f Home Newspaper PublisTied in the Interest of tKe Peopiend1 for Hdn'esty Tn QWernmentarAffaifs'7'1' 1 je-' -y- . : . , , 1 ... , J,.. , .... J . . "-. 111. " i I Ml "l. 1' ill I ij r - - - - 1 - - - 1 iA i t . V n vol. vim" :no; 13 1 J SALISBURY, N. O., WEDNSDAYr MARCH. '12Tb. 1912'. Wm.h. Stewart, to ibq SOIL IMPBOVEIIENTi Hew to llalotalathe1 Plaat Food Supply wnueerppg crop tftecrop of Corn, , If for an reasoa i ths ; farjner ehould desire to fpllow corn with corofiand"Jhiland need greeu" manuH, tbe , Tollowiug . plaiv will balfjmnd yqaite praoticabl and profltible and 4rU greatly 1 aid in mainlamiD the piaffe A food , sup ply of the sou id an available oondttion. " The coxa4 TQPc should.; in vari-r ably, banoultiyated.lata enough to ibsajre a ufBoient bonsenratnn of moisiure to. mature jthe orop al- eaSVlon the laiidCpriria:. gen erally 'latd-bytob J ebon in this ' stated after yfiiob the midsummer drought catches the crop bums it severely, .and frequently" re daces'tbe yield at least one half. Cultivate. shallo ii frequent, aud-late is aii excellent motio for the corn growers iaf North Oaro Una, : Rye &xid clithfl "n clover should be so wn broidcast in com and covered by . the .last cultivation This will serve as a cover crop and jireen ma u u r i ng crop for the oora the following ear. Donot. puU fpddr or cut tops from' com when, the following crop is t be corn a'.ao Let both fodder and. ops dry. up in tfce field. In "the spring, when -td-.. rye and crimson clov,er hat made S-gQOLU growtu BUM. mo icaujr u iplow under," the fjalrmr wants to .bring a sharp disd harrow into - action . The old' corn stalks, the rye, and the' crimson clover should bd cut into bits. The - old talks must not be plowed uuder whole to hinder the proper culti vation 'of the following crop, but ihculd be so reduced that they will give no trouble by pulling up The disclngrthbuld b3 dotre when the orimson clover is oo'mi hlnun."-The rve will -Ten Things tado Tills yootft.-- : - Get the land ready for-the crops. Plow well; harrow and re harrow until' a 'perfect seed bed la obtained. Remember that good preparation is half the battle. 2. Use good seeds. It will be cheaper to pay a good price for seeds than to plant those cf pDor quatiiy.i Then arrange some said plants, and , grow your own seeds. 8. Get the tcols out some rainy day and see that tbey are in good , conditionjo d o good, work . Look after the plantar especially. Yen oan't afford to have a poor stand from careless planting. 4. -Take special care cf the horses. See that the harness does not rub at.d that the collars fit. Groom well and rub their shoul ders three or four times a day. 6. Study the feeding of brood sow; fix up the farrowing pm; when the pigs come give them careful attention and keep them growing. 6. Make a start with pure-bred poultry. Fix up houses and run ways. Rid the premises of lice. 7. Put the spray pump to work in the- orchard. Kp up the gdrden planting and cultivation. 8. r Paint the house.. Buy a lawn mower and start it running. Whitewash fences and outbuild ings. 9. Order needed seed of cowpeae, .soy Deans, etc. Arrange to grow your own hay this year and to get the nitrcgen you heed from the air. . . ' . ;; . 10. Give the boy an acre work in corn or cotton, or a calf or a litter of pigs. Interest the girls in tomato growing or poultry raising. Progressive Farmer. GENEPAUIATTEBS GfJNIERE Tbe Hangman's Noose at the End of the fJi.anay:bj9, a.d doubtTes4s true that 'r many murderera have es caped the just punishment of their crimes, but m the great ma- likelybe heading out" by this Jjorisy of cases the law has exact- time; but the discing ana piow ing should be done with reference to the development of '.the. crim on clover. - When the discing has been done tbe land should be plowed ome eight or ten inches deep, depending .on previous depths to which the land has' been plowed, and disosd once more to break clods and further mix the organic matter with the soil stratum . The soil should now be allowed