THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. T 'VOL. XL Ms Pills Agar eeUng, PMMH of a bffioos habit will derive treat benefit by taking one Of these pills. If yoa have been PRINKING TOO MUCH, they will promptly relieve the nausea, SICK HEADACHE —. Take No Substitute. PROFESSIONAITCARDS J", S- COO 3C, % Attorney-Hi - Lew, GRAHAM, .... - N. C. Offloe Patterson Building Booond Floor. . DAMERON & LONG Attorneys-at-Law 8. W. DAMKKON, J. ADOLPB LONG Phone a», 'Phone 1008 Piedmont Building, Holt-Nloholson Bidg. Burlington, N.C. Oraliam, N. 0. DK. WILL LOW, JR. . . . DENTIST ... Graham - - - - North Caroline OFFICE IN SJMMONB BUILDINO ;AGOB A. LONG. J. ELMER IANG LONG & LONG, Attorneys and Oonnaolora atL w GRAHAM, N. JOH N H. VERNON | Attorney and Coun»elor-»t-L»w PONES—Office 05J Residence 331 - BURLINGTON, N. C. j Dr.'J. J. Barefoot OFFICE OVER HADLEY'B STORE j Leave Messages at Alamance Ptiajr-' macy 'Phone 97 Residence 'Phone 382 Office Hours 2-4 p. m. and by Appointment. ARE YOU UP f TO DATE " ■——' it you are not the NEWS AN OBERVER is. Subscribe lor it at once and it will keep you abreast ot the times. Full Associated Press dispatch es Ml the news—foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. Daily Newt* and Observer. $7 - per year, 3.50 for 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian #1 per year, 50c tor 6 mos. NEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO., RALKIGH, N. C. The North Carolinian and THE ALAMANCE GLEANER will be sen' for one year for Two Dollars. Cash in advance. Apply at THE GLEANER office. Graham, N. C. Oonstipation "For many years iVaa troubled,"!* spite of all so-called remedies I At last I f oun d quick relief and cure in thoae mild, yet thorough and really wonderful DR.KINC'B New Life Pills Adolph Sehlneock, Buffalo, N. Y. 28 com FEB BOTTLE AT ALL PHUQOTW. A Great Unreached Territory. Writing ot the missionary needs ot Columbia!. Mr. John L. Jarrett says : "With Senor Redondo I spent -the past month on an evangelistic tour, after holding. some special meetings here, we spent a week in a canoes visiting some hitherto unreached towns and villages on the banks of the River Sinu. We had a perfectly wonderful time. In towns of » n villages of 600, and in little groups of houftes we found, ready listeners. There is a vast amount of similar territory still untouched. "We have great opportunities for evangelistic work ip this country. This section of it may pot be the most desirable from a health point of view, for I suppose it would be hard to find more difficult condi tions, but the people are so acces sible. so needy, so responsive, We have the oft repeated question ringing in oar ear*. "When are you coming bmckf We found sev en villages of ovrer 1.000 inhabi tants without even s school for the children. In. wren) the the church was In ruins and seldom used. Many had no churcK, 'and only in ope town was there a resident priest. la4t«e*Uoßl Cut Katt ■oAppeUtcl! A teatment of Electric Bitten in creases your appetite, stops indi- Sestion, you can eat everything. , real Spring tonic for liver, kid ney and stomach troubles. Cleans es your whole system and you /topi fine. Electric Bitters did more lor Mr. P. D. Peeble's stomach troubles than any medicine he ever tried. Oet a bottle to-day. 50c and fI.M at your druggist Bucklen's Arnica Salve for Bc zema. adv. .•V ' ~ • ' ~i- "" - ' • Advertising Talks □ L UL HOW ADLETS MADE CHICKEN FARM PAY Classified Columns Used Exclu sively by Young Man to Build Up Business. "Perhaps you wouldn't think there could be a close connection, between a poultry business and want ads," says Edward S . "but I have used classified advertising from the tlipe I first piade-up my mind to go Into the business until I was well established in it, and I will use them to a greater extent In the future. "I was born on a farm and lived In the country until I was sixteen. Then, . like msfty other young fellows who don't know when they are well off, I went to town —and a few years later was trying like all possessed to get back to As country. With me It was not a case of wanderlust or dissatis faction, or of wanting to be some place else no matter where I was —it was simply a case of being lured by the glamour of the town while young and of awakening to the value of the coun try life as soon as I gained mature judgment. "Perhaps J was luckier n most city men who dream ot enjoying the calm life of the country, or perhaps I was more In earnest in my efforts to get | on to the land, but I was back In the I country