THE HANCOCK HERALD 23/Hancock NY Herald/H… · Wayne County farmer, shot and kill->ed his wife,...
Transcript of THE HANCOCK HERALD 23/Hancock NY Herald/H… · Wayne County farmer, shot and kill->ed his wife,...
est of tvery dollar w»
IS OUR QUOTA for VICTORY with
U.S. WAR BONDS THE HANCOCK HERALD
The Largest Circulation of any Independent Paper Published in Delaware County
MAfTE EVERY P A T B A T
WAR BOND DAY
STOP s?iM5me—urn DOLUS
V O L . «9 THE HANCOCK HERALD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1942 NO. 24
Harvey Hadden Kills Self and Wife NearRileyyiDe,Pa. Tragedy in Presence of Family
Gathering Sunday
DRS. GUTIERREZ AND PHELPS TO JOIN ARMY
NBIGHBORHOOD SHOCKED
Honesdale Police Say Hadden Had
Dr. Carlos Gutierrez, who has been practicing in Deposit and Cannons-ville for several years, has been commissioned a captain in the medical corps, and expects to leave for active duty Sept . 28th.
Dr. Joseph Phelps expects to leave within a few weeks.
Loss of Dr . Gutierrez and Dr . Phelps leaves Dr . C. M. Axtell and Dr . C. V . Latimer as Deposit's only
SupervisorsWaive Arrears Penalties On 0. kW. Debt! Except Interest Paid by County,
To Cover Arrears
WILL BID ON DOWNSVILLE DAM
_ _ . , . )physicians. Both Dr . Axtell and Dr . Not Been Drinking . u ' , - <.>
{Latimer have sons m the army. Harvey Hadden, 45, Rileyville,
W a y n e County farmer, shot and kill->ed his wife, Marjorie, 40, and then tu rned the gun on himself, inflicting mor ta l , wounds. Hadden was found i n two feet of water on Upper Dy-ber ry Creek about 600 feet from the Hadden farm house. The double killi ng was on Sunday.
| Sidney Allison Dies in Service
Liberty Gunner's Mate 6th Sullivan Man to Die
Coroner Vernon B.Walsh of Hones-\ Sullivan county recorded its sixth da le was hastily summoned. B e s a i d [ * a t a l casualty of World War Two Fri-i t was a plain case of murder and j * * ™th d i s c i o s u r e o f * » death in
ARREARS MAY BE PAID
-suicide. action som< er*here in the Pacific* of
m. Ralph T. Haas,
_ ' i . 7^-j. •;;-••• r?„ ••.- ,, i Sidney Elr«y Allison, 26, a gunner 's Ten relatives had gathered at the: . * Y, , . . * , ,,
_ , , * _f._ .,, . . m a t e , second-class, serving with the Hadden home near RileyviHe, a b o a t ; P a c i f i e FleeU
n ine miles north of Honesdale and; . „ - , * . , . • « « • j » ! „ C-J , , „ . , . _ . , ~, i Allison s parents , Mr . and Mrs.Sid-
a b o u t 10 miles from BjmnnnK. They ; ^ ^ . ^ rf ^ ? ^ ^ ^ were chatting peacefully when ^ { g ^ f r o m t f l e N Department conversation turned to Hadden s sin-1 _, , •. ,• . ., . „ > , , - . .„ : , , , j _ , . , i Thursaay tha t their son-had been kill-^ e - b a r r e l e a shotgun, : which w a s ; ^ .Q ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ rf ^ e n g a g e . leaning against a door j amb . 1 ^ ^ w h i c h h e l o s t m Me ^ ^
Suddenly Hadden picked up t b e | not revealed. " ^ u n , inserted a shell of t he single-ball | A m emor ia l service for the dead type used in deer hunt ing , and fired; ^ ^ ^ w a s conducted at the Liberty point blank at his wife, who was sit- j Presbyterian church at 2:30 p t i ng about four feet away. jSunday by the Rev
As she fell to the floor, Hadden; the pastor, r a n out of the door and two more; 'Allison enlisted in the Navy Decern-shots were %eard. Apparently t he .be r 29th, 1937, and had been on ac^ first shot missed and the second tore j tive duty until his death. His last away the left side of Hadden's face, j visit home was on Thanksgiving Day, ^ S t a t e motor police followed a trail j i9g8. The last letter his family re-
of blood along Upper Dyberry River; ceived from him was dated June about 600 feet, where they found Had-123d of this year and bore the stamp •den, d e a d , , on his hands and knees! of the Fleet Post Office, Pearl Har-in about two feet of water . i DOr, Hawaii.
