{ title: 'The Greenwich journal and Fort Edward advertiser. (Greenwich, N.Y.) 1924-1969, July 02, 1924, Page 11, Image 11', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031458/1924-07-02/ed-1/seq-11/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031458/1924-07-02/ed-1/seq-11.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031458/1924-07-02/ed-1/seq-11/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031458/1924-07-02/ed-1/seq-11/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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* ill v» y l& r t . . _________________ ,snr-¥inii»«nt whloh - QtilCWy ^ s ^ iTBtAUevea t>y local .application, and the sSSS, ••jStecrial WCeiMcine, a. Tonic, which a-ots HmookIi die Blood on the* Mucous Sur* £Mt. /iS^Sf, finis resaudjnfc tlie inflammation. ' -«oW?by, a lj -drugglsts, - ,&y St Co-, Toledo, Qhto. SELL y o u r f a r m Through tha World’s LnSfgest Agency. S5.000 sales and tho-usunas of waltlnK buyers _ Tlglit hoiiS. *£?o clVATfi1-’ tor listing, ‘ T&tMrowtns or advertising, Oal' <jr Ty-ito, , jg. A. STROUT FARM AGENCY. Inc. Odd Experiences of Railroad Journey and Sights iiibit. at Agricultural Ex- Si 3 ' f_ JS. B. T»aNeas H. Ij. Bunell , ’Vat* Ness <& Russell Attorneys and Counselors , . a t ‘Lato 'R m I Eitate and I nsuranco J G R E E N W I C H , N. Y- 111 m @ m m r ’*■ - - ■ ■' Ulr-H. E. Chesebrough DENTAL OFFICE Sf\r. and Mrs. igpeneer Hatch of Jackson rec«ntly received the follow ing’ lettet firom their son, Ira Hatch, who is an instructor in agriculture at Allahabad, India: , y Just get kome this morning: at day break havitLg travelled all night to complete the last leg of our educa tional trip iwitb the- students, which we were on Iasi week -when I wrote you from Lucknow. It has been the strangest an<l in many ways the hap piest of all trips in ray more or less rolling’ stone career. Last Wednesday night coming away from a garden party given by Mrs. Hig-gmtottom in honor of Mr. ■and Mrs. Forftian 'and Mr. and Mrs. k OtlfFi Clock Over American Express GREENWICH. N, Y. P . B R A D L E Y Try Our Monarph Brand M ince M eat Salad Dressing * Teas and. Coffee Vt - v ^ \ i- 1T0U CAN’T IMAGINE the comfort that can be obtained from a pair of driving glasses, ground to your prescription in Csookes Glass. Ask one that ■wears, them. bull imported from America. One of their half breed \holstein. anil na tive. cow with the hump has given 96 pounds of milk in one day.- She is much talked about in India; The manager of this farm, as English man, was very fine. He spent two or three hours with .us showing us about and answering oilr questions. After which we returned to tha city and in the afternoon visited the ruins of the historic old residency where .at the time of the mutiny in 1854 five hundred, mostly women and chil dren, took refuge for eighty days in the cellar while the walls of the building- above \them wer<j being shot through and shattered by cannon balls. It was never rebuilt; tiie walls with the scars of battle and the floor still remain. One can walkabout in the old cellar. It is quite roomy as cellars go, but surely small for so many people. Great numbers died. The next day we went out 50 miles Brooks, new a-rrivals in India, also|on ^ train t0 Cawnpore wIlere we newly married, and from among » ! saw w ¥ t was being done at the Gov- beautifyl array of flowers and of gorgeous Hindustani dress also ernnrent Agricultural college.* We , . ...........■ . , , „ _ . also went through the woolen mills. ‘ cluck Amsrieaii and European de-,These ^ are operated b British signs, I changed to the regulation capiul an(J under their . _ travelling costume of all khaki coat ■ vjsjon_ Thfiy are really j tQ shirt, short pants and long stockings. ( date plants. j bought a h w o len The students and I loaded ourselves ■ b)anket fa flashy red and ^ and bundles of bedding into several, , t takeg the €ye of Ismail> Indlan a friend who exclaimed: “WEiy,^ Didc, you are positively seaming! JVhat's up!\ “I am. in fhe greatest luelt Imagin able,” responded Dlcb.. \You see, I have beea^ attentive to a pretty Chevy Chase girl'for mope than-a year. 