6 cooked pixies i frainkfurters c -...

1
i It ri V I ’ ’ i £«ercd a* Second CUa* Uatter ia d» Port Office at UargaietTiUe, N. Y, PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY CLASEE A. SANFORD & SON Pnblidiert BOWLANb G. HILL, Editor SabKriptiona $3 per year, none accepted tor leaa than one jrear, strictly in adraace. We reserre the right to reject any copy, rither advertising or news. An subscriptions discontinued at ex- Qiration of time for which ordered. Oilk MOUNTAIN DEW “End Speed Zone” signs have been erected by the state on the main roads leading out of Mar- garetviUe'. Most drivers are al- ready going over the 25-mph limit when they come to the end of the speed zone. There are thousands and thous- ands of sparkling pictures these clear August mornings as the sun starts its daily journey across washed-blue sky. Dew gathers in the mountains and in the valleys. There are hot- region climates where the morn- ing dew is sufficient to take the place of rain. Down the centuries man has used the word dew as a symbol of freshness and purity. There are references to dew in the Bible —^meaning blessed by good. Shakespeare wrote of the “Golden dew of sleep.” Many folks talk about dew falling. This is not correct. The gleam- ing drops of liquid on spider webs, on strawberry and clover leaves, or spaced almg a blade of grass —this liquid which gleams in the sun’s ejirly rays is condensed from the air. * At dusk half of the earth turns away from the sun. Then the plants lose the heat gathered ii\ the day. TTiey become cool. Re- sponding to a fundamental law (the same as drops on cold water pipes a hot summer day) moisture in the air gathers on cooling ob- jects. * * Each small drop is a mirror in the morning sunshine—the images upside down. Examine a drop throu^ a hand lens and you _v?ill see. nei^y tre^'br B white d o ^ in the blue sky. Many of summer’s most appeal- ing pictures are made by dew. A strawberry or clover leaf has. a drop on each of the many points, a spider web is a flashing jewel, a long blade of grass has a large drop at the tip and small drops spaced along the sides. / Dew is heavier in the lowlands than on the hilltops because the air is cooler in .the lowlands than on the mountains. Some morn- ings in August are misty because the increasing warmth causes moisture to rise. ^ I have been told that “dew” is the most beautiful word in the English language. It is derived from the old Anglo-Saxon “deaw.' Dew is an important part of the great plan which governs plant life on this earth. Moisture hastens the return of organic mat- ter to humus. « Go out at daw one of these mornings and see the thousands of beautiful pictures psiinted dur- ing the hours of dark. Conservation officials and state police are burning the candle at both ends in an effort to control the outlaw. But while they are waiting in one location, the out- law is operating in another. Public cooperation with law enformement officials is increasing. More people are realizing efficient law enforcement is impossible with- out it. Fewer are dismissing the Crime with the excuse that the violator is poor and needs the meat. Good sportsmen every- where understand that the deer jacker is an inhuman sneak thief without justification for his crime. Sirus, the Dog star, rules the heavens as August hovers over the Catskills. This is the season when rivers and creeks move slowly and quietly along their windiig paths. * Streams are bom in many places. In the Catskills they have their start in clear cold springs which bubble from underneath great rocks on a mpuntainside often far up. * Millions of years ago when great travail heaved the continents about, Uquified rock materials were put down layer upon layer. Far below the surface of the earth, veins ^of never failing water seep through the soil and flow along between the layers. They sometimes find a crack. It may be high on the mountain. * There are cold springs in slop- ing pastures, in evergreen wood- lands, in low-lying swamps, in the very bottom of the rivers and in the bottom of occasional moun- tain lakes. Sprmgs had much to do with the location of homes and communities in pioneer days. A farm today with an “everliving” spring is worth more than one without. Water is a great farm necessity. * Springs make Uttle rivulets, rivulets join at the end of tiny ravines to form spring brooks. 