The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 27, 1922, Image 2
LIVE STOCK HAS
BRIGHT OUTLOOK
Clem son College, April 20.?With
noticeable improvement in breeding
stock, a better knowledge of feeding,
a realization of the need (or homegrown
feeds and a better understanding
of fitting and marketing live stock,
the outlook for successful develop
mcnt of the swine and cattle industries
in South Cvifolina is very promising,
according to various .qu .Ivor
at the twenty-first annual meeting r
the South Carolina Live Stork Association
held ?*'t Clemson College o
April G and 7.
The views of an outsider on sever:'"
of these points are well worthy o.'
note. Mr. C. Driver, the veteran he; .
of the Baltimore Live Stock Com mis
-sion firm of C. Driver & < \>.. wlv
attended tlie meeting-, said that South
Carolina has >hipped to Caltiinoro a
good cattle as comes to that market
but that the eattle raised generally
in this state is not yet sui^iciently
well bred to ship e:\st for feeders;
that the herd of Shorthorns recently
fed at Clemson as an oxperiment were
excellently finished ; taut success in
feeding steers lies in selecting good
rattle ai.d finishing them well; thai
iSouth Carolina hogs x?ro coming bet
ler to his market, showing better
breeding and better feeding.
The beef cattle program outlined
before the association by W. J. Shee
ly, extension animal husbandman,
stressed the recommendations for a
limited amount of work in purebred
breeding of beef cattle by those who
will do it well; the production of good
grade stock by means of purebred
bulls; the practice of steer feeding
by those who will study careful selection,
proper feeding, ^To.vin^ of feeds
and wise selling; and the development
of community beef clubs as a means
of greater home consumption of beef,
matters to which every live stock man
should give consideration in helping
promote the cattle industry.
In discussing "Some Live Stock
Problems," especially with reference
to hogs. Prof. L. V. Starkey, chief of
the animal husbandry division of
Clemson College, emphasized the following
needs for successful and economical
pork production: (1) More
and better fencing, (2) forage crops
the year round, (3) good foundation
stock, (4) home-grown grains, (5)
more attention to needs even in our
climate for shade, shelter and bedding,
(G) raising a larger proportion
of the farrowed pigs, (7) elimination
of mud wallows, dust, lice, etc.. (8)
attention to the soft pork problem,
(9) freights, markets, etc.
Many questions on various phases
of the development of a better live
stock industry in the state to fit it
into each farmer's needs were discussed
and many valuable suggestions
were brought out.
J. II. Connor, Eutawville, was elected
president for the next year and
\V. J. Sheely, Greenville, secretarytreasurer.
o
QUESTIONS WD ANSWERS
From Specialist^' Correspondence
With Farmers
Please give directions for using 10
per cent formaldehyde to prevent
corn sinut.?J. E. G., Kershaw.
Formaldehyde treatment will not
control corn smut, as tin's is not a
seed-borne disease. No satisfactory
r.umber of seed-borne diseases of co,-n.
control is yet known. There are a
however, and for the control of these
we advise an ear to ear examination
of the seed, to be followed by discarding
/.ill diseased ears. The hot-1
any division of the experiment station
is prepared to do this work free
j'or anyone in the state.
Please advise about 1 oculating velvet
beans.?W. M. S., Johnston.
It is not necessary to inoculate velvet
beans. Practically all of the soils
of this state are already inoculated
for velvet beans as they use the same
inoculation as peanuts, cowpeas, lespedeza
and lima beans.
What is the matter with the pecan
twigs which I am mailing you??J.
E. F., Rowesville.
The pecan trees seem to be aflTected
with Itosette, followed by the attack
of some semiparasitic fungus.
The usual cause of rosette is some
soil deficiency, which may vary
greatly in different circumstances and
localities. I suggest that a study of
1he soil conditions will indicate the
best measures for controlling tne
trouble.
Let me know what the enclosed
specimen is and if" it is a pest. I got
it in some black medic seed.?J. F
W., Ulmer.
It is wild mustard, or charlock anr
is a pest. Plow it under at once anc
not permit any 'of it to grow as fa)
as the blooming stage in the future
You can eradicate it completely bul
only by the closest vigilance.
What is the proper time to .applj
second spray for worms?
Two weeks after first spray, whicl
should have been applied when two
thirds of the shucks have slipped. Se<
Intension Circular 25.
