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S> They \Tell Us- Brenda Wheatley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Wheatley, 346 East Oak Orchard Street, a junior music education major at State University at Potsdam has 'been named to the president's honor list for the last semester. a' # * Mr. and Mrs. James D. Watt of 122 Roseland Ave. announce the birth of a daughter, Melissa Elaine, who weighed 7 lbs. 8 0zS., © born July 25 at Lockport Memo- rial Hospital. , % # hd Maj. A. G. Wheatley of Ken- neth City, Fla., returned to her TEMPERATURES _ in principal cities . . ALBANY, N.Y. (UPD-High- lo w temperatures in principal cities Wednesday and this morn- ing: Albany | Binghamton: Boston Buffalo Chicago Cleveland Des Moines. Detroit Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Beach Montreal New Orleans New York Philadelphia Pittsburgh St. Louis Seattle Syracuse Washington KNOWLESVILLE AGWAY farn, & Home Store Ph. 798-1716 High - Low ' 78 - 56 74 - 59 81 - 65 70 59 68 . 6M 74> 62 85 63 72 60 94 - 75 96. 73 86 81 7O - 60 90 +70 80. 67 82 69 76 - 62 90 72 73° 56 74 - 61 86 72 FREEZERS 15 to 25 cu. fi. Capacity Car Load Price 1 2DS5TZEZT home Monday after spending three weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ramm of 133 North St. She also visited many relatives and friends while in the area. Red Cross Still Seeks Disaster Aid Medina Red Cross Chapter is still accepting donations to the disaster fund for flood relief and this morning chapter offi- cials said $559 has been raised here toward a quote of more than $900. Contributions can be left at the Marine Midland Bank or sent to the Medina Red Cross office, Main St. Latest gifts as acknowledged today were from: Susan Craft, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stimpson, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Meyers, Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Poler and Dr. and Mrs. Robert Gates. Course in Stars, Telescope Use Is Set for August BROCKPORT - The State University College at Brockport will offer a non-credit course in telescopes and stargazing at Strasenburgh Planetarium - in Rochester, Tuesday from 8 to 10 pm. beginning August 8. The stars, moon and planets will be examined through the telescopes at the planetarium, 663 East Avenue. On cloudy nights the sessions will be held in the planetarium's dome, In- | 'struction will be given on how to identify planets and constella- - tions. The instructor, Terry Dickin- \ son, is an assistant director of ' the planetariuny and an experi- enced teacher. ~ Registration is being handled by the College's Continuing Ed- ucation Office. The fee is $10 for four classes. AASSIPIED & .L Go For A&P's Big, Big Values ! ~ IF YOU GO FOR QUALITY AND | CASH SAVINGS Medina A&P - 342 E. Center Countryside Restaurkan Special Week-end Menus Thursday _ Spare Ribs W/Barbeque Sauce Friday . MEAT LOAF DINNER HOMEMADE GOULASH urs. & Fri. Special - Fish Fry. Take-Out Orders Plus , Regular Menus Cooler Inside No Alcoholic _ Beverages Ph. 798-9863 1410 $. Main Street DRESS UP YOUR HOME WITH A LAKE , 222 Commercial Street - Phone 793-3220 Beautiful Door STANLEY | CAREFREE DOORs & Warp-tree ehminates sticky door © completely insulated @ magnetic weather stripping © No threshold-self adjusting seat @ Prechyng-easy installation @ Distinchve deugn selection LOCKS AND DECORATIVE DOOR PLATES Wide selection for beauty and security with Weiser pick-proof locks and accessories S; { # O., 4 « A GOP NIGHT- A tablefull of Republican _ Town of Ridgeway districts offered their thanks to Fred Roth Jr. Tuesday night in the form of an appreciation dinner? at the Half Mr. Roth recently retired after upwards of 20 years as Ridgeway GOP town chairman and a number of years as a county Myra Colton; Mrs. A- erce; Mr. Roth, and Moon Inn. vice chairman. TABLE TALK-With Roth in pre-dinner conversation are other mem- bers of the Ridgeway Republican Committee. Left to right, David Becking, Arthur Winters, Mr. Roth, Dr. John Gantner, Mrs. Doris Plummer . Left melia Raymondjack; Mrs. Roth; Mrs. Ida Pi Mrs. Beatrice Carroll. - (J-R Photos) to right above, Mrs. committeeman from various MEDINA JOURNAL-REGISTER | a G. W. Williams, 59, Succumbs To IlIness George W. Williams, 59, of 5063 South Gravel Rd., died this morning at Roswell Park Mem- orial Hospital, Buffalo, where he had been a patient for two and a half weeks. . Born in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Feb. 22, 1913, he had lived in Medina since 1947. He had been a member of the Shelby Volunteer Fire Depart- ment since 1955 and had served as president. He was a mem- ber of the Fire Police and bow! ed on the fire department team. He was a rural carrier for the Medina Journal-Register and Buffalo Evening News for 17 years. He also was employed by Meadow Lane Dairy for 22 years. For the past three months he had worked for the