Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Feb. 25, 1915, edition 1 / Page 7
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Effect ot Great Kidney Remedy is Soon Realized I feel it my duty to let you know -what Swamp-Root did for me. I was bothered with my back for over twen ty years and at times I could hardly get out of bed. I read your adver tisement and decided to try Swamp Root. Used fiv bottles and it has been five years since I used it, and I have never been bothered a day since I took the last bottle of it. I am thoroughly convinced that Dr. Kil mor's Swamp-Root cured me and would recommend it to ethers suffer ing as I did. Mv husband was troubled with kid ney and bladder troubles and he took your Swamp-Root and it cured him. This was about five years ago. You' may publish this letter if you choose. Very truly yours, MRS. MATTIE CAMFIELP, R. F. D. No. 3 Gobleville, Mich Subscribed and sworn to before me this 13th of July, 1909. ARVIN W. MYERS, Notary Public, for Van Duren Co., Mich Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. Trove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Ringhamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valua ble information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be' sure and mention the Asheboro Weekly Courier. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size, bottles for sale at all drug stores. Light From Stars. The light we receive from stars of the first magnitude, like Vega, is equal approximately to a forty-thousand-millionth part of that of the sun. It is calculated that the total light re ceived from the lesser stars is equal to that of 3,000 stars of the first mag nitude, or a sixth pari, of that which 1 sent to us from the mooc. Distrusted Education. Education was considered a disqual ification in a servant a century ago. Even Hannah More, who did much to .promote the Sunday-school movement. confined her curriculum to teaching the children to read the Bible, the cato--chism "and such coarse works as may fit them for servants." "I allow of no writing for the poor," she stated emphatically. Sleep While on the March. Sleep can persist with the exercise -of certain muscles. Couriers on long Journeys nap on horsesbaok. Among the impressive incidents of Sir John Moore's disastrous retreat to CoTuna, In Spain, not the least striking Is the recorded fact tv.at many of his sol--41 er pursued melr march, while fast -asleep. Burdach, however, affirm that this Is not uncommon among sol- fliers. Process of Milking. I do not know that the process of : milking has ever beon described. The forefinger first clasps the upper part 'Of the teat, and then the middle, ring and little fingers, In rapid succession, -so as to drive the milk before them through the orifice. The knack la rather difficult to acquire, and at first very wearying to the hands, though this soon passes. From "A Farmer's Note Book," by C. E. IX Phelps. About the Limit In Hunting. A Dublin gentleman was spending Ills vacation with some friends in the west of Ireland. As he was being -driven to his destination he noticed .a bog that promised good shooting, . and asked his Jarvey If there were any snipe In it . "Shnipe, Is it, sort Did ye say shnipe? Shure, If ye went Into that bog widout a gun they'd ate yezl" CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The KinJ You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature NOTICE North Carolina, Randolph County. Superior Court. W. S. Skecn vs. L. A. Sheets and Will Hurley: The defendant above named, L. A. Sheets, Will take .ice that an action entitled bove has been commenced against rim in the Superior court for Ra. blph county and that summons ano a warrant of attachment has been issued agninst him and his property in the said action that the nature an! subject matter of said action is as follows, to wit: An action to re cover damages in the sum of $100 lor the wrongful conversion of a ctrtain mare and the sum of $95.32 foi trench of an express contract to pay a sum certain in money repre sented hy note; that said defendant is is required to be and appear t fore the ludge holding the Superior court for Randolph county at the court house jn Asheboro, N. G, on the second Monday after the first Monday in Mrch, 1916, and answer or demur to tie complaint of plain tiff or the relitf demanded will be r granted. This Feb. S, 195. JeM. CAVBNESS, . -.Clerk Superior Court. FOR BETTER FARMING Southern Farmer Urged to Adopt Diversification. Department of Agriculture Gives Plan for Reducing Living Expenses by Growing Many Things Which the Family Needs. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) The secretary of agriculture In writ ing recently to cotton exchanges In the South, pointed out that the only really efficient way to prevent a re currence of the crisis which the col lapse of the cotton market created was for the southern farmer to diver sify his agriculture. Hitherto the cash returns from a successful cotton crop have blinded many farmers to the proof of the old proverb that It is folly to put all your eggs In one basket They have devoted all their land and all their time to the production of cotton, and have purchased their own sup plies at a cost much greater than they could raise them themselves. The essential weakness In this prac tice has long been apparent to agrl cultural experts, but their efforts to secure more diversity In farming have hitherto met with but little success, It is difficult to change habits of many years standing, and the man who has been accustomed to prow cot ton and only cotton Is reluctant to remodel his own farm, even after he has become convinced of the necessity of so doing. To help meet this situation, the United States department of nsricul ture has prepared a scries of articles, of which this is the first, on the sub ject of diversified farming In the South. These articles will treat of the raising of produce for home con sumption In vegetable gardens, potato patches, etc.; of such crops as corn beans, peas and other legumes, which are both useful in themselves and may be made to enrich instead of Impover ish the soil; and of poultry, dairy products and live stock for home use and as a cash crop to serve substitute, In part or in whole, for cotton. By the adoption of diversified farm lng, the farmer may reasonably expect to achieve several important objects 1. He may very materially reduce his own living expenses by growing on his own land a great many of the things which his family needs and which he now purchases at the store, paying, of course, a profit to the re- taller and the middleman. 2. He should save a very consider' able proportion of his outlay on fer tilizers by growing crops that add ni trogen to the soil, and by keeplag live stock to enrich it with manure. 3. He should grasp the opportunity afforded by the increasing demand for meat of all kinds to turn a large part of his crops into stock to be sold to slaughtering houses at a profitable price. He should place himself la a position where his entire prosperity. Is not dependent upon the demand for any one article, when the strength of that demand is determined by circunv stances entirely out of his owa con trol. In other words, he should have more than one thing to sell. All this seems very simple, but up to the pres ent time comparatively few farms in the South have been managed with these ends in view. In a speech before the National Dairy Show association in October, 1914, the secretary of agriculture stat ed that the average Iowa farm has six milch cows; the average South Caro lina farm has one. In Iowa, the av erage farm has 35 hogs; In North Carolina and Alabama, less than five; In South Carolina less than four. In poultry the difference is even greater. One hundred and eight is the average in Iowa; less than twenty In North Carolina and Alabama, and less than seventeen In South Carolina. The re sults of one investigation show that In Georgia the average farm home produced less than two eggs a week, less than two-thirds of an ounce of butter, and two-thirds of a pint of milk a day, and that the cotton crop of the entire South did not pay for Its food and feed bill. Thus it has been estimated that Texas Imports annual ly more than jrwi.OOO.OOO worth of wheat, corn and oats; Georg'a more than f24.000.POO; South Carolina moro than $20,000,000, and 12 southern Ftatps more than $175,000,000. In ad dition, nioro than $13,000,000 worth ot meats, dairy and poultry products are Imported each year. To do away with this condition of affairs Is one of the chief purpose? of diversified farming. It Is not neces sary for the South to compete in these crops with other regions in the open markets of the world, hut the home demand can be met by home production, and enough left over to form the basis of a very profitable stock raising industry. In this connection it is noteworthy that already 22.1,000 square miles, or an area that is greater than that of Georgia, Florida, Alabama aai Mis sissippi added together, has been cleared of the cattle tick, and that if the work Is continued at the sfojie rate of speed, the whole counn-y should be free of the pest within fif teen years. The cattle tick has, in the past, been one of the greatest drawbacks to the raising of live stock in the South. It has now been con clusively shown that it can be com pletely ddfya away with, and with the growing appreciation of the part that live stock plays in sound agriculture, there is no reason why this industry TAKES OFF DANDRUFF -, HAIR STOPS FALLING Girls! Try This! Makes Hair Thick, Glossy, fluffy, Beautiful No More Itching Scalp. Within ten minutes after an appli cation of Danderine you cannot rind a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most will be af ter a few weeks' use, when you see new hair, fine and downy at first yes but really new hair growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately dou bles the beauty of your hair. No dif ference how dull, fueled, brittle ana scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw n, through your hair, taking one small strand at a ti me. 1 The effect is amaz ing your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an incomparable lustre, soltness anil luxuriance. . Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store toilet counter, and prove that your hair is as pretty and soft as any that it has been neglected or injured hv careless -treatment that s ell you surely can have beautiful hair am lots of it if you .will just try a little Danderine. CAM 'Kit A DISEASE OF MANY FORMS v People commonly think of cancer a Mnglc definite disease, as dis t i iu-t and uniform in its nature and symptoms as appendicitis or typhiod fever. This is a misconception. It is nearer the truth to regard "cancer' as the name ot n group of. quite di ferent diseases vhi-h have one fei ture in common. It has been said that the layman's conception of can cer is of something very ' indefinite, very portentous, quite hopeless, disease which always affects someone else than himself, and about whicn he carries no immediate interest or responsibility. If this is a fair state meat, the layman is wrong on practi cully every count, and his error and confusion is probably due, in no sma! part, to the failure to take account of the many forms of cancer. If this were done perhaps the patient woulo not so frequently yield to despair and throw away the excellent chance of cure that exists when the disease is first discovered. As a matter of fact "cancer" in the light of modern knowledge of human ailments, is almost as general ano vague as a term as "fever." The word covers a number of entirely dis tinct diseases, differing widely in their origin, symptoms, treatment and cur ability. The various kinds of tumors have little in common except that they are all forms of new and lawless growths of body cells. This false notion of cancer as single disease has probably hindered progress toward the understanding and control of the various . diseases which are conveniently grouped un der that term. All forms of cancer are aspects of new and lawless cell growth, and it is the inner nature or "cause" of such growth that we do not yet understand. The essential point for the man in the street is that each different kind of cancer is a separate disease.' If he is so unlucky as to be attacked by any one of them, it would be well before becoming discouraged to go and find out which form he has. if he is ta ken with a "fever" and it happens to be German measles, his outlook on life is ciuite different than if it chanc es to be virulent small-pox. So, also a "rodent ulcer" on the face is quite different from cancer of the stomach And lastly while one is more serious than the other, there is always hope if it is recognized and treated at once. Why not give the surgeon the same chance with cancer as he has with appendicitis? Suppose all symptoms of that disease were neglected and hidden until the anntndix had burst? Doubtless the sure-eon would still save a certain percentage of cases, but would the record be anything like it is now? It is the intelligent co-operation of the patient and the family physician that has conquered appen dicitis, and the same weapons are even more needed in the fight against can cer. - i - KEEP IT HANDY FOR RHEUMA TISM No use to spuirm ana wince and try to wear out your Rheumatism. It 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 ease at once and feel so much better you want to go right out and tell other sufTercvs 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, bnt it does give almost instant relief. Buy a bottle today, KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL Health is Worth Saving and Some Asheboro People Know How to Save It. Many Asheboro people take their lives in their hands by neglecting the kidneys when they know these organs need help. Weak kidneys are respon sible for a vast amount of suffering and ill health the slightest delay is dangerous. Use Doan's Kidney Pills a remedy that has helped thousands of kidney sufferers. Here is an Ashe boro citizen's recommendation: Mrs. A. F. Parrish, Academy St., Asheboro, says: "I was troubled by my kidneys for years and though I tried different kidney medicines, I never found anything equal to. Doan's Kidney Pills. They have always given me fine results. Ever so often I have taken a box of Doan's Kidney Pills and they have kept my kidneys