The Honesdale motor police follow- % He was born at Livingston Manor •ed up the murder and suicide, and ; October 6th, 1916. In addition to his found that Hadden, a highway, em- \ parents ,other survivors are twin bro-ployee, and his wife had quarreled. . the r s r Myron and Harold, aged four-T h e wife worked a t a Whi te Mills: teen; a third brother, Carl; all a t g a r m e n t factory; Mrs . Hadden resthome; and three sisters, Louise, at t u rned to her home on Sunday morn-, home; M r s . Eugene Muhile and Mrs .
Elbert N. Oakes Discusses $2,000,000-Arrears Debt
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The Delaware County Board of Su-' pervisors on Monday at a special meeting passed a resolution which; provides for waiving of penalties and: interest charges on back taxes owed ' to the eight "railroad" towns in the county by the New York, Ontario & Western Railroad, following appear-; ance of the attorney for the railroad's', trustee before the board.
The waiver does not include inter-, est paid by the County Treasurer onj money borrowed by the county on•; the assumption tha t the arrears are a collectible, valid claim.
In urging the waiving of penalties and interest charges on the railroad's back taxes, Elbert N . Oak^s,'counsel for Frederic E . Lyford, trustee for; the railroad, told the board that the! W e e k of S e p t . 27 - O c t . 3d railroad would continue operation for i " S a l u t e T o O u r H e r o e s " at least t he duration of the war .
He added tha t if the road's business ] continues to be as good as i t is now,
Samuel R. Rosoff "All Set'* |6,800 Busy at To Bid on the Building of the \ Bendix Scintilla
Downsville $40,000,000 Dam Says Rosoff: "When This Job is Let, I Will, if God Spares
Me, Pu t in a Bid"—$200,000 Regarded as a Low Price for the Right of Way at the
Downsville Dam. Samuel R. Rosoff, just completing $19,000,000 contract for a 13%-
Sidney Plant Seventy Per Cent Are "Commu
ters" Living Outside Village
SGT. MANGAN HERE MON.
Rotary Governor Visits Local Club
i foot tunnel 15 miles long in the Ker-honkson, Ulster county, area for the City of New York, tells the Herald
{that he bidder for
Traffic Methods And Rubber Shortage Discussed
Sidney Bendix Scintilla workers now number 6,800 and the payroll is steadily increasing -as the corporation
ore and more munitions. the j turns out
"Pick a War Project It," Says W. Bert Lacasse
W. Bert Lacasse, of Syracuse,! Mr . Rosoff s announced decision to j ware County War Transportation | Governor of theJL22d district, Rotary | d i s m a n t l e ^^ g j t n e Delaware & I Committee, in position to have exact
Northern Railroad, seven miles of i knowledge. Seventy per cent of the
will be a a n d T)n • £ > o w n s v u l e $40,000,000 dam, the main j The figures were revealed on Mon-*i~1'" | reservoir of the $300,000,000 Dela- |day night a t the Village Hall b y E .
iware Water Supply. i F . VanHorn, chairman of the Dela-
Intemational , in his official visit to j the Hancock Club last evening t o l d | w h i c h a r e ^ ^ T o w n o f Hancock | employes live outside Sidney. its members to '"pick a war project j ^ n i n g C ut of East Branch, i s a n i m - j John L . Jaycox, captain of
CapitoMheatre To Sell War Bonds
and do it; its your opportunity as a | _ o ; r t a n + Rotarian and you obligation as a citi- j takinCT
the-
zen ," he said.
