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Page Two CHRONICLE-EXPRESS, PENN IfAN, N: Y\, JUNE 25, 1942 r> i . . , ^ r p i ^ •u J ?! • r If" III ■ ■ • it; 11 m V 1/ rirr-? > ip- 2Kl / T$ CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES V Minimum Rate Is Based on 5 Lines; Four Words to One Line CASH CHARGE* One Week ........................... 35c 50c Two Weeks ............ .......... 60c 90c Three Weeks ............... ..... 75c $1.20 Per Additional Week ..... 25c 40c Over 5 Lines—Cash Rate: 7c Line for 1 Week, 6c Line for 2 Weeks, 5c Line for 3 or More Weeks; if Charged* 10c, 9c, 8c per Line. ♦CASH RATES are allowed only if cash accompanies order or payment is made not later than Saturday following the first insertion. Ads ordered for two or more consecutive insertions and stopped before expiration will be charged only for actual number of insertions. If paid in advance, refund will be made. Bold face type (like this) is double price. Additional charge of 10c per week for “hlind” advertisement. By paying for a classified a year or half year in advance, a saving of over 23% is secured. Copy changes limited. Cost is $1 per line for six months. Minimum rate based on five lines. CLASSIFICATIONS Designate under which of the following classifications you want I your advertisement to appear: Found Announcements Lost Live Stock for Sale Miscellany - Sale Live Stock Wanted Miscellany - Wants Seeds, Plants, Bulbs for Sale Miscellaneous Poultry for Sale Used Autos for Sale - 'Fruits, Vegetables, Eggs for Real Estate for Rent Sale Real Estate for Sale Produce for Sale Business Services Farm Machinery, Implements Professional Services for Sale Help Wanted Chicks, Hatching Eggs and Positions Wanted Brooders for Sale Auctions Swap It Fix It Phone 123 — Page Closes 1 P. M., Wednesdays Lost Thursday, near Penn Yan postof- fice, silver ring with 3 large garnets. Reward. Phone 15-F-2. 26L1 Found Did You Ever Lose a Key?—Why not avoid that delay and cost by letting us make extra auto and Yale type keys for' you now? 20c each; 2 for 35c, while you wait. W. T. Grant store. 23L4* Female English Setter — white with orange tickings. Owner rnay have by calling for at Dr, Potter’s, Elm St., Penn Yan, and paying for ad. 26F1* V .v . x v ;,% w a » v \\ w i ■. v - v - v - v - 1- V .W .V .V .W rW .V /^ V ///. W .'A '.V //, > x < *: w,<v x- W A 'A .W M -,.\ < V A ■W w a / v . W ‘.'.*.vr.v x: :::: W A V . , v ! v a < v < w w zx . X ' x W .V . Used Autos Sale Fix It ’37 International Truck, model D-15, % to 1 ton capacity; dual > x< *y x- tires Clothing Remodeled and Repaired Make your clothes la$t longer. Nick Cecchini, Elite Tailor shop, over Baker & Stark, 108 Elm St. Phone 1594. We store furs. 26FF4* helper springs; enclosed body 6x9 ft. inside. Earl S. Cast- ner, 133 South Ave., Penn Yan. , 26C1* X, iT .v /.*w X V f.w ,:.v .> w 'A V .‘. f . W i .V AVA . ‘ ■ V . V .V A i V A / . A w .V .V •Xw .V .'.'.V A V .V .V f A V k W 1 ••Xx xx x (•i v\ y.vA v/A W ^ .:v.tf/.> y.v/ First Class Gun Repairing—Guns bought, sold, traded. Ed Wat- son, repair department. “Red” Woerner, sales dep’t. The Gun Shop, 117 State St., Rochester. 6FF26* Positions Wanted Man Wants Work of any kind. 217 Sherman St., Penn Yan. 26K1* High School Girl desires work caring for children. Phone 722 Penn Yan. 26K1 v.%% mss*™*** ....... sv* OX-y-X ; V : x- ..... *«• :- Xvox/e-. •yxK<n>y> Girl Scout Head We Thank Y |_*_X 0^ X '< < ;X -N >>P< X '.VX '. x x iy io > v- £S : / . ' i V A ' . ' / . ' A a W >. .< V .-/.V .(yA //A \ v A v .’. v . v a v v . ’.V » » VA/ V /..M -rtV iv/ t.'/.V /zA ' , 1, V . \ AVA1 .*AV,' * * * »■' ................................................................................M >#:v,\v V x V V - y V . V A W , n w X y .y /r.. A -X I x -.-.X ..e ..Z . x X X X X X X x X I I XX Ii.x.xxxxx IX x x x x . e x e e e * ,*l*X <»X vx-:«X /W ffivxv-lA xv y:<ys:oy.<‘X & r ■///< A '.'.C V A ’.-. A xV W .V M 'K Vx -««<>»;yy •x».vv X X X X X _ » “_X * X X X —_ X IX. * XX V .- Card of Thanks I wish to express my tion of flowers, use of cars brought to the home and ',!? acts of kindness, by my ^ and neighbors; also to Mrs. erine Tindall, during my m bereavement. 26wl* mmm « r m Theodore M X IS XX. y.vVXv.v I* '.'A 'A x ’ ______ k _ _ Real Estate Sale Watches Cleaned Better — Our new watch cleaning machine as- sures quicker service, a long lasting, perfect cleaning job. Schmidt’s Jewelry store, 114 Main St., Penn Yan. Phone 315. i 25FF4* Produce for Sale Attractive 7-room House in Stan - ley — electricity, newly painted, good garden. No repairs needed. $1,400. Mrs. Willis H. Austin, Geneva RD 1. 26R4* Food for Health IliF™ m XV mmrnmmmmm Elizabeth J. Nisbet Home Demonstration Agent X_l. XV XX'x’x XXX S-x? XV X.x X.x. I » S' <•/ XXX. Card of Thanks 1 We wish to express our siy appreciation of the flowers, uu cars, and many acts of MjJI extended during the illness j |death o f our wife and mother, u 1 wish to thank Rev. Erwin Berm , and also Corcoran company their services. Albert Larsen. / Mr. and Mrs. Earl K iel Mr. and Mrs. Julius L o< m Je M g1 in T T o a1 h w h a r $ I k c l l I I c ( ] ( 12 acres Alfalfa for Sale or cut on shares. Cheap. Inquire 114 Sheppard St., Penn Yan. 26PP1* Do You Want to Buy, Sell, Rent a home, a farm, or any real estate ? If so, I am always at your service. Peter G. Costes, - broker. 105 Main St. Phone 673. 16R26* Use Fruits for Dessert » • X. >23 & average Sugar rationing is not really such a problem. The American consumer used about three times as much sugar as he needed. If we must reduce our i consumption of sweets, it will xv; V : m Card of Thanks <--A m ii. vV, Y : ••X s Farm Machinery, Poultry for Sale Implements Sale Good McCormick-Deering Binder Mrs. W. G. Cooper, Penn Yan 299 Choice Hall Cross-breed Pul - lets, 14 weeks old. L. C. Kraft, Him rod road. Dundee. 26X1* 6 iDF- 4 .(TownLine road)' P 25 °s 2 :Live Stock Wanted 3-row Beet and Bean McCormick-Deering. Mothersell, Rushville of Potter). Cultivator, Sheldon (mile north 26S1* Old Horses— $6 each. Phone re- verse 12-F-21 Branchpcrt. Mink Farm. 7H26*-tf Keep the Home Front Cheerful Reupholster with bright new1 LaFrance fabrics. Slip covers made to order. Also refinishing and repairing. Open Saturday evenings. Penn Yan Furniture Co., 20 Maiden lane. Phone 346. 24FF4* Hay on Shares — 6 acres of al- falfa, 14 acres mixed. One who has tools. W. B. Foley, Penn Yan RD 1. City hill. 26PP1* Attractive Suburban Home—Walk-1 mean better digestion, fewer den- Side Delivery Rake Rasmussen, Penn Yan miles northwest of Phone 44-F-4. Herman RD 6 (3 Benton). 26S1 Good Healthy Rabbits Wanted — 0 V 2 to 9 pounds. Drop card and I will call. Charles Ayers, Stan- ley RD 2. 26H2* Replace Your Broken Windows Now — We still have a supply of glass * and can quickly put panes in place. Bring your sash in today. John J. McGovern, wall paper, paints, and window shades. 14 Main St. Phone 40-W. 22FF5* 50 Acres of Hay, 2 miles south of Milo Center, for sale or cut on shares. .Also fresh 2-year-old Jersey heifer. A. Ray Ansley. Phone 10-F-21. 26PP1* ing distance. 2 % acres land, | tal cares and clearer complexions, fruit. A better-built house with j it will be easier for those who are bath and hot water heating. Car j overweight to reduce without the Beautiful temptation of cakes, pies and sweet sauces ever before them. Closing estate. Walter E. Clark, Perhaps we should be thankful broker. Phone 224. 