Newspapers / Polk County News and … / May 21, 1925, edition 1 / Page 3
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W*' r [SO aJ? BIG V hp EDNA I! ? KpERBER ^as^jp? Lustrations , JplF - ~mC.lv/ /?'r- JjV ??R VI ? Continued r ??:. Manrtje i..-: s- living you r. rn.m^h this ? r. r. a. Ueertje U'i. tt would : .? Selinu won ?A< who hail . : ? it? Who .? . > -:i ? longer - and d^ W ho, when : M u- Dutch : ?? vrtin-1 Koelfs ! *.>. Pool, lit* do??s . ! k. Kiaas him > :? ?-;i ! wash his "* : i ri ?? a pride in ciant? <iu?'stions Just !v marrying the H l'ralrle ; For months : the dis ?a:> I I'ral ??w-ry scrap uf i: a When i ??? Kot-ifs flight knew where, ai'v to the great II n Ivrvus was : K.?elf had d??or one t :rn-d the knob ti. Km tlu-re was ah >t.t his appear <uit ? his first V !'.< u'lit at the It never a is grotesquely :.a i - . ? ? t up atnnz t or n:n>- months. ?I.,* ? f 1 1 1 ? ? rldicu . | there be an. i.irk. He put 1 ? - .'Vase. f: > A "'.Mn't stay." He was i !>? his tone ? last nl?ht. belong to '?> ?-n the v the :.d. stand He turned Walt a hilars ? in - perhaps awu}* in a ?afhed for '?< with the Chapter VII It :: r 1 ... .? ? ? tr. ? . Is1 tr.- . h , .. i *??! ... tr; 1 ' ' L N' ; "v ' ? V VD ti.t ; h*-Jmg. sew?Mj ,,VVn hl<>n<l fl!* h'xs "f tll(. ' rn0|? ^ ":"l ht'i'O -srrue ? Mi -I, l? - i niirje '*N >' iron r,,nfral ,r"?n Oc , !,"-v " fr,,m the V"sr "f N'o Sil vagely '?r '? ;""n- Time ",Jr Phre." thin. Knrhf?r. . "liotjld * ''?''nnfr, a . '*? "?''iron ,n "me, , u'fl I'rnlrlp, >k ot ?ije rocks and earth among which they filed! l>lrk, at eight, was a none too hand some child, considering his father and mother? or his father and mother as they had been. It was not until he was seventeen or eighteen that he was (?? metamorphose suddenly into a graceful and aristocratic youngster with an indefinable look about him of distinction and actual elegance. Selina was a farm woman now, near ing thirty. The work rode her as It had ridden Maartje Pool. In the De Jong yard there was always a dado of ; washing. Faded overalls, a shirt, socks, a hoy's drawers grotesquely patched anil mended, towels of rough sacking. She, too, rose at four, snatched up shapeless garments. Invested her self with them, seized her great coil of j tine cloudy hair, twisted It Into a utilitarian knob and skewered It with ' a hairpin from which the varnish had 'long departed, leaving It a dull gray; j thrust her slim feet into shapeless j shoes, dabbed her face with cold water, j hurried to the kitchen stove. The work was always at her heels, its breath hot on her neck. Seeing her thus one would have thought that the Selina Peake of the wine-red cashmere, the fun-loving dis position, the high-spirited courage, bad departed forever. But these things still persisted. For that matter, even the wine-red cashmere clung to ex istence. So hopelessly old-fashioned i now as to be almost picturesque. It I hung in Selina's closet like a rose I memory. Sometimes when she came I upon it In an orgy of cleaning she would pass her rough hands over Its s<>ft folds and by that magic process Mrs. Pervus DeJong vanished in a | pouf and in her place was the girl j Selina I'eake perched a-tlptoe on a soap box in Adam Ooms'^hall while all | High Prairie, open-mouthed, looked on | as the impecunious Pervus DeJong J threw ten hard-earned dollars at her j feet. Ii would he gratifying to he able to j record that in these eight or nine years i Selina had been able to work wonders , ?>n the I>eJong farm; that the house glittered, the crops thrived richly, the i harn housed sleek cattle. Hut It could : not be truthfully saltl. True, she had j achieved some changes, hut at the cost of terrific effort. A less Indomitable woman would have sunk into apathy years before. Tl*e house had a coat of paint ? lead-gray, because it was cheap est. There were two horses ? the sec ond a broken-down old mare, blind In one eye. that they had picked up for five dollars after It had been turned out to pasture for future sale as horse carcass. A month of rest and pastur age restored the mare to usefulness. Selina had made the bargain, and Per vus had scolded her roundly for It. Now he drove the mare to market, saw that she pulled more sturdily than the other horse, but had never retracted. It was no quality of meanness in him. Pervus merely was like that. Hut the west sixteen ! That had been Selina's most heroic achievement. Her plan, spoken of to Pervus In the first month of her marriage, had taken years to mature; even now was but a partial triumph. She had even de scended to nagging. "Why don't we put In asparagus?" "Asparagus !" considered something of a luxury, and rarely included In the High Prairie truck farmer s products. "And wait thr^e years for a crop!" "Yes, but then we'd have it. And a plantation's good for ten years, once it's started. I've been reading