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Image provided by: George F Johnson Memorial Library
6 DAILY BULLETIN, Endicott. Fri., Sept 16, 1955 \Gift From The Sea\ • he i (This Is the fifth install ment of one of the most dis- niswii books of our time \nne Mui IMU Umiiwigli^ * t vll or, \Gifts from the >• n- ) r waih<ti far ri< w • t K 1 toothed h the r;n;: ;> , waves. th« sun on nv> i «•'< and res* iff w d ..... n -t the spray on mv h.«nr Waves and out iit»e a >• v!; 1 ;» r And then home, diitichni. d '..t- god, reeling, lull to the I with my day alone. f..li !.ke the moon before the night has t.iker. a single nibble ot it fu.l as a cup poured uo to the l.p There is a quality to fullness 'I t ttu Psalmist evpxcsied' \> % <\ip runneth over ' Let no < • • <-on.c •—I pra> in sudden panic-- 1 might spill myself BUS; Is th.s ibPn what 1. ;io3s to woman* ^ho »jr'> pcrpct'ii'> i> spill hrrsilf aw.- A.'. |.f iestinct as a uorrnn the < T.'' Tiounshrr of chi!di< n. i; r i < ' *i>ciety—demand* that s'>e g\e. Her time. N r ene:c\ ttie- fitivenes<; ri'iln « it m '.i 'hc*e rhanni's if there • v <ri!c-> ai\ le.i* ' i'! . 'v u, >T tatigH .4 iv ut ... _. 1>> cu e «h.-re t i* r'-.-!>- r- ' Immed' I'I l\ 1 'crna w •• \ tpilU he x ,if u\\ r.\ ('• ' s t,> the f - 1 lowed t» e • peace t< if i i p to the I run But v\h\ not, one ma\ V-'K'' IVhnt is wrong w.'h v» ~ * s Fpilling he-self 8«HV c ; -- r >• her funr t H .• t •> i \. V. > • t coming I.UV'K 'urn. i. ,. tlflv at th« U n h ' i '• ' losing p \ i•<• <-\> • ' • ' just the artist in n.e Tin .>',st natura-llv .dw ivs t, MI ,. , himself in small dn>i« H,. n M save up for the pitrhc f '1 \\ it is also the unman ;n rr.c who is so unexpectedly n ..M.:,). I i N • I. 1 u Here is n s'f'/f i .--idoN Woman in«tinrtivch » ir'< to give vet re«enf- pi\'re herself in small pieces Rasiraliv is this D conflict'' (>r is it a n o\ci simpl flcation of i mirv sf r . ruled i . . . , . , I.-ohl«m- 1 )K - ex.- iMt u-h.t muM IH .> rtpl. n.shed K food tak-! * _^ . . ( ii . • i thi ln.«l\ If it is tvom- uoman resents is ti-->t so much ' • , giving hersrlf ,„ p-,^ „, p ,„„, * U \\ U ! n ^'l Ri \ e K J h f mUSt K 1 .... ^ be rei.l, nished too But how \In other JimM. womMi had In their HTM forefs which centered them . . . they had more creative tasks to per- kiriu . . . Baking bread, weaving cloth, putting up pre sent s, teaeiimg and singing to children, must have been more nourishing than being the family chauffeur or shop ping at super markets, or doing housework with mechan ic^ aids.\ herself purposelessly Vh.it we fear » not *o much thnt our cn ' l ^v (TV H^w inexplicable It seems Anything else will be accepted as a better excuse. I f one sets aside ..le says the \moon shell ' tu Tie for a business appointment, person, rspeewtHy eVery^a trip to the rmirdresser, a should be alone some- • social engagement, or a shopping t jim^ the year, some part' expedrtion, that time is accepted L(I ttwk and each day *\ \ 4,,, \ taM » «\t «• nrm sars: it voluiionaiy that sounds By Anne Morrow Lindbergh \room of one'i own\ demanded for women, befor* they could maka their place In the world. Tht problem is not entirely in mind and body so that it might be still as the axis of a revolving wheel is still\ This beautiful image is to my mind the one that women could hold before their eyes. This is an end toward which w e could strive— to be the still axis within finding the room of one's own, the time alone, difficult