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SWA
CnLLEGt.
L I J31~A I~ Y
SWAI~THM(i1~E
•
)
THE SWA
MOREAN
.2.50 PER YEAR
SWAR'I'HBORE, PA., JANUARY 9, 1942
VOL XIV, No. 1
SWARTHMORE'S GIFI'TO ENGLAND OFFICIALLY ACCEPTED AT BmMINGBAM
DON COSSACKS
SING TONIGHT ,
GOODWIN LISTS
DRIVE'S HEADS
I
I
Famed Chorus of Russian Male
Voi.,.,.. Bringo Interel8ting" :
Program to College
S\\'arthnH~reans
have been awaiting'
lUost eagerly the program of Russian
songs to be presented in Clothier Melllarial at the College this evening, Fri.
day, at 8 :15 by the General Platoff DOli
Cossack Chorus.
The Chorus which appears here under
the joint sponsorship of the \\'iIliam J.
Cooper Foundation and the music departmcnt of the College was formally
organized in 1926 by Nicholas Kostrukoff' who had previously spent sl'veral
years experimenting with a smaller
group ill eastern EUrOI)t.'. It is named
after General Platoff. a Russian miHtary hero who fought against Napoleon
during the French emperor's invasion
of Russia in 1812. 'fhe word "Don" is
used as a distinguishing term, recalling
the name of the River 0011 which runs
through the district from which the
Cossacks come.
The Cossacks will open their program with a grOUI) of Russian religious sCJngs, including ·'Blessed be
the Lord" by Tschaikowsky. "Inspire
:\Iy Prayer, 0 Lord" by Archangelsky.
"Prayer 10 Ihe'Lord" and "Credo" by
Gretchaninoff, "Lord, Have Mercy" by
Gretchaninoff~Lvovsky
and
"Those
Evening Bells" an elegy on words by
Kolzofl'.
Turning to Russian folk-songs, the
Chorus will render: The 'Vhite VJhirlwind; Departed Youth, by Vorobke"itch j \Valtz by Fogel; Russian Ballad
lIy Karnovaloff; The Snow Has Blown
Over Russia; In 1893; and Ihe Lezginka.
The Lezginka is a Caucasian knife
dance. This number will be performed
- hy a dancer trained in a tradition which
stretches
back
many
generations
through one family. In speakfng '01 the
~.~e;~;~~,~!i~~~~~~~sw~~'~~~~~~~~.
dance";- is'-'raditional," aiid -if has been
sung or danced in the manner in which
. fOi" t h e past three cenwe present It
tudes."
[n the concluding part of the program
the group will sing Grandfather Pahorn,
I .
HI ac k E yes, S ·Icny, '{
J.' a ama, and the
Kozatchok, a national dance of the
Cossacks.
II
United Charities Campaign EnLists 100 Loeal Workers Ready
to Start January 25
i
I
Daniel K. Goodwin of
Walnu~ lal1~
district director of the United Charities Campaign in Swarthmore, this
wef."k named 10 captains whose teams
will solicit contributions from Swarthmore residents during the campaign
which starts on January 25.
The team captains are: Leonard C.
Ashton of Elm avenue, Mrs. James F.
Bogardus of CorncH avenue, Mrs. T.
Harn' Brown of Cornell avenue, John
Eo Gense-mer of Vassar avenue, Mrs.
Harold G. Griffin of Rutgers avenue,
'-I rs. Frank R. ~Iarkley of Guernsey
I road. \Valter M. Reynolds of South
Che!Oter road. Robert M. Richmond of
I Crest lane, Ambrose H. Van Alen of
I Park avenue. and Mrs. J. B. West of
Henjamin \Vest avenue.
This year, Ellwood B. Chapman of
.
d·
Harvard avenue, whose service as ,strict director for Swarthmore in other
j 'cars has been outstanding, is acting as
associate director.
~Irs. ]. Donald Gibson of Hillborn
3\'enue and Mrs. Thomas H. Lueders of
North Princeton avenue will assist Mr.
Goodwin and Mr. Chapman with the
The above pieture will IJladden tbe hearts of aU those who contributed las. sprin.. and summer·in The Thimble
many secretarial details of the camGroup'. struggle to raise $1500 for a mobile eanteen for Britain. Shown wilb the materialization of thi. dream of
•
the little local group, are (left to ria:ht): the Lord Mayor'. wife; Councillor Tiplaf" Lo,rd MaY9r of Dlnnln.ham,
palgn.
M
I There will be more than a hundred
n. G. F. Cale-MatthewlI, Mr. Caie-Matthewil and the Cale-Mattbews' dau.hter. Photo,II'Bphll of the complete unit,
Swarthmore residents in the volunteer
iDeluding the motor vehicle which draws the trailer, eanteen, are pOllled in the window ofTheSwarthmorean Ot6ee.
_____
campaign organization which will seek
to better last year's total of $9,300 ip.
conlributions 10 the Uniled Charities.
The need for increased contributions
is greater now than in recent years,
Mr. Goodwin pointed ouL
"Tb B k '
if "
. '
"The 141 agencies maintained by Ihe
Attracted
Friend of Dr. A. F. Jack8.o~.
Me aFe,er 8F W' e Ph-'
d I
,.... Who English Novello•. Sponoored by United Charities form the front line
•
:.t..':
.....f.
•..h. -.. . .. . . el'Vl,
. ·)\1lle..o
lor delense on the home front," he said.
'
'
_ . . . . _~,J.
._I~Upoti . theit' serrice'~-dep'~IRbt . io" ,lUSt!
The French comedy j~The Baker's
Ch 1 ' I '
E'
part, the morale and welfare of our
W,'fe" ",,'11 I,".. Il,e fealure mov,'c al Il,e
Full details of the formal prescntaa~ es' ~" organ noted nghsh author civilians.
d
d
.
.
.
'n
k
d
h
College tomorrow night, Saturday, Jan- tion of Swarthmore's mobile canteen
ramahc cnhc ~I spe~ un. er t el ....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- ,
I
FRENCH MOVIE
Birmingham Mayor CHARLES MORGAN
AT COIJ.EGE Accepts Mobile Unit COMING SUNDAY
a":hi~, :rwpaY':,!~sA~:ce
Pr,~~;:!ed.W~.I.
•
.. ,.
n_l.e,;~;,to=
-
, -
r S~m._
.-' - !,'~t:,.r..;~
- . ~~~rth-,".
Ian ..
uary 10, at 7 and 9 :15 in Clothier Mem- to the Lord Mayor of Birmingham on. ar~Plc: of ~olmervl~e ~olllety melDS
orial. On the same hill will be a Disney November 27 outside the Birmingham ~t 11er
cmorla at t e o ege at 8'1
cartool' "Pluto's Dream House" and Counci'1 H
I
'
t
b
.
d
P.
·M.
this
Sunday,
11th.inHis
topic
Duse lave JUS
cen receive wiU be "The
Value the
of Art
Modern
the documentary film "TVA".
in Swarthmore. G. F. Calc-Matthews of Society" with the sub-title "A Defense
"The Raker's \ViCe" was written by Birmingham, a personal friend of Dr. of Story Telling."
• I
Jean Giono author of "Harvest". Like 1 and Mrs. Andrew Francis Jackson, preE
Lo lies W ateh
ducated from hoyhood as a Naval
·
LocaI F Ireman
the latter, the scene is laid in Prav- sentcd 011 hehalf of Swarthmore the
th,' officer Morgan served in the Atlantic
cllce. hut in this case it shows the life "token of friendship" for which
S and China fleets of England, leaving
Ellis Rumsey a member of the of the town rather than the country. It community under the energetic ana the Navy ,'" 1913 10 become a "'r,'ler
, Swarthmore Fire and Protective Asso··IS rat IleI" a !\cand a Ious S Iory, a Witty,
.
capa)II c Iea d ers I'
"p 0 f II Ie TIt'mbl
1
e but rejoining it in the 6rst da)'s of
ciation lost his watch while helping to good~llUmored talc of adultery in which Groull had raised ftmds last spring.
August 1914 to serve throughout the last
tight the fire at the Cleaver house, tl Ie I)ak
'I
Ca Ie- :til att Ilews t IIUS descn'b es \Vorld 'Var.
er' s pre tt ~. young WI'1c runs 0 If
.~ r.
North Chester road and Swarthmore with a handsome young shepherd. The tlat' rolling kitchen in a letter to Dr.
. f str1cken
.
)
In 1919 he went to Oxford Unh'ersitj'
1,Iace lasl
. Tuesda
. y. TIIe \Va t c h .IS a goId haker is so dazed and grIe
by Jackson:
Hamilton wrist-watch with initials the hetrayal that he can no longer
where he took honors in modern his~
G E R
is a very heautiful job. It is a tory and was president of the DraJ'.
....
•
I give his Ill'art or his mind to his work. tral"It
'1 er. S
h ave actua II y ma d c two matic Society. In 19.21 he became con~ 0 you
I
* Defense Council Bulletins *
Oftice; BoroUllh Hall - TelephoDe 0351
Opea Week Day. 9.12, 1-4 - Saturday 9·12
•
Med!",,1 Survey
2S doctors and dentists residing in Swarthmore met in Council Chamber last
Friday evening. They requested all lraiul'li IIIII"S(,S in the community to register
at once for emergency service at the office of the Local Council of Defense.
Swarthmore College has plans for an emergency hospital of fifty beds and
proposes to purchase a nrst aid kit containing materials for handling 75 accidents. Emergency kits of this kind are available at several hospitals. The doctors recommended that Swarthmore secure one.
A committee consisting of Dr.'s Roxhy, Jones, Heckman. \Vorth and Pat·
man was selected to arrange all details.
Allen.
AU aliens who arc citizens of any of the axis powers or of countries oc·
cupied by the axis powers are ordered by the Attorney General of the United
States to turn into police headquarters all weallons, cameras and radios capable
of receiving short·wave transmissions.
The local police department will give a receipt for each item and the articles
will be stored in a safe place until further notice.
Store Blaekout8
The Business :Men's Association in cooperation with the Council of Dc.
fense has arranged for blackout of stores. The State Council of Defense states:
For the period 01 the cm.ergrllcy. no store windows should be illuminated at
night unless (1) there is on duty within Ifle ('sfalJlis/""t'n' a night watchman who
wilt immediately extinguish the window lights when the alarm is sounded, or
(2) the store owner or operator installs an approved outside cutpoff switch
placed in a conspicious or accessible location and lighted if necessary.
Air Warden. Meet
The senior air wardens for the eight posts in Swarthmore met in Council
Chamber, J;Jorough Hall on Tuesday night and were instructed by J. Kirk McCurdy, Air Warden for Swarthmore. Within a few days the air wardens will
be caned in by the senior wardens 'of --their respective posts and given instruction relative to their individual duties.
Third Fire Scltool
Auxiliary Firemen held their third meeting last Monday night in the High
School.
Fire alarms in neighboring communities have caused some confusion here.
The~e IIl'UDicipalities have no metltod at present of sounding an alarm except
by siren. The Swarthmore siren will blow for an air alarm only and the signal
will be a series of rising and falling tones for two minutes. Do nat call the police
station when you. hear a siren.
The lIew police phones are Nos. 0122 and 0123.
..;; ~" -.'
..:. :.,(.~
,....
• -II
gifts. It is drawn b:), a 20 h. p. Morris
~ l I t 'f
d
~ a 0011 which can be detac le( t nee
he and used for other work 5uch as
(etching fresh supplies. It is painted
a beautiful shade of dark green . . •
the kitchen is equipped to the smallest
detail and nothing seems to be missing. The man who had driven it from
the works said it was the best job so
far. It is extraordinarily roomy and I
should think 3 or 4 could work without being in one another's way.
"Girls usually drive these canteens
and their courage is amazing in the
most dreadful conditions of an Air
Raid. They go out not only to feed
those who may be rendered homcles.s
but also those W:10 are helping and who
have been working sometimes for 18
hours at a stretch without food or _rest.
have taken
succour
and is
consolation
to
They
go where
the need
greatest and
thousands. You will easily recognize
that gratitude cannot he expressed.
Will you tell everyone this, that no
words can give an adequate idea of the
value and comfort the gift will bring
to those who suffer."
An excerpt from the Birmillgllafll. Post
of November 28 ,,,,as attached to }.{r.
Calc-Matthews' letter. "This was," it
states, " a gift from the citizens of
Swarthmore, Philadelphia, to the citizens of Birmingham. Swarthmore is a
small town, mainly residential, about
twelve miles from Philadelphia. It is
Quaker in origin and in atmosphere,
and has a collegc of high standing
much given to scientific research • • .
Its citizens - like many other United
States citizens-have stretched kindly
hands across the Atlantic in a very
good cause • • . The Lord Mayor accepted the gift with warm expressions
of gratitude to Dr.. and Mrs. Jackson
"and to all their helpers in collecting
tIM!; emst of .this /tbken of friendship'."
....
--
....
~'
.....
'.
,
•~
Early Gifts Welcomed
I
•
Red Cross Roll Call Chairmen
~{rs. Fra"kl,'" S. G,'llespie and
~,
Mrs. Wayne Randall acknowl~
edge gratefully the numerous
..
co"lr,'I,ut,'ons '''hich
are being reo
no
ceived toward the organization's
V~,7ar Relief Fund. As has been
announced the local drive wi11 not
hegin until February lS in order
. h t h e current
not to con fl'Ict Wit
United Charities Campaign.
Nevertheless any persons who
are ready to give now to this
acutely needed Red Cross fund
nected with the editorial staff of the
can do so by nlailing checks to
:.olrs. Gillespie, if the donor re·
London Times and from 1926 until the - sides south of the railroad, or to
outbreak of the present conflict he was
the principal dramatic critic of that paMrs. Randall, if the donor lives
011 the north side.
per. Meanwhile his novels began to ap~
pear.
I'-----------------J
In 1930 he was awarded the Feminavie Hureuse prize for "Portrait in a
New Surgical Dressing8
Mirror"; in 1933 he received the HawDate
thornden award for "The Fountain"
•
which was published a year earlier.
In addition to the weekly Wed"Sparkenhrokeu 111 1936. "The Empty
nesday session T hurs d ay mornRoom," and his latest book "The Voy~
d i n g from 10 to 12:30 has been
age .. pu bl'IS h e d'ID 1940, are WI'd e Iy rea.
His works have appeared in 14 Ian.
allotted to Swarthmore for surguagcs and have been particularly hongical dressings. Work is done in
ored in France where he has been given
the Red Cross Headquarters in
the Legion of Honor and has lectured
lfcdia. Mrs. A. L. Clayden, teleat The Sorbonnc. In England he is a
phone 753, may be called for ln p
Fellow of the Ro:ral Society of Literaformation.
Ir-----------------.
flu~r~e~'====:.:===;:~:::~I;~~~~~~=========~
'I1IE WEEK'S CAl.ENDAil
FRIDAY. JANUARY 9
)0:00 A. M. _ Literature Sectlon ••..•.••••••••••..•..•••.•... · .•. Woman'. Club
2:30 P. M. - Motners Club •.............•••..•............ Presbyterlan Church
8:15 P. M.-General Platofl Don Cossack Chorus ........... Clotbler Memorial
SATURDAY, JANUARY 10
7:00 P. M. and 9:15 P. M. - Moving Pictures .•..•...•....... Clothier Memorial
SUNDAY. JANUARY 11
11:00 A.M.-Morntng Worshlp ................................. Local Churehes
MONDAY, JANUARY 12
10:00 A. M. - Red 0l'088 SewlDR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Woman"s Club
7:30 P.M.-Recreation AsaoeIatton 1leet8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Borouab Hall
8:00 P. M. - Auzlllary FIremen School. •••••••.•••••••••.••••••••• BIah School
TUBBDAY, JANUARY 13
2:30 P.M.-Roland L. Baton. ~ ••••••••••••••.••••••••.•• Wom.an·B Club
... :15 P. M. - "OUr COsmIca1 Nelghborll" - ArmBtron.I Tbomas
MarUD Lab, OoUege
8:00 P. II. -
PhotograpbiC BIblblt. 0peDs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Woman's Olub
WBDNBSDAY. JANUARY It .
10:00 A.U.-Guild-AUZ1l1ar7 BUSlneas sesston ..•....••.....•.•TrlD.ltJ Cburch
10;00 A. M. - Woman's .Aaaoclatton ••..•••••••••••••••••••• PresbYterIaD Churcll
12:30 P. M. - Woman's Soclety Luncheon ••.•••.••.••••••••.• uetbodIat. Ohurcb
3:00 P,IL to 5:00 P.II.-PbotolraPhlc lIXhlblO OpeIl .......... WCIIIIIID.. moo
3:30 P.II. to 5:00 P. IL - Pt.rIoh Wom...•• Tea ................'ftInlCy Chureh
7:00 P.II. to 9:00 P . I L - _ P h I c lIXhlblo QpeD .......... WOIIWl·. mub
iBURS.DAY, JANtrABY 15
IO:OOA.II.-L. W. V. 8Wr.t..?~ ................... B. S. _ _ Boom
3:00 P.IL to 5:00 P.ILC 1IXhIbio QIIal •••••••••• W _ " moo
7:00 P.IL to 1:00 P . I L - _ 1IXhI~ QiIoD •••••••••• W _ " mub
8:15 P. M. ·'Ooem'c BaJa" - W••. o. ~ ............ ~ t.b. 0DIleIe
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
-------
<., VII ., nTH t-H!I H
Il1n ... I?Y
,
"
I IlL
' .. 'i'I~ 141 HMIII
I
SWARTHHORE, PA., JANUARY 9, 1942
SWARTHMORE'S GIJo'T TO EN(;LAND On,'It:lALL Y At:CEPTED AT BIRMINGHMI
DON COSSACKS
SING
J .. ' ,/
~HMOREAN
THESWA
VOL. XIV, No.1
I· 1.£
$2.50 PER YEAR
!GOODWIN LISTS
TONU;HT
DRIVE'S
.'allletl Churus of Ru.sian Male·
VoitoeK Bring"'" IlIter6Stin~
Program to t:oll.·g.·
HEADS
'ilnitt·" Charitie. CDIllI.aign En·
U"t. 1 00 L""ul W urker. Ueatly
to Start January 25
!"wanhlllllrC"'lIJs han' ),t'l'lI awaiting-.
I )anit.·1 1<. Goodwill of \Vaillut lalle
most eagprly thl' program oi Rl1~sial1
: di:'>lrin flirt'ctor oi tht.: United Chari.. onj.{s 10 hl' prl'selltec.l ill Clnthicl' ~(t'lII
urial at the l'ollegl' this cVl'nillg, Fri-,
: til':-' \."llIIpaign III Swartlllilon.. thi:o,lay, at H:15 hy thl' Cl'lIl'ral Platotr 1)1111 :
w('('k tlOlllll'fl J() t'aptaills wh05l' teaOl!-l'llS!'>ClCk Churus.
;
,will ~t)lil"it t·ulltrihlltiplI:-. {Will SwarthThl' Chorus which appl·.ars Itl·re..· ulldl'r
~ lIlorc n'~idellts durinJ,.{ tltl' l";tmpaigll
tht' joiut spoll!'oorship (If tilt' \\'il1i,1I11 J.
: which :'otHrts 011 JanuHry 25.
\'noJlt'r FUllllliatiull and thl' lIIu~ic (It-Th,'
taill; ar.. : L .. ollard C.
partlHl'nt uf thc t'olIt·gt· wa~ iurtnally
!
A:..hhlll
oj
EIIII
an'lIUt',
~(r:... James F.
organized in 19':U) h~' Xicholas Ktlstru·
BUg'anitb
of
Corm'lI
annUt',
)'frs. T.
koff who had Jlrc\'iuu~ly :-.pt·ttt :'>l'Yt'ral
I
Yl·ar:,> t'xlll'rill1l'nting with :t smalll'I'
H;trry Browll of Conn.'11 ;I\'l'Um', Johll
group ill t'aslt'l'Il Ellropt·. It i.. 1I:llIIt·c1
: ":. '~l'lI~l'lIIl'r oi Va~sar ,,,,,'t'Uue, ~(r!'>.
aih'r (~clIl'ral PlatotT. a I~ussiall milii Harold (~. Griftin of RulJ.::t'rs an'nUt',
tary I"'ro who iuug-ht against :'\apoit-oll
I ),1 r... Frank I<. :\1 arkll'Y of GUf.'fIl5C,r
Ilm'illg- tilt· Frt'l1ch l'lIIl1l'rur's il1vasiun
. road. \Valtt'r :-'1. r
, t'hl":..tl'r road. Roln'rt :\1. l{idullond of
tlsl-d as a distingllishill){ tl'rlll, I't'callillg
,('n·~t lalit', .--\mhrosl' 1-1. Van Aiel) of
thl' lIalllt' tlf thl' I~i\'el' DOli which nlll!'>
Park an'IIUe, ,mil '-Irs. J. B. \Vest of
thruugh tht' ,Iish'it" from which the.'
i:t,"jamill
\\'l':..t avcnuc.
Cos-sacks- CUtlll',
Thi:-.
H'ar,
Ellwood B. Chapman of
Thl.' Cos ... acks will 0Pl'lI tla'ir proi
1I:ln'arci
a\'Cllue.
Wh05l' sen,icc as disgram with it ,!{rollil IIi J.":u:-.sian rl.'i
trkt
direct(lr
for
Swarthmore in other
ligious songs, including "Bil's!'>t.'e.1 hl'
:
Y('ars
h,ilS
hl'C'1l
aut~talHling:,
i~ acting as
Iht· I.ord" hy T:-chaikll\\'~ky. "In~pirc
! ;I..;!'>ociall· director.
:\1 y Praycr. () Lord" hy . \t-chall){dsky.
"Pra\,('r to tht' J,ord" and "t'n'd,," h\'
, :\1 rs. J. Donald Gibsull oi I-lillborh
(~rl't~hallilloff, "I.ord. Havl' ),1 t'l""c\''' h~'
i an'IIl!{' and ~frs. Thomas H. I.ucdcr~ of
(;retchaninofT-Lnl\'sky
ami
"'i'hos~
Xorth Princeton avcnue will assist Mr.
E\'ellin~ Bt>lls" an elcgy 011 ,,'onl!'> h)'
: Condwin and )'Ir. Chapman with till'
'fhl' abO"t" l)idUrt~ ",ill :rludd'~JI tht~ h.'urt!'i of nil thu.!O(,· ,,·hu c.·ontriblltecl lust !'OJ.rinK aUfI !IoUlluner ill Th.! 1'himbl..
Kolzoff.
'lIIallY sl'cr{'tariaI details of the eam(;rUUI)'~ !'ilruggh~ 10 rai!'it~ 81500 fur U mubih~ ('untt~t~1I for Uriluin. Shu",· .. with Ihe nUileriulizutioll of this drt~am of
Turtlillg to Russia II folk-sollgs. the
, paign.
Ih., liult~ Im',,1 groUI)~ art" (Iefl In ri~ht): Iht~ Lor" lUu,·or'.s wife; (;ouncillor Til.lafl. Lord ~lu:t"or of Uirm;'IKhulll o
Chorus will rendl.'r: 'l'1J(> \\"hitc \VhirlThen.' will hl' more than a hundred
Mr", (;. F_ CIlIt·.MnUbt",,,~~ Mr. Cuh·-Muuht",,·)Oi and tht~ (;l1lt'-~tllllht!""s' "uu~hlt·r. l'hotn,fCrUI)hs of tht~ f!Oml,It'tt" uuil~
willcl: Departcd Youth, by VOl"ohkeSwarthmort.· rl'sidellts ill the yoluntcer
including th.- mutor 'n-hil·le ",·hit'li drnYo's Ih.· Iruilt'r (·uuh't·u, ore I,o~h'" in Iht! "'i.. dnwnfTht.S"'urlh ... ort~anOffi('e,
"itch: \\'altz hy FoJ,{cI: l~u:':oOiitll Ballad
campaign organi:.mtioll which wilt seek
liy Kantoyalolf: The SIIOW Has Blown
,
to hcttcr last year's total of $9,300 in
(h'l'r J~ussia: In aW,l: and the Ll'Zg-inka. F R E N C H M O V I E
I C H A R L E S l\fORGAN cOlllrihutiolls t;' the United Charities.
Tht' I.czginka is a <..'aucasian knife
~
Thc w.·ed for increased contributions
~Iallcl·. This 1Ill1llIJel' will he pcriorna'd
A T ( : O L L E G E : A c c e p t s M o h I l e Umt'l
C O M I N G SUNDAY[i' great,'r now thall ill rccellt years.
t.y a d.:tlll'er trained in it tradition which
,
~I r. Uoodwiu pointed out.
!'>tretches
hack
lUany
gcnerations
All rae'tef: IiI •.r ,rlPlul
.
J al' k 8011 Wh 0 II rL'.. ng I'I~ I
N'
.,
'I "The 141 agellcies maintained hy th,'
through olle iumily. In speaking pi the "Th" B u k __-r ' M \V'C"
• e
of D r a A'"
a r a
1 1 o\'ehst o:"'l.Oll80red ltv U 't I CI
't'
I' r I the front lin
~fall\, Fihn FUllS to Philadel-..
I
C
f
"
h
.
.
:
:
.·11
G
".
I
~
III C(
lan tCS 0 n
c
n'pt"rtoire of the chorus ),1 r. Knstrukoff
.- rettt~lllc(
ulltcen or o:"wart..
.-,on1f~r" 1 c
.roup
at ~wart 1.. I, ior dd('lIse on the home front," he said .
1,;1:'> ·talPII, "The :nusic Wl' g-h,c. ~on~ ";.
"".,
a
r
r
C
II
•-,hia 1.~wo Y p.ar~ Apc'
r"I
IIIC'rC n l'llt·~" ,.f:'I'i!llltJIlY
ttlore
0 eJ(t'
i "l"POIi lheir sl'r\·icl· dCllclIlb, in lalgl:
t1allCl'. is traditional, and it has hl'cn
'l·I,.'·
1,'r"""I,
•
.
! llart, the morale and welran' of our
"..
COIlll'tiy" rhl' B;I h'r s "
~ung or danced ill the lll'IIII1CI- ill which
'11 I tIl'
I Il'atllrt'
.
.
I
FilII
(ktaib
of
tht'
iorlllal
pn''il'nta(,harll's
'\[orgall
noted
English
author
ch·iJjans..
Wl' present it ior till' Imst thn'l' ("l'lI- \\ ','1"" Will'
11111\"lt' at t It'l .
• .
I I
'..
'11
"\. 0 II q{t' lomorrow lllg
. ItO
s. 111(1)1
It' l',mtl'('n,I.aile. 'I. raTlml!c
WI speak
turies."
I , ,-.a t tin Iay, J :111-.,11011 IIi Swartllll141rt'
•
••
.
..
f Scrtl1c
,.'11.
~.' IIndl'r
"
CIthe
In the concluding part oi tht· prognun u:tn' IU. al i i1IHI t) :1;; ill 1...·lothi\'r .\It·lII- i ttl tl\(· I.ord ~raYl1r nl 1,Irlllingham 011
':1 () I I , "
,I T ·'111.' I)',
,; .\"on·mhl'r .!.7 Ilutsidt' tlu- Birmingham,lhll'r .\I(,tllorl
UI""I.I.
II 'I!l :-"I~lllI»)11 \\1
I~t: ,I .. blle~I'('
'1 'I
I
. t I
. liP. ~r. this ~l1llday the 11th. His topic
Black Eyes. SiCilY, .\Ialania. and tlll' t'artnoll . Itlttl s
n'atll
ItJU~l'
:1Il( I
OIlIU'1 J" Oll."l' la\·l' JUS H'l'1l n·Ct'l\,t·( t .'11 I '''1'1
\T I ' . \
. '[ ~
l":t:"tl Crllss Roll Call Chairmcn
'1
"'1'\'.'\".
''';
tl
('
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C
I
'I
It
I
[I\\I'C
111 .\ Ollerll
I
I
Kozatchuk. it lIatinnal clalll't' IIi t1ll' tiC
(liCUlllt'ntary
it III
[. III , war nHlln·. • . '.
a t·-.\ a
ll'WS 0 I'"~
..." .'It·I Ia lie. I01 .• I,rt "\
~f
rs, Franklin S. GiIIl'spic and
. \\ ...
.
I,,, I"llrtlllllg"
. I1<1111. a pl·r~on'l I tnl'11(
.. I 01• D r, ;10(,ICI\
{'o:->sacks.
.. '1'1 u' I'.a k",,·r:o.
Ih' " wa!'> wnllt'lI
f ' . \\ It I tIe :'ilI )-ttt t .. nl'il'IISe,
,
~Ir!'>. \\-aYlIl'
Randall acknowlJt';111 Ciono ;l1Ithl1r Iti "HarHst". Lik~': ;l1Id )'Irs. Andrew Francis Jat'kson, pre- 0 Story Tel1ill~-"
('dg(" grateilllly the lIumerous
.
EdlH.:atcd
frolll
ho)'holl(i
ri:-.
a
Xa\'al
I ..cwul J.'ireillan Lotte~ \Vat ..h
the !;1I1l·r. th t· ;0;\,('111· i." lai(l ill PJ'{n-- "('lItt'(1 till 1ll'l!ali oi SWflrtllllltlri: the
cOlltributiollS which arc heing ret'lln. hut ill thi:'> \.·ilS,,· il ~how!> tilt· lii(" , "tnkt.'11 1I1 frit'IHbhip" f(lr which this ofliccr ~Iorgall ... ~n·ecl III the.: ;\tlantk
l'(·in·d toward tlw organi~ation's
U
I
'
I
alld
China
flel'ts
of
EIIg"land,
ka\'ill'~
1'.'11'I:; ",.UIlISCy
a lIIt:m ler ot tIL' (Ii till' ttl\\'n ralltt'r than till' (·oulltn'. It; e.·Ollllllllllih' under tht, t'lIl'rg<.'tit.- and
,..
\\'ar l{('lief FUlld. ~\s has he-en
S
. ..",SSll,
I is ratht·!' :t sl'alldahl.u", .~ltlr.\' ..a wit.t.\'.:
'..\\'ft.rt I 111Iorc.' F'
..In· .. all( I I'.r".kctl\'t·
l·.'IPahlt- Il·,ult.'rship.
t1i. tl1t· Thimhk Ith(, Xa\'y in 191.~ In hecollle a writer
allltoulln'd the local drivc will nat
lilt
rt"jnining
it
IH
tht·
tir:-t
d,l\'s
oi
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
nation o.':;t lIs ".lte 1 \\ II t· H' pllll.{ tn. l!11.IlI-hulIIort·tJ tall' 01 :lIluhlT\" 111 willch (.t'lltlp had ral .. l·d tUlle.),., 1a.;t ~prillg.
.
hcgin until Fehruary 15 III order
•
I
.\lIgltst 1914 to :o-t·I""\'(" thron,:rhollt tltl'last
lI,gill dll' lin' at thl' Clt'an'r h O l1!'>c.: tht· ha""r'" pretty yllllllg wiit.· run .. lllT:
:\11". l'alt'-~Iattht·\,·.; tim.; dl'serihcs \\'orlll \\'al'.
lIot to conllict with th~ currt'nt
\urth Chl·!'>tt:r road alill Swarthmorl': wilh a handsollll' youllg sht·pllt'rcl. Th t·. lin' n.JlillL: kitch l'lI ill a h,ltn to I>r
United Charities Campaign,
In ICJIQ ht., went In Oxio1'li L'nin'rsity i
plan·.libt 'I'm':.;(lay. Tltt:" wat~'h is ,'I.g.old I ilal,n i!'> :'1> Ii:./.,,'" and gril.'i strit'kl'lI hy: .Iat.'ks"t]: .
~t.'\·ertheless any persons ;.\'ho
wltt'n' Itl' tllok honors III lIIodcl'n his-:
H'llIl1ltuli wrist-watch with
1I11tmb i thl' hdra,',,1 that ht: \'al1 110 longer
"I . .
II ,.•..
, I' 1-'
'
t l'i ,I n'ry ht·'llltiiul jill..
., a tllr)' and wa:. pn'sidellt oi thl.' Dra-I
arc ready to g:in' now to this
(.. ... ,..
L:.'in· hi:'> l\I'arl Ill' hi . . willd to hi:-. work.,
.
'.
acutel" net'(kd Red Crns~ iund
! tr:lIkr. ~II yon han' ~IC'lI;llIy madl' two lIlatic Society. In 1921 hl' ht.'callJP con-I'
- .. _...-. ~ giits. It i'i drawli hy ,I .!O h. p. ~Iorris Ill'ct('(1 with tilt' editorial st.ilil of the
eall d~ so hy mailing checks to
~I rs. Gillespit" if the donor reSal""" "hi ...... a" .... ,I .. tad,,·,I it' lIec
south of the railroad, or to
i Ill' alld usnl ior uthl'r \\"ork ';'tlch as outhrl'ak of thl' prcs('nt conflict he was
~I rs. l
011 thc north sidt.'.
08i1:~: Borough Hall TelcpboueJ 0351
a hc.-;Hltiiul :-.hade 01 dark grt'l'lI . . _ per. ~I('an\\'hih' his non'ls hl'g';tll to ap-!
Oalen Wf'l"k Day" 9.12~ 1.4- - SOlurd.ay 9-12
Ihl' kitt'lll'lI i!'> l'qnh)Il('d tn thl' :'tIIallcst pear.
:' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '
•
! ,Idail and lhlthing- .. t·('ms to ht· missIn 19JO he \\'as awarded the Fcmina- ' ( " ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
~Iedit'al SUr\'t'~'
: illg". Tht· lIlall who hacl driven it irom \'le Hur~usc priZl~ ior "Portrait in ;:t!
New Surgical Dressings
, , 25 docto~s all(! dcntist:-; n'~idillg in !?w;lrthmort' . lilt· 1 in 1...\IUIKil. Ch
Date
r·nda}' cvelllllg. 1 ht'Y rCllucstl'd 1111 fn"'h'd 111/11'.\','.,' III thl' COIIllllltlltty to 1"t·.I/I.~lt'r I 1.1r. It I~ l'xtrallnhllartl) rtlOIl1~ :l.nd I thornell'n a.ward ior "'rhe Fountain" 1
"I onc,' for emcrgCIlC" St'r\,iC"t' at till' oflice..· oi thl' I.llt·al l'ol1l1cil oi Dt'il'nsl·.
i :'>hllllhi think .l Ill' .. could work with- which was pUhlished a year earlier.
Ltl ;Hhtitioll to the wl'ckly \VcdSwarthmore Col1~'J,{c .has p!ans. jor an ~'I!ll'rg-l'IIQ' ~ltlsp~tal cd lii~y hl'~I~ an.d! IIlt~ ...'.h'illg- ill 11In' ;1I,lothl'I"S way,
"Sparkt·nhroke" ill 193fi, "Thc Empty
Ill.'sday seSS101l Thursday lIlornpropo:;cs to purchase a ftr:-.t ;l1(1 kit con tall illig lIIatt'rtal~ lor handitng 7:1 acct. (.11'1:. lIsnaliy ,lrJVl' tItl'Sl' l'
al1otll'd
to Swarthmore for surtors recommendcd that Swart),mtlrt· ~l'l'lIn' Illll·.
11111.;t fln'adiul condition .. tlf :1I1 :\ir His work~ ha\'t' appeat·t.·d 111 1-1 lan- 1
gicaL dressings. \Vork IS dOlle III
A committee consi:Hillf,{ of I)r.'s H.Dxhy . .Iont· ... I it-Cklllotll, \\'llrth and Pat-! J..~aitL TIll'Y gil tlut 1I0t tlllly tn iCl.'d guagt's and ha"e ht'CII particularly hon-I
JUan was selected to arr;lI1,I.W all (It-tails.
: tiltJ:-'l' who lIIay hl' rt'lHkrt'd hllllldcss tl!""l'd in France where he has heell givcn
t he Red Cross Headquarters til
Ali(~IIS
hut al..,o thosl' ~"hn art' hl'lpillg and who thl' Ll'gion oi Honor and has lectureci
~I celia. ~I rs, A. I.. CIayden, teleAll aliells who an~ citizt'lb oi all)' ot' tht.· axis jll)\\"l.·rs or tit' l'Olllltril'~
h
phonc i53. may h~ calle(1 for Illl'upied by the axis pOwt·r:-. an' onkrt'd ),y tho AltlJrlll''y Cl'nt'ral oi th~' Ullitl'd honr:- al a ,;trl'lch without iOlld nr rest Ft.,lIow Ili tht· Royal Soci(,ty of Litera- j
iormatioll.
"'''III ,,,..
I
'BirmiuO'ham Mavor
....
.,
I
A
11""------------------,
•
••
*
Counc,,"l Bulletins
De.r.ense
:J •
*:
•
oc-I'
wlll~l'l'
;t~":'.~<:.=..::.::.:::.:..:.:.===::.:==.:=====~~==================~
States
to turnshort-w:!\'l'
into IH)licl.'trallsmissions.
hcadfll1arter:-. ;111 \"l';tIHllh. l'a1llerits alltl nHlios c:q)ahk:: havt'
Thl'Y takcll
go
tht· IIl'l'«I
grcatt'st and
oi
receiving
:.UCl·lll1l'
and isl'otlsolation
to
.~.
_... _ _. ...
I
The local polin' departlllt'nt will gi\'t' ;l n'n'ipt ior l'adl ill-III and thl' :tnil'ies thousands .. You will easily rl'l'()glliz~
will he stored ill a sah- placi' until furliwr Iloticl·.
; that gratllmll' cannot hc l'xprt~sscd
THE WEEK'S CALENDAR
Stor.- Hlut·kuub;
: \ViIl \'On tell l'\'('nOIW this. that 110
Thl.' Busincss .\II.'II·S .'\s!'>ol'iatilill ill t'llopnatioll with tltl' COUllcil of De- \\'onJ:.;· C;111 gin- an ';dC«ll1atl' i(ka oi the
FRIDAY. JANUARY 9
iC.'lbC has arranged for hlackout oi !'>lon·,;,. Tht, State C(ltlllcil ui l)dcns~ states: \'alm' allc.l eomiort til<' gtit will hring
10:00 A.M.-Literature Scctlon ........................ , ........ Womau·s Club
I
. I f l '
I
I
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()" .
2:30 P. M. - Mothers Club ......... , ...................... Presbytertan Church
8:15 P. M. -General Platoff Don Cossack Chonts ........... Clothler Memorial
"'or t If' pf'rw, () /1/' (·m""I,,·1,.,.\,. 110 ~lt)r\' WIIH ows s 1011 e H: I 1I1l111latpd at to thosl' who SUllt'r.·
night unless (I) tltl'!""l' i~ Oil du1\' within If/!' 1'.ollbii,.;fllll,'111 a lIi""ht watchman who, ;\11 \'xn'rpt ir0111 tht· Uirmi"yIIllHll'osl
SATURDAY, JANUARY 10
wil1 imnu;'c1iatl'iy t·Xt111g-lli:-.h tltl: wilHlow liglib wlwn lilt' alarm is ~ol1l\dt'd, or i of :\un'mlwr 2X \\';,I!'> Httacht'd to )'fr
7:00 P. M. and 9:15 P. M. - Moving Pictures, .......... , .... Clothler Memorial
» I
.t
"I .
, , '1t
SUNDAY,
JANUARY 11
l~ tIC storl' nwnt'r or oJlt'ratur instalj..,;111 apprll\,l"Il UUb1(l· cut-off 'iwitl'h!<..·all·-~Iatthl·w!'>· It'lll'l''". "Ill!'> was,
ll:OOA.M.-Monltng Worshlp
.................................
Loc8.1 Chut'ch~
plac("d ill a cOllspi("t(llJ!; or fll"ccssihk location and lightl'd ii Ill·Ct'ss:try.
: :.tatt' ..... a giit iro1tl th..:: citizl'lls of
MONDAY. JANUARY 12
Air ,,'nrd(,lIs Meet
i Swarthmon'. Philaddphia. to the citi10:00 A. M. - Red Cros:; Sewing ....................... , .... , ... , _Woman's ClUb
Tl
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I
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S
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7:30 P. M. - Recreation AssO(!lo.tlon Meets ........... , ........... Borough Hall
Ie sC11l0r air wankns for tilt' l'ight posts ill SwarthlllOH' l1Iet in Council I Zl'llS ni Binning mm. ~ wart lI110rc IS a
8:00 p, M. _ Auxiliary Firemen SchooL ..... , ... , .. _....... , ...... Hlgh School
Chamber, Borough Han on Tuesday night ;l1Id wcn' instructl'd by J. Kirk ~Ic-I ~mal1 tnwn. mainly residential. about
TUESDAY. JANUARY 13
Curd ... Air \Vardell for Swarthllw!""l'. \Vithiu a il'w dav~ the air wardens
twt"ln' milt'S irom Philaclelphia. It is
2:30 P. M. - Roland L, Eaton. Speaker .. , .... _..... _........... _Woman's Club
oJ
_
-1:15 P. M. _ "OUr Cosmlcal Neighbors" - Armstrong Thomas
be called in by the senior wardens oi tlwir rt'~pectin' pO'i\!' alld !-{in'l] 1nstrUt'- Quakt'r in origin and in atmosphere,
Martin Lab, College
tion relative to tltl'ir indi"idual dutie~.
I anti has it l'olll'gc oi high standing
8:00 P. M. - Photogmphlc Exhibit Opens ....................... Woman's Club
Third Firt· SC"hool
much gin'lI to scientific rl':oOt'arch . .
WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 14
10:00 A. M. - Gulld-Auxtllary Business session .. _. __ ... _....... Trlnity Church
Auxiliary Firelllcn hdd tlu'ir third Inl'ding 1:1st ~I onday night ill lhl' II igh I t!> l'iti~CIIS - hkl' many other United
10:00 A. M. - Womo.n's Assoclo.tlon ................. _...... Presbyterlo.n ChUrch
~choo1.
Stah's citizells-han' stretclll'd kindly
12:30 p, M. - Woman's Society Luncheon ........ , ... _....... Methodist Church
3:00 P. M, to 5:00 P. M. - Photographic Exhibit Open .......... Woman's Club
Fire alarms in neighhoring l'oml1l11nitit'~ havt' caused sumt· confu~ioll ht·rl·. hallds aero,,!,> till' :\ tl;lIItit' in a vcry
3:30 P. M. to 5:00 P. M. - Parish Women's Tea ...... _.. , , , .... Trlnlty Church
These municipalities have no method at prcscllt of sounding an alarm ~xcept gOl)d call:.t· . . . The Lord ~Iayor ac7:00 P,M. to 9:00 P.M.-PhotograPhic Exhibit Qpen .......... Woman·s Club
by siren. The Swarthmore siren will blow for 1111 (lir a/tlTm Olll.\' and the signal Ct.'pled thl' Rift with warm ("xpn'ssions
THURSDAY, JANUARY 1$
10:00 A, M. - L. W. V. Study GrouP .... , ....... , .. , ...... H. S. Museum Room
will be a series of rising and falling tones ior two minutes. nn tIot till/ the police I oi gra1itu(k' to Dr, ;md ).(rs. Jackson
3:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M.-Photographic Exhtblt Open .......... Woman·s Club
station when you hear a sirell.
i and to all their helpeTs in collecting I
7:00 P. N. to 9:00 P. M. - PhotographiC Exhlblt Open .... , .. , .. Woman's Club
-... I..___________________________________
8:15 P. M. - "Cosmic Rays" - W. F. O. Swann .. ,. _. _",. ,Mart1n Lab. College ...J
. d silip.
I th~~.~:;t of .th!'" 'foken of irten
The new police phones an- ~os. 0122 and 0123.
I
willi
:
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THE
JANUARY 9, 1942
SWARTHMOREAN
2
3
SWARTHMOREAN
JANUARY 9, 1942
o'clock in the Swarthmore Presbyter- George B. Schoe«el of Rochester, years old at the time of his death, had
ian Church when Miss Petra Christine N. Y., Mr. and Mrs. Harold Scott 01 been a resident of Rutledge until mov~
Lingle daughter 01 Mr. and Mrs. Roy !\ferion, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Allen,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . - - - . - - . - .. -~' ......-- .......... ---- Petrall Lingle 01 Cornell avenue be- Malvern, Mr. and 'Mrs. Alexander Mac- ing to California's .warmer clime 15
Y('ars ago.
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Bass, Jr. of moth~r Mrs. Sargent Walter o~, North came the bride of Lieutenant Norman ki... Drexe_.I;....:H.:i::;II:."........._..:..
• i.··
.l.t
Harvard avenue entertained with Chester road over the holidays.
. Bruce Duffett son of Mr. and Mrs.
Birth
Frescoln - Pitman
Mrs. Boyd Stauffer of Tioga County Norman Duffett of Niagara Falls. N. Y.
their annual New Year's Eve party.
Their guests iucluded Mr. and Mrs. entertained with
a lIIis ..,II,m"OIII5 / The Rev. David Braun officiated. The
A
William- Boyle, Mr. and Mrs. Rob- shower at the Harvard avenue
church was· effectively lighted with
lfiss
Katharinc Lorene Pitman I
SOli ,,-Richard Donald McKee, 2nd,
crt Saul, Dr. and Mrs. Donald Fred- her mother Mrs. John E. Michael
.Ivory coIurc d candl es an d d
t
d
daughter
01
Mr.
",d
Mrs.
]oh'l
H.
PitoJOlrn
Mrs. Charles
ecora e
H .10 "I. r. alld 'fd
S d McKee
erick, Mr. and Mrs. John Cush- week in hunor of Miss Jean Coch- with baskets of white and yellow chry- man of Vassar avenue was wed in a
b aKe;:t~wl1, .n '. on un ay, Deman, of Rose Valley, Mr. and Mrs. rane of Kenyon avenue whose marriage sa nth emu illS.
simple ceremony to Mr. Joseph Wright cem er
, IS thc chIld of the former
Donald D. Hart of Media, Mr.
, . .
.
Frescoln SOil of Mr. a"d Mrs. Lovett Fr~nces Hurton and the great-grand-
PERSONALS
I
Mrs. Frederick Anthony of Springfield, Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Ayer of
Drexel Park, Mr. and M.rs. Gilbert
Bloom of Glen Mills, Pa., Mr. and Mrs.
Edson Harris, ]r., and Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Seymour of Swarthmore.
The Rev. Dr. and 'frs.
Alexander S.
.1l
van Dyck with their daughter Margaret
of Rutgers avenue have bccn spendillg
the holidays at the West Hartlord,
Conn. home of their 50n-in·law and
daughter Mr. and 'Mrs. Wallace Winthrop Brown.
Uiss Peggy Rinclifie of Strath Haven
avenue .entertained 011 December 28
honor of ,Miss Barbara Boushan a
former resident of Swarlhmore wllO
now lives in Bethlehem. Guests ,'neluded George Armitage, Deborah
Drew, George Hoa",
Ph,'I,'p Park, Katll~
ryn Belfield, Winifrcd Park, James
Rowland, J~lwood Montgomery, Jean
Flah~rty, Bickley Parker.
to Mr. John Lumsden also of Kenyon
avenue is planned for February.
Bettina Hunter, Swarthmore Public
l.ibrary librarian has returned from
Mount Sinai, Long Island, N. Y. where
she visited her parents the Rev. and
~frs. William Hunter.
Barbara Allison a student at
brier College who has bccn
her parents Mr. and Mrs. J.
Allison of Vassar avenue has been
made president of her class and also
a member of Student Government.
, I•
ROMANCE IN THREE R'8
rhe bride who was give I' III marriage
I Jd f M Th
d
In- her father worc a dress of white Frescoln of Harvard avenue on Tues- C,11
0 . . r.
Omas W. An rew of
f"ll
d a fi ngcrtll'
. vel'1 W h'ICh was day afternoon at 4 o'cI .....
..... k I'" Ille ellapel North Chester road.
31 C' an
I.
uoun d b). a wrca II ) 0 I orange bl 05soms. of the Swarthmore Me. thodist Church.
Do Yoa Know
Sh t:' carnc
. d a ..uoueJuc t 0 I came II'las, Rev. Dr. ItO}' N.r. Keiser performed tile
I.
I'
I I '1
t
ceremon.v as~iste'd by Re\'. Carlos AIThe Sure Cure for IID7 A1Ito TnnI....,
uUUViU( Ia am wile swec peas.
berto
Avila
brother-in-law
of
the
bride:
0
Call 440
).riss Anllc Lingle sister of the bride
I
'd
I
I
d
M'
Only
the
immediate
families
were
presactc{ as mal 0
IOnor an
ISS
Tim
DWCCII Lingle and Miss Marjorie Duf- enTt.
I
he bride who was unattended wore
et '
sIster 0 I t h ~ groom were th e b'd
rI esRUSSELL'S SERVICE
'd
TI
II
d
t
d
f
au
afternoon dress of pale turquoise
mal s.
Ie a en an swore Tesses 0
Dartmouth and LsI.,.eate A_eo.
I '11'
dl I' I t
I
'th JU
. I'1- wool
corsage.
31 C III can e Ig I co ors WI
AI crepe Iand an orchid
.
"We Don't; 8ell C.......
It
I
t
h
TI
'd
f
h
ter
a
s
lOrt
weddmg
trip
the
groom
cecal's 0 rna c.
Ie mal 0
ODor
'11 I
I
We SerYtee 'Dltm"
was ill melody yellow, the bridesmaids WI cave or Camp Meade having been
ill minu<:t blue. 'rhey carried o1d fas- recalled for active service. He recently !~===============~
hioned lJ(lUquets of yellow and b1ue returned to Swarthmorc after com-II
Rowers.
pletillg a year of military service at
I
Fort Riley, Kansas.
11 rs. l.ingle wore an a ternoon dress
Afr. Frescolll is a gradu'ate of Color- I
f
'tl
t h'
'Ik h
0
grcy crcpl' WIlma c 111g Sl
at ado ~. laic Collc"e a"d .1."0 d,'d "radu-,
trimmed with wine velvet roses. T h e ' ; - '
1/"0
.~
co
'
h
d
d
.
ate
.study
at
the
University
of
Pennsylgroom s mot er was resse m a gown val11a.
of medium blue with blending hat trim• I t
med with feathers of ·wine and white.
Bereaved
Each wore a corsage of gardenias and
1
'flre$.one
Thrilled confusion reigned as stu~
dents reporting for post-holiday studies
'
I I'
learned that three of t IIe pu hi Ie S~ 100 S
. I'
h
I
C .•
tcae Icr!>
ad succurn led to
upul s
wiles, during their vacation.
Eleanor Ramage dietician of the
Swarthmore High S~hool cafeteria was
married at .. :30 P. M. Saturday December 27 to Mr. Charles Reynolds of
Eldean Reed returned to Valley Newark. N. J. in St. Mark's Church forget-me-nots.
Forge Military Academy Tuesday night in 'Vest Orange,· N. J.
Mr. \Villiam Duff~tt of Barberton,
after a holiday vacation at the home
011 December 31 at 4 P. }'L in the Ohio served as best mati for his brother
·of his parents Mr. and Mrs. L. D. ,w,uIGI'd '[
. I Ch h S F '
and the ushers wcre Mr. Thomas
of Swarthmore avenue.
I e .1' emona
urc, an ranClS~O, /' k
f /' I
California Franc~s Myers, the third -:100 er 0
\.oc lester, N. Y. and Mr.
Virginia Anne Yerkes left Wedlles- grade teacher of the College Avenue Otis Nic1lOl:'i or Parkersburg, W. Va.
day to return to her studies at
School. was married to Lieutenant EdFollowing the ceremolly there was a
ley College, Wellesley, Mass~ after
ward ).lillcr, Pursuit pilot in the U. S. small rcccptioll at the home of the
long holiday with her parents Mr. and Army Air Corps.
bridc's parents.
Mrs. Earle P. Yerkes of South PrincePhyllis Hasse Physical Education
Aftl'r january 10 Lieutenant Duffett
tOil avenue.
teacher of the Swarthmore High will hI;! stationed at Fort Monroe, Va.
Richard Terry ninc-year-old son of School announced her engagement to where tllc couple will r('sidc tempor·Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Terry 01 Swarth- Mr. Wiley F. Coil Jr. 01 Bryn M:.w]r I arily.
more avenue made a solo train trip to on December 5, 1941. The wedding will
Out of town guests includt:d:
New York last week where he visited take place 011 March 28, 1942.
:\rrs. George M. Wicker, Miss Bar·
Mr. and Mrs. Fred ,Pollak and sons
' •
harn \Vickcr,. Mrs. John W. Wicker
Oscar and George of Riverside Drive
Junior Class Entertained
and ~lrs. George D. Comstock of Nifor several days and saw the sight~ of
agara Fdls, N. Y., l\1r. and Mrs. H. D.
the city. The Pollaks who like the
David '''eiland, Duane Taylor, Ned Davis and ),[jss Joan Da\'is, of Plain~
'ferrys used to live in Vienna relturne,i/ Rutherford, Frederick Morey and Jim fidd, N. j., Mrs. john I. Haviland,
here with Richard, the boys remaining Cleaves were hosts to the junior Class Langley Field, Va., llrs. Otis Nichols
as his ~ests· from New Year's through of the Swarthmore High School at a of Parkersburg, W. Va., Dr. Elizabeth
Saturday while their parents visited Ho1iday Dance party given Friday eve· Petran, Baltimore, Md., Mr. and Mrs.
Washington, D. C.
ning, January 2, at the Swarthmore Erwin G. Schoeffel of Massena, N. Y.,
'I
d M
J. F.• Ancona, Miss Jean
Cadet H. W. Davidson left Wednes- "'oman's Club.
_ _ _••_.___
1\ r. an
.I. rs.
day to return to. Staunton Military
Engagement
Ancona of Rochester, N. Y., Mr.
Academy at Staunton, Va. after a holi:\Ir. and Mrs. Carl Schurz Clcavcs of
RELAX WITH A GOOD BOOK
day recess spent with his parents Mr. Cornell avenue announce the
and Mrs. H. O. Davidson of Guern!>ey ment of their daughter Mis!! Eli5abcth
road.
.
Gould Cleaves and :Mr. Nicholas Leonid
Miss Ruth Hammond of Niagara Turkevich son of Bishop Leontc of
Falls, N. Y. was among the holiday Chicago, III.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin F.:
:Miss Cleaves was graduated from
~ood of Elm ~venue who also had the IIIman School and attended the
!with them durmg the season Mr.: University of Pellllsylvania.
iWood's mother Mrs. Ora F. Wood and
)'Ir. Turkc"ich i:; a graduate of Dart/Mr.. and_ Mrs. C. W. Baumann of- mouth College in the class of 1940. He
lPompton Lakes, N. J. as well as
attcnded "uck School at Dartmouth
READ THE NEWEST BOOKS
on Lawrence Andres who left
and now is with the General Electric
unday to resume his studies at
. Company in Philadelphia.
ylvania State College.
~
I
Postmaster Alfred P. Smalley of
Yale avenUe was called to Easton by
the death of his hrother the Rev.
Charles F. Smalley, M.D. 011 Monday
of this w(·l·k. Dr. Smalley had lived in
Easton since rctiring as pastor of the
South Chc!'ter Baptist Church several
ycars ago.
- - -...-.~--
George Yunger Dies
in California
)'Jrs. Frank GeUz of Dickinson avenue is in Los Angeles, Cal. where she
was called 011 Decemher 27 by the 1
dcath of her father George A. Yunger
011 the 26th. Mr. Yunger who was 80
Mr. Alberto Avila of Vassar ~~~'~'1~1
has been at the University of 11
A heautiful candle light wedding took
~rbana, IlJjnois where he attended
place last Saturday afternoon at .. :30
Methodist Students Conference as
Uelegate from Drew University. He
a. member of the International R"la..:1I11
lions Committee of the Conference.
Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Brauns of
sar avenue have been entertaining
Frillay - Saturday
Braun's mother and three sisters.
M"abel K. Brauns and the Misses ~~~~:~I
DEANNA
Dorothy. and Mary Brauns of II
apolis, Ind.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. WiUiam E.
Pan forth of Cornell avenue
Charles Laughtou
were Mrs. Danforth's_ mother Mrs.
D. Swartzel of Los Angeles Cal
]viii remain several weekS,' and
~rother and sister·in-law Mr. and
te. D. Swartzel and their three da1ugl,-!
lers of New York.
CHESTER, PA.
DURBIN
"IT STARTED
WITH EVE"
RenetoBosshardt
waoYear's
came from
York
spend New
Day with
!:lis parents Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Bosshardt of Park avenue has now gone
~ spend two weeks at Coral Gables,
Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Thomsen and
sons Tommy and Len of Ridenvood
Md. have been visiting Mrs. Thomsen'~
The Players Club
of Swarthmore
•
OUT OF THE
FRYING PAN
By
Francis Swann ..
Director, Lincoln Atkiu
JANUARY 20, :11,22, 23, 24
81lS P. M.
•
JIM DANDY
B7 WIlUam SaroyaJI
Dh-ector, John Dolman, Jr.
JANUARY 30 and 81
8115 P. M.
I:~::::::::::~:::~
"KEEP 'EM
FLYING"
STARTS TUESDAY
EDWARD ARNOLD
ANNE SHmLEY
WALTER HUSTON
"All That Money
Can Buy"
Deanna
DURBIN
Chaso
LAUGHTON
••• _
••• _
••• _
••• _
•••
_~
.• _ . _ _ ••• _
••• -r. ••• _
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..._
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a
t
o l . .I
~
I:
N
I•
W-+--E
o
o
0
i•
\'"
••
I•
•
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o
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o
o
o
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0
0
0
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s
0
0
0
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Will. nil oul aid for lIaliollal
defense paramount in all OUt
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0
0
0
minds - Will. Ihe scarcily of
mbber slaring liS in the faceDelivery of orders may become
acule - We ask your coopera·
lioll to help us to maintain rea·
sUlluhle !'erviec for everyone.
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0
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1. Please do not ask for
more than one delivery a
day,
)
0
0
0
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0
0
Thruout the Store
Great Saving. in
Every Department
0/
0
•
•
NrTHER
PROVIDENce
o·
o
I•
Wilh your cooperalion we shall
••
he in u position to continue free
delivery, give better service and
H . . . .H . . . . _ . _ _
Lingerie
,
4. Pleuse refrain froDt )'e«Iue~ting rush orders unless in Ull emergent'Y.
Coats $13.95 up
Dresses $2.88 up
Sportswear
C.learance 0/
Blouses ....__.._ ......
77c
Skirts _.-......_-_.......... 81.00
Jumpers _ ...___........... 1,39
Jackets __.._82.49-$3.49
I•
I
I
maintain low prices.
,
•
I
MARTEL'S
I
FOOD MARKET
I
-~iii_iii·p..iii.R:iiiiN-Cr:~I~M~A~T~C~H~A~B~E:~-L~-L~I~·~"-"G~H~A~N~E~L~.
