Page 4A-The Second Opinion-March 31. 1982
&needs
SPRING IS. HERE
And we have every, mg you'll need
to get mg early.
[] I 3 su, qn rot, II m'r-j,,,, ! 120-1b ............ S2.99 |
OR(>. -Perlite
• Vlg(xro
ruES
Wlth II I-I II ,Rapld-Gro
Adjuslable II I :r,l II :r.*',,°.'
The temperature may be below freezing -- but spring is here now at
Y:ly yLU;-up E2 L le98a: e;12 si:/s:;;rY ia;:g :o 'w g;/:;ougr °g:i:d:':
= 2=IY grow ..men*. Our,r.,n00.a.
E.T. & H.K. IDE,,o
St. Johnsbury Woodsville Falriee
748- 3127 747- 3361 333-4307
SPRING
OXBOW HIGH SCHOOL I
EASTER
presents / OUTFITS BOOK BARGAI
WtlgOn] A
I Ir°ur
£'E(k spring aoth/,,g
I Alri, 2 & 3 - 8 I::).rn. | I mardrobe .
I OXBOW AUDITORIUM I R We have a good
I A000,ts s2.50 / !1 i selection for men, . ;i ,, "
women d
1! children
II il u yo=
ch00.,.oo.t o,o
I Ad sponsored by l Woodsvll/e, N.H. St. JotmgbuLry. Vt.
I Swenson Insurance Agency 1
--s;: it to rain inside the st adium, seas°n temperature changes'"
i "k Vermont maple
country'soldest landmarks: the early!
:k Etg colorin tradition traces back
(continued from page IA) practiced, is hiding eggs for natural *materials such as
became associated with the children to find on Easter onion skins or flwes btit a
Interior Design and [)ecora:i%
nteriors, Inc.
Studio and Workrooms
GILBERTE BOGHOSIAN AIII Associate
morning. Both parents and
children color them during
Easter week, leaving the eggs
for the Easter Bunny to hide
on Easter Eve. If an egg is
particularly beautiful, it may
be kept to treasure as a work
of art or given as a gift to a
special friend.
The various methods of
decorating eggs have also
become tradition. Today, a
few people still color their
eggs by boiling them in
more universal method of
applying color is to use
commercial dyes made
especially for that purpose.
With paint-on egg dyes, colors
can easily be applied with
cotton swabs or brushes to
create virtually any original
design.
Stripes, floral and
geometric designs, and dot
patterns are most common. A
slightly more difficult method
involves coloring the egg and
scratching off portions of the
color to expose the shell,
celebration of Easter.
According to legend, the
pagan goddess of Spring,
Eostre, turned a bird into a
rabbit. This may explain why,
in some areas, the Easter
Bunny delivers baskets full of
colored eggs to children on
Easter morning.
Some of the early German
and Pennsylvania Dutch
traditions and customs are
still in existence today. The
most common tradition, still
creating a "reverse" color
,.j.d/y " . effect. Probably the most
sophisticated method is
1' '"N f I' i 'L "pysanky,"a "resist-dyeing"
egg craft which produces
.... ag4" I 'L' ,, ., intricate designs by using
,, [ Ulysses S. Grant, an
beginning of the Civil War,
/ i" '''" , unknown ex-soldier at the
, became the first of the
-'. ii.i i '[] nation's generals to wear four
POULTRY PROGRAM /{ ,
-., ""¢2 - • FINAL ORDER DATE-APRIL 17, 1H2 /':aV
:i",.. x' ,,O PiCK-UP WEEK OF MAY 17, 1982 "E',,:,i,( IP'
\\;x ( ' " ' " •CHICK FEEDER(I per customer)
f 9 r ds
\\; !' . '" l i (with purchase of-5 or mo e bir )
,, f • FEEDING GUIDE (with purchase of any birds)
/"-"-"- 10-24 25+ DaD R O COST
/-'F:YINg Yi RHODE ISLAND REDS --t'-Br -1- .90-q-.TO [ .____L___
bs__.Z.Y;--;TY l;T:U_ZT.Z--?5)--_- ' ZTS-_Z ..... '
WHITE PEKINS ¢StraqhtR__!m) 1,75
Meat I----E .............. - .............
