old fulton ny post cards by tom tryniski 8/niagara...m> y^i'l mrnw^ rc»& ihja^joi^fth i...

1
M> Y^i'l mrnw^ « rc»& iHJa^joi^ftH I r f y - t^y* V Tp TH E awfijA G A *#ilflAL'usmMmMmm i*At\<;;+ .i. v ^,:. .Ir «,U «* ^lV VI -**J Bra 3-5 15^ Hollywood Sights •fe and Saurvds .9* ROBBIN COONS, IIP .j m v'viSSSv"-'- ; Wtmt mm &al if l i p s §|Hp v HOIiYWOOD-It was this way with Jhn Cral«v the big boy who was Jim Meador bade in the home town of NashTiBe, Vremj. *I was out here oa a racation and lookin* around. I saw a lot of people makta- a lot of money. If they can do it, I said, why cant It 1 went oirer to M-O-M and I saw Olirer Hlrwdell. Ha was coachln' there then. I said to him, •Look here. For- get about- the aetin* for a while and tell me this, hare I got what it takes or batent IT- He' was—and Is—more than.5 feet tall, nearly 200 pounds in weight, with football- shoul- ders — one of those taS, dark and not too handsome fel- lows. TiikJsdell looked and.smiled and said be reckoned Jim'Craig bad what it took. He recommend- ed a dose of theatrical 'expedience. "Tnafs what I wanted to know,'' said Jim Craig. He bad a Job at the time—chas- ing after people who forgot to make payments on their aatomo- bfles. Jim went back to Houston, kept his job, did some little the- ater work, and came back on his next vacation. ......... ... »-#-«--;: ;-:~ Hlnsdell was at Paramount by then. Jhn went to Paramount, saw some producers. They told huh to stick around a while, get some exeperlence. Jim said he didn't hare time—he had to sign up right now, here or somewhere else, before his two* weeks were RobbtB Coons up. So Paramount signed him rfghtnowv :i :-::^i>:>^ •>••:•.vVs ;c /o : :v . That's the ceoter-of-the-Una. approach to Hollywood. Maybe he learned It playing football at Rice where he was a pretty good end. He still has a sourenlr of football days—a bad knee where big Jack Torrancerof. U B.'V. fell on ifcf The knee went bad again the other day when a horse tossed hta^to; „* yjygBtf- of »the Sun" Anyway, it was a good approach —because it worked. Tor all the good it did, though, he might as wen hare started the alow way on the•atage.-'iy.'.f'/.v'v-:'-.•: - 'V,^ He played in westerns and quickies for a couple of years, getting nowhere; and then he left this town for Hew xVSSTETtm*" derrtudled Dean Jagger. in r^Us- souri Legend" and Hollywood brought him back. Jagger is now in Taney of the'Sun- with Craig. But HoDywocd,' bringing -him. back, put him again In the quickie tut. "Kitty Poyle" lifted him up. They made a powerful lot of testa for that one, and Jim Craig's came through. Now there's "All That Money Can Buy," and "Un- expected Uncle," and his present moTie—but of pictures released he has only two. •"': ,V ;V : ^';.:-•;.•; .-,.: _ .•• : *-. \ - y >>i •• Around RKO they can him a- "best bet." This makes his agent, sight a little because so far. he hasn't been able to boost Jim' Craig into "best bet" money. The same talent-peddler has been able to hike Victor Mathre's income eizably—largely on the basis or Vic's bulging scrapbook and abn- •ity to stay In the publlo eye^-or " hair, according to the point of Ylew. Craig hasn't a scrapbook that bulges. He was married before "Kitty Poyle"—to pretty Mary Ray, a non-pro—and "that let out' the customary flutter of night- club dates and arranged "ro- mances" to keep a new name in the chatter columns. Jimmy, Jr* now nearly 2, rounds out the fam- ily- ••••• -•'•• • -• " '•HSrfrrf There Have ^een Remarkably Few Cases of Psychpneurosea in •"• •; RAR PaychUfa|rtfoport£ ' ..-, % n vi **-•• NEW YORK—Strict physical' and ger has helped people to withstand mental examination before Induc- tion win enable the United States to atold mental and nerrous break- downs among its armed forces. Dr. Robert Dick Gillespie, psychiatric •specialist of Britain's Royal Air Force, told the Hew York Academy of Medicine In Up first of the Salmon lectures. >-. '".-•.'