Newspapers / Polk County News and … / July 26, 1923, edition 1 / Page 9
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Relief ro* g BELL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief m-ANS ?JwGES EVERYWHERE -far ?r.v Little One id Colic for iree Months L sitfVrcd Ti n i'ulic for :ir.'l I " ? ?'"aid I was " writes .Mrs A. J. ^ Fuj.. slip soon I cnve her Toothina, her. Jvbw ' ' frill never he without in for JpMli rnv liirio ones and tea fl'fll. very common <-ompIaint L- ?Tj'f if n- f ci'rroctod in JlpaiJs f() m??re serious dis IWhina corrects baby's ? reJ:ovf>s distress due to JJ^.^i.-'ich. i-Jt'Miis out the jrtfrttiw* the system. , i-sn he iuiil :it any dru^ jod .^V f<> file MofTeft Lab {Wnnifw. '-'a., and receive (tare n > f a free copy of strafed Riby Hook. ? (Ad |g people say?" has a tre rtr for pood. | MAVmCTUUNC CO. C?Mriktor?J noauw Jiar ?ldom see i* inkie, hock, stifle. *n** o ' d*n it off without Uy (cp th? horse. No blllttfi ?kalr gone. Concentrate T i few drops required at an atioa. I2i0 per bottle d? i Describe your case for v-Jilfiitructione, and Beek 8A fre? |k S* Ltbu Si, SprnffieU. Mm. :MA-1TCH Troubles C Permanently Cured With ACHOL J? Hospitals and Skin Diseaae ? important discovery of a ^BARACHOL Ointment. ^oiute and permanent cure for Ecz ima and Itch. A pfopeless wrote: "Given up W doctors-cured in 3 night? r Rub Barachol in your JNlrcacK the sore spots. No 1 ^ork, disagreeable odor ? Diiinfects while curing. Ut ** a TUBE sufficient ? NT treatment. Guarantee Mailed in plain wrapper chemical CO. PASSAIC. N. J. sriaOut of the System Hfl It?nic and appetizer [Jmn'sso quinine P Mail this arhertisement with P*?e bottV tot* < Unhok Company. Money i ,f not satisfied.' fc?REE Cybook?how to keep your (l p''""how to care for him ?? of S'< years' eTtperi known doe disease. rV*T GLOVER, V. S N*w Yorlt HURT? For bamirg or icmly lid?. , to r*li?T# inflammm-L r??c*r"^",r'!n'>"' os?Mltehell| K nrV *!v* ?ToHing to dlrec- 1 Soothing, heiling, *??AU * RUCK.EL M?ly Viae* N?v York1 Sifisr pSar* m * : - ^?VV; -A in nrgaai* . h.K <-xclusiv? < 1 ' 'ton seed, i'.'spnnslble ''tory agreed opportunity. lwchtriond. V0 DOINGS IN THE TAR HEEL STATE NEWS OF NORTH CAROLINA TOLD IN SHORT PARA GRAPHS FOR BUSY PEOPLE witn towns ' Greensboro. ? A check for $1,000 has been received from A. B. An drews, of Raleigty by Rev. S. B. Turrentine, president of Greensboro College, the institution of the Meth odists of North Carolina for young women, for a Masonic loan fund. Winston-Salem. ? The c'd high school building o? Cherry street was bid off at auction for the First Pres byterian church congregation fo* $46,100. Confirmation of sale is subject tcl action by fhe board of aldermen. % Durham.? R. W. Miller, of Char lotte, was elected president of t.h# retail groccry division of thg North Carolina Merchants' Association, at a meeting held in this city, grocerymen of ten cities and in the state in attedance. New Bern. ? Plans have been com pleted and excavations are now un der way for the erection of thfc new St. Peter's African Methodist Episco pal church, to supplant the old struc ture which was destroyed by the December 1 fire. The new building is to cost $100,000. Mount Airy. ? The concert class from the Odd Fellows' children's home, in Goldsboro. presented a splendid program at the Broadway theater. They played to a well filled house and much favorable comment j was heard on the splendid training the children receive in that institu tion. Durham ? D. G. S. Campbell, now with the State Board of Health, was oppointed by the Durham Board oi Health as full time county medical ov fleer to succeed Dr. Hunter Sweany, who gives ud Dart time work to de vote his entire time to practice. Reidsville. ? The big picnic of the Rockingham County Tobacco Gro^ ers" Association at the county play ground, was a success in every way. Notwithstanding it threatened to rain in the forenoon 1.200 or 1.500^peopl? were present. Southern Pines. ? The Sandhills Kiwanis club has received accept ances from J. Elwood Cox, of High Point, and Frank Page, state highway commissioner, to address a good roads rally and picnic to be held here July 26. General Bowley* and the 17th regiment band from Fort Bragg will also be here. Gastonia. ? Thousands of premium lists for the big Gaston county fair are being mailed oat to prespecth * exhibitors in Gaston, Mecklenburg, Lincoln, York, Cleveland and other counties. The list is unusual in ap- 1 pearance from a typographical, stand- j point and is one of the strongest in 1 the state as usual from a standpoint of amounts offered. Greensboro. ? In an effort to in crease business, the North Carolina Public Service company has under contemplation plans for operating gasoline busses in the populous parts i of this city which are o# the car lines. It is expected that the plans will go through as soon as details are worked out, it was announced by an official of the company. Salisbury. ? A number of fraternal and eivic organizations have ap pointed committees and have in hand the matter for getting for Rowan ' county the orphanage the Junior Or der, United American Mechanics, ex- ; pect to build