APRIL 10, 1930 sargon saved ms LIFE, SAW BROffN ‘•A. little less than 2 months ago t decided to take the Sargon treat -1 n f and I honestlv believe that Vision savd my life. C.O. BROWN . *»’ ' “I suffered so much with - indiges tion 1 wasn’t able to eat anything much but rice and milk and even this disagreed with me. I was sub ject to sick headaches and an awful pain in my right side and stubborn constipation, and kept steadily go ing down hill in spite of the fact that 1 took enough medicine to fill a basket with empty bottles. When 1 started Sargon I was flat on my back in bed and had been there for 2 months. Five bottles of Sargon made me as strong and well as I w 3? 10 years ago! I eat hearty meals, indigestion is over, I’ve gain ed 21 pounds, sleep good and feel good all the time. Sargon Pills completely overcame .my .constipa tion and the pain in my side and headaches have entirely disappear ed.” —W. O. Brown, Brown Pottery Co., Arden, N. C. C. R. Pilkington, Pittsboro; Wig gins Drug Stores, Inc., Sij-e*.. City,/ Agents. ' *-• .*■ Adv. ® RECIPE FOR CARP Skin the carp instead of scaling it. With a sharp .knife cut out, the red streak of meat along both sides of the fish. Then lay it on a soft pine board and bake in a hot oven until the carp is quite crisp. Then throw the carp away and eat the board. —The Pathfinder. LIGHT TALK ——* Irate voice over telephone, after arguing with freight rate clerk (any office): “Well, then give me the rate on a flat car load of duck feathers, loose!” ♦ For a man in a great position one enemy is too much, and a hundred friends too few.—-Italian proverb. I HOW I COTTON CHjyVtPEOMS MAKE THEIR CROPS 'SfEAR after year the cotton champion > **■ ship of your State is won by a farmer who fertilizes his crop with Chilean Nitrate of Soda. This doesn’t just happen to be true. Chilean Nitrate has been the main reason for every cotton championship in every Southern state for five consecutive years. INorffa CaF©B2ras Cotton Cfaaimpson /. WILSON ALEXANDER, Hunt ersville, N . C., named by College of Agriculture as cotton champion of the State. Yield, 1,145.2 lbs. lint cot ton per acre on five acres. Crop fertil -8 izsd with 3CO lbs. Chilean Nitrate per I acre. Chilean Nitrate is the world’s only nat ural nitrate fertilizer —’not synthetic, re member. It speeds crop growth. Increases crop yield. Makes better quality ... always. See your local fertilizer dealer. If lie does not carry Chilean Nitrate of Soda he can easily get it for you. Free Fertilizer Book Our new book, “How to Fertilize Cotton,” tells exactly how to use Chilean Nitrate. It gives all the facts. Free. Ask for Book No. 2, or tear out this ad and mail it with ycur name and address. I 1 j la 3 O-1 93 o j . \ i his year marks | the 100th year j since the first ! use of Chilean titrate on s American Crops . Lamb Recipes I J THE LESS TENDER CUTS OF LAMB The shoulder cuts of lamb are a particularly juicy and sweet piece of meat. They have, however, well developed muscle tissue and there fore in order to bring out every bit of goodness, it is necessary to cook the meat for a long time at a low temperature. The best methods for cooking are pot roasting, brais ing or steam roasting. A tempting dish “Braised Lamb en Casserole,” is one I am sure you will all en joy. Here it is: BRAISED LAMB EN CASSEROLE 1 pound neck or shoulder chops of lamb M> cup tomato Va slice onion 1 tablespoon flour 1 tablespoon bacon drippins or fat cup water Salt and pepper to taste Brown the meat on both sides, add the vegetables and make a gravy with the hot water and a little fat. Place the meat in a covered baking dish, cover lightly and bake slowly until the meat is very tender. • Another particularly tempting way to use the shoulder cut is to stuff the shoulder of lamb. I like this dish especially well when I am en tertaining a number of guests and want a piece of meat that will be inexpensive yet tempting. STUFFED SHOULDER OF LAMB Remove bones from a six to eight pound shoulder of lamb. Peel or cut off the outer skin from the fat side of the meat. This skin gives the meat its strong wooly flavor. Rub with a bit of garlic. Season with salt and pepper allow ing three-fourth teaspoon salt and one-eight teaspoon pepper for each pound of meat. Fill space where bone - was removed with a moist bread dressing. Roll carefully and tie. Place in a roaster. Lay .strips of bacon over the top. Add two, to three cups of boiling water. Coves and let the whole simmer 'gently and steam .for an'hour to make it tender and- delicately browned. .Use the -liquid remaining for gravy. Serve with mint jelly, asparagus tips or caper sauce. | The breast . has any number of | possibilties, a pocket may be cut | between the*- outer skin and' the bone. The . meat should be rubbed with salt and pepper, allowing .