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CAFE MAT conm TDHS, RIBAT. VeTXMXXX tO. IMS.
ssified Advertising .d, WM wUl h* Mat; Ml tad Kayttma Pbona. trtla*—m to ^ - cUop °»« cam a word;
Growars Mrxie Fine Showing at Show
■ata at- —•
IKVMT
LEGAL
Ctrv OF SKA l»Lt CITY
NewJ»*aar OROINANCK
Plum* — Mra. John roaralL
Brat.
Rhubarb—Mra. John Powell.
( am.
(Coatlauad tram Pa«a 0n«) StrawbarHaa — Mn. Flomiea Rad Sweat Potatoea C Noon Oliver, am; Mr*. Emma Hoffman. * Son. am; Woodbine f'-rlony lw aeeond; lln. Mary Heaton, third. Feeble-Minded, second; Ed. Qraaa- Plcklea—Mn. A. J. Meerwald. taan. third. ; Brat: Mra. Abrams, aacond; Mra.
Yellow Sweet Potatoea—Frank P* 01 Sturffla. third.
Sw *' n - John McCra-en. ^-j Pea;.—Mra William Champion.
ia«r. .nd pen v id in* for| on<,: J - Reld Chamber., third. Bm; Mra. John Rocap. aacond;
(CFroiMnSniONKiui 'ama—Frank Dlcklnaon. Brat; I 1- McPheraon. third.
OF ska isle city 8 B- Taylor, second; J. H_ Powell. Roup—Mra. J. H. Powell, am;
third. Mra. John Uby. second.
SSite g isi D... Corn—Ouj Krtic-
Bm; Mra. John Powell, ascond.
Citron—Mra John
r«M I'Ur. in panl Ara late Ot, |»_
ISSJE M !!T‘ bMednlk '.l,
A. H Reeve*, third.
White Dent Corn—8. Compton
* Son. am; Wilfred Levan. Bee-.. Mr . Umrr ond; E. E. Miller, third. I “ *‘ ,rr
White Cap Yellow Dent—Frank Swain, amt; Walter Taylor, tee-
id; Melvin Abbott, third.
Any other varloty—L. Oarret-
* A Beo.. Bm.
> the erereln*. balM- ‘ 'ZrzSi' •f Oime JetllM on Oman u i ii ■ Swnln Street and Matilda gUMt oi -Ud tit, ol Sn. UW ri\7 That me vine, ah.li he rrerird dructad and re-coiutructed
Miscellaneous—Mra. McIntyre,
Brat; Mrs. H. Taylor. ! Mrs. John Powell, third.
Sour Sauce, any variety—Mrs. Emma Hoffman, first; Mm. Mary ! Watson, second; Mm. Effie Stllea.
1 third. Jellies:
Apple—Mrs. W. S. Brat; Mm. John Uby. Mrs. L. McPheraon. third.
En Plant 8- B Taylor A po» e h_ Mm. L. McPheraon.
Amt; Mra W. S. Kimble, second. Grape—Me. McPherson, am; Mm. William bailey, second. Blackberry—Mm. William Ball-
VegetaUet
Pumpkin. Beld type—Norman |' Taylor, 3m: 8. Eld rede*, m
J. McAnally. third.
~ cheese type — 8. B. "
Nation Spends Many Millions For Food Bill Eoral Famfiica Food Bill Leu Thu Half of Cost To Feed City Family
Canning Industries Thrive
The country's annual .'cod bill Is somelhibc on which stnUsticlani have often figured, with results
that are more or According to n re-, the bill la around|
Radishea—W. 8. Kimble, amt. Turnips, any variety— George Albua. am: George Aibns. sec-
ond; A. B. Faure. third.
Ruts Bags.—8. B Taylor. Brat. Mangel Beets—Levin. Bmt; 8 Compton A Son. neaond; William iw^im « { Z B * lley ,hlrd Cn» <5 8- CrSr’kJTJlIU? T » Dl * B**'* — Swain. * * - fimt. & B. Taylor, second a
third.
Danish Ball Head Cabbagt Norman Taylor, am; W.
Raspberry—Mm. W. 8. Kimble
amt.
Any other Jelly—Mm William Bailey. Brat; Mra. U McPheraon.
Baking:
Gingerbread—Mm. Ralph Schnl-
lenger. Bm.