25R2 | for sugar rationing. m :vS- V .' Z < X ■X- x5\ Vi m barn, poultry house, lawns, shade and shrubbery. ,v x ■1 i: m .v Z <X eds' and Plants o Chicks, Hatching It will take some thought to s 100,000 Reed’s new improved Glory cabbage plants. Fred Coif, sr., Penn Yan RD 6 (Ferguson Corners). Stanley phone 16-Y-13 26N1* Brooders plan desserts without sugar. Here are some suggestions. Fruits are our most healthful source of sugar. They offer minerals and vitamins as well as sweetening. A fruit cup of oranges, grape- Baby and Started Chicks — New bunch just arrived. C. H. Cro- fruit, apples and canned peaches Mrs. Alan H. Means, of Salt Lake City, Utah, is the new na- tional president of the Girl Scouts. Elected in October, she heads the activities of nearly 760,- 000 girls and adults who make up the membership of the Girl Scout organization. I wish to express my sincere* preciation for the numerous ft pieces, cards of sympathy ^ helpful acts of my neighbors J friends at the time of my k band’s death. I wish to espeejj thank Archie M. Thayer for service, the IOOF who condui the funeral services in St. Ma?9 Episcopal church, Sunday, June assisted by Rev. A. H. Head, also had full charge of services 1:30 p. m. Monday, at Bastianpj neral home in Williamsport, Pa . 26wl* Mrs. Annie M em (All Cards of Thanks are 75e) sier & Son, 143% Seneca St., Penn Yan. Phene 330. 18Y-tf 10-20 McCormick Deering tractor. Choice of 2. 4 sets of tractor plows, Deering com binder, sev- eral used mowers, hay tedder. Howard Howell, Case dealer, Al- tay. Phone Dundee 46-F-2. 23S4* Broilers and Fowls—Highest mar- ket prices. C. H. Crosier & Son, 143% Seneca St., Penn Yan. Phone 330. 24H4 Real Estate Rent All Kinds of Cattle — Beef cattle and old bulls especially. Fat hogs and lambs. A. D. Dicker- man, Gorham. Phone Stanley ll-F-12. 12H26* Tractor Magnetos Repaired—You must get the most possible miles per gallon from your car. Let us check your carburetor, igni- tion system, generator, starter. Willard Safety-fill batteries. Wesley Turner, Maiden lane. Phone 375. 22FF5* 40,000 Cabbage Plants — Glory and few Cortlands. Warner G. Hermans, Penn Yan RD 6 (1 mile east of Ferguson Corners). 26N1* Chicks — Reds and Crosses; day- old or started; sexed or straight run. Hatches every Wednesday, whipped cream, sweetened slight- er pears makes a palatable dessert and requires only a little sugar. Have you tried a fresh banana pie.? Slice enough bananas to fill a baked pie crust and top it with Ureen Means Go A lta y - S ix Corner 1 ) Go with safety and assurance. MRS. KENNETH CRAN8 Rock Stream, RD 1 < 1 > O. S. Williams, Rushville. Phone 7-Y-12. 25Y4* Cottages Vegetable and Flowering Plants Tomatoes, cabbage, cauliflower, peppers; geraniums, petunias, annuals. Floyd A. Bootes, Flor- ist, 225 Main St. Phone 407.J Cottage for Rent 2 miles from Flat over Roese’s Jewelry store. Inquire Fred Roese. 20B-tf Calves, 1 day to 6 weeks old — Also cattle and hogs. Sheldon House* at 1 Hopkins Place. 210 Main St., Penn Yan. Phone 339-M. 26B3* Mothersell, Rushville RD 1 (mile north of Potter Center). Phone Rushville 38-Y-12. 26H4* Apartment — Small, modern, cen- tral location; rent reasonable. Call Penn Yan 300. 26B1 Apartment, 4 rooms and private bath; hardwood floors; 24-hour steam heat. Phone C. S. John- son, 711-M. 25B4 Large Apartment on Elm St., near business center. Fine condition. Available July 1. Phone Penn Yan 91-F-2. 24B4 Notice Farmers — We can use your dead and disabled stock. We pay $2 to $4 for dead horses, $3 to $6 for old disabled horses, cows $2.50, all accord- ing to size. Phone 4151 Mon- tour Falls, reverse . Montour Falls Rending company. 6H26* Penn Yan on West Lake road. C. E. Holley, box 169, Penn Yan: 26BB2 Cottage for Rent near Town City water, 'electric range and refrigerator. Good boat. H. J. McFarren, 408 Court St., Penn Yan. Phone 13-J. r 26BB1 Live Stock for Sale 2-year-old Guernsey Heifer, calf by side. Howard Jansen, Ridge road. Penn Yan RD 1. Phone 62-F-15. 26G1* Day or Started Chicks — Hatches off Tuesdays and Fridays. Last hatch off June 30. Not open for business Sundays. 'Fred Bogue, 328 North Ave., Penn Yan. Phone 383-W. 25Y2* ly. It’s delicious. Here’s a dessert which is a lit- tle out1 of the ordinary in which fruit has been used as the sweet- fruit souffle — % cup of emng: Purebred Guernsey 8-year-old) fresh Juiie 8; extra good milker. Harold Carr, Flint. Phone Sen- eca Castle 501-Y-ll. 25G3* Rhode Island Red Chicks and hatching eggs. We will hatch as long as we have orders. Rock Red crosses available after Aug. 1. Leon Stiles, Penn Yan RD 1. Phone 21-F-13. 25Y4* FIFTH GENERATION hFAMILY IN CIIOIR (Continued from page one) fruit pulp, peach, apricot or quince, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 3 egg whites, beaten stiff, sugar, few grains of salt. Rub fruit through a sieve; if canned fruit is used, first drain from sirup. Heat, add lemon juice, sweeten if necessary and add hot to egg whites. Add salt and con- tinue -beating; turn into buttered and sugared individual molds, hav- ing them three-fourths full. Put molds in a pan of hot water and bake 30 to 40 minutes ill a moder- ately slow oven (325° F.). This may be served with ice cream if Miscellany - Sale Furnished Apartment, all modern conveniences; ground floor; pri- vate entrance. 147 East Elm St., Penn Yan. 24B3* House at 104 Glencoe Ave. — 5 rooms, conditioned air heat, oak floors; garage. Carlin, 118 Burns Terrace, Penn Yan. 26B3* Reed Baby Carriage — Good con- dition. Mrs. Ben Aumick at Branchport. 26A2* Fryers from 3 to 4% pounds; dressed. Smithoover, 515 Court St. Phone 444-J. 26A1 Cottage Number 357 for Rent all modern improvements. 3% miles from Penn Yan^ West Lake road, Penn Yan. Phone 566 for information. 25BB3 i Guernsey Cow, fresh, calf by side. Guernsey heifer, yearling Guern- sey, good. I. C. Stevens, Bills- boro road, RD 1, Town of Gene- : va. . 26G2 many years Miss Mary taught i fifth, sixth, and seventh grades in * . the Penn Yan schools, retiring in I How to Get Along with Less Sugar 7- room Cottage for Rent — All modern improvements; boat; at Willow Grove. Mrs. W. A. Tierney, 109 Wagener St., Penn Yan. Phone 179-M. o O 5-year-old Bay Horse — •Wom8 make good saddle horse. Will sell reasonable or trade ,for . stock. Gordon Oakley, Rushville- Potter road. 26G1* 183 2 Apartments, upper and lower, each suitable for one or two adults. Mrs. E. T. Lee, 326 Lib- erty St., Penn Yan. 26B1* 2 Apartments, centrally located, unfurnished; all conveniences; bpth on ground floor; reasonable rent. Phone 989, Penn Yan. New 6-can Icebox with 4-inch cork z insulation all around. J. H. Sanderson, Penn Yan. Phone 453. 26A1 Computing Scales — Will sell or exchange for an outboard motor. O. W. Norman, Dresden. Phone 27-F-4. 26A1 5-room Cottage for Sale — Keuka West Lake road, Penn Yan. Water, electricity, flush toilet; furnished. $750. Inquire Dixon, 181 W. Lake rd. 26BB3 2 Lake Keuka Cottages for Rent with all improvements; safe beach; garages; boats; east side near Ark. H. C. Stone, 307 Court St. Phone 67-W. 24BB4* Pair Matched Sorrel Geldings, 6 years old, weight 3200; extra well broken. Matched pair sor- rel geldings, 5 years old, weight 1926. Musical heredity took Use substitutes for sugar. One a hop, j cup of sugar is as sweet as: one skip, and jump, when it came to ; cup of maple sugar or syrup, one Perl H. Bridgman, the last son of I cup of honey, one and one-half cup Go with a knowledge of **wnere you are going. How luting that green is the color of the Girl Scouts of Amer- ica. For years they have been training for just that. For safety and assurance, not only for them- selves but for the people with whom they come in contact. They have been learning rules of safety. How to preserve it for themselves and for others. They have been going ahead in every way, build- ing a youth movement in America that is stronger than the move- ments in almost any other coun- try, because it is done through freedom of choice and not because it is part of national policy.