The Pittsburgh Press from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (2024)

TWO TTant Ad Headquarters, Court 4909 Other Press Departments, Court "209 WEDNESDAY, MAY 16 TWO SLUGGINGS. THE PITTSBURGH PRESS. South Side Central Spellers Spare No Words in Avenging Defeat FIVE OF 6 MEN SUPPORTED BY M'N AIR BEATEN Mayor Captures Second-Place 'Honors' in Race For Governor LOSS OF VOTES, MARI(PRIMARY State, County and City Police Patrol Polls On 'Quief Day COMMISSION IS BUSY ii. i By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN WASHINGTON All this marching and counter-marching up and down Pennsylvania Avenue over silver inflation can be summed up in one word politics.

Behind the clamorous agitation stands a small band of Senators from Western mining states, most of whom are up for re-election and quaking in their boots over their extremely uncertain chances. PAYROLLERS AID HIM But in his shy, quiet way he can deliver devastating blows. The other day there came to his office a delegation of Puerto Rican sugar barons. They were typical of a class which has prorpereo at the expense of the majoritv of the people. While starvation has stalked through Puerto Kico more than any other American possession, they were Meek, at and prosperous.

The object of the visit carefully disguised, of course was to persuade Wallace to permit Jiem to grab off the major share of the processing tax. which the government, under the recently enacted Sugar Act, will pay back to U. S. growers. The callers were sonorously in- ET 1 i i Central Pupils Win City Spelling Crown Park Place School Girl Takes Singles Championship as South Side Team Fights Through Two Overtime Word Sessions Briefly, this is the story: Nevada's Democratic Key Pitt-man, with 20 years Senate service; Utah's Democratic Mormon, William H.

King, with 15 years, and Montana's Massachusetts-born Democratic-Progressive, Burton K. Wheeler, with 12 years the most vocal of the silverites face ominous up-hill fights. Enactment of a good strong silver-boosting bill would enhance their re-election chances enormously. Senator Bill Borah, Idaho; Alva Adams, Colorado, and Elmer Thomas. Oklahoma; while not up for re-election this year, hail from states where silver is a live issue.

By joining in the agitation they are piling up political capital for future use. The President is fully aware of these facts. In the numerous conferences between him and the group it has been freely discussed. He has assured them he is anxious to do something for them The question is how to do so without opening the flood gates of currency inflation a dangerous expedient he has so far adamantly resisted. Permissive or Mandatory THE specific issue is over mandatory or permissive silver remonetization.

The President is flatly opposed to the former. If by any chance. highly remote, such a bill should be jammed through Congress, he would be certain to veto it. He has told this bluntly to the silverites. They, however, grimly insist on a compulsory bill.

To his offer to accept permissive remonetization, with the pledged assurance gradually to increase silver coverage of currency from the present 12 per cent to approximately 30 per cent, they turn a deaf ear. Only compulsory remonetization will satisfy them meet their urgent political needs. At a White House conference last week they put this bluntly up to the President. "Permissive legislation is all right for you, Mr. President," said.

Borah. "But how about us? We can't go back to our people and ay we gave the power to decide -o a President who doesn't believe us we do on this question." "Well, you Can never tell," smiled the President persuasively. "I might change my mind." "You might," shot back Borah, unconvinced. "And then again. you might not Rapier Thrust HENRY AGARD WALLACE, Secretary of Agriculture, is not given to vehement language.

(Cop.vrieht. 19.34 by i 4rv A Battering down a stubborn one point handicap, a Central spelling team tied up the score in the last regular round, forced the defending South Side champions to-two extra periods, and came through to a i three-point victory to capture the city spelling championship last night. The victory of the Central team in the fourth annual spelling contest I 1-f i .1 fluorescence, and i "subservient," City Employes Ballot for Moritz and Their City Hall Chief Mayor William N. McNair ventured into yesterday's Democratic i primaries with six candidacies, including his own, and came out with a Congressional nominee and empty second-place "honors" for himself. The City Hall payroll evidently marched to the polls in force and balloted for the Mayor and his secretary-police magistrate, Theodore i L.

