Newspapers / Polk County News and … / June 3, 1926, edition 1 / Page 12
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I . " "wo' HowM ,DoTc ?"TTMi i^NE TXAir?9.000 iMSRZLi I By PROEHL HALLER JAKLON Drawing by Ray Walter*. HOW many words do you know? Shakespeare used about 23,000 words. A six-yearold child knows nearly a thousand. An uneducated i person knows 3,000 to 3,000 words. The "average" pera son knows 8,000 to 10,000. J ~ A college graduate knows more than 20,000. Lawyers, c doctors, and ministers know upwards of 25,000 words. An editor knows 40,000. Wood row Wilson used more than 00,000 In three of his books. * Do words Interest yon? Have you any Idea of the number of them In American speech or In the English language ? Come along, then, and have a chat With a "word expert," Dr. Frank H. Vizetelly, managing editor of Funk A Wagnalls "New Standard Dictionary." Doctor Vizetelly, who Is re,1 sponsible for the figures In the foregoing paragraph, has had brought to his attention In the last fifteen years more than 515,000 words. He does not claim, of course, to remember the meaning of all of them, but It Is probable that he has a fairly good v working vocabulary. "The range of a man's vocabulary depends on his occupation," Doctor Vizetelly says: "A churchman, familiar with the Bible, will know the meaning of 8.CT4 different Hebrew words in the Old Testament, and of 5,624 Greek words In the New Testament, or 14,21)0 words In all, with soiye duplicates, of course. This Is an exceptional case. "The physician or surgeon toiows more than this number. Take a rough summary of the matters with which he must be familiar..There are in the body of man 707 arteries, 71 bones, 79 convolutions, 438 muscles, 230 nerves, 85 plexuses, and 103 veins?Dotal, 1.70S. "In addition to this there are 1,300 bacteria, 224 eponymic diseases, 500 pigments, 295 poisons, 88 eponymic signs and symptoms of diseases, 744 tests, and 109 tumors, or a total of 4,968 niRlters relnting to his pfOfes- . si on alohe. "Then there are the names of about 10,000 chemicals and drugs-of which he must have' more than a passing ] knowledge?total, 14,968 in all, and ? we have not referred to the science of hygiene or to allied professions, as dentistry, etc., or to his home life, his motor car, or airplane, nnd the world at Iato-p of which ho Is so linnortant a figure. These cun barely be covered by 10,000 more?approximately 25,00tt words. "The lawyer also Is an exception. The most popular law dictionaries list approximately K',.000 terms peculiar to the legal profession, and comprehensive as the law itself may be. It does not In general embrace the vocabulary of the home, for which add 10,000 words, or 23,000 In all. "How many words does a newspaper editor know? One estimated the xtent of his vocabulary by the aid of Biggest Printing Job The printing of the New York telephone directory Is the biggest single publishing Job In the world. It now takes between five and six weeks to simply distribute the books to the 900,000 regular subscribers. As soon as one issue Is finished work la started on the succeeding edition. Distribution requires a force of more than 500 wagons and even pushcarts. Despite Ithe fact that the paper used la, from Dog Firtt Human Pet There has been considerable debate is to Just where the domesticated dog came from, and some naturalists deny he was directly brought down from the wolf, but they all seem to agree that he was the first wild animal brought to a satisfactory state of domestication. Certain It seems the dog was the most responsive to domestication efforts of all the animals that were sought for human pets In early days. anyM >uiQio 1 i1 ^ I 1/ / MEDULLA A ^ mf vTc~v^ & 4 O/ 7 - JtJn /M . ,/?