>• 7 : ." ^ThefisiKtjffM^oly 'ew eases of psych<meuroses because of the extreme care used In selecting mem- bers of the Royal Air Porce, Dr. aillespia said. Only the mentally and emotionally stable get past the weeding out process.; : ^. v i.;; ; j< "", T lE^eW6ho™wbo-flles-for'the HAP and most of the ground force has the "professional attitude- toward his work, whether he Is a pilot or an air gunner, a mechanic or a rigger, vHus apathy, he said, is usually the he explained. His patriotic dero- tion Is reinforced by his pride in his particular technique and. his devotion to hU Job.. < > ~ Dr. Gillespie credited the "greater importance which is attached to' the lndMduaT in this war as one rea- son why there are fewer neurotics than in the last war. Eren among the infantry today a man tends "to be more and more * technician, and less of a foot flogger," Dr. Gillespie told of a hospital speciaUy built for the care of psy- choneurotic victims in the RAF that had to-be closed after a few' months and directed to other work because there were not-enough pa- tients to AH It. -. Surprisingly enough, Dr. Gillespie continued.-the war has given birth to two institutions, shelter life and community centers, which are high- ly successful si a preventive of psy- choneuroses. - "We have learned that shelter life with its common sharing of dan- AND NOTHING CAN BE DONE ABOUT IT pern belter than isolation in kmaU groups, which oftan contributes to the development of psychoneuroses." he said. The feeling of being^^with others during an air raid, even In an insecure shelter, brings courage." "Shelter life and community cen- ters fin a-need for companionship, Dr. Gillespie went on. In large cities, before the war, we had the paradox of want amid plenty, social want in the midst of social poaslbQ- Uies. How persons' returri from safe areas to the sheltera In large cities declaring, Td rather be bombed than', bored,"!••^ c , T .••Dr. -Gillespie . warned' against apathy both among soldiers and civilians as "one of the most signi- ficant symptoms of psychoneuroses. these homes because of a death in the house. The houses were oc- tuuled in the 750-850 AD era, it is believed. - - - - - ?., : ;\f.i-ly •-{.o>;.:- •-, Prof. Linton reported the dlscov- result of the continual thwarting of simple desires—in the ; case .of the soldier, the repeated thwarting of the instinct of self-preservation In the case of the dvilian, it is the thwarting of the desire for activity. "Activity of some sort is a neces- sary condition of happiness," he aid, "and for many.people a neces- sary preventive of psychoneurotic or" anti-social behavior. Ii is im- portant for psychiatrists "to recog- nize the apathy or restlessness which may precede psychoneurosls. FIND PBEHISTOaiO INDIAN HOMES SET IN OEDEE, BUBNED » » i » i t i i i « « i f » i » « < i i i , ' . R -rSAv^rabg-Sfctt.P ToW^; You freMeMeeRHe/iARRteo] LILV vJHGf\F —we wef?e AT Tfi&R VteoOlhiCr f " \ TJag SAID To CAY W\S HcTAflO LILY W(=«e TKLKtHG ABOUT ^* s 5 : % 8 m afi «M tSSi IS m ^i %m si i : : j . m m t&- m ••*m v*. '-;•" '*~ii ULV SAID - troe, oo You RtTMcTMBc5r^ OOFV HO&EY- MOOt4 AT* CLAM BGAQH, AAto'lfie? GLORIOUS QfyY Wc? SPeT/4TON ID '* VfeS" SAID 3 b E , "AND UTTLG pip we'THINK Tftew TftAT web f?e7 S"Pc?NDIN& OUR TtTNTH ANMI</eRSARY ON Tfie ROCKS * (Br Seine*. Strtiet) NEW YORK, Discovery of In dian pit houses, which were care fully set In order and then burneu over 1,000 years ago, was announced! to the New York Academy of Sciences here by Prof. Ralph Iin-' 3! _ - •'•-' . \ ~ * - • . r - z '• ' ••• * :.'- *---- » - 7 T KwSJI^x^iS^*^^f "• 27 •mara* Vj."'- ton, '•' Columbia university .* anthro- pologist. . ; The stone metatea on which the Indian 'women ground their meal were stacked against the wan and pottery was< placed in the south- west corner of the house, and every pit-foundation home that has been in 'the area was thus arranged and then fired, prof. Lin- eries following a' visit to excavations at Gobernador, N. M, which Edward J. Hall, Jr.. has been conducting for Columbia university.