in good shape and made me feel better in ev ery way." Price 50 cents, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Parrish had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. . FEED THE DAIRY COWS WELL Cottonseed Meal It Convenient Feed In Texas and Oklahoma to Bal ance Sorghum and Silage. (By H. M. COTTRELL.) Native pasture and silage should be available summer and winter. The silage should be fed generously at any time of the year when the grass Is not sufficient to secure a high yield of milk. In dry times during the summer and at all times during the winter, sorghum, hay and the hay from either alfalfa, sweet clover or Span ish peanuts should be fed liberally. Rye pasture usually can be provided and It makes a good winter feed. In favorable years wheat pasture may furnish nearly all .the- feed needed for a high yield during the winter. Five good cows fed all they will eat will yield more -profit than 15 half starved. The daily ration must be balanced between the starchy, heat-making feeds, like silage, sorghum hay, corn fodder and millet, and the blood-and-muscle-making 1 feeds like alfalfa, sweet clover and Spanish peanut hays. Every cow yields a good flow of milk on preen;' luscious grass. The grasa furnishes ahont three and a half parts of the starchy to one of the blood-aud-musclc-making material. Dry V A Ml 4fn Excellent Dairy Type. land farmers often say that sorghum hay will "dry up" a cow If she is given enough of it. It will when fed alone, but it may be fed in large quantities to advantage when balanced properly with hay from alfalfa, sweet clover or Spanish peanuts. Cottonseed meal is a convenient feed In Texas and Ok lahoma with which to balance sor ghum, millet hay and silage.' SOIL EROSION IN THE SOUTH Other Crops Must Be Grown Than Those Requiring Clean Culture, as Do Cotton and Tobacco. The following statement regarding soil erosion In the South is taken from the annual report of the bureau of soils of the department: "In a study of soil erosion In the South It has been found that large areas are lost to agriculture annually through erosion. In some states vast areas, amounting to as much as 60 per cent of the arable land of these sections, have been abandoned. The character of the. erosion varies with the type of soil. Usually, on the heavy clay soils, "sheet" or surface erosion Is found. With Increasing proportion of sand In the soil the ero sion changes to the "shoestring" type, then to the gully type, with rounded edges, and finally to the gullies with caving sides. The most rapid erosion seems to occur In soils having a layer of silt or clay at the surface and a substratum of sand. This condition usually leads to erosion of the deep gully type, which Is difficult to check and unprofitable to reclaim. "All methods for prevention and control are based either on increasing the capacity for absorbing the water ns it falls, or on decreasing the veloc ity of the run-off. A new method in use in one locality is the construction of what are known as 'Christophers,' the distinctive feature of this plan ly ing In the manner of disposing of storm waters. Across an incipient irully is built a dam, through which is p.-iised a sewer r'l'e connected with an upright pipe on th? upper rida of h dam. Water fills the va'ley until it reaches the top of the upright pipe, and then fiov.s down this pip.; i the) next field. The valor left standing b-?low the mouth of i'io upright pipe ia gradually removed hy a tile drain. It i:i also demonstrated In the Sou ih that oilier crops must be grown than those requiring clean culture, ns do cotton, corn and tobacco." Keep the Hor?e Eu-sy. The horse is an inexpensive animal to feed and e;ietaiently should be kept busy all the time if possible If this cannot be done then he should be fed as cheaply as possible With hay or other roughage and two pounds of cottonseed meal a day the idlo horse or mule can be kept In good condition on a very small amount of corn. Oil for Paint For mixing with paint linseea oil Is the one which is most commonly used as an Ingredient. Other oils might be tried and the best way ta test their relative worth is to mix only a small quantity of paint and test the result, Linseed oil, when pure, Is excellent, since it oxidUes and becomes thick on exposure to the air. It may be considered the best of all oils for ubo In paint, putty and other similar substance. ' ' THE STANDARD DRUG COMPANY AND THE REXALL DRUG COM PANY FORMULARY. The Latest and Best Formulas for Home Use Compiled for the Standard Drug Co. and the Rexall Drug Co. by Dr. Charles W. Parsons, formerly editor of Druggist Circular, Chemist for U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C, Professor of Prac tical Pharmacy and Analytical Chem istry in College of Pharmacy, of City of New York. These formulas are