o--s ...................... __ . --
type /'° ,o-i---- t l
VVVo',o' v L... FRY BAN S"ECIA L 0.35 ....... . I .... [
1, I UNDERSI'A ND TttA T DA Y.OL D POUL TR Y A RE VLR Y FRA GIL E A ND
0
IX
H/GllL Y SUS(TPTIBL 1"(I PN.UMONIA AND OTttER DISEASES I, AMOUNT PAID [ |
.ER'.,R,= ..,'A .,,;wA Y. A,;w. =O.ES AD DEA.., ---. /E,,,
E'O ANY L/IL/rY OR nEAt.Tn Or THE BIRD A FTE THEY LAWN RAKE
each
mum order 1.5)
Spring-steel tines and
coil-spring tension pro-
vide maximum flexibility
for fast cleanups with
N.H. • very little effort. CDR24
i llil I lili
Brmdford, Verunomt
(802)222-5527
LEAVE TtlESTORE ANY BIRDIIELD OVER 2 DAYS WILL BE DIS- AVAILABLE
3SED'OF ASK FOR DETAILSI
GNED ............................................... DATE ............................... _.
ADDRESS .............................................. PHONE ...................................
THE COUPON CLIPPER
means king-size savings for you
ONI,Y IN Till"
Journal Oplnlor,
Rte. 10 No. Haverhill,
Z TeL (603) 787-6981
G
ican barn, which has acquired new
and valuable practical information
Bookstore
Vermont maple syrup is made into pur maple:
container, but syrup is also packed in glass
Containers are in all sizes from a few ounces to €
Vermont has a strictly enforced maple
trolling standards of density, flavor, and
law requires syrup to be free from
grade name must be plainb
Recent years have seen the development of
evaporation plants which purchase sap from
These central plants make the sap into
..... anticipated that further development of the
direction will take place.
SELL
in the
Second i
P.O. B0X 378
BRADFORD, VERMONT
REGULAR
CLASSIFIED RATES
$3.00 for 20 words per week.
v- I0' for each additional word over 20
,,- $1.00 for each additional week
ad is to run (up to 8 weeks)
,,- $1.00 billing charge will be added to
each classified that we bill out. (]orirf144
dL.
IO
7a
¢;, - -- 2---0- -- )) " - 28 ,(, ,' J2,
J 34 V, 36 ' 3H +, .K)
START MY CLASSIFIED AD ON
RUN MY CLASSIFIED AD TINI[ S
MY CHfCg IN TH[ AkOUNT Of $ . ENCLOS£D
N AM_E ...............
A D_DR_[SS ......
TOWN STATE TEL.
OVER ,eee
Page 4A-The Second Opinion-March 31. 1982
&needs
SPRING IS. HERE
And we have every, mg you'll need
to get mg early.
[] I 3 su, qn rot, II m'r-j,,,, ! 120-1b ............ S2.99 |
OR(>. -Perlite
• Vlg(xro
ruES
Wlth II I-I II ,Rapld-Gro
Adjuslable II I :r,l II :r.*',,°.'
The temperature may be below freezing -- but spring is here now at
Y:ly yLU;-up E2 L le98a: e;12 si:/s:;;rY ia;:g :o 'w g;/:;ougr °g:i:d:':
= 2=IY grow ..men*. Our,r.,n00.a.
E.T. & H.K. IDE,,o
St. Johnsbury Woodsville Falriee
748- 3127 747- 3361 333-4307
SPRING
OXBOW HIGH SCHOOL I
EASTER
presents / OUTFITS BOOK BARGAI
WtlgOn] A
I Ir°ur
£'E(k spring aoth/,,g
I Alri, 2 & 3 - 8 I::).rn. | I mardrobe .
I OXBOW AUDITORIUM I R We have a good
I A000,ts s2.50 / !1 i selection for men, . ;i ,, "
women d
1! children
II il u yo=
ch00.,.oo.t o,o
I Ad sponsored by l Woodsvll/e, N.H. St. JotmgbuLry. Vt.
I Swenson Insurance Agency 1
--s;: it to rain inside the st adium, seas°n temperature changes'"
i "k Vermont maple
country'soldest landmarks: the early!
:k Etg colorin tradition traces back
(continued from page IA) practiced, is hiding eggs for natural *materials such as
became associated with the children to find on Easter onion skins or flwes btit a
Interior Design and [)ecora:i%
nteriors, Inc.
Studio and Workrooms
GILBERTE BOGHOSIAN AIII Associate
morning. Both parents and
children color them during
Easter week, leaving the eggs
for the Easter Bunny to hide
on Easter Eve. If an egg is
particularly beautiful, it may
be kept to treasure as a work
of art or given as a gift to a
special friend.
The various methods of
decorating eggs have also
become tradition. Today, a
few people still color their
eggs by boiling them in
more universal method of
applying color is to use
commercial dyes made
especially for that purpose.
