VOL. XLIX
BUSSESROUTCARS
Motor Coaches Driving Out Trol-
ley in Some Towns.
Good Roads Throughout the Count!)
May Threaten the Electrls
Car's Existence.
A town In Vermont has now abaiv
doned its trolley line and is to sub
stitute busses. It is announced that
when the change goes Into effect the
fare Will be raised from 8 cents to
10. If the street railway company
had put up the price no one would
have stood for It, we presume. A
street-car fare Is one thing, a bus fare
another. Such Is our unanalytical psy
chology.
Few opportunities are offered for
getting more for your money than a
ride on a street car, no matter what
the rate charged. Yet trolley com
panies here aud there are being driven
to the wall or out of business be
cause people "kick" at a legitimate
fare, while they are willing to pay
more for perhaps inferior, at least
Irregular service.
Picture the busses in this Vermont
town getting proprietor, clerks and pa
trons down to the store on Main street
on the morning after heavy snowfall.
They will be good snow buckers If
they do it, for they won't have any
plowed-out trolley tracks to run in.
This promises to be an interesting ex
periment on (his account. Where busses
heretofore have been tried either
they have not operated where they
had to contend with heavy snow or
they have run In the tracks of the
street railways.
The motor bus Is multiplying In
New York and in this state would
probably have sent the Connecticut
company's rails and cars to the Junlc
man had not the public utilities com
mission intervened.
In the city of London there
are no street car lines. Motor
busses apparently serve the city and
environs dependably. Success of the
motor bus In this country will In
the end depend on the quality of
service rendered. Hereabouts the trol
ley seems to have certain advantages,
In regularity, dependability, c»st and
upbuilding of suburban territory which
it would be a calamity to lose. It was
predicted thirty-flve years ago, when
the trolley was In its Infancy, that a
superior method of transportation
would soon supplant It. The under
ground cable and. various other de
vices have had their day and disap
peared, but the trolley still stops to
take us abroad. It has been a faith
ful servant.
Street Improvement, of course,
makes the motor bus a possible com
petitor. Little advantage apparently
Inheres today In steel rails, as a well
surfaced road provides for rubber
tired vehicles good enough traction.
Government, state and town appro
priation of hundreds of millions year
ly for good roads have created a con
dition that may threaten the trolley's
existence. If that time comes there
will have to be a lot of new lawmak
ing.—Hartford (Conn.) Times.
United States Abounds In Qema.
Practically every known gem is to
be found somewhere In the United
States. Diamonds are to be found in
Arkansas, North Carolina, Kentucky,
Georgia, Ohio, Wisconsin, Colorado
and California. Montana leads In the
production of sapphires and also of
rubles, while others of the same fam
ily, especially the true emerald, which
is often more valuable than diamonds
of equal size, Is found in North Caro
lina and New Mexico. While the
largest and richest of the blue variety
of topaz comes from Russlai Colorado
has produced a marvelous reddish
brown stone that cannot be excelled,
while the clear varieties from New
England and Utah are as lovely as a
diamond. Many lands have given gar
nets, but the finest are from New Mex
ico. Nevada's opals have become im
portant in the commercial world.
Fresh-water pearls' come from the
mussel and are found In the rivers of
Arkansas, Indiana and Tennessee.—
Detroit News.
Colors Worn by Jockeys.
There are record! to show that King
Henry VIII as early as 1530 dressed
his Jockeys In colors, but nothing to
prove that the colors were always the
same. In 1762 the Jockey club posted
a notice to the effect that several own
ers of racing horses had selected colors
to be worn by their Jockeys. Some of
the colors chosen then are still In use
by the same families.
Near the Year's End.
The last orchids of the year bloom
In September and October. They are
the ladies' tresses, probably the most
common of the orchid family in east
ern North America, says Nature Maga
sine. Ail country dwellers know their
stiff, upright, slightly twisted bloe
aoma. The two most common are the
nodding ladies' tresses and the slender
iaOUa' treasML * %
THE ALAMANCE GLEANER.
ADVANCE IN TREE SURQERY| I Thl Eton College.