____ But no one can go unless tney are strong and healthy and pre- pared. The Girl Scouts are aware of that and all those things are part of their training. A sound mind in a sound body is one of the most necessary conditions in the world today. The world as we know it — “the Free World” — Baptist ' REV. G. K. HAMILTON, Pastoi Sunday: Morning worship $ei ice at 10:30. The pastor willspe; on the subject, “ Is the Gosi Adequate for Today ?” The you i people’s choir will render specij music. The Sunday school folloi the morning: service. Brine children to this service. The tru l learned in the Sunday school aid greatly in the moulding their young lives. The young p< pie’s meeting at 7 o’clock. V 1 Meat that has the most iron is lowest in cost is pig liver, W a j to use liver and similar meats given in the leaflet “Foods to K ( You Fit, Number 4.” Single coph are free to New York residenl who write to the Office of fublii tions, Roberts hall, Ithaca. V this family. “The only thing I ever I molasses played on was the kitchen lino- \ syrup, leum,” he says, but in the small person of his daughter, Mrs. Ruth Bridgman Yetter, soprano soloist or two cups of corn For cakes and cookies when using honey as a substitute use one-half the quantity of liquid needs help as it has never needed it before and the Girl scouts are organized to help — are willing to help. What about your pressi cooker ? Be sure the safety vali is not rusty and does not stii and that the pressure gauge accurate. -V -------- Classineas onng returns. and director of the Presbyterian called for in the recipe. When 3300. Several single horses. Saddle horses. Howard Briggs, Penn Yan RD 2 (Chubb Hollow road). 24G3 * Whitfield Pole and Thills for bug- gy. Inquire M. V. Tallmadge, 315 Liberty St., Penn Yan. Phone 151-W. 26A1* Small Modern Furnished Apart- ment — gas, lights, and heat furnished also. John Bolger, 117 Keuka St., Penn Yan. Phone 425-R. 24B3 Business Services Several Thousand FeeL 2x4% About 1000 ft basswood hoards. Harry Wheeler, Guyanoga. Ad- dress Branchport RD 2. 26Al* Upright Piano in excellent condi- tion. Price reasonable. Can be seen at 133 Hamilton St., or phone 585-R, Penn Yan. 25A3* Wilkins Insurance Agency — Rep- resents reliable stock com- panies for fire, automobile and kindred lines; also bonds. Room 9, Arcade bldg., Penn Yan. Phone 440. 14T26* Work Bench — White oak, hand made with wood screw. Hubert Waters, RD 5 Penn Yan (back of Bluff Point church). Also violin. z 24A3* Mary E. Watkins, General Insur- ance — Fire, automobile, liabil- ity, and bonds; also public sten- ography. Room 5, 2nd floor of the Lown block, 131 Main St., Penn Yan. Phone 194. 14T26* Cocker Spaniel — Healthy, well- bred puppies; all shades of red, few blacks. Thayer Kennels, Penn Yan - Bath road. Phone 14-F-4. 24A4* Regular Garbage, Refuse Collec- tion — Penn Yan, Indian Pines, Keuka Park, Bluff Point, West Lake road. Ashes removed. Claude Bentley, Indian Pines. P. O. Box 350. Phone 1560-W. 24T4* Bedstead, Kitchen Chairs, porch rockers, tete, antique sofa, large davenport. Mrs. E. J. Holley, 219 Clinton St., Penn Yan. Phone 784. 25A4 Cottage for Rent, ideal location 2 miles from town on West Lake road. Splendid beach, cooking , running water, row boat. Phone 507-R. Samuel McMath, Penn Yan. 26BB4* Miscellany - Wants Used Play Pen Cottage, Lake Keuka, 3 miles / south of Branchport. For rent or sale. .^Completely furnished. All improvements. Boat. Rea- sonable. Inquire F. D. Delbridge, Naples. Phone 60. 26BB2 Help Wanted Phone 655-M. 26E1* choir, it is rampant again. Other children of Mr. and Mrs. Perl Bridgman carry on the tradi- Hovv Scouts Can Help I using corn, cane or maple syrup, use one-third less liquid. When using molasses, use two teaspoons tion, too. Merrelle, one of the less baking powder for every cup sons, is prominent as a pianist, of molasses and one-half teaspoon frequently playing in bands orchestras in Yates county. For many years he, also, was a mem- ber of the Penn Yan Methodist church choir. He now sings in the and I soda. In bread and muffins substitute as much honey, syrup or molasses as the sugar in the recipe. Make desserts that require lit- Methodist church choir at Canan-; tie or no sugar, as: fresh fruits, daigua’. dried fruits, cooked or uncooked, Don, the youngest son, proved nuts, cheese with fruit and crack- that his talent lay in his mellow ers, fruit whips with cream or egg custards Hay, Wheat and Rye Straw — Jason H. Kipp, Rushville, phone 44, representing the Scholl com- pany of Newark, N. J. 8E26*-tf Your Butterfat Will Bring highest prices at Penn Yan Creamery, 114 Seneca St. Drop a postal or phone 245-J, and our truck will 22E5* bass voice by singing in the glee white, gelatin desserts, club while at school and taking j or puddings, care of the “low-down” harmony in the Methodist choir. Family Included Drummer The oldest son, Edwin, enlisted in the army during the First I prune, apricot, grape, cherry, - or- Conserve your sugar supply by observing the following: Use more raw fruit. Ripe fruit is sweeter. Serve more fruit juices — apple, World war as a drummer and was ange, and other fruits. Serve more call. Berry Pickers — J. C. Hessler, North Hamilton St., Penn Yan. 26J1* Old Glass and China Dishes, dolls, doll heads, bric-a-brac. Drop card to T. W. Keeton, Ham- mondsport RD 1. I will call after June 15. 20E10 a member of the well-known -Win- nek Drum corps of Geneva when his death occurred last year. He also conducted an orchestra known dried fruits prune, apricot, peach, apples, raisins, figs, and dates. Serve cooked foods hot. taste sweeter. Add dried as -Bridgman’s orchestra and! fruits to cooked cereals. It will played for dances for several sea- taste good and need less sugar. 20 Berry and Cherry Pickers — Hans Andersen, Bluff Point RD 5. Phone Penn Yan 47-F-24. 25J2* Semi-Invalids or Convalescents wanted to care for — by hurse %/ Beautician, experienced, to man- age and operate shop. Refer- ences. 54 Water St., Dundee. 26J2@ living alone in beautiful spacir ous home, completely modern, comfortable in every way, at- tractive grounds, fresh vege- tables, fruits of all kinds; rea- sonable rates. Mrs. Belle Ger- rie, Lakemont. 26E1 sons. Save juices and' syrups of Coming down to the fifth gener- j canned fruit for sweetening other ation, Edwin’s youngest daughter, food. Use sweeter varieties of ap- Peggy, follows in the footsteps of j pies and other fruits. Combine the her great aunt, Mrs. Bruce. She is tarter fruits with them. accompanist for the Junior High There is sugar in vegetables. Glee club, plays at the Girl scout | Use them raw or cook quickly and use the juice. Use raw carrots or beets in salads and desserts. Grow sweet varieties of vegetables in Moving and Storage — Loads to and from New York city, Buf- falo, Newark, N. J., Washing- ton, D. C., and all points in U. S. All in closed van. Lowest rates. Insured. Tod Dallas, Penn Yan. Phone 486 or 48-F-2. 24T4 Jay-Bee Portable Feed Mill—Good condition. Being sold because of ill health of owner. William Martin, jr., Penn Yan RD 3 (Ghiyanoga valley). Phone Branchport 8-F-22. ,• 26A3* Sewers Cleaned Electrically — No fuss, no muss, no digging; cleans inside of pipe like new or no charge; ask the man who has had it done. A. W. Brainard, Highland Dr. Phone 439. Or Lew Blakeslee>' 231 Lake St. Phone 886. -24T8* Westinghouse Electric Stove, suit- able for cottage. Cheap for cash. Marble-top dresser, also used Singer sewing machine. Mrs. Fernwood Lane, 434 E. Lake road, Penn Yan. Phone 15-F-14. 