up on it. The new way Is to plant asparagus In rows, the way you would rhubarb or corn. Plant six feet apart, and four acres anyway." He was not even sufficiently Inter i ested to be amused. "Yeh, four acres where? In the clay land, maybe." He | did laugh then, If the short bitter sound he made could be construed as ! indicating mirth. "Out of a book." "In the clay land." Selina urged, crisply. "And out* of a book. That west sixteen Isn't bringing you any thing, so what difference does it make l if I am wrong ! Let me put my own money into It, I've thought it all out, Pervus. Please. We'll underdraln the clay soil. Just five or six acres, to start. We'll manure It heavily ? as j much as we can afford ? and then for two years we'll plant potatoes there. We'll put In our asparagus plants the third spring? one-year-old seedlings. I'll promise to keep it weeded? Dirk and L He'll be a big boy by that time. Let me try It, Pervus. Let the try." In the end she had her way, partly because Pervus was too occupied with his own endless work to oppose her; and partly because lie was, In his un demonstrative way, still in love with his vivacious, nlmble-witted, high spirited' wife, though to her frantic goadlngs and proddlngs he was as phlegmatlcally oblivious as un elephant to a pin prick. Though sne worked as hard as any woman In High Prairie, had as little, r dressed as badly, he still regarded her as a luxury ; an exquisite toy which, In a moment of madness, he had taken for himself. "Little Llna" ? tolerantly, fondly. You would have thought that he spoiled her, pampered her. Per haps he even thought he did. That was Pervus. Thrifty, like his kind, but unlike them In shrewdness. Penny wise, pound foolish ; a charac teristic that brought him his death. September, usually a succession of golden days and hazy opalescent eve nings on the Illinois prairie land, was disastrously cold and rainy that year. Pervus' great frame was racked by rheumatism. He was forty now, and over, still of magnificent physique, so that to see him suffering gave Sellna the pangs of pity that one has at sight of the very strong or the very weak in pain. He drove the weary miles to market three times a week, for Sep tember was the last big month of the truck farmer's season. Sellna would watch him drive off down the" road In the creaking old market wagon, the green stuff protected by canvas, but I'ervus wet before ever he climbed Into the seat. There never seemed to be enoueh waterproof canvas for both. ??Pervus, take It off those sacks and put It over your shoulders." "That's them white globe onions. The last of 'em. I can get a fancy price for them, but not If they're all wetted down." "Don't sleep on the wagon tonight, Pervus. Sleep In. Be sure. It saves in the end. You know the last time you were laid up for a week." "It'll clear. Breaking now over there In the west." The clouds did break late In the af ternoon ; the false sun came out hot and bright. Pervus slept out In the Haymarket, for the night was close "He ? He'? Breathing So ? " She Could Not Bring Herself to Say, "So Ter ribly." und humid. At midnight the lake wind sprang up, cold and treacherous, and with It came the rain again. Pervus was drenched by morning, chilled, thoroughly miserable. A hot cup of coffee at four and another at ten when the rush of trading was over stimu lated him but little. When he reached home It was mid-afternoon. Selina put him to bed against his half-hearted protests. Banked him with hot water Jars, a hot Iron wrapped In flannel at his feet. But later came fever instead of the expected relief of perspiration. Ill though he was, he looked more ruddy and hale than most men In health; but suddenly Selina, startled, saw black lines like gashes etched under his eyes, about his mouth, In his cheeks. In a day when pneumonia was known as lung fever and In a locality that advised closed windows and hot air as a remedy, I'ervus' battle was lost before the doctor's hooded buggy was seen standing in the yard for long hours through the night. Toward morning the doctor had Jan Steen stable the horse. It was a sultry night, with flashes of heat lightning In the west. "I should think If you opened the windows," Selina said to the old High Prairie doctor over and over, embold ened by terror, "It would help him to breathe. He ? he's breathing so ? he's ???T/?IATATATAXM?x**AVAVJkw ^ - " ' " Pearls in Abundance in the Scottish Streams It is not commonly known that tl:e Scotch River Tay and its tributaries provide a rich harvest of pearls which are sold up to high as $50 each. Any one can go pearl-fishing in the Tay, and all have equal chances. The pro fessional pearl-fisher has a box-shaped boat In which he floats downwards with the stream, and armed with his simple lens ? a piece of glass substi tuted for the original bottom of a tin can ? which when