VOL. XLVIII
PROSPECTS FO't
AGRICULTURE 1923.
New Year's Statement and resume
of Agricultural conditions and
prospects from Secretary
of Agriculture Wallace.
Twelve months ago most of (lie
six million farmers of the United
Slates were starting on i lie long
hard climb out of the valley of
economic dcpivssioji. They have
not yet attained the heights \vhich
are bathed in ih.y grateful sun
shine of prosperity.- Some,
indeed, have fallen by tin* way.
Others aro still in t:.e valley. j
Nevertheless, as we stop a bit and :
lookback ward we can see th it
very considerable . round has been
gained by the great majority, and
we can enter the New Year with
renewed hope and with that cour
age wlfielt comes from the reali
zati m that we are really making
progress.
A year ago, when speaking of j
'the prospects for farming in 11)2:2,:
I said that while there was no
reason to expect boom times for
the farmer in the near future,
there was promise of oetter times,
both for the fanner and for those!
whose business is largely depend
ent upon him. The year has
brought fulfillment of thai
promise's Speaking generally, J
times are better, much better,
than a jear ago, both for agricul
ture and for industry.
Crops have been good, on the
whole. While there has been a
corresponding advance in the
prices of the thyigs the farmer
mi st buy, the total sum which
farmers will receive for the crops
of this year is greater by a billion
and a ha f dollars or more than
that which tl;e\ received for the
crops of last year. This will cer
tainly mean better times on the
farm, and farm folks will be able
to ease up a little on the grinding
economy they were forced to
practice the preceding year.
The labor cost of producing the
crops of l'J22 was still further re
duced. "There were some sub
stantial reductions «in freight
rates. Much helpful h gislatiou
has been enacted and more wiW
be this winter. Interest rates are
lower and tho redit strain has
been eased. This has made it
possible for many farmers who
were rather heavily involved to
refund t.ieir and get
themselves iu condition to win
through. i
There aro still some dark spots
In some sections weather condi
tions were unfavorable and crops
were short, and farmers iu these
sections are naving a very hard
time of it. Freight rates are still
too high, especially for those who
must pay for a long haul to mar
ket.
Taxes are high, but this_ is
largely due to the increase in lo
cal taxes, over which farmers
themselves must exercise control.
There has been gratifying
growth in farmers' cooperative
marketing associations, and more
of them are being organized on a
sound business basis.
Aside fro-., the help which has
been given by legislation and by
administration activities, strong
economic forces are at work to
restore a more normal relation
between agriculture and other in
dustries.
The peril in the agricultural de
pression is more keenly realized
by other groups than ever before,
and on every hand a sincere de
sire is being evidenced to do what
can be done safely to help the
farmer -.-otter his condition.
Everything considered, we have
good reason to expect still better
things for agriculture iu tho year
i'j23.
'l'lan to can some of yonr meat
when killing time comes. It may
lie a life saver some day when
company drops in.
The correct height of sink, iron
iug board and work tables help
the housewife cheat old age by
keeping her good posture.
feeding of livestock
before shipping is not desirable,
Bays V. W. Lewis, livestock mar
keting specialist, By light ft'ed
_ iiijj they handle better, do not
have so mtrch shrhrkago and take
on a~{>et at the market
before they are sold.
THE ALAMANCE GLEANER.
NORTH CAROLINA RICH IN
HISTORY AND TRADITIONS.
|
These Being Dramatized at Univer
sity For Preservation.
j World's Work, Dec., 1922.
J The University of North Caro
lina has adopted a plan for pre
serving the history and traditions
of the state which promises to be
, as instructive as it is popular,
j For many years Harvard LTnivers
i ity has aad a course in play writ
ing; this department, has justified
j itself by turning out several p'ay
j wrights who have wou extended
! fame and fortune on Broadway
and in London. The Harvard
course, however, aims to produce
playwrights of universal, scope,
whereas the course recently estab
lished at the University of North
Carolina has a more restricted
field. North Carolina his a his
tory particularly rich in legend
las well as in actual achievement.
