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Star-Gazette from Elmira, New York • 7

Publication:
Star-Gazettei
Location:
Elmira, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ff'ITV rl ELMIRA STAR-GAZETTE Monday, Fabruary 19, 1962 DEATHS Tm All for It, 6wt I I'M dill land Funeral Home, Corning. Calling hours: today and Tuesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Prayer service there Wednesday at 8:30 a.m.. Requiem High Mass at 9 at St. Patrick's Church, Corn Neiv Hair Style Demonstrated at Corning Shoiv i' in in iaKa destroyed, sheriff deputies re Asking Western Help In Row with Chinese Reds at 11, the Rev.

Charles H. Gustaf son. Burial in Arnot. Chemung County Mrs. Mary K.

Guyer 69, of 455 Frank Sunday. Feb. 18. 1962. ported.

The automobile skidded on the icy road and shot over an embankment landing on its ing. St. Mary's Cemetery, Corn ing. Charles F. Beaman, 61, of 1251 i Maple Monday, Feb.

19, wheels. In attempting to bring John E. Shadduck. 74. of About witnessed CORNING hairdressers 75 area demon- She was a member of Emmanuel Episcopal Church and of the church Altar Guild.

Survived by 1962. He was a member of Cen the car back onto the road it suddenly burst into flames. tenary Methodist Church and an nusDana, Clarence L. Guyer; nmnlntiA By LEON DENNEN NEW YORK (NEA) There are two vital questions to which Western leaders seek an answer as they stall Premier Khrushchev Athens RD 2, Friday, Feb. 16, 1962.

He was a former Athens restaurant operator. Survived by son. Earl of Athens; sisters. Mrs. Jennie Brennan.

Mrs. Fern Whit-moyer of Sayre; brothers, Dean of Binghamton, Harry of Sayre, the on 3wmT7, r. wife- Mrs- Mary M. hrnthor mS- cf 'miraj K. Watkins of Elmira; sister, William Bennett of Utica jjjll GEROULDS Ntlll strations of the hew "dancing hair" style by Arthur Resso of Rochester during a hair dress ing show at the Baron Steuben Hotel.

The show was sponsored by the newly formed Corning Hairdressers Association Sunday. Officers of the new chapter of the National Hairdressers and Forrest of Muncy, Ray of Can- one grandson. Body at Olthof Funeral Home. Calling hours: ton, Charles of Shunk; seven Until TiiMdoy Morning figaiH Show Iw Tmrqw fapttad efT" another Summit conference. How strong is Nikita Khrushchev's position in the Kremlin? Does the West really have a strong interest to save Khrushchev's face the current struggle within the Communist world, as Walter Lippmann and other commentators claim? iuui sraiiuciuiureii, eight great-grandchildren.

Body at Olthof Funeral Home. Calling hours: today 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 -mm Tuesday 7 to 9 p. Wednesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m. Funeral granclcmiaren; greai-grana-children.

Body at Jenkins Funeral Home, Athens. Funeral there today at 2 p. the Rev. p. m.

nequiem mass at 9 a. Cosmetologists Association were arrangements incomplete. Tuesday at Emmanuel Episcopal installed prior to the show. Floyd Bennett. Tioga Point Church, the Rev.

Eldred Simp-kins. Body will be removed Tuesday to Applegate Funeral Home NATO capitals. Each day brings evidence that important decisions are being made in Moscow. Cemetery. They are: President, Ken' Shimwell; vice president, MrsJ Alberta Fratarcangelo; secretary, Mrs.

Cappy Anderson; corres-j ponding secretary, Mrs. Janisi In Washington, London, Paris and Bonn, Soviet emmi-saries are now trying to convince Western diplomats and journalists that the Soviet premier is engaged in a battle for his policy of peaceful Harry Simmons, 68, of Mills, SNOW IS expected tonight in the northern tier of states from New England westward to Idaho while rain and snow are expected in the middle Atlantic states and in the central Plateau region. It will be cooler in the southeast; warmer in the southwest. The Weather Forecast Snow Flurries. Colder Mrs.

NeUie McKay of 359 Lyon Monday, Feb. 19, 1962. She was a communicant of St. Peter and Paul's Church. Survived by several nieces and nephews.

Body at Barrett Funeral Home. Calling hours: Tuesday and Wednesday 7 to 9 p. m. Re- Saturday, Feb. 17, 1962.

Sur Ilion. N. Y. Calling hours: Tuesday 7 to 9 p. m.

Praver service there Wednesday at 10:30 a.m., the Rev. Robert Withington. Oak View Cemetery, Ilion. Mrs. Sample, and treasurer, Elaine Acomb.

vived by son, Raymond of Stafford. N. sister. Mrs. Cloe Moon of Potter Brook, Pa YOU'LL GET "LLC." (TENDER LOVING CARE) Ona of the ingredients your own Individ ual pharmacy puts into every prescription is 'Tender Loving Care." We know you and your family personally.

