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Delaware County Daily Times from Chester, Pennsylvania • Page 8

Location:
Chester, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DELAWARE COUNTY (PA.) DAILY TIMES Monday. July 17, 195I WEDDINGS ELAINE DEWEES JUNE WEBER ss Dewiees June Weber Erigaged Will Marry JMLMONT PARK Mr. and Mrs. John Dewecs, 224 Buchanan announce the engagement 6f their daughter, Miss Elaine Dewecs, to Edward Brown, Ion of and Mrs. William Brown, 2911 S.

Fclton Philadelphia. --The a graduate of Notre Dame Catholic Girls High School. A graduate of John Bartram High School, Philadelphia, the bridegroom-elect is the owner of Brown Brothers Electric Co. Philadelphia. couple has not set a-wedding date.

MILLVILLE, Del. Mrs Clyde Weber of this city, formerly of Glenoldcn, has announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss June Barbara Weber, to Thornton R. Bailey. He i the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Thorton C. Bailey, 169 E. Avon Road, Chester. Miss Weber' is the daughter also the late Mr. Weber.

She is a graduate of Irter- boro High School and attends Goldey Beacom Business College, Wilmington! The bridegroom-elect, a Che's- High graduate serves with the U. S. Air Forca at Chanute Air Forca Base, A fall wedding is being planned. CHESTER-Miss Evelyn Mae Yorkey became Mrs. Albert A.

Swayy here Saturday afternoon in a ceremony in St. Paul's Episcopal Church with the Rev. Linwood Urban officiating. Mr. and Mrs.

Edwin Yorkey, 521 Saude Essington, are the parents of the bride. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Swavy, R. D.

2, Boothwyn. Walter Chambers was organist and Harry Koenenman, soloist. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a floor length taffeta gown which was with an apron overskirt of organza. Her elbow length veil was held in by a crown of and sequins and. she carried a cascade of asters with pompons and lemon leaves.

The maid of honor, Miss Mary Ann Beecroft of Pine Hill, N. wore a mint green organza street length dress with a sweetheart neck and a bow in the back. A crown with a short organza veil in back and a cascade of pink asters with lemon leaves completed her'ensemble. Best man was Mirle Yorkey of Essington, brother of the bride. Immediately after a reception in the Campbell House, Upland, the couple left for a wedding trip in Canada.

They will stop at Atlantic City, N. before returning to Boothwyn. The bride 'attended Ridley Park High School and was grad- Cooking Is Fun Firlein, King PORCH PATIO WINDOW bring approx. urements and or mart by "do-it-yourulf" installation. Repair or Renew 'OUTDOOR FURNITURE Complete stocks of pads, cushions, materials, Webbing, etc.

STOTTERS Dept, Store Mpp3rol Market, WASH WEAR NEEDS PROFESSIONAL CARE! new specialty fabric! rt- quira scientific handling by perl dry cleaners. 1 Phone -TR 6-8756 GEIGER CLEANERS 1625 PROVIDENCE AVE; CHESTER, PA. I Nu-glazV cleaning, fluffing 'of nap, controlled shrink- oge, pick up and de; livery. Just the finest scrvica possible. RUG REPAIRING STORING-DYEING Tacked dawn carpels cleaned Jn your home.

PH. TR 4-8681 For immediate pick-up in Delaware County. FBroWM thru our used rug Dcpl.l 426 East 7th Chisttr By CECILY BROWNSTONE THE BRIDE COOKS DINNER If you are looking for a savory rangetop veal dish that does not call for this is it. Phyl's Veal Paprika Steamed Rice Green Peas Head Lettuce with Thousand Island Dressing Lemon Tarts Beverage PHYL'S VEAL PAPRIKA 1. pound boneless veal (at least 1 inch thick) butter or marga- -Tine 1 clove garlic (crushed) 1 cup diced celery I'beef bouillon cube dissolved in 1 cup boiling'water 1 teaspoon paprika 1 A cup cream SaH and pepper Have veal cut in or 9 chunks.

In a heavy saucepan, brown on all sides in butter. Stir in garlic, celery" and bouillon. Simmer, covered, about hour or until tender. There should be enough-'liquid and drippings in pan to about cup; if not, add a little water; if more, reduce.by cooking rapidly. Off heat, in the paprika and sour cream.

Add salt if necessary and pepper to taste. Reheat but do not boil. Makes 2 to 3 servings. BOOTHWYN-The marriage of Christina Nelson Firlein of Ridge and H. Hilliard Klug was solemnized here Saturday evening at a lawn ceremony at the home of the bridegroom, Kirk Road.

The bride is the daughter of Mrs. S. V. 'Nelson of Parkside and the late Mr. Nelson, and the bridegroom's parents are Rev.

and Mrs. H. 0. Hug of New Mil ford, N. J.

