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•'J^>^¦^ The Nazareth Item m ,t>\'''^ti,'t oott 'M AN INDEPENDENT PAMILY NBW8PAPBK, DfeVOTBD TO LITERATURE. LOCAL AND SBOSS GENERAL INTELLIGENCE. NAZARETH. PA., THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 13,1930 DETZER TALKS }RLD PEACE AT CLUB MEETING HERE m^^^ Executive of Peace and Freedom League iiicy of GovemmenU To Agitate War Then Ganrantce World Peace; Build- y^ Implemento of War Continued Al- tbottffli Representatives Sign Peace Facts .;\1V. ^Dsretby Detier. eiecutlve ¦^i. Women's Inter- r,-irt tor Peace and , STtbe speeher st the rf ths Women's Club In ^hoot auditorium on 'J!^g. Miss Detser. 1. r«ember of the relief '.Tsi swcetw« capacity dur- TSa W*l<» War, was sta- iLmscs. L.atef •»»• "•"' Itring the food restrlc- _j asd had charge of tho !^lf,000 children under stM*- has traveled all orer Western Europe nalltlons and has come ^ylMlon tbat all eommon nat nothing more than vUla their gorernments UMat oa preparatioa (or held the undlTided her privilege to work. She dwelt on the Ineonslateacy and llloslcal attitude of govern¬ ments toward peace—tbat while tbey signed peace pacts they kept on building cruisers and preparing for war. The speaker said that conflict would never cease but could be settled by arbltr.-itlon. diplomacy, concillstlon and compromise. Jane Adams, who presided at the International peace conference at Prague was quoted aa saying. "That harmony Is u sl^a wl^b is merely the glossing over oC^real- Itles. We must state our difflcult issues clearly and compose tbem through what bas come to be call¬ ed creative discussion born of good will and pooled intelllgeliee. "It ll through the pooled IntellN gence of the representatives of the various countries how assembled "sf s tslr-sUed audleacojln London working on plans for laaiiMsssd condltione la the; disarmament that we must look for '¦ I iHatrlss In which It was permanent peace." raMfTATC BARBUTI ELECTRICAL FEATS AT HIGH SCHOOL Glenn B. Morris, with his bag of electrical tricks, visited tbe High school laat Thursday morning. His program, although the same one presieuted last year, lost none ot its usual Interest, as Howard Getz und Marlen Keru. his assistaati Young Wife Deserter Held Ellwood Yetter. ot Wind Gap. has been committed to prison by Squire James S. Fry. in defeault of ball to answer a charge of de¬ sertion and non-support preferred by bis wife, Eva, of Bethlehem R 2. The wife alleges her hu.-iband left ber one month atter marriage and went to California. Tbe couple bave an eigbt-moatbs old son which tbe defendant never saw. Tbe complaint furfh^'r al¬ leges that Yetter was living with another woman at Wind Gap. CEMENT WORKER BURIED ALIVE IN COAL SLIDE Buried under a slldo ot coal at tbe Hercules Cement company plant in Stockertown on Mouday morning, A. Fernandez, a Portu- ^y*-. ,* i the only winner of ih>r the United Stiitee In [PiOlyaipIp gnnips. who has .IIM nstnred to }tak.k.v. good standing pro tem. will aver. Using ordiu-,' gese laborer, was found dead after ary house current, Mr. Morris pro-' workmen had Instituted a search duced manufactured lightning, lit, for bim. The man was first miss- electric lights by magnetising thawed shortly after eight o'clock and .surrounding atraostphere and per- bU body was recovered some time tormed other numerous experi¬ ments Just .as phenomenal. His sclentlflc demonstration ot "Alter¬ nating CarrenU" was eaterUlainf and Instractlve. PBTIT JURORS Letball ineTonight ^^kiSkttbsll games will tea- nli^Ollilt'i program at the "Y." laa !