Old Fulton NY Post Cards By Tom Tryniski NY Daily Democra… · Pape.Onef. * Cyclist Hurt. .... •...

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." " ' - - ' . « . ^ r, '-"SaSSi 1 • -.: - ' : •;* -"./. ' . • i- . . .V ', •-/ *• >.* -. - ' - ' n - * AQE SBC EVENINdjtECORDER, AMSTERDAM, N X , TUESDAY, SEPTEOTER2, 1958 -. ——. • . eiwu Holiday A;nyn?i>er <? accidents over the holiday weekend in the Montgomery*Fulton County area saw'one.person killed, one critically Injured and one arrest made by the Fonda -"State Police. (The'story on the fatal mishap appears on Pape.Onef. * Cyclist Hurt . .... The condition of Lorena Stearns, 10, of 62 East Main St., Fort John- son, whq was taken to St. Mary's Hospital about 12:10 yesterday afternoon after she struck a car while, riding her bicycle down Lepper Rd. in Fort Johnson, was reported as "fairly.good".by hos- pital authorities this morning. sion S # t., sustained superficial In- juries "in a»one-car crash at 1:30 ajn. Sunday on County Rd 142 just off Rt. 6? when his auto left the tight side of the road and struck a guard rail before -shld« ding .across to, the left side and turning .over. The car rolled some 100 feet into a field and was de- The girl-had—beejy-rlding—herJ-moU&hed^Dopp wqs bicycle down Lepper Rd. and, ac- night in the Amsterdam City Hos- /cording tolier statement, Ijad rid- pital. den out onto the highway when] First Deputy Thbmas J. Mur- ray* a,nd Deputies Alton May and Benton Nellis of the Fulton Coun- ty sheriff's office investigated. Crash in Fonda A collision Saturday noon at Broadway and Main St., Fonda, between a 1956 ' station wagon driven by Joseph Iacobucci Sr.. 42, of St. Johnsvijle and a 1950 stake truck, driven by Frederick Rose. 32, of Fultonville. resulted in'min- or personal injuries and property damage to persons and vehicles Involved. Dr. Joshua Kern. * Fultonville, treated passengers in the station wagon for minor injuries. They were Joseph Iacobucci Jr.; 11, and Jennifer Iacobucci, 13. According to Trooper R. Lig- gieri of the Fonda barracks who investigated the, accident, a car driven by Patsy Basilio, 32. Giov- ersville, in a southerly direction, had stopped in a line of traffic when he was struck in the rear by the Klymkow car, wjiich then glanced off his auto a~n*d proceed- ed into the other lane where it struck an auto' proceeding north being driven by Dominick Princi- pato, 28, of Syracuse. ^Investigating police said Iaco- bucci told them he was driving r j>earance before a justice of the peace in Tfle Town of Amsterdam . at an uns'peqified later date. , Two passengers in the Prlnci- pato car, Joseph Principatb, 30: and John Madonna, 35. both of Syracuse, and - 'the driver were taken to the Amsterdam City Hos- . pital where they were treated, held overnight, and released Sun- day afternoon.. • Klymkow was, also treated at the hospital and kept overnight for observation. Local Man Hurt Donald Dopp, 31, of 315 - Dlvi- portetf at.a new monthly high for eas* on Mai i Ft nt 1,* mllf R pA*foy>-^»Tt-» n ^ ttf ™** tr P r « 1 ~ nfm ^ rtg » .her "brakes failed", causing her to hit' a car operated- by Peter La- Mothe, 3 Broadway,. Who told County. Investigator William S. Wert that-he was. proceeding east on Route 5 when the girl came out of Lepper Rd. and onto the highway. He said he Applied his brakes, but the. bike hit the door on the driver's side. ... *.. Dr. Fred F. Pipitb. county- coro- ner,] who happened to* be passing at the time, attended . the-girl until an ambulance.arrived. She was taken to St. Mary's Hospital by one of three ambulances that appeared on the- scene and was ^treated for lacerations to the "scalp and given' X-ray's at tl\e hospital. ••••• s * Present at the scene due to calls from various persons were three ambulances, the County Investiga- tor, state troopers and Fort John- son Constable Harold Town. Driver Arrested The arrest of John Klymkow. 