Bordeaux mixture, the first spr;r
to i'-jc applied before plants are re
moved from the plant bed, the secon<
about three weeks later, and spray
ing continued every two or thl*e<
weeks during fruiting season. Fo
best results train your tomatoes t
stake so that spray may be applie<
nil of the nlants.
How docs nitrate of lime compar
with nitrate of soda in availability
?R. S. Clinton.
Nitrate of lime is practically a
available as nitrate of soda.
o
( aids Cause Grip ant! Influenza
LAXATIVE BKOMO QUININE Tablets remove tl
miuao. Tliero is on'./ ouu "Qrotno Qutois-*
i. \i. GKOVE'S siaactura cn box. 30c.
3KY VISITOR i
FALLS IN SEA '
#
Asbury Park, N. J.?A meteor discharging
odorous gases flashed - h
rough space to the south of this place
one night recently and disap- .
o?,ared in a thunderous roar and ,
frightened residents of many coast '
owns. Window p.nnos in residences <
'a Toms River were shattered by the .
\plosion and the gases, polluting the .
tmosphere for more than ? quarter
f an hour, compelled the residents to <
.old dampened handkerchiefs to their ?.
- ostrils. ?
!n Lakohurst many of the buildings ..
ere shaken as if b\ an earthquake, i
A party led by town officials has ]
et out for the spot where the meteor (
ell, beiicved to be ne.ar Brown's-Mill- >.
l-the-Pines, a village thirty miles (
from here.
VllVsSH EGGS ENTIRE YEAR
C'emson College, April 27.?During
v pril and May, when eggs are plen
itul, of higher quality, and the mar- i
'cet price is very low, is the best (
ime to preserve eggs, according to
\T. R. Mehrhof, extension poultry spe
cialist, who suggests that only strict- \
ly fresh eggs should he preserved,
that dirty eggs or eggs that have '
>een washed should not he used, that
vashed e^gs will not keep because <
the protective coating has been removed
by the washing, and dirty eggs
will become tainted in flavor, and that
infertile eggs are better than fertile i
eggs for preserving. <
The water glass method is one of
the most satisfactory methods to use. <
The commercial water glass, which <
can be bought at any drug store, is <
used in the following proportion ;
One Aiuart of water glass to 10 '
quarts of pure water. j
Water that has been boiled and then i
cooled is preferable. The mixture
should be stirred until the ingred- <
ients are thoroughly mixed. 1
A clean stone jar is the most suit- 1
able container. The eggs should be
placed in the water glass so that <
those at the top are covered by at i
least two inches of the liquid. The l
jar had best be covered in order to (
prevent evaporation and stored in .
a cool place.
o I
CONTROL OF MOLES
Clemson College. Moles generally .
pass through their runways several ,
times a day and the following meth- ,
ods have therefore been found etl'ec- (
tive in controlling them, says Prof. A. ,
F. Conradi, entomologist, in answer i
to numerous / requests for a remedy. ,
1. Stir un parched peanuts in
white of egg. While sticky sprinkle
Paris green over them. Mix well so
lhat the poison surrounds all the seed ,
and let dry. They will dry in about
me-half hour and are than hard and
j an be easily handled.
2. Roll raisins in strychnine with
i stick or toothpick. Do not use
aands, and be sure not to snill am
for it is a violent poison. When
'hrough, burn any poison remaining
?ver.
How to Apply ,
Whittle a broom handle to a point.
Walk over the ground and at intervals
pierce the runway and drop into
the hole ;x poisoned raisin or peanut ;
and cover with the foot. .
Mole traps may be purchased at ,
hardware stores or wholesale houses, ,
!>ut they are less effective, and only <
the poisoned trap** are recommended. ;
o
OIYORCK RING FOR 1
THE CRASS WIDOW (
From time immemorial woman has ,
'.voi'n on the third finger of her left ,
' and a plain band of gold as a symbol |
>f her honored position of wifehood.
-\nd when death takes from her the
nnrtner of her life she signifies her
!oss and grief by wearing appropriate
garb.
But in what a different manner todav
the widow of the present, that is <
the one who by the sanction of the
courts. Iris resigned her job as wife,
nakes known to all the world her renewed
state of single blessedness.
