welcom i SMOKED HAMS 43 - NYS Historic...

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Page Six CATSKILL MOUNTAIN NlSWS Margaretville, N. Y., Friday April 15, 1960

TheCatskill MountainNcwsT ele^ione MSI

PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY

Owners CLARKE A. SANFORD

BfargarttriUe, N. Y. , ROSWELL R. SANFORD

UargaietriUe, N. Y.

CLARKE A. SANFORD Fubli^er

ROSWELL R. SANFORD Business Mansgef

ROWLAND G. HILL. Editor Subscriptions $3 per year, none accepted

ior less tisn one year, strictly in adTuice.We reserve the right to reject any copy,

estlier advertising or news.An subscriptions discontinued at expira-

tira of time for which ordered.Please address m .n to the newspaper,

■ a t to indivldnala

MOUNTAIN DEW

A w ater lily purfies her ItMig rubber-hose stem up through the w ater of shallow lake or pond out of a iiasty aK>earing blade mess on the bottom.

* * *When w ater and atmosphere

tu rn warm, there develc^ on toe surface the queen of floating flowers. The roots in the bla(* mess are the andior, the s^em is long enough to give the lily op­portunity to move to and fro on the top of the w ater as the wind blows. The leaves are p<Mito<ms which keep s to n and flower float­ing on top.

Before all the snowbanks are gone, trailing arbutus, th a t sweet­est nectar-bearing flower of the Spring, will blOMn a t the e ^ e of hemlock woodlands em itting a fragrance never to be forgotten.

* * *

B ut while these two take sweetness and beauty from muck and from acid woodlands, a skunk cabbage sudcs from the soil the stend i of putrid flesh or a smell liifp a cranbination of m ustard plaster and chopped onions. The plant grows in swamps, beside brooks and shallow ponds.

« « •The question w hidi arises is

why are the two plants, first men- tkmed, able to take from the earth sweetness and beauty while the third appeals neither to the eye or the nostrils.

• • •I am led to wonder which part

of a plant decides w hat to take from the soil. Is the sweetness of aibutus made in the stem or do the tiny hair-like rootlets down in the soil have sweet thoughts which they send upstairs on their capillary esculators to m ake ar­butus <*arm.

* • *There m ust be as much or even

more activity down in the earth when Spring listens to a song sparrow and calls for activity in lootland. Roots are everywhere in the groimd. Roots of grasses, of thousands of different varieties of plants, trees, shrubs, wild flow­ers, w e e ^ trees young and old. ■n iere are live rootlets two cen­turies old, others bom yesterday from a sprouting seed. The roots go down before the stems-, go up.

• * •Elacfa hair-tiny root, by the mil­

lions and millions, seeks to fur­nish its top soil partner aU w hidi is needed to add girth, to build leaves and to add, more length to m ain stem and litqbs.

• • •Ilie re m ust be a great turmoil

as millions of root^, like c o ( ^ in a great kitdien, s e ^ to prepare tiie food needed by the plants whom they serve. Root? have enormous strength. They can split great rocks, m ake their way ddwn in the earth where a strong man and his crowbar cannot find a way. They not only feed and w ater the id w t or tree, they fur­nish guy wires to hold i t up righ t W atch a great tree swing to and fro in a h i ^ wind, held fast by its roots. H ie pull is enormous.

• • •H iis job the roots m ust have all

12 months. A tree may be frozen s(did in a December cold. B ut the roots m ust hold fast, tie them ­selves around w hatever solid ob­ject they find to give strength to the m ain roots and so to the trad es up stairs.

• • •Roots grow all summer. \ ^ e n

leaves fall from the trees in the autumn, the roots live <hi, the stalks of many vegetables freeze, the roots of'4he annuals die. But even in death they hold weed- stalks u p r i^ t until a w inter snow comes to bury.

« « •To a person not reared in wood­

land surroundings, I would say th a t the first at the forestwould be to learn the nan»s of the trees. Once ead i species is recognized they are encountered like cdd fri^ids. Unless <»e knows the trees he is in a foreign land.

• * •A maple tiee means syrup, an

oak brings acom s to mind, a beech makes Mie recall a sweet little beechnut w^iidi falls with the first frost, black cherry q u i^ - ly turns ones th o u ^ t to a luscious b it of wild summer fruit, a blade b ird i recalls boyhood days when the bark on sm all limbs tasted like wintergreen.

* * •Scarce a tree in the forest but

can be remembered by some Char­acteristics like the <mes above. 1

would suggest to one who would like to recognize forest friends th a t he s ta rt with two or three, leam them, the other names will come quickly.

• • •Bo(^ stores carry tex t bocdts.

Secure one w ith pictures <rf bark £md leaves and you will soon be able to m eet thousands of friMids. ever true, who will not ta lk back, curse or praise, but point a way to the sunny sky. Even the tallest in all the forest will not boast its height.

* * *“I think th a t I shall never see A poem lovely as a tree PoMns are made by fools like nie. B ut only God can m ake a tree!”

