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®l)c €onsl)ol)ochen Kecorfter ESTABLISHED 1869. NO. 7885. CONSHOHOCKEN. PA.. TUESDAY. MARCH 22. 1949. FIVE CENTS No. 2 Firemen Hear Forrest At Anniversary loth Annual Banquet Drawi Large Crowd) HonorQmrterMemben rwtltg of the Jury box ind DM c4 tapping that im- DamocraUc lusuos .ind the irlhlMi box "free of tam-n. Rut E Arnold Forrest, District Attorn*] ol Montgomery County, iueei ■peaker :it the He'll annivcr.s.uv bancpn" o] Conaboh mean No a . puny, Saturday night in Hie V.F.W.' hone. Hector and Hirry Streets. Three hundred and nfly-flve men iind women attended the function.: The county offk lal and local I 111Idtnl deplored the Indifference of voters In exercising their right of franchise Luudtng the volunteer (Ire company as one of the bul-warks of the American way of life, he urged the promotion and sup-port of all such organization:. The; bend of county law enfnn cm it punctuated his serious address with bumeroits tniOfl Five charter members of thei OOmpttly were honor guests at the1 Representing an agminate Charter Members Of No. 2 Company Honored ^7k Youth Problem Is Challenge To All Society lion, \uflwin Win ml PhiliHli'lpliiu Jurist. S|M*;ik?. To Rotariani !K of C Cafefer IIV^IVCS SIMHUIY Iliice members ol Conahohockan 'Council 1609, Knight ol C win riming -ill cmidlducs i . itrad tlu Inrder. at 'lie Ph Ion Sunday afternoon, l'liev were Jacob BrodaiL St Jacob Brodell. Jr. and Dr Eugene J [.abowskie t ii' •( i i tin Riosnixt IQc i ounctl tin evenl mi Bdward A I Decker, Rand knight. Edward Fitr-terald, lecturer, and Joseph Hal.y Ten nwaaben of the I<H»I ootnv Mass Protest On Tax glla Set For April J I a Building IMIOIII In West Borough brnkri vr-irut.iy 1. I Labor*! i\ icGroap I rge Residents around en To Be Present ..u- emUon ell will receive 'he third dcgiee etltOO bl Joseph inie Pbuadelphla Council nth andlOetslread, ol 031 Ford sue-! * .„,,<• mMttlno in nmhaed Strensthemng of the moral fibre | Market SMcet* April . and m. Thli tlu rii A . itumbei ol , ,1M "UMl"" , I n oust of youth today oaO oniv be done kicai OOUnctl nuinoei.- will ,,: in *ll«■ [WO pro|KMtexl nol'iiUl/ll by tiie church, the school, and the''V«* fourth degree at the Benjamin tlua boi ■ i, U .:....! t.,\,-s will be held by the All-hoim ane a u ■ ammm Ha* I Fp™ran."k"lmin BH"oum] m°"i ,AA!p"i:l *. . |SH \\ }raUtl m *" '"'"1 *trt Labor Civic Committee, At. The local council held i I winnet, judge of'the Municipal I™*-*11"*' Sunday ntghi Coun ol Philadelphia, told mem- t"11'":11 chambers. bers ol the Conshohocken R"' ll i MI Club in an address last nighi to the Rotamn* at their '.lyetie ii announoeuienti Decker pn in.ui. weekly meeting nt Ridgeway Gar-dens, the jurist gava ai message on the subject Vfranf With Our Children I In pioblein uf children is not a new ana/1 the speaker said, tracing the problem ol adolescents back, 0000 years as he quoted u dim our-1 1 H. 0. Wilkinson Dead At 85 ; ||i | Wilsu.. ti miFib from left I'ti * IP.HI.MII is greeted b> Charles Moore tile 1'iih .MiniMi-n Dani|Ucl last Sa I Ul il.i - lefti, chief iii.'iii'.-! uf the compan; <il tin e'urter m-mbcr- of t'oiislinhorken No. i laeeond from left.. | resident of the rumpanv at 1 ooking nn are Franklin K. Thoin.ui (extreme (rneral chairman nf the event; Councilman ,aged Egyptian priest, who recorded:! »• a . .. "Our tarth Is degenerate In these1 W IIK 7HHI ■ I illilHT Mini i ,„,,,,. Excavation is expected to brill II. in the Forrest Mu'tt- AveniM ';,,L,l! »lthin ■ tea days tor the tre 11 »;i^ decided ;il U i-ci. lb. • ^ open mertiag ,„ the am-iew homes mittea Friday niirht in thr 2Mdi ui">i ,rord Bbrual *■ EaM union, headq■ u a.rtere in tin- P. If -. . A Km,ii . h-orn towii1"- «■ "' A n;>" 01x13 men oounoli nrvaral monthi ago in and women wara praaont ut m£& "' "lon,l.rg«.ttod.tofll eetinga of this ncwly- Unv thai two modern dweUlng> formed ornuni/iitiuii. '/!. I,:...,h'. "".""''.