[ Says Booth Was Shot IL. fj--* ^wmm m Itf m%^k ?* * *# j| i.... f' ' A Decatur, 111., I, boy lived on a Virginia farm ^ neir to the Garrett homestead in which barn John Wilkes Booth, J H mifrJerer of Lincoln, was cornered I H Mr} Cash urn to the scene and says I ^ Boj>th .?. net escape but was shot ^Hkylgergt. t'. rbett of Bakerjs Cav- I and died an hour later. +?? ? 11 || depend upon the yieldo pound of Cotton other crops, from ] ACRES carry less c cultivation, etc., than Acres, because there share the Cost. | Use "Plant* I of Fertilizers for Hi Tobacco, Planters' Factory ha cated on three railrot and can give prompt | "f.aoteri" j | of producing the Bes be made. (-J/\I ate rials in Cat PLAN' F?5?*H?.ze* fP ^Ylaauiacture: s For Terrbs, Price POLK COUNTY FARMERS FED GEORGE MOOSE, I LADIES ?L95 BATH ROBES, .>5.05 BATH ROBES, S^ $7.95 BATH ROBES, $8.95 BATH ROBES, SI $9.95 BATH ROBES, Si LADIES' OUTING $2.50 Outing Gowns J $2.00 Outing Gowns ] $1.75 Outing Gowns ] Women's a 4 .50 RAIN COATS, Si $ 5.95 RAIN COATS, S '$ 6.50 RAIN COATS, S $ 7.95 RAIN COATS, S $ 9.95 RAIN COATS, S $12.50 RAIN COATS, S "JACK TAR" I $ 4.00 Dresses, Sale Pi $ 5.00 Dresses, Sale P $ 7.95 Dresses, Sale P $ 8.95 Dresses, Sale Pi $ 9.95 Dresses, Sale Pi $10.95 Dresses, Sale Pi B $11.50 Dresses, Sale P: $12.50 Dresses, Sale P: Noi Children's I $1.00, ! NO APPR GRI { ' ' . .. p ml % *.ri - ^ interest - regar (Continued from page 1.) season. Its sewer system has its drainage into a creek that flows through its deepest valley. The State Highway hard-surface road runs through its main street and connects with the Dixie Highway and other hard-surface roads in every direction. Tryon has a large public school building, five churches, two banks, excellent hotels and boarding houses. Tryon is known for its beautiful moun tain homes, many of them having long roadways leading up \hrough the woods. A number of these homes are owned by eastern and northern cajh itglists who either make Tryon their home or spend the winter and spring months here, and in the summer Tryon is filled with people from the ' j if cropt from your aaTM 1 I, Tobacco, Corn at :. HIGH YIELDING f cost of land, seed, t from Low Yielding are more pounds to irs" Brands gh Yields of CoMcav Com, etc, s large capacity, k> , ids and deep wate^ \, shipment has the reputation it Fertilizer that cad htr a SjmJtdtf FER8 i hosphate Co. Charleston, S. C. s, etc., Apply to ERATION, Tryon, N. C. Newton, N. C. 1 L J _ . . . I k J? % orArnN RA y universalI 1LE PRICE ..." ^.LE PRICE iLE PRICE ^LE PRICE ^.LE PRICE GOWNS ALL CHI1 Now... $1.75 Now..:$1.50 Your Some Now... $1.25 choice . md Children's I ! VLE PRICE... ' ...1. ALE PRICE '. ALE PRICE ALE PRICE ALE PRICE ALE PRICE i PRESSES rice $2.95 E rice,. $3.75 CHI rice $5 95 ce Former' rice $7.50 rice $8.50 to $2 r!ce 1$?? $3.95 rice $9.95 .v Showing a Complete Assortmei Muslin Gowns, Slips $1.25, $1.50 an OVALS ON SALE ZENEWAI Department Store SPARTANBURG, S. C - ? I r WSP5!!' 3 FACTS DING TRYON South who enjoy its excellent climate jand especially its cool nights. The cumaie is nor as aeiblltatlng as It is farther south, and the clear, bracing mountain air makes it an Ideal allaround place to live. ~ r~ Its thermometers seldom go below freezing in the winter, and the nights are cool as soon as the sun goes down in the summer. | Any information regarding Tryon will be cheerfully answered by A. L. BERRY, office next door to the People's Trust and Savings Bank, to whom he refers. Mcdowell music club gave recital in studio The MacDowell Music Club of S. H. S., under the direction of Miss Winifred Bodie, gave a recital in the club studio last Saturday evening. Teachers and parents of club members were invited guests. Both piano and vocal "inumbers were rendered. Those taking