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, '.
In
.
~-
-..... _.
THE
wu
10•••
PA., JANUARY
COIJ,EGE BRINGS
MET. OPERA STAR
Navy League Mans
Local Headquarters
SINGS HERE TONIGHT
SEN. WELDON B. HEYBURN
.
.
RU8ign.Born BaaIlO Will Feature
FOUR· FII.E FOR
UBRARY .BOARD .
Prominent OdzeJllI on BaDot for
Two Vaamcles to he FIned .
Late In Month
Mozart, Brahms and Native
Folk So. Toulght
The Navy 'T •• _ •• Service will offi.
Four Swartlttuore resideot. haveagreed
Thi. e......ng. Friday. at 8.15 under. the
-~
t tand for eI_'on by _._L. __ of the
'~P
cially open its Swarthmore Branch Head0 s
.............
quarters. Friday. Janua.ry 8 in the Old'
Swarthmore Public Library Association
auspices of the William J. Cooper Founto the two vacancies to be filled on the
dation and the music department of
college Alexander Ki.pnil. basso .of
Bank Building. Headquarters will be
Library Board. Mr•. Sewell W. H .... w • .
II
open betweeo the hours of 10 A.M. and
......
Metropolitan opera WI give a
4 P.M. from Monday through Saturday.
and Guenther E. Froebel present inoum.
·taU in C1othi.r Memo~.
Women interested' in either paid or
bents are standing for reeJec:iion. Mrs.
Called "one of the real ma.ters.ingers
Henry I Hoot and Dr Charl- B Shaw
volunteer war work may call here for
- . com .
of th. tw entieth century," as' a youth in
com I te• the u'cket •hich -"ects
any information concerning the many
pew
rcu
and varied activities of the -"Nells."
munity-wide interest in the growing opRuSsia Mr. Kipnis sang coloratura 50· prano ati.. at musical ga!herings .but
eration of the Library. ru~on will
"now has one of the lowest pitched VOICes
In view of the crying need for women
take place SaturdaY. January 23 during
in the entire worM.
war workers' to replace men who have
Library hours and Monday. January 2S
He studied singing and conducting in
gone into the service this new. suburban
from 2 Wltil 5:30 P.M. and 7 wtil 8
' Warsaw and Berlin and came to Amerheadquarter. will undertake to interview
P.M. when the annual meeting will he
· ita with a ''Wag...rian· festival .company
and register women for.the various voca·
called to order.
after touring the continent for many
tional schools where pre-employment
Mrs. H -'_ was a founder of the
A1esander Kipnu, Rus8ian·Ame....
I
ta
f
traJ°"
•
•
•
UUAIIi:"
Year..
.
IS gtven m
Public Library in 1939 and has served
.
f thi
. - I.... · Star of Metropolitan Opera to supp
h emeo • ry free '11ingDing
machin
drill
H. bas become a citizen 0
• coun~,
L
t e operating a nu
es.
Delaware County Iqiolator who
continually on its board since that time
and upon his debut with the Metropolitan perform In Clothier Memoria
presses. power saving machiiles and weld·
aaoumed hla duties a. Majority as secretary and as chairman of. adult
Opera Company two years ago was ac·
ing apparatus. Still oth.r courses open
Leader of the Slate Senate Tueoda,..
hooks.
.
claimed th. most notable acqui.ition of
are radio inspection, army signal corps.
She heads the work of the Red Cross
drafting. ship' fitting. blu.print reading.
in Swarthmore.
the season. Among his singing roles
been leads in "The Marriage of Figaro.
detailing and tracing. If any preliminary
Mr. FroebeJ has served the Library
"Lohengrin," "Die Mei.tersinger." and
training has already been had, anyone
J:{4~~~14I)I~ Board as its president for the put five'
·~Fidelio.· He recently appeared in con·
.
registering will be referred to either the
& ~
years. In hi. first year on the board he
certs with Arturo' Toscanini in Buenos IS,,,,",riee Branch Takes Over Fash· U. S. Employment Service. !he NavY
was chairman of properties. Mr. FroebeJ
Aires. and has made recordings for Vic·
iOlwble Girle' School
Yard, or the Civil Service Commi.sion.l Ves11ry Annonneell Appolntm_t
on Swarthmore avenue here and
· tor and Columbia.
'.. •
Uni18
Anyone' 18 or over may apply.
Chester Clergyman In
is an executive with Baldwin's as Sales
Accompanied by W. Ro.e. Mr. KipniS
older women, with little education
Quick' Action
Manager of Ordnance and General Prodwill present the following program bere
Following purchase of the Mary Lyon do not know jnst what they would
School and Junior College properties on to do. tl1ere is the Trainee A':ce]/Ialnce: I The ~ev. George Christian Anderson
this evening:
Dr. Shaw is the Swarthmore College.
Aria' "In dieson Heiligen Hallen" from Harvard and' Yale avenues last week by Cent~r. whose address will be given upon acting .rector at St. Paul's Church. Ches- Librarian.
He is a founder of·the Phila·
"The Magic Flute," Mozart; Aria: "Ma- the United States Navy; some 80 to 8S inquiry.
ter until January 1 has accepted the elec- delphia Metropolitan Library Council
domina" from "Don Giovanni," Mozart; girl boarding and day students and about
Women interested only in the volun· tion to the rectorship'of Trinity Church. which includes 154 libraries. having served
"0 wiisst ich doth den 'Weg zurlick,"
full-time members of the faculty of teer service, may by joining the "Nell." Swarthmore it was annouriced late Wed. as its president for one and a balf years
USonntag," uFeldeiusamkeit,n "Verrat," the' ,girls' institutions will return frgm assist in any or all of the following activ- nesday night by the vestry- of the local ending last .·October. He is a member
"Vergeblich.. Stlindchen" all by BraIuns; holiday vacations Monday to hurriedly ities: knitting. selling of War Bonds church. Mr.·Anderson will fill the place of the Council of the American Library
Aria: "II
spirito" from "SimDn I pack .their possessi?ns and leave that and Stainps. the Transportation Corps of the Rev. J. Janten Guenther whose Association and vice·president of its As~
Aria:· Finale from evening to finish their term in New York which serves the army and drives con· resignation placed in the hands of the sociation of College and Reference Li.
of "Rosenkavalier," where the schools are' establishing new valescent service men, the Hospital Corps vestry six weeks .ago was accepted at brarians. He i. a past member of the
headquarters. The Navy moved in on for nurses' assistants with
Christnlastime to become effective Janu. Association's College Library Almsory
Mr. Kipnis will Wednesday with the first 30 patients to training. collecting of salvage, jobs
31.
Board as well as its editorial committee.
songs
at this new· convalescent hostesses at the Ofliq:n· Club at
vestry which is responsible'
For five years he has taught a cour..
, " "Solof the Philadelphia Naval Has· Bellewe and Day NlIrse."1 work ... '
quick action is composed of: George in College. Libra,ry Administrati.onin
is,rep'Ortoo'th.t.'!HilI.......
'-:AbYolleruivfug salvage; 'fDctlic!ing-old . "c:u.q sei!ior warden; WlIIliim' B. Drexel University's Graduate School and
of the .schools' dormitories,' across' the' silk twkings, .magazines and books,
jtmior warden, Harry C. Barr for 12 summers be has taught in the D...
; "The street from. the main administration build- playing cards, old furs, may leave them
. Sergeant B. Brewster treasurer, partment of Library Science of the Uni·
i" ·'Death Scene" ing. will be convelied into a nurses' home. here betweeo these hours. Navy League Samuel
Clyde. William L. Cleaves. v~rsity of Michigan's Graduate School•
.Godmmov" by Moussorgsky,
Founded in 1913 by Haldy Miller Crist Service gadgets and War Saving Stamps Guenther H. Froehel. Richard G. Haig,
Mrs. HoOt is a graduate of Swarth· '.,
and his wife Frances Leavitt Crist wl:o and Bonds will also be available here.
W. Minton Harvey. Louis W. King and more College in the class of '18. Sbe ~
died within the past year. the two schools
Mrs; William H. Collins of Walling. J. Burris West.
taught English in the Junior High School :!
Installation of the new redor will he of Ridl~y Park and social studies. bioI· ,
uob'1 th e current tenn were calied The ford is chairman of the work with Mrs.
Mary Lyon School and Wildcliffe Junior W. E. Hetzel of Thayer road as co- made Tuesday evening. February 2, by ogy. and public speaking in the Swarth·
They comprised a total of six chairman.
the Most Rev. Bishop Francis Taitt who more Schools. doing Junior Chautauqua
himself was rector of St. Paul's, Chester work with the former Swarthmore Chau· .
large stone buildings covering donnikEd M,ov,.1 tories, classrooms, studios, study halls,
•
for many years before becoming bishop tauqua ·for. six summers. She is a subCollqe Resumes Wee • n
gymnasium, swimming pool. tennis courts
REPORTED JAPANESE
the diocese. This date will be the .
tOacher in the school. here and
big Pictures With Full
on a high bluff overlooking a rocky.
pmSONER
anniversary of the bishop's own or·
tutor. She has been superintendent of
Program Tomorrow
wooded section of the Cnun Creek
as an EpiScopal rector and it is
junior departmeot of the Methodist
·Mrs.
Mary
Crist
Fleming.
daughter
of
Mrs.
Gitbert
E.
Youmans
of
to note that his first rector· Church School for the past 12 years..
{~Blockade" starring Madeline Carroll and Henry Fonda will be ~e fea- the founders of the school who has been Chester. road received word Saturday that ship was at a church called Trinity. too. She and her husband have five children
whom the eldest Polly is a junior at
ture picture at the college mOVies to- acting as assistant director, will take her son Lt. Joseph MacArthur Youmans. He has known Mr. Anderson since boy.
Oberlin College and the youngest Billy
morrow night Saturday, January 9, at an apartment in Philadelphia with her cavalry, is a prisoner of war of the Jap- hood.
Born in Liverpool. Engl~nd. Mr. Ander· is in the second grade of the local schools.
7 'and 9 o'cl~k, in Clothier Memorial. husband William aud young daughter Gay anese governnuont in the Philippine Is.
for
a
month
or
so
before
rejoining
the
lands.
son
came to this country at the age of
On the same program will be an assortAccording to the articles of incorpora·
school
Qrganiution.
Coincidentally
this
word
was
received
six
and
was educated in the public and tion and the by-law. all residents of the
·ment of Shorts : "Little Hiawatha"t one
It is ,aid the gym. pool and studios one year from the day on which Mrs. private schools of Philadelphia. gradu- borough wbo signed the by·laws on file
.
of "Dfsney's 'fanest
cartoons; "B o,mb er..
will
be used by the-Navy for occupational Youmans bad last heard directly from anng later from the University of Penn- at the Library before December 31. 1942
lJ
and uTanks , two governl1lent· docuwork.
that there are accommodations for her son. At that date she received' his sylvania and the Philadelphia Divinity are eligible to vote.
mentary films j uLaughing Gas",._ a
around
300 men in the donnitory build- letter telling of his escape from
School. After his ordination he estab---<1>---Chaplin short subject and "Les Houslished a new church called St. Anne's at
arm de fa' Garde", a French surrealist ings which are being prepared for iIleir on New Year's Eve and his joining
HEALTH BULLETIN
Army.
Willow Grove.
The movie programs are open new use.
On the last Sunday in January.
For three years he was rector of St.
Because of the recent outbreak of
of the borough ·and other
KITE HEADS INSURANCE CO. Arthur
Van
Landigham,
author
of
Gile's,
Upper
Darby.
resigning
that
post
Smallpox.
aU individuals who have not
college.
.
.',,··,B1.ocl",le" is acclaimed Hollywood's
W. Stanley Kite was named president Saw Manila Di.... laId Lt. ~:::~ II ~~sd1tu~dy at Oxford University. England. been vaccinated within five years should
in England he was assistant rector be revaccinated. Infants -who are "three
important film to date to be based and director of the Manufacturers' Cas- wife, who with their year-old son
in
South
Orange,
N.J
.•
that
he
had
St.
Michael's at the North Gat.. the months or over
safely be done.
Span~h War, "For Whom the ualty Insurance Company at a meeting
to
Lt.
Youmans
on
Bataan.
In
historic
church
of
Oxford,
and
Because
the
communicable
diseases
Tolls" having not yet heen released. held in Philadelphia late in December.
Mrs.
Youmans
received
official
word
master
of
religious
education
at
will
probably
be
prevalent
this
y ....r. it
story by John Howard Lawson For the- past two years Mr. Kite ,has
the
government
that
her
son
was
Dragon
School.
one
of
England's
famous
felt
advisable
to
call
attention
to the
by Kurt .Weill. it was pro·
vice-president of the Ohio Cas.
for boys.
ru!,,~ ofthe Borongh of Swarthmore:Walter Wanger and directed
Insur.ance Company and had missing.
Another son. Lt. Edgar E. Youmans.
Returning to the United States a few
"All children under school age and
Dieterle. Although this 1938
of its' eastern department. For
is
serving
with
the
U.S.
Army
abroad.
before
the
outhreak
of
war
in
1939
persons attending. any public, ·pri.
':Ci~~,~l tepid in its denunciation of
before that he was Philadel.
was assistant rector at St. Paul's when
parochia1, or other school or edu~
at its time it: ·took courage to
manager o£ the Hartford Accident
the Rev. Stanley V. Wilcox's leaving
ins.titution, who live in any
it. Actually the Loyalists' and and Indemnity Company. He is· a past
In
Mriea
for
the
Army
made
him
acting
rector.
household
where there are persons _ sufFascists' leaders are not named. but
of the Casualty Underwriters'
Mr.
Anderson
is
vice·president
of
the
feringfron:
Measles or ,WhoOpjOg
light of recent occurrences it
and the Surety UnderwritMr. and Mrs. R. Chester Spencer of Delaware County Welfare Council. pres- Cough. and who have not had these
little guessing to tell who repre· ers'
of Philadelphia. and Swarthmore avenue received a letter durwho in the picture; Based on the
of the Insurance .Society ing -the holidays from their son Lt. Rob- ideot of the Board of Visitation, chair- diseases. shall be quarantined as fol·
of the House of Deteotion Com- lows:
raids on Madrid and the siege of the of
in 1937 and '38.
ert C Spencer. Jr. who is in the northern
and a member of the County
Meas.... - For a ,period of It dqa
country, the film yet places the
Mr. Kite resides with his wife and part of Africa with the Photo Recon·
'ph,.. is to a large degree on the war
Court
Citizens' Juvenile Advisory be_a the 7th uuI 17th dq'.v. the lines rather than at the two daughters on Ogden avenue here. naissance Squadron.
Council. During his rectorship at Upper _
...... to such disease. (Placard shall
The love story wliich is the core
Darby he was president of the Town· be posted.)
.
the
is conventional and meloship Family Association and an honorary
WhOOpmll Co"llh - For a period of
Henry Fonda plays a young
member of the Upper Darby Rotary. He 14 cia,.. between the 7th IUld Zlot diy
and Miss Carroll a spy.
is a bachelor.
after exposure to snth disease. (Placard
Saturday evening of next week
I
.
shall be POSted.)
Office: BOI'O"IIh Hall - Telop....... USI
Lt. Robert B. Little of Park avenue is
No restrictions are imposed on hOllS..
R.ls.lian fUm "We Are from KronOpen Weekda7s 1:31.3.,. Dally
a .tory of the attaci on the
now statiOlled at Camp Tanforan, San hold contacts of. ~tJDaD Measles.
*,'..s defending Leningrad, will be
•
Bruno. Cal.
Ghicken pox, or MuIi>PJ. (No placard
On Monday. January 11. a meeting of chairmen of Air Wardens, Police, Fire,' ....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - ; l s h a U be posted)
Transportation Services will be held in the Defense Council otlice from
Will Take Old ChrlsbDa8
(Signed) J. Albright Jones, M.D.•
7
to
8
P.M.
Carda
'
Borough Health Officer.
Mrs. Slron.J In AUBtralia
, . A meeting of Senior Post Wardens will be held in Borough Hall on T . - I a y · .
I
The many local friends of Mrs. Paul evening, January 12 at 8 P.Y.
As for many years past The
C-ab'tt From Gvd"'_gJ
T.·Strong will be happy. to leam she
.' TIn c.. Sahqe
S~ office will receive
.
has amved safely in Australia. accord· , Tin cans to be properly PrePared shonld be thoroughly washed, have paper wrap.
.discarded Christmas card. which
Mr. and Mn. J. PaulBro_ of Wal·
irig to a wire from the Red Cross ping removed, top and bottomdlt out and pot inside the cylindets and then Oatare periodically collected and used
lane received a cable ... Tues4ay
received by her sister, Mn. John D. tcned by stepping on·.cyIWcfet: ·Such prepared cans .can he left in container at Co-op
for work amiJug shut-ina and contheir ..... Tun who is in active __
YcCramm of Riverview road. on Sun~ or in case of larger q\I&Iltities can be .deposited in rear of Co-op, the ~:af
vaI~. .
"'tha=~
I
NAVY P A'I'IEN1'S
BROUGHT HERE
¥
And
N
d
erson arne
T..;....;ty
I
:'.·on<'
FONDA FILM AND
VARIETY
can
I
* Defense Council Bulletins *
•
~.
which is ... R . a i I r o a i l . a f t m J e . . ' , ; -
.:.,:e.....s:;;:
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
..
,:
,
'
'
I
-
.. .
In
s,,·(;OI,L1o:G¥
ARTB,\fOJtZ
\1M) ,. Ui43
,"
f; •
f.
.
LlBRABY
THE SWARTHMORE
WIR
10lDS
xv, No.1
COI,J,EGE BRINGS
MET. OPERA STAR
VOL.
'2.50 PER YIWl
SWARTHMORE, PA., JANUARY 8, 1943
SINGS HERE TONIGHT
Navy League Mans,
Local Headquarters
I
SEN. WEWON B. HEYBURN
Prominent Citizens on Ballot for
Two Vacancie8 to be Filled
Late in Month
Local "Nell8" Trained to Direct
Women to Snilable
War Indnstry
RUBsian.Born BaS80 Will Feature
Mozart, Brahms and Native
Folk Songs Tonight
FOUR FILE FOR
LIBRARY BOARD
Four Swarthmore residents have agreed
The N a "Y League Service will offiThis evening, Friday, at 8.15 under the
to
stand for election by members of the
cially open its Swarthmore Branch Headauspices of the William J. Cooper FounSwarthmore
Public Library AssClciation
quarters, Friday, January 8 in the Old
dation and the music department of the
to
th'e
two
vacancies
to be filled on the
Bank Building. HeadqUarters will be
college Alexander K!pni~ basso of ~e
Library
Board.
Mrs.
Sewell W. Hodge
open between the hours of 10 A.M. and
Metropolitan opera wdl.gJve a free.rei:land
Guenther
E.
Froebel
present incum4 P.M. from Monday through Saturday.
tail in Clothier Memon~l.
bents
are
standing
for
reelection.
Mrs.
Women interested in either paid or
Called "one of the real mastersingers
I.
Hoot
and
Dr.
Charles
B.
Shaw
Henry
volunteer war work may call here for
of the twentieth century," as a youth in
complete the ticket which reflects comany information concerning the many
Russia Mr. Kipnis sang coloratura somunity-wide interest in the growing opand varied activities of the IiNeUs."
prano arias at musical gatherings but
eration of the Library. Election will
In view of the crying need for women
. now has one of the lowest pitched voices
take place Saturday, January 23 during
war workers to replace men who have
in the entire world.
Library hours and Monday, January 25
gone into the service this new suburban
He studied singing and conducting in
from 2 until 5 :30 P.M. and 1 until 8
headquarters will undertake to interview
Warsaw and Berlin and came to AmerP.M. when the annual meeting will be
and register women for. the various vocaica with a Wagnerian' festival company
called to order.
tional schools where pre-employment
after touring the continent for many
Mrs. Hodge was a founder of the
Alexander Kipnis, RU88ian-Amer- supplementary free training" is given in
years.
.
Public
Library in 1939 and has served
Star of Metropolitan Opera to the operating of milling machines, drill
He has become a citizen of this COWltry iean
continually
on its board since that time
~
.
Cl
thO
M
•
I
1
Delaware
County
legislator
who
__m
___o__te_r_ _
em_o_r_'8_"___ 1 presses, power saving machines and we dand upon his debut with the Metropolitan _::p_e_,,_o_rm
as secretary and as chainnan of adult
assumed
his
duties
8S Majority
ing apparatus. Still other courses open
Opera Company two years ago was ac.
books.
are radio inspection, army signal corps, 1_..:I:.,:.:":.:d:.e:.:r_o:.'::...:.th...:.e_S:.:ta_te_S_e_n_8_t_e_T_u_e_sd_8.:.Y_"_
claimed the most notable acquisition of
She heads the work of the Red Cross
drafting, ship - fitting, blueprint reading,
the season. Among his singing roles have
in Swarthmore.
detailing and tracing. If any preliminary
been leads in "The Marriage of Figaro,"
Mr. Froebel has served the Library
training has already been had. anyone
uLohengrin,u "Die Meistersinger/, and
Board as its president for the past five
registering will be referred to either the
"Fidelio." He recently appeared 10 conyears. In his first year on the board he
certs with Arturo Toscanini in Buenos Service Branch Take8 Over Fash· U. S. Employment Service, the Navy
\. . -a5 chainnan of properties. Mr. Froebel
Yard, or the Civil Service Commission. Vestry Announces Appointment lives on Swarthmore avenue here and
ionable Girl.' School
Aires, and has made recordings for VicAnyone 18 or over may apply. For
tor and Colmnbia.
Uni'"
is an executive with Baldwin's as Sales
of Chester Clergyman in
older women, with tittle education who
Accompanied by W. Rose, Mr. Kipnis
Manager of Ordnance and General ProdQniek
Action
will present the following program here
Following purchase of the Mary Lyon do not know just what they would like
ucts.
The Rev. Genrge Christian Anderson
this evening:
School and Junior College properties on to do, there is the Trainee Acceptance
Dr. Shaw is the Swarthmore College
1
Aria! 4 In diesen Heiligen Hallen" from Harvard and Yale avenues last week by Cent~r, whose address will be given upon acting rector at Sl Paul's Church, Ches- Librarian. He is a founder of the Phila·
liThe Magic Flute," Mozart; Aria: uMa_ the United States Navy, some 80 to 85 inquiry.
ter until January 1 has accepted the elec- delphia Metropolitan Library Council
.. damina" from UDon Giovanni," Mozart; girl boarding and day students and about
Women interested only in the volun- tion to the rectorship of Trinity Church. which includes 154 libraries, having served
41 0
wusst ich doch den Weg zuruck," 20 full-time members of the faculty of teer service, may by joining the "Nells" Swarthmore it was announced late Wed- as its president for one and a half years
4 I S onntag,"
uFeldeinsamkeit," "Verrat," the girls' institutions will return from assist in any or all of the following activ- nesday night by the vestry of the local ending last October. He is a member
"Vergebliches Stiindchen" all by Brahms; holiday vacations Monday to hurriedly ities : knitting, selling of War Bonds church. Mr. Anderson will fill the place of the Council of the American Library
Aria: "11 lacerato spirito" from "Simon pack thl'ir possessions and leave that and Stamps, the Transportation Corps of the Rev. J. }aIden Guenther whose Association and vice-president of its AsBoccanegra" Verdi; Aria: Finale from evening to finish their term in New York which serves the army and drives con.. resignation placed in the hands of the sociation of College and Reference Lithe Second. Act of "Rosenkavalier," where the schools are establishing new valescent service men, the Hospital Corps vestry six weeks ago was accepted at brarians. He is a past member of the
Strauss. . .
'11 headquarters. The Navy moved in on for nurses' assistants with no preliminary Christmas time to become effective Janu- Association's College Library Acmsory
. '_ . .After an intermission Mr. Kipnis WI Wednesday with the first 30 patients to training, collecting of salvage, jobs as ary 31.'
Board as well as its editorial committee.
sing:a group of Russian folk songs - be quartered at this new convalescent hostesses at the Officprs' Club at the
The 'vestry which is responsible for For five years he has taught a course
";RainbOw" :'l'fhe Ring:~ "Night," "501- branch of the Philadelphia Naval Hos- Bellevue and Day Nursery work.
this quick action is composed of: George in College Library Administratio~ in
.,-""'". ~di~r'.s Su~g"; and the foIlQwi.ng;-II~he pital. It is ,reported that uHiIlcrest," ont'
Any one- havi~g salvage, iltcIuding -old w .. ca!l~y senior warden, William B. Drexel University's Gradnate School and
, ,":Pilgrim" by TsChai~wsky; "As the;:
from "Boris GodOWlOV" by Moussorgsky.
Founded in 1913 by Haldy Miller Crist Service gadgets and War Saving Stamps Guenther H. Froebel, Richard G. Haig,
Mrs. Hoot is a graduate of Swarth- .
.
W. Minton Harvey, Louis \V. King and more College in the class of '18. She t"
and his wife Frances Leavitt Crist who and Bonds will also be available here.
died within the past year, the two schools
taught English in the Jonior High School
Mrs. William H. Collins of Walling- J. Burris West.
Installation of the new rector will be of Ridley Park and social studies, bioluntil the current term were called The ford is chairman of the work with Mrs.
Mary Lyon School and Wildcliffe Junior W. E. Hetzel of Thayer road as co- made Tuesday evening, February 2, by ogy, and public speaking in the Swarth·
the Most Rev. Bishop Francis Taitt who more Schools, doing Junior Chautauqua
College. They comprised a total of six chairman.
himself was rector of St. Paul's, Chester work with the former Swarthmore Chaularge stone buildings covering donnifor many years before becoming bishop tauqua for six summers. She is a subtories. classrooms, studios, study halls,
College Re8umes Week·End Mov· gymnasium, swimming pool, tennis courts
of the diocese. This date will be the stitute teacher in the schools here and
REPORTED JAPANESE
ing Pietures With Full
60th anniversary of the bishop's own or- a tutor. She has been superintendent of
on a high bluff overlooking a rocky,
PRISONER
Program Tomorrow
dination as an Epi.scopal rector and it is the junior department of the Methodist
wooded section of the Crwn Creek.
Mrs. Gilbert E. Youmans of North interesting to note that his first rector- Church School for the past 12 years.
Mrs. Mary Crist Fleming, daughter of
"Blockade" starring Madeline Car- the founders of the school who has been Chester road received word Saturday that ship was at a church called Trinity, too. She and her husband have five children
roll and Henry Fonda will be t~e fea- acting as assistant director, will take her son Lt. Joseph MacArthur Youmans, He has known Mr. Anderson since boyof whom the eldest Polty is a junior at
ture picture at the college mOVIes to- an apartment in Philadelphia with her cavalry, is a prisoner of war of the Jap- hood.
Oberlin College and the youngest Billy
morrow night, Saturday, .January 9,. at husband William and young daughter Gay anese government in the Philippine IsBorn in Liverpool, Engla.nd, Mr. Ander- is in the second grade of the local schools.
7 and 9 o'clock in Clothier Memonal. for a month or so before rej aining the
son came to this country at the age of
lands.
According to the articles of incorporaOn the same program will be an assortr school Qrganization.
Coincidentally this word was received six and was educated in the public and tion and the by-laws all residents of the
ment of shorts: "Little Hiawatha", one
It is said the gym, pool and studios one year from the day on which Mrs. private schools of Philadelphia. gradu- borough who signed the by·laws on file
.
of -Disney's fmest
cartoons; "B om be r" will be used by the Navy for occupational
Youmans had last heard directly from ating later from the University of Pennand "Tanks", two governm.ent docu- work, that there are accommodations for her son. At that date she received his sylvania and the Philadelphia Divinity at the Library before December 31, 1942
are eligible to vote.
mentary films; "Laughing Gas", _ a
~---<.--around 300 men in the donnitory build- letter telling of his escape from Manila School. After his ordination he estabChaplin short subject and "Les Ho~s
lished a new church called St. Anne's at
ings
which
are
being
prepared
for
their
on
New
Year's
Eve
and
his
joining
the
HEALTH
BULLETIN
ards de la -Garde", a French surreahst
Willow Grove.
new
use.
Army.
cartoon. The l1lovie programs are open
For three years he was rector of St_
Because of the recent outbreak of
On the last Sunday in January, 1942
to residents of the borough 'and other KITE HEADS INSURANCE CO.
GHe's, Upper Darby, resigning that post Smallpox, all individuals who have not
Arthur
Van
Landigham,
author
of
HI
friends of the college.
Saw Manila Die," told Lt. Youman's to study at Oxford University, England. been vaccinated within five years should
uBlockade" is acclaimed Hollywood's
W. Stanley Kite was named president wife, who with their year-old son lives While in England he was assistant rector be revaccinated. Infants who are three
only important film to date to be based and director of the Manufacturers' Cas.. on the Spani~h War, "For Whom the ualty Insurance Company at a meeting in South Orange, N.J., that he had talked of St. Michael's at the North Gate, the months or over can safely be done.
Because the communicable diseases.
-Bell Tolls" having not yet been released. held in Philadelphia late in December. to Lt. Youmans on Bataan. In April ancient historic church of Oxford, and
also
master
of
religious
education
at
will
probably be prevalent this year, it
Mrs.
Youmans
received
official
word
from
. With story by John Howard Lawson For the past two years Mr. Kite. h~
Dragon
School,
one
of
England's
famous
is
felt
advisable to call attention to the
and music by Kurt Weill, it was pro- been vice~president of the Ohio Cas- the government that her son was reported
schools
for
boys.
rules
of
the Borough of Swarthmore:.duced by Walter Wanger and di.rected ualty Insurance Company and had missing.
Returning
to
the
United
States
a
few
UAII
children
under school age and
Lt.
Edgar
E.
Youmans,
Another son,
by William Dieterle. Although th,s 1938 charge of its eastern department. For
days
before
the
outbreak
of
war
in
1939
all
persons
attending
any public, prithe
U.
S.
Army
abroad.
is
serving
with
film seems tepid in its denunciation of 18 years before that he was Philadelhe
was
assistant
rector
at
St.
Paul's
when
vate,
parochial,
or
other
school or eduFascists, at its time it took courage to phia manager of the Hartford Accident
the
Rev.
Stanley
V.
Wilcox's
leaving
cational
institution,
who
live in any
produce it. Actually the Loyalists' and and Indemnity Company. He is a past
In
Africa
for
the
Army
made
him
acting
rector.
household
where
there
are
persons
suf". tlie Fascists' leaders are not named, but president of the Casualty Underwriters'
Mr. Anderson is vice-president of the fering from Measles or Whooping
,-/-iii'; the light of recent occurrences it
Mr. and Mrs. R. Chester Spencer of Delaware County Welfare Council, pres- Cough, and who have not had these
Association and the Surety Underwrit~ !likes little guessing to tell who repreers' Association of Philadelphia, and Swarthmore avenue received a letter dur- ident of the Board of Visitation, chair- diseases, shall be quarantined as fol. s~ts who in the picture. Ba~ed on the was president of the In3urance Society ing the holidays from their son Lt. Robman of the House of Detention Com~ lows:
raids on Madnd and the siege of the of Philadelphia in 1937 and '38.
ert C. Spencer, Jr. who is in the northern mittee, and a member of the County
Meule. - For a period of 18 da)'O
Basque country, the film yet places the
Mr. Kite resides with his wife and part of Africa with the Photo Recon- Court Special Citizens' Juvenile Advisory between the 7th and 17th day after
e(@.phasis to a large degree on the war
two daughters on Ogden avenue here. naissance Squadron.
Council. During his .rectorship at Upper exposure to such disease. (Placard shan
, ; l>-ehind the lines rather than at the
Darby he was president of the Town- be posted.)
:t.~- front. The love stOry wllich is the core
ship Family Association and an honorary
Whooping Cough - For a period of
0( the picture is conventional and melomember of the Upper Darby Rotary. He 14 dayo between the 7th and 2ht diiy
dramatic. Henry Fonda plays a young
is a bachelor.
after exposure to such disease. (Placard
_- t@.triot and Miss Carroll a spy.
----<.>---shall be posted.)
I'.'
.; pn Saturday evening of next week
Office: Borough Hall-Telephone 8351
Lt.
Robert
B.
Little
of
Park
avenue
is
No restrictions are impos2d on ho'llSCthe Russian film "We Are from Kron~
Open Weekdaya 1:30·3:30 Daily
now
stationed
at
Camp
Tanforan,
San
hold
contc..cts of German Measles,
~ta:-dt", a story of the attacK on the
Cal.
€hicken
pox, or Mumps. (No placard
Bruno,
foitress defending Leningrad, will be
:--------------~Ishall
be
posted.)