26A1 Girl or Woman for general house- work; must be good cook. Mrs. Ralph T. Norris, 215 Main St., Penn Yan. Phone 92. 26J3 Man Wanted for steady farm job; married preferred; good proposir tion for right man. L. L. Shaw, Route 2, Dundee-Wayne road. 26J1 Fruits, Vegetables 9 Eggs for Sale Sweet and Sour Cherries—Inquire . Mrs. Hiram Schroeder, Penn Yan RD 6. Penn Yan - Benton road. 26P1 meetings, and sings alto in the Junior choir of the Penn Yan Methodist church. Five generations of musicians in! your garden, one Yates county family, and the Is Canning Equipment Ready? family still going strong. As Uncle 1 To the homemakers who are Charles Bridgman said after his 1planning to grow and preserve Girl for General Work at Lake Keuka cottage, near Penn Ya;n, : July and August. Mrs. J. H. Pepper, Bluff Point. Phone Penn Yan 42-F-3. 25J2 Last Chance to Get Peat Moss and poultry fertilizer. Just the thing for Victory gardens, flow- ers, shrubs, and lawns. $1 a bag or 5 bags for $4. We de- liver. H. L. Werley, 614 Liberty St., Pefm Yan. 26A1 Girl for Light Housework and care of 2 children; evenings and week-enda off. Apply after 5 p. m. at 111 Kimball Ave., near fairground entrance. 24J3* Sweet Cherries — Yellow Spanish: Bring containers and pick your own. A. N. Lacy, Penn Yan RD (Old County House road). Phone 83-F-14. 26P1* inV i Mmm Auto Liability Insurance — Fire, liability, bonds, all kinds. Mal- lory-Gelder Insurance Agency represents all well known stock companies. Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co.: Clyde B. Gelder, room 18, 2nd floor Arcade bldg., 148 Main St. Phone 288. 14T26 About 3,000 ft. 2x4, 2x6, 2x8, 2x12 Hemlock, all 10 to 12 ft. long. Also 1,000 ft. 1-in. roof boards. 10 - 9x10 range shelters and 500 ft. %-in. gal. water pipe. 50 8-ft. locust posts. H. L. Wer- ley, 614 Liberty St. 26A1 Men Wanted to Work on war or- ders — woodworkers, welders, metal workers, and- unskilled. Mid-State Body Co., Inc., 21 East Elizabeth St., Waterloo. 24J3@ News Printed Free—Phone 123 Due to Draft, we have a good pay- ing 800 family rural route v in Ontario county. Customers es- tablished for years. No invest- ment. Write J. R. Watkins Co., Dep’t D210-25, 231 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. J. . 26J1* Red & White Sweet Cherries Well sprayed. Phone 83-F-4 for orders and bring containers. William Athawes & Son, Penn Yan RD 5. 26P1 White Oxheart Sweet and Sour Cherries — John Bootes, Mid- dlesex RD 1 (1 mile north of Potter on West Swamp road). Phone Rushville 18-Y-13. 26P2* Memorial day march and prize winning tournament. “Who says musicians are sissies ?” A picture of Peggy Bridgman and, the leaders of the junior choir appears on page 9 in the Burnell Studio announcement. --------------------------------------------- V --------------------------------------------- most of the family’s food supply for the coming winter, and who have been busily hoeing and plant- ing a victory garden—one thought —is your canning equipment ready Crosby MftS. C. D. SEMANS Penn Yan RD 2 Phone 16-F-14 Baptist REV. H. R. KESTER, Pastor Sunday worship at 2 o’clock fol- lowed by Bible study. Those from here who received their graduation diplomas from PYA Monday evening were: Rog- er Allqn, Margaret and Ruth Am- idon, Venita Beilis, Pauline Gray, Helen Bullock, and Marian and Kenneth DeWaters. Miss Bertha Berry, a registered nurse from Waterloo, was a guest of Mrs. Minnie Amidon for sev- for use? Do you have enough glass jars? A good idea is to check through your supply, sort out the jars which have chipped rims, mark them to be used for chili sauce, or preserves. Match covers and check the wire. Estimate how many more jars you will need and buy them now. Do you have enough jar rub- bers ? Buy just the amount you plan to use, and give the other women who haven’t been as fore- sighted as you a chance to buy some later in the season. How can they help ? By being mother’s helpers at night so the mothers can attend first aid classes and defense units. By being paid one war savings stamp an hour. Thus they stimu- late the sale of the stamps as well as express their willingness to help the government and their confi- dence in that government. By gathering old newspapers and folding them for use in hos- pitals, thus freeing the nurses who would otherwise have to fold them instead of accomplishing more im- portant duties. By gathering books for the many sick children who are in our charity homes. * By spreading the word in every group of meeting they attend of the need for blood donors for the blood bank. Blood is medicine and it’s badly needed. By expressing at all times a cheerful confident attitude. It has been the practice of the enemies of freedom to spread doubt and fear in all nations in order to weaken them before attacking. Do not let that happen here. No war is ever won until the last battle and America has never lost that one and never will. There is no cause for fear. By being cautious — caution is not fear, it’s just common sense. Know the defense rules and black out rules and be able to give them to those in doubt. By saving — learn the things the government is most in need of and set one day a week aside to collect them. Scrap iron, old rub- ber, tinfoil — they seem like little, unimportant things, and yet motor units, battleships, and planes need every bit that can be gathered. Every group should take at least one of these projects for its very own and keep a war diary of its accomplishments. It will make proud reading for the Girl scouts of the future. There is a long, tedious, sad road ahead — that WANTED DEAD OR DISABLED HORSES . $2 toS i COWS . . $1 to Prompt, Courteous Service Call Station Nearest You*. ROCHESTER, CUL. 1161 WATERLOO 208 STAPPENBECK ESTAB. 1 9 1 0 RRIES WANTED Again This Year We Arc Buying All Types of Berries Come In and See Us! HAXTON Phone 385 118 Hamilton St. Penn Yan Ansel Burt, nip- Haying Guards and Sections All Kinds and Other Mower Repairs Louden and Myers Hay Tools Louden GRAPPLE FORKS is always the road, to victory. Remember your part in it. Green Means Go! ---------------------------------------------- V --------------------------------------------- Once Tried, Never Returned TRUE TEMPER HAY FORKSi I PULLEYS ROPE Uncle Ab says that rubber frofn golden rod may bring us back to a carnation. Fitzwaters Hardware Penn Yan Branchport Strawberries—You may buy them picked, or pick them yourself at my patch, % mile .north of eral days last week. Lee’s garage on the highway,1 Mr^.^errell Smith of Lakeland, ... between Penn Yan and Potter/ „Fla;, arrived the first of the week Paul Weichenthal, .Penn - Yan at her bottage here. RD 6. 24P3 *x The advertisements are . your guide to efficient s p e n d i n g s • y • V Waste motion can be reduced in the home by keeping near each other all equipment usedtogether. Quart mayonnaise jars may be used safely for fruit. Special metal lids edged with a composition or rubber which acts as a sealing gasket may be purchased to be j used on these jars. The metal lid, j held in place by screw bands, is removed after the jar has been sealed and processed, thus it may | be used over and over. Beware about using the mayonnaise jars, in the pressure cooker, because j the glass is not tempered thor- J oughly, and the jar is apt to crack or burst when held under pres- sure. . 1 WE HAVE FOR SALE PA L STARTING GROWING LAYING MASH Also BEACON POULTRY and DAIRY FEEDS PALLESEN’S MILL 156 WATER STREET PH O N E 155
Transcript

