Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Sept. 20, 1923, edition 1 / Page 13
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L- ASIIEEORO, N. C. bow to trc, A - wi. father hU at Up'J tia : uSTta saying, hast TtL m Al fncc nerer reasoned with hisa, Sd him U think what he was what th ewnaeqoeaces irht be. Therefore the boy did whU he Uk- na what ther PPW -v the toiiu man wu no 'l,r than a headstrong bey, bigger tut no isr. Therefore, the pexnpered prince be a rebel end a traitor and died violence. Thertfo' hi father, King David, 1...;., ..noiled him. had to suffer .JlAt"P- -i ' . , , Kim, TU process ef nay he very pleasant eo4 the resnru bot is the end the resort painful The sins of the fathers are watted ea the children; and thee the staix-ef the children come beck upon the lather. If the younger generation U wild and reckless, U not the elder rene ra tion at fault ! ' Discipline la ea needfnl to a child M training to a colt or pruning to a fruit tree. But with a child the dis cipline most be rooted in reason. "Why hast thou done so" is the first question. With that education begins. New is the time when good farm ers are getting their exhibits ready for the county fair. . IMPORTANT GUEST Hubby came a me and found an argument going- on- His wife was trying u give a bridge party. : "Whato the row?" he de mended. ' "One ef the nests is threatening to walk out," explained his wife in a whisper. "I most concilate her." "Conciliate nothing. Let her walk out." "Cant be done, hubby. Shell walk oat with six chairs and foer bridge tables I borrowed from her." Louisville Courier-Journal. It is thought that Frank D. Hack' ett will be candidate arainst State Auditor Baxter Durham and D. r. Giles, of Marion, will be a candidate for commissioner of Labor and Print ing against the present encumbent H. L. Shipman. Better Oetpei ef C ft. Mere YakUe Than CeUaa Cree ; I The total value- of butter produced in the United Sutes in mi wu 149,47537, or nearly HAOHW greater than the value of the l2l cotton crop. The wheat crop that year had a value of $731,068,000, according U a study of the butter and cheese mar kets just completed by Charles F. Junod, vice president of the Bank ef America. He found that tie butter received in New York in 1922 totaled 241,604,065 pounds and had a valae, at one average price of OAT cents per pound, of $98332354, Champion Pig Raised by Minnesota Youth Torrance L. HageD, n lad lMnj is IWlview, Redwood couity. U'jnmKi, raised s pig on a lift) Lj btij-tuui lot vkirft na made frnd chamriuu bar row ever all breed at the Junior Life Stork show held at SouUi St. Paul lust wtster. hy exerrialng food cure, witb the aid of well btvd autiaal be was able to overcome the hjmdli-sps ot town, and win over all idl club buys end glrla of Minnesota. His purebred Poland China barren, weighed 450 pounds wht-a he left boase, NEWS ITEMS Bud Lindsay, colored, ft is alleged, inflicted burns upon his wife in High Point, which resulted in her death. Lindsay will be tried for murder. (4?. m dm mm Terrano Haven and Hi Barrow. Champion B ig Reduct ion S Now on Continues Through FAIR WEEK Visit Our Store While In Town and when sold at the stock ynrds after the show, he weighed 430 pounds. The pig was faraevred March 9. 19U2. During the 14i-dfly period l'roui May T i 1 to September 24 the pig gained 2J7 J pounds or a traction orer two pounds per day. v i The lad's records show that the bar- row's cost of prodution was five $ ! wnts per pound. A St. Paul packer 4p bought him at auction for 00 cfnts per 1 pound, the check amounting to $258. Besides the boy won a gold medal, sll a i ver medal, silver trophy, free trip to a , the International Live Stock Exposl 7 tlon at Olilcago, and $80 in prise i , awards. mm North Carolina, Qcero Hill lulled and Mrs. as Snuth wm hurt aehously on itptember 5th, when an unknown ;3-on opcJ fire en the two per ns with s ghot gua ax a distance of J) yards, while they were sitting on i log in lit woods near the home of the woman. The bil weevil calls for some iositive changes ui the agriculture of Eattern Carolina. SmjJl grains, la ,umes and winter gardens are in or ler for this falL Aabe county is to bridge the dan gerow New kiter crossing at the .