With paint-on egg dyes, colors
can easily be applied with
cotton swabs or brushes to
create virtually any original
design.
Stripes, floral and
geometric designs, and dot
patterns are most common. A
slightly more difficult method
involves coloring the egg and
scratching off portions of the
color to expose the shell,
celebration of Easter.
According to legend, the
pagan goddess of Spring,
Eostre, turned a bird into a
rabbit. This may explain why,
in some areas, the Easter
Bunny delivers baskets full of
colored eggs to children on
Easter morning.
Some of the early German
and Pennsylvania Dutch
traditions and customs are
still in existence today. The
most common tradition, still
creating a "reverse" color
,.j.d/y " . effect. Probably the most
sophisticated method is
1' '"N f I' i 'L "pysanky,"a "resist-dyeing"
egg craft which produces
.... ag4" I 'L' ,, ., intricate designs by using
,, [ Ulysses S. Grant, an
beginning of the Civil War,
/ i" '''" , unknown ex-soldier at the
, became the first of the
-'. ii.i i '[] nation's generals to wear four
POULTRY PROGRAM /{ ,
-., ""¢2 - • FINAL ORDER DATE-APRIL 17, 1H2 /':aV
:i",.. x' ,,O PiCK-UP WEEK OF MAY 17, 1982 "E',,:,i,( IP'
\\;x ( ' " ' " •CHICK FEEDER(I per customer)
f 9 r ds
\\; !' . '" l i (with purchase of-5 or mo e bir )
,, f • FEEDING GUIDE (with purchase of any birds)
/"-"-"- 10-24 25+ DaD R O COST
/-'F:YINg Yi RHODE ISLAND REDS --t'-Br -1- .90-q-.TO [ .____L___
bs__.Z.Y;--;TY l;T:U_ZT.Z--?5)--_- ' ZTS-_Z ..... '
WHITE PEKINS ¢StraqhtR__!m) 1,75
Meat I----E .............. - .............
o--s ...................... __ . --
type /'° ,o-i---- t l
VVVo',o' v L... FRY BAN S"ECIA L 0.35 ....... . I .... [
1, I UNDERSI'A ND TttA T DA Y.OL D POUL TR Y A RE VLR Y FRA GIL E A ND
0
IX
H/GllL Y SUS(TPTIBL 1"(I PN.UMONIA AND OTttER DISEASES I, AMOUNT PAID [ |
.ER'.,R,= ..,'A .,,;wA Y. A,;w. =O.ES AD DEA.., ---. /E,,,
E'O ANY L/IL/rY OR nEAt.Tn Or THE BIRD A FTE THEY LAWN RAKE
each
mum order 1.5)
Spring-steel tines and
coil-spring tension pro-
vide maximum flexibility
for fast cleanups with
N.H. • very little effort. CDR24
i llil I lili
Brmdford, Verunomt
(802)222-5527
LEAVE TtlESTORE ANY BIRDIIELD OVER 2 DAYS WILL BE DIS- AVAILABLE
3SED'OF ASK FOR DETAILSI
GNED ............................................... DATE ............................... _.
ADDRESS .............................................. PHONE ...................................
THE COUPON CLIPPER
means king-size savings for you
ONI,Y IN Till"
Journal Oplnlor,
Rte. 10 No. Haverhill,
Z TeL (603) 787-6981
G
ican barn, which has acquired new
and valuable practical information
Bookstore
Vermont maple syrup is made into pur maple:
container, but syrup is also packed in glass
Containers are in all sizes from a few ounces to €
Vermont has a strictly enforced maple
trolling standards of density, flavor, and
law requires syrup to be free from
grade name must be plainb
Recent years have seen the development of
evaporation plants which purchase sap from
These central plants make the sap into
..... anticipated that further development of the
direction will take place.
SELL
in the
Second i
P.O. B0X 378
BRADFORD, VERMONT
REGULAR
CLASSIFIED RATES
$3.00 for 20 words per week.
v- I0' for each additional word over 20
,,- $1.00 for each additional week
ad is to run (up to 8 weeks)
,,- $1.00 billing charge will be added to
each classified that we bill out. (]orirf144
dL.
IO
7a
¢;, - -- 2---0- -- )) " - 28 ,(, ,' J2,
J 34 V, 36 ' 3H +, .K)
START MY CLASSIFIED AD ON
RUN MY CLASSIFIED AD TINI[ S
MY CHfCg IN TH[ AkOUNT Of $ . ENCLOS£D
N AM_E ...............
A D_DR_[SS ......
TOWN STATE TEL.
OVER ,eee