part were Gladys Wagner, Emma Katherine, Ruth and Eloise Cobb, Harriett Feagan, Irene and Ina Edwards, Annie Lois Mills, Coy Smith, Gretchen and Anna Lynch, Ruth Tate, Ruby Tallant, Ellen Hague, Blanch Feagan, Gladys Walker, Jettie Hague and William Egerton. Each number was well rendered, reflecting much credit upon both pupil and instructor. Miss Bodie hopes to present her pupils in another recital as soon as the school auditorium is finished, at which time she will not have to limit invitations to teachers and j parents of her pupils as was the case I this time due to lack of space. 7? To Get Best Results ~ in Using Loop Aerial It Is generally conceded that radio j is about the most puxzllng thing known and mnny, by way of performing various trifling experiments will ouch for thla. Things that many say cannot poaalbly be done are really performed and a good many of ear little eweryday "hunch as" bring aurprlalng, results. 1 Many fans have foand a loop atrial I will work better In one room of the house than In another. Therefore. If I yea want to do some Interesting exj; perlmentlng with this type of aerial, this Idea a tryout. Often largea metallic frames, radlaI tors, etc., affect the loop and the funotlonlng of your receiver. And should It ; be removed to another room In exactly ' | the opposite direction surprising re- [ ,, salts will be obtained. It Is well ta) ] | bear In mind that no radio set, whether ! receiving or transmitting, can be emIpected to work efficiently If large I , metallic elementa are In the lnunedt'ate vicinity. TH ROBES I tATH ROBES $3.95 I $4.75 ; $5.95 $6.95 $7.50 LDREN'S OUTING GOWNS Slightly Soiled Sic Rain Coats ' $3.75 >4.75 $4.95 $5.95 $7.50 $8.95 NTIRE STOCK LDREN'S COATS ly sold from $6.95 up 9.50, now reduced to up to $17.95. / nt of and Teddys d $2.00 S ITEMS! .D'S I ra--*** A-'...- > i . A ii . THE POLK COl"NTY N1!W ..... _ - ~^4_. \f* 1 SAL" *+++++. i++++++++++?l *+**.S.+.5.*+ Mrs. E. E. Fulton and Mrs. G 3. Moody spent Monday In Greenville, combining business with pleasure. * Mrs. C B. Poole and children, Pat sy and Baskin, are spending a few days in Gaffney, S. C., with Mrs. Poole's parents. H. Y. Bwayne, one of Saluda's hustling real estate men, made a business trip to fJendersonville Monday. * * M. H. Groves motored to Hendersonville and back Monday afternoon. * H. M. Tanner and Dr. G. B. Little spent the day in Greenville. ~ ] HUMAN INTE West Palm Beach?Social parasites better beware. The Rev. John Roach Stratton has arrived to war on the n and sim lar evil forces he thinks are | destroying the community. Washi lgton?In order to get h s | j name in the newspapers a member of congr iss has to jazz it up or mahe t ridiculous statements, in the opinicn of ReVj Johnson of Texas. 1 Wasni lgton ? Governor and Mrs. < Trumbul 1 of Connecticut, one of whos e , daughters has entered John Coolidte during [Amherst vacation, (were amorg white house guests ^recently. 4 , X' 4, 1. ol.l L 1. . 11 . 1 1 ' 1 ne? porn?oitrgu uens nave ueeu Jingling in Fifth Avenue for the first 1 1 time in ^ears. Some old cabbies ha' e j i lots of sioins jingling in their pockets , as a result. They hauled old sleighs ( out of sjtorage and have been getting plenty elf customers at |15 an hour. , 1 Patterjson, N. ^1.?Another typewriter romance ? Albert Tangora, work's ' champio|n typist, has married Miss J Dorothy Lane, one o^ his pupils. New V'ork ? Twelve/grandmothers i are studying child pssychology in a 1 1 RICHARD LLOY1 SAYS ' Instinct L " -fAs back of the dower we find tt nstinct. Because Instinct ia more fu .iea -er to the roots of things. Instl the first to respond. Reason is the milling process of of iusight. It is the protective inher Nothing is more marvelous than Instinct directs them into paths of danjger as if