Newspapers / Polk County News and … / June 4, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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By EDNA FERBER (?, Dovblftd&r, Pi|? ft Oo.) WNV Bervlo*. ^VHI-Continued "1!r,. ??: <!'. room at ^^Mter i:?::",,!' ',:dy Sh' , feJ: ^ . 4...:nl.fil her ^ <? ***** "',Ih' 1 . , .... ,v>.-rted by ^ -h:" !:iti-r the ... &**%;., ?n w Mob ' t - j ; s spank ?ff- ' * . Ui" '?* break V I >r,,i :in :?<??>-? !HV ul,inK y.rtfnini: ' j" 1 ;i iI*,,v?'"N ' ' itf. *?' \ >( t...s j; i !!.>t want from Selina ??' lnl-VinK ?f \ if bS off her ,r.n-u-aIoa crisp. Tw were r? >< ?'" K* , So;jn;l know they i*,rfa" '"',,,'vk'v When the B,-.] r.'nV- 'iJ*1 ? , ' n ? wh?*n the edges *** r>' ' h'...,u curled ever 9 ' brown "n,! limP' !.>? half, even thei::?o|v?-s remained J jrJl. *" ...,v CW t!:e buyers? .warrhv plump. **,' :W.v :::e- : >h:ewil. to ^ nvn It: overalls Stolid Ifrk' sun^'urn^i. I .-an. dark ^ Sh.>aiitio. clatter. tur ^ |,r,ke w:;r:n. T!ie sun rose y a I September * 'is fr'tpe-mly ln the i to tWs 5->k?* region. Garden ?Id !' wove (piioklv this i Af:er3' ?.n w? >u ! <! tind It Ljjjer? >ked at l:er bunched r.-jCvV'! -it her. passed her ffjs net unkindness that Ltbea. bur a certain shyness. o<. tie unaccustomed. Her ht ;eaipt'!V but they passed iiti tie instin.-t that the Ig iTtaga--st that which Is un i ('ri'.vk hecan to fall i paa:c Sei;na realized that ukhad raale amounted to n tij: two dollars. If she Sere naril n^n she might ku. bu: Q'1 more. In despera Iwesyi the horses, thread (j out uf the swarming street, k .'or S?.'Uth Water street sr.. Here were the commis si She knew that Pervus iiwsirf: b;s entire load with fii.rt dealer here, to be sold isos. s.y remembered the klfoti ? though she did not ?air. oration. jMten almost Incredibly o t p?i At the wagon he i rrdi.'y next his mother, sdfcioself vastly assisting her I* pit:fui saies; had plucked rd. brought forward the ud crispest vegetables. But ?* that he was drooping a Wf her wares, with the heat ikflt from accustomed soil, w going now. mom?" *i?f street. Soblg? " trtere there's a man whoU *?' stuff at once ? maybe. M k Sue! Then we'll go "fop mother find his name I Kure- Talcott ? T-a-l-c-o ' TiIco.t had known Pervus. W f^t.'.er before him, and W theaj honest, admirable ^e;r burden truck he had Doc. he eyed the spare ?ttat appeared before him J 'ack. with its strained ?ts ?rea: deep sunk eyes. ? Sorry to hear about I'ervus was a fine I Shakes ut truck farm ?:s w.,j?Wi h-tn? nm ? ? Xr,< n ? dull-witted farm ?f** ' -man tru, ;? , < 1 li.-r wagon, it "if.'.'V -Town cheek. m 's Im"! you got a (rt---/ >:u!T here and t ioii'i. ve.ssir, pretty 1 J?u re t>>j |ute Ten> pre?. " ctM Sfl'.na. "Oh, no ? kw\ a tv agony ^ V; I'Mik^c] at h?*r sharply. i in*hh- I can move a vion^ f'ir you. But stuff I'Vis wvu'her T'.rns wllty tiie ju'i touch it. . ? ? *r her 'h it was damp '4 'o tSt; tnu< h. "First ? trip *?lj ?:> was finding It ab 14 to Wati r.if s.'V wa'.k to the ^ r,.-n Hustle k Hxf it. The best. 1 Aect t<>m>irri<w, Mia' L)ft M on *;,& s-:,p prepared "J aza'.a-.i. t st- p to the k?r shaS'.y, absurd % w.-iv nrn h too big i u'Vim ??.,.! ' if ynu're Just p,i" i you're sorry J;'" lV:k.- V. pW;:.,.Ss ? a ay. Can't "Mum My ghe's r**^T. In Italy now, MSI C,Ms | a.J jrpt-OUt. P* tnnn..y 1 Can S'TUpe to ft &V.ui ;? P a ir It, Sellna's Pj'y'- Oh Mr. Talcottl" she hud Been It, Slit bewail to thank |>y. &'l rUht, Mis' I>c3ong. |~ s^fTs hun''hfl kind o( I. IJt a siz.>. t ixlu' to do l^ttit? th?*y looked pret course vegetables 17 t0 l""k pretty, 1 ex | *ttu?wM, stopped. pretty Ukp. that and Bj?1* first thins;, or send KjV' like their stuff As Sellna gathered up the reins he stood ugaln in his doorway, cool, re mote, unllghted cigar In his mouth, while hand-trucks rattled past him. barrels and boxes thumped to the side walk In front of him, wheels and hoofs tind shouts made a great clamor all about him. "We going home now?" demanded Pirk. "We going home now? I'm hunpry." "Yes, lamb." Two dollars In her pocket. All yesterday's grim toll, and nil today's, and months of labor be hind those two days. Two dollars In the pocket of her black calico petticoat. "We'll get something to eat when we drive out a ways. Some milk and bread and cheese." The sun was very hot. She took the boy's hat off, passed her tender work calloused