^ v A-v , • Unique features of the Indian settlement which is coming to light, said Prof. Union, are the burials and also stockades which the own- ers customarily buflt around a large pit house and Its associated „•, pit house and Its T—^—.- sort have been found Southwest Indian country, nor have archaeologists previously, found thejre the. practice of exposing the dead and then, burying them, al- MODEST MAIDENS .v though both these customs were fa- miliar ' to Iitlians In some . other parts of the country^r'*;^:-, j5 Possibility that these Indians may have come from the norths and may have been ancestors of modern Nav- Linton. .Japan proper, which occesi |>er cent of the whouT* I"**-than E ^ a J f t ^ -ACROSS- I NO ITBN wol N ATc s. 'Hearse aonaa 4, Hlaher than tvOld pl«e« of clotb • • U. Th# tullkflah " IS. At BO Um» ..-. 14. Oia mnalcu nots IB. Oritatal com- - m&ndir lCfYench* rlvsr*^ IT. Cleaning lm- - plement - 15. Princely Itauaa i boss» t0.Be»eaxlt 11. Trt« - ? - * - tl. Stem tbM* J 4. Humbled t*.-DriBkln»-' slauM. - 11. AUnd» SL Old timet: poetlo U. MtcherV Ifc-Crafty'•'•-. IT. Stats post- ' It. Bevtrar* If. Soft monanr 4e, OoDcemiaa iL CoopemUoa «f «. Caw for I a Couno of eat- . \xStg " IU Weljht M. BUkworm St. 'Always: eontr. U, Sacred &g oX ' India- IT. Inject ~ -- - • (S. Unit I I Fine old Tlolln (0. Owing «, Qolded raaan mm* amaGstana nnL ancia ESHQH gS aQQan§a B § aana oSnn »olu«on Of Y««t«rd«y, »J I I Canceled M. En»Ush letter - DOWN L Mark denotlna aa omiuion /* "HeHo, snperintendentT Pin expecting company, and someone in this building Is cooking CABBAGE!" tS 22 3S 38 io 3f 27 Si SX 7 8 125 43 t<t H 33 4J 4d.4f »- Covered «« *«er^ \t Refiu» <• Bird of m cuckoo^J «• *1alih»d T -.h> a m*as# »pria 8 «• Before . •• J'orxlTlB. 10. singly^ U. Come on rt. JJ- Worihltu- 17. Under ,H 18. steep «. Fenuli ii,. 10. Covered ,t M. U?i a^lt *• 1*. SkM 1*. Fonnerlj »• g^ly Job* .. n*tt« <8. Exist 4t Deroar « . Richly ite. orated <1 Stindud « . Sitter of eiy <>. DeteeU il. Otm W. Tablet (\ 11. Co»«r w FLASH GORDON FIASW TELUS D U E "THAT HS IS JOtNWa.THS DOTNOCRs" ^OBSQUACICCN TO ATTACK T»€ frWMJIrJereScB - .^. ^ ^ DfcLE PLEAOS.WOMAN-UtfE, aC' * .^ e «e-yuH /YUH/ YOH/ MOT 6AD, GH? ObcT /ALWAYS WAS A GRftor'-'-Jr <?ARD H [ FtATHBUhi, DID You ArresioTo CALLING ff{E PLUMBGF* ABoor -TT4AT 1-clAK AM TH& t-AUMDRY TOSp W\ FUSH BEFUSES AfiAlN AND AGWN._ CUT AT LAST EVEN UB,« NO MATCH RR AVOOMAM INtOVE I A T O M AKO SUSPOOUav •OfRC£R*«ATF=US^ SlOE, AS HE INSPECTS HIS BXKET F0R.THC COM1NO BATHE \ BUT SOON HER COOPAGE COMES TO WEC AJO. 'OPCOUBSE. VOUMUSTOO UtWT YOU OW TO s»veusnuf%ve. SAYS. V ovzy AS* CMS 7>**/a"7)1*e£M£ U»7*/ VOW* ftyf IWI. jCgj f n r x a 7 tyry THE DOOLITTLES \$ M w- w ' :VT'~*l KKr rfTfi m ==S3 \ ^^KSSSSKSSUX Ye* ***** CTIU K *teWRAM SHCVEL W SNOW OFP TVT '' Sl05VJ4t|^'(..^?lJT SCWE OQ4L &.T THOSE ASWES OliTA 1FSL CgUAfc** /' *wn. (XROFFKKAMnXICN D0UAR<; ONKUVEHyop T>€ PUW€ ATTW«WlANAl AJRTOtT/ 9tC W0 JWOULP-tAKB CASE OF rf/j SCORCHY SMITH—That Wdy Out! f note HE, (6EN1UMEN/ a AT RSSw 7 r - ITHKrU HCW.f I OAKY DOAKS—-Hero's A Putty Fix .A0KADAUB JLAG0M3A, OAKY IS 7BLIJNS TJSB FOBIUNBCF THBQOEEH CP IBB AUA70N3... 11-17 HMM-7HETEA IEAVE5 SM VDUJ? MAJESTY 15 PLANNING TO MAKE TROUBLE RDR KING ARTHUR/ WHERE HAVk 1 HEAROTHAT ' VOICE BEFOREP/ NtXJR MAJESTY BETTERJ WATCH HER STEP/, HMPH/. ^ will? MWARTHURJ5KN1GHT5K HIS ARE THE BEST W /T^KNIGHTS WlU. THE WDRLD/ -y~& \ BE PUTTY WHEN « MYAMA70N5/ CATCHUP *M WITH THEM/ TILLIE THE TOILER—More Work For The Police AaHCHEr,l-ETMl33 30NEa8KAJD -Spy HERE TONV5HT_1U. PERSOMALW (*8EEBEE33£ auARAwrae VJUKTSNEW ©AIU \fsoRttv; M R rm 3UOSB vMouipj OOMX MlNOH»M,CHlEFjTAkETHE<3W^ aAJU-.TUArSi^rp<jR cxrryj (>Ol/RE R16HT ||U-UN X.OCY THE _Qr»^, r^r^^w^w v^fga HIMRY. '* * •>•«.! e*. rovi^fw-,1 \ ••': iff -J x ktJf . ' *. - - . ' - Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Page 1: Old Fulton NY Post Cards By Tom Tryniski 8/Niagara...M> Y^i'l mrnw^ rc»& iHJa^joi^ftH I r f y - t^y* V Tp TH E awfijA G A *#ilflAL'usmMmMm i*At\

