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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 12

Location:
Rochester, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ROCHESTER DEMOCRAT AND CHRONICLE. MONDAY, APRIL 12, 191S 12 llBHBBHBBHBBHBiBB9HBHHiHHHHI town taxi SIXTH WARD CARD PARTY Mrs. Margaret Brinkman yesterday was named a member of th hostess committee for the Sixth Ward Democratic Committer's 2 Peiping Colleges Raided By Anti-Communist Mob Peiping (UP) A club-wielding mob of 5,000 Chinese, 1 Safety State to Get Huge Property For Horticultural School Albany (GXS) Approval by Governor Dewey today or tomorrow of a Milmoe bill will give New York State a property on Long Island, fully developed for the teaching card party to be held in Hotel Seneca tonight. Service Low Rates mostly farmers and working men, marched on two Peiping colleges yesterday demanding the ouster of "Communist agita MAIN 8000 tors behind the recent student strikes. The crowd first invaded the of horticulture.

This vast nereonal estate of more sioner in behalf of the state. It is 16 miles from the state's Long than 400 acres one mile and a half from Oyster Bay is being given to Island Agricultural and Technical Institute and would provide the munist demonstrator. She was rescued by a squad of 10 soldiers only after she had been severely the etate, for education purposes, hv the owner, William Robertson choicest end best-equipped training grounds of Peiping National University where they wrecked the rooms of professors accused of supporting the student strikers. Then they massed at the gates of Peiping Normal College where a delegation of 30 men entered the beaten and her hair set afire. school in the country for the teach Coe, a lover of flowers and gardens inz of professional ornamental ine demonstration was by an "anti-strike, auti- and trees.

horticulture. The estate contains these collec violence and traitor liquidation committee" demanding "effective It is the most generous single irift ever made to the state by an buildings, tearing up classrooms. and quarters of students and in measures against Communist ban individual. Coe asks in return that he be given a life estate for him structors. The balance of the mob dits in the universities.

tions: Trees, shrubs, tubbed rhododendrons, camellias (60 varieties, finest in U. orchids, with rare varieties; wisterias, brought from remained outside the gates, curs The incident marked the first KOT1CE Or ATVNL'AL MEETING Rochester 2, N. April 1, 1948 To the Stockholders: Kotics heizbt given that the annual meeting of the stockholders of Genekal Railway SfCNAL Company will be held at the principal fere of the Company, 801 West Avenue, Roch-, New York. April 26, 1948. at 10:30 E.D.T., for the following purposes: fla) To fix the number of directors to be iected for the ensuing year at not less thaa aevra nor more than fifteen; (lb) To elect directors for the ensuing year; (2 To transact such other business as may properly come before the stockholders, althouKh the Management has no intention to bring other business before the meeting and is not advised taat any other business will be brought before it.

Benjamin P. Watnz. Secretary ing the Communists and singing ir.v. 7 i hi time that common townspeople merchants, farmers, middle school self and his wife in a cottage and five acres. He even agrees that portions of the property may be sold by the state to create a maintenance fund that would make the Japan; hibiscus (80 varieties, finest collection in Northern U.

the Chinese national anthem. During the course of the demon students and others joined in stration the group seized and man demonstrations against Ked in Japanese cherries and ornamental crabapples (better for instruction handled a girl accused as a Com fluences in the colleges. than those in Washington); flow whole project self-supporting. Under the Milmoe Bill, title to the entire property would be taken ers, gardens (designed by famous Boston firm); greenhouses (more the state education commis- than 40,000 square feet, some with livine- and an under CLASSIC DRY CLEANERS INDUSTRIALISTS! BUILDERS HOME OWNERS ground cellar, 100 by 60 feet, with drive-in facilities, for forcing tend AOTJIUEEISAEIY hi I i We're 2 Years Old Bigger too!" We've addd New Equipment and a New SHIRT LAUNDRY Service. But we still stand for the same HIGH QUALITY WORKMANSHIP at reasonable prices.

