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^ V ^VJ-J.-»MW1A • U.i- % f y PAGE SIX THE ENTERPRISE, ALTAI^i^, ft F RIDAY ' JA NUARY 24, 1958 Milk Dealers Who Sidestep Order Will Lose Licenses Cat Fanciers Meet The January meeting of the Mo- ,hawk Valley Cat Fanciers was held New York state milk dealers who at * e l\\ 1 * °f , Mr .' a c \ d ' £SS P S .fail to comply with the New York- mond Clute, 271 Main St., Rotterdam New Jersey milk marketing orders Junction. face the revocation of their state I Mrs. Thomas J. McNaughton, licenses, it was disclosed by Agricul- president, conducted the business ture Commissioner Daniel J. Carey, meeting. Reports were given by Commissioner Carey said that dur- Mrs. Edward H. Koch, Sr Ayrshire Adirondack Club Chain CalfProject Report The first heifer of the Ayrshire Adirondack Club chain calf project will freshen this week at 2 years, 4 months of age, from service to Toll Gate Classic, a preferred pedigree NYA'BA sire. This heifer is owned by Richard Osterhout of R. D. 1, Delanson, a 4-H boy who has done an ing-the;pasFwee¥;fourd;a7ers had ^'M^^L^PUblfdty chSSlSndmg job raising \this animal been called to hearings in Albany toy ? nQ 1 ™ ri - '^u_ 1 -e,__puuu<\-j ; >. __^ j _ ^ ,.. !r „_ D i„ (( .„i,i KennetliT. SeTS^to? oTSS^ ^^^^t^^^L^ r^^ J^r^a X!X vision'of Milk Control, to show cause ea . sunsnin .?.. C\ alr /\ dn -, , . |Kignt r JUu^ „„:,._.. why their licenses should not be re- voked. voted to affiliate with the American Cat association. Plans were con- „, „ T , r , .. T ... 'tinued for the first cat show which The New York-New Jersey milk t . h e du . b wi]] sponsor in the early fall. marketing orders are joint orders The show W JH be run under the rules issued by the United States Depart- and regu i a tions of the national or- ment of Agriculture and the Depart- Kan j za tion The charter of the club was of- ith the following 28 ments of Agriculture of New York and New Jersey. They become ef- ,. . „ , , fective Aug 1 and regulate the f'cially closed, wi _ handling of ' milk in most of New ^ffKiX Slstete of\M«.\ Fred Buttles, Eastwood York state and Northern New Jersey. Mr. ^ 1 ^ s ^^^^\^ t Cobieikmi chairman; Marshall Action by the New York State De- anfl Mrs ' Koch _, p a ttersonville; Mr. Plotterkill Farm, Milton Gregg Es- tate, Schenectady, and was one of a group of calves in the project being carried on in each of the nine coun- ties covered by the Adirondack Ayr- shire Club. Counties in this club are: Albany, Columbia, Fulton, Mont- gomery, Rensselaer, Saratoga, Sche- nectady, Schoharie and Washington The committee for this project con ^ -, . . , , , ,, , , and Mrs. Koch . „..~.__ , — partment of Agriculture and Markets and Mrs c]utc Mrs William Blawis followed reports by the administra- and Mn . W illiam Worcester, Rotter- tor of the marketing orders, Dr. C. dam j unct j on; Mrs. Bert Erickson J. Blanford, New York, that some and Mr _ and Mrs Eugene Garrison, dealers were refusing to comply with gcotia- Mr and Mrs Fred N. Fisher the regulation. | and j^ rs Howard, Hagaman; Mrs. Commissioner Carey said. that of Lester Guttmann, Mr. Halvorsen, 'the four dealers called last week, 'Mrs. Peter Kozel, Mrs. U. S. Massoth, three had complied with the orders Mrs. Walter Rockwood and Rev. and following receipt of the hearing'Mrs. William S. Van Meter, Schenec- notice. The fourth appeared and in tady; Miss Leta Hemstreet, Sloans- •the course of the hearing agreed to'ville; Miss Lydia Scott, Shokan; comply within 10 days. JMiss Mary Sebestian, Albany; Leslie \The marketing orders are design- Simmons. Altamont, and Mrs. Fred- ed to guarantee dairy farmers mini- erick Staden, New Salem, mum prices for their milk,\ Commis- The 19 associate members on the sioner Carey explained 'Such a l chartor ro]e inc iude: Miss Pat Bloom- guarantee cannot be fulfilled if some fie]d Mr _ and Mrs _ Wa i te r