r - Fulton History

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ESTABLISHED JANUARY, 1870.
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^ A
r/ie On/y Newspaper in the World that Really Cares A bout Naples
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$3.00 A YEAR; SIX MONTHS. $1.75.
25
NAPLES. ONTARIO COUNTY. NEW YORK. WEDNESDAY.-'OCTOBER 8. 1958.
VOLUME 90.
Church Services
RECORD FREEZE
NAPLES' NEW RESERVOIR
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
NIPS GRAPES
SUNDAY. OCTOBER 12
AND GARDENS
SEAWOLF SETS NEW
SUBMERGED RECORD;
NAPLES MAN IN CREW
- —
Provide Us with Information of
The nuclear submarine U.S.S.
the Services of Your Church,
if you would have it appear in Seawolf surfaced in Long Island
this column. v
Sound at 11:45 a. m., October 6,
ASSEMBLIES OF GOD
Rev. Robert H. Bishop, Pastor
BAPTIST
Rev. Franklin G. Horst, Pastor
Sunday
,
11:00 a. m., worship service.'
12:00 an., Sunday School.
5:30 p. m., Senior B.Y.F., in
the youith room of the church,
v-—Monday,
younig
people's
work night at the church.
—Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., prayer and Bible study, at the parsonage.
—
—
—Thursday, 7:30 p. m., senior
choir rehearsal. __
_i
—Saturday, 11:00 a. m., junior
choir rehearsal.
METHODIST
Rev. Birger Halvorsen, Minister
1068, aifter breaking ail records
fox uninterrupted submergence.
The news release to The Naples Record, from New London,
Conn.
CFHTNC),
announced
that the Seawolf remained under the^North Atlantic for sixty
days, completely independent of
the earth's atmosphere, and almost doubled the previous submerged irecord of thirty-one
days, five and one-half hours,
set by t h e U.S.S. Skate last May.
At 4:00 p. m., Commander
Richard B. Laning and his crew,
who had not seen sunlight for
two months, were greeted by
their families as the Seawolf
pulled into New London.
One of t h e crew was Navy Lt.
Willis A. Matson, II, son of Mr.
and 'Mrs. Randall W. Matson, of
West Hollow Road, Naples. Lt.
Matson's wiife is the former Jane
Peacock, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roseoe Peacock, of Lyon
Street, Naples. Lt. and Mrs.
Matson are both graduates of
Naples Central School. After
his graduation from Annapolis
Naval Academy, Lt. Matson saw
service on a regular submarine
in the Pacific before being selected and trained for duty on
the Seawolf, second of the U. S.
nuclear submarines.
Sunday
/
10:00 a.~m., Sunday School.
11:00, morniing worship.
4:00 p. m., meeting of the M.
Y. P.
7:00 p. m., prayer circle.
—Wednesday, 1:00 p. m., Mission Study Group i wall meet at
the Presbyterian manse. Dessert
luncheon. All women are invited.
—Wednesday, 7:30 p. m., choir
practice.
AZULIKET CLUB
—Friday, 6:30 p. m., dinner
RESUMES STUDIES
meeting of the District Conference on Evangelism, at the WatThe Azuliket Club opened its
son homestead.
year's program on Monday evening, with Mrs. H. W. Tellier as
hostess and Mrs. May Corwin
PRESBYTERIAN
Rev. Vernon E. Shankle, Pastor and Miss Harriet Knapp as assistant hostesses. The entire
Sunday
Club rnembership was present
9:45 a,m-r-Ohurctu School.
with t h e exception of the treas11:00,'morning worship.
urer who was out of to vn.