1 This famous educational Instltutloi
at Eton, England, was founded bj
Henry IV (1422-1401) in 1440, undei
the title of "The College of the ISlessed
Mary of Eton Beside Windsor." Th«
pupils consist of king's scholars, ox
collegers who enter college between
twelve and fourteen years of ago. Un
til 1851, the education was purely
classical, but In that year'mathemat
ics was admitted Into the curriculum,
and In 1800 physical science was added
to the course of study. Eton has been,
for generations, the favorite school for
the sons of the nobility and gentry of
Eng' rnd. Among the famous men that
have studied at Eton may be named
Horace Walpole, Bollngbroke, I'orson,
Hallam, Gray the poet, Shrl>y, Well
ington, Canning, Fox, Gladstone,. Lord
Salisbury and Sir John Luiibock.
Million* of Dollari Being Bp»nt An
nually to Salvage Things
of Beauty.
Tree surgery, as It Is practiced to-,
day, Is less than a quarter of & cen-!
tury old. It was, naturally, crude In
It* beginnings, and the past ten years
have been the era of Its greatest de
velopment. It may be iiald that this
development has closely paralleled that
of the automobile. In both cases the
original principle was sound, but It
has taken a good many years to bi'ing
about the refinements which constitute
the efficient gas-driven car and per
fected tree surgery of the present day..
Among Americans no line of com-1
merclal or professional endeavor can
be expected to thrive or even endure
for long unless It has a sound economic
justification, says E. A. Quarles. We
are a practical people and things Im
practical make a very limited appeal.
American home owners spend yearly
not less than $5,000,000 in the care of
their trees, exclusive of work done on
them by labor in their own employ.
rpl en years apo it Is doubtful If half
that sum was spent. These figures
speak forcefully In confirming the ac
ceptance of tree surgery as an Impor
tant and practical application of sci
ence to the preservation of a useful
material possession of mankind.
Shade trees about the home have
both an aesthetic and economic value.
■\Vith many the first-named would justi
fy any reasonable care for their pres
ervation. Louis Fuertes, the noted
painter of birds, said in a recent ad
dress that he, for one, was tired of
hearing people appealed to for the pro
tection of birds because of their eco
nomic value, great as this la. Those
of us whose lives are spent with the
trees and whose daily endeavors have
to do with their preservation some
times have the same feeling If we must
be brutally frank. "Only God can
make a tree," In the words of Joyce
Kilmer's Immortal verse. Do not Its
majesty, grace, beauty and the sug
gestion it gives of a link between man
and the Creator furnish all the urge
that is necessary to give our treea the
care they deserve? Short of man him
self, few creations of the Almighty so
completely fill the eye and satisfy the
aesthetic sense as do the trees. In
practically all landscaping of any scope
trees are the dominating motif. Cer
tainly they deserve better care from
man than they receive.—Arts and Dec
orations.
New Cadmium-Gallium Lamp.
The production of light sources from
which pure monochromatic light of
various wave lengths and great in
tensity may be obtained la from a
practical viewpoint of great Impor
tance In the field of optica.
During the paat month, the bureau
of standards haa constructed an en
closed quarts vacuum lamp ualng an
alloy of gallium and sine, similar In
many respects to the cadmium-gallium
lamp previously designed. The design
of the new lamp has bean so perfected
that the lamp operates quite satisfac
torily with very little flickering, giv
ing several Intense lines, one red and
several blue and green.
Preliminary experiments have been
made In connection with the produc
tion of a thallium lamp, bat the re
sults so far have not been entirely
satlafactory owing to the high tem
perature at which It Is necessary to
run the lamp to prevent the thallium
from depositing on the walls of the
light space, thus covering up the arc.
—Scientific American.
Honor Among Chlneae.
It appears that there is a very high
sense of honor among Chinese, writes
Henry Crosby Emery, LL. D. So is
there among the merchants of Amer
ica, England, Germany and other coun
tries. Again the differences between
individuals are Infinitely greater than
those between nations. To all this
nust be added that, since China Is an
older country, her merchants devel
oped a sense of honor long before
western countries. At a time when
European commerce was half trade
and half piracy, China had developed
this high commercial morality. It Is
probably the half-buccaneering traders
who first brought news of this strange
and honorable custom to lands who as
yet knew It not Today Chinese com
mercial honor and English or Ameri
can commercial honor differ little ex
cept that China had developed it cen
turies before It was adopted In foreign
lands.—Harper's Magaslne.