'The brooks unite at the ends of larger ravines or hollows to fol- low their destiny to'a distant sea. » In March and April rains and melted snow swell the streams, small and large, make water bub- ble from the ground, for a short time like a spring, send this vol- ume down the valleys in a seeth- ing boiling flood of wild waters. There is a high pitched yell of destruction as they rush down the valleys. By Mrs. EUen VanSteenbnrg Shavertown, N. Y., Aug. 4 Mr. and Mrs. George Grupe and daughter of Hoboken, N. J., spent a couple of. days with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Liddle and other friends in town. Miss Robert Ebert of Dry Brook spent the past week with Gloria VanSteenburg. Celebrated Seventh Birthday Miss Caroline Sprague enter- tained a few of her friends Fri- day afternoon to celebrate her seventh birthday. Mrs. Ina Seath spent Wednes- day with Mrs. Mragaret Coulter at Walton. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Finkle at- tended a picnic for the Letch- worth village patients at Beers- |ton Wednesday. Miss Patty Reynolds of Frank- lin is visiting Mrs. Carrie Fenton. Mr. and Mrs. Ed VanDuesen of Walton were callers in town Thursday. Miss Betty Lou McGonigal of Glen Cove, L. I., spent the week- end with her parents. Miss Aloha VerNoy of Downs- viUe is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Perouix. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Maxwell and family of New York city spent the weekend at their home here. Mr. and Mrs. Minkkiner of Brooklyn are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Perouix. Mrs. Peter Stoop of Cabin Hill or Rev. C. B. Reed, DD, will oc- cupy the pulpit in the First Pres- byterian church on Simday, Aug. 9. Mr. and Mrs. Snow of A rk^sas have moved into the tenant Ijiouse on the Robert Conklin property. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Finkle left the past week for Miami, Fla. Gleason Tiffany of Hamden was a caller in town Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bacon Jr. of Springfield, Mass., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bacon. Eddie Bacon Entertains Eddie Bacon entertained a num- ber of little friends Saturday aft- ernoon in honor of his sixth birth-- day. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kratz and daughter, Donna, of Schenectady and Mrs. Nathan Kratz or Iowa were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Liddle. Today the wild yell is gone, the brooks and the streams are soft and muted. Beneath a blazing sun or in the quiet of a cool forest, the waters move languidly. Close by, a hiker or a thrush can heiu- a 4)Ieasant-«urgJe. ------ --- - I UNION GROVE By Mrs. Ivan Miller Union Grove, N. Y., Aug. 4 Mrs. Ora Playford of Delmar is at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. V. DuMond caring for Mrs. DuMond, who has been ill for some time. Dr. and Mrs. Sidney J, Levinson <of the Bronx-spent a few days a t * IHi Acres with Mr. and Mrs. Beneath willow or spotted alder- Kaufman. lined banks trout lie facing the current. Where there are ripples deer comes down mountain to drink or a robin enjoys a summer bath to work the water through her feathers. « » * When a brook runs through the forest there is a pictiu^ in places where the sun’s shafts slant through green leaves and reflect jewel glints in the clear stream. * A muskrat may swim in the pools *with a mouthful of green for a SEilad lunch, a red squirrel uses the covered bridge of limbs alcove, a kingfisher, alert for food, rattles rapidly up stream then alights on a dead limb to observe his meal in the clear brook below. * * Through hot days and moist star-bright nights, a thousand streams in the forests of the Cats- kills, take their rise and start a slow summer journey to the sea. Yours truly, The