Newspapers / Polk County News and … / April 30, 1925, edition 1 / Page 3
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rC % D a! . t:d UpTER IV? Continued ? . r sown. .... i. ' - u T'u' ? ? ? : r. hack * . .. ; . Why .... ? > soap i .. ? ? t ? .? hlil* j ^ <> .vine to hi". I'cikf : hat s who. I :\.v> ; ? : 1 ! * ? ? 1 by a j : * a .r : her as she 1 \ : r .'.'I t>' set?. : r. S: e put up u W: af':a I bid ! ? ? - !.??!> :.>\v!\ little >? .- her \:\ 11 Johannes >? r Ti ?? tittering , _-u:v . a. Selina was fee! ing nt the j T! r-'Ugh the haze J : -a < iii ? longer rt? ? w . She saw k I.e.. 1. I lis face was !!?? was coming ryl: j !". hut the crowd i.: ??; he was among ;?>. Si:*? h.<t sight of fc *V ? ? v. Soaieone had - ?? - \ ; : n > ! -? >">! teeter ? - ? ? ?- : -cssed against ? Pervus I >e ? ? ! i level with r. s- ? ; for all ? I ! f >r this lovely ; ' ; !?y tlie school far : a: !>. Five cents ! a i'vrvu? I >e.?oug. : - were suddenly I H : ( 1 Prairie's >' -a'.stanent. its ! ? : : ?- ; a .iS.njt Selina '? - ?**??! A.'S held high. ? - ? ::. ide a vivid ?* wine-colored '?? ! . i Johannes r. Selina. ?? :.??>< struggled Adaia Ooms' auctioneer " : The term :.s unknown - rf:st enough | ? :ri?us magic t!ils room* ' ransformed ? ? ' ? 1 a thing ? :::*?> an object ?' finite desir : ?* a a catalepsy is box all ' the gown ' ients, you aal the girl. : : all that. ??-r, it ain't it pleases i . t;? i, of Low I ?ing \ oung ! ?!' the dis ?' i iyrnarket ;.'i played - '? under the girls of ?' ?hi :n vain. - >n?' now ? 'he crowd. ' --?*?' laughed ? "' !ar hid. ' high clear 1 ' ?? "!<!. Hut | ''h e Roeif | '?hat he had | " eents In ! dollar* j ? t hut his j ? a* months - 't's look of ! -??r. Saw ?n his arm, ? I >? Jong. "? ijuI's cau 1 hi rend De ' ? g. , ? h voice of ' ' "ii t he last - aU^heU. "Three-three-three-three-three - three tliree. Three once ? " "And a half.'' I'ervus Pe.Tong. "Three sixty." "lour!" I>eItoo. * "And ten. The hoy's voice was heard no more. "1 wish they'd stop," whispered. Selina. 1 "Five!" Pervus DeJong. "Six !" DeRoo, his face very red. "And ten." "Seven !" "It's only Jelly sandwiches," said Selina to I Wong, In a panic. "Klght!" Johannes Ambuul, gone mad. "Nine!" DeRoo. "Nine! Nine I'm bid! Nlne-nlne nlne! Who'll make It ? " "Let him have it. The cup cakes fell a little. I>on't ? " "Ten !" said I'ervus DeJong. Itarend DeRoo shrugged his great shoulders. "Ten-ten-ten. Do I hear eleven? Do I hear ten-ttfty. Ten ten-ten tententen tentententen ! Gents! Ten once. Ten twice! (lone? for ten dollars to I'er vus DeJong. And a bargain." Adam Ooms mopped his bald head and his cheeks and the damp spot under bis chin. Ten dollars. Adam Ooms knew, as did all (the countryside, this was not the sum of ten dollars merely. No basket of food, though it contained nightingales* tongues, the golden apple of Atalanta. wines of rare vintage, could have been adequate recompense for these ten dollars. They represented sweat and blood; toll and hardship; hours under the burning prairie sun at midday ; work doggedly carried on through the drenching showers of spring ; nights of restless sleep snatched an hour at a time under the sky in the Chicago market place; miles of weary travel down the rude corduroy road between High Prairie and Chica go. now up to the hubs in mud, now blinded by dust and blowing sand. A sale at Christie's, with a miniature going for a million, could not have met with a deeper hush, a more dramatic babble following the hush. They ate their lunch together in one corner of Adam Ooms' hall. Selina opened the box and took otit the deviled eggs, and the cup cakes that had fallen a little, and the apples, and the sandwiches sliced very, ver*' thin. The coldly appraising eye of all High Prairie, how Prairie, and New Haar lem watched this sparse provender emerge from the ribbon-tied shoe box. She ofTered him a sandwich. It looked infinitesimal in his great paw. Sud denly all Selina's agony of embarrass ment was swept away, and she was laughing, not wildly or hysterically, hut Joyously and girlishly. She sank her little white teeth Into one of the absurd sandwiches and looked at him. expecting to And him laughing, too. But he wasn't laughing. He looked very earnest, and his blue eyes were tixed hard on the bit of bread In his hand, and his face was very red and clean-shaven. He bit Into the sand wich and chewed it solemnly. And Selina thought: "Why. the dear thing! The great big dear thing! And he might have been eating breast of duck. . . . Ten dollars!" Aloud she said. "What made you do it?" He seemed not to hear her; bit ruminantly into one of the cup cakes. Suddenly: "I can't hardly write at all, [only to sign my name and like that," "Head?" "Only to spell out the words. Any ways I don't get time for reading. But figuring I wish I knew. 