Henri, Aguess«au.
If anyone is Inclined to depreciate
the Importance of a few minutes a day
devoted to some task or hobby, let him
consider the case of Henri Aguesseau,
the great French Jurist and statesman
(1668-1751). Mfne. Aguesseau had
the blameworthy liablt of keeping her
husband waiting every evening about
fifteen minutes after the dinner bell
rang. Aguesseau utilized this quarter
of an hour each day to write a work
on jurisprudence, which he brought eat,
after some years. In four tars* quarto
volume*.
GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY. OCIOBER 18,1923
The C.orso.
The name Coreo is given the prin
cipal thoroughfare of Ho n» about a
mile in length, *>xteni' , :ip from the
Porta del Popolo to the foot of tho
Ci pttoline hill. It la lined with slio|>s,
palaces and private houses, nnd Is the
scene of the festivities of the carnival,
which Is annually celebrated at Koine,
just before the beginning of Lent.
Itaces of riderless horses along the
crowded Corso fori,, one of the prin
cipal events of the celebration; while
the throwing of flowers jind confec
tions from the windows ar,,l bal- [
conies upon the occupants of car
riages In the street below adds much
to the merriment of the occasion.
Homeric Verse.
The name Homeric verse Is some
times given to hexameter verso—the
spic or heroic verse of the Creeks and
Romans —because it was adopted by
Homer In hi- t" 0 grout p ins, the
Iliad and Oil; ssi y, Hexameter verse,
as its name Implies, consists of six
feet, the first four of which may be
either dactyls or spondees, while the
fifth must regularly be a dactyl and
the sixth a spondee. When, however,
the fifth foot Is a spondee, the verse
Is said to be spondaic. A spondee
consists of two long syllables, and a
dactyl of one long syllable and two
short ones. Virgil's Aeneid also la
written In hexameter verse.
Culpable Parents.
Charge the growing up unfit to the
parent who breaks the spirit of tho
child, or cuddles it Into egotism and
temperamental nervous bankruptcy
and lies to it and gives it the deadly
homemade examples of violent quar
reling, lle-a-bed laziness and whining. !
I have raised Airedale terriers. Any
body will admit an alredale terrier Is
not the sensitive organism a child Is,
and anybody who has raised good Aire
dales knows that one would ruin a
litter by the cruelties under the name
of discipline or the petting under the
name of devotion which are dealt out
to human offspring.—Saturday Evening 1
Post.
The Channel Islands.
The name Channel Islands Is ap
plied to a group of small Islands In
the English' channel, lying off the
northwest coast of France. Their to- !
tal area Is about 75 square miles,
and their population numbers about
100,000. The principal Islands are j
Jersey, Guernsey, Aiderney and Sark. \
Jersey, Aiderney and Guernsey are
fnnious for their cattle. The "Channel
Islands" were anciently an appanage
of the duchy of Normandy, nnd havo
belonged to England since t!se Con
quest. The Inhabitants still speak
the old Norman-French language.
\
Exploding Cornstalks.
Cornstalks being hollow, having no
pith, and belli-; divided Inside every
few Inches Into sections, ai" very com
bustible when dried n the un, and
the air confined v i Ma i'.. hollow sc. -
tions warmed by the external hent e::-
ploil 'S with very considerable lore,
so that a canebrake un lire gives the
Idea of a continued roar of distant
musketry.
Flatfish.
When the young li. ; -di hatches, Its
eyes are on the right and left sides
of Its head, as In ordinary fish***. but
as development proceeds one eye mi
grates to the opposite side, so that in
the adult both eyes are on the sat ie
aide of the head, says J. V. Leech, in
Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences.
Thistles Ed.ble.
In Scotland, despite the "tVlm datir
meddle wl' me?" motto, the rational
emblem Is oft n lerourod hj -hungry
youths. The tMf- k* head, having been
cud off, Is shorn of Its down, anil the
center eaten like cheese, which It
somewhat resembles In taste and con
sistency.
Bavlng of Breath.
