{ title: 'Greater Greece press. (Rochester, N.Y.) 1959-1977, July 30, 1959, Page 5, Image 5', 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/sn88074086/1959-07-30/ed-1/seq-5/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074086/1959-07-30/ed-1/seq-5.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074086/1959-07-30/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074086/1959-07-30/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Rochester Public Library, Central Library of Rochester and Monroe County
aiTs their vows. 'vas ma-i li'd-of'honop of Hillside, tVeiner an 4 re bridesi 5groom as Biben and in Aroestys, *ollack and la of Syra» isband was University 1. He is a 1 Phi fra- England, 1 will re- efet. alchow, a University te wife of in cere- in Brick 3yers re- daughter W. Mai- and the I H. Carl- [art was ids were and Miss iin of the lest man 5 ushers sr of the ti Rose- ont, the ktowaga. 3iane B. laughter smith of oltzclaw, 3. Holtz- s solem. ethodisf Lexing. egroom, Im a n of jwell of N. J„ rs were trg and College school ^ Ken- ICE I “ Natibnai Home Week Sbt iorSi^tember Ellery 'X Caldwell, wesident of ^PAnhARfAr TTnniA-^ 'R n ilrfA r.c’ T h e G r e e a T h u i n b that jfhe Jfetiohal HoihO'Week Cel- obration wiU he held September 12 to 20. The ohsieryanee is sponsored by theCNationai Association of Home Builders 4n cbiij unction with local affiliated bssoelations. Its purpose is to provide practical education for the\ public-on home buflding and .to demonstrate the newest in h u il ^ g ideas and equipment. „ Approidmately 1(1,000 exhibit homes will be ,ppen to prospective home buyers* Many homes now under construction in the Roches ter area- are scheduled for- com pletion in time for National Home Week. Women of the Moose The Women of The Moose will hold an OFFICERS’ CHAPTER NIGHT celebration at 8:15 p. m. Tuesday at the Moose Home, 441 East Avenue. The elected executive officers are Senior Regent, Mrs. Irene Koch; Junior Regent, Mrs. Joyce Mehlenla^cker; Junior Graduate Regent, Mrs. Mabel Wetherel; Chaplain, Mrs. Edna Drumm; Re cording Secretary, Mrs. Elsie Bie- ber, and Treasurer, Mrs. Marian Daniels. The Greater Greece Press r\ July 30, 1959 . D Swimming Pool Protection A Complete Line of Chemicals for Fool Maintenance Scobell . ChemicoT CbTfEiG. 1 Rockwood PI. 1-8080 SQUASH WINE BORER We’re getting complaints from our friends, telling ns that the squash vine borer causes their pumpkins and squash to suddenly wilt. This is the work of the squash vine borer, a white worm up to One inch in length. These worms are the larval stage of the vine boter. They can cause a vine to wilt and die in a jiffy. In the garden where only a few vines are involved, you can slit the vine and stab the grub with a sharp knife or blade. Dirt should be mounded around the slit portion of the vine to prevent further in jury or drying out of the vine. Dusting or spraying the plants at weekly intervals will help keep the borer out. Use 4% Malathin or 5 % methoxychlor dust or spray, dir^ting the in secticide at the stem and vines along the ground. Four or five doses are needed. Burning the vines in fall will help reduce the overwintering infestation of squash vine borers. DELPHINIUM \ Have the leaves on your del phinium plants turned whitish and curled? This means mildew. Dust ing the leaves with Mildex (Kara- thane), available at most garden supply stores, will help check it, but try to get the material on be fore the disease pops up, because it is difficult to eradicate. When delphinium buds become black and wadded up, this trouble is due to the cyclamen mite, a light-colored spider mite too small to see with the naked eye. This . By GEORGE ABRAHAM Napleg, N. ¥. serious pest' deforms the leaves, blackens the .flowef^uds, usually dents, prevents bloom and even stunts the plants. Control: Spray with, malathion, 1 table^bon to a gallon of water, starting earlier next year. You can still spray for a later crop i of delphinium blooms. Pick off the deformed parts and burn. Malathion will also kill-aph ids, another kind of peab*te-trouble; .