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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • 23

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Binghamton, New York
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23
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PRESS, Binghamton. N.Y. 9-B July 7, 1972 Houston Booming Despite Space Cuts By PAUL RECER AP Aerospace Writer SPACE CENTER, Houston The nation's space program is declining and astronauts are quietly leaving the Manned Spacecraft Center here. But the surrounding area, in almost mocking contrast, is booming as, never before. Ux) A I A Whigs Name i Bead Man Their Choice BALTIMORE (AP) The Whies have nominated Millard Fillmore as their 1972 presidential candidate.

No. 2 spot on the ticket was won by Robert E. Lee Moxley, who happened to be passing by. "The Constitution doesn't say the candidate has to be alive," Jeffrey Amdur said after 15 delegates acclaimed Fillmore the standardbearer of the Resurrected Whig. Party at an outdoor convention in a park Thursday night.

The Resurrected Whigs are an offshoot of the Students' Committee for the Glorification of Millard Fillmore, a Whig who served in the White House from 1850 to 1853 after the death of President Zach-ary Taylor. Amdur, cochairman of the committee, says the selection of Fillmore was a long-overdue restoration to party favor for the man who was dumped by the Whigs in 1852. Party leaders say they know little about Moxley, 70, the Baltimore man chosen for the No. 2 spot. "He happened to be passing by and we asked him if he wanted to be vice president," said Amdur.

Moxley won out on the first ballot over P.T. Barnum, Associated Press wiREPmOTO SUMMER'S STAFF OF LIFE-Three-year-old Jody Schimelfanick and Gypsy, a German shepherd, vie for slice of watermelon held by the Rev. Capistran Ferrito at a barbecue in Bogota, N. J. Father" Ferrito is newly appointed director of public relations of the New York Order of the Franciscan Monks.

having little difficulty finding buyers. Home values have increased from 25 to 50 per cent in the last six years, and are still going up. he said. "It's definitely a sellers' market," said Whynot. In the Cape Kennedy area the greatest impact was felt in 1970 after NASA had reduced its work force there from 26,000 to 15,500.

Unemployment in Brevard County rose to more than seven per cent. Hundreds of homes became available at bargain prices when laid off workers either just left them or let them go for the mortgage payments. But whe nword of the inexpensive houses circulated, many retirees from the Miami-Fort Lauderdale area, with its high cost of living, began pouring into Brevard. Several small industries moved into the county to take advantage of the talented labor available. Then last October, Disney World opened 60 miles away.

The combination has the area booming again, especially in tourism, with the Disney World throngs flocking to Brevard, which has the nearest beaches to the Magic Kingdom. Motels report 85 per cent occupancy so far in 1972, compared with 35 per cent in 1970. Unemployment is down below six per cent, housing prices are at or above the pre-1970 level and there is a rash of condominium building on the beaches. The planned U.S.-Russian space flight in 1975 will keep much of the Apollo team of several hundred in the Cape Kennedy area an extra two years after Apollo ends next December and Skylab completes a one-year program in 1973. The recent selection of Cape Kennedy as a launching site for the space shuttle ensures long-term stability at the space center.

Confusion Thicker Than Chess Fans Balk At Planned U.S. Treaty BERN, Switzerland (AP) The proposed U.S.-Swfcs treaty that the Nixon administration considers a vital weapon against organized crime has run into stiff new opposition from influential Swiss banking and industrial circles. It is now certain to be delayed until next year, and speculation is growing that it may never take effect. After four years of negotiations, officials of the two governments agreed last December on the draft of a complex "judicial assistance treaty," more than 100 pages long, that would help U.S. investigators collect evidence in Switzerland and track down funds deposited by American suspects in secrecy-protected Swiss bank accounts.