'Dur ing all of that time she would never -admit that slie loved me;'she would only say tliat she respited me. But now, old chap, congratulate me, for last night she confessed that she re spected nie no longer—that she loved mel”—Kansas City Star. U u c k y B r i d e s Three lmndreU years' ago tlie owner of a castle in 'Norfolk, England, left £ 1 , 000 , the interest of which was to be divided between the eldest and the youngest, the tallest and the shortest of the hrldcg* who were married- dur ing the year in the village belonging to the castle. This' original custom ls still contin ued. After each wedding in the vil lage the bride Is measured by the clergyman, und at the end of the year ihe result ls made known and the “record” brides receive the gifts. ekkas, a two wheeled vehicle drawn 1 servant, and he will’ now take great ! pride in making up my bed beautiful- 13 y a slender pony. The ekka fashioned after the stfle of grand j £ ^ “^ 07 in w s t o ^ t ! father s old srulky with carpeted plat -1 We returned to Lueknow in the evening and eafly .the following morn ing began taking in the -All India poultry show of which A. E, Slater, form, which would probably accom- modate six cans of milk or four pas- j .. senders and driver or three' passen- g-ers and thoir bed rolls. We trans ferred at the depot 'to a third class compartment on .the Punjab excess train. The inside arrangement of a pas- carriage in settler coach, called our Pregbytery missionary poultry man, is the secretary. It was really a first class show—nearly every breed of fowls being represented and fine birds too reared from imported stock. Our man Slater has done a lot in this England, is not like oars in America, Iine t0 improve the standard oT poul- With seats for two one back of an- j trjr in India. He gives ne(irly hls other throughout the entire length of whole time to it and is verjr stlccess. the par. Here in North India a car j f u]. jje is sending Duane a trio of i 5 . divided into_ two or three compart- : W . Leghorns., The Cornell fellows ments, one being furnished quite ex- wjjj not [je surprised at the propriety ti’aVagantly, with plush cushions 1 for «chick.. hatch t0 uke t0 mirror and roominess. This would Handshaking O ld Idea ' Even Hoiiier, Aristophanes and Ylr- gjl mentioned the social custom of shaking hands. Engllsh-spenfelng- races took it up vigorously apparently as none are more adept In thnt tustom ‘han British on fl Americans. JIany oth- ■s, like tlie H^ench and Italians, have iriatlons in their form nf greeting which the Eii 4 'llsli-speaklag countries do .lot. At the eonflrmntlon of a bnr- gain It appears to II Kings 10:15. It lij nevertheless practlcallY relegated to the Anglo-Saxon races today. A L B A H Y SAVING S B A N K “Don’t Spend I t All” Bank by Mail Save money regularly. Bank by M a il.'^N o m a tter where you live you can enjoy the banking facilitietoi the A l b a n y Savings Bank, one o f the largeit and oldest s a v ing banka In ~t the State. A postal- wiH bring full information. Albany Savings Bank Corner Maiden Lane & N. Pearl St. « ALBANY], N- Y. Deposit* and Surplw O vct Fwrty IM Iara S t o p . C o u g h i n g Tha simplest and best way .to stop coughs, colds,' cronp, 'bronchial, “fltr ’ a n i k grippe cotfghs is to take C H A M B E R L A I N S C O U G H R E M E D Y Every user ia a friend % The B e s t A d v e rtisin g M e d iu m . rror be called first class. A second class com p a r tm e n t has less leather cushion, w h ile in ix 'i ’f . }?. - ■' .»• v,' 'H • If f ; vr'; ■ 1 v'**f • 1 » H * U $■': y' f ■i .. s' i . *' • . 1 ■ *• H * • N , . i ' t • — i U M . Y; r : l *.v > i' f : i , v \ - - 'I ' I f -K rear-. ing and distributing chickens through- ^ out the villages of Travancore \as a 1 room and | Y . M. C. A. side line, the third I Slater had his show in a park class there are only narrow wooden (under a tent like chautabqnal The benches and b« cushioas. The seats. of show birds were arratw>d are arranged as one long bench nextj and ,abeJed in excellent ord(sx Pai)S. , ing from this well Americanized ex-, hlbition through a gate into an open _ yard the spectator finds, himself ob- I serving the Indian’s exhibit of their 1 own door yard fowls. It was funny j I enough to make one get right down | and roll. A line of pegs with strings' tied to them were driven dovn flush P A I N T I N G and C A R P E N T E R W o r k by Job op Hour H AM AH &RICKERT Phone 38-W| GREENWICH, N. Y. F L O W E R S Cut flowers and Plants of. ■every, discriptictu Wedding and FuniraJ Wort »itr Specialty ^ &jpert service in Laadscaiw ^jftrilexiing and }mprovemei£t& o* Sawiis -or gardens. the bet*! because ' *rro*» them. « -GREENWICH, ¥i. Y. * • &CEUYLEfeVILLE,;N. t i . to cach outside wall so that the