for the expensive open air seats in the specially built ... APIâLuther. Jones, 32, who murdered four .... Adirondacks,
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The Washington Lowdown
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THE
ARATOGIAN
MOSTLY CLOUDY Tonight and Wednesday. Colder Tonight, Temperature:
High . . . . 41;
Low . . . . M
(For 24 hours ending at noon today)
And The Saratoga Sun, Newt, Ballston Spa Daily Newt and Hudson Valley Timet
ESS
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y„ TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1937.
THREE CENTS
NEW
SERIES, VOL. 57, NO. 21
THREE CENTS
By Rodney Dutcher
No Noise Inauguration! Auditorium
Washington — Vice President Jack Garner has given his public promise to keep silent on public questions for the next four years, so anyone who wasn't breathing easy about that may do so now. Garner comes very close to being the only important public figure in the capital who, best lea refraining from statements of all kinds, guards state secrets 100 per cent in his conversations with newspaper correspondents. And yet in meetings of the cabinet and private sessions with groups of members of Congress, Garner is often the most voluble person present. Although the picturesqueness of his flow of language is somewhat hampered by the presence of Secretary of Labor Prances Perkins, the vicepresident often roars long and loud at the cabinet table when he Is convinced of a proposal's impracticably. The vicepresident usually addresses the president as "Cap," "Boss," "Chief," or "Old Top." "When I address him as "Mr. President,'" Garner once told an old friend, "he sits up and takes notice. Because then he know's I'm mad." •
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Spring Inaugural Urged Serious consideration is being given to proposals that hereafter inaugurations of presidents be held in the spring, when there is likelihood of good weather. N o one wants to go through another such day as the recent inauguration day, with its unspeakably vile weather. The idea would be to have the president take the oath of office on Jan. 30 at simple indoor ceremonies and postpone the inaugural parade and other big doings until April or May, when the cherry blossoms are out and everybody can have fun and romp around in presumably balmy weather instead of getting soaked or frozen. That is the way the British do it when they get a new king. The monarch takes the throne over at once,, but coronation ceremonies are delayed for months, pending good weather. Washington business men incline to like the idea, because moat of them would profit more from large crowds and pleasant weather, to say nothing a* the fact that they wouldn't be so likely to have to dig down and pay off such a deficit as was piled up this year. ..tany folks stayed away on account of the weather and those who came showed no great enthusiasm for the expensive open air seats in the specially built inaugural st&nds. * • ,» Huge Auditorium Proposed But whether or not the inauguration date is changed, the recent experience has made it much more likely that the $3,000,000 appropriated by Congress for a Thomas Jefferson memorial will be used by Congress for a huge federal auditorium, where such a performance as the inaugural ceremony might be staged. Roosevelt is believed to favor this idea, first advanced by Secretary Ickes. Although Roosevelt gaily declared he could "take it" and did, exposing himself to the elements more than he needed to, his health didn't suffer. But that doesn't mean that the country might not lose a president some day because of such exposure on inauguration day. Back in 1841. aged President William Henry Harrison, worn down by onslaughts of Whig office-seekers out to get jobs from Democrats, went to market without his overcoat, despite the fact that it was raining. Harrison caught cold. Soon afterward he died, deliriously screaming excuses to women whose husbands had been fired from federal jobs to make way for Whigs, refusing patronage, and howling at imaginary applicants. Copyright, 1937
Permit* Settlement Of Court Action Ballston Spa — Supreme Court Justice O. Byron Brewster has signed an order permitting settlement for $550 the claim of Charles Meilun, Columbia Avenue, as guardIan ad litem of his son, Edward, 12, for Injuries suffered Nov. 11 when in collision with the James V. Thomas automobile in front of the Thomas home, Hyde Boulevard. Settlement papers were filed at the county clerk's office today. The order stipulates that the amount he deposited in the Ballston Spa National Bank by Mr. Meilun in his and the name of Del B. Salmon, of Schenectady, jointly as a trust fund for the boy. Mr. Salmon was attorney for the Meiluns in the proceedings. The Meilun boy was riding his bicycle in Hyde Boulevard at dusk about 5:20 p. m. and crashed into the side of the Thomas ear as it was backing out of the driveway. He was in the Benedict Memorial Hospital with an injured arm 10 days. —
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EXECUTED IN NEVADA C a n o n City, Nev.—(API—Luther Jones, 32, who murdered four men in a $40 holdup near Elko, Nev.. Oct. 16, was put to death in the state prison lethal gss chamber today. About forty witnesses were present.
