The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, August 03, 1922, Image 3
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(Continued from last week)
I" * r
CHAWl fcrt II
I
Old Jerome and Dave and the older
men gathered In one corner of the
tockade for a council of war. The
boy had made It plain that the attacklng
party was at least two days be- J
hind the three Indiana from whom he
had escaped, so that there was no
danger that day, and they could wait
until night to send messengers to warn
the settlers outside to seek safety
' witfcln the fort. Meanwhile, Jerome
, would dispatch five men with Dave to
acout for the three Indians who might
| be near by In the woods, and the boy,
. who saw them slip out the rear gate
.of the fort, at once knew their pur
pose, shook his head, and waved hla
(hand to say that his late friends were
(gone back to hurry on the big war
party to the attack, now thnt the
[whites themselves knSw their danger. !
'.Old Jerome nodded that he under- j
l stood, und nodded to others his appre- j
'elation of the sense and keenness of j
^ ithe lad, but he let U>e men go Just the
'same.
. Mother Sanders appeared and cried
iu nun 10 oring tiie "Injun" to her
? , cnbin. She had been unearthing
clothes for the "little henthen," and
Bud helped to put them on. In a few
;minutes the lad reappeared in fringed
hunting shirt and trousers, wriggling
In them most uncomfortably, for they
made him itch, but at the same time
:wearlng them proudly.
On the mighty wilderness the sun
sank slowly and old Jerome sat in j
the western tower to watch alone. The j
silence out there was oppressive and
significant, for it meant that the boy's 1
theory was right; the three Indians j
had gone hack to their fellows, anil
when darkness came the old man- sent !
runners to the outlying cabins to warn
the Inmates to take refuge within the 1
' fort. And the gathering was none |
(too soon. TJie hooting of owls started 1
before dawn'. A flaming ?rrow3fct*Ki>.' |
from the woods, thudded into rjW?root
of oik; of the cabins, spattered feebly
on a dew-drenched ridge-pole, and
. went out. Savage war-whoops rent
the air, and the battle was on. All day
the fight went on. There were feints
of attack In front and rushes from the
rear, and there were rushes from all
sides. The women loaded rifles and
. cooked and cared for the wounded.
Thrice an Indian reached the wall of
the stockade and set a cabin on fire, i
? but no one of the three got hack to
the woods alive. The stranger boy sat
stoically In the copter of the enclosure
watching everything, nnd making no
effort to take part. Late in the after- j
noon the ammunition began to run
low and tlie muddy discoloration of
i * the river showed that the red men had ,
beituii to tnmtwl unilop tii*? ?...iiio /.c
fort. And yet a Inst snll.v was m^ide (
Just before sunset. A body pushed
against Dave In the tower and Dave
saw the stranger hoy at his side with
Ills how and arrow. A few minutes
later he heard a yell from the lad
whleh rung high over the din, ami he
saw the feathered tip of an arrow
shaking In the breast of a hlg Indian
who staggered and fell behind a bush.
Just at that moment there were yells
from the woods behind?the yells of
white men that were answered by
Joyful yells within the fort:
"The Virginians! The Virginians!"
And as the rescuers dashed Into sight
on horse and afoot. Dave saw the lad
leap the wall of the stockade and disappear
behind the fleeing Indians.
"Gone hack to 'em," he grunted to
himself. The gates were thrown open.
Old Jerome und his men rushed out,
and besieged and rescuers poured all
their fire after the running Indians,
ome of whom turned bravely to empty
their rifles once more.