'Rlthmetlc. I can figger some, but those fellows In Haymarket they are too sharp for me. They do numbers In their bead like that, so quick." Selina leaned toward him. 'I 11 teach you. I'll teach you. ' "How do you mean, teach me?" "Evenings." He looked down at his great cal loused palms, then up at her. "What would you take for pay? "I'ay! I don't want any pay." She was genuinely shocked. His face lighted up with a sudden thought. "Tell you what. I could start for you the fire, mornings, in the school. And thaw the pump and bring in a pail of water. This month, and January and February and part of March, 'even, now I don't go to market on account It s winter, I could start you the fire. Till spring. And I could come maybe three times a week, evenings, to Pool's place, for lessons.' He looked so helpless, so humble, so huge; and the more pathetic for his hugeness. She felt a little rush of warmth toward him that was at once Imper sonal and maternal. She thought again. "Why, the dear thing! The great helpless big thing! How serious h0 Is! And funny." She laughed, sud denly, a gay little laugh, and he, after a puzzled pause. Joined her companion ahiy. , ? . "Three evenings a week, repeated Selina, then, from the depths of her Ignorance. "Why, I'd love to. I'd love to." Chapter V The evenings turned out to be Tues days, Thursdays, and Saturdays. Sup per was over by slx-thlrty in the Pool household. Pervus was there by seven, very clean as to shirt, his hair brushed till it snone; shy, and given to droD plug his hat and bumping against chairs, and looking solemn. Sellna was torn between pity and mirth. If only he had blustered. A blustering hip man puis the world on the defensive. A gentle giant disarms it. Selinu got out her McBrlde's gram mar and Duffy's arithmetic, and to gether they started to parse verba, paper walls, dig cisterns, and extract square roots. They found study Im possible at the oilcloth-covered kitchen table, with the Pool household eddying about It. Jakob built a Are in the parlor stove and there they sat, teacher and pupil, their feet resting cosily on the gleaming nickel railing that encir cled the wood burner. On the evening of the first lesson lloelf had glowered throughout sup per and had disappeared Into the work shed, whence Issued a great sound of hammering, sawing, and general clat ter. He and Sellna had got into the way of spending much time together, In or out of doors. The boy wor shiped her Inarticulately. She had early discovered that he had a feeling for beauty ? beauty of line, texture, | color, and grouping ? that was rare in one of liis years. The feel of a satin ribbon in his lingers ; the orange and rose of a sunset ; the folds of the wine red cashmere dress; the cadence of a spoken line, brought a look to his face that startled her. J Since the gathering at 6oms' hall he had been moody anil sullen ; had refused to' answer when she spoke to him of his hid for her basket. Urged, he would only say, "Oh, It was just fun to make old Ooms mad." Now, with the advent Of Pervus De Jong, lloelf presented that most touch ing aud miserable of spectacles, a small boy Jealous and helpless In his Jealousy. Sellna hail asked him to Join the tri-weekly evening lesriona; had. Indeed. Insisted that he be a pupil In the class round the parlor stove. Itoelf would not. lie disappeared Into his work-shed after supper; did not emerge until after DeJong's de parture. There was something about the sight of this great creature bent laboriously uver a slate, the pencil held clumsily in his huge fingers, that moved Sellna strangely. Pity wracked her. If she had known to what emotion this pity was akin she might have taken away ^esu^ "Gone! ? for Ten Dollars to Pervus DeJong." i the slate and given him a tablet, and j the whole course of her life would have been different. "Poor lad." she thought. "Poor lad." Chided herself for being amused at his childlike earn estness. He did not make an apt pupil, though painstaking. Selina would go over a problem or n sentence again and again, patiently, patiently. Then, suddenly, like a'lhand passed over his face, his smile would come, transforming it. He would smile like a child, and Selina should have been warned