DELUGE SWEEPS TOWARD MISSISSIPPI RIVER CELEBRATE TWO Gustave Lorey, Portrait WORST TO COME' ANNIVERSARIES AT n L : r u , WARN ENGINEERS n PONTIFICAL MASS rnotograpner Here, Dead IN FLOODED AREAS
Young Refugees Drop Exhausted
Dies in Albany
Brilliant and Impressive Ceremony Today At St. Clement's
Gustave H. Lorey, for the past Havoc Wrought Mile on Mile 40 years a portrait photographer In Saratoga Springs and Albany, In Ohio Valley—'Step on where he rose to eminence in his It' Orders Roosevelt art, died yesterday at his home. One of the most inspiring and 48-B Dove Street, Albany, after a By The Associated Press impressive occasions in the his- brief illness. He was 68. Fear stricken tens of thousand! tory of the Redemptorist Order Born in Treves, Germany, Dec. cowered behind weakening levees was the double golden anniver7, 1868, Mr. Lorey came to this or fled to higher levels today a* sary ceelbrated this morning at the monstrous yellow tide of tha St. Clement's Catholic Church with country with his parents when very young, but returned to GerOhio River swelled to record-breakbrilliant pomp and ceremony. many when he was 14, and was ing flood heights on its sweep t« The occasion marked the con- graduated there from a military the Mississippi. cluding of 50 years of service by academy. Eddying in muddy slow-rising the Redemptorist Missionary FathAs a student he displayed a ers in Saratoga Springs and the torrents, the waters spread over same number of years of service keen interest in 'he infant photogan area of more than a million given by an individual member raphy art, but he did not develop acres, taking a toll of at least 111 of the congregation in the Catho- it as his vocation until he returned known dead, driving 550,000 from lic Priesthood, Father Joseph to this country as a youth of 20, their homes and leaving many when he began his career in an Borgmann. thousands more marooned in preOneida studio. The Most Rev. Edmund F. Gibcarious straits. Whole towns and From Oneida he moved to Utica, bons, Bishop of the Catholic Diovillages showed only rooftops. cese of Albany, and the Very Rev. then to Ithaca, and in 1897 beProperty damage was estimated Father Provincial Andrew G.. came associated with Epler studios far in excess of $10,000,000—and oft Kuhn, head of the Redemptorist here. In 1901 he opened a studio every side, from city officials and Order of the Baltimore Province in Albany, and returned to this army engineers, came the warning: and of the Church of Our Lady city, where he purchased the Epler "The worst is yet to come." studios from Trevor Teele. He opof Perpetual Help, Brooklyn, were Wholesale evacuations of floodnotable dignataries in attendance. erated the studios here, in Albany, sieged towns in Tennessee, western Schenectady, and Poughkeepsie. Bishop Gibbons was celebrant Gustave H. Lorey, above, was Kentucky, southeastern Missouri, of the Pontifical Mass. The Rev. Later he discontinued the Schenec- Saratoga portrait photographer Arkansas and Mississippi signalled tady anfid Poughkeepsie studios. J. J. Kilduff, V. F. was deacon; Mr. Lorey was the photographer in Saratoga Springs many years. the greatest mass flood exodus ftt the Rev. Joseph H. Kelly, D. D. history. None of the refugees who gathered in Memphis souri and Tennessee were wearier than the young- new pastor of the Schuylerville for many of Saratoga Springs' soHeaded Toward Mississippi cially prominent, and also of Alfrom three states to escape the raging waters of sters shown above, utterly worn out they slept Catholic Church, subdeacon; and From Pittsburgh in the north, bany's first families. He was a the Black, Little, L'Anguille and St. Francis rivers soundly on the cold marble of the Memphis Grand Father Cornelius Warren, C.SS.R. pioneer in the field of color porwhere anxious crowds watched tha rector of Washington, D. C. and aswhich flooded fertile sections of Arkansas, MisCentral Terminal. flood relentlessly spread over tha expert sistant deacons. The Rev. Father traiture. He became an edge of the billion-dollar business] and gave many lectures at the