hand over the damp hair that clung to his forehead. She made up her mind to drive east and then south. Pervus had sometimes achieved a late sale to outlying gro cers. Jan's face If she came home with half the load still on the wagon! And what of the unpaid bills? She had, perhaps, thirty dollars, all told. She owed four hundred. More than that. Fear shook her. She told herself she was tired, nervous. That terrible week. And now this. The heat. Soon they'd be home, she and Dirk. The comfort of it. the peace of It. Safe, de sirable, suddenly dear. No work for a woman, this I Well, perhaps they were right. Down Wabash avenue, with the L trains thundering overhead and her Ac She Gathered Up the Reine He Stood in Hie Doorway, Cool, Remote. horses, frightened and uneasy with the unaccustomed roar and clangor of traffic. It was terribly hot. The boy's eyes popped with excite ment and bewilderment. "Pretty soon," Sellna said. The muscles showed white beneath the skin of her Jaw. "Pretty soon. Prairie avenue. Great big houses and lawns, all qalet." She even managed a smile. "I like It better home." Prairie avenue at last, turning In at Sixteenth street. It was like calm after a storm. Sellna felt battered, spent Then another thought came to her. Her vegetables, canvas covered, were fresher than those In the near-by mar kets. Why not try to sell some of them here, In these big houses? Ln an hour she might earn a few dollars this way at retail prices slightly l^ss than those asked by the grocers of the neigh borhood. Agilely she stepped down the wheel, gave the reins to Dirk. She filled a large market basket with the finest and freshest of her stock and with this on her arm looked up a moment at the house ln front of which she had stopped. The kitchen entrance, she knew, was by way of the alley at the back, bat this she would not take. Across the sidewalk, down a little flight of stone steps, into the vestibule under the porch. She looked at the bell ? a brass knob. "Pull It!" said the des perate Selina. "I can't! I can't!" cried all the prim dim Vermont Peakes, ln chorus. "All right. Starve to death and let them take the farm and Dirk, then." At that she pulled the knob hard. ? Jangle went the bell in the hall. Again. Again. Footsteps op the hall. The door opened to disclose a large woman, high cheek-boned, In a work apron; a cook, apparently. "Good morning," said Sellna. "Would you like some fresh country vege tables?" "No." She half shut the door, open ing it again to ask, "Got any fresh eggs or butter r At Sellna's negative she closed the door, bolted It Well, that was all right. Nothing so terrible about that, Sellna told herself. Simply hadn't wanted any vegetables. The next house, and the next, and the next. Up one side of the street, and down the other. Four times she refilled her basket. At one house she sold a quar ter's worth. Fifteen at another. Twen ty cents here. Almost fifty there. Twenty-first street ? Twenty-fifth ? Twenty-eighth. She had over four dol lars In her purse. Dirk was weary now and hungry to the point of tears "The last housa," Sellna promised him, "the very last one. After this one we'll go home." The last house. She had almost five dollars, earned In the last hour. "Just five minutes," she said to Dirk, trying to make her tone bright, her voice gay. Her arms full of vegetables which she was about to place in the basket at her feet* she heard at her elbow : "Now, then, where's your license T" She turned. A policeman at her side. "License?" "Yeh, you heard me. License. Where's your peddler's license? You got one, I s'pose." "Why, no. No." She stared at him, still. "Well, say, where d'ye think you are, peddlln' without a license! A good mind to run you in. Get along out of here, you and the kid. Leave me ketch you around here again!" "What's the trouble, officer?" said a woman's voice. A smart open carriage of the type known as a victoria, with two chestnut horses whose harness shone with metal. "What's the trouble, Rellly?" The woman stepped out of the victoria. "Woman peddling without a license, Mrs. Arnold. You got to watch 'em like a hawk. . . . Get along wld you, then." He put a hand on Sellna's shoulder and gave her a gentle push. There shook Sellna from head to foot such a passion, such a storm of out raged sensibilities, as to cause