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Courier-Post from Camden, New Jersey • Page 22
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Courier-Post from Camden, New Jersey • Page 22

Publication:
Courier-Posti
Location:
Camden, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
22
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

7h v. 3k. :1 courier-post or and about CLUIS MSHIONS tlVINS 1 1 22 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1959 WOME 1' r- r- j. -Fi V- Bena Engaged Kenneth Richardson, Miss Grace Linthicum, Miss Louise Evans, Mr. Page Tilley and Mr.

Nicholas Sink, of this city; Mr. and Mrs. William H. Thompson, of Haddonfield; Mrs. Gerald P.

Trimble, of Collingswood, and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford M. Stumpp, of Cinnaminson Township. Mr.

and Mrs. Vernon Leeds, of 202 Broadway, Laurel Springs, have returned from a stay in St. Petersburg, Fla. En route, they visited their son, Mr. Robert Leeds, a sophomore at Wake Forest college, Winston-Salem, N.

C. Miss Florence H. Shirley and Miss Gwendoline I. Shirley, of 720 State entertained at des r. At i if 7 jtrjr 'ill 1 iLi If.

iH nr i -v I i I'' Phn' by Frink MISS GLORIA ELSA DISCHERT Whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. George John Dischert, of Merchantville, have announced her engagement to Capt. John Hunt Truesdalc, USA, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Cavour Langdon Truesdale, of Richmond, Va. Tha wedding, will be a spring event. Mr. and Mrs. Michael I.

Os-trod, of 26 E. Clinton avc, Oak-lyn, announce tlio rncaRrmrnt of their daiiRhtpr, Miss Brna (KlrolT, to Dr. Charles J. Kal-liik, son of and Mrs. Edward Kaliick, of l'hiladel-)hia.

Miss OsfrolT and Dr. Kaliick arc Graduates of I'ni-vrrstty of IVnnsylvania. 1'r. Kaliick also was graduated from Medical Collofic and interned at Washington Hospital, Washincton, ft. C.

He now is a resident in psychiatry at the Philadelphia Psychiatric Hospital. Miss Virginia Mary Merrill, daughter of Mrs. Conrad G. Merrill, of 7.10 White Horse Audubon, and the late Mr. Merrill, became the bride of Mr.

Kenneth McKcller Elliott, of 113 W. Redbank Woodbury, son of Col. John B. Elliott, USA, of Athens, and the late Mrs. Elliott, Saturday afternoon last.

The 2 o'clock ceremony took place in the Haddonfield Methodist Church, with the Rev. Lynn Hough Corson officiating. Mrs. Merrill gave her daughter in marriage. Allen E.

Stanko. of Oaklyn, attended her sister as matron of honor. Mr. Herschel A. Elliott, of Saverville, served as best man for his brother and Mr.

Robert Carpenter, of Haddonfield, ushered. A reception for memler.s of the immediate families followed at the Embers, Tennsauken Township. On their return from a Canadian trip, the couple will reside at the Woodbury address. The bride attended the Peirce School of Business Administration and Rutgers University, South Jersey Division. Mr.

Elliott was graduated from the University of Tennessee. Mrs. Wayne W. Rheiner, of 210 Lexington Pitman, entertained Sunday evening in honor of Miss Patricia Ann i of Merchantville, whose marriage to Mr. Robert P.

Goodwin, also of that suburb, will take place Saturday, Dec. 26. Additional guests included Mrs. Chester W. Weidner, of Merchantville; Mrs.

George Hu-ber, of Harrington; Mrs. Elwood C. Rambo Mrs. Paul Irons and Mis. William I'rban, of Woodbury; Mrs.

Raymond H. Schneider, of Mantua, and Mrs. David DiGiamlxrerdino, of Wenonah. Miss Janis K. lord, formerly of Collingswood, has taken up residence at 670 W.

