(GtLEANEE. HE VOL XXX. GRAHAM, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1901 NO. 15 M.AMANGE ; f KISS. CECELIA STOWE, .. Orator, Kntra Nous Clue, 176 Warren Avenue, ' -i...t Chicago, Iia., Oct. 22, 1902. For nearly oui years I luffered ! from OTariaa troubles. The dao : tor insisted on an operation as the i only way to pet well., 1, however, strongly objected to an operation. My husband felt disheartened as well as 1, for home with a tick woman is a disconsolate place at best.- A friendly druggist advised him to get a bottle of Wine of Cardnl for me to try, and he did so. i I began to improve in af ew days and i my recovery was very rapid. With in eighteen weeks I was another . being. Mrs. Stove's letter shows every woman bow a home is saddened by female weaknes and bow completely i Wine of Cardni cores that sick ness and brings health and happi ness again. Do not go on suffer ing. : Go to your druggist today nud secure $1.00 bottle of Wine of CarduL 'A; :::::3nmi3 . JEWELER GRAHAM, - - ' N. C. Watches, Clocks, Jewelry .. .... and Silverware. ' ESTABLISHED 1893 T, Arlington Insurance Agency. - INSURANCE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. Local agency of Penn ... Mutual Insurance ; - Company, v ' Beat , ;.. Life Insur- . '"". ' " anee contracts now on the market. vTTv Prompt pTiiona1 Attention to alt oiuhis. Corrosjxmdenoe solicited.- . iA.;XS P, ALBRIGHTAgent. 4 J t . . i T, a. COOK, Attorney at-Law, , C?.AIIAM, - - -- N. C Office Patterson Building . . Second Floor. . . . . , ..' . " ' ' '. ;:!.!. S.I.0.G, JK. . . . DENTIST . . ' ', i . . . . North Carolina J K Kfttwvr. W. r.TBTTM,Ja. A -n J Coanlors stt XW i f 1 liO, Ho.. r ,.'y Is the courts of Ab tr Aag.,Hy I ' a. I '"I. j. elkxs usa & LONG, . nnd Counselors at X.aa'ar, - UIAlf, II. C . ,-tt-Law. court of Ala r 1 counties), fl - li IIADLEY, WHAT ARE WOMEN? t "; :: " v" Weaker of Stronger Than Men er Es - , sentlally Different f " ;- If we fully admit the idea of wo man as a citizen by right and not merely through toleration, we come at once to the most interesting of all questions the inherent likeness or unlikeness of the intellectual life of the two sexes. Are women," as Tennyson said, only "weaker men," whose r. passions and - presumably whose intellects are to ours "as moonlight unto sunshine and as wa ter unto wine?" Or are they, as is sometimes maintained, really the stronger sex, especially in the moral qualities? . Or, to take a third possi bility, are they essentially different different, for instance, as poetry is different from algebra? So that it becomes absurd to say either that poetry is better than algebra or that algebra is better than poetry. We have here perhaps a genuine clew. To put this in a concrete way, men's mind intellectually conceives the 'idea of a house and makes an abstract plan of it, as architect; this is the intellect, the first of our three groups of powers. Again,: men do the actual building,, the matter of bricks and mortar, the grappling with the sheer nature forces. Thus the man builds the house, but wom an makes the home. , , v ' The difference between a house and a home is the added psychic el ement. It is a matter of feeling, yet- here f eeling, we will all admit, is the vital matter. . ' ' This is merely a simile. We have not used it to arrive at the platitude that "woman's sphere is the home" and that consequently she should keep out of politics. On the con trary, we hold -and by this instance sought to illustrate that into every completed work of humanity. all three elements should enter1 the in tellectual, or spiritual; the element of concrete feeling, or psychie, and the material and physical and that in general men will supply the first and the, third, while women will supply the second. -Harjper's Weekly- , ' ' - CARE OF THE' EYES. V Come 8impls Rules Which Will Tend to Preserve the Sight. An eminent physician lays down these simple laws on the general care of the eyes for persons who wish to retain, the strength of their eyesight to green old age; When reading, writing, drawing, sewing or engaged in similar work always take care that the room is comfortably cool, that the feet are warm, that there is nothing tight about : the neck and that there is plenty of light. Be sure that the sun does not shine directly on the object you are at work on or on ob jects