42. Gloversvilie, by Fonda State Police on a charge of driving while intoxicated was the result of a three-car crash Saturday night on Route 30 near the Perth Rd. miniature golf course. Klymkow had previously -submitted to a h)oodtes,t mi Was stateri-forsf-fflggg when ttle fl 0se truc k s t rU ck his Vehicle. Rose stated he had stopped at the traffic light at the intersec tion'and then made a left turn to the south when the accident oo curred Sheriff Alton R, Dingman and Deputy Harry Mayette were the investigating officers Vehicle Leaves. Bridge » Frederick Miller Jr., 16, of Mas- peth, suffered severe head injuries when his station wagon went off a bridge in the Town of Mayfield Saturday afternoon about 1:45 as Miller was headed south on the Cranberry Creek Rd. and lost con- trol of the vehicle. The wagon. Which was demolished, fell 20 feet into a nearly dry creek bed land- ing on jts top. • Miller was rushed to Ellis Hos^ pital after being treated at the scene where he-^was reported to ibe in critical condition. \, An accident on the Hagedorn's Mills-Fishhouse Rd. at 1:45 a.m. Sunday; caused right arm lacer- ations 'to Harold Maloney. 2059 Eastern Parkway, Schenectady. According to Trooper Jorin Rich of. May field, the driver lost control on 'a sharp right curve when the right rear tire blew out causing the car to hit nine guard rails and roll over an embankment landing on Us top. The trooper said the vehicle *syas badly damaged. Truck Catches Fire *A truck owned« by the Red RECOKDER DIAL VI S-HOQ By City Police using a junior license and that he was underage for aiterdark driv- ing ' • • '•. ' • ' '• Jtonopka was ordered to appear before Recorder Tomlinson this morning where he was reprimand ed and released. *.' . JCHHEE - CAR CRASH — Although two of the three car* Involved In a Saturday night mishap on the Perth Rd. near the miniature golf ronrse show considerable damage, four persona hurt In the acci- dent were discharged Sunday from the Amsterdam City Hospital with only minor Injuries; The cars were towed to Frank's. Texaco Station on the Perth Rd. (Recorder Photo.) .'\. Today in Wall St. NEW YORK Up» — The stock market .'advanced moderately in fairly .active trading early this afternoon. Leading issues were up from fractions to about a point. Turnover became more brisk now. that the long Labor Day weekend is out of the way and business jiews was favorable as a whole. r . Small gains were scattered throughout the rails, steels, mo- tors, chemicals, oils and aircraft's amidst a scattering of losses. Cop- pers and other nonferrous metals were generally higher. Artloom Carpet was a feature;, up as much as-4 points at ono phase,-due to short covering. August steel production was re- Local Priest Is Assistant To Spellman The 500th said, will apply to utilities' that purchase power from the author- ity. . . Power from the project will be marketed through municipal and rural cooperative distribution sys- tems,' and the Niagara Mohawk Power CoYp. and the New York State Electric & Gas Corp. . The project's power will go to anniversary of the about 600.000 rural and domestic Although Amsterdam failed to . add to the Labor Day accident ; statistics, t w o ar rests, "were made by city poOce officers .over the holiday week- end: one a charge of"drtying while intoxicated and the other a charge of being an unlicensed operator .(driving after dark with a Jun r ior's, lleense). ", Arrested at 2 a.m, yesterday was-.Frederick Surmaner, Water- bury, Conn.,'on a charge of driving while Iniaxicated,' resulting from 'the'-alleged" erratic driving of hrs autojnobile on city-.streets which attracted the attention of patrol- men Joseph Heffernan and Rich- ard. Bush v t - According to the two policemen; while on duty" they noticed an eastbound car traveling at a high rate of speed ,and, in their, opin- ion, hehaving erratically. The officers followed the car over various city streets, where they said it traveled at a rate 3f speed between 40 and'45 niph., wandering over the-road and nar- Report 10 New Cases of Polio mer Unions Obtain Support FromTeamsters HONES DALE. Pa. (JP^Three splinter dairy groups have" joined in a bid to achieve higher prices for farmers shipping- milk into New York' City. The powerful TeamstersJ^nion^ is backing them. they s a y . / ^ ~ -.