Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Oct. 18, 1923, edition 1 / Page 6
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"? 1 : Page Six TmrasiiEnona couiues, asiuxoiio; N.Cv- V 4: " - f . How lone after a dog ia bitten is it before be goes madt What are the first sign! Is there a way of testing the Mood to- see if one is affected with rabies? There are do dependable blood tests to determine whether or not a dog ia infected with the virus of rabies. The length ef time which intervenes from the time a dog has been bitten until the first symptoms of rabies ap pear varies considerably. Rabies may appear within three or four weeks, or it may be somewhat longer. If the animal does not develop rabies with in 90 days it is usually considered safe. In most instances rabies de velops within 60 days following the infliction of the bite. A positive diagnosis of rabies is made by an examination of the brain of the affected animal and, of course, this would be of little or no value un til the symptoms have actually devel oped. The early symptoms of the disease very to some extent, depend ing upon weather the dog is develop ing the dumb or the furious form. In the furious form we recognise at the beginning a change of disposition, a tendency to wander, a disposition to snap, especially when molested, rapid emaciation, at times a peculiar bark, ultimately the animal goes into a state of paralysis and dies within seven or eight days. In the dumb form we notice a paralysis of the lower jaw as indicated by a dropping f the jaw and the animal appearing to hold his mouth open continually, rhis becomes more marked as the disease progresses and there is not suite so great a tendency to snap as in the furious form, although the case lost be handled with caution. WATAUGA COVSTY HAS ACGl'JL MAltfUKG A Cm epcrativo Affair. J. U. Dmu h Cherryvills Eagle. Out aa Ik vast sad at Bean there is something pew aadei the sua going ; on. At least ia in to most of us 'people hereabouts; it Is a full fledg- ed kraut factory running at fall lapsed. Last week the factory made a trial 'start and ran at intervals during the 1 week making one 25-ton tub of kraut, (and all this week a string af wagons. ; and trucks was hauling in cabbage, land this wonderful new plant is shav- HOW 10 KOWYOU -. "ABE EDUCATED ing it into kraut .that looks like a A cooperative shipment of 6,000 pounds of crimson clover seed has just been distributed in Caswell Coun ts; by the farm agent. Orders far 1,000 pounds of vetch seed and two tons of lime have been given the County Agent in Lee County. After A universal custom thai benefits every- Aids digestion, PlCCal Manses the teeth, soothes the threat. & good thing to remember Sealed in its Purity Package V sT H FLAVOR LASTS feaspoonfui I bank of snow. The workmen are new of course, at this job and it will take then a little time to develop maximum efficiency, but even now they are making about 15 tons ef kraut per day. The cabbage is first trimmed, re moving every speck or green or dam- i aged cabbage; then (he core is sliced 1 . . I 1 ' I m . V oy a unu inacmne maae ior uie pur pose; then the cabbage is carried an a conveyor belt to the cutter. Thia cutter seems to be capable of hand- 1 ling as many cabbage heads as can I be put into it. The heads are sliced I so that the kraut is in long delicate threads. This shredded cabbage is put I into large cypress tanks that will hold j about 7,000 gallons, where it is left to ;ferment It will be about a month ; before one can sample the product, i but those who have visited the plant , believe that at that time here will be enough for all. I Later the power of this plant will (be furnished by a steam engine, but i at this time a Fordson tractor is run ining the thing, and judging from the steady purr that is sends up from the' basement it must be tickled over ite new job. An up-to-date steam pressure can ning plant is being installed that will iput up 15,000 cans per day. This kraut is to be hold in tin cans, 80 pound tubs and in barrels, as the market demands. The plant is in i charge of Neal Blair, who has been in the kraut game all his life. The people of Wautauga thought that he had been manufacturing in a wholesale way, but find now that his former business was an infant com pared with the present operations. Will Winkler is acting as sales man and has covered most of the territory with in trucking distance fr3.,i I?, or.?. Practically every 6tore he has visited