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Dunkirk Evening Observer from Dunkirk, New York • Page 3

Location:
Dunkirk, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SIX (X.TO KVEMXC OBSERVES. 3. The EVENING OBSERVER as it Published Every Evmim: bjr Ihe DUNKIRK PRINTING COMPANY Hear? Wiiiianas President Gerald Williams Henry K. Waiiasis Jr. General i Wallsce A tinT-nzn Herman Cutler Advertising Mg.

OFFICE: acd 10 E. SECOXO ST. Mrmbcr of Press Associttioo Member of Audi! Bureau ol Circulation Member of York of RETROSPECTIVE Items of Local Interest from OBSERVER Files TWENTY YCAKS AGO-- 1916 THIRTY YEARS ACO-- A SAILOR'S KNOT National Advertivins GEOiUiE b- OAVIU COMPANY -Wr California icd i.ivt refuued to him still insist- he Chicago Y. St Louis Kansas Wdg Atlanta ar.oica-JIa-.t-rv.- liWj; IV. Office i.s havt- wo- lor the lirit is found Out Although barred tn the governorship J.C76 Dunkirk.

Ol Subscription Slates: Postal Zoira i 3. IS other zones. SIUKO; earner. 18c per I I A A cf I i ll I vote. 'iii'-ij tititt The Krnpire has a -it are fii.iiiii.'-n-ij j'r'iin i i Am! bam' I i I i a i i a i a iif A i rook, ami i-aiisi- loud veljini; ami a She I i i i i i i i i i i i lYi.iii i i 'I'iU -f iill An.l tion.

bt-rt. at a linn? tllitt anils on lav dial 1 1 1 --arils v. i-n; i i i i i i th- v.i-n- in i a lh i i lnl tl 1)a fan Hut i i --anls. just tin- same; II: i i i i i i i i i i i i i a In i i i i a i. jus! as fiifiinila am! if MI i.

ill. The i si'i it all. In i I'm Is- lias a In im-h an -iiji, -i ran ri-i lni! i ial -l in. 1 A i Mill in tilt- hopi- i.f I'm- our- iii r. i i bin! limes the, "I lost v'Hi'isy is till! source whh-spi-t-al a i i i i a An.l 'u play lii'-ii! L'II as i i ill i i i in has a a i I slate whi'-h i In fimr I In i-n-a'ii- a i a rt-al a i i i i i i i a i i i spirit i i i i i i a i i in h-ave an i i a i i i i i i i a i fiiK'iio: in times.

Tliis type of cunt i I I I I a li-iidi-iu-y i a i a i i Then- are a who present sos-ial si-i-iirity 'aw as a ftMVi'r. v. iin rvirarilcil lliis as it! i-inH-cjiI ami in MI'I'I! ah'-ral imi. i i a i i i Tin- law niav inu'fiiil i i i lui! iif-ils a rhaiiir'-s to affon.l tin: liiinl i'-f si-ituriiv i i '-an "mid off-id in iii-ai- in- nut atiiiii! i familv i-ii-i its at'i" i al. Mar jn a live act picture.

'A'slHasn Sidis, eisht liruu-n Eyes." Corning has entered siojis. arc- Dorothy Gish, Douglas lu-huui, the high Fairbanks, Geriildine Karrar, in the country. He speafc i'ickfcrd and ''The Kail ol a Xa- four and has resnarkabie of mathematics, algebra physics. snu-it by Victor Hc-r- WASHINGTON LETTER- Behind the Scenes In a i Only One of Original "Brain Trust" Lasts Through 1936 Campaign Rosenman Stays in Background Enlisted Moley in Cause Tugwell, General Johnson, and lierlc Fade Out. BY RODNEY DL'TCHEK OBSERVER Washington Correspondent Nov.

Of the several more important members tin- I'amous brain trust which hc-lped Franklin D. Roosevelt plot the stratfKj-, the speeches, and the promi.scs ol cam- pa diily one was on the job I I I A i i i i i as i l.c^imi a I M'si-rali- a i a i i i i a i fur ilsdi' il llan-y i i i i i i i i a i i a i i I'sst-i! a i i a i inin.iate capacity in tin- campaign. ('in- by one tlie brain trusters wlio took impo.tant admini.stra- jobs, made speeches, and go: into the limeligtit--unwillingly in foirts gone into the doghouse, turned sour, or al least movi'd several yards away from the throne. The only one of the old crowd the brain trus; professors early in sheir career and later fought and bled for NRA, put in some effective licks with campaign speeches. The proficient fond of but Johnson has been erratically off and on the reservation and he; is no longer of the "inner circle." The most effective advisers--orj brain trusters--who maintained their influence have been men; like Rosenman, who shunned the fierce white light which beats upon the throne.