Moritz, candidate for a Demo- cratic Congressional nomination Mr. McNair, "stunt" candidate for the Democratic nomination for Gov- ernor, polled most of his votes In city wards well populated by pay- rollers. Name Finally Dropped Outside the city he ran poorly, and outside the county he was so far behind unofficial tabulators dropped his name from the list. His vote outside Allegheny County was estimated at 15,000. Reports from 499 of the county's 944 districts gave Mr.

McNair 11,442 votes for Governor, while the party's nominee, George H. Earle. polled 26,194 in the same districts. The Mayor ran well ahead of Judge Eugene C. Bonniwell and Judge Charles D.

Copeland in Allegheny County. Mr. Moritz had a lead of 1,700 over Dr. Marion McKay, Pitt professor, with nearly all the returns reported in the Thirty-second Dis- trict. Other candidates sponsored by the Mayor were badly defeated.

Available returns gave Francis X. McCulloch lawyer backed by the Mayor for Democratic county chair- man iess tnan one-sixth the votes polled by Chairman David L. Law- rence, re-elected. Frank Policastro, McNair candi- datp fnr tVl t- was won by Edward R. Frey, chief clerk in the office of City Treasurer James P.

Kirk. Mr. Frey had the indorsem*nt of the Democratic organization. I Harry A. Eigenrauch, McNair candidate for the State Senate in the Forty-fourth District, collected approximately one-fifth the ballots of the leader.

BABCOGK GIVES PARK TO WEST VIRGINIANS Babco*ck to the West Virginia Conservation Commisison as a park. The site is owned by the Babco*ck Coal fc co*ke Company, of which Mr. Babco*ck is president. The sec tion has been referred to as the "Switzerland of the United States." Mr. Babco*ck explained that West Virginia, far behind Pennsylvania and New York in conservation work, will be able to use the land as a nucleus for three proposed state parks.

Several hundded CCC workers will be put to work soon to clear the land. ENDS OWN LIFE "unicameral knocked down four third District. was out of the run. more Central contestants Six ni on th earliest misses! South Side looked good lorjswamped with the rest of the field a Congressman Henry Ellenbogen. But the words weren getting any 6 easier.

The South Siders were met Office Employe Far Behind with a barrage of "implicitly's," i John C. Davis, employe of the "vicissitudes." and "presbyopias." all Mayor's office, was hundreds of of which scored knock-outs. Then votes behind the leaders in the race tricky little "audal" floored Margaret for a Democratic nomination to the Guzzie and "doggerel" took William State Senate in the Thirty-eight Marrone into camo. Svdnev Robbins District. This contest apparently Atr ff Tmtln1 i i sponsored by The Press held at Schenley High School, upset the dope and the South Side applecart, for South Side had defeated the Central team last year in the preliminary brackets of the race.

The final score was Central, 187; South Side, 184. Of the twenty-four starters, only four three girls and a boy came through the team competition without a miss, ana qualified for the "singles" contest. They were Edith Rosenblatt and Betty Rose of Cen- tral, and Sydney Robbins and Louise Baggani of South Side. Miss Bag- gani, 8A Prospect student, triumphed over her three opponents, qualify- ing to meet Phyllis Buscheck of John Morrow and Ruth Zimmerman of Park Place, individual champions of the semi-finals, for the city lgles" championship. "singles In the later singles, Louise stum- bled over the in "blameable," Phyllis was floored by "forehead," and Ruth survived eight rounds of i posers to emerge, unscathed, the Pittsburgh scholastic champion speller for 1934.

