Newspapers / Polk County News and … / Oct. 3, 1919, edition 1 / Page 8
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i III12ISIlJB-AfjD. ill i Got: rd J t pott; act; 1US) Sut WX ationi willt IE A til xdui j f : - -J f J 14 1 Me Villi le5 'it a id Hi !l ll P H ti: if i ... t Brassieres Bandeaux Camisoles 50c to $2.0 RHODES & STREADWICK, Wilkins' Store TRYON, - N. C. mmmm TOWN' 1 HELPS The Library. Consider what you have in the smalt est chosen library. A company of the wisest and wittiest men that could be pickfd out of all civilized countries, in 1,000 years, have set inbest order the results of their learning and wisdom. The men themselves were hid and in accessible, solitary, impatient of inter ruption, fenced by etiquette; but the tnougnii. which they did not uncover to their bosom friend is here written out In transparent -words to us, the strangers of. another age. Emerson. "' " 11 "" Advice From a Great Man. Phillips Brooks once said that it Is Just as presumptuous to think that you can do nothing as it is to think that you can do everything. Try to "steer a middle course" between the two. Classified Advertisements. V FOR RENT. CLEAN UP AND KEEP CLEAN Much More Than Mere Comfort Is In volved in Having Community Free From Dirt The greatest effort in the history ot cleanliness is on ! For cleanliness has a history" Its Influence can be traced down the ages. Those races that were .clean were those races that were the masters. TheAthenians, with their baths and beautiful homes, conquered the Per sians, with their unkempt beards and dirty skins. The Romans, with their aqueducts, their barbers, their gar dens, beat back the barbarians with their goat skins and greasy fingers. Louis XVI was the most dainty mon arch France ever had and one of the mightiest. Filth kept the Panama canal from being built years before it finally was. Bolshevism flourished when the dirty and Ignorant erained control in Russia. Real people, the wise, the leaders In progress, alway have fought for cleanliness. At times it has been a sporadic fight, a skirmish. A clean man was handicapped by a neighbor who let his premises run wild. But co-operation has been brought to play at last. This year, in the United States alone; 7,000 villages, towns Land cities uiv campaigning ror cleanliness and health. They are not dolne so for n day or a week, but in a continuous campaign. In a steady pressure. Tin cans, flies, refuse, dirt, wast paper, unsightly buildings, unpainted suriaces are taboo. The drive is on. It has been estimated that 20.000.. 000 men, women and children in th united States are annually interested in and working on clean ud and nnin. up activities. It is an army of magnifi cent purpose and of immense possibili ties. It is bound to win. Join the forward movement f!lenr up, paint up and keep it ud. Make th old enemies, dirt and disease and un sightliness, abdicate and stay out For ::Fall iGraia- In your preparation to live on "the fat of tho land" use a liberal application of R. L Lee & Co's ground limestone and fertilizer under fall grain. - For Sale-From Our Ware House At Landrum, S C. 100 Mosh Ground Limestone 100 lb. paper bag, per bag. . . . . . . . .37 1-P 100 Mesh Ground Limestone 20Q burlap bag per bag. ...75 10-2-0, 9-2-0, 10-0-2, 10-0-4 fertilizer also 16 per cent Acid phos phate, at fall jricrwhich is bout 30 per cent below last spring prices - ex cept ACID PHOSPHATE. ' y p ; , , . It is our purpose to carry a stock of fertilizer from this date until the gram season closes. ig, , FOR A II l . Pris that i, l you money see T. W. BALLEW, Tryout the Righl k IRo ILo ILEE Landrum, South Carolina. WRITES NOVEL OPERA Mascagni's Latest Effort Is Rev olutionary Step. H No Characters, but Represents Ideas for Which Men Have Striven. JSS WHY HOME OWNING IS URGED chard Saluda, N. C. MISCELLANEOUS. Buy your nurserv 5?tnrlf . of F J Bradley, Saluda, agent for the old reuaDie nursery company, of Pomna, N. C. He can save you money and assist you m your selection of