THE CLEVELAND ST AH. SHELBY, N. C. TUESDAY FEB. 1:5, 1923 CONVICTS MOURN AT WARDEN'S BIER Prisoners Weep at Grave of Pen itentiary Head Lived a Christian Life. New York World. " -and HO lasht I on the ,. bare back."''. The judge finished reading the sen tence without looking at the wretch before him. It was a routine matter. "Come on, 'bo, your back will bleed tomorrow; but youH have five years in th? pen to heal it," a guard said, as he led the thief from the court. , The next morning; the thief, trem bling with fright, was taken from his penitentiary cell and down a long tun nel which ended in a patch of light, in the center of which stood the whip ping post. The shirt was stripped from his Chilblains ache and pain? MENTHOLATUM gives quick reiter. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that I have this day qualified as administrator of the. estate of Jame3 M. Champion, .deceased,, and 'till prrsons indebted to said estate will make immediate pay ment to the undersigned iTnd all per sons having claims against said entate will present them to me properly prov en for payment on, or before Janu ary ICth, V.YM, or this notice will be pleaded in n.r of their recoery. This .Jar.uarv lh, m?. K. C, CHAMPION, Admr. of James M. Charnliion. 'd?c'd. 19-p Buy Mark Twain Tires A tire that you can depend upon to give long life and mileage. VULCANIZING Our vulcanizing cannot be beat for quality. We guarantee our work. Retreading Done Right. Get our tire prices, we will save you money. Misenheimer Tire Co. Shelby, N. C. Formerly Shelby Rubber Works South Lafayettee St. NOTICE OF SALE. $100,000.00 5 Bridge Funding and Bridge Bonds, Cleveland County North Carolina. The County Commissioners of Clev eland county, N. C, will receive seal ed bids up to 2 o'clock p. m., on Wed nesday, February 21st, 1923, at which time said sealed bids will be opened by the Commissioners of Cleveland county at their office at the Court House in Shelby, N. C, for One Hun dred Thousand ($100,000.00) Dollars of Bridge Funding and Bridge Bond? of Cleveland county, numbered from One (1) to One Hundred (100) inclu sive. Said bonds will be coupon bonds of the denomination of One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars each and payable, principal and interest, at the Chase National Bank, New York city, bear ing date March 1st, 1923, and bearing five per cent, interest, payable semi annually on the first days of March and September of each year, said bonds maturing serially. Three Thou sand ($3,000.00) Dollars thereof ma turing on the first day of March in each of the years 1928 to 1947 inclu sive, and Five Thousand $(5,000.00) Dollars thereof maturing on the first day of March in each of the years 1948 to 1955 inclusive. Said bonds are issued under authority of a Special Act of the General Assembly of North Carolina, Session 1923, House Bill No. 71, Senate Bill No. 41, said Act direct ing that an annual tax shall be levied and collected i ufficient to pay the prin cipal and interest on said bonds .as same fall due. Bids should be address ed to the undersigned, accompanied by genuine certified check for two per cent of the face amount of the bonds bid for. said check payable tojthe un dersigned. No bids for less than par received, and Commissioners reserve the right to reject anv nnd all bids. Assessed valuation $35.fi83.802.00. Bonded indebtedness $226,000.00. Population rensue 1021. 34.372. Tax rate for 1922. Sixty cents on the $100.Ofl worth of property. T( r v,n n,nrri nf'rnnmiis. sioners.. ,..-', - . Thi F-bnmrv Rth. 1923. 