and necessary as this Is. The prob lem is more bow to still the soul in the midst of its activities. In fact, the problem is how to feed the souL For it is the spirit of woman that Is going dry, not the me chanics that are wanting. Me chanically, woman has gained in the past generation. Certainy in America, our lives are easier, freer, more open to opportunities, thanks—among other things^-to the Feminist battles. The room of one's own, the hour alone are now more possible in a wider economic class than ever before But these hard-won prizes art insufficient because we have not yet learned how to use them. The Feminists did not look thnt far ahead, they laid down no rules of conduct. For them it was enough to demand the privi leges. The exploration of their use. as in all pioneer movements, was left open to the women who would follow And woman today is stil searching. We are aware of our hunger and needs, but still ignorant of what will satisfy them. With our garnered free time, we are more apt to drain our creative springs than to re fill them. With our pitchers, we . attempt sometimes to water a j field, not a garden W e throw ourselves indiscriminately into committees and causes Not knowing how to feed the spirit, we try to muffle the spirit, we try to muffle its demands in dis tractions Instead of stilling the center, the axis of the wheel, we add more centrifugal activities to our lives — which tend to throw us off balance. as \inviolable. But tt one says I cannot come because that is ergv may be leak.rv nw.n through small rnrtlets q< th.it it| lv may he p^ing ''Tjmt -n trw «4f«*> ' J.mc We do not see the results of our ' giving as concrete I v as man does • * i in his work. In the job of ana h<w impossible of home-keeping there is ny raise ment. 'Jo many women such a from t4w>- boss- and seldom praise ..program seems quite out of from others to show us we ha\e rea i h They h.ive no extra in- r~* , hit the mark 1 xeept for the ^ to spend on a vacation for:hide ^l^ 1 ^. ^^SflS child woman s ciention is s o oft- • -henisehes, no time left over en invisible especially today VW {r , )rn the w -eekly drudgery of are working at an arrangement • h »UM >work for a day off, no en- In form, of the myriad disparate . l(UT tne dal] C00 king copyright, uss. *y ABTOI ~- Llndbcrgh: pnbllshrd by arramcrrerat with ranthran Basin, Inc., and Eio f Fe»ffif*s SVfiairal*. (In tomorrow's installment, sidered rude, egotistical or strange What a commentary on ottr crvtHztrtion, when one ha* the fact that one practices it—like a secret vice! Actually these are among the most important times in one's i life—when one is alone Certain ! In form, of the mynad disparate ^ ;ilUT tne daily cooking ^fe—when one is alone Certai details of housework family rou- | c)t .j mn> ; and washing for e^en. spr i ngs are tapped only when w 1 ne and social TiTe Tf l* a kind an h , ur ot crea t, w . solitude. T are a i 0 ne. The artist knoyvs Ti of intut.itc came of e«» - >< idle we manipualte on oi.r f: k i r<; w-.th lnyiMiile ttweads How c<n one point to this constant t in gle of household chores errands and fragmmts of humn nh- r>nfishps- : as a creation\ If hird e\ent to th .nk o f i* is purposeful flc'fVUy sn rr*.rh it is automatic W'ortnn b>'^»!f begins to feel I'ke n telephone exchange or a laundrom i ' Purposeful giyinc is p .t H . ipt to deplete one's re> 'ii n- ' t .i |o .s ir, th .1t tw'i,' d '\d' r <• p. 'h.«t seem s to in-i\\ e\en n the pet of dcpN '\w 1 >'e more one c.