^ P,,I, u> the OMM meeting, the DOnunlttM will tnuke lii BnaineM Bare Barvea W. Shaw, standing l>etwerii Mr Moore and Mr. WlKon: Alfred r'errarn snd Franrts Mr*- > feted us charter members; District Altornrt K Arnold Forrest, the speakrr, and Cti oaslmastrr. Of 380 years of volunteer fire-com-pany membership the* van Oaten Wilson. Norrlstown. oldest of the group; Councilman Harvey W. gnaw, James Dougherty, Alfred Ferraro and Franc!.* Meyers. The .slxih living charter member. George H. Colen. was unable to attend, due to Impaired health. Presidents of fouj nearby fOiun-leer fire companies were introduced by Qua Irwin. Norrlstown. who filled his traditional role of master of ceremonies They were Thomas Johnson. Washington Fire Com-pany , William Murphy. Oeorgc Clav Fire ccinpany; Rueben Kil-patrick. Spring Mill Fire Company and Edward Oolden. Norris Hose Company, Norrlstown Charles Moore, president of the No 2 com-pany, welcomed the large asscm- IJ1.II .■ Also Introduced were Walter Pope, chief of the Conshohocken Fire Department, and Theodore (ConUnued on Page Six) $1,256 Collected n "Seal" Drive j Tlie total collected m this com-tntinilv In the IMS Christmas seal | sale Is Sl.25655, Mrs Tli n... 1' McCoy. Sr.. local chairman, re-vteJad today Of this amount, one half, phis! the expense ol mailing the seals locally, was forwarded to the Mont-gomery County Tuberculosis and i Public Health Society for continu-ance of its work against tuber* u- , losls. The balance. tt50.97. was I contributed to the Conshohocken 1 Visiting Nurse Association for local: health work. Mrs McCoy expressed the gratl-' tude of the association to all who: aided in making the sale a success ' Centennial Offieers, Committee Named What Do You Think? 1H Rt't'orilrr Asks: Would you favor women serving Mi members of the school board and town council in Cousin.- Thr INihlir Answer!*: Mrs. Loots Poallne. I': West Tenth Avenue: I think for the most part that a woman's place is in the home, positions as school directors and rounrilmrn are quite rapablv filled hv men usual- It Hv saying that .1 worn.. place Is in the home I mean UMI .1 woman with growing children has about all she can do welt to see that they have the proper training and home In which to develop. 1 do feel that a woman whoii* family is grown or who has no specific duties to require hi - foil inn.■ attention, and who is capable through experience to participate In the conduct of school district and horuugh af-fairs might serve qullr well. nv.^ u t.mi.™ iin UJ=„. ntt. Assessments would not be quoted AvS^xr .?.*%.''';<'< think lots of women make as good administrators as men, and In some cases they are more competent As far as being able to Judge issues school district. I think women ore quite capable of being good officers And they are particularly well trained to deal with some problems, and conversely, of course, are less well trained to handle others Tax Opinion Gets Attention tfonnl To Analyze Private Srlmol Kiiliii"; The State Supreme Court ruling j yesterday that a privately operated 1 school should pay loeal taxes be-cause It is not a purely public charity institution may b reaching effects on assessments in 1 the county. That was the belief expressed I I today by members of the Board of ■Assessment and Revision of Taxes who arc waiting for a copy of Chief ! Justice George W Maxey'* 28-page I opinion in ordei to enauw the application ol its findings to < local assessment regulations. I The Supreme Court set aside rulings ol the Montgomery County Court as It found that the Ognntzj •ebonl At Rydal. Abingtuu Town-ehlp, w.i- ii..t entitled to en aaemp* 1 Him (rota paj ini 1 The County Board Ol As-sessments had exempted mutely 36 acres of ground In I'MH 1 but this action was appealed by the Township Commissioners end School Directors Justice Man | ruled the school was In bualneai i for the principal purpose ol making money and could not be classified as a charitable instltuUon. The I school's total teal estate Is assessed LI MS340Q Members of the County Board of The Con-shohocken Centen-: Dial Commlttea was formally organtiad ;it it mass maetiaff lu.st night in tlu> Forrest The-j litre. Rapreaaatativta ofmon1] than lifty-fivt' industries, churches, orgininatlfftii MM! gToopa aera present at the! i-iilliusiastie session, at which' plans loomed up for a bril-1 tiant olmervance of the bor-' ouch's eantary of axtatanaa. Harold Cooper Roberts, editor and publisher of The Recorder, and it the C-m-e. of Com- j mere, vae elected permanent chairman of the committee Mr Roberts had served as acting tem-ihe pre-1 Uirunar) meeting. March 7, in place! lot Burgess Ma* L « Blalr, whn LS I 111 they had copv of the opbnl D I '■ <• declared that the opinion could ■contain dynamite " No definite record as to the total amount of tax-exempt real estate W.I.