.ii -.ii M.ii Ai iR=y=oii u-ii N:'Hi i..Iii i.i iLi i.
~~
CCke JJOuquet
,:=;=;======:6=
QBEAUTY SALON
•
BelUdy glows i,1 frosly air
13 South Chal.... Road
Can
Swa~ore
• CHARBERT • ROVAE • CHEN YU •
476
CORDAY
•
I•
I
The Mary Lyoll School
PRISCILLA LANE
BErry FIELD
LLOYD NOLAN
"BLUES in the
NIGHT"
STARTS TUESDAY
'South of Tahiti'
STARTS '(HURSDAY
Robert Preston
Harry Carey
'Parachute BatlaUon'
SATURDAY
3 Mesqaiteers
"Wut of Cimarron"
••
Io
,Z 80
THE SATURDAY DRAMA SCHOOL
o
o
for young-.people tell to sixtcen. 'rhe school is under the direction of
Donald R. Towers, head oi the Drama Department. A complete dramatic. training course in ten Saturday morning classes will include
Speech, Pantomime, Make-up, and Acting Technique.
ForiJtformation Call SWARTHMORE 1764 or write to
TIlc Direl'tor, at THE lUARY LYON SCHOOL
ANNUAL MEETING
"IT
o
AnnOUbces the opeOling of
"Target for
Tonigltt"
in
STARTED
WITII
EVE"
••• _
••
MEDIA
LAST 2 DAYS
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
••• _
•
HELP US
TO SERVE
YOU BETTER!
3. Plea.e carry small bUlldIes whenever possible
when sltol'l,ing in the
store.
CLEARANCES
Robe....._ .......$1.88 10 4.95
Houseeoats ......• 1.00-$1.88
Pajama Scls ....._........... 81.88
Bed Jackets __..._.............77c
STARTS THURSDAY
BUD ABBOTI'
LOU COSTELLO
••• _
•o
Ba_
2. Please order in tlte afternoon for food you may
need early tlte next day.
RODGER'S
Clearance
MANOR
••• _
0
••
DutJelt - Lingle
l
, •• _
The Annual Meeting of the stockholders of the Swarthmore
National Bank and Trust Company, Swarthmore, Pa., for
the election of directors and snch other bu.ines. as may
eome before the meeting, will be held at the banking house
in Swarthmore, Pa., on Tlle.day, Jannary 13, 194-2, between
the honr. of three and five o'clock P. M..
.
ELRIC S. SPROAT, ea.hier.
I
o
o
o
Io
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o
o
o
o
I•
RIDLEY
I
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o
o
I
:•
l
aO"OUGH
.
OF"
SWARTHMORE
Io
o
_
200
_
000
I
APP"O ....IATE seAL'-
ai
OCTOBER,I941
sPRINGFIELD
..... FIRE WARDEN POST
i•
I'
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i
:
_ •.. _ ... _ .•• _ ... _ ... _ ... _ ... _ ... _ ... _ ... _ ..J
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
THE
JANUARY 9, 1942
2
----------_._ .. _- _._-
,
THE
S\v ARTHl\lOREAN
I o'cJol'l. ill till' Swarthmofl'
Prcsbyteriilll Churl'll whl'n ),1 iss Pdr.1 Christine
I.ingl(: dau,L!htcr of llr. and ~Ir". Roy
. i I'(:trall Lillgll' IIf Corm'lI
Han'ard
l'lItcrtainl'(i
with CI]l'ster nlad onr t!ll' holida,'''':',
'I:rt]\'t· IlulTdt ·"11 I.i .\Ir. and ~Ir.s,
their anJlual Xcw Yl'ar's Eve party.
~Ir:-. 1: .. .\",1 ~t.tulrl'r of Tio~a LOUlltyi :\lIrllla!1 1)lIlfllt llf :\iag;lra.!·~;t1b. \';,Y.
Their gucsts included ~Ir. ;:IIHI ~Jrs. l'ntt.-rtaitll'll
with
a
lIIist'cllaol'olls The Un. "a\'i(~ BI~aun .. n",,'wh'cI. l.hl'
\Villiam Boyle, :\Ir. alld .\In. Hob- !'Ioh"\\l'r at tht. lIan';lnl iI\'t'IHlC hOllle of: rllUI"l'h \\":1" I'Ir{'i'II\'t'ly I!glltl·t! WIth
lTt Saul. Dr. and ~Ir~. DOllald Fred- 11l'f lIIotiu'r :\Ir:-. Johll E . ..\Iit.:hm'l b~t! i\,(lr) ctllt,r,·" .l""Il~II(.':- and dl't:llratl'd
l'rick, :\(r. and .\Irs. Iohn Cush- \\'t'l'k ill h(llwr of :\Ii"" Jl':I11 (.'O("h-I with Ila~kt' ... 01 \\,1 .. 1<' ;ltld ydhl\\' chrymall, of I{OSl' Yalh,'y, )ir. and .\Irs. ranl' IIf 1(('11\'011 ;IH'lIlle \\,1I1I';l' llIarriagt', ~:!i1lhl'IIl11I1l'.
.
DOllal
~Irs, Frederick Allthullv uf Sprillg- an:lI1lt' i . . plalllh'(1 for Fl'hruary.
I It.\_ 111'1' lalIH'l". ,,·pn'." d~l'~~ ,~j whtk
lil'ld, ~Ir. and :\1rs. Natl;aniel Aycr of
1:1'I~ill:i Ihllh'r. ~\\arlhlllOrc Pulllil,'11;1:i1, and :t II1lg('rlll.' \TII wlllt:h was
Drexd Park, ~Ir. and ~Ir~.
(;ilhl'rt.
..
'1 \\T~"IIII III \lr:III~(' hhl"'~OIllS.
,
I.lhrar,' IIhrarran
11a" rdllrlll'l I 'IroTll I 11"111111 hI'
."
'.
•
Bloom nf Glen ~liIIs. Pa., ~lr. :wd ~[rs. 'I
.. " . I
I I
I ,. \.
1 ... 1 ::-;1., 1';lrrinl ;1 1.I\lUljUd 01 (":Ulu,lltas.
H'
'[
.\ IILIIII ;-",111;11 • • (IJlg ~ all'. .... • II' It H
.
·I
I',(
son
arfls, Jr., and )[r. and .\ rs. :-hl' \·isitc.-d Iii.'!" 1I:lfl'llb th,' I~(·,·. alII'
I I" "'''",1,'· ""I "llI'l' ~\ITt't 11\·a ..
'"
.• ,
.
',....
I[arry Seymour pf Swarlhlllort'.
~Ir~. \\'illi:ull Ilulltl'l'.
I '\Ii,,~ ,\11111' 1.1!Jt.;Jc.. ~I"kl' til thl' hr~(h'
Thc ({n·. Ur.
J:arha:,a .\lIi"oIJ a "llIdl'lIt at {:n'l'll1'0111 Dyck with tlwir t!:mghtt'r )'Iargan:t
.
.
_
/)\\1,\,11 l.ill.:.:k :tlltl ~Ii .. ..; ~larj(lril' Duf111'11''- ltJl1t-~l' who ha:- hl"'11 '·l~ltJ1Ig-.,
. I
.
_I I . I
o£ ({utgers il\'l'lIlll' lIa\'c ht'l'lI ."p('ntiill,L!·
.
It"! ',!-Il'r III I I~' grll!llll \\t'fl' ,Ie lrH l'S\11"" m](1 :\lr". J, \\l!t·('lt.-r1 111".'.~
.,' '1'1'
the holiday:> at th(' \\'\':it Ilartiord, ht'r. pan'lIls
..
!l.1'11'~ II" 1""1 _~ ,. '"....
. ,Ir,'~"·"s
.,'" . of
,
\ :l...,~.n·
. -" '.:11 l'aUI I'U' I'II.! I 1 t l'lI Ior .. WI' tI l 'JU I'1Conn.
hotlll' nf thcir son·in-Iaw ;1I1d .\111:-1111 lit.
. a\,,'IIU,' Ira." hl'l'll 1;II:U'
01 ,
hl'r dit~.., ;IIHI al,,(\ 1 !'t!I' C:I'J~ til matt' " l. 'I" U' IIl:W
'1 0 " IIOllor
IlauJ.{hter ~tr. allll .\Ir... \\'al1:lI."t' \\'in- lIIadl' pfl'~](ll'lIt.
;, 1IIl'11111('I' Ilf ~tlldt'l1t (.II\'l·I·IIIII~'lIt.
.!
I'
I'
11,'1
'"
throll BrowlI.
I
I
\\;I~ Til IIH' Ill .... yv 11\\',
It·
IrH CSIll~UuS
~liss Peggy Rillclifh· of Stratb lIavl'lI
UOlIAN(:E IN TIIIlEE Il~~
ill mill!ll'\ hhh·. TIIl'Y carril'd old fas·
.
....
.
liilll;,',1
11"Wllwb "I '.I'llo\\' and him'
a"ClIlll." l'1l1l'rt:lIl1l'd ,111 Dl'l't'lllhl'r .::H 111
ilollor of ~I is~ Barhara Bnushall it
Thrillt'd t·."niu:-illl1 n.:iglt~'d :t:- ;-;tu- 11"\\'I'r~.
iorll1l'r f\'sidl'llt (If ~'\· .. rth1ll0rl' wh(l ,kilts rt'l 111r tlllg for 1.1O ...,t-holl<1:I)' studi~s
'\II_~. I.ill,...;/o- \\,'1'1' all ait~'rllllOIl drl's."
IIOW lin's ill Hdhldll'1tl. CIH'sb in-I !t-al'llt·" thai lhrn" III thl' \,llhltc :-1:hll~)I.:- III t.:rl'.' ~·rt'l'\' \\ illl llIatt.:hillg silli hat
du«il'd
(;eorgl' ~\rlllitagl', Ikhnrah IIt'.adlt·r" .had ~~(,cllIllIIl:d t'l (1I1']d S trilll:lJl'd willI Willi' n'!\,l'l rOSl·:-. The
Dn·w, George Boag-, I'hilip l'ark, Katll- \\'d~'", dllrl1lg thl'lr \·a('~~IH.'I~.
.
.\.!.-III'III·." lIIothvr \\,;1." dn':-sl'd ill ,. c:own
rVII Bclfil'lil \Vildrl'd Park Jaml'~
I'.kallPr !':'aillagl' dldlCI:1II III tltt' "i tIl.:ditllll !lith' with hl('uciing: hat trim.
J{owlalld.
:\lontgt)llh';.\"' .lc.-an ~war.thllltln" IIJgIJ ~dl'l\d .t':lit'teria \\":I~ llH·d with 11':(1111"1'-. IIi ,dIll' ami whitl'.
':Jahcrt\'. Hickin' Parkl'f.
lIlarrll'(1 al -I :.10 P. :\1. :-Oattlrday 1Jt-~ 1'::lr1l \\<11"1' ,I 1·"r".I:.!l' of ganll'ni;,~ and
"
. II 1"~'lIIhl'r _',- I,. ,\1 r. Charles l~l'_"llOl"s ,II Illn!l·t
.
I
I
\
1111·'I1')!~ .
I ...'ll
(('
rl'lurrH',1 h)
a. l'Y \:l'\\"ark. \:. I. in ':-;1. ~1;11·1.:' .. Church
,.
'['I't
\
I
'I'
I
I
-'II".
"'illi,11I1 I)tllrt"tt IIi Bilrllt'l'toll.
·~rg-l· .\ II :lry 1 l':l( ('I.ny
U~S( ay IIIg]t i11 \\'l'st ()ral~.l!l" ;..: ..1.
f
)hill
~nn'd
d~ 111':-1 lIIall illl' his hnlther
I
I
I
I
I
't
a l'r II ]0 \( ay \·:It.:all011 at tit· 101lll'
()II Ikt'('lI1ht'r .)1 at -I 1'. ,\1. ill thl'
,f
I,,
·,r,·",·
'Ir
"111
'Ir
I
I)
I'
",I
alit!
tIll'
1l~III'r:\\,'1'\'
~Ir.
TIllllllas
"
I
IS).
S.\
••
l .\
:'. ••
• \t'..
Clitit, _\Il'lIIoria! Church. ':';'111 Fr:l1ll·i:-l"lI.
I)f Sn-arthmnn' a,·t'IIUt'.
11.",kl'l' II( i\(ll·hl':-h'r. X. Y. and ~Jr.
t'aliiofllia Fralll'cs ~I)'l:'rs, till' third ()\j~ Xirl 11ll- pi 1';tI·kt'r~ll1lrg. \\"'. Va.
Virginia .\lIl1l' Yt'rkt.'~ kit \Vl'
hdl!l\\'illg tlll' n'n'lIltllly tiler .... was a
day to n'turn to her ~tttdies <11 \Vdlc.·:-;. ':-;\,hllol. wa~ manit'li to I.it·ull'llallt bl-Ilull
rt,,'l'\ltil>11 ;,1 tll\' hlllll(' (II thc
Ic)' CollcJ.{(·. \Vdll·~IL·y. ~Iass. aftl'r a ward ~I illl'r, Pur"llit pilol ill tIll' t·. ::..
l,ridl""
pan'lIb
lung holiday with her parl'llb ),1 r. and .-\rIllY ;\ir C()rp~.
\lln
Jallll;II') ](I l.iCI11t'nilllt J)ulft:tt
\Ir~. Hark' P. Yt'rkt· .. I I i South Princel'hylli., Ilas!'tl' Phy~it:al I':dut'atillll
,\iil
iH'
~{;llillllt"d
at FIII·t ~IOIIrOl', Va.
lUll avenue.
il'at.:lll'l· III th~' SW;lrthmon'
Ili.u:h
\\
II'
n
Ilw
(:
'Iri!.\'.
.\lr.
\\~ih-.\'
F.
Cllil
Jr.
Ili
Bryn
.\Iawr
~(r. and .lIrs. D. I{. Tl'rry of Swarth()ut (II tl>\\,11 ,L:Ul'."h illdlltil'(l:
morc avenue madt, CI solo· train trip to ull Ikt.:t'IllIIl')' 3, PJ-II. '1'111' w(',hlillU; \\-ill
\Ir". (~l·tlr!.!t" :\1. \\'icb'r, ~Iiss Barlak,'
pial','
Ilil
.\Iarch
.!N.
11)-12.
Xl'\\" York la~t w{'ck where he \'i~itcd
I , I
J;ar;l
\\·id~l·r. \lr ..... JI)hl! \\'. \\,ick«:r
:\Ir, and ).Irs. Fred Pollak and SOliS
JUllinr
(]~IS~ Enlt'rtailwli
.:11.]
.\Ir:-.
Ll'llrgl' D. l'tllll!'hlrk oi :\,iOst:ar and Gcprgc (If Ri\'crsitlt· Drive
:I:.:ara F:t!k X. Y .• :\Ir. and \11'.'. I-I. D.
ior sew'ral days and saw thl;' :-;ig-hb
David \\\'iland, Duanl' 'fayill!'. ~t'd 1J:J\'i:- :~lld \Ii~" Joan 1);H'i:-, ~.f Plaillthe.' cit~·. The Pollaks who likl' thl'
Rutln·rillrd, Frl;'dl'rick ~11'n'Y :tlld Jim lidd. \: . .J., ~lr:-. John I. lIa\'ila1l
('It·
hl'rl' with Hiehanl, the !Joys rl'maining
of tIlt· Swarthmore Iligh SdlOP) at a 01 Parl':l'r:-hmg. \Y. Va., i)r. Elizabeth
as his guests from :\'cw \'t'ar"'" through
;-;aturday while tllt·ir part'lI1s visited Ilnliday Dancc parlY gi\'l'lI FI'ill:.y ('n'- I'drdll. J;:litilllort' . .\Id., :\11'. and .\Ir!>.
Hing. January ~. at tilt, S\\arthllll,n' En\ 111 C. ~dhll'lrl'l Ilf ,\1;1.~SI'lla, X. Y.,
Washington. I). C.
\\'11111:111' .. Clull.
.\1 r. :11111 \lrs. J. F, .-\nelilla, ~I is~ J t'
Cadl·t H. \V. Da\'idsoll lcit \Vetilles.\IlCI,lla .11' l~nd1t'skr. :\. Y.. )'Ir.
day to return to Staunton .M ilitary
.-'carlt·IllY at Staunton. Va, ait('r a holi.\11'. alit! .\11'''' Carl Schurz l'k;\\'\·~ of
HEI.AX WITH :\ GOOD nOOK
day rceess SJll'nt with his parl'ul..; ),1 r, l'1Il'lH'1I an'IIIH' :lIl1lnlllll'e.· tlr~' t'III,,~a!~,'-'
and ~(rs. H. n. ]);I\,idsnn of Cll('rrl~t~y IIlt'lll 111 tlwir clauL!:htlT :\1 i~ ... 1·:Ji:-al/l:th
PERSONALS
i
I
JANUAUY 9, 19-12
C(·on.'I· I:. ~t"hoefTcl o£ Rochcster, )'l'ar:, old at the time of his death, had
.\". Y., ~Ir. and ~rr~. Harold Scott of tU'l'lI a fl· ... ident of Rutledge until mol'·
~I t'rion, ,\1 r. and ~I r ..;. Benjamin Allen, IIlg til California':. warmer dilllt· I':;
:\IHI\'l'rll. ~Ir. <111(1 \lr~. A)exalltll·r Mac:tg().
kit·, J)n'xl'l
J-Jill,
------__....4._______
••
F.·,·stOttln -
PilnlHII
a .. :-ish'd b\' I~t,\". Carlos .-\1- i
hl'rlp _-\\:ila I.flltht·r·fll-I:I\\' oi thl' hrid .." '
(hlly t!lI' illlllwdiatt· f;t1l1ilil'~ \\"l·rt' pn·,;.
Tilt' hri,h- wht' W;h unallt'ncll'll W(ln' '
all aitt'rllOlln drl'ss oi pail· tur'luoi"l"
\\'0(11 tT\'l'l' ;md an (Irchid corsag('.
. \ itt-r a ~h{lr( \1'I'ddillg trip thl' groom'
\\'ill it-:I\'l' fIll' l';1I11!) .\Il'alk Ilaving hl'l'lI
n'('allnl illr actin' s\'I"\·i('(,. lit, 1'('('\'11111'
n·turnnl III Swarthmore ailt'!" l'UtH'ph·tillg a -"Tar III military -"l'1'\'in' at I
Fun I~iky. !'-:I1I"a:-.
.\! r. Frnctlln is a gradtiatt· of l'olor;11111 ~t;]1l' (,pl"'!.!I· alld ;"-;0 ~iid gr;](II1.. k .;ttllh ;11 tl1l' l·uin'!",il.\ I I i 1't'1I!"'1'1-
I
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Il.. r ..a\·c~cl
.\!lrnl I'. ~lII:llIl'v oi j
Yall' ;1\"l'lIlIt· was 1';1111'11 til Ea~tt;l1 hv:
1lit' Ilt-atll (Ii hi:- Ill'ulhl'l" till' I~t·\'. ~
l'harlv:- F. Slllallt·\·. ,\1.1). 1111 .\III!llla\·:
!If Ihi., \\'1'1'1.:. Dr. Sl11alln' had lin'" j;.'
E:t:-Illll :-illt'(· rdirillL: ..... 'pa"tor Ilf the:
~lllItlt l'he.·_"1l"1' l:a p ii"l Churl'll sn'('cd i
po., I Ill ..... It-I'
.\"1';11"
;1l!11.
- - - - . . -••- - - -
nn~shardt
Rencto .spend Xc\\'
whoYear\.
{'allll' £rom
York
Da\' ).Jew
with
his parents l\I r. and :\1 rs. A.
Ross.
C:
Fla.
M ED IA
.-\ugde:-. Cal. wlu.'n· she 1
w:t:- \';dll'll 1111 lh-n'm!H'r 1.7 hv
thc!
IIl'atlt III' 11('1' ialht"!" C('I,rg,' .\. YUIl!-{l'r I
011 lit,· 1.1,th . .\11'. YUlIgl'r who was
80!
~'i r.
itlld ~I rs. Fl'rris Thum:'1.:'1I and I
sons Tommy and Len
l{idl'rwood, 1
.Md. havc been visiting 1fT:;. Thomsen's,
or
The Players Cluh
of Swarlhmore
•
OUT OF THE
FRYING PAN
By Francis Swann
Director, Lincoln Alki ••
JANUARY 20, 21, 22, 23, 24
8.15P,M.
•
JIM DANDY
By William Saroyan
I>irector, John Dolman, Jr.
JANUAIlY 30 and 31
8.15 p, M.
LAST 2 UAYS
FlUnA Y - SA'ITHlU Y
Deanua
DUUBIN
ehas.
LAUGHTON
Dartmouth and Lnruyclle AVeB_
"We Don't Sell CarsWe Service Them"
(:ImSTEH, PA,
\\ illl
;111 oul
ill ill I oUI'
II Ii 1U1:-
:,nll'C'il\
\Villl IIIC'
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FJ.YING"
STARTS TUESDAY
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NETHER
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LLOYD NOI.. AN
TilE SATUHDA Y DUAMA SCHOOL
" llLU ES in the
!VIGln'"
-"llllllg ,pl'''ph· Ie!! \., :-iXt~·l·l1. Thl' ;-;l'll~),,1 i:- 111HIl'l" Ihl' ,Iin·l"~i,'li 1)[
1)'l)lal,1 I~. '1'1)\\'('1':.. 11\':111 ul t h\., !)rama 1JeIl.trtnh"lll. .\ l"lImpldl' lira·
lII.tlie Irallllll!.! (,('lll'.,,· ill It'll ~:ttllrda.\ lllorllill.t.; c1:t:-..,~.~ will inl"iud,·
::'l'n-r!l. I'a 1! 1,1111 illl 1'. \1 .. Kl· lip. and ;\t·tillg 'I\·chniljtH·.
STAIIT,; TUESIM Y
'South of J'uhiti'
STAHl'S TIllJIISDA Y
inl'
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Unht'rt )'r("stun
Ibrr:,' Carey
'IJttr(If"lll"e BfllIlllion'
SA1TilDAY
:1 M~,q .. i .. ·" ..
~~";I' est
oj CinUfrroll"
ELRIC S, SPHOAT, Cashier,
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OCTOBE.R, 1941
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SPRINGFIELO
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BOROUGH
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SWARTHMORE
0
200
,.r/'
W
RIDLEY
400
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~::R';"I"'A'TE
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~........ FIRE WARDEN POST
... ... ... ... ... ...- ...- ... ...- ...- ... ... - ... - ...-...
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AV
'Ilie Annual l\le.~ling of IIH- l~d.U"kh()ld("r~ of the Swarllunore
National Dank and Trll~t (~ollllt.any~ ~'wnrthnlore, Pa., for
the .-It!('lion of .lirt",·hu·" Hnd ~nu'h other Inlsine,""s as may
("nine he fore Ilu- nlt.'(~lillg, will he held al Ilu~ hanking bouse
in SwartIIl110r(~, Pa... on Ttll':uhlY" January 1 :i" 194-2, hetween
lhe hours of thrt'(" ~tl1ff {h,t- o'd~('k P. 1\1:
\\
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"l'arget for
Tonight"
"IT
STARTED
WITH
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F",· inf""""'I;"" Call SWAHTII;\IUHE 176·~ "'. "Til .. 10
TIl<' IIi,·.·.·,,,,·. ", TilE 'UHY l.ynN SCIIOOI,
ANNUAL MEETING
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I.ANI~
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13 South ChelleI' Rood
Call Swarlhnlore 476
CHARBERT
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PR INCE MA TCHABELLI
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Ill' ill a po~ilioll 10 ('oJlliJllIe rn'('
dl·li'l·r~, ~i,,«~ Iwller ~t·rvic't· allli
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PROVIDENce
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Plt-ase )".,rl'ui .. fruill I·f·nltih Ol'tlt"':-i 1111-
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afternoun I'UI' fund \'UIl Ina,'
IWI',I .'urh' til«' lH"xl d~n:.
Ut·flll'.\, ~/"I('.'i ill jrO.'iI,V
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BEAUTY SALON
EDWARD i\RNOLn
ANNE SllIRU·:Y
WALTV.R IIUSTO!\'
"All That MOlley
Cnll Buy"
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CCke J30uquet
LOII COSTELLO
"KEEP
MARY DUNHILL •
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Ilt'lp 11:' 10 IIwillLuili rpa·
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I, PJ.,i.l!"c .10 1101 at!lk for
mUI'(- Ihan on.' tldh'.'r~' u
Et!"r)' Df'llllrIrU,'"'
HtllU'~ .................. sJ.8a In · ...95
IltHl~I·I·f)at~ ...... 8 I.OO-S 1.&8
I'.. juilin S('I~ .....................8 I.HU
1~1·(1 J'I('kl~IS ...........................771.~
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t;n'al Savings ill
IChul!"'·:; ....................................... 77c
SkirlS ....................................81.00
JUIllIU!r:-; .............................. 81.39
J:H'kels ...............82., .. 9-83.49
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1'1I1,1lt'1' :-;Iarill~ LIS in rile r~I;'t~
I)t·li'l'''~ I,e ord('r~ IHf.ly Ilet'tllllt'
ThnlOllt the
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aid ror 1l,,,Liullal
t!c,j'ell:-Ol' paralllOUlt1
".
( 'oat'S :::;"'l~oJ, 9'".., "I'
Dresses $2.8811)1
SI}orlswear
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HELP US
TO SERVE
YOU BETTER!
•
.,
CLEAHANCES
_ _ _ _..._..._..._..._.__ ... _...- ... _..._..._... _... _..._...
_
f··_···_···_···_···_···_···_···_· .. ........... _... ... ... ...
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2.
RODGER'S
____ _
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Datterl..
RUSSELL'S SERVICE
1.0_.,
t:I"ttr""f'"
~~~::~:::::~:::::::~II
hardt of Park a\'l'lIIH' has now gone 1
to spellcl t\\'o wel·b at Coral r.ahll·S. 1
Ti I'estone
~olla"lc' :,pr\' in' for t'\f~I'\OIl(".
Lingerie
DURBIN
brothl'r- and sister-in·law Mr. and ~Irs. i
K. D. Swartzel and thrir thn'(' daugh-I
tcrs of ~l'W York.
I
Call 440
~I r:-. Frallk Gdtz of /)ickillSIIII avt.·-I
1I11l' i_~ ill
nOOKS
MANOR
"IT u~'I'AI{1'E·.I)
"711'H
Ii~VE.'"
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The Sure Cure for any Auto Trouble?
;:U'ull'
lioll 10
t;t-uJ"gc- \'1I11~('I· Hit·",
in (:&tlil'ul'liia
(:It·flrflll(·'~
\ ret h ad i S t Stude n ts C11Il ft'ft'1l Cc as a I"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~II
(lc1cgatc from Drl'w Uni\'l'rsity. Hc is
a membrr oi the Inll'rniltionai Ih'latiolls COlli lIliU ('l' of the [ontefl'net".
:Mr. and ~trs. E. D. Brauns of Vassar aVelllll' ha\'l' III'l'll l'ntl'rtaining' ~Ir.
F .. i.lay - S~'tllnl~,y
Braun's mnthl.'r alld thrl'c sister:-, :\1 rs.1
:\(ahcJ K. Brauns and tht· ~li:,sl's Amine, i
DEANNA
Dorothy, and :\1:lry Brauns of Indian-I
;tpoiis, Ind.
Gucsts of ~I r. and :\1 rs. \VilIia1lI E.!
Danforth of Cornell avenue recently
Charles Lallghton
were ~lrs. Danforth's motht'r Mrs. K.
Do You Know
TIres
l'll t.
h;ls hl"cll a.t t~ll' Ulli\'l'r~ity oi Illillt)is.l .\ Iwal.!tifnl c:lIl1lk light wedding h'ok
Crhi'llla. IlhlHHS whac hl' attl'lldl'd the 1IJal'{' Iasl ~atlll"()ay alll'rlllll)ll ;It -I :JIl
1J. Swartzl'i oi Los ;\ng-c1es, Cal. who'
",ill remain sl'veral w(·eks. and her
1;\
C\Tt'lIItlll\'
A
~"E\\,F.ST
,
tli till' ~W
or
HEAD TIlE
Birlh
",ulI I
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I~;It1rarilll'
l.on'll("
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In :\Ir. allti ~Ir."" Chilrk~ :\oleKet'
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tlau.L:htt·r oi ~11". :lilt] :\1 r.~ . .101111
It.
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of
llagt'r:-.lowlI.
Md. "II Sunda\'.
Dl'·
lIJall Hi \':I:-""r :\\'('lIIW \\';I.~ \\"l'd in a
.
.
n:mhLT '!8. i~ tht· (I!ild of til(.' i(lfnll:f
:-lIlIpk n'n'lIIOIIY In ~] r. JO"l']Ih \'"rig-ht:
Frall\·(·... ilurtoll ;lIId till' gn:al-grandI<'rl'-.('olll :-011 of ~1 r. and :\1 r ... Lllvdt
('hiltl of ~Ir. Tholllas \V. ;\mIn.'\\' of
Fn':-cohl (lj Ilarvarcl an'lIlI\' 011 Tuc..;-'
\'lJrlh Cht'sh-r road.
I!ay :lftl'f1ItIOIi :It -l (1\'iI'ck ill tht, (')I:IP,·, ~------------------,
,·:iWllOd
Wild.
t:llulcl ('ll';1\ l' .. alld ,\1 :'. Xidwl;\s I.l'onid
1li:-.s Ruth Hamlllouci oi ;,\,iagara TlIrkt'l'idl !-ollll "i l:ishllJI I.t·OI]1I- of
Falls, N. Y. was amollg thc holiday Chicago. III.
guests of :Ur. cHId .lfrs. ~Ich-in F.
,\1 iss 1...'1(':\\,\';-' W:lS gradllatc.·d irolll
\Vood oi Elm aVClIlIe who also had tilt· IlIllIan Schlllil allil alll'III"'d the
with thcm during' the Sl'asan )(r. l'llin'l'sity .Ii I 'I' III I."." h';111ia.
\Vood's lUothl'r ~lr:-.. Ora F. \Vood and
,\11'. 'J'urkc.·,'it.:l! i~ :\ gr,lllu:lh' IIi Dart.
.)'lr. and Mrs. C. \V. H;lUlUann of IlHlllth ('(llIq,!I' ill tilt· c1a~s ill' 1')-In. He
POlllptull Li'lkl'~. :\. J. as wen :ts till·ir alh'lHh-d Tlld-; Sd!lI(11 al I );Irtmlluth
·... on Lawf(·net· Alldrl'~ whn ldt last alul I]II\\" 1" \\·itll II'l' (~I'lll'I'al I:.ln·tl·ic
'~ul:day to rl'SUllle his ~tudit'" at PI·lIn·. t','llIpaIlY 111 Jlllibddphia.
.sylvania St<.tte Colll'g'l'.
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... T. j
)CrtO! "1 a of V
3
SWARTHMOREAN
SCALE
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J
JANUARY 9, 1M2
THE SWARTHMOREAN
.. ONE TOUCH
OF NATURE
/
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THE SWARTHMOREAN
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT SWARTHMORE, PA.
THE SWARTHMOREAN. INC•• PUBLlIIIIER
PHONE SWARTHMORE 900
PETER
E.
TOLD.
Edilor
MARJORIE TOLD.
Auociale Editor
ROSALIE PEIBSOL
Entered as Second CIau Mattor. January 24, 1929. at the Poot
OBi•• at Swarthmore; Pa.. UDdor the Act of March S, 1879.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1942 .
Christian Science Church
Thta aerlee wm
be continued.
I
I •
nm
week.
PhotOlP'8phie ExhibItion
.
Next Week
The third annual photographic exhiat the Woman'. Club House
opens Tuesday evening, January 13, at
8 otclock with an: evening meeting to
WOMAN'S CLUB
which all interested are cordially inthis time the speaker will be
OPENS NEW YEAR vited. AtStubenrauch
president of the
Guild WhO will conduct an
gallery talk. The exhibit will
open Wednesday anc~ Thursday,
14 and IS, from 3 until 5 and
until 9, and is open to the pub-
Movie of Points Now Under Fire
Shown Tu~y Followed
by Musical Interlude
preach on the subject "The Support of
Faith."
the opening meeting for 1942 the
The monthly meeting of the Church W"m,on's Club enjoyed a timely picture
exhibitors should deliver their
HGod" was the subject of the Lesso n - Board of Education will be held on "Trans Pacific" on Tuesday afternoon I pr'int:s to Mrs. Alfred E. Longwell, 222
Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Sci- Monday evening at the home of Mrs. at the club house.
avenue, on Sunday afternoon,
entist,oo Sunday, January 4
Lloyd E. Kallffman, 313 Dartmouth
The film which was presented by the
11, between 3 and 6 o'clock.
"Sacrament" wiU be the subject of avenue.
Philadelphia Electric Company, carried PREDICT YOUTH'S NEEDS
the Lesson-Sermon in aU Churches of
The 'Vaman's Society of Christian its audience from San Francisco to
Christ,. Scientist, on Sunday, January Service will hold its monthly luncheon l.Hon.g Kong on a Pan-American clipper
"Acceptable Quatities- in Youth" will
, ,
on Wednesday at 12 :30. The luncheon
Arrivals at Midway, Wake Island, be discussed nex~ Tuesday evening be11.
Trinity Parish Noles
will be followed by the January meetand the 'Philippines were in- fore 8th grade fathers, mothers, and
ing. Mrs. 'N. Trimmer who was a miswith glimpses of their cities, teachers in the Museum Room at the
On Sunday afternoon at 5 o'clock, sionary in China will speak, bringing a their natives, tropical birds and plant College avenue School. Dessert will be
the Epiphany-tide Service of Lights most interesting and timely message
and the glorious blue of the sur- served pI;'omptly at 7 :30 P. Af.
will be held. The Magi will pr."entl out of her own personal experiences. rounding waters. One could not help
Since 'colleges and business look ,---,.
their gifts at the manger
and She was stationed in China with her
feel a closer touch with these out- definite qualities in their applicants,
everyone present will be given a candle husband a medical missionary until she posts of this country and a greater those who guide the lives of 8th Gradwhich will be lighted at the end
was recalled with other women mis- strengthening of de~ermination to re~
in our junior High School are eager
the service from a central light.
sionaries b:r the Church's Mission lease them from their present peril to
chart youth's development toward
The Monthly Corporate Communion Board at the request of the State De- the beauty and peace of so short a time
practical goals. On Tuesday eveo[ the members of the Young People's partment due to the war situation. Dr past.
they will listen to authorities in
Fellowship will be held on Sunday Trimmer remained in China to carry
A musical interlude by Mrs. W. F. G.
education and in business.
Dean Frances Blanshard of Swarthmorning at 8 o'clock followed by on his much needed work. All womtn Swann, program chairman, gave evibreakfast
o[ the church and community arc in- dence of her versatile talents. Mrs.
College will discuss uQualities of
On Wednesday aUernoon from 3 :30 vited to hear Mrs. Trimmer on Wed- Swann played three selections for Personality and Scholarship," considto 5 o'clock the Guild-Auxiliary will nesday.
viola: a Handel Sonata, a Gavotte by ered important in candidates by college
hold a tea for the women of the Par~
, Ia
Popper and the lovely "Come Sweet admission committees.
ish. Mr•. H. Clifford Campion is the A.sk Silver Offering
Dcath" arranged from a Bach chorale.
Edward N. Hay, Personnel Officer of
chairman of the committee in charge
Mrs. Swann was accompanied at the the Pennsylvania Company, will point
and as hostess will be assisted by the
For Paralysis Fight piano by Mrs. Anthony Ventner in her out "What Business Expects of Youth."
officers of the Guild Auxiliary and
usual competent manner.
With a view toward stimulating praccommittee of parish women. All woThe local committee which annually
tical application o[ these standards,
men of the Parish arc most cordially raises a [und to assist in fighting in·
Eaton Speaks Tuesday
James M. Miller of the High School
invited to attend, especially all new fantile paralysis asks• that
while
resiHAre
We
Over
EducatingOurselves?"
K arns, 8 th
H
D f
I'S the subJ' eet of a talk to be gl'ven next sta ff an d M rS. George "
.I.)'.
d euts are engaged In
comers in Swarthmore.
orne
e ense
Grade mother, will discuss how the
The regular monthly meeting of the they forget not that the battle against Tuesday afternoon by Roland L. Eaton. school and the home can cooperate to
Guild Auxiliary wilt be a short business this disease is a branch of that work.
Mr. Eaton needs no introduction to
qualities mentioned by the premeeting on Wednesday Inorning at 10 Therefore from january 14 to 24 a a Swarthmore audience. As a parent he
speakers. Visitors are welcome.
to door canvass will be conducted has observed at first-hand the changing
• a
o'clock.
On Thursday the women of the Parby workers under the auspices of thoughts on educational procedures. As ,DRAMA COURSE TO OPEN
ish are asked to resume their Red
Swarthmore
Roosevelt
CJub. a member of the Swarthmore School
Cross sewing. At 12 o'clock noon there I
will be asked to respond Board for twelve years and its presiAdditional opportunities for young
will be the weekly services of inter-I'
no way will this collection
for three he is familiar with all actors are pre.ented by the Saturday
cession and prayers for peace.
with the offering in other cambranches of school progress and Drama School to open Saturday morn• I a
since only a silver gift is ex. development.
ing, January 17, in the Little Theatre
Every child and adult will be
The program will follow the month,lyl of Wildcliff Junior College. Two tenan opportunity to help in this business meeting of the club with Mrs. weeks courses will be given for stuPresbyterian Church Notes
acknowledging an individual re- Warren M. Foote and Mrs. Luther N. dents between the ages of ten and sixThe guest preacher on Sunday 111oroDimmitt as hostesses. Mrs., Roy M. teen, including work in speech, pantoing, January 11, will I;e the Rev. Dr.
aI,
Horsey and Mrs. John R. Kline will mime, make-up and acting, under the
Reid S. Dickson general secretary of
"Cercle Francais" Meets
preside at the tea-table.
direction of Donald R. Towers, head
the Presbyterian Board of Pensions.
The Drama Section will present Mrs. of the Drama Department at Witdcliff.
The sermon topic will be "The ChrisThe French Circle o[ Swarthmore'
F. Boyle in a revi~w of curMr. Towers, who came to Wildcliff
tian and a Warring World".
held its January meeting at the home of
plays next Tuesday, January 13 after ten years at Lawrenceville
The Men's Bible Class meets each Mrs. H. J. Creighton Monday ev•• niln8r.1~Lt 1-:00, R."MI',','.":" .
School in New Jersey and six years as
Sunday morning at 9 :45. Emery Nel- of this week. Harold M. March profes- The third annual Photographic Ex- head of his own stock company in
SOil of the Chester Y. ·M. C. A. is the sor of French at Swarthmore College hibit under the direction of Mrs. AI- Maine, has had wide experience on
current speaker.
was the speaker and Mrs.
L.
E. Longwell will open to the pub- Broadway. He was seen locally last
The High School Fellowship
Ward served as co-hostess with
on Tuesday evening at 8:00 P. M. month in the Players Club production
meet Sunday evening [rom 6 to
Creighton. After holding members Mr. Arnold Stubenrauch president of of liThe Great Adventure" and is cast
o'clock in the Parish House.
spellbound with his deep, detailed sur':
Providence Guild will conduct an in the Club's current play now rehearsLeora James Sheridan will give
vey-study o[ "Romanticism" Mr .March
gallery talk.
ing.
second illustrated talk on South ArlleLr-1 engaged them in a lively discussion
On Friday, January 16 at 10:00 A. M.
In addition to routine work, the
ica.
the subject.
informal round table discussion of group will produce a play for presentaThe executive board of the \Voman's
' •
interest to all club mernben will be tion at the close of each of the courses,
Association witt meet Friday. January
by the Art Section. Mrs. insuring a public appearance for all
Lackey, Mrs. Carl de Moll partl'c,'pants . ~..
..L hO
soars
9, at 10 A. M. in the Parish House.
'.
ch I h'IpS h ave
The Woman's Association wilt meet
and Miss Florence Tricker wilt discuss been made available through the genWednesday, January 14. Sewing will Troop No. 83 resumed its meetings on and analyze actual pictures.
erosity of onc of the patrons of The
begin at 10 A. M., the worship service January '} at the Swarthmore PresMary Lyon School, which is sponso:rinLg I
led by Mrs. Paul C. Payne will be
byteriall Church.
Spanish Class Opens
the Saturday Drama venture.
at 12 :15. The business meeting win
Beatrice Brewster told the story of
The class which is making a study
• I ,
at 12:30 followed by the luncheon
the Opera uCarmen" and played fa- o[ Spanish held its first meeting yesterMothers' Club Today
1:00 P. M. The speaker at the lunch- miliar excerpts from it.
day at 10 A. M. at the club house with The regular meeting of the Swartheon will be Dr. C. Dudley Saul who will
Mary Lou Denton and Brenda Rob- Elsie Pitman de Avila as instructress. more Mothers Club will be held at 2 :30
speak on "Alcoho!ism."
illson, Swarthmore College students as- The class has one or two vacancies if P. M. Friday, January 9, at the Pres• I •
sisted at the meeting.
there are still any who care to join.
Church. The guest speaker
Methodist Church Noles
Plans were made to go ice skating on
Jr•• Hear Review
be Mary Spiller of the nursery
Saturday hoping that Crum Creek will
I~~:.~ of the School in Rose Valley
still be under the influence of Old
On Tuesday, January 13, the junior I'
subject will be flDiscip1ille."
On Sunday morning at 9,45 the
section will hold its first stated meeting iiF;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Church School will convene, followed Man 'Vinter.
- - - 0...,...._ - of the New Year at the Club house.
by morning worship at 11 o'clock when
Brownies Meet Monday
The program promises to be very interesting. Mrs. Roland Eaton will give
the Rev. Dr. Roy N. Keiser rector will
CHURCH SER
The Brownies will hold their regular a book review on "Lanterns On The
RegIstered
_..;~
VIC=F...S,=== Monday meeting next week at the Levy". Birthday pennies will also be
PLUMBING and HEATING
~
Presbyterian Church from 3 untit
collected.
Automatic Beatln, Equipment
P. M. Four new girls who have comBefore the stated meeting at 6
218 W.
MEDIA
pIe ted their Brownie tcsts will be '~:~:,~~ o'clock, the Board members will hold
omce-MedJa 2598 Res. Media lB25...t
9:45 A.M.into the Pack and presented with'
a business session at a buffet supper
11:00 A.M.
1i'i!.i§~'CiiiiiiiC'EilmembershiP pins at this session: Jane at the home of Mrs. John Michael of
~~
Reynolds, Gretchen Bauer, Nancy Grier Harvard avenue.
and Corinna Foster.
Atlend Danee
S
Eight members of the Junior Club
9:45 A.
MW"thmore " •• Proape~' Parle
who joined about 80 other junior Club
9:45
10:00
The Swarthmore High School basket- members of Delaware County attended
11:0
ball team will compete with-the Pros- a dance at Camp Dix, N. J. on Mon.
::,-----1 pee! Park team in the high school gym- day evening given for the boys of the
6:00
naslUm at 8:00 tonight
Air Squadron stationed there.
Although this is the second game
The Swarthmore groUP included
the .Swarthmore team, as they defeated Helen Ludwig, Eunice Eaton, Anne
Sprmgfietd High in December it will Wood, Antonica Fairbanks, Tatiana
and aer... be the first of this season's' league Kane, VarreU Drew, Mildred Hirst
SERVICE
Evelyn Wherry.
~~;~~~l~;~:or~le
;:;;~~;:t
I
G,o...1 Scout News
I
B. F, BERRY
•
I
I
Sl:'!::on~"
,,
SJqIe aIJ.IooIek d ...w.,..
Ba1IIlD 1919.
~S.BROWN
TelepboDe
Swarthmore 904
MARTEL'S
LEGS OF
LAMB
The julclest and tenderest 01
lamb roost-Always at Its best
at Martel's.
Ib 33c
MARTEL'S
Rm ROAST
For a wonderful Sunday
dInner - A real hum d1nqar of a roast.
U:OOA.M.-
Do. Your Banking With
SWARTHMORE NATIONAL
MARTEL'S
PORK LOINS
Economy and delicIous eatingBrisk weather calls for roast
pork.
Ib29
c
MAPLE PECAN
LAYER CAKE
You'll rave over its home-
like goodness ...
ea45c
Fry lo a Golden Brown I
LARGE SMELTS
For a delicious inexpensive meal
on Friday.
Ib29
c
Extra Special!
MARTEL'S
FRESH
COUNTRY
TABLE EGGS
At a Low Price
Shell
White
doz49c
20 Mule Team Borax
SOAP CHIPS
Safe for clothes or hands.
PUDDINGS
Royal-Chocolate, vanU\a
Bank and Trost Company
"zrrtef lIeJenl O.pllll huuaaee C p.adaD
PBrER Eo TOLD
In.suraace
..
+17 Dartmouth Ave.
..a.J.. l~'
"~.~LZ~"
sealed Oonlroller"8
prouooals will
be received
the
county
omce-.
court at
Bouae.
Media. Pa.. until 1 p. m. and pubUcI3'
,'''DOING THE
A new study
on "Know
be group
sponsored
by the Your
local
branch of the- I..eague of Women Vot·
crs on the next three Thursday mom"V\
10
ings, January IS, 22, and &.y at
o'clock. Mrs. Raymond Denworth of
opened at 2 p. m. on Wedneeday,.JanlW'J Schoo1" will
28, 'D42, for furDlahlng and dellverlnll to
the Delaware County Home, Llma. Fa., BUollne. and 011 for the use of the Delaware
qounty Institution District.
SpeclDcatlons BDd blddIng sheet me,. be
obtained at the ODlce of the County CODtroller, and DO bid wUI be entertained un-~..tlz.' a
id must be accom=~ted
made
'ess
Each
b out on said bidding (,1 .00)
certlfled check of One Hun
of the Dela...
to th order
d wnT-~Iutlo.n
....CO.unraty
Dl8trlct.
ware
.a.ua"
The Admtnl8tratlve
and Executive Dtrectors of the Delaware COUnty Instltutlon
District
reserve the right to reject any or
all bids.
H. WALTER WEAVER,
County Controller.
a
Do.'
Elm avenue chairman of the League's
department o[ government and educat,' OII wl'll conduct the course which will
cover five sections: hthe pupil.
the
bo
school
personel,
the
sc
001
ard,
school plant, and who supports the
the
1..9-3t
school, ending with a discussion of education hi national delense.
~.
The meetings wilt an be held in the I
museum room of the High School and
arl' open to the public.
SHERIFF BALES OF REAL ESTATE
Sherlff's Office, Court Bouse. :MedIa, Pa.
, 1I
Saturday. January 31. 1942
Young Brain Specialist Called
9 :30 A. M. Eastern Standard Tlme
Conditions: $250.00 cash or certUled check.
at time of sale (unless otherwise stated In
Dr. and :M rs. James R. Gay stopped
adverttsement) balance In ten days. Other
a few days this week to visit Dr. Gay's
conditions on day of sale.
No.495 parents Mr. and Mrs. Owen. W. Gay
LevarI Facias
o[ Crest lane while en route from the
September Term. 1941
Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn. to I
All that certain lot or piece of ground. Camp Mead, Md. where as a first lieU-I
a.t Broomall, Marple Township, Delsitua.te
aware County, Pennsylvania. being Lot No. tenant in the United States ~{edical
38.
on the plan of the "Kershaw and Crowl R
D r. Ga y wa s ordhe.red26to re - I
Broomall Tract," as surveyed by Robert P.
eServe
Green, Clvll Engineer. dated January 218t, port 011 January 12• F or t IS
-year1921. and recorded In the Recorder of Deeds old «raduate o[ Johns Hopkins UniOffice in Media. Delaware County. pennsyl.r-.
•
vania, In plan case No.2, page 3; etc .. and, vcrslty who has been marned one year
described as follows: Situate on the North this caU to his country's defense interside
of the(Slxty
PhUsdelrhla
andat West
Chester rupts a [our-year [ellowshlp
• .111 bram
.
Turnpike
fee -Wide)
the dLstance'
of Fifty f~et Eastward from the East slde of I' surger)· at the famous clinic on which
summit
Avenue Northward
(Forty·flve onfeet
wide)
the-nee extending
a Une
at .he hegan work last October.
P. T. C. For
Bud Wernher Wounded
, E Duration
r n e s t Wernher of the Shirer Apart-
.
d
H.alph T. Senter president
of the men t s, S ou th Ches t er roa d w a. no t'fi
I e
Ph'l d I h' T '
by the War Department early this
I a c p la
ransportatlon Company
this week said, "One of the vital factors week that his son Walter A. "Bud"
.
'''cruher had been slightly injured in
in the winning of this war is transporM W
h
.
0 ur arme d f
actionin inChicago
the Philippines.
r.
ern on
er
tatlOn.
orces,'
our workmen was
this week counting
an d t h e materia
. 1s t h ey pro d uce, must b e the Department's promise to keep him
move d,an d moved quick Iy to insure our posted regarding his SOil.
ultimate victory. It was true in Napol• ••
To Make Surgical Dressings
con's day that an army 'traveled on its
stomach,' but today it tra\'els on wheels,
Mrs. Earle P. Yerkes of South
ill the air, and across the sea.
Princeton avenue head of Circle #9
"In Philadelphia, the 'arsenal of of
the
Swarthmore
Presbyterian
America,' more than a quarter-million
Church Woman's Association an1IIen and women are now working day
and night to manufacture the mat~rial nounces that this circle witt meet e'very
Tuesday morning beginning j an'Uary
of war.
·"fhese many thousands of men and 13 at 9 :30 o'clock in the Church house
women must be there to man the as- to do ~urgical dressings for a great
sembI)" tines and machines. It is the job de[ense need in the Chester district.
of the Philadelphia Transportation Tht· meetings will be open to all interCompany to see that they get there ested persons. Those attending should
from their homes scattered throt1ghout bring aprons. For further information
Mrs. Yerkes may be reached by telethis area.
phoning
Swarthmore 1580.
"This is the most important task ever
• I I
faced by PTC. Every persoll in the comA member of the Don Co888ek oul- patly realizes that a .breakdown in this
Recreation Group to Elect
fit which comes to the College to- war-service is unthinkable. 1.'he comThe regular January meeting o[ the
niaht ill gUmp,lJed in the odd", of I hincd efforts of every person in the
hi. performance of a traditional PTe organization will he devoted to Swarthmore Recreation Association
will be held in Borough Hall at 7 :30
this patriotic duty.
CauC'a.ian knife danC!e.
"New routes have been added, exist- P. M. oext Monday, January 12. The
ing tilles extended, and maintenance election of officers and directors post~lr. and Mrs. \V. S. Hoffman of Park work has been stepped up to meet this poned £rom the October session wilt .be
avenut: during the holidays left for demand.
held at this time.
Ocala, Fla. to spend the winter.
I
I
-:============='================================================:----
or butterscotch.
TIIB
,
• :45 A.JL-
L. W. V. Study of Edoeation
: DBLAWAlIB 'b'kura7aP'S'111UI10N
FOR SALE
6_
JANUARY;9~'~1;94;;2;;,;;;~~~~~~=:~;;;,::;,~~,:T;H~E;;.~SW~A~a~T~B~M;.O~R~E~A;N~~~~~~~-;~~
__~~~~::~~~:;.~~5
'LEZGINKA'" I Enltst~
the
I
MARTEL?~
FOOD MARK", I
SWARTHMORE 2100
West
Chester
One hundred,
right angles
with Turnpike
the said PhUsdelphla
and ____
ThIrty-six and Fifty one-hundredths feet'
to a point In Lot No. 56, thence. eztendinA:
Eastward along the side Une of Lot No. Sif.
Forty-six and SiXty-nine one-hundredths
feet to a pOint in Lot No. 39. thence extending Southward along the East line of
Lot No. 39. One hundred. Porty-three and
Twenty-five one-hundredths :feet to the
North side of the Philadelphia and West
Chester TUrnplke; thence extending West...
ward along the North side of the Phlladelphla and West Chester Turnplke Forty-sUe
and. Twcnty-one-hundredthfJ feet to the
first mentioned point and place of beginning.
No lmprovement8-vacabt ground.
Sold as the property of B. Phebe LewlB.
nlso known as Phebe LeWis. real owner.
RAYMOND E. LABSON, Attorney.
No. 45
Levari Fncill8
December Term, 1941
AU that certain lot or pleee of ground
wIth the bulldlngs and improvements there·
on erected; situate in the Township of
Upper Darby. County of Delaware and State
of Pennsylvania,' bounded and described
according to a survey and plan thereof
made August 29, 1924, by Darnon and Foster.
Civil Engineers. Upper Dorby. Fa., as fol·
lows. to wit:
Beginning at a point In centre line of
Pennoak Avcnuo··(forty foot wide) at the
distllnce of two hundred and forty-five feet
north twenty degrees three minutes twenty
seconds east measured from the point of
intet8ectlon of centre Une of said Pennock
Avenue with the centre Une of Lennox
Road (forty feet wide).
Containing In front or breadth along
centre Une of satd Pennock Avenue. twenwflve feet, and extendlng of that width in
length or depth north slxty-nlne degrees,
flrty.slx minutes. forty seconds west be...
tween parallel lines at right angles to said
Pennock Avenue, the distance of one hundred and ten feet. Being No. 118 Pennock
Avenue.
Under and subject. nevertheless, to certain conditions and restrictions as therein
mentioned.
Improvements consist of two-story stone
nnd stucco hOWle. 16x32 feet: porch front.
stucco garage. 10xi8 feet.
'Sold as the property of John H. Murray
and Elizabeth V. M~rray. his wife, :-eal
owners.
\
·WM. K. RHODES. Atto~ey.
No. '29
Levari Facias
December Term, 1941
All that certain two-started brick dwelltng house and lot or piece of ground Bit..
uate In the Borough of Medla county of
Delaware and State' of Pennsylvania and
bounded and described according to a survey *hereof made by C. M. Broomall. Borough Eng1n~r. May 6. 1924, as follows:
Beginning at a point in the Northerly
line of Btate Street at the distance of One
Hundred Sixty-three and forty one-bundredths feet Eastwardly from ~he northeast
corner of State Street aud Radnor Street:
thence along the Northerly side of said
state Street extending South seventy·nlne
degrees forty-four minutes East fifteen and
ninety-five one-hundredths feet to s point·
thenee by a llne at right angles to said
State Street extending north ten degrees
sixteen minutes East and passing through
the center of a party wall between two adJoining brick dwelUng houses One hundred
feet to the Southerly side of a twelve feet
wide alley extending from Radnor Street to
Manchester Street: thence along the Southerly :side of said Alley extending North seventy-nine degr,ees forty-four minutes West
fifteen and Ninety-five One-hundredths
fPoet to a point; thence by a line at right
angles to the last mentioned Une extendIng South ten degrees sixteen minutes ,West
Rnd passing through the center of a party
wall between two adjoining brick dwelling
houses One hundred feet to the northerly
~Ide of State Street~ the place of begtnnlng.
Being No. 321' East State Street. Media. Pa.
Im'provements consist of two-story brIck I
~use. 16:<:18 feet; Porch front.
i
Sold as the pronerty of John Walls, Jr .. \
Mortgallor and William R. Crutchley and I
Mary R. Crutchley. his wife, real owners.
WM. K. RHODES, Attorney.
1-9-3t
R. S. MUNSON.
I ..sherifi'.
It takes
EEL
ON the battlefield, and behind the lines,
modem war is fought with wheels. Transportation is a vital factor -
our armed
forces, our workmen and the materials
they produce must be moved quickly to
insure ultimate victory.
It is the responsibility of Philadelphia
Transportation Company to see that more
than a quarter of a million war workers in
tliliI ~rea are p'ansported to their jobs daily.
This is one of the most important tasks
ever faced by PTC. Everyone in the company realizes that a breakdown in efficient
transportation is unthinkable -
must not
happen. The combined efforts of PTC's
•
to WIn a war
10,000 employees are devoted to seeing
that it shall not happen_
Ever increasing are the transportation
needs of wartime Philadelphia, We are
meeting those needs with more and better
service - by establishing new routes, by
extending others, by stepping up schedules, by providing new and modernized
equipment. Millions have been spent to
improve service. More will be spent during the coming year to serve the "Arsenal
of America':
PTC has enlisted for the duration. All
our men, our women, our resources are
all-out to help win absolute victory. This
is our pledge to Philadelphia • • • and to
America!
S're cHAPs ar~ popular--lll
,
". nol lhe CHAP that afI, ci:' ':Cand" of home laun: elreS' . ·these freezing day".
: O.tracize ,hal chap by using
•
PHILADELPHIA
MEDIA LAUNDRY
-Can Media: tTl or StOP' Our Drinr
-152'22.-
TRANSPORTATION
COMPANY
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
THE
4
~
PUBLISHED
EVERY FRIDAY AT SWARTHMORE,
PA.
Thls serIes wlll be continued next week.
TilE SWARTHMOREAN, INC., PUBLI!ftIER
PIIONE SIV ARTIIMORE 900
PETER
E.
TOLD,
Editor
MARJORIE TOLD,
I
Assocwte Editor
Entered as Second Class Malter, January 24, 1929, at the Post
Office at Swarthmorc Pa' l under the ACl of March 3, 1879.
The third annual photographic exhibition at the ''''oman's Club House
opens Tuesday evcning, January 13, at
Providence Guild who will conduct an
y
Movie of Points Now Ulllier Fire informal gallery talk. The exhibit will
remain open \Vcdncsday and Thursday,
Shown Tu"sday Followed
January
14 and 15. from 3 until 5 and
hy l\lusieal Interlude
FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1942
-~--~~
I
Photographic Exhibition
Next Week
8 o'clock with an evcning meeting to
WOMAN'S CLUB
which all interested arc cordially invited At this time the speaker will he
OPENS NEW YEAR Arnold Stubcllrauch president of the
ROSA LIE PEIRSOL
~~-------
ONETOUCH
~=====O=IF=N.=~=TURE==
THE SWARTHMOREAN
JANUARY 9, 1942
SWARTHMOREAN
I
from 7 until 9, and is open to the pubpl\_ach 011 the Hlhjcct "Thc Support of
lic.
Clrri.tian Scicm'(' Churrh
F.l1th."
At thc opening meeting' fOi 1942 the
All cxh:hitOl" ~hol1ld dclh er their
"God" \\,15 the <;ubjcct ui tlte Ll'~SOll'fhe JIIollthl~ mceting of the Church \\"oman's Club enjo~cd a timely picture prints to :Mrs. Alfred E. Longwell, 222
~l'rlllon in all Churchc~ of Chri~t. SCi-I no.lrd of Education will be held on i "'1'r.l1Is Pacific" on TlH.' .. d.1~ afternoon Lafa) cUe avcnue. on Sunday afternoon,
l'nttst. Oil Sunday. January 4
~Iolld.l\ t.;Hllin!! at the home of )'Irs. at tll(· club I1OU5C.