AlJohn J. O'Leary, pastor of St. district, to the crest of the deluga bany Institute of History and Art, Clement's Church and College, was sweeping into the Mississippi River State College for Teachers, Alassistant priest, the Rev. Father beyond Cairo, 111., a panorama of bany; Skidmore College, this city, Lawrence Kelly, Albany, secrewatery desolation extended mile oik and in other places. tary to the Bishop, was master of mile. Although Mr. Lorey's main stuceremonies, and Father James In the lower Mississippi Valley, Kearns, C.SS.R. this city, assist- dio was in Albany, he made reguwhere 600,000 were made homeless Sloan's Refusal to Confer with lar trips each week to this city. ant master of ceremonies. in 1927, authorities awaited the Mr. Lorey did much hunting Union Chiefs Criticized by The Bishop was escorted in proHamilton— (AP)— Dr. Leo L. big test of the great system of and fishing, but his hunting was cesion of church dignitaries to his Labor Secretary Rockwell of Colgate University dikes and levees built along a 300throne, erected of cloth of gold, a generally with the camera. In the declared today the whole world mile stretch of the Mississippi after Adirondacks, in Canada, along choir of priests of St. Clement's The General Motors strike exeventually would speak EngBy The Associated Press Saratoga Springs Woman Sues mountain streams and in wooded chanting. He wore his bishop's tended from coast to coast today the 1927 disaster. lish if spelling were reformed Heartened makers of neutrality sectors', his camera was always "A super flood is on its way.f City, Asking $50,000 robes and mitre studded with gorfor the first time as the corporaand a simplifed vocabulary pushed ahead today to formulate photography tion completed plans to return 39,- came the grim warning from geous jewels and carried his gold present. Wild life For Broken Hip adopted. a working scheme for leaving was his hobby, and some of his crosier. 900 of its more than 125,000 Idle Lieut. Col. Eugene Reybold, diaSpain alone. In a speech prepared for demost prized possessions were shots trict chief of U. S. Army engineers^ The Rev. Father William Treanor Ballston Spa—Miss Margaret T. employes to work tomorrow. livery before the Exchange Italo-German agreement to join of animals taken in their natural at Memphis. C. SS. R. of St. Clement's preached Reardon, of Saratoga Springs, this Club, the director of the School In Washington government efa general embargo of foreign volsurroundings. Reybold predicted flood stages the testimonial and anniversary afternoon brought suit in Supreme of Languarges asserted that an unteers to the warring peninsula forts to negotiate the General MoMr. Lorey married Miss Mira tors strike stalled again today over along the Mississippi at least IS Court against the City of Sarato- sermon, stirringly reminiscent of "adequate" simplified vocabupaved the way for a practical pi g a Springs for $50,000. Miss Rear- the first days of the Redemptorist Ingalls, this city, shortly before go- the refusal of Alfred P. Sloan Jr., feet higher than records set in tha lary, consisting of about 800 to keep both men and guns fro! don felt o n the steps of the Katffrta Order at Glen Mitchell, its first ing to Albany in 1901. She and a president of the corporation," to tragedies of 1913 and 1927. Spain. --jp^^ggpjwrinn^f words, arfeady Hag tree* dePresident Roosevelt, anxiously Trask stairway In Congress Park home, which, he said, "was blessed sister, Mrs. Robert Keyes, San confer with union leaders. veloped. It is known as mneThe London neutrality commitFrancisco, survive. watching the progress of the tidal for service" by the very fact that and broke her hip. This occurred monic English. tee was called to meet Thursday Secretary Perkins said the GenThe funeral will be at 11 a. m. sweep through eleven states, seat on Nov. 1, 1935. a 30 foot long trail there, barren The present method of spellto accomplish that purpose and to eral Motors Corporation had "failed 1 h e Te utt Memor a out the crisp command to leglsla* In her suit she claimed that the ing, Dr. Rockwell