Post on 26-Aug-2019
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CATSKHJ. MOUNTAIN NEWS
Hie Gstsldfl Mountain News boughs and raises a pressure of50 pounds per inch a few feet above the ground, it works best when there are freezing nights and a sap kind of west wind blows by day, or when a storm is on the way. A sap bush is an excellent barometer to him who has learned to read it. There is no pointer and no graduated scale.
* * *I never had a purity test made
of sap. But it is my thought it would show m <^ pure than a mountain spring W a brook babbling in the valley below the sap bush.
MargaretviUe, N. Y.. Friday. March 9. 1956
Tdepkone 9 3 1
PU BLISH ED EVERY FSIDA Y
CLARKE A . SANFORD U arstntT iU e, N. Y.
ROSW ELL R. SANFORD l l a r c a r e tT in e . N. Y.
CLARKE A SANFORD PnbUiher
ROSW ELL R. SANFORD BostacM Msoaser
ROWLAND G. H IL L . Editor Snbtcription* $3 per year, none sccepted
t o r ICM one year, itiic tly is sdTUce.We rraerre the right to reject u y copy,
« th c r xhrertitias or newt.All tubccriptions diKoatiniud a t ex*
ybmtioa of fime (or which ordered.
MOUNTAIN DEWA small bear cub is wandering
about in Rider hollow. The little bear is about the size of a amall dog, looks healthy and well fed. The bear may securf part of his food from a dead doe found in that vicinity. The appearance of the doe indicates its legs were skinned and injured by cutting through the hard crust.
Reminiscing on Wednesday of this week, Harry Eckert of the MargaretviUe hospitsil staff, said, “I came to MargaretviUe 50 years ago today from the New Jersey Central to work for the D&N.”
"Already in the office were Dan Todd, Harry MiUer and James J. Welch. They had come to the job in the order named. The several sections of the raUroad, which had been under construction, were tied together a short time previous. The road was already operating from Arkville to East Branch.”
* » »He recalls that Dan Todd and
Harry MiUer were paymasters. On pay day they hired a horse and buggy from the Uvery stable and took the money down the line. It had been sent here in envelopes the day previous from New York. Each man was equipped with two loaded revolvers. They never had opportunity to use them on anything larger than a woodchudc. niis, after the money had been paid out.
Another sap mystery is. “How do the tiny tendrils pick up maple sugar far below the surface?” A beech tree has sap later in the season, but it is sour and unpleasant to the taste.
• * ♦There must be a factory some
where in that great tree. The sweet cannot come from a thousand or a million tiny root tendrils. Some of the factories, in the trees, make richer sap than the others.
* * *In the great echoes of the past,
the maple trees probably Uved mUlions of years before a wandering human tasted the sweet juice from a broken limb and for many more yetirs before he applied fire to take out the water and leave the sweet.
* * *I have in mind the picture of a
sap bush, the trees reach up into the sky, they are large in girth, they are hung with several buckets each, the ground froze the night before, there is a west wind, the sap begins to run, the buckets fUl. * * *
Comes the farmer with tractor. He hitches to a gathering tank and draws it through the snow from tree to tree emptying buckets of clear, cold, sweet sap. Back at the sap house the fluid goes into a great tank and from there into an evaporator. A roaring wood fire is built and before
jlong arises a sweet fog, once smeUed wiU never be forgotten.
* * *When there is a "big” run the
outfit has to be tended all night. The hot ashes make an exceUent place to bake potatoes, the boiling sap to cook eggs. The gathering has been exercise enough to make appetites. One who never boUed sap all night in a forest camp has missed one of the world’s pleais- ures.
Yours truly,The Mountaineer
Saturday weis the first day of Spring!
The sap ran, snow water ran in rivulets where it had not run since last year. False springs bubbled up in the fields, tiny lakes in the meadows were formed by melting snow, jagged dirty ice hung along the sides of the brooks.
* * *It was not so much Spring in
nature as it was in the minds of men. A gentle, warm sun, a soft southern breeze, that was aU. There was no robins, no bluebirds, no pussy willows, no taking off overcoats.
* * *Early Spring is a gentle, gentle
thing. It is here but it isn’t, one can smell it, but he can’t. A slight change of wind, a small drop of the mercury, it would be gone.