For tho grass widow of today has just
adopted the latest of fads, the "divorce
ring." This jeweled symbol of
the severance of the marital ties
takes the place of the former gold
band. It is made of gold or platinum
on which is mounted a broken Cupid's
bow at the end of which is set a jewel
to represent a divorce. Should the
.vearer once more embark on the matrimonial
seas and again come to
wreck then another jewel is added to
indicate the second divorce, and so on.
o
HEALTH HINTS I-OR
THE HOMK
The judicious use of oranges is a
good thing, hut a few precautions
1 should be taken. In the first place,
1 have nothing but good fruit, and pool
- the orange carefully, for the white
. pith lying beneath the yellow rind is
t deleterious. I)o not eat many oranges
at first,, but the habit of eating
j them at meals will work wonders in
a short time in regulating the /system
i and keeping the blood in good condi
tion.
1
For xi relaxed throat there is nothyr
ing better than gargling night and
- morning a teaspoonful of vinegar in
1 a tumbler of very hot w.itcr.
0 Those whose hands become easily
r chapped should keep them out of
i) water as much as possible when doil
ing housework. Rubber gloves and
washing cloths fastened on handles
e help to save the han-.ls from coming
? into contact with the water.
o
s Habitual Constipation Cured
In 14 "o 21 Days
AV WW WITI-I OPDCIM" ?
u/\A-* vo ? iiii i iii ujii 19 a npuiany*
prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual
Constipation. It relieves promptly buf
should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days
:e to induce regular acti*>n. It Stimulates and
" Regulates. Very Pleasant '.o Take. 60c
r er bottle.
tL.
TH3 HORRY HERALD, CON'V
PALESTINE WAR
WON BY CAVALRY
Washington.?Cavalry won the war
?at lo.ist so much of tho world conHot
ns v/as fought out in Pnlestino?
>"eo>v'intr *o Lieut. Col. Edward Da*is.
United Statos army, who has renrned
to Washington to present to
i-ir. p-^nnral slafT his observations on
^oro than six years' service with tho
ratios of other nations.
Before the entry of the United
Slates in tho World War and .nftoryards,
Colonel Davis served with tho
'oroe> of Grent Britain. Franco, Russia.
Ttalv, Serbia and Greene. Later
le served as military attache in Holand
and at Berlin. According1 to
Colonel Djivis, his most v.a'uable miliary
experience was with the British
>avalry during the Jerusalem campaign
ajhI he stated he was surprised
o find that so little waft known in
ho United S?t;ito? mirmviiiwi.
uic uu^
f General Allonby's two remarkable
ampaigns in the Holy I,and, each of
.vhich lie characterized as "an exuisite
example of the combined opor'tions
of all arms of the service unler
a master strategist and a great
natural leader of men."
In both the Jeruralem and Damascus
campaigns Colonel Davis said, the
naster stroke was delivered by the
-avalry. He described several of the
noimted charges made by Allenby's
rorces, and explained that the most
striking results were obtained by
those swift and unexpected blows at
?nemv infantry and artillery groups.
"After the British had reached
a hat looked like a stalemate on the
CJaza-Beersheba line," Colonel Davis
-aid, "It was decided to employ cavilry
in a final effort to pierce the
Furkish defenses. The British strategists
decided cavalry could operate
best against one end of the line, and
j. mounted squadron was sent to 'bite
">1T' an end of the entrenchments that
had resisted every effort at capture.
Within an hour the cavalry had effected
contact with the Turks and
then began a process that might best
^e described as 'rolling up' that thin
tine that so long had resisted every
?flfort at assault. The operation was
i complete success and the entire line
A'as in British control within ten
lours.
"The value of cavalry against heavy
irtillery was strikingly demonstrated
at Huj, where the Sixtieth division
,vas engaged. The cavalry under
Colonel Shea charged twelve cannon
protected by machine gun nests, and
n ten minutes had captured eleven'
if the big guns and cleaned out the
lests. The success of that operation
vas repeated in the charge at ElMugliar
one week later. There, the
'avalry charged to the top of a hill
125 feet high, with a 20 per cent
rrade, and, leaping over a 'series of
trenches captured three Krupp 77.md
nearly a score of machine guns.
"Without water, without baggage
if any sort, the cavalry made long,
v\rd '^arches and outflanked tlie en*:ny
column again and again. Finally
>n the plain of Armageddon, the last
?tru."g!e took place. During the first
stage of that battle the Turks fought
wo'l but were steadily forced back.
