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Delaware County Daily Times from Chester, Pennsylvania • Page 2

Location:
Chester, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
2
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CHESTER TIMES, CHESTER, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1937 U. S. EMBASSY TO QUIT NANKING, OTHERS TO STAY from Pan One declared war exacerbated anti-Jap- aneae feeling In Shanghai. The feeling grew among residents of the International Settlement that the powers must present a united front against Japanese encroachment. Japan's militarists, turned the full force of their devastating war machine on China's capital todny, staging two more terrtflce air raids on Nanking which impelled the United States Embassy staff to prepare to leave the city as a measure of protection.

While Japanese war planes roared overhead in separate air raids in the morning and afternoon, bringing to four the number of assaults staged within forty-eight hours. United States Ambassador Nelson T. Johnson announced his staff would move 11 miles up the Yangtze River abaord the gunboat Luzon tomorrow. He thus complied with the demand of Vice Admiral Klyoshi Hasegawa. Japanese navnl commander, that foreign nationals be moved beyond the range of bombs and i shells by noon which time thr Japanese hope to raze Nanking to the ground.

The time set bv Japanese for the bombardment is noon local time to- thing 1- B. Lowenstein of morrow or midnight tonight New liW Angles had had enough hik- York time. ing in the army. But here he rubs The Japanese warnings, however, found Oreat Britain, Soviet Russia and France determined to "hold the fort" at Nanking. Spokesmen for the three powers announced they had no Intention of hai.

however, "If the warning to i evacuating for the present. Xn ad- quit Nanking bv noon tomorrow is ditlon, British and French naval disregarded. commanders warned Hasegawa that Fifty In Nanking the Japanese would be held re- looked to Ambassador r. sponsible for the killing or wound- Johnson, to whom the warning was ARMY OF LEGIONNAIRES CAPTURES NEW YORE WHAT'S AFOOT? wtary feat on arrival for the American region Convention in New York. He came afoot! i 'tzxrrabi A A HO AltO FOR KOL'SINU GOOD TIME! LO.

THE POOR INDIAN The 200,000 and more veterans rxpnted lo take part in the Itlg doings The traditional "no fire-water for of the convention hardly set foot on the Sidewalks of New York before I Indians" floors Chief Shurtleff of thry are curried away hy transports of least if they are Plymouth, Mass. He quaffs his members of I he 40 nnd 8 society. The Detroit voiture above clangs its milk without the aid of the brass way around town on a miniature of the French trains used as troop, rail on which his Legion buddies transports in wartime. I lean so congenially. VETERAN CAMPAIGNERS Veterans of other campaigns go in for a less dangerous form of of votes for their favorite candidates for National Commander of the American Legion.

REFLECTING EYE FOR BEAUTY And here, ladles and gentlemen, is a glimpse of the mora of the Legion gathering. Elaine us sell of Oxford, who'll preside as Miss American Legion, reflects on that old military adjunct: "Keep your powder dry." Having done so, it's ready to keep her looking her prettiest through the hectic days of veterans' sessions. tag of any of their nationals United States Admiral Harry E. Yarnell, commander of the Asiatic fleet, likewise rejected the Japanese demand thai warships be moved away from Nanking. In a formal note to Hasegawa, he refused to move the Luzon and the gunboat Ouam from Nanking, taking the attitude their presence is necessary as long as Americans remain In the capital.

He asked Hasegawa to -instruct Japanese raiders to "avoid these Note: Yarnell's note apparently conflicted with the announcement of Ambassador Johnson at Nanking, who said he would evacuate the embassy staff aboard the Luzon tomorrow. It was regarded posslb'c the latter might be disembarked at a safe point above the river and the Luzon return to king to protect Americans remaining Hasegawa 's intention was to clear the Yangtze river of all foreign warships. The new Japanese air raids, however, found the British cruiser Capte Town, the British Tunboata Bee and anal and the French sloop Admiral Charnier firm it their anchorages in the river. Scores of Chinese non-combatants were killed In today's assaults. The objective of both of them ob- rtoualy to destroy the offices Central Government headed tqr Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, in this respect both failed.