«¦« y,i\\ be ataged he- tlks Lens Star flve and the •^Vmianii Company team, of Local followers of the I ^ ^ H»«t the Lriine Star hoys tW^Hi putting on real games EMMh^"' will expect a sharp I J** ••testa tbe cement pack¬ ing* «•• Kuton five. J"»"«ed game will be stagsd ^ tis "Y" giru and the St. P^«w leaai. of Easton. Tha •• else hare been putting aader the coaching I.JJ'^ aad are showing improved play. Tho iMtltt^,"' **• •»•«»'«>« wW» Itta tL: i"j«'"»e<ilates against «£«•¦ "»" Junior Varsity. '^t ons sdmlssloB. ^*XH1RK GIKLS MEET later. Dr. W. Jos. Happel, ot town, was called to the aceaa but toumt the aua dead. Coroaar W. CaMa Nickel was snmnioaed and Is eoa- ducting aa Investlgatloa althoagh It Is believed the matter was a pure accident. Feruandes. wi^) was ua- married worked with his brother, Tbe following persons arej Adolpb, st the Stockertown plant among those wbo are attending since August 1928 and made bis criminal court as Jurors: Samuel'home in Stockertown. Oplinger, Lewis F. Kostenbader i » and Ervin L. Dllchert. of Bushkill| .p„„K^.-. vifTiM township: Frances Blake aud Sue/^V""*-^^ vin:i.n Frutchey. Bangor; Harvey Frock] IlETnt-NS HOME and Nellie Mitman. East Allen, *• township; Warren G. Ache and, ^ugg Martha Schlegel. daughter Isaac L. Nlckum. ot Hellertown;' q, j^r. and Mrs. Henry Schlegel, Maude Bachman and Theodora W., ^j,o ,,„ been conflned in tbe Eas- Smlth. Northampton; William (on hospital for the past ten days Reagans, Plalnfleld township; Al- following injuries received when bert Garren. Portland; Mary Fish- struck by an automobile truck at er. Lower Nazareth township;' Belfast, has returned to her par- Lulgi 0. Sabatino, Roseto; Daniel ^nt's home. Miss Schlegel suffer- Remel, Michael Kist and Ralph g^ ^ broken shoulder and a broken Harkner, Upper Mt. Bethel and leg George McConnell, ot town. GALILEAN SHEPHERD COMING TO NAZARETH TUESDAY, FEB. 25th LEG BADLY HURT WHEN MAN TRIES TO THROW OFF BELT Raymond Hawk, a pit foreman of the Lone Star Cement Company, \<i in the St Luke's hospital. Berh- iebeni, with an injury that may cause the io.^s of his right foot. Mr. Hawk was caught iu the drive belt of a motor while at work at the.>4)Iant Saiurjrtv morning and was whirled aroiid by the mach¬ inery resulting In tbe breaking ot his leg and other body Injuries. Tbe leg was hurt in such a man¬ ner tbat it was though- p-irt of the member would have to be ampu¬ tated. The accident w»s the flr^t "lost time" accident that baa hap¬ pened in the plant in fifteen months and the men and employ¬ ers bad been hoping that might prolong that time Indefinitely. REGISTER OF WILLS SPEAKS AT MEETIN0 OF LIONS CLUB HERE Herbert Snydi^i^ Presents Many Interesting Facta About Valuable Documents; Advises Writioff of Wills To Insure Protection of Family and Interests; County Agent Displays Priae Potatoes Raised By Club Spon¬ sored By Lions Register of Wills Herbert D., Snyder, of Northampton county. ago where they took Orst prlaa^ Tbe Ci>unty Agent also confrats- . .1. ...^...in. «f la'e<I '•»« '<»«•' Lions, who I wa. the speaker at the meeting of, ,p„„,„,^4 j^e Boys aad Oil* tbe Lions Club in the 'Y ' audi-^ ^^.