January 11. bet\\ccl1 3 and 6 o'clock.
"Sacramcllt" \\111 be thl' <;lliJjCCt of I.1nyd -E. KautImtln, 313 Dartmouth' The film "hieh \\.IS presellted by the
I I •
the I.cs501l-Scrn10n III all L'hurche:> of t .IHIIIII.
PIllladc1phia Electric COlllpany. carried
PREDICT YOUTH'S NEEDS
l'hrio.;t, 8ci(.'lIti ... t. 011 Sunl,l\. January
The \\'lllll,III'S Socict) of Chrbtian its aud'l'.H.·e from ~.1Il Francisco to
11.
Scnice \\,11 hl)id It .. monthly lunclll:on Illon~ Kong all a Pan- \mcflcan clipper
"Acccptahle Qtla1itil'~ in Youth" will
• I ,
011 \\·cdne ... d,l~ .1t 12:30. The IUllcheon <;llIp. Arrhab at ),IH1".IY. \Vakc Island, hc discussed next Tuesda~ c\ening bcTrinit~ PUl'ish Nolt·~
\\111 he iullll\Hd by thl' J.II1U,lT) 111cet- 1 GU'lIll .tlld thc PllIlippmcs \\ere in- fore 8th .gradc iathcrs, mothers, and
illg. ,Mr~. \\ '{"rmull""r \\ho was a mis- dtHkd. "Ith gliIllP~l" of thdr cities, tcacher:; III the )(USCUIII Room at the
011 f:unda\' afternoon ;It 5 o'c1ock, "'Ionary III ChUla \\ill speak, bringlllg a I their lI:1ti,'es. troplc.lI InnIs and plant College a\'ellUC School. De .. scrt will he
the Eplphal;~ -tick Sen'ice of l ..ighb nw .. t IIltcre~tillg and limely message' lire. and the glonml" hlut.' of the sur- sen ed promptly at 7 :30 P )1.
Since colleges and UUSlIIl'S,S look for
\\ ill hc held. 'fhe Magi \\ ill prco:.cnt out of her o\\n personal experiences,: rounding \\
e\'cryolle pn'''l'nt \\111 he gl\Cll a candle hu ... hand a IlIcdir.11 IIl1ssion.lry until .;he I po ... b of till'" cOlin try lind a greatcr tiloo;c \\ Ito gUldc thc li\'e~ of 8th Grad"hich "ill h ...• lightl'ti .It the elld of \\:1 .... recalll'd \\lth other women 1I11S-lstll'ng-thellln~ of detcrmination to re- l'rs in our Junior Iligh School arc eager
"1\.tlJ.lflCS b~ the Chureh's 11issioll le.I"c thcm from their present peril to 10 chart )outh'5 dc\'(·loplllcnt to\\ard
the scn icc froll1 ,I central light.
The :\folllhh' COl porate Comlllllllll)JI gp.tnl at thc rUlu ...'::-1 or the State Dc- (he bcaut~ and Pl'dCC of so short a time thl'o.;e practical gtlaJ... On Tuesday e\'Cnillg', the) \\ ill li ... ten to authorities ill
(If the llH,'lIIhc;s of thl' Ymlllg Pcople'<; pal tmcnt dUl' to the W.II' situation. Dr. pa"'t.
Fdlow~hiJl \\ 111 hl' hdd on ~l1lld'l~ Tritlll1llr rt'I1l
thl
dltm:h
.lIld
e1,)11I11lUl1lt~
arc
indenl'e
oi
her
\ero;atilc
talcnts.
Mrs.
I more Collegc \\111 disCH'; .. "QualitIes of
hreakfast.
On \Vl·dlh· .. da\ .titcflloon frolll 3.30 \'itcd to ht.:ar ~rr .. Trimmer llil \\'cd~ I ~"all1l pI.qed three selections for Pt:r .. onality and ~cholar .. hil',·' COil sid\'lola' a Hamll.·1 Sonata, a Ga\oUe I,,· ered important in cancli(i.tt ...·s b) college
to S o'clnek th~' Guild-.\uxlh.lr) will 1l(.<.;tl,IY.
•
I
1'0pIK'r .111<1 the Imely "COIIIC S\\e';t adll1i"siol1 cOllltllittct.: ...
hold a tla f\lr thl' WOlUen ()r the PtlrI
Dc,lth" arr.tngeu 110m a Bach choralc
Ed"ard N_ Ha!. PI..·r ... ollll('1 Officer ot
I~h. lil" 11 Cliltord CampwII i ... the
1'11.lirm,1I1 of thl' cnlllmittec 111 ch.1I gc
t I )'Ir .. ~"anll \\.IS accompanied at thc the Pelln"'yh'ania Compall}. \\iII point
I
I IPI,LIlO b} )'fr~ .\nthon~ Yentner il' her out "\\'hat Busine:"s, Expeeb of Youth'
.lud :t ... hostt.: ..... "III hl' "ssj . . hd h) the
'Ii
I
I
.
I' I
II I u~u,tI competent manner.
\\"ith a vi\.-w to\\ar
tical application ot tht·<:.l· standards.
('ollllllittt,C oi pari .. h \\omell All \\0
"
E~I()II Sl)~aks Tuc!'Ol(lu)
_ .. james ).[. ~lll1er oi thl' High School
men of tht' Pari ... h arl' llIo ... t cordially I.'" ... e" a IUlul ,to .IS~lst III figh.tmg 1111.luttl
....
pnral\<:'ls
a
..
k",
that
\\llIle
re
...
,
,\re
\\e
O\er
EdlicatmgOlirsches:
"I.ff an d 'I
G eur~l·.\'1 K ants 811 1
.
. I
I.
.
lk
.
s..
i\ ro.;
im'ltr-d to .tHcnd. l'~Ill'ciall~ .111 lit·"
dellt..
ar
...
·
l·llg.ll.!ed
111 110m .... lJd~lI
... e I ".... tiet Sll J'1..'ct ot a ta
to
he
gl\'ell
ncxt
('
I
11
I
I
' tie
I
•
..
..srate
1110
H.:r.
\\1 I' (1':;CtlS':;
lOW
...·011lers ill S\\.lrthmof!.·.
the~
fOrl.!t:t
I~ot
that
the
b:lttitagalll!:'t
lues{a),
afteillooll
by
1~?lalld
L.
~aton.
school
and
the
hOlllt·
C,1I1
cooperate
to
The regular lIIollthl~ IIIC\.'tlllg of thc
tht--.
(h
...
t:.I
..
e
I ... a br.l1lch ot that work
:\1
r.
I',aton
needs
no
IIltro
I
1
I'
.
I
1
I
II
,.
.,
I
lcve
op
qua
Illes
tIll'n
IOIIC(
n'
1e
llrcGUild Auxili,In \\ III he .1 .. hurt bll .. lIIl·S"
I hell'lol e from jantl.ln l~ to 2-t- .1 .1 ;>\\art unorc
llll'l'llllg 011 \V,·dm· .. d,1\ 1I11)rnillg' at to
I all(hCncl' \s a parent . he \ lOllS spl'a k~ers. \"1
1"'1 or:. are". e 1COIIiC
(hHlf til doOl c.lIn',ass "ill hl' ('oIHlul'ted la., 0 )sen C( at first-hand the chang11lg:
•• I
o'clock.
Ill'n'
In.
"or1~er<;
under
the
au<;picl',"
of
thoughts
011 ~ducatl(:'lIal procedures. As
DRAI\IA
COURSE
TO OPEN
011 'l'11I1I ... d;1\ till' "lll1l~ II (Ii the P.lr
thl
tiw.arthmol
e
Roosc\
cit
Gub'l
a
IIll'mlJcr
ot
the
S\\
arthmore
School
i ... h ar ...·
\\illlllL:'I,. III 110 \\.1\ "Ill thiS collection dellt for three he is familmr \\ith all actors are pr ...·.. eJlt"d b~ the Saturday
"ill hI' the \\I'l'kl) "l·f\llt .. nt 11Itl'r- conllid- \\ ith the offerilll! ill other cam- the hr.tllclll<; oi school progre .. s and Dr.lIna Selwnl III (lpen Saturday 11101'11(·(· ...... Ion ,md pra~ l'r... ior l!l.lll
p.l1L:'Us ~il1Cl' ollh a siher gift i<; ex- de\clopment.
ing'. Jtlnuar) Ii ill the Little Thl'atre
I
~~----c----
FOR SALE
Sin,le a1l·hrl"" dweJlinll'.
6 room•• Built in 1939.
MARIAN S. BROWN
Telephone (After 6 P. M.)
Swarthmore 904
MARTEL'S
LEGS OF
LAMB
lb
33c
MARTEL'S
RIB ROAST
For a wonderful Sunday
dinner ~ A real hum dinger of a roast.
lb
37c
Ash Silver Offerillg
For l>(lr(dysis F·gl
.
••
o
a.
Thl' l'Xt nltl\ l Ihl.trd of tilt \\·\1111,111 ....
\\ III Im:d Fnda) , J anuar\'
~, ,It 10 A. ),1. in the Parish Hnu"c
The \Voman· ... A . . ~llciatlOlI \\111 !lied
\ \'edncsda~. J aHtlar~ l-l. Se\\ Ill!!: \\ ill
begin at 10 1\ ).{. thl' worship ~en'icc
Jed Ii), Mrs. Paul C. 1\1} ne \\ ill he held
at 12·15. 'nil' busmcs" llIl'eting will be
at 12 :30 follo\\cd b\ the hmchcon at
1:00 P ~I The spl.lker at the luncheon \\l1I 1)( Dr. C Dudlq Saul \\ ho \\ ill
speak on "Alcohoho;11I "
Girl Scaut N ews
As~ocitlttllll
•
I •
l\letlrOlli.t CI .....ch No .....
....
On Sunda} morning at 9 :.J:i the
Church SChllOI \\ ill convene, iollm\o'ed
hy morning \\ orship at 11 o'clock when
thc Re\·. Dr. Ro) X. Keio;er rector will
CHURCH SERVICES
~1El'HODIST CHURCH
RDy N Ke~6~D~~' Minister
9:45 A.1\-I - Church School
11:00 A M - Morning
Won;hill
Sermon
theme: "The Support of
Faith."
SWARTHMORE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Re\·. David Braun, Mlnlsrer
SUNDAY
9 :45 A. M. -
Church School.
9:45 A.
1\-1. - Men's Class
10:00
A.M.-Wornen's
Bible Clo.ss
A.M.-Dr ReId S. Dickson guest
preacher. Topic: "The Chl-lsa
Uan and a Warring World."
_.::6:::'OO:::,.;::P,;.'::M!:.~~H~.;;:;:S~.~Fe~I~'O~WS~h~I*P~.,-_______
TRINITY CHURCH
Rev. J Jorden ~~~:Y' S.T.M. Rector
B:OO A. M. _ VPP Corporate Communlon.
9:45 A.M.-Church School.
11:00 A. M. - man.
Holy Communion and Ser~
5:00 P.M.-EPIPHANY
SERVICE
OF
LIGHTS
E\er} child and .adult "Ill be
The plOgram ,,111 follow thl' monthl)
.111 llPlloltUlllt) to help in thi~lhl1<;il1cs" Illet.:ting ol the c1uh \\ith Mrs
\\.I~ ackno\\ll'(i1!1ng .1Il indhltlual rc- \\arrcn ),1 Foote .lIld ~Irs. Luther N.
"'1'1l1l .. ihility.
DUllmia ao; hostesses )o[rs. Rt)\' ),1
,. I •
! 1I00~l'y and )'I!s John R Khn~ \\111
'-eel'ell. I~l'arll'uls'" I\lecls
:prl.... ide at the te:t-tahlc.
,
"
1 The Drama ScctlOn \\iII pre.!'
),11'" II J. Creighton ).Ion
ol thi ... ,~cck. Harol~I)'1 :\1arch profc:-The third alllllwi Photogr.lphic Ex... or OJ I'rt:lIch .It Swarthmore Colll'g'e,iuiJit uuder the direction of ),11:;; 1\1_
\\:1 ... tile "pt,lker and )'Ir ... 11.ellr~ L. tn.d E I.ong-well wtll ope II to the pllb\\:uti .. l·f\l·d a~ co ho ... t~s" \\Ith ).[rs. lie 011 Tue"daY c\cuing at S,OO P. 3.1
('lglltOIl
·\tter holdlllg members ~II .• \rnold Stuhenranch prt.:sidcnt oi
... pcllbolilld \\ Ith hh deep, det.Hled sur- the Prm idellce Glli}(\ \\ ill conduct an
\'l'} -~tllt1y 01 "1~olllanticls11l" l1r ~Iarch 1I1101111al galIcn I
On Frida)', ):ullIar) 16 at 10:00 A. 1\1
tltl' .. ubJ\:ct
all mfOi IIl.lI round table disCll:!>SIOIl of
• I •
IllterCst to all club lI1embl'rs \\ ill he
presented hy the AI t Section Mrs.
Alexander Lackc), ~[rs. Carl de ),1011
and ~[iss Florence Tricker will discuss
TrOllp Xo 8J resumed its met.:llllgs on and analyze actual pictures.
J.lIlUal} 7 at the S\\arthmol e PrcsSpanish Class Opcns
hyteflan Church.
The class \\hich IS making a study
g,,'atnce Brc\\stcr told the ston of
of
Spallish held its first meeting yestcrthc Optra "Carmen" alI
miliar excerpts from it.
),1 aJ Y Lou Denton and Brcnda Rob- Elsie Pitman de A\,II.l as instructress.
inson, S\\arthmOic College students as- Thc cltlo.;" htls one or t\\'o vacancies if
there are still any who care to join.
...isted at the meeting.
Plans were made to go icc skating' oil
Jrs, Hear Revic,",
Saturuay hoping that Crum Creek WIll
On Tuesday, ]anutlry 13, the Junior
~till hc under the influence of Old
sectIOn \\ ill hold its first stated mccting
).Ian \Vinter.
of thc New Year at the Club house.
------~
,--~--
The program promIses to bc very ;nBrownies l\lwt Monday
tcrcsting. ~l rs. Holand Eaton will give
Thl' BrO\\uics \\iIl hold thcir regular a book re\ icw on "Lanterns On The
).Ion
Before thc stated meetmg at 6
P. )1. Four new girts who have como'clock,
the Board members wiII hold
pletcd their Brownie tests will be takcn
a
business
session at a buffct supper
liHo thc Pack and prcscntcd "'ill, tl,e,'r
at
the
home
of Mrs. John Michael of
membership pins at this session: Jane
IIar\'ard
avenue.
Rcynolds l Gretchen Bauer, Nancv Grier
tlntI Corinna Fostcr.
Attend Danee
Eight members of the Junior Club
I I •
S fear th mOTe vs. P rospect Park
who joined about 80 other Junior Club
The Swarthmore High Schoolbaskct- members of Delaware County attended
ball team \\ill compete with lhe Pros. a dance at Camp Dixl N. J. on Mona
pect Park team in the high school gym- day evening given for the boys of the
nasi urn at 8:00 tonight.
Air Squadron stationed there.
Although thiS is thc second game for
Thc Swarthmore group included
the .S\\ arthmore team. as they defeated Helen Lud\\ ig, Eunice Eaton, Anne
Sprmgficld High in December, it '''',11 "Vood, Antonica Fairbanks, Tatiana
b e tie
1
fi rst of this season's league
"
Kane, Varrcll Drew, Mildred Hirst and
games.
Evelyn \Vherry.
pectul
~ht.:l1
Tht· gut.: .. t prc.ILht.:r 1111 Snnda~ 1l1orning. Janllar~ 11. \\111 hl' thl ]{e\ Dr
]~lld S I hl·k .. oll gl'm ral sl'uL'\ar,) of
Iht' Pre~b) h n,1Il i:u,lrti oi Pell,;IOI1S
'I'ht' o.;lfllllHl tOpll \\ 111 ht 'Tht' Chri .. han .IIHI a \\'arrlllg \\'llrlll".
Th(' )'h u', nlhlt CI" ...... IlIl'l t~ each
SUlld:t,\ morning' .It 9...15
i-.llIen ~cI
SOli of till Cht. ~tll' Y.)'I C
\ I" the
currl'nt "'pl·.lkl·r.
The Illgh :-idlOnl Flllll\\ ::-hip \\ ill
I1ll'L't SUlHt.l\ l \ ~ ning Irnm (i to 7 30
o"clock \U tltl' P.ln .. ]) I hlU"l. ~l r ...
1. ...·or" lalllt· . . ~hl.'fidal1 \\111 g-i\e her
slcund Illu ... tr.llt·d talk \11l S(lutit {\1UerIl
I"
11;0
1
THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
SUNDAY
9:45 A. M.- First Day School.
11:00 A. M.-Meetlng for Worship tn the
Meeting House.
Do Your Banking With
WEDNESDAY
9:30 A. M. to 3:30 P. M.-Sewlng a.nd
qullttng In Whittier House. Box luncheon.
All are cordlally invited.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
OF SWARTHMORE
Park Avenue Below Harvard
11:00 A.M.-Sunday School.
11:00 A. M. - Sunday Lesson·Serm.on.
Wednesday evening meeting each week.
S p. m. Beading room open dally, except
sundays aDd holidays 1 to 4 p. m., Church
edlflee.
All are cordially invited to attencl the
services and use the Readlng Room
SWARTHMORE NATIONAL
Bank and Trust Company
!-;1Il!:UUl' SALB:S Ol" HEAL
Sht'lllI ....
Ollle(!
of \\'lldchfi
Cllllcge. T"o tell\\ ... ek .. cour ... e . . \\111 he gl\'ell for ~ttl
dClJb IJt:t\\tt'n tlit ,Ig ...... of tl'lI and SIXtet.:Il, iIlCII1t1ill~ \\ork III speech, p
uf thl Drama l>ep.lrtlllcllt at \\'ildcliff
Mr. Tu\\el .... \\ho C.lllll' to \\'lldcliff
aiter tUI
ycar..
at
LtI\\ft.:ncedlie
~chuoIlII :\l\\ Jlr ... t \ ,IIuI ,.,1X. \cars .l'"
head oi hh 0\\11 stock CllIllIMI1\ in
)'f:lIIll·. has hnd \\,dl expcrienc~ Oll
nw,HI\\.l~. lIt: wa ... "llil localh- la:.t
month in thl.' Pla~(:r~ Cluh prod-llctioll
(Ii "The Great .\d\·l·nturl·" and is cast
III tlil' Cluh';, current Illay 110\\ n·hl'arsIIlg
III ad{iltioll to TOutine \\ork. the
g-rollp will prll
participants. '1\\0 scholarship... ha\'e
heen made a\'all;:~hlc through the genI.. rosit~ oi Ol1l' of the patrons of The
).rar~ L\'on School, winch is sponsoring
tht, S,lturdav Drama venture
-
I
I
MARTEL'S
PORK LOINS
Economy and dehcrous eahng-Brisk ~Neather calls for roast
pork.
lb
29c
9 3U A M
PLUMBING alld HEATING
MAPLE PECAN
LAYER CAKE
You'll rave over lts homelike goodness ...
ea45c
Jo'r\" to " Golden Bro" n!
LARGE SMELTS
For a delIcious inexpenslve meal
on Friday.
lb
29c
lunch and dine often
at the
SUBURBAN
CAFE
-----------"PETER E. TOLD
llltl~
1Iwanhm.... 1833
llil
\\ OIr.
lJt:partt~H I1t
.l~
the ploperty of S Phebe Lew~s.
Phl"bc Lewl,;. renl uwner.
w·...
\ IIIt'mlwr uf Iht· Hun (;n ..:o;ut·k uul,.It " h'IC 1I ,·unu·.!' In I h t· (.,0 II t'g'· touill:hl jl"> gliml'!oOed in tht· mid .. , of
h'I!I. lU'r f urmUIiCt' () r ;1 (rOlf I".tlunu I
(:ouc·u ... iull kllif., dum·t·.
":\l'" I(Hlll' ... h.l\l IIl\1I ,,,hhll. l·XI .. t- 1'. ~I IIl'Xt )'h!IH1.IY. Janll
(k.II.I. Fla tl' "1)(,lId tll\' \\llIh'r.
:11\'IIt.lud
I hl·ld at this tilllt·.
,..
I
LARSON. Attorl1<.'v
No 45
or piect· of ~round
Imprm(-'ments there011 (I «('tNt.
~It\latt· in thc Towm;hlJ) of
UPI'l'l Darby Couoty of 1)('ln\\'llrc and State
of P"uns:.hnnla bounded lIud de!;cribed
,Ie( OJ dhw
to II ,
('1\ 11 Engill'-'I'I~. UJlI)er Dal·b\. Pit. as folIo v" to \"it
RPI.dIlUill'· at a point III cl·ubt· tine of
p, 11111). ~ , - " JII.I(' (fc.lty leot wldo) o.t the
clht.llt(·l' 01 two hundred and forty-the feet
nUl t I) t\\ Pllt!' degrees three minutes twenty I
~j-'{"(llld" l'll;;t IIwl\sUlcd frolll th(' point of
'ultl;,t'rtlon at cc-ntle line of sald Pennock
\\t'IlIl(' with the centre Unf' of Lennox
RO.Ht c fOl tv teet wide)
COlltainln~
III flout
01
blcadth along
(<'Iltl" lilH' of "aid Pcnnocl;. A,\ cnue. tWClltVIhe ft'<'t, .Uld l'xtellcUll~ o[ that width in
h'ngth 01 dt'llth north .. Ixt):-ntllc deglee:'> .•
tlll\-,.,h nllnutf's. forty "eeolltis we~t bct\·,f'( 1I rllll,\IIf.'l Hues at l1,.;ht angies to said
Pl'nnock A\(·IHU.·. till' distnllct' 01 one hunrilt'ti and Lpn fl'(-'t H(>ln~ No 118 Pennock
\11 th.lt C(·t tain lot
With tilt' buildings nud
It tali.es
I
\\l'I1u{-'
Undel .\lul ,.,ubj(-'ct llc\crtlwlcss. to ecrcoudltlon,. nn
InllllO\Clll"nt'i eon..,bt of two-,.,torv :;toue
\lid st-ue('t) hO\l--e. 16x32 [c(-'t, l}Orch front.
,.,ttl(·{'(J ~.lr.\gL'. 10x18 ((,(·t
t.lln
HEELS
Wl\1 K RHODES. AUot t\l~y
No 79
TABLE EGGS
At a Low Price
Shell
doz49c
White
20 l\lule Team Borax
SOAP CHIPS
Safe for clolhes or hands.
19pkg
19c
PUDDINGS
Royal--Chocolale, vanilla
or butterscotch.
Dt'CIClllbel Term. 1941
All thnt eel t,\111 two-storied orick dwellIIW hO\l:-;(' and lot or piece of ground Situate III th1' Borough of l\1edlu. County of
Dcl.lw.\I{· and State of Pennsylvania and
hounded nnd de"'crib('d nccordlng to a sur\.,.y t!leu'of IlHldl' l)}' C 1\1. Broomall. Borough EI\~inel'r. l\Jav 6. 1924. ns follows
n{'6InnIll~ at
1 point tn thc Northerly
Ihw of 8t,1te Stlf'et fit the dlstunce of One
Huudtcd Slxtt;-1hrpl' and [orl\; one·hull(\1 ('tlllb f('('t E.I ... tw.lldlv fl Oln the nOI theast
('011H'1 01 St.th Strc!·t and Radnor Stleet:
,hl'llc\ .tlong the NOI tlH'rly stde of said
f't,ltp Str('ct extending South f;e\'cnty-iltne
II. ~Ie.. :-; fortY-four mhlut('s East fifteen and
nhu t'\ -fh e OIw-llUndrl'dth:-; f.:oct to n point: I
thl'Uet· bv a linc at right angles to said
Stat<· StlCl't extending north ten deglees
"txtceu minutl's Ea~t and pfl~slng through
tlw Ct·ntt·!' of l l'nrty wall between two
IOltUllt' In i{'k dw<'lltng hUll"(s On(-' hundred
h· .. t l.\l the Sonlhf'll\' ship of II tw{'lve feet
'\hlt' f1B('v (xtcudll1t.; flom Radnor Stre(-'t to
I'I.f,l'l<:hl·,.,t{'r Stn'ct th('ll('(' .llon~ the SOllth' I h. ,kif! of s~ld Alkv (·xtt'udln,.: NOl'th se\',"I1\-IlllH' d('grf'(~ fort\~four mlnutf's West
hit ('t: II ,ul(l Nhwt\'-fwc OIW-llundredths
I", t l.o .l pOlllt. tlH'nc(' In a Hne at light;
IUP1('" to the l.t .. t m(-"ltioll('d linE' ("xtend11'0-': South t('n dt'gn'e~ ;-;IXtl'Cll minute's West
:ulli pa<:stl1~ tllJOUgl1 thc l'cntl'r of n parh'
will lwtwc'PIl t"o adjoillln~ brick dwpHlng 1
Iwusc;-; OW' hundred feet to tile 1l00therlv
... 1<11' of St,\tr' 8'1" (>t Ulp 1)lncf' of bpl,I:lnulng I
n. mg No 321 East Stat£' Street 1<1('din. PH
I
ad-I
Inll)lIl\{ nH'n('"
J "l1st
roO
Jtix3R fll t
Sold .t'i
C011 ..
1-.:1 ot two-ston hrick
Pon h flout
John 'V.-db JL
';\'01 t~.I!.\OI
lnd \VIIlI.uu It Crutchley' nnd ,
H,lI v R CI utchle~. his wif(' real owners
Pl!' 1)101>1'lt\
01
WI\{ K RHODES Atto! ney
R S MUNSON. :
1-9-3t
Sheriff.
I
MARTEL'~
FOOD
MARK~I
Member Federal Deposit luaaranoe Corporation
SWARTHMORE 2100
S ...
•
to WIn a war
ON the battlefield. and hehind the lines,
10.000 employees are devoted til ,eelng
modern war is fought with wheels. Tr,lns·
that it shall not happen.
portation is a vital factor -
they produce must be moved quickly
10
insure ultimate victory.
Ever increasing are the tr,lI\sportatiun
needs of wartime Philadelphia. We are
meeting those needs with more and better
serviee -
hy establishing new routes, hy
extending others, by stepping up ,ched·
It is the responsibility of Philadelphia
ules, by providing new and modernized
Transportation Company to see that more
efjuipment. Millions have been spent to
than a quarter of a million war workers in
this area are transported to their johs daily.
impl"Ove service. More will be spent duro
ing the coming year to serve the "Arsenal
of America'.'
This is one of the most important tasks
PTC has enlisted for the duration. All
in the com·
ever faced by PTC. Evervone
,
our men, our women, our resources are
pany realizes that a breakdown in efficient
all·out to help win absolute victory. This
transportation is unthinkahle -
is our pledge to Philadelphia ... and to
must not
happen. The combined efforts of PTC's
America!
d3;><=:
CHAPS are 1"'I....arnot tI ... CIIAP that af.
. h ..uuls of honu- launclr(·!'ist°!.i 'hc·~t· frc·(·zing daY!!ie
f )~In"'iz(' Ilull dUll' hy u~ing
iUEDIA LAUNDRY
our armed
forces, our workmen and the materials
I f'
l:.tll l\Iedla 1'74 or Stop Our Driver
.
~=======:==:=====::====:====================================-:-=====-:--------
.Ibo known a,.,
ItA YMOND I
thl~
tilt: \\lllIllIIg 01 t.hb \\ar IS trallspor-! ,llllOIi ill tht· Plillippim· ... )'Ir. \\'crnher
()ur .lr~lIld 10ICl..... our "Orktlll'll! \\.t .. in Clm
i IHU\ cd, and IIIll\ cd quickl) to insure our po .. tl'ci n·ganhng his .. 011
I ultilll.lte \·Il·tory It \\U<; true ill Xapol- I
I I•
IlPI1\, (Ia~' that .111 .I~IIIY 'tt .1\ l·Il·1! 011 it:"
To Make Surgical D"CIiKil1g~
l .. tlJllIilCh. hut t(ld.IY It tr.ll 1.1 .. ull \\ h{'l·I ...
1\1 tli{' ,lil •• 111(1 .tcroo.; ... till .ea
).Ir..
1'.• lrll I'
Y{'rh:-. of Soutlt
i
"In l'hil.nlclphi,I, thl' '.u"'t:llal (II I'rllln·ttJll ,1\t'lI1ll' he.HI of Circle #CJ
\ III {'I ito ... .' Illore than .1 qu.lrter-lIulholl I III
tltl'
~\\.Irtlllll()rt·
Presh} tt.'riall
: IIh,ll ;tlld \\ otllt.:n are nllw \\ orking: uay
Churl'll
\\ on ..
\ssodatiOiI
an
1.lI1d IIIj.!'1tt til lIt.tlllli,nturl lh~· 1Il.lh·lial IUlUlIll'" th.lt tIll'" clrdt' \\llIllll,(·t l'vcT)
Illf \\ .Ir
TUl . . (1.1 \ 1II1)rllil1~ hCgllltll11g J anuar~
I
.. Thl· ... l' lll,lIl\ tll(lll .... II\(I ... ul Illllt .tlld
U at I} 30 ,,'dock til till' Church hous,t'
I\\UIW,:II llIust he thl'n' to lIIall the as-I hI tI"
.. urglc.tl dn ..... mg ... for a great
"l'lIIhl~ hllt.,!,> .IIHI IlI.Ichiut's. It I" the job I .It. tt 1I.,t. lIl·l·.! III the Chestl. r district
Illi the
Phi\;uh'Jpllla Tr.ll1 ... portatioll Tilt IlItl·tlllg, \\111 he IIPt'tI tu all mtcrCOIllP,lIl) tll "'l'l that the~ gl·t thl'rc t l ... tul I't·r ... tl,,,, Tho .. e ,tttclldmg should
1111111 tlleil 1111\UI'''' sc.tltl're(1 thnnH.{ilOut I' lJrlll~ ,Iprllll .. Fur iurther II1fonnatlOI1
th, ...lfl.l.
~Ir ... Yl·rh .. 11101\ 1)(' reaehl'll h\' tell-'
"'1'111'" i ... Ihe 1110 ... 1 l1upnrl.1111 t.t ... k en'r I pitPlliug ":'"artlllllnn.· 15RO
1.ll·ell h~ PTe En:Q 1)(:1'<:'011 111 thl' cnm" •
p.lII~ 1\.·.tl!Zl· ... th.lt .1 hle"kdO\\n in this
I{c. .•·n·tation G.·on., 10 ~1c.·(·1
\\.t! - .. ( n 1L't.:
i ... unthlilkahil' TIt\.· (:Olll
1IIIIl·.1 lll\lrt .. I)l 1\\.1\ !Jl·l .. tlll III tltl'"
I
1
Iltl l(gU.lr 1,'····r'·.'I'·,'"
.!allUary lIll'l'tl1l~
01 lll'
1''I'l" IHI.!.ll1izatioll "III III Ill'\I,h,1 II) . .·,'.'rll",','r,
,\ .. ·.,'c'·.·I'·o"
,-..
",11
I" 1,,1,1 '" ......
1'."r",,"I, 11.,11:.., ·.,1 ..7'.31'
,I" .. IJ. ,lr,','I'- l ,1,,1,-
,
Buld
l·ar!):.
III
No hnpIO\'l'lnellt:+--\ncltut ground
FRESH COUNTRY
Insurance
+17 Dartmouth Ave.
h~
I
MARTEL'S
Malo Concourse.
P.R.R. Suburban StatIon
CoeltoU Hour6 3:00 to 6:00 P.M.
l'utnpalw;
I t.lt1011
YuUllg Brai.. Sl'e<"iali.t (:.. lIed
\Vt'st
C'lw)o;tt'l
One hundred
wht .l1l'';I\.'S
wIth Turllpikl'
the snld PhUndelphlu
anti _______
11th t\ -"ix aull l'ift) Olle-hundredths feet.
tu .1 poInt 1.11 Lot No 56. thcllee, extending
r.I,.,t\\.lId ,Ilon~ till' sIde line o[ Lot No 56.
POI t\ -~Ix lind SlxtY-lIhll' one-hundredths
f(·t't to a point in Lt,t No 39 thence ex·
'{'Ildin~ SoulhwlIld aloll\.!: thc Enst line of
Iol. No :In OUl' hllndrl'd Forty-three and
I'Wl'lll.y-tht· one-hundredth~ fecl. to tbe
N(H th ... ide of the Phllndelphia and West I
("'It ,.,tc' 1 \11 npil;.e. thence extending West~
\\,[1<1 UIOlH! the North sidE> o[ the Phllndelphl,\ .tnU 'Vl'st Chester TUlupike Forty~slx
,I\)(t T\\'(·IH:. -une-hundrl'dUl:-; [c(-'t to the
III,.,t IlIcnttotwd point nnd place of b(>gln-
Tr.l1bpuI t
.
.
• \\('l k that Ill ....on \\ alh,'r .\. Bud
•
Ih .... \\1..'l' k ".Iul.
()ne
.
,
d'III
,
. 1>1
.tht:
,\11.tllactor"l 1\' l'rll 1ler IhitI 1Il'l'll ~ l'Ig 111
1 \
1II1url'
1 •
('ulldlt1UIlt:< $25Q OU cush or cerlltied check
,It tlUll' of "'ale (uult'ss otherwise stated In
.1'1\'f:'ltlSt:IllCnt) bal:lIlcc In tell daYIi Other:
11r all(1 )'Ir:-.. jaml.·!> R. Gay stopped
loudltlOns 011
,
No. '95 1 I",rellt.. ~.-Ir. ,IIHI )1I's. ()\\('n \\', Ga'"
'
1.1'\111 I I'".le , I S "
J
lIt ere .. t I.UIl· while en route from the 1
St'plcmi)er TCI m. 1941
~Ia\o Clillle at }{ochester, ~linn. to
All th.lt cellaln lot 01' ph,'ct' of grollnd, C,U;I,J ~Iead. ~Id whcre .IS .1 hrst lieu
,.,ll.u.lte Ilt Broomnll. Marl)le ~rOWll~hlp, Delb"II1"
....,
..... p"'"""y',,ulla.
'-"
" ,. Lot No h·lI.1I1t in the Uuited States )Icdical
",.,', . "0",,".
UI, 011 the pIau of thl' 'Kcr"illlw Hnd Crowl I~t'''lnc Ur. Ga\ W.i:. onkn'd to rcBIUUJlMII'tlnct. as tiur\'l'vcd b~ Robert P
1'6
(ill'ell, Ci\'iI t;ll,'lneel.
dutcd
J.lllua ......
21st. Ilort 011 Januar_\ 12. For t lis _ -ycdro
R
'r'D .a.
•
19"U .•uul IlcOIdl'd In the
cCOld~r
0
ceus 'lld "r.Hluah· oi John .. I [Ollkimi UtIIO!hu III nIl.'dla. Delaware Cuunty. Peullsv.l,..,.
r
1
1
I I
\.1111.1 III !Jlan eas{' Nu 2 puge 3 etc. and I \I,·r ... lh \\ lola ... ,('ell tllarrtt:( nile yca
dl,,.<,i'lI'lI Ilh foBo,,"s: Situate Ull the North thi . . l',,11 to hl!'1 C\Hl1ItT\"~ defcll ... e intcr"tel('
of thetl:5lxtv
Philadclphla
.md
Chester rllpt.. •• IOUr-)l'ar
.
. .
'
I tlillpike
feet wide)
al. We~t
the distance
Icllow:.lllp
111 hram
,If flfl.v fCl.t En!-itwtlrct [rom thl' Ellst side of .. lIP'l T\ at thl' fal11ou~ dinic on \\hich
oummtt
A\'cnuc (I"orlv-the f('ct wide)' I,,· ,...
III Hel' (xtl'lldlllg NOIth,vllrd Oil Il line at
heg.tII "(Irk la ... t Octoht.:r.
I':nlt' .. t \\'cruher of the Shirt.'r ApartS('uter p. (" .. ld1..'nt \d Ihl'l II1t·1I1 ... ;:-:oll!h Clu.· .. kr road "i1~ notifi~d
(1\\ 11('1"';
Extra SJlecial!
and CocktaU Lounlte
Lunch -from SOc
Dinner-from SSe
ICdpll 'I
PIIli:llldplll.1
Sold a,., the 1)1 0IWI ty of John H MUIIo.y
Iud El1z.tbt'tlt V !\turray. his w1fe, rE'al
Automatic Heating Equipment
~--------Resolve now to
I
Bud 'Vcrnlt"r Wounded
Enlists P. T. C. For tlte
Duration
"DOING THE 'LEZGINKA'"
D(-'cl'mber Tellll. 19-1l
218 W. STATE ST., MEDIA
Tclephones:
Office-Media 2596 Res. Media IB25·J
Pit
Eastern Standard Time
1.'\,lli F,ld.l'"
Mothers' Cluh Today
BERRY
B. F.Registered
House. "'led In.
5
SWARTHMOREAN
: \ 11('\\ .. tudy group on "Kno\\' Your
:-; ...·!tool" "ill hc sponsored b)' the local,
hrandl oi thl' L('a~>l1" of \VOIll('lI \'01l·r ... 011 the next thret· Thursday lIIorn- I
iug:-.. J alluary IS, 22. and !;9 ~t 10
o'clock. ~Ir ... l{a)U10nd De1l\\orth of I
Elm avenue chairman of the Lea~ue's I
dc:partmcnt oi ~O\'crll1l1ent amI l'l\uca~
t 11111 will ('onliuct the course which will ,
('o\\"r h,,· scction .. : the pupil. the 1
... e11001 Jll·rsoncl. the .. choo! hoard, the
... e1mol plant. and who .. upports the
... cllo(11, t'lIdlllg "ith .1 discu~sion of eliut:atiull in national defense.
Thl' lIIeetings will .111 he hl,.'1d in the
III11"l'l1Il1 rllum oi the High Schonl ,u1'1
an' 11\,\'11 III till.' public.
I
I
The regular mceting of the S\\arthmore ),{others Club will he held at 2 '30
P M. Flld~IY, Januar) 9, at the Presbytenan Church. The guest speakel
will be Mary Spiilcr of the nursen
group of the School in Rose VaUe)'
whose subject will bc uDiscipline."
CaUl t
ESTATE
L. W. V. Study of Edu"ation
g,lt\uduy. January 31. 1942
JUI1ll 11
Penooal SUpe.ni&lon of lIarry R. TuI17
THURSDAY
12.00 Noon - Prayer for Peace
.;
VELAWARE COUNTY INSTITUTION
DISTRICT
Sealed proposals will be received at the
Count).' Controll(>r's Office. court House.
Mcdln. Pu, until 1 P m and PUblicly
upc1'ed ut 2 p m. on Weduesday. January
.!8 1912. for furnishing ond delivering to
l.he I){'lawulI! County Home. Lima. Pa .. gas·
uUnc .UH..l oU for the usc of the Delaware
County lu!>tltutloll DI"trlct
::;llecUlcutiolls lind bidding liheel. may be
ubtauH'1 'It the OIHce of the County Contwlh.r. and no bid wlll be entertained unle,,~ made uut on said bIdding sheet.
Elich old must be accompanied by 8
H'I tilled check of One Hundred ($100 00)
Dullun;.. drawn l.0 the order of the Dela\Hli c Count~· Instlutton District
The Atlmlnlstratlve uud ExccuU\'C Dlrectum of thl' D{lhlw.lr(' COllll,ty Institution
DL'itrlcL rcsci \ l' thc right to reject any or
,til hleb
H WALTER WEAVER.
County Controller.
The JUICiest and tenderest of
lamb roasl ~ Always 01 its besl
01 Marlel's.
'1
I
THE
JANUAHY 9, 1942
•
R. T. SENTER, l'mid"'"
PHILADELPHIA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY
rAU is the lAird In 0
seriu
0/
New Year'.s .stalement.s to the people oj Phrladelphlo Jrom your local transportation company.
.,
•
JANUARY 9, 1M2
£0, Mary'. Child!
CLASSIFIED
to trim the tree
~cliir'i:;Nri.' and Mrs. Meybusiness section
On Mrs. Meyer's
the gift and pre.leave the department store
M"y,,, slipped while dcscending
'of stairs, and fell 10 fcet. fatally fracturing her skull. Rushed to
the hospital she never regained cousd.
Gus'rjess· and died an hour later.
Born on July 29, 1913 in Chicago she
lived ill that city her entire life with
Od-rk is Ilty Nigh" 0 World
IVi,II terror, grief, and pain;
Co,,/tlSt'(1 uri ilIOn and staggering,
Vark is Illy Niglu. 0 Worldt
Fi"d )'t' 1/(1 gllidillg Slar
Ru/rrs /rolll lar la"ds riding!
IFiSt' 1If(" /illd J'(! "0 rVay,
Nor J'(' S/.('pIIlV-dS, in fields abiding!
[";s/,·". 0 Ir"",blittg 'world,
Is il It Child's ';Joice pleading'
1.0. at 'Ir), !ltlll" Jlftlr::ls CMld doth wait
Ail l';sl,·1/' Nor pass ""heeding.
the .exccl>tioll of four years spent at
Beloit Co1lege, 'Vis. whc-re she met hofr.
~feyer when they wcre both students
of the institution. She was a member
of Kappa Ddta Sorority.
)'Ir. and Mrs. Meyer moved to
Swarthmore on the 15th of last July
whell Mr. Meyer was transferred from
Chicago to the new Philadelphia office
of his insurance cOUlpany. Their apart.
lII('nt was ill the \Vood apartments at
the same address as Mrs. Meyer's
-SUSANNE FJ-:RRY KONKI.£.
~i~~~F~~~~~~~~~~
Reeds with Dr. and Mrs. E. ]. Evans
of Park avenue who were speadiug
thc holidays with th.ir parents in Chicago attended the funeral services
which were conducted in the new St.
]ohn's Methodist Church of which Mrs.
hi eyer was a charter member, by the
Rev. Abner Pennewill who also officiated when the Meyers were married
thcre in June 1939. Following the Chicago services on Friday, December 26.
the body was taken to the burial
ground of Mrs. Meyer's paternal
grandparents in the Warsaw cemetery.
Warsaw, Ohio. Before the interment
there wcre additional services at the
family church, the Chalfanls' 'Af ethodist Church at "rinw3)·.
D3tate of Prank H. Casey late ot the l.'oWDship of Upper Darby. Deceased. Letters
Testamentary on the above Estate haVing
been granted to the undersigned. all per-
I
to make
pa.yment.
and Estate
those having
claims
SOD8
indebted
to said
are requested
to present the same without delay. to Joseph P. Gaffney. Executor. 1524-28 LlncolnLiberty Bldg.. Broad & Chestnut Sts••
Phl1adelphla. Penna. Or to his Attorney
Joseph P. Gaffney. Jr .. 1524·28 LlnColln Lib.
D. W. It. Morgan former Chairman of
erty Bldg .• Phlladelphla. Penna.
12-19-6t
the highwuy committee was named
The ;\[ eyers had just become settled
ill their new home and were beginning
this winter to take part in community
acth·itics. 'rhose who had become acquainted with them through attendance
at the ~:J cthodist and Presbyterian
Church and other local gatherings of
recent datt." had received Mrs. Meyer
cousin Mrs. L. D. Reed who with Mr. most fondly and will be grieved to
Heed preceded the .Meyers in their think that ht.·r vital personality is her!'
westward move by four months. 'rhe no more.
01
Ilresidcni
the t1nnU[DD~~I.::~~~:r~~:~:~~: I---------------'---.L------- __________
meeting of Borough (
on
SherIU·. Office. Court House. MedIa. pel"a.. 1dll,. evening of .hi. week.
5!/WIIIIIIDIlIlIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII CHESTER'S FASHION CORNERlllmlllllllmlllnlllHIlIU~
SHERIFF SALES of REAL ESTATE
=
i
SatUrday. January 24. 1942
9:30 A. M. Eastern
Standard TIme
cash
or certified
check
at Conditions:
time of sale$250.00
(unless
otherwise
stated
1n
advertisement) balance in ten days. Other
conditions on day of sole.
=
YOUNG RESIDENT ';;
IN SAD DEATH'
=:
=;
_
;
,
No. 232 ltlr8. R. S. Meyer Killed in Fall
Facias
'"
Striking \\-·jth poignant sadness comes
news of the untimely death of a
Swarthmore resident on the afternoon =
befon.· Christmas while visiting her
former home in Chicago, Ill.
Hazel Way Meyer of 219 Swardl:'-:"_~'-L-"':-"'-~"' .~;;ru~ni I more a\'Cllue thc only child of Mr. and
[tf~~~l~o;~~~~~:~q'
~hs. G. S.14\Vay
left Swarthmore
on ;;;
December
to spend
the holiday va-
'"
'"
~~~~~~~f~~~1
b
~~;:::~~iiii;er30cp
1
~
Together with the free we. right. Uberty
and
of the
aforesaid private
driveway privUege
as aod tor
a passageway
and driveway at all t1mes hereafter torever. In common with the owners. tenants aud 00cuplers of the other lots of ground boundIng thereon to the East and West.
Improvements consist of Two story stone.
frame and cement block house. 18 x 30
~~itf~~~c~2 f~~t: f~~.e story cement block
as the
property of John Donlan.
WM. TAYLOR. JR.• Attomey.
WILLIAM W. McKIM. Bherlll.
•
WM. S. BITI'LE
MRS. A.
J.
~~~~!~~t(~m~c~'u~~~;.
l]D:'.'!~~.!
~[~~~:~:~~~l~~:p~anci' ciiben:
po-
A. MERCER QIDNBY. Jr.
0
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
206 S. Orange SI.
bank .•..•.
'stock
~'~~~~:~~l'~lD~':cliiding
other banks.
Media
'Phone Media 4
~F~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
an
d
Real eatate owned other than
92.702.45
25 East 7th 51.
CheSler
(Opposite New State Theatre)
f'~~~'~P~h;o~n~e~C~h~c~
~e~r~3!764~~::'~!1
i
Crall
SIMMONDS
0 bank prem.ises ...... , .•......
ther assets ................. ..
Total Assets ................. $i~~~~
Formerly of Swarthmore College
Carpenter & Cabinet IUaker
425 MORTON AVENUE, RUTLEDGE
'Phone Swarth. 2989
COA.L and COKE
FUEL OIL
VAN ALEN BROS.
10412
WOOD
KOPPERS
COKE
POStal
'j.;,iiilCi.i
!~ir: on.:::!ey
'0
$60.00
:
JI',,'ues up
'0
~
!
$25.00
_iii!
Tweeds-plaids-black and
stripes-beautiful styles in·
eluding box coats - fitted
coals and belted coals.
_I_!!'
~
=
1I I I I I I WI I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Il Il l l l l l l l l l l l l l lUI I I I I I-I I I I I I I-I I-IUI -I1lI I I I I I I UI l I l IlIUI I IU U IWl t lWlWlI IU IUI I~
~~----~
..
--~
-"~~--~----
*
..
(certified" anci
17.171.52
144.366.62
8.135.04
Total Liabilities ..............-=$2".""59:-'••-,.:-.-,
•
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Capital Stock:
Common stock. total par
S
1 $125.000.00 •••••••.•••.••••
.......................
Total CapItal ACCOunts .....
Total Ltabll1tles and
Accounts ..•...........•.....
SWA I~T HM()~~E
'.
JAN 16 1942
,
(2.2::
(·'c., ..
i
L 1 :, ~ " "y
• .....
•
\
THE SWARTHMO
VOL. XIV, No. 2
SWARTHMORE, PA., JANUARY 16, 1942
"OUT OF FRYING Antonio Brosa Plays
PAN" OPENS TUES. Tonight at College
P.
o.
Warn&
•
Postmaster A. P. Smalley
warns Swarthmoreans to beware
of chain Jetter schemes. They are
iUegal and prohibited through the
mails even when in regard to
Defense Stamps.
'2.50 PER YEAR
Photographic Show U. C. SOUCITORS
Draws Eager ,..,ans
MEET SUNDAY
Atld88 Direel8 Local Distinguished Violinist 10 Play
Gallery Talk by Stubenrauch United Charities' Film "Penn's
Presentation of BroadNicely Varied Program
Considen Prinlll of
Challenge," Milquetoast Skil
way WI
in Oolhier
20 Exhibiton
to Precede Inslructions
•
d ·
F
"'Out of the Frying Pan" is the apThe William ]. Cooper oun atlon
The Woman's Club was the scene of
I f I d
..
f
and Department of Music of SwarthMovies, a skit, co or u escrlptton 0
propriate title of next week's produc- more
College will present Antonio
a busy assembly of snapshooters, photo- charitable work conducted in Swarthtion at the Players Club of Swarth- Brosa violinist and George Reeves at
pictorialists and others interested in more and vicinity, plus instruction in
more. An hilarious comedy by Francis
16
815
photography on the night of January the fine art of soliciting contributions
Swann directed by Lincoln Atkiss. it the pia?o on F~iday ]anua.ry
nt:
13 when the annual exhibit of photo- for the United Charities all will be
M. III ClothIer Memor.al.
was chosen because it is a riot of P.The
program will include the Songraphy was given the ··once over" by combined - and topped off with relaughter. the kind of show the Club's a.a-Allegretto ben Moderato. Allegro. Tells Clubwomen We Are Nol the photographically minded people of freshments - next Sunday afternoon at
audiences seem to like best.
.
d All
Swarthmore. This exhibit which has a "get together'" of Swarthmore's
The origin of the play is interesting. Recitative-FantaSIa. an
egretto Over-Educated; Lists Forward
come to be an annual affair was at- United Charities workers in the WoOne of the popular picture magazines poco. m~sso-by ~esar Fra,!ck; from
Trends of Education
tended by some hundred people who man's Club. The program will begin
Parhta 10 E major Preludio, Laure,
made a case study of four girls who and
Gavotte u. Ronda-for the violin
examined the prints carefully and with at 4 P. M.
Jived in furnished rooms in an old alone by Bach; Sonatine -Allegro,
In answer to the question "Are We great admiration, envy or praise as the
All team captains, team members and
brownstone house in New York and Burlesca, and Vivace-by Werner ]os- Over-Educating Ourselves?" Roland L. case might be.
others assisting in the forthcoming
practiced plays current on Broadway. ten; Ravel's ''Tzigane''; and a final Eaton gave a positive "No" to a large
A high point of the erutibit that night campaign are requested by Daniel R.
It was their scheme to lure actors and group Rondalla Aragonesa by Grana- and interested audience at the Wo-- was a gallery tour and talk given by Goodwin, district director for Swarth..
producers to their performances in the dos, Murciana by de Falla and Jota man's Club on Tuesday afternoon.
Arnold V. Stubenrauch of Media. Mr. more, to be present for instructions
hope of impressing them and landing
"This
is
a
fair
question
to
consider.
Stubenrauch who was introduced by about the United Charities campaign
25
d
Navarra by Sarasate.
parj:s in road companies.
Antonio Brosa was born in Canonja, It has been flung at our schools by a Edwin C. Buxbaum is one of the out- which gets under way January
an
The brother of one of these girls was Spain. His first appearance in public thousand voices. This is a time when standing photographers of this part of continues for two weeks.
Francis Swann. He recognized the was made at the age of teo. in Bar- our system of public schools is going the country ami well-known in SwarthThe program on Sunday afternoon
comic possibilities of the situation and celona which was so successful that it to be thoroughly revised. What its more. He is president of the Provi- will be headed by a showing of the
J
decided to write a play about it. The was followed by many others, in which character is going to be after tbis war, deuce Guild of Photographers, print recently completed United Charities'
result is "Out of the Frying Pan."
he played both as soloist and in cham- no one may know. But its character is director of the Photographic Section movie, "William Penn's Challenge"
The author has created a plot full of her-music. The City of Barcelona made going to be determined by what we, of the Franklin Institute and a suc- which entertainingly outlines the scope
amusing situations, involving would-be him a grant to finish his studies in its patrons, demand; and its cbaracter cessful salon contributor ranking and intent of the campaign.
corpses with knives in their backs, a Brussels. From here he came to Eng- is going to affect the future of every twenty-third in the list of many hunOf great educational value to new
too efficient Mickey Finn, several at- land where he decided to make his boy or girl who is now or who will be dreds of saton exhibitors. He is the re- and old solicitors alike will be a twotendants from the insane asylum, and home. It is in England principally that in the next generation among its stu- cipient of many honors in photographic act skit staged by the Charities Playa much befuddled New York police Brosa has made his career and has dents.
circles.
ers, an organization of amateur actors
force. The acting of the youngsters so built up his reputation both as soloist
"Indictments of our school system
Mr. Stubenrauch gave an informal wh.o have presented their story of Mr.
bewilders their landlady that she is and as chamber-music player. It was range al1 the way from a lack of mas.. and informative t;;uk about photography Milquetoast (the mild-mannered solicinever certain whether she is witnessing here that he founded the world-famous tery of the fundamental processes, to in all its phases and then gave a gallery tor) to many community audiences.
a play rehearsal or scenes from real Brosa Quartet in 1926 with which he the claim that our program is too var- tour of the many pictures on the wall. After portraying Mr. Milquetoast, the
life.
toured France, Italy, Holland, Ger- ied and that it costs too much. The His good natured criticisms were lis- players remove him geutly from tbe
The play ran on Broadway for sev- many, and U. S. A. Owing to in- mounting cost of education is becom- tened to attentively and his good sense stage and proceed to demonstrate
eral months to popular acclaim and has creasing demands for him as soloist, ing another 'white man's burden'."
of humor made the time pass fast as United Charities solicitation as it
been released only this fall for ama- he has lately disbanded his Quartet.
Mr. Eaton quoted Roger Babson. each picture in turn was discussed from should rightly be done.
teur production. The Players Club is Both as soloist and in chamber-music Dr. Will Durant, Stephen Leacock, an ~rtistic and photographic yiewpoinL
Another feature of the program is to
one of the first little theaters to give it. he has given first performances of William Graham Sumner, Mary Enen Many good pointers both in composi- be the appearance of Mrs. Maria E.
Mr. Atkiss, the director. has proved many new works, and has acquired Chase in illustrating a cross section of tion and technique were given. In a She~ire, E~ecutive Director of the
his ability with other types of drama the reputation for interpreting both current criticism.
preliminary talk before his gallery tour. FamIly Service. of .Wester'! nelaw'!"e
and now takes a hand at fast farce. classical :and modern works with equal
··Critics?f the schoo.ls, unless th~y Mr. Stubenrauch emphasized the im- ~ounty, who wIll gIVe a brle~ d~scrl1!"
The cast includes some players with understanding and authority.
.' ar~ the paId propa~nd~_~ of, organlZ- ~~!'ta~ce. toc;lax. at keeping x~ur~elves in ~.IO~ a! th.o; .w,~rk tn:r or.gaDuatl~. l!'
whose. talents ··Club ·a'Udiences are fa".
~
·atlons .devoted to a rt:ductioll' JU. ~chuol .good mental and phYSical trim by hav- dOIng'm thiS and nearbr c?mmumti.es.
miliar: Charles Seymour, June West
iD'·
costs, are almost always of the Vln.tage jng a hobby such as photography.
Among . other org!lt;tlZatl0ns active
'.1.'1892 or thereabouts. They entirely
F
th
f ti II
• d d t t I locally whIch are partIcIpants under the
Atkiss. Janet James Campbell. Harry
overlook the fact that we are not pre- f °93r
~ sta IS ca hY mm eh .' ha 0 a United Charities are the Boy Scouts
V. Bonner. and Sally McFadden. Nurse
.
th
f
th
d
0
pr.nts
were
lC
were and t he G'
' f or
Preen in uThe Man Who Came: to
parmg our you
or
e ays we
d b 20 xh
°b't ung
Thw exh'b't
dr 1 S
couts.A
surprise
a
walked 'Unimportant miles over muddy !D lu~
D eR 1 o~s.
e
I
o~s local Boy Scouts at the "get-together'
Dinner."
roads
to
schools.
Today
we
have
some
IDC
e
r
.
.
mmerman,
• is to be the new Kodachrome movies
Local
Women
CUlTenlly
Waging
Others, who are new to the Swarththirty-two miUion youth in our schools :~~~r, ~
BC!':u~. ired ~ve~ of typical outdoor phases of scouting.
more stage, or who have not been seen
Annual War for Funds
and colleges. In the very nature of Ie er 0 n,
ro
rey,.
This movie, which has an accomrecently are Charles McCaffrey, a
to Defeal Infantile
things
the
type
of
education
when
only
i:q~~tttill
Ernesb
La'i':'
Donjl\Ja.t:e~.
panying
narration by Lowcll Thomas.
fonner Mask and Wig player; Washnfy
·Th e~!l h was taken at Valley Forge and Camp
ington West, ex-football captain and
Considering that 26.000 child and adult a chosen few went to school above the R ath H man'n r:d
ynon,
e Ig Delmont and includes several scenes in
actor at Tufts College; Mary Louise victims of infantile paralysis during the eighth grade will not suffice today. ahP001 ayes J BVl
Critical
analysis
will
concern
ltselti,
~c
11
~mera
Th:
Swarth"';o~
which local Scouts appear. Swarthmore
Brown, the little pest in June Mad; past three years have constituted one of
ab uty
much
with
whether
the
job
;
ege
!lmer
s~ven
pr~D
Scouts of Troop 2, under Scoutmaster
not
so
G. Jackson Evans, brother of Sam; and America's most serious epidemics, the
it
is
0
exceptlOna
eau
y
t
e
spea
~er.
Walter
Thorpe, and of Troop 3, under
has
been
overdone,
as
whether
J ae Van Arden, who has been associ- Swarthmore committee in the annual
being
done
at
aIL
The
arrangements
were
under
the
Scoutmaster
Ambrose Van Alen will be
ated with little theaters in and about paralysis fund drive asks each citizen
"The
curriculum
of
the
modern
auspices
of
the
photographic
commitpresent
in
uniform
to see the colored
Philadelphia . as actor, producer and to open heart and purse and engage at
school
is
a
roll
caU
of
the
activities
of
tee,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
~.
C.
Buxbaum,
Mr.
motion
picture
arrangements
for
costumer~
least in some small measure in the
men."
Mr.
Eaton
listed
among
the
and
Mrs.
Ernest
Laws,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
which
were
made
by
Rex
Gary
of
Yale
Donald C. Towers. head of the drama fight against this disease.
department at The Mary Lyon School.
One-half of the amount collected will gains compulsory attendance and child A. M. LackeYI Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cal- avenue, an executive of the Valley
and Jean H. Creighton, who has la- be used by the local chapter in easing labor law~ to guaran,ee schooling ~or vert. ]r.• Mr. Alan Wood. Mrs. A. E. Forge Council. B. S. A.