Immersed, enables him to see clearly through the surface agitations to the pebbly bottom, and a long stick with a Yr-shaped notch at thp end. grabs all the shells he sees I as he lazily drifts past, and at the end I of a day his spoil Is by no means | small. Hut the amateur dispenses with all encumbrances except the notched stick. With It he simply wades into the shallows and gathers In all the shells he sees within reach. The shells are of various sizes from an Inch up to six inches In length, and only one in perhaps ten contains a pearl of J value, although many may carry freak pearls, black or deformed ones, which may be quite saleable. A ready mar ket for the pearls obtained Is at the nearest jeweler's shop, but the profes sional pearler prefers to deal private ly and directly with the tourists who frequent this district, and who prob ably thus become possessors of a pearl at a fraction of Its real commercial value. Unlucky "I heerd tell this afternoon," said Mrs. Johnson, upon her return from a neighborhood call, "that Mlzzus Glg gery cut her foot powerful bad whilst chopping up stovewood. Ain't that just too bad?" "It shore Is," replied Gap Johnson of Rumpus Hldge. 'Tore Gabe won't have no wife to support him for a couple of months." ? Kansas City Star. .? It's safer to learn from your ene mies than it Is to Instruct your friends, j I breathing so ? " She could not brlnj herself to any, "so terribly." The sound of the words wrung her as did the sound of his terrible breathing. Perhaps the most poignant and touching feature of the days that fol lowed was not the sight of this stricken giant, lylnc majestic and aloof In hi* unwonted black ; nor of the boy Dirk, mystified but elated, too, with the un accustomed stir and excitement ; nor of the shabby little farm that seemed to shrink and dwindle Into further In significance beneath the sudden pub licity turned upon It." No; It was the sight of Sellna, wftlowed, but having no time for decent tears. The farm was there; it must be tended. Illness, death, sorrow ? the garden must be tended, the vegetables pulled, hauled to market, sold. Upon the garden de pended the boy's future, and hers. For the first few days following the funeral one or another of the neigh boring farmers drove the DeJong team to market, aided the blundering Jan in the fields. But each had his hands full with his own farm work. On the fifth day Jan Steen had to take the garden truck to Chicago, though not without many misgivings on Sellna's part, all of which were realized when he returned late next duy with half the load still on his wagon and a sum of money representing exactly zero In profits. Selinu was standing In the kitchen doorway, Jan in the yard with the team. She turned her face townrd the fields. An observant person (Jan Steen was not one of these) would have noted the singularly determined and clear-cut Jaw line of this drably callcoed farm woman. "I'll go myself Monday." Jan stared. "Go? Go where, Mon day?" "To market." At this seeming pleasantry Jan Steen smiled uncertainly, shrugged his shoul ders, and was off to the barn. She was always saying things that didn't make sense. His horror and unbelief were shared by the rest of High Prairie when on Monday Sellna literally took the reins in her own slim work-scarred handes. "To market I" argued Jan as excited ly as his phlegmatic nature would per mit. "A woman she don't go to market. A woman ? " "This woman does." Selina had risen at three In the morning. Not only that, she had got Jan up, grum bling. Dirk had Joined them In the fields at five. Together the three of them had pulled and bunched a wagon load. "Size them," Selina ordered, as they started to bunch radishes, beets, turnips, carrots. "And don't leave tliein loose like that. Tie them tight at the heads, like this. Twice around with the string, and through. Make bouquets of them, not bundles. And we're going to scrub them." Selina, scrubbing the carrots vigor ously under the pump, tlrought they emerged from their unaccustomed bath looking like clustered spears of pure gold. Jan, by now, was sullen with bewilderment. He refused to believe that she actually Intended to carry out her plan. A woman ? a High Prairie fanner's wife ? driving to market like a man! Alone at night in the market place ? or at best In one of the cheap rooming houses! By Sunday somehow, mysteriously, the news had filtered through the district. A fine state of things, and she a widow of a week! Ulgh Prairie called at the DeJong farm on Sunday afternoon and was told that the widow was over In the wet west sixteen, poking about with the boy Dirk at her heels. By Monday afternoon the parlor cur tains of every High Prairie farmhouse that faced the Halsted road were agi tated as though by a brisk wind be tween the hours of three and five, when the market wagons were to be seen moving toward