1
UTAT PTfT; IpOmSB Oe^ABTH IPDIXTiniDOWI iblh wMk of.tte bowUat fmirmTiBt oa Um WedeworHi Hose cld^ •Uejr* flnda tlM Bufs atHl on tppj of tlM U0t; tte WMp« aad Ant« M ruBDcrs-up; tb« Bees and • Ba4tl«0 UJwirlM Uad for third boa- onv the FlettJ and Horneta *1«> tied fou^ fourth poaltUm and the Gnata oteddUy cUnditnf up the Udder. , IJoClymoo^’a Bu^a bumped Into a ' tn their m * a r t t h Luttentoo*a Antat dropping the latter tmb gamee to : the buay Ahta. Fltairermld*a Whapa atung DoB^hoe’d BeeClea two outj three, loalnf the aeooi^ game to the Beetle# aQr a Mg margu ThompaoD’a Flee^ contlsueid their iMrs. Harry RltchU, Mra ^ C rO aw a loM m #4m rn l#m ra 'TH amOA J kW a Beea two <>ut of three, while ^ Young. Vlfona’a Gnata . Ilkewlee > extended - Mn. George «, ScoOeld. director; thdlr advance tn the win column by ; lira. Hunter Black, Mra. Henry Cur- dOlTDlnf Schanz'g Homela two out | ^ Aumn KrWtn, Ura. Charl« Hopklna. Hr* Oatea Miackler, IfJor Mabel Newtoo. Mra. Pred- McTar- ^ A-wwMM*, mm tm . Thompaoo’i Flfag cafl)ed off the Mm. WUllam Shepard. Mlv high bpnora for tfam mat week with ; Irene ,3mlUt, Mra. Reed SooCt, Min a ^ o re of 2330 fdr three game* and i Minnie Stlnaon, Ifra Eugene -Schef 81P for ingle gaie. r p T lrf. . Charlee Hopklflh featured In the Young*. M ra EOr*rd Chapin. Individual high hdaora with a aeore; Mra Donald Warner, dlerctor at OM for three Lame*, an average Mra. Harold L»we. Mra. Ray White o«! 1«H, lacludi/ -«Ki. w»b *««- i JJ™ 5^ ae| 2». hi* lli^ t|o b* llet^ cm the ' J Parry, Mra. Howarc hdnor roll . Otlurr additidn to the i Trail. Mra. Ludui Warner.' Mra bejnor roll, Harold Fitzgerald. 302. . Charlea I. Newton. Eldtlh M. War jcoach •‘ChMTleyj" Pundlnget urge* upon each bowlepr *' **— ride*- keep back of the foi|l line." H^ atatcHi that thi* rule la blatantly cooUnuD^y by M percent of the bowlera 4n the tournament. ad well 10 hy UM memhera of -the ladieo' bowling c l^ , and Inolata that tho*e bowlers sgould **watch their stjnp” and correck this Imperfection llngj form, a* It do«Vi reflect to. th^lr merit a* to the iliflcatlon* of I a good aportaman 1(1 a good bowfer. •Boy# and girfa. watcjh your atep.” .5M .M6 13119 .900 isieo 500 12994 444 13029 444 120^ nit 1 q^lil I The atandlngaj fotlowi 13^ Sales’ ^umeta .......... 18 Onaui .......... lO j Hl|ch tMm »cdre 2|t22;t Mama. Waa( . High llnciMdaal Rooney. isiT 33d 13912 1 tiign [inomauaj JCOfe-- S gl Clooney. isiT; 1 fc<^me. Cooney,- 234 . I Honor' roll 800 ^Kimr or Oetler IT r f^.234. 210. 204; Hopklna. 229; i. 228; Wade. 327; Bpexxano rvmnihoe. 222. 201; Culbertaon. pWOBB BUZZ TO TOP m ounesEO oLtJB BOWIOIVO ZJSAOUK Thb men'a wmter bowling touma- msntj Is off to a good l a r t with the Pnit iwsek of the maple mauUnf fiv- tng <^b team a chance to ahow Ita Th^ flrat match of the aeaaoo be- twaed NelTa Beea and WlUoa's Hor- naCs landed In a triple win for the Beeacj getting them off on the right foot, j Ho^coenh^a Soorpa atung Rider** Waopd for two out ot throe to fol- low 1 ^ aaconO place. Staging of Uaaa January 13'- W V, Pet. TJ». B«<« 1 .................... 3 0 1.000 2373 acorpiona ... .^2 1. 666 22M Waa^ ............. .1 2 .334 2131 Horni^ ______ 0 S 000 2114 High team acor*—1 game, & p4ona.[840: 3 game*. Bee^ 2373. High indlvlduaJ ncoro—l fftffl«. Qbepa^ 218; 3 game*, Holcomb. 070. roll.— 200 game Or batter— 918: McCaufhey, 919: Hol- Htgh average. 160 or baCtar—Hol- “aughey. Rider, N'«ff. Shej ard. 'P-, PLEWORK GUILD tfO DABLE W O U The j object ot tbe Needlework Guild W Americ* If to collect and dlatrlto4t« new plain, suitable gar- muiii to moot uw im t nioa o( oor pltalac hooaaa. and other oharltlaa. Any saanibar obtaining coctributionj from 10 peraona and one monay do- nation .becamm a director. It la aald that a mother failed to recog- nise her pretty, baby, whom she was accustomed to see bundled tn an oM shawl, when- brought to her la a yrhole new iult of Guild clothaa. The effect of now substantial cloth- ing upon a person desti^ta from Icknesa or- other causes la a great moral uplift. The Guild feels very grateful with this year'* member- shif) drive. Following is a list of the directors and metnbera of the Needlework Guild of Geneseo for the year as re- -ported -to headquarters In Phlladel- Mlsa Bertha Barry, director; Mlgs M ary BlooNdgood. Mra. XX % . FVaacU, Mrs. Samuel Prasar. Mrt. R IfT LeCIear. Mlaa M. A. Perry. M rs Kl- aanor Shaw Smith. Mias E. Whml- tEeda Smith. Mm S. P. Ruff. Jr., Mrs. Louise B. Willard, M rs Nathan WUUaaa, Mm Bertha 'Tottan. 'Mias Mallcent Orasna, dirsetor; Mias HikJagarda SharlocK. dlrec na. Clarence Lehman. Mrs er Ftnlejr. Mlae Marion Olmsted Mra. E. P. 'Campbell. Mra. Killed Horton, Mrs. ^amea CuIharUoo. Mn> I. Mi 111 man. T S. MiUlman. Mrs. L. C. (YC____ Mrs. John Blahop Mrs. Wiliam Leon^ y Connor trd, Mlai Cudnbtc, Mni. George Me , Ouire. Mra. B. H. Peachey. Mia Frances Cromwell. Mias Mas 'Trum per Mrs. George S. Scofleld la presl dent and Mrs. Wiliam J. Muns. sec retary and treasurer of the organ izatlon. .r ------^ Tl{18 PRAISE COMES RIGHT FROM THE FOUNTAIN HEAD ^vlngaton RepuhUcan. Geneseo, N. Y. Gentlemen: I was thumbing through a copy of Ralph Waldo Emerson the other day and I iiiw a phrsse wlileh started me UUnklng about my many yctra or mendiy oMooituoo wiui prompu of J late you on you bav* been doing you for the fine coBtrlbutlou which you hAvo marts to the growth aart progperlty of .the Ounpbell-Dwtld Company and lis ellaats. All advartiMng media are impor- tant. of couTM. hut the CamillMU* Bh«rald Company ha* always consid- e r the newspaper the m ol vital factor In Influeat^g the local nutr- ket for a nattonal producer, and we and our clients continue to hold hie aaxne convletioa today. Our largest individual chent. the Chevrolil Motor ComMny. h u juit 1933 Chevi^leta. taking first place car and tr In both sales for the and truck Sevanth time In the past 10 years. It has sold more than ZOOO.OOO used cars, breaking all previous sales records in that important field as weU. Ail of which, you Will iffee, la a. magnl- ficent selllDf achfereinciit. • In that achievement, the news- tapers of Amerlta—your newspaper <-hts3 pliytd tn Importint and I . want to thank you most eln- ctrdy 9B ychttf vf uw nuoQ. AU of -our other cUenta. In many other llnee of bustneaa, hanre Uke- the achievements of. these ganlxations also the OM support and cooperation which you have mtwmym , lAiQurr tiM i mr. Wm LndOs Bvkhwdt, Mki I2 w I Brown. Mias Bthel Mkrtti. Mra. IIU AttsaUa Ofty, Iflia GUttl Hfil- land. Mia* EMnsr MeSHda. Msa. R. A Ptft. wm D M GMoby, M is Agnes Rignsy, Mlaa Lsaa Rogans Mrs. Georfe Whesiecli, MMs Dorothy Mr^Vrad Quirk. Mzsl Mary Dele- hanty, Mrsi H*hry Welch. Mra. K. B. Moynea. Mra. Ernest LaVIgns. Mx«. Jacob Nsst. Mrs. George Meeker. Mrs. WUllam Shliiey. M n. WUUam Gallagher. Mra. Kenneth Rider. Mrs. WUllam Munx. dlractor; Mrs. Charlea Baeder. Mrs. Guy Bailey. Miss Mary Lotilae Baker. Mrs. Col- onel Bennett. Mias Anne 8. Blake, Mrs. Forster Courthopc. Mrs. Uoyd Croasett. Mrs. Charlea Fraley, Mrs Charles Fundlnger, Mrs. Edward Fhmegan. Mrs. Alfred Hall. Mlaa Marie Lobreo, Mlee Ellen North. Lobert Ritchie. *. visiting mtcr> national Journalist, called upon to contribute a yam. had this to say: “Adventure^ is not necessarily based upon thrilling eventualities. What Is adventure to one man may be deadly monotony to another., It resolves itself into a point of view. adventurer I The greatest through the and down the Red sea. SrhaU. wiz- ened and retiring was this ard to crack. Not week out did lad gone out of my wa; through the c ru l an English mother and Germa father, he came to England with hla you this letter greeting. The phrase was as follows; "The alienee that accept# merit a# thg mcMt naturml thing in the world the highest s)pplause." Now. that sentence may be per- fectly true It certainly expresses the attitude whloh almost all of us have t&lcc-ii in the past townrd