*' ~Tfie---three~are the Tri-State Master Dairy Farmers Guild the) Dairy' Farmers of America and Dairy Farmers Union, claiming a total-mebership of 9,000 farmers from the Canadian border to southern New Jersey. / The alliance was antounced late Monday night by S. Cady Sehoon- over. president of the DFA, and Charles Cartwright, president of Tri-Statc. Assures Succesa Schoonovor disclosed the- Team- ster support and said it assured rowly' missing vehicles coming! the success of any plan of action ALBANY, N.Y. .0*1 — Ten more cases of polio, two of them v parajytic, were reported last week In the 57-countyarea of the state outside of New York City. They brought the total for the year to 68. This compares with 82 at the same point- last year, and an average of 732 for the years 1931 through 1953— before use of Salk vaccine. Both paralytic cases were re- ported from Nassau County. There were two cases also in Chautau- qua County and one each in Broome. Dutchess. Erie, Oneida, Ontario and Wayne counties. birth of St. Casimir, patrOn saint of Lithuania, was celebrated Sun- day at.St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York where the Most Rev. Vincent Padolskis, auxiliary bishop in exile of Vilkoviskis, Lithuania, sang a high mass of thanksgiving. -Among the more than 4.000 in attendance was a group from St. Casiroir's Church in Amsterdam, and the Rev. Robert K. Baltch, assistant at the local parish, was sub-deacon v of the mass. His Em J nnnpprp, CardinalSpellman, pre EL RANCHO Drive-tn BOUTB S at PALATINE BRIDGE Adalti 80«. Children Voder 11 Free LAST TIMES TONIGHT •r All New Horror Shew "HORROR of DRACULA" WITH. BIO CAST Pins. 2nd Shocking Hit "TH| THING THAT COULDN'T DIE" . .PLUS CARTOON dert were on the rise and western railroads reported further gains. Money rates were higher. Raythein was Op more than a point, helped by the recommenda- tion of a Wall Street advisory service. Youngstown Sheet.' ahead more than a point, was outstanding among the steels... Chrysler paced the automotive group with a rise of about a point. . Lorillard, Caterolllar, du Pont and Baltimore & Ohio were other stocks to advance in the range of about a point. Anaconda, Kehnecott. Phelps Dodge and International Nickel all made small gains; Small.losses were taken by U.S. Rubber, Boeing, American Cyana- mld, United-Air Lines and Ameri- can Tobacco. .• (Quotations by'Spencer Tresk & Col O p e n 2 P M consumers within a marketing area of 150 miles from the proj- ect. 3 HITS TONITE SUPER 5 0 •ft , j Schenectady. IMwe-M Sar R i x a 5 R o o,,J Al Hedlie* * Patricia tiwtma 'THE FLY" ClnfmtStopf . Technicolor i. XaUlie Wood Gene Kelly "MARJORIE MORNING STAR" Ciaein>$rope - Technicolor - 3rd HIT — TAB HUNTER "LAFAYETTE ESCADRILLE" Allegheny Ludlum .. 43 Allfs Chalmers .... 2574 American ' Can 47 **Alco Products .... Arner- Tel and Tel 184 U American Tobacco . . 86 Anaconda Copper .. 5074 A. T. & S. F.-Ry. ... 23 \ Beech-Nut 36 a ; 46 * Star Express Co. blew a tire this jnornlng^ai 7 o'clock on .the New York State Thruway between Foft- da and Canajoharie unknown to Robert A. Organisciak, Utica, driv er of .the vehicle, who proceeded to continue on his way until fric- tio*> caused a fire to start in the box of the truck. . The Utica man, discovering the fire, stopped the 'truck and waited for help to arrive from the Thru- way fire department. The firemen managed'"to extinguish the blaze which did considerable damage to merchandise In , the truck and Organisciak spent the - morning [cleaning up the. debris caused .by the fire in the vehicle. I .**. cr R*C O It D I T I O H L D Hi ALTO LAST TIME TONIGHT "IMITATION GENERAL" Cr.F.NN FORtV— RED IH'TTHNH Bethlehem Steel Bigelqw-Sariford .... ll'i Borden f 71. ••Ches. & Ohio .... Chrysler t 51S - Colo. Fuel & Iron ... 22 s * Cons. Edison 5274 Continental Can-,.». 49% *Curtlss-Wrlght .... • 30 7 4 Del. & Hudson ...... 24>4 Douglas Aircraft .... 58 Dow Chemical ...... 64 'k Du Pont .... 19a- Eastman Kodak ,...119^i Ford 41'4 •Gabriel .; 11*4 General Electric .... 61'4 General Motors ..... 43*4 Goodyear 89 Tnt'l Nickel • * ....... 83*4 Kennecott ......... 93K Mohasco 9'4 Montgomery^ Ward . 39 »4 National'Biscuit .... 49% 4.1'i 26'4 46*4 18474 86 s 4 51 'i 23*4 36 46 S 11 X 71 V \f thr>gho » » • « tha IT, STARTING TOMORROW •' •».» 1 •—a 8HOWM AT ~ t-M— 1.H^%:f rtHOWN * AT - J i H - |H I National Dairy .... 