PAGE FIVE PITTSBURGH DAILY PRESS WED.,, NOV. 4, 1931 PERSONAL MENTION C. HARRY CARPENTER _ SAMUEL D HEALEY DEMOCRAT WINS ASSEMBLY FIRST TIME IN MANY YEARS »- Dr. R. E. Hyde left last night for Washington, D. C, to spend the \,'inter 'with his son, Dr. Leroy Hyde. Cflunty. Judge John K. Collins left ;a,st-night for Sugarbush, N. Y., to ittend' the,funeral of his late un"Thomas Russell. SPRINQVILLE, N. Y., Nov. 2'-'.fP) —Three dollars was all Sperry King.. vas paid for hewing out with a n •\xa a'VIdge timber eight inches s iare and fifty feet long and h a u ' ng it four miles to the banks of Springbrook in 1835, when Spring? \ 1 e's first flour mill was built. So well was the work done t h a t only close examination revealed it , vas not sawed. The timber served veil, and .the mill still stands, 96 j e irs old and still in use for its 0 lginal purpose. It has shown po .; s g n of weakening yet. [•he three-story mill, 36 by 4<* feet, was built on piles driven 50 feet through quicksand to bedrock, A Springville man, Thomas Li"-;, coin, was the builder. The stone' fo indations still survive the buffetn i of time. Harry S. Gray is the present pro* 1 etor of the mill which specialties "in buckwheat flour, and stock ai d poultry .feeds, having long since l common with most country mills, ibandoned the manufacture of vliite flour to the larger mills. An overshot water wheel, 24 feet in diameter, furnished the power for the mill for more than half . a century and many of the older r e sidents of-this' section recall riding around on the ponderous timbers which served as spokes. Later, one of the first motors to use powergenerated by Cattaraugus Creek was installed to turn the milling, machinery. .„, Leo Trombly, Nephew of Late John B. Trombly, Wins for Member Over C. D. Munsil by Small Majority —:John K. Collins, Re-Elected County Judge by About 1,000 Over B. Loyal O'Connell - Samuel D Healey Again Elected County Treasurer by Large Majority i I/WWISIN t ^ liW FIGHT ROLE LONDON, IIP) —. f e d "Kid" Lewis, •who 'lost, the world welterweight iChampidiiship H years ago, is out The most grimly . fought battle County Judge. The splendid vote for another title—that of "M. P." for Member of Assembly .perhaps Judge Collins received was a spim | If he is elected, to parliament and ever waged in Clinton county was did tribute to the friendship wh eh •thus, gets the right to add these -, fought to a finish yesteiiday a n d ' is borne him in this county and th initials to his name it will be by | for the first time in many years a high regard- in which he is, held grace of the voters of Whitechapel i Democrat will sit in the* Assembly j His opponent B. Loyal O'Conne 1 and "Sir Oswald Moseley. Chambers at Albany. This , is due; made as good a fight as any man Sir Oswald recruited him as one j to the election of Leo Trombly of could make under such adverse c lot- tfie-.first of the brigade of boxers Altona, a nephew of the redoubt- cumstances.. That he was defeated fend ipbtball players which he rais-; able John a. Trombly,-the old Ds- was.,.np"/ reflection upon his candi as an answer to threats made mocratic war horse of the..past gen-. da.cy, tj-ut was rather a proof t h i ,; when he broke away from Ramsay eration, against Charles D. Munsil,' he-, jwaf> .opposed to a man whos : .i MacDonald's leadership of the lawho has ably represented - Clinton' stren^jh j ^ g n asset such as is give -bor .party. county for four terms, in the State to-fewy "More action, less talk" is the Legislature. Trombly's margin is es- j 'Samuel D. Healey, who for tl e slogan of the new party and) . the timated at something like five Past twelve years has been the efflyoung leader of the group "promised hundred. Munsil made a good fight, oieni County Treasurer of Clinton •'his opponents could get any kind ,but fell a victim to; circumstances county, again demonstrated the con of -action they were looking for. 'which embodied" no fault of his own, - fidence the people of the county 'Matty of them, have taken him at : but which seemed to, be a part of . n a v e *h h i s ability as an accountant *^fc«ftis'':wijrdr The Birmingham rag and his other superior qualifications ; the general upheaval. market was t h e scene of one of which, have made him an outstandthese,, election fracases and Sir John K. Collins, for the past two. i n g . figure in county affairs. Mr. Oswald' -emerged minus his bodyterms County J u d g e ' of Clinton j He.aley's courtesy, honesty, and suguard.