Thursday. August 8, 1912.
THE CAUCA2XAXX.
RED
SfflRT SCENES
gut This Time the Democrats
Used Rotten Eggs on Each
Other
3P.00DER FOrf UTTLE CHICKS
, south Carolina Howled
jn at Spartanburg ami Pebble!
Willi tid- Krk When He Tried to
ak Against Governor Mease
Look On Sars Gov
i-olic-e Simpl)
,.rnr Should lie in the Penitcn-
uarj.
! i
l ( ial from Spartanburg, S. C.
Charlotte Observer says:
SUMMER HOUSE FOR POULTRY
Coop Shown In the Illustration Will
Provide Comfortable pJtct for
Ham In Hot Weather.
Illustration and Direction Given for
Constructing Comfortable Place
for Youngster.
TTsU fi relet brooder will accociso
date 23 to SO chicks, accordls to the
weather. If tbe hover U removed tt
cakes an excellent brood coop for hen
and chicks. Make the bottom of brood
er 2 fet S Inches by 1 foot 10 tccb
ea of boards, nailed on 2 by 2-Iseh
scantlings. For the upper part use 2
by 2-!nc posts for ths uprights, thoao
la front 17 Inches lot, and the rear
11 Inches. Make the coop 2 feet 10
Inches long;. 2 feet wide. IS Inches
hish in front and II Inches at the
back, writes Arthur 8. Werner of
Mn'iay s
Grace, of Charleston, to speak
a rrowd of 1,200 representative
io-.-rn in this county, and one hun
,Vr.'.. hoodlums who poured into the
j'v.-onv of the theater, were marked
t '! pro' edinga most disgraceful and
, , a'i ritizens are absolutely ashamed.
V.lrh tli- police force doing nothing
r ' k. -P down the stouts of the 'rough
ns v-ith every man on the force in !
appar 'if sympathy with the yeling in!
Mftain parts of the hall, with thej
f,..;il of whiskey, the gritty little;
p'.U,r stood on the floor from 8:30 to i
j,, ;m and during this time spoke j
;i!,uur tifteen miles all-told.
one occasion the hoodlums
j;, ill,- balcony threw an over-ripe egg
or, th- stage. This was quickly fol
j,,, . by another, a second dared the
r:iL'-r r' ho threw it to stand up. No
,,iif stood up, and Grace then apolo-triz.-d
to the few negroes who were
pr-nt for alluding to the monster
who threw the egg as a member of
th'-ir race.
"Mayor Johnson, some say, was in
th- fit y, others say he was not, at
any rate it was said that he would
not be here and Alderman Leonard,
mayor pro tem, attempted to preside.
H made a miserable failure.
"On one occasion during the thick
of the riot, Grace stated that he wish
ed he was mayor of Spartanburg for
five minutes. "What would you do?"
nif-ckly asked Leonard. "If I were
you I would resign," hotly responded
the mayor. "I would resign to-night.
Such a thing as this could never hap
pen in Charleston." Mayor Grace
then proceeded to condemn the pol
k force and said the men were even
worse than the New York force in
every particular, and they are the
worst in the entire world.
"At one time efforts were made to
induce the officials to have one hun
dred citizens sworn in as special of
ficers and the stage was crowded with
volunteers. The police force stood
hack and sympathized with the hood
lums and rough-necks. Then the
sheriff of the county appeared and
promised to keep order, which he did
for ten minutes, and during this time
('.race did his only real speaking.
Soon, however, the hoodlums reap
peared after a conference outside,
ami after taking on more drinks.
Then the meeting was pandemonium
for half an hour and the mayor quit
trying, after saying he 'would have
Blease arrested, tried, convicted and
put behind the bars of the State peni
tentiary.' "Several fights occurred on the
outside of the theater, but few ar
rests were made."
Good poultry quartern are needed,
and for warm weather the bouse
shown In the accompanying picture
will answer the purpose exceedingly
well. It La built eight feet wide. 12
feet long, aeren feet high In front
ha i V . . . uayton. Vs.. in the Missouri Valley
li s for hV WOr con,l,U? Farmer. Tbi. will allow the coop to
ing of inch .tuff, preferably matched. , ing upoa the Coor a,. aka two
! openlnga In front, one S by 8 Inches.
the other 12 by 20. Tor the smaller
I opening make a sliding door, and cot
per the other with fine mesh wire net
j ting. Make a frame and corer with
j muslin to slide orer this netting dur-
lng cold or stormy weather. For the
; roof take two pieces of T4-Inch board
j 2 Inches wide and 3 feet long, and
three pieces of the same dimension 2
j feet 2 inches long. Notch the long
pieces at end and center to 1 Inch
j wide, so the crosspieees can be nailed
j la to make a flat frame. Cover this
! frame with three-ply roofing stretched
tight and nailed around edge and
through center. Hinge the corer to
back of coop and put a small hook in
front to hold It shut.
