Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Jan. 10, 1918, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
H Ifeatth g V About k N Gone E Many thousands of women suffering from womanly trouble, have been benefited by the use of Cardul, the woman's I tonic, according to letters we receive, similar to this one from Mrs. Z.V. Spell, I KJ ofHayne, N.C. "1 could: not stand on my feet, and Just suffered terribly,"" she says. "As my suf fering was so great, and Ik ■ be had tried other reme- M dies, Dr. ■■ ■ bad us getCarduL . , I began L~ improving, and It cured me. I know, and my k/w doctor knows, what Car- dul did for me, for my nerves and health woe about gone." TAKE ™ CARDIII The Woman's Tonic ' She writes further; " f pa «m in splendid health ... can do my work. I feel I owe it to Cardul, fori was in dreadful condition." If you are nervous, run- down and weak, or suffer Ml from headache, backache, etc., every month, try Cardul. Thousands of women praise this medl- M tine for the good it has done fhetn, and many physicians who have used Cardul successfully with their women patients, for years, endorse this medl dne. Think what it means k. l to be In splendid health, Ml like Mrs. Spell. Give Cardul a trial. N M Druggist* R - ■ 1 HANDLING MILK IN WINTER Many Farmers Relax Vigilance In Cold Weather and Low Grade of Milk la Produced. i Many farmers who pay strict atten tion to the correct handling of- their auilk and cream daring the hot weath er relax their vigilance during tho win ter. The result Is that good tnllk Is (produced daring that part of tho yeur (When good milk Is difficult to produce and a low grade of milk when It Is naturally easy to produce good. Too fmuch dependence* should not be placed ion tho natural coolness of the atmos phere, tot the chances are that thla jwlU not auffice. It is a noted fact that (during the fall and early winter pur chasers of milk often find it more dlf -11 cult to keep the product from getting P»ur than they do during the hot Mtbef. gjj) . Milk should bo cooled to at least 60 degrees F. immediately upon being drawn from tho can and kept at that ■temperature until used. If the ordi nary coolness of the atmosphere Is de pended upon for this, it may be hours "before the milk reaches the required tamperature, and in the meantime mi crobes have been multiplying which In • abort time will render the milk unlit for aae. To produce flrst-claas milk the aama care la demanded In the win* tor months as during the summer, Cleanliness and a correct temperature being of cardinal Importance ut all ttmsai i ———_ ; Macadam la Regaining Favor With I Modern Builders, Who Are Now Looking at Annual Cost. ; A few years ago rood builders joined In a universal requiem for the old-faahloned water-bound macadam road la New York state. It served Its purpose when vehicles were sll horse drawn. It waa acknowledged, but with tho advent of motor vehlclea It was laid aside with the muxxlo loaders, crinolines and other prldea of depart ed day a. But recently the macadam road has come back again Into favor. This is because road of ficials are now judging the cost of a road by Its total annual expense. Including maintenance and sinking fund. On this baais It has been dla •covered that a macadam road la an jecodbmlcnl one for certain claas«9 of travel. Thla waa ths opinion expressed at the recent meeting of the New Tork State association of County Highway (Superintendents by msny of those present. Practically all tho recent roads built by these men have two courses of broken atone, and frequently it is pos sible to build the roads with a lower .course Of cheap local stone, using the more expensive stone from a distance for tha upper course only. This re duces the Drat cost without causing any reduction in the life and strength of the road. When they are flnlnhed they are sometimes treated at once with tar or asphalt, but usually this ' treatment la deferred long enough for travel over the road to reveal any weak spots, so they can be repaired he- Koro the oiling is done. It Is this dev elopment of efficient and economical methods of maintenance with the help of road oils whlah has led to the of water-hound macadam In New York. It is one of many recent Indications that where the work of ,malntenance Is thoroughly done and .coat records of It sre properly kept ■ Important light is thrown on the best types of construction to carry travel of different classes and Intenaltles. ' I ■ STOMACH TROUBLES. , If you have trouble with