4
PRICE FIVS' HERE AND THERE by BETSY.. ANN M1S GeOllte WOrth 110 Essex Ave head of the Red ClOSS ",ork Ioom at Elm Hall 1epol ts 169 193 stu glcal dl essmRS completed for the Yeal 1944 In 1932 they made 23 000 and 10 1943 85 000 .. Those constant Red ClOSS work- el s Pll t 10 29 442 haUl S of their tIme In the wOlk 100m or the eQUivalent of 5 525 days and turn- ed Otlt 5 525 gal ments fOI the Red ClOSS They al e alwavs m need of \\ 01 kelS fOI surgical dl essmgs \1 hlch the\ make through Thm sday The "ork Ioom IS open dalh at 9 30 until 4 also open eventng 7 to 10 Fnda:vs they sew on gal ments for the Red Cross --.--- Drive Opens May 14; House-to-House Canvass Scheduled Reveal Plans For 7th War Loan Here Lower Merion and Haverford Schools Represented High Pupils Given Business Tests ays Heyburn Will t Wage Tax Bill Die In Committee County League, Backed by 24,000 Signatures, Telegraphs State Senator For Action; 'We Do Not Intend to Forget', They Warn; Edmonds Also On Finance Committee MIS Joseph N Pew challman oC the camp and HospItal Com nllttee of the Mam Lme Red ClOSS has leQuested that anyone who can donate one 01 mOl e of the follow Ing al tlcles which a1 e badly need ed by com alescen t vetel ans should bllng them to the Red ClOSS Head QUaltels 111 Aldmole at Andelson and Montgomen A\e Q1 call Aid mOle 3100 Thlee Type" lltel s <stand al d) t\\ 0 Electllc Pl1onogl aphs <poltablel Vlctlolas (Ulgent need) Vlctlola I ecO! dS-Ile\\ new Playmg and Pmochle calds (new 01 usedl SponsOl fOI MO\les (tWice monthlY at $10 $20 a month) 12 Stlalght back chans SIX Benches mo backS-SIX feet long) CUI tams <kItchen 15-33 mehes \\ Ide by 52 mches long two 28 mch "Ide 36 inch long 13- 32 mch Wide bY 39 J1lc!les long) two Electllc plates \stove \\lth tluee units) thlee Pelcolatols capacity tv. 0 Qual ts two Has sO( ks SIX large cabmet 1adiOS (stmd\) one Tenor Saxophone one set of TI ap DI ums and Bass one TI umpet Bb one Base Fiddle SIX MUSIC stands 24 Olchestla hons SIX bMeballs Chalges that State Senator Weldon B Hevbum of Dela- wal e County was alhgl1lTIg hImself \\ Ith PhIladelphIa polIti- cIans to Impose the "I1llqUltous ,'age tax 011 suburban reSI- dents were made thIS "eek b) the Wage Plotest League of --------------+Delawale County Red Cross Seeks Senatol ieybUln gave hlS A "d F pledge to the Lealtue and to Labor Recreation I s or in Dela"a11' County that he would Convalescent put hiS lep;lslatl\e shouldel behind n= the bill mtloduced 111 the State Leglslatlll e by Benlamm F JameS 31 d Villanova which would abol1sh the tax fOl non lesldents of PhIl- adelphia Because the bill has lemamed 10 the finance comffilttee of the State Senate whele Heyburn IS malollty leader offlcels of the Tax League ale SUSjJlCIOUS that the Dela"ale County Senatol Is up to the old plcklmg tllck of lettmg the measUl e die 11l commIttee They chal ge that m 1939 1941 and 1943 Senatol He) bUl n had a pal t In krlhng bills that \I ould have aboltshed the \\ age tax State Senatol Fl anklm Spencer Edmonds of Montgomery County and Senato! Geol ge B Scal1ett of Chestel County ale membels of the finance commIttee along with Heyb{u n 10 WhICh the bill is be- mg.held \'\ III Not Forget We do not mtend to fOiget de- clal ed Eugene J Keenan chaIr- man of the legIslative committee of the Wage PlOtest League that cn culated petitIOns and obtamed 24000 sl/:natUles agamst the tax The Wage Plotest League has thl ea tened politIcal actIOn agamst Senatol Heybllln \lho has placed a fact lO11al ticket m the field agarnst the Dela\lale County Re- pubhcan OlganlzatlOn At the head of Hevbums Dela\latl' Coun- Repubhcan pllman tIcket IS E Wallace Chad\\ Ick Rose Valley candIdate fOJ 01 phans Court Joseph N multI mllllonalre Republican Pal tv benefactor \\ ho told an offiCIal of the Tax League ,e\ el al \\ eeks ago that he dldn t mmd hiS \I age tax He then I efell ed the League offiCial to Senato! Heybmn Pew lIves in Ardmole On ApllI 18 Keenan sent the follo\\ mg teiegl am to senator Heybuln Judge Senator He\ bum IS alhgned witb fallm e a get the James AntI \\ age Tax BIll to the FloOr of the Senate as promised is 10- defenSIble FOl SIX yeals yoU have helped PhIladelphIa to Impose the ImQUltous \\ aRe tax on the v.ork- l1lg people of OUI connty We shall notlf\ the people that whIle vou \leH' elected flom Dela\\ale Coun t\ on have looked af- tel the Intel ests of Philadelphia to the detl1ment of YOUI own con- stituents For the foUl th session of the Leglslatl1le staltmg \\lth the BI ethellck Bills 111 1939 1941 and 1943 and endmg \\ Ith the Jafes Bill m 1945 \ ou have failed to lift a fin gel to end the tax on Dela wale County \\age earners and "Ith the aId of the Mal tm Admm- ISt18 tlOn fO! ces \l1th "hlcl1 YOU al e allgned am people al e agam pav. lng We do not 10tend to fOlget Three Men to Fill Shoes Formerly Worn By Anderson Robinson Named Basketball Coach Seventh VVar Loan Real Challenge Says Congressman Congressman Samuel K Mc- Connell Jr wrltlnr fro Washrnrton sets the keynote of the Seventh War Loan Drive In a letter of congratulation to Thomas Barnes II chalrma of the Main Line Bond Drive Committee This nation writes Con- cressman McConnell • Is on the eve of another War Bond Drive A real challenge IS presented to the American people thiS time The quota for indIvidual sub sCllptions has beel\. set at a higher figure than for any pre- vious drive Hard sustained ef- fort and real sacrIfice wIll be lequhed in order to reach the goal Amertca has always reJoic- ed at the thought of a diffiCUlt task The people of thiS coun try have responded to the call of duty whenever they have been informed clearlY of the need It has been aptlY stated that much good work Is spoil ed by the lack of a lIttle more On threshold of a great victory It is unthinkable that there "ill be any Sign of falter- Ing no" 'Dam Bill' Now in House Committee, Sportsmen Hear Rod and Gun Club Plans June Outing The Lowel Mellon Rod and Gun Club at Its monthly meetinp; last Wednesday mp;ht chose Sunday aftetnoon June 10 for Its annual SPI mg PlcntC and outmp; at the Nash Farm on SPI ague Rd just outside of Narbel th A full outmg plOgum of cast mg and othel events IS planned and chan men of the Club s committees "Ill meet with Field Captain Etnest Jenkins of Narbel th at an eally date to com plete the schedUle RepOl t on Bill The Club s delegates to the MontgomelY County Fedel atlOn of Sportsmen s Clubs 1epol ted that the so called dam bill sponsOl ed by the SPOI tsmen s 01 gantzatlOns of Montp;omelY lncludmg the Lowel Mellon glOUp had been mtroduced by Charles H Bl un nel Jl of NOI rlstown and " as undel consldelatiOn In the HlIltse Committee on Counties at HaUlS bUlg Lambelt Cadwaladel of Villanm a 15 chan man of thiS committee The bill \\ould Delmlt counties that wish to do so to I ebullt 1e pan and main tam dams wlthm then lespectl\e county bOldels At the Qual telly meetmg of the County Federation held 10 NOll1S The depal tment of bus1l1ess E'du town two befole the Lowel cation of Lowel Mel10n Hlp;h Mel10n meetmg It" as po1Oted out co 11 I & 'S Bennel dn ectol that 10 Montgome COIlJ'ltyal<ll'l€ ."r. " thel e al e mOl ethan 50 old gllSt I plaYed host to 75 students f1 om mill dams as" ell as sevel al lal ge eight SUbUl ban schools APIll pI e "al WPA constl ucted dams 25 The natIOnal clellcal ablltt\ that al e badly III need of l 1epan and could be leconstlucted to the tests sponsOled 101llth the Na IJ,enel al advantage of the Stl earns tlOnal Council of BusmesR Educa and the people hvmg along them tlOn and the NatIOnal OffIce Man If the had legal authollty agement AssocIation al e gllAll to lepan them At the same meet thloughout the nation Those s"!ll!r- mR of the County Fedel at !On dele dents In the bus mess educatIon de ga tes flom 11 SpOI tsmen s 01 Ram pal tments of the \ aiioUS zatlOns mcludlng the Lowel Mel \\ ho successfullY pass the teRts rn Ion glOUP sent telegl ams to Rep the dlffel ent bUSIness sublects 1e lesentatl\e Cad\\aladel and Ulged <elve a celtltlcate of plotlclenC\ In othel 1eSldents of the to n01 mal tune thiS cel tlficate set ves contact him and then leglslatol s as an entlee to a good offIce PPSI to IeQuest thiS bill tlO-¥he tests \\ el e adml11lRtel ed by PlofesROI William L Ernolf of the Umvel SltV of Pe'nnsyl\ ama Guests obsel vmg the admnuotl atlon of the tests "el e Robel t F ,BI 0\\ n Cyn" \d chait man of the edllca tlOn committee of the PhIladel phla Chap tel of NOM A and C P Eckels fOl melh of the Um velsltv of Plttsb1l1 gh and past pleSldent of the Easteln Commel clal Teachel s AsooclatlOn The subUl ban schools I epi esen ted \\ ere AbIngton Amblel Collll1gdale Dm lestoll n Havel fOI d Lansdowne Norustown and Lo\\ el Menon Studen ts flom Lo\\ el MellOn who competed wele Betty Camp bell Betty Watson Pat Cal anagh Mafalda Regll1elli Albel t Ettole Jean Stllald Eleanol MIliCI Jos ephme Cappello D010thy Baslel Alleta Le Cates DolothY GO! t;tJan Rita DI Callo Malv BaileY "ala Tllhnghast and Belmce Ubrlman Students flom Ha\elfold Town ship wele Fiances Blan Audle\ Fox Jean FI arne Chllstme Payton and Jeanne VlOtante Mrs. Ethel P. Grimm Succumbs After Illness Funelal selV1ces fOI MIS Ethel P Gllmm WIfe of DI Geol ge Webs tel Gllmm Lowel MellOn Tow nshlp mllk contlol officel Will be held Aplll 27 at 2P M at hel home 3940 LakeSIde Rd Al d mOIl' MIS Gllmm succumbed at hel home Tuesda\ She had been III smCe last Septembel She IS SUI Vl\ ed by hel hUsband one son Cpl Wilham W Glnnm \\ ho IS aSSIgned to a hOSPital ShIP and hel mothel MIS PId- geon Lestel Intelment WIll be III LaUl el Hill Cemetel y Main LIne Workers Reach 70 Per Cent. Of Quota Mam Lme 1eSldents have con tl buted $50 378 to date 11\ the 1945 campaign of the SalvatIon Al my to 1alse $750 000 10 the gleatel PhiladelphIa alea ThIS places tIle Mam Lme Di\ I slOn of the Sah atlon Al m\ dllve Vi Ithlll 70 pel cent of ItS goal With thlee fomths of the tIme alreadv elapsed III the month long cam palgn fOI funds Quota fOl the Mam Lme Dn ISlOn IS $71 800 fhe campaign \\ III end \11th a vIctory luncheon next \\ eek Quola 111 Sight Om Quota IS 1ll SIght declaled MI s Albel t W Mosley chau man of the MalO Line Com1ll\ttee m IIn..- ng tlle I epOI t We not onh expect to 1each Oul goal when the campaIgn ends but we may even sm paso It bY next \\ eek Re.tUlns flom the annual Salva- tIOn Alm\ Golf TOUlnament con ducted bY the Bala Golf Club last Sunda\ boosted the 1ecelpts 0\ el tire \\ eek end OffiCIals of the club Iepol ted that $1 737 had been Ialsed tlu OUllh the tOlll nament Leader Honored GenelRl E\angehne Booth 101 mel mtell1atlOnal leadel of the Sah atlon AI my and daughtel of Genel al Wilham Booth foundel of the "elfale organizatIOn \\as guest of hanOI ThUlsdav at a luncheon of the campaign \\ 01 k- elS 10 the ,BenJamm Flankl10 Hotel An appeal to all those \\ ho 11a\ e not contllbuted \\ as sent out thiS \\ eek Halold S LeDuc genel al chauman of the SalvatIon Almy Mamlenance Fund and Wal WOlk Campaign He laUded the \\ ork ot the 15000 volunteels and saId that \\ Ithout then aid the dllve could not hope to be a success Those \\ ho ha \e ,not been I eached he saId should send then contllbu tlOns m to the neal est SalvatIOn Almy headQual tels tect the ptofesslon since all Plob- lems of medcal policy Will be left to the medIcal members of the boal d of dn ectors At the electIOn of ofticels fo," tv-o veal telms MIS John Y Hubel Jl Havel ford was elect- ed honol'llry Plesldent and MIS Ealle HepbulD Mellon plesldent MI s Hubel who has been PI es- Ident of the counCil smce 1932 was plesented \\lth a blacelet to sel ve as a constant 1emmder of the counCil s apPI eClatlOn of hel leadelshlp bY MIS Ha lie Reed on behalf of the council memoelS and the JumoI Republicans Thankmg the ofticels and chan men for thell \\ 01 k she sa d that of the 350 counCIls 10 the State the Lowel Mellon Nal oel th one IS tll1lQue fO! It IS mad up of mdependent thinking "omen and It IS With a gl eat deal Of gl atltude that I 1etu e as OUI plesldent fm thiS counCil IS my tlammg glound as a went mto the State and now the National 01 gamzatlOn I MIs Eal1e Hepburn ne\\ ly elected plesldent paid a tllbute to the pIOneel mg Job accom phshed bv MIS Hubel and asked fOI the membel s contmued Sl P POI t to enable the counCil to Ie mam the spothght council 1ll Pennsyl vanta Othel officel s elected to sel \ e fOI the ensumg two yeal s \\ I:!l e MIS Call H Zlpf MIS Heln an L Sch\\ al tz MI s Samuel L VeItch MIS Edgal H CoCkllll MIS Theodole A PhilliPS Ml s James A Jensen vIce pI eSldents MIS Joseph F Scull lecoldmg Secl etal y Ml s Scott Tanne- lull COli espondmg sel'l etal MI s HO\l al d S Delany tl easUlIJi rro NARBERTH, PA., mURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1945. Lady Luck and Kelly Pool Pouch Decides Whose Name Will Be First on Ballot Alec Templeton to Play at Dell Concert Alec Templeton populal PIan 1st entel tamel of I adlO and con cel t stage ha!'; been added to the lostel of solOIsts fOI the 1945 °ea at Robm Hood Dell-a letUln engagement fOI an al tlst \\ ho In Pi e\lous seasons has attl acted I ecOl d audlenc p !'> to the Syl\ an amphltheatle 10 Fallmount Palk ThE' PI ogl am \\ III be tYPI< al of the entel tammg fal e assOCiated \\ Ith Templeton events \\ Ith some \\ ell kno"n Concel to and musIc for solo Plano to exhIbit hiS skIll as a ke\ boal dlst and alai ge number of the chal actellza tlOns and hum OIOUS sketches fOl whIch he IS pal tlculally lloted and admn ed FOI hiS Dell date Templeton plomises a of new acts to gethel "Ith some old fa vOlltes to be I eQuested by the audience Templeton WIll appeal rn the CaUl se of the sevel al Pop con cel ts that are. to be featul ed among the 28 on the seven \\ eeks calendal f1 om June 18 to August 3 on the Pops hst al e Dmah Shm e and Jeanette MacDonald Last Fl1dllv mOll1mg S lIC Chal1es A Bailey of 110 Mellon Nalbelth and SIC J Hal \\ Ick of OlympIa Washlllg ton \\ hom he had blought home on Ius 48 houl hbel ty deCided to ;;'0 flslung down m Mill Cl eek When they 1eached the E'state of ;:,tacey B Llovd about 11 A M thpy sa\\ a pal ked cal III a fIeld t 1e cal occ IPled by two \\ omen apparently asleep Seaman Balle\ opened the CIlI door shook one of the women He then saw the hose attached to the exhaust of the aUl<.moulle and put through the car wmdo" He \\ ent to the maIO house on the estate and called the L<.'wel Mellon POhce Some SIX 01 se\ en veal sago when he "as a Boy Scout Seaman Baue, on anothel flshmg tllP found the body of a man along iVIIll CI eek The two women who dIed m a s llclde pact \\ el e IdentifIed as MIS Paula Kellogg 26 a dl\01cee daughtel of MI and MIS James GlffOld Kellogg of 80 Locust Rd Wmnetka III and MI s ElOIse W Bakel Wlff: of John Tull Baker a soclate PlOfessOl of at Pennsy!l ama State College had both been patients at the Il1stltute fOI Mental HygIene 111 N 49th st PhiladelphIa Seaman BaIley Had Same Experience As a Boy Scout Narberth Lad Finds Salvation Anny Bodies of Suicides Drive Nears Goal the luncheon lneetmg at Havel fOl d COUl t Hotel that thel e IS a gleat pubhc need fOI an effective medIcal msul ance plan He out Imed the bills sponsOl ed bY State SenatOl LOlllS H Fall ell (R Phlla) which would pel mIt the Blue ClOSS expansIon I beheve thIS PI ogl am can be a magmficent contilbutlOn to medIcal sel vIce and hospItal cal e he declaled Although some dOC tOlS beheve thiS IS an entellng wedge fOI sOClahzed medlcme 10 IllS oPilllon these bills fully pia DI Eu:ene P Pen del gl as" speakmg at the annual meetmg of the Lowel Mellon Nal berth Council of Republlcan Women Tuesday Ulged the SUPPOlt of legislatIOn authollzlng the Blue ClOSS to affel medICal as well as hospital benefits DI plofessol of radIOlogy at the Umvelslty of Pennsylvania School of Medlcme and fOlmel preSIdent of the Phil- adelphia County MedIcal SOCiety told the 65 membels Harrisburg DIspatch --- Death or the Farlell bills on the Blue Cross medical plan was accomplished by adoption or a committee lesolutlon to postpone action on them For all leglsla tl\ e Intents and purposes thIs kills the measure Said Sen Louis H Fa rell (R Phlla) Arter The committee ac tlon We were unable to geT them out todal but we feel we have close to a 50 50 chance to get them a It before the session ends However It was apparent Far rell was Whistling In the dark from the co nment by Sen Jacob W Carr fR BItler) chairman or i'he committee The chances are nothing more will be done this session G. O. P. WOMEN HEAR TALK ON BLUE CROSS EXTENSION AS BILL IS KILLED IN SENATE ---...---- --_..---- Olivel E Robmson has been named basketball coach at Lo" el Mellon HIgh School to succeed famous Bill Andel son who 1e Signed last" eek to become athletiC dll ectol at Lafayette College The announcement of Robm son s selection bv F A DuboiS su pel mtendent of schools came somewhat as a surpllse because he \ asn t active In mtelscholastlc basketball thIS past season al though hiS name was mentioned last \\ eek among those eligible m the sYstem Rabmson IS a QUiet likeable young man of 39 who has been a member of the Lowel Mellon faculty smce 1939 He was an out standrng all alound athlete at Washmgton College whele he play ed valslty football basketball and baseball and befOl e coming to L M "as a successfUl coach at Ches tel Berwvn and MOll1stO\\n N J Two ago he coached the basketball team at Havel fOld l:;<.:hool WhIle a membel of the local faculty He was an outstandmR plaYel ill mdependent basketball lanks With a lalgel Quota fOI aftel hIS gladuatlon flom Wash- \Iduals m the 7th Wal Loan Evel wondel \\hv one candidate those lePlesentmR them tben call Ingto!