1 p T WVATlIlTno rinrk- to the Board "of Commissioners. Shelby, N. r r 1 ' AY C. body, revealing the back, bared for the lash of justice. Each hand was manacled to a tide of the post, so far above his head that he had to stand on tiptop to keep the iron wrist lets from tearing his flesh. "All ready warden," a jailor called. The Sartorial Flogger. A man of the splendid age, with face and curly hair of a mntinee idol, and clad us the beau would dress to day stepped jauntily from a nearby building. Nonehlatitly taking u silver case from Waistcoat pocket, he care fully let a cigarette, took a long puff, and in a deep voice demanded: "Give me the 'cat'." ; The heavy cudgel with the nine leather lashes tied to it was handed him. The thief, screwing hii blanched face half around on his ntuhhy neck, saw the torture weapon. He cursed huskily and tried to flatten himself against, the post. The warden, measured his distance, took another puff at the . cigarette, held in his left hand, and ..abruptly raised the .cat-o'-nine . -.. tails, The thnngs whirred through the fir, and f(;-,iltYi,)st as lHit as th.istlee.down on the thief's back. ' :. Time and atrain Cat whirred. The t'iftenth lash was the last. There was bai'elv a mark on the thief's back, ','ThatV "nom-h for today. He's so sMrfd he'll f;.int -thinking I'm go ing to hit him. hard. Take him down and we'll-finish next Monday." War don .' Mc.rci:i;i Plumner, of the work house at Greenback, said in a low voice to the jailer. I TosM"g t'e cat in .on? side. Hum mer remarked to a spectator: "Th; Inw says that as I am warden of the Delaware pen that I've got to whip the thV-ves. But the law doesn't s;y how hard I've got to beat them. That's my business. Fool law beat ing a man insensible doesn't make him a better men. It spoils the I'lakirgs of 'ri man." - This happened last year. The whip pirg .'rnst ' js still ore of Delaware's most cherished institutions. Hut, an Warden Hummer said:." --see that man crossing the yard? He stole $10- jncacnracHBesasraioH -hiiTTir-irrTirmnr-,-T--riCTii Elf Weak Back Of a Mrs. Mildred Pipkin, of R. F. D. 8, Columbia, Tenn., says: "My experience with 53 Cardui has covered a number of years. Nineteen years ago . . . I got down with weak back. I was run-down and so weak and nervous I bad to stay in bed. I read of Bt D! at ft b The Woman's Tonic and sent for it. I took only one bottle at that time, and it helped me; seemed to strengthen and build me right up. So that is how I first knew of Cardui. ni E After that, . . . when 1 began to get weak and 'no account', I sent right for Cardui, and it never failed to help me." .- if you are weak and suffering from womanly ailments, Cardui may be just what you need. Take Cardui. It has helped thousands, and ought to help you. At all druggists' and dealers'. P. 97 ii -t -ini -irai-iriflrrTsaBi Dr. J. S. Dorton VKTKRIMARIAN Residence Phone 41. , Office Paul Webb' Phoaa 2: SHELBY, N. C. COMMISSIONER'S SALE OF LAND By virtue of authority vested in me by. decree made in the Superior court of Cleveland county in a special pro ceeding entitled "Ruben C. Peeler and wife vs. William A. Peeler, et al" I will on Thursday, March 1st, 1923 at the court house door in the town of Shelby at 12 o'clock noon offer for ale to the highest bidder the follow ing described real estate situated in No. 9 township, Cleveland County, N. C, and bounded as follows: Being tha Abe Peeler lands lying on the head waters of Maple creek and beginning on a rock pile. S. W. Lindsay's corner and runs thence S. 13 W. 35 poles to a pine stump and pointers; thence N. 77 