by the time I was thirty. I Many of the town men who planned with me to live on a farm in our old age still are talking of the delights of 1 the simple life while they drink creme de cocoa, listen to the orchestra and spend the money tfiey should be sav ing. Less Capital for Chicken Farm. "While in town I leaned the trade of carpenter. This, as you will readily see, aided me when I went back to the farm. From this fact also you will gather that I received good wages, Wit never exceptionally large pay. In- ' deed, many of my acquaintances who orated loudly on the Joys of the simple | life were drawing larger salaries than I, but today they have nothing to show for this money. "From the start I had set a certain sum as the amount to be saved before I again would tackle the farming game. At that time I had in mind a farm of at least eighty acres on which I would do general farming—raising corn, oats, wheat, clover, pigs, and perhaps a few steers. But soon my ideas grew more moderate. "After considering the matter, I de cided it would take far less capital to start a chicken farm, orchard or truck farm than a "regular" farm. Not need ing so much money, naturally I would be able to get on to the land while younger, while I still had many years of good work in me. Furthermore, the more I looked into the matter the more it seemed to me that a small, lntens; ively cultivated ylace ought to bring almost the same net returns as a Urger place on which the old-fashioned sys tem of farming was in vogue. "About the time that I had fully de cided to try out a small farm the want ad for the first time entered into my scheme of life. I had gotten Into the habit of scanning the want ad columns dally from picking out small farms to rent or for sale In the garden spots of the country—each and every one a 'garden spot' Incidentally—and one day I ran across what struck me as a par ticularly good proposition to the 'farm help wanted' classification. Inducements to Help. "Perhaps In order to explain the cause of this exceptionally good offer I ought to tell of the conditions that existed In our neighborhood, less than 150 miles from Chicago. At that time many of the farmers were finding dif ficulty In securing good 'hired hands' —they are yet, in fact The young un married fellows were apt to be lured to town by the magnetlo - power of the 'movies' and other amusements, or in duced to go west by the stories of Urge wages prevailing in the newer lands of the western country. "Fanners had found by experience that the married men were steadier, not nearly so likely to find fault w trifles and leave without warning, Ant that when more than one family lived in one house the two or more Mrs. ; Hired Hands engaged in spirited do bates—with words, fists and flatirons 1 —rather than butter making. For this > reason, therefore, one of the progrsss ' Ive farmers ot the neighborhood—a dairyman who especially needed mllk . ers—had built several tenant houses. Each of them stood in a small plot of ' ground on which were set out a few ' fruit trees, a truck garden was laid out and a chicken yard built This ! farmer then made a proposition to ' married farm workers to allow them - the use of this plot is addition to their i salary if they would agree to stay on i the lob* for a year. i 1 have forgotten the exact wording . of the ad that attracted DM, but the . gist of It was that a farmer had built a new tenant house in a peach orchard that he bad Just set oat and wanted a | married man to live la It. 1 1 was not married, but, as I told the ' farmer when I Interviewed him, U I • were to live in the midst of tbe farm peaches I would be to danger of matri _ jnony, to sax tbe Isut , I itoewa Amimmg the Fssihu. "The Sunday following tbe day on " which I bad read tbe ad I went out to see tbe farmer sad found that bis 1 proposition was a trifle different from - that of the nearby farmers. Hie new I orchard of 1,600 young peach treee ex r tended tor some distance along the • road, and be bdtove«-*Mi good rea eon—that when tbe trees reached the 0 bearing age this seed would become . one of tbe most popular in tbe eooa .. try tor autoists. bat that fcls would ® «» l_ The American forces occupied Vera Cruz, Mexico. There pictures were taken during the fighting that occurred. Armed sailors VS onapsnois an( j mnr | lu . B from several United -States battleships fought for two days with the Mexican federals and the armed natives and _ ft**' Week soon routed OQt tbe snipers and disarmed the citizens. About 160 Mexicans were killed. The