// i J* &au> 3 40oVj rv V/h-All V 600~{000 *raJXD^ ( in abridged dictionary. Under each etter of the alphabet a page or more I >f wbrds was selected at random and rounted. He kept a record of prlml:lve and derivative words. That Is, 1 imong the former was put "meas.? l,?? ' ii C , ULUUU^ IXiCT tauci Uit?nu???.v, 'measureableness," "measured," "measirer," and "unmeasured." Compound vords whose meanings were clearly ndlcated by their component were >mltted; as "clock-work," "drafttorse," "hard-earned." "Counting this way, he found an iverage of 20 primitive words and 15 derivative words on each page, rhls would make, there being 814 >age3 of vocabulary In this dictionary, t total of 16.210 of the former and 18,400 of the latter, or 45,000 In all. "Next he took a page in each letter, ind on It he counted the words which t seemed any person of average Indulgence would be able to use and inderstand. On 24 pages there vere 268 primitive words and 221 lerlvatlve, or nearly 9,000 In all >f-the former, and more than 7,000 of he latter. And, lastly, he made a x>unt of very common words, such is even a poorly educated person -ould hardly escape knowing, and they were found to number 5,700 primitive and 3,200 derivative. "The department of psychology of :>ne of our learned bodies recently Investigated the matter of vocnbularj acquisition, and disclosed the fact v, ~ * U ~ 11 .1 LIlUl IIIC UYCia^C lUUU VI J1V1U 1UU1 to five years of age makes use of 1,700 tfords. */? * * "In Its first year, the child acquired a vocabulary of from 10 to 20 ivo^ds. During Its second year this :otat was Increased to 300 or 400 words, depending entirely upon enrlropment. Before thte close of the thljd year, the larger of these totals was more than doubled, so that the vocabulary at command aggregated from 600 to 1,000 words. "Shakespeare's vocabulary has been put at 24,000, 21,000 or< 15,000 words, and the apologist for a limited vocabulary exclaims, "What did he not achieve with them 1" "Had Shakespeare lived In our time he would have advanced with our progress, and the strength of his vocabulary would have been double the number of words he used, but please remember that many of Shakespeare's words are now archaic. "Many words fall Into disuse when archery gave way to the gun, and things which were very useful when knighthood was In flower, eventually were discarded. The passing of the tournament and Jousts witnessed the burial of a large collection of medieval terms, even as the passing of armor did the same. "When falconry became a dead time to time. Improved to save weight and bulk, the last Issue consisted of two volumes, weighing nearly five pounds. It has 1,920 pages with 830,000 listings. In many Instances subscribers get several copies, so that the total edition consists of 3,000,000 dlrec torles, requiring 500 carloads of paper. Sabine Once Powerful The Sablnes were ancient and important people who lived In the mountains northeast of Rome, from the Holy Roman Empire Replying to an Inquiry, the Pathfinder Magazine says that In the year 800 Charlemagne, king of the Franks, was crowned emperor of the West at Rome. In 962 the title went to Otto I and his empire, which consisted of Germany, Austria and northern Italyi1' became known as the Holy Roman empire. This empire was continuous until 1806. Voltaire said the name irds . J sport. Its specific vocabulary wu soon forgotten. Alchemy and superstition r' had a host of friends, but with the * advance of our culture their lingo has been driven out of existence. "Every well-read person of educe- r Hon and fair ability la able to define * >r understand, as used nearly or perhaps, more than 60,000 words. The a same person In conversation and writing will command not fewer than 16< ? 900 to 20,000, while a person who cannot read but who has a good degree ot native mental ability will command ? 5,000 terms. ^ "But let It be clearly understood that j if a new war breaks out tomorrow, whether It be between capital and la bor, or between races of different .. hue, or between the upper world and g the lower world, the edltor'e vocabu- p lary will keep pace with the events as they develop. e "Every social upheaval, even as r every social reform, brings with It a the means with which to describe Its \> various phases, and our speech is like 1 the tide?ever at ebb and flow. I "What Is the longest word In the b English language? Who knows? Here are, however, a few that have posed r for the time being aa the longest a words In the language. c "The word most frequently cited Is