your stomach you should try Chamber lain'* Tablets. So many have been restored to health by tha use of these tableta, and their cost is so little, 25 cents* that It iv £ worth while to give them a trial. COL E. M. HOUSE* H r Now photograph of Col. E. M.I House, who I* studying for the presi dent data and Information gathered by diplomatic agents and others bear ing especially ?n steps It will be nec essary for this government to take that it may be fortified with facts and figures to deal with the trade war that Is sure to follow a cessation of hostili ties. KHUNING NEWLY SET TRJEES Work Bhould Be Done Just as Soon After Planting as Possible- Roots Are Not Strong. (By J. O. MOOItR, Wisconsin Aitrlrultura! Kxpcrlment Station.) Probably more tree* die the flrnt season lifter planting from lurk of proper top-pruning than fro;n nny oth !er one rut] He. Scarcely, If ever, does I the grower prune blx tree* too Hcvere i ly nt Netting; In nlmoxt all cases not I enough Ix removed, i Top-pruning should he done Just HH soon after pluhtlnK IIH poxxible, ax every dny It Is neglected lessens the chances for the tree to withstand the udverne conditions. When a tree Is due. not only Is the root system mutil ated, but by far the greater portion IK removed. Often four-fifths of the root area la left In the nurxery. It Ix evi dent that If the top of the tree Ix Low-Pruned Tree. not reduced, this mutilated and great- 1 ly lessened root urea will be called upon to supply an much top with molHturo and food materials an the entire rwit system did previously. Since Hie root* cannot do thin, the fruit trees should lie heavily top pruned Immediately after planting. ' j BEST RETURNS FROM MANURE In Orchard Planted en Slope Fall Ap plication Must Be Wasteful- Much Washed .Away. Will manure give the best returns when applied In the fall? Evidently no single answer can be given thut will fit oil conditions, says Country Gentleman. In an orchard planted on a steep slope, the fall application of manure must necessarily be wasteful, for n large portion of It will be washed down to lower levels by the winter rains. In an orchard located on a sandy, open soli the fall/ application of manure wilt also be Wsteful; In this case the soluble nltrofen and pot ash compounds are easily jwashed Into the deeper soil layers ana are apt to be carried off In the dralnWe waters. Huch soils should receive applications of readily available plant-food at the beginning of the growing season. On the other hund. level or sjifehtly roll ing clay soils, or clay loaflTsolls should allow an ecnnomlcaK utilization of manure when the Iwiter Is applied In the fall. To be autp. the Indirect ef fect of the manure Mll be tost to some extent, because the fermentation will occur at the surface Instead of with in the soli; nevertheless, the Improve ment In the tilth and water-holding power of the land under the manure mulch should offset this advantage. PROTECT YOUR FRUIT TREES There Are Some Kinds of Mixtures That Keep ftabhlta Away—Any Covering Is Qood. i There are a number of waya to pro tect trees from rabbits. Rome of these I also protect against mice, and some do 1 not. There are some kinds of paints and washes that will repel rabbits, but they are soon washed off by rain, and it Is doubtful If they repel mice. | Any sort of covering that extends high enough and low enough to the trunk will do the work. It remains for the owner to decide for himself whether he will u*e cornstalks, paper, regit, wire screen o» some other manu faeturcd covering as a protector. It is doubtful whether a man save* any j thing by using some auch make-shift as cornstalks or hay. The extrn time required to put It on as It must be done to he effective, probably more than makes up the cost of a manu factured protector, which can be ad- Justed so much more quickly. PASTURE SWINE IN ORCHARD Pattnaylvanla Expert Says It Will Bo Safe If Few Important Polnta Are Watched. | The 'Pennsylvania state zoologist, I Prof. n. H. Burfacc, says that It will be safe to pasture hogs in the young orchard If you will watch two or three Important points. One Is to be sure that the hogs do not rub against the trees too hard In the process of scratchier themselves. Another point la ta watch that hogs do not root out the roots of young trees. CONGESTION 10 BE RELIEVED IN EAST DIRECTOR GENERAL McADOO OR DERS CONGESTION IN EAST | REMOVED. IST NOT BE HAMPERED Pood and Coal Muat Move Regardless of Priority Regulations, Passenger Schedules or Any Other Hampering Practices. Washington.