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a 4 wom Shall Meet ., o a a o o a aj * THE DAILY JOURNAL-REGISTER ,, sournacrecistet Daily Journal Fevnded 1903 - Weekly Ingmar Feuvnded 1877 Other Merged Papers Media-“ultimo Founded 1852 - Orleans County: News Foo-M l’ql Md mry afternoon except Saturday and Sunday, 413 Main $01.0! by The Medina Daily Jeounal-Register, inc. 1 ALONZO L. WATERS 1 President and Publisher ROBERT E. WATERS Editor Terms of. gubscrip‘vion Payable in Advance - For Home Delivery Call 798-1400 - By mail in Orleans, Niagara, Genesee Counties $15 per year or $4.00 per quarter. All other Mail $19 per year. | and its Town-slaps EahnddiberofiOffiuMul-uc N. Y.' 14103, comm-lunar Edltorlol _ DAIRYING DIRTY WORD Smce when has dairying become a dirty word? According. to Dr. Herman Sapier, superintendent of the State Agriculture and Industrial School at - Industry he \wants boys in academic and vocational programs - not taking care of cows.\ down the wrath of the farming industry on fthe head of the learned correctional officer. We iuse . the term correctional because educational would not ualify him under the concept of what \indus- : frate urbanite in answer to the school head states \Does this mean that the good docbor . ks that the boys at the state school (which is ; rted by taxpayers money) are too good to | fcular Form of | lcare of the cows or that this nial husbandry is beneath them? Someo! must care of the cows that give the m: hool. What do dairy farmers and t of this attitude?\ ; /e have not interrogated any dalrymen or thelr sons to know what they think about it. But | payers of the state, and what the boys dont me hired hand must, we think that the vocal of Industry has been tarred with the same | brush as scores of other self-righteous individuals who have come out of sociology classes and taken haven in state departmental posts. Here they have the cloister of civil service, together with early re- tirement and public paid retirement benefits. Some areas of the state's belt tightening are | pomted in the wrong direction. ~ THE REWARDS ARE EVIDENT The type tive Extension and the other agnculturally orient- ed agencies in Orleans County with the establish- ment of the Junior Fairgrounds in the county has . been ably demonstrated this past fall and winter - season where scarcely a week has gone by with- out one or more uses being put to the bmldmgs . Something of théir availablity for regional - meetings is seen in the Dairy Congress which has - been planned for the Knowlesville site on March - 9. This type of an operation has never been avail- |_ -_ able to the farming interests in a building, or group - of buildings, they have owned or occupied before. ~- Because of the two fine buildings on the grounds, ' one of which has beenprovided with excellent It-. ~ chen Facilities, the “Congress will be able not alone prowde as assembly for the interested persons but also dining facilities and a spacious building which - tively new project for the farm interests, scarcely a det¢ade old, is that the grounds and two build- ings the sponsors that this year's walk-a-thon W111 be as rewarding in financial returns as those previous- ouse an agricultural industry exhibition. n outstandmg accomplishment of the rela- . ' ly held. Should this develop as planned, the new _ bulking, erected only a year ago, will have been | comp {n ly paid for. pbv51 turn that comes from working together. ___ When folks, young or adult, put their good- zwllb ogether in a creative way, or bias, alone to our ways of getting along with our world of n ghbors, but to our own well-bemg ive the world a few junior fairs to work on - e won't need to worry about South East _ 21a, the inner city, the suburbla, pollution, or any ; ' of the other festers that untate the old world The alleged statement has justifiably brought of service envisioned by C00pera- 3 practically debt free It is the hope of - addition to the material rewards of the - ' property, there is a more- enduring and - basic return to those who have given of their time | and talents to develop the project. That is the re- - is. no room - wrongs, either real or farmed or any other | of pettv divisive elements that are blown up - into situations that are destructive. Destructive not : they walkeb oicth christ ALEC SpE era Mess Hpa Mes Mees epa Meese s Ry vaovto polirxs SALOME - Jesus called twelve men as disciples, yet\ a half dozen women proved to be more ona and trusting to the Master. In the cross-f of, Holy Week and the testing hours of Goos iday, Mary, the mother of Jesus, Ma Magdalene, and Salome, the mother of Ja and John, were the last outpost of faith. fi these, Salome had followed Jesus from th first day of his teaching. She stayed unti the end and on Easter morning celebrated Resurrection instead of a