Newspapers / Polk County News and … / May 7, 1925, edition 1 / Page 6
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IMPORTANT NEWS THE WORLD OVER IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THIS AND OTHER NATIONS *OR SEVEN DAYS GIVEN THE NEWS GF THE SCLTH What la Taking P*ae* In Th? SoutJi. land Will Ba Found 'n Brief Paragraph* Foreicn ? ]> Konrnd Hn?nsh. Sot al - emor -f rt..- district of ,K". :.m! former rrussian minister of education, did recently el Wiesbaden Xhf* I or, Ion Dailv Mall, which to (I ef Sir l!ro,|.-r:.'li ll,r.?-ir. ture whisky "i^oiar. iran coast. now sa>s h M? izetl his supporters to tho ? * l?e lost evervthing In th? d?. ' Premier Herf/og. addrossins the South Afr'can national a^(n' ? ? .N,g<>d secession of t lie union of South Africa from Mie British empire Mumt;^ Resum. ilanclni: elr an former f.vorite of the Maharajah of mdore. India. brok- into tears when called nfvin to Identify the hi.* Wain td bits of el that belonged to Abdul Kudir llaula. rich Moharam dan merchant, who was killed at Malabar hill near Bombay on January t It to announced at Simla. India, that the Indian eon nunent has completer! arrangements to assist Theodore _ and Kermit Roosevelt on their W-'dMlon into Central Asia. Rafael Sanclvz Aballi. a wealthy su gar owner of the province of Onente. Cuba, has been appointed l uban am bassador to the Cnlt-d Spates by President Zayas. I Airplanes should h? abolished be- j cause they :,r ? a menace to cl'ill" Hon. according to Sir Hush Trench arri chief of staff of the British air force. "All the pood airplanes can do in civil lif-> cannot balance the harm they do In war." h? says. j Roger Wethered. famous British golfer. was recently married at St. , Margaret's Westminster to M'-ss Eliz- . abeth Cavendish Bentlnck. daughter ( of Lord Cavendish Chancellor Luther pledges Germany | and President elect von Hlndenburg to peace and has p it the next Euro- j pean move up to the allies with de mands relative to the occupied areas , and allied dissatisfaction regarding Germanv's disarmament. A dispatch to the Rome Tribuna from Its Sofia correspondent reports a new outbreak of fighting between Bulgarian government troops and ( om- | munists Casualties ar~ unknown, but the dispatch says they are believed to be fairly heavy. It is reported that all traffic in the streets of r f:a. Bulgaria, has been rtopped. because of muffled explo sions ard rh- panic-stricken condition cf the people. Agents of th* Ford motor Interests are seeking a site iu Mexico Cit> for ^he establishment of an assembly . plant. They are uncommunicative as regards tji* she of the plan: ir view ! or the ".itiniber of men it would ein- . ploy Thousands of prisoners walked out of the jails throuchout the South Af rican T'nion following a gen- ral^ am- , nesty in honor of the prince of Wales' , imminent visit. A plot to assassinate Austen Cham- j Wlain. foreign secretary of the Brit fsfi government, was frustrated >y I British scr *t service men. The plot is said to have been of Com ori- j fin. Washington ? Counsel for the shipping board, in i con'croncfi with R. Stanley Dollar, rice president of the Dollar lines, put ?he finishing touches on the contract ) for sale of th'? five vessels of the Cal /forn fa-Orient line to the Dollar in- i terests. President Coolidge has notified the , Polish and Swiss legations that he is willing to accept th<> responsibility of appointor chairmen for commissions cf concilation and arbitration in anv everfna' disputes between Switzerland and roland. should the members cf these commissions be unable to se- | Icct ( hairmen themselves. Edwin S. Booth, former solicitor of I the interior department, who recently , ?was indicted here with Senator Whee- ] ler of Montana on a conspiracy charge, | has withdrawn his plea in abatement. 