—Orders went to east era railroads from Director General McAdoo to clear up freight conges tion regardless of previous govern ment priority regulations, passenger schedules and any hampering prac tices under the old competitive sys tem and to pay special attention to movement of coal and food. Lines of the west and south were called on for locomotives and other equipment to help lighten the traffic burden In the east, and a committee of government officials was created to work out a plan for diverting export freights to ports south of New York. Quantities of coal were started to New Kngland to relieve the serious shortage there, and priority orders were suspended for roads east of the Mississippi and north of the Ohio rivers to the extent necessary to clear ( up congestion. At the same time the director gen-1 eral dissolved the railroad war board at Its own request and named a tern- I porary advisory cabinet of Ave mem- j hers. One of these, Hale Holden, president of the Burlington and a member of the war board, will be re tained to supervise the machinery , which the war board has created with-1 In the last nine months to co-ordinate the roads of the country. Members of Cabinet. Other members of the new advisory cabinet are John Skelton Williams, comptroller of the currency, who will have charge of financial questions arising out of government operation; Henry Walters, chairman of the board of the Atlantic Coast Line, who will assist on operation problems; Bdward Chambers, traffic, director of the food administration, who will have gen eral charge of traffic, and Walker T>. Hlnes .assistant to the director general. Other railway heads who made up the war board, Fairfax Harrison of the Southern, who was chairman; Rea of the Pennsylvania; Kruttschnltt, of | the Southern Pacific, and Elliott, ot New Haven, will return to the active supervision of their roads, but all the sub-committees and organizations of the board will be turned over to I Mr. Holden. The question of Increased pay for railroad employes will be taken up soon by Mr. McAdoo, but he said he had given little thought to wages and did not know what his attitude would be. Heads of the four brother hoods will confer with the director general Thursday at his Invitation, and probably will urge that with the scarcity of railroad labor It will be necessary to pay higher wages to re tain men. Many advisers of the di rector general advocate Increasing wages, particularly for many unorgan ised classes. Wage Disputes. The federal board of medlatton and conciliation will continue to pass on wage disputes now pending, but eventually the director probably will handle wage questions directly. The government's attitude toward wage changes will not be determined for several weeks at least, or until the pressing problems of speeding up transportation are threshed out. Mr. McAdoo limited his comments on the labor situation to saying that he would "treat the men with Justice and equity" and would give "a Just and square hearing" to the brotherhood heads BAKKR OUTLINES WHAT NEW YEAR FINDS AT FRONT Washington.^What the beginning of the new year finds at the battle fronts Is outlined by Secretary Baker In his review of military operations. In the west, he says, the British dom inate the Klanders plain with a great wedge Into the principal Qerman line of defense at Cambral, while the French, with their own lines unbroken hold the key to the Laon area through the rapture of Chemln Des Dames. Italy, supported by the allies. Is holding Arm. while the enemy Is bnsy preparing for a renewed offensive. Of Russia, the review merely says the Germans are endeavoring to persuade that country that they are eager to assist In restoring normal conditions. *nd that the Qerman embassy build ing at Petrograd Is being made ready for occupancy. While the operation of American troops at the front has been confined to narrow limits, the secretary says their presence has heartened the allies and Increased faith In final victory, ~ HERBERT HOOVER WONT CAN THE COMING YKAR Washington.—O(Trial* of the Vir ginia CannerV txchsrtge. summoned to explain certain papers found In their files by Investigators for the federal trade commission In tho .-on .