copyrighted. It will be noted that each formula gives the kind of each medicine for each formula, but the quantity of each medicine to be used is not pub lished, but is kept in a separate book and these formulas can be filled only at the Standard Drug Co. and Kex all Stores in Asheboro. The price of each formula is given, and all you have to do is to cut out ard Drug Co. or liexall Drug Co., to gether with the price. You can save money by using these formulas. FOUL BREATH Chlorinated Lime Oil Hose Alcohol Water Price, 2Ti Cents Tcapoonful in a glass of water as a mouth wash. Do not swallow. Had breath is a result of some di gestive de-wgcment or decayed teeth. Until the cans? is removed, only puliation ol the trouble can be ex pected. ANTISEPTIC LI(iUIl) Potassium Bicarbonate Sodium Horate Sodium lloii.onate Thymol Kucalyptol Oil Peppermint Oil of Gauitheria Tincture, of Cudbear Alcohol Glycerine Purified Talc Water, enough to mike Dissolve the salts in 19 ounces of water, and the thymol, eucalyptol and oils in the alcohol. Mix the alcoholic solution with the glycerine and the tincture of cudbear, add the solution of the salts and enough water to make 2 pints. Add the purified talc and shake occasionally, then filter, return ing the first portions until the filtrate passes brilliantly clear. Use diluteo with four or five times its volume with warm water. Price, 25 Cents A general antiseptic, indispensible to a complete toilet. Used as a gar gle, mouth wash, etc. Small quantity may be swallowed with benefit. FLORIDA WATER Oil Bergarmot .-, Oil Lemon ........ Oil Orange Peel '. Oil Lavender Oil Cloves Oil Cinnamon Oil Neroli Water Alcohol Price, 35 Cents A popular toilet specialty, equal to any proprietary brand. To be used freely after the bath. LAVENDER TOILET WATER Oil Lavender Oil Bergamot Oil Lemon Oil Cloves Extract Musk Extract Ambergis , Alcohol Price, 35 Cents An exceptionally strong and fra- grant article. Use freely on face and hands after the bath, and in atomizer as desired, the fragrance is delicious and most refreshing. LONDON TIMES PRAISES BRYAN With the London Times delighted with Secretary Bryan's letter to Sen ator Stone in defense of the United States government's neutral attitude, the situation may be surveyed with real satisfaction all around. Th United States Government is doing its best to stand perfectly straight on neutrality questions, and whenever English interests are involved it is to J be hoped that the English will not I charge our government with being t?.w tool of German conspirators. It is idiHirtiit business maintaining ol'icial I neutrality in a way to please every - lbo.lv. Th-re u las iHtnr 11,, i eeol-hraiieii a man ''or examp'o. finding .ve'.-'imenl on tlio i.; fomeMted tro"b'e 1 Stales and Kit-i.-.i-ered that v;V note on reu raiiiv was ''mot!":-a'.e' fault v.i'.h the d that it en the U He ha 1 el v.-e bin.!. the govei-rmer ! to Sir Ki'.ward I an-! correit. t- i-e prolnrmvirv ne-.vt;'a-i; were phri-d fo a ; Knylish and American;! itiier. This is gy::-g far per accoi'nts to prejudice afield to find mounds for cons-ire. ut: the senator r.'tist be set down .i one who is overcome somewhat, Vy hi stronrr English sympathies. S-pring-iiehl 'Eepub'.a-an. A GOOD EXAMPLE The Siler City Grit of last week said that two elderly maiden ladies. Misses Gilmore, in the southern part of this county, have never worn any "store" clothes, but that they have a spinning frame and loom and have always made their clothes. Now, just suppose their example was followed by all the. women (and also by the ir.en), what a saving in fine clothes they would make! No doubt that most persons spend more on their clothing than they can afford to spend, each trying to dress finer than his or her neighbor. In the one item of hats what a great saving most women could make, if they would not try so hard to be "in the fashion" by buying two or three costly hats every season, and frequent ly one hat to match or suit each dres. COST OF WAR AND LUXURY The probable cost of the war now raging in Europe to the people of Great Britain alone, not considering the expenditure of any of the other belligerents, is estimated at $:),40t, 000,000. This is a staggering load for the British taxpayers; but so far there has been no difficulty in borrow ing the needed money to defray wa expenses. Of course, there is a ter rible, economic waste. The lives sac rificed and the property destroyed represent an almost total loss. There is no return on the investment, so to speak. An English writer on the subject is at some pains to show that , enor mous as the waste of war may be, it is insignificant as compared with the waste of peace. He says that the 46,000,000 of people in Great Britain annually expend for Alcoholic drink Non-alcoholic drink $suu,uuu,uuu nr.o.000,000 173,000,000 :J75,000,000 Motorcars , SI. 700,000,000 At this rate four years of ordinary peace expenditure for luxuries would more than suil'ue, if saved, to pay the cost of the war. "Of course,'' the i writer adds, "the quoted terms are ! only a few out of many that might ; be named in a big category of luxury I trades. The well-to-do classes spend ' hundreds of millions a year on thina . which by no stretch of imagination ! could be called necessaries. It is use ful to realize that, while the waste of ! war is so great and so mournful ac tually, it is in.