On
Monday,
January
11,
a
meeting
of
chairmen
of
Air
Wardens,
Police,
Fire,
·sh~wn.
(Signed) J. Albright Jones, M.D.
Medical Transportation Services will be held in the Defense Council office from
Will Take Old Christmas
Borough Health Officer.
i
to
8
P.M.
Carda
Mrs. Stro~ in AUBtralia
, A meeting 01 Senior Post Wardens will be held in Borough Hall on Tuesday
•
Cables From Guadalean a1
evening,
January
12
at
8
P.M.
I
As
for
many
years past. The
i
The many local friends of Mrs. Paul
Tin Can Salvap
I
Swarthmorea.n office will receive
T. Strong will be happy to learn she
Mr. and Mrs. J. Paul Brown of WalTin cans to be properly prepared should be thoroughly washed. have paper wntPdiscarded Christmas cards which
has arrived safely in Australia, accord~
nut
lane received a cable on Tuesday
are periodically collected and used
ing to a wire from the Red Cross ping removed. top and bottom cot out and pot inside the cylinders and then ftatfrom
their son Jim who is in active serfor work among shut-ins and con.
received by her sister, Mrs. John D. tcned by stepping on cylinder. Such prepared cans can be left in container at Co-op
vice
on GuadalcanaI in the Solomon
valescents.
McCrumm of Riverview road, on Sun- Or in case of larger quantities can be deposited in rear of Co-op, the entrance of
which is on Railroad, avenue.
..
Islands that he is "safe, sound and happy."
I
NAVY PATIENTS
BROUGHT HERE
Anderson Named
Trinity Rector
ma"
FONDA FILM AND
VARIETY SHORTS
•
air
* Defense Council Bulletins *
I"
•
J
•
,1'-______________
day.
,
.
•
'II'BE
8'W'ARTRMOBSAft
:', _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy J. McCorkle of
Cornell avenue entertained Mr. and Mrs.
Calvin Sutherlin of New 'Haven. Conn.
_ _.::-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ as their New Year guests.
Mr. arid Mrs. Edward Whitecar. Sr.
'., Swarthmore avenue and Cresson lane
, ": celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary on Christmas Day. The Whitecars have spent 40 years of their married life in Swarthmore. Mr. Whitecar
is employed at the college. Their son
,Edward. Jr. of Dartmouth and P rinceton avenues, served in World War 1
and recently left the posit;on of assist·
. ant postmaster here to become a lieut.nant with the current United St,ates
Army.'
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd B. Nickerson of
Girard avenue entertained at dinner last
Sunday in honor of the 50th wedding an·
they lunched in New York with the HerMr. and Mrs. McCorkle entertained at
bert B. Sanford•• former residents of a tea on New Year', afternoon in honor
Dickinson avenue.
of Mrs. McCorkle's father the Rev. Ed.
Bill Piper, a senior at Pennsylvania
B
II f F . fi Id 1
h
State College. has been initiated into ward H. onsa
alMr eCo• kOI,:,a w 0
Sigma Gamma Epsilon honorary mining has been visiting the .ccl rdedesf over
engineering society and Panni Nous hon· the holidays. The goefsts 10 ul
ed° rmer
"
H
'
be
students
at
Camp
Con
erenee.
ocat
near
orary a thl eI,c SOCIety.
e IS a mem r State College which had been under Rev.
of the varsity lacrosse team, .of Delta Bonsall's direction each sununer from
Upsilon, and has enlisted in the Marine 1922 until last year when he accepted a
Corps Reserve.
.
It,.ching position at Parsons College, Iowa.
M rs. Samue I G. Trepp had as her
Marianne Neisser. formerly of Rut·
guests at the afternoon performance at gers . avenue, has been spending the
the Players Club last Saturday Mrs. Christmas holidays of Oberlin College,
Harold Shankland and son Ronnie of Oberlin, Ohio where she is a freshman,
Lansdowne. Mr. Shankland joined' his with hcr parents Dr. and Mrs. Hans P.
of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kenney Mrs. Walter R~d;;;;'~' ShOemaker""f
Crothers of Media and Ensign Frank Riverview road.
'
William Budke. Jr.• U.S.N.R .•• on of
•
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Budke of CanonsMr. and Mrs. Thomas Bayard McCabe
PERSONALS
°
niversary of Mrs. Nickerson's father and
mother Mr. and Mrs. William J. Brinsfield of Girard avenUe. The guests
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Brinsfield
,family of Girard avenue, Mr. and
Charles E. Black and son Peter of Rutledge, Mr. and Mrs. William G. War·
rington of Gennantown, and Mr. and
Mrs, Lee Wright and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Honeyford, all or Lansdowne.
Phyl Dana of Elm avenue entertained
eight guests at luncheon and bridge on
Wednesday in honor of her house guest
Jane Healey of New Haven, Conn., a
classmate of Phyl's at Smith College.
Mrs. Antonica Fairbanks of Park avenue. entertained at open house on New
Year's Eve to meet her son and daughterin-law Mr. and Mrs. Franklin N. Fairbanks and son Charles of Atlanta, Ga.
,
.
a..
Ensign and Mrs. Dav,'d Shoemaker
CAlL MoW
~re receiving congratulations upon the
RUSSEll.'S SERVICE
birth of an eight-pound daughta. Carol
Evans Shoemaker, in the Chestnut Hill
Hospital on Sunday, January 3. The
_ _ Ycnu Car loUt &lui DaratlollBepl&r Bonlee ww 1)0 It.
FIGHT In
Fuel
INSULATE NOW
•
..
ROCK WOOL/
Home Insulation "Blown In"
Pbila. Suburban Insulation Co.
~
,
SPRINGFlEI.D, PA.
•
Oldest R~k Wool Company in Delaware Co1Jnty
Phone
Swa.
2000
Or Write for
I
Free Estimate on Insulation.
Name .. ,', ... ' ........................ .
Address
.' .... ', . . . . . . . . . . . . . " .... , ... '
,
,
Effingandl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
on,
NEW D U PO N· T'
mQnt~y
,
WALL
FINISH
•
"ICELAND"
I GallQn of this easy-to-use, oconomical
wall finish does the average room
IT'S WASHABLE I
CHURCH SERVICES
,.
JUST THIN WtTH WATER
You don'e need sJ>CCial thinn....
I gallon of Spee
make. up to Iv.. pIlons of ready.
to-nse paind
•
JIM DANDY
CALL Us FOR
RADIO SER,VICE
Director
JOHN DOLMAN. Jr.
•
AND
APPUANCE REPAIR
Washl... "aeblnes
Vacuum. Cleaners -lrolll
Toasters - WaIDe wna
Mh:en-Ete.
RIDLEY PARK SS90
INTERBORO ELECTRIC
APPUANCE SERVICE
19 E. HlnokIe,. Avenue
BlDLBYPAaK
JANUARY
19, 20, 21; 22, 23
8.20 P. M.
T--ra,. -
•
Doable perlo.........,
F""'-Iar
FOI'IlDl, eut and audience,
follom... perl.......,
SUNDAY - MONDAY
TUESDAY
Brian: Donlevy
'Robert P....eston
"WAKE
ISLAND"
----~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~~!;::;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~'!-=-.-
!.
Covers in one coati
MEDIA
Sonja Henie
OLIVER H. BAIR CO.
•
w
The Players Club
•
•
Free Survey
Phila. Snhurban Insnlation Co., Springfield, Po.
Please Give
Prices for Suburban Calls
.........,..aiaeoI .......
PROMPTLY INSTA.LLED
•
rector of
physicalineducation
andwere
athletics
th.re.
Included
the party'
Dr.
and Mri. Luehring., Mr. and Mrs. FI'ed
Almgren (dID father and den mother).
Bill 5?den (den chief), Hyde Alden,
Fred.rttk Almgren, Neal Gallagher, John
Healey. David~n Luehring•. ~obbie Pe·
Donald P,erce, and Dand Almgren.
P.Yt. T •. Saulnier. Jr. left Wednesday
mg'ht to return to Greenville. S.c. after
having spent a three-day furloogh pre.
,to a transferral of station, with
parents on North Princeton avenue.
SUIUIIA. aAFB,
Save Fuel For Victory!
WITH
I
ii
;~a~by~i~S~a~g~ra~n~d~d~a~U~g~h~te~r~o~f~M~r~.~a~n~d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i
There's
:Mm'';'';'' w'heri ·tir. Luehriliii .... 'dJ;.
The 1943 united Charities campaign
For
Ibe
time
being
my
motives
led
this year is headed in Swarthmore
, ,TBE SWABTHMOREAIfo INc., POBLIlIBU
ever
more
to
tbe
baunts
of
unknown
T.
E. Hessenbruch with Eilwood B.
.
PBONE SWARTHMORE 900
'
I w."t." birds, and one evening late in the
as associate director will open
PETER E. TOLD, Edilor
MUJoalE TOLD. A ..oda,. EdiIor
24. The drive thi~ year in.
following May I found Ibat I could no on
ROIALIS PE'.SOL
Lo.... McCuftil
endure the bnd·bird migration.
the U.S.O. and .other 'Y"" ~cies.
Shawshene River. flowing
Mrs. J. pouald G,bson IS acting as
Eaund u S ad
Matter. J......" 24,1929.1I1he r0fIice II Swutluaole, P.., ander the ~ of MardI 8, l8'I9.
;~;;~~t bottom bnd. near Icbool, at· sec~etary With Mrs. Thomii H. Lueders
1
just enough swamp·dwelling as tant secreta
to remind me of coastal bay. and 51S
• ry.
.
•
"''''-WUF
·Y.OOI'
SWalDp.. Rare American Bitterns or ,The followmg captains hav~.been ~.
FRIDAY. JANUARY 8, 1943
::~~~~~:d~
no~ced and are now orgarnZ1ng their
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
~nmpers" stalked frogs sect,onal workers: Leonard C. Asbton,
cattail beds in s!uggish reaches E. L. Noyes. Robert T. Bair. W. M.I---::;;;;iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiirmeeting of 'the I.ea8ue for Protestant
the. Shawshe~e. While Red.winged Reynolds. Mrs. Harold Griflin, James I
Preabyteriau Chnreh Nole8
action in the Arch Street Methodist B!ackblTds dommated such area•• the F. Bogardus, Mrs. T. Harry Brown,
FINE FOOD •••
Church on Thursday, January 14 at 8 BItter!'. n~ver let me forget the wealth Pahner L. Skoglund. Mrs. Frank; R.
T~ Sennon Sunday morning will
P.M. Dr. Howard i. an outstan1ling
thelT tribe Ibat coul~ be seen where Markley. Robert M. Richmond. Ambrose
cooked as you like It.,
"The Future of th. Church."
Methodist
leader
and
will
speak
on
str,,:,m. merged mto large one•. Van Alen, Mrs. George Gillespie, Charles
Th. High School Fellowship will meet "South America."
Quick, courteous service.
tranS1~Dt Yellow legs that settled on
Morris L. Hicks, Isaac G. DarSunda,. evening; January 10 at 6 o'clock
•
Shawshene. few m,!d bars several days
(Strath Haven Inn), Morris
Oelightfu,l surroundings.
with the c:ommllnity fellowship in our
Chria1iIm Sdeoee Chnreh
I ~~!~:~u~~ called wildly to my school· Moore (colored section) Sadie Chad·
. CJmrc:h.:
11
conscience, a.king why Ipswich wick (schools)
,
The Board of Deacons will meet this
"Sacram.nt" i. the subject of Ibe should belong merely to tbe blind sum·
.
,
til 11.·C.I.""10
•
evening. JantJiry 8, at 8 o'clock in the
Lesson-Sermon in all Churches of mer cottagerlr.
Cabs GUeite at lee Show
Church Stndy.
So Ibe next, day I arrived in NewDr. and Mrs. Frederick Luehring were
The Executive Board of the Woman's Christ, Scientist. on Sanday, January
10.
The Golden TexCis: "I wiJl take buryport. close to the Old·Squaws· hosts to the Cub Scouts of Den 3, Swarth·
'Association wiJJ meet this morning. January 8, at 10 o'clock in the ,Parisb House. the c'UP of salvation. and call upon the Thanksgiving frolic, Ibough the weather more Pack on Saturday afternoon at the
name of the Lord. I wiJJ pay my vows was now mild and tbe sea lapped the matinee performance of Ibe Ice Follies
find Cocktail Lounge
Circl. III, Mrs. Harry Brown chairunto the Lord now in tbe presence of edge of a continent as gently as if land in Philadelph'a. The enthusiastic group
man will meet on January IS, at the all His people" (Psalms 116 :13.14).
IIII c........ r.LL ........ nan..
and water were no more than diminu·
met at the North Chester road bome of
home of Mrs. John Fawcett, 400 S.
•
tive phenomena.
Chester road, at 2 o·clock. Mrs. Guido
Once again a grebe greeted by ar· the Luehring. at 1 o'clock for Ibe trip
Snnday'. Forum Snbjeel
G. Savelli will review the book "I Heard
rival by its fortuitous presence. This to town. Climaxing the performance was
Lam In_ &Oc • DlIDI' "'_ 85c
a personal visit with Heinie. Brocb, one
the Anzacs Sing" by Margaret L. Mac·
t.i'me
it
was
a
Horned
Grebe
or
rather
At 9.45 A.M. this Sunday at the adult
COCKTAIl HOUR.3 to 6 PoM.
of the star.. Mr. Brach was an outPherson.
forum of the Friends' Meeting the second four Homed Grebes, two pairs of them
standing athlete at Ibe University of
The Woman's Association will meet
of a series of three talks by Maurice Man· swimming -in the surf close. to shore.
Wedn.sday. January 13. 11 :15 A.M. the
delbaum of the Swarthmore College fac- The males were in bright spring plum·
worship service will be led by Mrs. C.
bearing ornamental tufts of rus·
will be given on the topic "Race
W. McDowell. At 12 o'cloCk there will
feathers on either side of
be the busilIess meeting followed by Ibe
I ~~:Ii;.s~I~~h~ad scarcely realized belior" I
luncheon at' 12 :30. The guest speaker , Sa... ~.. liD __• pI'Operb- ~ II
how beautiful grebes could
wiJl be Mrs. CharI.. H. Lewis of Srun- The liD OD _
W be. Grebe hats in the nineties were
mit, N.J.• formerly of Yenngkoog, China. IiDe • 1M muk.
merely with the birds' white
Mrs. Lewis speaks with the authority of
•
I b"easts, their value being found in Ibe
experience and study about the.'modern
-are the same as those for the
Ueheclt Honored
close-grained arrangement and ligbt·
OrienL
~
reflecting lustre of the hair·like feath·
- The Trustees will meet Tuesday even·
On the occasion of its annual Christ· ers. But Ibese Newburyport birds were
metropolitan area and the same
inIi, January 11. at 8 o'clock in Ibe Cburch mas Party. which was held in Ibe brilliantly colored, quite as attractive
Chester mill for the first time in four· in the water as at the summit of a hu·
Study.
high standards as always prevail.
te.n year.. Ibe Scott Paper Compaoy man female, which . remark is a true
TrInIty Chnreh Nole8
honored its Grand Old Man of the tribute to grebes, since it ascribes
'
paper industry. Harry Liebeck. Mr. their beauty apart from a novel set·
fUNERALS START AT $150 AND THERE IS
Tbe Epiphany·tide candleligbt service Liebeck actually celebrated his fiftieth ting.
wiJl be held,.on Sunday afternoon at 5.30
of'
Ib
A WIDE PRICE RANGE TO CHOOSE FROM.
o'clock. ;Sergeant B. Brewster, -Williain
active service wilb
• paper
'
W.
King
WI'II
concernlastApri~atwbichdmeaparty
ofoN,;,.l!,-ThIa
Is
the
eleventh
_enC
B. Bullock an,d LoUIS
was given "in'his honor and many at. publi!i'iP..:"_I
",.~.~c::.:.!!l"'.J;p~~.'s un·
_resent the "Wise Men" and, symbo1i"
~- - - cally. bring. their gifts to - the Manser' tractive gifts were presented to him. A.
I
" " _ cIIa
Programs at Inn
Tbe.
her' f th Y
P I ' how....r. Mr. Li.beck was presented
On Wednesday evening at the Strath
e ~ . s 0
e. oung eop es with two beautuul oil portraits admir·
F'lI~~p will meet WIth the other ~. ably exe<;ll.ted by Ma)1rice Molar. Haven Inn, Leslie W. Miller. a r",ident
nonunationaJ ~oups at Ibe Presbytenan sky. prominent Philadelphia portrait of the Inn, informed house guests
DIRECTORS OF FUNERALS
,Cli1lrch on this Sunday a:>d on January artisL One of these portrait. of Mr. Lie. their friends on the Aircraft WanuDld
,17th. On Ibe 24;th they will have a Cor· beek w,as res.rved for his ,1l~'Plial nse, Service.
18~O,CHE,STNUT STREET
,parate Commumon ~ breakfast;
the alber" for hanging in Scott Paper ;.' Thls evenii.g Mrs. ]. O. Hopwood'will
•
Tbe,Red,Crosssewmg group will
Company's Cb.ster,mi\L
show the Phlladelphia:' Electric colored
M. A. Bal., P..lldent
RITtenhoul. 1581
as 'usual
Tuesday. . '
Harry Liebeck, who resides on Park motion picture "New Lands to Old" at
The Men. Fellows~p wiJl hold its avenue bas been a heavy contributor to the Inn at 7.45.
,regu!ar
meeting on Monday the progress of the entire paper indu •• I....
evenmg at 8 0 clock.
try particularly the tissue division and I
•such is recognized and respected
•
Meth~ Chnreh Nole8
IIbro"llIh,out Ibe United States. Respon·
The Church School meets on Sunday
wid.. high·speed paper rna·
morning at 9 :45. There are classes for chines fUnning over 1500 feet per min·
children of all ages and for adults. At ute in a,day when anything which ran
lb. morning worship service at II, the o..er four hundred feet per minute was
minister will preach on the theme, "Re· considered wildly fantastic, Mr. Liebeck
spnnsjbility or Opportunity." The Church pioneered the design and engineering of
Nursery will look after the smaller chiI· such macbine. in 1915. He was instrudren during the worship hour.
mental in introducing even wider and
The Youth FelloWship will meet with faster machines in 1921. at which time
the yoUng people of the other churches Mr. Licbeek'. startling designs inat a supper meeting at 6 o'clock in the cJuded placing ball bearings on these
Trinity Episcopal Church.
huge machines for.the 'first, time. reo
The Church Board of Education
ducing tbe borsepower required for
on Mogdoy evening at the bome of EI. their'
from 400 to 120. with a
' reduction of Ibeir operateanor A. Shinn, 314 Lafayette avenue.
The Woman's Society of Christian Ser· ing cosL
vice will hold 'its monthly l!mcheon meet·
Mr. Liebeck went with Scott Paper
ing on Wednesday at 1:t:30 at Ibe home COmpany on April 2. 1892, wben the
of Mrs. Williain E. Kisder. 144 Park organization 'was located in Philad.l·
phia.
avenue.
.
Deeply moved at the time of the un·
The rehearsal for the junior choir will
of ,the two portraits. Mr., Lie·
be on. Friday 'evening at 7 at the home
recipient of a rising ovaof Mrs. L1a,dD. Kauftman, 313 Dart- tion
fittingly expressed the sentimouth avenUe.
ments of everyone present at the ChristDr. George Howard will speak at
mas Party. _ _ _+-_ _
TIl'; hn CI1N lor ~ Aalo TIoa_
JUST
THE SW ARTHMOREAN
PUBLISHED EVF.RY FRIDAY AT SWARTHMORE, PA.
I
wife and son for dinner and evening Neisscr who are now Jiving at 216 Baltibridge at the Trepps'.
more Ave.. Takoma Park, Md. Dick
Mrs. Sargent Walter of ViUa Rhodora, Neisser is attending junior high school
North Chester road and Elm avenue had Takoma Park.
as her holiday guests her son·in-law and
- - -...- daughter Mr. and Mrs; Ferris Thomson
Engagements
and sons Tommy and Len who returned
to their home in Baltimore, l:Id. aD MonMr. and Mrs. Merle Schaff of Riverday of this week.
ton. N.J. announce the engagement of
Mr. and Mrs. Clark W. Davis of th'
elr daughter EI',.0beth t0 ,Mr. Ell''0II
Strath Haven avenue entertained a gr'DuI' I Richarrlson, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
of friends at a cocktail party at
Elliott Richardson of Lafayette aYeDUC.
hOOle on New Year's night.
Miss Schaff was graduated from George
School, Pa. and is a student at the UniMr. and Mrs. William 'W. Turner of versity of Pennsylvania and the -PeIUlYale avenue will be hosts to their bridge sylvania Museum School of Industrial
club on Saturday evening. The members Arts.
include Mr. and Mrs. H. Milton FusMr. R,'chardson ,'s also a graduate of
sell. Mr. and Mrs. William B. Bullock, George School and is npw attending
:Mr. and Mrs. J. Paul Brown, Mr. and Swarthmore College.
Mrs. S. Milton Bryant, Mr. and Mrs.
•
The Poetry Circle met at the home Herbert T. Bassett, Mr. and Mrs. Sewell
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Wallin of Bris·
of Mrs. Harry L. Miller of Thayer road Hodge, and Mr. 'and Mrs. Alben T. tol, Pa., announce the engagement of their
on Monday afternoon. Mrs. Robert L. Eavenson.
daughter Frances to 1vlr. Robert J. Shaw,
f Mr
Coates who had charge of the program
Mrs. L. P. Wray of Walnut lane en. son o
. and Mrs. Charles B. Shaw
read Negro poetry.
tertained informally at a luncheon at of Whittier Place.
Miss Wallin is in her juinor year at
Mr. Ralph R. Shelly of South Chester her home on Weduesday.
road r~turned on Tucsday after enjoycollege. Mr. Shaw is a midshipman,
ing a two-week furlough at' his home
Miss Edthel Farl?,! who diS MstayinRgobewith U. S. N. R. stationed at Notre Dame,
·
her gran parents ~ r. an
rs.
rt So'uth Bend. Ind.
h
he IS
here to P ensacoIa, FI a. were
an L. Coates of Harvard avenue while em_ _ _...._ _
instructor in Free Gunnery.
ployed as a Naval Aircraft inspector at
To Wed Next Week
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Blundin and the Philadelphia Navy Yard, returned on
family of Baltimore, Md. spent New Sunday after a ten-day vacatiolL Miss
Invitations were issued last week for
Year's Day visiting Mr. Blundin's par- Farley spent part of her holiday visit- the marriage of Miss Edythe Blanche
ents Mr~ and Mrs. L. C. Blundin of ing her parents Dr. and Mrs. Eugene F. Thomas. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
Park avenue.
Farley of Wilkes Barre, and was the New Stanley Thomas of Narberth and Mr.
Mrs. Franklin S. Gillespie of South Year guest of Mr. and Mrs. G. Donald Frank Coatman Williams. son of Dr.
Chester road and Harvard avenue re- Spackman of Hill Farm, Coatesville.
Frank E. Williams of Amherst avenue,
turned home Wednesday night of last Mr. and Mrs. Ray L. Harlow of North at 4 o'clock Saturday afternoon, January.
week after a week's Christmas visit to Chester road have been entertaining Mrs. 16. in the Namerth Methodist Church.
her brother and sister-in-law Dr. and Harlow's parents Mr. and Mrs. E. B. The ceremony will be followed by a
Mrs. Lawrence Smith in East Aurora, Heimberger and sister Miss Helena reception at the Bala Country Club.
N.Y.
Heimberger of Cleveland, Ohio as their
., Mr. and l..frs. Allen L. Putnam of house guest over the holiday season. Miss
Snyder - Effing
Lafayette avenue entertained New Year's Heimberger has returned to Ohio while
Eve when guests were members and famparents .are extending t1:teir visiL
Mr. and Mrs. Dal Jenkins of Rutgers
Hies of the Swarthmore Men's Quartet Betty Ellen Littlefield of Sw'Orthm,on, avenue announce the :marriage of Mrs.
in which Mr.' Putnam sings first bass. place visited Miss Natalie Stolk of Chap· Jenkins' sister Miss Catherine
The other members are Otto Kraus piano paqua, N.Y. for several days last week. Mr. Walter C. Snyder, son of Mrs.::
&ccompanist, Charles Deacon tenor, James
Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Thorpe of Walter C. Snyder, Sr. of Yale avenue,
Johnstone (of Wilmington) second tenor, Dickinson avenue entertained informally in the late afternoon of Thursday, Deand J. Burriss West second bass.
on Saturday evening for Mr. and Mrs. cember 31, at Elkton, ·Yd. Mr. Snyder
from Swarthmore High School
Miss Elisabeth Schobinger left late acob F Meschter of Mountain Lakes,
last week to spend the week-end in New N.]. who were their week-end guests. ' where he starred' on the football team,
York arranging for prints for the Cur- Mr. and M.rs. John Howard Taylor and is now on leave from the United
rier and lves show of the Cincinnati Art of KEIlyon avenue entertained at a din- States Naval Training School at BainMuseum where she is curator of prints, ncr party at their home for Mr. and Mrs. bridge, Md. untH' January 9.
Miss Schobinger had combined a holiday :Meschter last Saturday.
Mrs. Snyder is the niece of Mr. and
visit to hcr parents Mr. and Mrs. George
Mrs. Gerald Effing of Lancaster. forSchobinger of North Swarthmore avenue
Dr. and Mrs. George H. Cross of merly of Swarthmore. She will make
with this business trip east.
Princetown avenue entertained at dinner her home with the Jenkins for the present.
•
Carol Maude Froebel will leave Janu- at their home last Saturday. The guests
Budke - Crothers
ary 18 to resume her freshman studies later attended the Chestt!r Hospital Charity Ball .
. at Hollins College, Roanoke, Va. after
On Wednesday afternoon, December
a mid-year visit to her parents Mr. and
Pat McCormack of Thayer road was 30, at 4 o'clock in Trinity Church,
Mrs. Guenther H. Froebel 01 Swarthmore the guest of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Phillips Swarthmore, the Rev. ]. Jarden Guen
.avenue.
of Hagerstown, Md. for a few days and
ther, rector, joined in holy wedlock
Rinky McCurdy, daughter of Mr. and attended a danc:e at their home on New Miss Renee Rigby Crothers, daughter
Year's Eve.
Mrs. Wallace l.,f. McCurdy of Ogden
avenue, is returning also to Hollins. She Mr. and Mrs. Ray L. Harlow of North
is a member of the junior cla.ss.
Chester road spent Monday and Tuesday
Mr. and Mrs. Guenther H. Froebel of of last week vacationing in New York
Swarthmore avenue will entertain their City.
monthly bridge club at dinner and cards
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Coates of Hartomorrow evening.
vard avenue entertained a number
Having enlisted in the Anny, Private guests at ~ annual New Year's Eve
Edmund Jones of Park avenue left Wed- party.
ncsday of last week for a basic training
Sara Cook, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
period at Aberdeen Proving Ground. Md. J. D. Cook of Thayer road, and Doris
His wife is staying temporarily with his Rowand, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E.
BOOKS
READ THE
parents Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Jones M. Rowand of Yale avenue, returned to
of Haverford avenue.
the Pennsylvania College for Women
Ensign and Mrs. Alfred D. Cox, Jr. Pittsburgh on Monday after vacationing
of Media, formerly of Swarthmore entheir homes here since December 19.
tertained on New Year's Eve when 'their Rosamond Jones returned to Colby
College on Tuesday after passing
guests were Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Cox
Sr. of Media, Mr. and Mrs. \Valter Rau~ the holidays with her parents Mr. and
ber of Swarthmore, Lt. Comm. and Mrs. Mrs. F. P. Jones of Yale avenu~
LAST 2 DAYS
James S. Bethea, Ensign and Mrs. Paul
C. Robertson. and Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Major, all of Philadelphia.
OF SWARTHMORE
Mrs. Henry A. Piper of Yale' avenue
in
with her son John returned December
31 from a two-day visit with another
William Saroyan'a
son Robert in Boston, Mass. En route
I
(
burg.
of North Chester road are receiving conA reception for the immediate fam- gratulations upon the birth of a .on
ille. followed the ceremony at the hom. James Laws McCabe in the HahGemann
of the bride's parents.
H i d I h'
S
The bride is the granddaughter of
ospital. Phi a e p 10 on aturday. JanMr and Mrs. James Lord Rigby of l.ua
ll"'ry"""",2."""""""""========",,,,!"!i1
Mediia and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Croth· II
ers. Sr. of Wallingford. "
DO YOU KNOW
Births
United Cam-'_ . . Muater
Worker.
;~~:====~~~~~~~ 1
ONE TOUCH
One «:oat is enough in most cases,
e-ren o\'er old and dingy wa1b."
Cuts cost, dmo and work in half!'
5~~
$ 2J~5,
Within an hourfou have a smooth.
Got, oil.type waIllinish of encluriq
!-mY. Mil!
~
~'
Par walls and ceiliugs, over waU.
paper.waIlboard, .....ent,brldr,etc.
GALLON
..A..... 1% GaIIoM
•98Iv.._
c~
Moho
SNOWDEN'S, Inc.
'113-117 W. STATE STREET, MEDIA
Phone Swardun~re
10,000
~
(
PAINT OVER WALLPAPER
DRIES IN 60 MINUTES
~
,
,
i
I
\
•
,ENGIKES
OF
!
,
Admiral Writes
Former
TeQl!her
Dr. Samuel ~ 'Palmer, professor
emeritus of botaliy Itt S_rthmore ColMen's lege, received the following reply to a
: ~~~~~~~~~ Christmas letter to Admiral Halsey.
:;
whom he taught years ago at Swarthmore Prep School:
South Pacific Force
of the United States Pacific Fleet
Headqnartersof the Commander
Dear Dr. Palmer:
'
It is particularly interesting to have
a letter at this distance and under the
circumstances from someone who has
had a part in my early education. I
want to tell you that the confidence
~:'':''~::,ce
and support of you people back home
_"
''8...>1 is a constant inspiration to all of us
out here '!I1d I appr:cciate very much
good wishes.
•
Sincerely•
W. F. HALSEY.
AdJnlral. U. S. Navy.
Lined np here. in smart.Jllilitary formation. is
a "squad" of the mighty locomotives that
work night arid day fot Uncle Sam.
Passenger engines. their specific job is to
move troops. And. with the aid of other
locomotives. they ate doing this at a mte of
•
WIt' II
million troops II month!
,get. But-with the cooperation of travelers
and shippers. the Ollice of Defense Transportation. the Army. the Navy and Govern·
ment agencies-the railroads ate doing, and
will continue to do. everything within their
power to provide the best service possible ID
the public in the midst of the greatest war
civilization has ever known.
To the right ate their comrades-in.arms.
freight locomotives. Their job is to baul war
materials. And they ate moving 1,2,0.000 IrJm
Ndfcwthe ....atIoo.
*':~!Ul~"'!111
Of course. to keep np a wat pace like this
requires the milroads to g!ve right.of.way
and a very latgepart of therr passenger and
freight equipment cootinuousIy to thewarelfort.
Natutally. under the circumstances. service
to the public cannot be all that either you ~
we woUld like it to be. Tmins may be late.
Accommodations and seats may be hard to
Last Thne Homes ~
. . . . ' 2Q
*
of freight II mik til"., mmlilt oj II 24-hour """
I
Robert T. Bair of Cornell avenae bas
sold the last three houses in the Nason
lit Cull.n d..,eJc>pment here: SIS. 520
W_In*ravenae and·4S0 Strath Ha·
a_ue. Building in this project ...
*
.I.
I.
.."..
PBNNS1f£VJl.NZJI. BJl.ZZ.BOJJD
0..01 America'. R.n........ au
all ..
•
W&a
e
IDe W.,.
Alia
,.
,
J
'"~
I
HATrER ROUSES··;
CREATIVE URGE
Clubwomen Rush Home to Dig
Out, Remodel, and Adorn Old
Headgear With Salvage Trim
Dorothy· Nugent; Philadelphia hat
designer delighted her audience at the
Woman'~ Club on Tuesday wi~h h~r
clever ideas and thrifty suggesttons m
creating artistic hats. After a gorgeous
display of millinery and bags made from
aU sorts of left over materials beauti~
fully modeled by Mrs. Nugent, old felt
hats brought in by members were revamped 1;0 their owaers wore fine new
models home.
'
.
Mrs. W. F. G. Swann. program chatrman. presented Mrs. Nugent and a
chorus of club members who sang old
fashioned songs about hats. ~ Mrs. R.
Chester Spencer wrote the words for
'one of the songs and directed the group.