>e oT the Inquiry Into charges of f >od speculation made by the food admin istration. agreed to withdraw all let ters and papers which might be con strued as suggestions for price-Asm*, and to refrain In the future from all activities tending to such an effect. Will Net Buy Mexican Silver. Washington. Negotiations under which this government had agreed to purchase (.000.000 Mexican sliver pe sos from the Mexican government, to be melted and coined Into subsidiary silver, were declared off. Mexican representatives were understood to have signified their scqulescence in the arrangement, but acting under .In structions from Mexico City, they pre sented new phases, which resulted In the withdrawal by the United States af Its offer. The necessity for suoh a purchase frM jMiittj L HAROLD SHADDOCK. !7> Harold Braddock, vice president of the American City Bureau, and an ex pert organizer of chambers of com merce, is director of the (1,000,000 campaign for war libraries In every cantonment and training camp In the United Btates. REMODELED HOUSE LIKE NEW Dwelling That Is Made Over May Come Nearer Meeting Needs Than ' One Constructed to Order. The remodeled house Is often more comfortable, charming and satisfying I linn one built new. Buying a house already built Is much like purchasing clothes ready-made; It Is never quite a perfect fit; there is never perfect linrmony with Individual needs and re quirements, says Noble Foster Hoggson In the Phlaldelphla Public Ledger. Remodeling makes It virtu ally a new house, with the added ad vantage that, the general plan being satisfactory, It Is easier to see Just what modifications and Improvements are needed than to see them in imag ination from a study of the archi tect's plans for a complete new building. An old bouse, endeared through years of occupancy and association, grows Into a familiar adjustment to the needs of the family. But usually there comes a growing realization of the many ways in which it might be altered and Improved. The growing family requires more rooms or changed arrangements; or the taste of the owner, becoming finer with the years, or bettered fortune making It easier to make his dreams a reality, brings him face to face with the problem of remodeling, should he not care to move to a new dwelling which might prove, when tested by occu pancy, less satisfying. The two principal reasons for re modeling are the utilitarian and the esthetic; the need of more space or more convenience and comfort and the natural desire to make the home more beautiful to the eye. Both re quirements can be met perfectly by proper remodeling, which may really prove an actual transformation. Re modeling gives a stamp of Individu ality to a dwelling as nothing else can, for It means the revising of the building within and without to har monize with Individual tastes and qeeds. COST SHOULD BE IN HARMONY Amount Put In House Should Net Be Out of Proportion to the Value ef the Bite. _____ V v One of the most grievous mistakes the owner can make is to build a house which la out of proportion to the value of the land on which It Is erected. The higher the cost of the land the better, as a rule, the character of future build ing operations In the neighborhood. For Instance, It Is generally unwise to build a house costing $5,000 or SO,OOO on a site costing less than $26 to S4O a front foot Nor should the reverse mistake be made of building a rheap house on an expensive Site— though that Is governed by the re strictions which most developers of high-grade subdivisions Impose. Cost of house and cost of site should be in fairly strict proportion. Buy as much ground as you can rea sonably afford. Twenty-flve-foot lota In a suburban section are an abomina tion. Fifty-foot frontage should be the minimum for any modern residence built for a home, and 100 feet with the added possibilities of attractive lawn and garden Is better. As a bit of advice here la an excerpt from a booklet recently Issued by a realty broker: "Forced growth In anything Is haz ardous ; natural growth Is a guaranty of stability and permanent values. De mand governs supply, not supply de mand. A piece ef real estate has no fixed value uatll someone takes It to keep and Improve." Native Trees Are Desirable. Many people have the decidedly mis taken Idea that the only trees worth buying and setting out are the more or less expensive shrubs or evergree* which are not native to most sections of the country. The Idea of paying ont good money for a pine or a birch or a muplo seems to go against the grain. As a matter ef fact there are many places where such trees are to be had for the trouble of digging them up and transplanting them, but even this la considered too high a price. And yet for many purposes