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Times Herald from Olean, New York • Page 4

Publication:
Times Heraldi
Location:
Olean, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FOUR OLEAN TIMES-HERALD. SATURDAY. DECEMBER 4. 1937 raugus Supervisors Session; Turn Down lution Of Salamancan Allegany County News Bits Note Anniversary Will Not i ate Sum To Aia ighway Work In City. LtTTLE VALLEY-Parting ex- tions cf sooOw.ll marked the Bg meeting of the "Urse 4ucji" wssion cf County superr-fors fctre Friday.

A. S. Coarter. a former chairman at I I i wav superintendent, through the reduction cf highway department He J1SO.OOO was taken cut of the departmental for retirement of y.r givtn the privilege of the floor. the debt retire- ot board and present chairman lug semcrs "1 regret leaving be said, "I have be a while and I have i I i roaj program for next be able to extend want to tsark helpfulness.

Of cour.i I come back once in a while to any new piujtcts. state de- whose legislative careers either end or are interrupted at conclusion cf the board's sion Friday. Adjournment taken without date, probably until tie organization dotting of the new board in January. Mr. Courier cK act rtclccticn in NCVC.T.- ber and his place on tie board to r-artnrnt of highways is deter to get present roadj wicifnrd out to the exclusion of Board Chairman W.

B. Kingsbury of Franklinville, voiced his 3j.p:cciation for the courtesies and aids extended to the chairman. He said further. "I always feel bad ia a lame duck year. 1 miss the recn who leave us." Carlson In a brief session devoted to be filled ty Vcrn FL Charles; clcanr.g the legislative boards of worth, also of Otto.

Mr. Charles-j unfinished business, supervisors worth, a Democrat, is thr the resolution reported of his political allegiance to serve from committee which would "open tie board from Otto township further diversion" of the beverage tax money from the in several decades. Bert J. Dorsey, town the Isrjfst' amount this year for Hed Cross I memberships since solicitations I have been made, there. The com- mittet has turned in J163.

tome possible givers yet to cee. Alfred residents looking over an exhibit of in the library, gathered on trips to foreign countries by Mrs. R. W. Wingate.

Many nationalities are represented. Andover'j Exchange Club is sponsoring erection of Christmas lights on streets. that tillage's main Allegany dental so- dety gathers in Wellaville today for Its quarterly meeting, follow- Inr dinner at the Fassett House at one-thirty P. M. The program 1 being arranged by Dr.

H. W. Smith of Cuba and Dr. H. J.

Junker of Wellsville. Belmont and Andover Presbyterian churches have voted to unite into one parish to be served by one minister, resident in Andover. Neither congregation has a pastor since the resignation two weeks ago of the Rev. Frank E. VanWie from the Belmont church.

He is retiring from active ministry and will spend the winter in Florida. Wins Honors In Egg Contest BELMONT--The entry of Marion Kelly, Friendship, of Plymouth Rocks, was oat of three from seventy-two pettj at the Horseheads state 4-H egg-laying contest to receive a rating of The Joint entry of Donald Totten and Arby Swift, Cuba, was graded in the The Home Bureau now has 573 members. 146 of them new this year, with other new and renewed memberships being added from time to time. Belmont Couple, Wed 60 Years, Marks Anniversary Sweet potatoes are not ordinarily an Allegany County crop, but Mark Eanford of Little Genesee has grown a few each year for several seasons. Fillmore's.

Wide Awake Club will sponwr next year a series of entertainments." introduced Thursday by of lion, his'appreciation to the I Harry Locke. Randolph, embodied board for its assistance to th la petition to the state legislature, finance of which Mr. Mr Locke "P'alned late Friday that this tax return comes to the supervisors In the towns of the of which Mr. Dorsey is chairman. He said the committee had tried to do its work in the interests of the board as a whole, without regard for "politici- Death Takes Portville Physician PORTV1LLE--Dr.

Henry L. Trtnkle, for more. than twenty years physician in charge of Louden-Knickerbocker Hall. Araity- vSlt. LI and since 1932 a member of the staff, died early this morning at his home here at tie of sixty-two.