Americans lost sixteen killed and ♦ seventy wounded. Federal **oops were sent to Colorado to enforce peace In the mine strike tone, where nearly twenty-five were any wounded In clashes between tbe strikers and tbe state mllltla and mine guards. An explosion In tbe coal mine at Eccles, W. Va., caused ' 172 miners. Over sixty were rescued from tbelr dire peril In underground chambers, but tbe others were dead when found. It was one of recent American mine disasters. reeult In email profit for him. To pro tect the fruit from polite marauders, he wished to install a man in the little live-room house he had built in the or chard. "At that thne I had some money saved up—not enough to buy even a email farm but enough to start a chick en business If.l rented the land. I looked the peach orchard over and then made this proposition: "I would rent the land and the house from the farmer, paying a small rent, because I was to guard the orchard and was to get none of the fruit from the trees—l simply wss to use the land for my chicken farm. I would build small colony houses for the chickens—* houses that could be moved about and small enough to go between the rows of trees. Although I was not married, the farmer could depend upon my 'sticking,' for otherwise I would not in vest my money. If at the end of a year or later we disagreed, the farmer was to buy my houses at a fair valuation, or If ws could not agree on a price I would cart them off. More Work for the Want Ad. "My next move was to get some chiokens—for in starting I confronted the proposition which was to come first, the hen or the egg. I decided that It would be cheaper for me to buy an Incubator and eggs rather »than grown chickens. "Then I got busy with the want ad again. I advertised for a second-hand Incubator and got one. I had excep tional luck in buying eggs by means of the want ad. "As you may know, It is hard to buy eggs of thoroughbred chickens for five dollars a hundred —that, Indeed, Is about the lowest price. I had decided to raise light Brahmas, and among the answers I received to my ad was that of an old farmer who had light Brah ma eggs to sell at three dollars per hundred. "The reason for this small price was that this farmer was a man over eighty years old. He lived with his daughter and nephew on his old place many miles out in the wintry and had no one to send to town, i He there fore preferred to sell eggs jat three dollars per hundred on the firm rather than at five dollars per hundred Jn town. . For 40 years, he said, he had raised nothing but light brahmaa. but he had not exhibited his fowls at poul try shows. He had fine, big, thorough bred chickens, but no blue ribbons or newspaper clippings. "I drove out to the old man's farm In a borrowed buggy, and loaded It up with eggs. The want ad In this, case saved me six dollars every time 1 set my incubator, as the machine held 300 eggs. They Sold the Goods. "Having found -vant ads such hsrd working friends I decided to use them to sell my goods. Whtn, therefore, I had baby chicks to sell I ran ..his ad: "If you want some baby beauties, order a basketful of light Brahma day old chicks from E. 8., —— Rural Route "Now, I haven't the slightest Idea whether my ads ware well written or not lam Inclined to think they were a trifle too flippant But whether well written or not, they show ths valus of the want ad In the chicken business, for not oae of them missed flre, "From mi first ad I received mors orders than I was willing to All—l wanted to sell only a few baby chicks. The following ad, which 1 need when the chickens wore at the broiler sge, also brought me an excess of orders: "'For a chicken what is a chicken write B. IK? 1 * »•' "Later 1 ran this ad and could have sold every one of my youai rooeters If I bad been wining to part with them: - 'For great big youngsters, eight months old and nlae pound* big. writ* B. ■„ , Route »•' "This ad was run under tbe classifi cation 'Young Roosters for Bale,' so that I did not have to wssie a word telling what tbe great big youngsters were. Little Ad Cleaned Him Out "This last ad practically cloaned out every chicken I bad to sell. I then went Into the market, bought Sny kind of a good-looking chicken—whether thoroughbred or not—fed It carefully for a time, dressed It when ordered, aad sold it by meaas of the following " 'Cat tbe cost of living. Bay fresh |y disssll chickens direct from the farm. Drop a postal to B. 8., Route ». Tbe order will be filled nexl 1 mora lag ' * 1 "Using oo other selling Bawd ww classified ads, never rmnning aa a* more than three days. 1 have sok dreeeed chickens for ss hlgb aa 11.41 a piece aad have received a fair price for Indian Runner docks, Boarboa re . turkeys, aad squabs. | "I think *7 squab experience Is th climax- found one day that I bad ah young squabs ready for market I ha caged up a number of pigeone in i . 