S outhern O regon News Review. Thursday, March 25, 1948
T
X
7
Classified Department
;
FICTION
f
C o rn e r L
T JOINED the crowd gathered on
IM P R O M P T
By FLORENCE BAUGH
HABBIT3 & SKINS
Another said, seriously, “That’s
right. My boy knew him. He wasn’t
a coward. If he’s in that lake he
was murdered.”
A siren wailed and the crowd fell
back to make room for another pa
trol car which drew up alongside
the green sedan. “There's Old Doc
Warren,” someone in the crowd said
as an elderly man stepped out of
the car.
I worked my way toward the cars.
I could hear Old Doc Warren talk
ing. “Yes, this is his car. ' He has
been working hard—too hard, but
what doctor hasn’t these days? So
far as I know he has no enemies,
but I don’t believe my son would
commit suicide!”
There was another stir of excite
ment. I threaded my way back to
the rail to see if this time they had
really found him.
The boys in the boats were hav
ing difficulty hauling in the lines,
but when the catch broke water we
could see it was just a log.
As they dropped it back the shrill
whistle of the interurban reminded
the bridge watching the crew
dragging the lake above the dam.
“Who are they searching for this
tim e?” I asked as I pushed closer
to the rail.
“Young Doc Warren,” several an
swered at once.
I had never seen young William
W’arren, but I knew about him—the
whole town knew about him. He
had joined the army with our Na
tional Guard. The boys were still
singing his praises. He had been
through a lot at the front and had
won the complete devotion of his
men by his untiring efforts and
unceasing good humor. He had re
turned to his father’s clinic almost
immediately upon his return to the
States. I had heard little about him
in recent months.
“ What about the woman they
were drtgging for yesterday?” I
asked.
“They found her earlier this
merning. Plain case of suicide. But
when the boats were coming in to
the dock over there by those willows
they found a man’s hat. It had his
name inside—William Warren.”
“And about the same time,” an
other put in, “the police find this
car on the bridge, out of gas and
nobody around.” He pointed to a
green sedan that several officers
were shaking down. “They find a
driver’s license on the steering post
in the name of young Doc Warren.
They figure something has hap
pened to the Doc, so while they
radio headquarters for a check the
boats lower the grab hooks and
start working again.”
I edged my way over near a
couple patrolmen who had arrived
from headquarters. Calls to Doc
Warren’s home, his office, the two
hospitals, all brought the same re
sponse: he wasn’t there.
His wife had told the officers that
he had left home early, before she
and the children were up. He had
come home late after an emergency
operation, seemed unable to relax,
and had spent a restless night. She
had awakened while he was dress
ing and asked if he had a call. He
explained that he was just going
out to clear the cobwebs from his
mind. He had kissed her goodby.
She had thought no more about it
until the police called.
I moved back to the rail to watch
the boats as they trolled slowly
toward us, the grappling hooks
searching the lake bottom in the
lane between them. The water was
plenty choppy, a cold raw wind had |
been blowing out of the north since
yesterday. Nothing about the scene i
seemed urgent. The boats moved [
slowly. The crowd just stood and
watched, coat collars turned up j
against the wind. , ,
, j
j i Once again Pittsburgh is em-
A young boy
crawled under broi,ed fa a controversy over
my arms to press himself against
the rail, excited by his first-hand Stephen A. Foster, one of its most
experience with tragedy. “They got famous sons, as the result of a
somethin’,” he shouted, and the decision by the city council to
crowd came to life. All turned abandon the Stephen Foster Mem
toward the men in the boats, watch orial home.
Rather than spend $10,000 to re
ing with a strange fascination, wait
ing to see what was being dragged habilitate the memorial home, the
city is giving up the 14-room man
out.
Someone said, “That’s him!” when sion which some biographers term
the men pulled the thing loose from the “authentic site” of Foster’s
the hooks. “They put him in a birth. The once stately place has
gunny sack!”
become dilapidated, with plaster
We saw the men in one of the falling, porches collapsing and
boats peering into the sack. Then romping school children peppering
one of them, looking up at us, its windows with stones.
pulled out and held up a decoy some
Three direct descendants of the
hunter had lost. There was a mur noted composer may be left home
mur of relief, of restrained amuse less as a result of the abandonment.
ment, and the crowd settled back The three, a grandson, granddaugh-
again into their coat collars.
