Corning NY Evening Leader 1952 Grayscale - 1189

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. FRIDAY. OCTOBER % 1952.
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THE EVENING LEADER. CORNING. N. T.

PAGE FTVE

They'reSinkintjTheTitanic Again-This Time On Film Lot


By BOB THOMAS

the bottom of the ship "like a sardine can." WELLSBORO. P a HOLLYWOOD (jrV-Theyre sink-l The Titanic went down with 1,517 WOODHULL Miss Therressa boys for the Evening- T w o carrier Leader under' 1 Inj,' the Titanic again, this time on 1 Mrs. El a lor Fuiler, persons. When the liner Carpa- Colvin, Mason, Miss Kathleen Mrs. John L: Yothers narrowly escaped Marion Van serious injury Wednesday night h y haV g thia arrived H darken, if a t, iim e S f i m g !t lh!6 7 0 7 l o" the scene, only Delinder. Mis. Mildred Leach, l t far? r f?Mi survivors could bo found, Mrs. Winifred Wade and Mrs. Eu- when they and their bicycle were lact from fiction. ,?J Many stories of tne disasfer struck as they were returning n Titanic epic will star Clif-icame out of Senate hearings and lalie Morton were in Bath Wednes- home from delivering their eveton Webb and Barbara Stanwyck] newspaper accounts. Among them: day evening to attend the Mission ning papers. and is being helmed by Charles That the first officer on fee to Teachers of Sunday School Class The boys were identified as Dan-j put on Brackett. The sage producer, who] bridge continued the ship's speed es of Methodist churches, of Edu- iel and Francis Coilins, 14 and 12 j by the Conference Board has brought forth such films as r for 10 minutes after the waters cation, under the directum of Mr. respectively, sons of Mrs. Helen' "The Lost Weekend" and ^'Sun- were deemed dangerous and that and Mrs. A. M. Dietrich. The Collins of East Avenue. set- Boulevard," said this is the he shot himself after the iceberg meeting, the only one in the Hor- The accident happened on upper most fascinating subject in his was struck. nell District, was held in the Cen- East Avenue. Alvin Starkweather,; picture-making career. That one rich couple bribed tenary Methodist Church. driver of the car, stated to police} "The stories we have uncover- crewmen to put their luggage In that he failed to see the reflector! Briefs ed about the sinking are fabulous," a lifeboat. Mrs. Joyce Paddock spent Tues- on the rear of the bike. he remarked. "We have had to That a man donned a dress to day with her mother. Mrs. Bur- Francis received hrush burns disrard some of them because they gain a place on a lifeboat. are too fantastic for movie au-| That Mrs. Isadore Straus de- dette in Jasper. Carol Paddock and the rear wheel of the bicycle is spending diences to believe. Some are too clined to enter a lifeboat and leave grandparents,this week with her was smashed. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Chief of Police, Arthur Fields is \ (antastic for me to believe. That's I her millionaire husband, saying, Mack in Osceola, Pa. investigating. M.v natural, since human testi-j"I stayed with him a good many lony is inclined to be faulty in {years; I'm not going to leavey him imes of great stress." ' | n o w . " facts, as Brackett related j The acts of heroism outnumber*are these: the Titanic wasied the selfish ones. Brackett obbuilf*at a cost of lx'i million. Its served that newspapers of the building was accompanied by a time cited the actions of the dis big publicity campaign-citing it as aster victims as "one of the high the most modern, unsinkable ship. marks of human behavior." As News reels still exist of the cap- the ship was sinking, the people, tain confidently embarking on the aboard sang "Nearer My God to * WOODHULL - A-3c Robert Wil- i maiden voyage. Aboard were nine Thee," and that is the current liams, having completed radio op- ADDISON An ordination and multi-millionaires, several editors, title of the picture. (The title "Ti- erators training at Kees'er Air installation service for the Rev. a novelist, countess and President tanic'i is owned by another pro- Force Base in Mississippi and a Paul Cross, new minister of the thirty day leave with his parents, Addison First Presbyterian Church, Taft's aide-de-camp. ducer.) On the night of April 14, 1912. "One good thing did come out Mr. and Mrs. George Williams in will be held Wednesday evening, a lookout sighted an iceberg dead of the sinking," Brackett added. i Woodhull. left Camp Stoneman. October 8 at 7:30 o'clock at the ahead. The alarm was sounded I "Investigations brought forth new California, for Japan, where he is church. The servicer will be unand the ship was swerved to one: and safer ship design and a strict- stationed at Itazuke Air Force der the direction of " h e - Steubenside, missing the iceberg. Unfor-!er code of ship safety. Things that Base, near the town of Fukuoka Elmira Pnesbytery and the orditunately. the ship struck a spur of; were cbrelessness before became on the Island of Kyushu, which is nation sermon will be preached by ; ninety miles from Kowea. Because underwater ice, which ripped open'crimes." jof the shortage of radar opera- the Rev. E. Moyer, pastor of the tors, Airman Williams is being Presbyterian Church at Bridgegiven the opportunity of taking on- hamton, L. I., who is a close friend WELLSBORO. Pa.Mr. and Mrs. Carl Langer, who wer* of Rev. Cross. . the-job training in radar. A reception vvjll follow in the ( married Sunday at the Marshlands Methodist Church. The church social rooms for both Rev. J bride it the former Mica Charlene Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Brown of Gaines. of Mrs. Cross.

