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Image provided by: Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
MEDINA JOURNAL-REGISTER THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1972 CRAFTSMAN- Lyndv. Mayor Harry Maines spends many fulfilling hours at a variety of crafts. Shown is a comp- leted stained glass window, and some progress on a piece of free standing, sculpture. Craft Faire Harry Maines is probably known first as the Mayor of Lyn- donville and President of the | Lyndonville Canning Company. He was recently elected presi- dent of the National Association of Canners. r Like many active community leaders, Mayor Maines has a hobby. For six or seven years he has been working with stain- Dinner & Dance held at ' Shelby Fire Hall Sat., June 10 Dinner at 7 pm Dancing 9 till ? Donation $3.00 per person Sponsored by ‘ Shelby Firemen and | _ Ladies Auxiliary - FIGHTS INFLATION Brick School House ” BRICK SCHOOL HOUSE - Mrs. Roy Baker, East Shelby Road, attended a meeting of the Banner Class held Tuesday in the home of Mrs. William Mull, West Barre. A tureen dinner was served at 12:30 with 12 members present. Following a business meeting conducted by Mrs. Mull, class president; an auction was held. Mr. and Mrs. LaVerne Green, Sr. and daughter, Debra of East Shelby Road, and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Caldwell and sons, Brad- ley and Dale of Newfane were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. LaVerne Green Jr. and family, the occasion celebrated the birthday of Mr. Green, Mr. and Mrs. B. Ozarth of Richmond, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pultz and family; Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Weitzel and family of LeRoy, and Mrs. John Bland and family of Basin were Decoration Day guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Pace and fam- ily of Town Line Road. Mr. and Mrs. Seeley Palmer of Knowlesville were Friday night callers on Mrs. Roy Bak- er, East Shelby Road. Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Neal, East Shelby Road, have return- ed after spending the winter at their Florida home. Mr. and Mrs. George Bower, daughter and son motored to Lewiston, Pa., Friday returning Monday. They visited Mrs. Bower's mother. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Neal of Hilton and Miss Edith Barnsdale of Rochester were Sunday after- noon guests of Mrs. Norman Dunn, Sr., East Shelby Road. SIDE GLANCES | ® by Gill Fox $o | toy I &o tmm v HA inc. TMM. eg. US. Pot. Off. \On the bright side, be very a low-budget campaign would non-polluting!\ Sheret Post Will Honor ALBION - Presentation of several awards for outstanding service to the community and an address by Congressman Barber B. Conable Jr. of Alexander will highlight the 24th annual Ppa testimonial dinner honoring past American Legion command@fS of the local post and past presidents of its Auxiliary at the Sheret Post Building Sunday according to Commander Dee Williams. . The dinner is scheduled for 3 p.m. following cocktails from 2. Mayor William A. Monacelli, a Bonuses Offered to WASHINGTON (UPI) -- For the first time since the Civil War, the Army and the Marine Corps today began offering $1,500 cash bonuses to men who enlist for combat training. The bonuses will be offered until the end of August in a \ +> 'move'to attract more volun- teers. They may be offered ed glass design. He will be at the 4H Arts and Crafts Fair on June 10 and 11 at the Orleans County Fairgrounds to explain and demonstrate his craft. Thirty exhibitors will be dem- onstrating at the Fair. Visitors will be able to talk with the \expert\ and learn a craft or see how it's done. Crafts include pottery, ma- crame, crocheting, hooking, woodworking and carving, nee- dlework, painting, engraving, candy making, quilting and others. Midd‘leppflrrl MIDDLEPORT-Mr. and Mrs. Edward Thompson, Eagle Lake, | Ticonderoga and Tucson, Ariz., spent Tuesday with Middleport I Babcock and family, Park Ave., spent the week end with Mrs. Babcock's relatives in Pitts- burgh, Pa. - curred the last | For Your Classifieds Phone 798-1400 Garden Shop Ortho Lawn Care ORTHO-GRO < Lawn | ORTHO-GRO _ Weed & Feed \again later if the trial period proves successful. There are some catches. The volunteers must go in for four years, instead of the usual two- year hitch for infantry, artillery and armor; and the bonus will be paid only after the volunteer is in uniform, has successfully completed his training_and has been accepted for combat service. . Delaying the payments in that manner is an attempt to avoid the abuses which oc- time the bonuses were paid, more than 100 years ago. During the Civil War some men - enlisted, collected their bonus-it was called a \bounty\ -and then deserted, only to enlist again in another part of the country to repeat their deception. They were called \bounty jumpers\ and they brought the system into such disrepute that it has not been used since. ' But Congress authorized the new bonus in September, telling the Defense Department at the time that bounty of up to $3,000. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird decided to use only half that amount for the summer test period. The plan was given no Johnson Creek JOHNSON CREEK - Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. King, Johnson Creek Road, have returned from a four day trip to Dover, Del., Combat Enlistees advance publicity so that young men who intended to sign up during May would not delay their enlistment to take advan- tage of the bonus; but the Pentagon began a full publicity campaign on the offer today. ° The bonus is aimed at this year's crop . of. high,. school graduates who, are. coming into a labor market with an over-all 6 per cent\unemployment rate,. and a 17 per cent jobless rate for their age group. Pentagon officials said if the drive succeeds this summer they believe the administration's plan for an all-volunteer Army beginning 13 months from now will be a success. The bonus idea is as old as the republic. Five months before the Declaration - of Independence was proclaimed, the Continental Congress, on George Washington's advice, adopted an enlistment bounty. It provided $4 for men without rifles and $6.67 for men with rifles who enlisted. During - the Revolutionary War the bonus rose to $200, and during the Civil War it ranged from $100 to $300. During the latter conflict some towns offered bigger bonuses-ranging up to $1,500-in an attempt to attract volunteers from other communities so the local boys would not have to march off to war. it could offer a g Leaders, Hear Conable past commander and honorary life member of Sheret Post, will be master of ceremonies. The invocation will be given by the Rev. Robert Conlon, assistant stor of St. Joseph's Church, and the benediction by the post chaplain, the Rev. I. J. Carnegie of Shiloh Baptist Church here. Commander Williams will pay tribute to the past commanders in attendance, and a response will be given by the immediate past leader, Richard Dickinson. Mrs. Shirley Newbould, retiring Auxiliary president, will give tribute to past presidents present, and a response will be given by Mrs. Madalyn Biggar, immediate past president. Past Commander Elmer DilLodovico is in charge of the program, and Past Commander Rocco A. Sidari Sr. heads the committee arranging for the presentation of awards. Davis Case In Closing Arguments By JACK V. FOX _ SAN JOSE, Calif. (UPD- Albert - Harris - methodically _ piled together all the bits, and pieces - of circumstantial evidence against Angela Davis Wednesday, then told the jury it had no alternative but to find her guilty of murder, kidnaping and conspiracy. - Seldom has a closing state argument in a capital case been so flat and unemotional, but the assistant attorney general had the jury's intense concentration - - as he outlined the events leading up to the bloody Aug. 7, 1970, San Rafael courthouse gun battle and attempted to tie Miss Davis into all of them. . The 28-year-old former UCLA philosophy _ instructor slumped with her chin in hand, expressionless as Harris spoke. Her turn came today when the defense puts on its final arguments-possibly with Miss Davis speaking. - Runthly News - = yUNE1972 0000 where they visited their son, [WWW AIC Robert King, who is station- (MZ ed at Dover AFB. Enroute to Dover they foured an Amish farm and house in Lancaster, Pa., and the Long- wood Gardens at Kennett Square, Pa. A rummage sale, sponsored by the Ladies Auxiliary of Hart [RMA ° land Fire Company, will be held Friday and Saturday at the new Hartland fire hall on Ridge Road. Mrs. Thelma Budde is - chairman and may be contacted for information. . explosion s at\ State Orders Pollution Bond May New Changes Face Uphill Fight _. By Gas Cos. | ALBANY, N.Y. (UPT)-A gas which - killed - a Rochester-area couple has led the state to order certain new procedures by all gas companies in New York. P The Public Service Commis- sion Wednesday directed the utilities to file plans by. June 30 making \blow down valves\ and vents easily accessible for repairs. ‘ The changes grew out of the March 10 blast which demolish- ed the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert G. Southworth of Wheatland, and killed both of them. 'The investigation into the ex- plosion indicated that the need for crews from Rochester Gas & Electric to excavate to clear buried blow-down valves \undu- ly delayed the extinguishing of burning gas and the [beginning of repairs,\ the PSC) said. The PSC said the; delay in blowing down the pipeline - clearing out gas trapped in the portion of the pipe between shut- off valves-was not lassociated with the leak of the explosion. Excavating the valves, however, delayed the clearixifigf the iso- lated portion of pipe nearly three hours, it said. The PSC said the) investiga- tion showed that the cause of the explosion was natural gas leaking from a 15-inch crack \in the bottom half of a girth weld in a ¥0-inch diameter high pressure gas pipeline.