Key clauses that prompted criticism were amended, and there was confidence on both sides that the treaty could be signed early this summer. American sources concede that Swiss officials in several meetings made all-out efforts to win industry and banking support. But they have run into renewed resistance since spring, and one influential industry source said today the draft is still "completely unacceptable." He said Swiss business wants new talks next year. The chief source of concern is the provision rated most important by the Americans. It would oblige Swiss banks and authorities to cooperate with the U.S.

government and open now-secret bank records when there are "reasonable grounds" to assume that organized crime is involved. The secrecy that to depositors is one of the most attractive features of the Swiss banking system could be set aside on suspicion of actions that are criminal in the United States but not in Switzerland, such as tax evasion. At present, Swiss law allows bank secrecy to be breached only after a criminal complaint is filed in Switzerland. One chief opponent of the draft said that while there is sympathy for American efforts to combat crime syndicates, this clause could be invoked against persons accused of "political crimes, throwing overboard decisive principles of the Swiss legal system." iV.Y. Builder Schedule Talks NEW YORK (AP) After settling with the first of 13 striking unions, negotiators for the city's construction industry scheduled a meeting today with one of the three key unions in the week-old walkout, the elevator constructors.

Fred Munder, president of the Building Trades Employers Association, said through a spokesman he hoped Thurs-day's tentative agreement with Glaziers Local 1087 "could set an industry pattern." The agreement, subject to membership ratification and Pay Board approval, gives the glaziers a wage hike over the life of a three-year contract. They currently earn $9.75 per hour. luff1 1 Service Forecast Minimum last night (Airport) Mean one year ago today it was Two years ago today it was Five years ago today It was precipitation to A.M. Sun rises tomorrow at 5:35 A.M. Sun sets tomorrow at 8:42 P.M.

Airport Temperatures 5 A.M. 6 A.M. 7 A.M. 8 A.M. 9 A.M..

54 10 A.M. 69 74 79 0 82 54 11 A.M. 12 Noon 1 P.M. 2 P.M. 6-55 62 Temperatures In Other Cities Albany Ancro.

tge Boston Buffalo Chicago Cleveland Denver Detroit Harrisburg Honolulu Jacksonville Los Angeles 50 Massena 56 MiamiBeach 58 Minneapolis 50 New Orleans 61 New York 48 Philadelphia 48 Pittsburgh 51 S. Francisco 59 Syracuse 75 St. Louis 68 Tampa 67 Washington Swiss Deaths ARTRAM-HArj. Mildred f. Bertram.

7. J5 Riverside. Sidney, died Friday et 1:15 a.m. at The Hospital, Sidney. Sne: was a member of St.

Pauls Episcopal! Cnurcfi. Sidney, a graduate nurse of me Metropolitan Hospital School of Nursing. New York City, Class of Private funeral services will be held Monday at II a.m. at me C. H.

Landers' Funeral Chapel. Sidney, with the Rv Andrus Smith, BainOridffe. officiating. Burial will be in Prospect Hill Ceme tery, Sidney. Friends may call at the funeral chapel Sunday at their conven-l ience.

Memorial donations may bt made to the Sidney Emergency Squad. BOG ART Anna Smith Booart. U. of 70 Church Owego. 'died Thursday morning at me Riverview Manor Nurs-i ing Home in Owego.

She is survived bVi one daughter. Mrs. Carl (Lucille) Sad-j dlemire. Owego; three grandchildren; one great-granddaughter; one sister, Mrs. Venn iLuiu) Smith.

Homer, N.Y.;i one niece. She was a memter of the! First Presbyterian Union Church of, Owego. Private funeral services were; held at 2 p.m. this afternoon at the Estey Munroe Funeral Home. 15 Park Owego.

The Rev. Eogar Frank, pasto- emeritus of the First: Presbyterian Un.on Church of Owego, officiated. Burtai will be In tne family plot in Tiosa Cemetery, Owego. Israeli Court Throws Out Christ 'Case9 JERUSALEM (AP) The Israeli Supreme Court on Thursday threw out a request by an Israeli lawyer to rule that Jesus Christ got an unfair trial. Attorney Yitzhak David said he made the appeal "in the hopes that it may reduce the anti-Semites of the world by even one person." But the court ruled that the issue was "historic, not and that David had "not proved he suffered personal damage" through what he called a "miscarriage of justice" against Christ.