Presently the Turkish front between
ho sea and the Jordan was broken
[ind through the gap 'along the sea
?oast Ailenliy launched his cavalry
I ? > ii v'lniti) nni'tli w!t Vfl nnil t liPll Oil set
kVMrd to Nazareth. across the rear of
he whole Turkish host. The Gernan
commander, Liman Von Sanders,
>arc'v escaped from the net by precipitate
flight, but what was left of
he Turkish armies, more than (10,000
men and -100 guns, fell into Allenby's
lands. A month later Turkey capitulated."
o
.MK.MORY
Perhaps Uncle "Ebony" Brown of
Wavback, La., suffered from failing
eyesight, fading memory or a constilutional
inappreciation of the rising
generation. However it may have
been, a younger negro, who had returned
home after an absence of
manv vears. seemed to have escaped
his recollection.
"I'se boun' to say," commented
Uncle Ebony, "maybe his face seem
similar, but I fails to organize him!"
"Well. Uncle Ebony," exclaimed the
prodigal, in a tone of disappointment
and with much resent fulness, "it's indifferent
to me, but I can remember
myself as de one who most infrequently
used to supply yo' wid yo'
chewin'-tobacco; and den yo' was much
less reclusive wid yo' exhuberation!"
o
TOO LATE
A youthful scenario writer with a
freshly-creased diploma from a correspondence"
school dashed into the
office of the director of the Far-West
Movie Studio and began:
"1 have|just the thing for you in
a novelty film. It's a story on the
life of Robinson Crusoe whilh on the
island. It calls for a very small cast
and no interior sets; all outdoor effects,
and can be put on for a very
nominal figure. The scenario is not
completed yet, but I'll have it written
by Saturday, and?"
"Sorry," said the director, eagerly
grasping at the opportunity of escape
"but you're too late; I have just contracted
for a scenario on the life of
PlMlL'AA 4 /\ I in uri?! i 4 An lt?t n
i %%/r r 11 r\\r 1? vi vioug tu uu vv l ittC'll C
certain man Friday."
?* o
iRKTALIATION
: vj
A father and mother wishing t(
punish their chi'd for disobedience
told him lie could not eat with then
and must have a table for himself it
the coiner of the room. At mea
,when the parents were seatec
at tlw table and the boy was in tb<
corner, they overheard the litt'e fel
low saying grace: "O Lord, I an
thankful to Thee for preparing a tabh
before me in the presence of my ene
mies."
VAY, S. C., APRIL 27, 1922
RUSSIAN STORY
BEYOND BELIEF
Five hundred to 1,000 bodies are
each weok buried in Odessa's newest
cemetery. They aye carried out in
shoulders in coffins if the dead's relatives
still have money and affection
enough or are transported in motor
trucks. If carried in trucks the bodies
we piled high like so many broken
p-ickages, men, women and children
:iH together and all uncovered, barring
i few rags.
A', the cemetery the bodies are
dumped near a trench and cast therein.
Sometimes there is no trench. It
is yet to be dug. This statement of
fact is not given in criticism. The
wonder is that the bodies are buried
.t all and many would not be but for
.% r-\ \ i i n a i n
the tree Minuay laoor 01 ine v.ompumists,
donated as party discipline.
To say that the last phase of the
bitter story of famine in Russia is
told in this cemetery would he commonplace.
Nobody can tell the story
>f Russia. Perhaps neither Tolstoi
nor Hugo could have done it. Those
living or visiting there only now and
then at odd moments realize what is
happening.
Cemetery an Object Lesson
To ^ay that the population of Odessa,
though constantly renewed by
Jews fearing pogroms in the country,
is about one-half its prewar population
of 5,000,000 to (500,000; that conditions
are as bad as on the Volga,
worse than in Constantinople or worse
than Vienna at its worst; to say that
the life of the people is daily sapped
by fear, famine, nervousness, madness,
hopelessness, doesn't mean much.
Probably one would have to see this
cemetery to understand.
Why not go to our cemetery and
look at the mountain of unburied
dead, if you wish to know what is
happening to us," said a woman to
the correspondent.
The way ran some miles to the
northeast of the city's center, through
the Moldavanka suburb, shattered by
the explosion of 1918 in the military
warehouses. All along the streets
and the road were block after block
of stone buildings knocked down. Beyond
the wrecked and unused warehouse
and factory district lay the
burial place on the edge of the steppe.