After the program, light refreshbored long and unseen on properties, suffering and the remainder will go for every. chIld; developmen~ of .pecI~1 Longwell Eapecial credit should be
have been called back from very re- research work in prevention and to as- educatIon for. those phys.cally hand.- given to Mrs. Lackey who had charge menls will be served by the blue-uni(COMtuttUJ. 011 Pal. SU')
of the arrangements for the exhibition formed Senior Girl Scouts of the Marcent performances for their character sist in spreading present knowledge ret ••
parts.
garding the scourge.
hall and also to ~rs. A. E. Longwell iner Ship, "Trade Winds." Mariners who
Club nights are Tuesday through
Under the direction of Mrs. Carl dethrough whose many efforts the exhibit will serve are: Margaret Ann and
Moll eight· captains opened a door to
Saturday. January 20 to 24.
was such a success.
Mary Francis Dimmitt, Trudy Enders.
door campaign on Wednesday: Mrs.
The pictures were on display until Ruth Gay. Ethel Hay. Laura Lee HopJohn Pitman, Mrs. D. G. van de Boe,
] anuary 15.
kins. Betty Ann Hulme. Elizabeth Lee.
Braun to Address Mothers
and
Charlotte Maas.
Mrs. W. F. Hanny. Mrs. George W. Annual Dance and Card Party to
• I •
Casey.
Mrs.
Lovett
Frescoln.
Mrs.
S.
R·
F
d
f
Medical
Ch
Representatives and campaign workThe third grade Mothers' Group of Milton Bryant, Mrs. Oscar J. Gitcreest
College Names Doctor
Bl8e un 8 or
est
ers from neighboring districts in Delathe Rutgers avenue school. has invited and Mrs. L. L. Hedgepeth.
Needed in Local Defense
the mothers and fathers of the second,
Dr. Paul Strong, '3D, men's physician ware County have been invited to join
The public is reminded that a victim
third and fourth grades of bo.h schools of paralysis during the first year reThe fund of $400 for use as an Emer- at the College. has been called for this Swarthmore "get-together" by
to hear the Reverend David Braun quires proper care in realistic terms- gency Chest of Swarthmore, the request Army service. Dr. Morris A. Bowie has Mrs. A. F. Jackson of Park avenue,
whose· topic will be "Their Future is approximately a thousand dollars' ex- of local doctors. will be raised by the been appointed as his successor~ Dr. who is Division Chairman for Central
Now" on February 11. A question and penditure in necessary comforts, med- American Legion and Auxiliary of the Bowie is a graduate of the Harvard Delaware County.
discussion period will follow.
Medical School. For several years he
------~.~
ical attention and correct massage and Borough.
The meedng will open promptly at exercise.
The proceeds of the Legion-Auxiliary was a research fellow in internal medi-John D. Seymour of Vassar avenue
8 P. M. on Wednesday evening Febru• I •
annual dance and card party to be held cine at the University of Pennsylvania has enlisted in the Marine Corps and
ary 11. Those people who are forced
February 13 in the Woman's Club Medical School He is now on the staff is stationed at Recruit Depot, Marine
Past Presidents Dine
to be late for the meeting will miss the
House will be turned over to this pro- of the Bryn Mawr Hospital.
Corps Base, San Diego, Cal.
core around which the evening is built.
The Junior Past Presidents of DelMrs. Francis Harper is the group's aware County will hold their second asked
ject. The
cooperation
publicand
is ,.
in the
purchaseofofthe
tickets
program head and Mrs. David F. Evans meeting and dinner at the PJaza Inn, donation of money.
its chairman.
Lansdowne. January 26.
THE WEEK'S CALENDAR
The First Aid kit to be supplied will
I
contain medical instruments and equipment sufficient to cope with 75 acciFRIDAY. JANUARY 16
8:15 P.M.-Antonio Broea, SpanISh VlollnlSt .............. C1otbier Memorial
dents.
SATURDAY. JANUARY 17
The committee already selling tickets
7:00 P.X and. 9:00 P.M.-Moving Pictures ••••••••••••••• Clothter Memorial
and taking donations includes Mrs.
SUNDAY. JANUARY 18
Olli.... B ........... a.n - Telephone OS51
Robert T. Bair. Mrs. Herbert Bassett.
11:00 A.M.-Momlng Worsb1p •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• t.ocal Churc:hes
,Ope. Week Da,.8 9-12, 1-4 - Saturday 9-12
Mrs. Alexander Ewing. Mrs. Walter
4~ P. II. - UDJ.ted CharltJes Workers Meet •••••••••••••••••••• Woman's Olub
8:15 P.M.-PIlle ArIa Leeture •••••••••••••••••••••••• Prlencl8· _ _ Ho....
. •
Schmidt, Mrs. J. Paul Brown, Mrs.
MONDAY. JANUARY 19
The Fire School held its fourth meeting Monday evening at the High Oscar ]. Gilcreest. Ferris Mitchell.
10:00 A. M. -a..d cross SewlDa •••.•••••••••....•..•••••••••••••• Woman'. Club
School-weD attended.
Oscar Gilcreest and Walter Thorp.
2:00 P. M. -loe8Ion AuzIlIary •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Borough Hall
6:30 P.II.-Bualness Aseoc..tloP. •••.•.••••.••••••••••••••••• 8tratbhaveJl Inn
Captain ]. Kirk McCurdy. Air Warqen for Swarthmore. Swarthmore 2290. Mrs. Alexander Ewing president of
8:00 P.M.-A~ Plremen lleet .••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••8chool
has appointed as Senior Air Wardens the following:the Auxiliary urges a full attendance at
TtlEBDAY. JANUARY 20
Post 1- N. W. Suplee. Senior Post Warden. Swarthmore 708
next Monday afternoon's meeting in
2:$) P.II..-"I'alk on "C)oamjc :Rays....... ~ ••••••••••• ~ •• ~.~ ••••• Wom&D.'8 Club
po.t 2-R. L. Wilkinson. Senior Post Warden. Swarthmore 2145
.Borough Hall at 2 P. M. when details of
4:15 P.M.-··The Moving Blara"-Peter .an de Kamp •• 1IarttD. Lab. OOllege
8:1!1 P. M. - "OUt of tile PITJDg Ptm..............................PIQera Club
Post 3-]ohn Michael. Senior Post Warden. Swarthmore 1557
the dance and bridge party WIll be arWBDNlIBDAY. JANUARY 21
Post 4-George F. Corse, Senior Post Warden, Swarthmore 2404-J.
ranged. As usual members are asked to
10:00
A.M.
to
4:GO
P.II.
SUrgtcal Dt
'np ................ Re4 cro.. KedJa
Post 5-Robert C. Disque. Senior Post Warden. Swarthmore SS6-M
sew for the Red Cross at the Woman's
8:15 P.M.-"Oll!; of' the Pl'yIilg hD.......... ~ •••••••••••••••••••• PIaJerB Club
Post 6- R. <". Spencer. Senior Post Warden. Swarthmore 133
Club from 10 A. M. and then have
TlmBSDAY. JANUARY 22
Poot 7-H. W. Brinkmann. Senior Post Warden. Swarthmore 2242·
coffee and sandwiches at Borough Hall
10:00 A.M.-L. W. v. Stud7 Oroup ••••••••••••••••••••••• lI. S. _
Boom
10:00 A.M. '" 12:30 P.M.--8wB1ca1 Dr-aln. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bed orooo._
Post'8- Harry F. Miller. Senior Post Warden. Swarthmore 1240
'before the monthly meetini. Hostesses
8:15 P.M.--"Our IIIIkJ" ~'-Peter van de XamP ••••• MartIn Lab, 001lI!p
Eacli SODior Warden will call together the wardens in his special· post and next week wiD he Mrs. Norman Hulme
8:15 P.M.-"Ou1; of tile PITJDg Ptm..............................PIQera Club
start 'their traiiWtg. For any information
call post warden neareat-' 10ur...home,
and ~s; Oscar Gilcteest.
.
-
Lincoln
EATON DEFENDS
MO DERN SCHOOLS
DOOR TO DOO IN
PARALS"SIS DRIVE
d
J
C.
\ii
E
'Erbb s::
CHARITY DANCE
FOR BORO KIT
Ir:==============================:::;
•.. Ioh.nny Makes the Honor Boll
for th.e First Time in His Career
235.390.66
Total .................. U~_5.390.66
lIabtUttes :
Early in his school career, poor marks were attributed to Johnny'.
gI8sses were procured. Still he just got by" each
. year ••• until the Fall term of 1941 when hls\Mother bought
IUl LE.S. Study Lamp. Suddenly Johnny'S work improved •••
IUld today he's on the' honor roil Strange as it seems, the well
diltused light of such a lamp does speed seeing IUld learnin&.
eyesight. So
............
ARDMORE WINDOW CLBANING co.
Bworn to and 8Ubscrtbed. before
'1th day of January. 1942.
W1LLIAlI 8. BlTI'LB.
Correct -Attest:
Notary PuhUo.
K
PHILADELPHIA ELECTRIC COMPANY
ALBBRT N. Oagn_
W.E.~~u.
Bur ••~.II'. S'IIM'"
E. B. 'l'BMPLB,
Dlr8ctont.
l
COLL.EGE
...------
u'::El~eci"'" ••••••••••••••••••
Reserves
profits ..........•...
MEMORANDA
Pledged assets (and. BeCUtltlea
loaned) (book value):
United States Government
obltgatlons, direct and
guaranteed, pledged to secure deposits and other
lIablUties ..... ~ " .. ......
L I 13 l:f A I~ Y
.1.
FUEL OIL
SWA.RTHMORE BRANCH
JI'allies
::
i
;:;
U3~0
$3.00
Values up to
1=
$33
i
SUN
ALL BRANCHES OP HOllBB CLEAN.
INO KNOWN IN TRB TBRBITORY POR 20 YBAlIS
Free Phone 0allR - For CUstomera
~~
~
;
."",' .,•• ,
•••. $2.597,819.81
J. THOMAS
!
-
JI'allies to $50.00
LIAB~
i.·~~~~~l:~lrl.::~:::::[= I
etc.) ....... .
w.
Dresses
~_--~
$35
D~~~~~~,.:;;(::'ts and
ot md'vlduab.
COrpOra-
Chester
'Phone Chester 2·5161
~
Maker oj Fine Photographs ~
10
6.250.00
Jr.
Greeling Cards -
ROGER RUSSEIJ,
*
382.590.22
693.638.82
••
BooksFraming
- Kodak
Piclare
i
....
15.000.00
lectlon .•..... ~.~.~
..~~ . ~~:
balance.
and
Bank premises owned .. $89.440.00
Furniture and fixtures. 3.262.45
Your Jeweler
714 Welsh Sireet
602.255,61
1,149,151.5,
WATCHES
EDWIN B. KELLEY,
I
Clearance!
CASUAL
COATS
$5.00-$9.00
32 Yean P.raetieal Experience
§
~~
.
§
A. L. PARKER
'Phone Media 459.M
,~-- -----~, ----~-~-- .. -,~-.--~ ~----------
ASSETS
QUINBY & SON
COATS
$17.00
$23.00
12 !o 20
;:
AND REBUILDING
Swarthmore 111-.1'
;;
and
=
PIANO TUNING
Notary Publlc - Insurance _ Real Estate
Fur Trimmed
Sizes
9 to 15
cation with her parents. She had been ;;;
enjoying gala reunions with home town
friends and on the morning of December 24 happily met her husband RobS 'f
h
.
crt ... .\ eyer w en he arnved by train
to join her for the holiday. After lunch..:
l'on she mentioned she had one last
minute gift to procure for a four-year- §
old daughter of a friend. Pausing only
to hang Christmas wreaths ill the win-
416 HAVERFORD PLACE
CALL SWARTHMORE 1290
170 modern, 3 bedrooms, garage. Pos.
session at once.
i
JI'allies
=
Sold
C LEA RAN C E !
W!:lep:;:n!o~~a~.!!sit
December
•
SWA I~THMO"E
•
11110. B"IID'
* Defense Council Bulletins *
..
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
-'-
IIILI[I.(
THE
6
NEW COUNCIL HEAD
Uflry's Child!
CLASSIFIED
/ ' /1
FOil IIENT
I.
\
/' III
111\
\lldtl 0 'Forld
'\ II 1/
f
JI1,
alld /,,,111,
J on RENT
Large b('coud Hoor loom
>;>()uthern 12xpQ;;un llrcllkfast lind garage ( I/IJ 11 \. d ,IT lit '/I .,I/d lta./I/I' III!}
11 dC'!)ircd Tcl('phollC' S","rthmorc 59"~-R
J OR RENT
Apurtmcnt 5 rooms 111m; }),II II fill \/I/hl 0 Jl'orld'
kitchen Imth porch und garagc $00 110 I
PUlk 1I\f.'IlUC' T('lephone S\\urthmore 1313-R III d \ II
11/IIf!rl/'1 ')tlll
FOR RENT -Jo'ufn1sllcd room with prlvatl' /\/11\ II II/I fll/ IllIlds "d'i/i/~
bath Tl'I('phunlC Swarthmore 373
tOR RENT
End of January room On // I I, III, I f
'I 1/1 If OJ',
HJlI BO)1 K 'I he Swarthmot{ III
\./ \
,I"~
/,',
nil III n
comfortabll' room
FlUe location M('lIls H dl iilrl d Reason
.tblc
201
Coll('ge
a\CllUC
Telq)hotl(' I ' h I !/ () fl'lI/hI/Il" ~\ "Id
Swarthmore 0l55-J
,
,P/I,.dllll/ I
tOR RENT
rhrlc 100111 apartllwllt "uit- /. II ./ ( 1111.1 ,
able [or t\\O mcn or buslne..;s lOUp11C G IS I
f
It,
.{If,
Iflll,'\
(/llid dllllt ~i ott
(Icetrlc Includcd T('lcl>holll S\\ lrthmorl
,I
J.'
I
I
lOt
I
I
I Oil SAL!:
J
/'
I'
I'
SWARTHMOREAN
I'"l
\"
IIl1h.lll,llt/
J Ul 1I.lr) 24
WAN lED
JANUARY 9. 1942
IJelrl! g
to It.l\l
lit \ II
!
'"
~
19-12
~
=
§
~
CLEARAN(:E!
I
Fur 1'rimmed
'"
'"'"
~
COATS
$17.00
$23.00
, tlllI('" '0 8:'5
V"/IIP .• I .. 550.00
I)
tn IS
$33
~11111
11 ttl 20
,I'
.
.-:.....
~'u
tiuld
110>
till' proJlertl of Johu U01llUlI
I
'''lilt:
slippul
litsCllldmg ),1 t.: \ t'r \\.IS .1 ch,lrter member, by thl'
.1 th~ht 01 slalr" ,lilt! fdl 10 {cct, LI- Rl \ Ahllt.:r PUIII(,,\\III \\ho also offici{.,Ih Ir.ll tUflllg: htr skull Rushed to ,tied \\hlll the \(e,ers \\erc marfled
till hO'IIII,t1 .. lit.' 1H:\lT n:g.llllCd cOl1'o(;I- tht.:rc III JU1Ie 1939 FoUO\\llIg the ChiC.lgo Su\ ices 011 Frida), December 26,
"thlll .... ,lIId dlui ,III hOllr later.
the hod\ \\.IS t"ken to the bunal
Born 011 .Iuh ,Zi) l'JU III ChIC.lgO she
g-round tit
:\Ir~
~Ic)cr's
paternal
lI\ul III th,lt nh hu I.'lItlrl hie \\Ith
gl ,lIHIIl.ln IIh 111 tht \Vars.I\' c(·melen'.
I till l Sll pllOlI of lour 'l.IC .. 'PlIII It
\\ .Ir~.l\\ 01110 Bdufl,.· tlu.: IIIterl1lCI;t
I h IIIIl Co III ~l \ \ ,,, \\ IH rl sill lilt t ~I r
I
tht.:rt \\lre "dd,tlOll.tl SCf\'ICt.:S .It tilt
:\11.:\(f \\IItll lilt, \ \ l l l hllth .. huit:nts
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~ r JoUrlic'L·tI to the buslllc .. s section tht.: hohda) S \' Ith their parents In Chi·
for tilt.: rcm.lliling gift 011 lfr~ ~h!') er's C.I~O attended the funeral services
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Illll ... I?Y
THE SWARTHMO'R AN
SWARTHMORE, PA•• JANUARY 16. 1942
VOL. XIV, No, 2
"OUT OF FRYING Antonio Brosa Plays
PAN" OPENS TUES. Tonight at College
P. O. Warns
Postmaster
•
A.
P
Smalley
\\ arus Swarthmorealls to beware
of cham letter schemes. They are
Lincoln Atkis8 Directs Local Distinguished Violinist to Play
Nicely Varied Program
Presentation of Broad.
in Clothier
way Hit
The \V,lham J Cooper Foundation
"Out of the Frying Pan" is the ap·
Illegal and prohibited through the
82.50 PER YEAR
Photographic Show U. C. SOLICITORS
Draws Eager Fans
MEET SUNDAY
Gallery Talk by Stuhenrauch United Charities' Fihn "Penn's
Considers Prints of
Challenge." Milquetoast Skit
20 Exhihitors
10 Precede Instructions
malls even when In regard to
Defense Stamps.
The \-Voman's Club \\as the scenc of
anti Department of !I USIC of Swarth.! L__________________I
~IOVICS, a skit, colorful dcscrlptlon o£
propriate title of next week's produca
busy
asscmbly
of
snapshouters,
photochantable
,\ork conduc ted III Swarthmore Collegc wlil prescnt Alltomo
hOI1 at the Players Club of SwarthI)lctonalists
and
others
llltcrested
III more .1Ild ,Ie Illlt), plus IIIstructioll III
I3rosa violullst and George Reeves at
more An lu]anous comedy by Francis
photograph) 011 the mght of January the fine ,lrt of SOItCltlllg contributions
the 1>1.1110 011 Friday January 16 at 8 15
Swann directed by LlIlco]" Atk,SS, It
13 when the annual exillbit of photo- {or the UlIIh:d ChantH!S all will bc
P. M. 111 Clotiller Memorial
was cilOscn becausc It IS a riot of
graphy
was given the 'once over" by comblilcd-and toppcd off With re·
The program Will include the Sonlaughter, the kmd of show the Club's
thc photograplucally mmdcd pcople of freshllll"llts - Illxt Sunday afternoon at
ato-Allegretto bCII :Modcrato, Allegro. Tells Clubwomen We Are Not
audlcnces secm to hke bcst.
S\\arthmore ThiS exhibit winch has .1 "get toge ther" of Swarthmorc's
ReCItative Fantasm,
and
Allegretto
Over.Educated; Lists Forward
The ongm of the play is mterestmg.
comc
to be an annual affair was at- DUlted Chclntlcs \\orkers in the Wopoco mosso-hy Cesar Franck; from
One of the popular picture I1lagazmes
Trends
of
Education
tended by somc hundred people who man's Club The program Will bcgin
Partlta 111 E major PreludlO, Loure.
made a case study of four gIrls who
cxammcd the pnnts carefully and With at 4 P M
and Gavotte u Rondo-for the viohn
lived lit furmshed rooms 111 an old
In
anS\\cr
to
the
question
"Arc
We
great adImratlOn, envy or praise as the
.\11 team captams, team membcrs and
alone by Bach; Sonatine -Allegro,
brownstone house 1Il New York and
Ovcr-Educatmg
Ourselvcs?"
Roland
L.
case
might be
others a<:'slstlng 111 the £ortheommg
Burlcsca. and Vn3cc-by Werner Jospracticed plays current on Broad\\ay.
A lugh pomt of the exhibit that mght campaIgn arc requested by Da11lcl R.
ten, Ravel's "Tziganc" j and a final Eaton gavc a postttve "No" to a large
It was then" scheme to lure actors and
and
11ltcrested
audience
at
the
Wo~
wa~
a gallcry tour and talk glvcn by GO.::>d\\ Ill, dlstnct director for Swarthgroup Rondalla Aragonesa by Granaproducers to their pcrformances 111 the
man's
Club
on
Tuesday
afternoon.
Arnold
V Stubenrauch of :Medla. llr more, to be prcscnt for 11lstruchons
dos, Murcl3na by de Falla and Jota
hope of Impressing them and landmg
"Thh.
IS
a
fair
queshon
to
consider
Stubenrauch
who was introduced by .Ihout the Uillted Chantlcs campaign
Navarra by Sarasate
I)arts III road compamcs
It
has
been
flung
at
our
schools
by
a
Edwl1I
C
Buxbaum
IS onc of the out- \\hlch gets under \\'a} January 25 and
Antolllo Brosa was born m Canonla,
The brother of one of these girts was
thouS311d
vOices
ThiS
IS
a
t,mc
when
standmg
photographers
of tillS part of contlllues for 1\\0 weeks
Spain HIS first appcarance 111 pubhc
FranCIS Swann He rccoglllzed the
our
S)
stem
of
public
schools
IS
gomg
the
country
and
well-kno\\l1
III SwarthThe progr ..ull on Sunday aftcrnoon
\\ as made at the age of ten, in Barconnc possibihtles o£ the situatIon and
to
bc
thoroughly
rensed.
What
its
more
He
IS
president
of
the
Provi\\
111
be headed by a showlllg of the
celona, wlllch was so successful that it
deCided to \\ rite a play about It The
charactcr
IS
gOing
to
be
after
thiS
war,
deuce
GUild
of
Photographers,
prlllt
reccntl)
completcd Umted ChantIes'
\\3S follO\\Cd by many others, III which
result IS "Out o£ the Frymg Pan"
no
one
may
kno\\:
But
ItS
character
is
d'fector
of
the
PhotographiC
Section
mOVIC,
"\Vtlham
Pelln's Challenge"
he played both as solOIst and in chamThe author has created a plot full of her-mUSIc The CIty of Barcelona made gomg to be detcrmmed by what we, of thc Frankhn Institute and a suc- \\ IlIch cntcrtal11mgly outhnes the scope
amusmg Situations, IIlvolvmg would-be hun a grant to finish his studies In ItS patrons, dcmand, and its character cessful
salon
contributor
rankmg .111<.1 IOtent of the campaIgn
corpses With knives in their backs, a Brussels. From here he came to Eng- IS gomg to affect the future of every twenty-tilIrd III the Itst of many hunOf great cducatlonal value to new
too effiCient Mickey FUlII, sevcral at- land '\ here he deCided to make his boy or girt 1\ ho IS now or who wlll be dreds of salon exhibitors .He IS the re- and old SoliCItors ahke \\111 be a twotendants from the Il1sane asylum, and home It IS III England principally that III the next gcncratlon among Its stu- CIPICllt of many honors 111 photographiC ad skit s tag~ d by the Chanties Playa much befuddled New York pohce Bros.1 has made his career and has dents.
ers, .L1l orgall1zation of amateur actors
cudcs
force. The actmg of the youngsters so hUllt Ul' Ins reputation both as solOist
"Indictments o[ our school system
Mr Stubenrauch gave an mformal \\:ho have prescnted their story of Mr
beWilders their landlady that she 15 and as chamber-mUSIc player It was range all the way from a lack of mas- and mformal1vc talk about photography :Mllquctoast (the Duld-mannered SOhC1never certam whether she IS wltnessmg here that he founded the world·famous tery of the fundamental processes, to 10 a11lts phases and then gave a gallcry tor) to many commullIty audiences,
a play nhcarsal or scenes from real Brasa Quartet III 1926 With which he the clallll that our program is too var- tour of the many pictures on the wall After portraYl11g 1[r. MIlquctoast, the
hfe
toured Francc, Ita):}, Holland, Ger- Icd and that It costs too much. The .HIS good natured crihcisms were 1Is- players remove hllll gently from the
Thc play ran on Broadway for sev- man} ,llId U S A Owmg to m- mouIltlng cost o[ education IS becom- tClled to attentively and Ius good sense stolge and proceed to demonstrate
eral months to popular acclaim and has creaslllg demands for lum as soloist, mg anothcr 'white man's burden'."
of humor made the time pass fast as U11Ited Char Jtles soliCitation as it
heen released only tillS fall for ama- he has l.ttely disbanded his Quartet
~(r Eaton quoted Roger Babson, each picture 111 turn was discussed from should Tightly be done.
Another teaturc of the program IS to
teur productlOll The Players Club is Both as solOist and 10 chamber·muslc Dr. \Vll1 Durant, Stephen Lcacock, an artistiC and photographIc vIewpomt
one of the first httle theaters to gIve It he has gn en first pcrformances of 'V,lltam Graham Sumner, Mary Ellen Many good pomters both m composl- ue the appe~lrance of Mrs. Mafia E.
),[r AtklsS, the director, has proved many new works, and has acquired Chase III Illustrat1llg a cross section of tlOn and tedl1uC}ue wcre glvcn. In a Shdnllre, Executive Director of the
prehmlllary talk before hIS gallery tour. Family SerVIce of '\Vestern Delaware
IllS ablhty WIth other types of drama the rcputatlOn for mterprcting both current criticism
"CritiCS of the schools, unless they Mr. Stubcnrauch emphaSized the Im- Count), ,vito "Ill gwe a brief descripand now takes a hand at fast farcc claSSical and modern \\orks with equal
arc the paid propagandlst~ of orgamz- portance todav of kt'epmg ollr"f'lves In tion of the "\\' rl..: II('r organt7at' ..... u it;
The cast includes sODle players With understandlllg and authonty.
, I •
al.ous dc\ otcd to a rt:Judlvll III :)c]iVoll good mental and phYSical trtm by hav- domg III tillS .md nearby commumhes.
,\ hose talents Club aud cnees are fa
Among oth('r org.lllizations achve
costs, are almost always of the vin.tage IIlg a hobby such as photography.
mlhar Charles Seymour, June West
18«)2
or
thereabouts
Thcy
entirely
locally
"hich arc participants undcr thc
AtklSS, Janet James Campbell, Harry
For the statistically mmded, a total
overlook
the
fact
that
we
are
not
preUll1tcd
CharitIes arc the Boy Scouts
V Bonner, and Sally McFadden, Nurse
of 93 pnnts were hung which were
parmg
our
youth
for
the
days
we
and
the
Clrl Scouts .A surprise for
Preen m "The )'lan 'Vho Came to
made by 20 exlubitors ;rhe exlubltors
walked
ul11mportant
"ules
over
muddy
local
Boy
Scouts at the "get-together"
Dinner"
IIlcludcd Dr It C Ammerman, C. T
roads
to
schools
Today
we
have
some
IS
to
be
the
new Kodachrome movies
Others, \\ ho arc new to the Swarth- Local Women Currently Waging
tlurty-two million youth in our schools Bauer, E. C. Buxbaum, Fred Calvert, of t} pIca I all tdoor phases of scoutmg
more stage, or who havc not been seen
Annual War for Funds
and colleges In the very nature of Fielder Coffin. Carroll Frey, W. A.
TillS 1UOV1C, which has an accomrecently are Charles McCaffrey, a
to Defeat Infantile
thlllgs the type of educatIOn when only J aqucUe, Ernest Laws, Donald Tanner, panying narratton by Lowell Thomas,
former Mask and vVlg player j Washa chosen fcw went to school above the DaVid Ullman, Dr. .Hcnry J. \-Velland, was taken at Vallcy Forge and Camp
Illgton West, ex-football captain and
COllslt1ermg that 26,000 cJllld and adult
eighth grade Will not suffice today. Ralph Hayes, DaVId Eynon, The HIgh Delmont and lIIcludcs several scenes in
actor at Tufts College, Mary LOUIse vlctnns of mfanttle paralYSIS dunng the
Critical analYSIS wIll concern Itself, School Camera Club, The Swarthmore which local Scouts aPl'ear Swarthmore
Brown, the httle pest in June ~[ad; past three years ha\c constituted one of
1I0t so much With whethcr the Job College Camera Club and seven pnnts Scouts of Troop 2, under Scoutmaster
G. Jackson Evans, brothcr ot Sam; and Amenca's most scnous epale1111cs, the
has been overdone, as , .. hcther It lS of cxceptlOnal beauty by the speaker. 'Valter Thorpc, and of Troop 3, under
Jac Van Arden, who has been assocI- S\\arthmore C0I111lltttee III the annual
The arrangements were under the Scoutmaster Ambrose Van Alen wIll be
bemg donc at all
ated With httle theaters III and about paralYSIS fund dnve asks each Citizen
"The curnculum of the modern auspices of the photographiC commit- present In uniform to see the colored
Philadelpilla as actor, producer and to open heart and purse and engage at
school IS a roll caU of the activities of tee, Mr and l[rs. E. C Buxbaum, Mr. lIlotlon
picture
arrangements
for
costumer.
least 111 some small measure III the
men" 1fr. Eaton listed among thc and Mrs Ernest Laws, Mr. and Mrs wlllch \\ere nlade by Rex Gary of Yale
Donald C ;rowcrs J head of the drama fight aga1l1st tillS d'sease
gains compulsory attendance and child A M Lackey, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cal- 3\ enue, an cxccutlve of the Valley
One-half of the amount collected Will
department at The Mary Lyon School,
labor laws to guarantee schoohng for vert, J r, Mr. Alan \-Vood, Mrs. A E Forge CounCil, B S A
and Jean H Creighton, who has la- be used by the locdi chapter 111 casmg
every child; dcvclopmcnt of special Longwell Espcclal credit should be
After the program, ltght refreshbored long amI unseen on properties, sufferlllg and the rema1lltier "ill go for
education for those phYSically handl- given to 11rs Lackey who had charge ments \\ III be scn'ed by the hlue-ulllhave been called back from very re- research "ork 111 prc\ ClitIOn and to as(C 01l/Ullled 011 PaC8 Su)
of the arrangements for the exlllbttion formed SCllIor Gul Scouts of the Marcent performances for tllelr character Sist 1n spreadl11g I'resent knO\dedge re,
hal] and also to :h.frs A. E. Longwcll mer Slllp, "Trade \Vmds" Mariners who
gardmg the scourgc
parts
through
whose many efforts the exlllblt Will serve are. Margaret Ann and
Under the direction of ~lrs Carl de
Club IlIghts arc Tuesday through
\\as
such
a success.
Mary FranCIS DlInmltt, Trudy Endcrs,
~loll eight captams opened a door to
Saturday, January 20 to 24.
door campaign 011 'Vcdncsday. Mrs
The pictures were on display nntll Ruth Gay, Ethel Hay, Laura Lec HopkillS, Betty Ann Hulme, Ehzabeth Lee,
John PItman, :Mrs D G van de Boe,
January 15.
Braun to Address Mothers
:Mrs \V. F Hanny, l1rs George 'V
and
Charlotte Maas
• I •
Casey, ~Irs Lovett Frescoln, Mrs. S Annual Dance and Card Party to
Representatives and campaign workThe dura grade Mothers' Group of MIlton Br)ant, 11rs Oscar J Gllcrcest
Raise Funds for Medical Chest
College Names Doctor
ers
from neighbOring dlstncts III Delathe Rutgers avcnue school has lIlvlted ,lIld Mrs L L Hedgepeth
Neede.1 in Local Defense
ware
County have been IIlv1 ted to join
the mothers and fathcrs of the second,
Dr Paul Strong, '30, men's phySICian
The pubhc IS rel1undcd t hat a vichm
tIllS
Swarthmore "gct-together" by
tll1rd and fourth grades of both schools o{ paralYSIS dunng the first ) eal reThe fund of $400 for use as an Emer- at the Collcge, has been called for
Mrs
A F. Jackson of Park avenue,
to hear the Reverend DaVid Braun qUIres proper care III reahstic terms- gency Chest of Swarthmore, the reques t Army scrvlcc Dr..Morns A. Bowie has
\\
ho
IS
DIVIS Ion Chairman for Central
whose toPtC Will be "Their Future is ,Ipproxllnately a thousand dollars' cx- of local doctors, wtll be raised by thc been aPPolllted as hIS successor, Dr.
Now" on February 1.1 A question and pel1
• I •
(hSCUSSlon pCrlod Will follo\\.
Medical School. For scveral years he
Ical attcntlon and correct massagc and Borough.
The mcetlng WIll open promptly at exercise
The proceeds of the Legion AUXIlIary was a research fcllow 10 internal medlJohn D Seymour of Vassar avenue
8 P. M. on \Vednesday e\emug Febru·
annual dance and card party to be held cme at the UniverSIty of Penllsylvania has cnhsted 1ll the Manne Corps and
ary 1.1 Those peoplc who are forced
February 13 m the Woman's Club Medical School• .He IS now on the staff IS statlOl1.cd at Recnut Depot, Marine
Past Presidents Dine
to be late for the meetmg "Ill miSS the
House wIll be turned ovcr to this pro- of the Bryn ~lawr Hospital.
Corps Basc, San DIego, Cal
The J ulllor Past PreSidents of Delcore around which the evenmg IS bUilt
Ject Thc
cooperahon
publicand
IS
Mrs. FranCIS Harper IS the group's a\\arc County \'Otll hold thclr second asked
m the
purchaseofofthe
tickets
program head and Mrs DaVid F. Evans meetmg and dmller at the Plaza Inn, donation of money,
THE WEEK'S CALENDAR
Lansdowne, J alluary 26
ItS chairman.
The First Aid kit to be supphed \\111
1
contam medical instruments and equipFRIDAY, JANUAa,y 16
ment suffiCient to copc \\ Ith 75 accI8.15 P M - Antonio Bross, Spanish Viollnlst ...•
.Clothier Memorial
dents
SATURDAY,
JANUARY
17
The COlllllllltce alrcady sdhng tickets
7.00 P M and 9 00 P M - Moving Pictures ••• _
. Clothier MemorIal
and fakmg donatlollS includes Mrs
SUNDAY,
JANUARY
18
016.... , Borouch Ball -Telephone 0351
Robert T. Balf, Mrs Herbert Bassett,
11 00 A. M - Morning Worship • . .•
•
..• _ .• • •• • ••• Local Churches
OpeD Week Day. 9.12, 14 - Sa.urday 9·12
4:00 P M. - United Charities Workers Meet ... _ .,... . ..... Woman's Club
Mrs Alexander Ewmg, Mrs \Valter
815 P.M.-Fine Arts Lecture.
. ... _........•..• Frlends' Meeting House
Schm'dt, hlrs. J. Paul Bro\\n, Mrs.
MONDAY,
JANUARY 19
The FJre School held Its fourth meeting Monday evenmg at the High Oscar J. Gilcreest, Ferns Mitchell,
10 00 A M - Red Cross Sewing.. ... ... . .
. .. ..
.. Woman·s Club
School- well attended.
Oscar Gllcrcest and \Valter Thorp.
2 00 P. M. - Legion Auxlllary ..... ........... ~. ._
. . Borough Hall
6
30
P.
M
Business
Association.
.
..
_
..
~
Strathhaven Inn
Captam J. Kirk McCurdy, Air 'Vardcn for Swarthmorc, S\\arthmore 2290,
Mrs. Alexander Ewing preSident of
8:00 P M - AuxiUary Firemen Meet . .
. . _ ••....
. . . . . • St:hool
has appomted a:s SClllor Air \Vardens the followmgthe AUXIliary urges a full attendance at
TUESDAY. JANUARY 20
Post 1 - N. \V. Suplee, Senior Post 'Vardcll, S"artlunore 708
next Monday afternoon's rneetmg In
230 P. M - Talk on "Cosmic Rays" .• •. •••••• • •• ..,
. Woman's Club
415 P. M - "The Moving Stars' - Peter van de Kamp .. Martln Lab, College
Post 2 - R. L 'Vllkmsol1, Scmor Post 'Varden, Sw~rthmore 2145
Borough Hall at 2 P M when details of
.Players Club
8 15 P M - "OUt of the Frying Pan". .........
Post 3 - John ~ttchael, Selllor Post Warden, S\\arthmore 1557
the dance and brIdge party will be arWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21
Post 4-George F. Corse, Selllor Post "Vardcn. S"arthmore 240-1-J
ranged As usual members are asked to
1000 A M to 4:00 PM-Surgical Dressings.
Red Cross, Media
Post 5- Robert C Disque, Selllor Post \Varden, Swarthmore 556-M
sew for the Red Cross at the 'Vornan's
. •.....
8 15 P M - "Out of the Frying Pan".
Players Club
Post 6 - R. C. Spencer, SenIOr Post 'Varden, Swarthmore 133
Club from 10 A M. and then have
THURSDAY, JANUARY 22
Post 7 - H. \V Brlllkmann. Semor Post \Varden, Swarthmore 2242
10:00 A M.-L W. V. Study Group
..
_. . H S Museum Room
coffee and sandwiches at Borough Hall
10 00 A M. to 12 30 P M - Surgical Dressings. .•
.
.. Red Cross. Media
Post 8-Harry F. Miller, Scmor Post 'Varden, Snarthmore 1240
beforc the monthly meeting Hostesses
8:15 P. M - "Our Mllky Way" - Peter van de Ka.mp
Martin Lab, College
Each Senior \Varden Will call together thc wardens m Ins special post and next week Will be Mrs. Norman Hulme I
815 P M -"Out of the Frying Pan" .
. _. .••
.Players Club
J
start their trammg. For any mformatlon call post wardcn nearest your home. and Mrs Oscar Gilcreest.
EATON DEFENDS
MODERN SCHOOLS
DOOR TO DOOR IN
PARALYSIS DRIVE
~utar)
Public -lnsllranr(' - Itt',,1 Estatl'
\. J. QI,INnY .'t SON
MUS.
:\U'J(CEn QUINn\
\
"'/liVf:lU/,
20r.
~
"
/}mE("r(jU~
OI.lIIg( SI.
'l'hulI(, :\1(,111 I . J
,,~ (lid
IIUlll'lO~ and ELGIN' \v\TCIIEs
,I
EIl"'IN II. KELLEY •.11'.
} ollr
25
aJ estate owned other than
h tuk IHcmhl:-,
OUt( I b ' l b
(h~"I(r
(Opposite New tit"t'" 'Ihentr~)
'I' hUll(' C.1"'~h·r :~7(d
,--;.
"
"
-.
" - - ... _ ... _ ... c;;:
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•
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SWAIITlIMOIIE IIllAM'1I
ALL BRANCHES OF HOUSE CLEANING KNOWN IN THE TERRI.
TORY FDa 20 YEARS
Free Phone Calls - For Customers
(Formally Sw. 19)
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MEMORANDA
1
Ph '"" d as..o.;et.s (find securities
lomod) 'book value)
United States GO\ ernment
obllgaUons
dlr('ct
n.nd
gUfilantccd, pledged to sel lire
deposits and other
II iI)llitl(
... Johnny Makes the Honor Roll
for the First Time in His Career
rot It
~l(
\lIt d liabilities
D pusl ts secured by
CHARITY DANCE
FOR BORO KIT
.. ,
::;1 t 8L1 .11 '15
lJ(1sit" bloth
St
I
VAN ALEN BROS ,I
Phone !S'\. 10 ll2
..
LIABILITIES
at Indl\ldUll18,
Jla.rtnershlps
find
corpom-
1 Demand
II
U4 po~lts of United St It('", GotSIi\IMONDS
! I ~:.~~~~~ (InCluding pOol.1
(11t .. 1t r _ DI belh of Stat'" find political
1'_.-.".'. \\ I"h Sir, c t
t'
H~
It,,.! 1u
pledged
I:-<:;;cts Pill StHlllt to requireIlHcnt." of ll\~
'lotI!
$ 143')~1331
St... t
I. E S Sproa.t, Cashier ot the' Qb'ove
named bank, do solemnly swear thn.t the \
aoo\C statement Is true to the be;t of my I
knOWledge llnd belIef
I
E S. SPROAT. I
Cashier
S
to and sllbscribed betore me tbla I
I 7thwon.
day of .'nUliary, HH2
WILLIAM:::; Bl'ITLE
<..:urrect _ Attest
Notary Public
ALBERT N 0 ARRETT
W E KISTLER
E B TEMPLE
Directors
Early In hIS school career, poor marks were attributed to Johnny's
eyesight. So glasses were procured. Stm he just "got by' each
year ... untIl the Fall term of 1941 when his .Mother bought
an I.E.S. Study Lamp. Suddenly Johnny's work Improved •••
and today he's on the honor roll. Strange as it seems. the well
dlilused hght of such a lamp does speed seeIng and learnmg.
PHILADELPHIA ELECTRIC COMPANY
flur
DEFENSE STAMPS liND 80NDS
1;:===================================:::;
* Defense Council Bulletins *
•
IL__________________________________
THE
2
PERSONALS
Miss Ethel Stilz of Swarthmore College entertained Miss Maude Gorham a former member of the College
faculty now located at Cambridge,
M.... and Mrs. Sargent Walter of
North Chester road at dinner Friday
before tbe Don Cossack Chorus program at the College. Mrs. Frank H.
Griffin of Old Orchard Farm, Wawa
entertained at luncheon and bridge in
honor of Miss Gorham on Tuesday of
last week. Dr. Clara Price Newport of
North Chester road entertained at
luncheon yesterday in honor of Miss
Gorham who was formerly connected
with the English department here.
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Chapin of Harvard avenue have returned home after
visiting their son-in-law and daughter
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Hickox of Delmar,
N. Y. and their son-in-law and daughttr Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Mett of Schenectady, N. Y. for two weeks.
Mrs. H. B. Cookman of College avenue entertained her duplicate bridge
club Friday. Other members of the club
are Mrs. George L. McCracken, Mrs.
Harold Barnes, Mrs. C. M. C. Lewis,
Mrs. John R. Brownell, Mrs. John W.
Le Doux, Mrs. J. Horace Walter, Mrs.
Sargent Waiter, Mrs. Joseph J. Geer,
Mrs. J. V. S. Bishop, Mrs. William T.
Johnson, and Mrs. Thomas Downes,
Jr. Miss Frances White substituted for
Mrs. Downes.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hannum of
Oberlin avenue arc enjoying a motor
trip to Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Pearson and
two daughters Alice and Kathryn who
have been spending the 3 months since
their arrival in this country from Beirut, Syria, with Mr. Pearson's brother,
Mr. John M. Pearson of Cornell avenue, moved January 1 to the Dodd
apartment, Swarthmore avenue.
Miss Doreen McConechy of Strath
Haven avenue and Miss Mary Wood
of Cornell avenue entertained at tea
last Saturday afternoon at the McCon..
echy home in honor of Miss Virginia
Seal of Cornell avenue in celebration
of her birthday. Miss Rose Ward of
Philadelphia was given a shower at the
tea.
The H. Paul Cleaver family are living with their next door neighbors the
Robert C. Powells of Swarthmore
place for a month or so white their
house at Swarthmore place and North
Chester road is being repaired following recent fire damage.
Mr. Irvin R. MacElwee of Mt. Holyoke place spent January 7 and 8 at
Rutgers University, New Brunswick,
N. J. taking a course in civilian defense.
Mrs. MacElwee's parents Dr. and
Mrs. Joseph V. Collins of Stevens
Point, Wis. left January 5 to winter in
Lakeland, Fla. aft« their holi~.ay visit
here.
Barbara Bagby formerly of Swarthmore has recently accepted a position
with the International Business Machines Corporation of New York City.
The Thimble Group of Swarthmore
met Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Joseph Bates of Haverford avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Van Alen of
Park avenue and Mr. and Mrs. H.
Lindley Peel of Columbia avenue entertained at the Peel home on Tuesday
LOVELY FRESH.BOSES AT ALL 'I'IMES
''-n--Cor_..
evening with a spaghetti· .finner for
the teachers of the Junior-Intermediate
Department of the Presbyterian
Church and their spouses. Following
the dinner the group divided, the teachers for an evening of study and the
others for an evening of bridge.
Mr. R. E. Wilson and daughter Miss
Ruth Wilson of Ogden avenue spent
the New Year's holiday at Mt. CardiIr-ln Ski Lodge, Alexandria, N. H. A
heavy snowf~l1 made skiing conditions
excellent.
Ruth returned direct to Mt. Holyoke
College where she is a senior.
Dr. and Mrs. James D. Nelson who
have returned from their wedding trip
in the south and are at home at 2100
Walnut street, Philadelphia, spent
Sunday with Mrs. Nelson's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl de Moll of Park
avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Moscrip of
Dartmouth avenue had as their house
guest last week Mt's. Moscrip's aunt
JlIrs. J. Frank Gibbs of Back of Beyond, Stanardsville, Va.
The next sewing meeting of Kappa
Kappa Gamma will be held on Tuesday, January 20, at the Swarthmore
avenue home of Mrs. Robert Brooks.
: Mrs. Howard M. J cokins of North
Chester road is the guest of Dr. and
Mrs. Frank Aydelotte forwerly of
Swarthmore College, at Lake Wales,
Fla.
Mrs. Philip W. Kniskern of River..
.iew road left Tuesday of I.. t week to
accompany her husband on a ten-day
business tl'ip to St. Louis, Kansas City
and Denver.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Allison of
Vassar avenue left Wednesday of last
week to spend three months vacation
in a cottage they have taken at Indian
:Rock Beach. Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Wilkinson of
Cincinnati, Ohio have returned home
after visiting their son and daughterin-law Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Wilkinson
of Dickinson avenue for ten days.
. The Swarthmore Kappa Alpha Theta
Club met on Wednesday, January
14, at the Bryn Mawr home of Mrs.
Walter Roberts for its all-day meeting
and sewing for the American Friends'
Service Committee.
Miss Keta Brower returned recently
from California where she is taking a
~usiness course, to visit her mother
Mrs. Charles de Hart Brower of Crest
lane. She will go back to live three
months more in Berkeley, Cal, before
coming east again.
Mrs. Harold U. Faukner of North
Hampton, Mass. spent last week as the
guest of her brother 'and sister-in-law
Mr. and Mrs. William Webb of Cornell avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Gezelius of North
Chester road will entertain with a buffet supper for their friends tomorrow
evening and also a supper Saturday
evening January 31.
.
The regular monthly meeting of the
Philadelphia West Suburban AII~nce
of Delta Delta Delta win be at the
home of Mrs. M. L. Moore, 5 Chestnut
lane Moylan-Rose Valley on Wednesday 'January 21 at 2 P. M. Dessert will
be served by the hostess and her committee, Mrs. R. D. Fetherolf of Swarthmore, Mrs. J.W. Coogan of Cynwyd
and Miss Marjorie Jones of Bryn
Mawr. Any unaffiliated Tri-Deltas living in this locality are invited to contact the hostess.
Emily Terry daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. D. R. Terry of Swarthmore avenue celebrated her fifth birthday by
entertaining the kindergarten class of
College avenue with ice cream and cake
during the luncheon period.
Emily had the distinction of being
the first local baby of the New Year in
1937.
•
Engagements
~ions.
; The wedding will take place in May.
•
. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred H. Porter of
Moylan-Rose Valley have announced
the engagement of their daughter Miss
MAGAZINE PRICES
GOING UP
Take Long.term
subscriptions Now
To your Favorite
Magazines and
Save Money
Mrs. IJoyd E. Kanffman
Sw. 2080
_emeitt
1IIe. Tu:
EVE. 5Se
Mat. 40c -
SUNDAY tJNTIL ~ P. II.
CBILDBBH l'l'c ALL 'lIMBS
The B:nnDtDI' TIme of
"8BBGBANT YORK·"
Is 2 B01lll 15 Mllm:tes
•
BVl' DEFENSE BONDS.
Week
RODGERS
CHESTER, PA~
CLEARANCES
Great Saving. in
Every Department
I
COATS
Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Gillespie
of Secane are receiving congratulations
on the birth of a SOD, Edward Armstrong Gillespie, in the Lying-In Hospital, Philadelphia on Saturday, Jan.
uary 10. The baby is a grandson of
Mrs. E. A. Gillespie of Amherst avenue.
$10.95
$13.95
Yalue. 10
,16.95
J'alueo to
,2295
$19.95
J'alu...
10
,2995
DRESSES
Reduced to $2.83
J'alue.
10
,695
SKIRT
Save Y
Feathered
Friends
SPECIAL
$2.83-$3.83
SUPLEE'S BIRDSEED
A rare buy on new spring plaids
in palle) eolon. All fine ma-
J'alu... to '595
terials and all hiper priced
SUPLEE'S HARDWARE
11 So, Chester Rd.
skirts.
Sw.l05
Si~e.
24-30
WITH THE BOYS AT INDIANTOWN GAP
The Advocate speDds .. day ill camp
OUR COUNTY 25 YEARS AGO
As mirrored ID the Advocate 01 Early 1917
CHESTER'S ANNUAL CHARITY BAIl.
FDlST FOX OF '42
Rose Tree huntors ride OD New Year·s Day
COLLEGE STUDENTS CHRISTMAS SERVICE AT TRINITY CHURCH
11.00 by.he 1'_
NOIII
(121~)
By Frauds Swann
Director, Linr.oln Atkiss
JANUARY 20, 21, 22, 23, M
8:15 P. M.
•
STARTS FRIDAY
GRETA GARBO
-'-MELVYN-DOUGLAS-
"TWO-FACED
WOMAN"
STARTS TUESDAY
ROSAUND RUSSELL
WALTER PIDGEON
MEDIA
CLAUDETrE COLBERT
RAY MILLAND.
BRIAN AHERNE
"SKYLARK."
Voted the best actor of 19U for his
role 8$
"SERGEANT
YORK" .
_de
4Ic
CIIILDBEK~r=FtlmH
We
(Al!Prkes
tax)
Note: TbJs r.feture will DO' be
ahOWD: at esser prices &D7-
where before 11IIY, UIZ. • ~ •••.
•
Dresses Drastically Reduced
for Clearance
JUNIOR MISSES and LARGE SIZES
DEANNA DUBBIN
CHARLES LAUGHTON
ROBERT CUMMINGS
"IT STARTED
WITH EVE"
THURSDAY & FRIDAY
WILLIAM GARLAN
EDMUND LOWE
"FLYING
CADETS"
101&11
WALTER BRENNAN AND
JOAN LBSLIE
ADm"IIION
ADULTS MatInee
'SEMI·ANNUAL SALE!
•
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
FRIDAY
RICARDO CORTEZ
"I Killed That M",."
SATURDAY
ROY RODGERS
"Red RiverVaUey"
104 Park Avenue
•
Telephone Swarthmore 2513
~~~~
PAUL T. STRONG, M.D.
Announces that
ORVILLE HORWITZ, M.D.
Gradnate of the Johns HO(lkins Medical School
Has ~ to serve his patients during his service
in the U. S. Army Medi.,..J Corps
•
Temporary OflU:e Hour.:
Monday, Wednesday, Friday . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-8
Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-2..
S. PlESTER ROAD
Telephone Swarthmore 4514.
s
16, 1942
THE SWARTHMOREAN
..
H. & S. Meets Jan. 27
: :~.O~ TOUClI..
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT SWARTHMORE, PA.'
THE SWARTHMOREAN, INC.. PUBLISHER
PHONB SWARTHMORE 900
','
.
~,,"'"
.,..
". BomeAlter Trying
OFNATURE
Ezperiences in
nI"
.'
.
TIlls II tbe·t;JdnI ei
from. diaPten of • prallU!11 "book bJ C. Bluob
WoriIL-BdItor'a _
South America
The Home and School will meet
Tuesday, January 27 when the topic
for discussion will be Developing Initiative and Respectability in Our Children. This will be handled by panel discussion and led by Edward N. Hay
chairman of the Guidance Committee.
Mrs. Arthur P. Whitaker and chilAs an example I must mention a few dren Nena and Royal are back at their
peculiar pOols which .exist. at the cen- hOOle on Elm aveil1ie, comparatively
ROIAUE PaJUOL
ters
of man~_of. .the.. marshy island•• "safe" if not quite· sl? "sound" as when
Entsed u Second CIuo Matter, JullUf 24, 1929, at the POll
These have no. connection with the they left four months ago for South
Of&ce .t Swarthmore. Pa., under tho Act of Much a. 1819.
small channels and are really nothing America.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1942
more than ·.natural out-door. aquaria.
Arriving here on January 3 culminThere
is iDsnflicient seepage through ating a voyage from Callao. Peru on
•
will be on Thursday evening at ~ o'clock. the mud of the marshes to empty them December 18 to Balboa aboard the
Presbyterian Church Notes
The Senior Choir will meet at 8 o'clock. at low ·tide. It is only during periods Santa Elena, the intervening distance
The guest preacher on Sunday mornThe Fourth Quarterly Conference of flood that the creabires within have was covered by plane to Guatemala
ing, January 18, will be the Revereud will be held on Friday evening at 8:15 an opportunity for migration to other City and Texas and from that latter
Doctor Paul C. Payne, General Secre- P. M. T~e D~trict Superintendent, ?r. ponds or to the continuous element of point home by train.
tary of the Presbyterian Board of C. W. Kitto Will be present and preSide. the channels.
Besides the anxiety of continuous
While many of the pools are only a
, ..
Ed
.
• ••
blackouts
at sea the Whitakers homeChristian
ucatioo..
I
Trinity Parish Notes
few feet in depth and diameter, they
au January 4 the followmg were recoming
tales
will relate to friends
maintain a large animal population. As
ceived into the membership of the
many
momentous
occasions throughout
The members of the Young Peoples' one reaches the edge of such a microchurch: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Edward
their
stay
on
the
other
continent.
Bowman, Miss Helen Dorothy Brom- Fellowship will meet at the Church on cosm, the dominant member of the aniWhile riding horseback in Colombia
ley Miss Rosalin Irene Bromley, Mr. Sunday afternoon at two-thirty o'clock mal society sinks quickly out of sight. Nena fell, breaking her back. Just as
and
go
to
Sieighton
Fauns
School.
This
is
invariably
a
huge
Blue
CrabJ":'es M. Brye, Mr. James B. Clelland,
she was recovering from that injury
Mr. and Mrs. James P. Da~gherty, They will attend the Vesper Service the counterpart of "the big one th~t she ...encountered a still more serious
there
and
be
taken
through
the
Sc:hool
got
away"
from
the
average
rowboa~James Gibson Daugherty, DaVid Balone in the fo'rm of a complete cardiac
crabber of the inland waterway.
lard Daugherty, Mr. and Mrs. OWeD by Deaconess Johnson.
collapse brought on' by a trip to too
Bishop
Taitt
has
sent
a
letter
to
all
This
tyrant
subsists
on
the
liVing
and
W. Gay, J.{uth Frances Gay, Mrs. John
high an altitude in Peru. En route
members
of
the
Parish
asking
their
the
dead
of
his
kingdom.
His
.subjects
Reid Hanna, Mrs. John Frank Kelly,
home she had to be rushed from the
the
Diocesan-wide
aPPfal
for
range
in
importance
throughout
a
wide
help
in
Dr. and Mrs. Melvin C. Molstad, Mr.
plane to a First Aid station in Mexico
Mr..
Guenther
array
of
lesser
animals.
First
there
are
aid
to
British
Missions.
Robert C. Myer, Mr. John G. Pew, Jr.,
City for treatment when she suffered 1
is
a
member
of
the
Diocesan
Commitmyriads
of
microscopic
forms,
each
Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Poole, M~s
a
relapse. Royal ran his sister a close
contributing to the life of any being
Ruth Sheets, Mrs. Leora James Sheri- tee.
second
with an abcessed ear which had
Last Sunday afternoon, at the Epiph- with gill-strainers of sufficiently fine
In vital commnnicatioDB,
dan, Doris Whitecar, and Jane Ann
to
be
lanced
at points along the way
any-tide Service of Lights, the Church mesh to sift them out of the water.
Williams.
88 in production, speed Is
The Men'. Bible Class meets each School choir assisted in the musical Secondly exist a corps of scavengers home.
are
held
on
Tueswhich
utilize
all
organic
materials
that
program.
Rehearsals
Dr. Whitaker remained a while
essential to America's
Sunday morning at 9 :45. Ralph Ashton
day
afternoons
at
four
o'clock.
survive
long
enough
to
enter
into
delonger
in
order
to
finish
the
research
Nixdorf win be the speaker this Sunday.
war-time efiorl. Today we
The Annual Congregational Dinner cay. Nothing is wasted, for nutriment is work to which as a member of the UniCirele 9 of the Woman's Association
mnst make the telephone
meets each Tuesday morning to work will be held on Wednesday evening, at its ultimate premium, and the larger versity of Pennsylvania history dethe animal form, the higher is the price partment and in connection with a proon surglcal dressings for defense needs February the eleventh.
equipment we have do
The Tea, which was h~ld on Wed- paid by smaller animaleulae for his ex- posed history of Peru he had devoted
in this distric;t. All women of the comhis sabbatical. He returned home yesmore work than ever
munity are invited to join this group nesday afternoon, was glven by M.rs. istence.
H:
CI~flord
Campio~
as.
a
special
conIt
is
easy
to
test
this
principle
among
terday.
His research was under the
and bring aprons with them. If there
before.
are any questions please call Mrs. trlbutlOn to the SOCial hfe of the Par- the final members of the food-chain. At auspices of the Nelson Rockefeller
ish.
.
.
the edges of any pool there are mem- Foundation. He gave a series of lecThis means we m1Ut
Earle P. Yerkes.
The
women
of
the.
ParIsh
will
meet
bers of living mussels, A few of these tures at the Catholic University in
Members of the churches of this viSA.VE SECONDS. One
cinity have been asked by the Med- for Red Cross sewmg on Thursday are easily pried away irom their muddy Lima and at San. Marcos University.
mor~ing
at
ten
o'c1'!ck.
There
will
be
a
anchorage,
and
a
blow
irem
the
handle
This was the Whitakers' first trip
ical Committee of the Delaware County
second saved on each of
of a pocket knife shatters their shells. into such undeveloped territory and
Local Defense Council to give any serVice of IntercessIon at noon.
the 7,000,000 calls we
• I •
The soft yellow bod'les WI'th'm seem un- the first on which they had been acextra cots or blankeis they have to their
Christian
Science
Church
remarkable
in
comparison
to
the
degree
companied by the children. No member
local Scout Troop which will distribute
handle daily would save
of their protective fortresses. But the of the family escaped without some
them to six hospitals of Delaware
"Life" is the subject of -the Lessonalmost 2,000 hours of
County where the need for them is very Sermon in aU Churches of Christ, Sci- fteshy fragments are in the highest sad experiences in a setting described
possible
demand
within
the
pool.
as 100 years behind our civilization,
urgent at this time.
telephone time dallyl
entist, on Sunday, January 18. The
The High School Fellowship win Golden Text is: "How excellent is thy No sooner· are they thrown in-like but notwithstanding not one wishes the
meet Sunday eveniug at 6 o'clock in the loving kindness, 0 God I . _ • For with manna-than the previously empty t~jp had been foregone.
You can help. Please
Parish House. Mrs. Leora James Sheri- thee is the fountain of life" (Psalms water comes to a living boiling point.