Ruth is the daughter of Edward Zimmerman, of 546 East End Ave- miA ho nroe 1 1 1 run Trom Avenging: last year's defeat, the Central team trounced South Side in the finals of the fourth annual spelling marathon last night at Schenley High School, while Ruth Zimmerman of Park Place School won the individual championship from a field of 40.000 contestants. Above are the members of the winning team, with Dr. J. Freeman Guy, director of the contest. In the rear row are Hilda Kaplan, Betty Rose, Edith Tortorelli, Edith Rosenblatt, Emma Koman, Shirley Lipsey and Bertha Greenberg.

In the front row are Lawrence Weis-burg, Joseph Fernandez, Judith Feldman, Dr. Guy, Mary LaVelle and Irene Fellman. Below, Dr. Ben G. Graham, superintendent of schools, presents Ruth Zimmerman with a solid gold medal.

nunareas Find Mixup Registration Records; Court Fight Seen In Allegheny County balloted In Comparative peace yesterday, with only scattering reports of the customary troubles at polling places. Two men were slugged, a revolver was discharged near a voting place and small number of voters lost their right to ballot through confused or improper registration records as state and county police patrolled the county. Only two instances of violence at the closing of the polls the usual time for trouble in the "tough" lection districts was reported. City rolice, called to the polling place for the First District of the Sixth Ward: at 2818 Penn Avenue, shortly after 7 p. found George Dykman, 33.

of 2842 Spring Way. unconscious on the floor. Sarraf Supporter Slugged Witnesses said Dykman, a supporter of Dr. George J. Sarraf, candidate for Legislature in the Sixth District, had been slugged and kicked during- an altercation.

He was treated at West Penn Hospital for severe lacerations of the head and face. Louis Werner. 40, of 1507 Hatteras Street, North Side, was arrested following a gunshot outside a school at Hatteras Street and McClean Street, where polls for the Eighth District of the Twenty-fourth Ward were set up. Members of the election board Claimed that Werner broke into the I room last night with demands for "an honest count." He was ejected from the room and a shot was heard outside. Police claim they found a revolver on Werner and a bullet hole in the sidewalk.

He was held for court today by Magistrate Howard B. Mcnu*tt. Quiet in Homestead Homestead, storm center in past elections, produced only one definite case of violence during the day. Charles R. Passafiume, overseer in the Fourth district of the Second ward, reported to Judge Thomas M.

Marshall in Common Pleas Court, with a tut over his left eye, sus-tined, he said, when he was ejected from the polling place. Passafiume said bystanders yelled "Shoot him," as he left the polls, and charged Dick Loadman, John Catalona, John Butler and Matt Hunter with violating election laws. Judge Marshall ordered the overseer to make informations against the men. Police Guard Ballots Since rumors of election thievery had besti heard- around Homestead all day, members of three police forces escorted the borough's ballot boxes to the County Elections Bu- reau after the votes had been count- ed. A state trooper, Captain W.

E. Rucker of the county police and Homestead patrolmen accompanied the ballot boxes to a safe landing in the County Office Building. Charges of illegal assistance to voters in the Fourth district or tne Cnr4 TXTot-rf VirrttierH on nrripf from Judge Aiarsnaii ror me nung ul informations against Alexander Martin, judge of election in the district. Complaints were made by Alderman Thomas M. Geary and Sam Catanis.

The court also ordered the one riu. 5 umtc mutnfeai-v. of illegal assistance in the Fourth district of the Third ward. Registration Confused Nearly a hundred voters appealed to the Registration Commission to produce records that they had registered and were eligible to cast ballots, after failing to find their registration cards in district registry lists. 1upiitaic ii Commissions onices pu denuals enabling the to vote.