Mountaineer Last Saturday night an eight- point buck was killed on the flat above the Hardenburgh town storehouse in Dry Brook. Those who have been traveling the val- ley in the evening feel they have lost a friend, as this beautiful animal came nightly to feed and IF Huckleberry Brook By Mrs. Edwin Gavett Huckleberry Brook, N. Y., Aug. 4 Mr. and Mrs. George Straub and family of New Hyde Papk are spending a few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Maender. ___ Mrs. E. A. Pangman play not'far from* the road^ MUford were luncheon guests dents of Dry Brook, good sports- home of their son-in-law men themselves, are peirticularly i daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- incensed that someone would n o t'^ * ’ Thursday. ITieir only jack the deer but leave it to i“^ughtere, Mary and Kay, re- spoil. Deer jacking is one of the worst crimes committed against the wildlife, not for the deer which are killed sind taken home by the illegal operator, but for those who are shot and escape to die later. Any deer himter knows that aside from a head or neck shot, if the bullet drops through the heart or, , . lungs deer sometimes travel doz-i^^*^® reside ens of rods before dropping. Shot turned home with them. Mrs. Floyd Decker is in Mar- garetviUe hospital for observation. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Earing of Oneonta spent Sunday with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Gavett. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Franks and children are spending some time with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Franks. They are again in Mrs. David Williams and daugh- ter, Lois Brooks, and granddaugh- ter, Jean Brooks, of Arkville were Thursday caUers among friends here. Mr. and Mrs. John McDonald of Lew Beach visited Mrs. Velie Du- Mond on Friday. Mrs. Joseph J. Haviland visited Mr. and Mrs. E. A. VanKeuren at Sidney Center Friday after- noon. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rosetti and children spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Charlton, at Roscoe. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan MUler and children attended the Eden re- union held on Sunday in Tread- well at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Kennedy. Mr. and Mrs. Fred S. Levinson, son-in-law and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kaufman, who have just returned from Switzerland, are at Hi Acres. ' Mr. and Mrs. Don Bradt and daughter of Albany spent Sun- day with Mr. and Mrs. Warren Weaver. Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Leiby of Ithaca spent Tuesday visiting friends at Union Grove euid Fleischmanns. Mrs. Leiby is the former Frances Hitt. Little Michael Weaver of Beach HUl spent the weekend with Vera Weaver. Mrs. William Card entertained her brother arid family of Brook- lyn Wednesday afternoon. Weaver Hearing Held The heeiring on the Weaver property was held Thursday at the BWS rooms in Margaretville. through the stomach or intes- tines, they will travel miles. Their vitality is amazing. * The deer jacker shines the head- lights of his car or beam of a powerful simtlight on the animal, which often stands still or even moves towards the light. The sights of his gun do not show up as well as in the daylight therby handicaping even the best of marksmen and greatly reducing his chances of a killing shot. More than half the deer shot in this mianner escape the hunter, who dares not follow th ^ . A doe and twin fawns, victims of a jacker, were found dead in a space of a hundred yards a few years ago. Killing of does at this time Dr. and Mrs. Bagdasseroff are having then- newly purchased summer home repaired and re- modeled. They plan to be able to occupy it soon. Lowell Signor Appointed Constable for Middletown Lowell A. Signer wsls appointed constable for the Town of Middle- town by the Town Board at its August meetmg Tuesday. The board has edso recently appointed Robert Holliday and Walter Odell as constables. Among routine business trans- acted by the board was a resolu- tion authorizing