When compounding a prescription dependability is more important than words like "Cheap Cut-rate Discount or Reduced." We just use the best ingredients available, take the needed time to safeguard you and charge the fair price needed to operate a good pharmacy. brother. Edwin Simmons of Ulysses; three grandchildren George Oscar Thompson Sr. of jg m. Funeral there Thursdav live great-grandchildren.

Body at Fire Destroys Car After Crash Piper Funeral Home, Westfield cast, prepared by the U. S. Weath Calling hours: today 2 to 4 and er Bureau, from 7 p. m. today to 8:15 a.

Requiem High Mass at 9 in St. Peter and Paul's Church. St. Peter and Paul's Cemetery. Funerals 7 to 9 p.

m. Funeral there Tues how to deal with Russia but also who is the more serious enemy inside the Soviet Union Premier who preaches peaceful coexistence or the internal Chinese of Suslov and Konev? Few experts on communism agree with the view that Khrushchev "has made the preservation of peace with the West the keystone of Soviet foreign policy." The Soviet premier has always talked softly when he wanted the Western leaders to pull his chestnuts out of the fire. When facing internal trouble Khrushchev always wants a spectacular Summit conference where he can pose as the leader of the Red world. However, experts on communism increasingly believe that the West's inferiority in the art? of psychological and political warfare has prevented it time and again from taking advantage of the Red's internal weaknesses. 7 p.

m. Saturday: day at 2 p. the Rev. Clair RPMNFTTSRIIKf: The 196 Cornell Horseheads, Sunday, Feb. 18, 1962.

Survived by wife, Mrs. Bertha Thompson; sons, George O. Jr. with the Army in Germany. James at home; daughters, Mrs.

Robert Yergeau of East Providence, R. Mrs. Frederick Dickinson of Onset, ltylene, Patricia and Bon Temperatures will average Elmira and Vicinity: Snow flurries tonight, continuing Tuesday with colder temperatures. WEATHER FORECAST Expected low tonight, 20-25. Expected high Tuesday 25-30.

Winds, west to northwest, 10-20 Statham. Riverview Cemetery, "iflptt ITirp 'nonortmorit rlicJ degrees below normal. Frequent Potter Brook. Aaron Weaver. 95, of Button ft ONLY SOME Western concessions on atomic disarmament and Berlin, they claim, will save Khrushchev's face and strengthen his hand against the Stalinist war bloc inside Russia and in the international Communist movement.

The Soviet premier, of course, has bluffed so often in the past that there is a strong tendency to take the whispers of his agents with a grain of salt. Yet this may be the one time that Khrushchev is spreading some truth in the U9, pU.VIlVU till V. V. I 1 I. 1.

.1 HI 1-J VI 1 ment about 1 a.m. Sunday to burning car on the Tuttle Road! off Route 227 east of here. The car, owned by Robert, wood, Saturday, Feb. 17, day-to-day temperature changes with some precipitation indicated each day. Precipitation will average to 1 inch melted as light snow or snow flurries.

H. Lee Draper of 1353 Lake St. Funeral today at 2 p.m. at Smith Fudge Funeral Home, the Rev. Kelsie Martin.

Pal-bearers: William Johnson, Ronald Hynes, John and Robert Lewis, Mervin Landon, Ronald Barnes. Wocdlawn Cemetery. 1962. He was a retired merchant. THERE IS NO longer any doubt that Khrushchev, despite official denials, is increasingly challenged by the "internal Chinese" the greatest Red heresy that the Soviet premier ever faced.

The "vnutrennyia kitaitsy" as they are called in Russia are the partisans of Red China's Mao Tse-tung in his quarrel over Marxist-Leninist doctrine with the Soviet premier. They believe that Khrushchev has for reasons of personal prestige weakened the world Red movement in making Red China a bitter enemy out of friend. The internal Chinese, according to Western intelligence reports, include not only such diehard Stalinists in the Soviet presidium as Mikhail Suslov, but also a group of army marshals led by Ivan Konev with Marshal Georgi Zhukov, still a popular figure in Russia, lurking in the background. nie at home; brother, Frank of Horseheads; sisters, Mrs. Charles Warner of Big Flats, Mrs.

John Brunner of Elmira Heights, Mrs. Tuttle of Burdett RD. was totally Body at Bastian Funeral Home, Liberty. Calling hours: today 2 (ADVERTISEMENT) YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE RE 3-6696 when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping nearby, or we will deliver promptly.

