{ title: 'The Cuba patriot and free press. volume (Cuba, N.Y.) 1909-1914, December 27, 1945, Page 5, Image 5', 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/sn85054091/1945-12-27/ed-1/seq-5/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054091/1945-12-27/ed-1/seq-5.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054091/1945-12-27/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054091/1945-12-27/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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\eme [ PatYing i o h $ > Mk); 4, wh o> a ' s 50% 0C 60 / - N eM! {IF A > AF A \ 4 % A Jack Richardson of Grea ‘ Naval Training Station is. sp ing a leave at home during polidays. Thomas Guild, H. A. 1/C, of U. S. Naval Hospital at P Beach, Fla., returned Wednes after spending a nine-days le at home. Sgt. Edward Clapp is. at Home furlough until Jan. 6 from Cincin- nati, O., with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Clapp of: West M Street. _- o Capt. George Morris, U. S. wife and children of Washingt Main Street. Elton Herrington, SKD 1/C, rived Sunday from N. J., for an 11-day leave. - He reported to be improving from t | apr a HA TT A FA Tr A r a WOMEN IN UNIFORM I A T A Ir &A y a ter A o a op ad illness which bas caused a long D. C.; James Morris, wife and chil- dren of Buffalo are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Willliam Morris of West ¥.,8. Naval iflight oper Special Hospital at Asbury Park, whos doo To es end- hospitalization. C the Put. ‘Géorge Smith, son of the alm day ave about a month. Kenneth L. Weatherly, S 1 on ain/the \'Magic Carpet\ back to the States aboard the A., on, | awa, Nov. 26, and was scheduled 13. at- fpa, Fla., where he is engaged he | Jan. 4. Marriages Hartman-Brown Maplehurst, was united 23, performed by the Rev. Hardin. Sgt. Wilbur Butts, who has been discharged, arrived Sunday morn- ing and is with his mother, Mrs. Bertie Butts, «of Union Street. He was 26 months overseas and three years in service with the Medical being connected with the He was in England and France and for the Corps, b6th General Hospital. last year at Liege in Belgium Sergeant Butts has a number of ribbons and three Campaign Stars The ribbons include the Good Conduct, the ETO to mark his service. and others. PFC - Bernard Torpey - arrived home last Thursday, having been discharged at Ft. Dix the previous evening. Although his service was relatively short, 16 months, he has seen much action,. He arrived overeas in January, 1945, and went to the German front, Berving with the 63rd Infantry Division in the Seventh Army, and was wound- ed in the fight at the Siegfried , Line. He wears the Purple Heart, the ETO Ribbon with three Battle Stars, the Good Conduct Medal, the Victory Ribbon with Siver Star, the French Fourragere, the Presidential Citation with Cluster and the Infantry Combat Badge Edward Henry Crawford, jr., hos- pital apprentice, first class, has been discharged from the Navy at the - Naval Hospital, Pensacola, Fla., where he was a patient. - He is a son of -Mr. Edward H. Craw- ford, st, of Cuba. A Navy man since November, 1943, Crawford spent #ix months overseas aboard a emijé‘er, an aircraft carrier,. and at bgae hospitals in the South Paci- Ac. ~A, . brother, PFC. Lester L. Crawgord, serves in the Army. Cap§: Kate Cole of Cuba Sum- mit, daughter iof Mr. and Mrs. 9. Welcome Cole of Cuba Summit, was recently discharged at Ft. Dix. She had been overseas 19 months and in service since 1941. She was connected with the ETO Quarter master General's Office in an ad- : While in service M. Bergeant Jones The bride has for a number o of Bartlett Hardware Co. here. been in service since December duty. Mr. and Mrs. Hartman went to Philadelphia, Pa., on their wedding journey and on their return will reside at the bride's apartment on Chapel Street in Cuba. =~, Jones-Cole A wedding of much interest took place at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. Welcome Colé of Cuba Summit, parents of the bride, on Sunday, Dec. 16, when Capt. Kate Cole was united in marriage to William G. Jones of Spartansburg, S. C. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Harry W. Richmond of the First Presbyterian Church,. The only attendants were Mr. and Mrs! Joseph R. Cole, brother and sister- in-law of the bride. Before the ceremony Mrs. Edith Stearns L- venspire of Houghton College sang \I Love You Truly.\ The bride has recently returned from a tour of duty with the WAC's. capacity and as a dietitian, work- ing directly under the European Theatre Quartermaster General's Office. She ig a graduate of Friendship - Central School and Rochester Polytechuic Institute. Her military record appears in the column \Home from the Wars\ | printed in this issue. Mr. Yones, the son of James C. Jones of Spartansburg, S. C., is a graduate of the Spartansburg High School and -of Appalachian State Teachers College. He has recent: ly been discharged from the Army. was connected with the office of the European Theatre Quarter visory capacity and as a dietitian. She had been in England, France, | Belgium and Germany, was sta- | tioned in Paris for some time and travelled through France establish- | Ing mess halls. She was trained . at Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga., and Ft. Des Moines, Ta., and supervised the WAC commissary at Ste Sault , Maric, Mich., for some time, Cpl. Harold G. Feuchter arrived at San Francisco, Dec. 25. accord- Ng tn a telegram received by his; wife the next day. He will go from | thete to New Jersey, where he ex- > Decfs to be discharged, hoping to amfe home soon. He has been Serving in the Pacific area two | and a half years, mostly in New| Guinea, later at Manila. x f | t t I T mmr mnm Slno nonnal Stored Grain Stored grain may be treated with carbon bisulphide to prevent dam- afe from weevils and bran bugs. Weevils are the most injurious be- Cause they attack the sound grains. 53mm bugs can cause the grain to and they feed on the cracked -' Frains. A fairly air-tight bin or- Toom should be used for fumigation. During the fumigation process the ETaim should be confined to a small Spzce and piled from four to six feet deep. The carbon bisulphide ould be applied directly to the tp surface of the grain and atout three gallons per 1.000 bushels of . [ Erain is sufficient, according to ep. | 'cmologists. - The stcrage teeds to be closed after applying the fumigant so that Ts sttred grain can be Ict under | i; 'Testment for $4 to 48 Esours before tos necessary to air ont the storage Fone moter tmm ifit, onne rone... Pariereq Paper Napkine, with ES for $1.10. An {fee) gift. C*.ma, master (General, being with the Supply and Subsistence Division. The guests included the family of the bride and a few close friends. Immedjately following the ceremony a buffet tea was served by the bride's mother. After a short wedding trip Mr. and Mrs, Jones will be at the home of the bride's parents until after the Christmas holidays. ¥ Wiltsey-!ngram Miss Eunice Evelyn Ingram of Norfolk, Va.. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elzie G. Ingram of that city, T AFT A 3 A T A r A apr ¢.2 > A y ' p and Mrs. Benson Smith, is at home on a five-day furlough from Aber- deen, Md. He has been in service husband of Mrs. Neva R. Weather- ly, of Cuba, is on his way home from Pearl Harbor. He is one of 1,- 300 high-point Navy veterans whom- is bringing S. S. Thetis Bay, which left Okin- arrive in San Francisco about Dec. Cpl Joseph LaBarbera arrived Saturday from MacDill Field, Tam- ations, to spend the holi- days with hig. father, Sam LaBar- is | ber, and family. He will return on Hi Miss Harriet Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Brown of in mar: riage to Sgt. Samuel Hartman of: Bolivar, in a ceremony at the Ole: an Baptist Church on Sunday, Dec. Shields years been the chief bookkeeper The bridegroom, before his enlistment was an employee of Schryver's Market, and both are well known Sergeant Hartman, who has 1942, recently in the Panama Ca- nal Zone, re-enlisted last fall for two years, and now has an extend- ed furlough before he returns to 'She served in an advisory ’ J» y) Lt. Com Moses The fiollowing is quoted from Mr. First city : Methodist 1C, U. to ties at ments First Churéh\ are sen expressed by the form 'John W.: Annas, Jr., church who announced this morning. in I1, 1930-1931; 1982-85; Honeoye Falls-Ilona, 193 38; Coudersport, Pa., 1939-1940, and | Potsdam First Methodist Ch 1941-1943, w-_ THE PATRIOT and FREE PRESS, C Will Devote Effort To Youth Program article\ of some length in the Buf. falo Evening News announcing the appointment of the Rev. Howard V. Moses as assistant pastor of the Church“ of that: , Leadership in the battle against juvenile delinquency on Buffalo's | West Side will be given by the Rev. Howard V. Moses, newly. ap- pointed youth - director of First j Methodist Church. He is a form- er Navy chaplain with 34 months of service, 14 of them overseas. ; \Glad to get back into civilian harness and eager to begin my du- [ lieutenant commander to the Rev. pastor, the appointment Pastorates he has held are Union Avon-Fowlerville an [X \ Loan ti- er Ner Banks Observe ©, Wiltsey, aviation electrceian's mat ll/C. at a double ring mony performed at the Methodis 'Church of Cuba at 2 as Brewster. Wiltsey of Stone Street. ¢ tendants were Mr. and Mrs. Fran and aunt..of the bridegroom. chiffon with a - shoulder-length veil and carried pink roses. bridegroom's mother was gowned lin teal blue 'with black accesso- ries and wore a corsage of gat denias. Carleton Crittenden of Cuba gave the bride in marriage and Guy Hamilton, jr., and Robert Her- ring, also of this vicinity, acted as ushers. an At the reception following the ceremony at the - bfidegroom's home, the bride's table was center- ed with a huge wedding cake, and tall tapers adorned the end of the table. The bride is a graduate of Nor- view, Va., High 'ScHoot/-and thas been engaged as a stenographer in a merchantile busgfness in Norfcaéf. ba High School~\~joined the Navy four years and a half ago, At the end of his present leave he will report to Buffalo for reassignment. He has spent the past 15 months in Panama. ¢ - Guild-Martin Miss Shellie Mae Martin of Kingsville, Tex., and Howard L. Guild, aviation electrician's mate 2/C, now stationed at Kingsville, were united in marriage there on Dec 22. * The bride is a nurse in a Kings- cere-, cis Brown of Lower Haskell, uncle cupied The bride was gowned in white;located on East Main street. satin, wore a fingertip veil and on completion of the new building carried a bouquet of white roses :the centered with a gardenia. Little present location, new office fixtures Laura Wiltsey, sister of the bride- installed, making it one of the groom, was trainbearer. The ma- most modern banks in western tron of honor was attired in pink New York. > The 'The bridegroom, who attended u-. 6 t, Twenty-five years ago this week p. m., Dec,. the two banking institutions of Cu- 24, by the pastor, Rev. Gigi”) g. ba established themselves in new The bridegroom is the 424 modern quarters, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard p. to the files of the Cuba Patriot of according -' The First National Bank then oc- its own building, later 'known as the Whiteman building, Up- business was moved to its About 1200 persons attemded the formal opening. An- orchestra given to guests. Officers of the bank at that time were: H. C. Morgan, president; H. E. Keller, vice president; H. P. assistant cashier; directors at the time were: Roy Amsden, James J. Kirby, H. P. Morgan, R. H. Bart gett, H. E. Keller, A. .A. Lawrence, F. L. Sibley, W. J. Demcey, H. C. Morgan, W. N. Renwick, Cassius Congdon. The building erected 'by Bartlett, Morgan & Keller, Inc., which at that time was & newly organized concern, was purtch@ged by the bank‘ in 1943. \> ® The same i#fsue of 'the old file gives the story of the opening of the newly remodeled , building and offices of the Cuba National Bank. The building had undergone a com- plete revamping inside and out, with the erection of a new facade and the installation;: of new fix- tures. Thus Cuba became the pos- sessor of two modern banking in- stitutions. ~ Officers for the Cuba National Bank at this time were: Hon. John G. Leggett, president; Charles A. Ackerly, cashier; directors gonsist- ed of J. C. Leggett, C. A. Whegler, ville hospital. - The bridegroontg, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall , Guild of Cuba, is a graduate of Cu-. ba Central School and has been in service for 20 months, at Samp son, Norman, Okla.; and at Kings , ville,. K------ j Aged Woman on Relief 1 Dies Leaving $18,456 | NEW YQRK.