40th Miami Beach. Miss Patricia A. Schafer, of Westmont, and Miss Barbara Bickel. of Rarclay Earm. Delaware Township, have returned after spending several days at Split Rock Lodge, Mt.

Pocono, Ta. Mr. and Mrs. Elwood L. Lentz, of 3072 S.

Constitution are receiving congratulations on the birth of a second child, a son, Larry Edward, on Dec. 3. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Torrance, of 3 Anna Elwood, announce the engagement of their daugh ter, Miss Barbara Torrance, to Mr.

Joseph M. Robinson, son of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Robinson, of 1412 Washington Colonial Manor.

An October wedding is planned. Mrs. Inez Hagan, of Haddon Hill Apartacnts, Haddon Township, entertained Friday evening last in honor of Miss Mary Jane Dilks, also of Haddon Township, whose marriage to Mr. William A. Brahms, of Te-oria, 111., will take place Tuesday, Dec.

29. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Schroe-der, of 122 Rhoads Haddonfield, entertained at bridge Saturday evening for Mr. and Mrs.

William S. Keown. of that suburb; Mr. and Mrs. Theodore L.

Weeks, of Haddon Heights, and Mr. and Mrs. Warren C. Sinclair, of Barrington. Comprising a dinner party Sunday afternoon at Burlington County Country Club, West-ampton Township, were Mrs.

Roy L. Hays, of Haddon Heights; Mrs. Charles Miller and Mrs. Julian E. Gaylord, of Audubon; Mrs.

David Wilson and Mrs. Walter W. Erazee of Collingswood; Mrs. John Lincoln, Mrs. Daniel J.

Elynn and Miss Evva L. Trotter, of Gloucester City; Mrs. Joseph L. McP.ride, of Mnorcstown; Mrs. Joseph S.

Gibison. of I'pper Montclair; Mrs. Louis H. Gries-bach, of North Wildwood, and Miss Elizabeth Hollingshcad, of Merchantville. Mr.

and Mrs. Milton H. Eisen-hardt, of 457 Crystal Lake Haddonleigh, entertained Saturday evening for the Rev. and Mrs. Edward E.

Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fredericks, Mr. and Mrs. Eric J.

Phillips, Mrs. IMPORTANT NEWS FOR THE WOMAN AND MAN WHO WANT TO II Wllt-OIOOMIO dS, VINCENT JOSEPH open onofher smart, ntw BEAUTY SALON A BARBER SHOP of CHERRY HILL INN COTTON CORD fashions a water repellent coat. The ribbed-knit collar converts to a hood and another pnuq feature of the all-weather coat is its quilted lining. In beie or willow green, it is available at Kobcrt Hall in misses sizes. sert and cards Saturday evening.

Guests were Mrs. Holly Leslie Cooper, Mrs. William Kelly, Miss Marion E. Meany and Miss Katharine V. Sparks, of this city; Mrs.

Charles C. Schuler, of Audubon; Mrs. Paul S. Prutz-man, Mrs. Harry N.

Lutz, Mrs. Nelson D. Stair, Mrs. William J. Harman, Mrs.

James D. Loveland, Mrs. Joseph G. Ren-son, Mrs. Samuel Y.

Bowman, Mrs. Ada J. Ilann, Miss Eleanor J. Timmons and Miss Genevieve D. Kenning, of Collingswood.

and Mrs. M. Tarr Johnson, of Philadelphia. Mr. Mrs.

William A. Kratz, of Havertown, announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Elizabeth Anne Kratz, to Mr. Robert Craig Mc-Kinley. son of Mrs. Dorothea McKinley, of 820 Colford Collingswood, and Mr.

Robert C. McKinley, of West Chester, which took place Friday, Dec. 4, in Media, Pa. The bride attended Southern Seminary and Junior College, Buena Vista, V'a. Mr.

McKinley, currently serving in the II. S. Coast Guard, will enter Rutgers University in the fall. Mrs. Henry G.

Berger of SOI Station Haddon Heights, entertained at bridge Monday evening for Mrs. George D. Miller, Mrs. Rodman H. Lynch, Mrs.

