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| . . defoliation,\ La 10 MEDINA JOURNAL-REGISTER FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1972 Now Statistics Prove: _- Quit Smoke Science Today By DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor NEW YORK - (UPD-The common notion that people who give up cigarettes are likely to gain weight has been elevated from folkore to statistical fact. Drs. George W. Comstock and Richard W. Stone did it by comparing the medical mea- surements of 501 men who were checked over twice, five to six years apart. They calculated the risk to be 40 per cent. Being statistical their study could provide no answer to the prime question of how cigarette smoking could interfere with the accumulation of body fat and thus keep smokers thinner than they would be if they didn't smoke. However, six of seven ex- smokers recently revealed a diminished basal oxygen con- sumption to investigating scien- tists. This, said Comstock and Stone, could cause weight. gain even in the absence of an increase in food intake or a decrease in exercise. _ Obesity Feared Their study did not deal with _ 55,000-Acre .. Gypsy Moth Spray Program ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) - The Department of Environmental Conservation will begin spray- ing 55,350 acres, mostly in Sullivan and Putnam counties, to control gypsy moths starting the last week in May, it was announced today. Commissioner Henry L. Dia- mond said this year's spraying would concentrate on \high value, high use'\ lands because it was not possible to eradicate the moths everywhere. Some 130,000 acres are now - \heavily infested\ with the moths, Diamond said, compared to 500,000 acres last year. He attributed the decline, partially, to the department's spraying of 230,000 acres last year. \It is neither practicable nor - biologically desireable to sup- press the gypsy moth in all areus threatened with severe Diamond - said. \Therefore a set of priorities , has been established ...\ The targets are recreation and special use areas; forested com- munities; and forests with \high value\ stands of trees. The one - time application of the insecticide Sevin will be made only with the consent of land owners involved, the com- missioner said. . The spray acreage by county was: Dutchess, 9,910; Essex, 1,200; Nassau, 250; Putnam; 17,525; Suffolk, 3,765; Sullivan, 11,000; Ulster, 390; Warren, 5,660; Washington, 5,650. RESTONIC STANLEY SIMMONS JOHNSON CARPER All MERCHANDISE WILL BE SOLD REGARDLESS OF COST... NOTHING HELD BACK . WERE GOING TO MOVE TO OUR OTHER LOCATION VILLAGE SQUARE FURNITURE , __ (WEST AVENUE NEXT TO LIBRARY (NoRTH) HERE WE WILL BE ABLE TO SERVE YOU MORE EFFICIENTLY - OVER 10,000 Sq. FT. - | A WILL BE YOURS AT OUR WEST AVENUE LOCATION! - ‘ (DELIVERY WILL BE MADE ANYPLACE [HWESI'ERNVNEW YORK WHEN DESIRED) GIFT DEPT: - EVERYTHING GOES! A SAVE 1/3 TO 1/2 ON 1000's OF BEAUTIFUL GIFTWARES! CORNING WARE - PYREX BOWL SETS - CENTURA WARE - CARELLE DINNERWARE - SILVERPLATE - LEAD CRYSTAL - COCKTAIL SETS - GLASSES - WOODEN WARE - HAEGER POTTERY - COLORED GLASS |. FURNITURE - BEDDING - CARPET- EVERYTHING GOES! , 2 PC. MEDITERRANEAN SUITE - REG. $599 _ . -- Gain Lbs. the psychological theory that some ex-smokers compensate by eating more or exercising less or both. Either is a sure way of getting fat (or fatter.) Comstock is an epidemiolo- gist at the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and Stone is in the medical department of the American - Telephone Company. Their hope was to turn up reassuring statistics for smokers who tell their doctors they don't stop because - they're - afraid - of getting fat. Instead they raised a new question which, in their words, is: \Do the hazards of obesity outweigh the benefits of becom- ing an ex-smoker?