A JUNIOR REPI'FMC FOR MOUNT
til LEA I)
N Institution Fur .-stilt- n litntifd
i.v J uiiiitr Mi.rt;.'cn!'V.v County
Man Nov. i.hiug in Ntv. Yrk
An :nsttti.t:on ih;;t has for its ob
ject the reformsuion of the wayward
boy, tho training of the industrious
youth, the education of the suViiur.s
fad, all at oivi, is not common i'l
North Carolira: it U iii tV.cl. tthno.-t
unheard of, yet such an institution
is soon to be niche I un.ler the nanus
the Junior :v'lt!cin-;:t, lrcorooi-iTted.
Ami it is gratifying to the people ot
this stx-tioa to know that t';c idea w:.s
developed and the movement put on
foot by a native of Mr nlg-imery coun
ty, Uscar Haywno.i o, . .1 w.w,
at present pastor of one of the prom
nt churches ot tnr.t city.
the Junior settlement, intorjiui '.iiii
is to be a village community whose
citizens are boys of 16 to 21 years of
ape. It is to be located four miles
cast of Mount Gilead, on the 700 r.cre
farm of Doctor Haywood, by whom
the settlement is being founded in
memory of his father, the late William
Haywood, Sr., one of the pioneer set
tiers of this community and foremost
in its early development
ture republic, similar to the George
Junior Republic of Freeville, near
The Settlement is to be a mnua
Ithaca, New York. Its citizens will
,!.- nnd mf,mn their own laws.
" 1 :.!...... ,..,
J w: 1 .j o ' 'it
u'. ' ;.i i ..',,.i
t ' u !'
T-vArv h'nv in th Settlement is a bona
fide "citizen thereof and has all the
rights of citizenship, including the
ballot. The government of the Settle-
ment is not to be unlike the govern-
ment of the student body in colleges
where the honor svstem prevails. The
o-nvarnment of the eie-ht Junior Re-
nnhlirs now existir.tr in the United
States is based on the theorv that
boys can and do govern themselves
successfully as soon as they are put
on their own responsibilities. Mr.
William R. George of New Y'ork, foun-
der of the George Junior Republic,
says that boys from 16 years up are
thoroughly capable of governing them
selves and that they become good
citizens as soon as the responsibilities life's weary way."
of citizenship are thrust upon them.
Although the Junior Settlement INTERESTING NORTH CAROLINA
is to be self-governing in itself, yet NOTE
it will be managed from without hv !
a board of trustees whose duties will ; Tne toi,aro( manufacturers of
ne tne same as tnose or any oiner
board of trusters. The trustees of
the Settlement will solicit funds, ex
pend them to the host ndvantrge. and
plari the work in general touchir.g
the life of the in.-t'tut ;on. The r. res
ent board is composed of Dr. Oscar
Haywood and Messrs. Frank Dicker-
ton, George I. cask
George of NVv Yo
il William R.
( ity, Dr. J. 1.
Joyner and V. . .-. r.:iukm, M. P.. of
Raleigh. President W. L. Potent of
V.'ake Forest Col'-.-g", Mr. J. J. Putin
or waneviiw. and .Messrs. rrenK .1
aulav, R. K. Andrews. Ci;hb'e Hay
wood. James T!. Scarhoro and W. 1!.
Cochrane of Mount Gilcud. Three
more trustees are vPt t' be elected.
I How To Make the S
I QuickcsLSitnplesiCoitQh
Remedy
I
Much n. ttir thnn the Tli-sOy- (C)
l ull) l.uir.uui:t-I
T..U 1.
tisi .l it: i:
i:i.Ie
la. r 1
l"nie,ly. j.s i(. ..;.!!,. c:i,e ami
i.iuui in ctiiii.u. : uW:-llli.' t'uillis,
il...- .iiiu nilgai coai-. 11 reniiv rcimirk.
'!. loll 1..I1 intuall.v led it take held.
oi-dinarr cmwii :c!i.,r -,.n -i.,i.,
t-oiifcli quickly. .I'liiidid. ten, lor hron"
chitisi. H'iiMiiedic croup, bronchial asthma.
and winter coiiyhs.