pines snd maples are as good trees as can be bad, and there Is nothing listed in the catalogue more beautiful and graceful than a well rared-for group of white birches. ■ Fall Best Time to Paint House. The fall of the year Is by far the best time to paint the exterior of a house, fur paint dries more slpwly In * cool weather and consequently lasts longer. The heat of the summer sun on a hous. (minted In the spring does much more harm than any winter weather and a fall painting la well sea soned before the next summer arrives. Small tiles and Insects are also a pest In spring painting. Where He Waa Bound For. "Do you think your boy Josh is going to remember the advice you gave him when he left home for the artnyT" "Not thla trip," replied Farmer Oorn tosaeL "By sheer force of habit his mother told him to be sore and keep out of trouble." BUBSCIUBB FOB THB QLBANBI PUREBRED SIRE OF BENEFIT Use of Animal Will Result In Orsat Improvement of Herd—Have Bettor Cattle. There never has been a time when the common cow was at such a dis advantage to ber owner as the pres ent time. It takes a good cow to pay her way these times. A great many cows will be sold this fall because they would be unprofitable this winter, and yet every cow that will produce a calf Is needed by the country. Is It not a good time to make a reso lution and live up to It, to have bet ter cattle? The common cow was all right for cheap land and cheap feed. She must still do to mother better Superior Purebred Bull. cows, for tho great majority of farm ers who still have common cows. Get a purebred sire this fall, and If you can, one that can be used this fall. The use of purebred sires for ten years will generally result in a herd that passes In appearance for purebreds. Surely It •Is worth while. A man Is not as good a fanner as he can be, unless he Is Im proving his herd. FISH MEAL GOOD FOR COWS Nutritive Value as Affecting Milk or Butter Production Compares Wall With Cottonseed. The use of fish meal as a feed for dairy cow» Is not strictly a new feed, but only lately has the government seriously undertaken a study of It as a practical Ingredient In dairy rations. Fish meal Is a by-product of the fish Industry. Waste from salmon and sardine canneries Is especially excel lent for the manufacture of high-grade fish meal. Preliminary experiments made by the U. S. Dairy Division show that the meal has no detrimental effect on the quality of milk or butter, and that the nutritive value of fish meal as affecting production compares favor ably with cottonseed meal. An aver age analysis of fish meal Is as fol lows: Water, 5 per cent; ash, 16j protein, 60; fat. 14; salt, 5. Fish meal Is manufactured from the fresh waste of fisheries by a process of steam cooking, pressing, and dry ing. It Is preferably made from fresh water fish to avoid too high a content of salt Dried-fish products, known as fish scrap of "pomace," are used considerably for fertilizing purposes and fish meal fed to farm livestock re tains all its valuable fertilizing prop erties. COWS REQUIRE PURE WATER Bupply Constitutes Three-Fourths of Volume of Milk and Demands Dairyman's Attention. All animals require plenty of good, pure water. This Is especially true of the milking cow, as water constitutes snore than three-fourths of the volume of milk. The water supply, therefore, demands the dairyman's most careful attention. Stale or Impure water Is distasteful to the cow and she will not drink enough for maximum milk production. Such water also may carry disease germs which might make the milk unsafe for human consump tion or be dangerous to the cow her self. During the winter, when cows are stabled the greater part of the time, and unless arrangements have been made to keep water before them all the time, they should be watered two or three times a day. If possible, the water should be 15 or 20 degrees above the freezing point, and should be supplied at practically the same temperature every day. --- er SUITABLE HOUSE FOR FOWLS Meet Essential That Hens Be Protect ed From Inclement Weather, and Their Enemies. One of the most essential things In poultry keeping, is to have a suitable house which will protect the fowls from inclement weather and from their natural enemies. It Is well un derstood that no two farms will pre sent exactly the same conditions; for Instance, one farmer will desire to keep one hundred hens while another may want many more or leas. Then again, some farms will present one kind of aoll, whereas on other