by the warm rush op Joy that his smile gave her. She vyould smile, too. He was as pleased as though he had made a fresh and wonderful discovery. "Its easy," he would suy, "when you know it once." Like a boy. He usually went home by eight-thir ty or nine. Often the Pools went to bed before he left. After he had gone Selina was wakeful. She would bent water and wash ; brush her hair vig orously; feeling at once buoyant and depressed. Sometimes they fell to talking, ills wife had died in the second year of their marriage, when the child was born. The child, too, had died. A girl. He was unlucky, like that. It was the same with the farm. Selina's heart melted in pity. He would look down at the great cal loused hands ; up at her. One of the charms of Pervus DeJong lay In the things that bis eyes said und his tongue did not. Women always Imagined he was about to say what he looked, but he never did. It made otherwise dull conversation with him most exciting. His was In no way a shrewd mind. His respect for Sellna was almost rev erence. But he had this advantage: he had married a woman, had lived with her for two years. She had borne him a child. Sellna was a girl In ex perience. She was a woman capable of a great deal of passion, hut she did j ; not know that. I'asslon was a thing > no woman possessed, much less talked about. It simply did not exist, except In men, and then It was something to j be ashamed of, like a violent temper, ( or a weak stomach. By the first of March he could speak a slow, careful and fairly grammatical English. He could master simple sums. By the middle of March the leu- , sons would cease. There was too much work to do about the farm ? j night work as well as day. She found herself trying not to think about the ? time when the lessons should cease, i She refused to look ahead to April. One night, late in February, Sellna ( was conscious that she was trying to | control something. She was trying to keep her eyes away from something. She realized that she was trying not , to look at his hands. She wanted. j crazily, to touch them. She wanted to feel them about her throat. She want ed to put her lips on his hands? brush the hacks of them, slowly, molstily, with her mouth, lingerlngly. She was terribly frightened. She thought to herself : "I am going crazy. I am los ing my mind. There Is something the matter with me. I wonder how I look. I must look queer." At half-past eight she closed her book suddenly. "I'm tired. I think It's the spring coming on." She smiled a little wavering smile. He rose and stretched himself, his great arms high above his head. Sellna shivered. "Two more weeks," he snld, "Is the last lesson. Well, do you think I have done pretty good ? well?" "Very well," Sellna replied evenly. She felt very tired. The first week in March he was 111, | and did not come. A rheumatic affile- j tlon to which he was subject. It was the curse of the truck farmer. Sellna's ! evenings were free to devote to Itoelf, who glowed ajgaln. She sewed, too; read ; helped Mrs. Pool with the house- j work In a gust of sympathy and found strange relief therein; made over an old dress; studied; wrote all her let- ! ters (few enough), even one to the dried-apple aunts in Vermont. She no j longer wrote to Julie Hempel. She had heard that Julie was to be mar ried to a Kansas man named Arnold. Julie herself had not written. The first week In March passed. He did not come. Nor did he come the fol- , lowing Tuesday or Thursday. She was bewildered, frightened. All j that week she had a curious feeling? | or succession of feelings. She was ; restless, listless, by turns. Period of j furious activity, followed by days of inertia. It was the spring. Maartje | said. Sellna hoped she wasn't going to be 111. She had never felt like that before. She wanted to cry. She was | irritable to the point of waspishness j with the children in the schoolroom, j On Saturday? the fourteenth of March? he walked In at seven. Klaas, Maartje and Itoelf had driven off to j a gathering at Low Prairie, leaving , Sellna with the pigtails and old Jakob. ; She had promised to make taffy for ? them, and was In the midst of It when | his knock sounded at the kitchen door. All the blood In her body rushed to her head; pounded there hotly. He en tered. There slipped down over her a complete armor of calmness, of self possesslon ; of glib how do you do Mr PeJong and how are you feeling ana j won't you sit down and there's no fire in the parlor we'll have to sit here. He took part In