The mountaineers in the western
part of the state are among tiie
j most delightful and historically
I interesting survivals' in this
counter. Praeiically every moun
| tain has its story and I he -.-.did:-. of
'Scotland itself aro no more foil
of feuds and adventure and ro
| marine. The association of Sir
[Walter Ilaleigh with this state
'and the lost colony, the Croatau
j Indians and the Mecklenburg
I Declaration, the stirring scenes
, ( of the Revolutionary War, to say
nothing o£ the excitement of tho
, | Civil War and of tha reconstruc
tion period that followed, cer
tainly contain material enough to
i keep many playwrights busy for
a c aisiderable time.
These are tho traditions and
J the historical incidents to which
the new course iu playwriiing at
,|the North Carolina University
,is now devoting its energies.
Even though the successful play-j
, wrights who have been develop
ed at Harvard may not material
ize at Chapel Ilill—though thero
is no good reason why they
should not —the work is well;
worth whib. It is educational
in the highest sense and univer
sity extension work of the
finest kind. More and more 1
mod rn universities aro real
izing the uew conception—that it
, : s their business to be part of the !
, community in which they exist;
to preserve the best traditions of
the state and to familiarize its
people with all good thoughts and
actions. Certainly uo more at
. tractive way can be found of do
, ing : iiis than that which the Uni
i versity of North Carolina has now
discovered. The fact that tho
[ plays are not only written by the
, students but staged and acted by
. | them gives the University ail un
dergraduate activity of au espe
cially wholesome and elevating
. kind.
i
Use And Abuse of Lime.
The use of lime in North Caro
, l ; na is advocated by the Division
of Agronomy, according to W. F.
i Pate, of the N. C. Experiment
Station, but only under certain
; conditions. The soil must be
i wet and sour arid a system of
i crop rotation should be followed
.[which includes the growing of
jsonie legume crops.
. When liine is used with regard
11 to the proper rotation, an in
!cr»ased yield may be seen for a
few years but in the long run the
I soil will become poorer and the
) I yield less than if no lime had
I bee ti used, The •Id adage of
j | "Lime and Lime without manure
»! makes both farm and farmer
• poorer" will in most cases prove
inn*.
Some of the (fcils in the states
l are deficient in many elements
j I of plant food snejuas lime, nitro
i gen, and potash, and when lime
is used to supply this deficiency
or to neutralize or destroy sour
ness, it shoul 1 by very beneficial
Although the use of lime has
' been practiced for many yeaTs,
' | its effect on soils and crops *as
never fully understood and even
now its nee is Advocated when
Mlhe soit is extremely yW*t and
>jsour, when th»-l*e is a deficiency
■; n the soil, and then only in con
■ j junction with a proper rotation.
' What this country needs is
t onions too polite" to smell in eom
ip.my.
GRAHAM, N. 0., THURSDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1922
FORESTRY WORK IN NORTH
TO BE REVIVED.
■ Farmers Desiring Hel[ in Dealing
With Woodland Problems. May
Take Matter up With
Specialist
. 11. >l. CUIIKW - Sl*(*.( lAIJST IX
J ' FARM !•'(>!! I '.S J'iS V.
Ac ording to an announcement
from Director 15. W. Kilgore of
4the North Carolina -{extension.
IServioo, 11. M. Curran, a«gr dti
!ate of the State College and a
[native born North Carolinian,
I ha* been appointed extension
(specialist in farm forestry- to
': lielp tarheel farmers in handling
their farm woodlots and other-'
'wise developing the farm fores
try industry of this State.
Mr. Curran has been w• i! train- \
|ed. Has been in rhe employ o! t'le i
United States Forest Service lor
years and during that '•>n« has
made studies ot forestry pi >b' u,s
all over tho entire coyntry. He j
has also seen service |
iin the Philippine Islands aad j
about five years service. in ih*'
] tr iplcal forest s ot South .Vmeri
, CM. Recently he had chaige a|
lecture course on tropical f ■ vests!
at Yale Univo'sity.