Dr. Trenkle was a native of Portville and graduate of the medical department of the Uni- diploma in 1909. He returned to Portville to take up his residence a few years ago but never prac- ifsuVvh-e'd bv a sister. Mrs. i I Carlson asned James Cvrus Hakes.

Montclair, committees uad turned Uo.ui lits N. and a brother, Charles F. Trenkle of Kane, Pa. The funeral service will be con' ducted at nine o'clock Tuesday morning at Sacred Heart Church here, preceded at eight-thirty by a prayer service at the home, the Rev. J.

Vincent Growney, Sacred Heart pastor, officiating. county, who ia turn pay a portion over to the several villages. In 1934 the rate for tillages was increased. Mr. Locke said, and this resolution would ask the legislature to make no further intreasc In favor of the villages as against the towns.

The tax was originally returned to welfare units, that ia. municipal s-jb-divislons which pay out money for welfare. Villages have no such expense, Mr. Locke said, and the village welfare cases are paid for out of town funds. On adverse reports by the finance committee and ihe highway committee, the resolution of John E.

Carlson. Salamanca third ward, was lost for the present year. His resolution asked the county to appropriate $7.500 to be matched bj a Salamanca city appropriation for reconstruction of one-and-a Friendship" citizens have formed a committee to plans for a community Christmas celebra i Members of twenty-six organiza- ion-i and seven churches make up He committee. Prizes will be of- ered for the best slogans and most artistically decorated homes. Wellsville Elks plan to fete the Uf red University football eleven nd Coach Yunevich at their dub ousc In Wellsville, the evening of December 14 half miles of West State Street.

Wellsville's postmaster. Carl N. larshall. reports but 360 employ- lent cards returned to him there, ndlcating the ninety-four per ent of employable persons in that rea were working steadily when he census of workers was taken. Were Married In West Almond; Lived 38 Years On Staten Island.

BELMONT Married i years ago in West Almond. Allegany County, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Green celebrated the anniversary quietly this week at their horie.

92 Greenwich Street. The took place December The couple resided -near West Almond for five years but moved in 1SS2 to Staten Island where for thirty-eight years Mr. Dean was talelaMrl uf Luc al quarantine station wheje incoming ocean steamships must dock for medical inspection of passengers On his retiring in 1921. Mr. and Mrs.

Dean came here. and Mrs. Dean have two and son. children, five grandchildren two greatgrandchildren. A Miner resides in Philadelphia and his son, Daniel and daughter.

Miss Harriet Dean, reside in the same city, 'while a second son. Stephen, is an attorney In New York City. The daughter of the Deans. Mrs. Mary Barto, has her home in Boston, while her son, Dean H.

Hlldebrandt, resides In Chicago, and a daughter, Florence Hildebrandt, in Boston. The great- grandchildren are Dean H. brandt. and Harry Hildebrandt, Chicago. Mr.

and Mrs. Dean are in good health, doing much of their own housework, and until very recently Mr. Dean made a garden each summer and cared for a flock of hens. Mr. Dedit has ii! gathering and keeping relics of old days and has room full of a variety of articles from all over the world, many of them World War relics given them at the quarantine station by soldiers Among a collection of odd canes is one made of the backbones of a shark.

A bull fighter's dart with an ornamented wooden shafi Is another unusual piece. Twenty years ago. with so assy men In France, potato digging was seriously delayed. The Farm Bureau aided by placing 200 men and an equal number of school boys in fields to help farmers. Andover, Cuba and Wellsville business organizations and Alfred State School aided in finding help to save the tubers.

Allegany County's Farm and Home Bureau will hold.its annual meeting In Friendship Central School building. December 9. in the evening only, an innovation succeeding the former all-day gathering. Written reports will be distributed Instead of given orally. Separate brief seasons of the two organizations will be held, then a union meeting.