Men appear to have started the fashion of wearing decorated hats; women:
through the ages have copied ancient
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE
ALL MAKES
Quleh, Ef/idenI &rt1IDe_
~
•
aDd. tmOOD-id"red. amateur re-
fr18erator repaln often result In more
acrloUl d&maP. Paste t.bll ad on the
1na14e of 701U' retrJgen.tor door - caJl
U!I for IU&l'8Dteed repairs - youll be
_tidedl
•
WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR
OLD REFRIGERATOR
Call lUdky Parle 8890
•
BBCONDn~ONED
AND GUAIIANTDD
usm BIIPBIGIlBATORS
•
INTERIORO ELECTRIC
APPLIAICE SERVICE
19 E. 8Inddey Avenue
RIDLEY PARK, PA.
fillets of
the
snoods.
6£ the middle ages
the
crowns of the
Puritans. The modern touch is wearing
the hat at the proper angle. Mrs.
Nugent i:s the' authpr of "Hats Created
Not Dated".
..
Mrs. John H. Pitman won the prize
for the siltiest hat and Mrs. George
Zimmer carried off the honors for the
best looking. old hat.
BO«.rdU8 10 Speak
On Tuesday. January 12. Dr. James
Bogardus. District Price Executive of
the OPA, will speak on IIPrice Control
in National Defense." Dr. Bogardus.
who lives on Cornell avenue, is a former state secretary of Forests and
Waters. serving under Governo,r Earle.
At present Dr. Bogardus is on leave
from the University of Pennsylvania.
The stated meeting will precede the
lecture: Hostesses will be Mrs. A. P.
Shenkle and Mrs. John C. Moore. At
the tea-table Mrs. R. C. Gilmore and
Mrs. John H. Pitman.
the -cia.. may be large ehough to continue. Mrs. Russell Phil1ips chairman
of the group promises that it will bring
good fun and relaxation ·to all who
attend.
_
J n. in Sta.ed Meetluir
The Junior Club_ will hold a stated
meeting in the Woman's Club on Tuesday evening, January 12. A musical program will be given under the direction
of Antonica. Fairbanks.
The members anticipate a good attendance at the beginning of the New
Year.
NEWS NOTES
Dr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Whitaker of
Elm avellue entertained at a "Wassail
Bowl" on New Year's Eve from 4 until
6 for about a hundred of their friends.
Guests present were from Swarthmore
and the Philadelphia area.
.... , " ......
,",,'
""~-~.,
Start Seeond Series
Junior Red Cross Drive
Nets $175 lor Local
Service Fund
.
The second class in the Creative Approach to Music which is. being taught
at the home of Mr.. S. D. Clyde on
.
. Ogden avenue by Dr. Frederick'Schlieder
The Juruor Red Cross repo~ a net of New York City will begin on Janutotal .of $.175.32 secured. from .ts mem- ary 13 at 10 A.M.
. ~
bersh,p dr.ve conducted m November. A
Members of the first clas. have benCtota! of $188.32 w~ collected. $13 was fited greatly from Dr_ 'Schlieder's uni ue
retamed by the Nallo~al Red. Cross for
of ...music. They have lea~
enrollment on. the ha~1S of $t.~ for evin the simpler forms aDd
ery hundred students In. the High School
are now writing in canon form.
and SOC for each room 111 theEI~ry
person interested in joining the
Schools. All rooms and grades contnbcan get ·nf r tf
"
· h S h I' d ·
h
• 0 rna IOn rom _rs.
?ted• th e H 19
coos onatlOn reac :
"-.I)elaplaine, Mrs. Herbert Fraser,
109 < $123.76. t~e elementary scl.'ools Mrs. Guy Deming. Mrs. Henry Ford of
$64.• 6; The serv.ce fund of $17~ will
Chester or Mrs. CI d
. /
used to meet the needs of children ID
y "Swarthmore and to purchase materials
Study Government Ho118ing
used by the juniors in their Red Cross
projects. In addition to this fund: the
The Woman's Roosevelt Club of
Junior Red Cross has also for use in
Swarthmore
met on Thursday at the
the community a fund of $78.67" a con·
home
of
Mrs.
Carl de Moll of Park.
tribution to the organization by the
avenue.
After'
the election of oJIiMothers' Mutual ExcHange.
cers,
Mrs.
Henry
'Gouley addreSsed
Plans are to be adopted for the exthe
meeting
on
"What
is the Federal
penditure of the fund at an early meeting
Government
doing
in
our
country 'to
of the advisory committee at the home
house"
the
influx
'of
workers
i"
of the chairman, Mrs. Raymond K. Den..
Mrs.
de
Moll
was
named
president,
worth.
Mrs. O. J. Gilcreest first vice-president,
Mrs. Louis' N. Robinson second vic e. Leslie Rowland
president, Mrs. Robert Allison secretary
Funeral services were held Tuesday and Mrs. William F. Hanny treasurer.'
I?"
Mr. and Mrs. Russell White of
jamin West avcnue were hosts to a
group of friends at a dinner party given
Second WeHare Group Meet.
at the Rolling Green Golf Club on New
The Delaware County Welfare As- Year's Eve.
Other parties held before the annual
sociation and The League of Women
Voters a:-e meeting jointly on three New Year's Eve dance of the SwarthThursdays January 7, 14, 21 at
more Series in the \Voman's Club House
A. M. The speakers :Mary Walston were a cocktail party at the Maple aveJones first and third meetings, Eleanor nue homc of M_r. and :Mrs. James W.
:May second meeting will discuss child Lukens and a gathering of a few friends
welfare in Delaware County. All Ill,:er'-I of Mr. and Mrs. Wa)'ne Randall at the evening in Philadelphia for Leslie W.
On Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs.
Randall home on Riverview road.
ested are invited to attend. '
Rowland of" Fairview road'" and Cornell
Frank
Holman of College avenue enterMI'8. Bosshardt in Review
Miss Martha Thomas left Monday avenue. printer and publisher, who died
tained eight guests from Lansdowne.
Mrs. A. M. Bosshardt chairman of
internathmal Relations will lead the morhing to return to Hood College. Fred- Saturday at his home at the age of 51.
.
erick, Md. after having visited her niece
Surviving are his widow Rita, a sister
discussion and present a review of
Katharine, and a brother Dudley a,
Owing to overworked Postal·
"Last Train from Berlin" by Howard ~!~d s{~;en :e~v ~~;;,~mE~e~fM~;:e~:~:~ both of Washington. D.C.
Clerks, and many hours of help to
K. Smith on Friday January 15 at 10 Hubbard of Chattanooga. Tenn. left on
o'clock.
the
present crisis, interrupted by
Walter Goodwin. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Tuesday of last week after having been
Variety Program ,Today
tl1e Christmas holiday house guest of Mr. Daniel Goodwin of Walnut lane. left
illness, we refrained from sending
Mrs. Roland L. Eaton will review and AIrs. McCrumm.
Wednesday to return to his studies at
Greeting Cards this Holiday SeaMiss Patty Campbell of Haverford a\"- Princeton University, Princeton, N.J. afMarguerite Lyons' "And Green Grass
son. We take this means of thankGrows All Around" and Mrs. Harold G. enue entertained at luncheon at the Ingle- ter .having been at home since the 18th
ing our friends and neighbors
Griffin will point the highlights in neuk on Thursday of la5t week in honor of last month.
for those received and to wish
Dick Delaplaine. a sophomore at Am"
Frances Lester Warner's "Inner of Miss Worth Abbe of Dickinson avenue
them. and the whole world, a"
U
Springs before"mcmbers of thc Litcra- who left two days later for WAAC train- herst College, left Monday to return to
HAPPIER NEW YEAR
ture Section and their friends this ing in Iowa. Other guests at the lunch- Massachusetts after having holidayed with
eon were Mrs. Guido Savelli of Drexel his parents Mr. and Mis. Roy W. Dela.
morning at 10 A. M.
Maud L. and J. V. 5: B,..,op
Rhythmic Dancing Resumes
Hill. Mrs. Samuel James of Elwyn. and plaine of Cornell avenue since December
18. He is awaiting call into the Army.
The Rhythmic Dancing Section under Miss Eudora Sproat of Swarthmore.
Alice Kraft will'resume sessions TlmrsMiss Abbe was the dinner guest of Mr.
day evening January 14 at 8:15 P. M. and Mrs. Savelli 011 Tuesday. and on • MARY DUN HILL • PRINCE MATCHAB-ELLI
• CHANEL •
Instruction may be taken in series or \Vedncsday at luncheon she and her
in single evening. All interested are mothe,r Mrs .. George C. Abbe were cntel"- 9
,
,
•
~:::::::::::::~~a:sk:e~d~to:.:re:p:o:r:t~p:r:o:m~p:t1~y~in~.:o:rd:e~r:;:th:a~t
iii
"JANUARY BLACK. AND WIllTE SALE"
BOOKWAYS
403 Dartmouth Avenue
Handled Juveniles at great savings I
. S pedal reduclioll8 in
Classics, Art, Music, Religious, Poetry and Cook books
,-.
tained by Mrs. C. D. Howard of Rutgers
avenUe. Mrs. Howard also had Mrs.
\Villiam Alston of Drcxel Hill, as a
luncheon guest that day.
l.t. M. W.Shellenbargar. formerly of
Swarthmore avenue, came from Edgewood Arsenal. Md. to be the New Year's
gHes~ ,qf, th~,:~~.bgs._ - .... . .... ,..
Afr. and ~.frs. John Schumacher ,of
Dickinson avenue are entertaining Mrs.
Schumacher's' brother and sister-in-law
'Major Robert l.. Strayer and Mrs. Strayer of Fort Benning. Ga. as their house
guests this week. Major Strayer -is with
the Parachute Infantry' at Fort Benning,
ffi
:r:
foot
"he Bouquet
~
1923 Chestnut Street
6913 Market Street
JOSEPH E.lIAINE8,
C..........
•
-
• Philadelphia
Upper Darby, Pa.
c. ARLEY FARMER.
AVOID Freeze-ups
.",.". Broke. fA"ar WI.do.,.
Jack Frost will come Inside more houses
than usual this winter, but don't make~
It easy lor hlm to enter through a
broken eellar window ""d leave his
calling card on an exposed water pipe.
Repair or seal up nIl such openings
aDd look over 'your water pipes. Proteet any 01 them whieh are particularly
Up led to cold.
.
Pr_ideJlJ
~
•
rn
•
1943 Need. Beau,y.' Morale
8
- t"4
13 South Chester Road
Call Swarthmore 476
•
C
ARBERT •
t-i
~
SKYLARK-
_...o.c===='-':......=:..:..:~::..:.::!.-..:• ....!:L:.::U:.:C~IE~N~!:L!:Ec..!:L:::O~N~G!....:.--!:C~H~E~N~Y~U~~.
Jean Alston, Eudora Sproat, Carolyn
Cresson, ~Iarg:ueritc Gettz, Marjorie Dinsmore, Mildred Hirst, Nancy Fawcett
Ridley Park, Gene and :Mildred Griffith
of Media. Betty Beatty of Bowling Green,
and Ruth Cornwall of Spring Haven.
Burgess '"and Mrs. John H. Pitman of
Vassar avenue entertained Mr. Frank
Robbins of Melrose, Mass. as their house
guest over the New Year holidays. He
rcturned to the U~i\'ersity of New Hampshire on Sunday.
Jessie Gilbert of Park avenue and ,Lee
Sheridan entertained 20 of their classmates of the 11th grade at a New Year's
Eve party at the horne of Lee's mother
Dr. Leora J. Sheridan of Vassar avenue.
Dancing and games wcre enjoyed with
a supper party for the guests at midnight, who ushered in 1943 with much
merriment.
Billy Anne Mitchell of University place
entertained at a tea Sunday afternoon
for Mrs. John Stone of Boston, Mass.
who was her week':'end guest. Miss :Mitchell and Mrs. Stone were roommates
at thc Connecticut College for Women,
N e\:v London, Conn.
Dr.and Mrs. Arthur J. Jones of Dickinson avenue left yesterday morning for
Tavares, F~a. where' they will sojourn
until the end of March.
Capt. George E:"Davisson with his wife
and daughter Joan, tonnerly of Vassar
avenue, are visiting Mrs. Davisson's
mother, Mrs. Austin M. Allison of Vassar avenue. This week-end Mrs. Allison
will return with rhem to Camp Gordon,
Augusta, Ga. where she will remain for
several months.
Mr. and :Mrs. Harold Goodwin of Rose
Valley had as their guests at a dinner
party Monday evening Mr.. and Mrs.
D. S. Calhoun. Mr~ and Mrs. Francis
Taylor and son Francis., and Mrs. L. J.
Servais and daughters Louise and Mary
Jane, all of Swarthmore, and Mr. and
Mrs. Barclay \\1hitson and daughters Ann
and Ruth of Moylan.
Alan J?ixon Goodwin, Mr. and Mrs.
H. Goodwin's son. left Tuesday to resume his studies at Westtown after
"
.~~"~ vacati"on~ a"t his, h01ftC 1n, Rose Valley
SInce December 17.
' -", (_ '
~~"'f.ii''iiii~a;~u.:
===-;;-::-;,,;;
Ib·75e
Ib·3ge
Stewing Chickens
3 lb
Loaf
$1.25
5ge
Gold Medal Flour
Van Camp Milk 6 Tin·4ge
Martel Tomatoes 4 ~c:;: S5e
River Brand Rice 2 Pkg.: 23e
Salad' Dressing
Libby Tomato Juice
.~ Jwiket P.owder
Filet Flounder
Pt.
Ige
Bot·20e
6 TiDa45e
3 Pkgl. 27e
Ib·4ge •
'-
Improvementa collBlat two and one-balf
1~~~~5~~~~ffi~~~i~~
• of this region,
first notabIe naturalists
botanist to King George the Third
England. In it he has reprinted the natur• t' d·
. t
·t h
ed for
a I tS s laCY J us as 1 as repos
a hundred years at the Historical Society
. f h·1 d I h·
Th
..
pell·
o P I a e pIa.
e ongmal s
and punctuation_ have
retained bUI
following an introduction covering cir\ctnm'ta"ce,s. and the diary itself Dr. Har·
mg
graphical
and historical
comments
re·
quired
to describe
Bartram's
route which
Dr. Harper, during two trips in 1939 and
1940 covering in all five mon"ths and extending as far as central Florida, has
been able to trait for hundreds of mites
. t·109 even a few feet from
WI·thou t d eVla
t~e ancient track.
The Bartram Gardens on the Schuylkill near here are a memorial to John
Bartram and his son William (or Billy)
I ",th'Jr of the immortal "Travels" (1791)
PERSONAL
whom Dr. Harper is now completing
'·1ar V9I
t·
PERSONAL - .Articles useless" in your bome a second slmt
ume
0 appear abo ut
can be turned Into cash. War Stamps. April. It is planned to bind this "Travels
Call Chester 2-2573.
in Georgia ami Florida, 1773-74" with
LOST
the first volume and offer the works com·
· . I th
pI etc In C 0
cover.
Dr. Harper's i~itial interest in the Bar·
tram's greW out of his own family's IS~
acre tract in the heart of the vast Okefenokee swamp and wilderness of Florida.
One of the earliest accounts of this
was given qy William Bartram
nevertheless merely touched it. During a
period of living in his cabins within the
Okefenokee however Dr. Harper was able
,. '======='=========
=
"
botanicalGear";'
investigator
as well ofas Florida
the first and
sciDexplore
..... of the upper reaches of
St. Johns' river. He" portrayed the
pre-Revolutionary life of the South-not
only in the WI·1derness but also on the
pIantations and in the cities of Charles~on. Savannah and St. Augustine. He
was the friend and visitor of the elite
n Charleston and of several colomal
governors. He described the architecture
SON
A. J. QUINBY
A. MERCER QUlNBY. Jr.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Having already done a bit of research
iL
on his own in ,regard to the father-son
botanists Dr. Harper began serious work
on them in 1939. His late 1942 publication bespeaks the painstaking scientific
effort of several years and is one which
will be of great value in its field as well
•
Media
:::
:::
. EDWIN B. KElLEY, Jr.
Your Jeweler
2S' Ea •• 7.h 51.
Chcl'er--
(Opposite New State Theatre)
JI_
--
c...
_too. _ .... \9.O;~i1Own)j;
""",tva
CoUes. JOIlUAr7
Avenue
BUU
at. tbo
W_eoda~,
13. other
forooal-bUl'DlDg
tho
of
and
~ulpmeDt
for the i~~~~~;!'Y
'K'.
CODvemlon of two hot aU heaten. located
to the
make
0W11 Avenue
meaauremente
submit
In
Rutsem
School. and
B14d8lB
are I=~~~l~~~~consist of two and ona_lete Inventory of materials needed. and
bOUB8. ,38x18 feet: -OpeD
IJrice per heater. inc1udlq price of mater...
frame ad
be secured betw
91
d 4
Sold as the ~rO~ of Mary A. Casey.except Ba~ee;. 8:n:!y~Ilnd toW~ mortgagor and MOD-Dela Corporation. real
daJ8. at the SChool Dl!itr1~ Office. The owner.
!':'~1ds~':0~eo~t.::nr':J.ne: ~~ OEO. T. BUTLER. Attorney.
contraeta on 8IlJ' Item or ltem1 maJrlng up
=,.,
Augus_lan~~~b~ld~.~~HIT~~'D~A~LANi~G~~3~~~ It-a-at
of
first
Spanish
period in ofSt.the east... 12-24--3t
tinetheand
was
the chronicler
emmost known calumet ceremony at
Treaty of Picolata. Among his discov-I~~~!~~~~!.t~!,~~iie
eries were Pinckneya, Nyssa Ogeche,
Canna flaccida. and many other notewor- ~!!,~,~~_~
~~~~:3~jF~~~~~~~::j
thy p l a n t s . "
The records of the achievements ap;..,..~- ~""~V. 'ii:T(INuCE~~W~~.
pearing inlargely
his simple,
unvarnished
hitherto
unpublished,
have diary
now
enlarged upon and clarHied to a
generation by Dr. Harper with
editorial comments and annotations
historical background. identiand, animals, showing routes
10
by means of both colQnial and
maps, and with photos and drawiugs bringing into vivid focus after a
of nearly two centuries many of
points of particular interest that were
visited by John Bartram.
Dr. Harper who was with" the AmeriCommittee for International WUd
Life Protection ,for a number of years
is" now a "member of the editorial department of the American PhilOsophical SoBoth John and. William were memof this society--established by BenFranklin in 1743. and standing toof the oldest and most distinof this country's leamed socieJohn was a friend of Ben Franklin.
fact it was after him that he oaIiled
the long lost tree Franklinia when he
discovered it in Georgia.
extra-llli~~~i~~5~~i~~r-1
ordinary
to be an perfonnance
eye witness of
to the
thealligator
very bellows which William Bartram had meDtioned but at which folks scoffed. This
reptile is·.....;o extremely shy that although
FOR RENT
S rooms and bath, fireplace. Adnll8 hundreds of persons have heard the bellows few men even among the natives
only. P08sesaion at once_ ,38
ha"9"e been able to" get dose enough to see
m.onth.
SROP CO-O~v.
Or to her Attorney.
.
EDWIN A. LUOAS. Bsqulre.
&
S.
MUN~.
SBERIPP 6.ALES OP BlfAL ESTATE
8BElUFP"B OPPICB
COURT HOUSE. MBDIA. PENNA.
PRIDAY, JANtJAR~ 22••943
Eaate~
9:30 A. M.
War TIme
1~~i~~~"~'~IWt:;~.~~~~jig:~~J~.~~
ten
14ft~~~~~.
No. 638'
Atlas Pieri PacIas
12-18-8t
sePtember Term. 1940
"""Rrpp BALI!S OF REAL ESTATE
Sherlff's Office, Court House, Media. Penna.
PBIDAY. JANUARY 29, 1943
9:30 A. M. Butem War TIme
)2:;0.00
casb or certUied check
atConditions:
time of sale
(unlesa otberw1se stated In
advertisement) bala.lice in ten days. other
condlt1oIUf. on day ot sale.
Levari Pac1as
No. 453
September Term, 1942
Lot With Improvements In Haverford. 'l:wP.
Del. Co.• Pa.,lbelng No. 335 on Plkn. .of lots
Sayo your tin
C&Jl8
Improvements consist of two atorv brick"":
store front. 15x38 teet. one story _brick addltlon, 15x9 teet. brick_ garage, lOi:3O feet. '
Sold as the property of Mike, Luka8ev1c ...
.
properly prepared. LOUIS A. BLOOM. Attorney.
R. S. MUNSON. Sherltf.
...
ANNUAL MEETING
".-~
~~
..
,
.....
The Annual Meeting of the stockholders of the Swarthmore National
BaOk and Trust Company, Swarthmore, Pa_, for the election of di. reclors and such other busineSs as may cOnie before the meeting,
will be held at the banking house in Swarthmore, Pa.. on Tuesday,
January 12, 1943, between the hours of three and five o'clock P. M_
ELRIC S_ SP{l.OAT, eMhier.
~::::r=::::::::::::::::~:;;:;;~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~::==~~~~~~~::::::~~~~~~~
Cram Creek Scorers
Nortli and south winners at the mecting of the Crum Creek Bridg~ Club
the Philip W. ,Kniskern home \olinilli;~;;;
evening of January 4 were Mrs.
Faison and Mrs. Philip Kni,kern
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Warre'n S",,:~,,~,
I
Mrs. third.
Albert Hill and Mrs. K C. Ken~~~~~~~~C~h~"~I~er~3~7~64~~~~!1 nedy.
East and west winners were Mrs. Wal.
Picture Framing - SatiODer,'
Booka-Kodak Suppliea
GreeIIDIr <:arcls - Hobb~ Craft
SIMMONDS
12
lb••
8. 26- 12' B. 125 ft. to N. W. aide llDe
Turnbull Ave. thence by same 8. 83· "I' W.
2S ft. to beginning.
"
Dr. had
Francis
Harper
of South
to many Iay- t~~~~~~~~~~~~5~:~: atory atone and stucco bouae, OpeD cement
road
the first
of his
books Chester
on the as
menofinconsiderable
the Society interest
of Frieods.
porch. t8x36 teet. one story lS'tucco ac:ldltlon.
ul0 feet. One storY etucco garage, 12X18
famous Bartrams. early Quaker natural- Opening with a frontispiece portrait of
feet.
ists. ~ublished on Wednesday of last w.eek.1 John Bartram done by Charles Willson
,.",.•• as tbe property of c&lherlne A. Hart.
Ap.,.aring as Volume XXXIII. Part 1. Peale the volume closes with eight
...
owner.
1942
of the Transactions
the American
figures
of photographs
Bartram routes.
Philosophical
Society the oflarge
sized. pa- and
latter37are
mostly
of scenes
T. BllTLER, Attorn.y.
per-bound book called "Diary of a Jour- they visited but include some of William
,
ney Through the Carolinas. Georgia. and Bartram's original drawings. Volume 2
It<..arl ....
No. 323
Florida from July I. 1765. to April 10, when it comes out will contain the larg1766" contains nearly ISO pages tequiva- est collection of these drawings ever to
lent to 400 pages of tmlinary octaval book appear in a single work.
.
GBNf!BMB8 . ..."tor.
225 Vasaar Avenue,
paper).
John's trip to the southern colonies was
Swarthmore, Pa.
Dr. Harper who is research
his first official act upon his appointment 12-18-6t
of the John Bartram Association of Phil- as botanist to the king. He was the first 1'::::::Tbe:::::::8c:-cb-:-OO~':-::D:-:Iatr1-:-'~ct:-O-:f-:S::"W--artbm--'-=-ore-""wIU:::
~~~,p~h~oneMe;db~4~~
Fresh Calf Liver
He~z Ketchup
.
of
his owo. One ofexplanatory
these is ansections
annotated
index containing names of all plants, animats, persons. and localities mentioned
the diary with suitable definitions,
p Iytng
current tIt
.
. Ies f or many W h·lCh
modern botanists might otherwise fail
con- recognize. Another section features geo·
81
206 S. Oranlre SL
•
·MEAT LOAF
Journey of Quaker l\aturalist
been
COMPLITE
FOOD MARKET
Phone-Swarthmore 2103
New ··jJiio'k by Dr. Harper Traces 1~·fo1!roi~:i
~iii~~I!!~~~~~~:1 adelphia
which
the work,
devoted this
firstsponsored
book to John
one of
•
Chester Road at Rutgers Avenue-Route 3%O-8wa.rtbmore, Pa.
Cream
Whipt
;
CLASSIFIED
WM. S. BITI1.E
fOR THE TABLE
Experts in the Making and Fitting
of Spectacles and Eye Glasses
rn
BEAUTY SALON
~
AHce Rcdgravc
of Vassar avenue
entertained
with a 'dessert-bridge
on Tues:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:I day
evening in honor of hel" house guest
Miss Annc Hubbell of Eric. Her guests
included
Mary Kistler, Betty Jeanne PitJ. E. LIMEBURNER CO.
man, Roslyn Bromley, Catherine Fussell, 8ETTERFOOD
Dillpeming Opticians
-~
Arthur Lewis Lukens, fanner resident
of Swarthmore.. died sudjlenly in Washington, D.C. 'on Tuesday. December 29.
He was a graduate of Swartlnnore High
School and Cornell University. He served
as a. .conunissioned officer in the Army
Air Corps in the first World War. Until
last summer he has been farming in
Alabama when he became associated with
the War Production Board in Washington.
He is survived by his wife Mabel Pollard Lukens and .two sons Arthur, Jr.
and Samuel C., 2nd, also two sisters Miss
"Marion Lukens and Mrs. G. Warder
Cresson, and three brothers, ~dward S.,
)Valter l.ee. and Samuel C. l.ukens.
aalIeIt .....1!Ioutb '1UcIulGie'-' 't'8Y. ·1:a1"!JHdv..... '
"X" No. 10. page MI. bettlnn1Da at ~t
on N. W. side line Turnbull Ave. -(50 ft. W.)
400 ft. N. 63' 48'8. from N. II- 01<18 IlIle
Leedom Ave. (40 ft. W.) thence N. 28· . 12'
W. 125 n. thence N. 63- 48~ B. 25 ft. thence
'714. Webh Street
Chester
'Phone Chester- 2-5161
ARDMORE WINDOW CLEANING CO.
SWARTHMORE BRANCH.
AiL BRANCHES OF BOUSS
CLEAN-
ING. KNQWN IN TUB TBBBI..
TORY FOB 20 YEARS
Free Phone calls --For Customers
(Formerly sw. 19)
Ardmore 232G
ROGER RUSSELL
Maker oj Fine Photographs
ter Rodman Shoemaker and Mrs. Russell Kent first. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wilson second. William Cmemer and Richard Sellers. third.
L. G. Luckie is announced as the winner of the ten weeks tournament which
closed just before Christmas. North and
south winners at the pre-Christmas play
were Mrs. H. Bardwell Lincoln and Mrs.
Philip Kniskern first. Mr•. Wallace McCurdy and Mrs. Walter Shoemaker second, Mrs. Sargent Walter and Mrs. K. C.
Kennedy third.
East and west winners" on the same
were Mr. and Mrs. Fred
first, Mrs. Russell Kent and Mrs. A.
Clayden second, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bowditch third.
416 HAVERFORD PLACE
CALL SWARTHMOREH290
Swarthmore Club Scores
Members of the Swarthmore Bridge
Club enjoyed a delightful holiday oa,rtv.,
KEEP WARMER -LONGER
on Wednes$.Y evening, December
Mrs. E. C. Lappe was chairman of
with
refreshments. Bridge winners were Mrs.
COAL AND COKE
P. L. Howard and R. !>. Sanders first.
while just one-half point...behind were
FUEL OIL
Mrs. John E. Dever and Maurice
Greist. followed closely by John Highberger and Halsey Jones.
Winners on Wednesday evening; De~
cember 30 were R. A. Randall and
Bayard Morrison first. H. Tomlinson
Phone Swa. 10412
and R. Gemmill second, !lnd L. B. RanWe CAN SHOW -YOU HOW
kin," Mrs. Marsh, Mrs. R. Gemmill and
iiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.lJ Maurice Creist tied for third and' fourth.
•
Here's a helpful folder that aids in solving the "lunchbox problem." It tells how to pack flavorful, .nutritlonal
foods that provide plenty of body nourishment. !t also
shows how leftovers from last night's dinner can be
revamped into appetizing and filling packed lunches,
'.
as well as home lunches.
Write for your copy today, or ask for it at our
company office.
.......
---
)
•
VAN AI.EN BROS•
PHILADELPHIA ELECTRIC. COMPANY:
BUY MORE WAR SrAMPS AND BONDS
I
,.
-158161-:
-
t. 'OW
~.,
A:~I"'~.:J .'I'T.'
Ina
~ C(IIlpOnt which. friends 'of. the
Auxiliary might save from their pur-
. . . . Su,1
John Schobinger, 800 of Mr• .00 Mrs,
bearing them.
George
Scbobinger of S_rthmore ave~~...:R~~E~ADING
I
washcloths, soap and candy,
_
if left in the vestibule of the Oscar nue, has' left for preliminary Army Air
.' Pre-Sehool Club to Have Teaeh·. ,,:,...ord ......;. ....... Replac:e Annual Gilcreest home at 318 Harvard-avenue; Cor:PS training in Atlantic. City, N.J.,
Methode"
r_.~
will be sent to fill the many reque.ts being one of the last enlistments accepted
lq Expert ExpJain
CharIty BaD .. JoiDt WiDter
coming from hospitals for these items. before such method of en~ing the serToday
. SoeIal Mair
Modern books, especially those with vice was discontinued.
Guenther H. Froebel, Jr. of SwarthThe regular monthly meeting of the
paper covers, are al.o desired.
'more avenue, who was in the midst of
Swarthmore Mothers' Club will be held The American Legion and Atcciliar:v
hi. third year of business administration
today, Januar:v 8, at 2 :45 P.M. in the announce a card party to be held
Rose Valley ClwrUB to study at Lehigh University. when he
WOI)laJ1's Club House. Beatrice Hoskins day evening, February 19, in the Womenlisted in the Army, will leave Monday
. of the Sprogell Sch09I, Media, will speak an's Club House in place of the usual
Give
"pQi;ence"
at
to begin active duty.
on "lITeaching the CIilld to Read."
dance sponsored about this time by
Miss Hoskins is a specialist in the
Tom Myers, who was a member of
Players
Club
teaching of reading. She has taught in th~se organizations.
the Air Corps in Mississippi two y~rs
the Swarthmore public schools. the Rye There will be a business meeting .for
The Rose Valley Chorus will give its ago and has been a.. c!viUan accountant
(New York) Country Day School, and Auxiliary members at 2 P. M. on .Mon- .pring production at the Players' Club with the Army in Washington, D.C. ret1:e Manhasset Public School. rn her
January 18, followed 45 !DIDut.. in S"';'rthmore this year. This policy cently, will return home this week-end
talk today she intends to stress the necesby a talk by Mrs. Harrison S~ith,
ity for awareness of the child's reading
president of the state Auxiliary was decided at the executive board meet- for a reunion with his mother Mrs. Anneeds 'by both parents and teacher, and
presentfnational ch~irman of Pan . 1 t Sunda afternoon at the home drew Myer. .of C?mell avenue and· his
~f!! ~ presid':t, Mrs. George Jarden, brother and 'ISter-m-law Corp. and M...
adjusting reading methods to them. She t.::::~i::~ siudy, to wh.ch guests are Possum Hollow road, Rose Valley.
. John Myers who are here on furlough
will dwell on preventative methods rather
invited.
The Chorus' production of the Gilbert from Harrisburg, before reentering active
than remedial methods.
Bits of yarn and wool pieces arc
Sullivan operetta "Patience," will service on Monday.
. The older d~ion group will meet
by the Auxiliary for its sewing and
take
the
of the Players' May perClifford Bryant, son of Mr. and Mrs.
January 13 at 8 P.M. in the home of
at 9:30 Friday morning, Janu- formance. place
Instead
of
the
usual
two
pel'- S. Milton Bryant of Dickinson avenue,
Mrs. Robert Cadigau, 213 Dickinson avKnee robe. for convalescent
eDue. Theresa Young will speak on service men and nurses are receiving formances by the Chorus, there will be and Alban Eavenson, son- of Mr. and
Mrs. Alben T. Eavenson of Strath Haven
''Testing-the methods and purposes of first consideration by this group at six, the dates being May 6, 7, 8, and May avenue,
will leave Monday for New Cum13, 14, and 15.
land. Cl·ff d '
I·
achievement and metal tests," Theyoung- present.
Rehearsals for upatience" will begin her
1 or
expects to en er nuner group will meet at the home of Mrs.
Certain soap. canned milk and cigar- on Thursday evening, January 28, at eralogy study with the Army Air {:orps.