• » *There wiU be more cold days.
There will be warmer ones and birds and bees and pussy w^ows and all the rest. I t will be delightful. But never, this season, can again come the first day of Spring.
* * »Ski conditions wiU change to
trout jumping, siiow wiU disappear as though stolen in the night, overcoats will hang on hooks, highways will have soft holes, great flocks wiU fly north, home folks wiU return from Florida, blue jays wiU go out of style, buds will sweU, a farmer wiU figure on which field is dry enough to sow oats.
• * *But not again in 1956 wiU re
appear the magic first day.
When drops of sap from spring’s first tapping go ping, splash, splotch in the bottom of a new bucket, another sugar season has started, about the most romantic of all farm chores, albeit there is considerable work.
* • •Why does the sap run up the
maples in the spring? A scientist says it is the capillary attraction of the mUlions of hair-sized roots which the tree sends into the ground.
I found the foUowing defini- nition of capiUary attraction, “a small tube in which a liquid wiU climb up on account of the action of surface tension, being greater than that of gravity.”
• » *That sounds like something. But
I rise to inquire, why does the sap stop rising after a few weeks? The tiny roots are there aU summer. Looks to me they might make pressure enough, on a hot summer day, to explode the tree.
• * *Whatever the pump which
sends the sweet fluid to the top
Dr. Matthew Powell Gives Free Polio Shots
Dr. Matthew PoweU, a graduate of MargaretviUe central school, was featured in a New York Post editorial by coliramist Murray Kempton on Tuesday of last week. Dr. PoweU was involved in a difference of opinion with the Mercer County Medical society over the free administration of Salk vaccine shots to the school chuldren of Princeton township.
The county group refused to sanction the polio shots on the ground that the TSTew Jersey State Medical society was opposed to cooperating with free medical clinics for anyone but indigent patients. According to Kempton, PoweU administered shots to 257 Princeton township school children lis t Friday. The county group had previously said that any physician who broke formation could expect a summons before the society’s judiciary committee.
PoweU, who has not had a day off in two months because he has used his spare time serving Salk dinics where no other doctor dared raise his head, says, “Hell, no!” to any question about his sympathies with socialized medicine. “Two wrongs don’t make a right,” he continues, “and you can’t use school children as a point of argument. We’ve got to get the first shots in before June, and for God’s sake don’t tell me that’s controversial.”
Kempton added that the county medical group now hasn’t the nerve to discipline Dr. PoweU. stating, “Mercer county doctors hefd the line, and we can’t do anything about one interloper.” •
Church ServicesDeadUne Monday, 5 P. M.
The News is glad to print notes of weekly dinrch services withoat charge. The notices should reach this office not later than 5 o'clock Monday ev e n in n otherwise we cannot promise they wUl be orinted.
St. Slargaret’s Church: _Holy communion and sermon Sunday lat 9:15; church school at 10.
Fine Hill Community Church, Rev. Peter T. Ream, pastor: Sunday, March 11, Sunday school, 9:30 a. m.; evening worship, 7:30; official board meeting after service.
Fleischmanns Methodist Parish:Fleischmanns, church school at 10; morning worship at 11. Dry Brook, morning worship at 9:45. Halcott Center, church school at 10 a. m.; evening worship at 8.
Sacred Heart Church, Arkville: Masses: Sunday, M a r c h 11, Fleischmanns, 8:45; Arkville, 10; Andes, 11:30. Stations of the Cross, Friday, March 9, 8 p. m. Confessions Saturday, March 10, 4:30-5:30; 7:30-8:30.
Andes Methodist Church, announcements for- Sunday, March 11: Simday school, 10 a. m.; worship, 11 a. m. Pleasant Valley Methodist church, worship, 7:30 p. m. TTie message for that Sunday WiU be “The Gospel of God” (Galatians 4:4).
Free Methodist Ouirch, Allaben, Evangeline Keesler, pastor: Sunday school, 10 a. m.; morning worship, 11; evening service, 7:30. FMY each Monday at 7:30 p. m.