"(lit In! Git In. quick!" yelled old
,Joel. He knew another volley would
eotne as soon as the Indians reached
i the cover of thick woods, and come
the volley did. Three men fell?one
the lender of the Virginians, whose
head flopped forward as he entered
the gate and was caught In old Joel's
arms. Not another sound came from
the woods, but again Dave from the
tower saw the cane-brush rustle at the
edge of a thicket, saw a hand thrust
upward with the pnlm of penca
toward the* fort, and again the
irnnger Doy emergen?nus time witn
a bloody scalp dangling In his left
hand. Dave sprang down and met him
at the gate. The hoy shook his how
and arrow proudly, pointed to a crisscross
sear on the scalp, and Dave
made out from his explanation that
once before the lad had tried to kill
.Ms tormentor and that the scar was
ifjie sign. In the center of the enclog- j
ilire the wounded Virginian lay. and
when old Jerome stripped the shirt
I from his breast he shook his head
,gravely. The wounded man opened
his eyes Just In time to see and he
! smiled.
"I know It." he said faintly, and
then his eyes caught the hoy with the
sculp, were fixed steadily and began
to widen.
"Who Is that hoy?' he asked
sharply.
"Never mind now," said old Joel
E soothingly, "you must keep still 1"
MPL The hoy's eyes had begun to shift under
the scrutiny and he started away,
"Come hack here!" commanded the
wounded man, and still searching the
lad he said sharply again:
"Who Is that boy?" Nor would ht
have his wound dressed or even take
ths cup of. water hamled ta him until
SNifiTi i'i r. i II flTi\ ftTlfrr m "*
teei^yi
Fox, drf^H
RJt
"Who Is That Boy?" Ho Asked
Sharply.
watcher kept his eyes strained toward
the black silent woods. The dying
man was laid on a rude bed within
one cabin, and old Joel lay on the
tloor of It close to the door. The
stranger lad refused t<v sleep indoors
and huddled hliflself In a blanket on
the pround In one corner of the stockade.
Men. women and childreu fell
to a deep and weary sleep. An houi
later the hoy In the corner threw
aside his blanket, and when, a moment
later, Lydla Noe, feverish nnd
thirsty, rose from her bed to pet o
drink of water outside her door. sh?
stopped short on the threshold. Th?
lad, stark naked but for his breech
clout and swinplnp his bloody sea It
over his bead, was staniplnp around
the fire?dancing the scalp-dance oi
the savage to a low, fierce, puttura
song. The boy saw her. saw her fact
In the blaze, stricken white with
fright and horror, saw her too paralyzed
to move and he stopped, staring
at her a moment with savage rape,
and went on apnin. Old Joel's body
filled the next doorway. He called out
with a harsh oath, and again the hoy
stopped. With another oath and a
threatening gesture Joel motioned to
the corner of the stockade, and with
a fiare of defiance in his black eyes
the lad stalked slowly and proudly
umi). r rum iK'iumi mill 111*' voice OI
llie wounded man called, and old Joel
turned. There was a ghastly smile on
the Virginian's pallid face.
"1 saw It," he said painfully. "That's
?that's my son !"
CHAPTER III
From the sundial on the edge of
the high hank, straight above the hrlm
of the majestic yellow James, a noble
path of thick grass as broad as a
modern highway ran hundreds of
yurds between hedges of roses
straight to tin? open door of the great
manor-house with Its wide veranuas i
and mighty pillars set deep hack I
from the river in a grove of ancient '
oaks. Behind the house spread a little
kingdom, divided Into fiejds of grass,
wheat, tobacco, and corn, and dotted
with white-washed cabins tilled with
slaves. Already the house had been
built a hundred years of brick
brought from England In the builder's
own ships, It was said, and the second
son of the reigning generation, one
Colonel Dale, sat In the veranda
alone. He was a royalist oflicer. this
second son, but his elder brother had
the spirit of daring and adventure
that should have been his, and he hnd
been sitting there four years before
when that elder brother came home
from his first pioneering trfp into the
wlhls, to tell that his wife was dead
and their only son was a captive
among the Indians Two years later
still, word came that the father, too,
had met death from the savages, and
the little kingdom passed Into Colonel
Dale's hands.
