Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Oct. 21, 1915, edition 1 / Page 6
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AVAILABLE PUBLICATIONS. The following bulletins may be ob tained free of charge by writing the director of the North Caroina Experi ent Station, Raleigh, N. C: 228 Air-Cooled Apple Storage Houses. 229 Fertilizer Experiments With Corn on Piedmont, Cecil Sandy Loam Soil and Varieties, Culture and Fertil ization of Corn on Piedmont, Cecil Sandy Loam and Red Clay Soils. 230 Variety Tests of Cora for 1914. 232 Results of Variety Tests of Wheat, Oats and Rye. 233 Common Diseases of Poultry. The following circulars are also available: 24 Soy Beon Pastures for Hogs. 25 Feedipg the Sow t :id Suckling Pig. 26 Pig Club Manual. 27 The Limitations of Cotton Seed Meal Feeding to Poultry. 28 Use of Lime on the Farm. 29 Feeding Skim Milk, Buttermilk and Whey to Hogs. 40 Oats for North Carolina. 31 Soy Bean Growing in North Carolina. 32 Increasing Our Crop Yields by Seed Selection On the Farm. DENTON ITEMS. Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Tucker, of Riley's Store, visited in Denton Sun day. Sheriff C. C. Shaw and family, of Lexington, stopped here awhile Sun day on their way from visiting rela tives sit New Hope Academy. A force of i'amls are at work this week graveling the road from Denton to the Randolp'i line at Siloam Ciui'ch. The load commission recent'y appro prated $600 1o d) this work. Mr. and J.Irs. Baxter Riley, of Ki'h Point, rp'-i: The wca:-eni lieu ith her paro'.lb, Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Crani'ord. Mr. G. T. Co l.rare, of Thomasvillo was a business visitor here Monday. Mrs. J. W. Hanner, of High Point, spent Sunday in Denton. Mrs. J. W. Cashatt is visiting rela tives in Randolph county this week. The two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Pink Grubb, of Denton, R. 1, died Monday the 18th, of whooping cough. Miss Bettie Harris returned Sunday from High Point where she had been visiting for the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Irving Bryant are vis iting in Thomaeville this week. THE LOCAL NEWSPAPER This is the way it looks to a writer who has traveled some, and wptched for reasons why a town prospers. He says this aboat the town newspaper, which you should reprint for the ben efit of your readers: "Stand by your town newspaper. If there is anything in your town worth talking about, ten chrnces to one your little town paper had a hand in put ting it there, and if there exists any unsightly or unsavory nuisance, twen ty, chances to one it will stay there until your town editor eees it or smells H and wipes his pen on the town board's breeches. If anybody bevond Ihe walls of your little burg ever, learns that there is such a place as Pcaceville, it will be through the town I " "Every village ' gets its money's worth in the village ne-.vspaper. It's the wagon that carries all your good things to market, it ought to be kept in good repair. In many eases it would pay to grease it, paint it, keep its running gear in shape and shelter it at the public expense. "Stand by your local newspaper. It's the guardian and defender of ev ery interest, the forerunner and pion eer of every advance movement and the sturdy advocate of law and order. Take it away, and it would not be six months before the town would look as if it had been doped. Business would drag, society would yawn and grass would grow between the cob bles." A LONG WAY TO GO IN THRIFT. Eleven millio.i oie huudred thousand thrifty people had nearly five billion dollars in the 2,100 banks of the United States on June 30, 1914. That is to say, one person in every nine had something laid away against a rainy day. The average savings deposit was $444.36. In North Carolina 86,199 people, or only person in forty, had money on savings account in our 28 Savings Banks, the average account being $183.96 and the total $10,338,466. The increase vor 1913 in the num ber of savings banks in North Caro lina was 2; in the number of deposi tors, 12,138; and in the number on deposit, $2,779,000. In the number of savings banks, North Carolina ranked 12th, in over age account. Caleb A. Robinson hat been elected chief af poliee for Concord. GIRLS! DRAW A MOIST CLOTH THROUGH HAIR, DOUBLE ITS BEAUTY Try this! Hair gets thick, glossy, wavy and beautiful at once. Immediate? Yes! Certain? that'i the iov t it. Your hai- becomes licht. waw. fluffv. abuiiriant and ap pears as soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young girl's rafter a Danderine hair cUanse. Just try this moisten a cloth with, a little Danderire and care fully draw it through your hair, tak ing one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of du3t, dirt or excessive oil, and in just a few mo ments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. A delightful