IN NEW YORK Celebrity Centers Big Wig in One Habitat May Be Just a Nobody Elsewhere. FOREST BEING REPLANTED (UP)--A vest tree-planting project is under in ihe iloquah district of Chequamegon national forest. Approximately 5.500 acres are bsinz planted with 5.500,000 pine seeding necessary on about half trus area, conservation said. who went thru'igh the recent rn to The a a i tHr A i i i a i i i ami 11 is rll a.i.I i i law sl vv1 i Campaign ai the president's side, Jvoiir.borating on his speeches, ad, vising on the strr-iegv and phrn.se- ni. about nc ho has been least publicized the group.

He is State Supreme Court Justice Samuel L. Rosenman, counsel to Roosevelt when the latter was -f nf A i i i a liesl scnsi; r.f In: points tllir from political a i the rciMMit inli'DKi- campaign scvuriiv is llii- hasii- ili'shv pi-oplc. I nient. however may not i a i of i jimsent law inn-liaujri-d Karly in i i in- given to i inoasnn' porhaps i pluiscs i br n-viscil. i i i i i i iian.V vain-i- it bv i i fn- governor New York.

Rosen- mnn first movea to organize the original bi.iin trust in 1932. He is 42 and served several terms in I Ju try to ad- the New York i i a i i i to iiuli'l Two or three comparative new- i i i i i or jrriii bfsi i a i i i i i a who a i nj- If is In -rn i against its a liruud- niav be to malci; its Aiii.M-ieiinisin comers in the presidential circle worked with this year, but no microscope or telescope could have found Raymond Moley. Rexford G. TugweU, Adolf A. Berle.

or Gen- Hugh S. Johnson-the "Big brain trusters of th ih. ivinain: a irontrovor.sv ri'iranlb'ss lilsl of ihe recent an.i 1 lil lias in-i'n opinion of i law runt unit's to be i i i i i i I iloubis f-xist us to its i a cvt-r hefore. period prior to the 1933 i i i i i i i slightest eritieism of auguration--slipping unobtrusive' i i i I i fnr ideals. it may he said Hint, the worthy of its own i has a lian on It A A 1'Aii'LOK FI'X STILL HOLDS 1TS I I I 'iVorgi: S.

I'arki'r. who has bren i i i i m.nrkesmir parlor jjaiiii's sisu'i- "way in the era. emerges from wriiek 4if the eb'i-tion Ijindsliile to i-iinnrk a i i from lilnv i i i i i prevent, II Duo: to i the i i i a i a in a i a a bail I'-nriieil i.f Cjirner. a before wo The rharai'tei- refuses aneient. ami pntcei sport of playinjr Dailies to i bur be i a i yei around tho livinir-room a just as readinjr irrid (roaches' alibis Toonen-ille --By Fontaine Fox MICKEY MCGUIRE'S NEW METHOP OF CARRYING HOME UNCLE MICHAEL ALSO MAKES THE- UNLOADING MUCH EASIER ly into Whiit House for conferences.

I'avs to Shun Limelight Assuming that anyone wants to keep on being a close-in brain trusier. it appears that he must keep his neck polled in tight and not parade out in front where everyone can iake pot s'nois. Nut only have enemies of the New Deal concentrated fire on the president's most trusted advisers out others in the administration have simultaneously tried to undermine such favoriles. And as early as the summer of 1933 there was grent hue and cry against "brain from elements which still didn't dare attack Roosevelt. It seems funny now to recall that when Ray lloley, who was Brain Truster No.

1, quit the Washington scene, conservatives hailed his departure as sure evidence that the president was discarding his radical advisers anc that the would "turn right." Rosenman Enlisted Moley Rosenman, started after nomination, called in Moley from Columbia University. The two planned a program for summoning academic experts to function in the field of economic thought while Farley and the political experts were busy working for delegates and votes. Holey recruited others, notably Tugwell and Berle, from Columbia, and was a major factor in the Roosevelt speeches and messages for two or three years. Then Moley made the mistake iof accepting the post of assistant secretary of state and became a target for many brickbnts. His blow-up with Secretary of State CordcK Hull at the London economic conference forced Roosevelt to move Moley into a more ambiguous post, but he remained a mosi important consultant.