Milk Strike Negotiations "Fizzle;" Dealers Blamed Gerinans Get Gas Masks Burial will be In SL Bonaventure's Cersetery. The re.wlution cited 1936 law per in construction or reconstruction the "peoples' gas masks." with city in thin! clzis cities, which all German civilians, men. which ccrincct with state or coun-' women and children, arc to be (equipped, has begun in the Tern- why thei'pelhof. "No Progress" Reported After Series Of Conferences In Buffalo. BUFFALO Negotiations between Western New York dairymen and dealers to prevent a farmers' strike scheduled for to- Spandau, and dbtricts cf Berlin.

Jfeukolln resolution. "Was it because of the large amount involved, or for legal reasons, or because It requires a direct appropriation? Would the resolution go through If the money comes out of gas tax money?" I-in Cited Answering for the finance committee. Mr. Dorsey paid the resolution had been discussed at length National Banner HORIZONTAL I Pictured is the nag ot 7 This country is under ir.d French protectorates. 13 Verbal, Pertaining to tides.

It Unoccupied. 17 To secure. 18 To hew. Anjwer to Previous Puzzle Corpse. 23 Dutch measure.

Visions. 4TMorindin dye. 48 Those that degrade. Alleged force. 51 Measure 28 To administer, area.

31 Ulcer. 52 Fastidious. 33 To rent again. 54 Relieved. 34 Net aware.

55 The head. WMother- 37 Fairy. 38 Golf device. 40 Toothed tool. UHigh mountain.

62 The majority 44 Mineral spring of its people 1 Fashion. 2 Either. 3 Tatter. 4 Olive shrub. 5 Court 6 Lubricant "Tree fluid.

8 Plural. 61 Capital this Egyptian river 53 Cousin, country. 10 Thought 56 Constellation. 11 To bang. 58 Type standard 12 Female fowls.

60 Southeast 57 Finished. 59 Cravat 60 Certain. 15 Pertaining to a dower. 20 Credit. 22 Early.

14 Wedlock. 25 Particularized. Ii To arrange cloth. 29 Born. 30 Jewel.

31 Sirii Mohammed is this country's 32 Female sheep. 35 Bottom of a pulley. 39 To ignore. 41 Rage. 42 To revoke.

43 Pair. 45 Thin plate. 45 Form of "be." 43 Lair. 49 A continent 50 Potato. and said his committee believed he law prevents the county from artlcipating.

"No reconstruction intended." he said. "This is not a case of tearing up the road bed, or of replacing a road of one material with a better road of another material." The statute fort-ids the county to aid the city in replacing streets, Mr. Dorsey told the board. He also pointed out that the portion of West State Street covered by the resolution is not 'a "connecting street." since only the west end connects with state highway. Mr.

Carlson told the board he has a resolution petitioning the gas tax money for this one project. It was not introduced Friday. Recommendation wa.i withheld on the resolution of Frank Treble, town of Dayton, asking J780 for county office salaries. Aljo adversely reported was Mr. as dealers were charged with "delaying" possible settlement.

This failure to agree and dec! sion by the Unity Dairymen's operative Association' not to join the strike movement made it problematical producers would begin withholding their milk from the Buffalo market tomorrow in a drive for higher The Unity Association claims to represent 700 district dairymen supplying sixty seven local dealers. Henry J. Simons, general chairman of the Producers' Executive Committee, reported "no pro- frress" after lengthy meetings of both sides yesterday. He charged that dealers were evading a conference with representatives of the dairymen. "Our experience the past few- days indicates that the dealers know all the tricks of delay and quibbling." Simons said.

"Any attempt to negotiate separately with any of the 165 gentlemen would keep us here until next harvest." Previously, local distributors signified their willingness to bar More than 1,000 of the 1.100 farms where federal agricultural conservation is being practiced in this county have been visited by committee supervisors for making the check-up required by law. Many of the remaining farms not seen have practices which their ucfa twii bliii tally uul uniier the 1937 program. Plans are already under way for 193S. Checks have already begun to arrive for farms Inspected. today, producers would either petition the Commissioner of Agri? culture and Markets for an order fixing milk prices In.the Buffalo area or would take "other such action as may be necessary" Dealers said they hoped to complete their bargaining committee sometime today and then proceed with peace conferences.

