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The Nazareth Item NAZARETH, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 4,1934 No. 6 ^^(azareth Bank De¬ positors Now Insured I 1^ Btuiki in Haemrattt l»v« JZai Oertlftcatei from Vaa Otolr- JlTttie BoMd of Dte«ctoci ol the .<fi5i»!n«i*m of tte T«npor. P^^Zitl D«PM>t fMuraneo Pund. (tt vlotntty have reUtned eonfldenoe SaMiaiu man tat tte Bank* In >„ their banks Is evldeticed by the I, both havlnc been approved | |grge amount of depoelts aa reflected gnSiing Departnent at i,, ^^^^ sUtements of these Banka. aa aafe and aound T),e Naiareth National Bank and I Trust Company has deposita am- Tte Temporary Inaurance Fund created for this purpose amoiuitlng to approKlmately ISOO.000,000 la aub- acrlbed by tte United Statea Treaa- ury, tte twelve Federal Reaerve Banks and the Memter Banka. That tte citiaena of Naaareth and glgiiOt"" 'Imm lanUni Act of 193> for tte'ountlng to 14,300.000. and tte Second .Z at depositors created the Fe- j National Bank of Naaareth has de- SmJ Deposit Insurance Corporation. ^ posits amounting to tl ,150,000. More mZaenotatioa operatea under a ttmld people who have their money L^nrr PIm> from January 1,19341 in hiding at home or have placed it !fjLtoi 1934, wtereby every depo-^ in aafe-deposit boxes should now de- Zmtg insund to the amount of, posit their money in a Bank. For SLm, On July 1, int tte perm- It Is only through the efforts of all ^itoaataace plan will go Into people to co-operate In the Program IS- under thta plan eaeh depoal- of Recovery that we can bring our |?jrill be Inaured 100% on all de-, Country back to normal business |!L, op to $10,000.00; on depoalta and to the employment of all men. 2^110,000.00, tte depoaltor will be, Those people who are still holding ^LfS leitfc on tte first $10,000.00, money In hiding are retarding bus- nStmtte amount In excess of Iness and employment. By deposlt- fBlt** and not over $5,000.00, and ing their Idle funda in Banks It wil! [S^ tte amount In exeeaa of bring It back Into circulation and 5||«M Under tte temporary, telp to apeed up the wheels of Indus- LSitotffect now and until July 1,, try. It U only by placing ttelr IS proximately M% of all de-, money on deposit In tte Banks and t^iHi In Banka are fully Inaured- putting It Into circulation ttet we iSr^ily *> ^^^ ^"^^ ^'** perm-, can say we are giving full aupport to Ikuurance beeonea effective the President of the United States Ot 7-10% of tte numter under tte National Industrial Re- on In all Banka wUl te'covery Act and that we could aay I ttet we are doing our part. Crop Value For Year Shows 42 Per Cent Gain Steryly Ovw MIS ItM Betow ItSl TMal TWO ARE HURT AS AUTOS CRASH Miss Fannie Oemet, ot 37 Wash¬ ington street, town, aiid Mra. Mar¬ garet Arnold, wife of Albert Arnold, of 49 Belvidere atreet, town, were ad¬ mitted to tte Eaaton hosplUl at 13:06 o'clock Monday momlng suff¬ ering from injuries reoeived wten tte automobile in which they were riding was stmck on the Easton- Nacareth road at SelpsviUe by a truck driven by Charlea Adams, of Greenwich, Conn. The truck akidded on a curve and crashed into tte machine in which the women were riding. The other passengers in tte car were Arnold, and daughter, Lois. Mlss Oernet's injuries consisted of lacerations of the head. Her condition is reported to be fair Mrs. Arnold's left collarbone was fractured and ste also received a number of contusions. Her condi¬ tion is reported to te more serious. COASTING PERMITTED OW POSTED STREETS A notice Inserted on another page of thla laaue cautioning coasters of the Boroufh to please uae only such streeta of tte Borough that are so designated. From a standpoint of safety, it