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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • Page 2
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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • Page 2

Location:
Binghamton, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
2
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7 Barker Landfill Advocates Gain a Little Ground July 23, 19C8 PRESS, Binghamton, N. Y. 3-A I 10. BARKER ITSELF has no dumping ground for Its own residents, but exports refuse to the towns of Nanticoke, Maine, Chenango and "maybe others." A jW By JERKY HANDTE Proponents of a Broome County landfill operation in the Town of Barker made limited headway last night in the face of opposition to outside dumping in the town by 162 petitioners. Paul L.

Vosbury, chairman of the county board's Refuse Disposal Committee, joined with Joseph M. Missavage, top county planner, and Barker Town Supervisor Frank B. Ingraham in making these points: Because Barker has no town cumping ordinance, the only present control on dumping in the town is the County Health Department and its enforcement of county and state sanitary codes. Photo by Fred Brown. CRASH AFTERMATH Workmen attempt to remove auto, driven by Mrs.

Ruth E. Hogan of Windsor, from Route 1 7 near Owego. It was one of tljree cars involved in crash yesterday. Rider Hurt 1 3 rx ks -ft Hri v's. Two 'Fair' After Three-Car Oweso Crash in Route 17 Access to a proposed ty dumpsite, now used by a private contractor for Binghamton refuse, would not require use of any Barker town road.

Mr. Ingraham told objectors to garbage importation that Barker could be forced to buy between $150,000 and $180,000 worth of equipment to maintain a town only sanitary landfill operation, under state law. The Barker supervisor told the chief spokesman for the petitioners, Richard Hill of Dunham Hill Road, that. he probably would call a special meeting of the town board for 7:30 p. m.

Monday to act on petitioners' request for an end to dumping on the Reginald Haist property. MR. HAIST HAS granted a one-year lease to RMP Simon-son Associates of Oneonta for sanitary landfill dumping of Binghamton refuse on the 140-acre site off Knapp Road. Dumping on the site started last week. Last week, according to one of more than 80 objectors who turned out at the Barker Town Hall in Hyde Street last night for an informal three-hour public hearing on the dumping, Simonson garbage trucks were using Barker's Dunham Hill Road to reach the site Press Bureau Owego Two persons were reported in fair condition at Ideal Hospital, Endicott, today following a three-car accident in Route 17 in the Town of Owego yesterday.

Two other persons were The accident took place shortly after 3:30 p.m.' near DeGroat Road, Tioga County sheriff's deputies reported. Deputies said an eastbound car driven by Mrs. Ruth E. Hogan, 47, of Windsor RD 1, dropped off the pavement edge and went out of control In Scooter Accident Press Bureau Owego Clifford Hanes of Owego RD 1 was injured yesterday when his motor scooter skidded on some loose gravel and slammed into the base of an overpass in Route 17C. The mishap took place at the northern end of the new Owego Bridge.

The 55-year-old man was reported in fair condition at Ideal Hospital, Endi-cott, suffering from multiple injuries. Deputies said he suffered broken ribs, cuts and scraps. Attendants added that he had xinjuried his left shoulder. The mishap took place about 1 p.m. The motor scooter was heading east in Route 17 when it went out of control, hitting the southwest corner of the overpass, according to deputies.

Mr. Hanes was thrown to the pavement, deputies said. upon coming back to the roadway. The Hogan car crashed "nearly headon" into a car driven by William H. Heme, 56, of Main Street, Richburg, deputies said.

Mrs. Hogan suffered a broken left foot, a fracture of her right hand and bruises, attendants said. Mrs. Etha Heme, 56, riding in her husband's car, suffered multiple cuts, attendants said. Mr.

Heme and Ralph Hogan, 56, a passenger in his wife's car, were released after treatment for minor injuries, officials at Ideal Hospital said. The driver of a third car, James S. Graber, 27, of 2100 Ford Road, Endicott, escaped injury when his westbound vehicle skidded off the right shoulder of the road. Deputies said Mr. Graber was attempting to avoid collision with the other two cars.

Netvark Valley Annual Picnic Newark Valley The Summer Recreation Program of the Newark Valley Central School will hold their annual picnic at Greenwood Park Aug. with rain date of Aug. 2. Buses will leave the school between 9 and 9:15 a. m.

proceeding along the route where they ordinarily pick up the swimmers. Buses are due back at school at 3:30 p. m. Registration Warning Given Tioga Residents Owego Voters who have moved recently or those who are not registered may register at the Tioga County Board of Election office at the County Court House, a spokesman for the office said. The spokesman noted that all persons who have not registered under the Permanent Personal Registration pro PRESS PHOTO BY JOHN BOLAS.

EVERYBODY SALUTES HIM-Michael A. Donaldson, who was a sergeant himself once, gets salute as Medal of Honor -holder from Sgts. Eugene L. Welch, center, and Horace F. Langham, right, at Binghamton Army Recruiting Office.

