Eastern Beekeepers Meet 9 Aug. 6-8 at Ithaca, N.Y. All beekeepers—professional, amateurs and people who just like bees—are invited to attend the Fifth Annual Meeting of the Eastern Apicultural Society, August 6 to 8 Cornell University Highlight of this meeting in Ithaca, N. Y., will be a series of tours. . ... North America’s most Prof. Dyce will discuss bee- Nations mine you modern honey processing keeping abroad particularly the land of the tor- Plant, - the Finger Lakes m Australia, where honey is tm frijoleS) siestas> fiest as Honey Producers’ Coopera- produced on a large scale. beautiful senontas Sou tive, Groton, N. Y., will be Certain foreign methods „ f the Border vlsJted, and “£ pro- w«A well In America AJ tlme of the year cessing wi be P y ] - , Mexico literally is in full bio Demonstrations of the lat- a talk on bee research and bougainvi.l'a and est bee handling equipment advisory work in England the ‘ po i nse ttias display then will give hobbyists an idea w m be presented by John B. beauty everywhere you look, of how commercial beekeep- Free, English apiculturist. Life moves at a leisurely ing is conducted. Power Dr . Free is visiting Canada pace in a gaily bedecked land equipment will be employed whi i e studying where honey D , .. natives call in the removal of bee , should be located in th £°E Tha! from the combs and in its apple orchards for. best pol- means a thirt or forty min . preparation for market. hnation results. ute shower abou t mid-after- a tLente a? 'the Beekeepers should not miss noon every day, then clear exhibit their talents at tn opportun it y to inspect skies and a freshness that honey show which is an a- .. equipment which will smells as if the heavens had uu.l feature o£ the meeting at these just given the earth a bath. ° and cry's- meetings, says E: J. Ander- There i£ both a touch of d ’honev ’ frames of son, beekeeper at Pennsyl- the “old world” in Mexico innil beeswax anT baked vania State University. and a beginning of the new JS’iSS X. Anderson, a recognfeed cookies and bread containing authority on beekeeping gs people honey as a sweetening agent equipment, has made many ® , warm and sin will be judged. innovations and improve- hospitality is warm ana sin In an illustrated’ lecture, ments. cere. The Best Time To Go Ask George Billingsly, hos pitable, goateed manager of Taxco’s Hotel de la Borda, when the best time is to vis it Mexico and he’ll' tell you “Anytime is good time, but I think I’d pick November if I had to make a choice.” In. the fall the rains have ceased and the vegetation is lush. All of Mexico becomes a tropical wonderland of gre en valleys presided over by snow-capped mountains. The hotel here is as inter esting, historically, as it is comfortable withimodem con veniences and excellent food. It is located on top of a hill from which more silver has been taken than from apy other mine in the world. It overlooks the city of Taxco, 100 miles southwest of Mexi co City Jose de la Borda was a Fr enchman who discovered the rich silver lode more than 200 years ago. It has been mined continually since then Nobody knows how many million pesos worth of sil ver_has been taken from the mine. State-Wide Livestock Market 'Posting' is Launched by Ag Dept. On July 1, members of the XL S. Department of Agri culture responsible for enforcing the Packers and Stock yards Act, began a state-wide “posting” program in the Stkte of Pennsylvania, Posting of a livestock mar ket by the USDA gives no tice to the owners and to the public that the market is sub ject to the jurisdiction of the Packers and Stockyards Act. The P&S Act is a fair busi ness practice law applicable to those engaged in handling or marketing livestock, mea ts. and live poultry moving m> interstate commerce. The state-wide posting pro gram announced today is the result of expanded jurisdic tion under the law prescri bed in an amendment passed by the last session of Cong ress. Prior to that time, livesto ck auction markets having less, than 20,000 square feet of space were not subject to the-'P&S Act. 0 Lane. Poultry (From page 3) Starr, 17. 