the purchase and installation of a chlorinator for the well in the Arkyille water system. Marion’s Plumbing Shop Now Ready to FURNISH INSTALL SERVICE REPAIR Your Plumbing and Heating Equipment See.us for free estimates, or drop in to get acqn^ted. MARION’S PLUMBING SHOP MARION MORSE, Prop. Main Street by Whitney’s Garage Blargaretvnie, N. Y. . GIRARD BRAND, SHORT SHANK, 4 TO 6 LBS. Cooked Pixies HONEY GEE, SKINLESS Customers* Comer How to be Calm, Cool . . • ond Collect Savings! Sort of dreading preparations for the week-end? Taice it easy . . . come siiop ot A&P! You'll find over 3,000 different Itenns to choose from ... all under one roof . . . all conveniently dispJayed . . . all priced to save you money, too! A&P's pleasant one-stop shopping w ill help you get in a relaxed mood! Come' see . . . come save ... at A&P! Customer Relations Department A&P Food Stores 420 Lexington Ave., New York 17, N. Y. frainkfurters Lebanon Bologna Sliced Dried Beef Lb. Lb. Pkg. 5 3 c 4 7 c STORE SLICED Lb. 53c 35c JANE PARKER White Bread % COLD STREAM, ALASKA Pink Salmon 2<s.27c BING CHERRIES LARGE SWEET JUICY Lb. 35c grapes White PEARS Calif. 23c 2 25c r.RFRN BEANS 2 19c PEACHES 3*’’"25c JUICY LEMONS, large Calif. . . . . . doz. 39c CUCUMBERS 3 14c NEW ONIONS BLUEBERRIES ORANGES FROZEN FOOD VALVES! 3 lOc Do*. 2 9 c FRYERS IT STRAWBERRIES $1-29 Lb. e BIRDS Lb. * EYE Pk*. BIRDS 9 8-oz. EYE £ Pkgs. BIRDS 10-oz. 6 3 c 99c 750 pk*. PiaSWEET PEAS FORDHOOK LIMAS STEAKS PERCH FILLETS 2 35c Pict- Sweet Kramer’s Beef or Ve»l Cap’n’ Johr« Pkgs. 'Jsr- 2T« S ' 55« U?39« B&W FROZEN O R A N G E JU IC E 6-oz. cons SNOW CROP . . . FROZEN G R A P E JU IC E C-0%. 39c Nutrition— Packed Flavor Favorites . . . Our Famous Ched> dar Cheese . . . Together with CrUp, Fresh Crackers . . . A Delightful Tasty Treat! .FRESH CHEDDAR M iU Cheese CHEDDAR Al ______ MEDIUM vllGGS6 SHARP CHEDOAR Sharp Cheese NABISCO “ 53c 59c ■‘ (^c lb. 'pkg. ‘ 27c JANE PARIOER DONUTS Dozeo PLAIN, SUGAR or CINNAMON H e in z CUCUMBER PICKLES Pint 2 3 c B ab -o ■W CLEANSER m 2®*"*25® B u rn e tt's INSTANT PUDDINGS 2 25c W esso n D ll FOR SALADS or COOKING 3 9 c Si. 71c pt. Bot. R a n g e r J o e WHEAT HONNIES 6-oz. pkg. RICE HONNIES 16c 16c G o o d L uck OLEOMARGARINE QUARTERS SOLIDS 2 "-570 2 '‘‘ S3* NUTLEY OLEO SUPER COOLA MOTT’S JELLY Mar- garine GINGER ALE or ROOT BEER ASSORTED FLAVORS 2 39c 3 2Sc 2 JL" .; 25c CANNED GOODS ^ALE A & P S lic e d B e e ts C a m p b e ll's B e a n s B a x te r's W h o le P o ta to e s Io n a C u t G re e n B e a n s A & P S a u e rk ra u t D ew co R e d K id n e y B e a n s S p a g h e tti Io n a S w e e t P e a s 2 IS-es. cans 25« 2 16-os. cans 2 5 c 2 20-os. cans 25« } 15</2-os. cans 250 2 19-os. cans 250 2 16-oz. cans 250 1 15V2-0*. cans 250 2 16-oz. cans 250 ' LIGHT MEAT (Chunk Style) ‘i r 35« CHICKEN OF THE SEA T U N A FISH PLANTERS Peanut O il b'^.42c qh bottle 83c PLANTERS Peanut Butter 11-ox. jar 35c IDEAL Dog Food i 1 1-lb. i eons 43c 3 LITTLE KITTENS Cat Food 2 15-ex. can* 25c PETER PAN i Peanut Butter 12-ox. i«r 39c S N O W ’S M inced Clans IW -ox. can 27c S N O W ’S C lamChowder 15-ox. can 25c MY-T-FINE Desserts p " J 1 pkgs- 25c Junket WHITE MEAT (Chunk Style) 6V2-OX. jgg Rennet Rennet Sherbet Tablets Powder Mix Pkg. I2c Pkg. lOc Pkg. I5c MHMOIt MOD M riut...SM C I IU» can Prices In This Ad Effective Through Saturday, August 8, in All A&P Super Markets in Margaretville and Vicinity m Mwr MiMme « niaiK iM coMMMr G ib b s WAX BEANS or 8-ox. 4 A a SLICED BEETS can ■ U * SPINACH 2 ‘^ * : ; 1 9 c P a lm o liv e SOAP 3 2 2 c O c ta g o n TOILET SOAP 4 j9 o S u n sh in e KRISPY CRACKERS i:-2 7 c N ib le ts C o rn WHOLE KERNEL 2 " r 3 7 c W ise POTATO CHIPS . 3 1 c P a lm o liv e SOAP S I lO o C a sh m e re BOUQUET SOAP 2 It. 21c X -P e rt CAKE MIXES White, Gold I4.QK. or ChocoUte - ZSO Chltton pkg* G re e n G ia h f CORN CREAM O <7-01. STYLE C O 0 '» K irk m a n FLAKES 2 r 550 O c ta g o n ^ CLEANSER ‘2 ’L T 19c V el . MARVELOUS SUDS 2 ;S !5 9 c ^ :7 Q o F a b FABULOUS SUDS 2 5 s 5 9 c 5i";70c S u p e r S u d s FOR WAITER WASHES 2 p '2 !5 5 c 5 - 6 5 0