v "honorlflcabllltudlnlty,' which Is to be t found In Shakespeare's "Love's Labor v Lost,' act 5, scene 1, line 44. To the s Puritan divine Byfleld we owe 'Inclr- s cumscriptlbleness.' Doctor Benson Is c credited with 'antldlsestabllshmentar- b lans.' To William E. Gladstone we r owe 'dlsestabllshmentarlanl8m.' "An examination of any treatise on a chemistry will reveal several like o these: paraoxymetamethoxyallylben- h zene, and tetrahydroparamethyloxy- 11 quinoline. I "Among mfrdern German words of cumbersome formation Is Schutzen- * grabenvernlchuangautomoblle, which contains thirty-five letters to express c what the English Indicate by the word 1 'tank' In Its military sense. r 'There Is also the Turkish Asso- ' elation of Constantlnopolitan Bagpipe 1 Makers, which Is designated In Ger- r man by Oonstantinopolitnnlscherdudel- { sackspfclfenmachergesellschaft. "A word commonly attributed to r - - - - - . .. r Bismarck is said to nave Deen tne result of his hatred of everything foreign, particularly everything French. ' For this reason, he offered as a sub- 5 stltute for the French word 'apothl- c caire, the term 'Gesundheltswlederherstellungsmlttelzusammenmlschungsver haltnlsskundlger,' which he preferred to 'apotheker.' "Leading them all, however, is a Greek word denoting a dish consisting , of all kinds of dainties, fish, flesh, ( fowl, and sauces. Take a deep breath and try to pronounce: lepadotemach- i oselachogaleokraniolelpsanodrlmupotr 1 m matosilphiokarabomelitokarakech- j umenoklchleplkossuphophattoperistrer- ( a 1 e k t ruoneptokephallloklnklopeleiolsgoo8lralobaphetraganopterugon. "Which, in the vernacular, is Just j plain 'hash.' "The Flemish word for motor car Is 'Snelpaardelooszonderspoorwegpe t r olrljtuig.' " Now, aren't you glad, Indeed, that you don't have to speak German, or Greek, or Flemish? Think how much hungrier a man would get while asking for hash In a Greek restaurant I j Hons Fi8cellus and borders of Picepum south to the Anlo and Fldenae on the Tiber. They were of Urabro-SabelUan stock, allied to the Oscans, and the Samnltes were their descendants, i Reate (Rleti) was their chief town, i The "rape of the Sabine women" in tha I legendary history of Rome Is famous. | The Sablnl were finally subjugated by the Romans under M. Clrlus Denta- i tus (clr. 290 B. C.) They received the ' Tlnmon f.nn.l.l.. < _ rwio m m. iwuiau ii midline m mo, ana arter tno 1 Social war of 00 became amalgamated 1 with the Romans. i , , Holy Roman empire was Inappropriate , for three reasons?In the first place It i was not holy, In the second place U i was not Roman, and In the third place It was not an empire. The fact la the < emperors of the Holy Roman empire never had much power as such and the different nations forming the em- i plre considered themselves as almost | Independent nations under their owe i rulers. ? I Large radium deposits have bee* I located la Russian Turfcsstan NEWS, TRYON, N. C. ' I THE J % PIECE OF> I CHEESE, ' "I Bj M. and R.'M. TERRELL II I ill (ffl. 111*. Western Newspaper Union.) k JT R. BARROWS' eye# 'grew l\/l round wlth awe and 8UrPr,se L V A. as he gheed from the card on his desk to the ruddy, lean oung man lounging at the opposite esk. "You're Avery Anstyne, Jr.," he tammered. ; "Not a word to anyone In the office, nderstand?" the far-from-pampefedjoklng young man went on brlstly.r Not a word to anyone In town. I'm ust plain Anstyne, the new manager f the branch, a cousin of the old ian'8. I'm here to work anyway, not ? fox trot. Business Is rotten here, lesldes I'm sick of New York. I on't want a lot of high-faced society ames trotting out their daughters and olng flipflops for me. Or for the toney I'm supposed to get some day." "Sure, Mr. Anstyne, I understand," greed Barrows, who didn't undertand at all, but felt the threat under ' wnrds. oung Anscyne a uri9u>uB ? 