He comes to North Carolina I
| after these years of service and
'Study to render assistance in any
| of the forestry problems that nn\ !
be acu'e with the farmeis of
1 N- rth Carolina at lliisiime. ft
I will be remembered that this
' j work was formerly done by I i tr- j
'jry B. Krausz who left the exten
sion service shortly after the;
| way. For sometime the work has
j been hampered because a suit
•l ble man could not be*found to
| carry it o' .' Now that Mr. Cur
j ran has been secured, farmers ill
the State wanting help with t.lieir
farm wood lot problems or any!
j other problem dealing with wood-j
lands on their home place should
lake up these questions with
him.
North Carolina Exceling in
Roads and Other Things
[Memphis Commercial Appeal.
The St. Louis Globe Democrat
; reminds somo of the Western
[Stales that vaunt themselves
i! much over good roads, that North
; Carolina has a pre-emine;.' record
•in good roads building.
. | The experts say hat North
. j Carolina is next to Pennsylvania
■ in the quality of its highway sys
j tein. North Carolina has a pro
i gram involving ah expenditure
• around i 90,000,000. ft has more,
■ than 3,000 miles of hard mad*.
. ' Among the other records North
r Carolina has are these: Leads in
| the manufacture of tobacco. It
J consumes one-fourth of the to
bacco crop in the country. It has
i more cotton mills than any other
(Statu.in the Union. In the num
| ber of employes and in output
, I North Carolina leads all tho other
Southern States in cotton manu
facturing. It has the largest
'pulp mill in the country and the
I biggest aluminum plant in the
■ | world.
1 North Carolina has large water
■ j power possibilities. 'founcssee
i has greater water power possibili
ties. North Carolina has little
icoal or iron. Teiincss e |,as
j both.
j While the Globo i)em >eratic
."calls North Caro'in \ to tho atten-
Ition of Missouri, we tnight well
■icall the same progress i., th'« u 1 -
! tention .of the p -.»:i!e of Ton
. juesse.
Nortn Carolina is homogeneous.
,Tennessee is divided into three
i! parts North Cwnliiiahns fierce
; politics, but after tho men are
Selected to offide they fry to do'
{something for their State.
-1 The mental ealii»er of office*
. 1 holder- in North Carolina is higher
than mat of ofHceholdera in Ten s
, i nessess. 1
We might learn much from our
[neighboring State. A Jomrnittee I
i from the Tennessee Legislature j
, this year might go over to North '
I!Carolina and study that State's
• road program and other things-!
. subject to legislation which are
factors in the great advancement,
>f the Tar Heel State,
» ,
A bag of hot salt, applied to the
| face, is excellent fur toothache. •
'PUT SAFETY LAST
British Sailor Reversed the Usual
Order of Things.
Much to Be Said in Commendation of
the Change, Say 6 Writer in
Eastern Magazine.
Captain Campbell, V. C., royul navy,
hero of mystery ships, used to put la
j his night order book us a clotting ad-
I monition, "safety last."
Time and again Captain Campbell
took a chance and came through, while
the cautious took their caution down
to Davy Jones' locker.
America was discovered because
Christopher Columbus dared to Jump
across the sky line. The restless and
audacious enterprise which advanced
Uie frontiers of American business was
but a carrying on of the unil
f tin? pioneer.
The sheltered-life theory means
I el ie ■ i oiuaturi! demise or uti ovei-
I «up,i!y we.u.lings. The street that
I t>ree Is strong 11>t*:i is riot Kasy street.
! i >aii ;r and risk ft re us.essential in
i ajo.Uoig strength as air and food arc,
: observes llie Suflir.lav KvenWlfe Post.
| An -T ( i would '.i> .sell at this iri•-
j mt it in call back something of the
( devil-niriy-cure ffhivndo of her cattle
| kii s - and her clipper,captains. They
| we.e strong men with strong vices, but
! :il i with strong virtues; pungent char
| actore lu a pungent age.