"This is our third and newest cemetery,'"*
said the guide. "The others
were filled long ago."
Peasant Gravediggers Hungry
There were no bodies above ground.
At the extremity of the graveyard a
peasant bent over a shovel alongside
:\ muddy trench. Called to, he came,
wading through mud and snow.
"Eighty bodies have been cast here
and 1 am covering them," he said.
Then, "I am hungry, I have not been
paid for a long time. There are five
of us. None of us have been paid."
This seemed to be the end of the
story. Going back, a Russian priest
stood .at the gate, gowned in faded
black velvet. "Let me show you
_ .ji.' _ _ >? i__ ' i i.i: ii?
sonuumnuy ne .said, gmung niiu me
automobile. He directed the machine
down a macadam road leading past
the cemetery to the open country.
He brought the machine within a few
minutes to a big motor truck, backed
across t He road. It carried some
fifty-six bodies, limp and naked, arms
and hands and heads rising here and
there, massed like sardines in a can.
The driver explained that he had
just come from the railroad station,
where the bodies had been assembled
for him. He pointed to others lying
in the mud across the ditch that
drained the road. "These 1 brought
yesterday. Only a part have been
buried," lie said.
The priest took the car a little
further down the road. Here was another
truck, unloading. "I got the
bodies at the typhus hospital and the
madhouse," said one of the men.
Sometimes he i>*ot his load from the
streets, at house doorways; often
babies put there by parents too poor
to bury them.
How nv.inv people were being buried?
No one could say exactly. A
count had once been kept of those executed.
Each had been buried with
identity cards tied to the hands. But
now there were too many and every
one was tired.
On the way hack to the city the I
priest was set down at his pate. He I
said he needed a pair of shoes but
refused money offered. He smiled a
vague farewell.
No Signs of Mourning
On the way back to the city groups
of people were met carrying their
dead, with no sign of mourning. They
might as well have been going to
market. No one pays much attention
to the dead here. People are too absorbed
in trying to live.
, "America! You from America?
Why, you come from paradise," exclaimed
an old imperial /irmy officer,
who has long acted as if mad to save
, himself. He touched the correspond,
ent's coat, kissed the sleeve, then
asked:
"Is it true?God's truth?that there
, is bread in America?"
o
There is talk of deporting bootleggers.
The 1030 census should be
, comparatively easy.?Arkansas Gazette.
)
! CBEDH'^^CfiEDiT |
' T Kye glasses fitted and sold on %
I Z a CREDIT.
j Office over Horry Drug Co. T
I 2 Office days every Monday. <$>
, | Hours, 9 to 4'! I IT J
LL. A. WOODRUFF, D. Opt. I
Eyesight Specialist
Conway, S. C. 2
WOMEN PROTEST "CIVIC VIRTUE"
FALSELY DEPICTED
New York clubwomen and leaders
in civic affairs>fcik\Hev -sent out what
may prove to be a feminine battle-cry
against sculptor Frederick MacMonnies'
depiction of "Civic Virtue" as a
nude young1 mam enthusiastically kicking
the prostrate form of two sirens
representative of urban temptation
and vice.
Protest was voiced by Mary Garrett
Hay and Mrs. James Lees Laidlaw,
champion of women's rights, at
the announcement that the MacMon
nine vipiilnfni'D urou <il\i\nf + / ?
?MVU uv VIIJ/VVH V '? lio W V VW UV- Ui VV. I
od i?i City Hall park. The jnoney for
ihe monument to "Civic Virtue" was
left to the city in the term of Mayor
McClellan.
Mr. MacMonnies had depicted the
spirit of his theme as an onward
marching; youth, a mighty club slung
across husky shoulder, spurning with
either foot a recumbent and alluringfemale,
symbolic of all that isn't nice
in civic aspiration.
"I think it is a trifle ridiculous/'
Miss Hay declared. "Perhaps the
true symbolism lies in the fact that
Civic Virtue' is depicted as naked.
Thnt strikes one as reasonable after
thinking of what civic virtue has had
to undergo from the city hall politicians.
No wonder the poor thing
hasn't any clothes.
"Why should MacMonnies have used
a male figure trampling down tempting
women ? Why not represent civic
virtue as a man and woman hand-inhand,
mounting confidently and happily
a difficult path?"
