Newspapers / Polk County News and … / April 30, 1925, edition 1 / Page 6
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Liquid Protects Metals To prevent flu* rusting 'of metals J used in construction, a NVw York manufacturer recently perfected a ! transparent liquid preservative that forms a tou^ii, invisible. protective f skin on the surface to which it is applied with a brush. The Gentle Art "I did not provoke her. 1 hit her and pulled out her hair in self-de- j fense," said :i Willesden witness. ? Tit-Bits. Alabastine Genuine Alabastine comes only in package with CYojj and Circle printed in Red. Demand the best costs a little more than Kalsomine but it's worth more. And it won't ruboff when properly applied. Full instructions on every package. Ask your dealer for the Alabastine colorcard or write Miss Ruby Brandon, the Ala bastine Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Alabastine ? a powder in white and tint?. Packed in 5-pound packages, ready for use by mix ing with cold or warm water. Full directions on every package. Ap ply with an ordinary wall brusn. Suitable for all interior surface* -^-piaster, wall board, brick* cement, or canvas. but Oh, die difference ! Iheiltmost QUALITY Proof o* the biscuits is in the baking. There's more than luck in good cook ing and here's the secret ? a perfect baking powder. The utmost quality in a 25 ounce can for 25 centSe FREE ? Our big 44*paKe Cook Book. Send 10c to coyer cost ofl mailing. TWi Kentaa Bakiaf P?w Jrr Co. Ciociaamii, Obi* 50 years of Success GOULDS PUMPS AND WATER SYSTEMS V/rite for booklet D giving detail* of our complete line of elec tric end enginedriven pump* and water sys tem* for every need. The Goulds Manufacturing Co. Seneca Falls. N. Y. IClearThePor.es! Of Impurities With CuticuraSoap! iSotp. Ointment. Talcum sold ererywhere. SORE EYES k-vi' Lofton relieves and caros sore and InflamM eyes In It to i8 boars. Helps the weak eyed, euros without pain. Aak tout draggist or dealer for BA I, TICK'S. Only jffP Jteform Dlspousary , I . O. Buz 141, Atlanta, liv IMPORTANT NEWS THE WORLD OVER IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THI? AND OTHER NATIONS FOR SEVEN OA Y8 GIVEN * THE NEWS JJf_ THE SOUTH What la Taking Waoa In THa Boutin land Will B? Found In Brief Paragraph* Foreign ? Twenty-five thousand holy year pil trrims will ser? Pope Plus celebrate mass In St. Peter's cathedral In the near future. Afterward the holy fa ther will bless the assembled throng. It has been found Impossible for his holiness to receive all the holv year pilgrims In the papal chambers, so that pontifical high mass has been arranged Joseph ? Caillaux has won the pre Uminarv skirmish to force France to accept him as a minister cf the gov ernment. The chamber of deputies voted confidence In the financial pol icies of the Painleve cabinet after many hours of debate, much of which had to do with Oaillaux's fitness to be minister of finance. Miss Lucile Parker of Birmingham. Ala . secretary to the American high commissioner. Admiral Bristol, was married to Franklin W. Bell of Ral eigh. X. C.. a director of the Gary Tobacco company, recently in the American embassy at Constantinople. Captain Yankoff. who is alleged to have b-^en the head of the consp'racy for the bombing of the Sveti Krai ca thedral. Sofia. Bulgaria, was later kill ed by the police. When the officers discovered his hiding place and called upon him to surrender he replied by opening fire upon them and throwing several bombs at them. Tie was drop ped by their return fusillade. Three labor members of th,-? Brit ish parliament who" arrived recently in Belgrade. Jugo-Slavla. from Sof!a. | Bulgaria, asserted that th^v wore con- I vlnced that several hundred people were killed without trial and on the merest presumption after the recent j bomb explosion in the cathedral at Sof:a. Edouard Herriot, former pnm<? min ister of France, was elected to the coveted presidency of the chamber of dvnities in one of the stormiest j roppcjor.s ever staged by that hodv. Finally his election was made unanl- ] mous. however. The Soviet Russian government re- l centlv made a further confession to the farmers by agr^einc to allow them to employ =a'aried laborers on their farms. A cororor's jury has returned a ver- J diet of willful murder in the doath of j Crace Blakaller. the 16-vearold danc ing teach( r who was found with her | throat cut huddled on the steps of ( her mother's home in London. Eng- i land. April 11. Frnest Rhodes. IS- ] year-old Cifrman valet, told the p-dlce he slashed tho girl with a