in North Carolina. T. H. Vanderford and associated have ; offered free a 200-acre tract of^land near Gold Hill for the orphanage site, j New Bern.? One of the largest ex port shipments of eastern Carolina ! bright leaf tobacco made from here in several years left for Rotterdam, Hoi- j land. The New Bern Tobacco com* j p&ny, steamers and re-drj^ra, re-cured and packed the weed. Burlington. ? Col. R. L. Holt, one of the leading citizens here, died at his home at Glencoe near Burlington, I after an illness of only a few days. It j was not known that he was ill and the news of his death came as a sudden shock to his many friends. High Point.? The body of Grady Taylor, who committed suicide after shooting and seriously wounding hls? wife at their home here, was being held by a local undertaker, pending ( the arrival of relatives from South Carolina. Monroe.? The sixty-sixth anniver sary meeting of the Tirzah Bible so- . ciety will be held at Tirzah church, in I Jackson tpwnship, on Saturday, July 28. The principal speaker of the oc casion will be Dr. Alexander Martin, j pastor of Oaland Avenue Presbyterian church, Rock Hill, S. C. v. Raeford. ? Young Fletcher Stock*, colored, shot Monk McDougald and in- j stantly killed him at the former's* home, and then opened fire with hh? automatic on Mandy Monroe, and hi> brother's little 14 months old babj, hitting the woman in the abdomen and the little baby in the lower limb. It is doubtful whether the woman will live. ReidsviKe. ? T. P. Turner, secretary of the Reidsville Chamber of Com merce, chairman of the Reidsville Danville road committee, says the celebration of the completion of the highway will, be held at Guerranf Springs on Friday, July 27. Horticultural Points Thinning Out Extremely Thick Fruit Is Favored By thinning out the extremely thick fruit when it is about one-third size, fhat which is left will be not only larger, but more free of insect pests and rot, while the firmness and flavor will be enhanced. Where the fruit Is left thick on the tree, It Is too crowded to develop prop erly, and Insects are much more likely to cttack ft than if it is thinned out. Great damage also is done some trees, especially those which have not been in bearing very long, by allowing an abnormally large crop of fruit to un duly sap the tree of its vitality. In deed, trees are sometimes killed by this overloading with fruit. Even where this does not result, the tree often Is barren for three or four years immediately following the abnormal yield. In thinning the fruit from a tree, the small, ill-shaped, withering and r< ?i -specked pieces should be discard ed, only the larger, smooth, healthy looking ones being left on the tree. The distance apart for leaving fruit must be decided by the size of the fruit and the age, productiveness and general condition of the tree on which it is grown. A? a general rule, it may be said that all fruit should have a space of at least three times its nat ural size at maturity, some allowance being made for clusters of fruit, as It is difficult to remove one piece of fruit from a cluster without knocking all of the cluster off. It May Be Profitable to Pick Apple Tree Twice Most apple growers remove all the fruit from the trees at one picking. Many, however, according to observa tions of the United States Department of Agriculture, make two or more pickings during the season, especially when the fruit is not uniformily of good color, but Is otherwise of high quality. The advisability of making more than one picking depends upon the extent to which the size and color of the fruit are affected by the quanti ty borne by each tree. The apples on the outside of the tree, especially the larger and better colored ones, are removed at the first picking to permit the limbs to lift and expose the uncolored fruit to the sun. This thinning also tends to bring about an Increase in size of the fruit remaining on the trees. In the course of a week or ten days the second pick ing is made, when the remainder of the crop usually is removed. In a few Instances more than two pickings are made, especially with early apples. Two pickings are more expensive than one because of the additional time required, though the increase in the market value of the crop often justifies this practice. If the crop -is of low quality the vrilue of the re turns usually are not sufficient to war rant the extra cost of more than one picking. Control Red Raspberry Spur Blight by Spray Red raspberry spur blight makes its appearance about the middle of July, and can be recogn'zed by the Irregular brown splotches on the new canes. The fungus which is responsible for the discoloration invades the tissue sur rounding the buds from which the fruit spurs arise and either destroys them outright or prevents their further growth and development. The disease can be controlled satisfactorily by spraying the young canes with bor deaux mixture when they are six to eight inches high, and every two weeks thereafter until the picking season. The old canes should be removed as soon as the crop has been gathered, and a final application of the spray material should be given at that time. For