is of tte greatest importance that all parenta instruct their children ac Kiddies Enjoy Dinner By The Men's League of St \ / John's Refornied Church Tte Men's League of St. John's Reformed Church entertained sixty- nve children the age of 0 and 16 years to a turkey dinner oa Thurs¬ day afternoon, December 28 at four o'clock, in tte aocial rooms of tbe church. Each child bore an invitation to stere in the dinner and every one ted a moat enjoyable time- There was plenty of everything, — roaat turkey,; fliling, masted potatoes, gravy, apples, bananas, oranges in¬ cluding desert consisting of thirty quarts of ice cream. They were seat¬ ed in groups of eight and each group under tte care of a competent young lady. The dinner was prepared by excellent cooks- consisting of Mrs. P. » S. Trumbower Mra. H. F. Talalef, Mrs J. A. Fraunfelder, Mrs. Uaatf Knauas, Mrs. Oliver KnauM, Ifn. Clara Andrews, Mrs. R. Oswald, ttfa. Vf. Vogel and Mra. Berfaaa. ~ tables received prompt and courteous attention by llrf- MM Heyer, Mrs. M. S. Yeisley, MUa Amy Rodgera, Mra. g. Byer, Mra. S. Lie* pold. Mlas HmirtetU Fnwtt, aoi Mrs. Martha Sloneeter. All of the children mtmtd ttMlr test wishes to tte League for tbete klndneaa and hoapltaltty magaaaad ttem with thia Yuletlde dinaar. IW party broke up at a rsaaonabto ttmtte and out of town children wtra tali$a to ttelr Iwmas by memters of tlw l^aagvm. Liquor Store Employes Must Use Tact, Courtesy Harrisburg, Jan. 4. — Patience. | with a third party while aerving • hmt tte atandlng of Pennaylvania aa one of tte leading agricultural aUtea. , .. , . . . I Tte Conunonwealth had the aeeond f" '"" "*• T^tV^ atandards^or I aetmn. J«»- 4.-Tte value ot moat valuable hay crop and tte|" "" **' T'^**!fff "¦"• 7^^ \mana produced In Fennaylva- fourth most valuable apple crop of ??* ** «»o»»ln posted in exact loca¬ ls tgttff 1*33 •>»** * forty-two I any sUte. Furttermore, Pennsyl- ^""^ iMHitt. gain over tte record low vania ranked, among all tte states, Wgga 1*32. according to tte Stete nrst in tte production of buckwheat, ' AgrlctUture. Sub ' ssr;s,sssg"s'r;r:4-H LAMB FEEDING CLUB ROUND-UP of any accldenta if thla notice is violated or disregarded. Also, a teavy One will te Imposed upon the parties wte willfully tear theae post of Agriculture. Sub-, flrst In elgar-leaf tobacco, fourth In higter prloes wera largely' silage oom, fifth In rye and grapes, '' for this ptenomenal ad-. sixth in pears and peaches, seventh I IB aggregate value. The es- in winter wheat and cherries, thir- ifbr tte past three years are: teenth In com, fourteenth in oats ^110.000,000; 1033. $83,000,000 and thirteenth in the value of all I ffl, $124,000,000. Value esti- crops. )auist not te confused with Tte six most important Pennsyl- ne since a large propor-, vania cropa in order of ttelr 1033 tte fleld crops grown to' value are: hay. com. poUtoos. wteat. raa UfsaUKtaaa osts and apples. Tte potata crop form of Uvestock or live- which was slightly less tten in 1833' ipaiucta. Department offl- was worth Just twice as much, due to IMplalned Cash mcome esti- an Increase (rom 49 to 90 cents a r 1033 covering all farm pro- bushel in the average price paid laid, will te announced later, farmers '" ' ' - A pen of three Southdown lamba Tte Dorset elass included five pens stewn by Claude Kern, Bangor R-3, | with the pen shown by John Fogel was awarded Orand CtegiRion hon- standing first, 2—Paul Buss, 3—El- Drlvera of automoMlea and trucks' ors in tte Northampton Ctunty 4-H | ^f^,^ buss. 4—Charles Dutt, 5— are cautioned to uae these posted Lamb Feeding Club Round-Up last rioyd Strunk. streets aa little aa poaalble and when Thursday at the farm of E. J- Acker- doing ao to exerelae eare in prevent¬ ing acddenta. TELLS OF DANGER IN COASTING ON TRAFFIC HIGHWAYS mtm, Ackermansville. Reserve cham pion went to a pen of Dorsets shown |^^^-,' Tte Southdown class Included five pena, the flrat priae pen of Claude telng later made Orand AUTO DRIVERS MUST SUPPLY MORE DATA Harrisburg, Jan 4.