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THE ALAMANCE GLEANER VOL. LII Old Abraham Stuck to Mitldle of Road A man and. his wife took jjp an v aged and supposedly wealthy relative to live with them, thinking they would profit when the old' fellow passed away. Later they learned that he hadn't much money, and they were anxious to get rid of him. They agreed between themselves that tiiey would start an argument at dinner. The husband would claim that the soup was too salty; the wife would declare that it was not salty enough. They would leave the matter to old Abraham. I* he agreed with' the wife, the husband would throw him out. If agreed with the hus band, the wife would throw him oat. Consequently, at dinner, the husband said: "Rachel, this soup is too salty." Rachel tasted the soup, and gald, "No, my dear, the soup is not salty enough." "Then," said the husband, "we will leave it to Abraham, and see what he says about It. Abraham, what do yon think: Is the soup too salty or Is it not salty enough?" Old Abraham, who was enjoying his soup, didn't hesitate, but said, between sips, "Veil, it suits nie."- L -Los Angeles Times. . Household Pet Knew Purposes of Knocker This story is vouched for by one who had been for many years cap tain of a sailing skip. Several times during the past few weeks he had been called to the door by a "rat-tat" on the knocker just as he was com fortably settled down with his pipe, and on each occasion at first there was apparently no reason to answer the door. One night, however, the vestibule door caught for a moment as lie opened it, and left only a small gap o'l about six or,eight Inches. Through this gap squeezed the house hold cat, a fine black one, and he guessed the animal had on other oc casions slipped past unnoticed. Fetch ing an electric torch he examined the door, and found marks showing the cat had climbed up, held itself in position by a grip on the door mold ing wliile it raised the knocker, a theory which was later proved cor rect. After hearing the usual knock, the captain crept quietly round the side entrance, and waited until the cat repeated the operation, then dropped quietly on the mat and looked expectantly at the door. —London Mail. Wood for Newspaper Since the customary units of wood measurement—cord, log measure or lumber scale—do not represent an ex act quantity, the cubic foot solid wood is used. Even this unit Is variable as to pulp yield according to the char acter of the wood as to species and rate of growth. However, taking the dry weight of spruce as 24 pounds per cubic foot, the commercial yield of 100 cubic feet would be about 2,300 pounds of mechanical pulp,, and of sulphite pulp 1,030 pounds. Commercially, news print Is made from a mixture of 75 pe/ cent mechanical and. 26 per cent sulphite. Consequently, a ton of news print would contain 1,500 pounds mechanical and 500 pounds sulphite. Then 1,500 pounds mechanical would require 66.2 cubic feet wood; 500 Pounds sulphite would require 48.5 cubic feet wood; 1 ton of news print *oald require 113.7 cubic feet or 2,-« •28.8 pounds oven dry spruce wood. Wat Good to Animals ' Mrs. Sarah Martha Grove-Grady of Timbridge Wells, England, who died gently, leaving an estate of $3,000,- left something over $300,000 to ner family, and over $2,000,000 for the *°rk of different societies in aid of animals, a great part of the money u to be used for the establishing of a refuge or refuges for tire preserva °n of all animals, birds or other Matures not human," on some island r on the mainland, where land may Wt"k rcliase(i for 4116 purpose, the ob being to make the animals safe '' m m °'estation or destruction by S!le !eft almost as much per » property as In her estate and » n ,i »! um9 were Slven to hospitals ler charitable purposes. Railway Gauge Varies he standard gauge of railways Is Cini lnohes ln the United States, cnn i Great Britain, a number of M , on the continent of Europe, vail b ° lng the Sauge which pre ra!iu ° n probab, y three-fourths of the S ayg °* the globe. There have various different gauges, and in U,. a nu mber thereof are In use at n n f resent day. The old broad K was 1 feet There are nar- Und n 6 " nes of 3 teet 10 Ire " inch*,. . Usnal Kau * e 18 8 ,fect 3 4 .' In France there are lines of I gilTh lnches: ln Spain and Portu- IncJ:* nor mal gauge is 5 feet 5% th. n Russ,a . 