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VOL. VI, No. 27 INSTITUTE OF RACE RELATIONS OPENS Dr. Charle. John.on, of Fitk UniÂvenity, Director of Month'. Conference . The second annual Institute of Race ReÂlations opened Sunday afternoon at a tea given by Dean H. E. B. Speight, of Swarthmore College, and Mrs. Speight at the home of President Aydelotte and Mrs. Aydelotte. Dr. Speight welcomed the members of the institute and several memÂbers of the faculty spoke briefly. Among those being Dr. Otto L. Kleinberg, of Columbia University; Dr, Robert E. Park, of the University of Chicago; Dr, Charles S. Johnson, Dr. Herbert E. Miller, of Bryn Mawr, all members of the faculty of the Institute, and Dr. Leslie E. Pinkney Hill, a guest of the Institute on Sunday. Mrs. Crystal Bird Fausct and Miss Helen Bryan entertained the members of the InÂstitut'! at the home of Dr. and Mrs. H. E. B. Speight Sunday evening. The Institute of Race Relations is a recognized center where mature 'men and women study and discuss the world probÂlems of race and the factors which conÂstitute the American inter-racial situation, with emphasis upon the Negro-white rela-tion. . . Outstanding among the members of the inter-racial faculty assembled are: James Weldon Johnson, former secretary of the National Association for the Ad\'ancement of Colored People and head of the departÂment of Creative Literature at Fisk UniÂversity; Charles A. Houston, dean of the Howard Univelsity Law School; Ambrose Caliver, specialist in Negro education for the Federal Government; Ralph Bunche, Howard University, and Forrester B. Washington, president of the Atlanta School of Social Work, and an assistant to Harry B. F!(:;J!·:i~s, FERA held; Dr. t'railk Boas. 'COrumbia University; 'Henry l. Cadbury, Bryn Mawr;' George Herzog, Yale; Rabbi Edward L. Israel and Will W. Alexander, president of Dillard University, New OrÂleans. "We know that we cannot solve this whole big problem of race and weare not going to attempt to, but we do hope to provide from our studies here a backÂground which will aid us in more adeÂquately facing situations which arise daily from. race problems." (Continued on Page 3) • SWARTHMORE BOYS VOLUNTEER AT CAMP Boys' Clothes Needed at Health Camp for Undernourished Children The Delaware County Camp for underÂnourished "depression" children at ThornÂton is deeply grateful for the services of William Gittens, of North Chester Road, and John Peirsol, of Lafayette Avenue, which nave been volunteered by these two boys for the month of July, the four weeks in which the young male sufferers of the depression will be the guests at the camp. Mr. Charles A. Garland, vice-president of the Association, has informed us that there is an urgent need of camp clothing so that anyone having discarded sneakers, khaki shorts, blouses, or s\\imming suits may conÂtribute them to the cause by bringing them to the SWARTHMOREAN office, where they will be cailed for by representatives of the camp. • The Gospel Story in the Stars Sunday evening, July 8, the Blue Church will have as its guest speaker Mr. Jack Miller, formerly a Russian Je\V atheist. 1\Ir. Miller was born in Groduo, Russia, coming from a line of famous Orthodox rabbis. He was educated in Hebrew schools of Rabbinical learning. In his youth he. turned atheist. Coming to America he preached atheism but soon was won to God through sound Bible reasoning. He now uses his knowlÂedge to the glory of God. Mr. Miller will present the "Gospel Story as Seen in the ·Sfars"and will use beautiful hand-colored slides to illustrate his message. The service will start promptly at 8 o'clock, daylight saving time. Everyone is cordially invited to atÂtend. , "~.-' .... 0-'. • ',_ .. :::\\ '\" I" \( . • n. r),~ f': ~, '. () j. t ;.; /' JUl (j Swarthmore Colle~ Swarthmore. W34 Penna. SWARTHMORE, PA., JULY 6,1934 $2.50 PER YEAR !RESULTS OF FOURTH OF JULY CONTESTS I GIVEN-NEW ACTIVITIES SCHEDULED Both Children and Adults Thor- Children's Game, At 10 A. M. on the former prep school oughly Enjoyed Day's grounds the children's games were held. Varied Activities Mrs. Harold Griffin gave out the slips --- for double-decker ice cream cones, which Most of the residents of the borough were the prizes to the winners of the difÂwho were not vacationing elsewhere at- ferent contests. tended the events of the Fourth of July In the bottle filling game, under the program on Wednesday. Mr. John H. direction of Mrs. R. O. Redgrave, the folÂPitman was chairman of this year's com- lowing children were prize winners: Girls, mittee and E. M. Buchner assistant chair-Is to 10, Louis Gray; boys, 8 to 10,' Hebe man. Butler; girls, 11 to 12, Marie Hauger; boys, The committee in charge' of the chil- 11 to 12, Edgar Thorne; girls, 13 to 14, dren's games and parade were Mrs. H. A. Alice Bernard; boys, 13 to 14, Bill PaterÂPeirsol, chairman, Mrs. Jessie Herman son; above 14, Rebecca Warren. Itinerary of Dr. Terlll&ll', Third "Weatward-Ho" Trip, Which Started Wedneaday Morning Holmes, Mrs. Arthur Redgrave, Mrs. Har- In the cup blowing contest, in' which old Griffin, Mrs. Carl DeMolI, Mrs. Joseph Mrs. Elliott Richardson was in charge, the Seal, Mrs. Elliot Richardson and Mrs. winners were: Girls, 8 to 10, Caroline R. G. E. Ullman. Sinclaire ; boys, S to 10, Hill Harvey; girls, Those assisting with the games were: 11 to 12, Helen W~rren; boys, 11 to ~2, VACATION BIBLE I SCHOOL BEGINS' Fifty Children Enrolled in School Sponsored by AU the Churches The Community Daily Vacation Bible School o)Ji!ned Monday, July 2, with an enrollment of forty-seven children. A number of new registrations were made on Tuesday. The splendid spirit and discipline prevailing foreshado\V a successful school, Loth 3S to fun and accomplishments. The spacious rooms used in the Presbyterian Church seem to be about the coolest place in town, although the Bible work with all its phases tends to warm every heart. Visitors are invited not onlv to witness the work done, but even m~re, to catch the spiritual atmosphere so full of upliftÂ::!:! t!:::!:h!s c::.:l ~=!!::. Ch:!~:-=:t i::-~ still welcomed" to join in the' program if they have· not already registered, the tuition fee remaining the same, one dollar per family. The staff of teachers is unusuÂally capable, including those with experiÂence in college, normal school and Sunday School. Special thanks should be given to these splendid volunteer workers who are sacrificing their time and ability for the youth of Swarthmore. At present, Miss Dorothy Underhill and Miss Mabel SalÂfingere are taking charge of the Beginners, Miss Mildred Simpers of the Primary, Miss Louise Wagner and Miss Betty McÂGarrah of the Juniors,. and the director, Mr. Donald McGarrah, of the IntermediÂates. Mrs. B. C. Wiggins and Mrs. B. A. Konkle are helping with the devotional periods and musical instruction. As the school progresses, other teachers and helpers will be added with proper recognition of their services. The school has children from every church in Swarthmore; it is truly a community project promoting the highest Christian ideals and making reÂligion real in daily life. Please l:ncourage the children of your neighbors to come at once that they may not miss a single adÂditional day of the enjoyable program offered. • Campaign Against Speeding Gym Contracts Approved Word was received just as the paper was going to press of the apÂproval of E. H. Gravell, state engiÂneer of PWA, of the lowest bidders receiving the contracts for construcÂtion of the new gymnasium and cafeteria wing, General construction contracts wiII go to Robbins and Edelman, plumbÂing to S. Faith and Co., heating and ventilating to the American HeatÂing and Ventilating Co., electrical contract to Elias. Nusshaum and Brother, folding partitioris to Hom Folding Door Co" and kitchen equipment to W. F. Dougherty,' Contracts will be drawn and signed as soon as possible and it is expected ground will be broken within two weeks. Cape Cod Tour With its rocky broken coastline of many inlets, wooded capes, frequent beaches and quaint villages, Cape Cod presents a picÂture of charm that delights motorists seekÂing a pleasant vacation. ';I'hrough attractive regiGns along the Connecticut shore, the Keystone AutomoÂbile Club has outlined a motor tour that will supply motorists with a delightful journey to this famous "Down East" secÂtion. "While the New England seacoast is always alluring, June and July find the climate especially attractive on Cape Cod," says Howard J. Gallagher, manager of the Delaware County Division of the Club . "With their windswept open spaces, pleasÂant beaches and numerous attractive reÂsorts, Cape Cod, Marthas Vineyard and Nantucket present a picture that will always be remembered by travelers." From Chester the tour leads through Swarthmore, Broomall and Wayne to Bridgeport and Norristown. Here national route 122 is met and followed through Montgomeryville, Doylestown and BuckÂingham to Ne~v Hope, where the Delaware River' is crossed to LambertVille. . Froin here tliesame highway continues through Ringoes and Flemington. to beyond White House, where a right tum into U.S. 22, becoming N. J .. 29, is followed through Plainfield Into Elizabeth. Mrs. G. L. Alston, Mrs. James Bogardus, Edwar~ Alston; girls, 13 to 14,. Ahce I Mrs. J. Herman Holmes Jr Mrs Edward I Benard, boys, 13 to 14, Stanley HilI. Grant, Miss Catherine Sim~~rs, iliss J ane ~~e lucky ones in the game of "steppingÂLumsden, Miss Jane McIntyre, Miss Doris u~, under Mrs. !oseph S. Seal, we!e: McIntyre, Miss Irma Keighton, Miss I GIrls, S to. 10, LOIS Landan a.nd Manon Louise Isfort, Mr. John W. Pcirsol and I Henard; girls, 11 t.o 12, .MarI~ Hanger; Mr. John D. Detlefson. boys, 11 to 12, Arhe Colhns; girls, 13 to 14, Varrell Drew; boys, 13 to 14, Bill Pat- I . The day's activities began with the erson. I parade, which f(lrmed in front of the Bor- Mrs. Roland G. E. Ullman, in charge ough Hall at 9 A. M. The prizes for the of the "lollypops," awarded the decisions best decorated girl's bicycle were won by as follows: Girl and boys, 5 to 7, Jean Lois Gray, of Vassar Avenue, who received Huey; girls and boys, S to 10, Phyllis two tennis balls, and in the younger sec- Rodgers and Benjamin Collins;' girls and tion by Barbara Lukens, of Strath Haven boys, 11 to 12, Elsie Be:1ard and Leroy Avenue, who received a rubber ball. Dor- Evans; girls and boys, 13 to 14, Ella Deagle othy Be~ard received a prize for her and Stanley Hill. scooter b~ke, the only one In the parade. In the peanut scramble, Stephen Smith . The prizes for the best decorated. boy's I won in the "under 7" class; Emily Smith bicycle went to Dobby ~I)or, who ~1m..~lf I got 37 pe~nuts and Bill Harvey averaged presented a very fine ImpersonatIon of 91, becommg the winners of the 8 to I() Uncle Sam, and in the younger class to II gr<>up; Alice Maddox and Edgar Thorne George Froebel, of North Swarthmore Ave- won in the 11 to 12 age; and Alice BerÂn~ e, w~o won a wagon load ,of blocks., nard and Bill Paterson in the 13 to 14. Little Billy Froebel, who was With George I Mrs. Carl DeMoll officiated at this contest. and ~ressed like him, exclaimed, "Where's I Barbara Broadbent won the beach ball my priJ!:e?" when George received his, so as first prize in the clothespin contest for one of the judges ,resented Billy with a children 5 to 7, which Mrs. Jesse Herman nickel. .... Holmes. directed,. and little -Billy Sanborn As Betty. Laws, of Columbia Avenue, in ~ook second place. the costume of a Cape Cod peasant and After the children's games were over at Carol Maude Froebel, of North Swarth- 11 A. M., the adults staged some close more Avenue, a most charming bride with contests. Mrs. Frank R. Gray won the a lovely doll dressed in white satin in her women's rolling pin throwing and received coach, tied for first place in the "prettiest a can of corn, one of string beans, one of doll coach" section, each received prizes. lima beans. Mr. Millard Rewis, of WestÂBf,! tty won a large red, white, blue and dale Avenue, won a flashlight in them en's green beach ball and Carol a rubber ball. rolling pin throwing. Mrs. Rewis won the Little Marianna and Jimmy Pitman, of nail driving contest for women, driving Vassar Avenue, and Harry Knight Warre;; her last one in up to the head in six secÂwith George Pierce Warren, Jr., of South onds; She received " can of polish and Chester Road, both brides and grooms, cleaner. tied for the prize for the prettiest costume. In the bottle filling Mrs. J. Herman Marianna received a parasol and the War- Holmes, Jr., and Mr. Peter E, Told were ren brothers a ball. (Continued on Page 6) In the most original costume class Betty '\ • Jean Pitman, of Vassar Avenue, and Betty SCHOOL BOARD IN Ellen Broadb~nt to?k first place with their I most appropriate display. Betty Jean was a nurse wheeling Betty Ellen, who was SPECIAL SESSIO'N well bandaged and held a likewise med- .. iically treated doll in a coach bearing an inscription to the effect "Let's have a safe Fourth." Little Robin Harper, of Yale Avenue, dressed in green like his old nameÂsake, Robin Hood, with his little golden curls peeping out in front of his peaked Await Approval of State EngiÂneer for P. W. A. to S~gn Contracts hat, won a large ball in this class. Dr. Arthur E. Bassett, president of the Th . f th b t fl t School Board, called a special meeting of P t e prize or e es oa went to th h d I t F'd . d D 'd "'f C h f She oar as n ay evenmg. Clarence From Elizabeth U. S. Route 9 is. used a sy an aVI "y c a an, a Irat I G M e s h 1 • d through Jersey Cit" and north along the Haven Avenue, who were dressed in pink,' so'I'lcI't ey rd ,as ilethen aPbPomte tfo act as J d I' d h' b b . or UrIng e a sence 0 Claude Hudson River to the Alpine-Yonkers Ferry. 2:1 pu ,e L e!r :!. Y sister Betty, who I Smith 'h 'th MS· h . . Burgess John Pitman and borough Cross the ferry to Yonkers and continue was doll-like in a white crepe paper dress b ,\\ 0 WI rs. mit, IS travelIng po \I. ce are con d uc tm' g an ac t'I ve campai. gn east over the Cross County Parkway to and h at, on a fI oat d ecorated W'it h whi. te I a Arolal d. f th d t f h against speeding in Swarthmore. Residents the Hutchinson River Parkway. Here a crepe paper. The float was called "Little. 0 e a a necessary or t e apÂalong Yale and Swarthmore Avenues have left tum is made to West Chester Avenue American." The prize, a sun suit, was just pro~al of the Department of Internal complained about speeding and reckless B tt' . Affairs on the sale of bonds was submitted and a right tum to Port Chester. From e y s sIZe. by Acting Solicitor' Meyers. It was ap-driving on those two streets. Many waro- Port Chester U. S. Route 1 is met and L~c?, L~e Harper, of Yale .Avenu.e, and proved by thE- board and a copy filed with i~gs have been given and the mor~ flagrant followed along the coast to New Haven. PatnCla Gdes, of Rutgers Avenue, tIed for the clerk of the Court of Quarter SesÂViolators have been fined. Dunng June From here the short line is followed to the "best baby" (und~r 3 years) priz,e. sions in Media, They in tum have forÂforty- seven cases were brought before Jus- II Westerly where the state line is crossed Lucy Lee ther:e~ore received a rubber cupid warded duplicate copies to Harrisburg and tic~ of the Peace Ulrich and Rumsey. into Rhode Island. doll and PatrIcia a marble game. the School District has not yet received Thirteen were fined. I At Wakefield the highway winds north Jimmy Johnstone, of Harvard Avenue, the approval of the Department of Internal • along the shore of picturesque Narragan- received a pass for the Media Theatre for Affairs. • : s:tt Bay to Saunderstown. Here the ferry being. the neatest cub.. The board has taken the position that Girl Scouts to Hold Day Camp. is used to cross the Bay to the well-known B d' M . f ' N h Ch R in their estimation the lowest bl'dders on I N h · . . t N u ercer, 0 ort ester oad, . . resort of ewport, t en JOlmng. rou e o. a Scout of Troop 2; Don Thomas, of the all of the gym and cafeteria contracts are The Girl Scouts of S~arthmorc w!ll open I 214, becoming No. 138 to Fall RIVer. H~re' Swarthmore Apartments, Troop 1, and Bob financially responsible. Under the NRA ~/rsdcamPJa\ th~1 GlrAlllScGo~tl HSouse ~n a right tum is made on U. S. No. 6 h , "l'hlcdh I Clay, of Walnut Lane, Troop 2, also re- code the bidders who are to receive the e ne. ay, u y . . . If couts In is followed to New Bedford, once t e ea - ceived passes for being the neatest Bo contracts must be notified within twenty the nelgh~orhood. are .lnVlted to att.end iog whaling port of New En~land. On Scou~.' y days, Yesterday was the twentieth day, so these meetings, which wIll be held for eIght Johnny Cake Hill stands a umque monu- There were no Girl Scout Troops rep- the .approval was expected yesterday from weeks (July 11 and the seven following ment to the town's ancient industry, facing resented and but one Brownie. PMW aJAor G rav. eII, the st at e eng.m eer for the Wednesdays). The girls plan to bring their toward Marthas Vineyard and Nantucket. lunches and there will be various scout Here the motor journey can be halted The ~nager of the :-r~a .Theatre I?re- Th~ bond of Samuel M. Dodd, tax col-activities, including story telling and games. long enough to take an attractive steamer sented SIX passes for dlstnbuhon as pnzes I lector was received and ed Th M rs. D . L . LI'I Ie y, capt a'm 0 f tbe S pn•n g- trip to these two I'S1 a nd s. EI'g hte en years in the parade. tax d'u plI. cates and the waarrpapntr otvo . coDecet field troop, will be in charge. before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Other costume entries in the parade were taxes were turned over to him. • Rock a shipload of Englishmen settled a Nancy Van Allen, Carol Van Allen, Ray Mrs. Frank E. Williams was re-elected colony on Marthas Vin.eyard. Vineyard Pa~ Willis~ Deborah Drew, Caroline Sin- cafeteria manager. Contest Votes George Alston's total due to an overÂsight did DOt appear in last week's issue. George had 11,800 votes in L"e final listing. Haven is the principal port, although good clair, Fa~r. McKe,!"an, Betty Anne The borough auditors, William R. Main, roads lead through Oak Bluffs, Edgartown Hulme,Wmifred Ponce, Molly Harper, Wallace M. McCurdy and Dr James F and other attractive regions. Excellent Emily Smith, Bonnie Morse, Betty Morse, Bogardus, began the audit of' the schooi beaches, quaint villages and ~ores of sum· Billy Morse, Teddy Prince, Jack Collins, books this week. The fi5ca] year ends mer resorts make this a vacation paradise, Bill Harvey and Seth Cantor. June 30 for the school district. · i , • I )1 ·I, I] II I · I ",I !; ! i ,. : '
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,. • i ! I Joseph Walter and Edith Jackson Wed Among Swarthmore residents wbo atÂtended tbe wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Dickinson and their children, Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Barr, Mrs. George Watson, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Haines, Mr. and Mrs. J. V. S. Bishop, Mr. and • Mrs. Albert Sidney Johnson, Mr. and Mr>. Mrs. Ruth Sharpl ..... Bierman and Robert L. Coates, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Vance HoUoway, of Dover, I . Roberts, Daniel Johnson, George Joyce, Engaged Dr. Samuel C. Palmer, Dr. William Earl . I Kistler and Mrs. Kistler, Mr. and Mrs. Miss Editb Wilson Jackson, daughter of Edward A. Jenkins, Dean Harold Speigbt, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Jackson, of 1331 Mr. and Mrs. Francis V. \Varren, Miss Pelham Road, Mt. Airy. and, Joseph H. Kathryn Warren, Miss Anne \Varren, Mr. \Valtee, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. ]. and Mrs. Edward Bassett, Mrs. Sargent Horace \Vallee, of 508 Cedar Lane, Swarth-I Walter, Mr. and Mrs. John Fricke, Mr. more, were united in marriage Monday and Mrs. Paul ]. Furnas, Mr. and Mrs. evening at 8 o'clock, according to the sim- ]. H. Dickinson, Mr. and Mrs. John PitÂpie ceremony of the Society of Friends. tock, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Haines and The wedding took place at the Friends' children. Meeting House on West School Lane, GerÂmantown, and was attended by a large I .The engagement of Mrs. Ruth Sharpless gathering of relatives and friends. Bierman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Casper . The bride entered the mecting house Pennock Sharpless, of South Chester Road, upon the arm of her father. She wore a Swarthmore, a~d Vance Holloway, Jr., f hi h I· d . son of Dr. H. \ ance Holloway, of Dover, THE SWARTHMOREAN reunion of the Class of 1904 of tbe ChesÂter Higb School at the summer home at Hanc"s Point, Md .• of Dr. and Mrs. WaiÂter E. Egbert, of Chester, on Saturday, last. Elliott Richardson, of Lafayette AveÂnue, Billy Piper, of Yale Avenue, Louis DeMolI, of Park Avenue, and ·'Pete" UllÂman, of Harvard Avenue, will leave toÂmorrow for a two-weeks' stay at Camp Chesapeake, Chesapeake, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Roy P. Lingle and family, of Cornell Avenue, returned on Saturday, from Stone Harbor, where they had spent the past week or so. Mr:s. Charles Petran, of Minneapolis and Alice, Elizabeth, and Sandy Dennison, children of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Denni. son, of Rutgers A\'Cnue, arrived last week from Minneapolis, where they have spent the winter, and joined Mr. and Mrs. DenÂnison on a trip to Stone Harbor, where gown 0 us sa 10, rna c on prinCes! D I . d they will spend the summer. I· '. h . H I '1 f II e awarc, IS announce . lOes, Wit a tram. er ong l'CI 0 tu e 11.6 B' It d d h M L Mr. and Mrs. Ro)' P. Lingle, of Cornell d • h d h Id' lUrs. lerman a en e teary yon wIa s arrange III cap-s ape an emS hiS Ih M H II . Avenue, attended the ..... olden wedding an- b h' f b Sh (00, war more. r. 0 oway IS an I-> pace'e d y ah 'w reat a orda nge hl'ods soms. ea umlnusf 0 Sp fl.n g fi e Id Un'tv ers.l ty, cI a ss 0 f ni\'ersar)' of Mr. Lingle's parents, Mr. and carn w Ite roses an orc I s. 1931 d' f f h . I cd Mrs James Lin ..... le of Philadelphia on • • J an IS pro essor 0 p YSlca Uta-· b , , MlSS Matilda McCracken, of German-' tion at the Unh'ersity of Delaware I Tuesday. town, was maid of honor. The brides- . maids were Miss Helen Jackson, of Lan- 1\1rs. Charles L. Berry and son Hu .... h Dicky Delapla~ne, of .Cornell Avenue, Valley, Media. The farm formerly beÂlonged to Samuel Rhodes, of Media. Mrs. Harold Barnes, of Princeton AveÂnue, entertained the duplicate bridge club at lunch on Friday. Next Tbursday the members of the club will be the guests of Mrs. John W. LeDoux, of Walnut Lane, at the Rose Tree Inn. Mrs. Sargent WaIter, of North Chester Road, has been visiting her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Furnas, at the house they have taken at Stone Harbor. Mr. and Mrs. Furnas have been chaperoning a party of young friends at Seagirt, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard C. Ashton and two son, of E1m Avenue, are sailing early this month for Europe, where they will spend the summer. . Mrs. A. P. Shanklin, of Amherst AveÂnue, entertained a few friends at luncheon in honor of Mrs. Harold Perry last week, b~fore Mrs. Perry left Swarthmore for the summer. JULy 6,1934 The Rev. and Mrs. J. Jarden Guenther and their children are spending a few weeks at "Friendship Hill Farm," PaoU. the sumÂmer residence of Mn. Guenther's father. Judge Henderson. Mr. Guenther will preach each Sundny at Trinity Church. Mrs. Florence C. Bremer, of Yale AveÂnue, left on Sunday for a trip to Alaska. Mrs. Bremer will go first to Chicago and from there to Lake Louise. At Vancouver sbe will board a boat for Alaska. Plans for the return are as yet unperfected, but Mrs. Bremer expects to be home by the middle of August. -- Mr. and Mrs. Justice Mitchell, of North Chester Road, entertained Mr. Mitchell's brother, Mr. William R. K. Mitchell, and his wife, of Gulph, Pa., on Sunday eveÂning. Miss Sally Mitchell, of North Chester Road, had a guest from Long Island over the week-end. • Births Miss Alice Snyder, of Yale Avenue, will entertain with a liPOiD" party at her home Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Thomsen, tonight. This particular type of "polo" of McDonogh School, .l\-IcDonogh, Md., a is played with tennis balls and wooden I son: Leonard Sargent Thomsel1\ on \V~dnesÂspoons, the contestants being upon kiddy da}, June 27th. Mrs. Thomsen will be caster, a cousin of the bride; Miss Ada G. Berry, of Sharberry Farms, Thornt~n, I:ft unde.rweDt ~ to~sd o~:=rahon. at the OsteoÂcars. remembered as the former Miss Helen Clement, of Jenkintown; Miss Eugenic early Monday morning to motor to the pat~lc H.oS.Pllalm Ph.t1adelphla, la.st !hur~ÂHarshbar~ er, of Pittsburgh, and the bride's Chicago World's Fair after which they da). Dl.cky ha.d qUlte ~ har~ hme of It three sisters, Miss Elizabeth \V. Jackson will visit relatives in Iowa. for a \\'hde but IS recovermg nicely now. Those invited are j Mildred Hirst, Janel Sargent Walter, of Swarthmore. MacDonald, Doris Burnlc\\', Fred Hawkes, Jim Dryden, Robert Sanford and Walter Mr. and Mrs. Robert St. Clair Holmes,· of Ne\v York City, son and daughter-inÂlaw of Dr. and Mrs. Jesse H. Holmes, of West Elm Avenue, are being congratslated upon the birth of a son, David Randall Holmes, on June 10th. and Miss Ruth \V. Jackson, of Mt. Airy, Sanford. and Mrs. Leon A. Rushmore, Jr., of Long Mr. and Mrs. ·Howark Kirk and family, of Lafayette Avenue, spent Sunday at their farm near Sumneytown, Pa. On the 4th of July Mr. and Mrs. Kirk entertained their neighbors at a picnic supper at the farm. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Jeffords and fam. Mr. Ralph S. Hayes and daughter, Betty, ily, of Vassar Avenue, will motor to Mrs. of Oberlin Avenue, returned Saturday Jeffords' former home in Lexington, Ken- evening accompanied by Mr. Walter WarÂtucky, where they will stay for three or nock, who left on Tuesday after spendÂfour weeks. ing the week-end with them. Mr. and Mrs. Island. • Pale blue mousseline de soie fashioned the dress of the maid of honor, and pink frocks of the same material were worn by the bridesmaids. An were of the same model, with slight ruffled trains, and deÂtachable ruffled capes. Pale pink slippers accompanied the blue dress, and pale blue slippers were worn with the pink dresses. All the attendants carried arm bouquets of Mrs. James Phillips, of Compton, CaliÂfornia, arrived on Saturday to spend a month as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E. Longwell, of Lafayette Avenue. Hayes and Betty had been the guests of Mr. and Mrs •• S. W. Johnson, of ~mherst Mrs. Hayes parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter A\'~nue, entertamed a group of fnends at I Warnock, at Eastport, Maine, for the their farm ncar Oxford, Pa., on Saturday. past two weeks. Mrs. Hayes will remain Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Fussell, of River- for two more weeks. Police Car Hit On Sunday evening the police car driven by Officer Lindsey was hit by a machine driven by Mrs. James Gale, colored, of Wood1yn. Mr. and Mrs. Gale, who were driving along Michigan Avenue, had an owner's certificate, but Mr. Gale had only a beginner's permit and Mrs. Gale had no permit. Arraigned before a local justice of the peace, they were fined $25 and $10 respectively. No damage was done to the police. car. view Road, Miss Maude Lewis and Miss ---- Dr. and Mrs. Jesse H. Holmes, of West pink gladioli and delphinium. Mi:s Edna Vivian Black, daughter of Evangeline Lewis, of Pendleton, Indiana, Elm Avenue, with Mrs. J. Herman Holmes J. Horace \Valler served as best man IM r. and Mrs. Charles E. Black, of Park spent last week-end at Tamaqua, Pa. for his son, and the ushers included Davis Avenue, and John McKenna, Jr., son of Lcwis, William Chaffee, 2d, John Pyle, Mr. and Mrs. John McKenna, of BaItiÂAlbert J. Pittman, Thomas Keefer and more Pike, will be married at a Quiet wedÂLeon J. Rushmore, Jr. ding in the rectory of St. Francis' Church, William Kurtzhalz, of Park Ave:lUe, has gone to Camp Tip, Thousand Islands, where he will be a counsellor. Following the wedding, a reception was Springfield, on Thursday, next, July 12th. held at the home of the bride's parents, The attendants will be the bride's sister, aJter which Mr. and Mrs. Walter left for Miss Lucy Black, maid of honori and the a wedding trip. They will make their groom's brother, Mr. James McKenna, home in Knoxville, Tenn. best man. Aft!'!r the ceremony there will Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Hastings and son, Rohert, of \Vestdale Avenue, visited Mr. and Mrs. Steven Warren, of \Venonah, New Jersey, last week-end. Mrs. L. A. \Vctlaufer, of Dickinson AveÂnue, has returned from a visit to her famÂily in Toledo, Ohio. Mrs. \VeUaufer's aunt, Miss Cora Riebel, of Toledo, accomÂpanied her on the return trip and is her guest at present. Both the bride and bridegroom are grad- i be a smaU reception at the home of the uates of Swarthmore College. Mr. WaIter -of the class of 1931, and Mrs. Walter, 1933. MEDIA THEATRE Friday and Saturday BING CROSBY CAROLE LOMBARD BURNS & ALLEN 'We're Not Dressing' Monday and Tuesday JOHN HALLIDAY JUDlTH·ALLEN bride. Mr. and Mrs. McKenna will then take a short trip after which they will make their home on Baltimore Pike, Springfield. Miss Black is a graduf'te of the Swarth-more High School and attended business college in Philadelphia. Mr. McKenna graduated from the Springfield High School and attended Drexel Institute. Mrs. Louis J. Koch and daughter, Judith, of Ogden Avenue, have returned from Virginia, where they attended the wedding of a relative. Mrs. George Schobinger, of Swarthmore Annue, left Sunday to escort her daugh-ters, Gertrude and Elizabeth, to a camp in Kew Hampshire, where the girls will spend the summer. Mr. Sewell Hodp;e, of Ogden Avenue, left Saturda.y morning for Yellowstone Park. Miss Ruth Kurtzhalz, of Park Avenue, has gone to Singing Eagle Camp, Center Harbor, New Hampshire. Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Taylor, of \VashÂington, visited Mrs. Taylor's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Jeffords, of Vassar AveÂnue, over the week-end. Miss Arabel Jaquette has returned from I \~ashington to spend the summer at home WIth her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William A. Jaquette, of Elm Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Avery and family, of Elm Avenue, returned on Saturday from a se\'eral weeks' stay at Cape May. 'The Witching Hour' \Vcdncsday and Thunday Mr. and Mrs. Roland G. E. Ullman, of I Har\'ard Avenue, and Mr. S. Frank But-ler, of South Chester Road, attended a Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Lappe, of Park AveÂnue, entertained at a picnic luncheon in their yard on \Vednesday, when their guests were: Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Green and chilÂdren, Bctty and Peggy, of 'Vest PhiladelÂphia i Mr. and Mrs. Paul Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Richmond Fetherolf, Mrs. Paul Alger and Mr. Percy Gilbert. SYLVIA SIDNEY CARY GRANT I "30 Day Princess" Starting Friday, July 13 I for 4 Days JANET GAYNOR I CHARLES FARRELL ,I "Change of Heart" II Try and See Better Shows lH:~~OK THEATRE Chester Pike at Prospect Park I Daily Matinee at 2.15 I I You Can Arrive as Late as 9.15 P. M. and See Complete Show I I ; Friday and Saturday, July 6.7 "VIVA VILLA" I with ! WALLACE BEERY i The Biggest Production Since "The Big Parade" I Monday and Tuesday, Jul)' w. C. FIELDS 9·10 I 'n I "YOU'RE I TELLING ME" I And \"Je·re Te1ling You It·s One Laugh from Beginning to End Wednesday-Only-.July n RAMON NOVARRO LUPE VELEZ 'n "LAUGHING BOY" Pulitzer Prize Novel Cominl' Thurs.-Fri.-Sat., July 12-13-14 . "TARZAN AND HIS MATE" lit WASHINGTON Theatre-Chester Saturday, Monday, Tuesday RICHARD DIX IRENE DUNNE "Stingaree" Wednesday, Thursday, Friday JOE E. BROWN "A Very Honorable Guy" WARNER BROS. WAVE R L Y Theatre Drexel Hill Today and Saturday BING . CROSBY 'n "We're Not Dressing" With Burns and Allen Mond .. l)' and Tuesday CLARK GABLE MYRNA LOY WILLIAM POWELL 'n "Manhattan Melodrama" Wednesda)o' and Thursday IRENE DUNNE in "This Man Is Mine" With Ralph Bellamy I I ,I I I Mrs. Florence Temple, of Park Avcnue, left last Thursday to "isit Mrs. Walter Cornwell, of Mt. Clair, N. J., at Raquette Lake, N. Y. Miss Eudora Sproat, of Ogden Avenue, left on Monday for Singing Eagle Lodge, Center Harbor, New Hampshire, where she will spend two months. , II Mr. and Mrs. Addison S. Wickham, of 1'\orth Chester Road, have opened their cottage Twinwick, at Eagles Mere Park. With them are their son, Jack, their daughÂers, Cynthia and Harriet, who took an active part in the July Fourth water sports. Mr. Wickham took part in the l\.fedal Play Tournament at the Egles Mere Golf Club on June 30. I I, ! I I I , , I , --- Mr and 1\lrs. P. A. 'Vilson and family, Qf Cedar Lane, and l\.Ir. and Mrs. \V. B. Richards and family, of Cedar Lane and Elm A\'enue, left on Saturday for Ocean City, where they will spend the next two months. 'J Mr~. John Ro~('ri and ~on, John Rorreri. r., arc ~p('ndin!-:, ~e\"eral weeks at Angl~sea, : .:' -I. J. i i I i Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Gemmill and' amily, of 316 Dickimon A\'enue, left aturday for ?Iofrs. Gemmill"s old home, Le55burg, Va., where they will spend July nd August. i: ! la Gcorg-e and Robert Barber, sons of 1\lr. nd Mrs. George C. Barber, of Ogden I Annuc, sailed for England Saturday on : I he Steamship, Bremen. 0 h Mr. and 1\lrs. Harold G. Marc, formerly f Swarthmore, are li\'in~ in their new ome on Ridley Creek Road, Ridley Creek and son, Jesse Herman Holmes, 3rd, left on Thursday to attend the Friends ConÂference at Cape May. -.:.-- Miss. Lydia Turner, of Yale Avenue, entertained a felv friends informally at her home last Thursday evening in honor of Mrs. George Lloyd, of Joliet, 111. Mrs. Conrad C. SchaUe has closed her home on Princeton Avenue, for the sumÂmer and with her two daughters, Betty Ann and Marion Hanna SchaUe, has gone to their cottage at Ocean City. THE COMMUNITY SHOP Will be open daring July from 9 A. M. to 1.30 P. M. daily. A MILLION FORD V-8 OWNERS SAY GREAT! There isn't a lukewarm Owner among the million Ford v-s Owners. They're all "sold" on their V-S's. Thousands and thousands of lette~s prove ;t. And the Ford V-S, itself. did the selling. The sensational V-S eng:ne sold them. This engine-Âthe only V-type S-cylinder engine selling under $2500-Âdevelops more power than any . Ford engine ever built. It's fast. The fact that you can do over 80 miles an hour means you can drive 55-60-65 without engine strain. The reserve power is ~ere. And it's smooth .as only the inherently halÂanced deSIgn of the Ford V-S engme can make it. Ford V-S economy sold them. Co~ts for gas and oil are low, very low. And up-keep costs are light. Ford comfort sold them. The comfort of transverse spr:n.gs that act on aU four wheels, of deep, soft cushions, and of WIde seats. We urge you to compare Ford V-8 performance with that of cars costing twice its price, and more. Once you have done so, you, too, will say "It's great!" FOI'd V-8 prices start at $505, f.o.b. Detroit. Authorized Ford ~inance Plans of the Universal Credit Company offer convenIent terms of payment. Ford V-8 Tudor Sedan • A • beautiful, roomy sedan complete in every detail. Clear-vision ventIlating slots in front door and rear-quarter windows. There is also a De Luxe Tudor Sedan at slightly higher cost. THE FORD V·S TUDOR, f.o.b. Detroit. .................... $520 EDMOND STEINMAN Sales Service BALTIMORE PIKE at ROAD PHONE, MEDIA ISOO JULY., 1934 THE SWARTHMOREAN 3 THE SWARTHMOREAN ~ porth meeting of .the Woman'" As- Mrs. Fa_t said that tbe InotItute fa "I recommend," be said, "tbe aeatlon that the Division of Safety of the Bureau aoaaUon, under the direction 01 Mrs. unique in that there is no doubt about the of a State Commlssl~n of Highway Safety of Motor .Vehlcles "be placed in "uJIideD. p: II'" ." a •••1 E. ........ t PUIlUSHED EVEIl'IC FRIDAY AT Charla H. Leech, chairman 01 tbe mis- interest of th.... who atlend. This con- .' aionary department, is beld today at the clU510n was baaed upon the fact that the the Chlel of the CoIlll11ilaiOD to be an funds for conducting a contIDons h/sbÂhome of Mrs. Bucher Ayres, ZI6 V .... r Inatitute does not offer college credits, hut appointee of the Govemor and a member way aafety educational publicity program, SWAII1HIIOIIE, PA. .. ANN .. SHARPLI!S EdItor ad "'HU ... .. Avenue, at 10 o'clock. "is made up of people sufficiently inler- of the Ezecutive Department, and the at least comparable to that In eJfect in • ested to give a month toward the clari- other members of the Collll11ilaion to be New Jeney, where a 28 per tent decreue Buchner "P",u:,oM I~. Awarded fication of their own thinking on the whole the Secretary of Revenue, the Secretary of in accidents has been shown through the Doris WhItecar aDd MOton FUS!eIl carry matter." Highwa)'!, Superintendent of PubUc In- work of the State's Safety Department." ~ JM!~2 off two more prius as the fiDal count is taken in the SWA1l11lIlOUAH Summer Ad- The evening meetings are open to the otructlon and the Chairman of the Public He also urged that the State IJIshway pubUe aad will be held at Friends' Meet- Service c"mmiejon. Patrol be elllployed only in patroling the .. venture Contest. Not only were they re- Plo_ 1.....-.... - spedively first. and second highest in the log House at 8.1S. "The Chief should have no other duties h/sbways and enforcing the Vehicle Code, Tonight's lecture, Fridny. 6th-"Toward than those relating to thia work. He and that its personnel be increased to 1000 a World Culture," by Dr. Guy Sarvis, De- should have no superior hut the Goveraor members. He declared a State Traffic partment of Sociology, Vanderbilt Uni. of the Commonwealth. The iegblatlon Engineer should be designated hy tbe SecÂversity, Nashville. authorizing the creation of such a com- retary of HIghways, and that more frequent E18a2h9r,t N.tI . t.il .S .Pcooaect tO CElacue aMta Sttweru.t Jlu..a.e..r.e.,,- p2..4..., t 0 tal count , b u t are the g'il 'I and bo y w h 0 uatler tit. Act .f MarcIa a, • .,.. turned in the most votes stamped with the =:=;;;;;;;,,;;;;;,,;,;;;;,;;,;;;;;;;;;,,;;;,;;;;;:;= I name and address of Buchner's Toggery FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1934 Shop, for which Mr. Buchner \IllS offered the prizes of a pair of crepe pajamas for the girl and a shirt and tie for the boy. So once more we congratulate you, Doris and MOton. Doris turned in almost twice as many uBuchner votes" as did her predeÂcessor of 1933, although Milton had one hundred less than half as much as did the boy who won the same priu last year. Monday, July 9th-"ImperiaIism and miasion should vest in the Chief of the traffic counts be taken on the State High- N tI naBsm " b D R bert k Commission the power to obtain informa- way Systems as an aid to proper design- SAFElY HINTS a 0 ,y r. 0 E. Par , Uni- ti d • versity of Chicago. on an reporta from all Stat~ ngendes, ing of present and future construction. "Use the same common sense on your vaÂcation that you daily bring to bear on your job," advises the Southeastem Pennsylvania Chapter of the American· Red Crosa, in a bulletin of safety suggeatlons to hathers. Friday, July 13th-"The Role of the and the power to formulate a compre- "The policy of the State," be said, hensive safety pian, with speciJic and "should be as far as possible to aeate Non-Slave Holding White in Present Race broad powers to compel its being carried physical co~ditions making it .timcult for Relations," by Dr. W. W. Alexander, Act. into effect." the driver to do the wrong thing and log President Dillard University, New Or- Each year thousanda of lives are lost by swimmers, tragedies which are all the sadder he<ause with a little care and thought they might have been prevented. • leans-Director, Commission on Inter- Mr. Weeka also strongly recommeaded easy to do the right." racial Co·operatioD, Atlanta. Swimming takes the greatest toll of human life of any of the summer sports and tbose who enjoy this healthful recreaÂtion are advised by the Red Cross to obse"e the following Udon'ts." Institute of Race Relations Opens (ContJnued trom Page 1) • Tennis Tournaments at College Ave. Courts Even through the hot weather the chilÂdren of Swarthmore have made use of the College Avenue tennis courts. Mr. Wi!- With this statement of the purpose and liam Smith, a studeDt at Swarthmore ColÂaims of the second annual Institute of lege, has been in charge daily, except SunÂRace Relations, Dr. Charles Johnson, Fisk dny. The courts have heen lined and are University, opened the work of that unit in good condition for the tournaments bere Monday morning. The Institute went which will be played next week. Three immediately to work, under the direction tournaments have been planncd-one for THE BONAT PERMANENT WAVE OF DISTINCTION 3 Beauty Aids $1.00 on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday $1.25 on Thunda)" Friday and Saturday THE KATHRYN BEAUTY SALON 188 Saxer Avenue, Springfield Phoae: Swutluuore 120S Open Mon •• Wed. a: Fri. EYemllllO "Don't swim alone I Swim in pairsÂhave a water buddy who swims at least as well as you do. Even the strongest swimmers are subject to cramps, acute in· digestIon~>r heart failure-a had situaÂtion if there is no one Dear to help you. "Don't swim too far from shorel Or, if you feel entitled by reason of swimming ability to indulge in distance swfmming, be accompanied by a boat. of Dr. Otto L. Klineberg, Columbia Uni- boys, one for girls, and if there are sUffi-I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ versity, to consider the different concep- cient entries, one in mixed doubles. Those tions of race, the dassi.6cations of the wishing to enter these tournaments, which various groups and their relations. Dr. will begin on Monday, July 11, must regÂKlineberg was the first lecturer of the ister wilh Mr. Smith before Sunday eve- "Don't go in the water too soon after eating. That's an old bromide, known to practically everyone, but many lives are lost each summer because bathers refuse to. observe this simple rule of self preserÂvation. "Don't try to swim to the shore if your boat capsizes. The boat will ftoat and so will you if you cling to it. If no one answers your calls for help the boat may be paddled ashore even though bottom up. "Don't dive in shallow water-know your water before you dive into it, be sure it has been explored for bidden rocks and snags as well as for depths. "Remember that even the best swimmers will throw a rope Or a lifebuoy to a comÂpanion in distress, in· preference to swimÂming to his recue. If a boat is at hand they will use it to render aid. Unless you are trained in life saving, don't swim to tbe assistance of a swimmer in distress, the chances are you will be unsucCessful and may bolb drown. UDon't show off! Many deaths are caused each season by sheer bravado. Youths from 15 to 20 are particularly susceptihle to this sort of mistake." In the past ZO years more than haIf a million persons have received instruction in Red Cross Life Saving courses. Last year nearly 79p.xJ life saving certificates were issued. The demand for this instrucÂtion grows annually, with the result that drownings are diminishing in number, notÂwithstanding the steady increase in the number of bather:;. Life Saving campaigns conducted by the Red Cross throughout the country are again this summer accomÂpIishing much to prevent accidents and add to the enjoyment of water sports. course, wbich wiD bring to the Institute Ding, July 10. It is expected that there some of the most outstanding authorities will be a good turnout for these matches. in the fields of the social sciences. Prizes will be awarded the winners. I In personally commenting upon the work Beginners wishing instruction may make of the group as he expeds to see it, Dr. appointments with Mr. Smith for either Johnson deplored the conception that the mornings or afternoons at the courts. Institute is a "collection of experts only!' Those who have contributed are entitled He said that tbe group is mainly interested to this instruction. further in trying to work out some tech- Contributions of $3.00 a family to cover oiques for handling inevitable problems the maintenance and supervision of the growing out of race contact and conflict. courts may be paid to Mrs. R. P. Lingle, "We do not attempt to offer solutions," treasurer, or to Mr. William Smith at the Dr. Johnson has repeatedly pointed out, tennis courts. Hbut we do attempt to bring together here I • at Swarthmore as many of those persons Washington Theatre who have given serious and long thought I to the matter, and from· the .pooling of For the first time in his screen career this knowledge chait some kirid of course." Joe E. Brown has worn a high silk topper. Tbe Fisk professor said tbat tbe meeting This takes place in his latest Fitst NaÂhere is diHerent from others of its kind tional picture, HA Very Honorable Guy," in that it is. a HCOU~ of study planned which comes to the Washington Theatre t~w!1rt ~~mte ~E,?S. ~. 0;:), \Vednesday. As Feet Samuels, a tin-I I? lectunn~, on Human ~ature and the hom gambler, whose phenomenal luck SOCIal Order to the entire group ~t brings him more wealth than he knows Tuesday, Dr. Robert E. Park, of the UDl- what to do with he invests in a wardrobe versity of Chicago, pointed out that a seDse including the hi~h bat that would knock o.f obligation is the basis of all human rel~- I an eye out. ' tl0ns, and added that the only way In • which human beings may enter tculy into Recommends Safety Commission 'human relations' as against others, is 'to get dose enough to each other to discover behind faces the real persons.' liTo get dose to people, to know what they think and why, is the fundamental problem of sociology," Dr. Park held, emÂphasizing the fact that despite the existÂence of a tremendous amount of statistical data on human beings, the world is still sadly lacking in the matter of knowledge concerning the fundamentals of human reÂlations. Creation of a State Commission of HighÂway Safety as a vitally essential step toÂward reducing the terrific toll of motor vehicle accidents in Pennsylvania is recomÂmended by J. Borton Weeks, President of the Keystone Automobile Club. Emphasizing that not enough attention has been given to the safety problem in this State, largely through "lack of fully co-ordinated effort," Mr. Weeks pointed to last year's record of 1926 highway I Wish To Thank You friends and residents of Swarthmore for your good wishes to me as I take over The CoDege$ Pharmacy I am a newcomer to the business district of Swarthmore, but have lived. here long enough to want to stay. We here in the Pharmacy wish to . show our appreciation of your good wishes by service and courtesy exceedingsouJ elCP$!ctati.9n~. backed by a complete stock of the best ·merchanÂdise available. Our prescription department is handled with the carefulness of 25 ence. very capably years• expert•- Weare at your service day and night to help cure your ills and help with your good times. Stop in and introduce yourself. I will be very glad to make your acquaintance. JOHN MICHAEL. • Presbyterian Notes Dr. Tuttle preaches Sunday morning on "Rich Toward God." He will occupy the pulpit througb the nnd. In speaking officially for tbe Committee on Race Relations of the Philadelphia SoÂciety of Friends, the group sponsoring the study, Mrs. Crystal Bird Fauset, associate with Miss Helen Bryan as secretary, joined Charles Johnson in the clarification of the aims of the group, as being lithe gatherÂing of a body of material which may be used by any university or institution really interested in an enlightened approach to the problem of race." dPeantnhssy lvaanndi a 4a7s,9 0a8 cpoenrsdoitniaoln idnejumriaensd ining :~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ drastic remedy. A special invitation is given all strangers spending the summer in Swarthmore and not connected with other churches in the community, to attend the Sunday School and church service of this church. SUMMER EVENINGS can be made more enjoyable if you dine at the Inn. You will find a refreshing" atmosphere throughout the dining room., the widet cool lawns and the lovely Bower garden •• In the Tea Room Dinners Saturdays and Sundays SOc 7Sc CHURCH NEWS TRINITY CHURCH Protestant Episcopal Chester- Road and College Avenue Opposite the College Campus Rector: Rev. J. Jarden Guenther. S. T. M. 11:00 A. M.-Morning Prayer and Sermon. Mr. Guenther will preach. THE SWARTHMORE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. John Ellery Tuttle, Minister SUNDAY IO:OO-Bible School. 11 :OO-Morning Worship. Pastor preaches. .... '<Rieh Toward God. II ,.. Friday, 10 :OO-Summer Porch Meeting with Mrs. Ramsey, 500 North Chester Road. Str t .. -H a nav en SWARTHMORE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH REV. WAYNE CHANNELL, D. D. The Inn With Personality Pastor F M SCHEIBLEY M ent 9 :45 A. M.-Sunday School. • • an&gem 11,00 A. Y. and 8,00 P. M.-Wo"b;p and Swarthmore 680 Swarthmore, Pe.1lL Sermons by the Pastor. :;~~~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~9i I Strangers Cordially Invited J[,tJI!MIEBURIEI ~I • DISPENSING OPTICIANS .. ~1J21 CHESTNUT ST..PHILADELPHIA. Specialists in the making and fitting of Eyeglasses and Spectacles. JOSEPH E. HAINES. President. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST, OF SWARTHMORE I Park Avenue below Harvard Services: 11 :00 A. M.-Sunday School. 11 :00 A. M.-Sunday Lesson-Sermon. Wednesday evening meeting each w~k. 8 p. m. Reading room open daily. except SunÂdays and holidays. 9 :30 to 12 :80: Church edifice. All are cordially Invited to attend the servÂices and use the Reading Room. THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS SUNDAY 9:015 A. M.-First Da,. School. 9:45 A. M.-Morning Forum 11 :00 A. M.-Meeting for Worship in the Meeting House. WEDNESDAY 9:30 A. M. to 2:30 P. M.-8ewing and QuiltÂIng in Whittier Honse. 80s: luncheon. 1I-.:.. ................................................................ -' ..................................... -!l1 ~re eordially invited to join in these Save Now for a Real Vacation Next Year It takes money to visit the places you see pictured in the travel books, takes money to enjoy the vacation you've d rea m e d about. If you weren't able to make it this year, start today to save for next year. . Put aside a little every week and next summer you can have that "Real VaÂcation." Start a Vacation Club today! Swarthmore National Bank and Trust Company