pas sengers sit with the hacks to the windows. Another bench extends the long -way through the middle of the I • car where two rows of people can! , sit with their backs to each other. j One travels vor-y cheaply in this early j day school roo-m affair and our stu- ! dents, who are managing to live on ' loss than $4.00 per month, is well as many of the young and hardy mis sionaries take advantage of the cheap rates. j It wns in ?Dch a setting as this that wo piled up for the night ride unricr cooperative blankets, I being the only pale-face in the heap. Not with an uninterrupted sleep afiead of us, however-, we were awakened hv loB4-talk. A young Bengali stu dent who is known by his class mates to act more oft«n than he thinks, had heen awakened probably by a jolt of the train that tfte' rest of us didn’t feel, acted with CTeat confidence in hi' own superior power to awake at the proper time. He beeran talk’ng ■n a loud voice to the rest who were «tiH ouite willing to sleep on. After Inofeing at rny wrist watch I finally °\t enough aw?ake to tnqulrr in a husky voice withWny cfcs still half closed. lcWhat» sa of this row at ten minutes to three?\ He in sur er se exclaimed, “What ten to three. I thought it wag_mornine. Then let’s all sleep some Enore.’’ There was no tnnposition so we proceeded to, fall asleep. Two hoars later we were \tartled again by our Bengali brother; “ Qipick fellows! We are in the Luck- nows station now. There is no other such big station surely.” But when we come to look the place over more thoroughly we found the town was on tlte wrong side of the track for f'ne thing- and many sizes smaller than Lucknow our destination. We v.eise well awake now so we rolled our blankets and after another hour got down at the bi^ ol(J historic city. The whole cr<Avd took ekkas here and although it was still early morn ing the narrow? streets were quite alive with people, ox carta, high pony carts like on which we were riding, donkeys with heavjr packs, also horses and bullocks, and an occasidnal camel all •witli pack, saddles- Gloats and sacrsd family eows Wander at will in the '1 streets o»f the bazars on side walks, porches and, evenrin rooms of fhe houses.* Ill about 3 half hour we ciiiie to the SCYrssfcian college (Metho dist >, vs. here we were-, to stay in the Hostel -\\i:h Sheets. • You remember v.’e 1 ived with hran^at the -time we at tended the weddi ng of Ervin and Wil ma Pederson. After breakfast -we went out six miles to visit tlie Military dairy—a one thousand aeae fa«n where pure millc and butter Is produced to sup- with the -gTound. Each roostiT was tied by his foot to his individual peg and he stood on or n»ar it crpw- ing away the best he could. My experience in picketing chick ens, at tlje time I was the ago when mother would call me a cruel boy, was not successful. They tvould strain at the leash. I see now that dad’s fowls were not brought up properly. In the evening after the shojv I attended a dinner given to the fac ulty by the Mohammedan .students living in the hostel where wo were st&ymg. We ate riee, meat and gravy with ou£ hands as at other 1 Hindustani meals that I havo writ- ■ ten you about. The man’s name at my left vvas Abu ?fassar which means “Patner of Success.” At my right was “Son of a Prohpet.\ Wa< I not m good company? I enjoyp<l it all immensely. When we had finished eating “Father of Success\ rote and thanked us Americans for eonuag to their dinner. The Yanks made im promptu responses. This suggests to me that I should tfiank you for taking the trouble to read this letter which is long already and not write any more. We took the train after dinner back to Allashabad. Cleanly W ild Animals With every wild creature cleanliness Is essential. Even tlie desplsii} rat spends a large proportion of its time in cleaning Itself. All the cats, from the lordly lion .downward, arc most nnrtlcular uliTnlt washing and comb ing their fur. The rough tongue acts as a kind of sponge, and ,m>u will no- .tlce how a cat Holts her paws mnl uses them tn 1 -lean such parts <if her fiody as are lieymul the fea^h of her tongue. As a substitute'for the powdex so popular with feminine Immunity, birds find dust Invaluable. The domestic fowl loves nothing better than n dust Until. Partridges, sparrows ami larks roll anil flutter in the dust until their feathers are full of it. Isles Bird Havens Around tlie coast of Britain there are several islands chiefly populate.