declared, reof grass and hemmed with weeds, T J " " ? ^ ^ . * l , , ^ . ! ! in its public duty" in refusing to let Spain's Socialist government city was negligent and aleo was was part of the great trail out of Chapel, 176 State Street, Burial accept her Invitation to attend the tors debating a $790,000,000 relief tards the development of chiland its Fascist insurgents fight it will be in this city. request: maintaining a nuisance at the time Montreal, traced by Father Isaac dren "because so much of their out by themselves. conference. "Step on it!" she fell. time in school is required for For months major European exJocques who trod it on his way to Getting the sit-down strikers out more affecttionately, to serve Him The President sent out word Last August, the attorney for th? its mastery." ponents of the two philosophies martyrdom at Auriesville. more faithfully," he declared was of the factories, Sloan said, is not that the fund, originally intended city in this action, John J. Carushave made it a "Little World Next to the trail, on which grass an issue to be negotiated further. Tme, sought to have the complaint has never grown, he said, was a the ideal of every Catholic priest Under the "Lansing agreement" for to care for work relief, should ba War" by their help on one side and he wished for Father Borgof Miss Reardon dismissed on tha spring, by which the Iroquois Inor the other. Italian and Gernegotiations, he declared, the union appropriated for flood sufferers l a grounds that papers had not been dians camped for comfort and rest, mann many more years of such failed to keep its promise to evacu- the emergency. man "volunteers" and armaments served within the required time and where, according to history, service. Harry L, Hopkins, WPA adminhave been on the side of the inate. Grants Indulgence specified by law and on the further they stopped on their return from istrator, estimated 650,000 to 700,000 surgents; Russians, Frenchmen, Detroit — Police and pickets Father Treanor read the progrounds that this stairway was a their cruel and men of many nations have massacring expedi- clamation of the Bishop, granting clashed again today in the weeks would be homeless by Wednesday highway, because it was used by tions." or Thursday. fought in defense of the governto all present at the service an in- old General Motors strjke, five perpeople as a short-cut through the ment. Lieut. A. Burton of the V. S. Air "The Redemptorist Fathers," desons being hurt as union men dulgence of 50 days, and asking park. Corps, after a boat inspection of This war, in its seventh month, clared Father Treanor, "have never pray for j sought to prevent office workers Louisville's west end, reported 2,00© Judge O. Byron Brewster, before ceased, to the best of their ability, that the congregation raged on three major fronts. whom the motion was argued, deni- to understand the need and to Pope Pius the XI for the Bishop from entering the Cadillac unit of persons were marooned on second The insurgent attacked for and "for the Holy Mother Church". the corporation here. ed the motion to dismiss, stating floors or rooftops. Many refused t o three hours, south of Madrid, seekAlbany —(AP)—The Democratic- that no proof had been offered that know what men really need." The clash followed closely upon move. Dinner at Riley's ing, apparently vainly, to cut the controlled Senate approved today They, he said, have heeded the A testimonial dinner was served a disturbance last night at AnderOrders that looters be shot wera besieged city off from its communi- Governor Lehman's proposal to this was a highway, that it was a Master's words, "Learn of Me, berecreation park maintained by the cations to Valencia and the south. make it a crime for employers to cause I am meek and humble of I at Riley's following the ceremon son, lnd„ in which three persons renewed. Dyhamite Flood way Levee heart." ies, for all visiting priests and mis- were hurt. The Cadillac unit is one Two insurgent armies attacked intimidate employes by pay envel- city. of those in which a sit down strike The Appellate