% teaspoon salt* and Vs teaspoon pep per for each pound of meat. Fill the pocket with a tempting bread dressing, then sew or skewer and steam roast. By steam roasting, I mean placing the meat in what we usually term the covered roaster, I adding Vt to 1 cup water, depend ! ing upon the size and shape of the roaster; then cover the pan and place it in a 325 degree F. or slow oven. Let the meat roast slowly 1 for 2Vt hours. As the water evapo j rates, more water should be added. There should be sufficient water to Chilean ! Nitrate of Soda EDUCATIONAL BUREAU 403 Professional Bldg., Raleigh, N.C.. In replying , please refer to ad No. 68 *rTfc *oo* w ° T luck THE CHATHAM RECORD. PITTSBORO. N. C. j cover the bottom of the pan. About one-half hour before the *meat is ready for serving, remove the cover, 1 add the onion chopped fine and one-half green pepped diced. Con tinue cooking uncovered until the meat is brown and the onion cooked. Then make a gravy, add ing a little browned flour, salt and pepper to season. COME OVER TO SEE OUR LIZARD Before long your friends may be asking you to “come over and see our lizard.” For raising lizards as house pets is expected and predict ed to be the next fad in America. You may shudder at the thought of having a little lizard in your home ' —a Japanese water lizard at that —but that’s the newest fad. Al ready these lizards are being im ported by firms dealing in pets, such as goldfish, canaries, rabbits, dogs, cats, etc. They are kept in ( bowls like goldfish. However, they are not as beautiful as the imported j Japanese and Chinese goldfish. The Pathfinder. <§ Cpee h defects Stammering and other speech de fects may be caused b.v malformations of the palate, tongue, etc. Various speech defects may be symptoms of a functional nerve disorder. B The luxury of Camels — ** '* *• / «**»*»'*' i*m*****-\-< . , 1 MBl costs no more ■, I,J »I«I ; ‘ :.•••* w~. ‘- ? * * *• ‘ ; • i ~. r j , . .... ..i . 4 * = < .. I '" ' " ) * ■ ’ , 1 1 - • ,* «•. 1,. ;/»■.. . / ■> ,»>»./ •• j . • # * ■: J * . ‘ : . v _ " '‘J - IIISII DON’T DENY YOURSELF the enjoyment of smoking Camels. You pay as much whatever you buy. Why not 111111 l have the real smoke-luxury that Camels alone can give? \vXvXvXvXvXl jfHH Into this familiar package goes all the mellow, natural illllj fragrance, all the mildness, all the delicately blended aroma ||||||||j and richness —in short, all the true smoking delight that Illllj twenty cigarettes can possibly contain. No frills on the Illlllllil package. The extras you get with Camels are in the marvel !!!!§! j pus quality of the cigarettes themselves. p||||rt , Camels have won a wider friendship among the mil lllllllll Hons who appreciate the luxury of a perfect smoke than 11111 l any other cigarette ever made. ■■ | Don’t deny yourself the luxury of Li CAM ELS if l © 1930, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco If- Company, Winston-Salem, N. C. : How Farmers Can Go Broke > j <§> ’ j The Agricultural College of the 1 j University of Tennessee suggests ■ these ten ways for a man to go broke farming. 1. Grow only one crop. 2. Keep no livestock. 3. Regard chickens and gardens as nuisances. 4. Take everything from the soil and return nothing. 5. Don’t stop gullies or grow cover crops—let the topsoil wash away. 6. Don’t plan farm operations. It’s hard work thinking—trust to luck. 7. Regard * your woodland as you would a coal mine; cut every ; tree, sell the timber and wear out the the cleared land cultivating it in the same crop year after year. 8. Hold fast to tne idea that the methods of farming employed by your grandfather are good .enough for you. 9. Be independent don’t join i with your neighbors in any form of cooperation. 10. Mortgage your farm for every dollar it will stand to buy things you would have cash to pay for if you followed a good system of farming. Cheat me in the price but not in the goods,—English proverb. THE CATCH IN IT (Greensboro Daily News) There was discussion a few days ago about the preparation for the consideration of the universal draft act and the suggestion that its passage, if Congress ever gets around to it, would be a test of the sincerity of those who complain of the paramounting of property rights over human rights; and it was sug gested that organized labor would have opportunity to show in its support of that bill whether it would uphold the concrete propo sition as it has stood for the theory. It falls oiit that the reso lution providing for the appoint ment of the commission to study the measure was amended to stipu late that the commission “should not consider and should not report upon the advisability of conscript ing labor.” So organized labor takes itself out before the measure is even under way. The boys in the trenches neVer did get over the resentment of the government war time wage scale and the wage scales in private employment on account of the war, while they were compelled to take chance with death and physical wreck for mod est pay. Labor will say that it stands for the principle of human rights against property rights and will no doubt support the drafting of property money and other things of value —for war purposes. But no measure like that can suc ceed, if it is to succeed at all, un ; less it goes all the way; and one of its chief purposes is defeated if the labor necessary for war pur poses may not be drafted along with money and fighting men. It will always be necessary to draft the fighting men in any war of consequence, and it is the only fair method. In the matter of justice it is right to draft everything necessary for war purposes. But if labor escapes—and it has made a big start by having sufficient in fluence to instruct th ecommission which is to prepare the bill that labor draft isn’t to be considered— then property will escape. The boys in the trenches will remain in the trenches as they were, while greed and selfishness profit in their suffering and death. ® FOOD ADULTERATION COMMON Sand in flour, iron filings in tea, wood splinters in sweets, talc in rice and foreign fats in butter are a few of the disclosures concerning adulteration of food found in Eng land. A British Ministry of Health report stated that out of some 120 f -000 samples of food products ana lyzed as many as 7,500 were not up to standard.—Pathfinder. PAGE THREE