Pinex (.Ml tents ttorU
wv i.uu ant iimi"l:is.l -ounces or f
iKittle
Jated
i sugar srriip. This gives TOU at a 1
of duly 54 cunts a full pint of better
h sTrup than you could buy for ifi.oO. I
tout
ough STriip than you could buy for ifi.oO.
l akes but a few niinutes to prepare. Full
directions irith l'incx. Xabtcs good and
er npuili
-Sif will be pleasantly Surprised how L
euicklr ft 1oos.ii Art-
hoarse or tight ' V
cougha, and heals tliq inilamod mem-
..rnii.-H Jn a pniniui cougii. Jt also Btopg
ne formation of phlegm in the throat
"K7otei&
Pinex is a most valuable concentrated
fonipound of Bcniiine Norway, pine ex-
ISM Wl"Ch 18 60 hCa'-
'Jo avoid disappointment, be sure and
ak your druggist lor "2 V3 ounces l'incx,"
un.l don't accept anything else.
A guarantee of absolute; satisfuction,
ur iiionc.s .Minipiiy rciunueti. oes Willi
tins prepariu ion.
Wayne, Iud.
TUe Pinex Co., it.
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
Department of State
Certificate of Dissolution
To All to Whom ihese Presents .May , by Keeping it active; it stimulates m
Come Greetings: terest in life and interest in life is
WbprnpK. lt nmienrs to mv satis-
faction, by duly authenticated record newspaper brings the world's panora
of the proceeding for the voluntary a before the reader s eye. Every
dissolution thereof by the unanimous ''ay.'4 allows him to view life from
r,co. f oil tho Kfnnifhnlders I a different angle. It is a mental slim-
posited in my office, that the Brush
Creek Lumber Company, a corpora-1
tion of this State, whose nrinrinal of-
fice is situated in the town of Frank-
linville, county of Randolph, State of
North Carolina (T. I. Fox) being the 1
agent therein and in charge thereof,
won whom process may be served,)
Bits complied: with the requirements
of Chapter 21, Revisal of 1905, enti
tled "Corporations," preliminary to
the issuing of this Certificate of Dis
solution: Now, Therefore, I, J. Bryan Grimes,
Secretary if State of North Carolina,
do hereby certify that the said corpo
ration did, on the 22 day of January,
1915, file in my office a duly executed
and attested consent in writing to the
dissolution of said corporation, exe
cuted by all the stockholders thereof,
which said consent and '-he record of
the proceedings aforesaid are now on
file in my said office as provided by
law. 1
In Testimony Whereof, X have here-
to aet my hand and affixed my official by Chamberlain's Tablets after years
eal at Raleigh, this 552 day of Janua-jof nuffering. These tablets strength
ry, A. D. 1315. Jen the stomach and enable it to per-
J. ERYAN GRIMES.'form its functions naturally. For sale
1 "'-u-y f i-::atc. 1 by all dealers.
ICELAND GOES DRY
It is we'.I that those who are con
tcmn'.atinir a midwinter jaunt to Ice
land should bo apprised in advance
that the rigors of tiio climate will not
be mitigated in any degree by inter
nal u.imini:.t:.ti:on of alcohol, for the
chill litt'e Punish dependency, which
isn't ot'ito :.s cold as it sounds has
banished the !emon rum bap and
bagirage. Not o ily is no more HipuM-
t be n-ade there or imported, but
the visib'e supply is to be exported
out of hand. Iceland has woman suf
frage, which may or may not, have
something to-do with the case. At
anv rate the fact is that Iceland if
soon to be entirely dry and owing to
. t n(,n,,,.,Hl n. pstimated at 70,
000, the isolation ot communities, find
,,: :a Ht-iv t ctnv the
same wav. On temperance mr.pi
hereafter Iceland will appear in white.
Charlotte Observer.
MY CREED
"Do not keep the alabastor boxes
" ?'! "i '?'; , evii
their lives with sweetness. Speak ap
Proving, cheering words while their
fa" hf,.?i f, L
"... ;" ,' u: . '..