has given him a trial order and many have already given repeat orders, even before the first i delivery has been made. The manage ment seems comident and if the product comes up to expectations, the selling end will be the easiest part of the game, they think. There is another side to this busi ness of which grocerymen are not losing sight. The manufacture of kraut makes it possible for the cab bage growers to grade their cabbage, and put on the market as cabbage, only those heads that are of medium size, hard and without waste. Such cabbage can be handled by the gro ceryman without loss and the con sumer dosn't have to trim away half his purchase. -The fanners of Wautauga are very-l mll'Vi nta..A u: - -1 ......... iaocu wiui uua new co-operative industry and many of them are pinning their faith to it, while others are waiting for it to succeed before they lend their efforts to help make it a success. This plant is the out growth of the activities of the county agent, John B. Steele, and very mate rially has strengthened this work in Wautauga county. THOROUGH WORK When is one educated in the best of the word T : A professor ia the University af Chicago ia aaid to have told his pupils that "fce should consider them truly educated when they could answer affirmatively these 14 questions. . " . L Has your education gives sym pathy with all godd causes and made yon espouse them. Z. Haa it made you public- pi rit ed! .. -:i 3. Has it made you a' brother to the weak. - 4. Have yon learned bow to make friends and Keep them? 5. Do von know what ft la he their la friend to yourself? 6. Can you look an honest man or a pure woman straig-nt in the eye? 7. Do you see anything" to love in a little child. -: - 8. Will a lonely dog follow you in the street? 9. Can you be high-minded and happy in the meaner drudgeries of I ofihanvher tV f oooniy BJUUKQ FOWtttM Goes farther last$ionger kwvexuatf V ?s FAXING I t i TTST How an Asheboro Citizen Found Freedom From Kidney Troubles. ..If you suffer from backache From urinary disorders Any curable disease of the kidneys, Use a tested kidney remedy. Doan's Kidney Pills have been test ed bv thousands. Asheboro people testify. Can you ask more -convincing proof of merit? Mrs. D. C. Bulla, Cox St., Asheboro, says: "About a year ago I began to suffer with kidney complaint. The action of my kidneys was varied and Irregular. There was also a steady, dull ache across the small of my back that grew worse when I was on my feet a great deal and I would of ten have to stop and rest I used Doan's Kidney Pills getting them from the Standard Drug Co., and they helped me right along. Two or three boxes cured me and I havent been troubled with my back or kid neys since." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills-the sameTthat Buffalo?!?. FoBt-Milbun Co, ELECTION DAT IS COMING Election day is earning, friends; A day on which much will depend To. make this spot a favored place Where men will rush to find a space To work and earn and educate In WaynesTflle, in the Old Nortb State Let's jsrork, let's rote and vote Just right: ' Let's work to win from mora night. til Let's - not boys, forget onr brfght-eyed Thdr future welfare and their' Joys, AnA mrm Mite a m wt - aastaays, utru too lorger our 1 nru s , t With their ruddy cheek end. pretty Por these am mnafn "-Ufliii." Or ' wa should - fall ' tit f. health vf7 "J. most:, ml r tot ? better Vote for freedom for your chlJdj Vote against the rods and wild, t V Vote for home and native land; ' Vote agalnxt the outlaw band: j ' vote to turn out hrifpr men' Vote sirr.;.i-f. v . j ,.i tf.' life 10. Do you think washing dishes and hoeing corn just as. compatible with high thinking as piano playing or golf? 11. Are you good for anything to yourself? Can you be happy alone? 12. Can you look out on the world and see anything except dollars and cents? 13. Can you look into the mud puddle by the wayside and see any thing in the mud puddle but mud? 14. Can you look into the sky at night and see beyond the stars ? Can your soul claim relationshin with t.h Creator? The Progressive Farmer. 