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I POOL COVERS 6 Grades • Installation Instruction HOWARD'S FABRICS and FOAM 5I» ftidga Rd. E. • Q49-O720 • ,?P«\ Sat - '*\ T i :3 ° m Sanoca t Hudion J«*Z-T/ XV &,«. Tuos. * Thuri. DRESSY.. rayon/acetate, ruffle collar, button and bow trim. Sizes 6 to 18, black and turquoise. *15 98 Complete selection oj Maternity Lingerie **R ADCCST <Tg\\ CD L GREECE TOWNE MALL 227-3710 A VISITING MOOD? I VISIT n.i>\oiiinsns %f&SM BUT VISIT FIRST Then If You Are One Of Those Lucky Ones Who Will Be Traveling To Exotic Lands This Year, You Will Realize Why Patrons, By The Thousands Return To Enjoy The Delicious Food & Courteous Service Of Crescent Beach Hotel i I ] \The Riviera Of Western New York\ SERVING DAILY FROM 11:45 A.M. FOR LUNCH, DINNERS & BANQUETS ENTERTAINMENT NITELY Except Mon. JERRY LAMBERT TRIO Featuring The Beautiful \DUBBIC\ MAYES PLUS EVERY FRI. A SAT. , Rochester's Own DIXIELAND RAMBLERS 1372 Edgemere Or. On Lake Ontario Phone 663-5775 Vow Hosts. \THE BARRYS\ Gloria & Joe Rats, Like Mink, Are Expensive With the acute problem rats are canstng In the inner, city and the accompanying danger they present to all parts of the area, Joseph DeSantis, as- sociate p*ibllc health sanitar- ian for Che county, has pre- pared a series for the Courier- Journal i>roviding_Jnsight on the problem. by certain fleas that may in- County Department of Health. habit the fur of rats. ™* * \-' 1 -\-' Fortunately, there have been no outbreaks of plague We suspect that many bites were never reported. Of the reported cases, the in this—countryr-There—has—victims usually have been in been ah occasional isolated fants- who were attacked in case on the West Coast, but their cribs, or small children none East, of the Mississippi who attempted to \play\ with River. rats. By JOSEPH DeSANTIS Monroe County Department of Health Rats aa-e trouble. Make no mistake about it. Wherever they occur in number, they have a two-fold impact on humans: 1 — They produce a health problem in that they bite and are potential transmitters of \disease: —-—•—• - Other potential rat-borne diseases include murine ty- phus fever, hemorragic jaun- dice, rat bite fever and ricket- tsia pox, all of which, like the plague, have been fortunately absent from our community. One rat-borne disease which may have occurred here is sal- monellosis, or in layman's terms food poisoning. This un- pleasant illness is caused by a germ called salmonella, which can come from a variety of sources. Anyone who is bitten by a rat should have medical atten- tion, including a tetanus im- munization. Every rat bite should be re- ported to the Monroe County Department of Health. To do this, simply call 442-4000 and ask for Rodent Control. On the economic side of the rodent problem, it has been estimated that it costs the American people $250 million a year to keep rats fat and 2 — T*hey produce an eco- nomic problem by attacking property and foodstuffs. What are some of the more important diseases that are considered rodent-borne? If you remember what you learned in history, you will re- call the Black Death that swept Europe a few centuries ago, killing millions of people. This disease, also known as bubonic .plague, is caused by bacteria that are transmitted The rat is very apt to have salmonella in its urine or feces due to the filthy way it lives and feeds. So if an in- fected rat has access^ to food arid urinates or defecates on this food, and if the food is not thoroughly cooked, then the person eating the food may come down with salmon- ellosis. In oar community, rat bites are of more Immediate im- portance to public health than rat-borne diseases. In the last three yean, 32 rat bites have been reported to-the Monroe healthy. That estimate is based solely on the cost of food they eat. New Sex Instruction Termed Successful Dr. Gerald T. Guerinot, chair- man of the diocesan committee on sex education, said this week of the new sex instruction in Catholic schools. \The program has been in effect long enough now for us to say that it is a success. Those in favor of it,\ he added, \are in the vast majority.\ Statistics show that out of 1659 responses to a question- naire mniled last spring, 1050 parents approve of having hu- man sexuality taught in Catho- lic schooLs. Those parents dis- approving: numbered 103, or about 5.0 per cent \The purpose of the pro- gram,\ according to a state- ment issuted by the committee, \Is to provide for the school the direction It needs to assume Its role Ira reacting to the Vati- can II mandate for 'a positive and prudent sexual education.\ It alms to \help the young Christian to -grow up with a YOUR SON, PRIEST THE H0UY FATHER'S MISSION AID TO THI ORIENTAL CHURCH Have you ever wished you had a son a\ priest? Now you can have a 'priest of your own'—and share forever in all the good he does. . . . Throughout the Noar East each year, grateful bishops ordain hundreds of new priests trained by people like you... . Their own families are too poor to support them In training, but good Catholics in America 'adopted' these semi- narians, encouraged them all the way to ordina- tion. ... In some Inspiring cases, this support was given at personal sacrifice... . How can you begin? Write to us now. We'll send you the name of a young seminarian who needs you, and he will write to you. Make the pay. fnents for tils training to suit ytsur convenience ($8.50 a month, or $100 a year, or the total $600 all at once). Join your sacrifices to his, and at every Sacrifice of the Mass, he Will always remember who made it possible. A PUTUKE PRIEST NEEDS YOUR HELP HOW TO MAKE $10 S-TFt-E-T-C-H MASS FOR YOU ROOF OVER THEIR HEADS Look at the nearest $10 bill. What is it actually worth? Only what it will buy. In Miami or Brook- lyn or Philadelphia, It will hardly buy enough to feed a family for two days. In the Holy Land, it will feed a poor refugee family for an entire month. The Holy Father asks your help for the refugees, more than half of them children. Your money multiplies—as you give it away. Thinking of the month ahead, why not send us your Mass requests right now? Simply list the intentions, and then you can rest assured the Masses will be offered by priests in India, the Holy Land and Ethiopia, who receive no other income.... Remind us to send you information about Gregorian Masses, too. You can arrange now to have Gregorian Masses offered for your- self, or for another, after death. For only $200 i n Ernakulam you can build ft decent house for a family that now sleeps on the sidewalks. Simply send your check to us. Archbishop Parecattil will write to thank you also. Dear ENCLOSED PLEASE FIND $ Monslgnor Nolan: CJ FOR. Please NAME return coupon with your STREET. offering CITY -STATE. -ZIP CODE. THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE AB8OCIATI0I NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National Secretary Write: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOC. 330 Madison Avenue*New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon 6-5840 We have often been asked how many rats are in Roch- ester and Monroe County. The answer to that is unknown. There is a rale of thumb for urban areas to calculate one rat for every human. On this b a s 1 s the rat population would approach 700,000. But it is purely a \guesstimate.\ ' One thing seems certain, however. The rat problem in our community is larger than anyone thought it was. We say this because since the County Department of Health began the intensified rodent extermination program in October 1967, we have re- ceived 1,752 complaints of rats, more than double the number we used to receive. We believe the increase is due to the fact that residents now know whom they can com- plain to aboufr-ratsr—• -- NEXT WEEK — Methods of extermination and control. 14 Courier-Journal - Friday, Oct. 18, 1968 and HIGH SCHOOL COLLEGE MEN la your vocation plant COMSMW flit t*«Mag irothBrtood. lFor XAVERIAN BROTHERS . e/o Brofhtr Guy, C.F.X. llformatioa joi winehattor Straart (01 WIKIWITW »;«•• „.., Newton Highland), Mas».0II6l GEO. M. CLANCY. Jr. • . || P^f*TM| GENTLE Men Guide You Through Moving Day CEO. M. CLANCY CARTING CO., INC, 8 Circle St. 473 \ 3120 ; B tireie ai. < mail Step up to the great CANADIAN K-l MI'lHC concept of the sacred nature of sex, to develop respect for the opposite sex, to make clear the serious obligations that accom- pany God's gift of sex and to emphasize the family orienta- tion of sex.\ Father Daniel Brent, associate superintendent of diocesan schools, remarked on the re- actions of the students in the program: \We have received a number of letters from students praising the program and say- ing they wished such a course had been started earlier.\ Dr. Guerinot told of the re- actions across the country to the course of studies instituted by the diocese. \We have re- ceived requests from a number of dioceses 'for information: Seattle; Aukland, New Zealand; Baltimore ... are a few. 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