A great many people entrust us with their prescriptions. May we compound yours? Lena Chambers of Himrod, N.Y.; four grandchildren. Body at Ballard Lindgren Funeral Home, to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m. funeral there Tuesday at 2 p.

the Rev. Harry Billow. Freidens Cemetery, Liberty. John George Bain of 529 miles an hour. TEMPERATURES High Sunday, 28.

Overnight low, 22. SUN TABLE Sunset tonight, 5:42 p. m. Sunrise Tuesday, 6:53 a. m.

Sunset Tuesday, 5:43 P- m. U. S. TEMPERATURES Llmira Heights. Calling hours: Schuvlpr Ave Burial office and Stops Constipation Due to "Aging Colon" New laxative discovery re-creates 3 essentials for normal regularity.

Glen L. Bullock, 71, of Jasper, N. Saturday, Feb. 17, 1962. Survived by wife, Mrs.

Gladys today 7 to 9 p.m., Tuesday 2 to 4 Mass were held today and 7 to 9 p.m. Funeral there 11 a. m. in Grace Episcopal Wednesday at 3 p.m., the church, the Rev. Raymond Kent Lattimer.

p'Brien. Pallbearers: James I Baker, Ronald Packer, Herbert DJioiMh PHARMACY Bullock; son, Ralph of Jasper; stepson, Dean Bertch of Canisteo; stepdaughters, Mrs. Peter Kelley Is Public Business Private? What Is Rockefeller's Position? rrancis a. lUCdOWan, 0, OliSmith Paul Harrlpnsfmp. PROFESSIONAL 411 Underwood Saturday McLaine, Donald Hamilton.

ALBANY (AP) U. S. Weather Bureau temperatures to 7 a. of Jasper, Mrs. Howard Warriner of Springwater; brother, Kenneth Forest Lawn Memorial Park.

Mrs. Emma A. Nichols of 410 of Jasper; sister, Mrs. Leona Las on of Niagara Falls; two grand F. F.

G. W. WM. R. STEED, Pharmacists Ph.

REgent 3-6696 s. main a BUdlna shop jr Credit Serviea HUDSON ftic! 01 ont coovan- WftAlkMJ lenea aad tax rao. ELMIRA, Y. XMZfjgj W. Third St.

Prayer service was held at Hughes Funeral Home today at 8:15 a. Requiem High (1) Colonaid moisturises dry, hardened waste for easy passage without pain or strain. (2) Colonaid's unequalled rebulking action helps re-tone flabby colon muscles. (3) And Colonaid acts gently, on the nerve reflexes that stimulate the vital "mass movement" of your tower colon. Colonaid relieves even chronic constipation overnight; is so gentle it was hospital proved sale even for expectant mothers.

And Colonaid won't interfere with absorption of vitamins or other food nutrients. Get Colonaid today! INTRODUCTORY SIZE 43 As you grow older, the internal muscles of your colon wall also age, lose the strength that propels waste from the body. Stagnant bowel contents become so dry and shrunken that they fail to stimulate the urge to purge. Relief, doctors say, lies in a new laxative principle. Old-style bulks and moisteners may create gas, take 3 or 4 days for relief.

Old-style salts and drugs cramp and gripe the entire system. Of all laxatives, only new Colonaid gives you its special 3-way relief that works only on the tower colon (area of constipation). THE SOVIET leaders were obviously in great trouble in 1953 when they were changing from Stalin's one-man rule to so-called collective leadership. They were in trouble again during the Polish and Hungarian revolts in 1956 when the satellite nations were in a state of unrest. Now again there is a great upheaval in the Communist world the greatest yet.

Should the West stand idly by and even help Khrushchev with a Summit conference? This is what President Kennedy and the other Western leaders must decide. children. Body at family home. Funeral Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Jasper Presbyterian Church, the Rev.

Kenneth Snyder Albany Binghamton Boston Buffalo Chicago Des Moines Mass at9 in St. Peter and Paul's Church, the Rev. Bartholomew J. Jasper Cemetery. Feb.

17. 1962. He was a communicant at Our Lady of Lourdes Church and a former electrical engineer at. Remington Rand. Survived by wife, Mrs.

Delores C. McGowan; daughter. Miss Mari C. McGowan of Suffern, N. son, Robert F.

McGowan of Kansas City, sisters, Mrs. Asa Barr, Mrs. Elmer Merz, Mrs. George Whitmarsh, all of Carthage, N. brother, James McGowan of Carthage; three grandchildren.

Body at Hughes Funeral Home. Calling hours: today 7 to 9 p. Tuesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m. O'Brien, celebrant; the Rev IN CONSIDERING a new Summit conference with Khrushchev at this time which would obviously bolster his prestige at home and abroad the Western leaders must consider the evidence that he is no longer the undisputed leader of the Red world or even the unquestioned master of his own house.