5 feet; in India, 1 Prevailing gauge is 5 feet 6 • Srli' the ® riu «hx colonies, 3 feet With various othen. How France Encourages Ideas In order to encourage matrimony In France, the Friendly Society of Parisian Youth has organized a "mar riage fair" at Chatou. Three hundred and twenty-eight young men and women left Paris with a band at their head, went to Chatou, and started the fiances' fair by an alfresco lunch, followed by a ball. Bach of them had previously filled up a form, giving details as to their situation and prospects, and making known their ideas regarding their life partner-to-be. In return for these forms each person received a num bered badge. If, at the ball or elsewhere, a young woman was attracted by the wearer of a certain number she could' find out all about him by simply quot ing hie number. Most of the men wanted wives who were "fond of home," while the principal stipulations made by the girls were that their prospective husbands should have safe jobs and satisfactory incomes. How Ships Will Be halved Itnllan government engineers have approved a plan for raising from Lake Nenii near Rome the pleasure galleys of Emperor Tiberius who died in 37 A. D. It Is believed that these gal leys are well preserved and that they wIH throw much light on the social life of the Roman nobility of that period. The question hys' attracted the atten tion of archeologists for centuries. as the Sixteenth cen /rcy a scientist named Albert! risked his life in an attempt to raise the an cient vessels. About thirty years ago Professor Maes, who spent years on his project, devised machinery which raised valuable pieces of bronze and marble. But it was found impos sible to raise the galleys because of their great weight. By the new plan the lake will be drained by cutting a funnel through the side of the extinct volcano crater In which the lake is situated. The project will probably cost SIOO,OOO. —rathflnder Magazine. How Birds Know the Way One of the many explanations that have been offered to account for the fact that migrating birds are able to find {heir way by night and In cloudy and foggy weather Is that they are sen sitive, In some way, to currents of terrestrial magnetism and, therefore, direct their .flight by the magnetic me ridians, says the Popular Science Monthly. This suggestion was put forth by M. A. Thouzier, a French pigeon fancier, who declares that car rier pigeons make poor flights during the occurrence of magnetic storms. He also asserts that the general use of wireless telegraphy has diminished the reliability of these birds to a surpris ing extent. Celtic History Celtic-speaking peoples occupied a very wide territory of old, spreading from central Europe, where the first records of them exist, far to the west, southwest and even southeast They settled In Gaul perhaps about 1000 B. C., and were probably at the height of their power about 400 B. C. Late* they were under constant pressure from the Germanic tribes to the north, and saw most of (heir territories con quered by the Romans, from, the south. They maintained their Inde pendence in the British isles, though, for centuries. Patriotic Pride The term "God's country" is often applied to a nation or country by its sons and daughters. A recently pub lished bulletin on Australia calls at tention to the fact that among the white Inhabitants poverty is prac tically unknown, the aged, Infirm and children are adequately provided for, the labor situation Is satisfactory and the territory itself offers unlimited possibility for development, exploita tion and the exercise of man's ingenu ity. All these things would make It seem a favored spot. ~ Originated Turkey Trot Going back to the early Eighteenth century to show that every innova tion In dancing haS met with violent opposition, a writer in Liberty Maga zine says that it was in 1912 that Ma bel Hlte, an actrens, and Mike Donlin, a ball player turned vaudevlllan, ( who was Mabel's husband, brought to Broadway the firU turkey trot New York had ever so2U. Right there de cently ordered terpslchore expired. Raven in Literature Bavens hold a high place in folk lore and in the real literature of many countries. From the beginning they have been thought uncanny, although, according to the English story It was the magpie and sot the raven which was the only bird to refuse to accom pany Noah Into the ark. How it, or rather they, for there must have been a pair of them, survived the flood tra dition does not telL GRAHAM. N. C., THURSDAY. APRIL 22. 1926. ''(lb?