Prayer meeting Wednesday a t 7:30 p. m. .WMS meets with Mrs.
jNora German Friday at 7:30 p. m. JMS Saturday at 3 p. m.' Free Methodist CSmrch, Arkville, Rev. Elwood E. Brant, pastor:
^Rev. Paul Hosier, the district superintendent, wUl hold his quarterly meeting March 10-11. Services Saturday and Sunday evening at 7:30; Sunday school, 10; mom-
ling worship, 11. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:45.
MargaretviUe Advent Cbristian Church, Rev. C. WUUam BaUey, pastor: Sunday, Simday school, 10 a. m.; morning worship, 11; evening worship, 7:30; Youth group, 8:30 p. m. Wednesday, prayer meeting, 8 p. m.; choir rehearsal, 9 p. m Saturday, YWA meeting at the church in the aftrenoon.
OovesvOle Bible Baptist Church, Richard llait, pastor: Sunday school, 10 a. m.; moming worship, 11; evoiing service, 7:30; prayer meeting, 7:45 Wednesday, at the parsonage. Saturday, Mardi 10, at 1:45 p. m. Mrs. Richard Findi will hold a dass party at hcf home, Tuesday evening, Man* 13, a t 8, the trustees of the dhurdi will hold a business meeting at
I the parsonage.
' SlargaretvUle • New Kin(»ton ■ iMtger rutUb, Rev. John Earl jNaegele, minister: MargaretviUe, {9:30, Sunday school; 10:30 morning worship, "Neither Do I Con- donn You. ’ The Ccxnmunicants’ dass wiU meet a t the manse Thursday, March 15, after school. New Kingston; 10:45, Sunday
school; Uj moming wwship, “Neither Do I Cond^nn You.” Hie Ladies Missionary sodety wiU meet Tuesday, March 13, at 1:30 p. m. The trustees wiU meet at the home of Ralph Faulkner onWednesday, March 14, at 8 p. m.
CamKHisville Plans Old j Frank George Died Home Day July Fourth jAt Walton Saturday
Plans for CannonsviUe’s Old’ Frank M. George, 66, who was Home day, July 4,1956, are taking bom in ArkviUe Aug. 24, 1889, shape. The executive committee <iied Saturday a t his home in
- has set up the order of the day Walton foUowing a heart attack.M argwetvi^ Methodist Parish as foUows: I His funeral was held at the Lyon
Kv 8 a. m. to 11 a. m.—Registration funeral home there an Tuesday,^ t o r - ' U ^ m .,^^^aretviU e! a t the Community house, when the His body was placed in a vault sermon “The Four Dimensions”; reception committee wiU present 10 a. m., Sunday school a t Mar- everybody with a badge and a garetville; 10:30 a. m., Sunday brief history of Cannonsville as a school a t ArkviUe; 5:30 p. m., souvenir for the day.Methodist Youth Fellowship. Tues-i 11 a. m. to 12 noon—Grand ^ . M archp , umjm lenten s |^ . para depicting life in these
parts from the time of the Indians.12 to 1 p. m.—Basket lundi onbyteriah church, MargaretviUe.
Wednesday, March 14, offidal ^(Atkins) George. There
mission on education, 8 p. m., par- Brief address by present and for- *dso survive a son. Leland F. of
and wiU be interred at ClovesviUe at a later date.
'Mr. George, a carpenter, had lived in Florida, Ohio and Indiana, and in several viUages in Delaware county. He is survived by his widow, the former Beulah A. Sy- monds, of Waterbury, Conn. He was the son of David H. and Lu-
Trout Creek, and two daugfiters, Mrs. Angelo Modica of Kingston
sonage. On Palm Sunday, March mer residents.25, two weeks frcan this cc»ning 2 to 4 p. m.—Ball games.Sunday, we will observe the Sac-: Mrs. Leland Boyd is in charge and Mrs. Frank O’Brian of Accord.
of preparing a brief history of ,Given TV Set for 75th Birthday
of KeUy Corners, March 6.— A
that service are asked to contact charge of exhibitions, has re- the pastor as soon as possible. I “ *ved many interesting items— Choir practices: Margaretville, one, the personal account book Wednesiuy, 7:3Q p. m.; ArkviUe,' Benjamin Cannon, with entries IThursday, i p. m.
