Newspapers / Polk County News and … / May 27, 1926, edition 1 / Page 15
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i I ci*c Hi " "T lgv PROfHL HALLER JAKLON Jim??iuf*** b> Hny Walters. _ I asKfd niv mother for fifty cents J Ho see the elephant jump the fence. ' He jumped so high ho hit the sky. ) He wer't he back till Fpurth of July. i.Mi- s change and fnshiclis change, llut the r cirrus, tne xsiggest f show on Karth, whethir it open its tent ilaps i" your town or mine, in your father's time or yours, is ever lit- same ohl pageant of . . ior and action. 1 insolcd ladies in !;? > ily ill rough space - downs scamper in;! < arena : cowboys auil .. y iiiihor and thither; . leap nimbly from The circus goes on. ..in pyramid coustruct. - rotig men and strong . cie are ,<jeuls balanced spheres On their - i;_ balls to each other ar: of a j^fresh fish. > white ( and?r pink | _ \ chicles?tfc'ith nil tlie | : g for our attention, we etc loss as to where to do not wish to miss still some of the very i tin proper attention be-1 ovpeoiing something to' here else. lin acts the ringmaster I; 1 r.iinouiuvinpnc union | L0 , -st;i:i-l<. A Mast ;Of a| fr:r:: : : .1 I? i;^ roll of drums to O n J!^ rivet yt>'.:r attention. Then, all too (:>n. wv >i e an act that by no means deserves this very special heralding. In the animal tent we find the same cM '! >!} eiepluints, a flock of camels, e zd.ra - two, perhaps a giraffe with peat eves, and sometimes a hippo. The monkeys still like peanuts and the mountain lions are snarly. Ami If you find a talkative attendant you can learn lots of interesting things in the menagerie. For instance, "hen the weather is very hot, It Is the lions and the tigers, who come ' climates, that suffer from the !The nnlar hears, on the iviN-r natives of the Arctic and t>-<! t'.c cold, don't seem to mind !! - :c at all. ; r.-'s tlie side show with ! fakirs (which, many of L- ta'.ral enough to believe, ' , .| with an "e" in place Am! who can decide ri* attractive?the ofth's tent of wonders aid ballyhoo and perWanted Ham and Eggs ric value of ham and eggs '"'i litis been recognized, but It re'fl ' ttii Inliuhltant of the Thames I.upland, to place this dish in jA idairniacopela of restoratives of 'V ''"llapsing on the road between mid Staines, he was removed 0 ' h'lnpnlow by motorists, who has(rn"'l '.n to the nearest telephone to ail lonhnIi.rii.ii i.~n?? ? I r, uctievillg uittu ltl 11 'iJiug condition. On their re- | Qualities for Success Mhi are best measured by what 7" not by what they say. The zri-r tin. nmn the bigger the ob1 t->- overcame to be great. Suem lining oneself to the Job, J'' ' ''tiiiR the jolt to capacities and Abstraction Hans was terribly absentone evening he sat knocking his pipe, and presently was heard 0 "claim: "Come In!" l/llllllJI)INIIlilllll^ ) rp=~^ 1 ? suaslve oratory served up free of ^ charge on the outside? There's the midget, with his unchanging grin, reaching from ear to ear, his calm manner and his dress suit, strikingly out of place in the light of day. Then the giant, looking Pf . . . ... . ill sneepisn in his ineffectual massive- | " ness. Next, perhaps, a Wild Mnn from Wl Korneo or a pair of midget busliinen. s|' The Fat Lady, whose proportions are Sl1 unbelievable, bursts through a simple white dress, fashioned more after the dimensions of a tent than of any gar- ',r ment designed for more personal and u i individual human occupation. In rl-; !llJ I diculous contrast is the Living Skele- | s'' I ton, that animated pair of walking | stilts who exists, it seems, in defiance l>" to nature's laws. ,>l The others are there, too. The I Sword Swallower, tlie Fire Eater, the ('i: Class Cruncher, the Snake Charmer (who flies Into a rage if you as much as suggest that his pets are minus their sacs of deadly poison), the Two- Jir headed Sheep, pictured on the outside as alive and kicking as you would ? want, but found actually, after we've paid our money, to be lifeless and stl Pfl still, etnhbalmed in a glass case. * an From the circus of Nero's time to ne the gay show as we know it, the word itself has meant fun and frolic Wl and a good time. We say "Didn't we have a circus!" T1 But the Roman youth was cheated out of one thrill of the circus?he CO couldn't go down to the tracks early ^ of a morning and watch the circus ^ detrain. For this is an event in the .. lives of little men. From the time the billposter sloshes barns and fences ab A ^ l? i I," jQllr t : Rt Kli with gaudy posters announcing, in m( letters