Da vies, dealers refuse to comply with their and Miss Marion j« Ford| Schenec- provisions It is our position that, tady Miss Beverly Couper and Mrs. such dealers should not continue to George Crimson, Montreal, Quebec; hold state licenses either to receive or Mrs _ E G Fes senden, Toronto, Ont.'; to sell milk. M ^ s _ Eugene Fouyue, Philadelphia; m M nn n i \ • u . n Mr. and Mrs. Francis Groell and Miss Hl^i CI -{ Y(IY IWpmnW Mlllf Elizabeth Scott, Buffalo; Mrs. Ger- y*.vo IUI i/ciuuuci mini trude Hamakeri Ind j anapo ij Si i nd . ; Mrs. Grace Johnson, Amsterdam; Mr. and Mrs. John Krawiecki, Croydon, Pa.; Mrs. Leonard Schuler, Lacka- Dairy farmers in the New York- New Jersey milkshed will be paid a uniform farm price of $4.93 per nun Clickman, Holder Crest Farms, Alta- mont, and Paul Wiley of Johnson- ville. In Albany county, Mr. Clickman awarded a calf from his farm, Holder Crest Lovely Linda, to John Litts, R. D., Berne. This calf is out of Vista Grande Solution, a son of the approved Vista Grande Madeline, national class leader as a senior 3- year old, with records of 11.158 lbs. milk 4.5 per cent, 497 lbs. fat, 305 davs actual at 2 years 6 months, and 12,649 milk, 559 fat, 305 days actual at 3 years 9 months. Madeline is by the outstanding Neshaminy Prefer- red,, excellent double approved sire of 62 daughters, have first calf rec- ords averaging 11, /07 lbs. milk, 503 lbs. fat. The dam of the calf is a Helder Crest animal with 10,505 lbs. milk 5.2 percent, 436 lbs. fa,t, 305 davs acutal at 2 years 7 months, and 11,351 lbs. milk, 422 lbs, fat, 305 days actual at 5 years 9 months. The ma- ternal granddam is Atwood Orchard's Bernadette, approved with 12,846 lbs. milk, 481 lbs, fat, actual 305 days at 3 years 3 months. Morgan S. Myers & Son, Myerbrae j ^ • u* /^-cc * \ * il • ,' wa n n, a; Mrs - Stanley Selig, Patter- F o rrn robleskill donated a \calf to dredweight (46.5 quarts) for their ! Mn rt lle . j^ Wi „^ December production it was an- |tamont; ' M * re ; Thomas Wolfe, Lan- nounced by Dr. C. J. Blanford, mar- caster. Norman Panting of RD, Berne, calf was out of a Myerbrae This bull ket administrator. The November, _ , , ., , . =, farm price was $5.16 per hundred-1 \ was announced by the president whose sire was the Century sire, weight. The farm price for Decern- j tnat tne closing of the charter does iWhitpain Man-O-War, approved for iber 1956 was $4 68 per hundred- not mean the closing of the member-hype and production and, classified as •wpteht ' ' I'ship roll. All persons in the area in- \very good.\ He is the sire of 122 weight The producer butterfat differential -'terested in the breeding, showing and for the month was announced at 5.2 welfare of cats in general are wel- cents for each tenth of a pound of ?° me . l ° J° ln at ar >y tlme - , For fur \ fat above or below the 3.5 per cent: t her information contact the presi- standard. SEND YOUR VOICE TO ...telephone today dent or any of the members. The next meeting will be held at 8 p. m. Feb. 14 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Garrison, 129 Glen Ave., Scotia. daughters avering 10.188 lbs. miik, 419 lbs. fat, 305 days. The calf's dam was Myerbrae Glamour Girl with 11,411 lbs. milk, 470 lbs. fat, 305 days 2X at 4 years. Breeders cooperating in this pro- ject from other counties are as fol- lows: Mrs. Glenn Freeman, Freeman- Ayr Farm, Fultonville; John Belott, Sandy Springs Farm, Elnora; Philip Schuyler & Son, Pine Lake Farms, Cobleskill; Chester Skiff, River Run „ TT _ T _,„_ _, ,, . T „_ ...Farm, Greenwich; Ralph Cooley, SHOLTES _ Suddenly, Jan 22, at Brisklea Farm, Ghent, and several Berne, Jesse D. Sholtes, husband of ' 0 ^ ners Lena Posson, brother of Mrs. Clyde!_,',. , , , Ball, and Howard and Friend Sholtes. I T1 ? e chain-calves awarded, are to Also survived .by; several nieces and; K e . 