street, victoria, silk-clad woman, horses, and policeman to ?wlm and shiver In a haze before l*r eyes. The rage of a fas tidious woman who had had an alien male hand put upon her. Her face was white. Her eyes glowed black, enormous. She seemed tall, majestic 6V0D "Take your hand off me ! ' Her speech was clipped, vibrant "How dare you touch me! How dare you! Take your hand!? " The blazing eyes in the white mask. He took his hand from her shoulder. The red surged into her face. A tanned weather beaten toil-worn woman, her abundant hair skewered Into a knob and held by a long gray-black hairpin, her full skirt grimed with the mud of the wagon wheel, a pair ot old aide boot, oo bet glim feet, a grotesquely battered old felt hat (her husband's) on her head, her arms full of ears of sweet corn, and carrots, and radishes and bunches of beets; a woman with bad teeth, flat brea?3^even tben Julie had known hpr by her eyes. And she had stared and then ? to her lu her silk dress and her plumed hat, crying. Ob, Se nna t My dear! My dear!" with a sob of horror and pity. "My dear ! And had taken Sellna, (Carrots, beets, orn and radishes in her arms. The ^'tables lay scattered all about them on^be sidewalk in front of Julie Hem nel Arnold's great stone house on Prairie avenue. But strangely enough Ft had been Sellna who had done the nmfortlng patting Julie's plump silken .houlde and saying, over and over, shoulder a ^ & chUd ?There> ?he?l It's a" right. Julie. . If. all S Don't cry. What's there to cry ? i Qh-sh ! It's all right" Julie lifted her head In Its modish black plumed hat, wiped her eyes, blew her nose. "Get along with you. do, she said to Rellly. the policeman, us ng his very words to Sellna. I m go ng ?o report you to Mr. Arnold see if I don't. And you know what that m?Teil now, Mrs. Arnold, ma'am. I was only doing my duty. How cud I know the lady was a friend of yours. Sure I?" He surveyed Sellna, cart, laded horses, wilted vegetables. "And why not!" demanded Julie ? Water Denizen That Has Few Vital Organs The little creature called the lance lot Is slender and pointed at both ends and not very easy to see, since. It Is almost transparent and is only from nn Inch and a half tp two and a half Inches In length. It lives In shallow water and likes to stick Its bead ebd into the sand. Into which It burrows with great rapidity. It remains thus' for a long time with Its tall sticking out When on the surface of the water It lies on its side. While it can neither see nor heaf, there.Ja reason for believing that It possesses the senses of smell- and taste. Its eggs are laid about sunset and the larvae hatch out early the next morning. The lancelot has no bead. More over, it has neither legs nor pairs of flns. It has a mouth, however, placed at one end, which, therefore, may be called the head end of the body. It has a stomach, a very simple form of liver and another simple or gan which takes the place of a heart since It Is capable of contracting and thus forcing the blood, which Is quite colorless, forward to the area of the gills, where it is purified. ? Review of Reviews. Ancient Scottish Family The late Colonel Scrymgeour Wed derburn held the office of hereditary standard bearer of Scotland and was the lineal descendant of two famous families. The namo of Wedderburn was taken from the lands and barony of that name near Berwick, and Wal ter de Wedderburn swore fealty to Ed ward L Alexander Wedderburn was a ffreat favorite with James VI, went with him to England, was a signatory to union, and was presented, by the king with a ring from his own linger, stlfi preserved by the Wedderburns. This branch became extinct in 1701, when the estates were inherited by the heir of the line, now represented by the Scrymgeour Wedderburns of Wed derbura and KlrfchlU.? Family Herald, with superb an reasonableness. "Why not, Td like to know. D* get along with you." ? r }? ? He got along, a defeated officer of the law, and a bitter. And now It was Julie who surveyed Sellna, cart, Dirk, Jaded "horses, wilted left-over vege tables. "Selina, whatever In the! world I Whit are you doing with?" She caught sight of Sellna's absurd' boots then fcnd she began to cry again. At that Sellna's overwrought nerves sriftpped and she began to laugh, hys terically. It frightened Julie, that laughter. "Sellna, don't ! Come In the house