tall as a man, the great day which the cirrus is to arrive, the Se, youth of the favored town await that a ieventful morning when the mysterious on train steams into view, comes to a p0 halt and disgorges the queerest ap- an pearing lot of people, paraphernalia kn and whatnot that the eyes of young- hit sters ever were permitted to see. cic As if by magic, hundreds of hard- pa boiled roustabouts, working furiously, and with the precision and dexterity Sq that comes only to those who have Co learned their parts through countUss go experiences, are at their posts, afcd thi the task of unpacking a circus has an begun. They work fast. The big parade is ha scheduled for half-past ten, and by po; . that time wagons must be put In th< readiness, horses groomed and bar- fei nessed, and everything running with tin machinelike regularity. bu .And what is a circus if there is no da parade! A buzz of excitement runs ga througli tlie town. Business is tern- Kn nC\ i turn, much to their surprise, they no found the patient sitting up and tak- on ing nourishment administered by the ha owner of the place. The man ex- di< plained that it was the odors of fry- ws ing ham and eggs that revived him. th! ; a ] Pride lat The seaman does not commonly de- do sire to be made captain because he els knows he can manage the ship better Its than any other sailor on board. He wi [ wants to be made captain that he may esi [ be called captain. The clergyman does br< Brave Women Honored ? a The bishop of London has dedlcat- Ca ed In Holy Trinity church. Gray's Inn thi road, a chapel to the memory of "The ha Brave Women of the War." The of chapel is draped in scarlet, above the Ti altar table of black oak being a framed picture of the Virgin and Child, while the floor is paved with ' tiles of black and white marble. The w< bishop said it was a very striking he thing indeed that a poor parish In a tei wi4\ irarily halted. Lens: before srheded time, the line of march is lined itli happy, carefree onlookers. De ite trie crowd th<> street Is strangely I ent. Then some one shouts "Hero J e.v come!" And the parade is on. Circus men will tell you that the estige of the enterprise depends to considerable extent upon the length id quality of the parade. A short, a-bby parade conveys the idea of a ^ uk.v, mediocre circus. "Only one nd? Two starved elephants? And > calliope?" A poor circus indeed, is e thought that runs through the sappoiuted crowd. ... 1 Yes, the circus is an old, old instl- I tlon. Nero was a circus fan at a ; ne when bread, instead of peanuts, t dogs, and pink lemonade, went totlier with circuses. This was the reus Maximus whose 11!,<>00,000 uare feet of area lay between the ilatiue and Aventine hills of Home, j (1 accommodated, it is estimated, arl.v 2.">0.000 spectators. Here the Homuns sat round-eyed itching the feats of the strong men d laughed at the funny faces of 01 nvns, dead now these 2,000 years. al lere were athletes and chariot races d living statuary?only tights were nsidered not in good tikste. And re w the crowd would delight when Si; ose early Christians were thrown to . at e lions! Hut, essentially, the circus is the ah i? ??*?i? as uit. /\u cuiur, nuise, iruuiusiuu, andonment, chaos; so It starts, so w' ends. It Is the great leveler. You ^ in palpitating and come out ex- . usted?physically, emotionally. To C in, woman, child, it is all the same. e There are additions and deletions: w fashions and leatures change out- ^ le and a few creep in to join with Pl e changeless. Nero never saw ele- w' iants on roller skates. We are forIden the horrible spectacle of feed- a ? humans to wild beasts. But surely ta e Uoman circus had nothing more sp rrlble than that collection of freaks ar our side show. For the Romans j*r Ized beauty and perfection even if 1S pir value of human life was cheap. p Even New York and Chicago and ,f (ier large cities, which offer no end 'u nmusements for their citizens, go 111 the circus and enjoy it Immensely. rp it in these large places part of the nnor and romance of the circus, as ist of us know it, is lost. N'o one goes down to the tracks to p it come in. It is held Indoors In ro large building, and runs, not for t0 e day, but for weeks. And there Is parade. City traffic is too heavy, 1 d the dollars that every tie-up and cp ot In the swift movement of ve- so :les loses to business are too pre- ar us to be sacrificed for a mere circus rade. '? But once inside the new Madison J1 uare Garden In New York or the liseum In