The West is thus increasingly facing the question of not only David N. Mattie in the sanctuary. THAT THE THINK LINE if any that seems to set apart authorities from government itself still exists is ridiculous. They are by no means self-sustaining. Collectively they owe the state $141 millions.

The state itself has already extended its credit to one authority and is planning to extend it to two more. Others, in addition to getting advances in state money, receive outright state grants. In fact, when the Court of Appeals by a 5-2 decision decided no legislative mandate existed requiring authorities to make their records public, the dissenters (Chief Judge Desmond and Judge Fuld) saw no essential difference between authorities and government generally that gave them any right of concealment. Pallbearers: Robert J. Edwards, By DAVID H.

BEETLE Special Correspondent Gannett News Service ALBANY Failure of Governor Rockefeller to take a positive stand favoring legislation that would mandate that authorities make their records public is difficult to understand. He should be lending his leadership to such an effort. What is even worse in this situation Is it makes one wonder about the Governor's whole attitude toward making public business public. Here Is one of the rare occasions that a clear cut issue has arisen over the people's right in a democracy to know what goes on in government. Jotham Clark, 91, of Dundee, Detroit RD 3, Sunday, Feb.

18, 1962. was a retired poultry farmer ri. a TTiemher nf T.akemnnt Concre-i Leslie C. Johnson, Herbert A Porter," Clifford C. Smith.

St. High Low 22 9j 17 13 34 17 15 34 31 31 18 25 19 72 53 51 26 fil 51 77 74 19 13 80 60 38 28 36 30 63 38 37 35 26 13 58 31 53 40 16 10 42 33 Peter and Paul's Cemetery. national Christian Church. Angeles Miami vived by wife, Mrs. Lillian Clark; Arthur M.

Miller of 406 Union daughter, Mrs. Lloyd Fleet ot ly Place. Funeral today at 11 a. m. rone; son, Leslie of Lakemont; two Prayer service there Wednesday at 9:15 a.

Requiem High at Kalec Funeral Home, the Rev. 6ELMIRA STAR-GAZETTE Monday, February 1, 11 Mrs. Plays Old Refrain IT'S GREATLY to be regretted that Mrs. Nina Khrushchev doesn't read the newspapers, doesn't listen to the radio, or doesn't discuss Soviet policy with her husband. Familiarity with what's going on in the world and why could have made a big difference with the propaganda speech she beamed to American woman.

It was a boring hodgepodge of distortion, untruth and all the other ingredients of a Krem-lin utterance. That Mrs. Khrushchev believed any appreciable number of American women would swallow such fantastic guff is far from flattering to the audience to which she addressed it. It remained for Pauline Frederick, speaking both as a woman and as one of the world's best informed reporters, to make a most acute comment on Mrs. Khrushchev's speech.

She wondered why Mrs. didn't read it to her husband instead of inflicting it on American women. The speech has one merit which surely Mrs. Khrushchev didn't intend. It shows how well the demonstrations against American nuclear testing fit in with the Kremlin's hopeful propaganda.

Khrush Displays Clumsiness THE CHARY position taken by President Kennedy and Prima Minister Macmillan on the Khrushchev summit proposal will make sense to everyone except the Communists. It took many a meeting with the recalcitrant Russians to put summit conferences in their proper perspective. The blowup came in May, 1960, when the Paris summit meeting, planned with all the hoopla that used to seem appropriate, was torpedoed by Nikita Khrushchev in a performance so disgusting that the history of civilized diplomacy offers nothing to compare with it. Khrushchev, who obviously had cooled on the Paris meeting, used the U2 case as an excuse to cancel whatever success the meeting might have had. Moreover, he seized upon the occasion to insult President Eisenhower as no President of the United States has even been insulted before, terminating his propaganda assault with a cancellation of Mr.

Eisenhower's plans to visit Russia. Memories of the Paris meeting become fresh with Khrushchev's dickering to get back a Russian spy (Col. Rudolf Ivanovich Abel) in exchange for Francis Gary Powers, pilot of the U2 when the Soviets blew it out of the sky over Russia on May 1, 1960. The Russians have had a great deal to say about Powers. They have been understandably silent on the subject of Col.

Abel, a kingpin in the Moscow espionage apparatus until he was caught in New York and sent to Atlanta for 30 years. Khrushchev can be most remarkably clumsy and the release of Powers, followed so soon by a suggestion for another go at summitry, is one of his clumsier antics. President Kennedy and Mr. Macmillan have shown, by word and deed, that their interest in further summit conferences would depend on an improved attitude on the part of the Soviet Union and a base of concrete accom-plisments by lower-placed representatives of participating governments. The Khrushchev proposal covers only one of these points that of temporarily improved relations but it covers only one corner of it.

