Chatham
’‘U.WIWTON-
Blanketeer
Vol. 3
NOVEMBER 23, 1935
No. 9
1
"".'Ilf/ •■■\ V--/iS
v!t' -• r 4 A * 1 ^ /a
pf. ‘'Ik' ^
AUTUMN’S GIFTS
Bv Alice Crowell Hoffman
A^mn comes with lovely
Pretty painted leaves in drifts,
Chestnuts dropping from the
Wlth^'each passing autumn
breeze,
Apples rosy as can be
On the ground and on the
Golden crop in heaps and
Some^toe’lated hollyhocks,
punfle asters, goldenrod,
Telling us of fall and
Skto. t°». «“>
ji^t^the thing for Hallowe’en.
TtSa, to all these gifts so gay,
ISrkdds the best-Thanks-
giving Day.
^
'* V ■' .*
1* Ifc
4. i?
S
*^V . '.:
¥** *
a photograph made
The beautiful woodland scene above is It is an
y our staff photographer just back of the their leaves by
.'‘“tumn scene, in which the trees, shorn of many of the.r 1 ^
the
iSLciii pnotograpner jusi uaun. thpir leaves c
-n>n scene, in which the trees, shorn of many of the'r
antics of the first frosts, stand mutely in the
descending November sun. To gaze upon the scene brings an im
pression of quiet and solitude and abiding peace as nature prepares
for the onslaught of winter. Yet in truth, were you to be trans
ported to the very scene, would come the busy hum of our Elkin mill.