— The bureau of motor vehicles today urged ap- pllcanta for learners' permits and renewals of operators' Ucenses which have lapsed to make sure that they apply on the new forms, effective January 1. At tte aame time, the bureau notifled motor clubs and other agencies which obtain application courtesy, tact and good humor mttst mark the attitude of State liquor store employes toward patrons. Theae tte State Liquor Control Board ordered in prescribing the following rulea for store workers: 1 Speech to ctutomers in tteir presence or by phone must te clear, intelligible and show a thorough interest m the customer's desires.. 2. Supply customers exactly with tte goods asked for. 3. Recommend no one brand of liquor over anotter. 4. I>> not conduct conversations customer. 5. Do not chew or smoke whll* UUOng with a customer. 6. Hats must te off and there stell te no telsterous eonduet or "horseplay." s. No drinking while on duty la stores. STALEY REVIEWS RESULTS OF CCC IN STATE FORESTS TeUs of Werk AecampUshed 18,8N In Special "Army" Harrisburg, Jan. 4.—"An impres- £7John Pogel. Naaareth R-l. '^i^^^^oionTnoyrot^^^^n "»"•" '" °^^*^ ^ '^'^^ •"!»*'* "«"*' '._j . .w- M__»i . _—.«-. *'n*n»pi0n, ^—ROy rogei, a—oneiaon „,^ #«rm. »nit m» nmr nn«a <lav mitren [ftllMords r«und-up of tte Northampton coun-;i^^TlV:;. mchouTindS^^ '**^ *"" «•* "** ""*" ty Club included 24 pena U lamte, of Sfp^t^r **^^^''"" *^'^' Tba 1934 forms provide s] which 17 were selected to represent •"^J"™"^- I answers to questions which aU driv- the county In tte 4-H Lamb Club ""• n»on«y' ribbons, and 4-H|ers must flU In under tte requlre- elaaaes at tte Pennaylvania Farm ''^^ P^"*- ^''^ »»wdad to tte club bmiU ot tte Fanasylvaate Plnan- tS^^uJuavUtaU | maii^bira tteowgla tte aaoparatkm of| ui wsinn^hmbr Aat fa tte case ¦MW. Moiwy la w i». tte Flory Milling Company Tte Ctempion pen weighed »2 ^^^p,^ ,pj,,j^, thi^^'J?' ./•'Ji,/,t7-.»Y"'"";!lf I^'SL^'S Sffdi^SJ'fhfffe^ individual Merit, Dally Oain, for; out this month conUln tte question., ttet death in the streets, the 1.06 pounds per day durmg the reea- ^^jji^jj , -Qgi ^f j pound per day is Oovemor's Conunlttee on Street Ing period, while tte Reserve Cham- ,^^ ^^^^ ^j,^ keeping of feeding re- An .K- . ... - — - "^ Highway Safety today urged pion pen w*l«h«l 2M pounds, having ,^^,^ .„,, ,, pi^iags were made „ ., All tte leading crops show, parents and officials to see that a dally gain of 1.04 pounds per day. w- » , Connell sheen auecialigt (or 1933 easUy sustain an increase In unit value over 1933. children coast only on hUls safe from The lambs were flrst Judged by breeds fronTpeTmSrlvanla' sta^ Colle« automobile traffic. | and tte first prize pen in each of ^^lle James P. Keim, state club "Heavy snow, general throughout tte five breeds represented was tten j^jder. assisted with tte records tte state, has brought again tte exhibited for tte Championship __ ^ ^^ . , ^_^ ^^. ,. danger of injury and dealh from award. ^t^ 5^^*. fJm sh^w i«'JIIT.'' «/w..»in» .>««<>i...f. •• tv... r«..»..>i»»^! —- ^ . ... . , . ^, at tte State Farm Show were select- ^ 4l!S, rhiiH«.i L^ rSi^l Tte awards In tte C. viot cia« ed on Individual Merit alone and In- sald. Sleds, children and automo- were; 1—William Reagle, ^—Arthur .i„^ ciaurfp ici.m nnv iPn«.t r-har bUes cannot te mixed safely and Reagle. 3-Harold Rasely, 4-Ruth ?