Indentured servants, as well as
blacks front Africa, had labored on
I tllJlf Iifltli In fr/n? I nf o?wl nn
It had onco stalked n deputation of
the groat Powhatan's red tribes. Up
flint path had come members of the
worshipful House of Burgesses; bluff
planters in silk coats, the governor
and members of the council; distinguished
visitors from England,
colonial gentlemen and ladies. And all
was English still ? books, clothes,
plates, knives, and forks; the church,
tlie Church of England; the Governor,
the representative of the King; his
Council, the English Parliament?socially
aristocratic, politically republican.
For ancient usage held that all
"freemen" should have a voice In the
elections, have eqjunl right to say
who the lawmakers and what the law.
The way was open ns now. Any man
nuild get two thousand acres by
1 rcrvlce to the colony, could build,
i plow, reap, save, buy servants, and
I roll in his own conch to sit ns burgess.
; There was but one seat of learning?
at Williamsburg. What culture they
had they brought from England or
I got from parents or minister. And always
they had seemed to prefer sword
and stump to the pen. They hated
town*. At every wharf a long shaky
in 1 m ! , ii i, . .iggBMaegggBgBgg-?
I was enough. in towns men Jostled
and Individual freedom was lost, so,
| Hot for the great sweeps of land and
the sway of a territorial lord! Englishmen
they were of Shakespeare's
time hut living In Virginia, and that
Is all they were?save that the flower
of liberty was growing faster In the
n?w-world soli.
Englishmen called It the "Good
Land," and found It "most plentiful,
eweet, wholesome, and fruitful of all
others." The eait was the ocean;
Florida was the south ; the north was
Nova Francla, and the west unknown.
Only the shores touched the Interior,
which was an untraveled realm of
fairer fruits and (lowers than in England
; green shores, majestic forests,
and blue mountains filled with gold
and Jewels. And the feet of all who
had made history had trod that broad
path to the owner's hearr and home.
Down It now came a little girl?the
flower of all those dead and gone?
and her coming was Just as though
one of the flowers about her had
stepped from Its gay company on one
or the other side of the path to make
through them a dainty, triumphal
march as the fairest of them nil. At
the dial she paused and her Impatient
blue eyes turned to a bend of
the yellow river for the first glimpse
of a gay barge that soon must come.
At the whnrf the song of negroes rose
as they unloaded the hoat Just from
Richmond. She would go and see h
there was not a pncknge for her mother
and perhaps a present for herself,
so with another look to the river bend
she turned, hut she moved no farther.
Instead, she gave a little gasp, In
which there was no fear, though what
she saw was surely startling enough
to have made her wheel In flight. Instead.
she gazed steadily Into a pair
of grave black eyes that were fixed on
her from under a preen branch that
overhung the footpath, and steadily
she searched the figure standing
there, from the coonskln cap down the
fringed hunting-slilrt and fringed
breeches to the nioccasined feet. And
still the strange figure stood arms
folded, motionless and silent. Neither
the attitude nor the silence was quite
pleasing, and the girl's supple slenderness
stiffened, her arms went rigidly
to her sides, and a haughty little snap
sent her undltnpled chin upward.
"Who nre you and what do you
want?"
It was a new way for a woman to
apeak to a man; he In turn waa not
pleased, and a gleam In hU eyea
showed it.
"I am the son of a king."
She started to laugh, but grew puzsled,
for she had the blood of Pocahontas
herself.
"You are an Ii^llan?"
He shook his head, scorning to explnln,
dropped his rifle to the hollow
of his arm, and, reaching for his belt
where she saw the buekhorn handle
of n hunting-knife, came toward her, j
but she did not flinch. Drawing a letter
from the belt, he handed it to her.
It was so worn and soiled that she
took it daintily and saw on It her
father's name. The hoy waved hia
hand toward the house far up the
puth.
"He live here?"
"You wish to see him?"
