15
" . 1.; .... .. V ol u me 17, No.5 Narberth, Pa., November 7, 1930 Price, Five Cents ." . CONTINUED ON PAGE 13 CONTINUED ON LAST PAGE Polls 524 Democratic Votes Nearly Equalling Number Given Al Smith. Repert ory Pl ayer s Please in ~ B e l i n d a ' Colorful Audience En j o y S S mo ot h P er fo rm an ce of Milne's Comedy Here. ALL R EP UB LIC ANS WI N Although d ef ea te d hy t he u Jl ·S ta te vote HemphiII carried Narberth by a majority of 308 \'otes, winning each of th e three d i st r ic t s, i n Tuesday's elec tion. The total \,ott· in t he Borough wa s 956 for Hemphill and 648 for Pinchot. On e of the surprising things w as t he large Den'ocratic vote potled for HemphiIl, which "ery nearly equatled the vote given Smith in the presidential election of 1928. F iv e h un dr ed an d t w en t y. f ou r D e mo c ra t ic votes were polled Tuesday for HemphiIl, while tw o y ea rs a go AI Smith potled 539 votes in t he B or o ug h. Hemphitl's L i be r al v ot e was 432. District number t hr e e, t he home dis trict of Harry 1f. Chalfant, Anti Saloon League leader, went wet by a vote of 237 for Hemphill to 150 for Pinchot. The closest contest resulted in th e se cOI: d distri ct, where the vote was 393 for Hemphill to 298 for I'inl'hot. Th e fir"t d is t ri c t g a \' e the Liberal-Democratic nominee a majority of 125, tIl(' \ ' ot e b e in g 326 to 200. Narberth's Democratic candidate for the State Assembly, Anton Emil \Voh- Totals 627l 648 21 \ 524} 956 432 Governor No.3 145 5 131 106 No.2 292 6 193 200 Post Sponsors Ser"ice AJ Methodist Church Sunday Th e Harold D. Speakman Post ot' t he A me ri ca n Legion, Nar· berth, witl hold a community re l ig io us s er vi ce in t h e a u di t or i um of the n w Narberth Methodist Episcopal Church on Sunday evening at 7 :45. Commander H. Dumstray, c ha pl a in o f the Naval H om e. G ra y' s F er ry , will be on e of the: speakers. The meeting, which witl be non-sectarian, will be open to atl residents of the community and a cordial indta t io n is extended to attend. The offering will be devoted to the w el fa re f un d of the Post, which is u se d t o a id f ami li es of ex-sen' ice men in distress. Th e Rev. Robert E. Kcighton, chaplain of the local Post. is in charge of the meeting. Fall Luncheon of Narberth Club to Be Held Nov. 18th Hemphill Carries Borough by Majority of 308, Winning Each District Hands Down The alll1l1al fatl l un c he on o f the Nar berth \ Vo me n' , ; Club wilt be held on T u c sd a y , N o v c mb e r 18, at 12:30. Res· ervations llIay be made with Mrs, George N. Cill, 216 Dudley A\'enue, Narberth 2324, at any time prior to 1I10nday, Novcmber 17, at noon, when t he l is t witl be close d. ~ f e m b e r s of the \Vomen's Club are urged to attend t he A rm is ti ce Day ComlJ1unity S en 'i ce to bc held at the Methodist Episcopal Ch urc h at 7 :45 P. :M. on Sunday, November 9. Th e Women's Club is a id i ng t h e movement for commt1l1ity services an d has a rep-' resentati\'e on the committee. No.1 190 10 200 126 Voted for Districts Drive ross ed Narberth by { Republican Prohibition { Democratic Liberal ..... National Ho w Red Cr oss Chairman Pinehot Hemphill .l/NS. FJ.ETCH ER IV. STITES The of Narberth,. ~ ( 1 1 1 0 again will h ea d t hc Red CrosJ drive 011 thc Main Linc ~ d l i c l z o pe ns T u cs d ay , Armistice Day. Heads Hockey Team 11 iss Henrietta Deubler, d a ug ht er o f D r. a nd !>oJ rs. E, S. De ubl er , Penshurst Farm, Penn Vatley, has been niade c a pt ai n o f Iter Freshman Class Hockey team at Cornell, a nd a ls o class repre sentative to the University'S \Vo l11 en' s A t hl e t ic Associat i on , starts on Armistice Day and r un s un til Thanksgiving. Mrs. F. W. S ti te s has charge of the d ri ve f or the entire M ai n L in e. Th e chairman for Nar· berth is Mrs. H. A. Jacobs. Th e mem bers of the c o mm i tt e e a s si s ti n g 1 I rs . Jacobs arc Miss A bi ga il C la rk , Mrs. \ V il t ia m \ V il s on , M rs . Carol Starr, Mrs. A. C. Farmer an d Mrs. C. H. F er na ld . The captains in c ha rg e of territories ar e J. Bertram N e sp er f or t he b us in es s s e ct i on , :Mrs . Frank ]. \ Vh ee le r f or Anthwyn Farms, Mrs. Charles Shaw for the sOllth side of Narberth, !\'Irs. H. G. Reeves. ~ I i s s Emma Mutler and Mrs. E lm er L an e for the north side. The headquarters for the Red Cross will he the \Vomen's Club room in El m Hall. The rooms wi ll b e open on Fri· (By T. A. E. ) day. November 7, f ro m e le ve n until Hear of Peace Work "Belinda," one of A. A. Milne's one for the captains to ge t supplies. I 'I" I . I I' I' C typically charming comedies was the 'I' I I" . NT 1 I I Ie nternatlOna \.e atlOns om· ., Iw peop e I\'mg 111 , ar Jert I, JUt . . . M ai n L in e R e pe r to r v T h e at r e' s offer- working in Philadc111hi a are urn-ed to I nuttee of t he N ar be rt h Commumty. \XT d I .I. h BI C ' , ... mg .\ e neSt ay IlIg It at t ea yn- save at least part of their subscription Cluh and some others interested in the I wyd Woman's Club. Playing to an ap- for Narherth: as the N a : b e ~ t h d i s ~ r i c t s u bj e ct m e t at the home of :Mrs. How- preciative a u di e nc e , w h ic h m ade up in gets no credIt for contnbutlOns gIven ar d Strong, 29 N'arbrook P ar k, N ar - distinction what it lacked in numbers, elsl'where, berth, on l\Ionday afternoon, The the g ro up o f y ou ng Main L i ne r s g a ve group was addressed by Miss Ellen a s pl en di d performance, almost equal Brinton, field secretary of the Wom- ing that two years ag o of "The Ro en's I n te r na t io n al League for P ea ce m an ti c Agt·," als o by Milne. a nd F re ed om . Miss Brinton spoke of Evidently well rehearsed, the players the work being done in other countries gave a s pl en di d delineation of their to further peace an d of plans for work roles. Th c s et ti ng s w er e wetl exe here. Th e group e xp ec ts t o m ee t e ve ry c ut ed , with the e x ce p ti on of one door t wo w ee ks during the winter for study t h at just would d ri ft o pe n; t he p er and discussion. forma nee actuatly started on time, at about 8:30, and the i n te r m is s i on s , al th'ough rather long, were evidently well adapted to the conversational in clinations of audience. 11iss Eleanor Payne was a c h ar r r. i ng Belinda T re m ay n e, and Mrs. Beatrice I Carver eqllatly p l ea s in g o f appearance an d speech as d au gh te r Delia an d " ni e ce " " M is s Robinson." Miss Dor othy Stone's polite affirmations marked Old·Time Educational Methods Criticised by Snow at Rotary. A bitter l1e nll nciat' on of t he " li tt le r ed s ch oo l hOl1';l'" a" t lIe background (If crime, ignorance and unemployment was the f ea tu re o f a talk M on d ay n ig h t hy E. H. S n ow , p r in c ip a l o f the Lower Merion Junior High School. He spoke at t he m ee ti ng of t he B a la - Cy n wy d· Narberth Rotary Club, The s pe a ke r d re w a picture of the old country school as an ineff icient fi tt in b et w ee n h ar d sh ip an d labor. At tendance w a s p o ss i bl e by country chil dren usuatty at times when farm work permitted. The buildings were poorly heated, uncomfortable. Th e restless an d nonconformists w e re d is ca r de d a nd j o in e d t he a rm y of those u n fi t te d f or later l ife . G en iu se s, able to master L a t in , Greek and mathe matics under sl1ch circllmstances, mude good ancl s e rv e d to gl\'e a false im p r es s io n o f t he v al ue of such and edu cational system, In fact, ~ c c o r d i n g to Mr, Snow, c m ph a si s o n Latin, g e om e tr y and for eign langIJages for the pIJpils no t plan ning a c ot lege education, is a cruel C O NT IN U ED ON PAGE 13 Li tt le Re d School House Under F re Judge Williams , Stoney McLinn, St ites to Be Speakers At Affair. Legion Banqt.:et to Be Held Tuesday Tuesday evcning is one of the big dates in t he b or ou gh 's c al en da r, t he annnal Armistice Day b an qu et spon· s or ed by t he Harold D. Speakman Post of the A me ri ca n L eg io n. Speakers at t he a f fa i r, which wi ll b e h el d in the Legion room of the Com munity Building on Windsor Avenue, wi ll i n cl u de Judge J. Ambler 'Williams, riresident Judge of 1II ontgomery County; Stoney McLinn, a neighbor O\'er in M er io n and s po rt s w ri te r on the L ed ge r, a nd Fletcher \\T. Stites, without whom no A r mi st i ce Day ban quct would be complete. Inasmuch as the seating capacity of t he L eg io n r oo m is imited it is sug-, g es te d t ha t those planning to attend I Mrs. Stit es Head of Ma m purchase their tickets as soon as pos- Line Red Cross Drive sible. They may be had f ro m A. Perry Redifer, Jr., Charles Greyer, Robert C. Collins, Frauk A. Schrepfer or any other member of t he P os t. They will also be on sale at the door, providing the capacity is not exhausted. On e feature of the dinner will be t he pr es ent ation of the Past Com· mander ~ 1 e d a l to Arthur L. Cooke. Frank A, S eh re pf er , t he present com mander, wi ll a ct as toastmaster at the affair, SCHREPFER TO PRESIDE •• :1 .. ... .. ..

Our Town November 7, 1930

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Volume 17, No.5 Narberth, Pa. , November 7, 1930 Price, Five Cents

CONTINUED ON PAGE 13

CONTINUED ON LAST PAGE

Polls 524 Democratic Votes

Nearly Equalling Number

Given Al Smith.

Repertory PlayersPlease in ~ B e l i n d a '

Colorful Audience E n jo y S

Smooth Performance of

Milne's Comedy Here.

ALL REPUBLICANS WIN

Although defea ted hy the uJl ·S tate

vote HemphiII carried Narberth by a

majority of 308 \'otes, winning each

of the three districts, in Tuesday's elec

tion. The total \,ott· in t he Borough

was 956 for Hemphill and 648 for

Pinchot.

One of the surprising things was t he

large Den'ocratic vote potled for

HemphiIl, which "ery nearly equatled

the vote given Smith in th e presidentialelection of 1928. Five hundred and

twenty. four Democrat ic votes were

polled Tuesday for HemphiIl, while two

years ago AI Smith potled 539 votes in

the Borough. Hemphitl's Liberal vote

was 432.

District number three, the home dis

trict of Harry 1f. Chalfant, Anti

Saloon League leader, went wet by a

vote of 237 for Hemphill to 150 for

Pinchot. The closest contest resulted

in the secOI:d district, where the vote

was 393 for Hemphill to 298 for

I'inl'hot. The fir"t dist ric t ga\'e the

Liberal-Democratic nominee a majority

of 125, tIl(' \ 'ote being 326 to 200.

Narberth's Democratic candidate for

the State Assembly, Anton Emil \Voh-

Totals

627l 648

21 \524} 956432

Governor

No.3

145

5131106

No.2

292

6193200

Post Sponsors Ser"ice AJ

Methodist Church Sunday

The Harold D. Speakman Postot' t he Ameri can Legion, Nar·

berth, witl hold a community rel ig ious service in the auditor ium

of the new Narberth MethodistEpiscopal Church on Sundayevening at 7:45. Commander H.Dumstray, chapla in of the Naval

Home. Gray' s Fer ry , wil l be oneof the: speakers. The meeting,which witl be non-sectarian, willbe open to atl residents of the

community and a cordial indtat io n is extended to attend. The

offering will be devoted to thewel fa re fund of the Post, whichis used to a id f ami li es of ex-sen'ice men in distress. The Rev.Robert E. Kcighton, chaplain ofthe local Post. is in charge of themeeting.

Fall Luncheon of Narberth

Club to Be Held Nov. 18th

Hemphill Carries Borough by Majority of308, Winning Each District Hands Down

The alll1l1al fatl luncheon of the Nar

berth \Vomen' , ; Club wilt be held on

Tucsday, Novcmber 18, at 12:30. Res·

ervations llIay be made with Mrs,

George N. Cill, 216 Dudley A\'enue,

Narberth 2324, at any time prior to

1I10nday, Novcmber 17, at noon, whent he l is t witl be closed.

~ f e m b e r s of the \Vomen's Club are

urged to attend t he Armis ti ce Day

ComlJ1unity Sen 'i ce t o bc held at the

Methodist Episcopal Churc h a t 7 :45

P. :M. on Sunday, November 9. The

Women's Club is aid ing the movement

for commt1l1ity services and has a rep-'

resentati\'e on the committee.

No.1

190

10200126

Voted forDistricts

Driverossed

Narberthby

{

Republican

Prohibition

{DemocraticLiberal .....

National

How

Red Cross Chairman

Pinehot

Hemphill

.l/NS. FJ.ETCHER IV. STITES

The

of Narberth,. ~ ( 1 1 1 0 again will head thcRed CrosJ drive 011 thc Main Linc

~ d l i c l z opens Tucsday, Armistice Day.

Heads Hockey Team11 iss Henrietta Deubler, daughter of

Dr. and !>oJ rs. E, S. Deubl er , Penshurst

Farm, Penn Vatley, has been niade

captain of Iter Freshman Class Hockey

team at Cornell, a nd a ls o class repre

sentative to the University'S \Vol11en's

Athletic Association,

starts on Armistice Day a nd r un s un

til Thanksgiving. Mrs. F. W. S ti te s

has charge of the drive for the entire

Main Line. The chairman for Nar·

berth is Mrs. H. A. Jacobs. The mem

bers of the committee assis ting 1Irs .

Jacobs arc Miss Abigail Clark , Mrs.\Viltiam \Vilson, Mrs. Carol Starr, Mrs.

A. C. Farmer and Mrs. C. H. Ferna ld .

The captains in c ha rg e o f territories

ar e J. Bertram Ne sper for t he bus in ess

section, :Mrs. Frank ]. \Vhee le r for

Anthwyn Farms, Mrs. Charles Shaw

for the sOllth side of Narberth, !\'Irs.

H. G. Reeves. ~ I i s s Emma Mutler and

Mrs. Elmer Lane for the north side.

The headquarters for the Red Cross

will he the \Vomen's Club room in Elm

Hall. The rooms will be open on F ri · (By T. A. E. )

day. November 7, f rom eleven until Hear of Peace Work "Belinda," one of A. A. Milne's

one for the captains to get supplies. I 'I" I . I I' I' C typically charming comedies was the'I' I I" . NT 1 I I Ie nternatlOna \.e atlOns om · .,

Iw peop e I\'mg 111 , ar Jert I, JUt . . . Mai n L in e Reper torv Theatre's offer-working in Philadc111hia are urn-ed to Inuttee of t he Nar be rt h Commumty. \XT d I . I . h B I C' , ... mg .\ e neSt ay IlIg It at tea a· yn-save at least part of their subscription Cluh and some others interested in the Iwyd Woman's Club. Playing to an ap-

for Narherth: as the N a : b e ~ t h d i s ~ r i c t subject met at the home of :Mrs. How- preciative audience, which made u p in

gets no credIt for contnbutlOns gIven ard Strong, 29 N'arbrook Par k, Nar - distinction what it lacked in numbers,

elsl'where, berth, on l\Ionday afternoon, The the g roup o f young Main Liners gave

group was addressed by Miss Ellen a spl endid performance, almost equal

Brinton, field secretary of the Wom- ing that two years ago of "The Ro

en's Internat ional League for Peace man ti c Agt·," als o by Milne.

and Freedom. Miss Brinton spoke of Evidently well rehearsed, the players

the work being done in other countries gave a spl en di d delineation of their

to further peace and of plans for work roles. Thc s et tings were wetl exe

here. The group expec ts t o mee t eve ry cut ed , with the exception of one door

two weeks dur ing the win te r for study th at just would dri ft open; t he p er

and discussion. formanee actuatly started on time, at

about 8:30, and the intermissions, al

th'ough rather long, were evidently

well adapted to the conversational in

clinations of ~ h audience.

11iss Eleanor Payne was a charrr.ing

Belinda Tremayne, and Mrs. Beatrice

ICarver eqllatly pleasing of appearance

and speech a s d au gh te r Delia and

"niece" "Miss Robinson." Miss Dorothy Stone's polite affirmations marked

Old·Time Educational Methods

Criticised by Snow at

Rotary.

A bitter l1enllnciat'on of t he " li tt le

r ed schoo l hOl1';l'" a" t lIe background

(If crime, ignorance and unemployment

was the f ea tu re o f a talk Monday night

hy E. H. Snow, principal of the Lower

Merion Junior High School. He spoke

at t he mee ti ng of the Bala-Cynwyd·

Narberth Rotary Club,

The speaker drew a picture of the

old country school as an inefficient fitt

in between hardship and labor. At

tendance was possible by country chil

dren usuatty at times when farm work

permitted. The buildings were poorly

heated, uncomfortable.

The restless and nonconformists

were discarded and jo ined t he a rmy of

those unfitted for later l ife . Geniuses,

able to master Latin, Greek and mathe

matics under sl1ch circllmstances, mude

good ancl served to gl\'e a false im

pression of the value o f s uc h and edu

cational system,

In fact, ~ c c o r d i n g to Mr, Snow,

cmphasis on Latin, geometry and for

eign langIJages for the pIJpils not plan

ning a cot lege education, is a cruel

CONTINUED ON PAGE 13

Little Red SchoolHouse Under Fire

Judge Williams, Stoney McLinn,

Stites to Be Speakers

At Affair.

Legion Banqt.:et toBe Held Tuesday

Tuesday evcning is one of the big

dates in t he borough 's cal enda r, t he

annnal Armistice Day banquet spon·

s or ed by t he Harold D. Speakman Post

o f t he Ame ri ca n Leg io n.

Speakers at the affair, which wi ll be

held in the Legion room of the Com

munity Building on Windsor Avenue,

will include Judge J . Ambler 'Williams,

riresident Judge of 1II ontgomery

County; Stoney McLinn, a neighbor

O\'er in Mer ion and s po rt s wri te r on

the Ledge r, and Fletcher \\T. Stites,

without whom no Armist ice Day ban

quct would be complete.

Inasmuch as the seating capacity of

t he Leg io n room is limited it is sug-, •

ges ted tha t those planning to attend IMrs. Stites Head of Mampurchase their tickets as soon as pos- Line Red Cross Drivesible. They may be had f rom A. Perry

Redifer, Jr., Charles Greyer, Robert

C. Collins, Frauk A. Schrepfer or any

other member of t he Pos t. They will

also be on sale at the door, providing

the capacity is not exhausted.

One feature of the dinner will be

t he pr es ent ation of the Past Com·

mander ~ 1 e d a l to Arthur L. Cooke.

Frank A, Seh repf er , t he present com

mander, will act as toastmaster at the

affair,

SCHREPFER TO PRESIDE

8/7/2019 Our Town November 7, 1930

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/our-town-november-7-1930 2/15

..

\.

...

'.

.• #

No'Vember 7, 1930

L IN E

SATISFACTION

AND SERVICE

MINDF

M A IN

PEACE

windows f or specials.

moderate l11'ices t h i , ~the following:

THE MERION TITLE

Be TRUST COMPANY

THE

USE OUR SAFE DEPOS IT VAULT

Fo r a t ri fl ing s um yea rl y we will relieve

yo u of al l worry an d responsibility.

Is impossible if va luable paper s remain

unguarded.

BANKING INSTITUTION

209 Haverford Avenue-Opposite the S ta tim'

Phone Narberth 2855 for Prompt Delh'er,'

S. & S. Market

ARDMORE .:. BALA·CYNWYD .:. NARBERTH

F u l l measure of

weight an d quality isyours when yo u bu y

at t he S . &. S . Ma rke t.

And you are sure of

get ti ng r ea l value fo r

_____ your money.

Oysters Orcned \Vhiie YOIl Wait

Se a Trout , 2 lbs. fo r

Grapes, 4 lbs. fo r

Oranges, doz.

Watch our

Among 0111'

w e e ~ · e n d are

- - - ------------_.---_.---------

OUR1'OWN

Alcohol and Glyceri lle

.. , Oil Filters ..' Prestollt

Pille's Willter/ro'lts

Ask for ROY, BILL or FRANK

TEXACO CERTIFIED SERVICE

SERVICE is not our mott()-IT IS our Business

Weed Chail ls

'fextICo ( ;dJ dlld Oils ,:, Firestolle Tires

LOCAL MOVrnS

Page ' two

Call us at NARBERTH 2489·W and we w ill gladly

call for and deli'l'er your car

Where to Go

Announces a new lubrication method called "Chek Chart, the

Grease Rite System." "Chek Chart" eliminates guesswork

at the grease rack, insuring a complete and scientifically cor'

rect lubrication for the entire chassis and motor of every

American'built passenger car.For the sum of One Dollar ($1) it is not worth while to

overlook this wonderful opportunity for a perfect lubrication.