6:15 p. m.. Wratm'wrter FelAfter greetings and regular
lowship meets at the manse.
reports, 1 "Mrs. L. U. Thomas,
—Tuesday, October 14, 2:00 p.
chairman of the committee, exm., t h e Millard Missionary Soplained
and distributed the
ciety will meet in the church
1958-1959 programs. All books
patrlors. Hostesses: Mrs. Otho
and materials for every topic
W. l i n g and Mrs. Mary C. Meywill be found at the Naples Cener. Topic: Christians Everytral School library; Miss Esther
where Show the Work of Taking
the Gospel to the Whole World; Shay, school librarian, prepared
with Mrs. Charles W. Harbison, the 'magazine references printed
Jr., and Mrs. Robert E. Deusen- in the program, and will secure
from Albany, any specific book
bery as leaders.
a Club member may wish for
—Wednesday, October 15, at
her given topic. Study of these
1:00 p . m., at the Presbyterian
references by every member
manse, with -Mrs. Vernon E s
will .make the year's work more
Shankle as hostess, Mrs. Arthur
interesting.
S. Landino and Mrs. Roger
Mrs. Henry E. Standish introMeeker assisting. Topic: "Middle East Pilgrimage"; leaders, duced Australia. Using a large
Mrs. George Preston, Mrs. El- map, she showed the distinctive
bert Corwin and Mrs. Fred G. geogaphic features of the "land
down under," ancL its states and^
Lyon.
capitals. She spoke bniefly on
—Thursday, 7:30 p. m., senior
the population including aborigchoir meets.
ines, the "different" animals and
—Friday, 4:00 p . m., Junior
birds, the industries and prodHi Fellowship meets in the
ucts. Some of these will be takmanse.
en up in more detail on future
programs. A short discussion
ST. JANUARIUS*
and inspection of material loaned by Robert E. Moody, followRe<r. Henry C. Bleier, Pastor
ed t h e talk.
Sunday
Mrs. Thomas started the dual
Masses in Naples will be celetopic,
"Modem Women Poets,"
brated at 7 and 10 a. m. In Atwith a get-acquainted introduclanta a t 8:30 a. m.
—Thursday, 7:30 p. m., adult tion to poetry. She gave two
quotations, closing her talk with
choir rehearsal.
—Friday, 3:15 p, m., junior John McCrae'a famous World
War I rondeau, "In Flanders
choir rehearsal.
Fields."
A sooial hour and visit, after
Harold A. Jerry, Jr., of Eimdra, is still contesting the 36-vote the summer months, was enjoyprimary victory of Senator Har- ed. The hostesses served rer y K. Morton, of Hornell, for freshments.
Mrs. Leon A. Potter will be
nomination as Republican candidate for State Senator. The hostess on October 20, at her
matter has been referred to the home dm Sprague Street.
Sfupreane Court, Appellate DiNext Sunday, October 1 ^ is
v is ion. Third Depairtrnent, in AlColumbus
Day. The holiday
bany for determination.
waU be. observed on Monday,
October 13.
Drive Caring—Not Daring
The new reservoir of the water system of the Village of Naples will b e open for public inspection next Sunday, October
12, 1958, from 12:00 noon until
4:00 p. m.
Some member of the Village
Board will be there to answer
questions.
The Board encourages^ all who
are interested t o drive up the
Eelpot Road to the reservoir
during those hours, and see for
themselves the added supply
of water that has been provided.
Thereafter, the gate will be
locked in compliance with the
ruling of the New York Stale
Sanitary Department.
INTERESTING ITEMS
FROM OUR EXCHANGES
On October 29, Dansville's
Board of Education will put for
vote of the people, a proposed
$1,071,000 school building schedule.
POPE PIUS STRiCKEN-Pope Pius XII kneels in prayer only a
few hours before he was stricken by what his physicians called
"circulatory disturbances of the brain." The P2-year-old
"^s/fcontiff Is at his/summer residence in Castel Gandolfo, south
of\Romk The/new crisis came after an apparent^ recovery
from a new hiccup attack ~
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Anniversaries
BIRTHDAY No. 8S
'Mrs. Esther DeWick, of Middlesex, will observe her eightysixth birthday on Friday. Mrs.
DeWick was born October 10,
1872.
MARRIED 47 YEARS
On Friday, Mr. and Mrs.
Torris Eide, of Bayside, L. I.,
will observe their forty-seventh
anniversary. Maude E. Clark
and Mr. Eide were married October 10, 1911.