Wiseman—'To look at that English
man you'd think he was a tramp,
woudn't yoof" Jokely—"Well, I know
for s fact that he hasn't a place that
he can call home." Wiseman—"Non
sense I why his mansion ID London Is"—
Jokeljr—"Sumptuous. yes; but he calls
l| '•!»*"—-Catholic Standard Times.
BILL BOOSTER SAYS
v xrvuKr \P fcowsi OP IUEGE
V POBUC MPaOVSKAEvrcS
OO INCREASE TA*ES A UTruE?
-XUEM'RE VJOR-TH \T\ \P A
PSU-OVJ WAS VJIUUW6 tOGOr
ALOMG \N\tW -OAS. Bfcß-S.
MECCSSVYIES OF UF6 , VAE
COOUO UVE PREYtH OHEfcP,
©Uf V4WD WAMTS UVE
VU A CA\JE "? "
Jr||
Svbiipoe
NEW A Fie A IN
FLYING NEA
Inexpensive Transportation Fore
idowod by Remarkable Success
At'.ninej by Motor Gliders.
A new era in air flying, that of
cheap, safe, popular airpinnlng, h
foreshadowed by the remarkable sue-
c "s attained by tiny liritibli airplauii
called motor gliders, One of these, u
siual! monophino fit led with H three
lior.su power engine, rceontly reached
u speed of 5.'! miles an hour during
tests near London. It clluibed to 2,350
feet, and, although in the air for an
hour and 20 minutes, Consumed less
tlinn a gallon of gasoline.
French aviation experts also are
perfecting similar "pocket-planes," in
tended for use by amateur aviators
and sporting enthusiasts. In England
« small "car with wings," capable of
carrying its owner through the air at
the speed of an express train with no
more power than is required by a mo
torcycle, has reached such a practical
stage that orders are being booked
for it by tiie public.
Itising out of small Olds and being
wonderfully controllable in the air,
these cheaply-run winged cars are to
be made to alight so slowly that the
risk of a crash on landing, even un
der' adverse clrcunistuncps, will be
practically eliminated. Furthermore,
such machines will he so handy on the
ground, anil their wings will fold so
neatly, that It will be possible to house
them In ordinary motor garages.
It Is expected (hat the owner of
one of these machines will be able to
make the trip from London to I'arls
and hark, sweeping high over the
channel and escaping all the Irrita
tions and delays of earth transport,
for about A movement Is now on
foot to get motor-garage proprietors
to set aside smooth-surfaced fields,
marked clearly so they can be seen
from above. In this way tlie drivers
of little "air cars." when on week-end
aerial rambles, will have points all
over the country, where they can de
scend and replenish their gasoline
.tanks, or make any necessary repairs
or adjustment*.
Seek and Ye Shall Find.
Ash barrels :.nl garbage rans mn.v
contain tninure-s. Many years ago
a Nev. York in u n trod Crawford who
was Visiting the national capital hap
pened to t.oih e an xtm large peach
mono m a garbage nn that was stand
ing on the curb, .mil he wrapped It In
a piece of paper and arried It back
home with him. Ho plan (1 It and
the seedling that came from that
stone w:ts the source of all the excel
lent Cr . ord peaches In.the world.
Her Neat Little Be(j«me.
Wife—Hear, If you'll get a car 1
can save a lot "n clothes during oor
vocation this summer
flub —llow do you mean?
Wife—Well, you s»-e, If we go tc
one hotel as formerly I'll need sever,
dres.se*; whereas if we have a car 1
can get one dress and we'll go to sev
en hotels.—Boston Transcript.
Earrings as Heirlooms.
A New Hampshire w-niuu boasts of
a pair of earrings that has been worn
•In her family for nearly I'*) yeora.—
Indianapolis Xews.
Examcfie of Melting Pot.
Twenty-nine different nationalities
are represented among the pupils at
tending one public school in Vancou
ver, B. C.
Another Version.
All the world's a stage and the scen
ery Is much more satisfactory than the
cast. —Boston Transcript.
ODD SEA ANIMAL
Soldier Crab and His Habits
Described by Writer.
Is a Terrible Glutton and Desperati
Fighter—Will Battle to the
Death for Home.
