. Better fruit. Fruit-culture. Page 22 BETTER FRUIT Atigiist H€p! Hep'.'* Ten mifes more to bibe — thm camp and the comforts of a little chetM of Real See That He Never Lacks a pouch of Real GRAVELY Chewing Plug Your fighting man will go to almost any lengths to get good tobacco. Many a man has paid $5 for less good tobacco than you will send him in a pouch of Real Gravely Chewing Plug. Only costs you 10 cents. Give any man a chew of RealjGravely Plug, and he will tell you that's the kind to send. Send the best! Ordinary plug is false economy. It cost less per week to chew Real Grave


. Better fruit. Fruit-culture. Page 22 BETTER FRUIT Atigiist H€p! Hep'.'* Ten mifes more to bibe — thm camp and the comforts of a little chetM of Real See That He Never Lacks a pouch of Real GRAVELY Chewing Plug Your fighting man will go to almost any lengths to get good tobacco. Many a man has paid $5 for less good tobacco than you will send him in a pouch of Real Gravely Chewing Plug. Only costs you 10 cents. Give any man a chew of RealjGravely Plug, and he will tell you that's the kind to send. Send the best! Ordinary plug is false economy. It cost less per week to chew Real Gravely, because a small chew of it lasts a long while. If you smoke a pipe, slice Gravely with your knife and add a little to your smoking tobacco. It will give flavor—improve your smoke. SEND YOUR FRIEND IN THE V. S. SERVICE A POUCH OF GRAVELY Dealers all around here carry it in 10c. pouches. A 3c. stamp will put it into his hands in any Training Camp or Seaport of the U. S. A. Even "over there" a 3c stamp will take it to him. Your dealer will supply envelope and give you official directions how to address it. P. B. GRAVELY TOBACCO CO., Danville, Va> The Patent Poach keeps it Fresh and Clean and Good —It is not Real Gravely icithoat this Protection Seal Established 1831 The Prune Industry in Douglas County By Earl Percy, County Horticulturist Douglas County THE remarkable thing about the prune industry in Douglas County is that its growth has been steady and continuous from the start. It has never been a boom business since old John Hall, Hans Weaver and others back in 1877 planted the first orchards at Myrtle Creek and laid the foundation for the county's largest industry. In 1916 10,000,000 pounds of dried prunes were produced which was one-fourth of the total crop of the State. Douglas is the only county still growing any great quantities of Petites. Probably 50 per cent of this year's crop will be the French or Petite prune, long dis- carded by the other p


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