\ These hazards don't they said for two reasons: \First subcutaneous fatness is not necessarily associated with increased risk of mortali- ty. Second, and most cogent, are the reports that mortality and morbidity are decreased when cigarette smoking is stopped, in spite of the fact that most of those who stopped probably gained weight.\ ' Exams Repeated The 501 men were technical telephone workers. They were between 40 and 59 years old when checked over the first time. Weights were recorded, fat folds of upper arms and abdomen were measured, and they detailed their smoking habits. Five or six years later these routine examinations were re- peated. They revealed a gener- al trend toward weight gain. But the gains were the most among the men who had stopped - smoking - cigarettes between examinations. The more cigarettes they had smoked before giving up the habit, the more weight they gained. For example, 17 men who had smoked 25 or more daily gained antaverage of 15 pounds. The gains could be measured in thickened fat folds.. Oswa|d Speech Cancelled - . ONEONTA, N. Y. (UPD- Threatened demonstrations by students apparently forced the cancellation of a speech by State Correction Commissioner Russell G. Oswald at Hartwick College Thursday night. Oswald had been scheduled to speak on \Society and The Offender\ as part of a crime symposium at the school. Campus sources said prisoner solidarity groups had planned protests at the seminar and had asked to debate with Oswald. A spokesman for the Depart- ment of Correctional Services in Albany said Oswald decided not to attend the seminar \due to the national unrest at this moment.\ BEFORE DEPARTURE - Final s Nixon and his defense secretary, for the Moscow summit meeting on w Melvin Laird, as they trategy plans are a serious matter for President talk before his departure hich the eyes of the world will focus. (1) Phyllis ard Moriarty (3); Charles and Russell Gray Hagerman and Edw (2); Leo Bukiewicz Slack and Thomas Mack (4); Anthony Pescara (5); Robert Carver, Herbert Brant Jr. (6). Shelby -- Walter| Zelazny and Joseph Viterna (1); Robert Kubatek (2); John Baron (3); Edwin Smith (4). ' Weeks (3). ' - Kendall - Harry Butler and Jeanne Bewicke (1); Rose Passineau and Gerald Seaman (2). - . Murray - Frank DeCarlo Jr. (1); Rosemary Meland and Michael LeStorti (2); Americo Gifaldi and LaVerne Bubb (3); Theodore Fiorito Sr. and E Theodore Spada (5); Meryl Diltz _ Yates -Dianne Robertson and and Gerard Schifffhauer (6). Mildred Tuttle (1); Mildred Bane Ridgeway - Richard Hess Jr. .and Angelo Ricci (2). Patrifia Baker and Carl Petronio (6). . Barre - Frank Van Apeldoorn (1); Ned Peters (2). Carlton - W. Jack Elam and Maxwell Hedges (1). Clarendon -- John Kinsey and James Campbell (1); Charles Kinsey (2). |. . L Gaines - Bernard Bielicki and Stanley Noreck (1); Arnold Licht Sr. and Alexis Strickland (2); Frank Swiercznski and Wilfred R Both Parties List Some Vacancies of Workers ALBION - Petitions have been - received - by - both Republican and Democratic County Committee for town committeemen to be voted upon at the June 20 primary. In only one instance is there a contest. In Carlton Dist. I where three have entered designating petitions for two committee posts: Leon Williams, Maurice Belson and Lee Woolston. There are several committee posts for both parties where no candidate has filed, according to the County Election Board. The Republicans have only one candidate in Districts 1,3,5, and 6 in Albion; District 1, Kendall; District 2, Ridgeway, and Districts 2 and 3 in Shelby. _The Democrats have failed to file any candidates for com- mitteemen for District 2, Carlton, and 7 in Ridgeway, and for only one in: Districts 1 and 2 Barre; District 2, Clarendon; District 1, Murray; Districts 3 and 5, Ridgeway; Districts 