Mower County news (Austin, Minn.) 1920-1947
June 23, 1921 · Page 4 of 8
OCR Text
MMRIBiiffBiptfippMfi ,-r.'11!"1 r-.J4 v» vv m- yiy^fifflV1 11'? »'i?l,i)Wi(f""il|,*g,,J|l,f|i["''-jl U1 P?„, 1 .* 1 4 Sf 1 tOUNTYNEW&AUSM INN. '••. Page Five Thursday, June 23,1921, rk- V&iiPi THE WOODS im !,-f 1 rp.r UYr DOUGLAS MALLOCH By mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmd '-J THE PATH. 1 IT WINDS 1U way alone the shaded hill,' Disdaining distanoq, seeking only I ease. a It turns aside to linger by a rill. :1 It climbs a slope to rest beneath the trees Or breathe the perfume of a Summer r* breeze. W Here time Is nothing, haste a thing unknown— The hot. straight highway for the erase of speed |A Real Bonifide -Cut Price Sale. Compare .V- The path is made for them who walk alone, Whose God is Nature, and the woods The Prices! Below With Others their creed, To follow blindly where the path may lead. '-.-.h'\ v'J'- v- j. »y- .vl l: No stern surveyor made it thus and so, ONE WEEK ONLY Nor north nor south nor east nor west it tends. It dips to kiss the pool where lilies grow, Xt rises joyously where ivy bends And meets in fond embraces with Its friends. nirough brooding branches and embroidered leaves The sunshine filters in a golden rain, Transforms the tufted weeds to shining sheaves, The tangled grass to waving harvest grain, The marshy muskeg to a purple plain. This is a path of velvet from the loom Of droning Summer. Never human hand Wove such a pattern, bright with rose abloom Along its border. Never artist planned This brilliant carpet flung across the land. Now princes leave their castles, kings their thrones, I And unattended walk these sylvan aisles. They pause to muse beside this heap of stones beautiful than all the granite piles More Reared with slow labor on their ample miles. &SSEI Sweet, solemn splendor of the silent wood, dear you are than all the haunts More of men For never mortal in your presence stood And listened to the whisper of the glen But songs forgotten sang to him again. it his mother's hears, Perhaps is voice Jie re-echo cradle croon The,faint of her niat him groping down the ended sends years TO BE GIVEN ABSOLUTELY FREE TO THE PERSON RECEIVING THE MOST VOTES. ONE VOTE GIVEN WITH EVERY To find some long-discarded boon, To find again some long-departed June. ft'l Ji Then, by the magic of the shade and sun, FIFTY CENTS IN TRADE. PHONOGRAPH TO BE GIVEN CLOSING DAY OF SALE JULYJO AT IOjOO P. M. Of and rose and brook and verdant tree sod, This world shall seem to be that other FREE 100 100 one Brand New THIS BEAUTIFUL feet walk never, yet where souls Where have trod— And he shall hold communion with his Player Piano Qod. (Copyright) PIANO Bars Laundry Soap With In Ruby Mountains. Each Efcctric Washer. Five ESTABLISHED In the Humboldt national forest WELL KNOWN of the* leading washers to there are no movies there, no jazz MAKE, ONLY bands to split wide open the quiet of MAKE—FULLY select from. the night, but just a bit of unspoiled .00 $398 wilderness- -where- one -can hunt- withcamera, GUARANTEED #-11SY WAY^ fish, climb not too rugged THOUSANDS mountains or just rest to a ful! contentment MEplPI^N. TERMS h' o', $ amid interesting and restful v': IN USE. ^ffi%S LOW AS 0. surroundings, says the American Forestry Magazine. The gems of Ruby Sale Price $10.00 mountains—the lake, streams, peaks $10 00 and canyons found here—are all CASH -n yours to enjoy if you will but come •-•'t -1 and camp near the three lakes that PER MONTH EASY TERMS. PEE MONTH—"PLAY WHILE YOU PAY." nestle in the high valley amid pinedotted meadows. r-.'di .u. AUSTIN MARKETS T. •~S' •I -j r-T« June 23,1921 Chicago receipts 41,000 j.uJS HOG MARKET *. r. A FEW LOOK THESE Medium and Butchers 7.60 Packers 5.60 to 6.60 Butter 25 CATTLE Fat Steers 5.00 to 7.00 OVER. THEY SAVE Cows and Heifers 4.00 to 5.00 Canners and Cutters .... 1.00 to 2.00 Bulls 3.00 to 4.00 VEAL, SHEEP AND LAMBS Fat Lambs 6.00 to 7.00 YOU MONEY Fat Sheep 3.30 to 4.00 Veal 4.50 to 7.00 Quoted By Dalager Eggs 22 Butter 28 Quoted by Smith-Wright Company Choice of 85 cent Phonograph records, sale Hens 17 phonographs, regular price $50, on sale $38 Electric fixtures, 30 to 50 per cent discount. 7, l. Roosters 08 pric& 64 cents 15. Wiring, material at a big discount. l&tilips at less than cost, while they last. Table 8 Eggs 22 If we haven't the record you want in stock Two floor lamps, with parchment shades, 9. 16. Electric curling irons, regular $4.50 value, Light Hens 14 we'll order it. regular prices $45^ sale $rice $25 $3.59 sale price Spring Chix 25 ...VV Choice of player rolls at 20 per cent discount 2. Boudoir lamps, regular price $6, sale 10. 17.. Percolators, at cost. Edison Amberola, cabinet size, slightly used, 3. price ... mv4$3.79^ with records, sale price ...$69 Regular $18 headlight heaters, sale price $12 117 Electric faxis, keep cool Oak Organ in good condition on sale, cheap. 4. Two farm lighting plants at real bargains. .^9: |Electt*ic irons, at l&tper ceati discoui^ ft Kegular '$210 phonograph, with 12 records, 12. 5. o: One Portable Moving Picture machine and sale price $169 ...t lVibratoriBv iess thantbst. 13. screen ree, suit case design, vacatipfrffioaek Fine, hdglf grade player $573 6. 1^ !V' taw-iLv/fl 1 Many Other Bai^Un$ fToof^sTlKnfiSrous^ Tot Mention Our Entire 6w#|ljfiNl Musical Stock on Sail "j® 1: 'I" '-V 0ft J" isa*£ -ft? «UvC .it vjt 5- If.'.' "•r1" bp*a e* K-fi It & fevr*:,- 6nta9&3&. (CUT OUT AND MAIL TODAY) .Vfer WELDING. ift 10 !Sf PLEASE SEND 1 '•K Vii CATALOG, PRICES AND We can fix any size, shape or Mi design of broken parts. Bring r- OTHER INFORMATION fe.-S GMHXffa^K^h l:S them to us. We can make them I. Representatives 0 Electric Wadktt '^r like lie jWjew. New Standard Make Phonograph. & Jt St Piano Plaj Player J-ann Light 121 Main Street for-. 12 selections. Sale price $84. $10 n£si Phonograph Kjf&tfr, -J MOTOR INN cash and $7 month. II DELCO-LIGHT Phoaorewh Store Opt. MMMMi '511 V-f, 54 N3II16 Products. mJ *x-' *, Repair Department Address S Ua. H. ANDERSON, I KJ iiitfjliiiliiiiliii