,
,,
, . _ ,__ _
Someone commented, “This jump- er / nd great-granddaughter, have
ing off bridges is getting to be an hved m the building for more than
epidemic.”
I 30 years- The granddaughter, Mrs.
Another one questioned, “How do Jessie Ross, 72, has been acting as
you know he jumped? Maybe he . caretaker for the city.
In its decision not to repair the
was pushed.”
W ANT L IV E ItA B IIIT E 4 lb«. up. ra
me that I was already lute for work
bit itkin*, lililn", w ool, m ohair, ea
car», liv e p ou ltry. K uby * C om pany
I reluctantly pulled myself awa, | «2
#38 B. W. g r o u t. P ortlan d . O regon
and headed toward town.
_
.
• _
J Wl x
DKKIl, E L K , COW iiiul F u r Hklua tan
Down the road I stopped at Phil*» rdCK 01 ijGGQ IlGlS
nsd in to lea th er am t mail« Into
Phil-Er-Up. I liked Phil and I could « » . i , »
r t 11
n
c o a ts, g love*, etc. to your me.i"ur*.
Or w e buy tilani. O hsrvsn v O lov»
save the city gasoline tax.
IV ll l l l O I Î DOllcH CfOD
and T a n n in g Co., 1137 N. W . l# th
“Where’s the boss?” I asked the
A t «., P ortlan d , O regon.
Plant Immigrant Has
young attendant who dashed out to
B AM S B I U M B B
wait on me, “up at the lake watch
o r W h ile F r y e r » k in s
Typical Success Story ,» h to M ig h A 15 B B te c IT n e s n io t* BK n f IM
ing them drag for the body?”
» Ir e lc h e r s 11.4 j u o s .
p re p a id . S h ip to
“Gosh, no!” exclaimed the boy as One package of seed sent home by
B. B. L u os. W arren, O regon
he fumbled with the hose. “Has he a missionary less thnn 30 years ngo
been having a time! His wife had has developed into a crop now valued
MISCELLANEOUS
a baby this morning, a week before at more than 200 million dollars a
NLXOTKIO M O T O » w o e
she was expecting it!”
year. That is the success story of a 1 W all equip ped esta b llslu -d m otor re
Just then Phil came out of the plant immigrant — Koreun lespe- ’ pair »hop In Y ak im a Valley. >*.<’00
sh op and equip. B135.OOO In clu d es
living quarters in the back with an deza.
new brick b u ild in g. W rite I*»»«
other young man. Phil was beaming
B lsc tr lc , B o s 334. B u n n ysld s, W ash.
Only three decodes ngo Dr. Ralph
like the traditional proud father as
FDR HALE— 4 V iper J3 Cube t*#4i>
Mills,
a
medical
missionary,
sent
a
he pulled his hat down firmly. The
no tim e »Ince e n g in e m ajor, 1 1160
package of lespedeza seed from j eacli.
1^47 S tin so n 160, low tim e.
other man didn’t seem excited.
II1II0 B m lth -L lv ln g * to n Air B ervlce
Korea
to
the
U.
S.
department
of
1 heard Phil say, “Hey, Doc, you
In c. C o rv a llis, O regon.
forgot''vour 'hat'.”" H e tu re ^ d 'to 'g o ■«riculture. Department specialists
T E N T H G E N E R A T IO N , a grip
back. But the other man laughed, planted the seed at the experimental TIII-I
nln g sto r y w h ic h sh o u ld be read
“ You were too excited to notice that ^arm across the Potomac river from
by every teach er mid Cltisen, II »
th at Im portant. A 33-p n gs book let
I didn’t have one when I walked in Washington. In a few years there
w ith our In test c a ta lo g u e o f *21’ *
here for gas. The wind blew it off ’V» enough seed to plant lespedeza
unit u n u su a l book", 10c. I.OMAMB,
B o g 180, W. T o r tle n d , 7, Ore.
as I stepped out of my car on the al several state experiment stations.
The imported crop fitted well on D E A N ’S C L O V E R llo N K V W hite
m ild flavored .