burial. ome traditions have taught that Salom was a sister of Mary. Others claim that sh and her husband Zebedee were distant cous ins of Jesus and early followers of John the Baptist. Their sons aligned themselves with Jesus and Salome blessed their devotion with | -her money and her participation. When- ski came into the circle of Christ's teaching, i was not for a family reunion, rather a lif of loving service. , 1 For a full’cotor, “page book based on fins series, contain- i eight big ilustrations suitable for framing, send $2.25 In r check to LENTEN BOOK, c/o this newspaper, P.O. lax “9 Kédlo City Station, New York NJ! 10019. | Journal classlf‘ ed ads have a reputation for fast Jesponse TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972 Political Puzzle Why Is George Taking Tough Presidential Trail? WASHINGTON (UPI)-There ._ is endless speculation in bwash- Designated as an Office! Paper by the Village of Medusa County of Orleans ington about the motives and the Viloge of Lyndonville, the townships ef Ridgeway, Shelby - dem-ndfioCnmlSdodmdMQM-ndlymknfil. impact of Gov. George C. Wallace's campaign for the presidency. Nothing in public opinion polls indieates that he can come any closer to winning the White House than he did in 1968 when he polled 13 per cent of the vote and carried five southern states with 45 electoral votes. His real goal is to influence policies of both major parties. . A theory commonly held by anti-Wallace Democrats sees him in the Democratic pres- idential primaries to shoulder his way into the early press and television publicity. Thus : he would get an early start, then he could follow the American Independent party route he used four years ago. There is also speculation among the most suspicious Democrats, who admit they have not a gram of evidence to support it, that Wallace's campaign is part of a secret Will Hold Buffalo To Deadline BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI)-State Education Commissioner Ewald B. Nyquist says he will hold the Buffalo Board of Education to the April 1 deadline he set for submission of a plan to racially balance city schools. Nyquist held a two - hour meeting behind closed doors Monday with members of the board and four city councilmen to talk over his desegregation order. The commissioner said he would stick to the deadline he would be \flexible\ in the manner and the time- ' table established for the plan. Nyquist said later he was op- timistic that racial balancing could be achieved voluntarily by the board. But he also warn- ed that the state could take either of two steps if the board fails to act: either withhold state aid from the school sys- tem or remove the board. Before Nyquist met with the board, the city's advisory plan- ning council on desegregation released a report calling for cross-busing of black and white pupils. About 3,700 blacks are cur- rently: bused to predominantly white schools, but the new pro- posal would. involve the busing of more than 24,000 black and white students. The plan, the result of a year- long study, recommended split- ting the city into five districts so no student would be required to travel more than 5.2 miles to school. The new proposal would cost about $2.8 million. A group calling itself \The Silent Majority on the West Side\ picketed city hall during in the meeting to protest the bus- ing plan. Luna 20 In Soft Landing MOSCOW (UPI)-The Soviet Union's Luna 20 moon probe made a successful soft landing in a mountainous region of the moon, the Soviet news agency Tass sald Today: Tass said the unmanned ship \successfully resolved the most important _ scientific-technical . problems involved in making a landing in an area with a complicated surface.\ The report gave no imme- diate details of the Luna 20 mission. flwbia‘f Early in 1971 insurance companies writing health insurance policies in the United States provided hos- pital. expense protection to a net total of 112,575,000 persons compared with only 3.7 million persons covered by hospital insurance in 1940, The World Almanac notes. Copyng'ht © 1972, Newspaper Enterprise 'AaAssn. 