} and he played \\Ith BIOok DIl\e than eveI befole all leSI gets the top POSition on the bal out the numbels of the peBets Ime In the Mam Lme League dm dents of the Lo\\el Mel10n Nal lot at a PllmalY 01 Genelal Elec they lecelved which ale taken ing the 1936-37 season belth alea wele Ulged ohlS \\eek tlOn "hen there ale two or mOle do\\n by the stenoglaphel of the He has had httle opportunity to to make then bond pUichases lUnmng fOI the same office? Well Boald of ElectIOns The method become known to the Lowel Mel flom SOhCltOls m the to\\nslup 01 it s not a mattel of knowmg uoed IS this the lowest numbE'1 ed Ion SP01 ts publiC because he has bOlough bv Thomas BaInes 2d 0omeone nOl IS It a mattel of pellet lecelves the first pOSitIOn been jayvee coach In baseball an chan man of the local Bond Dllve the alphabet It s Simply Ladv on the ballot the second lowest assistant m and football Committee Luck helself batting away at the numbel gets the next 01 second and he helped out 10 the lOti a- The campaign fOI l11dllldllals SPitballs hUlled b' old man la\\ place on tile ballot and sO fOI th mUlal basketball pi oglam SUbSCllptlons opens Mav 14 al of a\elages In thiS wIn each candidate has Just Robl11son was ap- though It IS nO\I 10 plogles tOl In mOl e dlg111fied langallge hel e equal chance of dl a \\ 101{ the fa v- pointed head of Lo" el Mellon s the 1I1dustllal dIVIsIon Sfllcs of IS \\hat happens \\hen two 01 oled top pmntlon on the ballot Sum mel lecleatlon Ploglam E F G and C bonds maoe be mOl e candidates file petitIOns fOI \I hlCh students of PI actlCal poll I Supermtendent DubOIS confu m t\\ een APlll 9 and Juh 7 \\ III be the same otl'lce on the Republi tiCS say IS wOlth flam 10 to 25ledthelepoltthatnopelSOn\\OUld cledited to the dl1ve can 01 Democlatlc ticket A dav pelcent of the \otes rast at a be deslj;\nated as athletiC dhectOl Canvass IS set bv the County Boald of pIlmalV Ol electIOn Of COUlse The duties of thiS POSition WIll be We ale plans fOI an 1ll ElectIons soon aftci the final day thry Quahfy thiS bv porntrnlt out assumed b\ the Pllnclpal and b\ tenslve house to house CAmass or fOI w al of petitIOns has that the bettel candidates a1 e the vice pllnclpal GeOll/:e Gllbel t the tel1ltol y Batnes said It pa"sed All CAndidates \\ here known to the votel s of the umt and Vmcent Peal ce "Ill not be pOSSIble of caUl se to thel e IS a contest al e notIfied of dOlnlt the vot1l1!t the less the top A new teachel Will be selected contact e\ el yone dUI ing the fil St thIS day and lllvited to appeal posItion means to teach phySical educatIOn in the few days of the camPaign Thea personally to dlaw fOI then own Whele thele ale no contests for high school but will not be deslg- tOle \\e ulge all lesldents to sale numbel if theY \\ ish If they do otl'lce but two 01 mOle peIsons nated as head of the phYSical then bond SUbscllptlOns untl It not appeal at the time of the al e to be nom mated then the tl amlng depal tlnent ThiS tl1acher sohcltOl <ails on them Those \\ ho dlawlng \\hlch IS usuallY ht"ld m names ale allanged In alphabetl has not yet beeh selected \\I\I1t to buy thE'll bonds eadv the bOlll d loom 01 th< <ount y 1:.11 U1 del SUll e lIU Ollt' cundldale III othel WOI ds at least thl t'e should !tpl 111 louch \\lLh tllPI COllllnlSSIOIWls of1lce SOIlll'lllle Ca\oll d lJy on the bal- pelSOllS Will be d01111{ tile WOlle comllllllllty Chll.111l111n who will se eD epiC ent Is a I ed to dlll\\ fill lot handled plevlOllslv bv Andelson that II SOhCltOI VlSllS them the absent candidate At last TlllllSday s drawing for He leaves huge shoes indeed The chief clelk of the Boald of places 011 the PlimalY ballot at "••-- III evelY ple\ious Bond Dllve Elections Is In chalRe of the dlBW- the Comt House fewel than Board of IIealth Ballles, contlulled Lilt' Luwel ing Fl0m 111.9- lists ot candidates t\\ enty appeal ed pel- The Lowel Mellon TownshIp Melloll N al bel th al ea has ex he calls the names fOI II. paHlcu- souallv although thele Well' 64 BORld ot Health lepolted SiX new ceeded its quota by a substantial lalofflce If they ale Plesent they contests \\hele drawinRs weIe cases of chicken pox one neW malgrn We can and must do lL all' handed a black pellet bealing neCeSSalY to decide the Older of 'T'hat means we need the ti case of German measles one new al{am ... a numbel which the chief clelk listinlt A total of 1200 petl ons case of measles 11 nl!W cases of coopelatlon of eVelY Citizen In shakes out of R leathel pouch- wele filed with the Countv Board mumps and three new CMes of I buylnR bonds here 01 If commIt like container a. device velV sim- of Elections -With some 1000 can- scarlet fever for the week ending menlill are necessary at omcel' or llar to that -used In the Ilame of didates to be nomlbated at the April "0 Ccmttnued on Pt1{1e TWO Kelly candidates. or PrlmB.l'Y on JUt1e'19 .. Simon Crunch Opines: 00 ling the bells and file the guns fOl Uncle Sam has licked the HUllS' This Cl Y Is heal d the cuuutl y0 I:!I f1 0111 city desk lo Vil- lage stOl e All s over but the final shout the lines of malch Rle all laid out and wOlkers feel they can let down- the job Is done let s ltO to town I But prudence tells us we should -wait till vic. tory'S sure to celebrate Blood Donor Unit Here May 17, 18, 19 The MobIle Ul1lt of the Blood Donor Sel vIce Will be at Red ClOSS headqual tel s 10 Al dmol e Of! May 17 18 and 19 The houl s of appomtment on Thill sday and Fllday ale flom 1245 thloulth 515 on SatUldaY the hOUIS chang, to 10 15 thlOUih 3 15 Ap- po1Otments may be made fOl these hOUl s In Al dmOl e OJ for any othel comeOlent time at the pelmanent PhiladelphIa Blood Donol Centel by callmg Ald- mOle 3100 OUR Says FamilIes Of War Heroes Are Being Mulcted Says Pew-Grundy- Taylor Fall to Recog- nize Ills of Party Bell Raps GOP Leadership Again Services Held For Clement J. McCrea Funeral selvlces were held fOI Clement J McClea 302 Woodside Ave Narbel th flam Oliver Ball s at 830 A M Wednesday molO- Ing follo\\ed by Solemn Requiem Mass at St Malgarets Church Intelment was pllvate Mt McClea assoCIated with the Ivanla Railroad fOI many yeals and a lesldent of NalbeIth for mOl ethan 25 yeals died at ,Blyn MaWl HOSPital last Fllday mght SUI vlving all' hiS wife Malgal- etta McClea a daughte l Betty a student at Lowel MQllon High School and t\\ a sons Clement J McClea JI and John Rlchatd McClea who IS 10 the Nether- lands East Indies LIBRARY GLIDER PILOT tll\PSERTft CO" 'u, LTY WLT'DSClR AVE, NAR8ERTH, PA. NEWS OF THE MEN AND WOMEN IN SERVICE Capt Emil Roesici 340 Bombel GIOUp of 504 Essex Ave letUln- ed AplII 22 aCtel one yeal ovel selts duty rn Itah Capt Roeslel and MaJ Wilham L Rittenhouse W:vnne\vood Rd Mellon wele of I the same squadlon MaJ Rltten house has bcen Iepol ted mlssmg SlIlce Mal 7 Capt Roeslel sa\1 Mal Rittenhouse s ship damaged and sa \\ the men bailout 0\ el tellltOlv Smce then thele hl! s been 110 \\ 01 d flom the (I e\\ ffii but thel e IS mOIl' than a 50 50 I@: 1 chanr.e that they be pllson 1;1" of \\al Capt Roeslel 1eccn ed the F /0 GEORGE M SChRODER Plesldentlal Umt CItatIOn the Fhght Officel Schlodel son of DPC and the An Medal \11th MI and MIS G 0 Schlodel of Bettel p1mclples leadelshlP and Se\en oak leaf clustels 506 Dudle\ A\e Nalbelth IS a candIdates \\ele advocated fOl the III glIdel PIlot stationed In Fl allce Ills of the Repubhcan Pal ty by Lt 1o,t LlPlItcnRnt WillIam S 0 Sui 0\ el seas 0Ince Febl ual of Gm John C Bell Jl Wynnewood !ivan son of Cornmandel and Ml s thIS yeal he entel ed the sel vIce m anOthel attack on the Pew W R 0 sulllvan of 85 Wl11dSOl 111 July 1942 '" Gl undY Taylol boss conti 01 in A\ e Nal bel th \\ as one of elRht Bethlehem TuesdaY night men lescued bY a Na\ \ PBY Cle\\ It \" Ilham ClIpham son of Ml Bell" hom the bosses tIled to "'hen 11ls B 29 \1 as fOl ced dO\lll and MIS Challes B Chpsham of sldetl ack WIth an $18000 a yeal m the Bav of Bengal lecpntl\ 430 H;l\elfOld A\e Nalbelth Ie JUdgeship appomtment sevelal The men lIele PIcked UP aftel tUlned to dut\ \11th the 34th DI weeks ago Ulged a Republican 24 houls 10 the ,\atel VIOlOn m Ital\ aftel spendmg an New Deal fOI Pennsylvania , f 80 da\ fmlough at home Speakmg befole the NOlthamp Ford F MOnlile AAM 11c 0 ton CounCIl of Republican Women 322 Woodbme A\e Nalbelth IS I MJ and MIs Fled S DaVIS Bell ClltlclZed Joseph N Pe\l JI 110\\ statIOned at San Diego Cal 432 O\len Rd W\nne\\ood Ie Aldm01e multI mllllOnalJe palty as an l1lStillctOl of In dl allcs cel\ cd a cableRI am benefactor of A1 dmol e and hIS po In the sel \Ice for SIX ,cal s I APIII 24 flom then son Sgt Fred htIcal fllends SenatOl M Harvey Momoe selved t\\O yeals m San S DaVIS Jr "ho had been Ie TavlOl Dauphm county boss and " Jooeph Gl undy Bucks County Juan I POI ted a pllsonel of \\ al statmg leadel of fallmg to take heed HIS Wife l1\es \'dth hel mothe l Good health don t \lolly-Iettel flom the defeat the palty sutl'el- at the abo\ e•ad?1 e:;s \1111 follo\\ ed last No, embel Paul S I\llson 19 son of MI * If the same thmg had happen- and Ml s Chllllrs C Mason of I Da\ld S Duncan JI of 6 Sa ed to a busmessman he \\ ould have E:ssex A\ e Nal berth \\ as Iccrnth jbme A\ e Nal bel th has been PIO I \\ or ked night and to ::>Jomoted to selgeant He IS a1 motcd to lhst l1eutenant the leasons fOI the k dlsahstehl land to COil ect the mlsta es \I IC 1a ael1al jnllU1el on aB 24 L b la 01 been made and to plan for a suc oombel I\lth thp 15th AAF \\ IllIam S 0 SlIlIn an oC 85 1 cessful futUl e WIth ral e excep AIl1\mg Olelseas last Decem Wmdsol Ale NalbE'lth haR Ie tlonR the leadels of the Republ1 Del he has f1o\\n mOle lal 15l centh been plomoted to filst heu I can paltv have faIled to lealize 'ombat mISSIOn agamst Gel m n tenant the \I eaknesses and mistakes of IOUI pal t\ and conseQuenth theY Growth of Narberth Depicted in Pageant Presented by School Pupils and Staff specltlcally exempted Gov Ed \\ al d Mal tm fI om hIS clltlClsm An hIs! ollcal pageant deplct1l1g the g\(l\\ th of Nal beIth Outhnmg a 10 pomt plogIam BOI ough th I aug h the llle:5entatlOn of ,;cenes lal gel' taken IfOl lus pal Bell ad\ ocated Ie 01 ganizatlOn of the State com flom Its hl,;t)\\ \\a,; at the NaIbel!h Publlc IUlttee He called fOI a full time School on ApII] 19 20 and 21 I selected by The pagelll1t entItled A Communl1\ commemo I He ad\ocated state county and Clt\ lobs be given letUl mng war tatlllg the :JOth annl\elsal, of the BOlough \\a<: \\lJtten Rnd vetelans and that th. palty give l'les€nted h, the te IChels and l JU l)l!s of the <:choo! The "h l\\ mOle leCOgmtlon to youth gen- t' elally blought to hie authentIC JI1cldents taken f10m actual hIs The LIeutenant GO\ elnor also I f m ged that the pal ty pay mOl e Wllca acts attentIOn to mdependents He saId \\ J DIPnnen Plmclpal of the school dllected the afIan they could be attlacted to the Follml1ng ale the rplsodes as the\ \\eJe p esented 111 the pageant GOP by bettel Pllllciples leader- shIp and candIdates I andmg of the \\ elRh Quake. s ---- Ha \ 1111' obt nned OJ 000 aCI ps of land In Alllellca flom WillIam W N f Penn thlough John ap Thomas and Ed\\ald ap Jones a Palt\ nf arns ext 0 In [01 t\ WelRh Quakel s landed at Upland August 14 1682 FIndln I then pUlcllasE' alIead\ Rettled the\ deCIded to accept the offel of of tbe Schu\lklll So settled the Welsh 111 the of On Memon·al Fraud Re\ olutlOl1!\1 \ Da\s at Sh eellcr s Ta\el Il Tile land upon 11I1ICh Stleppel s Ta\eln nO\1 the Gene al Wa\np Inn II as blllit \ as fil st 0\\ ned bY Ed\1 al cl Jones It stood along t p fi t hOI ot gllfal e 111 thIS sec t on Old Lancastel Road nO\\ Mont gomel \ PIke ThlOUgh Re\ olutlonal \ Wal da\ s It stood a::. a lanQ mal k a stoppmg place fOl Ilch and POOl alIke Genel al \\ a\ Ill' 11111 Aft!'1 the ReI olut lanai \ Wal StlPepl'1 s Ta\ el n bee ame knol n a e the GenPI al Wavne Inn The del elopment of land the bUIldlllg of the tUlllplke and the nc\\ PhIladelphIa and ColumbIa RallI oao I unnmg close b, made the Inn a common meetmg place \\ hell' tI P Iltv of bemg \ Ictmuzed by cel tam futUl e ot the commul1It\ \1 as antICIPated or despall ed of FOI a Ion mdl\ Iduals gloups and Olgamza time It \\as the sIte of the local post office sltultted mld\la\ bet\lcclJ tlOns who all' conductmg plomo- l\Iellom Ille and LIbel t\\ Ille nOI\ the POI tlOn of Nal bel th bOldel1ng tlOnal schemes m wluch publIshed Montgomel\ A\enue neal est Almy casual tv llRts plovlde the Hnskllll:" Bee at the EdWald PrICe Homestead b SIS of flaudulent explOItation Le\ellll!( s Map of Lo\\er Mellon To\\nshlp (dated 1851) sho\\s NOlman L John dnectol Mont tilE' land NOlth of Ha\clfOld and Mel10n Roads o\\ned Ann Pllce gomel\ County Department of Jackson and Ed\\ald R Pl1ce The ollgmal Pllce (Rees) homestead I "'al Vetelans Affans coutJoned II as 111 Loll PI Mellon TO\I nshlp at the NOl th end of Blookhul t todaY" \ A\ e It \\ as used ))\ LOld COIl1\\ allIs as hiS headQual telS II hlle 11 InfOl mat IOn Indlcatmg that such thIS \ ICInlt, Anot hel PI lee homestead that of Ed\\ al d PI Ice sf II fl audulent schemes deSIgned to stands dlagOnal1\ aClOSS flom Mellon Meet1l1g no\\ knOll n as tl mulct the familIes of Amellcan 11' ""I helOes ale now bemg con John A Mall leI Plopelt\ It IS flOm thiS estate and tl1at ol1gmall\ d cted has lecenth come to the o\\ned b\ Ann PIU e Jackson latel by the FUleys that the NOlth ,5IQe attentron of John through the Wal of Nal belth \\ as de\ eloped tment Platform GOSSIp at Elm Station These schemes take on valYmg Llbeltyvllle \Ias the filst lallIoad statIOn In tlus \ICl11lt\ on the fOlms the most common of which Old PhIladelphia and ColumblR RaIlroad \\lllCh Ian close b, tnt' IS to wllte the next of km as ap school PI opel t\ In 1850 the Penns\ II ama Ralli oad bought thIS 82 peal1ng m the newspapel casualty mile Ime and the ne\1 statIOn \1 as gl\ en the name of Elm bl WillIam 11 ts seekmg fm thel infO! matlOn Thomas \\ho had g1\en the glOund on "hlch the statIOn \\as bUIlt on the soldlel hsted as a casualty The VIllage South of statIOn had been caIled Elm named fm the The next of km IS advised that the Thomas home 111 Wales Latel the name \\ as changed to Nal bel th deceased soldlel IS to be given a pIesumably bl Geolge B Robelts PleRldent of the pa1tlculal and special mche m a Rall10ad who lenamed mRm of the statIOns fOI to\\ns m Wales flOm so called hall of fame 01 helo s \\hlCh the eally settlels had come memol1al book 01 photoglaphlc la\ out GI antmg the Chal tcr DepoSIts In advance or other The -Nalbelth Bank ASSOCIatIOn Olganlzed Octobel 9 1889 ap cash lemlttance leQuhements all' pointed a commIttee on June 13 1893 to 100estlgate the ad set fOlth and as soon as the lemlt of obtamll1l( a bOl ough chal tel A pi opelly SIgned petitIOn \\ as ap I ance IS 1ecelved fl om the next proved by the Gland but set aSIde by Judge Aalon S SWaltz km the tlansactlOn IS closed and on the baSIS of objectIOns plesented by lay and busmess glOUpS In anothel Amellcan flghtmg man s May 1894 a nell petitIOn cOll1cldlllp; \llth the Judge s deCISIOn \\ as family has been VIctimized by thiS presented and lias lepolted fa\OJabb the Gland JlllV on June 7 nr\\E'st and most despicable fOlm 1894 On JanualY 21 1895 the pctltlon \\as confilmed by Judge of wmdlel Swartz and Nalbel th \\ as mcOl pOlated as a bOlough The United States Post Office Earh m Narberth Depaltment has bf'en takmg vlg Mam of the pll\lleges \\e enlOY today m Nalbelth had then be OlOUS actIOn In all such cases as fast as theY ale uncoveled Postal ginmngs 111 the nmetleR The pubhc school \1 as opened b\ LOllet flalid Oldels denymg the use of Mellon To\\nshlp m Jallllan 1892 accommodatmg pupils who had the U S malls to these casualt, fOrmelly attended Wvnne\lood School and the LO\\el Mellon Acao hst swrndlels ale ISsued and cum emy The filst Nalbelth Schuol..veal began Septembel 2 1895 \l1th mal prosecutIOn follows m those 44 pupIls Electllclty was secllleCl 111 1893 The Nalbelth Fne Com c ses "hele the facts \\anant such pany "as 01 gamzed m 1897 The 1ellglOus hfe of the bOl ough gl e\1 actlon apace \\ Ith the found1Og of chul ches and latel the Y M C A The Boal d of Health \1 as orgaluzed In 1895 Gas hues \\ el e laId 10 1896 Welcome Home In the decade follo\\ lI1g 1910 Nal bel th gl e\\ III populatIon flom 1700 to 3700 The Nal bel th CIVIC ASSOCiatIOn became an actl\ e fOlce 111 the bOlOU!!h ItS t\\O outstandmg accomplIshments belllg the foundmg of OUI Tml n newspapo tll st pubhshed Octobel 15 1914 and the de\elopment of Nalblook Palk begun III 1915 The filst BOIi Scout Tloop \\ as stllJ ted 111 the same YeAI WOlld Wat I found thp. bOl ou"ll en/:aJ:ed m many act!\ Itles While homes suffel ed the anxiety attendl11g the ab..<;pnce of Rons 10 sel \ lee N1I1e Nal bel th men made the supreme sacllflce In 1919 the Halold D Speakman Post of the Amellcan Legion \las fOlmed and today still senes 111 the mterests of \eterans of WOlld Wal I and II Progress m Narberth The closmg of the 1/ M CAm 1920 left Nal bel th \\ lthout a lecreatlOn centel ThiS need was met by the acqUIsItIOn of a play gIOund.m 1922 upon wluch \\ as built 111 1926 the Community Blnld ing alound \\Iuch much oC the commumty 111e centels Inlo it \\IIS mOled the C011l1l1Wllty Liblal, 1 1Y26 rhe ImbUc school pan ulation had outglown the local school facilities and m September 1923 the senior high school students wele tlansferred to Lowel Mellon High In this el a \\ e secmed police Plotectlon (1922) the milk and building codes II ele enacLed (1922 and 1923 1 espectlvely) and till ee \ oting plecincts \\ ele established (}924) Youth Looks For"ard In lecent ;o,C"dlS the olganizatlons and institutions of the bOlOUllh ba\e continued to lender service and keep alive a community sPirit unsurpas5ed anywhere We continue to train youth for citizenship to Cll1TY forward the work in their bome town their state and Nation G M 3/C Albert FOll est A\ e home Prmceton Capt Harold BLane burn La Penn honOl dlschal ged Army Lt Col Wharton B Carroll Gypsy La Wynne\\ ood aftel two yeals melseas duty IS awaltmg transpOl tatlOn home .. .