«1^2rand S STchS^fihoIS; half a mllUon 1934 dog licenses are JT^ Svmen'tVrhe i^rt^T ^'ri"' r'IrllL'2!^*^°'"h/"?.,'- S^utSS!^"*'¥te ^LI^ "Jm b^ :ZsViT'' °' '^•'""i^ '--'rrdr therein'" *"• '^'' "'iScSs^t^o SnTf'frS Te LrnrEiwU'sr'*^ S"' «»"^« ^^^ >» --'»»p--^*'-'^ ^^^ ?terD^s?o^ontlnrunde*r^h.r«'l "'•''^*"^ »"'» """""^'P*' offlcials^olng to Hariey Feh^?'and second foTclai wiT^cSr' f^ Sni "'"^ "' '''' aPPUcatlon. If involv- ;l!f»l„ /.t , 1 if^'^^P™ "are gr«at factors in curbing this to Marvin Heller I^U kI w .i.i^ o . .i! ed In accidents, they are required to tec^ion Of the law after January ,5.l_,,. ,,^,,. children coasting |'^^r,, ,^ ^3t classes In tte show S, Harr'^sefy^'^^d ^S^h^ !run\V^^^^ was thc Hampshlres. In which six Nicholas Harley Fchnel and Marvin' *""""* °' '*** '*'^*'* ^ ^*""'^ °^ was tte description to¬ day given tte accomplishments Tte 1934 forms provide apace for | during the past six months of tte 18/MO memters of tte Civilian Con- KIDDY PARTY Amertean Legion and at V. M. C. A. DOG OWNERS MUST GET NEW LICENSES Harrisburg, Jan. 4 — More tsan' I etal Rsiponalbmty Aei b tte ^, ... - ™.., —¦—.» -w—,.—.,. Tte of operators holding 1933-34 licenses, *** complete scoring of tte pens Includes | the renewals bUnks to te mailed Itl H. Rlcterd Stickel, director of the bureau said: "Operators whose licenses have lapsed through failure to renew for 1932-33, mu.it apply for 1933-34 li¬ censes on form 'T-29'. Applicants for learners' permits must uae form •O-l'. "Under the Financial Responsibil¬ ity Act, all persons seeking oper¬ ators' licenses must show whether they have been involved in acci- aervatlon Corpa kieated in nlnty- two eaaopa tn tte State Foreata and on Bute Oaraa lands by Secretary Lewis E. SUley of tte Pennsylvania Department of Forests and Waters. One of tte largest underUklngs of tte forest workers was tte con¬ struction and maintenance of some 1600 miles of truck trails, conunonly known as forest roads. Horse and man trails completed and maintain- ^ ed were In excess of 1400 miles. In connection with this work 190 bridges spanning streams and moun- I tain ravines were built. | Some 330 miles of State-owned | telephone lines were built and re¬ paired. Porest flre hazards were' lad Wednesday will long be rem- I by the kiddles of this com- ¦ when they were tte Invited I to the annual Christmas Party by the American Legion lAadllary iwu'nt a dull moment during I Mttie period. Mrs, Raymond president of the Auxiliary, |MMab)td the youngsters with . on city streets are in consUnt peril. Tte Department of Revenue has sent out 535,000 Individual and 1300 „ .^,ii „,i,i-i, ..,«„ ,u„ -,„. „„,.>r,.i — "~ •- - — - ^...w-o .>....;; m:^iuii=i anu mnrvui kennel licenses, to be supplemented "rnlr'toT.'^.l'rnr'L'^^S pens were_ exhibited, l.-Doris Sandt, Heller _will show Southdowns. The V... »-iJi.. 1 ... . motorist cannot eliminate unassist by additional shipments to counties ^^ I!l1"ia,r''"/T/!?*«.^'¦•/°""I ''coasting should be conflned to ing 1933. a total of 566.000 individual and 1450 kennel licenses were dis¬ tributed. Under the law. any person who, after January 15 of any year, be- and many prizes were given I comes the owner of a dog six months kll tacky ones. Mrs. Sarah Brob- old or older must apply for a license. tkMtbem many interesting stories All 1933 licenses, no matter when is-1 them all occupied until the | sued, becomes void after January 15. Pailure to obtain a license makes the owner liable to a fine bliaen ¦klltf Santa. When SanU made Mlgpiannce there were many •ko some frowns from a few Just a bit afraid of the man. However, when he Us bag and pre.sented ttem, nels tlth a ireat big orange and a} may not be u."