The Russian-run East German government keeps up its cold war against the West and Soviet troublemakers are busy around the world. And there's nothing in recent meetings of representatives of Russia and the Western powers to suggest that a summit conference, at the moment at least, would serve any purpose beyond giving the heads of government a chance to make speeches that men in less important position could as well read for them. The' Kennedy and Macmillan statements are short, temperate and on the point. The door isn't closed. It has never been, in fact.

One man could change the picture overnight. His name is Khrushchev. Lullus D. Bell. Pallbearers: John Bailey, William McGettrick, Robert, Donald and Glen Snyder Mass at 10 in Our Lady of Lourdes Church.

Receiving vault at St. Peter and Paul's Cemetery Minneapolis New Orleans New York Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Rochester St. Louis Seattle Syracuse Washington grandchildren; three great-grandchildren. Body at Oughlerson Funeral Home, Dundee. Calling hours: today 7 to 9 p.

m. Funeral there Tuesday at 10 a. the Rev. Roy H. Massecar.

Lakemont Ometerv at a later dale. Please Anthonv Corsi. Woodlawn Na mm: for later burial at St. Mary's Cemetery, Port Jervis, N. Y.

tional Cemetery Mrs. Violet E. Brown of nmit flowers sun EVEN THE MAJORITY, while feeling that the extent to which authority books could be scrutinized was a matter for legislative determination, expressed itself "as strongly in favor of enforcing the government's duty to disclose to its citizens the course of conduct of its various departments." The decision came in action instituted by a New York newspaper to get financial details of the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority under Robert Moses. As the bill passed the Senate with only two dissenting votes, Senator Harold A. Jerry Jr.

of Elmira, an opponent, argued "it would prevent the proper functioning of government" Authorities are government. And if government can't function properly because its books are open to the public then it's not much use trying to run a democracy. The Assembly should speedily pass the bill and the Governor should sign it. 27 Grand Juries Look Into Hoffa's Empire By Victor Riesel WASHINGTON, D. Jimmie Hoffa's fascination with mammoth truck vans driven by hardy men over iced highways always leads him to that industrial vortex, Miami Beach.

On March 5 he will call his high command into session at an oceanside hotel there. They will meet not only to count their money which has been rolling into the Teamsters' treasury at the rate of $20 million annually because of the higher dues since Jan. 1. They will meet to count grand juries. Shappee's Trailer Court, Pine City, formerly of Elmira.

Funeral today at 2 p. m. at Kalec Funeral Home, the Rev. Lullus D. Bell.

Pallbearers: George Smith, Thom Mrs. Adalaide Beers, 77, of Warren, Ohio, formerly of Elmira and Bentley Creek. Saturday. Feb. 17, 1962.

Survivors include sister, Mrs. Leroy Adams; brother. Lee Cooper, both of Elmira. Funeral and burial in ON THIS ISSUE, the Governor hesitates. The measure (introduced at the suggestion of Senate Majority Leader Walter J.

Mahoney) does nothing more than impose on authorities a requirement that is already mandated on other govern-mental areas, both state and municipal. The requirement is that, barring specific legislation to the contrary (and there is some covering such personal matters as juvenile court, parole, income tax, mental hygiene, and, to some extent, social' welfare) records having to do with the operation of government in New York are public. And they should be. Otherwise the citizens would have little knowledge of how their tax money is being spent nor would they be able to evaluate an administration come an election. 5-DAY FORECAST ALBANY (1 Extended fore- as and ueorge tsreese, James Deegan.

Rexford Brown, Robert Edward T. Skala, 56, of Main Newfield, Sunday, Feb. 18, 1962. He was a mechanic with the Tompkins County Highway Department and a member of the Newfield Fire Company. Survived by daughter, Miss Janet Mary Skala of Newfield: sons, Richard C.

of Newfield, Edward T. Jr. of Ithaca; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Skala of Newfield; sisters, Mrs.

Evelyn Kish of Ith Miller. Woodlawn National Cem etery. Regional Deaths Words, Wit and Wisdom Miss Josephine F. Hansen of 1251 S. Main Sunday, Feb.

18. ,952. She was a member of Bethany Lutheran Church. Survived by sisters, Mrs. Millie.

Ridae of Cameron, Mrs. Jennie Graf of Thompson, Mrs. Esther Peterson of Putnam, Mrs. Elizabeth M. Driscoll, 71.

of 338 E. Second Corning, Sunday. Feb. 18, 1962. She was the widow of Timothy Driscoll Letf Finalize the jargon El- and a communicant at St.

