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Olean Evening Herald

   Olean Evening Herald (Newspaper) - January 28, 1922, Olean, New York                               FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS fair tonight Sunday except mow In extreme southeast portion moderate to fresh becoming and VOLUME XLIII TWO CENTS OLEAN NEW YORK SATURDAY EVENING JANUARY 28 1922 EIGHTEEN PAGES NUMBER Are Street Car Service Suspended While Pedestrians Struggle Knee Deep Through Snow o a depth of from a foot and a hall to two leet Street car service was suspended early today and were that all and otherwise would be greatly curtailed The storm did not come ed as for two or three days snow had been falling in the Atlantic states to the south of the Potomac river in some states such as Virgnia breaking long standing records as to depth Pennsylvania avenue here was strewn with the hulks wrecked automobiles WASHINGTON By The Associated Jan through several suburban sections hai states comprising the middle Atlantic were today buried being further buried under the heaviest snowfall since the long remembered blizzard of February of The storm which began with most unprecedented fails of snow in the Carolinas and Virginia Thursday was creeping up the coast leaving buried cities stalled trains disrupted service and a general pension of business In its wake It had reached the edge of New England early today although its center remained pit the Virginia Capes weather bureau re- ports showed and forecasts were lor snow today and tonight along the coast from New York north although not as heavy as that over the middle Atlantic section The blanket ot snow early today was tlw District ot snow many years held bin fall Baltimore in o'clock as an even two feet At that time it was still snowing and the weather bureau prediction for a also been suspended as the result of high tides Heavy seas are pounding the coast at Cape Henry Many dwellings at Willoughby Beach are threatened by high tides Several cottages are rounded by water and small boats are tied to porches Residents of sections of mouths best residential districts this morning were forced to wade several blocks on leaving their homes owing to the unusually high tide which covered the lower ends of Dinwiddie and North streets to a depth of over a foot in coast today stated that she had the disabled naval fuel ship in tow and had headed toward Hampton Roads BALTIMORE Jan of the A radio the guard cutter early ot the fall through the day and into the night Starting shortly before dusk evening the snow fell con- through the night and by midnight railways and trolley lines began From midnight until nine o'clock this morning no trains left the Capital and only three trom New York one west arrived Gathering the generally material after 9 little used snow fighting railroad officials shortly o'clock succeeded in getting out two trains the Pennsylvania Railroad and another over the more and Ohio from the north and hoped to continue intermittent vice during the day national capital itself street car service was practically suspended at day light but gradually service was restored on the trunk lines but sands of government employes were forced to struggle through snow most knee deep to the government de- while many others in out- lying and suburban sections took one look outside and decided to remain at home Pennsylvania avenue the Capitol's historic thoroughfare was strewn with abandoned automobiles though the snow fell with an absence a wind thereby preventing drifts the flakes tell so thick and fast ing the night that numerous accidents were reported and the police received several calls for aid to find persons believed to have lost their way In finding their homes NORFOLK Va Jan blow reaching a velocity ot 56 miles an hour early today crippled water trout here and practically pended shipping In Hampton Roads Part of the section of the city is under water and car traffic was at a standstill street car vice crippled and railroad serVice be- tween here and Washington except by the electric line was virtually suspended North and east of more however railroad traffic Con- ditions were declared to be nearly normal Heavy ice in the harbor tied up all traffic by water The American Railway Express company at noon announced an em- bargo on all perishable foodstuffs ant livestock out pj Baltimore WASHINGTON Jan ington was cut off from the outside world today so far as transportation was concerned by one of the heaviest snowstorms in the history of the capital Officials at the Union Station shortly before nine o'clock reported that no passenger trains had left Washington since midnight and with the snow continuing prospects ol getting any trains out was said to be poor Three trains had since midnight two from New long overdue and one Baltimore and Ohio express from Cincinnati Train service from the south where snowstorms Have been reported for two days and from which section the storm came was wholly suspended Several trains from the south were re- ported stalled between Richmond and Washington with others being held at Richmond Railroad officials were attempting to get a train comprising day coaches onry out before noon for Baltimore and possibly to Philadelphia and other points north Trains from the south were reported held up in yards between here and Baltimore and In the Maryland city It was the heaviest snowfall since the blizzard ot February when tiie fall was nearly three feet Starling lale yesterday afternoon and still continuing early today the snow had covered the national capital Except For Select Issues There Was A State fill Week By The Associated Press NEW YORK Jan from selected issues of the steel copper equipment oil and sugar groups most ot which have been mentioned in connection with consolidation trading in stock market this week was dull and uncertain A very large portion of the daily dealings centered around half a snore of issues including such recen favorites as Gulf States Steel son Chemical and several of the