Mr. J A WARY 28. 1926. fjp8? fST TO rf Here an t Worth tl rdi+md B Mtu.vs Re'duc-ng Fire j-A Nicks Losses. \\'e t.a, I. ? rinti tin- it ought It i'.irt: . :! :> in tin* country l> "t ill'' til farim lp|i. : > tit wholly their niii lis a: :;::iesirai>le mail has I. Tli i'- -I:<>11 lil lie ,i more th< ft: tit- : "'u t t' :' ]] speet folr li.-tir:::< a--et -.if ms. hyain air I milt ,.ii- i .it' 'in amount t Bnratti" wr;f a fanu that his Hrm !il many minds d Hani! i:.1: n.-.r- farm food he Hti He woql I the maido 'wo heal: Bin ins.ran a eem- Why thle |rr l-iu \tfiey educate to Bare fill lit' p-opeMV. easionaj ||>:' til t, operate under feast of li'y p! in. v?!i. 111>y the seeing to >--.-> ?L . > i: " pay his "'"l l'"" iti' the ? >-es and ex- We sh vnipjny T!iis makes we can jg st of ;.nl: member to with st.o , fire da::;a-e. even and se:|ii ws !n- will he reeein- ; and crin loss ?Tile i'ro.cressive , columns 1 nouiueni Y E CREST ? OPEN A IF ermediate High School Grades TUTORING Ml) 5* *1* V V V V > V V V V V V V > v -I* v > v V > . A. PACK & CO Kf'Jll Instate ES, FARMS. ACREAGE AND I SAU I)A. N. C. row* property with us for < 4"S :AL ESTATE B ! I!! V IN I iKNTOX SPRING l: I.OT ,\N1 > GIVE l"S YOUR P ,11 VOl' A HOME ON TERMS. VIS FOR THIS I". ACRE RES EXT.' HAVE ACREAGE IN TRACTS >? .0 RES THAT IS SUIT ? H'iNG WITH LAKE SITES, H< S AND GOLF COURSES; IS, HOMES AND UUSINESS P . .'.IKE PROPERTY IN TH 3I.E IN PRICE IN THE NEXT IT WILL PAY YOU INVES CERS TO OET BUSY, AS YO 1 WHEN THE RUSH COMES. lanton & I Office in Polk Count] Columbus, North ( The Mountain City with Naftira ? I - Les bank llember Amerii I +4?H"H"H Iterest On Savin] 15,000 Surplus I No loans are ma Officer f W. HOLMES Resident 1 WALDROP e President A TER JONES President POLK coin d There Which le Progressive I ty "A Dirt Farm si a Day for Reading Matter." u never make the South what to be. we can never make life what it ought to be, un rs get rid of this idea that ids are not worth feeding. A > got to believe in himself tn that, must have more rehimself, more respect for his id his mind, before he can o anything. He must believe ; S 1 1_ ?Utl 5T0RS AND HOME U KNOW THE RESreene lfBank Carolina I Advantogas " [ AND TRU can Bankers North Car gs Accounts Co fr** '! ? > ? > ** ? ??M J ' over $7,000 I de by this bank t s or Directors. v . ii. ; ' * : 1 ^ own iiuuu ana 111s cuuureii ? eserve the best intellectual can find?and plenty of it dn't let his children go with s a day when they need three. 11 should he compel his chilget ^long with only an ocmontthly or semi-monthly intellectual food instead of i it that the best papers to be e to his home every week? ould all take the best papers et. A cheap newspaper filled ries of suicides and murders ldals and automobile wrecks luuu iriais, meir huiciuiiuk filled with shameless anents of patent medicine fakiCHOOL i lidrvidual Attention ?S MIMA FASSETT + >++< >+< ++ MPANY I FIRE INSURANCE | i quick turnover. lj ?SS?ssb* ?""4- -L i.-.-r. :---t zaasssr i ULLETIN ^ PARK. PICK OUT LANS AND LET US WE ARE SELLING 5IDENTIAL DEVELRUNNING FROM 6 SU1TARLE FOR DEDTEL SITES, HOME ALSO IMPROVED ROPOS1TIONS. WE IS SECTION WILL TWELVE MONTHS. come to the makers of Sloan's telling j J of the wonderful relief they have got j from all kinds of muscular pain with j this amazingly effective liniment. 1 Sloan's gets resul ts because it doesn't just deaden pain; it gets at the cause. Right to the place that hurts it brings j' a healing stream of fresh, new blood. | Quickly and surely it carries off the j rheumatism germs, takes out stiffness 1j and drives away the aches and pains. |? So clean and easy to use too. All j druggists?35 cents. \ I; B?il?jULlUZUJ I I! W. F. LITTLE i; : |:: NOTARY PUBLIC j; |J| Tryon, N. C. ?; <) ?4 4 4 ST COMPANY1 Association olina t PTTT mpounded Quarterly ??M"F < Resources over $300,000 o any of it's " I 11 W. F. LITTLE Cashier V. A. BLAND Asst. Cash. MORGAN MORRIS Asst Cash. NIlrAKMtno. Has a Local Angle ? Farmer's Attention > er" ; I! ers and quack doctors?such papers ? won't help us at all. Nor will the cheap rtonthly story papers with sen- .