Registration officials said th. roistered at the I of them tad registereo at tne many downtown registration off ice, nam-. ing the wrong voting cisrnci, a former Re- Mrs. UUian Morart. former publican city vice-chairman, a voter in tne tievemn uiai-riti.

i c-ottth Ward for nine vears, ana John P. Donnell. Republican Liiauiiiv i Ward for many years, were among those who found their registration records missing. Mrs. Morgart.

who resignea ner Rpoublican Dost last vear to join; the Democratic city campaign said she will go to court as a result oi her inability to vote. The Weather I Pennsylvania ami Ohio Fair -n4 wvrocr t.iniithi au.t Thurwla.v wet Virginia Kair toniirht ami Thursday, tint uuite so cold tuiuKhi. rmer Tbursday. Weather Conditions Tha low pressure that caused the howerv nn1itions over terdaw i now out over th 1 .1.. hirrh lhat (HV this se.

non ves- Atlantic o-ean. that covered the flams "taies vesieri.v is now r-entered over Western "Pennvivaiua and Ohio. This hich eausert market! drop in temperature over the Middle Atlantic States, and is at-Tnnrf bv clear skies this mornin. Liirht was Keneral this moriunir over Ohio. Wesiern Penn-vlvatna.

Xew York low- over Norlh. rtaknM lowest barom. lei in. hes at i l- 9.i.l Ksniar. k.

is rausius of na" S.ipenor. i nitlll tlOllS un. stHiut stationary. Franklin is Ij i No. No.

io. e. j.ne -r Mon am No. 4. UO: and he dams nr uf.

a Temperatures reportwl at 8 a Other oilies. i Atlanta Atlanti- City Bismarck Poise Boston Brownsville 1U mi 111 I T- II.ii ind the upper Mississippi It Jailor -ouie olou.iiocss over the upper Valley ton the ram fall so JlSSi- .,.,.1 imi tti vnrv ic. ii 5S TS Til 64 I.os Antreles lmsville tit J.viH-hburtr 5ii Memphis 4T Miami (irt Minneapolis Montvomery i i I AMBRIDGE SCHOOL TAX REDUCED TO S3 The Pittsburgh Press WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1934 and Gilda Carciofi, at Number 11 and anchor positions for South Side, came through, but the score was al- ready tied with six misses each for the round. Came the sensational Seventeenth, Five multisyllables scored five rapid-fire misses for Central, giving South Side a five-point margin. If they could hold it.

thev could win They could drop four, and still win. Mary Griffin, at lead-off position, came through. So did Jane Justice. But then, bang, bang, bang, came terrific avalanche of sticklers. In- exorable," "holocaust," "anthesis," "impenetrability," "phenomen "precipitous" they battered down tuo-t wi nr ma onnvo wnnfh i-: -f forehead's to pave the way for ciihukhiwiis im w.iuij.

meaai irom tne tress, presented by Ttf TJ P.rgh.m public schools. Dr. Graham also awarded silver medals, blue and gold banners, and certificates of merit to the members of the winning Central team, while the South Side team received framed certifi-' cates of merit. CANDIDATE'S KIN I i Robert Hamilton, last year's cham-; team. Eight contestants fell, and olte 10 Be NUCleUS P0r 3-pion, who was on hand to congrat-! amid the cheers of the crowd, Dr.

I 0. ulate her. Guy hailed Central, who had come I State PrOjeCtS It was over the team contest that into the contest the underdog sur- i enthusiasm was hottest. vivor of four consecutive previous The contest was set for 15 rounds, beatings, the winner. A stretch of mountain Starting easily, the 12 Centralites The singles followed.

Sydney Rob- land, 60 miles east of Charleston, and the 12 South Siders breezed i bins, the only boy to survive the West Varginia, has been given by through the first eleven rounds with team contest without a miss, was former County Commissioner E. V. Current Events (Officially approved for use in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County Schools) never a tremor. i the last to go down before Louise True, by an error, Margaret Guz- Baggani. who tripped on "blame-zie was given a miss on "folk" in able." while Phyllis Buscheck forgot troduced "Senor So-and-So.

of this Central;" "Senor So-and-so, of that Central;" "Senor So and so. President of this bank;" "Senor So-and-so, head of that bank." And so on. Wallace bowed gravely, shook hands cordially with each Whm the introductions were over, he waved them to chairs, remarking quietly "Gentlemen. I am very glad to meet you. I have long wanted to meet the men who are responsible for Puerto Rico being what 't is today." Shake-Up ANOTHER shake-up impends for the NRA.