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4 ~T·.-~.·B~,·.~·· ~A=S=S'N"~ .="• ·.= . I~N= .=S~EM~~I.~'··~ ~~~~~~~=THE~~.=S=W~AR~.~.THM=.~O=R~F~~~==~~~~J.n~~~~.~~~~~~~~JU~L~Y~~~1~9~M::: I Briars." S04 South Lansdowne " Avenue.- year.- Bureau of Agricultural Economics, NOYflDber Itl, 1881, and recorded. In the olffee- orie !Dlnat-- three RC!otuil west thfrt,..even Lansdowne, for a IaWD fete for' the benefit Department of Agriculture. Sped1ied edu- Cfooru ntthye orfe cDoredlainwga reo.f P~eDDl 7Jtnva nalan.d Info -rD ethede tteoe tt haen dA enfta 'mhbe'n~ttihornoee do npeo-ihnutn darnedd tphlsa eoef o• f fo))eo.t. of The Women's International League. The catioo and experience required. Closing Book D. No.6. page -493, .. Id Iron pin belna .innl.. . ANNUAL at the fnteneetlon of Aid' Une with the middle time will be from three to five o'clock in date, July 24. line exteodio8' w.twardJ,. of IladiMm. Avenue. Contl;lnlDS nfne t.ere. and' ODe tbouund . . tbe afternoon. Guests wiD have the op- Associate veterinarian (diseases affect- .. laid out thirty feet Wide, thence by the tour huadred elabt,.. .. tx: teo-thousandths of an ~rtunity of enjoying games and sports ing wild anlmallife), $3,200 a year, Bureau ~~~ d::re:-dt-:e~veA:rnU:lea n=.~ ::::::-: acre. ftlany P.tienb R~ ~e . From Fund Provided by COIIDty Commiuioners including shuIDeboard, quoits, archery and of Biological Survey, Department of Agri- flve and tour-tentha teet to. ltone a eorner ot Under and aubltet to certain "preas con. swo' n. -'-g. S. ....· I entertainment is being culture. Specified education and experience ground of th~ Philadelphia. Baltimore and dJtiolUl and reatrtetJoDII. I.U.LII ,.,.......... WashfDJrton ~RaHroad Company. tormerly the The foJlowing report was given at the serin-annual meeting of the Delaware CoUnty Tuberculosis $sodation, which planned for the children. required. Closing date, July 23~ Philadelphia. Baltimore and Central RaUroad No improvements-vacant ground. An unusual opportunity will be that I All States except Iowa. Vermont. Vir- Company. thence by said ground BOuth eight h 0 degrees eleven mInutes east one hundred Sold as t e property of Cathrine S. :Me-hearing :a.fr. Wilhelm Hubben speak on ginia, Maryland, and tbe District of and three and eight-tenths feet to a atone a Kenna. II Columbia have received less than tbeir corner of said ground and thence by other "ls Europe Declining or being Rebu' t?" ground of said railroad company IIOUth Hand .IloneY-$1600.00. was held June 25 in .Chester. . Twenty eight sufferers from tuberculosis are now .receiving. hospital care through the lund recently provided by the County Commissioners, according to the report made: ·to the directors of tbe Delaware County Tuberculosis Association at their regular meeting held at the Chester Club Monday. Mr. Hubben is an author, editor and quota of appointments in the apportioned 5eventy.seven degrees thirty-seven minute. west HAROLD L. ERVIN, AttOrney. le'cturer-'-a student. of European inter- departmental service in Washington, D. C. aeventy_five and thirtY-four one-hundredths national proble~ who lost his position in Full information may be obtam• ed. f rom fAeveet ntuoe aanfo rIerosnai dp iann dI ni nth lei nbee do f olfa nLda ngardaonwtende Public school work)n Germany under Hit- A. P. Smalley, acting Postmaster, at the to Casper Pennock .. aforesaid and thence ler Government. He was connected with post ollice. Swarthmore. Aalvoenngu es.a idn oJrltnhe aenIgdh tiyn bdeedg roefe ss aindi nLe anmsdinouwtnees Fieri Facias Pendle Hill last year and wiJI teach at • weat one hundred .. nd three and two-tenths George School ned year. Following his M D 1m M be hi leet to the place of beginning. No. 181 June Term, 1834 talk a cafeterm' supper will be served after rl. 0 an em rs P Containing one hundred and seventy-eight which dancing and sociability may be Chairman one-thollBandtha ot an aere. AU that certain Jot or piece of ground with the buildings. and improvements thereon erected situate in tb-e Borough of Swarthmore, County of Delaware and State ot PennSYlÂvania, beginning at a point on the southwest lide of Park avenue at the distance of one hundred eighty-five feet and ninety-elgbt oneÂhundredths of a foot lIoutheastward trom the corner formed by the intenectlon of the soutb_ west sIde ot Park aVenue (It extended) with the southeast side of Chester road (if ex_ tended); thence extendinB" aloog the 80uth. west side of Park avenue south fifty-three degrees. fifty minutea east thirty feet six inches to a Point, croaaing the head of a cerÂb\ in twelve feet wide driveway which extends on several counU!1I southwestward. northeastÂward and northwestward from Park .. venue, widening and communicating at ita northÂwesternmost end with an alley which extends Th·c..coe patients vary in type from the early case with excellent chances for reÂcovery to the far ad\'anced case with little or ·no chance for recovery and who can • Improvements conslat 01 tWo-story Btone enjoyed. The Swarthmore Branch of the American bank bUilding, 81 feet 11 inches by 47 feet 4 Red Cross announces with great pleasure inches. The Week at Hedgerow • only be made 3S comfortable as possible The Hedgerow Theatre in Rose Valley and isolated from those to whom the wiU return one of its favorite Continental disease might be given if they were allowed plays to its repertory on Thursday when to '~emain in their own homes. The report it presents Jean Jacques Bernard's "MarÂmade special mention of one patient who line," after an absence of over· three years. bas diabetes and tuberculosis. Another has A delightfully delicate French play, and pulmonary tuberculosis and a spinal con- one of France's most popular modern rep· dition which makes it impossible for him ertory dramas, it will be enacted by FranÂto move after he has lain in one position ces Torchiana in her original title role. for a time. The Association has been She will be supported by Libby Holman, asked to provide a brace for this young David .l\letcalf, Mirir.m Phillips and Sol that Mrs. John Dolman, 304 Vassar Ave- Sold as the property of E. G. Raymond nue, will act as Membership chairman for ~~In:w:er:.:. Annie Young. mortgagol'll and Swarthmore in the Annual Roll Call OctoÂber 14th to November 11th, 1934. Mrs. Dolman has been a most efficient and faithful lieutenant in former drives and Mrs. George C. Barber, 3rd, who is chairÂman of the Swarthmore Branch of the Red Cross was well pleased to secure her services in this instance. man at a cost of $25.00. Jacobson. Directors of the Association were en- Tonight's play is O'Neill's popular thusiastie: over this new service which drama, liThe Emperor Jones," with Arthur makes it possible to provide hospital care Rich in the title role. J as-per Deeter will at a much earlier date than could be done be seen again in this performance as before the Commissioner' Fund "Was avail- Smithers, the Cockney trader. able. Saturday night will see a performance of It was also announced that the local an Italian farce, which 'vas given its AmeriÂNegro Clinic conduded by the Association can premiere in May by HedgerowÂhas received the official endorsement of Capo's and Rossato's "Let the Punishment the State Department of Health, who have Fit the Crime." Alfred Rowe and Miriam appointed Miss Bertha Bryant, the nurse in Phillips will cnact the leading roles in this charge, to a place in the State Nursing farce, which closely follows the "comedia Bureau. The report showed that the daily del arte" school of farce in modem dress. average in attendance at this clinic for the On Monday the'repertory moves West past five months, has been 23. from Italy to Spain, when Sierra's newest • Trinity Church Notes During the summer months there will be a Service of Morning Prayer, at 11.00 A. M., except on Sunday, August 5th, when there will be celebrations of the Holy Communion at 8.00 and 11.00. At the June meeting of the Executive Council of the Diocese, Mr. Guenther was re-elected a member of the Field DepartÂment and Chairman of the Committee in charge of Summer Volunteer Work. He was also re~elected Secretary of the DepartÂment of Religious Education. Juvenile Books at the LibrBl'Y Hand MoneY-$1500.00. ALLEN B. OLMSTED. Attorney. Fieri Facia!J No. 121 June 'ferm. 1934 on . two COU1'8es northeastward to n point. which point is twenty-six feet six inches AU thnt certain lot or piece of ground sit- sQuthwestward trom the southwest side of uate in the Township of Upper Darby. in the Park avenue; thence extending along the County ot De]aware and Slate of Pennsyl- southeast aide of said drheway south thlrty_ vania, and described accordIng to a plan six degrees. ten minutes. west seventy-five and BUrvey therrof made for Chain and Jack- feet and thirtY_five one-hundredths of a foot. son by Damon and Foster, Civil Engineem, to. a point; thent:;,e extending still along said Upper Darby. Pennsylvania. under date of driveway south nme degrees, thirty-nine min_ January 6. 1928. as follows. to wit; utes west three teet and twelVe ooe-hundredtha of a foot to a POInt. thence extending still Beginning at a point the intersection of tho along said driveway nortb eighty degrees, center line of Burmont Road (88 Jaid out fifty twenty-one minute. west twenty teet to a leet wide) and the center line of Marvine point; thence extending atfJJ along lIaid driveÂavenue (as laid out forty feet wide), thence way north nine degrees thirty-nine minutes. extending along the center Hne of Manine east twenty teet to a poInt: tbence extend_ avenue north sixty-six degrees six minutes one ing sUIl along eaid driveway north fifty_threeÂsecond east the dtstance of seventy_two and degrees, fifty minutes weat five feet to a sixty-two one-hundreths of a toot to a point. point; tbence extending north thirty_six deÂthence on a line extending north twenty-three grees, ten minutes east sixty-nine feet to theÂdegrees fifty-three minuWs flfty-nine seconds fl1'8t mention61 POint and place of bEogionfng. weat crossing De.rmond avenue (as laid out (Being Lot No. 14.) forty feet wide). the distance of one thousand Together wIth the free and common USe othnree-eh unhdurneddrtehds oefig ah tyfo-towt ot of etheet caenndt erf ifltiyn .e. t woof right. Uberty and privilege of tbe .fo~-~.. .".-. Other activities of the Association have comedy, "Spring in Autumn," about a tern-been carried on as usual except for the tuous prima donna, will be performed. Township Line road (aa laid out fifty feet driveway 88 and for a driveway and passageÂwide); thence extending along the center of way at all times hereafter forever in common said Township Line road nortb sixty--seven with the ownen, tenants and oecupiers of theÂdegrees forty-five minutes seven seconds east other Iota ot ground bounding thereon and crosalog AndenJon avenue (as laid out flfty entitled to the ll8e thereot. Among the new books at the Library leet wide) the distance of two hundred flfty And together with the free and common are: uCrew of the Cases." by Barbour feet .. nd eleven one-hundredths ot a foot to a ..t-b libe work in Parochial Schools which was dis- arry Sheppard, Libby Holman and Helen j point; thence on a line extending aouth tlge •• Q; t. rty and Privilege ot the afore-c: ontinued February 1st, due to lack of Laird appear in this play-Hedgerow's Stone's "P. Penny and His Little Red twen t y-t b ree degrees fIIty-three minutes fifty- scaoiudr sael leayt 8aU8 atnimd efso rh ea repaafstsearg efowraeyv earn. d water- nine lIeconds eaat recrossing said Dermond funds. newest comedy. Cart"; uRobin and Heather," by Robin- avenue and Marvlne avenue. the dlatance of Improvements eonslst ot two and one-hal. Dr, W. W. Comfort, of Haverford Col~ Tuesday and Wednesday will be taken son; "Fo ur Gy psl•e Ch'ld "b M '. one thousand eeven hundred one feet and to hrl k • I ren, y orns, hventy-five one-hundredths of a foot to a s IY c and stucco store and apartment. Robinson's "Jack's House"; Field's "Mus- point in the center line ot aaid Burmont road; ;~8 feet. one-story brick addition, 12x16 lege, and president of the Tuberculosis up with a double performance of the latest kamming Red Head"; UNikita," by Phelps, thence extending along the ct'!nter line of 81dd Association, presided at the meeting which Rose Valley offering, Sherwood Anderson's was attended by the following directors:- "Winesburg, Ohio," which had its world Miss M. DeHaven Bright, Waynej Mrs. premiere at the rustic playhouse last week. Harvey A. Domblaser, Upper Darby; Mrs. Dramatized by Anderson from his great and Chapman's "TI'mber Trall"·. "Boys' BurmoIn t t roatdb north eixdt y-nine degrees eIght- S 0 Id 88 Ihe proper ty 0 t H Ug b F ergDSon. een m nu es ree secon s west recrossing said Book of Pirates," by Williams; Haines' Anderson Qvenue (it extended) four hundred HOWARD M. LUTZ, Attorney. J. S. C. Harvey, R adnor; Mrs. Wm. A. American nov.e l of the same name . in . col-twenty- one feet and fifteen one-huudredths of "Southpaw"i Warner's "Pop WE-ruer's a foot to a point: thence stili along the center NATHAN P. PECHIN, Book for Boys"; "Japanese Holiday Pic- line of Hurmont road north sixty degrees fifty_ Sheriff. ture Tales," by Sugimoto; White's "Where I ========;;;~;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;~==============~~~ Jaquette, Swarthmore; Mrs. Henry C. laboration With Arthur ~arton, It 15 a Marshall, Swarthmore; Mrs. T. Jeddson graphic study of a small ,mid-western town Myers, Springtleldj:-: Ur.:-:M: -A;· Neufeld, :.just ~ft~r:""the turn .of_this ~entury. ~_Based Chester' Dr H Armin Stecher Brookline' on Slhcere character study, for which AnÂMr. la;. T: St~wart, Lansdo\~ne; Dr. C: dcrson is justly famous, it utilize~ the enÂI. Stiteler, Chester; Mr. C. Frank WiJIiarn- tire Hedg~row troupe, headed br .Joe TauÂson, Media·j Dr. J. Wood, Chester; Mr. I lane, ~oUlSC. Beggs, Walter \Vllhams and Charles Kurtzhalz, Secretary, Swarthmore. Cathennr Rieser. Is Adelaide?"; "Kees and Kleintze," by King i Hill's "When Kitty Came to PortÂland"; Flack's "Tim Tadpole"; Garland's "Son of the Middle Border"; "Secret of Tate's Beach," by Seaman, and "Mystery at No.6" and "Dragon's Secret," by SeaÂman, can al50 be found now on the library shelves. • • Intemational League Benefit Civil Service Examinations At the Waverly A midsummer diversion is promised to those who are here on July 21st. On that date Mrs. Lucy Biddle Lewis, will open the grounds of her beautiful home: "The The United States Civil Service Com~ mission has announced open competitive examinations as follows: Bing Crosby sings and acts his way to the greatest success of his motion picture career on the screen of the Waverly TheÂatre with the showin~ today of his new adventure filmusical, H\Vc're Not DreESing." F Ocean Junior argicultural statistician $2,000 a THE LAN 10 E~' ~S City's Finest Ocean .l?ront BOARDWALK AT ELEVENTH STRUT OCEAN CITY, N. J. Come to The Flanders where you are offered true hospitality. excellent food. superior service and the companionship of a refined clientele. 2 3 2 Roms with Bath. AmerÂican Plan. Fireproof. 3 Delightful 0 pen Air Swimming Pools. Hotel J. HOWARD SLOCUM, Monager Attractive Rale, for Pam,. lie, ond Groups. Special Cote Given Children. THE PRINCETON INN Princeton. New JefftY I. also under MI. Siocum's 1I10nogemeni The Paramount fast-moving vehicle brought with Crosby a sure-fire cast of equally entertaining players-Carole LomÂbard, George Burns and Grade Allen, Ethel Merman and Leon Errol. This group of song-producing and funÂmaking stars cmbark on more than sixty minutes of music, laughs and suspenscs aboard the yacht of Miss Lombard. cast in the role of a wealthy heiress. Crosby is a sailor aboard the yacht, with Miss Merman, Errol and the fortune-huntÂing princes, Jay Henry and Ray Milland, as guests aboard the cruiser. There is a shipwreck and this colorful band of refugees invade a South Sea island haven. On the other side of the island are Burns and Allen, a pair of nut-naturalÂists. The fireworks start when Crosby has to take command of the situation, putting the former pleas!Jre~seeking yachting guests to work. ---+--- Attends Convention Emma ?\·lay l\IichacJ, of Park Avenue, a senior at Swarthmore College, left SaturÂday for Chicago, where for ten days she will attend, as representative, the Phi Mu Fraternity Convention. Miss Michael is staying at the Edgewater Beach Hotel. SHERIFF SALES Sheriff OlTice, Court Hous('", Media. Penna. Thursday. July 19. Hl31 1.00 o'ckck P. M. Eastt.'rn St,'Uldard Time Conditiona: 8260.00 Cash or certified check at time ot sale (unless otherwise stated in ad\·ertisement). balance in ten days. Other conditions on day of sale. Fieri Facins No. 133 June Term, 1934 All that certain Jot or ground with the stone stort's. buildings and former post office building thereon el't!<'!tcd. situate in the Dorough of LanSdowne. County of Delaware and State 01 Pennsyl\·ania. and described according to a survey made December 6. 1897, by Thoma3 G. Jam·ier. C. E. Bex-inning at an iron pin in the bed of Lansdowne Ave-. nue and in the lire 01 land ot which this was formerly a p:!lrt. granted to Casper Pennock by Michael GiboolUl, et ux. by deed dated The WELL at JA~IESTO'VN Death, disense and the dangers of pioneer life took their toll of those hnrd y pioneers who founded the first perÂmanent senlement of English speaking eolonists in America at Jameslowl), Virginia, io 1607. By 1609, Jomestown had ATown to a Village of 50 or 60 IIDuses, c/nstered around a village well, wi tbin a stoc/mde. Prior to the digging of this well, tbe settlers d"nnk the braekish water of the James dver. Eventually tbe well was fouud to be in an un~aDitnry condition_no doubt due to its proximity to the buts. A uew well W8S dug in 1611 but iu 1617 this was also found to he polluted. Front 1607 to 1625 the eolouy lost more than 6,000 settlers out ofa total of 7,289. Undoubtedly many oftbese brave men and women needlessly died from .lise3ses caused hy tbe laek of a plentifnl supply of good waler. You, bowever, enn always depend upon the IVDler that we send you. It COUles from clear., safe, country streams. Its Imrity is safeguarded, preserved and tested time and time agnin ••• 24 hours a day. This is the thirteenlh of n series of nllrralh'es which graphically tell the siory of waler. Look for the next one in this paper two week. from today. "~ERTIFIED WATER fro ... PEDIGREED STREA~IS" JULY 6, 19M THE SWARTHMOREAN ~~C~I·.&A~S~S~W~l"E~D~-'--~NuE~lV~S~N~O~T~E~S~~I ~~R~~~an~'~a~t~&~b_~b~~----~----------------- FOR RENT At the Rutgers Avenue school Frank Mr. and Mrs. David McCahan. of Strath Hoffman Is repairing the slate roof. After Haven Avenue, will have as their guests tbe severe winter many slates need re .. this week·end Mr. McCahan's broiber-in- placing. :FOR RENT-Two-ear B"aran. 730 Harvard. AveDue. CaD Swarthmore 116. PERSONAL PERSONAL-Room and mea", on Cape Cod, twenty do]lal'll " week. Write Box 88. Manomet. Man. law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Rans- The roofs on the College Avenue ele .. burg and their two children, Margaret and mentary school and shop are being reÂMarian, of Camphill, Pa. paired by the Barrett Roofing Company, The Rental Prices Will Be Higher Mr. George A. Bretz, Mr. Kermit Peters, Mr. Roy Delaplaine, Mr. Ed Whitecar, Mr. John H. Pitman and Mr. Paul McÂHale caught over 200 fish on a fishing trip they made on Monday on the Delaware Bay below Smyrna. who are responsible for repairs for ten years. The janitors are repairing windows and window sash cords and will begin to paint the walls of the high school auditorium soon. Water has seeped in through the walls and discolored the plaster. 8 RJa.. Corneri. $75; 8 Rm., V.caut, $75; 7 RIDo, Coa. ocatJoD.t $SS; 8 Rm., Cot .. l&I"e, $40;: 6 Rill., BriCk, $31. 8 Hm., Apt .• $50; 4 RID., Apt .. , $35. WM. S. BITTLE --- Swa. III-J Notary Public Real Eatale Guenther Frobel, of Swarthmore -AveÂnue, has as his guests for a week Donald Anderson and BiU Robertson, of Mt. Clair, N.J. The wire and fence around the College Avenue tennis courls have been removed FOR SALE in readiness for excavation to begin. Seven-room stone and frame dwelling, good location, large lot. Small c:aah payment. $6000. Mrs. E. L. Mercer and family, of North Chester Road, will leave this week to spend the summer in Wallingford, Vermont. • Robin Hood Theatre "Three Cornered Moon" wiII be the secÂond production of the summer season at the Robin Hood Theatre in Arden, Del. This farce-comedy by Gertrude Tonkonogy, will be presented Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, July 4, 5, 6 and 7. E. C. WALTON FOR RENT The Bye house. Stratb Haven and Harvard Avenues. Mrs. J. F. Bogardus and family, of CorÂnell Avenue, leave today for Manomet, Mass, where they will spend the remainder of the summer. Miss Sarah Berry, of Sharbcrry, ThornÂton, entertained at luncheon and bridge Monday_ The guests were Mrs. J. R. Kline, Mrs. E. C. Lappe, Mrs. Paul K . The story is that of a scatterbrained family who lose their money and find themselves forced to do something about which they know nothing-earn their own living. The three sons and one daughter set gayly to work to pull the family out of the hole into which their flighty mother has put them. Aided by the family doctor, they succeed, and in the process the girl finds that the practical physician is a more satisfactory prospect for a husband than a dreamy artist. SWEENEY & CLYDE Phone, Che.ler 6141 Alger, ?t-frs. Peter E. Told, Mrs. James F. FURNITURE Bogardus, l\frs. Virginia Frieze, Mrs. George Pl9wman, Mrs. Richmond D. RESTORING Fetherolf, Mrs. Don F. Price, Mrs. Paul ·5 nd for Harle -You'll Not Be So ,D. Williams, of Swarthmore; Mrs .. CortÂe Y tty land Sanny and Mrs. George A. Wemhold, UPHOLSTERING lof Drexel Hill; Mrs. Richard Arthur, of Hone.t Under the Cover Call Swarthmore 1441 Sbop-27 Main St., Morton, Pa. Eve. CaU Sw. 1839-J. Rutledlre. Pa. ANNA SCHALLES SUP COVERS DRAPERIES PHONE SW. 1225 MUHLENBERG AVE •• RUTLEDGE MRS. A. J. QUINBY & SON JOSEPH E. QUINBY ERNEST G. SNODGRASS, ASS·T. FUNERAL DIRECTORS BELL PHONE 4 Lansdowne; Mrs.·George Lloyd. of Joliet, Ill.; Miss Veronica O'Rourke, of Chester; Mrs. Leland Fox, Mrs. E. C. Richards, Mrs. Katharine Martin and Mrs. Robert E. Sharpless, of Thornton. Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Fussell, of RiverÂview Road, have bad as their guests for the past two weeks, Mrs. Fussell's cousins, Miss Maude Lewis and Miss Evangeline Lewis, of Pendleton, Indiana. The Misses Lewis departed pn Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Dickinson, of \VinÂter Park, Fla., have taken the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Garrett on Mt. Holyoke Place for the summer. Agnes Elliott Scott is being featured in the role of Mrs. Rimplegar. Mary EmerÂson will play her daughter, Elizabeth. The three SODS are portrayed by Edwin Ross, Rodifer Wilson and Robert C. Schnitzer. Maurice Burke takes the role of family adviser and Richard Edward Bowler that of the impractical dreamer. Also in the cast are Laura Barrett and Phyllis Sallee. Agnes Elliott Scott, featured in charÂacter leads, will again conduct her class in speech, voice and acting fundamentals. The facilities of the Robin Hood Theatre will be used for study and rehearsal. A numÂher of student have already registered with Miss Scott. The bill for July II. 12. 13 and 14 at the Robin Hood Theatre will be "Dan. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Lappe and family, gerous Cornel·," which was played on of Park Avenue will leave on Sunday for Broadway only last year. Maurice Burke --M=-A:-:::N"Y=S"'W=A-=R=-=T=HM==-O=-=RE=-A"NC:S::-=-H::-A::-V=E' I Ridgeview Park' in the Blue Ridge Moun- will do the part originated by Colin KeithÂBROUGHT THEIR OLD TIRES TO US tains. where they will spend the following I J ohoston. and will d:rect the play as well. TAHNEDM .H ADBR INNEGW YTORUERASD SIN PNUTO WON- two weeks. J W. I. L. to Present Children's MEDIA. PA. YOU WILL SAVE MORE THAN Ben Palmer. of Cedar Lane, will be home Theatre HALF THE .2RICE .QF·...A.NEW TJRE... .from.. Mount-Alto_ over-tho_week_cnd. Announcement comes from the \Vomen's RUSSELL'S SERVICE International League that. in the season Daniel Jaquett, of Elm Avenue, is going 1934-35, it will again prescnt the Children's to spend the summer on a farm in Vir- Theatre of New York in a series of six glOla. plays for young people at the Garrick TheÂ<- x-:. .x -....,..:-:-:->:-:-... ..X +".. .> :_:-:-.~ oj> PLUMBING, I ;.: HEATING & ROOFING J. AS IT SHOULD BE DONE L. W. JACKSON .' SWARTHMORE 74.J '. <-:-<. .....~ ~. .x -.x. •: . .: -... ... +:+:+» YE Village Window Cleaner A. HAUGER, Prop. Swa. 19 HARRIET L. TREAT Expert Designing and Fitting of Gowns Remodeling At Home or by the Day The Harvard Sw. 892 • • • • • • WHEN' YOU TRAVEL D EMEMBER - wben on ~ your travels this summer - you can telephone out.of. town from any Bell telephone and reverse the charge if you like (provided, of course, the person you call agrees !). This - and the surprisingly low cost of station to station calls - mean that you can always keep in touch with home. Call 100 miles for 60 cents by Station to Station Day Rate; for 50 cents by. E"'cning Rate; for 3S cents by Night Rate. The BeU Telephone COIbD_V of Penna. I atre. The repertoire will include: PocoÂFrederick A. Atcheson and family, of hontas, Nobody's Girl, The Prince's Secret, Riverview Avenue, left for Saratoga a pby of sixteenth century Spain, Dick Springs last week, where they wiJI remain \Vhittington, Under the Lilacs, by Louisa for a time. Later in the season, they will r .. f. Alcott, a.nd the Arabian Nights favorÂmake their home in Almont, Michigan, ite, Aladdin and His \vonderful Lamp. until Mr. Atcheson has fully regained his health. PETER E. TOLD The Do-dos met on Thursday. The Chief Do-do attributes his winninq- last season to his "keeping his nose to the grind- ALL LINES OF INSURANCE stone." I OLD INCLUDING LIFE BANK BUILDING WH£N TWO CAN UVE AS CHEAPLY AS 0 N E CYLINDERS WILL BE AS ECONOMICAL AS SIX! CHEVROLET THE QUALITY CAR LA WSON·SHEP ARD COMPANY, Inc. AUTHORIZED DEALER SW. 1833 401 DARTMOUTH AVENUE SWARTHMORE .. •....•••....•.....-.. liMtiliNl-l]VIlV.lI Fruits and Vegetables ~r~ Pep up lagging appetites with vitamin-filled fruits and vegetables-fresh from the garden. They're so good. and they're so good for you that they should be included in every meal-Buy yours- Where Quality Counts and Your Money Goes Furthest Georgia Red Ripe Watermelons eac~ 49c Sweet Juicy Calif. Bartlett Pears 12 lor 29c Tender Green Telephone Peu 2 lb. 2&c )IIIar CDrn 3 ." 10c I Lima Beans 2 Ib, 15c White Squash 3 h, 10c Green Peppers 2 f~r 5c Transparent Apples 2 lb. l3c Extra 1 arge Honey Dew Melons cach 29c Oranges Califomia Valencia do·29c A void extra heat on these warm Summer days-let us do your baking in our gleaming bakeries. Victor Sliced Bread Supreme (iSm Fruited Loaf 20'02 loa' 9c fach 15c 9c FreshWbite ManbmaUows 2 ~2·lb pk •• 15c Hom-de·Lite (the fre8h eyg) Mayonnaise pi i •• 15c 190 Welch'. Grape Juice 2 pI bolo 35c 17c light Meat Tuna Fish 2 CllnB 25c 161' Delicious Pears Bartlett or Calif. Peaches 2 large 271 can~ l3c lIS(» Cider Vinegar ~I reErigoralor hoi 10c lIS(» Tender Sugar Com 2 No.2 caD. "5c Muon Jar. (Pb) 101 75c : (Qta) 10. 85c Jar Rubber. d02 5c I Jar Tapa d0225c Jelly Glasses d0239c Parowax Ib pkg 10c 10 ¢ ~.... or Rob Roy 3 full B g~ts everages 6 i.i!:~w Glasses large 1St cans ._. -.... -- .. ~----. A1I49¢ for Plas bottle deposit. Y(;USa~e2H lISCO Meats-Kept Right-Priced Right Q.alitll Corn-fld Steer BEEF Finest Standing Rib Roast:I:~: tb 29c I Fresh Cut Beef CUbeS} i 22 Ground Fresh Beef tb C Fresh Killed Stewing Chickens Fancy, milk-fed poult!'),. All sizes. The best we can purchase. I Swift's Calf Liver tb 3ge ~~~~SW~I=FT~~'S~M~i1~k~-f~e~d~v~e~a~I~L~iv=e~r~~~~5:5:C __ ___ White American Sandwich Cheese I Pimento Sandwich Cheese f % Ib Be FElIN'S Extra Smoked Liver Pudding Ib 28c trookfield Spread pkg 6%0 I Domestic Sweitzer % Ib 18c Theuringer Sausage or Long BDlogna I y.; lb 5 Lebanon or Beef Bologna 4 C Wher(; Quality CountBand Your MOlle.1I Goes Furthest s
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6 Results of July Fourth Events (Continued from Page 1) the best fillers Mrs Holmes received a bucket and shovel, the bucket being filled with cakes M:r Tuld got a garden stake. Mr. Titus J. Ewig pro\ed his hithertoÂfo. re ?nsuspected ability as a seamstress by w10nlDg the sew10g contest, which in jusÂtice to Air. Ewig it is only falr to :my was open to men only He recch'ed a bottle of Wddroot hair tome Miss Dorothy Brower and Mr \V M Harvey composed the speediest team 10 the mu:ed paper race m which you have two pieces of ne\\ spaper and as you step off the rear one to the front one pick It up and place It in front, stepping on it agam Its slow work but excitlng, as were all the contests Miss Bro\\er received a Jarge white "bunny" garden stake and Mr HarÂvey a black cat garden stake THE SWARTHMOREAN forty-one seconds. A good 900 feet of. land rush in "Cimarron rJ as soul-stirring hose was out The losers got the water spectacles. turned on them and were really drenched Added to Its lavishness is a fictional They finally abandoned their own nozzle romantic story which runs through the and the Wlnners took it and sprayed (he photoplay, presenting Beery for the first losers and the crowd. time in many years as a lover. The wlDning team conSisted of Frank With Beery In the notable cast appear Wilmer, Sullivan, Steigelman, Frank Ter- Leo Carrtllo, Fay Wray, Donald Cook rells, Harry Bernard. Hauger, Cilf and Dave Stuart Erwin. George E. Stone, Joseph Rumsey. The losers were Jackson, Fres- ScbIldkrctUt, Kathenne De Mille Phibp colo, Hickling, Wood, Fluhardy, Aber- Cooper, Frank Puglia, Henry B Walthall nathy, 11m Terrells and Leonard. David Durand, FrancIS X. Bushman Jr' Never too Hot for BuebaU The Swarthmore baseball team played the Redwood A A of PhIladelphia in the late afternoon A good crO\vd turned out to see the Jocal bo,} s defeat the visitors b)' a score of 7 to 1 Shadieat Spot for Quoit. A.drian Rosley and Henry Armetta. I Th~ picture was directed by Jack ConWay. SHERIFF SALES Sheriff's OlfJc:e, Court HOUle, Penna. Thunday, July 26. 1934 100 o'clock P. M. Eastern Standard Time Media. Conditions $25 00 Cuh or certlfied check at tIme oC sale (unless otherw18e stated ID ad~utisement.). balance In ten days Other conditions on day of eRie. JULy 6,1934 hqndredthll of a foot to a point: tllenee elt- KI"ftI elev I -Âtending ~uthnatwardb 00 a Ifne at ..... ht feet (80) : :' n,'i Ill. ~theReOllda we.t eighty angles to Valley View road flft7-elaht and 8& d Iwn po D a corner of Lot No twenty-four hundredths feet to a point on the Lot a~o. t U ee eu.tendfnc alan. the aWe or northwesterly .ide ot ValleI' View roa4 afore- minute. a d ru l7 .laty decl'ftl thlrtJ'-I1"o Aid; thence alona the aame aouth ten dilRree. dred teet (IOO)w~ th Hef...n_~ 'Wat one bun .. fourteen mlouta fortI' ReOn. weat on. hun-I e p~ of becinniua. dred aod one and l8eVen17-e1cht hundftdtha teet to • point: tbenee northwea;twardly on the at ~ ~ill Sitaate 00 the northwestul7 Itde arc of • eire)e curvin&' to the riaht with a d.lata· t road. forb-8.. leet wldil!' at th radlws at "vel'ltJ' feet. the are d .. tance of I nee 0 lour hundred and tort:v-n'foe a '" torty-eJeht and thirty-slx hundredths feet to frx1:-a;ven hundredth. feet. me&lured no~g the 6rst mentioned point and place of begin. s ds wreea thirty-two minutes tWl!'ntJ' lee nlng. I,n iht along 1he uid side of Overhlll road rom e POint of tangent of • elrele fOI1Q Lot 2: Becinnin&' at a palDt on the north_ }~~ the c~rner of OverbiD road and Baver: eaaterb side at Havertord road. at the dis- rtheu~, containing In front or breadth ::ance of one hundred and one aDd liK-tenthl :r'de of 6·rd~1J a~ the .. Id northweaterlJ' eet meuured north thlrty-one degrees eleYen t dl ":t . sevenly_fl.e feet and minute. fifty seconds west, along the .. id Iide eli eg n. that width In lenlth or depth at Haverford road lrom the point of tangent n01 watwardly bd.ween parallel IInH at. right of a circle forming the corner ot Haverford in~ Mfl to f, OverhUJ :road. one hUndred and rulad and Valley View road thence continumg I or y- VI!' eet a ong the said side of Haverlord road north N i thirty-one degrees eleven mlRute8 flttl' seconds a mptovements. Vacant around. weat one hundhd feet to • point then Sold th r0rthiud twHanily along a line at rIgh't anal: mortgag-:r a~lwrrJ'i!."m o~ WnUBrJtD J O·Brlen. o Ba overlord road nlnety-slx feet and • •• l'E'al owner :hventy-four hundredthtt of a foot to • point; I Hand Money-lJ 60000 enee extending Bouth ten degrees twenty- • two minutes eaat one hundred and seven feet ALL to a pomt, thence extending southwest.wardly EN S. OLMSTED, 2D. Attome,-. on a line at rigbt angl_ to Ha.erford road 6fty-elght and seventy-one hundredthe leet to a point on the northeaatwardly line of Hav-erford road the IIlace at beginning. Levari Facias Lot .14: BeglhnlRR' at a point on the westÂerly side of Valle,. View road "lxt)' feet wide March Term. 1934 No. 1148 Prizes for the parade and games \\ere presented by the Swarthmore Bu .. ine .. s Men's A~oclatlon The qUOIt tournament drew a crowd of forty pla}ers The cool shade of the trees held them to the game the best part of the day Dr Samuel Palmer defeated NorÂman MadIson by C! score of 21 to 15 in the smgles finals The team of VIctor AIIu:on and RIchard Snyder defeated VICÂtor D Shirer and Grant Benjamin in the doubles finalo: The SCore uas 21 to 14. Levari Facias at the distance of one hundred and onc and Lot with Improvement. Lansdowne Darou h No. 1225 8eveniy-elght hundredths feet, measured north Del. Co. Pa Beginning at mterecUon m'l ten degreH fourteen minules forty aeeonda die line of Stewart avenue (60 fL wide) with March Term 1934 eost along the said side of Valley View road line drawn through Highland avenue (85 It • Crom the pomt of tangent of a eirele forming Wide), wbIch line extended N. through bed of All tbat certain lot or piece oC land with the Corner or Valley View road and Haver. Hlghland 81ienUe 11 at tbe di.tance of 16 It the meW03ftge and other Improvements thereon ford road. thence extending northwestwardly E. from and paralJeJ with W. hne thereof £J'ected situaled on the southwesterly Side of on a !me at right angles to Valley VIew roat;J Containing in tront on middle line of Stewart Summitt a\enue at the distance of one hun 6rtY-elght Bnd twenty-tour hundredths teet to avenue 6574 It. and extending m delltb N. of dred and thirty-two and two hundred and t POIDt, thence extending north ~n degrees that width between parallel Jines at r ht (orly_fhe one-thouaandths feet northwest- wenty-two minutes weat. one hundred and angles.to Stewart avenue. the W. line aI':n wardly from the northwesterly corner of Sum- s~x and eighty-Rve hundredths feet to a point, aforesaid line extend~ through bed ot }ffgh~ mitt avenue and Chester pike In the Bor_ t ence h extending 80uthelLlltwardly on a Jine land avenue 140 ft. to ground tormerly of ough ot Prospect Park, In the County 01 a~ rig t angll'S .to said Valley View road Mary R. Albertson. Hall Win. T ennia Tourney Water Sporta a New Feature Defymg the } ea~, the \'eteran Bob Hall, who \\as Delaware County net kmg h\enty years back, took the measure of J ohn Ke~t 10 a hard fh-e-set struggle on the Tenms Club courts. By 2 in the aftcrnoon a large cro\\d had gathered on the banks of the Crum at the Strath Ha\eD Boat House to take part 10 and see the newest innovahon in S\\arthmore's Fourth of July program, the \\ater sports The canoe races were run In heats. Harry Miller won the singles for bo)s and Dorothy Bro\\er won for the girls The mixed doubles in the canoe races \\ ere really mixed, but good sportsÂmanship pre\ ailed and Mr and Mrs Charles DeHart Broner pulled ahead of the cro\, d and \ .. on Delaware aroresald. Extending thence along n nely-five and eightY-SIX hundredths teet to the Bouthwesterly Side of said Summitt a'e- a 7tnt( on the watterly side of Valley View Improvements consist ot two and one.half nue north forty-nme degrees nine minutetJ rOB h B oresaid: and thence along the same sto:y stueco and shingle house 16x32 feet and fifty-sIX seconds west twenty-eJ.ght and sout ten degrees fourteen mmutes forty see- two and one-half BtOry atucco arid shingle ad~ nlDdy-five one-thousandths f~t to a point 11 onds west one hundred lPet to the fint men- diUon, 9x21 feet; one-stvfY frame addition Unperturbed by a sterling rally which gave Kent the second and third sets, Hall WIthstood the brOilIng sun and finally came through m the fifth and deCIding set ApÂplause goes to Kent for the grand fight he put up, considenng that he became ill after pia) 109 his semi-final round in the morning of the same day The scores \\ere 6-1, 3-6, 1-6, 6-4, 6 ° corner of lands of EdwJn S. Fu51er, et UX'I lIoned pomt and place of beginning. 112X12 feet; porch front. ~ extending thence along s8id lands south olxty- Lots 04 6 Sol eight degrees Viest one hundred forty three • and 6: Be.lInnlDg at a point on d as the property of Harry Cotrlh Jr and eu:hty-slx one-hundredths fe'lt to a pomt the n0r1;heutwardly aide of Haverford road and Ameha A. hIB wire, mortgagors: and a corner of lands of Maraball P. Snyder and h~nt:~dttance of seventy_mne an~ sixty-mne! Amelia A. Coffm. wife or Harry Coffin. Jr •• Joseph Oberle: thence extendmg along the last It feet measured aDuth thllty-one de- real owner. mentioned lands soutb twenty two degrees east grees e even mmutes 6fty seconds east along _ The tJltmg contests, composed of teams hvcnly_Ovc feet to a point a corner of lant!o ~h! tBait t Side of fHaverford road from the GEORGE T BUTLER, Attorney of J~eph D Taylor, et at; and extendmg DID 0 angent 0 a drele forming the cor-thenee along said last mentioned londs north :hr of Overbill road and Haverford road' NATHAN P PECHIN, Owing to the short nohre given, it was of a paddler and a titter, a boy \\ Ith a pOSSIble to run onl} a small tournament padded pole, \\ ere very exclttng Often a The same reason may be gh en for so man) fake move did more to upset the losers' defaults, as the summaries show sixty-ejght degrees east and passing along the enje h extendmg northeastwardly on a JlIt~ Sheriff. middle of the party wall separating said mes-I h~ ~ g dt antfi to stud Haverford road one ==================== .!lU8ge from the messuage adjOining on the :- fE an rty feet to a potnt; thence :>outhemst. one hundred fiftY-SIX and sixb-mne I :~h~d_lfi~e ioU~hiB8twanliY one hundred and f ADVERTISEMENT Summaries canoe than a poke or push from the poles b!:'~~:r::edths feet to a pomt the plsce of southY ten d~re! ah:eon~:_i~~en~~n::.~n~:~ I The Swarthmore Board of Sc:hool Directors • 6fty-eight and eighty-three hundredths feet J wllI receIVe bids lor coal and fuel aU up to All ages were permitted to compete against First Round-Hall defeated Nickerson each other and the crowd on the bank W. L Cleaves defeated Ta,lor by default: cheered lushi} nhen a couple of grownÂPassmore defeated Parker by default, Crcs- ups were toppled into the Crum by two son defeated Bill Cleave.!; by default, \V T sman bo,}s Walter Sanford and John Bro\\ n defeated McCain by default, Delaplaine finally stood up under all chalÂRhoads defeated Turner, W A Brown lengers and won the contest. Improvements constst of t101:o-stOl'Y stucco to R point, thence svuthwestwardlY on a Une I '1 00 hI'· M., E. S. T., Tuesday. Ju]y 10, 1934. and shingle house 804x16 feet Enclosed porch at right angles to Haverford road oue hundr«l at t bee Collegred e Avenue School. Specifkationa. •• • Bnd twenty-nine and seven hundredths feet may seeu from the School District Office, &lId as the property of MorriS Taylor and to n pomt on the afore-mentioned northeast_ Thli :i'd!rd reserves the right to reJect any Ruth Taylor, h18 wtce. mortgagors and real wardly Side of Haverfonl road. then"e extend- or a • owners. ing along the same north thirty-one degrees ELIZABETH A. LUEDERS. eleven minutes and fifty seconds west two Secretary. WM B HARVEY, Attorney defeated Simpson, Kent defeated Carl Cleaves I The tub race \\3S not so successful, but Second Round-Clea\es defaulted to I Elliott. Richardson managed. to pilot hif Hall, Baird defeated Passmore, Rhoads I galVan,Ized craft to the OPPosite sh~re first defeated \V T Broun, Kent defeated and \\on a prIze ~enJamm CollIns war: \V A Broun I runner-up by repeatmg thIS feat of carc- Levari FactaS No. 865 Ma£ch Term, 1934 Semi-finals-Hall defeated B' d K t ful balancing One tub sank In mIdstream defeated Rhoads. air, en and the boys tried to find it It hasn't All that certain lot or piece of ground WIth the mesBuage or tenement thereon erected sitÂuate on the southeasterlv eide of Powelton avenue JR the Dorough of IAmdowne. County of Delaware and State of Pennsylvania afore. mld Begmnlng at the distance of one hunÂdred and twenty feet eastwardl:v from the .outheaster]y corner of said Wildwood avenue and Powelton avenue Contalnlng In front on said PO\letton avenue tblrt:v feet and ex cndmK of that width 10 length or depth loutheastwardly between parallel hnes Bt right !lnt:lc3 to lUud Powelton avenue one hundred teet appeared ~ct It "as one of Mrs PItÂFiremen Battle Each Other After a false start, the two teams of ~remen, each WIth a pumper, launched mto the battle of a century, a \'iater fight One engme was placed at the fireplug by the Rutgers Avenue school and the other at the plug acroo:s from Clif Rumsey's man's wash tubs and it 15 rumored thai because of thiS loo:s l\.{r Pitman did Dot go home, but was last seen going IIUp the creek." • Manor Theatre garage At a signal from ChIef WItmer "VIVa Villa I" Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer'" the cre" s hopped on thell engines and spectacular story \\ hleh opens Friday at sped for the opposite plugs As they the Manor Theatre, is generally classed passed each other on Rutgers Avenue they among the great screen mastc;rpleces of all dropped one man \\ uh the end of the hose time whIch unreeled as the engmes \\ ent on Filmed largely in MeXICO \\ltb W II The ho<-:.e came uncoupled as one crew ' a acr I Beery as the star and With an excepttonal :e~;ee!ed and thIS delayed them quite a supporting cast, "Viva Villa I" has emerged the n_ec~ndsf thThc h wmners got water at as one of the truly great produchons of ozz e 0 elr ose 10 one IDInute and recent years Spray for Japanese Beetles Repeated Defoliation WIll Injure and KIll Tree A. W. CoDins Phone: Swa. 1272 More than 100,000 MeXIcan natives were used during production, as many as 6,000 appearmg on the screen at one lIme Months were spent by the stars in the remote mtenor of MeXICO, thelt only means of commUnlcahon with the outSIde world bemg by aIrplane j Its battle scenes, mcluding thl! storm I ing and capture of Mexican cities \\ hlCh I were In ne\\spaper headlines durmg the I dozen )ears of Villa's turbulent reign, have I been classed with the unforgettable march I of the Clansmen in "The Birth of a Na I tlOn/' \\ lth the chanot race in "The Ten Commandments" and with the Oklahoma ImiJro~emcnts consISt oC t\\:o and one-balr tory stonu and stueco house, 20x32 feeL One tory frame addItion, 8x8 teet. Porch front Sold as the property of Katharine Brown :ucrtgagor, and William L Wood. real owner \LLEN S OLMSTED, 2ND, Attorney. No 1455 March Term, HIM All those ct'rtain lots or PIeces of ground dhat... IQ Ha\crford Township Delawal"C Coanty Pa. known as Lots Nos 24. 19 18 t7. 16, 16. 32 1. 2. 14. 4, 5, 6, 11, 3-1 amI 61 Ie;;crtbed as follows Lot 24 begmnlng at a POint of tangent of B lrde formmK the comer of Glenbrook roalL forty five feet wide and Valley View r08,1 ~orty I'll e feet wide. thence extendln" south hlrty two dll'luees fortY-SIx minutes fifty I!I~_ lncls II'3st. a ong the soutb\\ P!lterly SIde of Glenbrook road one hundred thirty-four and leventy emht hundredths feet OS" 78') to a Ic'nt Il corner of Lot No 26, thence along lort of Lot 25 southwest on a hne at rfeht 'lngles to Glenbrook road eighty_three and Ixt];_one hundredths feet (8361') to a point '" cornn of Lot No 23. thenc(; along the IIDe ot Jot No 23, on a hne at rIght anKles to saId Valley View road n<orthwestwardly one 'mnrlred nnd fOTty_five fee~ to a pomt on the ;outholsterly Side of Valley View road: thcnce ."xtendmK' along the same north fitty dCi:recR nxteen mmutes east. nmety feet to a pOint "lnd on the arc of a circle cut1;ing to the right .\iloh a r:td U9 of ten feet the are 11i.stanc'c "If !::Ixtt!(!n and D1nety-t\\:o hundrcdth.s feet fI692') to the place of begmmng Lot~ Nos HI 18 I7 16 15 32 b<>1!mnmg "It thc pOInt of tnngent of a Circle formmg ·h .. ('ornf!r of Valley View rani, sixty f_t wide and Ardmore a~enue, thence extendmg "lrrth ten dcteree!'l fourt@en t'T)lDlIt~ forty IIIet'!Â" In<l:'l fAst along the said side 0'" Vallev VICW ~oa" t"Tee hundred fifty-mne and sixty oneÂ..... n"'- dths f~t to A pomt and nortbe!"o:t wardly on the arc oC a clrde CUrl m'l' to t .... p n~ht WIth 1\ radiUS ot one hunllrf'd feet the ..... .J,<;ta""E! of sixty-nine and eiK'My-fi.'" hl1"1- "r~dthg fpet 10 II pomt, and pn>1:h fiftv dp.. 'trcc'!! sixteen mlnut~ ea .. t ~i'CI:v four R'Irt "itt]; one hund"edthR feet (64 li1') to R ]}(\lnt ~ .. r"~~,, or Lot No 21). H," .. -.. p ... t .... dl .. V' .. Iollg the lin.., of Lot 20 BCJ:Jtheastwnrdly on "' h'''' pt rl'llht "' ..... 1"'1 t" v .. n .. y VIew ,.mul' 'lne hundr"d and forty-five feflt to a point fhpncf' "6uth fi.ftv seven d"<r...-es firtv_thr{" to n_ ,t~ ~ftv G('I"on"'" wP<;t th.rfv-f>'lI!ht Rnd I\:"'V_ <>nty-one hl1nd ..... dths fPet (387] '\ to R point 'hcmee south thirty d~es for'y_th~ minÂIte'i Wf'St o"e hun-'l~o:-d ""ld fir" -, .... ht Rnll ., ... r'\ fronr hllndr#>dth!l fef't (158 94') to a "'Im.,t th",nrc snuthf'llStwardly on a hne at "ll;I"ltt Angles 10 Ardmore avenue nmE"ty-one ~"d Slxtv one-hundn>dths feet to a pelOt 0"1 ""e northw8,,.rly RIde of Ardmore Rve"'e "'enlCf' E"~t"ndin~ aTonlt the Ram" f!Ollth flt·v "'CItI'C'-"I "',xtePn Jn~nntes w .... t two hundred lind 'wo and twerotv-sb: hnndnodths faet: to a I)omt thenCE> extend(nR nori .. _ t ........ dly 0"1 the ft .... ~f R "Irde rurvihg to thfl! right with a ra'llls .,t Iwt'.-.tv f_t. tbe RI'C chatanC"e at 'ortY ... '''''' STRENGTH FOR THE CHILDREN Sound bones and teeth. Vigorous bodies Penncreat'. milk helps you rear them t~ HEALTH. It' .. a wonde:fuI fuII-creameei food. ORDER AN EXTRA QUART A DAY. ,a"" .. iQ'hty-sn hundredths f_t to the first I mentioned point and place of beginning P[NN(I<!£~!III~~~~S ---- -- ------- -------- ---~ I Lot I: Beginning at the IKlmt of tanr"'nt of a cirele fOl'nnng the ramer of Vall .. y I View I'OB.fI Bixty feet. wide and Haverlord road' I thnre extendinR' north thlrb'-one degrHS ,eleven minutes fifty ~onds weat along the I northeast Side of Haverford road, one ! hundred and cue and lIix-tenthe f~ , to a point. thence extendlng on a line at rlcht ana1ea to Haverford road nortbeaetwardb' flftJ'~tght feet and sevent,. hU!ldred and forty feet to the first mentioned: -================::=: pomt and place of beginning. f Lot 11' .Beginnlng at a point on the south_ w~sterly Side at. Westfield l'oad forty-five feet Wide, at the dllltance of two hundn;od ami fifteen and thirty-one hundredths teet meas-I ured 8Out~ thirty-one dl!grees eleven minutt'll snd fifty Beconda east along the said side of Westfield road from the point of tonRent orl a circle forming the corner of Westfield road and OveJ:hi11 road forty-five fet wide. thence extending southwestwardly on a hne at right I angles to Westfield road one hundred and fifty feet to a point; thence southeastwardly forty and ninety_t\\o hundredths feet to a point: thence extending soutb ten degrees twer.ty-hi;o minutes east SIX reet to a pomt thence north seventy-eIght dCH'rees fif:y-on~ I minutes east one hundred and fifty-two and 6fty-elght hundredths feet to a point on the ... rore-mentloned southwesterly side of WestÂfield road and thence extending along the same northwestwardly on the are of a cil'ele eurv- 109 to the left With a radius ot one hundred feet the arc distance of forty-two snd thlrty- J three hundredths feet ,. ... , north thirty-one degrees ele"en minutes {lfI.y seconds west fiftY-I' qeven and sf'VentY-Reven hundredths feet to the place ot beginning. Lot 34· Begmnmg at a point on the north-east Side of WestfieJd 1'00d. one hundred one and sixty-nllle hundredths teet (101.69) BOuth thirty_ana degrees eJeven minutes ond fifty S t."onds east from a pomt of tangent of 0 circle forming the corner of Westfield road forty-five feet wide and Overhlll l'Oad forty_ five leet Wide and extending thence along the northeast Side of Westfield road eighty feet (80) to the corncr at lot No 33 on SRld plan. theme extending by said Lot No. 33 on Jaul p'an on a line at nght angles to !t.e iald Westfield road northeastward one hunÂ, Ire:! feet nOOl to a pomt in line of Lot Nfl 45 on said plan. tbence north thirty_one de- THE JAPANESE BEETLE IS HERE Beetle Traps Beetle Bait Beetle Sprays Suplee's Store South Chester Road Swarthmore 105 Ask for Your Votes Why Do People Usually Take a Demonstration Before Buying a Car? Performance and Riding Qualities Are the Two Main Features Riding Qualities We Have in thePL YMOUTH Equal to Our Competitors Performance--The PLYMOUTH Is Far Superior to Our Competitors TRY A PLYMOUTH Before Buying Any Car HANNUM & WAITE SOUTH CHESTER ROAD and YALE AVENUE Swuthmore 1250 VOL. VI, No. 28 COUNCIL CONSIDERS BY·PASS PROGRESS Over a Mile of Gas Mains to Be Replaced in Borough-Work to Begin at Once Elwood B. Chapman appeared before Borough Council last Thursday evening at the regular meetmg and gave a resume of the work done and progress made on the by-pass which has interested reSIdents of Swarthmore for several years This by-pass, when completed, would be around the lower part of Swarthmore and divert through traffic from Chester Road and Yale Avenue Before there 15 any pOSSibility of havmg the by-pass It must be put on the state plans. It will not he put on the state plan until aU land IS acquired and the PennsylvanIa Radroad agrees to make an underpass at a new location Most of the residents along the path of the proposed by-pass have offered to dedIcate the necesÂsary land The trustees of the Thompson Estate have not given theIr permission for the proposed by-pass to go across the estate That is the longest stretch of the proposed route that has not been promised Mr Chapman reported that Edwin B Temple, of the PenosyJvaDla Railroad COl\1pany, saId the ratlroad company would be willing to construct an underpass on the new route and close the grade crossÂing at Swarthmore Avenue T. E. HessenÂbruch, chairman of the Highway ComÂmIttee, will report progress made in furÂthering the advancement of thIS project at the next CounCil meeting. The Philadelphia Electric Company, in a rep!acement service, receIved permission to 10staJI approximalely 6770 lineal feet of four-inch high pressure gas main, as follows. Walnut Lane, east side, back of curb between Ogden and Swarthmore Avenues, 997 feet HIllborn Avenue, under paving, 325 feet. Ogden Avenue, between Walnut and Cedu J..,anes, under paving, 703 fe;:t. Elm Avenue, beh\een Walnut Lane and Chester Road, under paving, 1074 feet. Maple Avenue, under paving, 433 feet . College Avenue, between Chester Road and Princeton Avenue, back of curb, 1200 feet College Avenue, east of Princeton Ave nue, under pavlDg, 200 feet College Avenue, remaInder to SwarthÂmore Avenue, back of curb, 530 feet Harvard Avenue, west of Chester Road, under pal ing, 1308 feet The estimated number of square yards of street pavmg whlch win be dISturbed WIll be approxImately 900 'quare yards Mr McCloskey, representing the PhtlaÂ( Continued on Page 6) DR. REUTER SPEAKS ON RACE PREJUDICE Prejudice Against Negroes on the Wane Is the Opinion of UniÂversity of Iowa Professor That prejudice agamst Jews in thc UDltcd States IS increaSing markedly while that directed agamst the American Ncgro is obVIOusly on the \\ ane, IS the opiDlon of Dr E. B Reuter, of the Umverslty of Iowa, as expressed 10 a lecture dehvcred before the InstItute of Race RelatIons Wcdne&lay ntght &II feel that dunng the next tcn years we WIll ha,e a decided lDcrease in prejudice again"t the Jews1 \\ hIle the tense feehng agatnst the Negro will go steadily downÂward," Dr Reuter Said He added, howÂever, that he has no hope for any soluhon of the race problem In the hmes of the present generation ThIS he thought ImÂpOSSIble because of the high fechng which people have agamst mtermarriage and other inter-raCial actIvlhes The SCIentIst pointed out that "there IS nothmg to be said either for or agamst mtermarriagc, except that people do not )ct condone It In either race, that makes it an impractIcal approach" Dr Reuter would not offer Intermarnage as a solutIOn to the problem and said that he does not "offer any solution except a steady, con tinued study of the SItuation so that those who WIll come after us will have more matenal UPOJ) WhICh to base their actions than we have at prescnt" Dr. C. S Johnson, dIrector of the InstiÂtute, is scheduled to be the speaker at the Friday evcrung lecture, which will be held in the Fnends' Meeting House on the Swarthmore College campus at 8 15 At the lecture next Wednesday evening Dr John Henog, of Yale, will speak on uTJlf~ Nature of African Music." ~. s\\ d .. II ,,)"L lULLI.U E s~rthmore Oollege Library, Svm.rthmnre. L I 1\ I: .\ R Y SWARTHMORE, PA., JULY 13, 1934 P. M. C. Appoints Borough Boy.1 Penns}lvama MIlItary CoJlege has an-I[ nounced the following local appointments in tbe Corps of Cadets, to take elreet sep-I tember 25, 1934 To be Sergeant-Cadet John W Bo"ers I To be Color Sergeant-Cadet Sergeant [I Leonard D Frescoln To be Chief Musician-Cadet Sergeant I Robert G Ford, Jr I HEALTH CAMP AT I THORNTON OPENED! William Gittins, Jack Peirsol and Arthur Cheyney are CounselÂlors at Boys' Camp WIth the opening of the Delawarel County ChIldren's Camp at Thornton Monday, sixty boys from all parts of thel county begIn two \\eeks of wholesome camp life Walter I. Clarke WALTER I. CLARKE DIES SUDDENLY These sixty little fellows have been seÂlected as the r.lDst ncedy by county rehef agenoes who apportioned the number among the various sections of the county accordlDg to the number of cases listed with relief agencies in their most recent report Twenty-seven Cbester boys left Prominent Author, Editor and for the camp today, twenty-two were Director of Publicity for Pre .... taken from tbe eastern part of the county, byterian Church in U. S. A. four from the Matn Line, and seven from the vICImty of Media I Walter IrvlDg Clarke dIed at his home, Two weeks of good wholesome food the comer of Swarthmore Avenue and WhICh means lots of mIlk, and planned Cedar Lane, Sw~rthmore, Thursday, July exercise will work wonders WIth these boys 5, of acute ddallon of the heart, mduced \\ho have known only the barest sub- by the ~xtreme heat. sistence and the dangerous acthities which As Dnector of PubliCity ?f the General sweltering streets afford. Assembly of the Presbytenan Church In John E. Barkle John E Darkle, general manager of the Lester Works of the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, died sudÂdenly on Wednesday at his home, 214 Elm Avenue. Mr Barkle was fifty-two years old and bad been a reSIdent of SwarthÂmorc for the past two years Mr Barkle had been associated with the Westinghouse Company for more than thIrty years and was transferred to Lester five years ago from Pittsburgh He IS surÂVived by hiS \\tie, Maud, one son, John E Barkle, Jr, and two daughters, Mrs R P Maehl, of Pittsburgh, and MISS Edith Barkle Mr Barkle \\as a Mason, a member of the Penn AthletIc Club and Arontm1Ok Country Club Funeral serVIces \nll be held today in OrbIsonia, HuntIngdon County Mr Barkle was 10 charge of the clec trIfication of the ChIcago, Milwaukee and St Paul RaIlroad. He was very well known as a sportsman and hunter and Widely known In electrical circles. , Town Team Defeated The town baseball team was defeated by Leipervdle on Tuesday evening by a score of 7 to 4. Tbe team played the Lennis DIne last night and a game with "EI Rancho" is scheduled for next TuesÂday. • APPOINTED COMPENÂSATION REFEREE Mrs. Winifred Nolman Prince, of Guernsey Road, to Succeed T. Duncan Just Sleep and sunshine will figure protnl- the USA, Mr Clarke had recently reÂnently In thiS health camp located In a turned from the Annual Asser.nbly of the rural section of Delaware County and 400 Ch~rch at CJeveland, OhIO, greatly feet above sea level. fatigued by se.veral weeks of exact10g Camp facilities are Ideal and consist of dulles and deCided to take a vacatton Mrs WmIfred Notman Pnnce, of Guern-a large mess hall built in a deanng 10 the tbro~gh the month of July, restmg quietly sey Road, has been appointed by Governor woods, a large playground and campfire at hIS ~ew home, to whIch he had moved Pmchot as workmen's compensatIon referee circle also In a deanng, and ImmedIately from h~ former residence at 600 Harvard for Eastern Pennsylvama in front of the nine bJg pyramId tents, a Avenue.ln. Ma>: Never content, however, She replaces T Duncan Just, MontgomÂlarge pond roped off into sections for l to remain macbve, he bUSIed hImself work- ery County independent leader, dismissed .,wlli1illei and non-S1\'1mmer5. 109 In hIS garden and was thus engaged, when charged with soliohng State etn~ The daily schedule as announced by full 01 boyish gonG hUlllor anti appatentry ployes for funds for Governor Pmchot's A. J. Himmelsbach, of Drexel Hill, camp In the best of SPirits wh~n o~ercome. Senatorial campaign director, includes regular hours for play, Mr. Clarke was born 10 Pittsfield, Mas- Mrs Pnnce IS the first woman named ample rest before and after meals, dally sachusetts,. December 30, 1868, the son of compensation referee She has obtalDed a swimming instruction, and a campfire en- Thomas RIChard and ClarISSa Ellen ~Jark leave of absence from her posltton as pres tertamment with mornmg caU at 7 A M Clarke After an early apprenhceshlp In Ident of the Pennsylvania League of and taps ai 9.30 P. M ' the newspaper field. he became successively Women Voters AssIsting Mr Himmelsbach are eIght I a member of the edItorIal staff of the In 1911 she received her bachelor's de-young men wbo volunteered as counsellors: I New Y~rk World, editor of the Omaha gree from SmIth College and fivc years RIchard Seltz of Lansdowne George Hoff- Bee, ChIcago ChrOnicle, PllIladelplua Pub- later an LL B degree from New York man and WlII'Iam Mecouch ~f Media' Wil- lie Ledger, Boston lIerald and Boston University. ham Stevens and Luther ilimmelsba~h, of Amenean, and lor the past sixteen years Mrs Prince Will assume her dutIes next Upper Darby as well as \Vdham Glttms he was Director of PublICity of the Pres- Monday In the State office in the Keystone Jack Pelrsol ~nd Arthur Cheyney all of byterl3n Church of the USA He was Buildmg, Broad, near Race Street, PhtJaÂSwarthmore. 'also a. member .of the NatIo~al Religious delphia Mrs Prmce, who IS an attorney, First aId equipment m preparation for PublICity CounCil (mterdenommatIonal), a has not practiced la\\ since she left New almost any emergency has been donated to co?tnbutor to magazlOes and penodlcals,! York State Mrs Prmce is also a mem the camp, and the camp nurse, Mrs Elmsc editor of Rel,£,otlS and Pllbl,edy Manuals, ber of the board of directors of the Pub- Ashton, wiU always be on h~nd of the General Assembly News and the hc CharitIes Association When the boys now in camp have fin PresbyterIan Press As a hobby, he col- • l!hed their fortnight of recreatIon, ilxty lected unusual books and. was I?ost re- STRATOSPHERE little girls wIll be glVen two weeks 10 camp cently gather~ng together IDtercstmg volÂunder the gUIdance of a number of young urnes descriptIve of Old England Penna. $2.50 PER YEAR LAST BARRIER TO GYM REMOVED Ground to Be Broken SoonÂTuition for Non-Resident Pupils Reduced -. The actmg solicitor of the School Board, Clarence G. Meyers, recClved the appro\ al of Phihp Dewey, secretary of the Depart. ment of Internal Affairs, for increasmg the bonded indebtedness of the SwarthÂmore School Dlstllct to the amount of $70,000 Mr M} ers reported receipt of thiS approval on July 9 This follows the appro\'al of the Court of Quarter SessIOns ID Mcd13 last n eek E A Wright ComÂpany are engraving the bonds and they will be delivered and settlement made next \~ednesday by E H RoU1Os Company, high bIdder for the bond lSSue J. Howard Taylor, representative of TIlden, ReglSter & Pepper, archItects for the new gymnasium cafeteria wing, was present at the meeting He reported that an approvals have been made and conÂtracts ready for sIgnatures except those for S. FaIth & Co, plumbmg contractors. Se\eral of these contracts were Signed yesÂterday and today and It is expected to have them duly executetl by the board early next week. The tuitIon charges [or non-resident pupds were reduced fot all pupIls except those in the seventh and eIghth grades. The Department of PublIc Instructton allow the tuitton charges to be made in accordance With certain (osts per mdividual instruction. The board considered these figures and after some discusslOn reduced the kindergarten tUItion from $100 to $85, grades one to six tUition from $115 to $105, grades seven and eight, the same tuition as last year, $125, and grades nine tQ t\\elve, inclUSIve, trom $160 to $155 In an enroJJment report by Frank R. Morey, the average 1933-34 enrollment In the HIgh School was 425 and In the grades 430 The annual cafeteria report, presented by ?tlrs Lueders, showed a defiCit of $900. Increa:dng tbe prire of food was disca.S!ed, but no deciSion was made Mrs Elizabeth A. Lueders, secretary of the board, presented the annual finanCIal report for 193-34 It has been checked by the auditors and a copy sent to Harrisburg BIlls from Sweeney & Clyde for fire IDsurance poltcles and the bonds for the secretary and treasurer to the amount of $579.60 were aJlowed Albert S Garrett, representing the board of directors of the Swarthmore National (Continued on Page 6) INTERESTING PROGRAM AT INN People of Borough to Find SuffiÂcient Enjoyable EntertainÂment at Home women counsellors Mr Clarke moved from hiS former home FLIGHT READY In thIS way over a pcnod of eight weeks m Mount Airy to Swarthmore about three That there is no necd for Swartbmoreans 240 children of the county wdl be gIVen )ears ag~ and became IdentIfied With thi: to look elsewhere for entertainment this an outtng-two weeks of real hfe Two Presbyterian Church, where he was elected Captain A. W. Stevens and Major I n:eek-end 15 shown by the intercsting pro hundred and forty fraIl httle bodies wIll a ~uhng Elder at the church session last Willjam F Kepner Await gram of events planned for the commg be strengthened, and all win have received APHnl A .: W th \\ eek at the Strath HaHn Inn Friends two weeks' instructIon m the rudiments of e IS survived by MIldred \Vltham USPICIOUS ea er of the Inn throughout the vtllage are sanitary livmg and wholesome playing Clarke, hiS Wife, and by Bruce AddIson, At Rapid City, South Dakota, the cordially I,:vited to avaIl themselves of the • Rosemary, Rog(:r Wmthrop, Fremont Fair- weather man's favorable Signal has been opportunIties offered The entertamment W. I. L. Fete, July 21 field and IrIS awaited for the largest free baUoon r IS under the superVISIOn of T Ross Fink,. The funeral scr ... ices, at his late home, (CJ.r;:;'Clt)., 3,000,000 c:.lblc feet, three tunes formerly associated WIth Mr Schelhley and \Vldespread mtcrest has been aroused In were conducted by Dr Tuttle With Dr, that of any other free balloon ever made) there IS no charge of obligatIon for atÂLansdowne, Swarthmore and vicinity by William Chalmers Covert, Modcrator of of all time to start on Its epochal flight tend10g these affairs the plans of the Pennsylvarua Branch of the General Assembly, and by Dr Louis mto the stratosphere On Saturday, July 14, there \\ III be the Women's International League iilr a Seymour Mudge, former Moderator and ThIS IS one of the balloons outfitted b) movies at 9 P M The picture, "Four la\\n rete to be held July 21 at "The prescnt Stated Clerk of the General As- the Bartol FoundatJOn, here, WIth speCial Thousand Miles Through Southern EngÂBnars," 504 South Lansdowne Avenue, sembly of the Presbyterian Church in the apparatus for the studY10g of the cosmic land, Belgium and France," is a new sdent Lansdowne. USA In addition to the lesson, Dr ray, and the eqUipment for studymg more film made for the French LIne, Inc, Steam- Mrs Lucy BIddie Le\\lS, a former Na- Covert read the hymn, "God the Father," than a score of scientIfic subjects IS the ship Travel Agents. As tbls day IS Bastille honal President, and Mrs Emdy Cooper wntten by Dr Hugh T Kerr, a warm most mtncate and complete ever a .'.; scm- Day, the nahonal French hohday, It 15 Johnson, State PreSident, arc actIve 10 pro personal fnend of Mr Clarke It was his! bled for such an expedition parhcularly appropnate for showing such mohng the fete. Members of the arrange- favorite and he had been singing it fre-I The goal whIch has been set by WII-I a lovely travel picture of France ment committee, who are headmg branches quently Stnce hIS return from the recent ham F Kepner, pilot, and Captain A \V On Sunday, July IS, thele will be a of the \\ork, are Mrs Edward A Jenkins, General Assembly I Stevens, soenhfic observer. IS an alhtude I concert held under the auspices of the CurÂMr .. J V S BIShop and MISS Edlth Dur The pallbearcrs "ere The Rev Thomas of fifteen miles, one never before reached tis Institute of MUSIC, at 8.30 P. M Mr. nell, of Swarthmore, Mrs Barclay White, C Pea~, Jr, HIstorian of the General! by man I Eugene Loewenthal, baritone recently apÂMrs C C Roberts, Mrs \VJJham Hicko:, of :\<:scmbl~, Ruhng Eidcrs Henry Barrac-I As soon after July 9 that favorablc peared as the solOist 10 the '''Nmth SymÂLan .. do\\ne, and Mrs Bo)d Trc"cott, of [IOUgh and Clarencc Scott Pedrick, of the! wcather condillons prevail the part)' expect phony" of Bcetho\en With the Phdade1phla Drexel HIll Mr ~hester Roberts, of Gcneral Assembly, Dr Da\ .. d McCahan, I to start Orchestra, under the direchon of Leopold Swarthmore, IS finanCial secretary. Dr E Fullerton Cook, Dr E A WhIt-I The craft \\as christened "The Explorer" Stoko~skl He has also been engaged to From 3 untIl 10 PM, ?uests may en~o) ney and Mr Charles Joseph Youmans, on July 9 by Mrs. Tom Berry, wife of SlOg many of the principal roles at the wandenng about the spacIous Jawn, taking Ruling Elders of the Swarthmore Presby- the Governor of South Dakota. Robin Hood Dell Summer concerts this a dIP m the pool, pla~l?g a .game of shuf- tenan Church Llqutd aIr was used in the ceremony, year. Mr Harry Grier wIll be the pianist. fleboard, or t~ymg t~elr sktll at archery Inter:ment was in the famdy plot 1D although a bottle of champagne had been . These pr?grams wIll be found not only B.ndge enthUSIasts wdl .have tables p~o- Westmmster C~metery . brought from Denver for the OCC3Slon Im!»ensely mteres!ing, but also very beneÂVlded f?r them an~ chIldren may enJoy "God of our hfe, thr?ugh aU the clrchng I The balloon is stationed at Moonlight floal, due to their educational properties appropnate entertamment years, We trust 10 Thee; Valley Camp ncar Rapid City and every • Those who know Mr Wilhelm Hubben In all the past, through all our hopes precaution h~s been taken to' avoid mlS- Borough Hall Struck by Lightning " .. II l\ant to hear what he has to say on and fears, Thy hand we see. fortunes which have occurred on other the subject, "Is Europe DeclIning or Being With each new day, when mornmg lifts stratosphere Hights. Rebuilt?" the veil, Only the finest matenals have been used A cafeteria supper " .. n be served, after \Ve own Thy mercies, Lord, which never m both the airtight metal gondola and the which guests may enJoy dancing or other fail" I enormous gas bag which it is hoped will diversions of thClr choice -Kerr. carry two men to a new altItude record In the sharp electncal storm last ThursÂday about 6 PM, a bolt of lightning struck tbe cupola of Borough lIali. Not a great deal of ~amage was done, though a number of shmgles were dislodged and roof flashings sprung. •