trees Dest aaaptedt o your soil. FOR SALE AT RICKSHAVEN. The Encyclopedia Americanna 16 vols.; k the Century Dictionary, 10 vols.; household goods, kitchen uten sils and farming tools. Inquire of jyiito. jviakx JJ. USBOKNE, Rickshayen, Stearns, N. C Wanted: Irish potatoes $1.50 " delivered at Landrum, Tryon, or your nearest railroad station. Frying cnickens 30c, hens 22c, eggs 50c; first-class country butter 40c. Turnips rutabagas, sweet potatoes, cabbae-e. tomatoes in 10 bushel lots, apples or -any other country produce, also ten der sweet corn wanted. Call, write pnone, B. Willis, Tryon, N. C. FOR SALE Fresh Cow will sell ior casn or exchange for work horse. vj. vx. weaver, Tryon, N. C. Tryon Lodge No. 118 Knights of Pythias Castle Hall in Missildine Building Meets Thursday Evening at 8:30 VISITORS WELCOME NOTICE. This is to notify the followii..' par ties. viz:MatiA Tllal-raV. Blackwell, Alonzo Blackwell, Walter rntawcu, Anna ciacKwell arid Delia Blackwell and Jennie Lee Foster, heirs to certain realestate in the Greens Creek Colored School District Greens. Creek Township, County of Polk and State of North Carolina, 9,ounty Board of Education of Polk qounty, in conformity to power vested in it by legal statute will make petition to the clerk or the superior court of Polk County asking for appraisers to be appointed to condemn one acre of land m said colored school- district ?w J; Pent school building and church building, for the purpose of erecting a public school, house for the colored race. This done by the Board or Education of Polk County, N. C. by its clerk E. W. S. Cobb. PolkMiUer Liver Pills The Good Old Fashioned Kind that have been doing Good Work tor 50 years without change of formula. More popular than ever. Great in Malaria, Sick headaches. IT it T ouiousness. At all druggists. Manufactured hy PmiL Rami r . i wiiw miner Lrug o.t Inc., Richmond, Va. ciurea ay 10c. Ten Powerful Arguments Put Forward oy Those Convinced of Wisdom of the Plan. Home owning will result In hAnflt to people who become home owners and to the city as a whole, for Oipsa. among other, reasons : 1. In the long run the hom owhaf Is more prosperous than the renter, and the prosperity of any city depends upon the prosperity of its indhrtdnal citizens. ' 2. The home owner Is nermanpnt? the shifter ddes little eood to his Htv or himself. 3. The home owner Is Droeresslve ? the renter Is not Interested in DrOETP. sive movements. 4. Habits of thrift learned in home buying add to the wealth of the indi vidual and the city. . 5. The home owner beautifies the city; the renter does not: th mnr beautiful our city is the more people will be attracted to It. 6. Other things being, ., equal, . the home owner is a better worker Ithan the renter, and keeps his position af ter the renter is discharged. 7. The owner of a home has an ever- present protection , against poverty, and will not become a charge upon the community. 8. No city of renters can ever suc ceed. No nation of tenants ever be came great. 9. A city that is worth living in is worth owning a home in. 10. Other, things being equal, the home owner is a better citizen, a bet ter soldier, a better American than the renter. Rome. Pietro Mascagni, known to everyone as the composer of "Cava! leria Rustlcana and numerous other musical works, has written a new opera. "H Piccolo Marat," which is characterized here as distinctly a revo lutionary step In operatic works. It contains no personalities as characters In the story, but it substitutes for them symbolic representations of virtues and Ideals similar to the American pageant. ?I expect to produce my new ODera next winter in Rome," said Slgnor Mas cagni to the Associated Press corre spondent "The theme is founded on the conflict of the ideas between the autocrat and the j democrat, between oppression and freedom. The time of the opera, of course, is not limited to any one period. The opera Is sym bolic of many periods and would Just as readily apply to the stirring times of the