jBfisDAT, NOVEMEIB la, 1 , THEASHOOEOCQ inr3oca"itc.f. v Pare Three ECCPTS FOB ami .TCJLN20G TUK t)MEN " Con Meal Battel Bmd. , aupwluU eryeHpw eorm rneaL ' 1 topi hot jnilk. I- -'i'iVv! I - i tewpoo. salt. . ; - ;- - - ' teaspoons butter or baton fat 5 '""h J MC"'' " ' ' f ' " the hot milk. w th com and " K. Lot stand until cook Add too ' tatter or bacon fati melted, tb eggs weu-baven uu " ". novder. :' . f . ' "ST., Trtr lew seconds and , turn .kto a wea-greased, deep baking oiah. ' . Bake thirty minutes in a moderately Steven. Serve from the tdisa M . I Tnis breed. ia wr food with meat ?; 'Md jrsvy instead f potatoes or rice. .Net' Mf Trait' Salad. J$;f :r t tart 4 l sup pineapple oice. . . l eup celery. , l up Brazil nuta. i i eenned plmientoB.v eup inayonnalse or .cooked dn I. , " ifT i.5. 44 cud cromn. pesvca uaui iuii, Pare, core and eat applet in man, thin slice. Dean and cut the celery in thin slices. , doctt sisx xeclect. -' Dent fteetox a irf harp, darting peine or arinarr - dis orders. Tb dearer ef droorv or Bitchfe disease Is toe serious to ig nore. Um Doaae XJdaer 1 Pill a. aare four friends and neighbors. Aa Asheboro ease, 'w . Mrs. Hugh J. Bdju'i X. Faretu- Tfile Street, says: "Aheot 4hree years ago X was sufXetin ? sererty from uaaey uvwie. . it Mean lntli pams across tne amaU of my back and latex, i naa auu neaoaenee and mxtr snella. The way my kidneys acted bothered me rreatly,. I finally sent for Dean's JUndney JIIs and after 1 had need one box X was feeling" better, 1 kept on taldnr. Doaa's ntil 1 was eared of the attack. (Statement grrea January t, On December 15. 1921. Mrs.' Bums added:. There 's no thine like Poaas Kidney Pill for me. -1 dent know how I would ret alonr withent them. I used Doan's erery ence in a while o seep my aoneys u rood ordes." i race cue, at ail deeiera. Dona simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Sidney Hlls-the, same, .that Mrs. Bums had. Foster41ilburn Co, mrs, traasjev w . , ,.- SlieS the nuts and pit the pimientos in small dle.v.v.f S;. Mix all with a little mayonnaise. Season to taste, adding a small amount a lemon Juice it needed. Wash and dry the' lettuce' leaves , sad arrange in salad bowL Place the fruits and nuts III' erteT:-rr:-;': ' : Garnish top .with- the remainder of isavonnaise mixed with the V stiffly . beaten cream. If desired, the pimien . tos may be cut in, strips and used to garnish the salad,,;'' ,.i V;- ' Baked Fears With Rice.' U pears. ;.. Iach piece of cinnamon. 2 sups milk. . ' v 1-2 cup rice. . 1 egg. ; i ,!s- .' .: 2 tablespoons sugar. 'X , 1-2 teaspoon salt!. i 2 eups sugar, i. , 1 run water. ' . '' Pare, cut in halves, 'and remove the seeds from the pears,' Make a sirup , by eooking sugary , water and einna .. mon together for five minutes,. In this :' sirep cook ttie pears, a few at time I . until they arei soft but nbtv mushy. ? Cook rice in milk for one houtr-add ' sugar, salt and egg,, j and cook : five arinutes. Turn into a mold and chill. yTura onto a serving dish, Bqrround " with pears and siilupj.-..'Arv.-. . ' Ebrd winter pears, or the jearly fall pears, or seckel pears, are all -good : , cooked in this way. ' Sometimes a little preserved ginger j Instead of the cinnamon is used. TimDalea , ' . Occasionally one wishes to make for tapper or luncheon and with which to : t;jnake a croquette or timbahvV i 'The following recipe-will '"'rnake; eaad timbale which will tum but.' and by adding cheese to the sauce the fuel t vaiae of the dish will be considerable. This quantity will make i, four tim- sales, measuring ene-haif cupful, or sn measuring one-third cupful: ; V, 1 cups soft! stale bread crumbs. - 3 tablespoons butter or bacon fat. . 