{ title: 'The Medina daily journal and Medina register. (Medina, N.Y.) 1932-1970, July 09, 1970, Page 2, Image 2', 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/sn91066521/1970-07-09/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066521/1970-07-09/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066521/1970-07-09/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066521/1970-07-09/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
I , i. ~;-' ... I I · J()JJ;RNAL.:.REGISTER · MEDINA DAILY JOURNAl-REGISTER I , ' v . ·~HE HAD A GOOD GOING OVER DOC/ BEFORE I BROUGHT HIM HE~El\ . .. . . I·. r2 THIJRSDAY, JUlY 9, 1970 II \'J) Jaulrnal' Fo~llded 'j91l3: .:. We¢kl~· R,gister f~unded \877 . . . . , . . Other Merged Pa~ers · ' ... , ·b'l!i~,i~p Ti:ibun! founded 18$2 - .Orleans County Newt founded 1912 Wa·shington Window :· ..... ,.. ... .. ,· . Pl'i!~id&!lf' arid .Pu.blisher ROBERT E. WATERS tditOr Nixon. ' ' Wants Focus on. terms ·of S'ubscription Payabl& in Aclvanc& ~ . For Hom& Deliv.ery Call ·:f9S.-t400 - By mail in O.rleans, Niag.ara, Genesee Couritle$ $1.35 per month $15 per year. AU ather Mail $19 p.er year. Middle East Dangers · By EUGENE V. RISHER Outlines Interest jets Qil protective missions over' WASHINGTON (UPD-Back- He also outlined in some ··E'gypt. /:· ......... ~_ . ~ . .. ,, ,. lh>signatecl as en Official Paper by the Village of Medina, County of Orlean• the Village of lyndonville, the townships of Ridgewy, Shelby ond Yate• and' the Central· School Districts of Medina and Lyndon,..!Jie, and its Town•hips stuirs 11t the White House: detail America's interest in th;e ·According to administration President Nixon is seeking to area. The Middle East fur- officials ampligying the Pres• focus public concern on the nishes 80 . percent of Europes ident's position, this unexpected conflict in the Middle Enst: He oil and 70 per cent of Japan's d~velopment -dramatically at- obviously wa!lts to emphasize oil, he said. It is the \hinge of tered the balance of power by l11s conviction that the conflict NATO\ and the \gateway eliminating almost overnigM there is more than a dispute through the Suez Canal down the only significant advantage between the Arabs and Israelis. into the 'Indian Ocean.\ I~rael had over. its bigger !!nteted at the i'ost Ofice Medina, N. Y. 14103, as .oecand class matter. - Editorial INDUSTRIES ON THE MOVE Are the demands of labor and a receptive state government pricing us out of industry? One of the motivations stated by the Ainsbrooke Corp. of clos- inlf': its knitting mills at Warsaw, a community in- dustrial stalwart for nearly a century, and the re- sultant loss uf .iobs to 130 and a half million dollar pay\roll annuallv to the merchants of the locality, is the new $1.85 cent per hour minimum wage. This is hi!!her than the comoany has to pay its labor Lll other states where they operate. While the $1.85 cent per hour minimum wage in this state when eQuated with some of the con- tracted wa<res paid to many of the skilled and un- ~ldlle-d workers. seems unimportant,- the faot remains that New Yo:rk is higher and industry is placed in an unfair competitive position to those states where the fede-~al minimum wage rates prevail. In hls nationally televised \I is not only the cq1dlc of antagonists -it$. air force of foreign policy review last week, civilization, but it also ... is that trained: personnel using sophis- r.1xon characterized the Middle area that controls so m~tLch of ticated we~jliQns. · East situation as a \terribly +he world's people and the Must Be Challenged dangerous\ one involving. the world's rt-sources,\ the Pres- This situation, i£ it continues. risk of a confrontation between ident said. must be challenged by the the two super powers -the Nixon and his chief advisers Israelis and might eventUal~ Soviet Union and the United have been concerned for some !