American Revolution as it would to the French revolution, or the Rus sian or the Bavarian. "I have no characters in the pro duction representing any particular personalities. There Is no Napoleon, Metternich or Garibaldi. My charac ters represent the Ideas for which men have endeavored to keep man in sub jection. There is a character for jus ticefor truth, for freedom; and, on the other hand, for tyranny, for ignor ance, for wrong. The plan In my new work, has been to depict In song the evolution of man from a slave to a free man through the Instrumentality of characters representing the abstract qualities for which man fought, and, on the contrary, the qualities he fought against." W AND iviatPriM wuuul uuiiaing. pu STV m a mm. - uoors, Windows, CeilinK, Shingles UZ7 Finish and Moulding Dressd Lumber. fCT"0! STOCK oflBJ HEARON LUMBER co ... v SALUDA, N. C audi FRIDAY W " of next week, you are expected to be at Columbus with the best of your products, and do all that vou can to . . I ' help niake a success of the Millineryg DressMa All Work Guaranteed f irit floor Wilkins' store MRS. E. RHODES, W. F. LITTLE NOTARY PUBLIC Tryon, N.C. FA Old-Fashioned Flower Garden. "A thing of beauty is a joy forever," which can be found in a bed of i old fashioned flowers at a minimum cost. After the soil is prepared, sow the seeds or set out the plants, putting the tall ones like sweet peas, hollyhocks, golden glow and - sunflowers In the back. Plant shorter ones in front- such as the marigolds Japanese pop pies, sweet Williams and field daisies; in front of these still shorter ones, such as petunias,-nasturtiums and as ters, with pansies, pinks and verbenas in front. A border of candy tuft or sweet alyssum is very decorative. With such an arrangement, flowers for the parlor and living room-table can be obtained until frost comes. Many a bouquet of beautiful flowers at practically no exDense also enn find MA . us way into the room of some sick per son or to a hospital ward. Thrift Magazine. x Build Bird Homes. ' Birds add much to the hnm m.. roundines and are onsnir mo A.i.' . uiuuc ucigir Dors If -nesting places are available. iru nouses will attract wrens, blue birds, martins nH . . uuuioiuies; anu tne windbreak, annio nh. - t " . maKe go0(1 homes ;for orioles. rooms and thrushes. They will pay for any attention by the de BtrucUon of many . injurious insects. Tnn v irm"ng snrh3. such as the Juneberry. black haw, sheepberry and not8 be Ped in, thkets; TSeJ the but because " "rr surroundings. SEEKS TO CUT LIVING COST Freer Imports, Restricted Exports Considered by French Cabinet as Solution. Paris. The French government Is considering the problem of the high cost of living and the cabinet took up tne question at its meetine. According to the Echo de Paris the government Is considering the Issuance of the decree opening the frontiers immediately for the import of neces sary raw materials. The Figaro says the government Is discussing the prohibition of the ex port of certain foodstuffs, such as utter, eggs and cheese. Other newspapers say the govern ment will propose a law inflicting very eevere penalties on rood speculators. The proposal to end martial law, which has been in effect since the be ginning of the war, was discussed In tne chamber of deputies. FRANCE TO TEACH DOCTORS New Body Will Work for Permanent Relations With United States. Paris. The Temps announces thai an organization has been formed with the object of establishing permanent relations between American and French physicians and surgeons. Several commissions have been ap pointed by the organization One ol I these will have in. charge the estab lishment of a course of teaching foi , American physicians -visiting France, and another the founding of a bureau of information. v . A third commission -wjli examine Into means of organizing an exchange of articles on medical and surgical subjects between the Journals of thi Uaited States and France. ADMINISTRATION Director Genreral of, Railroads ATT formation to the traveling public, the United ConferWAf V ...:Yi 1.