Chicago. Selina, having loaded the wagon in the yard, surveyed it with more sparkle In her eye than High Prairie would have approved In a widow of little more than a week. They had picked and bunched only the best of the late crop. Selina stepped back and re garded the riot of crimson and green, of white and gold and purple. "Aren't they beautiful ! Dirk, aren't they beautiful !" Dirk, capering in his excitement at the prospect of the trip before him, shook his head Impatiently. "I don't know what you mean. Let's go, mother. Aren't we going now? You said as soon as the load was on," "Oh, Sobig, you're Just exactly like your ? " She stopped. "Like my what?" "We'll go now, son. There's cold meat for your supper, Jan. and pota toes all sliced for frying and half an apple pie left from noon. You ought to get In the rest of the squash and pumpkins by evening. Maybe I can sell the lot Instead of taking them In by the load. I'll see a commission man. Take less, if I have to." She had dressed the boy In his home made suit cut down from one of his father's. He wore a wlde-hrlmmed straw hat which he hated. Selina her self, in a full-skirted black-stuff dress, mounted the wagon agilely, took up the reins, looked down at the boy seated beside her, clucked to the horses. Jan Steen gave vent to a final outraged bellow. "Never In my life did I hear of such a thing!" y Will Selina sell every vegeta ble at a high price? Or, will ?he come home in despair? (TO BE CONTINUED.) She Meant Well A student brought his mother to the university and was showing her about. The dear old lady \fras anxious to make her boy think that she understood everything. "Over there, mother," said the son, "are our wonderful polo fields." "Oh," sighed the old lady, "what' Is there that Is nicer than fields of wav ing polo?" Guaranteed to Work An American fyaper a8^s for a slogan that will stimulate everybody's desire to get a move on. "Honk ! Honk I" isn't a bad one.-tThe Humorist, Loo .don. ... Around Orchard WATCH FOR SERIOUS DISEASE OF APPLE Apple scab Is one of the most seri ous diseases known to the apple indus try. In fact, it has caused a greater money loss to the growers of the United States than any other fruit dis ease. Just at this time, we may ex pect to see It appear on apple or chards, ond no time should be lost in putting on sprays to prevent a heavy loss. Scab occurs on the leaves, twigs and fruit. On the fruit It will be first no ticed as olive-green spots. These will enlarge, the tissue wijl break, and the spots will turn black, giving the apple a blotched, scabby appearance. From these spots the dlseaste spreads to oth er fruits and leaves. On the leaves the spots appear first as greenish blotches, eventually turning black. The entire leaf may be destroyed or only a few spots may appear. The severity will depend largely upon the prevail ing weather conditions. The damage from scab can be summed up as follows: Injures leaf surface, retards wood growth, causes a premature falling of fruit, prevents full development of the fruit, and re duces the quality of the fruit. There is a general weakening of the trees which will eventually destroy them If not properly protected by spraying, j This trouble can be controlled by spraying with either Ilme-sulphur 1-40 or bordeaux mixture 4-4-50. The first spray should be put on before the blossoms open, the second after the petals fall, then two more sprays at three-week Intervals. If you have not sprayed your trees, start now. Even though the first sprays have been omitted a great deal of good can still be done by thoroughly doing this work. Bordeaux Mixture Will Control Rot and Mildew Bordeaux mixture of a strength of 5-4-50, If applied at the correct pe riods, should effectively control rot and mildews of the grapevine. It Is suggested that to each gallon of the above bordeaux formula half an ounce of powdered arsenate of lead be added. The first application should be made when the second or third leaf Is show ing, the second Just previous to bloom ing, a third when the berries are the size of small peas, and a fourth two or three weeks later. Certain varieties lose a large per centage of their berries from a lack of fertilization of the blossoms, and thus very scraggly clusters are the rule. Other varieties, such as Niagara, Con cord and Worden, have been made to drop a great many berries through over-fertllizatlon with nitrogenous ma terials. This Is more accentuated if the vines have at the same time been over-pruned; that Is, too much has been cut away. Setting Out Strawberry Plants Early in Spring It Is usually better to set out; straw berry plants In the spring than In the summer or fall. Get the ground plowed In the fall and disk and har row In the spring as soon as the ground' is dry enough to work well. In the matted row system, which Is the common method, the plants