razor during a fit of jealousy. Washington ? Ry tendering an apointment as mln- I ister to Roumanla to Vire Chairman i W S. Culbnrtson of the tariff commis sion, President Coolldge has taken an other step In a series looking toward elimination of inside friction in the various hoards and commissions. Comparison of cost of producing but ter in this country and Denmark was recently made by the tariff commis sion's investigators. The report was attacked as unfair to Denmark in tes timony given to the commission by Soren Sorensen. adviser to the Danish legation. The hearings were called to consider the application of Ameri can producers for an Increase of 50 per cent in the butter tariff War on obscene and historically in accurate mov'es was urged before the Daughters of the American Revolution in a renort from Mrs. Mary E. Newton Raldwin. chairman of tbf* committee on better films. The cruise of a section of the Unit ed States fleet to Australia this sum mer will be conducted. Secretary Wil bur says, notwithstanding a few scat tering protests received from Ameri I can citizens and organizations. Representative William A. Oldfield I Is in a fair way for listing In Wash | ington's super-fan club." Recovering I | at a local hospital from an Illness ! j which necessitated a serious opera- j | 'ion, ho filed a request that he be | I kept advised of the score by innings | of the Washington-New York ^ame. j i The progress of the game was delayed j I to the hosital ward as fast as it be came available. A disatch from Manila says that Pri vate William J. Johnson of the 75th ordnance company, was found guilty recently by court martial and sentenc nd to be banged for the murder of ; Private William Willou.ghby of the ' same companv on March 10 Tho landing detachment of 1G5 of j fleers and m<-n from tbe light cruiser I Denver has been withdrawn from Cel I ba, Honduras. Withdrawal w;is ef ! feeted and was made possible by the i arrival of Honduran government sol I db'rs to reinforce the units at the port. A renewal of attempts to get a re duction in Fullman surcharges re cently was begun before the inter state commerce commission by the International Federation of Commer cial Travelers' organizations. The arrival of the U. S. S. Seattle, flagship of Admiral Robert E. C. Coontz. commander-in-chief of the Pnltcd States fleet, Honolulu news dispatches recite, has spurred the "black" force commanders to final efforts to make the Island of Oahu Im pregnable against the attack of the "blue" fleet now approaching Hawaii I Users of motor vehicle fuel upon which state taxes are levied may de duct these taxes in their federal in tomp returns provided the vehicle Is en. ployed for business purposes. Prescient Coolidpe recently contin ued his exploration into the lighter side of the theater by attending & per formance of the Greenwich Vil'age Fril lies at Poll's theater in Washington the other night. What is believed to have been a world's record for two-way radio tele graph communication was established the other day between the naval re search and experimental laboratory In Washington and Sydney, Australia. Domestic ? New Orleans. ? Mortimer M. Elkan of Macon. Oa? nationally known civil engineer, died at the home of his fa ther here recently after an illness of several weeks. He was noted as an authority on bridge construction. Marcus J. Parrott, member of the New York cotton exchange for forty years, and one of the best known men in the cotton trade in New York, died of pneumonia the other day at his apartment in the Touraine. Dank robbery insurance has been raised from 60 to 150 per cent In Mis souri, Kansas. Oklahoma. Illinois and Michigan, it Is anounced at Kansas City, Mo.. Insurance offices. The defense of Senator Burton K. Wheeler was begun at Great Falls, Mont., with the introduction of testi mony intended to clear him of a charge of appearing illegally before the department of the interior. Admission to bail of D. C. Stephen son. Earl Klinck and Earl Gentry, the I trio held on a charge of first degree murder in connection with the death one week ago of Miss Madge Oberholt zer. of Indianapolis, Ind., was asked in a petition filed by their attorney. Judge Collins said he would hear tho petition later I Police Captain Charles Hemard. a i principal in the "frame-up" row which ! has shaken New Orleans' police de partment for several weeks, and who was to have gone to trial with Chief of Detectives Healy and other officers, was found in the bathroom of his ' home by his wife with a bullet in his temple, believed to have been