>s'l-Fear" Strong Among Real Romany s j If, during a country stroll, you come to a clear-rutfning stream or river, ! and notice at the bottom a collection j of broken crockery, kettles, pans, and ; so on, you may bo sure that a gypsy : camp is near, and that a g.vpsy has i died there. On that day after the funornl of 1 a real Romany, the relation-; burn all I the clothes and other coosupinble be longings of the dead person;" Then all the crockery and men si Is are broken and solemnly thrown Into the 'near est running water. Behind this queer custom lies "ghost-fear." It Is believed that, so long as any of the possessions of a dead gypsy remain Intact, his ghost will "walk," and ill-luck and misfor tune will dog the camp. Sometimes. [ so strong is this superstition, even the horse of a dead gypsy is de stroyed. Gypsies never utter the nsynes of ! the dead, and for a long time after a death will not eat or drink anything that was a favorite with the departed. This is "ghost-fear" again. Rarely, if ever, are Dowers placed j on a gypsy's grave. Some little pos- , session that they loved in life—a toy ; for a child, or a blackened teapot, j broken tipst, for an old woman, and I bo on—ls the usual choice. j _ | | Huguenot Was First New York Physician j Dr. Johannes La Montague was the first educated man of medicine to set- j tie down in the little Dutch town of , what is now New York and hang out j his shingle officially. He- was a Huguenot gentleman of forty-two, a , i man who lutd obtained a splendid ined- j ical And gp>ieral background at the University of Leyden. He had mar ried a girl named Rachel DeForest, whose family had moved to thl& new country, and the letters home had told j of suclr promise that he decided to try It for himself. So In 1G37 he came. Almost lmme- , diately he assumed an Important place ; in the commmunlty life. His reputa- | tlon gave him professional as well as j social position and he became one of j the big men of the day. Governor j Kleft appointed him to hfs council • within a year after his arrival, and he I was retained also by Governor .Stuy- j Sesant when that slightly crusty ; Dutchman took the reins. Doctor La Montagne treated his j first case In what are known as these j parts as long ago as 1637. —New York ! Evening Post. How Zoning Has Benefited Approximately 24,000,000 people, living in 261 municipalities through out the United States, are enjoying the benefits of zoning, according to statistics complied by the division of i building and housing of the Depart- j ment of Commerce. New Jersey leads j In the number of zoned municipali ties, having 66; New York has 41; ' California, 33; Illinois, 25; Mussachu- | setts, 24; Ohio, 16; Wisconsin, 13; In- \ dlana, 5; Michigan and Missouri, 4 each; lowa and Rhode Island, 3 each; j Florida, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, i Virginia and Washington, 2 each, and Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Maryland, Nebraska, North ; Carolina, North Dakota, South Caro lina, Tennessee, Utah and the Dls- , trict of Columbia, 1 each. __ i How Love Unites Men 1 When the Forth bridge was build ing, the immense arms from either side were completed; slowly and steadily they had been built out, and now at the center of the mighty all that was needed was the final rivet ing. But the day fixed was cold and chilly, and cold contracts metals. So, in spite of flreg set under the Iron to expand it the Inch or two required, the union could not be completed, and the day's program was a failure. But next morning thtf sun rose bright, the day was warm'Tand genial; the Iron then expanded, the holes came oppo site one another, and the riveters had nothing to do but drive the binding bolts home. So love unites men— •love never falleth." How Electricity Aided Interested In the experiment on a poultry farm where electric light caused the hens to lay more eggs, oil men In Monroe county, Ohio, now I hang electrlc-Ilght bulbs ln their oil shafts and leave them for two or three days with the result that the 1 heat causes the oil to flow better I from certain strata. One well pro duced ten barrels a day after this treatment, whereas it produced only one a day prior to the experiment ] How Pages Are Appointed' The pages of the United States con i gress are appointed by the sergeant •t-arms of the senate and doorkeep er of the house through the indlvldtfel senators and representatives. There are only 21 pages appointed and they must be between the ages of 12 and 16 years. They receive $3.30 per day for the time they are employed, that H when congress is in session. ; Pastor Got Scolding More or Less Merited One of the oddest things about ths I "Further Reminiscences," by S. Baring j Gould, is the fact that he tells an | amusing story of his experience ln get ting the words to the song, "John Bar leycorn," but omits all mention of the fact thnt he wrote "Onward Christian 1 Soldiers." The clergyman and writer spent much time in collecting the old songs of the countryside. He heard that an almost bedridden old sinner of the j neighborhood was an authority on "John Barleycorn," as It was sung in , I the district So Baring Gould called on him, fortunately, on a day when the old man's wife was away, and dls- i covered the invalid had managed to get downstairs. He sang ; gratefully and the ribald words were carefully