Simnni pxnrrswl di-iannolnt- ment that Charles W. Newton, president of the Unity Dairymen's Cooperative Association, did join in the strike movement. In I taking- stand. Newton raid his' organization In sympathy with a'move-for higher prices but that It had contracts with dealera to live up to. TONIGHT'S FEATURE VALUE at HOUSEY'S ZII'I'ER SPORT JACKETS Leather sleeves, body tilth knit collar and cuffs.

All colors. OPEN EVtRT tVtNIMG 419 No. UNION ST. Flier Warns Of Fire, Then'Calls Apparatus SPRINGFIELD. MO.

Elmer Adcock still has his farm home because of an observing National Guard airplane pilot- CapL Eric Kaeppel. flying at 2.000 feet raw smoke puff from the roof of the Adcock home. He circled the house until the roar of his motor aroused the farmer. Then the flier circled the general store a mile away until he attracted attention. Next he flew back to the A-Jcock farm.

Mrs. Walter Hall, the proprietor, said: "We finally saw the smoke and figured out what he was trying to tell us." The fire department was, called and the fire extinguished. Install -TOP ROL Tht Upuwd' opening door JUuct over Ice mow--out of war. Operate! tatily, qukklj and con- Ytnfftitlj the yttf tround. Writ lit Jit.

Buril tr-creof. Ptfffltnftit "to ineipenifre. Etiilj in Lft Kit rou more about RoI-Top. It'll dtlitht you- A. Western LUMBER CO.

West State at 16th Street Phone 4195 Treble's bill to pay J150 toward the expense of the County Offic- with the dairymen jcrs Association in the state of I who demanding three dollars! i New York er hundredweight for class A 1 Carl W. WeJrtcndorf. town of 1 lili i2 I for recor.d grade milk. The dealers spent yesterday attempting to set up a which would bargain with the I producers. This delay arbuwd the ire of dairymen.

Their spokes- Mansfield, submitted the report the grand jury committee and the list of grand jurors from the towns. The board voted approval. Also approved by the board was the resolution of Frank B. Nix. Ischua.

that the supervisor's journal of proceedings shall contain "only laws and resolutions passed at various sessions of the board and exclude all reports from various county department 1 except those the statute requires print- Ing." His resolution empowering the printing committee to call for bids on the journal, the election digest and the court calendar was approved by the hoard. man. Simons, declared that if the dealers had not set up their r.e-o-! tlating committee by two P. M. i Let Us Fill Your Tank With Clean.

High Quality Fuel Oil No. 1 Se No. 2 1C No. 3 I. W.

MILLER SON "The Coal Man of Coleman Street" 336 Coleman Street Phone -1171 SKYSCRAPERS, ELEVATORS, AND BANKS A forty.gfory skyscraper would useless without elevators. Likewise, our modern civilization could not function without bdnks. The business world today uaes lor money money itself--such as checks, notes, acceptances, etc. tubttihites could not be used at all ii it were not for banks. with which are useful to you and beneficial to the business life of the en- tin community.

itumct i i FIRST NATIONAL BANK tow York OLDEST NATIONAL BANK fN CATTAKAUGUS COUNTY THE TAILS OF TWO CITIES London and New York approve the that distinguish by HART SCHAFFNER A Fashion, with a capital says "where ladies are present, wear a tailcoat after six." And more and more men today are welcoming thc chance because there is something about a tailcoat that is Dalterinir to every male. Hilt it's the attention (o detail which marks the real distinction in evening clothes. And it is a strict adherence to smart details which has made Surrey Tails the favorite tailcoat of well-dressed men. Wider lapels give thc new Surrey Tails a new "air." The tails are longer. They hue thc hips smoothly stay in place all evening long.

And this Rood-looking tail-coat fits perfectly across the waist and hack. Your size is here-in Mack, or thc much-favored midnight blue. $40 Robert Surrey $40 GAVIN-McCARTHY Opposite City Hall.

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About Times Herald Archive

Pages Available:
154,894
Years Available:
1909-1951