Dunraven Ladies Held Annual Meeting Dr. Huggins Gives Talk
The D unraven^dies Aid held At Andes Club Meetingthe annual meeting last week Wednesday evening at Kass inn. There were 39 present.
The next meeting wiU be held at the home of Mrs. Jay Conine Thursday, Mardi 15.
be- party was given to Mrs. Bertha ginidng in 1801 when the -town Trowbridge on her 75th birthday was first settled. Thursday evening, March 1, at her
home by her children. Present were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Trowbridge and sons, James and Steve, Mr. and Mrs. Gideon George, Mr.
March 6.— Dr. C. Ray-and Mrs. George Todd, Mr. and of MargaretviUe was [Mrs. Robert Hanley and chUdren,
Osena Fairt>aim, Merwin Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Mrs. Trowbridge received a TV set.
Andes Cubs Have Blue and Gold Dinner
I Members of Andes Cub Scout .Pack 38 and their parents were guests at a Blue and Gold dinner in the cafeteria of Andes central school Wednesday night, Feb. 29. At the speakers’ table were OVvot PUgrim, district commissioner; Robert Wolcott, institutional-representative, and Mrs. Wolcott, and Harold Schwenk, cutunaster.
After enjoying dinner, tastUy served against a motif of blue and gold decorations, a'brief [H^senta-
. tion ceremony^ wsa held, during ! which Cmnmissioner Pilgrim presented the foUowing awards: One- year service pins, Bobby Matthews and John Boyl; Wolf badges, Gordon Rowe, John Harvard, Janies Hisman; ^ a r badges, Jolui Am-
] merman, John Drew; gold arrows, ! John Ammerman, Calvin Ingram; silver arrows, John Boyd, John Ammerman, Harold Schwenk.
Hie evening was conduded with ,a brief committee meeting whUe !the Cubs enjoyed games in the- school gymnasiimi.
Andes,Hugginsguest speaker at the Men’s Cbm- 'Mrs. mimity club last Wednesday eve-; Shultis, ning. His topic was “How to Get Trowbridge, a Doctor in Andes.”
Andes Couple Honored 'At 50th Aimversary Party Andes, March 6.—The famUy of Mr. and Mrs. Norman L«tliam
, gave a party in their honor a t the Governor Clinton hotel in Kingston. Ninetera members were present to help them celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary.
One Maple Producer Remains on Beech Hill
Shavertown, March 5. — Uoyd- rick Butler tapped his sugar bush last week Friday. He has modern equipment which wiU produce a top quaUty product.
He is the only producer remaining on this Beech hill highway, where every farm, several years ago, produced considerable quantities of syrup, the total going into many h im d r^ of gaUons. A maple worm kiUed many trees. The Sherwood tenpin factory at Livingston Manor paid exceUent prices for maple logs. Many farmers thought best to have the immediate money and sold their maple to be made into tenpins.
Sidney Record-Enterprise Puts Subscription at $3.50
The Sidney Record-Enterprise, one of the best weeklies in this county, announced last week a rise in subscription price on account of continuing increases in the prices of everything which go into the production of a weekly newspaper.
After March 15 their subscription price wiU be $3.50 per year in Delaware county and $4 per year in outside territory. The newsstand price of the paper wiU be 10 cents per copy after March 15.
Q-T Sno-WhipFROSTING
23c
Butter KernelCORN
16 -o z . 33c
Butter KernelPEAS
2 37c
DewcoKIDNEY BEANS
2 ’i r 2 5 c
Burry'sFUDGE SHORTBREAD
; t 4 7 e
UnderwoodDEVILED HAM
33cI 2V*rO X.