With America's Finest Equipment For Domestic Industrial Use ODL BURNERS THREE BIG BIRTHDAY SPECIALS Repeated by Request. Limited Time Only ESS? $299-00, GUARANTEED OIL DELIVERY! The boat nqin.r.d AIR-CONDITIONING OIL BURNER UNITS or CONVERSION BURNERS (XTailable. INSTALLED FOR THE HOME IS rttntn HEADED TO HOMELAND HE NEVER SAW Young Joseph Donnelly, 11, gets a salute from his foster father, Comm. Ernest H. Hale of Fall River, as the youngster boards a Navy barracks ship at Tokyo to begin a journey to the homeland he has never seen.

The youth's father, an American soldier, died in the Philippines when the boy was 5. Joseph has lived in Japan since that time. LADIES' PLAIN SHIRTS 111 BEWES 15', Ea. ERP SEEN AID er woody plants. The main dwelling houae, which cost $1,200,000 in 1920, is of massive stone, with basement and three floors.

The first floor has a library, 30 by 60 feet: a picture gallery, 30 by 50 feet; a huge dining room, kitchens, pantries, and six other rooms lhat can be used for classrooms. There are 19 bedrooms on the second floor, big enough for classrooms or labora-tries. There are also a garage -with living quarters and space for 10 cars, and stables with living quarters and stalls so large they can be converted to classrooms. In addition there are numerous storage buildings and a laundry building, two double houses, a gate house, and four single houses, with facllitifs for 11 families in addition to I main houae. The Coe estate la known as "Planting Fields" and the Legislature, in passing the bill to accept the property, was told by the Education Department: "The acquisition of such an establishment with its mature trees, shrubs, and other plants in great variety, would be of inestimable value in strengthening the training program and furnishing a means of meeting the mounting pressure for the expansion of the program in ornamental horticulture.

It would put the state institute in the front rank of all educational institutions offering horticultural training in the United States." Sales of the horticultural business In the country in 1939 aggregated $383,978,000, with estimated sales in New York State alone at 135 million dollars for 1946. "The rapid expansion of horticultural business in the state has been reflected in the increasing number of employer requests for technically trained men," said the Education Department memorandum on the Coe property. "In the Spring of 1941 there were twice as many requests to the Institute (Farmingdale) as there were graduates and the number has increased each year." With every Dry Cleaning WINKLER STOKERS "The GREATEST Name In the Industry" No Pins To Shear! Burns the Least Expensive Fuel! Powerful Enough to Pulverize Stone! FURNACES ROUND OR SQUARE DESIGN STEEL OR CAST IRON INSTALLED TO NEWS FLOW Geneva, Switzerland U.P Order of $1.00 or more. SPORT SHIRTS William Benton, chief American 4 CHAIR COVERS $115 DAVENPORT COVERS $1.50 CUSHIONS 25 Each delegate to the' International Conference on Freedom of Information and the Press, said last night Marshall Plan funds could help to increase the free flow of Informa BUY NOW! Prices Are Going Up! Free Estimates 36 Mo. to Pay tion in Europe.

Benton said the United States has prepared a resolution for con Nearly Half a Century of Service ference consideration urging gov ernments to ease the exchange and tariff restrictions on news, news STONE 0206 STONE 0207 publications, newsprint and presses as their currency position strength ens. CALL OUSEL 7445 FREE PICK-UP DELIVERY Coal Inc. 1136 SIBLEY TOWER BLDG. "If adopted by the conference. the resolution may be helpful in encouraging countries, particularly GAILEY GAILEY A Certified Cleaners 265 SHERMAN ST.

614 LAKE AVE. under the Marshall Plan, to devote some of their foreign 'exchange to the purchase fo pulp for newsprint. presses and similar materials and equipment," he said. Gee! I What! "OK!" For Can't Afford I Can jl i $1.00 a Week A Washer jj jj At UNION I'm Sold jj I aV jr: fa ra i 112 Awarded Fellowships New York iV) The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation announced yesterday 112 fellowship awards to American and Canadian scholars and artists with stipends totalling $300,000. The foundation, net up to further research and artistic creation, was established in 1925 by the late U.