\e« the n. IT one has to gve_bke rr K n the hi oast In our eai y rionoe r rtiVT! and recently tn ftn -iiw I urope difficult as It \\ ,s u >m an s E'Mng vvas purpose! in M d s- pensable Today, in our corrp ir- piofni-n > 1 do not think so hvery paid yvorker, no matter whi e in the economic scale, ex- pec rs a day off a yveek and a vnmMort a year. By and large, mothers , and hoiiicyyives are the r'i;y xxorkers y^ho do not have n llii' 1 II k ,.u t.nie off They are the .t vacationless class. They 'y p\cn c..ni[>lain of their apparenil> not considennc • >ii i^ • d time to them.si.lyes as ,i j' ' I'IIC ti« < 1 1. }l. • i lies one key to the pruiiii ;ti I f wotiun were con- .meed that a diy off or an hour of solitude yy.is a reasonable' ambition, the> v\o.ld find a way of attaining it As it is they ti>cl M > unjustified in their de mand Mi it they rarely make the attve comfort.\ many w mien'attempt Otv> has only to look hardly feel indispensable anv'at i'i. -e v» .men who actually more either in the primitive, hay e t/u *i n-truc means or the s'ru'.-rlp to s , ; \ < .• or as the 'ii, i, I • ,, \ for solitude yet cil' dl font i>' ' ,x e home No , d.> n • r i • realize that longer f«^d iy a fe<line nf lndi|-jn lP ptobl< m LS nut solely eco- pensahi! tv or purposefulness. we |i.,mi. It is more a question of are h-jnery. and not knowing | mn , snunds i-ainiut I.W»II ; «v^«—^ — > - — tt« n I mv n° ur to aione - one 13 con * f the * uthor u » ta the K* ,n \ * n d aiiain- 1 _ tJ , .„Micti ^oi «p| losses women have experienced In the last 25 years.) Vestal Zorre Change Request Brings Protest Vestal Town Board, asked to rerone about 25 acres of land in Jensen Road from residential to light industrial Wednesday, also heard a protest on the proposal from a resident, Harris Johnson. . -The owner of five »£ the acres , has told the board that he can sell It to a trucking firm for a terminal site if he can obtain the light industrial classification. Mr Johnson expressed fear U-E Regents Diploma Winners Named Names of 106 pupils who have earned New York State Regents diplomas at U-E, were announced today. They may call for them at Miss Pitkin's office at the Union-Endicott High School from 7 a. m. to 5 p. m. Mon day through Friday. 3 Injured In Tioga Accident OWEGO —Three persons were injured, one seriously, in a two- car accident yesterday after noon at the intersection of Route 17 and Dry Brooks Road, about one mile west of the Vil lage of Waverly. Mrs. Alice Rose Hample. 59, of 705 Riverside Dr., Elmira. driver of one of the cars, suf fered concussion and bruises of her right shoulder and knees They are. Douglas Akers, Florence Am brose, Jane Angevine, Gail Arnold, Mflvfn Avery, Marilyn Bamo, Michael Beirne, Nancy Bidwell, Charles Bradt, Gerald Bravi, Isabel Brinser, Patricia Brown, Carol Burns. Thomas Btahnell, James Ca- hlll. Ronald Carlton, Michael Colella, Dorothy Comstock, Hal- bert Cornell, William Quinine- ham, Philip Davis, Thomas Day ton. Robert Demkovich, August Dobish, Reva Ellis, Mary Em mons. Kenneth England, Joyge Eng lish. Vincent Falcone, James Fischer, Susan Fish, George Frasca. Joseph Funari, John .Garthner, Marilyn Gelatt, Shir- bothlipy Getman, Gerald Greene. Ethel Harmon economic ciags tnap fiver Dciure. jVVUIiam Neil Dubois. 