Pat- Mrs. Ruth Taber of THERE ARE at least 27 federal probes of the Hoffa Brotherhood across the land. They are looking into virtually all sectors Body at Ballard Lind- rick's Church, Corning. Survived By WILLIAM MORRIS by daughters, Sister Timmothea. Your Hearing Deserves The Best! FRESH BATTERIES AND REPAIR FOR ALL MAKES J.

E. DEAN, D.M. MON.FRL 9 to 5 NEW ADDRESS 529 W. WATER ST. RE 2-6988 aca, Mrs.

Ethel Barlow of Bata-via, Mrs. Virginia Farkas and Mrs. Edythe Orcutt of South Lansing; brother, Robert of Odessa. Body at Allen Funeral Home, Newfield. Calling hours: Tuesday 4 to 6 and 7 to 9 p.

m. Funeral there Wednesday at 2 p.m., the Rev. John Love. Woodlawn Cemetery, Newfield. gren Funeral Home, Elmira Heights.

Calling hours: today 7 Questions By the Haskins Service 635 N.W., Washington 4, D.C. Q. Is Harrods, the London department store, as large as Macy's, in New York? T.A. A. No.

R. H. Macy Co, Inc. is the world's largest department store. Harrods is the largest shop in the United Kingdom Macy's is 1HM, of Scranton, Mrs.

Raymond iirooder of Corning; sisters, Mrs. Thomas Wheeler and Miss Jennie Hart, both of Corning; to 9 p. Tuesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m. Prayer service there Wednesday at 10:30 funeral in Bethany Lutheran Church city and state Teamster councils and literally hundreds of locals.

The official books of four grandchildren. Body at Po- lotion stand at his favorite meeting place. Not the least of his problems now is the restlessness inside the Teamsters Brotherhood itself. From all over the East there are reports of the opposition being tried or expelled by Hoffa-controlled local executive boards. Word from the West is different.

There he has been try-ing to move control, for example, of the $137 million Pension fund of the Western Conference of Teamsters to a Chicago insurance company. that Washington's men of destiny are moving on to wider linguistic horizons. On a tv show recently the head of the preposterously named "Dynosoar" missile program spoke of improved "capabilities" as projects now in work become more Whoever "authored" that certainly deserves to be "tipped" in rank. Inspiration For Today By JAMES KELLER Aristotle, the renowned Greek philosopher, onrf said: "It is not. enouch to know what tn say; it is necessary also to know how to say it." Many people with good ideas are flat failures at self-expression.

As a consequence they often bottle up the sound principles they know they should bring into public and private life. You owe it to God, to yourself and to your fellowman to acquire at least the elementary skills of "how to say it" if you are to be an effective force for good in these challenging times. Hoffa's own Detroit Local 299 as well as the accountants' bi-ic working papers Ji are now being pored over by Labor Secretary Hi Riesel President Kennedy's recent use of "finalize" has prompted some casual comments to the effect that, this unnecessary coinage must now be deemed a proper part of our language. Such suggestions betray a basic ignorance of our language and the way it grows. No one person not even the President can establish a word as an item of correct usage by favoring it with his mark of approval.

The first of the presidential Roosevelts Theodore learned this to his sorrow when he undertook to simplify American spelling. With his enthusiastic approval all sorts of bizarre spellings "fonograf," "filosofer" and other examples of "fonetic" spelling were approved for use in official government publications. But the public blithely ignored T.R.'s preachments and he learned a fundamental truth: you can't legislate changes in language. The basic reason why "finalize" is not likely to find a lasting niche in our language is that it is wholly unnecessary. It says nothing that "end," "complete," "terminate," "finish," "stop" or "close" doesn't say equally well.

Need CaItV Goldberg's Bureau of Labor-Management Reports. On Feb. 26, a federal judge in Orlando, will hear Hoffa's plea for dismissal of the $500,000 mail fraud indictment against him. If this Hoffa legal maneuver fails, he will stand trial there some time In mid-March. There Goes That Excuse Rochester Times-Union The prediction by an official of the National Institutes of Health that the common cold may disappear within the next decade is, of course, good news.

But have we thought of all the implications of so revolutionary a cure? What will be left for people to be miserable about? What excuse will we have for not keeping tomorrows engagement? And what will happen to the economy if we cease to stock our shelves with cough medicines and tablets and all those things we look for miracles from? If seasonal or emergency expenses have knocked your budget out of shape, don't worry. It happens to people every day. It's quite likely that a PERSONAL LOAN from Marine Midland will help you solve your financial problems. You can pay your tax bills, doctor's bills, tuition expenses, or other accumulated bills now. Then in small payments over a period of several months, you can repay the loan.

You receive your cash quickly confidentially. Stop in your nearest Marine Midland banking office and arrange for a PERSONAL LOAN this week. THAT FUND covers some 200,000 drivers and warehouse people. Recently it increased its benefits by 21 per cent. When it was set up, it had built-in protection.