Division concurred. As the turbulent waters plunged Malaga, isolated government sea- ope warnings in order to influence "There can be no fullness of life, sionaries. recently was called by the United south, guardsmen near Cairo, 111, Butler, Kilmer, Hoey and Butler no abundance of life, unless that port on the south Mediterranean their vote. Many Guests Automobile Workers of America. dynamited the $21,000,000 Bird* represent the plaintiff. coast. Also engaged in siege, the life is lived in Christ, with Christ Redemptorists from all sections j R ^ m Q n e Qf ^ plantg m _ . i g — The bill passed without debate, government blasted Fascist-held Point-New Madrid floodway levee, and by Christ, who is life itself of the country came for the anni corporation planned to reopen toOviedo, in the north, with field 44 to 1, with Senator Harry F. sending millions of gallons of pentEternal," continued Father Trea- versary of the founding of theij m o r r o w ( h o w e v e r Dunkle, Gloversville Republican, guns. up fury tumbling into the 131,000nor, as he went on to show this Order here. There were many of casting the only dissenting vote. It » i. belief has inspired all the Redemp- them high in the church work. acre lower area bounded by a ne*» now goes to the Republican-contorist fathers to lives of notable 60-foot setback levee. Redemptorists were: service. Those sent out from the trolled Assembly. Workers toiled feverishly ta Edward B. Howard, London, Quebec, Que.—(Canadian Press) Redemptorist Mission house here, strengthen the weak lkik in tha Ont.; Charles A. Daly, Annapolis, Passage of the bill was tempor- —Pursuers mobilized an exhaustive he said, have gone into all secmain-line levee below Hickman, Ky, Theodore A. Haviland, this arily held up last night when Sen- manhunt today for a five-gun des- tions of the Southern and Eastern Md.; Sandbags by the thousands wers ator John J. MoNaboe, N e w York perado who brpke jail and escaped United States, the mid-west and all city; Edward G. Coonan, West End, Whitehall—(AP)—Burglars carflung up against the weakening N. J.; Edward A. Droesch, IlchesDemocrat, asked that it be amend- from the scene of a ceHar gunbat- of the Dominion of Canada. ried off the Borden Farm Products barrier. ter, Md. ed to clarify the phrase "any electle in which two persons were Company 600-pound safe today afSilent and lifeless beneath th« "No man can do anything, who E. E. McGillicuddy, St. Alphonse, slain. ter apparently failing in efforts to tion." flood waters plans for himself alone," said New York; Mark DeCoats, Boston; Saratogians, deeply impressed by muddy, gurgling Honorat Bernard, the 28-year-old Father Treanor. open it. Senator Emmett L. Doyle, Roscores of villages and Of arms hid the suffering of 550,000 persons now Thomas J. Gilholly, Buffalo; D. A. Police said only the handles and chester Democrat, who sponsored hoodlum, slipped through a police His entire sermon was a thought Scannell, Newton Grove, N. C ; homeless in the flooded Ohio and tragedies whfch may not be known combination dials were found on the bill, explained today that such cordon surrounding a barber shop compelling definition of the Christ- Henry Schorp, Esopus. Mississippi Valleys, continued to- for weeks. the floor. Company officials said clarification was unnecessary and where he had calmly gone for a like services and example of the Houses and barns floaded dowl day to make their contributions to Peter M. Cosiello, Montreal; Paul the Red Cross, but with doubled the stream, crazily tipping and gy the safe contained only $25 and the bill was passed without amend- shave—three hours after the gun- mission fathers during which he fight. some papers. ment. particularly memorialized the far- E. Dugal, Boston, Mass.; Joseph quotas, the local officials urged that rating like derelict houseboats. Bernard and Arthur Fontaine, reaching influence of Father Borg- F. Solfka, Ephrata, P a ; Ambrose more persons contribute immediate"We saw settlements completely 32, overpowered a guard in the mann, who was ordained Jan. 26, McAdams, St. Boniface, Philadel- ly. Time