S. Senator Simon Guggenheim and Mrs. Guggenheim as a memorial to a. son. Its endowment, now more than 29 million dollars, is entirely their gift.

Fellowships are awarded on the basis of work accomplished. Among the recipents were: Novels Miss Marguerite Young, New York, author of "Moderate Fable;" Miss Elizabeth Hardwick, New York, author of "The Ghostly Lover;" Miss Jean Stafford, New York, author of "Boston Adventure." Poetry Theodofe Ward, New York dramatist. Other writers awarded fellowships Harold Courlandcr, policy supervision International Broadcasting Division, Department of State, New York; Edwin Denby, New York writer and critic of the dance. Studies in Political and Social History Dr. Jean-Albert Bede, professor of French, Columbia University; Dr.

Louis Morton Hacker, associate professor of economic. Columbia; Dr. Antonio Pace, ajnlatant proftwmor Romance Languages, Syracuse University. Research into the history of music Dr. Erich Hertzmann, assistant professor of music, Columbia.

Musical Composition Romeo Cascarino, composer. New York; Nicola i T. Berezowsky, New York. Studies of English and American literature Dr. Elliott Van Kirk Dobbie, associate professor of English, Columbia.

Research into French literature Dr. Reuben Wallenrod, assistant professor of classical languages, Brooklyn College. Medieval studies Dr. Helaine Newstead, associate professor of English, Hunter College. Psychology Dr.

Gregory H. S. Razran, professor of psychology. Queens College, New York. Chemical and biochemical researches Dr.

Michael Peech, professor of soil science, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Dr. Er-win Chargaff, associate professor of biochemistry, Columbia. Artists Reuben Tarn, painter, New York; MLss Denny Winters, painter, Woodstock, N. Miss Sue Fuller, printmaker and teacher at the Museum of Modern Art, Now York.

Experimental work In the field of motion pictures Francis Lee, New York. VES, Help you 2 UNION STORES Enjoy The Famous For many years the standard of measurement among motor cars has been Cadillac. First in all the things that make an automobile desirable, it has come to be accepted the world over as the yardstick of automotive goodness. Today, Cadillac's margin of leadership is the greatest in history. Never before has it forged so far ahead in the basic motor car virtues.

To own a Cadillac is to own the unquestioned best. ONLY SO WEEKLY rails Lowest Terms In Town i nni Boatman Lives Plunging, over 105-Foot Dam Vllk $490.60 fcay up PAY THOR GLADIRON ONLY I 1 I THOR AUTOMAGIC til WASHER AVAIL- 5j I f(n ABLE AT THE SAME I CT UJO EASY TERMS II 11 1 OJ DOWN WEEKLY SvtrS STONE if you art waiting for a mw Cadillac pUas assured that vry fA effort is being made to further production. Demand is so great. Mow ft myZJ' ever, that some delay in delivery is still inevitable. But hold to your 7 I I i V.

Purpose! There is no substitute for a Cadillac. Jackson, Ga. (U.R) A. B. Smith of Griffin, Ga, still has to touch the skinned places on his elbows to believe.

It really happened. Whllo iWilfiff In th river nbnvA Lloyd Shoals Dam near here, Smith's boat was swept Into midstream by a powerful flood current. Frantically, he tried to propel the boat back to the bank but failed. Smith and his craft were plummeted over the falls of a 105-foot dam into a deep pool In the stream below. Screams of two women who witnessed the accident brought Georgia Power Company substation employes.

They formed a human chain Into the river and rewued Smltli from a ullpiwry rock to which he wan clinging. Smith was treated for skinned, elbows. THE VALLEY 333 East Ave. CADILLAC CORP. Stone 0320 i i OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.

M. iPLENTy OF FREE PARKINGc.

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Pages Available:
2,657,013
Years Available:
1871-2024