'ancy being super rich and not waj^tag anyone to know it. Ah, probably subtle pose, thought Barrows sudenly. Dealing yourself out at the scyhological moment; surely. After ou've seen them first. "Now, about typist, my private secetary," young Anstyne broke into the larrows ruminations. "Send In your est. Your speediest girl." "There's two now. Both efficiency lus. Miss Peach and Miss Cheese," eclted Barrows In three puffs. "Peach? Cheese? See here, Barows, I'm serious. I'm not running a rocery but an office and-'" "I should say Miss Peachley and flss Cheeseborough," coughed Barows. "Nicknames, Mr. Anstyne, 'a 11." "Call a spade a spade after this," dmonished the young man. "Yes sir. Both are tiptop typists. I se Peach?Peachley. She's easier on he eyes. Miss Cheeseborough, well, lr, she wouldn't win?" Young Anstyne was from New York. Send in the good looking one," he orered. "Er, Barrows, send 'em both a. Pll Judge for myself." In the outer office Barrows took rottv atsteiv Miss Peachley aside. Look here. Peach, you're always chemlng about marrying a millionaire, m going to play Santa Claus for you." "And take me to lunch, at the beanry, and tell me your salary's been aised and that you and your wife ren't really congenial; aw, Barrows, 've heard that bleat before?from you. 'ou pulled It last week; remember? -ay off. Grab a pen and work It. I'm U8.V." "Forget your lines," snapped Barows, flushing. "There's no law gainst liking the goods. . . . You're lass plus and more, you get away rlth It, Peach." His eyes appreclaIvely estimated her smart crepe gown rlth Its transparent shoulders, the heen of her stockings, the cut of her Uppers, the glossy perfection of her olffure, the smartness of her comIned vanity case, rouge box and clgaette case. For contrast Mr. Barrows turned nd gave Miss Oheeseborough a split nee-over. She was clicking away at ler machine and, to the Barrows eye, lot to he easily distinguished from he rest of the office furniture. "Listen, Peach, confidential." he rent on. "New manager's really old sew York Anstyne's only son. Oozles >f Jack coining to him ! He's just told ne to keep all this getting out to anyme, at the office or in town; see? But '111 playing my money on you, Peach. Ie told me to send him in a new secetnry. I'm paging you, kid. Go in ind give hiip a couple of eyefuls. Vnd, get tliis, too; when you two're narrl?d don't forget little M. E. Barows for the new general manager." "What a elnch," thought I'eachley vhen she eyed the ruddy, gray-eyed oung millionaire through the fringe >f her lashes. "He looks lonely, poor boy !" thought Slsle Cheeseborough, blinking through ier glasses, the huge dark rims of vhlch distracted one's attention from he fact that her eyes were blue genlans, gentle and disconcertingly young.( Hie unemphasized line of her lips was ender and wistful. Whatever beau:les her slender body may have bad were masked , by the disconcerting primness of a black "business" suit sdth severe. Immaculate collar and :ulTs. Her blond hair, flghtly bound* ooked thin. Anstyne chose Peachley. He was lunran. and masculine?and from New i'ork. ^ Peach's coiffures became more elabjrate dny by day In every way. Her rostumes displayed he? to advantage. And ceaselessly, and adroitly, the sought to Impress young Anstyne that she also was. In a way, a New forker. and only debnrred from taking her rightful place in society there Phrases Long Noted The British Medical association Is revising Its list of tongue-twisters ised as tests of intoxication. Among hem have been such relatively 8}(nple phrases as "British constitution" and 'truly rural." which. It has been held, a man cannot properly pronounce unless he Is sober. It Is not surprising thut alumni of that fine school, the MuHKiichuHcttH Institute of Technology, isually abbreviate the title In conversation to "Tech" or "Boston Tech," for lIlflHP u/tm Hrtl mit tha nama ?n " ' | ? my |Mik UHUIC MT jettier evidently paid no heed to con* (derations of euphony it ease of pronunciation. In the lutter port of the Seventeenth century the recitation of the Lord's I'rayer was :a teet of witchcraft la MuiwurhuHetts. If you were a twitch, the court held, you could not say It property. A woman waa hanged 'because the Judge Insisted that the eafd "hollowed" Instead of "hallowed," thereby making the sacred UMihe of the Deity null end void. writer la the London Athenaeum by financial misfortunes of her branch | of the family. Did be hesitate la dictation over a metropolitan street address, she acppjifd It from tnenfory^aloud. : Her dear' aunt, Mrs. Wllmerwing-Peachley, lived right arotond the corner ;i fancy! Young Anstyne smiled. I He could afford to; she didn't know I really who he was! One night the Fates, whom, If legend I tells us; correctly, are homely women, I caused (young Anstyne to.seek a forgotten j overcoat at his office. The place Was lighted up; distinctly he I heard the click, dick of a typewriter. I I "What me merry devil I" he muttered. I He entered and was confronted by a [ startled:young girl in a blue dress and [ with a mass of golden curls hanging down hir back. * I . "I beg your pardon I" He acted as though he had entered the wrong o( I flee. Tne young girl did, too. Miss , Cheeseb<|>rough flushed furiously, ths rosy color running into the roots of ( I the shlnllng hair and down tender lines I of her throat ft was a long time since Anstyne had seen a girl blush! "Mr. Anstyne, I'm so sorry;" she i I cried. "Ho one has ever come here at I night before." Slowly yflung Anstyne j I realized that this radiant young thing I was?was "Miss Cheese." .-('If I had only known?" began the : embarrassed vision, acting like a cul- | I prlt and tirying hurriedly to pin up her | hair. "I washed It; It dries quickly j *? 1 fvnlnr?" ij over a raaiaiur. auu ...... ?_ Anstyne began to sniff the air. Miss Cheeseborpugh rushed to explanation. "I'm taking a university extension course In cooking," she said. "I'm, saving up jto have a real home of my own some day. Mr. Anstyne, I'm?I'm hopelessly jold-fashloned." Young Anstyne ^ook another sniff and. all of a moment, "Miss Cheese" recalled hejr rarebit on the tiny electric grill. She was Just In time; the coffee. In another electric contrivance, was about to boll over. Anstyne took a third sniff. Cheeseborough murmured something and they sat down and set to eating. Words weren't necessary?enticingly cooked food was 1 Anstyne hadn't eaten a real meal for years; he had always lived at his clubs. Miss Cheeseborough did love to cook and, encouraged by Anstyne, she began to discuss her favorite recipes. The conversgtlon went to chicken a la oh boy, sweetbread with asparagus tips, Vienna ^chnltzels that even a war couldn't put jout of circulation, plum j pudding with sauce, minced tenderloin | a la some more, and old-time pot roast alias "Contre-fllet roti maltre d'hotel," j etc. The conversation was very stlmu Iatlng ana n ijasiea ioiq me wcc uwu. Young Anstyrje Insisted they get something to eat again. They went to the j best restaurant In town; the contrast w^s quite eloquent. "Miss Cheese" wks> some cook! T'hey found! much of mutual Interest. "Miss Cheese," who came from the West, and wasn't ashamed of It, had had an uncle who had put the family In the j limelight of fame. He had been shot by one of the Younger or James brothers; "Miss Cheese" wasn't sure. Young Anstyne assured her that his father and Jesse James were twins, or [should have been ! Oh, J a pleasant evening was spent by all. j Some weeks later the stately Peachley rushed In cjn Barrows with a wire. ! "Say, Rat Face, what do you know about this?" she fairly barked. "That ass Anstyne bhs gone and let 'Cheese' marry him 1 Get that; our little piece of cheese! H^mph! I always knew she wasn't what she was 1" "Can you beat It?" echoed the flabbergasted Barrows. It was about noon. "I can," lisped Miss Peach, changing chameleon-like her voice. "Thanks, Barrows, old sport, I'm as hungry as a lady wolf.' Where're we going to | lnncli? SHy, -a steady diet of cheese | Is likely to turn almost anybody's? taste, nun 1 come on, lex s cuuw. Parcel Post Parcels have been carried by th* j Post Office department since its estalv j lishment. Prior to 1912 the limit ol j weight was four pounds. The parcel | post law was enacted August 24, 1912, | and this act provided for the extension I of limits of weights of parcels and pro- j vlded zone rates. It also contained j provisions for the establishment Of j C. O. D. and insured services. 