< sational fiction and fortune-telling articles and fraudulent "free" advertisements in unlimited number. We should take our best local pa- ^ per. the best farm paper, the best political and church papers,, the best magazines, even if they do cost more -^-clean, wholesome, wideawake, ablyedited papers that stand for progress, e for improvement, and for high ideals. !l No hjird and fast rule can be laid p down, but a reasonable minitnum can a be fixe^, and we would say that no 1 man is jdoing right by himself or his family if he averages less than a l! nickel a day or $18 a year for paf pers. magazines, and books.?-Editor Clarence Poe. in The Progressive c Farmer. u P 1,1 IJ ? e NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. t Having qualified as administrator of '> the estate of Ben Lvles, deceased, this I) is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned for payment within & twelve months from this date or this 1 notice will be pleaded in bar of their 3 recovery. All persons indented to ' said/ estate will please make inline- ' dlate payment. < This the 7th day of January, 1926. FRHD LYLES, Administrator. Tryon, X. C. Feb. 11 ; i RHEUMATIC ACHES j MM HELPED Wonderfully better after j simple home treatment 3 i When those old aches in joints and muscles come on?try this simple home ' treatment that so many rheumatic J sufferers have found effective. . < "I suffer very much with rheuma tism," writes a Salt Lake City, Utah, ! J woman, "especially during changes of < weather. I always use Sloan's Lini- I; ment and it relieves the pain very J quickly." i TTunriroHcj nf lot-tors like this have 1 1 POLK COUNTY NEWS. S t . j _ raws Last Milk the Richest. A reader wants to know "if the last ailk drawn from the cow's udder is icher n butterfat than tthe first?" Of course it is. The first milk Irawn may contain as, little as 1 per ent of fat. while the last drawn runs rom G to 10 per cent. The milker that doee not strip the ow drv not only loses the best of he milk, but may also dry the cow ip.?Editor Tait Butler, in The Proressive Farmer. Prosperity Follows the DairyCow." The be^st part of this slogan is it's rue. Yoii only have to travel through fie leading dairy sections of the coun-? ry to find what the dairy cow has (leant to these farmers and their amilies. In the first place, in practically very instance, you find painted ,omes and buildings, fertile soils, rofitable crops, fields nicely laid off nd fenced, farm equipment far above he average and a general air about hhe place that denotes that the farm i paying and that business is good. Also, there is something about the armstead and in the home that atches your attention at once. You sually find running water, a lighting laut, good furniture, a modern kltchn, and such luxuries as pianos, plcures, books, etc., that help to make ife worth living. Best of all, the oys and girls are being educated and WE DO ALL I GENERAL dJONTRA I WILL GLADLY FURNISH YOUR BUILDING REQUIRE I EXCELLENT SERVICE-W< ; PROUD OF. I MOW HAVE BER OF TRYON BUILDING YOU? : BRICK ' WOOD ANL R. A. SI General Contractor ' [ .HI Mail Ordc Our Mail.Order Departmi t is always at your comma I for you and use all possib ment in making selections. a trial? We are always i counts with responsible p; j; up to fifty miles, I 1 f Qvnj "jfsSttiit'i Qtml F (TOM HOlfltJ j? ir )AHU??n Asheville. j ATaTM] P < Enaineeri | ' ' Tryoii Are You a Buy In either ca can render; assistance. D. T. OUZ1 COM. Home Sites E Ann OFFICE OVER C ' I - dU 1 -- - - - - ? - ' ; |tthey ;|re.not even thinking of stopping uiktil they finish college.. There are a greai many reasons why dairy, farming spells prospe rity. Let's just glance over a few olj the outstanding ones that! fit general <jases and then you dan j figure out the others made by yotir speciial local conditions for yourself. 1. Dairy farming gives a steady sahc Income everyi month in the year. 2. It offers steady employment to labor throughout: the entire year. 3. Practically everything raised to feed dairy cattle is returned to the soil in the manure. Only a negligible part of the plant food is lost if the manure is properly handled. 