HANDLING OF PEANUTS One of Most Excellent Crops , Farmer Can Raise. Has Many Bird Enemies and Tender Plant Affprfls Dainty Rabbits Are , Partciularly Fond Of Plan for Harvesting. In my opinion peanuts are one of Jjne best crops a farmer can raise. They excel corn for feed, especially on poor land. Like peas, they will flourish on thin land, and improve it. They will grow on any kind of soil hut sandy land is best as the nuts ar cleaner, brighter and smoother. They have great drouth resisting Qualities. In this part of Texas pea nuts may be planted any time from the last of March to the first of July, writes W. P. Kloster of Sunset, Tex., In the. Missouri Valley Farmer. The ground should be prepared by plowing deeply and harrowing thoroughly, kay off the rows, drop the nuts and cover two or three inches deep. 1 take off the front part of my single row planter and use it when covering the seed. The hills should be about a foot apart in the drill and the rows three feet apart. Put in plenty of Beed, for the mice and moles will get some and some may not be good. It' is best to plant the whole nut Soak them for 24 hours before plant ing, to soften the hull. After drain ing off the water, Just before planting, pour kerosene oil over them to keep away the moles. The peanut has many enemies, and no wonder. As soon as the lender plant appears the crow is apt to pull It nn Tt 4a sr. a . w wcob LU yiUiVUl Lilt) I1ULS by fence from the rabbits. The tender plant is a dainty they like. At harvest time, when you turn the nuts up to the sun to dry, the crows come once more. Since the vines are as valuable as the nuts, great care should be given to the harvest If there is plenty of barn room they may be hauled in at once, and scattered thinly over the floor, leaving doors and windows open so the air can cir- - mate freely. -Some haul ana mi a flat topped shed or" barn o cur then they are out ot the way of depredators,, and they can quickly U pu": into the barn on the approach ot rain. But for a large crop, the best way 1b" to Bet up poles in . the field about six feet tall and shock the vine loosely about two feet in diameter Don't press the vines down. It is best to let the vines cure a day or two before shocking if the weather will permit As soon as they are thor oughly cured hurry them to the bran. Rain rapidly destroys their feeding value. To plow them up take off the mold board from an ordinary turning plow. The dirt will fall through, and the vines, together with the nuts will be turned to the side. They should then be shaken and turned up to the sun. Avoid all the dirt possible, as it will cling to the vines and lessen . their value as feed. A small crop may be How the Peanut Grows. The Vine Blossoms-Along the 8tem. After the Flowers Fall, the Ovaries of the Plant Enter the Ground Where the Pods Are Matured. harvested by running a common spad ing fork under each vine and turning out vine and all. In soft ground they can be pulled by hand. The feeding is a small problem. The stock only ask a chance. Cows and horses will eat first the nuts, then the vines. The dry vines are not good for hogs, but they will fatten on the nuts. The vines and nuts -together form almost a balanced ration. 1 knew one man who fed his horses pea nuts and bran, and he claimed -it was better than corn. At all events, his norses were fat. WORKING EROSION MODEL FOR SCHOOLS Model Showing the Effects of Rain-Fall Upon Two Adjacent Hill One Covered With Forest Growth and the Other Devoid of Such Protection, In the lake, and the gradual opening up of watercourses through them, are all typical of the processes constantly going on in nature and show striking ly the close relationship between for ests and surface formation. It is the same process of erosion on a larger scale which, after the destruction of our forests, causes the removal of the top soil from our slopes, cuts them up Into gullies, and deposits sand and gravel upon the fertile alluvial soil of thA nnrfnm lonHa In cfnm .nn , uvuxul ICOCI" voirs, or in the channels of streams, where it impedes navigation and causes overflow. HARDY QUALITIES OF MULES Horses Cost More to Mature and Also , Command Lower Prices Farmers ; Should Co-Operate. ':- A mule costs less to mature than a horse. It will out-sell a horse from $5 to $15, depending on the section of the country where you are in business. The average price paid for mules is $9 above the average price paid for horses in 1911, according to the year book of the United States department of agriculture. A mule, will earn its board after it Is two years old if handled carefully. IDp to the weaning time the mule will cost little more than $10 or $15. The next eighteen months of the mule's keep will be the most costly. Figur ing the cost of hay at $20 a ton and the cost of oats at 40 cents a Jbushel, it will cost about $90 to grow the mule to maturity. Yet when it is sold tt will bring from $150 to $300. It is not necessary for one to own or buy pure-bred mares to grow the best mules. Any mare that .will rear a good colt will rear a good mule! Yet the better the grade of mares the bet ter will be the