Even generals salute the 71 year old World War 1 hero. W. 1 Hero Adds mm xcw intic.PT jcira gram must do so in order to be eligible to vote in the November elections. He added that all those residents who have moved since last registering are required to re-register and transfer their enrollment. Registration must be made in person.

I Michael A. Donaldson of Buffalo, a chunky at a rate of between six and 11 a day. Mr. Vosbury assured Dunham Hill Road residents that their road, whose families have a total of 73 children, could be posted heavy trucks. He said county hopes for using the Haist site as one of Broome's landfill dumps are based on another route for refuse from metropolitan southern Broome: ROUTE 17, Stella-New Ireland Road to Choconut Center, Airport Road to Broome County Airport and Knapp Road north through the towns of Maine and Nanticoke to Mr.

Haist's private access road to his dumpsite. This route, the refuse chairman said, would eliminate use of any Barker town road. Mr. Vosbury also pledged that the county would resurface two miles of Knapp Road, at a cost of about between the airport property and the entrance to the dump, to spare taxpayers in Maine and Nanticoke from subsidizing the county landfill operation by road mending. The committee chairman, who also heads the county caaaie '5-liy2 in roaring good health at 71, is ordinarily red-faced from outdoor living, but his ace gets redder when anyone mentions hippies or draft evaders.

"In my day if that happened, they'd have 'em or tried 'em for treason," he said in the U. S. Army Recruiting office Film Program For Children Nichols The Nichols Cady Library announces its 1968 summer program includes free films for the children of the local area. With the cooperation of the Finger Lakes Library System the films will be shown each Tuesday at 3 p. m.

The local Jayncees are helping sponsor the free program. The first in a series of films will be shown today. Films to be shown are: "Alexander and the "Andy and the Lion" and "Gilbert and the Buffalo to Norfolk, where he will attend a non-commissioned officers' reunion. He travels from base to base my hobby, I'm a bachelor and I'm retired from the job as a guard at Chase and he stops at a city like Binghamton, he pops in on the recruiters. At Binghamton, the men made him an honorary recruiting officer and gave him a certificate to prove it.

AS AN INFANTRY sergeant, he saved the lives of six men under fire at Sommerance-Landres-et St. Georges Road, Oct. 14, 1918, arid five years later was given the Medal of Honor, by. President Warren G. Harding.

OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9 SUNDAY 9 TO 2 WEST CORNERS I 761 HARRY DRIVE ON THE CURVE JOHNSON CITY frying rr CHICKEN If MARINATED AAC YEARLING CftC SPIEDIES 03 Leg-o-LambU GROUND AAc WINDSOR VI Ac ROUND 59 BACON HV in Binghamton's federal building, where he was visiting. He is one of 11 surviving Medal of Honor Jwinners from World War 1. "I CAN'T UNDERSTAND these people," he said firmly, "They demonstrate outside Edwin Fiskes Wed 50 Years Newark Valley Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Fiske will be honored on their 50th wedding anniversary Sunday.

An open house is scheduled in the family home in Bridge Street by the couple's children: Mrs. William Bridges, Mrs. Gordon Tull, Mrs. David Noble, Mrs. Maxine Brandes and Robert Fiske.

'It was five years late, and I never did i 1 1 T---l-1 ttt 1 Doaius rumic woms m- -po find out why the delay," he said. "I should mittee, pointed out that all Uairyilieil volved in hauling to the Haist iSK ILCIliaL site are maintained by the state or the county. Milk PHceS POLISH -10 Picnic Friday Berkshire The Women's Fellowship of Berkshire's Congregational Church will have a picnic starting at noon Friday at the home of Mrs. Leon Rockwell. PLYMOUTH ROCK HAMS 3 lb.

$039 I lb. $999 can 1 can induction centers. They tear down the Ameri-', can flag' and they burn it. 1 "I don't see how any American can do that. They make a good living in America and then they go out and denounce it." It started when a reporter was asking him how he reacts to the new Army, the new youth and generations that have grown up Jsince enlisted in the Army before the first World War.

"Why, these hippies," he said. "I don't go ior them. I don't see how anybody can go for them. "Do you know that before the Astor Hotel was torn down in New York, I was walking down Broadway to go to a military ball and "I was wearing my medal and two soldiers-soldiers, mind you went past me and said, 'Lookat that old man wearing that dirty old How do you like that?" ACTUALLY, MR. DONALDSON rates a salute when any military man, from the general down, spots the ribbon in his lapel (five white stars on a field of blue).

He was saluted in the recruiting office last 'week when he dropped in on his way from Gannett News Service Albany A move to bring the price of imitation milk up to the cost of real milk has been started by the New York-New England Dairy Cooperative Coordinating Committee. The group has filed briefs with the New York, New Jersey and Federal Departments of Agriculture calling for Class I pricing of all milk ingredients used in the manufacture of imitation "filled" milk. The dairy federation has also asked the U. S. Government to require elimination of the words "milk" and a from substitute products.

"I got $15 a month for winning the medal, but President Kennedy invited us all to the White House May 3, 1963, and told us it ought to be $100 a month, and he got a law passed. "Now I get that, my army pension (he was wounded in the battle that won him the medal) and my Social Security. "I HAVE A GOOD LIFE. I get military transportation when available. I get around, and talk to schools and the young people.

I talked to the troops in Saigon last February. "I see the other medal winners now and then and one of them, John O'Connell out in Cleveland I go see every year. He's 82." He said, "We're all getting on. The average World War 1 veteran is 74. They're dying off rapidly.

Mostly from being gassed in the war." He shook hands all around the recruiting office, added his honorary recruiting officer's card to his half-inch-thick pile of officers' club cards, and headed for Norfolk, Va. -TOM CAWLEY 0 Court Denies 1940 Death Case Appeal Delhi A motion by his attorney to set aside the sentence of James A. Fink, former Masonville farmhand, convicted in 1940 for murder and arson, was denied in a decision by the New York State Supreme Court Judge Joseph P. Molinari of One- onta recently. 79 CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS lb.

annua qjb $39 ,3 lbs. a (Mam 12 GROUN BEEF $99 lbs. St Vint S3 ') I ONLY $0 ll ill' SUGAR HILLS BROS. COFFEE 0 -J. -l-a '3PM All tonnes rp 49c 5-lb.

bag JIB 65' I -lb. can BUDGET, ts afo i-vi tlUfc. RENTACAR ISO SYSTEM S'-' HUNT'S CATSUP -mi IBM Promotes Three Men To Higher Executive Posts Shurfine 100 Pure Chilled ORANGE JUICE '2 9al. 59C 281 Main Binghamton 14-oz. yi wrc 2 45' dam Mr.

Fink had been charged on nine counts of first degree murder and one count of second degree arson on Jan. 14, 1940, in the slaying of his employer, Frank Teed, Teed's wife, and their daughter, Ruth on the Teed farm in the hamlet of Ivanhoe, near Masonville. Mr. Fink was employed as a farmhand. The slayings stemmed from an argument over a card game between Mr.

Fink and his employer. Mr. Fink was brought to Delai by Delaware County Sheriff's deputies from Attica State Prison, where he is serving three 20-year-to-life sentences. Fink, 21 at the time of his arrest, appeared before Justice Joseph P. Molinari Feb.

23 to press his claim that errors in his trial proceedings contributed to the guilty jars iars 797-7741 'Hfc m. vat 1 ELMDALE PEACHES VAN CAMP'S GRATED LIGHT TUNA (Halves) 3 cans 1 Perfect for College 29c Large 2l2 can 2i a "Milk 1 f-tf XUir 1.1- MACARONI MRS. FILBERT'S MARGARINE fi; 'l-Vi Sinn A RIGATONI, SHELLS. ELBOWS to COc TRUNKS Quarters 2 lbs- 49" bag ww F00TL0CKERS Ivan S. Fredin, general manager of the IBM Corp.

plant Endicott has announced -three high-level executive pro-' motions. They were: JOSEPH A. FRANKOVSKY, from superintendent of printers, to manager of per installation organization, reporting to Frank P. Silkman, the assistant general manager. DONALD P.

MILLER from superintendent, second and third shift operation, as successor to Mr. Frankovsky. HERBERT M. SWAN, rrom project manager, machining, as successor to Mr. Miller.

Both Mr. Miller and Mr. Swan will report to E. M. Lowry, manufacturing manager of the Systems Manufacturing Divsion.

8 SIZES IN pruf SPRAY STARCH METAL VULCANIZED FRANKOVSKY MILLER SWAN KING SIZE FAD 99c Largs 22-oz. can 49- To Rule on Service Washington (UPI) The Interstate Commerce Commission will hold hearings Sept. 18 on a proposal to set minimum standards for railway passenger service. A commission official ruled in April that the ICC has power to force railroads to provide basic services. LOCAL FRESH GRADE LARGE EGGS Mr.

Frankovsky of 2700 Foster Street, Endwell, joined IBM in 1959 as a field engineer at Kingston. He joined the Endicott plant in 1960 as a computer technician. Mr. Miller, of Farm-to-Mar-ket Road, Endwell, has worked for IBM at Endicott since 1941. He is a former project manager of standard modular systems assembly.

Mr. Swan joined IBM in 1949 as a toolmaker trainee. He has held several manufacturing, engineering and management assignments. if FLUFF0 3 lb. CQc can ti ujii Mil ti-ii-rjliiiiJii i i i i i 1 i T5 nTlTT: I 1 mfi3B 1 59 "SKI SPECIALISTS" Opposite ih Post Offtc Wt RMrvt tht Rifht ti Limit Qutnlitits.

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