W. 65 poles to a post oak, Pool'a line; thence N. 7 W. 68 poles to a rock pile, juindall's line; thence S. 77 E. 90 noles to a rock in Lind say's line; thence S. 23, W. 30 poles to thoTieE-innintr containing 30 1-4 acres more or less. Terms of sale: One-half cah o lay of sale and balance December 1. j 1923, evidenced by approeu bearing six per cent interest note from dnw of snip. Purchaser has privilege i of paying all cah on confirmation of -sale. i This .Tonuai v oflth, 192o. . FRANK L. IIOYLE, Commissioner. Jno. P. Mull, Atty. 000 from a corporation; was a trust ed oflicer. A clever lawyer fooled with a technicality, and thr.t man wasn't sentenced to the wh'ipping post. Hut some poor white or nigger steals i ham he gets HO laches." Plummet- died the other day, his work accomplished. For 20 years he hud been a postoffice detective. A few years ago he wns made warden of a prison noted for 'he hvvality com hi'tted within its walls. '" ,. ' Plummer chn"i"l th' t. His !: act was the establishment Af an honor system. Then he Te-mde men, Hii v.tcm was imr'.-lrn a man on the souave. Give him i rhn'o to treat von nn -tln soiiix-p. .Ami dun't forfrt tht. 'rili'5on is ppi'esirv somewhere. "No I'm not s r.ii.,rir,nii man. But IV. t-pn what 't rt i. I fm- these men. TV) W 't -Pome - day I'm going to -V,i it nr." Those '!-i) V'v t'himmer well svid he lived rhvis-ii"''-. m-ph "though bp m" 'Ujt It"' -v( ln rvvice '-. . Plnt-ip-" t,ok , ;.lif--pi'it)o-s ""ho hd. t'f'Tt tveY'"l ' '' n""-'--' ' tie of ft'W .Cells. '."' ;'." l V;;l work tht rtor"r' "Mlth. A'.-gnmr ppt ro'd if lpp. v! !; ort-term pi en "nd lifers who hud shown s'rarVs of honor were niit to 'wok: on a" farm, without even a o-nard. "Run away?" Plumnier beearr.. i'n dignant at the tho'ifht. "Mv men H'i't run iw" The lifers . escape? I'll sfv not Why. man, the liters are he ral guard:'. Thev know what n hfll it wps under the "Id system. They're thankful (nr iv bit of frsb 'i-. If one of fho;p short -'"rm men 'ied to escfinp the ljfpvu vculd kill h;m That's thp wiy my honor systeni After the diy's wor'' in the mill?' "rtd thev wovl: hi'rd thTP hurr! n-'! 'i'hts were lit in thp vard nnd bae htiH w:is played until ! o'clock' each night. "Qfia .Itwiur, moil rA'ivint? ' Vtl')t, Glummer asked "Thev soy I'm cod dling rrisonrs by living them a chance to pumn frpsh air into their lungs, by mak'ng 'em forget the monotony of prison life. But every rrvi ha alreadv worked eifht. hours. Whn they finish p'aying they'll be bo tirod they'll want to sleen right off. A"d bt me tll vou we're turmnf out more good than the pen ever did, too.' WHRV FF,l T OW TOES ASTRAY HE NEEDS VOli Editnr Johnson P1aIs That Svmmithv prrl Kindness Go Oat to Fallen Man. Ch":t" and Children. inn p. follow tOPS PstrCV rr "pods th svmrathv and help of hi fr'pnd". it i a rathpr mean spirt, fhnt -ripi "I t-iH von so " It is simply VoRt:Pg pf pn0'! vidom and fo"' s;ph a t"1 m'sfortupps of one's fpl W nwn. It hetrnvs n Jck o th mi'k f human kindness aid reveals the vnitv: pnr' r"-pit of h'm who cives "terappp to the miserable sentiment. Vo r-iatT hov (ruilf" thp poor fellow u-bn 'fll- rv bp pr Inw unfit for thp witSpn b hi held, when hp ' ovv. nifPti "' his sin, prd vo" ouf iii-di.---- fi"". t'lpTc is the vW or tb" r"rt "''' fv"h. promotion to a place r- f honor and tnict. The pvpc-o-'nr rp"""",t!r,ps p'-p ins":'""d o th- p. ""s'on "f the retiremnt ' .-of. A.. D. Wntts Thp C-pfT.sr. p'is-lv '--inns'"! VattV a-rp"--.'lnr .t' nv Prpsid --it Wilso" to thp Fdprnl r"". "PUP r-"-virp. r- r-nilv rondpip'' Kis ""'itical mothods. But instead of 1-mb')'-in"' h'm in his bu'-"il!atiiin tbnt- --por rrfprs tn his honpst an pff-:r .