—Joyce Kilmer

John Randoli^, w riting in the New York Times, says:

“The last time a survey was conducted it was discovered tha t there were 21,000,000 anglers and 12,000,000 hunters. This added up to only 25,000,000 head.

"This time there will be more. Pressure on hunting ground and fishing w ater has been growing steadily since 1955. "nie total could go to 35,000,000 or more.

" It will be found also th a t botti classes are spending more money. In 1955, hunters and fishermen spent $3,000,000,000 — the fisher­men $2,000,000,000 and the hunt­ers a measly billicm. Even a child can figure out' th a t they spent $114 apiece.”

• * *Pollsters, who probably never

went fishing, set up figures of how much money a few million fisiier- men will spend for equipment, licenses, automobiles and the like. They do not mention the pleasure, the out of doors, the pure fun of an April day along a running brook when trout are hungry.

If song birds had a social column it m ight read like this. Mr. and Mrs. R. Redbreast of Palm Beach, Fla., took the first flight to the Catskills Friday morning.

Mr. and Mrs. S. Sparrow, who have w intered in Virginia, left by a ir a week ago for a new home in Delaware county where they will build and spend the warm months.

Mr. and Mrs. Blue Heron, fam iliarly known as Long Legs, have left a Gulf of Mexico home on a flight to the Catskills. The only baggage they had to pack was long waders which they folded up underside soon a fte r they were airborne.

Mr. Red-Winged blackbird, who w itii his Mrs., spent the w inter in MississipiH, left two w e ^ ago for New York state . Mrs. R. will w ait a while tiie men folks go north, then follow to their sum­m er home in a bush alongside a swamp.

Mr. and Mrs. Bluebird of the Gulf sta tes departed two weeks ago for the Hudson river valley where they have made their sum­m er home for several years in an old apple tree full of knot­holes. They are known in Apple Tree neighborhood as desirable dtizens where the vivid blue of the m ale rivals a northern sum­m er sky.

Yours truly.The IV b^taineer

Up and Down Main Street

Mrs. Ivan Rosa left her 1959 sedan parked on Main s tree t <q>- posite'-the theater last week Wed­nesday evening. When she a t­tem pted to sta rt, the car would not move forward; its tires spun and howled when she tried to bade. She got out and locked around, astonished to find the right back wheel sitting in a two-foot hole in the pavem rat ' A recMit sewer excavation had collapsed under the running w ater and the vireight of the car.

There was a crow convention in the back yard tree-tops of either side <rf lower Main stree t Monday morning. THe delegates were in n<Msy disagreement over a m atter of business. A month hence, they will unanimously agree th a t tiie com in our garden should be re­moved w ithout fu rther delay.

S eat belts will save many a headache g c^ g over mountain roads in their present condition in a low-roofed car.

Women W ill H ear Janet Hill Gordon

Senator Janet H ill GcHxlon will be the guest speaker a t the Dela­ware County Women’s Republican du b spring luncheon a t 1 p. m. April 30 a t Delaware Inn, Stam ­ford.

Senator Gord(»i, who r^ re se n ts the 46th senatorial district con­sisting of Madison, Otsego, Cort­land and Chenango counties, is the second wcnnan to serve as a mem­ber of the S tate Senate. She has been active in Republican politics and in 1946 was elected Member of Ass^nbly from Chenango coun­ty and continued to serve in th a t capacity until her electiMi to the S ta te Senate in 1958.

Mr. Gordon is a form er New (York sta te aunm ander of the Veterans of Foreign W ars.

This meeting is expected to a t­trac t Republican wcnnen from all parts of the county. Women in­terested should contact their near­est Women’s Republican club.

Assessor Is BusyHalcottville, April IL — Melvin

E. Stahl, assessor for the town of Middletown, has been busy for several days in work connected with his j(^ .

A » P ’s l o w P R I C E S O N F E S n V E F O O D S F O R T H B E A S T E R M E N U . . . C0»« SK ...V O im SAVI AT A»M

WELCOME HOLIDAY SAVINGS ON CUSTOM GROUND A&P COFFEE!

SUPER-RIGHT OR SW IFTS PREMIUM TENDERED P " '^ " w elcom T i^ ^M M . . _ . ^ ON CUSTOM GROUND A&P COFFEE!

SMOKED HAMSNO SLICES REMOVED FROM A& s HALF HAM

MILD & MELLOW

FULLSHANKHALF Lb. 43 FULL

BunHALF Lb. M

e v m o u ^ ^

HAM

S H A N K P O R T I O N ^ 3 3 c I B U H P O R T I O N 4 3 c

|EICHT«»‘O ' C L O C KTO OlkOC*C O F F E EI 0* fini

E i g h t O ' c l o c k

C O F F E E

1-Lb.Bag 54 ' 3-lb. b a g i '