Mrs. Laidlaw agreed with Miss Hay.
"Woman stand with men," she said.
"The spirit of the times, it seems to
me, is against a discrimination symbolic
or otherwise."
o
No Wprms In a Healthy Child ^
All children troubled with Worms have an unhealthy
color, which indicates roor h'ood, and as a
rule, there is more or 1 ess stomach disturbance.
GROVE 5 TASTELESS CHILL TONIC fliven regularly
for two or three wcck3 will enrich the blood,
improve the digestion, and act as a generu I Strength
emng lonicto tne wnoie system, ixaiure wm tuen
throw off or dispel the worms, and the Child will b?
In perfect health.' Pleasant to take.*i)0c per bottle.
o
"Why do you constantly favor new
methods of taxation?"
"I consider it necessary," said Senator
Sorghum, "to enable the people
to look forward to some kind of a
change. If we can't satisfy 'em, we
can at least kep 'em hopeful."?Washington
Star.
In a new package
At a price that j
The same immatel
Turkish. Virginia
[ cn Guaranteed by
| Qualitj
? No matter what your wa
X we can meet them always v
only kind you would buy or
J We carry not only the s,t
+ that go to make a com pie
We want t
| W. S. <
EAGLE "MIKADO">^
I?fllllll
iUHi WFililCafn^MMBflBSH
For Sale at your Dealer
ASK FOR THE YELLOW
EAGLI
EAGLE PENCIL C(
i
|
Strawbei
Mill ions of purebre.
varieties at wholesale pi
growers. Write for free
tion and prices of each va
E. W. Joh
Salisburj
i I
i i
i><>! i./. #rii Vi'
\
TRY TO BE THE FELLOW YOUR
MOTHER THINKS YOU ARE"
I I
While walking down a crowded city
street the other day,
I heard a little urchin to a comrade
turn and say:
"Say, Jimmie, don't yer know I'd
be happy as a clam
If I only was de feller dat me mudder
t'inks I am.
She t'inks I am a wonder, and knows
her little lad
Would never mix wit' nothin' dat was
utfly, mean or bad.
'T often sit and t'ink how nice 'twould
be, tfee whiz!
If a feller was de feller dat Ms
mudder t'inks he is."
So folks, be yours a life of toil and
undiluted joy,
You still can learn a lesson from the
small, unlettered boy;
Don't try to be an earthly saint, with
eyes fixed on a star?
, Just try to be the fellow that your
I mother thinks you are.
The Monitor,
o >
THE HALF-WIT
A youngster employed by an Eastern
mercantile establishment was
mentally deranged. He frequently
displayed violent temnor
After a period the young1 man became
angry at his employer and
abandoned his job. He had difficulty
in securing another.
He read a magazine advertisement
of revolvers. They could be obtained
?the most deadly pistols?at a certain
place by paying a certain sum
of money. The half-wit bought a
gun. He thought he had been discharged
from his previous position.
Last week employes of his former
company saw the young half-wit loitering
about the company offices. He
desired to see one of the principals
of the firm. He failed to see either.
He continued to loiter.
At the dinner hour one of the principals
stepped out of his office. The
half-wit and his gun appeared. The
principal is dead, shot dead by the
deranged young man with the gun he
had seen advertised in the magazine.
The pistol manufacturers want to
continue manufacturing revolvers.
They want them advertised and sold.
But the buyers often go to the penitentiary
or to the gallows, and the
victims go to the grave.
And the manufacture goes on.?
Oregon Daily Journal ((Ind.)
' 4
-eleven cigarettes
^ Throe Friendly
TURKISH
VIRGINIA
BURLEY
FIFTEEN
that fits the pocket ?
its the pocket-book ?
led blend of
L and BURLE Y Tobaccos
? *111 FIFTH AVE.
3 ** MtW VOMM CITV
j Meats I
nts may be in the meat line T
vith first quality meats, the X
serve on your talkie.
a pies hut also the delicacies X
te market stock.
o serve you. T
GATLIN |
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cum nu. jl 41
' ,L'"" T" " ";
Made in five grades
PENCIL WITH THE RED BAND
? MIKADO
5MPANY, NEW YORK
T ... . 1
rry Plants
id Klondykes and all other
ices direct from nursery to
, . . , . i J .
catalog giving bnet descrip~
riety.
i?; _
inson & Co.
r, Maryland
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