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PAGE FOUR THE ADVANCE-NEWS TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 22, 1930 •**^ THE ADVANCE-NEWS 136 PHONES 137 Daily Tabloid Newspaper Published Every Week Day Morning Except Monday by THE OGDENSBURG ADVANCE CO., Inc. Home Owned Newspaper Dedicated To The Principles Of Fair Pla> For All The People Be They Ever So Humble (Entered at the Ogdensburg Postoffice as second-class matter) COMMERCIAL PRINTING The OGDENSBURG ADVANCE CO. Is Equipped With Every Modern Device To Do Fine Commercial Printing Expeditiously And At Reasonable Prices In Large Or Small Quantities. SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL ONF YEAR SIX MONTHS THREE MONTHS _ $300 _ $2.00 _ $1.50 Delivered by Carrier in City of Ogdensburg TEN CENTS PER WEEK MEETING A MODERN NEED In a country which boasts 70 per cent of all the motor ve- hicles in the world, school instruction in careful driving can. not be deemed an educational superfluity. Such is the opin- ion of the authorities of the McDonough school near Balti- more. In this establishment, we learn, eighty-four boys are en- rolled in the third annual class in safe driving at the school. Of the twenty-one who passed the course last year, not one •has been involved in an accident of any kind. Training is carried past.the book learning stage. Boys of fifteen are permitted to enroll in the course and thirty .two weeks are required for complete instruction. The first few weeks are spent in the classroom, the next part of the course is given in the school shop where eight cars are mounted on stationary blocks. Students learn the proper placement of hands and feet and the manipulation of controls. A gravel driving course supplies the later tests, and final instruction is given in an eight-hour tour of Baltimore with the student driving. Critics of this auxiliary system of instruction may chal- lenge it as a waste of school time. But this objection fails to the ground when we reflect that it is a cautionary step to g uard against future sacrifice of human victims. The use of the automobile is a tremendous and growing factor in our American life. There is nothing bold or eccentric in reason. trig that youth should be trained to contribute as far as pos- sible to reducing the danger that goes with this phenomenal development of highway travel. TURKEY'S NEW RULER The late Kemal Attaturk went far in modernizing Turkey; and now European speculation will be rife regarding the capacity of his successor, General Ismet Inonu, to continue his work with the same boldness and enterprise. The father of Ismet was a high official functionary under the old Suit- ante, but his son was trained at a military school in Constan- tinople and was already a captain at the time of the Turkish revolution of 1908. Ismet won his spurs in the World War, when Turkey was fighting on the side of Germany. He was then promoted to chief of staff, and in time be was the re- cipient of higher military honors. It is further related that during the war Ismet received decorations from the two Kaisers for his services in the field. After the war he served as assistant minister of war, and lat- er he joined Mustapha Kemal in the national movement which resulted in the overthrow of the Sultanate. But Ismet has been distinguished as a diplomat as well as a soldier. At the Lausanne conference, he held his own with the assembled statesmen, and obtained a treaty which brought him a reward in the form of an appointment to be first prime minister of the Turkish Republic. Ismet is credited with the general political philosophy, and even some of the personal traits and eccentricities, of his pre- decessor. A study of his record indicates a significant dis- similarity between the two—that is, the new ruler's 1< etl democratic tendencies. Mrs. Dons Duke Cromwell, richest girl in the world who will inhi i it between $10,000,000 and $150,000,000 on her thir- tieth birthday, has readied England looking: for bargains in furniture. If the dealers recognize her, she is probably doom- ed to disappointment. The long-distance niegs, and only a few forecasters are having their weeks will prove how definitely many of them are. Funeral Of C. D. Kelly At St. John's Funeral services for Clarence D. Kelly. 