William F. U~e, on January 20 at
ctte products carry coupons which the
P.M., instead of Wednesday, January 6, Auxiliary is collecting and cashing in 8:30 in the Media Friends' Meeting
Dr. Leora J. Sheridau of Vassar aveas previously announced. Mrs. Stanley for money to be presented to the Red House. Philip Warren Cooke will direct
nue
entertained Mr. Robert Wenger of
the
music,
and
J.
William
SitlUllODS
is
Cro.. to assist with a Blood Bank. Mrs.
Taylor will speak on "Music for
to
be
stage
director.
Children."
Herbert Bassett is in charge of receiv~
Ephrata over the New Year holiday.
] );ltle I "h~~~~r;o:;fs~articles
.....
I
•
I
Malcolm Gardner Main formerly of
Cedar lane '""'s officially reported missing in action in a telegram received by
his father William R. Main 00 the !lib
of last month and listed as such in December 31st's Naval release to newspaper.. Graduating cum laude at Andover Academy and with honors at Yale
University, MalColm entered Northwestern University for Navy training and had
been in active service since receiving...,an
.
ensign's commission there last January.
His family now live in Malvern.
-
Lt. Lm.ti. I. Dethloff who recently received his commission as Second Lieutenant at the Officers' Training School
at Fort Knox, Ky. is now with the
Armored Force at Camp Campbell, Ky.
*********
Beeause of the on Shortage
the .hop will elOlle at
5:30 P. M. Instead of 6 P. M.
alice harber, Gifts
OLD BANK BUILDrNG
-
*********
**********************************************
,
,
How to help ensure yOJJr family's supply of essential
Supplee Dairy Products
these past months we have seen war change
a tiny bobby pin into an essential·machine-gun
spring. ; • a nylon stocking into a powder bag, ••
a pound of coffee into tbree-quarters of a square.
inch of paper . • . a careless few miles of driving
into a well-planned major shopping sortie.
DURING
We are all proud, humble and sanguine aboul
BUch temporary cbanges in our normal living pattern
• , • and about those that lie abead of us.
. All of us realize that changes are inevitable. Most
of us ask nothing more than to be informed as fully
as possible in order to plan adjustments.
Of all mattors affecting our daily lives, nothing is
more vital than food. Nutrition authorities have
placed dsiry prodncta at the top of the list of neces·
sary foods.
As 'you know, dsiry products conlain, besides
other essential nutrients, a war material second
alm~st to the metals and akills that supply our
troops. It is - butUr-Jat.
: '.
You know also holY this unmatched rich substance
in your milk and cream, with its precious freight oi
vitamin A, becomes almost liquid gold in wartime.
You ha.e read how the ruthless banditry of the
modem Huns has destroyed almost the entire supply
in every conquered country • • • how deficient the
nations of the Far East are.
Now you are hearing talk of an American "butterfat stock.pile." Heavy cream has already gone into,
it - off the market. There are restrictions on BUPplies of butter and ice cream.
.
If you weren't informed, you might suppose that
this means an actual mountain of butter is being
piled up somewhere, like the gold at Ft. KnoL But
actually il simply means that your Government and
the Dairy Industry must look at all the butter·fat in
all the milk product8 in America as a single source
or "pool." From this must be taken your family's
needs - and the needs of all your boys in service-
* ••,.
and of our underno\lrished allies - and of the starving people we rescue. Each need must be filled from
this single pool- even in the face of production and
distribution diffi~ulties.
That is where you can he wise - and generous.
Realize that the present restrictions of our Governmont and whatever future ones become necessary are
intended - NOT to deprive your family of whipped
cream on your dessert or two pats of hutter on your
hot cakes - but to .ee that you contirwe to get a
fair and equal.hare oj the exUting .upply ofthi&
Juddenly precioUJ
w..,. ingredient.
You can help to bring about this equitable division
by beginning right away to balance your family'.
butter-fat budget daily. This merely means that in
thinking of your family's requirements, you include
all butter·fat sources that are still available to you;
if possible, plan and order for several days in ad·
vance so your Supplee driver can budget your needs
with those of others - see that all are served.
Milk, cream, ice cream, butter, 'l/1eese - all con·
tribute to your own family's "butter-fat pool." You
will want to use them wisely. When butter plates
don't appear at supper, ice cream for dessert, for
eumple, can help supply needed elements. Homog·
enized milk, with cream mixed right through it, is an
especially easily assimilated way of giving the older
people and children a part of their share. And
although the ice cream supply is limited, you can
still send out for your favorite flavor and stand an
. excellent chance of getting it balance a "low" day.
For this is still the richest, moat fortunate nation
left on earth. (Ir7llIgiM what hungry'comtemation
to
of your family and thousands of other American
families. In these difficult times, we believe we can.
be of greater service than ever before.
We are arranging, for. instance, that a supply of
appealing, tasty Supplee Homogenized Milk and most
other products be availalile in a store in every neighborhood to supplement your regular deliveries. These
will provide needed milk' nutrients for the extra calls
of your war workers .and children as well as serving
your emergencies.
.
Our laboratories and the Soaltest Kitchen are .'
diligently using our extensive research facilities to
perfect new products. which will take less from the
butter-fat stock.pile_ One of these may help to iiJ1swer
the cream problem at your house.
ShortlJ. we will announce a quick, inexpensive new
method we have developed 10 double your bm"'r
without 1088 of flavor. With so much of all
the butter being madet9day earmarked for the Al'lllY
and the Navy, you can imagine what a "find" that
will be for every housewife. If you would like a
copy of thia "double·your-butter-back" recipe in
advance oj publU:ation, drop us a card. We'll see
that you get it - immediately - and other wartime
suggestions for good nourishment and conservation
as our people develop them. .
IJowm.
No coat or 'obligation, naturally. Be sure to include your name and address, and send.to SuppleeWills-Jones Milk Company, 1523 N. 26th Street,
Philadelp"hia, Pa.
~/Jt#k~
SUPPLEE
"
DI.................1
DIII~
.......... Co ....ollOn
the paragraph above would CIJlUe if if were publi&hed
as advice 10 howewi".. in a R .....ian, or French, or
Cerman or even English paper!) But there is no
.U • • L • • • • ILL • • • • • • •
•
1 .L •
CO" • • • y
p,....
.sa . ,
• -8UPPlIE.1
\be
SHOW
... uw. tb_d f. at 1030 ..... TImE IHI
* -'*"* * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** * * *- * * * * * 11
.-:"
.~
;·THE SWARTHM'ORE
w..
10111
xv,. No.2
PLAYERS REVIVE
SWARTHMORE, PA., JANUARY IS, 1943
. VOL.
TO ADDRESS WOMAN'S CLUlJ
"JIM DANDY"
, "Jim Dandy" William Saroyan's dreamlike medley of comedy, pathos, boogiewoogie, symbolism; satire, and dancing,
will be the January production of the
. Players CliJb opening Tuesday, January
19, and running through Saturday, January 23.
Tried experimentally last· year in a
special production outside the. regular
s;!ason, it was seen largely by non-mem~
bers, but was liked 50 well by tho.. who
saw it that many requested its revival.
The Playe.. Club. production is under
the direction of John Dolman, Jr. who
also plays Jim Dandy - said to be the
least important character in the play except for the few moments when he
doesn't pretend to be important. Saroyan
describes him as a l'bum with m
nondescripts who gather in a most astonishing public tib..ary with revolving doors,
stairways that don't go anywhere, a noisy
cash register, a pianola, and furniture
that orie would see only in a dream. They
include Flora the shy librarian (Barbara Spencer); the contradictory Jobany
with one ;oot in the grave (Paul Campbell) ; Little Johnny their son- (Neal Gallagher) a tiny replica of his father; Jock
the optimist (Thomas Sweeney) who
hopes to find a good book someday; Molly
(Gretchen-Van De.Boe)·who i. boih old
and yoliug and· whose part is to dance;
Jim Crow (Stafford Parker) the tal>d:!ncing boogie-woogie 'player wbo is jim
Dandy'. voluntary slave; a bewildered
pnblic servant (Thomas H. Lueders) who
deliver. the mail ; and Fishkin (Philip
R. Whitu~). the comically pathetic. pes.imist ,with. the soul !>f a great bero.
A novel feature ofuext ~s prodpction will be a "double-heade,." on Tuesday night- two performances for one
'admissi"n. This has been arranged because
50 many who have seen "Jim Dandy"
have expressed the wish that they might
see' it again \Vhile stiD fresh in mind.
The play is very short, and the second
performance)s expected to be over about
11.20.
Ou Wednesday night the single performance will be followed by an open
forum, in which actors and audience will
join for an infonnal discussion of the play.
,
.'
. '
RUSSIAN BATILE
T.'IYi' ,..
.l".lLl'.( AT COIJ,EGE
Well Rounded Movie Program in
Double Run Tomorrow
NIght
"We Are from Kronstadt" a Russian
picture celebrating the heroism of the
Red sailors in the October Revolution
of 1919 will be the feature of the college
movies in Clothier Memorial on Saturday
night, January 16, at 'I and 9 o'clock.
ItThe Flying Mouse'·~, two English documentary filmS"" "Cbattnel, Incident" a~d
"Yesterday's Over Your Shoulder", and
a Russian short "Folk Dam:e" will be
added attractions. Both shows aTe open
to residents of the village.
'We Are from KronstadtU is a battlepiece depicting the great attack and rout
of tile White Army with unusual military real,ism. The hero is a Red· sailor
stationed at Kronstadt the Baltic Sea
naval base defen
is traced 'the growth of patriotic sentiment as his comrades are captured and
put "to death by the White Guards. The
scene of the execution of the Red sailors
is 'the most memorable in the film-powerful, slow-moving, yet beautiful. ,The
symbolism of the gulls flying above as
the sailors are put 10 death is typically
Russian, very like a sce.ne from Chekhov;
still in contrast to this is the film as a
whole which is decidedly virile.
The next movie P1'9gram at the college
will be on Saturday, February ZO.
Katherine Booth of North Chester road
reports to Smith College,: North Hampton, Mass. tomorrow for basic training
as an officer in the WAVES.
A graduate of Swarthmore College in
1932 and Simmons College, Boston,·Mass.
the following year Miss Booth has lived
with the Eo M. Bassetts here since entering. the employ of the University of
Pennsylvania in the fall of 1933. Fot the
last three years she hu been assistant
to the dean of the Wharton School of
the University. She is spending this week
with her mother Mn. Vincent R. ~
or Old IIcmillllnD. Vt.
SERVICE SUNDAY
FOR DR. BRONK
t2.SO PER YEAR
Navy. League Seeks Desk
•
The lbeal Navy League Service
is in' dire need of a flat top office
Meeting in Memory of Woman
desk for its newly opened head-'
. Edueator Who Died on 10th
quarters
in the Old Bank Building.
After Tearhh'll50 yearS
Anyone who can lend such a piece
Memorial services wiit ~ held in the
of furniture to the outfit is urged
Friends' Meeting House at 4,o'dock Sunto contact" the headquarters during
day afternoon for Dr. rsabelle Bronk,
the day or telephone Mrs. Albert
professor emeritus of French and former
Hill, Swarthmore 0500 after busihead of the departmtnt of romance lanness hours.
guages at Swarthmore College, who pass-I!.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--1
ed away. Sunday. Dr. Bronk: lived her
first ten years in SwarthmOre at the col ..
lege, following which she had an apartment on North Chester road for many
SnrreaIIAt Vehicle lnilfated Here
1aat Seoon Repeated by
RequeetNextWeek
Latest WAVE
For our part, we are pledged to moat strenuous
effort for the continued good living and nouriahment
*
In
•
food to waste, nor would you want to V(aste any in
the face of international hunger.
Wor ....d. o .. d S'Olllp.
JAN 15
EneIa· MaIn A-.
ilfavy MIMing
years. For the past three years she had
lived at the Strath Haven rnn until two
months ago when she became ill and was
Latest Cloislel"8 Exhibit Features
taken to a corrvales~nt home in Media.
A heart attack last Saturday resulted
in her death the following day. Inter!Dent in the family burial lot in Man-
Work of LiJe Staff
chester. N.Y. cemetery foHawed services
Dr. John W. Nason whose talk on
uE.ducation and the War" before a joint
gathering of the League of W 9Men Voters and the Woman's.Club Tuesday,
January 19, at 2:30 P.M. -is greatly an~
ticipated. Mrs. Raymond K. Denworth
chairman of education for both organiu-.
tions has arranged the' program ,which is
open to all in the connnunity. Dr. Nason
is president of the college and a nationally recognized authority upon educational
problems.
MRS. EASTLAKE
BURIED ToDAY
Engli8h.Born Owner of Harvard
Inn Had Lived Here
for 35 Years
Mrs. Janet Faulkner Eastlake died at
her residence the Harvard Inn on Wednesday mornil)8';January 13, after a shon
illness. Funeral services Will be held at
Oliver Bair's, Philadelphia this afteruoon
at' 2 o'dock. Interment will be at ArIington Cemetery, Drexel Hill.
Mrs. Eastlake was born in Masonville,
n""r Manchester, England, the daughter
of' i.evi· and Sara Faulliner; She came
to· this country when she was six years
old. After her marriage to John Clark
Eastlake she lived in Lansdowne where
she was a member and sang in the choir
01; ,St. John's Chureh.
Thirty-five years ago she came with
her husband and daughter Marjorie to
Swarthmore. After his death she opened
a tea room in her home and later developed ,it into the Harvard Inn and Annex.
She was an early member of the Players Club and active in their productions
and a charter member of the Wow.an's
Club' of . Swarthmore.
She is surviv.ed by her daughter Mrs.
Howard Davis and two granddaughters
Jane and Barbara Davis, all of whom
have made their home with Mrs. Eastlake for the past year.
•
HOME & SCHOOL TO HEAR
CHICAGO SPEAKER
Eugene J. Benge, president .of Benge
Associates, managemeq,t engineers, ~f
Chicago -will address - the Home and
School' Association Monday night, Januany 25, in the High School Auditorium.
Mr, Benge will discuss individual differences and their effect. upon vocations.
E. N. Hay, the association's program
chairman, emphasizes the timeliness of
the ~pic for all young students. and their
parents. Members of the ,junior and
senior classts of the school are· specifically invited to attend the meeting which
is expected to have widespread appeal
for all parents.
MeCahe-:1i-u-g.-·n"·-ee-r-in-g A~ard
Given
'Thomas Bayard McCabe of North
Chester road t president of the, Stott Paper Company and alumnus of the college, personalty addressed a meeting of
the engineering students and faculty in
the auditorium of Hicks Hall Tuesday
morning at 11 o'clock on ,the occasion
of the presentation of his annual award
to the outstanding senior ~ngineering
major. This award which has been given
by Mr. McCabe since 1936 and consists
\>f a world esteemed watch suitably engraved, was presented by President
John W. Nason to J ahu Leslie Dugan,
Jr. of Elkins Park who will receive his
degr.. at the coDege on February 6.
The recjpient of the lLward plays on the
football team, captains the baskethaD
team, 'is a member of Boo~ and Key,
permanent' pr..ident of his class, and
Philadelphia Alumni Club .clrolar.
Political Cartoons
In College Gallery
held at 2.30 Tuesday afternoon at a
Media funeral parlor.
Born in Duanesburg, N. Y. on December 5, 1856 ,the daughter of Abram and
Cynthia Brewster Bronk she was educated at Brockport (N.Y.) State Normal School, attended Wellesley College
1878-81, the College de France 1883-84,
the University of Leipzig (Germany) and
the Sorbonne in Paris 1889-91.
Receiving her bachelor of pbilosophy
degr.. at Illinois Wesleyan University
in 1893 and her doctor of philosopby at
the University of Chicago seven years
later, she taught at Wellesley Preparatory School (Chicago), the Girls' Classical School (Indianapolis), and Miss Ely's
School, N. Y. before becoming a Fellow
of the department of romance languages
at Chicago University 1898-1900. During the ·school year 1900-01 she taught
French_ a~d Gennan and was ass~tant
professor on th~ department o! romance
languages and bteralure at Chicago, and
the same year headed. Beecher House
there. . .
. .
. S~dY1ng stun~ers _a! the. !libl~ntheque
Nationale and
Ule
ljmver:ntY
01
Gren::
Artist
The Cloisters Gallery of· SwartJunore
College reopens on Wednesday, January
13, with an exhibition of political car-.
toons by William H. Walker staff artist
for LIFE from 1898 to 1924. After graduating from the University of Roc~ester
in 1891 Mr. Walker studied at the Art
Students League in New York for three
years laying the foundation for his career
as a draughtsman on leading periodicals
and newspapers.
'
His most. important work was done
while a member of LIFE which was not
only famous for its hwnor but also for
its keen social sense and -active editorial
policy. The choice of the cartoons on
exhibition was made from the standpoint
of their significance for technical procedure as well as of their subject matter.
While some of them such as' the 1907
cartoon on Trust Busting may have a
limited topical importance, others on Congressional Procrastination and Isolation-
ism possess a strong appeal today. Out·standing in 'this ..mnd group is the work
which, predicts the arrival of the Second
World War about 1935 "unl..s the job
is lint,hed': in l!lIR
..
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'DR. BOGARDUS AT
WOMAN'S CLUB
OPA Execulive Asks Cooperation
of Consumers in Fight
Against IuDalion
Dr. James F. Bogardus, District PJ:jce
Executive of the Office of Price Administration, clarified for an intensely inter..
ested audience of clubwomen Tuesday afternoon the reasons for price control in
this nation's war. program.
.
"We need price control to keep the
war running smoothly. nis is primarily
a war of production. We may have the
finest Navy and Army in the world bot
unless we supply them adequately' they
will fail. Our productive equipment has
to run constantly at top speed. Inflation
will stop it as it did in Germany or
France. Price control will prevent inflation," he declared.
ulnflation means declining income in
buying power, it iocreases the cost of
government, is always followed by depr..sion, Our national income wblcll·
means purchasing power has increased
from 76 billfons in 1940 to over 115
billions ill 1942 with consumer goods
steadily dropping.
•
uPrice control although a revolutionary means of preventing inflation has
been adopted by every .goverument at
war. Germeny has imposed it Since 1916.
The purpose of the Office of Price Administration is to prevent inflation and
to protect the economic system by stabilizing raw material prices, stabilizing
manufacturers' prices, and stabilizing distrmution costs.
.
Dr. Bogardus praised the cooperation
of business with OPA. "Adequate, policing would require a personue1 of 200,000
petsons and be undemocratic, whereas in
this district which includes 8 counti..,
4,000,000 people, 4000 businesses, we have
a total of 2S men. The preferred way is
to, secure the cooperation of the cons11lDCl" .
and busin.... Only voluntary cooperation
can prevent VOlidng.",
An· animated question and answer
iod followed the lecture. Dr. Bogardus
was introduced hy Mrs. Edward C. Pr.. cott co-chairman of program who said
that Swarthmore clubwomen- were willing to lido or die" but that they did want
to know why and that they hoped that
Dr.
Bogardus would tell them.
,
oble, and in Paris and Madrid 1910-11
!14r. ~alker was particularly ~oDd of
U5IDg ammals as. s~l.s for parties and
she visited Europe 16 times in 'all.
She was assistant professor of French stat... and· to the familiar group of. ~e
language and literature at Swarthmore ~encan· Eagl... French Cock, Bntish
College 1901-02 and Susan W. Lippincottl:.on, and Russtan Bear ~e added an enprofessor and head of the romance Jan- brely new figure the IDCOnsta~t Cbaguage departent from 1902 to 1927 when mel~.n. of. the Ge"",!,n Repu.bbc. The
she retired and was made professor emer- eX!U~ltiOn 15 also. of mterest In d~l1!~n
itus.
~trabng' the relation between. an ~tial
HONORS GUEN'fHER.
"Listed for many years in 'rwho's Who" I?ea and the develoJ:!Dlent of Its reahza- FIRE
she was author of "Pan·s and Memon·.." tlOn through the .vanous stages .from the • The Swarthmore l"ire and Protective
and editor of ':Poesies diverses by An- fi r~t sketch subnutted to.t he edi tor J 0 h n
toine Furetiere" (1908). She contributed Mltcllell t.o the final draWlDg handed over Association presented its retiring chal>rtieles to many periodicals among them: to the prlDte~.
lain the Rev. J. J. Glenther with a handa
,
b'
th
.
, some silver tray at its 3;ntll.a1 banquet last
·f
ed by F'
Modern Languaae, Modem Language . It is 0 VIOUS. at changes m compos.1- 'gh Th
b
dicall aff
th
1 - n. t.
e g1 t was present
""
Journal, Nation, New York Evening hon can ra , y
eel
e r~ ative Chief Robert· Allison in token. of the
Post Education and School and Society, power of meamng and that the artist de- Firemen's affection and sincere appreciaD;. Bronk ";31 a charter member of veloped considerably in breadth and econ- tion of Mr. Guenther's long and faithful
the First Church of Christ, Scientist, 0l1!Y of means, the p~ t~nical .re- service to the volunteer company. '
Swartlnnore of which she had served as QUlrements for an effective SOCial satire.
The- Chief and President Harry Hamby
a member of the board of directors and The relative tightness of the early style each received a War Bond in place of
been' an active -teacher in the Sunday due in part to the use of pen and ink: was the customary ,annual recognition of
Scho.ol. She was also a charter member- over~~~~ by. the discovery of the great -their hard work done without monetary
of Swarthmore's Le Cerci!! Francais. A POSSlblhties In value and accent of the remuneration. Mrs. Hamby sang "God
member of the Women's International lithographers crayon .. This is of some Bless America" to open the program.
League for' Peace and Freedom she had his~orical in~portance since it has been Burgess Jo1m H. Pitman voiced the bar..
served for a time as treasurer of its Del- claimed that Mr. Walker was the first ough's appreciation of the high grade
aware County branch. She also belonged politi~l cartoonist to us~ the crayon on work of its Fire Company.
to the American Association of Univer- paper Iflstead of .on ~e hthograph stone.
The banquet was held in the Woman's
sity Professors of which she was Swarth': ~oday the technique IS a common prac- Club and attended by 75 volunteer firemore branch chairman 1921-22; the Amer- tiee.
men and 'their guests) members of the
iean Association of University Women,
Gallery hours will be daily 2 to 5 P.M., Firemen's Auxiliat"Y,. and of Borough
serving on its council 1921-23 and as its and Saturdays and Sundays 2 to 6 P.M. Council. The Ingleneuk Tea Room served
secretary 1924-26; Colonial Dames of
the banquet at cost in appreciation to
America; Modern Language Association
Surgieal 'Dressings Note
men who serve the borough' faithfully
of the Middle States and Maryland;
•
at any hour of the day or night.
Modern Language Association of Penn. The National Headquarters of
I
sylvania of which she was vice-president
Cor:p. William A. Faragher of South
Ch
h bee set ed
the American Rod Cross strongly
urg.. that all, women making surester road as
D ect for Offi1923-24; Phi Beta Kappa. .
Surviving are a brother the Rev. Mitcers' Training in the U. S. Signal Corps .
gical dressings be vaccinated.
chell Bronk of Philadelpbia, a retired 1':===::====~======~a:t_F=ort:.:..~M:o:nm=:ou:th:.'~N::.J:._ _ _ _ __
Baptist clergyman, a nephew Dr. Detlev I '
W. Bronk of Sycamore Mills formerly
~
of Swarthmore, professor of.biopbysics
• e elISe
OURCI
'. U etlllS
at the University of Pennsylvania and
director of the University's Eldridge
~. Boro"lIh Hall-Telepholle 8351
R..... Johnson Foundation of Medical
Open Weekday. 1:38-3:30 DaiJ,.
Physics, and 'a niece Isabelle Bronk of
Philadelphia.
According to a news account, we may expect some time this month a stateSIKOC::-=-RS-=K=YO::-'-=S=P=-EAKS
wide test of the entire defense organization.
AT COlLEGE
The mobilization will call into action the State Police, Pennsylvania Reserve
Igor Sikorsky, noted airplane designer, Defense Corps; Reserve Corps Auxiliary, Civilian Defense Corps, Civil Air
will lecture on .tThe Helicopter," Sunday Patrol, State Evacuation Authority, the Governor's 'disaster emergency (0111evening at 8.15 in the Friends' Meeting mittee, Volunteer police units and forces of the U. S. Army in the Commonwealth.
HQu.... The illustrated lecture is sponThe regular army, under Maior General Milton A. Reckord, Commauding
sored by the Cooper Foundation and open officer of the Third Service Command, will participate and a complete solution
to all interested friends of the college.
will be developed up to and including full use of Federal troops.
.
Coouumer s...;.. B..lJet!n
Mr. Sikorsky who was' the first to
build and 8y a multi-motored airplane, _ Rayon StO"k'n •• ~ A SO denier is equal to a 3 or 4 thread sUk, a 75 denier
came· to this country from Rnssia after equals a 5 or 6 thread and is most satisfactory for general use. A 100 denitlr _
the lOt World War and is now engineer- equals a 6 or 7 thread silk. Rayon I.... 4O'to 60% of its strength when weting manager of United Aircraft, Vought- the wearer is warned to be .sureslockings dry 48 hours.
.
Sikonky Aircraft Dirision of Stratford,
Mater"'''- in dr_eo, liaings or underwear, may he VIScose (bemburg) (XC
Conn. He has denloped severaJ types Adtate. Both wear well, however acitate melts qnicki)' with a hot iron, thereof planes, including the Sikorsky multi- fore viscose is preferable for things to be laundered. [f the c!eaner iI told tlte
. ',.
lcind of'material to be clelllled, ..snits ate I...· variable;
mutored amphibian. .' .
co.
*D
I'
., B II .
C
•
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INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
• _.f
:
<
__·~~.~J_~~m_~
__1__8
~~;;;;~~~~~TI::;.:~;:. .:;,;.::;~~l~.~.~·.~·l$~.~A:-M~·T~D7r"~~~R~I;·~~~~__________.______.-____·_ftDD.
'11·"
MO'IBERS LEARN Legion. UXI ary. .
Set Febmary Da t e
PROPER READING
Ing t L - -~. which. friends ·,of the
Auxiii:r;v;;.r;ht save from their pur'cle5 bear,'ng them •
h
eases
0 f a r t,
Ashtrays, washcloths, soap and candy,
'f I ft' th
libule of the Oscar
I
e 1111 e ves 318 H
d
Gilcreest
tome
at
arvar avenue,
Pre-School Club to. Have Teach· Card party will Replace Annual
will be sent to fill the many requests
ing Expert Explain Mcthode
Charity BaD B8 Joint Winter
coming from hospitals for these items.
Today
Soeial Afialr
Modern books, especially those with
· d
The regular monthly meeting of the
paper covers, arc a I so deSlre.
Swarthmore Mothers' Club will be held The American Legion and Auxiliary
today, January 8, at 2 :45 P.M. in the announce a card party to be held Fri-
hta- ~
. ., A· .
Woman's Club House. Beatrice Hoskins day evening, February 19, in the Wom-
of the Spragell School, Media, will speak an's Club House in place of the usual
on tlTeaching the Child to Read."
dance sponsored about this time by
Miss Hoskins is a specialist in the
teaching of reading. She has taught in th(!se organizations.
There will be a business meeting .for
the Swarthmore public schools, the Rye
Auxiliary
members at 2 P. M. on Mon(New York) Country Day School, and
day,
January
18, followed ~5 ruinu.tes
the Manhasset Public School. In her
later
by
a
talk
by Mrs. Harrison SmIth,
talk today she intends to stress the necespast
president
of the state Auxiliary
ity for awareness of the child's reading
and
present.
national
chairman of Pan
needs ·by both parents and teacher, and
American
study,
to
which
guests are
adjusting reading methods to them. She
being
invited.
will dwel1 on preventative methods rather
Bits of yarn and wool pieces are
than remedial methods.
needed
by the Auxiliary for its sewing
The older discussion group will meet
January 13 at 8 P.M. in the home of meeting at 9:30 Friday morning, JanuMrs. Robert Cadigan, 213 Dickinson av- ary 15. Knee robes for convalescent
enue. Theresa Young will speak on service men and nurses are receiving
"Testing-the methods and purposes of first consideration by this group at
achievement and metal tests." The young- present.
Certain soap, canned milk and cigarer group will meet at the home of Mrs.
ette
products carry coupons which the
William F. Uthe, on January 20 at 2
Auxiliary
is collecting and cashing in
P.M., instead of Wednesday, January 6,
for
money
to be presented to the Red
3S previously announced. Mrs. Stanley
Taylor will sP'"..ak on lIMusic for Young Cross to assist with a Blood Bank. Mrs.
Herbert Bassett is in charge of receivChildren."
Enslp
Main AmoIqr
Navy Missing
John Schobinger, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Malcolm Gardner Main fonnerly of
George Schobinger of Swarthmore ave- Cedar lane was officially reported miss.
nue, has left for preliminary Army Air
,.._~ training in Atlantic City, N.J., ing in action in a telegram received by
'N.yo
his father William R. Main on the 11th
being one of the last enUstments accepted of last month and listed as such in De-.
before such method of en~ing the ser- cember 31st's Naval release to newsvice was discontinued.
Guenther H. Froebel, Jr. of Swarth- papers. Graduating cum laude at And·
over Academy and with honors at Yale
'more avenue, who was in the midst of
his third year of business administration University, Malcolm entered Northweststudy at Lehigh University when he em University for Navy training and had
Rose Valley Chorus to enlisted
in the Army, will leave Monday been in active service since receivjng.,an
Give "Patience" at
to begin active duty.
ensign's commission there last January.
Tom
Myers,
who
was
a
member
of
His family now liv~ in Malvern.
Players Club
the Air Corps in Mississippi two years
Lt. Louis I. Dethloff who recently feThe Rose Valley Chorus will give its ago and has been a civilian accountant ceived his commission as Second Lieuspring production at the Players' Club with the Anny in Washington, D.C. re- tenant at the Officers' Training School
in Sw~rthmorc this year. This policy ccntly, will rcturn home this week-end at Fort Knox, Ky. is now with the
was decided at the executive board meet- for a reunion with his mother Mrs. An- Annorcd Force at Camp Campbell, Ky.
ing last Sunday afternoon at the home drew Myers of Cornell avenue and his
of the president, Mrs. George lardeD. brother and sister-in-law Corp. and Mrs.
Possum Hollow road, Rose Valley.
John Myers who are here on furlough
The Chorus' production of the Gilbert from Harrisburg, before reentering active
and Sullivan operetta "Patience." will service on Monday.
Because of the Oil Shortage
take the place of the Players' May perClifford Bryant, son of Mr. and Mrs.
the shop will close at
formance. Instead of the usual two per- S. Milton Bryant of Dickinson avenue,
fonnances by the Chorus, there will be and Alban Eavenson, son of Mr. and
5:30 P. M. instead of 6 P. M.
six, the dates being May 6, 7, 8, and May Mrs. Alben T. Eavenson of Strath Haven
avenue,
will
leave
Monday
for
New
Cum5
13, 14, an d I.
l'lf d
.
Rehearsals for "Patience" will begin· berland. C 1 or expects to enter mmon Thursday evening, January 28, at eralogy study with the Army Air Corps.
OLD BANK BmWING
8 :30 in the Media Friends' Meeting
Dr.
Leora
J.
Sheridan
of
Vassar
aveHouse. Philip Warren Cooke will direct
the music, and J. William Simmons is nue entertained Mr. Robert Wenger of
to be stage director.
Ephrata over the New Year holiday.
*********
alice barber, Gifts
* * **** * * *
**********************************************
,
PA,
,
•
IUY
WAR
BOlDS
,
....
I
,.
JArJ 15 1943
..
THE SWARTHMOR
SWARTHMORE. PA., JANUARY IS, 1943
VOL. XV, No. 2
PLAYERS REVIVE
"JIM DANDY"
TO ADDRESS WOMAN'S CLUB
Surrealist V chicle Initiated Here
Last Seallon Repeated by
Request Next Week
IIJim Dandy" William Saroyan's dream·
like medley of comedy, pathos, boogiewoogie, symbotismJ satire, and dancing,
will be the January production of the
SERVICE SUNDAY
FOR DR. BRONK.
Meeting in Memory of Woman
Educator Who Died on 10th
After Teaching 50 Years
Memorial services wiil bt;. held in the
Friends' Meeting House at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon for Dr. Isabelle Bronk,
professor emeritus of French and former
head of the department of romance languages at Swarthmore College, who passed away Sund?.y. Dr. Bronk lived her
first ten years in Swarthmore at the college, following which she had an apartmcnt on North Chester road for many
years. For the past three years she had
lived at the Strath Haven Inn until two
months ago when she became ill and was
taken to a convalescent home in Media.