Pler uu-m ; u.e ... l.umb uu
mean to sav when they are gone, sa
before they go. The flowers you mean
to send for their coffins,
en and sweeten their homes before
they leave them-
"If my friends have alabaster boxes
laid away, full of fragrant perfumes
of sympathy and affection, whish they
intend to break over my dead body.
1 would ratner tney would oring tnem
out in my weary and troubled hours.
and open them, that I may be refres
ed and cheered by them while I need
them. I would rather have a plain
coffin without a flower, a funeral with-
out an eulogy, tnan a die witnout
sweetness 01 love ami sympatny
"Let us learn to annoint our friends
beforehand for their burials. Post
morten kindness does not cheer the
troubled spirit. Mowers on the cof
fin cast no frngrnnee backward over
Reidsville paid into the federal treas
ury last year SSriS'Cj of excise tax
upon their products.
The attendance in the tate-aid
high school for IPIM-U ranged from
'.'.:'. per cent (based on enrollment)
in liurhe count v to .".-..". per cent in
Wayne. The State average was 7..8
per cert of attendance was lowrr thai
percentofattev.Iaricev aslowedth.nl
that for the Stat In 50 counties
the per cent was higher.
Our State high school fund pro
vided nearly S1C.00O worth of free
secondary education .hich absent chil
dren did not secure. Absence fror.i
our State-aided high schools costs
idiout live cents per p"pil p-r day.
I'igure up the cost of your absence.
J'
v,;,,'"j
Til" the,
" fvig
;s of
A'de;
rphv.
n. St.
Ya:
cev. Wi-
, Avenck
had
rial inter. ' s of
i.r'h Carolina ;r
! 2'.i:. or a lit J
h :' cent, of all
i". In 1:h( err
per cent of the
i:i Fedora,! Cn-
n;o;
!!:.'
mti
.1 Iv-nio.-IJureau.
ill
tot:
lliilh
Whenever the facility of an msti-
tul,lln ls nuule up entirely of men
'u''d aloof from the usual currents ol
(public life, there arises danger of
nclrin.cm un. nfl( .,n- :r f
ndrew l).
"hlte. twenty odd years ag
nv'"
. ' - --
go at Cor-,
THE NEWSPAPER
- lnal lne Tv? no
Some men boast that they have no
,. u . nespaper. ii is a
foolish boast. Generally the men who
make it have much spare time and
are only seeking to cover uo their
laziness with a boast'
I With all its shortcomings, the news-
; paper is easily the most wonderful
I thi. Wonderful nge. If you
(1 not thln,k co lt IS because you have
nt studied it deeply from all angles.
(To be otit cf touch vith it is to I"
out of touch with life. If it dees not
touch your life it is because your life
does not touca the world's life.
The habit cf reading has done more
to increase the average length of life
more than any other thing, the boast
of science to the contrary r.otv.ith-
standing. It keeps the mind vountr
what makes lt worth living. The
u'us tnat keeps him off the rocks of
despair. There is nothing finer than
to be in touch With the world in its
varied activities.
To criticise a newspaper is one of
the easiest things in the world and
one of the cheapest. Take it all in
all the newspaper is the best exponent
of modern civilization. It is closer
to the lives of the people than the
school or the church. We do not stop
long enough to confess it, perhaps,
but it is, in the main, a great agent
for good. Our complex . civilization
would be impossible without it. It is
the key-stone that upholds the arch.
Durham Sun.
DO YOU FIND FAULT WITH
EVERYBODY?
An irritable, fault-finding disposi
tion is often due to a disordered stom
ach. A man with good digestion is
nearly always good natured. A great
maav have been permanently benefited
THE GOOD OLD HYMN
There's a lot of music in 'em the
hymns of long ego,
And when some gray-haired brother
sings the ones I used to know,
I sorter want to take a hand, I think
of days gone by,
"One .Jordan's stormy banks I stand
and cast a wistful eye!"
There's lots of music in 'em those
dear, sweet hymns of old,
With visions bright of lands of light
and shining streets of gold;
And I hear em ringing singing
where memry' dreaming stands,
"From Greenland's icy mountains to
India's coral strands."