14x1] yard some time before. I rai * aa ad to the classified columns an GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, MAT 7, 1914. Che next day received four orders, the first of which was for 18 dozen squabi. "Of course I couldn't fill It —and this I find Is a good thing for an ad vertiser to remember, he must be sure to be ready to fill hia orders, for It is surprising what pullers these little ads prove to be." "The purpose of all retail ad vertising Is to serve the public; to give Information that will help to satlsfsctory buying; to present ths true chsrscter snd personality of ths store; to rep resent the store as It Is, Its mer chandise ss It Is, Its ssrvlos ss It Is. In doing this It bscomee whet ths store Iteelf is; an In spiration to thoss who will study Its spirit; education to thoae who will understand Its mes ssge; s plonssr In srt. In science, In merchandlelng; a lesdsr In humsn ssrvlce. "The Wanamaksr buslnsss csn nsver change eo long ss It holds ths psrsonsllty of the founder. Wsnamaker advertis ing can never Changs so long ss It reflects this- Wanamaksr eplrlt. "Doss It pay 7 Is never asksd by Mr. Wsnamaker. "Doee It Serve the public? le hie only query. "Profit la a by-product, just as happlnsss Is a by-product "Those who ksep looking ever- Isstlngly for hspplness nsvsr find It "Thoss who go slong qulstly doing ths right thing by thsm sslvss and by thslr nslghbors find happlneek all the time."— Joaeph H. Appel. ADVERTISING NOT A SCIENCE No Two Propositions Are Alike and for Thla Reason Standardization Is Impossibls. In a talk before the Buffalo Ad club Truman A. DeWeese, director of pub licity for the Shredded Wheat com pany, gave bis views on news paper advertising. Mr. DeWeese bad this to say: "Advertising Is not a science because no two advertising propositions are alike. You cannot standardize advertising. You cannot guarantee that a Certain definite num ber of subscribers to a newspaper will read a certain advertisemeirt, nor can you guarantee the kind of Im pression that It will make on these readers; neither ts It possible to come to any agreement ss to the value of newspaper or magaslne circulation. "Advertising Is an art It calls for the genius of ths writer, the sketch artist and the salesman. If literature Is an art, than sdvsrtising is surely sn art—although advertising Is not lltersturs. The writing of successful sdvsrtising calls for a combination of litsrary talent and merchandising genius. „ "Advertising is the persistent and consistent dissemination of informa- tlon retarding a salable product. The advertising must bsve news veins If you are In a newspaper roar ad vertislng'should not only hare news value, but It should have a timellneas that appeals to human Interest. It should be as interesting and Instruc tive to readers as any editorial or news story In the paper. If It Isn't, how are you going to attract the at tention of readers? If you are adver tising m a newspaper that enjoys the confidence of Its readers—a paper that is a true tribune of the people— you must not fall to take full advan tage of that relation by gradually ap propriating the good will and confi dence of the paper through honest ad vertising and honest merchandising. The newspaper Is the live wire of Industrial and political activity; It Is the motion picture of civilisation. The advertiser ahould get on UM Dim that Is world's publicity. He must have a being reeled off In the white light of the meesage each day that Is vi brant with life and so vivid In IU ap peal to human Interest that no reader can skip it or overlook it." HELPING OUT CHURCH BELL Religious Advertising In Newspapers by No Mean* Experimental—Calls Attention to Sunday Dirties. ! Church advertising la the newspa pers when first It Is tried In a com munity. nrini wSS M iS!S!- Ing. some as shocking. The newness of the thing make* It look at first glance like one «rthe bizarre expert menu of which the vlmee seem aston ishingly tail. m Hat- flhurch adv. rtlslnj Is no mfw* experimental than all advertising Is experimental. For It Is only one more way of dt|#f attention te the dntlee .of Sunday morning, an aide to the conscience, a comrade of the church bell It le but helping to translate that iiiouftl>T. 