Ralph C. Weis-gerber Mrs. Robert Galloway, Mrs. J. Robert Zensen and Mrs.

George H. Hennessy, of that suburb, and Mrs. Benjamin Nabreski, of Pcnnsauken Township. Mr. and Mrs.

Harry K. Strang, Adult Literature Parents' Job Child-Aimed Smut Is Issue Dorothy Draper created this outstanding addition to Cherry Hill Inn, blending traditional Americana with contemporary design. The BarberShop evokes the Federal period of history. Signs and pictures recall the by gone day; shaving mugs and apothecary jars line the walls. Barber chairs and bleeding bowls, in the stylt of yesterday, complete the picture.

Service, as you would expect at Vincent Joseph, could not be more modern. In the adjoining Beauty Salon, equipment and lighting advances contribute immeasurably toward creating the smart woman. The uniquely partitioned booths emphasize privacy and individual attention. The overall color scheme is pink and white. SPtCIALISTS IN HAIR STYLING, SHAPING, COIORNO, AND PIUMANINT WAVINO Our staff can fashion your hair along the latest lines or create an individual style for you alone.

1 Phone for an appointment, NOrmandy 3-1144 rfAA s.w.: si tin utl VIUCENT i JOSEPH By INEZ ROBB ment that adequately fits so shocking a crime against kids. I'nder the new law. 10-year prison sentences have been meted out to men and women who would deliberately debase children with pornography. Sentences of from three-to-five years are now general. This is surely a step in the right direction.

But I am still not convinced that a touch of Die lash in such cases wouldn't be salutary, too. The kind of men and women who engage in the revolting spread of commercialized pornography among children are themselves so beyond the pale of decency, so base that they cannot be treated as ordinary criminals For years, J. Edgar Hoover, local police authorities, judges, and youth experts have pointed to obscene literature, flooding the mails and newsstands, as a prime cause of juvenile delinquency and sex crimes. Mr. Hoover has described this traffic in obscenity directed at I I Smut via the mails used to be the same category as the weather: Everybody talked about it.

Teriod. But the last session of Congress lxrfcd up the 1056 law that permits the Postoffiee Department to impound mail addresser to a person suspected of sending out obscene matter. A Congressional subcommittee is holding bearings around the country on the por-nography racket. In Indiana, Gov. Harold W.

Handlry is behind a state wide campaign to cct hash literature" nflf the newsstands. The ovrrnor is activated by surveys showing that juvenile delinquency drops when smut disappears from the stands. And finally. Postmaster Gen-rrald Summerfield has just appointed a national committee to advise and aid him in his war on the sale and distribution of smut via the mails to children a racket so loathsome, so sickening as to demand a punish- I I I Ail (tawtr lobby; 0 of 813 Washington Tal- myra. entertained at dinner Su- day following the christening of their grandson, Karl Werner Evoy, son of Mr.

and Mrs. I Martin Evoy 3d, of Delaware Township, The ceremony took place in Trinity Presbyterian Church, Delaware Township, BEAUTY SALON BARBER SHOP Rout 38 Haddonfield Road Merchantville, N. i. (THERE'S ALWAYS FREE PARKINS!) Wit if I i I'll 1 I i 1 I i "1 i with the Rev. Wallace Edmund Carver, officiating.

the young as "America's ugliest racket." That is no hyperbole. The moral hyenas involved in such a business deserve neither sympathy nor regard of any kind from their fellow men. What they deal in is spiritual poison aimed at the debauchery of young people and borderline adults. It will be interesting to see what advice or help Mr. Sum-lnetlield expects from his committee of distinguished citizens.

The case of commercialized smut is clear cut. There is no border lino here to confuse the issue. But does Mr. Summerfield expect his committee to deal with an entirely different field, say that of "Lady Chatterly's Lover" and similar literature? The Postmaster General is still fighting to keep D. H.