Mo- Icy 3eft Wnshincton xvhh the blessing to edit a pro-New Deal weekly magazine sr.d for a Time continued in presidential Turwell Likely To Go The president's affection for when Roosevelt the presidential is still strong and there is no evidence that he is out of sympathy with Tugwell's ideas. But Tugwell became a political liability. His influence at the VThite House has diminished and likelihood is that he return soon to Columbia University. Berle went out of the picture after particicpating in much early (Xe-a- Deal legislation. He a spe- in public finance, banking railroad rehabilitation, i General Johnson, who joined BY GEORGE ROSS New York.

Nov. 9--New York's celebrity centers are as squared off as the notions and counters of a department store. He who is a bigwig on West Fortv-Fifih Street and Broadwav 8v Jones 10. Borfon. m.D.

THE SHOCK ABSORBERS OF THE BOD V-- THE DISCS BETWEEN THE SPINE BONES I SOCIETY MARRIAGES RISE St. Louis (UP)-- Marriages on the upgrade here, according St. Louis' Social Register. Sepian members of New York's Inner Circle have their favorite in Harlem. One is run negress named Tillie whose Fried Chicken vilh jn th2 eviou vep famed over tne oreadih 01 Deaihs a th 0 i red to 58 in the crt- transpSanted.

his ego collapses and even the waiters give him the once-over instead of the twice- over xvhen he drifts from the home plate. The gathering places oC the town's cognoscenti prove this clannish trait. For example, the accredited thirsting trough of Manhattan's noxelists, magazine ifictioneers and other literati on A number of years ago. in try-jthe loose is a small spot on Beding to correct a low Street in the Village called round shoulders, sway back, and spinal curvature, I had the patients hang on rings, one of which was higher than the other, or simply hang by their arms from a horizontal bar. On coming down from the apparatus, many of them would say, "That hanging seems to relax, to rest The reason for this relaxed or rested feeling was that the little round discs or cushions of fibrous elastic tissue situated between the bones of the spine, get pressed or flattened down during the day to such an extent that one may be as much as one inch shorter at night than in the morning.

By hanging by the neck, or hanging on the rings, the spine bones get separated and so these discs between the spine bones chance to enlarge to their normal size again. Now as these discs are really cushions to take ihe jar off the spine--the shock absorbers of the body--if they can be kept from being flattened too much, or given even a short time to bulge back to the width or depth the3' are after a night's rest, it will take that much jar or shock off the whole nervous system. Sometimes the front part of the disc may be pressed down more than the back cart, which might occur in the upper back due to tuberculosis or in the lower back due to a heavj- or protruding abdomen. This means that the little facets--where one spine bone joins the one below it--get separated from one another, and as this is a joint like any other joint, an arthritis--inflammation of the joint--mav result. Naturally the muscles around this little joint in an elfon to "protect" the joint become spastic, or a spasm occurs.

A tended or strained muscle is painful. In the lower back this causes pain from pressure on the nerve root supplying 'die hip and leg and so pain in the hip and leg- sciatica--frequeutlv results. Dr. D. York, in Archives of Surgery.

Chicago, in speaking of the treatment of these back cases, suggests that ihe Salient be put under an anaes- and after rutting ioTver part of the spine into its normal xsilion or a plaster jacket be applied to hold "there. It might be worth while for us all to lie down at full length for few minutes and give our shock absorbers a chance to enlarge or expand. It should res; us. PRISON WORKERS YOliXG Cambridge. Mass.

(UP)--Young i and active men comprise state; and county prison personnel in Massachusetts, according to! Sheriff Joseph M. McElroy Middlesex The sheriff says the public should be dis-j abused of the idea that old and; inactive men are the chief prison' workers. --Advertise to OBSERVER Lee Chumley's. This place, with its quiet atmosphere and perennial checker game in the back room, has been a long-favored rendezvous. Among an evening's clientelle, count Theodore Dreiser, Carl Van Vechten, The Brothers Van Doren, Faith Baldwin, rhom- as Wolfe, Susan Glaspell, Sinclair Lewis and Ernest Hemingway.