this work, we recommend an ad hesive bordeaux mixture having a for mula, 3-2-50, and containing 2 pounds of rosin fish oil soap to each 50 gallons. ? Walter G. Sackett, Experi ment Station, Colorado Agricultural College, Fort Collins, Colo. Powder Kills Currant and Gooseberry Worms The worjns that do so much injury to currant and gooseberry bushes are \;ery easily destroyed by an applica tion of white hellebore which may be obtained at any drug store. Use one ounce of the powdered hellebore to a bucket (about three gaJlons) of water and thoroughly spray the* bushes. The best time to apply this poison, according to C. P. Gillette, of the Colo ado Agricultural College, is in the eve ning, but it may be, used any time dur ing the day. This powder, while very poisonous to the gooseberry worms, will not po'son the fruit so as to make it dangerous to uge as food. A Start With Bush Fruits. When good care Is taken with cur rants and gooseberries they will be found to be one of the very best pro ducers. There Is a wide difference in the yield of Individual bushes and the number of boxes of berries or currants to the bush varies with ib* variety and t^e caire given to it. Everybody Likes Cherries. There Is no fruit grown on the farm which Is more welcome than cherries, and cherries are always in demand if one has a surDl us. IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Way School T Lesson* (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D., Teacher of English Bible In the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) Copyright. 1923. Westers Newspaper Ualta, LESSON FOR JULY 29 MATTHEW, THE PUBLICAN LESSON TEXT ?.Matthew 9:9-13; Luke 5:27-3^7 GOLDEN TEXT? "I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repent ance." ? Matthew 5:32. REFERENCE MATERIAL? Mark 2: 13-22. PRIMARY TOPIC? Matthew Invites Jesus' to His Home. JUNIOR TOPIC? What Jesus Did for Matthew. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP IC ? Matthew Overcomes a Handicap. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC ? Matthew, a Study of Conversion. 1. Who Matthew Was. Of Matthew little is known, even his birth place is concealed. Our first sight of him is seated at the toll booth collecting taxes. The tax gatherer was hated by the loyal Jews because he collected taxes for the alien, gov ernment under whose yoke they were galling. This hate was the more bit ter because^ of the extortion usually practiced by those in rule. From the meager accounts we find that Matthew was : 3. A Man of Decision. We do not know whether he had ever seen or heard of Jesus before this time, but we note that he at once arose and followed Jesus. Without doubt, there were many things to concern him. It was no little task to break off from his business which apparently was very lucrative. 2. He Was a Humble Man. In chapter 10, verse 3, the order in which he gives his own name and the fact that he designates himself a "pub lican" would show that he did not overestimate himself. 3. He Possessed Force of Character. This Is shown in the fact that he gave a feast and invited his friends in to see and hear his Lord. v He , had two names, Levi, which means "attached" or "joined," and Matthew, which means "gift of Je hovah." Most llltely Matthew was the name assumed after his conver sion. II. Matthew's Call or Convers^n (Math. 9:9). 1. As Jesus Passed By, He "Saw a Man." He saw th* possibilities which were in Matthew. He saw through the hated profession of a tax gatherer the shining possibilities of his man hood and apostleship. He saw in him the man fit to perceive and portray the Messiahship of the Redeemer. The divine grace was revealed In this call. Jesus sees what is in man regardless of name or profession. 2. Matthew's Response (v. 9). He acted witn decision and promptness; he left his business behind him. When Jesus said, "Follow Me," Matthew perceived that greater than man had spoken to him. May we yield our selves unto Him and render such sim ple obedience that our actions may be but i he echoes of the' divine voice in commanding. Two things in Mat thew's compliance prove the genuine ness of his conversion: 1. "He Left All" (Luke 5:28). Real conversion always results In the for saking of all that is contrary to Jesus, such as illegitimate business, nicked associates and worldly pleasures, e|e. 2. "Followed Jesus." Following Jesus means the commitment of one's life to Him for full salvation, aban donment of the will to Him to *io whatsoever He wills, and a willing ness to suffer, and even die, if need be, for Him. IN. Matthew- Made a Great Feast (Luke 5:29-32). This feast was made In honor of his newly-found Savior. His conversion was so real that he wanted his friends to become ac quainted with his .Savior. He was not ashamed to confess his Lord, be fore them. He showed real tact In making a supper. Men will come to a feast much more readily than they will to a sermon. A great company of sinners came, who doubtless had been Matthew's companions In sin. He now desired them to become hit brothers In Christ. The Scribes and Pharisees were astonished that Jesus would appear in company with , such a motley crowd of