Other of the city 's landmarks were not so fortunate, however. Bombs fell near the waterworks, the airdromes and narrowly missed the Central University laboratory on Purple Mountain where the remains of Sun Yatsen. founder of modern China, arc interred. Detonation of the bombs and heavy anti -aircraft Are rocked the city for hours. The Chinese claimed to have downed three of the raiding airplanes.

Issued, for leadership. Arrangements already had been made for possible flight of Chinese Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, and his government to Changsha, 450 miles in the interior. American river patrol boat.s were available to help the departure of the remaining nationals from king. The Japanese warning said the capital, which has a population 750,000. would be attacked In 'a most severe way in order to end hostilities as soon as possible through destruction of the case of China's chief military opposition against Japan." Newly-arrived United States Marines, taking up guard duly on the edge of Shanghai's intehinllonai settlement, again had a taste of war today whrn Chinese and Japanese artillery exchanged flic.

With Japanforces preparing a fresh nttack on Chinese entrenchments north of the city, land fighting on the Chinese front wius at standstill today because the entire sector Is flooded by continuing rains. More than doubling the American garrison here, 1435 marines of the Sixth Regiment arrived In the transport Chaumont, from San EDGAR C. FELT0N DIES AT HIS HOME P.R.R. Director Native of This City, Retired in 1916 Edgar Conway Felton, a native of this city, who was a director of the Pennsylvania Railroad and former president of the Pennsylvania Steel Company, died yesterday morning at his home, 500 County Line road. Havcrford, following a brief illness.

He was in his eightieth year. The industrialist, who retired In 101(1, IIIKI been associated with the Pennsylvania Sleet Company lor 30 years, beginning his career In a minor capacity at the Slrellon chemical laboratory. He advanced rapidly and held ihe presidency of resident of Chester until a number nl years ago. when she made her home in Washington. Surviving arc two children, Walter Jones, of New York City; Mrs.

Mabel Paulino, of the Philippine Islands, and live grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Tuesday afternon i'l. 3 o'clock at the Fall-lamb Funeral Parlors, 1600 Edg- mont avenue, with Interment following in the Chester Rural cemetery. Friends may call this evening. DR.

ROBERT K. SEYFERT Friends in this city received word THE GAME OF POLITICS By FRANK R. KENT (Copyright. 1937) -i In politics, as in everything else, it is the pit you dig for other people that hurts you mast when you fall Into it yourself. That Is exactly what seems to have happened to President Roosevelt, as a result the recent di: 'osurcs concerning his appointee to the Supreme i Mr.

Hugo Black, today from relatives telling of the I death of Dr. Robert E. Seyfert, 50, The fear of the President's lntl- a dentist, formerly of Third and ma tcs is that, before they can be Yarnall this city, who was blurred, the facts will so sink into killed in an automobile crash, near Lebanon, late Saturday night. His body and that of a friend, Hugh Black. 32, were discovered yesterday morning.

Dr. Seyfert's car had left the roadway, plunged down a 75- foot embankment and landed in a quarry. Both bodies were crushed. Dr. Seyfert will be remembered bv 1110 older residents of the West End.

he having conducted an office at Third and Morton street, as it was then known, for a peri6d of years. the company for 20 years. The firm On leaving this city about twenty nlnc ears ago Dr. Seyfert opened an ofllce in Philadelphia and after several years there he moved to Lebanon. has since been absorbed by the Bethlehem Steel Corporation.

After Ills retirement Mr. Felton In 1921 was elected a director of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and subsequently served as a director of several of its subsidiaries, including the Diego, convoyed by the light Pittsburgh. Fort Wayne and Chicago cruiser Marblchead To Ihe cheers of foreigners and the polite salutes of Japanese jackets, the marines landed on the customs Jetty while the band of Welsh fusiliers, crack British regiment, played. In the record aerial battle over the Yangtze near Nanking- a "dress rehearsal" like today's attack, for the threatened major attack on the 40 Japanese and 2G Chinese craft took part. The Japanese bombers took oil from an aircraft carrier anchored In the Yantze near Shunghul unci with speedy fighters as escorts, dashed away Into the interior.