the taffy pulling. Sellna wondered If Geertje and Jozlna j would ever have done squealing. It ( i was half-past eight before she bundled j them off to bed with a plate of clipped , ! taffy lozenges between them. She beard them scuffling and scrimmaging about In the rare freedom of their parents' absence. Pervus DeJong and Sellna sat at I the kitchen table, their books spread out before them on the oilcloth. The ( sweet, heavy scent of fruit filled Ihe room. Sellna brought the parlor j tump into the .kitchen, the better to , see. It was a nickel-bellied lamp, j with a yellow glass shade that cast a j mellow golden glow. "You didn't go to the meeting, primly. "Mr. and Mrs. Pool went. "No. I didn't go." "Why not?" She saw him swallow. I g?">t through too late. We're fixing to sow tomato seeds In the hotbeds tomor- | row." Well, it looks as if Pervus was | the man. Who does the propos ing ? Pervus or Selina? (TO BE CONTINUED.) Bad People Not So Plenty I have heard all my days warning of bad men and women, but know a few; and I have reached three-score and ten. I have traveled far, and haven't much farther to go, but upon my honor the rarest thing I know Is a completely had man or woman. ? E. W. Howe, the Atchison Globe Man. In Col lier's. Pottery Maker Must Be Skilled in Art Thrown pottery Is shaped on a rap Idly revolving disk. The propnratlon of the cltfy !s a scientific process. The ingredient?" ? t>all clay, flint powder, feldspar and kaolin ? are carefully se lected arid welched In certain propor tions, so that th?y will fuse properly and hecom.' ^ufflflentiy hard when shaped and tired, lbe mixture Is left to stand until thoroughly soaked and then la lawned through fine linen and dumped Into <1 plaster box which ab sorbs the water and leaves the clay in condition to be beaten. All the air bubbles must be driven out of the ball of clay before It is placed on the throwing wheel. Workers In pottery delight In the touch of the plastic clay as It spins upon the disk. The thumbs make the inside of the object while the extended fingers shape the walls. After the work of art Is properly shaped It Is put Into a plaster box to become "leather bard" and Is then finished or turned. The plain objects finally are ornamented and placed In the fire oven, and a still later baking process puts on the desired glaze. Legal Punning By this Is not meant punning which is legal? for there Is no pun that the ; law authorizes ? but punning by, mem- I bers of the profession which calls Itself legal. A judge In New York was listening patiently to an argumentative conflict over the amount of a fee claimed by a counsel. At the close of the conten tion lie remarked: "Let me have your papers and the Affidavits of the expert, and I will gee - what is feasible as to the fee, and will endeavor to see my way clear to a just solution between the contention on the one side that the fee is a phenomenal one, and on the other side that there should not b; -a n- mlnal fee." WIW? QtMWB - .1 I I I II I ? "JUNE BUDDING" AS ? TIME-SAVING PLAN "June budding" does not, as the tern, might imply, necessarily mean budding that Is done during the month of June, although this i? the conception most fruit growers have. Instead, It refers to budding done usually during the early summer, the bud growing the same season. In other words, the process of budding completed, growth com mences soon after. It so happens In most sections thlN budding is best done during the month of June. How ever, in other sections late May may be the best time and in still others, July. The time to do "June budding" will vary with the year and the con dition of the stock. Although success can be had when employing "June budding" on all de ciduous fruit trees, best results are obtained with the peach. The chief advantage of "June bud ding" lies in the fact that a fruit tree can be propagated from seed to readiness for orchard planting in one year's time, while if a bud was In serted In late summer, according to the usual practice, a second season ! would be necessary for It to grow in to a tree. The root of a "June-bud ded" tree Is only one year old, while the root of a fail-budded tree Is two I years old at the time of planting In I the orchard. The advantage of the one-year root Is that it Is smaller and j that more of it therefore remains In tact when removal from the nursery takes place. There are three requisites for "June budding" : 1. The seedlings must be large enough early In the season to be bud- 1 ded conveniently. 