^^^ cju^ qj jIji, county, la kaetaff torium on Tuesday evening. Mr.,a member of their clubs captura Snyder took for bla subject the flrst prize In competWoa With "WilU." He gave an hour talk on ar. adult as Miss Werner's potatoaa Noted Lecturer To Ap¬ pear In Higli School Au¬ ditorium; Also In Luth¬ eran Church Sunday Afternoon Stephen A. Hal ^ Oalileaa Shepherd. wlU preseat hUi Travelogue with beautiful colored slides aad motloa pictures In the High School audttorium on Tues¬ day evening. February 26th. This Travelogue Is being sponsored by the Moravian snd St. John's Luth¬ eran churches, ot town. Mr. Habousb is a native Galilean and an American citizen. He tended bis father's flock ot sheep, Just as every Oslllean boy has done since the days when tbe Master walked among men. He came to America and worked bis way through an American University. Recently be returned to the land! an American, because of his birth and tbere personally | American himself, and took marvelous motion pictures ot the scenes and people of Galilee. He has written for magazines and newspapers and lectured Sold Property Albert O. Sturgis & Son, real estate dealers, sold the home of .Miss Esther Werner. High street, tuwn, to Harvey Stewart, North ijtreet. Miss Werner built tha home several years ago tmt wa-t taken sick some months ago and has been in Haff's hospital, North¬ ampton, for several months. She the subject which was of great in- tere.st covering as It did the com¬ plete suhject. The speaker ex-, plained the laws relating to wills j and also who can make a will and the essential features of tbe^e documents. He told of the differ j ent kinds of wills that may be, drawn and explained why people| should make wills. "There is a, marked tendency." he said, "at the present time toward tbe making of wills people realizing the value of; the document in protecting their | familie.s and interests, after, death." | B. L. Coleman, County farm agent, was present at the meeting and exhibited some of the potatoes grown by Mary Werner, of Moores¬ town. and exhibited at ths exhib¬ ition at State College some time tl ANNIVERSARY AT REF. CHURCH were later exhibited in a coateat upen to all, boys, girls and adulta, aud again took first honors. The local Lions admitted Luthar Batt as a new member. President Elvkood Unangst announced that the State Convention ot Lloaa would be held in New Castla oa May 5 and 6 and named as a eom- mittee of delegatea from the elab: Lions Ayers, Oold and Marrta Klick. Lion C. F. Martin, ot tha Boy Scout committee, reported and presented Scoutmaster Elmer W, Snyder, wbo presented In tufA tve members of Veteran Troop No. 1» of town, Ellis Neuner and TmaMa Worman, who gave a damoaatra- tioa ot sending and reeeivlag tha Morse code. George Smith lad In singing with Charles Heae at tha piano. native land He knows it, too, as he is an American by choice and adoption. This coming Sunday afternoon, February 16ib. Mr. Habousb will before deliver a lecture on "My Shepherd ENTERTAINED AT BRIDGE Mrs. Willis HagenHucb enter¬ tained friends at a bridge party on DE.^TH AT COl'.MV HOME Paul Polgar, aged 67. an Inmate ot the County Home was found dead In bed at the home at mid many audiences In largest churches Life in Galilee." This lecture will and schools tn America. I be given in St. John's Lutheran Mr. Habousb knows Gafllee and, church at 3 p. m. The public is Palestine as most Americans never cordially invited to attend this can know it. because it Is his service. Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Brong night Monday. Tbe deceased was Gardener, of Belfast, received flrst' a native ot Hungary and had beea prise. Mrs. Edward Hellman.! admitted January 18, 1927. He second; Mrs. Lester Hawk received | was a laborer aad single, and was booby priae. A very pleasanf time a Cetholie hy taitb. The coroner was hai %y all present and delici¬ ous rafreehments were served by the hoeteee. Dr. W. Cslvin Nickel was called and found tbe maa had died of natural causes. French RoyaUst Back From Exile a, rnia l,^«« their meeting in the! ,j^ «oom Of the Reformed *fc Uirt^.. .