should be about four feet apart In the row. Keep cultivated ground loose and keep weeds killed until the vines have become thick enough to cover the ground. If good strong young plants can be secured In August and the ground Is not too dry for them to get a good start to grow, a bed may be set out In August. If one has to buy plants for August setting, they usually cost a great deal more than In the spring, though It will g^ve fruit a year earlier. Sometimes August-set plants will grow enough during the fall to give a good crop of fruit, but It is not often that they do. horticulture Facts Continue to clean up and prune the orchard and vineyard. ? ? ? Apply the dormant spray. If put on It will control plant diseases but not if "put off." ? ? ? Buy your spray pumps and mate rials early and be ready to start spray ing at the proper time. . ? ? ? The ground where the strawberries are to be planted should be carefully prepared, providing a fine mellow soil for the young plants. ? ? ? To make Insecticides stick to plants even during a rainstorm, a process of electrification Is now In use by one In secticide manufacturer. ? ? * The soil, to be a good orchard soil, should be sufficiently fertile, deep and well-drained to supply enough mois ture and plant food to maintain the vigor of a large tree and mature Its large annual crop. ? ? ? If the strawberry rows were allowed to grow together last fall it will pay to hoe the plants out of paths a foot wide and about one yard Intervals to make the picking easier. Cultivate the new patch every week even though it does not seem to need it. ? * * Trees planted on poor or shallow noils will come Into bearing earlier than those on good, deep soils. They will never reach the size nor produce as large crops as trees planted on suitable soils. * ? ? While it Is no longer necessary to prove to the average farmer that fruit trees must be sprayed If clean, usable fruit Is to be obtained, At Is not nearly so well realized how and when spray ing should be done to accomplish the Hest results.^*. MOTHER HEN DOES BEST WHEN COOPED i It Is not good poultry management ] to allow the mother hen to range un ! restricted with her chicks. With such ] freedom the hen frequently takes her brood through wet grass and, as a j result, some are chilled and die, espe | daily the weaker ones which are j likely to he left behind. The loss of young chicks which follows such a practice Is large and mainly prevent able. Furthermore, the food which a brood allowed to range with the hen obtains goes very largely to keep up the heat of the body and the chicks do not make as good growth as they otherwise would. Chick losses of this nature can be largely prevented by shutting the hen j in a coop. Any style of coop which is dry, ventilated, and can be closed at night to protect the brood against cats, rats and other animals, and which, while confining the hen, will allow the chicks to pass In and out freely after they are a few days old, will be satisfactory. The hen should be confined until the chicks are weaned, though a small yard may be attached to the coop, if desired, to al low the hen to exercise. The fence can be raised from the ground far enough to allow the chicks to go In or out, but not high enough for the hen to escape. By using the coop the chicks can find shelter and warmth under the hen at any time and the weaklings, after a few days, may develop into strong, healthy chicks. When chicks are raised with hens, they are IMtely t o become infested with lice. If the Uce get very numer ous, they greatly retard the chicks' growth and may even cause their death. The hen should be powdered thoroughly with some good Insect pow der before she is put In the coop with the chicks, and at Intervals of several days or a week thereafter. The baby chicks should be examined for lice, par ticularly on the head, under the wings and about the vent. If any are found, a little grease, such as lard, should be rubbed In those places. Apply grease moderately, as too much will injure the chicks. The chicks should be examined frequently and the treat ment repeated if lice are found on them. Young Chicks Need More of Mineral Constituents Young chicks need more of the mln 1 eral constituents found In wheat hran than do mature fowls, and the mashes fed them are accordingly, usually made to contain more of It. With this change and due regard to the size of the particles of food that baby chicks can eat, there need be little or no difference between a growing chick mash and one fed to laying hens. The chick mash recommended by the New Jersey experiment station consists of three parts of wheat bran to one each of sifted ground oats, cornmeal, flour wheat middlings and finely ground meat scrap. With one part of bran, Instead of three, and no necessity for sifting the ground oats or finely grind ing the meat