- with, bruises and under the county, proved that his remarkable perior knowledge, have been conescort of' policemen. Lewis was in personality has stayed with him' ceded more„than'once by members the'thick- of t h a t fight, - •? Reelected County, Treasurer Reelected on Board of Supervisors and his undoubted talents as a cam- of 1>o£h parties. They demonstrated • Lewis is' campaigning in .a- district ~—~ : : , A soda fountain milk-shake ma-., paigner are equalled by no one who. this-by their splendid tribute yeswhere, 'words, mostly unprintable, , |. claudel. had something to do with c n i n e is one of, the bits of equip- . has ever aspired to the office of terday. generally precede and accompany getting that famous Hoover-Laval m e n t u ^ by- bureau of public. fistic action. Fishwives and costerstatement into verbal shape for r o a d s ' engineers in studying soils. mongers, grimy little "pubs" and publication, he was not the only smarming, • tenements mark the ;killed wordsmith on the job. district, which he*-would like to rephas on his vocabulai-y. It must be very, The "radio probe" invented by SCHENECTADY, N. Y., NOV. 2 President Hoover himself * . handy little xeseilt;in,;trie house of, commons. Prof. P. Molchnov, meteorologist of (/P)—Returning alumni, parents of By Kirke Simpson done' a bit in -this line, though n o t pleasing to have nice, . He;.;has .been making speeches the Graf Zeppelin's polar flight In- students, and friends of Union ColWASHINGTON—With all hands, rated among the literary or ora- words like that, with a courteously , ther^-when. not engaged as- a body- .-dibates .that at an altitude of ten lege will see the college under "norat home and abroad, attempting to torical great men who have occu- \ satirical twist to 'em, lying aroundgu|rC-fqf;-his political chief. His m i j e s a b o y e t u e p o ] a i . i o e tempera- mal working conditions" during the [loose, ready for tongue or pen. • unwrap the real significance of the pied the-White House. What was P i t t s b u r g h ' s hardest, considerable thought to city affairs, talk's: "are.'/trenchant and his ges-j t u r e s ^sin to rise. annual college week-end festivities Hoover-Laval statement from the Was it not Mr, Hoover who pot fought -municipalelection since the .His honesty isunquestioned and alThe. Test Passed ' tureSVreniiniscent of the more t h a n | The coldest strata are near the beginning next Friday Informal. ^ ^ verbal'cotton-wool-in which.it a p - off that bit about an "experiment & ^ lnore,,ho h he h a s deoisivel b e a t e n Une At any .-sate, the, joint product of. .200 ; "etigagements he had in the earth. Aircraft in" polar flights es- visits will be made-to the recitation| t h o ^ „ ^„„„ fD „ Ae „ „„,,,.,„,.. „ „ J for noble in motive"? That utterance u ™ ' « . . r,-~.u,.-._ — t peared swathed, it took time I t h a n a quarter of a century ago. m a n whom the Republican party enring,^.~2;:.:,'-" | cape weather" extremes. j domestic political reactions to : has -been given many a . gallop | all these word artists stood the. test; and laboratory sections as well as proved conclusively t h a t party lines dorsed, there is every reason to be. Le^fe'hadVa perennial foe''then in I n the accompanying article to practice sessions of the athletic |. reach the -, surface. around the prohibition controversy Senator Borah himself was still siand party loyalty sink into insig- lieve t h a t he will make this city a Professor Molchanov discusses his teams. All j Why -not? Men skilled in the. use lists, •withoub.vbeing fully classes planning reUnder- lent after a 48-hour study. Senanificance when once the. public capable Mayor and one who will observations. I of words, not-.always to reveal their stood,-it seems.' unions at commencement time next . | tor Fess. of, Ohio, usually so free makes up its mind to stampede. justify the confidence t h a t wasI thought, had a share, in the wrap- -' Or take M. L3val, who boasts of and easy a talker, was completely June will have dinner meetings. As far as yesterday was concerned shown in him through yesterday's ping. • • • 'mum. The graduate council will elect his, newspaper activity. • By PROP. P. MOLCHANOV the stampede was complete and de- vote. He made a clean and vigorous'. Report has' it t h a t ' h i s first off-; 1 The Borah remarks to the French officers and allocate the alumni gift JSven a poet-diplomat, M.- Paul - MOSCOW, {/?)—Aerometeorologi„ . , .