OUR rro - docshare01.docshare.tipsdocshare01.docshare.tips/files/4965/49657890.pdfThose constant Red ClOSS work ... told an offiCIal of the Tax League ... In a letter of congratulation

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Page 1: OUR rro - docshare01.docshare.tipsdocshare01.docshare.tips/files/4965/49657890.pdfThose constant Red ClOSS work ... told an offiCIal of the Tax League ... In a letter of congratulation

PRICE FIVS'

HERE ANDTHERE

by BETSY..ANN

M1S GeOllte WOrth 110 EssexAve head of the Red ClOSS ",orkI oom at Elm Hall 1epol ts 169 193stu glcal dl essmRS completed forthe Yeal 1944 In 1932 they made23 000 and 10 1943 85 000. .

Those constant Red ClOSS work­el s Pll t 10 29 442 haUl S of theirtIme In the wOlk 100m or theeQUivalent of 5 525 days and turn­ed Otlt 5 525 gal ments fOI the RedClOSS They al e alwavs m need of\\ 01 kelS fOI surgical dl essmgs\1 hlch the\ make Monda~ throughThm sday The "ork I oom IS opendalh at 9 30 until 4 also openTuesda~ eventng 7 to 10 Fnda:vsthey sew on gal ments for the RedCross

--.---

Drive Opens May 14;House-to-HouseCanvass Scheduled

Reveal Plans For7th War Loan Here

~1

Lower Merion andHaverford SchoolsRepresented

High Pupils GivenBusiness Tests

ays Heyburn Willt Wage Tax Bill

Die In CommitteeCounty League, Backed by 24,000 Signatures,

Telegraphs State Senator For Action;'We Do Not Intend to Forget', They Warn;Edmonds Also On Finance Committee

MIS Joseph N Pew challmanoC the camp and HospItal Comnllttee of the Mam Lme Red ClOSShas leQuested that anyone who candonate one 01 mOl e of the followIng al tlcles which a1 e badly needed by com alescen t vetel ans shouldbllng them to the Red ClOSS HeadQUaltels 111 Aldmole at Andelsonand Montgomen A\e Q1 call AidmOle 3100• Thlee Type" lltel s <standal d) t\\ 0 Electllc Pl1onogl aphs<poltablel Vlctlolas (Ulgentneed) Vlctlola IecO! dS-Ile\\new Playmg and Pmochle calds(new 01 usedl SponsOl fOI MO\les(tWice monthlY at $10 $20 amonth) 12 Stlalght back chansSIX Benches mo backS-SIX feetlong) CUI tams <kItchen 15-33mehes \\ Ide by 52 mches long two28 mch "Ide b~ 36 inch long 13­32 mch Wide bY 39 J1lc!les long)two Electllc plates \stove \\lthtluee units) thlee Pelcolatols

capacity tv. 0 Qual ts two HassO( ks SIX large cabmet 1adiOS(stmd\) one Tenor Saxophoneone set of TI ap DI ums and Bassone TI umpet Bb one Base FiddleSIX MUSIC stands 24 Olchestlahons SIX bMeballs

Chalges that State Senator Weldon B Hevbum of Dela­

wal e County was alhgl1lTIg hImself \\ Ith PhIladelphIa polIti­

cIans to Impose the "I1llqUltous ,'age tax 011 suburban reSI­

dents were made thIS "eek b) the Wage Plotest League of--------------+Delawale County

Red Cross Seeks Senatol ieybUln gave hlS

A "d F pledge to the Lealtue and to LaborRecreation I s or in Dela"a11' County that he would

Convalescent Ve4,~rans put hiS lep;lslatl\e shouldel behindn= the bill mtloduced 111 the State

Leglslatlll e by Benlamm F JameS31 d Villanova which would abol1shthe tax fOl non lesldents of PhIl­adelphia

Because the bill has lemamed10 the finance comffilttee of theState Senate whele Heyburn ISmalollty leader offlcels of the TaxLeague ale SUSjJlCIOUS that theDela"ale County Senatol Is up tothe old plcklmg tllck of lettmgthe measUl e die 11l commItteeThey chal ge that m 1939 1941and 1943 Senatol He) bUl n had apal t In krlhng bills that \I ouldhave aboltshed the \\ age tax

State Senatol Fl anklm SpencerEdmonds of Montgomery Countyand Senato! Geol ge B Scal1ettof Chestel County ale membels ofthe finance commIttee along withHeyb{u n 10 WhICh the bill is be­mg.held

\'\ III Not ForgetWe do not mtend to fOiget de­

clal ed Eugene J Keenan chaIr­man of the legIslative committeeof the Wage PlOtest League thatcn culated petitIOns and obtamed24000 sl/:natUles agamst the tax

The Wage Plotest League hasthl ea tened politIcal actIOn agamstSenatol Heybllln \lho has placeda fact lO11al ticket m the fieldagarnst the Dela\lale County Re­pubhcan OlganlzatlOn At thehead of Hevbums Dela\latl' Coun­t~ Repubhcan pllman tIcket IS EWallace Chad\\ Ick Rose ValleycandIdate fOJ 01 phans CourtJoseph N P~" multI mllllonalreRepublican Pal tv benefactor \\ hotold an offiCIal of the Tax League,e\ el al \\ eeks ago that he dldn tmmd paYJ1l~ hiS \I age tax He thenIefell ed the League offiCial toSenato! Heybmn Pew lIves inArdmole

On ApllI 18 Keenan sent thefollo\\ mg teiegl am to senatorHeybulnJudge

Senator He\ bum IS alhgned witb~'om fallm e a get the James

AntI \\ age Tax BIll to the FloOrof the Senate as promised is 10­defenSIble FOl SIX yeals yoU havehelped PhIladelphIa to Impose theImQUltous \\ aRe tax on the v.ork­l1lg people of OUI connty We shallnotlf\ the people that whIle vou\leH' elected flom Dela\\ale Count\ ~ on have conslstentl~ looked af­tel the Intel ests of Philadelphiato the detl1ment of YOUI own con­stituents

For the foUl th session of theLeglslatl1le staltmg \\lth theBI ethellck Bills 111 1939 1941 and1943 and endmg \\ Ith the JafesBill m 1945 \ ou have failed to lifta fin gel to end the tax on Delawale County \\age earners and"Ith the aId of the Mal tm Admm­ISt18 tlOn fO! ces \l1th "hlcl1 YOU al eallgned am people al e agam pav.lng We do not 10tend to fOlget

Three Men to FillShoes Formerly WornBy Anderson

Robinson NamedBasketball Coach

Seventh VVar LoanReal ChallengeSays Congressman

Congressman Samuel K Mc-Connell Jr wrltlnr froWashrnrton sets the keynoteof the Seventh War Loan DriveIn a letter of congratulation toThomas Barnes II chalrmaof the Main Line Bond DriveCommittee

• This nation writes Con-cressman McConnell • Is on theeve of another War Bond DriveA real challenge IS presented tothe American people thiS timeThe quota for indIvidual subsCllptions has beel\. set at ahigher figure than for any pre­vious drive Hard sustained ef­fort and real sacrIfice wIll belequhed in order to reach thegoal

Amertca has always reJoic­ed at the thought of a diffiCUlttask The people of thiS country have responded to the callof duty whenever they havebeen informed clearlY of theneed It has been aptlY statedthat much good work Is spoiled by the lack of a lIttle moreOn ~he threshold of a greatvictory It is unthinkable thatthere "ill be any Sign of falter­Ing no"

'Dam Bill' Now inHouse Committee,Sportsmen Hear

Rod and Gun ClubPlans June Outing

The Lowel Mellon Rod and GunClub at Its monthly meetinp; lastWednesday mp;ht chose Sundayaftetnoon June 10 for Its annualSPI mg PlcntC and outmp; at theNash Farm on SPI ague Rd justoutside of Narbel th

A full outmg plOgum of castmg shoo~mg and othel events ISplanned and chan men of theClub s committees "Ill meet withField Captain Etnest Jenkins ofNarbel th at an eally date to complete the schedUle

RepOl t on BillThe Club s delegates to the

MontgomelY County Fedel atlOn ofSportsmen s Clubs 1epol ted thatthe so called dam bill sponsOl edby the SPOI tsmen s 01 gantzatlOnsof Montp;omelY Count~ lncludmgthe Lowel Mellon glOUp had beenmtroduced by Charles H Bl unnel Jl of NOI rlstown and " asundel consldelatiOn In the HlIltseCommittee on Counties at HaUlSbUlg Lambelt Cadwaladel ofVillanm a 15 chan man of thiScommittee

The bill \\ould Delmlt countiesthat wish to do so to Iebullt 1epan and maintam dams wlthmthen lespectl\e county bOldels Atthe Qual telly meetmg of theCounty Federation held 10 NOll1S The depal tment of bus1l1ess E'dutown two da~s befole the Lowel cation of Lowel Mel10n Hlp;hMel10n meetmg It" as po1Oted out co 11 I & 'S Bennel dn ectolthat 10 Montgome ~ COIlJ'ltyal<ll'l€ ."r. ~o "thel e al e mOl ethan 50 old gllSt IplaYed host to 75 students f1 ommill dams as" ell as sevel al lal ge eight SUbUl ban hll~h schools APIllpI e "al W P A constl ucted dams 25 The natIOnal clellcal ablltt\that al e badly III need of l 1epanand could be leconstlucted to the tests sponsOled 101llth b~ the NaIJ,enel al advantage of the Stl earns tlOnal Council of BusmesR Educaand the people hvmg along them tlOn and the NatIOnal OffIce ManIf the Count~ had legal authollty agement AssocIation al e gllAllto lepan them At the same meet thloughout the nation Those s"!ll!r­mR of the County Fedel at!On dele dents In the busmess educatIon dega tes flom 11 SpOI tsmen s 01 Ram pal tments of the \ aiioUS ~choolszatlOns mcludlng the Lowel Mel \\ ho successfullY pass the teRts rnIon glOUP sent telegl ams to Rep the dlffel ent bUSIness sublects 1elesentatl\e Cad\\aladel and Ulged <elve a celtltlcate of plotlclenC\ Inothel 1eSldents of the Count~ to n01 mal tune thiS cel tlficate set vescontact him and then leglslatol s as an entlee to a good offIce PPSIto IeQuest passR':~_~thiS bill tlO-¥he tests \\ el e adml11lRtel ed by

PlofesROI William L Ernolf of theUmvel SltV of Pe'nnsyl\ ama Guestsobsel vmg the admnuotl atlon ofthe tests "el e Robel t F ,BI 0\\ nCyn" \ d chait man of the edllcatlOn committee of the PhIladelphla Chap tel of NOM A andC P Eckels fOl melh of the Umvelsltv of Plttsb1l1 gh and pastpleSldent of the Easteln Commelclal Teachel s AsooclatlOn ThesubUl ban schools Iepi esen ted \\ ereAbIngton Amblel Collll1gdaleDm lestoll n Havel fOI d LansdowneNorustown and Lo\\ el Menon

Studen ts flom Lo\\ el MellOnwho competed wele Betty Campbell Betty Watson Pat Cal anaghMafalda Regll1elli Albel t EttoleJean Stllald Eleanol MIliCI Josephme Cappello D010thy BaslelAlleta Le Cates DolothY GO! t;tJanRita DI Callo Malv BaileY "alaTllhnghast and Belmce Ubrlman

Students flom Ha\elfold Township wele

Fiances Blan Audle\ Fox JeanFI arne Chllstme Payton andJeanne VlOtante

Mrs. Ethel P. GrimmSuccumbs After Illness

Funelal selV1ces fOI MIS EthelP Gllmm WIfe of DI Geol geWebstel Gllmm Lowel MellOnTow nshlp mllk contlol officel Willbe held Aplll 27 at 2 P M athel home 3940 LakeSIde Rd Al dmOIl'

MIS Gllmm succumbed at helhome Tuesda\ She had been IIIsmCe last Septembel

She IS SUI Vl\ ed by hel hUsbandone son Cpl Wilham W Glnnm\\ ho IS aSSIgned to a hOSPital ShIPand hel mothel MIS Sall~ PId­geon Lestel

Intelment WIll be IIILaUl el Hill Cemetel y

Main LIne WorkersReach 70 Per Cent.Of Quota

Mam Lme 1eSldents have contl buted $50 378 to date 11\ the1945 campaign of the SalvatIonAl my to 1alse $750 000 10 thegleatel PhiladelphIa alea

ThIS places tIle Mam Lme Di\ IslOn of the Sah atlon Al m\ dllveVi Ithlll 70 pel cent of ItS goal Withthlee fomths of the tIme alreadvelapsed III the month long campalgn fOI funds Quota fOl theMam Lme Dn ISlOn IS $71 800 fhecampaign \\ III end \11th a vIctoryluncheon next \\ eek

Quola 111 SightOm Quota IS 1ll SIght declaled

MI s Albel t W Mosley chau manof the MalO Line Com1ll\ttee mIIn..- ng tlle I epOI t We not onhexpect to 1each Oul goal when thecampaIgn ends but we may evensm paso It bY next \\ eek

Re.tUlns flom the annual Salva­tIOn Alm\ Golf TOUlnament conducted bY the Bala Golf Club lastSunda\ boosted the 1ecelpts 0\ eltire \\ eek end OffiCIals of theclub Iepol ted that $1 737 had beenI alsed tlu OUllh the tOlll nament

Leader HonoredGenelRl E\angehne Booth 101

mel mtell1atlOnal leadel of theSah atlon AI my and daughtel ofGenel al Wilham Booth foundel ofthe "elfale organizatIOn \\asguest of hanOI ThUlsdav at aluncheon of the campaign \\ 01 k­elS 10 the ,BenJamm Flankl10Hotel

An appeal to all those \\ ho 11a\ enot contllbuted \\ as sent out thiS\\ eek b~ Halold S LeDuc genel alchauman of the SalvatIon AlmyMamlenance Fund and Wal WOlkCampaign

He laUded the \\ ork ot the15000 volunteels and saId that\\ Ithout then aid the dllve couldnot hope to be a success Those\\ ho ha\ e ,not been Ieached hesaId should send then contllbutlOns m to the neal est SalvatIOnAlmy headQual tels

tect the ptofesslon since all Plob­lems of medcal policy Will be leftto the medIcal members of theboal d of dn ectors

At the electIOn of ofticels fo,"tv-o veal telms MIS John YHubel Jl Havel ford was elect­ed honol'llry Plesldent and MISEalle HepbulD Mellon plesldent

MI s Hubel who has been PI es­Ident of the counCil smce 1932was plesented \\lth a blacelet tosel ve as a constant 1emmder ofthe counCil s apPI eClatlOn of helleadelshlp bY MIS Ha lie Reedon behalf of the council memoelSand the JumoI Republicans

Thankmg the ofticels andchan men for thell \\ 01 k she sa dthat of the 350 counCIls 10 theState the Lowel Mellon Nal oel thone IS tll1lQue fO! It IS mad upof mdependent thinking "omenand It IS With a gl eat deal Ofgl atltude that I 1etu e as ~ OUIplesldent fm thiS counCil IS mytlammg glound as a went mtothe State and now the National01 gamzatlOn I

MI s Eal1e Hepburn ne\\ lyelected plesldent paid a tllbuteto the pIOneel mg Job accomphshed bv MIS Hubel and askedfOI the membel s contmued Sl PPOI t to enable the counCil to Iemam the spothght council 1llPennsylvanta

Othel officel s elected to sel \ efOI the ensumg two yeal s \\ I:!l e

MIS Call H Zlpf MIS Heln anL Sch\\ al tz MI s Samuel LVeItch MIS Edgal H CoCkllllMIS Theodole A PhilliPS Ml sJames A Jensen vIce pI eSldentsMIS Joseph F Scull lecoldmgSecl etal y Ml s Ra~ Scott Tanne­lull COli espondmg sel'l etal ~ MI sHO\l al d S Delany tl easUlIJi

rroNARBERTH, PA., mURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1945.