written down. The next day the minister called to ! get his pencil and was met by an ! irate wife. "What do you mean,'* she asked, "coming here and getting my husband to sing his old trashy songs when he ought to be preparing to meet his Savior?" She said thnt she had put her husband to bed and had burned his trouse©i so lie could not get up again and entertain visitors. The* : minister was scolded as lie never had i been before for encouraging a man i to be wicked. ; , I ! Find Priceless Relics Below Antwerp Street ■ Golden altar yessels dating from | , the Tenth century have been found in ' , an underground passage ln an Ant | werp street recently, Pierre Van Pans sen reports, in the Atlanta Constltu | tlon. The passage was like a long j tunnel and experts claim that It wns formerly used by a rellgous order whose house was situated on the out skirts of tiie city. The friars used tlie tunnel to visit the cathedral when they I wished to avoid walking through the streets. The tunnel ends abruptly and j the site of the cloister to which It led I is even ln doubt. Near ves i sels of priceless value were the In- I evltable skeletons nearly always die ! covered In connection with such finds. I There Is no way to estimate when the j vessels were hidden. Some advance i the opinion that they were hidden from | the English raiders, others say they ex- j I cited the envy of Spanish soldiers. The : most likely explanation Is that they j j were brought to safety in the days S , of luconoclast outrages, when mobs In- i j vaded the churches and slashed price less paintings, smashed inimitably wrought gold and silver adornments and tore invaluable Illuminated book* and manuscripts into shreds. Motor Fuel From Sugar A French girl, daughter of a widely-' known chemist, has succeeded ln mak j Ing a powerful motor fuel by dlssolv- j ' Ing the heavy explosive lrol In a sugar | solution, says Floyd W. Parsons ln the I Saturday Evening Post, j The product is being hailed In France as an epochal discovery, be-, cause it Is more powerful than gaso line and can be manufactured at a I low cost. The experiments being carried on ln Australia to extract alcohol from the prickly pear, of which there are tens of thousands of acres, also hold forth hope for an additional supply ef mo j tor fuel. - A Pessimist Recently an Indianapolis suburban real estate dealer had been driving several miles with a man ten years his senior. When they started to get out of the car the real estate man's left knee pained him severely and It 1 was with difficulty thnt he got out. On learning that li!s guest often suf fered that way, ho inquired for the | remedy and received the following reply: "Why, there ain't any remedy. In about ten more years they'll both be that way!"— Indianapolis News. When to Feed Dogs No one knows how many dog own ers spoil their pets i>4 their manner of feeding them. If given too little food and drink, a dog may be forced to tarn scavenger and work up regular free-lunch routes among the neigh-' bors. On the pther hand, If fed too' often, or whenever the owner thinks about It, a dog gradually comes to have food on his m!nd«-all the time. A grown dog should be taught to ex pect food only once a day, and then all he wants. Naturally this should be in the evening after be has done his exercising.—Fred C. Kelly, In Hearst's International-Cosmopolitan, i Great Secret Out Uge—Ah tells yuh, Mose, dat Ah done foun' out de dlffunce between ' de men an' de women at . las'. Mose—Go long. Llge; It would take ! a heap-lot smarter man dan you ter ' find out dat But let's heah what yot J got ter say erbout it. lige—Why, Mose; a man'll g» $2 fer a $1 thing dat he wants, an' a woman'll gib (1 fer a $2 thing dst she don't want HOME, DAD AND THE BOY By FRANK H. CHELEY mi - .nil The Conscientious Dad kF S. * He is the one Dad In scores who really recognizes the full re \ sponsibillty of fathering a modern y American boy. "\ He is eager for constructive sug - uestlons and is glad of help from /& A Anywhere. / warmin' iid Each year sees a larger num- ' 0AD?" her of such Dads and a corre- I spondingly better crop of boys. — He 18 the innn ls constantly seeking the best, physically, mentally, socially and spiritually XaM in order that he may pass It on to / Ills heir. /1 [u\ SON!" He knows that most boys live II ii\. up to Dud's estimate of them! treat -1 wVftTTii them contemptuously, they become ' contemptible; trust them, and they X i 'ft become trustworthy; recognize •Mvfeg-—gffii V !