many people and many laiU tutl^ that we admire and apprecihta tbe most. But I believe that the troiffilous yeara which we have now happily put bahlnd ufi hi?e titered thtt it- tltuds and ntade all of us a bit more ready to think of the other feUow and to applaud the Job that be is doing, not J u l aUently, but out loud so that he can hear and know! And so I am writing to you and a number of other publishers thru- out the country t4)day to coagratu- the splendkl job which English laviier, he cainv cusiaiM wiu, ptrents, ihopkeepfrs, provisionfri, I believe, and got a fairly go< education, excelling in draftsms ship, which led to map making. Fits Tricks Hermann Bland. phaned, but reasonably prospereus, __ L .... JL..J from the map making establishmam and made preparatkmi to tee tome of th* world that ha had been chart- ing on paper for thirty-two yeart. to go? Why not leave it to completed the most succeasTul year Us history. Xt has sold 1,193 000 and prcmi^ls year, as! haa the highly ^sttrreasful Campbell-Ewtld oomptny itaeff. ments of. these or- America — your nsirapaper — have played a leadtng role and X e^t thank you on behalf of thaaa cll- its, too. for tlw given to them and td us. Thia become a cather kxm letter, but that line of Emeraon's did start venture, which he alone ixu»essed ------------------------------------ - 1 ‘ fPt England for five years befon the vision to perceive, ‘My fru said he to me as we emerged Red sea. T hive grven yo Sil Me thinking and did cauae decide to make my AfPracll make my Alipreclatiod evi- lly thanks to youtigala and my r-Ha 9»7. very best wl^ee tor ^Happy. Proo- peroui New Tsar In sincere^. H. T. EWAM>. .Michigan, and m y.trip TK>ry of which k I for five yeai resume fny tn the dark e arorld. tu c east. Lon ig lert destiny the third lime, finally, with ibgh cided to reSume my travels, time, still in the darkn< mess. I us<| map of the arorld. turning my face toward the east. Long di(l I delay, teargig lert destiny ‘ desert me | for Oampbsn-BWald ^Company. -------^ ^ Skirts IHstated Chair Dykes Enormous skirts, known as far- ttiingaleg, worn by ladles of the Seventeenth century, diets tad tbs •tyle of chairs of that period. i hopes that the hour had come for me to plgnt the point* t did so t a firm hand, arid then, confide restored.' with faith at high pii i turned on the light. B ^ ld ! in India, my pin. on a blue stood like a sentinel D the heart of the Va-e of Kashmir.” Manure, Straw, -Needed by Soil >U» ^Thinkd cJxyilt Careful Return of ! Manure Is &n Aid to Land T ^ t Needs Potash. Grsatast Adveatarer Is Ca sf ElgM 13 TMls. EVER in history has there ^ been a lack of courageous men; at least, never a shortage of intrepid souls who Were will- ing to break a lance with fate. Theirs are the sagas that sur- vive the ages, to be told where- ever men congregate to swap tales of danger and daring. Years ago. New York boested i Adventurers' chib. Those who had come to grips with life and lived to tej] the tale asked nothing more than a few listeners. When • man held the floor he had his say to the end and none took exception to the form or content of his nar-. rative. One night the chairman, m iBtenuitktaal Fm QANiA MONICA, CALIF.— Whig] this esse Arthur Sullivan Hoffman. invited those present to relate dra- matic chapters from their own ax- Whjgn the German troopa marched into the Rhineland, France; was going to fight about it, but didn’t. When the Italians moved against Ethiopia, Britain was going to ifr^ vokc force, bat didn't. 1 When 2tu5sia poked her sn(|K>t into th* Spanish mess, there was fping to be armed Action by oth- er po|w'ers. but wasn't.; When:Japan began to nibble again* at China, there was go- ing tO be inte^en- tioo but sU that nap- ened Was that the League of Nations Chirped daapair- ingly atuJ then put ita bead back W I- a. MiUer, Aeseetew m *•* Ks Mast rwids. OalvsrWUr af UX- ■eu.—WMV aereifi Careful return of manure and to fields provides a “soil atcurity program” for those lands that are on the verge of a potali deficiency. In the growing of corn and grain crops, fully two-thirda of the potash content is in the com- Stalk and straw. If these by-products of the farm are left on -the land or are applied as manure, they re- him some potash to the “aoil bink” to be used again. A study of crop yield daU over k aik-yeer- period on six soil e x p e ^ . IrvtaS. Cobb under its wing. Somehow; Tm thinking o fellowa I who started fighting and. when bystanders rushed in to sep- ^ * them, the one who was g#t- Somehow; Tm thinking of the two afate ting the worst of it yelled: knew was quiti unaware of hla right to claim such title, and yet, when "Five or six of you hshg on to that big brute. Anybody can bold one takes into consideration the de- tails of his magnificent in tails of his magnificent intrepidity, nothing, in my opinion. comparM. His name was Hermann Bland; dead or alive today who knows. I met him on a steamer out of Liverpool, en route to India via the Mediterran lan, difficult of approach and, despite my .persistent efforts at ice brea ing. hard ipite uptil the sec- t evince the of a ctgetive profession, 1 said i ctee< *lfl really ought to stag< >ng week out did he evince the ilightest inclination to fraternize. I / way tP break of his retreat. His surrender was complete. This hia Story; Born in Hamburg of mel. and. I pledge you my word, haven't had an attack since. married a Welsh girl, who died without issue after twelve years of married lift, leiving her huibind a parcel of real estate in Cardiff. Twenty yeart of uneventful life for the map maker followed. Bland. now tixty. with a snug deposit in a savings hank, -to which he added 5,800 pounds, by the sale of the Cardiff property, making IIJXW pounds for a grand total resigfiad from the map making establishmaot |N C E a MassacI ' court reversed a felony convic- tion because the prosecution, in filing VI UIV |/i 4^CVU8M/II| lii miiJ a record, stated that the Crimean mmitted "on the nrteenth day i Jure. 1855”^ but failed to state whether the year was 1839 A. D. OX 1855 B. C. And evtr since then on quibblei almost equally foolish—such as a misplaced comma or an upside down period—other high courts chance? That would be an Idee worth trying. Fate should decide for him, and in the dark. So. Har- jnann repaired to his sitting room. twitched off the light end groped his wav to the oanter tabl*. upon which lay an atlas. Opening the book at random, he stuck a pifi haphazsrd into the page under hia hand. Light! Which way now? The gleaming pin stood upright in the vitala of a small lumber town in northern Michigan. Well, if that was deliny'a plan. Hermann Blend would let it ride. "Within a fortnight, lugging two Gliditonf bail and a Burbtrry dttatcr, Hermann laoded in the lum- ber town, took a roprp in. a depot hotel, and (or a period of one month, with never a complaint upon hla lips, stayed on at this capital of vast Inconvenience, sweltering heat and boredom. "Three years elapse-, oefore thia tourist • minded mao took an- other shot With a pin at the atlas. Thia time, again in the Stygian dark, he perforated the town ot ^ t a k . Siberia. Into which, with a Uwtk and a heavy lUster. be plUn|Sd bjr Wit shortest poasihlf rout*. One week was enough- FiUiice Rewards Travaler. "And now, gentlem4!h of the Ad-' venturers' club,” said Ritchif. glancing at Hoffman and steadying hia voice, **I have brought you to Hermann Bland's third trip out ci London in search x>f the great* gd- havt been defeating the enda of cisions of honel Juries. justice and setting ■ laught the da- Science has gone ahead, medicine has taken enormous steps forward, but law still rides in a stags coach. and hunt^ with a flintlock muiket. Haa it cv^r occurred to anyone that one reason for the law'a delays la a lack of the thing called common Bcnser Diaosaor FootprfnCa. D AGC m 1858, a coUegt professor LS discovered cm a eandatone