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i

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i

£ « e rc d a* Second CUa* U atter ia d » Port Office a t UargaietTiUe, N. Y,

PU BLISH ED EVERY FRIDAY

C LA SEE A. SANFORD & SON Pnblidiert

BO W LA N b G. H IL L , Editor

SabKriptiona $3 per year, none accepted tor leaa than one jrear, strictly in adraace.

W e reserre the right to reject any copy, rither advertising or news.

An subscriptions discontinued at ex- Qiration of time for which ordered.

O i l k

MOUNTAIN DEW“End Speed Zone” signs have

been erected by the sta te on the main roads leading out of Mar- garetviUe'. Most drivers are al­ready going over the 25-mph limit when they come to the end of the speed zone.

There are thousands and thous­ands of sparkling pictures these clear August mornings as the sun sta rts its daily journey across washed-blue sky.

• • •Dew gathers in the mountains

and in the valleys. There are hot- region climates where the morn­ing dew is sufficient to take the place of rain.

• • •Down the centuries man has

used the word dew as a symbol of freshness and purity. There are references to dew in the Bible —^meaning blessed by good. Shakespeare wrote of the “Golden dew of sleep.” Many folks talk about dew falling.

• • •This is not correct. The gleam­

ing drops of liquid on spider webs, on strawberry and clover leaves, or spaced alm g a blade of grass —this liquid which gleams in the sun’s ejirly rays is condensed from the air.

* • •At dusk half of the earth turns

away from the sun. Then the plants lose the heat gathered ii\ the day. TTiey become cool. Re­sponding to a fundamental law (the same as drops on cold w ater pipes a hot summer day) moisture in the air gathers on cooling ob­jects.

* • *Each small drop is a m irror in

the morning sunshine—the images upside down. Examine a drop th ro u ^ a hand lens and you _v?ill see. n e i^ y tr e ^ 'b r B white d o ^ in the blue sky.

Many of summer’s most appeal­ing pictures are made by dew. A straw berry or clover leaf has. a drop on each of the many points, a spider web is a flashing jewel, a long blade of grass has a large drop a t the tip and small drops spaced along the sides.

/ • • •Dew is heavier in the lowlands

than on the hilltops because the a ir is cooler in .the lowlands than on the mountains. Some morn­ings in August are misty because the increasing warmth causes moisture to rise.

• • • ^I have been told that “dew”

is the most beautiful word in the English language. I t is derived from the old Anglo-Saxon “deaw.' Dew is an im portant part of the great plan which governs plant life on this earth. Moisture hastens the return of organic m at­te r to humus.

« • •Go out a t d a w one of these

mornings and see the thousands of beautiful pictures psiinted dur­ing the hours of dark.

Conservation officials and state police are burning the candle a t both ends in an effort to control the outlaw. But while they are waiting in one location, the out­law is operating in another. Public cooperation with law enformement officials is increasing. More people are realizing efficient law enforcement is impossible with­out it. Fewer are dismissing the Crime with the excuse that the violator is poor and needs the meat. Good sportsmen every­where understand that the deer jacker is an inhuman sneak thief without justification for his crime.

Sirus, the Dog star, rules the heavens as August hovers over the Catskills. This is the season when rivers and creeks move slowly and quietly along their windiig paths.

• * •Streams are bom in many

places. In the Catskills they have their s ta rt in clear cold springs which bubble from underneath great rocks on a mpuntainside often far up.

* • •Millions of years ago when great

travail heaved the continents about, Uquified rock materials were put down layer upon layer. F ar below the surface of the earth, veins ^of never failing w ater seep through the soil and flow along between the layers. They sometimes find a crack. I t may be high on the mountain.

• * •There are cold springs in slop­

ing pastures, in evergreen wood­lands, in low-lying swamps, in the very bottom of the rivers and in the bottom of occasional moun­tain lakes. Sprmgs had much to do with the location of homes and communities in pioneer days. A farm today with an “everliving” spring is worth more than one without. W ater is a great farm necessity.

• • *Springs make Uttle rivulets,

rivulets join a t the end of tiny ravines to form spring brooks. 'The brooks unite a t the ends of larger ravines or hollows to fol­low their destiny to 'a distant sea.

♦ • »In March and April rains and

melted snow swell the streams, small and large, make water bub­ble from the ground, for a short time like a spring, send this vol­ume down the valleys in a seeth­ing boiling flood of wild waters. There is a high pitched yell of destruction as they rush down the valleys.

By Mrs. EUen VanSteenbnrg

Shavertown, N. Y., Aug. 4Mr. and Mrs. George Grupe and

daughter of Hoboken, N. J., spent a couple of. days with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Liddle and other friends in town.

Miss Robert Ebert of Dry Brook spent the past week with Gloria VanSteenburg.

Celebrated Seventh BirthdayMiss Caroline Sprague enter­

tained a few of her friends Fri­day afternoon to celebrate her seventh birthday.

Mrs. Ina Seath spent Wednes­day with Mrs. M ragaret Coulter a t Walton.

Mr. and Mrs. Ed Finkle a t­tended a picnic for the Letch- worth village patients a t Beers-

|ton Wednesday.Miss Patty Reynolds of Frank­

lin is visiting Mrs. Carrie Fenton.Mr. and Mrs. Ed VanDuesen

of Walton were callers in town Thursday.

Miss Betty Lou McGonigal of Glen Cove, L. I., spent the week­end with her parents.

Miss Aloha VerNoy of Downs- viUe is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Perouix.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Maxwell and family of New York city spent the weekend a t their home here.