A NTHO"Y \V A YNl ·: -Today andtomorro,v, " I ~ e t ' R Go Nat iYe":.:\rnnd:lY an d 'l"'ueHday, "QueenHigh" with eharle" RugglcR

;1 Btl (i i Jlg 'pr H.og'crH; 'VedneRc1n.)·'"1<1 T h u r ~ < l a ) ' . ";\'lldni,.d\t l \ I ~ ' R t l ' ry" \ \ ~ i t h B c t t ~ · ( ~ t l 1 l 1 p s o n a,n<l

l . o\\·{'l1 ~ h t ~ r l n a n : F'ridny an dHall.lr<la)·, "Captalll of thet:U:lrd·· \vitll .10hn Hnle:-; : tnd

Laura La I'lnllll'.

IiIiIiil ~ ~ ~ ~ _ ! i i i i i i _ - ~ - - - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - - ~ - ~ ~ - - - ~ - ~ i ' - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - ~

]':I;YPTIAN-Tol111)' and tomorI 'OW, "Sins of th e Chi ld ren"wit h Rob er t :'lnlllJ-:omery nndLeila HYlll l I " : :'Innda)' andTues<lny. "1.'11(' Sile,,,l l ' ~ n e n l Y " :\Vcdnesda)' and TllllI'"day, AnnHarlling in ")'arl" Bonnd";Friday ami Hatul'<lay, . lacl.Oal ,i" , . I( "anette l \IacDonald in"Let's Go Nati\'e,"

HgVII,J,E-Tol1a)' .1.11<1 tomorrow."San ta 1"1' Trall"; :.londny andTuesda)', "s i 1 e n t Enem)'' ':\ \ 'l ' dncsday and ThnrRday, "Oh,Hn 1101', Belll"'e!" Fri da )' a ndHaturdaY, " D o u ~ h h O Y ~ " withB l 1 ~ t ~ I ' Kenton. ~ : l l 1 y E i 1 t · r ~ .Cliff 1·:dwarl1",

"Anrn:nTH--Tol1ay and t omor y'nw, :'rIlton Hills In "Th" Hell.\Yolf"; :Monda)' and T u e s d a ~ ' .,la,'I, Onlde in "The Sap fromHyral'use"; \Vel1ncsday It n d"hur:-;dn,y, (ieorg-c O'Brien in

" 'rhe Last of th e l luancs" ; F'r i-d a ~ ' and Saturday, "Oh. Hnilnr.B(lha\ 'p!"

- '---- - ~ - - - - - - -

ARD;\IOng-Tol1a)' , "The ,Vay ofAI1 Men" with Douglas FaIrbanks, J 1',; tomorrow, "Last ofth e D u a n e ~ " with George0' Brien; ;\Ionda)' and 'l'uesda)',('onrnd Nagel ill "A Lady Surr e n l 1 ( ' r ~ " ; \Vedne"day and' r ln l r sday, .JOl' ) ~ B ro ,v n a ndPaul Scul1 III "Maybe It's

I,o\'e;" Frida)', "HouP to Nuts";Hnturday, 'She's ;\Iy Weakness"with Sue Caro\ .

- -\Dr. Joseph Neft Dies ' . ~ ~ ! ! ! ! ! ~ ~ ~ ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ~ ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ~ ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ~ ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ~ ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ~ I\ After Long IllnessI

\

Fo rm e r D i re ct or of H ealth a nd

Chari t ies Succumbs At

Cynwyd Home . I- I'

FUNERAL ON THURSDAY !I

FUllcral s e n ' i ~ e held, yesterday Iat II :.)0 A, )1, at St. Asaph s Church, ,

nala. for Dr, Joseph Seal Kef!'. who'1

di('l\" suddcl' ly on Tuesday at his home, i

S ta te Roa l! Cynwyd, fol lowing a long IiiJ!Jll'S' iron' lwart disease, Burial was'

I ill \\'cst I .ann ·! H il l Ccmcterv. !\

Dr , Ndf was a f or tn er Dircctor of IPnhlic Hc:, l th and Charities in I'hila-\i

dl'll'hia and was at one t imc d ir ec to r '

nf the .Je tTerson ~ I e d i c a l Collcge Hos-I 'pita\. He retired from active work,ahOllt 1900, but continued in advisory IIand cxccntin' medical activities se\'crall

V l ' a l ' ~ . !.

, Il e was I-{ra<1nated from the Uni\'er- :s ity of Pl' l1 l\sy lvania in 1873 and re- iceive!l his Incdical degree a t Je ff e rson ,~ edical Cl, lIege in 1875, He was i;I\\'anlcd t he d eg rc e of d oc to r of l aws I

Iat L1rsinus College in 1912 and the Il lcgr ee o f doctor of public health by •letTerson 1Iedical College and t he Uni.~ ' e r s i l Y of Pennsylvania in 1912. 1\

Dllring his pract ice he was attend-.

ling Jlhysici;.;,n at the Philadelphia Gen-!eral Hospital and .I etlerson Hospital I

II and a member of thl' auxiliary faculty IIat J l ~ f ! ' e r s o n 11edical College, I

1-1 e was director of the Departmento i l 'u bl ic Health and Chari ti es under I

~ I a , , " o r s \{(Yhur1l and Blankenburg,I-k'resigned'in Blankenhurg's term on

____ aCClll1nt of ill health, During his re - II: gime he inaugurated many pol ic ies in I,

Wills Probated Ithe department and was one of the. \.. ' • ontstanding hea lt h aut ho ri ti es o f his I\ \ ' l l h ~ m I ~ ~ l c C u l l e y . late . ( ~ f Nar-· time. He --\'as a member of the Board .

h"rtl:, l l Ins \\111 p r o b ~ t e d ,Iuesday of Chari ti es and Cor rect ion f rom 1895\ iat ~ o r n s t o w n names hIS wlie. ~ ) s a to 1899. \~ ~ a n : 1 1 1 ~ 1 c ( n l l ( · y . a" solc-, b " n e f i c ~ ~ r y Dr, Neff was a member of many I01, l \ l ~ l'st:"e, \';t!ul'd at :ti?OOO, I h e med ical soc ie ti (' s, including the Amen-

\\'Ife also I" n;lIned e,,('cutnx, cau Senior ~ l i l i t a r y Medical Associa' I " I ~ = = = = = = : = ~ = = = = = = = ~ = = = = = = ~ ' ; ' ; - : - : ~ - : - = =B.v the will of Pat ri ck F , DOl10l\\le, tion. Amcri,can Public Health Ass?c;ia- II., - ---- --- - -

tion, Amcrl can Academy o f Medtclne.

of ~ a r h l ' T t h , his ( 'state, \'alued f or a p- and the Pathological Society, He was II'raisal at $ 150. i s d iv ided hetween his also a memher of the Union L e a ~ u c , i1\ \ '0 children. Thomas and Anna Dono- Rittenhouse Cluh and the Merion 1

hne, Another d a u ~ h t e r , Katherine. is Cricket Cluh, -named executr ix, Th e will was pro- \-Ie is sUr\'ived hy his wife, ~ l r s , \

hat(d on T ~ l ' : _ ~ ~ Xnrristown, I : : l ~ ' \ ! e f f . \II I

Sunshine Service Station \Narber th Ave nu e a t Montgomery Pike I

II

II

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NO'l'ember 7, 1930OUR TOWN

Page 'three

Football Schedules

Just Call Rittenhouse 7070

·J·.. .N I"rhll '"[':I'I,,(,ol'al ,\<'lIdOIllY YM, :\lolllgom

< , r ~ ' Sehool " t Epl.",opal Field.Haver ford H<,hool vo;, CheMtnutHill A " " d ( ' I l l ~ ' at <;h,_,,,tIlUI HilI.

1 . ~ r i e I H l : - t t Cent ra l \ '8. ~ h v a r t 1 1 1 n o r cHigh H,'lwol at O\'orurool"

1,0, ,""1' :\1"1'1011 , Juulor High vs,['ou"toWI1 .Junlor High a t Ard ·

III ore .

''''IlI", Satturdu,'L O W t ~ l ' Merion lUg-it Yl". :"or r iH

10\\'n High at Ardmore,Hu,"crforc1 CollPg"c \ ' ~ . J-lanlilton,

a\vay.\"illano\'a Colleg-c , "S. Uuclillell at

Scranton.l·. of P, V", N otre D am e a l

Jo'l'lIl1l<lIn 1"leld.

~ e x t J·"rhln,'

1 ' ~ I J i : - ; I ' o l H L I Aeadcnl ) ' V8. C h ( ~ : - - t u u l11111 A<,ademy al Chestnut HilI.

~ l o n l g o m e r ~ ' Hehool " S , I·'riends'Ceilt ra l a t Overbrook.

Haver ford Hchool \ "s, Penll Char-

tp l ' at GernuLnt.O\Vn.

Lowel ' :\T.crloll . Junlor High vs.l l "d l lor ,lUlllol High at AnI

I n O " l ~ .~ t · : \ . : t SlIt l l rdn, '

1.1I\\'t '1' : \ Iuriol l "S . el)lH' r Uarb r

HI",h a t ArcTmore.Villal lo \ 'a Colle",e \ · s , Og-Ielhol'l/l'

a t :\JulI,,(pal Stadium, Phlla.Ilav<,rfol'(1 Coll,.g-e ,'S. C. C. N. Y.

al Haverfo\"ll.I' . of p, \"0;. UI"lI'glll Tech a t

1"I'anl;lln Field ,

Learn About Lumber).I"tion pictures of the lumber in

dustry in the I'hilippilll's and China,

and a talk b y Wal te r Hy re, of Ta

coma, \Vashington , representat ive of a

l arge lumher manufacturing' company,

featnred t he r eg ul ar mee ti ng of the

:o.lain Line Kiwani,; Club held at

\Vhitl'1lall, H a v ( ~ r f o r d . on l \I on day.

The I l l e d i n ~ was advanced on account

of the c kc tio n. E dw ar d \\" Ehtllan .

pn'''idl'lIt oi the club, prcsi l lt -d,

* :o *Dick Mol/is' J/lllio/" I l i i f l l Lcup(\/"ds

I ( / o ~ ' Ille l/Ie(\SIlI't' of t i l l' Utl t'c/"furd

Jllllior Higll lasl Friday (\/ 5011111

"In/more, The J,mi/lr lealll won, 31

10 6, a1ld Ihc\' scored almosl (/1 7<,i/l

a f/a M ih ' ' Ia l la""l l i 's 1'1111 uf l-\;;

yards willt an i1lIe"c'ef>led pass la/e ;11

Ihe fil'sl q1lar/('/",

* *' *Oh, yes. )Jotre Dallle plays at 1't'l1n

tomorrow aiternoon. Don't l oo k foran,' o\'cndldll1ing "ictorv for the Irish,,'ither. Lud Wray's I;oys can playfootball when they have t o. and unlessWe are I I l i ~ t a k e n t omor row t hey h ave

10 ,

s t rl l llg in foothal l, hut t hey a rc 110 ~ e t ·lip. Coach Adam' s hoys will hav e top lay al l the foothall t hey know to winthis game,

The number is Rittenhouse 7070

and Brad- I

With TOMl\IYM,\.CliLIl\"

On the Fifty·Yard Line

. r.

A ll Our Prices are correspondingly moderate.

Breast, lb.

Neck, lb.

Neck end of Rack,

Loin Chops , lb.

LAMB: Shoulders,

lb. ._-------_.Rib Chops. lb.

SERVICE-Prompt deli ...ery, twice a day, from City Line to Ha ...erford-alld the best meats

Scull on ScreenPaul Scull, of Ba'la,' f6r;ller Lower

)'Ierion High and Penl1sylvilnia foot

ball star" ,wi ll ' a ppea r 'wi th t he ·All

American football team of 1929 ill thepicture '!Maybe It's Love," which willbe shown at the Ardmore Theatre 'onV,'cdncsday and ThUrsday, ,NovemrntZ and·.p,

Haverford Downs MontgomeryAlthough Haverford School' s heavy

deven overpowered the MontgomerySchool team in their g ame at WYll1lewood last Friday t he b ig ge st t hr it l o fthe game was p rovided hy Enders,who ran fifty y ards f or a touchdownfor l \Iontgoll1ery after receiving a forward pass, Haverford scored in evervq ua rte r. F in al score, 25-6. -

Lower ~ [ e r i o l l put on a ~ p l e n d i d It wen t t en yards too short

performance last Saturday afternoon ford neyer t ~ u c h e d it.in a foo t hal l wav when her s ta lwar t * * *elc\'en lIIet and d ~ f e a t e d for the ~ e c o n d . , lda/ ll 's sloek sOII/·,'d I/ l l /I/) ' poill/s~ u c c e s s i Y e year a strong team from dllril/[J lire .'l l l i l l!l loll [/allle. Ji c IrasAbington High by a 6-to-0 score . ,"ol/ldcd l/lf/ctf,1'r OIlC of I". ' slroll[/-

Th e yellow brick smokestack which 1 <'SI Icallls tI,c Marooll "as CVl'I" Iwd.r ea ches h igh into the air above the II is 1/01 I" e bl's/ iJl I lrc lasl ICII ycars,high school 's powerho us e smok ed bill i/ compares favoral>/y 7";/1r /"e

placidly Oli as Albert Adam's boys Icam 7('IIiell 7['as (omposcd of I",' 17('0plowed t he r an ks of the invaders for Scltl ls. Pc/aSOIl, II,,"all, Harr, Mor-

successful gains. It took an extra puff ris c,"d ol"crs.

in the first quarter when jack * * * I •Rockwell c a r r i ~ d the pigskin for a t i fty-I Tht' thing' t ha t mak es t hi s t cam soyard n l ~ l off nght tackle to score the formidahle is the style of play thatonly pomts o f the day. Adam has adopted. And he has the:\ colorful crowd cheered 01I and boy s t o car ry out his wishes and plays,

on io r f or tv .e ig ht m in ut es whi le t he a nd that',; the anSWI,r.

ball zigzagl!'ed b ack and for th , up and * * '"down the. c c n ~ r e o f t he field,. Abington The !calli as it now ,;talld,; has onecould gam WIth .;ome ~ o n s l s t e n c y be- wt'aknes, ; a,; we see i t. Captain I'enny'tween the forty-yard hnes, but \,Yh,en p acke r b el on gs a t end, and h is val uethey began t,o ge t m the u p p e ~ t lu rt le s t o t he t eam in his original posit ion i ,;,L o ~ \ ' e r ~ enon r e a , r ~ d a sohd front undouhtedly g1'l'ater than when he iswhich stopped the VISItors from . fu rt he r used in the hackfield, John g"oe,; goodt r e ~ p a s s . on sacrcd Ardmore SOIl. again';l t he weake r tl,am,;, but his lackCaptalll John l ' e l 1 l ~ y p a c k e r and his of experience shows up clear ly against

fellow-classllla-,es gamed g r . ~ u n d al- a strong 01 ganization such as Abingn , l O ~ t anywhen on t!le fidel. I h ey car- ton',;, That doc,; not mcan th at thened the !loa,ther nght down to the ho\' IS a failnre a a h al l carrier a t a ll ,enemy ~ a I u ~ e . and then across it, b,ut hui j u ~ t that he is more \'aluahle \0

O l one occasion johnny,. tl,le cap tam, the t ea ll l on the lil1l'. A superh end isf al k,d t o hol d on for a suf tl cl en t lengt h one of the ,;trongest factors on a footof tUlle t o mak e It touchdown number ball team. .\nd that \'Illmg man cantwo, certainly play end, - .

* * *Jack J<uchlJcll 7('aS Ih .. Fral l l . .lit'/'- I * * *Jlh..,. Aloill Lill< ' schools look 0

riwe/f of Ih,' all/'/'IIOOII, o ll d h is "if('[Jaills 7['t'/'C bcal/l ifl/l ly cxcel/led, Hi s Joll Saillreiay. DI/l·c lookcd slrol l! ! i l l

f irsl 1/107'" of Ih .. aflal/(lOIl 7 (laS 10 I llcir defeol of Vil/OIIM"'. Ha71

crfordIrm'clcd SOl l ll l o lld mel somc of II, ..

lokc Ihe 111/1/ 011" lefl lad'le fo r Ihirly bi!J mel l Ihc)' sill9 01'011/. Thc boys,\'ards 10 Ih .. eClllr,' of ti,e f idd. A o f I hc Scarlcl amI Block mif",1 1,tl7'"cOllplc /If movcs lalcr Ihis sal//(' boylo l ..d Ih,' I..a lh cr f or IwclI/" vanis WOI/ illOl yalll .. 7 ,' il ll a l i l/ le I l ld ' . .A

. . fl l l l l i 'le 01/ Ih/' I/o/'l.·ills fi7lc-yard l i lle

Ihl'OlIf./1r Ih .. sam,' sid .. of 11,1' lill", Ius/ I ll e/ I/ I h, ' ,,'ill" IUl/chdu,"1I alld

'I,-his ellcol/l'Cl,l/l'd Ih,' qlllll'lcrl'aek sl/f- ille,\' 7[','111 oi l I;' piec,·s.}1/'/I'lIlly 10 Ir y Ih,' same lad a Ihird 'o * *li/llC, ./1Il! h.. did. This l i ll i e all '" On Frid.,Y l{adnnr lust a close one1',',1,'1'.\',' 71'hich lool! Ihe playoff lackl.. to Lansdow·ne. and Ha\ 'erford tackledOil Ibe r igl l l sidc of Ilrl' sllaf>perbacl... a (ommg team and lost t o Che lt cn -

* * * 'halll hy a cuuple ui tuuchdowns,

Friends ' Central completed i ts inler- The play worked perfectly and jack * * *academic l e ; ~ g u e schedul e by defea ti ng showed som: artistic hoofing as he Captain DiJosephs was out of the

( ~ c r m a n t o w l 1 Academ\' 27-0 at O\'er- sp('eded throl,gh the defensive l ines for latter game with a fe\ 'e r. That facthrook last Friday in 'a game featured fifty yards at'd a victory, sufficieiltlv wcakened t he Sou th AnI-hy sensatinnal long' runs, '" * * more teain that th ey wer e una hIe to

The outcome of t he season depends /)07'" J<id!lC 7,'ol l ld Irm'. · Iwd a cope with the ir rivals,

11I1 whether Pelln Charter and Episco- IOllc"elm,," ill Ih,' Iillol qllarler IIad h,' * *pal win t lwi r r emai ni ng g ames . If slm(·('d Iris 1'<lCC l/ l a/fml l his 'lIIol.'s 10 ""II i l , ' s!,.. o ~ ' i l l ! l of 0 ! load 10d'1.. ,they do t h l ' ~ wi ll he tied with Friends' I . ' ~ ' e /l/ll II,c safcly mall. HI' Iwd Harris 1,01/0, Lo,, 'a JIcrioll 's leflCentral for Ihe league honors. hu t if f , ,"r of I, is bo,\'s with I,im alld /ll l l" lacHe, !,Io,l'ed a «'ollderfll l if

O

/

llelosl

t hey lose one, t he t it le will go to the Ih, ' I lI l, ' I II /I 'I 10 dod!/<'. bill hc elil Salllrday a!Jaillsl AI,i"i//OI/, H ..F r i e n d ~ . wh os e only los s th is seas on formml IHi WOII a ll d wa s blOcI.'cd I>rol .c Ilrr"II!1" 10 lIail I"e ball earri..rwa s to l'el1n Charter. don'I!. * * lillie (/lId o.'/'I il/ ,fCII' losscs,

... * * *Funkc: Quinlan and ~ ~ a k e r were t he I And thellPennvpacker's f irst pas ,; Nor ris tow n c omes to town tomar-( l ~ l ! ~ t a n d m g ~ ..g r ~ J I l n d - g a m e r s for, the to Bradford. which' was i nt er ce pt ed o n row , and W!lI prohahly bring half o t t he

I r1lnds. m"k1l1g many l ong runs. the t \ ~ " l ' n t y y a r d li!le, was a touchdo\\ :u count\' scat wi th her, The old-timeplay If the captam had controlled It. rivals' of Lower :0.1 erion arc not so

Episcopal Wins Another I I ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - - ~ ! ! ~ ~ ~ - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - ~ - ~ ~ ~ - ~ - ~ - ~ - ! ! ~ ~ - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ IEpiscopal Acarkmy showed that it

i, still to be reckoned with in the Int eracadcmic League race by t rouncing(;ermantown Friencls. 19-6. last Fridayat Fifty-fourth and City Line.

A ninety-yard run for a touchdownin the thi rd qua rter by Slack, of Episcopal, on receiving a k ic ko ff resultedin the Churchmen's second sco re andw a the mL'st s en sa ti on al p la y o f t he

game.