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INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE 6 Results of July Fourth Events «( III I r I g ]) thc be t filler :\Jr Holmt rCCllHd I I IH ktt and III HI the Inll k( I hlln"" I lied \\ Hit l kt" :\Ir 101d)..:1 t I J!- milO .. , Ikl 'Ir IUtI J f \l proHd hi lutlllrto re un u Intul Ihllt!, I I (' IIn .. tH" b, \\Hlllm Ih ~\\tn (ntt t \\fllth In JU lite t( 'Ir f. \ I,., H I (nh f Ir \\ I I n II n}(n IlIh He fll b 11 h: 01 \\ Ildrm I h If it III :\It lJ r( tIl' Un \HI" Iud :\Ir \\ If H \ U IlIpO ul tit I l ht I It 1m In n1l:'\ull Itr rll' III \\huh' U hl\C 1\\1 It l tl n \\ plfxr lIul I \01 IIp uff It nlr n I thl fnnl m Illk It III tnll' tIl m Iront t\jltn It I \\ \\ rk I ul l XlIlln1! a Ih {; nIL t 'II Br \Hr rtl 1\ d I \\ IlIlt i 11m I ill k f , I Ir IlI1 I Ikl md "r (3t c: Irdm I Ike Ih I Ir It: 1 I III C Ihe '" \ Irtl nit Fe Btl • Hall WinS TenniS Tourney \ Kood 900 ft( t of \ lout 10 cr J,:nl the \\ ttt.r turntd (n tillm md \\tTl.: n .• 11\ tln-ndltd Ib mdoncd thtlr 0\\ n nOlzle lOci till \\Jnlltt h I It md 10 cr and the cro\\d lit' \\lIImn ..... t 1m t n h \\ II mu 5, 111\ lit StuJ.:dm In rdl H rn Hun ml H IUg:tr Chf md D 1\C Rum C\ Ihc lu~r \\trl' J tck .. on frc tuln III kim/! \\(ud I'luhmh \bcr UtllI\ JIIll IlTrllJ tilt! (('(nlrd Never too Hot for Baseball lilt Snlrthm n Illhlli IlUll 111'td tht R(;d\\ I' \ «I 1'1111 Iddplul III till lilt: I{ttrn tn \ J!-Intl rf(md lurmd (lut I( I I II f It the \I Itor I" ([I, (f to I Shadiest Spot for QUOits IIIl qu It t of lIel d Water Sports a New Feature J) 1\ I Ie tilt, r tf Hh rIB b Il til H 7 III th Itt rnl ( :1 \\11( fJ 1m Ir (unt\ I t h til Itlrcnd I n the I mk 1 (nt' \1 r II k I k thl: It Ihe Sttlth II Hn Ii t )(110 h.lnt III I Jl rt m lOd (I: tic til I tilt I (luI lUurt IS\\,rthm re I Irlh J,!rlm liutUrlll1 I Idm rtlh. \\!Idl \\ hr I rl 11 IIll til \\tr J,! 1\ K 111 (/ I 1 I mel tim I t H til III I It II lrr 'hllu \\ 11 III( In It \ III t(ld th I [I 11111 till tnl 1m 11\ l tm "\ n I f) r th Hr ur \\tll It r Ihr h 10 II t fth 11 I d 1.1 11 t \p Irl Th nll:>'C I I uhlt In till (lIIll I t Klnt Ie r tl ~ rmel II hl r l(' \\He r(' I" nllX( I I ut 0 d J I I t ul ()n Iltrlll th It lu I ( lilt: III III In lup I r '1IIl11 nd 'Ir II r ,11\1Il II elnl fmil romd In thc (hlrl!: Ihiltrt Brt\Hr II1Ilti III rill I I I tl lin 11\ I I t tl "tnt} 1((-I{0 I , " IHI) 1 Ir hO\\ mill un 1-1111 dll lilt! ~I k r n (I 1\ ddt III I I I r In d I IUlt I I III n I I Itt 1 I Irktr h\ del HIlt (r '" dlll tle I Bin ( It 1\ I (I I Ill! \\ I Br \ 11 c1lettll dllt tll '1(( 10 I" ,It I IUIt RI , II It t (I H r Irn r \\ \ IIr J\\ J " I n Kent dllt II d (Irl "'I: nd R und-(Itnl Hili H It I ddt It I I dt It Itul \\ I I r 1 I \\ \ Brt In du I 111((1 tr m r~ mil Itl Kent Iklt t d "'tn I nil If" lllel~ tld Bm I Klent It tte I Rho I Firemen Battle Each Other \Il( r I 1 I t rl ( I firln ln (Ith \\Jth I lull ,I I I I J IItr p Idol I I , t\ (Xtttlll,... Ilkc nn\e n t) upd the lotr II til Ir III h Ir m thc pole \11 a:-( \\Lre ptrll Illed t (ompcil' a).!: lIn<;t lldl otl r lIId tht n\\d (n th Imk (hlrclllill "lUll I ((Uille II rO\\n III \\lre toppled mto the Crum b) t\\O nI III I \ \\ tlllr S nf( rd nd I II IJ III lun 1m II" I Ifl lip undn all eh II It n (r tntl" t n thc conte t lht.! tul rltt.! \\ I nul <;() "uccc" ful but I Ihut t J{\l h tr 1 I n Ih IIllZld (tIft t nl\\ntlrlZ nmn r up 1\ r 111m lull II n to Olll hi w<l I hc I ) tm I t I 11111 red Ht It \\ (nl: (I 11 n \ I h lui ml II I ,It Iltlllll hut \\ I I I u:n om 1(' III (I I III I, () h m creek • Manor Theatre \1111 :\hlrn ( I I \ In It n \\ Illch tUll I I (' tt r lh( rc It III le (11llle nnn Ittl n I Ih n 1Il lUll I Ill\ee! t n u(;\\ thl ,II I qUI!t n hln d 1 r h JIJ 'I \1 Bl(;n tht t Ir mil \\!th 1 \ 1\ I \ TIl t fl.: \ nl Ih mnr tru" rt tla n 7.7.1 thllr r Llllt \1 lr - :ipray fOI" Japanese Beetles Repealed DefoliatIOn \\1.11 Injure and K,II Tree A. W. Collins Phone Swa 1272 :\It I" Ih In tOO vOO \\len I ell til rm pr timlH n 0000 PI( til (11 tltc ntn II ::\lonth \\ ere "pent h) thc "t lr In rtln It mhrltr (11\1 "I(U Ihclr (111\ m 01 mmUnllllltln \\lIh 11ll' ( ll!Cit \\ I in I, ilIrpl tne It I Ittlc I 11 n 1 Imc till In,..., III I CII ture (I :\Inl In CltUO::: \\lrt III 11 \\ 111111 I ullm dUrin Ii Z(n tlr 01 \1111 , tl n \llh II C mm III Iml nl -... --:-::- n l' lh rI III STRENGTH FOR THE CHILDREN Sound bones and teeth. V,gorous bodies Penncrest's mIlk helps you rear them to HEALTH It's a wonde-ful full.creamed food ORDER AN EXTRA QUART A DAY. p[~~(I<!~!III~~~~S THE SWARTHMOREAN JULY 6, 1934 Clmarrun oul tlrcIn/! I I Ircdlh~ (r a (001 tu n pomt thcnce ex J:r«s f'le t I) m nuh"5 firty 81'('ond" ",('St ('11:1., tt I dlllJ.: ~(uthl 1I1""r Jly (II nIne nl right rHt. fXO~ to II rOlllt at the ('orner or Lot N) anglO'; Iu \.1.111 Y VII"" road flrt').oCIJ:llt ani 3, ar I th('I(" e~telldlllll: "hll$.'! thp Kill' r <; ." t\\ nt) r ur hur I .... IthK ((C" It 11 lot n tI "'II.ot No 35 SQuth sixty dc-s.:reoJ tI rty t romanttc .. ton \\hlch run" throuJ,!h thc I rtl\ ~t~rh 1<11 or VIII) VI w roud nrOr('" mlhuh'1'l ani hHnty s((old!t "{'tit om liu 811 tlitn ( nJo I: the slime lIoulh tim d~rt'i.'1'I In'1l rt..'et (100, to the 1~ln e or ll\ mUll! I h )« pll\ pn t nttnJ,!: Btu\ f( r Ihe flr"l I (Ourtftl mil ut('S rorty lIeconds \\('IIt one hUll ~ I: Um( 10 0110\ HIp. I II0Hf lin I HI I (Ill' nnl t;1.'\(nl) ('llo!;ht hUldnoJtlK lot 51 Stuutl.' on Ihe mrtlm ~'~"Y "~I (('I.'I Iu I I lilt Ihl.'l CI.' I ortl \\ 'tih~nnlb 011 III( r h "' \\ II IJ HHn In the not Ible Cl t IPIl( Ir nr (III" I.' (' r\lllK I t h ( rl)~ II t ",0 II d0 lShOll H(r (I(I (rotmurl h(uonrdt)r:( '(t)h e8 1 rd(' ('t( \r\lI~ fen llla{'t nt I , I co ( Irn II () L \\ I I 1"1 Iru r lOlly (( I thl.' rt (II tfln (' (r" , I , I'h r I'l\ I" 1\ )( n I d (( ok (1"1) ('I/.:ht ani tlllrt) IX In I Indtlu, f t t ;) S(' {'II In rcc A (>('1 mUlsur(d nor II CI I j h fi I slxly l~r('eS thirty I , n I ut('!J hH'nty 1;( .J ulrl r\\1n Gl'orJ!c J Stom J( eph t rzit m rhol IUlIII m I Iince r 1('11 (lid!'! ( st UhllK \he 151111 1<1 Ie of OH'rhll ron I S Iuldkrilit Klthl'rJlll 1)( Mille Plllh" 1Il1/.: (rom thl.' lolnt or tangcnt or n c rdc forn (oollu I rtnk ]'u_I" II""" II \\ ,III, ,II I h IIIg lh. C'orntr (( 0 I.'rhdl road nnd lIavlr .. .. f('gll II O/.: at a J omt on t e ,orth f r' roa I (" ntRllllng In front or Ll"(';t hh lJa\ IU lJuranlf .. r tOU X Bu hm In J I" north a8h\urdb ulollg the salll northwf.'St('rly I 'lin In Ro In and IIlnn \rmelta The III I. r (htrhlll r ad S('\CIIl:J; fhc fl..'i!t nn J {'xten ling or thai "idth III I('ngth or dCI II Iitture \\ t dlfuh:d 1 \ ) I(k (0",\ 1\ 1I0rlh .... (.",h ur lIy bl'hU'i.1I paralJd hn"8 at right I Igles 10 O\{'rhdJ ron lone hu dr(' I a I flrl)li\('('C't , ~11!-1tI1 f< S \I }< S HI rrfr OfT (,' (I rt Uou M hi I (lin:! Ifur II Tul) I II I u) I I kiM }< t r Stll Il"l JIIII r J I" n I r" nn I r I II II \U\ I- \ \tt r No SG ~I h Il.'rn 1 II :-:; Of :\I~HI [l ND \tlor !Uri Irn H N III I r me ts Vo('ant J.:ro J SI II IS tI (.' J r( I erty or Willmm J 0 Brier. murt~n~ r an I \\ IIIi 1m I III rl real 0\\ n r II n I M no $1 ... 00 (10 01 ~ISTI- D 2D Attor ('y I Hlrl }< l'laS No 1148 ~lar h ] (.'rnl 1~31 ImprO\cml.'ots cons lit or h,o HI I 0 (' hnlf t r~ stUI'" :u I .. htnlo!;l~ houljc Ifo:-:3' r(ct t, 0 lin I (nl.' I 'If story stucco an I slunj.!'le ad Jrtl( n 9:\;"1 ((.'ct one story rrame nd ht 0 I"xl r~t I r I fr lit ~ II a thl.' 1 rOI crty o( 01 Aml.'hn A II \\Ir Amcha A C fT I 'Irl.' of rl'ai 0 0 r IInrry CI fTm mortJ,: J,:OI'S Ilnrry ColTlII J, nn' J, GI-ott( I' BU rr I- H Allor ey NAfllAN I Il-CJIIN ~h rlIT An, ERTISEl\IE~T TI (' S nrthmorc Board or 8 hool D re tOts \ II r('('(.'l\e buJs for coal nnd (ud 011 up to 00 J 1\1 B 8 T TuC'sday July 10 1931 at tl I.' CoU('j.!'e A\(' 1IC' 81.'11001 51 ('(' "(.'ntlon8 n ny Ie s('('urc I (rom tf Sl'hooJ DI~trrct OfTu:(' 'II Hoar I r('sl'r\(oS the r ght to r(')l.'ct any t r nil lids ELIZABF rn A LUEDERS Secretnry THE JAPANESE BEETLE IS HERE Beetle Traps Beetle Bait Beetle Sprays Suplee's Store South Chester Road Swarthmore 105 Ask for Your Votes Why Do People Usually Take a Demonstration Before Buying a Car? Performance and Rldmg QualIties Are the Two Mam Features Rldmg QualIties We Have m thePL YMOUTH Equal to Our Competitors Perfm mance-The PLYMOUTH Is Far Supenor to Our CompetItors TRY A PLYMOUTH Before Buying Any Car HANNUM & WAllE 1_- SOUTH CHESTER ROAD and YALE AVENUE Swarthmore 1250 0:> '(.1] t hmo J , I J + 11"1 l' VOL. VI, No. 28 SWARTHMORE, PA, JULY 13, 1934 $250 PER YEAR COUNCIL CONSIDERS P.I'~~ ~: ,~,P:~::~:, B(o~~~:~"BO:s j, "" I ~~~~ ~ ",~:r,~I,:, " ,f 1111 I LAST BARRIER TO BY -PASS PROGRESS ~:~;:~C~ol:I'~' :'~I~~',:~~ I,,: ': 'k~'I:f;::I;'~~,~ I,,~ ,I"\(\\n ~;" I",'n~:e ~\:n::':~:' u d,,:r'l:~:: GYM REMOVED ---- ltmher 7~ IQq II nh (11 \\uln dl\ It III h IIIl 1-1 11m ___ _ Over a Mile of Gas Mains to Be To be Scr).!:t: mt-C uld Juhn \\ Bo\\('f \HnllL :\lr II Irklt to Be Broken Sooo- Replaced In Borough-Work lobe <':olur SUCl mt-( IlItt ScrJ.,tt tnt II md TUillon for Non~Resldent t o B egln a t 0 nce I I leIO"n tnI,l,, D( I,,I" rfl 'wIIi'n ' I' ",-c "lei C I III rl I( r til 1'1 I h\ ) \ l lr PupIls Reduced ... \.-., .Jl:r,...l III :\1 I" B Irklc h II lu n I I)(llltd \\ Ith __ . _ fl"old B (olpmm lPPlmd iJclore Roberl G ford JI" tIl{ \\e 1m 1111 Ih(; Ictlll IhlH r II II Sllltil HI Irl , II, rough Cuullul la t Thur dl\ e\(;mnJ,!: It • -- tlllrh \.c II" till \\ I (. :\hHr rUll' d till II n' I[ ~:,~ :~~:~':I:~~"~:~J ~:~";c~'\; ,~~ ~:".,~! I HEALTH CAMP AT :':: ; I '; I, :,:;,)Ill~: ,',~" I :':'," ':'~:~~~" C{,~',:;' ',I :1\":~:I":,le U) pa"<; \\Iuch ha" Intnc .. tcd rle Itllnt oj' THORNTON OPENED Buklt: Jr 1111 tno dIU hllr II Ind(hlt II (f the S\\ lnh .:")\\ trthmorc for cHnl \( Ir :'I.lllhl 01 lilt h IrJ,!1 lilt! tl IJI trill Ihe Imullnt 01 1111 b\ pi"" "hen cOlllplctcd \\ ould lle II Irklc 'lr :\1, t r n I rlt I rt:nll t of Iround thc lo\\er IIlrt of S\\ Irthmorc tntl 'Ir IIlrkll' \\ I II Ihl f 110\\ the hHrl throuJ,!'h trlfhc from Che ter Runl Wilham Gillins, Jack Pelrsol and Iht Itnn \thl tI \ Irl OUlrlrr St lun n I' lile A,HIJUC Arthur Cheyney are Counsel. ( tmln (J II luntr I tnlH :\1< h( It I \\uk I \ \\nJ!ht (till Before thcre I" tn\ po Ihlht, of I 1\111,.. lors at Boys' Camp hili {(cll\ tIl Orluul1Il Iluntm don Plll\ Irt In rl\ln tile I nl tnllht\ the 1)\ pt"s It mu t hc put on title "t ltc ( tluh 1\\ " lle dcll\end md ttlumnt tlIuk next p1an<; It nllI not be put on thc .. tile \\Ith the IpenllJC (f the Ddl\\lre :\Ir Blrklc \\1 1Il (hlr ... t I the tin \\((Im 11,1\ f II Rulhn (OI11PIl1\ pi III until III I tntl I lcqUlrcd tntl the Counh Cluldrcn C 1I1lJ) It ] III rnton I nIl Ilion (f the Chll I 1 :\111\\ ukl( tn I III h II !tIt r It I" Ihe I (nd I \lC Plnn,,\haml Rulrolo IJ,!rel to mlkc III Mondl' IXt, bo\ from III plrt III the Walter I. Clarke St Pml Rlllmid lie \\ I \en \\lll J JIll\\ tnl 11,lur nlr( (ntlll\C of undt:rpl"'" It ,n"\\ locltlUn :\Io .. t of the cuunt\ bl).nn t\\n \\t:Ck ul \\1 ole tlmel knmn I rt mill n(1 hunhr IJIdll'llell Rt I (U So: Iqltr Irdlltuts lor f( Idcnls alonJ,!' (he path of thc pro"o"ed c Imp hfe 1)\ pas" hl'C ofrcrc.u, to dcdJCI((' the ncce" I lhle c IXt, 1ttll~ {tHo\\ hl\e been "e WALTER I. CLARKE 1\\1 Ich knl)\\ n III t I•~ llflc II Clrd( Ithne l'nlct \ It ,...t\ lIm l' nt tl ltlUdtlInl J!r iftI II tt nf Il il\\l I In j l I I\I\ I IIS I "In land 1 he tru<;tces of the Thump on I leclcd I thc 1110<;t nlee(h 1)\ counh rehef I r own Team Defeated 1111 IppH \ 1I h l\ l Llt n III ute lid t II ] "tatc h t\c not !!:I\cn thclr pcrml<;"lOn for aJ,!'enoc" \\ ho IPJlorlH)I1ed the number DIES SUDDENLY tr I(t re 1(1\ fur "Igll turl (;Xlt! t tllO~e the proposed b\ pa<;5 to j.!0 acrl"" thc Imon,., lhe \trlOU" "cellOn of tic count\ The h\\n bleblll t(;lm \\ (hleltcd IrS Illh So: ( ,Iumltn,.. tcmtrldors e tlte That I" the longest .. tretch of th Icconhng to the number of (I c h"lcd I" Ieipenille (n fu(' tll\ e\enmJ,! b\ I Se,crll I tIl' e «ntrl I "ere "1,.,lled)c propo<;ed route that ha" not bc(,n proml"ed \\Ith rehcf l).!:cnCle:, In theIr mo t rccent Prominent Author, Editor and "((Irc of 7 to 4 fhe leam pllHd the I h:rda\ II1d tt II 1\ n I It I eXI cdled to :\II Ch IlJman reported that Ed\\1II B reJlort T"cnh c\Cn ChI' ter bo)<: left I Duector of PubliCity for Pres~ I I emu mnc II"t mght and l ,.,arnc \\ Ith h IH thl'm duh exrcutl"rl 1 \ llt(' b Iru fcmple of thc Penn"\ h am I R ulroad for the camp toda\ 1\\('nh h\ 0 \\ ere Ch U EI Rancho ." .. chcduled for next Tu(' e uh nt xl \\ le k (ompam s.'ud the rulroad compm\ \\ould liken from the ca"tcrn put 01 the count\ byterlan urch m • S. A. day Thc Imtlon ch Ir,-!l f r lion n Idcnt he \\llImg to con<;truct ... n unclerpl"<; on tour from thc 1\.1 lin I tne and "c\en from \VtltCI" Inll1,., Cllrkc dll'(1 II hiS home • pupil \\tre I"t:ducled Itt III pupl ~XClpt the nc\\ routc md close the ~rade (ro" Ihe \Icmll) o{ .Medll the corner 01 S\\ Irthmorc t\\Cnue j'UnjUv APPOINTED COMPEN- th{"c III the "c\cnth md 1I hth J,!'mdct; In,.. at S\\arthmore ~\c'I1.... T E Hc .. en T\\u \\(;eks or ).!:oorl \\hole nmc food Cedlr I me S\\arthlllor(' Thur"d" Thc Deplrtment of Puhlt Instruclt n hruch chaIrman of the HIJ!h\\ 1\ Com \\Iu(h melD" lot" of milk md plannl'd :'I of Icute driatlOn of tic hClrt Induced I alle\\ the tUItIOn chlrgle to he mille In mlllcc \\111 report pfO~re"" made 111 fur cxcrCl e \\111 \\ork \\(Jnder \\Ith thc"e hO\ .. b\ the cxtremc heat SATION REFEREE Iccordmte \\Ith rertam (( t I r 1IIdl\1dUll thcrm,.., thc ad\ anccment 01 thl<; I rOjcd It \\ ho h 1\ C kno\\ n on" the ban .. t "ub A" Director of Pubhclh of thc Gencral l m<;trur.tlOn The boanl con ulereel the"c the mxt Council ml'etmg "1"ll'I1CC md the dmJ,!'erou5 aclt\llte" \\hlch A ..... embh of the Prc b\tentn Church III ____ II un mil Ilta "orne ,h"cu"lIn reduced fhe Phtladelphll ElectriC Compal1\ m :;\\dtenn,.., o:::trceto::: lfford the U S 0\ :\Ir Clarke hid r{'c(;nth rc Mrs WInifred Notman Prince, of the kll1dcr:-ll"ten tmtl( n lrum $100 to SS::J a I"cplaccment "cnlec recel\l'd pcrml "IOn Sicep and un"hmc \\111 il:-urc ,)roml turncd Irom the '-nnual \<;o:::cmbl) of thc Guernsey Road, to Succeed ! rltlt: on tn IX tUltl( n trom Sib to SIO"I to JDstall al'llroxmmtc" oi 0 lineal f~et nenth 111 thiS he 11th (tmp Joc lted In I Church It Clcvc1 md OhIO grcatl) T. Duncan Just I,...,r III~ c\t.n md u ... ht the "a me hutton of four mch hl!o:h )ll"e"sure J,!'l" mam a" rurll <;cchon 01 Dclm IrC Counh and -100 fatigued b\ eH1"11 ,\eck of e:HclmJ,!' I la t \( If ~P:"l lIul cadet; DInt to follo\\" feet aho\c "ea Ic\cl dutle" md cleCldcd to take I \ I Ihon :\Ir \\Intfrcd :\otman PrmC( 01 (.unn l\Hhe mdu IH lrom ~160 to Sb"l \\ Ilout L me c 1st "Idc baek of curb Camp t ICIII l~" ITe Ideal and con"I<;[ of throug:h the month of I uh rl' .. tmg: clulcth C\ Rn I I h I been lJlJlumted b, GO\ Cflll r In 1Il l nmllme nt f{ I rt In frank R behHcn Ogden tnd S\\arthmorc \\Cnuc .. a Itr).!:c me shill hudt tn I clearmg: III the at hi nc\\ homc to "Inch hc hl(l mO\ed Pmchot Ii; \\ rkmcn compen Ilion relcnl "lorn tIc I\erll~le Ion q enrollment In 9Q7 {cet \\oml .. I IlfJ,!C pl,,).!:round mtl rlmphre from hi" former rcsulenre It 600 HIn:ard lor EI"tl'rn Plnn \h mil Ihe 1111.!h Srhnol \\ I -IJ~ mel In lh( J!:l"lde5 Hdlhorn \\Cnue undcr pa\lnJ,! ~2., Circle al~) In I cJclrlnJ,!' tnd Immedtalch ~\Cnuc III Ma\ ~c\er wntcnt hO\\c\('r Shc rtphce T lJunon Ju I :\1 mt!o:om -I Cr O,...dcn ~"enue bct\\cl'n \\ Iinut md In Iront 01 the Dlnc In ... JlHlmHI tent" I to rt:rnlln InICtl\(' he ht Icd 111m clf \\ork en Counh lI1(hpcnelent Ilacler dl"llll cd I Thc annULI clfdcn3 nil rl I rc~nlcd rle llr Lant: U ltler pa\ m .. :;: ~ {e Ilr e pond roped off mto "ecllon'" for mg; III III J!: u lcn and \\ I tim (;n,.:: l,..,l d \\ hcn ch lr).!:etf \\ Itll :; hCIlIl1),!; St Itle t m I h' :\lr" I uedu ... 1,,)\\ cd I tlcllCit ot S900 Elm \\Cnuc IJCl\\CCn \\ tinul } me Illd l l nlmmcr and non "" Immer" {ull 01 ho) I~h gOO( hUI or III 1 I rarcnti} I plo\ c .. for fund .. {or Go\crnor Pmchot sllncre I In,.., tht.! pr lC ot fond \\ I (h cu .... c{1 Cht: ItT ROld undcr 1)I\m!! 10/.f feet Thc dalh "chcdulc I mnmnced In m thl Lest of "pmts nhen O\l'rcome Senttonl' camllll).!:n Ibut no decl"un \\a made :\Ilplc \\(;Ulle underpa\ln"" .f~~fcet ~) Hlmmclo:::bach (I Drcxel Hdl camp Mr Cllrkcna" h)rnm Pmsficld Mas l\lr Prtnce 1:-. the firt \\oman named :\Ir EIJzabcth' lucd(r" "euelln of ColI(').!:c \,,;cnu bet\\cen Che ter Road Iilrector mclude rC)!:lIllr huur for pll\ "achu~ctt~ Dl'cembcr m 1868 the 5011 of wmptn"ltHm rcleree She hi ollluned I thc baird pre"entel the tnnull In3nna} and Pnnccton henuc lack 01 (urlJ IJQO amplc rle t helenc lOci lit(;1" mCII .. duh Thomas Rlchml and elm a fllen Cllrk leI\( (I btncc lrum tier pO"lll n 1 pre I"C()I"I tor 10 q It ha~ leen chcck('cI bv {Ct t "\\Jmmlll1.! m tructllln tnd , campllre en Clarkc t\ftl'r lIJ C Irh apprcntlce Inp In Hlenl 01 the Pcnn \" tnll I c 11!;ue of I the IUthtor lOll a r II \ ent to Harrr bur,.. Colic e :h enlle cast 01 Prmcetun :\\ cIerI 1I1Olent \\ uh n lrnln,., c III nt I ~ M the nc\\ "P Iper hdd he Lcc Ime "ueec 1\ c1\ \\ omen \ otcr Bill" from S\\ ecnc\ & (h dc fl r tlrc nue u~der Pl\tn:- 700 lelet It 9m P M I member of th~ cdlt(rlal tift of thc In 1911 hc lIlurance IHliclc 101 till 111mb 1 r thc Collel!l' ~\Cnuc rtmnndcr to S\\lfth :\"Itlll:\tr Hlmmelhlch ll"e eight 'co Ivrk lIorld editor (II the Omrlw ).!:ree trum Smith C.llc t ('rrct f\ and tr lUrtl" to thc amount ot more \,,;cnur hlck (I (urh "10 I('{I \U1m,...men\\ho\()lunt~ercdascouncllor Bc Clll('r~(1 (IIr ",clf llutlllpllli Pul liter mIl B d rcc lrum :\e\\ s~ 0(0 \\erc III \\1:1 H In ml \\enue \\ l' t 01 ChI: tcr Rllh ml SCltZ 01 I 111 dl \\ ne Gcor:-c Hufl ile L(,l/~rr Bl sll Il IIfr dtl IIld U Jsl( 11 \Ibert S (,arrtlt r pre {'tltln1! Ihr board under,l\m!! IWK leet mm IIld \\llhlm Mt:couch ()I ;\1t(hl \\11 IIIUYl( III IIld lor the pi t Ixltcn }CU" Irancc '\111 lime h r dUltl ne,,1 01 <hattor (It Ihle ~\\ rthmor ::'\:(11)1)al fhe c tim !tee! number 01 qu Ire ham Slc\en::. tntl Luther l-hmmcll ach of I \\ lo;; lJlrect( r 01 Pubhul\ of the Prc.. :\It nd 1\ In the St It n{llce In tli(' hC\ lonc «( I I ~ I I II I I I I l I) ,In \\cll l" \\llhlm (dllm • of .. treel Pl\tn .... \\ HI J \\1 Ie (I tur t( !lpcr I all 01 b\tenln Church (It thc U S \ lie \\as Ihuld,"!! Hr II n Ir Rice Strtlt Ihllt I - - 1\111 hc tIPf("'" Iteh Q(}() $qtllre Jlck Pelf)1 uul '-rthur (hc\l1n ll) 1m nh r tl Ihe ::'\:tliol1ll Reh!!:ltuslcldlill :\OIr Innn \\ho I" III Ittorm\ INTERESTING Mr McClo lc\ n prc cntm .... lh(; s\\ Irthmorc I ubhnt\ CounCil (mlcrdenomm ltlon II) 1 hi n t pr It IlCci II" lI1(e "he lelt ).;C\\ « I tH I 1 } Igl! 1;) fir 1 lUI eqUlpmcnt III 1 re)llratum f( r contflbut It I) m tl-! zme m I ,cflodlC II \, rk St 1(( :\011" I nme I" I n I mem PROGRAM AT INN ----. -- almo t In\ t:nler,....enn ha~ b cn tl lated to editor of Rcil}!,lOlfS lHul P"blln/\ IltUlUli b r ol the hOlrd 01 (hrectur tl thc Pub S the clm" and the cuni> nurc Mr- lime 01 the Gel/trill "Sf filM, i\t'U~ tnl Ihc he Chlntc" :'t, ... OClltl n DR. REUTER SPEAK \"hhn \\llIlh\l\:'! he nn hmd Jr('~II\/~rllII Pr ~ \~ I hohln he col • __ \\hen Ihe 1(1\5 nol\. In clmp hl\c In lellcd unu uII hOI ko;; and \\ I'" mOl't re ON RACE PREJUDICE 1000hed II t f lorllll hl 01 rccr~ llton il1:l\ ccntl) g lthcrmp; logcthu mterc"hn.., vol STRATOSpUHl ERE httlc ",ut:: \\111 be :-I\en 1\\0 \\('cks m clmp umc dr"Cflllll\e 01 Old En).!:ltnd I People of Borough to FlO': SuffiÂCIent Enjoyable EntertaInÂment at Home Prejud,ce Agamst Negroes on the Wane Is the OpinIOn of UmÂverslty of Iowa Professor undtr thc gUldm c 01 :'l l1umhcr of \oun,.. Mr Clarkc l1ll\ed from In fmmer home FLIGHT READY "( mcn lO In cllor In Mount \In to S\\ Irthmorc Ibout three Th It tlurc I n n( I 1 r S\\ trthlll rl: ns In tIn \\ 1\ o\er a perini olll:-ht wcek" \Clr II.W mel I Cllile Idenhhed \\Ith the to 10 k d "hlrt I r nltr lInm('nt tins '-10 children 01 Ihe counl\ \\111 hc I!l\cn Pn:: ... lntcnan Church \\here Ie" IS clecled Captain A W Stevens and Major \Htk nIl 10::: ht \\n I \ II !ttn m .. J ro to oulml!-t\\() \\eck 01 rCII hfc T\\tJ I Ruhn,... lldcr at thc durch .. co;; IOn list WII F K A ~ram (I Hilt pllUllttl 1 r tIc commg 'Ihll prejudice Je\\ III hundred mel lorl\ Irnl httlc hOlhe \\111 , lam epner wad \\cck It tI e Slrlth II \ linn fnenilo: \prJl A W th Untlcd St ItC 1 mert: I In III Irkl:dh \\ lulc he "Iren thcned lIll III "Ill hl\e rcnnct! He 1 ut\l\ed 11\ "Illdrcd "Ilham USPICIOUS ea ~r tt Ihe Inn IhrHl!luut th \IIIII!~ Irc th \t (hrecle I I,.. un t thc \mulc III :\:e,..rn I (InUIt! 1'\ un Ihl \\ Ilt I Ihc olnnl n 01 Dr H Rl'utu II tltl ll1l\ r 11\ I t\\()\\ccJ.;.::. mlructlOn III thc ruhment ... 01 Cluke III "Ill md 11\ Hmc{ \d(hon \t H.qcl Cll\ S,uth IJlkola till (,lrhlh 1Il\!lldtn I\ultl~m 1\1 tithC" ' 11I13t\ It\ 111._. tnt! \•\ h olc 11m pI 1\ 111,.. RI min Ro rr \\ tnt II roll I r( mont F IIr "I till r III III I 1\ It hie 1:-11 II hi h cn 0ilil rtumlll t fI(;feci 1 h enl 1"1 lInm nl It)\\ I I ("prl' II It lIt 11 d It\ n I W I L Fete, July 21 helme th~ Ii {ltulle (I R h~ \\ult I n HI tnterle t I I III \\ cdn 11\ 111 ht n d \\ III S\\ rl hm )I"e me! 'IClllll \ 11\ I t lei thlt dunn Illl n xt ttn \1' r thle plm til the Ptlln 'h I III I Brlllch 01 \\C \\111 hne I dlecukd Inlre ~ III (>flJwhcc th \\nnlll\ IntefllLl1 nll llel lie J ~Il l ... lInl the Jl\\ \\Inh: thle ttnle lle 1m limn Id to h~ hdd Juh 71 It at!: un t I hl :\:e:-I" \\ til ) 1<: Hhh d 1\\ n Bn Ir O.f S ut h I 1Il do\\ nle \\ nm \\ ud Dr RUllt r II I Hle HI led h \\ '1Il d 1\\ n Cler th It he hint) hOJl{ tor 11l\ ) Iu ti n ',\I r I '" l Buldk 1 t \\ I I lurm r ~ 1 of the rHe J1robhm In th t)ml ot tIi t I lOnl I j n "1,,,1 ,",I ::\Ir Il1uh Co )1'" pfl' tnl J,!'cnullioll 1 hi III thou I I 1111 J hn III St It(; Pr 1flcnt Irl' Idnc III l)fO 110 Ihlt.! hn IU l 01 the In h ttdm \\hl h mnlm .... tht Id(' :\lcml cr (I thl arrm e )leOlle h l\l aJ.,t lin t mtlerm Irr} \ t.! 1Il( I lit I H m(n l ()n ""'II' •~ \\ I", ""'- I" ,,1m!.!: I r mdlt I the \\( rk m :\Ir 1<1\\ Ir I \ J(nkm Ihtn fl III 1d1\lttl J \ S HI IUd:\1I Ilhth nur 1 hc Imtl t II nntc(1 nut th It :\Ir B 1rt I \ \\ lUll n ltJlIn 1) bc ud lllh r I I" Ir mltrlrnlt :-.qltllltPlll \\111 III I link '(t l nl Hc It 1lll'1!1 I rl t thlt It m Impr Idll II \ppro I h Dr \\oull nol offer Inlerm trrll c to the lirobile m and "lUI th It Ofller tn\ nlutuln tXClept a "tcalh con lInued tmh 01 thc ".tuatwn 0 that tho e \\ho \\111 come after u "III hl\c mon m ltcn II upon \\ hleh to h '''C th Ir acltono::: than \\C h:l\c at IJI"c"cnt Dr C S John on dll"cclor 01 thc In II tute I" "chcduled to be the "peaker at the f:nda, c\cnll1!!: Icelufl \\Inrh \\111 hc held 10 thc Fncnds :\Icctmg Hou"c on the S\\ al"thmorc Collc"'c campu at S b At the lecturc ncxt \\ ctlneo:::da\ eHnm~ Dr John Hcrzol! of \alc \\111 "pcak on The ~ature of Mncan MUO:::l( I , 1m lIlC1al t:I ret u\ 10 P:\I 11( I ml\ en) l'\ \\ mdlnn,... Iho\lt thc JliCltlU II\\n tlkll1 I dll) III thle po I ph\ 111_ I ,.,31llC o{ .. huf Ileho tnl (r In!hg thcn o:::klll at 3rchen Brul!!c ('nthll II 1 \\ III haH \3hle pro \ Itled It r them and clnldr n mal enlo\ appmprilic l ntC'l"t nnmcnt Tho e \\ho knoll :\Ir \\lIhclm Hubhell \\ til \\ tnt to hrar \\ hat he hao to "a' on the ub)lct I f uropc Dl'dmm or HC1l1,... RebUIlt :; I :\ caieterla <;uppC'r \\ 111 b"' ~r\ ed attC'r I \\ hl("h p:ue t ... mn en)o\ d311CIl1'" or oth"r I dl\er IOn of then cholcc Itch I md hi" l\\ lied I r II t.! I rerc t Irn I) I II n I lind r the III en I 10 )1 1 Ru fmk Thc funrll r e h bt"homl' ( "OCQ"'Qlll It'l time til frmrh C1ltefl\\llh:\lrSthelhl\aIU "ere cnndutlcd b, Dr Tuttle \\ItIl D r thltolll1\ tltrlrnhlll)f1 \el"m3Ik) Ih r no ch If!!l' I I obh 3110n I)r at \\llham Chltruer C o\ert.',I OlI crl I or 0 I )1 II tllne tt tlrt (n II ("!lolhl I IjI hl ten 1m thl t.! lit lIr the Gencral \sembh and 1)\ Dr loUt lilt thl trtllilure On Salllrd" Jul 1-1 tllrt \111 Ie Se\l1lour Mud c lormt:r :\1 dl'rltor lilt! Till I )Ilt (I tlu hili on oulhtltd 1\ III \ It 0 P:\1 II{ II.tUrt four prt (nt St It(;11 (lrrk ut II (' (encr II \ till B ntt I ft undalllln ht rc \\ Ith pc lal rt u an I :\hle TI (ll h S l tl ern (n,.. .. cmhh o{ Ihe PI"C b\lcnan Chul"ch III thc lPP flllI t r till t1l(1\1I1 01 th (I) nnc Imd Bel Illlll lIld fmnre I n(;\\ <;tlent l S \ In Hhhllon to the Ie on Dr rl\ mel thle lqUl1lJllni 1m tu(hm m HC hIm made for the french I In In Sh 1m CO\nt rt:ad thc Inmn Cod thc lathcl" thm l l re of l("nl1lt uhJ(tl Ihe hIp Tra\d \).!:cnto:::. \ tim cl3\ I Ha t!lle \\TIlllen 11\ Dr HUJ,!h T Kerr I \\3rm mo t mtn(ate and (Omllctc e\ r a un DI\ thc natlOnll Frlnch hoh Ia\ It IS pcr I nal trlcnd o{ Mr Clarkc It \\as Ill" hi cI I}r lIrh m e"puhll m parllclliarh appropnatc lor lumm,... <;uch {a\ontc and he had I ecn "mgm!! It tre The goal \\Inch ha bccn et 11\ \\d 3 lo\Cl\ tra\cI (nch re 01 I rmcc quenth "mcc hi rcturn {mOl thc rtnnl him I Kq>llu Jlliot md CI]llam \ \\ On Sunda, Juh b ticrc \\111 he a Gencral A,""embh I Stelen (Jentlltc 01 u\Cr I m Iltllude conccrt held undcr the au plcr (f the Cur fI I Th R, Thom of hftlCU mile t n nt\lr hllorl' rClch d h In tltute of l\lu IC at sOl :\1 "Ir thle F.u)!cne Loc\\t:nthal b3ntone rrccntl\' ap JII )thlt \rtll Jwrela til Iltmlh :'\mlhS\m '" "",1,1 I Itl\ LXI tl Ihn IB th\I1\\llhthtlhtlllcllh, \ unl h Dr J) l\ tI I UUl rt n (n k J)r 1 r lit \\ 1 lim t n d Th( I Xl I I"er n \ III I :\Ir (h rlt J In Juh 9 h\ "Ir fom Bcrn \\11t 01 Ruhn I hit r 01 lhe I re 1 \ the GO\ nn r 01 Soulh Dakot 1 ltrltn Church I Ilqlll(1 3n \\ a u {'d In the ccrcmom Orchl: trl lin la thc dll"edlt 11 01 I COl old. Stoko\\ kl Hc ha~ al"o bcen cnJ,!'a~ed to o:::mg man) ot thc prinCIpal role at the R( I III Hood Dell ummcr conccrt thiS )car l\1r Harr) Gner \\111 he thc Jllam .. t Intermen \la" m thc f3nllh plot 10 tlthou:-h I hottle 01 chamJl3cne hid heen Thc c pro!!ram" \\ III bc found not only \\c"lmm<;ter Cemeten J hroucht Irom Demer for thc ocra"lon ImmC'l1<;ch mtcrc .. tlD!! but aJ 0 \cr} bent." God of our hfc Ihrou,I!:h all thc cll"dm~ I Th halloon I" lah mcd at ).[oonltdlt I Ilcml duc to lhnlr ~Iucahonal Ilroperllc" ,car \\c tru .. t m Thec \ IlIt\ (\mJl ncn Rapul Clh In I ncn Borough Hall Struck b L hln In all thc pa .. t throu h all our hope" 1 prcl' mhon ha'" I ccn taken to l\ nul nil Y Jg Ing and f(;ar Th\ hal1d \\C .. C"C llortunl' \\Inch ha\c occurnd on othcr In the "'harl) clcclnml o:::torm Ja<:t Thur \\Ith carh nc\\ rIa\ \\hen mom!h~ hit" "lra(o"pht:n: tll,...ht d, 3bout 6 P :\[ 3 bolt of h,l!htnmg thc Hil Onh thc lint t malcnal" hal c hecn u .. cd .. truck the cupola oi Rorough Hall Not \\ (' 0\\ n Th\ merC1e lord \\ hlCh ne\Cr I 111 loth thc aJrh"'ht metal gonnola and the I a gre3t deal ot clama!!c \' as done thou!!h lall ('normou" j:a" I a \\ Inch It I hoped" til a number of "hlOp:lc" \\ ere dl"lod!!cd and -Kerr earn t\\ 0 men to a nc\\ altitude rccord J mol fla hm!! prung
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, 2 THE SWARTHMOREAN Sara Baird and Wills Brodhead ~ed return to Swarthmore thoy will be at home which earried them into GermoJlY, E",Âon tbe Baltimore Pike at Riverview Ave· land, France, g"'eden and elsewhere. Due. MD. Brodhead is a graduate of tho Swarthmore High Sc:hool and the West Chester State Teachers' College. Mr. BrodÂhead is also a graduate of the Swarthmore High School and attended business coDege. John, young &on of Mr. and M",. George Schobinger, who has been quite seriously iO with secondary poisoning from polson ivy I i!. much improved although Dol yet Mias Mae Lyud, of Princeton able to do without tbe care of a nune. AVeDue, Leaves on Inte .... tÂing Trip Tomorrow I Miss Mae Lynd, of Princeton Avenue, I will leave tomorrow with a group of At 4.30 o'dock on Saturday, July 7, in friends on a trip to Alaska. The party the Swarthmore Methodist Episcopal will leave Chicago on Sunday and go by Church, Miss Sara Augusta Baird, daughter train to Banff in the Canadbn Rockies, of Mrs. Laura J. Baird, of Oberlin Ave- from whence they will motor to Lake Due, became the bride of George Wills Louise, where they will spend seVc:b.l days. Brodhead, who has been a member of the After stopping at Emerald Lake, they will family of Mr. and Mrs. Louis COlel go directly to Vancouver and embark for Emmons, of Riverview Avenue, since child- Skagway and Taque, after visiting which hood. they will return to Vancouver and go The Rev. Wayne Channell, D.D., pastor from there to Victoria. Seattle, Mt. Rainier of the church, performed the ceremony. I Park, Tacoma and Portland will be the The newly revised marriage ritual of the next ports of call. The travelers will en. Methodist Church was used. joy a trip up the Columbia River after Mr. Sergeant B. Brewster, of SwarthÂmore Avenue, and the Rev. J. Jarden Guentber, of Nortb Chester Road, spent last Friday and Saturday at Avalon, N. J. The Rev. and Mrs. J. Jarden Guenther are cruising this week-end with Dr. and Mrs. Cyrus. Ward Fridy on their yacht, Ella III. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Wilson and famiJy, of Ogden Avenue, returned late on Sunday from a trip to Dennis Port, Cape Cod, where they visited Mrs. Wi]Âson's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and The bride was given in marriage by her Mrs. Walter N. Fogarty, for six days. brother, H. Virgil Baird, of Pittsburgh, and was attended by a matron of honor, Mrs. Walt \Vilkison, of Pittsburgh; a maid a few more stops and will also visit Glacier National Park and Lake MacDonÂald. They will then visit the Chicago Ex. position and then return to their homes. Miss Anne Warren, of Walnut Lane, left yesterday to visit Miss Marjory Roland at Buck HiD, Pa. Miss Warren will return of honor, ~er sis~er, Miss Lotta Baird; Mr. and Mrs. Oscar J. Gilcreest of Har- un Monday. and two bndesmalds, Mrs. Percy C. Bel- d A h . ' fi Id J d M ] h B lfi Id Sh I var venue, ad as th", guests recently e, r., an rs: o. nee.. e Mr. Gilcreest's niece, Miss Marian Dunker- Miss Mary Kistler, of Park Avenue, reÂturned early in the week after visiting her I uncle, Dr. Franklin Flanagan, at Longport. "'ore ~ gown. of an!lque IVory sa~, made ley, and Miss Rena Ma field of Dallas on pnncess hnes With a court tralD, long, Texas y" dose-fitting sleeves, a bateau neck line, . buttoned to the waist in back with butÂtons of S3me material. Her sweeping halo veil and face veil were of white tulle and unadorned. . She wore ivory satin slippers and gloves and carried a spray of orchids and lilies of the valley. Both the matron and the maid of honor and the bridesmaids wore dresses of white organza with· ruffles of sel£ material at the lower edge of the skirt and graduated to the waist at the back j bateau neck line and short ruffled sleeves. Large picture hats of rough white straw with a braid of plaited white organdy, white sandals and white gloves completed their costumes. Mrs. Wilkison and Miss Lotta Baird carÂried Shasta daisies and yellow roses j the bridesmaids' bouquets were of Shasta daisies. Louis Cole Emmons, Jr., was the brideÂ- groom's attendant and Thomas F. Baird, a brother of the bride; J. Newton Pew, of Lapidea. Hills; Charles Diek, of New York City; John Belfield and Percy C. Belfield, Jr., were ush~rs. . The bride's mother wore a lace gown of pale pink, with white slippers and hat, and a corsage of orchids and pink roses. Mrs. Emmons was gowned in brown chiffon, with matching bat and slippers, and wore a corsage of yellow roses. For a traveling dress, the bride wore a brown checked silk crepe ensemble, with hat and shoes to match. As a corsage, the 'orchids from the bridal bouquet were used. Mrs. Francis V. Warren and Miss Anne Warren, of Walnut Lane. visited Mrs. WarÂren's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Stone, at their cottage at Avalon, N. J., over. the week-cnd. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Denworth and daughter, Dorothy, of Elm Avenue, have gone to Stone Harbor, where tbey will spend three weeks at the cottage of Mr. Denworth's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Denworth, of Lans. downe. Mrs. Robert J. Morrison and two chilÂdr~ n, Maria.n and Robert, of Washington, are tbe guests of Mrs. Morrison's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John R. Brownell, of HavÂerford Place. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Fuller and Ada Fuller, of Elm Avenue, left last week for Acidalia, N. Y., where they will spend several weeks, after which they will take a motor trip. Miss Martha C. Huber, of LouisviJle, Kentucky, is visiting her sister, Mrs. E. Morris Fergusson, of Swarthmore Avenue. Mrs. Harold Ogram and children of Riverview Road, returned on Sunday from Rehoboth, Del., where they had been vacaÂtioning for some time. Dr. and Mrs. John ·R. Kline, of RiverÂview Road, returned last week after havÂing spent two weeks at Columbia UniverÂsity. Dr. and Mrs. William Earle Kistler, Mary and John Kistler, left yesterday by motor for Mt. Desert, Maine, where they will spend the next two weeks. I Mrs. George E. Smith and daughter, Mrs.' C. K. Alger, of Flourtown, are spending the summer with Mr. and Mrs. Paul AJger, of Park Avenue. --- Mr. and Mrs. JQhn Lessells, of the Swarthmore Apartments, will sail Wednes. day for a visit with relatives in England and Scotland. Mr. Lessells will return in September. Mrs. LesseUs wiD remain until October. Mrs. N. K. Chamberlin and daughter Patsy, of Detroit, fonnerly of Swarthmore, are spending six weeks with Mrs. ChamberÂlin's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Brill, of FJourtown. Miss Grace Wilson, of Lansdowne, and Miss Hannah Kirk, of Doylestown, both Miss Ella Mae Beagle, of Princeton AvcÂteachers in the Swarthmore Hi~h School nue, had a few friends at her home on left last week for a trip to Seat-tie, 'V3Sh~ Tuesday evening to play mah jong. Miss iligton. They wil) stop at various places I ~eagle's guests wen:: Keta Brower, CalÂen route. VlD Gerner and Lows Dethloff. Miss Keta Brower, of Guernsey Road, was hostess Mr. and Mrs_ Frank R. Morey and sons, to the same group on Sunday. Ferns, palms, Shasta daisies and yellow roses (armed an attractive decoration for the church, with St. John lilies, bridal wreath and white iris on the altar. After the ceremony there was a recepÂtion and dinner at the Strath Haven Inn, attended by fifty-four guests, after which Mr. and Mrs. Brodhead departed on a motor trip to Nova Scotia. Upon their Frederick and David, of Amherst Avenue, are spending several weeks with relatives Mr. and Mrs. Harold V. Baker and in East Orange and on Long Island. Dur-i son, of Ne":, ~ochelle, N. ,Y., en route to ing their stay, Mr. Morey will pursue, Kansas to VlSlt ~r. Baker s parents, spent graduate study at Columbia University. Ilast week-end With Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Fetherolf, of Park Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard. C. Ashton, of' Elm Avenue with their ""'0 sons sail to-! Mr. L. L. Hedgepeth, of Park Avenue, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ morrowan' the "Georgie" of the White ~ !eturned. last Sunday from a vacation spent a~ II Star Line from New York for an extended 1D Flonda and South. Carolina. Mrs. trip abroad. They will visit the larger I Hedgepe~h and ~hildren, Miles and Bet!y cities of the continent before returning in; Jane, will ~emalD for several weeks· m Media Theatre STARTING TODAY FOR ~DAYS 4 Friday. Saturday. Monday, Tuesday CHAS. JANET FARRELL GAYNOR "Change of Heart" e:Lrly September. I South Carolina. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. McCabe, of North Chester Road, returned the latter part of last week from a foreign tour WASHINGTON Theab e Cheater --- Mrs. Martha lilessing, of Kentucky, is spending this week with her nephew, Mr. Peter E. Told and family, of Park Avenue. Mr. Robert P. Green, of North Chester Road, and daughter, Miss Beulah Green, of New York City, are taking a motor trip through New England. Miss Sally Mitchell, of North Chester been doing splendid work in many lines. Tho IJItermediates bave started a thriJling contest with points gained by memory work, briDging new members, "celling in Bible drills, games, etc. Miss James ud Miss lfelen McLain bave been added to the volunteer otal thla week, while Miss Virginia Seal olered her services also. The school offers lots of fUD along with con. structive activities-why DOt enroll your children for the last two weeks? , Attend. Convention JULy 13, 1934 visiting at· Glacier Park, "<IIIIana. M .... Douglas was tho delegate 10000eoentiag th •. local alumni aMOtiation at tho Conveation. , Birth Mr. and Mrs. Horace M. Johnson, of Z33 Dickinson Avenue, are being congrat_ ulated upon the birth of a oon, David Merrill, on Thursday, July 5, in the Ches. ter Hospital. Both mother and SOD are doing nicely. FriencUy Cin:le Meeq Mrs. James Bacon Douglas, President of Bota Iota Chapter of the Alumni Asso- The regular monthly meeting of the elation of the Kappa Kappa Gama Na- Friendly Circle will be held on Thursday tionaI Women's Fraternity, who has been I July 19, at the home of Mrs. Frank Gettz: a~tending the Convention of the Frater- of 217 Dickinson Avenue. This will be the mty at Yellowstone Park, Wyoming, is now last meeting of the summer. THE INGLENEUK 120 PARK AVENUE A new feature of The Ingleneuk this summer will be menus for the children. Not just a haJf portion of the delicious but possibly rather rich clinner served the grown-ups but something very special, very delicate, very interesting, to tempt the capricious little appetites. Did you ever stop to think how different life would be if you did not have to think about marketing and cooking during the lazy summer day. when so many delightful things to do are calling you away from the ice-box and the gaB-range? The ioteresti4g weekly rates at The Ingleneuk make Jt possible for you to do all of these things knowing that at the end of the day a perfect dinner will be ready for you and your family. Breakfast Luncheon Dinner Breakfast. Dinner • Charming Atmosphere HOURS 7:30 to 9:00 A. M. 12:00 noon to 2:00 P. M. 6:00 to 7:30P;·M.· SUNDAY - 9:00 to 10:30 A. M. 1:00 to 4:00 P. M. Interesting People Delicious Food PerFect Collee Student Service The Friendly Tea House in Pennsylvania Swarthmore 69 with James DUDn - Ginger Rogers This picture will not be shown in any other nearby theatre. AI"" Ish!lm Jones and His Orchestra Hal LeRoy Musical Comedy and Saturday, Monday, Tuesday !CARLOFF an" LUGOSI Edgar Anan Poe'. "THE BLACK CAT" Wednesday, Thursday, Friday LORETTA YOUNG CARY GRANT CRlouabd, , iins sNpeewnd iYngo rak . week at the Barbizon ~~::::::::;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;::::::; ---- Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Effing and daugh-ter, Joan, of Lancaster, arrived Wednes- Pop eye the Sailor In "The Man on the Flying Trapeze" Try and See Better Shows H~~OR THEATRE CLeater Pike at Prospect Park Dally Matinee at 2.15 I You Can Arrive a8 Late as 9.15 P. M. and See Complete Show Friday and Saturday, July 13·14 ''Tarzan and His Mate" with JOHNNY WEISSMULLER Monday and Tuesday. July 16·1, LEE TRACY - GLORIA STUART In "1'U Tell the World" Wednesday and Thursday. July 18.19 CLARK GABLE WILUAM POWELL MYRNA LOY In "Manhattan Melodrama" I Comfnal Frf.-Sa. t., July 20-21 BD<G CROSBY "We're Not Dressing" "BORN TO BE BAD" WARNER BROS. WAVERLY Theatre Dre •• t Hill JOAN CRAWFORD' ;n "SADIE McKEE" with Franchot Tone Monday and Tuesday JOE E. BROWN I day evening to be the guests of Mr. and , _M. rs. Ch....a. rles .K urtzhalz, of Park Avenue. Joung .lcrry IS at camp. Mrs. DetIer Brank, of Elm Avenue, enÂtertained on Tuesday evening in honor of Dr. Brank's birthday. Dr. and Mrs. C. S. RossweiIer, of Haver. ford Place, returned last Friday from a visit with relati\'cs in Illinois. • Bible School Progresses Attendance at the Community Bible School has averaged about fifty. \Vhile a number have had to leave with their parents for a week or two of vacation ,, ot he rs coming back have filled in the' vaC3.ncie5. Ref!:i5trations arc still in ordcr, I and new fac~s are appearing every day. "A VERY The Beginners, under splendid leadership, HONORABLE G ha.ve been modelling Bible scenes from clay UY" among other interesting projects-why not with Allee White send your four or five-year-old youngster Wednesday and Thursday to enjoy this creath-e work? The Primary SYLVIA SIDNEY children put on a little dramatization in in assembly this. l.\·eek, while the Juniors have "THIRTY.DAY r PRINCESS" PETER E. TOLD with Cary Gra"t I Special Kiddie.· Matiaee ALL LINES OF INSURANCE Thursday at 2 P. M. INCLUDING UFE ............................ .1 OLD B~ BUD-DD<G SVV. 1833 SUMMER DRIVING Can Be Both Safe and Pleasant, IF-your tires are brakes are good-and your car is runÂning well. We can solve all these problems for you. Let us test your brakes--inspect your car-examine your tires. If you need new tires-then there is only one tire to buy-the finest tire built today- 'Are$to e Racing drivers. whose lives depend on their tires, choose FIRESTONE. The reason is good-they are the toughest safest tires built today. ' See the New "'re.f... High Speed Tlfe Now. Russell's "re.t ••• Service DARTMOUTH AND LAFAYETTE AVES. Phone 440 OFFICIAL •. SERVICE WashlnR--Lobricatina-Tire P.ttel7-B .... ~ SA .ice ._-------- JULY 13, 1934 THE SWARTHMOREAN F"oUDdeci by Robert E. Sbuple. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT SVVARTHMORE, PA. ..... ANN B. SHARPLES Edltor aDd PubH.ber ..... TITUS J. EWIG CeDer" MaD.,u ..... PhoDe Swarthmore 900 Entered as SecODe! Clas. MaUer, J'anuary 24, 1929, at the Poat Office at Swarthmore. Pa •• under the Act of March 3. 1879. FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1934 EFFECT OF THE 1834 LAW ON EDUCATION IN PENNA. Essay Written by Harvey Whitaker, Swarthmore High School, '34 \Vhat phenomenal progress has been made from our early schools to the schools of today? Compare the few lillie octagÂonal schools, where in a four months' term the children were taught a smattering of rcading, writing and arithmetic, with our great school system of today with its many subjects and tcn months' term. After Thaddeus Stevens' great speech kept the 1834 law intact, things were at a 'standstill until 1836, when a law was passed which organized the school system. This law provided for the formation of school districts, the election of school diÂreelors, the' organization of school boards, the levyfug and collecting of school taxes, and a provision for a state superintcndent.. The state superintendent was to be tbe sports, dramatic dubs and manual trainÂjng are considered a definite part of the curriculum. Various special schools have contributed much to education in Pennsylvania. The first farming school was established in the middle of the nineteenth century and is known today as the Pennsylvania State College. The quality of a school system is gen. erally measured by its attendance regulaÂtions and the length of its term. Although Pennsylvania's early schools had only a three months' term, not more than oncÂthird of the pupils aUended regularly. Therefore, in 1895, the first compulsory attendance school Jaw was passed ... xequirÂing all children between eight and eightecn to attend school sixteen weeks. Two years ago the minimum term became ISO days. In closing let us consider thc developÂment of thc school system of Delaware County. The first school was erected jn Chester in 1780. Dr. George Smith, whose granddaughter, Nancy, is being graduated in our class, was one of Delaware County's representatives to Harrisburg who helped pass many important schools laws and was county superintendent for many years. The numb:r of pupils in Delaware County schools has increased from 6,000 in 1866 to 50,000 in 1933. Our school system has grown greatly during thc past one hundred years, and I feel sure it will improve just as greatly in the next century. James N. Rule, our prescnt state superintendent, states: "CoÂoperath- e -effort will bring fun recovery to mark the dawn of the second century of public schools." • An Every-Day Creed head of the school system. His duties were Ethel Stocking Leech, of Swarthmore, re- THE SWARTHMOREAN presid~nl. Prior to that Mr. Hopson was lization of this best-seller had its world advertising manager and assistant secretary I premiere in Rose Valley in 1929. Since uf the C~mmunity Finance Service. He is then it has become a success 00 two conÂnow ch3.U'man of the special advertising tinents. committee of the America A . r f . n. SSOCla I.on ~ On Monday Hedgerow's most popular PelS?nal Finance Corporations, which 15 play dUring the last eleven years Eugene rnak .. ~g a ~urvey ?f personal financc ad- O'Neil's "The Emperor Jones'" will be vertl5lng . With the Idea. ?f building a series produced with Arthur Rich in the title of bulletinS on advertlS~g. for the benefit role of the jungle monarch who rises to of members of the association. great heights, only to fall a prey to his • own ego. Presbyterian Notes Tuesday sees the sol. presentation of Hedgerow's most played 1934 play, Dr. Tuttle preaches at morning worship I Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" whi h has ne~t SU,?day, the. s~bject of his sermon been in the repertory steadiJ; since cJanu_ helDg, In Arabia. Mrs. Cross, the ary. This Elizabethan farce combines sopr.ano su~oist of the church choir, is the poetry and robustuous humor in a delight-solOIst dUlIng July. ful evening. . Because of the absence of Mrs. Ramsey, From sixteenth century England the , .. -ho is summering at the Ramsey cottage, repertory cros.."Cs the Channel and presents Ventnor, the porch meeting of the Woman's one of France's twentieth century classics Association will be held this morning at 10 on Wednesday with Jean Jacques Bernard's o'clock with Mrs. Noyes, Harvard Avenue. "Martinc." This delicate drama of the The meeting of next wcek will be at the modern school is of the French country. home of Mrs. Bishop, 7J6 Han'ard Avc- sidc, rcplete with imaginative poetry and nue. . These meetings, to which all women , meaningful nuances. Francis Torchiana cspecl3lly those spending the summer in enacts the title role, supported by David Swarthmore and newcomers, arc cordially Metcalf and Libby Holman. i~vitcdJ closc at 12 o'clock. The time is On Thursday the humorous Hfe of a glVen to scwing for hospitals or mission I temperamental Spanish opcra singer is preÂ~ eIds, ~nd readings are given from the scnted in Sierra's "Spring in Autumn," mterestmg text-hook, IILand of All Na- which has Miriam Phillips and Harry Shep. tions." p:ud in its Castilian cast. The Sunday School continues through the summer under the dircction of the new gcneral superintcndent, Dr. David McÂCahan. An departments above thc BeÂginners, meet for common worship in the chapel at 10 o'clock, and thcn go to their proper cIas-o:.cs for the study period. The attendance' and interest show that a sumÂmer Sunday School meets a real need. The Hedgerow bas Shaw's "Saint Joan" in preparation to open during the Shaw FesH\'al Week in Rose Valley. "Saint Joan," which will be thc one hundred and sevcnth Hedgerow production, will open on G. B. S!s seventy·eighth birthday, Thursday, July 26, and during the Festival Week from July 23 to July 30, six of his plays will be presented. 3 Advice to Pedestriau Five out of six pedestrians injured in motor accidents are struck before they reacb the middle of the street they are crossing, according to Frank E. Ballan-Âtyne, General 'Manager of the Automobile Club of Philadelphia, which is aDiliated with the American Automobile Association. Basing his statement on studies made by the A. A. A. Safety and Traffic Engineering Department, Mr. Ballantyne declared that these studies clearly indicate that the curb is the danger line. "Apparently," he continued, IItoo many pedestrians fail to look to the left for approaching traffic before stepping into the roadway. In many cases automobiles parked close to the corner prevent oncomÂing cars from being seen until the pedestrian is well out from the curb. One-half of the pedestrians injured arc hit by cars approaching from the left, and about to cnter the intcrsectiOJl. Obviow;ly ri~id enforcement of the rc/!ulation requiring cars to be parkcd a certain distance from the corner will help to reduce pedestrian accidents. "Onc-third of the pedestrians injured in the accidents under study were hit before they reached the middle of the street and by vehicles which have just passed through the intersection. The lowcr number inÂjured in this manner indicates that the bettcr visibility was a factor. It might also be that the person afoot was more cautious because of fear that he might be hit by vehic1es making right or left turns. "The A. A. A. stUdies, however, make it clear that if pedestrians Jook carefully for approaching vehicles, particularly when leaving the curb, many accidents will be avoided." to visit. some of the impoTtont schools in cenlly had this worth-while bit of prose in A REAL OPPORTUNITY the state, to· make speeches, and ,to give the Presbyterian Advance. Entitled "An Media Theatre and receive suggestions from the school Every-Day Crced/J it is one which we aU After eighteen months of separation, to dine well a!,d inexpe~sjvely _ and to enjoy your boards. As the number of schools in- might well adopt. Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell, thc summer evenings at the In .... creased, county and local superintendents AN EVERY-DAY CREED 't t' t '11 b have been appointed to take care of the I believe in the efficacy of s~ap'. sucnrieteend 5i n mFoosx Friolmma'sn l a'cte ste arrenle, asWe,I UChe anrgee- DINNER IN THE TEA ROOM added work. . I believe that work is the best panacea of Heart," which comes to the Media The- SOc Our schools have pro;;ressed, and our for most ills, especially those of the mind, atre today. Heeding the requests of thou- .. Saturdays and Sundays, 75c teachers have become better educated dur- and that fresh air, exercise and sleep are sands of fans to re-team these two screen ~ ing the last one hundred years. In the the best medicines for the body. sweethearts, tbe studio started an intensive S II. H . .~ . early schools children of all ages were I believe in fun and Jaughter, both as search for a story that would be suitable frat . taught only the essentials by poorly pre· a tonic for the blues, and as an otltlet for for their reunion. Kathleen Norris' grcat a v en pared teachers, who secured a "provisional high spirits. modern novel, "Manhattan Love Song," certificate" by knowing the rudiments of I believe in the beauty of flowers, sun- was finany selected out of hundreds of The Inn With Personality the "three R's." By 1840, however, a law sets and mountains; in the music of birds storics as the perfect vehicle. F. M. SCHEIBLEY Management was passed authorizing the school directors and brooks. The screen play adapted from the novel Swarthmore 680 Swarthmore, Pean40 to' examine all' teachers before granting I believe that there is a bright side to is a modern drama of youth's epic struggle -:::====================:::~::~~~~~~::~:; them a certificate. everything, and that we would be more for love and happiness in. the turmoil of r _ About the same time that this law went aware of the good ,about us, were our Manhattan. The film relates a big city's into effect, a professor at Lafayette College hearts more responsive to its touch. grim challenge to four youngsters just out proposed a four-year course for the more I b~l~eve in human kindness. of collcge, two boys and two girls, who, complete trainin-g of teachers. This plan, I beli~ve t~at an ounce of fran~ess and banded to~etl\Ct by tics of loyalty and known as lhl!~":M6dcl·Scboolr!~Sfrin(!d. .. widc: exp1an'J.!IC?~ IS. ,~o!$~,. il. p!,?un.d, 0 re~nt-I-c()mmon. in. ~c.cet;"(,i1:c;. i:.s .PCi':....ts, .a.G"-:'::p! fame and remained Tn active use until ance ana forgIVeness, .and wl.1I often pre- its chaUet1g¢ and' begin their brave fighl 1850. It consisted of a regular curriculum, '':negn.t heartache and bItter lDlS. understand-, to a~~ieve ~UC,cCss'i _rca·.lize their dreams of but was model in equiplQent i\nd workings, I b li . . I.. ~.' I I'f f h h ambition anc\ .poSsiWy fame. providing a study of teacners!,inetnods. ~d_ e eve 10 tt,1e simp e • e 0 t come, _. ~. . ' .-.~ ~_ opportunity for practice teaching. \Vith free from. formality and social convention- Th W' i-- ~'ti:Hed the help of this excellent course, the qual- alit.Â¥- e ~. ..., gerow ity of the teaching rcached a much higher I believe in the hearty handsbake, in Six plays of. fiye different nations will level.' hospitality, comradeship, friendship, love. form the varied playbill next week at the The Edmonds Act of 1921, which pro- -Ethel Stocking Leech. Hedgerow Tb,e~tTe in Rose VaHcy. ~ vides for a minimum salary for teachers, • Tonight marks' the Jast performance this and which includes new regulations gov- Receives New Position month of Lenno;,: Robinson's new farce, erning certification, has been of great im- "Is Life \Vorth Living?" which tells of portance: This legislation has been the Howard G •. Hopson, ?f 417 Han:ard the dire results of visiting repertory on a most outstanding in recent years. Avenue, has rece!l~ly received a~. appomt- simple seacoast town in Ircland. \Vritten Important, in the development of schools ment to the posItion of ~dverbslDg man- by the director of Dublin's Abbey, it was in Pennsylvania, WAS the __ enlarging and a.ger of the Household FI!lanc~ corpora-j added to Hedgerow's repertory on the changing of the cumculum. ~itture. for tlOn. . . _ . eleventh birthday in April. It has been a a moment an early school in which chil- . Mr. Hopson, who 15 a graduat~ of .DICk-~OPUlar addition. dren twelve and thirteen are struggling to lOson Coll~f-has~~.-very ·actlVe-lIl· t~e Christopher Morley's delightful fantasy, spell such useless words as antedeluvian, Pennsylvama ~ssoC13tlOn of. Personal. Fl- "Thunder On the Left," adapted by J can plenipotentiary and corroboration. Such nance. Co;porabons and. ~Iso ID t~e n~t~onal _' erguson Black, will have its only show-teaching of these essentials was called an orgamzatJon, the AmerIcan. Assoclatlon of ing in July on Saturday. The drama-education in early' times. By 1867 there Personal Finance Corporations. He was . . was a demand for a better education, and formerly with :the Philadelphia North so geography and t hist{lJY were added to American and' has his headquarters at 152~ the curriculum. ! .:: Walnut Street, Philadelphia, in the offices An amusing story i~' told by an early of 'Arthur R. Dana, vice-president and superintendent of i Bucks County, ahout director of the Household Finance CorÂthe reason for introducing geography in poralion. bis county. One: day while visiting a Mr. Hopson has been a resident of school, he asked t~e children th.e naIl1-e of Swarthmore for the' past two and a half the county in whi h they lived. No; one years. He is 'a 'memtier; of Trinity Church, knew, nnt;l when e found that only: one Swarthmore, and the Phi n'elta Theta FraÂboy knew that Harrisburg was the cap- ternity, and is finance officer of the Robert ital of Pennsylvania, he decided to intro- Ainsworth Legion Post. _ r ~ •• duce geography. Mr: Hopson came to his new position CHURCH NEWS TRINITY CHURCH Protestant Episcopal Chester Road and College Avenue Opposite the College· Campus Reetor: Rev. J. 3arden Guenther, S. T. M. 11 :00 A. M.-Moming • Prayer and Sennon. The Rev. Thomas A. MerryÂweather will preach. THE SWARTHMORE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. John Ellery Tuttle. Minister In the early nineteen hundreds, art and from the Benjamin Larzelere Company, SUNDAY music became required subjects, and .now printers and publisherS, where -he' was vice- 10 ;OG-Bible School. ;=:;::;;~;;;=::;;:::==::===:::==================~ ill ..; Oo-..- ·M·Roircnhi nTg owWarodr shGipo.d ." Pastor preaches. Friday. lO:OO--Summer Porch Meeting with Mn. Ramsey. 500 North Chester Road. I FOR SALE I Just.. o.utaide. the B orough-over three ac~es with ~ handsome old trees, splendid lawn, garden and spring ·stream. Substantial frame residenc~ ·with ~ix . bedro~.ms and tiled bath on second 800r; wide cenÂter hall with open stairway, bot-viat~r heat, elecÂtricity. ·. Taken under fo~ecl~.ure and will ~8ell p.t : $8,000. An unusual bargain. I I, ~ 1..'" ... 'Yocum & r.Q-w.~ .. S ,Cq., ·I~~.,.&~ :1 , . -..... ;., .. :"'SWARTHMORE ~~ODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH REV. WAYNE CHANNELL. D. D. Pastor 9 ;45 A. M.-Sunday School. 11:00 A. M. and 8:00 P. Y.-Worship and I ' Sermons by the Pastor. Strangers CordiallY In,,·ited FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST. OF SWARTHMORE Pa~k Avenue below_ Harvard Services : 11:00 A.II.-Suhday School. 11:00 A. M.-Sunday Lesaon·Sermon. Wednesday evening :meeting each week. 8 p. m. Reading room open cUlly. ueept SunÂd&)' B and holidan. II :30 tol 12 :80; Church edifice. • .AP_~r'It_w...rdia)lY: _ iDvi~.!o..,attend the'aervÂeea and use -tlie 'readIng Room. THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS . . . SUND~~ i> I'~ Il:to A."I11;;;""')(eetirur for';:~onblp d\; the Jleetlne HoUM.·.o:; , . . \\IEDNESDAY· 9:10 A. I[~ 14/'::" .1' •. II.-,;!C!:phlC and· Ql1.il .... . Ina m Whltt£ei House. DOs Juncheon. . ~.::e eordlalq Invited *! jofa in'_,theee DRUG STORE SERVICE; NO MAilER WHAT YOUR WANTS MAY BE Phone, SWARTHMORE 857 WE WILL DELIVER PROMPTLY MICHAEL'S COLLEGE PHARMACY JOHN E. MICHAEL, Prop. Prescriptions Filled by Registered Pharmacists Only , "-. Thz·nk "IOt ·: .··v·er ·· If you have any dohbt about the 'Value of . -"--'" thrift-just ask any man who has had a Savings Account the past few years, what he woUld have done' without it! .Swartbmore National.Bank '.' .' :' ,~:. , '.r.. f 'and Trust Company • •• _1 Ou1' depoaitor. account ••• 0 insured uP. to $~,900.~O. ~ ,h~ 'F ederat pepoait IDa~r;iJ: Corporatio~. ': :;",::; ~ ;; = •. . .....• :.. ,. . -'.
