Thursday, Not. 29,1117 ““'MTEae k Lozianne Guaranlee: ^(er usj'ng the contents fan, you are not satJshed Verj' respect, your gro- will refund ^our money. Hna-m-m! That IS Coffee” It’s i«t tk« MM«X tmd tk* MMMMk tkftt make ym wmj, “Mmi ’•m np acaka.’* For it'a always iur waatkar wkea lood folks get tagatkar arar a cmp af steaming, staying-gaak LaaMMia. Taw don't bay a pig ia a poke wkeci yaw buy Luxianne Coffaa. Na, MM’mm. It clearly states that if it daean't meet rour idea of a katter caffae, you're entitled to your money back and it Buy a can of Luxianne and re adjust your ideas of what good coffee rnuefbe. Ask for profit-sharing catalog. ' -niife' water contain- i ^ ing y2 ounce salt immerse 12 ounces ; jlcornmeal,' stirring until thoroughly^ ^lixed. Cook for twenty minutes. Add j .vo ounces butter .and Vz ounce grated ■ Bieese. Spread one thin layer on the [ Ti.ttom of a-buttered grating dish, and I fti top a stuffing prepared as follows: ! tMIx Vz pound .finely minced cooked ; licken, three ounces chopped cooked i Epinach, salt, pepper, and mix with one ' liw egg. Cover with a layer of the Jrnmeal mush; sprinkle with grated fieese and bake. ^coffee The Reily—Taylor Company, iMew Orleans Cornmeal Grochi [Scatter and stir 12 ounces white Valuable Real Estate For Sale bake nicely brown. Pursuant to a decree of the Superior THIRD TRACT:—“Ninth Tract” in Court of Randolph county, North Caro- original advertisement.) This tract lies - ----- Jina, made in the case of Greensboro in the village of Cedar Falls on Deep rnmeal into a qua^t of boiling milk; | Loan & Trust Company, as executor River, Randolph county, and known as I ason with salt, pepper and nutmeg, i of the last will and testament of 0. R. “The Meadow Lot” and adjoins the b-iok gently for twenty minutes. Tak^* Cox, deceased, vs. Sarah E. Cox and lands of the old Cape Fear & Yadkin ■off fire, thicken with the yolks of two ! others, the undersigned will sell the Valley Railroad Company and others 'gs, spread it over a moistened tray [ lands hereinafter described on the and contains about one (1) acre being inch thick. When quite cold cut it j dates hereinafter mentioned. The^ale part of the land described in a deed with two inch round cutter, set In, of these lands will be by public auction recorded in book 38 page 728 in the ittcred shallow gratin dish, sprinkle i to the last and highest bidder, on the office of the Register’of Deeds for Ran- th grated cheese and melted butter terms of one-fourth cash, one-fourth dolph county, N. C. ' ' At the same time and place, the un- fourth twelve months after date of sale dersigned will sell, for cash, to the last and the balance eighteen months after and highest bidder, ten shares of stock date of sale, deferred payments to of the Asheboro Wheelbarrow Manu- bear interest from date of sale till paid factuing Company, of the par value of at the rate of six per centum per an- fifty dollars ($50) each. ‘ num, title to be retained as security for. t ..j * deferred payments. This sale is made Lands m Guilford County for partition between the heirs of 0. R.' ifiese lands are to be sold on the Cox, deceased: 'premises, in High Point, N. C., on the 18th day of December, 1917, commecn- Randolph County Lands ing at ten o’clock a. m. The first three tracts hereinafter scribed lie in Randolph county, and will gSertn^Ch^nnldba be sold in front of the county court werlv house door, at Asheboro, N. C., on the ' lilpiv^“a ™ la' 17th day of December, 1917, commenc-. east W th’tM t ’ ® ine- at 11 oVlork a m i f^ Sechrest Division, FTR9T TR ACT a’ -a a n If forty-seven (47) _ FIRST TRACT.—An undivided half lots as shown on map recorded in book mterest m the following described lot: of maps No. 4, page 62, in the office Beginning at an iron stake in the north of the Register of Deeds for Guilford side of Depot Street at the line of the county, N. C which see Of thess High Point, Randleman, Asheboro and forty-seven (47) lots, Nok 5 6 7 8 Southern Railroad Company, imd runi 9, 14, 16, 16, 17 and 18 have been here- nmg tnenee east along Depot Street tofore sold, leaving the others running 29 1-6 feet to J. S. and.W. R iewjs consecutively from 1 to 47, both inclu* corner, being the center or dividing'sive, exclusive of the ten lots herein- ' wall between the bank building and the before mentioned as having been sold, hardware building; thence north along to be sold. * the center of the side wall 50 feet to J. S. and W. P. Lewis’ comer in said wall; thence we§t along center of wall between bank and hardware building ; 22 feet and four inches to an iron stake • in the North Street, J. S. and W. P. Lewis’ comer; thence north along - North Street 53 feet to Finch and Cav- iness building; thence along the wall . of the Finch and Ca-viness building about 55 feet to an iron stake inter- King Corn’s Country Cousins J As the result of many attempts to I id' crops suitable for cultivation In semi-ai’id regions of the Western Kates of this country, the non-sac- liarine grain sorghums have been suc- Issfullly introduced from South Af- Ica,*where they have for a long time pld a prominent place as a staple preal crop. In India, China, and otn- Oriental countries the sorghums lave been used in both animal and luman nutrition, oftentimes compris- |ig the major portion of the available- lipply of food suitable for human con- I’.imption. E In this country feterita, kafir, dwarf ■lilo, and kaoliang, all varieties of Biese sorghums, have for some time leen used as feeding crops for animals, Ind the agricultural press has report- |d successful attempts to use them in he human.