H. D . English, manager of. the Capitol Theatre announces Hancock's
I "Salute To 6ur Heroes" week, Sun-the company may be able^to discharge: d a y ? g ^ . 2 7 ^ S a f e t y , 0 c t . 3rd,
inclusive, at which time War Bonds'; may be purchased a t the theatre.
its tax arrears debt—approximately; $2,000,000—within four or five years. '
The board also passed a resolution '• which prohibits a person whose property is up for auction a t a tax sale | to buy i t back a t a price which is; lower than the amount of taxes and | fees he owes on the property.
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Our boys' must have the best, and | they must have plenty of it—and! fast! Speak up by buying war bonds to the fullest extent your income will i permit. j
Friday, Oct. 3rd , will be Mothers'! Night. Mothers wi th sons or daugh-; ters in service will b e admitted free.
essential step in t he under- j Auxiliary Police in the town of Han-The Board of Water Supply! cock, called a special meeting of the
j has had from 20 to 36 surveyors on j auxiliary policemen at the town hall I the Downsville Dam project for about I on Monday evening. Outside speak-jtwo years. Their map-making is s o ' e r s were Sgt. Thomas J . Mangan of far along that the City of New York [Troop C, State Police, and head of can at an early day follow their! the traffic division and Mr. Van work up by advertising for the con-!Horn. The Sergeant brought with struction of a diversion tunnel , the j him state and county maps which removal of graves from cemeteries j had been especially made to desig-between " Downsville and Margaret-1 nate military highways throughout ville and a survey for new highways ' the state,. He said: above the water line between Downs- \ "When the time comes for such ville and Margaretsville. The H<-rald ; troop movement local motorists are asked Mr. Rosoff about two specific j warned to "keep off" the military features:— ! routes. The army trucks will tra-
A possible bid by him for the \ vel two abreast, requiring full width Downsville Dam. of the highways. When the. military
His retention and operation for per-!; police tell you to stop, n o matter
i ng t h e day of the t ragedy. The^ farnily "wai* having a Kttfe
ga ther ing before the Sunday dinner, which had not yet been prepared. In t h e room with Mr. and M r s . Hadden in addition to their two sons, Eugene a n d David, and their son-in-law,Lawrence Glover, and Glover's infant daugh te r , were their daughter , Mrs. Grace Glover, 20, and three other daughters , Dorothy, 11; Merle, 9,and Be t ty , 7.
There had been family squabbles, police said they were informed, andj
Herman Krauspe, both of Liberty.
New $2,700,000 I. B. M. Plant
! Cornerstone Saturday With Lily Pons, James Melton Helping The International Business Machine
J Corporation's $2,700,000 addition j was dedicated Saturday at Endicott with Thomas J . Watson, George F .
on occasion Hadden had been heard;Johnson, captains of industry, and to threaten his wife's life. J Lily Pons and James Melton, nation-
Hadden, they said, was arrested j ally known opera stars, assisting in ~six weeks ago as a hit and run motor- \ the most elaborate cornerstone pro^ is t . .His car* had crashed into t h e ' g r a m ever presented in the Triple machine of Mrs. Jennie Parish,West ; Cities. S t ree t , Honesdale, on Pa rk Street, ] Vincent J . Smith, Binghamton con-Honesdale. He had been arrested; t ractor , erected the .huge air-condi-a n d indicted and was awaiting trial . ; tioned s t ructure in seven months. Hadden was the son of t he la te George and .Adelaide Brown Hadden. He had rented the home in which the family lived since last March. They did not work on the fa rm howeyer. The place is near Cold Spring and RileyvUle.
Del. Co. Doctors DineWithScintilla?
Free theatre tickets will be given | with every bond purchased. The spec-
W. Bert Lacasse "Pan-Americanism is the major par t
where you are, do so. The army must move and you will probably get in trouble if you don't obey.