1 The pfea had been founded on the presence of certain department of jus tice officials in the grand jury room, fcuf Mr. Booth told the court he was satisfied that they were legally pres ent. A reorganization of the prohibition trnil is in prospect, Assistant Secreta ry Andrews indicated as a result of a month's study given since he assum ed office Several proposed changes in both federal and state tax laws, recommend ed by various business organzaitions throughout thp country, will be consid ered by the United States chamber of commerre at its annual meeting May 20-22. The organization is ex pected to draft its tax recommenda tions for the coming congress at this meeting. Vice President Dawes will receive no support from the president pro tem of the senate. Senator Mo?fg, Republi can, of New Hampshire, in his effort to revise the rules of the senate. That became evident when Senator Moses cj?cn his return to Washington dis cussed General Dawes' recent address in Old North church, at Boston. President Coolidge is working on a plan for organization of a financial corporation without governmental con aections to lower Vuilding costs in Washington by lending funds at rea sonable rates for building operations. a a 'orvitrh from Honolulu says the A d., patch from ^ ^ ?f[|ccr. enlertamtn. S|a|08 neet ran * ' ?^h"K?, and that ten thousand lUen "S the n?. were vis-tora ashore , dispatch from Panama says that | Jose teen ! "'Tied fori earlv b'ont with Joe Ramos Panaman featherweight, who has just returned from a successful trip to Peru. Science for the first time in Amer lca has offcially crowned a woman j with its laurels by the election of Miss ' Florence Rena Sabin. physiologist j Johns Hopkins medical school at ? I time to life membership in the Na tional Academy of Sciences, which w 1 Hon was taken at the annual meet ing of the society in Washington re f John Marshall of Parkersburg.* W. I Va bas been appointed to be an as I sisiant attorney general. succeeding I Rush L Holland of Ohio, resigned. Domestic ? j Augi'ft Krtisieh. war veteran, whose divorced wife died three years ago. i {ias brought suit in Philadelphia for annulment of the divorce to "clear his name " Snow fell ut San.Angelo. Texas, with the sixth day of rain, which broke a drouth of three months. The temper ature a few days ago was 102? in the shade. Hi?hop William Lawrence. 75 years old. Episcopal bishop of Massachu | setts 32 vears in the sacred ministry, has relinquished actual authority to the coadjutor. Or. Charles Slattery. The business situation at the end ' of April was more favorable than it was at the same time last y<\ar. es j I pecially in the outlook for the textile . | industry and for agriculture, accord i ing to thv? monthly review of business ! and agricultural 'conditions in th? fifth federal reserve district Ten Communist meetings were brok- ; ' en up by detectives of the bomb squad | in Manhattan and the Br?nx. New York Citv. Fifty detectives drove j members' into the street and confls , | cated May Day literature. No Amer | lean flag or patriotic I design was found by the officers, though pictures I of Lenine and Trotzky usually were j prominent. ! Members of Troop 10 or East Deer j ing Maine, in winning the wall seal- | ?tng contest at the l3oy Scouts' rodeo, held In Portland ( broke the world's scout record for the event, the time being 12 1 /5# seconds. Because th^y were reused the priv I ilege of rolling 'heir Stockings, the 'girls of the Gladston (Mich.) high school threatened to strike. A prohibition graft scandal involv ing a number of federal dry agents in the Philadelphia territory is believed to have been uncovered wilh the ar rest of James L Worcester, a federal prohibition agent, and George W. Du- , Pont, an agent of the law enforcement ! league, on charges of extortion. I A whipping post bill has been parsed 1 by the Michigan legislature. It is de ' signed to stop petty theft and various kinds of robbery and carrying conceal ed weapons ' Rear Admiral Palimr. president of the emergency fleet corporation. sa>s the present fiscal year will close with a much better showing than any pre vious year, the op-rating expenses be ing "cut to the bone," reduction In per- , sonnel, conservation in fuel and othir improvements having been made. A $40,000 treasure hunt, which re- j centlv started in New York City, re vealed the story of a North Carolina farmer who speculated in cotton fu- ; tures sixteen years ago and made aj profit of $24,000 on a $IG.000 invest ment in three weeks. Then he hid the money in N'ew ^ ork, but failed to reveal its hiding place before he died last fall. flashes between armed factions in i cities throughout the state of Sono- ? ra, Mexico, wjjere municipal elections were held recently, caused thirty-two ! deaths, it is announced In reports re- ! celved by officials at Nogales, Ariz. ! However, confirmation of the report j is lacking Samuel Harrows. 