.'\. heart attack last Saturday resulted
in her death the following day. Interment in the family burial lot in Manchester, N.Y. cemetery followed services
held at 2.30 Tuesday afternoon at a
~fedia funeral parlor.
Born in Duanesburg, N. Y. on Decemher 5, 1856 .the daughter of Abram and
Dr. John \V. Nason whose talk on Cynthia Brewster Bronk she was edu"Education and the \oVar" before a joint cated at Brockport (N.Y.) State Norgathering of the League of Women Vot- mal School, attended Wellesley College
ers and the Woman's Club Tuesday, 1878·81, the College de France 1883-84,
January 19, at 2:30 P.M. is greatly an: the University of Leipzig (Germany) and
ticipated. Mrs. Raymond K. Denworth the Sorbonne in Paris 1889-91.
chairman of education for both organizaReceiving her bachelor of philosophy
tions has arranged the program which is degree at Illinois Wesleyan University
open to all in the community. Dr. Nason in 1893 and her doctor of philosophy at
is president of the college and a nation- the University of Chicago seven years
a11y recognized authority upon educational later, she taught at Wellesley Prepara-
'2.50 PER YEAH
Navy League Seeks Desk
•
The lbcal Navy League Service
h; in dire need of a flat top office
desk for its newly opened head-_
quarters in the Old Bank Building.
Anyone who can lend such a piece
of furniture to the outfit is urged
to contact the headquarters during
the day or telephone Mrs. Mbert
Hill, Swarthmore 0500 after busi-
DR. BOGARDUS AT
WOMAN'S CLUB
OPA Executive Asks Cooperation
of Consumers in Fight
Against Inflation
Dr. James F. Bogardus, District Price
Executive of the Office of Price Admin-
istration, clarified for an intensely interested audience of clubwomen Tuesday afness hours.
\",_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..! I ternoon the reasons for price control in
Players Club opening Tuesday, January
this nation's war program.
'
19. and running through Saturday, Jan"We need price control to keep the
uary 23.
war running smoothly. This is primarily
Tried experimentally last year in a
a war of production. \Ve may have the
special production outside the regular
finest Navy and Army in the world but
season, it was seen largely by non-memunless we supply them adequately they
bers but was liked so well by those who
Latest
Cloisters
Exhibit
Features
fail. Our productive equipment has
will
saw' it that many requested its revival.
Work
of
Life
Staft
to
run
constantly at top speed. Inflation
The Players Club production is under
Artist
it as it did in Germany or
will
stop
the direction of John Dolman, Jr. who
France.
Price
control wilt prevent inalso plays Jim Dandy - said to be the
flation,"
he
declared.
least important character in the play exThe Cloisters Gallery of Swarthmore
"In8ation means declining income in
cept for the few moments when he
College reopens on Wednesday, January
buying
power. it increases the· cost of
doesn't pretend to be important. Saroyan
13, with an exhibition of political car-.
government, is always followed by dedescribes him as a "bum with manners,"
toons by William H. Walker staff artist pression. Our national income which
and he is one of a curious collection of
for
LIFE from 1898 to 1924. After grad· means purchasing power has increased
nondescripts who gather in a most astonuating
from the University of Rochester from 76 billions in 1940 to over 115
ishing public library with revolving doors,
in
1891
Mr. Walker studied at the Art billions in 1942 with consumer goods
stairways that don't go anywhere, a noisy
Students League in New York foI" three steadily dropping.
cash register, a pianola, and furniture
years laying the foundation for his career
uPrice control although a revolutionthat one would see only in a dream. They
as a draughtsman on leading periodicals ary means of preventing inflation has
include Flora the shy librarian (Barbeen adopted by every government at
and newspapers.
I
bara Spencer) ; the contradictory Johnny
war.
Germany has imposed it since 1916.
with one foot in the grave (Paul Camp·
His most -important work was done
The
purpose
of the Office of Price Adbell) ; Little Johnny their son (Neal Galwhile a member of LIFE which was not
ministration
is
to prevent inflation and
lagher) a tiny replica of his father; Jock
only famous for its humor but also for
to
protect
the
economic
system by stabithe optimist (Thomas Sweeney) who
its keen social sense and active editorial
lizing
raw
material
prices,
stabilizing
hopes to find a good book someday; Molly
policy. The choice of the cartoons on
problems.
tory
School
(Chicago),
the
Girls'
Classiand
stabilizing
dismanufacturers'
prices,
(Gretchen Van De Boe) who is both old
exhibition was made from the standpoint
o
cal
School
(Indianapolis),
and
Miss
Ely's
tribution
costs.
.
and young and whose part is to dance;
of their significance for technical proceSchool, N. Y. before becoming a Fellow dure as well as of their subject matter.
Dr. Bogardus praised the cooperation
Jim Crow (Stafford Parker) the tapof
the
department
of
romance
languages
of
business with OPA. UAdequate. policdancing boogie-woogie player who is jim
While some of them such as the 1907
at Chicago University 1898-1900. Dur- cartoon on Trust Busting may have a ing would require a personnel of 200,000
Dandy's voluntary slave; a bewildered.
ing the school year 1900-01 she taught limited topical importance, others on Con- persons and be undemocratic, whereas in
public servant (Thomas H. Lueders) who
delivers the mail ; and Fishkin (Philip English.Born Owner of Harvard French and German and was assistant gressional Procrastination and Isolation- this district which includes 8 COooties,
professor in the department of romance ism possess a strong appeal today. Out- 4,000,000 people, 4000 businesses, we have
Inn Had Lived Here
R. Whitney) the comically pathetic pesand literature at Chicago, and 'standing in this second group is the work a total of 25 men. The preferred way is
languages
simist with the soul 9f a great hero.
for 35 Years
the
same
year headed Beecher House which predicts the arrival of the Second to secure the cooperation of the consumer
Mrs. Janet Faulkner Eastlake died at
A novel feature of next week's producthere.
tion will be a "double-header" on Tues- her residence the Harvard Inn on WedWorld War about 1935 "unless the job and business. Only voluntary cooperation
Studying summers at the Bibliotheque is fini!;h.M'~ in 191R.
can prevent \lolicing."
. __ .
day night - two performallces for one nesday morniDg, january 13, after a short
NatUmale
ami
toc
1.jniver:iit~oi
Gren::'
An
animated
question
and
amwer
per.-.--::admission. This has been arranged because illness. Funeral services will be held at
Mr. Walker was particularly fond of
oble,
and
in
Paris
and
Madrid
1910-11
iod
followed
the
lecture.
Dr.
Bogardus
so many who have seen "Jim Dandy" Oliver Bair's, Philadelphia this afternoon
using animals as symbols for parties and
have expressed the wish that they might at 2 o'clock. Interment will be at Ar- she visited Europe 16 times in all.
states and to the familiar group of the was introduced by Mrs. Edward C. PresShe
was
assistant
professor
of
French
see it again while still fresh in mind. lington Cemetery, Drexel Hill.
American Eagle, French Cock, British cott co-chairman of program who said
language
and
literature
at
Swarthmore
Mrs.
Eastlake
was
born
in
Masonville,
The play is very short, and the second
Lion, and Russian Bear he added an en- that Swarthmore clubwomen were willCollege
1901-02
and
Susan
W.
Lippincott
near
Manchester,
England,
the
daughter
performance is expected to be over about
tirely new figure the inconstant Cha- ing to "do or die" but that they did want
professor
and
head
of
the
romance
lanof
Levi
and
Sara
Faulkner.
She
came
Il.20.
meleon of the Gennan Republic. The to know why and that they hoped that
On Wednesday night the single per- to this country when she was six years guage departent from 1902 to 1927 when exhibition is also of interest in demon- Dr. Bogardus would teII them.
formance will be followed by an open old. After her marriage to John Clark she retired and was made professor emer- strating the relation between an initial
forumJ in which actors and audience will Eastlakt: she lived in Lansdowne where itus.
FIRE CO. HONORS GUENTHER
Listed for many years in "Who's Who" idea and the development of its realizajoin for an informal discuss,ion of the play. she was a member and sang in the choir
tion through the various stages from the
she was author of "Paris and Memories"
o
of.St. John's Church.
first sketch submitted to the editor John ~ The Swarthmore Fire and Protective
Thirty-five years ago she came with and editor of "Poesies diverses by An- Mitt-hell to the final drawing handed over Association presented its retiring chaplain the Rev. J. J. Glenther with a handher husband and daughter Marjorie to toine Furetiere" (1908). She contributed to the printer.
some silver tray at its annual banquet last
Swarthmore. After his death she opened articles to many periodicals, among them:
It is obvious that changes in composia tea room in her home and later devel- Modern Language, Modern Language tion can radically affect the relative night. The gift was presented by Fire
Well Rounded Movie Program in oped it into the Harvard Inn and Annex. Journal, Nation, New York Evening power of meaning and that the artist de- Chief Robert Allison in token of the
Firemen's affection and sincere appreciaShe was an early member of the Play- Post, Education, and School and Society.
Double Run Tomorrow
veloped considerably in breadth and econDr.
Bronk
was
a
charter
member
of
tion of Mr. Guenther's long and faithful
ers Club and active in their productions
.
Night
omy of means, the prime technical re- service to the volunteer company.
First
Church
of
Christ,
Scientist,
the
and a charter member of the Woman's
Swarthmore of which she had served as quirements for an effective social satire.
lOWe Are from Kronstadt" a Russian Club of Swarthmore_
The Chief and President Harry Hamby
The relative tightness of the early style
picture celebrating the heroism of the
She is survived by her daughter Mrs. a member of the. board of directors and due in part to the use of pcn and ink was each received a \Var Bond in place of
Red sailors in the October Revolution Howard Davis and two granddaughters been an active teacher in the Sunday
the customary annual recognition of
of 1919 will be the feature of the college Jane and Barbara Davis, a11 of whom Scho.o!. She was also a charter member overcome by the discovery of the great their hard work done without monetary
movies in Clothier Memorial on Saturday have made their home with Mrs. East- of Swarthmore's Le Cercle Francais. A possibilities in value and accent of the remuneration. Mrs. Hamby sang uGod
member of the Women's International lithographers crayon. This is of some Bless America" to open the prograDL
night, january 16, at 'I and 9 o·clock. lake for the past year.
o
League for Peace and Freedom she had historical importance since it has been Burgess John H. Pitman voiced the bor"The Flying Mouse'~, two English docuserved for a time as treasurer of its Del- claimed that Mr. Walker was the first ough's appreciatioll of the rugh grade
mentary films "Channel Incident" and HOME & SCHOOL TO HEAR
uYesterday's Over Your Shoulder", and
CmCAGO SPEAKER aware County branch. She also belonged political cartoonist to use the crayon on work of its Fire Company.
paper instead of on the lithograph stone.
a Russian short "Folk Dance" will be
The banquet was held in the Woman's
Eugene J. Benge, president of Benge to the American Association of Unh-er- Today the technique is a conunon pracadded attractions. Both shows are open Associates, management engineers, of sity Professors of which she was SwarthClub
and attended by 75 volunteer firetice.
to residents of the village.
men and 'their guests, members of the
Chicago will address the Home and more branch chairman 1921-22; the AmerGallrry hours will be daily 2 to 5 P.M., Firemen's Auxiliary and of Borough
"We Are from Kronstadt" is a battle- School Association Monday night, Janu- ican Association of University Women,
piece depicting the great attack and rout any 25, in the High School Auditorium. serving on its council 1921-23 and as its and Saturdays and Sundays 2 to 6 P.M. Council. The Ingleneuk Tea Room served
of Ute \Vhitc Army with unusual mili- Mr. Benge will discuss individual differ- secretary 1924-26; Colonial Dames of
the banquet at cost in appreciation to
America; Modern Language Association
tary realism. The hero is a Red sailor ences and their effect upon vocations.
men who serve the borough· faithfully
Surgical Dressings Note
of
the
Middle
States
and
Maryland;
stationed at Kronstadt the Baltic Sea
at any hour of Ute day or night•
E. N. Hay, the association's program
o
naval base defenqing Petrograd. In him chai rman, emphasizes the timeliness of Modern Language Association of PennThe National Headqnarters of
Corp.
William
A.
Faragher of South
is traced the growth of patriotic senti- the topic for all young students and their sylvania of which she was vice-president
the American Red CI"OSS strongly
Chester
road
has
been
selected for Offiment as his comrades are captured and parents. :Members of the junior and 1923-24; Phi Beta Kappa.
urges that all women making surcers'
Training
in
the
U.
S. Signal Corps
put -to death by the White Guards. The senior classes or the school are specifiSurviving are a brother the Rev. Mitgical dressings be vaccinated.
at
Fort
Monmouth,
N.J.
scene of the execution of the Red sailors cally invited to attend the meeting which chell Bronk of Philadelphia, a retired
is the most memorable in the film- is expected to have widespread appeal Baptist clergyman, a nephew Dr. Dctlev
powerful slow-moving, yet beautiful. The for all parents.
W. Bronk of Sycamore Mills formerly
symbolis:n of the guns fiying above as
of Swarthmore, professor of biophysics
the sailors are put to death is typically
at the University of Pennsylvania and
McCabe Engineering Award
Russian, very like a scene from Chekhov;
director of the University's Eldridge
Given
Office, Borough Hall-Telephone 03&1
stin in contrast to this is the film as a
·Thomas Bayard McCabe of North Reeves Johnson Foundation of Medical
'Open Weekday. 1,30-3,30 Dally
whole which is decidedly virile.
Chester road, president of the Scott Pa- Physics, and a niece Isabelle Bronk of
The next movie program at tbe college per Company and alumnus of the col- Philadel)lhia.
---"0--will be on Saturday, February 20.
According to a news account, we may expect some time this month a statelege, personalty addressed a meeting of
o
SIKORSKY SPEAKS
wide
test of the entire defense organization.
the engineering students and faculty in
Latest WAVE
AT
COLLEGE
The
mobilization will call in.to action the State Police, Pennsylvania Reserve
the auditorium of Hicks Hall Tuesday
Igor Sikorsky, noted airplane designer, Defense Corps, Reserve Corps Auxiliary, Civilian Defense Corps, Civil Air
Katherine Booth of North Chester road morning at U o'clock on the occasion
reports to Smith College,- North Hamp- of the presentation of his annual award will lecture on 'IThe Helicopter:' Sunday Patrol, State Evacuation Authority, the Governor's disaster emergency com·
ton, Mass. tomorrow for basic training to the outstanding senior engineering evening at 8.15 in the Friends' Meeting mittee, Volunteer police units and forces of the U. S_ Army in the Commonwealth.
The regular army, under Major General Milton A. Reckord, Commanding
major. This award which has been given Housl'. The illustrated lecture is sponas an officer in the WAVES.
A graduate of Swarthmore College in by Mr. McCabe since 1936 and consists sored by the Cooper Foundation and open officer of the Third Service Command, will participate and a complete solution
will be developed up to and including full use of Federal troops.
1932 and Simmons College, Boston, Mass. of a world esteemed watch suitably en- to all interested friends of the college.
Consumer Service BuUetin
Mr. Sikorsky who was the first to
the following year Miss Booth has lived graved, was presented by President
Rayon
Stocking.
A
50
denier is equal to a 3 or 4 thread silk, a 75 denier
with the E. M. Bassetts here since enter- John W. Nason to John Leslie Dugan, build and fly a multi-motored airplane,
equals
a
5
or
6
thread
and
is most satisfactory for general use. A 100 denier
ing. the employ of tlte University of Jr. of Elkins Park who wilt receive his came to this country from Russia after
equals
a
6
or
7
thread
silk.
Rayon
loses 40 to 600/0 of its strength when wet the
lst
World
War
and
is
nOJN
engineerPennsylvania in the fall of 1933. For the degree at the college on February 6.
the
wearer
is
warned
to
be
sure
stockings
dry 48 hours.
ing
manager
of
United
Aircraft,
Voughtlast three years she has been assistant The recipient of the award plays on the
Materials
in
dresses,
linings
or
underwear,
may be Viscose (bemhurg) or
Sikorsky
Aircraft
Division
of
Stratford,
to the dean of the Wbarton School of football team, captains the basketball
Acitatc.
Both
wear
well,
however
acitate
melts
quickly with a hot iron, therehas
developed
several
types
Conn.
He
the University. She is spending this week team, is a member of Book and Key,
fore
viscose
is
preferable
for
things
to
be
laundered.
If the cleaner is told the
of
planes,
including
the
Sikorsky
multipermanent·
president
of
his
class,
and
with her mother Mrs, Vincent R. Booth
kind of material to be cleaned. results are less variable.
.
. Philadelphia Alumni Club scholar.
motored amphibian.
of Old Bennington, VL
Political Cartoons
In College Gallery
MRS. EASTLAKE
BURIED TODAY
How to help ensure yo.ur family's supply of essential
Supplee Dairy Products
these past months we have seen war change
a tiny bobby pin into an essential machine·gun
spring ... a nylon stocking into a powder bag .••
a pound of coffee into three·quarters of a square
inch of paper • . . a careless few miles of driving
into a well.planned major shopping sortie.
DURING
We are all proud, humble and sanguine about
such temporary changes in our normal living pattern
• , . and ahout those that lie ahead of us.
. All of us realize that changes are inevitable. Most
of us ask nothing more than to be informed 88 fully
as possible in order to plan adjustments.
Of all mailers affecting our daily lives, nothing is
more vital than food. Nutrition authorities have
placed dairy products at the top of the list of neces·
sary foods.
Asyou know, dairy products contain, besides
othe.r es.,">ential nutrients, a war material second
almost to the metals and skills that supply our
troops. It is - butter-fat.
.
You know also bow this unmatched rich substance
in your milk and cream, with its precious freight of
vitamin A, becomes almost liquid gold in wartime.
You have read how the ruthless banditry of the
~odern Huns has destroyed almost the entire supply
In every conquered country . • . how deficient the
nations of the Far East are.
Now you are hearing talk of an American "butter.
!at stock·pile." Heavy cream has already gone into
It -
off the market. There are restrictions on sup-
plies of buller and ice cream.
If you weren't informed, you might suppose that
this means an actual mountain of butter is being
piled up somewhere, like the gold at Ft. Knox. But
actually it simply means that your Government and
the Dairy Industry must look at all the butter·fat in
all the milk products in America as a single source
or "pool." From this must be taken your family's
needs - and the needs of all your boys in service _
*
and of our undernoprished allies - and of the starving people we rescue. Each need must be filled from
this single pool- even in the face of production and
distribution difficulties.
That is where you can be wise -
and generous.
Realize that the present restrictions of our Govern·
ment and whatever future ones become necessary are
intended - NOT to deprive your family of whipped
cream on your dessert or two pats of butter on your
hot cakes - but to .ee tool you continue to get a
fair and equal .lw.re of the e:x;iJting supply of thi.<
• uddenly precious war ingredient.
You can help to bring about this equitable division
by beginning right away to balance your family'.
butter-fat budget daily. This merely means that in
thinking of your family's requirements, you include
all butter·fat sources that are still available to you;
if possible, plan and order for several days in advance so your Supplee driver can budget your needs
with those of others - see that all are served.
Milk, cream, ice cream, butter, c,heese -
all contribute to your own family's "butter-fat pool." You
will want to use them wisely. When butter plates
don't appear at supper, ice cream for dessert, for
example, can help supply needed elements. Homogenized milk, with cream mixed right through it, i. an
especially easily assimilated way of giving the older
people and children a part of their share. And
although the ice cream supply is limited, you can
still send out for your favorite Oavor and stand an
excellent chance of gelling it to balance a "low" day,
For this is still the richest, mo.t fortunate nation
left on earth. (lnwgine what hungry comterMtion
the paragraph above would cawe if it were publi.
German or even Engli.
the face of international hunger.
For our part, we are pledged to most strenuous
effort for the continued good living and nourishment
Buy War Bond. and Stamp.
.UPPL • • • W I L L . · ' O N • •
*
MIL Ie
COMPANY
of yonr family and thousands of other American
families. In these difficult times, we believe we can
be of greater service than ever before.
We are arranging, for instance, that a supply of
appealing, tasty Supplee Homogenized Milk and most
other products be available in a store in every neigh.
borhood to supplement your regular deliveries. These
will provide needed milk nutrients for the extra calls
of your war workers and children as well as serving
your emergencies.
Our laboratories and the Sealtest Kitchen are
diligently using our extensive research facilities to
perfect new products which will take less from the
butter-fat stock-pile. One of these may help to answer
the cream problem at your house.
Shortl~ we will announce
a quick, inexpensive new
method we have developed to double your butter
volume without loss of flavor. With so much of all
the butter being made today earmarked for the Army
and the Navy, you can imagine what a "find" that
will be for every housewife. If you would like a
copy of this "double.your-buller-back" recipe in
advance 01 publication, drop us a card. We'll see
that you get it - immediately - and other wartime
suggestions for good nourishment and conservation
as our people develop them.
No cost or obligation, naturally. Be sure to include your name and address, and send to SuppleeWills-Jones Milk Company, 1523 N. 26th Street,
Philadelp'hia, Pa.
~/Jt#k~
SUPPLEE
PRESIDENT
" Dhillon of "-tlo".' 0.117 P'PocIuou CorPONt.lon
~~L
~ DAIRY PRODUCTS
• SUPPLEE briDp you th. ~,"'c.. SHOW
oyer KYW, Tbunclaya at 9:30 P.M. TOllE IHI
*********************************************~
RUSSIAN BATI'LE
FILM AT COIJ.EGE
1,.---------------•
I
---..0---
* Defense Council Bulletins *
•
TBB SW ARTBIIORBAN
......... .......
FRIDAY. JANUARY 15
•
Miss RUIl. Child who was home from Henr:t Armstrong Peirool, Sr. of 'Laf.,- some time with Mr. and Mr.. Irwin
Middlebury COUege, "
avenue and the late Mrs. Peirsol Smitli, Sr. of Michigan avenue. .
.'
'
. performed in the rectory of tjJe
•
,
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hormby of York- Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help,
A seoond SOh Jolm Grier Poo!. ~
Ensign Seymour S.
Lt Benson Bowditch .perit two day. town entertained Saturday evening,
Morton by the Rev. Joseph B. Gibson, t>w:n, on Mom:oY, Jan~ry
In the
U.S.N.R., son of Mr. and Mrs.
this week with his parents Mr. and Mrs. uary 2, to announce the engagement ofJ' as"istant rector.
'".."
',' L)'I"I'-In HOSPItal, Pbdad.lpllla to Lt
Rutherford of Strath Haven avenue
John Bowditch, Jr. of Cedar lane while their daughter Marian Jeanette and Lt
Vows were exchanged in the presence Donald W. Poole, U.S,N.R,' and M .... ,
Monday morning for active duty
transferring from Quantico, Va. to Mon- Willits H. Bowditch, U.S.N.R. SOD of of memloers of the inunediate famili.. Poole of Swarthmore avenue.,
,
Mechanicsburg. A graduate of sw:.rth-I mouth, N. J.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bowditch, Jr. of with Dr. Ruth Helen Winant of Phila-.
.
more High School, Dartmouth
Lt Sunmer P. Jones who received hi. Cedar lane. The marriage wlll be per- delphia acting as maid of honor for her'
DO YOU KNOW
'and Tuck School he has been
commission as Second Lieutenant last formed at 8 o'clock Saturday evtning, siste.. and Mr_ J. Henry Wellburn of
Tbi'.... Il1IN . . .b7 _ _
as
auditor with the Sun Oil
Wednesday at Fort Benning, Go.
January 23, in Seaford, Va.
Swarthmore in theOposition of best man.
pany. for the past two-and·a-half years. spending a ten-day furlough with his
• •
The bride wo~e a two-piece semiJUST CALL. 'OUO
Mis. Mary Kistler of Open Doors, parents Mr. and Mrs..F. P. J~es of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry' L. Bernard of tailored' model of lightweight natural colPark avenue entertained Miss Eleanor Yale avenue before leavlDg for his next Union avenue announce the engagement ored wool with. a jaunty tall-feathered
RUSSEI,I,'S SERVICE
Goodspeed of Mont Clair, N. J., Miss assignment
their daughter Elsie Frances to Brown hat of the same material. lIer stitched
_
Y. . . c.. ... a.i. _ _ Elizabeth Conner of Harrisburg and Miss
Roland G. E. Ullman, Jr. son of Mr. E. Wiggs, Jr., Seaman Ilc of Louisville, leather pumps were in British tan and
8eplu . . , ... _
Do It.
Martha Conner of Millville, N. J. as her and Mrs. Ullman of Harvard avenue has Ky.' son of Mr. and Mrs. Wiggs of she wore a shoulder 'corsage of gardenias.
. returned from a week's visit with Mr. Louisville, Ky.
After the ceremony the wedding guests
house guests over last week-end.
Goodspeed, a former class~te of MISS and Mrs, Edward Forrest, Jr. on their
Miss Bernard is a graduate of the repaired to the home of the bride's parKistler's at MarY Lyon, will be an at- farm near Manchester, Vt and reported Swarthmore High School and is at pres- ents where they were joined by a few
tendant at the marriage of Miss Kistler for active duty with the Coast Guard on ent employed by the Pennsylvania Rail- intimate friends at an informal reception.
to Ensign James Harold Conner, U.S.N, Monday. "Pete" was a third year student road. No date has been set fol" the wedAfler a brief hOnO)'lROOD in New York
which will be performed on Saturday at the'School of Industrial Arts in rnu-ldiog.
the bride will remain temporarily'at the
•
home of her parents while her husband
evening. FebruarY 13 in the Swarthmore adelphia. He will receive his basic
training at the Manhattan Beach Coast
Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Paulson of Park at the end of a ten-day furlough r~turns
Methodist Church at 8.30 o'clock.
The Rev. J. J-;'rden Guenther and Mrs. Guard Station at Loug Island, N. Y.
avenue announced the engagement 'of this week-end to finish' his Army Air
Guenther of Trinity RectorY,' will move
Mrs. William H. Hickson and chil- their two daughters, Dorothy Grace to Corps training at-Fort Myers, Fla.
' r
Private Wesley Van France, and Helen
The bride· graduated from. the Mary
to "Friendship Hill Farm," Pao I, next dren Jane and Bill of Dartmouth avenue Louise to Mr. Vahey S. Kupell of Akron, Lyon, School in June, 1941. Mr. Peirsor
Wedn~sdav. Their daughier, Miss Doro- left Wednesday of last week for Washattended' Swarthmore High School, class
thy Hend~rson Gueniher, left this morn- ington, D.C. where they attended the Ohio.
ing for Washington, D,C. to accept a opening of Congress and heard the
The announcement party was held
of 1935. •
gOvef!U1lent ~ position in the Department dent's address on Thursday, Mr. Hick- Saturday evening, January 9,
---0--of 'the' Interior.
,on who has been living in Washington birthdays of both girls and was att,en~ed I
KaufFmau - Dexter
Mr: and Mrs. Charles Adams Cald- during the week since his
by 65 friends and relatives. The games
well arrived Monday to visit Mr. Cald- as assistant tally clerk to the House of of the evening were under the fr~on
Miss Gladys H. Dexter daughter of
pper Mrs. Anthony Dexter of Chester and
well's mother Mrs. Dwight D. Row~nds Representatives on November 1, accom- of Miss Grace Demetriades 0
of Harvard avenue temporarily. Mr. panied them home on Friday.
Darby, organizer of many young people's
Sidney L. Kauffman son of Mr. and
Caldwell who graduated from Swarth- The Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae groups,
. Lloyd E. Kauffman of Dartmouth
A short musical was also part of the avenue were married at Claymont. Del.
more College in 1938 was in Honolulu Association will meet at the home of
with the Turner Construction' Company Mrs. Daniel S. Morse, 315 South Ches- program in which Mr. Martin Hatch of on Friday, January 8, by the Rev; C.
wallpaper, wallbaard,
(of which J. Archer Turner of Harvard ter road on Tuesday, January 19, to sew Drexel Park sang several baritone solos, Stanley Lowcll, pastor of the Claymont
avenue and New York is president) for for the American Friends' Service.
and Miss Ernestine Pirimian of Spring- Methodist Church.
pia Iter, brick, etc.
a 'year and a half and then spent a year
Mrs. J. Horace Walter of the Swarth- fi.el~ rendferthed seve~al SOngsM' .A tri°D'.con·
Mrs. Kauffman is a graduate of Chlest'er I
on Midway .. Island, re~umiog t~ Hono- more Apartments will' be hostess to a slsllng 0
fee -slsters- ISseS ,lana, High School. The bridegroom,who gradIhIa with wattr
lulu in. September 1941. In December meeting of her luncheon and bridge club Pauline, and Grace Sober of Drexel Hill uated from Swarthmore High School
thinlDcn
1941 ,he married Julia Steele while she
at the piano, violin, and cello respectively. and Ml Hermon Preparatory School is
1 gallon of
was on a Hawaiian vacation. Mrs. RowMax Essl of Rutgers avenue left concluded the musica~ portion of the even- assistant to his lathe,,· who
the
plua"_
Paper Products 'Manufacturing
lands was about to entrain for a visit Wednesday to attend a meeting of the ings events.
up to l~,gd.
to her son on that fateful December
Society of Automotive Engineers which
Miss Doroiliy Paulson and Private plant here.
oE z..dy.to ......
when the bombing of his territory ch'~'..t is convening this weck in Detroit, Mich. France both graduated from Houghton
--B-'-+-~L---" paintl
evef1\bil1g.ConsequenUy this is the
Mrs. Joseph H. Walton of Ogden College, Houghton, N. Y. in the class of
..,.....
she has seen Charles since he ,,:~a~~~?,~!1 avenue is hostess to the Art Club today. 1941. Previous to his entrance to HoughOn. _t is _,ugh
Mrs. Irwin Smith, Jr. and infant daughat' home in August 1941 and h~r
The 12 members are studying Modem ton College, Pvt France attended Elmira
1 coal u....u, co....
Business College. He is now stationed ter Julia Elizabeth of Woodlyn have
personal acquaintance with her daul:hl<"-1 Art.
even
wallpaper and
in-law., Mr. Caldwell returned to
Mr. Edward Thatcher of Ogden avenne at Camp Kilmer, New Brunswick, N. J. turned home froni the Jefferson Hospidingy
wa1ls and
country to enter the service. His
will leave Saturday of next week. for His paren~ are Mr. and Mrs. Jason H. tal, Philadelphia where the bahy was
iDgs.lt
cuts
COR
born on December 26 and are speading
plans to make a visit to her mother Mrs. the Civilian Public Service Camp at France of Jasper, N. Y.
and work in ha1fI
Jolm Rush Steele of Stillwater, Okla.
Powellsville,=-_-+,___
Md.
Louise Paulson
is now of
attending
theMiss
Philadelphia
ConSefV'dtory
Music 'iM;m~~~~~~~:~~::i
'. Dries In 60 minutes
Engagements
where she has held scholarship for three
Mr. and Mrs. E. O. LangE of "Langewood," Baltimore Pike have received
consecutive years under Madame Olga
Within an houz you
word Umt their son Lt. Donald E. Lange Mr. and Mrs. Jay D. Cook of Thayer Samaroff Stowkowski.
.
haft • smooth,- flat
wa1llinish of enduring
has been promoted to the rank oJ Cap- road announce the engagement of their
Mr., Kupell is a graduate of the Unibeauty. Make' po..
tain in the U. S. Army Air Corp,. He daughter Miss Jane Marcy COOk to Lt versity of Akron and Massachusetts Insible l-day paintinB
at the Anny Air Base
Jallles Ie, Schu~ United. States
stitule of Technology. He is a member
;;: •• DO· i.cico.onmient
Air COrps son of Mrs. J. R. Schurz
of the Sigma Tau, American Aeronauti.
New Orleans. La.
deJay
••
Nancy Peel returned to Wooster
Pennington, N.J. Miss Cook is a gradu- cal Engineer's honor&f1
and
ate of the Woman's College of the Uni- at present is associated with the
lege, Wooster, Ohio on Tuesday
For lliin.g-. dining-, bedroomo, pm...
spending the holidays with her
versity of North Carolina. Lt. Schurz year Aircraft Company of Akron, Ohio.
room.. basements; pnges, etc. Vud
Mr. and Mrs, H. Lindlcy Peel 01
atteoded the University of North Caro- He is the son of Mrs. V. Kupelian of
BRAD THE NEWEST BOOKS
IIy ...1IIIb1. /MirItnr-~moJ IIy ,.,,.
oia avenue.
lina.
Akron and the late Dr. Kupelian.
tit:Mlar 1Hmt......orr.
• .