They seem to sing forever of holier
sweeter nays.
When the lillies of the love of God
bloomed white in all the ways;
And I want to hear their music from
the old-time meetin's rise
Till "I can read my title clear to
mansions in the skies."
We never needed singin' books in
them old days we knew
The words, the tunes and every one
the dear old hymn book through
We didn't have no trumpets then, no
organs built for show,
We only sang to praise the Lord
"from whom all blessings flow."
An' so I love the good old hymns,
and when my time shall corner
Before my light has left me and my
singing lips are dumb
If I can hear 'em sing them then, I"!
pass without a sieh
To "Canaan's fair and happy land,
where my possession lie."
Atlanta Constitution.
PRICES AND TOTAL VALUE
The prosperity of farmers depends
not so much upon the amount of pro
duction as upon the total amount of
money received for what they pro
duce. Thus, this year's cotton crop
is the largest ever produced, but its
value to the farmers is much less
than the value of any crop of recent
years. On the other hand, the com
cron, in total production, is only a
moderate one, having been exceeded
four times in the past 10 years: but
the high prices prevailing make it the
most valuable corn crop ever pro-
uced. In fict, this year's corn is the
most valuable of any one crop ever
produced in this country, and undoubt
edly, in any country.
The producers of wheat have bene
fited hv a combination of very larir-.
production and high prices, caused Ti
the war and moderate production ?n
foreign countries.
EXTEND IT
Tt is pointed out that the rurnl fret-
lei ivory service -costs $40,000,000 per
year more than it brings in. Well.
'oppose it does? The rural free ?
ivory service is doing more goon
to the country than half a dozen proj
ects like the Panama Canal. It has
made life on the farm less isolated
and more agreeable and does its share
to s'.on the citw.ard tide. Farm val
ues f ir last ;. ear are put at forty
billion of dollar r.ot quite but near
ly. That is a b '-daess. worth catering
to. The 'm;-m! s. '-vice should be cx
irnded, not 1 -.a: :ed.
ONE OF F.R1I"IVS SMALL AVARS
In the iridsl of her other troul.los.
Kngland is car 'tig on a war in Kavt
Ar:iea. against the forces of the
"Mad Mullah." That irrepressible
chief has born stirring up his tribes
men in British Somaliland, to attack
the tribes that are friendly to the
English. In a recent battle, according
to the London Times, the Mulah's
forces were defeated and scattered.
SOMETHING NEW FOR MEN AND
BOYS
Silk manufacturers at Pattrson, N.
J., are trying to make summer suits
of silk fashionable for men and boys.
ITALY'S EARTHQUAKE
DISASTER
Latest reports do not reduce the
number of victims of the recent ter
rible earthquake in Italy. The fig
ures still stand around 85,000.
Funds were quickly raised in this
country to help the sufferers, but it
was understood that the Italian gov
ernment did not wish for help. The
King decreed the spending of :0,000,
000 lire (lee ray)' or about J6.000,
000, for the relief of suffering.
KEEP IT HANDY FOR RHEUMA
TISM No use to spuirm ana wince and try
to wear out your Rheumatism, lt
will wear you out instead. Apply
some Sloan's Liniment. Need not rub
it in just let it penetrate all through
the affected parts, relieve the sore
ness and draw the pain. You get case
at once and feel so much better you
want to go right out and tell other
sufferers about Sloan's. Get a bottle
of Sloan's Liniment for 25 cents of
any druggist and have it in the house
against Colds, Sore and Swollen
Joints, Lumbago, Sciatica and like ail
ments. Your money back if not sat
isfied, but it does give almost instant
relief. Buy a bottle today.
CHEEK-BRADY
Miss Clara Ethel Brady and Mr.
Richard L. Cheek, both of Coleridge,
were married January 10th, 1915.
Mr. R. H. Dixon, J. P., officiating.