0 Codfish Ariatocracy "Codfish aristocracy" is the name j given to persons who, lacking In real | ' culture, make a vulgar display of recently acquired wealth. It was for- j merly applied to families who were ! supposed to have become rich from the j fisheries of Massachusetts, a state noted for its codfish. The "sacred codfish" hangs in the statehouse at ; Boston. | "A Reading From Homer" In Lourens Alma-Tadema's paint | ing a professional Greek reader and interpreter looks up from his scroll j A hunter lies on the floor. At the ; extreme left stands a traveler. The 1 man with the harp Is Phaon. The beautiful woman is Sappho. The legend concerning the latter two has been incorporated in the painting. as Tongue Twisters once observed: "He cannot hope to scale the topmost heights of Parnassus who crama his mouth whilst singing with a gritty handful of consononts" onH T aiwaII n?IA .g n. ..uui.a , nuu wwncn oaiu Ui mtlll I1GW Arnold's line on Shakespeare: "Self-schooled, self-scanned, selfhonored, self-secure"f that It "hissed like an angry gander." What shall be said of the libretto of an opera, written In pursuance of the Ideal ol opera In English, which gives the prima donna this clashing collocation . ' of "continuous rectltu pe," or at another point Hills the mouth with the phrase, "A pair of stanch English thoroughbreds" T These things are difficult to say and still harder to sing. What can the librettist have been thinking of when he concocted them? Was ha tone-deaf as well as Ignorant of labial and Ungual processes??New York Herald-Tribune. Joseph Cartler of Blddeford, Maine has not missed a Democratic caucus In his ward for 48 years, \ ? ? FEEDING TURKEY V POULTS PROPERLY It la very poor economy to atlnt turkeya, especially young growing stock; (or when once stunted, It takes a long while to recover. For the first 34 hours after the chicks emerge from the shell they should remain under the hen unmolested, both to dry and gain strength and hardiness. They do not require any food, as the store nature provides will last over this time. As the chicks hatch sometimes Irregularity, the older ones can be cared for In the house until the others are ready to be taken away, when the hen and her brood can be removed to a roomy coop, with a tight-board bot torn and rain-proof roof, rney snouiu b? fed Are times dally, but just what they wtll clean up. The first food should consist of stale bread moistened In water or in fresh milk?the milk Is preferred. Do nof wet the food, a very moist or sloppy food will cause slckneee and a high rat# of mortality among young turkeys. If milk can be spared!: give It to them freely In plaoe of water. The too lavish use of corn meal has caused more deaths among young chicks than has cholera among grown fowls. Until the chicks are halfgrown, corn meal should be but sparingly fed; bat after that time, when Judiciously used, is one of the very best and cheapest foods for fowls and chicks. Nine-tenths of the young turkeys which die when in the "downy" state get their death-blow from corn meal, as It is a very common practice to merely moisten with cold water some raw corn meal and then feed It in that way. Young chicks relish occasional feeds of cracked wheat and wheat screenings; while rice, well boiled, Is not only greedily eaten by the chicks, but is one of the very best things that can be given. It frequently happens that damaged lots of rice, or low grades of It, can be bought at low figures in the cities. As it Increases In bulk in cooking, It Is not an expensive food for young chicks even at the regular retail price, though it would not ordinarily pay to feed it to full-grown fowls very liberally or very frequent ly. In the absence of worms, bugs, etc., during the early spring, cheap parts of fresh beef can be well boiled and shredded up for the little chicks; but care must be taken not to feed more frequently than once In two days, and only then In moderation. Feeding meat Is very beneficial to young turkeys when they are "shooting" their first quill feathers, as then they require extra nourishment to repair the drain on Immature and weakly bodies. Youth and Age Will Not Mingle Well in Flock Conditions fatal to