50, a banker of j Johnsonburg. Pa., died at the city hos- I pltal of New York City of injuries suf- ' fered when he plunged five stories through an open window after es- ! (?aping from his nurse in a private j sanitarium. The nurse, seeing Bar rows in the window, grasped him by I the ankle and he hung suspended. | headforemost, until he kicked himself j free At the headquarters in New York I City, .recently, the officers of th"> | church pens'on fund of the Protestant | Kplscopal church announced that it i has a sufficient surplus on hand to warrant liberalizing its pension pay ! ments beyond the amount it has prom- | ised to pav. The amount of Increase ha?i not yet been determined, but pen sioned ministers who have been in the 1 ??(?rvice wi'.l he the first to benefit j Oovernor Miriam A. Ferguson of , Texas has issued a vigorously worded statement in answer to individuals, or ganizations and newspapers that have criticised her for undue liberality in the granting of pardons and paroles. Advertising in every farm Journal | in the United States and in 3.500 daily , newspapers, hundreds of them in the smaller towns, as a means of increas ing the box office receipts of the film theaters using Famous Players-I^askv pictures, has been decided on at the corporation's international convention in session at Los Angdes, Calif. A Santa Fe passenger train due at San I>lego from I-oh Angeles, Calif was wrecked near Sorrento, 15 mil'?" north of San Uiego. The engineer and several others are reported killed and at least a dozen seriously Injured. Directors of the 1'nlted States* Htcj' Corporation declared the regular ex tra dividend of 50 cenls a share on the common stock, in addition to the regulaily quarterly payment of $1.25 on the common and $1.75 on the pre ferred shares. Extra dividends at this rate have been paid since the first quarter of 1924, 7?. 192^. Western N?w?pap?r Union.) It has been said of the Daniel that he went wlth^greaWr willingness to the de" of ,d not cause ho knew that he wou be called upon for an after-dinner speech. ? Burgess Johnson. SEASON A BLE~~GOOD THINGS Now tlint the fields are full of the delicious mushroom, free to any o the gathering, let us ln" dulge In: Creamed Mushrooms.? Iirush one-half pound of fresh mushrooms, peel the caps* aud cut the stems into small pieces. Cook the stems In but ter for live minutes, then let tliern simmer while the caps are being broiled with a bit of butter in each. Add a cupful o cream then the stewed stems and serve with the broiled caps as a sauce. Pot Roasted Rabbit.? Dress and clean two rabbits and disjoint the pieces ready for serving. Cover with cold water to which a tablespoonful of snlt and one of vinegar have been tidded, and let stand several hours. Drain, wipe dry and roll in seasoned fiour. rut Into a deep Scotch kettle with an iron cover, add a slice of pork and try out the fat slowly; cover tightly. Add a tublespoonful of water if the meat gets too dry and cook until tender, seasoning toward the last o the cooking. Quick put Bread.? Mix and sift two cupfuls of bread flour, add one-half cupful of sugar, four teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one teaspoonful of salt. Add three tablespoonfuls of soft- j ened burter and two of lard; one egg, [ well-beaten, one cupful of milk and , one cupful of walnut meats coarsely chopped. Heat thoroughly and turn into a buttered pan. Let stand twenty minutes, then bake in a moderate oven. Veal Loaf.? Take three pounds of | lean veal and one-half pound of un cooked ham, chop both rather tine, add j one teaspoonful of salt and one-half teuspoonful of pepper, three soda j crackers rolled fine, then add three beaten eggs, three tablespoonfuls of cream and two tablespoonfuls of boil ing Water. Mix all together thorough ly. Grease a bread pan and press the j mixture into It. Cover and bake one hour in a moderate oven. Uncover and brown, baking another half hour. New Carrot Salad.? Put a few car rots through the meat gHnder, add a little chopped onion and more chopped celery, a few nuts finely minced and