-iguificant relatively to i the waste of pwice, for war is oeea ' sional and peace nearly constant." I Philadelphia Record. NOT EVEN GERMANY CAN. HO WITHOUT MONEY Not even Germany is able to get on without money, as appears from the reports- that arrangements are being made for a second war loan. In De cember the Reichstag voted a fresh credit of 1,2."0,0()0,0(ju, and the Tag blatt of Berlin says that the new ap peal for subscriptions will be made in February or March. The German people responded enthusiastically to the first call, and no doubt the second loan will be met in the same spirit. None the less there will come a time if the war lasts, when in the least one of the belligerent countries spirit will 1 not be enough if the whole world, m- stead of merely half of it, were at war perhaps money might never give out, for it certainly is not destroyed by changing hands. Even as things are the pinch may be felt in real values sooner than in money, but even Ger many, which is better prepared than any other country to devise a scien tific substitute for money, is neverthe less spending like the rest at a tre mendous rate. This credit is more by a fourth than the huge war indemnity which France had to pay in 1871, and which started Germany on its great commercial boom. Springfield Re publican. CONFISCATING GRAIN In confiscating at this early stage of the war all the grain supplies in the country, the German- government shows a more energetic efficiency than has ever before been shown in the conduct of a war, and the measure, so far from encouraging the allies to think that Germany is hard pressed, should be to them a significant warn ing of the desperate resistance which that country is prepared to make. Normally it imports a third of its foodstuffs, but it is reasonable to sup pose that by rigid economy and spare diet, consumption may be re duced by something like a third with out danger of starvation possibly with a betterment of health, for many people eat too much. Whoever goes hungry, the soldiers must be fed, ana the taking of grain means that what ever happens the men in the trenches will get their rations. It means, too, that the distinction between food for combatants and food for noncombat ants is obliterated and the difficulty of interpreting the rules of contra band of war is greatly increased. It has never been an easy distinction to make, and it is doubly difficult in tTiw case of the "nation in arms." The government is to feed all, but it must feed first and best those who are do ing the hard work of fighting. Springfield Republican. FEDERAL AID TO GOOD ROADS The final report of the joint con gressional committee on Federal aid to eood roads shows conclusively that public opinion is overwhelmingly in favor of this aid being given. The committee ha? spent move than two years studying the s'lhject. and in ll'l" Hon. Jonathan Bourne, chairman of the committee, sent to a large num ber of nev spapei'!". commercial organ i.ati 'ns. farrier's union:; and grar.srrs ns. fat-pi ;a- lettei v them to ascer op'nion in their UCHlIOIl. mirratieb on the j B. n'ies -..: ::,- l(Hi,()00 in-.li-; -!i::i'st came (V.im every Mate in tho .Union, show ir.i-' wJ. reasonable ac ! ri-acy t 'i a:;!uide of the people ! tin-'ia; hout the country. Nin-.'ty-.-ev-en per cent of tho replies favored Federal a'd and three per cent were against it. COOL SPRING ITEMS 1'rower York attended the burial of his little cousin Edith Curtis, at Liberty, recently. Master Kermit McDaniel of this section is in school at Franklinville. Charlie Walker has returned from a visit to his sister, -Mrs. Deaton, at Troy. Mr. Isaac Routh died nt his homo near Millboro, January 28, aged 78 years. Interment was in Gray's Chapel cemetery, funeral services be ing conducted by Rev. Mr. Pike. Mr. Bud Routh, of Level Cross; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Routh, of Cedar Falls; and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Devinney, o( near Liberty attended the burial. Harry Benton, a negro, was recent ly sentenced to serve 12 months on the streets of Greensboro for retail ing $2 worth of cocaiae, -Ml. fH - .
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 25, 1915, edition 1
7
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