Tin life of Sir William Van Home Is
a great sermon on the text "Safety
las',." Donald Smith and his col
i leagues had a vision of clamping ail
British Ninth America with an Iron
banc!. They came to Minneapolis to
consult v ith James J. Mill.
"You need," said Hill, "a man of
great menial and physical power to
! put the line through. Van Home can
I do It."
From the first the scheme was prob
lematical. The railway man who un
dertook It was risking his career. Van
Home had before him an assured suc
cess in the United States, but as a
] friend put jt, "He went off chasing rab
bits into the wilderness." The task
j which called him was the execution
of ihe greatest railway project in the
world. The naturaT obstacles to he
overcome Were, unparalleled. Un
daunted he turned hi* back on the easy
places and ventured forth.
Said one of his engineers, "He al
ways acted as If nothing were Imiws
slble. He was not always right. He
was the kind that would go out,on the
side of | mountain and say 'Blow that
down.' He would not ask If It could
be done. _He would
times the thing 'was impossible under
ordinary circumstances, but he had
such luck. Some accident or other
would happen so the thing could* be
blown up or torn down without any
harm. His luck, his daring and his
fearlessness Just carried him through."
Or, to put It more clearly, pluck car
ried him through.
Physical obstacles were the least of
the opposition met by Van Home and
I his colleagues. "On one fateful day In
I July," writes Professor Skelton, "when
the final passage of the bill was being
tensely awaited, the Canadian Pacific,
I which can borrow $50,000,000 any day
before . breakfast, was within three
, hours of bankruptcy for lack of a few
• hundred thousand dollars."
Optimism Is a nice word, but right
now pluck Is a thousand times more
. what we are needing. Amid the soft
ness of today we need more stoutness
of heart. There Is a Gaelic phrase,
"Sioul fear ferraii," which means "the
' sons of manly men." On the floor of the
1 stock exchange, on the tl'sir of the
reeking foundry, wherever there Is hesi
') tntif 'i there Is n call for the sons of,
■ | mnnly men, a call for those who are
possessed of that ,'ood old-fashlone**
. | Ana'"-Saxon virtue of pluck.
S'angy but Sircere.
Without toy knowledge -on s site I
j hi" gang to come «v-r for a Hallowed
I part v. V-lther i voisemetit nor f'*o'l
j hod been firntn!?'*' for, but we mnde
1 nn Ifuproniptn party, r >llel back ftir
j niture, turned back rut's, and gave
I them the house. I unearthed the ma
• ferial for Halloween games, rahed
the ice-box, and afterward took them
, | i,ut to the kitchen, w here we cracked
1 rints find matte-fudge.
J When they raid good-night, son b«v
! thoiight himself.
j "Why, say, kids." he said,' "mother
' i did not even know you were coming.
Pit say she's «ome Sheba!"
And the boys said, "I'll say she la!"
I —K .change.
Raisin Fluff.
i Two eupfuls sugar, *4 cupful water,
1 stiffly beaten egir white, V 4 cupful
( chopped raisins, cupful chopped
! walnut meats, >4 te.'ispoonful vanilla.
Roll sugar and water until It threads
5 when dropped from the tip of a spoon.
| Pour on beaten egg white and beat
J until it hold* its Shape. Add raisins,
J nuts, salt an 4 vanilla. Mix well. Drop i
from teaspoon on .araffiue paper and
1 wt aside until cold.
tOESM'T KNOW HOW TO LOVE
Gilbert Franltaj Believes the Younfl
Worran of Today Is Not Capable
of Self-Sacrifice.
You have to watch the modern
i dance to see the- modern girl at her
most self-reveitllng. ltegurd her care
fully, this bepalnted, bepowdered, be
manicured product of our hectic age,
as she circles the ballroom. She
dances emotionally, but her emotions
are for the rhythm and the music, not
for the mere male, her partner. Even
In a man's arms she Is as nearly sex
less as the ladles of the Lyslstrata,
Gilbert Frankau writes In the Forum.