in front of you and that the fiorVit Mimpa from over the left shoul der. The head should not be bent rcnUintr. The natre should be nearly, perpendioular to the line of sight, it should noi oe less man ten inches from the etes. - i 'It v Do not habitually lie. Jown when von si in ef ' . " ;" J- ' Never study or write before break fast by artificial light ...v--v-v. Avoid reading or sewing by twi liViit nr when debilitated bv recent illness, especially fever. , ; - ' - - : When the eyes nave any aeuxi .fino nnedlework. drawing of fine maps and all such employment except for very snon lassa, uot ex ceeding half an hour each. . . -" Katrar rJav "trirlta" with the eves. .ii'n rJ 3 such as squinting, rolling them, and so on.- . .x rf;"--. ' Tn all- farm of labor requiring the exercise of vision on minute subjects the worker should rise Erom his task now and then, take a few nonimtiriTt With the mOUth closed, stretch the frame, throw the arms backward and lorwara ana, u possible, step to window or into the open air, if only for a moment. Heading in a moving car certain ly involves an undesirable strain and should be avoided as far 'as practica ble. If you will read, obtain books or papers with large type.-' ' , The eyes are often affected when the stomach is out o! order. . Con gult n oculist without delay for se rious' or persistent weakness or pain of the eyes. .; ' '.,), ' 1 8mu88linfl ia OW Knota Smuggling was very generally practiced in England in former times. -A London journal aaysj "Hardly a family upon our eoast line has not a smuggling record. Lord Shaftesbury, father of th philanthropist, sat at ,d"Ue' lleron court with the last of the Hooper family, chairman of cts tomsV when, with a great shooting and clatter, a cavalcada of smug glers with wagon loads of smuggled roirita dashed into new. Bhai tee bury sprang to the window and died his host The chairman of customs sat down resolutely with hi, back to the window, nor would h move until the hut echo of the train had died away. When, ten aanuteriater,- troop of mounted excise men pulled np at bis door, he trutiifullyabletouythath. had seen nothing of th lawless ones." ' ' The "poor relation alwayas a checrleWtoe of it Xf1? ttct visitor found that it made Lt tle diSerence whether the p-r re Ution moved in big xy or a the humble circles of court, with which hef work 1- 3 made ber familiar. , . . -Where is Aunt Jof this erinter?" she aked the ) 1 of one) brother of Thai ousin who lsso kind to her?". , "She's, stopping at her brudder Lorenzo's, was. the reply, "an I know she's having a mighty hard time, missy. She didnt wan to go noway, I'm certain sure ob dat. But I tell you- how !tis, missy. Pore ole Aunt, Josephine, she's got so pov'ty j struck en she hasn't reely rot any pinions leit. , - ,. ' An Important Announcement. ! Sam Davis, the editox of the Vir ginia City Enterprise, was once an noyed by a rival who was continual ly "stopping the press" in order to insert a piece of late news. There was hardly a day that the rival did not say "We stop the press to an nounce that", somebody had died, moved, been born, run away, lost money at cards, sold a mine, bought a new hat or been arrested. So one day Davis inserted the following on the front page of his paper, -double leaded and under the heading "Im portant "We stop the press to an nounce that there is no news of suf ficient importance to justify us in stopping the, press. Giddan 1". , :. Contrasts In Courtship. ' .', ' Among the Kolarians of Bengal engagement is a matter of minutes only, ., A lad sees the lass of his choice carrying a full pitcher from the well. He steals behind her and lets fly an arrow between the crock and the arm that ho'ds it It is as if he should say: "Go on, beloved, without fear. My bow shall protect thee and clear for thee , a road through life." If the lass thinks ill of the lad's suit she continues ; her journey and takes no notice, but if, on the other hand, she be fa vorably disposed when she reaches the arrow sue daintily raises it be tween her great and second toes and offers it, with a low bow, to her hus band, as he is from that moment. ' No country in the world has such abnormally long courtships es Bo hemia. Among the peasantry espe cially engagements lasting fifteen and twenty years are so common as to call for no remark whatever- Family Doctor. " - Couldn't