'T ouf/iu to giT to 1 church today," Into terms of action. The problem of getting people Into the pews is one of the most vexing of , alt the problems of religion today. I Tbe choice of .the ministers of the gospel Is only a choice aj to how they shall go about it to get people to re- j member their duties, to slough off the bablt of neglect, to recognize the source from which flow the greater blessings of our civilization. The | advertising pages of the newspapers, | .until recen:*/, have not been consid ered a medium for reaching the non churchgoer and the only-occasional- j churchgoer. It cannot be said that this was so because of any defect In the medium, because it was vulgar or tainted In the least degree. It was , merely custom, which caused the church' to ignore this method of reaching whom l£ would. All In the Family. Suburbs —The mlfiister odt In our place won't marry #ou unless you have a medical certificate. Crawford—ls It hard to get one? Suburbs—Why, no. It happens bis brother Is a doctor —Judae. KIN HUBBARD'S HUMOR Frank McKlnney Hubbard, carica turist and humorist, of Indianapolis, has written many clever bits of phil osophy. Here ere a few examples: Don't worry over trouble, it never broke a date yet A loafer must feel funny when a holiday comes along. One good thing about a little town —you kin git in th' band. Borne folks don't seem t' have noth ln' bat a lot o' Information. Ther' hain't notbln' a woman likes better'n havln' somethin' charged. Somebody was seen co/nln' out o' our Carnegie library Wednesday fore noon. People that blurt out Just what they 1 think wouldn't be so bad if they thought Th' only time some fellers ever dig in the garden ts Jlst before they go a flshln'. A feller never knows what he would o' done till he's been married a couple o' years. Nothln' sounds as good as your wife's singin', whether sba knows how sr not. Th' trouble with banquets Is that they set you so close t'gether It knocks th' peas off your knife. Boms fellers wear a suit o' clothes so long they're In styls two or tbrsa tlmee without knowtn' It SOME POSTSCRIPTS With a new cylindrical oven for gas stoves which baa a removable'shelf it Is possible to bake, roast or fry. Compressed air apparatus has been Invented for threading cord through conduits for use in Installing wires. London educational authorities havs decided to place motion picture ma chlnee in a number of public school*. The tlwifi mysterious Dn( sea la Palestine U providing a new puzzle for ■dentists, u It seems to be drying op. Simple apparatus for disinfecting by ■team that a Frenchmen haa In runted botla tb« water with an alcohol lamp Weight for weight according to aa English scientist, macaroni la aa reli able a fleeh building food aa beef «r mutton. A new fly trap, made of paper and cotton netting, la Intended to bo burned with Ita captlree when filled with flies TOT gatheiiag flowers or fruit aa lowa man baa lnrented a knife carried ec a tube to be slipped over one Am ger—Houston Poot - WORTH KNOWINQ " # ant faith, Joy and life. royal ifyj»a s-',bi>«ib *n .»*iia bmi *lw •baa«uoiii. Black correa pehd* t» 4* pMr, neee, earthllneas, ufrfrufltf, ndgWflft, wirkMlne** «»>* •'•■lK* 0 , I Tbe number Of cows In the dairy does not mean success always, bat it's , the kind of cows that counts. • • • Hand separator cream producea better butter than that separated any other way, say those who know. • e • Physicians say that a laboring man can do as much work on a diet of eggs ss he can If fed on pork or beef. • • •' Parsnips have the finest flavor' If allowed to stay in the ground rather late. A frost or two makes thsai sweeter. • • • Farming Is becoming a more sys tematized business. This Is one thing thst has removed the drudgery from the work. • • .. • The manure on tbe farm Is the most valuable by-product, but it doeen't do any good as long aa It is lsft in the barn yard. •e e - ■No ben is going to lay winter eggs if her system is run down, her molt not over, and she Is mads to scratch her own living. ess It Is better to raise your own calves, for then you know what you have. To buy up heifer calvee promiscuously is sn uncertain business. • e e The good road brings ths msrket nearer your farm and adds matsrlslly [ to the value df the place whether you want to sell or live there. • • • A pslnted fence post ts csrtalnly an addition to the rmd side, but a painted post hidden. by nice thrifty weeds la not exactly a good combination, see Tbe housewife who makes good butter, so good thst It has a