The boy grunted assent, and with a
shock of resentment the little lady
started up the path with her head
very high indeed. The boy slipped
Jtner ner, his race unmoved,
but his eyoR were darting right
arid left to the flowers, trees, and
bushes, to every flirting, strange bird,
the gray streak of a scampering squirrel,
and what he could not see, his
ears took in?the clanking chains of
work-horses, the whir of a quail, the ]
screech of a peacock, the songs of
negroes from far-off fields.
On the porch sat a gentleman In ,
powdered wig and knee-breeches, who,
lifting his eyes from a copy of The
Spectator to give an order to a negro 1
servant, saw the two coming, and the
first look nf bewilderment on his fine
face gave way to a tolerant smile.
He asked no question, for a purpose
very decided and definite was plainly
bringing the little lady on, and he
would not have to question. Swiftly
she ran up the steps, her mouth prim- '
ly set. and handed him a letter. ,
j "The messenger is the son of a I
I king."
"A what?"
| 666
Cure* Malaria, Chills and Fever,
Dengue or Bilious Fever, It kills th?
germs. 37
The State of South Carolina,
County of Chesterfield,
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
Summons for Relief
R. A. Griffith, Plaintiff,
against
E. L. McGuigan and Frank L. McGuigan
co-opartners ;n trade under the
name of E. L. McGuigan and Comvto
n i> n v\ /I oil o*l? "
|/?* 11 y <* ii\4 <III tuifi pcrsuii'4 wiiu
may be partners in said firm to the
plaintifT unknown, defendants.
To the defendants above named:
You are hereby summoned and re-,
quired to answer the complaint in this
action, of which a copy is herewith
served upon you, and to serve a copy
of your answer to the said complaint
on the subscriber at his office, Chester
weld, South Carolina, within twenty
days after service hereof exclusive
of the day of such service; and if you
fail to answer the complaint within
the time aforesaid, the plaintifT in this
action will apply to the Court for the
relief demanded in the complaint. H
June 19th, 1922. i
M. J. Hough, Plaintiff s Attorney
'lo the defendants above named:
Vou will please take no Met that the
Summons and Camplaint in the above
stated case, and all papers connected
therewith are on file with the Clerk
of Court of Chesterfield County,South
Carolina, and that said Summons and
Complaint were so ' filed with said
Clerk of Court on 8th July, 1922.
M. J. Hough, PlaintifT s Attorney.
666 quickly relieves Colds, Con*
1 ,. I i i? I 1 1 t I'1 H I '
"Tlit? son of a king," she repeated
gravely.
"Ah." said the gentler an. humoring
her, "ask his highness to lie seated."
His highness was loo' ing from one
to the other gravely and keenly, lie
did not quite understand, but he knew
gentle fun was being p iked at him,
and he dropped sullenly on the edge
of the porch and stared In front of
him. The little girl saw that his moccasins
were much worn and that In
one was a hole with the edge bloodstained.
And then she began to
watch her father's face, which showed
that the contents of the letter were
astounding him. lie rose quickly when
he had finished and put out his hand
to the stranger.
"I am glad to see you. my boy," he
said with great kindness. "Barbara,
this is a little kinsman of ours from
Kentucky. He wus the adopted son
of an Indlnn chief, but by blood he Is
your cousin. His name Is Ersklne
Dale."
(To Be Continued N.*xt Week)
HOME DEMONSTRATION DEP'T.
How to Have Cle.- n Milk
Many C. Haynie
1. Keep the cow's flanks and udder
free from dirt, for more dirt gets into
milk from this sonje than from any
other. Clipping the flanks and udder
makes this easier and more certain.
2. Wipe the udder with a moist
cloth, for tViic Irnnno U?:_ - *
f iujac imir, cic.,
from dropping into the pail.
3. Use a small top n-.ilk pail, for
it is added protection against dirt
and has proven its worth.
4. Use outing flannel or a cloth pad
strainer, for wire or cheese cloth
strainers are a delusion.
5. Pails, cans, and bottles should
be rinsed with cold uatcr, washed
with hot water and a washing powder,
sterilized with boiling water or steam,
and then thoroughly and immediately
dried,
6. Rinse each utensil before using,
preferably with hot water, for this
will remove any dirt that may have
entered since washing.
