{ title: 'The Medina tribune. (Medina, N.Y.) 1852-194?, January 25, 1940, Page 7, Image 7', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031556/1940-01-25/ed-1/seq-7/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031556/1940-01-25/ed-1/seq-7.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031556/1940-01-25/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031556/1940-01-25/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
•^F Xmuu® 2S»' X94G THE MEDINA TRIBUNE OF A * ) Subscribe to the Tribune Poll Reveals One tatelrln FivePrefers independent Label By Institute of Public OtlnJon And Get 2 Want Ads FREE Applicable Only To New Subscriptions THIS OFFER JANUARY and FEBRUARY ONLY! With J^iAentl*fc!«Mft'elj; *»g* ing his najpty to *appe.al4i» flic in- dependent* voter in IW% the corn- ing pjNsndetrfia* fcimpablO. nV»y \&S* r both tta<3 Democrat;? and %mbuV cans'doing their utmost to interest this hutch-discussed individual whoss MJppcsed to sit on the poli- tical f/ence and c^st his willoi eventually for the \best cattd>, date\ father than for any pasti* cular party. Who are t ho Independent voter? inlhe United State today? In tJito first place, a wjtio»-\vvi5> Institute survey shows' tfbout one' voter ! n every five now jwefct*- that political label to any other, in the second place, yaw Scnd,e- pendent voter is much more IpveV to be a big-city dweilei* than &§.& to be a farmer or a person living in a smau town. Generally speak-, ing, the larger the'city, the greater the proportion of political fcode- pendents, the survey shows. This finding play!? havoc with one notion that has been cherished by some political observers — namely that the chief habitat of the elusive Independent was the same farming areas that produced the Minnesota Farm-Labor Party, or the Wisconiin Progressives. On the contrary, the survey shows, Independents are scarcest in the form belts of the Middle West and South. Especially in the $01% Jfere, where tb.e tradition. of the \solid South\ stttl x-ematos very s*fon& only about ow yot$ & ,ip*TO «0nsideM hiifiseW anitod>« PRndejit'taday, the survey show*, $md titfa great jna&niy, $0 g>» sent) ^aii thc«u<?lv*s fjemocmts.' i Ifofto be overlooked by Repubt lican and perrw»\«tic &toitejfcts alike, fcowever, is the. fact that 20 pey ce*nVo> tho vote'in tb.fr 18 Southern States consider them- setvei Republi«ms at this 'time. Futon,* ftstjlute burveys in nxorrtjis to eprae will reaveal whether this iUjure is to «wi03se us owny $e- pbMieam hope, o* .whether tho \Sjjuth will witinue to be the iMippy- hunting grounds of the Democrats only. ^, : ~~ ,.,.„•,• , » ifejlaiaits Wiiilters In P<hoto Contest Robert Saunders of West ave- nue, Medina, took all three awards in the pictcs-ial prints, junior class, in the first Buffalo Photo- graphic Snlon for high school stu- dents under the auspices of the American Institute of Science and Engineering Clubs. Tho judging took place, Saturday, January 20, in the Buffalo Museum of Science. Among senior class pictorial prints awarded honorable ment- ion was \Harvest Moon\ by Don- ald Kujaw, Commercial street, Medino. ^ ACTS YOU NEVER KNEW!