"If the army were coming through
P l a n t M a n a g e r s A s k T h e i r C o o p - ; iai offer appears on page 6 of this is-eration For Duration Is^e-
_; ,. _ . _„ , J All men in service;, home on fur-The big BendixScmt i l la plant a t ; ^ ^ ^ ^ rf ^ ^ ^
Sidney, m t h 6,800 employes, a n d J m e n t ^ ^ ^ ^ Q^ ^ ^
Dishwasher Good Dishwasher Bad
more and more o t them, gett ing h u r t ; w . %Q flgn^-and sick under the pressure^of vpar; work, had nearly 40 Delaware county doctors breaking bread with the plant managers on Tuesday night a t the plant between 6:30 and 8:00 o'clock.
After dinner the doctors, in squads: of six or eight, were shown over the; P h i l i p K u p c z i a n a i n plant, it taking about two hours to make the rounds. Only a few of the county doctors were missing in. the round-up. Courtesies were extended by Drs . Ralph Loomis and Elliott Danforth of Sidney. From Hancock were Dr . F . M. Woolsey, Dr . L . E . Woolsey and Dr . D . RfTDavidson.
There are 44 doctors in the county, and seven have entered U . S services, tated by disabilities. About 30 -ere
Isonal and sentimental reasons of a^ section of the D . & N . between *Tai-! garetvilie and Arkville.
Mr. Rosoff says: T W W4~*»c „ • ™ r t « ^ in tni* * « « \ 0 t OUT P ™ ^ 1 3 1 ' " s a i d t b e ^ < e a k e r ' "WThen this job (Downsville Dam) jthey would get in touch with Albany, xhis includes ail motners m tnis area, t u,,* <.].- w „ _ i,.,, i.__„0.i,1. -mon-o- mam? . - .,, ... ,-, % i- -•• - .« —- -» ^ J „ . . - - _ _ „ _ - out tne war nas orougnt many, m a n y ^ ^ j w i U ^ ^ G o < j s p a r e s m e j p u t ! who would pass the information down
opportunities—we have as a c l u b i ^ a b i d _ „ * j the line, contacting auxiliary police done much, we have been leaders, | ^ far ^ retaining a m i l e of the?in the county. The men would be
;sponsored_ and financed many things j D _ & N_ Rayj.03,3 ^ ^ ^ ^ Margaret-1 advised when to take their posts. ville and Arkville, this is up to the!Then rfs up to him to contact the Interstate Commerce Commission. ' town, the county. Then Albany of-The Government is very much in need j ficials would decide which way t o re-of scrap and I shall do all I possibly \ route traffic. A division moving out
—but as Rotarians let's face the chall e n g e of today; don't merely give | money give time, thought and energy j—and keep up the good record—Its (bur duty as Rotar ians ."
Governor Lacasse spoke of the international assembly meetings and
Jail For Robbing Good Wong Chong Sullivan County meets up with all
sorts of dishwashers—mostly good dishwashers, but along came a bad one- by the name of Philip Kupcziana, 49, of Columbus, Ohio. Philip and Wong Chong washed dishes at
can to cooperate." j would cover about 100 miles of high-Mr. Rosoffs disposal of "certain(way and would require about 3 %
property" (doubtless meaning what 'hours to pass a given point , riding told how thoroughly the programs for ^ d t y n e e d s - b e t w e e n Downsville? two abreast ," said Mangan. Route 97
| the m ;anyj?rejects s p o n s o r e d ^ Ro- j a ^ M a rga re tvu le occupied by tbe D . [has been designated as a military ~ _.._ „ . „.„,. „ „„_.„„ „„ ^ ^ v ^ §200,000 is regarded by! highway while route 17 is military
as a most reasonable] only west of Hancock, sum, compared with what t he city E . F . Van Horn, chairman of the paid more than 20 years ago for a | Delaware County War Transportation somewhat similar r ight of way own-
( Continued on page 2)
! tary International was planned and j carried out, foremost of which was ^ . ^ ^ j Pan-Americanism.
This was the Governor's fourteenth j club visit since taking office last Julv-
Hancock Folks Short of Coffee
LIBERTY H. S- COULDN'T GET EXPERT, TOOK CARPENTER I making i t next year,
I:
I t will house 3,000 workers. The I . B . M . Corporation has several War Defense contracts.