This time it will not be among the executives. The latest ax Is being sharpened for the clerical ranks. General Johnson has decided that the Blue Eagle roost is overmanned. Going over last month's payroll he discovered the startling fact that he has an army of 2,400 under him. He could not figure out how his staff had grown to such proportions.

A few months before it had been around 1,600. A 50 per cent increase in so short a time is streamline speed even in these days of government expansion. Johnson ordered an immediate survey "reclassification" is the technical term. Whether heads fall remains to be seen. Meanwhile there are many lowly NRAers who go about their tasks in a very uneasy frame of mind.

Merry-Go-Round ARRY RICHEY. most confi dential secretary of Herbert Hoover, hopes to get off on a big game hunt to Africa. He just carne back recently from a trout fishing trip with that perennial juvenile. Young Teddy Roosevelt. F.

D. Roosevelt has discovered a new word. It is "supposititious," and, according to Webster, it means "spurious." Anyway, the President rolls it off his tongue as if he were saying "Pop." Ff-ature Syndicate. Inc.) arch of the sea which is beinc; groomed for ocean service after" a year's layoff. The decision of the Shipping Board to put the Leviathan back on the transatlantic runs Starting June 9 means, incidentally, jobs for 1,000 seamen then and hundreds of other jobs now getting her ready.

It's a huge task. For instance, the stewards must check up on 221,000 pieces of china. 43.000 pieces of glassware and 71,738 pieces of silverware. On one voy age 93 tons of meat, 28 tons of fish, 36 tons of poultry, 30 tons of potatoes and 10 tons of other vegetables are consumed. In addition, officers of the ship must store eight tons of sugar, three tons of coffee and tea, two tons of ham, seven and a half tons of butter, 10 tons of jam, 6.700 dozen of eggs, 1,000 barrels of apples, oranges and other fruits.

The French Prize SPEAKING of ships, the French have a prize packet about which they are saying nothing but about which considerable is being heard. The "prize" is one of the new, much-discussed pocket-battleships. The warship is equipped with armament all out of proportion to her weight at least judged by present standards. And more remarkable than all. it is capable of a speed of more than 50 miles an hour.

Another apple of the French naval eye is a new seaplane carrier of very unconventional design. Navy officers of other powers say that the carrier's profile is such that it. is impossible to tell on which course she is proceeding when met at sea not so good for submarine enemies. Odd But True HE HUMAN body contains ice. caused by the enormous pres sure in the muscle tissue Polar bears propel themselves through the water by use of the front limbs only An auto traveling 200 miles an hour wduld need no air in its tires; ceritri-fugal force would keep the ttres inflated.

By CY KING THE AERIAL freight train, long the dream of scientific fiction writers, soon is to become a reality according to word leaking through from Russia one of the leading aviation nations incidentally. The Russians, faced with the task of consolidating an immense area and handicapped by the scarcity of railroads and the time SHALER TOWNSHIP VOTES BOND ISSUE! vvciici anu ochci i iujcoi Wins by Margin of 88 By a narrow margin of 88 votes, Shalpr Townshio voters vesterday aooroved a $290,000 bond issue to t-sieuu itnri mm ci unco ua township. t-v, cioi viaUnt inc luic a. 7ql ooirist i 143 For. against.

im in rarp nr rnnsuipruiitf uuuii- sition to increasing the township's indebtedness, Malcolm Smith, town. ship secretary, said the township commissioners have no intentions of floating the bond issue unless it can be done with a loan from the Pub- Works Administration. If the alread applied for, can be had through that source, the bond issue will be given as security. and u.ater lines are nec. townhip Mr Smith said.

