Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Sept. 16, 1908, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE DEVIL Macauley in New York World. PRESERVATION OF FORESTS. The Old Bay State Is Now Taking the J Initiative. The preservation of the forests is a problem second to none in present im portance and in its outlook toward the future. Without trees our country would be a desert, and the rapid den udation of our New England hills is already beginning to hare its effect upon our streams and rivers and upon our water supply. The invention of wood pulp paper and the rapid exten sion of the industry throughout the country, together with the increase of newspaper circulation, have stimulated the destruction of the forests to such a degree that steps are already being taken to preserve them before It is too late. Congress has attempted to take a hand in the matter, but so far. with little avail, and it now remains for the Individual states affected to see what they can do. The first step would seem to be the development of paper making from some rapidly growing and an nually reappearing substance, such as cornstalk fiber, Instead of from the slowly rising tree which cannot be re placed except after years of renewal and growth. "As was to be expected, Massachu setts Is taking the Initiative. To the governors of the other five New Eng land states Governor Guild has sent out a request for a conference, and it will be held at the Algonquin club In Boston on the 14th of September. The six governors will then confer and deliberate over the best means to be taken for the preservation of our for ests, and It 13 probable that arrange- ,siS5&i?s -mentis will b mad for tiw ratling of a .New England business conference at Mme time lmmedlatdy following the presidential election. If It should be held, says Governor Guild in his letter, t. It should come at that time "in order that Its work might, not be confused with the politics of the presidential campaign." One of the especial ob jects of this meeting of the governor cargo of one of Sir Richard urenvine's ships and landed at Plymouth, and the ship had gone direct from Virginia and called nowhere on the way. On the voyage home, however, It had encoun tered and captured a Spanish ship from Santo Domingo. The potatoes were a part of the cargo of the latter vessel. The Useful Sunflower. Sunflower seeds are said to give an extra fine flavor to eggs and are much used by the French people for that pur-' pose. Remember this when you plant your garden and drop in some seeds around the edges and In the odd cor ners. A few planted near the sink drain will help to keep away miasma and give you heads of seed that will be mammoth in size., BOY INVENTORS. I GOVERN OB GTJTIiD OF MASSACHUSETTS. with his associates will be to devise means whereby a greater uniformity of action may be secured In the leg islation among the several states in the Union. But the greatest result should be in the stimulus it will give to public opinion and In its awakening of us to. the fact that the forests must and shall be preserved. The First Potatoes. . Sir Walter Raleigh, who shares with Sir Francis Drake the honor of first introducing the potato in England, lived at Brixton, England, near Eliza beth's House. Formby, in Lancashire, also claims the honor of being the site of the first culture of the potato in that country. They are said to have been grown there by a Formby man who sailed with Sir Walter. The earliest cultivation of the potato in the British islands was probably at Youghal,; on the south coast of Ireland, where this great navigator had an es tate. It has been generally accepted that the potato was taken to Europe from Virginia and that It was cultivated tnere by the natives. Sir Joseph Banks and De Condelle both lent the weight of their authority-to this view, but it has been ascertained that the Indians of Virginia, though they used a number of tuberous roots, did not know our po tato. , One of these was the plant sometimes grown as an ornamental climber In our gardens and called by botanists Apios tuberosa. The Indians called the roots potatoes, and the French Canadians knew them as pommes de terre, and our potato, being a native of South America, was scarcely ! likely to be known to the Indians of Virginia. - Yet the potato was undoubtedly Introduced in England as part of the Humphrey Potter's Crude Addition to r . the Steam Engine. "Some of the most important in ventions have been the work of boys. The invention of the valve motion to the steam engine was made by a mere boy. Newcome's engine was in very incomplete con dition from the fact that there was no way to open or close the valve except by means of levers operated by the hand- Newcome set up a large engine at one of the mines, and a boy, Humphrey Potter, was hired to work these valve levers.