>pil·al into a direct conflict States - 'that neither of them time with the Soviet military between the United States and wants.\ buildup in the Middle East :md the Soviet Union, the officiaJ.s He compared the Middle East the threat that it would lead to said. · V.'ith the Balkans before World Soviet domination in this vitally They pointed out that the War I where a regional confiict strategic area. emphasi~; now was on getting mushroomed into a war that This concern turned to alarm the Soviet pilots withdravm , changed the political complex- with the recent introduction. of through diplomatic means, and ion of the globe. Soviet pilots to fly Egypttan spoke with some optismism of Pay Up Ruling on 'Coke' Game Would Cost Millions the new peace i n it i a ti Y e launched by the United States. But at the same time the 3dministration campaign ap- peared to be aimed at laying the groundwork for introduction of U S. military personnel in the area if they are reqUired. \Vith the annonhcement by Bemis Comnany, Inc, that it is phasing out its operation at Albion and the phmt there will be closed by the end· of this yea:r. this villal!e suffers the loss of its second major industrv within the vear and some 70 more WASHINGTON (UPll-In an the game, called \Big Name err.nloyees will be losing \their iobs. This leaves unprecedented rulirig that could Bingo.\ Almanac A~bion with· hut one major industry, Thomas J. cost millions of dollars, the \It would be a. pretty piece of Ltnton Co. Coca-Cola Co. has been told to change,\ one FTC source said ~ Medina is fortunate fu havin~ recouped its pay the $100 priie to conte·· of the potential payout. \It was Five Years Ago lo;se.; with the closing of three of the major indus· stants allegedly gypped out of a game of skill, not luck, and it By United Press Jnternatioual Bodies of two Canadian boys tnes here- m1d the.several new ones have more than the jackpot in a promotional wasn't that difficult.\ drowned at Niagara-on-the· made up in ioh opportunities for the losses sustain- game last year, it was learned Glendinning Companies Inc., Today is Thursday, .July 9, Lalre July 2, found near Carlton. ed when Heinz,. General Foods and the Ontario Co. ·today. Westport, Conn., a sales the 190th day of 1970 with 175 to Village.considering curfew as Gideons p~;esent new Bibles heir to large estate left by to Medina Memorial Hospital. ' Twenty-Five ·Years Ago State· buys tract south of Ala- bama for pheasant farm to be known as John White Mf'morial Game Farm.· ' . Temperature hit 44 ahove for new low.for July. Gaines Grange visits at E. Forty Year's Ago Band concer-t at City Larry Mott fractures leg Oak Orchard Park. FishH family reunion at Park. Forty-Fi:ve Years Ago Co. F leaves for PeekskilL · Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Shelby. · Tokyo waits .for invasion by Sehnackle, a son. Yanks. ceased operatit:tns. Indications point to a thousand The number of people who promotion firm that ran the follow. acts· of vandalism by yout_hs con- Fifty-Five Years Ago ·neath of Warren Ide. more iobs available within the next couple of years. would get $100 should the promotion for Coke, said 831 The moon is· approaching its tjnne,tbtooghout the -village. Thil1y Years Ago AH of these removals in industrv from com- Federal Trade CommissiQn p~rsonS' won the $100. But the first quarter. ,. Area fruit' men make a tour President Roosevelt asks au- munities where thev have be.en institutions over (l<''I'C) order go through was FTC, in its tentative complaint The morning star is Saturn. of the ·l3enjamin Brown fruit thority to call National Guard Sixty Years Ago the vears is part of the chang;in~ industrial picture. not known. But Advertising July 1, said \a substantial The evening stars are Mer- f~rm. at Two. Bridges. for a year's training. Fleet Caufield merchant No longer are community ties being given general Age, a trade publication, said in number of contestants\ beyond cuy, Venus, Mars and Jupiter; The ·Rev.