Chicago, your city circus er has the same good time and he th ills to the same reckless performce. Since the advent of the movies there 1111 o snrno talk regarding the Ju ssibility of the slow dying-out of ai ? circus. It Is perhaps true that 8,1 ,ver companies are on the road now w< in there were twenty years a go, ev t nmny of these have been consoli- ye ted, making for bigger, grander and fit udier shows, each the Greatest on j \V rth. "n In I si t usually wont to be made a bishop 'n ly because he believes that no other e' nd can, as firmly as his, direct the ea >cese through its difficulties. He ,a ints to be made bishop primarily cl it he may be called "ray lord." And as prince does not usually desire to en- 8C ge, or a subject to gain, a king- P1 rn, because he believes that no one le can as well serve the state, upon t0 throne; but, briefly, because he ^ shes to be addressed as "your maj- 10 ? II? ? TV,n v, K? US iy" vy as iuiuij upo ^ aught to such utterance.?Ruskln. r or district seven years after the ir should be the first to put up such memorial. Except for the Nurse veil monument In Trafalgar square it was the first war memorial he C< d dedicated simply to the memory jV brave women themselves.?London y? mes. J, ol Greateat of Tyrants w rime Is the greatest of tyrants. As H ? go on toward age he taxes our alth, limbs, faculties, strength and itures.?John Foster. 1 y( | NEWS, TRYON. N. C. PrQ5KE M?a ~^a * ' wSH idHEi * -J? wmmd wn-MTza ijm iV Jv ^ilkkTv v/ iffinPI mulMm ifeaae ^ jwH^HkT >jf nHS <H Pw^xSniH "w3 B 7i Esthonian Nurses and Patient (Prepared by the National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C.) ~~T STUOKIA, with which the United H States has been negotiating a j commercial treaty, should be of especial interest to Amerims. Not only Is it one of the mngest republics, but its formation nrked the emergence to sudden in pendence of a people who, through 0 years of crushing bondage, kept ive their dream of freedom and were ady to put It into realization when e opportunity came. World attention lias been focused so osely upon storm centers of central id southern Kurope that comparably little lias been heard of tiie w nations carved from Itussia along e Baltic sea. But with tiie gradual sumption of commerce between ltusa and the outside world Ksthoniu ?<-! nolcrhhitra T.ntvin nnrt TJthn lia, will assume a more Important pect, either as barriers or as gateays to interior Russia. From the ghties of the last century until the orld war period Esthonlu bore the >uble yoke of czarist laws adminisred by German officials. One must go far back into Esthonian story to trace the origin of this duicate despotism. Like the Finns, to horn they are closely related, the Esonians or Esths, a race numbering million and a quarter people, rein many characteristics which beeak their Mongolian origin. They e long-armed and short-legged, have oad faces, are usually beardless and ive slightly oblique eyes. They obably came to their present land tween the Sixth and Eighth cenries from a former home along the iddle Volga far to the east. Other lathes of the Esths, though more stantiy related than the Finns, are e Hungarians, far away in south* ntral Europe. The first record of the Esths in Eupe reveals them as a daring, predary people of the Italtic whose pitic outrages enkindled the wrath of anish kings as early as the Twelfth ntury. In 111)4 and 1190 Canute VI nt a strong expedition against them, id forced a number of the lawless ind8 to accept Christianity and alw themselves to be baptized. Hardly id the warlike proselyters left the ithonlan shores, however, when the habitants reverted to barbarism and eir heathen practices. Ruled by Teutonic Knights. A quarter of a century later Waldear II was more successful. He subgated the northern coastal region id brought, the inhabitants under bmission to the Danish crown. It ? 