ledga in MaiaachusetU a whole batch of imbedded tracks of the dlnoaaur— familiarly known to aeologiats as dinah. Just as among ita scientific friends the great winged lizard la frequently referred to aa big Hi. At the time, the discovery created no excitement—merely a slight shock of surprise to the o4d families upon learning there wai something historic in Massachusetts antedat- ing the Mayflower. For tbe natur- alists figured those tracks had been left more than 159.000,000 yeara ago. And they were suffered to remain nearly eighty yeara more. re recently it develope that parties unknown have been chiael- IJinah'B footprints out and toting iKem off. dicate eitli would ieetn (a in- either that America ia g*t~ ting dinoaaur-cofiscioua or that dine- saurleggers are operating, or both. So if a ilinky gentleman should come to 'the aide. door, offering a prime specimen for the parkn whatnot, don't trade with him, read- -call the police. Next time he come back with a domick off of Plymouth Rock or the corper- ^ iRViN ^ COBB ”H M i i name of (or Her) Majesty's ship. TVe letters are uped in connection only w-th vessels in the British scrvi-'e popularly "H. M. S.” is suopoT'-l to be the abbre - viation of H’ .a Majesty's steamt but the ■ letters varp names of British ships long before the comnr.escial oevelopmcnt ot tbe steamboat. "H, M. B ” is also the abbrev^ion of H<s Majesty's S eri imcntal farms on the gray soils shows that yield levels were as high with manure as with potash, basic* treetmentf of limestone and pboe* Bhate having- been t^cd in aaA . caae. The manure was applied at' the rate at which with careful mao-, agement it could he accumulated! on any live stock farm. For the farmer who markets hia crops aa grain, the problem is aomo- wbat different. At one loU ezptNri- ment Sc Id th* com yields on Umsd gray silt loam on tight clay lor the rotation ending ia 1028 wer* 28 bushels. Since that time yields have declined to 91 bushels. This decline appears to be caused by potash deficiency (or. with tba appiicatkm of oaU straw at the rat* of two tons an acre for each four- year relation since 1090. the com yields have been revived to an av- Certng Temperament. A JUIXIE back east rules that this so-called artistic temper - ament if not .fufficient excuse (or a so-called genius to beat up hia bride. erage of 45 bushels^ for tha last' year period. This treatmant leemi also U> have satisfied the I tried the stuff once—Just once— but the presiding jUdge in my case was a lady. For years I'd been potash needs of other crops Ip th* rotation. Analysis of the atraw jemTM trudging as steadily as a milkman's i 0 ma ily appreciate me. So I rehearsed showed that each two-ton applica- tion contained about as much potas- _ _ »y a: horse,, whereas being ,a practitiooer ion, 1 ige 1 •mperament just to make the (am- sium as is supplied by 110 pouxxls of muriate of potash. After limestone and clovers havi ooated .crop ' '' marginal levels, farmers will do well yields above auh my act and went downstairs one morning and puj it on. So my wife looked at me across the breakfast "I k to watch for potash deficiency. Not that legume farming is a breedar of table, and said; "I know what the trouble with you is. You^rt bilious. You’U take some calomel.” WeU. what are you going to do when a beautifully itaied emotion* al outburst ia diagnosed, not as the promptings ipf a tortured aoul, but as liver complaint? You guessed it. I took the calo- poteah shortage in the seU, but ,aa yields go up, greater demaixM ax* made upon soil minerals. When crop growth ia sufficient to exhaust th* supply of any one of the plant nu- trient*. the crop.!* handicapped. A minimum acreage of soil-d*- platifig cultivated crops luch aa eoA and soy beans, together with th* return of manure ana itrawi wtu fo a long way toward making far aelf*suffici^t In their potash Supreme Sash Greenhouses Make Plant Growing Less Work Sash greeijhouses' have so many advantages over hot beds for grow- ing plants frona see<l tKat eveiy commercial vegetable | r o w a r e. believes C. H. Mia- should have c aJey, extension professor of vego- table growing at the Nei eoUega of agriculture. ^Rutgen uni- In sash greenhouaea. which art usually heated by a wood stov* or with a hot water ayttem, seed i ntmi ing and transplanting may b* don* in comfort, even during extremely cold weather, and watering a n d ‘ger air space under th* gl*a*. Last winter many of theae itnio- tnrea wer* built. Sonr»* of thewi ar* located in the farage. With thia ar- rangement. the heat is fumiahad -to the garage and to tha washing and packing house aa well ai to the greenhouse. These structurei are not expan- sive to build. An IS-aash greenhouse completa with boiler and head house. BOWgash and new materiali ihould coat less than 3300, not counting labor. When laib ii on band, tberi may be no need of buying new. In- stead of purchasing • new boiler, a good second hand one, purchasad at a iow price, may be used. For perinanent atmeturea. a concrete or hollow tile foundation and walla ar* recommended. Wooden sides- mey also b* used if himber is avall- abla. In the Feed Lot Dairymen who make th* higbeet income from their heads plan their business so that th* volume ot milk fiMduM ififl ii m iintiinfd la w iiittf months when prices are normal' baft. pf Harvard coHege *r the plate from Cotton Mather's IN ^ ( An snoual farm inventory will | ahow a farmer just whera b* stands financially whether he is fsinlng or losing, spd how much. The inventory also provides a valuable property list in case of fire. 1 Meaning *f "R. M. 3." on Ship ”H M S " ppcceiing the name < > vessel stands f r |4>» (or Her) A Cemetery 8or cows on Lailg- water farm near North Easton, | Mata., stands aa a monumant to some of the greatest dairy cows eyer bred. About 24 million farmers are now marketing some or aU of their form products CO - operatively through their a.400 aztociationa. Horses free from parasites breed better, work better, are easier to hendla-and require Idas feed to keep their in |pod cohtiidOD. The iocuat mokas good fence pogta and. being a legurte. improves the- soil. It grows well on almost any type of soil HOME-COOKED FOOD ^ ; loin the Thousands who read this paper'each week, for news and ads. Maitol Badgil HERTS RZTEA FINE QUAUTT PRICED LOW BUT AN BETEA DOS. AT TEll LOW nUCB CAUFORNIA NAVEL SUNKIST Q 8 | r ORANGE OALL Fresh, Sweet, DeUetooi m u t Th# fiek of tho Crop! RICH IN PLAVOR^^EAST TO FEEL, SUCR, 8RO- AND nSR- SIZE iC BUT OKAMORS NOW. 8AVI1 DOZ. FANCY BUJl l o s t RICE KIRKMAFTS BORAX S SOAP 6 25< PURPLE CROSS TISSl'E PATRICXOTH DISHULV's'U wm WITH 6z:25< “SUPERIOR” BREAD 9 « K0U8 ON. 14c I bUCDIT tu. DOI. lO C Doughnuts Vt doi 12^ | Cookies Vi dos. lOe UNEEDA BISCUIT, N. B. C. PU, U Thistle SuccotRsh, Gold. Bant. Ho. 2 Crr ISe HAZEL ALLEN CHOCOLATES Lh. Bmc 2SD DAVIS BAKING POWPFJt OcUson SOAP POWDER Octaaon SOAP CHIPS Leg-o-Lamb . . 23£ Shoulder Lamb Chop 24! Breast of Fine For Lamb Pot Pie Ptire Pork Shueage Fresh Pork Picnic Shoitilders Style Lean Heaty 20 ! Short R ibs Beef 12 ! WILLIAM Ot Pavilion R. F proVlDC 9BC3 OgAH good io(Aa are not Cl this Utile enti oaiir”r good feetur oad. blue eye* le • ggOiy gupportera in tl Ion Is the 4 year • OBd Mn- BerUe Gael oad the grandaon ot ^ jgmaa Alexandei niST COIINT UIT DEMT UigiOtV III THIRTT TOUMOB 10 wpr FLAOU ON ITB8T HOMOI By BOR MeC ■aby Darby They're off in Um Oa another page df will find listed aR ba data. sMliar by paren Tbirt If 00 doubt you would Ilka to lx W TlcWry, HolptDf Derby la not si dlfllc li What you can do. 'Ot stores In tha page the atorsa glviiMr Bah •ach 60 fgnt purchaa pwi to apsDd 85 ht A ha antlUsd to 10 TDU.MURT ABK FI When you tki parent , RRby Derby itnet. That poiitad.* Flrit C< jesT**** ^ iPm WlUN IFirst Count Iht plaowl « I weak's iasiM plaoad ( M th* Hah To thosa 1 wtaanig a \ wa adi tHo taao* or M |ta nm ( Fdaic wiu ] to whirl IWUn