They were accompanied by Miss Fleta
Cheek and Mr. Edgar L. Brady, Miss
Lecta Cheek and C. Cola Gee. After
the ceremony they attended preaching
at Brush Creek church, hearing an
eloquent sermon by the pastor, Rev,
Mr. SpruilF. They returned to tne
home 01 the groom where they par
took of a sumptuous dinner. The
groom is a prosperous young farmer,
of Coleridge township, while the bride
is the beautiful and accomplished
dausrhter of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Bra
dy, of Colerdge. We wish for them ,a
VALUE OF THE GARDEN
Usefulness Cannot Be Measured
in Money Atone.
Farmer Will Find It Profitable to De
vote Small Patch cf Land to Vege
tables Location Should Be
Near the Home.
(Prepared t.y the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture.)
If the value of the homo garden
were to be estimated in money alone
it is safe to say that the returns from
a small plot of land devoted to this
purpose would be from eight to ten
times greater than the value of the
cotton which could be raised on the
same area. Many southern farmers
will refuse to believe this. It is, how
ever, a fact that experts in agriculture
have thoroughly demonstrated. For
several years past, canning-club girls
have made annual net profits of from
twenty to fifty dollars on gardens
only one-tenth of an acre in extent,
and in Alabama this year products
worth $700 were raised en seven-tenths
of an acre. The usefulness of the gar
den, however, cannot be measured in
money alone, and no man can afford to
ignore the important part that an ade
quate supply of fresh vegetables plays
in preserving the health of his fam
ily. It is obvious that when a man buys
vegetables he not only pays for the
cost of production, but for the cost
of transportation and marketing. He
obtains, however, an inferior article.
Many vegetables lose their character
istic flavor within a few hours, and
none are so free from the danger of
infection or so palatable as those
which are grown at home. In practice,
howeiier, if the farmer does not grow
his own vegetables it means that in a
great majority of cases his family gets
no vegetables at all. One result of
this Is a demand for tonics and other
medicines in the spring, for it ls a
well-known fact that vegetables and
fruits furnish many ingredients abso
lutely essential to human health.
Where a monotonous winter diet falls
to supply these ingredients, the hu
man system suffers and recourse is
had to medicine.
For reasons both of health and
moncy; therefore, the farmer will find
Two C&nning Club
it jTcJlti'Ma to devote to his home
gar! en the small amount of hind and
the tma'.l amount of labor that lt re
quires. The amount of land depends,
of course, upon the size of the family.
In a majority of cases, however, from
one-fourth to one-half of an acre will
be found sufficient to produce an ade
quate supply of vegetables throughout
the entire year. Close attention must,
of course, be paid to the rotation and
succession' of crops, the planting
planned with forethought, and the cul
tivation done as carefully as that of
any field crop. No specific arrange
ment can be laid down that would suit
all requirements, and each grower
must devise plans to meet his own
conditions. In this he is strongly
urged to seek the assistance which
county agents, state agricultural ex
periment stations, and the federal de
partment of agriculture can give him
There are, however, certain funda
mental principles which apply equally
to all gardens. The garden should al-
Products Front a Texas Garden.
ways be located as close to the house
as good ground can be secured. This
means that the garden ean be cared
for at odd moments, when tt would
be neglected if it were at an incon
venient distance. The vegetables
should be planted in long rows in or-
- , ,.v:-.
dcr to make cultivation with ordinary
horse Implements possible. A slope
to the south or southeast is desirable,
because the ground warms easily in
the suring and early planting is thus
made possible. Good drainage is,
however, a factor of greater import
ance. The land should have sufficient
fall to drain off surplus water, but not
sufficient to wash the soil. If all the
ground around the house is level and
artificial drainage by open ditches or
tile drains is not resorted to, planting
should be done on ridges or beds to
prevent the drowning of the crops dur
ing wet weather.
Thorough preparation of the soil by
plowing, harrowing, rolling or drag
ging will ultimately prove a saving
of labor by lessening the work of cul
tivation. A deep soil is desirable, but
the deptk should be increased gradu
ally. Barnyard or stable manure is
the best fertilizer, because it furnishes
both plant food and humus. It should
be ai.plled far enough .in advance of
planting time to allow it to decay. If
it is available, twenty to thirty tons of
manure to an acre will prove very
satisfactory. If this cannot be se
cured, some leguminous crop such as
cowpeas, toy beans, or crimson clover
should be turned under to supply hu
mus and part of the necessary nitro
gen. Finally, additional fertilizing ele
ments can be applied in the form of
commercial fertilizers. These, how
ever, are expensive and it is one ob
ject of diversified farming to enable
the farmer to economize in their use.