7. Milk with clean, dry hands, for
wet hand milking is filthy and injurious.
8. Cool the milk to GO degrees or
below immediately after milking am'
keep cool, for this is one of the best
methods for keep bacteria from multiplying.
When delivering milk in hot weather,
cover the cans with a wet blanket
to keep off the direct heat of the sun
and the evaporation of the moisture
helps to keep the milk cool.
10. Drive disease from the herd and
keep the barn clean and whitewashed.
If you want good prices for healthful
and palatable dairy products, keep
in mind the motto, "Clean and Cold."
A clean herd, a clean barn, clean udders,
clean hands, clean utensils, immediate
cooling and keeping cold are
the strategy of the good milk general.
Changing Skirt* Date*
Back to Egyptian*
Paris, July 22.?That fashion is as
old as humanity has once more been
proved by some recent discoveries
made in Egypt.
In the time of the Pharaohs the
battle of the skirts was as hotly
foill"ht sie < " *- '
?, ... v..c ^ic-ociiL nay. unarming
statuettes of Egyptian women
lately sold at a great sale show skirts
of knee-length and others that sweep
the ground. One is a draped model
caught on thu hip by a large buckle
ornament. Another has a scarf forming
the belt, with ends flying and terminating
in large tassels, a model
which one might easily believe came
from the Rue de la Paix this season.'
After forty centuries of discussions
and differences of opinion, the question
of the length of the skirt is just
about where it always was.
BB SB
g Indigestion g
O Many persona, otherwise H
D vigorous and healthy, are B
B bothered occasionally with Q
g indigestion. The effects of a g
H disordered stomach on the
5? system are dangerous, and "j
H prompt treatment of lndlges- O
B tlon 1b Important "The only B
D medicine I have needed has m
been something to aid diges- r~
"3 tlon and clean the liver," B
D writes Mr. Fred Ashby, a M
McKlnney, Texas, fanner, gg
B "My medicine Is C9
B Thedlord's S
ri apormirut
ubnuu uunuuii I
Q for Indigestion and stomach M
trouble of any kind. 1 hare 25
D never found anything that D
U touches the spot, like Black- gf
Draught. I take it In broken 22
H doses after meals. For a long D
Q time I tried pills, which grip- H
Ded and didn't give the, good n
results. Black-Draught" liver H
Q medicine Is easy to take, easy Q
to keep, inexpensive." ?
Het a package from your 55
druggist today?Ask for and
D Insist upon Thedford's?the D
D only genulnei Q
d Q?t It today. Q
OB inDB
onnnnonnnqnoD
A a A Cure? Malaria, Chills,
laftala Fev?r, Bilious Fev?r
V V Colds ano LaGrippo. 37
RESIDENCE PROPERTY FOR SALE
Very desirable residence property
on Qreew Sirest for
BANK3 OF STATE ENDORSE
CO-OPERATIVE MARKETING
Columbia, July 31.?Assurances
from the banks of the state that they
will support the South Carolina Cotton
Growers' Cooperative Association
to the limit are being received daily,
officials of the association said today.
Letters were received yesterday from
over 100 banks, they said, stating
their desire to cooperate with the organization
in every way possible.
Many of the banks have signified
their intention of launching vigorous
advertising campaigns in behalf of
the assoiation and of doing everything
in their power to enouragt; I
those farmers who have not yet done
so to sign the contract.
The Commercial Bank, of Newberry,
of which John M. Kinard is
president, has already begun a campaign
of this nature in Newberry, the
Newberry papers having carried in
their last issues large advertisements
by their bank endorsing the movement
and urging the farmers to join.
"After a thorough investigation of
the cooperative marketing plan," says j
the statement by the bank, "we wish i
to state that we heartily endorse it'
and wihout hesitating further, advise j
every cotton grower in this and ad-1
joining counties to join if they have
not already done so.