Of all the queer creatures that live i
•n the sea, there is none strur.ger than
the hermit crab, or the soldi ?r crab, 1
as lie Is son»tlmes called, says Mary 1
Dudderidge. The second name Is bet
ter than the first, for the hermit crab
Is neither pious nor dignlfie'', as a
hermit should be, and he does not live j
alone, as we shall see later lie -j,
on the contrary, a terrible glutton and !
a desperate fighter; for he lives In a
world of hungry creatures,' nil anxious
to eat and not to be eaten, and he
does not intend to be eaten If he can
by any means avoid it.
And In order that he sluill not he
eaten, it Is first of all nec ssary lb,,
lie shall get himself a hoti a. No'iir"
has been rather unkind to hlni, f r,
wiiiie all his cousins of the crab fvn
ily ore clad In coats of mall, and m . y !
of his neighbors In the set are able
to build themselves stron;- and beau
tiful houses, he has no tools with
which to build and no armor except
mi the front part of bis body. So
lie Is obliged to take refuge In a
strong tower that some one else has
built, and in his search for It, lie does
not trouble himself much about ques
tions of right find wrorg. If no ono
has a claim on the h. ise that he
wants, well and good; but In'any case,
he must have a safe place to live In. i
If, therefore, lie finds urv one in pos
session of the coveted stronghold, he
does not scruple, if the unfortunate
tenant is weaker than 1 iinself, to pull
him out and make a meal of him. If j
this tenant happens to be a brother :
hermit, there Is sure to be a royal
row. The pair sometimes fight to the !
death, and the victor may devour the j
vanquished. In many cases, however, j
It has been observed that the upshot j
of the fracas Is simply an exchange ;
of shells, the defeated party taking
possession of* the abandoned fortress j
of his enemy. And after all the fuss, ;
the victor very likely fli.Us that the j
new house does not suit him and he j
must look for another.
The hermit crab has n great fancy
for the shell of the whelk; but In
ruse of necessity he will lake 113 with
anything hollow, even an ild pipe or
bottle. When shells are plentiful,
however, he Is as particular im any
housekeeper looking for a llat. When
he finds an apartment that appears
satisfactory, he examines It very care
fully, holding It off at aim's length,
turning It around and poking his claws
inside. Having finally decided that It
will do, he comes out o' his old shell
and darts Into the new so quickly that
It Is almost Impossible to see him do
It, for he has no mind to expose his
soft body to the dangers of the sei..
lie hangs unto his old shell till he Is
sure the new one will do, and often
changes his abode several tiroes be
fore he Is satisfied.—St. Nicholas
Magazine.
More Women Enter U. 8.
For ten years there has been a
steady Increase In the proportion of
women to men among the Imiilgrsnts 1
from all parts of Europe. L'asf »ar,
for the first time since Immigration >
statistics have been kept, there were
more women than men admitted to p
the country. The proportion l» pnr
tlally explained by the fact that lm- !
migrants of former years have pro;,- j
pered and are now. sending for tht-Jr 1
mothers, wives and daughter:! to 'oln
them. Respite the Increasing nunibT
of women coining In there Is no ap- |
parent relief for the household help
problem. A trilling proportion of
these women take up domestic worV
Many of them enter factories. Hta
tlstlcs show that of the wo: en Ironi!
grunts comparatively few are trained
for any kind'of employment. Tf. •
same condition Is found among ?li ;
men. A large proportion of this Im
migrants are classified under "no oc
cupation," There are fewer laborers
coining In than at uny time In twenty
years.
Use (f Feldspar Growing,
Tlit! exploitation of the many feld
spar deposits nt the UnlKfd .States Is
nil tlie titu> Increasing, "wing to the
extensive line of this mineral In the
manufacture of pottery, enamel ware,
enamel brick and electrlcware. It In
also used for binding together the
material of emery or carborundum
wheels as well as to s me extent In
tin: manufacture of oputescent jrlnss
and artificial teeth. It Is useful In the
preparation of scouring soaps* and
window washes, because being slight
ly softer than glass » lg not likely,
as Is the quartz contained in some
soap if, to abrade the surface. Feld
spar employed In pottery must be
nearly free from iron-bearing min
erals.