Regarding her thus, one cannot help
answering the question which stands
at the head of this article In the most
emphatic negative. No! Give her all
her good qualities, her poise, her-ef
ficiency, herMntelllgence and you will
still be forced to admit that—Judging
her superficially—the modern girl Is
not canable of a great nnd enduring
love. To begin with, she is too selfish,
to i s i-'-centered, too set on tlft* nur
s'iH (•' what 1 -> ( .n 'tiers pleasure,
1 to übt n • »i her elf to that self-sacrl
| flto-wh.eh in love, at Its best. And
th 'Ti, p : hints, she Is to vim.
| My"4f f, I tt iti and have always been,
i a str>>Pg supporter of the civil con-
I. trrct in matrimony. Matrimony,
! af'er alt. Is—however much sentl
j mental, luldc'e-t ged fogeys like my
-1 self may like to regard it as *a pure
| love affair—a legal undertaking. And
I think that it is high time for the
j young man of today to understand
j that his legal undertaking when he
marries a self-supporting or an Inde
! pendent young woman Is not confined
purely and simply to housing her. The
modern woman, you see, Is something
more than a mere domesticated pet.
She requires her leisures, her pleas
ure* and, more perhaps even than
these, her full partnership rights.
STARLIGHT HEAT SPECTRUM
Scientist of Bmithaonian Institution
Explains How Be
Determined.
By measuring a hundred millionth
degree of temperature and a trllllonth
| of an ampere of electric current, Dr.
O. G. Abbot of the Smiths" nian Institu
tion has determined for the first time
the heat spectrum of starlight, as he
•nnounced In aa address at tha Car
negie Institution of Washington.
Working with the 100-inch telescope
at Mount Wilson observatory this fall.
Doctor Abbot measured the heat at dlf
"erent parts of the spectrum of ten
stars and the sun. The rays were dis
persed by a spectroscope In a band
sunllar to the rainbow.
The bright star Capella, which Is
very similar to our own sun in Its
Spectrum, was found to furnish the
equivalent of one horsepower to an
ureu on the earth approximately equal
to the state of Minnesota. Rut this
prominent stffr Is feeble Compared
| with our sun, which Is equal to a
I hundred billion (Vpellus and sends
down on twenty square feet heat equal
to a horsepower. On the whole earth
Capella's heat equals 500 horsepower,
and as all -the stars together equal
500 Oapellas, this would amount to
one-quarter million horsepower over
the whole earth from the stars- alone.
#oottlsh Estates Being Bold.
Enormous estates In Scotland are
going iindor the hummer, duo In many
cases to the taxes that have followed
the war. As many as 310 square
miles of forests, grouse moors and
(arms, with salmon and trout Ashing,
whole rivers and lochs, Islands and
! mountains, nnd comfortable houses
1 ure of-red, for sale at the present
time, Including lurge part of the
Ca.fdc ilan f -r.jr. Yu ht meliorates
j stir *i t! i t(k e Ictitlfnl.
■ The ore ?> t statement of the game
I t a A on' sotno af tie* properties, and
oj the average 'ik A i f troi t and
salmon, brings Into strong relief the
fic that, • like Scott's "Finnan had
dock,' the .«;*>; ting thus indicated
' hus a rtHlsh of a very jmcullur and
delicate Haver," Inimitable elsewhereJ
Going One Better.
One of tlie brightest "stars" In "The
I Island Klxjg" at the Adelphl theater la
Nancle Lovnt. She sings and acts
cba. tultigly,
I paid Miss Lovat a visit the other
evening, and she asked me If I had
"heard this one." I hadn't.
Two kiddles were engaged, ln a brag
ging match.
"My mummy's gone to the shops to
j pay some bills," said Joan, proudly.
"My mummy doesn't have to,"
j sneered Doris. "The men come to the
I house for ours."
Here la another of Miss Lovat'l
j atorles.
"George!" murmured the girl, as she
nestled close to him, "cigars are noth
ing but a habit,"
"Yes, and you've now broken one of
my habits," said the young man, as
' he sadly withdrew the remains of a
Havana from his i|ocj;et,—London Tit-
I Bits. . r „ . .