Bluff Him. ' . , "It was rieht funnv." said Uncle Hosea, telling of the orchestral con cert, "A smart alecx lookin. teller set in the middle, an' all ter oncet the little man at the end o' the line hit the big drum a sassy rap. Well, the smart aleck feller shakes a little stick at the drummer, an' what does he do but hit her up ag"in just to show he was as good as the next man. -An, by jinks, he didn't take no back talk, or, rather, no orders, from the smart aleck man, because hd jest kept on a-whackin' that big drum in spite b the boss', shakur that stick, as if to say he'd catch it if he didn't quit Yes, sir ; I gloried in his spunk, if he was little.. An' at the end o' the tune he whooped it up on that drum harder than ever. A little man fer nerve every time," Judge.- : '-;, :i-V:;i . ' . ' ' - His Synonym, ' . A" Chinese boy who works in a Philadelphia laundry . and who is studying English had occasion the other day to write a letter to the young woman who is his Sunday school teacher. . Not wishing to be gin his letter in the stereotyped way with "Dear Miss," for he considered her worthv of something special, he took his English dictionary to look up an equivalent for the word "dear." s Hi teacher was much surprised and highly edified when she opened the letter. This is the way it began: - Expensive Miss." Youth. , . The Devout Heir, ' , -' Years ago a millionaire died in Paris. A church, while the priests were reciting the prayers for the dead over the body, all the mourn ers were edified by the fervor with which one of the heirs was reading out of a book which he held in his hand and which was supposed to be i collection of prayers for the de parted. A neighbor, happening to glance at it, discovered that the lit tle volume was nothing more nor less than a copy of the civjl code, open at the chapter on successions. Brala wk mm lmmrrHT, la a lecture oo longavlty delivered before the Eoyal Colkg of ITiy si clans Sir Hermann Weber, himself a a octo genarian, gave official rapport to the doctrine that brain work doea not kill, but rather the reverse. A few of hie Instances wet Sopboclea, Plato, Galen, Clem, Moltke, Bismarck. Uommsen and Gladstone, to wbom we might add Hotobe. Carixl. Speinser and Kelrln. The facta are that brain work Increase tbe aoppir of blood to the nerve ceUa and . promotes . their nutrlrtoa and keeJth. Uosao. aa lUUaa. laid a man on a delicately balanced table and bowed that tbe bead end aank when ever tbe subject did a mental ton or any other brain work. Tbe Increased weight of bis bead was doe to the nfe firm blood. Tbe troth to that brala work, aa sorb, nerer silled anybody fondoa Cbrook le. - fesco " i writer tn a Loo newpeper era: "Tbe !. f dy I beard an Kn lUbmaa defer, lis oar system of coin aire on tbe groouJ that we are tbe only nation on e--" wbo can aey that tbe rm'i n Is l ..e of otir bone, For there are i0 bones la the borty and :w r nea In tbe poond: there are 120 bom In "- bead sod trail moi 120 to the V,, and J2) prar la half a r?er-e'i-n; each tltnb contains 80 booes. and a Ulf erowa emitains 30 peore: ' b ,'nal column there are 2t booea mod la a Borio 21 ixw. and as we hare 12 r:t on each .!. so we bae 11 pence In erery ahlKins. the proportkms of t!. sk.'-t. "t our eoio snertw cnoform to a-'re's te--Mrifr Ka wot!' it t V DOCTRINE i v : HE stupendous fact that has dominated the history and must control the future of the isthmus of Pana ma is the POSSIBILITY OF COMMUNICATION BETWEEN THE TWO OCEANS. ' Throughout the centuries since Philip II. sat upon the throne of Spain merchants and statesmen and humanita rians and the intelligent masses of the civilired world iLj have looked forwards to this consummation with just anticipations of benefit to mankind. No savage tribes that happened to dwell upon the'isthmus would have been permitted to BAR THIS PATHWAY OF CIVILIZATION. No Spanish sovereign could by discovery or conquest or occupation pre-empt for himsolf the exclusive use of this little spot upon the surface of the 'earth dedicated by nature to the use of all mankind. No civil society organized upon the ruins of Spanish dominion could justly arrogate to itself over this tract of land sovereignty UNQUALIFIED BY-THE WORLD'S EASE MENT and all the rights necessary to make that easement effective. THE FORMAL RULES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW ARB BUT DEC LARATIONS OF WHAT IS JUST' OF CASES." ' .. " - - , ,. - 4 . ' - But where the application of such a general rule would IMPAIR THE JUST RIGHTS or imperil the existence of neighboring states or would unduly threaten the peace of a continent or would injuriously affect the general interests of mankind it has always been the practice of civilized nations to deny the , application of ,the FORMAL rule And compel conformity to the principles of JUSTICE upon ; which all rules depend. The Danubian principalities and Greece and Crete and Egypt, the passage of the Dardanelles and the neutralization "of the Black sea are familiar example of limitations in derogation of those GENERAL rules of international law which describe the sovereignty of nations. , ', ' , I z n n n The Monroe doctrine itself, upon which we stand to firmly, ia an assertion of our right for our own interest to interfere with the action of every other nation in those, parts of this hemisphere where others are sovereign and where we have no sovereignty or claim of sovereignty,' and to say if you do thus and so even by the consent of the sovereign we shall regard it as an unfriendly act BECAUSE IT WILL AFFECT -US INJURIOUSLY, It is said that the Mon roe doctrine is not a rule of international law. IT IS NOT A RULE AT ALL. . . . : IT IS AN ASSERTION OF A WOHT UNDER THE UNIVERSAL RULE THAT ALL SOVEREIGNTY IS HELD SUBJECT TO LIMITA TIONS IN ITS EXERCISE ARISING FROM THE JUST INTERESTS OF OTHER NATIONS. WOMAN CAN IIOLi) HER TONGUE , By Mrs. FRANK LESLIE NE of the most frequent gibes of mankind against wom ankind is that it CANNOT hold its tongue and must have the last word in a controversy, as note the famous scissors dispute between a man and his wife, where he, irritated beyond endurance, threw her into the well, and she, too nearly drowned to speak, held one hand above the water and worked the fingers to imitate a pair of scissors, and so maintained her opinion not only with her last breath, bnt after it waa gone. . u My own impression ia that the sexes in this aa in many other di rections share the foible about equally and that THERE ARE AS MANY MALE AS FEMALE CHATTERBOXES. -: Of course every one knows that a woman'a tongue is far more nimble than a man's; that she has great deal more to aay and thinks of a reply or a retort a great deal sooner than s man does; that her thoughts or fancies formulate themselves more readily, and ahe has s great many more of them. - And for all tnese reason it ia all bnt in evitable that she should talk more than s man does, but that ia sot saying that she is UNABLE to remain silent if she please to. 1 Then, again, women in society have to talk more than men do that ia to say, the average woman ha to talk more than the average man or those awful pauses ensue which are so fatal to s social occa sion. .,- ' I appeal to my sister women to bear me out in tbe statement that 90 per cent of the EXPENSE OF CONVERSATION, a the French call "it, in society, or, for that matter, in private, except among the nearest relatives, is borne by our sex, and I'm sure I don't know what would become of society or of roan in Lis social relations if the women, to refute the charge of being great talker, should form trust" and put up the price of speech and board it in the treasury of their own Irainsfor awhile. '- V ) ; ...;"' '. ; ':, - And not in society only in the family circle, when the head of house comes home tired, rather cross and disposed to grumble at everything, does it cheer and recuperate him to find a silent wife and daughters, each occupied with her own thoughts or her book and, although ready to respond to hi remarks with perfect amiability, originating nothing and relapsing into silence the moment hi ques tion are answered! . .' AND THAT. MAN AND MANY, WANY MORE OF HIS KIND KNOW AT HEART, WHATEVER THEIR TONGUES' MAY SAY, THAT WOM AN'S FACILITY OF SPEtCH AND WILLINGNESS TO USE IT RIGHTLY ARE THE TRUE SUNSHINE. CF -MIS eo??s v;o:z;i people - : v co i;:t FAVon Russia fry FAULT! Y SICCL w. As'Sef mi TravcUr- - - IIE WOSKINO TECrLE cf Europe are not for RaasU at alL Only t e pr ;'a ia t'i cr.cial rod'ioni hop for Russian TL Ccrc-'ea fOTcrr.Tr.rct lools to Kasia to win Lsc s T. 