Mr. and Mrs. Minkkiner of Brooklyn are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Perouix.

Mrs. Peter Stoop of Cabin Hill or Rev. C. B. Reed, DD, will oc­cupy the pulpit in the F irst Pres­byterian church on Simday, Aug. 9.

Mr. and Mrs. Snow of A rk ^sas have moved into the tenant Ijiouse on the Robert Conklin property.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Finkle left the past week for Miami, Fla.

Gleason Tiffany of Hamden was a caller in town Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bacon Jr. of Springfield, Mass., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bacon.

Eddie Bacon EntertainsEddie Bacon entertained a num­

ber of little friends Saturday aft­ernoon in honor of his sixth birth-- day.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kratz and daughter, Donna, of Schenectady and Mrs. Nathan Kratz or Iowa were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Liddle.

Today the wild yell is gone, the brooks and the stream s are soft and muted. Beneath a blazing sun or in the quiet of a cool forest, the w aters move languidly. Close by, a hiker or a thrush can heiu- a 4) I e a s a n t- « u rg J e .------ --- -

I UNION GROVE

By Mrs. Ivan Miller

Union Grove, N. Y., Aug. 4 Mrs. Ora Playford of Delmar is

a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. V. DuMond caring for Mrs. DuMond, who has been ill for some time.

Dr. and Mrs. Sidney J, Levinson <of the Bronx-spent a few days a t

• • * IHi Acres with Mr. and Mrs.Beneath willow or spotted alder- Kaufman.

lined banks trout lie facing the current. Where there are ripples

deer comes down mountain to drink or a robin enjoys a summer bath to work the w ater through her feathers.

« » *When a brook runs through the

forest there is a pictiu^ in places where the sun’s shafts slant through green leaves and reflect jewel glints in the clear stream.

• * •A muskrat may swim in the

pools *with a mouthful of green for a SEilad lunch, a red squirrel uses the covered bridge of limbs alcove, a kingfisher, alert for food, rattles rapidly up stream then alights on a dead limb to observe his meal in the clear brook below.

* * •Through hot days and moist

star-bright nights, a thousand streams in the forests of the Cats­kills, take their rise and sta rt a slow summer journey to the sea.

Yours truly,The Mountaineer

Last Saturday night an eight- point buck was killed on the fla t above the Hardenburgh town storehouse in Dry Brook. Those who have been traveling the val­ley in the evening feel they have lost a friend, as this beautiful animal came nightly to feed and

IF Huckleberry BrookBy Mrs. Edwin Gavett

Huckleberry Brook, N. Y., Aug. 4 Mr. and Mrs. George Straub

and family of New Hyde Papk are spending a few days a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Maender.

___ ™ Mrs. E. A. Pangmanplay n o t'fa r from* the road^ MUford were luncheon guestsdents of Dry Brook, good sports- home of their son-in-lawmen themselves, are peirticularly i daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- incensed th a t someone would n o t'^ * ’ Thursday. ITieironly jack the deer but leave it to i “^ughtere, Mary and Kay, re­spoil.

Deer jacking is one of the worst crimes committed against the wildlife, not for the deer which are killed sind taken home by the illegal operator, but for those who are shot and escape to die later.Any deer him ter knows tha t aside from a head or neck shot, if the bullet drops through the heart o r, , . lungs deer sometimes travel d o z -i^ ^ * ^ ® reside ens of rods before dropping. Shot

turned home with them.Mrs. Floyd Decker is in Mar-

garetviUe hospital for observation.Mr. and Mrs. Robert Earing of

Oneonta spent Sunday with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Gavett.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Franks and children are spending some time with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H arry Franks. They are

again in

Mrs. David Williams and daugh­ter, Lois Brooks, and granddaugh­ter, Jean Brooks, of Arkville were Thursday caUers among friends here.

Mr. and Mrs. John McDonald of Lew Beach visited Mrs. Velie Du­Mond on Friday.

Mrs. Joseph J. Haviland visited Mr. and Mrs. E. A. VanKeuren a t Sidney Center Friday after­noon.

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rosetti and children spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil­liam Charlton, a t Roscoe.

Mr. and Mrs. Ivan MUler and children attended the Eden re­union held on Sunday in Tread­well a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Kennedy.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred S. Levinson, son-in-law and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kaufman, who have just returned from Switzerland, are a t Hi Acres. '

Mr. and Mrs. Don B radt and daughter of Albany spent Sun­day with Mr. and Mrs. W arren Weaver.

Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Leiby of Ithaca spent Tuesday visiting friends a t Union Grove euid Fleischmanns. Mrs. Leiby is the former Frances Hitt.