David, a 36-year-old resident of Eilat, Israel's southern Red Sea city, brought the appeal to court in the name of David Bi-ton, also an Eilat Jew. "I expected to win my appeal," said David. "I intend to go to court again." Hijacker Gets 20-Year Term AUBURN, N.Y. (AP) A young man has been sentenced to 20 years in prison after a U.S. District Court jury found him guilty of air piracy in the hijacking of a jetliner to Cuba more than three years ago.

Judge Lloyd F. MacMahon pronounced the sentence, the minimum permitted under the air piracy statute, on Ronald immediately after thz jury returned the verdict Thursday. Remembered for All Time MONUMENTS Jackson Granite 295 Main St. 797-1849 Bob Betty O'Neil, Prop. SAY IT WITHFIOWERS iverside ardens 729-2292 CENTRALLY LOCATED PKOMPT DELIVERY 165 RIVERSIDE DRIVE JOHNSON CITY ZS39B3 Friends deserve the comfort of Flowers.

MacLENNAN'S 499 COURT ST. 722-6484 B3BDEEB9 Deaths MOAT The luwll of William H. nvrt be held at 18 30 a.m. Satur day forn the J. F.

Rice Funeral Home. 150 Mai" Johnson City. The Rev. Gary Brlgos. assistant pastor of the First Baptist Church, will officiate.

Burial will be in Floral Par Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home today from I to a and 7 to p.m. Miss Bessie A. Dayton. bq Montrose (Birchardville), died Thursday morning in Montrose General Hospital after oeing III tor the last si months.

She Is survived by six brothers. Charles B. Dey'on. RD 4. Towendi.

Pa, Joseph E. Dayton, Moorefield. W. Roland C. Dayton, ooco Ka.cm, Fla.

Harold A. Devton, Birchardville. Russell S. Dayton. Montrose, and Robert B.

Oayton. Rochester: also sev. eral nieces and reohews. Miss Dayton was a member the Birchardville Baptist Church. Tl-e funeral will be held at 2 pm.

Saturday from the Robert A Bortron Funeral Home. 74 Church Montrose. Pa. The Rev. Bernard Graham of the Elk Lake Com-munity Church and the Rev Russell S'anton of the Birchardville Baptut Church will officiate.

The interment will be in Birchardville Cemetery. Friends may tall at the funeral home this ai'er 7. FLINT Miss Maude H. Flint, 94, of 37 Dennlson Binghamton. died at 1 15 m.

Thursday at General Hospital. She Is survived by one sister. Mrs. Fred (Ella) Rogers, RD 1, Atton; oe niece. Mrs.

Lewis (Maude) St. John. RD 1, Afton; three grandnieces. Miss Maria St. John, Cooperstown.

Miss Sharon St. John, Philadelphia, Miss Noreen St. John. Philadelphia; I grand-nephew, Roger St. John, Afton.

She was a member of the Chenango Street United Methodist Church, and its W.S.C.S-. and Its Bethany Class, which she taught for over 15 years. She was a retired employe of the McLean's Notion Department. The funeral will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday from the Hop-(er Funeral Home, 4(3 Chenango Binghamton.

The Rev. Hugh G. Kllne-tob, pastor of Chenango Street United Methodist Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Spring Forest Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home this evening from 7 to 9.

HENDERSON Mrs. Isabel K. Henderson. 77, of 45B Andrea Vestal, formerly of Albany, died Thursday morning at Wilson Memorial Hospital after a short Illness. She Is survived by two daughters.

Miss Mabel Henderson, Vestal, and Mrs. Floyd (Elsie) Groesbeck, Vestal; two grandchildren. Ftoyd C. Groesbeck, Apalachln and Mrs. Nancy Sconjert, Wisconsin; two great-grandchildren.