„ _ , . ,, „> oisive, leaving m its wake shattered i fight on issues which appealed to Claudel of France, was in on it, ac- h a n d reaction- to Senator B6r ; ah's writers were, different. What. Mr. cal research during the Graf Zep fund on Saturday^ Other events on ° . . , I -° • • , ,, startling frankness on European. Hoover thought about 'em w a s ^ n o ^ cording, to some accpunts. • — .... _ ., ' " " " " " ° ." . •; • " . hopes and aspirations and which the public fancy, and even if the a as that And until Jose Manuel Puiz Ca- political; problems,, talking. -wHhJftated.^ pelin's polar flight was one of the day-will include a bullet nin-; . even the Republicans as a party were opS &lmost le{j d u m b f o u n ( i e d UJ3A'* j3.-^i*»A.* ".lr^pst .important activities of th.e^ex^ «iv--. -« -..„,. „ ^ J & . I „ ,--• jsi « m j °B? ^ " o had..^o..completelv ovei>J„pQsed .t.0 his. election. there is lipi- sauranc', ?K&xlco's"jSeV' afriBassadoi', French 'journalists,, was to say. he ! Secretary Trafik'Pfii'Ker :and-•••••;•• . * : . ; - , , . " 'T~71. ' I • " cheon during DaySwill"speaK? which President' 'R'ay Lyman , Wilbm;,.,,., .... , ',. -. ; .;. • • - , turned the calculations of both par- reason- to believe t h a t a;il will*not IDfi^ifi'pn1- ' - ' . • • informal meeting of..faculty and „„„_.,,,.•.,, „ ~ ;. - . „ _ , • „ „ „ , „ joined the Washington' corps, M. did come over, to engage in "po- oyer in the interior department,, i"s,, "i'SDKta were acquired showing the I ty organizations, work- hand -in hand with him- f o r ialumfai. The unipn-Bochesteri Claudel had the poetic end- of Wa- lemics" with' the Idaho man. supposed a t times', to reflect Hoover-" cohditi'pn of the - stratosphere at John H. McGaulley, the present the: welfare of P i t t s b u r g h . _. „ i , ,, i sliingfon diplomacy all to'himself. football game will be played, durPolemics! Now there is a fine- views, however. SIZ$8*> various'points. At heights of abbut ! incumbent of the office of -Mayor, There .was nothing to upset the . _ ; . . * „ . . . . ' , , word. I t h a s ^ o t been, much used afternoon, and the fresh-1 , . , . . . . . .. „ , 'five or si-Si miles- temperatures of ingB the " „ „ . .... „ o o k = 1 , m who has' for two terms controlled , ,*, , . • • ' , The -Mexjcan ambassador, . how- lately in American politics. And it is- the testimony of those• . • minus 48;'-to 54 degress centigrade m a n football game with .Peeksklll equinamity • of Plattsburgh s l-epre" ' . '• . , . , . " . , „ -j ,. j - i , - - • , „ ' a f f a i r s at the City Hall,, was at the who talked with h i m ' t h a t ' he.. were found. .'".. _ ever, is,quite . a n u m b e r of' things . Washington news-writers had to Academy. President and Mrs. Day M t s. e t * , . breathed fire , at mention of "Bo:„ • • a tea i t i the i= as , .of ,such , strong J , . . « ™ , t a I n • higher strata, upwards of 10 •will the B oCarpenter, a r d - o f - S u pRee r - , surgeon, .„„,, . .an. educator, j . ,' ..• a. newspaper . . look, it up to get a real hold, on M. TT .... regarded , timber r. . , , sentation crat,.. and on C. Harry -, give • J * and • -ideception „« (h„ for. „„uo„= I political and rah's name; .' ,,|' owner-_and a awriter of books, in...... . . . had . , . such a fol- •pubifcahv-'.'were J * '. besides being diplomat. He is-amile's, tn¥'-temperature rose to mi- alumni and friends of t h e college,-^ . Laval's,thought. I t means "the art returned to . the ' , .. ., , ^„ „ „ „ , „ „ fv ,„ 1 lowing t h a t the Republicans thought visors and Harry M. Cooke, Demo-' cluding' verse'..' n u s -36 pghtigrade. . ' :or practice of* disputation .or", "conB p a r ^ . w i t h . the, defeat of Golda..,. , . : °, I n t h e .strata .'near the earth the after the game. I n the evening tne lfc •_=. For Lamps, sSe Byrnes Furniture,.^ Wordsmiths ' troversy." Mountebanks Dramatic Society will ^ * *» endorse his -nomination Qppgi^s^'.'-Republican, and Robert temperaturevwas rising with the inJL'f\, Accepting the ...report that M. . iM. Laval is to be congratulated Co.—adv. p r e s e n t ' a one-act comedy. " and W u rthe z e l -term. j ^ e by the Democrats for a third Erfly,ps>,fIiemocrat. Flummery" by A. A. Milne, cvease of the height up to a little Usually the backing of both poliGlee Club will sing. | The upset "in trie Common Council' tical organizations is "regarded, ,ai was. almost as complete as that of tantamount to election without, any the mayofality.