BRUSHES FOR HOUSEHOLD
1 i
They May Be Divided Into Three
Classes, Which Are Brittle, Hair, j
and Fiber.
There are two classes of brushes,
those with backs and ..those with
out. These come In bristle, In hair and
in fiber. It Is fiber and bristles that
are of special Interest In discussing
household needs.
The backless brush has the ad
vantage of being usable In any posi
tion and thereby being at least twice
as long-lived as the brush whose only
working surface Is one side. These
brushes are nnirvelously made and the
bristles, hair, fiber or fabric (mops)
are so fastened In as to make a falling
bristle almost an Impossibility. These
brushes come In every department of
house life: toilet, bath, pantry, laun
dry, clothes, kitchen, halls and walls.
The Husslan pony gives the best horse
hair, nncl the wild boar gives the most
and hi'-st bristles. The test for the
bristle is thi't It will not break If
bent buck and will spring Into place
lignln. The lmlr ami bristle when
burned give a characteristic lmlr odor.
The fiber brush, though a cheaper
brush. Is ii'! >p'ed to things for which
the bristle brush Is not adapted. The
fiber makes a good scrubbing brush,
but the bristle would not be stiff
enough. Many fibers are made to look
like bristle, but the bristle test will
snve you from a rash purchase. The
bristle brush Is expensive and so Is
the brush of camel or badger hair
from which painting and shavln?
brushes are made.
Radium From Bohemia.
Government-owned mines at Jachy
mov, Bohemia, are turning out ura
nium ore, rich In radium, and the
known supply Is Raid to be sufficient
for 20 years at the present rate of
production; In addition, there are
three large mines not yet prospected
hs to depth. These facts are given
out by the Scientific American. Two
grams of radium a year are now be
ing produced and net profits to the
Czechoslovak republic for the past year
were about 3,500,000 crowns. The ra
dium Is selling today at 10,000,000
crowns per grain, a crown being now
worth about 1.04 cents. While pro
duction In the United States Ir greater
In quantity, the .Tachymov orea are
reputed to be rloher In quality.
"Pardnere,'? '"\ v '
In these days of bonding companies
and enormous corporations the old
phraae, "His word was as good as his
bond," has a homely sound, and little
tales of partnership with never
a hard and fast legal instrument nam
ing what Is his and. what Is other's,
seem like old tales out of the past.
Hut the other day when Sam Harris
and George M. Cohan dissolved their
seventeen-year-Ald partnership, they
ended n period of agreement In their
Joint producing business In which no
contract ever existed, and yet their |
business was one where more csn- |
tankerous hitches eccur than In most, i
Smooth are the seas when two men, |
each of whose word goes, do busings
together.—Christian Science Monitor.
Caribou Swarm In Yukon.
Tens of thousands of wild caribou
are reported to be swarming over the
hills through the suburbs of Dawson,
Y. T„ for a radlu* of 50 miles. The
great herd, which annually treks
through the district. Is now moving
| northward. Large herds swimming
the Yukon have Interfered with the
progress of steamers. The herd Is
, so vast that the hunting by men, wom
en and children, who have provided
nearly every home with deer meat for
the winter, has made no noticeable
effect on It.
Lost Souls.
A spiritist tells us that people play
golf Iri the life hereafter. If they use
the snrne language while playing It
that they do here, we think we know
in which division of the hereafter ths
game Is played.—James J. Montague.
Paper That Can Pe Washed.
J Many possible usee suggest thorn
i selves for a special pujier recently
i produced and patented by a Japanese
i inventor. This paper, according to an
i j Illustrated article published In the
i j popular Mechanics Magazine, Is re
j markably strong and ran be crumpled
• up and washed with soup and water,
I much as one would wash clothes. So
I durable Is this paper that it carKbe
' used as a covering for umbrellas, and
j when soiled cau be easily cleaned at
j home.