• I •
be sure yon have the right
A few small fish appear in a twinkling,
dan will speak on South America.
36 :7, 9).
Mrs.
Franklin
Lee
to
worry
at
the
larger
pieces
like
jackCircle 1 will meet Wednesday, JanI
I
number before you make
als at the carcase of an elephant. But
uary 21, at 1:30 P. M. at the home of
News From Pearl Harbor
Mrs. Mytrie Shores Lee wife of
a call. Dou't ask "inforthe small furor of tiny minnows quickly
Mrs. Bucher Ayres at 216 Vassar aveFranklin
I.
Lee
and
mother'
of
Mrs
•
.
TW9.
h~~eresti~g
c;ables_
were
recently'
.attract
·larger
.onE''&-whicblurk
under
,nue. Mr&•. "l.{"aria.Shel~e .will.bethe
mation" for nnmbers that
speaker. Mrs. Frank Reitzel would ap- received here from Honolulu. ODe was the edges of the pool. These appear as Horace . H. Hopkins of Crest lane
are listed in your dfree.
preciate children's. books or gam~ .to the announcement of the birth of a if suddenly created to take advantage passed away at the home of her daughter
on
January
9.
Services
were
conson
J.
Archer
Turner
the
third
to
Mr.
of
the
moment.
Small'
fry
retreat
in
start a children's bbrary for the VISIttory. Answer all calls
and Mrs. J. Archer Turner, Jr. on Jan- terror, for the new arrivals have. no ducted by her pastor, Dr. Arthur
ing nurses association.
promptly.
Circle 2 will meet Wednesday, Jan- uary 2 in the Honolulu Hospital The preference between dismembered mus- James, of the Drexel Hill Methodist
uary 21 at one-thirty o'clock at the baby is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. sel and full-bodied baby fish. Even Church. Commitment will be made in
home of Mrs. Percy G. Gilbert, 407 J. Archer Turner of Harvard avenue. IGng Blue Crab leaves his recess at the family lot at Long Beach, Cal
Mr. and Mrs. Lee who came here two
The other cable announced the mar....; this point to see if his subjects are
Park avenue.
riage of Miss Julia Juanita Steele fattening sufficiently to supply his fu- months ago after the latter had been THE BEll TELEPHONE COMPANY
taken Ut, are former residents of
daughter of Mrs. James Rush Steele ture appetite adequately.
Methodist Church Notes
OF PENNSYLVANIA
to Mr. Charles Adams Caldwell son
Meanwhile a scavenging troupe of Springfield and Collingdale, Delaware
At the morning' worship on Sunday at of Mrs. David D. Rowlands of Harvard shrimps skulks further from its over- County.
11 o'clock, the minister will preach on avenue. Dr. Horace Levitt officiated at hanging bank than usual, for excitethe subject "Christ's Gift of Eternal the ceremony which took place in his ment is abroad in the water. These - MARY DUNHILL • PRINCE MATCHABELLI • CHANEL •
church the Central Union Church. Dr. crustaceans are ghosts, almost transparLife."
The Church School meets at 9 :45 Levitt is the brother of Mrs. H. M. ent in. external aspect and in activity,
whose whole life is built on the word,
o'dock and classes are provided for Crist of Harvard and Yale avenues.
Both
Mr.
Turner
and
Mr.
Caldwell,
"escape."
But even the hunted must
adults and children of all ages.
who
are
connected
with
t:he
Turner
take
an
occasional
chance, and the most
The Church Nursery is in operation
Construction
Company
have
oeen
opportune
moment
for such adventure
and will care for the smaller children
the
Hawaiian
and
outlying
is
that
one
when
predators
are quarrelworking
in
during the worship hour.
islands
for
the
past
two
years
and
are
ing·
over
the
disposition
of
a
rece.nt kilL •
The Epworth League will meet in the
now
working
at
Pearl
Harbor.
.
-Even
now
the
tiniest
fragments
are ~
Beauty colors frosty days
chapel at 7 o'clock.
•
t
I
overlooked;
these
sink
slowly
to
the
o~
The first meeting of the Woman's
IS Solllh 0 . _ .....
Society of Christian Service Mission A. A. U. W. Children's Theatre bottom where Hermit Crabs wait imEntertains
.
patiently for them. Crabs they areCaD Swudunore "76
Study Class will be held on Wednesday
and
hermits,
too-for
each
lives
solitarevening at 7:30 at the home of Mrs.
The Children's rheatre group of the
HARBERT. ROV AE • CHEN YU • CORDAY •
Octavius Narbeth, 323 Lafayette ave- Lansdowne branch of· -the American ily in the shell of an extinct snail As.
nue. Miss Eleanor Shir." will introduce Association of University Women will
shells,
casting
the old one
the crab
grows
up, off
it searches
for
the Study Book, "The Christian im- present an event of unusual interest larger
as
soon
as
it
finds
a
roomier
abode.
Its
perative. II
not only to Lansdowne but to her body is very soft: without t.he artificial
The rehearsal for the Junior Choir neighbors as well on Saturday morning
protection of a snail's shel~ it would be
January 17 at 10 A. M. This allair will easy prey for any rapacious carnivor
be an "Open Hausen to which the parCHURCH SERVICES
ents of the group members and the in the pool.
C. BROOK" WORTH
ME'l'BODIST ClIllBCB
members of the Association are invited.
• I •
Boy N. Keller. D.o•• JrI1nJeter
The Staff of the Theatre will be the
BUNDAY
College Offers Courses
8:45 A.M.-Church Bcllool.
hostesses
with Mrs. J. H. Cleland of
11:00 A.M.-MorDiDS Worship. sermon
theme:
"Christ's G1ft of Lansdowne and Mrs. WilliaDl C. WethThe Government is in great need of
Etert1&l LUe,"
erstine, Jr. of Drexel Hill in charge. many trained radio engineers and
BWARTlD40BB PBBSBYTBR1AN CHUBClI Mrs. D. Chester Warlow of Lansdowne draughtsmen; and these are jobs which
Bev. David Braun. M1nIster
the President of the Staff 'Will weleome can be done by properly trained woB1JNDAY
8:45 A.M.-Church BcllooJ.
the guests and explain' briefly the work men.
8:45 A.M.-Men's CIa88.
which
the Theatre is undertaking this
10:00 A.M.-women'. Bible Class.
If enough qualified women in the
11:00 A.M.-Dr. Paul C. Payne guest year
vicinity
of Swarthmore are interested,
preacher. Topic: "Looking on
.
LIte ThrOugh Qulet Eyes."
An interesting program of original courses in Engineering Drawing and
_8:;:GO::::..::P::..M.=:=:;,;;IL~B;;';:iPell~;;owahI~;;P~·;;-_ _ _ _ 1pantomime and dramatization will be Mathematics, in Chemistry and in
TlUNITY CJrolWB
presented for the pleasure of the guests Physics, as well as in Radio Engineer..
Rev. J. Jarden ~~~ S.T.M., Rector and to show the type of work which ing will be arranged. The plans for this
8:00 A. M.-Boly Communion.
the children are enjoying in their Sat- project are under the direction of the
9:45 A.M.-Church BchooL
d'
I
11:00
.A. M.-!IorD.1Dg PraJer and Sermon. ur ay morntng c asses.
Engineering Science Management De2:30 P.IL-YPF
Mrs. Stuart Graves of Media is the fense Training Program; and the
TiroBsDAy
12:00 Noon - Prayers for Peace.
director of the Theatre and Mrs. courses themselves win be under the
'1'BII BBLIOIOUB BOCJBTY OP PBlBIIDB Charles Means of Lansdowne is her supervision of Swarthmore College.
:)- ~::.
SUNDAY
assistant.
There will be no tuition charge; but
Due to the owners being transferred, the above Home is offered for
I •
8:45 A. M.-FIm DQ BcllooJ.
trainees wiU be expected to furnish
11:00 A.M.-IIOO_
tor Worship In &110 Writers Hear Mrs. MaeLeod
_ _ BOUIe.
sale at $15,800. Built by Geo. Gillespie in 1928, it contains 8 rooms
their own textbooks and personal supWBD!l!!BDAY
Beatrice
Beach
MacLeod
of
the
plies.
The
classes.
will
.
be
held
two
and 3 baths plus' a delightful sun room. There is an oil burner and
8:30 A. II. to 3:30 P. II. - _
ODd
QUllUDc In Whlttter Bouse. Box lUDClleou drama department at Swarthmore CoI- nights a week for three hours each
a 2-car garage. The lot is 90 x ISO and has. many beautiful old trees.
AU are cordI&II1 Invited.
lege gave the first of two consecutive nighL The only requirement as ge.neral
.1liBr CBUaOH OP CBBIST. SClBNi1S1 addresses to the members of the Writ· background for the courses is graduaYour inspection is invited, by appointment only, through
.
OP BWABTIIMOBB
.
Park Avenue BelOW BarftI'd
ers Club of Delaware County when th4 tien from High School, although some
i'
U:OO
A.1I.-Bunda7
~Bc:b:::ooI;;.-IIor:~"
U:GO
A.1I.-Bunda7
I.-on BU_DO_~ organization met Tuesday at Upp~ special school courses are advisable.
W_
......
Darby. Mrs. MacLeod's subject wa4 All women interested in further inlutd~ BBf"Jnp room open da1l7.~~ "What Is Dramatic Material?" Od formation or in registering should get
TELEPHONE SWAR~ORE 011"
md _clap 1 '" 4 Po DO., - PETER
E.
TOLD,
EdiloT
MARJORIE Tow. A.uociaU
EdiloT
WE'D LIKE TO
SAVE
7.DDD,ODU
SECONDS
•
---....,..---
THE DELAWARE COUNTY ADVOCATE;
Gary Cooper
ThIs
"We DOli!' leU ~.
We . . . . _
ADd Other Picture Stories 01 lulerest to Delaware Couullalm
OUT OF THE
FRYING PAN
SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY
ADMISSION PBlCB
Baa 100
Dulmollth IUId Wayette A_
Births
Sub.cribe
with
BINNIE BARNES &: WALTER ABEL
SUNDAY, MONDAY AND TUESDAY
YORK"
.,.r•••o.,..
ON SALE NOW
t
•
"SKYLARK"
Gary Cooper
"SERGEANT
I
JANUARY
ras Net
RUSSElL'S SERVICE
Miss Charlotte Mae King daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. James King of Lenni
will be married to Mr. Milton Bergey,
Jr. son of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Bergey
of Yeadon at 3 o'clock Saturday after·
noon, January 24, in Trinity Methodist
Church, East Lansdowne.
After a short wedding trip Mr. and
Mrs. Bergey will be at home at 539
Cypress Street, Yeadon. The bride will
continue her association with The Bouquet Beauty Salon here.
•
AQ . . . .
('d ' " '
ldrs. Rutlt Stilson of Swarthmore
and Mr. E. J. Brecker of Washington
were married by the Reverend David
Braun, December 27, 1941.
Weds
eve tor
Dora
Lewis
Mr. John
PhiUiPsl:===::;=::;:====:=~::;:;:;:;:;::;:;:;:;:;:;::::
polman
son Porter
of Mr.toJohn
Dolman,
Jr.
6f Swarthmore.
! Miss Porter was graduated from st.
Mary's School, Peekskill, N. Y.
, Mr. Dolman was graduated from the
niversity of Pennsylvania and gradu'\.tes today from the United States
With Picture Stories ¥OU'U Want to Seel
"DESIGN FOR
SCANDAL"
RAY MILLAND
DIe hie
TIno
••
Next
16, 1942
DoY_~
•
of Swarthmore
By WllUam Saroyan
CLAUDETTE COLBERT
......
Breeker - Slibon
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Cumming SinClair of Boxwood Hall, Freehold, N. J.,
formerly of Swarthmore, announce the
~ngagemcnt of their daughter Estelle
Foster to Mr. Frederic Breakspeare
lfarrar, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert
Powderly Farrar of 200 Cabrini
A third son Jared King Robinson
Boulevard, New York City.
was born in the Woman's Hospital on
Miss
Sinclair
graduated
from January I to Walter H. and Mariana
Swarthmore High School and studied Robinson of Wallingford Hills. The
for 2 years at Sweetbriar College. She baby is a grandchild of Dr. and Mrs.
was graduated at the New Jersey Col- Louis N. Robinson of College avenue.
lege for Women in 1940 and at present
Serves in an executive capacity at
Saks, Fifth Avenue.
Mr. Farrar was graduated from St.
Paul's School, Garden City and in 1941111';~• •" • •" - - - - - - from Washington and Lee. At College I!
he served as president of the senior
OUT
t;Iass, president of his fraternity Beta
Theta Pi and was elected to Omicron
Delta Kappa. He is now on the adwith
tertising staff of Conde' Nast Publica-
The Players Club
Director, John Dolman, Jr.
JANUARY 30 and 31
8:15 P. M.
~AYANDSATURDAY
--_ _--
Naval Reserve Midshipmen's School in
Chicago, Ill, commissioned as Ensign,
U. S. N. R.
I •
1------------.., ~=====~~=====!:II
JIM DANDY
MANOR
JANUARY
8." ARTHMOREAN
i~?!::1U;
:=~~~~~~========================:
FOR SALE
40 Amherst Avenue
e_ __ --
...an
'flee_ _
b1v1tOd",a_ _
-.ntceI and UII8 the R
d
tn " BoIXD.
E DW A R D L .N 0 YES
Tu~s~~y, January
27,. she will ....
giv1 at
io_toDCIOHh~te1r,'I'i!hN"cna.BOOthl:===============:::;::::":;'=::::==:::;======
"CritiCism
of Manusenpts."
the COll~;' ...>., • ,-,'.' ."
••
.,---.- •• --:- •••
:.-~~
.• 1
.
'.,. ~..'
. ,_ ",
'" _"
JANUARY 16, 1942
,_, _. "4~
TBE 'SWARTBMOIl_AN
JANUARY 16, 1942
Jackson J~J.e~e
Society' .Lu:;a'
IttEm.
On January Z1 the Pennsylvania Fed·
Word has just been received from sister Mrs. Joseph B. Efird in Char·
Harry H. McWilliams
Io
tt N e
C
,..·
tale _ v.... - - .
avenue that his addre..
Miss Anne Robinson danghter of
from Arlington Can- Mr. and Mrs., A. S.Robinson of Ogden
eration 'Umeeting
at
tbe
Penn
Athletic
Va.
to
1300 Service
.
th
• IIJR.,pc)rll8
avenue h asp Iedged Kappa Kappa
CI ub WI have as Its
guest e NatlOna
of Varied ChrisIma8 Headquarters Third Corps Area,
Gamma at Middlebury College, Mid.
president of the Federation of WOo
Projeela Made at Jan.
timore, Md. and to be sure to forward I dlebury, VI.
'
man's Club, Mrs. John ,Whitehurst.
nDPV 8 E1ee1ion
The Swarthmorean which he
Several club members will attend e8<:h I
-,
very much each week.
Dr. and Mrs. S. G. Trepp of South
of these meetings.
W' 'f
Chester road visited Mrs. Trepp's
-.~- Jr. B--....
The January meeting of the boardI of
I M r. R oy C. Potts and family of
Eot ~
......
d IDI
M redC McDowell
W M D daughter
II f of
unce
The executive board of the
directors of the Community H'ea th an
rs..
• c owe a
Washington, D. C.
Section of the Woman's Club was
Society of Central Delaware County avenue returned to Hood College on
tertained at dinner Tuesday evelling
was held in the Legion Room, Borongh Sunday after spending the holidays Yrs. Herbert lL Schroeder of BrookMrs. John E. Michael of Harvard
Hall on January 8, with the president, with her parents. Miss McDowell who Iyn, N. Y. with her daughter Joan and
nue. Following the dinner the ~~~~:I Mrs. A. F. Jackson, presiding. The fol· is a freshman at Hood is vice-president son Robert is visiting her parents Mr.
Meeting was held at the Club
lowing officers have been elected for of a dormitory of 150 girls.
and Mrs. William C. Starr of Dartat which time Mrs. Roland L.
the year:
Mrs. EcJiar Campbell of Lafayette mouth avenue.
THE WOMAN'S CLUB
entertained the members Wl'th an exMrs. Jackson, president
j MMrs'F';~~ II ~~: Princeton avenues entertained her
P'
'd
nvate Thomas Boden of Media has
F etzer, I 5t vice-presl ent;
Seetions Meet Joinllv
cellent
review
of
the
book,
"Lanterns
n.
great
nephew
Pilot
Officer
DeForrest
been
,
L M .
2 d'
'd
M
A. L
sent to Fort Meade, Mel He exThere will be a J"oint meeting of the on the Levee!'
.
arlin, n Vlce-preSI
rs. F
aufer,
dieDt;
h Jr. of the Canadian Air peets to be transferred in the -_.
W It
E L I ·
Drama and Literature sections of the
Next Tuesday the Art Section
a er . . rWID, reeor ng seere- oree, W 0 was on a 9-day leave.
future.
.--..
club on Friday January 23 at 10 A. M; hold its meeting at the home of
tary; Mrs. C. Wahl Olmes,
Private Victor Celia who is in the
Mrs. Luther M. Dimmitt will review McConechy, 922 Strath Haven avenue. ing secretary; Mrs. Norman
Medical Corps at Camp Lee, Va. spent
Dr. and Mrs. Michael Kovalenko
a few days visiting his family in Mor- formerly of Wallingford have left New
Louise Andrews Kent's "Mrs. Apple- The discussion will concern the restor.. treasurer with Mrs. A. R. O.
yard's Year" and Mrs. Roland G. E. ation of WiUiamsburg.
assistant treasurer.
ton recently. He is to be transferred York City to spend the winter at their
Unman will read the current Broadway
I I
Mrs. Elizabeth Plummer,
in the near future.
place at New Smyrna Beach, Fla.
production
of Brennan.
"The Wookie" by Frednurseduring
reported
475 visits
erick
Ha.litt
W I
staff
December.
S930 visitsbywe,re I Private Harry George Wagner of
Adele Markley of Guernsey road 'has
made in the year 1941. Aside from
Dickinson avenue who has been at Aber- returned to her studies at Grove City
Defense Reque..
routine duties of the staff Nali'onal
Proving Ground, Md. was trans- College. During the holidays which she
Defense Headquarters requests a listMiu
S'.o"",
f
d
Cal
spent WI'th h er parents. M r. and Mrs.
. A
fense and the Red Cross DIS'aster
erre to M0 ff ett F'IIel,e
.
ing of cots and blankets which would nol'e
MISSH' deline Strouse of the Swarth· paredness program are
' •
Travis McDaniel son of Mrs. Ethel Fran k R . M arkl ey 5 h e entertained
with
be available for emergency borrowing. h
Igh
School
faculty
is
substituting
a
t
f
II
f
Ik
of
the
Clint'c
Smith
McDaniel
of
Dickinson
ea
or
co
ege
0 •
.
tion.
Reports
M ISS "{'onaco as house mother of
Anyone with such equipment is asked
to telephone Mrs. Walter Schmidt
House on the college cam. parties prepared in the various
has been pledged by The Pennsylvania
Sixteen French students who must munities were given by the local chair- State CoDege chapter of Sigma Pi fra~--------Cour... for Exhibitors
RuoIve_to
I ,~'eak F
h'
men.
ternity. Travis is a freshman in
lURCh and dine often
I:
rene
at
all
times
are
residents
T
S
h
I
f
E
'
.
A course for flower show exhibitors,
.
the house. Miss Strouse, who teaches
he organization received many
c 00 0
ngtneenng.
attM
consisting 0 f four Iectures beginning
January 21 will be offered to garden
at the high scbool, will hold during the holiday season to
The Charles N. Hales have removed
enthusiasts in the auditorium of the
position until the return of Miss Christmas cheer for patients under
from The Swarthmore to the Mayfair
care.
Apartments in Wi1mingto~ DeL
Insurance Company of North America,
1600 Arch street, Philadelphia.
Marh Ki..... Dq
Ten scrapbooks were made and
Mrs. John Glarence Lee of Stamford,
Co. Federation Meets
On January 6, the third year French by the fourth grade of the
Conn. has recently concluded a visit
and Cot:1rtall Loun,.
The mid-winter meeting of the Del- r:~~j~::;:, of Swarthmore High School Presbyterian Church School The here to her son-in-law and daughter
awar~ County Federation of Women's
a small celebration in honor Primary Department of that
Mr. and Mrs. Harold March4 MrS4 Lee
P.R.R. Suburban statloQ
.
Day usually ackno ledged ' arranged 17 pots of bulbs l'n
Luneh -from ISOc
Clubs will be held in the Upper Darby
, d"
al
w
m "sick-abed" patients. Circle 8 of the was entertamed by ber Philadelpbia
Dfmuno-from
85c
tra Ibon pastry cake was Ch
frends, where she formerly resided,
Junior High School in Bywood on JaD-I:~~~~~~~
uary 22. T,he morning session at to:30
; however, the porcelain beads
urch also donated a number of and at a tea given for her in SwarthC1te,IIOII Bovr. 3:t1O to "."" r.M.
•
h
k lovely mfts for shut-m' s.
make the pers OI'!- 10
will be addressed by Mrs. Alfred A.
W ose ca e
eomore.
"Waa18DpenJaIoll oIl1an7 a. TuU7
Crob,ks, State Federation president and were
they mlS
a,:e .found
the king of the day, canned
Donations
jellies,
og
goods,oftoys,
clothl'candies~
ng and extra
Mrs. Samuel CaldweU Harris and
the State chairman of Defense 'Mrs.
.
51.
•
Ed . h
son
WID ave returned to their home
Gustav Ketterer. Following luncheon a . Slips of paper we~e substItuted elect. gifts came from Mrs. James
on Wellesley road in Swarthmore Hills
National Defense pageant will be pre- IDg !:largy MacMII~n and Marshall and children Katrina, James and
STEAKS-CHOPS
sented under the direction of Mrs J 0 Schmidt queen and king. The students dy; Mrs. Jack Thompson; Mrs. Her.. after a week's visit with Mrs. Harris'
SEAFOOD Our·S~
.
. . . indulged in soft drinks and a toast was man Bloom; Mrs. Bassett FeJr.::!:::: -:=============~
proposed to the rulers.
Mrs. George W. Wellburn;.
r
Completely Air-Conditioned
See B..-u 81110.,Bye; Mrs. Margaret Shields' Mary
Some CHAPS are popularOn Monday morning in the high Pusey; Lotta Baird; Mrs. F.
Brew·
But not the CHAP that af·
school auditorium, the Senior High ster; Mrs. }4 D. ·Gibson; Mrs. Jo,se~,h
operated on
filets hondo of home laUD'
School enjoyed a moving picture en- Geel'; Mrs. Paul Fetzer; Mrs.
titled, ''The First Century in Baseball." Green;; Mrs. Guido Henry;
CANNED HEAT
dreo8e8 these freezing days.
The movie portrayed important George Bond; Mrs. Fred! ;;~:~~~:~
Ostracize thot chap by using
events in the history of the sport from Mrs. Geyer j Mrs. S. S. J
beginning in the nineteenth century Miss Eva Cresson; Mrs. Fred Calvert·
MEDIA LAUNDRY
to the present day.. E.obert Kerr Mrs. Carl deMoll; Mr•. H. Leon; Mrs:
Sw_ 105
Call Me41a 17' or Stop our Driver
. Open All Night
student cha;rn.ari, andToin WilcOx l;eonard Frescoln; Mrs. Earl Burcharge of devotions.
bidge; Mrs. Frank Martini Mrs. John
Frdthful lanitor DIa
Detlefsen; Mr•. S. S. Haring.
Monday morning, January 12, 1942,
The Knitting Committee of the
of
Swarthmore
High
School's
most
Friendly
Circle made and gave us 46
Martel Table QualitY'!
failthf,.l janitors, George Shockley, died garments for distribution.
a heart condition at his home on
A total of $178.88 was contributed for
Maple Avenue jn Springfield Township. Christmas activities by Daniel J. Hit·
Dillpellldng Opticiam
He was first employed at the school in ferty; Mrs. Oscar Gilcreest; Mrs. A.
1927 and was night janitor W. Willard; Helen Barrow; Mrs. H.
Experts in the Making and Fitting
from October to April every year, B. Cookman; Mrs. E. O. Thomlas;
coming on duty at midnight until noon. Frances Porter; Eva Cresson;
of Spectacles and Eye Glasses
Chal
..
D'-Nio"
M.
Viele;
Mrs.
Joseph
E.
Haines'
Raised for better eating.
Lynn Freegard, editor of the Ga,rnet I Fred Schweitzer; Miss ean;pian;
1923 Chestnut Street •
•
Philadelphia
of Swarthmore High School will
Lansdowne Iron and Steel Co.;
as chairman in the school club discus- Swarthmore Canning Project: Sw'arth~ I
6913 Market Street • • • Upper Darby, Pa.
Ib
sion at the Drexel Institute
more eoDege Library Staff'
House on Friday and Saturday of
Friendly Circle; The Pitt Club'
JOSEPH Eo BAINES,
Co ADLEY PARMER,
week.
Representatives
of
the
schools
Presidents of Delaware Counq:
~ of Lamb ...... lb. 35c
ChalnnGll
PrNldtmI
in surrounding districts will convene
ior Clubs; Presbyterian Woman's
Hopwood. Reservation. may be ma,de I
throngh Mrs.
].,.~
Paul Brown.
S
•
•
E
I
o
F
not
year
your paper recently.
LETI'ERS TO THE EDlTOll
Other lights on other trees did not
shine either. This is not because of air
'nle optn1ona expreued be10w are thOle
of lbe individual wrUen. All let.ter'I &0 'DIe
raid warnings, priorities or expense.
Swartlunoreao mUll be 1ieDed. ~ndOD71D8
The lights did not shine on Christmas
m8J' be u.ed If the idenU17 of the W'I'Ker
Is known &0 t.he BelUor. Letten will be
Eve because Swarthmore has ceased to
published onlT at. tbo d1acretlon 01 ,be
he a different town. We have joined the
EdltOJ'.
L-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'Iranks of the other .Philadelphia sub~=, I
TOOnka Fire Company
urbs where outdoor decorations cannot
be left in safety. We belong to that
Swarthmore,
great majority of American communiJanuary 5, 1942 ties where vandals and hoodlums can
Dear Editor:
break connections, steal and break bulbs
I wish to express the enthusiastic on lighted trees, and damage the shruband sincere gratitude which'"my hery with impunity.
~~~~~~~~~Fw!l:f'.m'iIY have for the Swarthmore Fire Does this seem to he the Spirit' of
Company. There is no doubt that our Modern Christmas?
awari'b:lhome and its contents were saved from
Is this a manifestation of the MOiiiliii'-;ii~=,;;;.;;-;:;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;:;-;;;;;;:;:-;;
complete destruction by the prompt reo RALE of a United Nation?
l~~~~~i~lsponse
to my call, followed by deterIs this the new Swarthmore Version
mined, intelligent and tireless work. The
"Peace on Earth Goodwill Toward
CLASSIFIED
~
i
~~~~~;~~;~~:~~~~Iactual
extinguishing
the flames
was
followed
by faithful of
vigilance
to make
~
~
SCHOOL NEWJ\S
Sa".
....
_eoaoo......
.... '-'--"-'-------
S
terno S·
tove
V.
Suplee's Hardware
J. E. LIMEBURNER CO.
STEWING
CHICKENS
~
~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~~~il
Loino of Pork ..... lb. 29c
•
Oriental Spiced
LAYER CAKE
A gorgeous rich flavored cake
hinting of oriental splendor.
EA. 45c
Dutch Coffee Cake .. ea, 23c
Buller Twin Rollo, doz. 23c
Ch!)C. Chiffon Pie. . ,ea. 35c
.
,
•
JERSEY STEAK COD
As easy to handle as chops:""with hardly any waste.
Lb. 29c
discuss
followingFrench,
suojects:
Studies, thescience,
mathematics, Foreign
dent clubs, social life
las tic sports for boys and
Senior. Pielc "Our
"Our 'fown." by Thornton Wilder
is the selection made by the Senio;
Class to be presented in the High
School Aud!torium February 21, as the
annual Sentor Class production4
Miss Hanna Kirk faculty director is
being assisted by Margaret Brown of
the Senior class. The cast of characters includes: Jack Linton, Bob Longwell, Art Dodd, Norman Hulme
Jane Davidson, Winnie Park, ~uis
Moll, Barbara Kent, Lewis
Mary Gilcreest, Marshall Schmidt
sell Kneedler. ~unice Shay, Bet~
Booth, Bob Gemmi1~ Wilhe1mina
de Boe, Frank 'McCowan.
man, Bert Peckerman ,
Bill Spiller, Roy Fahl and Sam
The entire personnel of the cast
not yet eomplete~'I'
r
l=.
~
Jannary 17th's Chaperons
Spanioh Mackerel .. lb. 29c
. lb. 29c
Large Smelt.
•
Gold Medal Flonr, bag 5%
i?eIo sOap Chips ... pkg. 1%
MartelCoftee ..... Ib. 2ge
MARTEL'S
.
,.
~.
FOOD .MARIET
SWARTHMORE 2100
Ch.aperons for. the seventh grade
dan.cmg class wh,ch will meet from 6
untd 7 :15 P. M. tomorrow eveningS~tur.day, in the. Woman's Club Hous;
WIll be Dr. and Mrs. James Bogardus,
Dr. and Mrs. D. W. Bronk, Mr. and
Mrs. Norman H. Borden, Mr. and Mrs.
C. B. Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Brown. Junior chairmen of the
are George Warren and Helen Dlsqtle,
~inth grade chaperons from
un!,I.9 :15 P.M. will be Mr. and Mrs.
Wllhan. H. 'l;'hatcher and Mr. and
Robert P. Bradford.
The senior assembly for the 11th and
12th ~des will meet as nsuol from
9:30 until 11 :30. Any interested parents
of 'those in this group are invited to
~rop in for a visit at any time CODftn..
lenL
I
::NE=W=S
..,...·_-NOTES
Edward Thatcher returned last
~ek to ,resun;ae ~is teaching duties at t~e U~lvenlty of Minnesota
af.ter ~aVlng enjoyed a holiday sojourn
WIth hIS parents Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Thatcher of Ogden avenue.
Miss Mary Davis of Collingswood
N. J. formerly of Swarthmore was th~
house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert
Cheyney of College lane last week-enel
~r. and Mrs. W. W. Smith with
the.. daughter Nancy and son Wayne
hav.e ,moved from 6S2 Yale avenue to
the .. 'new home at 4M Conshohocken
road Bala-Cynwyd. The Smiths moved
to Swart.hm~ from Frederick, Mel
and had med m the Borooglt ahout
years.
ever before, because of the upset con'ditions in all our lives.
Although my time in Swarthmore
P
'i oetry
C.
I ' 'R'ecalI
tre e
omce
lees made out on aalcl bJd.clIDg eheet..
Bach bid must be accompimJecl by a
certlfled check of One BUDdred ($100.00)
Dollara, drawn to the orcler of thB Dela-
ware County InstIutJon Dtatrlct.
The AdmlDlstratlve and Elecutlve DJrec..'
tors of the Delaware County Instltut1oD.
following
the detailed
instructions
on
the jncome
tax blanks
Formgiven DIstrict reserve the r1ght to reject any or'
and FO,r,in . i040A (op' tiona'l s,'ljlpl,'fied ai, bld8.
for'm).
H. WALTER WEAVER,
CoWl~
WHAT
IS
THE
TAX
RATE?
A
•• Con>-Uer.
~"
.
1:.1-..:1J-..:3:.;t_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
normal, tax of 4 percent on the amount
of: the net income in excess of the al;"
Iowable credits against net income
(p~rsonal exemption•. credits for dependents, interest on obligations of the
Un't d St t
d't'
.
I' .
' d' e
ad ':s an I s dl~s)tr~mehnta Itles
an earne meome ere It 10 t e computation of the normal tax net income;
ammTPP BALES OP BBAL ESTATE
MedIa, ~
SberUf'8 Omce. Court Bouse,
.
I
Saturday. January 31. 1942
9:30 A. M. Baatem Standard TIme
caab or cerWled Clleck
otherw1lle
stated in
in ten. clays. OUler
on
No.t9S
,'of net
a gradiiated'surtax
income in excessonof the
the
able credits (personal exemption
credit for dependentS) against net
~~~~~~~~;I
in the comptitation of the surl:axl~';~~~'.'
income
.
'
.
I I
Mrs. Arthur W., Kent has returned
,tQ:Swarthmore from Sewickley and is
' l i v i n g with her -son-in-law
and.
Mr. ·and
Mrs.
D. Scales' of Vassar
avenue
. Richard
Alfred D. Hoadley son bf Mrs.
George' A. Hoadrey of Walnut' Jane has
been elected 't.O Sigma Xi, the Honor-
road,
,.,
8
DBLAWABB COUNT!' IN811tUil0N
DIBTBICT
BeaIed propooals wW be _oed at _
County Controller's omce. Court BoUIe,
14ed1a. Pa., untU 1 P4 m. and publicly
opene4 at 2 p. m. on Wednesday. January
28, 1942, tor tW'DJm,¥fc and del1v~ to
the Delaware County ome. LIma, Pa., guol1De and oU for the use of the Delaware
County IDat1tUtIOD D1&tr1ct.
Spec1flcaUODB IImd bidding sheet mal' be
obtained at the
of the County Controller. and DO bid wID be 8nterta1D.ed UD-
.Aagore
~
~:~~~~;~i~~~~~~1
ary
Scientific'·Society -at the University I~~;f:~~.i~
4\t Monday afternoon's session of
~f Maryland.'
means of The Swarthmorean.
'pdetry Circle held at the Walnut ~~V~~~~~~~~~~[f.~;~~~I.
Again, my sincere thanks for your hortte of Miss Frances White ·Mrs.
:;t~~.;.~
~~iii~~~~~~2~1 ki~dness,
____-. _
;
poet Tag-ore.
of the .
Very truly yours.
India's'
Williamgreat
]aqueUe.
re'viewed'Some
the life
DWIN
•
IK~N.
C A ~
E
members remembered" tw~.w~:~~;t:~~;:t:~i~.~:
Bemoa... Mean Thieving
To the Editor of The Swarthmorean..
We learned that the "blue lights" did
DELT'A H'AND
'LOT NEWS
Now'1s
the time toBuDding
make a
in
Swartbmore
acarce, .prtces advancing.
$3000 and t35OO.
WM.
:~~:~~:;:
I
f]warthmore
MRS. A.
ill-oJ
J. QUINBY &
Suplee's Hardware
Sw.105
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Media
EDWIN B. KELLEY, Jr.
Your Jeweler
25 Ea.t 7th St.
Chester
(Opposite New State Theatre)
,'Phone Chester 3764
Fireplace Logs
Hickory and Oak
Call Ridley Pai-k3651
B. F.
RegIstered
PLUMBING and HEA.TING·
Automatic Heating Equipment
218 W. STATE ST., MEDIA
Telephones:
WlLLlAIII T.
PATIERSON
Funeral Director
FormerlY associated with
late Joseph E. Quinby
SERVICE - NIGHT
,. B. BALTIMORE AVE •• MEDIA.
'Phone MedIa 2588
\
Framing _
Picture
Stationery
Books _ Kodak Sopplie8
Greeting Cards _ Hobbv Craft
Use pen, typewriter or check protector,
,
SIMMONDS
714 Welsh Street
Chester
'Phone Chester 2-5161
Ii!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;~
• THOMAS
W• v.
:
Formerly of Swarthmore College
Carpenter & Cabinet Maker
4%5 MORTON AVENUE"RUTLEDGB
. 'Phone Swarth. 2989
"====~~~~~:::==~=:===!!
=
COA.L and COKE
FUEL OIL
Painting
Paperhanging
•
KIl\IMEL & SON
Pho
S
2425 J
ne w.
•
Phone Sw. 10412
ARDMORE
Member of Fednal Depotit l .....r ..nc:e Corporation
ING
wnmow CLIIA!IING CO.
SWARTHMORE BRANCH
BBANCBBS OP BOtlBll CLlIAN-
ALL
c..na-For
~,?W~~
2O~;1:;iAT..)
ou.tamen.
__ _
I...;......;...;..._.;..___;;.;;.;....~
" .... ,..
, •
..,,~
.. /.
r,;
"."
~~OND E. LARSON, Attomey~
No. 45
.~:"'-. In centl"e Une
mGB CLASS
DRESSMAKING
of
an:'f~~~A::~~
secondl~8i~~~~~i~~~~i~~I~~~~~~~~~fe~et~w1de)
at the
the ~~
recital
whichcarols
pianofeatured
pupils oftheDorothy
. Christmas
Paul held recently at the home of Mrs..
If,loyd Leach on Benjamin West ave·
D:pe4 The songs were played in solo and
duet form by.: Jane and Jack-Pittenger.
.1;~~nn I.each, Bobby Lang, Edwin HartYs; and Ellanor Shanklin, with the
singing. Patty Paul played the
obligato, in additioQ to a violin
solo. Following the program refresh·
ments were served.
.
,
of
sal:' Lellll":
Under and aullJect, nevertheless, to certa1n condltlons and restrictions aa th_~I
ltLentloned.
I •
'CrumCreek Bridge Review
UIo-..u&
R.
Improvements consist of twO-8to~ stone
,The Crum Creek Bridge Club met
atnd stucco house. 16x32 feet: porch front,
s ucco garage, 10zl8 feet.
¥onday, D~cember 22 at Strath Haven
MacElwee and Mrs.
lim. Mrs. I.
..,bethProperty of John H. Mutray
Murra.y, hla
rea!
J. C. Kennedy, seated north and south
~. SALES of ~ ESTATE 1
were the top' seo-rers: Sargent Walter
and Mrs. Philip" Kniskern were'
.
Sber!1f's Ofl'lce. Court HOuse, Medla. Pe'UIa·I\Vl4:· K. RHODES, Attomey.
ap~ Mr. a~d Mrs. Fred Wilson were
- : Sa~. 'January' 24, 1942
Facias
No. 79
third.
9:30 ~, M'.. Eptern ljI~dard TIme
~ Seated east and west, Mrs.
December Term, 1941
A-rmitage and' Mr. Philip W. Kniskern
rI~~"':'$:~~:'lfl:!:te'i! All that certaln two·storled. bl'tCk dwellthe high scorers, second were ~~~m~~~~i",
In ten days. Other lDg house and lot or piece of ground SItA L CI d
d M L S
sale.
~te
In the Borough of Media COWlty of
ay en an
r.,., .
bo"~
BIld State of PellI>aYIVanla and
Luckie, and third were Mrs., Walter
No.
0 Ullt h
Ofd described 8CCOf!llDIJ: to .. sur·
.' "
01m,,;;:
_e.
".
I
~~;;~~:::~;=;;=;=~~Ishoemaker and Mrs. Arthur Robinson.
O~h ~lne:~1:a~Y6,cye::: :a7oN'o~:Bor..
-Winners cif the 10 week tourn~m'ent
~~~~~'~~;~Ji..~~
were' Mrs. Harry Armitage and Mrs·I~~oq;:
William Laison. .
" ."
".
December 29th, the winners were,I~,~·;y-=~e~f
seated' north and south, Mrs. W. H.
12;-":;;;;Ilt;;;;:
Brown and Mrs. Philip W. Kniskern
first, Mrs. Samuel Hanna and Mrs.
i~~:~~~~~!~~j~~~~
1I===~~~~g~~~~~==~
Samuel Eby second, and Mr. and Mrs. ;~;~~
~;~i~lt~~~j~~~~~,~~~r~~~:&: ~~~~
~
H. J. Berry third.
Optonaelriat
DR. M. BLOOMFIELD
Complete Eye Servi...
612 WELSH STREET
VAN AT •F.N BROS•
Swarthmore National Bank
and Trust Company
., Diana Brewster of Dickinson ave~~e ",••.::c·••
a sophomore in the department of ~;~: I'~~:;~;o'~f ;;;~~
sic at West 'Chester State- 'Teachers
'II
College, has taken a position ,as organist: of the Twenty ..ninth Street, Method.:. ,
iot Episcopal Church in 'Philadelphia.
Miss Brewster is a pupil of Benjamin'
L. Kneedler, organist and choir' director of the Swarthmore ·Presbyterian
CHurch.
,.,.,.'
",,~ld. as the property" of 8. Phebe LewJ8
~ knOWD.&8 Pbebe LeWis, real OWllII!r.
•
••
Ofllce-Media 2596 Bes. Medho. 1825-4
DAY -
.lB~,~Dl~~ C~;';cla_.?~~~s,t_, "';Jj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i
. No Improvements-vace.nt ground .
"._,~ . . . . . . . ~"
Holiday Piano Recital
HAMILTON and ELGIN WATCHES
the
College, once -10 years, ago and
when Tag'ore had visited
other time 1,15 -years earlier.
'
SON
A. MERCER QtJINBY• .Jr.
206 S. Orange St.
'Phone Media 4
LANTERNS
Invaluable in Emergencies
•
S. BITnE
Notal'J' Public - InsuraDee - Real Estate
-rul. eS "
never pencil. Write amount as far to left
CIS possible - fill in blank spaces with
heCIvy lines. Make numerals and written
Clmounts agree. Never erase - write
new check instead. Don't sign blank
checks. Protect your banking signature
from prying eyes. Guard your check
book Clnd cancelled checks carefully.
These simple rules will help you get full
value from your checking account i:lt
this bank.
,Contributors
are asked
to
Mrs.
Walter Schmidt,
Riv~rview
Mr, and ,Mrs. Warren R. Bernard
and daughter Lyne of Ridley Park.
form~rly of·Swarthmore have been ill
with the grippe for the past week. Mrs.
Mabel Hutchison, Mrs; Bernard's
mother. is with them recuperating
from an operation and the grippe. The
Bernards are now living in an apart·
ment on Ridley avenue.
Mrs. Edward M. Bassett, the Misses
Kathryn and Elizabeth Bassett, and
Morris Bassett of North Chester road
spent the holidays in Florida.
i~~i~~~~l~~~~~~~;~~~ir.'has
been greatly
limited
I appreciate
~
once.a·week
contact
with
the town my
by
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
Class; and
the offering from the Community
Thanksgiving.
Mrs. F. A. C. Vosters donated 24
lovely begonias; the Swarthmore
Mothers' Club, under the direction of
Mrs. Ellis Ridgway, Jr.• made up 24
baskets of fruit. Mrs. Austin Blake of
Holmes, her two daughters and ~on
together with a Holmes Girl Scoui
troop, filled IS stockings with candy
and made 2S Santa Claus favors.
Christmas cheer was provided for
213 individuals in various ways. It is
trusted and believed no one was overlooked.
One mother who was helped in
other years when she needed assist!lnce. returned her gift this year by fin109 a basket and giving it for one of the
families.
Vol~nteers were active both in office
service, wrapping gifts or in :le~~~:~r
Chr15
. t mas pacl e
a 'Virginia
ges.
Mrs. George W. Wellburn Cynthia
Wickham, Billie Van deBoe: Elizabeth
Bassett, Betly Green, Eleanor Burgett ,and Jane Worrall assisted d ...~n •• 1
the month.
~heckers,
Kinston, January
N. C.
Sunday,
11, 1942. leet
et~.) games
decks(checkers,
of cards,Chmese
magazlOes, ~sh
Dear Editor:
trays. books, card ta~les and chairs.
-,,,.-~-, This is a leller I should long ago have I.~~:is:~pong tables, P!r:t,g pong ball~,
.~;:.::..-.
written, but these are busy times with
rugs, or anythmg to make the
'-;:;:;::-:= I thno. of us in the service.
Centre at Douglas School,
~~~~~~~= 1 wish to express my appreciation to
a comfortable' place for the
~
and to the Swarthmore Business ~~OOO
troops who are on duty
-'l'~';iiiIM •. n'. Association for your kindness in along the waterfront, 'to spend their
.=",-._"07 :...
sending me The Swarthmorean4 Keeptime.
l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!ling
in like
touch
withis the
at home
at
times
these
morefolks'
important
than
district
in which
thebusiness,
person and
liveswith
or
has tJis chief
place of
collector of internal revenue.
DOES, ONE MAKE OUT
HIS
TAX RETURN? By
' News
Gir1,Scout
G
.
U
irl Scouting is Defense". says the
all our furniture and belongings
so-oln-I National President cif the Girl Scouts
·
no t on Iy we b u t our IDsurance ...'
of Amer.·ca .
pany owe them a great deal
Swarthmore Mariners of "Trade
'1~~Jii:~~ May every citizen of Swarthmore do w· d" t t d
R d C
H
"
;:
everything in his power to support and N ID •S sCar e a
~ d .rod~
om~
aid our fire company.
.urslDg ourse on. e nes ay ev~Yours truly,
ntng of last w~ek, to be prepared lD
HANNAH G. CL£AV£R.
the .field of .child Care, as part of the
SeDlor ServIce Program.
'
Firat Real Job
.
.
A.ppreciate. Home New.
Girl Scouts have been. asked to col-
Row
WHO MUST FILE A RETURN?
Every ~ single persop. having a gross in":
come of $750-,or more; everY married
person, not living with' husband or
wife, and, having a gross income of $750
or more; and married persons living
with husband or wife, who have an aggregate gro!!s: income of $1,500 or
more.
WHEN MUST RETURNS BE
FILED? For the calendar year 1941
on or before March 16. 1942. For the
fiscal year, on or before the 15th day
of the third month following the dose
of. the fiscal year.
WHERE AND WITH WHOM
MUST INCOME TAX RETURNS
BE FILED? In the internal revenue
- - -••+•••- -
t~F~O~Rp~~~~~~~~1 men
Ourwho
thanks
also
to the
moved
andgoes
covered
Where,
of .lneome· Tax
A LOYAL SWARTHMORItAN.
I
33c
Rib Roaots ........ lb. 3Bc
sure that no tiny smoldering spark had
lingered to break forth again during
the night.
....
SUBURBAN
CAFE
Men?"
Who, When,
Cau Cheoter 8014
1....- - -
WOOD
KOPPERS
COKE
"Seated east and west, Mr. Richard'
an4 ,Mr. William Craemer 'were
It/l"h~~" scofers, Mrs. J. K. MC,Donald·
Harry Armitage were
iiGii~~.rii
Miss MaryVerlenden and Mrs.
were third. .,' .
5, s~ated north and south,
Armitage and Mr. Palmer, I ~~'j~~~,:f:t;'o
were the .top sco~ers, Mrs. I'
McCurdy anda,nd,Mrs.
Kniskern were
Mrs. p'hilip
A; 1,Clarden aD~
. Seated
1~~3~i.~:;~~~~~~~~
FUEL'- O'n.
l~~III~~~~S~UN~~!!JI]I~.·~R.~'
~~~~~~~1!F.~~E'1~~!~1,t~4' .•"~~:~~t.y
, , ,".
W!jL.>TAYLOB. .m., """mey
••. '
0( ,.Job!>.
' '. •
btoiiIi I
'-
nmlOp,:c .
. K. MODEll.
11-11-'"
,
;T~~1!;.":.ra
A\tomey.
B.
rMl_
s. IlUN:?,fIr.
,
.
r::: 01_ Ui: ('; f:
!. WA I~ THM()I~E
TBE SWARTBMOREAN
6
SCHOOLS ACTIVE SHOW ENGUSH
FOR DEFENSE mSTORICAL FILM
Faeulty and Buildings Dedieated Stars of Current College OfFering
to AU Pouible Cooperation
Have Sinee RIsen to
in Community Measurea
Prominenee Here
Eaton DelendB
Mourn Schoo,.
(Ctnlli1nu4 f~1ItII P.I# Ou)
capped; operation of continuation,
night, and adult schools; expert training in individual skills and aptitudes.
"The poison in our body politic to·
day has not come from areas where
enlightment, intelligence, tolerance, understanding prevail. Our only hope for
a future world fit to live in is education-and even more education."
Talka on "Cosmle BaYI'"
On Tuesday, January 20 Dr. W.
F. G. Swann director of the Bartol
Research Foundation of the Franklin
Institute will give a talk on IICosmic
Rays."
Dr. Swann was born in England and
acquired his training at Brighton Technical College, University College,
King's College, and the City and Guilds
of London Institute. In 1913 he came
to the United States with the Carnegie
Institute and has since held professorships at the Universities of Minnesota,
Chicago, and Yale. Since 1927 Dr.
Swann has been Director of the Bartol Foundation.
Dr. Swann is a Fellow of several
Physical Societies a . • t
")f
Tea and a social hour will follow the
meeting with ?tll-s. William Craemer
and Mrs. Arthur Dana presiding at the
tea table. Hostesses for the afternoon
will be Mrs. E. LeRoy Mercer and
Mrs. Sargent Brewster.
JANUARY
MOTHERS BEAR
MRS. SPRJ·ER
.........
CHESTER'S
F..h1on Comer
A FROCK
WITH FORESIGHT
through tho whol.
yeorl
C..... D....
w1tlo All-Wool
J •••01
!hc Federal Art Exhibit, sponsored
Jomtly by the department of Fine Arts
and Somerville Forum at the college,
ope!led on Monday, January 12, in the
ClOIster Gallery of Clothier Memorial
Chapel. Loaned by the Pennsylvania
W. P. A. Art Program, it will be open
to the public as well as the students
every day except Sunday from 2 to 5
P. M.
The aim of the exhibit is to represent ~ertain trends in contemporary
American sculpture in various media.
Sizes 12 fa 20
PRIMROSE
priDt aD 4te ..
with V necJe·
line, buttonl to
wal.t, pocket.
on bloVM. Fit·
ted Jacket b
collarle... patch
pocket. an.d
contra.tin. but·
tonl.B1ue,aqua.
rose, JU.Ple.
YouPit,.
• t •
HOLI) EVERYTHINGL
A single slip on your sid£
walk or steps may result i
a costly suit for damage:
Protect yourself from lo(
with Residence Liabilit,
Insurance issued by Th;
lEtna Casualty and Suret~
Company of Hartford.
Conn.
PEI'BR & TOLD
lMUraftCf!
+17 Dartm"'nlh Ave.
...... ' • • 1833
0;
• I
I
W. I. L. BoRl'll Meets
T~ere will be a meeting of the ExecutIve Board of the Swarthmore
branch of The Women's International
League for Pea4!e and Freedom on
Monday, January 19, at 2 P. M. at the
home of the chairman Mrs. PhiHp H.
Jewett of Kenyon avenue.
~
,
'
"-",-,.
DRIVE
.
..'.: ...
VOl.;
~
L'~
.
'
.
,
:.: .": "
No. ~ ..
.
: ,
. '.
"."
•.•. ,.\ ' .
-
-~
Are Any of Your Home Aids
Gathering Dust on the Shelf?
There's a familiar ring to Mr. Eagleye's plaintive question. And
when she 5ays-"lt'5 up on the shelf-out of order," he snorts
-"Well, let' 5 get it flxedl" Look over your own electrical aids. If
any need repairing, take them to your electri~al dealer. Remember, Uncle Sam wants you to conserve materials and strength.
PHILADELPHIA ELECTRIC COMPANY
DE.ENSE
STAMPS
.Ill. 28
",
....
.. : . .
.
~
.. .. . ,.. .
i
.-41
swARTHMORE;PA;, 'JANUARY
23,
.. . .
·1?42 -',:: ..
MRS.·, CHARLES
Young Cast Stars
UST'WORKERS IN ,.
:.~.:;:T~-EVANS DIES In Star-Bent Roles CHARITIES _DRIVE
Cbildren
12.50 PER YEAR
Need
C10daing
VICTORY BOOK
DRIVE STARTS
The Friendly ·Circle is asking
for clothes for a family in which
Str:..th ':liaveD Avenue Resident, Alkiu Direeted Players Club 118 Volunteer Solicitors Begin
the children are, boy, 14; girl,
Enlire Community Organ'...... 10
79; 'Stirvided Hnsband by
Comedy Gives Promised
Two Week Campaign Sunday
II; boy, 8; girl, 7; boy, 5.
Help Armed Forees in
." .• _ Nearly Two Yesn
Amnsement
for Needed ·F~tI .
Mrs. Harold G. Griffin, 214
Week's Drive
_ _"";"''''';'''.';",.._
'
Rutgers avenue and Mrs. Ben;., SIE"oan~~h ii: J;dvans widMOW °df ChaJries
The Players Club lobby buzzed this
Spurred by anllo.unc,iment that adjamin Collins, 412 North Chester
Swarthmore opens its Victory Book
rr
•
\fans""
"'a~se
away
on ay an
road will gratefully receive cond
, •
l'
,
- week with "\Vasn't it fun?" as the vance gifts received ',so far from people
trihtitions. '
Campaign Monday, January 26 un er
h:~~u~t a~:e~e~ :~~h~il~;;:~ Haven 1I0ut of th~ Fryin~ Pan" homewar~ in this community for the United Char-IL_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- - - - - - - - - ' I the chairmanship of Mrs. 'Frank G.
~ Mr,g:;Evans was born near Reading ,bound audIences. mtcrchanged their i~ies campaign are wen ahead of l~st I
.
Keenen. School children, Boy Scout
and w,ould have been 80 ears old on com~ents of unam"!ous a~prova1. Ac- year's tot~ls, ~warth~~re ~M,~n~ th!s
and Girl Scout troops, the Public Li~larc1i ·Sof this ear.
y
cordlllg. to the Club s publts~ed state- week completed organtzalton of the .. I
brary, adults in every phase of Swarth:' Mrs::: Evans ~ame from Tacony. Inent I.the . comedy by FranCIS Swann, teams in ~eadines~ for t~e start of the.
more club activities are organized to
Ph.. !!a.,d.elph.. i.a. to Swarthmore with her was ,.produced solely to make yooUr two week campaign which gets \Inde r '
, b r i n g the drive for free, good books
".
\Val.!
for servicemen throughout this nation
1'_1;I~~~'i!.4,~f!j
.1~ three ycars afJer the Iaug I1. A nd no matter II 0 w dark e n
" Sunday
Ja"'er had retired as general manager gloomy or sour !he wo~ld 'ieems wh
A total of 118 men and wOlDen have ,oting for DirectorS Tomorrow to a ~uccessful close by Saturday night.
6f tlie 'steel works of Henry Disston the first .<:t begms ~~u 11 ~ave forgot· been recruited in Swarthmore for the: and Monday Preeedes Annnal
January 31.
and Sons. She was a member of the 'ten all of It before It 5 filllshed.
fourteen day drive. Tht:y comprise:
Meeting Monday Evening
The drive being currently conducted
Swarthmore Presbyterian Church and
Even though the play's action devel- eleven teams and a headquarters unit. ~
all over the United States, is sponsored
· blc, 110until a few years ago belonged to the ,ops with the most unpre d leta
The latter, headed by Air. Goodwin, : Th C ~nnua I mee t'I~g. 0 f th.e S war th .. l'';intly by the United Service OrganSwarthmor\!' Woman's Club.
believable situations nOlle of those arc Ellwood B. Chaplnan, of Harvard :more Ll~rary ASSOCIatIOn wll1 b~ held ization. th~ . American Red Cross, and
.' Surviving are three daughters Mrs. :could have been really am. using without 'avenue, associate director;' Elrie S. :.h~onday. January 26, at 8 P. M. . In the the American Library Ass.ociatibn.
Horace R. Hayday and ~{rs. George ',<1 spontaneously contagious presenta- Sproat.• of Ogden avenue special public- ~ I....Ib r a ry R 0010. All • W h 0 are m t er.es t e d Books collected. will be trucked from
Cillespie of Swarthmore and Mrs. Jolm tion. The Players Club cast under t h e 'ity; Isaac Darlington, of Strath Haven ~1I1 t h. e, .~~II,ua I rev~ew 0 f •th e L 1b rary here to the Widener Branch Library. in
.
·
K.. Desmond of Philadelphia; a twin d trecttOl!
0 f L'IDCO.In A
. t k'IS~ d oes a Inn; and the following secretaries who !Board s alms. "a II d a cco mpIISh men t s are Philadelphia where they will be sorted,.
sister Miss Sallie D. Seidel of Gibral.. superlatively good Job 111 thiS respect. will take turns in attendance at a spe- iasked to. attend.
.
rep'aired, and distributed to
c1ub-,
. tempo as a umtl
. cial campaign office
' provided in the .t P 0 IIs w tIl b e open f or tl Ie e Iec. t Ion 0 f house libraries outside training camps,·
tar,: Berks county·" another sister two ,It works in rapid
~
I
••
f'
. hank. building thro'ugh the courtesy of IItwoo mc"! b ers 0 f th e B oard 0 f D Irec t ors to. supplement existing library s'ervices
brothers;
and three grandchildren
,managing an irreSIstible,
cIecllve
air
d
II brar.y h ours S a tur d ay, January maintained by the Army 'and ,Navy',
•
C,harles 'Evans Gillespie and George of fun and surprise.
the Swarthmore National Bank and ~urmg
f
9:30 A . .'f
Gillesp·ie, Jr. and John K. Desmond, Jr.
The complete participation of the Trust Compan),;. ~fiss Nettie Alexan- 4 ,rom·
1... t 0 I'"
1:.:30 P • M • and and to the ,American Merchant Marine
ro
2
to
4
P
l\I
1
·..:Funeral services were conducted at 8 audience in the series of surprise ell- der, of N. Chester road. Mrs. Rob~rt ~ m
. . ; a so 0nMond ay, Library SAssociation.
The. warthmore committee hopes
26
f
o'clock \Vedncsday evening at the resi~ trances durina the play within play was ;L. Coates,. of Haryard avenue,' Mrs. ~~~uary :to r?m ~'" t ~ 5 :30 an d 7 t 0 8
~
p
h{
All
vottllg
eSldent
f
S
rth
that
this community will con.tribute
denc~(:b)':;"~~t: formc::r. pa~tot, .the Rev. proved by the audible comments of dis~ Joseph ] ..Gecr, of Swar:thmore Apart., J; •
•
r
s 0
~a.J. l\{arshall Linton of the Disston Pres- appointment 110.' I expected somebodv: ments, Mrs. J. Donald Gibson, of HilI- ~or~ ~VllO !!Ilgned the roll of Assoclabon from its ample private libraries books
,.
.
.
b
. t D ecemJer
I 31 I~s,t are of quality· in. quantity. They may be
byterian Church, Tacony.
else again," whell~final1y-Norman
born avenue, )'lrs. ThoIr'as Lueders,
of l.:..
~lIe,m ers pr,10r 0
g
th
d
t
t
f
t
I I
"made it." Unusually good timing N Princeton avenue and Mrs Harold r e o vo C 0.£ e wo cand Id a t es: left at the Pennsylvania railroad SUIbuilt up that suspense and Mr. Atkiss
March, of N. Chester road.