Friends' Central EndsSeason With 27-0 Victory

Five different European countries are

repre,;entecl by t he h ol de rs oi the five

Ilryn ?\I awr scholarships for foreign

women, England, Germany, Holland,

Hunga ry a nd F ra nc e a re the countries

f rom wh ic h s tu dent s wer e d rawn ,

)'Iiss Nlary ?\[argaret Allen, of Horn

(:hurch, England, received the B. Sc,n ~ c o n , ) degree from thc U nivcrsitv ofLondon i n 1930. Besides he r graduat e wo rk in the Department of Economics at Bryn Mawr, s he is doing apractical amount of research in theDepartment of Public Works in Phila

delphia.NI iss Fr idel Boehme, of Dresden,

Germauy, attended the Hohere Maedd1l'nschule there; after further study at

Vienna Miss Boehmc received the Di\lloma-Kauimann from th e University

of Cologne,

~ iss Diederika Liesvc1d, of Holland,tn ok he r d eg re e of Doctor of Litera

ture at the Universi ty of Amsterdam..\ t Bryn )'Iawr ).Iis; Lie,;vc1d plansto car ry out h er p la n for a dissertationon the subiect of "Bvron's Influenceon Swedish" Literature:" under the direction of Dr, Samue l Chew,

).Irs, ) ,[ ar ti ne And re e :Miskolozy,irom Budapest. Hungary, studied until1918 at Kolozsvar (now Clj, Rumania).She has held several important execu

t ive posi tions and h as s tu di ed socialconditions in her own c ount ry a ndwhile in America intends to studyAmeri can me thods of industrial re s ea rc h a nd to i nspect t he wel l·organized factories of America,

~ I i s s Odette Thireau, of ]oigny,France, studied at the Unive rs it y o fParis, specializing in c hem is tr y. S hereceived from the University of Nancy.i n 1929, the Ciccniee es Sci ences andth e de gr ee of Inl -' enieur Chimiste in1930. '

I

European Girls StudyingAt Bryn Mawr College

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In the Theater I OURTo"WN II .:Main EinesI A Co·operative -:=ommunily N e w s · M a g a ~ i n e , founded in 1914 by the Narberth UVith (1/1 (!ckllowledgmCllt to Jallles

Phi lade lphi a thi s week has the OP-I E. Hammer. former presidellt of Bala-Civic Association, and published every Friday at Narberth, Pa., by the I d CI b I

portunity, if it so wishes, to contrast C)'llw.\'d's Ncig Iborhoo It , w 10 sug-

LIVINGSTON PUBLISHING COMPANY gested the Izcadillg of this COIIlIllIl.)two actresses, both famous, bu t each

in a di ff er ent medium, Al ia Naz imovaI PHILIP ATLEE LIVINGSTON, Presidenc and General Manager While Penn was wal loping Kansas,and Grace Gcorge, Perhaps one ROBERT MOORE CAMERON, Editor and Villanova and Haverford were bit-

jUdges them so tot al ly d if fe rent that, THOMAS A. ELWOOD. Associate Editor ing the dust last Saturday afternoon,they cannot or should not be grouped ' Iwe had the pleasure of watching an un·together. It i s almost as if a woman O£6.ce-258 Haverford Avenue , Na rber th / defeated Abington High School teamshoul d c ar ry a flaming burnt orange I £ 00 bow to Lower Merion. And we he-fan when wearing a mauve gown Te lephone -Na rbe r th 2545,· i no answer, Ardmore 31

. I lieve the game was as well worth wit-Nazimova, in the Theater Guild play

"A Month in the Country" at the Gar-1 SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: $2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE nessing as any coll cge f racas in thisrick, is intensc, dramatic and restlessly \ ' section.feminine. Her color fu l per sona li ty , Ent er ed as second- cl ass mat te r, October 13, 1914, at the Post Office at When Abington's goal line was

d tl I t I ' h I' e I Narberth, Pa" und er th e Act of March 3, 1879,pcrva es le somew l a s uggls In S i c ros se d for t he first tim e t his s eason,of Turgenev and saves them from, we became as hoarse as anyone else,being dull. Naz imova, a ided by Cecil I NO'l'ember 7, 1930 But we confess abysmal ignor ance o fYapp in his portrayal of the doctor, football tactics, and we were interestedmakes "A Mon th in th e Country" en- not so much in t he game as in thc en-tirely endurable and for t he mos t par t vir011lnent and spectators. The differ-entertaining, The role she has t o p lay Must We Educate Only for Business? ence between off-tackle and offside isis in itself the unpleasant one of a E H S slight, iu our l imited understanding,je alous , whin ing, vampi ris h woman. l'l'Iany i nte re st in g" points werc brought o ut Mon da y by '. . now, although to the umpire and referee andBut time and again in the play, Naz- principal o f Lower l'vIerion's junior high school, in his t al k a t CYI.lwyd. linesmcn it seemed to ma ke all theimova keeps the part from deteriorat- Some of thcm lead to serious t hought on th e part of those whose chIldren difference hetween penalty and touch·ing into that of the ordinary nagging I' dO\VI1. WI·lat \ve \vere especially no-

SI I k ' b' are p al1111ng careers.woman. Ie a ways ma es It a It on . I 'd ticing was:th "I 'd b t ' th ' t t u h :Mr. Snow, who is doing a wondcrful J'o1> in vocatlOna gUI ance. ate ongma SI c, u WI JUS a 0 c The brilliant foliage on three sidcs

of ord ina ry r ea li sm eve ry so o ft en t o th e school, feels that too much cmphas is is heing laid on the claSSIcal

renlllld Iler audl'ence that all \VOITIen of ' I 'I f ' II' 1 d I' 1 tl b d of t ha t Ardmore gridiron; the Wana-stU<!Jes, w 11C 1 avor t he m te went stuc ent s, a n too Itt e on le re a - k d I' kit I dthat type wer en 't in Ru ss ia or didn't b rna 'cr e Ivery truc t la oome onf and-butter subjects, That, in a sense. i s t rue , Bu t doe sn 't t he i de a s eem a nea rby road in thc same p lace it has

cease to exist orty years ago. fl" 1 I fl ' - stood at e\'cry Radllor -Lo\ \'cr '. lcrl'Ollto con ICt WIt 1 anot leI' 0 lIS statements .-Grace George in "The First Mrs, f ' I f I gallle \ve've ,seen at Ardmore in recent

F "b S J IE ' kl' He criticizes, in short, th e lack 0 l)rcIJaratlOn on t le IJart 0 t le'raser y t, 0111 rvme, a spar mg years; the cheering that seemed wcomedy at the Walnut, pleases all with average citizen fo r th e intelligent u se o f l ei su re time. \Ve wonde r i f t oo feeble to thosc on the s amc stands asher light and deft touch, but at the much emphasis on work-a-day subjects would not in itself tend to p roduce thc checrers, but that might ily andsame time it is a k now ing li ght nes s such a condition? p leasan tl y assau lt ed the ear s of thoseand the delightful effects are achieved Th e criticism lies, and trul.v el1ou,(!h, in th e increasinO' adoption of across the field; the young high schoolwith much shrewdness. Another in- . ~ b gir l who was on hcr feet in f ront , mos tterpretation of femininity. c ~ n n e d and m ~ s s amusement. Th e man who used to g"0 to. a concert, or of the gamc, in order that h er new furOther attractions in Philadelphia smg or play h 1111self , now turns to the phonograph or radIO, He hears coat might be propcrly seen; that

are: Leslie Howard and Margalo GiII- canned music a t t he movies, reads canned features in the daily papers, an d Abington captain , whose met iculositymore in the New York success, "Berk- shares with everv other ci tizen in th e land most o f t he events of his leisure Ibrought razzing fn:JIlI L. M., fans. \Veeley Square," at the Forrest; Ed Wynn time, Thus arc' sideline citizens devc'lol)ed, Iexpccted the umplrc to grill oncc oris in Ziegfeld's "Simple Simon" at the , , . tWice when the boy measurcd cveryShubert, and Edward G. Robinson is On the other hand, not bell1g eqUIpped and educated to al?preCIate Iinch and checked up on every new sub-starring in "Mr,. Samuel" ~ ~ h Broad, the ~ r t s and l i t e r a t ~ l r e , to understand , I ~ a t u r e and geog,raphy, l:e ~ ap t to Is!itute, but we ,failed to see that offi-

~ , e x t week Will see the New York- conSider a Sunday s pleasure the tralllllg of a l ong Ime of sl11111ar cars c lal c rack a snl lle,

Hcrs a t , tlhe Chesbtnut

fStreet adpera along a smoky main highway. 'vVe turn t o h ri dg e and detective novels And the g ir l who Ill sis ted in a b ari -

ousc WIt 1a Ilum er 0 stage an mo-, d f d I' 1 I tone voice that so and so be taken outtion picture stars in the cast Thurs- 1I1stea 0 to goo Iterat ure anc persona sports, tl t th t I Id I Id th t Ii ', , , , I WI I 1 I I fi' I ' ? I . ' t or la c eam s lOU 10 a nc,ton, ,the magICIan, WIll appear at the le:e co t le ~ 100 s 1t. l11to t le 1?ldUre, seems ~ us, Ignoran or, on occasion, get in there and fight.

GarrICk,a n ~ ,

a Schw:;b~ ?

,MandelII of

educatIOnalpractIces, that If

all claSSIcal educatIOnbe WIthdrawn from Others

s eemcd to sha re h er opinion,productIOn, Trade \VlIlds, Will come th e less favored 80 l)er cent. such waste of l ei su re can only increase. including a conple of small boys. We111 at the Broad " d d 'f b ' I ' I t

• ! A Bachelor o f A rt s deg-ree may not help a man to be a better storekeeper, ~ v o n ere I some rig I t ~ e r s o n , mIg 1* * * 11 ' fi ' I ' . " I . ' , I " I'" . ' L t' F 1 d IIlvent a game of football II I which theHedgerow Theatre Presents New Jut It ts 11m t o enjoy ~ n c ~ p p ~ e c J a t ~ li S elsure tl1:1e. a m, renc 1 an spect ator s cou ld par ti ci pa te , not t ha t

I ta li an P lay IGerman t augh t t o a mlddhng-mtel!Jgent boy or gIrl may never be used Iwe object to cheering; it's one of theThe interest that ha s been shown in in breadwinning, but i t wil l make good read ing more in te res ting by widen- finest things ~ b o u t gridiron contests,

new p lays a t t he ,Hedg.erow Theatre in g the vocabulary. one of the. thl llgs that makes foo!bal lhas encouraged th,lS ul1lque company I Can we no t as sume t ha t t he bright IG pe r cen t. wil l improve their ~ l l o r e pop,utar t!lan, ba,sehall, eSf?eclallyto continue preparl l1g more new o n e s , " , .• , .. , • . , If ' 111 educational mstltutlons, 1?ut It d o ~ , sat this time of year-a complete de-! mmd s a n) \\ a) , a n tlMt the less favored therefore need t le rost1l1g on secm a shame tha t the rabId enthus! -par tu re f rom the policy of former Ithe cake of educatIOn th e more? asts are c ~ m p ~ l I e d to ,COnfi!le thClryca rs . Ton ight 's opening is Giacosa 's 'vVe agree hear ti ly that there arc a lot of good plumbers, farmers effor ts to sldehne coachu,lg ; It secms" L i ~ e Falling L:eaves," a ' ~ r a m a b ~ ,an and printers being spoiled by was te d y ea rs at Latin and algebra, bu t Is o ~ n ~ h o w and somewhat hke back-scatI tahan plaYWright. ThiS sensItive I Id 1 I ' . I" I ." , b' t· t' 1 dnvlllg,s tudy of the r evel at ion o f true n at ur e s lOU I:ot ou r sc 10,0 s c ~ m t m u e to teac 1 use. ess su J e s as a pa r la Thcre was a policc dog , held in l eashill an I talian family wil l be played with preparatIon fo r the mtelhgent use of f ut ur e leIsure hours, Iby a couple of small boys, on the hill\Vi ll iam Pricc as the father, Ned Pot - Ibehind the eas te rn goa l pos ts . And

tcr a ~ Kay Roma as t he c h i l d r ~ n w ~ Armistice Day Iwhen it b roke loose, oh! wha t, a scram·so dIvergently r ea ct t o t he cnses 1111 ble of it those boys and their dozen-their lives, and Alf red Rowe as "Mas- Th e opportunity is again at hand for Narbe rth 's men to join wi th the somc companions had climbing, falling,s imo," named s imply as "Gentleman" Ameri can Leg ion in honor in g the memory of those wh o gave their lives rolling and slipping in their effor ts t ~ by the a u ~ h o r . The ,second .perform- fo r their country and to celebrate the clay which is remembered all over cat ch the dog, They hadn' t caugh t Itance o f tillS drama WIll be g iven next l' • f 11 ' Th b when the quarter ended.\Vednesday night the worlc as t he end1l1g o f t he g re at es t wa r 0 a tune. e anquet on B h d '

'. l ' I ,. l' fie ' B ' II ' 1 Id ut t e way, we a mIt once more"C ast Up by the Sea," that popular uesc ay evemng m. t le L ~ g l O n room 0 t le ommumty U1 ( mg s 10U our i gn or an ce of footba ll mattcrs

travesty of "ten-twent-thirt" melo- be a truly commumty affaIr. enough to express surprise at learningdrama, is the play for ne xt Thursday that the quarters wcre not f if tcen min-evening, Friday's show will be Mus- What wit h t he concerts o f t he Mai n L in e O rch es tr a, those of the utes long (allowing for time out, ofselman's "Poker Face" with Marshall I I d . course). Like the l it tle boy who, whenGatchell in t he t it le rol e of the suave new y organized Communi ty Concert Association and t le ramatIc disillusioned about Santa Claus, setgunman, and Miriam Phillips as his offerings of the Mai n L in e Repertory Theatre, th e section a ff or ds n o out to see if t he re was any truth intough sweetheart. lack of good things for cultured enjoyment. that Jonah story, we are now cur iousOf especial interest is the return to * * * to l ea rn if the d i s t a ~ c e ~ e t w e e n the

the re pertory of Ib se n's "A Doll's '0 J , ' " 'd k b' ten,and ~ w ~ n t y - y a r ~ h,nes IS t ~ yardsHousc" on Saturday November 15 to 1 ha t 9 -year-old New Jerse) man who s a) s he hasn t run a It or If It Isn t. It dldn t look It to us,t ake i ts p lace b e s i d ~ the later a f f i ~ e d Io f wat er f or forty years might be surpr ised if he knew how much o f the a l ~ h o u g h to the competing. teams, i tplay, "When We Dead Awake," This stuff they are put ting into the milk ancl moonshine nowadays. mIght well have s eemed tWIce thIrtys tudy o f a wif e who demands her r ight * * * fcet.t o her own life despi te the p resence ofI ' ." We' re g lad Lower Mer io n is t o p la yher husband w!11 be acted with Gretch- . PennsylVa!l1a has r emoved 32,000. roadSIde Slg!lS from ItS State R ~ d n o r at Villanova this year: There

en An to n-Sm It h as Nora and Ferd hIghways. ThIS, we understand, fol lowed the complamt of tourists wh o Will be mon , r oom for the Malll Linc'sNofer. in the role of the p ~ c u l i ~ ~ l y Ihad to d ri ve r ig ht t hr ough without seeing Pennsylvania. , g r c a t e s ~ SP?.rts c r g w ~ : ' , Af!d we' renear-Sighted Hel!,TIer, whose lIlablhtYj * *.*. , won:derll!9'.' It Ra4nor ..WIth .: ~ t '. Wt;akto sc;;e beyond IllS own narrow cen- _" " team .wIll, rel)c.at. pa'st ,performancesception of t ~ i n g s , .wrec.ks his' h o 1 i ~ e - : - GI0,na Swanson says of- he r . ! ~ u s . b h n ? , "Apart, we will always be a g a ~ n s t Lower.Meri0n's strong one.h?14 and d rives hiS Wife out of ItS good frIends," She seems to have solved' the' p to bl em o f how to be That.Warne bUllch s e ~ n l 8 t o p l ~ y bet-shflms atmosphere. ihappy though married. . ' I h:.r. than ! can w h ~ l 1 . I t m ~ e t s Its t ra -

For tomorrow night Hedgerow. pre- " * * * .1 d l ~ l o n a l rivals. We re 100kll1g forwardS W . t s ~ p " c ! s y . S . a l J 1 . M ~ C : ) . r v e ~ " _fudney' _._. .... .. . . . . " , .. . : . ! ~ f ~ · · ' '" " ..•• ' to a grand ganle.,. , .' '..H o ~ a r d ' s · melodrama or "sam" on tn e -:-!t·-w1'tter·,sar-"',P}:esffient-YeGver•• t ; Q D k . ~ .. J , ~ ( u 1 t . , ~ . , ; . ~ O J . i 1 i W l I / Enough of football. Next week we'll"up and up." trammg. But he 11 have some whe n he leaves. Idiscuss this and that.

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NO'Yember 7. 19JOUR TOWN~ a g e Four

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DYERS

Page Five

220 Bala Avenue, Cynwyd

Phone: Cynwyd 92A

Mai" Line Distributors

RALPH S.DUNNE

NARBERTH 2430.2431

NARBERTHCOAL COMPANY

More Carbon......More Heat

Less Ash......Less Waste

Manayunk 4244

GLEN WILLOW

ICE MFG. CO.

BIDE.A·WEE GIFT SHOP

136 SOUTH 15th STREET, PHILADELPHIA

Belmont Ave. &

River Rd .

Jeddo-High la ndc / lNTHRA CITE

We special ize in Chris tmas cards for t he bus iness man . It will

pay you to look over our lines.

Special Attention Given to Engraving from Plate or Printed

We A re Open Tuesday and Friday Evenings to Hel p You

DON'T PUT IT OFF!Cold weather is just

around the corner .

Then youln want COM·

PLETE heating comfort

-comfort such as only

Reading Anthracite can

give. Donlt put it off call us today for this

cleanerI more econo!D'"

ical hard coal.

Your Cold-Weather ClothesMen's Suits and Top Coats, Women's Velvets, etc.Let us make them promptly, well and at moderatecost.

Adelizzi Bros.TAILORS CLEANERS

The GREETING CARD SHOP of PHILADELPHIA

102 Forest Avenue, NarberthPhone: Narberth 2602

OUR TOWN

~ ~ T h eSilentEnemy"

Thrilling, genuine epic'Jf the American In'

dianAs an added feature, see·hear

this Sil ly Symphony:

"Monkey Melodies"

At a special matineeMonday at 3:45 P.

M., and at the Man'

day and Tuesday eve 'ning shows you willhave an opportunityto see

Robert Montgomery, LeilaHyams and a dist inguishedcast in a p leas ing drama:

"Sins of the Children"Snturdny ] In t il lee .

HOOT GIBSON in a

"Ta lk ie " o f Wes te rn Life"Concentratin' Kid"

'VetllleN,lny nn d Thuradny

AN N HARDINGIn th e Stnlfe Sue""•• •"PARIS BOUND"

ThiN Frldn" . on d Snturdoy

H. B. WALL

Show Shop of the Main Line

~ ~ S e a Vlolf"

EGYPTIAN

-A t Th e

Plumbing .:. Heating100 FOREST AVENUE

Phone: Narberth 3652-M

Next Fri. and Sat.-Comedians

OLSEN and JOHNSON in

"OH, SAILOR, BEHAVEl"

)(Ilu te n.o.-kl"· I " ~ o o t h n l l UTlllkle"

l.ntlr ,,1 ntlel Hurd)· Corned )'Xpxt : : \Iolu)", ' nntl '1"leH.hIY

Jack Oakie in ftThe

Sap From Syracuse"A.ld .....l - " . I \ 'nler lcnI lH Conle"

A I 'ntr lotle ]l tI"" 'n l Fent t l r e t t"

Special Armistice Day Matinee2 :30 P . M. Tuesday

Milton SillsAt his bert il/ Jack Londol/'s famoursea-thriller:

Offers, in connect ion with i ts thi rdanniversary:

ThiN Frl t ln ,- Illul ~ n t l J r . h , , ·

Wed. and Thurs.-Zane Grey's

"Last of the Duanes" with

GEORGE O'BRIEN

Next Frldn) ' n n d Sn t urd n )'

Jack Oakie andJeanette MacDonald in

'" I " LET' S GO NATIVE"~ ~ - - - - - - -

Narber tH

No'tlembe,r 7, t930

I

I Narberth Theatre Notesi Elcction returns wcre announced byi the enterpr is ing management of theNarber th Theat re a t a midnight showTucsday night in thc course of a dou-,ble-fcature program. Thursday of last iweek, bv thc wav, thc theatre was'filled at -a matincc' performancc given ifor school children in which th e fea-'tUre was "Admi ra l Byr d' s S ou th P ol e 1Trip." !

IIn counection with its cclebration of ;

its third annivcrsary, the Narberth i

1

1. 'heatre is offering a fine program of I

shows. This weck-end's feature i s \ , -. :

"1' he Sca VV olf," Jack London's th rill- 1 . G ! ! - ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ' ! ~ ~ ! ! " ! ! ~ ! ! " ! ! ! ! ! ! ' ! ! ! ! ! ' ! ! ' ! ! ' ! ' ~ ! ! ! ! ' ! ! ! ! ! ! ' ! ! ~ ! ! ! ! ' ! ! ! ! ! ! ' ! ! ' ! ! ' ~ ! ! ! ! ' ! ! ! " ! ! ! ! ' ! ! " ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ' ! ! ' ! ! ! ' ! ! ' ! ! ! ! " ! ! ! ! ! I I I ! ! ! ~ 1ing story, in which Milton Sills playcd I•his greatest role. Knute Rocknc's,footbal l sc rics continues , and there isIa Laurel and Hardy comedy.