Among the out of town guests present
Mrs. A. G. McVay and children Jackie
and Priscilla of Front Royal. Va. returned
Dr. and Mrs. Cyrus Comnmos
at the party were Mrs. Mary Kupelian
to their home on Sunday after a two Groton. Mass: a~ounce the .
of Akron, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Iliad of Norfolk, Va., and Pvt A. Leonweeks' visit with Mrs. McVay's parents of Mrs. Comnmos daugh!er MISS
~
atd of Fort Eustis, Va.
Mr. aod Mrs. D. A. Hills of Elm avenue; Hale Pa~khurst to Lt. (l.g.) Hugh
AIken, U.S.N .R. son of Mr.
N'
edi Ie I
h
bee
d
MT. an d M rs. Thomas M~re, J r.?1 combe
'
Mrs. Gayle Aiken, Jr.. of New Orleans.
0 lnun
a p aos ave
n rna e
GALLON
South Chester road accompamed b~ their
Miss Parkhurst is the daughter of
for the weddings.
guests Mrs. Thomas Moore of Phlladel- I
Fed'
H
kh
Miss Lollise Paulson and Mr. V. Kupell
Makes 1~ gallons
phia and Miss Kelen G. Moore of ~laiJ.t- g~:ern~r ~~IC~ajn:~e Par urst fanner left for Washington, D. C. where Miss
field, N. J. attended the Ice Folhes 10
Lt A'k
tali' ed t Edd t
Paulson gave a recital for the benefit
You'll Rnd .ottng at tt. Suburban a
'd
'
on time
a he resided
ysone 0 fRf
.
Ph1'ldlh'
a e p la Iast F
n ay
cvemng.
last'.year,enwass
during which
e ugee Child ren un der th e auspIces
Quart
.'
,..,1 delight. Delldou., taIlsfy\ng roo.j,
Miss Margaret Little who has a teach· on Walnut lane.
of the Armeni~n 'Congregation in coopMakea 1 J.i quam .
charming atmospb.re,por/ed_ I
ing position in !=}~veland. !enn. spent
The wedding wi1I take place in the eration with the American Red Cross.
last week-end Vlsltmg her parents on near future in Boston, Mass.
•
lUCI'Il.1 lie • IINIEI "'" 15e I
Park avenue.
•
Peirsol- Winant
COCKTAil TIME' 3 TO 6 P.M. I
I
Mrs. B. W. CoUins of North Chester
Mr. and' Mrs, Frederic A. Child of
THE Alt.CONDITIONED
The marriage of Miss Shirley Mason
road will entertain a few friends
Germantown, fonnerly of Vassar av.,nue,
I
Wilmnt daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gilmalty at lunch today at her home.
have announced the engagement of
I
bert
Stevenson·
Winant
of
Sproul
road
Elsie Reuning daughter of Dr. and daughter Miss Adrienne Child to Mr.
113-117 W.State Street,Medi.,pa.
and Mr. John Whiting Peirsol, aviation
14rs. Karl ReuDing of Amherst avenue Ambrose Salmini of New York.
IInl
underwent an operation for hernia on
Miss Child is a visiting nurse employed cadet United States Army SOn of Mr.
Phone Swarthmore 10,000
tIlIIIMmlSE • '.1.1. SIIIIW SlIDM
Wednesday morning in the Taylor Hos- in New York City, and Mr. Salmini is
pital and was reported doing favorably engaged in Naval Defense work. An
early date has been set for the wedding.
SubacriptiolU POT
when we went to press.
ALL MAGAZINES
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Jacltson of
The, an:t~un~ement was .made at a -din·
Remember the. MeR and Women
North Chester road . left on Wednesday ner pa~ty dunng the holIdays when t.he
in· Service
to vacation in Florida. They will visit gnests mcluded Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Child
MRS. LLOYD E. KAUFFMAN
Mr. Jackson's brother and sister in Or- and daughter ?f Buffa!o, N. Y .. Mr. and
'Phone Sw. 2080
lando, spend some time in Highland Mrs. John Chtld of Ltnwood, N. J., and I;r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I
Park, and visit friends in Sl Petersburg
and Palm Beach before returning soon
after the middle of Februart.
Mr. Richard Thatcher of Chattanooga, '
'
,
Tenn. was the guest last week of Mr.
and Mrs. William 11. Thatcher of CoUege
FriMy and Saturikr
avenue.
',
PERSONALS
'!,
a.m.e,
I
-._--.------------_.-.,
""n-
aiU POND
.....- SPEED·EASY
$2.85
,
••
•
9Se
•
•
·
•
Inc.
,
SUBURBAN CAFE , SNOWDEN'S,
"
r--------------
MEDIA
The Players Club
BRIAN DONLEVY
VERONICA LAKE
William S.....1IUl'.
"THE GLASS
KEY"
JIM DANDY
Sunday
OF SWARTBMORIr"
•
Director
JOHN DOLMAN, Jr.
•
JANUARY
19, 20, 21, 22, 23
8.20 P. M-
r--..,. -
•
Doable p e r f _
I''''
ForaJD, F_ ...aad audiea..,
f..uo..m., perf_r ••
AVOID Freeze-ups
Qukk, EfIU:lent §en>Iee
K_" ¥ __ Water S."",. ""'.
ALL MAKES
•
IIaaty anti 'JDogneJdered
u:aateur re-
frt&erator repoln often reoul. In more
oertoua damqe. _
tbta ad on tbo
lnalde of your refrtgerator door - can
U8 for IIIU&l'&Dteed repBlra - lOU'll be
satlatlecU
•
WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR
"PRIORITIES
ON PARADE"
Call lU4ley. Par. 1IJ90
OLD REFRIGERATOR'
•
BBCONDI'I'IO!IIID
.um OVAILUftIIIaI
Vim
. "onla, . TueodGr-r,..,......".
"NOW'
VOYAGER"
,•
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE
JERRY COLONNA
BETrE DAVIS
tllth/ilil.!""""
lUIIBIGBIU.maa
•
l.lERBORO ELECTRIC
aPPLl••• SERVICE
l~
E: lDne1de7 A_ _
, RIDLEY PARK. PA. .
Protect yonr water pipes against
freezing before it is too late.
Avoid unnecessary delay and
expense later by timely protection-Nowl
,
PBTJ;R
E.
TOLD,
ErJilor'
M...a.JoalB TOLD, Jfuoci4le
L\lulla McCuna
Eal....... Smad a.. Matt., JeU!)' 2t, 1929,IIt!be POOl
0I&c0 lit swart"-. P.., andc the Act of MacII 3, 1819.
~
,- .,,"
,,,'
EtJik,r
. ROS&LIE Pi:IDOL
• •W!MI-W"'"
'y ilooa
FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 1943
Presbyterian Oanreh Note.
ONa TOUCH
,,'
SPE
OF NATURE
.,
'
,
Lest one he led to _
!hat grebes
a drug on the ornithological market,
explain that m)l' aignilicant early
expen,,"" with birds only bappenecl
associated with this family oE
After making
Pied-hilled and Hnmed
have ...... a Holboell'. Grebe in
Tenia'. but, following lIrat episode there
THB SW.urtHIiOaUN, INC.. PUBUSBD
PBONB SWARTHIiOaB 900 .
"Water won-"
eveniDs at 7.45, at the
'FrI_dly. Circie Heels
kerOD
This Saturday
Strath Haven Inn the public is invited
to join the Ion guests in bearing K. C.
discuss "Water Treatment."
Mr., Armstrong recently. returned from
South America where he had been
gaged in water work for 13 years.
spent several months at the Inn until his
wife joined him and they moved to WaIlingforcL He wiil demonstrate with actual
experiments. and will tell of his experi_
• South
ences m
America.
On Wednesday evening one of the
regular round table game nights was enjoyed by house guests at the Inn.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Alvah Wood Stuart of
Vassar avenue entertained informally at
their home last Slinday evening.
The Friendly Circle will meet Thursday afternoon, January 21 at 2 P. M.
at the home ,of Mrs. Otto Kraus, IS
Benjamin West avenue. Mrs. T. H&rf1
BrowlI lind Mrs. Adolph Wuest'wlll be·
oo.hostes.es•
.,
iIish,' Scout
Ge,ts
'"
AwllJ'd
Ned Rutherford son of Mr. and Mrs.
Se)'IDour S. Rutherford of Strath Haveo
avenue was made an Eagle Scout at a
Boy Scouts of America court of honor
held at the Swarthmore Presbyterian
Church last Friday evening.
were several unproductive grebe, years
in my life. The first three kinds brought
my list to the balf-way mark 10 far as
the' United States was CODCeIned, and
,
it was a long time before I saw the other
Major Robert H. Douglas returned to
three in Wyoming, CaliEornia, aDd Texas.
camp Van Dorn, 'MiSs. Thursday of last
At Newburyport, hawever, I began to
'week after spending a lO-day furlough
feel that grebes were rather a plague,
,wi,th his family on Michigan avonue. '
and I thirsted for stranger birds. I wanted
them to be not only rare but also out- I -----,,= i!~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.;;~~~landish in ,their shapes and activities. To
~
outStrip grebes in physical peculiarity,
however, one must almost revert to the
contemplation of fossn.. Such birds as
khthyornis long ago.bect.me such expert
,wimmers t!'"t they lost the ability to
fly and their legs were over-
into huge paddles. One might 5Oy"All mimsy wer~ Cretaceous birds
standard of dignity and service and we
And the divers out-grebe."
will continue to adhe~,e to ,this basic policy
But I was forced by the :=~~~~faictsi
of extinction to" abandon
nostalgia and to s...:rch among
throughout the yeors to come. Funerals
for satisfying experiences.
Methodiet Oanrcla Notee
TIi.7 guest preacher this Sunday mornThe Church Sch091 meets on Sunday
ing ,at 11. ,o'clock will be tho Rev. ~r. moming at 9.45. At the morning worship
Cameron ,P.. Hall, Director of. the Social at 11, the minister wiu preach on the
EducitiQll'a'nd Actlon of the Presbyterian subject "The Divine Potter."
Board otChristian Education. Mr. Braun
The Youth Fellowship will unite with
will be the speaker at Hamilton College, the youths of the oommunity churches at
Clinton, N. V.
a supper meeting at 6 o'clock in the PresThe. Men's Bible CIa •• will have as byter.ian Churclt
their:$peaker· this Sunday morning at
Mrs. R. Bennett Cunningham will give
9:45 o'clock Dr, Paul C. Payne, whose a tea for the Young Women's AssoclasUbject wUI.be "A Project for Swarth- tion at her home, I Sylvan avenue, Rutmore." All men are urged to' attend this ledge on Thursday afternoon at 3.30
nY:Ciing an4 listen to this interesting dis-Io',clock.
cusdOil. ; . ?- ' , ' _"
,
The Bible Study class' will meet on
s
ginia: Bonitel. and 'Robert Ewing will
The Junior Choir, rehearsal, ,will be
the leader.;· .
held on Friday evening at 7 o'clock. ,
start at $150 and there ore over a hunThe High School Fellowship·will
,
Takes Stud~t ""'ork PoD
this Sunday . evening at 6 o'clock, with Concludes Race Series Sunday
..
dred pri.:e ranges to ch~se from.
the Conununity Young People's FellowThe report of Mrs. Waldo E. Fisher
ship at tI,is church. Fay Eo Campbell,
On Sunday, January 17, at .9.45 A.M.
Guernsey road vocational counseller
member of the Board of Christian Edu- Maurice Mandelhaumof the philosophy at the West Philadelphia High School
cation in Philadelphia will speak.
department of the college will give the on pupils working part time has brought
Circle III moieting scheduled for today third of his series of ta1ks on "The Prob- to the fore many intereSting statistics
has' bem cancelled. ,The next meeting Ilem' of Race" at the adUlt. forum of the which are considered typical by officia1s
will, be"the third Friday in Februa.,..
local Friends' Meeting.' His topic this of other pUblic schools. Of West Phila. -,_. '" " .
.
The YOimg pG,ple's Choir' will re- week will be "The Plight of the Negro." delphia', 3300 studentS it was discovDIRECTORS OF FUNERALS
hearse Sunday afternoon at 4 :30 o'clock
Christian Science Oanreh
ered 43% of those over 16 years of age
in the C h u r c h . '
are working anywhere from one to 40
1820 CHESTNUT STREET
Circle' I, Mrs. Frank Reynolds chair"Life" is the subject of the Lesson- hours a week outside of' their school
RlTlanhous. 1511
M. A. Balr, P..sldant
f Chri ScieJ._lstudies. More hoys than ,prls are workman, will mect Wednesday, JanU8f1 20, I S,,",,on' all Ch reb
I n ' u es 0
st,
.
d
'd bl
t
h
at "'.30 o'-'ock at the home of >Irs•• '
Fiiiilli"Gi1iespie;'
'Harvard
and
Chester
list,
on
y,
Jannary
.
e
en
both
parents
working
alSo.
'"
&I
.In
•
Sunda
17 Th Cold
roads. 'Mrs. Elizabeth Worrell Plumer Text is: "The gift of God is eternal IiEe
through Jesus Christ our Lord"
of the Family Service will speak on
) .
"Trailer Camp Conditions in Delaware ans 6:23 .
,
,.
County."
SWISS REFUGEE GROUP
I' ..
Circle VII; Mrs. George M. KarnS IN SECOND REPORT SESSION
chairman
will meet
at,the home
of Mrs.
J.
H, Jessup,
243 Haverford
avenue'at
The local,Committee Eor the Relief
O~,
11 A.M. on Wednesday, JanU8f1 20. Dr. of Refugee Children. in.Swi~erland will
•
..",.
Sheridan' will speak on "Pan AmeriCan hold' its second: quarterly meeting next
Friendship" Members are asked to bring Tuesday at I o'clock at the home of,
their own sandwiches.
•
Cameron P. Hall, 230 .Park avenue wh
.. , (
tJi'€'Wbrtl'I>Y-ltii:dlarrDW\"'anif'll'mifter.
Trinity Parish Notes
Almost 1200 dollars 'has been raisedf~~
the committee was organized three
The Young People's Fellowship will ago by Mrs. A. M. Bosshardt of
meet with the Interdenominatioual group avenue. One hundred patronesses and
at the Presbyterian Church on Sunday. twenty donors have been listed.
On the following Sunday, Janna.,. 24th,
Among neW patronesses are: Mrs. I
all young people of the Parish are asked John W. Nason and Mrs. W. H. Brown.
Taka %: lb. of Butter-Have th,ebutte~ soft. (Keep
to,attend·theearly service and to remain A donation was also received from the
for breakfaSt as' this will be the last meet- Camden Rotaiy Club.
it at room temperature about
hours. Do NOT melt
ing when Mr. Guenther will be present.
The committee consists of the followthe butter by cooking.) Cream.the butter with an
The College Discussion Group will ing officers: chairman Mrs. A. M. Bosshold its 6na1 meetini under Mr. Guen- hardt, co-chairman, Mrs. Herbert Fraser,
electric mixer or hand beater. If im electric mixer is
ther's leadership' on Sunday evening.
treasurer Mrs. Hel~ S. Harris, secreused, whip it at medium' speed and gradually increase
The women will meet on Tuesday for tary Mrs. Rosalie Elliott, advising secreto higp. speed.
the regular Red Cross sewing.
taries Mrs. Cameron P. Hall, Mrs. W.
The Men's Fellowship ·had one of the Earle Kistler, Mrs. J. Burris West, and
largest attended and most enthusiastic Mrs. Sargent Walter, and publicity chairmeetings, last Monday evening when En- man Mrs. J. H., Pitman.
Plu. %: CUp of exclullve Supplee DevOll Style
sign William Robertson, U.S.N., was
L
W.V.
Holds
6-Connty
the s~';r. Mr.. Robertson was graduCream-Add 1h of a measuring cup of the Devon Styl~
Conferanee
ated from Annapolis only about six months
Cream to "the butter, a ~blespoon at a time, until the.
before being .. signed to the USS. "Boise".
Mrs. E. N. Hay of Ogden and Swarthaegave a graphic' description of the
butter absorbs all of it. Salt to taste, then put in the
mort: avenues chairman ofi ~;~~::~:~~!I
preparations on shipboard for the battle and
education of the P
refrigerator until hardened. Mold or cut into patties
i~' which the "Boise".. p1ayed such a
League of Women Voters wlll preside
tinguishe4 role. lIe commented upon
when serving.
at the morning session of a six-county
qUiet "and efficient manner shown by all League conference on Wednc;sday, JantW. ,qfficers and men and, after his speech, uary 20,· ·in Philadelphia. Mrs. Daniel
gener8uSly answered many interesting Goodwin regional director and Mrs.
questions which were asked· him by mem- Earl Harrison are other local women
Youfll get 1 lb. of dellclou. Butter Spread
bers of the andience.
who are taking part in the all-day event
- You double the butter volume· with none
the
which will feature many outstanding
speakers on vital problems both before
butter flavor lost. And it's far less expensive, too!
CHURCH SERVICES
and after luncheon.
SINCE 1878
I
'II¥-
,
OLIVER HJBAIR CO.
~~g~a~n~a~c~on~s~,~e~ra~,~e~per~cen==ag:e-=a=v=e~_~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!~~~~~~~~~~:__
H
I
to DO U' 'B LE
") ~,
two
,
,
of
8WABTBUORB PBI!SBYTBIIIAN CHUBOlI
. Bev._
.'
Da.yld..~BrallIl.
Mlnlater
eVJll)A,Y.,
Hostess to Parent Gronp
1:45 A.lL - Church _ .
.
Mrs. Howard G. Hopson will enter1:45 A.IL - Women'. Bible CJasa: Men's tain mothers of the fnurth grade of the
Bible Claaa.
11:00 A. M. - Mornlng WOl'8hlp. Dr. Cam- Rutgers avenue school Monday aftereron C. Hall, Director of SocIal noon January 18 from two until four,
Educatlon and Action of the
BPUca.. at her ,home on Rutgers 'avenue.
"'Irs. Steven M. Spencer chairman of
the Home and School Grade Group
8VNDAY
.
committee wilt be the group's guest at
1:45 A. lL -church 8c:hool.
U:OO A . l L - M _ Worship. Subject: the meeting which will discuss inform...
.
"The Dl.vllle· Potter".
fourth grade interests. Mrs. Hop-.
son
is
the group's chairman.
TBINlTY CHUBCH
PresbJterlan ~ of
tlon•. wtIl prea .METHODIST CHUBOlI
Boy N. Ketaer, D. D •• _
BeY. J. J&rdeD. Ouenther. 8.T..M., Hector
SUNDAY
8:00 A. IoL-HolJ' CommunIon.
9:45 A. 1(. - Church School.
11:00 A. U. - Morning Prayer and Sermon.
'1'BB
OF PBIBIIDII
1:45 A.lL--~~~
You'll find it wonderful on :tOast, in mashed and
baked potatoes and other cooked Vegetables.
---e-o---.-._
,
the rest of the Devon -Style Cream on your salads and in pastries.
It's rich, spoon~thick and mild in flavor-so differentl Available in half-pints
and pints. Order from yoUr Supplee milkman or your ," neighborhood store.
Ask for the Devon Style Cream Recipe Folder if you order by telephone:
CHESTER 2-5721
.
USE
~,.
Women "Man" Pos... for
Dna Lines
Many traditionally masculine jobs are
being fille9, for the duration, by the
fairer- if not weaker-eex.
Latest such posts to pass to the ladies'l
are those of three ticket agents in the
Travel Bureau of the Philadelphia Su~
Transportation Company, located
ill it! 69th Street Terminal.
Red Arrow Lines are also using - " "
for the duration on certain bus 'and car
operations formerly performed
men now engaged in the war effort
The. company anticipates that, in addirltiidn to the jobs where· women ha~ already replaced men, a number of other
posts could, if nece.sarY, be manned
"w0Uk1L.
.~. ,-,,~
" .J
PUBLISHED, 'EVERY FRIDAY AT 'WA.TBIIORS, PA.
an
I
~
THE SW ARTHMOREAN
I;
.
*
BUY W .... BONDS AND ST... ,..,S
Th;$ ;$ one of 'he con,,,,,,,,,,;on
recipes tlne/opetl by Suppit¥ 10
help you meet new .iltuttions cre._
"'" _ JJt¥J.. W _h for other.. ,.
SUPPLEE bllDga you Iloe ...s::,"'~ SHOW
""" )[TW. nuadaya
at 9:31P. M. !UNE IHI
*
SUPPLEE
!
.
"
·'·f··~
FRIDAY, JANUARY'!S
, SCHOOL' NEWS ;::
(X)UNcu."GOES ON POORD' : ,'~ land., 'c)~'bJ:i~ }ni~~
1'_"
Lt. arid Mr•. John T. Halldy,"]r;' of
Alexandra, 'Va. ....u. recent 'week'elld
The last meeting ,of the Swarthmore gae.ts of Mr. and,Mra. Henty L Smith
'
Junior AsSemblieS was 'held in the of Wallingford HIlls.
WOlIWl'S Club Hou~' on Saturday evening, January 9, when the 'introductory
THE ECBOGLEN TEA BOUSE
~Ia•• (seventh' grade), allvanced class
W-Blnp"'"
(ninth gr,ode)' and junior assembly (elev~ 110 ........ ,1IDiU lv..,
enth lI1:ad o) mel. Chaperons for the
introductory group were Mr. and Mrs.
!her DOli.., ...,....
Pemberton Dickson, Mr. and Mrs. G.
1II0NDAY, 1ANUARY 18'
W. Biaclanore, Mr. and Mr., Roo.;rt
H. McCurdy, and Dr. and Mrs. George
P. Warren. Chaperoning the advanced
class were Mr., and Mrs. Paul 'F.
CALL till 1'0.
Gemmill, Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. DaviRADIO- SERVICE
Son. aod Mr. and Mr•. C. M. Black, Jr.
4IID
The junior 'assembly chaperons were
APPUANCE REPAIR
Mr. and Mrs. E. Fay Campbell.
Wull1D& .......
,This week's Junior Assemblies wilt be
Vacu1lBl CJeenen_ rr.a.
held in the WOman's aub lIouse tomor_-WalIIeImu
rOW evening. 1:.he Intennediate Dancing
IUDLIIY PAIlE uti
'_
~Iass (eighth grade) meeting from 6.30
INTEROORO ELEC1'RIC
to 7.50 wilt be chaperoned by Mr. and
Mrs. Edwin J. Faulkner, Mr. and Mrs.
APPLIANCE SERVICE
Stephen M. SPencer, Mr. and Mrs. Car19 Eo H1nc:ldey Ay......e
roU P. Streeter, and Mr. and Mrs. StewIWlLBY PaIUI;
art W. Thorbahn.
'.The Sophomore ..,ssembly (tenth grade)
will be held from 8 to 9.45 and wI'11 be
, "
, ; ' , , ' "tlOn at,th.,effeetive date of this Ordi·
Borough CoUncil addreSsed after its ,'nlmCe ,.,r:rioDtlguous' ,theRIo!':
,'2'_ 'lbCoa.. AfWr"'%
S.
mCeting January 6 the following courte-It w"!'ld appear that:the. ~emplated ,;Unde" 'tht new pl!1R'for graduatinglhl
Scltool'fot"useas"a"t<>nWlestent:chori1l!; tCl said ordinance.
"
Duncan Chiquoine and Dave 'Thayer
The letter is printed in order that borThe Council therefore_tMI,., rO: have left to'attend PeruiSylvania State
, 0ugIi teiident.~y:s\ollij!r 1io!a1~ i1\lJltes_ quests that its poSitiOl1 in tbisresp«! Colles..',
'
.. , '
si.... "Hts cobtent: ' " " ", ",
, be duly noted by your Department, and
FnmiIa C/a6 ,D_ A/_ Ga....
Hooorable .. Frank Knox.
that when.the present, emergency has 'The high school French Club URdu
Secretary of Navy
been declared .. tuminated, this property the sponsorship of Adeline Strouse French
Washington, D.C.
be
to its f?rmer
or a use instructor wil! have charge. of the dance
Dear Sir:
penrutted m the residence distnc! of our after the Rulley TownshIp hasketball
,The Council of the Borough of Swarth- Borough.
game tonight.
'
more, at its meeting of January 6. 11'43,
Respectfully yours,
'
SenJor 8 ....IA....".",,.
was ioformed, unofficially, tllat the Navy
Elliott Richardson
A committee including George AnniDepo.rtment plans to take over the buildBorough Secretary tage; Betty Wilson, Betty' Ellen Littleiilg~ .M, propertY 'of the 'Mary' ~yoil
field, Jerry Nowell, Susan Thatcher, and
Legion Women. Plan Loeal
Dan Kirk presented a "Truth or ConseSchool. in this Borough. for ,Use as', a
' ',',
, '.Hospilal Work
quence"'program in the senior. high school
convalesc....thOll!".,
, ,I was instructed to make clear the po6l,
assembly Wednesday moml1lg. Mary
iron (;f the Borough'Ci>uncll;that it'l\;U The American Legion Auxiliary will Armstrong, Harry Oppenlander of the
no desire to interlere in any way with exhibit in The Swarthmorean office win- faculty. and Dan Kirk and Susan Thatchany action the Navy considers necessary dow an afghan and quilt made by mem- er acted as judges.
or desirable during the present emergency. bers and friends of the Auxiliary in
Jack -Beddoe sang "Beautiful Dreamer"
Under the terms of our Zoning Ordinance connection with the hospital work of and Flora Lee the second stanza of "The
oH928, however, buildings·in.the~residence the organization.
Star S~gled Banner."
.
distric~ (which includes the Mary Lyon An afghan created mostly from do- Doris Lubin led devotions.
School) may,~, us"ll, c?,qly, ,1.9.r residenti~' na,ted, bits of yarn was, ~ontributed to
Sing. In U. 0/ P. Reelto'
'
purposes ani,l certalD enumerated a
tional purposes including (Section 502,: a forty-year-old local sewing circle
Schubert's "Ave Maria" and liMy Curly chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. Walter C.
sub section 3.). ,
" " On Monday an afghan produced from Headed Baby" by Clustsam accompanied Giles, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dure, Mr.
."~.ucational •.. reh,'gioos
phila~- -:'1: commu!lity donated squares and .yarn by Alice Blodgett music supervisor~ of and Mrs. William H. Gehring, and Mr.
r~storec.t
-0:
throplc use (exc1udlOg hospltal, 63.01-
~'.
gion Auxiliary now plans to cooperate of' Pennsylvania. Students for this recital were selected from schools in Philadelphia and suburban towns who were
heard in the University of Pennsylvania
, .. ,.J:"E.)~~EN:'S, Bq~ CLASS INVITES
Cultural Olympics Vocal Contest. Those
who entered this contest from Swarth·
more included Marion Bernard and the
:
..
. c·
Girls' Trio (Marion -Bernard, Laura Lee
TO ,BEAR
.. ,." I,
Hopkins and Alice J'utiwn)., '
Paula daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
"A' Project for the Men of Swarthmore"
'George C. Sala of 317 North Chester
road came to Swartlunore High from
PAUL CALVIN PAYNE
Ridley Township High School last Sep-
AlJ. MEN OF,SWARTHMORE
~
SUND.AY MORNING
tember. .
SeeDnd '»..."e,ball De/_
9:45 A. M. -.- PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
"l"1'h
~'MARY DUNHILL • PRII:lClliMATCHABELLI •
o
~ .1. ~
~"
'''';;B'
.. :';"",,:':::J'I
'
t'
CHANEL, •
~
e ouque,'
BEAUTY SALON
t<""
en
o
S
'
•
•
,§l
c:
13 SOuth,
Cheder Road
-~L":'_"76"
Call Swona.uumo
..
• CHAR BERT • SKYLARK •
LUCIEN LE LONG
H N Y
t:
~
0
:z:
iF~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~C;;;;;E~;;;U~.
"_,,
,', "'"
.
, "JANUARY' BLACK iAND ,WHITE SALE"
BOO KW A Y S
403 Dartmouth Avenue,
Handled Juveniles at great savings!
Special reducliom in
"Cla8si~.",
~~ Music, Religioll8. Poetry and Cook books '
-....
,
~
~
.1•.
,',
.'!':
In the first place America needs great
sums of money to fight the war. Much of
this will come from the sale of Defense
londs to the public:. Taxes a're mounting
(IIId require thrift lobe met in an orderly .
sensible mamer. P.4>rsonal thrift is im:
portant to ward off inflation. Thrift is
deslrable_ because it is the opposite of
spending, which would compete with our
defense effort. It is a means of providing
for emergencies that may arise during
th~:~arL!~~.!or the period of adjustmetjt::afte~'pea~e comes. We welcome
the accounts of E!9m'est savers.
NATIONAL
AND
.
Last Friday night the Swarthmore High
School baskethall team. playing at home"
suffered its second defeat of the 'Season
as it lost to Ridley. Park 38-14. ~dley
Park took an early lead in the first period ontscorlng Swarthmore 12-7 and increased its lead until ,the visitors led
21-14 at the half. The lead was never
seriously, endangered during the second
half and Ridley Park went on town.
easily by 11 points despite
.slightly
improved Gamet defense. Hoot was high,
sc"rer, for"s.~nw..~'i,~tj,l,lO in~., ~
,;: Tl\e 'SWa'iilimore J·Y· t _ plaYIng
earlier -in' the 'evening won -24,.22 in, an
The v1S1tors
. .
extra "od.
pen
were ahead
15-12 at the half but Swarthmore came,
back in the second half i"i'd at the 'end
of the fourth period the teams were ,deadlocked, 22-22. However .arly in th~ el
seven - points to lead in 5coriol;"
~
n"
--Etc.
Dr. Edgar T. Wherry of Obe~lin avenue addressed the meeting of the Delaware
County Institute of Science at Media on
Monday, January 11, on the subject "The
Flora of the Delaware Valley" ilIus-
,
M'
W. State St, Medial
Martel Tender Sweet Peas - With all
thefiaVof and gOodness of the fresh.
_Keep a couple In the pantry.'
tins
,
,.
Barbara Krase of Harvard avenue en·
te~ined informally at dinner at her
Camay, Soap. barB
home last Saturday evening belore the
Junior Assemblies at the Woman's Club.
Mary Yates Gilcreest «'turned on
1"-'lb.
Tuesday to Stephens College, Columbia,;; \..AClljCO.......
Mo. after spending the holidays .with her
0, xydol ..... pkg.
parents Mr. and Mrs. Oscar J. Gilcr...t
of Harvard avenue.
'
I vory FlakeEl . . pkg.
Virginia'M. Wilson of, Ogden avenue
has been entertaining her c1assm;lte Pris,
,
'L_
.cilla Warren of Scarsdale, N. Y. for. Ivory Snow •• p-.
the last three days of their vacation; e
.
They returned today to Penn Hatl,
Cbipso Duz .. pq.
ChambersbUrgw~' they are' m e m b e r s '
of the Junior claSs:, '
I'
Ireobar
Mrs. Warren F. Faragher of South
,Vory oap.
3
3
I
I"
:":'."".~
Two medinm
... __ o ...
c
.
MRS. A. J. QUINBY &
's
Ten-B-Low •••
1i1l8
~~;~~~~[§w.~~~~:'i~
1..•~~P~~!.!':!':':;:~~~.l~';~t~;,
'
,8,250.00
25c'
.. s. ar.....
Media
SI.
'Phobe Media 4:
FOR SALE
Near COllege- 6 room ho1Ue
with garage. P ........lou Feb. 1.
'5000.
A. III. BAIRD
Old Bank Bldg. Phone Sw. 0108
EDWIN O.
Your
KElJEY.
Jr.
lmoeler
25 Eaat 7th St.
Cheoter
(Oppaolte ..ow Rtata Theatle)
, ·Pb..... Cheo_ 37M
PictareF......m. - Bali.,...,.,.
.. BoOiI>o -Kodak S4'l1ie.
c.••t- • Carda-HobhT Craft
SIMMONDS
714 Webk S -
CIoeot.
'P.bOIle Chester z-DII
ARDMOBB WINDOW CLEAJ/lNO co.
SWARTHMORE BRANCH
ALL BRANCIIJIII
or BOUR CLBAN-
ING. KNOWN IN TIlE TBBBITOBY FOB ZO YEARS
Free Phone caDs - For CUJtomen
(Fonn.erIJ 8.. 19)
Ardmore 23ZO
21c: MIX ••••• pkg. 19c
69c GINGER
pkg. 19c
BREAD MIX • • • •
22c Smoked Oysters lin 25c
22c ACHICKEN
,
jar 39c '
LA. KING • • • • •
22'
""
C Cider Vinegar ..... 17c
. .
22c Wax Polish '. . . pi. 25c
,
1"BORDEN'S
_lb. jar 59
"" IJElIO
• •• '
C
and_
'99.95
,L.!,w~rt1
0"""". \ , ' ,
. I:IIU.
u ... ~ Attorney.