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4 THE SWARTHMOREAN NEWS NOTES Mrs. Russell H. Kent, of Riverview Road, entertained at a luncheon-bridge on Thursday last in honor of her sister, MrS. A. W. McKay, of Chevy Chase, Md., who was her house guest at the time. Mr. and Mrs. James Hanna, of Vassar AveÂnue, and Mr. and Mrs. Conrad C. Schatte, of Princeton Avenue) who have a summer home there. to Casper Pennock .. aforwald and thente I widening and eommunfeatJna at Ita north .. along said line and in bed of aald Lansdowne WesternDl08t end wU,b an aUe7 wblcb alen ... Avenue, north crabty de.reea nine minute. on two eouree. northeastward to • »oInt. weat one hundred an'll three and two-tentha whleb point :Ls twentY-t!lx teet _Ix inehes feet to the place of beginning. eouthwestward from the &outbwest aide of Park avenue: thenee exwndlnc alona the Containing one hundred and aeventyo.eight southeast side of .. Id driveway south thlrty_ JULy 13, 1934 TOftther with the tree and eommOq V;; rfa'bt. libel'ty and pdvlleee of tbe aforaatd. drive ... ,," .. and lor • _ drIveway and » .... ge., way at aU tJmee hereafter forever iq common with the ownera, teo.ula and oeeuplens of tb other lote of Jrn)und bounding thereon ande Miss Marjory Schumacher, of Haverford entitled to the use thereof. Avenue, will --leave the first part of Dext week for a trip to the Canadian Rockies. Miss Schumacher will be escorted by her mother, Mrs. Hervey Schumacher J and her aunt, Mrs. Ge~rge Paull, of B~.lJJalo, N. Y., on the motor trip to Manchester, where Miss Margaret, SmeUie, . ,of LondoD, will I join her. Mrs. SchumaCher will remain one..tbouundtha of an acre. lalx degrees, ten mlnutel, west HVent7-tlva Improvementa consist of tW<HItory stone ltoe et• apnodi nttb: lrtthYe-nfievee eoxnteen-hdiunn&d'r esdttihlBi aolofb &a' .fo.oI dt bank bulJdi!1g. 81 leet 11 Inches by 41 feet" driveway BOUth nine degrees. tblrty-nlne %oln_ inche.. uta: weet three feet and twelve one-bundredths Sold of a foot to a pOint: thence extending sUIl lUI the property of E. G. Raymond along uld driveway north eighty dE'grel!3. And together with tbe free and eommoq UH. right. liberty aud priviles-e of the aforeÂaald aile)' .. and for a »assaaeway and waterÂWinthrop Mellen, of North Chester coune at aU limea hereafter forevel". Road, and Jim Dryden, of Princeton and Lafayette Avenues, enjoyed a fishing trip at Salem Creek, N. J., last Friday. Young and AnDie Young. mortgqortl and twentY-one minute. west twenty feet to a real ownel'S. point: thence extending aUIi along aald driveÂway nortb nine degrees tblrty-nine minutes Impfo"ernenls consLst of two and one.halt lito". brIck and etucco Btore and apartment Hand Money-$1600.00. 16:x28 feet; one-stol'7 brJck addltloD IbIS ALLEN B. OLMSTED. Attorney. Iea st twenty teet to a POint; thenee extend_ ing atill along uld driveway north fifty-three degrees. fifty minutes west five feet to a point; thence extending north tblrty-slx de-Âgrees. ten minutes eaat sixty-nine feet to the feet. • Sold ae the property of Hugh Ferguson. HOWARO II. LUTZ, Attorney. ~r. and Mrs. Wayne H: RandaD a~d I in Manchester during the two weeks Miss family a!ld Mr. ~nd ~rs., RIchard G. Halgl Schumacher and Miss Smellie are in the and famIly, of RIverView Road, have taken Canadian Rockies, where they will go from a cottage at Avalon, N. ] .• for the month Montreal and will meet them there on the of July. return trip. Mrs. and Miss Schumacher Fieri Facias fil'8t mentlonfil point and place of beginning. No. 121 (Being Lot No. 14.) NATHAN P. PECHIN. June Term. 1984 Sbet'Ift'. Mr. and Mrs. Russell H. Kent and famÂwill then go to Nantucket for two' weeks. ily, of Riverview Road, wiD leave tomorÂrow for Cape May, where they will spend the remainder of the montb. Those from Swarthmore who were presÂent at the launching of the United States Ship Aylwin at the Philadelphia Navy Yard on Wednesday were: Mrs. Helen Dryden, Miss Rosalie Dryden, Mr. H. A. Peirsol, Jr., and James Murray Dryden. Mr. and Mrs. Walt Wilkison, of PittsÂburgh, and Mr. Victor Selover, of New York City, were the week-e~d guests of Mrs. Laura J. Baird and her daughter, Miss Lotta Baird, of Oberlin Avellue. All that certain Jot or piece ot ground litÂuate in the Townsbip of UpJ)f'r Darby. In tbe County of. Delaware and State of Pennllyl. vania. and described according to a plan and IIUrvey thereof made for Chain and JackÂson by Damon arid FOIIter. Civil Engineers. Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, under date of January 6, 1928, as folloW8. to wit: Beglunlng at a point the intersection of the center line of Bur~nt Road (88 Jaid out fifty feet wide) and tbe, center line of Manine avenue (as laid out forty feet wide). thence extending along tbe center line of MarvIne avenue north sixty-six degrees six minutes one second eB8t the distance of seventy_two and I Mr. E. C. Walton and Miss Jean Walton, of Riverview Road, Dr. Samuel C. Palmer, of Ogden Avenue, and Edward Noyes, of Harvard Avenue, spent last week-end at Cape May. Mrs. Ludlow Claydon, of Detroit, enter- • taiDed Mrs. Russell H. Kent, of Riverview Manor Theatre Road, and Mrs. A. \V. McKay, of Chevy I Chase, Md., at bridge and tea on Saturday I Three stars - Clark Gable, \Villiam at the Strath Haven Inn. PoweH and Myrna Loy-united for the first time, come to the Manor Theatre Mr. and Mrs. T. E .. l!essenbruch and ~ starting Wednesday in Metro-GoldwynÂdaughter, Elizabeth, VISIted at Beach I Mayer's new production, "Manhattan Haven last week-end. I Melodrama." Laid in New York, the picture presents S~rley Shaw, daughter of Mr. ~nd Mrs., Gable as a big-shot gambler and racketeer, Da\'ld T. Shaw, of Walnut Lane, IS sp.end-i powerful and dramatic figure of the dty's ing the summer at Camp Aloha, FanJee,; smart night life. Vermont. I Powell is the district atto~e~ wh~, M r. and M rs. AI exan d er J . All en, a f ', rearedd withc hG able haen d alwayf s' thhISl fnend, t1 5 P arn.s h R oad h ave b een VI.S 1' tm' g fn'e nd sI' I' nforce. .to oose tween 8•J esfs nhe's s 0I Eas t Au rora,' N• Y • fb JS publIdc trust and prosecution 0 IS pa or mur er. Mr. and Mrs. David T. Shaw, of Walnut I Miss Loy is the' woman in both their Lane, spent the week-end in Cuba, N. Y.,! lives, loved by both. where they were the guests of Mrs. George: Col. W. S. Van Dyke, who gave the B. Woodle. While there Mr. and Mrs., screen "Eskimo," "Trader Hom" and other Shaw ~ted their former home East outstanding successes, dieeded. The pro- Aurora NY; ducer was David O. Se~ick, who made , • • I "Dinner at Eight," "Little Women," Sydney Gittens of North Chester Road, "Kong," IIDancing Lady" and other hits. is enjoying a mo~tb's stay at Camp Ocean The supporting cast includes Leo sixty_two one-hundreths of a foot to • point: thence on a line extending north twenty-three I degrees 'tifty-three minutes fiftY-nine aeconda I west crossing Dermond avenue (as laid out torty teet wide). the dietance of one thousand I three hundred eighty-two feet and fifty_two one-hUndredths of B foot to the center line oC Township Line road (as laid out fifty' feet wIde): thence extending along the center of 1 raid Township Line road nortb lixty-aeven degrees forty-five minutes Beven seconds east crossing Anderson avenue (ae laid out fifty feet Wide) the distance of two hundred fifty feet and eleven one-hundredths of a foot to a point; thence on a line _ extending south twenty_three degrees fifty-three minutes fiftyÂnine seconds east recrOssing said Dermond avenue and Maninc aVenue. the distance of one thollAnd seven hUndred one feet and twenty_five one-hundredths. of a foot to n point in the center line of said Burmont road i thence extending along the center line of 88id Burmont road north aixty_nine degrees eightÂeen minules three seconds west recrossing said Anderson avenue (if extended) four hundred tWenty-one feet and fifteen one-hundredt~ of a foot to a point; thenee .tilJ RJong th~ eenter Une of Durmont road north sixty degrEes flft)'Âone minutes three lleeonds weat tbirty-seven feet and eighty_three one-hundl'edtlui of a foot to the firet mentioned point and place of beÂgiunlng. Containing nine acres and one thOUsand four hundred eighty-six: ten-thousandths of an aere. Under and subject to certain express conÂditiona and restriC.tloDII. No fmprovemenu-vacant around. Waves, Avalon, N. J. Carrillo, Nat Pendleton, George Sidney, I Isabel JeweU, Muriel Evans, Thomas JackÂThe r~guIar meeting of t~e Do-dos will i son, ClaudeUe Kaye, Frank Conroy, Noel KeSoonld . ..a.s · tbe.' -property of Cathrlne S. Mc-be held next Thursday evenlDg, July 19. Madison, Micky Rooney and Jimmy But- Mr. and Mrs. John Comog and son, le~~M h tta MId " s n on'g John Comog, Jr., Ie ft yesterday for Pocono . I at na bnA teho ramC a wa d a ted to-Manorwh erethe ywl'1 1 stayunll'1 the end jmha sory by 0r1 ' ur H aesPa r, Ga apt t d fit e screen y Iver . . arre an o Ju y. Joseph L. Mankiewicz. It was photo- Mr. and -Mrs. Ludlow Claydon and graphed by James Wong Howe, A.~.C., daughter, Priscilla, of Detroit, are guests who handled the camera on uViva Villa ". at tbe Strath Haven Inn tbis week. The and other hit pictures. Claydono formerly lived in Wallingford. • Washington Theatre Hand lIoney.o....11600.00. HAROLD.L E_RVlN. Attorney. Fieri FacI8a No. 181 June 'l'erm. 1884 All that ce..taln lot or pieee' of ground with 'he bulldfna..-.",_ ....... __ • erected situate in tho' Borough of Sw8t'thmOh!. County of Delaware and State of P~nnsJJÂvania. beginnlilg at' a point on the ,soothwest side of Park avenue at: the distance of one I hundred eighty-ftve feet and ninety--eight oneÂhundredths of a foot southeastward from the corner formed by the intersection of the aonth_ weat side of Park avenue (it extended) with Although they have both been in Holly- the southeast aide· of Oheetet' road (Il ex-wood for many years 'and have portrayed tended): thenc~ ex.tendlng along the .southÂwest side of Park avenue south flfty.three simi1ar types of rotes on -the screen many degrees. fifty mlnutee east thirty feet. sb: . h K I II B I L . inches to a point.· el'O&Blng the head of .. eer- JUDGE THE NEW FORD V-8 BY HIGH PRICED CAR STANDARDS Ford V-s Tudor Sedan A 'beautiful, roomy aec:laD, complete in every detail. Clear-vi.ion veDtilatin •• Iota in front door and rear-quarter windOWA. There ia .... 0 • De Luxe Tudor Sedan at .Us:hdy hiaher co.t. . THE FORD V-B STANDARD TUDOR, f.o.b. Dell'oit ........... $&20 Ford performance can he compared with nothine leu than v-a performance. ADd there i. not another V -8 aellia. for Ie .. thaD $2500. But Ford motorin. enjoyment i. DOt limited to Ford v-a performÂance. The New Ford v-a Rive. you amart hody .tyles of permanent beauty. It pvea you the comfort of d.eepl,. IIpbolt.tereci aeab and trazu",erae .prine.. And. the _ely of aU-.teel bodiea and a aolid front axle. JudII<' the New Ford V-B only by hillh-priced car .b.adards. Then look at Ford V-8 price.. They atart at $505, f.o.b. DetroiL Authorized Ford Finance Plana of the Universal Cre'dit Company offer a convenient method of payment EDMONDSTEINMAN·- Sal" BALTIMORE PIKE at PROVIDENCE ROAD Mrs. A. W. McKay and two ~ons, Curtis and James, of Chevy Chase, Md., left on Sunday after having been the guests of Mrs.- McKay'S brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Russell H. Kent, of RiverÂview Road, for a wee~ or so. Mr. and Mrs. William T. Gailey, of Chester, will occupy the home of Miss Mae Lynd, on Princeton Avenue, during the time Miss Lynd is absent on her trip to times, nelt er ar 0 nor e a UgOSl, lain twelve feet wide driveway which, extends those two "terror" stars, had ever met ~~n~~.e~V~"~.~I~r.o~U~"~"~'~O~U~'h~w~ .. before they were introduced on the set ward and not'thwestward f~rotmw ~Pa~rka rav~ednu~e,. i ~n~o~rt~h~"'~'~_~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!;!~~~~! of uThe Black Cat" at Universal stUdio. It was just one of those strange coinÂcidences Hollywood is noted for and both PHONE, MEDIA 1800 Alaska. Mrs. Francis V. Warren, Mrs. Edward Bassett, Mrs. Hervey Schumacher and Mrs. Thomas Jackson were hostesses 1ast Fri~ day at a luncheon-bridge at the home of Mrs. Warren, on Walnut Lane. The guest of honor was Mrs. Leonard Ashton, who will soon leave for a trip ahroad. men had a hearty chuckle over it when they shook hands for the first time. It was an interesting meeting, with many people around them expecting to see them glare at each other, or something equally as sinister, considering that Karloff was the original creator of "Frankenstein" and Lugosi the lurid uvampire" of "Dracula.': What actuaUy happened was that both men bowed courteously and smiled broadly over a warm handclasp. Dr. and Mrs. Franklin S. Gillespie, of Rutgers Avenue, left Saturday morning.to spend a week at George's Bay, Canada. It is of course the first time these two screen demons have ever appeared together in the same picture, liThe Black Cat,': starting Saturday at the Washington TheÂatre. Mrs. Anna M. Hodgson and daughter, Margaret, of Amherst Avenue, have been at Shancaken, N. Y., for the past week or so. 1=========== Mr. and Mrs. John R. Hanna, of UniÂversity and CorneH A venues, spent the week-end in Ocean City as the guests of SHERIFF SALES Sheriff Office, Court House. Media. Penna. THE JAPANESE BEETLE IS HERE Beetle Traps Beetle Bait ".., Beetle Sprays Suplee~sStore South Chater Road Swarthmore 105· Ask for Your Votes . , Thu.raday, July 19. 1934 1.00 o'clock P. M. Eastern Standard Time Conditione: $250.00 Cash or certified cheek at time of sale (unless otherwisf;' utated in advertfsement), balanee in ten da:ys. Other eonditlons on day of sa1e. Fieri Faeias No. 133 June Term. 1984 All that certain lot 01" ground with the stone stores, buildings and formet' post office building thereon erected. situate in the Borough of Lansdowne. County of De1aware and Slate of Penfl8ylvania, and described aecordlna to a IUrvey made December 6. 1897. by Thomas G. Janvier. C. E. Beginning at an iron pin in the bed of Lansdowne Ave. nue and in the line of land of which this was former]Y a- part. granted to Casper Pennock by Michael Gibbons. et ux, by deed dated NO\'cmber 16. 1881, and recorded In the oltice Cor the t'eeordiqg of deeds in and for the County' of. DeJaware., PeIlJUl:rlvanla, in Deed Book D. No.. 6. page 493. aald iron Pin being a.t the inte~tion of said line with the middle hne ex.tendlDg westwa1'd)y of JladiMm A.enue as 1.ld out thirty feet wide. thence by the middle ot 'Madflon A~ue. nDl'tb. &e'tenty_ teven d~ twelve minute. -eat eventyÂfive and four-tenths feet to • awne a corner of . ground of the PblladelphIa. Baltlmol"e and / Wasbington Railroad Company. formerly the Philadelphia. BaltimOI"e bd Central Railroad CompaD7. thence by .. id .-round IOUth eiaht decrees eleven minutes east one hundred and three and efght.-tenib teet to • atone a ¢Ohler of said In'Ound and thence by other PQQnd of aald ndlrNd eampany eouth &eVenty--aeven dea1"eM thlrtsro8e\'en minutes west e-enlJ'-ftve and -thlrty_fotlr one-hundredths feet to an iron pin in the bed of Lan.dcnme A't'enue afo)ft8ald and In line of land granted I MODERN GAS HOME-MAKERS Automatic Gall' Water Heater ..c ... Makes hot ,vater always avllilable_ It's a real comÂfort and a labor-saver to have a gas water heater especially. during Slimmer days when there are so many extra demands for hot water_ Let us install one for you on 30 days free trial. Cb.oice 01 PeniielJ. R_J. 01' Hot.oDe 0nJ.:v $.2 Do_ 24 Months to Pay $5 9'l!h Never Before Boaglat a Qualitv G •• R.age L~e TAi.r Beautiful finisb, including marbleized panels and top. Equipped with oven therÂmostat, Rutt-o-mauc top ligbter, large utensil compartment, brOiler, roomy oven, and.new,MUIld Quicktop burnell!. Price sligbdy more 00 budget plan. $2 Do_.BIldZ Yeus to Pal '-I .All .OMr SlIbIw6vt" Storts,· Dr SH Â¥otIr D~ PHILADELPHIA ELECI'RICCOMPANY JULY 13, 1934 THE SWARTHMOREAN I ~~~CI~.·A~ SS~JFh·l~LEa"snt ~B-a-m~' --~TO- -------~·--~;=~~~;=~~~------------_____. _ ______ ~ __ ~ _ ~ j The r ..... rt of unpaid tax .. as of July --------..,..-----...:~ I er I' 1, 1934, given by Mrs. Lueder.!, is as fol- PERSONAL lows: 1933, $18,743.13; 1932, $10,369.43; BOARD-Atlantic City, Ventnor. N. 3 .• Frlendl:y HoUle. larwe rooms, plenty to eat. ODe prlce-flt1.00 each. ft6.00 double. .lira. W ... Sll)'der. North Newford Avenue. Gym Removed 1931, $2,(169.72; 1930, $411l.58; 1929, $75.63. (Continued trom Page 1) • p£RSONAL-Store Your ear while J'ou're aWay in a modem. fire-proof 8' ..... e. Only 12.00 • month. Swartbmore Auto Sen-ice. e.u 8w. 214-. Bank and Trust Company, was present to tell the school directo.. that the bank wished to hold the entire deposit of the FOR SALE FOR SALE-Swartbmo~ LOt. 7&x..Z06 feet. on improved .tNet near Collea:e A.enue SchooL Beautifully wooded with oab. l'Ouna and old. Bordered by .tream. WUl eacriflce f01" eaeh. Albert N. Garrett, phone Sw. 489. funds for the gymnasium. In a letter from the bank they .tated Iheir wIllingneso to take the proceeds of the authorized bond issue and the proceeds from the expected grant from the government. This deposit will he protected by the Swarthmore NaÂtional Bank and Trust Company, .... depositÂing with the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, government bonds, state bonds or county, city or other municipal_ ity bonds, as specifically set forth in the school code, to the amount of 120% of the value of the deposit by the school disÂtrict. The members of the board decided to make the deposit in tbe Swarthmore Bank and authorized the officers of the Board to execute and deliver the depository agreement with the Swarthmore National Bank and Trust Company. FOR SALE-Dlnlua room and breakfut room fU1"nlture. bookO(!De. library table. Pbone, Sw. 219--R. MAKE YOUR CHOICE NOW DEMAND IS GROWING $15--4 B. Ro, Hot-WaW:r H".t. CeDtral. $65--3 B. R.. Good LoeaUDD, earase. $a_rick, 3 B. R. ,50 2nd Floor Apt .• S am •. , £lee. Ref •• Car. WM. S. BITTLE Notary Public Real £alate FOR SALE Seven-room atone and frame dwelling, good location, large loL SmaIl c:aab paymenL $6000. The board authorized the payment of $7,443.75 to redeem five Series E bonds and to pay the interest on other Series E E. C_ WALTON bonds due September I. FOR RENT STORE - 22,,44, 411 D_o." The treasurer, R. C. Disque, was gi\'en authority to borrow an amount not to exceed $12,000 for current expenses, if it Avenue; a1.0 S-room apartment OTer were needed before taxes were paid. the alorea lJids for coal and fuel oil were opened. FRED A_ WERNER, Inc_ Madi.oa 3000 FURNITURE RESTORING Mr. Cook and Mr. Davis, of Girard-Miller and Girard-Ralll5dell, were present at the opening of the bids. 'Sead for Harley-You'D Not Be Sorry' The concerns who submitted bids for fuel oil were Petroleum Heat and Power Company, Girard-Ramsdell, Wilson Coal and Supply Company, cre';'-LeViiCCik~ia:~:~:d I pany, Atlantic Refining Company, [ Ice and Fuel Company. These .hids, when opened, were all for the 58me amount, .045c per gallon current price now, curÂrent price at delivery not to exceed .054c per gallon. It was decided to let the contract to Wilson Coal and Supply ComÂpany, since Marvel Wilson was a local dealer. UPHOLSTERING Hoae.t UDder the Coyer Call Swarthmore 1441 Sho_27 Maia St., Morto", Pa. Eve. CaD Sw_ IB39-J, Rutied!l ... Pa_ ANNA SCHALLES SUP COVERS DRAPERIES Coal bids were received from Wilson Coal and Supply Company, Howard B. Green, Girard-Miller Coal Company and Mason-Heflin Coal Company. The bid of Girard-Miller Coal Company at $5.90 per ton was accepted. This was for white ash buckwheat Glen-Alden coal. PHONE SW_ 1225 MUHLENBERG AVE., RUTLEDGE MRS_ A. J_ QUINBY & SON JOSEPH £. QUINBY ERNEST G. SNODGRASS. ASS'T. nJN~rBECTQ~ _ BELL PHONE 4 _IA. PA. MANY SWARTHMOREANS HAVE BROUGHT THEIR OLD TIRES TO US AND HAD NEW TREADS PUT ·ON THEM. BRING YOURS IN NOWÂYOU WILL SAVE MORE THAN REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE SWAkTH_ MORE NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY OF SWARTHMORE. IN THE STATE OF _ PE:NNSYLVANIA, AT THE -cl.oa~ -BUSINESS, 9:N .RJN~ .10" 1984. A.SSETS Loans and dlscount. ...... _ ...... $ 846.692.29 Overdrafta ............•......•.. 601.78 United States Government tiecu_ rilles :........................ 248.766..26 Other bonda. sleeks and aeenrities 288.6S7.52 Banking houee .•...... '107,823.00 HALF THE PRICE OF A NEW TIRE. :&.1 estate owned other than bank_ RUSSELL'S SERVICE Ing house ..................... '1.82' .• , Furniture and fixtures.. 8.524.00 116.847 ~~*Q~QG~.Q ~OO~G~Ga~a~CO~C~a~QC~C~Ga~ .•M. Q*G•, ;IO~ IRC eassehr vIen wvitahu1 .lF_t edaenrda l bRaelasnercvees Bwaintkh 170"" .729.2•1• - PLUMBING, o::a~~~ ~h~ks ··~~d··~ih~~··~~h ... 213. HEATING & ROOFING ;'ems ......................... 971.3. Redemption fund with U. S. Treas- AS IT SHOULD BE DONE urer and due from U. S. Treas- L W JACKSON urer .......•........•......... 2.500.00 • • Otber au... .................... <,389.28 SWARTHMORE 74-J ~O'GaGOOOGOOOOCOOOOOOGDO Total ···· .................... $1.5iO.560.9~ YE Village Window Cleaner A. HAUGER, Prop. Swa. 19 • • • • • • LIABILITIES Demand deposits. except '0. S. Gov_ ernment deposite, public funds and deposits of other banks .... $ 586.167.21 Time deposits. except postal sav_ Inn, public. funds and dep09its of other- banks................ 464.684.36 Public fonw" oC States, counties, school dietrich. or othet' subdivi_ sions or municipalities......... 58,065.48 United Slates Government and postal savlnRS dep09its......... 29.500.00 Deposits of other banks. including certified and cashiers' checks out_ sbl.nding ..•......... ,......... 17.101.49 Total of above five items: (a) Secured by pledge of loans and/or investments .... $132.665.48 (b) Not secured b:y pledge of loalls and/or inv~t_ ments ......... 1,017.953.06 (e) Total Dep03its.$1.150,51S.54 Trinity Church Nota The Rev. Thomas A. Meryweather wiD preach at the mOrning service on Sunday. At a special meeting of the Convocation of Chester, held at the Church Farm School on Tuesday, Trinity Church was represented by the Rev. J. Jarden Guenther and by Mr. George W. Cuy, Mr. A. B. Chapin and Mrs. Louis W. King. MONTHS -uF EXIRA MILES! BLOW", OUT PROTECTION FREE! TO HOLIDAY MARBRS I~ there isn'ta telephone In your summer cottage, there's a public teleÂphone nearby. As soon as you arrive call up the horne folks and give them its number. Arrange to be notified if they should call. Cirelliating notes outstanding.... 50,000.00 Capital account: Common stock. 12S0 shares, par $100 per sbare ............. $125,000.00 Surplus ............. 150.000.00 Undivided Profit3- net ..............._ ..:s..•: . :.:.o..:•'=. . .:s~s. ...:~~~ 310.042.38 Total. including Capital Ac-count ....................... $1.510.560.92 MEMORANDUM Loane and In't'eatmenb Pledged to SUare Llahllitles United Slates Government securities $168.000.00 Other bonds, stocks and securities.. 20,000.00 Total Pledged (excluding redls-counts) ...................... $IS8.000.00 ONCE you could only hope you wouldn't have a blow-out. Now the new Safety SUvertoWD giv ... you b/ow-out PTotecli01lfree-and months of extra mUes in the bargain I The amazÂing Lile-Saver Golden Ply, now built into every SUvertown Tire, resists terÂrific heat, the great, unseen cause of blow:.outs and early tire fallure. Tires last months longer, and rear of blowÂouts is banished I Yet this Safety Silvertown dOesn't cost a penny more than other standard tiresl Come in and see this IiflHlaving tire. Then you are carefree. If you're needed suddenly, you will be within easy reach_ TIl. BeD 'I'eI.p .... . C ... p~~,~~_ ... . Pledged: Against circulating not~ out~ standinst ........... _ ......... $ 1)0,000.00 Against United States Government and postal s8\-ings deposits.... 32.000.00 Against public Cunds of Stat~, counties. school dllltricts. or ot.ber subdivisio!lS or mUnicipal. ftles ••••.•... _. ••. .•• • • • ••• •.• 46.000.00 Against deposits of trust depart- Ments ....................•... 10,000.00 Against other deposits........... 50,000.00 Total Pledged .............. $188.000.00 State of Penna .. County of Delaware. 59: I. E.· S. Sproat, Cashiet' of tbe abo-.:-e-named bank, do solemnly swear that the abo\'e stateÂment is true to the best of my knowledge and beliet. E. S. SPROAT. Cashier. Subseribed and sworn to before me this 9th day of Ju1)-. 1934. WILLIAM S. BITTLE. (Sea)) Nolary Public~ My commi!l.Sion expires March 2. 1937. Correct-Attest: E. B. TEMPLE. J. F. MURRAY, W. E. KISTLER. Dil'e'Ctors. 'SobJoct to _wIthooit __ to any gen .. "=tal tax or IhJ. Goodrx(3l1", S@l~ Silverlown WITH UfE.SAVIa 8CILDEII PLY Swarthmore Auto Service Cbester Road near Players' Club Swartrllnore 214-- . ON WARM SUMMER DAYS WIT" lSi TEllS ICED IISiXJ Teas are young tender le"aves. pic/ced in tbe season when they are richest in flavor_ That is why. no matter how mucb they are chilled, IISaJ Teas always retain their delightful color and refresbing goodÂness. Orange India or Pekoe CeyRon 13c: 29~r;lb 25c Rich full flavor and exquisite bouquet-popular for loed Ten" 65c II: Un 57c 100% India j )rdn~e Pekoe. Very economical-makes mort? tea. ./11 16c California Bartlett 2 large 27 \..'1 Pears cans C \ . r 8c ,/lid iFqqI Macaroni or Spaghetti 23c Hester Price KuKumber Rings Extra large Stuffed Olives 3 pkgo 20c pt Jar 190 pi lar 29c 17c Sour and Dill Pickles 2 I qt lara 29c Imported Olive OiJ% ptcan 23c; ptean43c; q'can 83c (PI:;; Butter P';M 15c) .R....e. a--l .-H- o.m. . e. -Uk.. e Flavar and Fres"ness ';'." ... ~~:~ a-reaci "',-_..... Ioof ~., .. _. Bread Supreme • I .. go I •• f 9c t!..s(IJ Sliced Rye. Bread, .' b;g loaf .ge" Plain or with seeds. (v;;;ec;~;" ""2 N. B. C. Graham Crackers 240. bots N. B. C_ Brown Edge Wafers 15c (lSCO Pure Grape Juice 2 pI bOl. 25c Ib pk·17c Ib 29c Q~~~~!"~r '!::!~r (BiSqUiCk \ 3 20.., 25 1"90 31 .m.1I 19c 1/ pkg. C pkg C pIg , l..l.S .- a.. .J..,. ..Q........u _a-l-if-y .M. .-e--a-'.s ... ..a......t.-. ..R --easona....b. le Prices ,. ---. .- Fel!n'o l-X-L Small Smoked Hams \y'l!~!~_ Cl' 5h::':1.I;; hult. Leaf,. sug-ar cured, selected trom young porkers. cured anti smoked to a golden urown: 'l'ry one ot these home dressed smoked Hams. J Fresh KTIied Ste~ing Chickens -'.:..,;--~- -_._--. 'u tb 23_c II ,SOCt meatcd, [cnde!·. delicious. From 3* lbs to 6 lbs eaCh., Theuringer Sausage } Lebanon Bologna Y4 tb 5C Ham or Beef Bologna . ( Swift's V II L- SSe "ÂGenuine ea. Iver tb.· I Swift's Calf Liver Ib 39c , There Is a hig difference in the qualIty ot liver. I" Domestic Sweitzer Cheese V2 Ib 18c Smithfi~ld's SoftCream Cheeie-·-· I 11 Ib 9 Pimento Cream or Cream Cheese Relish r 74 C J, Fresh . Boston Mackerel Ib 9c \.. ./ F' h . II Fillets Genuine Haddock Ib 18c II ':) IS Jersey Butterfish 3 Ibs 19c r Fresh Produce at Attractive Prices Bananas Fancy 4 tbs Ripe 19C U. S_ No. 1 White Potatoes . . ....... 15 Ibs., 25c BartleH Pear., . ~o •. , 29c I Ga. Pe.achea II'. earrier S9c ,Jer.ey T omatoea lb., 10c c;~~g"doz 29c Watermelon. each 49c: Large Cucumbers 2 for Sc Iceberg LeHuoe head 10c O;~~~geS do~ 2Bc W"ere Quality Co •• ,. a.d YOR' Ma •• , Goel Furt"."