4. It gives a farmer a business in which he can tkke a pride in "its growth. If handled right, a herd grows more vdlua^>le year by year and even day by day. 5. It fits in perfectly with Southern farming conditions?either alone or as a supplement to cotton and tobacco.?The Progressive Farmer. I "We Are Foreveri for Radio for Farm Families!" A very fine "human interest" story illustrating the value of a radio on the farm is found in this extract from an official report by County Agent G. E. Thomas of Love County, Oklahoma : I "Friday we visited club boys in the neighborhood of Burneyville and Jim I ? ? i? . kinds of :: cting&Ibuilding :: ?? r you estimates on all ;| cmentsandguarantee jrk that you will be ii contracts for a num- ;[ s. may lfigure with 4 ) CONCRETE WORK ' 2xton j; Try on, N. C. ?> i ' i < > h >r Service < > < > i snt?in charge of experts <nd. These experts shop ;; ?le good taste and judgeWhy not give this service ?> *eady to open charge jacarties and we pay postage ;; < > fcviche fy Pfparfmtnt Jkrt" 4 * ? I TKLKPHOHl * ? - jo?* *? :: N. G. :: l<:RliI(Iv "1 ng Service i, N. C.j . . . er or a Seller ? se our c^ffice you valuable * i I i. i ii! J 1 'S! REALTY PANY business Property eagfe ASH ANp CARRY -.1- L ....' \ I * ? MBTIfff Town. We took dinner with. J. M.! Northcut of Burneyville. During the | noon hour one of the little girls, who had been picking cotton during the morning, tuned the- radio receiver in on| the Dallas broadcasting station and gojt an explanation of the next Sunday's Sunday School lesson. Then we listened to a very excellent talk on the beef cattle industry and then received the day's market reports. This was the first time we ever realized just what the radio means to the : farmer and his family. The entire family was interested in what was go- i ing on and what iit means to them to I b^ in touch with the world around i them. We were informed by the chil- 1 dren of the family that they could get Denver and other cities with all eajse. We are forever for the radio for farm families." Mr. Thorns is right. The radio is a marvel and a boon to town folks, but it almost a godsend to our farm folks. Formerly, for example, only a relatively few people could hear the world's best music?the great singers, violinists, pianists, organists, and the est bands and orchestras of the nation. In those days, to get the priv- , ilege of hearing such muspic, one had , to take several days' time and a pile of money for a railroad trip to'1 New York or Chicago, array himself in a dress suit and a collar more uncomfortable than a mule ought to wear, and buy high-priced seats in fashion- 1 able theaters. Now, on the other 1 hand, the farmer, after a hard day's , work, can take off his shoes, light his pipe , and summon a dozen great ' musicians or a dozen bands and orchestras performing in a dozen different cities to entertain him?and if one set of entertainers doesn't suit NOTICE OF SALE. ^ ' Pursuant to the power of sale contained in that mortgage deed executed by G. Duff Jackson and Sarah juckboii, uis wiie, 10 vy. rj. ijawreuce on the 24th day o't October, 19&4, and of record in the office of Register ot Deeds for Po!k County in Book 22 at page 142, to secure the indebtedness and conveying the lands therein d<; scribed^ default having been made ii the payment of said indebtedness, the undersigned will sell at auction to the highest bidder for cash, at the Cour house door of Polk County, on Monday, the 8th day of February, 1921, at Eleven o'clock, A. M., the said lands described in said Mortgage as follows: Situated in the County of Polk and State of North Carolina and in Tryon Township, bounded and described as folloWs: Beginning at a stake, S. E. corne r of a lot sold to James Page and on Ballenger's line, and running with said line S. 40 E. 14 poles to a stale on the South side of the roajl, leading from the Town of Tryon to the Howard Gap road: thence with Said ro^d S. 84 E. 11 poles to the Junction of the Howard Gap road near Vaughnl'a creek1; thence with the Howard Gap road S. 11 W. 16 poles to the middle of the creek above ford; thence up with the creek S. 52 W. 10 poles S. 67 W. 6 poles, S. 59 W. 7 poles to a large stonb on the side of the creek and pointers; thence N. 35 W. 31.4 poles 1 to a stake and pointers at the foot of the hill; thence N. 53 3-4 E. 30 poles ! to the beginning, containing 514-100 acres, more or less. This being the same land conveyed by Mrs. E. M. Harlow to M. W. Page by deed dated December 22, 1903, re- ] corded in Book 19, page 413, office of 1 Register of Deeds for Polk County, and conveyed to said G. Duff Jacksoi by deed from J. S. Shaver. This 4th day of January, 1926. W. B. LAWRENCE, Mortgagee. WALTER] JONES, Attorney. 