farms the chsracter of the soil and drainage are entirely different Some farmers will desire a bouse which presents an attractive appearance, whereas on other farms poultry houses will be so located that they are not conspicuous, and hence the matter of appearance Is of little concern. It must be remembered that from the staudpolnt of the hen, appearance makes very little difference, but the house must be so built and so ar ranged that It will be a comfortable place for the hens to live; otherwise they will not thrive and production will not be satisfactory. On many farms the hens are not provided with a house constructed especially for tbem but are housed tn an old bnlldlng Originally made for some other pur pose. DISPOSE OF DEAD CHICKENS Cremation Is Only Safe Method of Oat ting Rid of .Caiaasass Old Car bide Can Is Handy. There Is only one safe method of disposal of the dead, and that Is by boning. Ait ordinary wood fire does well, bnt an old carbide can or othsr such^ things made over slightly, makes f BRIG. GEtf. JERVEV —" ,* fv j Brigadier General Jervey, now sta tioned «t Charlotte, N. C., la In com mand of the field artillery of the Forty-first dlvleion. mori~complete and less repulsive, writes Dale H. Van Horn In i Farm and Home. Having procured the carbon can, make a hole in the bottom a little smaller than the bole in the top, and then on one side near the top make a door as shown. before starting operations, dig a small hole and set the can Inverted over It. Pill .with cobs or wood and souk with cold oil. Then drop the dead fowl In the top and ignite. When all has burned, nothing will be left ! but the ashes, which have fallen into | | Carbide Can Cremator. the hole and may be then covered up. In this way only, can one safely han dle contagious diseases in the chicken yard. FATTEN POULTRY IN CRATES Bendlng Chickens to Market Not Prop, •rly Fattened, Is Wasteful Prac tice of Farmers. Sending chickens to market which have not been properly fattened Is a wasteful practice. The weight of healthy, well grown chickens can be Increased from 25 to 50 per cent in two weeks by proper feeding. Three hundred and fifty to four hundred pounds of mash moistened with skim milk or butter milk and properly fed to good fowls will produce 100 pounds of poultry meat in from 12 to 14 days. I'roper feeding of the chickens be fore marketing Improves the quality of the flesh. "Crate fed" and "milk fed" are synonomous with "high qual ity." Chickens which have been milk fed in crates should sell for from 2 to 3 cents above the market price for un fattened chickens. At this price, they are cheaper to the consumer on ac count of the reduced waste in dress ing. lilffinriACKlNG IN VITALITY No Matter How Well Marked He la He Will Be Failure as Best Time for Culling. No matter how well marked he is, a cockerel lacking In vitality will be I a failure as a breeder. While the yoang stuff is growing up, and the age | Is unmistakable, is the time to cull. I Later an early-hatched, stunted spe ! clmen may be thought to be a late. ! hatched prodigy. PARASITES CAUSE OF WORRY i Hene and Chicke Worn Out With Con stant Irritation Are Apt to Suc cumb to Disease. Both liens and chicks worn out with the constant irritation of the skin caused by the parasites, and the loss of blood by actual sucking from the tissue,') lose vitality apd are more apt to succumb to diseases which would otherwise be resisted. Homemade Utter Carrier. TWO AMERICAN AIRMEN WOUNDED IN FRANCE Washington. American airman lighting the Oerman planes on the western front have suffered their first casualties. Two men, a corporal and a private were reported wounded. BAND OF VILLIBTAB AMBUSHED BY FEDERALS I ( I Juarez. Mexico.—Combined columns of federal cavalry, in command of Gen ! eral Francisco Murgula and General | Pedro Eavela, ambushed a large band ' of Villa followers In Santa Clara can- I yon, 75 miles northwest of Chlhuahus Ctty according to an official statement ' given out at military headquarters. A I total of 400 were killed and wounded j on both sides. The Villa forces suffer j ed the heaviest losses. C ASTORIA For Infanta and Children In o*3 For Over 30 Years ZBZ&s&ZSu Always amused at locksmiths, "Love" now passes the laugh on to "Father Time," bringing together a St. Louis bachelor of 73 and a Louisville maiden of 72 and brave ly demanding of "F. T." what he la going to do about it? For Infants and Children. Know That Genuine Castoria . 