$ - |.5 6

SUPER-RIGHT SKINLESS, SHANKLESS, DEFATTED

SEMI-BONELESS COOKEO HAMSDOMESTIC

CANNEB HAMS

WHOLE y , OR HALF 65

RICH & FULL-BODIED

Red CircleVIGOROUS & WINEY

^ I w Coffee

’ i t ’ 1 . 6 8

•..“ M.80

58e

62e1

9 TO 11 LB. AVC. Lb. C C c ! u.$Q .79 SO.59

U V Can O h a m Can ^

A C rP 's F A M O U S "S U P E R R IG H T " Q U A L I T Y , R E A D Y -T O -C O O K

TURKEYS 5 TO 12 IB. AVG. 49

SERVE WITH TURKEY . . . OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRY SAUCE___ 2 29c

F R E S H F R U I T S o n d V E G E T A B L E S

PASCAL CELERY FLORIDA ORANGES

NONEPRICEDHIGHER 2 Large

Bunches

<5-lb. bag)

35c 2 5-Lb.Bags

2569'

ICEBERGL E T T U C E 2 " * ° ^ 2 5 c

N e w O n i o n s ^ 3 1 9 c

G r e e n O n i o n s 3 " " “ ^ 1 9 c

SWEETP O T A T O E S

C a l i f . B r o c c o l i

F r e s h R a d i s h e s

3 1 9 c

b T h 2 3 e

5ch inifth

8 5 c

2l;1;69c

30-ez.

—GROCERY SPECIALS—DEL MONTE

P E A C H E S 3

L&S PURE CONCORD

G R A P E J A M

SULTANA FRUIT

C O C K T A I L

SULTANA

S T U F F E D O L I V E S 9 5 c

STOCK-UP ON BREAKFAST FRUIT DRINKS

B D , B N o r B C

ANN PAGEM A Y O N N A I S E 2 '» ! : 5 9 e

9 7 c

CHIOKKN, BEEF, TCBKET

—FROZEN FOODS—

A&P Orange Juice A&P Strawberries Banquet Pies Patti Pdk Steeles Birds Eye Fisli BHes

—JANE PARKER BAKERY TREATS—

P O U N D C A K E R I N G

e- 7 9 ^

4 59c I 9 e

5,* 990 r *14)9

___2 7 e

GOLD,CHOC. ICED or MARBLE, VAN. ICED

HOT CROSS BUNS JANE Pkt. OCr PARKER of 8 O w C

CHOOSE YOUR FAVORITES FROM ACrP's large SELECTION OF

EASTER GANBIES

STORE HOURS!All A&P SUPER MARKETS Will Maintain Regulor Store Hours This Week, With the Exception of Good Friday, Stores Will Close From 12 Noon to 3 P. M.

CLOSED EASTER MONDAY

SUNNYBROOk LARGE, GRADE "A"

FRESH EGGS50*ALL

WHITE

CRESTVIEW EGGS GRADE B

in dated carton

-5 5 c

PAASEGG DYES

3 9 ^

CHICK CHICKEGG DYES

29c

CRESTMONT

ICE CREAM^ _ JANE PARKERK Q ^ a pple PIE

GaUon .»b 49c

HEINZKETCHUP

2 'ir4 9 c

NABISCOGRAHAM CRACKERS

37c

HEINZCUCUMBER PICKLES

’5:^ 27c

HEINZ BEANSVEGETARIAN STLYE

2'c‘:^2 9 c

HEINZBABY FOODS

(STRAINED) (CHOPPED)

1 0 -9 9 ‘ 6 » 8 9 ‘

SUNSHINEKRISPY CRACKERS

'C- 27c

ORLEANSDOG FOOD

2 t;:^4 3 c

YUMMIESDOG CANDY

' 17e

ANGEL SOFTFACIAL TISSUE

400 1CIC

GOLD MEDAL FIOUR(5-lb. bag) (10-lb. bag) (25-lb. bag)

57c $1.05 $2.15

INSTANT YUBAN COFFEE

*?45c ^ * 1 . 1 9

BUHER KERNEL 'WHOLE KERNEL CORN

2 ’S^ 39c

SPIC & SPANCLEANER

/SJ87-

STAR-KIST TUNA FISHCHUNK STYLE

LIGHT eii-Os. <94 WHITE CVi-Oi. MEAT C«i MEAT Cn

CRISCOSHORTENING

J^SI- 77-

FLUFFOGOLDEN SHORTENING

77c

BUHER KERNELPEAS

2*S?37c

DUZPREMIUM

WMi Chinowora

JOYLIQUID

^ 6 7 '

OXYDOLWITH BLEACH

S:35* ^ 8 V

CHEERBLUE DETERGENT

Lgs. Cl«t 7Qc Kg. Kg.

MR. CLEANALL PURPOSE CLEANER

r * 37- “«2"67‘

COMET ^CLEANSER

2’J.t31‘oi*i2:23‘

Mg.

DASHDETERGINT

89- ?J77‘

IVORYLIQUID

t r s a - ^ 6 9 -

d UzWHITE SOAP

s:34-

tide<20-0s. Mg.) (Cintf Pfcg.)

33c 79c

! 0«AT MIANTK « >*OHC TIA COoyAW. IMC._

m l Foot. MIICHINT ill

Prices in This Ad Effective T hron|^ Saturday, April 16, in Our A&P lOarket in M argaretville Store Oprai Friday and Saturday Mights ’TO 9

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