379w February 4th i il Western No ?1 _1 o Real Estate is Paj :: to the Wis See Try Th C. J. || I "Re* ;; , : I can't sell all th< :: ' offer you :: | m __ TI rryon uin w :: i - "It Can | CHAS. d ; | Real Phonf 173 j .ii- . i. r. jr PAGE FIV1 ^ " ^ Jk +++++ ? Mr. Farmer's fancy, }ie simply turns them down and calls another. Aladdin with his wonderful lamp was no more truly master of his servants, nor had a power more magic or mysterious. Great indeed is radioi! Not only does it summon all the daughters of music for our entertainment, but it also brings instant news of all the world's market places, the views of great thinkers and oratorss, the wit and humor of famous comedians, and even the bedtime, fireside story to add happiness to the littlest ones before they again find fellowship with angels in slumberland. And since radio, fortunately, may be had in forms suited to almost anybody's pocket book. "We are forever for the radio for farm families." ? The Progressive Farmer. NOTICE. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that certain mortgage deed executed by Floyd Lifts and wife, Bessie Liles, to Forest City Motor Company of date March 18, 1925, of record in mortgage deed book No. 22 at page 219 record of mortgages for Polk County, North Carolina, to secure an indebtedness of Four Hundred Fifty-nine Dollars; default having been made in the payment of the same, I will on Monday, the 15th day of February, 1926, at 12< o'clock at the court "house door in Columbus, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, to satisfy said indebtedness, together with interest and cost, the following described tract of land as conveyed by said mortgage: Beginning at a pine, Turner's corner; thence N. 80 W. 112 poles to a stone; thence N. 27 1-2 W. 22 poles to a pine; thence N. 71 E. 9 poles to two black oaks in edge of road; thence with the road 50 poles to Henderson's line; thence with his line S. 2 W. 37 poles to the beginning, containing 34 acres, more or less. This 9th day or January, 1926. 'FOREST CITY MOTOR CO., Mortgagee. J. R. BURGESS, Atty. r?s 127w Feb. 4. W>TICE TO DELINQUENT TAX PAYERS. I Notice is hereby given to parties named below, and all persons that may have a lien on the land herein described, that the undersigned purchased at a delinquent tax sale in Columbus, North Carolina, Polk County, on the 4th day of May, 192~>, \| land listed for taxes and described as follows: 1 lot in the town of Saluda, listed in the name of Pauline Montgomery/ tax for the year 192*: 1 lot in the town of Saluda, listed in the name of Mrs. Jane Wilkes, tax for the year 1924; 1 town lot in Saluda, listed in the name of J. O. Thurse, tax for the year 1924; 6 acres in Sa'uda township, listed in the name of R. E. Merriman, tax for the year 1924. Twenty-five acres in Coopers Gap township, listed in the name of Bailey Heirs, tax for the year 1924; 8 12 acres in Tryon township, listed in the name of Duff Jackson, tax for the year 1924; 21-2 acres in Tryon township, listed in the name of R. B. Rolland, frit- tiia ?oar 1Q24* 9 lots in the Be Done'' ? + i ? t f. LYNCH ? Estate. * Tryon, N C. | j IUA H/l vuv J v Mi ? town of Tryon, listed in the name of James H. Paine, tax for the year 1924; 84 acres in Green Creek townI ship, listed in the name of Gus MarI tin, tax for the year 1924; 117 1-2 j acres in Green Creek township, listed [ in the name of W. G. Greenway, tax : for the year 1924; 50 acres in Green Creek township, listed in the name of A. R. Ridings, tax for the year 1924; 25 acres in Coopers Gap township, listed in the name of Amanda Logan, tax for the year 1924. Notice is hereby given to Marion Logan. You are further notified that application will be made to the Sheriff of Polk County for a deed to said land, if not redeemed by the 4th day ofi May, 1926. L. L. TALLANT, ? Feb. 4 Purchaser. i _ ? L * rth Carolina i ?g? X 1 ring Large Profits % e Investor f I i v on First I ?5? pn i * 4* Lynch ! altor" | t i Earth, so I only + the Best. f > Vill Clean Up ! + __ 4* + 1*

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