aelf j inflicted. The Rt. Rev. William Montgomery ! Hrown, of OalUon. Ohio, former blsh j op of Dallas of the Protestant Epis I copal church, recently convicted of j heresy by two ecclesiastical trial courts, recently delivered the address which Hlshop William T. Manning of the Diocese of New York forbade him to give at St. Marks-on-the-Rouwerie. He spoke at the non-denominational Community church In New York City, and admitted that he was undoutbedly a heretic when Judged by theological standards. Henry Ford and the Dearborn Pub lishing company, of which he is the nwnpr, were named defendants in a million dollar libel suit the other day at Detroit by Aaron Saplro, of co operative marketing fame. The body of Floyd Collins, cave ex plorer. who died from hunger and exposure when trapped in San Cave late in January, has been freed from its natural underground prison and moved from beneath the rock that pin ned It to the bottom of the 70-foot shaft. W. H. Hunt. Central City. Ky.. engineer informs the press. Five persons, including Marjorie Rambeau, the actress, wore overcome by fumes and 200 more were marooned in a large Times square office build ing, New York City, when an ammo nia pipe burst in the basement. In four years the bureau of the bud get has pruned from executive esti mates a total of $1,203,771,929, Brig Gen. H. M. Lord, director of the na tional budget, announced in a recent address to the Chicago Association of Commerce. Putting the entire story of his con nection with Gordon Campbell, Monta na oil operator, in the hands of the Jury that will decide whether or not he wrongfully used his Influence be fore a government department, Sena tor Burton K. Wheeler, on the witness stand at Great Falls, Mont. In his o,wn behalf, admitted that he had discuss ed one oil land permit with the depart ment of the interior officials. The nationally-famous Salt Air re sort on the shore of the Great Salt Lake, 20 miles west of Salt Lake City, was recently gutted by fire and the damage is estimated at a million dol lars. The resort was famous becauBe in its waters it was impossible for bathers to sink. Frank Brittain of Kansas City, Mo., was recently nominated as governor of the fifteenth district of the Rotary International. An organized effort, It is announc ed, is already under way to have the federal government take over the Rankhead National highway as a mil itary necessity This highway tra verses thirteen Southern states. In recognition of bis twenty-five years' service as president of the As sociated Press or since the organiza tion was founded in its present form. Frank B. Noyes of the Washington Star was honored signally at the an nual meeting and luncheon in New York City. W. T. Evans of Jonesboro, Ga., af ter a telephone conversation with Norfolk, Va., said he was convinced the young suicide victim whose body was found on the sand dunes at Vir glnia Beach was his son, Alfred Roger Evans. Elizabeth M. King, 19, was sentenc ed to ten years in state prison follow ing conviction in circuit court at Rock ville, Md., on charges of manslaughter in connection with the death of her two children. Properties of the Norfolk and West ern and the Virginian railway proper ties, representing combined assets of about five hundred and fifty million dollars, will be united for future oper ation and development, under a lease agreement approved by directors of the two roads at a meeting in New York City. OOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOUUUUUUOO ? CO. la". Western Newspaper Union.) If life were all fnlr weather As the fleeting days go by, We should never know the beauty Of the rainbow In the sky. THE PICNIC SEASON As the lovely spring days cnll us into the open, we return to our cook books to fresh en our memory on good things to take on an outing. For many of us a few good sandwiches and fresh fruit, with a cool or hot drink, comprise a meal most satisfying and little trouble to get ready. The fol lowing are a few to add to the I cherished list: Cream of Chicken Sandwiches.