01 No'th Calina. As Soon as you get to Noth Calina The roads and the towns get newah, nnan, The people walk with a brisker step, And even your motor has more pep. The hookworm's banished. the country has A lot more energy. neD and iazz: The livest northerner couldn't Hp- sign a Livelier state than No'th Calina. The farms look fatter, the hamlets ain't Quite ignorant of the siirn'of naint They're building roads, and are not content With sand and clay, but they use cement, And the schools looks good; the mills are busy, And each inhabitant owns a Lizzie, "r a Dig iwm-six, or finah, As soon as you get to No'th Calina! This state's not dreaming of the days gone by, There's an modern glint in each mortal's eye, And the village bells and village beaux Are smartly dressed as the crowd which flows On Gotham's streets. Tou give 'em credit, Those folks are fully awaken, saiu in You meet WieboostaVi'ai the "whinah," As soon as you get to Calina! HOW AND WHLV - IT?J Ilauuoa fav&. "Varkui mixtures doot retiilta :fl"l v. j -AND WHY WB DIK of grassea and clovers grow well but seed plant! . a . poor Vh "vri r : should ha varied accord, nc te eondit- so a. .Jt i nt -Cwtf. c Staristirlans of national reputatioa, ion. The following general fomu&f seed ander .aaca eonditim k, digging into United States -Cansus has proven valuable for the atral that wiU make a bale of L Keporu, eoroaars reports, - and tha mart af the - State: Orchard, grass toUO baehaU ofora per experience tahka af big insuranoa Italian rye grass and red top, eight 'grow grass suceeasfilfy, xu" companies, ia their effsru te . seam pounds each of seed with four pounds seed slluid be inoculated vita C how and wMta and why we dis, hart of rod- clever aeed or . planting as natural or artificial inoculauVn . unearthed those startling facta: W . acre. Qn tha damper and lower soils 'seed should be sown on tentf ' 20,000 men In perfect health today tha more eastern counties 8 lb, .prepared soil and covered bv a Tour oat .of ever ,100 ployoe, 21?. , - ' are absent rrom auty every asy tha rear on account of sickness accident. Excepting only consumption and 1 or course tne seed ned snouid ta should be sown to pasture rrau 1 Dneumonia. a nerson is mars liable to well prepared and well fertilised. Ia er some other winter JLZ9 accidental death than from any, other "est. cases lima is 'necessary, aspao. this will prevent washing and & 15,000 wage-earners yearly leave 1 work, permanently disabled. j i. j Between suns, every day in the year, automobiles kill 89 persons. . 27 j are murdered, and 41 commit suicide. Automobiles killed 14,000-people in I the United States in 1922, which was one fatality every 88 minutes. " 1 Between the ages of 20 and .60. one death out of every eight is aedden- j tal, and for every accidental death there are from 120 to 140 disabling accidents. Five times as many people are killed and injured every year as die from natural causes. 1 There are 113 accidents to one fire. 57 automobile accidents every hour; 1,370 every, day; 600,000 every year. . More than 5,000 people are . killed every year by fires and over 50,000 in jurea; o.uuu arown; ,,uw die m rail road accidents. One person is accidentally killed every six minutes; 10 every hour; 240 every day; 87,000 every year. This means that at the present rate. 876.- 000 persons are sentenced to die by accident witmn tne next ten years! iwenty-three persons are accident ally injured every minute; 1,380 every hour; 33,120 every day; 12,088,800 every year. j Careful and painstaking research has demonstrated, bevond Question. that 85 per cent of our fatal and dis abling accidents might have been prevented by the exercise of ordinary care and foresight. The past can not be helped,, but the future lies ahead, and it is the duty of every citizen to do what he can to make North Caro lina safe for life and property. j HOW TO KILL COCK ROACHES Scatter podium Fluoride on the shelves or floors of a pantry or in amriPthino.1. , V' c . tocnes are. , something Thia chemlcal ia ot expend is a ueauiy poison to tne roach but only mildly poisonous to man and, therefore, can be used with safety in the pantry. Care should be taken not to scatter the Sodium Flooride over rood or where children can get ik It can be swept up in a week after scat tering but in order to kill 'other roaches which might have been hatch ed from eggs should be applied again witnm two weeKs. I i IIANDf J FOR' . SALE ON EASY TERMS On 3a acr tract. Five I.strtcts. ThrM s tracts Five Z acre tracts, Twenty-five 2 acre tracts. 