Complex regulations actually put its investments into the unimpeachable hands of Prudential Life Insurance executives. But it has long been Hoffa's dream (with him completely un-Freudian) to put himself in a position to influence about a billion dollars worth of Teamsters' pension funds. The setup in which he is most influential is the Central States Conference of the Teamsters. It is legally empowered to make individual loans some of them running into the millions. But not so the Western Conference which covers 13 states.

Hoffa has been so eager to get this fund shifted to the Midwest insurance company that he threatened to come to a recent meeting of the Western Conference in San Diego. That was held late in January. He got word he'd never make it. He did not show. There is no suggestion here that Jimmie Hoffa's power is cracking.

But he finally is getting that war he has been inviting. And. it will be hotter before he gets an everlasting peace. DO MORE than answer the roll call and then remain speech-lesj at church, civic, school, union, political, fraternal, business or social meetings. You have opportunities that no other person in the world can take advantage of.

Live up to your responsibilities and help prevent leadership from slipping by default into the hands of the indifferent, incompetent, unprincipled or even disloyal. Make it a point to be skilled in "what to say" as well as "how to say it." "Let your speech, while always attractive, he seasoned with salt, that you may know how you ought to answer each one." (Colossians 4:6) Help me, Jesus, to become more alert and effective communicator of Your truth. NNtMMMWMMMNIM reported to make some 45 million transactions a year, compared with about 9Mt million by Harrods. Q. On what occasion did Wood-row Wilson say, "The world must be made safe for KB.

A. This assertion was contained in President Wilson's address to Congress April 2, 1917, in which he asked that Congress declare "the recent course of the Imperial German government to be in fact nothing less than war against the government and people of the United States." Q. Have sea anemones any kind of brain? F.Y. A. These simple polyps have no brain and they also lack sense organs.

They are sensitive to light and to touch. Q. What is the population of India now? Is the rate increasing -or decreasing? L.D. A. After a census in February, 1961, the population was officially estimated at 438 million.

This figure represents an increase of about 215 per cent between 1951 and 1961. Q. How much of the eastern U.S. did the blizzard of March 1888, strike? How deep was the snowfall? M.L. A.

Along the coast, the blizzard paralyzed the whole region from Maine to Maryland; inland, it reached from Buffalo southward to Pittsburgh. Fifty inches of snow fell over Connecticut and eastern Massachusetts and even more in parts of western Massachusetts. New York City had little more than 20 inches. (J. Is there an Ocean Island? If so, where? G.P.

A. Ocean Island (also called Banaba), about Vi by 2 miles in area, lies in the western Pacific Ocean some 57 miles south of the equator, between the Gilbert Islands and the island of Nauru. Q. What happened to the Baghdad Pact, signed in 1955? I no longer see it mentioned. F.S.

LANGUAGES MEANWHILE some 35 of his chain of command await trial in the federal courts 29 of whom have been indicted by Bob Kennedy. There's another breakthrough coming in the South. We're all on what the Navy used to tell us was radio silence on this one. But watch for it. Hoffa's opponents, mostly rolled up in the big bulk of the Seafarers' Paul Hall, are preparing to war on Hoffa and his men from Puerto Rico to Philadelphia, to Boston, to Chicago, Detroit, Milwaukee and St.

Louis. I would be the last, despite the two-front war, to underestimate Hoffa's staying power or ability to take the heat. But he got what he asked for the acceptance of his loud and constant challenges and ubiquitous notice to the world that it had 24 hours to get out. The result is that despite the most gargantuan flooding of a union treasury since the invention of the dues stamp, Hoffa, can't do much with his new millions of dollars. in the NEWS i By Chorlet f.

Berlin "FINALIZE" actually started as ad alley slang just after World War II. In the parlance of Madison Avenue, an account executive could "finalize" an advertising campaign but it remained for the client's approval to "concretize" it. Now it has been taken up by the bureaucrats who will do it to death and in a few years "finalize" will be a nostalgic memory like the "boondoggle" of Franklin Roosevelt's day or the "normalcy" of Harding's. Already the evidence is at hand and Roburt Strumpen-Pnrrjo YOU REPAY MONTHLY Cath Receive 1J M0. ll Met.