W'hull Residents Attend Teachers Meet A t Bath

iW'boro Brothers Struck By Car, Minor Injuries

Wed In Marshlands Church

a No!

I am not a Real Estate Broker"

-Claude Buckpitt

"However I do have the privilaga of tailing my own buildings at 154-156 Laka Straat. Elmira. if the other man does not sell it for ma. "Not that I am going out of -the piano busim the piano business is my Ufa-long lova.
-uh-uh

"I would Ilka to pay rant for my store at 154 Lake Street. Elmira. and let the other fellow make the fabulous profits? and increasing value of a mercantile building (along with a few headaches). "My real estate friends tell me that mine is a Ubor location for a 'Ladies' Wear Shoppe'. an office man tells me that It'a a hundred per cent location for an 'Office Sup* ply Shoppe', and there are many 'in-between ShoppeeV so what? "The price asked is 25% below the appraised value of the buildings alone, which means that the valuable lot 57 ft. by 90 ft. goes to the buyer. FREE. GRATIS, and FOR NOTHING. "If a buyer wants to budget the purchase, the well known B.B.B. terms are available on buildings as well as pianos."

Woodhull Airman j Ordination Of To Study On Addison Pastor Duty Near Korea |To Be October 8

Protection Of Youth Against Subversive Propaganda Major Problem Facing Public Schools

CLAUDE BUCKPITT
154-158 LAKE ST., ELMIRA, N. Y.

Sabinsville News

SABINSVILLE, P a . - M r . and ALBANY m Lewis A. Wilson, '1950-51 school year. Mrs. Fred Stone of Elmira visited state education commissioner, to- Recently Wilson upheld the right his sister and husband, Mr. and I day listed "the protection of youth jof the New York City Board of Ed- Mrs. William Van Dusen. recent against subversive propaganda" as ucation to establish a list of sub- ,ly.Mr. and Mrs. Claud Hancock! one of the principal problems fac- versive organizations and to ques- visited Ted Karhan s>nd sister OKai tion teachers about membership in Sunday.Mr. and Mrs. John Saing the public schools. ltans and Miss'Lena Baker were inIn his annual report, entitled such groups. "Education to Safeguard American Wilson said some of the other the Wellsboro Hospital Friday. Freedom." the commissioner said problems for educators were the Last Saturday a roofing b^e was. it was up to the public "to help continuing increase in school en- held at the Clymer Baptist Church. strengthen the entire structure of rollments, the "desperate need" for The dinner for the workers was' the public school system" in the more school buildings, the shortage served in the grange hall by the I current "period of international of teachers and the financial prob- j ladies.Mr. and Mrs. Donald Roblems "inherent in a period of in- | insnn and three children of Fulton. tension." N. Y. spent the weekend with her The 64-page report covered the flation." oarents Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rexford.

Stalin Declares

War More Likely Between Capitalistic Nations Than Communist Countries

Dewey Urges Employment O f Physically Handicapped In State Proclamation

ALBANY )* Gov. Dewey says^ MOSCOW m - Prime Minister "Bolshevik" on the eve of the Com-* employment of the handicapped is Stalin said Thursday war between munist Party Congress, opening essential "not only to the individual capitalistic countries was more here next ^Sunday. ;but to the community at large." >robable than war between capitalproIn expressing his views, Stalin The governor yesterday stic and socialistic, i. e., commuclaimed Oct. 5-12 "Employ the said he was correcting the mis- Physically. Handicapped Week" in nist, countries. Stalin said wars between the takes of other-communists who be- New York State and urged greater capitalistic nations Of the world lieved there was little likelihood effort to find jobs for disabled perof conflicts between capitalistic sons. were inevitable. The Soviet leader made these countries because the U n i t e d statements in a 50-page article in States, as they stated it, had subRegister Today the Communist p a r t y magazine jected them to satellite positions.

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Untitled Document

Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069

www.fultonhistory.com

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