Page Two CHRONICLE-EXPRESS, PENN If AN, N: Y\, JUNE 25, 1942

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CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATESV

Minimum Rate Is Based on 5 Lines; Four Words to One LineCASH CHARGE*

One Week ........................... 35c 50cTwo Weeks ...................... 60c 90cThree Weeks .................... 75c $1.20Per Additional Week ..... 25c 40c

Over 5 Lines—Cash Rate: 7c Line for 1 Week, 6c Line for 2 Weeks, 5c Line for 3 or More Weeks; if Charged* 10c, 9c, 8c per Line.♦CASH RATES are allowed only if cash accompanies order or payment is made not later than Saturday following the first insertion. Ads ordered for two or more consecutive insertions and stopped before expiration will be charged only for actual number of insertions. If paid in advance, refund will be made.Bold face type (like this) is double price.Additional charge of 10c per week for “ hlind” advertisement.By paying for a classified a year or half year in advance, a saving of over 23% is secured. Copy changes limited. Cost is $1 per line for six months. Minimum rate based on five lines.

CLASSIFICATIONSDesignate under which of the following classifications you want I your advertisement to appear:Found AnnouncementsLost Live Stock for SaleMiscellany - Sale Live Stock WantedMiscellany - Wants Seeds, Plants, Bulbs for SaleMiscellaneous Poultry for SaleUsed Autos for Sale - 'Fruits, Vegetables, Eggs forReal Estate for Rent SaleReal Estate for Sale Produce for SaleBusiness Services Farm Machinery, ImplementsProfessional Services for SaleHelp Wanted Chicks, Hatching Eggs andPositions Wanted Brooders for SaleAuctions Swap It — Fix It

Phone 123 — Page Closes 1 P. M., Wednesdays

LostThursday, near Penn Yan postof­

fice, silver ring with 3 large garnets. Reward. Phone 15-F-2.

26L1

Found

Did You Ever Lose a K ey?—Why not avoid that delay and cost by letting us make extra auto and Yale type keys for' you now? 20c each; 2 for 35c, while you wait. W. T. Grant store.

23L4*

Female English Setter — white with orange tickings. Owner rnay have by calling for at Dr, Potter’s, Elm St., Penn Yan, and paying for ad. 26F1*

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Used Autos Sale

Fix It

’37 International Truck, model D-15, % to 1 ton capacity; dual

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tires

Clothing Remodeled and Repaired Make your clothes la$t longer.

Nick Cecchini, Elite Tailor shop, over Baker & Stark, 108 Elm St. Phone 1594. We store furs.

26FF4*

helper springs; enclosed body 6x9 ft. inside. Earl S. Cast- ner, 133 South Ave., Penn Yan.

, 26C1*

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First Class Gun Repairing— Guns bought, sold, traded. Ed Wat­son, repair department. “Red” Woerner, sales dep’t. The Gun Shop, 117 State St., Rochester.

6FF26*

Positions WantedMan Wants Work of any kind.

217 Sherman St., Penn Yan.26K1*

High School Girl desires work caring for children. Phone 722 Penn Yan. 26K1

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Card of ThanksI wish to express my

tion of flowers, use of cars brought to the home and',!? acts of kindness, by my ̂and neighbors; also to Mrs. erine Tindall, during my

m bereavement. 26wl*

mmm « r mTheodore M

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Real Estate Sale

Watches Cleaned Better — Our new watch cleaning machine as­sures quicker service, a long lasting, perfect cleaning job. Schmidt’s Jewelry store, 114 Main St., Penn Yan. Phone 315.

i 25FF4*

Produce for Sale

Attractive 7-room House in Stan­ley — electricity, newly painted, good garden. No repairs needed. $1,400. Mrs. Willis H. Austin, Geneva RD 1. 26R4*

Food for Health

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Elizabeth J. Nisbet Home Demonstration Agent

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Card of Thanks 1We wish to express our siy

appreciation of the flowers, uu cars, and many acts of MjJI extended during the illness j

| death of our wife and mother, u 1 wish to thank Rev. Erwin Berm,

and also Corcoran company their services.

Albert Larsen./ Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kiel

Mr. and Mrs. Julius L

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12 acres Alfalfa for Sale or cut on shares. Cheap. Inquire 114 Sheppard St., Penn Yan. 26PP1*

Do You Want to Buy, Sell, Rent a home, a farm, or any real estate ? If so, I am always at your service. Peter G. Costes,

- broker. 105 Main St. Phone 673.16R26*

Use Fruits for Dessert» • X.

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averageSugar rationing is not really

such a problem. The American consumer used about three times as much sugar as he needed. If we must reduce our

i consumption of sweets, it will

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Farm Machinery, Poultry for SaleImplements Sale

Good McCormick-Deering Binder Mrs. W. G. Cooper, Penn Yan

299 Choice Hall Cross-breed Pul­lets, 14 weeks old. L. C. Kraft, Him rod road. Dundee. 26X1*

6iDF-4.(Town Line road)' P25°s2:Live Stock Wanted3-row Beet and Bean

McCormick-Deering. Mothersell, Rushville of Potter).

Cultivator, Sheldon

(mile north 26S1*

Old Horses— $6 each. Phone re­verse 12-F-21 Branchpcrt. Mink Farm. 7H26*-tf

Keep the Home Front Cheerful Reupholster with bright new 1 LaFrance fabrics. Slip covers made to order. Also refinishing and repairing. Open Saturday evenings. Penn Yan Furniture Co., 20 Maiden lane. Phone 346.

24FF4*

Hay on Shares — 6 acres of al­falfa, 14 acres mixed. One who has tools. W. B. Foley, Penn Yan RD 1. City hill. 26PP1*

Attractive Suburban Home—Walk-1 mean better digestion, fewer den-

Side Delivery Rake Rasmussen, Penn Yan miles northwest of Phone 44-F-4.

Herman RD 6 (3 Benton).

26S1

Good Healthy Rabbits Wanted — 0V2 to 9 pounds. Drop card and I will call. Charles Ayers, Stan­ley RD 2. 26H2*

Replace Your Broken Windows Now — We still have a supply of glass * and can quickly put panes in place. Bring your sash in today. John J. McGovern, wall paper, paints, and window shades. 14 Main St. Phone 40-W.

22FF5*

50 Acres o f Hay, 2 miles south of Milo Center, for sale or cut on shares. .Also fresh 2-year-old Jersey heifer. A. Ray Ansley. Phone 10-F-21. • 26PP1*

ing distance. 2% acres land, | tal cares and clearer complexions, fruit. A better-built house with j it will be easier for those who are bath and hot water heating. Car j overweight to reduce without the

Beautiful temptation of cakes, pies andsweet sauces ever before them.

Closing estate. Walter E. Clark, Perhaps we should be thankful broker. Phone 224. 25R2 | for sugar rationing.

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barn, poultry house, lawns, shade and shrubbery.

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eds' and Plantso

Chicks, HatchingIt will take some thought to

s100,000 Reed’s new improved

Glory cabbage plants. Fred Coif, sr., Penn Yan RD 6 (Ferguson Corners). Stanley phone 16-Y-13

26N1*

Broodersplan desserts without sugar. Here are some suggestions. Fruits are our most healthful source of sugar. They offer minerals and vitamins as well as sweetening.

