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VOLUME 92. NAPLES, ONTARIO COUNTY. NEW YORK. WEDNESDAY. JULY 6. 1960. . . • ;v /“ • • _______ NUMBER 27. Anniversaries BIRTHDAY No. 88 * Mrs. - Ndda Coleman, now of Qanandaigiua, wiM,;1 '''.oihsissrve ...her eilghty-eigihth ' birthday , this m onth, She was bom July 16, 1872.\ NEW S OF AREA PEOPLE / , IN THE ARM EDFORCES BIRTHDAV' N o . 80 Mrs. Elbert Bund, of Reed Street, observes her eightieth birthday 'th is month, - having been bom in Judy, 1-880. A LAWYER 63 YEARS . Came July 30, W illiam Perry Borden, of Lyon Street, will have been practicing law for sixty-three yearns. Mr. Borden w as adm itted to the bar July 30, 1897. MARRIED 43 YEARS .Mr. and 'Mrs. Fredsepck -Mailer, of N o rth .Oahocton’, wull^ observe th e ir fo rly -^ ird anniversary on Ju ly 18, 'having been m arried in 1917. MARRIED 39 YEARS Mr. and Mrs. A rthur W. Lin coln, of- Bristol Springis, will ob serve their thirty-ninth „ onnii- versaiy this -month, having been m arried July 26, 1921. MARRIED 28 YEARS Mr. end Mrs. John P. Adams, of North. ..Main Street, will ob serve their tw enty-eighth wed ding anndversairy on July 26, 1960. MARRIED 23 YEARS Mr. and Mrs. Victor Evarts, of Bristol' ■ Springs, will ‘have th e ir tw enty-third anniversary th is month. Riuth Randolph and Mr. Evarts w ere m arried July 15, 1937. MARRIED 20 YEARS ■Mr. and Mrs. Lysle Gibbous, of Hunts Hollow, observed their tw entieth anniversary last week Thursday^ Frieda Sohmuck and Mr. Gibbous wiesne m arried 'June 30, 1940. MARRIED 19 YEARS Colonel M ilford W. Wood, of the U. S. Army, and Mns. Wood wiill observe their nineteenth anniversary n e x t Tuesday. Al ice. Jean Davis end Mr. Wood w ere manried July 12, 1941. Gottlieb Glause'r Heads Fire-G eneration Picture Gottlieb Glaiuser is proud to ‘ have posed recently for a pho tograph w ith his great-gneat- granddauighter, Lori. Ann Let- sky. The five-generation p<ic- tuire includes the baby’s grand mothers: Mrs. Claude McElwain (daughter of iMr. Glaiuser), and her daughter, Mns. McElwain Gow, and Lori’s mother, Mrs. ,Gow Letskiy. Members of the family are eagerly awiaiting th e finished photograph. O ld I h r w v \A good listen e r n o t oaty i* popular everyw here b u t a fter a w hile lye know* something.” Jo ^ > h J. Schenk, 19, son of M r. and Mrs. Sam u el Schenk, wiho/1neoently e n tered the’ Army, has been assigned to Fort IXix, New Jersey, for eight weeks of basic training. ’ Lew is B. Fisher, 19, son of Mr.' and Mrs. G ran t Fisher, is ait P o rt Dix, New Jersey, for his eight weeks of basic training.. P rands Carso (Gene) enlisted in th e U. S. Navy ait Dansville on April 26, 1960, and entered into service M onday q f - lasit w eek, June 27, in Buffalo. He w as assigned to G reat Lakes N a v a l Training 'Station f or his boot training. He plants on mak ing: the Navy his career. Three men who w ere school m ates ‘ in - Naples w ill-have train ing this summer ait the' OfEioers’ T raining School a t Font Sill; Oklahoma. C aptain Paul E. SduuMz, of Naples, and Capt. Rotger H. Coye, o f South Bristol, are assigned to Font Sail for long periods, Capt, Schiultz for eight months, a f te r which he expects to be sent to Fort Bliss, Tiex)as, for four m o n ths of train ing. Robert F. Dean, now ot jw5d~ w ell, N. Y., k a m em ber of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, and is assigned to Fort Sill for two weeks. INTERESTING ITEM S FROM OUR EXCHANGES Dansville officers one crack ing down on speeders in that vaLLage. Ten w e re arrested the last week dn June. Fittsdford Police Gazette: “A man reports' a prow ler around his house. Requests officer * * O fficer Pasrcells sDound out .that th e prowler was a ’coon.” A fight to preserve their fine old trees, is b eing w aged by res idents of Jefferson Road, Pifcts- fcxrd, where . estate engineers p&an to. witter* resurface a stretch of highway. T h e village .board dn Orchard P a rk has just passed an -amend ed. ordinance to ^ th e effect that a ll private sw im m ing pools •must be fenced in, w ith 4- to 6- foot-high fencing. The class of 1966 at Orchard Bairk school, w ill b e an estim at ed 35 per cent larg e r than this year’s class, based on the pupils graduated firom the system’s sixth grade this year. Mrs. Eleanor C. Harris, di rector o f, liibrairians in Livings to n County, resigned at a rect counity meeting. She has a position dn four southeastern counties, newly organized, with headquarters in Middletown. Wayland C e n tral School Dis tric t is being sued in Supreme Qourt, Bath, for $100,000.00, the action being based on a w rest ling j accident in school in 1959, w hich ils alleged to have caused permanent im p airm ent to a stu dent. Btoth th e principal and th e physical education instruct o r are co-defenxJamts' in the case, alleging “negligence in super vision.’’ SAYS BUSINESS MEN FAIL IN LEADERSHIP THE 50-STAR FLAO FLIES OVER HAWAII-Thousands of Hawaii- -_ang watr»h as thi» pew 50-star flag is raised for the first timg in a solemn ceremony in Honolulu, Hawaii, the 50th state. At right of the flag on platform front (left to right) are: the first Governor of Hawaii, William P, Quinn, and his wife. * 1 Fireworks cxn. a grand scale were displayed on Warner Ave nue, Lent Hill, last Saturday night, July % a cooperative ven ture of the business men, Co hocton firemen, and Ouderikirk- Gragg Post, American Legion, Two young men, of Bath, N. Y., have just, returned from Ida ho, m aking th e round trip in a i 1933 automobile. They left in January and have been attend ing college, one ait Idaho State College, in Pocatello, and the other a t the University of Ida' ho. j NAPLES MAIL SCHEDULES A placard .in the Naples post- offi.ee canaries the following in formation malaitive (to the post- office hours, and -the arrival and departure of mails: Postoflice Hours: Mondays, Tuesdays, f Thursdays, and F ri days, 8:00!A. M. to 5:00 P. M.; Wednesdays and Saturdays, 8:00 A. M to 12:30 P. M Mails Arrive a t: 7:45 A. M., -9J.5 A. and 11:20 A M. Mails Leave a t: 9:15 A. M , and 5:15 P. M.. THE BIG QUESTION The Cohocton Times - Index; published the following ex cerpts from rem arks presented by Assem blym an' Charles- D. Henderson, of Hiomell, before a recent m eeting of the A tlanta- North Cohocton Lions- d u b : “Business m en have failed to provide leadership in the oatiise of good governm ent eltboujgh they have done a marvelous job in many instances tar ithedr communities -through chambers of commerce or trade associa tions. “Unfortunately, most busi nessmen react to politics the way the demagogues w ould wish—and th a t is apathetically. “Businessmen of the com munity m u st cease neglecting politics a t th e w ard level and in the prim aiy election. Politics are gutter-type relationships in the eyes of m any businessmen, yet the dictionary defines poli tics as the science-of good gov ernment. “When a businessman says he wants no part of politics it’s an other way of saying he doesn’t Want good government. Politics void of effective participation by businessm en allows both “political\ p a rties ' to ignore th e challenge o f ' stating! unequivo cally that m an has a Eight to full freedom, a right to individ ual -human dignity, and that -the state should serve /the individu al rather -than try to be his m as ter. “Governm ent must be k e p t absolutely dependent .upon th e people if th e basic freedoms Which m ake our way of life are to endure. ^ , “Each tim e we authorize th e mighty entity w e call govern ment to do another of the daily chores for the individual, w e surrender another fragment of freedom and become that m u ch mare dependent, on govern m e n t” QUOTES Diplomacy in the old school was the a r t of giving a hand without a hand-out.—Phi! H. Tuseth. Political campaigning: The ant of listening to the nation’s pulse w ith your mouth open.— Tuseth. The quickest way to ‘get a lot of undivided attention as to make a m istake.—Frank H. Mc- Innis.. The irian who sows more th a n he carf reap is likely to Jose his subsidy.—'Larry Braun. „» 1 Anybody who thinks this is a nat’n of conform ists hasn’t been around during an air raid test. —‘Franklin P. Jones. The roots of all evil seem to be planted1 v ery firmly.— M or ris Gallant. Suburbia: where the houses are -farther ap a rt and the pay ments are closer together.— Maurice Sedtter. A budget- is merely a m a the matical confirmation of your suspicions.—F. G. Reman.