Jack Oakic in "The Sap f rom Syra-,cuse," wil l amusc Narbcr th aud icnces Inex t Monday and Tucsday , and , in ad

dition, therc will be a musical fea-\turette.

"Americans Come:' The s how wil la lso b c givcn at a 2 :30 P. M. matineeon Artlllstice Day, which is Tuesday.

IOn \Vedncsday and Thursday Zane

Grey's "Last of thc Duancs" will appcar in it s thrilling talking vcrsion, andon Friday and Saturday Olsen and~ = = = = = = = = = = = = = = ~ IJohnson, comcdians dc luxe, w il l star

George A. Witte ,i n "Oh, Sailor, Bchave!"

Paperhangi1lg and I Egyptian Theatre News IDecmoating Robert 110ntgomery and Lei la Hy-,

ESTIMATING ams ar c among t he stars in "Sins ofthe Children," a drama of a German

Narberth 4135\V barbcr and hi s wif e and children, whofind f or tu ne and t ro ub le in America.II t is playing at the Egypt ian Theatrc,this week-end. A change o f programI at thi s Saturday 's mat ince will cnable

Ithe children 's party to enjoy "Conccnt ra tin' K id ," a Hoot Gibson Westcrn

'''talkic.''

I

Really filmed in Northern On tario, "Thc S ilen t Encmy ," p laying at' - : = = = = = = = = = = = = = = ~ t he Cynwyd playhousc nex t l \londayIand Tucsday, conccrns Ojibway In -dians, who wcr c i nduc cd to stage the

· drama in o rd er t ha t the ir t ra di ti on smight bc p rcse rvcd . For the bencf it

Iof school chi ld rcn, a speci al matinl'ewill be give n a t 3 :-15 P. M. l\'[onday.

IAnn H ar di ng , p opu la r stage and

screen actress, will appear in he r suc,ccss, "Paris Bound," at the Egyptian

II next \V cdncsday and Thursday.

"Let 's Go Nativc," a frivolous narI r at ive abou t a r cvue , Argcntinians, a

I"hard -bcr led" cab driver, shipwreck,rescue and an earthquake, is coming

,t o Cynwyd n ex t week-end. In th e IIamusing cast arc Jac k Oakie, Skects _IGallagher, Eugene Pal le tt c, ] eanctte I~ ! ! ! ~ ! ! i . . ! ! . ! ! ! i ! i ! ! ! i__~ _ ! i _ . _ i i i i i__~ _ ! i _ ! i _ ! i _ ~ .. ! _ ! o i _ ~ i i i i _ ! i _ i i ! _ i i i ! i i i i j ! ! ! ! ! ~ ! ! i i ! ! ! ! ! ! ~ ~ ! ! i ! ! ! i ! ! ! ! ~ ! ! ! ! ; ~ 1[I 1\1acDonald, Kay Francis, etc. Andtherc are fivc songs, inc luding "MyIMad Momcn t" and "Let's Go I\'ative."

IIndian Epic Coming to \

, Egyptian Monday Was I

'

Filmed in Temegami Wilds I"Thc S il cn t Encmy ," the living i

drama o f t he Amc ri can Redman in his Inath'c wilds, which is playing at the,Egyptian Thcatrc, Cynwyd, next 1\[on-/day and Tuesday cvcning and Mon- i

day afternoon, is thc rcalization of th edream of \Villiam Douglas Burden ,

I promincnt young society man, studcnt,Iexplorcr. It was his ambition to make

Inot o nl y a valuable record, but an cxci ting motion picture as wcl l, with full-Ibloodcd Indians as thc actor s. I

I Into the wilds of Northern Ontario i

'h e wcn t w ith \Villial1l C. Chan lc r and

Iscveral cxper t picture-makers, filminga quartcr of a million fect o f I nd ia n

Iand wild animal lifc scenes, o f whi chthe ncccssary 8000 fcet is embodicd in!"Thc Silcnt Enemey." No "talkic," IIthc picturc has a well synchronizedmusical score, writtcn by Massard Ku r II

IZhene, a s tuden t o f Ojibway melodies.

}\. short talking sequence, i n whichIChief Ycllow Rohe (Chetoga) explains I

Iwha t t he p ic tu re mcans to his people", is u sed a s a prologue. !i "The Silent Enemy" is no t a scenic': picture, al though thc c amcr as h av e

Icaughtsome of the most inspiring

I scenic effects ever seen on th e screen.1I t is a thrilling drama, which concerns

I, the loves, hates, wiles, fights and sacrifices of members of the Ojibway

.... . .. . . 1tribe , in the Temcgal11i Forest Ress.rve.

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1-.'

. , ~

..

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,

No"ember ,7. 19JO

NARBERTH, P A

no medical aid;

Farm

require'

they car ry at all t imes the

valuable violet ray qualities.

S ta r. gazing through the ir

lus trous beauty will give

you a clear and lovely con·

ception of th e world. They

maybe used· in Sun Rooms,

Storm Sash, or just th e

eyes of Home-the win

dows.

PENSHURST FARM·

0· 7 •

The Lin/{ Between Forest and Home

25 'lnd 29 BALA AVENUE, BALA.CYNWYD

CYNWYD 662

The Buying Power of) the Retail

Dollar Must Be Increased if the

Present Business Depression, Is

to Cease.

Shull Lumber Company

All Milk and Cream Sold Is Produced Ot l Petuh"rst Farm

Herd Established 1904-300 Purebred Animals

U. S. Certificate No. 27751, Accredited for Tuberculosis

Pennsylvania State Certificate No.6 for Freedom from Bovine

Abortion

As a worthy companion for them, we carry th e best g rade o f

put ty ( al so med ium grade if desired), glazing points, sash

cord and th e necessary fasteners t o ke ep them tight. Pay a

visi t to th e little Paint and Hardware Store at No. 29 Bal a

Avenue, and look through t hi s new American "Lustra" Glass.

I f you have t ime, walk over to No . 25, as our display rooms

are always ope n f or y ou r inspection.

White"Lustra"Panes

Penshur s t

CERTIFIED AND RAW INSPECTED

AYRSHIRE MILK

Prices Reduced 25 to 30 Per- Cent

Certified Milk, ZOc per quart-delivered ·to consumer

Raw Inspected Milk, 18c quart delivered to consumer

Phone CYNWYD 97

Take the Shortest Route and Sa 'lie Motley-BUY DIRECT FROM

PRODUCER

129

104

112

156

132

60 I

693

1190

159

132

152 I168

so;- .

140

14119 ')

123

14746

OUR TOWN

5

I i i 160157 188

175 146

l511 15l)

172 1921

29 20

854 862

105 145

141 108

144 10816117:1 151\ I

51

724 6681II

1 5 : ~ 172 .

237 170 !'160 117 I

147 161

1160 155

857 775

186 155148 172

139 152

169 148

167 190

·12 42

851 859

S61

1:11127

12:1152Jr.:1

35

172

173108

143

146

57

799

16014(;

176

155

224

( , A 1 \ n ~ L S126

12S

162

aH

16235

_i

Latter Win Thre e Games

Tie Meteors For First

Place.

'l 'Ul'bitt .HopkIns .Hamer .Anderson .C a u l e ~ ' .Hnndicnll .

7 ~ 552 812

772 731 719

LIONS)1"es 139 134Pl-ltchal 'd 137 l7f1 157

H:dst 132 174 123

!\lUl'ray 155 166 167

C. HUlllllhrles 175 200 175

Albert 190

;.,

The Meteors and Colts a re n ow tied

: ior f ir st p lace in the Naroerth ChurchIBowling L e a ~ u e . In l as t Fri day' s

Iimatches , lhe Pilots attempted to usc a.1 little strategy to trim the fast-travelingI' Colts by coming dressed in Hallowe'en.1 attire with the hope the Colts would! become skittish on account of the fancyI costl1lnes and thereby fail to see the: p ins. Th e result was that the Colts" tonk all three games to tie the Meteors.'I' Four ntlll'r t eams arc only a few point s: behinl! ' Th e weekly prize w en t t o H.i Humphries, of the Meteors., The standings and scores follow:

Points1313111110107

),[eteors .Cnlts .Pilots .Boosters .Lions .

I Rattlers .I: Pcp Boys .

II ' Camels riXTTi:i:jR:sMcCarter 16n

'V . D. Smedley 153

K"im IUO

Young' 145

H. S r n e l l 1 e ~ ' 1115

HanlllC':l\l 29

,\Pilots' Tricks Fail Ii to Stampede Colts!

Iand

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*weekly

without

7 h :lVarherth

:lVational

Page Six

NARBERTH

NATIONAL

BANK

QUOTATIONS:

The

A Member of the Federal

Reser1le System.

No system of social eco

nomics has been invented to

earn real money without

real work.

512

I ' gp BOYS

H U I 1 l J l h r e ~ ' 78Harner 119

Hause 141i Stever 15f1

saver l's 11\1<'XI\'ell · . . · · 121

i Heps .

his daily 618

'I: B O ~ R SI':\ '"icholson 1 ~ :-:tl'inglicld 141

Hih'Y 152

I

ll. na\ 'is 178

Wealth is born in a bank, Ward :...... 125

but dies out of it. ' 7511, : \ lBTEORS

I Duncan 1 4 C. Young' 1Sti: George Davis 10

IH. HUJnllhri"s 145Har t ley _ 161

I Hanll i"nl'

I: 7S6

j' PILO'l'S

Haws 165

I Goodrich - " 112

' IMason 142i l\[eColllwII - " 127

II Blind 117I Hnndieap 60

ii 723

COLTS

! Brenan 204I Meehan . - . . . . . . . .. 154

1-:1 . Iekins 117

Conley 16SI,acey 191\

never

bread.

Many a man wastes his

breath in proving he doesn't

need a bank account, and

his life in proving that he

does.

Open Daily From 8 .1\.. M.

and also 7 to 9 P. M. on

Fridays.

Your community b a n ~cwelcomes your account -

c h e c ~ i n g or savings 01· both

.-and aSSHrcs you cou.rtesy,

consideration and co-opera

ticm in your financial

"affairs.

j Plan Annual SupperI The a nn ua l sauer kraut supper at

IHoh' Tri ni tv Luthe ran Church, Nar-

Iberth, will be held on Thursday, 1':0- Ivember 20, at 6 P. ~ I :\rticlcs suitable i

Ior Christmas gifts allli other Illcrchan- i' I

I~ ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! i j ! ! ! ! ! i j ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! i ! ! ! ! ! i ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ~ dise will he 011 sale. ' , . ~ - ~ - ~ ' ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ! ! ! ! ! ! i ! ! ! ~ ! ! ! ~ ~ i ! ! ! ! ! ! i i i ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! i ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! i j ! ! ! ! i ! i ! ! ! ! i ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ~ J, :

8/7/2019 Our Town November 7, 1930

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-The

STRAWB;R-IDGE

& CLOTI[ ' IERLINE

Ncwember7, ,1930

,Former Merion:Man I.Saved From Death;

Sydney Grier Gest Is Rescued

.When Three Companions

Drown.

Sydney Grier Gest, formerly of Mer-I:

ion and now vice consu l at Havanna,was re sc ued frolll t he sea whi le three I

companions lost their lives. A party of Iseven , i nc luding Mr. and Mrs. Gest, IMr. and John T. Wainwright, Mr. and IMrs. \Villiam 1. Jackson and Mr. Sherbourne Gillingham, had gone to Bney IVaca Beach t o picnic. Mr. Jackson'and Mr. Gillingham were vice consuls Iat Hav ana and Mr. \Vainwright,

whose mother i s l Il rs . Clement Biddle, Iof Philadelphia, was vice consul at

Matanzas. :Mrs. Gest , Mrs . J ac ks on a nd 11r.

Gillingham had donned bathing suitsand were sitting on a cliff watchingt he spr ay as it dashed a ga in st t hero cks . A high wa\'!: swept Mrs. Jackson of f t he rock and all the men in th eparty j umped i nt o t he ocean to try tosave her. A s trong undertow carriedMr. aJl(I Z\lrs. Jackson and Mr. \Vainwright out to sea. :-'1 rs. Gest saved

her husband and ~ r. Gillingham by.throwing them a long scarf \vhich shehad been wearing..Mr. Gest, who formerly resided in

325 Berke ley Road, Mer ion, i s th e sonof Judge and Mrs. John 11arshan Gest,of Overbrook. He enlisted in theMarine Corps in 1917 a nd was one ofthe famous "fighting five" in th e FifthRegiment :Marines enlisting from theUniversity of Pennsylvania. In 1919he received the Cro ix de Guerre forrescuing a wounded companion undera hea\'y barrage fire. He was awardedthe Distinguished Service Cross in1925.

~ h (iest was appointed vice consulat Havana in St,ptember, 1929, aftercompleting· his studies at t he F or ei gn

Service School in \" ashington. Priorto that he had been an attorney inl'hiiadeII>hia. His wife is th e formerSenorita Maria Isobel Escobar, daugh

ter of Senator and Mrs. Alfredo Escohar. of Santiago. Chile.

Merion Property SoldFor Shand Estate

Hall. Sparks & Harris have sold forthe estate of Alexander C. Shand thesouthwest c or ner of Oak and AvonRoads, 1'.1 erion, together witL an Early;\merican Colonial stone house of tenrooms. three baths and two-car garageto be bui lt by the Meagher Construct ion Company. The property, representing a t ota l c os t o f $23,500, whencompleted will he occupied by the purchaser. \\'alter B. Taitt.

William H. \Vilson & Co. have soldfor Dav id .M. l \ ewbold to a purchaserrepresented by J. Harker Chadwick &Co. the residence situated in Merion Iou the s ou th ea st c orne r o f BowmanAvenue and Va lle y Road on a lot I70x150. The improvements consist of .a det ached s tone and stucco residence Icontaining fourteen rooms and three Ibaths, with a two-car garage. The Iproperty will be occupied b y the pu r-:chaser. It was held for sal e at $32,000. i

OUR TOWN

MAIN

SPORTS

Page Seven

· STORE

FASHIONSTHERESA A. M. STEVENSONServices were held on Tuesday at

8:30 A. l\I. for Theresa A. MastersonStevens on, wife of the l at e Wes le yStevenson, from the residence of hers is te r, Mrs. Thomas P. Ril ey , 708\Vynnewood Hoad. Solemn ·.Requiem:-'1ass was celebrated at th e Church ofOur Lady of Lourdes at 10 A. l\LI ntenllent was private .

I,RUTH LAIRD MARTIN .

Funeral services were held on Tues-\day evening at 8:15 o'clock for Ruth IL.aird Martin, widow of James B. Mar-!tin.and mother of Del ia Martin Neely, I

from her l at e r es idence , 152 Sheff ie ldLane, Overbrook Hills. IntermentWiiS: nt"'\Vrights"iIIe, ::Pa.

I

When the grandstand calls, Fashion

and Comfort say:

Fur and Leather Coats ; Fur, Fabr ic

Fur and Leather Jackets • • • The

tailored English type of nubby tweeds

. . . Smart windbreakers and wool

skirts and dresses . . . Light-weight,

r ich-textured Camel 's hair, tai lored

MONTGOl.1f .RY A.VENUE & ST .

to the nicety of a Shagmoor .••

With an Ascot and Beret ... A pair

of pull-on capeskin or pigskin gloves

• . . Or the smallest of muffs .. . And

trim, clean-cut Oxfords or wide-strap

pumps . . . probably a Laird, Schober

& Co. model from the Strawbridge

& Clothie r Main Line Store.

JAMES PLACE - ARDMORE

8/7/2019 Our Town November 7, 1930

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Page Nine

DAVIS'

now and a t

Thanksgiving time,

D A V I ~ ' suggest,

from theirlarge stock,

Thanksgiving Party

Favors and

Decorations, and

Bon Bons,

Canc..lies, and

Kemp's Salted Nuts.

(Oldest Store ill Narberth)

For Parties

Fholle: Narberth 4035

224 Haverford Avenue

COX'l'IXUEIl 0:>1 PAGE 11

doll told his c omp ani o n t o p us h m c

out of t hc c a r, but hc c ou ld n' t, F i n

ally wc rcachcd thc Dl'rgdoll homc on

thc Wcst Chcstc r Pikc at Broomall,

whcre hc pullcd u p. I f ol lo wc d h im

OURTOWN

Has

YOURfamily shollldhave thisMilk

Only such rigid sani

tary precautions at

e ve ry s te p w il l e ar n

for the farmer th e

premiumwe pay him

for keeping Abbotts

uA" Milk pure..

Our constant labora

tory tests make sure

thisextrapayisearned.

For service phone EVErgreen 4461- 62

November 7, 1930

ABBOTTS DAIRIES. INC.. MaJers of Abbotts de luxe Ice Cream

Phi/adelphia. CaTlld... , Brit/Keton Atlantic el y .m,] S"",horePoints

SAFEGUARDED BY SCIENCE AND TUBERCULIN-TESTED

.

,

. "Al ter ever'Y milkingI scruh m.y Pails with Soda and

.,ScaldingWater"

•. '

Joining Force in 1910 When 21, Lieutenant Mullin

GainedFame as Investigator; ArrestedGrover. .\ ClevelandBergdoll Eight Times.

NO'Yember 7, 19JO

LEHIGH VAI.t.I:':'

•A N ' ' ' " t R ~

Thompson

Our service covers ('very phase of

home heating. Tlw advicc o f ou r

combustionexpcrtoftcn rcsults in

lower fue l cos t. The high quaFty

ofour Anthraci te insures an even

burning, easily rcgulutcd fire. Our

drivers ulways are courteous ,con

siderate imd careful.

May w e no t serve you?

•• To maIm ou r business "Heat

ing Headquarters" for t h is com

munity is our ambition.

Bala.Cynwyd

Telephone: Crnwyd 280

Bala Ave. near Union Ave.,

Phone Warne 1121

BROOKMEAD GUERNSEYMILK and CREAM

FOOD VALUEIN MILK

The beautiful G : l e r l l ~ ~ e ? Cow produces

more FOOD '\'ALUE

The Fireside

Brookmead Guernsey Dairies"A Complete, Deptlldab/e Dairy Senice"

gives you greater FOOD VALUE,

Finer Flavor, that "Golden Color"

and real Economy by actual test.

TradeMark

Twenty Years' Produ.ctionand Distrihtttion on theMain Line

Supported by \vonderful cleanliness, low Bacteria and .

supervised by four l\1ain Linc Boards of Health

West Lancaste rAvenue ,Wayne

Page Eight OURTOWN~ ~ = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = ' ; = = = = = = = = = = = = = 7 " = = = = = = = = = = = = - = ... '- _ . _ , - - - Guest of Honor 'I Friday aftcrnoon. • -- Ithey s t a y c ~ ~ , t th e Grove Park Inn for IL,·eu#-en'·'--a-n't 7t lul",·n T.S ' ~ ' - e r ' o c k

I~ [ r s . Vcrner \ \ ' oodcock , o f 11 28 ahout a \lcck. "1 .LY.Lj Ii .I.J 4Jn 14

Miss Polly PahlH]uist, of Narhrook ~ I o n t g o m c r y Avcnuc, h as r ct ur ne d t o H cn ri ct ta 1\IcCaig Starrctt, a , , :c l l- U l ' if 'T ' h · R l·will havc as hcr gucst this wcck· I h er h om c a f tc r v isi t ing in Ncw York k ~ l O w n illustrator of thc Saturday hc - nO mes 0 .l. owns.,n leeMiss vVca!th ca Stark , of Boston, I Ci ty fo r scvcral days las t weck. mn g Pos t . , , :as th c g u c ~ t f or . a f cw J e T

s s . ! \[ is5 Palmquist will cntcrtain I Among thosc who will a tt en d t hc d ay s o f h cr slstcr, Mrs, J ' rcdenck An-b ri dg c on Friday in l\[iss Stark's Univcrsity of Pcnnsylvania - Notrc dcrson, of Narbcrth.

They will attcnd thc Tcmplc- Damc football game wil l b c M r. and l\liss Hopc Bu rl ingamc, of BrynUnivcrsity foothall g am e a t A t - Mrs. Lco McHalc, o f C ynwy d, a nd M aw r , c nt c rt ai nc d a t a b uf fc t suppcrCity tomorrow. Mr. a nd M rs . R ob cr t M . T ow n, of and b ridgc on Friday cvcning.