L ittle Michael Weaver of Beach HUl spent the weekend with Vera Weaver.

Mrs. William Card entertained her brother arid family of Brook­lyn Wednesday afternoon.

Weaver Hearing HeldThe heeiring on the Weaver

property was held Thursday at the BWS rooms in Margaretville.

through the stomach or intes­tines, they will travel miles. Their vitality is amazing.

• * •The deer jacker shines the head­

lights of his car or beam of a powerful simtlight on the animal, which often stands still or even moves towards the light. The sights of his gun do not show up as well as in the daylight therby handicaping even the best of marksmen and greatly reducing his chances of a killing shot. More than half the deer shot in this mianner escape the hunter, who dares not follow t h ^ . A doe and twin fawns, victims of a jacker, were found dead in a space of a hundred yards a few years ago. Killing of does a t this time

Dr. and Mrs. Bagdasseroff are having then- newly purchased summer home repaired and re­modeled. They plan to be able to occupy it soon.

Lowell Signor Appointed Constable for Middletown

Lowell A. Signer wsls appointed constable for the Town of Middle­town by the Town Board a t its August meetmg Tuesday. The board has edso recently appointed Robert Holliday and W alter Odell as constables.

Among routine business trans­acted by the board was a resolu­tion authorizing the purchase and installation of a chlorinator for the well in the Arkyille water system.

Marion’s Plumbing Shop

Now Ready to FURNISH INSTALL SERVICE REPAIR

Your Plumbing and Heating Equipment

See.us for free estimates, or drop in to get a c q n ^ te d .

MARION’S PLUMBING SHOPMARION MORSE, Prop.

Main S treet by Whitney’s Garage

Blargaretvnie, N. Y. .

GIRARD BRAND, SHORT SHANK, 4 TO 6 LBS.

Cooked PixiesHONEY GEE, SKINLESS

C u s to m e r s * C o m e r

How to be Calm, Cool . . • ond Collect Savings!

S o r t o f d r e a d i n g p r e p a r a t i o n s f o r t h e

w e e k - e n d ? T a ic e i t e a s y . . . c o m e s i i o p o t A & P !

Y o u 'l l f i n d o v e r 3 , 0 0 0 d i f f e r e n t I te n n s t o c h o o s e f r o m . . . a l l u n d e r o n e r o o f . . . a l l c o n v e n i e n t l y d i s p J a y e d . . . a l l p r i c e d t o s a v e y o u m o n e y , t o o !

A & P 's p l e a s a n t o n e - s t o p s h o p p in g w ill h e l p y o u g e t in a r e l a x e d m o o d ! C o m e ' s e e . . . c o m e s a v e . . . a t A & P !

Customer Relations DepartmentA & P F o o d S to r e s

4 2 0 L e x i n g to n A v e . , N e w Y o r k 1 7 , N . Y .

frainkfurtersLebanon Bologna Sliced Dried Beef

Lb.

Lb.Pkg.

5 3 c

4 7 cSTORESLICED Lb. 53c

35c

JANE PARKER

White Bread%

COLD STREAM, ALASKA

Pink Salmon

2 < s .2 7 c

BING CHERRIESL A R G ES W E E TJ U I C Y

Lb. 35cg r a p e s White

PEARS Calif.

23c 2 25c

r.RFRN BEANS 2 19c PEACHES 3*’’"25c

JUICY LEMONS, large Calif. . . . . . doz. 39c CUCUMBERS 3 14c NEW ONIONS BLUEBERRIES ORANGES

F R O Z E N F O O D V A L V E S !

3 lOcDo*. 2 9 c

FRYERS I T

STRAWBERRIES

$1-29 Lb.

e BIRDS Lb.* EYE Pk*.

BIRDS 9 8 -o z.EYE £ Pkgs.

BIRDS 10 -o z.

6 3 c

9 9 c

750

pk*.

PiaSWEET PEAS

FORDHOOK LIMAS

STEAKS

PERCH FILLETS

2 35cPict-

SweetKramer’s

Beef or Ve»lCap’n’Johr«

Pkgs.

' J s r - 2 T «

S ' 5 5 «

U ? 3 9 «

B&W FROZEN

O R A N G E J U I C E

6-oz. cons

S N O W C R O P . . . F R O Z E N

G R A P E J U I C E

C-0%. 39c

N utrition— Packed Flavor Favorites . . . Our Famous Ched>

dar Cheese . . . T ogether w ith CrUp, Fresh Crackers . . . A Delightful Tasty T reat!