^d for hunting un ¦|a ef candy, happy faces appeared 'ee-s a separate lndivldu.il license is I mtt th* rnnm i obtained for th hills remote from ordinary automo- bile trafTie. In many communities, rumtmiwxmT An local offlcials have solved the prob- []|tGES STUDY OF lem by designating certain streets *^^ "¦Jr';,*^^,—__ on which coasting is permitted dur- RATE SCHEDULES ing specified hours under the super- ^^^^ vision of police. ^~^'~" "This practice permits full enjoy-' Harrisburg. Jan. 4.—Prospective ment of the sport and eliminates Its users of electric current, particularly dangers I thoae who intend using the current "Parents, municipal officials and '" 'he"" business, should study 2—Jay Ackerman, 3—Velma Sandt, Hampshire class will te represented 4—Albert Sandt. 5—Marian Acker- by Jay Ackerman, Velma Sandt, Al- man, and 6—Paul Brodt bert Sandt, and Marian Ackerman. Town Council In Special Session the Kennel licenses are is.sued to'^otorjsjg^n contribute greatly to *'**'t'^'c company's rate schedule be breeders or^wners and cover only ^(juc^d sledding accidents by Join-^o™ signing a contract, tte PubUc ' ' ¦¦ ¦ ing also in a general campaign to. Service Canmisslon advises stop children from hitching sleds I onto motor vehicles. Like utu-e- strlcted coasting on well-traveled the dogs normally kept at the ken-1 Dogs licensed in this manner not obtained for the dog so u.sed. Ken-1 stivets, hitch sledding may be good "er the room. •Ilerpreaentg were distributed, the'nel tees are |10 for up to and ^'dunent committee, headed by! eluding ten dogs, and $20 for more w. J. Silvert and Mrs. Hanna Kem- than ten dog.s. ifrved a ta.sty lunch to all | The fees for Individual dogs aro: w committee who worked to make j Male, $1: female, $2; and spayed $1. •"••nnual affair a success this year | An additional tf'n cents is added to JJ^rted of Mrs. E. Butz, Mrs. C. cost of each licen.se as the foe for "T*"' Mrs. C. Hagenbuch, Mrs. E the county treasurer who l.-isues It. J«»»w, Mrs. 8. Eyer and Mrs R. -'e'er. '"* \ sport but Is a dangerous practice.' A special meeting of Town Coun¬ cil was held this 1st day of January, 1934, at 8:00 o'clock p. m. There were present Messrs. Kem, Lindenmoyer, Schaeffer, Seyfried, Keim. Worman. Altemos Wambold and Hartzell. The President, Mr. Hartzell, presided The Frequently commercUl users of newly elected members, Messrs. current flnd that others In a similar | Kahler and Kortz, were present as business are receiving current at a guests of tte old Body, lower rate than they are paying. | The President advised the meeting dentswlthln'oroutsideof the SUte|e""^a'*<» on 1850 acres and 138 miles of flrebreaks for tte control of woods blazes were cut through the forest. Four eighty-foot steel forest fire observation towers were elected, bringing the total of such outlook points in the State to 125. j More than 300 miles of woodlands along roadsides were cleared and 2000 acres of forest stands were given improvement cuttings. Ap¬ proximately 360 acres were cleared and developed for public camps. Another operation conducted, ac¬ cording to Socretary Staley, on a scale never attempted before in Pennsylvania, was the control of tree diseases, principally the white pine blister rust, on 40.000 acres of woodland. In.