"If the plan wasn't a good one, our
government would not have agreed to
loan the assoiation $10,000,000 for
South Carolina.
"We are going to back the association
to our limit, and in doing so, we
feel that it means a long step forward
in bringing independence and prosperity
to the farming industry and
putting it upon a more secure and sol1/1
f/?iin/luf
"We believe the farmers need to
adopt more modern and more business-like
methods, and unless they do
this there can be no hopes of lifting
their occupation from its present depression
and putting it upon the organized
and systematic basis that other
enterprises rest upon. We see in cooperative
marketing the first and most
solid hope for accomplishing this. We
look pon it as sensible, business-like
effort to increase agricultural prosperity
and think that farmers should
join each other in this enterprise. If
you haven't joined, don't stand back
and let your neighbor do this work for
you. Cooperative marketing in our
opinion is here to stay, and we are all
I going to benefit by it. Therefore,don't
i wait until the last drive is made but
join in now with your neighbors and
friends and sign.
"It has been reported that the credit
of farmers might be injured if they
joined the marketing contract. Don't j
be afraid of this, for if you have ex-^
isted under the old plan, which has
caused so many to lose their credit, j
we assure our customers and friends
that their credit will not be injured
with us in the least account of sign;
ing the marketing contract, nor do
I we believe their credit will be injured
with any other business institution.
"Cooperative marketing spells prosperity
to all of us, and we want to
see the county sign up 100 per cent.
strong."
!
| She?I hear that you lost your
valuable dog, Mr. Dudley.
t He?Ya-as, in a railway accident. I
| was saved, but the bawg was killed.
I a pity.?Chicago Journal.
|
I
f
r*> ^ j
7 =Uj
How Hi
Became jh
IN 1903, driving the
car, Barney Oldfie
career of victorie
earned him the title
Driver of The Worlc
come the tire weaknes
racing difficult and (
studied tires?specifie
supervised constructio
Today, Barney Oldf
as the "Master T
Starting with the cruc
carried the "999" one
seconds, Oldfield g
veloped his famous G
which covered 500 mi
eight miles an hou
change.
In three years Oldf
won every important
ican speedways. The
*
THE HOIN
How to Make and Use It
VII.
AERIALS AND H<
One of the greatest advantages of
wireless telephone receivers is that tin
elaborate or expensive aerial Is not
required. Although good sets with
vadium bulb detectors may he used
with an indoor aerial, or even with
a bedstead or wire springs as an
aerial, yet an outside aerial will tilways
give better results. As I have
already mentioned, a single wire will
do as well as several, the main thing
being to get the aerial
long and high in order
to catch waves which j \
are not Interrupted or f \
Interfered with by sur- / \
rounding buildings, / w \
steel bridges, electric A <
wires and similar oh- r A >
Jects. Next, or rather J
most important, is to V
have the aerial and
lead-in thoroughly insulated
from all surrounding
objects, for
even wood, when damp,
Is an excellent conductor.
The best material
for an amnteur aerial
for receiving is a
stranded phosphor |
bronze or copper wire.
about No. 14, although msvh
solid copper wire, cop- %
per-covorcd steel wire
| or even Insulated cop|
per wire will serve every
piirpose. For Insulators,
use porcelain
! cleats. These may he
used both where the
lead-iu is attached to
walls or other objects, and where the
aerial wire is attached to the supports
or guys. The accompanying
figures,, No. 0 and No. lb. Illustrate
I aerials Installed, the first showing the
wire attached to a chimney or similar
structure and to a wall ; the other,
an aerial which is designed for a tin
or slute roof and which obviates making
holes for attachment. Where the
Lad is Attacked By Rattlesnake
Near Charleston
Trenholm Boykin, son of Mr. N.
C. Boykin, living near Summerville,
was brought to Charleston for treatment
after having been bitten by a
rattlesnake.
It appears that he and Erenst
Chinners were squirrel hunting when
the rattlesnake attacked young Boykin.