M>

Y^i'l mrnw^ «

rc»& iHJa^joi^ftH I r f y - t^y* V

T p TH E awfijA G A *#ilflAL'usmMmMmm i*At\<;;• • + . i . v ^ , : . .Ir «,U «* ^ l V

VI

- * * J

Bra

3-5

1 5 ^ Hollywood Sights •fe and Saurvds

.9* ROBBIN COONS,

IIP . j

m v'viSSSv"-'- ;

Wtmt mm

&al • if

l i p s §|Hp

v HOIiYWOOD-It was this way with Jhn Cral«v the big boy who was Jim Meador bade in the home town of NashTiBe, Vremj.

*I was out here oa a racation and lookin* around. I saw a lot of people makta- a lot of money. If they can do it, I said, why cant I t

1 went oirer to M-O-M and I saw Olirer Hlrwdell. Ha was coachln' there then. I said to him,

•Look here. For­get about- the aetin* for a while and tell me this, hare I got what it takes or batent I T - —

He' was—and Is—more than.5 feet tall, nearly 200 pounds in weight, w i t h football- shoul­ders — one of those taS, dark and not too handsome fel­

lows. TiikJsdell looked and.smiled and said be reckoned Jim'Craig bad what it took. He recommend­ed a dose of theatrical 'expedience.

"Tnafs what I wanted to know,'' said Jim Craig.

He bad a Job at the time—chas­ing after people who forgot to make payments on their aatomo-bfles. Jim went back to Houston, kept his job, did some little the­ater work, and came back on his next vacation.

. . . . . . . . . . . . » - # - « - - ; : ; - : ~ Hlnsdell was at Paramount by

then. • Jhn went to Paramount, saw some producers. They told huh to stick around a while, get some exeperlence. Jim said he didn't hare time—he had to sign up right now, here or somewhere else, before his two* weeks were

RobbtB Coons

up. So Paramount signed him rfghtnowv:i:-::^i>:>^ •>••:•.vVs;c/o::v . That's the ceoter-of-the-Una. approach to Hollywood. Maybe he learned It playing football at Rice where he was a pretty good end. He still has a sourenlr of football days—a bad knee where big Jack Torrancerof. U B.'V. fell on ifcf The knee went bad again the other day when a horse tossed hta^to; „*yjygBtf-of »the Sun"

Anyway, it was a good approach —because it worked. Tor all the good it did, though, he might as wen hare started the alow way on the•atage.-'iy.'.f'/.v'v-:'-.•: - ' V , ^

He played in westerns and quickies for a couple of years, getting nowhere; and then he left this town for Hew xVSSTETtm*" derrtudled Dean Jagger. in r^Us-souri Legend" and Hollywood brought him back. Jagger is now in T a n e y of the'Sun- with Craig.