>*ct eradication, espec-' cars, tte amount claimed by or paid claims to others for property dam¬ age. "Since the new act became effec¬ tive, the bureau cannot issue any operators' licenses unless this in¬ formation is given Where the ap¬ plicant has failed to an.swer thc question the applications will be re¬ tumed, "To safeguard their driving privil¬ eges, motorists should take their! time and answer each question care- j fully. Pailure to furnish correct in- ^ formation will result in a two-year. iaiiy of the destructive southern pin? su.spension of operating license." • • WEDDING ANNIVERSARV I Mr. and Mrs. Oliver L. Kahler, North Broad street, recently ccle- They then flle a complaint with the • had been called at the request of the brated their 55th wedding anniver- j Commission, charging discrlmina- newly elected Chief Burgess, Mr. F. , tion. p. Hahn, as he had matters concern- I Under the law, rate schedules are mg the Civil Works Projects which Nazaroth Is booked for nine CWA opexi to public inspection. This gives he felt should be considered by Coun- LATEST CWA PROJECTS projects, to employ 146 men. to cost 25.389.47. Same pro.spective customers the oppor- cil. tunity to apply for the type of ser^-; ^he Burgess stated Councii should give consideration to the qm^stion of Metzger Explains What ''Bottled In Bond'' Means BWMJESS REPORTS PROGRESS ON CWA PROJECTS BEGUN -**'JJ**™ed staled meeting of HarrLsburg. Jan 4.—For the bene- »OfS.U'.Q^;"^'^. f "J nt of these whose memories a,* dull- ' •» »«cemi)ei71933, at 8 o clock , ,. , ^„„ Jf.wtth all of the members pre-|ed by the passage of 14 yea.s. I^on ^ The President, Mr, Hartzell.'D. Metzger, secretary of revenue, to- age purpo.ses, in storage up to mid¬ night, December 5. "If liquor produced aftor Decem- ico applicable to their business and the ono most economical Failure of customers to investigate schedules and .select the provisions most fav¬ orable to tliom cannot be charged to the company, the Commission as- .sorts. J. H. SCHOENLV TO BE MERCHANTILE APPRAISER placing a master phimbor in charge of the plumbing work for the Cani- (Continued on Page Three) .sary in an Informal manner Mr. and Mrs. Ira Stoudt and chil¬ dren, of Tatamy; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Fehnol and son Linford, SeipsviUe, \tx. and \trs Leldy Stoudt. of Bush¬ kill township, and Mrs. ELsie Koeh¬ ler, of town, were recent dinner guests of their parents. Mr. and Mrs Peter Stoudt. beetle, was completed on 475 acres. 4-H CORNAND PO- TATO JUDGING TEAMS J, H. Schoenly, of Bethlehem, was named merchnntile appraiser for New Prison Will Reduce Crowding On */ "V I day gave this explanation notion of Messrs. Kem and phrase "bottled in bond": of thc ttaia-«;¦;:" *"* "*°^*^ ^liat the taSiv^ regular stated moet- "" oeottnber 4th, of the informal JITT* »' December 12th ¦• we Special Meeting of Dc jjj* »rd, 1933. be VAaS^ °' M*'«fs. LIndonmover ^^"•ener. it was "Oenernlly .".peaking, all distilled liquor mu.st be placed in bmid in a .¦j-his „¦^f^y be years from now , warehou.se designated by the Pod-' and 20th pral aovernment. Tho bond is to in.siM-e pavment of the Federal tax, nnd. if the liquor i.s loft in storage for four years or more, it may b<' sold under a label .statini? that It approved as ber 5 and bofore January 1 was Northampton county by Auditor put In bond, the $2 tax does not te-, ooneral Baldwin at Harri.sburg He come payable until the 15th day ol [g the president and general man- the month after it is withdrawn'^g^r of the former Bethlehom Con- from bond,' Secretarj- Metzger said, struction company and resides in ! Edgeboro. •However, as to liquor which isi He succeeds E. B. Landis, of Ban- not placed In bond, or is placed hi||{or, and is well and favorably known bond only temporarily, the $2 tax Hiruout the county Ix^oines payable on January 15, '*»J|ni|ed^nPago Three, "Stained oit oi~~ UtuiAu /'^^TE VISITORS •^CuSboIk, ¦¦''*'¦'*" Kreidler, Jr , «. •^"*' Ohio, Mf fj^MTatamV.;- •-¦re dinner guests »ncl Mr '^^iQtQs moved that the V-a.s bottled In bond" Tho secrotary explained further I how the circumstances under which I liquor l.s placed In bond nfTtct the ^ period within which the State ."