Lawrence's novel out of the mails. If the committee is asked to wrestle with this problem, it will need the wisdom of Solomon. No democratic society has ever yet been able to come up with a foolproof definition of the thin line between liberty and license. One of the weariest cliches in this battle is to point out that there are passages in the Bible and in Will Shakespeare that arc not for little pitchers. Literature, the drama and the cinema cannot be boiled down to the 12-year-age level, the charge continually thrown at Hollywood.

I find "Lady Chat-terly" too dull to get past page 50. But if there are other adults who want to read it. that's their business. The problem of the government is to keep smut out of the mails and of parents to keep adult literature where it belongs. OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P.

M. VWn-fllrVrt HAVE YOUR ilil RUGS FREE my I CHRISTMAS DELIVERY ILL 1 1 wmm EAST CAMDEN 'v 4 Pit i Phnln hv Bradford Bachrach MRS. SET CHARLES MOMJIAN The bride, before her marriage to the son of Mrs. Charles Momjian, of Philadelphia, and the late Mr. Momjian, was Miss Joan Anctte Reed, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. John A. Reed, of 333 Bellevue Haddonfield, where the couple is residing. it'ttf CLEANED WML fM WM0K rf LARGEST SELECTION of HANDBAGS in Baby's Clean Togs Park in Groups When folding laundry for a baby, make separate groupings of clean clothes to be used at the same time. For example, place a diaper, nightgown, shirt and blanket together in a drawer.

Then at hath time, a complete change is available in seconds. LTDOCV IU. ZSk i rrm i iu i I K523 I CLEANED feSSS We're Proud to Offer I Give Him LUXURIOUS COMFORT That Follows Him Everywhere imM vMKOMa inn Tor iacKn uown i a mai mm A Chrcsc, Olives Slar In Sandwich Treat For a delicious cheese sandwich, try this combination: shredded cheddar, mixed with pieces of olive. Moisten with mayonnaise or French dressing and add a dash of mustard. uil by HOLEPROOF Ihit lil thowt Ih diamal riifferont In frto and vntriottd Xyjl li I I I il tetptl offer fwo manfhs war.

Yew can haw your rugi tltantd and fQtLiB ft A it I I I Dvo-Dtllay 10 Ihty'll ifov clean longir of vtry mo Mr-! Tvuvm 1x 12 li sxw 1 a Give Them a Thorough Cleaning ORIENTAL 01 Smmr i ond INSTALL EM IN Y0UR NEW H0ME CLEANED 1 AT DISCOUNT PRICES I jyes J) i96 LEATHER CASHMERE SUEDE IKOADCIOTH AtLIOATOH IOKtU TACKED DOWN ll iKSI I EVENING IA0S AND IMPORTS ot iSflui.L,,- CARPETING fTr 074 I THf ffNfSf AT CREATE SAVINGS Volu Xl.JJ;'' "Wh.r. robuou, Art ffi ffi iij" T'' Ji? I iitM HADDON AVE. CAMDEN EM S-4392 Daily 10 a.m. fe 9 p.n, Sundoyi 1 to 3 Ji fc'W'MMi t'm urtiril wti-wMieiiailmiMitMii mm iniiitMi WmIMm ij-yaWiTia' SUBURBIA MEMBER OF "HADDON CHARGE-IT" AJAA mr WM MARKET For his moit comfortable nlght'i sleep Give pajamas that follow him Move when he moves turn when he turns glide over sheets. The only perfect Wash and Dry fabric that never needs pressing, Royalty dark and pastel colors piped SELF-SERVICE corem Ai low Ai or tiHHL 16: In contrasting tones, 1395 4fi teuaf O'vtrftn form by Mail svirri ron rati sAMnt zad 711 ARCH ST.

NYLON TRICOT UNDERWEAR PACER Boer Shorts 2.50 PARK FftEEl REAR OF STORE ON 25th STREET.

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Pages Available:
1,868,373
Years Available:
1876-2024