A fruit cup of oranges, grape-Baby and Started Chicks — Newbunch just arrived. C. H. Cro- fruit, apples and canned peaches

Mrs. Alan H. Means, of Salt Lake City, Utah, is the new na­tional president of the Girl Scouts. Elected in October, she heads the activities of nearly 760,- 000 girls and adults who make up the membership of the Girl Scout organization.

I wish to express my sincere* preciation for the numerous ft pieces, cards of sympathy ̂helpful acts of my neighbors J friends at the time of my k band’s death. I wish to espeejj thank Archie M. Thayer for service, the IOOF who condui the funeral services in St. Ma?9 Episcopal church, Sunday, June assisted by Rev. A. H. Head, also had full charge of services 1:30 p. m. Monday, at Bastianpj neral home in Williamsport, Pa.26wl* Mrs. Annie Mem(All Cards of Thanks are 75e)

sier & Son, 143% Seneca St., Penn Yan. Phene 330. 18Y-tf

10-20 McCormick Deering tractor. Choice of 2. 4 sets of tractorplows, Deering com binder, sev­eral used mowers, hay tedder. Howard Howell, Case dealer, Al- tay. Phone Dundee 46-F-2.

23S4*

Broilers and Fowls—Highest mar­ket prices. C. H. Crosier & Son, 143% Seneca St., Penn Yan. Phone 330. 24H4

Real Estate Rent

All Kinds of Cattle — Beef cattle and old bulls especially. Fat hogs and lambs. A. D. Dicker- man, Gorham. Phone Stanley ll-F-12. 12H26*

Tractor Magnetos Repaired— You must get the most possible miles per gallon from your car. Let us check your carburetor, igni­tion system, generator, starter. Willard Safety-fill batteries. Wesley Turner, Maiden lane. Phone 375. 22FF5*

40,000 Cabbage Plants — Glory and few Cortlands. Warner G. Hermans, Penn Yan RD 6 (1 mile east of Ferguson Corners).

26N1*

Chicks — Reds and Crosses; day- old or started; sexed or straight run. Hatches every Wednesday, whipped cream, sweetened slight­

er pears makes a palatable dessert and requires only a little sugar.

Have you tried a fresh banana pie.? Slice enough bananas to fill a baked pie crust and top it with

Ureen Means GoA l t a y - S i x Corner1)

Go with safety and assurance.

MRS. KENNETH CRAN8 Rock Stream, RD 1

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O. S. Williams, Rushville. Phone 7-Y-12. 25Y4*

Cottages

Vegetable and Flowering Plants Tomatoes, cabbage, cauliflower, peppers; geraniums, petunias, annuals. Floyd A. Bootes, Flor­ist, 225 Main St. Phone 407.J

Cottage for Rent 2 miles from

Flat over Roese’s Jewelry store. Inquire Fred Roese. 20B-tf

Calves, 1 day to 6 weeks old — Also cattle and hogs. Sheldon

House* at 1 Hopkins Place. 210 Main St., Penn Yan. Phone 339-M. 26B3*

Mothersell, Rushville RD 1 (mile north of Potter Center). Phone Rushville 38-Y-12. 26H4*

Apartment — Small, modern, cen­tral location; rent reasonable. Call Penn Yan 300. 26B1

Apartment, 4 rooms and private bath; hardwood floors; 24-hour steam heat. Phone C. S. John­son, 711-M. 25B4

Large Apartment on Elm St., near business center. Fine condition. Available July 1. Phone Penn Yan 91-F-2. 24B4

Notice Farmers — We can use your dead and disabled stock. We pay $2 to $4 for dead horses, $3 to $6 for old disabled horses, cows $2.50, all accord­ing to size. Phone 4151 Mon­tour Falls, reverse . Montour Falls Rending company. 6H26*

Penn Yan on West Lake road. C. E. Holley, box 169, Penn Yan:

26BB2

Cottage for Rent near Town City water, 'electric range and refrigerator. Good boat. H. J. McFarren, 408 Court St., Penn Yan. Phone 13-J. r 26BB1

Live Stock for Sale2-year-old Guernsey Heifer, calf

by side. Howard Jansen, Ridge road. Penn Yan RD 1. Phone 62-F-15. 26G1*

Day or Started Chicks — Hatches off Tuesdays and Fridays. Last hatch off June 30. Not open for business Sundays. 'Fred Bogue, 328 North Ave., Penn Yan. Phone 383-W. 25Y2*

ly. It’s delicious.Here’s a dessert which is a lit­

tle out1 of the ordinary in which fruit has been used as the sweet-

fruit souffle — % cup ofemng:

Purebred Guernsey 8-year-old)fresh Juiie 8 ; extra good milker. Harold Carr, Flint. Phone Sen­eca Castle 501-Y-ll. 25G3*

Rhode Island Red Chicks and hatching eggs. We will hatch as long as we have orders. Rock Red crosses available after Aug. 1. Leon Stiles, Penn Yan RD 1. Phone 21-F-13. 25Y4*

FIFTH GENERATIONhFAMILY IN CIIOIR

(C o n t in u e d f ro m p a g e o n e )

fruit pulp, peach, apricot or quince, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 3 egg whites, beaten stiff, sugar, few grains of salt.

Rub fruit through a sieve; if canned fruit is used, first drain from sirup. Heat, add lemon juice, sweeten if necessary and add hot to egg whites. Add salt and con­tinue -beating; turn into buttered and sugared individual molds, hav­ing them three-fourths full. Put molds in a pan of hot water and bake 30 to 40 minutes ill a moder­ately slow oven (325° F .). This may be served with ice cream if

Miscellany - Sale

Furnished Apartment, all modern conveniences; ground floor; pri­vate entrance. 147 East Elm St., Penn Yan. 24B3*

House at 104 Glencoe Ave. — 5 rooms, conditioned air heat, oak floors; garage. Carlin, 118 Burns Terrace, Penn Yan. 26B3*

Reed Baby Carriage — Good con­dition. Mrs. Ben Aumick at Branchport. 26A2*

Fryers from 3 to 4% pounds; dressed. Smithoover, 515 Court St. Phone 444-J. 26A1

Cottage Number 357 for Rent all modern improvements. 3% miles from Penn Yan ̂ West Lake road, Penn Yan. Phone 566 for information. 25BB3

i Guernsey Cow, fresh, calf by side. Guernsey heifer, yearling Guern­sey, good. I. C. Stevens, Bills- boro road, RD 1, Town of Gene-

: va. . 26G2

many years Miss Mary taught i fifth, sixth, and seventh grades in * .the Penn Yan schools, retiring in I How to Get Along with Less Sugar

7-room Cottage for Rent — All modern improvements; boat; at Willow Grove. Mrs. W. A. Tierney, 109 Wagener St., Penn Yan. Phone 179-M. o

O

5-year-old Bay Horse — • W om8 make good saddle horse. Will sell reasonable or trade ,for

. stock. Gordon Oakley, Rushville- Potter road. 26G1*

183

2 Apartments, upper and lower, each suitable for one or two adults. Mrs. E. T. Lee, 326 Lib­erty St., Penn Yan. 26B1*

2 Apartments, centrally located, unfurnished; all conveniences; bpth on ground floor; reasonable rent. Phone 989, Penn Yan.

New 6-can Icebox with 4-inch corkz

insulation all around. J. H. Sanderson, Penn Yan. Phone 453. 26A1

Computing Scales — Will sell or exchange for an outboard motor. O. W. Norman, Dresden. Phone 27-F-4. 26A1

5-room Cottage for Sale — Keuka West Lake road, Penn Yan. Water, electricity, flush toilet; furnished. $750. Inquire Dixon, 181 W. Lake rd. 26BB3

2 Lake Keuka Cottages for Rent with all improvements; safe beach; garages; boats; east side near Ark. H. C. Stone, 307 Court St. Phone 67-W. 24BB4*

Pair Matched Sorrel Geldings, 6 years old, weight 3200; extra well broken. Matched pair sor­rel geldings, 5 years old, weight

1926.Musical heredity took

Use substitutes for sugar. One a hop, j cup of sugar is as sweet as: one

skip, and jump, when it came t o ; cup of maple sugar or syrup, one Perl H. Bridgman, the last son of I cup of honey, one and one-half cup

Go with a knowledge of **wnere you are going.