But HoDywocd,' bringing - h i m . back, put him again In the quickie tut. "Kitty Poyle" lifted him up.

They made a powerful lot of testa for that one, and Jim Craig's came through. Now there's "All That Money Can Buy," and "Un­expected Uncle," and his present moTie—but of pictures released he has only two. •"':,V;V : ̂ ';.:-•;.•;

. - , . : _ • . • • : * - . • \ - y >>i ••

Around RKO they can him a-"best bet." This makes his agent, sight a little because so far. he hasn't been able to boost Jim' Craig into "best bet" money. The same talent-peddler has been able to hike Victor Mathre's income eizably—largely on the basis or Vic's bulging scrapbook and abn-•ity to stay In the publlo eye^-or " hair, according to the point of Ylew.

Craig hasn't a scrapbook that bulges. He was married before "Kitty Poyle"—to pretty Mary Ray, a non-pro—and "that let out' the customary flutter of night­club dates and arranged "ro­mances" to keep a new name in the chatter columns. Jimmy, Jr* now nearly 2, rounds out the fam­ily- ••••• -•'•• • -• "

'•HSrfrrf

There Have ^een Remarkably Few Cases of Psychpneurosea in •"• •; RAR PaychUfa|rtfoport£ ' ..-,%n

vi **-••

NEW YORK—Strict physical' and ger has helped people to withstand mental examination before Induc­tion win enable the United States to atold mental and nerrous break­downs among its armed forces. Dr. Robert Dick Gillespie, psychiatric •specialist of Britain's Royal Air Force, told the Hew York Academy of Medicine In Up first of the Salmon lectures. >-. '".-•.'>• 7:." ^ T h e f i s i K t j f f M ^ o l y 'ew eases of psych<meuroses because of the extreme care used In selecting mem­bers of the Royal Air Porce, Dr. aillespia said. Only the mentally and emotionally stable get past the weeding out process.;:^.vi.;;;j< "",

TlE^eW6ho™wbo-flles-for'the HAP and most of the ground force has the "professional attitude- toward his work, whether he Is a pilot or an air gunner, a mechanic or a rigger, vHus apathy, he said, is usually the he explained. His patriotic dero-tion Is reinforced by his pride in his particular technique and. his devotion to hU Job.. < > ~

Dr. Gillespie credited the "greater importance which is attached to' the lndMduaT in this war as one rea­son why there are fewer neurotics than in the last war. Eren among the infantry today a man tends "to be more and more * technician, and less of a foot flogger,"

Dr. Gillespie told of a hospital speciaUy built for the care of psy­choneurotic victims in the RAF that had to-be closed after a few' months and directed to other work because there were not-enough pa­tients to AH It. - .

Surprisingly enough, Dr. Gillespie continued.-the war has given birth to two institutions, shelter life and community centers, which are high­ly successful s i a preventive of psy-choneuroses. - "We have learned that shelter life with its common sharing of dan-

AND NOTHING CAN BE DONE ABOUT IT

pern belter than isolation in kmaU groups, which of tan contributes to the development of psychoneuroses." he said. T h e feeling of being^^with others during an air raid, even In an insecure shelter, brings courage."

"Shelter life and community cen­ters fin a-need for companionship, Dr. Gillespie went on. In large cities, before the war, we had the paradox of want amid plenty, social want in the midst of social poaslbQ-Uies. How persons' returri from safe areas to the sheltera In large cities declaring, T d rather be bombed than', bored,"!••^ c ,T .••Dr. -Gillespie . warned' against apathy both among soldiers and civilians as "one of the most signi­ficant symptoms of psychoneuroses.

these homes because of a death in the house. The houses were oc-tuuled in the 750-850 AD era, it is believed. - - - - - ?.,:;\f.i-ly •-{.o>;.:- •-,

Prof. Linton reported the dlscov-

result of the continual thwarting of simple desires—in the ; case .of the soldier, the repeated thwarting of the instinct of self-preservation In the case of the dvilian, it is the thwarting of the desire for activity.

"Activity of some sort is a neces­sary condition of happiness," he a i d , "and for many.people a neces­sary preventive of psychoneurotic or" anti-social behavior. I i is im­portant for psychiatrists "to recog­nize the apathy or restlessness which may precede psychoneurosls.

FIND PBEHISTOaiO INDIAN HOMES SET

IN OEDEE, BUBNED » » i » i t i i i « « i f » i » « < i i i , ' .