-dietary. : Bulletin 470, Uni^*^d States Depart- lient of Agriculture, gives a-^ull de- Icription of numerous tests made to letermine the composition and nutri- live value of .these grains. In the liajority of the experiments the grains |.’ere eaten in the form of soft bread Ir in mushes. The results show that lin an average the protein of the softer Kwarf kafir bread was 51 per cent di gested and that of the dwarf kafir nush was 48 per cent, while that of liard kafir bread was 58 per cent di gested. In the case of feterita the Values were 51 per cent for the bread Ijrotein and 48 for mush protein. With llwarf milo the values were 40 per Tent for the protein of bread and 34 fccr cent for that of the mush and for Kaoliang 20 per cent for the protein Tf the bread and only 4 per cent for fhat of the mush. From tests related in this circular. It seems fair to conclude that these Lereals are (tecidedly valuable- as hu- fnan food. They can be prepared ^or l:he table in palatable form, requiring, liowever, some special method of cook ing to insul'e their being at their best, tn preparing them it is most import- lint to make certain of the absoi^ption Tf water in such quantities that the l)articles of meal wjiich are character istically hard or flinty may be well Softened. n To many palates the grain sorghums ijmore nearly resembles buckwheat in ^avor than they do com or wheat, taste is quite generally regarded T^greeable, however, and the grains ’ certainly wholesome. WHAT EVERY CHILD BRINGS TO SCHOOL j in order to discove^iow . cn pi.c- 77.^6 uy liaha ' pared they were for the first studies fetched from somewnere. The Chautauqua Reading Hour tEhr. William Byron Forbush, Editor. No grown-up can possibly realize how little a small child knows. Alice in Wonderland found a way to shrink herself so as to be' able to enter through a keyhole into the country of tiny people, but no key or potion has ever been found that will enable any adult to explore the ignorance of a 6ix-year-old. Did you appreciate that more than one child out of five enters school without knowing his right hand from his left? That nine out of ten,do not know where their ribs are ? That over half of, the beginners in city schools have never seen a squirrel or a sheep, have never seen a suni’ise or a sunset, do not know that things grow from seed, or where butter and meat come from? That from 10 to 15 per cent of tliem are unfamiliar with the col ors, green, red, yellow and blue ? That many of them do not know when a book is right side up ? Equipment to Start School A 'munber of yours a,,’o G. Stanley Hall studied the contents of chil dren’s minds on entering school. These are a fc\v of the facts lie got from Boston (ompliasis ort Boston!); Eighty seven p.;i' c<.nt had never seen a pine tme; I-l per cent had never seen the .stats; nine out of ten ditl not know where cotton comes from; over one- Ihird had lioved been in the country. they would undertake in school, ho selected the names of 113 objects, taken mostly frcim First Readers. He found! that over 60 per cent of the children were ignorant of the mean ing of over half the words; 39 per cent could not beat time regularly, and only 62 per cent could sing at all. Over half were ignorant of stories. A very important bit of knowledge for a child first going away from home is in respect to finding his way back if he should be lost. In a study of 10,000 little Berlin children it was found that only about half had ever seen to know by name any of the con-: spicuous buildings or streets of the city, and from 15 to 19 per cent of The drawings of a young child are instructive as to the way they look at the world about them. They are invariably endeavors to express story. There is no care as to detail and not until they have been in school a year or two do they make the slightest effort to imitate nature. Figures are drawn without bodies or with arms and legs put on like branch es on a tree. 'They show almost no interest in number and no evidence of proportion or relation. It must be a very simple world in which children live. His Hinterland One thing every teacher who has a new roomful of pupils will know with- them could not give their father’s in a week after school began this fall: name. Could your own child, if he) She will know what kind of a home were lost, give clearly -his own name I each one of her children comes from, and street address? It is much more|Not the wealth of those homes, not important than a clean pocket hana- j their location, but their character, kerchief. j Every child brings his own Hinter- How They Look at Things ll™'’’ “e cannot disguise it No pre- ^ . .. 