distinc tion of its own, can always find a ready market and eager customsrs. • • • This Is a good tlms to buy that pur* bred male, or that breeding pen of fine fowls. Breeders will sell a little cheaper now than they will be a little later. e • e Every farmer owea It to himself and his posterity to do s limited amount of experimenting |n crop production, stock breeding snd the mslntensnce of soil fertility. • • • Most of the visible dirt in milk ts stabls manure. However disgusting thst may be, the real harm is dona by the growing bacteria waabed from i the stable manure. • * * Keep a good, deep, dry bed under tbe horse whlls bs ts la ths stable. , day ar night on Sundays especially . The more be lies down ths iongsr hia legs and feet >wlll last. s • • Cows must be fed regularly In order for them to do their best work. We have found regular meals to be a neceeeity for our own welfare, and the samo applies to animals. Rsmember that tbe cow Is not em actiy like a machine or a mill. Yoa can't put in certain food and get milk of desired Quality. Ths cow makes It In ber own individual way. %- . • Oreen, tbe emerald. Is ths color of ths spring of hope, particularly of the hope of Immortality and ot victory, as the color of the laurel and palm. Violet, tbe amethyst signifies love and troth, or passion snd saffsring. Purple and scarlet signify things good and true from a celestial origin. FROM THE PELICAN la writing love letters a man need not use a quill pen to make a goose of himself. It is not necessary to take a coarse of physical culture to carry other peo ple's burdens. If you waat to be ears of a hearing with a woman, either flatter her or abuse her friends. If some people dida't talk aboat what they were going to do. they wcrald have precious little to talk aboat ANVIL SPARKS Yoa cannot ran backwards aad aat be weary. ,~ u js; ' A fit tetnper U hardly a becoming ■A f#rtlnefy holy life is always trteaslag to behold. K 4Nvia*'|ney hart a lKtle, but navar aa bad-aa withholding. . '« m* prMttte Doesn't keep a keen %dga w *h»ermsetewss smsJn ' •>-" NOTES fßfltt MEJDOWWtOOK fMM .Do your churning today. • • • Diversification U iiotllral ■ • • Alfalfa doe* bMt OB manured 1011. • • • British India alone hae M.000.00C lead ot goats. • • • The proper way to sow alfalfa la iltk Mine form of drill. • • e Be sure that the male at the heal uf the ioek la pure bred. r •e • J Don't try to winter more blrda thai rou have room for, or time to care for e • • The man who has already used th silo will tell you wether It pays 01 not. • e • Crowded houses are sure to beeomi lamp, and hens will not lay whet crowded. • • • ♦ Dont expect a good cow to develoi from a stunted calf. They don't (roe that way. e e e Feed plenty of charcoal, as It is on« :>f the best things for keeping the poul try healthy. e e e A scrub hen Is not worth met, but ■he Is as good as any for the man wbt irill not give his flock good care. • Jf - M It Is claimed that early-sown fall wheat Is benefited when pastured wltl ■heep to keep down the rank growth • • • One of the successful ways to grut rat white grubs In old sod ground li to eallst a drove of active pigs In th lood work. • • e When removing a calf from its dam do so while the cow is away from hei stall so she will not associate you wltl the loss of her calf. • e e Adding tlib silo to the farm slmpl] means applying one of the first prin r I pies of modern manufacturing Indus try to the oldest of all industries. • • • Don't sacrifice your heifer calves U the veal flend. Cows are going to tx In demand and you may not only havt none to sell, but will be compelled b buy. e- e e The boy who has an Intereat in thi farm Is usually pretty quick to see thi possibilities of the farm and he U not In so much of a hurry about gettlni away. e e • Celery banked with earth late In th« fall seems more palatable than when boards are used. Do not bank whet the foliage la at all moist as this will aid dscay. e e e Newly purchased hogs should b carefully examined for vermin, am should not be turned out with th herd until they are known to be fret from these pests. e e • When you toot your cows for quaa tlty, you must also tost for quality ii order to determine definite results Some cows give a greater per cent. • butter fat than oOjers e e k The first thing to do after drawln, the buttermilk from the churn la t pour a pailful of cold water oa th butter and give the churn three o four quick revolutions. • e e Are you getting the most out o your dairy herd? If not. Is It thi fault of the breed, the