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The Evening News from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania • Page 5

Publication:
The Evening Newsi
Location:
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE FIVE HIGH LIGHTS OF HISTORY No. 47. Andrew Jackson The British Bombardment By J. CARROLL MANSFIELD Special Bloomsbuirg Law Bothers Many Boroughs State Political Gleanings THE EVENING NEWS, HARRISBURG, FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1930 kUAKERTOWN had a new borongh solicitor this week and his official act was to make a great discovery. He found that first statute of 1929, relattne to the election of councilmen in bor oughs, opset all the elections in all of the 1000 or so boroughs in Pennsylvania.

The discovery was taken very seriously Quakertown which is a Bucks County municipality. The same idea that came to the brand new official came to many other borough solicitors last spring just after Governor Fisher approved the act. lawf- The 1929 Legislature passed a Copyright. IC30. by Th Syndicate.

InQ January Pakemham move" hi Christmas eve. i8'4, part of HIS ARTILLERY FORWARD TO oowevepthe british batteries mot jomly fatletto make am impression ok the stout American defenses, but prew such am accurate anl ts7ruc- briefly of the organization work be-in? done in Philadelphia. Among those at the guest table were: Judge Henry C. Niles, of York; Judge Samuel E. Shull, of Stroudsburg; Judge William M.

Mc-Keen, of Northampton County; National Committeeman Sedgwick Kist-ler; former National Committeeman Joseph F. Guffev, of Pittsburgh; JACKSON AO MV MApE A SOQCTE AKI providing for the election of councilmen in Bloomsburg, which had been an incorporated town and desired to become a borongh regulated by the borough code. In giving up its old form of government and electing councilmen under the new form provision had to be made so that not all of the councilmen elected would eo out of office at the same time and I 111 Igj WEEK PAS5E WITH NO FURTHER ATTACK FROM THE BRITISH JACKSON 5 MEM, BEHIND THEIR SOU RAMPART, GRIMLY AWAlTEP THE NEXT MOVE OF THE WITHIN A THOUSAND YARf5 OP Jack sows line anc began bomsarp-ikig the American works. ATTACH CTWHBm5H AVVAHCE (aUAGfc BUT WAS DttWEM BACK AFTER A SKIRMISH. twE FIRE IN REPLY THAT THEY HAD TO BE HASTILY WITHDRAWN.

so some nad to De eieciea lor train term find some for lone terms. Heretofore in Bloomsburg, under a cumulative voting system, if eight Miss Labaree Will Direct National Work councilmen were to be elected a voter classmates were rolling in a dump at Twenty-eighth and Chestnut streets, Camp Hill, was treated at the Harrisburg Hospital. rould cast eieht votes for one candi Cauley by C. C. Carstens, of the Child Welfare League with headquarters in New York City.

Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secretary of the Interior in President Hoover's Cabinet, i3 general chairman of the conference. date, or if four school directors were to be chosen, the voter could cast four votes for a single man or they could vote for all the candidates On Child Welfare Miss Mary S. Labaree, director of the bureau of children, State Department Welfare, has been act applies only to once. The new Bloomsburg. cranted a ten-month leave of ab PURSE STOLEX CHAMBERSBURG, Jan.

10. A small purse containing $150 and belonging to Mrs. Edna Seiders, of this city, a clerk at the Harry A. Walker drug store en Lincoln Way West, was stolen from the drug store while Mrs. Seiders was on duty.

BREAKS LEG IN PLAY John Willis Keim, 15, of Camp Hill, whose leg was broken when he was knocked down by a stationary engine boiler which he and four State Senator Harvey Huffman, of Stroudsburg; E. B. Zimmerman, secretary of the State committee; Warren Van Dyke, treasurer of the State rrmmittee; R. Sturgis Ingersoll; Mrs. Marie O'Connell, Miss Ellen G.

Hood, Thomas J. Minnick. Jr Patrick I. Carr, of Sunbury; State Representative Biagio Catania and State Representative Marshall D. Lowe, of Philadelphia.

Notaries appointed by Governor Fisher are; R. W. Combs, Pittsburgh; W. L. Hamilton, Ben Avon; Verner J.

Martin, Pittsburgh; Miss Estelle E. Pittsburgh; Mrs. Ida N. Urias, Wilkinsbarg; William A. Harte, Quakertown; H.