· Burton· Entrekin of 50 enrolled in swimming class- 'Ridgeway Corners. , conside-ration. It is a question of economics-mov- an article in AugiiSt that 1.5 the 831 were tricked out of the On this dat~ in hist<)ry: . M«ic!iiJa~.named. a chaplain at es in Medina pools. Charles Bennett ih1jmrd · iuv nf\arer markets, nearer source of materials million persons participa,ted in prize by a secret and deceptive In 1850 Presi<M;nt T~ylor dte4 $U~er catnp of Lewiston Trail Murphy employees hold picnic he fell off his barn. lack of modernization in old ulants, and wageg,' · . : ·,l . . : :1 .• · ! , I! :tnle.. d · • . of a typhus tnfectio.n afte.~ Boy S®ilts at Dittmer. at Voelkers Park. Chan\:{es must be accepted, However; if com- . . . . The FTC'~ July 1 announce- serving one year and four : . · &ixty-Five -.zears Ago , m1.miti~s develop (}r expand there must be a strom~ M~teor4 M~stcifry' · 1 ·.I mant! :said .a formal ~om plaint months. He was· succeeded by Ten Years Ago . . .. : Eug~~ w;alsh advertised i base of.·civie.minded men and women who are wi11- · T would be 1ssued agamst both Millard .Fillmore. · . . Stiite repairs section of and'l);now-. 4:0 men to work at 'his · ~ ino: .to give of the~ time, talents and resources in S\ 1· ''d by 'A· · ' 'Coke·~ Glendinning unless In 1900 Queen ~ictoria si~~ed R,d .. p~v~ent that .''e.Xl.Ploi~ ?fi'!J~!l;Vfi~~t-·':.Bo~ '~l$\~fs'···~K\~hafuf.:r~i)rt .. r ·. . · .. . ! nickin~ up the pi~es and· building·uver· M:ain. It. \ · 0 :Ve < • l ~~ 11 1 'they Signed a corisent order an act by Which Austf?lla due. to heat. Park irl Lock'·£\ F!tcetl Howell off<!rt>d ~n'\\'' 1 .ha<> heen.Nfedina'~ f!OO fortune to 1 have had just. ScietdisfS .,g.e, ,prof}is\ng ;not to repeat the agreed to enter into a 'federal Dr: Alan Jo,hnson: of . ''ifof:tetum of his lo~t· '~~ HHI.IUl I this type of leaders., hi ... ·''. t . ·,· I' ' .• . ' '' . all~ged hoax. The annoupce- British Common~ealth, . '.·' ' Vi~\e ~~)pel);$ om<;idot ' . . ;; iopi~. . I · 1 . •• : ·~ss~~· N.r <UPI!l-U.Th:, my~- 'fh~nt said nothing about telling In 194~ Am~nc~n, CanactjaJI, mjl,4~~tne .Vl 1 ~~dtna: 1 - ... -~~·~·-!!-!;-~~~~~~-~-.!!!,-·;· ;;;;;~;;;:;~ . ....:'~!!:--!!!.!.;_.;.;.;·~· ~;~,·;~,.2..·~--. ;·•~'~;~~,;;~- tery, .?~ ·1lltt!_ met,eofl.t~t ~asn t the ~ompanies to make good on and British forces ipvaq~d .DOnald' Goodw1n · ins:talled _ ; .. w.as. Stllv.ed 'tqdtty :b}Ltqe.sharp the $lll0 prize ~n FTC Sicily '·d.ent ·i' Medina Rotary f 1 '· ... pose ()£ ·~·.I?latt.llb~\.·scientistL';. ... , •. l!~.._!Ja.'n s·-.;· 1 d~~1;......-.Ms· 10 ners · · · Pr · · · .. N'M~-·,P~s.l~, '· .. o:J.'· , .. ·,. · · · L~--. ~~ -·6'• hlSt'wd~:s•u \ . \\\\''\\\' In 1960 Russxa . emter 1~.na , · F't~ll. l)oza 1 .bf J'eridaH The l. • ht and .the· oo,.Ues8lon 1 oi a: it,2-year- ~ ~<J1ed;,- tb~ ~ou~h Rrovi~ion at Khrushchev thi'eatened the p~sia~nt of Otlea'ns ' . L:.;IQ . er ·old boy. ' . '. . .. '':J It, \)f!M,last fu1nu~ ·after·'the press United States . with .. SoVi~t~ Bo~d oq::Qdpci'ative ~;;t;.,. . .n, ' ~ . ' . ., . ·s~·H·<, -,-·•:t1 t \ · Scientists -from· Mballiy' ·a n 1 d rel:e~se·was yyritten. rockets if Washington trie·~·Jo · -· · .,,. ·.