On farms which maintain an adequate
supply of live stock, and where atten
tion ls paid to the enriching 'of the
soil by leguminous crops, this should
not be needed, at least in large quan
tities. The vegetables that the farmer will
grow in his garden depend naturally
upon local conditions and the family's
own preference. Asparagus, however,
should be included wherever it will
thrive. This is one of the earliest
vegetables and will prove a valuable
addition to the spring diet. The roots
may be planted in the fall or early
spring. After the bed is well estab
lished, it should last indefinitely, and
for this reason the location of the bed
should be very carefully considered
beforehand.
Heans are another vegetable which
should always be included. The first
planting should be made as soon as
the ground is reasonably warm, and
this should be followed by others at
Girls Hoeing Tomatoes.
intervr.N 01 .en days or two weeks,
until the hot weather sets In. Cab
bage is also desircble, because it is
economical in the use of land and may
be sown through a large part of the
year. For spring and early summer
good varieties are the Jersey Wake
field, Charleston Wakefield, All Head
Early and Succession. In most sec
tions ot the South it will hardly pay
to attempt to grow cabbage during
midsummer, but a fall crop as well as
a spring crop should be grown. Cauli
flower is generally regarded as a
greater delicacy, but it is not so hardy
as cabbage. For further information
on these and similar vegetables such
as celery, lettuce, cucumbers, egg
plant, etc., the prospective gardener
should apply to his state experiment
station or to the division of publics
tlons of the U. S. department of agri
culture for the various farmers' bul
letins on these subjects.
Although, as has already been said,
the choice of vegetables to be grown
in tl garden must be dntermir.ed
individual tastes and circumstances,
spinach should not be omitted. This
can be grown in the open throughout
the fall and winter all along the coast
south from Norfolk, Va., and inland
through the lower tier of southern
states. In the colder regions, a little
protection may be 'necessary during
the severest weather, but two or three
Inches of hay, straw or leaves will usu
ally be found sufficient Seed planted
in the autumn will furnish greens
throughout the winter and early
spring. Spinach should be sown in
drills twelve to fifteen inches apart,
at the rate of one ounce to 100 feet
of row. For the average family, three
or four ounces of seed will be found
sufficient.
In an article of this kind, however,
it ls obviously impossible even to
name all the products that a garden
may be made to yield. The farmer
who has hitherto neglected the possi
bilities of a half acre or so devoted
to the purpose should begin with the
simpler and most useful vegetables
and gradually increase the variety in
his garden as his experience and
knowledge of vegetable growing
grows.
No mention has been made in this
article of potatoes, for their impor
tance in the family diet entitles them
to an article to themselves, which will
follow shortly.
8ell Unprofitable Fowls.
Some of your hens lay a great many
eggs during the year, and others lay
very few. Sell the unprofitable birds.
NORTH CAROLINA FURNISHES
THE GREATEST OPPORTLM.
TIES IOK FARMERS
The United States Denartmenf
Agriculture has recently issued a
bulletin of the greatest value which
was published in The Courier soon
after it was issued. The University
"News Letter" has arranged soms
facts comparing the case of living on
the farm in Gaston county, Nortn
Carolina and McLenna county Texas
"The average annual cash outlay for
food, fuel, and oil in Gaston county
North Carolina, was $70 per family
lor?IcLenna county, Texas, it was
2o4, or more than three times as
much.
The Gaston countv farmm. nm.
es on his farm more food, and has
mTs. fueI from hia wood lot.
familv
daston coun
tv. N. C.
McLenna coun
ty, Texas.
?213.47
17.35.
15.17
Food $71.28
Coal
Wood .... 1.71
Oil 3.10
7.58
"Farming in North Carolina i H
ujjuu Hstunisiiinjfiy smau cash capital
so, actually and relatively. .'