-"hewix Creek on the road from Jef feraen tq PUa Creek. The Co-operative Marketing Abso lutions do not have to pay income wken the distribution of the earnings are made, to all of the stock holders. ake, county and Guilford county are to have new audits of county af fairs. The Wake county auditing is to be confined to the sinking fund. C. F. Pwwell, editor of the Mebane Enterprise, was painfully hurt at Mebane September 5th when an air plane in which he was riding was badly wrecked. , a serious accident occureii at Fig, I Ashe county, on the closing night of (he camp meeting recently when a l ord touring car ran off the road, turned over three times and was prac tically demolished. All six occupants of the car except one escaped serious injury. James Gilly, the driver was seriously injured. The party was go in from the camp meeting held by ! Hev. J. M. Green. Mr. Carl Blake, son of Henry Blake , was seriously injured in an auto mobile accident, on his way to Thom- 1 asville, recently when the car in which he was riding plunged into a tele phone pole near Denton. The Ford Motor Company's profits for the past four months are $54,000 000.00. This is equal to about $315, 000,000, a share on the stock of the company. - Congressman Hammer, of Ashe boro, and Senators Simmons and Overman, and no doubt other mem bers of the North Carolina delega j non in Congress, have been elected, and notified of their election, as hon orary members of the North Carolina bociety of Pennsylvania. Mr. James Lee Bost, secretary, has written a letter in which he calls attention to ; the fact htat the societv is oroaH,, interested in the construction of the Chicken Flock Need Not Be a Nuisance in Towns Neighbors frequently object to the keeping of poultry in towns and cities, i most comnlalnts belntr aealnst the ! vociferous rooster and disagreeable i North Carolina Bay in the cloister of odors. In some cities and towns there , ., 1,1 L"e woiuieriui memorial Riming at valley Forge. North Carolina and Georgia are the only remaining states of the original col onies that have not finished their parts. H. B. Shaw becomes the head L J L. are regulations to prevent er control poultry keeping, but the United taj,es Department of Agriculture lays that the floctt nee3 not 1e a nuisance. Ther"? will be no annoyance from odors If the dropping boards are Cleaned me experimental station at North dally and the yards are kept reason- I Carolina State College, ably clean. There Is no necessity for . Jhe famous Captain Shepperson, of teeDln a'rooITw'unless the owner in- ,n"ePld , sy writer" aviator, was in- . ... si.aiiuy Killed near K nrlrwnnri Ition field September 15th. tends to hatch chicks, anfl In that case the rooster should be disposed of as soon as the hens have been set. A flock without a male will produce Just us mnriv eses and. what Is more, the p5 will be infertile and win betterT keep buy .r- : A A JWi HJou can Tlie Diamond people, builders of tlie famous Diamond Cord, make a tira for lightweight cars lenown as the Doable Diamond. A quality tire througli and through, as only Diamond knows how to make At a Price Astonishingly Low! We can Touch for the service and de pendability of this sturdy tire because we saw what Double Diamonds did on the road last year. Give us a telephone ring and we'll tell you what d Doable Diamond costs. Lexington Grocery Co. Asheboro, N. C. Free Choice System of Mash Feeding to Fowla A study of the freo choice system of mash feeding for chickens made by the United States Department of Ag riculture at Its experiment farm lo cated at Beltsvllle, Md., showed that the best results and highest egg pro duction are obtained when hens are allowed to select their own mash con stituents. It was found that henn se lected a mash composed of 66 pacta corn in eal, 26 parts meat scrap, 4 parts wheat bran and 4 parts wheat mld- avia- haviiw ,i - .. I ... .. ' . ; tvMiiy.cwju a sKy writing" advertis- ing stunt over Nashville. The way he i writes in the sky is to make a smoke j shield between him and the earth and 'hen he writes In large letters hiy advertisement. The Advertisement ,the editor has seen him wre is. I "Lucky Strike." -r State auditor Baxter Durham has been made president of the National Association of State Auditors, Comp trollers and Treasurers. Mr. Joseph W. Kesler, wealthy re tired fanner and business man, of Salisbury, died at the age of 75 years on September 15th. Mr. James Lee Bost, who was one time principal of Farmer Academy in Randolph county, is now living in Philadelphia and secretary of