surprise awaits those whose hair has been neglected or is scraggy, faded, dry, brittle or thin. Besides beautifying the hair, Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invigorates the scalp, forever stopping itching and falling hair, but what will please you most will be af ter a few week's use, when you see new hair fine and kwny at jtirst- yes but really nsw heir growing all over the svalp. If you care fo Tret ty soft hair, and lets of it, surely get a 25-ccnt bottle of Knowltons Dander a 23-cent bottle of Knowlton's Dander ine from any drug store or toilet counter and just try it. VACCINE FOR HAY FEVER. The up-to-date plan of escaping hay fever is through vaccination. The pol len of the flower that makes a person with hay fever sneeze is used. It has been tested and found that a person who is susceptible to golden rod, if vaccinated with the pollen, can gather the flower without the slightest in convenience, and so with "ragweed" and other flowers causing hay fever. Hay fever is a baffling malady to doc tors, and it is hoped that the vaccine will prove entirely successful. TELL THE SALESMAN With the approach of the fall sea son, the big jobbers and manufactur ers will begin to send out their sales men. Many of these salesmen are go ing to call on yea, Mr. Retailer. Here are a few suggestions by which you might open the conversation with them: Ask them what they will do to help you seH the goods they want you to buy. Ask them if their firm is going to advertise their goods in the newspa pers of your city. If they reply No, ask them why not? Tell them that it is necessary for them to create the demand in your city, among your customers, for their line of goods; otherwise you cannot push their line in preference to those manafaeturers or jobbers who do cre ate tits demand. , Tell them the best way to create the demand is to advertise in the local newspapers; that your tustomers read the newspapers published here; that you yourself advertise in them; and that you are not willing to spend your money to make their particular brands popular in this town and later have them take the line away from you and give it to your competitor. Tell then! that you favor goods that are advertised in he local newspapers I because you find it more profitable to tlo" ES. This is a mighty good hand to hold. H shonM be a stand-pat one. MISTAKEN IDEAS. No public School: system can succeed or ever, has succeeded that depends solely upon state appropriations for its maintenance. Our legislators might s well understand this now and for all time. ' The only successful public education that we ean acquire comes and must always come through local option. Our people might as well learn this now before they waste more time try ing te build up an educational system at the expense of the state at large. Also, there can be no marked decrease in our illiteracy until we get the chil dren in school. So long as there is a large percentage of our boys and girls straggling about the State without ev er entering the class room so long will our illiteracy remain as it is. The Educational Monthly, Georgia. "I have used Chamberlain's Tablets and found them to be fust as reDre- sented, a quick relief from headaches, (tizzy spells and other symptoms de noting a torpid liver and a disordered condition of the digestive organs. They are worth their weight in gold," writes Miss Clara A. Driggs, Elba, N. i. or sale by all dealers. RUB-IYlY-TISiYl Will core yowr Rheumatism Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Braises, Cuts ani Barns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used in ternally and externally. Price 25c Yon will find the shirt you want at Wood Cash Clothing Store. HOW TO COOK A HAM. The Treatment Begins Long Before the Fire Is BsOt To the Editor of the New York Sun: Some days ago you published an in teresting article from a $10,000 chef as to how to cook a ham. It was mather astonishing to read of the va- ! rious methods employed by foreign chefs to roast or broil or hash the flesh of king porker. If I were to give any suggestion in this matter which may be beyond my knowledge as compared to that of a S10.000 specialist. I would say "first catch your hog." That is, after he had been treated from the time of a suckling up to the time he was ready for the sacrifice; and in regard to the treating, I quote from the experience of "Old Black Joe," a Long Island colored man of all wsik and especially of plain toothsome cookng, who has been over forty years in my family. First, be very careful, very careful, of the kind of piglet you pick out, not too eld, but with a straight back and snout and a curled tail; if he has any black spots on him that makes no dif ference. Feed him well, but not too well, so that he will not root for his living, the usual way a pig is fed, not too many slops, but plenty of