lger populated districts in the ave had these improve- Car. CrasllS Into It on Bridge Frank Dreistadt of Hays, sold 120 Cherry Whitaker, an auto a few days ago. He didn't see him again until last night, when their cars collided on Brown's Bridge, near Homestead, Rydosky, 30, was taken to Home- stead Hospital, severely cut and bruised. Dreidstadt and John Com- osky, of Fourth Avenue, Homestead, i who was driviing Rydosky's car, were not injured. Police said that Rydosky's car had cinnnoH rfcn tHo KriHno trip sfi'' other machine crashed into It.

MISSIONARY'S WIFE AND CHILD ARE SAFE Former Washington, Pastor Still Missing in China The United. Press NANKING. May 16 The United States legation announced today that the wife and child of Rev. Howard Smith, kidnaped American missionary, have reached Chungking safely under a bandit escort per mitted by authorities. Rev.

Smith, former, resident of Washington. still is missinK. He was seized and held for ransom last week by Chinese bandits at Pengh-sien. Fliers Rescued in Sea NEW YORK. May 16 Crew of a French plane FXCAC was rescued by the German Lloyd liner Dresden yesterday after being forced down in tne Nortn tea, according to ais- I Tiot-erips received here.

i i i RoHiirtinn nf 1 Marfp in Ppr h.viwm v. Capita Levy Special to The Pittsburgh Press AMBRIDGE, May 16 En- couraged by improved business con- Hitin in th stwi nianu hprp and anticipating higher tax collections this vear. the Ambridge Board of TTHnpotinn Via rut th Krhnni Ipvo -w one mill and reduced the per capita rates. The new school assessment has been set at 32 mills and the per capita tax has been lowered from $4 to $3. It will be necessary to collect approximately 75 per cent ot tne tax this year to meet the new budget of $400,000, the same as.

fixed a vor Onlv S3 ner cent of the year ago. Only 63 per cent of the school tax total was coUected in No provision has been made in fv, fnr nf salaries which last year were cut between 10 and 30 per cent for the sys- tern's 145 teachers-close to the r-H icttr-. IIIUUUO Z.l, RWWl -v- vi kj pay- TO SEEK RE-ELECTION -vr i TWING BROOKS Renominated on the Democratic ticket. Congressman Brooks, of Sewickley, will run against Edmund F. Erk, the Republican nominee, in the Thirtieth District in the November general SJtf -'4 hi VtV 1 (rv I I the sixth, but the iudses huddled in tne sevenin rouna sireicn, una ue- cided she had spelled it correctly.

i Thus were the South Side defend i cnamps restorer io even term with Central, and the battle woe- ressed evenly until the twelfth, when things began to happen. Bertha Greenberg. number eight for Central, got an into "wondrous" for the first miss. Irene Fellman, Central's Number 11, missed "inertia." William Marrone of South Side failed on "fraternally." and the tral 142. round ended, South Side 143, Cen- this contest a speller was not eliminated by a miss.

The twenty lour contestants au siayeo to tne finish, and each one got a different wor round; stood ln smgle line retching across the stage, and were identified by num- bers. Central having 1 through 12; I South Side, 13 through 24 In round 13, Mary LaVelle of Cen-i tral dropped the from parole, and Mary Griffin, lead-off South Sider, put an "ie" on "newsy," the adjective. Score, South Side 154, Central 153. Round 14: Lawrence Weisburg, Central, got an for the in I "wobbly." Little Hilda Kaplan, standing next to him, drew "wis teria." She started, backed up, started again, and finally got a mixed into it and lost the point. It hurt, but Hilda smiled.