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6 CouDcil. Considers By-Pass Progress (Continued from Page 1) delphia Electric Company, was given perÂmlSSlon to do maintenance trimming of trees on Park and Yale Avenues, also perÂm~ ion . to trim tbree gum trees on ColÂJege Avenue, and to remove a dead poplar at the corner of Dartmouth and Oberlin Avenues if the permission of the owner were obtained. Burgess Pitman reported the employÂment of Ellis M. Lindsey as special officer during July and August, the vacation periods of the borougb police. Council approved the action of the BurÂge~ s in employing E. M. Lindsey. John E. Gensemer, chairman of the PubÂlic SaIety Committee, presented the monthly police report and it was accepted. He was authorized to huy four tires for the police car. Two permits' for alterations were granted to the college. One to rearrange partiÂtions and plumbing in a house at the northeast corner of Elm and Walnut Lanes and the other to make B first floor apartÂment at the Faculty Club on Walnut Lane. Permission was granted Alan C. 'Vood to enlarge the garage at the back of his house. J. Paul Brown, chairman of the Sewer Committee, recommended that permission be given Ridley Park to make an annual report to Swarthmore Borough Council instead of monthly, as was required in the contract in which Ridley Park empties some of its sewage into a sewer, near Rid* ley Park Lake, which belongs to Swarth* more. This was granted. Mr. Brown, who is chairman of the Central Delaware County Sewer CommitÂtee, reported that the main consideration of the committee at this time is the colÂlection of sewage from Crum Creek, Little Crum Creek and Stony Creek Valleys into a single line to dischargeat onc·-point into the Delaware Riiler. Mrs. Cheyney, chairman of the Accounts Committee, presented bills for $1439, which were authorized paid. Bids for resurfacing were opened. Those who submitted bids were Ransdell ConÂstruction Company, John Hanna and Son .and Michael B. Mahoney. The contract was awarded to Mahoney on his low bid of seven and one-half cents per square yard. The only bid for the spreading of oil was from the Atlantic Refining Company .at ten and one-half cents per gallon. This bid was accepted. ---01---- Mr. Miller Returns to Blue Church J"e E. Brown in II A Very able Guy;' starting Monday Waverly Theatre. Honor* at the SHERIFF SALES Sheriff's Office. Court House. Media. P"nna. Thursday. July 26. 193.e 1.00 o'dock P. M. Eastern Standard Time Conditions: $25.00 Cash or c.ertified c.heck at time of sale (unless otherwise stat.ed in a,lvertisement), balance in ten days. Other conditions on day oC sale. Levari Facias No. 1225 March Term, 1934 All that certain lot or piece of land with the meussage and other improvements thereon er«ted situated on the southwesterly side of Summitt avenue at the distance of one hunÂdred and thirty·two and two hundred and forty_five one-thousandths feet northweatÂwardly from the northwesterly corner of SumÂmitt avenue and Chester pike. in the BorÂough of Prospect Park, In the County of Delaware aforesaid. Extending thence along the sbuthwesterly side of said Summitt aveÂnue north forty-nine degrees nine minutes and fifty-six seconds west twenty-eight and ninety-five one-thollSandths feet to a point a corner of lands of Edwin S. Fisler. et ux 0 extending thence along said lands 80uth sixtyÂeight degrees west on~ hundred fort)'~three and eighty-six one-hundredths. feet to B point a corner of lands of Marshall P. Snyder and Joseph Oberle: thence extending along- the last mentioned lands south twenty~two degrees eel twenty~five feel to a point a corner of landa of Joseph B. Taylor, et al: and extending thence along said lut mentioned lands north sixty-eight degrees east and passing along the middle of the party wall separating said mesÂsuage from the messuage adjoining a!). the southeast. one hundred ftrty-six and sixty_nine one-hundredths feet to a point the plaee of beginning. Improvements consist of two-story stucco and shingle house. 34x16 feet. Enclosed porch. Sold as the property of Morris Taylor and Ruth Taylol". his wlfr., mOrtgagors and real On Sunday evening, July 15, in the Blue owners. Church, ~r. Jack Miller will conclude his WM. B. HARVEY, Attorney. presentation of the "Gospel Story as seen' in the Stars." Mr. Miller was born in Grodno, Russia, coming from a line of Levari Faciaa No. 865 famous Orthodox rabbis. He was educated in Hebrew schools of Rabbinical learning, but'in his youth he turned atheist. Coming to America he preached atheism but !oon was won to God through sound Bible reasoning. He now uses his knowlÂedge to the glory of God, The service will !tart promptly at 8 o'clock, daylight saving time. Everyone is cordially invited to attend. The Blue Church is situated on the BalÂtimore Pike at Blue Church Road (fourÂtenths of a mile west of the SprinKfield S,.,.imming Pool) in Swarthmore. March Term, 1934 All that certain lot or piece of ground with the messuage or tenement thereon erected sitÂuate on the southeasterly side of Powellon av~nue in the Borough of Lansdowne. County of Delaware and State of Pennsylvania afore... .:laid. Beginning at the distance of one hunÂdred and twenty feet eastwardly from the .>outheasteriy comer of said Wildwood avenue and PoweJton avenue. Containing in front on said Powelton avenue thirty feet and exÂtl'! nding of that widt;l in length or depth southeastwardl,. between parallf;!1 lines at right anglee to uid Pow(!lton avenue one hundred feet. Improvemenm consist of two nnd one-hall ltory stone and stucco house. 26x32 feet. OneÂstor,. frame addition, 8x8 feet. Porch front. c:OUR AIRFLOW CHRYSLER HAS HAD PUPS How to get one: Any girl or boy furnishing us with the name of a buyer for a Plymouth. a Chrysler or a Chrysler Airflow can get one of these all-steel, electricÂally lighted, spring motor dr;ven models of the Chrysler Airflow. Choice of several colors. Come see these little pets. THE SWARTHMOREAN Sold .. the property of Katharine Brown. mortgagor, and William L. Wood, Nal owner. ALLEN S. OLllSTED. 2ND. Attorney. Levari .'aclas No. If.55 March Term. 1934 All those certain lots or pieces of J(round situate in Haverford Township Delaware County. Pa., known as Lots Nos.' 24, 19, 18, 17, 16. ]5, 32. 1. 2. 14. 4, 6, 6. 11. 34 and 51 described as follows: Lot 24 beginning at a point of tangent of a circle forming the corner of Glenbrook road forly-five feet wide and Valley View road' forty-five feet wide 0 thence extendina south thirty-two degrees fort)'~six mlnules fifty aecÂODds east. along the southwesterl,. side of Glenbrook road one hundred. thirty-four and seventy-eight hundredths leet (.34.78') to a poJnt a corner of Lot No. 25; thence along part of Lot 2&. southwest on a line at right B.ngles to Glenbrook road, eighty-three and sixty--one hundredths feet (83.61') to a point a corner of Lot No. 23: thence along the line of Lot No. 23. on a line at right angles to said Valley View road northwestwardly one hundred and torty_five teet to a point on the southe~ter)y side of Valley View road j thence extending along the same north 8tt)' degrees sixteen minutes east, ninel,.. feet to a point and on the are or a d.-cIt! curving to the right with. a radiUB of !en feet. the arc distance of sixteen and mnety_two hundredths feet (16.92') to the place of beginning. Lots NC!s. 19. 18. 17. ]6. 115, 82 beginning at the POlDt of tangent of a circle fonnln&' th.e corner of Valley View road, sixty feet Wide, and Ardmore avenue; thence extending north ten dC!1irees fourteen minutes forty secÂonds (.8st along the said side of Valley View road, three hundred fifty-nine and sixty oneÂhundredths feet to a point: and northeastÂ"":: ardly on the are of R circle curvinJ[ to the right with • radius of one hundred feet the are distance of sixty-nine and eighty_five 'hun_ dredths feet to a point 0 and north fifty deÂgrees sixteen minutes east sixtY_four and fifty--one hundredths feet (64.61') to a point a corner of Lot No. 20: thence extending along the line of L6t 20 southeastwardly on a line at right angles to Valley View road one hundred and forty-live f _ t to a point; thence south flft,.-seven degrees ftlty*three min. utes fifty seconds west thirty-eight tlnd :'sevÂenty- one hundredths feet (88.7]') to a point: thence ~outh thirty degrees forty-three minÂutes west one hundred and Mty-ehrht and ninety_four hundre(ftJ1~)·feet (168.94') to a point; thence 80uthe~Tdly on a line at right angles to Ardmore ."I!!nue ninety--one and sixty one-hundredths (.eet ;;10 a point on the northwesterly side .... o .. ~·Aidmore avenue thence extending along the same aouth fifty degrees sixteen minutes west two hundred and two and twenty-six hundredths feet to a point: thence extendln5l. northwestwardly on the are of a circle curving to the right with a raiiu. of twenty feet. the arc distance of forty-ehtht and eighty-six hundredths feet to the fint mentioned point and place of begh:ming. Lot I: Beginning at the point of langent of a circle forming the corner of Valley View road sixty feet wide and Haverford road; thence extending north thirty-one degrees eleven minutes fifty seconds west along the northeast aide of Haverford road, one hundred and Qne and six-tenths feet to a point 0 thence extending on a line at right angles to Haverford road northeastwardly fifty~ight feet and seventy hundredths of a foot to a point: thence ex_ tendin&, southeastwardly on a line at right angles to Valley View road ftfty-elght nnd twenty.fonr hundredths feet to a point on the northwe-sterly side of VaHey View road afore- 9aid: thenc.~ along the same south ten degrec.'8 fourteen minutes forty seconds west one hunÂdred and one and seventy-eight hundredths feet to a point; thence northwestwardly on the arc of a circle curving to the right with n radius tJf twenty feet. the arc distance of forty-eight and thirtY-Bix hundredths feet to the first mentioned pofnt and place of beginÂning. Lot 2: Beginning at a point on the northÂeasterly side of Ha\'erford road at the dillÂtanee of one hundred and one and six_tenths feet measured north thirly.one degrees eleven minutes fiCty seconds west, along the said side of Haverford road from the point of tangent" of a circle forming the corner of Haverford road and Valley View road thence continuingÂalong the said side of Haverford road north thirty-one degrees eleven minutes fifty seconds west one hundred feet to a point: thenee northeastwardly along a line at right angles to said Haverford road ninety-six feet nnd seventy-four hundredths of a foot to a point; thence extending south ten degrees twentyÂtwo minutes eMt one hundred and Beven feet to a point; thcnee extendIng southweJtwardly on a line at right aneles to Haverford road fifty.eight and seventy_one hundredths feet to • point on the northeastwardly Jine of HavÂerford road the plaee of beginning. Lot 14: Beginning at a point on the westÂerly side at Valley View road sixty reet wide at the distance of one hundred and one and Bevent,.-eight hundredths feet, measured north ten·· degrees fourteen minutes forty secon& eut along the said side of Valle,. Vi" .. road from the point of tangent of a circle formln~ the corner of Valley View road and HaverÂford road; thence extending northwestwardly on a line at right angles to Valley View roal! fifty_eight and twent,.*four hundredths feet to a point; thence extending north ten degrees twenty-two minutes west, one hundred and six and eighty-five hundredths feet to a point; thence extending southeastwardly on a line at right angles to said Valley View road ninel)--five and eighty.six hundredthB feet to a point on the wc~terly side of Valley View road aforesaid; and thence along the same south ten degrees fourteen minutes forty seeÂonds west one hundred feet to the first menÂtioned point and pla:e of beginning. Lots 4. 5 and 6: Beginning at a point on the northeastwardly Bide of Haverford road at the distance of seventy-nine and sixty-nine hundredths feet measured south thirty-one deÂgrees eleven minutes fifty seconds east along the said side of Haverford road from the point of tangent of a circle forming the corÂner of Overhill road and Haverford road; thence extending northeastwardly on a line at right angles to said Haverford road one hundred and fifty feet to a p6int; thence extending southeastwardly one hundred and eighty-five feet to a point: thence extending south ten degrees twenty-two minutes eaat fifty-emht and eighty-three hundredths feet to a point 0 thence southwestwardly on a line at right angles to Haverford road one hundred and twenty-nine and seven hundredths feet to a point on the afore-mentioned northeast. wardly side of Haverford road: thence extendÂing along the same north thirty-one degrees eleven minutes and fifty seconds west two hundrcd and forty feet to the first mentioned point and place of beginning_ Lot 11; Beginning at a point on th(' southÂw~ terly side of Westfield road forty_five feet wide. at the distance of two hundred and fifteen and thtrty-one hundredths feet meas* ured south thirty-one degrees eleven minutes and fifty seconda east along the said side of Westfield road from the point of tangent of a circle forming the eorner of Westfield road HA.NNUM & WAllE and OvcJ::hUl road forty_five fet wide: thence extending southwestwardly on a line at right angles to Westfield road one hundred and i fifty feet to a point: thence southeastwardly !! f orty and ninety-two hundredths feet to a point: thence extending south ten degrees ,twenty-two minutes east six feet to a point; 'I thence north aeventy.eight degrees fifty-one SOUTH CHESTER ROAD and YALE AVENUE minutes east one hundred and fifty-two and Swarthmore 1250 I fifty-eight hundredths feet to a point on the afore-mentioned southwesterly side of West- I field road and thence extending along the same northwestwardly on the arc or a circle curv* I ing to the left with a radius of one hundred IJ..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;Y feet the are distance of forty_two and thirty* tbree- hundredths feet and north thirty-one. dearea elev~n minutes flfty seconds west fittyÂseven and seventy-tJeVen hundredths feet to the p1aee of be-gin~ln&'. Lot 3fi: BE1rlnnina at a point on the north. e .. t .Ide of Westtleld road, one hundred one and aixty-nlne hundredths leet (101.69) BOuth thlrty-one degrees eleven minutes and fifty seconda eaat from a point of tangent of a circle forming the corner of Westfield road rorty-Rve leet wide and Overhill road fortyÂtlve teet wide and extending then::~ along the northeast side oC Westfield road eigbty feet (80') to the corner of lot No. 83 on Bald plan. thence extending by said Lot No. 33 on said plan on a Jine at right angles to the said Westfield raad northeastward one hunÂdred teet (l00) to a point In Hne or Lot No. 46 on said plan. thence north thirty-one deÂgrees eleven minutes fifty seconds west eJght,. feee (80) to a point at the comer of Lot No. 85 and thence extending along the side ot Lot No. 35 south sixty degrees thirty~two minutes and tWenty seconds weat one hunÂdred feet (l00) to the place of beginning. Lot 61: Situate on the northwesterJy side of Overhill road. forty-Rve feet wide at the distance of four hundred and (orty-n'lne and forty*seven hUndredths feet, measured north sixty degrees thirty-two minutes twenty secÂonds e&IIt along the said side of Overhill road from the point of tangent of a eireJe form_ Ing the corner of Overhill road and Haver* ford road 0 containing In front or breadth northeutwardly along the said northwesterly side ot OverhtH road, seventy-five feet and extending of that width in length or depth northwestwardly between parallel linea at right angles: to Overhill road, one hundred and Corty-five leet. No improvements. Vacant ground. JULY 13, 1934 Sold as the Propert-;;,\Viiii;;-i.CYB;IÂm~ rt ••• or and WlJIlam P. Hart, real own~~: Band lIoney--$],500.00. ALLEN S, OLMSTED. 2D, AttOrney. LeYBri Faciu No. 114.8 March Term, 1934 Lot with improvements Lansdowne Dorougb Del. Co., Po. Beginning at Intersection mid' die line of Stewart avenue (ISO ft.. wide) with line drawn throQh Highland avenue (85 ft. w!de). which line extended N. through bed· of Hqrhland avenUe is at the dlstanee of 16 ft E. from and parallel with W. line thereoi Contatnin. In front on middle Une at Stewart avenue tl6.74 ft. and extending in depth N of that width between parallel lines at right angles to Stewart avenue. the W. Hne along aforll;!l5aid line e.z:tebded through bed of Hla-b_ land avenue 140 ft. to ground lormerly ot Mary R. Albertson. lalPl'Ovcments conslst ot two and one--half story stucco and shingle house. Itlx32 feet· two and one-halt stOry stucco and shingle ad: dition, 9x21 feet 0 one-story lrame addition 12:11:12 teet 0 porch front. ' Sold as the prolX!rty of Harry Coffin, Jr., and Amelia A.. his wife. mortgagors, and Amelia A. Coffin. wife of Harry Coffin. Jr. real owner. • GEORGE T. BUTLER. Attorney. NATHAN P. PECHIN. SheriII'. 01 ER FOR cosrs MORE THAN FEEDING SIX EIGHT SAVE WITH A CHEVROLET SIX 10 EXTRA CYLIIDERS TO FEED The amount of gas that will serve six cylinders just can· t be made to stretch for eight. You must use more gas and more oil-yet you get no beHer all-round performance than you get w;th a well built six. And that means ChevroletÂthe only car in the low-price field with six cylinders. overhead valves. . DRIVE THE MOST ECONOMICAL CAR YOU CAN BUY CHEVROLET THE QUALITY CAR LAWSON.SHEPARD COMPANY, Inc. AUTHORIZED DEALER 401 DARTMOUTH AVENUE SWARTHMORE NDIIIERS Ocean City"s Finest Ocean .. Front Hotel BOARDWALK OCEAN AT ELEVENTH STRUT CITY, N. J. Come to The Flanders where you are offered true hospitality, excellent food, superior service and the companionship of a refined clientele. 2 3 2 Rems with B~th. AmerÂican Plan. Fireproof. 3 Delightful 0 pen Air Swimming Pools. J. HOWARD SLOCUM, Mano;.r Attrodiv. lolel for Ponu_ Ii .. and GroUPI. Special Car. Given Children. THI •• INenON INN PrlacetoII, N .. Je...." is oliO under Mr. Slocu ... •• mana .... n'" •-- - -.. S\Wl.rthmore Ooller,e Library. M ~ \ Swarthmore, Jlf ." 'II' ..\ /,"1 " Il.'lult!: \ Penna. ' .L .j,. C,' ';'V" (,Ol.!, I "Ii ,1. I ' THI: VOL VI, No. 29 ." SWARTHMORE, PA., JULY 20, 1934 $2.60 PER YEAR SWARTHMORE New ~tor of Publicity Practice for Quoit T_t HAS NEW SPORT Paul Alg~, dean of the announcing staff at Radio Station WPEN, Philadelphia unit of the William Penn Broadcasting ComÂpany, is being congratulated upon his teÂcent appointment as the station's new DiÂrector of Publicity. 1934 'mTWARD 80' ARRIVES WEST L~~ night at 7.45 a practice g~me was played with Chester on tbe quoit court at Deab.ong Park, Chester, Pa., prior to scheduling regular games with memben of the Quoit League, such as Chester. Soulh Chester and Prospect Park. It Is hoped that the Swarthmore team will be ready to enter the tournament in a week or two. A. F. MAC80LD PASSES AWAY Box lacrosse, "the fastest game played OD two feet," is being played in SwarthÂmore at Chester Road and Fairview Road every Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock. BOOKS ON H. S. LIST FOUND IN UBRARY Dr. Terman's Group Wend. III Way Westward After HaviDc Enjoyed Two Day. at Fair Widely Known Citizen Succumb~ to Lona Illness After Active Military Career The following is a report of Dr. E. L. Dr. Shirer, Mr. Watson, Mr. Bergett, Mr. Captain Anthony F. Machold of the Terman' "w Gwinn and Vic Allison are members of the 5 current estward Ho" trip and home team. Pennsylvania Volunteers passed away on The ground for the box was lent by its happenings thus far as recorded in a Saturday, July 14, at his home, 415 Yale lIfr. George Gillespie and the box was built by Porter Waite and Percy C. BelÂfield, Jr. . Pupila Given Opportunity to SeÂcure Extra Credit While EnÂjoying Summer Reading letter which Dr. Terman wrote to the • Avenue, after a Jong illness. SWARTH:MOREAN on July 12 while in Rocky W. M. PARK NAMED Captain Macbold, a wel1*known citizen Mountain National Park, Colorado. of the borough for the past fifteen years "The third adventure is under way. We BUREAU DIRE' crOR Box lacrosse ill played somewhat like ice was born in Copenhagen, Denmark, o~ hockey, in an enclosure 175 Ieet long and 7S feet wide. The sides are formed by boards four feet high and wife which extends six feet above the boards so that the ball is in play all the w.:e which makes the game very lively. broke from Swarthmore promptly .at 8.30 October 21, 1857. He was in the Danish A. M. on July 4. At the eleventh bour Royal Army from 1875 to 1878, in Paris, In the Swarthmore Library can be found (two days before the Fourth) John Fox • France, from 1878 to 1880, in New York most of the books which are on the sum- from Narberth joined the 'gang,' and as a ,Swarthmorean Appomtecl Direc. and Cleveland in ISS1, in which year be mer reading lists of the Swarthmore High result we number fourteen this year with 1 tor of the Distriet Bureau of also came to Philadelphia and entered the School. By reading any of these books the exception of the parents of iansen I Foreign and Domestic firm of R. Dunlap and Company of that The Swarthmore "Indians" the team pupils of the school can obtain extra credit Rogers from New York City and Larry Commerce city, and also a keener appreciation of their Dalton from Reading. All the parents and In 1881 Captain Machold enlisted in the subjects next fall. The complete lists of some local Swart.ht&oreans were present at William M. Park, of 117 Yale Avenue, Third Regiment of the Infantry of the . ' representing Swarthmore in the Philadel-phia Lacrosse League, was organized by Porter Waite and is coached by Avery Blake and Grant Benjamin, who also play defense on the team. The team is comÂposed, mosUy of boys who have played at Swarthmore College and at Pennsylvania State College; Bud Hickman, Bill Hickman, Avery Blake, Grant Benjamin, George Joyce and "Twit" Taylor, from Swarth~ more College, and 10hn Belfield, Percy Bel. field, Bud Green, ,Raymond Fellows and Fred Maley, from Penn State. C1iff Rum. sey, Joe Kahler, Timmy Whitehead and Porte. Waite have played box lacrosse for the laSt four or five years in Atlantic City and Baltioore. The Swarthmore "Indians" have one 01 the iiOst box lacrosse teams In this part of the country, and so. far have lost only one game, The other teams in the ieague are the Philadelphia UComets" and the Canadian "Eagf .. " from Philadelphia. The first game played, on May 30, was an exhibition game with Swarthmore ColÂlege and ended with a tie score of 8 to 8. The next, game, with. tho.: .Philadelll.hia "Comets" wu .woiiby tIie uIJidiailS·,''' " to 5. Then followed a tie game with the "EagJes," 7 to 7, and another game with the "Eagles" on June 27, when the home tum was defeated by a score of 6 to 5. Al! the boys who play have helped to put the game over. Cliff Rumsey, Jack Hanna, Fred and Dick Maley, Walt Stupka, Joe Reynolds and the members of the Swarthmore "Hornets" hasebaU team have also figured in making it a success. Joe Reynolds is the official scorer and timeÂkeeper, and is doing fine in this imporÂtant position, which is unusually so in this game where the players must be changed every three minutes without stopping the game. This changing keeps up the speed and makes the game very interesting. The younger boys have become interÂested in tbe sport and under the coaching (Continued on Page 6) o COMMInEE MEETS TO PLAN PICNIC the books available in the library are as the 'seeing off' party. was named Monday by Dr. Claudius T. PennsylVania National Guard where, in follows: For tenth grade reading- "A unique feature of this year's adven- Muichison, Director of the Bureau of time, he was promoted to the posts of Cloister and Hearth, by Reade; Odd Num- ture, patterned somewhat after that of the Foreign and Domestic Commerce, as man~ corporal, Ueutenant and captain. In 1898 ber, by DeMaupassant; Don Quixote, by first, the World Olympiad Expedition to ager of the Bureau's district office in he was with the Third Regiment of the Cervantes; Arabian Nights, Quo Vadis by Los Angeles, is a Ford express truck. not Philadelphia, Pa. The Philadelphia office Pennsylvania Volunteers in the SpanishÂSienkiewicz; Wallace's "Ben H~r'" only affording space for carrying all the covers most of the State of Pennsylvania, American War and in 1904 he was placed Chekov's Short Stories; Kingsley's uHY~ baggage under cover, but for 'lying down' and also Southern New Jersey. . on the retired list. patia"; Bulwer Lyttc-n's "The Last Days ~pportunities while the wheels are in mo- Mr. Park, who has been a resident of Captain Machoid went into business for of Pompeii"; The Talisman by Scott. lion. Groups of four boys relay through Swarthmore for three years, is well ac- himself in 1882 and cClntinued in it as· Connecticut Yankee in K~g Arthur'~1 h~f-day perio.ds in avaI1ing themselves of quainted wi.th business men in the area manufacturer of men's hats until 1912, Court, by Twain; The Prince and the this opportunity. These four berth3 are served by hIS office, as he has been acting when he went to the Foreign Trade Bureau Pauper, by Twain; The Three Musketeers the most popular in the caravan. manager of that office since August 1, 1931. of the Philadelphia Commercial Museum, by Dumas; Anderson's UMary of Scot~ "The newly built engine in the Pierce- The Philadelphia office is one of twenty- where he was connected with the export land"; Kipling's uThe Light That Failed"; A:row slowed pace and shortened distance I four such branches of the Department of department until his death. ' Lagerlof's "Marbaca"; Maeterlinck's "Blue on our first day out. We camped on 'Short Commerce maintained in that many impor- Captain Machold was a life member of Bird"; Master Skylark, by Bennett. Mountain Summit,' the top of the first tant cities in the United States. The office Oriental Lodge No. 385, F. & A. M., and Romola, by Eliot; Scaramouche, by Saba~ peak on the William Penn Highway, west is equipped to give full and prompt service a member of the Oriental Lodge No. 25. tini; Messer Marco Polo, by Byrnne; through Penn~yJvania.. The city park, to b~ess men ~terested in foreign trade Knights of PythJas. He was also a member Westward Ho, hy Kingsley; When Knight- Mansfield, Ohio, furnished our second and It 15 also eqUipped to be of assistance of tbe Naval and Military Order of the hood Was in Flower, by Major' Kenil- night's abode and the palatial Dimcan in many phases of domestic trade promo- Spanish-American War, a companion of worth, by Scott; Ib5en's "A Doll's 'House " (West Side) Y. M. C. A. tbrew its doors tion. the Military Order of Foreign Wars of the Hugo's "!.es Miserables'" Remarqu;'s wide open for our two~day stay in Chicago. Except for a brief period when h United States of America, and a member "All Quiet on the Western Front" and his "The Fair-yes, it truly is .bigger and listed 4t the Anny during the World ~:~~ of Jesse M. Baker Camp No. 125, United "Road Back"; .Wells' -IIMr. Britting Sees better than e~r. The fine t~ of last Mr. Par~ has spent many years in the States War Veterans. He was formerly a. It Through"; Journey's End, by Sherriff; 'Year s~ill remaID. !he HaIl of SCience, an service of the Department of Commerce member of the Swarthmore Players' Club~ !esta~ent of Youth, by Brittain; Educa- ed.u~tional gold mm~; the ~en~ral Motors and as a result is unusually familiar with Cltptain Machold is survived by bis wife, tion.-·of B. Prince5S"! by f?nmd' Daches" aD~..:.t}le .Tr~portatlon Buildmgs a}-l re- its facil!ties. b~th ill this country. ant\. Georgine L. Machold; a niece, Mrs. MarieÂMane; T~lce Born 10 RUSSIa. by Petrova; main as entlang as ever. The Midway abroad. He·19 the cousin of ·Guy"B. Pilrt': .Ga..Doyne11)' .. 3Jld~Mrs.~oDn~y's.,daU@\l.ter, A World May End, by Skariatina; Kapaot, has ~n traos,?lanted across. the lagoon Governor of Missouri. BonDle; a nephew, Moritz MacboJd~ of The House of Exile by Wain and Mozart and Its place IS now occupied by the .,.. Audubon, N. J., and a sister-in-law, Mrs. by Davenport.' , , splendid group of new ,illages. The new H: entered the se~ce of the B~reau of Anton Wagner, of Swarthmore Avenue. Colonial Village seems to be a winner. FOIClgn and Domestic Commerce ID 1917, The body was on view from 7 until 'i> For Junior readers (eleventh grade stu- Different color schemes on most buUdings ~rving in variom capaciti~, inclu~g as-- o'clock on Tuesday at the funeral home of dents)-Moby Dick, by Melville; Uncle add much to making this a new fair. But Slgnment to the Department 5 office m Lon- Oliver Bair on Chestnut Street, PhiJadel- Tom's Cabin, by Stowe', H,uck Finn, b .... · don where he reached the rank of T d hia P Th J the most of us agree that 'Ford at the ~.. . . . ra e p ,a. e military services were also Twain also his "Innocents Abroad" and Fair' is the thing which alone makes it ComllUSSloner '. HIS expenence WI th the b eI d at this time. The funeral services his "Connecticut Yankee"; Tarkington's worth coming to this year. Spent the most De~rtment IDc1~des duty as Assistant were on Wednesday morning at 9.30 after "Penrod," "Seventeen," and "Magnificent of our time in seeing his 'twelve million C.hie.f of the A. Oh-"·r "Icultural Im. plement D"I Vl- Wb I'C h t h e m. terment in Arlington National Ambertsons"; Wallace's "Ben Hur"; Mary dollar' contribution. He has done much to Slon ID Washmgton and WIth the BraQcb Cemetery followed. . Johnston's "To Have and to Hold"; James Office of the Bureau of Foreign and Do- • Fenimore Cooper's "The Deerslayer" and wipe. °lis~t !heh~riticism °Ti h'tofio muhch com~ mcstic Commerce in New York. "The Last of the Mohic.ans'" Ri h rd C _ merc~ m t IS year. e rst- and o~- , . . . ' c a ~r -servatlon of processes changing twelve basic As part of his educational equipment Mr. vel . and Cn:sIS, by Wmsto? Churchill j elements of the earth by man's creative Park has specialized in economic and busiÂJamce Meredith, by Paul Leicester For~; genius into 15,000 finished. pieces that go ness courses, including foreign languages. H~gh Wynne, ~ree Quaker, by S, Welr into the Ford automobile furnished us with I He attended the Wharton School of Mitchell; Marching On, by James Boyd itt 'F ., "t W b k Finance in Philadelphia and the School of D b J B h our grca es all V1SI. e ro e away ruIDS, y ames oyd; T e Conqueror, f Ch' . th I . S Economics in London England b G d A h H I H rom lc.agO m c ear y evenmg on un- ,. y ertru e t erton; e en unt J ack- d th '11 d 'th fi t I' d Before entering the service of the De- son 's' 'Ro mon"a;E dn a F erb er' s "Sho w ayd, fn e lW'I our . rts tch Im' ax ta'n partm.e nt of Commerce Mr. Park was en- Bo at"; Tho mas· Ne Is on P age 's' 'Re d Ro ck;" rean Oyn oMr sedvae ra 'SJuhm'ftp' s 10S 0 e' tw eks . gaged for a number of years in various a W' t' "Th V· .. " on y, I mg cenes 00 us wen IS er s e IlgIman; Edna out of bustling Chicago over the Lincoln capacities with railroad c(Jmpanies in St. Ferber's "So Big" and "Cimmaron"; The Highway on the broad fertile acres of Louis and San Francisco. He was also at Uarbor, by' Ernest Poole; One of Ours and Illinois Iowa and Nebraska. We rode 310 one time assistant to the general manager LECTURES AT THE RACE INSTITUTE Dr. Otto Klineberg, of Colmnbia, G:ves Closing Lecture at Institute of Race Reations August 1 Named Week Picnic at Grove for County EmmODS' My Antonia, by Cather; Stephen Crane's '1 'M d f DeK Ib III t d of a paint manufacturing concern. "R d B d f C "J ' IDI es on on ay rom a,., 0 an e a ge 0 • ourage.; . L. AUen s beyond Ames la. A happy surprise which In his efforts to be of maximum assist- Evening lectur.es of the 1934 Institute of Ra-::e Relations, being held at Swarthmore College, are open to the pubHc. Tonight the lecture .is "The Missionary and the Rce Problem in Africa," by Dr. Charles T. Loram, Sterling Professor of Educatiol1 at Yale. The preliminary meeting of the Country Week Picnic Committee WitS held in the Borough Hall on Monday evening. All arrangements were made for holding this year's picnic and the committees are pracÂtically decided upon, pending the acceptÂance of the posts by the various persons selected. It was decided to hold tbe picnic on Wednesday, August I, in Emmons' Grove, where the picnics have been held for the past ten years. The Philadelphia Country Week AssoÂciation has invited 500 children to attend the piOlic. The mothers who accompany the children, of course, will make the total number considerably larger. It has been requested that anyone who expects to be away at the time the solicitor calls, which will be in a week or so, and Who desires to make a contribution will do so by sending it to the chairman of the committee, Dr. Harvey Pierce, 109 PrinceÂton Avenue. A complete report of the committee members, etc., wiD be published in our next issue, July 27. -'------ A~en.ds Ford Co,,"vention Mr. Jacob F. Meschter, of DickinsoA Avenue, left on Monday "ith the Ford dealers of the Philadelphia area to attend tbe Ford Convention at the Chicago World's Fair and to view tbe Ford exhibit there. "Kentucky Cardmal"; Ehzabeth Roberts' we found he;e in this great com belt of ance to the Philadelphia business comÂ" Great Meadows" i Thornton Wilder's the United States was a twenty-four inch munity Mr. Park will have the full supÂ" Bridge of San Luis Rey"; Lewis' "Main rain which feU last night This here in port of the facilities of the Dep~rtment in Street" an~ 'I Babbitt" ; Jack .London's "Call Iowa drowned the chinch bugs which were Washington and its trade promoting of th.e Wdd"; Alcott's "Little Women" i killin~ the com and also broke the long agencies located in various parts of the Hamlm Garland's "Son of the Middle . . h world. Bo rd er" ; D ana's' 'Tw o "] lears B eI ore t h e d.r ought which W2S threatemng t every M t" d W tt' UD 'd H " hfe of the Iowa com crop. We rode, then, as, an esco s avt . arum. all days througb fields just coming into Senior students (hvelfth grade) lOay ob- tassel which'are now cheering the...<:e hitherto o Swarthmore Teachers Vacation on tain prose translations of Homer's gloomy farmers, 4IOdyssey"; Nibclungenlied; Udall's uRalph UBut the worst was yet to come. Miss Grace Wilson, of LanSdowne, and Royster Doyster"; Stevenson's uGammer During the next two days we glided along Miss Hannah Kirk, of Wycombe, are spcndÂGurton's Needle"; Marlowe's "Dr. Faus- the banks of the Platte River through ing six weeks traveling in the west. tust1 j Shakespeare's Plays; Mort d' Arthur, Nebraska. Even though this river gener- M' V· " All f Med' . b y M a IO f)'; B unyan 'S' 'Pginlm' ' s P rogres1s1 ; ally furnishes water for irrigation, we campIS Sin Mllgailnmea. en, 0 la, IS at a (Continued on Page 5) found ~m only a foot high and in many Miss Lillian Hewes Prospect Park h fields withered. A daily temperature of 90 I been attending the F;iends' Conferen~e :: Streets to Be Reaurfac~ to lOS, with no rain for months, could Cape May. produc~ nothing else .• Wheat here is only I Mr. 'James Mil1er, of'Prospeet Park, is The following streets will be resurfaced producmg three to SIX bushels per acre, at Ocean City for the summer. according to plans of T. E. Hes...;:enbruch, where eighteen to twenty-five were reaped I Miss Anna Burkhart, Lansdowne, is at chairman of the Highways Committee. before. I a camp near Downingtown. Michael J. Mahoney Construction Com- UToday the weather has been much I Miss Lydia Reinbardt of Lansdowne is pany, having submitted the low bid for cooler. ~We began to climb at Greely, Col., at Avalon, N. J., for the summer. ' the construction, will do the work. this A. M. and reached the Park (Rocky Miss Lillian Barton of Lansdowne is Mountain and Estes) in time fo~ lunch. spending two weeks at Avalon. ' Hillborn Avenue, from Walnut Lane to We arc here only one day behmd our Mr. and Mrs. William Price and son Borough Line; Maple Avenue, from Col· scbedule, after taking two days for the Philip and Miss Margaret Pnce are travel~ .lege Avenue to Elm Avenue; Dartmouth Fair not included in our origi~al itinerary. ing fu England. Avenue, from Park Avenue .. to Lafayette We have taken this first week, as usual, Miss Adeline Strouse, of Ashland, Pa., Avenue; Lafayette Avenue, from Dart- to get west. Our next epistle will. start is taking graduate work at State CoJlege. mouth Avenue to Princeton Avenue; Am~ with th~ great park, the. only on~ m. the Miss Teresa Young, of Willow Grove, is herst Avenue. from Dartmouth Avenue west whIch we have not mcJuded ID either doing graduate work at Teachers' College half way 10 Harva:d Avenue; Park Ave- adventure number one or two." Columbia. ' nue, from Yale Avenue to Michigan Ave- As is dearly shown by this communica- Mr. and Mrs. G. Baker Thompson. nuej 'Union Avenue, south of Yale and tion from Dr. Terman ~he travele~ are as I Lansdowne, are visiting Mrs. Baker's sister Kenyon Avenues. usual having a great time and will have in Springfield, Mass. Work ,,"ill begin early next week on yams a-many stored up for future usc I Miss Doris Van de Bogart, Hudson, this project. upon their return. N. Y., is traveling abroad. On Monday evening, July 23, Fred McÂCuistion, of the Association of College and SecondarY ,SchoolS of the Southern States will give an illustrated lecture, "Abi1it~ and Effort of States and Sections to SupÂport Negro Education." On Wednesday evening, July 25, Dr. Ambrose Caliver, Senior Specialist in the Education of Negroes of the Office of EdÂucation, Department of the Interior, will speak on the subject, "Availability of EdÂucational Facilities to Negroes and Its ReÂlation to a New Social Order." Thursday e\.·ening, July 26, the subject will be "Legal Approach to the Problem of Race Adjustment," by Dr. Charles H. Houston, Dean School of Law, Howard University, Washington, D. C. The last lecture of the Institute wiH be on Friday evening, July 21. when Dr. Otto Klineberg from the Department of PsyÂchology, Columbia University, will speak on "Practical Implications of the Study of Race." • Swarthmo-:e Me.. to Be Given PJ,eferetlCe In employing men to work on the new gymnasium wing at the High School prefÂerence will be given Swarthmore residents according to a clause inserted in the COnÂtracts by Dr. Arthur W. Bassett, president of the School Board. Regist..ation must be made at the Federal Unemployment Bureau at Eleventh and Madison Streets Chester. '
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INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE 6 THE SWARTHMOREAN -------------~---------_::_:_~-_::_-_,______:___:_:_c~_____,,_- - - -:--c----c-:-~- I dq;:rH.!I- dc\( n nunut s flft); ('{ or I" \ C'!>t fifb !' UII mel tll\4;IItJ,: H\CII hUlldndtl s rc t to thl 1111 (' of bCl!UlJlInl.: Council Considers By·Pass Progress I JULY 13, 1934 {( til lit I II III I ~ 1) I dll, hll Iltltn( (umpH!' \\ I I!I\Ul pn lUI lUI) t) do m IlItitlllll(l tnmruln .. ~)f tnt" (n P Irk IIHI \ lIt \Hnul II 0 pef , 1111 IUn to trim lhrt!.: gum tru (n Col [ It C \\U1Ul md to nOlOH I dt'lli popllr I It till rurn r 01 D ,flmuuth In I Obtrhn \Hntt II lIll (lUIIII 1011 (If till 0\\ III r [ \\lH oLlllllld Hur!.!t lun III rqmrlul tilt un "I \ llllllt tl Jill \1 IlI1ll\ t <;'1~1I11 ofllurl III rJllI! Juh mtl \u II t lIu \ H It I II I tTII d I f til(: bUll lJ.!h lohle I (t until l) f,r \1: I tht IdJOn (f the Bur r j.!\ III t IllJ 111\ 1111: I M Ilnd~\ John I (ttl t tnt r <:h mill In I f tin I uh hi Stith (olnllllthr pn clllul tlu lUt Ilthh pulu rq rl 1111 It \\ I Htl)ltui Ill: \\ IUtlll ruul t J IJm i( lIr tm i H thl I II t t r 1 \\ 0 J Ullllt lor Iltt r Illt n \\ HI.' ... r II1tlll thl.' wllq!l On( t rl.' Irr m!1.' I Irtl II II II1d plurnlnn... III I I U ( It th nurlill I t «)Ttl( r I I llIl mil \\ 111I1l! J lilt J(.e E Brown In • A Very able Guy" starting Monday at Waverly Theatre lIul (h~ utlu:r to JIllkt I IIr t Iloor Iput ment Il til.: 11(1I1t\ Llul tn \\ Inut I IIII.' SIll' HIli S \1 Hi Rt rifT OfT. (' C Irt 110 I MIt PI rllll \( n \\ I J,!r lIltl.'d \1111 ( \\ ood I to tnllTJ.!1 th Irl e Itt thl.' b (k (f III I Oll I.' I I lUI Bn \\11 ch IIrm In (f the «lI1lr III In t t HII.' Th Ir J 1\ I " I " Jtlh ?Ii " k I I" r I II.' rll SI In J Ir I "[a nn , I " r rtll II n I It'rt." melltl blllll e III til tll\ IIdltl' 011 ! I) (r ale nII(:ns !\I r h Itrm I:U No I I H n ~Ir \11 tI It c("rl n J I r 1 of III I ,uth "lrlcllOn Clmpam Juhn IImnl ami Michael B Mlhonn The eontr Itl \\ I 1\\ mled to Mthonn on III 10\\ Iml of l \\n mtl onl.' h Iii cent I>lr \ lrd I h(' onh )ml fur th(' .. pnadm It (11 \\ I 1ft III the \11 mtlC Hellnm,.... Coml'tn\ It It n tnd one I lit unt 11.'f!! III< n flu bltl \\ I ICU pl('d • Mr. Miller Returns to Blue Church Church :\]r J pn nt Ilion (t thL In th( 5t Ir :\lr In 111.' HIm conclud( III G( Jld Stun a Se n :\1I1I1.'r \\ I rn In nit! III rs \\ "1 II 11 \It\ r \ \tt rr ) ()n dn Ru I {umU1", lrum lime (1 I C\ IT I I I N f ml I Ort! I x r hill Hc \\ I ulucltt 1 1\1 r I fl'rm 1 HI m H lm~\\ d 1 II 01 R Ihhlllll II It Irnlll lutmll ( ( nlln I ut - n \\ t \ n 1 Ihllt rt: I mm III nun u t I.'dL:c t th I n (1 ( Illt en Ill.' \\111 Ilrl pr mlth o I k d \h ht I\m 111m 1\ T\ cunhtlh m\llt I 10 Itt(nd I h~ BIll (I uuh t Itt Itt I III lim r like 11 Hlu~ (hllnh RUlli (lour lLnth (f L nule \H t III thl.' Sprm .. ltd I S\ylmmlll Pt I) III S\\ Irtl n rc Iml I" t ry rr OUR AIRFLOW CHRYSLER HAS HAD PUPS ... _--- How to get one Any gut or boy furnlshmg us With the name of a buyer for a Plymouth a Chrysler or a Chr) sler AlTflow can get one of these all s·eel electrIC ally lighted ~Pl ng motor dr.".t; I models of the Chlysler Anr.ow ChOice of several colors Come see these lIttle pets HANNUM & WAITE SOUTH CHESTER ROAD and YALE AVENUE Swarthmore 1250 'II ~N s 01 MSUI> 2ND AHorJu) f II'; N I ut i I Vae"nt ground DI ER FOR EIGHT Soil us th(" I rollcrly of "dhum J 0 IIrl('Ânwrlf.: ugor and \\11110101 I IllIrt nul O\\h~r IInnd MOl 0'-$1 au 00 \I I f. N S or MSTf. D 2D Attorll(,) No 1118 Hill G~ uuaE T BUTI ~ It Alton e) NA111AN I I f CHIN Slnr fT COSTS MORE THAN FEEDING SIX SAVE WITH A CHEVROLET SIX NO EXTRA CYLINDERS TO FEED The amount of gas that Will serve six cylinders Just can t be made to stretch for eight. You must use more gas and more Oil-yet you get no beHer all·round performance than vou get w th a well bUilt SIX. And that means ChevroletÂthe only car m the low pnce field with SIX cylmders. overhead valves DRIVE THE MOST ECONOMICAL CAR YOU CAN BUY CHEVROLET THE QUALITY CAR LAWSON-SHEPARD COMPANY, Inc. AUTHORIZED DEALER 401 DARTMOUTH AVENUE SWARTHMORE THE ~\L A N \~~ City's Finest Ocean.Front Hotel BOARDWALK AT ELEVE.NTH STREET OCEAN CITY, N. J. Come to The Flanders where you are offered true hosPltahty. excellent focd, superIOr servIce and the compamonshlp of a refined chentele 2 3 2 RC!TI" w,th Ican Plan Dehghtful SWlmmmg B~th Amer Fireproof 3 Open A Pools I r J HOWARD SLOCUM Manager Attract ve KaleJ forroml I eJ end Groups Spec CIt Core G yen Ch Idr". THE PRINCnON INN Prlne.lon New J.".y IS obo under Mr Slocum s monogemen~ •--- - J "IJ tr.l'110J 'ollur't; )"J1 ,. t rm , .. , :J rl.' • LiblalY, TH~ VOL. VI, No. 29 SWARTHMORE, PA., JULY 20,1934 $2.50 PER YEA R SWARTHMORE New Director of Publicity Practice for Quoit Tournament HAS NEW SPORT P tul ~Igcr dean of the announcmg "taff at RadiO StatIOn WPE~ Pillladdl))U I umt of the Wilham P(,nn Broadc t"tlh~ Com I)an, IS being' con~ratulatcd upon hiS rc cent apPOintment as the "t 1{lon 5 nc\\ DI reclor of Pubhclt) 1934 'WESTWARD HO' ARRIVES WEST L.. n .,ht :;.t 74;:, a P :!. ... ·I '" game \ ~ .. pla)cd \\Ith Chc"tcr on the quoit court at Deshong Park Chc"tcr Pa I pnor to .. chcduhng regular games \\ Ith members of A. F. MACHOLD PASSES AWAY Young Men of Borough Derive Great Pleasure From Box Lacrosse Dr. Tennan's Group Wends Its the QUOit tcagu!..' "ucb as Chc .. tcr, South Way Westward After Having Chc<tcr and I'ro'pcet Park It" hopcd [ ----+- ~ E . T 0 that the S\\arthmorc team \\111 be read\ Widely Known Citizen Succumbs to Long Illness After Active Military Career Box lacrosse, the fa ... te .. t game played BOOKS ON H S LIST DJoyed wo ays at Fair to ent('r the tournament In a \\ eek or t\\ 0 on t\to feet," IS bcmg pla}cd In Swarth • • Th f II [D E L Dr Shirer Mr \\ .. t"on, llr Bl"rgetl ;:\ofr CaptaJO \nthom F ~[Ichold of the e 0 O\\lOg 1<: a rcport 0 r G\\mn and' IC A.lh"on arc members of the more at Chester Road and FaJt\u"w Road FOUND IN LIBRARY Terman<: current Wc"t\\ard Ho trip and home te3m Pcnn<:\hama \oluntcct pa .. cd a\\ 1\ on every \Vedncsday eventng at 7 oclock Iits happcnmgs thus far as recorded 10 a I • Saturda\ Juh 14 It hiS home 415 \: lie The ground for the box \\3<: lent lJ} letter "hlch Dr Terman \Hote to the t\\Cnue aft(,r a lonl! IlInc" ~~:It ~;O~:rl~t!~~~:te ::~ ~~;C) b~' ~'c~' Pupils Given Opportunity to Se.1 ~~~~:~~~o~:;::~ ~~I;k I ~~;;;~cd:n Rocky W + M. PARK NAMED 01 ~~I~~r~~:I:h~~~ tl:o \~~~I k~~t\~;n e;~~:~ fieldJ Jr cur.e Extra Credd While. En. I The thlrd ad\Cnture IS under \\a) \Ve BUREAU DIRECTOR was born In Copenha",l.'n Denmark on Box lacrosse IS pla}ed e:omc\\hat hke ICC JOYing S ummer Reading broke from S\\ arthmore promptl} at 830 I OctoiJ"r 71 18;:,7 He \\~b In the Dame:h hocke\ 1D an endoe:ure 17;:, feet long and Rmal \rm\ (rom ISo to 18 8 In Pane:, 75 [ t d Th d AM on Jul\: 4 :\t the eleventh hour I IS 1 "Y k b dee 1"1 e [ e e:1 I.'S are formed by I ]n the S\\arthrnore ] liJrar} can be found (two d 1\<: before the Fourth) John Fox S rth A t d D. rancc trom S to SSO m 1'IC\\ or oIa r ds our[ eet high and WIfe "hlch I [ N b h h wa morean ppom e Irec- and Clc\("lmd In IS81 In \\hlch \Clr he b h b d moe:t of the hooks \\ hl{h are on the sum rom ar crt JOined t e 1!ang and a" a t f th D' B f ex en s SIX eet a ove t e oar 5 "0 that It b f I h or 0 e lstrlct ureau 0 a1 .. 0 Came to Philadelphia and entered the the ball IS lD play all the hme which mer rcadll1~ It"t<: of the S\\arthmorc High rc"u \\e num er ourtecn t 115 Har "It F· d firm of R Dunlap anrl Compam of that k th I I School H\ re uhn/!: an~ f the"c b k j the exception of the pannts of Jan"en orelgn an Dome3hc CI1\ rna es e game very Ive y 0 00 s I Rogers from New York City and Larry Commerce I The Swarthmore Indlane: the team Imlllis of the "chool can obtam extra credit D It I R d All h d In 1881 CaptaIn :\lachold enh .. ted m the representing S\\arthmore In ~he Phdadcl and alo I keener appr('clatlon of their a ani rolmS cahmg M. t c parents an \\llhtm 1\1 Park of II, \ III.' ~\I.'nut: [Third Reglmcnt of the Infantn of the I h I I r II Th I I [ some oca \\art moreans \\ere present at phla Lacrosse League was organIzed b\: "'U Jec" nex a e comp etc IstS 0 h ' If \\as named Monday b\ Dr ClaudIUS T Pmnql\anta ~ntlonal Guard \\ht't(' ID J Ilh b k I hI I I b t e seeIng 0 part) I Portet \Valle and IS coached b\ Avery e 00 <: a\al a e m tiC I ran are as j A [ [ I I Mudchle:on Director of the Bureill of time he \\as promoted to thc po"t<: of f II F I II I I umquc cature 0 t 11 \ car S a( \ en I Blake and Grant BenJamm, \\ho also pla\ 0 0\\<;;; or en 1 j!ra( e te u mg:- I t tt d h t it th t f th [Foreign and Domce:tlc Commerce I" man I (orporal leutenant and cilptam In 1898 defense on the team The team IS com ClOIster mtl Hcarth In Reade Odd ~um fiur~ I:~ e~~e I~O~~\\ a ~ ~ ~ tOt (' Il!er ot" the Burelll 5 dl<;trlct oUice In he \\a<: \\Ith the Thml Re~:Imcnt of the posed most!} of boss who haH played at ber h\ De:\1lUlllssant Don QUI "ate 1)\ LI" A e l or F\mdPIa( ';PCt "k on °IIPhalldcJJlitLa Pa The Phllldelphil oClIee Pcnn .. \hama \oluntc('r In the Spanto::h~ C t 'L "h Q \ d b as nJ!e CS, IS a or expre"s ruc no Snarthmore College and at Pennsylvama enan es ~rt 1m ."Ig t" lIO 011<;;;, \ I IT I [ II h COHrs mo<;t of the Stlte of Penn,,\h mla ~mencm \\ar IOd 10 190-t he \\ae: placed State College Bud Hickman Bdl HIckman S Il.'n k le\\ \\' II B II on y a on mg "pace or carn 109 ate ICZ a ace 5 en ur bib [ I d I tnd al .. o Southern Z'\e\\ J er"'e\ on the retIred h t ' , Ch k Sh S I aJ!J:mge lIn( ('r CO\ er ut or } 109 0\\ n Avery Blake Grant Benjamin Geor!!e e 0\ <;;; ort tort(,s Kmg"e\" H\ ttl I th h I Mr Park \\ho has lfl.'n a re"Ldcnt 01 Capt am :\Iachold \\('nt mto bU"In(," for JO} ce and 'Twit Taylor from Swarth patla Bul\\ er I \ lton s The I a<:t Da\ 510 ppor UGnI I('S W If I 01 C b\\ C(' 5 larc III n mOh Sn nthmore for thrce \ e Ir<: 1" \\ell ac hlm"('li m 1882 and contmued m It a" more College and John Belfield Percy Bel of Pomll(,11 The Tlh"mln h\ Se 11 IOn roup<: 0 oUr 0\5 reay Iroug: [ I h I II 1912 ' C t t \ k K:\ h0 h a II d d I Ih I [I qu Hnted \\Ith bu"'lOl.'<;s men 111 the area I manu ac lIrer 01 men 5 a s un t J £1\ P(,rlD s m £1\ al 1nJ! em<:e \ es 0 h h field, Bud Green, Ra\mond Fcllo\\s and onncc ICU an ec m mg rt urs thIS opportuntt} The .. e four berths arc "cned b} hiS ofhee 1 he hiS heen actmg: \\ en e "ent to the ForcIgn Trade Bureau Fred Male~ from Penn SLate ClIff Rum Court h} T\\ I1n fhe Prince md the th I I th m ma'Yer of that ofllce since \u"u .. t I 19~1 of the Philadelphia Comm('roal :\Iuo::cum • P b T TI Th 'I k e mas popu ar In C caravan ~ '" h h e:ey, Joe Kahler Timmy Whitehead and mper ) \\£110 Ie ree.l.\' us eteer... The ne"Jv budt engme In the Pierce The Phdadeiphla ortice IS one of h\en1\ \\ ere e \\as connected \\Ilh the export Porter WaIte ha\C played box lacrosse for In Dumas A.nderson!O. Mar} of Srot A.rrow "Io\\cd pace and hortened dlstancc I four ~ueh branch(,s o( the Department 01 department until hb de Ith Ih I f fi ' I eland Klplmg 5 The I I~ht That Faded Captam :\Iachold \\ as a hfe member of east our or Ive years m ~t antIC It} on our hr(:t da\: out 'Ve camped on Short Commerce malnta1D~d In that maD\ Imllor ~ d B It I aJ!erlof S Marh Ica l\Iacterhnck 5 Blue J Oriental Lodrre::-\o ,,8;:, F & \ :\1 and anT he aS "t marothrem ore Indians ha\ cone ot Ihrd Master Sk\ lark, bv Hennett Mountam Summit the lop of the first tant cIties 10 the UnIted States The office a mem ber "ot I he OrlentI I LO( I,.,eN 0 Z;-) Romola b\ Eliot SClramouche b\ Stba peak on the \VlIham Penn Highway west 15 eb<tUlPP('d to gl\c full and prrompt 8C~\ICC Kmght<: of PqhJa;:, He \\as £11';;0 a membc; the be.;t box lacrosse teams 10 thiS part Marco Polo In R\ rone through Penn"ylvanta The city park, to I usmess l mcn mterested in orelgn trade of the :\a\ ~ an(1 l'.hhtar) Order o[ Ihe of the country. and e:o far hal e lost only lim Mes.."Cr M fi Id Oh [ h d d an t 15' Ulp I t h f t \·"" es I \\ anI H b K I \"h K hi aDS Ie, 10 urnts e our sccon {I a 0 eq pe( 0 e 0 assl.;; ance S h \ \' f one game 0 \ m~" e} ,v en DIg h [ pam.. mcncan ,\ ar a companton 0 The other teams In the league are the Philadelphia Comets' and the Canadian Eagles from PIIlIadelph13 The first game pIa} ed on May 30, \\ as an exhibitIon game "Ith S\\ arthmore Col lege and ended \\ Ith a he score or S to 8 The next ~ame WIth thi! PhIladelphm Comets was WOh by the Indians,' 9 to 5 Then follo\\ cd a he game With the I Eagles 7 to 7 and another game With the Eagles on June 27 \\ hen the home team was defeated b} a <:core of 6 to 5 All the bo\s \\ho play ha\C helped to put the game OVer Ch£( Rumsc\ Jack Hanna Fred and Dick Male\ Walt Stupka Joe Rc) nolds and the members of the S"arthmore Hornets b I"eball team have 31"0 figured In making It a ::;uccess Joe Re} nolds IS the offiCial scorer and hme keeper and IS domg fine m thiS Impor tant posItion \\ hlch IS unu~uall} "0 In thIS game \It here the pla\ ers mu .. t be changed c\:cr} three nunut('" \\ Ithout .. toppmg the game ThiS chan~mg keep up the ~(leed and makes the j:!ame ~en mtere"tlng- The \ounger hO\s hale become mter ested m the sport and under the coachmg (Continued on I age ij) COMMITTEE MEETS TO PLAN PICNIC August 1 Named Week Picnic at Grove for County Emmons' h OO( I \\ as FI b 'I K I flight s abode and the palahal Dlmean tn man~ p I"es 0 dome"hc trade promo Ih 'II 0 I I F \\ f th S 10 0\\ er \ n aJor Chi (\,"ve st Sl d e) Yu 'I C J\ t h rew ItS d oors tton enI Uan rc er 0 oret!!n ars 0 e \\ orth b\ cott Ib<:.en s '~ Doll s Hous(' [ Ch j Untted State-- at ~mcnca and I m(,mber HUJ!o S 1.\.',:, l\llscrables Remarque S Wide open for our two day stay In tcago Except for a bnef penod \..,hen he en of ]e""'e ~I Baker Camp No J7~ Umted All QUIet on the Western Front and hiS! The Fmr-}es, It truly I" bigger and h<;ted m the ~rm} durmg the "orld '\ar Stat(,s \\ It \etemn'" He \\as formerl~ a Road Back Wells Mr Bnthng: Sees better than e\er The fine thmgs of last !\ir Park has e:pent many 'Vears m the member of the S\\ trthmore Pla\Cr::. Club It Through Journc\" End 1)\ Shernff }eur still remain The Hall of SCIence an SI.'HICe of the Department of Commerce Captam :\1lchold I "unlvcd b\ Ius \\Iie r('~t Imcn! of '\ outh 1)\ linH IIll I duc 1 educatIonal gold mme the General Motors md IS a te<;ult 15 llnusu ,Ih famlhar \\ Ith Georglnc L l\Iaehold a mcce :\lr ::\Ianc tlon of I Pnncc~s b} (.rand Duchess and the Trano::portahon Bulldmgs all re Its Caclhlles both m thl:; countr\: and G Donncll~ and Mr DonneU\ e: dauJ!hter Marlc T\\lce Born In RUSSia b\' P .. trola maIO as entlcmg as eler lhe Mldwa} abroad He ISo the COUSin of Guy n Park I Bonme a nephe\\, :l.fontz :\hchold of \ \Vorld Mav End b~ Skanatma Kapoot has been tran<:planfed acro"s the lagoon GO\crnor of l\lJs<:oun ~udub~n N J and a e:bter In law ~Irs The Hou!'C of Exile b\ \V lin, md Mozart and Its place IS now ~~cuPled T~} the He entcred the o::;erVice of the Bureau of \nton Wa~ner of S\\ arthrnorc A.venue b} Da\enport scplclndull ~Vrolul() of new \11 a~bes e new Forcign md Domcstlc Commerce m 11)1 The bod\' \\as on lle\\ from 7 untll 9 for Juntor read('r" (cle\enth gradc stu I D oIof ma II age hs eems 0 e t a I \\Imd ner scnlng m larlOUS capaCl I les mc Iu d mg as 0 c Io c k on T ue"( Ia } at t h e JUnera I Il ome 0 f dents)-l\1oby Dick b} Mehille Unele I erenth co or <:~ cme~ on mos f)ol ~g~ signment to the Department 5 office m Lon OlInr Balr on ehc tnut Street Phdadel Toms Clbm b\ Stowc Huck hnn 1)\ add muc tOr rna lng t ISh a ne; ~Ir t t~ don "here he reached the rank of Trade pilla Pa The mlhtan "en Ices \\ere alo:.o T\\ un also hb Innoc('nts \broad and the mo"t 0 us agree t at or a e CommlO::;O::;lOner HIS exp(,Tlence \\Ith the held at tllI-- time The funeral "en Ices Ius ConnectICut Ymkce Tarkmg:tons FalrhlS the tlhmHh \\hlch aslonClIntlakeS IIt Deptrtment meludes dut\ 3:. :\""I<:tant \\ere on \\lednl.' da\ morn1n~ at 930 after Penrod SCHnleen md l\.fa~ntltcent o\lfo rot urc ohmOlme g m0 "tc eImS r\re ahriS tp\\eenh e Ime lmlhoosn Chlel ot the :\gTlcultural Implement DI\I \\hLch the mterment In Arhn",ton ~ahonal ;," m I) ('rt .. ono::; \\ a II ace s Be n H ur M ar) dollar contnbutlon .H... e has done much to "Ion m \Va .. lnngton and \\ Ith the Branch Cemeler~' [0110\\ cd John .. ton" To H l\C md to Hold James " h Ofhce 01 the Bur('au of For(,lg:n lOd Do I wipe out the CtltlCI m of too muc com me lIc Commerce In ~('\\ \ ork LECTURES AT THE Femrnore Cooper e: The Deer,;lner and mercmhsm thiS \ear Th ... first hand ob The I ast of the Molnc lUS Richard C!f I t I h t \ elvc baSIC A .. Illrt oj hiS education II eqUipment ~lt I -serva IOn 0 proce "es c angm~ \ ) k \ cI and Crls):' b) \\ 1Oston Churdllil clements of the earth by man s creahve II ar h 1 peclahzcd m economIC and bu I J Intce 1\1('r('<llth b\ Paul I eICe .. ter Ford I genIUs mto 15000 flmshed pleccs that go ne"s coursc:-. mcludmg foreign languagc:, 1 RACE INSTITUTE lIu~h w\ nne .hec Qu ,ker b~ S Weir mto the Ford automobile furmshed us wUh He Iltcnde~1 the \\ h Irton School 011 Mitchell Marching: On u\ J Ime,; BOHI ! t t F t \" broke a'\a) Finance 10 I hilulclphia and the ~chool 01 , nur grca es air VI"I ,ve D 0 Kl b f C I b Drums b\ James BO\d I he Conqueror Imm Chtcago 10 the earl~ eunmg on Sun EconomICs In london EnJ!land I r. tto lne erg, 0 0 om la, b\ Gertrucle :\thertnn Helen Hunt J Ick I da\ thnlled \\ Ith our f!rst c11011X and Belore entering Ihe "'cn ce ot the Dc G yes ClOSIng Lecture at "ons Romonl Edna Ferbers Sho\\ I read\ for se\eral Jumps mto the nest' partment ot Commerc(, Mr Plrk \\a" en Institute of Race Bo It Thoma" ~el"on Pa,..,e 5 R('d Rock On Mond I} Shlftmg Sccn(''' took u~ g:ag:ed for a numb("r of ~ car... In \ anou~ Reahons O \\en \\ I" t cr ThC \ .Ir._l nlan IL.: (Ina [ out of bustlmg ChICago O\er t II e I inca In eal>aotle:; \\ Itn railroad coml) Ime-- III St I ferb(,r s So Ill!!; and Cmlmaron The Hlgh\\a} on the broad lertlle acrcs ot LoUIS and San Francl<:(o He \\ IS al.;;o at I \(nm_ Inturl' 01 tl c ll)q In ltUt~ ot IIarbor 1)\ I roe"t Poole One of OUtS IOd IIhnol'" 10\\ 1 and ~ehra kt \\e rode 310 one time 1 .. 