511 i?iit cnhniicsion. how :IS lit* V t* I ,, mi(.ub ...... F er, nnd for more than a hundred lira the inhabitants gave their conlerors endless trouble until in 1343 aldemar IV decided that they were ot worth the bother," so he sold his terest In the rebels and in tiieir land the Brethren of the Sword. The tter, unable to subdue the Esths, lied on the Teutonic knights who ere gradually spreading their net of ?wer northward from Teutonic lands, hey went in the role of Christian usaders and remained more than sis inturies as overlords and masters, tie lot of the Esthonians became that 1 serfs. In the Sixteenth century both the >bles (they came to be called "Bait irons") and the fortified towns of jthonia placed themselves under the otectlon of the Swedish crown, but ley were forced to acknowledge a >w master after Peter the Great's iccessful wars against Charles XII. In the last half century the Russian iperial government made systematic forts to Russify the Esths, trying peclally to abolish the Esthonlan nguage to which the people have ung tenaciously. Harsh regulations i to the use of the language In the hools did pot serve to wean the peoe from their own tongue, however, ae characteristic which has served preserve the Esth language through e centuples has been the people's ve for poetry, and they have rare itural gift for versification. The Russians also undertook by U/ltAnn It f!nmpc Frnm Wild u ! vwiiiww w. The saying "How old Is Ann?" imes from the following neat little Ithmetical problem commonly put to le man on the street about twenty >ars ago: "Mary is twenty-four years d. Mary is twice as old as Ann Was hen Mary was as old as Ann is now. ow old is Ann?" If you solve the problem, says rank Fitzpatriek of Tucson, Ariz., >u will find that Ann was eighteea , 'a. , X, "\ .\ . ? . : y 'Si m thnnia Ik : ! . KM I.: '/^h^HBHHHB , ' M s at Typhus Hospital in Narva. strenuous methods to gather the Esths into the fold of their orthodox church. The rugged endurance of this northern people, their vitality and spirit, is sufficiently shown hy their hearing up under oppression that was both religious and political, and from the political standpoint, both Prussian and Russian. Perhaps their Mongolic descent helps account for that. Progressive In Agriculture. P.efore the World war Esthonia had j become one of the most progressive regions, agriculturally. In Russia. Though situated in northern Europe, the country is tempered by the farfaring Gulf stream. Another thing of American origin ? the potato ? has made its deep mark on Esthonia, and it has even been called flippantly, "the Potato republic." As a source of alcohol the potato has been most important economically to the country. Every large estate has Its own distillery, and before the World war great quantities of the potent liquid were exported. Russia was reluctant to have Estlionia set up housekeeping on its own account. The country, about as large as New Hampshire and Vermont combined, blocks a considerable section of western Russia, whereas it formed before a natural outlet for the larger country. The Esthonlan railways have already played an Important part in mnvint* nrnflupp to nnd from Ilus sla, and If conditions become stabilized In the latter country, Esthonia should regularly collect a tidy sum as a transit agent. Since the Esthonlans are such lovers of liberty, yet had been so downtrodden by the "Bait barons" until almost the end of the World war, violent readjustments were inevitable. First came the Russian revolution. The Esthonlans demanded and were given home rule. Then followed the Bolshevik coup; a Bolshevik invasion, which was fought back; a German invasion ; more fighting with the Bolsheviks ; and finally the establishment, with Finnish and Britisli assistance, of an independent state. Then the new republic set about what Its leaders described as "righting the wrongs of 700 years." The Esthonians, making up 02 per cent of the population, seized the great estates of the Baits (who constitute per cent of the population) and parceled them out among peasant proprietors. The country's agriculture was tbus placed on an entirely new footing, but the most recent statistics seem to show that production is holding its own. Reval the Chief City. Reval, known to the Esthonians as Tallin, Is Esthonia's greatest port and city. It has existed for 700 years. With Iielsingfors across the gulf, it formed tsarist Russia's gateway and first line of naval defense to I'etrograd; but to Esthonia, its commercial possibilities seem brightest. As first seen from shipboard. Reval's skyline is an epitome of the forces that have been at work upon Esthonia. On a hill which rises above the towq is a citadel wall reminiscent of the Germans who took the country by the swprd. On this height, too, are the h6mes of many of the Bait nobles who have descended from the German Invaders. From the same hill a clHmp of Gothic steeples pierces the sky, recalling the Swedish Invasion and the Lutheran religion, which most of the Esthonians profess. Within the circle of sharp spires are the qneerly shaped, gilded domes of an orthodox Russian