Rev. Klug, pastor of the Newark, N. Baptist Church, officiated. The former Mrs. Firlein wore a blue silk organza gown embroidered in white on the yoke and skirt, and a white cap.

She carried a colonial bouquet of white carnations and slephano- tis. Her daughter, Mrs. James K. -Conner. Jr.

of Ridley Park, was her attendant. She also wore a blue dress. Her pink and" blue flowers were arranged in the colonial style. T. Nelson Allen of was best man.

A reception in the bridegroom's home followed the ceremony. The couple will live there when they return from the West Coast. The bride, a graduate of Ches- 'ter High School, is an executive secretary at the Scott Paper where her husband, a graduate of the Pratt Institute, Brookiyn, N. is a lubrication engineer. a from Chester Hospital School of Practical Nursing.

She is now working as an operating joqm technician at Ches- 1 tcr Hospital. Her husband, who was graduated from Brown Vocational School and served four years in the U. S. Navy, is'currently employed at the Industrial and Farm Equipment Chester. FEDERATION Committee Discusses Bazaar BROOMALL --Plans for the Christmas bazaar.

In November were discussed by members of the home life committee of the MARPLE TOWNSHIP WOMAN'S CLUB at a recent meeting in the home of Mrs Mae Lord, 20-10 Woodside L'anc. Mrs. S. Harold McClea assisted Mrs. Lord as hostess.

A feature of the afternoon was Mrs. Lord's showing of movies of her recent trip to Alaska. Committee members include Mrs. T. S.

Dickson, Mrs. Sidney Armstrong, chairman; Mrs. Robert Mrs. Edward Sauer Mrs. Frederick H.

Burgess, Mrs. William Curro- dus, Mrs. George Hudson. Others attending. were Mrs.

John Manzi, Mrs. Brinton Carter, Mrs. Newbold, Mrs. James Eichlin, president; Mrs. William Bieretz, and Mrs.

James Klopp. At another meeting, Mrs. Robert Thompson, program chairman, discussed the fail program with Mrs. James Eichlin, Mrs. Carter, Mrs.

Gardner Showalter, Mrs. Armstrong, Mrs. Hudson and Mrs. Clyde Baker. THE NORWOOD JUNIOR CENTURY CLUB picnic is slated for Wednesday at 11:30 a.m.

in the home of the president, Mrs. James Doyle. 575 E. Winona Ave. Norwood.

AH club members and their families are invited. Corn Boil Scheduled SWARTHMORE--Notre D.ame DeLourdes parish wall have its third annual corn boil July 29 on the parish grounds, Michigan and Fairview Avenues. Games, kiddie rides on fire engines and ponies, and other amusements, and dancing and refreshments will be part of the program. All of this will be in progress from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.

A hot beef dinner will be served from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the school cafeteria. Fred lacono of Ridley Township is chairman of the event, which will be postponed until Aug. 5 in cvmt of rain. LIVING It UP Chester Man Travels To Study ivith Master Muscella Miss Lucille J.

DeJohn became the bride of Andre M. Polilli in a cere- mony'July 9 in St. An- thony's Catholic Chester. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Pasquale DeJohn of Chester, and his parents are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Polilli, also of Chester. After a honeymoon in Miami Beach, the newlyweds will live at 717 Madison Chester. FAMILY DOCTOR By EVAGENE HARGROVE Daily Times Family Editor THE BEST--Simon Krudo, a 35-ish bachelor to his' friends, Mr.

and Mrs. Lobr Kerns of Chester and steeps" music, sailed for Italy this month. There he'll study with Andres Segovia, a Spaniard who'plays the guitar, and plays it, by all critical estimates, better than any other man in the world. Segovia.isn't a "pops" guitarist. His' specialty is 'classical guitar, which calls' for, total mastery of all ten fingers on ail the frets and on all the six strings of; the instrument.

(Those who have seen Segovia in his concerts in this country have been known to watch him carefully for a third hand. They 'claim, rin'y half facetiously, that no one could produce such sounds without one.) At any rate, classical guitar technique produces intricate harmonies and melodies on an instrument that is usually thought to give forth very little more than chords. For example, Segovia has developed an entire repertory of Caring for Diabetic Child-Is Demanding SINCERELY, EDAIV WRIGHT Drunken Father Causes I Problems for Children DEAR EDAN WRIGHT: I'm a 15-year-old girl who'has problems that come from one source --a father.who is a drunk. weeks go because he hit the bottle too much and too often. And this isn't the first lime.