Thc Gama Delta I'si Fratcrnity of Becchwood Lanc. Crozcr Ludlow, sono f l \ lr . andMr, ;.Lowcr Mcrion High Schoo l wil l I Miss Dora l\[ilIcr, daughtcr o f M r, Bcnj ami n Lud low, o f A rdmo rc , a nd

l d a d an cc a t t hc C ynwy d Club to- and Mrs. L. Parker Millcr, o f Du il l cy Bil l \ \ " rcnn cn tcr t a in cd mcmhcrs ofnight, Avcnuc. s pc n t t hc wcc k- e nd as th c th c sophomorc clas s o f Lowcr l\lerion T hc s ec on d o f a series of articles to ycar, Mullin wa s a ss ig nc d t o invcsti-

Mrs. Gcorgc Pell ino s , J r ., o f Anth- gucst of ~ I r . and l \ l rs . Georgc East- High School at a Hal lowc' cn party on introJllce the mtmbers of Lowcr Mcr- gating work undcr th c pcrsonal dircc-Road, was thc hostcss to thc burn, of Logan. Friday cvcning, iOlls spltlldid;o/ice .force to our rettdcrs, t io n o f t he l a tc Chief Jamcs I. Don-b cr s o f h c r bridgc club on Tues- 1\1 r. and l\lrs. H a r r ~ .Hoffman. of l1 r. \- "race n. ~ I urra,•. of Dud Icy " -- a g hy , who r o sc from a p :: l trolman to

y . M rs , Pcttinos also gavc a showcr Roosc\'clt r:oulcvard, vlsltcd 1\lr. a n d Avcnu c has just left on a hunting trip, J I ) ' nOIJEIlT· lI l. C,\.iUEROX chief of dctcctivcs in Philadelphia be-hono r o f 1\[iss Frances Gibbons, of ~ f r s . Clarcnce A, ?pcakman, of Hamp- 1\liss 'Helcn Brookhart. of Tcmp l c L i cu te n an t Ignatius Mullin. hettcr forc cuming to Lowcr l\Ierion.

mor c , who sc m ar r ia gc t o Mr. F,' dcn l ~ \ ' c n ~ l c , on ~ , I ~ l l ( l a y . .. . Uni vc r si ty , I ~ ' a s the glICSt of Miss Annc, known to his many fricnds as "Patsy," Disguisesay Lincwcaver will takc placc Mrs. \\. B. \\ ~ s mo\cd ! r ~ ) m hcr Compton, ot \Voodhmc Avcnnc, ovcr 1has achicvcd f am c a s o nc o f t hc o ut - Thc ability t o d is gu sc h im sc l f a s a

S a tu rd ay , Nov cm bc r 22, at St. h om e o u Avon koad last I'nday t o t he weck-end. .. , standing C r i J l ~ l l a l i,Ilvcstigators in t hi s wom an has aidcd 1\Inllin in his sleuth-ry 's Church, Ardmorc. Ncw.ark, ~ J. . , ~ I n ; . Fredcrick ]{. \\'ray, of C111- scction o f t he country. inrr work. At o nc time voung womcnMiss Bctty Burncll, of Bccchwood 1\Itss ~ I m a Lylc. \ ~ ' h o IS a t tc n dm g c ag o wa s til\' guest of her aunt, ~ l r s . N ow t hc sccoud ranking o fii ecr in wcre hcing annoyed in th c cvening at

c , c nt c rt a in c d a t a Hallowc'cn l\1.t Holyoke Collegc 111 1\la.ssachusctts, John \V. Joycc . o f ; . .i a rh rook I 'a r k. t he d e pa r tm cnt , L i eu t en an t l \ fl l ll in a corncr in B ryn M awr by a youngy on Saturday cvcniug. WIll spcud thc wcck-cnd WIth hcr par- for Sl'\ ' l' ra! days last wcek. j oi ne d t he Lowc r ~ l c r i o n forcc when colorcd man whohuggcd thcm . \\'hen

l\fr. Edwin Fittipoldi, of thc ValleyI Ients, ~ r. a nd M rs . D, O. L yl c, o f 11 r s, A . Pcrry Rcdifcr ! l ~ S rcccn t ly a y ou th o f 21 in Apri l. 1910. Thc h c t ri cd h is tactics o n a n attracli\'('!v- LIEUTENANT "PATSY"MULLIN

1 i I \ ~ ~ ~ ; h ~ c a l ~ : : ~ ~ t s , S I ; ~ I ; ~ ; : ; ~ _, I A V F : i e l ~ ~ f , a e ~ ; f ~ I r s . Joscph Simons. oi : f : ~ I ; n ; ~ d n : : ~ I ~ \ \ ~ : ' I ~ ; : : ~ ~ ~ ) t ( ~ ! ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ \ ~ ~ ; ~ l ~ ~ ~ ~ 1 ~ I : f i ~ i ~ : : c ~ o c ~ ~ < ; j ~ ~ ~ ~ . o f th ir t ccn mcn in f ~ ~ ~ ~ e d h i ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ; f 1 ~ ~ ~ ; ~ I ~ a \ \ I ~ ~ e e ( I " ; ~ : l i ; ~ u ~ ~ Ihe falllous draft,dodger was li\ ' ing at '

Jolm J. Fitti[Joldi, of Mcrion Avc- IDud,tcy Avenuc, arc sorry to learn of I:-lar"'atHl. Of P l' F '1 in thc strong ~ r i p of Oflicer 1\lu11in a nd B rooma l\ . Du ri ng t he two -y ea r p(rioc!hcr Inncss ' 'I' 'I I \\' 1'1 f SI 'rl .v 0 Ice amI yI -B y Photocafters. I ", ~ I'" f I .\ rs, 1\ art:a .' ~ ) ( ) I l l , 0 ,11 e. Pol icc work seellls t o r un in t h c a n yt hi n g b u t a fcmininc I'oicc cxclaim- f rom I lJ I2 to I'Jl4 1\lullin arrcstcd

Miss Lois Caldwcll, o f E lmwoo d 1\[]SS RUTH A. NICHOLSON I\ ' T 1 \ I ' l l e r l \ ' \ ' o ~ I ( I ! d C ~ ~ ~ ~ ' ~ d \ \ J a n l a r : " ~ , i ~ i t i I ~ g Road. l ' n ~ e r t a l n \ e d at dnllllcr on t rhurs- Licutcnant's familv. Hi s f a th er , J o hn i n g t r iump ha n tl y, " I 'v c go t you this Bcrgdoll eight timc.s. Due to h is maniavenue, \\ 'as thc IlostCSS to thc mem- J) I f '/ d 'f Ed · \ . , 1." ' day c v c m n ~ . f Illong tIC gues s werc ~ II" f ' I I I time." for dril·in.g his !lowcrfnl a l l t o l l l o h i l e ~

allYIlcr 0 "I'. all "rs . : gm' thcir daughter ~ rs C H Bartlctt of 'I I 'I I 'I I' I' f Sl'r l\ u 111 \\as 0llc 0 Ie lrst t l rccpo Iceof I l cr b r ldgc cllll) 011 TIlurselav I 1/7 I \,. I I 0" of "/J(}sc f 'lcd(Jc" . ' ' · · · · ·k 'I .\ r. ane "rs. .". , acr , a sO 0 • 11 - ffice" on tll '1 11 L',1C bClllg CIII " _ ' I ~ , (11'S'glll'S'C I I as s o g oo el ." tllC throu,"'h t he s t re e ts a t hiorh s !wcds hc

• J

cs .. ,1' 10S.

\" ~

crlon :\ venue, for a \."cc ' or so. Ic\ 1'\()a(I ' "".' allc! '1 r, . I . [1. l)a,lson, 0 1'" C '\, I . I '. . " , -_ """

I 117 I 1 1 1 ~ (Jllcsl of 1101101' I . '\' I d I tl 'I I C tIllS A L I' eu tc ll al lt S l l (I "tllat I \ \ a- - alII .. t,) w as c " n t i n l l a I J ~ ' gcltill,g in trouhlewith. I ,\ 'IIIICWOO(, , , I 'fr 0111(1 ~ I r s JOlll1 flcrncv of ~ cet-, "I I 'I I{ II I" I' II -II f P oyc )y le . \ am 'mc .1 zc . S . -M iss J i ll Caldwel l and Miss Eunice I al a I"' idgc par i, \ 011 IVcdllcsda,\'. No- ling" I:louse' I ~ ; l e c n t e r t a i n ~ ( i a ~ r o u p ' . ;\ r. anI .\ rs. l' 'I" 'In

ls ~ l ' ,I 1 1 sociation before thc incorporation of c om c i nt o t he s t at i on h on sc o nc timc thc policc,

riswold, gavc a Hal!o\\CCII [Jartv on I b 5 ' I lfl',S f:I,"alcll, "f I ," :. (,CrlnantO\I'n, an( .\ r . a n( . rs. ' . 1 ' J . 'I ' l' . 'I' 'fl tl . alld talk \I·)·tll tllC IIlCll I I\orl\ce! \1'Itll OIl ,)IIC '" ( l s l( lI 1 I l 1 1' s ' 1·II,tlllltC(!J vcm cr ,il ,vell ).1'. •• - - •• o f f r ! cn ds a t a l ar gc party on Saturday ward ~ l c C a f f t ' r t l ' , of Drcxel Hill. _o\\cr l\ cnon O\\ns,llp. lCSC l.rcc -

c\'cning at Miss Griswold's Folwcll, dallglrlcr o f M r. all d Mr s. Icvcnlllg. 'I 'J I "I ~ I ' 1 I ' f Hav'rford mcn covcred th e terntory from 0\ cr- wi thou t th c ir rccogn iz ing me." I to a r re st Bergd"ll fo r \ ' io lat ion o f thce on Chcstnut Avcnuc. , l V i l l i am f-f Folwcll, of Mcrio ll . Thl ' . .[. ! \ II ' S crff f I .\ r s. o sc p r .. I c r, 0 ( h rook to Ra<jJlor. brother. Edward Bergdoll Experiences Ispccrl lall's. "I sa,,· him cOllling along

Mrs. Raymond D. Kenncdy, of 1II11lrialC of M i ss Nic ilOl so ll ami Mr. ' \ V ~ ) f ; e i s i ~ l l ~ d A ~ ' ~ ~ ~ C : l ~ ~ ~ ~ r ~ c c n ~ I ; ' r ~ :\\·cnuc. ha" Ju st rclurncd f rum a two Mullin, wa s o nc C?fthe first membcrs ~ [ a l l l ' of Licutcnant l \ l u l l i n ' ~ most in h i car," "aid th c Licutenan t . "ILanc, rcturned on Friday Arlhur Chichl's"'r Slc,mrl, SOI of Mrs. I i tu rncd from Ashv il l c, N. C, whcrc CONTIN trE I J ( ,N PAI:E 13 of the Lower MCrlon forcc. in te rcs ting cxpcricnccs arc conncctcd It ol d h im t o s to p a nd Icaped for thc

Chambcrsburg, Pa . whcrc she L1'llIall Sln,'arl a/lll Ihc laic Mr. Slcw- ,_,__ !\ftcr serving 'IS a pat ro lman fo ronc wi th Grover C lcvcland Bcrgdol l . when runnini:1; hoard whcn he d idn ' t, Bcrg-

hcr mothcr, Mrs. Blanchc Skin- a':I, of Rose / 'i /{a, Pasadclla, Califor- i, I -==._-- . ~ ~ ' = = ~ ~ = = = . . : = ~ = = ~ = = = = ~ = = = = = ~ = = ~ = = = = ~ = ~ = : : = = ~ : . . = = = ~ = = = = = = = = = = ~ = = = = : : ~ = = : : : : : ~ ~ = : : = = = = :r. /lio. will lol.c p l C C al Ihc Pr cs byl c - :: --- -- - ----- - -- - . ----.. -- - •

11 r s. C ec il B ar tl et t, o f E lmwo od ria l l Church of O"l'r /Jl 'ool, 0/1 Saillr- ,

spent scvcral dayslast wcck in do.\ , Dcccmbcl' 6. I ; : : : = = : - : . - = - = ~ = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = : : : ; lCity.

Among thosc who attcndcd thc Hal - I son, o f An thwyn Road, and 'many,dinncr-dancc at th eOvcrb rook o thcrs . Dr, Ho ffman was th c chairman \

Club on Friday evcning wcr c D r , of thc cntertainmcnt committcc.Mrs. C. Romaine Hoffman, of ~ r. and Mrs. Frcderick Crowell,

A v e n u ~ ; Mr. a nd M rs , H . B. !ormcrly o f B ,arri e Road , a r c n ow liv-!of l\[cnon; Mr. and Mrs, Roh-Imp; in Brooklme.

1\1 Town, of Bcechwood Lanc; Mr'l 1\[1' and Mrs. H. A. V an Dykc, II

Mrs. Earl Young , o f Ardmorc; formcrly o f t hc Narbcrth Hall Apart- I

r.. and Mrs. Frederic Stclwagon, o f m en ts, h aI'C now t ak c n a n apartment':r lon ; Mr. and ; ., rrs. Alcc Hicks , o f ~ 208 Price Avcnuc.

Avenuc; Mrs. Yvonnc McClurc,1 Thc Narberth Puhlic School gavc aCynwyd; Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Fcrgu-I party to t hc m embc r s o f t hc s ch oo l o n

I

• •

8/7/2019 Our Town November 7, 1930

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/our-town-november-7-1930 9/15

,.

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,..

•..

•..

•"

, ,

Phone Narberth 4182

WALTER G. CASE. Proprietor

241 Haverford Avenue

. ~ A 1 2 I 3 I : 1 2 T I iI:LI:t::T12It::

. I1 i()1)

Don't put it off-come in now

for that free record of

yoar voice!

-The only radio set inthe world that is Guar'anteed by its makers togive service for an indefi'nite time, free of factorydefects and faulty w o r ~ ' "manship-is the

VICTOR RADIOIn order that youmay become fa'miliar with Vic'tor'5 remarkablenew f ea t u r e HOME RE,CORDING-weare extending aninvitation to youNOW to

, · H E R E ~ SSomething

YOU DIDN'T KNOW!

Come Inand m a ~ e a recordof your own voiceon the Victor com'bination radio andphonograph. We'llsupply the record;md needle - andwithout any obli,gation they areyours, to play whenyou pie a s e, on

your own phono'graph at home.

Please be reminded, bythe way, that Narberth'selectric shop is a realmusic rendezvous, with alarge stock of Victorrecords, including the lat'est jazz and the best ofclassics. We've the lat 'est song hits, in sheetmusic form, and alsoukeleles and other musi,cal instruments andstrings and other

accessories.

Masque Bal at FairviewOn Saturday evening, November 15,

the annual masque hal o f t he AmericanProtestant Corporation wi1l h e h el d at IFai rv iew Hou se , F ai rv iew. Dancingwill begin at 8 :30 P . M. and t he G rand IM arch wilt take place at 10 P. M.,

after which prizes will be awarded to!those h a v i n ~ th e m os t o ri gi na l and IImost comic costumes and also t o t he :

bes t dressed w0 man and ilia n. P Ie n ty IiI ~ ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! i i ! ! ! i ! ! ! ! ! ! i ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! l lof refreshments will be on hand. : '!

Forum Finds Fourth

Gospel Interesting Study

---- ----_.--_._---_.- ----UR TOWN

- - - - - . - . - - - - - -

Methodist Episcopal ChurchRev. Samuel l\IacAdams, l\[ inister.Sunday, Xovember 9:

9 :45 ...... !\I.-Sunday School.11 :00 :\ . !\l.-l\IoTlling worship and

sermon.li:45 1'. M.-Epworth League Devo-

tional Meeting. The fourth gospel, commonly as -7:45 P. M.-Comlllunity servicc un- c ri be d to St . John, was thc subject of

der thc auspices of t he Ame ri ca n di sc us sio n a nd s tu dy at thc ForumLegion. Se e spccial noti.ce. meeting last Thursday l'vening in thc I

Monday, Novembcr 10: home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Kac-

1:00 P. , l \ · I . - ! ~ a l l _hn !cheon . o! the ber. The group l istened to a most in\ ~ o ~ J 1 a n s I' orclgn ~ b s s l O n a . r y teresting talk h y Ih e l ea de r, R ev . Roh- iSocIety. ~ p ~ a k e r , ~ 1 t s s I ~ o l 1 1 s e I erl E. Keighton. who compared thc i

.. Hader, MIssIOnary to India. fourth gospel with the first three, indi-\! u e s ~ ! a y . ! \ o v e m ~ ) e r II : cating w h ~ r c i l l t her e wa s ~ g r . e c m e n t . :8.00 I .. ! \ I . - ! \ ~ eetmg of ~ h Ladies' and wherem Ihere were omISSIOns or I

AI(l Soclcty. ?lleeling of the new material. In this manner the I'

Standard Bearcrs. \'iewpoint and aims of the writer of I\Vednesday, No\:ember 12: .. , Ihat gospel could he perccivcd. I t was i4:00 P. M.-Meelmg of the Kmg s agreed that Ihe Jesus of the fourth

Hcralds. . 'gospel. viewed s ep ar at el y f rom all7:30 P. M. - Preparatory Memhers other New Teslament writings, seems

~ I a ~ ~ . l' . . l\1 . r 10 be a ' iu i te d if ferent pcrsonality.8:00 .• .- ra)el . eellng. I'racticallv all oi the For um mee t- \

;ngs l as t y ea r wer e d e\ 'l 't ed t o a study

Holy Trinity Lutheran Church anrl discussion of the Old Testamentand Ihis .\'car, thc suh)'ect of the sea-I

Rev. Cletus A. Senft, 1'astor. Iunda\', ?'Jovemhcr 9: son's m e e t i n ~ s is the life of Jesus. As

9:30 A: ?I\. -Bible School. a pn'liminary to a hiographical study,II :00 A. ?l1.-The l\lorning Sen'ice of that life, the four gospels have heen I

with sermon by Dr. John E . s l' pa ra te ly con si de rcd a t t he f ou r meet-\H u ll lmon . o f Chicago . This is i ng s whi ch h av e a lr eady b een h el d t hi s IRoll Cal l Sunday in our Loyalty autumn. The viewpoint of the mem- ICru sade . E ven- member should bel'S of the Forum is no t fixed no r in ,he prcsent. ' a r el ig io us s en se unanimous . The I

6:45 P. 11.-The Luther League. Forum, as Ihe name implies, meets for I

7:45 1'. M. _ Community Armis tice discussion, united hy a sincere inter-IService in t he Methodi st Chu rch. e st in the suh ject , gcneral agreemcnt I

1O:00-4:00-\Veduesday, \\lomcu's Sew as to the methods of approach and ain the church. tolerant, friendly attitude of personal I

4:15 1'. 11. _ vVednesda \' , Confirma- contact without whi ch s uch sessions. CI - would bc impossible. \Ilion ass.

8 :00 1'. 1\1. _ Wednesday, Choir re- The tl'xt book tha t is being used thishearsal at the home of )'-liss year is "The Li fe of J es us o f Na za -Squicr, 305 Grayling Avenue. re th," hy Rush Rhees, a nd t he fourth I'

7:00 P. M.-Thursday, covered - dis h and fiflh chapters of that book will he •luncheon at thc home o f Mrs. considered at the nex t mce ting , which IKrout, 520 Essex Avenue. will be hcld at cight o'clock n ext ii

7:00 P. M. _ Thursday. Pre-Confir- Thursday c v e n i n ~ , thc 13th, at themation Class. home of Mr. 'Wi ll iam A . Stout, 5

7:30 P. M.-Friday, orchestra re- Hampden Avenuc.hearsal. -------

I Church Notes-II R l , \ ' . T : ~ n P : , : ~ b ~ : : : ~ a ~ . ~ ~ ~ : r ~ I ~ s t l ' r . i

Re\ '. \Vade C. Smith will conclude \his hclpful minis try in thi s church on

, -. next Sunday. The meetings have heen \

well attended and much gooad has hel 'n ,

Baptist Church of the E"angel accomplished. .,

Rohert E. Keighton, Ministcr. .-\ special meeting for young people \'Xovember 9: is being held this Fr iday evening and \

9 :45 A . ~ l . - C h u r c h School. delegations from other churches ar eexpccted tp he presen t. I t will bc a i

11:00 A . M.-Morning wor sh ip . S cr- great l11eeting and all are cordial ly in- I

1110n: "The Chamb er s o f Im - vited.a ge ry :' D ur in g the first part of 'ou r morning worship the Church On nex t Sunday morning at 11 iISchool will meet w ith us. The o'clock :\\ l' Smith's thcme will he 'Pastor will havc a messagc for "God's Higlmay" and at 7:45 P. :\1.Ihem. too. he will deliver his farewell address on

thc suh ject , "Thoroughbreds." These7 :00 1'. : \1. -Young Peopl c' s D evo- sermons will he illustrated by the

tional Hour. \\Te are continuing famous "Little Jells." :\11 ar e invited.ou r discussion of youth's prob-lems a nd t he Christian answers. A stlppel conferencl ' will bc heldAre you interes tcd? in the 1 'r il na ry r oom a t lJ P. M, by

t he S en io r Endeavor Society,. which7 :45 1'. M.-Colllmunity service in will he addn'ssed hy Mr. Smith.

Ihe Methodist Church. See news N'ext Tuesday CVl'ning the Com-itcm for deta i ls . munity Bihle Class will he conducted

\\lednesday, November 12: by :\1 iss 1I arriSl111.8 :00 P. M . -Prayer service at the Xext \V edncsday evening a meeting

home of 1\1 r. and 1\[ rs. J. C. will he heir! t o hl' add re ss ed by M is sSimpson, 232 Essex Avenue. Elizahdh Knauss. who wil l speak onThe subject wil l be "\Veakness." t Il l' p resen t-r lay sitnation in Russia.Following the scr\'ice, the Quar- Mi ss K na us" is the anthor of thet er ly Bus in es s r-.I e el in g o f the widcly-di"cll""l,d Iwok. "The RisingChurch will he held. Tide:·

Thursday, :-Jovember 13: :\cxt Thursday l'\'l'ning Ihe West-8 :00 1'. l\1.-The forulll Illeets at the minster Cir cl e wil l mee t at the hOllle

home of Mr. and !lliss Stout. 5 of :\! rs. C. C. T\'son. 22r, Sab ine AveHampden Avenue. Those who nul'. The assisting hoslesses will bear e interested in the modern ap- 1\1 r s. l \IcAulif fe . : \I rs . Roher tson and

proach to the life of Jesus arc 1\1 r s. Phi ll ips.invited to be present. On Sunday, l\ ovember 16, Mr . Va n

Ness will deli ver a historical sermonon the completion of the twentieth anniversary d the present pastorate.