4 deal to help re-elect President Nixon. Slated to compete in several state primaries, Wallace alrea- dy is rated the probable winner in the Florida primary March 14. The credentials of any Wallace delegate to the Demo- cratic National Convention are almost certain to be challenged. No one could ever prove which major party candidate was helped or hurt the most in various states by the Wallace . vote in 1968. Republican leaders hold con- flicting ideas about whether the Wallace campaign could help or hurt Nixon's chances for re- election. _ One school of Republicans PEOPLE's FORUM (Free expression is the mark of a progressive com- munity. This column be- longs to Journal - Register readers to set forth their views. Letters should be as brief as possible and must be signed in the writers' own hand). . To The Editor: I have been carefully reading your paper relative to the reporting about myself and the Fireplace Inn drug raid. I feel that there has been an abun- dance of prejudicial publicity in conjunction with the so-called “carefully planned raid\ and its primary purpose was to smear me. Several weeks prior to the Grand Jury returning a \no- bill\; my attorney,; Tom Calandra, sent a letter to the District Attorney, requesting a polygraph test to determine whether or not I had been in- volved with narcotics; for- tunately, this will not now be . needed. In my opinion the raid is of questionable legality and had the atmosphere of a political clambake with its principal players being Trustee and Chief Deputy Howard Lake, Mayor Cobb and the District Attorney, . Hon. Hamilton Doherty leading the festivities. Apparently, Mayor Cobb is now a law en- forcement officer and I am sure it did not hurt his political image to have his picture appear in the paper at a drug raid scene. It has recently come to my attention that Mayor Cobb had stated that. he would close me down - one way or another. Mr. Doherty was also kind enough to bring his teenage son along with a camera so that he apparently could take pictures for the \family seraphbook\. I take issue with the \reporting done surrounding the so-called \raid\\ especially since only one newspaper was privileged to be present at the raid. The article of Dec 6, 1971, linked all 24 suspects ested that evening as being at the F eplace when it was raided. Thls is not true! Eight of the iduals were not at the Inn; 9 were rought in from the parkmg . lot and 3 persons were arrested two hours after the raid began for standmg 8 feet from the place where marijuana was allegedly found on the floor; 1 person was arrested for hang diet pills in her possessmn Many people were arrested after a search was made of their automobiles and drugs were found there. Am I supposed to be responsmle for what | a person has. in his automobfle\ The paper reported \all customers were, searched\. It should have explained how the police. blocked off the area outside the Inn, arrested people outside of my estabhshfixent and ° brought them inside to be searched. Young adults were searched, taken inside and questioned while oldei- people who would pull up outs‘lde were allowed to go on their way. I guess the determining factor is \who you are\ and \who you \ know\ in this county as to whether or not an individual is a suspect for a crime. Onev might expect tins in a pohce state, but not in the United States where you still: have to arrest; people on probable cause and not just because you think they are guilty - a' primary reason for the American Revolution was to insure against public officials arresting people on suspicion and to insure preservation of our personal liberties. KINDLY NOTE THAT NOT ONE PERSON CHARGED WITH SELLING DRUGS WAS ARRESTED IN, OR AS FAR AS - I KNOW AROUND MY PLACE OF BUSINESS It seems highly improbable that the raid was done in good faith - \three experts from Erie County\ after giving the \small army thorough instructions in. making proper identification of ewdence” took a jar contammg believes that Wallace feels he has lost ground in the south to: Nixon since 1968. Southern: Republicans addicted to rose- tinted glasses see the President sweping or almost sweeping the: 11 Dixie states next November. Those states cast a total of 130 electoral votes, almost half of the 270 needed by the winner.} But other Republicans fear; that Wallace intends to av01d‘ the third party route he used in: : 1968 and to throw his weight; around only in the Democratic party. If he followed this pattern, he would not drain away discontented white back- lash votes in northern industrial states from a liberal Democraic presidential nominee. al and labeled '\Oregano'' and \xg a 72 arrested me for Criminal) | Possession of a Dangerous Drug. | Experts should have been able to : distinguish Oregano from | marijuana by a simple field test | that takes less than 5 minutes. 