zsl ^Thinkd cJxyilt - NYS Historic Newspapersresume fny tn the dark e arorld. tu c east. Lon ig lert destiny the third lime, finally, with ibgh cided to reSume my travels, time, still

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: zsl ^Thinkd cJxyilt - NYS Historic Newspapersresume fny tn the dark e arorld. tu c east. Lon ig lert destiny the third lime, finally, with ibgh cided to reSume my travels, time, still

U T A T PTfT;I p O m S B O e ^ A B T HI P D I X T i n i D O W I

ib lh wMk o f .t te bowUatfm irm T iB t oa Um WedeworHi Hose cld^ •Uejr* flnda tlM B ufs atHl on tppj of tlM U0t; tte WMp« aad Ant«

M ruBDcrs-up; tb« Bees and • Ba4tl«0 UJwirlM Uad for third boa-

onv the FlettJ and Horneta *1«> tied fou^ fourth poaltUm and the Gnata oteddUy cUnditnf up the Udder., IJoClymoo^’a Bu^a bumped Into a

' tn their m * a r t t h Luttentoo*aAntat dropping the la tter tmb gamee to : the buay Ahta. Fltairermld*a Whapa atung DoB^hoe’d BeeClea two outj three, loalnf the aeooi^ game to the Beetle# aQr a Mg m arg u ThompaoD’a Flee^ contlsueid their iMrs. H arry RltchU, M ra CrOawaloM m#4mrn l#m ra 'THamOAJk W a Beea two <>ut of three, while Young.Vlfona’a Gnata . Ilkewlee > extended -M n. George «, ScoOeld. director; thdlr advance tn the win column by ; lira. Hunter Black, Mra. H enry Cur- dOlTDlnf Schanz'g Homela two out | ^ Aumn KrWtn, Ura. C harl«

Hopklna. Hr* Oatea Miackler, IfJor Mabel Newtoo. Mra. Pred- McTar-^ A-wwMM*, mmtm.