Laura Lynn, and Carol Lynn Groesbeck, Apalachin; also several nieces and nephews. She was a retired school teacher and taught In the Albany School System for 30 years. She belonged to the Retired Members of National Edu-cation Association of the United States, and attended Murray Hill Presbyterian Church. Funeral services will be he'd this evening at 9 p.m. at the Peter P.

Savage Funeral Home, 338 Coiklin Binghamton, directly after viewing hours. The Rev. Albert Almstedt, pastor of the First United Methodist Church, Apalachin, will officiate. Burial will be In Evergreen Memorial Park, Schenectady, Saturday at 1:30 p.m. The family will receive friends at the funeral home this evening from 7 to 9 m.

The family requests that In lieu of flowers friends wishing may make donations to the First United Methowist Church, Apalachin, In her memory. JOHNSON The funeral and Interment services of Mrs. Bernice Johnson will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday from the Allen Memorial Home, 511-513 E. Main Endlcott.

The Rev. Gerald R. Hert. rog, pastor of the Union Presbyterian Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Vestal Hills Memorial Park.

Vestal. Friends may call at the memorial home this evening from 7 to 9. Friends wish-Ing may make memorial contributions to the Union Presbyterian Church in memory of Mrs. Bernice Johnson. KELSEY The funeral of Clarence W.

Kelsey. Jr. will be officiated by tne Rev. Edward D. Ellmore, pastor of Conklln Avenue First Baptist Church, who will conduct a graveside service Saturday at 11 a m.

in Vesial Hills Memorial Park Cemetery. Funeral arrangements were by Ernest H. Parsons Funeral Home, 71 Main Binghamton. RAMEY Richard W. Ramey, 10, of 1373 Glenmary Owego, died Thursday afternoon at the Robert Packer Hospital, Sayre, Pa.

He is survived by his mother, Joan Waters, Owego; his father, Leroy Ramey, Binghamton; one brother, Robert, at home; one sister, Symantha, at home; his paternal grand-father, Harry Ramey, Binghamton; his maternal grandfather, Daniel Norman, Maynard, Mass. Funeral services will he held Monday at II a.m. from the Estey Munroe Funeral Home, 15 Park Owego. The Rev. James Graham, pastor of the Open Door Mission, will officiate.

Burial will be in Tioga Cemetery, Owego. The family will receive friends at the funeral home Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m. ROBINSON Fred B. Robinson, 85, of 232 E. Temple Owego, died July 6 at Wilson Memorial Hospital, Johnson City.

He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. William (Hazel) Reynolds, Endi-cott. Mrs. George (Gladys) McCann, Elmira; one son, George A. Robinson, Endlcott; one sister, Mrs.

Gertrude Helenbrook, Owego; 14 grandchildren: 26 great-grandchildren; also feveral nieces and nephews. He was born in Harrison Valley, September 13, 1886, son of the late Samuel and Adoe Hill Robinson. He lived In Owego most of his life. Funeral and committal services will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. from tt-e Richards Funeral Home, Owego.

The Rev. Francis Mather, pastor of f'e Lakeview Chapel of the Christian Missionary Alliance Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Tioga Cemetery, Owego. The family will receive friends at the funeral home Saturday from 2 to and 7 to 9 p.m. SMITH Louis J.

Smith, 83, of RD 4, Binghamton, died at 8:20 p.m. Thursday at Wilson Memorial Hospital, Johnson Citv He is survived by a sen, Lewis Smith RD 4, Binghamton; one daughter, Mrs. Ramsay IRuth) Lay, RD 3, Binohamton; one sister, Mrs. Howard Strickland. RD 4, Binghamton; five grandchildren; also several nieces and nephews.

He was a retired New York State Highway employe after 38 years of service. Funeral arrangements are pending at the J. F. Rice Funeral Home, 150 Main Johnson City, where friends may call Saturday evening Irom 7 to 9 and Sunday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. WRIGHT Mrs.