-f?T.MiisfrTtion of b;- ,tp-n rofiisot tp yo-;p th ro"S",nnpniPS pf his si- Thnt is rpst creditable o t'"1 "rn'- as anv nthe coursp n-mit 1 have bpn unworthy. It s ppjther brnve nor honorable in kick r nw. whAn b" is down nnd out. It ;n t' e ens''p;t thipn- in the world to snv "t told vp'i so", which betravs a half h''1, din h'larity rt the man's downfall. fThe st-ong ought to bear the infirmi ties of the weak and not please there selves. "I told you so" not only refuses to bear the infirmities of the weak but panders to the ignoble pleasure of self. None of us are free from weak ness and sin. All of us are liable to be overcome by temptation. To raise the fallen and cheer the faint is not only the duty of the Christian, but of any mnn "-ho is r-'inlv and bav? To rise on stenpimr stones of our dead serves to hiV--- th;ngs s fin but to rise o" -t---5'"? stones of others, however feeble and faulty, is despic able. JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN MNCOLNTON MILL SUIT Richmond, Va.. Feb. 12. In an opinion presented by District Judge E. Y. Webb, sitting on the appelate bench, the Unitel States circuit court of appeals today affirmed the judg ment of the Chsrlotfp district court, whereby Frank F. Pels company of New Durham, N. J.. was denied dam ages against the Saxony . Spinning company, of Lincolnton, N. C. in a case involving alleged breach of con tract on the part of the Lincolnton factory. The New Jersey concern sued on five different contract for the deliv ery of certain quantities of cotton varn at stipulated prices per pound, damages in the sum of J20.8V..40 be ing risked. A jury in the lower court "warded damages in the sum of $9.-617.57,-but the verdict was set aside The first of the five contracts was executed December 13, 1915, and the last on March 13, lOlfi. It was charged . that the contracts, were renunciated October 22, 1917. j In its opinion the 'appellate court said: ' - "Plaintiff's various orders discon-J tinuing shipments of yarn ami nY manding change of certain numbers I were contrary to the contend agree mrnts. However, these requests seem to have been granted far as possill? by the defendant, and deliveries were continued agreeable to the pt-iintift . m,upct until September 191 Reference was also mud.- to th fart that the defendant eomplaim-l from time to time of the failure on th.' navt of the plaintiff to ettle prompt-, v The court, ummimr up, declared thtit the court below did substantial jjstice in rendering a. judgn.-nt for i the derendant. . ! II VK NKWS FROM IIIK I.AWNDAI.K SKCI'lOV tv,., ial 0 The Star. : We are glad' to 'say 'that the influ enza around here is about-died out, Miss Selnm Detiton who is .teach ing' at Pleasant Hill spent the week end with home folks. There was a large crowd at th". ti'ay r,t Piedmont which was given. Friday night. Miss Lattie Dayberry is visiting h;r sister Mrs, Maurice Southard f I .'iwndalt-. ' Misses Sallie and (I.'r.v.ie Southard r-i-nt the . week 'end with tlvir si.'ter Mrs. lmuh Lattimore, Mr.'