{ title: 'The Advance-news. (Ogdensburg, N.Y.) 1933-1935, December 15, 1933, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071106/1933-12-15/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071106/1933-12-15/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071106/1933-12-15/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071106/1933-12-15/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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v report and to trans* al business was call- sday afternoon, otetl to st*nd a chet-k Potsdam tire Uepait^ letter of thanks, iu tion for the prompt 1 for help sent from, rtment on tne ni^ht hotel fire, when the nen answered wills heir apparatus. » eat on record as op- ange of the date ot in first class vil- ly 1 to March 1, be* » fiscal year but fav- z the date of the be- ? fiscal year to J»dv ct with the collection hoo! tax. board will command uference on its stand n of the distribution d its proposal In r«- ribution of revenue .iquor. * •eived from Massena lean Legion, by May- as read in which the, nded the local police y Sergt. William F. Officer Darwiu Sha- ir stand in law en* d their recent action he law. :king ds Higher ices on Mart K. Dec. 13.—Stocks r today with profit is were considerably derma nbonds -while; med. dosing quota- u 21 1-2 »1 14ti 1-4 97 7-s 1 120 14 7-K 74 3-4* 73 1-2 T»4 1-2 rks 12 1-& 3« 1-8 24- T»-8 a — ific 12 7-S* 0 7f» 1-8 38 1-2 tt * 511-2 W — 89 1-2 ak M 3-4* ight T» 3-8 trie 20 1-4 rs 34 . >d 36 3-4 ber 1 14 p sr» r>-8 4 7-S' rn 21 3-4 :al \*- Nickel 21 \-\ 14 3-4 Harvester 41 3-8 R 15 Ward 25 1-r Mid * *-* •od 13 1-4 Hit 48 1-4. . .\ 3* 1-8 ight \ « can - - 1* **^ Hr *~ 1-* fle 4^ 3-4 7W J *« 1% 1« 3-4 7 3-S « 44 * 42 « 1 — 1< 4 1-J Ipfcar 42 l4 ^<»*ndrv ** M *• Steel 4* 7* Steel Pfd --- *« 41 1-2 w York C*rb & 12 - 1 7-* *7-* Civil Works Jobs Will Continue Until March I VJSfC WS A HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER FOR OGDENSBURG AND THE NORTH COUNTRY VOL. 1—Xn. £><; <><;i>K\snrn<;. x. v.. FKII>AY. DKCKMUKK I:>. VXV.'. I'IMCK •'« $12,000 Distributed to Local Workers aMaB ^ a ^ HBBaa i M ^ H ^^ iaBaMn ^^ BiaM ^ __ aMMMaMMMnaMii^aMaMMBai mmmm^^^immmmmmmmm^m^^m^m^^m^m^mmmmmmmmmm «»«MBMHHMMMMaBMaHBBMBaHMMni LINDBERGHS ARRIVE AT SAN JUAN AFTER BIG HOP CIVIL WORKS CORPS WILL MAINTAIN ITS FORCES TO MARCH 1 WASHINGTON. Dec. 14.—Con-'northward with the spring weath- er. The $4HtMHMUH>0 set aside from the public works fund together with about $l«HM>O0.oii0 from the emergency relief fund will be suf- ficient to carry the Civil Works Corps through March 1. Mr. Hop- kins believes. The President will ask Congress to appropriate $3r.o.- «HHi.O00 more to pay the workers through 'March and April. C.W.A.Men Were Paid Yesterday $12,000 Distributed to Work- ers—New Disbursing Ag- ents Monday. Federal chocks amounting to $12,ooo were distributed to S.'iO C. tinuance of the Civil Works Corps until May 1 has been recommended to President Koosevelt by Harry L. Hopkins, administrator. For the purpose of budget-mak-j ing. Mr. Hopkins laid details of his plans before the President this week. The full contingent of 4,- ooo.ooO to be reached by Saturday, will be carried until March 1. The next two months thereafter willj In making his report to the Pres- «ee a gradual tapering down of j Went. Mr. Hopkins gave special i ™«« ™ ^ the corps until dissolution on May Commendation to the way local au-' 3. Mayor Renews Assault On Superintendent of Schools Says He Is Going to Try to Have His Salary Cut from $416 a Month to $200 Next Year. Mayor It. J. on the stage in ihe city auditorium late yesterday afternoon and ad- dressed the 85t> assembled C. W. A. workers before the pay-off beuan. \\\ A. workmen at the city hall j He expressed regret that there had It is expected that a fuller ex- penditure of public works allot- ments by that date, together with the coming of warm weather, will make the emergency support of the workers now carried on civil m-orks rolls unnecessary. President Roosevelt said today. Inasmuch as warm gather will begin in the South about March 1. workers there will probably be the first to be let off civil works jobs with theK ,eld agents as paymasters for civil disbanding process extending thoritie? have received the civil works scheme and the speed \with which they have worked during the last month to till the quotas assigned to them. Paying the workers each Satur- day in thousands of communities scattered all over the United States is setting a record in dis- bursing operations for the Treas- ury. The veterans* administra- tion has tent the services of its been delay in the arrival of the fed- eral checks and stated that he had done everything 1 in his power to remedy the situation, as he knew the men were badly in need of funds. He said he wa.< looking out works employees. Savs R. F. A. Being Repaid * At Rate $2,000,000 a Day CHICA(X). I>ec. 14.—!>eclaring , -er financial aw! program than that j Eight Are Killed In Bus Crash School Children Meet Death in Grade Crossing Accident in Florida. yesterday afternoon, beginning at \> o'clock. The money had been overdue since last week. The city auditorium was filled to capacity and many men who get into room wait- until their names were called. The checks were prepared by City Treasxirer M. M. Morse, who has been acting as federal disbursing agent, and were distributed by C. W. A. IM- rector Arthur Fleet ham assisted by Mayor Morissette, Aldermen Elie and Lynch and Officer James Brown. There will be another pay-off to- day or tomorrow. 'Mayor Morissette announced that beginning next Monday Clark M. Bowman and Karl F. Quinlan will take over the duties of federal disbursing agents. He stated that the city clerk and • he city treasurer had so much work to do in connection with their | ren **\ere killed and a score of regular duties that it was neces- 'Others injured, some of them cri- sury to employ Messrs. Bowman And Quinlan. now being undertaken- Borrowers Meet Bills 4 Interest received to date ha* ex- ceeded expenses and interest pa*d the operations of the RFC to date had given unmistakable evidence j that \government business can be ^H^veSST.^^^ \*l F1 'y from Trinidad to San ,uan recovery program,\ Mr. J esse H.J not the taxpayers are footing the Lindberghs Near Home Morissette appeared ' for the interests of the unemployed. at all times and declared that when the C. W. A. quota wa.< cut recently to 271 h*- immediately hastened ic Syracuse to comer with the offi- cials and succeeded in having the number put back at the former fig- ure of •>•><». At this point the mayor renewed his attack on Superintendent ot Schools Arthur J. Laidlaw. whom he had criticised the previous night during a meeting of the cit> coun- cil. Alter repeating some ot the •statements concerning the school head which he made on that uveas ion t he declared that he was 'Voin:; after *'tliis highly salaried OiTicial*' in an effort to have his ;»ay reduc- ed next year. He said the super- intendent was receiving a salaiy of $41K a month, including the vaca- tion period, and declared that this was more than \some of you men v.ith large families have earned ir an entire year.\ **1 am going to see that his salary is reduced to $2«*> a month and even that is too CRESCENT CITY. Fla.. Dec. 14. much.\ Mr. Morissette added. \I Eight element a ry school child-; *ant you to help me in this mat- ter. You can do a lot of talking. He mas not born here.