Individuals • the owner? It la up to you to worl oat this problem yourself. • e • Shredded fodder Is much more eon venient to feed than the shock fodder The time and labor saved In feedfni shredded fodder about compensate) for the time and labor taken In shred ding. • Pigs may be taksa from their moth ers as soon as they eat' heartily. B] selling the ptgs young the sow ma; be relieved of the necessity of nourish ing her pigs and soon prepared for thi second liuer. e * e Oreen ground bones are rich In al bumen, phosphate of lime, and phos pboric arid, which go to make eggi and shells. It will pay any poultry man to buy a bonemlll to grind booei for his fowls. e e e Too much emphasis cannot be pu upon regularity In the dairy work, lr regular hours greatly interfere wltl the milk production, and a long delaj In milking must be painful, for beat results there should be regular feeding boars. • e e Good seed corn la a profitable la vestment at from |I to »# If yoa doe' have It If row can select, store, aat teat It for |1 per bushel, how macl will that save on nest year's crop' Sell your surplus seed to your neigh bor, don't wait aad buy from hiss. • mm The Bxprees says Mr. James Mc Iver ot Banford recently found $4 In lO blifs that jeuru ago nn been placed in a small tobacc sack and sewed up in a quilt. Th quilt waa first owned by Mr. am Crs. Minter Johnson, parents o rs. Mclver, The quilt had beei washed three times since th money was put in It. BUBBCRIBB FOR THB OLBANBR SI.OO A YBAR NO. 12 Indigestion Dyspepsia Kodol Whan your stomach cannot properly Ugiit food, of tesalf, U need* a lltUs taaiitance—and thii aasistance la rexV ily supplied by Kodol. Kodol aasita the itomaco, by temporarily digesting all >f the food in the stomach, so that Uu Homar.h may rat and recuperate. Our Guarantee, gfj rn ir« Ht benefited —the drunrlst trUl M WM return jour aoner. Don't besttate: any EwW win M-U ran kodol on IHM tend M loOar bottle eon tain* M tt«as as mat ia tb# lOa bottle. Kodol la praparedM tka MHaIM e» *. O, o«WUt * Co.. OMaaaa flnkf» DIM Cm. The ' CHARLOTTE DAILY OBSERVER Subscription Rates Dally .... $6.00 Dally and Sunday 800 Sunday .... 2.00 The Semi-Weekly Observer roes. - 1.00 The Charlotte Daily Obeerrer, ia tued Daily and Sunday is the leading lewspaper between Washington, D. D. and Atlanta, Ga. It gives all the lews of North Carolina besides the somplete Associated Press Service. The Semi-WeeklyObeerver issued m Tuesday and Friday lor $1 per fear gives the reader a full report of the week's news. The leading Semi- Weekly of the Suite. Address all irders to ±L!£ Observer COMPANY.* " CHARLOTTE, N, C. " LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS This book, entitled as above, sontains over 200 memoirs of Min isters in the Christian Church with historical -preferences. An IntcreHtiiig volume—nicely print ed and bound. Price per copy: Blot h, 92.00; gilt top, 12.60. By mall 20c extra. Orders may be tent to P. J. KBBNODLB, 1012 E. Marshall St., Richmond, Va. Orders may be left at this office. IlirlMl Wtsa?| Me Cardui The Woman's Tonie I North Wilkeaboro Hustler: The news haa reached here that a party named Penny from Moaaa chuaetta haa purchiued the Blkin and Alleghany railroad, and that work in earnest haa been atarted again. The ateam ahovel haa re sumed and more men have been put on. ' VaaKaaw What *« Are Tilllf When you take Orove'a Taateless Chill Tonle because the formula la plainly printed on every bottle ahowing that It ia Iron and Qui nine in a tasteless form. No cure, no pay.—6oc. adv. The Robesonisn says a young lawyer of Lumberton delivered an address at a school closing in Robeson county a few daya ago and received as an honorarium 183 egga— real hen egga. Bach child in the achool brought an egg to the apeaker. CM|M tor Three Years. "I am a lover to your godsend to humanity and science. Tour medicine, Dr. King'a New Discov ery, cured my cough of three years aaya Jennie Fleming, of New Dover, Ohio. Rave you an annoying cough? Ia it stubborn and wont yield to treatment? Get a Mc bottle of Dr. King'a New Discovery to-dar. What it did for Jennie Fleming it will do for .vou, no matter how atubborn or chronic a cough may be. It atoba a cough and stopa throat and lung trouble. Relief or money back. 50c and SI.OO at your druggist. BwckWi Arnics Salve for pnn- Hr. D, T. Edwards, for some years isditor and publisher of the Kinston Free Press has sold the paper to a company and retires from newspaper work. H. Gait Braxton of Raleigh will be and manager under the new man-'