'tense can conceal an accurate impres- i here is space to name only a feiv sion. His manncir, his anpearances, ot the strange ideas commonly held ],is tastes, his outlook will reveal Lrtle children. _Most of iiiem think whether he has a good upbringing, or the earth is a plain. More than half whether, like Topsy, he has “just have-nover noticed the sun when more growed.” The teacher is informed as than 40 degrees froip. the zenith, and to the time and care that have been' about half of them tlunk it rolls along gpeht upon every child in the room, or.flles or IS blown, pe stars and Ihe These are his education, during the moon shine through holes in the sky. years before school when a human Babies are made up in heaven and are being learns more than during all the ,brought by the doctor or the milkman, rest of life put together. Those are In general, the world is a sort of groat the goods that he brings down to life’s big house where everybody has been ^ c<5astline to trade with, and they'are principal stock in trade. Don’t Blame Him; Texeh Him The moral seems to be plain. Don’t blame your little child for not know ing what he has never had any chance to learn. Don’t expect him, with his few hundred ideas and words, to un derstand or do what ought not to be expected of an average child of his age. If you wish him to know more than he does now and to enter school ■with a broader foundation for educa tion talk to him and show him more of the commonest things. For instance, this very week, let him see an ant, a chicken, an elm tree, and some moss; show him clouds, dew and the moon; teach him a square, a circle and a triangle; point out a bricklayer, a-Shoemaker and a bootblack at work. Common things ? Yes. But from ten to ninety-one children out of 100 en ter school without knowing them. seeting with the said lines of the High Point, Randleman, Asheboro and Sou thern Railroad Company; thence along said line 100 feet to the beginning, con taining 4,267 square feet, more or less. SECOND TRACT:—(In former ad vertisement “Third Tract”)‘Lying and being in Asheboro, North Carolina, and adjacent to and fronting on Fisher Avenue, two hundred four and one-half (204^^) feet, and extending back four hundred and twenty-eight (428) feet to Hoover Street, and bounded on the west by the lands of Arthur Ross, and dn the east by the lands of Hold er. On this lot is a good large dwelling house. This lot will be first offered in four parcels, the boundaries of which will be made known on the day of sale, and then as a whole, and the manner in which it shall bring the greatest price will be reported to the court. In addition to the foregoing, there will be sold at the same time, lots Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 in Block E, all fronting on Brockstt Avenue om the west; Lot No. 7, in Block B, a(^ joining Tate Avenue on the east, and fronting on Price Street; Lots-Nos. 6 and 7, in Block C. fronting on Lee'St:,"-- or Chippendale Road’; No. 7 is adjacent to Tate Avenue, and No. 6 is just east of and adjacent to No. 7; Lots Nos. 1* and 14, in Block A, fronting on Price Street; No. 14 is bounded by Tate Ave nue on the west, and No. 13 is just east of and adjacent to No. 14. All these ' lots are 50 by about 150 feet. See J. M. Sechrest Division, Plot Book No. 2, page 53, in the office of the Register o£ Deeds for Guilford county, N. C. Maps or plots of these lots can be seen at the office of J. L. Parrish, Esquire, High Point, N. C. Information may be had concerning' the foregoing property on application to W. C. Hammer, attorney, Asheboro, N.. C.; J. A. Spence, attorney, Ashe boro, N. C.;, and King Kimball, attor neys, Greensboro, N. C., or the under signed. '* This November 14, 1917. GREENSBORO LOAN & TRUST CO., By J. W. Fry, Commissioner and Exec utor. J. M. Sides, of Connelly Springs, was struck by passenger train No. 11 at Hickory last Thursday morning. He was immediately rushed to a hos pital where he died Friday evening. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ J - . t t (J. C. Kime Wants Your t ♦ Country Produce ♦ X and will pay highest cash market t ♦ ♦ X prices. Dried beans, peas, pota- X ♦ ❖ X toes, onions, eggs. X ♦ ♦ C ASTORIA For Infants and Children Use For Over 30 Years Always bears t’-.e Signature of Car Load of McCormick Binders, Mowers, ai d Binder Twine just received. Have an attractive price on these items. Call to see us; McCRARY-REDDING HARDWARE COMPANY The old-fashioned man who lacked education and spelled pneumonia the way it is pronounced because he didn’t know .any other way, now has a son who- spells it the way it is pronounced because he is a college graduate and an advocate of simple spelling. Housewives have been warned against persons who, it is reported, have attempted ter buy, tax or carry away home-canned products, claiming that they are representatives of the Food Adrmnistrator. These persons are imposters.