offspring. In most communities there is a breeder who owns a good jack. If not, it will be possible for a few interested farmers to co-operate and buy a , good jack. They should be able to buy an excel lent Jack for from $1,000 to $1,500. SOUTHEBII RAILVAY. PRI CARRIER OF TIE SOUTH MAIN LINK. ! Pasturing Too Closely. i m ' If the sheep are compelled to dig In the pasture for their food they are very likely to eat the roots of the grass. It Is a. far better plan to have two pastures and allow them to graze In one while the other is allowed to catch up and make a good growth. (By D. C. ELLIS.) A working model showing the pro cess of erosion on deforested slopes has been a feature of exhibits by the forest service at recent expositions. It shows the working out of the natur al phenomena so well, and is ho sim ple and inexpensive to construct, that a similar model might be erected in schools for the use of classes in nature study, elementary agriculture and physical geography. The model consists of two hills slop ing down into two valleys through which two streams "wind in and out through farm land and lead Into two lakes at the front of the landscape. Both hills are made of the same kind of soil, that of the region in which the model-is erected, but one is cov ered with twigs, young trees, or shrubs, to simulate a forest, under neath which is a heavy carpet of moss representing the layer of leaves and twigs which covers the ground in the real forest, while the other hill Is bare of all vegetation. By means of a suitable sprinkling device water in the form of rain is made to fall with equal force upon the two hills. On the forested slope its fall is broken by the foliage and it drops gently upon the moss-covered surface of the ground. The moss and the soil beneath, which is kept soft and porous by the protective cover, quickly absorb the rain and allow it to seep out as clear water farther down the slope, thus forming a moun tain stream which flows through a green and fertile valley into a clear lake at the lower end of the model. On the other slope the rain beating down upon the unprotected and hard ened surface" washes deep gullies in the hillside, carries the soil into the. turbid stream which drains the val ley below, and thence into a. muddy lake. The erosion on the slope loos ens stones, which are carried down upon the valley farms; the silt depos ited in the channel of the stream di verts the water, which opens up gul lies through the dry land; the main stream is made shallower and wider and often overflows into the fields; islands and silt bars rise in the stream; and deltas are built up in characteristic form at the entrance to the lake. Th 3 erosion processes which work themselves out In this model, the wearing down of the hill, the silting up of the stream bed, the gradual shifting of the course of the stream, h formation of deltas and sand bars N B The following schedule figurei published only as iafor mation aod are not guaranteed. No. 8012:40 a. m Daily. Birmingham Special for Wash ington and New York. Pullman drawing room sleeping oars, ob servation cars to New York. Day coaches to Washington. PoJ'mai to Richmond. No. 29280 a, m. Daily, Birmingham Special for Atlanta and Birmingham. Pullman draw iug room sleeping can and obser vation cars. Sleeping car Rich mond to Birmingham. Dining oar service. No. 8185:0 a. m. Daily, Southern's Southeastern Limited for Columbia, Savannah, Aiken, Augusta and: Jacksonville. Pull man drawing room sleeping oars tor Aiken, Augusta and Jackson ville. Day coaches for Jackson ville. Dining car service. No 85:00, a. m. Daily, lecal for Danville, Riohmond and intermediate points. No. 455:40 a. m, Daily, local for Charlotte and intermed iate pointB connecting with No. 89 at Charlotte, local for Atlanta. No, 447:45 a, m. Daily local for Washington. No. 87-8 :55a. m. Daily, New York, Atlanta and New Orleans Limited, Pullman drawing room sleeping oars and observation oate New York to New Orleans. Diu ing oar service. Solid Pullman train. No. 119:20 a. m., Daily, local for Charlotte, Atlanta and intermediate points. No. 36 12:05 p. m. Daily, United States Fast Mail, for Washington and points North. Pullman drawing room sleeping cars New Orleans and Birming ham to New York. Day coaches to Washington. Dining car service. No. 22 2:85 p. m. Daily, lo cal for Greensboro and Goldsboro. No. 72:25 p. m. Daily, local for Charlotte. No. 46 4:85 p. m. Daily, lo cal for Greensboro. No. 128:00 p. m. Daily, lo cal for Danville and Richmond. Pullman service between Char lotte and Richmond, Asheville and Norfolk. No. 858:00 p. m. Daily, United States FaBt Mail, for At lanta, Birmingham and New Or leans, Pullman drawiug room sleeping cars, New' York to New Orleans and Birmingham, day coaches Washington to New Or leans. Dicing car service. No. 88 8:50 p. m Daily, New York, Atlanta and New Or leans Limited for Washington and pointB North, drawing room ieepiDg cars, observation cars to New York, dining car servioe. Solid Pullman train. No. 489:05 p. m. Daily, for Atlanta. Pullman servioe. Raleigh to Atlanta, day coaches Washington to Atlanta. No. 