2,3 and 4 in Shelby. The following candidates Have filed for the position of com- mitteemen in the primary: REPUBLICAN Albion - Ray Severns (1); Tony Piazza and John Ronan (2); Emanuel Burgio (3); Adeline Scibetta, Carol Milliken (4); Mary Basinait (5); Harold Hill (6). Barre - Francis Daum and Helen Mathes (1); Grace Allen and Harold Root (2). Carlton - Leon Williams, Maurice Belson and Lee Woolston (1); Pauline Broadwell and Audrey VanWyke (2). Clarendon - Linda. Bartnik and Howard Schmidt (1); Clark Webster and George Keople. - Gaines - Arnold Roth and David Vagg (1); Ernest Hults and Robert Batt (2) Lenoyr SALE qt, ar HICKEY FURNITURE CO. 421 MAIN STREET MEDINA, N.Y. CLOSES ITS MAIN STREET STORE FOREVER! YES, OUR 421-423-425 LOCATION, A FURNITURE STORE UNDER MANY MANAGEMENTS SINCE 1880 IS CLOSING... LIQUIDATING OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY AT SACRIFICE PRICES... FAMOUS NATICNALLY | ADVERTISED NAMES...... ALL AT DRASTIC REDUCTIONS LA-Z-BOY REMBRANT LAMPS BEAUTY REST KROEHLER THAYER - END Ttasies & coc«taiu tasies 1/3 BEDROOM SUITE IN WALNUT - REG. $369 now $188 ALL STYLES COME IN BROWSE YOU'LL FIND REAL WHOLESALE sArGAiNs 9X12 NYLON CARPETS - REG. $89.95 , ENDS OF ROLLS - All AT COST | CLOSING OUT RESTONIC & SIMMONS MATTRESSES | THESE FINAL DRASTIC REDUCTIONS - baie ma (of “the. NY, DON'T MISS HICKEY |a2-s mam street sm 1 $A ~ MODERN now $299 now $49.00 - ~ humor and raconteurship. Scharping and Donald Nesbitt (3). Kendall - George Herring Jr. (1); Lawrence Hill and Alice Wolfe (2). _- Murray - Joseph Coceitti and PearleWilson (1); Jesse Gillette and Michael (Christopher (3); Gail Romagnola and Joyce Barkley (4); (Lillian Valentine and Veeder Howard; (5); Carl Levandowski' and Louise Hart (6). Ridgeway - William Knights Jr., and Leo Houseman (1); George Clapp (2); Beatrice Carroll and Amelia Raymond- jack (3); John Gantner and Edward Jablonski (4); Robert Waters and Myra 'Co}ton (5); David Becking and Doris Plummer (6) Ida Pierce and Arthur Winters (7). Shelby - Arthur Watts and Marilyn Ramier (1); John Pratt Jr. (2); Edward Bidell (3); Kenneth Schaal Sr. (4). Yates - John Donald (1); Richard Merrill and Kenneth | O'Brien (2). DEMOCRATS Albion - William Finn and Francis Nayman (1); Rocco Sidari Sr. and John Gurney (2); James Aina and Geneveve Colucci (3) Charles Pulley and [ - Sara Burroughs (4) Richard Monacelli and Peter Dragon (5); Men of The Kremlin: - Gromyko Is Cool, Obedient, Unswerving JOURNEY TO MOSCOW: ' Gromykeo The Diplomatic Technician. By PETER J. SHAW MOSCOW (UPI) - Former Premier Nikita S. Khruschev once said of . Andrei A. Gromyko: \If I tell my foreign minister to sit on a block of ice and stay there for months, he will do it without backtalk.\ The dour Gromyko, 62, has been Soviet foreign minister since 1957 because he does as he is told. He implements Kremlin policy, never molds it. U.S. Secretary of State William P. Rogers' counterpart is a meticulous statesman with a penchant for accuracy in ° details. Gromyko's career spanning ambassadorships in Washing- ton, London: and the United Nations has: been built on avoiding mistakes. ' Don't Have to Worry \'With Gromyko, you don't have to worry,\ _ Western diplomats have been known to agree. \When he says some- thing you kni w you're getting fl'lgeh official line-and exactly n -” Gromyko heads the non- policymaking team that will conduct parallel talks with Rogers. and other U.S. officials while President Nixon huddles with the Kremlin top leaders. Besides Gromyko, there will be Defense Minister Marshal Andrei A. (Grechko, Foreign Trade Minister Nikolai S. Patolichey .and the negotiator at the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) Vladimir S. Semenov. Gromyko was one of the youngest wartime ambassadors in Washington, then became