*. Mrs. Louis J. Ehllnger. ill East Seventh Avenue: Ves, [ am in favor of women "erving as mem-bers of the two er",,P* vale school holding: termed 'extremely high" "Perhaps townships and bor-oughs in which private school-, and Mmllar Institutions are located may use the opinion as a basis to file appeals from the County Board's ruling on tux-empt prop w-us declared ■"This would then \ l hearing and findings: In keeping with the principals es-i tabli>hed 111 this opmi-.n ' W'e do not knnw hew far reach-ing this opinion will be However equipped and trained by "their ex- Alexander Knight, Esq. solicitor to perienees as houswlves and bus:- the board, ts obtaining a copy and nesswomen to serve capably on the will make a thorough study «f ft 1 school board and town council Of '°r the board ' course. It would depend enl '—" upon the individuals chosen, but Itifiril in Mei-I women have proven themselves able "<mr" ' leaders in many fields of endeavor The Wh.tetnarsh Township Board Both governmental groups must el Adju-'lmrnt will meet on Thurs-handle widely-diversified types ol I rit.y night at 8 at the <• problems Some require Judgment' Uulldlng for the purpose of eonsld-and experience that men acquire eiim anplicntlon by Charles Davis, from their dally activities in the proprietor o( Fountain Inn world Others are akin ptfca na U Church Road. Barren more to problems that women are Hill for .1 special exception to per-trained and experienced in handl- m:t him to tesuinr pubU log and hta Me pro|»erty. ; v RiinHi uu s..i - -- Nfiuoi interested may attrnd the r.Rlindt. mMTenth „,,,,.,ln|{ ,Xsrar A Ko;tier secret-ary- treasurer of the township board supervisors, stated Mrs John _ East Elm Street I th.nk I should Camera (lull favor women serving on the ■ board and town council J: seems Edward MsOulre. ol N I to me that women are fitted vice-president of the Conshohocken through their experience in raising Camera Club, will present a lec-to serve, particularly on "ire at the club meetlr.n in the l ol board. And manv of the Mary H Wood Park House Thurs-problems that face town council are day night Following the talk problems that are as familiar to a woman as to a man Robert C I-andls, superintendent, of local public schools, and Mrs. Warren J Ftshet. ptesidcnt of the Woman's Club, were named (o-\ice chairmen. George T Jack-son, principal of local public grade schools, ts the choice for secretary and Miss Claudia Rcmey. assistant to the president of the First Na-tional Bank, treasurer A fifteen-member steering com-mittee, named from the floor, was also chosen at the meeting Mem-bers are Edmund K Williams, for-mer Town Council president. Ed-ward W. Oermann, Conshohocken High School principal; Oeorge J. RafTertV. Mrs Francis C Palaclo. Ralph Falconero. Harold Cunnlng-ham Mi- A K Alderfer, William Swing, Ran Foaaph J. Lawler. Samuel I)eMed:.. Mr Henry E Rolllni Si Rei John P.: Klntry. assistant rector of St. Mat-thew's Catholic Church. Daniel Whtteman and Elizabeth Collins. Also named on this committee, as an cx-offlcio member, is Bur-gess Ellas L S Blalr h no definite date has (Of the gala fun-peeled to be the largest ever held In the community. May. 1650 ts accepted as tiie likely period. The borough was incorporated hi May. 1650 Seven ty-thrre different units were contacted by the temporary commute! 