- Although his work was not hard work, yet it required his constant attention. As he was working the levers he saw that parts of the engine moved in the right direction and at the same time that he had to open or close the valves. He procured a strong cord and made one end fast to the proper part of the engine and the other end to the valve lever, and then he had the satisfaction of seeing the engine move with perfect regularity 01 motion. A short time after the foreman came around and saw the boy play ing marbles at the door. Looking &l me engine, ne saw the ingenuity vi me Doy ana also the advantage ux bu great an invention. The idea suggested by the boy's inventive genius was put in a prac tical, iorm ana made the steam en gine an automatic working ma- cnine. The power loom is the invention of a farmer's boy who had nevei seen or heard of such a thing. He whittled one out with his jackknife, and after he had got it all done he, with great enthusiasm, showed it to his father, who at onoe kicked it to pieces, saying that he would have no boy about him who would spend his time on such foolish things. The boy was sent to a black smith to learn a trade, and his mas ter took a lively interest in him. He made a loom of what was left of the one his father had broken un and showed it to his master. The blacksmith saw he had no common lad as an armrenriVp. ar,A that the invention was a valuable one. He had a loom constructed under the supervision of the bov It worked to their perfect satis faction, and the blacksmith fur nished the means to manufacture the looms, and the boy received half the profits. In about a year me DiacJcsmitn wrote to the boy's iatner tnat he should bring with him a wealthy gentleman, who was tne inventor of the nelphmp power loom. You may be able to judge of the astonishment at the old home when his son was presented to him as the inventor, who told him that the loom was the same as the mortal that he had kicked to pieces but a year oetore. IF arm nfi Garden 1 J'J JAPANESE INTENSIVE FARMING The Way the Little Brown Folks Til Their Small Estates. With very few exceptions the whole of the land under grain of any kind Is absolutely flat If It Is not so by na ture the Japanese farmer levels and banks It up till it is horizontal. In the narrow vallej's there are elaborate series of terraces running up the slope of the hills till the fields become so small as to accommodate but a double row of plants. The more typical grain A MOSAIC IN GOLD AND QUEEN. country, however, lies in broader val leys or along the coast where there are many wide plains which were once be neath the water. If one looks down on these from a slight elevation they appear like some elaborately designs! mathematical figure or as though a cloth had been spread over the earth with mosaic patterns in gold and green. Each little field is as nearly rectangu- Jar as circumstances will allow. Many of them, therefore, are perfect rectan gles, for where the plain'ls broad it is easy to fit into it small fields of twen ty or thirty feet in length. Many of the plats are even less than this. Some barley fields are only six feet by a dozen or go. The pattern or tnu mosaic is vividly marked out by the coloring or the vari ous crops. Today the barley Is and stands golden in the sunshine. The rlcefields, however, are but bare ex panses of mud or water, for the rice is not yet planted out but is growing in small, oblong fields bjj itself, which show a vivid emerald green growth of little plants only three or four inches high. At the end of May some of the farmers are beginning-to reap their ripe barley and wheat, and when this is. finished they will be free to plant out what is to them the much more important crop, the rice. Reaping