guided by a higher powc In the heart of metropolitan Bo? cit.i's ultra rich. Is a great reservoir, 1 l Aliuig it for miles, runs a concrete thoroughfare for thousands. i The basin ft- rigidly policed. S ' pleasure craft, it is Immune from d , Every year, for weeks before fit of the basin is black with thousands from its head to its foot, diving ev? sweet grasses which line the bottom dsn. In well-<>ndf.ved columns they mo swiftly rise, circle in great curves to tb-m down again, repeating as often These wild fowl, ordinarily so w are safe. At times they float so ne almost within human, reach, hut no terror; no missile strikes them with r How do they know the watery zo clamor of busy men? , Whence comes this Instinct which woti'ler of nature, and the kindest pre J Copyright .923 b; ' - J The Time Proven j __ ^ ^ i - JiiSiSJl/. This is a year of "I irresistible than < the largest selling are lower in price in value. in ten years of ^ Super-Six perfon have never been i And in all advanti ship and material alike. Thousands turnu Essex Six in price performance the And Hudson, ai cars, has no rival Tht Pay r W Ball ww m www 1 < I . , L ' t ; i ' . ? ?*-& ? ->?!-Mqp,-vrv? ^ . " r * t **********&**************? UP A I ************************** ! Mrs. W. B. Sutherland of Landrim ! visited her brothe^ and sister, Dr. C> | M. Jenkins, over the week-end1 at '.he ! Hntol HnvvarH i Mra'' TflnlrUo ve like armies flown, uown; mvn the upper reaches of (he reservoir, as the feeding is replenished. ! ary, seem to know thnt here they ar the embankment rail as to be gunshots All them with nameless sudden death. nes of safety amidst the noise and seldom fails? It is the greatest 'Vision of the world. 1 Ricfri-i ly-4 Vmei r I "Sixes" ?and Wjorld' I 71 i [ ~ ! X "6" CC I Sixes." The trend is more sver. Hudson-Essex are "Sixes." And today they 4 finer in quality, greater ' -> I ralue leadership Hudson nance, quality and price so outstanding. iges of design, workman- F is Hudson and Essex are I lg from "Fours" find the i, appearance, quality and qar of greatest appeal, nong the higher priceid in value or sales fnr-a Mnv be Purchased for a Lou) F on. * * Mrs. A. L. Pitman has returned from Tryon Infirmary where she had been for the past week undergoing treatment and having dental work done. Mrs. Pitman's health has been bad for sometime. Her friends are hoping that she will now improve. v Mr^ W^A>N^QTTT?e~~of"3Phicago is in Columbus this week, looking after business matters. * County ' Superintendent Henderson of Translyvania county was the guest of Superintendent Cobb Monday night and together with Mr. Cobb visited a number of Polk County Schools on : Tuesday. .. ? Miss Marie Hall was greeting friends in_^Columbus Sunday. Marie was a member of last year's graduating class of Stearns High School. She iirnrlroo in i ho nffino nf TV** 0? bourn, dentist of Shelby. * * * Miss Curtis Hill left last week for | Spartanburg to take a business course. ' # Miss Ida Seidel was a dinner guest of Miss Mae Irene Flentye at Mamosa Hotel Monday evening. , Mr. N. 0. Nord, a well known architect from Oastonia, has purchased through Blanton & Oreen a six-acre knoll on the hard-surfaced road between Columbus and Lynn and expects to erect a modern home in* the near future. This property formerly belonged to Mr. Cannon from Lynn. Mr. Thomas McEntlre of Shelby bought three business lots In Colum- < bus last w::h from Blanton ft Green. Mr. N. G. Nord is working on plank for a modern real estate office for Blanton & Green to he erected on Polk County Bank property in Columbus. . . Friends in Columbus were saddened to Fear last Saturday of the death of Mr. C. E. Gray of H11J Crest. Mrs. Gray, who was formerly Miss Mary ; Waller Camp, has the sympathy of many Columbus people in her hour