Thompaoo’i Flfag cafl)ed off the Mm. WUllam Shepard. Mlvhigh bpnora for tfam mat week with ; Irene ,3mlUt, Mra. Reed SooCt, Min a ^ o r e of 2330 fdr three game* and i Minnie Stlnaon, Ifra Eugene -Schef81P for in g le g a ie . r p T l r f .. Charlee Hopklflh featured In the Young*. M ra EOr*rd Chapin. Individual high hdaora with a aeo re ; Mra Donald Warner, dlerctor at OM for three Lame*, an average Mra. Harold L»we. Mra. Ray Whiteo«! 1«H , l a c l u d i / -« K i. w»b * « « - i JJ™ 5 ^ae| 2 » . hi* l l i^ t|o b* l l e t ^ cm the ' J Parry, Mra. Howarchdnor ro ll . Otlurr additidn to the i Trail. Mra. L ud u i W arner.' Mrabejnor roll, Harold Fitzgerald. 302. . Charlea I. Newton. Eldtlh M. W ar

jcoach •‘ChMTleyj" Pundlnget urge* upon each bowlepr * ' **—ride*- keep back of the foi|l line." H^ atatcHi that thi* rule la blatantly

cooU nuD ^y by M percentof the bowlera 4n the tournament.ad well 10 hy UM memhera of -the ladieo' bowling c l^ , and Inolata that tho*e bowlers sgould **watch their stjnp” and correck this Imperfection

llngj form, a* It do«Vi reflect to. th^lr m erit a* to the

iliflcatlon* of I a good aportaman 1(1 a good bowfer.•Boy# and girfa. watcjh your atep.”

.5M

.M6 13119

.900 is ie o 500 12994444 13029444 120^

n it 1 q ^ li l

I The atandlngaj fotlowi

1 3 ^

S a l e s ’

^um eta .......... 18Onaui .......... lOj Hl|ch tM m »cdre 2|t22;t Mama. Waa(

. High llnciMdaalRooney. isiT

33d 13912

1 tiign [inomauaj JCOfe-- S glClooney. isiT; 1 fc< me. Cooney,- 2 3 4 .I Honor' roll 800 Kimr or Oetler

ITrf .234. 210. 204; Hopklna. 229; i. 228; Wade. 327; Bpexxano

rvmnihoe. 222. 201; Culbertaon.

pWOBB BUZZ TO T O Pm o u n e sE O oLtJBBOWIOIVO ZJSAOUK

Thb men'a wmter bowling touma-

msntj Is off to a good l a r t with the Pnit iwsek of the maple mauUnf fiv-tng < ^ b team a chance to ahow Ita

Th^ flrat match of the aeaaoo be- twaed NelTa Beea and WlUoa's Hor- naCs landed In a triple win for the Beeacj getting them off on the right foot, j

Ho^coenh^a Soorpa atung Rider**Waopd for two out ot throe to fol­low 1 aaconO place.

Staging of Uaaa January 13'-W V, Pet. TJ».

B«<« 1....................3 0 1.000 2373acorpiona ... .^2 1. 666 22MW a a^ ............. .1 2 .334 2131Horni^ ______ 0 S 000 2114

High team acor*—1 game, & p4ona.[840: 3 game*. Bee^ 2373.

High indlvlduaJ ncoro—l fftffl«.Q b e p a ^ 218; 3 game*, Holcomb.070.

roll.— 2 0 0 game Or batter—918: McCaufhey, 919: Hol-

Htgh average. 160 or baCtar—Hol- “aughey. Rider, N'«ff. Shej

ard.'P-,

PLEWORK GUILDtfO

DABLE W O UThe j object o t tbe Needlework

Guild W Americ* If to collect anddlatrlto4t« new plain, suitable gar-

muiii to moot uw i m t nioa o( oorpltalac hooaaa. and other oharltlaa.

Any saanibar obtaining coctributionjfrom 10 peraona and one monay do­nation .becamm a director. I t la aald th at a mother failed to recog­nise her pretty, baby, whom she was accustomed to see bundled tn an oM shawl, when- brought to her la a yrhole new iu lt of Guild clothaa. The effect of now substantial cloth­ing upon a person d e s ti^ ta from Ick n esa or- other causes la a great moral uplift. The Guild feels very grateful with this year'* member- shif) drive.

Following is a list of the directors and metnbera of the Needlework Guild of Geneseo for the year as re- -ported - to headquarters In Phlladel-

Mlsa Bertha Barry, director; Mlgs M ary BlooNdgood. Mra. XX %. FVaacU, Mrs. Samuel Prasar. M rt. R IfT LeCIear. Mlaa M. A. Perry. M rs Kl- aanor Shaw Smith. Mias E. Whml- tEeda Smith. M m S. P . Ruff. Jr., Mrs. Louise B. Willard, M rs N athan WUUaaa, M m B ertha 'Tottan.'M ias Mallcent Orasna, dirsetor;

Mias HikJagarda SharlocK. dlrecna. Clarence Lehman. Mrs

er Ftnlejr. Mlae Marion OlmstedMra. E. P. 'Campbell. Mra. Killed Horton, Mrs. ^am ea CuIharUoo. Mn>

I. Mi 111 man.T S. MiUlman. Mrs. L. C. (YC____Mrs. John Blahop Mrs. Wiliam Leon^

y Connor

trd, Mlai Cudnbtc, Mni. George Me ,Ouire. Mra. B. H. Peachey. Mia Frances Cromwell. Mias Mas 'Trum per

Mrs. George S. Scofleld la presl dent and Mrs. Wiliam J. Muns. sec retary and treasurer of the organ izatlon. .r

------^Tl{18 PRAISE COMES R IG H T FR O M T H E FOUNTAIN HEAD

^vlngaton RepuhUcan. Geneseo, N. Y.Gentlemen:

I was thumbing through a copy of Ralph Waldo Emerson the other day and I iiiw a phrsse wlilehstarted me UUnklng about my manyyctra or mendiy oMooituoo wiuiprompu of J

late you on you bav* been doingyou for the fine coBtrlbutlou whichyou hAvo marts to the growth aartprogperlty of .the Ounpbell-DwtldCompany and lis ellaats.