Chinese airplanes, however, had Destructive as they were, these time to take off and engage'them raids were nothing to the attack Japanese commanders warned they would make at noon tomorrow. Extension of Japanese aerial activity through all North China also was foreshadowed when Japanese authorities sent notes to foreign I representatives telling them to advise their nations in the area north 1 of the Lunghal Railroad to take pie- cautionary measures. American and other neutral flags must be conspicuously displayed on rooftops, the Japanese and homes in the vicinity of Chinese military establishments were ordered evacuated. Two Japanese air raids yesterday, which brought on one of the greatest aerial battles in history, gave the Japanese airmen a chance to map and photograph the capita! Japanese warships, sailing up the broad Yangtze river, also will participate in the razing of Nanking, but naval commanders promised lo avoid damaging foreign Interests "as far aa possible." "We cannot assume responsibility for foreign lives and property," said the Japanese spokesman in Shang- Most of the Chinese craft were American built Curtlss-Hawkcs or Italian Bredas. Japanese commanders admitted that three planes failed to return- otherwise reports of the battle's result were conflicting.

The Japanese spokesman suit! 20 Chinese airplanes were shot clown, but llv mayor of Shnnkhnl. Yin, "We are all right, but lour Japanese planes were brought clown Japanese submarines ale now operating In the patrol off the coast, said the spoke but far lliey have not taken any lively warlike steps." Railroad. Ihe Pittsburgh. Cincinnati. Chicago and Kt Louis Railroad and the Western New York and Pennsylvania Railroad.

Durhig the World War Mr. Fcllou served as director of the civilian service and labor department? of the Pennsylvania Committee on Public Safety, and later a.s director of ihe S. Employment Bureau for Pennsylvania. During thin lime he rehabilitated and obtained employment for thousands of returned soldiers and sailors and other war workers. During the last two of 1111B it was est 1 mal 11 in i 1211.000 persons were thus put buck to work.

Mr. Felton was interested in various financial enterprises and held life membership In the leading technological and engineering societies. He mm an Overseer of Harvard University and a trustee of the Drexcl Institute of Technology, and JOSEPH A. CROCKETT Joseph A. Crockett, 51, died nt his home lust at 1000 Potter after illness of 10 months.

He was a resident ol Chester all his life, and lor many years was em- playcd as. a guard at the Baldwin Locomotive Works. He was the son of the late Charles and Mary of this city. Funeral will be held on Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the funeral parlors of John L. Clancy, Broad unci Upland streets.

Interment will be in the Chester Rural cemetery. WILLIAM l.OKB DIES GLEN COVE. N. Sept. William Locb, 70.

secretary to the late President Theodore Roosevelt, was dead today of pneumonia. After serving as stenographer of the New York Assembly in 1888 and of the New York Constitutional Convention of 1894, Loeb became In North China, Hit one time served as" president "of secretary the public schools of Steellon and of Haverlord 'ownshlp. In 1027 he was named president of a coinmls- i sion to con.iid?r plans for a second Delaware River Bridge between Philadelphia and Camden. Born at Thui'low. on April 13.

Mr Fell on was Ihe son of so Samuel Morse Felton and Maria ac- Low l.ippitt Felton. He was graduated from Harvard University in in 1899 when the latter became governor. WALLACE OUTLINES 1938 FARM vnneinif in 1 traveled in Europe for a vear van ing along the Peipiiig-Hauk(iw-; 1UU Railroad asserted thev advanced The Five Hundred Familiar Sayings Readers Ask About In the booklet, FAMILIAR 8AYINOS. Issued by our Washington Information Bureau, there is a collection of over 500 famous sayings, words, and phrases that are the ones concerning which the most questions axe asked by newspaper readers. It is a publication that will refresh your memory about some of your old favorites, and it will give you a great quantity ol new Information, all indexed for ready reference.