® hy, marine birds; The Fumes hive been the winter resort of the elder duck for generations and probabljMfrfr many centuries. *The Skerries off the Anglesey coast are the sanctuary. Of the arctic tern and the beautiful ro seate tern. ' Holyhead isltipd ls visited\ occasion ally by the whopper swao, the some what rare tufted duck and the red breasted merganser, says tlie Detroit News. Puffin Island, at the entrance to the Men a 1 strait, is named after Ihe birds that Inhabit' I t , *.. . G r o w t h d e p e n d o n a n d V i t a l i t y this one thing— N O matter what type of bird or animal you raise healthy, energy. Not n bit o f nourishment Is wasted— —no matter how scientifically you feed them— and In addition, Flcischznann’s Pure Dry Yeast the bij; question is: Bow fast can they turn th a t feed into flea h and vitality? If yon call find a natural way to speed up digestion and assimilation— to help the animal get the last ounce of nourishment out of every pound of feed— your profits will grow accordingly. And that is exactly what Fleischmann's Pure Dry Yeast doesl This remarkable food-accessory, added in »mnil amounts to the regular daily ration, helps to transform that ration quickly and easily into good solid flesh and F IE ISC H M A N N ’S P U R E D R Y ^ YEAST Copyist, 1924, The Flelschmanu Co. supplies tlie essential B*Vitamin (the vitamin of growth)1 in the most highly concentrated form avail able in all nature. TJie results are startling: faster growth—increased vitality and fertility— heavier egg-pioducticm for poultry— blue-ribbon winners for* fanciers. Scientific - breeders tlie country owcr have proved the power of Fldschtaann’s Pure Drjr Yeast. It Is now on sale right here in town—a trial can will be the best investment you ever made. Come in and get a free booklet on this modem method of animal feeding. For sale by- 0. F. SHELDON- Greenwich k C. DUNNMG Greenwich THE GREENWICH, CAMBRIDGE AND SALEM LtJTO BUS LIKE Schedule Effective &Jay 30, 1924 GreenwicK aad Salem Schedule Salem and Fort Edward Schedule Sunday Only AM PM 8:3013:35 9:15|4il5 9:40)4 {40 ,.9:25| I:25|5:25||l0:26|5i25 Dally Except Sunday AM AM PM .. .7.30!10:3513:251 ..8:f5!n:25|4:20| . ,8:30il2:35 4:40j Lv. Greenwich Ar. Salem Lv. Salem .... Ar. Greenwich Bus connects at Salem with Bus fo i Gran ville and Whitehall at 8:15 a.m. and 4:40 p.m. 10:35 Trip to Salem and Return will NOT be operated TUESDAYS. __________ Greenwich, and Cambridge Schedule Daily Except Sunday Sunday Only AM PM IM PM AM PM 'PM PM 1>V, Grotm'h 7i0i)|i:s0|s:30|---|J8:30|12:30|5:30j 9:30 ‘ Ar.SaU’ge 7:26 2:00 0(00 -- {7:001.1:0016:00 30:00 Ar. Hedges . ; . ,12:0516:25]. .. . 11 ... .| l:25|6:2Bf ....... i.V. Hedges ___ |2:SE| ♦ |7:35|| --- 1 1:3517:35 - --- L-v. Csua’Si t!30|S:OM6:00)8:06 TS00 2:00 8:00 10:00 Ax.GHtn’h 8:00!s:26(6:2G|8:25||7:30( 2:35(8:30 10:30 *B\is leaves Cambridge for Greenwich Sun day evening at 8:00 and 10:00 o’clock. NO' 6 : 00 ‘ o’clock trip operated. Bus connects at Cambridge with Bus for. Hoosick* Palls' and Troy. A special round trip rate of $2.60 will be offered. No •Waiting and a fine ride—Try it ! _____________ Bus will run to dances at Hedges Lake during season,. Leave Greenwich at 7:30 and Cambridge at 8:00 p.m. standard time. nATLY EXCEPT SUNDAY AM FM Lv. Salem ................... 8:30112:30 Lv. Cambridge ............ 7:30l .......... Lv. Greenwich . . . . . . . 8 :25 12:30 Lv. Cossayuna ............9:00 1:00 Dv. South Argyle . .. . f>:18 1:18 Lv. Argyle ........... . . 9:.\0( 1:30 Ar. Fort Edward . . . . 9 :50| 1:50 SUNDA 1 ONLY AM PM 14:40 7:00 2:00 7:30 4:35 8:00 5:10 - Ft:1*= 5:28 R :30 5:40 8i60|6:00 . Lv. Fort Edward . Lv. Argyle ......... Lv. South Argyle Lv. Cossayuna ... A t , Salem . . , s . Ar. Greenwich ,., . Ar? Cambridge .., DAILY EXCEPT STOtDAY AM FM ,. 10:1013:45 ., 10:35 4:10 10:47 4:22 ., 11:0514:45 ..-11:3015:20 ll:3ffl&35 .. 2:00 6:00 SUNDAY ONXY AM PM 9:C0' fi:05 9:20( 6:30 9:32 6:42 S:50! 7:00 lth 2 0 | - * MJiSO; -7t30 l:00|l0:0t) Bus -\vill make evening trips Saturdays and holidays, Leave Greenwich 6:30 p.m. and Leave Fort Edward 19 :30 p.m. Regular stops are Loughlins, Fort Edward —Gtrthriea Store at Argyle—McNamghton’s Store at Cossayuna—Bajber & Kipps at Sa lem— Corcoran’s News Room at Greenwich— Ellis Hotel and McWhorter's Store at Cam bridge. Bus to let to go £ny distance at any time. . PHONE , p . g . A t k i n s ’ G r e e n w i c h , n .- y . \ A iiu -n i -in 0 v eittu oi W t