/ jHa. % THE DRIVER, ANTS OF AFRICA WILL ATTACK AND DEVOUR ANYTHING FROM A^ __ SNAKE TO A MAN- THESE ANTS MOVE ALONG IN COLUMNS IN REGULAR: AAlliTARy FASHION AND EXECUTE INTRICATE F^ANK/v\OVEMENTS. RRE AND WATER ARE THE ONLY ELEMENTS KNOWN TO STOP THEIR ADVANCE.... CURIOUS ENOUGH IS THE FACT THAT . jgfrfe^ THESE ANTS ARE TOTALLY BUND,/ a , e j THE GOOFUS FAMILY •MtMNMW WHO'S N17WC THIS By LEMUEL f. PAKTON fn'ririir'trniiiiii TVcnch Monetary Policy u n »»i'yi'»<f. IP you WAK3T \TWE TOB vtxi MUST GET Mee&/^rr 9M 1(0 THE N*OK*J»NG , DUST \TM6 OPFiCE . OPGM TWG tviAil. VN/P>SM ~VHE V\/lNDOWS, \SEE I50 OP OUR COSTotviER'a BTFORS NOOVJ, \TEW MIMUTES FOR UJKICM TaGVJ SACK TO F'L e ALU -ipte v.erreR&. BAUAMCG OOR UKiTll. H. T. Elmo S«V, LlSTBM, ^ AtOVBOCT/ THPiT I MUCH TO OO OOWT PA\/ Kit MORE\ J0. X LITTLE BUDDY By Bruce Stuart 0).d ScnatQi? Joseph <Jaill«\j»x ot Francx> 4 \v3to St^owiuHt^ Jo| 4l>QUt snonoy «nd; teadc says CfcrfturoJ? will be licHed by her poVerty^iu natural whouixst* chiefly oil, At 70, baring th<£ scar§ &t font *nd t>Ut«J? *«»iJise1i. -rft0S»#ltt^# a*n satteft. ift tHo'iwst thi?i pot^apa any other mm la fvettw?, biecoin* nuihds tesftftet m hK Ic^a $& ^roRk$D3 \Victory jn v?n* la ofBsm destroyed by flnance>?* «&& he 1* still a powerful guidiBf fot , c^ In Erencfe nwmsuwy policy, Ho has known glory, riches, Jail, exile, calumny, foolish ndulMtotv scandal, exultation, bltteme«» »nd ilsllluslonment und with lilood* •sliot evea »ml outthrusit JAW, he'i still on his feet when the iront ;ntls tho rotinth Ills fortuiin vt$&. unk in the defeiwo of hlu wife or MUlng Gaston C»lmetto to 19,14. Ho returned front bantali- ment to full vindication In the e»- ptenav@ vise afSlnst lihn, tw b«* vxaw premier and later finance minuter of France. He has shaded down hla green rouser-i end yellow shoos wu green \ost to more somber huos, out his la still the toughest politi- cal hide anywhere-extant. MelioHsts Have Not Yet Found the Golden Key When this writer began news- upot n'orh in Chicago, people In luUtcd and West Mndkon street) «imed to be about as badly oil a; luiopean victims to today. I knew ii.burt Clvatfleld Tifylor and wa Hcrestcd In hb work with Jan< \ddums at Hull House, tho pioneer rcuil «<'ltlement. They were do- i led and unselfish, but. when 1 uolu d around the Hull House 'cmlib'iiliood several yoara ago, lothin'j hccmcd to have chunfiOv much Mr. Taylor's son Wayne C. Tay or, grew up In this shadow o{ •il ory. and now moves Into a aor of i>n.nto/inu>li cnlarncmoiU of tlr vmr. fir U ourouto to Plndland to study and org»nl«o relief there. Tho social Kottlcmenl theory, H lavcl.v expounded and lived by ho cldir Mr. Taylor and Jane Ad- dnms, wag that \all men are brot- iici i.\ and if fortunate cltlcens will llvo In neighborly Intereouna with Uic unfortunate, \• little icuvrn will leaven tho whole lump.