serve well moistened with a good mayonnaise on lettuce. Spanish Meat Dish.? In the bottom of u well-greased baking dish lay some slices of roast beef, lamb chops, veal , or chicken; cover With a thin lajer of finely shredded onion, any leftover gravy or brown sauce, then a layer of thinly sliced raw potatoes; cover with j a cupful or more of tomatoes, enough t to moisten the dish, and bake In a moderate oven until the potatoes are | tender. Just before taking from the ; oven sprinkle three or four spoonfuls of green, cooked peas over the top > of the dish and serve piping hot from the dish In which It was baked. Culinary, Other Hints. An old fisherman said If you want to eat fish without being bothered with the bones, clean them and put them through the meat grinder, make ln small cakes and fry In butter. It's worth trying. When cream refuses to whip, with no viscogen handy, add the white of an egg and ( chill, then whip. Chocolate sauce served with boiled rice is a dish especially good, and ! well liked by all chocolate lovers. Sprinkle salt on any boiled-over food on stove or In the oven ; It will destroy the odor. Add a teaspoonful of sugar to the j rinsing water us*ed to rinse fine linens and organdies, lace collars and cuffs. It stiffens slightly and gives a texture like new. When baking fish without a roast- ; ing rack, place two strips of cheese- j cloth In the pan. letting them come up well on the sides of the pan. With 1 these the fish can be easily removed to a hot platter without breaking. When the fur piece Is soiled clean It with corn meal dampened with toilet water, The alcohol cleans the fur and leaves a pleasant odor. Cleaning the Icebox on Friday will Insure the using up of food and getting ready for the Sunday meals with less waste. Grease the oven doors with un salted lard; this Is good for any door hinges that do not work easily, but a drop of machine oil will do as well, j Always use new rubbers when can- '? nlng. A rubber should be elastic and free from cracks to be safe. Hang the broom by the handle; It will last much longer and keep In bet ter shape. If necessary to Iron an nrtlcle In a hurry, sprinkle with hot water, roll up flghtly and wrap in a dry towel, i place the bundle ln a warm oven and by the time you are ready to Iron It, ' the article will be evenly dampened. Green foods should be* served free ly all the year. In the spring there. Is such a variety that one may have j something different each day of the , week. IfYLo^vtiiSL Gave Name to Province Brittany, In France, Is supposed to have received Its niimn from those Hrltona who were expelled from Eng land ond took refuge there between the Fifth und Seventh centuries. Before 1 that time the country was named Am or lea. Ah, That'? the Rub t Chicago girl nays sho will mnrry th? man who pays her father's debts, but applicants had better Und out who made the debts ? Columbia Record. I ORCHARD GLEANINGS ; ? ? ? ? ? ? j SPRAY SOLUTION FOR EACH TREE VARIES ' v -i. j Flow much spray solution Is required I to spray un apple tree? Of course the | answer to this question depends very I largely upon the opinion of the oper i ator. Some one lias said that the or | chardlsts who obtain best results from I spraying are those who "waste" nm. ! teriul. In other words best results are i obtained by putting on the solution I until the tree Is thoroughly covered and drippTng quite heavily. In keeping a record of the cost of I spraying at the Ohio experiment sta : tlon, a record of the amount of ma terial required for bearing trees of ; various ages has been kept through two seasons. Factors that make the amounts vnry in Addition bo the opinion of the oper ator are the wind, Tiniterial used, and j whether gun or nozzle Is used to dis charge the solution. I Naturally when the wind Is high, J material will be used in excess of that | actually required on a calm day. One ! cannot always wait for ideal days to i spray, especially during the time of I applying the pink spray. i Oil sprays require less solution than ; other sprays because of their "creep I Ing*' qualities. No doubt less material would be required by using a rod and , nozzle rather than the gun but the ; time element Is so much In favor of ; the gun that the gun has more to j recommend It