BO-lb. <'ftn IIS
the poor, slightly acid soils unfit for
6 lb. pull 81 40. I’rrfiuld 3rd son e
such crops as alfalfa and soon was
B o y D ean, C uldeeao, Id aho.
being grown widely in the East Cen
R ETE m ix ers, s te a l fab ricated
tral states as a seed and pasture CO no N C open
jo in ts, 0 cu f t. bow l. Vow
crop. Now’ its use is becoming more
ered w ith lty -h . p. g a so lin e en
Mine,
l
i
a
s
t l g li t - f l lt l t n g cover for
widespread, particularly in areas of
leak p roof bow l, can be u sed « fo r
low fertility land.
m ix in g feed", fe r tilise r * , a p r a y i and
tr e a tin g seed. P rice 3135 60. B . B
The U. S. crop of Korean lespe
B e lle , 3783 N. W . M lcolal. BB. 8108
P ortlan d , Ore.
deza. developed directly from the
single package, now is valued at
more than 200 million dollars a year.
We Shop for You
Value of the seed crop amounts to
O
rders
r ille d , D a r re or S m all
20 million dollars. The hay crop
Farmers Shopping Service
makes up another 100 million dollars
V a st E ffic ie n t— reraon allxed
of value. Although value of the pas
W rite, P h on e or W ire
ture crop is difficult to estimate, spe
■14 I n n im lt Bo. S e a ttle 3, W ash .
cialists contend that it amounts to
P h on e M inor 3333
at least 100 million dollars. These
figures do not take into account the
PLANTS AND SEEDS
profitable use of millions of acres of
B
L
U
E
B E R R IE S — N e w e st am i beat In
low fertility land made possible by
c u ltiv a te d blu eb erry plant,»
Kend
introduction of the new legume crop.
for
folder.
B b erh a rd t B lu eb erry
B u reertee, B o n te 1, B o x 379. O lym
pia, W a sh .
___
He's a Rat
What is the most destructive ani
mal In the world?
No—it's not a puppy or a small
boy!
The common Norway or brown rat
has absolutely no competition when
it comes to the ability to destroy.
Annually, rats alone destroy about
ASK fo r ou r llret o f beet peach varle
tie* to p lan t fo r roadxlde m ark etin g.
Our bu<(* cu t from b earin g orchard»,
ch eck ed by S ta te In sp ec to rs for
vlrui» and p assed . W a sh in g to n B u r
s e r ie s. T op p en ish . W a eh ln rto n .
~ IN O A L L B M U B S B B T CO.
T ieton . W ash .
40,000 fru it treee, ap p le, peach, pears,
prune, ap ricot,
ch erry.
R educed
price*. W rite to u*.
F IE L D O XO W N B ng. L au rel 13” -18”
*3.80 Dox. H eath er, B oxw ood 8 fo r
" 11. Font paid. O. O aeaer, M alin o,
O raron.
Wild Blackberry Plants
A Ruperlor v a r ie ty o f n a tiv e w ild
bluckberrleM w h ich y ield * h e a v
ily w h en c u ltiv a te d . N o t "E var-
g r ee n ”, " lllin lln y a ’’ or c ro ssed
berries. 15.00 doxen. J err y P e te r s ,
X t. 4, C hehaU s, W ash .
Pittsburgh Council to Abandon
Stephen Foster Memorial Home
building, the city council declared
that the rambling brick homestead
has "ceased to have any value as a
memorial.” The council therefore
is deeding the property back to
heirs of James H. Park, wealthy
steelmaster who bought it in 1914
and gave it to the city with the
stipulation that it be maintained as
a museum containing a collection
of Stephen Foster mementoes.
Music-lovers of the city later
raised $o00,000 to build an elaborate
Gothic memorial to Foster on Uni
versity of Pittsburgh campus. This
memorial contains the largest col
lection of Foster’s manuscripts and
other belongings. It now is the
mecca for thousands of visitors who
formerly called at the Stephen
Foster Memorial home.
Another controversy over Foster
raged in 1934 when Henry Ford
bought what was claimed to be
Foster’s “real birthplace” and moved
it to his outdoor museum in Dear
born, Mich. William McNair, Pitts-
burgh’s mayor at the time, claimed
the millionaire car manufacturer
bought “the wrong house.” Mrs.
Evelyn Foster Bomeweck of Detroit,
a niece and biographer of Foster,
said the composer was bom in a
white frame cottage which was tom
down and replaced in 1865 with the
brick mansion which became the
Stephen Foster Memorial home.
Foster died in 1863.
POULTRY. CHICKS & EQUIP.