Foi the hover hake a box 18 Inches
square and 8 Inches high with a hole
4 Inches square In one side for chicks
to go In and out. Put in a bottom but
no top. Make a wooden frame to fit
rather loosely In this box and tack
Summer House for Hens.
nailed on perpendicular as Indicated,
writes Fred O. Sibley In the Farm and
Home.
The front, which is to face toward
the south, has a good-sized window,
and at each corner are two openings,
12x16 Inches, for the hens to pass. In
the end opposite the door there is a
wooden shutter about two feet square
for air and ventilation, and this, as
well as the window, should have
strong, fine meshed wire nailed on the
outside.
The roosts are located in the rear,
up under the roof, with a platform
below to catch the droppings, 2 feet
wide, extending the whole length of
the bouse. Beneath this Is another
platform, three feet wide, for tl.e
nests. For hens on the range such a
house is just the thing, and needs no
floor if the location Is well drained
and dry. It will shelter from 50 to 60
fowls comfortably. The Interior ought
to be kept well whitewashed, and if
the house is set in the shade of a large
tree it will be all the more pleasant
for the hens to go Into on a hot day.
The cost of building this kind of J
summer "cottage" will be from $12
to $15. It pays to use good lumber,
and two or three good coats of paint
should be applied.
PREPARE FOWLS FOR MARKET
Apparatus Invented by Indiana Men
for Injecting Water Into Body
After Killing.
Experts have discovered that fowls
and animals are better fit for food if
about 8 per cent, of their weight in
water be Injected into their bodies
Just after they are killed. This must
be done before the animal heat has
left the body, and the water, which
Democratic Platform Deception.
Union Republican.
The Democratic platform states
"that in the highest protected indus
tries, such as cotton, wool, steel and
iron, the wages of the laborers are
lowest." This statement is in the
line with a statement made by Con
gressman Edward W. Townsend,
Democrat, of the Seventh Congres
sional District of New Jersey. When
he was campaigning for his election
he denied Hon. Wayne Parker's state
ment that the protective tariff was
the means of good wages to the work2
ing men and women. Mr. Town
send's statement was that it was not
true, and gave as proof that locomo
tive engineers, bricklayers, masons,
plumbers and carpenters, who have
no protection, get better wages than
the trades that are protected.
You will notice the trades Mr.
Townsend mentioned have no com
petition from abroad. They are na
turally protected. They cannot ship
houses from foreign countries here,
but the wool, cotton, the steel and
iron industries iiave to compete with
the low-paid laborers of Europe. The
locomotive engineers have no compe
tition. This Democratic tariff plank
is formed to try to fool the people.
Will the people be fooled?
Defeated Officeholder Commits Suicide.
A press dispatch from Waynesville,
way wood County, August 5, says:
J. M. Noland, Register of Deeds for
Haywood oCunty, committed suicide
early Sunday moraine following: his
defeat for renomination in the pri
mary held Saturday. He shot him-
in the head with a revolver
about 8 o'clock, death being almost
instantaneous.
Saturday night Mr. Noland was in
tne crowd around the court hnnsA lis
tening to the returns from the pri
ory, and it was noticed that he was
jery much depressed and admitted
bis defeat. No inkling of his suicidal
"uentlon was rfven. y
naa been register of deds for six
jears.
Pipe Pierces Fowl's Breast.
must be at a temperature of between
50 and 70 degrees Fahrenheit, is kept
(here for an hour or more. Two In
diana men have Invented an attach
ment for a water spigot, or which,
may hare its own pipe leading into
tt The attachment consists of a
length of hose with a" sharp, hollow
metal point on the free end. This
point can be thrust through the
breast of the chicken or whatever
fowl or animal It may be, and the re
quisite amount of water injected Into h
It in this fashion.