All advartiMng media are impor­tant. of couTM. hut the CamillMU*Bh«rald Company ha* always consid­e r the newspaper the m ol vitalfactor In In flueat^g the local nutr-ket for a nattonal producer, and weand our clients continue to holdhie aaxne convletioa today.

Our largest individual chent. theChevrolil Motor ComMny. h u juit

1933 Chevi^leta. taking first place car and t rIn both

sales for theand truck

Sevanth time In the past 10 years. I t has sold more than ZOOO.OOO used cars, breaking all previous sales records in that important field as weU. Ail of which, you Will i ffe e , la a. magnl- ficent selllDf achfereinciit.

• In th at achievement, the news- ta p e rs of A m e r lta —y o u r n ew sp ap er<-hts3 pliytd tn Importintand I . want to thank you most eln-ctrdy 9B ychttf vf uwnuoQ .

AU of -our other cUenta. In many other llnee of bustneaa, hanre Uke-

the achievements of. these ganlxations also the

OM support and cooperation which you have mtwmym

, lAiQurr tiMi mr.W m LndOs B vk h w d t, M ki I 2 w

I Brown. Mias Bthel Mkrtti. Mra.

IIU AttsaUa Ofty, Iflia GUttl Hfil-land. Mia* EMnsr MeSHda. Msa. R.A P tft. wm D M GMoby, Mis Agnes Rignsy, Mlaa L saa Rogans Mrs. Georfe Whesiecli, MMs Dorothy

M r^Vrad Quirk. Mzsl Mary Dele- hanty, Mrsi H*hry Welch. Mra. K. B. Moynea. Mra. E rnest LaVIgns. Mx«. Jacob Nsst. Mrs. George Meeker. Mrs. WUllam Shliiey. M n. WUUam Gallagher. Mra. Kenneth Rider.

Mrs. WUllam Munx. dlractor; Mrs. Charlea Baeder. Mrs. Guy Bailey. Miss Mary Lotilae Baker. Mrs. Col­onel Bennett. Mias Anne 8. Blake, Mrs. Forster Courthopc. Mrs. Uoyd Croasett. Mrs. Charlea Fraley, Mrs Charles Fundlnger, Mrs. Edward Fhmegan. Mrs. Alfred Hall. Mlaa Marie Lobreo, Mlee Ellen North.

Lobert Ritchie. *. visiting mtcr>national Journalist, called upon tocontribute a y am . had this to say:

“ Adventure^ is not necessarily based upon thrilling eventualities. What Is adventure to one m an m aybe deadly monotony to another., Itresolves itself into a point of view.

adventurer IThe greatest

through the and down the Red sea. SrhaU. wiz­ened and retiring was this

ard to crack. Not week out did

lad gone out of my wa; through the c r u l

an English m other and Germa father, he cam e to England with hla

you this lettergreeting.

The phrase was as follows; "Thealienee that accept# merit a# thgmcMt naturml thing in the world the highest s)pplause."

Now. that sentence may be per­fectly true It certainly expressesthe attitude whloh almost all of ushave t&lcc-ii in the past townrd manypeople and many la iU tu tl^ thatwe admire and apprecihta tbe most.But I believe that the troiffilous yeara which we have now happilyput bahlnd ufi h i?e titered t h t t i t -tltuds and ntade all of us a bit moreready to think of the other feUowand to applaud the Job th at be isdoing, not J u l aUently, but out loudso that he can hear and know!

And so I am writing to you and a number of other publishers thru- out the country t4)day to coagratu-

the splendkl job which

Englishlaviier, he cainv cusiaiM wiu,ptrents, ihopkeepfrs, provisionfri,I believe, and got a fairly go< education, excelling in draftsm s ship, which led to m ap m aking.

F i ts Tricks Herm ann Bland.

phaned, but reasonably prospereus,__L.... JL..J

from the m ap m aking establishm amand made preparatkmi to tee tomeof th* world th at ha had been ch art­ing on paper for thirty-two yeart.

to go? Why not leave it to

completed the most succeasTul year Us history. Xt has sold 1,193 000

and p rcm i^ ls year, as! haa thehighly sttrreasful

Campbell-Ewtld oomptny itaeff.m ents of. these or-

America — your nsirapaper — haveplayed a leadtng role and X e ^ t thank you on behalf of thaaa cll-

its, too. for tlw

given to them and td us.Thia become a cather kxm letter,

but that line of Emeraon's did s ta rt

venture, which he alone ixu»essed------------------------------------ -1 ‘

fPtEngland for five years befon

the vision to perceive, ‘My fru said he to me as we emerged

Red sea. T h ive grven yo Sil

Me thinking and did cauae decide to make my AfPracllmake my Alipreclatiod evi­

lly thanks to youtigala and my r-Ha 9»7.

very best w l^ ee tor ^ H a p p y . Proo-peroui New Tsar In

s ince re^ .H. T. EWAM>.

.Michigan, and m y .trip TK>ry of which k I for five yeai

resume fny tn the dark e arorld. tuc east. Lon

ig lert d e s tin y the third lime, fina lly , with ibgh

cided to reSume m y travels, time, still in the darkn<mess. I us<|m ap of the arorld. turning my facetoward the east. Long di(l I delay,tearg ig lert destiny ‘ desert m e | for

Oampbsn-BWald ^Company. -------^ ^

Skirts IHstated Chair Dykes Enormous skirts, known as far-

ttiingaleg, worn by ladles of theSeventeenth century, diets tad tbs•tyle of chairs of that period. i

hopes that the hour had come for me to plgnt the point* t did so t a firm hand, arid then, confiderestored.' with faith at high piii turned on the light. B ^ l d !in India, my pin. on a blue stood like a sentinel D the heart of the Va-e of Kashmir.”

Manure, Straw, -Needed by Soil

>U»^Thinkd cJxyilt

Careful Return of ! Manure Is &n A id to L a n d T ^ t

Needs Potash.

Grsatast Adveatarer Is Ca sf ElgM 13 TMls.

EVER in history has there ^ been a lack of courageous

men; a t least, never a shortage of in trep id so u ls who Were will­ing to break a lance with fate. Theirs a re the sagas that sur­vive the ages, to be told where- ever men congregate to swap tales of danger and daring.

Years ago. New York boested i Adventurers' chib. Those who had come to grips with life and lived to tej] the tale asked nothing more than a few listeners. When • manheld the floor he had his say to the end and none took exceptionto the form or content of his nar-.rative. One night the chairman, m

iB tenuitktaal FmQ A N iA MONICA, CALIF.—

Whig]

this esse Arthur Sullivan Hoffman.invited those present to relate dra­m atic chapters from their own ax-

Whjgn the Germ an troopa m arched into the Rhineland, France; was going to fight about it, but didn’t.