^plr- ¦ Itunus and vinous Uquor tax nuist be paid. This Is the levy of S2 a proof gallon on liquor and wine.^ supplementing tho floor tax which Inipo.s^d the .siune rate of tax on all alcoholic liquor. u-,<^ablo for bcvor- and Mrs. F. M. on Thursdav 1934. at the time reports are re¬ quired to be nied with tho Revenue Dep.Trtniont "This will apply to tho.se liquors which ran Ix' produced quickly, without being aged Chiof among this group are straight alcohol and gin. Somo distillers also are plac¬ ing on the market a whisky which is not aged but treated to an arti¬ ficial process Instead. "Hie tax on these and similar liquors will be¬ come due on Jniuiary 15." HELD NEW VE.%R'S P.\RTV Mr. and Mrs. Chris Musclar, Main .stiieot, gave a New Year's party at their home to which tho following were Invited: Mr and Mrs. John Elienreich and son John, Mr. and .Mrs Matthew Re.srh and daughters Akiios and Mary, Mr. and Mrs. Mar¬ tin Brandl and daughter Anna, Mr. and Mr-^ Oeorge Di.inor, Stephen Slionk. Mr and Mi ^ Muscler, two daughters, and son Jr. Harrisburg, Jan. 4.--Prison offlcials foresee an easing of congested con¬ ditions in Pennsylvania's over¬ crowded penitentiaries should long delayed erection of the Cumberland Valley Institution for Mental De¬ fectives be pushed through to com¬ pletion during the coming year. Offlcials dealing with large groups of pri.soners and mental ho.spital in¬ mates have long been aware of tlie urgent need for a .separate institution for male defective delinquents. Pri¬ .soners of this typo add to the diffi¬ culties of maintaining disoipUne. At presont all t>i5es of prisoners are grouped together. Plans as completed for the Cum¬ berland Valley Institution Indicat.' threo propo.vd l.vpes of housing quarters. A basic ."lectlon Is pro¬ posed to be strongly constructed. and equipped much as any peniten¬ tiary. Many of the patients will have been long habituated in crime, somo of them with characterLsties of thc most dilTicult prisoners. After some years there will be an accum¬ ulation of lower grade defectives, quiet ard more easily controlled. Tlie plans Indicate less .secure quarters a.' sufTicient for this group Farm colony gioups will be housed in a third type of quarters. The.se will be selected and trained Individu- aL<i long enough undor observation to have demons'ratod that they aro cap.iblo of living under almost nor¬ mal conditions. It Is expected that from this gro.ip there will bo a limit¬ ed number who will from time to tlmo qualify for return to their home ronimunities tnidor a system of par¬ ole supen-islon. The 4-H Corn and Potato Judging Teams to represent Northampton County at the State Farm Products Show in the State Wide Contest on I Wednesday, January 17th, were se- I lected Saturday In the elimination I contest held at Nazareth under the '. direction of County Agent B. L Coleman. Tho Corn Judging Team I will be compo.'jod of Carl Snyder. i Howard Wolbach, and Walter Sny- 1 der, all members of the Lower Sau- I con 4-H Club I The Potato Judging Team will t-- I composed of Paul Bu.ss. ^: ¦ How- I er. and Cliarles Shutlz. Ji "^liis is the third .vear that Norf -mton I County ha-s participated in t i"'irn and Potato Judging Conte.'- nd j la.st year twth the teams stood ¦ -d In competition with teams 2 in other counties. The elimination contest Satur' was open to all 4-H club membe- who completed their work durii. 