1 T, asking them to send representatives to last night's meeting, but. It was re-ported at the meeting, several ad-ditional local groups have Dm v«" been reached The committee will attempt to contact all those not vet reached and invite their sup-port. The committee also extends an invitation through The Recorder: i.;z,i;i(!n groups or Indus-rat contacted to Jota n the plans for the town-wide cele-bration I.eRot Avenue: f think it would be a good Idea. M aak■'*-ki. lag lUtgrstrll qllf-t litui if pntili' il. relliiou tee twailea to -WJiai Irnm Diaphragms and Siiutu ictures entitled "Photo-graphy". "Camera Ma^ic and wif. Photos', will be shown William Landts will preside at the buFiness meeting The pro- *"*■ * y. ** f per-sora Inter- * ntMoarapliy Damage Suit Goes To Jury A Civil Court jury began dehb- j eratlng this afternoon foll'twrnu a two-day trial before Judge Willintn F Dannehower during wh» h monetary damages were asked for the death of one child and Injury to anothi i > itomobile ■ One suit was brought by Oeorge Si 111 id hi- wife Ruth! M Thomas, of this borough, and In the other Calvin P Flowers Jr and hi. father Calvin, Sr. are the plaintiffs The defendant in both cases Is Oeorge R Mashinlunm. 27 of IS] West Fourth Avenue Mr. and Mrs Thomas were the parents of Oeorge R. Thomas. Jr. isja two who was pronounced dead at Sacred Heart Hospital. Novem-ber 11. lft« Young Flowers wus injured aarloualy m the same 1nccldent I It was alleged by the plaintiff- Li.at the boy were hurt when nlo'i automobile ran into, them white he was backiup the vehicle into Wood Street from Six'h Avenue before making a turn E Arnold Forrest, Esq. repre-sents the defendant, while Leuuaid Market. GMJ is c.ainsel for the plaintiffs 10 Jurors Excused Becmte Of I Mm— A U-membcr Grand Jury, the I smallest In many months, was! sworn In yesterday by Judge Wil- j Ham F Daiuiehower who observed "I never saw the first day of Spring erriee with ao much illness" He referred to the 10 members of the original panel who were ex-cused because of illness Foreman of the Orand Jury is Thomas N. Thompson, of Boyers-ford The secretary is Helen T. ScheeU. of Lansdale Bills of indictment in approxi-mately 40 criminal cases will be presented to Hit jury for delibera-tion this week by District Attor-ney E. Arnold Forrest. In addition to the litre-man and secret nrv. members include Mniv Wojltiis. 479 Old Elm Street, Con-shohocken R D 1 Willlum C. El-liott. Conshohocken. wat. excused Fire Station RobbedSunday I \niu- Compel Firrinaii Id < i|n 11 (loinpaiit Safei A daring, dawn hold-up at the No I Fire House. Ninth Avenue and Barry Street. Sunday morning. ■ baffle ■uthorttlee and ipoitad ■ thnated by polloe as 1325. was lost to the pair Df youne rob-bers, who gwoke the tttghl attend-ant at the fire stutlon from p deep sleep at point of gun, and ordered him to open the safe, he told police, Vernon M; ' : ut the company, was the flrenan on dntv. whin 'he hold-up men. cne masked, appar-ently using a key. quietly gained entrance on the ground floor as Mati slept on the second floor. The held-up occurred ■ ' after the close of the oompattjri 46th b.tnquet which took place Saturday nljht in the V F W Hall. Hector and Harry Streets "I returned from the banquet at 12 ;)0 to report lor nuhi duty," Mi Mats told a Recorder 'There vere fifteen or ■ bers of the Washington company on dutv whUe we weie ut the ban-quet, and when I returned I talked to them for a while When they left ghOUl 1. I locked the place up and went to bed on the second floor "I th;nk it was about 530. that someone shook me awake, and I opened my eyes to see a gun point-ed at me The man holding it was al-most completely coven*' wore a heavy overcoat .1 bat, .md had a while handkerchiei or nap-kin over Ii: "He said Cet up - end open that safe' I thought it was n joke, which Frcnk 1 Thomas 1 and sot 1 ■ ip to, coming hack from Dqaet. When I didn't jump up at once. a Yhakl Army lurket and DO I -Quit stallln' and open that sale." "I said I didn't know how to open the safe, but they continued to v.lth the gun and order me to open it I (.inn- ciowns'..iirs. 1 -ntKiu'ii ..11 Page Threei latter days. There are signs that the world ut coming to an end. Children no longer obey their parents Everybody wants to write I »,„, . _ ..„,. a book The end of the world «' f H£^rt, ° W^"*"11' M- n"u' neor - 1 of England, whose OM*tlnM RIM ■ w* I. „, ,„..„ ,. ,„„„. _,(>, sliop m England had the dtaUnc t.hhe eprSobleimlslVnot oSf thhe^-fsifmilpBleOB o! the Kim-s Ptathai u)Km u. |dl^ .. s.llldav ... ,.., ,.'