Ida Cully Wright, 56, of 33C8 Watson Richmond, died in a Norfolk Hospital Thursday. She is survived by her husband, Lin-wcod O. Wright, Richmond, two sons, Ellshi Y. Giles, Lynchburg, and Henry E. Giles, Bath, South Carolina: H'o daughters, Mrs.

Harold (Birdie) Abrams, Owego, and Mrs. Richard (Patricia) Cordell, Norfolk, her mother, Mrs. Myrtle Cully, Richmond, two sisters, Mrs. Nancy Needham, Gordonsville, Va and Mrs. Nettle Tirpak, Richmond, one brother, Iva Cully, Richmond, eight grandchildren; also several nieces, nephews, aunts and uncles.

A christian prayer service will be held this evening at 7:30 in Richmond, Va. A funeral mass will be held Saturday at 12 noon at the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Richmond. Va. Burial will be in the family plot in the Maury Cemetery, Richmond, Va. Friends are invited to make contributions to the American Cancer Society in memory of Mrs.

Ida C. Wright. Virginia arrangements are under the direction of the Estey Munroe Funeral Home, 15 Park Owego. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By carrier dally 75c a week. Sunday 35c a week.

Daily by mail first and second zones, 1 month. $3 40; 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, $39.00. Sunday by mail, first and second zones. 1 month. 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, $18.20.

Rates for postal zones three through eight available upon request. Mail where we have no news-paperboy or tube delivery ser-subsenption rates apply only vice. -I Chester A. Arthur, W.C. Fields and others.

What does the Resurrected Whig Party stand for? "Motherhood, the flag, apple pie and Millard Fillmore," said James A. Seidel, a Frost-burg (Md.) State College student who organized the convention. Discussing the party's platform, Seidel said one of the planks calls for an immediate freeze on wages and prices, followed by federal action to roll them back to 1853 levels. Another urges the cutting off of federal aid to school districts where pupils are transported against their will. "This is based on the Whig philosophy that stage-coaching is inherently wrong," said Amdur, who teaches junior high school French in Fern-dale, Md.

Is the Whig party ahead or behind the times? "Yes, we are," was Amdur's equivocal reply. Boating Banned On IUqIi Seneca SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -Boating on 35-mile long Seneca Lake has been banned at the request of lakeside home owners who fear wake damage from fast-moving power craft on the high waves-of the lake, the state Transportation Department has announced. Navigation on all state Barge Canal channels in the Oneida, Seneca and Oswego rivers has also been a halted because of neary flood-stage water levels. TIGHT INFLATION! EAT A ItMUIlCK SPECIAL VESTAL VILLA POCONO DOWNS D0UBIE HEADER SAT.

JULY 8 POST 2 P.M. and 8 P.M. And the Cape Kennedy district in Florida is experiencing a new prosperity too after an economic depression resulting from a sharp reduction in the space-oriented work force there in 1970. In the last five years, the number of workers at the Houston space center, home of America's astronauts, has declined by about 5,000, but the merchants, banks and home builders in the area claim they have hardly been felt the impact. "It beats me how we could be any busier," said a grocery store manager.

"We can't get enough houses to sell," claimed Charles Why-net of. Space City Development, a real estate firm. Webb Sharp, manager of the Clear Lake Chamber of Commerce, said that although the Manned Spacecraft Center and the torrid pace of the space program helped the growth of the area, there would probably have been a boom here anyway. "The space program gave us the immediate base," said Sharp. But it was the nearness of Houston, 27 miles by freeway, and that city's immense growth that rocketed the area's economy upward, says Sharp.

Clear Kake City, a community put together by Friendswood Development Corporation, a subsidiary of Humble Gil Refining is the largest new development in the area with a population of about 14,500. Charles Pence, a vice president of Friendswood, said that even with the declining amount of activity at the space center, home sales in Clear Lake City reached its highest level ever in 1971, and a better year is predicted for 1972. "We're ahead of last year in sales already and expect by the end of the year to have sold 660 new he said. New apartment buildings, and new town-houses are going up also. We now have a diversified job base for the home buyers," he said.