0
- T • B'I"IOTOT_PD
-
No, ~
September Term. 1913
B. 8. BPBOAT,
' ',CMh1er.
to and aubBer1bed before me this
dIU
of JanU&r1. 15t43.
' B. TOLD. I! .
NOtary PubUC.
Correct.....;. Atitest·
~ '. ' ,
",
W1<.
Ii.
TlIA'I()1D5R,
"
B. B. TEMPLE.
l'
ALBBRT N GABlU!fI'T .
Lot with
Improvements hi Baverford TWP.
,,
.'
;..;.
-Attv.
.'-'
..
That's what millions of women
'ask themselves lIach night. And
yet, with a 1i"le thought, it isn't
too much of a .er~blern:Yo,l,Ic;an
plan your'evening meals so that leftovers can be readily adapted
to tomorrow's lunches for dad, the children and yaurself.
"',.,
.'
A. L. PARKER
'Pbone Media 459-111
KEEP WARMER -LONGER
,willa
Write Home Economics
Dept:, 900 Sansom St.; . ,
.
or ask for it at any Philadelphia Electric Office•,
~
COA.L A.ND COKE
"FUEL OIL
PHILAQELPHIA ELECTRIC, COMPANY
VAN AID
Phone
sw..
8."Mt*
10112
'W. CAN SHOW YOU
HOW
ftlt14
lta.pl
"",J 8O#frJd.
•
j •. . '
.'-:
.
~
.
=-------~~
. -., ..
~
•
,"
.'!.
We'll gladly send you a free folder on WAR·
'TIME LUNCHES that gives plenty of suggestions on this and other methods of preparing
tasty. nourishing lunches.
,AND REBUll.DING
32 Yean Pnetiad Ezpefte.ee
•
_0._
.
1,,
.'
.
TOMORROW?"
PIANO TUNING
•
y
~
.
I PItCKFOR
Mrs. J. V. S. Bishop of Harvard avenue entertained 15 members of llie Reading Group at luncheon' On Thursday of
last week The group is reading uVan
Loon's Lives." and also discussiug cur...
rent events.
Miss Evelyn I. Wherry, daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. W. Nivin Wherry of Cedar
lane, was given a surprise ~ower at her
home on Sunday afternoon. January 3, by
25 of herfriends. Miss Eunice Eaton and
Miss. Mildred Hirst were responsible for
the complete surprise. Miss Wherry's ento, ~1. Robert C. Messmer of
News. Va. has recently been
. Cro
.
.. ,the PIOPOrt7 of,catl1erlne A. Hart,
"WHAT ,SHALL
Reeo..t
Chan.er
.;
"i~i:ti~ II'~:~r~~~~;.~~~~'~tl~~~~~
ing.
Automatic
:iar 25c Wu~ERM .. ~""·.35e
.'
Pvt'(--lrr;;!!!!!!!!!;;!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iI- ,~"
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
19c
22c
788,8t1C1.ltl
u;
phen of Maryland are staying with
Hoadley's mother' Mrs. George A., Hoad-I
ley 01 Walnut lane while he is serving
with the U. S. Marines at Parris Island.
S.c. Pvt. Hoadley will soon leave for
Officers' Training at Quantico, Va. Previous to entering the service -he was an
instructor at the University of Maryland.
Mrs. PO' W. Moor and children Eleanor and Billy are occupying their new
home at 211 College avenue, having
moved A month ~go from 'Rose Valley.
Lt. Moor, U.S.N.R. is stationed at'Little Creek. V a ; '
'
Mr. and Mrs, Earle P. Yerkes of
Princeton avenue entertained 16 guests
dinner and bridge on Saturday even-
•
,
280.'l24.21
,.oi ~i~~~~~:I:~~i~i
Hillborn
,!)as joined the Engineering Staff ~
of Watubury
Clock, Waterbury,
and
is leaving Sunday
for his newConn.
post.
Mrs. Pegram aod their son John will
join him the latter part of the month.
~.~;::iI-';~;
Philip Witham of Parrish road
,
d ed f
h U'
ity'
I AI
b
1:t... ...:
•
onoe. gra
nat' A
. rom t etJ' I mvers
0•
a·
r.~~~~~:~~~~l
- ama 111- eronau ca ~~neenng' 10
. November has accepted a position with
the Eastern Air Lines arid will soon lIy
as a co-pilot.
Mrs: Alfred D. Hoadley and son Ste-
A. MB8rnm Q~Y. Ir.
,
Golden Flow Peach or Pear Juice ••. 2
I_
.Ized Cold.po.
rieI..I_--.
Can be moved a.
'2 per month..for UBal'e.
.,.
~ I. loLl!!
WM. S. 0 .........
19c
19c
'I
.. 3 35c '
IOe.
29c'.
19c
Bing
'.2 65c
=
......... 2
25c
White Rose Fancy Shad Roe • •••••••• lin 59c
NEWS NOTES
401,l3UI
1~_.12
at 9.15
A.M. book
next "H~ts
Tues- iOt,tigiiOliS-"I.......
station
dii
y on WCAU
her newly
published
-~~la'v;Mr;-;;;;., YiiUiam, ~._J'etm!m_of
,
life. A few weeks belore that date she =
felt she needed more care than she could i§ Martel Golden Bantam Corn • •
••••••
have at a hotel and went to a nursing ~
home in Media.
~
Trappey's Lonisianna Yams • •••••••• lin
We realize she was an outstanding :;
character. To Swarthmore she was more §
than that. For over 40 years she has ~ Torsch's Small Green I.imas • •••••••• lin
been out"neighbor and friend and a 10v~ ~
and famiJiar figure. Her sense of humor fi Snider'SSu.cc~lasb .••....... • ••
was delicious. She was sought as a ~
speaker at banquets, football rallies, and ~ FreElh~Like Salad Vegetables ..
• ••••• • lin
col1ege J;eunions. Her deep interest in ~
her fellow man was always manifest. ~
Martel's Tiny Whole Beets •••••• •••• tin
She was ~.ctive in the work for Woman's
Suffrage, for International Peace._ She. ' I :
1i1l8
suffered for France in the lst World :
Heinz Tomato Soup •...•.•....
War. She could not live through the 2nd World War. ~ Campbell's Cream of Potato ••..•• ; •. lin
Her many students were her children, !:
and she extended thaf love to her stu- ::
I ...•••....
'
Doe
I Sli
. ce d ' P'meappe
-. 1ge. tin
dents' children.
::
It was appropriate that on Christmas
Eve a group of Swarthmore young people -- Wonder Pak Prune Plums •.•........ tin
went to' sing to her the beloved carols. 1-_
thin~ that w.as the crowni~g eve!!t o~ her ~
Fancy Black
Cherries..••••••
IiIl8
Chnsbllas. She spoke of It many times. §
Religious services were held on Tueslina
Diplomat Cbicke~ Broth
day. the 12th. Intennent was made in ~
Manchester, N. Y.
.
==
19i~~i~~~i~~~~ii
-======="
•
No.2
1ltIlO8O~.
anil
•
Sugar Peas
8.
Barbara Griffith. Richard Cordray. Ann Created Not Dated."
aod Peter Myers will entertain a large
S-'~;"''''';'''ore'
Bridge Clnb',
Sold as the p_~ of MUte Lulta8eVlc,'1 ~~:;:~~~~~~~:~
5,008.25
party of seniors ,of the Swarthmore Hlgb
..............
.v_·1
~I
195.710,$
School at a dinner party at the
The winners of the Swarthmore Bridge I L
•iceiitiied"
:;~~~~;i~;:ti on
'Saturday
evening
before
the
R, 8. MtlNSON, 8ber1tf.
.~at5_;iI ,,8,144.1!!
Assemblies at the Woman's Club. This Club which met on Wednesday evening ---------~~-:...:;;.~:..
were M. Griest and H. Tomlinson first,
BIIEMPP BALI!8 OP BBAL DlTATZ
~~~~'~"'" ...........m•.ilIIU.
will be one 01 the last get-tog
seniors before their number is further Mrs; M. Griest and Mr•. ' M.
OttIce, Court; House, _
PeJma.1 Cc'plt;a]
( __econd, and Mrs. E. Goodwin and A.
total par
diminished' by departure for college and Robinson tied with W. Craeiner and R.
P'lUDAY, JANUARY 29. IlH3
................ rs8:GGG:=
for the service.
_ .
Sellers for t h i r d . '
dit;r:i~~~i:: ~~ 41.530'tor
Mr. R. E,. Wilson of Ogden avenue who
(a p reterred stock) ••• 25.241.03
is stationed in Washington, D.C. for the ESTATE OP RUTH Ml'1ViiELL VLACIlOB,
Total capital Acc:ounto. ...... 341.'I7Ura
present, was in Boston, Mass. last week above
deceaaed.
Lettera
testamentary
on
the
Total"L1a"Wuea~
..- nd ~nt--"
'":,-:,,.'
Estate have been panted to the
'''I
~..-.
to lecture on "Fire Protection in. the-In... underelgned# -who requeA~D8 ,bavAccounts· ..•••.• ~.' •.•••.•• -.•.•. t3,4l'l.W.'1O
dustrial Plants during the, War.'~
tag CI&ID18 or demand!!
of
'the decedent to make
ownthe
the I!8tata
same.
Mr. H. C. Krase of Chicago. Ill. who ....d all persona indebted to the decedent
._....""... ~-,•• _".- • has bt!en visiting his son Mr. Norman .to DUJlo:ot p.ymeD~',t,c;t~~l:lJ.
Krase and family of llarvard avoliue
_tor,
since Dec,ember ,,1,6, left on Wednesday
215 Vassar
Avenue.
f3waI;thmoi'O.
Pa.
(or Dayton._ Ohio' to visit another son
. Herbert Krase and family'hefore
returning to his home in Chicago.
. . ~_8~lJI'!ntel .....
'Phone-Swm-thmore 2J03 "
"
~ BUY SENSmLY! - BE PATRIOTIC! - DON'T HOARD! '
~
On Sunday morning, January 10, Dr. '"
~
IsaheUe Bronk passed into the higher I!!
.~' ",.~.10-....
~
iii
I
R,
ality,
and community's
practising allideals.
that
is 'lestembodying
in 01\1' little
Olm~_~~u.,
An active participant in all public, af- ~:!!:!!-______-=B-=.-=ut:.::::b:::m:::ore=,.:Pa':::'1
stamps $350
so far
January.
School
in in
War
Stamps At
by the
Mrs. Frank Keenan i. chainilan
",NEWS NOTES
•
;;
Ii
hisl~~~5~;~~r.~~~~~~
.
Chester Road at: BUlprs A.enue-J\I.O....:te
Ii!
The Drama Section. ,Mr.. R.
Ullman chairman. discussed the
review; of ''The Three Sisters" the
recently attended _by a large number
I
club member•• Mrs. V. M. Parry
IoRedrl,.,TrUiityReeIor
her impressions of recent plays and
It must have come as a shock to most
John Speocer entertained with readings Swarthmoreans to learn that Mr. Goenbefore the
has resigued the reclorship, of
from ,Saroyan's
meeti;,g
Tuesdayplaya
afternoon.
.
EL'S
iii
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~
---,---
FOoD MARKET ,
,
IIuv18n
;~;-~~
,COM'I,;ITE
=
!§
OD
~~~~i~
Qpen Every EveniDg ,
34
T.u..
near future.
The wodding is planned for
Mr. and Mrs. Georg., M. Allen of
road and children Jane and
returned on Monday of last week
a w~':.. holiday yacation, iD Ft.
Service in place of Mr.s. Walter
; a consec:rated genius in serving the resigned be\:ause of pressure of
of the college students and other
!!RBI!JPP BALIII8 OP IUIAL DlTATII
I~~r~~~~~'if.::
d,oti...,
pepple, an encourager and inspirer
smnnpps OPPIOB
The,
Club shared
in the 6,000 ".ounly
the common life, as well as an efficient
.
.
b D I
COURT Hams. vlmtA. PIINlfA.
setVlce men gtven y e aware ~
(mini'tler to hi. own parish, Mr. Guenther
~Iub women.
•
has WCHl the respect and affection of all.
PBlDAY, JANUARY 10. 1M3
Seetlona Aetl..e
. In all of his life and service here, Mrs.
9:30 A. M. Butem 1ir.. TIme
Mrs. de Caindry gave an interesting Guenther has sympathetically and enthu- L,~~~I'~~! .~;.~;&~=~:~~~
survey of CoUnty welfare work. 176 siastica1ly shared.
~.
families needing help were aided at
I cannot imagine a greater loss to the
community than the departure of these
Chrisbnas by the welfare committee.
Mrs. Arthur W. Binns entertained the good neighbors.
Wm. T. Ellis.
Art Section at tea on Thursday at her
~iDii;miiii:Ciiiia.;a;:;lli-lhon,. on Mublenburg avenUe. Plans
~
spring Flower Show were di5cussed. Radio Transmits Bal QneslionB
In Piano Prelude
Those who heard Dorothy Nugeni, ~~~
~~~;~~::~;';;J
Sylvia Swann, senior at Wellesley Col- Philadelphia ,millinery designer at .the
~~~~i~~
~
lege, will give a short piano recital be- local Woman's Club ten days ago will be
~
lore Dr. Na'!>,n's talk next Tuesday.
interested to note Mrs. Nugent will be
interviewed by Jean Colbert over radio
ttra~ted~':W1:·t~h~co~I:"r:ed~l~an~te~m~s~li:des~._ _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
Tribute to' Dr. Bronk
on J.uesday.'
:~t;'~~:~::£~~::: I
BERNIE'S
Department
IStore
•
...
War DoDd T~ BJP.'
The Rev. J. Jarden Guenthu has long
Mrs, J. Paul Brown announ~ $60,755
the typical Swarthmorean-a publicworth of war bonds and $I,03Z worth
minded, broad-spirited, radiant person-
-SALE
Depict8 'Local Flower-Life
'~DlUUl"8'ClobNote8I~DnoUDCed:
"''''''hh••
FI'RE
sion.
PO,
r.J~,!!!,:.~,!,~,Depo~ '?'UT~:~r~lm~!' ,,:-,,~,a~~~Si.~:~££
CLASSIFIED
i;;;•••••••••;;;;;;;;;;;:
a
•
.
Mi•• ,GraCe: R. Shelly, an' insltllCtor
In MOdem Languages at Penn Hall,
Chambersburg i. vacationing at hoi, ho11le
ori South Chester mad until Janua.ry IS.
~~~~~l§~~~~~~~~f
i
by Dr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Bell of Media.
Although the young ladies atteuding
the Assemblies usually dr..,. formally, on
accowll o( the automobile situation they'
may come in short dresses for this occa-
,
JANUARY 1$
..
ho.
and kmtted together by a local reSident Swarthmore Public Schools in a vocal and Mrs; Willard Tomlinson.
was presented ,to the new Naval hospital recital held Thursday evening, January
rhe Senior Assembly co~vening 'from
unit in the borough with which the Le- 14 in Houston Hall of the UniversitY 9.50 to 11.45 o'clock will be chapero.iec!
. -larium, correctional institution, or
, institutions for sub-normal persons) ;
'provided such buildings are erected
--
.
.
.
,,,,,,aTs.oaBAN :,..-_--'-__..!.,_ _ _ _--;-_ _F_IUD_~_·:t:...;._l...AJ-N-U.-:o:_::::y~1~5:-'
Ta.
(~==-===-=::::=:::-:~,;:-l;:::============~~=====ii
.
...&.~
HOSKINS "'T
a
TBB WEEK'S
~.......
~ANVARY
MOTHERS' .CLUB
Bani.
• 5Oda. Mark
N
In March 1893, Swarthmore Borough
Council organized and held It. first
mO~i~ednesday
Ihe_
:;gg
~
The PhI Beta Kappa Society of Swarth·
more College will hold a dinner meeting
this evening in ·Parr/Iit Hall at 7 o'clock
at which time members of the oeoior class
will be guests of hooor. ,
Dr. Paul F. Gemmill of Thayer road
who is president of"tbe SwarthmoreCbapter will preside, and· William H. AtideD,
lecturer ;n the English Department of the
college will address the meeting 00 "Voca·
tion and Society."
•
:
NURSING SERVICE
:!;~;ldr!d:u~~rh~~S ~~~~::~n~~.fren. IN YEARLY MEET ~~3:;;:n:,.~'w~~~J::;.;::i.o".! ;~: annual
R!~r:';:i~lIt:e::~eir
reports at the meeting of the
· seven years is the average age wn.en,
future of the country depends.
the child's eyesight is strong enough
Nurses Made 6.37'8 Visits in Past
'
concentrate on print.
.
ted Chal
TO LAYOUT 1943 UNITED
The tendency to reverse is quite com·
Year Which Preeen
•.
CAMPAIGN TUESDAY
mon among young children, Miss H~·
lenging Problems
kins
said.the Itsecond
is onlygrade
whenthatthenormal
child
reaches
readers can be separated from reversal
cases and special training. given.
reasons have been brought forth for
versal 'but the theory commonly accepted is that normally one side of the
brain is dominant in what we see.
. .: reversal cases both sides are active. The
.. reversal problem is one of the ·most common in reading and one which has very
hannful effects if it is nol treated prompt-
. Providing adequate public health nurs·
ing serviCl"" to Central Delaware County
in wartime was discussed from many
angles at the annual meeting of the Com·
munity Health Society held in Borough
Hall, January 14. .
. Interesting and stimula~g repo~
were presented by the vanous Commlt7
iee chairmen on their activities. The
supervising nurse reported lithe influx of
population (largely defense workers' famIy~
.
ilies), has resulted in an almost over.· Miss Hoskins emphasized the fact
whelming upthrust of health probl~. To
provide adequately for such necessIties as
there should be no stigma attached
the child who is not able to read
communicable disease control, maternal
Ability to read is not related to intelli·1 and child care, sanitation, adjustment
gehc:e. The main thing to avoid
of disrupted family life requires the wissense of failure in the child.
dom and use of all the resources of the
clinics will help avert this.
community. A total of 6,378 visits to
Other reading problems, according
1,350 cases were made by the nursing staff
Miss Hoskins, are usually caused
during 1942. A fine staff of volunteers
phasizing some particular method.
share 'with us the responsibility of meet·
the . phonetic· and the visual method. of ing this increased call for nursing serteaching are needed, with emphasis
vice."
one or the other related only to a
Offieers elected for the ensuing year
· individual needs. The same applies
were, Mrs. Paul Fetzer president, Mrs.
oral and silent reading- both
A: F. Jackson first vice·president, Mrs.
bY the child, and the eXclusion .o~ one Walter E. L. Irwin second vice-presithe other will lead to serious problem.. dent, Mrs. D. Malcolm Hodge
Abo.. all, we mu,t teach the child to secretary, Mrs. No.,...n Krase treas,!,"er,
faee hi .. difficulties honestly, and try to and Elnc S. Sproat assistant treasurer.
avoid a sense of failure.
Mrs. Thomas S. Safford honorary pres·
In spite of the ban on pleasure driving, ideot served as chairman .of the nominat~k:":u;~i!t;~ at
the meeting
.
.
for thistomonth
109 couumttee.
grOUpS
Th
least, since the hostesses have rather
e Board 0 f D·Irectors and staff ex. ed slDeere
'-"I
I ' o n for the dona.
trally located homes. The older
press
appr~
met· as scheduled at the home of
tions and services rendered to the agency
Robert· -cadigan, 213 Dickinson avenue
innumeraille individuals and groups
last Wednesday evening. Theresa Young
loyal citizens doing their part in this
of the local school faculty spoke on "Test·
Less dramatic bot DO less neces-
~
ing." The younger group will meet at
~ ~-.
--'7-
".
•
a-.
Open All Night
I'M~rs~.~Se~W~e1~I~W~.~H~od~g~e~OII~~O~gd~en~~av~en~u..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A workers
rally of also
United
War
Chest by
captains
and
to be
attended
vari.l.
ous teams from surrounding conimUDities,
will be held at 8 P.M. sharp Wednesday,
January 20, at the Woman's Club.
Moving pictures will be shown and
general instruction iss.ued as. to co!lduct:ing this years campalgD which will extend from January 24 to February 8 .
T. E. Hessenbruch local cbainnan
stresses the extreme importance of the
presence of all those intere~ted in the
at this session.
the drive' the secretary will be
at headquarters in the Bank
from 1.30 Wltil 3 P.M. weekday afternoons and from 9 unti112 o'clock Saturday mornings to receive reports and CODtributions of various workers and residents who find it more convenient to
leave their donations there. As the
pa~gn advat1!es the ~ecr~ry will be .
hand during the major part of the day.
MARY LYON CONTINUES
TERM AT NEW YORK
HOTEL
The Mary Lyon School and Junior
College whose buildings here were laken
over for a convalescent hospital by th~
Navy last week, reopened with classes
at the fashionable Barbizon Plaza Hotel
facing,Central Park, New York on Tues·
day morning this week to continue its
current first semester which ends at the
close of this month. On the first of February the second semester will begin at
the new headquarters at 58t11 street and
Central Park west.
When the Navy first decided to take
over the local institution during the
Christmas holidays of the latter. arrange_ ments were made to move the schools to
the Henry Hudson Hotel in New York.
However, just before The Swarthmorean
went to press last week it was learned
that a section of that hotel had also been
taken over by the Navy thus excluding
the possibility of the school's being aCCOm:'
modated on the same premises.
Mrs. Mabel J. Neal who has been secre·
tary 01 Mary Lyon for 28 years is reo
- taining the business office in connection
with her home in Media.
WAVES Expeeted Here Soon
A number of W AYES are expected
to arrive in the borough in the near
future for duty in connection with this
new suburban Convalescent Annex of the
Philadelphia Naval Hospital.
•
Crum Creek Card Club W"mners
East and west winners at the weekly
meeting of the Crum Creek Bridge Cluh
at the bome of Mr. and Mrs. Philip W •
~=~~, of Riverview road. on Monday
,"
. were Mrs. Sargent Walter and
Bates first, Mrs. Franklin
G~1es:~~and~ Mrs. Joseph Blakiston tied
..
Sellers and William era..
. mer for second and third.
North and south winners were Mrs.
MacElwee and Mrs. Marga....t
Marsh first, Mrs. Philip Kniskern and
..
H. Morrison, Sr. second, and
Mrs. I,. Rankin aDd I,. G. Luckie third.
w..
,; "' ..1.. ·
..
tia:u1'iiMf:iij·W,OOiREii'£."'1P~A.L.'iJANU&MiiiARlinyr-'';2Z,;":""iliCi9i:i:
::~,,;ot:;:>;;::·;:w;;.:;;···;;NO;.::;3;·~·---....;".,--_...,,--',.;,'---S;;WIVU
;:,;;.;:;,Piil;;;;;.':;;i;m~'
'.
43; - - - - - - - - . . , . . . - - - ·,";·~:aso;;·
Sw~."1h~o~e Red Cross Reports WORKERS OPEN . Nason Say~ Colleges Will Face
S'
-'42 DRlVE SUNDAY
1FT
. R
0bo,o
A
. cttve. TT,'
,,0 unteer ervlC6S In' .
.
_.
,.,.
ar
esponsl
l "t"es
Willi"gly
Borough Ready for Two-Week
o·
o·
0
0
. ~r•• Hodge, AU().~r. Q1fd ·lIirectQr. ~e,-!ct6fl WJ.
•
FOR SAl,E
""'8'
The Harold Ainsworth Post No.4ZJ
of the American Legion invites all inter.
ested Swarthmoreans to its showing of
the official R.AF. sound movie "Target
for Tonight;' at 8:aO P.M. Monday night
January 18 in the Legion room, Borough
Hall. Ralph Ashton Nixdorf' will intr<>:duce the pict:ure which is considered one
of the foremo' st war movies to date., It
runs·'toa minutes' and is presented through
the courtesy of the Bell ·Telephone Com·
pany_
.
The Post's regular monthly meeting
will be called to order at 8 f;M. on the
date but will adjourn promptly
226· RUTGERS' AVENUE
SWARTHMORE
The abo.." home I. deuptfally Joeated amon. fine old SwanJ,.
more trees. It 10 well-bullt, In ..,.... ""...ulloa, with beautiful,
weD oel-..d eheetuDt woodw....... Two &repIa..., ODe In the
·Uvio. Room, and one of the Dutch oven type hi the Di'l1lna
Room live thie home ....eepllo...,] .......... The houoe eonl!Oin'
Beven room. and one bath, with 8.10t size of 80 x 180 feet.
yo.... in&pedion i. inl1ited, ,by appointment, 'hrough
EDWARD L. NOYES
SWARTHMORE
23 S. CHESTER ROAD
E
IER!
Cam.
CanVllll8 for Annual
Hard
Worked
Chairme" F~.C9mb.inefl
War
.
'.
.
Fund, RoU Call D,i~e If)rfI"~
tarian Reliel March 1
paignP)usWar
. ' ~!'I1cl!l8
Capacity AUdience 01 League 01 ,Women Voter and.
Woman's Club Member. Cheer. Swarthmor~. .'
College Head'. Vuiqn for CQUege.' Cpntribution to W.ar. an.d. Peace to Come
The United' Campaign which opens a
two-week drive here on Sunday this year
• ,.
has assumeda!lditional obligations in
Swarthmoreans actl' vely enga.,o-ed in volunteer service un. d.er the establi'h~ agenci!'S created by existing
"1' h b '
fed'
war conditions. J\mong these are the
. t IS t e usmess 0
ucatlOn to be farsighted and to build., a
direction· of the Red Cross achieved tremendous humanitarian services U.S.O. :ind the British War Relief. better w
in 194 2 'according to the annual reports of Red Cross chainnen made Money rais!:d in .this joint campaign will declar~d as he outlmed a forward l!JOking post-war program for higher
Frid;!.y morning at the home of Swarthmore's chainnan Mrs. Sewell care for the usual welfare needs of this educatIOn Tuesday afternoon when he addresseq a joint meeting !>f'the
W .. H~. ,o.nnQ~"ceI!'ent was made
area as well as being used to exteod t o ,
League of Women Voter. and t1!" Wom.
by the chaimian that she had offered the
and women in·~e armed forces some
I
Club' th I .r' cl ~ .
Services of her org;mization to Captain
'" .
of the comforts to which they are en·
an;'putting I~otal' ;..~
fuIl1
Jamesb.:Rives at the lOcal ~nva1escent
titled.
'.
as im rtant
..
'1. Th toiaJ
Annex of the Philadelphia Naval· Hostii.
••
. ' . A mass meeting
workers Tuesday
1.1. .1.1
resuli ~f this a:":'~~f ':'t be eknown
evenipg in the Woman's. Club House
until th~ steps we took to put the world
tal and was now awaiting requests from
;I1im which she would relay to the proper E. J. Benge Will Tell How to prepared tho"" upon whose shoulders January Get.Together of Local on a stable hasis are written intQ hi_lPry.
chairmen.
Select Voeatiou ou Ba8il! of
rests the responsibility of collecting sufli·
In8trumentalists And Singel'8
I know that if we don't win the war we
_
.-di.:ridu~ Assets.
cient funds to cover the increased work
Next Tu--"-v
won't have much to say about the Peace;
Twenty·nine Gray Ladies are at work
'in Phi!adelphia'hosp!tal. with five more
..,.. Liabilities
of the aiencies in this war year. Every
.........,
but if we don't win the 'peace it is not
enrolled to take the next training class
.
citizen is urged to show his patriotism
going to matter much whether we won
according to the report of Mrs. Thomas
in this &mall way by contributing as
The Swarthmore Music Club will hold the war."
u In=.~ . -." '"~.'.n of Gray T -dies..
The next meeting of the H!'IRe and much as possible to the.United War Chest its regular monthly meeting at the home
Ea I' h h
.set
+~ added
D'~~that
,.,,~,,~
..... had School AssOCI'atlon on Monday night, Jan.. F und .ror
~ the converuence
•
f those woo
h
f M'
war.
·She
recently' new services
0
rs. S
amuel·D. Clyde, Swarthmore lOW r ler
oda e ad CORCI y hisloned
•
.
f rom h pme Wh~n- thoe soIl" ~- an d 0....
.
ar.knt
y is
...... '·n...
been opened to this section, among them ua~
. ~ 25, in the school auditorium, will W1'11. be away
.5Uen avenues, oq T uesday evenN different from .11!1''''''''''
be on a topi.c of great interest ..to .n'rents t
. th·
• hbo hood call h d
ever
own.
0 group, DO bUSlDeils, no
actinG' a. hospital
.... J. quarters
or 10 are
elf netg
.
5
institution I'S safe from the effects· of' 'total
Eugene
~-'Ing r
matntal'ned
at ea·
the ing, January 26, at 8.30 o'clock.
- receptionist, filing x' ar:d. the.ir. olAe.r c. h.i,ldren,
ray reeoros," handling floor teleph.o Benge
ne
"
.
.
""
The
pro=am
I'
S
a~nged'by
the
chal·r.
Il'
, . Iff'~PI\l
,.
the speaker bas had 10l)g experi. Swarthmore National Bank. Here too
c'
•• ~
~ar. N
0 co ege can rernatn a 00
desks
. fi'
•
.
. Mrs'. 'Geo'r'ge L. Armitage, chairman of ence In
ndlOg round h 0 Ies for' round
all q.rds'and contributions r""elred by man Mildrid Spencer Hutcheson who Its ~ffect."
President Nason listed ~s tbl! w~s
pegs and square holes for square peg!l. the collectors are to be turne.! over to will playas the first Dumber the Bach·
canteen, repo~ 41 J~. ,,!ome,! who, Mr. aiPJ8..e'~ tajl$,:will.deal with w!'ys th~ secretary. .
.
Busoni "Chacoone.in D Minor." Irma fiy~ maj~r imPa.cts ~PPQ colll'lles Ilf
It'!" graduatea 10 March and had con- of detemunrng chOice of an OCCUpatlOQ. The complete personnel of the 1943 Carels contralto will sing a group of which hlgh.r edu"'Ilton hl\S suff."",
t~buted
hour~ of ~olun.teer work He will discuss the dependence of sue:, catnWign is as follows:
songs as follows: HLes BerceaUx" by greater blows than at any time sinc~ .~~
slDce then lD hosp!ta1s,. m high
cess o.n..abiHties. and il?-terests. Among
Dir:ecW~-T4 $. Hessenbruch, asso- Faure, uThe Snow-drop" and "The .f?uncUD~ of Ha~rd ~niv~rsity:_Pfi9ri_
""" colle!!" eafete,:as, ID work on ~)'f' the ,!bllities he Will conSl~er are those .QI ciate direclPr-);:lIwood B. Chapman, Nightin Ie" b Gretchiminaff ''Tides of lIe~ whiC;h ~e It difficql~ to'.~ DIIk
Ibree parties for sailors. Swarthmore IS phySIcal mental mechanical and soaal
:M: J D uald Gihs
. ga
.y.
'
tenals With which to ~ repatn; "r to
rePresented· at the Red Cross Saturday develop';'ent i"';luding babits and skilJ8 "E"retary rs. MOTh
~n,L as· ~~ndy" by !'Illdrid S. Hutcheson, "The operate' .: shift .in 'curriculum fri1lll' ~
canteen each ·week in the year.
'
in these ar~ The importance of inter~- Sistant secretary .-.. r54
omas.. u; Fls4ers WIdow·' by. Clara Edwards. humaniiies in the directiop of ~C3.I
Mrs. A. Ludlow CllIY"en reported ~ .,ts, will be d~lt with al",,; interests iD ders, and caplajn~ and ~orkers.- !i:ln~ ~he. Brah,,": ~'So~ta in A Major" fa: supjects which I1l'Ikes ·tite maintepatwe
!"'Dlpletion during July. an1·:A'lB'!~t of peaJlle, ip ,ide' s and· in things.
S. SPrPill. ~aptaln ~buslOess district), Vlolm and· plano will be played by Cynl of. the necessary ~_~. be~ ~
jl supply of surgical dressangs 'for the
The . ever.!itcreasing importance of E. L. N~yes, JDhn. MlCh..el, !larry Try. Gardner and M:rs. Samuel D. Clyde.
IlWJlber of stude\lts 'and .... num....... on;'
.
d · t h · I bo h ·th··
.
"
ens . Lesbe Pyle. Isaac Darlington capT"
'II .
f
•
.
..
. ""
. ..,.. ...~
borough Ill;" e WI matena s. ug \ VI!
s':llled gwdanc~ ID chOice of a car,,!,!" tai~ ..(Strath Haven Inn).' R!>bert T. . ...e .0 OWIDg grpup a two Pl8l1O typo;s of faCilIty a constant. p~ob.l!:\TI;· th~
..)he ~5 gtv"!,. by the Amenean Legton will be emphasized and Mr. Benge will 'Bair capl;l.in' Mrs. Ultgb O. Thayer Pieces. ,~Iayed . by Mrs. Clyde ar:d. Mrs. r;!pl
Hutcb!'Son Will concl)lde the prograt)j: (h•. Ql1pl!!