is of importance in the surrounded by water," reporter Esopus; rescue and relief work, they em- Charles A. Wilson, assistant Indi city jail and fled to a St. John 1887. The jublinarian's work at phia; John G. Schultz, Street cellar with five pistols, some St. John's, N e w Brunswick, where Gerald J. Whelan, North East, Pa.; phasized. ana WPA administrator, after ) and Francis of them taken from the jail office. he was pastor in 1889, for 27 years, Martin T. Leddy, of the Hoosle This city's quota was raised to- plane inspection Last night—24 hours later—police was eulogized by Father Treanor. Meehan, Esopus; E. E. Meyer, St. flood scene. "It appeared doubtfu day from $600 to $1,200, Walter P. invaded the darkened basement There he established a St. Peter's John, N. B. Butler, local chairman announced. if these people could be sided ex and fought it out with them. Fon- Young Men's Association. Albert J. Zudeck, New York The increase is due to the increas- cept by dropping food, medicitt A VERY CLOSE SHAVE Father Treanor did not forget City; John A. Lynch, Rochester; ing seriousness of conditions in the and other supplies from airplanes. New York—(AP)—Joseph Gabriel, barber, arrested for giving a taine, a former French Foreign Relief trains ventured cautious!; shave in his shop on Sunday, told Magistrate Wieboldt his customer Legionnaire, and Detective Leopold the parents of Father Borgmann Henry J. Otterbein, Our Lady of flooded areaii. Contributions in Sar"was going to get married and he was too nervous to shave himself." Chateuneuf, were killed. Detective to whom he gave credit for edu- Perpetual Help, Brooklyn; Alfred toga Springs will be received by W. over flood-endangered roadbeds I ImnSaculate Conception Bryar White at the Adirondack countless points in the vast floo< The judge studied an ordinance stating Sunday labor is a misdemeanor Gerar Aubin was wounded seri- cating him in a parochial school Menth, area, bringing in supplies to strand and who Inspired bim to his vo- Church, the Bronx; Geoffrey C- Trust Company. unless the work is a necessity and ruled: "If getting a shave before ously. cation. ed refugees and evacuating thoti Stowe, St. Philomena's Church, you get married isn't a necessity, I don't know what is. Sentence sus'To love God better, to love Him | Pittsburgh, pa.; Peter F. Hines. the Bronx; John Hoezelein, pended." S t sands from the more critical cen ters. James* Church, Baltimore; Joseph R E D TAPE SNARLS In many districts, human miser L. Winerecki, Sacred Heart, BaltiNiagara Falls, Ont—(AP)—George Hughes, fur trapper, went more; Thomas Chapman, New reached a peak virtually unknow hark disgusted to his wilderness cabin unaware that immigration York City; John Sippel, Annapolis. since the Johnstown flood in 1689, Cincinnati —(AP)— With falterregulations had been waived to let him Join In flood rescue. With In Portsmouth, Ohio, the watei Md. ing power, by hand, snd by mimeothree Indians and two boats, Hughes drove ftoo miles to enter the cascaded over the river wall whle graph, newspaper editors In the Andrew J. Gunning, Thomas F. has*resisted every flood in the p n United States. He was stopped at the border. Friends Informed flood area struggled today to conWright, Our Lady of Perpetual quarter century. More than S5,€K United State* Immigration authorities who, as soon as they heard tinue publications. Help, Brooklyn; Albert F. Luska, were homeless, awaiting e v a e a of the volunteer, granted permission for his entry. But Hughes In some cities snd towns, presses Baltimore; Edwin A. Shearer, St, tion. and his Indians, tired of the delay, had started back toward Marti's capable of printing htousands of Alphonsus, N e w York City; Gerald Throughout the stricken are Lake in the Tlmagami preserve. copies aft hour were under w a t e r Koster, St. Peter's Church, St. frantic merchants sought to sal but the newspapers still appeared Cincinnati —(AP)— Cincinnati-1 permit a return to the havoc of John, New Brunswick; John Haas, their stocks by building eeaffoU FORETHOUGHT as little handbills. St. Michael's, Baltimore; Edward