. Roland Towery of ! this pbt. . has accepted ' a position . in Wjisbinjr ton. ,t;S:5 Madee Copelai-d spent the wo k nd wi'h her uncle and aunt Mr, and Mrs, Dool Corcland. ; .Born to Mr. and Mrs. Andy F.akor a 'dainty daughter, Annie 'Pearl. Mirs Josephine Ramsey apent' he wP"k end with Miss Effie Spangler. Bern to Mr. and Mrs. Laurence I Towery a ''"o Hioehter, Birdie I.ee. Born Mr. end Mrs. P. P. Rich ards a dainty biughter. Wi: nr S'ain Rector Sails. New Yv V. F"b. 7. While scores of renorterF '"ug1. her on another liner Mrs. Frances Noel Evans Hall, wid ow of the. Rev Edward Wheeler Hall, of New -Brunswick, N. J., who was murdered last September, with Mrs. Eleanor R. Mills, a choir singer, sail ed for Italy today on the steamship J r-P"ip Mrs. Hall was accompanied by Miss "nl'v Peters, who acted as her confi ('antp and adviser during the long an"1 fruitless investigation of the double slaying. It had been announced that Mrs. Hrll would saiFtoday on the Maure tania. Catches Large Hawks. John V. Porter of Shelby, R-l caught three large hawks in less than two months. One measured 41 ..inh.es from tin to tip one 33, and the other 30 inches. They were caught in a Jteel trap. GOOD CIGARETTES GENUINE "BULL" DURHAM TOBACCO MORTAGAGEE'S SALE. By virtue of a mortgage deed exe cuted to J. L. Suttle Company by S. W. Wilson and wife, on the 8th day of February, 1919, and recorded in Book No. 90 at. page No. 407, in. the office of Register of Deeds for Cleve land county, N. C, to secure the sum of $670.00 ,and default "" having been made in the payment of the indebted ness thereby secured, the undersigned mortgagee will sell to the highest bidder at the court house door in Shel by, N. C, on MONDAY, March 12th, 19.3, at 12 o'clock M., or within legal hours the following described real estate: Begining at a stone, Philip Wilson'i corner in D. Putnam's old line; thence N. 75 W. 28 poles to a stone; thence S. 37 W. 6 Opoles to a stone; thence S. 43 1-8 W. 64 poles to a stone on the bank of river; thence down the river as it meanders. 37 poles to a take; thence N. 59 E. 4 poles to a I J. .1 OR Cm.tWnct 1 H Southwest 11 poles to a stone; thence N. 18 E. 91-2 poles to a stake; thence S. 80 E. 21 poles to a Black gum at the fork of the branch; thence up the left hand from about N. 33 E. 49 poles to a white oak stumn at the head of the branch; thence N. 72 E. 13 Poles to a stone thence N. 15 E. F3 poles to the begining. containing 22 1-8 acres, more or less. Terms of Sale: Cash. This the 2nd dav of February. 1923. J. L. SUTTLE COMPANY.Mort gagee. B. T. Falls, Atty. 1 TO CONTROL FLAVOR AND ODOR OF MILK Much Depends on Feeding and Proper Care of Product. Siligs That Has Ben Fed Qjp Hour Befor Milking It So Quickly Ab sorbed That Taint la Dlacarn- , iblo, Saya Bulletin. (Prauftrvd bv th Pttrf Stm. n.n.ptm.ai ! of Acrkullura The flavor and odor of milk may ha controlled to a great extent through the Ceding of the herd and the care of the product. Thesa problems are discussed hi United States Department of Agrt- '"'iure bulletin 1W7, "The Effect of ""S8 ou 'a" and t)dor or ''" A. Gamble and Erneat ' ... .. juu iinvor aim ooor ot simge, ac cording to the results of the luvestlga Hon, are largely Imparted to milk through the body of the cow, and Bllage (lint has been fed ohh hour before milking Is so quickly absorbed that Us taint is discernible In the milk. It should he fed Immediately after milk ing, If the diilrynmn wishes to avoid Imparting an odor to the milk. Legume MIiik must be fed In smaller suiouuta, ns It affects the u.llk more than com ! silnxe. j The bud odors Imparted by silage . may be gfeutly dlndnlslied by prompt nnd cu reful nerutlon of the wiirm ; milk. Some milk Is Improved lu flavor t by the feeding of sllaye. The results J (thread. This was done to lessen the show that silage odors In the barn air I danfer of importing seiious insects have little effect on the flavor and odor irr dvonitr prms w;th the plants. Somr "f the nilll;, but the department advises th-so tliimrs h:ite not yet been pro tli.it Kond ventilation should not be lost i (ullicit ntly bir-'f,. quantities- si'-'1t of. n this rr.mdrv In mi nr.lv iU,l fl'eam frmn sllae-talnted milk re tains the tlavors nnd odors more tena ciously. than the milk Itself. Condensed milk made from It litis a less percent!