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f ' -•ft/ Thursday, September 30, 1937 TUPPER LAKE FREE PRESS Page 5 14 LOSE AUTO LICENSES IN THIS DISTRICT COIOOSSIONEB HARNETT ANNOUNCES 14 REVOCA- TIONS, ?© SUSPENSIONS OF DBIVEB8' LICENSES Albany, N. <Y., Sept. 29, 1937— Charles A. Harnett, Commissoner of Motor Vehicles, announced to- day the following list of revoked and suspended driving licenses and certificate* of automomlle regis- tration* as having been filed within the two weeks ended September 18th. In each Instance the date preceding the name indicates when the revocation or suspension was issued, and immediately fol- lowing the name of the suspended person Is the period on the sus- pension order. . The number of, revocations and suspensions was 530. Of \these cases, 234 will require proof of financial responsibility before ap- plications for new licenses will be considered. In New York city and vicinity there were 66 re- vocations and 2S1 suspensions, and in other parts of the state, 109 revocations and 114 suspen- sions. - In the Utica district there were 14 revocations and 20 suspensions: Revocations Driving while Intoxicated: Sept. -Bernard Shjjnnick, 6 State St., Potsdam; John B. Stevenson, Cbateaugay. Sept. 3—Wendell H. Mason, Arena; Daniel Whitty, Cherry Valley. Sept. 9—William Pegnlm, 9 E. Park Rd., Clinton; Joseph Perry. RFD, Water town; Louis Neverette, RFD, Norfolk. Sept 13—Alex Maykrryckl, 308 Henry St., Rome. Sept. 14—Paul C. Staple, 622 Armstrong Ave., Rome. Aug. 27—Morris Hood, Hallesboro. Aug. 30—Romeo H. Marlowe, 230 Park St., Tupper Lake. Leaving scene of accident with- out reporting: Sept. 2—Don Rubar, 47 George St.. Massena. Reckless driving: Sept. 10—Joseph L. Shean. RFD, Taberg. Sept. 11—Floyd Bodway, 17 Woodlawn Ave., Massena. Subscribe to the \Free Press.\ Only $1.60 yearly or Be the copy, oy carrier. LADIES — IF YOU WANT A Winter Coat or Suit THE REPRESENTATIVE OF Cratgletgft WILL RE AT Ginsberg's TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5 With Over 60 Garment*. II You Sw What You Want, (and Wo Know You Will) You Can Take It Right Along With You. For the Hard-to-Fit Figures, .SprcUl Measurements Will Be Taken. \What Are the Score* of Today's Game*?\ Intricate System Helps Crack Radio ^ \Sportscaster\ Answer That Question \What are the scores of today's games?\ That's the question which turns literally millions of American sport fans to their radios almost every evening of the year. Even dinner must wait while the ardent fan twirls the dials for the latest flashes from along the firing lines of football, baseball, golf, tennis Journal office In the downtown section of the city, Mr. Lomax's assistants relay them by telephone to the WOR studio In midtown several miles away, where he makes ready to go \on. the air.\ There the Transradio News tele- type also brings late flashes. And during the progress of the nffceen- minuto broadcast still other re- As \SportMMt er\ Lomax (be- low) t h • a I r,\ h I • staff of helpers (sbove), with telephones, get •lilt initiate\ scores for broad- oast and other contests. Find out the. suits are relayed by telephone scores he must without delay, j and teletype, assistants at the While the arrival of newspapers | atll dio enabling him to continue will later give him more complete | wixhaut interruption of the pro- details, he wants the scores and highlights of the games \hot off 1 the gridttle\ from his favorite sports announcers. How are these Increasingly popular sports broadcasts ar- ranged T How has it been pos- sible for the announcer at a studio In New York state, for example, to give his audience the Saturday night results of more than 200 football games, throughout the country a short time after they have been completed, In some in- stances only a few seconds after the final whistles have blown? How can this be done without the- slightest Interruption of the pro- gram? Stan Lomax, the \sportscaster\ of radio station WOR, who has a large following of fans In this section of the country, explains the necessity of extensive prepara- tions and activities \backstage\ providing his daily broadcast REMEMBER, TOO — EVERY 'CraigleigJ) Garment is wrinkle- proof, rain-resistant WAIT UNTIL O<TT. 5 TO BI'Y A COAT YOU'LL \LIVE\ IN! Ginsberg's TUPPER LAKE from the station's studlo^Jn New York city. It is by no means a \one-man proposition,\ for he utilizes a well-organized staff of assistants. Tabulators with local and long distance telephone serv- ice, telegraph, and teletype at their command help speed the results of the far-flung contests to the announcer at the microphone. ^ The \sportseaster\ relies great- ly on rapid communications facili- ties, and especially on Saturdays at the height of the football season when extensive wire links are needed to cover some 250 games in time for his broadcast, which occurs at 7 o'cloclcin the evening. The main center of communica- tion in