-But two; members' of Jack Britton whom he met three or KTJGS AND SOFAS WEAPONS effort on the part of the candidate: lour., times a year in ^-England, the present pdard. will remain whe'n IN FIGHT AGAINST NOISE Yesterday proved the exception to Pran6e-:.and t h e United States. He t h e . Common Council convenes on the rule and the- outstanding' perwon the world title from' Britton. in January'1st. Redmund Holland, who WASHINGTON (/P) — If your sonal popularity of Leander A. Bou1917,and: lost it back to him in 1919. made a splendid run and was deneighbor's saxophone music is too yea together-, with circumstances cisively elected'in Ward. One,' and loud, it may help to present; him which ^mitigated to his- candidacy, j George Spearman,,' who has given with a n overstuffed ?ofa, vug, , or swept. the city so completely t h a t excellent satisfaction to the resiwall- tapestry. there was no question whatever as 'dents.of Ward Five. Such, materials .absorb .sound, to the choice of- Plattsburgh, for its says the Bureau of Standards, and candidate for Mayor, Of the remainder of the Council, prevent it from building itself up Felix- Lamar, thef.present incum-' Mr. Bouyea is new .to politics, but j bent from' WardjTgree, a Democrat, to sufficient intensity to penetrate he made a campaign-such as com- was defeated by'Iieriry Raymond, the partition of the room.. pletely surprised those who thought Republican. In W a r d Four Jolin.B. they were wise in the ways' of voters. Light,. Jr., Republican, defeated the more t h a n a mile.-' '•'<•' ".^•,The" fact t h a t 'the newly-elected present incumbent Wallace. BourThe- lowest strata had extremely Mayor" has heretofore kept put of deau, • Democrat. In Ward-. Six. politics is hot regarded as a ' h a n d i - George B'oui'deau, the present ihrinteresting peculiarities.. . Nearer to (jhe sea level the tem- cap, inasmuch as he is a ousiriess cumb'ent, was defeated by W.' R. perature was sharply falling; reach- m a n who h a s qualified as such to Shay.' ing up to minus 8 at :a height of the extent that He is one of the j 1,000 meters and, up to minus 7.5 outstanding leaders in local' c o m - This leaves the Common Council mercial pursuits. He is a large tax- standing with four Democrats to at sea level. The stratum of the low tempera- payer, a m a n of modest and una¥- two Republicans. The present- Board ture reached- a .thickness of approx- suming demeanor and .one who h a s is composed of three Republicans imately 150-200 metres 'and .was u n - demonstrated that he h a s given and three Democrats. ... doubtedly .caused b y ' t h e - influenceof the cold masses of the- water :surHENRY RAYMOND _.JOHN B. LIGHT JR. :face. This cooling caused t h e forma Won in the lower/strata' of '& s'tVpng'fog developing s'liAbst'-.on' all • sections of the opeh'-wateK ,,; ,. •,*' i . , Hovveve/r, this fog did1-, not >'coir stitute a n y danger; to .the fiighLpf fre dirigible; ~,as' 'the - fog-.-'occupied only t h e lowest strata, , - . . . , ' * The rise of temperature with J h e increase of height constitute, as is INGREDIENTS used 6 y Ml''. Fitzknown, an extremely favorable, don You can»ndw make "substantial savgerald i n compounding your pre-, dition for the flight,, of 'dirigibles ingsSiby: bi'i^giiig- your DOCTOR'S sicription are purchased by uS from lighter t h a n air.. prescription HERE (6 be compoundt h e most reliable finhs, i n t h e world Thus, contrary to ail^xjJeciatibns,, ed'. •' *-••::;" — Merck,. Squibb, Parke 'Payis, the conditions of the'flifeht of.'the, MR. ynhhlAM. FITZGERAtD, reg-; Wycth, Upjohn, Xi'Uy a n d otKers. of' dirigible in the polar' regions ;.were istered Graduate Ejhiarmacist is in. the highest stantUnfi Cheaper inquite favorable even, in ,';.'Sur4riler ciiargc of this department and will gredidnta. cau be used..But: N^O.T' in : months. '-,-•"'••• -. / , ; .flfjj' yoiir. prescriptittn exactly aa OUR LABORATORY, your POCTOR wantsj^it filled. SAVE -WJTH CONFiDENCB'! From the observatibns : ; inade diir-. ing the polar flight it /was' ascertained that the observations :of.the. meteorological stations .located oh' the islands of the polar b&sin can-' not give a complete picture, of the. , condition neither of the upper, strat a of t h e -atmosphere nbi"6i''the"ft>w Elected 'Alderman, Ward Three ' Elected. Alderman,, Ward Four- m J 'SAWS'TIMBER WITH AN AXE UNION COLLEGE 'PROBE' CHECKS PLANS FESTIVITIES POLARCHILL A. IL^ Washington Bystander * • 'FltfwerPots i tt Hearts Delight Farm,Sausage Sealshipt Oysters • & .1 •1! BRING YOBR PRESCRIPTIONS T.Q.IIS! ANNOUNCEMENT - For six years the on the corner \x ,[ •!'• has saved you money on ToiletArticles^dPaten GORDON - ABRAHAM Open a Prescription eiY - . • : " • ' • " ' V-. -r^V- tA
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