Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / Feb. 19, 1926, edition 1 / Page 2
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FACE TWO The Cherokee Scout TV. Official Organ of Murphy and Cherokee County, North Carolina "PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY C. W. BAILEY Editor-Manager MRS. C. W. BAILEY. Aseociato Ed W. S1PE Aaeociata Ed. Entered in the postoffice at Murphy, North Carolina, as second class mail Blatter under act of Mar. 3, 1879. Subscription Rates One Year $1.50 Eight Months 1.00 8ix Months 75c Payable Strictly In Advance Legal advertisements, want ads. reading notices, obituaries, cards of thanks, etc, 5c line each insertion, payable in advance. Display and contract rates furnished on request. All corr.mur.i at ions must be signed by the write r, otherwise they will not ba accepted for publication. Name of the writer v. 1 r.ot 1"- published un- ! leas so specified, * ut we must have the name of the author as evidence of good faith. ~ The family tree grow? the most: huts. There i- n?. saturation point in progress. A statesman .? a politican awav, from home. Farm relief will C'me .1- ?=oon as the farms reieaf. The tv. ;ut: : v. "nan kind is from the Iv!l t the c liar. Every t wn has some fell w where equal to a whole quorum. People who can't real are not jnuch worse off than those who don't The door that is hardest to keep the wolf from is the one to the ltdin. A California man fainted when he saw a $100 bill. Put the bill was for groceries. The four corners of the earth are those on rubber, toffee, aluminum and gTain market. Music is the universal angu&ge which probably a. counts for the rattles and squeaks of the flivver car. "Wonder what the man who names Pullman cars calls his chi!-' dren?"?Columbia Record. Probably just plain diner-. General Pershing traveled all the way irom onam Amenva 10 n?\e his teeth fixed, which is setting a worthy example for everybody. Any merchant who does a credit business will tell you that along toward the last is when the debtors put the most stall in instalments. Correcting An Error In Last week's issue of The Scout, there appeared an error in the advertiament of Candler's PepartmenT Store. The item of boys $2.50 an . S3.50 wool sweaters should hav* been $1.08 instead of 19 cents. The Scout assumes full responsibility for this error, and correction is gladly made. FACTORYTOWN Mr. and Mrs. ?"arl Dockery and! Mrs. Neal Millsaps motored to Andrews Sunday. A son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dockery got badly hurt Sunday with a 7? dynamite cap. .vir. r-a nowen nro .Mr. mister Gibson have returned from Gastonia. Mrs. D. E. Freeman has returned from a visit to her son in Tennessee. Miss Ada Millsaps. wha has been visiting her sister in Maryville, Tenn. has returned. Misses Carrie and Mattie Dock#ry were Grape Creek visitors Saturday night. Mrs. Poley Wilcox has a bad case of the mumps. Mrs. Allen Davis and children arc the sick list. ' "===^=^=^= Bargain Pure Bn I B Three Years Ago . * ^-rf&jafdk* 433 ^y~ '' .... - W^n V1 J'.' Ai'LRt-HKKD Hire is the Prat st? I.arr'.we Institute of Animal i:< advunTirge ? prevaiSfng luw prices herds for greater production. A p' p.. sold fr.r an average of $433 a statistics ahow. f n y?*ar and another farmer one agricultural college survey It w Income on farms heading their he jeur. farms 'wing grade bulls retur J4*9 Put even as he breeds up bet profit from the oow? nn hand If hi feedlrn;. The average cow under o pr?fltuMy because her grain ration ?he 1- underfed or over?.ruffed with There are "poor" pure bred" a guarantees pure I lood. Dot result! ration and good management to st actual test ore what need to be wi Chicken Prices in Hi WltK.T TBCHO CP PI 7c5 POUND >?? 3 ? | "1.7 ;7T_3 _?*t_ r "Si ~ilr \ H BLCfiPTS ' to* LAW ASTKAIULY expanding market i In an average 1025 farm price i '.021. according to the 1025 market i i Econotnics. Prices for fowls on the I highest In late January when extra | then they have ranged between 35 when the usual heavy receipts of [ Price* then dropped to 21*3 cents 1 colder holiday season came on. Increased demand for poultry I some measure to a lesser cor.sum poultry epidemic In that year. Stoi a? r: pl.'