Bui let the portly figure of say-Paul Whiteman--loom up in ihe doorway and, the temper of the place would remain ihe same. By the same virtue, Miss Hepburn mighi not be recognized, Bankhead might be ignored- Like Likes Like Sardrs. the Cafe Select ot the Broadway luminaries, greets a varied crowd of stage, screen and radio "personalities." Miriam Hopkins, Lanny Ross. Ethel Merman, William Gaxton, Kitty Carlisle. Tamara Geva, Ruth Etting, Margaret Sullavan, Leslie Howard and Helen Gahagan might be there at one table d'hote session, oblivious to gaping The management is not awed byj such a celebrated trade andi knows its people well.

Should Serge Rachmaninoff, however, venture in 'or a meal he would be as unknown as the Forsotten Man. On the other hand. Miss Merman or Mr. Howard would be equally unobstrusive were they to into a iWoscovite retreat on West Fifty-Second Street call-j ed the Russian Tea Room. Here, is the orthodox hangout of erudite) musicians, composers and famed concert soloists.

The walls are muralled with autographed pho- ios of Gabrilowitsch. Stokowski, Heifetz. Elman, Ponselle, Flagstad. Kreisler. Horowitz, Bori, Bauer and their brilliant kind.

And nightly, these photos are brought to life by the pictorial subjects" visits. Here moreover, talk runs to Bach and Beeihoven or the latest personal tale about a Met. diva. And should Mr. Valle.

the crcooner. hoppen in, he would ccause no more furore than Anuro munching a chop in Jack Dempsey's steak iouse. Holy of Holies Jack Charlie's patrician club on West Fifty-second Street is another place populated i for ihe most part by the topmost! crop of Broadway celebs. The; room downstairs has probably! oeen the hatching nest of more -nanagerial schemes and play-' than any other atelier in i But to the neophyte who ders ia 'or an innocent iheir room is sacrosanct--and hej is politely shunted upstairs to sip! amongst the ignoble This is exactly what happened to! she has a ranlc-iybang piano for their use. Many a torrid tune has been composed rm the tinny keys at Tillie's i.eno: Ave.

salon. So the Hegregation applies to almost any occupational set you care to name, including the sports crowd, the socia: cliques and the Wall Street tycoons. It is as easy to locate one of them at a given moment, as it is to contact i veteran Union Leaguer: in his own clubroom, of course. For the majority of -Manh-ittan's celebrities move in a socia! circle almost as limited as a lighthouse keepers. Well-heeled Big Town Notes: They tell it the universally known Noel Coward.

He sent his man over to the department store to open a charge account in his name. The! valet returned to say that it was quite simple, the clerk wanted no references, since Coward was the scion of the wealthy shoe magnate. Next trend in night club entertainment will be an attempt to raid the Opera House. Mary Lewis, a Diva, is the first recruit the nocturnal whirligig the Club Cersailles. The most self-effacing movie star to arrive in Manhattan is the small, slight and attractive Olivia de Havilland.

Trains EASTERN STA.MJAHD TI.1IB "Daily except Su.iiiay Sunday? and only: other e.vvept daily." XEW YO11K CR.VriS.AI. a. a. 11:50 a. p.

p. in-: a p. m. Westbound--HM-i a- a. 9:14 a.

a. 1 i p. 6:52 p. m. 10:07 -r 11:11 p.

m. VALLEY HRAXCH. S. V. GE.XTItlL.

Leave p. Arrive a. m. fXc change.) XICKE1. PLATE p.

m. (F): p. m. (F). a.

m. (P); p. p. m. (F) regular 3v and holidays).

(F) Flig stop. (N) Provisional stop for Passengers Consult Ticket A (P) for pay passenger? Clev and the west. A I A a. a. p.

vn. PennsyH-ania tr.iins esrularty.) ERIE A I A Arrive a. m. Leave p. -n.

THIS CURIOUS WORLD William Ferguson LOCK. WITH FOUR. AND IOO NUMBERS, HAS CHANGES OF COMBINATION. Sen au'ihor of themselves solely by seeds, in thony whose name nowj sears almost as much weight as his book. Because his countenance was unkno-an to the man on guard, he was discreetly despatch-j ed above.

duction is accomplished by tubers. The wild species in the region, ol Chite, however, still reproduce by means of seeds, fett only rarely do Uiey develop potatoes. NEXT: Why mter bate.

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About Dunkirk Evening Observer Archive

Pages Available:
178,577
Years Available:
1882-1950