2. The bark must slip readily. 3. The desired dormant buds must be available. Sometimes they are not mature enough to use In May or early June. About ten days after the bud has been inserted, the string holding It In place should be cut so as not to cut the rapidly growing tree. Immediately after cutting, the seedling should be bent over and broken about four inches above the bud. Care should be taken not to completely sever this top portion, but to allow a few strands of wood to remain intact. Complete re moval of this portion of the tree at this time will cause the hud to be "drowned out" owing to too much sap going to ; the bud. As soon as the bud has j started to grow vigorously, the top I should be cut off ubout one-half Inch ; above the growing bud. Given the j proper conditions, the young tree i should be large enough to plant In the orchard the following winter. Removing Weak Canes Is Best for Berry Patch Some Interesting results have been obtained from raspberry pruning In vestigations carried on by the depart ment of horticulture of the Michigan agricultural experiment station. While the results obtained seem to be ap plicable to Michigan conditions, the same methods might not prove to be of value under different climatic and growing conditions. The first thing to determine when pruning a black raspberry plant is the number of canes to leave. The results of this investi gation show that ttie number will vary with the vigor #f the plant. Strong, vigorous canes should be left, while the weak, spindly canes should be re moved. Some plants will be able to handle six or seven canes while others should only have two or thtee. The size of the cane Is of great Importance. The larger the cane the better when both total yield and size of fruit are considered. Canes 10-32 of an inch In diameter (at a point six inches above the ground) had an average yield of 0.16 ounces, while canes 18-32 of an Inch in diameter had an average yield of 8.92 ounces. When the size of the cane Increased to 21-32 of an Inch the average yield also increased to 12.47 ounces. Clover Is Satisfactory Cover Crop for Grapes Nearly all of the clovers have made very satisfactory cover crops for vine yards. A few varieties of clover, how ever, make a slow start In the spring and may, during unfavorable seasons, make a rather short crop to turn un der. The crop selected should be one which will give good growth In your locality. Hubam clover Is probably as good a green manure crop as can b# produced In one year. It may be planted as late as August first and still produce an abundant growth before frost. It may then be plowed under about the first or middle of May the following spring. Spray for Scale Insects Where young trees become Infested with scale Insects, a strong spray of lime-sulphur Is necessary. If the li quid lime-sulphur is used, eight gal lons should be diluted in each 50 gal lons of water. Where the powdered form Is used, 15 pounds are necessary for 50 gallons. This spray must be strong in order to get these protected s<*ile insects. It Is so strong, in fact, that If it were applied during the grow ing season, it would seriously burn the foliage of the trees. Time for Spraying It takes only about two hours to spray 20 to 30 trees with a barrel sptayer, and the materials for sprky ing will cost but 3 to 4 cents per tree, per spray. A combination spray consisting of one pound of lead arsen ate and one and a half gallons of lime sulphur to 50 gallons of water Is used first when the flowers show pink, but before they have opened, again after the petals are all off, a third time two to three weeks later, and a fourth time the latter part of July. POULTRY etts POULTRY DAMAGED BY DISINFECTANTS (Prepared by fhe United States Department of Agriculture.) As a result of the widespread use of cheap coal tar products with a strong carbolic acid odor for disinfect ing poultry houses and coops, large quantities of poultry contaminated with the odor have been received at some of the big markets. The bureau of animal Industry, United States De partment of Agriculture, has received complaints from handlers of market poultry who have suffered heavy losses because of the unsalability of tainted fowl, one lur^e firm reporting a loss of $10,000 on four cars.