R

-rSAv^rabg-Sfctt.P ToW^; You freMeMeeRHe/iARRteo] LILV vJHGf\F —we wef?e AT Tfi&R VteoOlhiCr

f " \

TJag SAID To CAY W \ S

HcTAflO LILY W(=«e TKLKtHG ABOUT

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ULV SAID - troe, oo You RtTMcTMBc5r^ OOFV HO&EY-MOOt4 AT* CLAM BGAQH, AAto'lfie? GLORIOUS QfyY Wc? SPeT/4TON

ID

' * VfeS" SAID 3 b E , "AND UTTLG pip we'THINK Tftew TftAT w e b f?e7 S"Pc?NDIN& OUR

TtTNTH ANMI</eRSARY ON Tf ie R O C K S *

(Br Seine*. Strtiet) NEW YORK, — Discovery of In

dian pit houses, which were care fully set In order and then burneu over 1,000 years ago, was announced! to the New York Academy of Sciences here by Prof. Ralph I i n - '

3!

_ - • ' • - ' . \ ~ * - • . r - z '• ' • • • * : . ' - • * - - - - » -

7T K w S J I ^ x ^ i S ^ * ^ ^ f "• 27 •mara* V j . " ' -

ton, '•' Columbia university .* anthro­pologist. . ;

The stone metatea on which the Indian 'women ground their meal were stacked against the wan and pottery was< placed in the south­west corner of the house, and every pit-foundation home that has been

in 'the area was thus arranged and then fired, prof. Lin-

eries following a' visit to excavations at Gobernador, N. M , which Edward J. Hall, Jr.. has been conducting for Columbia university.^ v A - v , •

Unique features of the Indian settlement which is coming to light, said Prof. Union, are the burials and also stockades which the own­ers customarily buflt around a large pit house and Its associated „•, pit house and Its T — ^ — . -

sort have been found Southwest Indian country, nor have archaeologists previously, f o u n d thejre the. practice of exposing the dead and then, burying them, al-

MODEST MAIDENS .v

though both these customs were fa ­miliar ' to Iitlians In some . other parts of the country^r '* ;^ : - , j5

Possibility that these Indians may have come from the norths and may have been ancestors of modern Nav-

Linton.

.Japan proper, which occesi |>er cent of the w h o u T * I"**-than E^aJf t ^

-ACROSS-

I N O

ITBN wol

N ATc

s. 'Hearse aonaa 4, Hlaher than tvOld pl«e« of

clotb • • U . Th# tullkflah " IS. At BO Um» ..-. 14. Oia mnalcu •

nots IB. Oritatal com-

- m&ndir lCfYench* r l v s r * ^ IT. Cleaning lm- -

plement -15. Princely Itauaa

i boss» t 0 . B e » e a x l t 11. Trt« - ? - * -t l . S tem tbM* J 4. Humbled t * . - D r i B k l n » - '

s l a u M . -11. AUnd» SL Old t imet:

poetlo

U . MtcherV Ifc-Crafty'•'•-. IT. Stats post- '

I t . Bevtrar* If. Soft monanr 4e, OoDcemiaa iL CoopemUoa «f

« . Caw for I a Couno of eat-

. \xStg " IU Weljht M. BUkworm St. 'Always: eontr. U , Sacred &g oX ' I n d i a - •

IT. Inject ~ -- - • (S. Unit I I Fine old Tlolln (0 . Owing « , Qolded

raaan mm* amaGstana nnL ancia ESHQH gS 5° aQQan§aB§

aana oSnn

»olu«on Of Y««t«rd«y, »J II Canceled M. En»Ush letter

- DOWN L Mark denotlna

aa omiuion

/*

"HeHo, snperintendentT Pin expecting company, and someone in this building Is cooking CABBAGE!"

tS

22

3S 38

i o

3f

27

Si SX

7 8

125

4 3

t<t H

33

4J 4 d . 4 f

»- Covered «« * « e r ^

\ t Refiu» <• Bird of m

cuckoo^J

«• *1alih»d T-.h> a m*as#

»pria8

«• Before . •• J'orxlTlB.

10. s i n g l y ^

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JJ- Worihltu-

17. Under , H

18. steep « . Fenuli i i , . 10. Covered , t M. U?ia^lt*• 1*. SkM 1*. Fonnerlj » • g^ly Job*

.. n*tt« <8. Exist 4 t Deroar « . Richly ite.

orated <1 Stindud

« . Sitter of eiy

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Untitled Document

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Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069

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