Royalton- Hartland School System. 'Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Dorothy E. Nudd Williams; four sons, Gary Williams, at home, Thomas of Waldron, Ark., Ken- neth , of Texas, and Leslie of M Portsmouth, Va.; one daughter,. Mrs. Donald (Beverly) Kephart of Shelby Center; five grand- children. Three sisters, Mrs. Paul Wil- cox of Bethlehem, Pa., Mrs. William Harris of Beachaven, Pa., and Mrs. George King of East Long Meadow, Mass.; two brothers, Charles Williams of ° Baltimore, Md., and John Wil- liams of Willington, Del.; sev- eral nieces and nephews.. Friends may call starting Fri- day (25, 7-9) at the Barnes- Tuttle Funeral Home, 226 Pearl St., where funeral services will be held Monday at 2 p.m. Burial will be in Boxwood Cemetery. [---, Service _ («'\ fou aun ROBERT I. PRIEST USCGC ESCANABA-C.G. Sr. C.P.O. Robert I. Priest, husband of the former Miss Marjorie A. Walker of 7549 Ridge Road, Gas- port, N.Y., is in the North Atlar tic on Ocean Station Delta No Oil Pol ~~'~Expécted from Center ALBION - Orleans County Natural Disaster Coordinator David Green said this morning he does not expect an oil burning , cross pit planned for a fire year on County House Road to have any adverse effects on the environment. \Not here,\ Green told the Journal-Register. \We're in a rural area and I don't think the 81.1 9s are going to affect it at Air pollution complaints about oil fires ignited for training purposes in Cheektowaga, Amherst and Orchard Park prompted the banning Tuesday of oil burning for two weeks by the Erie County Pollution Control Division. Erie County officials are scheduled to meet with area residents early next month to pinpoint responsibility for ac- cumulations of soot collected from an air monitoring station on the roof of the Cheektowaga Town Hall. The fire training tower in Cheektowaga is located 800 feet t training facility to be built next behind the town hall near in-. dustries and offices. The tower there is being used pepitaC C W NOTES ADMITTED JULY 26 Mrs. George Grapes, Shelby Center. Mrs. Eugene D. Collette, 713 W. Center St. Mrs. James Snyder, N. Main St., Middleport. William McCarthy, 8799 Sea- man Rd., Gasport. DISCHARGED JULY 26 Mrs., Bernard Barry, E. Yates Rd., Lyndonville, DISCHARGED JULY 27 Mrs. Victor Borzek Lyndon- ville Rd., Lyndonville. lution Is day and . night with Buffalo firemen working the tower about two-thirds of the time and suburban companies training there the other third. Emissions, including black smoke and soot, are released day and night as well as on Saturday. The proposed Orleans County facility was brought to public attention June 8 when Green appeared before the Orleans County Board of Supervisors to obtain approval for its con- struction. The board gave its okay. Tentative cost of the project has been estimated at about $10,000. _The facility, which will be located adjacent to the county's civil defense center, will contain a 30-foot high training platform for ladder practice, an apparatus for demonstration of hot fires (using bottled gas), a gas tank truck simulator and the oil fire unit. Green said this morning the proposed oil fire unit's two cross arms would each measure about 22feet in length by about two feet in width. \We expect these fires to last about 15 minutes,\ he said, \and we would have a successful operation if the facility were used 13 times a year.\\ There are 13 fire companies in Orleans County. . Green also said there is only one house on the same side of the road from the proposed fire training facility's location to Route 98. Among the solutions proposed to the Erie County problem was the possibility of obtaining equipment to contain the pollutants released in the bur- ning process. > Dr. Victoria Markellis, Orleans County commissioner of health, is on vacation and could not be reached for comment. Green said he had not had any discussions on this matter with ° u REpoRT on _TRrapimng NEW YORK (UPD-Govern- ment economic news was a mixed bag today and so was the stock market. Trading on the New York Stock Exchange during the first two hours was fairly active. Shortly before noon, the Dow Jones industrial average of 30 selected blue-chip stocks was up 0.76 at 933.33 Standard & Poor 500-stock index was ahead 0.02 at 107.55. ' Declines pulled away from advances, 619 to 479, among the 1,490 issues crossing the tape. ... Two-hour turnover amounted to more than 5,310,000 shares. = s ) Litton Industries was the most active issue, off % at 12% on 121,700 shares. American Motors was second, off % at 93% on 109,600 shares. Grumman Corp. was third, off 4% at 13% on 93,800 shares. Grumman lost out on the space shuttle contract, awarded Wed- nesday to North American Rockwell. So did McDonnell Douglas, andits stock slipped 1%. North- American Rockwell was delayed in opening because of an influx of orders. Prices were slightly lower in moderate