preparing the program is at Mr. Lomax's office in the quar- ters of the New York Evening Journal, where he is also a sports writer. There' with a staff of four men, including his secretary, he arranges a chart of T.he games scheduled with blanks to be filled in as the scores come in. At each college or school where the con- test is held someone has been au- thorized in advance to send in a report on the game. Frequently the coaches themselves agree to do thisV From forty to as high 'as ninety- flve per cent of the results are flashed by long distance telephone to the headquarters for tabulation, the remainder being transmitted by telegraph and teletype. Prac- tically all the scores of contests in nearby territory, including New York state, New Jersey, Pennsyl- vania, Connecticut and Massa- chusetts, arc telephoned,- while distant games all the way to the West Coast are frequently thus reported, particularly if they hap- pen to end near the deadline for the broadcast. Ordinarily as the late scores of sports contests come in at the But on Saturdays, the big day during the football season, Mr. Lomax generally attends Important games in person, announces for his radio station during the game, then rushes to a hotel nearby where he broadcasts the scores from all over the country. There he Is linked by \remote control\— a telephone circuit to the broad- casting studio in New York, and also by a special long distance cir- cuit to his office downtown in the city where the scores are relayed to him by telephone. Six of the Yale games at New Haven and two of the University of Pennsyl- vania games at Philadelphia were thus attended last fall and the \sportscaster\ broadcasts made from those cities. During the summer broadcasts of important'baseball games, golf and tennis matches, the long, dis- tance lines also play a big part in up-to-minute coverage by the \sportscastef.\ Results of the baseball games at St. Louis, gen- erally ending about the time Mr Lomax goes \on \the air,\ are in- HOTEL SARANAC IS SOLD FOR $150,000 BUILT IN 1KM AT COST OF $796,000, 8ABANAC LAKE HOSTELRY GOJCS UNDER HAMMER TUESDAY — WAS HEAVILY MORTOAQKD The Hotel Saranac, built In the heydey of Saranac Lake for $760,- 000, was sold at public auction Tuesday morning for $160,000* to Mrs. Rita Marshall Snider, widow of the\ nationally known hotel broker whose spectacular career started when he rode Ms bicycle into Saranac inn for a Job. He lived to own that resort and hun- dreds of other widely known hotels throughout this and other states. Marshall, financed the Hotel Saranac for nearly $000,000 and on Tuesday his widow, now the wife oi William T. Snider, Newburgh lawyer, purchased the hotel to satisfy mortgages of $275,000 and Interest arrearage that brought the Indebtedness up to $860,625. Four bids were made before George Moore of Malone, referee In the foreclosure action declared the hotel sold to Mrs. Bolder. Judge Joseph Roesch, attorney for the Delaware and Hudson railroad, opened the bidding with $100,000. Mrs. 8tanley Parker bid $110.- 000. Mrs. Balder bid $115,000. It looked as though the competition would be keen so Referee Moore permitted a five minute recess at the request of Mrs. Snider. Mrs. Parker, who is the wife of Stanley Parker, owner of the Alta Vista lodge, local private sanatoria, made a. hasty telephone call. When the bidding was resumed, Mrs. Parker stated she was not inter- ested further. F. Ferris Hewitt representing the Hotel Saranac corporation, bid $148,000. Mrs. Snider bid $150,000 which stop- ped all further bidding. Mrs. Snider will make no change In the management of the'hotel. Frederick Smith, present man- ager, will remain as will all other employes. The Hotel Saranac was built in 1926 and opened In 1927, a period when Saranac Lake thrived on thousands of dollars poured Into the village weekly by the federal government for the care of its tubercular former soldiers. Marshall's financing of the hotel included a first and second mort- gage. At a later reorganization lie reduced his mortgages to the present amount. Public Service Commission Rules that \ Municipal Electric Plants Must Pay 6 % Interest on Deposits Made by Consumers variably relayed to the studio' by telephone. Beaver Born in Tank Truck—That's News! Albany, Sept. 29,-When babies are born in street cars that con- stitutes news. But when beavers are born in a truck.that provides * real eyebrow lifter. That's exactly what happened in a special state Conservation Department tank truck, accord- ing to James Covey, one of the state beaver trappers, today. The now proud parent had been trap- ped * in an area where beaver damage was reported, and was being transported to her new home on an upper New York game refuge when the event occurred. Mama and her kits are doing nicely in their new habitat, Covey asserted. CIVIL SERVICE OPENING For, ANIMAL HUSBANDMAN 'Loyalty Days' to Be Observed Oct. 2,3, in America's Churches United States Civil Service Commission has announced an open competitive examination as follows: Principal animal husbandman. $5,600 a year. Bureau of Animal Industry, Department of Agricul- ture. Full information may be ob- tained from the secretary of the United States Civil Service Board of Examiners at the locaJ, post- office. Subscribe to the \Free Press.