and planting of grain together one may see in the same acre. There is no broadcast sowing of grain here. Each seed grain has an individuality and ia separately tended. The barley is planted in rows, perhaps wree leet or six feet long, and each' row is a foot or eighteen inches from the next, so that a worker can pass between the rows to tend and weed and finally to reap each individual plant In many cases each row grows on a little semicircular ridge four or five feet horizontally and about a foot high, so that the barley is well drain ed, though the next little field may lie under several inches of water. In the whole district of Okuna there was only one of the ripe fields Taid" by the wind, and that was one of the lar gernearly thirty feet across. It is nnr to be Inferred from this that the Japa nese farmers do not have to contend with heavy -winds and pitiless, beating rains. Japan Is n particularlv windy country, and this year has leen a very bad season, for even in April there was heavy snow snow so thick that it entirely disorganized the telegranhio and railway communication for a few days. The wheat and barley are all sown in the autu HUT. SO ffl fl f" t"H OT7 OTr the benefit of the winter sunshine, which Is clear and brilliant and verv hot. This, of COUrsp ia tha riinf ... ux. vun-i UOJ DRIED SWAMP MUCK. Its Benefit In Chemical Fertilizers l Greatly Exaggerated. The . practice of using dried muck and peat In mixing chemical fertilizers puts up a problem which farmers ought to understand. Thousands of tons of such muck are used-sold as "muck tankage." We learn of one case, where a man started growing celery in a swamp and is said to have nearly fail ed at it Then he conceived the Idea of drying and pulverizing the soil of that swamp and selling It to fertilizer dealers. This has brought him a for tune. Some samples of this dried peat are said to. contain nearly 3 per cent of nitrogen; others carry less. This ni trogen is in an inert form and is of little value as a plant food. Experi ments in Illinois showed that such ni trogen was worth about one-half cent a pound as compared with that in dried blood costing 15 cents. Yet the fer tilizer manufacturer who sells this muck mixed with other chemicals un dertakes to charge 18 cents a pound for it when you buy it For example, take a brand of fertilizer which Is guaranteed to contain In each ton 16 pounds of nitrogen, 160 pounds avail able phosphoric acid and 100 pounds of potash. It would be possible to supply the potash and phosphoric acid In 200 pounds of muriate and 1,200 pounds of acid phosphate. Then by using 100 pounds of cottonseed meal and 500 pounds of dried muck they could pro vide more nitrogen than they guaran teed. The object of using the cotton seed meal is to color the muck aid thus prevent, if possible, the chemist from detecting it. But see what a nice game this is! The muck furnishes ten or twelve pounds of nitrogen, which gives the fertilizer a valuation of from $1.50 to $2. but whic&costs perhaps 20 cents. A farmer might use such a fertilizer on his wheat this fall. The potash and phosphoric acid may help, but it is doubtful if his grandchildren will see any benefit from the nitrogen In the muck. The excuse given for using the-muck Is that it makes a good filler and dries out the other chemicals. No serious ob jection can be made to its use as a filler, but the nitrogen it contains should not be valued in the fertilizer, for it is not worth the price. It Is near ly Impossible to detect the muck when cottonseed meal is used with it The best way to avoid it is to refuse to buy low grade fertilizers or those very low in nitrogen. It is impossible to use large quantities of muck in fertilizers pvvuiuiumS -t pci ceui or mure 01 uuro- ha l-JVlTICrt niiltopinlo Anfn!n!n( nitrogen niuSbeuSea ,n order to reach a high per cent, lw are mogt likely to find the muck In the mixtures" with about 1 per cent of nitrogen. It does not pay to buy them. Buy the higher grade mixtures and use an equal value in dollars per acre and you will be bet ter off. We believe that farmers are paying millions of hard earned dollars uselessly for this peat nitrogen, many of them already having swamps on their own farms. The chemists must find some way to detect this peat nitro gen, and then w