'P re( $. • *P ares^approved.. by ;%i ;»aie at 2 p. m. from the Berne Reformed neifer'from these' ammals wilj, in church. No viewing hours will be ' turn - be awarded to other qualifying held. Arrangements by the Brunk b °y s and gi rls - Died Churches, ^ 0o | S) fraternal, and Other^ganjiations (Cbntiriueajifroi^ jpjge 1) SPAGHET#! UP pMil FEB. 1 The Youth fellowship «>f the M ' tamont Reforinjia church will serve a spaghetti .siifabV e Saturday• Feb. 1, parting at 5.S^1i parish hall. Preceeds W|ll b'|.-u S ed to send mem- bers to Camp : fowler -iie*t year. ROLLER PARTV FEB. 6 The Youih %li6w S hip,of Westerlo Reformed church will l iold a roller skating party at Knox Cave Thursday evening, Feb. 6. public invited. DANCE FEB. ^ The \Heartbeat Hop,\ a round and square dance, $i\\ be held Friday, Feb. 7, at Clarjcsville Grade school from 8 p. m. to midnight. It is spon- sored by the Hobfbeats and Clatter 4-H Club for-the..benefit of the Heart Fund. Bill Chattin and orchestra will play. m FOOD SALE FEB. 8 The Intermediate Youth Fellowship of Voorheesville Methodist church will hold a food sale Feb. 8 at Brate's Food Market Voorheesville, starting at 10 a. m. PANCAKE SUPPER FEB. 13 New Scotland Kiwanis Club will sponsor a pancake supper Thursday, Feb. 13, from 5:30 to 7:30 p. m. at Voorheesville Central school. HAM SUPPETFEB. 15 A ham supper (family style) will be served at Guilderland Center Fire de- partment hall, Guilderland Center, on Saturday, Feb. 15. Sponsored by La- dies' Auxiliary to V F. W. Boyd Hil- ton Post 7062, Altamont. 5 p. m. un- til all are served. GAME PARTY FEB. 22 The Women's Guild of Hamilton Union Presbyterian church, Guilder- land, will hold a game party at the church on Saturday, Feb. 22. ANNUAL HAivTsUPPER FEB. 22 Dutch Arms. Club of Helderberg Reformed church, Guilderland Cen- ter, will serve its- annual ham sup- per Saturday, Feb. 22. First -table at 4:30 p. m., and continuing until all are served. Dairy Income To Compare Favorably With Last Year BAKE SALE FEB. 22 Hamilton Union society will spon- sor a \Washington Birthday\ bake sale at 1 p. m. ;Skturaay, Feb. 22, at Guilderland Bad^-TV; Guilderland. FTREMEN'SAIL FEB. 22 The annual Firemen's Ball of the Altamont Fire' de|arthient will be held at Altamont Elementary school Sat- urday night, 'FefF 22: Continuous dancing.fromS'toWo'cloclc,. with music PANCAKE/'sirlfif^AR.: 1 The Berne 1 Fire <KJ$ptfmeMt Eiadies' Auxiliary will spJijsBr a pancake supper on Saturda||Mareh 1. SCOUT DINNEftJMAR. 15 Altamont Girls Silouts and BEOWH- ies will hold a faptlirjand daughter dinner at 5:30 p. li^gaturday, Mar. 15 at Altamont ^filjapritary. school. Funeral Home. WARNER — Schenectady, Jan. 17, Henry, husband of Lavinna Smith Warner, of 2122 Fairview Ave.; fath- er of Harold Warner of Guilderland, Raymond Warner, Mrs. Cora Cud- more and Miss Bernice Warner of Albany county dairy farmers can ex Schenectady, Mrs. Walter Armstrong pect their incomes in 1958 to compare of Westmere and Mrs. Anthony favorably with last year's. This pre- Graves of Coeymans; brother of Mrs. 'diction was made jointly by Profs. L. Albert Carpenter of Guilderland and C. Cunningham and R. S. Story of the T ^ x^ll^^^M 1 Jn cr ,„„ c „„ Mrs. George Bloomfield of Voorhees- New York State College of Agricul-! Lak e Ref °™e<3 chtfgi, will sponsor ville. Funeral service was .held on' ture and Leonard Palmer, associate Tuesday afternoon from the Bond county agricultural agent. The farm price of milk, for Albany county dairymen, is expected to be -a little less than last year, but sales of milk by dairymen aer expected to be ,,. . ... .a little greater, according to the Cor- A\ J^lf ™^g l V il° S f. P i?