=( this handsome perennials, EPSOM SALTS FOR TOMATOES Did yoii know that Epsom salts can help tomatoes yield better and make melons taste sweeter? Light sandy soils are low in magnesium, as well as boron. Plants need both of these minor elements for nor mal growth. No matter how much ordinary fertilizer you put on, if your soil is low in magnesium or boron, tomatoes or muskmelons don’t do as well. Commercial growers apply these two elements by adding Epsom Salts and borax to their insecticides and fungi cides, and they increase both yield and quality. , If your garden soil is light | and sandy, add 1 tablespoon of | Epsom Salts-\and 1 teaspoonful i of borax to each gallon of spray ! m ate^l. Do this twice in a season, spraying op tomatoes | when the crown fruit begins to j tui*n pink, and then later, dpr- i ing the third week of harvest. ' Spray borax and Epsom Salts on muskmelons. when the vines first begin to run, and again when the early fruit is one or two inches in diameter. Shefi0 Al Skinner Says: Augiisf is thci’l>ig vacation month. T he p eak of the tourist;^ seaison is 'lust aheatl. P ^ p le who a r e planning long trips should give seriow^^ft* thought tp safety measures that can ?help them to avoid acci*s v No'Phe.can afford to be careless at th e wheel of an auto»i« moblledEdr:rArsingle=mtomenti - r „ All iHotofists who are traveling long distances should heed the f ir ^ signs o f fatigue. PatigOe^and drowsiness breed accidents. K. Yw Liquor Store Offers You T 0 1 Newly-Stocked Items 1439 Ridge Rd. West Corner Stone Rd. Opposite-Howprd Johnson’s HEALTH foi AU JACK SPRATT, MRS. SPRATT,, avoided AND FAT We’re willing to bet that Jack Spratt, who ate no fat, outlived his wife, who, if you remember, ate no ' lean. While they both licked the plate cle^. Jack doubt kept his boyish fi^re, staved off arteriosclerosis, ' .an^l BOOTH’S ^ G U & D R Y G IN 90 Proof. Pull Q u a r t $ 5.34 If You Don't See It — Please Ask for It We'll Try to Obtain It for You PRONTO Chilled Imported Wmes and New York State Champagne HAGGERTY & A4AHON 6L 3.5021 \r..” y PLENTY OF FREE PARKING AT THE DOOR 7 USED CARS Always the best of fo o d BREAKfAST — LUNCH — DINNER BEST of BEVERAGES ^ Open ai 5:30 a. m. Every Dayd DON O'COIN'S West Ridge Shopping Center HOW TO SHARE 72V AMERICA’S FUTURE M utual providing ownership in dustry by -diversified IrrcoM E . a mutual fund organized in, )viding ownership i Ahiericar ustry by -diversified investments in' 1933 American in vestments in common stocks selected for growth and; ' F oundation possibilities. For a Prospectus and a new InformationJRolder without cost or obligation . . . phone, visit, or write: GORDON EROMM ID 6-6735 JO E LALLY ID 6 -1800 AL BENNEM ID 6-6038 446 Genesee Street Rochester 11 ie lre« fads and Prospeclui on MlF with no obllgofloft. ’^ONEWRFbNOf liliE R I T A G E SECURITIES, INC. I avoiaea a heart attack. Mother Goose doesn’t say, but Mrs. Spratt ’was probably overweight and may very well have had a fatal heart seizure when she was compara tively young. Jack wasn’t so very smart in | avoi^g fats compeltely—but he l was smarter than the missus. Ac-1 tually, the whole story about fats | in the diet isn’t known yet. But j the evidence seems to point to j time for a change in the American diet. ‘ The chan'ge should be one of balance, shifting from hard fats of animal-origin to cooking oils of vegetable origin, from whole milk to skimmed milk (at least for grownups), from fatty cheeses to cottage cheese, from rich gravies and ice cream, to plainer, simpler food. High-fat diets, doctors say, in crease the danger of blood clots, thCb commonest cause of heart at tacks. We know about this partly from observing diabetics. In the days before the use of insulin, when overeating was frequent among diabetics, hardening of the arteries was common even among* diabetic children. The body manufactures choles terol—which has been linked to hardened arteries and heart dis ease—from fats of animal origin, called saturated fats., You can’t and shouldn’t avoid animal fats completely, but if you’re a house wife, try cooking oils of .vegetable origin, containing unsaturated fats, like corn, cottonseed, peanut, and olive oils. «■ Americans used to get_an est- timated 30 per cent of their daily calories in fats; now they get 40 per cent from fats. A re duction to 25 per cent—half -amunal fat and half; vegetable., oils—would be smart. You don’t have to .give up milk and . meat and eggs altogether, but you and your family will be Jbealthier-i|- you cut down on the fats—and you’ll stay lean, too! The Health Association of Roch ester and Monroe County urges you to take^ ndvantage-of-recent-j- ffndings in nutrition. Carl Schafer Bill Markham German Day \ ■Rochester’s citizens of German descent wHi'recreate the lore of ^hpir former homeland at the an- ^ a l “German- Day” celebration, Sdnday in Elser’.s- Grove* 1246 Buffalo J^oad, undep the a^ispices ^ ' thaf’. Federatiqn of German Aanerlchn Sp.eieties. Buy Today & Tomorrow A t August LOW SALE PRICES 12$ CARS MUST BE SOLD CHEVS — F O l^S — RAMBLERS PLYMOUTHS - - DODGES MERCURYS — DE SOTOS ' # Greatly Reduced Prices • Low Bank Rates if • No Cash Down—Trade In Your 0 |d JOax^ ^ A Good Tires • Battery Guar. 12 Mos. Basis - ALLING MILES. Inc. 1301 Ridge Road East NEAR PORTIAND