With the reunion of two great industrialists—George F . Johnson and Thomas J . Watson—featuring the event, the cornerstone of the most
Mrs . Hadderl was the daughter of; recent addition to the International Ezra Van Orden and the late Myrtle; Business Machines Corporation's Just in Van Orden. j Endicott plant was laid, Mr. Wat-
In addition to the four d a u g h t e r s ' s o n welding the trowel, already., listed is another daughter , ; From o p e m n g t o ^ o s i n g - 1 5 min^ .g u ^ -Adelaide, Washington, D . C. The j utes ahead of schedule-event follow-1 u ^ _ J_ ^ ^ frnm ^ . ^ ^ ^ P°h^± l^ Tl^l
war
the Hotel Premier , South Fallsburgh.; Philip walked off with all of Wong's j Grocers Say Not Enough to
. hard-earned possessions. Trooper; S u p p l y C u s t o m e r s FoUT.°T. '"e 25? : n c . £ p a C "" ; Robert Denman overtook Philip andj Hancock grocers all say the same j teacher" will be Kenneth Roosa
tbe suitcase and it was well fee did. ; thing, namely, they are unable to e r t y c a r p e n t e r , who will have charge ^.P- „_- ^ a n t o V T h H o u n t v ^ s ^ b u t ^ W h a t P h i H p a l m O S t g 0 t a W a y w i t h —igeW:of fee to supply customers' d e - , 0 f woodworking and carpentry in the is not likely to get that many. The Army officers would like to reduce
Committee, emphasized the seriousness of the rubber situation. . "Regardless of what the synthetic production may be, and they will be
i t will not be I before 1944 or 1945 that anyone, un-
War-time conditions today shatter-j less it is essential to the war indus-ed precedent in Liberty H i g h School t ry , will be able to legally buy a tire when David E . Panebaker, supervis- for his automobile," said the speaking principal, reached into "non- e r . teaching" ranks for a teacher. The! Mr. Van Horn reviewed the rubbei
Lib- shortage situation for the past year . He said the Army and Navy , after a reallv active. The Army wants a
TIWU' • r i u n P a m w ^ ^ a w a y W I t u — ! geW^oaee to supply customers a e - , 0 f woodworking and carpentry in the survey, said they would need 1,000,-but not quite—mcmded Wong's §28; m a n d s . I industrial arts building, under a tern- 000 lbs.' of rubber a year. The Sgun in cash, a new S30 suit of clothes, a A Herald reporter- stopped at ha l f .pora ry one-year license, approved by 1 was finally cut to 850,000. In tbt new pair of expensive shoes, and; a d o z e n stores Monday and Tuesday, t be state education Separtment. Mr. !United States there was made up ii other clothing, S5 in war stamps,; a n d - received the same answer, name- R 0 0 s a , 43, is a former Liberty High: tires a b o u t 600,000 lbs. of rubber, gold bonds of tne Chinese Republic j l y : "We don't get enough week by School student, is married and the according to a nation-wide checkup.
A* t>« , - w of the i n^ r^ t i on on V 3 l a e < i Zt S 1 ° 5 a r ' d t w ° ^ ^ ° n t h e ; ^ e e k to supply the demand." ifather of several children. The un-At the close of the ^ j ^ t i o n j m j H o n g K o n g b r a n c h o f ^ N a t i o n a l ; Q n e o f ^ m e r c h a n t s ^ ^ ^ d 6 v e k ) p m e n t h a s ^ ^ o u t o f
the county doctors to about on© to; a township, but area physicians will; not sanction such an apportionment. \
totoS7e^pto^nd°^ ^ m " S ; C i t y B a n k ^ t h & *"* ™l™ ° f $ 2 ' ^ " C h a S e & S a n b o r n ' S W a g ° R U S e d to difficulty in obtain::,,- trained teach-mjured employes and gave them ad ](m e&ch H a r r y S c h w a r t 2 j 0 W R e r o f , e a v e ^ five j^jfr a ^ e k . Now, e r s , because of vlCG- | the Premier Hotel, had a suspicious o n account of rubber and tire short- Register .