It will interest and amuse you. For example, "Where did we get the phase Paddle your own canoe'?" The answer is that it was first used in a poem published in Harper's Magazine May. 1854. In ordering your copv of FAMILIAR SAYINGS enclose 10 cents in coin to cover cost and handling. USE THIS COUPON lrom Chochou to Koapeiilng.

The vanguard is now only 40 miles Ivom the Chinese main base nt Paotingfu. which was heavily bombed by Japanese planes. TOKYO. Sept. 20 The Dome! 'Japani'M'i agency reported today that the "black plague'' has broken out Munchuko and that 19R ea.ses have been reported i Authorities established quarantine restrictions at Hsinkiug.

the capital, and all the railway It was not specified whether the plague was pneumonic or some other 1 form. in 1HH0 entered the service of the Pennsylvania Steel Co In WW-t he married Alice Bent, ol Chicago, and they had six children. He became first assistant superintendent ol Ihe steel company, then superinteudem, and lHiiti was named president. Mr Felion was manager nt Hie Guard Trust Co. and ol the Wcs' ein Saunas Fund Society, and a director ol Hie Philadelphia National Bank and the General Asphalt Co.

He was a member ol ihe Frunkliu WASHINGTON. Sept. 20 (INSi of Agriculture Wallace today announced tne new farm program for next year. Submitted to farm leaders from every state here last week, the program establishes a "goal" acreage for all major crops which would reduce the total farm plantings 1P38 bv 15,000,000 to 30.000.000 acres. the public consciousness that the widely cherished i' 2a of him so fostered for fl years will undergo a considerable change.

It It not surprising they arc perturbed. Certainly it will take ingenuity and agility to get out of the hole without damage. Even if he compels Mr. Black to resign, it hardly will allay popular resentment over the fact that but for the of an anti-New Deal newspaper a member of a sinister and secret organization, founded on racial and religious prejudice, would sit for life on the highest court in the land. If this is averted, clearly It will not be Mr.

Roosevelt's fault. It is not through him that Ihe sn.ug security of tills "great liberal stateman" has now been disturbed and the Klan can tied to his tail. Only the completely undlscerning are likely to miss that basic point. Left no alternative by the public clamor, it is plain that Mr. Rodke- velt intends to ask Mr.

Black to resign and" establish as his own alibi that he did not know he belonged to the Ku Klux Klan. There are two reasons for thinking that program may not work out. One Ls that Mr. Black may refuse to carry out the part to which he is assigned. To bow to the Presidential request is equivalent lo being thrown off the bench in sent back to private life a ruined man, who has lost not only the great judicial position to which he was so suddenly elevated but also the Senate scat he had before the President picked him.

It is easily conceivable that, cornered, Mr. Black may balk at getting off. He has a pretty mean disposition and is an extremely insensitive man. He is hardly the kind voluntarily to "sacrifice" himself. Already his friends have indicated the position lie is apt to that the whole business is aimed at the President in revenge for putting a "liberal" on the bench.

That's exactly the sort of poslMon it would be typical of Mr. Black to take. Suppose Mr. Black comes back and, despite the documentary evidence, denies he Is a Klansinan. Or suppose he admits it and declines to retire.

What can be done about it? He can't bo removed and not many think hp can be impeached. Of course, Mr. Roosevelt may charm the Black confirmation. And the pretty plan to "purge the party" of these Senators has distinctly sagged. It is the President, not his opponents, who ls now on the defensive.

The appointment which so delighted Mr, Roosevelt because it put the Senate in a hole, and at the same time smacked the Court in the face, does not seem so clever now. It was reported at the time that it greatly amused the President to compel the Senate to accept the unpopular Mr. It did not want, and put on the Court a man who would be unpleasant personally to the austere members who had refused to "co-operate" with him. It seems safe to state he is no longer amused. The effect to date of the disclosures has been to shake the confidence of a good many people who were with him to cause a revision of the speeches he had planned on his western trip; to queer the scheme of punishing the Democrats who opposed him on "Reform of the to enhance the strength of the opposition and diminish his prestige, particularly among Catholics, Jews, Negroes and the foreign-born.