That gave South Side an additional edge of two points, which the defenders promptly lost again, Mary Griffin i missing "notoriety," and Jane Jus-i tice going to honorable defeat over i "tricotine." I The score was now South Side, 164; Central, 163. Entering the final round under i a one-point handicap, Central drop- ped two more points in its half of the round; but Mary Griffin missed "comparatively," Melseana Lydzinsko spelled "canon" with a and Margaret Guzzie, with victory in sight for her team, stumbled on "ap preciating," knotting the score at the end of the period at 173 apiece. A recess was called, during which the contestants sat down and rested. They looked tired. The next round would tell it, the audience whispered, and the excitement had reached shouting pitch by the time Referee J.

Freeman Guy called the teams out for the sixteenth round. The first word came up. "Mex-cantilisra. The crowd breathed "Whew!" They were getting tough. Judith Feldman picked her way carefully through it, and the next was "mensuration." Edith Tortorelli Central, started.

She backed up, started again, reversed again, and plunged blindly through. It was wrong. "Melancholia" downed Lawrence Weisburg, and "omniscience," to build them, are bending their efforts toward the aerial freight. Within a few days, it is said, an airplane will start on a cross country flight. Behind it will be three glider "trailers!" While none of the trailers is to be dropped off during the hop, such is very possible.

That has been done. The gliders to be used in this experiment are large enough to carry a man and 45 pounds of freight. Other larger glider "freight cars," are available. And that isn't all the Russians have done with glider-trailers. They have worked out a method of picking up these trailers without stopping.

Picking up the glider while in flight will enable the pilot of an airplane to deliver several of these planes to remote destinations and then, on the return trip, pick them up without loss of time and in a much smaller field than would be necessary for the plane itself. Persistence THE ETERNAL challenge of the Atlantic Ocean has lured two more aviators. One of them is George Pond, Navy flier during the war, participant in several ill-fated ocean hops and test pilot. The other is Cesare Sabelli, and an outstanding example of the virtue of persistence. Sabelli had been trying for seven years to fly across the sea to his homeland to re-establish himseif in the good graces of the powers that be in Italy.

He learned to fly in South America, returned to Italy to fly during the war, then emigrated to the United States. As long ago as 1927 he was ambitious to make the transatlantic hop. He obtained funds for a plane, fell into a dispute with the designer and only five months ago obtained another ship. The two fliers announced before they left that they would drop wreaths on the ocean in memory of the 13 fliers who have tried to fly to Rome and failed. Grooming Leviathan TRANSATLANTIC flights are becoming relatively common but the most of us will prefer to make the journey on a ship such as the Leviathan, a mighty mon- fy- I till 7u 5.x ftt 4 hi 4 5 54 52 Bttnaio Nashville 5il Orleans 50 New York 4S tklahoioa.

54 I'ai kershiirc- 5rt Parry Sound 4H Philadelphia. 44 St. Louis 44 Salt City. 4pin Antonio jfi Seattle fhatiajioo Chicaso Cincitmatv Cleveland Columbus TVnver res Miiw ptroit Ttnlilth Harrisburs Helena. 50 Tampa 7 wasninrton 54 Winnipeg fig Yellowstone PaJ-t Huron Ir.dianaooi tittle Bock MRS.

BENJAMIN D. PHILLIPS Mrs. Phillips, sister-in-law of Thomas W. Phillips, Republican candidate for nomination as Governor, shot and killed herself last night in Elm Court, her Butler, home, while the primary was in progress. (Story on Page 1.) 4.8 1 I a.

The Pittsburgh Press from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Laurine Ryan

Last Updated:

Views: 5944

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (77 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Laurine Ryan

Birthday: 1994-12-23

Address: Suite 751 871 Lissette Throughway, West Kittie, NH 41603

Phone: +2366831109631

Job: Sales Producer

Hobby: Creative writing, Motor sports, Do it yourself, Skateboarding, Coffee roasting, Calligraphy, Stand-up comedy

Introduction: My name is Laurine Ryan, I am a adorable, fair, graceful, spotless, gorgeous, homely, cooperative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.