\ 'Ihf vduiujpr Mr. Taylor catching ftrp with his tlmew, WQS U rculiat •wliu believed thot Uie way ahood ley In understanding tho buslc cc- i nimlc forces and In tho applica- tion of progressive and enlightened UclinjquuB of government. He bo- came special advisor to President RMM-VOH on foreign trade, DBBIB- liinl .idmirilstrolor of tho AAA; vice prcnidcfit of tho Export-im- poit built of Woehlntiton; nasistnnt secretory i>f the treasury. Ho with- drew iiom tho lost-named office l/iM Februnry, dJaoontlng from Mhiil l.e ronsidei ml tho trouxury di\ policy of shaping manty procedure to foreign pol- icy like the Hull House molloriatR, It uc-uld rcf tn (hat the ecouomiiit innovators and renovators liave nut yt-t found ,lie golden Ucy, A <(inpari«on cf notes by father and tsou as to whal'o wrong with West MntilBon street, Europe anil In- - •\ r>9inl«, and what to do '. i' • , »t)ld, I OHI sure, be In* • • . . i •--1 ; • v ! \n ('•!• Wr». 1,1 \V, 1, i .' i \'.>..v in lilts |ju in^j and brokerafir In 1 inr i.,' in Chi- cago before going to Washington m 1033. •• > 'f « i t « * »V \ * v£t* V*4$\ Political Form of Power Men Hard to Place It would be hard to say whether big, ewart, dead-pan Col. Fubjen- cio BoUsta, Cuba's power man, headed in from rl«hl or left. Pos- sibly power is tho main idea with all sucn current Innovators, and their poll ileal orientation is mere- ly academic. A year ago, tho news scouts were reporting tsat Batista was swinging right. The flev/8 to- day is that the Cuban Communist party i* backing him fear election to tlw presidency. A tea news Is the fngre fact that iliey are having a presidential elect ten in Cuba. B«tltt* wa* can«- rtuU«r, baiber, dikh-dl*K«r, bmlinnmn, e-oldier and *Unofr*p- tut, before he seized Cuba with tho night of President Machado, Be to at OntHtn, Indian. «?litl»*n crijfla. with Me«ireidd fealwes M*A M» tt«ttci*s. <^«rtJj(ht«4Ma^ldat«4 New WmUttm, WlfU S«rvie«. cm>eewow)Hr«ixi *«*»•*:• >:»i» I—i*rr» crowd l 4—Conjunction , • - -—women'* *MrtW»nt» \% a »0* hamnwaaa, r*»ia«no» v> i»-lPnther UH*Fhit» llllRTaV It-imiRaJUy II—Obtain _ ^ lv—Ore*U IrttW it>-l!iinplo¥ «-.N«Wiva .„».,• U—Nois ot raunlcftl i«al« aj—A oalr JQ—Vart of tiaad |»~0rotlier ab~ln a iisnty nutow M«-n«e*»t*cl* for fljw'M..^..,, h—To lea»» »o—P«»MH|I 8t—iiion«r tW^ro • 4t~-iuurumonwl duit , on aot •«ln«lm w>u apatar ia atxl i«#*», IIIIIIIL ,f, .Wii • ii iwiiii^iina IKHUHI Ji n '.II . IIIIIIJ'II, niil.ij ill I III I Wadswortli To Sjieftk Before Parmer Group Representative Jumca W. Wad«» worth of Gctteaeo wlU fiddWfst amlly ip-oupsi from Orl^ana, Mott- •ce, aenesee, Wyoming, Llvtngt- .01^ Ontario and Wayno «»Ufttler a a regional dinner February 0 tc >o hold by tho Community Council t tho Chamber of Commerce 1 '.ocheiter. Ho will discuss \Mutual Inter- est—-Industry mid Agriculture,\ .'copcrating In tho dinner will be county farm bureaus and granges erving as a common ground for iUciiHSion of mutual problems incoming tho region and to fos- <r goodwill between urban and urol communities. ,a-*»!»i •*»<lir. v«rt1ie»U iWc«nw«i|tton t-.M«th*r 4 *-Pr#»o»tllo« «*-i>o«»«»)ilv* Brouoim 1-*>NO1I« «tao» fey a -tow •«Ramuntr*t*a i*-l*»nd'>ai*»»ur« ' tl- l.-tnhHlf tht0u*ii «o»» In «k tnaunir . l»-.*o cat \•s i*-*.lmp»r»on*l prftnofliai n-Mothe* C8(tanl«lil jlwowalnta St-»P«r|ofi ot Uw» «l»>int*rrottatt\« oronotiK st—fhrvii-iMd »lath n JS^IeTtrtiilftl M*t* t«febr(> . ,jf i»*»@a«tp«et«» *nfti*tytwrtt»»t \&- ij«T«. draft- Ja^otioWiir' • • ^^ ' 9*>ut«ta -|» mm* M9* IIIJK - - ,(,' (if a*- lied Cross Aid in Europe To be Dramatized Friday A letter received by Mfa. llugl Whipple, chairman of tbo loco led Cross chapter, reports Hint a lianintlzod report of tho American tod Cross aid to Europe since 'eptcmbor 1, 1030 will bo present- K! by tho Notional Broadcasts jompany, rod nelworli, Friday January 20, OiSO to 10 pwt. Kfttt- orn Standard Time. A feature of tho program will bfl an Interview conducted by'Hume* Bimkhago, noted NPC itetromnta-* tor on International alMr*, With Ernest J, Swift, vlce-ortatemah h elmrgo of lasulfiv find foreign ap» pro'tcin fr>\ tho Red Croats, wnfl h«i jml.jtitui'njW irota ft.*iav# la Europe. ' .... .Vhluplo reports an cnlhttt- i-nie ro»|ir*n«> to o coll for addi- tional workers to do Red Crow sowing tmd knitting, Units ar« busy nt Onk Orchard, Joddo, Sliel- by, t-yndonvlllo, os well as Jn &!§»• dlna. I RIGHT OUT OF THE AIR 1 «->«---,M>-n.i*.u...«<.., a >., a . u |y IAKLI CERltlS M iciiABt. nAFFETTO, pictured here, plays Jack Packard, one of (he three modern musKoteors In Carl- ton & Morse's nightly thrillers called \I Love a Mystery.\ Raf* fetto also tokos tho part of Paul In \One Man's Family,\ another Morse creation. • • « Bette Davl* Insisted on \Ethan Fronw\ as her vehicle when sh# was booked to eo»star with Spencer Tracy In tho Radio 'Fhoatro nre- Bfftm of Jon. 8. Tho booking marked the first time these two Academy Award playora were signed for a Joint broadcast. .* * • Horace Heidi's \Pot O* q»ld M Tuesday nights network, Is rnp» program, heard Tuesday night* over the N» idly p»wln* in wmUutty, On# of the *»mm I* wjftseh># Mttrv pran», ptetur^d J»er», wfto, with hw *i*Wfi, e«»rls«s tht vtehn •oetien of Msrfdf| «mritestf«. Dennis .Pay, $mm ,m<smNr of the Ja«»tJWW Up* ti> AMMr into New form •mm muamwti ^mtbm miM?M JtfeiWd to him aplred to write tliO lilt tune, \flfjetii and Hflddlo.\ Now the young nitteg- tro la'taltlng up soccer at %Mw York gymnnsluni—anil hi* follovv- ern are limhlnrj for a iiong about It, mayho \Whackl!)' the Ball,\ • • • •> Fred Howard, of the \Ma- «i ream\ program and eompoiqfpf \I'm Forever Slowing aubnjekf hnn completed a now tune iliat will bo oil tire music countef* tfifir shortly. ('/* • • • »*«* Ever since Jjorn Layman, pic- tured here, who Is heard on \Song* of America\ ovftr NBC, reeeivcdi hor two plntoTiaSe* from tnjm* bora of tfio Madison Square Qkw» don Rodoo, she has spent svlty wwfct.end on h#r Connwtleut fijftn training the animaJ*. 2 » • • The blind actreis wlicia W»m \We. th^pe00ic»^enj#frrjp| her « job with ft Broujlway fflg^ Is only one of ovep fifty mmf eppearajiee* en tlw Ctate Hmt show have ltd to their finding job*. * * * i AMtai Ko*t«i«net*» ltt«Mq&tli)% Is luslted by^modftm empmn <#/ the BIJUSUSI mftwte m wmm •) ,tt rfl at .•is ,M *B fj^S^mffi ^^tk^S^^^WM^^^' tiW--»9*!*«^^Vl^^^