- jble si In ni; flavor thiin the milk tfam which It was made. Copies of the bulletin may be , had from the Teprtmeiit of " Agriculture, Washington. NEWEST FREAK IN POULTRY "Turken," a Cross Between a Turkey and a Han, Drought About ky Waahlngton Man. If your faintly U divided aa te whether they want turkey or chicken for dinner dou't worry here'a the K IntloD a lomblua'lon of the twa In "1 urKen," Latest rrea. u Houltry. ne In the form of a nw and strange bird, the "turken." h cinsa between a turkey and a thicken. This poultry freak, bred by K. 'fi. ilcii.les of WaHhington, one of the ex hibits at the poultry show held In the Coliseum in the national capital, com manded unusual Interest nnd puzzled. the visitors. The fowl about the head and.nwk has the appearance of a turkey while the body is that of a larga chlckeu. TREES WILL DRY OUT QUICK Best Plan to Handle One at a Time, Leaving Other Remain in . Trench Healed in. Plant one tre at a time. Do not take a number of .rees out of the box or trench where they are heeled In and distribute them on the gronDd by -i the holes. They will quickly dry out, much faster than you Imagine, and since you won't plant as fast aa yon thought the delay Is sure to be long er than "best practice demands. POWDER CONTROLS HEN LICE Mixture of Gaaellr.e, Stock Dip and Dry Cement WIN Prove Quite Effective. Commoa hen lice that live on the hairs, feathera and akin of the fowls can be controlled by treating with a home-made powder composed of mix-1 ing three parte of gasoline and one part of stock dip and adding enough dry cement to make a powder. Hold ft, fclrfl with I i hoarl trt,n ..J . i . nn. . tt,mmt? I " . "...c.iuirj. WAY FOR KEEPING SEED CORN Flour and Sugar Barrels Make Satis factory Containers Provide for Ventilation. A good way to keep seed corn Is to place It In good tight boxes or barrels. Flour and sugar barrels make good containers. The barrels should be placed where the nir Is dry and circu lates freely. Such a place la taiutly fouud in the baru loft S t ' WHY PLAN YOUR SPRING PLANTINGS SO EARLY? While You are Sitting by Fire Think of the Crops ' You Can Plant. (F, F. Rockwell, Horticultural Kditor of "Farm and Fireside.") Wliy should you plan now while the the groumLis still frozen up hard, or covered with snow, for what jiu are going to plant this spring? The big reason for "doing it now" is that, the earlier you make your plans, the better he results which yon will get. There nr? many reasons why this i a fact, In the first .place, you can at th's time, imike vour planting plans at leisure. With th" approach of spring even weks before the ground can be worked, there are a score ofj things to begin that require one's at tention even on the smallest " place. Now, while the evenings are still long, and there is plenty of time to pick and cbposo nnd discuss, and to send for catalogues if those you have, on hand do not cover eveiylhing you are likely to want, is the ideal time to do your' planning. The Karly Order Bird fiels the Pick. There is another big reason why vi'ii should pit your plans made now, and that, is s!i that' vou can order e'lily. Many kinds of plants and tlmil.s are scurciir tbis spring than thi-y-hnye boft for nwmv years. A few yea iv airo the United States de partment of agrii