1933 and tho.se participating had an opportunltv to pa.ss on the merits ol both com and potato classes. • • HOLV COMMt'NION IN FORKS-ARNOrs PARISH Preparatory services will be held and the Lord's Supper admlni.stered in the Porks-Amdts Lutheran par¬ l.sh. the Rov, Oeorge 8 Kleckner, pa.stor. a.l follows: At Forks, on Sunday. January 7th, at 10 a ni At Anidt's, on Sunday January Mth. at 10:15 a.m. TUB BNBMT Whoever jrou are ttert'a somebody ttet doean't lite yoo. Tte one conatant flfuiit on life's state la tte enemy. Ht'a alwaya there, atttlng griat aad silent, or busy with hoetiUty. "Be tteu aa pure aa let. aa chaste aa anow, thou ahalt not escape calumny." Oentle maiden, aa good aa fair, with a heart varm and kind to all Ood's enaturet, anxious to spread happineaa aa May to spread flowers, it seems Incredible, but there la some one to whom preaenee Is of> fense, and to whom your sur- cease would te pleasinc! In tte ctemlstry ot souls tliis repelleney is most curious, but undeniable. No human force ever comes Into tte world without ita opposite. Every positive haa iU negative. In every love U a Uttle apot ot tete. Heaven and tell. In their deeper significance, touch every human heart. Caesar had hia Brutus, Soc¬ rates his Meletus, and Jeaua the envloua Pterisees When I read any book that pleases me, human Z>ickena or quiet Wordsworth, tte ex¬ quisitely tooled woodcraft of Vernon Lee or the smashinc liveliness of Conan Doyle, It often comes to me—somebody doesn't like this. Queer. Isn't it? Sinister and strange, but true. Little dove, the tewk soars stilly watch¬ ing; little fly, the spider swlncs ready m his web; little doe, the cougar crouctes tehind the bush; little soul, among the gods walks one who looks darkly at you. And the higter you climb, the brighter you write your name upon fame's scroll, tte louder your applause and the more signal your triumph, tte surer ttere will be, aome- where muffled in the cheering crowd, the sombre figure of some "Mordecai sitting at tte king's gate." Is not America a teloved country? There are thoae who loathe it unreservedly. Was not President Wilson a fine flgure among .statesmen? There arc many who would re¬ joice at his downfall, who watch eagerly to find his mis¬ takes and herald them. In t way the strength of tte enemy is a reliable mea.sure of one's success. The more you amount to, the sharper tte hisses. Many a man has been elected to Congress by his en¬ emies, and many a writer haa been hounded to fame. The best way to meet tte or.einy is to let him aee ttet you do not think It worth while to flght him Nothing so enrajes malice as to discover that vGu don't mind. Nothing so dis inns attack as for you to go ah-^nt your business as uau¬ al. Surh defense is more ef¬ fective than blows; kindness Is t'.ie mos: exasperating venge¬ ance. When In doubt, say nothing. Vour enemy can answet every¬ thing you can possibly sajr, can retaliate against thing vou can p-'sslbly do, cept one thing Ttet ia sil¬ ence. —DR FRANK CRAMI
Object Description
Title | The Nazareth Item |
Masthead | The Nazareth Item |
Volume | 4\u000d\u000a43 |
Issue | 6 |
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 | 1934-01-04 |
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 | 01 |
Day | 04 |
Year | 1934 |
Description
Title | The Nazareth Item |
Masthead | The Nazareth Item |
Volume | 4\u000d\u000a43 |
Issue | 6 |
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 | 1934-01-04 |
Date Digitized | 2009-09-30 |
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 39040 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 |
The Nazareth Item
NAZARETH, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 4,1934
No. 6
^^(azareth Bank De¬ positors Now Insured
I
1^ Btuiki in Haemrattt l»v« JZai Oertlftcatei from Vaa Otolr- JlTttie BoMd of Dte«ctoci ol the
. |
Month | 01 |
Day | 04 |
Year | 1934 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
FileName | 19340104_001.tif |
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