to settle - and become 'somewhat eomoaot before planting after which the land Bhould be pre "pared and the corn planted ac cording to the method outlined for this crop whan following wheat. We do not recommend the sandwiching of a . pea crop be tween two corn crops for green manuring purposes because,- in case the crop is cultivated as late as is generally necessary, the paa orop would make but an indiffer nt growth' before frost and wa would not only fail to get much of a nea crop to plow' under - but ed the full toll. It is a matter of record, toe. that murderers, "made cowards by conscience," have confessed their guilt under mental lash. Bat whether overtaken by the law's machinery or voluntarily acknowledged, "murder will out." It is one of the seven deadly sins crying to heaven for vengeance, and its bloody .tail must sooner or later lead to the assassin's door. The cry of "murder I!! has always been one to benumb the brain and strike terror to the human mind and heart. It wis such a ory that Shakeipeare invested with all the horrows of human imagination; around the crime of murder he painted sseues of frightful vivid- nesB. "Murder most foul, as in the best it is," will not down. These who are gailty of it may lull themselves into feeling of compar ettive security in the passage of time, but f-.ver and anon the spec tre will rise and haunt them. The murderer knows no real rest, for "wherever von so. the thine Bit Events Reduced to Li trie Paragraph for the Headers of This Paper..-. Neaily one million coal miuers in England are but on ttrike ' de mandiug aOi increase in wages. The. strike is felt thircughcut Europe, ' v - - - ' v, ' The : textile manufacturers at Lawience,: Mass., have announced a five per cent . raise in the wages of their employeesVwhbhive been out on a strike for . the past several mouth?, but it appears thaV this will not settle th$ strike. w As he was preparing to become one of the pall bearers at the funeral of Dr. H. C. Spencer at Gainsville, Fia., recently, Harry G. Welch was arrested on a war rant charging him with the mur der of the man he was to- help bury. Welch had been living at the borne of the latter for several years. - Announcement haB been made of the selection of Greensboro as the location for the establish mant of a branch manufacturing and distributing point of the Armour Fertilizer Works of Chicago The Greensboro plant wilt cost about $250,000 and will be in operation by next fall. Senator Gardiner, of Maine, haB introduced a bill under which the government wuuld take over. the express companies of the country. He estimates the total cost at something like forty mil lions and he would regulate rates something like that which pre vails in the posteffice department. Governor Hooper of Tennessee, who has been named among the nine republican governors who ire for President Taft idu his fight for renomination-J as teek announced; that u4 will keep hands off in the fight in the state republican convention. Govern or He oper is himself a candidate for re-nomination. After writing a letter to his wife, telling her he wa.s short in his accounts and declaring "It is this1 or gjtothe penitentiary" Postmaster H. L- Marsh of Abbe ville, S. C , committed suicide last Wednesday by firing a bullet into his brain. Marsh was 71 years old and an old union soldier and has been postmaster for twelve years, tie leaves a widow and five children. In the new foreign office Sun day. Yuan Shi Kai was . formally inaugurated provincial President of the republic of China in the presence of a great gathering ot delegates, 'province envOyes, mili tary and naval officers and other prominent personages. ' Many foreigners attended "the cere monies bub legations were not represented. Yaan Shi Kai, who was in military unitorm. read a would not be able to put on cur wmtet C3ver cron tor green ma nuring in the spring. In view of the general practice,' however,, peas may be sown in tbe corn at the last working-, allowed to mature, and cat up with the