0::1 tant to the g~neral manaE!('r I RI e R iltum hem hdd It S"arthn ore :\1\ -\Iltom I 1)\ Calher Stephen Crane 5 nllies on Monda~ from DeKalb III to and 01 a punt manUlacturmg concern Cull('ct Ire open to tht puhhl ft):ll",ht Red HuJJ!e 01 COllfl,...C J L :\lIens be\ond \me.;; Ia :\ happ\ "urpnsc \\hlch In hiS dfort" to he of mlXm11lnl a""1 t the icdure 1 The:\11 lonar IUd the K en II ll.: k \ C If( Il ila I EI IZ lhe III R (l I) er 1S [ \\e found here In thIS rrreat corn helt 0 f IDlC to thc Phliull.'lllhm busm(' 5 com Race Problem III \frlc I In Dr Chatl(':; ( lre I t I'tI ('af I0 \\ 11l orn t on \\' II fI er 5 the Untted Stat(';:, \\ as a0 t\Hnh four mc h mumt\ Mr P Irk \\ III h I\e the full up T loram Sterhn.. Pratt: or 01 Educ ltl In HndJ!e 01 Sm Ims Re} IC\\IS Mun ram \\hlch felllL~t m",ht Thl" hnre m I rl ol thc tlohtle:-. of the Department 10 It \al(' Stnd and Blhlnlt Jllklondm:-. CllI Io\\a dro\\nrd thechmch 1m,.. \\hlch\\cre \\Ihlllgton mel It tr,d~ prol11otln", On :\Iondl\ e\enm Juh)~ Fred :\lc The pr('i1nllnln m('etmg 01 Ihe Countn 01 Ih \\lld \leott 11UIc \\omcn ktllmg the corn and alo broke the lonl! :tJ!cnne loclte<l m \ mOll put 01 the CUI tlon 01 the \" t nallon ot Collt'''e nd Wc("k PICDlC Comnllttee \\ I h('M m th(' Hlmhn Glrlmds Son ot the Mulcllc drou .... ht \ hlch \\ tlm"ltemnE! Ihe \Cn \\orld Sl.'eon(iln ,.Slhool 01 the Southern Stah Borough Hall on 1\1onlll\ C\(mn \11 Border Dana~ T\\n \elrs Belore the hie of the ]0\\:\ corn crop "e rode then ~ \\111 I\e m 1IIu tt\ted lecture \1)1ht\ arrang('ment \\er m HI~ lor hoMIn!! tin ~11 l lOti \\ e cott IJa\ HI H !fum all cla\;:, through held )U t commg mto Swarthmore Teachers on mtl f flort 01 State and Sectum to Sup ~ear" IHCIllC and the {umnlllt..:{' lTC IUIC Senior "tulienb (t\\('lIth !!;rull.') AI \ .b I I I h h tl (' hItherto Vacabon lort ::'\ !!ro EducatLon taca 11 \ (Ie elf I1 .'( I upon I en d mg th e a{cept t 1111 pm e tr In latton ot HoI m(e r ... gtalso"oem \\\ lfiea rmaerrc~ no\\ c eermg On "edlll d:l\ CHnm Juh 1) D r ance of the po"t b} the \ mou per"on" Od\ ...... C'\ :\dlclull",l.'nheli Ldtll Rllph Hut the \\or t \\01 \et to come ~h 5 Grace \\II"on of Lan ... do\\ne and \mbrn I.' Cahur SCllIor Spccllh 1 In the ~Iected Rm .. t('r »0\ lcr Stc\en on" Glmmcr! Dunn;! the n("xt t\\O da\s \\e ghd('d along: l\1J ... Hannah Kllk of \V~combe are ... pend hlucatlOn ot ~e,...roc ot the Ofille 01 Eel It ,\as deCided to hold the p1cmc on[Gurtons ~('("(l1e Mari<mc .. Dr FillS thc bmk .. ot the Platte Rl\cr through m!!; "IX \\ecks tra\clmg: m the \\C"t IIcatlOn Dt:J1lrtment ot the Int(,rlor \\ill \Vedne"da\ Augu"t 1 m Immon GrO\e tus Shakl.'''p('are'' Pla\" :\t)rl cI \rthllr ~I.'bra"ka E\cn though thl" n\er g:ener l\hss \mnml Allen 01 Medta at a Icak on the .. ubJect ~\1l11Itht\ 01 Ed \\here the IHcmc<: ha\e bCl.'n held for the In ~Ililn BUll\an" PtlJ,!nm" Progre"'" alh furDl<:hes \\ater for Irngatlon \\e camp In Milne lucatIonal F10hilC tn ::'\1.'J,!r e5 and It Rc pa.;;t ten \car<: ( 0I1mlitc I n I t1; I found corn on1) a foot high and m man) :\11" I tlhm Heuc Pro )ltd Plrk ha lat1011 to a ~C\\ Soual Ordcr The PhIladelphia Countf\ "eek \ 0 • I ~ I I t [ 00 I Thur d I} e\Cnm", Julv )6 thc -'ubJl.'cl held" \\Ithered ~ (a1) tempera ure 0 he('n altendm~ the fnend Conterence at II I I I \ h h I' bl oahon ha .. 1D\ Ited )00 dllldren to Itlcnd to 10;:, \\ Ith no ram for monthe: could Cape l[ t} \\ 1 )e ega pproac t, t c ro em Ihe pICniC The mother \\ ho tt:(omIHR\ Streets to Be Resurfaced I \"h t h I I ot Race \(lJu .. tment b\ Dr Chark H produce nothmg e "e ,\, ea ere I'" on \ I Mr J arne" 1\111 er of Prospect P uk the children of cour~ \\111 make the tntal I-Iou"ton D('an School 01 I l\\ 1I0\\ard The loIlO\\ltl_ treet \\111 he re uri Iced produclD", three to "IX bu ... hel .. Jl r acre !at Ocean Clt\ for the summer I~ \\ h I) C number con"ld('rabh lar .... cr <" I "herc et hteen to t\\ent} t1\e uere rcap('d 1\11 0:: \nnl Burkhlrt I an .. do\\nc I .... at ""nI\er It\ a 1I1 0 ton It ha ... been reque"ted th It 111\ In \\ h) I t mhn to 1)1 to ot T He enhruch Thc II tIel In 11 tit In IItutl \\lli Ie hllrll1ll1 the Ill ... h\\ 1\ ComlllLttl.'C hetorc II CIUlII ncar l)mnm!!lo\\1l tXl(tl to he a\\a\ It till tmH the ohntor To<i;l\ the \\elther hi" b tn mmh :\tl~ I )dll Rctnharch 01 Lan do\\m I III fn 11\ l\ nltl!! Juh J- \\111.'11 Dr Otto call \\ hleh \\ III be m a \\c('k or 0 and I ::\It h lcl J ~I thonc\ Con trudlOn Com cooler \\e be).!all to cbmb at Gr('ch Col ! at \\ alon :'\ J for the "ummer Khnl.'blrg: lrtlm the D('partment 01 P \ \\hO de"Ir(''' to make a contribution \\ III do [ p tn\ hal to ubmHted thc Itm Iml lOT I thiS :\ 1\1 and re lCh('d the Park (Rock\ I 1\1.IO::;S Lllhan Barton of Lan"do\\ ne cholog\ Cnillmbl t Dnner 11\ \\ III "p('ak o b\ .. endmg It to the chatrm::m of the the ("on IructlOn \\LII do the \\ork Mountam and E ... te ... ) 10 lime for lunch .;;pemlmg t\\O \\eek" at ~\alon on PractICal Implicatlons of the Stud} comm ttce Dr Har\C\ PleR(, 109 Prmce III \ [ \" I L t I h I I ot Race I I llt)Orn \enue rom ,v I nut anI.' or \Vc are here onh one da\ Ie m( our Mr and Mr \\J!ham Price and <:on I • __ ~~_ ton t\\('nue Burou h I lUI.' :\1aple t\\cnue from Col --chedule alter takmg: 1\\0 da\" for the II PIlIhp and 1\h55 Mn~aret Price are tra\el S th M B A. complete report ot the committee It.-e ~\Cnue to Elm :\'\enuc Dartmouth FaIr not mcludcd 10 our orlgmal Itmeran 109 m England war more en to e Given member" etc "Ill be pubh hed In our "('nul.' trom Park ~\enue to Lafa\Ctte \\e ha\e taken thl" hr ... t \\('ek as u"ual MI5S \<fehne Strom(, of \ ... hland Pa Preference next )" ue Jul): 27 • ~\CnLle I afa\Ctlc' t\\enue from Dart to get \\C"t Our next epl ... tle \\111 .. tart II~ takmg ,:!raduate \\ork at State ColleJ!c I In emplo\mg mcn to \\ork on the n('\\ Attends Ford Convention mouth t\unue ttl Prmceton t\\enuc \m I \\1th thl .... !!reat park the onh one In the I 1\11<;" Teresa Voun!! of Wtllo\\ GrO\e I" ,..\mna mOl \\m~ at th .... H.rrh School prel her t henu(' lrom Dartmouth \\{'nue \\('''t \\Inch \\e ha\e not mdud('d In either dom!! !!raduate "ork at Teach('r" Coll('~e erence \\111 be 1!1\"'n S\\arthmore re"lrlenl::i Mr Jacob F :\le chter of Dlckm--oA !\\Cnue lett on :\Ionda\ \\ tth th" Ford dealer ... 01 the PhIladelphia ar('a to attend the Ford COD\enhon at the ChIGlg'O World" Fair and to \Ie\\ th(, Ford e\hlblt Ihere hili \\a\ to Hanard \'\enuc Park :\\e ad\Cnture number one or t\\O Columbia I accordmrr to a dau e tn ... erted In the con nUl lrom \ ,Ic ~\cnuc to 1\hchl .. an ~\c I ~<: 1S cIcarl~ .. hn\\n In th ... commumca Mr and l\1r G Baker Thomp .. on I tract" Il\ Dr A.rthur \V BI~sctl pr('''ldent nue lntm h('nu(' outh of \ale and I tlon from Dr Terman the Ir:nelero::; are a"jLan"do\\ne are \I"IHng Mrs Raker ... "'Ie:ter of the School Hoard Rel!l"trahon mu"t KCil\on \\I.'nu(' u uII ha\m::: a un \t hm(' and \\111 han In Sprm~field Ma"'" I be made at the Federal (nemplo me t \\ork \\111 b"!.!m ('arh next \\('ek on \jHn" a mam "tor"'d up lor future u..:el 1\11e: .. DOli" \an de Bogart IIud on I Bureau at Ele\l.'nth and l\Iadl.;;on ~ree~ thl projt'd j upon their return ~ Y I tr:nehnrr abroad I Che tcr
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i , .1 : '( Edna 81 k· 8 °d f' I they are 5tudent.. Mr. J?avid Rosenblatt. ae .' n e 0 of Chester. was the .. IOLSt. Mr. Rosen- . , blatt was accompanied by Mrs. Macintyre. J h M K also of Chester. During the evening there o 0 e eDOa was a treasure h.unt in w~ich ]immyLipÂman won first prIZe and MISS Mary Temple won second prize. Ice cream was served Louis N. Robbuons Entertain at on the lawn. Among Dr. and Mrs. RobÂGarden Party, Musicale and " inson's guests were their near neigbbors Treasure Hunt and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Cochrane,. their . . I sons, David and West, and Mr. and Mrs. The marriage of M~ ;Edna. V.ivia~ GeQrg~ HaYl _ Qf _Chester j Mr •. at'd "':rs. Black, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Leon Stem,' of Media; Mr. arid Mrs. E. Black, of 400 Park Avenue, Swarth- William Fogg, of Lansdowne, and Mr. more, and John McKenna, Jr., son of Mr. W. W. Jacob and SOD, Ellis, of Moylan. and Mrs. J abo McKenna, of Baltimore THE SWARTHMOREAN Mrs. ] acob Meschter and Kathryn Meschter, of Dickinson A venue, , spent Tuesday in Ocean f;:ity, N. ]. . David Rumsey, 'Of Rutgers Avenue; H. Chalmers Stewart, of Princeton Avenue, and Henry A. Pe'irsol, Jr., of Lafayette Avenue, active members of the Second Philadelphia City Cavalry. Troop Br !03d Cavalry, left on Saturday for their sum~ mer encampment at Mt. Gretna, where the entire Pennsylvania National Guard will be in' training for fifteen days. Swarthmore members of Kappa Kappa Gamma who are present at the Fraternity Convention in Yellowstone Park are: Mrs. S. W. Hodge, Mrs. ]. B. Douglas. and Miss Agnes Metcalf, all of Beta Iota Chapter j Mrs. A. F. Jackson, Beta JULy 20, 1934: Miss Phyllis Rhoads, of Princeton AveÂitue. 'spenfil few day. last week in Ocean City as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. George ], Courtney, of Ridley Park. at tbeir sumÂmer home .. Miss Mary E. Thorn. of the '. Shirer Apart .... nts. is at the Osteopathic 110.Âpi! aJ. Philadelphia. where she' has und~r~. gone a serious operation on both her feet. SUMMER COURSE of CREATIVE DANCING Under the DlrectioD' of ··ANNA CRISS Dl.clple of badora DUDcaD all the ESTATE OF DR. G. C. SPEIRS Children - Adult. . S_ ... Wednesday. July 25. at 10 A,. M. Information - Phone Swarthmore 622 Pike. look place last Thursday afternoon I Mr. and Mrs. Paul Campbell, of HarÂat 4.30 o'clock, in the rectory of St. Fran- rishurg, Pa" were the w:ek-end guests of cis' Church, Springfield. The ceremony Mr. Campbell's mother, Mrs. Edgar CampÂWas performed by the Rev. Francis J. bell, of Princeton Avenue. Mrs. Campbell Conway, and was witnessed only by mem- I also has ber granddaughter, Miss Barbara . bers of the families and close friends. Campbell, of Wenonah, and Miss Marian Miss Black bad as her maid of honor Lauffer, of Philadelphia, visiting her for -and only attendant, her sister, Miss Lucy a week or so. Black. James McKenna served as best man for bis brother. Gamma; Miss Helen Jackson, Delta Epsilon; Miss Betty Lou Meyers, Mu . ;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~; Mrs. Roland G. E. Ullman, Jane and David Ullman, of Harvard Avenue; Mrs. The bride worc a gown of white silk crepe, made on simple Jines with jacket of self material. A picture hat of white straw, white gloves and white kid sandals completed her costume. \Vith it she wore a corsage of gardenias and lilies of the valley. The maid of honor's dress was of ashes of roses crepe, with white ruching at neck. and sleeves. Her hat, gloves and shoes "".ere white, and her corsage was of talisÂman roscs. Mrs. Black., mother of the bride, wore a 'white costume, with matching accessories, and a corsage of gardenias. Mrs. McÂKenna's gown was of dark blue summer cr:epe, with white trimming. She wore a dark blue hat, and a corsage of gardenias. 'After the ceremony and a small recep· tion at the home of the bride, the couple left on a wedding trip to Ocean City. For a goin~·away gown, the bride chose Miss l\fila Schwartzbach, of Princeton and Lafayette Avenues, has returned from a two-weeks' vacation in the west with Miss Marjorie Porter, during which time they visited Miss Schwartzbach's sister and brother-in-1aw, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Vter, of Harrisburg, before going to Canada and Chicago. They also visited Miss Porter's pzrents, Dr. and Mrs. J. P. Porter, of Athens, Ohio. Miss Porter will remain in Ohio for two weeks more. Dr. Richard G. Abell, of Park Avenue, spent last week-end with his wife and daughter \'1!ho are spending the summer at Duck Hill Falls with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Atkinson, at "The Mmhroom." Dr. Abell plans to join them in August. Mrs. Charles DeHart Brower and family left on Saturday for West Hampton Beach, L. I., where they will spend two weeks. Elliott Richardson and Jane Richardson, of Lafayette Avenue; Mr. and Mrs. Carl DeMolI, Louis and John David DeMoll, of Park Avcnuc, and Mr. and Mrs. David Ulrich, of Rutgers Avenue, visited young I Elliott Richardson and "Pete" Ullman, at Camp Chesapeake, ncar North East, Md., on Sunday. I Fred Hawkes, of Dartmouth Avenue, j caught 3 two and five-eighths pound black I bass measuring sc\'enteen and a half I inches in length last week in Crum Creek. I Mr. and Mrs. Harold G. Marr and daughters, of Media; Mr. and ltoirs. Leonardi Ashton and two sons of Elm A"cnue, and Mrs. Robert E. Carels, of Riverview Ave· nuc, arc stopping at the Vassar Club at the New Weston Hotel in New York City. an ensemble of rose crepe, with close fit- The Do-Dos will meet ne::o;:t week, which Hng brown hat, and brown shoes. is their regular bi-monthly meeting, which Mrs. Theodore \V. Crossen, of Garrett I Avenue, entertained at a luncheon on Mon-I day at the Rolling Green Golf Club in honor of her sister-in-law, Mrs. Jean! Crossen, of St. Louis. Mrs. Crossen's other guests were: Mrs. George de Forest, Mrs. Thatcher, Mrs. Frederick Luehring and Mrs. Stabler. On their return Mr. and ~Irs. McKenna will be two weeks from their last meeting 'win make their home on the Baltimore I at which time a pleasant evening was had :Pike, Sprin·gfield. by all present except one member who was Mrs. William Taylor, of Riverview Road, has announced the engagement of ber daughter, Clara Bond Taylor, to Dr. H. Rudolph Seibold, of Ne\V York City. Miss Taylor is a graduate of the Swartbmore High School and also of Swarthmore ColÂlege. She is at present head technician at the New York Hospital, connected with the Cornell University Medical College. Dr. Seibold is a graduate of the Veterinary School of the University of Pennsylvania and has done considerable research work for the Phipps Institute of Philadelphia. Miss Black is a graduate of the Swarth- in a fog and did nothing right when he m'ore High School and attended business should and everything wrong when he . college in Philadelphia. 1\.1"r. McKenna shouldn't. graduated (rom the Springfield High School : ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and attehded Drexel. Institute. Ilf WASHINGTON ·Dr. Louis N. Robinson and M.rs. Rob-! inson, of College Aven~e, entertamed last i Friday evening at a. neIghborhood ~arden i puty and musicale In honor of theIr son I ;and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. 'Valter H. Robinson who have arrived from Cam-: ·bridge, Mas~., to reside for a period wit~ nr. and Mrs. Robinson; and their daugh. teTS Miss Alice Robinson and Miss ChrisÂtine' Robinson, who have just retump.d from Stanford University, Cal., where Media Theatre Today (Friday) and Saturday Joe E. Brown 'A Very Honorable Guy' Monday and Tuesday Earl Carroll'. 'Murder at the Vanities' Wednesd3.Y Only George Raft in 'The Trumpet Blows' Thursday Only Bebe Daniela tn 'Registered Nurse' IEVERY :PICTURE YEAR ONE STANDS OUT Theatre--Chester Saturday, Monday, Tue.day Lupe Velez Jimmy Du.rante "Strictly Dynamite" Wedneaday, Thuraday, Friday Edgar Wallace', "Return of the Terror" Try and See Better Shows H~~OH. THEATRE Cheder Pike at Prospect Park Dally Matillee at 2.1& Friday and Saturday-July 20.21 BING CROSBY CAROLE LOMBARD BURNS-ALLEN E'!~~L MERMAN LEON ERROL "We're Not Dressing" Monday and Tuesday July 23.24 JOE E. BROWN , The F-larriage is expected to take place· carly in the fall. -.,..---:-: Dr. and Mrs. Louis N. Robinson ami family, of College A venue, have gone to spend the summer on their farm near Tunkhannock, Pa. Miss Christine Robin· son is studying at Columbia University this summer. Miss Arabel Jaquette, of Elm Avenue, wi1l1eave early next week for the Jaquette's summer home at Little Deer Isle, Maine. Miss Alice McReynolds, of \Vashington, will accompany Miss J aqueUe as her guest. Little Miss Edith Thatcher, of Ogden Avenue, has returned from the Bryn Mawr !!~s,it:!l where she underwent a tonsil operation last week and is doing nicely. Snyder-Linton in Dr. and Mrs. Charles Carroll Linton "A Very Honorable Guy" announce the marriage of their niece, Ethel Wednesday Only~July 25 Betty Linton, to Harold Elam Snyder on IRENE DUNNE Tuesday, June 26, 1934. At home, 554 CONSTANCE CUMMINGS Wesl 114th Street, New York. in Mr. Snyder, who teaches German and "Thia Man Is Mine" social studies in the Swarthmore High with School, is a graduate of Swarthmore Col- Ralph Bellamy - Kay Jobn.oD lege, where he received the degree. of A.B. Thuuday Only-JulY 26 in 1929. His A.M. was obtained at the A MILLION FORD V·8 OWNERS SAY GREAT! There un't a lukewann owner among the million Ford V-8 owners. They're all "sold" on their V-8's. Thousand .. and thousands of letters prove it. And the Ford V-8, itself. did the selling. The sensational V -8 engine sold them_ This engine the only V-type 8-cylinder engine selling under $2500- develops more power than any Ford engine ever built. It's fasL The fact that you can do over 80 miles an hour me_ you can drive 55-60-65 without engine strain. The reserve power is there- And it's smooth as only the inherently balÂanced design of the Ford V-8 engine can make it. Ford V-8 economy sold them.. Costs for g .... and oil are low, very low_ And up-keep costs ..... light- Ford comfort sold them.. The comfort of transverse springs that act on all fonr wheels. of deep, soft cushions, and of wide seats.. We urge you to compare Ford V-8 performance with that of cars costing twice its price, and D1on!- Once you have done so, you, too, will say "It's greatI'" Ford V -8 prices start at $5os. f_o..b. Detroit. Authorized Ford Finance Plans of the Universal Credit Company offer convenient terms of payDlenL Ford V-8 Tudor Sedan A heau!:iful. roomy aedan, c;:omp.ld~ in every detail. Clear .. vi.ion. ventilating slot. in front door and rear-quarter windows. Tf'here i. a1ao a De LWl:e Tudor Sedan at .lightly bigher coat. THE FORD V-8 TUDOR, f.o.b. Detroit ..................... $5%0 GASH·STULL CO. Sales Serllice NINTH and SPROUL STREETS CHESTER 6131 SWARTHMORE AUTO SERVICE R. C_ BROOKS, Jr., Prop_ CHESTER ROAD Dear PLAYERS' CLUB SWARTHMORE 214 Back Again Teachers' College of Columbia University "Flying Down to Rio" in 1933 and he also studied abroad at the I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~;;;;~~~~~~~~i 7h:! ·'C.:d:;C3"-D3:l:e Se:lS!lti::an Universities of Leipzig, Grenable and You Can't Miss on This Picture ~~:::::::::::::;~~~::::~~~P~O~it;ie;rS~'~~~~~~~::::::::::a STANL.EY CHESTER Hot Weather is Hard on Tires BEFORE YOU HAVE TROUBLE WITH YOURS-LET US EQUIP YOQR CAR wITH THE NEW "'H$t .... HIGH SPEED TIRE-IT IS STURDIER-TOUGHER AND SAFER THAN EVER BEFORE.. DRIVE IT TODAY. Why Not Paint Your Own Car? IT IS VERY EASY THE STEELCOTE WAY. WE HAVE A COMPLETE STOCK OF COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM_ Russell's "ft.'... Service DARTMOUTH AND LAFAYETTE AVES. Phone 440 omclAL SERVICE Wubiq-whricatiq-Tire BaHel7--Brake--Serrice HER CHILD! MOTHER'S GREATÂEST TREASURE_ He needs her conÂstant attention AND PURE FOOD. Penncrest's milk u a sweet, clean, creamy food that the whole family thrives on. Use more of it. p[~N(~!e~!'/I~~~~S ~JUL=-_~ _20 ~'_1_9_34_· ________~ ____ ~~~~~~ ____~ 7THE~~Sw.~~~THM~~O~REAN==·~~~ __~ __~ ____~ __~ ~ ______~ ~~~ __~ 3 THE SWARlfHMORFAN At the Blue CIua-ch. which bas been playing at Hedgerow since had to go. the two cubs being inseparable lying temperatures in Pullman oieeping can F ......... ·.II' ...... E.-..... PUBLlSHED.EVEIlYFlUDAY AT SWARTH.M. ORE, PA. ANN B_ SHARPLES EdJtor .. d Pu ...... Homer Hammontree, International gos-Âpel song leader and soloist. wUl lead the Evening Service Sunday. July 22, at !lte Blue Church, Baltimore Pike and Blue Church Road, Swarthmore. Mr. HammonÂtree has been a leader of gospel singing throughout the country for years, his Ufe as well as hia voice sbowing forth tbe vicÂtorious life. He always has a penetrating message from the. Word of God. 1923. wUl be the Shaw opus on Wednesday. since birth. are now uniformly maintained In every Based on the age-old legend 01 the .kind- Carole Lombard, George Burns and part of the car and that there is a comÂhearted Christian and. the remembering Gracie Allen. Ethel Merman and Leon plete absence of objectionable drafts or air ~on, it is replete with humor and sincerity. Errol are featured in "We're Not Dress- currents along the roof or the Ooor. Herbert Walton and Frank Beckwith enact iog," wblch is a f .. l-paced combination of Through speciaJly designed cooling appa-the title roles. melody and fun on a South Seas island. ratus and """'os of iDgress and egress -I>ÂTITUSJ_ EWlG c.-.! ........... G. B. S.'s birthday on Thtiesday marks every part of the car is Oooded at all tim ... the crOwning evont at the Hedgerow Fes- ' with sweet. refreshingly cool air. and tem. -I>- P...... Swartlamore 900 Entered .. Secoad CI ... Matt.. ,JaDl&UT .24. 1928. at the Pod· Oftic. at Swartllmore, P .. , WIder the Act of Marcil 3, 187.9. Paul Beckwith, accomplished pianist, will assist and accompany Mr. HammonÂtree during this service. The musical ability of this young man Itlakes a perfect comhination for the leadership- of truly beautiful gospel music. Everyone is cordially invited to attend. tival when hia "Saint ]oan" bas its premier Air-Conditioned Sleeping Can peratures are scientifically maintained at c starting at 8.15. It will mark the one levels determined by careful experlment.to. bundred ",!d seveDth Hedgerow production. A whim of fate in the guise of air-con- be tbe most comfortable and healthful for' and the moth Shaw play to. be ad.ded to ditioDing again has brought to popular sleeping. ~ _ _ the reperto~y. Frances Torc~t.ana will por-, favor that old friend of the traveler, the tray the hUe role of the Sl!Dple country upper berth, according to recent studies l~ who leads France !o Vl~o.ry. Co~- made by the Pennsylvania RaHroad, IQfÂSldered by many Shavtan cntaes as hIS lowing the general introduction of air-conÂmost beautiful drama, it is rich in true diUoned cars on its through passenger history and ~enuine poetry. Others in the trains tbis spring. , - Special Funds for Camp FRIDAY. JULY 20. 1934 Bible School Commencement , Commencement exercises for the SwarthÂMany Friend. Attend Conference more Community Vacation Bible Schoo] When the biennial Friends Conference will be held at the Presbyterian Church on conveDed at Cape May, on Fciday. July 6. Harvard Avenue at 8 o'dock, Friday eve~ there were in attendance from SwartbÂning, ] uly 27. There is stUl one week of more the following: Miss Ethel B. splendid training oHered to your children, Dumall, Mrs. Helen M. Hall, Mrs. Eleanor so, if you have not as yet enrolled them, S. Clarke, Miss Dorothy Simmons, Mrs. do so on Monday morning. Mrs. B. A. Elizabeth Robinson. Miss Ruth Shoemaker. Konkle is giving splendid vocal instruction Miss Martha Haviland, Mrs. W. H. EIsÂto each.department. Handwork and games bree, Mrs. Edward A. Jenkins, Mrs. C. ji"t in to make the work interesting and Howard Jenkins, Miss Frances Reinhold, more permanent. Visitors are cordially in- Mr. and Mrs. J. Warren Paxson, Mr. and vited to attend the worship services and Mrs. J. Bernard Waiton, Mr. and Mrs. classes each morning, as well as the Com- Irwin ·D. Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Louis N. mencement exercises next week. Robinson, Dr. Jesse Herman Holmes and cast are IrvtO Poley. Fred Hake. Alfred Th I Rowe, Sol Jacobson, Douglass Parkhurst, e upper, a tho.ugh alw~ys comfortable Edwin Pettet and MarshaU Galchell. and r,,""?nably pnced. UDt~ recently had "Heartbreak House," Shaw's favorite been. IoSlD~ ground and With real beds, Hedgerow play will be performed on Fri~ luxunous 5lJlgte rooms, compartments and day night with Jasper Deeter in tbe title all. the. rest of the competition on today's Mrs. Bernard Isfort, of 119 Princeton Avenue, who is treasurer of the Swarth~ more League of \Vomen Voters is receiving special contributions from the Swarthmore members of the league to be donated to the funds of the Delaware County MalnuÂtrition Camp, at Thornton. role. trams It ""as small wonder. Saturday night marks the return of what It took the magic of air-conditioning to many critics term uShaw's most perfectl), waft .the negle(.ted upper back to public constructed play," "Candida," with Miriam fav~r and patronage .• Th; cool, clean .air Phillips in the title role. Thia play has whIch refreshes and IDvtg011ltes s1eeplDg been out of the repertory for tbree years. car passengers on. t?e Pe~nsylvania, ?o This was the first play produced by Hedge- matter ho~ hot It IS outside, exerts Its row back in 1923. beneficent mOuences I)n the J?Crson in the "Saint Joan" ends the Festival on Mon~ upper ~ wen as the person lD the lower. THE JAPANESE BEETLE IS HERE Miss DoUy Viscidi has offered her serv- Mrs. Holmes. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Phrismer. ices as teacher of the Primary cblldren this Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Cleaver, Yarnall week. Trained-. in! teaching, as our other Cleaver, Guenther Reuning, JfJbn J. day, July 30, with its second performance. With. wmdows an unnecessary appendage for night travel, the upper berth patron now enjoys the same restful, soothing atmosphere and quiet comfort as other passengers. , Washington Theatre teachers are, Miss· Viscidi·is doing a splen- JaquE'tte, James Armstrong, Edward Rob~ More thrills and chills than, have been did task by awakening the interest of her erts, George Roberts, James Haviland, packed into a single picture in many a cbildren in the Bible and inspiring them to John Mark Robinson. Patcick Malin, long day are promised in the First NaÂlive accordingly. The children have all Warder Cresson, Jr., David Scull, Thomas tional mystery drama, "Return of the developed splendidly in their co-operation Kennedy, Frank Gutchess, Joseph Walton, Terror," which is scheduled as the feature during the worsbip periods--4his alone is Morris Fussell. and W. Carson Ryan. ]r .• attraction at the Washington Theatre beÂworth the whole time spent at the Bible and his mother,- Mrs . .w. Carson Ryan. of ginning next Wednesday. The startling plot School. Our youngsters need .such an op- Falls Church. Va, formerly of Swarthmore. of the screen play is credited to the excitÂportunity as can be aOorded only by con- Dean Harold E. B. Speight, Dr. and· Mrs. ing Dovel by one of the greatest of all secutive sessions under competent teachers Wi11iam I. Hull, Mr. and Mrs. Walter mystery writers,· Edgar Wallace. to supplement the fine work done by all Keighton, Mrs. Charles Paxson, Mr. and There is not just one mystery, but many, our local Sunday Schools: Jesus taught us Mrs. William Paxson, Davies Preston, Mrs. beginning with a series of arsenic poisonÂto pray continuaUy that "His· Kingdom ]obn Phillips. Caroline Phillips aDd Miss ings at a private sanitarium for which the migbt come on earth as it ·is in' heaven;" Alice Robinson. Also' Mrs. Sarah ShOe- superintendent is convicted and sent to an and Bible School:is helping our children maker Farley, of Puk!.Avenue, with .her insane'asylum and culminating with three to catch,a vision of their share in·the com- granddaughter, Etbel Shoemaker Farley, more killings and two attempted murders ing of the.Kingdom of brotherhood in'our of Newark, N. J., and· Elizabeth·Price, of at the same sanitarium in.a night of terror community and throughout the world. Plainfield; N. J.~ who have been' her guests after tbe superintendent has escaped from Furthermore, only as we learn, to enjoy for 1he past week. the. asylum. God·s. abiding feUowship NOW, can we , Mary Astor heads Ihe all-star cast as the become prepared to enjoy His closer fel- Hedgerow, Theater' owner of the sanitarium where tbe mys-lowship in heaven. Let us pray that the terious poisonings take place, with John work of our CommuDity Bihle School will The Hedgerow Theater in Rose Valley Halliday playing opposite her as tbe superÂissue forth as a stream of ever widening will present· a unique theatre event· nn.t .intendent, and her sweetheart, who is con .. influence for good in every. family repl"e- week with its Jrirst· Annu.al. Shaw. Festiv.,.l victed of the arsenic crimes. sented. Week. This week, in bonor of George Others at the sanitarium on the night ---.'::---,. Bernard Shaw's seventy-eighth birthday, of the three strange killings, which happen W. L L Lawn Fete Saturday will feature six of bls plays at Hedgerow, under the very nose of the police. include Final preparations are befng completed' and on Thulsday, July 26, Mr. Shaw's Lyle Talbot, the new' superintendent' ana for the lawn fete to be given for the bene- birthday, USaint Joan" will have its initial 'a· rival lover of the owq.ers; Frank McÂfit of the Women's International League showing in Rose Valley. This is the first Hugh, a reporter; Robert Barrat and at the home of Lucy Biddle Lewis, 504 time in American or European theatre his- George E. Stone, as two crooks in hiding; South Lansdowne Avenue, Lansdowne, on tory that such a Festival has been held. I Irving Pichel, t_beir lawyer; }. Carroll July 21, from J unill 10 P. M. Shaw is the most popular playwri~ht of Naish, in the role of a former attendant Travelers bave been quick to sense the n~w advantage of the upper bertb, and ticket agents report a material increase in upper berth sales since air-conditioning was generaDy introduced on througb Penn .. sylvania trains this spring. Even· with the limited number of sleepers equipped for air-conditioning last year, a decided in. crease in upper berth occupancy was Doted. Officials anticipate that this season will reveal a marked return of patronage to the upper berth, which, on most Pullman car lines, sells for but .little more than half the cost of the lower. Railroad air-conditioning experts, through tests, have determined that cooling, satis- Beetle Traps Beetle Bait Beetle .Sprays Suplee's Store South Chester Road Swarthmo..e 105 Ask for Your Votes In Compliance With the Request of the State High_y Department ·HAVE YOUR CAR INSPECTED EARLY Official Inspection Station No. 6294 SWARTHMORE AUTO SERVICE , R_ 'C:' BROOKS. Jr_. Prop_ Chester Road near Players' Club--Swa. 214 This annual social event promises un- the sixty authors in the Hedgerow reper- who bad given damaging testimony against usual entertainment, including games, tory. the superintendent, and members of the I' sports, marionette performances, pony The week opens on Monday with Shaw's hospital staH. rides and evening dancing. brilliant comedy on the family institution, ___. ,. _ __ Wilhelm Hubben will speak at 5.30 "Misalliance," with Harry Sheppard in the P. M. Members of the reception com- leading Falstaflian role of John Tuzelton, mittee who will assist Mrs. Lewis are: supported by Jasper Deeter, Catherine Mrs. A. R. O. Redgrave, of Swarthmore i Reiser and Frances Torchiana. uMisalli_ Mrs. Samuel P. Felix, Mrs. Lacy H. Evans, ance" opened at Hedgerow in 1924. Mrs. Robert J. Tullar, Mrs. C. Wilfred On Tuesday, "Arms and the Man," the Conard and Mrs. Edwin L. McCau5]and, of Irish dramatist's best known comedy on Lansdowne. war and romance, will be played with A delicious cafeteria supper that will Frances Torchiana and Ferd Nofer in leadÂappeal to the taste of both adult and child ing rolts. This has played more often than has been planned, so come, bring the fam- any other Shavian comedy in Rose Valley. iJy, ht:lp a good cause and have a good "Androcles and the Lion," which Shaw time. terms his "Christmas pantomime," and I A TIMELY THOUGHT Dine at the Inn and enjoy your summer evenings. The food u carefully selected and prepared. TeDDu • • • Canoeing •. • Wide Lawns _ _ _ Beautiful Flower Gardens. • • • Tea Room Dinner, 50 Cents Saturdays and Sundays, 75 Cents StratLHaven The Inn With Personality F. M. SCHEIBLEY Management , Swarthmore 680 Swarthmore, PeaDL I FOR SALE Manor Theatre During the production of Bing Crosby's newest Paramount film, "We're Not DressÂing," which comes on Friday to the Manor Tbeatre, Hollywood discovered that pro. fessional stooges were not limited to hUlDan beings, but existed in the animal kingdom, as well. Although Director Norman Taurog needed only one bear, "Brownie" for seÂQuences in the picture, he soon learned that he had to take his playmate "Blackieu along. For wherever Brownie went, Blackie CHURCH NEWS TRINITY CHURCH Protestant Episcopal Chester Road and College A venue Opposite the College Campus Rector; Rev. J. Jat'den Guenther. S. T. M. 11 :00 A. M.-Morning Prayer and Sermon. Mr. Guenther will preach. THE SWARTHMORE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. John Ellery Tuttle. Minister SUNDAY 10 :OO--gible Sc:hool. 11 :OO--Morning Worship, Pastor preaches, "Compromises." Friday, lO:OO--Summer Porch Meeting with Mrs. Clarke. 9 Swarthmore Crest. SWARTHMORE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH REV. WAYNE CHANNELL, D. D. Pastor 9 ;45 A. M.-Sunday School. SPECIAL PRICES , / j~\ We have adjusted the retail price of many toilet and proprietary articles. The following list shows just a few of our everyday prices: Squibb's Tooth Paste ............. . Druco Milk of Magnesia Tooth Paste. Colgate' s Tooth Paste . . . . . . ..... Squibb's Mineral Oil ...... . Squibb's Milk of Magnesia .. . Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. . .. Petrolagar .......,..... . . Upjohn's Citrocarbonate ......... . Listerine .................. .. Druco Rubbing Alcohol, fuU pint. .35 .25 .19-.35 .59 .23-.43 .43 1.00 .79-1.09-1.50 .69 .25 Phone 857 We Will Deliver 'Promptly MICHAEL'S COllEGE PHARMACY JOHN E. MICHAEL, Prop. Prescriptions Filled by Registered Pharmacists Only Just outside the Borough--over three acres with handsome old trees, splendid lawn, garden and spring stream. Substantial frame residence with six bedroom. and tiled bath on second Hoor; wide cenÂter hall with open stairway, hot-water heat, elecÂtricity. Taken under foreclosure and will sell at $8.000. An \Inusual bargain. III :00 A. M. and 8 :00 P. M.-Worship and Sermons by the Pastor, Strangers Cordially Invited I FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST. ~:;;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~~ OF SWARTHMORE '. _ Park Avenue below Harvard 0 " 0 G Q 0 a 0 a " a a 00 0 0 GOa a a 0'00 0 1:1 0 a 0 000 a 00 • 0 a 0 Q '0 0'0 ~II II II 1:1 a 0 0 00: ,. 11 :00 A. Il.-Sunm:~i. Yocum & Powers Co., Inc. 6940 WOODLAND AVENUE CaD Mr_ YOwl!! in the Eveomc at Swarthmore 243-W 11:00 A. JI.-Sunday Lesaon-5ermon. Wednesday evening meeUrqr each week. 8 p. m. Reading TOGm ODeD daib'. except SunÂdan and holidllÂ¥8. 9:30 to 12:10; Cbufth edifiee. All are cordially invited to atte~d the Berv· ices and use the Reading Room. THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS SUNDAY 11 :00 A. M.-Meeting for Worship in the Meeting Hm18e. WEDNESDAY 9 :10 A. II. to 2 :30 P. 1I.-&"lnl' and Quilt. ing in Whittier Honse. Box 1llllcheon. Do YoW' &l1kil1g With SWARTHMORE NATIONAL Bank and Trust Company sAerlvl icaare. tordiaIJy invited to join in these Q';O 0 0 GaO GI ) 0'12 0 DO" 0 H 0 0 0 I) 0 0 ~ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 • 0 0 0 0 0 0: DODO 00: ••
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4 NEWS NOTES THE'SWARTHMOREAN Miss Alethea Avery, of Elm Avenue, eoÂtertain~ a group of sixteen friends at bridge on Tuesday evening. fortFoeJaht: and thlrb· ... 1x hundrec1tb11 feet to the first mentJoned point. and place 01 beelnÂnIDI:. JULy 20, 1934 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Powell and Richard, of Swarthmore Place, have on a sbort trip to Norfolk, Va. and MiSs Esther Duke, of Avondale Road, Swarthmore, at Royal Oak, Md. Miss son, Tomlinson was in Swarthmore on Tuesday gone and enjoyed a short visit at home before sbe returned to Maryland. Mrs. George T. Ashton, of Cedar Lane, sails for England on Tuesday. Sbe will attend the Dolmetsch Concerts. using andent instruments. This festival is given at Haslemere. While in England Mrs. Asbton will be the guest of Miss Doris Allen, of Portsmouth. Mr. Ashton will sail on the 4th of August to meet Mrs. Ashton. The Ashtons expect to occupy their new home in Wallingford Hills in September. Miss Rutb Detlefsen, of Lafayette AveÂnue, is spending several weeks with her aunt, Mrs. Jesse W. Gage, at her summer coUage near Ogunquit, Maine. Early in August she will have Miss Eunice Eaton, of Dickinson Avenue, as her guest, later returning with her for a short visit at the Eaton cottage at Sebasco Estates, Maine. Miss Margaret Little, of Park Avenue, is a counselor at Camp Gould, at Spring Valley, N. Y. SHERIFF SALES SberUr's Otrice. Court House. Media, Penna. Tbunday, .July 26. 1984 1.00 o'clock P. M. Eaatern Standard Time Miss Helen Tomlinson, of Yale Avenue, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Duke Miss Virginia Tomlinson, of Yale AveÂnue, is at Pocono Manor with Mr. and Mrs. Jobn Cornog and son, J obn, Jr., of Dickinson Avenue. Conditions: $26.00 Cub or certified check at time of aale (unlen otberwise stated jn advertisement), balance In ten day.,. Other eondiUon., on day of sale. Lot 14: Beginning at a point on the westÂel'ly .Ide of VaUey View road sixty feet wide at the distance 01 one hundred and one and seventy-eight hundredths feet. mea\!lllred north ten degrees fourteen minutes fort,. seconlil eut along the .said side of Valley View road from the point of tangent of a elrele formlntt the corner of Valley View road and HaverÂford road; thence extending northwestwardly on a line at rIght angles to Valley View road fifty-eJaht and twenty_four hundredths feet to a pOint: thence extending north ten degreea twenty-two minutes west, one hundred and aix and eighty .. Ove hundredths feet to a point; thence extending southeastwardly on a Unp. at right ang-lea to said ValJey View road ninetY_five and eighty-aix hundredths feet. to a point on the westerly side of Vallt!)' View road aforesaid: and thence along the same .outh ten degrees fourteen minutes ·forty seeÂonds wes~ one hundred feet to the first men_ tioned point and place of beginning. When we say good used cars, it means exactly _ that. These cars have been gone over thoroughly ••• mechanical parts have been put in first class condition and moat of them look like brand new. More 'important, they run like new and the prices are terrifically low. Just drive them! These Bargains Won't Last Long 1928 Ford Tudor , _$70 1930 Ford Roadster .$150 1931 Ford Tudor, De Luxe. ,$250 1932 Ford Tudor, V-8 ___ , _ $350 1933 Ford Tudor, De Luxe __ $500 EDMOND STEINMAN Sal,. Sm/ice BALTIMORE PIKE at PROVIDENCE ROAD PHONE, MEDIA 1800 SUMMER TIME is a busy tim. for c:ReaJlj 1<i!owau Your Electrlca' Servant Wilh an electric fan he gives us a pleasant zephyr all the long summer day • • • he keeps our food fresh, and gives us tinÂkling cubes of ice to cool our summer dtinks. He runs an exhaust fan in the kitchen and keeps the air dean and free from cooking odors •• , harnessed to a vacuum cleaner he gathers the dust that blows in through open windows and doors. He makes it convenient to change our summer linen frequently because he washes and irons it so easily. And when Ready Kilowatt cooks a meal on an electric range the kitchen remains as comfonable as any pan of the house. . ·Your E/~&tricaJ S~r""nt 'lever needs II vacatioll and his wagts amollnllo (JIll, II few €~"ts II Ja;' PHILADELPHIA ELECTRIC COMPANY W .AI Pi •• nr ", y.r.alllril7 I1II4MUbiq l...Ow R4ks /_r All Ehdrk SnnCl Levari Faeias No. 1225 Mareh Term, 1934 All that certain lot or piece of land with the mellSSage and other improveDients thereon erected situated on the BOuthwesterly side of Summitt avenue at the dl.tance of ono hun~ dred and thlrty~two and two hundred and forty~five one-thousandths feet northweat. wardly from the northWesterly eorner of SumÂmitt avenue and Chester pike. in the Bor~ ough oC Prospect Park, in the County of Delaware aforesaid. Extending thence along the ~uthwesterly Bide of said Summitt aveÂnue north forty.nlne degrees nine minutes and fifty-six seeonds west twenty-elght and ninety-five one-thousandths feet to a point a corner of lands of Edwin S. Fisler. et ux; I extending thence along said lands south eixty~ I eight degreea west one hundred forty-three and eighty.six one-.hundredths feet to a point a corner of lands of Marshall P. Snyder and I .JOfJeph Oberle; thence extending along the last : mentioned lands south twenty-two degrees east twebty_fivo feet to a point a corner of landa . of Joseph B. Taylor. et al; and extEnding thence along said last mentioned lands north eixty-eiJrht degl'P.ell east. and paning along the middle or the party wall separating said mesÂsuage from the meuuage adjOining on the southeast. one hundred fifty-six and sixty_nine one.hundredtha feet to a point the place of beginning. Improvements consist of twQ.story stucco and shingle house, 34x16 feeL Enclosed porch. Sold 88 the property of. Morru. Taylor and Ruth Taylor, his wife, mortgagors and real owners. WM. B. HARVEY, Attorney. Levari FaeillliJ No. 865 I March Term. 1984 All that certain lot or piece of ground with I the messuage or tenement thereon erected 81tÂuate on the southeasterly side of Powelton avenue In the Borough. of. LalllSdowne. County of Delaware and State of Pennsylvania afore. said. Beginning at· the distance of one hunÂdred and twenty feet. eastwardly from the southeasterly comer of said Wildwood avenue I and Powelton avenue. Containing in front i on said. PoweltOn avenue thirty feet and ex. I tending of that width in length or depth l southeaa.twardb between parallel lines at right angles to said Powelton avenue one hundred feet. . I Improvement.J consist. of two and one-ha)[ story stone and stueeo house, 20x32 feet. OneÂstory frame addition, 8x8 feeL Poreh front. Sold a.g the property of Katharine Brown. mortgagor. and William L. Wood, real owner. ALLE}If S. OLMSTED. 2ND, Attorney. Levari Facias No. 1455 March Term, 1934 All those certain lots or pieces of ground situate in Haverford Township. Delaware County, Pa., known 88 Lots Nos. 24, 19, 18. 17, 16, 15, 32. I. 2, 14, 4, 5. 6, 11. 34 and 51 dP.ilcrJbed as follows: Lot. 24 beginning at a point of tangent of a eircle forming the eorner of Glenbrook road forty.five feet. wide and Valley View rosel' forty-five feet wide; thence extending south thirty-two degrees forty~8'X minutes fifty see. onds east. aTong the southWesterly side of Glenbrook road one bundred thirty-four and seventy-eIght hundredths feet (134.78') to a point a corner of Lot No. 25; thence along part of Lot 25. southwest on a line at right angles to Glenbrook road, eighty-three altd slxty-one hundredths feet (83.61') to a point a corner of Lot No. 23; thence along the line of Lot No. 28. on a line at right. anplea to said Valley View road northwest.wardly one hundred and forty-five feet. to a point on the southeasterlY side of Valley View road' thence extending along the aame north fifty' degrees sixteen minutes east. ninety feet to a point. a,!d on the !'Ire of a drde curving to the right With 0 radiUS of ten feet, the arc distance of sixteen and ninety_two bundredths feet (16.92') to the place of beginning. Lots Nos. 19. 18. 17. 16, 15. 82 beginning at. the point of tangent of a drele forming the corner of Valley View road. sixty feet wide, and Ardmore a"enue; thence extending north ten degrees fourteen minutes forty secÂonds east along the said side of Valley View· TOad. three hundred fifty-nine and sixty oneÂhundrcd!. hs feet to a point; and northeast_ wardly on the nrc of a circle curving to the right. with a radius of one hundred feet. tbe are distance of sixty-nine and em-hty_five hun~ dredths feet to a point; and north fiFty deÂJU'CCS sixteen minutes cast sb:tY.four and fifty-one hundredths feet (64.51') to a point a corner of Lot. No. 20: thence extending a10ng the line of Lot 20 .southeastwardly on a Jine at right angles to Valley View road one hundred and forty-fh'e feet. to a point. thl:'nce south Iifty.~even degrees fifty-three min~ uiles· fifty seeonds west thirlY-eight. and sevÂenty ·one hundredths' feet (38.71') to a point; thence south thirty degrees forty-three min_ utes west one hundred and fifty-ei~ht and nil}ety-four hundredths feet. (1&8.94') to a P!llnt; thence aouthcastwardly on a line at right. angles to Ardmore avenue ninety.one and s.xty one--hundredths feet to a point on the northwesterly side of Ardmore avenue thence extending along the same south fifty degrees sixteen minutes west two hundr.cd and two and twen~y--six hundredths feet to a point: thence extendIng northwestwardly on the arc of !l eirde curving to the right with n radius of twenty feet, the are di.stance of forty-eight and eighty-six hundredths feet to the first. mentioned point aad place of begj~ning. Lot 1: Beginning at. the point. of ~ngent of a cbde forming the corner of Valley View road sixty feet wide and Haverford road' thence extending north thirty-one degreei .eleven minu~es fifty seconds west along the northeast SIde of Haverford. road one I hundred al}d one and six-tentha' feet to . a pomt ; thence extending on a hne at right ang1es to Haverford road northeastwardly 8ttY-eight teet and seventy I hun,!redths of a foot to a point; thence exÂtendlDg southeastwardly on a line at right angleg to Valley View road Iifty~ight and twenty-four hundredths feet to a point on the no.rthwesterly side of Valley Vfew road aforeÂsaId; thenee along the same south ten degrees fourteen minutes forty seconds west. one hun_ dred and '?;ne and seventY~ight hundredths feet. to a·PG1nt; thence northwestwardly on· the are. of a circle cuning to the right with a radiUS of twenty feet, the arc distance of Lot 61: Situate en the northwCBterly side of Overhm road. forly-Rve feet Wide, at theÂdistance ot four bundred. and forty-nine and fortY-8even hundredths feet, measured north alx.ty degrees thirty-two minutes twenty secÂonds east along the said side of Overbill road from the POint of tangent of a clrele fonnÂIng the corner of OverblH road and HaverÂford road.: eontalnlng in front or breadth nortbeaatwardlY along the said northwesterly side of Overhill road, seventy-five feet and extending of that width In length or depth northwest.wardly bet.ween parallel lines at l'ight. angles to Overhlll road, one hundred and forty-five feet. No improvements. Vacant ground. Lots 4, 5 and 6: Deglnning at a point on the northeastwardly side of Haverford road Sold lUI the property of WilHam J. O'Brien .. at the distance of Beventy.nlne and sixty-nine mortgagor and William P. Hart, real owner_ hundredths feet measured. BOuth thirty-one deÂgrees eleven minutes fifty seconds east along the Bald .ide of Haverford road from the Hand Money-$1.500.00. point. of tangent of a cJrcle forming the cor_ ALLEN S. OLMSTED. 2D, Attorney. ner of Overhill road and Haverford road; I thence extending northeaatwardly on a line at right. angles to said Haverford road one Levari Facias hundred and fifty feet to a point; thence extending southeaatwardly one hundred and eIghty-five feet to a POint; thence extending south ten degrees twenty-two minutes east fi[ty-eJaht and eighty-three hundredths feet. to a POll't; thence southwestwardly on a line at right angles to Haverford road one hundred and twenty_nlne and Beven hundredths feet to a point on the afore-mentioned northeastÂwardly aide of Haverford road; thence extendÂIng along the Bame north thlrty-one degrees eleven minutes and finy seconds· west two hundred and fot"ty feet. to the first mentioned point and place of beginning. No. 114S Lot. 11: Beginning at a point on the south. westerly aide of Westfield road forty-five feet. wIde. at the distance of two hUnd",d and fifteen and thlrty-one hundredths feet meg.. ured. south thiny-one desrees eleven minutes and fifty seconds east along the aaid side of Westfield road from the point of tangent of a circle forming the corner or Westfield road and OvethiU road forty-five fet wide; tbenee extending southwestwardly on a line at right angles to Westfield road one hundred and fifty feet to a point; thence 80utheastwardly forty Rnd' ninety_two hundredths feet to a point: thence extending Bouth ten degrees twenty-t.wo minutes east six feet to a point; thence north seventy-eight degrees fifty_one minutes· eaat Gne hundred and fifty-two and ftfty-elght. hundredthu feet to a point on the March Term. 1934 Lot with improvements Lansdowne Dorough Del. Co.. Pa. Beginning at intersection mid: die line of Stewart avenue (50 ft. wide) with Hne drawn throuah Highland avenue (85 ft. wide). which line extended N. throUg"h bed -of" Highland avenue is at. the distance of 15 It. E. from and parallel with W. line thereof. Containing in front. on middle lIoe of Stewart avenue ~5. 74 ft. and extending In depth N. of" that WIdth between parallel lines at right angles to Stewart avenue. the W. line along afoft8ald Ilue extended through bed of HiBh~ land avenue 140 ft. to ground formerly of" Mary R. Albertson. Improvements conaiat of two and one-halt" story stucco and shingle house. 16x32 fbet; two and one-halt atory stucco and !thlngle adÂdiUon, 9dl teet: one-atory frame addition .. 12x12 feet: poreh front. Sold as the property of Hat"ry Coffin. Jr .• and Amelia A., his wile, morlga&"ors. and Amel'" A. Coffin. wife or Harry Caftin, Jr." real owner. GEORGE T. BUTLER, Attorney. NATHAN P. PECHIN, Sheriff. The~~TEA WATER" PUMP Lou~ before tbe Revolutiouary War Ihe City of New York had lis own water supply •• but it consisted entirely ofneigb. borbood wells.l\len,women and children gathered'around them_to gossip and get tbeirdaily supply of water. Well sweeps stood like sentinels at the principal street corners: In time, howe~er, tbe picture_que old well sweeps were ahandoned lD favor of more efficient well pumps. These pumps were j<>intly maintained by the city and tbe citizens whn used the wells. The water in tbe lower part of the city, however wns hrackish and disagreeable to the laste. It served' well enough fordomeslic uses but was not suitable fordl'inking. One oftbese wells was famous far and wide for the purity of its water and its delicious, refreshing toste. It was called the "Tea Water" pump because its water made such excellent ten. So grcnl was tbe demand for II.e watcr from this welllbllt a giant pump was erecled so thnt tllis water coul~ be .pumped into carls and carried throug!J<>ulthecity. Th.. Is the -fourteenth of a series o{ narratives whicb graphically tell tbe story of water. Look for tbe next one in tbis paper two weeks _ from today. "(;ERTIFIED WATER from PEDIGREED STREAIUS" JULY.20, -1934 THE SWARTHMOREAlt CLASSIFIED FOR SALE FOR· SALE-Swarthmore. Lot 16x206 feet. on improved street near Collea« AYebue SchooL ]JeOutifully wooded with olks youit&' and old. Bordered by .trMlll. Will ACriftce for c .. b. Albert N. Garrett. Phontt. 8w. 489. 'Books OD H. S. List Foood in Library T~ese irises, in bloom from about May 20 to JUDe 1, given an idea of the won-I derM development whieb has taken place' in this Bower in recent years, for almost I tbe whole color range of tbe rainbow is 10 be _ seen. In whites there are sueb varieties as "Athene," "True Charm" "True DeJight" j in white with purple' "Rhein Nixe" and "MOdred Presby." In the great group of IavenderJ lavender-blue, and lav .. ender-purple we find "Princess Beatrice" "Qu C • , FOR SALE-SmalI, upright. EB"te7 eltCCllent condition. "eaaonable. ,18. WANTED plano, in C.1I Sw. WANTED-Day's work for the beat house and yard man we ever had. h.ecommended by !.ouEs N. RobiMOn. Addren And,. Kent, 1-4.2 Bridge Street, Oak View, Pa. PERSONAL PERSONAL-Store your car while )'ou're away in a modern. fireproof garage; only $2.00 a month. Swarthmore Auto Service. Call Sw. 214. FOUND (Continued trom Pq. 1) of Percy Bel.6.eld, who devotes two mornÂings a week to their instruction in the game, should have a good junior team by next faU. Henry Esmond, by Thackeray; Heart uf eeo atenna," "Mary Barnett," and Midlothian, by Sco.tt; Kenihrorth, by Scott; Austen's "Pnde and Prejudice'" Dickens' "Old Curiosity Shop," his "Pick~ wick Papers" and "Oliver Twist'" V.anity Fair, by Thackeray i Lorna Do~ne, by Blackmore j Mill OD the Floss, by Eliot; Cranford, by Gaskell; Wuthering Heights, by Bronte; Jane Eyre, by Bronte' Return of the Native, by Hardy; Joan a~d Peter, FOUND-Large folding Kodak camera in by Wells; Walpole's UWinter Moon" his Swarthmore Bank. Owner may have same liD h f W " d " ' "Souvenir de Mme. Gaudichau." In pink and red·purpIe tODes there are uDream," "Susan Bliss/, "Morning Splendor!' Most faseinating are tbose in wbieb the colo .. yellow, bronze, blue and pink all seem to be combined in one flower, so much 50 that any definite description is difficult. Among the finer varieties in this general class are "After Glow," "Quaker Lady," "Ochracea," and "Dolly Madison." In pale yellow, "FIavescens" vies with the newer "Shekinah," and there are more golden. yeUow varieties such as "Gold Imperial" and "Pluie d'Or." The varieties mentioned are but a few of the many which will bloom late in May. by calling at Swarthmorean Office. Dartmouth uc ess 0 rexe an Rogue Herties'" AA~ve~n~u~e:=.