35, of j patr'cia Ingalls Joyce Jurc- But these hard-won prizes are Tioga, Pa. RD 2 driver of thejzalr. fttensra \Kfotzr-Barbara ' 'other car, suffered multiple Kravcovic. Nancy Lalor. Kather- laceratlons of the head, fore- me LaPorte. Marian Lesko. Pal- arms, hands and knees ma I.ongo. Richard Macharyas, Mrs. Ellen S. Rutledge 40 of Georgia Machotka. Celeste Mag- lOSa 1 ^ Caton Ave, Llmira, a eiote, Margaret MaUo, Nancy passenger in the Dubois car, was jMalnwiekv the most seriously hurt. She \ Anne Mancinl. Antonia Man- suffered a deep laceration of the , cini Dean Masland, David chin and internal chest injuries. | Mayes. Garald McManus. Joyce All three are patients in TI>KI MePher-on. Virginia Mollica. County General Hospital wher e K'nmond Mon eagle. Ellen they were taken following tlv According to State Police of Waverly. the Dubois car was traveling north on the P> Brook Road and came out on'o M \-.in Susan Murray. John iilimn Patnck O'Brien, Cor- uine Oliver Robert Osborne. Grace Pall- s.mo Robert Parke, I.ucile Pero. 1 Ronald Phillips Carol Podest Route 17 where it <\•••\• i tnno Mvma Kamer ix)is rtap- Hample car on the right ,> A Reines, Donald side. The Hample car was pro-, ^ J *.«!J.l the! Chester Proslnskl. Dominic Pu stmcK I tnno Mvi11a RamPr ix)!., Ran- ceedlng east Th e Dubois ma chine was turned completely Pitneia R : venhurg. Waneta around b7the\impact whle the ' ^\f-rd Roliert Semska. Frank- Hample car was driven off the '. n ^neV-nr Gahnel Siehor north side of the n>ad and b'o 2. n '°\ k -^ne Stage a culvert. Both cars were com- J ri ^' ' rik \' •' Sterhnt: pletely wrecked. Stevens. Rita Stone Dubois was Issued a summons no-ma Stratton. Elizabeth Szed- on a charge of being an un- '^ k ttcensed operator and will apprar i V>nna Tarnowskl. C a r o later before Justice of the I'rao - \\«'n Jimr.; T*ame; Jane John KUpalrlck Qf the Town o> V*r>r>ov> n . John Venner An. Chemung. Troopers SHII.MI and Geer of the suhstation in vestigated the accident \V .... v.. ^..u..-. are alone. Th e artist knows Tie 1» ties liien only an economic mus t be alone to create the writer, to work out his thoughts; the musician, to compose; the saint, to pray. But women need solitude in ordejr to find again the true essence of themselves, that firm strand which will be the indispensable center of a whole web of human roaltion- ships. She must find that inner stillness which Charles Morgan describes as \the stilling of the soul within the activities of the the revolving wheej of rela* >n- ships obligations, anil acti\ 'ies Owego Woman To Attend Conference V'Ve Jo'^^h Vvina. i Vivisna , Leo Vielkle. v«-'v Wi'i/\ .T^'-'e* WwTier. -'.-• a vvvv, w'tf-i m Wli't- C\ *n W|\t P-sKert V'oos- V <bert Ziemba. FrarieTs\ 's .ilek. Two Face Charges in Tioga > ) Florence May Gen- Hirtnn was arrested last night that the chanee will. .„. . hurt the value of the residential! Miss Catlin recently rece ved nn areas that abut the land The | official certificate of recocn.tion tract is located between Old i signed by Governor Harnm.in Solitude alone is not the answer | Vestal Road and Route 17. A t New York Mhs »Ctl n will to this it is onlv a step toward The zoning committee will In- 1 meet with a group discussing a mechanical aid. hkp thevcsticate ' In what vvay can w e organize OWEGO — ili*s Alice Catlin,. director of the junior high school o\\ | in Owego, will attend a state fl | 0 , l( conferenc eon Education next rhurs d .,v \bv Waverly StatV'piv Monday and Tuesday in Now , ^ • ]7 York Citv The conference will , inni , nn un]jrPnsed ^ t °J be a preliminary meeting to the , . y , Hirkrv r.f <;„, ,u Wjute House conference.on ^-^J^ ^ eh VSd ^h pe\ ^Miss Catlln-s appointment a* » m ;'^ ' \ ' u; \ ll operator delegate to the conference wis , ^ . ^ made bv Kenneth C Roy all • ^mmoned to ap- chairman of the stare committee P «r Sit'.id v morning before for the White House Conference • h '^\- < - \ f ,h< * Gilbert Lilts of I'e Town of liarton. it our school s\-'<m<! more effici ent U '\d • ei v '' i .