BULB WORM OR STEM MAGGOT i
Uttle Peat Works Ita Way Down Ini 1
Crown f Wheuat Pt mn
Causes Much Damage,
Tb wheat ba'.a worm or attta ct
fot causes math damage la the &t '
field, These little jure a worms chasce
to a papal form la April and May. be
cotsisg little yellow tW. sssch re-i
sembUng a small hou2y. to Jss. f
TDes Eie lay their eggs oa the opper
wheat leaves. The eggs balca lato
the little greeaiah-wMte worms with
th small black feelsg hooka at ote
end. Theae worms crawl down the
wheat leaf and fd oa the stalk, caea
lng the part of the stalk above where
they are feeding to tarn white. This
brood of worms star a la the straw till
July or August, when it changes into '
another brood of Hies. The files, by
laying eggs on volunteer wheat and oa
grasses, produce au other brood of
Ciea by September or October. It was
tbi i third brood that laid the eggs
which hatched into the little green
worms we speak of. This brood of
worms does damage by working Its
way down Into the crown of the wheat
plant, often cutting off the central
stem and In this way causing consid
erable damage.
If It were not for the numerous para
sitic enemies of this wheat pest, it
might become more dangerous than
the Hessian fly, which it resembles
very much In Its general htbita. In
one respect It Is even worse than the
Hessian fly, In that it can feed oa
many other grasses beside wheat.
There are few practical measures of
controlling the pest. Rotation of crops
and late planting of winter wheat are
not as effective as with Hessian fly.
Ivessx-fats ay that th o3
trj ! prxfpTfn to tit at a
raHr . 4 ss!si.t ration otj5 t trt
ao'ii a&I a , list taat'a tActty
tt ir4tret A U-iti Mii &
!U of Is:. jt$t a fe U?t wt&r
Mr. ri"f 15-4 -iri6j, a4 ia ;
tbaa tfclrtj- 4.y f!r t irises
t&i4A fc i tl Itti pnocUmaliaa
ralliag i"o.c la ettra ris to
prtjtidr aad to U4 or
k t? wfisw wtiiw u ;t4
ti?arj mill rJwMH N.
Lf ;ri fc-ar frt at a4
it fl tkai tt fv wfc.4 wstts
tioj . -Vfeia lft-tHkas
Educational Directory
Explanatory Sketch.
muslin on one side of frame with a
pleat in each corner so it will sag
about 2 Inches. Put a nail in each
corner of box 4 inches from bottom
for frame to rest upon. Have about
1 inch c fine hay chaff in bottom of
box. Put in chicks and cover top of
muslin with burlap sacks or any soft
material. In warm weather they will
need very little cover.
BEDBUGS IN CHICKEN HOUSE
LonisbHTfl College
North Carolina
or Young H'ona and grirU.
Thorough Work ia Books. Sym
pathetic Tram is s la Manners and
Morals Positive Religious Tea
ching and Training. Pleasant
Location and Spacious Ground.
Fine Health Record. Moderate
Charge.
avi HIMSl D V9 rmiMi VUI
Mcivs srrmitnt in, m.
SESD FOR CATALOG.
Mrs. MARY DAVIS Aim,
RresMent.
I. AI LEX. Secretary.
LOU1SDUBG, N. C.
THE NORTH CAROLINA
State Normal and
Industrial College
ltiai4 tr IV set far im f
CrWi. fl rr Cmnm 4l
IWpm fttful Cmrm tm f ree
ta i- ra s tn
ilTTJS I fCtTT. mUmL
ft.C
tee som aaouw coiuxe or
AGRICULTURE AND MECHANIC ARTS
THE STATE'S IKOUSTB11AL COLXHCC
Four-year courses in Agriculture; in
Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical Eng
ineering; in Industrial Chemistry: in
Cotton Manufacturing and Dyeing.
Two-year courses in Mechanic Arts and
in Textile Art One-year and Two-year
courses in Agriculture. These courses
are both practical and scientific. Ex
aminations for admission are held bv
the County Superintendent at all
county seats on July 11th.
For catalog address
THE REGISTRAR,
West Raleigh, N.C.
Tit
OF CKA.Vtt.V tA
U! I rata you. 4wrtmg pr tuue.. lot
a Oovermmaat poatUva or to 811 a re
poatlble u&alcaJ poeiUoa at a targ
r aalarj tbaa joo are ao getttag
For full tatormatloa. fill out tae
ouoi bvlow aad mall it tc Yr
fVasblagloa office
M O Haaley. upt . 1 C Waal
tagtoa. D C . OfSce lt. Paa
sylvaata Aveaue. N W
Dear Sir: Please sead me tafoe
matjoa as to how caa beocse a
isaeaUoa peel
tioa) fey spare time study wtthovl
leavfsg my p reseat work vattl . eta
tvallfied.
afy same Is
Street aad No
Towa aai Bute..