-1 J .1 - . . : WMiinuo Will XIOIU fe r'ff inrAtlanta, October 7th to 10th. Ticlceb on sale daUy October 4th to otn,: inclusive. All passengers desiring to take ad van tage of these reducted rates should supplyv themselves with a certificate, fac simile of which appears below-as these rates are not open to the general public. IDENTIFICATION CERTIFICATE t TWENTY-Nim-H ANNUAL REUNION UNITED CONFEDERATE VETERANS .y ATLANTA. GA.. OCTOBER 7-10. 1911 tcvtBcet AGENf:;:;:::;7 ! : '-" Thisr Certifies that .nZZ'V ''''''' V v ;' (name of Passenger) " m SAMPLE Insert Check Mark Below Denoting , Membership xiftl ember. f ? Uied Confederate Veteran,. X (ci. MemfiM of tm Q.. t n.t i v ij a - "'."w vwueaertte Veterans X CEK It -Mr oU memberTlhe Son. or e XW !mber f e nfedwated 8outhern , Memorial Au (0. . A member of the fwralv f. . l . . , .. ' . . - Southern Memorial Aociatin. V,nl,CTtJ authorized for thi Wiion. aa T-'eguUtiow. condition, .tated onTaThe "o de-4. - Countersigned bv AJ . V Wm.E.Mickle", Adnjtaut General and Chief of Staff United Confederate Veterans ' , A. B. Forrest Aduitrnt-in-Chief ahd Chief Staff prt j .Sn.;inMLj.-:. w.n Commander NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE By Virtue of the m ascertain mortgage deed executes on the 12th dav of NnvpmW m by tmstees of the Hamilta otoss Koads Church, R. R. Brootl shire. James Pa b Q U11U AlCtitUtl Karnes, to the Congregational Churcbl ounamg society to secure an in debtedness of $450.00. which reort- gage is' of record in Book 10. Pun 312 of the records of deeds and mort gages of Folk county, and, default haying been made in the payment of saia indebtedness, I will, on OtJTORER 13 1919 within the leiral hours of sale, for the purpose of satisfying said in- aeDteaness, with interest and cost added, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, at the court hous door of Polk county, the land con veyed by said mortgage, situated in the township of Columbus, County of Polk and State of North Caroliu and described as follows: Rpfrin Til Tier of q ctoVo in fri north" - 3 'lUUllg uv fc 0huut Alt east corner of the intersection of the CoiiiTYihiis and Snnrtv Pains Kilo wifVl fVio T onrlniTvi nrA Mill Snrffltt . wj. wav juauui uiii aiiu xixm o road, running thence along the north- ern Doundary ot sandy riams w T? 1Q C It? 4- folro thPTlM N 70.20 rods to a stake; thence H. aw A. v A. VUW VW M boundary of Mill Spring road; thence .Q Til o 1 An n wf. iv . aiuiic apbiu , J 1 r 1 i 1 t KofflTt. saia roaa zv poies 10 pxace vi ning, containing two acres more or less. This 12th day of . September, im CUMGKEGATIO.NAL Wiunw BUILDING SOCIETY. E. B. Cloud, Attorney. NOTICE "Mar-xr rasp Pntprc ia acres of land, more or less, in Columbus Townshij iPollc Cmmtv. N C on waters 01 White Oak creek; adjoining the W ot ki. U. Durham, u. r. nai heirs of Mrs. Gilbert and Cabe r 3 a.i t raw ana ouiers. Entered Sept. 8th, 1919. v ir T3TTT?mrcc! Fntrv iaKer NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to the DOWer of deed, executed by M. E. Moms, J- IjT TUT ,-r. T M. iW"4. and B. F. Morris to RenL rf ' Stock Company on tne J-"" offi November 1913 and recoiu -Of Register of Deeds for ?ol on y m dook ixv. & in secure payment of the dew ; terest therein set forth, ing been made in the PZgnei debt and interest, we , ta tne will sell at public auction w highest bid, for cash, a on the 9th day of October ' 11 O'clock A. M. the toM senbed land and premie, -and described in said moW follows. m " Melvto Six acres m tne w win n- rrcaV Townsnip. . - a.j.ai, via ceil viv.v, - naW1 County,. North Carolina, j A lands of Mrs. J. I. Robbs Ges Ci'mnsATI anU . , -in- Stadman, being the vejed to W. H. Morns y 3J. Ri5inro t.h tna lot whereon E. Morris now lives. . j9i9. This 6th day of gVnl CU PIEDMONT LIVE STOUg, 'Walttr Jonas, Attorney.
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 3, 1919, edition 1
8
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