~s't~;rs. Franklin S. Gillespie and John F. tion platform, the Swarthmore Public
Library, b.oth Public School buildings,
P encer
is to be comptim"nted
upon
the
cast's
TIle
tealn'
d
b
M
G
d
..
s announce
y
r. 00 - : Ar .F B b . 'II I . h
f and at the Woman's ,Club where boxes
achievement.
win arc the following:
~
Ice. ar er WI Je III c argc: a 'wl'll be plac'ed ·for. the . purp·ose.· M;"';"'~he ballot box all Saturday mormng,
,.
The happily chosen cast which preLeonard C. Ashton, of Elm avenue, ~(rs.' Peter E. Told 011 Saturday after... bers of the Junior Red Cross will help
~el1ts 'lOut of the Frying Pan" includes captain; Katherine R. Booth, Arthur hoon, and :Mrs. Sewell \V. Hodge on to package them on the 31st.' Girl
Hay Heads Panel to Lead Home June West Atkiss in a skilled cOIDie R. Dana. Mrs. Morris L. Hicks, Ever- ~;ay afternoon and evening.
Scouts, telephone 1690, or Boy Scouts,
;;; and Sehool Assoclatiou
characterization as Muriel Foster; ctt L. Hunt. Mrs. Thomas ~L Jackson,
I I
telephone 175-AI, will collect any books
,
.
Stndy
Sally McFadden and Janet James Carlos F. Noyes, Joseph A. Perry,
which cannot be transported to. local
collection centers.
,. _
Campbell as Marge and Kate who have Frank S. Reitzel, Dr. Louis N. RobDeveloping 'responsibility and initia- little difficulty in persuading the U11- il1sol1. Wa1ter A. Schmidt, Mrs. Hervey b:rr
Camp librarians report a great;,need
tive ilJ dur,!children will be'discussed'by conscious but pretty Dottie Coburn Schumacher. Claude C. Smith, Jack B.
for up-to ... date technical publications
'.
,.
by, men desiring to pursue a hobby or
t'rs. parents, and pupils at ..the ~Qme, B~st.o~1 is a dreary place and b,e.r .~ew
!-~~s . .James F,: ,B~~ard,us~_,~~ ~o~,n
In greatest'deinand ari,!iOOki;- on ·.tliese
'ruesda~
K.
subjec,~s: }Iilitary p1,Jb1.ications, applied
Edward - N:'· Hay, chairman of the' cclieilt'·last mipute pinch hit for Jean Mrs. Charles Israel. Mrs. Ernest R.
mergency .t
psychology, accounting, shorthand, bus.guidance ~committee of the Home and H. Creightori ,vho was HIt'
Laws, Eleanor Shinn. Mrs. Earl Weltz. !
iness an4 salesmanship, lettering:and
School As~ociaii9n. will lead the dis~
Charles F. Seymour as George adds
Mrs. T. Harry Brown, of Cornell '~ On the evening of February 13 mechanical ~rawing, photography, novel
.
P arcn t s ·'·1
k
h
d
d
. ,s spontaneity; avenue, captain; Mrs. F. Stuart Brown, warthmoreans wishing to enl'oy a gay and play writing.
cusslon.
VI' 10 ma e qp t ~ aU muc 1I
to the
pro uctlon
ience.\'dll be'i!lvited to participate in a Charles },(cCaffrey as Nornlan lends :Mrs. Ralph Dinsmore, Mrs. Philip H. evening and'at the same time contribBiographies and histories (particu
L J W
'f
P L Who ~ards in the \Voman's Club House to ises on all phases of mathematics are
·bT
T
I
d
f
rs.
.
.
artler,.1\
rs.
. . \Vor1" the music of thc'Mazda Lane Orchesresponsl llty. he pane, compo~e 0 yearns to succeed; Jac Van Arden taker, Florence \Volverton, Jane
desired. 'Ranked with respect to poputeachers, parents, and children, should serves two masters, the' cookt)ook and raiL
tra.
larity arc these types of fiction: ad~
help answer some .of, the perplexing the theatre; G. Jackson Evans blusters
The Harold Ainsworth Post and venture; aviation stories, historical
·
. .III every horne to satls
.f
·
John E. Gensemer,
Jr., of IVassar
Auxiliary, American Legion \vhich are novels, humor, mystery, sports and
(Jues t Ions
w h'Ie II arise
y t Iel
playwright's
conception
.
C
concerning the interretated responsib!l- of a politician. Harry V. Bonner and avenue, captam; \\T. C. Campbel, aro- ~url1ing over their ,annual charity ball western.
ities of the children, home, and the Donald C. Towers contribute the Play- lyn Cresson, \Villiam Dodd, Grace ~o ~h~s._~~,Ys~ are asking the response
school.
I ers Club's liveliest policemen to date.
Dodd, Doreen McConechy, Frances E. ~~ 'every Citizen in the Borough to the
The success of last year's panels on
Hunter, John B. Murrell, D. Alice Red- jleces,sity of a ·C.ommunity Emergency
NAMED BY OPA
And-believe it or not-a lady near grave ,J:Mrs. P a Imer...
I SkogIu nd , A nn Ch est 10'
. case of bombing or other
home work and other aspects of home
us sat faithfully, pencil in hand, to V \Vhitem3il
' .
D J
F B
life, as well as the IIInformation Please"
I 'f K
.
b·
' .
emergency occurrence. Local doctors
r. ames • ogardus of Cornell
,
catc
1 .1\ r.
ennys
gum
a
recipe
I
She
'{
H
Id
G
'ffi
f
R
t
I
·
·
d
.
h'
.
.
. d as h ead . 0 f
.;.\ rs. aro
rl n, 0
u gers ave- lave a VIsed t e precaution of a UBlt avenue was appOinte
Programs of previous years, has led meant to take home ~Qre than, entert
'
"
G
E'
M
.
N
Y
the Committee to the belief that tainmcnt.
nue, cap alii; . . .,.Lrs. eorge' \Vmg, ar- so thoroughly equipped that a small the' ew ark Office when the Office
Swarthmore parents like best to sit
I
gueritc Gettz, Mrs. Katherine John- field hospital can be set up in short of Price Administration made its most
down i!.JformaIly ! with Swarthmore
The production continues tonight stonc, Mrs. Charles Marshall, Mrs. action.
recent im'portant step in broadening
teachers' and discuss from their own and tomorrow at the Club's Fairyiew Arthur R~dgrave, Mrs. Alvah Stuart,
Each family can aid by buying a ac:tivities. Dr. Bogardus was price excxperience the problems which they road Clubhouse.
Mrs. John Howard Taylor, AIrs. H. S. ticket for Feoruary I3 or by contrib- ecutive of the Consumer Durable Goods
have to face every day. With a panel
•••
Toole, Mrs. George Van Alen, Mrs. ~ting to the committee in charge of Section.,He will now not only 'be CODon the stage to .lead the discussion and NEW RECREATION O}O'FICERS LeRoy Wright.
1~he event which is headed by the Le- corned with consumer durable goods
a carefully planned outline of the queshIrs. Frank ~. )..{arkley. of Guern~ gion A'!xi!iary's president Mrs. Ale~- !~:hich' inc!ud;s practically the ~ntire
tions to,be discussed, an e'vening Can be
sey road, captain; AIrs., Charles Bro· ander Ewmg and Commander FerriS ~~ome furmshmgs field but also With" aU
very profitably spent.
At last week's meeting of the Swarth~ gall, }.{rs. Hobart Davidson, Mrs. Mitchell of the Legion Post. hirs. Rob- the other commodity classifications .in
'
'f rs. James B. D oug- er t T . B'
. II,andl'109 tete
h
Iep h
. t erest ed ~
F amilie's who have 110t joined the As~ more Recreation Association three new W a Ida D
aVISOU,.L\'
air IS
one I
w'
lIC II OPA'IS III
sociation may do so by bringing their members of tIle board were elected to las, Henry R. Harris. AIrs. Stanley Kite, ~st and also will be glad to receive
As a regioqat price executive he is
dues with them to the meeting or by take the place o[ those retiring. Those Mrs. Agnes H. Sheldon, Sewell ,W. .;ontributions. All proceeds will go to- in charge of all activities of his remailing them to Mrs. Walter M. Rey- just elected were Mrs. Howard Kirk, Hodge.
ward, shouldering the patriotic respon- giona1 office relating to the developHolds, 219 Chester road. Meetings of Mrs. Philip M. Alden and hIrs; David
\Valter M. Reynolds, of South Ches- sibili~y of supplying Swarthmore with ment of price policies and will reprethe Home and School are not limited McCahan.
ter road, captain; S. Frank Butler, t,his precautionary measure.
sellt the commodity divisions of OPA
to members, anyone is free to come. A
The new officers of the Association Waldo B. Davison, Walter H. Dickin- : ~t the ,Auxiliary meeting in Borough in the field. He will also supervise inlarge treasury permits a greater vari~ also elected at the mecting were: Mts. son, T. E. Hessenbruch Frank G. Kee- l:Iall hfonday afternoon following Red vestigations, and collection of informaety of program and enables the associa- J. Burris West, president; Mrs. Theo~ IIcn, Ralph Ashton Nixdorf H. Lindley C~oss sewing arrangements were sys- tion necessary for price action. An imtion to invite worthwhile outside speak- dare W. Crossen. vice-president; Mrs. Peel, Howard J. Tallev.
'
tematically scheduled for the success of portant part of this duty will be to
ers.
David McCahan, treasurer: Mrs. How~
Robert!I Richmond of Crest lane this War Defense Project. Each of the handle explanations of price actions to
'Vith notice Qf this meeting sent to ard Turner, . assistant treasurer; Mrs. captain; Mr~.]. Paul Bfown, Mrs. Ed~ l~ members'in attendance has accepted b'us~nessmen in the area. The New
all parents by mail will be a copy of J. ~T. S. Bishop; Mrs. Andrew Simpson ward N. Hay, W~ E. Hetzel, Jr., Mrs. a; role, in the drive and ardently see~ York office of OPA J:1as j~risdiction
the Air Raid Regulations for School publicity and corre~po~ding secretary. Albert S. Johnson, Thomas Lueders, t~e cooperation of all.
over New' York and New Jersey.
:TWO .RUN FOR
,UBRARY BOARD
·v
-
1
usa
<
'.
}.f.
TO ENCOURAGE
;.:RESPONSmIUTY
":;AU'
================================::;
th~,corriing
BUY
RUIS
. .
,
"
XIV,
d~N
A I Y -\ :
c ;,
2 3 1942
T HMOUE -, . P A-,-, ...-. --".".----.--",
••
To Give Freneh LeetDl'e
M. Gustave Cohen, Professor at the
Sorbonne in Paris, and now visiting
professor at Yale University will give
a lecture in Swarthmore
Monday
Jar:uary 19 at 4 :15 in Martin Bio~
logIcal Laboratory. The lecture will be
in Frencht and is open to the public
M: Cohe!1 was in the first World War,
serv.lflg Wlth honors which were the
Legion d'honneur, Military Cross with
palm and star, and two citations. He has
bee.n author and producer of drama
'yhlch adds to his interest and bril~
hance as lecturer, and after teaching
at the University of Strashourg and
then ~t the Sorbonne, he was compelled
to retire, when the German authorities
!,ook ,?ve~ ~rance, finally coming to the
ho.sp.tabty (as he puts it) of the
Umted States.
...
I·
.- - ... , .
0;. t.I"l~
GION GROUPS
",ORK FOR CHEST
--
----------------1.
.c·:...
:"."~'
i- 113'~
·
SW'
~i'·:R;·
'
:
T-'
·H··':-M··:~I
0
HE
~~~·.lfto'RY~:~~~--::""
. ,':. .
. IOU'
--
I
to wear from thIs
minute on •••
••
Y
,j
,..........,..,-_......"""".\ ,
KIDs
Captain E. Grafton Carlisle, Jr. of
Muhlenberg and Amherst avenues wu
one of three members of the Royal
Air Force Ferry Command to receive
recognition for their services to Eng·
lish Empire in the King's New Year's
honor 6st.
Captain Carlisle a young Pennsylvania National Guard officer refinquished his connection with the direct
United States forces early in September 1940 and volunteered for service
by Rying bombers from Canada to
England. With Captain Lorne V. Messenger another civilian pilot who shared
with Grafton the honors just bestowed
by Britain's ruler Captain Carlisle was
the first to make the trans·Atlantic
Right.
Captain Carlisle described his 16
months with the R. A. F. Ferry Command in four words -never a 'dutJ
moment. liThe work of thit; organiza~
tion will be of tremendous value after
this war is over," he declared. "Before
the work started a transatlantic flight
was regarded as a risky undertaking
to say the least. Now it is almost commonplace . . ."
---
Iqlll
by
Mrs. Robert E. Spiller, Director 'of
the Rose Valley Nursery School talked
on uDiscipJine" at the regular meeting
of the Swarthmore Mothers Club held
Friday January 9 in the Presbyterian
Church.
Mrs. Spiller opened the discussion by
saying that discipline is a 'Iweighted
word" and everyone wants to talk
about it. She said the aim of discipline
should be self discipline and not blind
obedience; that it should develop
people into individuals who can live
together harmoniously.
The speaker divided the subject into
three categories. The first was preventative discipline which aims at foreseeing situations which may occur to caUse
trouble and trying to manage them ably
before they actually arise. The second
was that of corrective discipline, the
aim of which is to impress the child
with the importance of not doing something because of the danger involved.
The third was educative discipline
which concerns itself with giving the
child an understanding of life and the
ability to learn from it.
.:...;,.,,;- ~-Legion Post Listens In
Mrs. Spiller stressed the point that
affection and harmony in the family
The January meeting of the Harold
group are necessary for the best de- Ainsworth Post No. 427, American Levelopment of discipline in a child.
gion was moved up to Thursday, the
Following the talk there was an 15th, when the members heard a naactive discussion by the club members. tion-wide broadcast from 9 until 9 :30.
The Swarthmore Schools are actively The English historical film "Fire Over
cooperating in the community defense England" will be the feature of the Coleffort in a number of ways. Classes are lege moving pictures in Clothier lrfembeing organized among the people of orial at 7 and 9 o'clock tomorrow evethe community and the school plant is ning, Saturday. On the same program
being made available for public meet- will be a Disney cartoon U\Vindow
ings and some modification of the Cleaners" and two short subjects "Carschool course has already been insti- men Amaya" and 'ISymphony in Snow."
uFire Over England" is a picture of
tuted.
the
Elizabethan Age, of the year 1587Mabel Ewing, home economics in1588 when the Spanish Armada sailed
structor in the high school, has just for England. In part it is the story of
launched a class in the American Red Elizabeth (played by Flora Robson) and
Cross Nutrition and Canteen course
Philip of Spain (played by Raymond
which had its first meeting on January Massey);
but in the main it is a tale of
5. 4S active and enthusiastic women eo- romance and adventure, of a man and a
rolled from Swarthmore and neighbor- maid (in this case Laurence Olivier
ing communities. The group is meeting
and Vivien Leigh). Much of the hisfor 20 hours, two hours every Monday torical background is excellent except
and Wednesday for five weeks. Upon
in the instance where Laurence Olivier
the completion of the Nutrition Unit
defeats
the Spanish Armada practically
and successfully passing an examinasinglehanded. The storm mentioned in
tion required by the Red Cross, each
history books is conveniently forgotten.
class member will receive her proper
This is not considered one of the great
certificate. Every member of the class
is required to do twenty hours of mass English pictures but is thought an infeeding, much of which will be done at teresting historical film.
The next program of movies at the
the school cafteria under the direction
Col1ege
will be shown on saturday,
of the cafeteria manager and dietitian,
February
14, when the Russian film
• I •
Mrs. Eleanor Reynolds.
DISCUSS OLD MASTERS
UChapayev" will be featured.
In order to be prepared to take care
CAR TAX STAMPS AT P. O.
• I I
The William J. Cooper Foundation
of injuries at school in the event of an
air raid, or to be of service in their own PARENTS' MEET SUCCESSFUL and the department of fine arts at
Stamps for the payment of the auto~
Swarthmore College will present Dr.
home communities, thirty-eight of the
mobile tax have been received at the
members of the high school and grade
A candid picture of today's college Jacob Rosenberg associate professor of Swarthmore Post Office and were
girl
with her strengths and weaknesses Harvard University and curator of placed on sale yesterday at 9 A. M.
school teaching staff have joined a Red
Cross first aid course. A number of the was presented to 8th Grade fathers prints, Fogg Museum of Art in an ilThe stamps, which are to be affixed
teachers are already cer:tified in ~rst aid and mothers on Tuesday evening by lustrated lecture on 'IOld Master Drawto the windshield, are green in color,
ings
The
Problem
of
Quality"
this
and several as first aid instructors, Dean Frances Blanshard of the Col..
so they are instructing in the course. lege. Dean Blanshard pointed out that Sunday evening at 8 :15 in the Friends' and bear as a central design a repre ..
These instructors are Virginia Allen, the most acceptable qualities hoped Meeting House. All friends of the Col. sentation of the Liberty Bell.
, The present issue is good until June
Phyllis Hasse, Miss Barten, William for in college candidates were "eager- lege are welcome.
..........
~-30,
will sell at $2.09, must be ·nsed after
Ziegenfus, and John Jenny. The class ness and alertness of mind" and "a
Receives
Stretehers
February
1 and will be on sale until
is meeting two hours daily, four after- capacity for growth." Some maladjustFebruary
28.
After that date the tax
noons a week after school.
The
Swarthmore
Red
Cross
is
very
ments at the college level, Dean Blans..
will
be
reduced
monthly until the
The need for first aid is being em- hard thought might be prevented by grateful for the three stretchers which stamps for the year 1942-43 are placed
phasized in the' health courses in the a wholesome test in early years as to have been donated through the kindness on '3ale, at $5. For March the tax will
school. Beginning with classes after the the effect of too little rest and too little of Mrs. Harvey Pierce of South Princeton avenue, Wallace McCurdy of Og- be $1.67; April $125; May 84 cent.;
New Year's vacation, all health classes food on living efficiency.
Edward N. Hay Personnel Officer of den avenue and Thayer road, and the June 42 cents.
have undertaken the study of first aid,
With the stamp the motorist is furthe junior course in the junior high the Pennsylvania Company surveyed the First Aid Class of Swarthmore.
nished
a card which must be filled out
I •
school, and the regular Red Cross techniques of large business firms in
and
returned
to the Collector of InMumps
Continue
course being undertaken in the c:lasses choosing their employees by accepted
ternal
Revenue
in Philadelphia. Inof the senior high school. This is now tests for abilities and personality.
Those who have been ill with the
formation
to
be
furnished
includes the
The role of extra-curriculum activi- mumps since January 8 are Roy Bossrequired work in all of the health educamake
and
body
type
of
vehicle,
year
tion classes and will be continued until ties in after school hours in creatmg hardt, Barbara Lou Parry, George Alof
model
and
engine
number.
de&irable personality traits was graphi- len, John Garden, Arthur Grover, Betty
the course3 are completed.
• I •
Every Monday night the school is cally presented by James Miller, of the Ann Hulme. John Bernard, Jane Sorber, Gregory Heath, Douglas Heath,
open for the classes in fire fighting for High School faculty.
Mrs. John G. Hersh
Mrs. George Karns developed the Ann Myers. Margaret Gibson, Douglas
the fire wardens and householders of
the community. This class is in charge viewpoint of the basic qualities for suc- Spencer, Betsy Barnes, Jennifer CalMrs. Ida Hersh widow of Dr. John
of the officers and instructors of the cessful character whose growth is quhoun, Corina Foster, James Robert G. Hersh formerly of East Greenville,
Swarthmore Fire Company and meets planted in the home itself. Among McHenry, Elizabeth Nixdorf, Barbara' Pa., who has made her home the last
from eight to ten o'clock every Monday others. she emphasized the contribu- RoUhaus. Joan Harrar, Deet Dunn, three winters with her son~in-Iaw and
tion of sincere religious training upon Joanne Worst, Lucy Hayes, Jane Pit- daughter, Mr. and Mrs. C. Wahl Olmes
night.
character development.
tinger, 'Judy Barnes, Marjorie Lang, of Cornell avenue, passed away JanuIn summarizing the reasons for fail- Frances Brewster, Louise Archbold, ary 4. Mrs. Hersh celebrated her 86th
J. J.'. to Plan Red Cro•• Aid
ure in college, business, and school, the Cornell Archbold, and Sally Spencer.
birthday last May.
above speakers cited definite data to
The first post-holiday meeting of the the effect that such failure was apt
J. J.'s will be held Sunday evening at to reflect the lack of respect for per7 07c~ock at the home of the president sonality or lack of encouragement for
Susan Thatcher on ,College avenue. individual adjustment in the hom!! it• W#AT IIAPPfNED 1lJ 1114T MIXER
This will be an important meeting as self.
6AVE
the line of assistance which the organ• I I
ization will take in Red Cross and local
Art Exhihit et College
defense work will be arranged.
.~
••
Honored
16, 194.2
AND
BON DS
1
Children.
Plans were
discussed:
for the Victory Alice
Luktns,Mrs.
Rebecca·
Robinson'lrt
Refreshments will be served in the summer.
Cooperation
with
Ann Wray.
Lee P.'M.Wray,
'Mrs.
).{usic Room, after the meeting, by the Garden National' Defense ~rogram Earl P. Yerkes, Mrs: Samuel Carpenter.
. THE WEEK'S CALENDAR
second grade mothers.
headlines the activities for the year.
Ambrose Van Alen, of Park avenue,
I
captain; Charles L. ~Iaas. Oscar GilFRIDAY. JANUARY 23
creest. Guido Henry, Julius Under10:00 A.M.-Literature Sectlon ................................. Woman·s Club
8:15 P. M. - "OUt of the Frying Pan" ............................ Pl&yem Club
d J r.
woo,
i
SATURDAY. JANUARY 24
Mrs. ). Burris \-Vest, of Benjamin i
9:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M.-Polls Open .......................... PubUc Library
.,
West avenue. captain; Mrs. Rudolph
2:00 P.M'. to 4:00 P.IL-Polls OPen .••.•••.•••.•••••••••••••• PubUc Llbrary
8:15 P.~. - "OUt of the Prytns Pan" •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Pl&yel'B Club
H . B an k s, M rs. E . M . B oy,
d M rs. R ay.,
08iee. BoNqIo Han - Telephoae Oasl
SUNDAY. JANUARY 25
: ". Opea Week. 0.,.. 9-1Z, 14 - Sal1lrda7 9-12
mond K. Denworth, Mrs. W. F. Hanny,
11:90 A. Y.-Mornlng Worahlp ........••.......•. ~ .......•..... Loeal Churches
,
Mrs. O. M. Hook, Mrs. James Hom,;MONDAY. JANUARY 26
.
.
10:00 A.M.-Red Cr088 8e1rIDa ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••• WomaD'8 Club
The Fire School held its fifth meeting in the High School last Monday night. day AIrs Otto Kraus Jr Mrs P M
2:00
M.
5!30
Open""." •• " " " " " " ••• "PubUc Library
Thursday night, 7,45-10 P. M. residents are urged to enlist in Company H, Maiin, ifrs. Walker' P~nfiel,j, llrs: ,
7:00
8:110
M. - Polls Open •• " " " " " " " " " " " , .Publ1c Library
Swarthmore Military Training Corps at the High School Gymnasium for sei'v- Robert R. Richmond, Mrs. RusseU
8:00 P.M.-AW
8:00 P. M. - Anoual MeetlDe""""""""""""""".""PubIIi: Library
ices as Auxiliary Police and Messengers,
"
TllBBDAY. JAHVABY :n
Air Wtudeos Meet
School Faculty Team, Sadie A. Chad- :
2:30 P. M. - ODell Meet1Dg: ··CltbJeDe and OOacreaa..... ~ ...... Woman'. Club
8:00 P. 11. - B""ome and SChool 1Ieet1D8' ••••••••••••••• ~ •••••• R. B.. AudJtorlum
The senior air wardens have been meeting with the members of their posts. wick, captain; Elizabeth Barten. Na- I
Olub .. """"".".""""""".".Bortot B1d11., Oo~
The post wardens will vi~it you shortly, present their identification cards and than Bell, Lillian Hewes' and Mrs. .., 8:15 P.M.-1IUsIc
.
WRDNlIBDAY, JAHVARY 21
ask for certain jnformation.
Henrietta W. ¥annaL
.
10000 A.M.
4:00 P . M . - _ Dt 10l1li,,,,,.,,.,, .... _
en.;'Next week The Swarthmorean will pub6sh a map of the Borough with the
Special solicitation among· colored
TBlJIISDAY. JAIroARY:It
","..'aiI>
different air warden posts. Keep this for future reference.
.
residents will be'made by Joseph Quin10:00 A.K:..,...I.W, V._B~."" .... " " " " " " " R . ' B ; M_aiI>_
Ou!_~~~~j_~!!~. t'.': ,~~sin~ss Men's Association for.linanci~&:_~~.£t.,!j~ lan, ~f, ~odine ~v~nu~ . .,.
IlL.~_'~.O~:OO:"A.:;'II.::~to:'12:.~:30:',.~~~:M.:,.~.
~"'~~~~_:":_:':n~p:::,,~.~.:.:~.~.:"~.:~.~:'~'~'R~"G~.~CIo~:,-!.~!.dJ~I:'_~1.~"~.,;;-J-
*
~~fense. Council
~
~
.
llulletins_,*
I
I
P
.. toto
P.II.
P.II.-POIls
P.
to
=.::2-
-
•
,
2
.,
',URSON'n'A'
A 1S
.' PJ::,
." :
.
.' , . \ '."'. If'!'
m
! , .i
THII: .. $·.4a.T.... OB,BA~.
dormitory of the Drexel Inatituteof
TO!'hnoJoay as shidenf dietician. Mi~.
Hiti:licock,vill graduate in June.
Mrs. Oetavlus Narbeth ·of Lafayette
avenue entertained the Mission Study
Class of the Methodist Church last
Wednesday. Miss Eleanor Shinn reviewed "A Christian Imperative."
Miss Doreen McConechy, Defense
chairman of the Junior Woman's Club,
and Miss Virginia Seal will leave today (Friday) for Washington, D." C. to
attend the National Defense Forum to
beheld in 'The Mayl\ower Hotel. They
will remain over the week-end.
ii,
[LIf'I',
I' .
.-------------~-----~~~~~
brld.o{-Dr.:Hugh HattI")llpb;~Calbl)UD .
0;;
I
. Behaved
son of Mr. and Mrs: D.aYl4~. Pa\b~¥a"r'"OVh"., .D~ ,Calhounilchief reli- "
of .Myrtle. avenue. 'lhe"R., ... John·Old-· dent physIcIan at. Bryn MawrH"ospital.•
man officIated. The church,"'" elfee-'
""
.
...,. ,
: .' .
tively lighted 'with ivory colored candles " ,.:,'
" .• Birthe , ....
and decorated with white gladiolus ,and
.~f..:alld· Mrs, H. W. Huse of, Park
evergreens.
av:enue
-, are receiving ,-conlJ!atuladOns
The bride who was ~ven in marrlage
on .tq~ Ilirth of a daughter' Saiiilf-Cay
by her uncle Mr. James S ... RusseU of
Jan'u~ry S ill. tbe Pr~sbyt.rian HosBaltimore, Md. wore a dress of .white o!,
pItal
PhillideIP,h·1L , , ,..' ,,..'
_.'
faille taffeta and long veil oLnet: Sbe
car~ied a bouquet of white rO,ses. ga.rMr. and. Mrs. Norman .Sbaw of Prosdelllas and gypsophelia.
. ..• pe~t.ville are_ receiving congratulations "
Miss Dor~thy Gibson of Philadelphia upon the birth of a' daughter Caioly" .'
acted as maid of honor. Her dress -was in the Temple Hospital on December
of Alice blue taffeta with hat to match 27. Mrs, Shaw will be remembered as
and she carried white snapdragons and Miss Marguerite Michener formerly of
pink al J d Wh·t
Ie swee t peas. Th e b··d
Cl es- Swarthmore. '
maid was Miss Betty WaterWorth of
Clearfield. Pa. and she ,yore a dress o{lr-----'--------,;.;.---,
pale blue taffeta with matching hat and
Do' Yoa ItDaw
htr bouquet was of white snapdragons
~e • .,.. em. tOl' ~ A'" 'Zi """
and W]
h'te swee t peas., .
' .
CaD 440
Mr. D. S, Calhoun, Jr. of Charlottesville, Va, served as best trian for his TIreo.
en .
brother, and the ushcrs were Dr. HalRUSSELL'S S
sey F .. Warner. of E. Orange, N. J , , '
EI;lVICE
Mr. Walter Hickman of Baltimore ".D~o.alh., alid Lid'.~ A....
Md., and Mr. William Hickman of . ';We Don" &eD car.Spril.lgfield, Pa.
-.... ••
' -~, , --- •
Following the ceremony there WOlS a
~~~ption at Makemic Hall, Snow HiU,
'Fl , ••
3
:SWART
JAN.VABY: 23, ,J~
Dr. aIu! ],lis:'Paul A. Mattis of
• 'anll ~ls.19eorge: Wagner
ge.. avenqe and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred B jamin West avenue entertained at
Voysey ciI"~hester will entertain with a Sunday night supper party on Jana square dance at the Green Lawn uary 18.
Club on Frida)' evening of next week,
Mrs: K D. Swartzel returned last
January 30.
..
Wednesday to her home in Los, AnMr. and Mrs. Harold G. Griffin of geles, Cal after several months iri the
Rutgers avenue entertained at dinner wt..j.he...-p.te.vious.~-,'\Ieek"lrpd:.·:Mrs.
and bridge last Saturday: evenihil'. :Their Swartzel and· her daughter . Mrs. Wil·
guests· included, Mr. and Mrs; Robert liam ·E. Danforth and grandson Dick
L. Coatts~- Me.. 'and7Mrs; 'Osca.r J. Gil- \Oisited her SOil Mr. K. D.
.
creest, Mr. and Mrs'. Benjamin W. Col- and fa.mily· at their home in Murray
I I •
Iins; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. O. Red- Hill, N"}.
Engagement
grave and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sydney
• El'
MISS
~ aJile Bra dfoed of
Mr. and lies." Charles Frederick WolJohnson.
avenue cliteiiained' Saturday at
ters, Jr. of Cedar lane announce the
Mrs. A. B. Lawrencc of Corn en avc- bridge:,arid,'a, 'miscellaneous shower
engagemcnt of' their daughter Miss
nue wUl leave in the very near future Strath Haviiit Inn :in honor of
Susan Ustick Wolters to Afr. Leonard
for Boston, Mass. where she will visit Elizabeth Davis 'of,Collingswood, N.
,Vincent Vall Arsdale son of Mr. and
her ":sters·
Mrs. M. S. Welbnan and f armer
.. Iy 0. f S wart. h'more, W h ose
~
Mrs. \Valter David Van Arsdale of
Mrs. ). S. Rose for several months.
. Mrs. J. V. S. Bishop .of
N: Che.-t"f'i-oad wiWtiik.P!'acc March
Miss' Wolters was graduated from the
avenue will be hostess at luncheon
21 in the Swarthmore Presbyterian' Arts CoJlegc of the University of Robridge today to the bi-weekly
Church.
chester in June and is now continuing
of a bridge club to which she
"Miss Jane Lums4,en of Kcnyon ave, her study of the dance at New York
Mrs. :Charles W. Lukcns of
n'ue entertained at bridge and a mis- Unh.crsity.
.
. en tertame
. d h er brid.ge: I ccll3:l'I;cous sho\ver Wednesday -v.,nillg
H ...- ven avenue
Mr. Van Arsdale is a graduate of the
clUb last Friday at dessert bridge.
iri honor of ~nss Jean Cochran of Ken- Unh'ersity of Kentucky and is now
guests included Mrs. James H. Horn- yon;:-avenue whose' 'marriage to Mr. with the New York Office of the Hartaday, Mrs. Charles Fischer, Mrs. Paul John l,lirnsden,wilrtakc'place February ford Accident and Indemnity Insurance
Hertel, Mrs. Jack Thompson,l " Mrs. 7.
Company. _____- - Merle Muuoy of Winding lane,' Media, : -DodQrs and s.taff members of the
' I •
Mrs. Samuel Crothers of Wallingford, IMlat,,,",al' Health Cent~r of Southern
Bird-Tomlinson
and· Mrs. Adley Nichols of Lansdowne. Ddawai:c, County had a Ittneheon meetMr. and lfrs. 'Villard Tomlinson of
"Yrs. Elric S. Sproat of Ogden. ave- i"g'~t the home of Mrs. llelvin C. Mol_ls"uth Chester road and Harvard aveIlile'·, is recuperating_ in the' Osteopathic stad' of DiCkinson" avenue on Wednes~
annOUncc the marriage of their
H9spital. Philadelphia after an opera- day of this wcek. Plans concerning the
:Marjorie Jean and Ensign
ti0Mn'performed there on January 10.' Clinic, for the coming year were disWellington Bird, U. S. N. R.,
r.· and Mrs. ,Roy M. Horsey and cqss~d.'
,.
of Mrs. Marion P. Bird of Portfamily moved' last week' 'from
Conn. and the late Mr. B:·d.
. d····
. new Iy
Th ayc:r roa
Phone Sw. 2425.J
,mto Ihelr
'1<[rs,
, -0,' J. Gilcreest of Harvard avemarriage was performe'd on Sat,."avenue.
~l~~ .~Jltet:tained 2 tables ,at' .dessert
, . ,. ,at 424' S warth more
Ilome
I ,""lav. December 20, in the PresbyterManse at Crestview, Fla. in the
&£AD THE NEWEST BOOKS
M,r•. an d Mrs. J 0 b'iL!;'G' . Maxey. J r.
h.r.i.dge, ~~d~y. ,',!,
~~~:=-J~===========~~~~
\V,aWngford wm return to live in " Mts.~ George t.'-Tone of Wallingford
of the bride's parents.
Swarthmore again au "February 1 when Hills i.nd'sons,'Tommy and, David' ar-~~r. and Mrs. Bird are now living at • MARY DUNHILL • PRINCE MA TCHABELLI • CHANEL •
they. will move into·:the former Wit- rived home'·Su~day after a 17-day
Pensacola, Fla. where he is an instruc~he
.
ouq~·
liam V. Fischer hoilse at the corner of to· Mh., TOlie's:"parents' Dr.~ and Mrs. tor in patrol plane£: and assistant uavi- ~~
Yalc, and DickinsQn: ~venues.
Max 'Hootman of ,Washi~gton. Mr. gation officer of Training Squadron 4.
Mr.. 'and Mr~. O. 'H. 'Ellison of Den- Tone h~s returned from 'a'l()"day busiDoth the bride and bridegroom atver... Colo. I~ft' ,T~ursday of last week ness tTiP to New Orleans, La. and tended Middlebury College at Middle.
. . to their niece ,.
a f ter·.a. ten- day VISIt
Mrs. Beaunlont, Texas.
.bury, V t. s IIe haVing
graduated from Q
BEAUTY SALON
li<1<;1ce' H ..Hopkins. and Mr. Hopkins . Mrs. Charles B. Campbell Sr. of Swarthmore High School in 1938 and
0'.: Crest· 'ane. They had been
Wallingford left Wednesday' for St. left Middlebury to be married when •
here ,by th~ fatal illness of Mrs. EUi- Petersburg, Fla. 'where she wiD spend half through her senior year, and he :z;
Beardy builds a bulwark 01 cheer
.so,1.;l,·s ~ist~l' Jdrs.. F_raQk,lin Lee.
two months.' '
having bcen president of his college 0
'.Mrs., Charles: S. W2lker of
MrOs, Samuel'D.·Ciyde ~f Swarthmore c1asks. Mr·h Bird received the highest
II SD .h a.- Ilee4
Okla. is spending some time with her ~nd " 1t~en 'ave~ues was taken to
ran and onor while a cadet in train- ~
daughters:, Mrs., :Paul T_ Strong of ~hcs:t.cr Hospital" Ch~ster .
;ug at"Pcli.sacola that of captain of the
CaD Swarthm • "16
Sproul raad:aDd .Mrs. John McCrumm ll'I~rDlng for observation.
Aviation Cadet Regiment, and was also. CHARBER T • .::R~O:....:V_A::.::.E=-_.-c-_C::.::H~:.:E::N::.....:..YU • CORDA Y •
of I Riveniic.w_ Yoad1 Mr. Walker who : Pat Francis of Park avenue enter- managing editor of the 1941 Flight
aJso::was, visiting his dpughters and tained.Barbara ero_sset of Media. Pern Jacket the year book of the Aviation
th~ir.;husba~ds.bas. reibrhed .. ),onle:· . lIutc~ls"n"or,W"1Ii~~9hi; '(ois' !,lri!on, Cadet Regiment,
. Mrs ..Henry· J.: Weiland of' 'R~tgers 'I'ootSle LeWIS and Billy' Froebel
Ca-I-h':"o':"u-n'"~_
...-Tru--itt
avenue .'erttettained'.l at luncheon On luncheon Saturday in celebration of his
, A beautiful candle tight wedding took
Wednesday'for.'Mrs, John A. Ferrell eleventh birthday.
PJ~cc
Saturday afternoon January 10
of' Stam~otd;:~Conh~ who is visiting her A(rs~:' EdWin Faulkner of Dickinson at 5 o'clock
'in tht! Makemie :M cmorial
sister Mrs. Samuel C. Harris of Wel..
is e'ntertainiug ,the members
Church at Snow Hill, Md.
;Presbyterian
lesley road.
'
group advisory' committee at
when
:Miss
Kathryn Nelson 'fruitt
'"Mr, .'and Mrs. J. St~nley Taylor of 'U1ic"e~11 today<
.
daughter
of
1\[r.
and Mrs. Grover C.
Yale avi:!nue were recent gqests at the
committee consi~ts of Mrs.
!fruitt
of
Snow
Hill,
Md. became the
Beekham 'Tower Hotel Ju){ew York
Lue.ders, Mrs. George M.
City."
.. , . .'.':. ,
Mrs. Peter E. Told and Mrs.
~~,s:" Lticy Hayes ~ Of\~'~,~arth~orc
,I. Hoot.
ay~~~e, ~J,~,S ,recoy~«:d. fraQ,! can 'a~a~~
_ "Mary J a Hitchcock of N.
of mumps -and will return to G~~(~::.I
' : :Toad is spending 6 weeks at the
School next week where she is a j
Mrs. Richa,r:d ·G~ Haig-:~f~Riverview
road will e'nterlain· her" bridge club at
luncheon next 'fuesday.
. :Mi-,..: .H. C. St~i*~ofNew LO'lIdO n,
N!~~.~ ~'s' mak~!1~.·ari'e~~nded
STARTS FRIDAY
her,--c:taughtcr' a.nd, ,~p:fi,':'in7:.I,~w; ,
.
Friday -.:. Sillurdioy
BETfE DAVIS
Mrs, .1I. w. HUSe.6f'hrk'avenu.:
In
ERROL FLYNN
·~~ss' Ma~jan -Kirk daughter of
"THE LITTLE
Howard Kirk oE .. South Chester road
".OLIVIA.
DeHA
VILLAND
an~,_a ,s~phomor~
Bryn Mawr Col~
FOXES"
J~ge ,was !ecenlly ~tected to' _the .
with
~Ity Players Drl\ll1ati~ Club•. Mis~ .'
, ',:.:,:
'.:
HERBERT MARSHALL
IS ~rso a member i'Of' the "eo'f1ege, "
club. . .
. . . .. ". .
STARTS TUESDAY
EDWARD ARNOLD
:~rs. Thoma&';;Nl)lan:!and Miss'
WALTER HUSTON
gID:la _Morris came from.,.MoyJan
Mond~y' to mflke ,their home with'
_
HAll That Money
and Mrs. Alexander :Dryden of '316
Can Buy"
Dartmouth aV,enue. ,-.
": '
Private Joseph. M.Buehler of Girard: avenue has· beeri::tranSfer'f(!d:
Chan";te Field at' Rantoul; III. to Howard ,FIeld, Canal Zone.::
STARTS SATURDAY
• Travel by Greyhound co... only
~ivate' Ralston'
l'-'RIDAV
AND
~A"UR"AY
"EAST
SIDE"
KIDS
1/3
as much as driving a car - but
avenue'
even that isn"t the most important
BELA
LUGOSI
IRENE DUNNE
.
thing these days.. You save your car
LEO GORLEY
Setvice
410BERT I\IONTGOMERY
for
necessary in-town' use-and you
"SPOOKS
save vital.war materials. Three
RUN WILD"
as many people can travel by Grey~
I,
hound
per gallon of gasoline - and
TUE8DAY " WEDNESDA.Y
·1
similar
savings are made in oil.
"SECRETS OF
of Swarthmore
metal,
robber
and fabrics. Go GreyTHE LONE WOLF"
with
hound and savel
Prestou Foster
THURSDAY & FRIDAY
One-Way Rd •• Tri.p
.- : ..
THE. SWARTHMOIEAN
MARTEL
RIB ROAST
Serve Fatber lib Favorite R....'
'lb
'0..
The kind of beef roast 9 out of 10
men would choose if gIven the
choIce . • • Beef roast with all
the rich flavor of a good juicy
steak. Flnl 2 ribs ........ lb. 38c
Legs of Lamb ....
Round Steak.
Sugar bag 31 c
KIMMEL & SON
5 lb. bag -limit one bag.
Bisquick
America'
Goi
Mrs.
,:.~~mEY DIED
'
.'. WITH·.THEIR
and, saves gas, oU,
rubber, metal- by
SUPER-COACH
Heinz Baked Bean•
3 tins 35c
Hershey's Soap, 4 bars 19c
i
I
,
·1
••
OUT. OF THE
FRYlNGPAN
..,SUNDAY-MONJ)AY It TUESDAY
..
117 PIaDcb 8.......
DirectOr, Lincoln Alkiss'
JANUARY 23, M
.
"Th'
: ....' ,,'~y n·
.. Ied W·th
1
SllS. P.Il.
JIM DANDY ....
. .,~~
DirectOr, Jolm Dolman,
JANUARY SO Qd II
Jr.
ERROL FLYNN
OLMA deHAVILLAND
Theil· Boots On"
. .•... .,.
.'1MP'OB'/."&NT:
·Tbe. Feature St._ Promptly at
,
'.' . ";:.,:~
.. ····2:40
".
' 7:00 '"
" 9.25
.
•
""'0-1
"AMONG
THE LIVING"
......... , $'1.00
...........
.. .........
us
SlUO
U.
U5
18.1.
IUS'
IUS
11.1.
19.1.
9.15
11M
Landa -froin IOc
. ~-Jrom8lc
: Trini~y ·Parish Notes
On Sunday' afternoon at the regular
meeting ot.t,he Young Peoples' Fellow·
ship, Mr~;~ther will give...,t4e.:sec~nd
of a series' of Informal talks on "Church
Symbolism:;; The \'ISlt to Sleighton
Farms last S.unday afternoon proved of
great interest' to the members
made the trip. -,
The tenth anniversary of the usc of
the new Church -building will be observed all Sunday, February thc eighth.
Ur. Guenther will begin his thirteenth
year as rector on the first Sunday of
February.
The Church School Choir will particillate in the Pre-Lenten Service at
~t. John's Church, Lansdowne on Sunday afternoon, February 8. All Church
Schools of this part of the Diocese
wil1 send delegates and choirs.
On Wednesday :Mr. Guenther conducted a Series of :h.leditations for the
Junior Woman's Auxiliary at Holy
Trinity Chapel, Philadelphia.
..........
FRIDAY
BUSTER. CRABBE
"BiUy the Kid's
Roundup"
SATURDAY
MARTEL'S
FOOD MARKET
SWARTHMORE 2100
••
-=-__
Girl Scout News
Rev.
J. J.rclen
8:<10 A.
9:45 A.
11:00 A.
5:30 P.
Girl Scout Troop #83 met on Wed~%i~~~ lueSday at the Presbyterian Church.
~
Mrs. Ernest Laws spokc to the Troop
about Red Cross work. listing projects
to help in Junior Red Cross._
Swarthmore College girls who asIllli""! sisted at the meeting were :Mary Lou
Denton, Brenda Robinson, Beatrice
,--____ , Brewster and Ann Wirth_
B.T...., _
Tomorrow (Saturday) afternoon at
2 the Troop will meet in small groups
for Radio parties to listen to the opera
;'~:. /3eIrmcm·I"Carmen n •
A JOB FOR YOU
Are you _ali_lied ..,;11& your Job'
• •
Business Folk Nominate
Nominations of officers took place at
the Monday evening dinner-session of
the Swarthmore Business Association
held at the Strath Haven Inn. Named
were Harold Ograrn, president; Robert
Honeyford, vice.president; Alfred P~
Smalley. secretary; and John E. Michael. treasurer. Elections will be held
at the February meeting.
In 11>0
TRAVEL
. BUREAU
:.2.. Park Avenue
., Phone Swa. tn..
SWARTHMORE
CruDl Creek Bridge Club weekly winners on llonday evening at the Strath
Haven Inn were: North and 50uthMrs. Lucille Rankin and Mrs. Harry
Armitage tying Mrs_ Wallace M. McCurdy and L. G. Luckie for first place;
Mrs. Walter R. Shoemaker and Mrs.
Philip \V. Kniskern, second; Mrs. William Faison and !lrs. Edith Paschall.
third. East and West-Mrs. Edith Cuskaden and Mrs. David Cramp, first;
Mrs. P. L. Howard and Mrs. J. K
Donald. second; Mr. and Mrs. Palmer
~koglund. third.
.•
•
mM'AVENUE '. ': ..
.
104
II
Take Care
of Your
Engine!
-
Lowest
Prices
Always
If you take time out now and then
to have your motor. checked over,
yon'lI save yourself a lot of grief
and elfpense later on. The motor
in your car is an intricate and delicate mechanism that needs expert
attention at regular intervals to in·
sure top-notch performance. Don't
overlook this important step.
Authornoo Chet1rolet Dealer'
SooolIo AmnI
~
lUOI. ;.:.:~ i 1M: - iD· , ~
=u _"aiMs·~," :'._11 .r
DELAWARE COUNTY EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
'R()Om 205 Merl!,banl8' Trust Bid... , a.hah Street and Edgmont Avenue
CHESTER
CurnFORnM.R~EY
•
• Po ....
ROID!
wldy., ...
The best place to bring your car!
Will Reopen Her Dancing School
S_la1o 0....,... ••• Baller •••
"Forbidden Trail."
dealred claanlle
Ass't Bookkeeper _ Prot. ared 22-25.' Sal. open
Stenographer •••• $18
ApplY 9 to 1Z Monday thru FrIday
'1 to 9 'tuesday and o:fhursday eveniitgs
••
FEBRUARY 2, 1942
BUCK 60NB~TIM McCOY
dUll
PARTIAL LIST FOLWWS
Cashler ................ ~.
TJptsts (5) ................ ~5 to Sl8
Crum Creek Card Winners
AI.IX FIELD WHITAKER
.::::::::: 1.1: . tt::
Make
Many Jobs now open tor exPerienced help
and for reeent hlgh school graduates
~~~~~~~~~
_
.....
Ydow Wrap,.'
Circle I of the \Voman's Association
of
the Swarthmore
Presbyterian
Church asks clothing to be left with
Mrs. J. V. S. Bishop, 736 Harvard ave·
nue, telephone 627-Vv. or to be called
for by thc Circle's president, Mrs.
Frank Reitzel, 512 Harvard avenue,
telephone 690, for any of the followI
•
ing children whose father is dead and
Methodist Church Notes
whose mother is in the hospital. three
girls, aged 17, IS and 13 and two broth·
The Fourth Quarterly Conference ers 16 and:..:l..:4:.._ ...._ __
will be held tonight, January 23, at 8
o'clock in the chapel. The district suHead. Insurance Co.
perintendent Dr. Charles W. Kitto
will' be present and preside. This wiU Harold G. Griffin of Rutgers avehe the last official visit of Dr. Kitto nue who has been connected with
who completes ~)is term of office in the Philadelphia :h.£allufacturcrs Mutual
March.
.
Fire Insurance Company for the past
The 'Church School convenes on 22 years was recently made president
of the Com::.:::p;:a:;n;:;y.:..
..
• I I
........ 1.... 18.1.
IVILLR .' • .. • ••
,;';" ••-';' ........ 14075
m __
··....LSuh_soa_
times
"Unfinished..
Business"
... pkg. 2%
Beech.Nut CoBee ... lb. 32c
uel
i'f?ip . .s;
The
. .. lb.45c
•
s!
BOOTS ON"
27e
Stewing Chickens ... lb. 33c
U
oar
. lb. 33c
Martel Pork Loins .. lb.
Painting
Paperhanging
13
35c
.
."
LAST DAY FOR INSPECTION
JANUARY 31
..
TBE SWARTBMOREAN
--'~~h ·second' 'evefy-'one',is
about ten time. by bigh .peed
-:-the _cosmic rays," was Dr. Swann's
t h'
.
"U t'l
attent lon·ca
c mg opemng.
.n 1 reI
cent y we .were acquainted wIth two
Sete atomic particles, the electron and the
. _.
.
I
·-To--PariiJ-v
•.u ~i(i'~j.it·-"··"
........ _.. .
."'"
.. ·M.- i&; :-i. -L~ii':'y'
.\ }; li;1 -,,'
pf
H~d.ing
!
8001
. .staff· at a teainin honor
of tbe
her home
on
Ja1Illary 15; ·The other guests
'0 I e ·""""d·o
i·
h
.." . fd
stalI..iru:ludes.
Mrs.
u
.' u.· PJummer,lsupervising
T S h -d M'
.nurse;
4ll_......,.pry·_
" .ls,,"ElIzabeth
Henr
M' ;.,H _cI.. 11)1 B'
. ,
y,.
1S9'
e en
IOns and Miss
"],f~rgatet. A1len, secretary.
:.. .....
DRIVE
'. the
;~;~~~~~~b~y~in~~f~:a~n~t{~le~'~~~~
_e~tertained
~~~~~~;~~.~ea~e~·ti:~~~lr.~~:~~~~~;~·~~:~if
'''C'o~ml'c
!ii'ra
T~a, was sen'cd at the lecture's com-
pichon by the hospitality committee
Mrs. Charles Russell, chairman.
'
OpeD Meetln. Tuesday
Mrs. Harris T. Baldwin first vice
president and chairman of legislation
for the National League of Women
Voters will address a joint meeting of
'g-·wOiIi= Ilhe Woman's Club and Ihe local branch
the I..caguc of "Vomen Voters TuesLOT NEWS
Mrs. Baldwin's topic is announced
Now ia the time to make a sate Investment
In Swarthmore Bu1l~ Lots. Gettlllg
"C:ongrCSS
and the Citizen." Since
as
~~e, prIces advancing. Two speclals_
.....,.,., and f35OO.
No ImP~ve:ri;t~nt. ;)'i,v~ilt .M.und.
she directs the legislative work for the
"'."":.
League, has served as chairman of the
WM_
a~~n=nUt.! ~t~rtle:L.Si-eaPf,~~be~~'''Is'1 Women's Joint Congressional Committee, and attends all important congresRAYMO~ E.'~ON, Attorney.
I~~:~:~:.committee hearings her talk
MRS.
I.e"arl Facias
to be a highlight of Ihe ycar's
•
.~:~~~~~~~~~f
,
F~ERAL
~lDbe~
TenD, 1941
No. t5
All that certain lot or piece of ground
with the bull~.and improvemBDta there
2~ S~ 'QraUl'e'
i
'frO
'Phone
! .
erected; B1\UI'te In the
'J;'owDsbiD
•
I
of .
I
I
Chaperons and Ushers
\
','
.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~r.~1 accordIng
Darby;i~unt7'of
Dela.1t1U'e
State li'~i~:~~~;"m~~:'(
to a survey
and. awl
planand.
thereat
iI Tomorrow
grade evening's
dancing
o'fPPeerDnsylvaula,.
bountled;
d.e8cr1bed
B.
. EDWIN
,
25 Ea
chaperons
for
class of the
~~e~~. ~~~T~on.!.t1clPoe:ter. !
Assemblies in the Wolow~~ ;W:.wJt: = :' ~
.
y, .nL, a.s 101- i
'Club House from 'J until 8 :45
I '{
Beglnnlng at a POint in centre llne of "rlo,.va,e,rd.L,' r, and Mrs. A. Beheuna, Mrs.
~0Ck Avenue (forty feet wtcle) at the Ii
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Reeves,
north ~~:~~W:~~d. forty-aye feet
and M r,s. R. G. Rincliffe, Mr. and
seconds
---..,
minutes twmty
\V 0 J'
1ntersectl=totm:e-:~lIn~: ~ =_~
L S -h ff "",ane, and 'Mr. and l-Irs.
Avenue with the centre Une ot I.e U\OA.
•
co.
Road (torty feet wide).
IUlOZ
T.he tenth grade which meets from 9
,unttl 11 o'clock in addition to Mr. and
;Mrs. Percy Gilbert, Mr. and Mrs. E.
C. Lappe and Mr. and Mrs. James P.
:naug~erty as chaperons will have the
followUlg members of the grade acting
ushers:
David Wcbb, William Talley Gilman
taUlnnder and SUbject. nevertheless, to cerDavid Seymour, John Reinndlt10ns anll restrictions as thereto
and Richard Powell.
men,..• co,
oned.
Your
8t 7th St~
, "
£:heeler
New State Tbtiatre)
"Phone Cheeter 3764!
(Oppoe1te
Pit:lure Framing - Stationer.,.
Books - Kodak Soppliea' .
G"""lng Card. - Bobby Cr~i,
SIMMONDS'
714
Weloh S''''''1
'Phone
w• .I.
.....·~e."er
THOMAS
- Formerly or Swarthmore CoUege
'
Carpenter & Cabinet Maker
425 MORTON AVENlIE, RUTLEDGE
.
'Phone
2989
a'::~:=h~~O= of
two·story stone
stucco garage, lOxia feet. teet;, porch front.
an~l'kr:a:ib p~pe:uy of John H. Murray
owners.
.
urray. his Wife. real
"
Facias
Dec,ember Term. 1941
VAN AJEN BROS.
· Biets hands of home lann.
· dres8e~ these·fredng daY8•
· O.trac~ tluit chap by n8ing
MEDIA LAUNDRY
Call Media 171 or Stop OUr DraYN
CHESTER'S
FASHIO.V CORNER
'
I
COLLEGE SHOWS
NEGRO ART
In connection with the Finc Arts'"
Department of Swarthmore College
there will be an exhibit of Negra Art ~
from Hampton Institute in Collection'
Hall.
Thc'tentative opening date is Sunday ~
afternoon,
' .
'
The exhibition is being sponsored by ,
a Swarthmore committee on Race Relations. which ,is. a student group inter- ,!
csted 10 fosterlllg understanding be-',
tween the races.
This exhibition is designed to show',
the c~ntrjhutjon of a minority group to '
Amencan culture, It wilt include oil and
tcm~era paintings, crayon drawings and
pOSSibly pottery.
0/ Celaneae-:
Bailon Olnira·
1le.se Tallda
S J) e'clally
prlced t with'
,these alst1neth'e feature.'
• • • three IlDD ~
ravel. scal10ped
hems you &DIp
oil' to
Smart and
IVA;, . . . ,.d.
N.".,.
Bpow.,
11•• 9 •• B'....
lhuJ7 .....
CLOTHES
TROUSERS
$2.65
Originally $2.95
SUEDE
JACKETS
$6.65
.i .:
Were $7.95
•
Alterations Free
•
7th & Edgmont Ave.
CHESTER
WINDow CLEANING CO .
SWARTHMORE BRANCH .
ARDMORE
ROD'GER'S
ALL -'!RANCHES OP HOUSE CLEAN
. INO KNOWN IN THE TERRI. . TORY POR 20 YEAIlS
Free
• • • CHESTER
January Savings.
COATS .,
$10~95"""'$i3.95;' ".
Customers
(Forman,
2320
ROGER RUSSEI.I.
Maker 01 Fine
Yalue.
32 Yean Praei.lea\ Exper/m""
A. L PARKER
'Phone Media 459.M
$29.95
CASUALS
•
OUR FAMOUS
WOMEN'S FURRED'COATS
WOOD
KOPPERS
. COKE
". SUN
FUEL On.
REDUCED. 1/3
.
"
'Il'\VEST~
BUY NEXT WINTER'S COAT
"
NOW •••
'.
Clearances
Throlllllwut Store
-.-
OUR:~.ooperatlo~:~
Y
,.
he.lps us ·pro.lde ..
,.
fast, dependable t.le•
phorie' servic.; which ·I~.'
,more iinp·o".ant than:;
'. ever: In. time of.war·
..
"
,;'!
'F.
'ji,: '
THEBB.L~_MY
.-. _·.. OfJiDflsYL_, 'c,,," <: ::::
'~
i! ...
'
' '.;..
~'.; ~~",,:: ':';'\'l~ .. ~~:': .~i
I
..
,
EllS
THE SWARTHMOR
VOL XIV, No.
TOMORROW
liGHT
'2.50 PER YEAR
SWARTHMORE, PA., JANUARY 30, 1942
4,
UBRARY ASS'N
SCHA'ITE CLEARS Swarthmore Players DEFENSE WORK Paralysis Fund
To Close Soon IN YEARLY MEET
3rdREGISTRATION To Give "Jim Dandy" SHOWS PROGRESS
Sew Registration Covering All New Saroyan Play Gets First Chairman Pitman Reports Ac- Local Women Enter Last Lap of Froebel Reelected to Head Di·
Men 20 to 45 to Take
Prodnction in Phlla·
complishments by All Divi.