low priced motors and subsidiaries Rails were hesitant when not ir- regular although labor conditions better earnings and probability di a retention of prevailing freigh rates invited moderate buying of low grade issues The money market reflected im- pending demands from agricultural centers call loans again rising to 6 percent Most of the week's demand funds were placed at five percent or lower however with free supply of time funds for commerical paper and bank acceptances Foreign exchanges continued to express the uncertain state of European politics but a rise in re- to London and Paris was accompanied by reports that the British and French were coming together on important economic questions Another Chapter In Mife Of The Of Long Island By Associated Frets NEW YORK Jau daughter of the Jacques Lebaudy Emperor ot the has been married In Paris to Roger it was learned here today Lebaudy an eccentric figure was shot and killed by his wife three years ago when he attacked her and her daughter at the family borne in ANOTHER INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE DECIDED UPON ii FORMALLY AT ARMS MEET WASHINGTON AND SOUTH IN BLIZZARD Greatest Storm Since 99 Paralyzes Transportation Two Feet Of Snow Falling in National Capital No Trains Leave Union Station or TWJ Ben Hell of first Moral Bank of Wta By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH Pa Jan 28 Walter Joyce and Oren Graeme Long Island acquitted Mme Lebaudy yesterday bank of Crafton had been robbed and Harold Pittsburgh men arrested utter the First National From Oklahoma Charged With Shooting Officer Held in By The Associated Press BUFFALO N Y Jan iff D Robbins of Muskogee was in doubt today whether he would be waB Moss assistant cashier had been killed were today identified by bank employes as two of the party of dits who committed the crime me was pointed out by Frank King janitor of the bank as the man who shot Moss Seven persons taken In after the bank robbers had escaped from a party of city detectives who had in- them in the north side as they were returning from the scene of the robbery were lined up in tral police station with a number of other prisoners Employes ot the bank who witnessed the robbery looked them over and Joyce was ed out by five of them as one of the robbers King however was the only man to say he recognized Graeme He able to take back to Oklahoma Louis told the police that one of the H McShann a negro under dits climbed over the op of the ment here for alleged violation of tition separating the cashier's cage from the main banking room and that Graeme wa the man The the narcotic laws McShann is a federal prisoner and the United States attorney's office has not decided whether to try him or to surrender liim to Oklahoma McShann is wanted Muskogee on a charge ot shooting ah officer ers agreed that while they could not identify Graeme as the robber they did agree that the man who went over the partition was the one who at Moss Grandpa 107 Today After 54 Years Vigil as Gate Tender at Trinity Cemetery Centenarian drops to ground attending to Now at Bellvue By The Associated Press NEW YORK Jan three years Grandpa Jimmy ray stood at the gate of Trinity tery street and Amsterdam avenue and watched funerals enter He was 54 years old when he began his long vigil and today he too at the age of 107 was seemingly in the shadow of the gate he had opened so many times Yesterday there was an unusually heavy traffic through the cemetery gate and the aged man was forced to to and fro nearly all day Just before night came he collapsed He was hurried to Bellevue hospital but there held out little hope for bis recovery COLLECTING LOOSE ENDS IN ARBUCKLE CASE SAVE YOURSELF STEPS At a glance through this paper yon can sift out the things that intent you molt and in a moment you know when and whew to go for what yon want fl Figure how many much walking talking the advertisements thai save yon and your neighbors Jj Then yon realize the great economy and necessity of advertising in your daily life READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS Attempt To Derail Limited Trail Frustrated By Los Angeles Tim Associated Press LOS ANGELES Jan attempt lo derail the San Angeles Shore train of the Southern Pacific Railroad and pile it into a ravine 31 a was frustrated last night when Los Angeles police shot and seriously wounded Walter E a railroad switchman The police contend that son nailed a der'ailtr lo the track in an attempt lo the train cure a suree of money at from lo which was aboard Js by police lo bo wanted in Seattle Wash on of murder and by the authorities to ten charges of nal syndicalism Lady witness denies Miss Rappe was afflicted with a disorder of any nature The SAN Jan sel were determined today to get all ends of evidence out of the way in the second trial of on a charge of ter growing out of the death of Viriginia Rappe The last witness yesterday was Mrs Catherine Fox of Chicago who testified she had known Miss fince childhood She was called by the prosecution to refute Introduced hy the defence that Miss had had a disorder which caused her at times to faint shriek with pain and tear her clothes Mrs said she had never seen Miss Rappe ill or in pain The charges that Miss Happe died as a result of a bladder rupture caused when at- fier in Ms rooms at St AFTER FALLING Prominent Johnstown Citizen Dis- in Government vice Passed Away Today By The Associated Press JOHNSTOWN N Y Jan 28 James A Northrup 43 head of Northrup Glove Manufacturing com- pany one of the largest concerns in this city died early today in a New York hospital as a result of injuries sustained four weeks ago when he fell from a second story window at his home here Northrup was prominent In ness financial and fraternal circles and a member of several New York city clubs During the World War he served as major in the Air Service and was sent by from France to this country on two special missions His Manager Says He Ml Even to Meet in Europe By The Associated Press NEW YORK Jan Kearns manager