MARRIED 36 YEARS
Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. Hanggi, of Vine Street, will observe
their
thirty-sixth anniversary
Thursday of next week. Clara
Johnson and Mr. Hanggi were
married October 16, 1922.
MARRIED 29 YEARS
On Saturday, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence A. Mimim, of Rochester, will observe their twentyninth anniversary, Gladys E.
MaoDonald 'and Mr. Mimim having been married October 11,
1929.
MARRIED 28 YEARS
Mr. and Mrs. Osborne Lyon
and Mr. and Mrs. John Herendeen will observe their twentyeighth anniversaries on Saturday.
Bernfee Federkile and
Mr. Lyon, and Florence Federkile and Mr. Herendeen were
married October 11, 1930.
NEWS OF AREA PEOPLE
WITH THE ARMED FORCES
Pvt. John A. Francis, who left
Naples on September 22, 1958,
following his enlistment, is having his basic training at Fort
Dix, New Jersey.
Army,Pfc. Larry D. Wheaton
lis a paratrooper iin Lebanon, in
a unit serving as a defense perimeter.
Pvt. F r a n k ' s . Schutz is stationed at Fort Chaffee, Arkansas. He entered the Army m
June, 1958. _^
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One hundred took part recently irTan evening Civil Defense
practice in Dundee, in, a « n w
lated disaster area,
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Untitled Document
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NUMBER 41.
>r-
Thomas M. Tryniski
309 South 4th Street
Fulton New York
13069
www.fultonhistory.com
Boy Scouts of Dansville are
scheduled
to distribute their
share of 40,000,000 copies of the
Civil Defense "Handbook for
Emergencies."
Eight football players in the
TWO DEATHS. SUNDAY.
Dansville school
have
been
AT LOCAL MIGRANT CAMP dropped from the school team
for the rest of the school year
Two deaths, only a few hours because of breeches in training
apart, at the farm oamp of the rules.
Davis Produce & Supply Company, of Wayland, kept Ontario
Conesus Lake Medical Center
County officials busy for some opened on October 6, 1958, with
twenty hours, ending Monday, two? doctors, three nurses, and a
when it was decided that the medical secretary on the staff.
deaths were accidental or from The center is located on the Linatural causes.
vona-LakeviLlle road.
It was brought out that there
had been trouble on Sunday in
An Army surplus dukw, one
the camp which is located in the of two allotted to Seneca CounGarlinghouse area of the Town ty by Civil Defense authorities,
of Naples, about four miles from has been acquired by the Lodi
Fire Company. It was last used
this village.
In the case of Mrs. Mary Jack- during a flood in Toledo, Ohio.
son, 29, of Florence, South CaroCottage owners at Lake Walina, Ontario County Coroner
C. Parker Long placed the time neta are concerned at the green
of her death at about 3 p. m., color of the water; inquiries
and attributed it to pneumonia giV'.fe information that it is alwhich was 'aggravated by a fall gae—sometrmes obnoxious, but
which she suffered in a stairway generally good for fish production, as in Chautauqua and
at the camp.
A few hours later John L. Oneida lake.
Harris, 37, of Douglas, Georgia,
The Livonia Gazette has bewas"" fatally burned in a fire at
the same camp, which damaged gun its eighty-fourth year, as of
a section of the building. Dr. October 1, having been founded
Long attributed death to suffo- by Louis E. Chapin on October
Thomas H. Alford is
cation and burns on the back 1,- 1875
the^ present publisher, having
and shoulders.
Besides Dr. Long, Ontario succeeded his father, C. M. AlCounty Detective Anthony L. vord—thus, many years of highCecere and Deputy Sheriff El- ly efficient publishing by two
wood Cox worked on both cases. generations of Alvords.
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Vacancies at U. S. Academic!
Congressman John Taber announces that theme will be two
viaoancies at the U. S. Naval
Academy ait Annapolis, Maryland, and one vacancy at the U.