Cona.

in

'nr ~ ' ( , ~ r ' II'\t Mnn,1 for lhr h ~ ' 1 1'1 "111\1'

NARBERTHELECTRIC SHOP

241 Haverford Avenue

Come in today for that

demonstration!

WALTER G. CASE, Proprietor

Phonc: Narberth 4182

Page Ten

In 4 models from $112.50,

Less Radiotrons

Expert service I'" Ea.siest termsNo bunk Biggest values

Buy [ ..om th e house of reputation'

NEWVICTORRADIO HomeR e c o r d i n gELECTROLARE-57. 3 Su . ,reme i ns t ruments in one.MntchleS9 Performance-Su'"perb Beauty.

~ . . ! O ; ) LessRadiotrons

3 great instruments . .. oneNew in every respect

Th e ultimate in radio •• • with in comparableVietor Tone andToneControl••• absolutelydependable.A new beauty in playing VietorRecords. Th e new thrill and funof m a k i ~ g imperishable living records of th e children •• • your family •• • fr iends •• • Talk, don ' t

write ISend them one of your selfrecorded records.

We have Vietor Radio separately , too. The most beautiful cabinets Victor ever built I

First Church of Christ, ScientistAthens and Linwood Aves., Ardmore.Reading' Room, 19 \\ ' est Lancas te r

Avenue, open dai ly , 10:30 A. :M. to4:30 P. 11. \Vednesday evenings, 9: 15

to 9 :45.

\

Sunday services, II A. M. and 8P. 1\1.

IThe subject f or t he Bible [esson ser-

lmon for Sunday is "Adam and F al le n!!.-______________ Man:'

Victor Radi'oHome-Recording

ElectrolG

and make a record 01~ o u r own voiee on the

sensational new

-------_._--------

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No ...ember 7,'19J(J OUR TOWN Page eleven

economical!

to haveGAS HEAT this winter!

P H I L A D E L p · i 1 I , ~ ELECTRIC COMPANY

~ l Suburban Stores

In a gas-heated base

ment no bins or tools .. ,

no dirt or clutter mar

otherwise useful space

,

The Gas-Heating boiler

with its good· looking

stream-like cabinet har·

monizes with any sur·

roundings

AND what could possibly give greater return for the modest

sum invested? A home gloriously comfortable the winter

through, with you and every member of your family com

pletely free from the old chaining task of fire-tending. A

whole" new, livable space in the basement which can actually

be devoted to extending the size of the house. Better health for

everymemberof the family, because of an evenly heated home.

Ample proof now exists that Gas Heat is t rue economy ...it completely does away with so many other costs incidental

to the old-fashioned furnace room. Actual gas-heating costs,

month by month, for homes of various sizes will be gladly

furnished to you . Why not let our heating engineers estimate

how much it would cost to heat you r home with gas? No

obligation! Telephone our House' Heating Division today.

Still time.

Many a house which'

seems too small needs

only Gas Heating to

make it spacious

FRANCES H. ZIEGLERFuneral services were held Ol i '

\Vednesdav aftl 'rnoon at 2:30 o'clock:

a t Ol h' er "H. llair building, Philadcl-:phia, f or Frances H. Ziegler , w if e o fHarry S. Ziegler, of \Vynnewood, whodied suddenly on October 31. Inter·mcnt was private.

New Type of Cemetery

For Chester Valley!

No old-fashioned "burying ground," ihut a spot of loveliness beyond com· Ipare is the aim of the builders ofPhiladelphia 1\[emorial Park, a newcemetery being created in the beantifulChester Valley. The princ ipal entrance will be just north of the Lin-',coin Highway ana on the Phoenixvilleand \Vest Chester Road. I

This new cemetery does away with Ithe unseemly pretentiousness and Ugli',1ness of tombstones by replacing them

with beautiful bronze markers. It willhe a lovely park, containing a Towerof Memories, Medi tat ion Chapels, wide Iavenues, sparkling fountains and a I

wealth of trees and flowers. It wil l be I

hy far t he mos t beautiful environment!ever created in o r n ea r Philadelphia. I

This Memorial Park provides a help· iful, new "Be fore Need" p lan which Ieases f inancial burdens and g iv es t hecomfort of prepa rednes s in the hour Iof need.

IPhiladelphia Memorial Park is spon-

Iored by a group of prominent Philadelph ians headed hy Frank H, 1\1an-Icill, ,Edwa,rd P. Si!.n0n. Thomas I. I

Ranklli. (,eorge \v Jlcox. J, Harker IChadwick. Paxson Deeter, Esq.,(ieorgc \V. Statzell, Jr" A. Ernest I

~ r a r g e r i s o n a nd J ohn Kclly. •The architects are Simon and S imon . :

o f P hi la de lp hi a. \\'ho h a\ 'e dc si gn ed I

many of Philaclelphia's hest-known'hnildit:g-s, inclnding' Fidelity-Philadel-:phia Trust Building, the nc\\' Straw-,hridge & Clothier storc' and mal1\':others, Dr. \V. L. Halherstadt is sale's·director. The princ ipal office o f the:Philadelphia MClllorial Park is in the:Lewis Tower Building. Fifteenth ane! !Locnst Streets ill Philadelphia.

LIEUT. MULLIN ASHERLOCK ICONTINUED FROM PAt;;E i

into·a barn which was pitch black'i

First · thing I knew som eone hit m e i

ov er t he h ead w ith a club. The n w e I

b oth b eg an t o use our revolvers, aim· Iingat the .flashes, hut no one was hit ibefore ou r anllllunit:on was eXhausted'1After that Bergdoll aood his companion

slipped away and 110t knowing the lay i

o f t he l an d I didn't tr y to follow him,. I

but returned to the s ta tion house."

"One time," said the Lieutenant,

"we found notes lying around outside Ithe s ta tion house s igned by Bergdollwith the message, 'Al l Lower Merion!cops can go to hell; I've go t my license Iback,' and we didn' t know where theycame from. Later it was learned Bergdoll had d ropped them when flyingo v ~ r the station in h is a ir pl ane.

"We go t qui te f ri endly after awhile," mused the Lieutenant. "H easked me to take a ride in his air·plane, bu t I wouldn't go up in the airwith that fellow."

O n l ~ of Lieutenant Mullin's outstand-Iing' al ;ests was t hat o f Alf red E. Lind-,say, swindler of New York societymen and \,,"omen. Having gotten in- I

formation on a tip that the man wanted Ihy New York police was s taying at a

wel l- known Main Line apartmentI

hotel, Mullin went d own an d arrested!him lIn suspicion, Then by a clever Iruse, admission was ohtained f rom his iwife that he was the llIan wanted in I

New York an d later Lindsay con·'i e s sed . ' I

Lieutenant :Mullin was bor n in R ad- IIn or and h as sp en t all b ut t he first twoyears of his life as a r es ident of Ard- i

more. IHe was mar ri ed in 1913 to Miss

1\1olly Dunn , of New Rochelle, New IYork. They have three children, twohoys and a g ir l. Their home is at 2041Edgewood Avenue, Ardmore.(Another member of the force will be the I

SIlbject of next week's story) 1

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-. ,

•..

I

-.

."

...

•.,.

•'.

:Fall Ll;lncheoll of W. F.M. S. to Be Held Monday

Th e fall l unc he on o f t he \ \ 'oman'sForeign Missiollary Society of the:\arberth Methodist Episcopal Churchwill be held in the church on Mondayat 1 1'. 11. Miss Louise Hader, whospellt many years as a missionary inI ndi a, w il l be the speaker. He r subject will be "Gl impse s of an IndianBazaar." }'l embers and friends of thesociety ar c inv i ted to attend. Reservations ma y be made by calling :\1 rs. :\ .J. Sigel, Narberth 3823-M.

No ...ember 7, 1930

l\1 rs. \\T. Russell Green was the

speaker at the reg'lllar meeting of the

Sub-Juniors of the \\Toman's Com

m un it y Cl ub of Narberth o n Mon da y

evening in Elm Hall. He r topic was

IParliamentary Law. Mrs. v\T. H. Mul

! leI', the new cha irman, p resided.

On Monday, l\ovemher 17, t he Suh

Juniors will gi ve a bridge par ty a t Elm

Hal l f rom 7:30 until 9. Refreshmcnts

will he s erve d. :\Irs. \ V. H. 11uller,

the new chairmall, and l 1r s. L. Parker

:\1 iller, the president, will he the hos t

esses. All girls h etwe en t he a ge s of

15 and 18 are cordially invited.

Narberth Sub-JuniorsHear Mrs. W. R. Green

IForty-one Girls and BoysI Win Library CertificatesI

I Forty-onc girls a nd b oy s h a v ~ becn

,awarded certificates for completing the

!coursc of the Vacation Reading Courseas p lannel l hy the Narbcrth Library,In this c ou rse t he c hi ld re n w er e enrolled as members of a Travel Club,and were T l ~ q u i r e d to read according toi the ir age a nd grade from eighteen totwcnty-two books selectcd by thelihrary to illustrate a trip frolll Narberth around the world. The childrenwere requi red also to outline a mapand to indicate with a star the placereached in the journey.

Th e names of those who satisiactorily completed the course ar e given below, and a rc also enrolled on an honorlist displayed at the lihrary. Jo e Berta,Billv 1\1 a cC om as a nd A ni ta MacFarland won spe ci al p ri ze s given hy theParent-Teachcrs' Association for outs tanding work in the contest.

~ a m e s of children who have finishedI t he v ac at io n r ea di ng f or t he s umme r

' of 1930:Belty Jane Bailcy, f if th and sixth

! grades; Edward Bailey, fou rth g rade ;

i Bobhie Berta, second grade; Joe Ber ta ,I th ird g ra de ; Marie Borden, secondIg-rade; Anna Brennen , s econd grade ;Eleanor Cahrey. third grade; KathrynICahrey, second grade; Patricia Cahrey,; third grade; J ean Carmody , secondIgrade; Esther Clark, fifth grade ; Ever: et t Clymer, fourth grade; Anna DonaI hue, third grade; Billy Duncan, secondI grade; David Duncan, third and fourthi g rade s; L oi s E nz , sixth grade; HogerGraham. third grade ; Chr is tine Hack:man, second gradc: Dorothy Havelick,four th gradt ': l\farjoric Havdick, scc-

'ond grade; Nancy Havel ick, s even thgradc; Dorothy Hcmsley, fourthgrade: I ~ o s e Emily Hopkins, fourthg rade ; Ho\ \ a rd Kairer, s econd grade ;Johanna Kn:hs. second grade; I'egg-yLvnn, third grade: Billv l \ IcComas, •sl:cond g-ralle; Anita l\Iaci;arland, fifthg-rade: Peggy MacFarland. third grade;Dwight l\l;.ckell, sixth grade: FrancesM e tz radt , f ou rt h g rade ; Billy O'Sul

li\'an, third grade; Charles Palmer.third grade; Betty Jane Rankin, fifthgrade; Virginia Rankin. fifth grade;Margaret Shanr, third grade; ShirleyVincent. thi rd g radc ; Jack "'eir, sixthg-rade; Shirley \Vhitesidc. thi rd g rade:Anne \Villial1ls, fourth grade: HowarelZeigler, t i ith grade .

Wa,h,incton$3.803.753.75

consult

DARBY, PA.867 Main Siree'

Darby 1::00

ARDMORE, PA.S E. Lancasler Avenue

Ardmore 3500

UPPER DARBY, PA•Long lAne and Ludlow Street

lIoulevard 1600

Atlantic CityAsbury Park Bal t imoreOl.:Citn Grove Ncw York

Narhath $2.05 :S3.:;OMerion $2.00 3.25Overbrook 2.00 3.25

For t i m ~ of connectiog trainsTicket Agents

Proportionately Low Fares f rom

Other Statiolls

Pennsylvania Railroad

Sundays, November 9, 23, December 7, 21; also Thursday,

November 27

WASHINGTONand

BALTIMORESundays, November 9, 23, Decem

ber 7, 2 1; also Thursday,December 25

ATTRACrIVE FARES

LowFare ExcursionsE...eTr Sundar to

ATLANTIC CITYASBURY PARK, OCEANGROVE, LONG BRANCH

NEW YORK

• • •( ;hes ter (;Oke is available

from ou r own plant •• • manufactured there from a most

careful selection of coals. I tis a popular, money-saving

fuel •• . clean, easy to handle.

Why no t t ry it in your heat

in g plant?

"WHY no t se tt le next win

ter 's heating now?

OUR TOWN

OurExpe r t Will Show Yo u Dow to

BUrD Tblll l '108t EeODOmlcol FueU

MEOlA, PA

19 E. State Street

Media 431

CHESTER,PA.16-18 E. Fifth S t r e ~ t

CheSler 6300

LANSDOW'NE, PA.32 E. Uahimore Avenue

M n r l i ~ o n 520

REASONS

Aftera

visit, reachfo r your telephone-call up t h ef ri ends you 've l ef t.They'd much preferth e sound of yourvoice to a formal"thanIi. you" letter.

WHY

YOU SHOULD

BUY

NOW!

DiBcount or 50e

pe r ton ir paid wi thin

15 day.

'1150perTON

(2000Ibl l . )

Del ive red

ORDERS

may h e p la ce d at

any of the offices

listed, or with any

emp loyee o f th e

Company.

••• E . I S Y

T E R I U S

~ H E S T E R~ O K ~

8,

fr iendlytoneh

PHILADELPHIA E L E ~ T R I C ~ O M P A N Y

Page Twelve

T E L E P D O N ~

SEVEN

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Pump-

Page Thirteen

in the Beautiful

For Music Students

We have 15 fine upri!!htpianos that we h av e repossessed because the purchaser could no t a lf or d t o makethe necessary payments.

We will loan these fine instrum ents to any worthymusical students for thestora!!e costs.

Applicant must be wellrecommended.

LOCUST STREET A T 1 7thRITTENHOUSE SQUARE

$2.00 PER PLATE

Dinner and Supper Dancing

Every Evening ExceptSunday,

7 to 9 on d lO la Closing

,HUSTON RAY in Peroon

ond his Halel Worwick Orchestra

Excellent porking spacedirectlyodja.

cent to halel; garage adjaining. Res·

ervation: "Paul," Pennypacker 3800.

Exceptional entertaining facilities ... forTeal . Ca rd Porties. Banquets. Dances, Et-:.

BENNETT e. TOUSLEY, Manager,

EMBASSY ROOM

marmirk

~ : Enjoy a Delightful

SundayDinner in

Phi ladelphia

White'sSweet Shop

219 Haverford Ave., Narberth

PhOllC: Narberth 4005

CUlld,·, Xuts , I"rellt ·" nn d

J)nni"h I-nHtr,·, l ind 14 fln,,·orN

o f 110111('-1111 ..11" dl'lh"lollN It·(·

Crt"l In .

15 PianosFREE

Address Instruction Bureau1312-}4 Chestnut Street

Ph'!adelphia

W. P. MIESENCarpenter .: . Builder .:. ,Jobhinlt

Phones:Day-Narberth 3973-1\1Night-Narberth 2890·R

100 N. NARBEHTH AVE.

Home-Made Delicious

ki n an d Mince Pies,

(regularly 35c)

Special SaleTuesday, November 11 :

Choral in First RehearsalAsks All Singers to Attend

Mowrer. Jr., motored to H01land, L. r., r ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " l Ion Friday where they spent the weekend.1lrs. Jack St atl ar d, of Hampden

.\ venue, ha! ' just returned from New- imarket, Canada, whcre she visited rela- ,tives.

~ I r . AMine K. Siler, of \Vashington,D. C, spent the week-end with hisparents . Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Siler , oforth Narberth Avenue.

!\liss Katharine V. Harl cy , o f theClarks Apa rtments, \ 'Vindsor Avenue,sai led on Saturday for a thrce weeks't rip to \ 'Vaco, Texas.

Mr. and ~ l r s . W. E. G. 1\1 i ll er, o f521i Essex Avenue. a rc r eceiving con gratulations upou the birth of a son,Stcphl'n \V. ~ I i l t c r , on November 4.

Mr. and ~ rs. Thomas Keenan, ofBryn ~ awl' and \Vetlingtou Roads,\Vynnewooci, have j us t r eturned froma trip to Jacksonville, Daytona, St.Augustine and Miami, Florida.

~ rs. L. !\l. Leonard. of Pittsburgh,1'a., is tIll' guest of her son- in-law anddaughter, ~ r. and ~ l r s . G. R. Rich-

Iarcl son. of Vat ley View Road.

:\11'. and : \I rs.. .\. H. Rippcr, o f Dud It,\· Avcnue, left l as t Fridav for a tend ~ y s vi si t in Pittshnrgh. -

~ I r . and :\Irs. James A. Tyson, ofNarberth Avenne, arc receiving con~ r a t n l a l i o n s upon the birth of a son onTuesday, October 28

:\1 r. and ~ rs. Geo rge Trimble. of)'lontgomery Avcnue, eutertained at Ibridge last Saturday evening. I

:\1 r. and :\Irs.. .\ tl an T . Kirk, of Elmwood A\'l'n\l('. arc receiving' congratu-'lations upon the birth of a son. Priorto her marriagc ) 'I rs . K ir k was }'IissEthel \Valls.

:\Iiss A l l l ~ CUllnlling, of \Vestficld,:~ J .. accOIJ1pallil'd ),1 iss Harriet ;\1arsh Iand her parl'nts on a visi t to Narherthon Tuesda\'. :\liss ~ I a r s h visiteda J l l n l l l . ~ 111'1" . iril'1](I" ill Lower ),Ierioll,"lid la1<'r joil1ed : \I iss Lois ]{inehart , :"i SOl1t1l :\ar1ll'l'th ,\\'CIlUC, at tca. '

Fril'1HIs oi :\Irs. Fn'd Rnhl'rts, of the '

Ikrllola :\I 'artml'nts, Ardmore, witl he ,sorry to hear tha t she has been ill. '

:\1 r. al1<1 : \I rs . Cli fford D. Goodwin.of l . a l 1 l \ " ~ ' n Lane, announce the mar- :riag-e "i : \i rs . Goudwin 's s is te r, :\ Iis s i

"-Iarioll ),l<trshatl, and ~ I r . (;eorgl"C 1 c n l l ~ l l t . which wilt take p lace today a t !the Birch'ille Chapel at Sou th Tom 's iRi\'er, :\ . J. '

Mr. and )'Irs. A. K. Ld'-cvrl', of ' : e - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - " " ' !Sahine .\v{:nue, arc entertaining' :\11'. $10.00 or lessand :\-( rs. Donald Rhorer and their Rebuildsdaughters. of :\1 anheim; ),1 r. and :\IrsElmer Cl11T\ ' , of Lancaster, and ) ' I i s ~ yourSomo ll, o f ':\orth Philadelphia, over Vacuum Cleaner Like NewIhis week-l·lal. RegnrdleN" o f m nk e or condition

Gunrnntee l l fo r On e YenrE"t lmnt lng ,V I tlllm t C h n r ~ e

GUS WELSHElect r i c ian

40 , \ N D I ~ R S O N AVE., , \ r l lmorcPhone . Arllmorc 112:>

The Fireside

A Charming Bride

COX'J'IXUBD FROM PAGE S

.lllSS .1UN/.-IN .H.·INSIHU.ni l.alll, .' .\ 'I; l.alll. . \'arberll, . 7,'hosl'I I I l1/Tio!/, ' I,. ;H r. (;"or!/I' Clrl/ll'lIl. ofI'hiladel!,hia. ,,'ill lal,'c !,Iate today illth,' Hinl7'ill, C!1lI!'1'1 at SOlltl, TOI/I's

Ni7',"· . .\'. J. .Hiss .Harsl lll ll i s thl 'sistI '/ ' nf ,1 Irs. (,Iilnrd (;ood,,,ill.

wel·ks' stay in St. Lonis, :\10., and Laytonia , Ky.

) 'I rs . H . C Troxel, o f Lock Haven,I'a .. is the guest of ) 'I r. and Mrs. J.:\1. L. Bickford. of . \\ '011 Road, this

week.:\11'. and "-Irs. :\lalcohll Ilurllside and

family, of \Vi lke s-Ba rn '. wilt bc theguesb of :\1 r. and ~ rs. i"re(lt-rick .\ .Egmore, of Elmwood ,\\'l'Il\ll'. this\\'l'ek. :\1 I'. amI : \I rs . BIII'11"i<1e. :\1 r.and )'Irs. Egmore and t ll l' ir snn, :\[ r.Frederick A: Egmore, Jr. , wil l attendthe PCllllsylvania-N'otre Danlt' gameun Saturday anel wil1 lall'r go to .\t-

lantic City whl 're they \I'ill spellcl tit"

\\'l'ck-end."-( iss E ll' anor St il ,g le r, the i as hi nn

designcr of the Fowler Dickon \Valkl'rStore, of \Vilkes-Barre, "a., is Yisiting~ [ r s . Egmc,rc this \\' l·ek.