✓'(l their growing manliness, and you The conscientious Und probably will not have so Lodges at " '*■ tend his funeral, but a real boy, well started toward manhood, will miss him mightily and hold him ln fondest memory. And when the One Great Scorer comes to write against Dad's name, KEEPING YOUNG WITH •mEWCI , he '' l note—not money gained or U J lost, bUi how he played the boy game. (© P. 1L Cbelcir. Denver. Colo.) t How Chestnut Weevil Deposits Eggs in Nut The worm found in a chestnut Is the larva of the chestnut weevil, a yellowish beetle with a long beak. During the blooming season, which is In June and July, the female bores through the burr of the chestnut and deposits her small white eggs In the immature nut. The larvae when hatched feed on the tissue of the growing kernels. After the nuts have matured the grublike worms gnaw through the shell and burrow into the ground, where they remain for eight or ten months. They finally emerge from the ground as mature weevils and the life cycle starts over again. Several eggs may be laid In a single nut. This accounts for the fact that frequently a worm is found in a nut which has no hole in It. — Exchanze. Men and Chairs "Men aro like chairs," writes a woman In a foreign exchange; "they vary In shape and size, but all can be sat on. Some into are like mahog any chairs; they lose their polish after a little while. Some are like Chippendale chairs; they need deli cate handling. Some are like plush upholstered chairs; one cannot stand them on a hot day. Others are like parliamentary seats, they have to be won. Some married men are like deck chairs; they are always being dragged about. Some are like rock ing chairs; they put you to sleep. And finally, some men are like benches; It takes more than one woman to sit on them —a wife and a mother-in-law." Garden of Eden Josephus, the Jewish historian, lo cates the garden of Eden between the Ganges and the Nile; others In sonth ern Babylonia; still others In Ar menia, near the source of the Tigris and the Euphrates. Recent discover ies would Indicate that Eden was the Sumerlan name for the plain of Babylonia at the south end of which stood the city of Eridu, formerly on the Persian gulf; and near It a beau tiful garden Inhabited by the gods and containing the Tree of Llfo. This points to a district north of tie Per sian gulf, nnd agrees with the Biblical evidence. Then and Now In 1830 an employee of the patent office, In Washington, resigned because he believed that all the Inventing that could be done was then accomplished Today there Is a bill before congress to do away with many models so that room may be had for models of recent and coming InvSulons. New Englaud farmers once cut down sev arnl telegraph poles because they be lieved that no one could send words through a solid wire. Work Where You Are. If yen Intend to go to work, there It Bo better place than right where yoq •re; If you do not Intend to go te work, you cannot gvt along anywhere. Squirming and crawling about from place to place can do no good.—Abra ham Lincoln. Worked Until He Was Ninety-Eight | The great Italian painter, Titian, continued to work until he was nine ty-eight. His great masterpiece, .Tenus," was one of the pictures that 'came from his brush after he was six ty years old. —— Natural!/. Hickii —I hear Hardy Upton Is pay ing his debts at hist. j Wicks—Yes. He sold his automo' bile nnd that put him on his feet— Washington Star. CHATTER Happy Is the man who can laugh at trouble, his own as well as other people's. Even when they are being pushed to the front some people can be pushed Just so fur. Don't parade your virtues with the Idea that the whole world Is on ths reviewing stand. You never can tell. Many a man takes a train of thought without know ing Its destination. The fellow who boasts that he can always master himself may not be much of a boss at that The cynical bachelor observes that many a girl who fishes for a hus band catches a skate. Nor can you tell from the size of ' a man how far he can Jump from the I frying pan Into the fire. Blobbs —"Borrowell snys he belongs to a swell family." Slobb—"Swell Is [ right. They are nil sponges." I As between turning the other clieek and hitting a fellow when he is down, it Is just as well to strike a happy ' medium. "I contend that every man should marry," Raid the newlywed. "Now. what possible excuse can you have for being slugle?" "Well, for one thing, I wus born that way," replied the bachelor. ' Muggins—"Closeflst can't be so mean, after all. He insists that when an appeal for charity comes, he al wnys puts his hand In his pocket" Bugglns—"lf he does, It's to satisfy himself that nobody eUe will." Weaving Genius Until the close of the Eighteenth century all fabrics carrying colored designs were woven entirely by hand. About 1801 Joseph Marie Jacqnard in vented an attachment which Is placed •t the top of a loom and automat ically selects strands of yarn required to form the patterns and draws them up to make the surface of the cloth and at the same time leaves the other strand to form the back of tho fabric. The attachment has ever since keen called the Jacquard. The Invention was first put Into commercial use in 1800 In France. Longest River in Canada The Mackenzie river Is the longest In Canada and the second longest In I >'orth America. Not the Crumbly Kind • A cake that is dough yields few (crumbs of comfort. —Boston Trsn , script. Faithfulness I Tlx deepest hunger of s faithful jhesrt Is faithfulness.