profits are developed In the poultry flock by allowing youth and age to mingle Indiscriminately In the runs and houses, according to Prof. L. F. Payne, head of the poultry department at the Kansas State Agricultural college. "If the pullets are fed enough for growing purposes," he explained, "the hens become fat and sluggish and If the hens are fed just sufficient to lay well the pullets starve." In the farm demonstration Hock at the college poultry fnrm the 75 best pullets are separated from the 50 best hens October 1 each year and are kept In separate compartments throughout the winter. Poultry Facts +4++*+**+*+++**++++*+++*++ Green feed is very essential in stltn( l ulating egg production. Early-hatched chicks will get a good start before hot weather and mature before winter. Raising chicks on fresh ground away from the farm flock lessens the danger of disease. * Too mature pullets can be held back by withdrawing all mash and feeding only grains, and this sparingly. Arrange the poultry breeding pens. A few more dollars spent for a highgrade rooster will be a good Investment. Resting and hardening the chicks before they are taken from the Incubator makes stronger, sturdier stock. ? Feed a dry mash and green feed so the hens will always have something to peck at without troubling the eggs. Please remember the Importance of fresh air. Poultry houses that are not ventilated are responsible for many poultry ailments. Under good conditions and management It Is estimated that at least five to six eggs toust be set for every pullet ready for service In the fall. A single pair of chicken lice will multiply .to 125,000 In eight weeks, under favorable conditions. That'a enough to bite up your whole flock. Actions often speak louder than examinations. The heavy layer la a busy hen. She rises early and works late. . * * * Trap nesting the laying hens In yoar poultry flock will help to eliminate the nonproductive birds, furnish definite knowledge concerning traits and habits of individual birds, help te tame each hen and add mechanical preclsloa te Judgment and experience la developing and maintaining the production of the flock. 4?r. with, ?ro^TB Are you i..me ln with headarU $*l disorders ? j ?,.,' '^tV*<fl couraged? thing wr-De weakness. r>)n-. your health ?+|V HtttfJ.B PUIS, a *V, neyfl. Do(iti\ \ '^ty and ?hou\l neighbor: p K. i'^lH fl A | '' ^^^1 backaci . were normal " "? DOAN'SM STIMULANT DIURETICTOlto-S I Footer-Mubcm C o., Ml|. X^ourHoiS \ rli- < 1 I Roa|J There is roaches of any siie whtm^H spray Ni-Late thorough. cording to directicwi. jct^H few whiffs and thty in JH their backs?DEAD. Ni-Late U quick, wt I death to every kind of >1 creeping- crawling insect \ I peat. It will not harm hie \ I man beings; animals or AH delicate fabrics. When jjj ipraycci, puiiuuiy Mil will not (tain. ~ VrJ M| Casta only 50c if/I lor Urgo bMtk wrtJi I Ml ftpirajrar Iraa //' V P^H I C any drug or grocery i store ff H jrl4^ B^H BUI ncn 900 ACRE PLlllfl Carolina River an! I Seven-room dwell.i.^; 4 - :H town. Excellent farm, .tfaN,-: Ing, fishing und duck da-Creil C. Phillips, Inc. Georg^o** | I AM IN TOITII WITH III MIE>H ttioneyed men and n.ar.ut.". :ur?r> J to buy pood Invention?' Ur Hr"4I Our? St.. Bangor. "IRRITATING * For quick, lasting re!ir! itching and burning, doctors j.tdiH ResinolB Outenherg jiri01 - ! > " <!H Bible?the lir-t I k ~-"M able type?but < :.!> H SureM| BELL-ans| FOR INDIGESTIOM 25<t and 75<t Pkgs.Sc uev H Mitchell * Eye ,hu Salve [S3 For SORE EV&M Boy*, Girl*. ?"?< *"> Creeling car?ia. H'tf 'r^", with picture folder. ^ 1 } 81.20 value aet. 7??o. j!?' Heiland. Square 11 a i s- : ! Virginia Ave Jer?^ FOR OVE&I 200 YEAR5! haarlem oil has been a ,1 wide remedy lOrKiUi-v tfl bladder disorders, rl:t'jrr,a . lumbago and unc acid cond1-' I ?0U>M1% I HAARLEM OIL correct internal troubles. organs. Three sires. All on the original genuine Gore ^ Full >Im: Mnt by ptrw paid, upon receipt of <?r bf . Prepared and &0'\kJ pb GEORGE W. JARCHOVV, f Maaafaetarfnx 'v'H ?|MB 8staU J
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 3, 1926, edition 1
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