the Kremlin's postwar ambassador at the United Nations where he earned the: sobriquet ''Mr. Nyet\ for his frequent vetoes. After a brief stint as ambassador in London, he became first deputy foreign - minister, then foreign minister. Gromyko speaks English pre- cisely and well. Gromyko has Mellowed Although 'hardly ebullient, Gromyko has mellowed from the grim, unsmiling facade he used in the Cold War days. He smiles often now and diplomats give him good marks for wry Defense Vhief-Grechko, 68, took command of the Soviet Fredonia Graduate te University Col- lege at Fredonia held annual commencement exercises,. More chief arsenal five years ago after a stint as head of Warsaw Pact forces. Like Gromyko, he carries out rather than formu- lates policies ordered by the Communist Party leadership. Trade Minister Patholichey, 64, will be' one of the chief - Soviet bargainers in the trade talks likely to play a key role in the summit. He has been trade [ chief since 1958. SALT negotiator Semenov, 60, is a deputy minister of foreign affairs and ranks third behind Gromyko and troubleshooter Vasily V. Kuznetsov, the first . deputy. Semenov also is a. specialist on Germany and the Middle East. Wallace Suspect Ticketed BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (UPD)- The young man accused of wounding Alabama Gov. George mome Roomy Galvanized Stor _ Size 97Wx6'7\Dx5'9\H LONG LASTING PERMA PLATE FINISH ON DISPLAY IN THE GARD - 3 HP. ROTARY MOWER with easy-spin recoil starter May 21 ~ i only -> SALE: Rugged steel deck. Auto- ° matic choke and throttle control on the engine. Cut ting heights from 1!\ to 3\. C. Wallace was in New York a - month prior to the shooting, and - was ticketed for speeding, state | police confirmed Thursday. ~ A state police spokesman said Arthur H. Bremer, 21, was given a citation by Trooper | Paul F. Mitchell, charging him _| with driving 75 miles an hour § in a 65 mph zone. Authorities | said Bremer was southbound on Interstate Route 81 when his 1967 car was stopped April 15 - in the nearby town of Baker, - 20 miles north of the Penn- ° sylvania state line. - The driver presented identifi- cation listing an address of 2433 W. Michigan St., Milwaukee, Wis. The vehicle was listed as a Rambler sedan with Wiscon- sin plates reading QFBI59. A - Rambler allegedly driven by | Bremer was recovered near the site in Laurel, Md., where Wal- lace was gunned down Monday. Mitchell said Bremer was alone in the auto and did not present an unusual appearance. - Bremer told Mitchell he was | unemployed, state police said. - The speeding citation was re- - m turnable April 25 before Town J . Justice Theodore R. Gruesbeck. - No reply was received and, on - May 12, Gruesbeck issued a delinquent notice. In New. York State, a motorist may enter a plea by mail. If . he pleads guilty, a fine is | assessed and, paid by return mail. If the plea is innocent, the court fixes a date for trial. The reason for Bremer being in New York State could not be determined. There- are no - records to indicate any, major - political activity' in the area. . I-81 runs into Pennsylvania, and © that state held its presidential - primary on April 25, 10 days after Bremer: was arrested in New York. - Limit 2 per Customer MUST PRESENT COUPON a a e sCOUPON A PEAT 50%. IhHUMUS ® 1 - Limit 2 per Cust MUST PRESENT COUPON °\ {Redwood Bark gNuggets :c. f. L Limit 2 per Customer | | MUST PRESENT COUP s10s _ *%\ ) > May 210 { |_| Limit 2 per Cu MUST PRESENT COU only _ -_ OPEN 9:00 AM TO 5:00 PM ONLY | - (Fzanls Fists NFLATION...COAST TO COAST \MAPLE RIDGE PLAZA ONLY Limit 2 ner Customer P = May 21 only 10ea *1\\ Limit 2 per Customer _. may 21 MUST PRESENT Coupon _ °\ _ Limit 2 per Customer MUST PRESENT COUPON May 21 only URE “if?! per Customer Moy 21 UST PrREsENT couron *~ \17\,