.., „, rural life but of a moving, complex!?1™ n^1"1^ '" ''ls .'" '"' ' social Ule in which there Is lnsta- .i0"}* R ^.' "' J m,^ "' blllty of social groups through £? ^.t J° f«"ef"'l™"• '« chanae In atandard. V-uiur of ' ln* pt5t lhre* weeks He had $£^ttwS£l£$L oSsrt£|«»tal«s h,« «* "\ ""■ '"—:"" home, there has been a loosening ?' ■ Ff,v,"1 Ue 8lrt■e, meul ,narl:el home control Preveiitliwj',or ■ ,,umbfr oi >ears juvenile delinquency is a part of Funeral services will be held to-the educational process for family j morrow afternoon ut 4 ;to at his and community life and we canN^te home, with interment at a niiiv anvetll it if we first under-'Tom's River Cemeierv stand some of the basic causes of Born In Kings Lvnn England the disturbances of our children," |Mr Wilkinson operated an exten-the speaker continued jslve mMt bU8ineai t|,ere for many Judge Wlnnet caUlogued some) years, during which time he was causes of delinquency as the very one of the royal tradeenu fact of adolescence, itself, with Buckingham Palate In thnt cap-eonfttnte and pressures common tolacity. he was granted the p alt adolescents: inadequate home j of using the royal insignia, the life, sub-standard, congested hous-j King's Feather oh his shop, ing; lack of recreational facilities: comino to America 47 v«w« »o the economic practice of discrimin- Urw*^nl^nt£J^bZL attag again* tnmorU, groups, poorl* Jg-J Jjj «f' ^'"f" thll Siiruig The outlook at the nrteenl ami u i"i the greatest bniKiuu' biH.iii in the hlstoi of the Re-Dedicate Pipe Organ Two Srrvico II. I.I At Mclli.MliM Cluin-li Marking the re-deduallou of the house distribution ol pamphlets, iminiing out the dlsndvanl iin proposad *;"> per capita tu\ and SJ employers tox 1 payable ah eve). 1 mploye 1, and will also coiufui 1 • door-to-dnor appeal bo : the boeough to attatM the next meeting ol Town Counall, April 1 . ai which the proteatad tax ordinance 1- scheduled fur linal reeding Kxpcri legal ad-visers aie expected to bi .it the mage meeting, to give their upiniiiiis 011 the tux-s UnWlund pleMdrlll of Local 1392. United St ee I workers. CIO. and chairman ol the All Uiboi Civic Committee, outlined unties 1 Koch, pastor Methodist Church h 11 fie Pmvtrtetiri- Philadelphia. law enforcement and. finally, u moral deterioration which has oc-l"iml,-mr «tabtUhmenu u curred In our lives." "Our moving pictures are a de*. . torlorating Influence." he said, re- . Whrn "' «. »**«« ° Wl" fcrrlng 3 the generally acceptedl**"™" »l*ned a meat maikei at -so-caUed movies which portray'72 P"yette Street about ill- en to adolescents that it Is stylish to J?fr» li«° MfT ^.igAha.n entered alwavs smoke and drink Bert »«« partnership with him and won tliiv see the eternal triangle por-l1* «*<*• cjfale of friends here, prior travefl and IU lure" lie contlnited )*'- "Is removal from the borotinh £■ a solution and remedy to an 1*1* VM" ;iK°i when his licalih existing probleni. Judge Winnet]bt<aine iripulre.l rTl was ■ niem-llsted methods to remove factors ber of Calvary Episcopal Church In the enur.mmcni and resources here, inter transferring his mem in communities to be employed in bershlp to St Paul's Episcopal gttve the halting the destructive factors Church, Tom's Rlvei which cause crime and delln-1 Besides his son, Hertiert q ■ . While we cannot change the adolescent age which has been "a period of turmoil since time Im-memorial" we can bring parents to an understanding of this age 'hat they mar be "better equipped to „„„„-„„* ,.