corn stalks and plowed under in the fall,, after wbioh a crop of rye and crimson clover may be own as a winter cover crop and a green manuring crop in the spring. This method is likely to leduoe the yield of v5orn by ex- Zm. posing the crop to the midsummer drought whtich saps the land cf its moisture content and . checks the development of the plants Bulletin N. 0. Department of Agriculture. you are Will follow after you The fear of discovery is always upon the wretch whoee hands are stained with human blood: his ears are never clcsad to the death cries of his victim. In the pursuit of the manslayer the law is unrelenting. A mass of leeal technicalities may delav the day of reckoning, or circum stances temporarily insurmounta ble may favor the culprit, but the hangman a noose is always at the end of the road Asheville Citi- . .-r - x. u r . : ....... j. t- .--. -I flin'alti Amnnilcan Rloi re-Smith Dnls I 5 London, March"" 9. OaDt. -Roald Aniuiidses triifnip! is generally acknowledged as complete. SU herNor wegian ex plorer baHe.dlae the, cons queror of theouth pole. Many Britons arq till clings iug to the hope t&at Captain, Scott's return ma$. furnisti. a dramatic climaXS tb nt artic story, .v-' fe?'Vfc':-r m The Royal (graphical Society is awai tin news from 4 icy. 4.l .-.JS - jsas : ij. - rauuiii L'tJiuro cumuiuiux it self. Rear Admiral sPearyi Sir Ernest ShacMeton' and Dr dhariom are rimhenjlx STATE KEWS. Hems ot Interest gathered From the Allan- ti( tn tba Anntlaohiine , A i Workingnoan?3: Olark . club, said to have ? 2P0 members, i has been 'organ iz ad in Raleigh to .pro mote ? the candidacy . of Judge Clark forthe United States Sen-ate- , . ... i,- . .. v. Henry Campbell, a negro man i about 40 years of age, commit ted suicide last Thursday after noonVatisTrome- several mites .vu. am. ua f - J - J' 1 J Hnw PlVe jn'H Sfiiian WSJ! Uatn " .- IV B I HUM WIIUbl II III IICIU 1 . t. - ; --.v t The farmer who grows a field of 30m and a field of peas and soy beanspurchases a good brood sow and feeds the oorn ,and peas to her Off spring ; then disks the stub ble laud, sows in rye and crimson clover and feeds that crop to the second litter of pigs, will surely make more , clear money in the long run than he who grows a crop and sells it in the raw Btate, and will have just as fertile a farm At-thft nd of dirt yearifal i wiu:tu9.man who; turns-under ior jn orwegjan explorers, ! may have reached th; ' goal -i and each remained inV ignorance of the other's succ splayed in theewspapp as su pportin.x the a arinise" lijMdtittiadiliad J&odm ' that both the British , and alficSed.7 Several' week ago poo- pie in hi3 commaniBv safd that CampbaJf was brazy; but he did not ffppaar 1 at all dahgerous and no Steps r were" taken to- coc fine him'. Ha 5 was a vjry-iarae mail, The Price Ot a Bij0e. . ; Cl aemingly in perfect health; and What is a taaAoig b66i coua;deredvp ucjabIe; worth? At the nt term of barmleas and a thrifty s rtf Forsyth county TsuDerior ' .bellow. " court for the tiial pf.-ciyil nncaa r ? n wrr -ttt ill V y-k r 1 ! nl jy -" "rw. Wautaoga .county,-iays that he upon to decide this question: ... . . .e ... a i. j i u , v will not be 'a candiiate, f)r tht A to th man. mnti -mat thv ' " A , , - toe, he estimated the valde of RWbll?aQ nomiuatlOM ,for Conr the missing member at$2,50O. jrs in tbis district, Mr Lin And so it is asserted inthe WiSpeot Tuesday nig at fJaM. complaiut filed reeentlyb'y r-We'jk, in Stateavill, giog i6in Attorney Fred M. Pa'rrish' in I here to Taylors ville, Wod xesdaf iuc Lane ui hi, j. ygoM.ui.v4o, i moTning, ana wnen quesEiouea:o. suing by his next iKl4;aiadmari wpor'ter; about the Li. AiariQge, vs. uoook- statement mad' in the Salisbury w. iuuimiy Py.r pfchat'he would be a oodi- luia uity. xiio uuuipiciiui air leges that the young man lost his great toe by reason of the negligence of the defen dant company for whom he was at work. .The accident occurred on February 15, 1909. Youn? Aldri.dge, 'who is 17. years old was Berving as