~ 1 .. :'' ~· l :\ the Smithsonian in·lW\ashington ,-,1 \·(• : ·· · · · oiiSt the Castro Communist :FUteenYearsAgo , ·· : ·· jw-·: · ·,. '< · had ·joined•> James• ·Perkins of S .. · •d S f C b · · :Py D.~CK,.~if ·.y \ ~tate_ Urt~v~rsity. 'Qoileg~ :: at, 'ta,h~WI e a ety regime in u a. sc~l ~~~:r ~:e year . United Press International r~~~~--~~~-- • WASHINGTON lUPD House voting procedures, noted Members of Congress are fond that many votes cast in public of desC'rihing one another as session are unrecorded. Which \distinguished.\ But ·this most tr1eans the voting is done overworked word in the con- anonymously. gressional lexicon is usually Teller votes Important only a half-truth at best. \The most important votes It is tnte that a congressman on the floor are teller votes,\ may appear distinguished when he explained. \Each member Y?U meet him head-on. When walks past a teller, a member Vlev.ted_ from the. rear, however, appointed to count the votes for h; Is lik1!ly to ~ts:play co:rnr~ton- and against am amendment. p_.ace .cha~actensttcs that blend \The members walk through nght rn wtth the crowd. the teller line in a directio The u~texceptional 9uality of facing away from the pres~ congres~10nal postertors was gallery. It's hard enough for ~he subJe~ of a news release 1he press to identify a 1ssued thts week ·by . Rep. congressrp.an from the front- Thomas lVI. Rees, D-Cahf. you can imagine the trouble Rees, who wants to reform they nave identifying one from CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 5-Test 6-Sell to eonsume\r !-Sacred image 7\Near· 5-Snare 8-Footlike part 9-Conducted 9-Tibetan priests 12•Accomplished 10-latin . . 13-Nerve network .conjunction 14·D~voured ll·Ptefix: dowrt 15-lndefinite article !?•Conjunction l6·Linger l!Mbove 18-'total 2.1-City in Rus$r.a 20-Preposition 23-Musical 22-District in instrument Germsny 2!l·State of affillrs 24-South American (pl.) toc!ent -.. 26-Foreigners 27-lreland 27-Regard 2.9-Falsehoods 28-Latnpreys 46-Greel< 31-The sun . SO-Stalk marketplace 3;?.$Coff 33-Harvest 48-Rent 34-Flermil>~' • 35-Strike 5l·Sun·god 36·Symi>Ol for nickel 38·Regrets 53-~~J:, of 37-Bank employe 40-Southweslel'ft 56-Cheer' :39-Mislead Indians 58:Man's · 41-Printer's measure43·Secondoftwo niGkname 60-Piaee . 61-Note of scale . 62-tfyj)Otheticat force G4·Symbol for calcium 66-COn'ipa$$ point . 4;Hirst king ot 'i'\T2'1ii\\1r\'!Zl~,rl7 Israel 11 .44-Moming prayer 45-Qreek letter 47-Toll 49'Fondles iiO-Monsignol' (abbr.) 52-let it stand 54-Spilnish fof \yes.'' 55-Paddle - 57·Caudal appilndage 59-Bone 6l·Preposition 63-Higlt cards 65-Siave · 67-Girl's 1111me fiB·RabbH: 69-0irection ·oowN 1·Girl'sllam& . ZG!'<!atlall!t masS!)$ ; .s;Pr~PP$ffion 4-R~t P1attSburgfi m th1s: ·~mall , 4tke . Cod Ad pted A thought for the day: TWo large barns on Champlain hamlet td take ,a e 0 German philosopher friedrich field. ·Farm, south of Mi4idl!lp()'l~, ll?ok at a 3'lh~foot hodleth. State.po· for Facilities Wilhelm Nietzsche said, \Dis- burn. ICe had summone · e sc1en- trust all in whom the imptilse Night employees of Lapp Ex-- . tists upon receiving r•eports it ALBANY, N.Y. tUPil - A to punish is powerful.\ press·Co. and families picnic at had been caused by a meteor. single 'ltatewide safety and fire Lakeland Park. P k . h t k hiff code for homes for more :than . er ms, owever, oo a w· · C.OVERED BRIDGES / Thirty-four·Orleans 4-H youths f th t d m II d g 520' homes for the aged and o · e era er-an s e e a- camping at Bristol Hills. soline, rather than the carbon other facilities caring for 25 · 00 ° FRANKFORT, Ky.