1
j
4 Per cent
^he total grain and
cereal cr°P in the United States, fig
ures compiled by extension service
entomologists indicate. As if its de-
structive abilities were not enough,
the rat is host to carriers or is it-
.
.
« w w_»
, _
. typhus
. _ and . other
..
.
.
. nr„
diseases which
are
i deadly to man.
Few farms are entirely free of
rats, although rat populations can
be reduced quickly. Cleaning up the
premises, rat proofing, cutting off
food supply, poisoning and trapping
are major points In an effective rat
control program. But. once the con
trol measures begin to show results,
! there can be no relaxing. Rat con
trol is a permanent, year-around
program. A few days of poisoning
1 will have only a temporary effect oo
j-gt population,
Modem Dairy Buildings
Will Boost Efficiency
Increased efficiency has entered
the dairy industry with more wide
spread use of milking rooms and
milk houses.
The ideal location for a milk house
is attached to the milking room or
barn. In most areas, sanitary re-
Playing Child Termed
Human Caution Sign
A playing child should be a Hu
man Caution sign to motorists, of
ficials emphasize in connection with
a nationwide plea for highway
safety.
Mile* of walking are saved an
One of every three children who
die is killed in a traffic accident, nually when the milk house la
according to the 1947 edition o f adjacent to the milking room or
Accident Facts, a publication devot barn, figures compiled by Cornell
ed to safety promotion. One-third of university show.
the accidental deaths of children 5
to 14 years of age are the result of qulrements permit construction un
der the same roof.
motor vehicle accidents.
Adjacent construction permits the
Motorists are cautioned to observe
dairyman to coordinate feeding, car
the following rules:
1. Always “Watch Out for Kids.” ing for the cows, milking them and
2. Keep clear of bicycles—right or handling the milk into an efficient
wrong—as they are defenseless j system.
against a motor vehicle.
|
— ------------------
3. Be on the lookout for children 1 D » » ■,
j pL:,1,nr,
darting out between parked cars. n d D D ll d n u LIHCKen
Reduce speed and increase watch- Rdising Is Profitdble
Ailnnna
i n onnnnl
onn w
zxoi-
““
fulness in
school 7nnno
zones and
resi
To offset high meat prices, home
dential areas.
I productjon 0, rabbits and chickens
4. Always remember that children ^
carried on
economl-
have not reached the age of d.scre-
making the fam„ >t leagt
tion and judgment-drivers must
¿ ally independent of commer-
think for them.
£Jal gources
5. Children play in driveways and ' 'Raising of rabbits and chickens
around parked vehicles - always [ gt home hag a blg advantagc ln the
make sure chiWren are out of the i
Jca, uge of feeds> becauge
way before starting a parked vehicle I
animais mature more
ickl
6 Driver—it might be your child! i gnd at lower feed cost per pound
i of gain in weight.
F IV E pop ular breed* for vkk produc
lio n and fin e m eut ty p e. W hite
L eghorn», N ew llarnp anlree, I’ar-
m en ter Red». R o c k sh lr e s and W h ite
R ock» from
ou n tn n d ln g
hreedlm t
sto ck . U. H. A p p r o v ed -u . 8. I’ull-
oruin P a sse d . One o f th e la r g e st
and o ld e st h a tc h e r ie s In the N o r th
w e st. L eghorn co ck erel* 4c. BBA T-
T L B H A T C H B B T , 6744 B. M argin al
W a y , S e a ttle . W a sh in g to n . ______
j
Electronics War on Rust
j An electronic instrument to com
i bat rust and corrosion has been de
veloped by the electrical manufac
turing industry to Insure better lu
brication and longer-wearing ma
chinery.
FOR SALE
B B IM I U B B A T O M B Q U I I-M B B T
{b iles A Hervicr, Homo lo i’koi*. b o tila
ooolai • reach In boaea. Meat oaeee.
Ev. r y lliliig In n frlg< ration B orU a»«
M efriirerntion Co., 1310 B B. ER1-
In re w o r th , P ortland , Ore*oB. Ph.
V S . M M . __________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
BUSINESS 4 INVEST. OPPOR.
M ODERN inoveabla lum i» ream . 18
«tool", »•oiiii«!» ii’ly »>ioli>i" »l L o c a t
ed n u lo, H f « r , R»»«. »>••» G ood
I> i i » I i i >"». «iroiinil rent 111.04 Ho.
f a n bn m o v i'l Io Dam Kite*. 1 oat
jr.ion H»r »17.00 E lder »*» M ary
A ean ovlob , 133Tl B. W. J e ffe r e o n ■*.
on T o u r let H ig h w a y , P o rtla n d 1,
O regon.