shall work for a law compelling thet manufacturer to state that he uses Hand that it 4s not valued IT arm and HANDLING APPLES. Fruit Must Be Put Up For Market In . Attractive Style. Radical changes must come about In the methods of grading, packing and marketing our home grown fruits if we succeed In maintaining our present trade in the home markets. California fruit is having a greater influence on the prices of fruit In the eastern mar kets every year, and this competition Is sure to drive many eastern fruit growers out of the business unless It Is the same as otfflw . - New English Potato. The Magnum Bonum potatoes shown herewith were exhibited at a recent fair at the American institute in New York. Dr. W. H. Jordan, director of the New JAPANESE CUTTING THE GBAIN. of the early ripening of the grain, for rrom the time it is sown till the time it Is reaped it never has a spell of dull wwttner tnat lasts more than a few days. Japanese men and women cut their rows of grain by holding each plant's staiKs together in one hand and cut ting the off with a sharp, bent knife at the ejd of a straight handle a foot or more in length. The handful is laid tidily on the ridge where it has crown and its neighbor is nlnrW! hoci,i it till the small field is covered bv thp straws. To thrash, the heads are cm off the stalks and then pounded with She Was Not a Whitmanite. Back when Lord Alfred Tenny son was poet laureate of England there was a prominent American girl, the daughter of our ambassa dor, m fact, who was very anxious to meet the greatest literary light a neay wooden mallet, oi ms time, une evening the long covetea cnance came at a soiree lne conversation that ensued chronicled in the Conservator follows: Tennyson You are American? Girl Yes. is as The Olympic Games. - The famous Olympic ffames atr said to have been instituted in honor of Jupiter, about 1,300 years B. C, and to have been revived by Iphitus, 884 B.' C. -Thev were holr? a Tennyson You know Walt Whit- vals of four vears on the bonl , man? . Alnh PITS TIOQT m-rrm., -J X - X viiiuum, ill Til H LU " 1 1 , . . A . . MAGNUM BONTJM POTATO. York experiment station, says: "At the station in our variety tests 'of potatoes in 1895 Magnum Bonum. the seed of which was imported from England was tested. The variety is still grown by the firm from whom we purchased our seed, and in its 1907 catalogue I find the following: 'Mncrniim Rnnnm introduced by us in 1876, proved to be the premier of all disease resisting va nenes. inere is scarcely a parish in tne united Kingdom where Magnum Bonum is not known as an enormous cropper of good quality, almost free from disease.' The yield at the New xork station of the Magnum Bonum was rrom 150 to 160 hnshPis nor a rTa while with some other varieties we se-' cured a yield of between 300 and 400 bushels. No English varieties yielded wen in comparison with our best Amer ican varieties." Home Garden Hints. Strawberry plants are now making ft ni-lUn4-i.: 1 .... a ouusiauuai growtn showing. Keep out the weeds, hoe freauentlv. and in early fall plants will be thrifty to set in a new Dea. It is none too early to manure a piece ueavuy ror rnuDarb. Then cultivate It once a week or so to incorporate the manure thoroughly through the son Rhnhnrh ia o Trrwn . , uiauuus leeaer ana re quires a large quantity of manure If Dest results are to be obtained rw piant highly fertilized will yield a sur prising quantity of stalks. Currant cuttings of the new wood are easily made and If done In early fall ought to be wen rooted so as to be transplanted in spring. In snmo towns there Is never an oversuoDlv of currants, whUe if around 10 cents per quart can be realized for them thev pay weU. The large currants are most profitable, such as the cherry. j.ne asparagus bed ought to have a good coating of manure before winter and then be well cultivated In. Pick the pears shortly before rhpv ripen. PILED NEATLY DJ SHADE. met with goods that are put up In as honest and attractive style as those that are shipped from that section. The remedy lies In the hands of'the growers. If they desire to have their fruit recognized as equal to California fruit they must make It so attractive in style and honest and uniform In quality that the buyer or the consumer will not make Invidious comparisons