M.klng the Cactus Pa)
Each year our huge fields of cactnl
■>n the western plains are made t
yield some new form of profit that
will eventually make our waste Ifind
a: (1 Its "sole product truly valuablej
The latest use of the prickly plan!
has been the turning of it Into good
cattle food. The thorns would maks
rougli eating, of course, but they may
either be burned off by gasoline torch
or softened by being chopped wltli
the plant and allowed to steep In the
Juices, so that cattle can consume the
whole in combination with other foods.
It has been found tlmt such food in
creases the supply of milk. The
glutinous moterlal obtulned f;om the
plant's leaves gives promise of becom
ing a valalile paper sl'e and the
small red .ills are yielding a profit
able supply of alcohol and a very ex
cellent vegetable coloring mutter foi
luuny purposes.
Mriiime de la Suze,
Henrietta Oollgny de la Stize wa*
the daughter i.f Mnrechal .!«• Collgny.
She was lioni In 'CIS und 'vns one of
the most ndedred poetesses of her (lay.
Nothing, however, could ex eed the
want of order In which thfs Rifted
woman lived, tior hr apathetic negli
gence »>f her affairs. One morning at
3 o'clock her ' O'isi ho! 1 goods were
seized for debt. She \. as not up, and
she begged the officer on duty to allow
li'T to sieep a fe>.- hours longer, et she
had been up lat thf> night before, lie
granted her request and took a seat In
the anteroom. She slept comfortably
until 1 I, when she arose, dressed her
self fur a dinner party, walked ir to
the officer, thanked and complim 1 od
Mm f r his polltetx and gixid n m
nei s, and, coolly adding, "I leave vuu
ma .ter of everything," she went out.
John Gilpin.
John Gilpin was a Loudon linen
draper and train baud captain, whose
amusing adventures are related by
Cowper in Ills ballad entitled "The Di
verting History of John Gilpin, Show
ing llow He Went Further Than He
Intended and Came Safe Home Again."
The original of the poem Is said to
have been a Mr. Bayer or Beyer, a
famous linen draper whose estnbilsh
ment was on Paternoster row, where
It Joins Cheapslde. The story was rt
lated to Cowper by Lady Austen (who
remembered If from her childhood) tn
divert the poet from his melancholy.
The poem first appeared In 1782, and
was afterward Included In the second
volume of Cowper's works.
Tied Up for Life.
The man of the house In name only
mopped the bald spot in front where
his forehead should have been and
gazed with Intense hatred at his wife
a few steps aheady It seemed evident
that he was about to divulge a con
fid ;nce, and the hotel clerk leaned to
ward him with a friendly, expectant
glance. The grumbling one came near
er to the clerk and said: "When 1
got married her folks told her not to
do It and ray folks told me to do
It. Said it vas a misalliance and we
wouldn't stay together a week. Mis
alliance nothing! I've been married
twen'y years, and I can't even get out
'•>r one night."-—Prize Story In Judge.
or Kill.
Bachelors have often been penalized
with a view to encouraging matri
mony. In Sparta criminal proceedings
might be taken against those who
married too late or not at all. Turn
ing to America, the citizens of East
ham, Mass., decreed that every man
should kill si* blackbirds ;.nd three
crows yearl . while he reman d single.
In 17.16 the assembly of Maryland laid
a tax of five shillings a year upon all
bachelors over twenty-five worth £IOO,
und twenty shillings on those pos
sessed of £3 ►
Tre Burrowing Owl
Thi! buriowli)4 owl la a .-.mail owl'
which burrows in the ground In many 1
parts of North and South America. It
Is about ton inches long, grayish
, r rovn, pr« i'uisl:, spotted with white, |
with tb« head smooth, without pluml- !
rorns. Xlila Is the owl, well known
fin the western prairie* in connection
vlth the prairie lo,'.s. In the des.jrtfdj
burrows of which It mak~>ii Its n-'St'
Ti est- ovls are (11 lr.sal, and feed upon
Injects and small mammnls and rep
tiles.
Criminals Use Tear Gas.
F.'iUljmient of a first-class criminal
now includes a gas mask and a supply
o. tear gas, the War department in
d leu tee In a rei>ort showing that the
crocks have not been far behind the
police In adapting this war material
to th! pursuit of "peace."
An example Is quoted of a boot
legger who carried tear gas In his
rum-laden car and when pursued
loosed It through the exhaust pipe.