trading © on the American Stock Exchange. aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Escanaba, homeported at New Bedford, Mass. at sea for more than 30 days, monitoring and | transmitting weather data and maintaining He and his -shipmates will be « the Health Department prior to the submission of the proposal to the Board of Supervisors. the search-and-rescue readiness of the cutter in case of surface vessel or aircraft emergency in ' ® , the Atlantic. f 0.0 (AXA) l.t.t.c.o.o.0.o.o.o. C efeleSele ....... | Our Population - 'Tops' China's By DON OAKLEY When President Nixon's entourage journeyed from the airport to Peking at the beginning of his history-making VilSig tthhlifna last March, the motorcade had the highway all to itself. To Americans watching over satellite-relayed television, China, which we think of as \teeming\ with more than 800 million souls, appeared almost deserted, at least until the streets of the capital city itself were reached. This was not the result of security measures by the President's Communist hosts. Normal traffic had not been cleared from the airport highway. By American stand- ards, there would have been very little traffic to clear. In America, however, one need not go into the cities to find people. Travel anywhere in the country, especially during the peak vacation months, from the least-known park in the most remote location to a well-publicized attraction like Disney World, and you'll encounter people, people, people, along with their cars, their trailers, their campers, their pets. * China, with 800 million, is not seriously more crowded than it was with 600 million or 400 million. But in terms of \effective'\ population, the United States with 200 mil- Hon is probably the most populous nation in the world. We not only have two cars in every garage but many of us have two garages, or at least a carport at our sum- mer cottage, as well as a minimum of one television set and other conveniences at both locations. Because of the great mobility and affluence at the com- mand of Americans, our actual numbers have to be mul- - tiplied by a factor of several times to arrive at the \effec- tive\ population-the true population in terms of its im- pact on the environment and the consumption of re- sources. ‘ The lesson, which ecologists and others are trying to sink into us, is that while the world may be able to sup- port an indefinite number of people-so long as living standards are kept low enough-it may already contain too many for any but a small minority to hope to approach the American level. As for America itself, it does not mean very much to - say that there are only so many of us per square mile, compared with so many more Belgians or Netherlanders per square mile. What counts is how many square miles of farms and forests and highways, how many rivers and lakes and streams, how many mines and wells and ore deposits each American has an effect upon in terms of his travel and consumption and his wastes. - No Box Tops, Please At the risk of setting off a new avalanche of cigarette wrappers, matchbook covers, teabag labels, beverage can tabs and what have you, the Seeing Eye of Morristown, N.J., would like to emphasize that none of these things can be traded for a Seeing Eye dog. . For 40 years the organization has been on the receiving end of such worthless junk sent in by well-meaning people deluded by a rumor that refuses to die despite all attempts to squelch it. - Yet all a blind person has to do is apply to the school in Iglonxstown. No one is ever denied a dog for lack of undgs. . (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.] THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1972 Lunar ' ROCk samples. From Battered Crust CAPE. KENNEDY . (UPID-It is now clear that Apollo 16's astronauts were lucky and brought back what apparently are the first substantial sam- ples of the old and battered lunar crust. The big question now is how . old ! are these=® rocks. The answers will not come easily because of the complicated . nature of the samples, but the ages could tell when the moon's crust was formed. The first reports may come out next month. - Determining the age of the lunar crust would be a key point in the effort to piece togetherthe story of the moon's Commerce Dept. Reports on Economy WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Commerce Department Thurs- day reported a sharp upswing in its leading economic indica- tors which it said pointed to a major expansion of the econo- my at least through 1973. The nation's foreign trade deficit continued to worsen, however, the department said. The department said its index of leading economic indicators advanced 0.5 per cent in June. It also reported that prelimina- ry figures showing a 0.2 per cent increase in May had been revised to show a 1.4 per cent gain. . * This produced a 4.2 per cent increase in