Lady LuckandKelly PoolPouchDecidesWhose Name Will Be First on Ballot

Alec Templeton toPlay at Dell Concert

Alec Templeton populal PIan1st entel tamel of I adlO and concel t stage ha!'; been added to thelostel of solOIsts fOI the 1945 °ea~on at Robm Hood Dell-a letUlnengagement fOI an al tlst \\ ho InPi e\lous seasons has attl actedI ecOl d audlencp !'> to the Syl\ anamphltheatle 10 Fallmount PalkThE' PI ogl am \\ III be tYPI< al of theentel tammg fal e assOCiated \\ IthTempleton events \\ Ith some \\ ellkno"n Concel to and musIc forsolo Plano to exhIbit hiS skIll as ake\ boal dlst and alai ge numberof the chal actellzatlOns and humOIOUS sketches fOl whIch he ISpal tlculally lloted and admn ed

FOI hiS Dell date Templetonplomises a ~IOUP of new acts togethel "Ith some old favOlltes tobe I eQuested by the audienceTempleton WIll appeal rn theCaUl se of the sevel al Pop concel ts that are. to be featul edamong the 28 on the seven \\ eekscalendal f1 om June 18 to August 3AL~o on the Pops hst al e DmahShm e and Jeanette MacDonald

Last Fl1dllv mOll1mg S lICChal1es A Bailey of 110 MellonA~e Nalbelth and SIC Tedd~

J Hal \\ Ick of OlympIa Washlllgton \\ hom he had blought homeon Ius 48 houl hbel ty deCided to;;'0 flslung down m Mill Cl eekWhen they 1eached the E'state of;:,tacey B Llovd about 11 A Mthpy sa \\ a pal ked cal III a fIeldt 1e cal occ IPled by two \\ omenapparently asleep Seaman Balle\opened the CIlI door shook oneof the women He then saw thehose attached to the exhaust of theaUl<.moulle and put through thecar wmdo" He \\ ent to the maIOhouse on the estate and called theL<.'wel Mellon POhce

Some SIX 01 se\ en veal sagowhen he "as a Boy Scout SeamanBaue, on anothel flshmg tllPfound the body of a man alongiVIIll CI eek

The two women who dIed m as llclde pact \\ el e IdentifIed asMIS Paula Kellogg 26 a dl\01ceedaughtel of MI and MIS JamesGlffOld Kellogg of 80 Locust RdWmnetka III and MI s ElOIse WBakel Wlff: of John Tull Bakera soclate PlOfessOl of plulosoph~at Pennsy!l ama State CollegeThe~ had both been patients atthe Il1stltute fOI Mental HygIene111 N 49th st PhiladelphIa

Seaman BaIley HadSame ExperienceAs a Boy Scout

Narberth Lad Finds Salvation AnnyBodies of Suicides Drive Nears Goal

the luncheon lneetmg at HavelfOl d COUl t Hotel that thel e IS agleat pubhc need fOI an effectivemedIcal msul ance plan He outImed the bills sponsOl ed bY StateSenatOl LOlllS H Fall ell (RPhlla) which would pel mIt theBlue ClOSS expansIon

I beheve thIS PI ogl am can bea magmficent contilbutlOn tomedIcal sel vIce and hospItal cal ehe declaled Although some dOCtOlS beheve thiS IS an entellngwedge fOI sOClahzed medlcme 10IllS oPilllon these bills fully pia

DI Eu:ene P Pendel gl as"speakmg at the annual meetmgof the Lowel Mellon Nal berthCouncil of Republlcan WomenTuesday Ulged the SUPPOlt oflegislatIOn authollzlng the BlueClOSS to affel medICal as well ashospital benefits

DI Pendelgla.~s plofessol ofradIOlogy at the Umvelslty ofPennsylvania School of Medlcmeand fOlmel preSIdent of the Phil­adelphia County MedIcal SOCietytold the 65 membels attendm~

Harrisburg DIspatch---Death or the Farlell bills on

the Blue Cross medical plan wasaccomplished by adoption or acommittee lesolutlon to postponeaction on them For all leglslatl\ e Intents and purposes thIskills the measure

Said Sen Louis H Fa rell (RPhlla) Arter The committee actlon We were unable to geTthem out todal but we feel wehave close to a 50 50 chance toget them a It before the sessionends

However It was apparent Farrell was Whistling In the darkfrom the co nment by Sen JacobW Carr fR BItler) chairman ori'he committee The chances arenothing more will be done thissession

G. O. P. WOMEN HEAR TALK ONBLUE CROSS EXTENSION ASBILL IS KILLED IN SENATE

---...----

--_..----

Olivel E Robmson has beennamed basketball coach at Lo" elMellon HIgh School to succeedfamous Bill Andel son who 1eSigned last" eek to become athletiCdll ectol at Lafayette College

The announcement of Robmson s selection bv F A DuboiS supel mtendent of schools camesomewhat as a surpllse because he\ asn t active In mtelscholastlcbasketball thIS past season although hiS name was mentionedlast \\ eek among those eligible mthe sYstem

Rabmson IS a QUiet likeableyoung man of 39 who has been amember of the Lowel Mellon HlI~hfaculty smce 1939 He was an outstandrng all alound athlete atWashmgton College whele he played valslty football basketball andbaseball and befOl e coming to LM "as a successfUl coach at Chestel Berwvn and MOll1stO\\n N J

Two ~eals ago he coached thebasketball team at Havel fOldl:;<.:hool WhIle a membel of the localfaculty

He was an outstandmR plaYelill mdependent basketball lanks With a lalgel Quota fOI lllrh~aftel hIS gladuatlon flom Wash- \Iduals m the 7th Wal Loan

Evel wondel \\hv one candidate those lePlesentmR them tben call Ingto!} and he played \\Ith BIOok DIl\e than eveI befole all leSIgets the top POSition on the bal out the numbels of the peBets Ime In the Mam Lme League dm dents of the Lo\\el Mel10n Nallot at a PllmalY 01 Genelal Elec they lecelved which ale taken ing the 1936-37 season belth alea wele Ulged ohlS \\eektlOn "hen there ale two or mOle do\\n by the stenoglaphel of the He has had httle opportunity to to make then bond pUichaseslUnmng fOI the same office? Well Boald of ElectIOns The method become known to the Lowel Mel flom SOhCltOls m the to\\nslup 01it s not a mattel of knowmg uoed IS this the lowest numbE'1 ed Ion SP01 ts publiC because he has bOlough bv Thomas BaInes 2d0omeone nOl IS It a mattel of pellet lecelves the first pOSitIOn been jayvee coach In baseball an chan man of the local Bond Dllvethe alphabet It s Simply Ladv on the ballot the second lowest assistant m ~occel and football CommitteeLuck helself batting away at the numbel gets the next 01 second and he helped out 10 the lOti a- The campaign fOI l11dllldllalsSPitballs hUlled b' old man la\\ place on tile ballot and sO fOI th mUlal basketball pi oglam SUbSCllptlons opens Mav 14 alof a\elages In thiS wIn each candidate has Just lecentl~ Robl11son was ap- though It IS nO\I 10 plogles tOl

In mOl e dlg111fied langallge hel e equal chance of dl a \\ 101{ the fa v- pointed head of Lo" el Mellon s the 1I1dustllal dIVIsIon Sfllcs ofIS \\hat happens \\hen two 01 oled top pmntlon on the ballot Summel lecleatlon Ploglam E F G and C bonds maoe bemOl e candidates file petitIOns fOI \I hlCh students of PI actlCal poll I Supermtendent DubOIS confu m t\\ een APlll 9 and Juh 7 \\ III bethe same otl'lce on the Republi tiCS say IS wOlth flam 10 to 25ledthelepoltthatnopelSOn\\OUld cledited to the dl1vecan 01 Democlatlc ticket A dav pelcent of the \otes rast at a be deslj;\nated as athletiC dhectOl Canvass P~ansIS set bv the County Boald of pIlmalV Ol electIOn Of COUlse The duties of thiS POSition WIll be We ale la~mlt plans fOI an 1llElectIons soon aftci the final day thry Quahfy thiS bv porntrnlt out assumed b\ the Pllnclpal and b\ tenslve house to house CAmass orfOI wIthdlR~ al of petitIOns has that the bettel candidates a1 e the vice pllnclpal GeOll/:e Gllbel t the tel1ltol y Batnes said Itpa"sed All CAndidates \\ here known to the votel s of the umt and Vmcent Peal ce "Ill not be pOSSIble of caUl se tothel e IS a contest al e notIfied of dOlnlt the vot1l1!t the less the top A new teachel Will be selected contact e\ el yone dUI ing the fil StthIS day and lllvited to appeal posItion means to teach phySical educatIOn in the few days of the camPaign Theapersonally to dlaw fOI then own Whele thele ale no contests for high school but will not be deslg- tOle \\e ulge all lesldents to salenumbel if theY \\ ish If they do otl'lce but two 01 mOle peIsons nated as head of the phYSical then bond SUbscllptlOns untl Itnot appeal at the time of the al e to be nommated then the tl amlng depal tlnent ThiS tl1acher sohcltOl <ails on them Those \\ hodlawlng \\hlch IS usuallY ht"ld m names ale allanged In alphabetl has not yet beeh selected \\I\I1t to buy thE'll bonds eadvthe bOlll d loom 01 th< <ount y 1:.11 U1 del SUll e lIU Ollt' cundldale III othel WOI ds at least thl t'e should !tpl 111 louch \\lLh tllPICOllllnlSSIOIWls of1lce SOIlll'lllle I~ Ca\oll d lJy PO~1I1011 on the bal- pelSOllS Will be d01111{ tile WOlle comllllllllty Chll.111l111n who will seeD epiC ent Is a I ed to dlll\\ fill lot handled plevlOllslv bv Andelson that II SOhCltOI VlSllS themthe absent candidate At last TlllllSday s drawing for He leaves huge shoes indeed plomptJ~

The chief clelk of the Boald of places 011 the PlimalY ballot at "••-- III evelY ple\ious Bond DllveElections Is In chalRe of the dlBW- the Comt House fewel than Board of IIealth Ballles, contlulled Lilt' Luweling Fl0m 111.9- lists ot candidates t\\ enty ~andldates appeal ed pel- The Lowel Mellon TownshIp Melloll Nal bel th al ea has exhe calls the names fOI II. paHlcu- souallv although thele Well' 64 BORld ot Health lepolted SiX new ceeded its quota by a substantiallalofflce If they ale Plesent they contests \\hele drawinRs weIe cases of chicken pox one neW malgrn We can and must do lLall' handed a black pellet bealing neCeSSalY to decide the Older of 'T'hat means we need the