While out squirrel hunting with
a friend Ernest Chinners, a huge rattlesnake
bit Trenholm, of the New
Hope section, near Summerville, on
Tuesday afternoon. The sn..ko was
five feet lung, eight incites in diameter
and had fifteen rattles, acocrdlng
to the boy's father, who relates the
story.
The two men were walking, young
Chinners in the lead. lie stepped over
the snake unharmed and before the
warning could bo given, young Boykin
was bitten on the leg. They were
about two and a half miles front home. |
As quickly as possible the wound was
cut out with a pocket knife and the
log tightly corded. Two cat squirrels
which they had killed were cut open
and hound around the wound until
they reached home. After reaching'
home he was rushed to Summerville
by atuomobile. Ater remaining in the
q, - ?
^uiHHiuviiiv nun nutry a day or so ne
Le Master D
laster Tire I
"999" racing American tires tha
Id started his first place in the Fr
:s that later They have won fc
: ??* "Master tive years in the
1. To over- apolis Sweepstakes
ses that made oidfields have low,
dnr,e?.s- seven
The Wichita Te
ield is known dence ?! Oldfield si
ire Builder." when a set oi
le tires which 34.525 miles o
mile in sixty winter roads?a
radually de- tested by the May<
ords?a set of
iles at eighty- See your dealer
ir without a these rugged tires
field has develop!
through a lifetime
ield tires have experience. Their
race on Amer- convince you tha
y are the only Most Trust worth}
- r?i- m'IT p- if
4E RADIO 1
(Co By A. HYATT VERRILL
Vy bnrkMkfl^atlMkM
3W TO INSTALL THEM
lead-in wire enters the building it
should be of rubber Insulated wire and
umy be brought In at the corner of
a window, either by cutting s small
, groove or by jamming the window
' down until the wire flattens and is
burled partly In the wood. All Joints
In the aerial and lead-In should be
scraped bright, tightly twisted -and
soldered. Anally being wrapped with
Insulating or adhesive tape or covered
r<f /o r
' !
af/t/al. .
r+a$
lfao in g / w**
-r,} 9
with "spaghetti" tubing. For the best
results. be sure to run your lend-In
from the end of aerials towards the
station which you most frequently
wish to hear or towards the most distant
station which you desire to pick
tip. Very often, this will make h vast
difference in results, especially with
a small receiving set. Care In following
directions will Insure good results.
was taken home, but later was taken
to Charleston for treatment. At last
accoutns the patient was doing well.
A total of 1." 10,441 boys and girls
were enrolled in agricultural extension
clubs, in 1921, for training in
' various phase of live stock work.
| These junior farmers owned, last
j year, 70,148 head of farm animals and
554,286 fowls, representing a total
| value of $3,605,176.
| "I am glad that you find my sermons
instructive, Mrs. Goodley," the
young minister declared with deep
appreciation.
"Indeed I do, sir," the old lady replied
enthusiastically. "Why, we never
really knew what sin was in this
pl^.ce until you came among us, sir."
?Country Gentleman,
The mother took her baby to be
christened. The rh>v<rvtv?.?? ?
r> ??* ?!, ? u\j ivncw
her personally, dipped his pen in the
i ink, and prepared to fill the necessary
papers. When he came to the space
reserved for the date, he said genially,
"Let me see?this is the eighth, isn't
it?"
"Certainly not!' said the indignant
mother. "We've only been married
three years."
1 i
. * ' 4
\\ 4
. \ "
(I
river
Guilder
t have ever taken
ench Grand Prix.
>r three consecu500-mile
IndianSo
far in 1922.
;red four World's
track records.
st Run gave eviaperiority
in tourf
four Cords covver
rutted, frozen,
performance atar
of Wichita. !
and get a set of
that Barney Oldid
and perfected
: of practical tire
performance will
t thev are "TK?
' Tires Built."
i
. ? s'. ' *