How luting that green is the color of the Girl Scouts of Amer­ica. For years they have been training for just that. For safety and assurance, not only for them­selves but for the people with whom they come in contact. They have been learning rules of safety. How to preserve it for themselves and for others. They have been going ahead in every way, build­ing a youth movement in America that is stronger than the move­ments in almost any other coun­try, because it is done through freedom of choice and not because it is part of national policy.____

But no one can go unless tney are strong and healthy and pre­pared. The Girl Scouts are aware of that and all those things are part of their training. A sound mind in a sound body is one of the most necessary conditions in the world today. The world as we know it — “ the Free World” —

Baptist 'REV. G. K. HAMILTON, Pastoi

Sunday: Morning worship $ei ice at 10:30. The pastor willspe; on the subject, “Is the Gosi Adequate for Today ?” The youi people’s choir will render specij music. The Sunday school folloithe morning: service. Brinechildren to this service. The trul learned in the Sunday school aid greatly in the moulding their young lives. The young p< pie’s meeting at 7 o’clock.

V

1

Meat that has the most iron is lowest in cost is pig liver, Waj to use liver and similar meats given in the leaflet “Foods to K( You Fit, Number 4.” Single coph are free to New York residenl who write to the Office of fublii tions, Roberts hall, Ithaca.

V

this family. “The only thing I ever I molasses played on was the kitchen lino- \ syrup, leum,” he says, but in the small person of his daughter, Mrs. Ruth Bridgman Yetter, soprano soloist

or two cups of corn

For cakes and cookies when using honey as a substitute use one-half the quantity of liquid

needs help as it has never needed it before and the Girl scouts are organized to help — are willing to help.

What about your pressi cooker ? Be sure the safety vali is not rusty and does not stii and that the pressure gauge accurate.

-V--------Classineas onng returns.

and director of the Presbyterian called for in the recipe. When

3300. Several single horses.Saddle horses. Howard Briggs, Penn Yan RD 2 (Chubb Hollow road). 24G3

*

Whitfield Pole and Thills for bug­gy. Inquire M. V. Tallmadge, 315 Liberty St., Penn Yan. Phone 151-W. 26A1*

Small Modern Furnished Apart­ment — gas, lights, and heat furnished also. John Bolger, 117 Keuka St., Penn Yan. Phone 425-R. 24B3

Business Services

Several Thousand FeeL 2x4% About 1000 ft basswood hoards. Harry Wheeler, Guyanoga. Ad­dress Branchport RD 2. 26A l*

Upright Piano in excellent condi­tion. Price reasonable. Can be seen at 133 Hamilton St., or phone 585-R, Penn Yan. 25A3*

Wilkins Insurance Agency — Rep­resents reliable stock com­panies for fire, automobile and kindred lines; also bonds. Room 9, Arcade bldg., Penn Yan. Phone 440. 14T26*

Work Bench — White oak, hand made with wood screw. Hubert Waters, RD 5 Penn Yan (back of Bluff Point church). Also violin. z 24 A3*

Mary E. Watkins, General Insur­ance — Fire, automobile, liabil­ity, and bonds; also public sten­ography. Room 5, 2nd floor of the Lown block, 131 Main St., Penn Yan. Phone 194. 14T26*

Cocker Spaniel — Healthy, well- bred puppies; all shades of red, few blacks. Thayer Kennels, Penn Yan - Bath road. Phone 14-F-4. 24A4*

Regular Garbage, Refuse Collec­tion — Penn Yan, Indian Pines, Keuka Park, Bluff Point, West Lake road. Ashes removed. Claude Bentley, Indian Pines. P. O. Box 350. Phone 1560-W.

24T4*

Bedstead, Kitchen Chairs, porch rockers, tete, antique sofa, large davenport. Mrs. E. J. Holley, 219 Clinton St., Penn Yan. Phone 784. 25A4

Cottage for Rent, ideal location 2 miles from town on West Lake road. Splendid beach, cooking

, running water, row boat. Phone 507-R. Samuel McMath, Penn Yan. 26BB4*

Miscellany - WantsUsed Play Pen

Cottage, Lake Keuka, 3 miles / south of Branchport. For rent

or sale. .^Completely furnished. All improvements. Boat. Rea­sonable. Inquire F. D. Delbridge, Naples. Phone 60. 26BB2

Help Wanted

Phone 655-M.26E1*

choir, it is rampant again.Other children of Mr. and Mrs.

Perl Bridgman carry on the tradi-

Hovv Scouts Can Help I

using corn, cane or maple syrup, use one-third less liquid. When using molasses, use two teaspoons

tion, too. Merrelle, one of the less baking powder for every cup sons, is prominent as a pianist, of molasses and one-half teaspoonfrequently playing in bands orchestras in Yates county. For many years he, also, was a mem­ber of the Penn Yan Methodist church choir. He now sings in the

and I soda.In bread and muffins substitute

as much honey, syrup or molasses as the sugar in the recipe.

Make desserts that require lit-Methodist church choir at Canan-; tie or no sugar, as: fresh fruits,daigua’. dried fruits, cooked or uncooked,

Don, the youngest son, proved nuts, cheese with fruit and crack- that his talent lay in his mellow ers, fruit whips with cream or egg

custardsHay, Wheat and Rye Straw —

Jason H. Kipp, Rushville, phone 44, representing the Scholl com­pany of Newark, N. J. 8E26*-tf

Your Butterfat Will Bring highest prices at Penn Yan Creamery, 114 Seneca St. Drop a postal or phone 245-J, and our truck will

22E5*

bass voice by singing in the glee white, gelatin desserts, club while at school and taking j or puddings, care of the “ low-down” harmony in the Methodist choir.Family Included Drummer

The oldest son, Edwin, enlistedin the army during the First I prune, apricot, grape, cherry, - or-

Conserve your sugar supply by observing the following: Use more raw fruit. Ripe fruit is sweeter. Serve more fruit juices — apple,

World war as a drummer and was ange, and other fruits. Serve more

call.

Berry Pickers — J. C. Hessler, North Hamilton St., Penn Yan.

26J1*

Old Glass and China Dishes, dolls, doll heads, bric-a-brac. Drop card to T. W. Keeton, Ham- mondsport RD 1. I will call after June 15. 20E10

a member of the well-known -Win- nek Drum corps of Geneva when his death occurred last year. He also conducted an orchestra known

dried fruits — prune, apricot, peach, apples, raisins, figs, and dates. Serve cooked foods hot.

taste sweeter. Add driedas -Bridgman’s orchestra and! fruits to cooked cereals. It will played for dances for several sea- taste good and need less sugar.

20 Berry and Cherry Pickers — Hans Andersen, Bluff Point RD 5. Phone Penn Yan 47-F-24.

25J2*

Semi-Invalids or Convalescentswanted to care for — by hurse

%/

Beautician, experienced, to man­age and operate shop. Refer­ences. 54 Water St., Dundee.

26J2@

living alone in beautiful spacir ous home, completely modern, comfortable in every way, a t­tractive grounds, fresh vege­tables, fruits of all kinds; rea­sonable rates. Mrs. Belle Ger- rie, Lakemont. 26E1

sons. Save juices and' syrups ofComing down to the fifth gener- j canned fruit for sweetening other

ation, Edwin’s youngest daughter, food. Use sweeter varieties of ap-Peggy, follows in the footsteps of j pies and other fruits. Combine the her great aunt, Mrs. Bruce. She is tarter fruits with them.accompanist for the Junior High There is sugar in vegetables.Glee club, plays at the Girl scout | Use them raw or cook quickly and

use the juice. Use raw carrots or beets in salads and desserts. Grow sweet varieties of vegetables in

Moving and Storage — Loads to and from New York city, Buf­falo, Newark, N. J., Washing­ton, D. C., and all points in U. S. All in closed van. Lowest rates. Insured. Tod Dallas, Penn Yan. Phone 486 or 48-F-2.