when he sees it by the side of the Cal ifornia product. Quality and flavor will have weight In determining which fruit to use, but if our home grown fruits are put up In an honest manner and undesirabl varieties are kept off from the market we can meet the com petition and hold our home markets. This problem of handling and market ing fruit is not one that can be solved by Individual effort alone. It requires co-operation on the part of the various fruit growers. One man may succeed In establishing a reputation for high grade fruit, but at the best his reputa tion would only be local, whereas If a large number of the leading fruit grow ers would combine and organize and have their fruit put up In uniform style and in large quantities by expe rienced packers, so that their brand would establish a first class reputation the de nand for their fruit would equal if not exceed that for the California fruit. What we need to do Is to organ ize and do our grading, packing and marketing m as DusmessiiKe manner as the Californians. our growers must learn to utflize their Inferior grades at home and mar ket nothing but the very best and in uniform packages. By so doing they win obtain more money than by plac ing the whole lot on the market. Ev ery grower should grow the best vari eties, put them up in nice, clean, uni form packages and place them in the hands of dealers who understand their business. Let every package contain full weight. The most Important mat ter arter the growing of the fruit is the selection of the package in which to send it to market. No fruit should be sent in any but a neat and attrac tive new package of the form and size Preacber Wants Damages. - E. Ii. Tedder, a prominent tobi dev t of Penpacolaf .Fla.i who, with his wife' and - daughter, has b Mn PDHidii 2 the summer in w stern North Carolina, waB ar rested here yesterday on a war rant sent out by Rev. J. C. Cog gins, president of the Holmab Christian Institute of ' Black Mountain, charging slander, and aekintf damages to the amount o $20,000. Mr. Tedder was taken in cas tody, aod later released on $5,000 bond. Thease is se t for hearing September 16th, The suit is broucht by the Rev Mr. Coggins as'the result of a less of two railway tickets belonging to Mr. Teder. who. at that time was stopping at Black Mountain with his family. Later these tickets wtre mailed to Mr. Tedder at Aeheville, and it is stated that the initials on the ticktes were changed, and that a profane mas sage accompanied them Ashe ville, N. C, dispatch. Announcement. I hereby announce mysel a candidate for the office of Coun ty Commissioner, subject to the will ot the people at the polls at the Wovembbr election. It elected I will serve the public to my best ability. J . Calvin Linglb 8-5-llt Faith, N. C Mortgage . Sale. Mai opular Va., Girl No. Tennyson Then you don't know man worth knowing in exercise the youth in the five kinds of combat. The nrize con tended for was a crown made of wild oJlve or lanrpl. TKn Whereupon the laureate tnrn !shed bv nrdpr of TWW;, w away and the interview was over, i A. IX 394. the only America. Excursion to Richmond, &ept. latn, 1908. Southern Railway will onftraffi its popular excursion to Rich mond, Va., September 15th. tram to consist of first class da vRftf.hfiB ana ruuman cars, giving two days and one night in Richmond. Following round trip from Salis bury, N. C, $4.50. For detailed information see large, flyers or call on your depot agent. R. L. Vernon, fcf Trav. Pass. Agent. PACKED STEMS DOWN. most popular where the fruit Is ship ped. The human eye is the great buy er of fruit. Apples that are sold for first class fruit should be handled in a careful manner while being picked and then carefully laid In piles on the ground where the sun cannot reach them or removed to the barn for a few days and left In piles, so as to permit some of the moisture to evaporate and the skin to become toughened, In which condition the fruit will stand up bet ter while being shipped and keep long er when packed than it will when put into the barrel as fast as It Is picked from the tree. Pursuant to the provisions contained in a Mortgage Trust Deed Registered in Book No. 18, page 382, made bv William Austin and Hattie Austin for the protection and benefit of the under signed, on the 