48. who died at Hepburn hospital Sunday morning at 11:30 after an illness of nine months, will be held at St. John's church this afternoon at 2 o'clock. Inter- ment will be made in Ogdensburg cemetery. Mr. Kelly, who was an engineer on the New York Cen- tral railroad, was born in Ogdens- burg Sept. 28. 1890, the son of the late Daniel Kelly, and Mrs. S. A. Jones of Watertown. He was a member of the Brotherhood of Railway Engineers. On Sept. 28, 1911 he married Miss Mabel John- son. Surviving besides his wife and mother, are six sons. Clarence H. Kelly, Watertown; William Kel- ELMORirS COLUMNl SENTENCE SUSPENDED Charles Cummings. who was ar- rested Sunday on a charge of pub- lic intoxication and disorderly conduct, ijled guilty to the charge in city court before Judge John H. Wells yesterday morning. A 30-day sentence in the county jail was suspended. ly. Pittsburgh; Edward. George, Francis and Walter Kelly, Og- densburg. four daughters. Mrs. Mary Gagnon, Mabel Anna, and Iva Kelly. Ogdensburg: one broth- er. Vermy Kelly, Akron, N. Y., and two sisters, Mrs. George Fox, Prescott, and Mrs. Robert Lattim, Mount Vernon, N. Y. Mr. Kelly was well known in railroad circles and was held in high esteem by his fellow workers who will extend their sympathy to the family. ind the Seen in HOLLYWOOD By HARRISON CARROLL Copyright, 18S8 Kiac Fratnres Syndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD. — Harry K. Thaw's $100 tips used to be the talk of Broadway, but around the M-G-M barber shop he would get a piker rating. Out of one of the shops* fancy chairs stepped Spencer Tracy the other day. He paid his check and then turned to Car] Renner. his good friend and the man who has been cutting his hair for five years. \Kere CUxr!:,\ he said, gTinning. \here's a tip for you.\ The tip was a slip of paper pre- senting Renner with Miss Susie and Strangeways, tv.o brood marer whose colts have raced to many a victory on the California tracks of an historic Hollywood vehicle As cameras ground this week, the gold-leaf coach used by Gloria Swanson in \Zaza and by Mary Pickford, Loretta Young and doz- ens of other stars in the last 15 years, was driven off a cliff at the Uplifter's ranch and smashed tc bits as it hit the rocks below. The scene—a thrill for 4 Thc Three Musketeers.'* MY DEAR ELMER: Monday and what a beautful day. Ewn Old General Fund was swelled with pride after the donations made in the wee small hours of Sunday morning. Talk about Grant taking Richmond. The Boys in Blue took the town by storm, and before they had con- cluded their visitations the sta- tion house was full of humming hunmanity. Many of the faces were so very red. but the color of their money was what Ls known and described as the Long Green, and not one of the many had a suggestion as to what to do with the city mar- yet. It was sort of a cosmopoli- tan crowd. There were many \visiting firemen.\ They paid, too. A couple of the boys from out of town made a terrible beef because they didn't get a receipt for their fives. Said where they came from it was customary for the coppers to give receipts for fines and bail bonds, but didn't get any here. They said they wanted receipts so they could put the amount on their \expense\ accounts for the firms they pretended to repre- sent. They beefed but weren't too insistent. Well, nothing ever happens in the Burgo. No not much. Even squirrels get mixed up in the traffic. Spencer Tracy In all the talk Hollywood has overlooked the person most vitally concerned in the fate of the new Charlie Chan series starring Sid- ney Toler. Thia is Mrs. Earl Derr Biggers, widow of the author who created the Chinese detective. For. amazing as it seems. Big- gers* posthumous earnings on Iiis brain child hare exceeded what lie got during his life time. Biggers wrote only five novels featuring his Oriental sleuth. But \Charlie Chan in Honolulu,\ in which Toter makes his debut, will be the nineteenth picture based on the character. Biggers died in 1933. Since then. his widow has received $7,500 for every picture, or $22.50© a year The radio version of Charlie Chan has added another $500 a v.~eck and, now, Charlie also is the hero of a comic strip. Easy to guess who will be To!