S. Aiin- Force Academy at Cotoraxlo Springs, Colorado, from the
36th Congressional District of
New York, for entrance in July,
1959.
A second preliminary examination for the above appointments
will be held Monday, November
17, 1958, in Auburn, Ithaca, and
Norwich, N. Y.. -""'
Applicants who did not take
the first exa«nanaati'on„(on July
14, 1958) arc advised to submit
their names to Congressman Taber, 123 Genesee Street, Auburn,
N, Y., prior to October 12, 1958,
giving the name, date and place
Tftte Salvation Army has asked again to be included in the
Sod us Community Chest. For
two years the Salvation Army
used the mail system, but the
income decreased, partially due
to increased postage. Of this,
80 per cent is turned over to the
Buffalo office, and 20 per cent to
the Sodus chairman for local
use.
Nancy J. Seager, 17, of Dansville, was seriously injured;
Karl W. BiU; Jr., of Wayland,
and Roslyn E. Metzer, of Mumford, were injured, and are in
hospitals, after a convertible
crashed m the Town of Wheatland, on Sunday The driver,
Bertrand R. BeJanger, 17, of
Wayland, and three other passengers were injured also, but
were released
from hospitals
after
treatment,
of birth, and home address, and
should indicate their preference
Luck is good planning, careof academies,
* fully executed.—The; American
A good parent is a good driver Salesman.
A severe freeze, which may
have been a record breaker for
this time of year in t h e local
area, came during Sunday night
and Monday morning, October
5-6. The only report we have
of the temperature comes from
J. Earl Woodard, whose thermometer registered only slightly over twenty degrees above
zero at daylight, at his home in
Gulick.
Hundreds of acres of lush,
green vineyards were turned
drab brown, over night, and the
value of
large, unharvested
crops of Naples Valley's famous
fruit was depreciated.
Most flower gardens were no
longer the prize of those who
had given painstaking care all
the season.
Gardens, and field crops like
sweet com suffered.
Like most early freezes, there
were favored spots that were affected little if any, but the destruction appears to have been
quite general.
No estimate of the total damage is available at this time.
The outdoor water hose at
Fleisehman's service station, in
Main Street (left available for
those who pass in the night) was
frozen solid and stiff.
Over in West Hollow, ail the
garden vegetables were frozen
at Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harnish's, with the exception of
some late-sown peas which were
in bloom and still appear to
promise reward to the planters.
At least one pair of summer
residents of Vine Valley started
packing a t once, finished loadng early Tuesday morning, and
left "this darn cold country" at
once, for winter quarters in
Florida.
Warmer weather followed almost timmediately, but we are
made mindful of the type of
weather that will soon be here.
FOUR ARRESTED
FOR THEFTS AT
BRISTOL SPRINGS
Four young men from. the
Hoicomfo area were arrested, the
first of this week, by Ontario
County^ sheriff's men, charged
with petit larceny, being accused of taking fruit and soft drinks
from the porch of the Francis
Standish
store
at
Bristol
Springs.
According to statements credited to Undersheriff Leonard H.
Richmond, George Codding, 21,
James Wales, 21, David O'Brien,
17, and Jerry Bates, 16, admitted^ theft of cider, cola drinks,
and peaches from the exterior of
the Standush store.
Arraigned before Justice of
the Peace Warren Smithem, of
Hopewell, Codding received a
six-month suspended jail sentence and a two-year probation
term. Bates was placed on probation for one year, and received a 30-day jail sentence which
was suspended.
Wales and
O'Brien were held at the Ontario County Jail, pending further
investigation into t h e case.
Mr. Standish told Undersheriff Richmond that he discovered
the young men orr h i s property
when h e returned from Canan*
daigua at about midnight, and
that they fled when he arrived.
Deputy Sheriffs LaVerhe Brown
and Calvin Brown joined Undersheriff Richmond in a search
through South Bristol- and Bristol, , which resulted An the arrest
of the four young men.
Of course tennis wouldn't be
the* game it U without two playerr.—John Foster Dulles.