24T4

Jay-Bee Portable Feed Mill— Good condition. Being sold because of ill health of owner. William Martin, jr., Penn Yan RD 3 (Ghiyanoga valley). Phone Branchport 8-F-22. ,• 26A3*

Sewers Cleaned Electrically — No fuss, no muss, no digging; cleans inside of pipe like new or no charge; ask the man who has had it done. A. W. Brainard, Highland Dr. Phone 439. Or Lew Blakeslee>' 231 Lake St. Phone 886. -24T8*

Westinghouse Electric Stove, suit­able for cottage. Cheap for cash. Marble-top dresser, also used Singer sewing machine. Mrs. Fernwood Lane, 434 E. Lake road, Penn Yan. Phone 15-F-14. 26A1

Girl or Woman for general house­work; must be good cook. Mrs. Ralph T. Norris, 215 Main St., Penn Yan. Phone 92. 26J3

Man Wanted for steady farm job; married preferred; good proposir tion for right man. L. L. Shaw, Route 2, Dundee-Wayne road.

26J1

Fruits, Vegetables9

Eggs for SaleSweet and Sour Cherries— Inquire . Mrs. Hiram Schroeder, Penn

Yan RD 6. Penn Yan - Benton road. 26P1

meetings, and sings alto in the Junior choir o f the Penn Yan Methodist church.

Five generations of musicians in ! your garden, one Yates county family, and the Is Canning Equipment Ready? family still going strong. As Uncle 1 To the homemakers who are Charles Bridgman said after his 1 planning to grow and preserve

Girl for General Work at Lake Keuka cottage, near Penn Ya;n,

: July and August. Mrs. J. H. ■ Pepper, Bluff Point. Phone Penn

Yan 42-F-3. 25J2

Last Chance to Get Peat Moss and poultry fertilizer. Just the thing for Victory gardens, flow­ers, shrubs, and lawns. $1 a bag or 5 bags for $4. We de­liver. H. L. Werley, 614 Liberty St., Pefm Yan. 26A1

Girl for Light Housework and care of 2 children; evenings and week-enda off. Apply after 5 p. m. at 111 Kimball Ave., near fairground entrance. 24J3*

Sweet Cherries — Yellow Spanish: Bring containers and pick your own. A. N. Lacy, Penn Yan RD (Old County House road). Phone 83-F-14. 26P1*

inVi Mmm

Auto Liability Insurance — Fire, liability, bonds, all kinds. Mal- lory-Gelder Insurance Agency represents all well known stock companies. Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co.: Clyde B. Gelder, room 18, 2nd floor Arcade bldg., 148 Main St. Phone 288. 14T26

About 3,000 ft. 2x4, 2x6, 2x8, 2x12 Hemlock, all 10 to 12 ft. long. Also 1,000 ft. 1-in. roof boards. 10 - 9x10 range shelters and 500 ft. %-in. gal. water pipe. 50 8-ft. locust posts. H. L. W er­ley, 614 Liberty St. 26A1

Men Wanted to Work on war or­ders — woodworkers, welders, metal workers, and- unskilled. Mid-State Body Co., Inc., 21 East Elizabeth St., Waterloo.

24J3@

N e w s P r in t e d F r e e — P h o n e 1 2 3

Due to Draft, we have a good pay­ing 800 family rural route v in Ontario county. Customers es­tablished for years. No invest­ment. Write J. R. Watkins Co., Dep’t D210-25, 231 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. J. . 26J1*

Red & White Sweet Cherries Well sprayed. Phone 83-F-4 for orders and bring containers. William Athawes & Son, Penn Yan RD 5. 26P1

White Oxheart Sweet and Sour Cherries — John Bootes, Mid­dlesex RD 1 (1 mile north of Potter on West Swamp road). Phone Rushville 18-Y-13. 26P2*

Memorial day march and prize winning tournament. “ Who says musicians are sissies ?”

A picture of Peggy Bridgman and, the leaders of the junior choir appears on page 9 in the Burnell Studio announcement.

---------------------------------------------V ---------------------------------------------

most of the family’s food supply for the coming winter, and who have been busily hoeing and plant­ing a victory garden—one thought — is your canning equipment ready

C r o s b yMftS. C. D. SEMANS

Penn Yan RD 2 Phone 16-F-14

BaptistREV. H. R. KESTER, Pastor Sunday worship at 2 o’clock fol­

lowed by Bible study.

Those from here who received their graduation diplomas from PYA Monday evening were: Rog­er Allqn, Margaret and Ruth Am- idon, Venita Beilis, Pauline Gray, Helen Bullock, and Marian and Kenneth DeWaters.

Miss Bertha Berry, a registered nurse from Waterloo, was a guest of Mrs. Minnie Amidon for sev-

for use?Do you have enough glass jars?

A good idea is to check through your supply, sort out the jars which have chipped rims, mark them to be used for chili sauce, or preserves. Match covers and check the wire. Estimate how many more jars you will need and buy them now.’ Do you have enough jar rub­bers ? Buy just the amount you plan to use, and give the other women who haven’t been as fore- sighted as you a chance to buy some later in the season.

How can they help ? By being mother’s helpers at night so the mothers can attend first aid classes and defense units.

By being paid one war savings stamp an hour. Thus they stimu­late the sale of the stamps as well as express their willingness to help the government and their confi­dence in that government.

By gathering old newspapers and folding them for use in hos­pitals, thus freeing the nurses who would otherwise have to fold them instead of accomplishing more im­portant duties.

By gathering books for the many sick children who are in our charity homes. *

By spreading the word in every group of meeting they attend of the need for blood donors for the blood bank. Blood is medicine and it’s badly needed.

By expressing at all times a cheerful confident attitude. It has been the practice of the enemies of freedom to spread doubt and fear in all nations in order to weaken them before attacking. Do not let that happen here. No war is ever won until the last battle and America has never lost that one and never will. There is no cause for fear.

By being cautious — caution is not fear, it’s just common sense. Know the defense rules and black out rules and be able to give them to those in doubt.

By saving — learn the things the government is most in need of and set one day a week aside to collect them. Scrap iron, old rub­ber, tinfoil — they seem like little, unimportant things, and yet motor units, battleships, and planes need every bit that can be gathered.

Every group should take at least one of these projects for its very own and keep a war diary of its accomplishments. It will make proud reading for the Girl scouts of the future. There is a long, tedious, sad road ahead — that

WANTEDDEAD OR DISABLED

HORSES . $2 to SiCOWS . . $1 toPrompt, Courteous Service Call Station Nearest You*.ROCHESTER, CUL. 1161

WATERLOO 208STAPPENBECK

E S T A B . 1 9 1 0

R R I E SW A N T E D

Again This Year We ArcBuying All Types of Berries

Come In and See Us!

HAXTONPhone 385118 Hamilton St.

Penn Yan Ansel Burt, nip-

H a y in gGuards and Sections

All Kindsand Other Mower Repairs

Louden and MyersHay Tools

Louden GRAPPLE FORKS

is always the road, to victory.Remember your part in it.

Green Means Go!----------------------------------------------V ---------------------------------------------

Once Tried, Never ReturnedTRUE TEMPER HAY FORKSi I

PULLEYS ROPE

Uncle Ab says that rubber frofn golden rod may bring us back to a carnation.

Fitzwaters HardwarePenn Yan Branchport

Strawberries— You may buy them picked, or pick them yourself at my patch, % mile .north of eral days last week.Lee’s garage on the highway,1 M r^.^errell Smith of Lakeland,

... between Penn Yan and Potter/ „Fla;, arrived the first of the week Paul Weichenthal, .Penn - Yan at her bottage here.RD 6. 24P3 *x

The advertisements are . your guide to efficient s p e n d i n g s •

y •

VWaste motion can be reduced in

the home by keeping near each other all equipment usedtogether.

Quart mayonnaise jars may be used safely for fruit. Special metal lids edged with a composition or rubber which acts as a sealing gasket may be purchased to be j used on these jars. The metal lid, j held in place by screw bands, is removed after the jar has been sealed and processed, thus it may | be used over and over. Beware about using the mayonnaise ja rs , in the pressure cooker, because j the glass is not tempered thor- J oughly, and the jar is apt to crack or burst when held under pres­sure. . 1 ■

WE HAVE FOR SALE

P A LSTARTINGGROWINGLAYING M A S H

Also BEACON POULTRY and DAIRY FEEDS

PALLESEN’S MILL156 W ATER STREET P H O N E 155

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