'a and Germany represent the but wtnaitin cf t'e DL-TOTIO rover-- - -'. If V 4 Ruiia is beaten loth countries V popular forms. It ta erv lllelv that the Ur' strftch out her hand when some Farcpea power 1 ItLTR 'ever a weaker nation sc.! u'.l t'.e f-'-'-r j rj awsy. Genr.ariy may some tin t-y to annex the 2Tetlts!s tie fjrra cf frm-'t i ?-i.irt' rera. T."i i 1 liter.- tie United f;tes WOULD IMV7..T0 i- THE ISTHMUS OF PANAMA AND THE MONROE By ELIMU HOOT, . fx-Secretary f War AND RIGHT IN THE GENERALITY HOWE. ILL HAVE to c' .il) more "l ftst 'H or I t J ' -" I- I, 1 -T r o-i TUBERCULOSIS IN HENS. OaUfarals PrWtiMf aya'oiMs Is FrTlmt Itaaahsa. ." ' r Now that lila experiruents wltb dis eased fowla In California lis re demon strated tbe (act that tubercukwla Is one of tbe moat widely prevalent dis eases In tbe poultry ranches of tbe state. Dr. Archibald B. Ward., veteri narian of tbe University of Califor nia agricultural department, . la pur suing Investigations to discover wheth er there la toy relationship between this and bovine or human tuberculosis. Furthermore, the consideration of tbe possible significance of fowl tubercu losis baa awakened the desire to know whether or not .the deadly organisms are present In the egg. Both these points are vitally Important, and tbe animal Industries department. In con junction with the recently established poultry experiment station, will make a careful study of the cases that are brought to their attention. , - : Dr. Ward, although Just commenced on these Investlgatlona, has this to aay on tbe second point: "It appears to be true that hens badly Infected do not lay. In the thirty postmortems of tu berculosis hens that have come under the writer's observation but one ben contained an egg. Tbe thorough cook ing to which poultry ia subjected ren ders rather remote the possible dan ger of human Infection by Ingestion. Careful observation to determine if newly hatched chicks suffer from tu - berculosls will throw light on the ques tion of tubercle bacilli in eggs. - - l Owing to the fact that tuberculosis la fowls seldom kills a sufficient num ber of birds at one time to excite fear, Its existence In a nock baa come to be regarded as a matter of course and ha attracted little attention from the own ers. Under the conditions obtaining la tbe poultry Industry In California Dr. Ward says all tbe individuals, of an Infected flock must be regarded as possible sources of danger to healthy birds. ' taking advantage of the ex perience In tbe control of tuberculosis In cattle, be says that It will be easy to raise a flock of healthy chickens provided they are kept constantly from contact with diseased birds or from land recently contaminated by tuber culous fowls. Since tbe life of a fowl la so short be predicts that such a procedure would result in tbe eradica tion of the disease in three or four years-8an Francisco Chronicle. '. IMffMa BaUaiasr. - Profitable pigeon raising depend up on securing the right kind of stock, careful attention and proper manage ment Homing pigeons and Dragoons are regarded as tbe best breeds, while a cross between the two Is also favora bly mentioned. A large bouse I bet ter and more economical than several amalt ones, but In no case should ac commodate more than 200 pairs. Pi geons require feed twice a day, the best aorta being .cracked corn, red wheat, Kaffir corn, millet, pea, hemp and rk. . Tbe Importance of Varying the diet I Inslxtod npon, as well a plenty of pure water for drinking aod bath ing and attention to tbe sanitary con dition of bouses, nests and yards. DnUi Baas aa Yataa. - Fowls should have outdoor exercise during tbe warmer months ef tbe year. If they cannot be allowed their liberty they should bare access to a large graaa yard. If tbe bouse contains a number of pens of fowls It will be found most economical to arrange tbe yard side by aid In front of It The yards should be the same width aa tbe Inside pens of tbe bouse (eight feet i La, :Z A WWW flBOtnrofcAX. . wide for tn double boos and ten feet for th single bouse) and twenty-flve feat long. - Then for every three pen ef the boose there should be another yard fifty fee long and either twenty four or thirty feet wide. Th fowl of the three peas should have access to tb targe ysrd st different tune of th day r on different days. When a number ef yard era ar ranged aid by side In front ef the boos there should b targe gats in tbe fence samr th bouse so that a horse and wagon eaa drive through the yards. Smaller gats are also re golred opening Into th large yards and through which a wheelbarrow can pas.