ti case of German measles one new al{am ...a numbel which the chief clelk listinlt A total of 1200 petl ons case of measles 11 nl!W cases of coopelatlon of eVelY Citizen Inshakes out of R leathel pouch- wele filed with the Countv Board mumps and three new CMes of IbuylnR bonds here 01 If commItlike container a. device velV sim- of Elections -With some 1000 can- scarlet fever for the week ending menlill are necessary at omcel' orllar to that -used In the Ilame of didates to be nomlbated at the April "0 Ccmttnued on Pt1{1e TWOKelly candidates. or PrlmB.l'Y on JUt1e'19 •

~~~ili~iij~~_~~~~~~~~~"~.,._~ ..~~\~~~~~

Simon Crunch Opines:00 ling the bells and file the

guns fOl Uncle Sam has licked theHUllS' This Cl Y Is heal d thecuuutl y 0 I:!I f1 0111 city desk lo Vil­lage stOl e All s over but the finalshout the lines of malch Rle alllaid out and wOlkers feel theycan let down- the job Is donelet s ltO to town I But prudencetells us we should -wait till vic.tory'S sure to celebrate

Blood Donor UnitHere May 17, 18, 19

The MobIle Ul1lt of the BloodDonor Sel vIce Will be at RedClOSS headqual tel s 10 Al dmol eOf! May 17 18 and 19 The houl sof appomtment on Thill sday andFllday ale flom 1245 thloulth515 on SatUldaY the hOUISchang, to 10 15 thlOUih 3 15 Ap­po1Otments may be made fOlthese hOUl s In Al dmOl e OJ forany othel comeOlent time at thepelmanent PhiladelphIa BloodDonol Centel by callmg Ald­mOle 3100

OUR

Says FamilIes Of WarHeroes Are BeingMulcted

Says Pew-Grundy­Taylor Fall to Recog­nize Ills of Party

Bell Raps GOPLeadership Again

Services Held ForClement J. McCrea

Funeral selvlces were held fOIClement J McClea 302 WoodsideAve Narbel th flam Oliver Ball sat 830 A M Wednesday molO­Ing follo\\ed by Solemn RequiemMass at St Malgarets ChurchIntelment was pllvate

Mt McClea assoCIated with thePenns~ Ivanla Railroad fOI manyyeals and a lesldent of NalbeIthfor mOl ethan 25 yeals died at,Blyn MaWl HOSPital last Flldaymght

SUI vlving all' hiS wife Malgal­etta McClea a daughtel Bettya student at Lowel MQllon HighSchool and t\\ a sons Clement JMcClea JI and John RlchatdMcClea who IS 10 the Nether­lands East Indies

LIBRARY

GLIDER PILOT

tll\PSERTft CO" 'u, LTYWLT'DSClR AVE,NAR8ERTH, PA.

NEWS OF THE MEN ANDWOMEN IN SERVICE

•Capt Emil Roesici 340 Bombel

GIOUp of 504 Essex Ave letUln-ed AplII 22 aCtel one yeal ovelselts duty rn Itah Capt Roesleland MaJ Wilham L RittenhouseW:vnne\vood Rd Mellon wele of Ithe same squadlon MaJ Rlttenhouse has bcen Iepol ted mlssmgSlIlce Mal 7 Capt Roeslel sa\1Mal Rittenhouse s ship damagedand sa\\ the men bailout 0\ elenem~ tellltOlv Smce then thelehl! s been 110 \\ 01 d flom the (I e\\ ffiibut thel e IS mOIl' than a 50 50 I@: 1chanr.e that they ma~ be pllson ~'t.

1;1" of \\alCapt Roeslel 1eccn ed the F /0 GEORGE M SChRODER

Plesldentlal Umt CItatIOn the Fhght Officel Schlodel son ofDPC and the An Medal \11th MI and MIS G 0 Schlodel of Bettel p1mclples leadelshlP andSe\en oak leaf clustels 506 Dudle\ A\e Nalbelth IS a candIdates \\ele advocated fOl the

III • • glIdel PIlot stationed In Fl allce Ills of the Repubhcan Pal ty by Lt1o,t LlPlItcnRnt WillIam S 0 Sui 0\ el seas 0Ince Febl ual ~ of Gm John C Bell Jl Wynnewood

!ivan son of Cornmandel and Ml s thIS yeal he entel ed the sel vIce m anOthel attack on the PewW R 0 sulllvan of 85 Wl11dSOl 111 July 1942 '" Gl undY Taylol boss conti 01 inA\ e Nal bel th \\ as one of elRht Bethlehem TuesdaY nightmen lescued bY a Na\ \ PBY Cle\\ It \" Ilham ClIpham son of Ml Bell" hom the bosses tIled to"'hen 11ls B 29 \1 as fOl ced dO\lll and MIS Challes B Chpsham of sldetl ack WIth an $18000 a yealm the Bav of Bengal lecpntl\ 430 H;l\elfOld A\e Nalbelth Ie JUdgeship appomtment sevelal

The men lIele PIcked UP aftel tUlned to dut\ \11th the 34th DI weeks ago Ulged a Republican24 houls 10 the ,\atel VIOlOn m Ital\ aftel spendmg an New Deal fOI Pennsylvania

• , • f 80 da\ fmlough at home Speakmg befole the NOlthampFord F MOnlile AAM 11c 0 • • • ton CounCIl of Republican Women

322 Woodbme A\e Nalbelth IS I MJ and MIs Fled S DaVIS Bell ClltlclZed Joseph N Pe\l JI110\\ statIOned at San Diego Cal 432 O\len Rd W\nne\\ood Ie Aldm01e multI mllllOnalJe paltyas an l1lStillctOl of In dl allcs cel\ cd a cableRI am Tuesda~ benefactor of A1 dmol e and hIS po

In the sel \Ice for SIX ,cal s IAPIII 24 flom then son Sgt Fred htIcal fllends SenatOl M HarveyMomoe selved t\\O yeals m San S DaVIS Jr "ho had been Ie TavlOl Dauphm county boss and

" Jooeph Gl undy Bucks CountyJuan IPOI ted a pllsonel of \\ al statmg leadel of fallmg to take heed

HIS Wife l1\es \'dth hel mothel Good health don t \lolly-Iettel flom the defeat the palty sutl'el-at the abo\ e •ad?1 e:;s \1111 follo\\ ed last No, embel

Paul S I\llson 19 son of MI • * If the same thmg had happen-and Ml s Chllllrs C Mason of 11~ I Da\ld S Duncan JI of 6 Sa ed to a busmessman he \\ ould haveE:ssex A\ e Nal berth \\ as Iccrnth jbme A\ e Nal bel th has been PIO I\\ or ked night and da~ to anahz~::>Jomoted to selgeant He IS a 1 motcd to lhst l1eutenant the leasons fOI the

kdlsahstehl land

• • to COil ect the mlsta es \I IC 1aael1al jnllU1el on a B 24 L b la 01 been made and to plan for a sucoombel I\lth thp 15th AAF \\ IllIam S 0 SlIlIn an oC 85 1 cessful futUl e WIth ral e excep

AIl1\mg Olelseas last Decem Wmdsol Ale NalbE'lth haR Ie tlonR the leadels of the Republ1Del he has f1o\\n mOle lal 15l centh been plomoted to filst heu Ican paltv have faIled to lealize'ombat mISSIOn agamst Gel m n tenant the \I eaknesses and mistakes of

IOUI pal t\ and conseQuenth theY

Growth of NarberthDepicted in Pageant t~!~~~t:f\~~~~g~i~~ll~g:r:~le

Presented by School Pupils and Staff ~;~£hl\e:f~l:~~~~e~n~b1~~t:~~~specltlcally exempted Gov Ed\\ al d Mal tm fI om hIS clltlClsm

An hIs! ollcal pageant deplct1l1g the g\(l\\ th of Nal beIth Outhnmg a 10 pomt plogIamBOI ough th I aug h the llle:5entatlOn of ,;cenes lal gel' taken IfOl lus pal t~ Bell ad\ ocated Ie

01 ganizatlOn of the State comflom Its hl,;t)\\ \\a,; ple~ented at the NaIbel!h Publlc IUlttee He called fOI a full timeSchool on ApII] 19 20 and 21 I~gl~~t~t~I~~n~~:~lman selected by

The pagelll1t entItled A Communl1\ Ih~e<: commemo I He ad\ocated state county andClt\ lobs be given letUl mng war

tatlllg the :JOth annl\elsal, of the BOlough \\a<: \\lJtten Rnd vetelans and that th. palty givel'les€nted h, the te IChels and lJU l)l!s of the <:choo! The "h l\\ mOle leCOgmtlon to youth gen-t' elallyblought to hie authentIC JI1cldents taken f10m actual hIs The LIeutenant GO\ elnor also

I f m ged that the pal ty pay mOl eWllca acts attentIOn to mdependents He saId

\\ J DIPnnen Plmclpal of the school dllected the afIan they could be attlacted to theFollml1ng ale the rplsodes as the\ \\eJe p esented 111 the pageant GOP by bettel Pllllciples leader­

shIp and candIdatesI andmg of the \\ elRh Quake. s ----Ha \ 1111' obt nned OJ 000 aCI ps of land In Alllellca flom WillIam W N f K·

Penn thlough John ap Thomas and Ed\\ald ap Jones a Palt\ nf arns ext 0 In[01 t\ WelRh Quakel s landed at Upland August 14 1682 FIndln Ithen pUlcllasE' alIead\ Rettled the\ deCIded to accept the offel of

~~Ite"%~<;t of tbe Schu\lklll So settled the Welsh 111 the \lCmlt~ of On Memon·al FraudRe\ olutlOl1!\1 \ Da\s at Sh eellcr s Ta\el Il

Tile land upon 11I1ICh Stleppel s Ta\eln nO\1 the Gene al Wa\npInn II as blllit \ as fil st 0\\ ned bY Ed\1 al cl Jones It stood along t p

fi ~t t hOI ot gllfal e 111 thIS sec t on Old Lancastel Road nO\\ Montgomel \ PIke ThlOUgh Re\ olutlonal \ Wal da\ s It stood a::. a lanQmal k a stoppmg place fOl Ilch and POOl alIke

Genel al \\ a\ Ill' 11111

Aft!'1 the ReI olut lanai \ Wal StlPepl'1 s Ta\ el n bee ame knol na e the GenPI al Wavne Inn The del elopment of land the bUIldlllgof the tUlllplke and the nc\\ PhIladelphIa and ColumbIa RallI oao sl1~~~t ~Ja~~na~~1I~ltmtheC~s~~~~11sI unnmg close b, made the Inn a common meetmg place \\ hell' tI P Iltv of bemg \ Ictmuzed by cel tamfutUl e ot the commul1It\ \1 as antICIPated or despall ed of FOI a Ion mdl\ Iduals gloups and Olgamzatime It \\as the sIte of the local post office sltultted mld\la\ bet\lcclJ tlOns who all' conductmg plomo­l\Iellom Ille and LIbel t\\ Ille nOI\ the POI tlOn of Nal bel th bOldel1ng tlOnal schemes m wluch publIshedMontgomel\ A\enue neal est W~nne\\ood Almy casual tv llRts plovlde the

Hnskllll:" Bee at the EdWald PrICe Homestead b SIS of flaudulent explOItationLe\ellll!( s Map of Lo\\er Mellon To\\nshlp (dated 1851) sho\\s NOlman L John dnectol Mont

tilE' land NOlth of Ha\clfOld and Mel10n Roads o\\ned b~ Ann Pllce gomel\ County Department ofJackson and Ed\\ald R Pl1ce The ollgmal Pllce (Rees) homestead I"'al Vetelans Affans coutJonedII as 111 Loll PI Mellon TO\I nshlp at the NOl th end of Blookhul t todaY" \A\ e It \\ as used ))\ LOld COIl1\\ allIs as hiS headQual telS II hlle 11 InfOl matIOn Indlcatmg that suchthIS \ ICInlt, Anot hel PI lee homestead that of Ed\\ al d PI Ice sf II fl audulent schemes deSIgned tostands dlagOnal1\ aClOSS flom Mellon Meet1l1g no\\ knOll n as tl mulct the familIes of Amellcan

11' ""I helOes al e now bemg conJohn A Mall leI Plopelt\ It IS flOm thiS estate and tl1at ol1gmall\ d cted has lecenth come to theo\\ned b\ Ann PIU e Jackson latel by the FUleys that the NOlth ,5IQe attentron of John through the Walof Nal belth \\ as de\ eloped D~pa1 tment

Platform GOSSIp at Elm Station These schemes take on valYmgLlbeltyvllle \Ias the filst lallIoad statIOn In tlus \ICl11lt\ on the fOlms the most common of which

Old PhIladelphia and ColumblR RaIlroad \\lllCh Ian close b, tnt' IS to wllte the next of km as apschool PI opel t\ In 1850 the Penns\ II ama Ralli oad bought thIS 82 peal1ng m the newspapel casualtymile Ime and the ne\1 statIOn \1 as gl\ en the name of Elm bl WillIam 11 ts seekmg fm thel infO! matlOnThomas \\ho had g1\en the glOund on "hlch the statIOn \\as bUIlt on the soldlel hsted as a casualtyThe VIllage South of statIOn had been caIled Elm named fm the The next of km IS advised that theThomas home 111 Wales Latel the name \\ as changed to Nal bel th deceased soldlel IS to be given apIesumably bl Geolge B Robelts PleRldent of the Penns~l\anla pa1tlculal and special mche m aRall10ad who lenamed mRm of the statIOns fOI to\\ns m Wales flOm so called hall of fame 01 helo s\\hlCh the eally settlels had come memol1al book 01 photoglaphlc

la\ outGI antmg the Chal tcr DepoSIts In advance or other

The -Nalbelth Bank ASSOCIatIOn Olganlzed Octobel 9 1889 ap cash lemlttance leQuhements all'pointed a commIttee on June 13 1893 to 100estlgate the ad Isablht~ set fOlth and as soon as the lemltof obtamll1l( a bOl ough chal tel A pi opelly SIgned petitIOn \\ as ap I ance IS 1ecelved fl om the next o~proved by the Gland JUl~ but set aSIde by Judge Aalon S SWaltz km the tlansactlOn IS closed andon the baSIS of objectIOns plesented by lay and busmess glOUpS In anothel Amellcan flghtmg man sMay 1894 a nell petitIOn cOll1cldlllp; \llth the Judge s deCISIOn \\ as family has been VIctimized by thiSpresented and lias lepolted fa\OJabb b~ the Gland JlllV on June 7 nr\\E'st and most despicable fOlm1894 On JanualY 21 1895 the pctltlon \\as confilmed by Judge of wmdlelSwartz and Nalbel th \\ as mcOl pOlated as a bOlough The United States Post Office

Earh Da~s m Narberth Depaltment has bf'en takmg vlgMam of the pll\lleges \\e enlOY today m Nalbelth had then be OlOUS actIOn In all such cases as

fast as theY ale uncoveled Postalginmngs 111 the ga~ nmetleR The pubhc school \1 as opened b\ LOllet flalid Oldels denymg the use ofMellon To\\nshlp m Jallllan 1892 accommodatmg pupils who had the U S malls to these casualt,fOrmelly attended Wvnne\lood School and the LO\\el Mellon Acao hst swrndlels ale ISsued and cumemy The filst Nalbelth Schuol..veal began Septembel 2 1895 \l1th mal prosecutIOn follows m those44 pupIls Electllclty was secllleCl 111 1893 The Nalbelth Fne Com c ses "hele the facts \\anant suchpany "as 01 gamzed m 1897 The 1ellglOus hfe of the bOl ough gl e\1 actlonapace \\ Ith the found1Og of chul ches and latel the Y M C A TheBoal d of Health \1 as orgaluzed In 1895 Gas hues \\ el e laId 10 1896

Welcome HomeIn the decade follo\\ lI1g 1910 Nal bel th gl e\\ III populatIon flom

1700 to 3700 The Nal bel th CIVIC ASSOCiatIOn became an actl\ efOlce 111 the bOlOU!!h ItS t\\O outstandmg accomplIshments belllg thefoundmg of OUI Tml n newspapo tll st pubhshed Octobel 15 1914and the de\elopment of Nalblook Palk begun III 1915 The filst BOIiScout Tloop \\ as stllJ ted 111 the same YeAI WOlld Wat I found thp.bOl ou"ll en/:aJ:ed m many eD1ell~~ency act!\ Itles While homes suffel edthe anxiety attendl11g the ab..<;pnce of Rons 10 sel \ lee N1I1e Nal bel thmen made the supreme sacllflce In 1919 the Halold D SpeakmanPost of the Amellcan Legion \las fOlmed and today still senes 111 themterests of \eterans of WOlld Wal I and II

Progress m NarberthThe closmg of the 1/ M CAm 1920 left Nal bel th \\ lthout a

lecreatlOn centel ThiS need was met by the acqUIsItIOn of a playgIOund. m 1922 upon wluch \\ as built 111 1926 the Community Blnlding alound \\Iuch much oC the commumty 111e centels Inlo it \\IISmOled the C011l1l1Wllty Liblal, Ma~ 1 1Y26 rhe ImbUc school panulation had outglown the local school facilities and m September 1923the senior high school students wele tlansferred to Lowel MellonHigh In this el a \\ e secmed police Plotectlon (1922) the milk andbuilding codes II ele enacLed (1922 and 1923 1 espectlvely) and till ee\ oting plecincts \\ ele established (}924)

Youth Looks For"ardIn lecent ;o,C"dlS the olganizatlons and institutions of the bOlOUllh

ba\e continued to lender service and keep alive a community sPiritunsurpas5ed anywhere We continue to train youth for citizenshipto Cll1TY forward the work in their bome town their state and Nation

G M 3/C AlbertFOll est A\ e homePrmceton

Capt Harold BLaneburn La Penn Valle~honOl abl~ dlschal gedArmy

Lt Col Wharton B CarrollGypsy La Wynne\\ ood aftel twoyeals melseas duty IS awaltmgtranspOl tatlOn home. . .

Page 2: OUR rro - docshare01.docshare.tipsdocshare01.docshare.tips/files/4965/49657890.pdfThose constant Red ClOSS work ... told an offiCIal of the Tax League ... In a letter of congratulation

;". or .;.t:-. of

'.•

OUR '10'"' AprD 26,.184". •

..

...

.. J

J

..

,"

.'

l.

..

..Ph. Ardmore 7081

And For RefreshmentAnd Rest· Visit

BROOKMEADCOTTAGE NO.2Corner Route 23 & 652 ,.

ALL GOLDEN

GUERNSEY PRODUCTS •"ICED" CREAM -

JCHOCOLATE MILK

BUTTERMILK, ETC.•

Going West On Lanc. PikeStop At . ",,1

BROOKMEAD •GUERNSEY DAIRIES

WAYNE, PENNA. '.•

..

VIGOROGarrlrn "I~oro 5 ]hs SOc(;nrrl.n Vh:oro 10 Ibs 8~c

.-Iower anrl Lawn Vj~oro, Sibs 45cFlower anll I,awn "hwro, 10 Ibs 80cBurners tor Tent CataplII;trs ., 50c

Evergreen Grass Seed.5 Ibs $2.65

Large Powder Duster forPlants $1.49

White Dutch Clover. lb. $1.35

HIGH VITALITY SEEDSThese seeds "re all ~lIarantepd to

be of hi~h vitality. \Ordinarily 10c per p"ck. SOW

3 for 25c

Butcher Knives •..•...........•..•.. 3geCarving Knives· .....•........•.••. $1.19Bread Knives $1.19Paring! Knives ..•.•.................. 10eRubbel' Gloves 69c pairThel'morneters 25e and upWaste Baskets (Red, Green, Blue) .. 8gePadlocks 55e and upDiston 8 Point Hand Saw 53.75Stanley 10" open ratchet bit & brace $3.25FOl'('e Cups fOI' cleaning sink or

toilet bowls .. ,.................. 1!1el\h,plt' RollinI:' Pins 71lcPatchinI:' plllstCI' 3 Ihs. 25cI'otl"hlnl:' Ct'ment 4 Ih!!. 15c"e~etahh~ nhl~ '" $2.39 and up('oat and Hat Hooks '" '" 3e ea.Powderene 3 lbs. 8geLeather Dog Collars IOc to 35eBrooms 75c up36" Dowels a~" Diamctel' 3c ca.36" Dowels I~" Diameter 5c ea.Hell J(hl/l'illg TI·:lIl~flll·m'·I·s. 16 Volt, $1.40

NewConvalescent

HomeFor Elderly PersonsAged and Chronlo

Where Kind Care Is aPrlrnary Consideration

GOOd Food Spacious Grounds2i-Br. Nursing Licensed

ThoroughgoodConvalescent Home

Baring 1875 or 9326

Sl-~lll\ \VRRIDGE

29 RiUenhoUie Place, Ardillore, Pa.

z.HARDJVARE FOR HATlV WEAR

FREE COpy OF LANDRETll'S SEED CATALOGUE

Steel Garden Spades .. , .$1.25Garden CUltivators $1.25

Four Foot Poultry Wire(Galvanized After Weaving)

5c a ft.. 150 ft. roll ..... $4.45Asphalt Roofing Paper

2 ply, 100 sq ft. roll $1.753 ply. 100 sq ft. roll 52.10Garden Hose .... 25 It 52.4550 Ft. ... ~ .. . .. .. ...... $4.55Shady Spot GI'ass Seed.

, 5 Ibs. 82.85Lawn Sprinkler $1.09

B.'

----.---

Everything For YourVi~tory .Garden

All our stock is FRESH and of the BEST QUALITY. We have no old stock.:we haven't been in business long enough to accumulate a stock of items thatdidn't move. We also have the lowest prices you will find along the MAINLINE. Our policy is one of QUICK TURNOVER, believing that the CUSTOMERbenefits as well as we do. Check the items we have listed below with prices

in your local stores, then come to us andsave money.

BfI""iIIHviJfenBUY YOUR HARDW ARE IN ARDMORE

AND SAVE MONEYClothes Line, 100 Ft. • •.............. 99cClothes Pins, 1 doz. . 20eClothes Hooks Including Sel'ews, 3 for 29cClothes Poles 3 for $1.00Wood Splint Market Basket 35cRenuzlt, 1 gallon 6geRenuzit 2 gallons $1.09Lge. Clothes Baskl'ts $3.25Kitchen Towel Racks 29cWashboards ' 90eRubber Star Treads 12 for 9!1eAwning Cord. per )'al'd 5e[,awn Edgel' RaeSickle R5cPrunlnl:' ~hears $1.25 liP11 Inch Tinning Shears $J.1l1JIeI' Pieks J5cRoml'-x Wlrinl:' Cable 6c fl.Ell'drlc Lamp Cord !ii' ft.Elee,trle Heater Cord 6e ft.Setfast Canvas Paint , " $1.40 qt.Screen Enamel ,.......... 60(' qt.Kraft Scaling Tape 10c lllld :!5cFlit :{!I,' qL

Expenditures $80,887Higher Than TheyWere Last Year

Haverford Passes,45 School Budget

Peace League Autoc.ar ExpeJ;tsWill Celebrate Its Qualify For Finals30th Anniversary In Quiz Contest

Leaders in the field of interna- ~oseph McGilvery. of the stockdepartment, hung up a perfect \ •

tional peace will come together ac score of 500 for the Autocal' Com-Haverford, College. Haverford. pany on the Sears cross-TownMay 3. to 6, to celebrate the quiz broadcast last Thursdayfounding of The Hague of the night.' As a result. Autocar'

stepped up to second place in theWomen's International League fur contest and qualifIed for the fin-Peace and Freedom In May, 1915. alg which will be run off again~~tTI e 30th I ti f a team from the L. H. Gilmer Co.

Haverford Township school di- tIl ann versary mee ng a on May 3 at the Plays and Play- •rectors on April 12 approved a! le organization will be devoted ers Theater, 17th and DelanceY1~45-46 school budget $47,761.04 ;)n part to reviewing events of the Sts.higher than last year but voted to, critical years since 1915 and the Autocar will be represented Inkeep the same tax rate. I' efforts made by Its founder Jan the finals by the four contestan.ts .,