Nor does the stress laid by his journalistic defenders upon his past opposition to the Klan, and personal "tolerance" make his situation very much better. The hope of his friends is that upon Mr. Black's return a way can be fotoffthat will rifei to wriggle out of his jam. However, they haven't found it yet. If Mr.

Black is amenable, acquiescent and fades out of the picture without fuss, the President can, it ls held, count upon an easily diverted people to forget the incident. But if Mr, Black Is not Mr. Black beats his breast, prates about the purity of his heart and insists it is all a vile "Tory plot" against the President (all of which would be in entire keeping with Mr. Black's character) then things will be a mess, indeed. How Mr.

Black reacts when confronted by a White House request to "go way back and lie down" ls the most Interesting question of the moment. JAPAN AIMS TO CONTROL CHINA Foreign Diplomats See Ambition to Create 5- Province Government PHILA. MOVES TO PROBE GAMBLING Continued From Page One Here and There SHANGHAI. Sept. 20 Japan intends to dominate all China if she wins the present war, foreign diplomats and military experts believed today.

Various sources polled by the United 1 Press said Japan presumably has the following objectives: 1. Establishment of a wedge between China and Russia through Sulyuan, Kansu and Sinkiang provinces. 2. Creation of a five-province autonomous government under Japanese tutelage and including Hopel, Shantung. Chahar, Shansl and Suiyuan province by a military conquest.

Such a conquest is necessary, it was said, because of the failure to achieve results through negotiations, coercion, threats, and promises to Sung Cheh-Yuan. Han Fuchu, Yen Hsi-Shan, Pu Tso-Yi and other provincial chieftains. 3. The enthronement of Pu Yl, new emperor kang teh of Manchu- kuo, as ruler of a Manchu empire with Chinese, Mongolians. Manchus and Mohammedans under Manchu- Japanese emblems.

4. Control of coastal provinces, enabling passage of Japanese Imports, oi.opium and irorh JMidT and aMnchipfao without interference by Chinese customs. 5. Control of Chinese customs with their huge revenues, enabling Japan to throttle foreign commerce and build up Japanese commerce. 6.

Occupation of Hainan Island off the Soutjp China coast. The island is recognized as of strategic military importance by world naval authorities. 7. Recovery of Tsingtao in Northern China, now held by the Chinese. IIAWAIIANS LIKE SCHOOL Hawaiian Islands have gone school conscious.

Superintendent of Public Instruction Oren E. Long has just announced that at the present time one of every four persons in the islands is enrolled in either a private or public school. move, charged that gambling wu rampant in "wide open Philadelphia," and requested the Court to start aa Immediate inquiry. Judge Bok, ignoring Mayor S. Davis Wilson's plea that he refrain from issuing the order, directed that an immediate investigation be conducted by the Grand Jury, and included the office of the District Attorney, in his order.

It was believed there would be important political repercussions as memories were revived of the sensational vice investigation of 1932, when the entire police department was shaken. It was expected that the Grand Jury would not begin the Investigation immediately today, but would wait until the full panel of members had been obtained tomorrow. Sheriff William J. Hamilton said his deputies had been able to find only 17 members up to Saturday, and if the full panel were not present today, the Jury wheel would be brought to court to select addtional names. Meanwhile, there was conjecture In legal circles regarding who would present the evidence to the Jury, as the office of the district attorney was included in the investigation.

PENNA. TRAFFIC TOLL By UNITED PRESS Reported today: Dead 14 Injured 293 Victims January 1 to date: Dead 1.817 Injured 40,942 Avoid Embarrassment of FALSE TEETH Dropping or Slipping Don't be embarrassed again by having your false teeth slip or drop when you eat, talk, laugh or sneeze. Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your plates. This new, extremely fine powder gives a wonderful sense of comfort and security all day long. No gummy, gooey taste or feeling because It's alkaline lnon-acid).