the index for the second quarter of 1972, the largest quarterly gain since the first three months. of 1971 when the economy was recovering from a long strike against General Motors, officials said. y But imports continued to outstrip exportsduring June as the nation's balance of trade deficit continued well ahead of last year when the United States wound up with a $2.7 billion deficit -the first time it had been in the red in trade . since $1893. The Department said imports in June totaled $4,495 billion, ij which was $590 million more ° than exports. It was the ninth consecutive month that imports have exceeded exports. The trade deficit for the first z:. Six months of this year was a record high $3.343 billion, more than $600 million more than the deficit for all of last year. oop LIVESTOCK MARKET J 40 BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPD- The Buffalo livestock market report. Steers and heifers-Market steady. Good 875 Ib. holstein steers 34.00. xii Dairy type slaughter cattle- Demand good, market steady to strong. Cutter and utility cows - 26.00 to 27.50; heavy canner 25.00 to 26.00; light canner 23.00 to 25.00; shelly kind lower; creation and tumultuous child- hood, and see how it relates to the.: evolution of the earth and other 'planets. When John W. Young and Charles M. Duke landed in the lunar highlands last April, they - were expected to find a rolling plateau made up of volcanic rock (that blanketed the rem- nants 'of crustal material. t Lava Forms Seas . But two months of analysis by the preliminary examination team at the Manned Spacecraft . Center in Houston showed that ; ° few specimens were volcanic. Most | were complex altered . versions of original rock and 90 - per ¥ent of the Apollo 16 samples - contained - large amounts of aluminum and calcium in the form of the common earth mineral, plagiq- clase. ° This agrees with surface composition measurements - made from lunar orbit by an X« ray detection experiment. That instrument scanned broad areas of the rugged and heavily cratered highlands and found that they too have a high amount of aluminum and calcium. Geologists 'believe the high- lane - are remnants of the primitive lunar crust, formed more than 4 billion years ago. Parts of it later were flooded by lava to form: the dark- | colored seas that are visible from jearth. Moonquake detectors set up on the moon by four astronaut teams have confirmed that a crust; does exist 'and recent measurements showed that it is about| 38 miles thick-twice the depth of earth's continental crust. Earthly Resemblance fact that the Apollo 16 to a great depth early in its history, said Dr. Paul W. , anned spacecraft center. 'The aluminum and calcium rich | mineral plagioclase is relatively light and solidifies er than other minerals. gists therefore believe plagioclase _ crystals ; in this hot liquid and to the surface like slag blast furnace to form a ust rich in aluminum and calcium. From what now is known about the lunar crust, said Gast, it appears to have no resemblance to earth's crust. He said the lunar crust is much more! constant in composition \andiits origin must be. quite different from the crust of the earth.\ . Boys' Fall \Billy The Kid\ Slax and Jeans Regular - Slims Huskies - Kennedy Bros. standard and commercial dairy \_ heifers 28.00 to 32.00; cutter and -> utility sausage bulls 30.00 to .- 33.00; canner 28.00 to 30.00. * Cahgr—Due to the late ar- rival were no sales at the closing, time of this report. Hogs-Market steady following the midweek 50 cent price de- cline. U.S. No. 1-3 butchers weighing 200-225 lbs. 29.00 to 29.50; 230-260 Ibs. 27.50 to 28.50; 260-300 lbs. 24.00 to 27.50; sows, all weights 18.00 to 21.00, top 22.00; boars 15.00 to 17.00. v P + 640.2 204 calf buyers there | « Come Early for Our < Cocktail Hour (3-6 p.m. most drinks 65c) Then Enjoy Our \Famous «lslandic Fish Fry\ {All You Can Eat) 1 . . . Fridays - $1.85 (Bt Pue A tes - a _ WHAT was \A THERIAC OF MATTHIOLU\ Back in the 16th century, persons afflicted _ with the plague were frequently given a medi- . cation that consisted of 130 ingredients which when mixed and ready for the patient weighed 13 pounds. Not only was it of dubious value, ' but the time involved in the preparation (several days) and the cost made it almost prohibitive ''to the average patient. Today we have come a long way from the Theriac of Matthiolu, but there are still some prescriptions that have to be compounded of more than one ingredient.. We welcome pre- scriptions like this that give us a chance to show our professional skill, YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery. ._ promptly without extra charge. We will deliver A great many people rely on us for their health needs. We welcome requests for delivery service and charge accounts. ‘ m coop win's - PHARMACY -=- STORE HOURS son. -Fzi-9 0.894, ~9 \p.m. sat. 9 aim.-6 p.m.