.FRESH CHEDDAR

MiU CheeseCHEDDAR

A l ______ MEDIUMvllGGS6 SHARP

CHEDOAR

Sharp CheeseNABISCO

“ 53c 59c

■‘ ( ^ c

lb.'p k g .‘ 27c

JANE PARIOER

DONUTSDozeo

PLAIN, SUGAR o r CINNAM ON

H e i n z

C U C U M B E R P IC K L E S

Pint 2 3 c

B a b - o

■W C L E A N S E R m

2 ® * " * 2 5 ®

B u r n e t t ' s

I N S T A N T P U D D I N G S

2 2 5 c

W e s s o n D l l

F O R S A L A D S o r C O O K IN G

3 9 c S i . 7 1 cpt.

Bot.

R a n g e r J o e

WHEATHONNIES

6 -o z. pkg.

RICEHONNIES

1 6 c 1 6 c

G o o d L u c k

O L E O M A R G A R IN E

QUARTERS SOLIDS

2 " -5 7 0 2 '‘‘ S3*

NUTLEY OLEO SUPER COOLA MOTT’S JELLY

Mar­garineGINGER ALE

or ROOT BEER

ASSORTED FLAVORS

2 39c3 2Sc2 JL".; 25c

C A N N E D G O O D S ^ A L E

A & P S l i c e d B e e t s

C a m p b e l l ' s B e a n s

B a x t e r ' s W h o l e P o t a t o e s

I o n a C u t G r e e n B e a n s

A & P S a u e r k r a u t

D e w c o R e d K i d n e y B e a n s

S p a g h e t t i

I o n a S w e e t P e a s

2IS-es.cans 2 5 «

216-os.cans 2 5 c

220-os.cans 2 5 «

} 15</2-os. ■ cans 2 5 0

219-os.cans 2 5 0

216-oz.cans 2 5 0

1 15V2-0*.■ cans 2 5 0

216-oz.cans 2 5 0

' LIGHT MEAT (Chunk Style)

‘ i r 3 5 «

CHICKEN OF THE SEAT U N A

F I S H

PLANTERS

Peanut Oil b'̂ .42c q h

b o t t l e 83cPLANTERS

Peanut Butter 1 1 - o x .

j a r 35cIDEAL

Dog Food i1 1 - lb .

i e o n s 43c3 LITTLE KITTENS

Cat Food 2 1 5 - e x .

c a n * 25cPETER PAN i

Peanut Butter 1 2 - o x .

i « r 39cSNOW ’S

Minced Clans I W - o x .c a n 27c

SNOW ’S

Clam Chowder 1 5 - o x .

c a n 25cM Y-T-FINE

Desserts p " J 1 p k g s - 25cJunket

WHITE MEAT (Chunk Style)

6V2-OX. j g g

R ennet Rennet Sherbet Tablets Powder Mix

Pkg. I2 c Pkg. lOc Pkg. I5 c

MHMOIt MOD M r iu t .. .S M C I IU »

can

Prices In This Ad Effective Through Saturday, August 8, in All A&P Super M arkets in M argaretville and Vicinity m Mwr MiMme « niaiK iM coMMMr

G i b b s

W AX BEANS or 8 -ox . 4 A a SLICED BEETS can ■ U *

S P I N A C H 2 ‘^ * : ; 1 9 c

P a l m o l i v e

S O A P

3 2 2 c

O c t a g o n

T O IL E T S O A P

4 j 9 o

S u n s h i n e

K R IS P Y C R A C K E R S

i : - 2 7 c

N i b l e t s C o r n

W H O L E K E R N E L

2 " r 3 7 c

W i s e

P O T A T O C H I P S

. 3 1 c

P a l m o l i v e

S O A P

S I l O o

C a s h m e r e

B O U Q U E T S O A P

2 I t . 2 1 c

X - P e r t

C A K E M IX E S

White, Gold I4.QK. or ChocoUte - Z S O

Chltton pkg*

G r e e n G i a h f

C O R N

CREAM O <7-01.STYLE C O 0 ' »

K i r k m a n

F L A K E S

2 r 5 5 0

O c t a g o n

^ C L E A N S E R

‘ 2 ’L T 1 9 c

V e l .

M A R V E L O U S S U D S

2 ; S ! 5 9 c ^ : 7 Q o

F a b

F A B U L O U S S U D S

2 5 s 5 9 c 5 i " ; 7 0 c

S u p e r S u d s

F O R W A I T E R W A S H E S

2 p ' 2 ! 5 5 c 5 - 6 5 0