\ Only $1.50 yearly or 5c the copy. The National Committee for Religion and Welfare Recovery announced yesterday that plans were nearlng completion for the observance of Loyalty Days next Saturday and Sunday In countless churches and synagogues through- out the country. Observance of Loyalty Days, designed to stimulate attendance at houses of worship on those days, has the official support of the President, the Governors of some twenty states and innum- erable fraternal, religious, wel- fare and civic organizations. The committee sponsoring the observance Is composed of more than 400 Catholics, Protestants and Jews, \united for the pur- pose of meeting the present-day sweep of secularism, materialism and racial and religious prejudice by bringing the minds and hearts of men back to the consciousness of the fatherhood of God. the brotherhood of man, the sanctions of religion, loyalty to and support of our religious institutions and the worship of God in church and synagogue.\ Governor Lehman's proclama- tion for the observance of Loyalty Days follows: \The National Committee fo> Religion and Welfare' Recovery has Initiated the observance of Loyalty Days — a constructive, educational and co-operative In- ter-falth effort to mobilize the spiritual forces of the nation, and has dedicated Saturday, Oct. 2 and Sunday, Oct. 3, to this high purpose with which. I am in hearty accord. \Now therefore, I, Herbert Lehman, Governor of the State of New York, endorse and commend this observance by the designa- tion of such days as Loyalty Days and urge the people of the state to attend their respective houses of worship. With faith, prayer and hope we shall strengthen our devotion to God and country and rekindle Interest in our civil ob- ligations.\ Albany, Sept. 2».—The Public Service Commission baa ordered «U municipal electric plants In New York state to pay the legal six per cent interest rate to all who have made deposits to secure payment for electric service and to credit such Interest on bills at regular two-year Intervals. The order also provides that the amount of deposit which a muni- cipal electric plant may require shall not exceed the estimate of two months' bills. The Interest on deposits required by municipal utilities is to be credited on bills rendered after October 1st of each odd number- ed year and paid to the depositor if the deposit is returned prior to that time, according to the Com- mission's order. It is also provid- ed by the order that municipalities now requiring deposits shall credit depositors with all accumulated interest on the deposits at the rate now allowed by the municipal- ity, to November 1, 1937, on the next bill rendered after December 1. 1937- The Commission's rules governing requirement of de- posits by municipal electric plants become effective November 1, 1937 and continue in effect for three years unless otherwise ordered by the Commission. The order of the Commission is the result of a proceeding which It Instituted on its motion to In quire into the rules, regulations, methods and practices of • various municipal plants with respect to consumers' deposits. From time to time various municipalities operating electric plants have fil- ed revisions to their rate schedules tn^iriny changes In the rate of in- terest to be paid on\ consumers' deposits. The Commission's investigation showed a wide variation In the practices followed by the 62 muni- cipalities operating electric plants in New York state. The moat common practice, it was shown, is to require a deposit from every non-property owner, 29 of the S2 plants following this procedure. Four plants required deposits from every customer and 12 re- quired deposits when deemed necessary. Seven of the 52 muni- cipal plants do not require de- posits. Of the 54 municipalities requir- ing deposits 19 had a fixed amount of $5.00 for residential customers. The most common practice for non-residential customers is to re- quire a deposit equal to an esti- mated two months' bill but not leas than $6.00. The practices of other municipal plants varied gremtly. The rate of interest paid by the various municipalities varied from nothing to six per cent with 19 of the group paying this higher amount. Of the 45 requiring de- posits, eleven paid vJF Interest. WE INVITE YOU to taste the new SONNY BOY DONUTS The picture on the left shows you how these delicious dough- nut', are m:\de. They are e,xperUy blended and cooked In a *anitur> gliuts enclosed automatic doughnut mae.hlne without one« l»elng touched by human hands. Wntoh this remarkable machine at work In the Gold Medal Bakery window. Buy a paekago tod.iy from your grocers! Look for the \Seal r of Tested Quality.