an apprentice ah the foun' SOME QF;R0WAN'S ULOEST CITIZENS. ess Whore 'Thei?vls This LisKDofififif? ? Waare stiJL geUingii nauips fcx our pid folkg cplnaWaudv filling m ma oates or ojrtu, or jptijera ana magf-siigh't cOredftdiJsnf u Dxteuut u wiu ue appreevateav aabobpTjolehbusertfe Litaker iWjnship, bornunet ffllfilmma Shumab. af Sala? tttxj; mta Junsf 2iidi$ vi Mrs, rir v. ana , was mftmiff ome heffrbetbftrrv!v.iron brought back, t V fnwhWim-ai to stand'triaf OY-exasome iron and Iell? drop ping the heavy weight from his hands to his foot. Not only was the big toe severed entirely from h's foot but the toe next to the bit? toe was smashed until it is of no more service, .bor toeee mjune? the plaintiff asks that he be allowed damages to the amount of 82,500. Winston Salem Journal. One Kind of Modern Girl not Fitted for Housekeeping. Deliver us from the modern girl if she is the kind that is always seen on the streets, da far the nomination, h9 ws s very .emphatic in his answer that he will not be a candidate. He said the statement in the Post was made without his . knowledge or consent. Statesville Land mark. . W. H. McKnfcire has beei cap ture! in Tampa, FlaM and- will be North Carolina fbtheimuMet.j half a do9n meu who disappeared from time to time in Rutherford c unty. Tbe last murder he is charged with is that of an old hermit named Hinos, disappeared under very mysterious ciscum stances. McEutire tried to eet possession of tbe old mau's prop erty after his disappearance and when suspicion was aroused he left the court. It is alleged that he burned the bodies of all his victims in the furnace of his illicit 'distillery. The college commission, having in hand the choosiug of a site for the Mfc. Amoena Seminary, will visit the several plac&B offering ntwg,Be safcep ana woi n pay. folclihs'fedttud caring of thf Hock. Some citt'e will beu d c also, as there will be jnuch of .b ooarsr parts of the r ugh fefd that the sheep cannot handle tc adrantagp, and to carry out thif plan of saving aUthefesdyraliie of the crops, thus jaducingVthe whole to a miuiunxthe cattlV W' do their part. Progressive, Farm er. - I 1 mer. livine TUeartirinite and I will wager be will' better credit by far at TVl " a i - n - ' " ' " jl amy uonarS;Wm pay brood sow that will prod pork the firsr $ ear, mrkiiiri dollar's worthofedmetfbl .chasejdif the land, is kept A Mrs, gan'sfCM isffth Mt.-should be. growing ie crgpsvery.mohtb of the year tuexo will De proguct8 Jren l crops-coin udder, pea hay etoT-fihsPb t he hogs cannot use; there will aUj fie moie perma iem pasture grass than they w.i! con uraV, and to pr-ys-bfthV wastii. Gt the'-feed vaiuo of tbwge bpro" 4ucts:a small fl .k t.f sh-p w.i. .ieBd'vln.if?-j esf-s will c:e frlJr .fiwd the.jami.s wJ :xue" --o4,;ff)8 next epni.g. '" J, - -r dB'-CJ' mT . SfufiCr. , 1r 8; tfornc4 ypbornOcKie 8S'. sJr 8 87 86 '82 1 A I - 1 who it turned loose in a kitcken, would not know the sites iod donations, and will meet Unless difference between 'a skillet and a sancepan, who knows not the difference - between "saltrising" and - any other kind of bread. . Woe unto the man who is so unfortun ate as to get one of these "creatures" for a helpmate, For should the cook fail to turn up, a most likely hap penmg, on any one of these declaration promising faithfully frosty mornings, he must go to develop the republic, observe DreaKiasuesfl to nis worK or the constitutional laws and retire else suffer the pangs and hor when the National Assembly ap pointed a permanent President The ceremony was solemn, almost Host tesnrfff Sate tttorT No conditions, no prpjuthces, no posaioie combination ot cir cumstances can stand in the way of a more general and complete use of labor-saving implements and machinery or we are doomed to remam "hewera'of wood and drawers of water" in the agricul tural world for all time. There is a tremendous reach of progteas between the old cradle used in the harvesting of small greinB less than a century ago and the combined header and thresher