Dr . Davidson of Hancock, w h o l e y e o n Philip and assisted in his ar- a g e the wagon comes once in two :
the war.—Liberty
live at home. Eugene lived Nick Upson, and David with Clark Blake, two nearby neighbors.
Hadden's survivors, besides children mentioned, are one brother, Ralph Hadden of Honesdale, R. D
cessor to the International Time Recording Company. From start to finish, there was never a lag in the activities, directed by Harry E.Stabler, president of the Greater Endicott
] stayed through the entire program, : r e s t - Wong thinks much better of erstanding' j ^ ^
is that ::.c i rors doctors from t h e ; n i s precious suitcase. Philip, behind ny i
[Navy work as the "saturation
two sons, Eugene and David, did not ed eve r t with the precision and tim- ( a n d ; t h e - b a r s i n M o r t , c e l f c jaiL has bit-with *nS tha t is a symbol of the IBM,sue-1 ~ - ""~ *"-•' - - --• -- —
has been reached. point t e r thoughts.
weeks, and we get five pounds, and no more. Up the line they say less coffee is being imported. I t is with; coffee now as i t was with sugar last fall. Now that rationing of sugar
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE!
:HONOR MARY SNYDER, DOWNSVILLE. FOR 4-H WORK
1; two Asters, Mrs. Dorothy Shuman, : Chamber of Commerce, sponsors of Roscoe, N . Y . , and Mrs . Eugene ' the affair. Seeley of Peckville- •. Mr. Stabler, acting as master of
Honesdale motor police say Had- : ceremonies, introduced the various den, although a drinking man, was speakers and presented Lily Pons and no t intoxicated when he killed his James Melton, stars of grand opera, wife and himself. • w h o scored with the upwards of 20,-^01^31 Building in Mitchell Avenue a t Ishanki tunk, ' "Delaware county 4-H
The bodies were taken to the Wal-jOOO persons attending, either as par- 8:55 p . m. ; c l u D c a m P ) ' Fraser. next summer. t e r Steelman Funeral '"" ' " " '"""-" ~" -—"'•--Park Street, Honesdale
MAYOR HOPKINS OF BINGHAMTON SERIOUSLY ILL
! Mary Snyder, outstanding in 4-H; Mayor Fancher M.Hopkins of B i n g - i c l u b w o r k i n r> e] a w a r© county, was
hamton was stricken with a hear t at- ' c r o w n e d 4-H champion of the town; -tack at his home Monday night. H i s ; o f Colchester, at the annual 4-H fair condition is serious. i a n d victory garden show Wednesday
Be has been under an oxygen tent; o f l a s t w e e k i n the DownsviUe school. ' since his admission to Doctors Me-. s ! l e w i l l r e c e i v e a free week at
I t has been brought to t he attention of the Salvage Committee that a large percentage of people that
has cut down the normal demand the have scrap metal are under the im-supply is about equal to the demand pression that the junk dealers are and nearly everyone gets enough getting this metal given to them, sugar to get along. Probably it will. The committee would like to make be that way with coffee. There is a it clear that any metal taken to any pronounced shortage at present, bu t . salvage yard is paid for to the party in a few weeks, under a reduced de- who it belongs to, or if the party
Home, 313 ticipants or witnesses. Mr. Stabler in his introduction of
___ ; Thomas J . Watson,president of IBM, LIBERTY DROPS O. & W . , spoke of him as "one of the world's
$125,600 TO 833,100 greatest industrialists" here with "our , , own beloved George F . " (Refering
At a special-meeting Friday night, ' to George F . Johnson, shoe manu-t h e Liberty village board voted to r e^ : f a c tu re r . ) duce assessment of the Ontario &\ Mr. Watson drew cheers from the Western Railroad in the village from"Crowd when,visibly shaken,he said, $125,000 to $33,100 for the tax year of 1942. The lowered assessments is for that one year only, and as a result of the action taken, the railroad will discontinue the certiorari action brought against the village. The action was filed late last year when the board failed to make any reduction when requested to do so on grievance day.—Register.
"Mr. George F . , I want to express not only my appreciation for your presence here, but my love and affection for you ."