«„liir„ meet problems Emphasising this , recital point Judge Winnet said "we Domenux Camarda husband of I Mis: Mary Jan could prevent u great amount of Doliv Blaselle Cumardu. Of 20611st delinquency and Its resulting 1111 pipe organ at the Methodist the aitnities ol tlic oommlttae in Church, ibtth Avenue and Pajrettalthe buttle against the teaee, rinoe n i.i.st month at the I0:ill serviu Sunday morn- j Rev Marshall W Uc pastor of ing. with R.v John D Herr, St Pauls Baptist Church and head S. T D, district superintendent 1 ol a group from the All-Labor of the Northwest District of the Committee which met with Town Pblladelphle Conference, dedicut- councils finance committee Ut an ing thr recently rebuilt and mod-|cffort to effect a tux compromise, einixed instrument Special anthems spoke on the borough budget were sunn by the senior and chan-i In the course ol eel onotri oonumttee epo^eaman claimed thnt Ralph Kinder, Hue i>. organ- WG buildlngi In the borough iiav» 1 bob dimtor of Trinity been converted Into apat 11 Memorial Church. Philadelphia. (with no additional Mwei coal bo who was guest organist at tiie the landlords, although the borough dedlcaUoii ol ttu organ thlrtjr-tera la's been put to eddlUonal ex-yeurs ago. was , tl paneo It was also pointed out thai ■u pi 1-.-eiit ni .n 4 p tn JM Kuyettc aUreel propert) torin- 111 the church, and eUandad by Hh aaaaaeed el *14<KMI had lx*eu approximately 400 memtiers Ol the ii'-assessed at eiOiKHl .i!-. (o:in]!.,:;,uoti and ' conversion into row 1 iru An Harry P. Bvughey. pastor I ,X| tt" I'' ' oaaall at the church praaMed ai the V1 iwrk"« wetara on Prida] liar .id c M-'"'i " bowed only in ihei k wa- Itb Council Ntently maktni ■ provision for n palm el $600 ■» prayei piec-etl nu the SuVk< ">*■" Pointed oui ai the ,1 Benediction was pronounced me*r?i "''" whU* ""'v "• lir»mK two following the recital by Rev <;'-i"-se--incut ol pmpcrtj values. 4 the traaaunw at the local church. Benjamin D Koch, other sons and a daughter stirvhe 'Harold B Boufhay pg b i 1 the v '"'k UBon " 1"",,' Thev are Clifford of Kent, Eng-;Tloga Meth.xli-t Church Phuadel- B°Ju?rnenl "' v-,ll,,v lllld lt>ut it land. jack, of New York cnv ind pole eon ol the local minister Rei ,!l"1"1 'ln' effacl the average one- Mrs DoI.lv Thomas, of Brottdstairs.i Richard B Weils ■ fonnet Con- '"", 1 lly nome England His wife died some years aboaoekan pastor, now pastor of ... *"*rty«a«faM women and twenty-ega Lawerch Methodist Church """' """ 'A'" pteaanl at the DunM-nick Hamanla Ififfiff ""' "^~ - HTBIB. tmg ohMtUad for April 11. wu originaui paannad happiness if parents recognired their limitations and sought advice on how 10 handle their adolescent children" Parent education part. also, and speed up the edu-jber of Ss cuUonal processes which in the Ion*;church run will abolish segregation and ( In addition to discrimination, and law enforce-< survived ment must be strengthened in I wife community *m\ ,*.-•-11,. .■.!>. 11 i\ ,11 p Mill.- . -. , fc i, ei winch '" ,' '' H, ,llv' "n" organist, was anothei \*,' <-""""1 ,n,',',m* Marah B Dan. lit] West Seventh Avenue, died In I Dr. Kinder is Jefferson Hospital. Philadelphia.. guest artist at the recltaJ Saturday afternoon after an illness M font weeks lil'-|{liri'il Se»r\ ico Born in Hah he had res.ded In I1* ,,,M ,*1* ~< • »"< •"■onglv advocatad bv the jurist. jConslioliocken for the past fort? L1 ., I I w-onal facilities must be \ years and o|ieraled ■ bakery ul j T Ol I,Of'ill "t'ltllKIII provided for all youth, according toiMarle street, near Seventh Avenue Tl . . ••>- speaker Society must do Itsjfor thirteen veurs He was a mem- ,, n,,o, 1 l, a.s.s■ .I..l.i"'i'iii.i.s ',1 ",1 . ., I'1"" t'j ,h and Mis Thomas Casey.' Si Of ISM Butler Pike i Mile, who paid the Ripri D I Bee in the PaoUh 'inane m it h the «rted BDJL wife ol Joseph Campul- momlrn/7oTra™liuarmBi»^'^ '^ "The reeuonslbihty tar crun. and toga and Bdward end Joaaph, ell fhTSti from tn. delinquency is society's, and by of this borough; Cosmo, of gridg- w.ii!-..n ^ IZ, "V , ■ t' . s.s-lei> I mean y,.u and me There (wr[ CullIm. „ t]llII1,. „„,, tomoTroa m n-i* work for everyone of us. indl-,grandchildren He is also survived nig u, 9 with 1 reou.- n inass m 1 yidually at home and collectively u> tm A ,ry caballcro 81 Mattbsa 1 CathX Church at Ol A1.111 Kfcmrrou^am::. »>™™* " 1 ^ your child care organliations. your l1^"1,^^, wlI1 be hHd from Enhsting with ,he Navy I. ™ '" hospitals all have a part in theL^iWd",.? We4n«S.i mo.ni.5 -u the ag^e o 17 wi :/ 22uTM2 U building of more secure and happyL, fl.M „...,, , .oi-m,, reomem ai St Matthew, in! L V , ,'-""h " '"' th,< Hprmg season \^*A„^..?^ ss coim^id Z;::,:^\SM,;;,S t^r, dSsv^s uf us can build a better and hap--Cath(]|ic rtlurrll al 10M Inter.!i. iM6. In Naval H.t,.,,, Wu \l!,. ."