2 tablespoons chopped onion. 1 eup mflk. v teaspoon celery salt . teaspoon salt. ;v teaspoonful paprika, H teaspoon pepper. "w , 1 tablespoon fine cut; parsley. , 'i - Ceok the onion in the butter or ba ; en fat until yelfow - Add bread f erseibs and cook one" minute.' Add .; auk and. cook until a paste Is.fonn "'es, " i . ! -- . Mm add ' seasonings and eggs Y ' sliAtly beaten. , Tarn in well-buttered ,,' nolai and set "molds in a pan-1 half r HUt with hot water, - - vi lake in k moderate oven until firm, V ' er antil when a sharp-pointed knife Is mto, the center of the timbales m of the mixture' clings to knife. Serve with, the following sauce: ; ' V tsblespoona butter.. r '-' "- ii'A ,f : 2 mblespoona flour. " ,, eup milk, -fysfiiS.- f ' '. 1 mblespoon; catsup, ' 1 r -TV-. teaspoon, aalk ; - (, fV teaspoon pepper. :r l,S 4, i 1 tablespoon lemon juiced ,. . , l mblespoon chopped pickle. Get Ready to Eat Reindeer Meat, Folks! ' nke aa usu&L' bv meltine batter. Mt flour, . and ' when ', thoroughly lied adding milk and Y seasonings. CHk until thick and smooth." . aheesei is leaired,, use ; one-half P awted . cheese.,: ,itj- Vv v' - ,:.Tae, American's .Creed, v j . 1919 inkua Tyler Kge,.W d'e featant of Carter Drartonone of the "i9eri of the Declaration of Indepen ei, was awarded a prize of i one wowwnd dollars for a short article "U3ed The American's Creed. It U f .ef -the same sfiUmnt , that feniptd the Declaration of Indepen and i.i much of the declaration rieii In n1 "ft form. It follows: I blie-e la " the United. Rules', of ica a (rowrnmrnt of the Ph F hy tS.a i '!(, for the people; Jur.t poptg aia drrivcd from NEW SCHEDULE ON NORFOLK ; SOUTHERN RAILROAD The people In this section of the state especially in Moore. Montirom ery and Randolph counties were re joicing - Monday morning 'when -' the new schedule went into effect en the Norfolk Southern railroad. The pas senger, trains on this ' roads between Asheboro and Aberdeen r, have been discontinued since the strike some months ago, and mixed freight has been the only accommodation on the railroad .between these points. The schedule Is as follows: The trains will be vmixed trains, Nos. 70 aKd .71, ' handling through freight only, while the new. trains,. 74 and 75, will handle local freight and passengers. All trains will be daily except Sunday.,?. . Train- No". 70 will leave Aberdeen at 9:30 a. m., reach Candor at 10:30 a. m., Star at 11 a. m and Ashe boro -at 1 p. m. Train No. 74 ' wflt leave Aberdeen at 8:30 a, m.; reach Star at 11:45 a. m.; leave at 12:15 p. m., and reach Asheboro at 2:30 p. m. : No, 75 will leave Asheboro at 8:45 a. m; reach Star -at 11 a. m., and Aberdeen- at 3 :40 p. m. . ' y No. 71 will leave Asheboro at 3:30 p. m.; arrive at star at 4:oo p., m., and Aberdeen at 7:40-pn m.. , ..yv:-'i; iiii ,,'ni i i. i ii ii ' Trimming an Ingrown Nail. , Almost as deeply ingrown as . the popular delusion that iractures fknit" on the ninth day or is it the twenty- nrst z anyway it is one nig day znax never was .is the popular idea tnat an ingrowing toe nail should be .trim mod straight across without rounding the comers off at all, or is it the other wayT anyway jt is seme way that doesnt matter, , . v' vThtse ia a- wayta-trim biF ut se- ealled ingrowing toe nail and it gen erally gives permanent relief, and en- flows: A local anesthetic is injected I into, the tissue near the edge , of the nail, and the root of the nail. The surgeon then removes a wedge, of tissue which includes the edge of the nail and the soft. tissue next to the aiL He takes , a good deep section out while he is at it, so that the clean edges willi approximate