8211:25 p. m. Daily, Southern's South Eastern Limited for Washington, New York and points North. Pullman drawing room sleeping cars for New Y rk, day coaches to Washington. Din ing car service. NORWOOD BRANCH. No. 23 -9:80 a, m Daily, lo cal for Norwood and intermedi ate points. No. 21 4:85 p. m Daily, lo cal for Norwood and intermedi ate pointB. ASHEVILLE DIVISION. No. 155:00 a.'m. Daily for Asheville, handling New York Asheville Pullman. No. 119:20 a. m. Daily, lo cal for Asbville and intermedi ate points, connecting at Ashville with Cincinnati and St. Louis sleepers. Cafe observation cars between Salisbury and Kuoxville. No. 212:25 p. m. Daily, lo cal for Asnville and intermediate points. No. 85-9pSpm. Daily, for Asheville. ntlAran drawing room sleeping cats Riohmond to ABheville. Car may be occupied at Asheville West bound until 7:00 a. m. Tickets, sleeping car accom modations and detailed informa tion can be obtained at ticket office. T. J. Anderson, R. H. DeButts, ticket ag't, div. pass, ag't, Salisbury, N. 0. Charlotte, N. 0. ofnc iiEers Made A Mow Man Of Him. "I was suffering from pain in my I T. Alston, Raleigh, N. O, "and my liver and ki&reys did not work right, nut zonr Domes ot isiectnc jitters made me zeer iike a new man." LUNG DISEASE "After four in our family had died of consumption I was taken with a frightful cough and lung trouble, but my life was saved andl gained 87 pounds through using DR. KING'S NEW COVER atterson, Wellington, Tex. OIS W.R.P OVER 65 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Tradk Marks Designs Copyrights Ac Anyone sending stetca and description mj OnlcklT ascertain our cminlnn free whathnr u Inrantlon la probably patentable. Communica tions stricrtlrronfldentfaL HANDBOOK on Patent icy I men tpecial nattet, without charge, in the ent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patent t&Jten tnrough Dunn tt Co. rocelre Scientific American, neiyillnstrated weekly. Lanrestel I any scientific Journal. Terms, $3 r months. IL Sold brail nmradealw i nfl-rnn nnnnnnnnnn i I i D U u M J Ol ll W S I U U UUUU U UUUUUiJi 4'oos4 oo oo OUR SHOE BUSINESS we are throwing in some inducements. With each pair of Boys' Ox fords we will give him choice of a base ball, bat, mitt or a mask. And to the Girls for each pair of Oxfords or pumps purchased from us we will give a painting outfit, a stick pin or a pair roller skates. We have a line of the renowned Uro3sett Oxfords that we are cloa ing oat at a sacrifice. Oxfords worth $4.00 to $5.00 at $3.48 and $3.98. Out prices on skirts and snits to close out. See us for everything in dry goods, notions, silks, poplins, all colors, 15c to 25c. Ratines, all colors, from 25c to $1.50 per yard. Black peau de soi silk usually sold at $1.25 to $1.50, our price $1.00. New lot of Bulgarian silks fresh from the looms. Pretty line of panier silks worth 39c, our price 25c. Some beautiful patterns in cotton foulards 15c values our price 10c. The new splash voiles put up book fold and a yard wide, these are soft clingy goodsthey come in pink, navy light blue, tan, lavender and black, worth 30c, special at 25c Ripplette in all the best colors at 15c. Some beautiful patterns in the new, soft, clingy crepes at 25c. All calicoes at 5c. Good apron ginghams at 53. Some 15c Hickory stripes in short lengths, 2 to 10 yds, at. 103 per yd. Some specials in shirting and pants cloth worth 20c, 2 to 10 yd lengths at 12$c. Good quality black satteen petticoats at 50e and the best value we have ever had at $1.00. Whit leaiher hose for men, women and children at 10c per pair. These hose ara like their name indicates, tough as whit leather. You can buy nothing better at the price. The wander hose 4 pair guaran teed to wear you 4 months without darning, per box of 4 pair for $1.00, and beyond a doubt one of the best hose ever sold on this market. They come in mn's, women's and children's sizes in black, tan and white. There are a thouaond other things we might mention that is of the very best selected merchandise and all at Bed Rock Prices. OO 00 WW OO 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 O O O o o o o o o o o o Brittam tote II TRADE o o o o o o o o o o o o 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 We Try to Pleasa You flTler Hatiooo Lunch I mini Learn to Know us. Dealers In Cigars. To bacco. Lunches and Confectlonaries. Ice Cream a Specialty. 115i . Couneil St. Phone 662-J r Mr. "Farmer: We have all kinds otA Garden and Field ; Seeds, D. M. MILLEIT& SOH: THE LEADING Q ROC ERS ' m M. Nn m Prlml These are beyond a doubt two important Factors in choosing a Dentist. Full Set Teeth $5.00 Fillings in gold, silver, pla tinum and porcelin 50c and $1.00 up. Gold crowns and bridge work $3, $4, $5 a todth. OURMETHODS are the uptodate PAINLESS kind not the old fashioned nerve-wrecking kind that made so many dread the dental chair. OUR PRICES entirely sweep away all competion on work of a similar high character. Guaranteed 15 Years. Philadelphia pmess Dentists, Inc. I26i-N. Main St., 'Phone 763. .Salisbury. N. 0 VI m PRICE 50 CTS. AT ALL DRUG STORES. I PRICE 6 0c and 1 1.00 T ALL DRUGGISTS. U