?"'y . ' . !l" ""f (or P,a> postiMiiietl when it was found that 1 be protested taxes would not Dome before Council for 'Safety Month' During April Ceaildren'a Salet) StTftaed In i ;mi|iiii^n Safety thi montn of Frank Palermo ol Ambler A „ ,M<"'.,, .'"„,"w the apaaaar g* ate. wife « ajbyrt Itettno,kg* SUToi P?e- ■octetT-" Jud*p V""*1 '""-inienV will be In St Matthew's! coast of OWnaw . ^ , , . . K ... . Cen.cter brought from , Joseph J Lawler club pn " mswa was M charge ol the meeting . - ifht|on ,n , Darattte he I The speaker was Introduced b) Uonfl I o Ml'l'l survived by^^three broth. Harold Coo,»r Roberta The birth-; rh(. Ll,„ , rlllb wllj ;, will.,,,,, 1 , indlmonthl) sieeUruj tonight ut « 15 In ^<"'<' campaign with 1 ■ .luditotiiini oi the Spring Mill £otp1:, John- *» Ami'. rOpe mniping and I'aMIH'llls >|ut|v> Audi'or General O Harold Wag- .ijiproved payments total-ing M26.483S2 to 50 fourth-class school dlitrtcta of Mi Count y The funds are paid out of legt'latlve appropriations for the siippor* of public schools The districts and the ..mourn 1 1'lvmourh Township *8,- C57 78 West Coii-shohw ken S3.W0 - 10. and Whltemarsh Township $6.fiJl IS da's of Oeorge Jackson Jameg Lynch were recognised. William J Griffiths, of the Read-inK Club. IsEued an invitation to members of the local club to the Conference ill Readmi; April 33 to X Coiwhohocxen Lions Club mem gare ejffl l»e entertained by the Ro. tariati' at the weekly tin April 4 Tiie vntherlnu 1. expe ted to attract several hundred men and will be held at the VFW Audltor- I'lii. Hector and H»rr> Sim | A feature of the program will be the showing of a General Motors Corp picture 'Preview of pro catered dinner will be McAllisters Visiting Rotarlans were John Ste-venson and Earl Weber, of the phoenixvtlle Club Bedford Wooley, of the Bala-Cynwyd-Narberth Club and Mr Griffiths Rev Ob) was a guest pin Houa sra.i.iM. t:HAMi* D(Vfjr«a Suit Suit for divorce has been filed at the Court House by Marian S afwwaaa*. Conshohocken, gainst Arthur F McVaugh, Malvem \\ ill lit- Gaaaai \rtiM \1 Ifoxlnil-oilMll Kvt'llt Margaret Collins, local pianist, ' will be guest artist at the annual Spring concert of the Roxborough Symphony Orchestra next Tuesday nlghi at 8 15 m the auditorium "l Roxborough High Sch<»ol Miss Collins will play Mendel--- aoh 11 .s Concerto in O Minor with full orchestral accompaniment A request was made tor the local pisnt&t 'o play the concerto m the nearby community, after her fir.st "ubla presentation of it here at "H tn^lie1 fIn: Unai concert o! 1 the jseaaahahocken Cbwral Soceetr John, ... rjoroth] taggph .1 1. Car Damaged ■ tloo ofl UM . ■- arbler The Safety Counefl and 1 "rr> the Mont Down Omunfas-loners have bll man the plan to ■■ th attention „i The program is designed . ma, ' - tnotonai miDils end ind leaflets will ■ message in pm-m torm. to bring out the cautloui 1: ttttua he ust Stxaef ' 1 : eclally ■ nelgh-coupe v.. "••■ Idee was Inspired fef . tter to a 1 he uiidergoea ■o and th dan 1 ■ ,.. n .u, Em h . rtooj and 1 ■ Uage in me worfci ertth e thai a pipe or some OUM ' ' :i,,t" » large re- 'h,,, ■•** i"1'"1 !l ' ■ ■ P K. 1 ••■ Barracks mil lend ■ it,nice In i"»Hlrili- 1 *l distribution to the < hooli gab I will be sixth An unmet and the her duties at the Reudliv <«MI will DC ■ each sum- I ■ an Samuel TO ■ safety 'nSSSK" Beltv Ann slater, «| HI H<<' last A»enue West ( on hobockrn, 1. the rlumpluii »|K-l!er of West onshohoikni Oeade aeaaal and will cempele In the Munl«iimro gee flnjl. eg :tr.m an ■ her to her ■ ■ lli.-|ni.il ifitnliiainaii John J in west - it, surgical. Betty Ann O Donuell 101 Forrest Street, medi-cal Will!..' ent Ave-nue, Lafayette Hills, surgical, were admitted to Montgomery Hospital umpaign .th.e..uurgeases ■ officials in tn.' 1 ountv asked to coo'jerate In . ■■•,■■, Dog Killed Rudolph Paollna, a* West Third .•-oorted to poll ■■in a dog at "' Maple Streets. Friday Michael Marshall, li East Kiev- Ji'trtwoii at 4 Ai, latall-, . antb Avesme, swgacal. was adnutied it The antsnal sea* removed u. the to etatTW Wear* feaagakel 'WC.1 . hhurnonviua.