1 r This j par of ftliss Julia Tborn'a land I -2 to 2 X-2 miles of town of Asheboro. Abundance of wood, runnln watef. Productive land ideal for poultry and truck to do generai farming. Only J-4 cash required.. Buys home and stop hieh rents.. This Drooertv is Imnni . double in value in next few yeara.;.Act now) How la van wsntt ' " ' " W.F.LAMBERT, Coles Store, N. . e i i i i must you ose Noth THE HOUSE BESIDE ROAD OF1 THE souls that live "There are hermit withdrawn. In the place of their self-eontent; There are souls like stars that dwell apart, In fallowless firmament: t. There are pioneer souls thai blaze their paths Where the highways never ran; But let me live by the side of the road, And Be A Friend To Man. "I see from my house by the side of the road, By the Sfde of the highway of life, The men who press on through the ardor of hope, And the men who are faint with the strife: But I turn not away from tjieir smiles or their tears, Both parts of an infinite plan, And live in my house by the side of the road, And Am A Friend To Man. "I know there are brook-gladdened meadows ahead, - , And .mountams of wearisome height; rA That the road reaches on through tie long afternoon, - ' . , Txn.i.'!t?!tch,e? far mtft the ntrhv But still I rejoice when the travellers rejoice, .;: And weep with the strangers tha( iivsui. ii Nor live m my hoose by the tide of the. road, . h- As One Who Lives All Alone. ' ' 7, "Then let mo live by the side fifths road, - -. v Where the race of men go h They are' good,- they are bad; Haty m- are weak they are strongi11 "4' Wtas, foolish; so am I: ' Then why should 1 sit in the corner's sett: : . , ...in Or hurl the cynics baa f ". Let me live In my house, by, tha side of the road,4-'1 - ,M t xi And be A Friend to Man." j J V Thtj Good Old Reliable Honest household service for twenty years has earned ' for Red Devil Lye the name, "the good old tenable." It is tellable i fot so many tasks about the house, tt f teas no boosswife from alT somof drodgory. Buy hby tascaatfitli chsspor that way. And always remember the name you can. rely on "Rod Devil Lya". - ww aa irr m iiwviisii Win. Schlcdd MfgvXcv, J5t;tula, Mo, -I PLANT A PASTURE THIS FALL .. Baleish. N. C Oct. l TTnnii of demonstrations made by 'county agents through the central portion of North Carolina prove the value Of grasses and clovers for profitable farming. It is only under very ex ceptional circumstances that lives stock an be successfully grown with out grazing and now is the time to get these pastures ready, suggests C. R. Hudson, State Agent for the ex tension Division of the State College and Department. Mr. Hudson says that after October 15 will be most too late to plant In making a pasture in this state, .. .... , ., -ftrf , wa wa.wV fw "v w- a-. w :.,wxw. r" When you become a subscriber to the Southern Agriculturist yoa sre entitled to an almost unlimited service of information and sd dee absolutely without charge. . iflli Dm( uib pruutsuw m jour uuuie, your Buamess or your oom jiunity to us and they will receive the sympathetic study of vilton and specialists, who through years of experience have becuiue ext pert in their solution. Their advice is yours for tha asking. 400,000 farm families already take" ihei'Giant of the South," tf you do not, 60 cents a year or $1 for three years will entitle yoa to this unpurchasable free service in addition to an unbeatable paper twice a month. SOUTHERN- AGRICULTURIST, NsshvlUe, Tenn. The Giant of the South I I I t I ' IP: " i S i i7 : j V- I - r. lf I. w sit a a ii t SI If 1 .I--m 7 i V u. '' ' VW.V r-i.,- ; " : I . . . "a, j. DamsgedV hut R pair able. ' - -"""7i:"'i'.-'.-! . a Joe Hass tolls about a tia roof of a Xansas store .that was torn off and rolled into a compact bundle by a ry elone. Iiavlng a sense of humor, the owner wrapt a few strands of bailing wire around the ruin and shipped it to llenrv Ford. In due time came a communication sayingi - r; "It will cost you 148X0 to have your tar rrpalrL';For heaven's sl tell us what hit youH The Crescent. lhre ii to lis a eommuniiy at Kllrrba Fridsy, October 2d. 11 litor is in rocipt of a . tl.ii'y-ti rnir pnmi'tilrt giving a doB-r;: ' ...n ' f l,Jfi! n and )! IkmiI a !v. i w ! i !('' f i i' - rrriAKE advantage of tne present low H price, of DIAMOND 'TIRES and . ' placeiyour seasona order for these ' rnost dependaole of ; Urea now. : We can may need how and hold the remainder rrp-, 'a-Section for you!; This plan applies on Diamond Cord as well as 'Diamond Fabrics. . f- , . . , ' - i 'J ;,T Ct YftKi'' A'.Wil'ji .".Jtrwfiul r ; I "tr Ashtboro,' N.' 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The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 18, 1923, edition 1
6
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