\d ^f^'nellw economists.pp They farm price in- Funeral Home, Schenectady. Inter- ment was in Prospect Hill cemetery. TIME FOR BREATHING SPELL JCt costs so little...near or far. For example: ALTAMONT TO CHICAGO — $1.20 For the first 3 minutes, Station- 'to-Station, every night after 6 and all day Sunday. Plus 10 % tax. are diminishin cannot stan ne in- j > 57 was a roximate i 40 cents a nun creases in wages which do not result in genuine gains in man-hour pro- ductivity. Moreover, such raises Thousands of Polio Victims Try Comeback Blonde little Wanda Bradley, now going on six, has a wonderful success story to tell her playmates these days in her home town of Alexandria, La. It's the kind of success story Ameri- cans everywhere can be proud of, for it was made possible by their dona- tions to the March of,Dimes. On June & 1956, when Wanda was only four, she was struck down by spino-buibar polio. Paralysis af- fected her limb muscles. • Worse, she couldn't breathe. Her survival de- pended on .an iron lung, which was rushed to her aid by the local chapter of the March of Dimes organization. Later, as her lung muscles gained strength she was graduated to a rock- ing bed, another device to help her breathe. Still, this kind of survival wasn't enough — not in this day when medicine and research have devised new and advanced techniques to help the polio-disabled stage a comeback to near-normal, happier lives. Through physical therapy in a hos- pital and at home, Wanda's leg muscles were re-educated to function again. At first she needed braces. Now she walks and runs again. For Wanda and her family the future now holds' great promise, ^ Wanda is only one of thousands of patients, children and adults, who are making partial or complete comebacks from crippling polio. March of Dimes volunteers, now en- gaged in the organization's annual fund drive, will tell you that many more remain to be helped. The accent now, with the great decline in new polio cases, is to give these patients all possible rehabilitation aid. ' The program is called Operation Comeback. The March of Dimes will tell you that 300,000 living Americans have had paralytic polio and that one out of three still have disabilities that can be benefited by rehabilitation. The techniques that have been de- veloped only within the past five or six years could, if they were applied to \old\ polio cases, bring relief to many thousands who are now helpless or despairing of ever becoming useful 'human beings again, the March of Dimes organization believes. Better, more efficient arm-bracing alone, for example, is needed by more than 50,- 000 past victims of polio. Such im- provements can make \all the differ- ence in the world\ in the lives of these handicapped Americans. However, it's not done overnight and the costs are high. Last year, for example, $21,700,000 in March of Dimes funds were needed to give' care and rehabilitation to 57,800 polio vic- tims. Only 4,800 of these were new cases. The others had suffered polio in previous years. This year the March of Dimes has allocated $21,100,000 for polio oare and Operation Comeback. Until the polio- disabled have been given the maxi- mum aid possible in rehabilitation, it can't be complacently said that polio is a thing of the past. Albany County Poultrpen, Look To Favorable 1958 » Albany County poultrymen can look forward to a favorable year in 1958* This is the forecast made by a poultry specialist from the New York State College of Agriculture and the Albany County Agricultural Agent. Cornell Professor A. William Jas- per and Associate Agent Leonard •pal- mer foresee a good year for egg pro- ducers, but narrow profit margins for broiler growers. The turkey out- look has a tone of optimism. The marketing specialist, who con- stantly keeps an eye on the size of the nation's laying flock, reported that hen numbers on Jan. 1 will be about Red Cross Chairman Named The appointment of Robert W. MacArthur as chairman of the in- dustrial division, and Perle S. Kezer as vice-chairman, has been announced by John P. Hiltz, Jr., Albany county chairman of the 1958 Red Cross membership and fund campaign. Mr. MacArthur