Struggle to Relieve Th08e
redon in Crucial
PIaee Next Month
Stricken
Year Ahead
delphia Area
sional Chairmen
The following communication addressed to The Swarthmorean by Con- "Jim Dandy," William Saroyants a5rad C. Schatte of Parrish road chair- tonishing experiment in theatrical surman of Local Drafl Board #3, Dela. realism, released Ihrough Ihe National
ware C~unty contains valuable instruc- Theatre Conference for production in
lions for latest requirement of Selec- the little theatres of the country before
tive Service System.
the Broadway opening, is given its first
"Acting under and by virlue of the local showing by the Players Club of
authority vested in him by the Selec- Swarthmore tonight and tomorrow
tive Service Training and Service Act night.
of 1940, Ibe Presidenl of Ihe Uniled The play has had 21 produclions 10
States has proclaimed that the Third date, in university theatres from Maine
Registration of certain male citizens to C&lifornia, and in community theatres
shall take place on Monday, February at Jamestown, N. Y., Pasadena, Cal,
16, 1942, between Ihe hours of 7 A. M. Fargo, N. D., Newark, N. J .. and Hous·
and 9 P. M. as fonaws:ton, Tex., but has not been seen in New
"Such male citizen or other male York City. It has been given at the Uniperson who on December 31, 1941, has versity of Delaware and at Princeton
attained the twentieth anniversary of University, but the Swarthmote producthe day of his birth and on February tion -Ihe 22nd - is the only one
16, 1942, has not attained Ihe forty· fifth scheduled for Ihe immediale vicinily of
anniversary of the day of his birth, Philadelphia. About 30 productions have
and has not heretofore been registered been scheduled, but the number may
under the Selective Training and Serv- reach 50 before Mr. Suoyan releases
ice Acl of' 1940 and the regulation Ihe play for Broadway.
thereunder: Provided, That the duty of "Jim Dandy" is a most remarkable
any person to present himself for and ,play; it has some of the charm and
submit to registration in accordance 'mysticism of the author's previous sucwith any previous proclamation issued cesses, 'especially "The Time of Your
10 d I'
. th d
't'
books early in 1941 to Mother Moore
under said ACI shal! nol be affecled by Life" and "My Hearl's in Ihe High- ,S -gned
'
U le~ In
e orml orles.
for use at the Navy Yard and the curthis proclamation.
lands," but goes much farther in the di- ' The Auxiliary Firemen have had six,
: sessions and have receivqd instrucrent use of the Library as a collection
"The honorable Arthur H. James, rection of surrealism.
center for Victory Book collection were
Governor of the Commonwealth of In one important respect "Jim 'tions on First Aid, General Fire, Use
"
lisled by Miss Barber as highlighls o£
Pennsylvania, has declared a state Da.ndy" differs from current surrealistic of Ladder., Handling of Incendiary
the year.
holiday for all public schools and has pain ling. Most of Ihe .o-called surreal- Bombs, Preparation of House for Air
Compositions for Young Ears
Miss Hunter in her firsl annual rerequested that the School Boards and ists are also sadists, fond of dismem- Raid, and Pumps.
AUXILIARY
POLICE.
Provide
Enjoyment
at
porr
to ·the Library Associalion lisled
facuIties cooperate with Selective Serv- bered human bodies and ugly, abnormal
Number
43
wilh
an
addilional
22
Tuesday's
Meeting
a
total
cire'Ulation for Ihe year of 28,761.
ice in a satisfactory completion of the slimy things, and obsessed with Freqdyounger
members
as
messengers.
These
Biography
led in popularity in the 4654
Third Registration.
ian psychology. Saroyan is much pleasmen
3re
receiving
military
training
on
Lucius
Cole
and
Edmund
Soule
conon-fiction
volumes circulated, with
"We have requested the Superintend- anter, and "Jim Dandy" contains a very
ent of Schools in your district to se- satisfying balance of humor, pathos, ro- Thursday night and in addition traio- chaired Tuesday's meeting of the Music history and travel a fairly close second.
Club. at which a program of music The fiction circulation totalled 16,784
cure for us six volunteer registrars, mance, tragedy, and resignation, and ing in police and traffic duties.
written. for Ihe young was presenled.
and Ihe juvenile 7,323. 50\ adult \leriodithree 10 acl from 7 A: M. 10 2 P. M., leaves ,:me wilh a warm gl.~. and a MEDICAL UNITS.
Hayden's "Toy Symphony" played by cats were circulated and 87 juvenile
~nd... !hree to act from 2 P. M. to 9 comfo~tlD}J sense of human k1Ddn~ss
_~!,~rt~ore. S~g~ has arranged to an ensemble under Mr. Cote's con- periodicals. 307 new cards were issued
_ ..... .P_ ..lLL,.......wj. tn. .furnish .....Ia....""'" "" .!'~
u-:s.:,:tP.mnne;sn
,I..'
th tJ progr..m. Plve
•
• .. -:.~""o'
• .... __
'.
'
-~•. , .'"' ~
• _
UtlClh)ll'"
olJ.C:l'!-cd
(.f -to' bu'l'l'owct'Sl.- ~'~--. - - -~' ~ .'
--,
classrooms in which regislrations will 1IIl~lfcatTOn., ouf L'--lll!VeJ·1llIiiltii'i5llJ;-o'''"
hospitals With a third umt In P~tt Hall Schumann's pieces from the "Kinder(COMtUt:.ld "" PJ616 SO;)
be made. We feel that the -School depressing.
.
.
.
I I •
Board will cooperate to- the fullest ex- The Swarthmore. pro.ductlon IS being for use of t~e Borong.h, Ap~roxtmately seen en" were played by Mrs. Everett L.
tent and in a later issue, we will ad- staged under t~e direction of 'ohn Dol- fifty be?! WIn be avatlable lD the first Hunt. Mrs. Laurence J. Stabler sang an
•
•
•
vise the public of your community man, Jr., and IS offered
where registrations may be made. The regular schedule, for two nights only.
phe~ . and the A~erlcan LegIOn and by Sobeck on the clarinet accomft
' •I
Local Board offices in the Lansdowne
Auxlhary are ralslDg ~unds for the panied by Mrs. Dorothy Paul. Mr. Cole
Theatre Building, Lansdowne Pennpurchase of a second umt for. the Bor- then played three violin solos. Elimar Vice-President of National League
sylvania, will, of course, be op~n from
•
•
ou.gh. Doctors and nurses will be de- McConechy played two piano pieces
Discloses Present Congresil7 A. M. until 9 P. M. In addilion to
tall~d for duty at these emergency uJ ardin Feerique" by Ravel and "11 y
Citizen Relationship
the registralion points fixed in your
slallons_
't
f OIS
... b S PhT
M
e
community, every male- citizen who is
There are 21 station wagons and asval ul nC H
• Y
. . IIPP'
.rs.
.
.
amue
.
arr)s sang 10 concIuSlon
Mrs. Harris T. Baldwin first vicecalled upon to register may do so at Current Drive for United Chari. trucks ~nd one car With
convertible Schumann's '"Thou Art So Like a president of the National League of
any other registration point in the
ties' Fund Drags Record
bed avall~b"e for emergency use.
Flower" four !longs from Rena Barry Woman Voters spoke before a comUniled Siaies.
in First Week
In a~dlt1~n to. recently graduate.d Skeritt's Song Cycle "Childhood" and bined audience of the Swarthmore
"It should be specifically noted tllal
Local contributions appeared to be classe.s 10 First Aid,. the Re.d Cross IS Mana-Zucca's "Big Brown Bear."
League of Women Voters and the
the registrant has the right of choosrunning
behind
last
year's
in
the
early
~arryl~~
~nA~dtas~s
I?
SU~lcatl
Dress
Mrs.
Irwin
R.
MacElwee,
Mrs.
P.
\Voman's Club on 'ruesday afternocn
.ng his place: of residence, and he
stages
of
the
United
Charities
camlOgS,
Irs
I,.
urslOg,
an
e~n,
an
L.
Whitaker
Mrs.
Ernest
C.
Heg
Mrs.
on
the subject "Citizens and Congress."
should bear in mind that his place of
according
to
Daniel
R.
Goodwin,
Mo~or
Mechant~s.
100
women
f
are
William
C;aemer
and
Mrs.
'Elliot
After
a word of welcome to reprepaign,
residence will determine the Local
Swarthmore
district
director,
who
on
regI~tered
for
vanous
phases
of
de
ense
Richardson
were
hostesses
for
the
evesentatives
of other Leagues in the
Board unaer whose jurisdiction he will
Icounty Mrs. J. Paul Brown introduced
remain for the duration of the Emerg- Wednesday urged solicitors of all teams woTrh e· D'Isas Ier Commt'tt ee 0 f Ih e R ed ning.
. 1 S G
.
'd
f
to
canvas
homes
in
their
neighbor-,
Cross
has
well
develop£¥!
plans
for
•
•
Mrs. Dame
. ood~1n prest ent 0
ency. This means that if a man is tern..
'd'
f d h It
d I thO
Mump8 Snbsiding
Ihe local League who m turn presenled
porarily working in a community but hoods in the effort 10 reach Ihis year'.
c 0 109
the speaker of the afternoon.
do~s not intend to remain there in- campaign quota which has been upped provi 109 00, seer an
thirty
percent.
for.
those
who,
may.
be for~~d. out of
Those
who
have,
been
ill
with
the
In answer to an oft-repeated qu("s-,
definitely. for his convenience, he
The
drive
for
funds
to
support
chartheir
homes
here
or
In the VIClOlty.
mumps
since
January
20
are
Marion
tion
Mrs. Baldwin said that there is
should give as his address the locality
work
of
141
heallh,
family,
weI
•.
RECREA~ION.
.
Bernard,
Virginia
Hay,
Donald
Ogram,
comparatively
liltle difference belween
itable
n which he expects to spend the most
dtes
youth,
child
care
and
other
or-'
The
l:a
have
alread~
carrte~
on
Suzanne
Harrar,
Barbara
Bower,
Lora
Congress
in
war-time
and in ordinary
fare,
of his time.
ganizations
in
Philadelphia
and
this
Recreation
work
f~r
soldiers.
Enb~ted
Blackman,
Jack
Blackman,
Bill
Harsession.
She
cited
the
physical
changes
. "The Local Board plans to call a
vicinity
began
January
2S
and
will
con!Den
from
Camp
nix
were
entertamed
vey,
Mrs.
John
R.
Bates,
Ann
Pepper
"on
the
hill"
with
lights
Qut,
extra
meeting of all volunteer registrars, to
tinue
until
February
11,
aided
by
118
U!
~any
Swarthmore
homes
on
ThanksNeal,
and
William
Brown.
guards,
more
flags
flying,
and
an
ocbe held in Ihe office of Ihe Local Board
Swarthmore
men
and
women
who
have
glVlDg
Day.
Money
for
purchase
of
casional
patriotic
note
in
the
congreson Sunday afternoon, February 15,
smokes and gifts w.as collected and
sional record in conjunction with the
1942, al 2:30 o'clock, in order thai Ihey volunteered their services.
Mr. Goodwin calls attention to the these delivered to Camp Dix in time regularly. The buildings are welt pro- expected intensification of work.
may be sworn in and receive specific following points:
for Christmas. A group of members tected. The courses have been changed
The speaker stated that the Special
nstructions on the conduct of the regof the Junior Section of the Woman's to meet the various needs of the pres- Interest groups are sl,'ll exertl'ng Irestration. As soon as all the necessary
1. Increase in production has caused
mendous pressure on Congressmen wl-th
nformation is at hand, the registrars a rise of 10 percent in industrial accidents-adding to the heavy load car- Camp Dix. Games, books, records. and OFFICE WORK:
a seeming lack of patriotism. The force
will be further informed."
.
equipment were collected and delivered
Some 25 women are enrolled for of- of Ihe 10bbYI'ng groups "an easl'ly he
ned by local hospital facilities.
fi
2. Military forces stationed nearby to the re~reation room of the color~d ce duty. These women have set up seen if one analyzes the voting on a
5·YEAR-OLDS CAN NOW
additional burden on morale troop stationed at Marcus Hook. RegIs- complete files of the personnel of the given bill as for example the Price
ENTER KINDERGARTEN place
'Id'
tration of cots and blankets available various defense groups and have kept Control BIll.
The second half of the school year bUI 109 agencie.s such as Y. M. C. A. in an emergency has started.
the office open at, the regularly schedMrs. Baldwin said that citizens must
'
Ih e fi rs t b 3. Day nurseries
have
ule d h o u r s . .
I'n Ihe p ublic sch 00l
sb
elllns
f h
• been swamped
•
BOY SCOUTS.
(c..,;...,t .. P-r' Sis)
of Febru
W'th th
f ecause 0 t e great JQcreases In em.
chools 0 a~ d i e . opeFnlbng 0 ployment of women in defense indusThe Boy Scouts are arranging for
s
n
on ay mornlOg, e ruary try
the collection of paper and magazines
2, those children who have reached
4' W
I h
h
h
from Ihose wh<> wish to help Ihrough
. Ied to h .
e must nol el appen
ere w at
the,' r fiflh b'Ir Ihd ay W1'11 be entlt
,
the adva t
f k' d
appened'10 B"
ntam w h en many boys thOIS Ag ency_ Tb e procee ds 0 f the colOlBee.
Borou
..
h
Telephone OS51
n
Two k· :ges ~
m ergarten.
. clubs were closed at the start of the Icction will be invested in Defense
OpeD
Week
D878
9·12,
1-4.
- Saturda7 9-12
ergar ens a~e operatmg 10 war. Juvenile delinquency increased 30 Bonds and held for future use of the
Ih e local 10schools,
one 10 the Rutgers
.
S
Avenue School la ht b M
percenl and ther hasllly reopened
couls.
Fin> Sehool-Moada7 ";'bt B P_ M. at the High School
..
,!g
y
argaret these youlh agencIes.
AMERICAN LEGION.
A~ Police - Th......7 ";'ht at Ihe High School Gymnasium_
~~~ceS~~!:r~a~:~; 'i:'/'M~~l~~~i~vc: . S. Already a large number of Members of Ihe Harold Ainsworlh
Ai.. W ...... -At call of Posl Wardens T~ Ii. I tr,F.hNNT 3, BP.M.
L" d
Th
.
.
wounded have come to the West Coast Post are assisli'ng in manning the Air....n ers.
ere IS sbU room for a few f
H
.. Th"
I th b al the High School Audilorium_ Speakers Roy W. Delaplaine on Gas Defeose
more children in the pubJit: school kind- ~m awau.. IS IS. on y .e egIn- plane Spotter Post in Media in conergartens. Parents are advised to bring nmg. The Phdadelphl~ area IS bound junction with the Legionnaires of Me- and Milan W_ Garrett on Black Ouls.
For Air Wardens, Auxiliary Firemen, Auxiliary Police, Messenger! and de~ ,
Iheir five.year olds 10 school al once t"! be one of those Sl.milarly affect~d dia and Springfield. AD members of Ihe
fense
groups of Ihe College, Mary Lyon School and Public School.
and, regi!>ter them
~~th a conse~ue~t dram, on the facll- Post have volunteered for service in
On Thursday night of this week Ihere was a t~sl of all defense groups - .
• I •
Itles of ~ur li~sPltals.
,
various agencies of the Civilian DeAir Raid Wardens, Firemen, Police, Messengers, First Aid and Transportation.
Repreeenlative8 to Speak
6. One West Coast .shipyard has fense.
This i. a preliminary 10' a lesl blackout of Ihe homes in Swarthmore during ,
many of ils employees absent from SCHOOLS.
The Swarthmore School Board has the second week in February. Please prepare yodr home now. Notice of day .
Senalor James J. Davis aad Con.. work because of an epidemic. Many
gressman James Wolfenden are to wiD recan the influenza epidemic which cooperaled by opening the building for and hour will be given in next week's issue. .
If a metropolitan area blackout is ordered earlier Swarthmore will cooperate.
speak at Ihe regular lunche,*! ineetlng swept 0ftI:, thllt' eastern seaboard in the : numerous public and group meetings.
of the Women's Republican Club of lasl war. Hospilals and visiting nurses 38 leachers are taking Red Cross First REGISTRATI0N_
Delaware Counly to he held on Thurs.. help prevent and control such e\lidem.. I Aid Courses. Put>Us and teacber. have t~,,~~:;··;.; ~ . iMZ bel,!~
day of next week in Media.
ics that .trike at defen~, held Fire. Drills :"fIll '. Ajr Raid Drills
,
•••
* Defense Council Bulletins *
a.n -
•
~!~ , '
-",
.- ,
" , ... ,'
~:-~:,
\
d
'n,
_"tid .
,
L C(l/.j. 1.... .t. ' •
1..,Ii .Ie .t J'• ',_
.I.
.,
l
-'---
.. I:oak "in the hllepheine"
dl.re~~~ry. If. yau're ..
doulli.'You will save time
and spare O~the"';'.-: •. ,
nayciit~e of beIng
by mlstoklO. .
_. '.
".~ .~::~~ \ .
..
'..
. ,, .
•
A'S DEFENSE AID
'
Zip Lined TwiU.
Zip Lined' Camels
Fur Trimmed - Misses
~~~~T1NG
IN
"0
Juniors --Misses
Women's
B, F.
DRESSMAKING
$22.95
•
REBun.DlNG
mGa
to
$19.95
PIANO .• TUNING
ANJ»
Y fIlues
J'alU83 10
$16.95
416 HAVERFORD PLACE
CALL SWARTHMORE 1290
~
8W.)...
"., ... , C.!.~'I
JI.. , 30 1942
CITE U C DRIVE
Make sure of the tel..
. phon.e number before
you
call. Even
the
best-·
: .. ,"
' .'
. , "
mlOmort . gets .numlle'.:
iumbleci.som8time~ .
'
"-
L W V INSTRUCTS
'WOMEN "'T CLUB
Wrong
Numbers
SLOW DOWN
.·War-Time
.Telephone
"Service
BETTER QUALITY
104,12
:
sult your'
helgbt. Talon
closute dress·
maker bodJce•
no - ride akin.
COLLINS
'
MUSIC CLUB IN
CHILDLIKE MOOD
ReJl. 12.25
practical !
'2--40". 7'«. Rou.
WM. K. RHODES. Attorney.
COAL and
FUEL OIL
~~
Some CHAPS are pop~
,But not the CHAP that at.
~~~~i~~~~;:~~;~j
~~:..
VICTORY
Communi~ .Health
the desperate'
. Dr.
~
Merce~' ~f N~nj,
. ., . Chester road chairman of the nursing
prolon.a Ligbt
hassince
presenled
years
difficulty
it actsfor
in many
some
rcspccls like parlicles and in some refi- h't
·Wi F ..G .. Swann, di~Cct';r 0(. the spcets .like waves. Within Ihe last dec· ident _10.. droP. ....
g
Birrol Research-Foundation' 'of . the ade Ihese alomic particles have become broughl
to hi.. door:. ca..tiiins. and
•
war k crs ar~ .t.r~.Y~r~
Imit.ilutc
'dl'scus
the a'ddition
of a neutral
. •
i..og . . S,~arthfuote
. · ..._- .. _..... in
. bcIore
Ihe Woman'.'
Club mem·. enriched
parlicle, Ihe
a charged
parll·. ord
e.r to '
gIVe each familu.an op~. rtunity
Ttiesday afternoon. In ~~~::;;I cle,. the mesotron; "and a mysterious to ald.
. ; , I~.'"'
particle the neutrino.
A n attempt is being made to check
mcnt to his talk 'he ,holve' d n
of the Stratosphere Flight
·"Cosmic rays were discovered through
grea I enemy t h at leaps hundreds
th.c National Geographic Society and their influence in causing the atrnosthousands of miles, now before it
~~~~~~ 'oU'I,OI conducted experiments with a geiger phere to become a conductor of eIec- I "LV'",e< the nation during the future
i;i
counter tube.
tricity. There are many theories of
T
their origin; olle of the lUost spectacu~
a repetition of 26,000 victims.
. SIlERIPP SALES" OP BRAL BSTATB
lar is to the effect that all matter in
rhe local he
chapter
last three
will years
receive
cry half
out
Sber1ft"s omce, Court Bouse~ MecUa. h. the greater universe was once
the fund raised here for usc in this disSaturday. January 31. 1912
together at what we may caU the cen- triet of fourteen square miles. Doctors,
9:30 A. K. BMtem Standard 'l'1me
tcr of nowhere, and it all blew up. In nurses and students with the remaining
the debris are to be found aU of our ?'l0ney will give their time and energy
Conditlous: $250.00 cash or certI1led Meek Milky \Vay and all the nebulae of space 111 r(.:search.
at tUne of sale (unless otherwlae stated In
I' h
I'k I '{'J
"i;LCiiin.~1 advert1aement) balance in ten dan. other W HC aTe let Ie j.\o J ky Way. In this
If you were not at home when called
II
condltlone on day of sale.
sense. the cosmic ray is the little
for your contribution you arc
BiOj;,;o;;.1
No.495 brother of a nebula, and in a sense a
•
requested to ,drop it into
iut~@:;;g::niOij.-:ftirn;: I
September Term, UNl
nebu!a is among the biggest of the
. III one of the local stores. Mrs. S.
e.iYIiii
COSIUIC rays.
Milton Bryant has been in charge of
.o.,.. ,"'!~~I,1 '''\Vhile the energy of a cosmic ray is
these hanks throughout the,
vcry large in relation to its size its
section.
'
actual energy is quite small. The'
At 6:30, P. M. Friday, January 30, a
cosmic ray energy falling on the earth covered dish supper will be held at the
amounts to a million kilowatts. That home of Mrs. Carl deMon 011 Park ave~v~uld be quite a Jot to pay for, but nue for reports of the canipaign and a;
It IS onl)· one hundred miJlionth of the
I'Ime. M rs. A . J.".
'f B' oss hardt is
. in
~~~~~r recch'ed by the earth from the Ie',",·,·. o,f a~rangemellts f«?r the occasion. '
~~;~;~~;'~i;~I.~F~r~ai1ri~k~Ii~I1'
.. ... - ---.....--
"
.'
E
· 'Commun
.' ky' N'" .
ntenaiDB
.._ lll'llee
A.id
Or: _. __ .._ . _.. _ __
_"u
\,
~ VIlA In t1~(H~E.
,JANUARY 23, 1942
1.1-9"t Call ~
"
·SWA "THM{J'U:
L J 13 IVU~ y .\
. ..
,
. -' ~ !
:: .........., '.-.
.'" "
!,.::~~:~ .'~=~~~:-~~, :'-'1;'";" ~:~'~"!=':' :'e-:~~~
'Wi
'"<'
-.
•
....
4.
~ .... J
~2~·--------------1-:J--Ij--~~---S--O----N·~-A---LS------------------~~M~is:s~D-o~r~is~L~aC~k~e~y~a=f~re~s~h~m=a=n=a-t~t~he~.--~M;;R~S;.~·;1!I~II;;I11rUE;;;;.~R;.~P~A~S~S~E~S;-~:::::::::u.::!~:_::~::::::::::~
. TilE· 8lVARTliMOREAN
.
.
JANUARY
30. 1942
New Jersey College for Women spent
several days last week with her parMis. Ethel M. Whittier widow of
'IIIe __ CaN .f• ..,. A. . 210 ...,
ents Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Lackey of John W. Whittier passed away on Jan440
AIDerie deLaet has enlisted in the
Airs. Paul T. Strong is vacating her Ogden avenue.
uary 10 at her home 100 Morton ave~
\
-1.rmy Air Corps and has been commis- home on S;>roul road following Dr.
Miss Keta Brower spent the week- nue. Rutledge where she had lived since Tl...
I ...
sioned as Second Lieutenant, training Strong's assumption of active duty with end at her home on Crest lane. Miss moving from 'Swarthmore about nine
RUSSEU.·'S SER·VI·CE
at Maxwell Field, Alabama. 4'Ricky" the Medical Reserve, and will again Brower instead of returning to Cali- years ago.
lived with Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Jessup live at the home of Mrs. Myra C. Doe, fornia to finish a study course there
Mrs. Whittier was a Christian Science
O-Oada aad.I..I.TeHe " .....
of Haverford avenue for three years South Princeton and Lafayette ave- as planned, is now engaged in a secre- practitioner and maintained an office in "We Doa't: SeQ ear.and is a graduate of Swarthmore High noes, where she lived before her mar· tarial capacity with the Glenn Martin Borough HaU, Swarthmore until early 1I_________.W.:.:.,:._IIIi:.:.:._
...
1
School, class of '3S. He is the son of riage last summer. Her mother Mrs. Airplane Factory at Baltimore, Md.
November. She had not been in \'cry I
Ruby Gerard, concert violinist and of Charles S. Walker who has been visit·
Susan Braun daughter of Rev.· and good health since that time.
the lat~' AlbeTic de, Laet, Belgian iog here will return to her home in Airs. David Braun 'of Harvard avenue
Du'ring her residence 'in Swarthmore
Charge d'Affair'.S. in Washington.
Tulsa, Okla, the middle of next week. celebrated her third birthday January Mrs. Whittier lived at various times on
His' mother is the house guest of
On January 1 Dr. and Mrs. Paul A. 22 by entertaining some of her small Amherst avenue, Yale avenue and on
For Your Sunday Dinner!
Mrs. Jessup this week.
Mattis of Apartment 3·A, 139 Rutgers friends at a pink and white supper Chester road.
l\frs. Harold G. Griffin of Rutgers avenue will move into the house form· party.
She was a member of the First
avenue entertained at luncheon last erly occupied by the Strongs. On FebMr. and Mrs. Alben Eavenson and Church of Christ, Scientist, Swarthmore
Friday. Her guests included Mrs. ruary 15 Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Breokell family of Norristown, former residents and had served on committees of the
George M. Ewing, Mrs. Jesse H. who are coming from. Roanoke, Va. of Swarthmore will move to their church.
H9 1mes, Mrs. Katherine Johnstone, will move into the apartment vacated former home 626 Strath Haven avenue
Surviving besides a son John \Vilmot
on Saturday of this week.
of Rutledge and two daughters Ethel
Mrs. Robert L. Coates, Mrs. Charles by Dr. and Mrs. Mattis.
Bolton, Mrs. George P. Warren, Mrs.
Ensign Paul H. Snyder, U. S. N. R.
Mr. Harlan R. Jessup is resident offi- (now Mrs. William PoHg) of Miami,
Serve batter meat to your guests
C. 'Vahl Dimes, Mrs. Harlan Jessup is flOW assigned to the Naval Ammu- eer of Pennsylvania Ship Yards, Beau- Fla. and Janice (Mrs. John Babb) of
and family.
and Mrs. Frances K. Robinson.
nition Depot at St. Juliens Creek, mont, Texas. Mrs. Jessup and children, Chicago, Ill., are a brother \V. Collins
Dr. and Mrs. \VHliam T. Ellis of Portsmouth, Va. Mrs. Snyder who had Harlan, Jr. and Kathleen, have been Singley of Drexel Hill and two grand.
Walnut Jane left on Wednesday morn- been visiting her mother Mrs. J. Har- living in Beaumont since the middle children Joan and Janice Babb.
Ib
ing for a three month's transcontin- \o"Cy Whiteman of The Swarthmore has of last October.
Services were held at a Philadelphia
ental tour. They will make sojourns at johled her husband and they have taken
Captain Harry Andrews, Jr. of funeral home.
The juiciest and tenderesl of
North Chester road has been trans- 1______________________________
Ashville, N. C., New Orleans, Arizona, an apartment near his post.
lamb roasts - AlwayS at lis
California, Banff, and wiII wind up at
Miss PearJ Kesselman of Washing- ferred from Fort Bliss, Texas to Fort ORDER FLOWER VALBNTlNES EAR~Y
best at Martel's.
their Canadian Camp.
tOil, D. C. will be the house guest of L CWIS.
'W as h'
109t on.
. \"
FIDtiu......cor_ _
Lieutenant and Mrs. Bruce Duffett Mr. and Mrs. Edwin C. Buxbaum of
Kahl' I IB
spent last week-end with Mrs. Duffett's Riverview road over this week-cnd.
er rogan
parents Mr. and Mrs. Roy P. Lingle
Mrs. Charles DeHart Brower of
of Cornell avenue. Lieutenant and Mrs. Swarthmore Crest entertained 40
The marriage of Miss Ava Kathleen
Duffett are Jiving at U. S. Hotel Cham- friends of her new son-in·law and her Brogan daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wit.
berlin, Old Point Comfort, Va. Lt. recently wed daughter Mr. and Mrs. Jiam Brogan of Aldan and Mr. Erwyn
Duffett is stationed at Fort Monroe, Va. Laurence M. Smith at tea from 4 until John Kahler son of Mr. and Mrs.
A neighborhood party was given last 1 o'clock on Saturday last.
The finesl of all CUIs of beef
Harry A. Kahler of Villa Nova avenue
Friday by Mrs. Roy 'V. Delaplaine and
Miss Frances Armitage of Harvard was performed in St. J ohJ1.'s Episcopal
roasls - With the rich flavor of
Mrs. Roy P. Lingle when they enter- avenue entertained with a bridge party Church, Aldan at S o'clock Tuesday
a good steak.
IUlAD TIlE
BOOKS
tained the 100 Block on Cornell ave. and personal shower last Wednesday afternoon, January 20.
nue at tea to we1come all the new.' evening in honor of Miss Jean Cochran
-.--~-~The bride who wore a pale blUe
comers of that section.
of Kenyon avenue whose marriage to model of fine wool with small matchResolve now to
Ib
The Kappa Kappa Gamma Sewing Mr. John Lumsden will take place on ing hat, slippers and gloves and a corlunch and dim often
Circle will, meet with Mrs. Howard February I.
sage of orchids was attended by her
at the
W. Newman, Jr. of Elm avenue next
Lieutenant Clifford M. Rumsey sister Miss Jane Brogan of Aldan. The
LONG ISLAND
Tuesday.
formerly of Fort Bragg, N. C. who maid of honor was dressed like the
has been stationed at the Hi1lsgrove bride only in a delicate shade of green
Robert Little who is stationed at G. Airport, Providence, R. I. since Christ- wool, and wore a corsage of'TaHsman
H. Q., Army War College, Washington, mas, returned home January 21 to rosebuds.
and CocktaU Laun,.
D. C. spent the week-end with his par· spend a ten.day leave at his home on
Prlceci'less than meat thIs weekMr. Walter D. Kahler of Rutledge
Main Concoune.
ents Mr. and Mrs. Ralph V. Little of Park avenue following a week's con- was his brother's best man.
end - Make it a feasling OCCa.
P.Jl.R. Suburbaa 8tatlara
sion.
~ar~ ave~ue.
.
I finement in, the Fort Adams Hospital, Following the ceremony a reception
Lunch -from SOc
, ~1c:ut.en~nt Henry L. Smith, J~.. of Newport, R. I. with a slight illness.
Ditmer-from
BSc
was held at the home of the bride's
~alhngford Jeft, on. ,Januar.y 21, JOIR- Mr. and Mrs. Russell Snyder and parents.
Clltdlllll Bow.a:oo 10 6:tH'-P.M.
1~~ , tlte . ~ennsylvaOla Hospital Evacu· sons Russell and Noel formerly of Going away the bride wore a brown _ .......
Su'* ....on of IIarq IL T&d.I7
.,.t~Oz;t Umt.
Springfield who have been Jiving this fur coat with matching toque over a
Mrs. DavJd Br:aun of Harvard avenue fall in the Shirer Apartments are mov- silk print ensemble.
I~a:s joined her husband for his Jast ing this week into their newly com. Upon their return from a brief
Rouud Steak......Ib. 45c
week's \york at Newport News, Va. pleted home on Dickinson avenue.
honeymoon in New York the newlywher~ .he has been assigned by the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bishop and weds \vere feted Friday night at the
25 and 50 Fooi Lengths
~mergency Service <;::ommission of the children of Germantown visited Mr. home of the bridegroom's brother and
Rump. Steak......Ib. 49c
Pr~sbytedan C-hllrrh. n. S. A. for thp .Bi.&:hop's parenb Mr. and Mrs. J. V. S. sist~r-ill-law Mr. nnd MC3. joocph
.. Faucet Connections
past montb..
Bishop of Harvard avenue last week- Kahler of Providence Village.
A-frs. Courtney B. Adams and small cnd.
. Saturday morning Mr. Kahler who
daughter Gay ,Adams of Martinsville,
Mr. John Bowditch, Jrd of Cam. was just recalled to service with the
Va; are visiting Mrs. Adams' parents bridge, Mass. is spending a few days Army. left to join the lOOrd ObservaMr. ,and Mrs.·Owen W. Gay of Crest with his parents ~rr. and Mrs. John ,tion SCluadron at Providence. R. I. Mrs.
lane'for several weeks~
Bowditch. Jr. of Cedar lane.
Kahler will continue to make her home
11 Soulh Chesler Road
Mrs. William B. Bullock of Cedar
Robert Bair SOil of Mr. and Mrs. R. in Aldan.
lane entertained ,her bridge club at !. Bair of CO~lIel1 avenue was home
Mr. Kahler is a graduate of Swarth ..
Swarthmore 105
·SWARTHMORE 2100
luncheon last Monday. The guests in- trom Penn State last week-end.
~nore High School.
.
cluded Mrs. W. E. Hetzel, Mrs. Herbert Bassett, Mrs. W. M. Harvey, Mrs.
Roy Comley,· Mrs. James B. Douglas,
.
Mrs. George Armitage, and Mrs. Alben
T. Eavenson.
MUSIC· COURSE
OF SWARTHMORE
MARY MISTELSKt AsH1'ON
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Anthony of
Springfield entertained Mr. and Mrs.
Eight Weekly Illustrated Leclurea on Music
Arthur L. Perry of Rahway, N. J. and
BEGINNING MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 8 P. M.
JIM DANDY
Lieutenant and Mrs. Arthur C. Perry
Swarthmore High Schoo)
:
C~urse Tickets Only _ '5.00
By William Saroyan
of Aberdeen, Md. 'last week-end.
Director, John Dolman, Jr.
Miss Elizabeth Bowditch of Cedar
JANUARY 30 and 31
STARTS FRIDAY
8:15 P. M.
Jane was the guest of Midshipman
WILLIAM
POWELL
• MARY DUNHILL • PRINCE MA TCHABELLI
Alcmbershlp Coupons do not admJt.
George O. Bennett at Annapolis over
• CHANEL •
Tickets
99
cents,
inCludinG'
tax
at
MYRNA
LOY
the ·week·end.
box omce and BUChner's.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Thorpe of
"Shadow
Dickinson avenue entertained their
the Thin Man"
PURE AS THE
b~idge club at dinner last Saturday.
,
..
THB SWABTHBOBBAN
PUBLISHBD BVBRT FRIDAT "T SWARTHMORE, PA-
'FI , •• fone ..
..:.._ft__-_._
r---------______.,
Roast a Leg
of LAMB
32e
Juicy
RIB ROAST
_aT ---
....
35 e
SUBURBAN
CAFE
DUCKLINGS
Ib25e
------- .... _--RUBBER HOSE
MARTEL'S
SUPLEE
HARDWARE·
FOOD MARKET
;;;==============:;
.
The Players Club
•
of
•
DRIVEN SNOW
MANOR
OR A WORKING GIRL'S SECRET
Mellowdramer by Paul Loomis
Free
Director,
J. William Simmons
FEBRUARY 17, 18, 19, 20, 21
Parking
8:15 P. M.
BlIY DEFENSE BONDS
NOW PLAYING
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
"BffiTH
OF THE
BLUES"
SUNDAY and MONDAY
HETIE DAVIS
LAST TWO DAYS
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
Bing Crosby - Mary Martin
Brian Donlevy -- Carolyn Lee
Rochester in
•
with
THuRSDAY & FRIDAY
RiChard Diz - Frances Fanner
CHEN YU
•
CORDAY
•
BUlh Berbert _ Andy Devine
MONDAY,
TUESDAY,
WEDNESDAY
"ALL THAT MONEY.
CAN BUY"
with
I
•
. tunity that lOay uot occnr; again for many years,
AU models included,
"The Gay Falcon"
Starring
Robert Stack - ADD RutherfOrd
'SIunhJw 01 Thin Man'
ROVAE
Due to rising costs, this year's sale is au Oppor-
TUESDAY
NOTE-'DAILY MATINEE
STARTS MONDAY AT 1:00 P. MOo
"You're in the
Army Now"
•
"Go West
Young Lady"
"BADLANDS OF DAKOTA"
In
~·CHARBERT
IS Soada 0 . _ Road
CaU S.............. 676
-EXTRA_
NEW MARCH OF TIME_
"MAIN STREET. U. S. A."
FIRST RUN WORLD NEWs
'The Little Foxes'
WEDNESDA.Y and THURSDAY
Beauty sheds romance. on FebrlUlry's fetes
SHOE· SALE
SUNDAY
William Po"eU -- Myrna Lo,.
•
"BIRTH OF THE
BLUES"
With J. CARROl. NAISH
I
BEAUTY SALON .
Q
JIMMI.E DURANTE
JANE WYMAN
PHIL SILVERS
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
HERBERT MARSHALL
In
"All That Money
Can Buy"
"Badlands 01
Dakota"
MEDIA
-STARRING-
BING CROSBY
MARY IIIARTIN
- BRIAN DONLEVY
CAROLYN LEE
ROCHESTER
STARTS TUESDAY
RICHARD DIX
ANN RUTHERFORD
ROBERT STACK
i rc~ J30UfJuet
Edward Amold - Walter Duston
Simone Simon
IlaseBed
on S~hell Vint!ent
net's amazbil' mgt, -'The
Devil and Da.nIe1 Wetisler!"
FRIDAY
THE RANGE BUSTERS.
'Thunder River FeUd'
~~A.risona
,~
.. : .. -:
PUD
E. TOLD, Editor
M&!uORII: ToLD, ,,"DaiGle
Mr.. IWward A Jenkins. Mrs. Phlili,.1
~.!ldl=,",~::* ~ c. ThIs II tM -
&liIor
Former Ceeh1er Olea
M -
Word has been receIved bere of the
IL Jewett and Mrs. Frederick ToU.. death of Isaac Roberts on January 16
the loca1 members of the board in the Norristown Friends Home al the
attended the luncheon meeting of age of 87. Mr. Roberts was the fint
-...
Snails, Hermit Crabs, Shrimps, MinDelaware County Board of the
nows, and Blu.- Crabs: this list fails to
International League for
EDtend u Socoad CIa. Mauer, JI!IUl7 24, 11129, at the POll
mention the most characteristic
Peace and Freedom at the home
0Iice at Swuthmoze, Pa.,
the Act of IIan:Ia S, 18'19.
of all the marshes. I refer to an only Flora Bock in Drexel Hill on Thurssemi-aquatic
form, the Fiddler Crab.
day January 15.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 194.2
Fiddlers have their burrows aD over
I , I
the marshes and may be seen
More Chrielmall Charity
abroad everywhere. Each one must
Preebylerian Chureh Nole8
Church between the ages of 12 to- 23 close to his own burrow, for as a
To be added to the Health Society's
The gue.t preacher on Sunday morn- wiU be held ·in the chapel ou Sun- man advances, there is an audible list of Christmas donors whicb' aping, February I, will be the Rev. Doctor day evening at six o'clock.
scurrying of many crabs and a
peared in the January 16 issue of The
Andrew Mutch pastor emeritus of the
The Little Light Bearers will hold ceptible popping out-of-sight of allll:::.~~ Swarthmorean are the foUowing three
Bryn MaW1' Presbyterian Church. The I o',_In<.lcmeeting on Wednesday at 3 and conditions of fiddlers. I say ..
contributors: The Eigbt Club,
sermon topic will be ''The Supreme
at the home of Mrs. Ray L. ble" because the number of animals, Young Woman's Association of the
128 Rutgers avenue.
P b
.
Ch
-'
Heroism."
The
Cross meets in the Chapel mUltiplied by the number of their legs, res yterWl
ur
Mrs. Zelia M. Walters as teacher
through the grass stems 10 their hOles;hrr=============~
invites all women to its meetings on to sew. The ladies of the Church and "perceptible" because it is almost as
Sunday mornings at 10 o'clock in th~ community are asked to help, bringing hard to catch a fiddler as a grasshopchurch transept. Mrs. Walters for- box lunch. Tea will be served.
per, though one feels that each footstep
merly taught m
The junior choir meels on Thursday
t b
h'
t h 6
f
• Dr. Lloyd Douglas'
church in Akron, Ohio, and is at pres7 o'clock and Ihe senior choir al 8. ::;:~ or"t~!:::. 109 ou I eves 0 sevent teaching a Wednesday class of ov~r The monthly meeting of the official
The burrows are readily seen as small
100 members in Wilmington. She IS board will be held on Friday evening at chimneys of mud. Smaller crabs build
also the author of many chUdren's 8 o'clock.
•I•
chimneys of narrow diameter and
books and devotional literature.
Christian Scienee Church
a fraction of an inch high. Large ones
The High School Fellowship will
erect proportionately more important
meet Sunday evening from 6 to 7:30
"Love" is the subject of the Lesson- structures and congregate in more deo'clock in the Parish House. Dr. Paul Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Sci- sirable areas near the edges of the
A Private Banquet Chamkr
C. Payne will be ·the guest speaker.
entist, on Sunday, February 1. The channels. All, however, leave their lab.
Circle 5 wUl meet Wednesday, Feb· Golden Text is: "We have known and ricated sanctuaries to scuttle over the
Whida ean heautlluDT a_DUDo. ruary.J, from 9:30 to 2:30 o'clock at the believed the love that God hath to us. meadows and channel-banks during low
date a hundred Pesta at dinner
ParislrHouse.
God is love; and he that dweUelh in tide. Only at times of very high water
or dan...... and ;" otIII .....,.
Circle 6 wiD meet Thursday, February love dwelleth in God, and God in him" are they all confined to the sublerenoqh for Y01U' next .fternoon
S from 10 to 2:30 o'clock at the home of (I John 4 .:.1:.:6~):-.._____
ranean, and temporarily submarine,
tea or eanI PIII'I7,
it C. Spencer, 330 Swarthmore
I I
level.
And, Lest 01 aU, Toa ....
avenue. Dr. E. A. Whitney of the
J. J.·8 to Meet Sunday
Fiddlers are inoffensive scavengers.
chartJecI
DOtlalq _
10 have
Elwyn Training School will be the
The J. J.'s will hold their bi-,wc:ek:lyl Their best hunting takes place after a
dafs ~ oettin& lor ,...ar
period of Hood-when abundant detri.
speaker.
session at 7:45 this Sunday evening
owaplU1Ieo.
Circle 9 will meet Tuesday, February the home of Betty Morse, 410 Yale tus has been left on the marsh by the
3, in the Parish House at 9:30 A. M. avenue. At the last meeting of the receding water. Most succulent
to work On su"';cal dressings for De·
fr h bod', s f se
. I
oned
-10·
group Mary Morse of South Chester
es
e 0
a amma s, maro
feose
the meadows and sufficiently unforThe needs.
Church Hour Nursery for chil- road was elected vice.president and on
t at t b dro ped
'th
• t a
un e 0 e
P
nel er In 0
Barbara Brown of Walnut lane,
MEDIA
dren age 1-7 will be conducted under licity chairman.
channel nor into one of the inland
TEL. MBDJA i:n
the direction of Linda DeArmond, elaCh
JOHN' .&. LOVE, 3r. M&r.
• ••
pools. In the former case the individual
k
flOSALD PIIUOL
an.
Cashier of Swarthmore National Bank
from its organization in 1904 uutllApril,
1907. The plan of opening a bank in
Swarthmore originated with him. His
energy, and the confidence of the stockholders in his integrity and abUity,
made the realization of that plan pos_
sible.
----~~;:=:;:;;;S;;:-:---
I
AT
YOUR
DISPOSAL
Tlze Colonial Room
Mrs.
HOWARD JOHNSON'S
0
c oc
IN TOWNDrive Slowly, Don't Skid.
Avoid Quick Starts, Inflate
Tlrel Correctly
OUT-OF-TOWNGo by
SUPER-COACH
It'. the carel"ree, :restful WQ to aD7.
wear and tear on 70UJ
car. savia&" 2/3 of the cost of driviDll
Oae-WA7 Rd.-Trlp
where---qvfll&'
".01)
ClevelaD.tI • • • • • •
JacbonYDie •••• 10."
MIamI .......... IUS
BJrm·n..bam ••• Oo 10.81
Atlanta ........ "'5
JU,.A
1t.J'
_
I
Swarthmor~2090
: ~' .. c::...:
......
L~
Date
Sat. Feb. ?
MOD. Feb. 9
Sat. Peb. 14
.
'.'",'"
Toe. Feb. 17
Prt. Feb. 20
Sat. Feb. 21
Mon. Feb. 23
1'>1. Feb. In
Wed._.4
Vanity
Hopkins
•
SWARTHMORE TRAVEL
BlJREA.U
z Park AVe.-Phone 8..... 119-W
•
•TrInIg
·_Iham
.D1plrlnem
J. V.
·Penn. J. V•
Freshman
UrsIn... _
Gooqe SchOOl. 3:30
Delawaze J. V.
·OarleCOn
·WtJupmenn SchOOl KcDonOBh
-.AmerIcan u.
·Haverford J. V.
-Haverford
r.ra.-e
Sat. _ . ?
·1ncII..... 11ome_
a
,
Don't let
HIDDEN HUNGER
hanc:llcap your service to your nation1
Tmsiseve9'body'swar.Every_
body has a job to do. The way
those jobs are done determines
America's destinyl
You can't do your best, unless you're feelinll your best.
You've got to keep keen and fit
and free from HIDDEN HUNGER..
HIDDEN HUNGEI< isn't a matter of how much you eat, but
what you eat. It's a kind of
malnutrition caused by the lack
of vitamins, minerals and other
essential elements in your diet.
Facing the dangerous ract that
HIDDEN HUNGER lowers efficiency
and morale, the nation's best
nutritionists are fighting it
with especially developed
model diets. And evelJ' one pre-
8cribes plenty of milk-a pint
a day for adults - a quart for
children. Milk is only part of
such balanced diets, of coursebut it's the No_ 1 partl*
Get the milk habit the easy
way with Supplee Sealtest Homogenized Vitamin D Milk-a
fine milk made even finer. Tastes
better and is better for babies,
children and adults. Valuable
vitamin D added. • • • Help
make America stronA by
makinA Americans stronAer!
CaD your Supplee Inl1kman or
CHESTER 2-5721
S UPPI.E.E
• SUPPLEE briDga you the
UrsIn,..
.Mez. t,YII"CA
Delaware
19.1.
1f.U
~=::::============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
W. I. L AIRS VIE""S
"
PRESENT CRISIS
might"
returnunder
at once
the co'nd.iti,on
sea if it I
so
desired;
the to
latter
• , I
it would have to wait in the
Trinity Parish Notes
vided it survived the Blue Co."h'.
On Sunday Rev. J. Jarden Guenther
petite) until the next period o~,f:Il::~c~1
will begin the thirteenth year of hislLoe.1I Members Dedicate Tllern,lwhen temporary-though 51
rectorship.
selves to Serve Under Preeepts continuity with the channels was again
On Sunday afternoon the YPF will
Adopted by National Board
established across the level of the
hold a special "work-meeting" in the
marsh.
uWar having been declared by consti.
But those creatures, unlucky enough
basement of the Church at 2:30 o'clock.
There will be no supper·meeting.
tutional means, the Women's Interna. to be left high and dry on the mud,
:Airs. Margaret Clark Neal has been tional League for Peace ana Freedom would sOOn be the so'Urce of many a
appointed leader of the Church School reaffirms loyalty to our country and our Fiddler Crab's meaL Fish, mollusc, 'Cru'l;hoir. Rehenraals are held on Tuesday,
We believe in. a g()vern. stacean, annelid, echinoderm, or whatafternoon at 3 o'clock. The Church
men' but of laws, where rna. not _ the dryirig air and burning sun
School Choir will assist in the special jotity opinion prevails and where minor. quickly draw flies and fiddlers to the
Lenten Services.
ity opinion is heard both in civilian life decaying feast. In a short time the
Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Brewster repre· and in the Congress. Therefore,
marsh is cleared of refuse, and crabs
sented the Parish at the presentation
as a part of a minority group, return to their endless mock.duels.
service of the Diocesan Aid to British
not propose to put obstructiona in
C. BROOKE: WORTH
Churches in Old Christ Church on Tues- the way of constitutional authority."
(To be COIlt1D.ued.)
.
T his and the following quotations ex••
day evemng.
The Rev. Alden Drew Kelley head press a few of the points in the state- D. A. R. SCANS ITS
of the college work for the ~piscopal ment prepared by the National Bo•• rel.1
ELUS ISLAND PROGRAM
Church was a guest at the rectory for 1:~~~:~~was read and approved at
several days in connection with special 11
of the Swarthmore Board
"Ellis Island" was the program
work on the Campus. W. Minton HarI. L. Monday afternoon at the at the regular monthly meeting of
vey, Prof. Scott Barrett Lilly and Mrs.
of Mrs. Philip Jewett.
Delaware County Chapter, Daughlers
Robert Detweiler were members of a
"At the same time we should never of the American Revolution held MonParish committee which met with yield our inalienable right to believe day, January 19, at the home of Mrs.
Diocesan student leaders at the rectory that disputes between nations have Joseph H. Perkins on Cedar lane•
on Thursday evening. Richard Mayfield never been and never can be settled
Mrs. Thomas Henry Lee State Chairan Episcopal student at the College either ethically, wisely or permanently man . of the Ellis Island Committee,
was also a member of the local comand that modern inventions and D. A. R. who was the speaker of the
mittee.
discoveries make war not
afternoon gave an interesting resume
The Church Periodical Club will meet futile but inevitably destructive of hu- of the work being done at Ellis Island,
at the home of Mrs. H. H. Adams of man rights, liberty and security.
New York Harbor by the committee.
Harvard avenue next Monday at
The Swarthmore W. I. L. is sponsorIn 1934 upon the decline of immi.
p. M.
ing an essay contest in the high school gration the government requested the
• •I
on the subject ..,f Pan-American rela- Daughters of the American Revolution
Methodist Church Notes
tions, the award to the winner of which to extend the occupational work preThe Church School wiD meet on Sunbe presented on Good Will Day in viously done among the detained immiday morning at 9 :45 o'clock.
May. Information may be obtained grants at Ellis ·Island to include the
At the morning worship at 11 o'clock from Mrs. F. Gordon Straka, newly ap- Marine Hospital located there. This
the minister will preach.
pointed chairman of the education com- hospital has about 450 beds for its reguA meeting of all young people of the mittee. Mrs. Frederick B. Tolles has lar beneficiaries - merchant seamen,
accepted the chairmanship of the com- coast guardsman, lighthouse keepers
mittee on maintenance of civil liberties. and Federal employees, most of them
• I I
ill with chronic diseases.
Crnm Creek Card Cape1'8
The occupational work proved to be
The Crum Creek Bridge Club regular such a tremendous stimulus to the morMonday evening of play at the Strath ale of those so confined that there are
now three full time workers employed
~~~~~~~:'!:I Haven Inn resulted in the following in
this work which the speaker summed
i:!
current winners: North and Southup
as educational, patriotic, humaniii;,~::
Mrs. Albert Hill and Mrs. K. C. Ken-!.l~!::.!~",
nedy, first; Mrs. Lucille Rankin and tarian and conservative.
Mrs. Arthur B. Griffith was coMrs. P. L. Haward, second; Mrs. H.
B. Lincoln and A. F. RobinsoD, third. hostess al the tea which foUowed the
. Bet1!'O"i East and West-Mrs. Wallace M. Mc- meeting with Mrs. George R. StuU
Curdy and Mrs. Joseph Blakiston, first; and Mrs. Lovett Frescoln al the tea
Mrs. J. K. McDonald and Ada Deering, table.
• I •
second j W. W. Moss and K. C. Ken.
Caplains Frosh Basketball
nedy, third.
The February tournament will begin
Theodora Hulme of North Chester
at next Monday's meeting, the winner
road has been elected captain of the
to be the one who gains the largest freshman basketbaD squad at Wilson
number of top scores during the month. College, Chambersburg.
Sun.day
morning
from 11 to 12
in
the Parish
House.
MoD. Peb. 18
102 PARK. AVENUE
Terror."
THE SW&IlTBIIORB.Uf. IKe., PUBLlIBD
PROKE 8W&IlTBliOaB 900
SeealOD
1942 COu.EGE BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
CELIA SHOE···SHOP
SATURDAY
DON 'RED' BARRY
•
At County VI, L L
THE SWARTHMORIAN
c.n
19a
JANUARY
'=~tnol
Ac$~RUDY VALLEE
SHOW ove. KYW. ThursdCIfB cd 10 P. M.. E. S. T.
TUNE IN!
-a..e plat 01bmilk.
'4'ia adtaIfi daiI7 iequb:
ta ottbe foIIowiua food '
ta iD
the
tIooa Mo.m:
7/10 ofall n:quiftd.; Vrtamia A, 1/5; V'ttalID.
t
7
,*opoc
_BI,I/7,V_B.. 2/5 Pt
C:t!
I
I
..
ill,
1/4,N"-Add.I/7,lnla,1/12,CaI .... 1/9.
JANUARY 30,
"
JANUARY 30. 1942
SWARTHMORE BOROUGH .MAP" .__SHOWING AIR RAID ,ZONES , AN
AIR .RAID WARDEN POSTS·
..
i ','
'I \ ,,.
.
.,!!
'''1
TtflSMAP IS PRESENTED TO YOU WITH' THE COMPLIMENTSOfjHESWART~MORE BUSI,N
, ".
ASSOCIATION' OF' WHICH THE FOLLOWING '. ARE" MEMBERS:, . " .
',':',
..
I
,"
.
.. '
'.'
',
.. ,
,
1~~eph's Barber Shop
Media Drllg Store
Russell's Service
Hannum & Waite
l\lichael's College Pharmacy,
Swarthmore National Bank.
and Trust Company
I' .
'.
'
"B. J. Hoy
Alice Barber
Martel Brothers
Bouquet Beauiy Salon
H. B.Green
Wayne Mosteller
"Dew Drop Inn
' ,
A. i P. Smalley
Th". Ingleo!-:.uk.
A·IGoulieb
RUJnscy's Garage
Peler E. Told
Victor D." Shirer
Strath Haven Inn
Co-op
Harris & Company
Mason Builders Supply
Edward L. Noyes
Buchner's Toggery Shop
Suplee's Hardware
The Swarthmorean
WOIDBD'••
Chili
To Review "'Wlnd,wept"
At its next meeting on Friday, February 6 at 10 A. M. tbe Literature Section will present Mrs. Allan M. Smith
in a review of "Windswept" by Mary
Ellen Chase and Mrs. Harold R. Goodwin in a shorter review of a lighter
~~~~;Inovel "Spring Magic" by D. E. Stev-
"
·Ii !. .
,.'
CLASSIFIED
New. of the
;~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~1
Start
SCHOBINGER GETS GAVEL
New Study Group At its recent January meeting the
The Swarthmore branch of the
League of Women Voters wilt sponsor a study groUP under its department of government and foreign policy
on Thursday mornings, February 5, 12,
and 19, at the home of Mrs. Earle P.
Yerkes 19 South Princeton avenue.
Reports by members will be given on
"The Economic Defense of Latin
America," the Rio Conference, Latin
American leaders and the Joint Defense Board with Mexico.
Members who plan to attend the
meetings are asked to bring newspaper
and magazine articles they find on
these subjects and any maps of Central
and South America available.
Mrs. Glenn R. Morrow of Rutgers
avenue is local chairman of this de~
partment of the League.
.
~~r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:IJOhn
"
v. ,to
women. Only course tickets will be
issued.
The first meeting will be held in the
main building of Swarthmore High
School on Monday. February 2. at 8
P. M. Further meetings will he settled
that time.
Swarthmore School Board members
presented to the retiring' president
~eorge Schobinger an engraved gavel
III honor of his years as president and
member of the Board. This gavel had
I
I
On it a silver ferrule upon which was
engraved "Presented to George Scho- College Girls Do U. S. O. Duty
!!
At Malinee
binger by Swarthmore School Board .
"Brief Music" a three-:act farce of
The members of the Motion Picture
Member 1935-41. President 1940-1941."
college
life will he presented by the
Grouv attended the matinee performThe presentation address was made \Vildcliff Players at the induction cen ...
ance of "Swamp \Vater" at -the Boyd
by the vice·presidellt of the Board Dr ter, Fort Djx, N. J. this evening, Fri~~;:~~;'~;~i Theatre 011 Wednesday. 'fhose who met
David McCahan. Mr. Schobinger had day. January 30. This is the first of a
,?,
for luncheon prior to the matinee were:
been lured to the meeting on the pre. series of performances the gro'Up will
~~~s:!~§~~IMrs. C. Russell Phillips. Mrs. P. L.
text of securing his advice upon some give at various sen'ice centers.
~
Whitaker, Mrs. Dwight Cooley, Mrs.
technical
problem that the Board had
-.:-' .,""...
cu. George Ewing, Mrs. Joseph Perkins,
in mind. In accepting the gavel in an THE CIVIL SERVICE COMMTBB~ON OP
Mrs. ,,'. Stuart Brown. Mrs. O. M. Hook.
the Borough of Swarthmore will hold
appropriate speech ~f r. Schobinger excompetItive examlnatlona for the positions
pressed his surprise and pleasure in re- of
patrolman and radIo operator at 9:00
Mrs. Clarence
Franck,
Mrs. A. W.
Stuart.Mrs.
Mrs. Roland
Albert
Eaton,
ceiving this gift, and his enjoyment of A. M.. February 14. 1942 In Borough Ball
Garrett, Mrs. J. Paul Brown, and Mrs.
Fa. Appllcatlons must be
the years of service on the School Swarthmore.
on or before February 11th. 1942. Appllca...
I Board. The testimonial was a personal t10n forms wlll be furnIshed upon re ...
C.Tell.
Moore,
the group.
01 chairman
Spmmer of
Stock
unelerslgned.
SQUARE
DANCERS
PRAISED
gift from the nlcmbers of the Board, quest from the ELLIOTT
RIClIARDBON.
The Drama Section of the J uDior
the school solicitor, and the adminisSecretary.
Club will meet Tuesday. February 3. at
1-30-42
On January 17 the Wagon Wheel tration.
P. M. at the home of Betty Taylor. Dancers, local square dance group,
ESTATE OP BOWARD 'KIRK, Deceased.
I
I
Kenyon avenue.
participated in the Cultural Olympics
Letters Testamental')' have beeu lasued
Frances Armitage will talk on her of the University of Pennsylvania.
to the undersigned. who requests aU per_
Music
Study
Course
sons
havIng clalma or demands against the
;--=:" experiences in summer stock company. "This is the best country dance group
estate of the decedent to make known the
I
I
and. all persona ind.ebted to the dehave yet seen in the Cultural Olympics,' Mrs. George T. Ashton (Mary Mis- same.
cedent to make payment without delay to
said one of the judges, "it should be an telski Ashton), who has completed a
LILLIAN CHAt.MgRB KIRK. Executr1x,
County Bldg.• Media. Penna.
inspiration to others." The three judges, ... ri ... of tcn illustrated lectures on mu- Or to her 102
Attorney
"ttend German Opera
were unanimous in their praise of these sic for Swarthmore's Adult Night at
A. STANLEY PE'IBRSON.
102 County Bldg.. Media. Pa.
Students from Mr. Snyder's German Swatthmore young people and voted to School has been requested to contiu1,Ie
classes and several others interested in
them a Merit Award in the Dance, the course privately.
DELAW ABE COtJN'l'Y
j~~~iL.::;~~
Sealed ProposalB wW be received at the
!!'....'New Civic Committees
The Ilew series will cover opera, sym-' County
~~~~k:~~gr:1 music-84 in all-attended a perform~
Controller's Omce. Court House.
ance of "Die Fledermaus," a comic opera
phony, aratoria, British music. a study Medla. Pa.. UlltU 10 B. m. (Eastern Standard
TJm.e)
and publicly opened at 11 a. m.