scrap, this would make as good a laying mash as could be compounded. The above would make a very good mash to be fed with equal parts of cracked corn and wheat. After four to six weeks chicks will eat coarser cracked corn and whole wheat and do not need to have the hulls sifted from ground oats. An excess of meat scrap or of green food might cause some looseness of the bowels. Whatever the cause, It should be cor rected; added amount of wheat mid dlings would not avail. Green Feeds for Fowls During the Entire Year Fowls need green feed of some kind all the year round. It should be sup plied to hens confined in small yards and to all hens during the winter when no natural green feed Is avail able In the yards. Free range or large yards will furnish Ideal condi tions for sreen feed, and this factor Is one of the most Important In rais ing poultry profitably on farms where the birds are supplied from cheap, natural sources. Where smaller yards have to be used, they should be divided Into two parts and used alternately, planting the vacant section two or three times yearly with quick-growing green crops of rape, oats, wheat, rye, or barley. This furnishes green feed and also helps to keep the yards sweet, clean and sanitary, which Is perhaps the most Important consideration In majclng poultry pay. /Good kinds of green feeds are sprouted oats, alfalfa, meal, chopped alfalfa and clover hay, cabbages, and mangel beets. In ordinary cellars cabbages do not keep so well as man gel beets, so they should be used up first. Why Little Chicks Die Chicks die In the shell because of lack of vigor In the breeding stock, lack of moisture, overheating or chill ing of the eggs and other causes which are hard to explain. It Is a fact that most poultrymen find the eggs running close to 90 per cent In fertil ity, and even then have to be satis fied with 50 per cent hatches on the average for the season. A lot of chicks seem to die In the shell during artificial Incubation In spite of the best of management. Protect Early Chicks These early hatched chicks are worthy of protection. The fact that they do hatch proves that they are apt to come from vigorous stock. They grow into broilers when prices are highest. Most of the early hatched chicks will be large enough to rustle on the range when spring conditions are good. When everything is condu cive > to the development of bird life the chicks gather an abundance of worms, bugs and tender bits ot frees feed. G WW "after every meal ' Parents - encoarato the children to care for tneirfatkf Give them Wrigley's. It remove* food particles from the teeth. Strengthens the guws. Combats add mouth. Refreshing and beneficial? STALED TIGHT KEPT RIGHT Respon?bility Placed Men are responsible for women's gowns. A century of cheap jokes about women buttoning their dresses up the back, has le<J to almost nothing. ? Hopkins (Mo.) Journal. YOUR MOTHER its Goodness Remember the biscuits and cakes that Mother made so well? She used Snow King, the finest of all baking pow* ders, and it is stiH the very best. Good and economical. ?25 full ounces for 25 cents. FREE- Our H* 44-ptii Cook " 10 coxa to com coat of m?llln| 1k Ecatn ?>U?r*w*rC?. n?f.n, oy? Congress on the Radio Debates of the Argentine congress are broadcast by radio. ? Science Serv ice. Tell Your Shoe Dealer You Want Shoes with Genuine USKIDE SOLES The Wonder Sole for Wear? Wear* twiom as long ?? bmmt feather/ ? and for a Better Heel "C/. a." 8PKING-8TZP MeeJe United Statee Rubber Company U!\UTFI\ Y?aa? Nea !? Lean IT All 1 Lll the BARBER TRADE Beat college in tha South. Joba awaiting ear gnduitM. Charlotte Barker College, Cbarlette, N. C. LANE SAW MILLS and ! HOE SAWS art the standard Improved In every way. Eur to operate, all slxca. Write for Pre* Booklet, W#| fump^ * I t Saw Mill*. Wind RESINOL Soolhinq and He&linq Clears Away Blotches POTATO PLANTS Two million Porto-KIco and Southern Queen, I.000 12.50 delivered. 10.000 up $2 f. o. b. Rebecca. H. T. WILSON. REBECCA. OA. POTATO PLANTS: PORTO-RICO; $2 1,000; II.75 In 10.000 lots. Big Stem Jersey. 12.25 1,000; $2 In 10.000 iota. DR. LAMBERT. DENTON. OA. Kill boll weevils, tobacco worms. Bean Beetles, Potato Bugs, by using our H Blower-Duster. For description write WEEVIL DUSTER CO.. SMYRNA. OA. PARKER'S ' HAIR BALSAM | Removes Dandruff-Stops Hair railing Raatore* Color and - J Beauty to Gray and Fad ad Hair 60e and 11. 0? at Drug gists. fflaco? Chaap Wft T. HINDERCORN8 Remove* Coras. Cal louses, etc., atop* all oalo, ensures comfort te tha feet, makea walking Til nala, ensure# eomwn Obemlaal CARBUNCLES Carboil draws out the cor* and gives quick relief. { G&RBOIL ^0 oenepoos eo< box At all Druggists ? Monty-back Guarantee 'V. N. U., ClfARLOTTE, NO. 21-1*
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 21, 1925, edition 1
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