The tax rate will be 19 and one- . . e who have previously appeared 111'11alf mills of $1.95 per $100 of as- Addams...and others to establish the current series of broadcasts.sessed valuation on real estate an enduung peace. They are: McGilvery. James Pol- •-. . Luncheon in honor of Mrs. lock of the timekeeping- depart-t StC~~OI bdlJect.ors I pass~d. the IHannah ClothIer Hull of Swarth- ment: Georg-e Bra!!g-. of the chas-en a. ve u get ca hng or ~x-I more. former Suffrage leader anrl sis parts machining department.pendlt~res .of $8~4.362.70 which, one of the founders devoted I~nd Clarence France. of the ma­co~pales. With estimated expend i- ; friend and assocIate of Jane terial control department. .tUI es fOI 1944-45 of $846'601.~6·1Addams. and for eight yeal s IThe fiscal ;veal' of the school dls- chairman of the board and pres- Itrict ends 111 July. ident. now honorar~ president of' S Ih D d

Assessed valuatIon from which the United States Section of theI ee e ogwoo Sthe school district will draw its IWomen's International League,tax receipts will be a little under will be held at the Benjamin al Valley Forgewhat it was for the last year. For Franklin Hotel ThUl'sday, May 3.1944-45 receipts came from an as- at 12.30.sessed valuation In the township ~----of $34.630,603 while this year thevaluation will be $34,507.253.

MUCH MARRIEDWhen Mario Muller died in the

state of Minas Geraes. BraZil. itPublish Pamphlet was found that he had' 60 wives I

scattered throughout South Amer-jFor Returned Veterans ica. He chnged his name andwife as fancy and circumstance/,

To help returning service men. dictated and was never a party toable-bodied or handicapped. pick 8. divorce Alit.up the threads of their civilian I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilives with the least possible con-I:fusion the Public Affairs CommIt­tee of New York this week pUb­lished the "Veteran's Guide". a32-page. illustrated pamphlet pre­pared by Dallas Johnson.

The book. which addresses it­self to the problems facing- ourex-service men and women fromthe day they receive their dis­charge papers and their five-cents­a-mile travel allowance. is a se­Quel to Jolmson's pamphlet "Factsand Tips for Service Men andWomen". which dealt wIth rig;ht~and prlvi!eg-es whlle in service. It Ican be obtained for ten cents from,the comm~ttee. at 30 Rockefeller iPlaza. Nell' YOlk. 20. N. Y.

«..J

RANOHAIRDRESSING

NARBERTH AND HAVERFORD AVE&NARBERTH - Narberth 42'70

Merion High School

L,ETTER

Lower

COLD WAVE SPECIALISTSAnd Other Types

Of Permanents

NEWS

PHILADELPHIAELECTRIC COMPANY

•• ~O' •

OR BY A BROOK - or near a lake•••• It'sgreat to be young and dream and plan.

The dream.homes being planned today callfor frozen food cabinets and automatic washersand electric blankets and air conditioning and lot.more electric conveniences.

They'll have them, too, And the electric. service that keeps them rulUting will continue to

be both cheap and friendly. That's one way wecan help make dreams come true I .

• H.a, NELSON EDDY in "THE ELECTRIC HOUR," williRob.,t A,m",.".,', Ord,.It,•• S....., .It.,_n•• 4:JO, EWT, CBS.

~~We'll build a h~use on a hilltop"

CPL. PHILIP .T. BONGIOVANNI, '35. Is home on, furlough afterservIng 27 months wIth the Signal Corps In IndIa. He arrived at MI­ami on one of the ATC's giant planes. He .wears a .Bronze Star ontheater ribbon and has the Good Conduct Medal.

S/SGT. PAUL HELLER. who would have graduated in June, 1943,but left in the middle of his 'Senlor year to enter tile Army. has beenmisslng'ln actIon in Belgium since December, 1944. He went overseaslast August after receiving training at Camp Howze, Texas, and CampLivingston, La.

S/SGT. KENT ROBERTS, '42, was wounded somet~e ago InFrance. III a letter dated March 8th from Tilton General Hospital,Fort Dix, N. J .• he says, "I was in Patton's Infantry until I picked UPa load of shrapnel which turned out to be my ticket to the States.As soon as I am able, I'll be around to see you,"

Two classmates of '37, who were neighbors in Bala-Cynwyd andhadn't lleen each other since October, 1943, met recently' by chanceat an Army General Hospital In France. CAPT. EDWARD A. NEW­COMB, company commander of a 90th Ipfantry Division unit. hadcome to the hospital t(} recuperate from a foot injury and met thereLT. MARTIN S. GILL, special service officer for the hospital. Bothentered the Army early in 1942. Ed received his promotion to captainon Christmas eve. 1944. Ed met up with anotl1er Merlonite not long"go, LT. JACK WALLEIGH. '38, who is serving as an infantry com­pany commander with the 3.5th DivisIon.

CPL. CARL H. BRAUN, '34. of West Manayunk, wa.~ wounded inaction in France. February 1. 1945, and Is now in a hospital. He hasbeen overseas since last November and is wIth the SeVenth Army.

CPL. HUGH C. CLARK, '42. of Bala-CynwYd. is an aircraft me­chanic in the maintenance division at an Eighth Air Force ServiceCommand Station In England. where B-17 FlyihR Fortresses are re­paired. He has been in the ETO sInce August, 1943.

LT. S. PARKER WOOLMINGTON. U. S. A. A. F .• '35. was 1'1'­('ently promoted to the rank of first lieutenant at Sheppard Field,Wichita Falls. Texas, where he is a member of the Technical Train­ing Command.

LT. BOB CANFIELD. '35, who plaYed basketball, soccer and ten­nis at L. M.. has finished 18 months with the M. P. near Prince Ru­pert. Canada. He coached the basketball team which won the Postchampionship. He has been transferred recently to Camp Claiborne,La.

The three ROSEIt brothers of Narberth are about as widely sep­araled as it is possible to be. LT. HERBERT ROSER, '37, enlisted inthe Marines seven years ago and is now commander of an anti-air­craft g-un crew aboard an aircraft carrier commIssioned a Year agoin Pl.ladelphia, which.is serving in the Pacific and has seen actionin most of the big campaigns out there. A/C GORDON ROSER. '35,is traIning as a navigator at Hondo Flying Field. Texas. arid expectsto receive his commission in May. SGT. HARRY ROSER of the Classof '34 was an instructor in judo at Camp Blandin!!, Fla., and CampWheeler, Ga., until he went overseas to France about the first of theYear.

SGT. ALICE M'QUISTON, '40. of Bryn 'Mawr. appeared on "TheAmerican Forces in Londo1\ Calling Philadelphia" program heardSunday, March 11, 1945. oyer WIP.

-

Reveal Plans ForContinlled jrom PagB Z

i

All Medical Need.

HEADQUARTERSfor

Paid Immediately For

DIAMONDSDIAMOND JEWELRYANTIQUE JEWELRY

We are paying the highest l1rlcesIn hlslory

CHURCH NOTES.Christian Science Churches

"Probation After Death" Is thesubject of the Lesson-Sermon inali Churches of Christ, Scientist,on Sunday, April 29. The GoldenText Is: "The Lord will perfectthat which concel'11eth me: theymercy, 0 Lord, endureth for, ever"(P.salms 138: 8).,----

Mobile Unit AtArdmore in May

The 'Mobile Unit will be at theBlood Donor Center at Red CrossHeadquarters in Ardmore on May17, 18 and 19. Appointment hourswill be from 12.45 to 5.15 onThursday and Friday. and 10 A.M. to 4 P. M. on Saturday.

The Blood Donor Service of theUpper Haverford Branch and .theBala-Cynwyd Branch are cooPer­ating- in securing donors for thesedates. Appointments for donorsmay be made by calling- Ardmore3100.

CAS

209 Haverford Ave.Fittings by

AppointmentPhone Narberth ~808

•••••••••••••••••••••••

$ 72 ..;66.75

$ 93,000.00

S 20,433.2535.202.295.00

!113~S~~~t!ON'SI We Also ~IIY

S 119,237.59 r."'~:;..:A..:;..;:;..;:.;:;..::;;.::;;.::;;...::;.;:.;:::;;:..:.:;..:;..;:;..;:.;:;.:;;;..~.~..~..~.~

DRESSMAKING .FOR SMART

WOMEN

MADELEINEIESEN

j

7'1 46.,' 8. I '.;2

8/1 '5512.d ·5312,'1, 64

16.700.00250.00

2,750.001.200,001.000.002.125.001.175.00

I O.T. 4-26-45.

I,EGAL NOTICE

First Church of CkrilltScientist

Holy Trinity LutheranChurch

WOOdbIne and Narberth Ave.Rev. Cletus A. Sentt, Paotor.

Samuel T. NlcholM. D. D., PnswrIn-Cbar,';

SUNDAY9.45 A. M.-SundaY School.

11.00 A. M.-Momlni Worship.7.00 P. M.-Junlor and SenIor Luth­

er LenllUes.

Linwood and Athena Avel., Ardmore.SUNDAY

11.00 A. M.-SundaY Schoo!.11.00 A. M.-Mornlnlt WorshIp.3.00 P M.-Afternoon SerVIce.

WEDNESDAY8.00 P. M.-Evenlng meetIng.ReadIng room at 8 Rlttenbouse Place

I. oPen week-da';'a from 9.30 A. M.

~oo P. M. and Sunday trom I w 2.45, and Wednosday eVel1lni 9 to 9.45

P f.

Long TermF. Hi A. Morlgages

Are BeslIf you are refinancing your homebe sure to see to it that you have& mortgage that runs fifteen 01'

twenty years and not three or!Ive. An F. H. A. mortgage willtake care of this for you. Cbnsliitus!

St. Marga1'et's CatholicChurch

• Rev. James F. Toner. Rector.Rev. Charle. P. O'Connor

Rev. Charles T. DinanIn rPsldenee, Rev. W1Jllam J KaneSunday Masses-6.30; 7.30; 9.00; 10.15:

11.15: 12.15. Sodality and MiraculousMedal Devotions. Tuelday evenln, at 8P. M.

CALENDAR

OUR TOWN

GEORGE' A. WALKER. P!'Plldent and EditorHELEN FITZPATRICK. Bualneu Manapl'

'R LESSERAUX. Advet'tlsln. Manuel'

LEGAL NOTICE

Publl4bed JCvenr '1'hUJ'lIda7beullln. for·advertilln, and newa COD7-Weclneada7 II A. II.

SUblcrllltlon rate-t2- per year In advance

BOROUGH OF NARBERTHSUMMARY OF AUDITORS' REPORT

ANNUAL STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS

PublicatIon Oll'lc&-EI,ht Crtcket ·Avenue. Ardmore. Pa.Phon&-Ardmore 5720 and 5721; Greenwooc! 7740

Member of Buckll-Mont,omery NewlpaDer Publlsber. Alloc!atSOD

Founded in 1914 by the Narberth Civic Auoc:ialioD

cnURel1Note: For publication on Thursday, all church notice!! mustbe reeeh'ed by Monday at 5 P. M. each week. Mall notice, tothIs paper. c/o Box 350. Ardmore. Pa.., or telephone Ardmore5'120 or Hilltop 3600.

Credit! :DePosited In Stnkln~ l"unrl Accounu; S,13,5S7.39Cash and Accounts Recel,'able 39.009.36

t~·JlDterecl .. .eeond cllUll ~atter October. 1838,. at tbe Pa.t Olftol II

Narberth, Pa.. under the Act Of March 3, 11'JO.

Narbertz" Methodist ChurchEssex Rnd Price A,..nue•.

Minister. Carl R. Hammerly.SUNDAY

9.45 A. M.-Church School.11.00 A. M.-Sermon1l.45 P. M.-Youth Fell(\wshll'.

Baptist Church of the­Evangel

NArberth. Pa.Rev. R. G. MIddleton. Paswr

SUNDAY9.45 A. M.-Cburch School.

11.00 A, M.-Mornlng Service.

Fiftieth Anniversary Pageant ...AGathering SuchAs We ~sed to Have

Narbe1·th Pre,byterianChw'ch

Windsor and GrAyling Ave.Re". Bryant M. KirklAnd. PaAwr.

,yohn Van NeM. D.O.. Pastor EmerltuB.Leonard J. Q,o;hrlnk, a..lstant paswr.

SUNDAY9.45 A M.-Blble School Cl ..se~ tor RII.

11.00 A. M.-Mornln~ wo"hlp oermon.11.00 A, M,-Chlldren's Nursery.11.00 A. M.-Junlor Church.1l.45 P. M.-Junlor Christian EndeRvor.7.45 P. M.-New E,'enln~ Service..

WEDNESDAY&:00 P. M.-Prayel' Meeting,

Merion Friends MeetingMontlromery A~e. and Meetln, Houae

LAne. MerIon.SUNDAY

10.00 A. M.-Flr.t DRY (Sund"y) School.11.00 A. M.-Meetlng for WorRhll1.

There were several aspects of the Fiftieth Anniversary pageantat the Narberth Public School that made it a notable and very worth­while exPerience to any old timer who attended, and those were notnecessarily connected' with any distinguished aspects of Narberth'sfirst half century. As an exhibition it showed an excellent continuityof interest and of development w~lir.h indicated how carefully it had'been planned and wrItten by members of the school facUlty under'the direction of Principal Drennan. The response of all the childrento that planning and training was of a high order-especially thechoral singing.

It was the community participation. in the form of the audiencesthat for three consecutive nig-hts filled the school auditorium to over­flowing. that gave the final ollch of high success to the entire enter­prise. It wa~ originally planned to run that alIair for two nights only.but the sale of tickets was so large that Mr. Drennan knew that allwho had thus indicated an intention to attend could not possibly beaccomodated on two nights bnly. Therefore. in spite of fatigue theextra performance was added Saturday night. and again the hall wasfHled to capacity. with another audience that manifested great pleas­ure and appreciation of what was cJisplayed to them.

An unrehear~ed and unplanned touch wa~' added by the audienceeach night when the people rose. row by row. as the fIag advancedup the center aisle as the school chorus sang ':Here Comes The Flag."'To those who could see it'from the stage, that was especially impres­sive, not only as an act of normal respect but as an indication of howsPontaneously the audience was responding to tile' spirit of the en­tertainment. It was one of those gatherings, "such as we used to havein Narberth," the good people of !\ good neighborhood all gatheredtogether and enthused with a community of interest and pride intheir town and Its attainments. It fobowed that the same people withthe same communit~' spirit are still there ready to respond at anytime to any appeal of the Borough. R. F. W.

In compliance with the Act of June 25. 1941, P. L. 159, SectIon 215. 53P. S. 2011.215 part thereof bein~ a sumfl1.llry of the Audltor's Report for theyear ended December 31. 1944 ItS requIred by the Act of May 4, 1927 P. L.519,53 P S 12981 to be pUblished.(a) GroSl; Llabilltr:

Bonded Debt. , ".'.,... , $90.000.00Loan from Strel't Improvement Fund 3.000.00

NET INDEBTEDNESS '" ..(b) .use.ssed ValuatIon .tc) Asut.s:

Uncollected tIl"es , $ 6.520.70MunIcipal Liens And Claim. 1.052.39Advanced tor 61dewnlk repaIrs 88.50RecreatIon FIeld 30.000.00Communlt~· B'ulldlng '" 30,000.00Swrage BuildIng 3.600.00102 COnwA~' AI'enue 6.976.00!:QUit;· In FIre House 15,800.00!:Quipml'nt: trucks. fire apparatus. cal's

(RPPl'OxlmRte !l~\Ir.,) ..Matt'rlal. on hand ..MachInery .'1'001. Rnd Suppll., ..Pla;"l'Ound eqUiPment .OffIce furUlture. safe.-. N.c ..Grandstands (2) .

businE:sS places. by buying anextra bond locally."

Bond PremierePreliminary plans were dis­

cussed Monday at an organizationmeeting of the Lower Merion­Narberth Committee for a BondPremiere to be held at the Sub- 1ST LT. JAMES H. GILBERT, '36, a battalion adjutan't, is aurban Theatre, Ardmore. under member of the 310th Engineers Combat Battalion of the Fifth Armythe sponsorship of Harry Fried'. in Italy, ~vhich recently.built a cable tramway to re-establish con~actthe proprietor and the local War with an mun~ated medical unit neal' .the ~o valley. Floods had ISO-

. ' Ilated the medical ouftt, and only the IproVlsed supply route- kept theLoan Committee... . stranded unit In operation and provided for evacuation of wounded.

Another organizatIOn meetmg Keeping roads and bridges up to the infantry Is the primary purposeof the committee will be he!d. of thIs battalion, but there have been times when it had to flght asMonday at. th~ P~nnSYIVaDl~ infantry, as happened along the Arno last Fall. and also to clear~ompll:ny.'.AldmOie. at 4.30 P .. M.. mines from roads under intense enemy til·e. The 310th has been In\I. hen It IS elfPected that apphc.a- Italy just one year after undergoing advanced training In NorthtlOn blanks and other material." 'for solicitors will be available for Afllca.distribution.

Arrangements have been com­pleted by James M. Sluss, SouthArdmore chairman and townshipcommissIoner from that section.for the use of the magistrates'hearing room at the Lower Mer..Ion TownshIp Building for prog­ress meetings of the committee onMay 20, June 3 and June 24 at12.30 P. M.

District Chairmenwe~~stl~ct communi~y cl~airmel1\ WILLIAM 1\1. WOLF. quartermaster 3/c. '43, is missing in actionfOllOWs:nnounced b~ ~alnes as in the Pacific. He e~tered the ~avy in SePte~ber, '43, went overseas

Penn Wynne-Overbr60k Hills- las~ .Fall, was based In New Gumea, from which he made trIps to theC. A. Troutman. Crosshlll Rd., Philippines. ,Penn Wynne.' ,M~rion-Henry S. Nee!, 437

Bowman Ave., Merion; James A.Lynd, 733 Beacom Lane, Merion;J. Harry East, Jr., 353 N. BowmanAve., Merion.

Bala-Cynwyd - Robert F.Brown, 115 Dartmouth Rd .• Cyu­wyd.

Wynnewood-Herbert K. Ball,599 Sussex Rd., Wynnewood.

Narberth-Carl B. Metzger, Jr.,National Bank of Narberth and550 Manor Rd.. Wynnewood.

South Ardmore - Jam e s M.r;:;:::==========================il Sluss, 157 Grandview Rd., Ard­

more.North Ardmore-Roger Driscoll.

St. Georges Apartments, Ardmore.Penn Valley-W. J. Beasten, 597

Hansell Rd.. Wynnewood.West l\'Ianayunk - Ric h a I'd

Welsh. 23 Jefferson St.Gladwyne-George H. Rieger,

Waverly Rd., Bryn Mawr.Rosemont-J. B. Francis, Jr.,

Broughton Lane. Villanova.Villanova - Rowland E van s.

Green Tree House, Villanova.Ardmore Business District­

James L. Gardiner. PennsylvaniaCompany. Ardmore.-. ---.----Major RittenhouseMissing Over Italy. Among those reported mIssing111 the latest' ca.~ualty reports. was ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;~Maj. William L. Rittenhouse. whohad an aUdience with Pope PiusXII at the foot of the Vaticanstairs last Summer.

His parents. Mr. and Mrs. LouisL. Rittenhouse. 511 E. WynnewoodDr.. Merion. have received wordthat he has been missing; overNorthern Italy since March 7. Aveteran of 50 EurOPean bombingml.,sions as pilot of a B-25. heholds the Distinguished FlyingCross and the Air Medal witheight Oak Leaf Clusters. The 27­year-old flier was promoted to therank of major on February 8.

He is a RTaduate of Lower Mer­ion High School and attendedWilliam and Mary College. He I':======================~~====~~====~~~====~====~~ Iworked for the Scott Paper Com-pany in Chester. His wife. the for- •mel' Miss Gretchen Clay. daugh­ter of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph V. F.Clay. lives with her parents atGlenview and Old GUlph Rds.,Bryn Mawr.

(11) Lut Maturlt~· DRte6 of Funded Indl'btedne",,:Road BondA Is<ued 7. 1;16PlaYln'Ound Bonds :-:...... 81 '22Street Improl'eml'nt Bonds ........• 8 I '25

'. Storm Water SPwer lInd Ian Creek) .. 12 I 33Stonn Watpr SewPI' Bonds 12; 1/39

(e) ABseto In Slnkln~ Fund<:~ad Bond 3 3.452.1I9SlaYVOUlld Bonds 3.410.05

treet Impro"ement S1:lnd. . 25.695,25~wnn ~atl'r Sewer Bonds (Indian Ck.) 1.000.00

torm ater sewer Bonds .---- $ 33.557.39

The auditors' report is all file In the Borough of Narberth office. whereIt can be Been between the hours of 8 A. M. and noon and 1 to 4 P. M. onweek-daYB and from 8 to 12 on Saturdays.

~l

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Page 3: OUR rro - docshare01.docshare.tipsdocshare01.docshare.tips/files/4965/49657890.pdfThose constant Red ClOSS work ... told an offiCIal of the Tax League ... In a letter of congratulation

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Open Eve".Day in th.

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Open /Tom4 P. M.

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Beautiful Cocktail Lounge. .FOUNTAIN SERVICE

ARCADIA CHIOSRESTAURANT

SEAFOOD OUR SPECIALTYEST. 1922 NARBERTH, TA. NAIL II!.

• LUNCHEONS • DINNERS • BANQUETS

• WINES AND LIQUORS

Wines Liquors

Really FineBAKED HAM SANDWICHES,

DAVE~SBAR

RAINBOW TERRACEFULL COURSE LUNCHEONS • DINNERS

Enjoy Splendid Food In a Dellrhtful Atmosphere

Lanca.ter Ave. & Old Eagle Rd. in StraffordWAYNE 1169

The Covered Wagon Inn I. Under the SameManagement Of Mrs. William J. Bachman.

1236 MontJ'omery ATe."or ReservatIon.

Phone Nubertb 9282

CITY LINE It HAVERFORD ROAD