than the rod and noz ! zle, especially if the gun Is In the hand j of a careful operator. Most of the orchards on which spray | ing records have been kept %it. -Hie ex i periment station have been sprayed, either five or six times each season. The petal fall spray usually requires more solution than any other spray al though there is not much difference In i the amounts used on any of the sum mer sprays. The pre-plnk and pink applications usually require less. This Is partly because It Is not necessary i to drench the body of the tree quite so heavily as on the dormant spray and there is no foliage to cover at this period. g There is no difference in the amounts required of bordeaux or lline sulphur,"! which are the two main spra3*s used. Baldwin Apple Has Been Grown for Many Years According to the New York state experiment station, tite Baldwin apple Is probably more generally distributed throughout the United States than la uny other one variety of apj)le. TIi is variety lius been grown for a great many years, and under a wide range of soil and climatic conditions. As a result of this, perhaps there will be some difference in the size and quality of the fruit, as It is grown un <U>r the different conditions, and many fruit growers have advanced the the ory that when Baldwins are grown for a long period of time under different conditions, new strains of the variety are developed. Some thirteen years ago the horti culturists at the experiment station at Geneva determined to try out the the ory. They purchased 84 Baldwin ap^ pie trees from 40 different locations In the United States. These were set out on the trial grounds to determine defi nitely as to whether the distinct strains of this variety had developed under these widely different environ ments. These tree* are now in full hearing, and every one of the 84 trees produces fruit similar In size, color, season and quality to the fruit pro duced by the others. The results of this experiment will be quite interesting to those who like to inquire Into some of the theoretical side of plant growth, and so far as this experiment Is concerned. It seems rather certain that no strains of this variety have originated because of dif ferences in environment, but if there are strains of the variety In different sections of the country, they have originated probably for some other reason. Horticulture Hints Strawberry plants are usually ptft up In bunches of 25 plants to the bunch. * ? ? Look up the latest control measures for Insect pests and plan for them be forehand. ? * * Fertilize the home .orchard. Prune and spray fruit trees before the buds begin to swell, If this was not done earlier. * * * Every home garden should have Its strawberry patch. The early part of May 1^ the most deslrah'e time to set out the plants. ? ? ? Orchard trees made their principal growth and demand on the soil for both water and plant food during May and June. This early cultivation con serves moisture and Increases the sup ply of available food. , 1 ? ? * Keep the strawberries cultivated and select now the ground for a new planting. It Is a good plan to plant each year a third of the home patch, and after the crop is gathered In the spring plow up the oldest third. This keeps an unfailing supply of berries. * * * Give first treatment against worms In peaches (cufrcullo) ; arsenate ot lead as a spray or dust Just after the petals fall. Second application when the shucks are shedding. ? ? * ? Occasionally Ayhen the bark has been very badly injured, It 1b advisable to plant young trees around the old ones and graft them Into the tree above the girdled portion. Many badly damaged trees have been saved In this way, particularly those Infected with collar rot BETTER HIGHWAYS YIELD BIG PROFIT American motorists cash in u yearly dividend of 10 per cent on the capital Invested through federal aid In the Improved highways of the country, ac cording to a statement issued hy the American Automobile association. This dividend actually goes Into the pockets of the motorists and repre sents the difference between the cost of mo>or vehicle operation over unim proved and improved highways. The differential, which is conservative, Is based on extensive engineering tests of motor vehicle operation costs made in different sections of the country and for different types of roads. A' recent survey made in Kentucky shows that there is on the average' a j saving of. -*4 cents a mile in the cost j of operation over improved roads and i highways. Some time' ago a similar! investigation conducted in Iowa indi- | cated approximately the same saving. 