vegeta bles, and about one or two months be fore the sacrifice corn and plenty of milk. Don't allow the hog to get too large, for then, as in the case of an old chicken, the flesh would be coarse and gristly, but a fair size in regard to weight; keep him r.nd the pen as clean as possible. When M. or Mile. Hog is sacrificed and cooked by a native chef, either roast or broiled, when the slices are cut from it for eating or broiling, there will be found the greatst differ ence in the flesh of common picked out and common fed hogs. Cham pagne sauce, properly applied, would make a dish of ham a dish for the gods. No foreign treatment could improve on the native treatment for American palates. EDWIN BARRY WILCOX. RANDLEMAN R. 3 ITEMS. Mr. Vedeton, who has been farming on Mr. John York's farm, moved t Greensboro last Friday, and Mr. John York has gone to Randleman where he will conduct a meat market. Miss Clara Prichard, of Asheboro, spent last Sunday evening at Mr. Rom BuNa's. Mrs. Anne Miliikan is spending some time with her daughter, Mrs. Bud Fentress, at Worthvifle. Cottage prayer meetings in this neighborhood are progressing nicely. Several of the friends and relatives of Mr. Ben Miliikan, of this communi ty, attended his funeral at Marlboro last Saturday. How To Get Rid of a Bad Cough Boate-Made Rented? (hat Will Do It Quickly. Cheap and Easily Hade Ifyou Si'vo il Lad cough or chest cold wuicu reiuses w yiem to ordinary reme dies, net from any druw;it 24 ounces of Pinex (00 cents' worth), pour iuto a pint bottle and nil the bottle with plain Kranuluted Biiar syrup. Start taking a U'UHpoonful every hour or two. In 24 hours jour cough will be conquered or very neurly so. Even whooping cough is greatly relieved in this way. 'Ihe above mixture ruuk'n a full pint a family supply of the finest cough syrup that monuy could buy ut a coat of only 04 cents. Easily prepared in fi minuteB. - hull directions with Pinex. lliis Pinex and fcuuur Hyrup prepa ration takes riiiht hold of a couch and gives almost immediate relief. It loos ens the dry, hoarse or tijrlit couch in a Way that is really remurkuule. Also quickly heals the HiHanied membranes which accompany a painful cough, and stops the formation of plilcum in the throat and bronchial tubes, thug ending the persistent loose cough. Excellent for bronchitis, spasmodic croup and winter couchs. Keeps perfectly and taut eg good children like it. K'nfx '8 a sl)ec'al nd highly concen trated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, rich in guaiacol, which is so Dealing to the membranes. To avoid disappointment, ask your druggist for "2 ounces of Pinex," do not accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or money prompt ly refunded goes with this preparation. The Pinex Co.. Ft. Wayne, lad. BEST DATE TO SOW WHEAT. As an average of two years results in sowing wheat at different dates at the Iredell Test Farm near States- ville it has been found that seedlings made during the latier part of October yielded 52 percent, greater yield of grain than did seedlings made during the first of December when other con ditions were made the same as nearly as possible. This percentage in yield was equivalent to an average in crease of the two years tests of 8.7 per bushels per acre.. These results cer tainly emphasize the importance of seeding wheat in the Piedmont section daring the latter part of October or as soon as possible after a light f rest has occurred. ATouch of a w. . . . loucn a maicn. utes the Perfection Smokeless Oil Heater is spreading comfort and warmth. The Perfection Sold in many stylesand sizes at all hardware and general stores. Highest Award at Panama-Pacific Exposition. Look for thu Triangle Trademark. Use Aladdin Security Oil or Diamond White Oil to secure beat rseolta in Oil Stoves, Lamps and Heaters. STANDARD BALTIMORE WuhinftM, D. C INorlolK, vs. Riohmoad. Vs. PEW CAL-SINO STOCK and POULTRY REMEDIES art tclantlfls prspsratlon Sims' on 16 rssrt srsctksl stssrlsnc. the CAL-SINO sontultinfl nlcrlnsrtss. Thsy hn sssa on Ihs market an mart. Thar hss mors consantraUa ntesicsl powers than "stock food" and 'condition pew dsn." Thar are IS CH-SINO remedies lor va rious aliments si Horses, Settle. Swiss and Poul try CAL-SINO P6ULTRY RESTORATIVE aids In Mis prevention and sure of Cnlcksn Chol era; dltfnlsot the sowslt; drives out elooged ap masts matter: rsoulatss nullrtion snd invlaorates; makes poultry nealfiy snd sals aaighl se thai they through natural I means Isy mors esse. 1 lb. I5c, 10 lei. Il.bt. CAL-SINO RSUP REMEDY for diteases of Inner noss. mouth snd throat, known as snuffles, lore eyes, chicKen diptherls, canker, eto. This li the roup sesson. Big pscksgee. lc. and 26c. Ask us to tsll you about and shew you CAL SINS Aemedies. RANDOLPH SUPPLY CO.. Aabeboro, W. L. TR06D0N A CO.. Sea rove. I M. SH.W. New Hope Academy, I M. RUSSELL