~ I r . and :\Irs. August .\ . Blal' '' '' . ofElmwood A\'enuc, arc l 'nkr taining ata dinner nn Saturdav. :\Innng theguests will hc ~ l r . \Vi il iam Bcrgen. ofTrcnton, ?Ii. J., 1lrs. \Villiam H. ) 'I ar sha1l and ;\!iss Lena \'Vagner.

~ I r . and )'Irs . Clarence H. \\'001

mington, of Narbrook Park, ga\'c aHallO\\'l,'en party on Friday evening.Among the gues ts were :\1 r. amI : \I rs .Edgar \Voolmington, of Llanerch; :\1 r.11 r. and ),[ rs. J. Raymond Sharp. for· 1

merlv of l \a rber th , now of (;la([,;lone I~ I a n ~ ) r , Lansdowne; ~ I'. and :\1 rs.' TIll' tirs t relll'arsal o f its s ix te en thChark's Bradley, of Berwyn; :\1 r. anel ,, 'a-nn \las helel :\Ionday night by th l')'Irs. J amcs Shearer , of East Lans- Il al a-CYl l\ \' yd Conl ll ltJni ty Chora l,downe; ~ I a nd Mrs. Al'11old Zillger, under kaelership of Henry Hotz. Fifty~ I r . and ?\Irs. Charles :\Idntirc, :\11'.and Mrs. l\obert Gundacker, of 11\'- JIIl'1I and womcn attcnelt'd the meeting.wood; and Mr. and Mrs. Charks Erick- which was hcld in the Bala-Cynwyd Ison, of Paoli. \\'(linan's Clllh. !

Miss Ruth Quinn , o f \ \' yc llnlhe . isspending s l' \' er al (l ay s thi s week with I'I;lIls are heing ma(k for a nun'l and11iss Eve ly n J eff er is , o f SIO Duel ley pkasipg l'llll'rtainml,nt, of l1Iusic andAvenue. elalll·l's. to he given hy the Choral

~ I r . John :\ . Van Horn and :\11'. and t(lwar<1 tIll' l'\I(l of January. . Among~ l r s . Alber t Vroom. of I'rincc Bav.:-.I. Y., WCI'(' the guests of :\Irs. S. j,:. prndllclinns in pas t Yl'ars g i\' l,n by theJef feris, of Dudlev Aven\ ll '. last week- , ingl 'r s were "The :\1 ikar lo, " a night

College Cas t Selec ted (,nd.· ;n Dixie. "A ro und t he \'Vorld byThe c as t has been selected for the Mrs. K. R. Runvon anel :\1 iss :\1 ar - Zeppe li n. " which was g iven last year.

f ir st ini tial American presentat ion of gar t' ll a RUl,yon, of Chestnut Avcnue.S) k

'F Q anll an Italian fete, gh'cn the previousl a espeare s 'irst uat:to "Hamlet" l ef t on Sunday f or Mil lb rooke, N. Y.,

which wil1 be given by the English where they wil l attend the wedding nf yl'ar , whicl . was arranged by ClarenceClub of Haver fo rd Col1ege in Robert Miss Alicia Marshall. (;artlner, of Cynwyd, ,Hall, on Friday, December 5. A mat- Mrs. G. Howard Reesl ' has reccnth' i

inee at 4 o 'clock and an evening per- r et ur ned t o her home on ]-Iampdei l The Choral's first meetings were Iformance at 8:30 wil l be given. Avcnue frolll Hollisdayburg, Pa .. where launched ahnnt fifteen ye ar s a go hy I

S. A. Hunt, '32, president of the she was the g ue st o f :\11'. anel :\frs. Dr. Herbal J. T il y, president of the;English Club, wi1l plllY' the 'par t ,of the .R. F. \"arlle, fo r a week. Strawbridgt, ,& Clo th ie r s to res, anrl'lking: ]. MaColl, '34,' will fiU tlle role ~ l i s s Alma Reesc, of Hallll',kn :\ \'l'- chllinnaslcr-llrganist of St. .. Juhn'sof Hamlet; P. E. Truex, '33, \vitl' b.e' nue: \\-iil at tend, tl le Temple and ~ l i a m i ' I

Laertes. University football game in Atlantic Church, .Cynwyd. Aiding· hinl was IIn add it ion to t he Haver fo rd stu- City on Saturday. Mrs. William K. Mil le r, who · is stilt:

dents, two Bry n Maw r College girls Mr. and Mrs. James c. Smith, of identified with the group as l ibrarian . Iare in the cast. Miss Nuckols, a Pitman, N. ]., arc spending the win te r E ar ly meetings were held at homes of !senior, ,who was May Que en la st year, with, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Mowrer, I

····IL. hel' -- ' Mi Y f 'U - A the lIle.mbers, and in th e P-resbyterianII p.QI:tr .ay.Up la,' a,u,,- 5S . oung,.(J -.untI{Q1I1ery.,.",vellue,· . ' . . . • . :who wil l be the queen. Mrs, Mowrer and he r son, Mr, John Chu rch o f t he Covenant, Cynwyd.

her a capahle maid Bet ty. G eorg e

.I oly was a most poctic De\'enish,

Richa rd Bushne1l a properly punctil

ious Baxter, and Robert Ely, 3d, a

satisfying stiff hut ultimately ardent

Tremayne.

The action and settings paid tribute

to the dil ection of Robert Roland

Deardon, 2d; t he s tage craft smansh ip

of Barent F. Landstreet, Elizabeth B.

Cunningham, John Creighton and Her

hert Stratton, and t he s cene ry des igning and building of Agn es Sims and

~ J r s . Beatrice Carver.

A pleasing performance is to be ex

pected of the Shavian comedy which iss ch edu le d fo r thc Repertory Theatre

\Voman's Cluh House the middle of

Decembel'.

Milne Comedy Well Given

By Repertory PlayersCONTINUED FROM THE FIRST PAGE

CONTINUED FROIII Tin : F IR ST P ,\ GE

waste. The schools arc still designed

for thc upper class and bri ll iant stu

dent, rather t ha n for t he mas se s.

Only 16 per cent. of children entering

school are of a superior type of

mentality, prepared to f01l0w ou t

s tudies of this kind. The r es t, he said,

:'.1lOuld be prepared for l ife, no t for a

c01lege they will not at tend."I t is t he duty of society," ~ J r . Snow

,.;aid, "to find something a student can

succeed in, a nd n ot ap e t he old classical

co1leges by emphasizingLatin and alge

hra. Skill in t he se s ub je ct s, o ft en

classed as menta l exercise, can not Ill'

t rans fe rr ed to other type s o f men ta l

c ff or t in which the pup il wi ll later have

to engage."

"Side-Line Citizens" came in for

t he ir share of the speaker 's criticism.

He drew a comparison hetween thedays when a pcrson attended a concert

and participated in the actual perfor

mance of a l iv ing per son, and the pres

t"lt method of putting a record on theIlhonograph or tuning in on the radio.

" \Ve arc three and four timcs removed

from actual participation nowadays,"

he said.

Footba1l. and s im il ar s po rt s he ap

proved of f or t he spectator, for t he ex

citement of the game made the witness

a participant in the spi ri t o f it ."The only measu re o f civilization,"

he Wl'nt on, "is in how a man invcstshis le is ure t ime ." Mass amusement

was rapped hy reference to Sunday

Ilapers, "Sunday parade, " motoring,

movies and radio.

Education must take care of the lessable student, as we1l as the favored

ones, he concluded . Adequate preparation for l ifc' s work and h-isure must

he ginn, so that wc wilt not hecomemerely a nat ion o f sitters-hy.

Educational MethodsDiscussed by Snow

NO'Yember 7, 19JO OUR TOWN- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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Admission Free

NO'l'ember 7, 1930

P.\STOR

to=- 1 ~ " C f I n · x A , · e l l t l t · - ~ l . · l l r th e

: \ "nrh. ' r th Pm,t om.,.,

" 'e Cull Ul l t l l )eU\ ' t ' r

"\1:\ LI:\"N'S ( ) J , I ) J ~ S ' I ' " ' l ; I U U I ~ 1 l'1'.\ 1I ,0R . C " I ' ~ . \ ' \ " 1 ~ 1 l un d J ) Y I ' ~ I I

Evangelistic Meeting

Sunday Afternoon, 4 P. M.

At th e

Seville Theatre, Bryn Mawr

The Speaker Will Be

Rev. P. Vanis Slawter

For Daily

Pressing Service

CALL NARBERTH 2564

- JOE ALMAN

F i r ~ t B a l J l i ~ t Church, ~ o r l ' l s l o w n

Organ Recital

I , __

JULES MATHISSpecialist in Massage

Treatment at home o f pa ti ent s b ~ al)) lointmell t . Spec ial treatments a s s pe cified hy 1)ln·sielans. R C ~ l l o n s l h l e localreference.

F", ' Ap)lolntn!l'n\ (',,11 );arb. 3927-\V:i20 Ilonlc" 'otul A ,'t·.. ' Snrber th . PII.

Do You Like Good Drama?

..._. __ . - -- ..__ .._._ .. _ - - _ . _ - - - - - - ~ - - - ~ - - . __ .

The saga of family l ife- o f a barber who leaves Germanyfor America and prosperity, and of

his children, who go their own waysi n their new-found freedom fromTeutonic restraint-Will this poig- Inant play o n th e talking screen findyou an appreciative audience? We It hi nk it will. •• All criticspraise i t . . uSins o f t he Chil·dren," t he Hol lywood producers Icalled it, for want of a better name. \Robert Montgomery, Leila Hyams,

Elliott Nugent, Louis Mann and \others are in i t . -AND it's real!

This Friday and Saturday \, night, at THE EGYPTIAN THE. I!_A_T_R_E_,_B_a_Ia_.C_yn_W}"_d_. -'_---1\

To Erect Garage

.\ p r ivah' ga rage \ \' il l he l '! 'l 'l '\ ('d hy

:\icolo Tumolo on t he r ea r portion o'fhis p ro pe rt y. o n the nllrth side of

V\" oodbine A \ ' ( 'n t l l ' , :\ a rb er th , a t an\Villow Ayenue cast of \ \ ' oodhine Ave- •nul'. Karhl'rth, at atl e"tinlated cost

oi $1000,

St . Margaret's Guild Sale:\ Runu:lage Sale will he held hy

SI. ~ I a r g - a r l ' t ' s (;Ilild on :\ov"l11her 14

an d :-1ove111her 15 at lOS N. Xarberth

Avenue. ~ i r s . \Villiam J. nutler is th ec ha irman and those who wish to con

t ribute a r ti c le s for th e sak such as

fllrnitllrt' an d clothing, m ay l eave it at

102 :\ . Xarhl'rth :\\'(·nuc. Ii the

articles ar(' to 1)(' ca lled ior, kindl \' t e le phon(' ~ I e l ' i ( l n (,OO. In connecti";1 with

the Rummage Sale 1hel"<: will a ls o b e aCake Sail'.

Tlw oftin'rs oi lit" t;ui1c1 which wasorganized last week at a tneeting atth e hom(' of ~ rs. j ' ierr" Lai rd , o f

A von R oad , arc ~ I r s . C. J. l;oodyear,president; Mrs. F. X. Purcell. "iccprl'sident; ~ ' rs. ~ ar k E. ~ organ, secre·

tary; Mrs. J. J. Cahrey, t r easure r . an d~ rs. John ~ 1 Tl lwnscnd, chai rman o ft he hos te ss e, ., Thl' ml'etings of the

Guild wil l hl' held on the first Tuesdayoi tIll' month at X:30 P. M, in th ehasl'mcnt of SI. ~ argaret's Church.

Fred C. Peters, of Ardmore, wo n

re-election to t he S ta te Assembly from

th e First Legislat ive Distr ict defeating

his Democratic opponent, :\ . E. "\iVoh ·

lert, of Narberth, by a major it y o f

5342. Th e vote wa s 7071 to 1729.

James S Boyd, of Xorristown,standing for re·l'1eetion to the Senate

in th e S t; ,t e : \s semhl y, e;u;ily out

stripped hi s Democratic opponent, Edward F. K;l1;e, 7004 to 1785 with a 5::!19

lllajority.

I ndicatioll of how the }.\ ain Line

would \'ot(, came with t Il l' f i rs t returns

from Lower 1,1 erion, 111 which \Vynne

wood (the :\ urth :\r<1more secund dis

trict) gaYc' Ih'111phill -114 \"Iltl'S to

l'inchot's 71. .\ s t he r etu rn s came m

district hy d is trict. the Helllphill

ma jority m ountl'd steadily.

Hemphill 's virtual thre( ·- to-one vic

t < l r ~ ' 111 L"wl'r ~ l c r i o n an(1 suhstantiall ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - majority m :\arhl'rth camc sOlllewhat

as a surpr ise , al though predictions had

bccn made h e w nu ld carry the Town

ship hy a twn·to-nne vote. Fai lu re o f

thl' Republican Organizat ion til active

ly support 1 inchot, though hc had heen

seeming-Iy i"dnrse(1 h y C ou nt y Leader

Charles Johnsnn. is given as one cause

fo r h i opponcnt's large majority.

OUR TOWN

Wanted

E STATE NOTI CE

Hemphill Piles Up BigMa j ority in Lower Merion

Rooms and BoardingO I'; 1'00111 fo r gentle1l1an, convenien tto ~ t a t i o l l . I'h. : ' \ a r l H . ~ r t h ~ ( i 3 S - " r .

«(111-],1)

HIHl :--nHlll\Yrilf' 1'.(011-7 )

fa r Sale

Lost and Found

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS

Phone Your Ads to ARDMORE 3100

Page Fourteen

Deadline for Insertions- C l a ~ s l t l e d adverliselllelllS will, be aC('E'pted up to WednesdaY, fi

o'clock f or OUR TOWN or a ll t hr ee pnpers; Thursday, 1 o 'c lo ck , f or THE

MAIN LINER; Thursday. 5 o'clock for NEWS OF BALA-CYNWYD,

R t10 ('"",,, a line In each paper; 25 cents a line In all three.

a eS -M ln l l ! " , charge, 35c In one paper; 75 centR In all three av

e r a ~ e of five words to I he line. No blackfaced t ype used .

GeneJ'a l l\Totice- Classified Adverttsements wll1 be charged only

. t o r es tden ts of th e Main L in e who se names

appear In th e telephone directory; t o per sons maintaining an account wi thUF. or to l ' e ~ u l a r "lIbscrlbers t o e it he r THE MAIN LINER. OUR TOWN, orNEWS OF BALA-GYNWYD.

Carrying ,'\'ery 011( ' of Lower

11 erion's s. ,venteen distr icts, many of

them hy large majorities, John 1:L

Hemphill, defeated D emoc ra ti c a ud

Liheral ca nd id at l' fo r G ov er no r, o ut ·

Apartments for Ren t . Ir an h is suc ce ss fu l Republ ic an oppouentbv almost a three-to-one vote. Hcmp-

NAHBER1'H - 209 Grayling AV('lIue,! : , . . ' I 1\·1'3 bedrooms, 2 b at hs , F ri gi da ir e, \1111 s majority 111 ,ower 1 e rl on w as igarag"e, balcony, etc., Including eleC-\3850, his total \'ote h e i n ~ 0557 to

I rl ci ty and hot w at er ; reasonable. In - p 'nd o f ' ?707 Iquire I l rs t flool'. Ph . Narberth 2749- \V'I 1 .1 S - .(011-14) Th e "\V<:tness" of th e ~ I a i u Line______________ '- -__--'-\' com1l1unitil's was very mauifest, partie- i

Garages for Rent ular1)' in ' th e ) ' Ie r ion dist r ic t . which

(;AHAGE on nocl<land Avenue near \ ga\'(' H. emphill a 562 majorit\· in a ,\Vynnewood Road, $7 a month. Ph . . ' . . .

:o<arl>el'lh 2605. (011-14) vote of O\'er 1000. Bi g 1I1aJontles i• Iwerc also piled up by t he L ib er al - ,

E STATE NOT IC E IDemo': ra t ic candidate in the strong- IEsta Ie of \Vi ll ia ln l iar"ner CrowelI , hold. , of local Repuhlican leaders.

deceaSel1, Inte o f NarlH,rlh, Pl<. I.etters I Bala the home district of TownshilJ itest:Ullcl1tarv 011 tIlt.' nho\ 'c c:--tntc hn.\"- f • Iing' I)('ell g)'illltell to Girard TruRI Com- T f l ~ a s l 1 r e r ,1lId Repuhlican leader Peter

pany ant! \ViI"1<'I' na.·t !nl') , ,crowell, C. Hess. pol le d 4-13 votes for Hemp-Ila-t l \ l o n t g n l l H ~ l ' r Avenue , ~ a r b e r t h , . ... .Pa., all p e l ' s o n ~ indebt (0(1 to t.he said es . hll1 to 113 f or P lI lc ho t. Haverford,ta te a ro )'equ"sll>C! to ;:1[.1,o payment , Cynwyd, ~ o r t h Ardmore No, Two, a ndIlnd thoso havil1l!'" claim:· ,,) present th e IRo ' 'mont al1 returned heavv' \ ' o t e ~ forsame, without. delllY, :.: . !10 offico of se < .'

lHARD TRl;ST 'CO.. Hemphill .Broad and Che';tnut Sts., Phlla. Despite the wetness of t h e day vo ting

A. A. JACKSON, President. 1 . k . t"' 11 11 f thT H J ~ ( ) D O R EF . .T1-JNKINS, Esq., Atty, was ) T1S - at prac Ica y a ·0 e231 fi-16 Fidelit)·-Phlla. Trust Bldg. ITownship poJling places, th e total vote

Broad and \Va ln ut Sts., Ie in g about 2.000 g re at er t ha n at th e

Philll., Pa. p . . . "M 1 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ! ! ! ! ! ! i ~ ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ~ ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ~ ! ! ! ! ~ ! ! ! ~ i ! i ! = ~ = ~ ~ ! i ! ! ~ I J( 1 1 - 1 ~ : J O ) " rnnaTles m • ay. I •• • - •.• r...-. •• _._ ., A. _ .. J.... " .. -":,,,. I ,I ..... ., .- " .

BORTO'" TI':HR11';I: I' , I ' P I 1 ' : S - ~ mos,old; chan' l ) l ion II1'ed, rea:-;ona1tle. 1!J21

X. G l ~ t ~ t Ph . (:rel ' l1,,·ou(1 4i57.(omhl1·7)

nr-:A ~ 1 J I H ' r S wi t h po"·0rtuht.'x. Bt'aut i fu l , ·ahint ' t .

O. no" :;,11 ~ " r 1 ) ( > ) ' t h "

Fun : - ; A 1 , 1 · ; - ~ l a h o g a n ~ · hall ~ ( ' L I'h.Narher th : ~ ~ I : ! l i . (o11-:!1)

WORLD'S BOOK, te n \·olume'". Heference honl\. fo r IHH·jet' in I ~ o , , ' P I ' :\Ior

io n S ( ' h o o l ~ . J';xf't'llL'llt (·()l\ditiol1. Ph .

:\Il's. 11. II. :-;pcl'd, Narh. :I!lOO-.I.(om1lJI-7)

HIl. I , DOTH,\ HfY:> musi c ( or your nextIln,1C'l', 2 ~ 1 \ \ ' ~ ' n l 1 l ' w o o d Avenue, E ~ t a t e of \Vil1lam A. McCul1ey, lale

X,,"", I'll. :-;-arh. ~ H ~ . (omhll-14-:10) of :-':"rherth, :-'lollt!;,ol1ll,ry Counly, de -CCal-"Pl1. L,t' l tel':--; T e ~ t a m e n t a r y on th e

Instrllction, Schools ahoH' e ~ t a t e having been granted toti l l ' \ ) t 1 ( l e r ~ i / ; n e d , ,,11 J l e r s o n ~ indebted

SPEECH I M P R O V E M E ~ T - P r i . l es . In to ~ a i < l e st at e a re r(>'luested to mal<ecorrect ion o f d ef ec ts , in cl . Htanl1ller- in'ln1pdiate IUL)·nlent, anel those having

Ill/;, slntlerillg alld l is pi ng . : \l adel ine l e ~ a l .,laillls, to p r ( ' ~ e n t t he s ame w it h

1'. "filler, ~ 2 :-.:. Narb. Ave., Narb. (lut .Idav 10

3:109-"[, A u ~ h o r i z e d by S ~ a t e Dep t. o f lonA MARIAN McCULLEY, J ~ x e c u t r i " ,I ~ d . . Il1lel'\'lew g la dl y g Iv en without 2 I 1 Hampden Avenue, Narberth, Pa.obl,galloll. (ombl1-7) Or he r A t t ( ) r l l l ' ~ ' ,

A L A ~ ,TOI1:-':SO); :>:>II·I'H. J ~ ~ q ..::21 Swede Sireet,Nor r is t o, vn . P a .