HOWARD JOHNSON'SRESTAURANT

KATHLENE BEAUTY SALON

R e r t. The Finest Food a.t AU Timll

DonoghD"~S.2nd I WALNUT STS.

Dinners Served Daily except SundayW'"\'NNEWOOD DOUSE

MARINE BAR

Our permanent ARE lasting.We have the facilities of giv~

ing you 8 lovely spring hair­do that wiIl keep you with theSPRING GLAMOUR lookfor many months. Our oper­ators llre expert in ,giving youthat little extra touch thatmeans so much.

~:~ Chat t erboxDINING ROOM (May Gibson Boyd, Owner)

839 LANCASTER AVE. ~(BRYN MAWR, PA. -~ 411

If you haven't tried one of ourtasty pipmg hot Sunday dinnersyou have missed a real treat, Bestfood obtainable. Homeilke sur-

"o~~;s'OUR SUN~Y ~ \DINNERS ~.

3.00 to 7.00 P. M, ~~~\'Luncheon 11.30 to 2.30. Dinners 5 to 8.15 P. M.

500 UP , $1.00 and $1.25Served Daily Except Tuesday

102 Essex Ave.•Narberth

Narberth 4077

:hJ:i,. DINE 0liT!~

f~ .ThatLas~

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IGNITION SPECJALUIT.MOTOR REPAIRS

BATTERY CHARGING

MILK AND CIlIAM

SUPPLEE

8ealte6t

a

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FLOWERS121 N. NARBERTH, NARBERTH, PAt

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Put your car in the "pink otcondition"-Keep it that way-and you'll have economicaltransportation for the duration.Do it now.

When Your Car Fails to Start-Don't Fail to Call U.

MAI·N LINEBATTERY AND ELECTRIC STATION

304 W. Lancaster Ave. Ardmore 1825

Time forSpring

Check Up

LarC'l~t

Selection In'69th St. Section

116 So. 69th St,BlVd. 2120

JJUK lOWN;

• • •

"Can't Help Slnll'ing~'

Deanna Durbin"Up In Central

Park" Jea,neUe MacDonald"Oklahoma," .John Charle!l

Thoma!!' and James Melton"Songs To Remember",

Jose Sturbl

RECORDS

Mrs. Wheeler left Wednesdayfor Atlanta, Ga.; to accept.a po­sitlon' with the York Corporation.

o • •

One day a ;'woman-hater" ••• and the next a "Iadies'-man." Life is fullof changes for a young fellow sprouting up.

And he revels in new things, too ••• like switching from regular milk to

the one that's smoother and better, SuppleeSealtest Homogenized Vitamin

D Milk. He/II love mi~k Iik. a kitten when he tastes the cream-in-every-dropl

Ask your Supplee milk man or woman or your neighborhood storekeeperfor this improved milk today.

S.oo,her and lIetter

..

THE AIR.CONDITIONED

SUBURBAN CAFE',nlCUi/llil./;11I1I11

MAIM comuS[· P, I.,. SlIIlIA. srATIo.

LUNCH fill 60c • DINNER .... 15cCOCKTAIL TIME' 3 TO 6 P.M.

. ," ~rCh h 'r l O==lH!=OC=OC=O'=-Or::= of'e1!ort and 'the weakening Of\Gqi-den Club Will~[!f~:;]RESIDE~. Pl::

cSprrnU'gnteers K'N,0S~A~3UR ~rtat~~~r~J:t~O~i~!~:!r~~ Hold :Flower Show>.

tl=:~~~ ~ ~ m OC::::H:lC~t>C=o()oC=~==~C::::::'1 a.lternative the further, extension , The Garden Club of Bflla-c,n-:Flownr Bulb Show of federal powers into fields which wyd, will hold its annual Bulb lLIldMrs. John C. Heymann, 530 ,0 • / The ratification by the General have thus 1ar been a state respon- Spring flower show, on May 3. :at,

Ott Rd., Cynwyd, will spend the sibll1ty. the Woman's Club. ", ,The next general meeting of wee'kend at th", Marlborough, At- A meeting of ,the volunteers of Assembly of the Ohio River Valley TD improve the waters of such A luncheon will ,proceed the

tht' Narberth Junlol' Wom'lm's ." the Main Line Federation of Sanitation Compact marks an im- a .rlver as the .Ohio was impos- show. .Club, will be held May 3, in the lantic City, as the g\.Jests of l)er Churches was held Wednesday portant forward step In the con- sible by any single state authority Mrs. J, Packard Laird, of theCommunity Building. Club 16 will parents, Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Ai. afternoon, April 1l-; at the home trol of stream pollution by state since there was always the pl'ob- Four Counties Garden ClUb, willhave charge of entertainment kens, of Pittsburgh. of Mrs, J. Howard ClOUd, 11 W. authority. lem of pollution from sources for- be the guest speaker. Her' subjectand refreshments. • • Montgomery Ave., Ardmore. Mrs. This Compact represents the ther up stl'eam. Under this agree-I will be, "Tab1e Setting With Plow";

Mrs. Martha L. Levering, of the PIc. and Mn. Robert ,WlUey ,John M. Bristol', of Bl'YD Mawr, culmination of an effort extend- ment pollution in the entire Ohio Ier Arrangements."Senior WomaIt's Club of Lans- are the guests of Mrs. Willey'S presided. ing over twenty years, beglninng River. from source to, mouth. will ----. 'dbwne, will provide the entertain- parents. Mr. and Mrs. He~bert E, The resignation of Miss Eliza- with a_ meeting In Pittsburgh in ,be controlled by th~ united effort Sell Home in Ardmorement. The committee in charge is Poore, 531 ott Rd., Cynwyd. beth ~aro, as chairman 01 the 1924 to obtain an agreement of all the,states involved and the . 'Mrs. Robert Sigel, ,chairman, Mrs. • • committee. in charge of the volun- among all states in the Ohio River signing of the bill which ratified McMullin &. McMullin haveSamuel Krauss, Mrs. HalTY Davis Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nelms of teers who act as receptionists in Basin to unite in a program of this Compact for Pennsylvania sold for the Philadelphia contri-and Mrs, Frank Williams. Collegeville, formerly of Nar- the office of the Federation, was stream pollution control Author- was an important part of the con- butionship, a property on 30e

The election of officers for berth, spent Saturday evening accepted with regret. Mrs, Ethel ity was obtained from Congress in servatlon program which has been Hamilton Rd.. In Wynnewood,treasurer, second vice-president, with Mrs. Allison R. Hartman, Hastings, of Bryn Mawr, is taking 1936 to form the Compact which pushet;l so vigorously by our state for $13,300. The purch8.ller Is C.director, and recording secretary of Chestnut Ave. her place, , will become effective for all states Government in the present Ses- V. Cohole who will occupy thewill be held. • • Mrs. J. Emott Cladlwee and in the Ohio Valley ,upon its ratifi- sion of the Legislature. property for his residence.

A Board meeting was held at Mrs. Warren A. Benfield and Miss Evelina C. Walbaum. as co- cation by the Legislature of Vir-the home of the clUb president, chairmen of tl Littl G d ginl·a.her two children of 5"l9 Brook- le e ar enMrs. Frederick M. Robb. last hurst Ave., Penn Villey, will Day sale, reported on Plans for The Ohio River SanitationWednesday evenmg. spend the month of' May with the sale. which is to be held May Compact provides a basis for in-

Club 16 will meet at the home h t i 15 from 10 A M to 6 P M on terstate cooperation In the elmiin-of Mrs. sterling M. Chain. 94 er paren s n Minneapolis, Min- tile' gl'ounds' of' the M'emo"rl'al f 11 I th h

d b th F'd r.esota., , while h'er husband, a aUon 0 stream po ut on roug

Wynnedale R ., Nar er . 1'1 aY member of the Philadelphia 01'- Building, Lancaster Ave.. and the development of practical andevening. Mrs. George stultlng will chestra, is on tour.' Bryn Mawr Ave.• Bryn Mawr. uniform standards. Administra-be her assistant. The Book Club Tea was served by the hostesses, tion of pollution abatement meas-will also meet Friday evening at • • • Mrs. ClOUd and Mrs. Henry Long- ures will be through existing statethe home of Mrs. Frank Purcell, Mrs. Thomas Mitchell, 200 S. maid. agencies thus avoiding duplication506 Rock Avon Rd., Narberth. Narberth Ave., entertained at I ?;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;__;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.Mrs. Edward Nunn and Mrs. bridge Tuesday evening when h~r IIHjalmar Breit will be hostesses. guests included: Mrs. John Oatis. I___0____ ~rs. William Klein: Mrs. Abell

Bottoms, Mrs. Robel·t Dowd, Mrs.!Cornelius Alexander, 3rd, Mrs.!William Farmer, Mrs. Robert I

Baker, Mrs. Robert, Sigel, Mrs. IBruce Gill, Mrs. Sterling Chain, IMrs. R. ~. Staley, Jr., Mrs. Roy I'

Gowland. Mrs. William Clipsham,Mrs. C. ArleY Farmer, Mrs. Doug­las Miner. and Mrs. Robert Smith01 Charlotte, Michigan.

Narberth Ju:niorsList Next Meeting;Plan Elections

Dobelbower-CareyEngagement Listed

\

Mr. and Mrs. Henry NewtonDobelbower, of Merion Place,Merion, announce the engagementof their daughter, Miss ClaireLydia Dobelbower, to Pharmac­Ist's Mate 3/c Norval 'EmmettCareY, USNR, son of Mr. and Mrs.John P. Carye, of Overton, Neb.

The wedding will take placeearly in June. The couple expectto reside In Virginia Beach, Va.,after the ceremony.____0____ 'Miss Marjory Pearce, of Nar-

Hollsehold Tips berth, was awarded her athleticmonogram at a recent banquet

Grease the spOut of the pitcher given by the Women's Athleticwhen you use It for mUffin or Association of Indiana University.waffle batter. It will make pour- The monogram is the highesting smoother. award given co-eds for parUclpa-

Fats keep bes~ If stored',in a well tion in women's athletics.covered contamer away from I --------stronR flavored foods. p u,. d Cl

Halves of grapefruit. lightly 1 aper rr zn ow eaner~weetened with maple sirup 01' You can wipe windows once ahoney. are delicious when broiled: week durin~ the Winter with pa­

Store sweet potatoes fiat in a per napkins and remOVe dirt.well ventilated basket oi· box keptIn a cool, dark. dry place.

Never use a sharp instrumentin removlnR Ice trays: it may In­jure the refri!teratinR coil or traY.

Try folding the top crust of afruit pie over the lower etust be-I M tel t St kfO.re crimping to keep the juicesI os omp eeocin. • Of Records In......._------------1\ Upper Darby

"It",\\\1 \.\\\\t\\ at. \\\\\t : HITS FROM

~~ I~t1!"F~

You'lI find ecling ot the Suburban 0

,eel delight. Delicious, 'cti.lying fpod,charming atmosphere. perfect service.

Lunc.heonChairman

NARBERTHElectric & Radio Co.

I NARBERTH U82

I <10 Cor. Haverford & F~rest Avet

'oi:'_~ ; ,,,.,. '~ '""":

,,'

"A 'riea"'~ "ace to Work"* '

045 Anderson Ave~ue, Arctmor.1631 Arch 5tre.t, PhiladelphiaRoom 315, McClatchy lulldlng

(69th & M.rket Itt., U""et D.rlty)57·59 I. P.nn St., Norrlltown.410 York Road, J.nklntown

or call Enterprise 10100

Please bring along your birthtcertipcate or otherp~oof of citizenship. ,I

THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA

To gi,.ls who want to be doing their bit for victory' ••. girls ,~'ho want immediately to start earninggood salaries ... girls who want regular increasesin a job with a future. :.

••. to these girls, Bell Telephone now offers avariety of interesting jobs I

It is steady work, clean and sa'fe work, in thepleasant atmosphere which is traditionally "BellTelephone." Telephone workers have alwaysspoken of the company as "a good place to work."

The atmosphere is warm, friendly. Working con·clitions are clean, safe. You need riot be experi.enced because helpful supervisors are there totrain you and are constantly ready to counsel andlend a hand. Comfortable'rest-rooms are provided.

How about hearing the 1\'hole story - REALSOON? Drop in at any of these Bell Telephoneoffices:

o

ForLawns and

Victory Gardens

SIO Per LoadJames PI Gallagher

Fert~:;"d'~t';;' ~~1r~~2.. Pa.Phnne Newtnwn Square 0211

The Rev. and Mrs. FrancisCope Hartshol'11e. of 145 E. Lev­ering Mill Rd., Bala-Cynw~ld. cel­ebrated their 50th wedding anni-Iversary on Wednesday. April 25.

The executive vice-president of Ithe Church Foundil.tion of theEpiscopal diocese of pennSYIVanla'1from 1897 until 1909, the Rev.Hartshorne was also rector of st.Peter's Church in Phoenixville.

The couple was honored at atea at the home of the Rev. Hart­shorne's sister, Miss Amy Hart- Ishorne, 138 Rose La .. Haverford. 'IPresent at the tea were two ush- MRS. EDWARD PAGEers and two britiesmaids of the.. h' h h Id 50 Mrs. Page. who lives onwending, w IC was e years Spring Mill Rd .. Bryn Mawr, Isago. I chairman of the Seventy-Fifth

The ushers are, the Rev. Nor- Anniversary Luncheon of theman V. P. Levis and Joseph W' I Philadelphia Young Women'sSharp. The bridesmaids are" Christian Association, a UnitedMiss Amy Hartshorne and Miss War Chest beneficiary, whichEllen Morrls.'\\ will be celebrated Tuesday, May, Mrs. Hartshorne is the daugh- I, at 12,30 P. M. In the War­

'ter of the late Rev, and Mrs. wick Hotel ballroom. 17th andJames Haughton. Her father .was Locust Sts. Hostesses wll1 In­formerly rector of the Church of clude Mrs. William C. Byers,the Redeemer, Bryn Mawr. He Villanova; Mrs. William W.performed the wedding ceremony Comfort, Haverford College,in that church. and Mrs. Lawrence D. Edson, 21

The couple are the parents of Penarth Rd., Cynwyd.five children: Charles. who is a ,professor of philosophy at the! N biGUniversity of Chicago; Richard, a ar ert troupprofessor of geography at the,Universit;f of Wisconsin; Jal!'es. ~ To Hold Openwho is With the OPA In Washmg-ton' Alfred, an engineer with the' M t' M 1Leeds Northrup Company in Phil- i ee Utg ayadelphia, and a daughter, Fran- I

ces, who is the e,xecutive :;ecretary An open meeting of the Dramaof the ConnectIcut Hygiene As- ,soctation. Department of the Women s

____•• Community Club of Narberth,

Engageme1rt of Iwill be ~eld Tuesday, M,ay I, ~t 2

J tt C L· t d' P. M., In the Commu11lty BUlld­

eane e Ol'ey lS e ! ing.Mr. 'and Mrs. J. Alfred Corey, Mrs. J. S. Erichson" chairman

of 515 Sussex Rd., Wynnewood, of th~ drama group: Will presenthave announced the engagement Fr~nC1s Bosworth" director ?f theof their daughter, Miss Jeannette INe~ghborhood GUild of Phlladel­CoreY, to Pfc, Herman Anderson phla. and former head of tl~eGaileY, Jr .. USA. son of Dr. .aJld' drama ,department of ColumbiaMrs. Herman A. Corey. of York, IUniverSity. •

Miss Corey, a graduate of the Through his work as a news-Baldwin School. I, now a junior paper man,' and art and musicat the University of Pennsylvania, !critic in New York, Bosworth hasShe is the granddaughter of Mr. Illlrd opportunity to know well theand Mrs. Jefferson Shiel, of 30 I personnel of the stage.Essex Ave,: Narberth., I His subject will be, "The Play

Pfc. Galley. who IS a student and The People"at Johns Hopkins School of Medi- -----:.--.------­cine. was graduated from LafaY-I·;·eUe Col1ege. I

Colorf~oi-ifeaTs IPlan your meals with an eye i,

to color. All whi te meals or all Igreen meals aren't very appetlz- ill1lZ. _1\

II

:April 26. 1945.

Couple Observe50th WeddiitgAltltiversary'The Rev. and Mrs.Francis C. HartshorneFeted at Tea

Bala-Cynwyd's Social, Cent~r.THE £WNWYD" 'C;,B:.JLL·

. , ~_' ",c'.. \1' ". !!I'I,,'IIII.,.I,...1'. 1.1"'11' Mill RII.'~J'WJ'.'"••••ii.iii~.liillillilii~~~~~"·~''~:-~''''''~''-i

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Page 4: OUR rro - docshare01.docshare.tipsdocshare01.docshare.tips/files/4965/49657890.pdfThose constant Red ClOSS work ... told an offiCIal of the Tax League ... In a letter of congratulation

"1

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Aprl1 "6, lU...o.

7020 W. Garrett Rd.Boulevard 1%«

'1'nl'n your unusMh'pewriter into money.We pay top prices, QIU'

make.

H. E. STEINKE

58~6 Mal'l<et 8t.or Call

ALL. 74:,11 - West 516-1EvenillKl GRA, 4521----

DEVANEY

RADIOSRepaired

U> heSAVE

MUCH

216 S. 60TH ST.PHILADELPHIA

OPP. Imperial TheatreAll. 8125

Brl nl: your radIorePAIred. Yo 11money And getc.ulcker sentce.

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MimeographingMultigraphing

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BEACON LETTER SHOPROOM 4I~, 6RI6 MARKET ST.

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BROAD ST. & SNYDER AVENUE

H. L. YOUNG & Co.17 MYRTLB Ava.

• Chltham VlU••e. llJlpu Dar_Graflitu 1020 BWtoD 13U

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Also l'iano 1\lovln,Write

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II

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

co.DARBY

1200 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA

By magic? No-by opening a savings accountat BENE1'ICIAL with $1.00 or more, and byadding to it every payday. Dollars saved nowwill buy imp'roved, better quality products,and will help assure continued prosperityin peacetime:

Come in today and open an account, or'phone or write for particulars. You'll find theBeneficial friendly and cooperative, and morethan glad to help YOl~.

Latest Gun 7'ype

For Replacemcnt Only

BEN EFI CIALSAVING FUND826 E. ALLEGHENY AVENUE

T1°~tEGlass Shop

7315 West Chester PikeBoulevard 3082

AllROOF

Dnder Inlest. 1:D\"ermnent rullngWe CAn install a new 011 burnerto replace your 'Worn one.

Phone Us TODAY

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RAYMOND C. PEPPELClIIl.1lS AVE., IJREXEL HIf,L

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We do our ownwork and canguarantee work­manship twoweeks delivery.

. We repair noton I y watchesbut English,French andS w iss clocks,We call for anddeliver clocks.Eslimates givenin advance.

II. \V.:McCLATCHY BUILDING, UPPER

'Boulevard 0158

APPROVED JOHNS-MANVILLEAPPLICATOR

ROOFING and SIDINGEASY TERMS

Phone 01' Write for Free Estlmatl's

IFornlNly With RiROS & Rro.)232 Bala Ave., C~'nw~'d, Pa.

Cynwyd 3250

GrandfathersClocks

and WatchesRepaired

Two Weeks Service

H. F. STELZER

Maroon Nine UpsetsJ Radnor But Loses

At Cheltenham

CASH ._. -.. --.----FOR YOUR USED-FURNITURE

• I Pay the Highest PricesTurn your used and old furniture, brick-a-brack.washing machines. vacuum cleaners into immediaterash. 1 will call at your home and pay you the'nighest possible cash price. Give me a call onIhe phone TODAY.

Telephone Bryn Mawr 2901

ARTIIITR "TILSON1000 LANCASTER AVE., BRYN MAWR

At Penn RelaysBaseball Standings Sylvester Steals

SUBURBAN ONE LEAGUEThursday's Results Sh I T k

Haverford, 16: Norristown, 2. I OW n racLower Merion. 7: Radnor, 2.Abington. 4; Upper Darby, 3. Haverford High School was

Monday's Results 'outclassed in its first dual trackHaverford..3; Abington, O. test, losing to Upper Darby, 82%Cheltenham, 2: Lower Merion,1. to 34Y4. on the latter's field butNOlTistown. 4; Radnor. 2. had the consolation of producing

Standings of the Teams tne meet's outstanding athlete.Won Lost P. C Jack Sylvester was the Havel'.

Having broken even in its two Haverford ..•. ", 3 0 1.000 ford hero. He won the broadleague starts to date, Lower Chel~enham ••••. 3 0 1.000 jump. and high jump and woundMerion High School will endeavor II Nornstown ...••.• 2 1 .667 up high scorer by also placingto force its way into a contend1ng Lo~ver Mer'on ••• 1 1 ,500 second in the 100-yard dash andposition in the Suburban One IAbmgton •..... ,. 1 ' 3 .333 third in thE! 220-yard low hur.Baseball League next week. Upper Darby ...• 0 2 .000 dles.

The Maroon battles Norristown, Radnor 0 3 .000 Sylvester clcared the high jumpbeaten bnly by Haverford. at I Monday-Upper Darby at Chel- bar at 6 feet and broad jumpedPennypacker Field on Monday tcnham, Havcrford at ~adnor, 19 feet, 3\~ inches.and invades Upper Darby. Which Nornstown at Lower Mel'l~n. Only other Haverford entry tohas yet to win in the league, on Thursdl\y-;-Radnor at Abmgtoll, win an event was sprinter Fuller,Thursday. Lower Menon at Upper Darby, who finished first in the century