-Although she had | been on the 'home relief rolls, Mrs. ! Katherine Kellum, 86 years old, who ; was found dead in her furhished' room, left $18,456, Police Sergt. James Lyach of the Classon avenue © precinct disclosed. Sergeant Lynch found $3,456 of the money in a battered trunk in the woman's single room. The rest was in bank deposits. Mrs. Kellum, | neighbors said, had earned the mon- ey acting as a companion to wealthy old women. She seldom spoke to anyone in the neighborhood and - became the bride of Paul Howard ber only activity was occasional / walks in Fort Greene park. f mois ae Don't Forget Your | Water Bill | Monday, Dec. 31st space ;i nediately | [ IS THE LAST DAY TO Save Discount | SIDNEY A. HIXSON, Village Clerk. C. A. Ackerly, FP. C. Saunders; D,. P. Snyder, C. L. DeKay, B. G. Har ris, E. E, Moses, and J. E. Wind- sor First National Bank Marks 25 Years in New Home furnished music and roses were Morgan, cashier; G. W:; Folwell, | Giv Anniversary ' Of Opening in New Quarters \C> ; Bartlett, Morgan, Keller Building Completed 25 Years | Ago - First National Holds National Bank Rebuilding Finshed at Same Time Reception - Cuba §|tove with is her husband, If the one she is a very good sign. a* Taking advantage of the opportun= ity to give their personnel a long holi= day, Cuba stores will remain closed-all- day \Monday Dec. 31, and Tuesday, © flan. 1, remaining open all day Wednes- _ ay. « bok ul x THE COMMITTEE -< © We Will Se-rve. p between the hours of 1:30 and 4:30 p.km. Cuba National Bank Building Com- pletely Remodeled 25 Years Ago Hocus-Pocus-This Outht Detects Counterfeits How an electric spark may quick- ly detect Counterfeit coins is re- vealed in a patent granted to Hjal- mar L. Petersson of Stockholm, Sweden, (Pat. No. 2,100,977). The in- vention not only detects counter- feits, but automatically separates them from the genuine coins. As the coin drops down a chute it is momentarily held and an elec- tric spark is caused to jump be- tween the coin and an electrode. Light from the spark passes into a spectroscope, a device which breaks the light up into a spectrum. The spectrum of light is then focused on a slit. If the coin is genu- ine, the focused beam of light will pass through the slit and strike a photoelectric cell, The cell converts the light into electric energy, which operates a relay, In turn, the relay swings a hopper over the genuine coin receiving box, into which the coin falls. On the other hand, if the coin is a | With the march of time Cuba's} banking homes have continued to 'keep pace and to be a credit to a' hits a blocking screen. In this case fast growing village. e | too many | If they did not want any- | They say people want things. thing, they might not do any great | and amount of work. F rom serve 1948: Greetings Our Customers and Friends our hearts, all of us at Wheeler's wish you a Happy and Prosperous New Year,. kverythimg possible to counterfeit, the electric spark gives a spectrum which, when focused, will not wholly enter the slit, but the relay is acuated to swing the hopper over the box which receives the counterfeit coins. ¥ ------ Want Ads are money makers Speciél For Thursday __| Beginning Thursday and succeeding Thurs-. | - days we will serve special Spaghetti din- 44; x nets all day. l TRY A REAL SPAGHETTI DINNER 'P: bogs, s 605 McCol Restaurant - West Main Street, Cuba, N. Y. t\ HERE'S __ _ A MONEY-MAKING .., :> NEW YEARS RESOLUTION | TO SAVE more money regularly at _. The Cuba National Bank . . TO KEEP eis TRACK OF ALL EXPENDITURES through a checking account ... TO ©\ BORROW whenever there is a sound - _ . opportunity to profit thereby . . . TO USE MORE of the bank's services . .. TO CONSULT more often with the bank's officers concerning plans and ambitions. _, - # *a gt, u QiCuba National Bank Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation To SP BHI. . the bottom - of We will do ygu well during ¥ The waste of war is behind us. The world is going back to work. < You will need the cooperation which this bank can give you in carrying for- waged your personal and business plans for the fcture. _ We're ready, and we extend our best wishes for your success in the New Yeats | »