7th day of Febv. 1901. default having been made in the pay ment of this debt, which said Mortgage was given to secure, the undersigned will sell at public sale for cash, at the court house door in Salisbury on lb 8 19th day of October next, the following property: Beginning at a stase, u. w. Winecon s and J . F. Park's corner, thence with 0. W. Winecoff's and J. F. Park's line N 31J deg E 6 chs to a stake, V. Yv. Winecoff's corner in J. if . Park's line ; thence with C. W, Winecoff's and J. W. Parks' line S. 71 degE 5.10 chs to a stake; Margaret Kidennour'a corner ; tnence with U. W. Winecoff's and Margaret Ridenhour's line, a '6 deg W 5.7o chs to a stake, 0. W. Winecoff's and Margaret Riden- nour's corner: thence with C. W. Winecoff's and Margaret Ridenhour's line N 71 deg W 5.10 chs to the- begin ning, (9 miles N. of Salisbury.) known as thehou e lot, containing three acres, Also real estate bounded as follows to- wit : Beginning at a stake on the bank pf thud creek and thence S 78 deg E 3.25 ens to a staKe, Walton's corner ; thence S 2 deg W 24.50 chs to a pine : thence S 8-1 deg E8 chs to a stake; thence a new line jn z deg n; 25.50 chs to a stake ; thence N AV, deg E 10 60 chs to stake on the bank of said creek: thence with said creek to the beein niner. con tain in tr 25 acres, more or less. Gonveved hv the said William Austin and Haltie Austin to satisfy the debt provided for in saiu mortgage. W. F. WHITAKER John J. Stewart, Atty. Weak Women : To weak and ailing women, there Is at least one war to help. Bat with that war. two treatments, must be combined. One It local, one is constitu tional, but both are Important, both essential. Dr. Snoop's Night Cure Isthe Local. Dr. Snoop's Restorative, the Constitutional. The former Dr. Snoop's Night Cure is a topical snncons membrane suppository remedy, while Dr. Shoop's Restorative Is wholly an internal treat ment. The Restorative reaches throughout the entire system, seeking the repair of all nerve, all tissue, and all blood ailments. . The "Night Core", as its name implies, does its work while you sleep.; It soothes sore and inflam ed mucous surfaces, heals local weaknesses and discharges, while the Restorative, eases nervous excitements gives renewed vigor and ambition, builds up wasted tissues, bringing about renewed strength, vigor, and energy. Take Dr. Shoop's Restorative Tablets or Liquid as a general tonio to the system. For positive local help, use as well Dr. $Hodp's Nig'ht Cure CORNELISON & COOK. FOR SALE. Floor : Perfection and straight ; Bran, Feed, Meal; Chop, Corn, Wheat, and Oats ground together. Shuping Bros., Rock. Dr. L S. FOX, DENTIST, 122$ N. Main St. Phone 305. Now is the time to have your teeth looked after, this fall may be too late. All work guaranteed. Best materials. Latest methods. THE SCHOOL FOR THE PEOPLE. The Thirteenth Year of This Well-Known Institution Will Open Sept 1, 1908. There will be a prominent new feature in that tshose boys and girls who will not, Bnder ordi nary circujmstances, study will be under the direction of one of the teachers to direct their studies at night. There are the following schools maintained: Music, Art, Elocu tion, Penmanship, Commercial. Normal, and Literary. Thorough in everyone of them. We have an International reputation. No liquor, no tobacco, no cursing, no cards. Prices verv reasonable. Catalog for the asking. JtEv. J. M L, Lyerly, Ph. D., Crescent, N. C. Trinity College Four Departments Collegiate, Graduate.Engineeringand Law. Large library faculties. Well equipped laboratories in all de partments of Science, Gymnasi um furnished with best appara tus. Expenses very moderate. Aid for worthy students .... Young men wishing to study - law should investigate the superiour advantages of fered by the depart ment of law at Trinity College. - - - - - For Catalogue and further Information, Address,. D. W. rtEWSOM, Registrar, Durham, N, C. Dr. J. K2. Heel, T. Guaranteed, Phone IE 6 8:80 a m to I p m 2 to 6 p m . Land Sale. Pursuant to a decree of the SuDerior Court of Rowan County -rendered in the special proceeding entitled : ".Tas. A. Ritchie, Admr. of Peter A. Ritchie, et al vs. Wiley VV. Ritchie. Daniel Peeler, Mary Peeler, W. Ernest Ritchie and others," authorizing,, empowering mi j uu-ecting ine undersigned, as com missioner