^'"*''>' evening. At »*iInS/'L"""'* ^""'ed ««» ^•» "Wing material. i •^ .or? *'""''"'«•» the fol-' •**tttii„?""'"^« t" prepare >%l,,r°';f« Remaly. I, nL'* '"««="« Wunderly. 1*^ wr""' *¦«'•« Miss Eliza. h*Kai.,. .1*^* Kemuly. Mil- l|.«/;^'«»ye ening. February ¦^¦••"«« '^ peanuts at .jUsmq, 5i*tl, \Z:Y^^ *'"* observed IS^J^ths',' '" "Pl'^oprlnte '«^.?: ' ''''' "'•-erved. If** K' fssi arrj .^j;^^'he occasion. conflned to' "y ho Ra.tfi la ' » t«n on a flight of I,e«n iMiiilH. editor here wiih his wife mid si after thirtv nionlhs of ••sil"' In Belgium efforta lu make Vrame a klngdum. of the Frwth royiillst pn|M»r l.'.\itlon. shown un, rwenlly wns pennllle.! t<. return to Paris lie immediately resumed bla IXSTALLATIOX OF OmCBRg AT ST. JOHN'S REF. Sl'NDAX The recently elected Elders and Deacons ot the Reformed cburch will be installed next Sunday morning, February 16, by Rev. W. H. Wotring. pastor. Tbe members elected to tbese bodies were named on Thursday evening at a congre* gatlonal meeting, aud will take part In the consistory organisation. Those elected for the coming year are: Elders. William B. Har¬ per, Walter Kern: Deacons, Roy Kostenbader. Walter Abel. William Silfles. Wallace Schmidt, and Ceorge Smith. Jeremiah Ehret waa named to the cemetery board. CO. SABBATH SCHOOL ASSOCIATION NOTES Dr. Albert H. Cage, of Wake- fletil, Mass., who will be heard In Chri.-t Reformed church, Betble¬ hem. February 27, has no superior in educational evangelism. His work and methods are Invaluable to pastors and church school lead¬ ers. The meetings at 4 and 7:45 p. m. on February 27 are part of tha State School Administration tour, cnvering ten points In the state. The Bfthleheni meetings are for all of North:impton county und vicinity. L. Louis Aber, .-¦•.'» Sm;) r!nti iiilt'iit (if Sc!io(»l Administration will accompany Dr. (Ja«e and wiil conduct a forum on "Slime Fresh Educational Ideals." To encourage the young people of our Sunday schools fo study Christian Stewardship in its vari¬ ous phases. It Is the custom of the County AsBocl.itlon. to hold an an¬ nual contest, asking Sunday school pupils to write an essay, a story, a poem or a pageant, oa tbis Im- (Continued on Last Page) VUINO GIRL SCALDED WITH HOT WATER Miss Ada Snyder, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Snyder, of North Whitfleld street, is confined to her home as the result ot burns received when she spilled the ebn- teats of a tea-kettle full of bot water over her feet and legs. The burns are very painful but not of a serious nature although they will keep Miss Snyder conflned to ber home for some daya. LOCAL HEALTH REPORT Clarence H. Ziegler. loeal health Tlie Junior Ciiristian Endeavor. of .St. John's Reformed church, on -Sunday quietly celebrate!! its 33rd aimiversary iu the chapel of the church. Tea was served at 4:30 i3 improved in health but doe.s iiotj iiy .Mrs. W. H. Wotring. wife of ths feel .strong enough to take care of p:i-!;or, aud .Miss Henrietta Frantz. her home. 1-ader of the society. Following the tea a brief business meeting was held featured by reports ot the secretary, Dorothy Halteman. and *the treasurer. Luella Serfass. - tJaia Society wae erganlsed In 1905. when Miss Henrletu Frsnts was elected president. Sho has been leader of tbe society since that time and bas watched its growth into an active and import¬ ant group in the church activities. ^ fiWIIillf '' JCRBlflAR OOfWHART Jeremiah Goodhart. a well known resident of town, died at 5:30 Sunday night at his home, 134 Locust street, of spoplexy. He was 78 years. 