Pence and others estimated that about 65 per cent of the area's job hold-e are in non-aerospace fields. This represents a turnaround from earlier years. Pence said that Clear Lake City and a nearby deep water port industrial district were already on the drawing boards when the space center was located here. At that time, 11 years ago, cattle grazed where mission Control now stands. A battered, two lane rural road was all there was to what is now NASA Road One, the avenue of the astronauts.

The only major developments nearby were Ellington Air Force Base, a dying military base 10 miles away, and Webster, a sleepy Texas town. i Down the road the other way was a fading resort area on Clear Lake, a sweet water lake that offered boaters a path td Galveston Bay and Gulf of Mexico beyond. But Friendswood and other developers were expecting the rapid expansion of Houston to affect the area. Thecompany designed Clear Lake City and Bayport and planned a long orderly development. The sudden impact of the Manned Spacecraft Center construction accelerated the development by about five years or more, according to most estimates.

It also led to the establishment of other communities in the area and a rapid growth of such nearby towns as Sea-brook, Kemah La Porte, Dickinson and Friendswood, a onetime Quaker community now popular with aerospace engineers. Sharp and others believe even if the space program died out completely the boom in the area would continue. Bayport now has 16 industrial firms operating there, six more committed and a payroll of $300 million. There are predictions of 22,000 jobs and a $1.5 billion payroll by 1980. Additionally, the University of Houston has established a branch in Clear Lake City with 15,000 students expected to enroll by 1981.

Two new hospitals are expected to create 600 new jobs. Most of the astronauts built homes near the space center and many of these are now up for sale. But, according to Whynot, the astronauts and others who are selling their homes are a slender claim to represent Fischer and called a lot of news conferences, forecast like a man who ought to know: "I can't see Bobby apologizing." The letter began: "Dear Boris: Please accept my sin-cerest apology for my disrespectful behavior At another news conference, one of Fischer's lawyers said he'd come to say he had nothing to say. Yefim Geller, Spassky's second, fielded questions with: "Kak Gavarit po Angliski," or as you say in English, "No comment." One final quote, from Gud-mundur Thorarinsson, president of the Icelandic Chess Federation, who was under pressure from Fischer to give up a share of the gate receipts: "I have worked for more than a year to get this match to Iceland. I would do many things.

But I will not bite into a sour apple." Thanks to a rich British chess fan who doubled the stakes, he didn't have to. Wine, Liquor Hit in Pa. Flood HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -The chairman of the state Liquor Control Board says $3 million worth of wine and liquor were destroyed in the floods that hit Pennsylvania two weeks ago. Edwin Winner, the chairman, said Thursday that cases stored in a warehouse near Wilkes-Barre suffered water damage and had to be discarded.

In addition, 34 of the 750 state-run retail stores suffered partial losses. fqvt Show lw Tfwrptfotu' lipJ Until Wuiitiiy Motivfwi Cffswlt '''I'f'li Abernathy Fight ows For Poor MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy pitched a one-man pup tent in Resurrection City II Thursday and vowed to carry to the Democratic National Convention his demand that the party act to improve the lot of poor people. Abernathy, head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said he would sleep in the tiny tent, the first of many the SCLC is erecting to handle an estimated 500 followers scheduled to arrive Sunday, the day before the convention Opens.

Abernathy sprawled on the grass in front of his tent and told newsmen: "We are going to live here and demand that the Democratic party put an end to racism and disease that -inflict poor people." Police estimated the number of protesters in Miami Beach at fewer than 600, about 80 of them camped out in Flamingo Park, where Abernathy pitched his tent and named the site after a shanty town built during a massive protest in Washington, D.C., in May 1970. Earlier, the SCLC head met with Yippie Jerry Rubin and leaders of other protest groups. They agreed to set up a "sort of people's government" at the camp area. "We have decided that no hard drugs will be brought into the park and there will be no violence," Rubin reported. "Everybody will be working together because we are working for the same causes, such as an end to the Vietnam war." REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) Bobby Fischer lost the draw Thursday night, giving Boris Spassky the first move, and the world championship chess match will finally start next Tuesday.