nicely. That is all there is of it. The soft tissue at the edee of the aaiL being, ; constantly pressed and squeezed against the edge, become' ir ritated and inflamed, and if the ab normal or freak shoes are not'discard ed the inflammation is followed by granulation ("proud ..flesh"- in the groove, jknd . this granulation', tissue heals op over the nail , edge giving the. appearance of "ingrowing" nail. If a toe nail took1 upon itself a' tend ency to grow' in there would be little to do for it But the soft tissues may be drawn awayjfrom the nail edge by skilfully applied strips of adhesive plaster, changed night arid morning. The groove may be powdered With burnt alam -to discourage' the granu lation--tissue, ; Of course. Wide -.toed shoes having the straight inside heel and toe lines reust. be worn, if. any shoes may be worn while the nail edge la .sore. ' ii i 'j More Milk For Children. V .' Uut February a rduk campaign was waged for the. school children with amazing results. It is toot necessary for any organisation, in Asheboro. to start such a movement when so many families bare cows of their own, and pure dairy milk la accessible. Ar1 This fact is shown by r figures de rtred from chart given eat by the chamber of commerce, ef Greensboro, Thursday giving results of milk feed ing experiments conducted in the dty schools for a period of eight weeVV .The greatest gain shown by' a child cn the milk diet was eight .pounds m eight weeks, and the.' average' gain for each child over, that period was 5.78 pounds,- Twenty nupils that were selected irorn me OOMBTHINO i new f te eat I Oet ready to eat reindeer neat, xolka The reindeer experUaents of Undo 6am and William T. Lopp In Alaska have proved 't great success. The first drive ef ifioo from: the home range to a big distributing point, already is under way. jl;l JAh4,y ' More than 800 miles will be traversed by this herd, moving from Good News bay to Biley creek on the Alaskan railway. ) The. herd will pasture and ratten on ' the moss-covered ' plains along the railway. In the faU they will be slaughtered. Other herds wm follow this to the iblalty Of the railroad, where a 12,000 square mile area is open for feeding them, and transportation is at hand. The surplas .from other herds win be broujht la regularity and. wfH be factors in feeding hot only Alaska but part of the United States. As a palata ble; , nourishing food, reindeer meat finds favor, wherever' marketed la America, . s ', -t AY 1? ' - Tp the Xskimo the reindeer la most valuable, v Alive, It represents a value ef 29. a head. ' It is an . excellent sled animal, traveling In snow toe deep for dogs, Slsnghtered,! bis meat, as sures a food supply and a trading com modity, and the akin provides the KNOW NORTH CAROLINA , ' ; Going Seaae. j : In" Chairman ' Frank Page's little chat Monday night to S0,0u0 people over the radiophone, he told them that the state's road building results daily in two miles of . hard surface and three of other construction, and that the building from first to last re quires 16,000 men. From the expenditures it can be seen, too, that this construction re- terlal for making every garment wWch!2uire tSlOO.OOO every work: day, the IfcMmo weara' ' rKt r ,w M' vennea. .xne : Twenty-five years age the Eskimo "pending about $25,- raoeunatry own nerosworui over 00 every1 year at the present 84,000,000;, have an assurance . of a rate, . i profltabM Vrellhood, and real business No wonder that people are no longer judgment . ' r " : unintelligent enough to attack the -Here 1a where Lopp "has succeeded, 'road construction - program. There He's chief of the Alaska division, l are 160,000 