ulture 'shut nir many kinds of plant formevlv im- Ported n .large (puintities fronf rlint is the reason- for the shortage. Another is .tlsut .more" building . hn . been going on during the last twelvi monlhs than has, "'Previously, been done 'n many years. People realize mom bun they ever did before that a house not really a honip until it is plant ed with trees ami shrubs. Almost ev '"y new home you see built these days hns me planting done around it al most immediately. All this building:, therefore, has made an extra heavy demand for all classes of ornamen tal plants. More Fruit Being Planted. When it corns to the fruit trees, tl.t s!t"ption is the same. During the war nd the few year following it. com--srrt'velv few fruit tree wer set owf Dnr'"? the bst year o" ''o, h"wve porle hae bernn to fpn"7P tht irt ' ,mnnv kinds of fmit. we have few bPf.-" tr-.g in 19?0 than we had T r .ov.pvnment figures show thnt the decrease were from ten to thirty pnd even fortv Per cent This has r "ltH in .yt-T hvv flpmnnd'i frof K;n. r(,mt'V"r'!r'! t 'lr'll S, UP.ll t') IS -'"r t su"tdr for the 'home owner and he farmer who wants a home orchard ff- hi ue unci for local market. Then is no tarn- investment todnv '-'b-h tiffprc p htipr nnnortunity t' th" t.lant'nti' ,.f an on-rord i 'n-fnr -.11 n,.rt pf the P'ace... Ton -i.-v pf thn rvl.Trnq which OI1P- Hpy nr(l fHrmn or sub s.iff 1 fiin "lppRidpd ' -' ,i:ni' Ip tio t1ip tnqv tc.'. i'vcrirreen ;i"d o'hing else. Fv "''"""nB e- fipa ik1 thev are so de' p'Vii.lp ;., rf, t(,nn- lived that some "f.flrni tUiinlil b 'rifA, pyprv place Lu thpre ne"-' elT for other trees for . flowerii-''. .shrubs nd hardv t'snt s, , Fvcwre ns. us a rule, should ''ill to t" north or west of R ii.,,flrt fi... .itf tyy.fitnpf from ......f.. ...initc. p-H trt. n bppke'ro1'? "t ill it off to nilvantape: l)t -i,.l,Vht w c"'n Vpvr. in. flip wintm- "" tl'".pfo-p in frtmt r,( the ho'"" it : l,t'ir f-, hrvp mmp trpps w'h ,t thpiV tpnve in winter,' thus ' both K"ri i summer RV(t r.n,n.;ttinT tn wlipht to enter dur r" ti,, mnnttio wh'n we want it. There i hrd!v n place, no matte -i' small, where there i not, room r(,r ome fruit. Certainly no. farm s a real farm without Pt lenst some sort "f nn orchard to provide plenty of fp"'t for home use. Even if it is only a couple of doz en trees, it will he well worth wbi'p, because durincr eight, or ten months . of the vear thew will sivp manv dol '" that would otherwise be spent for "store" fond. "' in eddltion to this, pven a very sma" orrhrd msv bring . ;n a poodlv sum of rpsdv cesh. Ten to vpntv dollars is not at all unnnal. t have received a 'mnch its foi-tv dnT- 'pre for the cron from one trpe of at plps. Thpp there pre tb floweWng 1 nrnhs and th- hs-dv flowers. The Hoy h?" fone bv wVpn t.h" strV. bre fowi Vnup will r for q fmj home thnt thp ownrr "!r. hp nrond of. Sorpe nlnip" nnd e" flowPrs Hi XS r""ch l Prt of the mnPm fsrn) home "nn'ns' ter 'n the k'tphon. a "'rtnVrn hPnt;n r.lp,t. pnd , p'pptr'c ""hts, A 'w do'brs invpsted in "1iint! will br!f hppjitv f" inv trt thp pntirp fpmilv for yeflrs. nd rP wp timp pdd more th ten ttmos thp cost of be Hants trt te vlna of thP prprprtv. Tbpre 's no 1o"pr nrif excise for bare nnplanted houses. Kppp these tbip-" in m!"d. ""d mnke vonr r.Jans ow to do or.e "lentip" the SPT'nc. Cot vnhr prnr in promptly so you ran fet ?"t wbt von wont sm) not have to tnVp -what thp other fellow hnrren to lv. WANTED YOT1R BT'TTFR rwrrtf. pus nn' effs. W pav bi"bpt. prn. R. V,, Hewitt & Cn . TnttJmnre. .1-1 3c

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