and administrator to expose to public sale the land hereinafter de scribed, at the Court House in the city oi oansDury, tne undersigned will, on Monday, October the 5th, 1908. ftt. I A n'nlnnh- ty o11 4-n 1. a bidder, for cash, at the Court Housp IJVPr Dflxic A Wilnw Ro U Hnn, fl1Q ! ' t 31J1 iV. x l . . " ldlirv. "'V' ' " vnKy kji kjl uanouuij , tile iUi- lowing described real estate. Ivi nc and ue-n.fc nrar nay s cnapei, in J-rantlin ftflrisfarir ty of Rowan and bounded as follows? Beginning at a hickory 110 chairs nffiro U.... I south of the beginning corner (a post "UUI " "J j.ivy ui me lui-acre LracL in tiift snn- division of the. Hillary Elliott estate, aim running d W., 59 5(J chains to a white oak; thence S. 2 west. IS SO cnains to a post oak ; thence south 88 east, t.io r-Jiaies to a maple in the branch; thence south 3 west. 18 98 cliams to a black oak; thence north 79J east, 24.57 chains to a hickorv thence nonh 54 east. 5 50 ch ains t.n n dog wood; thence south 71 east.. 7 so cnains to a pine, dower corner; thence south 28 east. 10 chains to thence north 41& east. 20 50 chains tr. tne Beginning, containing 132 acres more or less, deed for which is regis tered in Book 72 page 270 in the Regis- ioi o niiiw in rtuwu county. This is a valuable tract of land iri n good neighborhood, and title to the ame is pertect and whoever buvs will get a court deed. The sale will be left over lOdays foralOper cent, bid, and the purcnaser wm oe required to pay 10 per cent, of the purchase monev nndai 1 mi i . ' saie. J ms A ' trust 2H. lyux. James A. Ritchie, Admr. andComr.. rural route No. 3, Salisbury, N. C. it jee Wright,- Att y. DR.KING'S NEW DISCOVERY Will Surely Stop That Cough. Jtate tbu of any other make ol patterns. TUi U as. account of their tyle, accuracy and simplicity. BleCall's BlaffazlaetTlie Ooecn of FmMoo) haa ore tubicribera than any other Ladies' Marazbta. On it, Lat tart MAT! anlirtnHAfi fwm niiinlur.1 K f homk-, 5 cents. Kvery rabweribsr reti a ktoCall Pa, tara Free. Subscribe today. iAdy A ten ta Wanted. Handsome pis sjluma et Hberalcesh commission. Pattern Catalogue( o eoe 4e Hens) and Premium Catalogue (showing 400 premiums teal tree aUdraaa XH MoCAXL CO,Mst4 As It Should Se. John A. Oates, Chairman of th . . .. . . executive Uommittee of the State Anti-Saloon League, told an Ob server reporter today that all ob ligations, incurred by the recent Prohibition- election, had been met, including the debts, which he'asBumed personal responsibili ty for, during the campaign. Fayetteville, N. C, Observer. Wood's High-Grade S i Crimson Clove The King of Soil Improvers, also makes splendid fall, winter and spring grazing, the earliest green feed, or a good hay crop. CRIMSON CLOVER will in crease the productiveness of the land more than twenty times as much as the same amount spent in commercial fertilizers. Can be sown by itself or at the last work ing of corn, cotton or other culti vated crops. Wood's Trade Mark Crimson Clover Seed is the best quality obtainable, of tested germination, and free from impurities and objec tionable weed seeds. Write for "Wood's Crop Special giving prices and information about -Crimson Clover and t other Seasonable Seeds. T. W. WOOD & SONS, seedsmen, : Richmond, Va. i Notice to Creditors. Vll persons having clai Ellen C. Lentz, late deceased, are hereby notified to present thpm t.n thu undersigned exeeuttrix of th lnat m and testament of the said Ellen C Lentz, on or before the 4th day of 8er! tember, 1909, or, else, be barred from participating in the distribution of iha assets of her estate. This 1st day of September, 1908. Roxie Alice West, Burton Craige, attorney. 9.2 6t Executor's Notice. Having qualified-as executor of tK estate of P. Clementine Brady, dis eased, late of Eo'j 17 an fionnftr xi...i. Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said diseased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Gold Hill, N. C, on or before the 29th day of August, 1909, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted t.o b,yi oc4. I will please made immediate payment ""wu w"o August zorn, laos. A DVTT A nrvm Walter H. Woodson. u-,... ' 1 6t-pd attorney.
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 16, 1908, edition 1
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