- er's strongest rooter as he carries on in the new series. Nineteen-year-old Bud Richards, a member of the labor gang at th: Warner Brothers studio, will tel you it's true that anything car happen in Hollywood. As Rich ards-was trundling a wheelbarro-. on tie lot, he was hailed by v excited man. Fifteen minutes laU he frond himself in the wardrob department donning one of En Flynn's costumes for \Dod^c City Orry Kcliy. studio designer, h: spotted Richards as a physic double for Flynn. With the st- in Honolulu unable to try on cc tumes, the wardrobe departme had b?en in a dither. Richar solved the problem. He said goc by to his wheelbarrow and serv- es a tailor's model for al! • Flyims clothes m the pictr: Now. Richards has gone to Modec to join the company on location. Eleanor Powell is still lookir for the si:>ye2r-okl oiphan boy . adopt She and her mother a ; having prospects out to the hou t in relays—two every Sunday. You may be able to bani«h th* fear of sontarn in the near future. Fere Weatnwre. head of the War- department, has de- that be believes win give the weare? absolute protec- tion front the scotching rays that bring fan—cut to those with sensi- tive skins. The best part of it as that the cream is Tirtuafly imns- wife. to Springs to give the furnraki every, sort of test on her fair skin This haft the first tune that Miss j Dickson has served her husband's interests. When she had t operation to boh on* the tip of* filmed the A few words to note the passiKt Ona Munson wifl arrive on ti. coast with the bathing suits of ha the Russian ballet . . . Last yea: when the troupe arrived here z the end of a Ion- tour, the moth. had had a ficl day . . . Jo: HoJges aiv' Lr* Bowman adm: 10 tteies jn l\v. weeks . . . Perar, S i ngleton : mother has ha a relapse an-i ; Hood transfu- sion in a Phifc* delphia hospit? ... Gloria Toungbiood saw Rudy Valiee off to San Francac* - . Hear Rudy is much smitte: with Merle Oberon whom he mr at the Catted Artists stntho . GoMwyn thinks he has a anger 15-year-old Evaner . She* hens; ouieth The new leKe-Vie*. theater here is tonippul with th theater teats invented by Ala* Hale and his partner . . . Jur~ l«gat the Tropics two nights i? a row with Qarwoad Van . Where was Don Berry? . . . Th Ed Lowes are nannuul to hav« patched it to hot he was at lh Hocre of Murphy alone. Sunday morning when the town was emerging from its slumber and the early risers were reading the headlines, the usual early crowd was assemb- led around the B. C. A big gray squirrel scampered to the com- er to see what was going on evidently, and 'fore he knowed what was going on a dog hove into sight, and squirrel took for the nearest upright. He went up a metal lamp post^tt the corn- er where the traffic signal box is hooked thereto, and he must have knowed that it wasn't the usual thing he was climbing. because he skidded on the way up and leaped to the cluster light and there he was as an unusual Sunday morning crowd gathered. Boys were hustling to their paper routes. People were hustling to early church. More people were hustling to get their morning paper and all the time Mr. Gray Squirrel was hustling to get out of the way of the traffic He didn't find the perch- ing on the big light-globe any too comfortable, but he hung on the best he could, and then all of a sudden he slipped and down through space he went and very near landed on the shoulder of an early morning citizen. He went to the pave- ment with something of a light thud, got on his four feet, and just as one of them pointer dogs came around the corner, he put on all speed available, and with tail in the air shot North on State from where the man looks up, and just made the big elm tree near the park as the point- er dog got through with his pointing and went to work. The squirrel saved his hide by the width of his tail, and the crowd which had gathered at the cor- ner went on about the business of the day. It was that much excitement about which you hear much and team nothing. Then there was some other excitement around yesterday, but could learn nothing much except there was a terrific lot of forfeiting up around the Hall of Echoe* yesterday morning and when it was all over the books showed a neat balance of more than five I—bed Cs.