Oet FASTEETH at any drug store. Accept no substitute. Instead of reviving piivments fori, diversion acreage from soil-dc- I 1 1 s( who pleling tanners will be paid on the product from acres actually pliinlod in such they do not exct'od the maximum aceriiRc "go.ils" fur them by the AAA. ami provided they carry out other 1 conservation practices cstab- know Mr. Black do not think so.

ihe American Institute ot lished by the department. Mining Engineers, the American So- "The new program." Wallace said, 'UP' The si all moved I.u.Min. anus a result ol mg mass airplanes NANKING Sepi 'JO United Si ales today to tiir gunboat chored in the river ihe Japanese warning tH.it Nanking would be Iximbed by The enure wiih ihe exception V. lliili-Palrh, si com! tary. loll Hie ciuliassv by automobile, Nelson American ambassador ncling In the last ear.

and boarrtui the gunboat. 'Die I.u/mi will ivmatn in midstream iin.i! murnuig. when probably will go nvei sali'ly. The Chester Times' Information Bureau. Frederic J.

Haskin, Director, Washington, O. C. I enclose herewith 10 in eein (carefully wrapped in ier) far a copy of the book- PAMILIAR SAVINGS. ttTMt (Mag to Washington, D. Letters to the Times Editor IRf-hdors Invited to contribute their viewb on i-um-nl topics.

-All communications must be signed 1 ELECTION KETI'ltNS ciety of Mechanical Fngineers mid tin; Ainevu-an Iron anil Steel Institute. lie was ii president of Univer.siiv Club, a leimer prcMdcni ot the Harvard Club, of I phla. a governor ol the Merlon Cricket Club, and a member ol the Philadelphia Club and ot the Son i of the Revolution. I He Is bv wife and -ix Mrs lunntcU H. Tain-all.

i I ol Haverlord; Mr: Sumner Union- i i Miller, of Atdmore; Samuel Kel; ton anil Winshnv Felton. ol Cornelius l'Vlton, of New York and Huston, and Kdgar lon. Jr. ol Haverlord. MISS MAKV l.lll'KK Miss Man Giay I.

CIIKT of Ivy- Hall. Avondale road. anhniore. tiled this morning in the Ciozer Hospital Upland Miss I.eiper. a member ol a prominent Delaware lainlly.

was the daughter of Mis Miugaret (Gray Vale l.eipev unci the late Cal- I lender Irvine I.eiper. and tiic home which she was born i.nd lived is one ol the land marks of Revolutionary Her mothers lather. Rev James Dale, tmiuded the Media Presbyterian Church She had been 1133 Thomas street, Chester. 18. 1937.

Editor Chester Times: 1 wish to express my appreciation for the fine work that was done by manager ol the Lctper's Quarries in the Chester Times 1 compiling the Ridley township since the death ot election i licr lather, several years ago. You can readily realize how Besides her mother she Is aurvived anxious 1 was to get the final re- by a sister. Miss Margaret Oray aults, my being a candidate for jury Leiper, and a brother. Calender commissioner on the Democratic 1 Irvine Leiper, of Sewickley, Fa. ticket.

Funeral arrangements have not been As you know, your paper had practically complete returns In a comparably short time after ihe closing of the polls on primary day. Very truly yours, Mrb Alice J. Jones, over 10 years I FRANCES D. EBY. age, died in the Pennsylvania Sanitarium in Washington, D.

The Chester Times Classified Als 9 o'clock Saturday night, after an are salesmen, visiting thousands of illness of seven weeks. Mrs. Jones, I homes daily widow of William T. Jones, was a' "represents a progressive development lrom previous programs formulated under the soil conservation and domestie allotment act. It lollovvs the broad outlines already establlshrd and sets up definite objectives for 19.18.