automobiles in the state rjnlted States bnman at aAnraHAn ami 'not eoontinr h 18.000 trucks. These has taught the Eskimos the. reindeer ! all belong to North Carolina, but it is' sale to assume tnat 60,000 automo biles' from other states every year use North Carolina roads. And what thes tourists can do by way of say ing a good word for North Carolina, everybody can see. From California to Maine' and from Minnesota to Ala bama, the chorus of praise for North Carolina is without discord. GLAD SISTER ESCAPED -... ' OPER4TI0NX Thyskians had given, say sister ap to die; they wanted to operate Jar nil stones, but she was too weak aa4 could oalx talk la whispers. , 1 got her a bottle ef Magi's Wonderful Rem edy and in 8 weeks aha was able te get about and walked - a mile - te church." It is a simple, hinrjesa preparation that removes the va tarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation wham causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including s- pendicitis. One dose wul convinca k money refunded. Sold by Standard Drug Company and leading druggists everywhere. "business. Pioneers will tell von of Lonn's nart in , the Point Barrow relief expedltloa of 189T, when with four Eskimos ha droye 400 reindeer across the treacher ous Ice and wind-swept Arctic winter coast for 750 miles, to feed a starving people, Harnett county farmers are ized with the purpose of studyinx i ditions and methods of other parti f the state. v Many a business baa collapsed -jn. the verge of a magniflcent sucasss Just because, it lacked little ready capital. .North. Carolina came da geionsly near doing the same thing when a little adversity struck it twe years ago. The 876,000,000 put iisto schools and reads will come back, with a billion of compound interest. ' Ffcre miles of finished road and $100,Mt, paid to 16,000 men daily that is cer tainly going some. Greesisboro News. Anniversary Sale Prices Pre vail in Our Ladies9 Ready-to-Wear Section The anniversary of our fifth year in High Point is being observed by us in our ladies' ready-to-wear department. Many real value giyipg specials are being given by us. Newest styles, latest patterns, and excellent materials are being shown here. Come in and go through our stock of ladies' ready-to- wear, coats, dresses, and suits, and see exactly what we are now o'ffering you. Note the prices that we -have them marked at Note the styles, the new styles, the styles that add such becoming smartness to the wearer. The styles that add individuality to the wearer. The materials that will jgiye you a last-' ing service that will more than justify you in purchasing a garment, such as.we are offering. Note the ' wide ranggof colors that this fall has brought forth. Note the beauty f it all, you are not asked to buy, hit just to come and look and see for yourself what we are offering you. Visitors always welcome. crry i. tf t : t 1!!.! ,, H i ' 'lmit t fi.r ' " 1 ! a r"t y a t t , 1: F'.vn '.ii-; a 1 i t :1 i,,-- H to 'ivrr:in n-r.'.-i, a prl-p-tr..;.!p; es .. ii !-a ' of nm humnr.- uly lo "It its to re- it t U r; underweight were dty schools, and each was given one pint of milk per day for eight weens. A . record of each on Was made at the end of . the third, ,, fifth,; seventh and eighth weeks. 