, »il F U I’ A I.F N E . IDAHO
O ffa»
Uunilv lirici» b in in e** b u ild in g on
proininf nt lo c sllo n .
H ulinblo
»or
b a n k . A b t r a i l f o , or o ffice » . Hell
for »Sn.oooiui p a ti term *. Alno h a v e
4 l 0 - n » ’ r o r i m h or dude ranch «pot.
I loud liu llilln g" ami e a » lly ad van ced .
I'lie e »16.000. p. P. Jo h n so n , 11O3-W
15th BI., Ooenr d' A len e, Idaho.
\i;\v
i.ei » li ii
ui.iib'ii
win»
three
pump*, w nrehou»*, new ihree-roorn
m odern h ou se on 176x175 ft. c o r
ner turn o f tw o w ell kn ow n high»
w ay*, one I bn park to-park h ig h
w ay In M ontana,
A gen t for la rg e
w h o le ia ln lo iiip a n y w ith th ree large
tank* and w nrehou»* w ith cnm -i
plot« »lock A uto n cce»»orlee atock
»bunt »1600, D oing a s w e ll b u si-
ne»*
R e tirin g a cco u n t o f h ealth .
P rice »13,600 h a lf dow n. A «w ell
»land for tw o liv e w ire».
JO H N SO N SK BV IC B ST A T IO N
A L D B B , M O N TA N A
AUTOS. TRUCKS & ACCES.
1 NEW
P id n ler -W llla m el ta
low bed
tr a iler (a r m y ), »' 7“ w ide.
1 U sed
l ’olnti r -W illa m e tte
low bed
trailer, S-fb wide D ual axle*, 14 0 0 s
20 tire», air brake», »ISOO each.
S 14.00x20 ■ Mira U ree, tub e* and
w heel», 110O inch.
N O O L A N D T K A N S P B H O OM PANT
B v e re tt, W ash .
T H U O K B , T H A IL B R M
W H B B L B . P A B T S . W IM C B B B
PO H BLL h B B B L O W
9773 13th B. W BB 0033, B ea ttie. W in.
HMD P e l e r b l l l c o m p i r le w it h v a n . excel,
oondl , suitable fu r lu g rig i b a n g e o v » r .
Cont. if r a n k l l . k r r e l V»e W »l.r» A Beg-
ere, lee ., S#ve N W, y » m . I’erlleed. Or»».
FARMS AND RANCHES
44 A C R E S on W ind ltlv e r, W »eh , 141
Ml. N. o f I'arnon. IS acre» clear, 14
In cu lt. Hume fru it tree«, flood w ell.
A bout 30% lev el ground en d 30
acre* fen ced . P aved rd. Hcho. bus
and pwr
lin e to property. Cash
»ale.
W rite B ox 433, S te v e n so n ,
W a ib ., » . D. P en d rel.
195 C U E S — 76 a. p eat not!. Ideal for
d a ir y in g or truck ga rd en in g ; 60 a.
row crop s la st year. A d d ition al 23 a.
can be put In »h ap s fur row cr»>pa.
C aterp illar, plow and d isc. B ox 331,
W ald p ort, Ore.
OLABK COUNTY W A B H IB O T O B
Ctrl. R iv e r G rade A D airy. 40 bead,
tra cto r A» equip. L arge barn, 3 alios,
ab ou t SO A. a lfa lfa , 100 A. b ottom
land ponture. M odern hom e. 11,000
mo. Incom e. P rice H i . 000,
119 A., 40 A. c u lt , * bedroom hom e,
la rg e b a r n , e x c e lle n t »oil. P rice
111,000.
M any m ore farin a and
dntrle».
L B B . B IC B B H B A D , In c.
308 W ash . Bt., V an cou ver, W *#h-
P h o n e 4100
660 A C RES. 90 tilla b le , nalab le U m
b e r , p a stu re, tractor, fnrtn eq u ip ,
merit, good building», 150 sh eep ,
2 oowa, m odern 4 bed-room horn».
D elco p lan t .fa m ily orchard, nchool
bu*. m all route, g r a v el h ig h w a y ,
123,600. H illc r e s t B e n c h , B t. 1, B oa
331, 13 Ml, B oeeb urg, O regon.