17. M&B (James. Vincent), 7500 IRW, 9-3, NO SALE, 17.1 bid. 18. M&B (Roiy B. Martin), 5000 WV, 9-3, NO SALE, 17.2 bid. 19. Same, 17 3 bid. 20. M&B (El vin) H. Nolt), 6600 WV, 9-2, Meader’s, 17. 2a M&B (Samuel Stoltz fus), 4200 WV, 9-2, Victor F. Weaver, 17. 22. M&B (John L. Herr), 750 WV, 10-2, John E. Hettinger, 17 3. 23. Same, 1400 WV-P-Cap, 14-2, NO SALE, 23 bid. 24. M&B Foreman could have been left out, but which, once.we'liave it, we would not part with. y Ways to Rtad flutti ■ One can read this little tale of long ago just as a tale and enjoy sets simplicity and beauty. Or one can find in it much sociological In-Law* interest, what marriage meant in The most mipies those far-off days, what provisions expression of ths were made for the very poor, and person to anothei so tforth.-One can also enjoy and the book of Ruth S learn something from the char- ( some would think acters described in it, eaclji one to a mothci-m-lav, sketched in a few revealing words. eav th the Bible 11 The author is strangely modem at think of m-laws as this point. Writers today seldom yonder, a strange use adjectives (such as heroic, an m t e rfei mg lot brutal, clever, or what not) about too dose They h their -characters; they just let us- because they aiei see them and judge for ourselves. o£ us Nothing co So it Is in the book of Ruth. But smd- God’s childr the way we propose to look at i aws just as mud “Ruth”’ Is this: the book shows peo pie This paitu with quiet simplicity how the very we 011 ght to say, t kinds of people many of us are in- _ weie closei, mor dined to look down on or shy o ther and more away from, are God’s children, than then- own 1 Plain People There is another book in the Bible telling about the times when the characters in the story of Ruth were alive; it is the-Book of Judges. It is full of hero-stories. But none of those heroes appears Now Is The Time ... TO CONTROL CANADA TH® Every land owner is responsible control of noxious weeds, in Fe® Canada Thistle is one ot these * quite common in this area Frequt ing or spraying with chemicals * them from spreading. All is ® should do this voluntarily. Many pastures become low P rc ® MAX SMITH ing the hot summer months ad ' mg herd drops in production; ° nCt are down in flesh and milk flow it is very & 1 ( gain normal efficiency. Therefore, we suggest hay or silage, or both, be fed to supplement P st It has usually paid big dividends. TO USE CAUTION WITH NEW GRAIN"’ 11 ’ 6 new oats, barley, or wheat should be done veri - . a bW in order to avoid digestive troubles’ ana best to allow jthe grain "to go through a curlC^ several weeks jn the bin or in the -b'ag before use of a small percentage of the new gram at ration and then increasing gradually is xecom TO ORDER FALL,, of the best the quality and variety of seed needed this 8 , your order several months before seeding buy certified seed of one Of’ the recommon Supplies of alfalfa, pasture"mixtures, barley -called to your-attenti&a. - on the pages of of the chaiactersT* mentioned m the battle that make* l( Judges. Apait fl “ p t and the gi oly people who nowaS" the headline?, j farmers and n O J Ruth knew y 0 °* * Idea fiom reading Is Interested only J ceptional people, JJ heroes. But the > brings out the J thoughtful i eadei just as much mw? ble as In the greats, children aie euu^ Thn Foreigner It was Wilton (r law that ceitainfjj not to be welcome treated as equaj s ned by a Hebrew I especially to be te descendant of a tenth geneiation, cepted as a raembet gregatlon” of Mahlon and then Bi this Moabite girl jj was a foreigner, bin was not: What is her but, What kind of m Boaz was one of tb» who are kinder tha* quires; who look on] dividuals, not as n| (perhaps hated) groi for us today to ttai having children in I, Czecho-Bloi akia and' other “ " blandish 1 ' i does! Theie may be uni uies among yom i OBasrtl on outlinf the Dmsion of Ci National Council of Chust m th« V « Community Press Si BY MAX SMITH TO'KEEP UP MILK PB ool *