2 months and 14 days old. He Is survived by bis widow and the following children: Morris and Jeremiah, of town, and Mrs. Katherine Troy, of Philadel¬ phia. Six grand children and one great grand child, also survive. The funeral was held Wednes¬ day afternoon at the home with Rev. H. C. Snyder, pastor of St. John's Lutheran cburch. officiat¬ ing. Interment was made in tbe Greenwood cemetery. rOM:.M> MILLER KI.IK4 EAST TO VIHIT MOTHER Conrad Miller, of Des Moines. Iowa, who has been called home hy the illness of bis mother. Mrs. John A. Miller, a patient in St. l.ulve'i hospital, made part of bis journey eastward by airplane. Otfting word too late to catch an eastv^ard train Mr. Miller took an airplane and traveled to i'ittsburgh MRS. WILLIAM FRANK GOLD where he arrived in time to make Sabitla M. Gold, widow of tha '^^t train connections and reach late William Frank Gold, aged 7s|tiie bed.^ide of his mother a few yeara, 3 months and 14 days, died, hjur* atter he was summoned. at her home here on Sou*h Broad: — street on Saturday evening at 9 o'clock from complications. Mrs. Gold was a faithful mem¬ ber of the St. John's Reformed church. Sunday school and Its Ladies' Aid Society. She was ai.so locally well and favorably known, having been a life time resident of town. Sbe leaves to mourn four sons. Willlam H.. of town: Edgar L.. Kenosha. Wis.; John G. and Oliver J., of Betblehem, and one daugbter. Mrs. Eva Rmert. at home; two sisters. .Mrs. Emma Michael, Thomasburg, and Abhes- ena Dornblazer, Newburg: two i brothers, Andrew and James John¬ son, of Hecktown, and ten grand children and three great grand children. Funeral services were held on Wednesday .Tfteriioon from her late home witii a cont.nued churcti Inspector, submitted the following i ¦'<rviie in fhe St. John's Reformed he.il'li report for tlie month of rhirrh. followed by burial in rhe .liinuiuy: Seven cas>e'of scarlet St. .lohn's ruion cemetery. Uev. fever and five of chiokOn pott. I W. H. Wotrir.s; officiated. oK(.AMZ.\TI(»H OF VOl .\« roLKM .4TTEND CHl'RCH Boy Scouts. Girls Scouts. Boy Rangers and Camp Fire Girls, of town. Oq Sunday evening attended iu a body the services at St. John's Refortned cburch. Rev. W. ^ Wo ring bad for his sermon text: "The Growfh of Jesus." The various organizations repeated the flag pledge in tbe church under their various leaders. The meet¬ ing was very well attended. V.tLEXTINK MKIAL I'lipils of the Jackson public s.";:' >1 Kerndale. will hold a Valen- !ire social Thursday and Friday eve:iings. Feliruiiry rS and 14. at 7:."to o'clork. The pupils will reu- Ift a program of songs, plays and .•>xt-rrises inider direction ot th-ir ttMoh^rs. Mi.-isps Irene .M. Reimer :iM 1 .Martha C. Knauss. of town. Destroyers en the Way From San Diego to New York Tbe fottpiastcr of tbe little of ^iita Ciaus. Inmana, wae Mowed under a> Onistaias wirVl<^ tera sent in from all over the country, le be mailed to chiltfren villi tiWi Seaia Gaue postasarlc. Naz. High at Quakertown N'azareth High school cage teaoaa wiil Journey to Quakertows.«B Friday evening to meet the Qnnb* ertown basketball teams. Tha l.cal boys team will feet keenly i lo-ss of Jake Fraaatelder. who rorg!ng rapidly into s star eagar. Coach Leh bas heen hard praaao^l for basketball material thla yaar and now flnds It necessary to raeaat his team. Smith, star football player, wbo haa been laid up with a bad leg, is still unable to get lata the game and will likely aot ba ahe to play tbls season. Tha present squad numbers Yeakel, Koch. .Sandercock, Klefer. Bolaa and Christman. y. ^'^LLl'i^ •*<,.. •¦4' t f^ - - T ' ":v"fh \:.. ^ Hi^' *:^:: A deetroyer division of tbe bettle fleet leering San Diego harbor for a ertfae te New Tork. \i:ti:i:a.