-ally and wh it sN'u! 1 o ;r schools accomp lish wh.it v.' up ' -\ H <'.. e - • S' \\ -I f pi' 1 t'> the -;ni' pri r>tv H 'i' ?<' fei pei inp TP h'inpTv for we fill I w *h • •.d''-s' d -strae - n< a t hi\ii - ui \f ^ c .. . <irr; i N \ f c' • i' - » , c. 1 r f he r^ »st •' • f> \\ , k iddrn! v .* i« dr v . tt. f w <\l! \' c 71 - r i \nn' r 1 i 'v h a f ' il t V I \ j be .< c. .oiiiv jction s than of outer I'i 'hough of course, 1 i i • p:(si^, c s are there ' .• t n- •• e difficult As t s f.>r solitude .b e 1 ,i , live in a nega- \\e • n. «pne;e a s invisible, as •i t- - , ; •-, 1 HS enervating « t • • \i . <.n an August .itt. '....n. 1 . world today r >» >• i ^'and in either >• o r w >t--\i ihe need to bt refjll s i « You may win a 21\ Stromberg-Carlson TV sefj worth $259, or art English- -Raleigh bicycle, worth $74.95j, 4 Most Modem Porter in any Truck! New Chevrolet Task'FoiCe Trucks! Shortest stroke V8's of any lead ing truck. The Industry's most ad vanced Sixes! You get tht most Modern pdwer for your job with •••••••••••• new Chevrolet Task-Force trucks! 'Most Modern Engines V8or6 V8 is standard in new L C F. mod els, optional at extra cost in all other except Forward Control models. New Chevrolet trucks offer the industry's most advanced valve-tn-head sixes, too. All have a modern li-volt elec trical system. Most Modern Styling Work Styled-w'ith a fresh, functional appearance that's tailored to the job! Two distinctly different styling treat ments are otlcred-one for light- and medium-duty models, another for heavy-duty models. It's a Chevrolet exclusive^ Moff Modern Features Panoramic windshield, concealed Safety Steps and new High-Level ven tilation! New frames, new suspen sion! $ew tubelcv! tires standard on Vi-ton model*! Come in and see all the modern features that put you ahead! See Your Chevrolet Dealer Reg. $87.20 Deluxe Model 300 Witt SVE Slide Projecter With Automatic Aircquipt Slide Changer and Case 95 SI-30 Dowa SI.50 Weekly # Hr 2x2 Slldit # 300 Witt Lamp # 5*IR. eelir etrrtcttd lans Now you ran projeet wtthoot tnnehing xtwi slides! Kaek one moves direct' from magazine to projector with a gentla leverpush. back to Its own Indexed posltiun with aa easy pall. The Skyline Automatic Airequlpt majraxine» are specially designed . . . slides won't fall out however the magazine la held! Its color corrected 5-Inch ana»t!gmat lens and its 9#4- « r «.tt brtlttanc/ do ttnrrtrjr tn your ft Bes t abets • , , rlfkt a* their very edfes. And remember: it's automatic! r fREE INITIALS SAMSONITE VANITY 0WT| Slroaa enowc/d to stand Oft'wMt b«4»sf than Vsother ftnirii. .Wip« ckton wMi a domp sloth, UwwFtewi Knlng ond Kordwofe. Complete stock fit SaNMortHt from 17JO to $35. 17 .50 HQ MQHD SOmui RCA VICTOR CLOCK RADIO twfft you lo sleep, men shvta iheK off. Wakes you pleasantly... buzzes 10 minutes later if you oversleep. Controls SSMN appliances. Rica tone 39 .95 1.00 WEBdY Holmes & Edwards 2 Piece Set BABY FOR AND SPOON 89 FiJ. $1.75 •k Lovey Lady Pattera , 4 X • ENDICOT* Opel Daily 9M te SM — Thurs. »M te I f, 14