Cocoanut Layer Cake—Mm. H
"furiSurc^hu. - m™. 'Tjj-siS; w „_ ^ „ , _ . . ! Any other cake—Mra Paul Spinach. C. L. B. Creme. Bm. gtuITU and; Martha Halbruner. Denver a Half Umg C MT v ,— Vcond- Mm. Ralph Schellengnr. S. B. Taylor A Son. Bmt; George T”" 0, * nl - P Albw. second; S Compton A Son.] ‘ ^ doKD btacu | U -Mra BelpA
Watermelons - Frank Swain, j Bmt; Unknowc. second; Frank
1 Swain, third.
Lettuce—Unknown. Bm; K. C. I Mackle. second.
. Bean.—B. B Taylor A
Ison. am.
On ions—S. Compton A Son. flm; C. Noon A Son. second. Tomatoes—Swam A Jones. firT. Peppem—W. 8. Kimble. Bret
BchelleDger. Bmt.
Apple Pie—Mm. Ralph Scbel
Unger. Bm.
Lemon Pie—Mm. Frank Swain.
am
Sew lug:
MI.0OC 000.0O6. which l. too big a
grasp.
Dividing this up by fnmlUes. the aaalymls showi the bill .or the enabout Mil The urban family. It about MIS annually for food and the rural family about UTS 1 Few families actually know what 1 food costa them in n year. The
girls,
that it tokos a lot of money to meet the mother of these youngster, knows that It takes a lot of food to fill them. Investigation, of in various walks of life and have arrived some figures which show bow a proportion of the money m« by n family roe. for food. In the average workingman's family. collected from about 12.000 families several years ago. about M per cent of the yearly expenditures are for food—by far the largest item In the cost of
living.
People moat have to sustain life, but ro matter bow much money they have they eat only so mach. Causeouently
Crocbeted Yoke—Aur* Rhandm. first. Maud Heaton. aec< Scarf with Crocheted Mr. Frank Swain. Bm: Maud Heaton, second; Mrs. MeUin Ab-
bott. third.
Towel with Crocheted
Mm. Carrie Swain. Bm; Mm. Margaret Watovn. second; Mm
Howard Norton, third.
the proportion of It that soei food There Is a difference, too. In wLat people eat that is determlrcd to part by bow mum they ha' spend for food. There are certain thing, that certain famillee Bad
in our country no much ac to our comparatively higher standard of living. People In the United States are better housed and better clothed, as well as better fed. than In any other country. ThU U due to the fact that the average Income In the United States is the highest In the world and thus permits larger expenditures for the n aaries. the comforts and the conveniences of life. Perhaps If our diet were limited to a comparatively few items It would not be such a difficult task to determine (be chief Item In our food bill; but If there is one characteriaUc of the food of the American people It is variety. Of course, we Americans have our staple foods—bread, butter, milk and meat, for example—and we have foods peculiar to our country, such the cob or In the can; but the list ot food purchases made by the average housewife is astonishingly long when it is actually put down. This food variety la strikingly 11.ustrated in the output of the canning industry, which produces foodstuffs to the value of nearly billion dollars annually..and whicb now furnishes these foods in about 200 varieties. While the canning industry has steadily Increased its output of staples like corn, peas and tomatoes, the outstanding feaof Its growth In recent yearn has been 1U extension to new lines of product.. To dte but one example. 15 yfirs ago the Industry produced hot 2,CM.000 cases ol 112.000 cans of caried soups; the output now Is over 15 000.000 c.<*e* or SGO.OOO.OCO cans. Hneapple l* another arUclt whose outwit ha. grown rapidly nnd baked beat** a third, while there are dox-rnn if specie Itiec now IsiT*'? a few yearn ago were unobtain-
able.
Nearly every part of our Is noted for some favorite h,*>d or a favorite way of preparing some one food. When writers like O. Henry and Irving Cobb marshal their adjective, to describe the delights of a hvoiite dish—be It the Kentucky turnip green, with smoked bo* Jowl r dished by Cobb or the Georgia Brunswick weleh O. Henry says is the lop notch of all good things to eat be:prises them all—the average person long for a peripatetic labh 'hat could travel whole Unite.' Stoles for the best
what happens, and it is possible because of the wonderful development of the country's food tndusEverv meal served in the average home represents thousands of miles of travel, yet It is brought together wtib only a short walk to
the corner store.