1 It hns been estimated many times ! that the average car runs approxi mately G.00O miles, a year. A sav'ing of 2^ cents a mile for 0,000 miles amounts to $lo0 a year. For 17.000, 000 automobiles this would mean a saving of $2,550,000,000 h year on tfaso- i line, tires, parts, upkeep, renewals and ; all phases of operation. This would be the total saving If every mile over which an automobile ' traveled was improved. But, of course, only (30,000 miles of highway have been improved by federal aid. This j 00,000 miles represents x slightly more than 2 per cent of the total highway system, which amounts to approxl- j mately 2,500,000 miles. Two per cent of $2,550,000,000 gives I $51,000,000 which can be legitimately , credited to federal aid. The total cap- J Ital expenditure for federal aid was ! $500,000,000, which yields $51. 000.000 | a year, or 10 per cent in saving to the user of Improved highways. The study made by the Iowa State college, the Iowa highway commission and the bureau of public roads showed that the gasoline consumed on ; a paved road was only approximately ! one-half the gasoline consumed on a dirt road per unit of traffic. Inciden tally the Investigation developed that , the gasoline consumed per unit of ; traffic can be taken as an Index of the other costs of motor vehicle opera tion. It showed, in fact, that there Is a definite relation existing between the gasoline consumption per unit of traffic and other Items of cost In vehicle op eration. F. R. White, chief engineer j of the highway commission, estimated that through improvement of a road ! surface the gasoline Consumption Is cut in two, the cost of tires is cut In I* two, the same applying to other items, Including depreciation and repairs. | For the first time these studle# | make It possible tQ present In terms of dollars and cents the difference In cost to the motorist and the public In general between Improved and un- i Improved roads. According to the Iowa study, traffic i equaling 500 vehicles per day over | earth roads requires nn annual ex- I pendlture from both private and public funds of $25,600 per mile, while a siral- ! lar amount of transportation over a i concrete surface costs ' $20,050 per J mile. This means that for a light ? traffic | earth road carrying 500 vehicles a day there would be saved S4.1J50 per ! mile per year If the same traffic went j over a paved road surface. Assum Ing the cost of paving a dirt road to be $25,000 per mile the saving v in transportation cost would actually pay j for the capital outlay in from four to ' six years. The difference between the I cost of operation on a gravel road and ! a paved road would pay for the differ ence In the cost of construction In three years. Work on Post Road It Is planned to (Jo a great deal of work on the New York state section of the Boston Post road, and contracts for part of this work have heen let. Traffic on this road Is very heavy. A count last season showed CiO.OOO vehicles passing day and night. The traffic Is as heavy at night as in the day time and at times runs heavier during the night. Just when this Im provement work is to be started is not j known. * Thick Roads in Oregon The Oregon state highway depart ment recently adopted a design of thickened edgro for roads. The speci fications call for a cross section seven inches thick at the center and ten inches thick at the edges, the in creased thickness graduating to the edge from a point two fo<?t from the edge. .The cost is estimated at $24, 381 per mile. Boulevard Out to Sea The Ocean boulevard, following the string of islands which extend from tlie extremity of Florida, and which has been under discussion for a long time, Is about to be realized, for the details for the operation of the work have been arranged and the work will soon be begun. Contracts have been signed for 25 miles at flther end of the line. This is about one-sixth of the total length of the proposed