A CO., Sophia, I D BRAME. Tnuiiy. ELLIS A JORDAN. E. A BEAN. C. P. FOX A CO. NO HURRY ABOUT THE TARIFF Like all other instructors iu the protectionist school, our neighbor the Sun believes that there is only one way to revise the tariff, which is up ward, and only one acceptable time, which is now. ' No matter if all indus trial Europe is at war and is doomed to remain' so, perhaps, for two years more, there will be peace eventually, and then "our manufacturers, mer chants and workers will be at the mercy of the most skilful and des perate competitors the world has ever known." Probably no well-informed person will deny that after the close of the war there will arise economic condi tions in Europe that may demand im portant changes in our tariff. Good reasons may appear for increasing some of the schedules, but it is quite as likely that common sense will dic tate decreases in others. With due respects to the protectionist school, it must be said that the American tar iff is going to be adjusted to revem as well as protection for many a day Existing customs duties have failed as revenue-producers because the war has reduced imports. The war, there fore, has given most of our manufac turers and merchants the advantage that they would hope for under a pro hibitive tariff. To increase rates up on a traffic that does not exist would be useless, and experimentation in other directions, except for the one object of revenue, would only invite Jobbery and disaster. It is not in the mind of any didin terested man to say precisely what kind of tariff we shall need when Eu rope relinquishes the sword. But the ery worst of all tariffs in that emergency would b one under which a few favored interests could perpet uate in time of peace the obstructions from which we have suffered lri time of war. New York World. Match Brings aTouch of Spring T c - r A ... TX. I in nve mat- miu-ncc cum and take it wherever you want extra heat Light and easily carried. Smokeless and odorless. Ten hours glowing warmth on a gallon of kerosene oil. keeps any room OIL c c r , , son i i Send Us That Soiled Suit AND LET US SHOW TOU HOW WELL WE CLEAN IT Asheboro Pressing snd Tailoring Go. W. P. ROTSTER, Manager. NEXT TO REXALL STORE. PHONE NO. 1S7 OFFER DISC GRAIN DRILLS AT $60.00. Only have a few at this price. Come to see us at: once. MCCRARY-REDDING HARDWARE CO. WE ARE ABLE And willing to do everything for our customers that a good bank ought to do. Why don't you open an account with us? With a record of seven years of successful business and re sources of more than two hundred thousand dollars, we solicit s our business. Call .to see us. BANK OF THE IMPORTANCE OF DOMESTIC SCIENCE IN SCHOOLS. Domestic science should be taught in the schools as an important subject, for such it is. In college it is taught to prepare teachers, but only a minor ity of women go to college, therefore it is to be ranked with or Above arith metic and other equally important subjects. Private classes are very good for those who attend, the ones who need training of this kind most do not go to the private classes. Our men are tiained for their bus iness, should not our girls be as noli? The public school is the place for this trainin-io let us push it.' Every Home Needs a Faithful Cough and Cold Remedy. When seasons change and colds ap pearwhen you first detect a cold after sitting next to one who has sneezed, then it is that a tried and tested remedy should be faithfully used. "I never wrote a testimonial before, but I know positively that for myself and family, Dr. Sing's New Discovery la the best cough remedy we ever used and we have tried them an." 60c and 21.00. i mo;, jtm u RAMSEUR FELLOWSHIP, FUN, AND PROFIT- ( Friday, October 29th, is the annual Rally Day in Chapel Hill a day set apart for comradeship with our neigh- bora in Orange, Chatham, and Durham ' counties, under the auspices of the-1 Chapel Hill Board of Trade, the Com munity Club Women, and the Univer- ' sity. It is the occasion conceived by Deaa ; Noble and kept alive by him for the- last three or four years. The events will be: singing contests-; by the country Sunday schools; a mu- ; sical entertainment by the University 1 students; potato races, three-legged-1 races, and other athletic events; a do mestic science exhibit; a better babies- contest; brief addresses, and an old fashioned picnic dinner on the campus. The general committee arranging" the event is Mayor W. S. Roberson, Messrs. Lucio Lloyd, M. C. Black wood, R. L. Stroud, Paul C. Lloyd, A E. Cole, W. B. Thompson, and Profes sor M. C. S. Noble . . James L. Harbin, aired 17 years, died at his home in Statesville Friday ' from the effects of a pistol shot wound which occurred May 22.' 4 I f i
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 21, 1915, edition 1
6
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