with me. What are you laugh ing at! Sellna 1" , With shaking finger Sellna was point ing at the vegetables that lay tumbled at her feet. "Do you see that cab bage, Julie? Do you remember how I used to despise Mrs. Tebbltt's be cause she used to haye boiled cabbage on Monday nights?" "That's nothing to laugh at, Is it? Stop laughing this minute, Sellna Feake I" "I'll stop. I've, stopped now. I was just laughing at my Ignorance. Sweat and. blood and health and youth go Into every cabbage. Did you know that, Julie? One doesn't despise them as food, knowing that. . . . Come, climb down, Dirk. Here's a lady moth er used to know ? oh, years and years ago, when she was a girl. Thousands of years ago." Chapter IX The best thing for Dirk. The best thing for Dirk. It was the phrase that repeated Itself over and over in Se llna's speech during the days that fol lowed. In this period of bewilderment and fatigue Julie had attempted to take charge of Sellna much as she had done a dozen years before at the time of Simeon Peakcta dramatic death. And now, as then/ she pressed into service her wonder-working father and bound en slave, August Hempel. "Pa'll be out tomorrow and I'll prob ably come with him. I've got a com mittee meeting, but I can easily ? " "You said ? did you say your father would be out tomorrow I Out wheret" "To your place. Farm." "But Svhy should he? It's a little twenty-flve-acre truck farm, and half of It under water a good deal of the time." "Pa'U find a use for it, never fear. He won't say much, but he'll think of things. And then everything will be all right" A species of ngiy pride now pos sessed Sellna. "I don't need help. Really I don't, Julie, dear. It's never been like today. Never before. We were getting on very well, Pervus and I. Then after Pervus' death so sud denly like that I was frightened. Ter ribly frightened. About Dirk. I wanted him to have everything. Beautiful things. I wanted his life to be beauti ful. Life can be so ugly, Julie. You don't know. You don't know." "Well, now, that's why I say. Well be out tomorrow, pa and L Dirk's go ing to have everything beautiful. We'll see to that." It was then that Sellna had said, "But that's Just It I want to do it myself, for him. I can. I want to give him all these things myself." "But that's selfish." "I don't mean to be. I Just want to do the best thing for Dirk." It was shortly after noon that High Prairie, hearing the unaccustomed chug of a motor, rushed to Its windows or porches to behold Sellna DeJong In her mashed black felt hat and Dirk wav ing his battered straw wildly, riding up the Halsted road toward the DeJong farm In a bright red automobile that had shattered the nerves of every fanner's team It had met on the way. Of tfce DeJong team and the DeJong dog Pom, and the DeJong vegetable wagon there was absolutely no sign. High Prairie was rendered unfit for work throughout the next twenty-four hours. In the twelve years* transition from butcher to packer Aug Hempel had taken on a certain authority and dis tinction. Now, at fifty-five, his hair was gray, relieving the too-ruddy color of his face. In the last few years he had grown very deaf in one ear, so that when you spoke to him he looked at you Intently. This had given him a reputation for keenness and great character insight, when it was merely the protective trick of a man who does not want to confess that he Is hard ot hearing. Selina'8 domain he surveyed with a keen and comprehensive eye. "You want to sell?" "No." "That's good. Few years from now this land will be worth money." He had spent a bare fifteen minutes tak lng shrewd valuation of the property from fields to barn, from barn to house. "Well, what do you want to do, heh, Sellna?" They were seated In the cool and unexpectedly pleasing little parlor, with Its old Dutch lusfer set gleaming softly in the cabinet, its three rows of books, its air of comfort and usage. Sellna clasped her hands tightly In her lap ? those hands that, from much grubbing in the soil, had taken on something of the look of the gnarled things they tended. The nails were short, discolored, broken. The pal ma rough, cailov.sed. The whole story of the last twelve years of Sellna's life was written Id her two bands. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Discovered A young man whose gallantry was in excess of his pecuniary means sought to remedy the defect and to save the money required for the pur pose of expensive flowere by arrang ing with a gardener to let him have a bouquet from time to time In return for his cast-o(T clothes. One day he roceived a bunch of roses which he at once dispatched to his lady love. In sure anticipation of a friendly welcome he called at the girl's house the same evening and was not a little surprised at a frosty reception. After a pause the girl remarked, frigidly: MIou sent me a note today." "A note I I? To be sure, I sent you flowers; but ? " "And this note was with the bou quet. Dp you mean to deny it?" And the young man read: "Don't forget the old trousers you promised me U?? other . ? - ? < . ? ? . ? - . ... . ? *. . . "tMiUVV BHiAU'llJUlS UN HhjAlJlitiAK; FROCKS OF KNITTED FIBER SILK ?* . -I * ? ? FT TAKKS many kind* of hats and many varieties of each kind of pleasn the whimsical taste ??f all kind* ??f .women. But designs of millinery mi*h prolific |q Ideas and It appears Ciut there are aa many variations upon the themes of the millinery modes, as there are women to wear, them. With everything at handjto do with, designers reflect summer aiid the hum or of the mode, In endlessly varied hats. Here are Four late arrivals, all hearing the hallmarks of the season and revealing Its capacity to please whoever comes along looking for "somethin^jdifferent" and yet unques tionably modish. The first hat pic tured Is handsome and practical, a namely? a knitted dress which Is cool 10 weur on warm. days. and Is com fortable on cool days; a frock which slenderizes the tljrure unto svelte line# of grace; a frock that possesses all the style virtues of a silk, satin or cloth model, yet. being knitted, is In formal enough to wear at almost every daytime occasion. Of outstanding Interest Is this smart frock portrayed herewith, firstly be cause It Is knitted of fiber silk, sec ondly, It has the modish high turtle neck; thirdly, the skirt .carries the popular "kick-pleat" to give ease and ( graCe In walking; lastly, It is embel lished across the front of the blouse In border fashion with gold kid ap ped aline braid with soft, crushed col lar of printed chiffon. In which col ored flowers bloom against a black background. Two bar pins set with black pearls and rhlnestones ? the last word In ornaments ? are Important as a finish. A brim facing of crepe con tributes becoming color next the face, lighter near the edge, where the brim turns upward? at the front. There is an applique trimming of flowers across the back. A scarf of plain and print ed chiffon is a companion piece to this picturesque bit of summer finery. A tailored hat In black straw faced with white crepe has motifs cut from white felt applied to crown and brim. Little UHes of the valley give unity to the design, which Is very chic. A wide trimmed shape, which might be of tagal, leghorn or halr-brald, has the usual half-facing of georgette on the under brim and trimming com prising silk-covered fruits on the front crown and millinery foliage^ Some Summer Hats. pllqne together with vari-colored em broidery. One of the smartest notes of the season In connection with knitted fashions Is this Idea of leather and kid trimmings. One finds on display an alluring galaxy of knitted frocks, belted and collared sxd cuffed with gold leather or gaily colored snede. Indicating the trend of fashion among the more elegant knitted modes is a beige colored one-piece dress with a vest-panel of scarlet kldskln extend ing to below the waistline. Motifs cut from bronzed leather are appllqued in borders and sometimes Ideal for Summer Wear. This model might be developed In any becoming colors. A flexible silk bat completes tbe group wltb brim facing of straw braid. Well may tbe coming vacationist, likewise the bride-to-be, who Is assembling her trousseau, dream dreams of pretty clothes for tbs sum mer months. Tls but to visit tbe knitted outerwear departments and specialty shops to find that dreams do come true. Not even the most ardent/ dreamer of dreams can overdraw the charm of certain twp-plece jumper frocks of which the model here pictured Is a winsome exponent. This frock Is the Ideal of what women of fashion have been longing for this many a day, Pervenche Blue With Orchid A( frock of orchid colored Crepe de chine has a most unusual trimming which consists of a band of pervenche blue English eyelet embroidery about the full peasant, sleeves an? just below the natural waistline. New Garter Conceit Garters worn by tbe modern woman usually have an Initial or a cipher pe culiar to the wearer In the stone ap ornnrlata to tha month In which ah* scMtered effectively In connection with hand embroidery on knitted dresses, sweaters and scarfs. The tendency to feature knitwear ol rayon or fiber silk Is emphasized ai the warm weather approaches. 