is vice-presfdent of the Ramsey Chain Co. and a director and past president of the Albany Safety Council. Mr. Kezer is automotive engineer for the Socony-Mobil Oil Co., a di- rector of the Alabny Kiwanis Club and the Albany County Chapter, American Red Cross. He is a mem- ber of the Normanside Country Club and Blanchard Post 1040, American Legion, Elsmere. Mr. MacArthur and Mr. Kezer an- nounced the appointment of the fol- lowing group chairmen: Printing, Oscar Hakes and John Nugent; auto- mobiles, Robert D. Ley den; construc- tion, Thomas A. Gallagher. Guernsey Makes Record A registered Guernsey cow, Feura Pearlie, owned by Daniel H. Heller, Feura Bush, has completed an official production record in the Herd Im- provement Registry division'of the American Guernsey Cattle Club. This record was for 12,717 pounds of milk and 532 pounds of fat. \Pearlie was a senior three-year- old, and was milked two times daily for 305 days while on test. This of- ficial production record was super- vised-by New York State College of ' Agriculture. \As you look back you recall the President put in the first budget pro- posals with the suggestion Congress cut if it could- Later he even sug- gested an amount to cut. While Con- gress didn't do all it could have, it took the cut from the popular out- cries, from back home and at least save us some tax pain. So if you want to know what good it does to protest about government, there's a case history of how well it pays oil. Keep it up, on state and local levels as well as at Washington. After all, it's your money.\ — Utica Obesrver- Dispatch. _^____ i INFLATION AFFEaS YOUR INSURANCE, TOO I That homo you bought 10 or 15 ftarx ago couldn'l bo'replocwd for anything noar what you paid for It. At Inflation corrioi iho *atu» up, koop a iharp «)<• on your inturonce bacaut« a fire could hand you 9 frightful toit. Btltar chwk your policlei in th« liflht of toda/l *» placement value*. 6ttr»r check u»f FRANKLIN SHULTES BERNE — E. Berne 131 ETHEL U. WOOD VOORHEESVILLE — RO 5-2119 dred higher than the previous year. The farm price of milk in New York uucuviiy. ivioreover, sucn raises state avera ged $4.58 a hundred in the and the anthrsdt^fdU^trv to \took- ^^^ C ^^ZS&^&^^ mm ^ - Iing f ° r a n S^S n words 0 °o 1 ly rises. And for the civil servant; PANCAKE SUffeiB iWAR. 29 The Men's Cluftpf' Thompson's ake Reformed cHurot will sponsor a pancake supper 3^£p,29 from 5:30 to 7:30 p. m. in theMureb. hall. jest —£0\ , 5 per cent smaller than a year earl A national conteflltb' find a new ier. slogan for hard'cdifheat has been During the first half of the new launched by the,Anthracite Informs- year, indications are that poultrymen tion Bureau. It' wflfpbjnted' out in 'will start only about five per cent the announcemehtbfiiat competitive — *•— -u:„i„ 4.u„_ *i— J:J fuels have widely ,M>iicized slogans, teacher or person of fixed income the rising costs of living soon become disastrous. \The time has come for a breath- ing spell in these annual wage de- mands by big unions — demands which, because of the vast power of huge unions, beebme in effect shot- gun bargaining.\ — New York, N. Y., Herald-Tribune. . OUR SERVICE IS ME J OR AND WE CAN PROVE IT EXPERT SERVICE — H9URS, 9 to 9 GUILDERLAND RADIO-TELEVISION 2301 WESTERN AVE. ALBANY 8-4420 SCHENECTADY ELgin 5-3579 \ALBANY'S POPULAR EATING PLACE' 'S Italian - American Restaurant HUDSON AVE. and GRAND ST, — ALBANY \The Ultimate in Italian Cuisine\ THE IDEAL PLACE FOR BANQUETS — PARTIE8 ^ BUSINESS MEETINGS Plenty of Parking Space on Markejt Square , PHONE ALBANY 3-9519 Cunningham , and Story pointed out that a decline in milk supplies and a revision in the New York Milk Mar- keting Order accounted for most of the price- increase in '57. Fluid milk sales were about the same as the pre- vious year. Looking to the year ahead, they foresee a moderately larger milk supply