of today, but this sets an example which the Southern far mer must follow in the improve ment of his farming methods. this spirit of progress on weanesaay, marcn u, to taxes nrm hold ot our agriculture. make a final report, which will be our favoring climatic conditions presented to tne regular meeting or abundant sunshine and mois- ot the Lutheran Synod at Char- tare, our monopDly of the great lotte in May. Salisbury, Albc-. est field crop known to the farm- marie, Lexington, China Grove, iag world, and the number and pathetic and typical of China's transition. Fears of a strike of a hundred Landis. and Mt. Pleasant all havo made iuviting proposals. The mystery of the death of Myrtle Hawkins, whose dead body was found floating in the waters of Lake Osceola Septem- i in im u ki 4. n . -. . . I ilrl I III I IT I I . WILH 1 1 1 1 1 II V 1 1 tl t HftjKU either by his wife's leaden uearer to 80lufeion Mday after hisp.nita or tbe fare from some noon when the Hendsrson county down town restaurant. Give gfaud 3uryi sitting at Henderson- varied excellence ot our other agricultural products cannot con tinue to overome that tremen dous disadvantage of the failure to uae labor-s iving farm machin ery, under which we are now suffericg. Progressive Farmer. What is Lent? The name Lent is derived us the oldfashioned sunbon- I ville. returned true bills charg-H from the old English word net girl who knows how to prepare a meal which shall and eighty thousand anthracite really satisfy the inner man. coal miners Anril 1. caused a Grastonia .Gazette.- general rash on the part of con Burners for coal to carry them over the strike period. Tbe sud den demand is widespread . Many dealers have increased prices. -It is reported he .rail roads' supply is running short. Glorious News comes from Dr. J. T. Curtis?, Dwtght, Kansas. He writes: ' I uo only hive cured bad cases of ecz ma in niy patients with Elec tric Bitters but also cured myself by them of the same disease. I feel sure they -will benefit any case of e-izema." This shows what ihonsands have . proved; that Electric Bitters is a most effective blood purifier . It's an orustv -humors, as well as i.fxceiient , remedy ror eczema, their accidental inruries, cuts ftetterj jalt rneum, ulcers, nous burns bruiees. etc,, 'with partect and running sores. i Jrt stimulates safety. Nothins-else hea s so ;SX To MothersAnd Others. . ;vYcn can' use Bucklen's Arnica Salve to cure children of jscZema,- rashes, tettdrr chaflogs, scaly and quickly. For boils, ulcers, old, tunning cr fever sores or piles it has lno equal." -2& cents at All Pruggists, liver, kidneys and" bowets expels noisoiis, helps digestion. -builds up the strength. " Price' 50 cents . Satisfaction guaranteed by All Druggists. Repels attack Of Death.' 'Five years ago two doctors told me I had only two. years to live."' This startling statement was made by Stillman Green, Malabbite, Col. "They told me I would die with consumption. 1 was up to me then to try the bast lung medicine and I began to use Dr. King's New Discovery, Early tomatoes rot badly here. How shall I prevent?" Spray accessory before the fact to the the plants in the eee3-beds with murder, and Dan McCall father, Bordeaux mixture, and after they of Mrs. McCall, is charged with are set out Bpray every ten days being an accessory after the fact. tul the fruit is half grown. This Immediately fobowing the read- will prevent the rot. and the leaf fcflight," but wiif-hayd -no effect, on the Southern bacterial 1 lieht. .. -. F ing murder against Abner McCall Lencten, meaning Spring, his wife, Beatrice McCall, and and so may be called the George Bradley, and a woman Spring fast, and is kept in "unknown to the jury." commemoration of the forty "Boney" Bradley, a brother of days spent by the dear Lord George, is charged with being an in th wilderness The Lenten tast has been observed and kept by the Church from a very early date. Traces of its obser vance are found in the writ insrs of the Anti-Nicene Quaff y, vbornvBeptember G h as . JA r rffanlf droran Tnwnr tsbipv lrnrivovember . ro2i. - -.V. vV. M. Barker? ot l -vr i ' . oorn ioye,ini .Mi3S8.ru 1 1 zaeJJeeiiler, r ut e N . 