When the Italians moved against Ethiopia, Britain was going to ifr v o k c f o r c e , b a t didn't. 1

When 2tu5sia poked her sn(|K>t into th*Spanish mess, there was fping to be armed Action by oth­er p o |w 'e r s . but wasn't.;

When:Japan beganto n ib b le again* atChina, there was go­ing tO be inte^en-tioo but sU that nap-ened Was that theLeague of Nations Chirped daapair-ingly atuJ then put ita bead back

W I- a. MiUer, Aeseetew m *•* KsMast rwids. OalvsrWUr af UX- ■eu.—WMV aereifi

Careful return of manure and to fields provides a “soil

atcurity program” for those lands that are on the verge of a p o ta li deficiency. In the growing of corn and grain crops, fully two-thirda of the potash content is in th e com - Stalk and straw. If these by-products of the farm are left on -the landor are applied as manure, they re- him some potash to the “aoil bink”to be used again.

A study of crop yield daU over kaik-yeer- period on six soil e x p e ^ .

Irv ta S . Cobb

under its wing.Somehow; Tm thinking o

fellowa I who sta rted fighting and. when bystanders rushed in to sep- ^ * them, the one who was g#t-

Somehow; Tm thinking of the two

afateting the worst of it yelled :

k n ew w a s q u i t i u n a w a re of h la r ig h tto claim such title, and yet, when

"Five or six of you hshg on tothat big brute. Anybody can bold

one takes into consideration the de­tails of his magnificent intails of his magnificent intrepidity,nothing, in my opinion. comparM.His nam e was H erm ann Bland; dead or alive today who knows. I m et him on a steam er out of Liverpool, en route to India v ia the M editerran

lan,difficult of approach and, despite my .persistent efforts a t ice b rea ing. hard

ipite

uptil the sec- t evince the

of a ctgetive profession, 1 saidi ctee< * lfl rreally ought to stag<

>ng week out did he evince theilightest inclination to fraternize. I

/ way tP breakof his retreat.

His surrender was complete. Thishia Story; Born in Hamburg of

mel. and. I pledge you my word, haven 't had an attack since.

married a Welsh girl, who died without issue after twelve years of

married lift, leiving her huibinda parcel of real esta te in Cardiff.Twenty yeart of uneventful life forthe map maker followed. Bland.now tixty. with a snug deposit in asavings hank, -to which he added5,800 pounds, by the sale of theCardiff property, making IIJXWpounds for a grand total resigfiadfrom the map making establishmaot

|N C E a MassacI' court reversed a felony convic­

tion because the prosecution, in filingVI UIV |/i 4 CVU8M/II| lii miiJa record, stated that the C rim e a n m m itted "on the nrteenth day i

Jure. 1855” but failed to statewhether the year was 1839 A. D.OX 1855 B. C.

And evtr since then on quibbleialm ost equally foolish—such as a misplaced comma or an upside down period—other high courts

chance? That would be an Idee worth trying. F ate should decide for him, and in the dark. So. Har- jn an n repaired to his sitting room.twitched off the light end gropedhis wav to the oanter tabl*. uponwhich lay an atlas. Opening the book at random, he stuck a pifi haphazsrd into the page under hia hand. Light! Which way now? Thegleam ing pin stood upright in thevitala of a small lumber town innorthern Michigan. Well, if that wasdeliny'a plan. Hermann Blend would let it ride.

"W ithin a fortnight, lugging twoGliditonf bail and a Burbtrrydttatcr, Hermann laoded in the lum­ber town, took a roprp in. a depot hotel, and (or a period of one month, with never a complaint upon hla lips, stayed on at this capital of vast Inconvenience, sweltering heat and boredom.

"Three y ears elapse-, oefore thia tourist • minded m ao took an ­other shot With a pin a t the atlas. Thia time, again in the Stygian dark , he perforated the town ot^ t a k . Siberia. Into which, with aUwtk and a heavy lUster. beplUn|Sd bjr Wit shortest poasihlfrout*. One week was enough-

FiUiice Rewards Travaler."And now, gentlem4!h of the A d-'

venturers' club,” said Ritchif.glancing a t Hoffman and steadyinghia voice, **I have brought you toHerm ann Bland's third trip out ci London in search x>f the great* gd-

havt been defeating the enda of cisions of honel Juries.justice and setting ■ laught the da-

Science has gone ahead, medicinehas taken enormous steps forward, but law still rides in a stag s co a ch .and hunt^ with a flintlock muiket.Haa it cv^r occurred to anyone thatone reason for the law'a delays la a lack of the thing called commonBcnser

D iaosaor FootprfnCa.D AGC m 1858, a coUegt professorLS discovered cm a eandatone ledgain MaiaachusetU a whole batch of imbedded tracks of the dlnoaaur—familiarly known to aeologiats asdinah. Just as among ita scientificfriends the great winged lizard lafrequently referred to aa big Hi.

At the time, the discovery created no excitement—merely a slight shock of surprise to the o4d families upon learning there w ai something historic in Massachusetts antedat­ing the Mayflower. For tbe natur­alists figured those tracks had been left more than 159.000,000 yeara ago. And they were suffered to remainnearly eighty yeara more.

re recently it develope thatparties unknown have been chiael-

IJinah'B footprints out and toting

iKem off.dicate eitli

would ieetn (a in-either that America ia g*t~

ting dinoaaur-cofiscioua or that dine-saurleggers are operating, or both.

So if a ilinky gentleman shouldcome to 'th e aide. door, offering aprime specimen for the parknwhatnot, don't trad e with him, read-

-call the police. Next tim e hecome back with a dom ick off

of Plymouth Rock or the corper-

^ iRViN ^ COBB

”H M i i nam e of (or Her)

M ajesty 's ship. TVe letters a re uped in connection only w-th vessels in the British scrvi-'e popularly "H. M. S.” is suopoT'-l to be the abbre­viation of H’.a Majesty's steamt but the ■ letters varp names of British ships long beforethe comnr.escial oevelopmcnt ot tbe steam boat. "H, M. B ” is also theabbrev^ ion of H<s Majesty's S e r i

imcntal farms on the gray soils shows that yield levels were as high with manure as with potash, basic*treetmentf of limestone and pboe*Bhate having- been t^cd in a a A .caae. The manure was applied at'the rate at which with careful m ao-, agement it could he accumulated!on any live stock farm.

For the farmer who markets hiacrops aa grain, the problem is aomo-wbat different. At one loU ezptNri-ment Sc Id th* com yields on Umsdgray silt loam on tight clay lorthe rotation ending ia 1028 wer* 28 bushels. Since that time yields have declined to 91 bushels.

This decline appears to be causedby potash deficiency (or. with tbaappiicatkm of oaU s traw a t the ra t* of two tons an ac re for each four- year relation since 1090. the com yields have been revived to an av-Certng Temperament.