-8ulletlo Canadian Department of iLgrlcultnr. T reach body IVepa fowls tt to aec- eaaary to beadle each bird, applyuf a good Insect powder through the ea th an and dose down to tbe skia. If this Is Soae fhree times, a boot a week or tea days sport, th birds win thereaft er keep tbeoaerves substantially free sf body Bee If supplied with a good dastbath. This Is tbe method adopted a the large poultry plants. aw Skat. - - A story Is told of Couot Scboavalott, forow Caaalsa ambassador to Eng land, lit gat?y admired EngUabwo me and was heartily annoyed when be offended any one sf tbem. While be was In Loudon be learned English, and, having beard ooe famoos EuglUh b3 0ty aay "Piut spT to another, be tniagliml It to be a phrase of poilts "-"r-rrvnt, etKb aa "Fay no more." Ia t fnm be himself addressed It to aa i:'n:rins lady ths next Bight st t'nr, to the lartr's enrmterna tkm. and t oi bf ti ktct be discovered his j B ' r, la. BE GENTLE WITH COWS. Aa Ohio Mmm'm Teat DtrsalM tmm , c.t ( B.ah Miiaar. Not long ago a man wbo bad ; tbe work of testing several dairies ou bis hands told me that be made a trial In bla own herd to see Just what would be tbe result of excitement, upon the cows, say H. Vincent In Ohio Farmer. He kept a careful record of wbat bla cow did one day, noting tbe number of pounds and making a teat with tbe Babcock machine. Tbe next day be bad tbe cows driven Into the yard as usual. He then went down wltb a dog to which tbe cows were not accus tomed and drove tbe herd Into the bam with considerable yelling and flourishing of sUcks mingled with tbe barking of tbe dog. Tbe cows were then milked. Tbe milk was weighed as on tbe previous night and a test made ef tbe butter fat It contained. It found that there was a marked falling off In tbe amount of milk obtained, but this was . not tbe most serious loss. The percentage of batter fat dropped perceptibly. Suppose this system of exciting the cows should be followed up for a season, wbat would be tbe re sult T Such experiments as my friend made prove that tbe loss must be re markable. Few of us are rich enough to carry on business that way. And yet there are hundreds of farmer wbo 1 are doing Just that thing. They allow their cows to be harried by dogs and yelled at by hired men. A careful milker, quiet In bis ways about th barn and stable and gentle In hi manipulation of the cows, will be worth many dollars more In tbe course of a single season than on who work on th principle that tbe cow la noth ing but a machine -:''... : There is hot a cow- anywhere, no matter bow poorly bred sb may be, that will not respond to kindly treat ment She knows the very sound of tbe voles of tbe man who comes around ber. She will come up to him In the open yard lu a friendly way If he 1 willing to meet ber halfway, or sho will run away from bim If she" feel that he bas no sympathy with ber, Of course tho mors highly organ ised the animal Is the more susceptible she Is to these Influences. .And the rough, harsh and unfeeling man bas no more place among a lot of high strung, nervous cow than a bull baa In china shop. Poor Blatter. Ten cent butter aa a rule I loaded down with Ignorance. Ignorance pre sides at every step in Its history ignorance of what the maker should have known to have made It worth a much a the best says an exchange, Tbe original butter fat a It cam from th cow 1 all right but Ignorance took It In hand, and Its course was down ward from that tlm on. Tb people wbo make cheap store butter are just tb one wbo despise knowledge and are always talking against reading and knowing mors. Tbelr butter show It That I tbe way heaven take to punish tbem for their contempt of knowledge. Wbat aa amount f punishment they can endure! These people stand on tbelr own necks and by making poor butter aurreader tbelr wn Held to hog and bull butter, - cottonseed oil suA fraud. DAI HY CATTLE An Inquirer asked Professor Shaw of tb Bt Paul Farmer, "What breed sf bull would you advise me to use on my crab cows to get good milkers la Min nesota r - Tb professor advises bun to as a Bed Poll, Shorthorn or Brown Swiss bull, thus Ignoring all that tb world has accomplished la th past 800 years In tb way of developing cattl of sp. dfio