My mo- thcr has to work to help him' make a living and when she comes home she has to cook dinner and do a lot of bther things. COMPLETE HEARING HELP FOR ONLY $50.00 Hearing Service Involves more than just shearing aid. To assure your complete satisfaction, you get all this from Zenith--at one low price! Zenith's powerful model 5O-R Zenith quality earphone, cord and stodk carmolcf. Convenient clothi'ng clip. 10-Day Money-Back Guarantee--you must ba satisfied or your money back.

Ask to see and then compare one-year warranty and. famous fcive-Year Protection Service Plan. After purchase, assistance, guidance and Instruction. My older brother has been working after school for a long time to earn money for college and to help Mom make a living. In the summer, an older sister and myself work and take over for our brother on the money end.

We all do our part in helping out with the housework and in trying to be a credit to our parents. Even our young sis, who is just a kid, contributes by getting 1 the groceries and doing a lot of chores around the house. My father does nothing but make trouble. The kids in our neighborhood won't have anything to do with us" because of him and we arc just lucky that our Dad gets too drunk on weekends to keep us from going out and having a little Of course we have to do this with the kids who don't know about his drinking. But isn't it terrible when a girl can't ask a boy to her house to meet her parents? Our grandfather wants Mom to put Dad away and we think she should.

But he won't. Don't you think she is wrong? DISGUSTED WITH FATHER. NO. BECAUSE you don't understand that your Dad's drinking is an illness and that he needs help with it from all of you. I want all you older kids--and your Mom--to 'go to the meetings for relatives of Alcoholics Anonymous.

I'll put you in touch with the group in your area through a personal letter. From the understanding you will get of your Dad's condition, you might be able to get him to seek help with the main stem of A.A. --the people who have conquered the bottle and can show others how they might do the same. By HAROLD HYMAN, M.D. Writes a registered nurse who as the mother of a child diabetic: "Re your statement that 'Diabetes today is just about the simplest and easiest of chronic disturbances' to maybe you ought to take a newly discovered diabetic child into your home for a few months and then write another article.

The day begins at 7 a.m. with examination of a specimen and an insulin shot," she says. "Then breakfast of what he's supposed to eat, not what he wants to eat. Meals at the school cafeteria are but. No nearly enough protein and too much starch.

"Social activities with refreshments are another problem. Who wants to explain 'all the Then, if he gets shaky in the middle of a game from too much insulin or too little-the others become angry if he quits. "Everything has to be considered when the insulin dose is figured: Activity, emotional upsets, a cold, an upset stomach. The rate of normal growth (he was years old at the onset. Now he's 11).

"If you had ever lived with a child diabetic--or even' an adult with a brittle diabetes you could not possibly have stated that the control of diabetes is simple and easy." I plead guilty an explanation. Caring for the child diabetic or for the adult with a "brittle" diabetes is indeed a difficult and treacherous job. As my correspondent "just everything'lhrows them off" and "they can go from diabetic coma to insulin shock" in a matter of a few hours or even minutes. But what I was referring to --and I should have been more specific was the vast majority of adult diabetics of whom there may be as many as two million in the United States and Canada at this writing. Of this veritable army, perhaps the largest group is composed of adults who require little more than prescription of a mixed low calory diet to accomplish weight reduction.

Perhaps the next largest group is composed of those whose disturbance is 'controllable through diet and one of the sugar-reducing (hypogly-cemic) pills that is taken by mouth. With the exception of the relatively small group to which my correspondent refers, the majority of the remaining diabetics manage to get along i successfully with a single injection of insulin each day. Now it was to the preponderant numbers of simply controlled diabetics that I addressed myself in the column criticized by my correpondent. Within the limitations of time and space, I really cannot do more than enter into a broad discussion of complex problems to which experts dedicate volumes. I should most certainly have Indicated that my general statement did not embrace those trying special situations encountered by child diabetics, adults with a brittle diabetic the controlled diabetic with a particular problem such as pregnancy, an intercurrent infection or operation, or evidences of chronic disease.

Finally, a positive suggestion for my kindly critic. Might it not be a good idea to have your child's situation reviewed by a specialst? Perhaps it may now be possible to substitute an oral hyperglycemic tablet for the insulin shot, and remove most dietary restrictions? I hope so for both your sakes. Bach, arrangements that out- Bach a harpsichord. To get back to Krudo: He has been a Segovia fan for years, has gone to each concert the master played in the New York or Philadelphia areas. At one of the last of these he spoke personally to'the great guitarist, and it was then that the arrangement was made that takes Krudo to Italy.

After the month of study with Segovia Krudo will tour Europe. He plans to return in late October, when, presumably, he'll he'll pass on to his own 'students teaches guitar, as well as piano, banjo, and bass) of what he's learned. A graduate of Chester High School, he went on to Penn State to major in music. He was born and raised in the house he now occupies at 542 Sth Chester. --0-NESTING TIME-To the passerby, the Daily Times Building seems to be connected wall- to-wall with its neighbor, the Ohev Sholom Synagogue.