as the cause for a small de- crease in the farm price of milk. They.said: \A sharp reduction in 'dairy cow numbers occurred during 1957, the second year of decrease. Cat- tle numbers are expected to level off in '58. The number of heifers started in 1956 and 1957 will be just about enough to maintain cow numbers, with average culling. The Cornell specialists and Agent Palmer pointed out that the '57 hay crop was above average in quality, grain supplies are plentiful, and the milk-feed price ratio will be favorable. With normal pasture season, milk pro- duction per cow in 1958 will probably resume its long-time upward trend. Referring to the Class I or fluid milk, .the economists said: \The price is expected to be lower during the new year, but sales will be somewhat greater because of the expanded Mar- keting Order.\ To fortify this pre- diction, they pointed to a weakening in the general price level and an ex- pected increase in the supply of milk in the coming year. These two fac- tors are the movers in the Class I price formula. Wholesale prices of butter and skim milk powder next year are not expect- ed to vary much from support pur- chase prices. And the price of manu- facturing milk in the New York mar- ket will be about the same as the past year, unless support prices are chang- ed, they added. Agent Palmer and the economists agreed that the price-cost pressure was eased in 1957, since costs in dairy farming increased less than the farm price of milk. Gen. Hans Speidel, German soldier- scholar, Reader's Digest notes, in his new role as Commander of the Ground Forces of the North Atlantic Treaty Nations in Central Europe, now has tinder him troops of the nations which defeated him 13 years ago in World Wai* II when he was one of the officers opposing the Allied invasion of Europe. ing for a slogari-;in?1ten words or less to emphasize ipVEbmfort, clean- liness, healthfuKesslMfety and econ- omy of hard s6al ftgat.. According to 'theilpiracite Infor- mation Bureau'^ riffiSSi early entries embody the . foliowTifg: \Anthracite heat cost less'.i. !gifi?'we can prove it.\ and \Clean sia?§M°w-cost hard coal heat.\ Ho^eferV * ^ w have been received \} rc $?ipunsters in a lighter vein, sjich-jSI^' \Don't fuel around — coaf-us''Kind' \There's no fuel like an 6i£fu$®* ; First prize\ 'tiffitM .$50; second prize, $25; thiitf fe^fiftti, $10 each; next ten, anthraciteifewelry, a choice of cuff Jinks' oftlearJings. l here is no ErmtSto ^ e number of slogans thafcearrfie' submitted by one individual';' Entries must be postmarked nd^aiMrphan Mar- 1, and addressed <W ^fwiVnthracite In- formation Bureau -'spitfadison Ave., I^cw York, Ne|rjSf£'/.\' Fire R||fp957 The Schoha''Hif3&n*y Volunteer Firemen's assbciifloi'^ ™ de * he following repoE J»>i'&S7: Fires, 154; W-MffiVoid calls to the wtimatedftdamap-o* ,$188,200, and three res'fiafe'rs»\We're called on nine cases, ^^^fe-l 7 -:' ' All of the irf^|&^;-Si'epar'tmen'ts participated $%$&&&. Civil De- tense drill, ^m&jfcmz service sent out 13 wMffl&iffl-- trough- out the comB^mMfirje::answered) to aid in OgM^^m- Are on Leonard mouKlHpn^r'Gottes* 1116 - fhe j assodati6nlS^iM*6W:ed loss on damage. dojM:|iisM^ . Jbe radidlM-itaia*',d'-:''more im- portant part^M^^epartmertts a \d C.vil D^^^mte. . i:^i0^b. 12. ov9 f ! U . th eiDffiy r t;Mo' ; became gen- erals during fflfflW^Umost 80 percent were^glSnhe;-Army's „.e =i .„ „„ ., Command aid*SS2$Sttft.' College |.Jan. 26, at 7:45 a, at Fort Le^v^pffi^ ..^ere ;; they of, the .program is ' mfr f ned ^:m^0':^m4 of °? weii-Befng.- -~ T more egg type chicks than they did a year ago. If this happens, egg producers can expect satisfactory egg prices through the year, not just for the first six months, he added. To explain his cautious optimism for regular egg producers next fall, Professor Jasper said, \Many poultry- men gave up egg production' entirely after their experience in 1954 and 1956, particularly in the midwest. Some of those who gave up egg production are likely to remain out of business or at least not re-enter on a large scale.