Roots and Nests Should Be Removed
From Building and Whitewash
Spray Thoroughly Applied.
Many poultry houses are Infested
with bed bugs and It is not an easy
matter to dislodge them.
Some people say that turning the
sheep into the poultry houses will In
duce the bugs to attack the sheep
where they will be lost In the wool,
but this is a poor remedy.
Remove all the roosts and nests
from the house and spray with boiling
hot whitewash to which has been
added a pint of turpentine to a pail
ful. Another good remedy Is to burn the
Interior of the house with taroline
mixture which can be bought at any
drug store. Another effective remedy
is half a pint each of turpentine,
ammonia and kerosene to which add
about four ounce of gum camphor.
If more is needed double the quantity.
Apply with a brush.
The nests should be burned out over
a blazing fire and the roosts should
also be held over the fire and all
should be thoroughly whitewashed and
painted before putting them back.
Wheat Bulb Worm or Stem Maggot
The most practical thing which man
can do to control wheat bulb worms Is
to burn the straw and stubble after
harvest, destroying the worms of the
second brood before they come out of
the straw to change into the fly form.
The Nebraska station suggests that
wheat planted in October Is less liable
to trouble, although not entirely free.
COUNTRY ROADS OF CONCRETE
One That Cannot Become Muddy and
at All Times Provide Secure Safe
Footing Is Desired.
WARRENTON HIGH SCHOOL
WARRENTON, NORTH CAROLINA.
Cour of M i v required for granting of certificate riven hijhe! ctJit Ik
unitt in the I'tt of accredited schools of The t'ierwty. r.ftpereaed
Faculty. All roirdmg pupU under thrtiaamcdiAt perl4j of the
Principle. Separate dormitory to gHrU. Total ex penee for jear, S12)..
For Catalogue address.
JOUS GR A II A St. rrincifHxL
System In the Feeding.
Fowls should have empty crops In
the morning and the crop should never
be quite full until it Is time to go to
roost For the first feed grain scat
tered in the litter in the morning Is
preferred, the sooner the better. This
induces them to exercise. In the mid
dle of the day a warm, moistened
mash should be given, about what
they will eat And at night before
they go to roost a liberal feed of
grain should be scattered in the lit
ter. Fowls should be kept busy.
Oyster Shells for Fowls.
The feeding of oyster shells is
claimed to supply the birds with grit
but experiments-show that under cir
cumstances in any other manner oys
ter shells may be utilized by the hens
to supply shells for the eggs. It is
not necessary to feed shells, however,
when the fowls are -supplied with
varied food, at the food cf poultry
contains lime sufficient for all pur
poses.
Insect Powder for Fowls.
Here la a receipt for an insect pow
der and it can be made a great deal
cheaper than it can be bought
Take one pint of crude carbolic
add and three pints of gasoline. Mix
In an earthen crock or granite ware
dish. Sprinkle in plaster of Paris
and thoroughly stir so that every par
ticle of it will be wet. Use enough
plaster of Paris to absorb all the li
quid. Spread out on a paper for ex
tra gasoline to evaporate, then run
through a sieve and the powder Is
ready for use.
PdultpyNote-5
Don't raise scrub chickens.
Dont use too heavy a cock bird with
your females.
Poultry constitutes -a very good min
or source of farm profit
Early turkeys are what pay and
these can only be had from early laid
eggs.
Condiments that stimulate egg pro
duction are very much like anything
that stimulates a human being.
Some tell the sex of the guinea fowl
by its wattles. Those of the male are
double the size of the female.
A chicken's stomach is not made of
Iron, and the same diet day after day
harms them as much as It does a hu
man. Running the incubator is like most
other things, we get results largely In
proportion to the work we do our
selves. Ventilation in the chicken house Is
a very important consideration, and
the health of the fowls,, in a great
measure, depends on it
The breast of the Indian game is
rery much like that of the pheasant
or the palrie chicken. The heft of
the meat lies on the breast
It is becoming more and more evi
dent to farmers and those interested
in good country roads that a more
lasting material than earth or the or
dinary macadam must be used. Near
Coshocton, O., two concrete roads
have been built which have success
fully withstood one severe winter and
show no wear either from traffic or
weather.
The first view shows a 10-foot con
crete strip laid on the old roadbed.
The second shows an 18-foot strip of
the full width of the road. The lat
ter joins the macadam road which is
deeply worn and rutted. Concrete in
the first case replaced a block stone
road, which had given away under
heavy floods and travel, and the other,
a limestone macadam road, whose life
was only one year, due to heavy traf
fic. At present the 15-foot strip road
carries all travel from the concrete
road and also from another brick road
and shows much lest wear than the
brick.