However, this proximity disappears behind the facades of the two buildings. There is, in reality, a sort of alley between the two that Isn't apparent from the street In this alley, high up on an airconditioning outlet, a family of pigeons has chosen to We've watched the mama build the nest, a straggling affair of sticks and hay (where did she get such materials in downtown and lay her eggs. Now two babies have hatched, we're waiting for their first flopping flight. --0-STREET SCENES -Arthur Sutton of Concord has devised an almost foolproof method for determining the distance he and his Boy Scout troop have hiked. He stops a passing motorist, gives the surprised driver his hat, and politely requests that An old-fashioned spread for crackers that bears reviving: crackers that bears reviving: Pimiento-stuffed olives ground with walnuts or pecans and moistened with homemade cook- cd dressing mayonnaise.

i i vACOKATLDTOIDMLEi PRESCRIPTION i i OUR SPECIALTY Foreign Filled GUARANTEED DELIVERY TR 4-2597 TR 4-2598 Your "Charge-It" KEYSTONE DRUG CO. 506 MARKET STREET the motorist take the hat and deposit it exactly four miles up the road. When Sutton and the troop collect the chapeau they know exactly how far they've traveled. The only danger is that the motorist will like the hat. But Sutton hasn't lost one yet.

CUSTOM MADE DRAPES end SLIPCOVERS LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES For Free Call LE 2-1170 IE-HI 559 CHESTER PIKE (Next to Monor Theatre) PROSPECT PARK PA. '31" LOUNGE 3100 W. 9th CHESTER PHONE GYPSY 4-9080 AVAILABLE FOR if Of A SHOWERS-PARTIES SOCIALS-MEETINGS Serving up fo 500 --Open Friday Shop and Save BIG SALE Red Cross SHOES DISCONTINUED PATTERNS OF THIS SEASON'S STYLES Beautiful Styles-- All Heels Women's Shoes Formerly to 14.99 Sizes 5 to 11, AAA to Plenty of Hard-to-Find Sizes 7" a 9" SLATER'S 618 Edgmont Ave. Chester, Pa. EASY CARE-- Mrs.

Charles A. Summers, who' was married July 7 in South Chester ci i Church, was Miss Lois Anne Tinley. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Calvert Tinley of Mai'cus Hook.

Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Summers Swansboro, N.C., former Delaware County residents. Both the bride and her husband attended Eddystone High School. Following their honeymoon, they will live with the bride's parents.

Treat yourself to more time for summer fun with the latest, easiest hair style. Special for a Limited Time. ARTICHOKE GUT and PERMANENT $OJt, FREE PARKING Chester Village Green 620 Sproul Stropping Cen TR 4-4311 HU 5-642 i "LIVING, SOUND" HEARING AIDS Come in or call for a free NELSON'S SURGICAL APPLIANCES 120 E. 9th Si. (Near Edgmont) Phone TR 6-4935 HOURS: Daily 9 to 5:30 Fn.

9 to 9 WE SERVICE AIL MAKES OF HEARING AIDS DON'T BE A SUMMERTIME WEEKENDER Reductions on all PERMANENTS Received During Our Midweek Specials Starting at 10 There's nothing quite so refreshing to the lady who likes to look lovely, than a new hair style or color. Sth Welsh Chester SALON TR 4-5307 FASHION of the MONTH "ARTICHOKE" "ARTICHOKE" the Paris- Inspired, short-short cat. perfect for Summertime. The subtle, ever-so ftlttrrfn; lhrr- i sional Is achieved by cut- ttnjt the in overlapping layers betinnlnr at a focal point at Ibe crown. On one tide wave movement li carried prettily back and np.

IcaTinr Just a portion of the tar exposed. The other ilde wlsoj back to cover the ear, flndlnr forward motion In a. ItjhtlT (endrllled cheeX cnrl. Eyebrow bams item from the hich crown In an Irregular casual dcslrn. 'Back hair li shaped to the head contour In a softly feminine pattern of wares.

Overall Chic, yet ilemorc. 1 SWARTHMORE BEAUTY SALON Klngswood 3-3476 CARMEN'S RUG CLEANING gives your RUGS THE FRESH NEW Our method UFE of your carpeti and RESTORES original bwuty. WE ARE EQUIPPED FOR COMPLETE CARPET SERVICE! Cltaning, mothproofing, dy.tng atl.ratien,. EXPERT WORK at naionabU pric.l rhoni for TR 4-2943 TR 4-5373 31 RUG SERVICE CHESTER ROSE STREET.

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About Delaware County Daily Times Archive

Pages Available:
161,297
Years Available:
1959-1976