( 1 ~ - J 2 - : I O )

IL \ C L I ~ ( j - - - L o t : a l : u\ (l l on g" distance.~ c r \ ' i ( ' e I';xprpss Co., Frank I-I. Seely,

.Jr., 1)I'op. a Bala AVt'. CYll\\,yd 877. \(oh-If)

] .. O S T - ( ~ o l d p; l1"ringH ".i th CI"YHta] Y 0 1 ~ : ' \ ( i lJuHineHH \ , "onlcn dCHire:-; room

drops het \ \ ' ( ' 1 ' 1 l :\terion an d Oalullont . allo h o ar d \ vi th pr iva te f:uni1:r. Con-Finder please relurn t o T he Main Liner veni ..nl to P. R. ~ l Station III :-'forionom .. c. ::,) erlcl<et Ave., Ard. (0I11hll.7) or :-':arherth. \\ ' r lte "D," care of The__________ '- - '- - J lITain L;ner, Ardmore. (011-7)

1.0ST-I'"lice l l U ) l l l ~ ' , gray and hlae]<; H I W" I l l o n l h ~ "ld. :-.:"me "Von." If e pan t ed

found notify :-':arherlh 2",,1. (0-11-7) 1 ~ ' ( ) T H I ' ; I 1 ' S hellle)·. while or coloredgoi .'1, ~ l e e p in ; ,,,ages, $5. Ph . Naro.

At 'Yorer Service 12!11;'. (ombll-7)

DHESS:-'L\KI:"G and alterations or Situatiolls Wantedm _ e n d ~ n , " , i l l ~ youTr h O l ~ l : o r 111ine. 1\{rs. L.l\ l ~ : " \ D H Y ,v or k to tn,l\:c honlC. Hef-

M. RedlIch. I h. ~ a r b . 2,,65-\V. (011-14) e l ' ( ' I H ' e ~ , 1 'h ol '" B ryn Maw r S37.

PIANO tuning' and repairing In your (ombll-7)o,vn lo,vn COHts lnnch less. Send (iIH.L., ( " o l o r ( ~ d , , ,"ants \\;01'1< by ,veelL

poslal. Q. Uherti, 311 Hampden Ave. noo,l ref"l'ellt'e. Ph. :-':arberth 2674.________________ <.:O_t_f.:) (ombI1-7)

D n E S H ~ r A K I : - ; - r ; _ Elizahl'th Pearson, \ V A : - ' : T J ~ D - B ~ ' r el ia h le woman, Wed,' .n ;) U \ 1 d h ~ y AYl'.. Xarb. P h. N arh . an d 1 ~ h u r 8 . , hy th e day, an y kind of

272S. (o-If) \\'01'1<, References. 3741; \Varren St..

FLOHA (; EROLD-Specializing in up . \ Phi la . P hone A rdmo re 2S72. (011-21)

i1nl,stery " ,orl \ , Hlill ~ o \ ' e r H ' . (iraperies . ' V ? ~ ~ . . - \ ~ ~ . ' V i ~ h e H ,york bY . t he . ~ ~ ~ : . ,"Iaterials of ar t hrought to th e home (I t . , l n l n ~ , or ~ a u n d r y . C,n) , (SSIStf or s el ec ti on . ..:\11 ,vorl\. guaranteeu . SerVlng' 111 evenings by appointl11ent.

Estimates. 344 '1'l'evor Lane, C ~ ' n w y d . Phon" Cynwyd 349-.T, (obl1-14)

I'llon" Cynwyd 1;'95- \V . (omhtf)

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Page Fifteen

Insurance "AT COST

-N O PROFIT" - a

saving of 3 2 V 2 ~ ' v overs tanda rd ra te s . Get

dela:ls- 'phone or write

nearest office.

SWl'dl' 1I11e1 .\In' str.·.·tH

~ o r r I H t u " · J l

Needlework Guild Notes

Christian Science Topic"Adam a nd Fal le n Man " is th e sub

ject of t he Lesson -Sermon to be readin all Churches of Christ , Scient is tSunday, November 9, Th e GoldenText is, "As by the offense of one

judgment c ame upon all men to condemnation; even so by t he r ig ht eo us

ness of one the free g I f t came upon almen unto justification of life" (Romans

5:18).Among t he c it at io ns f rom the Bible

\S th e fonowing: "\Vhosoever is bornof God doth not c omm it s in; for hisseed remaineth in him: and he canno tsin, because he is born of God" (l

John 3:9).

The Lesson-Sermon a lso includespassages from t he Chr is ti an Science

textbook, "Science and Health withKeY to the Scriptures," bv },IaI'''Bak er Ed dy, lIue of whicli reads:"Adam, represented in the Scripturesas formed from dust. is an object-les

s on f or the human mind. Th e material

senses, like Adam. originate in matterand return to dust-arc proved nonintelligent, They go out a s they came

in, fo r thel' arc s ti n t he error, not the

truth of being" (p, 214).

Montgomery County Offices

~ A R G E S T IN THE EAST ~ E C A U S E IT SERVES BEST

"BE A KEYSTONE MEMBER"

O N YOUR

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE

K E Y S T O N EA U T O M O B IL E CLUB

S- lI ) l .n'l"lIHtl 'r .Olk, ·

Arllnlorr

Keystone Au tomobile

Clubownsitsown Auto

mobile Insurance Com

panies. All Members

(and you can be one)ge t their Automobile

and SAVE 32%%

KEYSTONE AUTOMOBILE CLUB CASUALTY COMPANY

KEYSTONE AUTOMOBILE CLUB FIRE COMPANY

Thl' anllual 11Iedin!-! of the NarherthI Branch of tite Xl'edlework Guild ofAmerica will he held in the I ' resh\ 'teriall Uhnrch \\·e(lnesda'v. :\oven;her

12, at 2 1', ),1. -),1 iss ~ art ha CihhOlIS. who has heen

with Dr. <;l'enfel ill La),rador, wil l tel lus oi the work there,

~ l i s s Caroline ),1. II ole. informationsecretary of the I 'hiladelphia HealthCounc il and Tuherculosis Conllliittee.w il l he the other ~ p e a k e r .

Dln'clOr- are urge,1 to get thl'ir garll1ents 111 ; , I ' a r l ~ ' as pos,;ihle. Thechurch will he opene,l and the Ht'ceiving Conllnittee wil l hI' on hand Tne,;day ni ght a t 7 ,,'clock to recei\'l' garl l l e n t ~ as 11'<:11 a III o'clock \\ ' e d n e ~ -day morning. Luncheon wil l he sen 'eel

at 10:30.The Jun io r Circle uf the iIJeed1ework

Gui ld 11esire t o thank thl'ir horough

at t he Execu ti ve Mansion . fathers for the use of the Coml111111itv

\'ice President Cur it s will he the Bl1ilding for thl'ir card party la;t

speaker at the hanqnet at the Penn I ' ~ h u r s ( ~ a y llight and, to thank all tllllse

J-J

• J-J t" I ' 'I'} I . : kllld fnelHls who a':-lSted thl'm,-HelenarrJs 0 e on lurS( ay e\·emng. I Baird Caldwell.

The S ta te Convent ion of Counc il o fRepublican \\ 'olllen wil l I lleet II I Har

r i ~ h u r g Xo\'elllher 12, 13 and H. Any

IlIclnhers who d e ~ i r l ' to attend should

e011ln1\1nicate with 11rs, J-J, 1', Leedom.

2914 ({ising Sun Roael, Ard1\1ore. He r

telephone number is Ardlllore 3li5<i.

Cm'ernor Fisher a ssi sted b y his

daughter, ),[1'';, H, 1 'atnal l Brown, Jr ..

of Haver fo rd . p re si dent o f t he Lower

),(l'rion-i'Iiarberth COl1ncil o f Repuh li

r.an \Vomen, will receive th e delegates

State Convention of G. O. P.Women Is Next Week

Plans for a community o pen hou se

on Christmas Day at E lm H all with

refreshments, cOll1lTIunity s inging and

entertainment were d iscu ssed at the

regular meet ing of the "M ulieres" on

Monday afternoon. A free matinee

for th e children at the Narbe rth The

atre will he one of the features,

It was decided to postpone the drive

for 1 1 1 e l l l h e r ~ h i p s in the Xarherth Fire

Company until January.

:\. decided increase in attendance was

note'd at ),Ionday's meeting. .-\ny

woman in the Xarherth fire district, in

terested in iurt lwring lhe intl'rl'sts of

the company, i s d ig ih1l ' for l lI emher

ship. Th e next mee ting - wil l b e held

on ),!onday. December I. at 2:15 P. ),1.~ I r s . ,\ . H, i'liulty, of ) ' I e e t i n ~ House

Lane, IS conducting a que st io n and

suggest ion hox in whi ch any que ri es

a bo ut th e wo rk oi the Fire Company

or s n ~ g e , ; t i o n s may he left.

fMulieres' Plan Open HouseAt Elm Hall Christmas

OUR TOWN

J. E. G. ::\1.

FLOORINGthe world!

Phone: Paoli 250

In

The sp,'ak'.'l at t he Eyang el is ti c),[,'eting 11<1<1 at the Seville Theatre,Bryn ),la\I'l', on SU1Hlay, Xuvemher 9.at 4 I', ),\.. lI' ill he the Rn', 1', \ 'anisSlawtl'r, p<,,,,tor "f the First BaptistChllrch. Xor ri st own, Mr. S lawt er willplay tb,' \c C. :\ , Electric Therl'lllin.the I l l ' II ' l I l u ~ i c a l instrl1llll'nt which prod \ l l ' l ' ~ ~ ( ) u : l l b hI' ether wa\",-etherwaye 1 1 l u ~ i c . ),i r. Slaw tel' wi ll also

play the ) ' l n ~ i c a l Sail". Thl'n' will hein addition a hrid pipe organ recital.

EI'eryone b invited. no a d l l l i ~ s i o n .),1 nn ' thall (,Oll penple wC're p resent a t

th,' last lectnre,

Electric Theremin to FigureIn Evangelistic Meeting

~ T h a n k You'-FathersThe F at he rs ' Associatiou of Nar

berth wish to express their apprecia

tion to t h , ~ f ul lowing l is t o f donators

fo r t he ir k in dl y r es po ns e t o t he recellt

appeal for funds with which to car ry

on the Boy Scout wurk:

ReI'. John Van ilJes,;, \\'iIlialll C.Clag-horne, Dr. H. F. McDuffee. A. J.~ l o l o s c h l e h . C. J. Brunell, \ViIliam J.Crosson. :'I., C. Shand. J. L. M cCrery,A. L. Lamhl'rt. \Villiam B. (;riscOlll,R. S. J )unn l· . \V. M. Sample. ~ 1 J.Lacey, Dr. F loyd Tomkins , ),[rs. H.P. Seidelman, (" \\'. Reming-tun, J. B.Nesper. A. P. Redifer, H, H, Wilson.

\V. d . Coleman. Dr. L. R. Davis, C. B.11 etzgar, Dr. \\'. Zentmayer, ),1 i ~ 11ary J, Jones , Dr . R. :M. Staley, E, P.Dold. A. J. Smith, Alfred Peeney,F, X, Purcell, M r ~ L. \V. Red if er ,

E. M. Posey Est" H. G. Matton, T. E.Laughlin. H. C. Gross. :: \hs, A . H.Durborow. }{ohert Xash. C. R. Stearn,T. E. Wolf, :\.. R . Pleath, C. H. Xold,

\V. l\ , Lynch. R. K. Hewitt. 'vV.~ 1

\Ventz, I' . R, L oo s, Alex Bur t, J oh nBurt, )'Irs. Hew le tt . Mary E, Starr.\\'. S. Dl'aI'C':, J, D. Beck. Jennie n.Lons, E. H. Connell. A, \\ ' . Burns.

\. :\ . \Vilsl'n. H. ),1. Chalfont.Th e t"ta' donated, $253.5ll,

I. X. W JLSO X, Treasurer.

Refreshments will be served by th e

hostesses for t he evening , Miss Vir

ginia Burgstresser and }'frs. James

Douglass ~ o o r c . ~ ,

Every Cromer s tr ip o f selected Appalachian white oak ismilled, filled. varnished, and even treated to resist moisture-b y machines. When th e completely finished stripsarrive,there 's nothing left to do bu t nail them down. Nothing .Lai d i n a new home, at the speed of a room a day, itmeans 10 days to 2 weeks ' earlier occupancy. In an oldhome, laid right over the worn floors. th e new Cromarhardwood floor is reedy for lise t he momen t t he l as t nail

is driven.

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Ask Abollt Ollr Budget Paymeut Piau

FREE ESTIMATES

REPAIR - MODERNIZE - IMPROVE

YOUR HOME NOW

Lincoln Highway, Paoli, Pa.

We'lI Aladly demonstrate tI,e numerous exclusive Features of

Cromar- l e t yo u see th e superb beaut)' an d test th e quali ty o f

th e fine C,.onlsr fi. . ish.

GILLINGHAMLUMBER and WOODWORK CO., Inc.

Let us show you the onlyFACTORY FINISHED OAK

-

,,__ - - - - - - - - - - - - ' I l ' ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ I

November 7, 1930

Th e first Novembe r mee ti ng o f t he

Junior Community Club was incaI"

rec tl y announced l as t week as taking

place on the (.th. \Ve t ru st n ot too

many g ir ls w er e obJ:g'd to "wait at

t he chu rch" fur a me:t'ng that never

happened, for the c or re ct ti me is

Thursday, Xovemher 13. The advan

t ~ g e of this is that it gives us an op

portunity to anticipate in print a few

of t he e nj oyment s p la nn ed for this

meeting.

First on the program win he ;\[ rs,

(;reaves, of t he Greaves -Royer Schoo l

for the Backward Blind. who will hring

with he r several of the little pupils

in her care, These children have heen

heautiful1y taught and trained to per

form as their talents show promi se ,

and under }, f rs. Greaves, direction they

will present a shor t p rog ram for ou r

entertainmC'11t. ~ l r s . ( ~ r e a v e s will

spl'ak, as wel1, of the work being a c

c ompl is he d by h er school, and it w il l

he very worth while to anyone in

terested m socia I service. or more

particularh' in work f or t he bli nd. to

a tte nd , F ri end s as wel1 as members

of the Junior Cluh are cordially in

\ 'i te d. Th,- (ireaves·Royer School is

situated \'Cry close at hand. at K ing of

\ 'russia, which should douhle the in

krest of ou r visitors' program,

, \nother h ig h spo t on the program

will he a talk h ~ )'liss ) ' larian Beans,

of Oak LaJ1l'. who is t he S ta te Junior

Program Chairman, It IS certain that

In ' may expect a "heap of good things"

frol11 one w h o ~ 1 ' position indicates that

~ 1 1 1 ' i hound to he hrimful of nl'\I'

ideas for c luh act iv it ie s,

Frol11 "u r own ranks the musical

nllte of the eyening wil l h,' sounded

a,: )'lrs, I-1 a ro ld Crei st IS to g-ive us a

piano solo, which. according- to he r past

performances. will hI' accomplished

\ I' jt h a mas te r' .s touch,

It lI"ill he ,:eell that a full e\'l'ning oj

i l l t e r e ~ t i n R I 1 U l l l h e r ~ h a heen plannl'd

anrl it IS ~ i n c e r d y hopl'd that the at

tl 'lHlance will he equally up to s tandard .

Plan Interesting Program for Meeting ofJunior Community Club on November 13th

8/7/2019 Our Town November 7, 1930

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/our-town-november-7-1930 15/15

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.r

Phone

CYNWYD 700

Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.

N'o'JIember 7, i9JO

Lehigh Coal

"Holds a fire forhours without attention"

J. J. Skel ton&80n

Charge Cash

Egg ~ 1 4 . 0 0 $13.50

Stove 14.50 14.00

Chestnut 14.00 13.50

Pea ........ 10.50 10.00

Buckwheat 8.00 7.50

Koppers Coke. 11.50 11.50

DIRECTORSUNERAL

ATHENS AVENUE AND SIMPSON ROAD

HOWARD C. FRITSCHJustice of the PeaceREAL ESTATE

Fire Insurance-Best CompaniesPhono 4049·W 2111 Haverford ATe.

We are as near as Your Telephone

WUNDER

BATTERY 8( ELECTRIC SERVICE

108 Forest Avenue"Wunder Starts Them All",

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I [II I: PHONE: ARDMORE 9 ARDMORE, PENNA.:

I .h'1lfiftiWIWIi'\iitclltclljtijltclli1\iIi1\iIi7\iil'l\ilirnirniimliiffiiirnllrnIMlIf&liITiii'ITiIMtlt&IU-

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at Present LOW PRICES

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Phone: NARBERTH 2866

r rBBIDGHBOY-A brown WIll-

Dutcabinetwith satinfinish; FreDCbcloors.Super-beterodyneusingnioe

tubes,fourofwhicharescreen-grid.

{ F 1 t ! ~ ~ ! t ! : ! TONI! CONTROTJ• •• Price 1179- 50, ~ Ulbes (uillustrated).

Prepare for BanquetTh e Legion room in the Community

Building was decorated this week f ~ next Tuesday's Armistice Day banquet

of the Harold D. Speakman American

Legion Post of N arherth. Alex Betus,

adjutant of the Post and veteran of

Judge of the Superior Court : several hattles in the Wor ld War , has

The vote f or Judge of the Superior Iexercised his vocat ion as an electrician,Co urt was as f oll ows: \Vi lI iam B. Iin fitting up t he Leg ion headqua rt ers

Linn. Repllblican, 1158; ] ames B. with electlieal decorations, includingIDrew, Repuhlican, 1131; Aaron E. shields representing America's eighteen

Reilll'r. Democrat. 406; George F . d iv is ions in the Expeditionary forces.

Bicycles Rel'4ired

OUR 'tOWN

Lieutenant Governor IDouglas, Democrat, 412; Peter Muse-Fo r Lieutenant. Governor, Edward C. lin, Communist, 2; Max Silver, Com

Shannon, Republican, polled 1142; Guy Imunist, 1; Ida G. Kast, Prohibition, 23.K . Bard, Democrat, 419; Samuel Lee, I Representative in Congress

Communist, 1: Mahel D, P ennoc k, I Fo r Representative in Congress,

Prohibition, 20 : a nd Mary \Vinsor, 7. IHenry \\T. \Vatson, Republ ican, re-I . .

Secretary of Interna l Affairs IcelVed 1162 votes, and Jo hn F, Head-

For Sec re ta rv o f Internal Affai rs Icy, Democrat, of Ardmore, 422.

Philip H. D c w ~ v , Republican, received i Senator in General Assembly

1157; Lucy D: \Vinston, Democ ra t, ! J ames S. B.oYd, R e ~ u b l i c a n candidate

411: Frank Note, Communist, 1; Fred Ifor Senator In the (Jene,ral A s s e m b l ~ ,\V. Litten , Prohihit ion, 14: David polled 1156 \ 'otes and hIS DemocratIc

Rinne, Socialist, 4. opponent, Edward F. Kane, 420 votes.

Judge of Supreme Court iGeorge \\r. Maxey, Republican candi·

dat e for Judge of the Supreme Court,

received 1127 votes: Henry C. Niles,

Democrat, -B6: Charlotte F. ] ones,

Communist, 2: Charl es Pa lmer, Pro

hibition, 24 ' John \\T. Slayton, Socialist,

5.

't m. can bu)' an) 'Genera l Electric Radio OD die Budget payment Pr.a.

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Battery and Electric Service

-THE RADIO-PHONOGRAPH(OMBINAT l aN -A handsome

brown wamut cabinet , satin· fin·I shed . F ltt cQ With TONE CON·

TROI ano HOME RECORDING

eaulPmendorrecordingboth radio

plograms a n homt: cnrenainment• . Prlct; $2115'oCJ. ,es, ,,.bes.

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low-powered stations .• • howthe FULL RANGE Selectivity

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how th e FULL RANGE Tone

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natural quality,

7HE LOWBOY-An attracti .e

cabinet in satin-finished brown

wainut . Super-heterodyne U$ing! lIne tube s , four of which ar e

s c r e e ~ - g r i d • 0 • Price $142.50,U s lubes.

108 Forest Avenue, Narberth

I i ~ e k n o w'!IOU willqet more enjoymentjiom this RADIO _

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GENERAL• ELECTRIC I Gl,nb,ook Nu".';.. Ph"".

, F _ U _ ~ _ L__IA.lWG_E n A D ~ . ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; . ; I ; ; . O ' ; ' ; ' _ - J I ..~ _ ~ ! ! F _ i ~ n e ~ s ~ e l ~ e c i i i i i ! t i o ~ n ~ ~ _ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ _ ~ ~ ~ ~ _ ~ ~ N ~ a ~ r _ b ~ e r ~ t h ~ 2 ~ 8 _ 0 0 ! ! L ~ . I .

Hemphill Carries Boro

With Majority of 308

Page Sixteerl

CONTINUED FROM THE F IRST PAGE

)('rt, pol led a total of 442 votes to his

Repuhlican opponen t Fred C. Peters'

1141 votes. Th e total vote in the First

Legislative District gave 1\Ir. Peters

approximately a 5000 majority over

Mr. \\ 'ohl er t. I n d is tr ic t n umbe r o ne ,

\Vohlert polled 176 votes to Peters'

343: in d i s ~ r i c t number two, \Vohlert

received 16(, to his opponent's 519; in

the Third Dis tric t t he vot e was Woh

lert 100, Peters 279.

U. S. Senator

All of the Republican candidates

triumphed, as was ant ic ipated, by large

majorities. Jame" J. Davis, Repuhlican candidatl' for l'nited States Sena

tor , pol led 1145 votes to Sedgwick Kistler, Democratic candidate's 428. Em

mett P. Cush, Communist candidate,

received one vot e: S. \V . B ie re r, Pro

hibition candidate, 9 votes, and \Villiam

J. Van Essen 3.