—George Bitot JT. Obmacbt A Suggestion Mr. Btumblefoot—l'd rather dance than eat Miss Trlpplt—K you're so fond of dandng, why don't you learn how? Exceptionally Quiet Visitor—Your housemaid seems very quiet. Lady of the House—She lsl Why, i she doesn't even disturb' the dost! NO. 11. BUREAU 6P HEALTH EDUCATION. !.j N. C. STATE BOARD OF HBAI/TH - TEETHING HLONG with the bones, teetfcl begin to form before the : baby is " born. When the baby is born the teeth are there but are not seen be- *: cause they are covered up with the gums. Sometimes babies are born with teeth showing but usually they do not begin to protrude through the gams until the fourth to the tenth month. the eruption of the teeth is a pergti fectly natural process and "teething'- gets blamed for many ills of the child which it does not cause. As the troth pushes its way to the sur face the gum gradually and painless ly gives way before it. Normally neither the child itself nor any one else should knov; wh£a the baby "cuts Its teeth" until the teeth are caen. If, before the tooth appears, bard pressure is made on tbe gum over the tooth the gum tissue is bruised and pinched until injury is done. When this happens "then, later, when even slight pressure is made it presses th>s sore gum against the hard tooth underneath and of course it hurts. After the gums have been braised and the teeth are almost through it ni2y often be best. to lance the gums or "rub the tooth through" in order to avoid the con-, stant hurting by pressure which otherwise; might last for several days. If this is attempted before the tooth is sufficiently elevated, the gum will again close over the tootk and the hurting will continue. This prematura bruising of the gums is responsive for most of the restlessness of ba':i3g when they are teething. The teeth are made up largely of mineral elements and if th.e mother's diet is lacking of thase mineral salts - her baby's teeth will be deficient. Rickets is a retarded development of the bones because of a deficiency in mineral (calcium) salts. Retarded eruption of the teeth suggests a cer tain degree of rickets. Another in teresting point to notice is that in healthy children 'he teeth appear in pairs but in the child with rickets they appear one at a time. The child with injured, swollen and inflamed gums may have a sec ondary inflammation of the ears. It is posFible for this condition tc fee sufficiently severe to cause conrnl-* sions. The a.^-oclation of diarrhea or bronchitis must be looked upon as being entirely independent of denti tion. To i>« sura the injured gum may cause ;he child to be constantly putting Foinethinr in its n.outh and this offers incroarud numbers of op portunities to carry infection to the intestinal tract that would cause diarrhea. The usaal measures indicated for the prevention and treatment ol rickets are indicated for the preven tion and treatment oi delayed or dis turbed dentition. Sunshine, cod liver oil, egg yolk and hygienic measures are of su preme importance. GEORGIA NUGGETS The gold in the lund Is only watt ing for the grit In the man. V ___ iteason the big flsh get away la because they see the liars coming with their fishing poles. Few authors can afford to write for posterity, with the cost of living high er than their hopes. We won't believe in an optimist until we hear one giving thanks for a free ride on a hurricane. If Happiness should shout halleluhi on the highway be would be Qncd for disturbing the peace. Thrift doesn't mean denying jour self a holiday to save the expense of a ticket to the picnic. We preach and sing about heaven, but still prefer an airship on eartb to the wings of the angels. Oit favorite mule was struck by lightning recently and kicked the lightning back to where it came from. lon pray for the goods, and if the goods come, you expect Providence to build tbe fire and wait on the table. Only three new niogaslnes were started recently. They are financed by wealthy writers, who will thus be In position to accept their own coo* tributlons. —Atlanta Constitution.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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April 22, 1926, edition 1
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