disreputable per sons. They were too cowardly to speak to Jesus but_they came to fhe disciples. Jesus championed their cause and battled . His adversaries. His reasoning was unanswerable. A physician's place is among the sick. Only those who are diseased should come to the doctor's house. Since spiritual matters are of more impor tance than physical, Jesus was more than justified in being in the center* of those who were morally sick that He might heal them of their maladies. He came to call sinners to repentance. Our Conscience. I If conscience smite thee once it Js an admonition; If twice, it is a con demnation. Repose is as necessary in conversation as in a picture. ? Hazlitt. _ _ ! Intelligence and Charity. The brightest blaze of intelligence Is ' of incalculably less value than the' smallest spark of charity. ? W. Nevlns. The Ground of Joy. We can do nothing Tell without Joy, and a good conscience which is the ground of Joy. ? Slbbfrs. I The Quality Car Jtvbmonom ieml fnm/lWitMt 1 S/SM r SUPERIOR 5-Pass. Sedan *860 U^V Mich, Not alone for every-day utility does Chevrolet represent the world' 8 lowest-priced quality car. It also meets the require ments of particular people for those social and sport occasiona when artistic proportion, high grade coach work, and hand some finish are in harmony with the time and place. You can be proud of your Chev rolet, combining, as it does, a high degree of engineering effi ciency with modern quality features that appeal to the experienced and the discrim inating. Call at our showrooms and dis cover the astonishing values made possible by the exception al volume of Chevrolet sales. Prices f. a b. Flint, Michigan SUPERIOR Roadster . . . SUPERIOR Touring ... SUPERIOR Utility Coupe . . SUPERIOR Sedanette . . . SUPERIOR Sedan .... SUPERIOR Commercial Chassla SUPERIOR Light Delivery . . Utility Express Truck Chassis See Chevrolet First CHEVROLET MOTOR CO. Division General I Motors Corporation Detroit, Michigan MELLON NOT TALKATIVE MAN Secretary of the Treasury Will Never Make Reputation at a Great Conversationalist. Two Scotsmen, noted for their rar ity of speech, were playing golf. Up to the seventeenth hole neither spoke a word. It began to rain and Sandy ob served: "Shall we quit?" "Chatterbox," muttered his oppo nent, as he drove off the flnal. Secretary Mellon is silent like that, writes "Girari" in the Philadelphia Enquirer. If, as our copybooks in formed us, silence is golden, that able banker came by his great wealth in the most natural way. 'This is not a talkative cabinet" ? that from a Philadelphia coal man often brought Into contact with Mr. Hoover and others of the presiden tial family. "But," he continued, "Secretary Mellon can say less in a day than all the rest of them put together." If a woman can't drive a nail slie mfght try coaxing it. All the world loves a lover. All the world loves to be amused. Elsewhere Sometimes. The village was having Its spring tea party and was getting rather tired of It. Finally they decided to propose conundrums and one of the company asked, "Which Is the most warlike iu* tion?" "Vaccination," replied the village doctor, who was one of the party. "How do you account for that?" said the man, who had put the question. "Because It's nearly always in arms," said the medic. The Difficulty. "The feller that owned this hotel before I took it over," related the land lord of the Petunia Tavern, "wantei to name it after himself and call tt the "White House.' " "Did he?" nonchalantly asked a guest. "No ; he couldn't You see, his name was Brown." ? Kansas City Star. ? * ? A Nature Faker. Teacher ? Now, children, with what part of its body does a bee buzz? Tommy ? With Its buzzum, sir. So Far, So Good. "Will you marry me?" "I like your nerve!" "How about my other qual ifications?" economy law* Ohe Meat of the Wheat STARCH is the "meat" of the wheat berry. It is the great energy-producing element of the grain. Bui, in order to do you any good, it must be thoroughly digested, and it is right here that such a food as Grape-Nuts renders special service. Grape' Nuts, made from wheat and malted barley, supplies the meat of the wheat in most digestible form . That is because in the making of Grape-Nuts a large proportion of the starch is converted into dextrins and maltose? forms into which all starch elements must be changed before they can be as similated by the system. Grape-Nuts not only digests easily, but also aids in the digestion of other foods. ? Crisp, delicious Grape-Nuts with milk or cream is a complete food. It supplies the life-essenfial vitamin-B; also iron, phosphorus and other im portant mineral elements tor nerve, tooth, bone and other body structure. The daily use of Grape-Nuts is a form of health insurance which has demonstrated its value for more than 25 years. ? Grape=Nuts * FOR HEALTH "Uhat's a Reason* Your frooer has interesting details of oar offer o! over $7500.00 for Grepe-Nate Red pet. Ask him eboat it; or write to Recipe Dept., Poftum Cereel Co., Ino., Bettle Creek, Mich.
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 26, 1923, edition 1
9
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