-? , Tuke sulHcient white meat of chicken ! to make half a cupful, chop and pound ; to a paste. I'ut a teaspoonful of gela- | tin to souk In two tablespoonfuls of j water and stand over heat until dis solved. Whip one cupful of cream un til stifT, mid a teaspoonful of grated horseradish and half a teaspoonful of salt to the chicken and gelatin. Stir until It begins to thicken, then add the cream and let stand until cold. Butter bread, cutting the slices a little thick er than usual. Trim oft the crusts and cut Into triangles. Cover each piece with the cream mixture, garnish the top with slices of stuffed olives, minced parsley, pipings of cream, mounds of chopped capers and olives and celery finely minced. A platter of these open sandwiches cut Into various shares I decorated with minced green and red ( pep;>ers, may be most attractive and decorative. Deviled Sandwiches. ? Chop a qnar- | ter of a pound of cold boiled tongue very fine; add to It two tablespoonfuls of oflve oil, a dash of red pepper, a ; teaspoonful of Worcestershire sauce, j a few dashes of paprika and salt to , season. Mix and add the hard-cooked yolks of three eggs which have been ; put through a rlcer. Spread on but- J tered bread, cover with another but- j tered slice and garnish with water | cress. Cucumber Sandwiches. ? S p r e a d bread with butter and cut the slices : one-half inch thick. Cover each slice with seasoned sliced cucumbers, then cover with finely shredded lettuce; on : this place a slice of thin white meat ! <>f chicken, cover with lettuce and a slice of buttered bread. Trim into shape and serve at once. Clubhouse Sandwiches. ? These are usually made of freshiy-toasted bread. Put on a well-buttered slice of toast a thin layer of boiled ham; pn that a thin slice of pickle; on top of that a thin slice of turkey or chicken, then J a leaf of lettuce with a spoonful of j mayonnaise. Cover with another slice j of buttered toast and cut Into triangles ! to serve. Summer Desserts. There is no dessert more popular , than some form of frozen dish. Strawberry Sher bet. ? Take two! cupfuls of straw- j berry pulp, made ; by mashing the ! fresh berries. Boll | one and one-half 1 cupfuls of sugar j and two cupfuls of i water for ten minutes. Soften a half i teaspoonful of gelatin In two table- ; spoonfuis of cold water and add to the hot sirup. Add the Juice of i half a lemon and one-half cupful of , orange Juice to the strawberry mix ture; add the sirup when cool and I freeze. When the mixture is pnrtly j frozen add a well-beaten egg white with two tnblespoonfuls of sugar; con- | tlnue freezing. Raspberry Juice j st mined from the seeds Is especially ; delicious for this sherbet. Raspberry Bombe Glace. ? Line a I three-pint melon mold with rasp- J berry Ice. Fill the center with sweet- ! ened, flavored whipped cream. Pack In j ice and salt and let stand for three j to four hours. Apricot Cream Sherbet. ? Measure I two cupfuls of canned apricots, put j through a potato rlcer, add three fourths of a cupful of sugar, and let stand three hours. Fold In one cupful of whipped cream and freeze. Raspberry Ice. ? Take four cupfuls of water, two cupfuls of sugar and boil six minutes. Cool ; add one and one-fourth cupfuls of raspberry juice and t lie juice of half a lemon. Freeze as usual. pineapple Cream Sherbet. ? Take two cupfuls of grated fresh pineapple, cover with sugar, using a cupful; let stand three hours, fold In one cupful of cream, whipped Ptltf, and freeze. Panama Sherbet. ? To one and one | half cupfuls of sugar add one cupful I <?f water, boll live minutes and cool. Cut six medium-sized bananas through a ricer ; add two cupfuls of orange juice and two tablespoon fuls of lemon juice; add to the sugar sirup and pour into the freezer. When partly frozen ;idil the beaten white of an egg and two taMespoonfuls of sugar; mix well and iinlsh freezing. Oranges served in some form when mirk, goose, turkey or pork form the inn in dish, as well ns rich puddings and nuts, will be found very desira ble. Tide Machine An Instrument has been Installed at Rldston observatory, Birkenhead, Eng land, which predicts tides in any part of the world up to 50 years ahead, and within a margin of half an hour can state what tides prevailed at particu lar places 500 years ago. Sensitive Imtrument ? The noise of atoms moving about In a piece of iron, stirred with a magnet, has been detected by sensitive ampli fiers. BETTER ROADS NOW FOLLOW MOTOR CAR Automobiles led to construction of the network of good roads which weave their way through all parts of the country, but "bud" roads aided ma terially In development of the Ameri can type of motor car to its present supremacy over European cars. The natural assumption would be that ownership of motor cars in any given section would follow the con struction of good highways, but ex perience proves that the cur comes first and good roads follow, inevitably. In other words, the motor car proves Its need and desirability even on the worst roads. The owner comes to realize the advantages of good roads, and he soon stirs himself to see