for Jack said today that Promoter Tex ard might be asked to stage a return match between the world's heavy- weight boxing champion and Georges Carpentier in Europe next summer I have not approached said Kearns but the idea appeals to me as a way out ot a most un- usual situation Here I am witn the best fighter in the world on hands and I cannot find an to get him in the ring witn an opponent who appears to have enough chance to draw a paying crowd I know that there has been a lot ot talk in the newspapers about Dempsey meeting Wills Fulton and others but the point that I have yet to have a promoter come forward with a real offer for a match these men Ai I have said a dozen Dempesy is ready lo meet anyone who looks as though be would prove a real drawing card The champion is in fine condition and could box a match with 2 weeks training It necessary He is eager to set in- to the ring it a sutable opponent can be found for him I am going lo be in New York for a week or ten days and hope to have Dempsey matched for at least one bout before J return to the coast Eight now 1 have no particular man in fight 1 am going to see Tex to sea If I cannot interest him in an- other match for She champion He may be able lo suggest franc OTIC who looks like a good drawing card I believe that another bout be- tween and might go big abroad hut 1 would want to know that a reliable and experienced promoter was tarns to handle the thousand and one which Overrun With Dangerous i Hungarians Eat Gats By The Associated Press BUDAPEST Jan and mice are migrating from the Russian famine area and pest is now overrun with The market halls food stores and houses are swarming with the ro- dents which have become so that when disturbed they will turn and show fight Several chants have been recently bitten The situation Is aggravated by the dearth of cats In Hungary During the war when food was scarce thousands of families ate their cats Since then the increasing demand for cat fur as a cheap substitute for expensive furs has taken a further toll As a consequence the exorbitant of to krone is being offered for a kitten by shop keepers In some villages the peasants have given up poultry raising and have turned to the most business of cat breeding Shantung was principal of interest on today's dar in Washington By The Associated ROME Jan republic can members of the chamber ot de- are considering interpellation of Premier Bonomi upon the adi of the Italian government officially recognizing the Pope The attitude of the Sacred College of the church toward a is expected to be defined in Its of a successor to the late Pope dict The republican deputies became interested in the question when they learned that President de Nichola ot the chamber in accord with the policy intended to a eulogy for the late Pontiff when the chamber reconvenes on i February 2 which is also the data on which the Sacred College will convene to choose the new Pope newspapers published the statement thit de Nichola and President Tittoni ot the senate were to announce cally from the tribunes of their re- houses the death of dict and pronounce a eulogy as is the custom following the death of foreign potentiates Immediately several demands for interpellations were placed upon de Nichola's desk one of which protested against what it termed the tion of the Vatican by tie visit of Signer Mauri minister of lure to the Holy See Conferences were held through- out the afternoon in which Premier Bonomi and Signers de Nichola Titoni endeavored to induce the to postpone or withdraw theif interpellations so as to of the late Pontiff unanimous Premier Bonomi having taken tog stand that he would associate self and the name of the government with the declaration Signer Nichola hoped that no orator nof any group will take the of marring the demonstration of sympathy which must be The Catholic party 110 votes and holding the balance nt power among the widely divergent elements composing the majority of the Italian chamber is in its desire that the eulogy be In the face of this de- termined attitude the are understood to be wavering and it is stated that they may not ly oppose tlis demonstration but content themselves with abstaining fiom voting upon or participating ill it Federal Prohibition Officials Named for Various States Today foreign promoters until Rickard re- fuses lo match Dempsey either here or abroad I Rickard declined to discuss the I proposition other than to say that he would listen to any suggestion Kearns might offer Mexico Minister to GauMa Says no Strained Relate Between Francis holel on September 5 last The defense contends Miss make or break such a match I died as a result of chronic certainly uot do any business vita Charles C Hook of Buffalo is the official from Western New York By The Associated Press WASHINGTON Jan 26 pointment of 27 federal prohibition officials in various states was an- today by Commissioner Haynes The appointees included Roy 0 Goodwin of Felicity Ohio General Prohibition Agent for the Slate ot Ohio Federal prohibition appointed New York C Hook Buffalo John J Gillen Syracuse Walter Walter S Mosher Canandaigua and Henry J Ryan James A Ryan and George W Zorsch all of Rochester CITY Jan of war between Mexico and mala were n lean official last as too to Luis Caballero Mexican minister lo Guatemala a leave of absence several ago it staled If he to return to Mexico this time it will be for that reason and not because of any relations between the two countries President Obregon nor General Francisco Serrano acting minister of war could be reached lasl night for an official government statement oa the rumors GREAT TO SELL BIO ISSUE OF By The Associate Press WASHINGTON Jan was granted the Great thern Railroad today by the Inter- Slate Commerce to snd sell in percent Sold bonds for the pose of paying off existing ness and adding lo the facilities on its line The issue will he sold at Paper and envelopes lo match in or unusual shapes artistically printed at Tit   

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