\ Broiler growers in. the state, accord- ing to Jasper, can expect broiler prices in 1958 to continue somewhat higher than the U. S. average. In 1957 the average U. S. price at the farm was 19c a pound. Next year's prices will hover at this figure. Growers will likely set another record in 1958 by producing five or six per cent more broilers than the '57 record breaking figure. Turning to the turkey situation the marketing specialists said the '58 tur- key crop ' is likely to be below the 1957 record. Present large storage stocks will, however, dominate the early 1958 picture On the other hand, turkey growers can look forward to higher prices dur- ing the last four months of next year than this September - December, if an anticipated cut of at least five per cent is made in number of turkeys raised. Summing up the outlook for the year ahead, Professor Jasper and Agent Palmer believe that poultry- men can look forward to higher gross incomes in 1958 as compared to 1957. The actual increase in net income will be larger than the gross because price increases-not volume increases (except for broilers) will be the principal basis for the increased gross income. SUNDAY BROADCAST A woman from St. Louis, Missouri, states that by acquiring a > better understanding of God she obtained a healing of tuberculosis. She will tell the! details of how this occurred on •th Christian Science radio program over WPTR^ Albany, on Sunday, m. The subject 'The True Basis ... -.- ,«n. or careiui ««.~.7\-M — VJ-I ,,^-^U.B, Neil Bowles of At- velo d Sit ^'^'to»# r ^?' 1 '?* P e \ l'anta„Ga„ is the commentator. 2Hlr ed a reaaijS^l^pii'respoifsi-I Subscribe to the Altamont Enter- bility ajiamavSiffiJKr,'\ erise — $3.00 per year. ' Vacation Sale!!! •YES, W^RE TAKING A VACATION . . . BEFORE WE GO — ALL BILLS MUST BE PAID Arnold and Jerpy must have expense money. Take advantage of these Big Savings! ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE MUST BE SOLD Store 1823 Western Avenue PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER WESTMERE — OPEN EVENINGS — WE GIVE S & H GREEN STAMPS LOUDONVILLE, NEW YORK Men Only Men and Women DAY SESSION EVENING SESSION SPRING SEMESTER ~ 1958, Classes Begin January 30 REGISTRATION UNDERGRADUATE SCHOOL Seniors Jan. 24 Juniors Jan. 27 Sophomores Jan- 28 Freshmen Jan. 29 HOURS OF REGISTRATION Day Students 9 A. M. to 12—1 to 4:30 P. M. Evening Students—6:30 to 9 P. M ' GRADUATE SCHOOL Jan. 24, 27, 28, 29 2 to 4 P.. M.—6:30 to 9 P. M. UNDERGRADUATE SCHOOL-Both Day and Evening Sessions, offer a complete program of approved courses leading to Bachelor's Degrees in Arts, Science and Business Administration. The program provides majors in English, History, Sociology, Modern Languages, Classical Languages, Biology, Pre-Medical, Pre-Denral, Pre-Veterinarian, Pre-Law, Mathematics, Chemistry, Physics, Economics, Finance ahd Accounting. , ' TUITION $18 per credit hour for undergraduate day and evening students. GRADUATE SCHOOL-Offers courses in the major fields of Education, English, History, Sociology, Accounting, Economics, Biology, Chemistry, Mathematics and Physics, leading to .Master's Degrees in Science in Education (M.S. in Ed) •' Arts (M.A.); Business Administration (M.B.A.) Science (M.S-) The Gradu/ate School conducts its classes on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings 6:30 td 10:25, and on Saturday, 9:00 A.M. to 11:15 A.M. Open t o Men and Women TUITJON-$20 per credit hour for graduate students. For Catalog, Detailed Information and Consultation Gall In Person, telephone or Write K For GRADUATE SCHOOL-Deqn of the Graduate School For UNDERGRADUATE SCHOOL-Director of Admissions Telephone Slate 5?8511 v 4 1 I fe m £ i *i t ^