A JU IX IE back east rules th a t this so-called a rtistic tem per­

ament if not .fufficient excuse (ora so-called genius to beat up hia bride.

erage of 45 bushels^ for tha la s t 'year period. This treatmant

leemi also U> have satisfied the

I tried the stuff once—Just once— but the presiding jUdge in my case was a lady. For years I 'd been

potash needs of other crops Ip th* rotation. Analysis of the atraw

jemTMtrudging as steadily as a m ilkm an's

►i0 ma

ily appreciate me. So I rehearsed

showed that each two-ton applica­tion contained about as much potas-

_ _ »y a:horse,, whereas being ,a practitiooer

ion, 1ige 1

•mperament just to m ake the (am-

sium as is supplied by 110 pouxxls of muriate of potash.

A fter lim estone and clovers havi ooated .crop ' ' '

m arginal levels, fa rm ers will do wellyields above auh

my act and went downstairs onemorning and puj it on. So my wifelooked at me across the breakfast

" I k

to watch for potash deficiency. Not that legume farming is a breedar of

table, and said; "I know what thetrouble with you is. You^rt bilious.You’U take some calom el.”

WeU. what a re you going to dowhen a beautifully itaied emotion*al outburst ia diagnosed, not as the promptings ipf a tortured aoul, but

as liver complaint?You guessed it. I took the calo-

poteah shortage in the seU, but ,aayields go up, g rea te r demaixM ax* m ade upon soil m inerals. When crop growth ia sufficient to exhaust th*supply of any one of the plant nu­trient*. the crop.!* handicapped.

A m inim um acreage of soil-d*-platifig cultivated crops luch aa eoAand soy beans, together with th*

return of manure ana itrawi wtu foa long way toward making faraelf*suffici^t In their potash

SupremeSash Greenhouses Make

Plant Growing Less WorkSash greeijhouses' have so many

advantages over hot beds for grow­ing plants frona see<l tKat e veiy

commercial vegetable | r o w a re. believes C. H. Mia-should have c

aJey, extension professor of vego-table growing at the NeieoUega of agriculture. ^Rutgen uni-

In sash greenhouaea. which a rtusually heated by a wood stov* orwith a hot water ayttem, seed i

■ ntmiing and transplanting may b* don* in comfort, even during extremely cold weather, and watering a n d

‘ger air space under th* gl*a*.

Last winter many of theae itnio-tnrea wer* built. Sonr»* of thewi ar*located in the farage. With thia ar­rangement. the heat is fumiahad -to the garage and to tha washing and packing house aa well ai to the greenhouse.

These structurei are not expan­sive to build. An IS-aash greenhouse completa with boiler and head house. BOW gash and new materiali ihouldco a t le ss th a n 3300, n o t c o u n tin glabor. When laib ii on band, tberimay be no need of buying new. In­stead of purchasing • new boiler, a good second hand one, purchasad at a iow price, may be used. For perinanent atmeturea. a concrete or hollow tile foundation and walla ar* recommended. Wooden sides- m ey also b* used if himber is avall- abla.

In the Feed LotDairymen who make th* higbeet

income from their heads plan theirbusiness so that th* volume o t milkfiMduMififl ii miintiinfd la wiiittfmonths when prices are normal'

baft.

pf H arvard coHege * r the plate from Cotton M ather's

IN ^ (

An snoual farm inventory will |ahow a farmer just whera b* stands financially whether he is fsin lng or losing, spd how much. The inventory also provides a valuable property list in case of fire. 1

Meaning *f "R . M. 3 ." on Ship ”H M S " ppcceiing the nam e <

> vessel stands f r |4>» (or Her)

A Cemetery 8or cows on Lailg- water farm near North Easton, | Mata., stands aa a m onum ant to some of the g reatest dairy cows eyer bred.

About 24 million farmers are nowmarketing some or aU of their formproducts CO - operatively through their a.400 aztociationa.

Horses free from p arasites breed better, work b etter, a re easier tohendla-and require Idas feed to keeptheir in |pod cohtiidOD.

The iocuat mokas good fence pogta and. being a legurte. improves the-soil. I t grows well on alm ost anytype of soil

H O M E - C O O K E D F O O D

; loin the Thousands who read thispaper'each week, for news and ads.

Maitol BadgilHERTS RZTEA FINE QUAUTT

PRICED LOW

BUT AN BETEA DOS. AT TEll

LOW nUCB

CAUFORNIA NAVEL

SUNKIST Q 8 | r ORANGE OALLFresh, Sweet, DeUetooi m u t Th# fiek of tho Crop!RICH IN PLAVOR^^EAST TO FEEL, SU C R, 8RO -

AND n S R - S I Z E i CBUT OKAMORSNOW. 8AVI1 D O Z .FANCY BUJl l o s t

RICEKIRKMAFTS

BORAX S

SOAP6 25<

PURPLE CROSS

TISSl'EPATRICXOTH DISHULV's'U

w m WITH

6z:25<“ S U P E R IO R ” B R E A D 9«K 0 U 8 ON. 1 4 c I bUCDIT t u . DOI. lO C Doughnuts Vt doi 12^ | Cookies Vi dos. lOe

UNEEDA BISCUIT, N. B. C. PU , U

Thistle SuccotRsh, Gold. Bant. Ho. 2 Crr IS e HAZEL ALLEN CHOCOLATES Lh. Bmc 2SD

DAVISBAKINGP O W P F Jt

OcUsonSOAP

POWDER

OctaaonSOAPCHIPS

Leg-o-Lamb . . 23£Shoulder L a m b C h o p 24!Breast of Fine For L a m b Pot PiePtire Pork S h u e a g eFresh Pork Picnic S h o iti ld e rs StyleLean Heaty

20!Short R ibs Beef 12!

W IL L IA M OtPavilion R. F

proVlDC 9BC3 OgAH good io(Aa are not Cl

this Utile enti o a i ir ” r good feetur oad. blue eye* le • ggOiy gupportera in tl Ion Is the 4 year • OBd Mn- BerUe Gael oad the grandaon ot ^ jgmaa Alexandei

niST COIINT UIT DEMT U i g i O t V IIITHIRTT TOUMOB10 wpr FLAOUON ITB8T HOMOI

By BOR MeC■aby Darby

They're off in Um Oa another page df will find lis te d aR ba data. sMliar b y p a re n

Tbirt If 00 doubt

you would Ilka to lx W TlcWry, HolptDfDerby la not si dlfllcli What you can do.'Ot stores In tha page the atorsa glviiMr Bah •ach 60 fgnt purchaa pwi to apsDd 85 ht A ha antlUsd to 10 TDU.MURT ABK FI

When you

tki parent ,RRby Derbyitnet. That

poiitad.*Flrit C<

jesT**** ^i P m W lUNI First Count

I ht plaowl « I weak's iasiM

plaoad ( M th* Hah To thosa 1wtaanig a \wa a d i tHo taao* or M|ta nm (Fdaic w iu ]

to w hirl

IW Un