A. Englehart, Ebens-burg; Miss Margaret Ivey, Johnstown; Harry D. Dando, Wiconisco; Paul S. Gingrich, Harrisburg; Nicholas Del Guercio, Drexel Hill; Miss Mary C. McNicholas, Lester; Miss M.

Violet Schmeltzer, Chester; Joseph L. Trambley, Johnsonburg; Harold T. Beach, South Mountain; Mrs. Genevieve M. Jenkins.

Waynesboro; Miss M. Constance Erdman, Allen-town; Charles F. Kuhns, Wilkes-Barre; Frank Shannon, Pittston; J. O. Rhodes, Wyncote; Charles A.

Wilson, Ardsley, and David G. Ben-, der. Milton. Governor Fisher today appointed United States Senator David A. Keed, Dr.

William C. Bandy, director of the bureau of mental health, Department sence to become secretary of a committee on State and local organization for dependent, neglected and delinquent children, named as a result of a White House conference recently. Mrs. E. S.

H. Mc-Cauley, Secretary of Welfare, in announcing the leave of absence, said she had named Miss Margaret Steel Moss, assistant director of the bureau of children, as acting director. Miss Labaree Is president of the Pennsylvania Conference on Social Welfare. The request for Miss Labaree's services was made to Mrs. Mc- SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY, JAN.

1 1 Hi, 1930 SUPREME MEAT MARKETS 449 BROAD .213 CHESTNUT 1607 N. 6TH ST. 1305 MARKET ST. 2628 MAIN ST, PENBROOK Buy at These Stores, You Will Like the Food, 4he Service and the Price SUGAR CURED What would happen if nobody saved? Here's what would happen if-nobody saved factories would gradually go to pieces people would be thrown out of work wages would fall prices would rise the standard of living would go down happiness would be at a premium This is all another way of saying that when you save money you help yourself, your job, and your country three excellent reasons for making a start. You may start to save here with an initial deposit of One, Dollar.

Kf ranci-ABD- WE WILL DELIVER TTIE CELEBRATED of Welfare, and Mrs. E. a. mc-Cauley, Secretary of Welfare, as delegates to represent the State at the first International Congress on Mental Hygiene at Washington, May 5 to 10. 'When Joseph K.

Grundy is through with his fight for United States Senator he will know that he has been running for something more than a Councilman in Bristol." State Chairman John R. Collins made this declaration last night at the Jackson day banquet in Philadelphia. "The Democratic party is going into the State fight intent upon winning," added Chairman Collins. "We intend to show up the extravagance and the incapacity of the Republican administration as well as expose the reactionary record of Grundy." The chairman told the big audience gathered from Philadelphia and many connties in the eastern part of the State that the Democratic candidates picked this year must be outstanding men end women. "I believe that women should be represented more largely as candidates," he said.

"They also should be represented on the county as well as thg State committees and encouraged to take a leading part in the work of the party. United States Senator David Walsh, of Massachusetts, was the chief speaker at the banquet. Mrs. Carroll Miller, of Pittsburgh, and others, also spoke. Registration Commissioner Thomas A.

Loeue, was toastmaster. He told NEW SCREEN GRID liii 1 1 Sugar si lest II Curcd Ulp Creamery )) ll HAMS jiajib Buttei Model 46 For Complete With Tubes i ii 1 1 rusfCJorapany 1 irsi. WAS $197.50 Phone Bell 5405, 2-9932 or 2-0420 WE WILL DEMONSTRATE AT ONCE BAPTISTI FARLING Easy Terms 319 CHESTNUT ST. No Carrying Charges MEMBER-FEDERAL-RES ERVE SYSTEM Ik the ft A AN a cigarette A i 1 Ah XT is a curious fact that the best-tasting cigarette is the one in which no single taste quality is too evident. Over-mildness, for exarnple or over-richness shows lack of "balance" just as plainly as harshness or bitterness.

On this basis, test Chesterfield. Aroma, smoothness, satisfying goodness, flavor, mildness, all present but none emphasized at the expense of others. The one goal is taste better taste, balanced taste "TASTE ahove everything" esc 1 r.f-i A v. c5 It SUCH POPULARITY MUST BE DESERVED and Lucxtt Unu Tobacco Co, THEY SATISFY A..

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About The Evening News Archive

Pages Available:
240,701
Years Available:
1917-1949