tho North Carolina society to which con gressman Hammer was elected hon orary member at a recent meeting of the society and has been invited to visit a meeting of the society and re- dllnra. This mash elves best results with Leghorns, and a less stimulating Quested to take a part in the program, mash, containing more bran and I Over 2,000 negroes departed from ground oats, with less meat scrap, baa 'Johnstown' Pa., after being ordered given better results with ganoral-pur-pote breeds. Well Prepared Field Is Needed for Sudan Grass It Is requisite If the f&rmor Is go ing to hnve good success with Sodon grass that he plant In a well prepared field. Jast because the crop Is hardy Is no reason why It should b treated nad quarreler shabbily. Tall plowing or fall listing of fields Intended for It, with careful after preparation before planting means that much higher yields, and this Is generally the bails for figur ing profits from producing any crop. on Dy me mayor. The mayor out j lined as his reason for taking this j action was so that no more negroes would be brought to Johnstown from the south. The people have been sit ting on a bomb for a month and it almost exploded last week when two ; policemen were killed and four others ;so badly wounded that one of them , died and two others were so danger ously hurt they are not expected to live. ini8 was done bv a neo-rn who with his wife. This DOUBLE ;mii, - I uUv urn . -..I,', ,T mm (. wr ttt-t. '.. '. Jft'M fc-' 1 negro had gone north thinking ho could do as he pleased but was treats ed worse than he had ever been in any southern community. John F. French, a prominent Lum berton citizen, died September 14th i at Black Mountain, N. C. He was spending his vacation there to re cuperate his health. O. C. Cox, chairman of the Demo cratic Executive Committee was tak en to the hospital last Saturday ; morning after having three hemor I rhages from the lungs. Mrs. L. C. Bray, of Liberty, died Friday in a hospital in Greensboro. , Mrs. Bray is survived by her hus band, three sons and seven daughters, all of Liberty; her mother, Mrs. Sal ly Dickson, three brothers, L. T., A. W and W. M. Dickson, three tiatjr. " :Mrs. Sally Forrister, Misses Grace Study Being Made Of Many 2nd ?adle Dickson, all of Siler City. ti u ? n n 'Tn was tk,,n to her home at Problems in Growing UOm ; Liberty and buried at Deep River Problem, dealing with corn growing ; Chu ""fiW' are being -ndled by .b agHcn.tura, 'w.shbLX.X experiinew aianons 01 oo .on -q . . . - Cull Pullets Closely During Month of August Cull pullets closely during the month f August. Sell for fryers all those Individual! that lack proper develop ment. Birds showing tolled, ruffled plumage, very long legs and shallow breasts belong In the poor class. Cull slso your molting bens. They will loaf till next spring. Tb best layers ars till laying and will not molt till fall. three Ot th Insular possessions, ac cording to reports to the United States Department of Agriculture. Cora breeding, adaptation of varieties, till age, rate and date of seeding, and use of fertniaera are the principal lines of Investigation. Plant Dwarf Essex Rape for Chickens or Swine Dwarf Essex rape may be planted very rich soil any .time daring early swnmer for the chickens or plga. A man area of rich land la rap will oftea yield an enertnoc aiooest of green feed for pig chlckee rehbtti od other aman antnala, . Do sot plant rape M thin tand anltaa m iMfr Urayard rntMOf tnttf, j.. ,i .' ' "" ' '"'. - -; tha richest, men in the world. Henra Ford, made his money out of automo bllea. He did not begin the: manufac ture of the present model 'of Fords until 1909. In the fourteen yeara that have intervened he has turned out 8,112.000 cart. Ford plants are now turning out 7,100 car a day. Their employes in 1903 numbered 126: In 1921, 82,679. The ford proflU in 1921 were not quite seventy-six mil lion dollars, 1606 a minute, eight dol lars second.: , - Wratt Pickens who has Wn a att. oertt of the University at Madrid and has 'been studying Spanish fn Brain, this vnmmor le a son ef Mr. and Mrs. K, Tr Pickens and a grandson of the UU ReT.'C. A. Pickens who was well known in this section. Young Pick ens la to he teacher of Spanish in tho University of North Carolina, v v
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 20, 1923, edition 1
13
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