The mayor was taken to the h o s - j s h e h a s accomplished noteworthy jpital by his physician, Dr. Samuel w o r k during the year, according to | L . Ailerton, accompanied by M r s . j J o h n A Lennox^ Delhi, Delaware j Hopkins. 'county 4-H club agent.
-After he had had dinner on Mon-1 I day evening he suffered the severe TOP HONORS AT ; attack at 8:30 p . m . , DELHI 4-H FAIR
The mayor suffered a similar at tack; — • (in 1939, the year he was elected to Maiy Klukkert and Lynwood Clark ; the office of councilman from the , were crowned homemaking and agri-Second Ward , and three years prior j culture champions, respectively at the
mand and no hoarding, there will be coffee to meet normal consumption."
In Scranton coffee and tea have been put on the one pound per per-, son basis and independent and chain store operators say that this may stop heavy hoarding. Grocers' supplies are reduced 33 per cent.
wishes to donate i t , it can be turned over either to the Red Cross or American Legion.
The Committee.
j EILY WRIGHT, WALTON. GETS $2,072.72 FOR ARM
to his election as mayor.
—If you know the address of a service man from the town of Hancock, send i t to the Herald Office at once. He will receive the Hancock Herald free for one year.
STARRUCCA DEER PICK APPLES
Four deer spent Monday quietly feeding in the meadow near W m . rancher ' s . They seem to be tame
. and keep the apples picked in the j Fancher orchard. —Starrucca Cor.
annual 4-H school fair in Delhi last week. Scores of awards of excellent, good, and worthy were given for exhibits of vegetables, clothing,and craftwork. The two champions will each be given a free week at 4-H camp next summer.
THE F. N. CONLON STORE
We have a fine line of ladies' new fall gloves in wine-brown black-fabric leather pigtex—sizes six and a half to eight. See the attractive Flor-
An award of $2,072.72 for loss of ence Walsh dickeys guaranteed by part of his teft arm in an accident Good Housekeeping. A new line of was granted to Eily Wright , Walton, ; gift handkerchiefs is on display. at recent workmen's compensation; The F . N . Conlon Store. hearing held in Walton last week be- j fore referee C . ' W . Gray.
—Pittsburgh Paints at Krafts.
Other claimants receiving awards were: Charles Cummin gs, $44.06; Fred C.Brady, $190; Howard Knapp, $75; Paul E . Gransbury, $217; William Pearsall, $217; William C. Burns, $359; Kenneth Harr is , $187.50; William E . Cranston, $187.50, and Jud-
; son Brush, $225.
HONESDALE LUTHERAN PASTOR RETIRES AFTER 25 YEARS
Rev. W. F . Heldt, who has been pastor of St. John's Ev . Lutheran church, Honesdale,the past 25 years, announced his retirement from active ministry, at the morning service, Sunday.
The scrap rubber drive netted abou 500,000 lbs. With the tremendous in crease in Army and Navy demands estimated by 1943* to be th ree time that of the past year, means a de cided shortage. Today we have ai army of 4,000,000, in 1943 or 1944 i will be 13,000,000. And the ail planes and trucks, which vitally nee< rubber, will take all and more thai can possibly be made and salvaged i the United States.
Mr. Van Horn spoke of the car sharing plan which was working oo so well among Scintilla employees Surveys show that the percentage ha raised since last July from 2.6 to 4. meaning that where there were on and two riding to work in a car i July, now there were from four t five. Scintilla,which now employs aroun
6,800, 70 per cent of whom con mute, could put to work over 3,0C more, if the question of transports tion could be solved. People from distance cannot get to and froi work. The average distance now 40 miles both ways by an individual
"Delaware county's allotment c new-tires a year is 200. In the com ty are registered 10,000 cars and 2 700 trucks. The average car nee< VA tires a year. Thus today on] doctors and veterinarians are gettin new tires. Nurses,doctors and farn ers are allotted recaps ," he saic The quota of new tires for Delawai county for September was i 0 .
" I f s a serious situation," he sa;
in closing and urged every au' owner - conserve wherever possibl<
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Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069
www.fultonhistory.com