>.h aixiliarv ATTKM>.4 UANQVai Fifteen members of tha Auxlli* ary ,jf tlie Sons of Veteran's and oC Owen Rice Post, Sons ot Veteranat ou Tuesday e.ening attended the hautiue'. of the Lehigh District of the order at the Hotel Americue In Allentiv\n. "Rie affair was attend* ed by 500 me^hera who marchnS in procession to tbe tables, te tha procession being Veterans of tba Civti war with their wives aad tha widows of Civil War reternH. A feature ot the evening waa prayer by Itev. Aehtr Heat. Of Piiiiudeirhta. trbo Was a drummer boy tn the Civil War. S. B. Ham. .Mayor of Easton, acted as toaa(< master. Rev. J. K. Frets, ot ton. >avanillicaddMi^sM as a part of the speaking profra ot the evening. Lester Solt. of towa. haa Ca»*| nisbed ball la fSOS betora Sf«l James 8. Fry. to apfaar ta aoMt t* answer a charfe of desarttan • non-support preterraf %f kla vlfifcl rioraaea. i'-ft'^^Sft.ij...:;
Object Description
Title | The Nazareth Item |
Masthead | The Nazareth Item |
Volume | 39 |
Issue | 12 |
Subject | Nazareth's first English newspaper |
Description | A weekly home town newspaper published from December 4, 1891 to November 20, 1975 |
Publisher | The Nazareth Publishing Company |
Physical Description | weekly newspaper |
Date | 1930-02-13 |
Location Covered | United States, Pennsylvania, Northampton County, Nazareth |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Source | microfilm |
Language | eng |
Rights | Public Domain |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the Memorial Library of Nazareth and Vicinity, Attn: Reference Department, 295 E. Center Street, Nazareth, PA 18064. Phone: (610) 795-4932. |
Contributing Institution | Memorial Library of Nazareth and Vicinity |
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. |
Month | 02 |
Day | 13 |
Year | 1930 |
Description
Title | The Nazareth Item |
Masthead | The Nazareth Item |
Volume | 39 |
Issue | 12 |
Subject | Nazareth's first English newspaper |
Description | A weekly home town newspaper published from December 4, 1891 to November 20, 1975 |
Publisher | The Nazareth Publishing Company |
Physical Description | weekly newspaper |
Date | 1930-02-13 |
Date Digitized | 2009-09-28 |
Location Covered | United States, Pennsylvania, Northampton County, Nazareth |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Digital Specifications | Image was scanned by Backstage Library Works at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival Image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from film at 300 dpi. The original file size was 39161 kilobytes. |
Source | microfilm |
Language | eng |
Rights | Public Domain |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the Memorial Library of Nazareth and Vicinity, Attn: Reference Department, 295 E. Center Street, Nazareth, PA 18064. Phone: (610) 795-4932. |
Contributing Institution | Memorial Library of Nazareth and Vicinity |
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. |
Full Text |
•'J^>^¦^
The Nazareth Item
m
,t>\'''^ti,'t
oott
'M
AN INDEPENDENT PAMILY NBW8PAPBK, DfeVOTBD TO LITERATURE. LOCAL
AND
SBOSS
GENERAL INTELLIGENCE.
NAZARETH. PA., THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 13,1930
DETZER TALKS }RLD PEACE AT CLUB MEETING HERE
m^^^
Executive of Peace and Freedom League
iiicy of GovemmenU To Agitate War Then Ganrantce World Peace; Build- y^ Implemento of War Continued Al- tbottffli Representatives Sign Peace Facts
.;\1V.