1 / believe to help buttress their case, cigarette papers were}, dehberately planted in the | Oregano jar in an attempt to | further implicate me. H there was any doubt as to the presence of marijuana in the Oregano, the material should have been} submitted first to a laboratory test in order to- determine its - content. I am not in the habit of sear- , ching my customers when they | come in the door. However, I do | police my establishment to in- sure that no drugs are used by : persons while they are inside the Fireplace. For the record, the only time I | saw any of my customers using | or exchanging drugs was on one occasion. When I discovered what was going on, I im- mediately called the Orleans , County Sheriff's Department, : indicating that I wanted to place : charges against these in- dividuals. Four hours later (3:30 . a.m.) the officers of the Sheriff's . Department still had not arrived, | so I gave up and went home. If - you feel this is an inaccurate statement, I would suggest that Sheriff Williams check his log book in July or August, 1971, to find out whether or not a call was | made by me. As a matter of fact, ' I have been burglarized 18 times during the last 6 years and seem | to get very little cooperation from the law enforcement agencies. , It is my understanding that in America, people have the right to . life, liberty and the pursuit of PEANUTS® ina Dally Journal edina Register Five Years Ago NAACP pressing Albion for HousmgTAuthorlty Farm Bureau receives 89 essays from two Orleans Schools, Lyndonville and Kendall, for | Albany trip contest. Baptist Silvers leading 14 team Church Bowling League. happiness and should not be subjected to undue harassment. This is a small community and some people do not read beyond the headlines. Once an allegation is made, certain people feel you ' are guilty regardless of whether ' or not the charges against you are unfounded. These charges have caused myself and my family to incur irreparable harm which cannot be mended by your editorial of Dec. 6, 1971, and the article of Feb. 15, 1972. I honestly feel the whole purpose of the raid -was an attempt to close me : down. | Rather . than \dragnet type police procedures\ I would suggest better law enforcement so that innocent persons will not be accused of crimes. I am confident that a number of persons jwho were unjustly ac- cused of: being involved with narcotics during the raid have been, and will be, vindicated. I would greatly appreciate your printing the entire content of this letter .in your paper. ' DAVID SCHRADER p. | Fifteen| Years Aggo d- Short, William Ken- nedy and Edward Bielak en- dorsed | by Citizens Party to succeed themselves as trustees. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Sipple, N. Academy St., returned -from vacation in Florida. Mrs. Roy Smith of N. Academy St. hostess to Medina Junior Home MDemonstratioon Unit. Harry Garner named to head Orleans County Barracks No. 259 rld War I Veter’ans. , Twenty] Years Ago Lewiston Trail Boy Scouts rally brought some 400 scouts to the state armory. William Jenny reported ex- penditures for the county home - infirmary amounting to $40,797 for the jyear. Twenty{Five Years Ago Miss| Inez Reynolds and Bernard E. Hart, Red Cross Drive chairman, attending. state of Red ,|Cross in Syracu'e ' Caph as Evans of Shelby Center i in car accident. rriet Beecher Stowe tent DUV held t-ureen supper. Thirty nears Ago Bruce Scarborough, 6 son of . and Nrs. Homer Scar- borough fatally injured by hit ~- I and run driver. ~ Medina Home Bureau met with Mrs. Charles A. Mack, Pearl St. : Miss: Mildred Hoey elected president of Heinz 57 Club. Capt. William Grauch at Ft. Belvmr Va. . Tlm'ty-Flve Years Ago Death of Mrs. Nellis Posson. Death of Asher Freeman, 84. - Forty Years Ago 'Mrs. Edward Crook hostess to M. E. Utility Class. Death of Mrs. Lllhan Jackson, 54, of Shelby. {Forty-Five Years Ago Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Soucie celebrated their golden wedding . anniversary. Death of Miss Vade Fumess returned foreign mlssmnary, Yates. : 'Fifty-Five Years Ago Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Thurston of Hedley St. celebrating their 54th anniversary. i Siity Years Ago Death of James Fox, aged 54. 'A. J. Cleary signed as umpire in New,York State League. Sixty-Five Years Ago _ Mary Louise Hospital ready: to receive «patients, Miss Coon, superintendent. ' Cabbage bringing $18 per ton: Seventy Years Ago Marriage of Edward Woods and Ida Claver. Snow prevented mail carriers from making their rounds. Physicians attending President McKinley, presented bills to government with three - charging $5,000 and one $25,000. - By Charles M. Schulz THERE IT 1s! A ' VINE-COVERED COTTAGE Wik Rose. BVSHES, A WILLOW TREE ANP A PICKET &n IT STANDS, JVST AS IMAGINED IT ! GH, oweersrow l'VE ‘1’00 AT LAST! WHEN PHE ANSWERS THE POOR, [°LL REMOVE MY. DOG Dt§H AS IF IT WERE A HAT, LL BIW AND IN A VERV PIENIF tED MANNER TULL 6M ( “Ht éwEEflEQ ¥ <\ deoun 40 97 +0 awd JUST Two IN THE FRONT ROW Tm Reg. U.5. Pat Off -Atr rights reserved 01972)va ited Feature: Synd ate inc GOOD MOVlE | wasn't iT 2 GREAT & 1972 by NEA, lac TBM Reg, US fet Off, NO MAN LIVING ZALLS ME HAr! | REMEMBER. I WAS steepwé IN BLEPSOES HUNTING ? IN NORTHERN CANADA! ser BUT l \DREA P yese- thE STVDY iN Bl EPSOE'S | COUNTRY HOUSE- ABOUT 50 mirEs LEROM WHERE were si1Ting NOW: wb 7. ha wovsants \ Mn z From nis | | (Wi ’, | UéE‘ A | by Crooks 8x Lawrence ral '~ I RECOGNIZED THE ROOM AT ONCE... w iT HAG NO WINDOW5 AND JUST ONE POOR!\