===============~ Galsworthy's "Forsythe Saga" and Othe; : Novels, and Testament of Youth, by Brit. FOR RENT 133 Rut.ers Avenue-$8D--4 bedrooms; water on aecoad. and third Oao~;: eaeIosed parch. fireplace, conveniently located; po •• sessioft at once. , WM. S. BITTLE SWB. ll1-J Notary Public Real Estate FOR SALE Seven-room atone and frame dwelling, geod location, large lot. Small cash payment. $6000. E. C. WALTON FOR RENT STORE - 22x44, 411 Dartmouth Avenue; also" 5-room apartment over the store. FRED A. WERNER, Inc. Madi.on 3000 FURNITURE RESTORING 'Send for Harley-You'll Not Be Sorry' UPHOLSTERING Honest Under the Cover Call Swarthmore 1441 Shop-27 Main St.t Morlon, Pa. Eve. Call Sw. 1839-J. Rutledge. Pa. ANNA SCHALLES SLIP COVERS : DRAPERIES In addition to this collection, the Col. lege has recently received a gift of a fine collection of Japanese iris from the BrookÂlyn Botanic Garden. The plants are small and though they will not bloom this year, they should give good Bowers next year in the latter part of June when other irises are finished. lri. Li.t lain; Garden Party and Other Stories, by Mansfield; Arms and the Man, by Shaw also Candida and Androdes and the Lion: by Shaw; What Every \Voman Knows and Dear Brutus, by Barrie; Doll's House, by Ibsen; Master Builder, by Ibsen; Queen Victoria and Eminent Victorians, by Strachey; Ariel, by Mauroism; Microbe Hunters and Hunger Fighters, by de Kruiff; Twenty Years a-Growin', by SulÂIi\' anj Mary of Scotland, by Anderson, and Modern British Poetry, by Untermeyer. By handing in book reports on any of Aksarben Mildred Presby these book~ the extra credit may be had. AAll'li~zar Mme. Dut"rand Othe r b 00k's W h·IC h I a Ith ough t h ey arc not Amb"'a.. ssadeur MMomae . Henri Cayeux on the shelves of the pUblic library as yet, Apache Moonlight are on t h e school's summer reading list and AApsihar O(Ut.... Mo.he r 0 'Pe arI Mrs:. A. S. Hoyt earn the same credit arc: For the tenth Athene Mount Royal grade-Tolstoy's Short Stories', \Vhitt's BBaonn.~tarine My Lady Ochracea "The Unwilling Vestal"; Davis' "A Victor Bruno Odaroloc of Salamis"; Song Ci( Roland, Puck of ~:::eliard ~i::ee~ouge Pooks Hill, by Kipling; If I Were King, Cardinal Pluie d'Or by Me.:Carthy; Jeannedc Arc, by MacKayc; gh!ll!=e Davis :=~:~ Beatrice The King's Henchman, by Millay; Trans· Chlorinda Quaker Lady lations of Moliere's Plays; An Iceland g~~~~r:i':he ab:r~ ii::rina Fisherman, by Loti; The General's Ring, Corrfda Rheingauperle by Lagerlof; A Happy Boy, by Bjornson; g:~~~er R~:ola With Cresar's Legions, by WeHs; Colomba, DollJ7 Madison Sarpedon by Merimee; The Crime of Sylvester Bon. Dominion Seminole Duke of York Sensation nard, by France, and Russian Primer. For Eckesachs Sequoiah the eleventh grade-Joseph Hergesheimer's £llambeau Shasta uJ ava H ead " ; Irv'm g Ba c h e II er's "A Man 1F'. rasv eAecnegnesl ica SSnoopwhr oWniha ite From the Ages"; Dorothy Canfield Fisher's ~ '. Steepway "The Bent Twig"; Frank Norris' "The Geo;:ia J. Trlbolet ~~:~:es Octopus"; Vandemark's Folly, Herb. Quick Germaine P~rthuis Sweet Lavender d Th R " . Gold Imperial Taj Mahal an e lse of Silas Laphan, by \Vd- Gold Stream Tenebrae liam Dean Howells; and for the twelfth Golden Glory Thoraten grad e - prose trans1 a h•o n of Homer's GGrraacpet a Sturtevant TTroomp icT itS eas "Iliad"; Kalevala; Shoemaker's Holiday, by Harmony True Charm PHONE SW. 1225 Dekker; The Rivals and A School for ~:bil:hevreau ~~:~:::light. MUHLENBERG ~VE., RUTLEDCE Scandal, by Sheridan; Aesdylus' Plays; King Ksrl Van Cleve -.:.:.:.:--.,.----""--'----::-::----/-IMtp1t .... le3' Playsj. Euripides' Plays', Para- LLa'""Cr°::-rcge Vesper Gold . Wedge"·oud MRS. A. J. QUINBY & SON dise Lost, by Milton; Diary, by Pepys; Los Angel.. W .. tern Dream JO~S EPH Eo QUINBY R assel as, b y J 0 h nson,. L1'f e 0 f J 0 h nson, b Y MMaaoryri BParirnnceetsts YWehlliotwe KMnoigohn t ERNEST C. SNODGRASS. ASS·T. Boswell; Castle of Otranto, by \Valpolej Medrano Yeoman FUNERAL DIRECTORS Castle of Rackrent, by Edgeworth; Emma, ::~~I~e Charralre ~~t: BELL PHONE 4 MEDIA, PA. MANY SWARTHMOREANS HAVE BROUGHT THEIR OLD TIRES TO US AND HAD NEW TREADS PUT ON THEM. BRING YOURS IN NOW-ÂYOU WILL SAVE MORE THil.N HALF THE PRICE OF A NEW TIRE. by Austen; Northhanger Abbey, by Austen; ================ Barchester Towers, by Trollope; Tess of = the D'Urbervilles, by Hardy j Precious Bane, by Wehb; Old Wives' Tales, by Bennett; Old Junk, by Tomlinson; TreÂmendous Trifles, by Chesterton; Saki j Mansfield's "Letters"; Masefield's "Dauber," "Right Royal" and "Widow in Bye Street" i. Barrie's "A Kiss of Cinderella"; Poor SplendiCl. WJngs, by \Vinwar, and Queen Elizabeth, by Waldmar, as well as poems by Yates, Synge, Rupert Brooke, Housman, Hodgson, Thompson, Davies, Sassoim, Owen, de la Mare, Hardy and others. RUSSELL'S SERVICE .: G:~~..;+Ht t PLUMBING, - • 0'. HEATING & ROOFING i t AS IT SHOUlD BE DONE X L. W. JACKSON ~ SWARTHMORE 74-J :j: ~:-..~ 00 C : .. X-=-> Some children may have some of the books in this latter list in their homes or be able to secure them elsewhere if they prefer them to those available at the Swarthmore Library. e_e • • • • EVERY ROME NBBDB ONBI HERE'S a personal mes-senger to run your errands, to save time, to simplify housekeeping. Here's an Intimate friend to bring you news and a wider circle of acquaintances. Here's a guardian to sumÂmoo aid when things go wrong. What is it? It's a telephone, of COurse I Nothing does so !!luch for so little. . YOII ta".h41't o"t in your home for /'SS ··;11". II JilR, II Jay I ft •• eII ...... p.O •• q •• p".yof •••••• ----.:. ...> --- IRISES Arthur Hoyt Scott Horticultural Foundation Swarthmore College is fortunate in hav· ing been the recipient of the giCt of the Iris collection of the late Mr. James Boyd, Pr~ident of the Pennsylvania HorticulÂtural Society. This is one of the finest colÂlections in America and consists of ap. proximately one hundred varieties. They are planted near the Japanese cherry trees at the north end of the Meeting House Woods, extending west along the border, then south to the College entrance on Cedar Lane. ESTATE OF ANNA PORTER DAVIDSON (late of Swarthmore. Delaware County. Pa.) dee-eased. Letters of Administration on the above Estate have been granted to the undersigned. who rt"!quest all persons having claims or deÂmands against the Estate of the decedent to make known the same, and all persons inÂdebted to the decedent to make payment, without delay, to GERALD G. DAVIDSON. Administrator, Or to his Attorney, CLAUDE C. SMITH, Swarthmore, Pa. Swarthmore. Penna_. and 1617 Land Title Bldg., S. W. Cor. Broad &: Chestnut Philadelphia, Pat Su .• ESTATE OF GEORGE J. WATSON, deÂceased • Letters Testamentary on the above Estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make payment and those having claims to present the same without delay. Attorney: PROVIDENT TRUST COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA, 17th &: Chtstnut Streets. Parker S. Williams, President, Executor. ROBERT W. ARCHJJALD. Jr., Esq., 1012 Stephen Girard Building, Philadelphia. Now • • • Today Our New FUEL OIL Contracts are being issued with the NEW, more favorable regulation govÂerning top price. Worthy of Your Immediate Investigation , e Quality Guaranteed hy the pioÂneer suburban fuel oil distributor featuring that individual service available only in a local organization that is "large enough but not too large" • • • and identified by those RED and BLUE trucks. FUEL - GI RARD· RA~5DELL 01 L MEDIA 1 600 MADISON 4000 Aflm.ted with GIRARD· MILLER "Iae coal' ,~ ••••••••••••••• &- ,DtHW-1J Boys and Girls! Get a Wrisht-Dayton Seaplane e for IOC -:;;:;:::.. only with every pound purchase of our th7:e coffees The 1934 Wright-Dayton Model Plane-really three planes in one-is lois of fun-interesting, edueational an" seientifie. VOL can .. asily obtain one-or sever .. 1 -of these sturdy, effieient, bass and balsa wood construeled planes, One SOc Seaplane for lOc with One Poun,' Victor Coffee ,21 ( One SOt: Seaplane for lOc with One POUnt _~scn Coffee Ib 23' One SOc Seaplane for lOc with One Poun( Tin Acme Coffee tin 27 -, 911fdF"'1 Finest Familv 12.lb 49 24 It, 9 7 ~ I our ha': ha~,:., ___ I tiSW Beans with Pork 3 16'02 13e 2 28 '02 15e Cans cans Phillips Delieious Spaghetti 4 con. 25e 10: Sun Dine Grapefruit Juie,' 3 con. 25= lotby's T oa India "4 ·11l 15 DunRe % ·lb 19c Ceylon plea C Pekoe pkR D .. IMonle Tomatoes can 121he 10e Kidney Be.ns 2 ~~."; 150 17e P.b,t· .. 1t 2 pkg. 2ge 20e Stuffed Olives 6·., b.i is.: TomatoeJ. big can L ~c 150 Asparagus 3 No.2 can. 350 150 Grape Juice 2 p' b.ts 25c -Fresh Prunes b;g. con I o~ . Madewith"1he same fine ingredients 1,0U" ,could use. Bread Supreme ,\,I:~~~ 9¢ Jonr Vielol Sliced Bread * lISCO ~Iieed Rye Bread big ,0aJ 20-0&. oa • ··{lo.lar S!2C, ·liee:'• l Jam or wit!1 seeCt--. 6e 9c Genuine Spring LAMB ~ t u Legs'Lan;t, 23c ~ Lom Chops Ib 45c I Shoulder R<>ast II> 20c Rib Chops Ib 39c Neck (for pot pie) Ib 20c Rack Chops Ib 25c Breast (to stow) Ib 7c Fresh Killed Milk-fed Stewing I Chickens ~::~:o: IbS~ lb~!~ Swift's Calf Liver 11> 39c /lSaJ Potato Salad, Coleslaw, Creamed Cabbage Ib 16c Decker's or I I (in Whole Size 1b 3 7 c Hormel's Cooked nams can) Halt Size 1b 42c Special Cure, Short Shank, Lean Smoked Picnics Ib 15c Lebanon Bologna or Thueringer Sausage I Besf Or Large Bologna, Millced Ham I % 1b 5c S,ic9d Sandwich { White ~merican l Ch -or PImento f % tb7c eese Swiss Loaf % Ib 8c I Tb Tender Beef Liver 1/2 ..., Store Sliced Bacon } Fr~sh III ,FiSh . Jersey Sea Trout Sliced Codfish - Ib 10~ Ib 170 *Sea Baut lb. 12c· t the p~n-h-=-c:I~ .• on ..•• ., ·Croakera. Ib_ IDe ·Cleaned ready for Garden Fresh Produce Specially Priced ,R-ed Ripe 'Watermelons each 45cl LarBe CaUfonUa. ValeDcia Oranges 6 fer 20.: L BartleH Pears doz. 29c I Sugar Com 6 ears ISc; Large Lemons doz. 29c Cucumbers 2 for 5c' Firm Tomatoea 2 lb •• Ilc EgR Planb each 10e: Crisp Icehet'g Lettuce 2 head. 13c Grape. Thompson Seedless 1b IOC 5
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.==~~ __________ -, _____________ ~~~THE~~~~~~~~~~~~==~==~~ __ ~~~~~~~ _ ~Aa~Y~.2O,11~ Swartluno,e Mt. Deoert, MalDe, where tbey will spen'd known oil burner acceooories maDufacturen."1 UDbeard of low price. Thia is broughl the rest of lbe Bummer. . Mr. Wilson./urtber otated that, "Mter con-1a~ ut by dlspooing of all mitIdIe pr Ii Has New Sp ort Mrs. Robert E. S!larples aDd Mlos Sarah slderable expease and sludy by our com- .. lbe 'Wilson Burner' comes directly 7ro~ Berry, of Sbarberry Farm, Thornton, opent pany, the Wilson Coal and Supply Com- the ManuIadurerto the Home Owner last weet .... d at Ocean City, N. 1. paay, we now present tbis advanced oil The Wilson Coal and Supply Compan~ (Continued from Page 1) buming 'Wileon Burner,' built to our OWD completes the whole picture, Dallle.y. The standing of tbe leams al present Mr. and Mrs. William H. West, 01 spedJications. It bums low priced No.3 'Wilson Burner,' SaIes, Installation Serv' is shown in the chart· given below, two points beiDg given Lor each game won and one point for each lie game:· Princelon Avenue, were the gues," of their Fuel Oil and has the capacily suftldent to ice and Fuel Oil." ,- • SOn and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. beat 80 per cenl 01 tbe bomes in tbis com- 10hn B. West, at High Point, N. 1., over munlly. Furthermore, our Installed price, the week ..... d. complete wilb tank and Ihree MinneapolisÂPldladelplda !.acre.. I.e ... Won Ldat Tie Pbl. Swarthmore "Indiana" •• 2 2 2 . 6 Canadian "Eaglet" ••••• 1 1 1 a Philadelphia "Comets" • 1 1 0 2 John Belfield, Bud Green, Avery Blake, and tbe Hickman boys are tbe team', higb scorers. uMart" Gatchell has been comÂmendable in his role of referee. The game on Wednesday, Iuly 11, was a very lively one, although the ulndians" were defeated by the UComets," 13 to 8. The goals were made as follows: Heward, Cbarles A. Dravo, Jr., of Westdale Ave_ nue, left tbis morning for Indian Head, Md., whfre be wiD stay until the end of September as the guest of his aunt, Mrs. McDowen. Edward E. Drava will accom~ pany his brolber to Indian Head, wbere he will stay for a day or so and then leave for Washiqton, D. C., where he win spend the rest of the summer with his grandÂmother, Mrs. W. M. Morrow. 5; Raley, 3; Zabnow, 2; W. Townsend, With John Boles co-starred ANN Edtl and Kane; J. Belfield, 3; Blake, Fel. HARDING i. c:urrently appearing' in Jows, Bud Hickman, J oyee and Benjamin. what i. probably the outstanding :mo- This Wednesday the "Indians" defeated tional role of her career, .. the heroÂthe Canadian "Eaglcs" by a score of 8 to 4. ine in uThe Life of Veraie Winter" which .tart. • three day engagement ~t Ralpb E .. Rhoad" 1r., 01 Princelon AveÂnue, left on Tuesday for the Caddie Camp at Sky Top, Pa., where he will remain for the rest of the summer. The high scorer of the evening, who the Stanley, Cheater, today. scored five points, was Bobby Poole, 18- ====~===~==,;;;;~===== cros..~ coach at Harvard, who is visiting Avery Blake, Swarthmore College coach. Mrs. F. Norton Landon and daughters, Lois and Betty, of Princeton Avenue, will return to Swarthmore today after having been the guests of Mrs. Landon's sisters, Mrs. Hug" McLean, of North Tonawanda, N. Y., and Mrs. John Ayrault, of TonaÂwanda, N. Y. Mrs. Ayrault and lamily will relurn wilh Mr.;. Landon to he her guests for a time. NEWS NOTES The home team was fortunate to have Mr. Poole, especially sitJce it was handiÂcapped by the absence of four regular players. "Bud" Green's sore arm prevented his taking part in last night's battle and "Bud" Hickman, John and Percy Belfield, as weI) as the official scorekeeper, Joe Reynolds, are away on vacations. Miss Mary Leuhring, of Copples Lane, Wallingford, is spending a month in WashÂington, where she is attending the Nursery School Training Conference. --- Mrs. Gertrude H. McClure and children, of Riverview Road, sailed last week for a I European trip. Mrs. Theodore W. Crossen and daughter, Barbara Ann, of Garrett Avenue, left on Tuesday for Oberlin, Ohio, where they will enjoy a two weeks' sojourn. Miss Mary Tomlinson, of Yale Avenue, is at camp at Kearsharge, near Naples, Me., SlVa~ore (iolE (;ourse where she js a counselor. SPROUL ROAD Public Invited Reasonable Rate. Miss Harriet Miller, of Minneapolis, Minn., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. FredÂerick W. Luehring, of Copples Lane, WalÂlingford, for a month or so. ~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ Mrs. Richard Thatcher and daughters, Elizabeth, Peggy and Becky, of Lookoul Mountain, Tenn., arrived on Monday to be the guests of Mrs. Thatcher's brothers- AU Grass Greens HOUSEHOLD GOODS will be sold at PUBUC SALE for unpaid storage on Saturday, July 28, 1934, at 2.00 P. M. at J. T. Stilwell Stora .. e House Morton Ave. &: R. R., Morton Sale lncludes bureaus. beds. chairs. tables and all goods stored by Mrll. Anna Mertz. and all goods stored by Mn. Samuel White. J. C. STILWELL. J,. J. T. Stilwell. Auctioneer. in-law and their wives, Mr. and Mrs. WilÂliam H. Thatcher, of College Avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Thatcher, of Ogden Avenue. I Dr. and Mrs. Jobn A. MiDer, of WalÂ! lingford, Pa., left on Tuesday to spend the remainder of the summer at Wallingford, Vermont. Mrs. Albert Thalcher and Miss Gertrude Dare, of Chester Road, 1eft last week for OIL BURNER PRICES REDUCED $100 Introducing Our Fully Automatic "WILSON BURNER" at a price below what even we hoped it could be merchanÂdised for. Our own burner - the "Wilson Burner'· - i. a prodÂuct engineered and manufactured under our own specificaÂtions. After severa] years' experience in Automat:c Heating Sales, Service and the Fuel Oil Business - we determined that Automatic Oil Heat could be merchandised at a price \Vithout sacrificing qualilY. Our Answer Is - The Wilson Burner Price Completely Installed - Including Tank $247.50 The following specifications of the "Wilson Burner· speak for theno3elves: - l-CaplJcity-1000 ft. Sleam, 1500 ft. Hot Water. 2-High PreSsure Gun Type Burner. 3-Century Repulsion-Induction Motor. 4-Monarch Stainless Steel Nozzle. 5-Three Safety Co;'trols-Minneapolis-Honeywell. 6-Webster Transformer. Strainer Pump and Reg-ulating V"h·e.' • 7-Burns No. 3 Oil. 8-Engineered Pre-Cast Combustion Chamber. 9-Cork-insulated, Noiseless Operation. Be Sure to See This "WILSON BURNER" Its Beauty, Quietness and Efficiency Will Amaze You Wilson Coal & Supply Co. SWARTHMORE 600 DOE Oil Bamen ''WIlSON'' Barnen Distributors for Fuel Oil MEDIA 123 OIL Burner Service P. S.-Three Experienced Burner Saleunen Wanted--Liberal Cammi •• ion Paid Miss Alethea Avery, of Elm _ Avenue, spent last week-end in West Chester where she was the guest of Miss Betty Coates. Mr. R. V. Little, of Park Avenue, was called to Cumberland, Md., on· Sunday by the death of bis sister, Mrs. T. R. Palmer. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Gilbert, of Park Avenue, entertained at dinner on Monday for Mr. and Mrs. Herbert P. Canerdy, of Pittsburgh. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. M'ahlon Scott, of Brookline, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fairbanks, of Merwood. Mr. and Mr.;. William S. Bittle, of RUI-I gers Avenue, and W. Mark Bittle and famÂily, of Sellersville, Pa., spent the week-end I motoring through the Eastern Shore of Maryland and Delaware. I Miss Isabella Bronk, of North Chester Road, left yesterday to spend the remainder of the summer at Rutland, Vt. Mr. and Mrs. John Fricke and children, of Hillborn Avenue, have taken the apartÂment of Mrs. Friedley at Avalon, N. J., for the rest of the summer. The Misses Mildred and Kalharine Simpers, of Westdale Avenue, will return Monday after a week's visit at Cape May with their aunt, Mrs. E. Marshall Harvey, of Media. Mr. and Mrs. Scott Willis, who have been making their home with Mrs. Willis' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent C. Pownall, have taken an apartment at 1002 Jefferson Street, Wilmington, Del. Methodist Church Notes The service on Sunday evening at 8 o'clock will be the last one until SeptemÂber. The service on July 29 is omitted in order that the members may attend the Chester Heights Camp Meeting. The Sunday morning service at II o'dock will be held as usual through August with guest preachers. The Rev. 'Varne Channell will preach on Sunday morning at 11 o'clock on "Pure Religion." The subject of the Sunday eveÂning service at 8 o'clock will be "Jesus and Our Doubts." Carl Nocke, baritone, will s;ng. Mr. Nocke is a former leader of the Glee Club of the College, now DiÂrector of Music in the Temple Lutheran Church of Ph!ladelphia. The Sunday School picnic will be held at ,Westtown on Saturday, July 28. , Introduces Burner This issue of the SWARTHMOREAN carries a formal announcement of the "'Vilson Burner," which the WiL~n Coal and SupÂply Company, one of our local companies, is introducing for sale in this community. The \Vilson Coal and Supply Company has been in the Automatic Oil Heating and Fuel Oil business for the past several years. Through this experience and based on other facts gathered by extensive engineering and marketing surveys conducted by their comÂpany, Mr. Marvel Wilson, their president, stated the following: "Eighty per cent of the homes in this community could be sold automatic· oil heat provided a quality built oil burning unit could be manufactured· and retailed at a reasonable price. \Ve believed this could be done, pro\ided sound and simple oil burning engineering principles were blended with quality, workmanship and proper co-operatioD of the great nationally Honeywell safety controls, is an an-time We welcome tbis expansion by tbis COmÂpany in our communily aod feel tbat tb. community joins us in well wishes for their success. WE DO NOT REPLACE CHEVROLET ENGINES • • WE DON'T NEED TO! - You've heard of motor car engines that.perlonn like a million dol!ars when they're uew-but soon burn themÂselves out completely-and have to be replaced. "SkyÂrocket" eogineo-we call them. They "take 011" with a lot of zip and zoom! They streak away with a lot of dash and sparkle. Then: S-s-ss-st! . PIuJeeee! Room! AaahIshh! It's all over. And it you want to get this same brilliant pertOl'Dlance again, you have to go out and buy another skyrocket engine. In fact, the builders of this "skyroeket" type realize its shortcomiugs 80 well, they h?ve to provide special facilities f .. r replDcing their engines. We believe that the public is "fed up" On engines like this. We believe that sane, wise buyers want an engine they can drive and drive for years-that will last the life of the car. That's why Chevrolet U8e8 a six-cylinder valve-in-head . --...,....-. engine with cast-iron pistons and a cuahion-balanced mounting. It never _018 to wear out. It. never needs replacing. It's easy to service. It's easy on'gas and oil. It's built for years of dependable low-cost operatioJ. CHEVROLET THE QUALITY CAR LAWSON·SHEPARD COMPANY, Inc. 401 DARTMOUTH AVENUE SWARTHMORE Ocean Ciq's Finest Ocean_Front Hotel aOARDWALK AT !UVINTH STRIET OCEAN CITY, N. J. Come to The Flanders lVhere you are offered true hospitality, excellent food, superior service and the companionship of a refined clientele. 2 3 2 Roms with Bath. AmerÂican Plan. Fireproof. 3 Delightful 0 pen Air SlVimming Pools. J. HOWAIO SLOCUM.. Manc,,'" Attractl..,. Roles ror ram'. lief; and Groupt;. Special Car. Given Chlldr.n. THI PIIHelfON INN PrI ....... H .. J...." 15 0150 v_d., Mr. Slocvlft's fIIa"oge .. nt • Sylttrthmnre College Swarthmore, Penna • Library, --- TH-= VOL. VI, No. 30 SWARTHMORE, PA., JULY 27,1934 HISTORIC SPOT IS RELOCATED Preliminary Meeting to Be Held Dr. Edgar T. Wherry, of Oberlin Ave-will attend a preliminary meeting of the officers of the Pennsylvania Academy' of.5'cience, at Cornwall, in Lebanon County on July 28 and 29, in preparation for the summer meeting of tbe' Academy which takes pJace on August 11 and 12. Dr. Wherry, who is vice-pte$ident ot' the· Academy, has· been chosen to select spots ABOUT HOP NO.3, ADVENTURE NO.3 Health Camp Receiva Scales Mrs. Howard J. Dingle, of Park A veÂnue, and Mrs. Harvey Pierce, of Princeton Avenue, began last Saturday to receive donations for scales for the Thornton Camp for Undernourished Children. On ThursÂday they presented the scales to the camp, thanks to members of the Friendly Circle and others who gladly contributed. BmLE SCHOO~;", COMMENCEMENT Dr. Harper and Mr. Leeds Ide.,Âlify Bartram's Buftalo Lick in GeOrgia Thrills in Rocky Mountain, Grand Teton and YellOwstone National Parks Closing Exercises to Be Held in Presbyterian Church In 177J William Bartram, the fa'Do'"s I of botanical interest to be visited at the On the 15th of July, Dr. E. L, Terman • The clo5ing pro~ram of the Swarthmore' Philade1pbia naturalist, while traveling time of the meeting on August 11 and 12. wrote us his second letter of this year, LOCAL RESIDENT Community Vacation Bible School will' This Evening through Georgia visited a buffalo lick • which we have just received and are for- help to summarize its splendid accomplish-eighty miles northwest of Augusta, of which ANNUAL PICNIC TO warding to you as follows; ments for the benefit of parents and he made mention in Chapter IV of his "Th R k PASSES AWAY "Travels," written upon his return. Licks e oc y Mountain National Park friends. Owr fifty diplomas will be given' of this kind were made by cattle, deer and NE w,'lb Ihe Esles Pa k '1 I ' to children of our community, showing BE XT WEEK r as I s ga eway, was horses as weI) as by buffaloes continually the last of Ibe na Il'O na I park s l0 be 'In c Iu d e d Mr S B B that they have attended at least a week licking away the earth in certain places in the itineraries of our 'Westward Ho' s. ergeant arton rewster and have done satisfactory work. for t he m.l nera I depo'slt s contam. ed therein. Various Committ'e es Busy Makin... Adventures. It was the only one left to Succwnbs At fHte r Long Illness The commencement, which will be held In t hI·S partl.c uI ar .m st ance d eep caves h ad Arraaaementa for the ---D be seen this summer. a ome in the Presbyterian Church tonight, will been f ormed by t h C I"n cessant Visitations e BiG" Day u..W e arrived a I EsI.rL. ;C.h am b. er a f .C 0r.1- open with the One Hundredth Psalm, an 1 On Saturday, July 21, Mrs. Mildred of the animals. "0 me_re at 4.00 P. M., and ID thirty mlDutes Dilworth Comly Brewster, wife of Ser- evening hymn, and the invocation by Dr.. . To determine the location of this lick The 500 children who have bl.'Cn invited ~ad ou~ schedule f~r the. stay there planned geant Barton Brewster, died at her late Wayne Channell. was one of the main objects of this sum- by the Philadelphia Country Week Asso- In detaIl. The fnendshlp camp section .of residence, 240 Swarthmore Avenue, after a It will be very evident that the chil-mer's expedition into northern Georgia by dation to be its guests at the annual Coun- the famed Y. M. C. A. Conference Site long illness. dnm understood and liked their Bible Dr. Francis Harper, of Yale Avenue, try Week Picnic on Wednesday, August 1, welcomed us. with open. arms and had Mrs. Brewster was born in Wilmington, Memory Work by the way in which they zoologist, and Mr. Arthur N. Leeds, of will arrive with their mothers at Swarth- much to do m the makmg of our first Delaware, the daughter of May Dilworth repeat their daily verses, led by several of Germantown, botanist of the Philadelphia more Station at 9.23 A. M. They will adventure in Rocky Mountain National Comly and the late Joseph Ashton Comly. the Intermediates. Great care has been Academy of Natural Sciences. The spot make the trip from Philadelphia on a spe- not soon to be forgotten. Funeral services were held in Trinity used in selecting verses and giving them had been recorded on a map in 1818, but cial train, making it possible for them to "Coming out. of the heat of western Church, of which l\frs. Brewster was a titles \",'hich would present the great Bible Dr. Harper and Mr. Leeds having no board it in Broad Street Station instead Nebraska and Colorado our first delight member, on Monday afternoon. Interment Truths in an interesting, concise way. longitude or latitude to assist them, knew of at 30th Street, and saving much con- was to plunge into one of the sballowest was in 'Vest Laurel Hill Cemetery. Several of the children have said that they only its approximate location, say, within 1u S.l on. and Iherefore warmes I 0 Ilh esc great moun- Be SI' de h er h us b an d an d mot h er, M rs. liked the Bible Memory Work besl of all-a radius of ten miles or so. The transportation corpmittec of which tain pools. We tben stationed ourselves in Brewster is survived by four children. Mil~ clear proof of the tact and concreteness of Tbe re are apparentI y no speC•i mens 0 f Mr. Buchner is chairman ' will ~ that the 'Friendd shi.p ' camp, secluded under the great dred, Sergeant, Jr., Grace and Frances, and the teachin. g. buffalo bones f rom Georgia in existence, Picnickers are comfortably escorted to Is ee.nte pmes but not more than a three- by a brother, J. Ashton Comly, of Toronto, TI' he Pnmary children will give several and no actual records of any white man Emmons' Grove, where they will spend I Bm m'Iudt'e walk from the large Administration Canada, and two sisters, Mrs. James M. •d e IghI tful little recitati"fJns as well as sing-having ever seen any of the animals there. another memorable day enj"oo'J- 'ing plenty fU I h mgC, Afu ditorium, Post Office and Hall Smith, of Buffalo, N. Y., and Miss Helen I1n\1g Ga ongh with the Beginners. Miss Betty It is believed that no other naturalists of fresh milk, sandwiches, puddings and 0 t e on erence site. M. Comly, of Ardmore, Pa. carra taught the Primary grade this have relocat~d or identi6ed the lick since ice cream and cakes, as well as fresh a,'r IIA small nearby ::ommunily house fur- Mrs. Brewster has been a resident of hla st week, while Miss Dorothy Underhill Bartram's time. and a good day's rest. nished us with bathing and clothes wash- Swarthmore for the past ten years, having as stuck faithfully by the Beginners Mrs. Elizabeth Paxson is the chairman ing facilities and we at once declared our come here from Germantown. throughout the month. Handwork from Buffalo Creek gave the two twentieth of the rice pudding committee; Mrs. W. N. first official wash day. This was on the • these departments included clay modelling century explorers a lead. They had but Spangler, chainnan of the coffee commit- line the next morning before dinner and $4 DOES MUCH AT of Bible scenes and little booklets of few facts to go by. That the lick had teLi Mr. Albert Buffington, of the milk with time enough left to join the Nature "Leaves From the Bible!' been described by Bartram as being at the and water committee, and Mrs. Harvey Hike under the direction of Ranger Ding. The Junior children will give a fine chorat foot of a southeastern promonotory of a Pierce, of the cookies ~nd crackers com- Our wild flower collections will show evi- . THORNTON CAMP program includicg processionals, solo, two_ central ridge of hills, running north and mittee. Mrs. Helen Hall is entertainment dences of the hike. During this time six part s:lections, etc. Mrs. Burton A. south through that part of Georgia, with chairman; Mrs. Frank Gray, chairman of of the boys took a two·hour horseback Konkle has given daily musical instruction a plain occupied by a cane swamp to the the ~rving committee; Mrs. Edward A. ride. By Depri1(mg· Ourselves of a Few to each department, of which the Junior south; that the original party had come up J k' f h d· h . k· ,. d . the Little River prior to making the dis- Me n IHD S, 0 Wt e ds an f WhIC committee, and liThe lecture by Mr. Ding on the eve- Minor Luxuries We May Do wL or". IS\ "a llttmhg emonstratlOn. Miss. .£Overy, and that the earth at the lick was r. Tahrrey 00, 0 tb ae grounds commit- ning of our arrival, entitled 'Glaciers ' Past a Lot for Some Child I OUlse . Iva~hn er h as had this class, the composed Of white clay, they did . know. tee. 0 5&h1 idti~g hc ' irmen are as fol-. Ia nd Present," came· in·. gOoO atead on _t he . argde' st f m ht e hsc 001, and deserves much lows: n t e sout Side of the railroad, next afternoon when we drove toward How would· ,);ou'like to spend hvo fun cre It or er t oughtful work. The spirit It is true that ten miles seems very little Mrs. Harold Griffin and Miss E.leanor I Long's Peak, 14,000 feet high, as far as weeks in the country for only $4? of the Juniors has done much to enrich in this age, hut just try locating some Kennedy, and on the north side, Mrs. Wil- Bear Lake, from whence seven of liS If you' think you would enjoy it and the spiritual life of the school. particular spot, the exact location of which ]jam B. Bullock and Mrs.·George A. Hoad- climbed 1,000 feet over a three-mile trail benefit by it, how about the hundreds of The gil-jng of diplomas will be followed has been hitherto unknown to you, within ley. to Lock Vale and within two miles of the half-starved youngsters to whom a coun- by a rather unique program broadcast by a radius of this many miles and the prob- After having "the time of their lives" as great Webster Glacier, which drains into try vacation, 'with swimming, baseball, the Intermediates over Station D. V. B. S. lem will be found to take on a new and well as seven and a half hours of health- this lake. hiking, plenty of milk and sleep. probably The daily practice of prayer by aU within very different light. ful pleasure the group will entrain at t~e . "It was very cold, but we braved this means the saving of their Hves? Four dol- the group will precede a demonstration of Dr. Harper and Mr. I~eeds, who traveled statton ~t S.I? P. M: and ret~rn to their I for the thrill of such high altitude and lars is such a Httle amount when stacked the Mem.:,,·y Work and Handwork. The here and there Questioning the settlers, hom~s ~n . Phdadelphl3 to walt for next proving it with our movie camera. Buddy up against a child's health. class song, nature work, and other features found that some of those of the ages year s pICnIC. Fussell, Maurice and myself were included So far sixty boys, from 8 to 14 years of of the school will be shown. beyond three score and ten had heard of • in the group to make this difficult climb. age, have spent a two~weeks' session at the The c1ass session will cnd as was CU5- the natural curiosity but had no idea LAST WEEK OF The rest of the Igang' climbed a le5SCr dis- county camp for undernourished children tomary with a mission mess.'1ge from Dr. where it was or had been, while most of tance to 'Dr eam La k· e,' which they unani- at Thornton. A second group of sixty is Dana Id GMc a rrah, teacher as well as gen-those of lesser years had not even heard RA!'E INSTITUTE mously claimed around our evening con- now in its first week in the country. On eral director of the school. A clear-cut of it. \" ference table was the finest lake that they August 6 the girls will take over the camp inspirational message will be followed by k In Oglethorpe County they came upon had ever seen. for their share of the summer health. call to bring a heart-offering to lay at a man who invited them to ,iew his "deer" Two weeks in the Gountry! It seems an J ,. Th lick, which, upon sight, they concluded to D r. 0 tto Klem· h erg Wi•l l P resent "Kno,v,'ng Ih a I we were I0 fi n d more insignificant amount of time for a child esus teet. e silver offering will be have been Bartram's "buffalo" lick. It F:nal Lecture This EveninG" As ma J. es (,'e pe ak·s I. n th e C ana d'I an R oc k·I'e s, who has not tasted fresh milk for three used to provide necessary supplies to itart h If I I f h t h t eo and anxious not to be late there, we fore- a volunteer Community Vacation Bible was after the u a 0 e t t e country a Conference Closes years, or for one who weighs thirty pounds School among underprivileged children in the deer took over the spot, so Dr. Harper went the five-hour Grand Lake drive and less than she should, or for a little cripple and Mr. Teeds might have save d t h em- Th e t•m a I week" 0 f t h e secon· d annuaI rode back to LO"eland ,·n the 100Ih,'II, .who has nc\"er knoll'n what countrv a,'r Philadelphia or in the mountain. s of North selves a g.r,e at ~.ca l of ~rQuble and have Institute of Race Relations has been de- Ih roug h Ih e gorgeous 'TIOmIson' Ca nyon. feels like in his nearly collap:::ed lungosJ . Carolina next summer. The pledge to the come more quic h·._Io... . Ih. e·l r d estl.D a t'I on \'0 Ie d I a the st U d yof, curren I con dI' tI' ons We took dinner here and camped ten miles T wo weeks is insifl"nificant, but doctors, Christian Flag will be followed by the had they gone in ~q u-est of a udeerl:.1i _of education, employmen,t ,. . relief and rec- n 0 rth i n Ih e spacI. ous MUD"l Clpa I P ark 0 f nurses, tuberculosis a..u thorities and othe- prayer song, "~ow I Hear My Saviour instead of the original "buffalo" one. ognition of ability as they affect the Ameri- Fotr C0 lrm s, C0 Io ra d O. Its Ia rge Ia k·c f ur- have found that, with 500 eager youngster~s" Calling/' and the benediction. although by this time even the deer have can Negro .. Dr. Edward McCuiston, of nisbed a pre-bed swim and a hefore-break- scrambling to get a crack at life, the best The Commencement program will thus g.me from that part of Georgia. the Bureau of Education, Department of fast dip the next morning:. possible way to handle the situation is by end \\'ith a call to serve the Heavenly The present owner of the lie k remem b ers In· ten·o r, gave an 1'1 1 ustrate deIctuMre o n- "0u r roa d over, the cae I us an d sage b rus h the two-wc.ck divisions. Some of them Fath"~r whom J.esus ca me to reveal. Th.-. when, fifty years ago, there was a large day evening comparing the educational fa- desert via Laramie, Col.; Rawlins, Rock need two years in the country to put them sen"lce .wlll be dommated by a w~rship~ depression, between two and three feet citities for s::hool children in the entire Springs and Farson, \Vyoming, led us the back on their feet again, others will never ful athtude ?~ the p~rt of chIldren, deep, which is now mostly filled in, a United States as compared with those of ne~t day through Jacks~n-remains of the get back, but at least a fortnight of health teachers and_ Visitors. Clearly t.he di~ector depth of about six inches being ~.n that is the white children in the South and fadl- Iwlld and woolly west'-mto that ncver-to-j helps them some. And besides that who and ~eacher:. h~ve been. espeCially mterÂleft. The same white clay which Bartram ·hies .for Negro childre.n in t~e South: be-forgo;te~ scenic beauty of the Grand . will be the tinal judge to pick a sele~t few ested m, de~elopmg an athtude of reverence described forms the earth at this spot. ASide from the obVIOUS difference In the I Teton Nahonal Park and ended at our at tne expense of the four hundred others, and 10,) alt~. Dr. Harper has a fine photograph of the facili,1ies offered the three groups, in part camp there on Lake Jenny, under the I ~hould it be dccid.;d to let a few spend the Recognition is due those who made the lick which, although taken in the rain, explainable by the economic conditions of shadow of the Grand Tetons. whole summer and the others stay home I school possible. All local pastors co-op_· (Continued on P8&'c 3) the local communities, the comparison. of I "A very chilly dip and an early get-I a!t~gether? ~o one wants that re!,ponsi-I e~ated to, the ut~ost while Dr. David .Mc; • the states as a whole was most mterestmg_1 away led us through Moran and past Jack_I'blhty. Cah:-n \\as .especlally helpful to tile dlrec- In Pennsylvania, for example, the amount son Lake into the south entrance of Yel- The really serious cases have heen taken tor In ",orkmg out the general plans. Mrs. New Tournaments Begin August 1 spent for educatio.n per capita wealth .is lowstone. \Ve rode twenty-five miles along ahead of ~he others, with the result that I B. C. \Viggins, Mrs. Cha.rles Fischer, Mrs. below average, while the amount spent m the Lake from Thimb to Lake Junctionj i only the Sickest and most undernourished John.H. Fa~\'cctt and MISS Frances James A new series of tennis tournaments, open comparison with the total Of. income within and arrived t.here in. time for lunch at the j find their way int9 camp, and then they ~ontllbu.ted mvaluable .services ~y providÂto all the childr:n of Swarthmore will the state places Pennsyh·ama at the bot- Lake Cafeteria. ThIS lake has a lOO-mile ,are scnt home before they really get a! 109 musIc for the mormng devotional hour. begin \Vednesday, August 1. An entrance tom of the list. The taxation rate for the. drive around it. chance at the fresh air. \Vith hundreds I Miss MUdred Simpers, Miss Helen McÂfee of twenty-6ve cents wm be required support of education is also less in penn-I "After a thorough appreciation of the; turned aw'ay, and with the"fortunate or.;rs Lain and Miss Dorothy Viscidi each of those who have not subscribed to the sylvania than the majority of states. , museum here we moved on to one of the! unable to get very far on the limited offered a ~veek of senicc as P..rimary Tennis Court Fund. All who arc inter- The final puhlic lecture will be held this' outstanding s~enic spots in the nation. \Vr! time allowed them for recovery, the situ a- teacher. MISS .Mabel Sal fingers, Miss Helen estcd in playing in these' games arc rCA e\'cnin!!, whe~ Dr. Otto KleinhcrJ!", o~ th~: spent two hours on 'In~piration and Ar-! tion is de~perate. Seal ~n~ ~[I~:3 Betty. :McGarrah gave quested to register at the courts bdorc department ot psyc:hology) and a reSident i tists' points drinking in the Grand Canyon; l\.[any app~al::; for funds have been made, worth}. aId 10 several 01 the depar:tments. Tuesday evening, July 31. member of the faculty of the Institute, Willi of the Yellowstone. 'I but the response has been negligible. That All. th~ wo.r~ was done freely, with a Chic Gerner, of 210 Dartmouth Avenue, discuss "Practical Implications of the Study "w . d . t 'Old F 'thf 1'1 the camp is doing immeasurable good c:an- sacn6aal SPirit, as a rich offering to our a student at Swarthmore College, will be of Race." The concluding sessions of the f. I.e at~nvef mthcamAP a I BFa, d'u not be doubted. A visit to Thornton community and its Divine Guardian. . h· h rts 1 Ih 001 f . '11 b S d • . h I JUS mIme or e nnua ear ec 109 I Id . kl h h . In C arge of t e cou or e ance 0 Institute WI e atur ay mornmg, Wit d I t h' h h d I t k wou qUIC' Y s ow w at accomphshmenls the sea.son, which ends Labor Day, as \ViI- Dr. Kleinberg and Dr. Charles S. Johnson, scdene Ian efc ubref, IV dil~ we a o'a'e have been brought about in the short time I1· 3m Sm'it h 1. 5 returnm. g t 0 h1' 5 h orne m. director of the Inst.i tute, as spea k·e rs. a "v an age .0 e ore. nne"r. . IhC 1I-1,1.1 e ones h. ave bene 'tn t he care of the Dayton, Ohio, the latter part of this w~k. , Today 15 the sixteenth (wntten the county. But the possibilities for further A subscription of $2.00 a family for ,the .Tennis Match Scheduled next day), uand we have just now arrived I good arc unlimited. \Vhat of the 400 chil-balance of the season will entitle the mem- at Mo~noth Hot Spri~gS, where th~ thrill dren who have been turned away? Or of hers of that family to the use of the courts On Sunday, July 29, the Swarthmore of gettmg our first maIl and the thmgs to the hundreds of others who have never for the next five weeks. Tennis Club's team will meet a team rep- see and do here vie with each other for been even considered? This subscription which helps to pay for resenting the duPont-Grasselli Athletic As- our attention. Four dollars means one more child in the maintenance and supervision of the sudation. The match is--scheduled to start "Under the peculiar spell again of this camp for the two-week period. And $4- courts may be paid to Mrs. R. P. Lingle, at. 2 p, M. The regulation number of 'first' and one of the greatest of our Na- taken away from the vacation funds of Treasurer, 108 Cornell Avenue, or to Mr. matches, six singles.and three doubles Willi tional Parks, we move northto Ox Yoke I many Swarthmoreans would never be Gerner at the courts. be played. Ranch-one of the finest in the west." missed. House Struck by Lightning . The house on Harvard Avenue, next to the Strath Haven Inn, was struck by ~btning during the storm Wednesday eveÂmg. It smouldered until about 11.30 when it broke into flames. ~he house, which is owned by Atr. F. Schtebley, was unoccupied. The firemen worked until 2 A. M., when the fire was finally extinguished.
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INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE -----------------------------------------T-H-E- S-W-ARTHMOREAN Swartbmore Has New Sport (ContlJlu(:tl froUl !'.ICC 1) Mt. Desert, Maine, where they will spend the rest of the summer. Mrs Robert E Sharples and MISS Sarah Berry, of Sharbclry Farm, Thornton, spent last week-end at Ocean City, N. J. JULY 20, 1934 The .. tandmg of the teams at I,resent! J~ "ho\\n m the chart j.:l\en belo\\, t\\o! pomts bemg J:I\ en for each j.:ame \\ on and I one pomt for each tie game kno\\ noll burner a(C~SSOliCS manufacturers" I unheard of low price ThIS IS brou~ht Mr Wilson further ~tatcd that, "After (00-1ab out by dl~poslng of all middle profit .. siderable expense and study by our (om- as the '\VIIson Burner' comes duectly from pam, the Wilson Coal and Supplv Com the Manufacturer to the Home Owner pan), we no\\ prc~nt this advanced 011 The Wilson Coal and Supply Compan) burning 'Wilson Burner,' bUilt to our 0\\0 completes the whole picture, narnrl, Mr and Mrs \VlIham H \Vest, of ",lCclficalions It burns low priced No 3 'Wilson Burner,' Sales, Installation, Serv_ Prmceton Avenue, were the guests of their Fuci 011 and has the capant) ~uffiClent to I ice and Fuel 011" son and daughter-m-Iaw, Mr. and Mrs heat 80 per cent of the homes 10 thiS corn- We \\cleorne thl~ expansIOn by thiS com I John B West, at High IJoint, N J, over mumt} Furthermore, our installed pm:e, pany 10 our commuDity and feel that the Philadelphia LacroMe LUCile the \\cck-end complete \\lIh tank anu three MinneapobS-/ commumty Joms us In \\1.'11 \\I~hes for theIr Won J..os1 TIC j't" I Hone) well safety controls, IS an all tlmc I success ~\\lIrlhrnor( Inllllllll; 2 2 2 6 (urUldlln fll,de3 1 1 I i I'htluddllhlll Cumets 1 1 0 2 Juhn Hdficld, Hud Gre~n, AHr) Hlake, I and the Hickman ho) .. arc the team's hl~h sconr'" "Mart" Gatchell has b~cn comÂmcndable 10 hiS role of referee nuCe,h alrelfets tAh iSD mraovron,m Jgr , foofr \VInedsitadnal eH Acad, vI e_.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: i Md, \\ here he \\ III sta) unhl the end of I September as the gue~t of hiS aunt, Mrs : McDowell Ed\\ ard E Dra\; 0 will accomÂI pany hiS brother to IndJan Head, \\here I he will stay for a day or so and then leave I for \Vashmglon, D C I where he \\ III spend Jhe g Ime on Wedne"d.I\, Juh II, \\.1" I the rest of the summer "Ith his grand-a Hf\ IJ\th om, although the IIlmhan<:" \\ere deh:attd b\ the' Cometo;;' 13 to S I mother, Mrs W l\f Morrow I lhe J!oll<: \Hre m.lde ,1<: follono; He\\ard'i • - ! Ralph E Rhoads, Jr, of Prmceton A\e- 5 Rall:\ 3, Zahno\\ 2, \V To\\n~cnd With John Boles co-starred, ANN I nul', left on Tuesday for the Caddie Camp Edrl and Kane, J Belfield, 3, Blake, Fe! HARDING IS currently appearmg, in I at Sky Top, 1'a, \\here hc \\111 remam for JO\\~, Bud Hickman, jO\cc and H~n,amtn what III probably the outstandmg emo- the rest of the o;ummer fh II I I tl • I d ' d f I I honal role of her career, al the hero_ I~ e( nc<:( 1\ Ie n 1.Ino; e e.t (:( • "Th L f ..., I t II e "\. ..an Id hmE ,IlI! e " b \ a <.:core 0 f 8 I 0.,• I wmhei Ihn tart e thI e odf Vergle Winter, t I Mr<: F Norton Landon and daughter~ ' 1 C 1 15 a ree ay engagement a LOI':' and Belt). of Prmccton A\;cnue, \\111 The III .... h O;COf('r of the CH'nlnJ!, \\ho the Stanley, Chester, today J t S th t d f h I ~rur{'d fiu pomt<:, \\ a<: Bohln Poole, la- • I rbcturnlh 0 \\a,' mforllet ° Lay d3 ter avmg rro~ e {'oalh ,It Han.lrd, \\ho I~ \'1~Jttng NEWS NOTES cen e gucs S 0 r" an on s 51"ter<: . "' "" III Ik l, S "IrI h more C 0 II t'~e coac h I I NM ,oY Hu~hd !IIIIIc LcaJn , ho f :A-; orlh ITI onfa \\Ta nda, 1 , an rs 0 n ~ rau ,0 ona- Thc home Icam \\a<: fortun,ltc lo ha\c 1\I15~ Mary Lcuhrm.[!, of Copples Lane ",anda N Y Mr<: A~rau1t and famllv :\Ir Poole, c<:pect.llh <:tnce It \\a<: handl IV a II f d h will rdturn "Ith l\Irc;; Landon 10 be her c.IJlPt'd In Ihe .Ib~ence of four rcgular I 109 or , 1<: spendmg a mont 10 \Va<:h gucc;;ts for a lime mrr on \\ here <:hc IS attcndm~ the Xur<:erv plm cr.. Hud Gceen" "are .Irm pre\ ented School' Trammg Conference ____ _ hl~ takm.!: p Irl m J I<:t nlg:ht <: battle and l\Ir~ Gertrude H McClure and children, Burl I-hc).;m In, john and Pern Hdfteld,l Mr<: Theodore W Cro<:~en and daughter, of Rl\cf\le\\ Road, 'O:.uled la~t \\C(:k for a I~ \\cll I'" till ofhct.ll "core keeper, joe I Barbara Ann, of Garrett A\enue, left on European tnp Rn nold<:. Ire .n\ 3\ on \ acahon~ T f I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ uesda} or Ober 10, OhiO, \\here they \\111 ~ I enJo) a h\ 0 \\ eck<:' sOjourn Swarthmore Golf Course SPROUL ROAD Puhllc InVited Reasonable All Gra.ss Greens Rates HOUSEHOLD GOODS will be sold ;:at PUBLIC SALE for unp ud stor lj.;e on Saturday, July 28, 1934, at 2.00 P. M. at J. T. Stilwell Storage House Morton Ave. de R. R, Morton Sale 1ncludes bureaus beds chairS tables and "II goods stored by Mrs Anna Mertz and all goods stored by Mrs S"muel White J C STILWELL Jr J T Stilwell AUctioneer l\h~" Harriet Miller, of Mmneapoh<:. ::\ltnn, J<: the Ruest of Air and Mr<: FredÂCrIck \V Luehrmg, of Copple3 l.ane, \Val hnJ!ford for a month or ~o 1\1r<: Richard Thatcher and daughters, Elizabeth, Pe~p:\ and Beck}, of Lookout 1\1ount.lIn, Tenn, arrn cd on Monday to be the guc<:.t<:. of Mr<:. Thatcher's brothersÂm Jaw and then \\I\e~, Mr and Mrs \VII ham H Thatcher, of Colle~e ~\Cnue. and Mr and Afrc;; Charles G Thatcher, of Ogden ~\enue Dr and Mrs John A. Mlllerl of \Val I hngford, Pa , left on Tuesday to spend the remamdcr of the summcr at Walhngford \'ermont I I l\Ir ... Albert Thatcher and 1\11<:S Gertrude Dare, of Chec;;ter Road, left last \\eek for OIL BURNER PRICES REDUCED $100 Introducing Our Fully Automatic "WILSON BURNER" at a pnce beJow what even we hoped It could be merchanÂdIsed for Our own burner - the "WI)son Burner" - IS a prodÂuct engmeered and manufactured under our own specificaÂtIons After several years' expenence HI Automat:c Heating Sales, Service and the Fuel Oil Business - we determmed Ihat Automatic Oil Heat could be merchandIsed at a price \\ lthout sacnficmg qualIty Our Answer Is -- The Wilson Burner Pnce Completely Installed - Includmg Tank $247.50 The followmg specdicatJOns of the "\V.Json BurneT" speak for therr.3elves: I-Capl)clty-IOOO ft Steam, 1500 ft Hot Water 2-Hlgh Pressure Gun Type BurneT 3-Century RepulSIOn Induction Motor. 4-Monarch Stamless Steel Nozzle 5-Three Safety Controls-Mmneapohs Honeywell. 6-\Vebster Transformer, Stramer, Pump and Reg ulating Va!-'e 7-Burns No 3 011. 8-Engmeered Pre Cast CombustIOn Chamber 9-Cork Insulated. NOiseless Operation Be Sure to See This "WILSON BURNER" Its Beauty, Quietness and Efficiency Will Amaze You Wilson Coal & Supply Co. SWARTHMORE 600 DOE Oil Burners "WILSON" Burners Dlstnbutors for Fuel Oil MEDIA 123 OIL Burner Service P S -Three Expenenced Bl.Irner Salesmen \Vanted-Llberal CommiSSIOn Paid MI<:o; M, rv Tomhn<:on, of Yale A\Cnue, IS at camp at Kearshar~c. ncar :\aplc'"', 1\lt' 'I \\ here ~hc I~ .1 coun"c!or :\11<:<: \lcthe.1 htn, of Elm ~\enu{', sptnt I .. c;;t u('e).; end In Wc<:t Che.;:ler \\here "he \\a<::. the gUt<:t of l\ll~" Hett) Coat['~ 1\fr R \ Llttlf' , of P.uk ~henu(', \\ I~ called to Cumbcrland, l\Id, on Sunda\ bv the death of hiS "'l<:(('r, 1\1r .. T R Palmer Mr .md Mr<: Pern Gilbert, of Park :\\l'nuc, cntertamed at dmner on :\Iond 1\ for l1r Ind Mr" Herhert P Canero\. 01 PUI"hurg:h Other g:ll('<:t~ \ure ~fr and :\1r0; M.lhlon S(,ott, or Rrookhnc, and Mr and Mr<;, frank hurh mk<:, of l\lcr\\ ood Mr and Mr<:. Wdh.lrn S HIUTe, of RutÂgers :hcnue, and \V M.lrk Bittle and famÂIh. of Sclltr"\llIe, Pa, <:Jlcnt Ihe \\cck end mutorlll~ thrOliJ1;h the E tc;;tcrn Shore of 1\la£\ I.md and Dela" .IrC MI"'s Y"ahella Brunk, ot ~orth Che<:ter Ro.ul, Icft \esterd 1\ to "pend the remamder uf thc 'iummcr .It RUlllmJ, \ I I Mr .mel Mr<: john fClCkt' .md dliidren of HlIlborn ~unue hUH laken the .Ipart ment of 1\1r .. Frlc.lIt\ .It ~\ lIon, ~ J , for thc fI.'St of the summer The l\11<;!'4.''' Mildred and Katharme Simpers, of \Ve .. td.lle henuc, \\111 return :\Ionda\ .Ifler t \\CI.').;" \1~ll .It Cape 1\.Ia\ \\uh t1ll'1r IUnl, Mr" L :\I.tr .. hall Hanc\,1 01 :\1c(111 I ~Ir and Mr Scotl WtllI<: "ho h I\C been m.lkm~ Ihl'lr home \\Ith :\Ir" \VII!J<:.' plrents.Mr md :\Ip- 'mc('nl C Po\\nall h 1\ (-' taken.m Ip trtment at 1002 Jdlcr"on Street, Wllmlnglon, IJd ----+ - Methodist Church Notes The ~H\,ICC on Sund.l\ 1.'\ enmJ!: 11 S o clock" III ht the 1a ... t (J1l( unltl Septcm I hcr I he "cnu.:e on juh 29 I" omlttell m ordu th.tl tl1(' mcmher.. ma\ alh:nd thc Chl' ... tu Helg:ht .. C Hnp :\Icdm!.! Thc n t lock \u,.!:U'" Sunil 1\ morning '-cn 1(1.' \\ill he htld I" u .. u tI \\tth g:ue<:t preacher ... at II throu_h lhc H.c\ \\ nne Clnnntli \\111 prellh on Sund 1\ morning: It II () dock on Pure Rdl,...Hnl" fhl'" IUJtct Of thc Sund 1\ (\ l nln!!: "cn IU .11 fi tl do( k \\ III III It ~I lOti Our Douht.. Cui ::\ock( b mtom I \\ 111 "In,.! :\Ir :\ulke I I lormer It Hlcr tJl the (,Icc Cluh 01 tht Colle!!t, nm\ HI rutor 01 ::\1tI~1 m th ... [emple LUlher.1n Church 01 Ph luh \plul The Sund i\ School 11ilniC \\ III hc hdd It \\ c<:ttO\\ n on Satmil 1\, J ul) 28 - - . Introduces Burner TIll" I ..... ue of Ihc S\\ \Rl "'ttllU \:'1; carrl(" I form II mnouncement ot the \VII"on Burner," nhleh th~ \\t1"on Co.11 and Sup ph CompaO\, one of our loral comjlanll I'" mtroducIn)! lor <:lk m thl" (ommum1\ I I he \\ II"on Co II lilt! Supph enmp In\, h l~ 1 bel n m till \utomattc 011 l-lt ~lln,.:: lOt! I I ucl 011 bu"mc<:<: for the 11I"'t "nUll \ear'" Through thI" experJ('nce and ba~ed on other I.it.:t" g:athcrtd b\ exten<:l\ e em!lneenn!:!; anll mark('lm~ "lint \" conductcd h\ thur com pam :;\lr ~Iancl WII~on, th::1£ pre<:l(icnt "Iatcd the follo\\ 1D!! IIg:hh Jl~r l('nt nt thl honl("~ 10 thl'" commumt\ could he "oM automallc 011 hClt pro\uled a Cluaht\ hmlt Oil humID!! ,mit could he manuf.lclured :tnd retah('d \t a rca"'onahll PrlC(, \\'e hdlc\('d thl" t.:ol'ld he done, prO\uhd '-mmd and "lmpIe hll hurnmg cn!!I!\('crm~ prmnple.. "t'r(' hlend('d \\Ith qu .ht\, \\ orkman"'hlp and pmper co 0]) .. rat1On of the g:reat n:t.tlonalh WE DO NOT REPLACE CHEVROLET ENGINES • • WE DON'T NEED TO! You've heard of motor car engines that perform like a million dollars when they're new-but soon burn themÂselvcs out completely-and bave to be replaced. "SkyÂrocket" engines-we call them_ They "take off" with a lot of zip and zoom! They streak away with a lot of dash and sparkle. Then: S-s-ss-sl! Plweeee! Room' Aaalrlrlrh' It's all over_ And if you want to get this same brilliant performance again, you have to go out and buy allolher skyrocket engine_ In fact, the huilders of this ftskyrockel" type realize its shortcomings so well, they h,vc to provide special facilities f~r replacing Iheir engilles, We believe that the puhlic is "fed up" on engmes like thJs. We believe that sane., wise buyers want an engine they can drive and drive for years-that will last the life of the car_ That's why Chevrolet uscs a six-eylinder valve-in-head enrp.ne ~ith cast-iron pistons and a cushion-balanced mounting. It never seems to wear out. It never needs replacing_ It's easy to service. It's easy on gas and oilÂIt's huilt for years of dependable low-ecst opcratiOl!. CHEVROLET THE QUALITY CAR LAWSON-SHEPARD COMPANY, Inc. 401 DARTMOUTH AVENUE SWARTHMORE Oc:ean City's Finest Oc:ean-Front Hotel BOARDWALK AT ELEVENTH STREET OCEAN CITY, N. J. Come to The Flanders where you are offered true hospitality, excellent food, superior serVice and the companionship of a refined clientele 2 3 2 Roms with Bath. Amer- ican Plan. 3 Delightful Swimming FireproofÂOpen A Pools. I r Altracltve Rales for ramI' hes and Groups SpecIal Care GIven ChIldren THE PRINCETON INN P,lnc.ton, New Jen.., 8· FI J·t r.mo J ;0' 1,-!"t;; + h"1 '" , Ljbrary, VOL. VI, No. 30 SWARTHMORE, PA., JULY 27, 1934 HISTORIC SPOT IS RELOCATED Dr_ Harper and Mr. Leeds IdenÂtify Bartram's Buffalo Lick in Georgia Preliminary Meeting to Be Held I ABOUT HOP NO 3 Dr I d,·." I 1\1,,,,,, "f O""hn h, : - • , nue, \\}II .tttcnd .1 prchnlln.ln mu ImJ! ot I ADVENTURE NO 3 thc -ufhur" 01 lilt Pcnn"'\ h till I \l IIlll1l\ I . of SlII'OlI, It Curn\\ Ill, III (lhlJlon (ount\ un Jul\ 21-\ .1l1d 2Q 10 prcllirttiun for Ihe Th·1I . R k M - G d .. umlller rm .. llllJ! of the \llthm\ \\hHII rl sin OC y ounta.n, ran t.lke'" plRC on r\ug:u""t II !lui 12 Dr I Teton 8!,d YeJlowstone Wherry, \\ho h \1(1.' pn"'ldcnl oi thc Nahonal Parks ~c.lthm) ha!; beCll dlO"ln 10 tint ")lot .. Health Camp Receives Scales ~" I hm Iffl J DlIl"!ll III P.lrk "( nUL, II1d :\Ir .. H.lnl\ Jlllrll, 01 Prll1(lton \\.nlll, IH!!,UI II .. t Sltun!n tl) H(ll\t don Itlllll" lor .. t lit .. fllr tht Ihorntoll ( lInp lor lllde rnoun,-hul <- luilln II On 1 hu r'" ell\ ttll\ pn-l'ntul thl' "'ldt .. lu the lllnp th ink ... tn munlllr 01 thl: I rundh Clnlt: mil otlll.:r ... \\fln _!l(lh tontnlJUtul In liH WIlh.lm B.utmm, tIlt' famou"l uf bot 1111{ II mteft"t to bt: \l~lttcd It th~ On the 15th of Juh IJr I L 1l.!flll II' I 1 1111 Idelphl 1 nllllr.lh<:t, \\Inle lr.l\ehm.! time of the Dlectllll-: 011 ~u"::lI .. t 11 .uuil2 nwh us hl'- "l.'