Object Description
Title | The Conshohocken Recorder, March 22, 1949 |
Masthead | The Conshohocken Recorder |
Date | 1949-03-22 |
Year | 1949 |
Month | 3 |
Day | 22 |
Volume | 78 |
Issue | 85 |
Coverage | United States -- Pennsylvania -- Montgomery County -- Conshohocken |
Subject | Conshohocken (Pa.) - Newspapers; Montgomery County (Pa.) - Newspapers |
Type | Text |
Technical Metadata | Digitized from 18x microfilm at 350dpi true optical resolution to 8-bit uncompressed TIFF master files. Searchable PDF derivatives shown here are downscaled to 150 dpi / Medium quality. |
Date Digital | 2011-12-01 |
Digitized by | Creekside Digital |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-NC/1.0/ |
Contributing Institution | Conshohocken Free Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Contact | If you have any questions, contact Branch Manager at smason@mclinc.org or call 610-825-1656 |
Description | Conshohocken Recorder Newspaper |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | application/pdf |
Language | English |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Subject | Conshohocken (Pa.) - Newspapers; Montgomery County (Pa.) - Newspapers |
FullText |
®l)c €onsl)ol)ochen Kecorfter
ESTABLISHED 1869. NO. 7885. CONSHOHOCKEN. PA.. TUESDAY. MARCH 22. 1949. FIVE CENTS
No. 2 Firemen
Hear Forrest
At Anniversary
loth Annual Banquet
Drawi Large Crowd)
HonorQmrterMemben
rwtltg of the Jury box ind
DM c4 tapping that im-
DamocraUc lusuos
.ind the irlhlMi box "free of tam-n.
Rut E
Arnold Forrest, District Attorn*] ol
Montgomery County, iueei ■peaker
:it the He'll annivcr.s.uv bancpn"
o] Conaboh mean No a .
puny, Saturday night in Hie V.F.W.'
hone. Hector and Hirry Streets.
Three hundred and nfly-flve men
iind women attended the function.:
The county offk lal and local I
111Idtnl deplored the Indifference
of voters In exercising their right
of franchise Luudtng the volunteer
(Ire company as one of the bul-warks
of the American way of life,
he urged the promotion and sup-port
of all such organization:. The;
bend of county law enfnn cm it
punctuated his serious address with
bumeroits tniOfl
Five charter members of thei
OOmpttly were honor guests at the1
Representing an agminate
Charter Members Of No. 2 Company Honored
^7k
Youth Problem
Is Challenge
To All Society
lion, \uflwin Win ml
PhiliHli'lpliiu Jurist.
S|M*;ik?. To Rotariani
!K of C Cafefer
IIV^IVCS SIMHUIY
Iliice members ol Conahohockan
'Council 1609, Knight ol C
win riming -ill cmidlducs
i . itrad tlu
Inrder. at 'lie Ph
Ion Sunday afternoon, l'liev were
Jacob BrodaiL St Jacob Brodell.
Jr. and Dr Eugene J [.abowskie
t ii' •( i i tin Riosnixt IQc i ounctl
tin evenl mi Bdward A
I Decker, Rand knight. Edward Fitr-terald,
lecturer, and Joseph Hal.y
Ten nwaaben of the I |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-NC/1.0/ |
Contributing Institution | Conshohocken Free Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Contact | If you have any questions, contact Branch Manager at smason@mclinc.org or call 610-825-1656 |
Description | Conshohocken Recorder Newspaper |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | application/pdf |
Language | English |
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