* Because of the appearance of Euro pean fowl pests in certain parts of the country, farmers throughout the East and Middle West, through fear of this disease, have been doing much more disinfecting than usual. In many instances chemicals with strong and offensive odors have be?P used, many of them not In the list approved by the department, and In some cases the results have been aggravated by the failure to dilute the product. Iilrds kept in houses so treated, or shipped In crates reeking with the odors, ab sorb them into their bodies, where they remain after the birds have been killed and dressed. It Is thought that another source of the contamination j In dressed birds may have been feed on which the chemicals have been sprayed. When such penetrating odors are present in the disinfectant used the birds should not be marketed with- | in less than two weeks of the time It was used and then not In crates re cently so treated. Coops and poultry houses should al ways be thoroughly cleansed before disinfecting. A good plan Is where possible to smib the Interior with hot lye solution or scalding hot water. Such cleaning solutions are themselves good disinfectants. If scalding hot water is not available, the coops may be disinfected with a 4 per cent solu tion of formaldehyde. Wrhlle this dis infectant has a very pungent, disagree able smell, the odor soon disappears. If the poultry are marketed for sev eral weeks a three per cent solution of compound solution of creosol or a product of similar compositon may be employed. Any coal tar disinfectant Is apt to leave an odor which will gradually disappear. , Many cheap products are now bein^ sold In response to the unusual de mand which has arisen since the ap pearance of the fowl pest. In certain sections peddlers are taking advantage of the situation und are going to the farms with a great variety of cheap disinfectants, sometimes doing the work for the farmer. Sonire of them are selling strong smelling by-producls from local gas plants. The department wishes to encourage efforts at disease prevention, even though much of this work is being done in regions far removed from any point where fowl pest has been found, but urges farmers to Use ttie abov? mentloned methods, which will not leave a taint In the fowls when offered to the consumer. Sodium Fluorid Useful in Treating Poultry Sodium fluorid Is an Insecticide used in treating poultry for lice by plac ing just a small bit of It at different points in the feathers of the fowl where lice are usually found. A1-. though it is a poisonous substance, the poultry do not seem to get enough of ft into their digestive system to cause trouble. If used on cattle there would be more danger of poisoning, because cattle would be more likely to get it into their digestive system by licking themselves. For cattle a mixture of one-half powdered sabadllln seed and one-hafT sulphur Is favored. This can be spread along the backs and necks of cattle where the lice are most likely to be, and will be found quite effective in keeping them In check so that they will cause ve^y little trouble to the cattle. Poultry Facts Caponize the cockerels. ? ? * Goslings nj;ver eat much during the first few day^. ? ? * Chicks given the rigbt kind of start in life ha? many advantages over those receiving only Indifferent care. ? * ? It is very important not fn fped the poults too heavily, especially the first few weeks. Keep them Just a little hungry. ? ? ? Buttermilk Is an almost Indispensa ble feed for growing chicks and may be given In *.ny one of a number of forms. ? ? ? Pullets which are well grown and matured are the ones which make profitable layers during the coming winter. <? ? ? ? Young turkeys seem to have a great fondness for new corn when it Is just past the milk stage, and they prob ably .'ould not get anything that is worse for them If they wanted to. , ? ? * Geese are about the hardiest of all domestic fowls. They require less at tention and little or no outlay for housing. However, they must be raised under right conditions to give the best returns, so one must understand their nature and how to care for them. ? ? ? By providing plenty of oyster shell and feeding the scratch grain in litter so hens will be kept busy, much of the egg eating can be prevented in the poultry flock. Feeding a balanced ra tion and darkening the nests so the bens cannot see the egg will also helo. AVEEK Put in aNcW Set of Champions Next week, more than 95,000 equipment dealers will assist you toward greater motoring economy with a special Champion Spark Plug week. 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Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 30, 1925, edition 1
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