church, speaking of the efforts at Russlflcation which never bore much fruit. In the lowe? town are the homes of the Esthonians?the stratum from which the people have literally risen to take over the affairs of their country. In addltloo to its agricultural actualities, Esthonia has numerous industrial possibilities. Already some of its waterpower is haVnessed, and at Narva, on the Russian border, is one of the largest cotton mills in the world. Much of the land is still covered by forests, and the timber and wood-puip industries are Important. Millions of tons of oil shale exist in the country. As a bit of arithmetic It was, of course, too much for the man In the street, but he held the question and forgot all about the rest of It?American Mercury. Hero's Position There Is never any real danger In allowing a pedestal for a hero. He never has time to sit on it. One sees him always over and over again ' kicking his pedestal out from under i him, and using It to batter a world i with.?Lee. j, . .?/ . V .. . \ T THE H OKITCnENlgl Id CABINET C3 (@4. 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Give roe no light, great heaven, but such as turns To energy of human fellowship; No powers save the growing herttage That makes completer manhood. ?Elliot. FOOD FOR THE SICK Food Is so often more important than medicine in illness that the study Invalid cook^ girl's education. and a well-toasted piece of toast is knowledge which is invaluable. For a convalescing patient who needs to be coaxed to eat, a tempting tray with the prettiest chinw and the daintiest linen should be used. When the invalid tray cannot be provided, use a large tray and support it on each side with books to hold its weight from the patient, and keep it from tipping. Gruels are such important foods that It is biting that proper thought be given to their preparation. Use | two to three tablespoonfuls of cereal I to a quart of water and cook for at ] least three hours, strain before serving; this is used in the liquid diet. Chicken Broth.?A good broth may hn nr/inurii/1 frntri tlio nni'L' \irin<? flna and feet of the chicken. Scald the j feet, removing the skin. Cover the I ? meat with cold water, adding a stalk I of celery for flavor; simmer for two ! to three hours. Season, strain. Often ! no pepper and very little salt is allowed. Lemon Jelly.?Soak a tablespoonful j of gelatin in three tnblespoonfuls of water, add three-fourths of a cupful 1 of boiling water, four tnblespoonfuls of lemon Juice and five tublespoonfuls of sugar. Stir until dissolved. I'our 1 into a wet mold and put on ice to harden. This will make two servings. With the prepared gelatins of different flavor one may, with little labor, have a dish of jelly always ready. Baked Custard.?Beat lightly two eggs, add a pint of good rich milk, and flavor with nutmeg, adding three to four tablespoonfuls of sugar. I'our into custard cups, set in hot water and bake just long enough to set. Thrust a knife into the center of the cup; if It comes out clean the custard Is done. Summer Salads. Skill In garnishing and arranging colors is as important in salad-maklng as in arranging bouquets. Bright splashes of red, green or yellow give zest to the appetite 1 by appealing to the eye. 1 Pimentoes, chives, and hard-cooked eggs, thinly sliced, make attractive garnishing, as do olives (stuffed, green or ripe), shaved, chopped or in halves. Capers, green peppers, tomatoes, chives, all add to the appearance and flavor of salads. Lemon sliced in various shapes, sprinkled with minced parsley, makes most attractive garnishing for fish. Beet and Potato Salad.?Take six j beets and six potatoes, one cupful of chopped olives and chives with mayonnaise dressing. Cut the cooked beets into small balls with potato cutter, also the potatoes. Cover with mayonnaise dressing to which has, been added the chives and olives. Dip the beets into vinegar and serve in mounds on lettuce. Poinsettia Salad.?Take six tomatoes, a stalk of celery, a sweet green pepper, three -apples, one-half cupful of nut meats, and one-half cupful of mayonnaise dressing. Scald the tomatoes, chill them and with a sharp knife mark five divisions from the top center over half way to the base. Carefully turn back the skin to form _ the petals, scoop out the pulp and fill with the apple, celery and nuts. Heap I a little extra dressing on each and ki garnish with a ring of green pepper. Jellied Egg Salad.?Take one quart of chicken jelly?this may be prepared from half a dozen pairs |0f ^ chicken feet, or from the bones of a <\ roasted fowl. If the feet are used, scald them, and the skin will p?el? easily; cover with cold water and siji^.Tjl mer in a quart of water until tlie flgsfi 1 ) ' falls from the bones. Slice the eggs? using six?and stir them genffy into the cooling jelly, so they will b{; evenly distributed. When cold sebve on lettuce garnished with mayonnaise and water cress. _ Joe'* Dressing?Take one teaspoon ful of salt and mustard, two table- q spoonfuls of sugar, a dash of cayenne, _ one whole egg, one and one-half tablespoonfuls of flour, two tablespoonfuls f of corn oil, one-half cupful of evapo rated milk, one-fourth cupful each of g vinegar and water. Mix the dry Ingredients and cook all together in a ' double boiler. V If the farm woman would realize g that nine-tenths of her friends who come from small cities or large, would appreciate a farm dinner of fresh eggs, cream, butter and the vegetables g that are so plentiful, fresh and delicious, and not try to prepare some fancy foods, both she and her guests would be happier. Such things as pickles, preserves, Jellies and conserves are usually found In the fruit | cellar of most housekeepers. Site of Letchworth Park Letchworth park Is a tract of land of about 1,100 acres In the valley of the Genesee river In Wyoming and Livingston conntles, New York. It was conveyed to the state In 1906 by the proprietor, William Pryor Letchworth, to be used as a public park. Exposed A speaker In Seymour, Ind., says the "farmer of America deserves a place In the sun." Goodness! Doesn't he get It??Detroit News. ALLEN'S13'FCM3T=EASE Tbo Antiseptic, Healing Powder for tired, swollen, smarting, sweating feet. It takes the friction from the shoe, prevents blisters and sore spots and takes the sting out of corns and bunions. Always use Allen's Foot-E*?? for Dancing and to Break in New Shoes. Sold everywhere. Your jJTV system. needsM^jo v Hancock Sulphur Compound it mn anff** from rheumatism. trout. I eczema of hives, op if troubled with pimples, blackheads, freckles, blotches or other skin eru ptions, your blood and skin need the purifying and healing effects of this tried old remedy. Physicians agreljthat sulphur is one of the best and most effective blood purifiers known to science. Hancock Sulphur Compound is the meet efficacious way to use and benefit from Sulphur. As a lotion, it soothes and heala: taken internally, it gets at the root of the trouble. 60c and $1.20 at your drcargict's. I f he cannot supply you, send his name and the price in 6tamps and we will bend you a bottle direct Hancock Liquid Sulphur Company Baltimore, Maryland Hmrrrk Sulphur 0>mpound Ointment ? 90o and $Qo ?J'ur as* with the Liquid Compound. Second Summer Is Hardest On Baby Every mother should keep a close watch on Baby during the dreaded second summer. Keep Baby's diet right, correct minor ailments before they become serious and build up Baby's strength to meet hot weather spells. "My baby had Inflamed bowels when the hot weather began and -1-1- * a 1 ^.n/vl.ri ? was very silk, iwr tmce wccboi writes Mrs. Wm. G. Jones, of Woodvllle, Ala. "I gave Teethlna after everything else failed and It was certainly a blessing. My child is well and playful now and I cannot praise Teethlna too highly for little ones." This mother Is but one of millions who now realize how helpful Dr. Moffett's Teethlna Is In bringing up children. It Is a baby doctor's preparation and can be had for 30c at all leading druggists. UD rr f SEND FOR USEFUL M? JlvJU/lv* Booklet About Babies C. J. MOFFETT CO, COLUMBUS, OA. TEETH INA Builds Better Babfcs G(uick / safe (jW \ relief CORNS Tn one minute your misery from corns Is ended. That's what Dr. Scholl's Zinopads do atfely by removing the cause ? pressing or rubbing of shoes. You risk no Infection from amateur cuttlng.no danger from "drops" (acid). Zlno-pads are thin, medicated, antiseptic, protective, healing. Get a box at your druggist's or shoo dealer's today?35c. foe A** Sample write The Sd>oD Ifig. 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If they do not five you quick g relief, we will return your money Immediately without quibble. g < CARB MAVCFAOTCRrNG CO. 52A Weft 46th Street New York B Let Cuticura Soap Keep Your Skin Fresh and Youthful nBom* Oiotmtot, Tslenm from. Addrmm 0?tlc?r? Lmbymlmn*, D?pt. M. MalAm, Mmm. ; --? -? - itiVa>iim|^
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 27, 1926, edition 1
15
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