\ The leaking gas, unable to escape through the frozen earth, traveled into an abandoned cob- blestone water well; then follow. ed water lines through the wall into the cellar of the house, where it ignited, the PSC said. The PSC said that while Ro- chester Gas & Electric had been found to meet all protective measures required, additional safety measures were recom- mended. X-ray examination of other welds on the line showed flaws which are being correct- ed, the agencysaid. COBBLESTONE ‘UNQYERSAUST CHURC at Childs ~ ALBANY, N. Y. (UPD) - Environmental Conservation Commissioner Henry L. Dia- mond said today it would be an uphill fight . to get voter approval this fall of the proposed $1.15 billion bond issue. - . However, Diamond predicted voters would authorize the measure to combat air and water pollution, despite rejec- tion of the $2.5 billion transit bond issue last fall. - ''\The voters are very under- standably concerned about high taxes, and a billion dollar bond issue is not very popular,\ Djamond said. . e \This is going to be a real test whether our commitment to our environment overcomes our reluctance for bond issues. I believe that, on balance, after the voters study it, they will say yes. But those of us who support it are going to have to get out and educate them.\ The bond issue, cleared for the ballot by Rockefeller's sig- nature - Wednesday, - would provide funds to build sewage treatment plants, curb air pollu- The Duke Lies in State WINDSOR, England (UPD- The duke of Windsor, an exile from his homeland in life, was back in the hearts of his countrymen today in death. | - Railroads said they added extra cars for the thousands expected to pay tribute to the former King Edward VIH when his body lies in state in St. George's Chapel here Friday and Saturday. - The body of the duke, encased in a coffin of solid English oak and draped with his own personal red and gold standard, was brought today by road to the historic chapel on the grounds of Windsor Castle, - chief residence of the kings and queens of England for more than 900 years. The body was moved quietlyh, , and without ceremony through 'the turreted Henry VIH gate into the castle grounds. The hearse and four other cars comprised the cortege. There were few onlookers. s any *s JUNE 2nd, 3rd, 4th noon -9 p.m. JUNE 2nd and ART FILMS (Donation $1.00) 3rd af 9 p.m. ORLEANS CHAMBER GROUP \_ JUNE 4th at 11 a.m. ‘ Sponsored by The Ontario Plains Unitarian Society 0. ssssss s~1%%%2%° % %% ssoflsssxsss~~~MQ~~§~~~~~~¥ - What Kind Of Ceiling Tile tion, and preserve valuable forest and coastal lands. With the stinging defeat of his transit bond issue last fall, Rockefeller has indicated he will let conservationists do the - bulk of the campaigning for the environment issue this year. In signing the bills, however, the governor warned the effort against water pollytion is \in jeopardy\ because AU the funds from the $1 billion Pure Waters bond issue of 1965 have been committed. |_ \Not only will these bills keep our Pure Waters Program alive, they will also reserve funds for combatting air pollution, de- veloping solid waste manage- ment systems and preserving unspoiled and unique lands that would otherwise be dost as en- vironmental resources forever,\ Rockefeller said. | The governor said the vot- ers' decision in November will determine \in no small measure the quality of life that we shall enjoy and the kind of state we will hand to our children and they to theirs for generations.\ A second bill in the program signed by Rockefeller detail- ed how the money would be spent. The bill earmarks $650 million to complete the pure wa- ters effort, $150 million for air pollution control efforts and $350 million to safeguard valuable forests and coastlands. 1 The bonds would provide jim- mediate cash, to be repaid with tax money in futuge years. During the legislative session, some $50 million in \non-criti- cal\ funds were cut from the bill. The changes deleted $30 million for educational centers, and $10 million each for fish hatcheries and upgrading state parks. . © * The funds to protect hands, in- - cludes $59 million for land ac- quisition in the Adirondack and Catskill parks, $27 million for protecting wetlands, $10 million for preserving \unique areas\ in forests outside the two ma- jor parks, $3 million for stream rights acquisition and $8 million for new access to remote lands. - Just Arrived ITALIAN: CLOGS 0 Leather and Suede [* | Heels and Wedgies . - Baughn's SHOES 1438Main St. - - Medina §~~\Q\\\\~~~~“Q~~ss~ Doesn't Look Like One? & Tl.‘\,\ /¢‘ W “a; . _IN A X \Sy: 4 ..v\ - aC _ I. . +# motrong - Now there's a ceilihg that's made house, Unlike ordinary tile ceilings, Arms edges have - ve f\\¥\' 4“; ~- % Q: \ F » : - - WALL-TO-WALL ELEGANCE beén eliminated. ‘ itr stead, tiles fit snugly together, creat- ing a truly elegant effect. Come in for that! most luxurious rooms of your rong Chandelier Ceilings and ask us to show you SIX great have the typical ''ceiling designs to give your rooms an @x- look. The bevels along the citing, new look, ' TODAY. > Orleans County's Largest Stocking Dealer There will be a car wash, spon- sored by Hartland Hot Shots 4H NMM . Club, on June 3 in conjunction [ f with the rummage sale. MEET G 0.E.S. ' _ The regular meeting of Me- M dina Chapter No: 381, Order of | Eastern Star, will be held Mon- fik day at 8 p.m. The annual floral i degree will be held and 50-year | memberships presented. Prac- M # tice will. be held Sunday at 2 F . p.m. for all officers. |- _ -~ don't block s a95 $6 95 Covers 6000 sq. ft. Covers 5000 sq. ft. Maple Ridge Plaza ELECTRICAL - HARDWARE - PLuMsinG West Avenue, Albion 589-4032 ~