HELP WANTED
Man or w om an to ow n and aervtce
route o f p r o fita b le new ty p e a m u s e
m ent v en d in g m a ch in es In your
area. Requlr»*» J300 ca»h to handle.
For fu ll particu lar* W rite: P . O.
B o x 133, T ak lm a, W a sh in g to n .
Men. w om en, It. H. g ir ls: Hell n a tio n
a lly ad vertln ed ''F ittin g ly youra''
N ylon H o siery In you r tow n or c ity .
P le a sa n t
work.
P ay»
han d som e
bonus. Spare or fu ll tim e. N o e x
p erien ce n ecessary.
M B. B . J. POTB
P O. BOX 63
X B B H V IL L B , O BB.
BU BB C B IPT IO B B W A B T X D
Old Line State
“With the Shield of Thy Good will
Thou Hast Covered Us,” is the
motto of Maryland. The black-eyed
Susan Is the state flower and the un
official bird is the Baltimore oriole.
S u b scrip tio n a gen t w an ted In you r
c ity to rep resen t W estern L iv e sto c k
Journal At W estern D airy Jou rn al:
good d isc o u n t F u ll p a r ticu la r s and
sa m p le con ies on req u est. N . 3U
OBOW P U B L IC A T IO N S IN C ., 1148
P roduce P la z a L os A n g ele s 11, C a li
fornia
New Seeding Machines
The beginning of commercial pro
duction of seeding machines was
marked by a patent on a "force-
feed” drill granted to Foster, Jes
sup and Brown in 1851.
Blown Window Pane*
Before the proces* for fiat-draw
ing glass was developed, windo*
panes were made by blowing glaai
spherical shapes, reheating th»
spheres and rotating them until th*j
became disks marred by a bull’i
eye in the center, a historical studj
by Libbey points out. The dlski
were cut into panes and those wit!
the bull's eye were used In Colonia:
America for transoms and dooi
sidelights.
Europe Takes Africa
In 1876 only 10 per cent of the
African continent was in European
hands; 38 years later, in 1912, 95
per cent of it had been divided
among European nations.
Making Lard
To keep lard from becoming ran
cid add two or three pounds of hy
drogenated vegetable shortening to
each 50 pounds of fresh lard—stir
ring it in while the lard is still in
the kettle. This commercial s.'iort-
ening has been hardened by forc
ing hydrogen gas through it, a proc
ess which keeps the air or oxygen
out of the lard, preventing it from
oxydizing.
Meat Ila* Real Value
Nutrition scientists say meat Is
one of the most Important natural
sources of the B vitamins. It con
tains all of them — from the oldest,
thiamine, to the newest B vitamin,
folic acid. It supplies generous
amounts of the three vitamins for
which recommended allowances
have been established — thiamine,
riboflavin and niacin.
Children Suffer
Each year more than 800,000 Are*
break out in the United States. Chil
dren are the most frequent vic
tims.
Idaho Sccnio Counties
The area of Adams, Idaho and
Boise counties in Idaho is about the
same size as Switzerland and the
scenery Is much the same.
Rig Au’omotlve Industry
More than 534,000 business con
cerns in the United States, or a
sixth of all Arm*, are in automo
tive fields.
Musio in Industry
More than 3,000 companies *1
ready Include music in their em
ployee-relations programs. It* valui
as a morale builder and in easini
the tedium of the working day wai
clearly demonstrated during the
war. Wherever possible, musical
facilities in industry will be expand
ed both as company projects and
through employee bands, glee clubi
and concert groups.
Tank Car Train
The quantity of oil that can bt
hauled In a tank car train dependi
upon length of the train and capac
lty of the cars making up the train
Oil train« average about 60 tank
cars each, and the capacity of th<
average tank car is about 210 bar
rels. Thus, an average oil train car
rles about 12,600 barrels, or 529.20C
gallons of oil.
Unnecessary Food Los*
Waste and spoilage costs »elf
service grocery stores »7.40 for each
»100 worth of fresh fruits and vege
tables sold.
W eigh t of T ruck
The two four-wheel trucks whlc
support a boxcar weigh about 14,0(
pounds or approximately one-thlr
of the total car weight.
First Lady Champion
First national golf championshl|
for women was held ln 1895. Thi
winner was Mrs, C. S. Brown.