^Dsretby
Detier. eiecutlve
¦^i. Women's Inter-
r,-irt tor Peace and
, STtbe speeher st the
rf ths Women's Club In
^hoot auditorium on
'J!^g. Miss Detser.
1. r«ember of the relief
'.Tsi swcetw« capacity dur-
TSa W*l<» War, was sta-
iLmscs. L.atef •»»• "•"'
Itring the food restrlc-
_j asd had charge of tho
!^lf,000 children under
stM*-
has traveled all orer
Western Europe nalltlons and has come ^ylMlon tbat all eommon nat nothing more than vUla their gorernments UMat oa preparatioa (or
held the undlTided
her privilege to work.
She dwelt on the Ineonslateacy and llloslcal attitude of govern¬ ments toward peace—tbat while tbey signed peace pacts they kept on building cruisers and preparing for war.
The speaker said that conflict would never cease but could be settled by arbltr.-itlon. diplomacy, concillstlon and compromise.
Jane Adams, who presided at the International peace conference at Prague was quoted aa saying. "That harmony Is u sl^a wl^b is merely the glossing over oC^real- Itles. We must state our difflcult issues clearly and compose tbem through what bas come to be call¬ ed creative discussion born of good will and pooled intelllgeliee.
"It ll through the pooled IntellN gence of the representatives of the
various countries how assembled
"sf s tslr-sUed audleacojln London working on plans for
laaiiMsssd condltione la the; disarmament that we must look for
'¦ I iHatrlss In which It was permanent peace."
raMfTATC BARBUTI
ELECTRICAL FEATS AT HIGH SCHOOL
Glenn B. Morris, with his bag of electrical tricks, visited tbe High school laat Thursday morning. His program, although the same one presieuted last year, lost none ot its usual Interest, as Howard Getz und Marlen Keru. his assistaati
Young Wife Deserter Held
Ellwood Yetter. ot Wind Gap. has been committed to prison by Squire James S. Fry. in defeault of ball to answer a charge of de¬ sertion and non-support preferred by bis wife, Eva, of Bethlehem R 2.
The wife alleges her hu.-iband left ber one month atter marriage and went to California. Tbe couple bave an eigbt-moatbs old son which tbe defendant never saw. Tbe complaint furfh^'r al¬ leges that Yetter was living with another woman at Wind Gap.
CEMENT WORKER BURIED ALIVE IN COAL SLIDE
Buried under a slldo ot coal at tbe Hercules Cement company plant in Stockertown on Mouday morning, A. Fernandez, a Portu-
^y*-. ,*
i
the only winner of ih>r the United Stiitee In [PiOlyaipIp gnnips. who has .IIM nstnred to
}tak.k.v.
good standing
pro tem. will aver. Using ordiu-,' gese laborer, was found dead after ary house current, Mr. Morris pro-' workmen had Instituted a search duced manufactured lightning, lit, for bim. The man was first miss- electric lights by magnetising thawed shortly after eight o'clock and .surrounding atraostphere and per- bU body was recovered some time
tormed other numerous experi¬ ments Just .as phenomenal. His sclentlflc demonstration ot "Alter¬ nating CarrenU" was eaterUlainf and Instractlve.
PBTIT JURORS
Letball ineTonight
^^kiSkttbsll games will tea- nli^Ollilt'i program at the "Y." laa !«¦« y,i\\ be ataged he- tlks Lens Star flve and the •^Vmianii Company team, of Local followers of the I ^ ^ H»«t the Lriine Star hoys tW^Hi putting on real games EMMh^"' will expect a sharp I J** ••testa tbe cement pack¬ ing* «•• Kuton five. J"»"«ed game will be stagsd ^ tis "Y" giru and the St. P^«w leaai. of Easton. Tha •• else hare been putting aader the coaching I.JJ'^ aad are showing improved play. Tho
iMtltt^,"' **• •»•«»'«>« wW»
Itta tL: i"j«'"»e |
Month | 02 |
Day | 13 |
Year | 1930 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
FileName | 19300213_001.tif |
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