· mPI) Kenneth Rook seated as new dioxide which usually accompa- r,ersons was adopted by the There are still 17 covered brid· noble grand of Orleans Odd Fel-. nies meteors. · State Board of Social Welfare ges in Kentucky. There were as lows. · d 'I'uesday·. n1any as 45 as late as t\'\ 19\'\, The scientist's iscovery was '\\ \\~ coupled with a confession given \The single code establishes but many have been lost to fire the father of the unidentified safety requirements for the pro- modern demands anc\ decay. boy' and memories of village tection of the individuals served The covered bridges were residents who recalled a gas by these facilities,\ Governor built originally because early station once occupied the vacant Rockefeller said ln announcing Kentuckians discovered timbers lot where the crater was lo- adoption of the code. \But it is lasted much longer when kept cated. . flexible enough to be applied to dry and protected from the wea- The lad, it turned o11.1t, tossed the specific purposes ol those ther. facilities providing special care a firecracker down a pipe lead- to a wide range of the needy ing to a long-forgotten gasoline and handicapped, including the storage tank. yollng drug aadict, alcoholics, mentally ill and not in need of hospitalization, an,d aged who are rrot in need of medical or. nursing care but do require help in everyday living and per- the backside. Only a few members pass this instant backside recognition muster . . \I helieve the public has a right to know what the Honse of Representatives is doing, and how. their elected congressmen vote on important amendments in committee and on the floor.\ sonal c a!'e.\ NANCY Twenty Years Agi. Francis Sturges of Albion GOP C®~idalje f~r non;rlnatipn fQr eot»\ti1 jadge. E~orsed by Dem- oc~atif as' their 'canl:lidate. Cornerstone laid for new RH Central School at Middleport. Axtell· family hold reunion. As a frequent occup.ant of the press gallery, I must concur in Rees' evaluation of the situa- tion. Of the 435 House members, the only two I can positively identify in a teller line are Heps. Charlotte T. Reid, R·ili., and Patsy T. Mink, ·D-Hawaii. The code requires all build-. ings, old or· new, must be \safe and suitable for the residents, must be in good repair and in a sanitary condition and must conform to applicable laws and ordinances and to rules and regulations o( local authorities relating to safet-y, fire health and sanitation.\ . All facilities providing in-resi· dence care for adults must have safeguards against fire that in- clude automatic smoke detector systems, smoke barriers, fully charged fire extinguishers and fire alarms or telephones plus alternate means of egress on DON'T Fl-Y YOUR PLANE: tN THE: HOUSii _......., Way to Solve Problem Rees did not spell out what remedy ne had in mind, but it seems to me the simplest way to solve the problem would be to require that congressmen wear numbers on their backs. Programs listing the names and numbers of each and every congressman would be made available. Then those of us in the press galleries could identify the voters the way our colleagues in the sports press boxes identi~y the players. Rees quoted a fellow Rouse member as saying that \if the lJUblic does know what happens, mavbe a lot of us won't be back next session.\ rn that event, maybe we would put their numbers In a trophy case and retire them from the teller line. ea<:h floor. Such fire hazards as space heaters, kerosene stoves an d lamps. combustible material, corridor and ~xit obstructions are prohibited. Employes of all facilities pro- viding this care must be trained in the 1se of the building's fire- fighting equipment and in eva- (;Uating the building through fire drills. GINGER. By .. ·. \Don't get exdted. The pony is Jenny's cmd I'm \ looki_ng after it while she's on va{citionJI' . I