\ FOOTBALL STANDINGS IN THE NORTHERN LEAGUE L. 0 0- 0 0 1 1 1 1 P.C 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000 .000 Team W. Massena 1 OgderisbUrg 1 Potsdam 1 Saranac Lake .... 1 Tupper Lake .... 0 Malone 0 Canton 0 Gouverneur 0 Results Saturday Massena 30, Canton 0. Ogdensburg 38, Tupper Lake 0. Potsdam 33, Gouverneur 0. Saranac Lake 19, Malone 7. Games This Saturday Saranac Lake at Tupper Lake. Ogdensburg at Masaena. Gouverneur at Canton. Potsdam at Malone. Of the 34 that paid interest, 14 paid only when the deposit was returned to the customer, ten paid periodically and eight paid on de- mand. \ v A report of the Commission baaed on evidence submitted by the municipalities at a public hearing concludes that ''It does not teem unreasonable, in the light of the evidence presented, to require a uniform practice on the part of municipalities similar to that required of private cor- by the legislature under y thrf^Transportation Corporations Law.\ AUSABLE FORKS, PT. HENRY P. O. PROJECTS \OUT\ SEVEN NORTH COUNTRY POSTOFFICE PROJECTS ELIMINATED FROM FEDER- AL BUILDING PROGRAM FOR NEXT THREE YEARS A Washington news dispatch •tales' that the postomce projects for Ausable Forks, Chatham, Phllmont, Port Henry, Schenec- tady (Scotia branch), Valatie and Warrensburg have been eliminated from the Federal building program for the next three years. A complete program for the three-year period has been ap- proved and funds for it have been allotted, leavingSip money avail- able and none to come for the •even projects, officials said. The seven new • postoffices were favored in a report sent to the House appropriations committee ^earlier this year by the treasury department. The proposed esti- mate of cost of the projects fol- low: Ausable Forks, {70,000; Chatham, $75,000; Philmont, $70.- 000; Port Henry, $70,000; Schen- ectady's Scotia branch, $80,000; Valatie, $70,000, and Warrensburg $70,000. Up until this year, congress has authorized at each session enough money to cover the Federal build- ing program for the following year. This year, however, a three- year $70,000,000 program was au- thorized Only $23,000400 for new buildings was actually appro- priated, but the treasury and postomce departments were told to frame their three-year program, get it under way, and come back to congress for more money next year and the year after, to make up the full $70,000,000. Shelving of the seven projects in the Albany area under this or- der does not mean the need for the new buildlrigs Is no longer recognized, but simply that $70,- 000,000 worth of more urgent projects were found, officials said. Saranac Lake Lost $1,834 on Ball Team . During Past Season Saranac Lake, Sept. 29 -The future of baseball In Saranac Lake was a subject of much dis- cussion here today following the report of the baseball committee to the village board of trustees on Monday night which showed a deficit of ,$1,834 for the past season. This figure is a drop of approximately $1,000 from, the deficit for the previous season which amounted to $2,900. ITS GETTING MORE POPULAR EVERY DAY — THAT DELICIOUS Italian Spaghetti COOKED REAL-OLD ITALIAN HTYLE, WITH HOT SAUSAGE AND ITALIAN BREAD! — And Here's Another Dtsfe That'll % Faat-Urowlng Favorite Here In Tupper — VEAL CUTLET OOOKED THE WAY YOU LIKE IT, WITH FRENCH FRIED POTATOES AND ITALIAN MAl'CK Sotnetalag New la Delirious Specials, Cooked in the Italian Style, as OsUy a. Good Itarilaa Chef Kaewi How, Every Day at DAN'S GRILL Depot St, Faust — Next to Lyrtc Theatre ORDERS PREPARED TO TAKE OUT — PHONE t»7 \Missing a Chance to Buy a Good Cow HELPED ME DECIDE TO PUT MY TELEPHONE BACK\ \Last Fall one of my best cows was taken out of production because of mastitis. I needed another producer to replace her, so I put an td in the paper tnd spread the word around to dairymen in the neighborhood that I was in the market for a high-class Holstein.. \In tnswer to the »d I had a letter that sounded good, but the cow for sale was 25 miles away, tnd we were busy filling the silo. The next - day I drove over tnd found that she had just been sold at a bargain price. The farmer said he would have called me to see if I was in- terested, but I didn't have a telephone. \Right then and there, I decided to have my telephone put back. It's been a big help to me in running this farm too. It saves me lots of trips to town, and is always there to protect the family and my stock if there should be an emer- gency.\ # A telephone on the farm more than payt its way in tht time and money it saves. In addition, it's a real comfort to the family. The next time you're hi town we'll he gl'\i to see you at the Business Office and sfiow how little jam telephone service really costs. NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY