{ title: 'Greater Greece press. (Rochester, N.Y.) 1959-1977, March 12, 1959, Page 8, Image 8', 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/sn88074086/1959-03-12/ed-1/seq-8/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074086/1959-03-12/ed-1/seq-8.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074086/1959-03-12/ed-1/seq-8/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074086/1959-03-12/ed-1/seq-8/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Rochester Public Library, Central Library of Rochester and Monroe County
g SCflKNlKS fHE SCORE ^IffiETS ~ The BoWling Roiiitd^ Heading the' -list -s-h ^ars;-!^thletie »ASs6 Lea^e at Domm Brothers afe GotcTle 3Matin; Elmer Tlusehong, Ed Each and John Schilling—ail d e a t o k e r t l t h a avCTage \ ^ io iieawtiWeW ¥iou M ai an — 1 iiliffiri^ illiaiiis ■ ■ 'd » i n g : ! P 9 6 l jDrpp a Card to iBlS^yHOlRTON 101 PEMROSE STREET Rochester 12 i or Con CH S0603 lELP WANim . Wcdtress cmd Counter-Girl € a i r GL 3-9938 POPLAR FOOD NOOK 2946 Rtdge Road West ' 279 and G. li^hth has a ;21|. •Steele lias a ^ l i r e e « 0 m M pf: ».« • • a ^ ~ s s S S * i ^ - \ . S tifltural. ihecaTlse animals Behind them are A1 HeinZ) with 186, and Art Steele, A1 Lort?, jaeinz) «, ctxiu iCXi’i, ■Jicciri, r A1 I Ken Winn, Jim Kahe, Don White,' Joe Eagiewsfci, John Remmel and-has a ^264 single: ........ 1 0 K ' At Ridge Hall, the Boyce TV Tfeam,TKing Eahiads and Sarvey Bob Troas, with 185. Kane has high Single-game/of 680 and Heitt^ has hUed''np a ' 670. In the KdPAA. Film Erocessing, League, Ashley is on fop ^ith- a- 180 average, followed by Smith, Meagher and Schwartz, with 179;. Denison and F. Brown, with 177, and Stahura and Doyle, iiWith 174. hieWs Seridce. TStatiPn are 1-^5 In ?Leth-:Gate Leagde; Faye /Biirkell 4ias a W4P' avelrage,u foHoWed Wy Eldeana Barnes, vpith i38, Doro thy Childs and ®val.Forb^ with 122;:^ and Jane Codnahi hnd ATline Maier, with 12i: Schwartz’s 248 is high single with Brovm’s 247 next on the list. Ash ley has a 651 three-game perform- ance to his credit end Webster has a 625 total. J. Wezelis and F. Purcio are out in front in-the K.E.A.A.^ Mon day League, both • averaging 184. B. “Seymour,, with 173, .Phd E. Welch; %. Kflinger has 653 three-gamo ahd R. Young c KODAK PEOPLE ^ r . Let the PayroH Investment Plan-PRIP^-help - you^to-own more’ and more shares in your own company. Nothing couffb^m o re convenient or systematic. It’s thrifty, too, because you SAVE BEFBRE YOU SPEPD-as little as $6.25 a week or $25 a period. No down payment is required. Your signature alone can get you started but, of course; you may invest your wage dividends and any other lump sums when you si can inv idend reinvestment. If your subscription is accepted on or before MONDAY, MARCH 30 your Plan can be started with the 5th Payroll Period. For prospectus-booklet and first-hand information without ob in any day including Saturday mornings, telephone us or mail tl YOU can invest $3,000, $6,000, $12,000-with the added help of complete divider without obligation, come ail this card today! The ttuinby Plan ESTABLISHED 1938 Street Address 1213 LINCOLN. ALU ANCE BANK BLDG. I 1^10 tr»nVUt.Il,nkM H nW C DHntV DLUU. V Rochester^, New. York • BAker 5-8590 City and Postal Zone In the K.PA.A. Girls Classic League, M. Barnes is leading the draae’with -a 169 ayearage. 'Behind hep ^ e H. Heinsler, lil. Dagger, :M. Lahlb and, E.- Slateiv Marilyn Twomey°has a. 240 mme on the hooks and Ruth B u s i e r has 236. 7 In the K.P.A.A. Men’s Classic League, it’s Herb Buell, with- a 194 average; Heth Freeman, with a 179; Norm Faber, with a 178, and Dave O’Neil and Wfliiam Mc- \ Glynn, with 177. Btrell has top three-game — a 676, And, Albert :?Hauck hhs a 662. Freeman’s 249 Js the best singleton, with Roy Sm next with a 246. ^ . There .also,.is,good going m the K.P.A.A. Tuesday League where where F. Baker’s 180 is top aver age. Next on the list are E. Irish, with 174; J. O’Rourke, with 172; R. Rossi, N. Faber and M. Brown, with 171, and S. Horton, with 170. hearing bn. «onsegfyatiom*i bills at Albany, Kew Ydrk, ahdl|heylv6re anxious to .Jidar, and .j)apticip#e in, if lieedeti, the^ ttajditional de-. bating, and Tiollnrihg that comes up' when strpjagminhed' sRArt^ oh two Sides of. a N^ue^oh. homd* together .at a meeting -pf |his.ty^e. ■ T,6'1;heir/astonf^imeht, the two aforementioned sportsmen, Roy: Japp and Ted Cbmish fdund In stead a very seda:te ekposita^ir of conservation' problems, with a greater unanimity‘of opinion than previously encountered oh iriost- matters, and little in the way of Tchest pounding rotations. -------- J J AT KODAK BONUS SPECIAL PRICES! MOBID EREMIER ^ • * •• ^ R .-l« o im SAFETY . av qid t ir e breaks All Sizes Hicluding 14 Inch FREE WHEEL BALANCE WITH PURCHASE OF SET OF POUR GERRY SPRINGER 1436 Ridge Road West GLenwood 3-7117 :^ V J V M /W W J V J W ^ M W M m W W J W M W W J W J W W J ^ I state conservation council, plained that was the way it some- Horton has a 247 single and E. Scheck has a 245. The best three- gdme tally is Baker’s 624, .with E. Ranalli in second spot with a 621. groups favored giving the Department author- nine when and in what areas the season coiild be -hpened for deer of either sex. They also found n general agreement on a uniform trout season. One strong bloc wanted to hunt pheasants oh \Sunday be cause as one club head stated, “Our. club members work six days a week.’’ At Lyon’s Den, the Greece Firemen’s League keglers had a lively session last week* The Grand View Heights Wasps took five points f/oin Barnard No. 1. The. Wasps had a 929 single-game tally and the individual standouts were Brucker, with a 223; Kovas, with a 214, \and Franz, with a 201 Greece^Mdg^. No. 3 grabbed off four poinitfe7.aL.'the of Crescent JBeaSh, as; JBffl rolled 225. Ed DrumMoy sRot a 204 for the losers. North Greece No. 2 took four from the Barnard Exempts with A1 PoUet chalking up a 219. Fran Cramer of the Exempts rolled three games of 145. Arid the Balcn^ of ’flie^Day ^ ^ to You, Sir I ^ Aiid the-Proper Bcdonce for l\\ Greece-Ridge No. 1 took four from Greece-Ridge No. 2. Mona han hit the maples for a three- game total of 561 and John Volk- mar had a 205 single. North Greece No. 3 toOk three points from the Greece-Ridge Exempts as Parks turned in a 212 game and a 542. Woods had 200-550 and A1 Starken had 223-576. St. Patrick's Day Should-Be a FconilY J^inner of - Corned Beef oind C a b b a g e KIRBY'S RESTAURANT . . . $ 1 5 0 Per Person The Grand View Exempts grabbed off three points from North Greece No. L Effing had 208-530. and Knight had a 209 game for the Exempts, A1 Lempkc rolled a 220 for North Greece. ’ Carl * /Langschwager covered himself with glory as he blasted the pips for a 704 total in the K.P.A.A. District NASD League 1 the Red Men’s Club alleys. He ... f RIDGECREST SHOPPING CEINTER rW W VW i^W iKm W VVW VVlAVW VW AfW W 1/^' ' J 16 ALLEYS 16 A L L ^ S -^H E N -B O W U N G Mon., Tubs., Thurs., F ii. — 6^ A. M. to 7 P. M. . Wed.—B A. M. to 4:30 P. M. . ^oL & Sun.—-All Day DOMM ■ , 640 Ridge Road W eal ^ GL 3-2424 started' with, a 276 and followed with 224 and 204. • There was quite a bit of excite ment down at Boehm’s Bovvling Hall a few nights ago when the Willow Inn team came close to a single-game tally of-, 1,000. The outfit, consisting of E. Meisch, H. Bencns, J. Zaleski, £. Becker and^TL Barnesr-tui^ed-4n sparkhng 979 performance. Barnes had a 231 and Benbns had a 20.3. Becker rolled 190; Zaleski hit 185-and MeiSch ha4 170. In Boehm’s Wednesday Ladies League. Gert „ Baldwin ha^ Jop single-galne honors vvith- a 191. ’ In Thursday Men’s Leaguo com petition this week. Regal Bever ages ,took three - froih . Schaller’s Hot Stand nnd flie Grove * House Tquintet took five to reihain dn first place, John Ames of^ the' Groye Hous^4eam leads the keglers with a 181 average. The :Schiffauer team of the Fri day Night League has a big 947 single on record. Corner radh Trbm the- Rdehester^ area Were as'pu^ted and' as/rfsllcss as moving machines and modern super-^highways,' most f . ;gmhe -trails,* p ^ ^ i l y ' those nf BuffalQ .or bisoh/ This : was natural, feecatisse . ^ im a ls - chose the from one arda to anothir. Huge'fiends of buffalo- had t o / teavellong idistahces ttp obtain: tfiO : Targe afiioufits of food necessary to sJJsitam Ihbhi, and; they: Rro.-; vlded w.ell-defined.*. lrails./t /:p.is Roy Japp, who is a leading figure in the Seneca Lake Duck Hunters Association and Ted Cor nish, who is the \Riding spirit be hind the Northwest' Conservation Association Inc., agreed. yiUCCl ' W.CJJ.-UCA11*CC4_. CU.AO. V Was also true to a lesser tdegree p f , other-:big-game .S!pecies- How ever, engineers today .'often i^ o r e the easy routes establishied over canturies by the original inhabi tants and move mountains -afid cross- streams 'that^/befpre/.:^ been bafriers'fo w iir iam ^ T - . Attorney Thomas Crone, Roch ester lawyer and counsel for'the times went. Cornish and Japp found out that most sportsmen They also witnessed Conserva tion Commissioner Harold G. Wilra at his first legislative hear ing and heard him call out' clear ly and positively the department stand on each biR. They failed to hear any discus sion of increased fishing' and hunting fees—a matter before fis cal-committees and pot conserva- tion---or water pollutipijp pr duck legislation, Nothing^ o.n,,^ose O b jects was before the committee and Co-Chairman Leo A. Law rence limited the hearing to bills before the conservation commit tees of Assembly, which hei heads, and the Senate. Limitless Limbs? Dr. Marcus Singer, Cornell Uni versity, uncovered the mystery of why certain^ creatures such as sal amanders ^can regenerate new limbs when they are destroyed. He found the re-routing nerves from a frog’s leg to reinforce the arm region made it possible to grow a new arm. His - finding confirms the belief of scientists that nerves p- oduce a substance vital for rfe-growth and are the key to why some creatures can .regenerate new limbs. The unusual experiment was performed as-a part of stud ies for_ cancer cures. ■ColiMF Causes . ’ - It is geperaliy ^hccOQled tiiat the shade pf color jof fisfi Ts 'de termined by the amount ofiTight that enters its eyes. Consequently, those- from the shallowsLows arere ligight. a l Howe-ver the intensity of color of deep water fish are dark, and fish_ is^elateiL to jy;s diet*, ' ^ At least, this nas been proven as true in the case Of the t ’-ojit. Check for your own satisfaction. Crustaceans, such as fresh-^ivater' shrimp and crayfish, produce the most beautiful colors ih trout. Trout from streams where-crustk- ceans abound are much prettier than those from adjoining-; waters where minnows pirovide .inost Of the fish diet. ■« •' Friends of ours who take ^ e a t pleasure in ' expldSfefg the waters. of Quebec, found much ^evidence, of this where a small stream joined two lakes._/Erout from t h e ' \streams were far mpre beautiful than those taken from either lake. Lines About Lines Certain terms about fishing lines are best known to the manu facturer. Here are some you miy or may not understand. Pound test is the number of pounds Of weight it takes to break a line on a direct pull. Monp-filament in spinning' lines simply nip^s one strand; One advantage of linen line is, that it increases in strength in water. Sizes of linpa salt-water lines are computed ac cording to the number of threads, in multiples of three, from \six- thread upward. For in^ance s x- thread wet tests 18-^pounJs, nine thread tests 27 pounds, etc. Tne use of more than one le ,ter as a fly-line designation' indicates a tapered linfe. For example: HDH means a length of size, H-dlame- ter, tapered to a length of size D line, then tapered back to a length, of size, H line. The Grass Roots is a balance wheel in our republic and the hoitte-owned press is part of it and ^ves it expression., — Industrial News Review. OUR CUSTOIVIERS COME BACKf Because of the •Comfortable, Congenial Atmosphere Fine Epod BREAKFAST-^UNCH-iD0lNER W BEST m BiEVEEAGES DON O’COlN'S TAVERN I 5 West*.Ridge Shopping Cdnter | I I GRAND OPENING SUNDAY, W ‘ ELBOW ROOM A ' Choice ^of • CORNED 6 EEF AN D C A B B I^G E • VEA L c u t l e t s $ n o o - p e r person 169416keA v e . G L 3-fS50 J ; ^