Lower Merion's first victory 111 Cheltenham at Norristown. in 10.8,I the league was quite refreshingI as it was a 7-2 affair at the ex-pense of arch-rival Radnor HIghlast Thursdlly at Ardmore. .

However, the Maroon wa.~ help-'less against the brilliant pitching jof Cheltenham's George Ander-Iman Monday. getting only one hit .as it dropped a 2-1 decision to!the unbeaten Panthers. OUt- II

fielder Townsend got the onlybingle. I

It was Anderman's second one­hitter. L. M.'s lone nm was the I

I result of a walk. two infield outs I'

Iand an error. Jim West. L. M:hurler. allowed only six hits,pitched shutout ball after the Ithird.

On Tuesday Episcopal Academyavengcd an early season setback Iwhen it defeated the Maroon. 7-3.at City Line and Berwici\: Rd, I

Lower l\1erion CheltenhamRH.E. R.H,E.

Llls,ell!. S,<i 0 0 0 McH'h, 2b I' I 0 ITownsend If 0 lOCh'bers, If I 1 0Qllat.rani. cf 0 0 0 Regan, 311 0 1 0'/

. West. p 0 0 0 MpIlIIi. ce () 1 0ISchmidt, 3b 1 0 0 And'on, p () 1 0Kern, rf () () 0 MUld'n, c () 0 0 'I

McQ·t.OR. 1bOO 0 CAr!'An. cf () 1 0Albrocht, 2b 0 0 1 Sholton, lh 0 0 0 I

::~~1::;~~~:13 j5 ~~;~t'; or: joijICheltenhal~~~~.:.~.!_ 0 () 0 x-2

8otoptimists Meet IThe Soroptimist CtUb of the I

Main Line held a meeting AP1'j! Ii 25, at 6.30 P. M .. at the Haverford;

ICourt Hotel. Haverford. IThe speaker for the evening

!was Marg-aret W. Corson. of Nor-! ristown. Her subject was, "The

IILaw of Liable and Slander, or.Smile W!Jel1! You Say T!J8t."

IA mUsical program rounded out

the evening's entertainment.Ho~tesses \\'ere Pauline Siegpl, I

IMargaret Corson and Mary Bar- IIret!..

'SERVICE DIRECTORY

(,ua' £ U .1 i<lD ••• " etc'. __

The amount of rainfall is not evenly dhlt1'ih.

uted throughout the world. In some parts of

India and Burma in the mOllsoon sea8011 there

are six straight months of rain and up to

500 inches of rainfall. Death Valley, Cali­

fornia has only a two-inch annual rainfall.

As a malleI' of fact, the hi8tory of ch-i1iza­

tion shows the vilal influence of ruinfall aud

the amount of it.

Even within the limits of our own country

there are ~I'eat variations ill the annual rain­

fall. Mobile, Alabama, has approximately 60inches and Phoenix, Arizona, has less than 8inchell. Here in the Philadelphia area we

ullually have around 40 inches, a rather

good. average.

That is an average over a long term of

years, but there are cycles of wet and dry

years, for which the Philadelphia Suburhan

Water COll1l'au~ ill prepared with its large

lltorage rCllervoirs,

It'8 really nice to live in an area of good

eUmate and rainfall, especially when you ha,'e

Springfield Waler.

DistributioD of Bail.fa"

Pr-f'LADELPHIA SUBURBl\N

W ATE ReO M 0 A ~J'!'

Ralph Brenner u'ightl Lower Merion High. beats RussellAtkinson. West Catholic. to the tape in the 100-vard dash atArdmol'e Tuesday. The picture is deceiVing. indicatillg that Atkin­son finished second, but he didn't. Dave Link of Lower Merionmot in the photo), squeezed into second place while Atkinsonwas third. (Philadelphia I1lquirer Photo!

'~~ERTIFIED WATERIro. PEDIGREED STREAMS"

HighBow

Get 'Em WhileThey're Hot

Bring in to our Art De­partment tho s e OilPaintings or other Pic­tures that need recon­ditioning and re-fram­ing.

If you're going to needBeRn Poles, let us knowhow many before thestock is exhausted.

SHULL LUMBERCOMPANY \

25 BALA AVE.

BALA-CYNWYD

Cynwyd 0662

Closed NOON Saturday

West CatholicAnd Chester111 Dual Meets ••

Hilltop 3600

Talk of what should havebeen done Is so pointless, be­cause it is ver~' doubtful whet-h­er anything could have bel',ndone to keep And~' at L. M.After ail, a high school does'have limitations, yoU know,even I,. M!

••

You may @end monO!'V order, et.ampa or 1'<'1"0""1 check. Addre88 allcommunications to Lower Merion Newspapers, Ardmore. 1'a.

<Special M~ntlh1f Rata)

CALL

GREenwood 7740

- ..... ~

Ardmore 6720

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING25 WORDS FOR SOc (In Qne Paper)

$1.40 FOR FOUR PAPERS

OUR TOWN, BALA·CYNWYD & MERION NEWS

THE MAIN LINER, HAVERFORD TOWNSHIP NEWS

ManDa W!lS in R, ticklish spot inthis field controversy as membersIof it.<; elub put in a lot of hardwOI'k in helping to make VeteransPark playablp. two years llg-O llno

HELP WANTED-FEMALE

Ma'll to work In lolf ~hop And lockerroom, alsO man to work 011 "olf course.

Barllngton Gall Club. formerly PennA,Gol! Club, Msnoa Rd .. Llanerch 9889.

Yet Manoa feared a leaguending against Brookline play­there might invoke pOliticalfh-eworks that also would costit the use of the field, That's

llut had another club been on why Manoa took no part in thethe waiting list, Hare would have decisions at Monday's Icaguefound himself out in the cold be- session,caUie the mana~ers were unani- • • •mous in the belief that two teams Steve Juenger, Haverford Highoperating from the same field basketball coach. led the Amer­would not help the league. When Iican Pro Basketball League inthe leRgue put a ban on traveling scoring with a high average ofteams last year It was with the 10.92 points per game, accordingidea that each club would develop to the official figures jUst releaseda following in its particular com-I b~' League President John J.munUy, O·Brien. of New York. Steve

• • • taJlied 92 field goals and 89 foulIt is now fcued that Brook- tosscs for 273 points while play­

line will merely attract a eer- ing 25 games for Washington­tMn JlereentaA"c 0{ l\IlIJloa fans Paterson. Juenger also led theat Its h()DJp games and wiil IULVe league in the same departmentlittle, if any, following for while playing with Harrisburg inaway games. 11943.

Should this· tllrn ·out to be the Cprtain quarters are hintingcase, Hare had bf't.ter take the i rat.her pointeoly that. conditionshint and find a separat.e ba~e for Iat Lower Merion High were 1'1'­his operations because it's a good sponsible for Bill Anderson tak­bet the league won't condone two lng the job lit Lafayette CollelletealTlll using the same home fleldl rathel' thRn the advancement and

'. the moment. there are other teams future offered by the la.t.ter. Whenavailable who have fields of their YOU consider thllt Andv's new jobown. However. it would be an ell-I' amount.s to the same held bY Dr.tlrely different story should Lerov Mercer at Penn. don't youBrookline develop a strohg follow- think he would have been a nit­ing of it.s own by plaYin~ at Vet- wit not to hRve taken it?erans Park, TIlis is definitelY pos­sible in our opinion, but only timewill tell.

Four fleet-footed runners fromLower Merion High School mostlikely will be the hope of the en­tire Philadelphia district for anAmerican championship in themedlay relay event at the PennRelay carnival this week.

The pupils of Coach John Mar~

7.ucco set a new record in winningthe medley event at Bridgeton. N.J .. last Saturday and have highhopes or being the first suburbanschool ever to win a national eventat Franklin Field. The Maroon willibe up against a large field with I'strong competition expected fromNew York schools. but the factthat L. M. has drawn fourth posi- ,tion is considered a decided break.

Lower Merion's team will becomprised of George Glenner.R~lph· Brenner. Lou Turner andHenry Uhle, the same combina­tion which led North Catholic.Central High and Camden High Ito the tape at Bridgeton last weekin the new meet record time of 8minutes. 24.1 seconds,

It is believed the Maroon will beable to clip considerablY off thistime on the faster Penn track.

Lower Merion is also concededa good chance of dethroning Up­Per Darby as the mile relay cham­PIOn in the Suburban Conferenceas it finished fourth, but ahead ofall suburban rivals at Bridgeton. INorth Catholic won this event withTrenton Central second and Cen-tral third. .

Lower Merion and Upper Darbyfinished third and fourth, respec-

Ith-elY, in the two-mile l'elay. alsowon by North Catholic. while Up­PEr Darb~' placed third in the half-

S· T S· 'Be W· d' mile relay.I,X ea.rns, urVl,ve (fJ' -'n Lower Merion crushed Chester~ It High. 98 5/6-18 1/6, last Thursday

S M eL· B b II defeated West Catholic, 19-38.o {Un ute (1se (1 Lea.fJ"Ue I T~eSday In. dual track meets at II jon; 3. Rus.sell At.klnson, West Cathollc·l Draw alld Schedule~ : Ptnnypackel FIeld.. Tlme-IO.7 hecs.· I

W · IO ' Summartes: F P R II S 1 d I M 13' lower Mcrion 98; /6' Cheh!cr lR 1 -6 Mile-I. Craig HAl!. Lower Menon: 2, 10r enn e ayst pen on C I,e u e 0)" 1·~0'.YA1:d .,hlgl; ·hl;rdI~s. I: ,BIACkwO~d .. Geor~e Eshenck, Lower Merlo";; 3, Hon-Lo"!, Mel ,on. 2. Tellf, Lo\\er Merion., rY Uhle, Lower Merion, Tlrne-4 mlns., Time of events of local inter-3. Kane, Chester. Tlme-17.4. I 3 d til I d b 1 IlOO-l'Ard, da'h-1. Brenner, Low~r' 5 .4 secs, est an I' anes rawn y Oca

If the ftnlll meeLiIlg- to complf'te Failing to earn' the requIred ?\tHlon. 2. MAtl.hpws, Lower Merion. 3_! 440'YArd dAsh--J. Brennor. Lowe,' schools in the Penn Relays:1 f

· h M' L b I'" Link. Lower Merion Tlme-IO 9 : Merion: 2, Harry WAtt" Wost Cnl.lioilc: F 'dpans 01 team me Base al : two-thIrds vote were proposed i Mile run-Won br: Uhle, Lo\~e;' Mer-: ;,. Lou Turner. Lower Menon. Tlme-52.8 1'1 ayLeagUe can be taken as a cl'1ter-! amendments (1) that would have: lOll. 2, HAl!, Lower Menon. 3. Koztcki. I' sec~ (Hew meet. r..eOl·dJ. . 2.10 P. M.-American Prep

. . I . . : Cliester. Ttme·-4:42.2 (new record\. 2.0·Yard low hllrdlps-1. Blackwood. School 440 relay 9 H f Iion. the 41st campal~n. whIch I chan~ed the prehmmary playoff" 440.yard dahh-1. Brenner. Lower, Lower Menon; 2. Lynch, Wehl Catholic; -. aver orcSchool.opens May 13. won't be lacking in I draw so that the No 1 team would I M,'! ,on. ~. Turner. Lowe,- Merion. 3.; 3, Illff HollowlIy. W~st. ClItholic. Time. . I . I MAt,t.hew.,. Lower Merion. Tlme-52.9 -"~5.5 ,;ecs. 2.30 .P. M.-American Hig-hkeen n\'aln' nor .excItement. ,have played the team finishing I (new record'. Hp.lf-mlle-1. Vlrl ... Lowor Merion; 2. School 440 rela','-9. Lower

:rt to k tl n • f . d : f ·tl . t f hi" ,200·ya'·d low hurd1<'h-l. BlACkwood, Olok Cox, LO\\"<'r M,'rlon: 3, Goorll;~ Glon-o 110' mana~els OUI an . ow 1 Ins ea 0 t I' t 11ld place Lower Menon. 2. Tpar, Lower M..rlon. n'.'r. Lower Menon. Till1e--2 n1lns., 4.6 Merion. 35. Haverford High.one-half how's of debate and slde- ! team. (21 that would made the: 3. Hoot, Cheste,·. Til11e--25.9. secs. INew IlI"('\ record). 4.40 P. M.-Suburban Confer-bal' conferences to complete the: .. . '880'YArd 1"\111-1 Cox. Low"r Menon. 2. 220-YArci dash-I. Brenllc!', Lllw('rpre-season business at Narberth i prel1mlllary playoffs the best three' EsiJerick, Lower' Merion. 3. KozickI. M~rioll; 2. Link, Lowor Merion; 3, At- ence C19~s A mile rclav-6,M

onday night and when it was; out of five games and (3) that' Cb"'I"r. Tlme-2:08.0 (ncw record). 'kll,hOIl, We,t. CatholiC. TIlJ1e-23,1 ,,'es. Lower Merion. 8, Havei'ford• . ' . 220-yal'd dnsh-J. Turner. Lowf'l' ~tf'r- I (New l1WPl TPcord). High.

finished hardlY anyone was satls- 'wOJ'- have permitted the home 1011.. 2: L11l~, Lower Merlol1. 3, Matthews.: H.'gh-Jll~JJl-.1. LeonI' nubo,> . W,:~t 5.20 P. M.-Distance CoIlerrcfled. Itca~ to keel) the net receipts in LCI\ 0' Mollon. Tlme-23.8. . Ca Inolle. -. Bah Sl.el1h n" 1,0\\ 0, !\ILl - '"

N be·th 1 f th f I ' " . Shot PilI!. Young, Lower Merion. 2. ' Ion: 3, tlo. Al Wlison. Bob HU~ho,. both MNlleY-6. Villanova.

. ar let e con a) (~n-: the preliminary pla~·offs. VUl1Iychuk. Chester. 3. St.riekler. Lower I'Lower Merioll. Hei~hl-5 11. 6'. IllS.vmced everyone was agaIn 'em In- ; . Meriol1. Dist.RI1ee-46 ft.. 10', ill. Shot I1l1t--1. Stew YOIIIl~, 1.0\\'1'" l\Ier- 5.50 P, :M.-Ameriean Hig'hasmuch as ;1.11 but one of its pro- . Also defeated was a motIOn to DI'clls,-J. YOUlll:' Lower M"rlon. 2. i JCIl; ~. Mlchnpl BORRn, Wl'st. CAthol'c; 3, School McdlrY-4. Lower Mel'-posa!s had been rot.ed down: Manoa 111crpa~e the durs $10 per club m i Bllsh. Chester. ~. Wilson. Lower Mer- I Al Slnekler. Lower Merlol1. DI"Anee-- ion. 63-Ha\'erford Hig-h.

bl d tl t'( l tl "\ . I oJ'der to ereate a fund of $60 to: It'll. Dlstllllee-l~1 ft. 7 111. ,45 fl. 9'" 'Ilh. S tlilrum I' la:. go· .1e )111 I! be v 'd d th t fi' I' tl ' H:~h Jump--Tie betwer'n Wilhon Alld' D1sCII.SS-1. Young, Lowe,' Merioll: 2, a urdayend of the stIck ; Sad-eypd EddH' . a \ a.1 _e e ea':1 I1IS ling 11'. HUl':he,. of Lower Merion. Third, l.Ie' WilSall, Lower MPrloll: 3, Bog,,". Wo,1 1 50 P M -S . 1'Uftre, of Brookline. complainAd legllial season 111 filst place. I AI1IOIl" HAwley. Lower Merion, And Kane' Celholic_ DlsIRllce-125 ft., \2 111. (NeW" .'. pf'clal C a~S n;i1e..QA> d M 2.35 P. M.-America nt\Vo-"they made me feel like a robber"; Major issue was whether or not An Orl!lIl1. Chest.~r. Helght-5 ft. 2 111. meel ,.~cord). JIll-Ie l· a lay-44. Lo\"el' Mel'l·on.Ard t 'II ltd . th ,Br okl"n sl uld b rmitt d to Pole vault.-1. Hawley, Lower Merion. Pole \"null-1. Bill Hawl"y. LowN C ". more \Vas s I I 10 un el _ I' 0 Ie. 10 c pe e ~ 2. R0.'" , Lowe,' Merion. 3..Jnckson, Cheh- Merion: 2. Corneli,,' GreenwaY. W,-;t 255 P M Interacadem''''eollar at Narberth s uncompronlls- play at. Veterans Park. thereb~' tel'. Helght-lI ft. 3 In. II1~W record\. Cnlhollc; 3••Jon RoNS. Lower Merion. Lea'RUe Olie-llli·I;"relav-1. Ha;~1tut demand for a home gamp Jub' setting the precedent. of allowing .la\·"lln-1. KO?lckl, Chester. 2. Kane. H('I~ht-Jl fl. f S 1 I .4' new member Llanerch. which two teams' to use the same home Lowe" Merion. 3. GlA", Chest.er. Dist-: BIOAd J\1nlP--l,. ,JA111es ;',lmplJy. Wl'st er ord c 100. 4, Episcopal. 5,ha.d

' b b th' d tl' field Ancp-141 fl. 5 m. , C,ll.holle; 2, ,Joe D'l'tnl'h. W,'st Catholtc: Central.. een 0 PIO an can on 1e. . .. : Brand Jump-I. Gill. Lower Merion. 2. : 3. HAWlcY. lJOwpr M.'rlon. Dlstallce 19 3.50 P. M.-American one-

major issue. was a bIt. eonfused by N~:berth leo the fight agamsl It. Hewit.t, Lower Merion. 3. tie betwe~ll fr .. 9'. IllS.it all. while Al Truesdell. of far claiW!ng that each team had been. Mull Ill, Lower Merloll. and SummA, JAVI'I!Il-·l, FrallllY Held, West. CutlJ- mile high school relaY-26.removed Colle~eville. just shOOk his told last ~'ear it had to have a' Ch,,";r. . .'. ,.. o,lIc: 2, ,Iohll Kalle, Low",· Merion; 3, Lowpr Merion.head with wonder and unbelief home field of its own and insisting' l.o\\er :llenon. 79, '\eht Calhollc, 38. 'l'oUIIII;, Lower Menon. 0Ist.Allce-145 ft.., 4.05 P. M.-Class B College

,But all partie6 were agreed t.ilat that Brookline 'games on Ma~oa's 'BI~~~;~~~~.l1;~~e~M~\'~~I;et:iaCk~~~;";I~I, _6_1_"_S_. o_n_e_-I_ll_i_le_I_·c_l_a:..Y_1:::.:._V:..i:.:.ll..:a:.::n:::.:o:..\..:'a.:..:.__the league would open as planned home field would hurl Manoa's Wesr. CRtl1ol!e; 3. Gene Lynch. We,tMay 13 with the following- first following on awa~' games, Cathol,c. Tlme-16.5 6ec•.da~; schedule; George Passmore. managpr of Lo\e~;3-~;~rio~,a;hD~;'Pl:t~Jl~1JLo\~~t'~J::~

Ardmore at Llanerch; College- the Llanprch team which will be - "..ville at Na.rberth; Brookline at comppt,ing in the league for theManoa. first time. pointed out that per-

It WBs also agreed but Quite 1'1'- I m.ission for Brookline to play atluctantly. thai. Brookline could J Veterans Park would be unfair toplay its home games at· Veterans, Llanerch in tha" Llanerch had lIn­Pa.rk, Darby ano MaJloa Rds.. I derotood each club had to have aBrookline. on the dates Manoa: field and had sunk $1500 into awas schsduled awa~' ft'Olll home.: field at Township Line and Bur-

It wa:- decided unanimously t.o! mont Rd .. whereas this wouldn·tha,ve paid official scorekeepers ap- iha ve been nr ~essary as it was alsopOinted for each g-ame. . • eligible to play at Veterans Park.

-,, .:~'~

lAJwerMerion Runners 'Eye Medley And Mile· 'Iitles,i Sports 'Seene Maroon Quartet r FIVE MORE POINTS FOR L. M, Norristown Next{- Just Q~W: ~re~?s~~lei'e last ~ro:~<;edt1~~~. t~~~i~O~~ £~:~ Sets New Record For Lower Merion

the field into a decent ball park. I Bd Mweek•. there was little the Main It isn't hard to understand their n .ne geton eetLine Baseball League could do misgivings now that they see an-abOut Eddie Hare's decision to other league team moving on theplay his home games at Veterans field. especially when that par-

ticular team and its backersPark. the same site Manoa A. A. showed no interest in playing atha~ used for a home base for the Veterans Park until Mano oper­put two years. Eddie was ada- ated there,mant. TIle league either had totake him on his terms or operatewith only five clubs, So they tookhim.

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PlANaS BOl'GHr QUIck RemOValco~~~o~~IC:en j

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ATTENTION LADIES! CAREFUL 5846 1Iiarket St..;'. Have YOll 3 or 4 hOllrs to SPAr~ bet.ween PIANO M V O:'h8:.i.L

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!~~iE~llI~~u~~dJe\\r:~tL ~i.nY.A~~~ f~l\ I ==:~H~~O~M~~E~:~F~U~.~R~;~~;~;~~~'~I~~~~~ri~~·~C~5Z9~WHITE WOMAN to help In klt.chen. Nu WIndow Shades-Venetian BIInde I REGULATION

laundn·.. Two In fnmll~·. El<cellent Linoleumwages, ne;'r tl'llnSportAtton. CAll BTl'n HOBSON & OWENS , ~Mawr 064.1. 101~-IOI7 LAncaster Ave .. Bryn Mawr ri' ~ ..n.8I:D'RES8MAKERS .A"-;;lst.An~PCl"If.iiC;: Phone' Bryn MAwr H2O or 1I21, ~W~

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' llOOKS-Bobb,y TWin". HOll~Y BunCh'j WANTED TO BUY I \' ,Mntery book,; And "Ic., complete ,~t" FGRNITURE WANTED-Sn t C -h Al I Wit.h .CO.mp...1."1,, OU,t..fil

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evening slipPers and Tux. WonderfUl p'MOrt·hlnes. PIAnos. anythIng E1pctrlcRI, N Anawarma ""ah.Tt·Tohvalues 1JI M()@S, bsby sizeR UP to Ladles' ea hers. Italr, "Bric-a-BrAc. Stlver. BraBll, Indian lAke Onlbarand men's 10. Hilltop 9976. p& lCoppcrware. Marble Furniture. roIlS. I' Gens"a ()&naden•••o ntlnKll, Jewclry I'll Buy from Attto 81l1rana... ' Gr....n !.a"e

REAL ESTATE to BlISement. COLEMAN. 907 N 7th St"l \',':.'::::".::: ~~~ ~~Phtlll., 23. LOMbnrd 0:132. RIII~ MOlllltaiD Rtola ~

DESIRABLlI: ROMES ANTlQUF.9 wantoo _ l"ttrnlture gl.... Arlbur LouJ,sID eacpJleni oommunltlea -* at- old chma. "ases.. brlc-a-brao fliUl'e8 Rarqllett. I..aJ<.. AIry

, ~e..:noa:e or Bent. coPPer and braes. It yOu bave Bnnhlni r::~.I!=:~ ....torr'::old call Bm. Mawr 2324 C u ....to... AkIlJa

.....-..!'fLL1AM fOOa BABY MliITAL PEETER CHAIR. Oall- ........".m-n Avenue. CYn'lfY11 Narberth 3784. me,••~

WANTED TO RENT WAN1:'ED="KIddieKoop, In lIood cOlldl· ;,. .. , 1.1011. Pbone Evergr..ell 2410. Mill N. Broad 1107 Soutb St.

..A~Vl!:RFORD or 'Lower Merloll 'rown-j GARDENING 137 S. 52" St.......... II-room hOWle or 2 bedroom. 11v-roomdlitc:heJ1 and .bath apartment. VICTORY GARDENS plowod Ilhone: 177 CITY LINE AVE 1; ,~= w~ .tve referel1ce. Phone Hill- early. GUl1et l"lU1n8, 424 puiecireat Rd.. •,. . • 8JtrlDdleld Ph- Swarthmore ~7S. . BALA.C\'ltiWYI) Neu Mth It.