> Watching Forests,
j New York Is the first state In which
a relnventory of the wood-using in
i dustriee has been made, says the
American Forestry Magasine. Several
i other states have now engaged in
. similar work, the value of which from
I an educational standpoint alone can-.
I not be overestimated.' The more
, states that will hold the stop watch,
, so to upeak, on forest depletion, the
more clearly will we be able to gauge
the national effect* of iU progress.
NO-47
Clover Increases Corn Yield.
N. C. Agr'l Extension Service.
Trenton, N. C., Dec. 16. C. M. I
Foy, who lives four miles from I
Trenton in Jones county, has I
r ound that it pays to use a legume I
in building up his crop yields. la I
a demonstration conducted in co- ■
operation with County Agent E. I
F. Fletcher this past season, aa I
acre of laud which was planted to I
corn gave some interesting re- I
suits. This entire aero was ferti- I
lized with 120 pounds of an 8-8-3 I
fertilizer before the corn was I
planted on May IG. All of the I
land in the acre was the same I
type. T)u one-fourth of the acre, I
crimson clover was p'owed under I
before the corn was planted; onQ- I
fourth had the clover grazed and I
the stubble plowed under; one* I
fourth was given a top dresser of I
20u pounds of an 0 —!>—2, and one- I
fourth was used a* a check plot I
with nothing added except the I
regular fertilizer u.sed over the I
whole acre when ihe corn was I
planted.
Here are the yields:
Plot with clover -41.5 bushelS' 1
per acre.
Plot with clover mubble— 37.7 I
bushels per acre.
Hot with top dresser'—36.o
bushels per acre.
Plot used as check—2G.4 bosh- j
els per^cre.
This demonstration proves that 1
clover will help to increase the
average yfeld because the plot 1
which wab fertilized with an 8-3-3
mixture gave only 26.4 bushels, I
while the plot on wL.ch the clover I
was plowed under before the same
fertilizer was added gave a yie : d
of 41.5, an increase of over 15 I
bnsheles per acre. E. C. Blair of !
the Division of Agronomy assist
ed Mr. Fletcter and Mr. Foy in
conducting this demonstration jl
aud the results show that the
farmers of this section should be- 1
gin the practice of usfng mors
legumes in their crop building and I
1 land building operations.
Viole -scented seaweed grows in
the lak * ,if the Mauyishlak Pe
ninsula in the Caspian Sea, and
the pleasant odor scents the air
for miles form its source.
666 quickly relieves Colds
and LaGrippe, Constipation,
Biliousness and Headaches.
Hhick For Hire.
Let us do your hauling of every
I kind, moving, etc. Have a new
I truck. Terms reasonable.
Boamuaw & Fuller.
i'hone 656 ( v ' Graham, N. Of
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LOVICK H. KERNODLE,
Attorney-at-Law,
GRAHAM, N. C.
Associated with John 1. Henderson.
Office over NallonaJ Bank of Alamauee
THOMAS D. COOPERT
Attorney and Counselior-at-Law,
BURLINGTON, N. C,
Associated with W. S. Coulter,
Nos. 7 and 8 First National Back Bldg.
S. C. SPOON, Jr., M. D.
Graham, N. C.
Office over Ferrell Drug Co. ~
Hours: 2 to 3 aud 7 to'J p. m,, aud
by appointment.
Phone 5)7
GRAHAM HARDEN, M. D
Burlington, N. C.
Office Hours: 9 to 11 a. m.
and by appointment
Office Over Acme Drug Co. \ -M
Telephones: Office -HO—Residence 28*
JOHN J. HENDERSON
Attorney-at-Law
»
GRAHAM. N. C.
Ofllec aver Nsllassi BMikul MsaasM
T, S. COOIC,
Attorney -at- Lear
GRAHAM, - • •- N. Q
Otßco Patterson building
Saoond Xlnor. .
DR. WILL UMG.JR.
»' . DENTIST I J 1
Irsham .... Nertk Carolina
, OFFICE IN PARIS BCILDINU
> I M