The canning Industry, with its 200 varieties of products. Is one of the biggest factors In this elimination of distance. In fact, but for the canning industry the diet in the average American home would be limited by both distance and 1 season, and we would not enjoy 1 the abundance and variety that 1 characterise our tobies. The American people spend n for food than people of other c tries, and they do so because they have the means and because they have an unexcelled quality and v rlety of foods from wblcb
Charles WIHam
Bwt individual eollectioe. * “’gfiManiW* With Crocheted ta u,, caitod State. And this toct
net Edge-Mra. Kendall Smith, ffito; - |. not to he aacrtbad Meerwald Brst. Mra. Bailey sec ^ Swain, aacond; Linda
William*, third.
food for the funity substitute* cheaper toad for toe one .be really
would like to
"average pernoa" takes his
It ta doubtful If to* cast of food' U*™*
high to aay other country as | «*•*- ,f tr *’
teCTKX OF hALA OF LAND FOO ond: Mrs. Mary Watson, third.
UNPAID TAABA Bant quart Jar exhibits; I “ Drans—Mr*. T. E. De-
Oliver. drat; Mra Paul Sturgis
■*~ nd; Un S“ ,, h_‘ h ‘ rd Embrolderod Centerpiece - — — ■ FwbI ***•»—Mra McIntyre, tat. 'j ullm Hoffman. Bret; Mra Hattie - *«<« Corn—Mr* Mary Watson. Brut. ,-rond Mra Jennie Mad If-y* ^ OgggS; Mr , A J. Meerwald, mcond; I u» .utwiti 1 the teatwe. i. Midi Era. W. B. Kimble, third. Guest Towel Embroidered —
Abrams, second; Min. Margaret
vTiciriiPif{fFwe*»“ B * 1
- tail hnetoe Am^T" If »'' 11
■on. first; Mra John Powell,
ond: Mrs Florence M. WaUM1 . UBrd.
third. F , or - ac « Patchwork Quill—Alice Sand f! u *“ 1 T - “J!, gran, am; Mm B. F. Godfrey. Bailey. Bm Mra Joseph Mrs prsnk Swain, third.
Mra A. 2- ma-r Counterpane — Mm-
Hlck-
* r.wooo-WF Have wt to.-, luteta -A tew te~-— ' t^nntew .. tere. Lr
1 *r ocxirr view, m
“ l. r Otewn <Kr- . w—I IU au_fc
, Counts _
waid. third. Jennie Madden. Bm; 1 i®* Tomatoes—Mra Mary waiaoo. ,
* Fwr the tas •mb ,.. ... , rr . man. aacond.
, Emm bbs ea«A Bm; Mra Mary JJ 1 * 0 " • Home Made Bug—Mra Am-
“ ^ »Sia A. J- Meerwald. third. bro- . comm. Bm; Mra. J. fc tr-l »vwvt Beetr—Mm. Mary Hantoa. Bm. Mr. Charle. E
Mm A. J. Meerwald. eaoond.
Mm lUry Watooa. third. Fotoer. »r . to Peaches - Mra Lnrtcka. Bm; Ifp
Mm H Taylor, amtond; Mm Flor- Egga-Andrew C Walk Bailey. ^ er. Bmt; AHinglos Poultry Perm ( CberriaB— Mr. -com*. ArUngton Poultry Farm
w: Mm L MePhemon. Beeond.
Mrs J^n PowoM. third. BrovB gym—Karl
fimt
’—to-s 1175.000.000 S srsr?2l2S.tefL TW SM *f ttnjmjm was toft te-W Will folio.^ the^s«te»^ ptato^ to
FU Tell you how to Lower the Cost of Heating When Winter came around, I used to heat my house, all right. I heated the front yard and the bade yard, too. But the warmest place of all was the attic. The heat seemed to race upstairs. That i*. the heat that couldn't find a crack downstairs. And our furnace was one of the coal man's two best friends. That was before I “overcoeted” my house—before I covered it with “P-Tivo-Fourteen'' Steel Fabric Reinforced Stucco! Now the kiddies don't wear sweaters when they play in the •creamery on the real cold days. And the sewing machine isn’t parked beside the radiator. Neither is the reading lamp. And every room's as warm as the next. Inrhidtng the attic, I think. For I haven't been up there for extra blankets for—well, since we “overcoated” the house. The roal mipn has lost one of his two best friends.
I meet yarn to kmtxw ham to lower the cot of heating your home. Drop tn, or phone, today, for the Bmlletm I’ll TeS Yarn Why." DAVIS-WADDINGTON LUMBER. CO. Office and Yard: SWAIN STREET AT RAILROAD SEA ISLE CITY, N. J.
REINFORCE. CTTTTTd s t t • l wire
DURAB1 NATI.ONA.i STEEL