41*4 New York Central . . 18S. Niagara Mohawk . . . 35*4 Pennsylvania R.R. .. 14>4 Pepsi-Cola 23 & 4 Pullman •.. 57*4 Radio Corp .". • 35H Republic Steel 57*4 Sears Roebuck 32% Socony Mobiloll .... 47*4 Southern Pacific .... 52*4 Southern Rv .47*4 Standard Oil, N.J. •. NS% Stauffer Chemical .« 78 Texas Co. 72 * Union Carbide .... ) .108«4 Union Pacific .'. 30*4 United Aircraft .... 6474 U.S.JFlubber 4\M U.S. Steel .*.. 75 WYgho'se/Air Br kes 26 Westlnghouse Elec. . 62*4 Woohvorth 47*4 •Ex-dlvldenfl ••No sale » 51 7 4 22*4 5314 ^4q%| 30 2 5 8 ' 5 64% 195 »i 119% • 4 1 % 11% 63% 43 U 89 83 93% 9% 39 Vi 49% 44% 1S%' 35% 14% 24 57% 35% 57 >i 32% 47% 52% 47% 55% 78 72% 108% •30% 64% 41% 75% 26 62% 48% sided Officials Present. ' Among the worshipers were members of' the Lithuanian Gov- ernment in exile, including Jo- seph Jkajeckis, Charge d'Af- faires, and Jonas Budrys, Con- sul General of New York. Mem- bers of the Committee for/ a Free Lithuania and delegates to the Lithuania World Congress meeting at the. Statler Hilton Hotel also were present. In a sermon orf St.,.Casimir, Msgr. John Balkunas of the Church of the Transfiguration, Maspeth, Queens, told how in the fifteenth >century a knight ap- ed_before a Lithuanian army. seeking~to res^u^^he~city-^f-EoLL lock.. The knight, he said, led the^ Lithuanians across a flooded river, a maneuver that enabled them to disperse the Russians. The knight thereupon disappeared. Msgr. Balkunas\ said that at the time it was believed that the knight was Prince Casimir. a Lithuanian nobleman who had died thirty-four years earlier and had mij-altulbusly reappeared. Prince Casimir, who was born in Cracow, Poland, on Oct. 3, 1458, was known fqr—his—saiiitliness: After his*death steps weer taken for his canonization, the preacher, said. In 1636 Pope Urban VIII de- clared St. Casimir the patron saint of Lithuania, Msgr. Balkunas said. culf-of-SU Caslmii spread American Legion Trophy Is Stolen CHICAGO </P>—A thief fouled up ceremonies for the American Legion's annual presentation' of an Americanism award at a Loop Hotel Monday., &g stole the tro- phy. The trophy, an impressive four- foot gold plated figure astride a loving cup which in turn stood atop a 40-pound marble base, was to have been presented to the le- gion's Department of Pennsyl- vania. But when C. A. Tesch, national Americanism CdmmissidrrdirectOr, prepared to present the trophy, It was missing. The gold-plated part of the trophy was valued aj apout $350/Tesch said. . "Some louse swiped the trophy, screwed it right off the marble base, and walked out of the hotel with it," he said. He said a sim- ilar trophy would be given the Pennsylvania_departrnent later. from the opposite direction The officers stopped the car at the corner of Wall St. and 'Divi- sion J5i.,*where they said the ac- Tidns of Surmaner caused tfiem to arrest him on a charge of driving while intoxicated^ ' Taken to the police station, Sur- maner allegedly refused, to take a blood test by the police physi- cian .and asked to have his own physician give the test. Police, however, were unable to contact any of the doctors named by the Connecticut, man ancT^ they said Surmaner. while in the station, threatened Officer Bush with bodily harm and used abusive and pfofane language. Fined $50 Recorder Malcolm Tomlinson set bail at $50 which Surmaner iy' ConnetMieo adopted by the three. Any action would be carried out through Milk Producers Local 69, a Teamsters affiliate.' Tri-State obtained the local charter earlier this year. Cartwright declined to comment on what. actlpn the new group might take. He said . there had been heavy pressure for, a strike but the policy thus far had been to-seek voluntary recognition from milk dealers. Farmers now get about $4.50 a hundredweight (46.5 quarts) for their milk.. Cartwright said ilfcey were seeking $6 a hundredweight. The three groups staged brief strikes in'New York State In 1957. All failed for lack of support from th,e Teamsters and the big four dairy cooperatives in New York. — NOW — PLAYJNG GE Builds Electric MoVpr GARY, JKt GRANT-BERGMAN So great together you'll wish they'd never part again! \ s. I old Paj can spe Se> veh cha I no< lea rec out I wa . tht 1 Lo dri fal < . Al' ha : *n lie au ! tic 1 .! ! ch i | do ! .he •!5 INDISCREET paid and "V man failed to appear in Recorder's Court this morning, *th^ judge fined him the $50 for disorderly conduct. Matthew E. Konopka Delmont Ave., Schenectady, cur-jter. • rently serving with the Army, was i A special Insulation svstem al- arrested,early Saturday morning., the windingSi brings and on a charge of being an unlicensed] . , operator and driving with a junior magnetic components to be total- license, when the car he was My immecsed. a company an- That Will Run Underwater The General Electrie Co, said today it has developed an electric 17, 906' m °tor designed to .run under wa- SIIOW.V AT — 1M 10:00 Hagamah News Mayor Louis Cuyler has asked that village residents refrain from putting cans with garbage. The Thursday pick-ups will be for garbage only and on Mondays, cans and ashes will be - picked up. It was announced that from now on, it will be necessary to inspect garbage before putting it on the ^ruck. and" FUNSTERS IR0WML Once upon A Horse i -i / i i (SBBBH AT S:4t driving aroused the suspicions of officers Heffernan and Bush. Police officers said they saw the car, owned -by Dorothy Golden, Schenectady, and driven by. Ko- nopka, with three companions, proceeding west on Main ST. De- ciding to check the car, the of ficers found that Konopka was speeds. nouncement said. GE said the biggest immediate use of the motor would be in in- dustrial .boiler circulating pumps. The motor also has been used ex- perimentally on ships, mounted directly on .the rudder for 1m- provpd maneuverability at low BIO a "BACK TO SCHOOL" KIDDIE' SHOW SATURDAY, SEPT. 4 FREE ICE CREAM COURTESY OF "SEALTESr DOOBS' OPRX 1:M 25C — CHILDREN' — Me Mn aria Mrs. John Oleksak, Pawling St., are celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary today. out Europe. It was brought to the United States'by Lithuanian immigrants, he said. Customers of Power Project Will Save On Electric Bills NEW YORIC-VP)—The St. Law- rence power project may save municipalities and rural coopera- tives in northern New York and Vermont' as'much as 25 per cent on their electricity bills, the State Power Authority says; A statement by / the authority Monday night said Its chairman, Robert Moses, has told all mu- nicipalities in the St. Lawrence project market area that: "Since the villages will be buy- ing power from the authority at lower cost than they have been producing it or purchasing It from other sources, they are bound to save money. We expect them to reduce their rates to the extent made .possible as a result of this saving.- We shall therefore expect that initially the new rates will reflect nt least the amount of the saving." i' i The same policy, the authority ;. I*A8T TIMES TONIGHT • WALT DISNEY'S "PETER PAN" IN < o i m i Tl.V» "THE DEERStAYER" *a AI.SO 6 COLOR CARTOONS EDDIE RICH Present* NOW THRU SEPT. 7 2 WEEK8 ' except Mon., Sept. 1 IBANK lOtSHl'l MHUU iritl FELIX . ARLYXE KNIGHT FRANK JACK HASKELL (hlld under 1) with pnr- " lit tlfkrt Sat, « fb«t« of art adn p.m. only LAST CHANCE For rrtfrvaMoaa call CKdar 7-&US or writ* Bex MS. Latham, N.Y. Send itimprd. Mf-»ddrf ***A «a- relap*. Hekata all* at lt»n»rd'a —::— NEXT HIT —n— *Tt. » - S*»t. 14 8HIRL CONWAY nk AUNTIE MAMI ' AJ M ar M lii S; in dc fo VI tv w tt W R< H ti h g n w P n d a t! C o ll c Y i V a r Final Showing of Hie 1958 EXHIBITS CARNIVAL VAUDEVILLE An Old Familiar Name Symbolic ' at of Fina Qualify Fair Prices to Main ...--T7 . . » • Plus Today's Special Attractions . V HOLLYWOOD MOVIELAND ANIMALS BUFFALO RACES DOG RACES LLAMA RACES LOCAL DRIVERS 20 Feature Events in a Two-Hour Attraction i 6 I * r a * » » f » f t * t a * « t l That Comes AJttf Having Played MadiMMI S^uor* Garden ..v i CKHdren Under 12 FREE ADMISSION $ 100 ' » » . _ yv/ -. a . 1 difOTd FREE - - -— -. Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

Transcript of Old Fulton NY Post Cards By Tom Tryniski NY Daily Democra… · Pape.Onef. * Cyclist Hurt. .... •...

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    AQE SBC — EVENINdjtECORDER, AMSTERDAM, N X , TUESDAY, SEPTEOTER2, 1958

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