that they are built. Illinois is a good example of this. Its roads were among the worst in the country until the advent of the auto mobile changed sentiment which fought improved highways. Farmers were at first unalterably opposed to spending money for better roads. But they be gan to use automobiles. Then they changed their minds. Today IllinolB is a leader in the good roads movement. Meanwhile, bad roads were serving a good purpose. Had It not been for them In the early days of the motor In dustry it is probable that American designers would have copied European manufacturers, who built their cars at prohibitive cost for use only on Euro pean boulevards. With our "bad" roads, we had to build our cars for rough going. We had to allow enough clearance to get over rocks, stumps and hummocks. We were compelled to devise springs that would carry passengers In comfort even on rough venues of traffic. Our cars had to have more power so that they could negotiate bills and mountain grades on "high." European cars carry four or five shifts, and In order to get up even a low grade, It Is necessary to use nearly all of them. If we had had our present splendid system of highways, It is very probable that we would still be building the Eu ropean type of car. This would mean they would have to be built at a much heavier cost than now. And Instead of being for universal use, as they are, cars would be limited to the use of a small class of weulthy citizens. Canadian Highway From Coast to Coast Planned A new and vast playground, called more beautiful by many than the most I beautiful sections of the Swl^s Alps, ( may be opened to American motorists , as a result of the hazardous path- | finding trip which Austin F. Bement, secretary of the Lincoln Highway as- 1 soclation, made across Canada. Bement's trip, the first ever made j across the Dominion in an automo- j bile, was widely heralded. For 03 ' miles of the distance he drove his ol- ? ficial car over the ties of the Canadian \ National rullroad. This was through | the Fraser River canyon between Lyt ton and Hope, B. C* a section of the proposed transcontinental route which no automobile ever before had been able to negotiate. Seventeen tunnels and 150 trestles. some of them hun dreds of feet above the roaring Fraser river, had to be negotiated. It was the most severe test for man and car | through which any motorist ever passed successfully. Bement proved that a way could be won -by motor car through the passes of the Sierras which previously had < been considered Impassable to motor ists. Following his record-breaking trip, the Canadian Northwest has awakened to the possibilities for de velopment of the country through roads that will Invite American tour Ists. Blooming Sweetness on Highways Now Planned Practical enough appears the St. Louis resident's objection to planting trees all along the state highways. He says, "It's bad enough to run Into the ditch, let alone hitting a tree." The trees will not be planted; and experi enced motorists will breathe easier. Still, the highways can be beauti fied. Safety first, no trees; but rose bushes are not perilous. We believe It Is North Carolina that has projected the plan to border Its highways with blooming sweetness, says the St. Louis Globe-Decomrat. The sweatbrler once set out takes care of Itself. It Is a low. grower and spreads Its pink blos soms over the roadside for at least a month or two. Along the Missouri valley It seems to be more plentiful than anywhere el*e, and grows In wild profusion by the railroad embankments. But the befiowerlng of highways needn't be confined to rose bushes. Wild flowers can be sown like wheat and the motorist be thus greeted for miles with gales of nature's perfume. Building "Throughways" Virginia has made progress In con structing "throughways" for the en couragement of automobile traffic, and now proposes to expand the through way principle that places of historic Interest may be accessible. The state Is dotted with places In which all Americans are interested or would be come interested were those places called to their attention and could they be reached by good road.%. Fann ers living along the highways would be benefited. -? Easiest Tax to Collect Tax authorities claim that the gaso line tax Is one of the easiest taxes to collect. The state board of equaliza tion of California, which administers the gasoline tax law In that state, es timates the cost of collection has been only a small faction of one per cent of! the amount collected. Indiana re ports that the state collected a total tax of slightly more than $4,500, 000 at a cost of approximately one tenth o? one per ceoL SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN" and \\4 Proved safe by millions and prescribe.! h- rh>.i:,J Headache Neuralgia Colds \ .n Pain Toothache Neurits uu . C\/ -fit") 111: '-S-.vi. f Handy ?Pv.