** At this point there were cries from the au ^*jdicnv-e. ~Put h»m out.** Resuming h>s remarks, the mayor said. \I will fight for you as long as >ou tieally, when a freight train crash- school bus in i riding near here this ed into the school bus in which Jones, chairman of the RFC, re- ported last night to western manu- facturers on the. present financial status of the operations and a*ked for their support of an expanded program. \Notwithstanding the fact that we are a generous creditor ami that *o»e people think that many of onr loans mill never he repaid. • bin.** Mr. Jones continued. Liquor Flowing to U. S. in Small Lots -Leave for Miami day. To- they mere morning. Frantic and hysterical parents searched the wreckage for their loved ones and many fainted at the scene of the crash lost three children. Tonight the snrvivors told of the crash in halting sentence and with tear-stained eyes. ~\V> were all talking and laughing in the bus.\ said one boy,\ All of a sadden stand by me. 1 am with you and i want you to stirk with me as long as I am right. I am uoiking ei^ht een hours a day for the < »iy ant do. One mother | not get a red cent for my sen ices, nor do I expect it. This is m\ t;^ht. Horn- man y of you are with nieT There was a shout of approval an«t the mayor thanked The men and strode off the il'age. !<arg«» quantities of Canadian whisky are said to have been mov- _ 1. oar collections have averaged $- ,inc steadily across the border into 3*mjm# a day *or tne past nine ta ^ |- B j|^ States dnring the past month*, ii* lading Sundays, andlag frw ^ T ^ Numerous permit* i*- Mr Jone? IOMJ^'** 1 \™* 10 * authorities •**« *U«t- >r* of the Illinois Manu j *m*«* to date. of $+**.*****' the mei fartnrers' AS**K int*n *t the tieth ajnattvernary dinner. This new* fac- ed the comparatively norement across the line, it learned. The permits are mostly tk~ and^e^rTnThld'-ntiT tbae fate a substantial >i*«^^ n^aTiT^em** n* the* *te«- encdm* to one Weal dmtflfcr. ed to->5r_ J««ie< p**une » Mill lar- J-Things are mmi** Tery SAN JTAN, Puerto Rico. I*ec. j there was a terriffic crash and I 14.—Colonel and Mrs. Charles A.|cou4d hear the ringing of a bell. Lindbergh arrived here at 1: 4^ this i w<* were all thrown out.\ afternoon after a leisurely flight of X». R. Niles. elderly driver of the 7*»* miles from Trinidad. bus, said that be did not see or Tonight they are the guests of bear the train. A heary fojc hung Acting <Governor and Mrs. Benja- ovw the countryside and undoubt- min J. Horton at the official state edly obscured his vision, boose. The engineer of the train said The coloned spent tiie remain- j that he rang the bell of the loco- der of the afternoon after he set i motive and biew his whistle on an- 'his red monopiau* down on the lo- j Broaching the crossing, cal harbor in a check up on the motor in preparation for the 1.*!** mile hop to Miami. Florida which i way* win start at < a. m. |f« I indhuiln expect to arrive jainumd the withhi the next few days front their extended light in the interests of the PanvAmiiirni Air-|**ai) and com me re ill ahr lines. Iroquois Suspect Held for Robberv hich has carried them to half way] gat hi i if, data for in the possible OTTAWA. IV«. 14.—Allien Sn-v- <~nson alias Arthur ll^id. of .Xlouci Royal, Que., arrested*at Iroquois oc a charre of vacran<-y on T«i*-*iay and held as a suspect in the sluing of Johnny Co|»j>. Toronto athlete Ion Nov. 2**. was idt-ntu'it-d tod:»y as John Rnssell. abas Johnny Ru-st'li. said to be wanted >n Toronto cu a rharze of robb<ry whu> armed. ldentificaliuui was made by Pro- linria! Countable fPrank Itos,-. of Jloni^burg. ;hr«nrh n circular «*ra4> J.ent by the Toroati *mm+mf*mrm