.ond 1(I((.:r of lhL<; \1.lr, LOCAL !]If()lu.:h Georgi •• \1<:ltcd a huff.llo hC'k • \\hHh \\l: hl\l lu .. t r ru\(d .. nd l[l'lm I _ dlt\ mllcc; norllHH,<:t of ~U"!lI<:1 I, of ,,11Ich ANNUAL PICNIC TO I" Inhllg tu \Ull I" fullm i RESIDENT l m tde mention In Ch Ipter IV of In,., 1 I J h R k :\l11unt lin :\ IlIOn II P Irk PASSES AWAY rra\cl~," \\nUen upon hl<: return Llck<: I l nc \ f tillS ).;md \\Cre Ill.ule h\ (attIc, deer mtl BE NEXT WEEK I \\I' 1 II 'h, f l,tI I' Irk " 11- "II", 1\ \\.' __ lOr"~" as \\ell .IS In hufl.llo['~ clinttnlllih Iltnll II,I "t (ll Int hl' II ItIUl,J .lIIHrk ...I It'u 1I) ( tncIl uIdIu l M rs. S ergeant B arton B rewster CI lrlrtl" 0 ollr t""\\IH () S lJd-anl-! a\\a\ thc e.trlh In cert lin 1I1•1n'''. • • I ~(hlnturt It \\ I'" thl nnh onc It:lt Itl uccurnbs After Long Illness or Ihe miller II dC1)O"lt.;: cont lined thercm I VarlOUs Committees Busy Making b. "'ten till" "unumr I at Home In Ihl~ p;trhcular m<:tan(e decp t.:a\C~ h 1<1 Arrangements for the 1 r , I ____ ')"el1 formed by the Int.:e ...... anl \1"ltatlon<:j B· D \\c Irrned .It f"l~ Chllnhtr oi Com On S,lturdl\ Juh 21 'Ir, :\lIldnd '1 r' • $2.50 P E I BIBLE SCHOOL COMMENCEMENT Closing Exercise. to Be Held Presbyterian Church This Evening ID III ,h "111_ pro ... rllll 01 Iht S" If'hlllnn C(ll1l111UDlI\ \ It IlIOn Blhk Stlwul \\111 lulp to "lllIIlllrllt 11 1)1.l1d"llltumplt-h ment .. (or thl hUIl .. I 01 P Ift:nt.. IIHI friend... (her III \ dlplt m,l" \\111 ht: ,...l\el1 10 dulclrcn ul uur UlnlI1lUIIlt\, "h()\\IJ1~ 111 It thl, h l\~ Ittlndt tl .tl Ill"l .t \\lek till I hl\l (10111 "'Itlf.ldill\ "ork I he I f)l1llllllll (1I1('l1t \\ lilt I' \\ 111 b, III hi m the Prt .. b\ttrl.llI lhunh tUlIIght, \\111 III tn "Ith thl Onl Hundrulth P ... llm tn nf the aOlmal" I Ig ay mtf(e It 400 P :\1, md In thn" minute, IJIl\\orth Cuml\ Bre" .. 1lr \\lIe ul Slr l\trun,..: h,mn lOci Iht In\Ol.ltIUI1 1)\ Dr To determme Ihe IoeatlUn of thl" lick II Ie :-'100 l IIII (Ir en \\ h I I !h.l(l()ur"lhedulef()rth~ .. tt) therepl.mned ,!emt BITton Bre\\ ... t r c1lld It hlr Iitl (I J.l\C )('l'n tn\lll'd I I I fl f I I f It II I I I tl 'II I I , , .. one of the maIO object<: of tin .. ~um IJ \ the 1'1 HI u IeI JIlH I C nunln \\ eck :\""u- Itnl (Cf II I"I e 'Irl C'C"' ''llI\J lC.l ml' ~cdlOn n "'I,I""-n" ,_"...0 S""tl,n"'I". ."" 'I'lll , ,Iet , I \\l)t \If\ nUln 11 Ie (u- • I lC Imt( 1 I' onlerence <:Ite Ion,.:: IlInt..... dnn undtr 10011 .!nll h)';((1 thllr Bible \\ I\nl Chtnntll mI)er'" expechtlOn Into nnrth('rn Geoq:nl IJ\ (lltHin In lC It" J!:IJ("'t" .It the mnull Coun \\eicumt'd U" \\uh opm arm~ J I I :\Ir Brc\\"tcr \\ 1" born In \\llnllll.!lnn :\Iemon \\ork 1)\ thl \\ 1\ III \\hllh Ih \ r FranC!" H.IT,lCr, of \ale A\Cnne, tn \Vee).; I'I{nll: on \Vedm .. dl\, \Ugll<.;t 1 I I h k ,m( II( I tl I I I I I I I t nl l\.'I :\rthur ~ tcel<: f "III .Irrl\~ \\Hh lhclr mothtr" It S".trlh mUCI 10 (0 III t e m.t m~ til our IIr"t DelH\tfl, the dlU.~! hter 01 :\11\ IJlh,orll, nIp elI lt1r (.u, \lr. . t .. U J\ "Ie \er.lb 01 GZOeOrmOg I:In<:t,o "a n ,( botarm "t of thC' Plul,u(lc,lpOhmm ","'- SI.,I'"n .11 ",_',I ~' ."\.1 fl'" ",II .uh1 (ntun 1 In I Rfnck\ 1\lo11ntam :o-.;atllOn.ll (0011\ lOci thue lite JO"lph \-htun Cumh tiC I n11t emIu h1lmtt' . . (,rl t.:.lt cIl rc l.l'" tl cen h m.lkl'tllt Inl' from I'hll.ulllillul nn I "I'l no "oon () )e ur .... ulten I untrd ~enue~ \Hrc hdd m Trim" "'U I ... t l'l _ Hr ...... tn( 1-:1\10,..: l\:m I\ caI dbt m\ of :\.II tuI ral Sue nee" TIR Ie" .;I:p oIt clli tr.tln m.tkm)! It PtJ~"'lbll' lor thcDl to COll1l1l.".. nut of th ..... hc.1 of "c'l"~ rl' (hunh, 01 \\Imh :\lr. . Brl'\,'I" "." Illtf llt .. I \\llIth \\otthl pre.lllt tllc ga.lt Blblc lU een n~cont( on a m"I) m ... , JU board It In Ihout Street Stltton m<:hul :\cbra").;" .tnd CuJurulo nur IIr .. t deh..::htllUlmblr on :\[ondl\ ,tlternoon Inlerm .. ntl rut I" 10 an lntl'n tIn,.! lonn.t.: ".1\ Dr Harl)Cr and l\[r Lecd" ha\m~ no 1 I S I I \\.1" tn plun,.!c mlo nne 01 lht .. h.lllonc"t \\ I" m \\l~t Ilurcl HIli Ctmd(n S .. \lrtl 01 lht dllldnn hl\e .... tld thl! the\ longitude or Iltllud(' to .1<:"I"t them, knc\\ 01 .It at 1 tred, In( "'''m ... mut: I (UII I IIkld tht Hlhl ~Iem n \V Irk L I f II fU'I.,n Indtherefor'-'"armc"t(lfthe~c'!rclt moun- Ih .. ulc her hu .. hlnd mIl nUltlnr :\lr"l e II ( e .. a 1- onh It~ apPco:\lmalc I()ratlon, <:a\, \\Ithm ~Ic Ir J)ronl 01 the lilt md u)ficretene of I ra(hu" of ten ml Ie <: or ~o 'fl,,'-, 1"I"I",,',I,.,n ",n,n"II'.... ·, ,'f ,,1,1,1, I.tln pool" \\e thcn ~tltlnncd our"'eht.:<: 10 Hre" ... hr I· "llr\lHd h\ Iuur c1llldnn, :\111 • I; I I ' I IS) ( I I the ((,(ChIn.! :\Ir Hu("hu(:r I'" chllrmm. \\111 "tt Ihtt thl rfleDl"lIp camp "'eeluded lIndn thc great In( .. tr .... blnt r, ~rlCl m( rlOn., md Thcrc arc .Ipplrcnth no "pedmen" of PICOl().;t.:r:-, tre comfurllhh l"lorted to ... ((nltd Illlle ... hut nol more Ihm I thne In Ihrotlltr,J \ .. htonComh 01 forol1tn Ihe l'nmln children \\111 ... I\e ... ~\t'r.II llllfflio bone<: from Georgia III eXI<:ttnce 1 mmon'" (.m\(' \\ htre 1111 \ \\ III "'P' nd mmllte ".llk f",m II,.,, 1.,,_", ',I mlnl,t,.,t",n emU/I, .md t\\() I. . ltr, :\1r .. ).,nH'" .~I d(h ... htlul htth n ltltltln" ... ,\(11 I" ~m,! 10<1 no actu.t! ncord. . of am nhlte mm .motlwr m( morable d 1\ I'nJO\ 1m: pleot, Bmldltlg', \Udltuflum, PO ... 1 Ofllrc mel Hili Smllh, 01 BIUlhl :\ \, md 'h .. IIdln 10_ t1()I1~ \\Hh Iht Bl .... mner. . '11 ..... Beth I!l\ml! e\Cr <:een m\ 01 the mlmt! .. there 01 IH"h milk <: mll\\ Iche .. , puddll1~" mil of the Cunfl'ren('c "Ilc 1:\1 enmll, 01 \rilmof(' Pa 'h(.trr'h tlll..::llt tht: Prlmlr\ grHk 111I .... It I" beh('Hd thlt nn otiur nalur.lh"ls Ile cr. .. lm Iml ll).;e ... , I" \\dl 1'" Irt:"h .lIr ,_," '01 II I ne IfI) \ cUl1lmunll\ I1 011"'1.: f.I' I :\tr Br('\\ ... tt .. hi" hnn re .. uknt (II 11"'1 "uk \\llIll 'II .. lJorntll\ Undntllll haH rl"1()clted or Idcnttht:'d th(' h("k ~tnce mcl t l!o(l(1 d l\ " rc .. t ru~ II t II u'" \\ It hi I It h tn~ mel c1ulhe ... \\ I",h S\\ Ifthmorl" lor the I)I,-t hn H.lr. . , hl\tn_.. 11.1'" "IlHk IBlllIuth Il\ th( B.,..mnl'r }Jarlrlm' ... time :\Ir" I hZlllllh Plx"on I'" till lhllrmm m).,. flohtu .. illd \\C It nncc ,lcdlrcd our lOnle here lrom (Jermmto\\n throu.!'htlut tht mOrllh H.md\\urk frum II 1lf1 iIO C ree k J!I\C' II Iet, ' 0 I" ,"ntl' I I, 01 tIl( rlu: puddmg: wmnHIln.l\lr" \\ :\ hr~1 ufllclll \\I ... h £11\ lhl~ \\.1" on thc • thl"C (hl)trtllllnt~ IIHhulld lll\ mOlIlI!m_' I I I , TI h HI I'll I $ (tn un exl' orer,., a cae le\ ) Sp mgl('r, dl:tlfm m 01 the tulfl'e (unumt hm t I( Ilcxl mornm..:: hdorc dmmr md 01 Bllil Cl n.. Iml httlc booklct~ of 4 DOES MUCH AT Ie" f act ... tn go Il \ TI1 1 I II IC II C k h alI 1(1.', l\lr :\Ihlrt BUllmgton, (II th( nnl)'; \\Ilh tlmt: enollt.h Idt tn JOIn th\: ::'\lturl'l Ie IH" from tht.: Blhlc" heen lIe"'( nbed In H.ulr 1m .1" hl m~ .It t he lOti \\ .tll r Ulmmlttn, !lHI :\Ir... 1I1r\ l \ Hike under the dlr( l hOll of R.tD_cr Din,.! I I he f IIlIt r llllldn n \\ ill .... 1\ l t I!lll ,11Or I[ loot of .1 ~nllth~.t"'tern promunoton 01 I PllrH ul till ((\Ukll" mel lrU).;lr .. Ulm Our \\1\.£1 1111'Hr colkclion" \\111 410" (\1 THORNTON CAMP pnl_run lI'llucllll~ Ilrtlll 1011.11 ....... nlo t"o-lcnlnl ncl..::e (II lull .. runmn!! north and DlIUU l\Jr" Hden H III I" tnltrt.llnllllnt delllc" 01 tltt Inkl' Dunn,.: till" lIm{' "IX .. P Irt lull( n d( :\Ir~ Burton \ "olllh thr(lu~h Ihal IJtrt 01 (,cor~la \\Ith (h.l1rm.llI 1\lr~ FrlOk Grl\, lh IIrll1 10 of 01 thc hO\ ... look I t\\O hour hor .. chlck Konklt: hi" _I\ll c1uh tnU"'llll III tCllcllOn a pilln oCtllpled Il\ a ("lOt' ~\\Imll to til( tilt .... nllt.! wrtlnlltte( :\lr ... Id\\.ml \ fUlt By Depriving Ourselves of a Few to t:llh (hlllrlnllnt, nl "Ilhh thl jUllIor oulh. Ihlt Ihe on.!;mal parh hill ("Orne lip lln).;m ... 01 Ihl uul\\Hh Ulmnulln md lilt I(lhln !J\ :\fr IJmg on till 1'\C Mlnor Luxuries We May Do \\ork I~ I lilt'""! dllllOI1 ... lrll1un :\11 the little ILHr prior to mlkln~ thc (h ... :\Ir IIlrn \\und .ll tht .... roUIH\~ lomnllt nm,.:: 01 om Irrl\ II l'ntltlul GIIClcr~ PI .. t a. Lot for Some Child 1()III~ \\ 1_Ilt.:r hI" hill tIll'" ,II~~ thl rm.(!"\ uul Ihlt tin t lrth it the h k" I" t. Ih, "'011'1111'1":: thllrmlll In" I" IIlI 1ml Pn .. III rlml I'" HI ... t( If I 'm till IIf"::l t m tlll dlUul mil de"lne" much {nmpo eel 01 \\hlte dl\ the} did knm\ 10"" ()11 the oulh "Ide ttl tht: rllirnul Q{:\t .Ifllrnuon "hln \\l dnl\i Iu\\ Ird I Jlm\ \\ould "111 h:"( tl. Jllild 1\\0 lull J {fllHt I lC h r t lOu_hI lui \\nrh. lIlt jllr I It I" truc thlt hn mile., "e~·m ... \en htth :\Ir .. Hlruld (.T1llm md ::\11 .... Illlllor 101lJ.!'" 1'1:1).;, 1-1000 het hl_h, I" Ilr .1"J\\llk~ III thl: luuntn lor dnh :-.4" JOI tilt rUll1or~ h.I'" <loUl llHalt to lnnlh In thl" a.!( hut Ju .. t tn Joratm.! "Unit Klnne«!\, mil on tht Ilurth ..,lIlt, :\Ir ... \\11- IltiT Ilki.' lrum \\JuIHe "'C\lll 01 U... II \Oll thltlk \01 \\lJllld lllJOl It mel tlu )llrlltld hh 01 thl lhoul partHulu <:))ot, thc extct 10CItiOll nl \\hlch him B Bullock lnd .:'.Ir" (.tllT,.::t \ lIoHI {llmlled 1000 lel'! O\tr I thrce nule trail IJ~Iltljt In 11 ho\\ Ihnlll Iht hUl1drul- 01 Iht _Hm..:: 01 i1Iploml \\111 In lollll\\ed hi" I)"'en lutherto unknonll tn \011 \\tthm Il\ to I mk \ d 11111 \\Uhm t\\o mill'" ot ttl( hlh .. llnul \tHm~ ttr .. tu "hum I lOUn In t rllhtr UI1l</Ut l'rtI_rlm broulLlt In I rHhu" 01 thl .. mm\ mlIe~ m<1thcllroh- \lttrhl\m~ thl tIm{ 01 thllrll\t .. I" ,.::nll \Vl'h .. llr (~IHlt.:r \\hllh (Irun .. Intojtn \Illlilln \\!th "\\mmull.! hl .. thlll lht Inhrmuhltl.U\trStltlOl1 n V B S lem "III he tuund tn t •• ke nn .t nt'" .md \\1.'11 I'" "I.:\en till I I hlll hour ... ot ht 11th tin .. II).;c II1lkm,..: pltHI' III mIlk mel .. 1 P Ilfohlhh lht dill\. I)rlltlll 01 prl\lr],\ III "Ithlll ,," .llfler.".. ul h..::ht lUI IJ!e.I"Urt ttll J!:rtlUll \\111 lntrun Il thl It "I'" \I.:n lOIII IIII, \\e II rl\l{ I tl II mt m ... Ihe ~1\ln..., III thtlr h\ ... ~ lour dol Iht .!'rUlip \\111 I,rendl I IllUlull"trltlon tll Dr Hlrper md :\Ir Y({d .. ,\\hntrl\t!ed ... tllton It -.10 P :\1 !lui nlurn ttl Ihtlr loc Ihl Ihrtll 01 "luh 11I_h Iltltllch mellllr ... I ..... mh I hull 1n1Otint \\hlll .. tllktr) Ihl 'I mw\ \\urk lI1il lIuul"mk Ihe here and there (1IIe ... llonm..:: Ihe <:ettlcr~ homt .. m Pill I uleilliu I to "tit lor mxt prll\ Ill!! II \\ tl II tlllr mo\ Il c tiller I HwhI ' lUll 1.!lIn .. l I (II ule] .. ht:dth lil" 1)1l!!, nltun \\ork lIul ottllr lellurt!::l f"'ln.1 Illal ,.,n'e oi tho~c ot the age .. \elr ... Illlnu I II 'I I II I I I So tlr ~l,1\ )(l\~ Irnn S til 14 \elr (II 01 1I1l' .dltJUI \\111 lu: hO\\11 II'" l "lllril t.: IIlI 1I1'''l \\ e rt: lO( II( I I he\ond Ihree <:COrt' anel t('n had htanl of • m tile grnup to mlkt tin ... e1UhlUIt Lllmb II,..,t hl\l "'plnt t 1\\0 \\tlk "l~~lnn Illhl lht dl~ l ~101l \\111 tn(1 .1'" \\ I" tll"- the natural CllnO"lh but h.«I no ule I LAST WEEK OF Ill( rl ... t 01 I hl I.! til.... l hmhl cI t h t r (h.. t ount \ t tlllp lor undt moun III II llllldn n 10m In \\ It h 1 ml .... lon ml ~ 1"::\ 110m Dr "hnrc It \\a" or had lutn, "htle mo~t of :I !IUlt to I)relm Like \\Imh thl\ Uilim It lhorntnn \ l{tJllIl _roUll 01 ~I:\t\ I~ !Jonlhl :\h(~lrrlll l1.:Hlur I ... \\ell t:-. ,...ll1 tho,e of le .. <:er )car .. hid not e\en heard A-f'E I STITUT'" mou .. h tlumerl Hound our cunln .... lim IIHI\\ In tt~ lIr~1 \\uk In thl ulIlIltn On trd (itrtltor 01 tht '-,huul \ lklr cut of It Hi'll,. M 14 I rt'lll tlhlc \\I ... tlu hnl~t Ilkt Ihlt Ilu\ \u..,u .. t h tilt _Irl ... \\lIltlk( O\lr th limp 1Il",lIrttitlllll me 1_1.' \\111 ht 10110",11 IJ\ 't In O..::lcthorpe Count\. Ihe\ canll' upon 1L.I. IL ...... 1 h ul t \( r ttn Ilor Ihur h Irl 01 the IImml r ht.: 11th ! l ill to 11fIn~ hl Irt olll rill!! tu 11\ It I min \\ho m\lted them to \Ie\\ hi" "dcer' ---- 1\\0 \\ k .. III tIll ulUntn' 1t .. llll 111 It u'" Itlt Iht "'Ihlf nlllrm \\111 he lick, \\hICh, "linn <::1j!llt. Ihe\ concluded to D r. Ot to KIel' nb erg W'JI I P resent Kno"lIl~ th It \\C \\Cre to IIncl Illon IIl'-1t.!nllll.lllt Imounl 01 tlmt tor I l1I l I(I II'" d til pro\J(ll Illlt "In ~1I11plu' .. til '" 1ft hl\e hlen Bartram·. .. 'huflalo' hck It F ' naI L ecture Th-IS E venl• ng A 5 IlIlll .. ll! Ill.lk ... III th~ C m l<iI m Roc).;lt.. \\lIU II I" no t tl .. hl I In II nll Ik !til tIl ntll \(llullhlr (olllmUIlII\ \l(ltlOI1 Blhll "a ... aiter the buffalo lctt the countn thal Conference Closes mil 111:\10.1" nol to h•t Ilh tlll'[(. \\C Ion \ e ir .. (lr tor one \\ II n \\ (I~ II t Iu rl\ ptllllUI" I ~l houl mOil.!' L1ntll Ill! 1\ lit _ld (1lIldlln III the deer too).; our the <:pot, "0 Dr Harper ----- \\Int tht h\l hour (.rlOd I Ikt dn\e lIuI Il ..... II1 m ... I h II I I I It .. nn I or IlIr t II ttl rlpil l PIli I lilt Iplll I \)r III thl Illllunt lin" nl ::'\nrth anll ::\Ir 1(((1 ... ml!!hl hl\c "l\ed them Illl llIlti \\et' k 01 tI. t t~on( I l!lnUt1 [(·lIt bH:k to lo\dtnd 111 the lootlull .. \\ I I k I HI 11" Ill\tr nlH\11 \\ lit lountn Ilr (\foilit lll:\t Hllnur fhl plld_l tn till "llu .. a gntt rleal ot troubll' lOt I It a\t;' I 1)"t'1 I II I( 0 'I,' lIl ,U, ( I l,I On'" II I'" I lltll IIl throu .... h Ihl' _Or!!:tOU .. 'Ilwll1 on' C m\on 1,,1_" I'k, 'I~I 1,1_ "., ,rl, ,..,11'1,-,,.111'"_- (hn 11111 Ill":: \\111 II lullo\ul I" tl)l corne morc qll1ckh tn theIr (I( ' Imatlon \UIl l I t n tlH tll,I, ,I ",r,."t ','I"IIII"n'" \\t took chmur lurt.: md limp d tt.:n Illlle... I"., ".,k, ",""_",1,, ",I I"lt "."t", prl\lr "11Il~ :\11\\ I ilt II \1, SI\iIOUr h,d Iht.:, !!ont! In (IUl .. t 01 a "dt.:er' hck 01 ldul.ltlon tllJpIn \llll:lI, riIl l 1111 I nl north III till "PHIOU" :\IUllIllptl Plrk (II nllr~ ... tu I1 (1111 I0 I ttll Il ul!tll" lilt I III Iu r ... l IIlIJ)~ Ilul III Itlll/llltlOIl Jn~tead 01. - the on,.::ma1 hU1lalo' one u.!:lUliul1 HI Ihlh1\ I" tll(', dlut tht \mtrl lort (0111ll Cule r ulo It" Ilr"::l I Ikt lur hl\t IOllnd th'l \\lth :-."() ~ I_lr \01111_ Itr. ... althtJu.!h 1)\ tIll ... tIme e\en tht;' dl'er ha\e lin :'\t,...ro I)r Id\\lrd :\h(m .. ton 01 m ... hul t I)r~ -!lui .. \\ 1m rnd I hClort.: bn tk _ rllllIllIl 1_ lei .!It I crh k It II II lIi t 11l.1 ~one !rom that plrt 01 GcOn!11 thl Bun Itl 01 I <lUt 111110 l)ll)lflllltnt 01 11"'1 dill Iht: lIl:\t 1ll0rllln.! 110 1I1I \\ 1\ til Il tll( II t tIi t lluhltln I I1 \ The Iln enl o\\n('r 01 Illl h(k rcmemhn"- Interior ,.!I\t tn Illtl Irlhl! IIlitHl :\lnn Out r01l1 OHr th~ lldu~ lOti "I,-,(hru .. h tht t\\O \\l k t!1\1"lOli ""'OIlH HI thtlll "hen. hlt\ \l\f" I!!tl thl're \\a. .. a Ia rge j I 1\ l\tntn"::,tlmplrln..:: tl H tlIt llllIO nl I, I cl<"lrt \llllflmll {ol Rmhn Rock n.tl It \\1l'11 "",1,( (tllJllI\ "I'Jlt Ill llll cleprc~ IOn hll"lell 1\\0 and thrce tl'et Ilhlll" 101 hool tlu!rlnn In thl lntln SPrlll.! !Ill I llr on, \\\Ollllll_ ltd u .. till hltk nil 111111 Itt I I un o'lllr \\IIIIH\tr clup "hlth I" no\\ mo .. th tilled In I (nHtil :-itllt I lomplred "lth tho"l III lH"t tin Ihroll~h Illk ... on-nmlln .. III tIll _,I hICk hut It I I t I Itll I,-hl ot In dlh depth 01 Ihollt"lxmchc~llllll":: 11 I tII ll I" I III I \\Il IIl I1I1 IIIn nlll II Il .c) 111,1I1 Ill( I I Itl I \\IHI ",.1,,,, .. 11\ \\("I lIIte, ,I, ,t I' ,,' t.. IH II I II 1I1lllln1l \ Ilt I IJ tllIt II II t \'1I1 1 Idl lhl' "IoU "hlh tin "Iud) Blrtram lUI Itr :'\t.!rll tlllldrlr1 In tIll Sntlth III lor_oil n (t!H1 hlltU\ 01 tht (.rlnd \\111 III Ihl: Imil lld_\ Itl !Ilk I lilt Ie\\ Illl { 1 11l1t II t illlni Pro~1 lin "til tllll~ llli \\!l1I 1 (111 til ll\l Ih~ Illl\tllh I tlh I "hom J j {Iml: II, nHtI Ihe lnltl \\111 Il dllllllltiul In I \\ol .. hlp lui IUlttl Il til( I I 01 lllldlln I( Ilhlr Illd \11 Ir (kilh till dlllltDr IHI tlhhlr hl\( IJlltl l j1l{ltlh IIlltr t 1((1 III I \ll)1 11_ III t1tll dt III fl lllll l ,I, cnhlcl tortn .. tIll lHlh It tin ... pot \ IIII t rum ,I 11: 01I \1011" 1I1'1, 1\11 l III II 11 1.1.", .", ,',.," ,I I'"k ,n,1 .n,I,,1 ,I "I" II II, ll'P' I' 0 I ,I, I I tlUr I, ImlIn l I ",II r !Ild 10\ 111\ nr 11 Hilt r h I~ I 11m photn.!rll)h ot the I tt ,hUt .. ullt rll I t Iu t II II l _roup III PHI t Imp ,I, t , I on I I k ~ )e,l n', " tlI t Il Oll II ' It Ii t I It l If It ( I tilI 1 I, \, PI II{ I t II I Rtltl ... nllUIIl I ,1Ut ttltll ,,'HI III 1.1 ,I", hlk \\huh lltholl h tlK,n In tIi t I ,p I !llliIlIt I1 \ tl h ((tll'lUh (1IIlfIlIl l)n~ n t hlChl\\ 01 Ihl (,rmd IltOll'" nl,,,ll I"""", ""I tl" "I", I" I""", lh '01 Il( I1,Il \11 11)( II 111!1l to 01' I II I't,ro.: .) I II I II lt I I tllml1ltllllt l t I1 IOIllI)IfIOn 01 \ \In III I II \ III JI IIlC I In {IrI\ _1:1 {I1, J~l ,I hI ' ,_ ,I) III \\ Ill ... tII ll Il pon I lrilld ttl til lltm, I ,dIll, Il, I)", 1'.1\ , (I'lltlllli • oa llll Illl I I \\1011 \\I~ mol Ilhll .. llIl_ 1\\1\ hdu Ihrtlu.!h :\Itlrlll IIldPHJuk I' lh1\ ( dlll1 \\ 1 (I" "II, 1,,11"'11 I, ,I" ,I"" Ilnl'lnn ... \hlllllltlll\lllIjlll th IllIuunt ollld'lllltottH"'oulhlntrlllltClI\tl 11111,11!\ ,llOU \1 hlHh(lltlklll IOrlll\\OI:"Ill_<mltlh_tlltltlplr :\11 New Tournaments B egl• n A ugus 11 I pnt 101 tltUltlO1l plr "11I11 \\'11II1 I" I"" 10m \\, rOIIl t\\lnt, II\l mJil'" !long 1I1 tH I 01 III I ntIl tr \\11I1 11I nilI 1I1 11 H ( \\1 _ 1Il 'II' (huh 11(lhl ~I,_ I 'IItt l\\ "till \\IlIIltIlt 11Il1\1l1t"',,~n I IntII! lkIl lrolll IlIllIll llo Itkt J UiHtlllll nil 1\ ,1H "II k 1111 I Il1ltUlltIt llltlllri1lt1l 111ll11l1t\\tlttlld\lllrllltl:)"I' \Ul\\ enl (flttlll1 'IUrlltll1t, n"OI' l ') IIOIllPI.Oll\\ltI IIHI llIIOIl llhOIlH\\l1lI1 n lUI I Inn(tIl lI l~ll1tHn IOrIU nI( lltlllI : , IIU I 'IH lI\\l\lIlIl 'lllljl 1111 I I II t II IIl l' IOlltnllllhtl 111\ lu,('I,'- "",'.. I), 1",)'1,1_ tu ,II till lllllthn 01 '-'\\lIlhllltln \\111 Iht tilt plltl ... l'lnn\hlll It Ihl hIt Itli (.Iltllrll 1111 .. 11).;\ hi'" I 100 milt In lnt hOlllt Inion tht\ flt1h _II I IU.!'DlU"'h lurtht.:molllll_dt\tltl()lldh'Hlr hi_ill \\Hlm tll\ \ II_lit I \ n ~n I I tlH~ 1111ll III tIi l h t II II 11\ltlllll [lit lor I II I IIl l\l If til!!}! I It (1I1 Il11 I1 II It I I, II lIr \\ II I I IH IIH II ~I I :\II .... 'Illdrlll SlIllplr '11~ lit lU1 :\h It: 01 l\\~nl\ II\t l~nl· \\1 II II t nlUlHl , upp rl 01 ltillltln!l I~ dol "Ill I' tllll \Ihl I tlhlr.lt! h IPlltllltlon 01 Ihl tUrilll I 1\\1\ llt( I \\11I1 11I1 lorlllllih 111:1 I lin (1)(1 'II I)molln \ I {III, ""- "I, III tho e \\ho h!\( nut dh lllh.d to thl \h \Ill I thm Illl JI1IIlIIl\ HI lill !nlll'lIll lurt \\ IIlIl\ul Oil ttl \l1ll III Ihl 1II'lhl, !n _l! \ n III III til Imutt" olllr d I \\llk 01 lr\llt I'" PIlTl1ln f 1111)1" ( ollrt I Ull( I \11 \\ I, 0 " l II,t" III t 1I1l1 I JllIlIl h I t I 1I1l \\1 III )t 1111 I1 ,1I I 1lllllldll1. til! ]l)t III !ht nltllll \\t II"'. ,11."",1,1"", .",.,."",' ,I" "," Itltlur :\]1 :\Irl,I:-illllll_lr \11 /[11' l ltd III pll\lIl_ III till .!'ll1lt III r. \ 1ll11~ \\11 II 1)1 (II 1 ".hm!t _ (I I I I III \ 11 \II II Ii P'lltl II Illd \1 11111 I I .1 I I .... 1 I IIlIl \1 Bdl\ 'ld'llrlil _1\1 IUl ... llll to rl Ilu 11 t Ih tuUlt I1 1111 I pi dlltlll II I \t Ih )It ! \ III I I 11111I .11 I Illmll fltlllkm..:: 1Il thl (.Ilnd (lIl\tlll .'\I ill\ 1(11) II " ur Ullt I II I\l II I n IlllfI~ \\\Jltln wi III l\lI II 01 tht chlllrtl'h .1, 1m tll\ t.:\lmn,.! Juh ,I ,I1 Iltmlurlll tht I Hull\. til thl Intlllllt \\111 0"1 thl \lllll\\ ... lOlH 1II1I ,1I ~ n"'pllllt II i II Itl1lll_I I'II)I( 11 III \11 till'" \\ork \\1 dOllc Irnh "1,1, , (hit Gt:rmr til 210 I )lltnhlutIl \ \lllll: ill II I'rlliltl I ImJlIh ll\On~1l1 tIIL StUtI \ ()I,I 1",1",,1 tl II lll") )1 (I! lin,! '"l lllll"urIilIl _1101 I (til "ilrJlllltl Ilint I I nlh ,,11"'1'-_' t,) .)U, I .. tudent II S" Irthmurt.: CIlIII.!t "I II II I III Rt(t Ihl tnllehHltn_ .. l .... ltm .. III till \\1 (frnul III t !lUp II II." " .1",_, nol I) e (0I 11 IJt lC I \ \1 II til II hlrntol} umllllllDlI\ ,nil It .. 1)l\ln, (.lllr,I"n 'n ch,p'" ut lh( tlmrt ... tor the I)lhme ul 1I"tlllltt: "III III Siturdl\ Illornln.!' \\llh JIH III tlllll tor tht \nnll II I I ,- k \\UUIfI quit kl \ II t}" "hIt Hlomph ... hnllnl tI," °'1",..,'.." \\llIlh encl .. lahnr Un, l" \\11 I), <-I. lllhl r_' lilt! Dr (hlrh ... S )ohn .. on ..u 11( mil lu turt. \\ hll h \\t.: II( to tic 1I1 1'e I) e(n hruu .... ht ahollt .- .-.... .... uh tnt tCC 01 h( lor\: dlllnl r In tht horl tlllli hlDl Snuth I" nlUrnm,.:: to 111 hml1( III dm.:dnr 01 Illl In BOlh 1 ...... Jl tklr... thl hltlc on(" h.l\\ hl(~n III thl lire 01 tIll • House Struck by Lightning 1)1\lon,Olnu thl.' llttn pul til 'III'" \\('t:).; .... Tmln I'" tht "'Ix(e nth ("nUln thl ((Hlnt\ But thl' Jlo .. ,.II>1htll" lor lurllur! \ .. uIN:nplion III ~2 00 1 tum I\ I or II 11.' Tennis Match Scheduled nl'xt 111\) mel \\( hl\t: ju. .. t nO\\ Irrl\ld _oml ar, 'Inhnul,,1 111"t III tl,''- ..'. 00 .1,,1 I lhc hou c- on II In Ird "tnll., 1"' ,1 I" ht1lme 01 Ih.! :'ll .. nll \\111 (ntltie the l1lt:m- __ _ It :\Ionnoth llot ~Ilnn.! ... "hlrc tilt' thqll elren \\ho hl\, ht:cn tUrn,d 1\\ I'" Or ot the Str.llh 111\tn Inn, \\ I" .. lnlLk h\ hlr ... 01 that t.mn'" to Ihe llx (II the (Ourt.. On Sunda\ Jul\ 2<) the S\\ Irlhmon 01 .\!lttm..:: our IIr~t mill md the thm..:: ... to Ilht.: huntir(d ... 01 olh('r" \\ho ha\(~ ne\lr I h~htmn,", dunn.!: thc ... torm \\'ednc d \\ l:\t lor Ihe next It\C \\uk... Ttnm ... Cluh .. him \\111 mul I him rtP .. tC md do h~rt \It \\llh cuh Ilthn lor bt.:ln c\en um .... ukrul? In..! It '-mnuldered unlll abuut 11,0 "ht:n TIn .. "ub .. trlpuon \\Imh htlp .. tn pal lor r("lnttn!! till duPont Grl ..... dh \thltlll \~ our Ithntwn I four d<)II.lr~ mtm .. om mort: child In II h£O)';. Into 111me .. the mamtenmce .md .. upcnHon of the "otlallon Thl' matlh 1" "lhliluTld Itl .. tHt In(kr Illl ptt.:uhar "pl'lI 19am ot till" tamp tor Ihe t\\O \\lck Jllnnd \nd::-4 The hou ... ~, \\hlrh I ()\\ned In :\olr f IOurt .. ma\ he paul to :\olr ... R P LIn!!le al 2 P ::\[ The re1!ulitton numh::-r 01 !lr I mrl nne 01 lhc- ..::rt.:ate t 01 our ~a II:lkln ma\ Imlll tht \alation tund .. 01 S('hlt:hln, \\a~ unoleuilled The Ilremen Trea~lIrcr, lOS Cornell :\\.cmc or to Mr m.lldll.>,"1X .. mc:lt ... and Ihrel' (]nuhl( .. \\111 llOntl Plfk .. \\1.: mOll nMth to Ox \Ok"j1mID\ S\\arlhmort3n ... \\ould nner ht'I\\or).;ed until 2 \ :\1, \\hen tht: ttrl~ \\01 ... Gnn.r at Iht:' court... b(' plncd I Ranch-one 01 tht.: Imt: t In Ihe \\e t nll .... ed I tmall) L\lIne: II-hed
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;, THE SWARTHMOREAN JULy 27,1934, Birthday Party for Janice Wherry Robert Thorpe, of Troop No.1, and Walter Jones, Edmund Jones, David UIl· man, James Davis and John DeMoll, of Troop No.2, left on Saturday for a twoÂ\ veeks' stay at Camp Delmont, near SumÂneytown, .pa. guests of Miss Janice Wherry, of Cedar LaDC'~ tbis week. Cedar Lane, were hostesses to the summer bridge dub on Wednesday at tbe home of Mrs. Bullock. Birth Mn. Ro~- T.'. Hair Entertains : Mrs: D. C. Storrs ,and daugbter, JeaD, in HODor of Mr. and Mn.. :./. of· Swarthmore Place, left OD Sunday for a George Smith }our-weeks' _ vacation. Tbey will go first . I to Richmond Hill, Long Island. the home -- Little Grace Richardson, daugbter ;'(Mr. aDd Mrs. Arthur RichardsoD, of Nortb Cbester Road, celebrated her sixth birtbÂday on Friday, July 20, with a party. Grace's guests were: Ida Sheldrake, BarÂbara Tbatcher, Marcia _Walker, _Betty. Ann Roberts, Kathleen Scott, Rosemary Argyle, Betty Ann Beagle, Janet Buebler, Ann Bradford, Esther, Ruth and Olive Gregory, HeleD Hawks, Mildred LoveDall and Jerry Dana. Mr. and Mrs. George Schobinger and family, of Swarthmore Avenue, left on Monday to spend the week at Syracuse, N. Y. Jack Corse, Billy Thorpe, Edson Young and Johnnie Simmons are spending two weeks at Camp Miller at SbawDee-on-theÂDelaware. Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Smytb, of 415 Highland Avenue, Morion, Pa., are being congratulated UPOD tbe birtb of a daugbter KathleeD Elizabetb, OD July 9. Mrs: Mrs. Smytb will be remembered as the former Miss Marian Rumsey J of Swarth_ more. Mrs. Cro'sby' P. Morton, of LaJayette ":::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::= Avenue, has returned from Ocean Grove r where she spent two weeks with her sister, Miss Martba Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ogram, of RiverÂview Road, have as their guest this week, Mrs. Ogram's brother, Mr. Richard W. Taylor, of Wilmington. • The regular meeting of the Do-dos will THE JAPANESE BEETLE IS HERE . Janice Wherry, daughter of Mr. and of Mrs. Storrs' mother, Mrs. Thomas Mrs. ·W. Nivin Wherry, of Cedar Lane, Arundel. Mrs. Storrs, Jean Storrs, Mrs. celebrated her ninth birthday on Monday Arundel, and Mrs. Storrs' sister, Miss with a dinner party at her home, from 4 Bessie Arundel. will then depart on a motor until 8 o'clock. Miss Wherry's guests trip through New England. They will stop were: Alice Putman, Trudy Endress, Ann at Mr. Storrs' former home in MassachuÂMonihan, o( Ridley Park; Jean Chermal, setts, where -they will be joined later by of Chester; Marian Troxell, Margaret Ann Mr. Storrs. The Storrs will then visit DimIilit, Mary Frances Dimmit, Ann friends' and return to Swarthmore in about Argyle, June Ullman, Ann· Perkins and, a month. ___ _ Evelyn, Rosalie and Elaine Wherry. Dr. . and Mrs. W. O. Vivian, of Media, were Mrs. I. P. Strleby and son, of • Rutgers Mr. and Mrs. Neil Curry, of Chester I be held next week. Road, have returned after spending ten ---- . days in Pittsfield. Mass. . Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Atcheson, of River- Beetle Traps Beetle Bait the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wherry at Avenue, left Friday, July 20, for a trip to dinner. Miami Beach, Fla. They will also visit Mr. and Mrs. Ezra D. Merriam, of Jacksonville and Savannah, Ga. Swarthmore Avenue, returned from New Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Bair, of Cor- York last Wednesday after seeing Mr. neJl Avenue, entertained bst Saturday c,'e- Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Davis and son, Merriam's sister, Mrs. D. Spencer Berger, ning at bridge in honor of .Mr. and Mrs. Dicky, have returned to make their home of New Haven, Conn., sail for ~urope. George Smith who wilrshortly move froJ)'l again in Swarthmore, after having li,'ed in, Mrs. Berger sailed on Wednesday pn the Chester to th~ir new home at 230 Haver-I Pittsburgh .for a short time. J "Manhattan" to meet ~er husband in En~- ford Avenue which they recently purchased land. Mr. Berger 5alled to Bermuda 10 from Mr. a~d Mrs. Gerald H. Effing Mr. Mr. and Mrs. F. Norton Landon and his schooner, "Madoo," and after par-and Mrs. Bair's guests induded M;. and family, of North Princ~ton Avenue, and ticipating in the races there, continued to Mrs. Harold Griffin, Mr. and Mrs. John ~r. and Mrs. L. C. Hashngs and son, Bob, the Azores, ~ortu.gal and England, from Fawcett, Mr. and Mrs. C. Wahl Olmes, will leave tomorrow for Honeybrook, Pa., whe~ce ~e ,:,",111 ship the schooner back on Mr. and Mrs. Howard G. Hopson Mr. where they have taken a cottage for two the MaJeshc." Mr. and Mrs. Berger will and Mrs. John Howard Taylor,' Mrs. weeks. also return on the "Majestic" on August 6. Vlew Road, left recently for Saratoga Springs, N. Y.~ where they have taken a cottage for a few weeks, after which they will go to Detroit, Michigan. Mr. Atche. son, formerly manager of the Ford. Plant at Chester, is on a leave of absence due to an illness from which he is recuperating. Beetle Sprays Suplee's Store South Chester Road Swarthmore 105 Frances Lumsden, l'4r. and Mrs. W. C. MacDowell, Frank Smith, Mr. A. M. Lackey, Mrs. Kathryn T. Bair, of Temple University, and Mrs. S. M. Hurtt, of HolÂ] ywood, Fla. Dr. and Mrs. Franklin Gillespie. of RutÂgers Avenue, have returned from a vacaÂtion spent at Honey Harbor, Georgian Bay, Canada. Ask for Your Votes Little David Allan Behenna, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Carl Dehenna, of Rahway, N. }., celebrated his birthday on Saturday, JUDe 16tb at tbe home of bis grandÂparents, Mr. and Mrs Walter I. Fritz, on College A.venue. Among those present were little Nancy Tupper Reynolds, of Port Wasbington, L. I., Tyra Rydell, of J Mrs. Wesley N. Clifford, of South Ches- Brooklyn and Nancy Fawcett and Fred itner TRoowada,n idsa v, isPiati.n g Mrrss.. RPoolratnedr Gw.a sP ofroter-r I~B~e;he~D;n~a~,~ O;f~s;w;a;rt;h~m;;o~re~.======~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ merly a resident of Swarthmore. . ... Mrs. Stanley L. MacMillan and daugh. • MISS M~rJorle F~lend, of Yale A~enue, ters, Marjory and Shirley, of Vassar AveÂIS at Hollidaysburg; Pa., where she 15 thel nue, have returned from a visit with Mr. g!lest of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Hartsock. and Mrs. Bayard Buckley, at Ocean City, Mr. and Mrs. I. L. Nickerson, of South Chester Road, recently had as their guest Mr. Al Frecker, of New Rochelle, N. Y. N. J. On Friday Harry MacMillan went Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Bair, of Cor- down for an indefinite stay with the BuckÂnell Avenue, have had as their guest for leys. several days this week Mr. Bair's mother, ___ _ Mrs. Kathryn T. Bair, of Temple Uni- Miss Kathryn Simpers, of Westdale Ave-versity. I nue, has as her guest this week Miss Ruth . Sears, of Jersey City. Mrs. Ralph S. Hayes, of ObC'rhn A"e-nue, returned on Saturday after a month's Mrs. WiUiam J. Guy, of Yale Avenue, vacation spent with her parents, Mr. and with her two grandsons, Billy and Johnny Mrs. Walter \Vamock, of Eastport, Me. pjper, is spending some time as the guest Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Banta, formerly of Woodbury, N. J., are no,,' living on Strath Haven Avenue. of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Newton, near Bridgeville, Del --- Mr. and Mrs. Horace Passmore, of . Strath Haven Avenue, left on Monday to Colonel Charles A. Dravo .and .Mrs·1 spend a week at the Chica 0 World's Fair. Dravo, of Westdale Avenue, wJll sad on I g Wednesday, Augnst I, for a trip abroad. Mrs. Jesse Ormondroyd and children, of While in France they will be the guests of Cornell Avenue, will leave next week to Colonel Dravo's sister, Madame Jacques spend the month of August in Stone Har- Calve. bor, N. );-. c',,:" ._~ _ •• ,... _ •• Mrs. Herbert Dunn, of Halifax, Va., who has been the guest of her brother-in.law, Mr. George Dunn, and MlS. Dunn, of Cornell Avenue, left on Wednesday for Jteading, Pa. Mr. Wallace M. McCurdy, of Ogden Avenue and Thayer Road, has joined Mrs. McCurdy and the children at Avalon, N. J., and will spend his vacation with them. Mrs. McCurdy and children have Mr. and Mrs. Eric Shid, formerly 'Drexel Hill, have taken an apartment 101 Princeton Avenue. been at Avalon since June 15 and will aotf return September_ 15_. _ "Pete" Ullman, of Harvard Avenue; Elliott Richardson, of Lafayette Avenue j Louis DeMoll, of Park Avenue, and \Valter Goodwin, of Walnut Lane, returned on SatÂurday after a two-weeks' stay at Camp Chesapeake, Md. --- Miss Helen Cumliffe and Miss Mary Joyce Wens, of Baldwinsville, N. Y., are visiting Miss Dorothy Storm and Miss Faith Storm, of Vassar Avenue. WASHINGTON TIteatre-Chester Saturday, Monday, Tuesday James Capey Joan Blondell "He Was Her Man" Wednesday, Thursday. Friday "The Personality Kid" Glenda Farrell Pat O'Brien Media Theatre Today (Friday) and Saturday JOHN BARRYMORE in "20TH CENTURY" Monday and Tuesday Slim Summerville in "Love Birds" StartinK Wednesday for 4 Days 4 Zasu Pitts GeO.1'ge Arliss in "The House of Rothschild" Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Mitchell, of Avondale Road, Wallingford, will leave this week-end for New Hampshire. Mr. and Mrs. I. L. Nickerson and son, I. Leston Nickerson, Jr., of South Chester Road, spent last week-end in the Poconos. Mrs. Thomas W. Simpers. of Westdale Avenue, left Monday to spend a week at Cape May with her sister, Mrs. E. MarÂshall Harvey, of Media. Miss Ann Monihan, of Ridley Park, and Miss Jean Chermal, of Chester, are the STANLEY THEATRE CHESTER 3 Days Starting Friday JOE E. BROWN "Circus Clown" Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday "Here Comes the Groom" Jack Haley Mary Boland Try and See Better Shows H~~OR THEATRE Chester Pike at Prospeet Park Daily 'daUnee at 2.15 Friday ond Saturday ]uly~ 27.28 JOAN CRAWFORD FRANCHOT TONE in "Sadie McKee" With Gene Raymond Esther Ralston Monday and Tuesday _ July 30.3) SYLVIA SIDNEY CARY GRANT in ''Thirty Day Princess" Wednesday 6: Thursday - Aug. 1.2 GUY LOMBARDO &: HIS ROYAL CANADIANS GEORGE BURNS GRACIE AUEN in UM any Hap.p y Returns" Mr. James \V. Laws, of 230 Park AveÂnue, left the Newark Airport of United Air Lines, Newark, N. I., Thursday eveÂning to fly to Los Angeles, Cal., where he will be the guest of Mr. Harry R. Major, formerly of Media. He will return in September "ia Canadian Pacific Road. visÂiting Banff, Lake Louise, Chicago Fair and Detroit. Mrs. J. \V. Steigelman and daughter, of Dartmouth Avenue i Mr. and 1\Irs. David E. Steigeiman, of Rutlrdge; Mrs. E. 'V. Steigelman, of Morton, and Miss Eleanor Mallay, of Fernwood, motored on Sunday to Camp Muir, of the Pennsylvania Na~ tional Guards, Mt. Gretna, to visit friends and relations. Sergeant J. Wallace Steigelman, of Swarthmore, will return on Saturday from the camp after having spent a 'two.;weeks' Vacation'" there. He is a member of Media Company B. Mrs. William Allen Brown, Jr., of Yale Avenue, and Mrs. William B. BuUock, of Now • • • Today Our New FUEL OIL Contracts are being issued with the NEW, more favorable regulatioD gov. emiDg top price. Worthy of Your Immediate Investigation , • Quality Guaranteed by the pioÂDeer suburban fuel oil distributor featuring that individual service available only in a local organizatioD that is "large enough • • but Dot too large" • • • and identified by those RED and BLUE trucks. FUE:.L GI RARD· RA~5DELL OIL MEDIA 1 600 MM>ISON 4000 Alliliatecl with GIRARD-MILLER 'blue coal' NOTICE! PRIOR TO AUGUST CLOSING ABSOLUTE CLEARANCE of all our SUMMER DRESSES -in Three Groups- $1.00 $2.00 $3.00,. Extraordinary Values ALL SALES FINAL GOWN SHOP PARK AVENUE 1932 Chev. Coach ..... . 1930 Ford Tudor .. 1929 Aluburn Sedan. 1927 Buick Sedan. . . .$360 ,$200 . $200 .$110 SWARTHMORE If you're looking for a car, you'll find an "0. K." selection here. Smooth runÂning, splendid --look. ing, sturdy, the I e used cars will satÂisfy your automooile nee d s. Practically every make of car is represented. See these values before you buy. LAWSON-SHEPARD COMPANY, Inc. AUTHORIZED DEALER 401 DARTMOUTH AVENUE SWARTHMORE JULY 27, 1934 THE SWARTHMOREAN THE SWARTHMOREAN races, for a quarter of a century, bave Fouad.d b,. RoIHtrt E. Bb .... 1eo adopted racial self-respect. The late Dr. Historic Spot I PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT Blyden, of Liberia, a real colored maD aDd SWARTHMORE, PA. Minister to Great Britain, knew Iwenty- .. seven languages, and was the best example Is Relocated ANN B. SHARPLES of racial self-respect I ever heard, for I Editor and PubU"er (Continued from Pace :) .. beard him speak in McCormick Seminary. tumed -out very well. His interest in tbe lick grew out of Bartram's account of the Okefinokee Swamp in his "Travels." Dr . Harper has made several trips to the Okefinokee in the last few years in conÂnection with his study of the region. TITUS J. EWIG He said, witb earnestness, but not witbout Ceaeral Manqer humor: "Black is a combination of all ... colors; white is an absence of color. The PhD... Swartlalllore 800 Indians called white men 'pale face.' Eatered - Secoad Cia .. Matter, .1anuU7 24, Therefore, we should be proud of our 1929, at the Post OfBce at Swarthmore, P.., UDder lb.. Act of March 3, 1879. color." So speaks a great man of his race' ====FRI=D:=:Ac:y::,~JU=:LC:Y~2;'7;;;'::;;1;'9;'3;;;4;;'== I and tbe race has shown pleDty of abllit; ==~;;;:;;;;;;~;;;;,;;;;,.;;;;;;;;,,== I to be proud of besides tbe color _ . Racial IN PROTEST To tbe Editor: For the first time, I find occasion to protest against something in your paper: namely, your report of some person Damed Reuter's sentiments on races. I don't know who he is, or care; he's not in "Who's Whu," and such persons may be found in every field-the kind who discover ,8 copÂper two-cent idea aDd .bold it before tbe eye so that it is all they can see! And it makes no difference whether the idea is as mouldy and defunct as the copper coin I I am a northenler and when I say I belped found tbe firot colored Pr03byleriaD Church in Chicago for three years, nothing more Deed be said. Inter-race marriage was one of the raw, unbaked ideas that the ex·slaves assumed as the "new freeÂdom" of carpet· bag days J It is just that raw and uncivilized; and those who keep it up are not only out of date, behind the age, but enemies of public good. That is why your report should not pass without protest. Racial self-respect is the cure of aU prejudice. A man who has not racial selfÂrespect is like the snob; for a snob is one who is not sure of himself-at heart does Dot believe in himself. Tbe best of both se1f~respect is always accompanied by racial purity. It is only tbe balf-baked whining theorists who, snoblike. are sc: unsure of tbemselves that they look outÂside of themselves for a crutch with which to stand up I EveD a bllod mao can see that the surest cure for racial prejudice is racial self-respect. just as it is with an individual, whom no one respects if he hasn't, self-respect I BURTON ALVA KONItLE. • Return from Dental Meeting Dr. J. A. Detlefsen and Dr. A. F. Jack. son have returned from the annual meetÂing of the Southern Society of OrthodonÂtists at Hot Springs, Va. Dr. Jackson demonst~ted at a special clinic, and Dr. Detlefsen presented the invitation guest paper on measuring the importance of antecedent causes in defects and disease. • AtteDd. Northfield Conference Miss Harriet B. Selfridge, of 735 Yale Avenue, is among tbe 400 delegates atÂtending the thirty-first annual Northfield Conference of Religious Education now in session on the Northfield Semiaary campus at East Northfield, Pa. AN ATMOSPHERE Dr. Harper aDd Mr. Leeds iDtend 10 verify, if possible, the exactness of their discovery by the records of the astronÂomers who accompanied Bartram on bis expedition. although they are personally well satisfied tbat it is the actual lick or one very near to it. In last year's trip, Dr. Harper and Mr. Leeds believe they located the exact spot, close to the Altamaha River, Georgia, where Bartram first discovered a tree called Franklinia. This tree, as far as known, is now entirely extinct in the wild state, although a specimen of it is still livÂing in Bartram's G.trdens on the Schuylkill River, at West Philadelphia. In 1~13 Dr. Harper with a friend wrote a booklet OD tbe birds of tbe OkeMokee Swamp, and remarked on the scant attenÂtion given it by the Georgia naturalist and poet, Maurice Thompson, although the latter in his writings, spoke of having been in the swatnp. It seemed impossible to Dr. Harper that anyone could have been in such a marvelous place and have failed to write upon it at length. At the time, he sent a copy of the bird booklet to Maurice Thompson's surviving brother, Will Henry, who replied with a letter saying that Maurice and he had been in the Okefinokee Wilderness in 1866. He then wrote a delightful account of his exÂperiences there, which was published in Forest and Stream in 1915, nearly fifty years afterward. The Thompson brothers while in the wilderness shot even wildcats with bows and arrows, and one of them later became national archery champion of the United States. that is inviting, cool and refreshing-the Tea Room aDd gardens at the lun. Start your summer evenings pleasÂantly by dining at the Tea Room. DinDer ... , .. '.,............ SOc Saturdays and Sundays. . . . . . . .. 75c StratL.Haven This summer Dr. Harper and Mr. Leeds visited the boyhood haunts of these two writers, around Calhoun, Gordon County, ~ and located and photographed two houses in which they had lived . The Inn With Personality F. M. SCHEIBLEY Management Swarthmore 680 Swarthmore, Pe.taa. The Bonat Permanent Wave of Distinction 3 Beauty Aida $1.00 on Monday, Tue.day and Weclnesday $1.25 on Thursday, Friday and Saturday The Kathryn Beauty Salon 188 Saxer AveDue, Springfield Open Mon., Wed. &: Fri. Evening_ Phone: Swarthmore 1208 ALL THE ~ing-ii orstll ••• and all the kiug's men, cau't bring back a valuable paper. a treasured photoÂgraph. a prized heirloom. once fire has accomplished its destructive work. Yet ••• for a ceut or two a day (the c:QSt of a safe deposit box in this bank) you can place your valuables out of harm's way-surround them with the safeguards of a modem bank vault. Surelv the risk ,s too ,reat, and the cost ot t/Us p~otectlon too small. to talra chan"",,_ Swarthmore National Bank and Trust Company W'ill Henry is the author of "High Tide at Gettysburg,U one of the most famous of the Civil War poems. While on their trip this summer Dr. Harper and Mr. Leeds spent several weeks in and on the·highest·mountains of Georgia, in the northern part of the state, which have been very little investigated by biolÂogists previously. There they made a study of the animals and plants and Mr. ~ds collected between two and three hundred specimens of plant life. Dr. Harper found some salamanders of whose existence in Georgia there have been few records hitherto, and several rav~ns, one of the scarcest birds in the eastern United States. He spent three days alone on the top of Tray Mountain in an Appalachian -Club shelter with the ravens and wildcats as his neighbors. From this spot a most glorious view can be had of most of northern Georgia, as far south as Stone Mountain, near Atlanta. He secured three specimens of cave rats (Neo!oma pennsylvanica), which are the first specimens of the species on record' from Georgia. The first ones had been described from Pennsylvania in 1893 by Dr. Witmer Stone in the ProceedÂings of the Academy of Natural Sciencts, of Philadelphia. CHURCH NEWS TRINITY CHURCH Protestant E"piseopal Cheater Road and CoJlege Avenue Opposite the College Campus ReckJr: Rev. J. Jarden Guenther. S. T. M. I1:DO A. M.-Mornlng Prayer and Sermon. Mr. Guenther will preal!h. THE SWARTHMORE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. John Ellery Tuttle. Minister SUNDAY 10 :Oo-Bible School. 11 :OO-Morning Worship. Pastor preaches. "Compromises." Friday, 10:OO-Summer Porch Meeting with Mh. Clarke. 9 Swarthmore Crest. SWARTHMORE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH REV. WAYNE CHANNELL. D. D. Putor 9 :45 A. M.-Sunday &hool. 11 :00 A. M.-Preaehing by the Pastor . Strangers Cordially Invited FeRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST, OF SWARTHMORE Park A\'enue below Harvard Services : 11 :00 A. M.-8unday fkhoo1. II :00 A. M.-8unotay i.esson.Sennon. Wednesday evening meeting each week, 8 p. m. Reading room open daily. except Sun. days and holidays, 9 :80 to 12 :30 ii Church edifice. All are cordially invited to attend the servÂiC@ 8 and use the Reading Room. THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS SUNDAY 11 :00 A. M.-Meeting for Worship in the Meeting House. WEDNESDAY 9 :30 A. M. to 2 ;30 P ••• -sewing and QuittÂing In, Whittier House. Box luncheon. All are cordEally invited to join in theae serviCES. 3 ------------------- A ........... & Coffee Sale 21 c Victor An aU ~. , , . cxcepUonal qu::: 27c ACME tbtin 25c Certified Arabisn Mocha and Java and the fineat South American Coff~. skillfully blended. Packed In a Vacuum Tin. Ib 19c N. B. C. Sky Flake Wafers N. B, C. Crinkle Cakes Hershey's Chocolate Syrup 3 IbOkK I7c Ib 19:: 60zcans II c Re!,.!.. Value -:' Raal ~omy I BREAD Supreme l.r~~I:.f ge ' __ Victor Sliced Bread loaI 6=.C_...J Campbell's or Ritter Beans ~!!~ 4 cans 19c I a. ACME 2-~~~ 71c s~'r:x. ~ olor Oil s·~~~ $l"«;~ .. ::~~~x. -.. .=:::. , I V.llnegar lISCO Pure Cider •• , h,. 3$e lISCO White Distilled gn i jug SSe I 'l'cn Cent refund ror return ot JuJ.:, lISCO Gelatine Desserts --2 pkgs 9c lISCO Diced Carrots 2 No. • can. IS:: Preserves33C Glenwood Larl9be 29 Pure Strawberry 2 C ,-,;-..--;;-.;-::-.....--_~~.!.!,'-i.r Phillips Delicious Soups can Sc Laundry Gems 2 ok •• 19c Sardines 10c California 2 big oval cillns 15c Phillips Delicious Spaghetti Blue Ribbon 1 Malt Syrup I 4 cans 2Se can SSe Grape Nuts Ok. 17c Maxwell House Coffee I 1i~ 32c I MEATS of Quality SensiblV Prica=d Extra-Fancy Bj;ef:....(Who!~-Cut~) . Chuck Roast: around Fresh Beef or Fresh Cut Beef Cubes Ib 19r: I Legs Gei:;':b J;am~ tb 23c I Loin Chops lb. 41c I Sh'ld'rs (to roast) lb. 18c .1 Rih Chops lb. 35c Neck (for pot pie) 1I,.17c, Rack Chops lb. 24c Breast (to stew) lb. Sc - 3tore S!iced Cooked Corned Eaet. 'IIinced Bologna or Lebanon 8o:cgna % tb 5C Store Sliced Sandwicll Cheese Y4 Ib 8e ;ce Cold lISCO Coleslaw, l Ib 15C, ?otato Salad or Creamed Cabbage f cup Loin Chops Ib 25e I "eal Cutlets Ib 29c Rib Chops Ib 20e Loin Roast Ib 23c I Raek Chops Ib 160 Shou!der Roast Ib 12c Fresh Fish Jersey But:t:erfish tb IDe Jersey Bluefish tb 12c "Jersey Sea Trout or Croakers Ib 100 (·Cleaned ready for the pan heaus o~ S-ea-sonable Produce . Thompson Seedleu GRAPES )reen Peppers 2 for 50 :uoumbers 3 tor 5c Green Cabbage 2 lb. 5c ~ooking Apples 3 lb. "140 ~LarpCeIuy S~ns;bly Priced 2lbs. 15c Egg P;ants each 10c ~learby Tomatoes Ib 5c Baets or Carrots 2 hun. 5c IC"'lb3rg Let::uce 2 h.i. 15c 2 .talb 9c ~earby Sugar Corn ear 2c =' Where Qaallty Coaeta .ad roar Goes Furthetf
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I • i'i ; !' . , , , i "o- j, .' j '. " I i , c I· . ,, 4 CLASSIFIED FOR RENT FOR RENT-Two email apartments. Albert N. Garrett. Swarthmore 489 or Pennypacker 4~42. PERSONAL PERSONAL-Stllre your ear while you're away in a modern fire-proof garage. Only $2.00 a month. Swarthmore Auto Senlce. Sw. 214. BOARn-:-Atlantie City. Ventnor. N. J.. reo fined young people. Room and board-two In a room. $26.00. Rooms. $1.00 eaeh. two In a room. 26 North Newport Avenue. FOR SALE ___ _ FOR SALE-Porch turniture. chiffonier. book. case and library table. Phone. Sw. ZI9.R. FOR SALE-Small upright Estey piano. in excellent condition. Reasonable. Can Sw. 678. WANTED WANTED-Capable colored girl or older woman to supervise two children. wPek. days. (or two week.. Call Sw. 1665..1 atter 3. FOR RENT 133 Ruleers Avenue-$60--4 bedrooms; water on second and tblrd Hoors. endosed porch, fireplace, conveniently locat .. d; poeÂsession at· once. WM. S. BITTLE Swa. I11-J I\lotary Public Real Estate FOR SALE Seven-room stone and frame dwelling, good location, large lot. Small cash payment. $6000. E. C. WALTON FOR RENT STORE - 22x44, 411 Dartmouth Avenue; also 5-room apartment over the dore. FRED A. WERNER, Inc. Madison 3000 FURNITURE RESTORING 'Send for HarIe,--You'I1 Not Be Sorry' UPHOLSTERING Honest Under the Cover ANNA SCHALLES SLIP COVERS DRAPERIES PHONE SW. 1225 MUHLENBERG AVE., RUTLEDGE MRS. A. J. QUINBY & SON. JOSEPH E. QUINBY ERNEST G. SNODGRASS. ASS'T. FUNERAL DIRECTORS BELL PHONE 4 MEDIA, PA. MANY SWARTHMOREANS HAVE BROUGHT THEIR OLD TIRES TO US AND HAD NEW TREADS PUT ON THEM. BRING YOURS IN NOW-ÂYOU WILL SAVE MORE THAN HALF THE PRICE OF A NEW TIRE. RUSSELL'S SERVICE WHY? COUNCILS MEET ON SEWAGE QUESTION Plan. Already Endorsed By State Await Ratification of Towns At a meeting on Tuesday, July 17, at the Ridley Park Borough Hall, plans were discussed for the disposal of the collection of sewage by sewers in the Crum, Little Crum and Stoney Creek Valleys. RepÂresentative members of the various borÂoughs and townships, including Ridley Park, Ridley Township, Rutledge, SpringÂfield Township and Swarthmore were present. The immediate object is to provide a means of collecting all sewage into one line, discharging at one point into the Delaware River, pending the construction of a treatment plant. The plans which have been drawn up and endorsed by the state are now awaitÂing the approbation of the various municiÂpalities concerned. The blue-prints which have been prepared showing where new lines are proposed have been submitted to the towns and at the meeting last week each municipality was asked to have its council pass upon them. A motion made by Mr. Maxwell, of RidÂley Park, that the borough and township officials be requested to endorse the plans and reports as prepared by the Delaware County Board of Engineers and agree to co-operate with the interested municipalÂities, and, one made by Mr. Burns, of Ridley Township, that each council be asked to appoint one member to serve on a commission to carry on to completion the plans as outlined, were duly seconded by Mr. Hessenbruch, of Swartlnnore, and carried by the assembly. Mr. H. M. Freeburn, Administrator of the Philadelphia District of the Sanitary Water Board, attended the meeting and said that the state had been very lenient in the past few years owing to financial conditions, but that it was now a question of how long it would continue so, as it will not tolerate the pollution of streams indefinitely. Mr. Freeburn urged the mun;cipalities to get together on these plans to clean the streams up. It will be necessary to install a system sufficient to care for the entire area, thus allowing for future increases in the amount of sewage and eliminating the necessity of enlarging the system otherwise. ESTATE OF ANNA PORTER DAVIDSON (late of Swarthmore. Delaware County. Pa.) deceasctl. Letters of Administration on the above Estate have h<'en gmnted to the undersigned. who relluest all p~rsons having claims or deÂmands against the Estate of the decedent to make known the same. and all persons inÂdebted (0 the decedent to make payment. without delay. to . GERALD G. DAVIDSON. Administrator. 405 Elm Avenue. Or to his Attorney. CLAUDE C. SMITH. Swarthmore. Penna .. and 1617 Land Title .B1dr: •• Swarthmore. I'a. S. W. Cor. Broad & Chestnut Sts .. Philadelphia. Pa. DIAMOIID . FUELOIL QUALITY .... Diamond Fuel Oil is selected with utmost care according to rigid specifications for each classificaÂtion of oil. Carefully tested in our laboratory to insure consistency. DELIVERY SERViCE .... Modern delivery equipment with a trained, courteous personnel assure a satisfactory delivery. Under any circumstances delivery can be made quickly within a minimum of time. 'DIAMOND FUEL OIL CONTRACT Our contract is assurance of complete heating satisfaction during the coming year. In the question of price a Diamond Fuel Oil Contract has two adÂvantages- it not only protects the customer against an increase in price but also provides that the cusÂtomer shall benefit should a decrease in price be. come effective during the period of the contract . . Aside from the price pt'Jtection one has the assurÂ'- ance of a quaJity product backed by a substantial local company, organized and equipped to give the best there is in fuel oil service and convenience. CONTRACTS ARE NOW A VAILABLE WITH THE :N~W SCHEDULE OF PRICES. PHONE FOR OUR REPRESF;NTATlVE. DIAMOND ICE&FUEL COMPANY ~ourth & Penn Sts., Chester, Pa. Phone 9189-9188 THE SWARTHMOREAN It was urged not only to have action taken by the councils, but to bring the matter before the people generally, that the problem may reach a speedy decision and work be begun on the new system. • Large Plot PurduuecI William E. Witham, of Wallingford Hills, has purchased from Philip G. Platt, a tract of land of irregular depth extend. ing 244 feet along the southwest side of Long Lane, adjacent to the northeast boundary of Wallingford Hills. The con. sideration was not announced. • Baseball Team OD Up and Up Our local baseball team seems to have struck its stride recently and is decidedly on the up and up. On Thursday evening, July 19, they played Ridley Park a shutÂout game, the score being 5 to O. On Tuesday evening of this week they played Henley Fire Company, of Chester, and won the game by the score of 6 to 1. It was with a good deal of difficulty that the team was gotten together this year and Manager Abernathy deserves credit for sticking on the job after being disappointed by losing many of the players who started with the team early in the season. As • • • • • • SArE ONLY by telephone can you reach the doctor instantly. Only by telephone can you summon firemen or police without dangerous delay. Only with a telephone in your home can you feel truly safe at home I You can hat'e r.ne for less Ihan a dime a day! ..... e BeD Telephone C::onlpaay 01 Pelllla. JULY 27, 1934_ ------------------------------ the evenings during the latter part of August become rather short for twilight games, it is likely there will be no games scheduled after about the middle of that month. The team plans to put on a few more good games during the next three weeks anet hopes to receive the patronage it deserves from the town people. THE SWARTHMORE BUILDING ASSOCIATION Has a Limited Supply of Funds to Loan on Small Approved First Mortgages THERE ARE SOME THINGS WE REFUSE TO DO TO SELL A CAR - There are some things we re- priced car. That is claimed for fuS'! to do to sell a car. We like several cars. Obviously it cannot sales, but fair.dealing and the be true of all. There comes a confidence of our customers are point Illhere claims and adjec-desirable, too. tives and all advertising hysteria For one thing, tile refuse to disappears in its Ollln fog. Per-poison anyone's mind against sonally, I prefer facts. another make of car. We knolll We say the Ford V-S is the IlIhut our car is and what it Itlill best car we have ever made. do, and wc al"c read. V to tell you We say that our 8-cylinder car about that. But to imply dcfects is as economical to opcrate as any in another car is not au,. business. 10lver number of cylinders. We have done our utmost to We say that we have always encourage intelligent buying of been known as the makers of motor cars by showing purchasers good cars and that the many how to protect their own inter- good, well balanced qualities of ests. All that a good producer our present car place it at the asks is a customer who knows head of our line to date. quality when he sees it. An in- Anyone wishing to do bllsi-telligent purchaser will speedily ness Itlith liS on thrse p,.:nciplcs conclude that only a bad product Itlill find ollr 1II0rd and the qual-requires bad sales methods. ity of 0111" product to be A.I. We J'efuse to keep dinning in What ttle say about economy, yOIll" ears that the Fo,.d V-8 is operation and durability ,tlill the best, most economical, 10lllest stand good anywhere. A letter from Mr. Henry Ford published by 'C.J F d the Assoc:lated Ford Dealers of this territory. ~Cllry or. EDMOND STEINMAN &de. Smlice BALTIMORE PIKE at PROVIDENCE ROAD PHONE, MEDIA 1800 YOUR ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR PAYS FOR ITSELF' • •• -.'-'- ----- ... _ Here's little Ready Kilowatt (your Electrical Servant) giving back nickels and dimes to a housewife so that she can pay for her electric refrigerator. o The picture is not exaggerated. The United States Department of Agriculture tell.. us the average family wastes a dime a day due to food spoilage. An electric refrigerÂator eliminat~s that waste. --~. .Hany housewives take advantage of buying market speÂCl: lls at lower prices and keep the food in an electric rl..frigerator until needed. This is a special summertime saving. So why let another day go by without enjoying the economy and satisfaction of an electric refrigerator? Frigidaire General Eleetrie . $llll!. 50 Ca h. (Sli,-ht/:1",~rIO" Prices as low as ~ • Blli/gll PI ... ) .' Very Eas,. Tn-ms of Pal,,",,'. All Our Suburban Stores, or See Your Dealer r" PHILADELPHIA ELECTRIC COMPANY