.Iy during the past year as f continued good prices during I I taken from storage. '"oji.j arntlvely lower feed cosi 1 n rc?.'i! years the highest in tliii I "ndnsfrisil eondltl* ns In general poi I " ducts for another two years at Ic Cows Heart Pun Gallons MORE than 21,000 gallons of blc and 14 feet high?are puro Id twenty-four hours, according to tl Twenty to forty seconds are re<in circuit of the main circulatory syst The railroad engine deriving furnace, transforms the fuel Into n only derives all her power from th# farther, turns these materials Into A cow does not perform miracles, abundantly unless she herself Is fed hay and silage. This Is the only st scientists to keep the milk pall filler THE CHEROKEE SCO 11 sd Prices oost Dairying Profits | Today ? ^istofOR *-293 L:. .,,y. 13 ?eesu:>..-v y. - H? -'WW \\/.r. " ' ? ft >:. !t" ? ? '--"I I 111? juuoot r^?TnvTl or wm. icox s?p to profitable dairy :ng. according to the rocomlcs. which is urging farmers to t ke of good breeding s'ock to organize t: are bred bull and cow which three y? -t auction may now be obtained for y IfTerence between a farmer's labor lncc-?'a Income that Is twice that amount. In as found that whereas the average It" - ttJ? with ptire-bred hull* was JS37 In a ned a lsb<-T Income for the year of only ter cow?, the farmer can realize a greater e will hut give more attention to proper rdSrary farm condition* 1? not prodti' > i lacks milk-making ein-nta or been :? i poorly balanced fo?i s well ? "good." "Pedigree" alone - r y ?. It takes a food cow. a food d -y icceed Records of perfomu-.nce and tie itched In the?e day? of business farm it 1925 ghest in Four Years <ltl CF *CNS IT fcCV TOP* UW JOL iUS HS-QCT MOV Dtc RgClhAifi ?' """, u*o;si sawitt "HiUiCni >* ?cwg I VSTiTUTE or A.-.1MAI ECONOMICS * [or tuble poultry in r*-ceat years resulted ter chicken <?f cents, the highest 'luce review of the Larrowe Institute of animal New York market during the year were quality reached 37 cents u pound. KJhee cents and 24 cents until early November this time of the year began to be felt, i a pound, but recovered rapidly as the In 1925 over the prevloos year Is due In iptlon In 1924. mused by n wide-spread rage stocks of poultry did not accumulate they did In 1924. which Is an Indication the spring mcmhs when this poultry Is ts since 1929 have made ponltry profits ty years. Present market demands and at to good prices for poultry and poultry ast. 71 CflO ipo ^ A^UUU of Blood Every Day kkI?enough to till h tank 14 feet square ped through the average cow's heart >e Larrowe Institute of Animal Economics I red for the blood to make n complete em. Its power from the coal burned in Its ijechanlcal energy, hut the dairy cow not ? grain, hay and grass she consumes, hut. hlood and milk, which is made of *>l??od and her "milk factory" will not produce plentifully on a tested gra'n ration, good ire and safe method as yet discovered bj 9 month after month. r. MURPH> N\ w. I I I BIG RE! I IN CLOSEE h Effective i Tudor 520Coupe 500Fordor 565J Demand fr.r Ford Closed Car* introduced has been eons Lai r" of these types production c policy of the ccmpany to jpv< I;, reductions. 1 NFW OPF.F Touring Car $31 Starter and Den Ti actor, Car and Truck Alt prict CHA THEATRE 1 In 10 reels Monday and 1 Show Starts: Matin< 25c ADA 1 ? FRIDAY. FEBRUARY l? lf>t 7FCC> I DUCTION I ) CAR PRICES f f February, 11th ces Old Price Reduction M 00 580-00 C0-00 oo 520?? 2000 I oo 660?? 95?? B ?ince the improved Type? in colors were B illy increasing. With greater output os<r have been lessened and it is the l-j > its customers the benefits of all such B M CAR PRICES I ! 0 00 Runabout $290-?? I tountable Rims $85 Extra ? | Chassis prices remain unchanged a F. O. B. Detroit B I Detroit, Mich. 1 ' IP RLIElPLIN Hftybh. in Iff GOLD IJ RUSH I. (2 Dramatic Comedy I yVritten and Directed by ' Charlie Chaplin , rJ 1 } Man's Greed Fop gold turned into comedy that will rock you with laughter. Hardships Of the Klondike stampede made to seem uproariously funny. U-... ^ - - n nunger rangs The basis of antics so clever that they make you forget pain. LovesicUness Becomes Hie foundation for Chaplin tricks that rouse hilarity. / Blizzards Switched into boisterous gates and blustery shouts of glee. / Freezing Cold Brings the warmth of laughter that never ceases, atwaus increases. ^ ^ * MURPHY, N. C. 'uesday February 22nd and 23rd | :es 2 P. M. Nighls 7 P. M. I MISSION 50c I
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1926, edition 1
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