"What a paradise of opportunity
our State offers the enero-ptip no
ble, thrifty home-seeking farmers of
n.:L t.. ; i . ..
iutt i mauo in tne ioiiowing:
vmvii on memge, uie iarm-nrn.
ouced food on 438 farms in the ten
omics was oj per cent 01 the fooo
consumed bv each familv. Rt .-J
Gaston county, North Carolina, wail;
82.3 ner rent'" ffl
"North Carolina makes a bettn
showing than Iowa in home-raisedf
groceries, Decause tne lowa farmer!
sells his wheat, corn and milk, and!
buys flour, meal, and butter from tM
store. I
"But it is Still common in VnJ
Carolina for the farmer to have hil
wheat and corn ground for toll at j
nearby mill; while his butter is madl
almost entirely in his own home. I
ine dittcrence appears in the fo
lowing contrast of foods furnish
the farm in the two States: I
Iowa. N. C. i
urocenes i.b ner ct. 2.4
Animal prod
ucts .. vti.i per ct. 97.3 per ttf
Pniita An T. aa M '
Vegetables . 47.4 per ct. 96.1 ner d
ine lesson wnicli Uaston s ro-n
teaches is shown us follows: I
"Little as the Gaston county far!
lamuy spent 111 casli tor food in 191
and it was only 71.28 for the vear.
means a total for the 2,859 farm fatf
Hies ot the county, amounting f
$20:1.789. !
'but 5,377 families in the count
are not farm families. Thev are cof
sumers not producers of farm en
m-is. ounuosmg tiiat tnev ivp
well as the farmers, they must b
food amounting to S2.1C1.000 a v
"That is to say, the total of Danti
supplies mat must be bought and p;
for in cash in the countv amounts
two and one-third million dollars. T
amount of food and feed raised in
county was barely more than one-is
01 this amount.
"In other words more than a mil
dollars must be sent out of the cc;
ty every year for mintrv sum,
aione. it tne leed that must bo bo-
for don.cstic animals be counted
the bill for imported feed an I
tutl's is two and a third million
lars.
Jf this amount of moncv. or
one-half of it, were snent for he
sed food and feed stuff.;, th
wealth of the county would 1 r
than doubled in the next six vea
CONSTIPATED
When costive or troubled with
stipation take Chamberlain's Tab1
They are easy to take and most air
able in effect, ror sale by all deal
MOREHEAD FOR SEWERS
Votes Bonds for Complete Sewe
System
Morehead City is to be a clean
Nothing else will suffice. Recci
she voted unanimously $20,000 bi
for the purpose of lrstailint
tarv sewer svstem. The work i;
begin at once and will be in the h,
of sanitary engineers.
This splendid summer capital
the sea is to be congratulated orJ
sanitarv measure she has aooi
and there is no doubt that her cit
will reaD bi? dividends from thei
vestment, in better health and ac
er town. The example is a fcooa
which other summer resorts 'i
well, to follow.
WISHED SHE
COULD G
And Be Free From HerTroa!
bat Finds Better.
Vtlln,h!a Tann ianV 9 ft?
says Mrs. Jessie Shaft of this
"l wished would d and be rell
of my Bufferine. fromVomanly tro
I could not get upvithoul pun
somethine to help s. 1'
most o! the time..
housework.
The least amnt of work firra
out. My head fad swim, and I Jf
tremble for anM or more, m
look Cardui. M woman's tonic, 3
am not botld with pains any
and I don't we to go to bed.
1 am soundd well of all my trouw
Cardui f to 8,1 he weak spo8
helps to e them strong. It a
nature agamst her. It is w
tired nrtis irritable women, wj
as if'ejVthing were wrong, aw
sometj t0 1uiet toeir nerves
strenn the worn-out system.
it L are a woman, suffering fry
0i numerous symptoms. of Sf jf
trVe, take Cardui. It will MfJW
druggists.
to. If
rUt t: Chattanooc MtdldM Ha
Ml
.ftorv LMBt.. (Jhalt&noOM. lenn..
prmcttmi on your ca nd 64-p "
Jntmnt
1
lor Womto," u plain wih
long and Happy lite, S.
Ik;