'The teport shows Hint only two of th 20 children fail ed to make gains In weight, while on the milk diet, and one ft these chil dren loft arhrKd, before the experiment was completed. The report states that r,. arly all of the tnlllrn, "show- rf runrkfil improvement physically, noma In classroom work and one showed a mnrkH . clmnge in temper-tv-. t." Our A-l f Wiro ami' counly cnihlren ,vSI-'i J t.i tl,c bt, gttd them pi. '.!' of miik. .. New Fall Dresses -Lovely new fall dresses' of canton crepe and crepe ;de chine;'all "are made'nicelyand "some, trjmmed arid others plain in navy, black and brown for $9.5 Ladies' wool dresses . .f.. $89& Ladies' wool mixed serge dresses $3.98 Visit our annex entrance back of office. A complete line in all the desirable furs. Squirrel chokers, special price $13.75 Stone Marten chokers, special $7.98, $12.48 Red Fox chokers, special. . $13.75 Ctone Marten Opossum chokers $7.95, $12.48 Pearl grey fox chokers $7.95 Beaverette, in single and twin-skin . . $4.98, $11.48 Special values in scarfs in fox and cross fox $16.75 Ladies' Coats of Bolivia Cloth,' priced at $32.50 Heather mixtures of the new materials for $12.48 yelourand Bolivias in brown, navy and black $25.00 values, for v. ,......-...:. SK.75 Velour and heather mixtures, blue and brown, for.. .. J. .. .. .... ; $18.95 Satin Dresses You have seen dresses priced at $16.75 before, but never have you seen such dresses, as the ones we have at this price. New dresses of satin, poiret twill and tricotine dresses in navy at $16.75 Ladies' New Coats Velours and Bolivia in navy, brown, and black for $24.50 Poiret Twill Suits Poiret twill suits for fall. They are the new soft fabrics in tailored models, for $29.95 Children's Coats Children's silver tone and chinchilla coats for $4.98 Made of beautiful colors of velour. Siaea 10 to 14, for $4.98 New Sweaters Ladies' new coat sweaters in the new fall colors for $3.98 to $6.48 Children's wool and cotton sweaters, in pink, old rose, red, blue, white. Efird's prices. . $1.98, $2.48 t Thanksgiying Values in Men's, 's and Children's Shoes women J r Below wq list JusTalew of the items that we are offering you. Note the prices at which w have them A 'ttiarked, then tomb In and see the wide range of new styles that we are now showing. The smartest of -i.'-.;.: all shoes. The 'popular satin' brocade pump which we have on display, and many other styles, equally f iTv.MipulariiReu'Thai are now being offered. Note our window display of shoes. $185 $185 $55 $195 lien's black scotch grain oxfords V. Il6n's tan scotch trrain oxfords- V:, i .lien's brown brogue oxfords .,1;.,;.;. i,1 "Men s DiacK. bcovca gruui bjiucb. . f-t'lUtfB scotch grain shoes lHV.Viv:U$5.95 K'X Meri'$ Kussian calf, Reynolds shoes ;V.''$7.C0 -,-. .Men s Russian calf, Reynolds brogue shoes. , $7.uo, ; 'Men's brown kid, Reynolds combinatiori,last'$3.00 Men's black leather lined shoe U 4 v ;-i $-U8 Men's Russian calf shoe ;;; ,-r'. . ,n iti IW $-t8 Men's brown.kid, flexible trCad, v.. HrHhvi $6.00 Men's Russian calf, English last .V.v:i':. t $3.93 -- Men's Russian "calf;' blucheriast'.: trv. $3.93 Men's black' kid. Enclish last !,7 $3.93 Ladies' Pomps and Oxfords Piotr eatin liwva4a rvumn Purinn ViooT f $6.50 Ladies' black satin pump, baby Louis heel M . $5.93 Ladies'" black kid pump, baby Louis heel V; ; ..; $4.93 Ladies' patent pump, military heel :,;;i.y: $4.98 Ladies' patent, grey trim pumps . v. r ;ifCVi $198' : LAOies tan. pump. neei. 4 , ; ; o . -i Ladies' two-tone oxford, military heel'.-..i'.V $5L85 , 1.11 brown kid oxford, flat heelv. h. V'v $4.98 -f; ' 11- .1. ' ! T iAdik' Riiftsian calf hxford: military heel i i J4.93 Ladies' patent pump," baby Louis heelVi $5.98 JJJ; Ladies' black kid oxford, military heel..,', a-.Vi. $1.93 f w a a a a x m 1 . Laoics' biacK kid, arcn noia oxioros v.v.. v tirlnz the children in;. we giVe them' special' 4, o o - : J V. . - ..fa t '"I 'I V i . 1 - .rV- . ... $2.93 . . . nirn a inn t'.nrTii;n Knur ....... A P.Tr."T7.NT STORE

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