Gerber'sBABY FOODS
STRAINED CHOPPEDg i , « 5 9 c 4 - 5 9 c
SunshineGOLDEN FRUIT
Cookie* 8-oz.______ Pkg. g P C
Peter PanPEANUT BUTTER
"r23c ’®i” 59c
KleenexTISSUES
pkgf. of 9 Q c of 9 7 ^?00 C w 400 C ■
Ripe Bananas F lo rida Oranges LARGE
SIZE
JUICY SEEDLESS
Grapefruit Spinach 'p'k” 13c Green Onions Red Radishes
4 £ ;2 9 cnr;.-35c
a--15c3BCHS 14c
SWEET, WESTERN
D'Anjou Pears 2 Fresh Mushrooms Sweet Potatoes 4 Fresh Green Beans
29c-4 9 c
29c19c
192 GROCERY PRICES REDUCED IN PAST 7 WEEKS! OVER 500 REDUCTIONS SINCE SEPT. 1st!
Tom atoTomato
K etcliup Paste
BROCKPORTBRAND
MADONNA or CONTADINA 6
12-oz.bot
6-oz.cans
1555
BROCKPORT BRAND
Chili SauceTuna Fish GRATED
Grapefruit Juice Keebler Saltines Crispo CookiesCikmmL aU i ANN PAGIjpagneni prbpaiox) Tomato Soup Mayonnaise Pork Sausage Silverbrook Butter
12-oz.bot. 19c2 37e 3 " r 29e
25cOLATE 9 -0 * . O C ^ HP pkg.
3 35e4 37e
S;29e t 4 9 e39e 65c
can
l-lb.print
Velveeta 45c 85cPks-
Sharp Cheddar Cheese Mild Cheddar Cheese Nabisco Cookies ^
Pk«-
‘ ^S S c
■^47e " S r 27c
BROCKPORT BRAND
Tomato SoupGreen Giant Corn V-8 Cocktail Niblets Corn Mother's Oats Hershey's Syrup Polish Pickles ' French's Mustard Del Monte Pears Sterling Salt Pancake Mix ^ Book Matches Puffin Biscuits ^ Puffin Biscuits
25c121/2-OZ. cans
2 " r 33c 37c
2 ’i- -3 3 eHEGULAR or QUICK “, C l 7 c
“r 19c t 2 5 c
6-ox. i*r
large «in
tn o cib.
pkg.
10c43c
33c2
2 25c3*;::; 29c3 29c
2 S :r3 5 c2 ’SS:49e
FROZEN FOODSA & P BRAND
Orange JuiceCHICKEN, BEEF OR TURKEY
Banquet PiesStrawberries A&P Frozen Peas A&P Fordhook Limas A&P Broccoli Spears Excelsior Fish Sticks j Turkey Dinner Grand Duchess Steaks Cap'n John ^
BAKERY TREATSJANE PARKER
Hot Cross BunsBlueberry Pie Pineapple Pie PASl Raisin Tea Ring Whole Wheat Bread
BEEPBURGERS OP BEEP STEAKS
b a n q u et
3 10- dIi
pksi>
•j:," 39coz.
pkg* pkg.
89c55c
;;r49c 99c
pkg. of 10 33c
each 4 9 c
“"•39ceach 2 9 c
“ 15c
GREAT SC07T SALE!
Scot Tissue Waldorf Tissue Cut'Rife pjwER Paper TowelsScotties TISSUES
Scotkins (Family
2 23c 3 ' 23c
2 'S .'"4 7 c 2 IX 37c * ^ i? 2 5 c
2 29c
ARMOUR'SPANTRY SHELF MEALS
Treet DHJCIOUS «
Corned Beef Chili Con Carne 27
37c27r
Mazola OilFOR SALADS, COOKING
^ .1 5GallonTin
SurfSPECIAL OFFER!
2 . ' " “ 2 p S . 4 5 c
OleomargarineMRS. FILBERTS or BLUE BONNET
(Solids) (Quarters)
2 « > . 4 7 c 2 " * * ^ 5 1 c
Karo SyrupBLUE LABEL
23c
Q-T instantFROSTING
Chocobta 5Mi-os.•r Va»Ma pkg. IO C
Woodbury . Woodbury Bon Ami Modess Feb Naptha Fels NapthaSOAP SOAP CLEANSER REGULAR
SOAP INSTANT SOAP
3 26c 2 S^25c 2 'ir2 5 c(12 pads) (48 pads)
2-'*" 77c ‘1.49 3 ““ 28c Special O Ig. CA O ffer! ^ owe
Prices in Xlil> Ad Effective Ttarongfa Saturday, M arch 10, in All A&P Soper Marlcets in H argaretville and Vicinity