8111111 l BeaTS /f Signatur^/^Jr AJ* Use \J» for Ovsr ■HI Thirty Years WIBCfISTOBIfI Exact Copy of Wrapper. t»« ttmum ».w TO.« «>tv. JAMES H. COLLINS Jamea H. Collins, for 15 years a widely known writer on business sub jects, has charge of the rood adminis tration's publicity handled through trade papers . GIVE SORE TEATS ATTENTION Where Trouble Results From Improp er Milking Olntapent Made of Zlno and Vaseline. When cows have sore teats caused by Improper milking, applying an oint ment made from 1 dram of oxide of rlnc and 1 onnce of vaseline applied when the soreness Is first apparent will probably be sufficient If the teats break out in pimples which form scabs I it is in all probability a case of cow I pox, In which case the affected cows should be isolated from the remainder of the herd and due precaution taken to prevent the spread of the disease, which is very contagious and can be (carried to other cows in the herd on ( the bands or clothes of the milker, j Treatment consists in applying, three times a day, an ointment made by mlx ! lng together 4 drams of boraclc arid, 20 drops of carbolic acid. WORD FOR BROWN SWISS COW Animals Are Remarkably Btrong, Healthy and Larger, and Coarser Than Other Dairy Breeds. Brown Swiss cattle, as the name In dicates, originated in Switzerland. They are remarkably strong, healthy animals, larger and coarser than any other dairy breed. While many Indi viduals have made excellent dairy and " Champion Brown Swiss Cow. milk records, the total number of the ! breed in this country is small and It I has not, therefore, been as important j a factor la the dairy Industries here ias It has been In Switzerland. The number of animals Is rapidly Increas ing, and the breed Is receiving more , Attention from dairymen. CREAM THIEVES ARE FOUND Minnesota Official Finds That 44 Farmers In Nine Associations Have Defective Machine*. "Have yon a cream thief on your ttrar la a pertinent question at the head of a circular being sent out by iW. A. McKerrow of the agricultural (extension division of the University of Minnesota. | In answer to the question, Mr. Mc- Kerrow say a that 44 farmers In 9 cow-testing aaaodatlona in Minnesota did have cream thieves, or separators that waste butterfat Out of 170 sep arators tested it waa found that one In five waa stealing from Its owner, | To prove op on your eeparator, it la suggested that yon take a aample of your skim milk from the spout and (hare It tested at your creamery or at the college of agriculture. There la no possible excuse far cream aep -■■■ . j. I Very Serious It is a vtrf serious matter to ask* tor one medicine and have the wrong one given you. For »hH reason we urge you in buying to be careful to get thcgenuine— BLAcW&HT Liver Medicine ■ The reputation of this old, relia-. ■ ble medicine, for constipation, in- H digestion and liver trouble, is firraJ ' I ly established. It doss not imitate' ■ other medicines. It is bcttei than. ■ others, or it would not be the la-, I vorite liver powder, with • larger' I sale that* an others combined. I SOU) IN TOWN W m trade marks nntl copyright* bbtnlnwl or no M II fe*>. Tv nd model, sketches or photo* and de* B R Bcrlption tor ft IEE SEARCH and report? ■ Lj or patentability. hunk reference*. H PATENTS BUILD FORTUNI* for (j ga you. Our free booklet* tell how, what to Invest W D and eave you money. Write today. |D. SWIFT &CQ.I PATENT LAWYERS, iH Seventh St., Washington, D.Jkfl LflW UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA LAW SCHOOL Excellent Faculty Reasonable Cost WRITE FOR CATALOG THE PRESIDENT, CHAPEL HIUL, N. C. ■A. Help For Girls Desiring Education. ' We have on our campus au apart ment house, a two storyL) uildiug of 25 rooms, **ith a frontage of 100 feet which may be used by girls who wish to torm clubs and live at their own charges. Pupils can live cheaply and com fortably in this way, many of them having their table supplies aeDt to them from their homes. • I For further information address I.J M. Rhodes. Littleton College, Littleton, N. C. ++ UP-TO-I)ATB*JOB*J^BININO + i DONE AT THIS OFFICE. X OI VB [ PB | TRIAL | (■■■■■■■■lll 12 HMd 4Qltarc § mil 8 The WORM'S Tub f Sold Everywhere X liiimiinit % >« orrntrftTiON ;■»» a ißKniarsfA fi BALSA!' . i W'.r'ftnl uj To (. j jjA U. 4uH*«R i Graham Drug Co. | my mi am stmmch? If yem do "Digeftoreine" wui rh/f 0.1 cite. i'or full particnla»s cMpf . lijjs woirhi fta kt*»nir».v v, i, • Hayes Dreg Co.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 10, 1918, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75