(HOLKKA IN CHINA IS SEEN EPIDEMIC WASHINGTON. Sept 'JO-'UPi-- t' Public Health Service agents China reported today lo Surgeon General Thomas Parian that, the cholera in Shanghai has now leached epidemic proportions. The Public Health Service is maintaining strictest surveillance at Honolulu and Munila of vessels arriving from the Orient en route to the United States, Parian said. It was announced that adequate steps have been taken also to prevent transmission of the disease into the United States by aircraft passengers arriving from Oriental ports. Bats, snakes and toads can live longer without food than any other creatures.

Another reason the Roosevelt plan may not work is became the President's alibi that he did not know Mr. Black was a Klansman is greatly weakened by the fact that he did know, as did everyone else, that he had been charged with being a Klansman, and that In 1926 lie had been elected with Klan support. Further, in i he four days that ensued between the sending of his name to the Senate and his confirmation, about his Klan connections were printed in hundreds of newspapers broadcast over the radio, 1 discussed in the Senate committee and on Uic floor. No one will contend that Mr. Roosevelt was not aware of this.

He had four days, on one of which Mr. Black lunched wltli him at the White House, in which to ask the question he now intends to ask on his return. But he never touched on the subject. One lias to believe the President that this is so. but it is something of a strain.

At any rate, there seems no excuse for not havuig asked him. and inability to find an excuse deeply pains the Administration Gone is the complacency of the White House circle. Gone, too, is the belligerency toward the Democratic Senators who voted against the Court packing bill ana Taking as his sermon the "True Service to the Cause of God," the Adolph Kempin, of Philadelphia, officiated at the religious services of the Church of God, yesterday morning, which meets in the Y. M. C.

A. The Rev. Kempin substituted for the Rev. W. J.

Paxson, former pastor of the local organization, who has recently been assigned a pastorate in Philadelphia. J. Finn, of Upper Darby, has been transferred as district engineer at Williamsport to district engineer at Philadelphia, according to personnel sheets issued today by the Slate Highway Department at Harrisburg. Dr. Melvin Borie Wright, pastor of the Woodland Baptist church, Philadelphia, and a graduate of Crozer Theological Seminary, will represent the seminary at the Inauguration of Dr.

Levering Tyson a.s president of Muhlenberg College, Allentown. the week-end of October 1 and 2. The college representative will be among the delegates who will be the guests of Muhlenberg for the inaugural activities that will Include a symposium on the relationship of the small liberal arts colleges to the professional life of the nation. The second annual "Cubbing Conference" of the Valley Forge Council. Boy Scouts of America, will be held at the University of Pennsylvania Christian Association building, Thirty-fourth and Locusts streets.

Philadelphia, on October 9. Representative leaders of Delaware and Montgomery Councils held an I annual "pow-wow" at the Valley Forge Council Camp Delmont, near Sumneytown, over the weekend. NO COAL NO ASHES A South American fruit with a I custard-ltke center is known as the cherlmoya and has been called the "vegetable ice cream." Here It Is! A TWO JOB HEATER GIVES MORE HEAT SAVES MORE MONEY The moat economical Heating Unit that can be obtained. Uses the Cheapest Oil with the greatest efficiency. SUN FLAME OIL BURNING HEATERS With ECONOMIZER PERPETUAL CARE announced.

I MRS. ALICE J. JONBls FUNERAL HOME tec a. OftANGK MEDIA FHONR MEDIA I No for Use of APARTMENT FOR RENT 1 1 24 W. 3ri 5 ptr atatli ROIERT L.

RANKIN Crowr BMg. FhOM Mill Greenhouses Gardner's Services Shrubbery Concrete Vaults, Underground Crypta Modern Equipment TERMS AS LOW AS A DAY NON-8EC1ARIAN Courteous and Competent Personnel to Serve You With Complete Cemetery Service Advice Given in Anticipation LAWN CROFT CEMETERY ON THE RIDGE ROAD, LINWOOD, PENNSYLVANIA Pout Boothwyn, Pa. Telephone, Cheeier 5-2416 Check Then Many Features: NO WICKS COAL NO ASHES DUST CARBON STURDY CONSTRUCTION MROOM OriM A. M. TO f..

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About Delaware County Daily Times Archive

Pages Available:
307,149
Years Available:
1876-1977