At the Wednesday evening session of the violin and the history and pos- (Eastern Standard.
by Johann Struass produced in English
Time). on Wednesday.
LC)ii'j'=:S;
Ninety-five (95) more or less. tax dupULaud. "Hale America"
following committee set-ups for 1942 histruments in order that the layman cates for the year 1942.
SpeclflcatiOn8 and bld.dIng sheet may be
On Friday morning January 23 the and 1943:
may find a vital introduction to the art obtaIned
at; the omce of the County Conentire High School heard Martha
ACCOUNTS - George W. McKeag of music. the trained musician may en- troller. and no bId wUl be entertained unGable coordinator of high schools and chairman, Wallace ~{. McCurdy, Frank large the knowledge already gained, less made out on said. bIdding 8heet.
Each bid - must be accompanIed by 'a
colleges for the Hale America Physical R. Markley; FINANCE- Wallace M: and parents IiM'a'course of real value certWed
check of PUt, (t50.oo) dol\am
drawn to the o~r of -the County of Det..
. McCurdy chairman, Roy G. Rincliffe,
connection' with the study of music. aware.
Fitness Program speak.
She challenged youth and adults to George W. McKeag; HIGHWAYSComments received by Mrs. Ashton
The County Commlesloners reserve the
.
keep in the best of physical condition S. S. Rutherford chairman, Roy G. after the fall course include the follow- right to reject any or all 'bIds,
H. WALTER WEAVEB.:
not 'only for the duration of the war Rincliffe, Andrew Simpson: PROP~ iog:
County ControlleJ:,
but always. Later George Reimer. thli ERTY AND PUBLIC RELATIONS
"The course has been exceedingly l-aa-3t
trainer of the boys, reviewed the "His- - Andrew Simpson chairman. S. S. well thought out to include those who
SBElUFP SALES of REAL lIBTATE'
of
Basketball!'
Rutherford,
Frank
R.
Markley;
PUB-:
know
little
of
mu!=ic
and
those
who
are.
LOT NEWS
Reeei~ Leltel·.
LIe: SAFETY - Frank R. h{arkley' more accomplished!' uThe whole thing SherIff's omce. Court House. Media. Penn~.
Now Is the tbne to make B safe mvestment
In Swarthmore Bu1IdIng Lote. Getting
Letter awards were given to Junior chairman, S. S. Rutherford, Wallace has given me a Jittle glimpse of the trcSaturday. February 21. 1942
$a~e8n8r~.advanCln8'. Two spec2a1s_ High students in the assembly
M. McCurdy; SEWERS - Roy
men
.: A. M.··.._
m Standard T1m.e ,,'
· I'ff
R mc
gram F rida Jan
16
l e eh'
airman, A n d rew Si'm~>son; I exp Iored."
,
y,
uary
•
C,ond1tlo~-'.
.....
00 ___ ~ or co-.Aed
Hockey letters were awarded to: George W. McKeag.
rhe course is open to both men and at time ot8alrrunl~therwisew.u.8tatedi;:
111-1
Belly Beagle, Pats~ Beatty, Barbaroilr================~================J advertIsement) balance in ten·dsYB. other
-R
condltlo:cs on day at sale.
Mary Gary, Edith Johnsfon. Jean
THE WEEK'S CALENDAR
Alias Flert Facias
No. 210
MRS. A. J. QUINBY & SON
Lawrence~ Phoebe Lukeil-s, .. Joanne
september Term. 194~
i:'
A.. IfRB.CBR QUINBY, Ir.
Paul, Mary Jane Servais, C,?nnie SpilFRIDAY, JANUARY 30
Lot wIth imps. Nether Prov. -twp:, Dei
ler, and 'Barbara Thatcher. ~,'
8:15 P.M.-"Jim Dandy.. •••••••• •••.•••••••••• ~.~ •••-•.• ~ ••••.••• P1ayers Club
Co ~ In. S W • M ,_~.
cI
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
.• .a.,
..
. .
oy£Q.&4
IUl
Football
letters
were
r.et;~ved
by;
SATURDAY.
JANUARY
31
B.
E.
8.
Qakland
Ave
.•
152.60'
MOj!axa
A"f'
:
1.
206 S. Oran.., St.
Media
George
Atlbinger,
Roy
Bosshardt.
Jack
8:15 P.M.-"Jim Dandy···.· ............... ,...................... Players Club
~j~~:: .N. W. llDe ~Ion~ 8.~E., 8.. 0alI;~
~hoDe MecUa 4.
Collins, Frank Evans. Bob EWingi HerSUNDAY. FEBRUARY 1 .
man Holmes. Bob McCowan, Frank
11:00 A.M.-MornIng Worshlp···· •••..•• · •••••..••••.•.....••. Local Churches
Iinprovementa conslst of three Story ston;
ancl frame house,:· 30 x' ;J3 feet: ·porche.
Pete
Nowel1,
Jim··Pi~man.
Jim
MONDAY.
FEBRUARY
2
Murray,
and
front and aide; two story frame addltIODj
10:00 A.M.-Red Cross BeWlng ...•.••·•••••••••••.•••.•.•.•..•.. Woman·s Club
12 x 9 feet;. flame garage. 21 ]I: 21 feet.
Price,
Bob
Raymond,
Bob
Reed,
Jim
TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY
3.
.
EDWIN B. KELLEY, Jr.
frame. addItion. 18 x 15 teet:
.
Taylor, Herman Tucker. Ed Walton
2:30 P.M.-RevIew of "Revellle In Washlngton................ Woman·s Club
.
. .
. . .'
.
;
You,. I_Ie,.
Bold as the property .ot. ¥argru:et ~11
and Bill Ward.
WEDNESDAY; F"RBRUARY 4
ton Broomall..:
.
25 Ea.. 7th S..
Cheo.er
10:00 A.M. to 4;00 P.M.-SurgICal _Dresslngs ••••••••.•.•...• Red Crosl;, Media
.,
Athletic awards to students who have
(OpPQ81te New State Tbeatre)
accumulated 10 points in several sports
THURSDAY. 'FEBRUARY 5
Hand money-$500.00.
;
'Phone Ches.er 3764
were given to: Ricky Armitage. D,'ck
10:00 A.M.-L. '!I. V. Stuely Group .. _~ .....•..••.. 19 South Princeton Avenue
R B MUNSON Sherl1l'l
10.00 .A. M. to 12.30 P. M. - SurgIcal Dtessinga ............... Reel Cro6s, MedIa
'"
~
Shelly.Peter
John Reinhold,
Campbell. Jack
Dan Clay,
_ _....;:......._ _ :
Pletlll'e
Neal,
Tomlinson,
Books_
Cornell Archbold. George Giliespie,
•
••
•
•
Greeting
Donald Swan, Bilt Thompson,
Warner, Dorothy Bernard, Mildre.d
SIMMONDS
Pierce.
Betty Rumble. and June Ull714 Welsh Stree.
Ch
man.
'Phone Chester 2-5181 ester
Non-athletic awards were received
by: John Campbell, Dan Clay. Frank
Davis, Bob Ewing, Jerry Jordan, Roger
March. Craig Neal. Pete Nowell. Ed
!l
FOfDlerl,J' ot Swarthmore cone~.
Rawson, Stephen Smith, Francis Tayi'
CtJI'penter & Cabinet Make,.
Jor, and Jack Tomlinson.
425 HORTON 4l'ENUE, RUTLEDGB
-, --.- .
S'udent. in Clwmical Show
A
demonstration
on
fire
and
water,
!!:~~~~'P=h=o~ne 8warth. 2989
two of the four elements which lhe ancients believed the world to be comCOAL and CllKE
I~::~ of was given for the entertain_
" ...
I'
of
the
Senior
Higb
School
MonFUEL OIL
morning January 26 by th~ Senior
~heim;'5try Class under the direction of
Harry Oppenlandet.
The first demonstration on fire was
Phone Sw. 10412
by Jack Linton, Bill Balch, and
Seth. The second demonstration
ARDMORB WINDOW CLBANtNG co.
water was presented by Jim Lukens
SWARTHMORE BRANCH
Fred Harrison.
ALL BRANCHES OP IIOtlSB CLBAN
lNG'KNOWN IN TBE TlmRI- Eunice Shay sang two numbers. Anne
:
TORY FOR 20 YEARS
conducted the Devotional Exi
Free Phune Calla - Por Customers
i.
ercises.
(Formerly Sw. 19)
Ardmore 2320
.
N
5
mea
,
SCHOOL NEWS
,.,
~
in
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..
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"
•
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•
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C()I-~
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fi1"A£
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Crajgr===============i~=::;~==~==::;==::::;~=~~H~.~L:.-:FUBS~~m~J~":'A~tto~m~e~y~.
I
BOROUGH or
SWARTHMORE
d>
DELAWARE COUNTY
PENNA.
/
"
/
-'
" '" G
[!1~',
SENIOR POST WARDENS
l'U!)T
l.OCA.TlON
NMIE
Ttl£rIlONE
I'O,"T
SWARnlMORE
~HO~E
3,
Morvu.h lIall _ _ _ N. W. Sap......_______ 10&~_035'
110 1Iid.lqaoA A,~.~_R. t;. Willd1lM>u ___ .---21.15_----2HS
S,.artb ... D .... Apa... ____ J<>hn ~nrb.rl _ _. _ _ 857 ______97.U
.J.
·n I
5.
6.
I· ... y'"" Utlb_._._~R. (:. U.... lur_.,._~_ ..5S6." ____ ~.'J7'J)
110." SrlrooI. ______ ".R. I~ SI...a ......_ . , _____ OlU _ _ ._,,67
1.
2..
,.
8.
I.' ...._ a .
"'.t.. Au-.___..__ (;.•'. (::u....r-__.___
""""A_
_....
N_·.G~__
.
-.--II. W. Brtnkma" ___ .--22_'2~
-.- .....
I:Mo Sn..-I....- Slallo.. __ 11. 1_ !tliltr-r- _____ 1-t.20_____ .. _%00
J. KIRK .\I..t:lJRIlY. limo..,." ,Iir
,,1'''
:'
VAN AI.EN BROS. I
._._.2.lOI-J~ __ --2.I~I-J
UlARI.ES F_ nSUII':K, / .. " ..... & ...
W. J. THOMAS
IT'S JUST PlAI.N' HHORSE SENSE"
TO KEEP WEll INFORMED
ramrll
.411' I".nfm
r
I
Optometmt
DR. M. BLOOMFIELD
Comple.e Eye Service
612 WELSH STREET
.. ..
:<0
>
Housekeeping Apartment
i O'
j
i'~
I
.
,,,..y
~/'
/'
/
/
/
/
/
-'
;'
But not the CHAP that af.
fiiclB hands of home laUDdresses these freezing days.
Ostracize that chap by nsiDg
MEDIA LAUNDRY
Call Media 1"" or Stop Our Dri'1'.
FtIRNIsBBD OR IDIFURmSBBD
ALSO DESIRABLE ROOM
DELICIOUS HOME COOKING
',J '¢I
~./'
,
fl!DU'::Y
,
e
SomeCHAPS are popular-
.
THE HARVARD
Tor. Swuth. &149
/'
Comer Butun and IIanant A.ves.
-
-
-
""PPAOV~O 4Y ;fti~,(.., eO~7r
F-1'-/.1'J'
WOOD
KOPPERS
COKE
SUN
FUEL on.
· .
P, amting
Paperhanging
•
KIMMEL & SON
Phone Sw.
Th~se are days when rumor, idle talk and misinformation
nourish.
GUlrd against these enemies of mental peace by getting the fac:b.
Your most immediate and constant source is your rldio. Not
only will It keep you well-informed b,ut when necesslry It
will, supply vlluable instructions Ind Idvice for your protection.
PHILADELPHIA
"
ELECTRIC 'COMPANY
BUY, Defense Sfamp';-: and Bi;lids
.: ,:. ;
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
TQE
JANUARY 30,
SWARTRMOREAN
.-=~~----~----~~~=---~--~~
19~2.
JANUARY 30, 1942
.---.~----~----~~~----------------------
SWARTHMORE BOROUGH MAP SHOWING AIR RAID ZONES AN
AIR RAID WARDEN POSTS
!'
THE
CLASSIFIED
i·
News of the Woman's, Club
To Review "Windswcl.l"
At its next mecting on Friday. Fehruary 6 at to A. ~1. the Litcr:ltlln: Sectioll will present ~Irs. J\lIall ),1. Smith
ill a review of U\VindsU'c!Jt" hy ~lar)'
ElIl'n Chase and M rs_ I-Iarold R. C;'oodwin in a shorter rel·iew of a lightl'r
novel "Spring hlagic" hy D. E. ~h'vellSOIL
THIS MAP IS PRESENTED TO YOU WITH THE COMPLIMENTS OF THE SWARTHMORE BUSINESS!~
ASSOCIATION OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING ARE MEMBERS:
At l\Iolinee
JO~~I)h's Barber ShOI)
Media Drug Store
Russell's Service
Hannum & Waite
lllil'llUel's College Pharmacy
SWlII'lhmore National Bank
and T,'usl Company
Co,ol)
Harris & Company
iUason Builders Supply
Edward L. Noyes
Buehner's Toggery Shop
Suplee's Hardware
The Swartlullorean
B. J. Hoy
Alice Barber
lHartel Brothers
Bouquet Beauty Salon
H. B. Green
Wayne lUosteller
Dew Drop Inn
The mcmbcrs of the hlotioll Pictun'
Gr(Hlp attl'IHlcd the l1Iatim'l' pet-fclI"Il1.
a lin' of "Swamp \\Oat~r" at ·thl.' Bonl
A.P. Smalley
The IlIglelleuk
A. Gottlieb
RUlllsey's Garage
Peter E. Told
Victor D. Shirer
Strath Haven Inn
S~~b~~:;'
~
_j!«'E":
~!r==========--============================================================N~lltl
,,
p~;~;;.~:;::ITheatre
011
\Vedncsday_ Those who 11;('t
~r.i,~;po'~!i!I,,;n:"Fi _ I
for luncheon prior to the matinee '-"l'rt':
;;i':::';"",,,,
c.:;n;i}~:§;srne;," ~ I rs. C. R115Se 11 Ph ill ips. Mrs. P. L.
I\Vhitah·r.
~~
SWARTHMOREAN
L. W. V. to Start
New Study
5
,
S(;1I0BlNGER GETS GAVEL
Gmu/)i
,
,
At tb rl'Cl'nt January II1cetmg thl'
The Swarthmore orallch or the i Swarthmnrl' School Board l1Iell!bers
l,ca<1"e
of \\'01 •• "1.
\' oters WI'II .sl'OI1- I C
)In'~"lIh'dS I to1- til(' rctlrmg prcsldcnt
•
1"1
'sor a study group Ulld('r its dcpart-,' .('t1rgl' • l' 10 ).tngt·r an ellg-ra~'e
,
....
. II1l'lIIbc'f
,T'I\'"I
011 fhursday morl1l1lgs, I'l'hruarv 5, 12,
. _ of
.'. tht· . BO'I'(I
••. '1'111'".~ ~'.
'- 1"1(1
•
and 19, at the home of ~frs. E·arlc
(:II,I~ ~I. :-;t~~~r lerrul(' tlp(l~1 willch, Wit!'
lilgr.l\ld I rc . . elltl·cl tn <.. ('org"l· Schn"
•
Y l'r k'l'S 19 S
• ou II I I rlllcc 011 :(VCIIUl'.
I'
.... \\··lrthlllorl' Sc1w,1 B -Ir I
!
Reports h\' members will he gin_'11 UII' 111Ij..tl'r J\'
• • _ •
•
(
O. (.
"'1'1 IC I'·.coIIOJ1nc
'
.
D c:'fl'IlSl' 01' r .atm
- If :\ll'lIIlll'r
le)3,::.-41.
Prl'si
_
.
America," th(' Rio Confcrcllcl', Latill'
I he lI~esl'lItatlOIl addn'~s was madl'
:\1IIl'ricilli leaden.; .'111<1 thl' Joint Dc-: hy 1!ll' nl't':prn,i
: )),n'lIl 1lcCahan. ~Ir. S('hobillgcr had
~I emhers who plan to attl'ud lhe: ],l:l'lI htrl'l! to. the IIIl·l·ting l;n thl' preJIIl'dings arc askcd to hring newspaper I text t~f Sl'cnnng his ;t
tlll'SC subjects aud an)' milps- of Central' III mind: In accepting thl' gan,l ill an
and South America
partmcllt of the I.('a",nl('.
thl' Yl':lrs oi sl..'rviel' 011 thl' School
• t •
Hoare!. Tht, Il'stilllonial \\':is a Jll'rsonal
I
Po'
,I.'
."
llrs. Dwight (\wln-. ~Irs.
one car. George Ewing. ;\Irs_ Joseph iJcrkins,
llrs. F. Stuart Brown, ~Irs_ 0.11. flonk,
FOR SALE
)Irs. Clarence Franck, 1lrs. 1':ol;:lI1d
FOR SALE - Household goods. pair Mahogany bookcases, oriental rugs. chairs, Eaton, Mrs. A. \V. Stuart, 11 rs. A Ihl'rt
tables. crystal sconces. mIrror, bric-a-brac Garrett, ~Irs_ J. Paul Brown, and ~Iri'.
ship modeL 541 RivervIew road. Telephone
Swarthmore 287-W.
John C. 1loorc. chairman of the J-!rolllJ.
FOR SALE - QUickly-at a sacrlfice-Dtn_
Tt'lis of SlIllllll("r Siork
SQlJARE DANCERS PRAISEIl "ii. iWIII Ih<' /IJ"/IJhers oi Ih,' Buard.
ing room SUite: 2 bedroom suites· Odd
The Drama Section of the Junior
pieces. Telephone Swarthmore 173, •
the sclttlol snlit-itor, amI th l· adminisOu Jallllary 17 the.: \Vag-oll \\"lIn'1
FOR SALE - Pair or girls Wright & Dlt- Club will meet Tuesdav, I'\·hruan- J. at
son Ice skates, size 8. Good condition.
P. ~1. at the home ~r Bctty 'j'ayh,r. I )~ulcl'rs, local 5quarc dallcl' group.
Reasonable. Telephone Swarthmore 2052_
Kl'l1\'on avenue.
)larticipall'd in the Cultural Olympic;.
of tht' Cnin'rsity of Penllsylvania.
WANTED
:\Illsi(~ Sludy Course
l'xperil'nces in SUll1mel- stock company. "This i!'i the best country dance group Ij
•
I
ha.n yet Sl'CII ill the Cultural Olympics,"
.:\Irs, Gl'or!{c '1', Ashton ()'Iar)' Missaul onl' of thc judgcs. "it should he an
tdski ,\s11ton), who has completcd a
inspiration to others." The three judges scril's of tCIl illustra1l'cI It.:CtUfl·S on 1U11wcn' unanimou5 in their l)faisl' of tht.:se SIC
. lor
~
..•dle",I GfOr"",,, 0 IJPra
~\\'arthll1orc\; Adult Xig-11I at
'"
~\\'arthll1()rc
rOllng
peo,llc
;l1ld
nHed
to
S
f
• tndents rom 1,1r. Snyder's German
~ch(lol has hel.'l1 requcstl'd to continue
grant them a Merit Award ill the Dan",',
l" I aSSl'S and se\'eral others intl'rl'stcd in
...
tilt.· e011l-se I)rivatcl,\'.
• I •
music - 84 in all- attl'ncled a pcrf orl1lNew Ch'ic ConllniUeC8
I
Thl' ne\\' serics will con'r 0per;l. SJfllance of "Die Fledermau:i," a comic opera
phony, oratoria, British music. a studv
hy JohanlJ Struass produced in English
At tht· \Vedl1csday e\'clling sl'ssioll \li thc violin and the history an(1 1)(IS
hy the Philadelphia Ollera Company of Burough Council last \\'eck Presi- sihilitics of the piano. Tlle~l' talks will
la.st Tuesday evening.
dent D. \Y, R_ :Morgan anllounced the he illustrated by slidcs, reconling's a 1)(1
Laud. ""ale Ampr;ca"
followiug cOlllmitte(' sct-u[>s for 19-12 instrulIlents in order that thl' !;l\'miln
On Fri(lay morning January 23 the ami 1943;
lIIay find a \'ital introduction to tl;e art
cmire High School heard Martha
ACCOUXTS-Gcorge \V. ~lcKcag of IlIlIsic, the trailll'd musician ilia" ellGahle coordinator of high schools and chairman. \\'albee :\L McCurdy, Frank largl' the knowledgl' aln'ady g~~itll'tl.
colll'ges for the Hale America Physical H:. :\Iarklcy; FIXAKCE - \\'albee ~1. and parelJts find a course of rl':ll \';i1Ul'
Fitness Program speak.
~lcCurdy chairman, Roy G. RinclifTe, in conllt'ction with thl' study 01 IIlllsic.
She challenged youth and adult s to GcorJ.:c \V. :\IcKeag; HIGH\\' A YS ("OIl1I11l'lIts recein:cI 11\' :\Irs. A"hton
h'cj) ill the hest of physical condition S. S. Ruthl'rfurd chairman, l~oy G. after the fall COur!'il' illcllldl' thl' iollnwnot only for the duration of the 'war RinclifTe, Andrl'\\" Simpson; PHOP- iug:
hut always. Latl'r George Ueimcr. the ERTY AND PUBLIC H.EL.ATIO~S
"The course has heell l'xcl'l'dingly
trainer of the boys, reviewed the U His· - Andrew Simpson chairman. S. S_ well thotl,L!'ht out to indude those who
, I1 ' I
I,ut
tory of BaskethalL"
erlon. Frank R. Markley; PUll- know little of 1~1Usic an.:lthosl· who an'
LOT NEWS
Rpcpir:e Lellprtf
LIC SAFETY - Frank R. :\farkley more accoTllplished." "The wholl' thingN.ow Is the time to make a sate Investment
n Swarthmore BuUdlng Lots. Gettln
I.cttl'r awards were g-iven to UII1(Jr( chairman, S. S. Rutherford, \Vallace h;:ls gi\'cl1 lUI.' a little glimpse oi thc Ifl'scarce, prices advancing. Two speCials g
I-lig-h
studcnts in thc assembly pro- M. :McCurdy; SE\VERS- Roy G_ mendous field that remains still to Ill'
$3000 and $3500.
gram, Friday, January 16.
Rinclitfl' chairman. Andrew Simpson, I."xplorcd."
Hockey lettl'rs were awaTded
to: Georgc \\T. McKt·ag.
The course is o,len to hoth 1Ill'1I and
WM. S. BITTLE
Swarthmore 111-3
netty Beagk·,
Barbara I
::::-:..:--=-=:::::::..:_~=====================:.I
PubUc -Insurance - Real Estate
Brown,
Bctty Patsy
Cook, Bcatty,
Sandy Crossct.1l
llary Gary. Edith Johnston, J can
THE WEEK'S CALENDAR
•
SCHOOL NEWS
o
_
''-----------
I
I
I
".,
"
•
;:==:.-:-=-=--=-=-=::::-::.'
--- ---- ..,
~~t~---~~~"
~
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I\IRS. A. J. QUINBY & SON
,
A. I\IERCER QUINBY, Jr.
I .
Ii)
.
,
'0
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
206 S , Orange S..
I
I
Ii
'Phone Media
M d'
4
J
e
10
and ELGIN
--------
25 East 7th St.
r,
~
o·
r:;
Piclure Framing - Stalionery
B~oks - Kodak Supplietl
GreClmg' Cards - Hobby CraEt
')
,
SIMMONDS
,
I
I
,
,
I
/
I
I·
DELAWARE COUNTY
PENNA.
I
'II
I.
Carpelller & Cabinet 1I1aker
425 l\-IOR1.'ON AVENUE, RUTLEDGE
'Phone SWarth. 2989
I!'H.I'lIn".
1'1,,,,-,
UIIIIIIIIUI: 11.1.1.1'111':\':
~"I·L,,·
11111
IU:;,
.~: ~:(:':;::'~'::"~"::'t~~"
1:. I . 1\ 011.;" ... "
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j,.I.II Iii, I"" I
a:;~
'J711
I.
ILl L,I.- \"
I.,;
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1'1." ,'," I I "I.
II. t • tI"'I' ".
:'.·>1~1I
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II,~I, .~,'I" ...I
, .•. ""·.I;",.,~,·
11. ',I. tit;"!.,,,.,,,
n
1.· ..',~.'n;"-,~I,'lj,,,.
11, J 'loll"
~
VAN ALEN BROS.
In:u
"'" .... ..
•.
_, K,
COA.L and C(lKE
FUEL OIL
-~
.... \\.
I I:!II
II, .... I', ••
HI!: I\HII:II\llIl'I 1\11. \111 I! ~I.'IHII 1\\11111-.\
J. !.olll" \1". \ HII'. I/",,,,,d,
I IBUI I." I .. 11·111111_ 1.... ;."
I" lI'ml,,,
II"' .. ,,~I,
Chester
Phone Chester 2-5161
.'ormerly ot Swarthmore CoUege
~\\
110\
1\""",~"lhll
714 W~Jsh Street
W. J. THOMAS
/q::f
. L.,.-!l5S~ '-==:;,
-- . 'y-::;'::::; ~
,....
SENIOR POST WARDENS
\1"'"' _~~~
CheSler
(Opposite Ncw State Theatre)
'Phone Chester 37£'
U'-to
------=-:
BOROUGH OF
SWARTHMORE
..'
'lhlHI
'.
e
'"
;""1
..... . ,. . .
~
."
.0'''-'
Phone Sw. 10412
Q
ARD1\IORE WINDOW CLEANING co.
SWARTH~IORE BRANCH
ALL BRANCHES OF' HOUSE CLEAN_
ING KNOWN IN THE TERRI_
TORY FOR 20 YEARS
Free Phone Calls - For Customers
(Fottnerl.v Sw. 19)
Ardmore 2320
~,
, r - - - - " " 1 i ! t - - 1 I _ _ .:.-. __ I
I I l~
'.
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e .,,
,g
.,
,
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~~
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Optometrist
IlR. 1\1. BLOOMFIELD
/
/
/
/
Complete Eye Service
/
612 WELSH STREET
/
Pl.!
/
i
..,
:'
Dll':\'
Cnll
/
~ >ll;
/
Housekeeping Apartment
/
J
/
Foothall letter... were receiveu by:
George Allbinger. noy Bosshardt, Jack
Pr;ce. Boh Raymond, Boh
Reed. Jim
Taylor. Herman 'fucker. E
Bill 'Va rd.
Athletic award=, to stlldellt~ who have
accu11Iulatl'd IO poillts in several 51>orts
werc givl'11 to: Ricky Armitage, Dick
Shelly, John Campbell. D.m Clay, Craig
>;eal, Peter Reinhold, Jack Tomlinson,
Corncll Archhold. George Gillespie,
Donald Swan, Bill Thompson, \Vayne
\Varner. Dorothy Bernard, Mildred
Pierce, Detty I~uJUble, and June Ullman_
~on-athlctic awards were received
by: John Campbell, Dan Clay, Frank
Davis, Boh Ewing, Jerry Jordan, Roger
~.rarch, Craig Neal, Pete Nowell,
Ed
H.awsoll, Stl'phclI Smith, Francis Taylor, and Jack Tomlinson_
SluIlelits ill
/
THE HARVARD
Corner Rutgers and Harvard Aves
Tel. Swarth. 0149
.
~o
5
...-?,.oP..t'aveo BY "':;~~ ....u.-D.,7£
.P - ~ -:.:"J?
WOOD
KOPPERS
COKE
SUN
FUEL OIL
._ .. Players Cluh
SATURDAY. JANUARY 31
8:15 P.M.-·'Jim Dandy....................... _... __ .. _... _... _.. Players Club
l<~EBRUARY
SUNDAY.
1
11:00 A. M. - Moening Worship ............ __ ..... , ..... , ....... Local CllUtches
MONDAY. FEBRUARY 2
10:00 A. M. - Red Cross Sewing ......... _....... _. _........ _' ... Woman's Club
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 3
2:30 p, M_ - Review or "Reveille In Wnshlngton", .... _..... ',. Woman's Club
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4
10:00 A.M. to 4:{]0 P.M.-Surgical Dresslngs ..... _...
. .. Red Cross. Media
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 5
10:00 A.M.-L. W. V. Study Group ... __ ._ ......... 19 South PrInceton Avcnue
10:00 A. M. to 12:30 P_ M_ - Surgical Dressings ........... ,' _. Red Cross. Medin
"I;ril'i llusic" a tltrCl'-act farcc of
nJlkgc lift' ",ill he pn·~l·tlted by thl'
\\'ildclifT Playcrs at the il1tluction Cl'IltlT. Fort Dix. X. J. this evelling, Fl"iday. January .10, This i~ the first of
gin' at \'
the Borough of Swarthmore will hold
COmIJetItlvc examinations for the positions
of patrolmnn nnd radio operntor at 9:00
A, M .. February 14, 1942 in Borough Hall,
Swarthmore. Pa. APPltcatIons must be filed
on or before Februnry 11th. 1942. Appllcntlon forms will be furnished upon rcquc:;;t from the undersigned.
ELLIOTT RICHARDSON.
Secretary.
ESTATE OF HOWARD KIRK. Deceased.
Letters Testamentary hU\'e been Issued
to the undersigned, who requc.sts nil persons hnvlng claims or demunds against the
cstate of the decedent to make known the
same. and all persons indebted to thc decedeut to make I>aymcnt without delay to
LILLIAN CHALMERS KIRK. Executrix.
102 County Bldg .. Media, Penna.
Or to her Attorney
A. STANLEY PETERSON,
102 county Bldg .. Media, Pu .
DELAWARE COUNTY
Sealed proposals will be received at the
County Controller's Officc, Court House.
Media. Pa,. until 10 n. m. (Eastern Standard Time) ond publIcly opened at 11 a. m.
(Eastcrn Standard Time). on Wednesday.
February n. 19<:2, for furnishing and delivcring F. O. B. Court House. Mcdln, Pa_.
Ninety-FIve (95) more or less. tax dupl1cates for the year 1942.
SpeCifications and bIddIng sheet may be
obtained at thc Office or the County Controller, and no bid will be entertained unles..:; made ont on said bidding sheet.
Each bid must be accompanied by a
certified check of Fifty ($50_00) dollars
drawn to the order of the County or Delaware.
The County CommiSSioners reserve the
right to reject any or nil bids.
H. WALTER WEAVER,
County Controller.
1-23-3t
SHERIFF SALES or REAL ESTATE
Sheriff's Omce, court HO\l.<;e, Media. Penna.
Saturday, February 21. 1942
8:30 A. M. Eastern Standard Time
Conditions: $250.00 cash or certified check
at timc of sale (unless otherwise stated In
adVertisement)
balance
In ten days. Other
conditions on day
of sale.
Alias FIeri Facias
No. 219
Lot with Imps. Nether Prov_ Twp., Del.
Co., Pa.. Int. S. W_ s. M(;ylan Ave_ and
s. E.
~.
Oitkland Ave., 152.60' MC:;!Ar.
•
• • • •
o
Improvements consist of three story stone
nnd frame house, 30 x 33 feet: porches
fcont and side: two story frame addltlon,
12 x 9 feet; frame garage, 21 x 21 feet;
frame addition. 18 x 15 feet_
Sold as the property of Margaret Hamll-:
ton Broomall.
Hand
moneY-$500.00.
R.
S.
MUNSON. Sheriff:
• • • •
IT'S JUST PLAIN HHORSE SENSE"
TO KEEP WELL INFORMED
I~]
'-
Some CHAPS are popularBut not the CHAP that af-
flicts hands of home laundresses these freezing days.
O"tral'ize that "hap by using
MEDIA LAUNDRY
Call l\fedia 114 or Stop Our Driver
These are days when rumor, idle talk and misinformation flourish.
Guard against these enemies of mental peace by getting the Facts.
Your most immediate and constant source is your radio. Not
Painting
Paperhanging
•
KIMMEL & SON
Phone Sw. 2425-J
only will it keep you well-inFormed but when necessary it
will supply valuable instructions and advice for your protection.
PHILADELPHIA
ELECTRIC COMPANY
BUll Defense Stamps and Bonds
~
••••
~.
•
•
c
~
~".... '::,.
by 206.60' N. W. line along S_ E. s. Oakland Ave.
H. L_ FUSSELL. Attorney.
Chemical ShoUl
ALso DESIRABLE ROOI\!
DELICIOUS HOME COOKING
/
(:"lIt'g" Girl. Ilo U. S. O. Duty
September Tcrm, 1941
FRIDAY. JANUARY 30
8:15 P.M.-"Jlm nandy ....... _. __ .......... _... _.... _.
A demonstration on fire and water,
two of the four c1cments which the auhelieved the world to he COmposed of WitS given for the entertainment of the Senior High School hi ouday morning January 26 by the Senior
Chemistry C1ass under tht' direction of
I-larry Oppcnlandcr.
The first demon.'itration on fire '\.Vas
hy Jack Linton, Dill Balch, and I
ohll Seth. The second demonstratioll!
water wits presented hy Jim Lukens
Fred Harrison.
!
Eunice Shay sang two numbe.·s. Annc
~Jyers conducted thc Devotional Exercises.
FURNISHED OIt UNFURNISHED
/
"
Joanne
Paul, ),1 ary J iUle Servais, Connie Spitler, and Ilarhara Thatel,n,
~tll(1
Your /eloeler
•••
Lnkens,
E\·ans.
Dob E\ving,Frank
HcrBob McCowan,
~Iurray, Pdt' Nowell. Jim Pitman, Jim
EDWIN B. KELLEY, Jr.
--- - '
Phoehe
r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~1 Collins,
Frank
mall I-I01111l'S,
II'
/
Lawrence,
WOllll'n, (Jill\- coursc tickt·ts will be
isslIed.
.
The first meeting will Ill' held in the
main building of Swarthmore High
~chool 011 )lol1da\', Fehrllan 2. at 8
P . .:\1. Further IUl·~tings will i'l' settlcd
tllat timl'.
6
JANUARY
30,- 1942
. .. ... .
."
~
.~..-
-~.
Jane Davidson, complete~ tht . ~ ":."' '.~'" "(j,ile-';~' :a6~ra Pion 10 Women
with Mrs. Charies Bunting and Mrs.
PANEL REVIEWS Amy
panel.
•. . .
e."eII •
. ..
George" M. :Karns presiding at the tea
Several of the points brought out by .
table.
RESPONSIBIUTY the panel on the development of re- Within the last few weeks, the Provided enough qualified people are : ---""'-''---''---:----------
Bay Heads Lively Parent.Pupn.
. Teacher Home and School
Diseuulon
Tuesday night members of the Home
and· School Association heard parents'
ideas about responsibility and how it
could be developed in children.
The program was under the direction
of the Guidance Committee, Edward
N. Hay chairman. This i'i in accordance with the practice of President
Robert 'E. Spiller to have the Association an active working body instead
of just a listening one.
In the brief business meeting preceding the program the treasurer reported a healthy balance although the
membership is stiU lower than last
year. Dr. Spiller announced the subjects for the next two meetings, one on
curriculum and one on nutrition and
health under the leadership of the grade
groups.
The panel assembled by Mr. Hay was
representativp. of the entire school system. The' teachers who served were
Myrtle McCallin, grade school; Eugene
Udell, junior high school; Claudia Hancock, senior high school. There were
four parents besides Mr. Hay, Pernberton Dickson, Mrs. George M. Karns,
Mrs. D. Malcolm Hodge and Dr.
George B. Sickel. Two ninth graders
Frank Davis and John Campbell and
two tweJfth graders, Betty Landon and
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- .
SALE ENDS JANUARY 31st
EDWARD'S Children's Shoes
10% Of(
Ladfea' ENNA JETl'ICKS, '3.95
RecularIJ
$5
sponsibilities are: first, the child m~st
be given as complete an understandmg
as possible of the whole framework .of
the problem. The reason and necessIty
for his assuming the responsibility niust
be dear to him. This brought up the
question of allowances and payments.
The panel did not agree on what should
be done.
Second, the individual child as well
as his capabilities and age should be
considered, for there should be some
.measure of success possible. Parents
and teachers both agreed that a boost
here was of supreme importance.
Parents in the audience and on the
panel admitted that the third point,
allowing the child to suffer the consequences of his own lack of responsibilities was desirable. B.ut they al~o agreed
that they f?und th.ts. most dIfficult to
do. The chddren slttmg on the panel
thought this type of punishment natural and perhaps the solution.
The panel talked around the reason
why one should fulfill his responsibilities. A member of the audience
pointed out that the only reason was
the inner satisfaction gained by the
knowledge of a task well done. Rewards, praise or punishments were all
a means of coupling for' the child the
relation of the accomplishment and this
satisfaction.
All agreed that although the child
is not "born with it" respomlibility
could be developed.
The audience and the panel continued
the discussion in the music room where
the mothers of both second grades
served coffee and sandwiches.
•••
Jeff Kirk on New York Track
to t6
Jeffrey Kirk of South Chester road
will represent Mercersburg Academy
Be.11Iar11~O, ,11
by running in the Melrose Athletic
BUDGET SHOE
Association Meet in Madison Square
21% W. state Street
MEDIA
Garden, New York City on February
X-Ila)' Flt~ - 'Phone Media 990
7. Jeff will also run on the 13th in
....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' Convention Hall, Philadelphia.
FLORSBEIM Men's Shoes, 18.95
Husbands!
Thrill
Your
Valentine Anew!
By havln« her engagement rin«
modernly remounted and her
weddln« ring recut.
The Beautiful New
1942
WALL PAPERS
ARE HERE
Come in and See them!
We
Have
BLACKOUT
A fine selection of 14K «old
mountings on display at a price
to suit yoUI' pune.
PAIIT, PAPER' AID
SHADES
•
•
Wiltshire Bros.
Ace Wallpaper
& Paint Co.
100 E. Slate Street
MEDIA.
Telephone 2239
511 Edgmont Avenue
CHESTER,. PA.
Telephone Chester 6859
United States Civil Service Commission
has announced an examination for women only which will remain open indefinitely. The need is for Apprentice
Draftsmen who can perform simple
routine, mechanical and free-hand
drawing, tracing, lettering and incidental technical work. In addition, the
Government has estimated a need for
100,000 Radio Engineers. There are
not enough women trained in Chemistry and Physics to fill the demands
of industry and defense in laboratories
and industrial plants. There are
needs
essential to the
present
emergency; and the Federal Office· of
Education is making every effort to
satisfy these needs by providing free
instruction and training. Anyone who
can allow six hours a week for the
purpose of attending one of the Engineering Science Management Defense
Training Courses. is not only providing
herself with a skill which can result
in immediate employment, but is also
contributing to the greater efficiency
of the national defense program.
interested, .courses in Engineering,
Mathematics and Drawing, Radio Engineering, Physics and Chemistry wiIJ
be offered by Swarthmore College
a part of the Defense Training Program under the Federal Office of Education. Since immediate employment is
desirable upon completion of the course,
only Seniors in College or students not
planning to return after the second
semester are allowed to enroU. Therefore, the registrants must be composed
primarily of persons not attending
school at the present time. The Courses
wiJI meet twice a week for three hours
at each meeting. There is no charge;
and the only expense wiJJ be for personal equipment. High School graduation is the only basic requirement, although some special background is necessary for particular courses. All persons who qualify are urged to get in
touch with Nora Booth at the College
as soon as possible for further particulars and for registration.
Library Ass'n
In Yearly Meet
sidered by many who heard it an outstanding performance which the whole
membership of the club should have the .
benefit of hearing Mrs. Told wiJI also
present high-lights of other current
literature.
Mrs. Lovett Frescoln and Mrs. Clarence Franck will be hostesses and a
social hour wiJI foJlow the program
(Co"li""etl
I~DtII
Ptlg, 0_)
"On the whole," said Miss Hunter,
"the above report seems rather gratifying, considering the world at large,
and our chief aim for the future is to
continue to prove our worth at all
VALENTINES SPICE LIFE
We've (3REETINGS \ ' romandc,
jolly, tender "theY're perfect
for your friends
. or if it's a GIFT you're wandng.
we've timelv. gay ones to suggest
"
alice barber GIFTS
OLD BANK BUILDING
Sw. 1381
STEAKS-CHOPS
SEAFOOD Our Specialty
Completelv Air-Conditioned
I!::==============:!.I
tim~
~ ilie entire com~~~~
Mrs. Sewell W. Hodge, chairman
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
of
the book committee, announced the accession during 1941 of 402 adult books,
373 by purchase, 29 by gift; and the
subscription to 14 periodicals. The Jatter group is supplemented by the
Home and School's contribution to the
Library of 10 subscriptions to be primarily for use by members of that
organization but to be circulated to the
general public, also. Mrs. Hodge reported. that the Pay Shelf continued
to enable readers to reserve new fiction and reminded those present that
ALIX F'IELD WHITAKER
Will Reopen Her Dancing School
FEBRUARY 2, 1942
•
Spang,. Dance. • • • Ballet • • •
Sourh American Folic Danee.
Ballroom Clauea by arrangement
•
104 ELM AVENUE
TELEPHONE SWARTHMORE 850
~booboohss~Jfare~~~~s~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
those on the free shelf.
Three exhibits of children's books
were reported by Mrs. Peter E. Told
chairman of children's books; the.
Spring Book Festival Exhibit in May; .
the display which supplemented the
Childrens Book Tea in November at
which Elizabeth Janet Gray spoke; and
the Christmas exhibit arranged at the'
Woman's Club later in November.
Froebel Reelected
Following the adjournment of the
Annual Meeting board members met
with their newly elected associate, Mrs.
Franklin S. GiJJespie, and John F.
Spencer, reelected, to organize for the
year 1942. Officers elected were Mr.
Froei>eI, president; S. S. Rutherford,
vice president; Mrs. Gillespie, secretary; and Mr. Spencer treasurer.
Committee appointments were made
by President Froebel as foHows: chair-
m~ ~ Lilirn~li~
.-
MEN'S'SHffiTS
January 30-February 7
.\
$1~89
$1.39
$2.69
3 for $01.00
3 for. $5.00
2 for $5.00
WERE $1.50 TO S3.50
. (No Whites on Speclal Sale)
STAINTON ·BEIJ,IS CO.
MEN'S: STORE
9TH & EDGMONT AVENUE
CHESTER
~a~- ...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Bub&;
man of books-Mrs. Hodge;
chairman
of publicity-Mrs. J. Passmore Cheyney; chairman of property-Mr. Rutherford; chairman of childrens booksMrs. Told. By formal action the board
instructed the librarian to enforce the
~nmIIIllODlIDID""nllIl/IDJII"mll1"IIII11IUIIUUIl1I11I1I1111I11I11IIJ11111l11l1l11l11nlllllllllllllllllllllll1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1I11I1I11I111II11I1III11I111I11I1UUDIIIIIIIIDIIIUllm!
~
==
.
C H EST E R' S
(Co"ti"ntl
I~o",
Pag. 0 ... )
§
E
:_=-!
,=
F.'RE'E'
=
remain strong and sound - its income
must exceed its outgo. Even if all its
funds were available for loans or investments, it still could~t pay as much
interest as it charges, b~ause rendering
banking service costs money. In actual
fad, sizable sums must be "immobilized"
as reserves. Other sums are invested in
government bonds which pay very little.
Swarthmore National Bank
and Trust COmpany
..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -____1
the watch~dogs of the public interest.
She mentioned the trend toward fed- _
eralizatioll of Social Security and Un- ==
employment Compensation Agencies.
We must watch also to see that the I§!
social services aren't cut down in war- time and that Reciprocal Trade agreements are not undermined. What the
average citizen can do according to the
speaker is to be inteUigent in the choke
of. representatives in Congress, keep
in touch with their voting records and
let th~m hear from us with inteJJigent
criticism.
.'
Interesting sidelights from Mrs'l
Baldwin's extensive participation in
hearings and conferences were followed ==
by' questions from the audience of
more than 100 legislative-minded women =
A short talk by Mrs. WilJiam R. Tal~ =
bot superintendent of the Babies' Hos-I:;
pital of Philadelphia and a moving pic- 5i
ture "William Penn's Challenge" pre- Ii
ceded the main speaker. Mrs. Talbot
rep,resents one of the 141 agencies supported by the United Campaign and
listed disease, despair, and defeatism
as the enemies whic:;h must be met and
conquered on the home front.
Request Procram Next Week
Next week's program wiJl feature by
pOpUlar request a review of Margaret
Leech's "ReveiJIe in Washington'! by
..
Mrs. Peter E. Told. This review was
given for the members of the literatme
I.
sectio~ee-·w:ccD~ap.Uaci~w.,· CQIl
r'DE'E.'
r '"
ALL" N·E X'T
. WEE K!
~~a:~~~ro~o t~~t~:r~r~~~~n~n~a~~~~~ =
~
If a bank is to be profltable-and thus
!
I
FA SH ION CO RN ER
;~.:;::. ;:r :::::: OV«dU,:
Women at Club
e
'
I_
_~
A F,-_l1
Package
un
of LUX with
E very
Purchase of
HOSIERY
69
C
or over
.Ita,
Ask tile £US E:cperl
stoekina. to wear .he• • _ _
and
to care for them
Miss Mason wiJI be here all
'"*'
next week to give y~u washing tips that win help you get
longer wear from stockings
•.• she'll present a regularsized box of Lux with stockiogs at (l)c or higher (only
one'box to a c:aatomer).:
a
_
~
==
__~i
• How
cut
~
_
• Why should stoekings be LUXED
nightly?
• How can ] tell
what size I need?
A.1e oar ho.iery
eJtpert lor the
an8lW!r
;;;
==
_
can I
down runs?
We
addae
lukewarm
§
~,
~
=:
a'
1=
I
j
:
§
I
="'ji
Lax
. .ds
for
hosiery
"
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
6
.~B~
PANEL REVIEWS
RESPONSIBILITY
Hay Heads Lively Parent-PupilTeacher Home and School
Discussion
Tuesday night members of the Home
and School Association heard parents'
idcas about responsibility and how it
could be developed in childrcn.
The program was under the direction
of the Guidance Committce, Edward
N. Hay chairman. This is in accordancc with thc practice of Presidcnt
Rohert E. Spiller to have the Association an active working hody instead
of just a listening one.
In the brief business meeting preceding the program the treasurer reportcd a healthy balance although the
membership is still lower than last
year. Dr. Spiller announccd the subjccts for thc next two mcctings, one on
curriculum and onc on nutrition and
health under thc leadership of the grade
groups.
The panel assembled by Mr. Hay was
representative of the entire school system. The teachers who served were
~Iyrtlc McCallin, grade school; Eugene
Udell, junior high school; Claudia Hancock, senior high school. There were
four parents besides Mr. Hay, Pemberton Dickson, Mrs. George M. Karns,
Mrs. D. Malcolm Hodgc and Dr.
George B. Sickel. Two ninth graders
Frank Davis and John Call1l)bell and
two twelfth graders, Betty Landoll and
SALE ENDS JANUARY 31st
EDWARD'S Children's Shoes
10% Off
Ladies' ENNA JETfICKS, $3.95
Regularly $S to $6
FLORSHEIl\1 Men's Shoes, $8.95
Regularly $10. $11
BUDGET SHOE
212 W. State Street
MEDIA
X-Ray Fitting - 'Phone Media 990
r-------------------__~I
Husbands!
Thrill
Your
Valentine Anew!
By having her engagement ring
modernly remounted und her
wedding ring recur.
Amy Jane Davidson, completcd the
panel.
Sevcral of the points hrought Ollt hy
thc panel on the development of responsibilities arc: first, thc child must
he given as com pi etc an understanding
as possible of the whole framework of
the prohlem. Thc reason and necessity
for his assuming the reSI)Onsibility must
he clear to him. This brought up the
question of allowanccs and payments.
The panel did not agrec on what should
he donc.
Second, the individual child as well
as his capabilities and age should he
considered, for therc should be some
lIIeasure of success possible. Parents
and teachers hoth agrecd that a boost
hal' was of supreme importance.
Parents in the audicncc and on the
panel admitted that thc third point,
allowing thc child to suffer thc consequences of his own lack of responsihililies was desirable. But they also •• greed
that they found this most difficult to
do. The children sitting on the panel
thought this type of punishment natural and perhaps the solution.
The panel talked around the rcason
why OIlC should fulfill his responsibilities. A member of the audience
pointed out that the only reason was
the inncr satisfaction gained by the'
knowledge of a task well done. Rewards, praise or punishments were all
a means of coupling for the child the
relation of the accomplishment and this
satisfaction.
All agreed that although the child
is not "born with it" responsibility
could be developed.
The audience and the panel continued
the discussion in thc music room where
the mothers of both second grades
servcd coffec and sandwiches.
•••
Jeff Kirk on New York Track
Jeffrey Kirk of South Chester road
will reprcsen t M crccrsburg Academy
by running in the 1\lelrose Athletic
Association Meet ill l\ladisoll SIJuare
Garden, New York City on February
7. Jeff will also run on the 13th in
Convention Hall, Philadclphia.
The Beautiful New
1942
WALL PAPERS
ARE HERE
Come in and See til em !
We
Have
BLACKOUT
A fine selection of 14K gold
mountings on displuy at a price
to suit your purse.
PAINT, PAPER AND
SHADES
•
•
Wiltshire Bros.
Ace Wallpaper
& Paint Co.
100 E. State Street
MEDIA
Telephone 2239
511 Ed~ont Avenue
CHESTER, PA.
Telephone Chester 6859
SWARTBMOREAN
JANUARY 30, 194-2
College Offers Plan to Women
with ~Irs. Charll's BuntiuJ.{ a 1111 Mr);.
n('orJ.{l· ~1. Karns prcsidiuJ.{ at the tl'a
tahle.
Pro\'ided cnough qualificd peoplc arc - - _ . _ - - - - - - - - - - - - intcn'sted, courses in Enginccring,
1\[ athematics and Drawing, Radio EnV ALENTINES SPICE LIFE
ginecring, Physics and Chemistry will
be offered hy Swarthmore College as
We've GREETINGS., romantic,
a part oi the Defense Training Progr:nll undcr the Fcdcral Office of Edujolly, tender • they're perfect
cation. Sincc immediate ('mployment is
for your friends
desirahle upon completion of the course,
only Seniors in College or students not
or if it's a GIFT you're wanting.
planning to return aftcr the second
semester arc allowed to enroll. Therewe've timely, gay ones to suggest
fore, the rcgistrants must he composed
primarily of persons not attcnding
school at the present time. The Courses
will meet twicc a week for thrcc hours
alice barber GIFTS
at each mecting. Thcrc is no charge;
OLD BANK BUILDING
and the only ('xpense will hc for personal equipment. High School graduaSw, 1381
tion is the only basic relJuirement, although sOllie special background is necessary for particular courses. All pcrsons whu qualify arc urged to get in
touch with Nora BO(lth at thc Collegc
STEAKS-CHOPS
as soon as possihle for further particSEAFOOD OU1" Specialty
ulars and for registration.
Within the last few wceks, the
United States Civil Service Commission
has announced an examination for women onh' which will remain open in{kfiniteIY. The need is for Apprentice
Draftsmen who can perform simple
routine
mcchanical :lIId free-hand
drawin~, tracing, lettering and incidental technical work. In addition, thc
GOVl'rlllJlent has ("timah'd a nced for
100,000 Radio Enginel·rs. Therc are
not enough WOIII('n trained in Chemistry and Physics to fill the demands
of industry and defense in laboratorics
alld industrial plants. There are
needs
l'ssential
to
the
prescnt
emergency; and the Federal Officc of
Education is making every cffort to
satisf v these nceds by providing free
instr~ction and training. Anyone who
C:1I1 allow six hours a week for the
purpose of attending one of the Engineering Science ~[anagcll1ent Defcnsc
Training Courscs i, not only providing
herself with a skill which can rcsult
in immediate employment, but is also
contributing to tlw greater efficiency
(.f the national defensc program.
•
Completely Air..Conditioned
Librllry Ass'n
In Yearly Meet
sidered by many who hcard it an outstanding performancc which the wholc
membcrship of the club should havc thc
hencfit of hcaring Mrs. Told will also
present high-lights of other current
literature.
~I rs. Lovett Frescoln and Mrs. Clarence Franck will be hostesses and a
social hour will follow the program
(C''IJ{illl,,·d ITOm I'''ce 0,,1')
"On the whole," said Miss HUllter,
"the above report seems rather gratifying, considering the world at large,
and our chid aim for the futurc is to
con tinue to prove our worth at all
limes to the entire community."
~I rs. Sewell \V. Hodgc, chairman of
thc book committec, announced thc accession during 19·n of 402 adult books,
373 by purchase, 29 by gift; and the
Will Reopen Her Dancing School
subscription to 14 periodicals. Thc latFEBRUARY 2, 1942
ter group is supplcmentcd by thc
Home and School's contribution to thc
Library of 10 subscriptions to bc priSpa"is', Dallcc& ••• Balle' •••
marily for use hy mcmbcrs of that
Sout" Americall Folk Dances
organization but to be circulatcd to the
Ballroom ClauelJ by arrangement
gcncral puhlic, •.iso. Mrs. Hodge rcported that thc Pay Shelf continucd
1M ELM AVENUE
to cnable readers to rcserve new fiction and reminded those present that
TELEPHONE SWARTHMORE 850
all books on its shelf arc duplicates of
those on the frce shclf.
Three exhibits of children's books
werc reported by 1[ rs. Pcter E. Told
chairman of children's books; the
Spring Book Festival Exhibit in May; I
the display which supplcmented the
Childrens Book Tea in November at
which E1izahcth Janet Gray spoke; and
the Christmas exhihit arranged at thc
\Voman's Club later in Novemher.
Froebel Ueelected
Following thc adjournment of thc
January 30-February 7
Annual Meeting board mcmbers met
,
\
with their l1I~wly elected associate, Mrs.
Franklin S. Gillespie, and John F.
Spencer, reelccted, to organize for thc
3 for $4.00
3 for $5.00
2 for $5.00
year 1942. Officers e1ccted werc Mr.
WERE $1.50 '1'0 $3.50
Frocbcl, president; S. S. Ruthcrford,
(No Whites on Special Sale)
\'ice presidcnt; 1\1 rs. Gillespie, secre-I
tary; and Mr. Spcnccr treasurer.
COlllmittee <,ppointments were madc'
I\IEN'S STORE
hy President Froehel as follows: chair9TH & EDGl\IONT AVENUE
CHESTEU
man of Library-Alice Barber; chairman of hooks-~lrs. Hodge; chairman ___ . ___ .________ .. __ . __ .__ .... ______ ._._ .. _ ...___. _ .. _. ____ ._ _ .
of l>ttblicity-M rs. J. Passmore Chey- ~IIJIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIJllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillili1111111111111111111111 II IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!§
ney; chairn~an of prope~ty-M r. Rutherford; chaIrman of c1uldrcns books- ;;
C H EST E R 'S F ASH ION COR N E R
==
)'lrs. Told. By ~orm~1 action thc board ~
~_
instructed the IIbrartan to cnforce thc s
two cents per day fine on overdue
-s=
periodicals.
ALIX FIELD WHITAKER
•
•
MEN'S SHIRTS
$1.39
$1.89
$2.69
ST AINTON -BELLIS CO.
'I
=
I
i _ _
:rs. .
L. W. -V-.-,... "·t-ru-c-ts
Women at Club
(Con/inNed from Po.re
If a bank is to be profitable-and thus
remain strong and sound - its income
must exceed its outgo. Even if all its
funds were available for loans or investments, it still couldn't pay as much
interest as it charges, because rendering
banking service costs money. In actual
fact, sizable sums must be "immobilized"
as reserves. Other sums are invested in
government bonds which pay very little.
Swarthmore National Bank
and Trust Company
Member
01
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
On~)
he morc on the alert during war-time
than ever to notice trcnds and act as
the watch-dogs of the public interest.
She mentioncd the trend toward federalization of Social Security and Unemployment Compensation Agencies.
\Ve must watch also to see that thc
social services aren't cut down in wartimc and that Rcciprocal Trade agrecmcnts arc not undermined. \Vhat the
avcragc citizen can do according to the
speaker is to be intelligent in the choicc
of represcntatives in Congress, keep
in touch with their voting records and
!~~ti~i::::.
hear from us with intelligent
Interesting
sidelights
from
~
;;
i
-
_;
__
2--=
FREE!
!
FREE!
!;;
ALL N EXT WEE }7'
~.
==
E
§
§
§
A Full Package
i_ of LUX with
=
~='
Every
i_
h
f
Purc ase 0
~
§
~
==
~
===
_~
~
~
!
Mrs. ~
Baldwin'sandextcnsive
participation
in ~===_=s
hcarings
conferences
wcrc followcd
hy qucstions from the audience of
morc than 100 legislative-minded womcn
A short talk by Mrs. \Villiam R. Tal: ~
bot supcrintendent of thc Babies' Hos-I ~
pita I of Philadelphia and a moving pic- ~
ture "William Pcnn's Challcnge" pre- ccdcd the main speaker. Mrs. Talbot
reprcscnts onc of the 141 agcncies supported hy thc United Campaign and I listcd diseasc, dcspair, and defeatism
as thc enemies which must be met and
conquered on the home front.
Request Program Next Week
I
Ncxt week's program will fcaturc by
popular requcst a review of Margaret
Leech's "Revcillc in \Vashington" by
Mrs. Peter E. Told. This review was given for thc mcmbers of thc literature
• :,~o:'l ::,','s? I
HOSIERY
69
cut
~
• Why should stock-
~
ings be
C
ni~htly?
or over
•
Ask t"e Lux Expert what
stockings to wear when. • •
and how to ~are for them
~I iss Mason will bc hcrc all
next week to givc you wash.
ing tips that will help you gct
longer wear from stockings
• . • she'll prcsent a rcgularsized box of Lux with stockings at 69c or higher (only
one box to a customer).
s
LUXED==~
How can I tell
what size I nced?
,18k our hosiery
exper' lor the
======_======
§==_
anSI()pr
I
We
advise
lukewarm
Lux
suds
for
hosiery
=
_
~=_
5:
-
_=
section three weeks ago and was con-I ;nOOIlWllDnmIDllDIDIUODIIDlUlIIlIIlDnllllllllllllllllllll!llIlIlIlIllIllIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlUlllllllllllllllilllllll1I1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111Uiia
The Swarthmorean, 1942-01
First published as The Swarthmorean in 1929, this newspaper continues to the present day.
1942-01
digitized microfilm
Film P398-P427
Digitization funding supplied by the Swarthmore Historical Society
1942 JANUARY.pdf