dairy capacity. W. F. Schilling, editor of the Northfleld (Minn.) New, made a column of very pertinent com ment on the subject One paragraph of air. Schilling's srtlcle is as follows: "Suppose this same farmer ahould bar asked tbe question, 'What breed should I select If I wish to raise beef cattler Profeaaor Rbsw would have answered him by saying Shorthorn or some other beef breed. Feopis are very likely to get !xed la this kind of Information, and there ie;iid' bo a line drawn somewbeea. The beawdlng of a herd should not be guesswork. If a parson Is breeding for all beef or all milk, he certainly finds many difficul ties, but when be Is breeding for milk and beef together he Is tip against tbe real thing." Oreat la dual purpose.' 11 . , ' KtaaT OM Caws. , , good many cow are kept beyond their profit paying time because their owner hardly knows what to do with them. Be does nut Ilk 16 sell thsea to th butcher for a son, aod If they are well along In years be thinks H may east more then tbey are worth to try to fsttsn them, srxl so they are kept oa aod on, eating their own heads off and the profit oo some other cow at th same time. We hare found sut that Joat as soon as a row bas hewn eVctdcd anprofltsbls tt pays to feed her homln sr corn mee I. sil she can handle. Her mUk flow will Increase, sad this addi tion will largely pay for extra feed oa. The cow will fatten slowly at first, but later put on fat quite rapidly. Then If lbs is not Inclined to dry off we da tt for ber. We botcher th" ow ourselves, as aa to get sil there Is la bar. and sell th quarters to large stssd families, nsually getting SH or fl cents for tors quarters and T to t cents for bind quar ters. The meat will not h ss good If taws are not thoroughly dry, bet whs wen fattened this most Is often ptafar red to aocse ef the western barf. The amount We get for the beef win go wH toward buying a new milk "ex Rural New Yorker TaehUJarttr. Of lb Cve senses, 700 can see. tast and smell tb Tar in Tar Heel Cough Syrup, which i particularly recommended for Coogbi, Asthma, and La Grippe. 25 cent. AU druggist. There are only 700 convict in the penitentiary, the smallest CP ra ber H SO years. Women as Vcll C3 LI: Are llzds f,U--rcL!3 ty ; Kidney Trout's. Kidney trouble preys eaon tbe mind, dis courages and lessens ambition beauty, v' r -mi, . and eheerfulneij tun Tr disappear when the kid-w-Jrti '. neya ara out of order JT r or diseased. Kidney trout! bas f-Vj lJ" become so prevalent that it la not uncommon V V AJ 'OT a child to be born ' oeys. If the child urir.- stes too often, if t! a orlne scalds the flesh or If, when the eh; J reaches an ags when It ahould be able to control the passage, tt Is yet afflicted wi:ti bed-wetting, depend upon It. the eause of the difficulty la kidney trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpteassnt trouble la duo to a diseased condition of t; i kidneys and bladder and not to a babit i most people suppose. '. ' ' Women as well as men are made mis erable with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great reme; . '. The mild and the Immediate effect cf Swamp-Root Is soon realized. : It ia J by druggists. In fifty r, " cent and one dollar , kaizes. You may have a sampio pernio vy mail free, also pamphlet 111- Baasatswi- '.' Ing all about it. including many p( i. a thousands of testimonial letters re- ,vf J from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. K.'.n-.rr fc Co.. Blngbamton. N. Y., be sure a.d mention uus paper. . t DonH naka an r mistake, but renwrnlver the name Swamp-Root, Isr. Kllinrs bwaiT- p Hoot, rod tha add roil, Bingham ton, ft, Vn os every botue. , lememfci eatlacli This time of the year are signals of warning, TakeTaraxacum Com- Dound i now. It may save you a spell of fe ver. It will rerruIatD your bowels, set ycur liver right, and cure your indigestion. AtroodTonic. An honest medicine. . 0 1: 1 uO. .ik.Liii . N. C. amtllUllillltlllllll , a PSolt S3 aktCCTT laessssssrs to Boh, WUUaau tUj ; Undertakers i: 5 . aa ' Embalmerc,'- BURLINGTON, N. C : raovitt. .'.. F u u i.i t) !'i i We manufactnre . And are prepared to Furnish on short notice All kind, of Rough and dressed Lumber and Sash, Doors, .Blinds, moulding, etc. Mantel and scroll .work A pecialtjv r-iririf rirnn mm MM;, GRAHAM.1N.C. ytcr' Subscribe For The Gloancr. Only $I.OO.pcr y: ;r v, Taraxac