American Agriculturist, July 14,1923 
25 
New Jersey Horticulturists 
to Hold Summer Meeting 
in Glassboro 
F RUIT and vegetable growers from 
all parts of the State will assemble 
for the summer meeting of the State 
Horticultural Society on the campus 
of the new State Normal School in 
Glassboro on Wednesday, July 25. 
Representatives of the staff of the 
State Experiment Station at New 
Brunswick have been conducting im¬ 
portant spraying experiments in the 
orchards of the Repp Company. The 
lessons from these experiments will be 
demonstrated during the tour of sev¬ 
eral large orchards near Glassboro. 
The run will be made by automobiles 
leaving the Normal School at 10 
o’clock, standard time. 
After lunch in the beautiful oak 
grove adjacent to the Normal School, 
the members and visitors will assemble 
for a meeting. They will be addressed 
by Mayor Frank Stanger and Mr. 
Charles F.-Repp, of Glasboro, Senator 
Emmor Robberts, President of the Hor¬ 
ticultural Society, Dr. J. J. Savitz, Prin¬ 
cipal of the New Jersey Normal School, 
and Mr. L. A. Cooley, Secretary of the 
New Jersey State Federation of County 
Boards of Agriculture. Professor M. 
A. Blake, Horticulturist at the State 
Experiment Station, Professor A. J, 
Farley, Pomologist, Dr. T. J. Headlee, 
State Entomologist, and Dr. W. H. 
Martin, Plant Pathologist, will lead dis¬ 
cussions on the best practices in orchard 
and field work. 
Last year the summer meeting was 
held at Minch Bros, farms near Bridge- 
ton. There was an attendance of 
nearly 1,000 persons. The meeting this 
year is expected to be even larger. It 
will be held in the Normal School build¬ 
ing in the event of rain. 
SHEEP BREEDERS ESTABLISH 
SCHOLARSHIP AT PENN 
STATE 
A special scholarship is to be estab¬ 
lished at the Pennsylvania State College 
as the result of a $5,000 fund provided 
by the Pennsylvania State More Sheep 
More Wool Association. It is to be 
known as the “Arthur C. Bigelow Mem¬ 
orial Scholarship” in honor of the late 
organizer of the association, a former 
prominent textile manufacturer of 
Philadelphia. The interest from the 
fund will be awarded each year to a 
student in the State College animal 
husbandi'y course who is specializing 
in sheep studies and who is deserving 
of the award by reason of his scholastic 
standing. _ 
“Going To Law” 
(Continued from page 19) 
up to nearly eleven thousand dollars! 
How many such cases—not quite so 
striking perhaps—have come under the 
notice of most persons. How many 
estates have been wasted, and heirs 
beggared, by an unwillingness to make 
slight concessions. 
But the pecuniary loss, serious as 
it often may be, is not the worst fea¬ 
ture in the business. The hatred en¬ 
gendered, and bad passions nourished, 
react sadly upon the parties engaged. 
The disposition is soured, peace ban¬ 
ished, and constant vexations and ap¬ 
prehension embitter life. Said one 
who had finally obtained his suit, in¬ 
volving a large amount, and one which 
he could ill afford to lose: “Had I 
foreseen the anxiety and vexation I 
have suffered from this business, I 
would have given a receipt in full for 
the amount, rather than have com¬ 
menced.” i Many others will bear the 
same testimony. There are cases where 
it is positive duty to invoke the aid of 
law to secure or preserve rights, but 
reason, not passion, should preside 
when such interests are involved. 
We repeat, then, if any of our read¬ 
ers are now, or hereafter, tempted to 
indulge in “law,” let them first give 
this picture a careful study, and then 
inquire if it will not be better to lose 
the milk at once, than to hold the cow 
with might and main, for an indefinite 
period, and in the end find all the labor 
lost. 
Wishing you success in your good 
work.—Phil R. Goodives, Ritchey, Ill. 
PUBLIC FORMULA FEEDS 
r T" , HE Cooperative G. L. F. Exchange is securely established. 
It has wiped out the operating deficit which existed on 
January 1, 1923, and during the first six months of the current 
year has increased its gross business by a million dollars over 
the same period last year. 
The service the G. L. F. renders you in the future will depend 
primarily on the volume of purchases it makes for you. Volume 
voluntarily placed means savings in overhead and sales cost. 
Orders secured without the expense of direct solicitation mean 
lower prices to you and your neighbors. 
The G. L. F. Feed Pool which opens this month affords you the 
opportunity to buy your winter feed at summer prices. It also 
furnishes you the added guarantee of securing the best dairy 
feed available at the lowest possible price per hundred pounds 
of digestible nutrients. 
Thoughtful deliberation will convince you of the wisdom of 
using the G. L. F. to buy your feed for you. Remember, orders 
voluntarily placed make the pool price lower. 
President 
Cooperative G. L. F. Exchange. Inc. 
Buffalo, N. Y. 
AUCTION SALE 
Buy At Your Own Price 
GASOLINE ENGINES 
FARM TRUCKS 
SAWING OUTFITS 
TRACTORS and.ATTACHMENTS 
SAW BENCHES 
MOWING MACHINES, Etc. 
Owing to the ever-increasing demand for 
DO-IT-ALL TRACTORS, we intend 
giving up the retail store. We have, a 
large stock and sooner than put it in the 
warehouse we are going to sacrifice. Here 
is an opportunity for the farmer to supply 
himself with his needs for years to come, 
at his own prices. The Auction Sale will 
be held at No. 33 Park Place, Thursday, 
July 26th. If you desire further information 
write to DO-IT-ALL Tractors Corp., 
No. 33 Park Place, New York City. 
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