boule vard, which will connect so many of the beautiful. Islands. Different Traffic Rules With 48 states and thousands of municipalities, all making their own traffic ruies, the motorist Is more or less at sea as to what he can and can not, should and should notNlo. But when the national government builds roads for the nation, a national trr.fflc law will be Inevitable as a national police force for the national highways. On all Pennsylvania state highways the poles are whitewashed six feet above ground. AFTER HER ? . . Mrs. Hollister Unable Tn n Work for Six Monthj Tells How Lydia E. Pinkharr.'s Vegetakl Restored Her I lealtK * ' Af^l^ " if.wl '' ?' "-W'1 . ta.. ' " TS3'^ , 1 fi?-6 r i' I., MRS. HENRY HOLLISTER WYANDOTTE, MICHIGAN Wyandotte, Michigan. ? "After my babv was born I did not do my own work for six months and could hardly take care of my own baby I always had a pain in my right aide and it was so bad I was getting round shoulders. I would feel well one day and then feel so bad for three or four days that I would be in bed. One Sunday my j mother came to see how I was, anil I she said a friend told her to tell me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. So the next day I got a bottle and before it was halt taken I Now and Then Aiming to do rijsht is not en?.n_:li; you must score nn occasional hit. - Boston Transcript. ? -a vr-o.-.vr. 7 cl'.'idf) '.A t? r] \~t ?-.? n l.yr.a t. i ; V j? c* r \.\>A tV.vift t. < \ : fr\t:wlsaA\ ? ' , r hi a i v.... \j' , f , ? V.'T v:f.rr.?,\t\4 ttam *.V?!U 1 ^ t'..A irst Adv we ni WHY DRU6GISTS RECOMMEND SWAMP-ROOT S-^ave With Cut cm An -2 ; ?- .. , fori ;in<| iZW '??npafi faith. 5,1 2?: tnti'.n v.: For many years druggists have waMi ed with much interest the remarkable record maintained by I>r. Kilmer - ne s"a?' ' r all Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver an i an,l sharup. . !n?.? bladder medicine. It is a physician's prescription. Swamp-Root is a strengthening tned: cine. It helps the kidneys, liver and bladder do the work nature intended they should do. Swamp-Root has stood the test", "f years. It is sold by all druggists (in it merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friends. Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start treatment at once. However, if you wish first to test this ?reat preparation send ten cents to Dr Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure ind tnention this paper. ir Ey r- it Th. }?nn:-< to I!. ? I ? I Strong and Active e] Ilanf. ? ! - ! <? \S*i Monster Gooseberry V_ UT be i A new gooseberry as Inrjre as a If tlnni has b?*cn discovered in the woods ] -hm >f northern Florida. ! ha\? MOTHER:- ^ toria is a f '.cr:;ar*. b3 Substitute for ( astorOj goric, Teething Drops and Soothing S\ru;>s, c~pcc;a..y pt? for Infants in arms and Children a!! a?'c>. ? sit To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of U^fi roven directions jon each package. Physicians ever, where "Be again as you used to be t Ky/.-m The health and vigor you had in yor.i yours again. Rheumatism, lumbago, i and kindred ailments, are the result <>t impure blood, and the reason your M" this is because it lacks the iron which enable it to throw the poisons out <>t > keeps on circulating these impurity body and these ailments steadily gr< finally become dangerous. The most amazing tonic ever discover .. blood the iron it needs, is Acid Iron just as Nature herself produced it. scientists have never been able to ihi; It is the only mineral iron which c; directly by the blood corpuscles. Thi> fies and strengthens your blood and >? yob back that energy, appetite and \ Nature intended you should have. For more than thirty years, this reni.i blood tonic, has been bringing suffer ing men and women back to strength and health. It will do this for you. Go to your druggist today and get a bottle oi Acid Iron Mineral. Also get a box of A. I M. pills. A-I-M Percolating Corp. SALEM, VIRGINIA , ,'jth can ? ? lit - 'i;5faS6 i '((rfiift 1 . . ' i! '? '?* ? ? I'fjjl ^ -teifl . ?? "!l J* T-(< ..... -;tCS in- ta-' : '? i -IV ^ ?''I M* v , r r ? -V.
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
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May 7, 1925, edition 1
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