-y 9 Also hot tins ' * v4 Aspirin la the trade mark of Bajer Manoferture of M .. Pocket Screwdriver i[rnif ^ ^ An invehtor has designed a folding) "T!. . ? Qz,fici, screwdriver that can he curried in the - her.---.. ;v pocket with one's knife. Three blades askiti r. ? ' -r of different sizes lock and open sep- ; "i;i. \ ; arately, giving the compact tool a wide ' the it-.- ; -t range of usefulness. When the blades i derm- , are not In use, they are locked tight J brag-ir:_ In the handle. Freiih Strawberry Shortcake. Sift 4 cups of flour In large mixing bowl add 4 teaspoons Calumet Baking Powder and 2 teaspoons butter, pinch salt, two eggs and enough milk to make a soft dough. Place the dough In layer cake pan and bake In hot oven for 20 minutes. Cool and split in 2 layers. Spread 3 tablespoons but ter between the layers and let cool. Cut cake In desired size and pour fresh crushed strawberries over cake. Serv* ' with whipped cream Record Beauty Parlor New York city claims to have the largest beauty parlor in the world. It occupies the entire floor of a half-blork building and it cost about $.r>Oi)t (nmj t<> I fit it up. It is possible for a patron to j spend J? 1 1-4 at one sitting. Granulated eyelids, sties, inflamed eyea i relieved overnight by Roman Eye Balsam. I One trial convinces. 372 Pearl St., N. Y. Adv. Riches Defined Riches do not consist in having more gold and silver, but in having 1 more in proportion than our neigh ! bors. ? Locke. I A Lady of Distinction Is recognized by the delicate, fasclnat i Ing influence of the perfume she uses. J A bath with Cuticura Soap and hot i water to thoroughly cleanse the pores i followed by a dusting with Cuticura Talcum powder usually means a clear, sweet, healthy skin. ? Advertisement. Great Idea It is odd no one has ever thought to devise a lawn sprayer embodying the principle of the grape fruit. ? Detroit News. work ii.- ' 1 ? Kan* - v . * MRS. vrquhar: GETS m Mrs. I>, houst-wi:.- ? . ... : ... possess in.' -i ; ... > : Is what st.i - - T; j , ' it. I ans-.?-r. : free l".' I. found It s - ? : poIishii.L' t! , : ! ?? . -i.^ friends a! '? '.it1 ! entirely fr. .? ? :/: ? ? I beautiful >J 1 ?' !. : ; V>> ! ing Mop." T! Mr* on to -ay : "I r;-:i v. ' pleased v- it*- ?!.?? ^ j what I hav?> r.?. ? ? x.'. '<j pleasure in :r.: !: ? Twenty t M<?ps are r>. . housewi \ t'S. Wri't- ' * ? v bottle and ;i4: f - 15 telline t "V ^ have one . >f tl .?-<?? ; ? .\'s? Veneer < *? ar.y I'.- !. ^ Y? Adv. Light Much Cheaptr\ Sine.- .? ? ! i energy, i ; - : ? * i cheaper M 1 ? f ' < household i ? ? m - * ' one sixt ????n' : ? ? ' ? ' ? - .? ?M year- I * > '? few ????!!.: i i ?" i ? - " ? ' ' J collie d"'-' n : ' ? -.*? i i ali' iiit 1 . 1 ? ? ? ' ' j bought f-r v : - f. r if. 'J"" ? : ? " ? " lAOcZisui MOTHER:- Fletcher's Castoria is especially prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipa tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom. a* regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assisiia] Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. IW aIwayS ,ook for lhe signature of Absolately Harmless -Np Opiates. Physiciani everywhere rc=o| Break Your Chains of mp : ,l-fl Rheumatism, lumbago, kidney trouble ar, i '-K ailments are like chains and shacklcs t: ' 11 down. They destroy your wage-earn im: ; ^ you feel and act years' older than yoi : r : ; keep you in misery. And these ailment <? worse. They finally become dangers - Yet you can break these chains <>f remember that these ills are caused : blood ? blood that does not contain ' " * Without iron, your blood cannot thr "? t: 0 ? ^ out of your body. Instead, it keejo 1 : ??" and circulating these poisons throng }' ; 'r^ This is why you should begin at once to u y, Mineral. This amazing iron tonic is N'ature product. Physicians and scientists hav< '"c'r to duplicate it. Unlike any other mineral ro. quickly absorbed into your blood, arid gives it strength to throw off impurities which cause your bad health. It is posi tively guaranteed. Get a bottle from your druggist today. With It, ask for a box of A. I. M. pill*. A-I-M Percolating Corp. SALEM, VIRGINIA % A
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 30, 1925, edition 1
6
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