1 HWw, 36 Mot. tO Met. 300 26.68 i 18.41 14.30 10.27 500 4447 3068 23 84 17.13 10OO 88.95 61.36 47 68 34 26 I 22 61 2500 222.39 153.42 1 19.2I 85.65 5670 5000 444,78 306.84 238.43 171.30 113.41 'Available only for roparty Improvtmtnt Who'll Know the Difference? By MILTON MARMOR Elmira star-gazette HUMOR AND PATHOS Where you find humor, you find pathos close by its side. Whipple. Above payments include life insurance on the unpaid balance in the event of the borrower's death'.

an additional family protection. 17 BANKING OFFICES SERVING THE SOUTHERN TIER BJI FRANK OANNETT help the second man keep up with the globetrotting Joneses." "So it started somewhat as a joke. But sales are big now and we get letters from all over asking for the labels." Strickland said a round 40 per cent of his buyers are Britishers on holiday, mostly from the Provinces "Invariably they have gone to the seaside in England, haven't left the country at 11." LONDON (Jl Long to look well travel-Id? Or. at least have your baggage look well traveled? A novelty shop owner has the answer. Don't worry about such mundane matters as mum" or motion sickness.

For 3 Shillings 8 Pence (40 cents) you ran get 20 brightly colored labels from the best hotels all over Europe and never leave home. OMMt4attM July 1. 10' Tu'' r.lmlin KvnlnK Htr IN8i The El-mlra rjiuftlr MS) The Klmlrn Frv Prfi (1S781 Th Elmira KxTilne tfewa It HO Readers of newspapers may well be somewhat confused by constant references to the initials OAS which, coincidentally, refer to two quite different organizations. The bomb-throwing OAS is the anti-Defiaulle secret army organization, which stands for a continued French Algeria Algerie Franchise frawn-SAYS). In French it is called L'Organiza-tion del'Armee Secrete 'lohr-gah-nee zah s' YOUNG deh lahr-MEH seh-KRFHT) "The Organization of the Secret Army." The other, or non-bomb-throwing, OAS is the "Organization of American States," of which the initials in Spanish are OKA Or-ganizacion de Estados Americanos (ohr-gah-nee-thah-th 'YOHN deh chs TAH dohs ah mch-ree-KAH-nohs.

It is a curious coincidence that these two organizations are so prominent in the news at the same time. 1 Docs some word in any language puzzle you? Put your question to "Languages the News" in care of this newspaper). Your Congressmen 1RINE MIDLAND tmicpmni.NT i. A 'uhllBhf'd Motility through rnuay AM. vinmM rxffnt hOUOUri r.innra WW the guidance of rcailira may wieli to write conceinlnit li ho la- lallon.

here aie tin- members of Coif Bii apt-vlna; the district In Tin-Stai-GMrtti iliculatUm una: TRUST COMPANY Saathern New York IT HAS BEEN generally forgotten that he increased the teamster dues from 40 cents to a dollar per capita. This gives his headquarters an additional $8 million a year or a total of $20 million annually. Jimmie H. had hoped to use this money to sweep across the country in a vast organizing drive to build himself a new labor federation. He had hoped to go into the political wards and build himself a machine which could prove this fall that it could deliver votes.

But he is as busy as a suntan WHAT A BARGAIN! The ad shows just what she needs and with no strain on the budget So she reaches for her extension phone and, without leaving the kitchen, gets her order in fast. It's one more way a phone in the kitchen can help keep a home running more smoothly. Call your Telephone Business Office soon and order an extension phone of your own. You'll get more done in less time and come up smiling at day end. Hew York Telephone VWV Omri nf thai ft avlirvniit ftU Tlnhnnal SFINATK Jacob Javlta or New of fltar-CaWMc.

lnc Frank Tripp. prflrtnt end publisher Robert R. fcrk'rt, Hi-rural nutnydfr Covey Hoover. manlriK editor: Fredlrlt W. Bott, nw editor Burton Uliur, city editor.

The Anioetated Preee la entitled tluilvely to the uae (or publication nt all the local ncwa printed In thla newspaper aa well a aU AP dlepatcnti. Toik City, Kenneth ABOUT THE AMERICANS and Canadians who make up the balance of business, Strickland had a slightly kinder comment: 'They have made a three day tour of 45 countries or something ltko that and haven't had time to get labels. So we service them. "Who's going to know the difference anyway? Hark in America the neighbor! can't check on them." SOME TIME AGO Alex Strickland, who owns a novelty shop front of Victoria Station, noticed a man in the station tarrying a bag choked with hotel stickers. "Next to him was another man looking enviously at the baggage.

The only difference between the two was that one had those luggage stickers. "I thought, why not sell labels and A. The Baghdad Pact also known as the Middle East Treaty Organization or METO was given a new name in 1959 after Iraq had withdrawn. It became the Central Treaty Organization, or CENTO. Member Federal Diposit Insurant! Corporation Rochester Joseph 8.

Clark of Philadelphia; HurIi Scott of Philadelphia. HOUSE Howaid W. RobtsOM Oweico. 37th Y. Congremlonal Die-trlcl: John Tiber of Auburn.

36lh pint. Herman Srluifibeit of Wll-llanwport. 17th fa, Dlatilct.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1891-2024