and boarding their stores again a m trudged up and down the city's what was once their homes. Dallas, Tes^—(AP)— F. L Robbins of Ralls was determined to The Louisville Courier-Journal Henning, New York; Thomas J. ths slowly rising waters. seven hills today, carrying cans, Children, unmindful of the grim Tapp, avoid telling it to a judge. He put a nickel snd a note in an envelope ; a n d the I/>uisville Times will be St. Clement's this city; addressed to the policeman on the beat and attached the envelope to | published in Lexington beginning jugs, bottles—anything in which a circumstances, welcomed the nov- Brother Silverius, St. Peter's Philalittle of the city's vanishing sup- elty of the situation and ran gaily a parking meter. The note resd: ''Please put the nickel in the meter tomorrow. delphia; Brother Rosarlo, New ply of drinking water could be got- about the refugees. when my time runs out. Gone to the doctor's office." York: Brother Paneratus, Esopue. The Parkersburg (W. Va.) Eve- ten to their homes. Recreation directors arranged ning N e w t and The Sentinel turnOther priests in attendance were: games and other diversions for Mo. — (AP)— Rescue ed to hand set type, running off While the churning Ohio reachRABBIT H U N T The Rt. Rev. Monslgnor John L. working in flood-bound their elders. DuaW a one-page paper on a hand press. ed and held to an apparent peak Argyle, Wis. — (AP)— Eugene Barry, 15-year-old farm bay, Family groups remained intact, Reilly, LI* D., Schenectady; Pat- Conner, reported today they fatti —-— • in its resistless charge down the showed s lot of determination in capturing a rabbit. While pursuing valley. Disaster Dictator C. A except that overnight sleeping ar- rick Alcysius Crowe, Troy; Charles a woman and her new-hern infs the animal Eugene came to a cliff. Unable to stop on the lee-covered Dykstra reduced the water ratio rangements placed fathers and McCaffrey, Ballston Spa; Leo P. fresea t o death on tha roof of ground, he planted to the bottom, fracturing his left ankle. But he Brady, Troy; John Fox, East water-surrounded farmhouse. to one hour, and then, it was avail- mothers in separate dormitories. caught the rabbit. The Red Cross was the heroine Greenbush; Bernard JF, Lsnnon. this When "boatman pushed throu able only in the lower sections. again. The workers of that organi- city; James H. rfaydea, Schenec- the frozen St. Francis River tint SIMPLIFIED Letters of administration in the Half the city's 65,000 homeless zation took complete charge of the tady, Edwin Wattson, Scotia- waters, they found the bediaa Milwaukee—(AP)—The name of an Austro-Hungarian sick benefit estate of District Attorney John B. crowded with remarkable cheerful- city's dispossessed end assisted Charles MeCormlck, Quebec; J*men appeared the baby wa* bam * society here has been shortened—But it's still a mouthful. Henceforth Smith have been granted by Surro- ness into schools, churches and state sanitary authorities in the ad- Hiekey, thit city; Thomas A. Cur- mg a sleet storm Friday «ignt a the Oesterreichiseh-Ungarlscher-Krankenunter-Stuetsungivereln will be gate George O. Tuck to his widow, public buildings, waiting for the ministration of serums to prevent ran. Stuyveeant Falls; and Daniel that both mother s d child a a known as the Qesterreich-Ungarischer-Krankenunterstuetiungs Vsrein. Mrs, Blanchs T, Smith, muddy water to fall sufficiently to typhoid, small pox snd diplheria. A. Ho«an, gtottrviUe, died of
NEUTRALITY PLANS PUSHED TO ISOLATE WAR FROM EUROPE
G-M CAR STRIKE EXTENDED FROM COAST TO COAST
Spelling in English START LAWSUIT Held a Drawback OF MISS REARDON To Universal Usage
FOR FALL IN PARK
APPROVAL GIVEN BILL TO OUTLAW VOTE SUPS IN PAY
Hunt for Desperado After Two Are Slain
Thieves Make Off With 600 Lb. Safe
CONTRIBUTE NOW FOR FLOOD RELIEF
FLASHES
In Day*s News
Papers in Flood Area Appear Like Handbills
Remarkably Cheerful Spirit Reips in Flooded Sectors
Woman and New-Bor Child Frozen in Floo
Letters in Estate Of John B. Smith
Untitled Document
Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069
www.fultonhistory.com