·sterlu
..... ·bl! ...............··r,Hn~tal. Thes~ , 'e_ r '. - , , ' . , . " .,: '. ',: . •
·f.· rs. rerr.," . ' 1 ~ . , .rs. FIoyd': ,"Sol'
'etto" b C. P. E. BaJ:b; ''Tam- D
.'D_
d WI' "
.
.' ~
.=,~ t-'ihe"'/j . ikaJ fi :i'a;d ,\Ite ~"'~ ~ 11);01 !I>'this 1:"B"~s.~~~ j.llld
.jlan . ,!",ymop .
a tors two,-y=. sm;
..... ·.~re.!'Ql¥ ' .,_.m~ ..... ye.. \' ~chooslng. He WiU d:well on .~e part ."""'. E. Fa' Campbell :a ron EberSole, and
Un!}
'S. ,~,ec lItTa1I&,,:, 1:
I~- ".ey which, Qe~ore the lowered· drat!:;.,,,
staljons. She reported .tne camp elion of parents can play ID prOViding proper: M 61
R M' Y M '. M
beth ~st), Menuet A!>tique
aln d hsted a drop In the enrollment of 1!igber
4?86 dressings in ~~ hours.of work gt!!d;l"ce fQr c;h!ldren not only in junior ca~n %IO~ed
a'W:lte:oM: "Danse Negro" by George F. Boyle.
edqcational iristitutiollS" in thp Uqit¢
smc~ Borough ~uncil.s !>J!l1)I;r~tion 1I!'lc!. and senior high school, but also in ele- Reynolds captain' Frank G Y.....en Mrs. Henry R. Harris is chairman States of .16 per cent); the tuptitjg of
~'Ible the ?penlng of the Surgtcal Dress: mentary sch~ls.
Howard' J. Talle~, R!>bert'
Kroo"; of .the hospitality co!ll!Dittee and will be IQllny ca,!,puses ipto armed camps for
.lngS room ID Borough Hal! on ,Septem,
Mr. Benge I. a graduate of the Car· John M Broomall A C. Bosshardt H assisted by Mrs. Phdps SOIlI. and Mrs.. the duratiQ" as the Army and Navy. lieber 2. She "?"trasted thiS. 4 monthSs negie Institute of Technology in Applie!l
. . (c..,_' _ 'POIO Sis).
'
• Ernest Heg.
.
leet certaill iQJtitupolll' .for tecjmical
.
'
.
traiqing. ulld~r mili~ coDtIol in c...."chieyement With the complelton of 32 0 Psychology. He is the author of nomer·
?
mg. In the Media headqua.rters durmg the and vocational subjects. He is a memo
.
effect UPO/l all coll,*!'S 01 thqe changes
entire year of !941. Flfty·five wom.en ber of many of the principal m a n a g e - .
..
but esJ!eci:!lly upon those "...ilb rel~yely
work regularly 10 the local room With ment associations and is president of
small en.dowmen~ to which the IQ5s. of
51;< instructresses in. charge. She praised Benge Associates'management engineers
Office: Borough Hall-Telephone
stu!ients meaps the diffe~ bei" ....,.
highly the cooperallon <>f her. staff, tfe of Chicago.
•
Open Weekday. 1:30·3:31 Daily
solvency and bankntp~.
Mo~r Corps, and the COm....uruty Hea,th Tea will be served at the close of the
•
Swarthmore College which I~ a
Society.
meeting py the fourth grade mothers Qf .In the near future a census of Swarthmore will be un.derlaken. This is to sup- drop from the. largest enr,ol)IDeut to. the
,
lJote 5 Blood Donor. 0.1.
the Rutgers and College avenue schools. plement the c~us taken by the Air Wardens last year. Pertinent data will be stn:lllest within 15 yea", barripg d.eJ'!:IM~s. Clayd~ follow~ her re!"'rt as
,
used for a Swarthmore Dirl'ctory.
.
opmellts whiJ:b will bring 5t!!!l.esJts liMe
Surgtcal l)ressmg5 chalDorman chaiWIt)t her W.e.T.U. CalIs SpeeiaJ SessioQ.
We would like to have a card for each and every resident of each dwelling. We is, according to Dr. N3SQn "far b!:It!or
annual rec;ord as. Blood
nor
rman.
wonld like to know if you have a fire extinguish.er and if so what type?
off than mose' since it is coed'l~IiOJllll
'1'he : Mubile Urnt of the Blood Donor
The Swarthmore branch of the w.e.
Pue to the increased importanr.e 01 Victory Gardens in view of food rationing, and highly endowed.
. ~·of the Southeastern Branch of T.U. will hold a special meeting at the we would like to know if you would be interested in operating such a garden if . Must Contribute to' WarEfF_ .
the Red Cross has come to Swarthmore home of Mrs. George Van Alen on Park conveniently located or if you have a garden on your own uroperty?
' "0 th
th
ba d
11
11k all
five times in the past year, thre~ tim~ avenue next T~esday, IaDl~afY 26, at 10
From time to time the Defense Council is asked to set up new committees for . di
~ik er U ? J ti:ti eges :
to the ,co!'e¥"r twice to the borough, for' A.M. A full ~tten~ is urged. Mem· new projects. If you are not already actively engaged, would you be able and :ak: ;,~ s;"axi':..:'" :ntri~tfu..ong :ibl~
520 dO,!"tiQll!!. _Eleyen Pl'fsons ~ave served bers sho!!ld bring sandwicbes. The hos~" willing to serve if called upon? .Mrs. Albe~ Hill of College avenue has accepted 'to the total military effort. Th:"must
three times as" aonors. For theIr coopera- ess will serve coffee and tea.
the chairmanship of this conunittee.
(Ccmt...., otJ ___ J"nr:1
CAREER CHOICE
284?
......on Show8 War Movie
JAN 26 1943
"
« .• '
·.n
MUSIC CLUB TO
MEET AT CL-vn.ES
men
TO'BE'U & S TOPIC
Shopping trips mode
•
.
executive board of the Swarthmore chapteo of the American Red Cross to be
held Monday morning January 18 at
9:30 A.M. at the home of the chairman
~SU'~~I'~'
,
"~r,ry~th~an:.:m:i~li:ta:ry~s~eM~·c~e~i:.~thi:·~.~s~e:rvt~·c~e~fo:r~th:e~Pi~.c~tur~..~_ _ _ _ _-:-_ _J~=======================:;=====
the home of Mrs. William F. Uthe, 223 ~
Park avenue on Wednesday, January 20,
at 3 P.M. Mrs. Stanley Taylor will
speak on "Music for Young Children.'·
.
PA. '
PhI Beta Kappa D1DDer TcmIPt
night a committee
eonsisting of Burgess John H. PitmaD,
°1 D W R. M
Sehool Reading
~~~~t~; of Counci . ,
organ,
Lists CaU8e8 and Curee
Secretary Elliott Richardson,
of Reading Troubles .
of School Board Roy W. Del.
president of Swarthmore Col.
The Swarthmore Mothers' Club
IIleg. John Nason, president of Woman'.
:. its r-·lir monthly meeting,
Mrs. J. Paul Brown, president of
,.~~;"'ri~~~e, in the Woman's Club11~;rs ~: II. - "Jim Dand." ........................................P •
Players Club Malcolm Hodge, presi.
dent of LI'brary Board Guenther Froe.
Hoskins of the Sproge
WEDNESDAY, JANVARY ze
Ball
•
Co'
H
Media spoke on "Teaching the
A. ... to 4;00 P .... -Bed """'" Surgical DreesIDga ...... ··W"':!';,'!' Club
bel, presid~nt of Fife
mpany any
=~ Her talk was foUowed
18°: P M. - United camp&1gD Ball,. •.••..• , .• , ... , ••••••••••... .:..-...."h Ball
Hanby, president of Business Men's
Sa... _
tiD ..... ,,",,_IT DjWl'ldOl._wolool.
.
• 10:00 P.M.-B.ed. Cross 8uigleal Dl I n p ··············-..~ ... ~ero Club
O'd
discussion and tea.
:;: r.1L_uJJm Dandy" ............................ ; ........... P1aJ
Association· Harold, gram, preSI ept n==============il
Miss Hoskins dealt with the
.
TIIVRSDAY, JANUARY 21
Ball
of Rotary Club Edward Noyes, and the
. .', problems which 'confront parents
10:00 A ... to 4:00 P M.-Re
Editor of The Swarthmorean Peter E.
STEAKS-CHOPS
10=00
V. Circle
Study ••.•..•..•....••.•..
Group · .. · .. ···· .. ·•.••
.. ·I·.··BeD····t·am.n
Told met in the Council
.... teach.rs in teaching children t0 rea d, and
2:00 P~M..-L:W.
.... _Friendly
'
•. ;~lveDue
Playe.. Club
• bl room
lebto form.
. SEAFOOD 0.. SpcdaII;y,
' what can be done to prevent them. She
8:15 P. Y. -"J1m Il8Ddy" .......................... ...........
ulate plans for a SUlt:- e ce rabon.
CompletelV Air..condidoned
. . stated that much trouble begins ~use IL_..:~:::.::.,:=:.:=:....:..:..:.:.:..:.--~---:-~-~-:--:::--:--::-:;::;~
Announcement of plans will be made
'. adults impose adult standards on children.
to maintain the health of the civilian at a later date.
Before teaching the child to read,
population of workers who supply the
- - -..
, - - - ...
IATUBDAY,
18
_
ooDep
1:OO ....d 9;00 p.IL-XovIna Plctunlo •••••.•.•••• C1cU>1or.'
SUNDA.Y, JAMTJARY 1'1 \.
Local ohurchea
11 :00 A II. - K.row Worohlp ............ 'te''r"'" ••••• 'Pr\e'"·tidi.:
Bouee
':15 P:IL-Ia:or I. BIk"","' "The!Iellcop
.•••••
MONDAY, IANVARY U
woman'. Club
10'00 A.IL- Bed """'" ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BoroUgh Bel1
~::t==..!";;::gr~ ~':::::::::::::::::::::::::::Borough Ball
T1lBSDAY, IANVARY 1.
, ci b
... - Dr. Jobn 1'1..... , "Education and tbe war" ....... wo:::-:r: CI~b
.
.
ot
:'CI¢.:i i:"'
sch!!?!
....
C' - "
0';:':;,..).
P.
*. Deif.ense Coune"0, B uII'etlns
*.
_I
hl
(C~ . . " . , . ,~)'
'_~".
_~
.
......
.•. , ·x
RECI'ORJ. J. Gl,JENT.JIER A1)llRESSES FIREMEN AT ANNUAL MEET
..
"
N
between the hours of 10 a.m. and
ATURALLY we are doing all we can to accom-
packages.
•
In these wartime days, when It IS not poSSIble
In the first place, we are carrying large numbers
~8 to add new cars and buses, cooperation is the
of workers during the morning and evening hours.
for
These quickly' fill up seats and the aisles, too.
best means
town for any other purpose -
it will
be
or into
of assuring
smooth and comfortable ser·
vice for you. Not only shall we appreciate your help,
more com·
.
more
seats are available, there is more room for your
modate everyone, but there are certain things
that we should like to point out to our patrons.
Therefore, if you are going shopping -
3 p.m. Then
but on all occasions
fortable for you to do your traveling over our lines
we
think you will find it to your
advantage when you travel overourlines: Thank you.
.
PHILADELPHIA SUBURBAN
TRANSPORTATION COMPANY
sv.".... from 69'" S'r••' f.rmiaa'
S.rlf;', Phllad.lphia'. W•• t.ra
.'
PI: l'I.AIIIaDy JlemhT. \'Iee.'" lAon. CharIee BoB. . . . S- , . T . w Pete. Told, olIi, I. of the S..u.-.ore
.... PI: I tl •• A... oIat1oa, B ..._ 1 .....· B. Pitmui .... III - -
:-
Oap ~'. o..m.,;..
.....
,..Qdef
.ea.PaDT'.....
FIre
t
j PahJIe-&lelJ" Fnak '" MarIde:r
Rohmt AIlIooa n- wIIh. 'rIII'ieoI ~ .. doe
r . aeJ Chaplala. lU'D , ·10 lie Iwewd!
.'
,
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
- . l .... - ,
,•,.
TBB SWARTBMOREAN
FRIDAY, JANUARY IS
6:=~::::~~::~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~:::::;'~BBo;M~Q~gh~N~~~~5~~~~M~a~rk~JPp~hi~.B~~~Ka~p~pa~IH~n~n~~~;o:n~';Ih~t
:: SS HOSKINS AT
THE
CALENDAR
MI
In March 1893, Swarthmore Borough
Council organized and held it. first
W1>I>ir'S
~ ....-
MOTIIERS' CLUB
Sprogell Smool Reading Specialist Lists Causes and Cures
of Reading Troubles
SATURDAY,
~ANUARY
16
IaJ COU....
7:00 and 9:00 P.IL - Moving Pietures ...•...•.... Clothler JrJemor
11:00
8:1'
10:00
2:00
8:30
•
SUNDAY, JANUARY 17
Loeal Churches
A.M.-MornlDg Worship Tb·····H···)·lco··p··te·r~:······P;ie·nci8: Meeting House
P.M.-Igor
I. Sikorsky'" • e
... ···
MONDAY, JANUARY 18
Woman'. Club
A. 14.- Red. CC088 Sewing ......................... :::::::: .Borough Hall
P.M.-Leglon Aus.Ulary •·••··•·••···············• ......... Borough Ball
P. M. - American Leglon Movies •••••• ·••• •••••••.
TUESDAY~ JANUARY 19
• cl b
m~!in~ednesday
night a committee
consisting of Burgess John H. Pitman,
president 01 Council D. W. R. Morgan,
Borough Secretary Ell'lott R'Ieh ardson,
president 01 School Board Roy W. Del-
aplaine, president of Swarthmore CoJlege John Nason, president 0 f W oman'5
The Swarthmore Mothers' Club held
regula"r monthly meeting, Friday, JanClub Mrs. J. Paul Brown, president ,?f
uary 8, in the Woman's Club House.
~~~g ~:~=p.J~~J;~~~:::~~~~~~?~.~~.~~.~~~: :::::::~~:;:r: Cl~b
Players Club Malcolm Hodge, preslBeatrice Hoskins of the Sprogell School,
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY ZO
h Ban
dent of Library Board Guenther FroeMedia spoke on "Teaching the Child. to
' . M. to 4:00 P. M. -Red Cross Surgical DressIngs ......
Club
bel, president of Fire Co~pany HMar?
Read ." Her talk was followed by m~ M. - United Campa.lgn Rally .......................... Borough Ball
Hanby, president of BUSIness
en s
'onnal
d,',eu,s,'on
a"d
lea.
8:00
to
10:00
P.
M.
Red.
cross
Surglcal
Dressings
.....
::::
..
::::
.
Players
Club
Association
Harold.
Ogram,
president
l'
8:15 P. M.-"Jlm Dandy" .....•........•....•...... , .. .
Miss Hoskins dealt with the main
THURSDAY, JANUARY 21
H 11
of Rotary Club Edward Noyes, and the
problems which confront parents and
10'00 A M to 4:00 p.M.-Re:l Cross surgical Dressings .. · .... Jci~a':.~ Cl~b
Editor of The Swarthmorean Peter E.
teachers "n teaching children to read, and
10:00 A:M:-L. w. V. Study Group .. · .. · .. · .. · .... is·Benjamln West AvenUe
Told met in the Council room to form2:00 P. M. - Friendly Circle .......... · . .. ..........
. ....... Players ClUb
I ' bl
I b t'
what can be done to prevent Ihem. She IL_~8'~I.~P~.M~.~.~.J:Im=-DaD:::d~Y_··_.:.:...:.:.':':".:.:' :':":''::'1'',,:._._
.._._.':-'_.'-:'_
.._.-:'._.~.-:::--:-:-:=-=::~ I ulate plans or a sUlta c ce e ra Ion.
stated that much trouble hegins ~cause II
Announcement of plans wilt be made
adults impose adult standards on children.
to maintain the health of the civilian at a later date.
Before teaching the child to read, one
population of workers who supply the
Red Cr-o-ss-B~~-or--:d:--to Meet
should be sure he is physically and menequipment for the milit~ry f.orces, of the
tally rcady for it. Six-and-one-hall to
mothers and the children upon whom the
Red Cross chainnen will present their
se\'en years is the average age when
(uture of the country depends.
annual reports at the meeting of the
the child's eyesight is strong enough to Nurses Made 6,378 Visits in Past
'
executive board 01 the Swarlhmore chapconcentrate on print.
Year Wh •.ch Presented Chal.
TO LAYOUT 1943 UNITED
ter of the American Red Cross to be
The tendency to reverse is quite comCAMPAIGN TUESDAY
held Monday morning January 18 at
its
.
The Phi Beta Kappa Society 01 Swarthmore College will hold a dinner meeting
this evening in Parrish Hall at 7 o'c1oek
at which time members of the senior class
will be guests of honor.
Dr. Paul F. Genanill of Thayer road
who is president of the Swarthmore Chapter will preside, and William H. Auden,
lecturer in the English Deparhnent of the
college will address the meeting on "Voca_
tion and Society."
':#oo:!':fs
13:::8
1Ii================-1I
NURSING SERVICE
LY MEET
IN YEAR
H~s-
mon
children,
kins among
said. Ityoung
is only
when Miss
the child
reaches the second grad€! that Donnal
readers can be separated from reversal
cases and special training given. Many
reasons have been brought forth for reversal but the theory commonly accepted is that normally onc side of the
brain is dominant in what we see. In
reversal cases both sides are active. The
reversal problem is one of tI~e most com....
mon in reading and one which has very
hanoful f!ffects if it is 1I0t treated promptIy.
Miss Hoskins emphasized the fact that
there should be no stigma attached to
the child who is not able to read well.
Ability to read is no~ related to. in~el1igenee. The main thmg t~ avoHt IS. a
sense of failure in the child. Readtng
clinics will help avert this.
Other reading problems, according to
Miss Hoskins, are usually caused by emphasizing some particular method. Both
the phonetic and the v~sual meth~ of
teaching are needed, With emphaSIS on
olle or the other related only to a child's
individual needs. The same applies to
oral and silent reading- both are needed
by the child, and the exclusion o~ one or
the olher will lead to serious problems.
Above all, we must teach the child to
face his difficulties honestly, and try to
avoid a sense of failure.
In spite of the ban on pleasure driving,
W~ 0; decided at the meeting to continue
l",_~~~...
•
discussion
groups for t.ltis month at
least since the hostesses have rather centrall~ located homes. The older group
met as scheduled at the home of Mrs.
Robert 'Cadigan, 213 Dickinson avenue
last Wednesday evening. Theresa Young
of the local school faculty spoke on "Testing." The younger group will meet al
the home 01 Mrs. William F. Uthe, 223
Park avenue on Wednesday, January 20,
at 3 P.M. Mrs. Stanley Taylor will
speak on "Music for Young Children."
lenging Problems
Providing adequate public health nursiog service to Central Delaware County
in wartime was discussed from many
angles at the annual meeting of the Community Health Society held in Borough
Hall, January 14.
Interesting and stimulating reports
were presented by th.e vari?':l~ committee chairmen on their activIties. The
supervising nurse reported lithe influx of
population (largely defense workers' famiIies) has resulted in an almost overwhelming upthrust of health probl~s. To
provide adequately for such necessiltes as
communicable disease control, maternal
and child care, sanitation, adjustme.nt
of disrupted family life requires the WISdom and use of all the resources of the
community. A total of 6,378 visits to
I 350 cases were made by the nursing staff
d~ring 1942. A fine staff of volunteers.
share with us the responsibility of meeting this increased call for nursing service."
Officers elected for the ensuing year
were: Mrs. Paul Fetzer president, Mrs.
A. F. Jackson first vice-president, Mrs.
\Valter E. L. Irwin second vice-president, Mrs. D. Malcolm Hodge recording
secretary, Mrs. Norman Krase treasurer,
and Elfie S. Sproat assistant treasurer.
Mrs. Thomas S. Safford honorary presideot served as chairman of the nominating committee.
The Board of Directors and staff expressed sincere appreciation for the donations and services rendered to the agency
by innumerable individuals and groups
of loyal citizens doing their part in this
crisis. Less dramatic but no less necessary than military service is this service
•
Save your tiD can. properlJ' preparetI.
STEAKS-CHOPS
SEAFOOD Our SpeciGIcy
Completely Air.Conditioned
'.U
2:ES
,
IIoiIIocJl&"""'-
I""'"
II
-7-
Nigh
11~9~:3~0~A~.M~.~a~t~t~h~e~h~0~m~e~0~f~t~h~e~Cha~ir~m~an~~~~~O~p~e~n~All~~~~~t~~~~
A rally of United War Chest captai~s Mrs. Sewell W. Hodge on Ogden avenue.
and workers also to be attended by vanOU5 teams from surrounding communities,
will be held at 8 P.M. sharp Wednesday,
January 20, at the Woman's Club.
Moving pictures will be shown and
general instruction iss.ued as. to co.nducting this year's campaign whtch will extend from January 24 to February. 8.
T. E. Hessenbruch local chairman
stresses the extreme importance of the
presence of all those interested in the
campaign, at this session.
.
During the drive the secretary Will be
stationed at headquarters in the Bank
from 1.30 until 3 P.M. weekday afternoons and from 9 until 12 o'clock Saturday mornings to receive reports and CO~
tributions of various workers and reSIdents who find it more cOllvenient to
leave their donations there. As the campaign advantes the secretary will be on
hand during the major part of the day.
Legion Shows Wor Movie
The Harold Ainsworth Post No. 427
of the American Legion invites all inter-
ested Swarthmoreans to its showing of
the official R.A.F. sound movie t1Target
for Tonight" at B:30 P.M. Monday night
January 18 in the Legion room, .Bo~ough
Hall. ·Ralph Ashton Nixdorf will mtroduce the picture which is considered one
of the foremost war movies to date. It
runs 48 minutes and is presented through
the courtesy of the Bell Telephone Company.
.
The Post's regular monthly meeting
will be called to order at 8 P.M. on the
same date but witl adj Durn promptly
for the picture.
.
FOR SAl,E
226 RUTGERS AVENUE
SWARTHMORE
The above home is delighlfull,. located. amon, fine old Swarthmore trees. It i8 well.built, in good eondition, with beautiful,
well selected chestnut woodwork. Two fireplaees, one in the
Living Room, and one of the Duleh oven type in the Diniog
Room give this home exceptional ebarm. The house contains
seven rooms and one bath, with a lot size of 80 x 180 feel.
Your inBpection i. invited, ,by appointment, through
EDWARD L. NOYES
23 S. CHESTER ROAD ..
SWARTHMORE
MARY LYON CONTINUES
TERM AT NEW YORK
HOTEL
,.
I' , --
The Mary Lyon School and Junior
College whose buildings here were taken
over for a convalescent hospital by the
Navy last week, reopened with classes
at the fashionable Barbizon Plaza Hotel
facing Central Park, New York on Tuesday morning this week to continue its
current first semester which ends at the
close of this month. On the first of February the second semester will begin at
the new headquarters at 58th street and
Central Park west.
When the Navy first decided to take
over the local institution during the
Christmas holidays of the latter, arrangements were made to move the schools to
the Henry Hu(lson Hotel in New York.
However, just before The Swarthmorean
went to press last week it was learned
that a section of that hotel had also been
taken over by the Navy thus excluding
the possibility of the school's being accommodated 011 the same premises.
Mrs. Mabel J. Neal who has been secretary of Mary Lyon for 28 years is retaining the husiness office in connection
with her home in Media.
WAVES Expected Here Soon
A number 01 WAVES are expected
to arrive in the borough in the near
future for duty in connection with this
new suburban Convalescent Annex of the
Philadelphia Naval Hospital.
•
a-.
P)',
In
WIR
10111
f
JAN 22 1943
BW ARl'JlMO••
00 LL K(}}J:
JAN 26 1943
LI:IRA.Y
THE SWARTHMOREA
,
PA..
Swarthmore Red Cross Reports WORKERS OPEN Nason Says Colleges Will Face
IS·
. '42 DRIVE SUNDAY II'T
..
Active 1"7
" 0 unteer ervlCes In''
w ar R esponsl.b l.,"'"eS
Willingly
Mrs. Hodge, All Officers and Directors Reelected
Hard Worked Chairmen Face Combined War
Fund, Roll Call Drive lor Humanitarian Reliel March 1
aB-
Swarthmoreans actively engaged in volunteer service under the
direction of the Red Cross achieved tremendous humanitarian services
in 1942 according to the annual reports of Red Cross chairmen made
Friday morning at the home of Swarthmore's chairman Mrs. Sewell
W. Hodge. Announcement was made
by '!'e chairman that s.he ~ad offered t~e
serVIces of her orgamzatlon to CaptaJO
James D. Rives ,,:t the I,?I Convalesce~t
Annex of the PhiladelphIa Naval Hospl•
tal and was now awaiting requests from
_ _ _ _ _ __
,him which she would relay to the proper E. J. Benge Will Tell How
to
chairmen.
Seleet Vocation on Basis of
Twenty-nine Gray Ladies are at work
Individual Assets,
in Philadelphia hospitals with five more
Liabilities
enrolled to take the next training class
according to the report of Mrs. Thomas
The next meeting of the Home and
H. Ingram chairman of Gray Ladies.
School
Association on Monday night, JanShe added that recently new services had
uary
25,
in the school auditorium, will
been opened to this section, among them
be
on
a
topic
of great interest to parents
acting as hospital receptionist, filing xand
their
older
children
Eugene J.
ray records, handling floor telephone
Benge
the'
speaker
has
had
long
experidesks.
ence in finding round holes for round
Mrs. George L. Annitage, chairman of pegs and square holes for square pegs.
canteen, reported 41 local women who Mr. Benge's tal~ will deal with ways
had graduated in March and had con- of determining choice of an occupation.
tributed 2849 hours of volunteer work
He wit! discuss the dependence of suc~
since then in ho~pit3.ls, in high school
cess on abilities and interests. Among
and college cafeterias, in work on the the abilities he will consider are those of
three parties for sailors. Swarthmore is
physical, mental, mechan!cal and social
represented at the Red Cross Saturday dt!velopment, including habits and skills
canteen each week in the year.
in these areas. The importance of interMrs. A- Ludlow Clayden reported the ests will be dealt with also; interests in
completion during July and August of people, in ideas and in things.
a supply of surgical dressings 'for the
The ever-increasing importance of
borough made with materials bought with skilled guidance in choice of a career
the $35 given by the American Legion will be emphasized and Mr. Benge will
and its Auxiliary fQr that purpose and point out the part which the school and
sterilized by the Chester Hospital. These the home can play in this pr
are now stored in· the five lOcal first aid choosing. He will dwell on the part that
-stations. She reported the completion of parents can play in providing proper
4SB6 dressings in 2J03% hours 01 work guidance for children not only in junior
since Borough 'Council's coopc;ration made and senior high school, but also in elepossible the opening of the Surgical Dress- mentary schools.
ings room in Borough Hall on SeptemMr. Benge is a graduate of the Carber Z. She contrasted this 4 months' negie Institute of Technology in Applied
achievement with the completion of 3250 Psychology. He is the author of numerdressings by Swarthnwre women work- ous books and articles on management
ing in the Media headquarters during the and vocational subjects. He is a mementire year of 1941. Filty-five women ber of many of the principal managework regularly in the local room with ment associations, and is president of
six instructresses in charge. She praised Benge Associates management engineers
highly the cooperation of her staff, the of Chicago.
Motor Corps, and the Community Health
Tea will be served at the close of the
Society.
meeting by the fourth grade mothers of
u.... 5 Blood Donor Day.
the Rutgers and College avenue schools.
Mrs. Clayden lollowed her report as
Surgical Dressings chairman with her
annual record as Blood Donor chairman. W_C.T_U. Calls Special Session
The Mobile Unit of the Blood Donor
The Swarthmore branch of the
Service of the Southeastern Branch of
T.U.
will hold a special meeting at the I
the Red Cross has come to Swarthmore
home
of Mrs. George Van Alen on Park
five times in the past year, three times
avenue
next Tuesday, January 26, at 10
to the college, twice to the borough, for
520 donations. Eleven persons have served A.AI. A fult attendance is urged. Memthree times as donors. For their coopera- hers should bring sandwiches. The hostess will serve coffee and tea.
(CoraUmu,d OM Pq. 'o.r) •
Borough Ready for TwO-Week
Canvas8 for Annual Cam.
paign Plus War
Agencies
The United" Campaign which opens a
two·week drive here on Sunday this year
has assumed additional obligations in
established agencies created by existing
war conditions. Among these are the
"It is the business of education to be farsighted and to build a
U.S.O. and the British War Relief. better world" Dr. John W. Nason, president of Swarthmore College,
Money raised in this joint eampaigu will declar~d as he outlined a forward looking post-war program for higher
care for the usual welfare needs 01 this educatIOn Tuesday afternoon when he addressed a joint meeting of the
area as well as being used to extend to
League of Women Voters and the Wommen and women in the armed forces some
of the comforts to which they are enan,~ CI~b in the latter's c1ubho~se.
.
Putting total war together IS fully
meeting of workers Tuesd:y
as important. as wagi!1g it. The total
result of tillS war will not be known
evenipg in the Woman's Club House
until the steps we took to put the world
prepared those upon whose shoulders January Get-Together of Local on a slable basis are written into history_
rests the responsibility of collecting suffiI k
h'f
d'
. h
Instrumentalists And Singers
now
cient funds to cover the increased work
, J t at J we on t wm
bo t e war we
of the agencies in this war year. Eve""
Next Tuesday
won ~ lave mu~h t? say a ut ~e ~eace.
..,
but If we don t Will hthe hpeace
citizen is urged to show his patriotism
h It IS not
H'
CI Ub WI. '11 I10 Id gomg
to.. matter muc w et er we won
Tl Ie S warth more 1nUSIC
in this small way by contributing as
tl
Ie war.
.
.
much as possible to the United War Chest Its regular monthly meetmg at the horne
E I' h h d
. I h'
. d
F d F
h
.
f
h
h
'
•
ar
ler
e
a
concise
y
Istone
war.
un.
or t e convelllence 0 t ose woof Mrs. Samuel D. Clyde, Swarthmore "War today is different from' anything
will be away from home when the solicidOl
T
d
g( en avenues, on
ues ay even- ever known. No group.. no business, no
an
tor
in
their
neighborhOOd
calls
heading,
January
26,
at
8.30
o'clock.
institution is safe from the effects of total
quarters are being maintained at the
The program is arranged by the chair- war. No college can remain aloof from
Swarthmore National Bank. Here too
all cards and contributions reeeh'ed by man Mildrid Spencer Hutcheson who its effect."
the collectors are to be turneti over to will play as the first number the BachPresident Nason listed as the wars
the secretary.
Busoni ~'Chaconne in D Minor." Irma 6.,,·e major impads upon colleges qy
The complete personnel of the 1943 Carels contralto wilt sing a group of which higher education has suffered
campaign is as follows:
songs as follows: HLes Berceaux" by greater blows than at any time since the
Director - T. ~. Hesscnbruch, asso- Faure, "The Snow-drop" and f'T h e founding of Harvard University; prioriwhich
to getormadate director -
with make
which itto difficult
make repairs
to
secretary - Mrs. J. Donald Gibson, as~ J:undy" by Mildrid S. Hutcheson, "The operate; a shift in curriculum from the
sistant secretary - Mrs. Thomas H. Lue- Fisher's Widow" by Clara Edwards. humanities in the direction of technical
ders, and captains and workers - Elric The Brallms "Sonata in A MaJ' or" for
su~jects which makes the maintenanj:e
the necessary balance between the
S. Sproat, captain (business district) j violin and piano will be played by Cyril of
E. L. Noyes, John Michael, Harry Try- G~rdner and Mrs. Samuel D. Clyde.
number of students and the number and
Th'e following group of two piano types of faculty a constant problem; the
ens, Leslie Pyle. Isaac Darlington, captain (Strath Haven Inn). Robert T. picces played by Mrs. Clyde and Mrs. rapid loss 01 most 01 the male stu
The Swarthmorean, 1943-01
First published as The Swarthmorean in 1929, this newspaper continues to the present day.
1943-01
digitized microfilm
Film P398-P427
Digitization funding supplied by the Swarthmore Historical Society
1943 JANUARY.pdf