Unless the American challenger or the Soviet champion pleads illness and gets another postponement. The confusion of the past week was summarized by the old woman selling cigarettes who asked in the beginning: "Fischer come?" Near the end it was: "Spassky go?" "I'm very pessimistic," Dr. Max Euwe said at 10 a.m. At noon: "It's a very delicate situation." At 7 p.m., the president of the International Chess Federation sighed: "There's hope." That was Tuesday. It could have been any day in the garbled prelude to what chess lovers say is the match of the century Spassky of the U.S.S.R.

vs. Fischer of the U.S.A. Spassky arrived early to wait for Bobby. Saying "I came to play," he philosophically accepted the first postponement when Fischer didn't show. Later he demanded an apology or he wouldn't play.

Fred Cramer, who advanced Storms End In Japan TOKYO (AP) The weather cleared in southwest Japan today after three days of torrential rains that triggered floods and landslides in which nearly 200 persons may have died. The national police said 76 bodies had been recovered, 119 persons were missing and 111 more were injured on Shi-koku and Kyushu, two of Japan's four main islands. Tokyo meanwhile was suffering from drought. The city's main reservoirs had only a 16-day supply. Boy, 3, Plunges 6 Stories, Dies NEW YORK (AP) A 3-year-old boy accidentally plunged six stories to his death from a Bronx apartment house Thursday, police said.

The dead boy was identified as Robert Riely of the Bronx. A woman motorist was dozen other persons were volunteers to the Corning quired said. admission, officials Investigators said the Lee woman apparently had stopped at the top of a hill to turn off the highway when her car was rammed from behind by the second auto and propelled into the front of the oncoming bus. ivianifs simwiU SUNNY WEATHER is forecast for most of the country Friday however showers are forecast for part of the Pacific Northwest, northern Plains, southern Plains and Midwest and southern Florida. Unseasonably cool weather is expected to continue for most of the East with warmer weather forecast in the southern half of the nation.

vesul hills memoRial pauk mausoleum tti Entire Park is under SjrJlHj Perpetual Care "ilptf For Immediate Need Call 797-8407 ggKr Bronze Memorials by Corham r4 Master Craftsmen in silver and bronze Woman Motorist Dies In Auburn Bus Crash National Weather Binghamton and Vicinity Fair tonight, low in the mid to upper 50s. Increasing cloudiness tomorrow with a chance of an evening thunderstorm, high In mid 80s. Precipitation chance 10 per cent tonight, 30 per cent tomorrow. Evening thunderstorms Sunday, partly sunny Monday and Tuesday. Highs in 80s, lows In 60s.

Eastern New York Fair tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight in 50s, high tomorrow in 80s. Western New York Fair to partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight near 55, high tomorrow in 80s. New York City and Vicinity Fair tonight and tomorrow.

Low tonight near 60, high tomorrow around 85. Precipitation chance near 0 tonight and tomorrow. Barometer reading at 9 A.M. Falling 30.27 Mean Tcme ture yesterday (Airportl Maximum temperature yesterday (Airoort' CORRECTION The following item in Loblaws' ad in Wednesday's Press should have read: SAVE 15 QUARTERED MRS. FILBERT MARGARINE AUBURN, N.Y.

(AP) killed and more than two injured today in the collision of two automobiles and a GAULT TRUCK RENTALS bus carrying flood-relief area. Mrs. Nancy Lee of Cayuga died in the crash along Routes 5-20 five miles west of Auburn, State Police said. Two of the 35 persons aboard the bus and the driver of the second car were taken to Auburn Memorial Hospital for examination. Only one re- l-LB.

PKG. flQ' DAILY WEEKLY ALL AREA AI Sizes Available 754-5006 2107 E. MAIN ST. ENDICOTT, N.Y. FROM (195 piu.

Ailaaga nm LOBLAWS I.

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