I'ursuit ended immediately.
Ilecause the criminal has becotna a
customer of the gas mask manufac
turers, many police departments are
now considering the use of other than
tear gas—something that the ordinary
mask will not stop. Such a gas would
be far more dangerous and equally as
effective.
SO. 37
LEADS IN MEDICAL SCHOOLS
United States Has Eighty-two Out of
the Total of 446 In the
World.
Out of an approximate total c* 445
medical schools In the rorlrt, the
United States predominates r !th 82
schools, acco-'llng to a list prepared
by the Hoc ler Foundation. Next
come the B.i.tv.h Isles with 43, fol
lowed by France w'th 82, RUSP'B with
28, Germany with *>, China with 24,
Italy with 22, J"->an with 20, Indi.i
with 18, Spain wl'h 11. Mexico with
11, Brazil wt'h n,, In with 9,
Netherh.iids with 8, Poland with 5,
Swltzerliind with 5 and belglum with 5.
Fifty-four other countries* stmport
from one t« fo u . medical schools *ch.
Not only do stan' 1 rds differ g-*tly
between countries, but even wlthla na
tional areas, r.utably In the United
Stiites, medical schools are of dis
tinctly different grades as measured by
personnel, equipment, resources and
Ideals. In spite of great variation In
quality, how, ver, all these centers of
teaching are more or less directly dom
inated by the alma and methods ot
modern medicine. It Is one aim ot the
Fountain, says tie re
port, io hasten the development of In
teraatlon.'l co-operutlou In medical
education, by all available means.
New Sugar Beet Dlggei
It Is said that a machine for top
ping and digging sugar beets proai
lies to el'n.lnate " .eh nf the buk
breakln„' work of Harvesting. The
apparatus resembles u potato :
In general ontl're but In front of thj
lifts that remove the roots from tLe
cro-;nd Is a revolving disk twenty
Inches In diameter, so adjusted by a
spring and roller that it m* imires tt>e
cutting distance from the top ot tl i
beet Instead of irom the ground Im
mediately behind the di.v-; are two
lifts that remove the beets from the
ground and deliver them to an end
less chain elevator that , es them of
dirt and tiumpa them out behind the
machine. As the top and head of the
sugar beet contains ai add that
counteraots the sugar in the rest of
the root, a harvester must measure
the beets and cut 'hem at tlte
place.
is a Prescription for Colds,
Fever and LaGnppe. It'® .he
most speedy remedy ve
know, preventing clju
monia.
i'KUFIsSSIONAi. auL»S
J. li. BALL, U. c.
nu«oPitAcroit
.servuusj and Chronic
bUItU.»UTuN, N. C.
Office! Over itisJiAiiit rtovvliimt'g Murt«
i'cii;|ihjiie»; iiUicc. Uu«. iMMtittC' to.
LOVicM H. HERS
At? -y-auLavv,
GUA it ,«1, M . C .
Auvcialiui uilti .Joh.. J. lie.iiie. .uu.
Oilire uwr National Haul. of Waaiau^c
TiKIXIAS'L.
Attorney and
BU.tLLNC TON, N. C
Aut..iaicd with '#.S. Coulter,
N' 7 and' 3 Fun Nar.onal bank n'.Jg.
S. t. SPOON, Jr., M. i>.
(iralia.a, im. C.
'stee over Kerrell Dru..-' o.
i I I'm: 2to hu(l 7to!» p. i.; , ,»ud
by uppo'.u' iueat.
l'none 07'
( iJAHAiVi XL D.
I urtiay ton, N. C.
Otli' c Hours: U to 11 a. .n. •
siiul by appoiutiui m
Offi v Over Acuse Dru,' C...
Itleyhomi: Office I Iti -Reside,ice t
{JOHN J. HENOEBS9N
Altoraey-at-Law
•i.tAMAM, N. C. «
I lice aver Nalluaid banko! .Uaiaiac
3. cooz:,
Attorney-at- Law*
.HAM, . . - N. 0
OBS« I'atterson Building
-ec-jjd Floor. > .
?11. WIU.IIMG.JR.
. DENTIST : I I
.rtnmm, .... North Carallaa
IS PARIS BUILi ISO