01 super-vogue also are dresses of wool stockinette, balbrlggan, also mohali and fiber combinations. These are all of vivid color charm. The new shad< of violet to which the Parislenne Is so devoted Is receiving considerable at? fention from stylists of knitted ap parel. Black knitted fiber silk frocki are piped with white crepe de chine, with collar, cuffs, and tie to match, JULIA BOTTOMLEY. (?. 19SB. WMtern N?w?p*p?r Union.) was born. They are worn below the knee and more for ornamentation than use since most stockings are sustained by grips attached to the corset oi brassiere. Wide Silks Are Practical The plain and printed silks, which come In a width of 54 Inches, are as practical and economical as they arc smart. A yard and a half of the material Is all that is necessary for a frock, while little mora Is required ~E?tto Daddy 'dortt Jeweler* Lose Trade Won.en's constantly changing Idfus /egardlng what they shall or shall not wear always affect some trade or an other. This time it Is the Jewelry trade , which is suffering, owing to the new > simplicity of tastes regarding the wearing of Jewelry, says a corre spondent of the New York World. All vi omen want pearl necklaces for the ruoment, and if ttyey cannot get real ones they will have Imitations, with the result that pendants with ornate gold settings as well as brooches are out of fashion. f According to the head of a jewelry association in Birmingham, where much jewelry is manufactured, there Is today a slump in gold watch wrist lets because women are now wearing a plain moire ribbon band, and where as it was quite usual for a woman to wear four rings it is now only usual to wear two, a wedding and au en gagement ring. "Well, howdy, Slackputter !" saluted an acquaintance from over beyond Toyheavy. "I hear tell you baffled them bank bandits tuther day." "You betcha!" prldefully replied Constable Sam T. Slackputter, the faithful guardian of the peace and dig nity of Petunia. "I ? by gosh ! ? baffled 'em plumb into the tall timber before they got away." ? Kansas City Star. Freshen a Heavy 8kin With the antiseptic, fascinating Cutf cnra Talcum Powder, an exquisitely scented, economical face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume. Renders other perfumes superfluous. One of the Cuticura Toilet Trio (soap, Ointment, Talcum). ? Advertisement Long Enough Ethel ? Were they engaged long? Edith? Oh, one cross-word puzzle. ?Life. Hu Action The man after a woman's heart may not want It. 4 It's Almost Impossible to Wear Them Out! USKIDE SOLES The Wonder Sole for IVaar? ?am 4 for m Better Heel "(/. i." 8PMNQ-8TIP Nwh United States Rubber Company iuiiimim WATER GOULDS PUMPS MO WATER SYSTEMS Write for booklet D gtvtnc details of our complete Hne of elec tric and eaginedriren pump* and water sys tems tor every need. The Goulds Manufacturing Co. Seneca Falls, N. Y. LEONARD EAR OIL PesBi rprf^jV* At /III Qw$$ists IDoV' mm about "nomas' m wauor. HEALS RUNNING SORES "I feel it my duty to write yon a letter of thanks fcr your wonderful Peterson's Ointment I had a running sore on my left leg for one year. I began to use Peterson's Ointment threa weeks ago and now it la healed." ? A. C. Glib rath, 70S Reed St.. Erie. Pa. For years I have been selling through druggists a large box of PETERSON'S OINTMENT for 35 cents. The healing power in this ointment is marvelous. Eczema goes In a few days. Old sOres heal up like magic; piles that other remedies do not seem to even reileva are speedily conquered. Pimples ?and nasty blackheads disappear In a week and the distress of chafing^ goes In - few tenon y blackheads disappear in a wee* the distress of chafing foss in a ?&&?? 'S&aOtifE ?
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 4, 1925, edition 1
7
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