2, Chio4Gfaec ra . SarrMWlWw. I.lpbardt, lives eastof mmcmtZ born Novg6lr88 AOW Matthew MeuiusSteele shijf.bqraFeb: Ph 1 1 lip m T&M$li& Abner wMfrj '-AlwSfc hip,'boio.''vfe Mary.Annavfrtjfenia Grove, boru April 7, 1880, iJSfptlft BlaWlder,:No, 1 .rcWGroW bom- DeX- - Miaa Jpry :Bl-:Gilfeaifcbotn -Aprll15h, ' 1826V age-" - 85 Mrg.Aiinie- CressrrankUn' " v Mrs .'Rozsna1 Bostians-China" ' Grove, btxrnv . " JJJ Cant. Wm. A Lucky ,Glvfl- land, born Sept., 1827, new John H. A. Lipoard Wood- leaf, born-182.7 Gaorge Dal, China Grove 1J6, 1, bpin July 4th, 1827. .... Mrs. C. E. Blackwelder, Chi na Grove, born.. Mrs. Mary E. Menius, Steele Township, born February 26tb, 1828- Nathan Morgan, Providenoe Township, born May 31,1828 Samu9l Dal, Chiua Grove Towuship, born January 17th, 18S0, n w Mibj Sirah E. S9chler, R. D. No. 2, China Grovj, born November 6, 1829, mw. , . . Jacob A. Kluttz, Franklin Township, born April 27th, 1880. Jacob Albright, Atwell Town ship, born Mrs. vV . H. Neave, Salisbury, born January, 1831,.:..... Martin Blackwelder, No 1, China Grove, born Sep tember 1st. 1831. now. J. L, T)eal, China Groye, No. li now over Mrs Jacob Albright, Atwell TownBhip, born ........... J. G. Albright, China Grove, bqrai83l,, now 80 Mrs. J . Gt , Albright, China Grova horn 1831, now CutharineS, Earnhardt, born July 14, 1831, now Levi Powlass, IJjity Town shTp, bora April 11, 1831, old soldier, hai been blind for 13 j ears, now Isom Hosky, col,. East Spen cer, born May 8, 1811..... Who are the others? Send in the name of the oldest person you now, and give nearest date Of their birth. - ' :M if msnura uaifthef prsMna V s ' i$m produufgSSi PS The only thing for this is to use uninfected soil.- .:. .F-- Massey, in Progressive Farmer. iug of the bill of indictment, war- Writers Irenaeu3 and Origen, rantB were'issued for the iudiotid s0 it runs all through the narties and:all were arrested and Christian Centuries back placed in Henderson county jail. One of the worst wrecks in the history of Wilmington occurred Friday night at 8 o'clock, when the Atlantic Coast Line passenger tram No. 5 from Sanford collided through Jewish history to the days when Israel was de- livered from Egyptian bond age.x Lent is the special season for drawing nearer to God, for special acts of charity and . : Nineteen Miles 4 Second without a jar, shock or . dislurb ance.48 the awful speed of our It was well I did, for t day I am earth through space . We wonder head-on with a yard engine just devotion, for giving up cer as it was about to enter the city tain things that might tend rtat has chead thrgravef aT PMS.M- Foreman H. B Goodnight, who God, for the deepening of the tuff-jr with coughs, colds or other Lwork that brings good eatlth and "as on tne yara engiuu, jnugiuuer n , o , wae present ,84 84 84 84 88 ,84 88 83 82 81 81 81 80' 80 80. 8Q 80 80 100 in I i u Gold Knob School Closes. Tbe school at Gold Knob closed Friday, March 8th. The closieg exercises which began at 4. :80 p. m. consisted of recitations, dia logues, songs, etc., was rendered well especially by the little folks . Seven very nice gifts were pre sented to the (principal) teacher by the larger girls. Succeeding this several social games were, played in tbe yard. About all of the students parted frith teirs in their eyes. A very nice crowd 4 throat -.and lung troubles now Take the core that's safest Price 50 cents and $1 00. Trial bottb free sit All Druggists. fine, feelings. Druggiste. 25 oents-at All Walter M. Williams and Fire- heart in a purifying process Xh) Bchool: was suaceisfnlly man Borden Branch of the pas- to Cleanse u iromjsm, lur mc taught, by Miss Gertrude Hart s senger tram, an wnne ana resi uuiuug uo wim-auu uiamuu principal bdu miu aeiue ran U READ THE WATCHMAN. I dents of Wilmington Wa.vjlw -- 4 'A -e

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