A country road which cannot be
come muddy, which wfli give at all
times a secure footing for horses and
which will need little or no repairs,
would be the greatest improvement in
farm conditions that has been made
in recent years. Concrete seems to be
the only material combining these
qualities with low cost A decade
from now, our country roads of con
crete may equal our city pavements
in eflciency under all conditions cf
weather.
BUIE'S CREEK ACADEMY and BUSINESS COLLEGE
Prepares for College, University, or Business. Special teachers in Charge of Elo
cution, Art, Telegraphy, Business. Excellent Music Course, Piano, Band. Voice,
Strong Faculty of christian men and women. Good boarding arrangement,
with dormitory for girls.
606 Students last year, representing G5 counties, G States, and Cuba.
"One of the greatest schools in theState." Gov. H. II. Glenn.
"Your school is doing a blessedwork." Hon. J. Y. Joyner.
"It Is doing a high quality ofwork." President Alderman.
"In many respects the best Acad emy in North Carolina." Rev. B. W.
Spilman.
"One of our greatest schools." Judge Pritchard.
For catalogue and other information, address
J. A. CAMPBELL, PHINCIPAL. - - BUIE'S CREEK, N. C
The Agriculture and Mechanical College
for the Negro Race. Open all the year. For
males only. Strong Faculty. Three well
equipped departments Agriculture, Mechan
ical and Academic. Board, Lodging and
Tuition $7.$9 per month.
For Catalog or free Tuition, write
PRESIDENT DUDLEY, GREENSBORO, N. C
Don't forget to plant a few pumpkin
seeds.
A weedy pasture ia an unprofitable
piece of property.
A weedless cornfield Is the sign of a
farmer who is proud of his calling.
Alfalfa may be put into the silo, and
it produces a fair quality of silage.
Celery may be transplanted to the
garden any time from May 25 to
July 1.
Hape la one of the best annual for
age crops for temporary spring and
fall, pasture.
Hen manure is an excellent fer
tillzer, but it is not the thing for the
potato ground.
The hired man who gets up a the
morning without being called is worth
hanging on to.
A fanning mill will more than pay
for itself in one year on any 160 acres
of land farmed.
The main thing is to decide to build
a silo. After that yon can begin to
think about the kind.
Rape cr rape with the small grains
I for psistr-e c::rs ?n opportunity to
save vn" - fodder.
EAST CAROLINA
TEACHERS TRAINING SCHOOL
A State school to train teachers for the public schools
of North Carolina. Every energy is directed to this
one purpose. Tuition free to all who agree to teach.
Fall Term begins September 24 1912.
For catalogue and other information address
ROBT. H. WRIGHT, Pres.. Greenville, N. C
MEREDITH COLLEGE
On f tha few coU;e for woman a tha Soath that eoftra as A.R Sacra
repreaentlna; four rn of aeaalaa eotVca work according to tha atajkdart of tha
eolleg-eo balo&ginr to tha XaoodatloB of CoIUra of tha Southern State.
Diploma ara awarded thooe who oarapiete tha cocraa la tha School of mca
Uon. Art. aad Mud.
Library facilities exeeUeat.
Systematic training la Physical Bd mat Ion. Cort for teaals aa4 tkathiJ.
Board aad famished room la Mala BuHdla-. beat. Ufht. literary tcJtlaa. fee far
physician aad aura, aad all minor fee 120 II; la East Bolldtas aad Csttaeaa
from S7 to IS7 ic
Students not offerlax the necessary Salts for entrance may prepare fa Meredith'
Academy, which la rated La tha A-Clae of the accredited scaoU of tha Stat Cal
varsity.
Both the Co He re and ths Academy re located ta the center of Raleigh, aear fJa
Capitol and leading churches, so that indents hare many opportunities fer teersJ
culture, la addition to their reruiax work. For CAtal, Qmaxtaeiy POetlaa, a
fuller lalsrmatioa). address
- haliecix n. c
B. T. VANS, President,
72 TO OOO rmym Doard. Tuition and Room Rent sit
"A treat scboor-Hetfet C Moore. Editor Bihlkal Recorder.
"k mismificent cbooL-Chtnty sod Children.
Ideally loclL --Cleveland ur.
PIEDMONT
" Board iojr system aniqa.-C. W. Payseor. Pastor cf Lawndsi
and New Bethil Baptist rbttrtnes
for the entire session of
nine months
Session opens An?ust 8th.
For ninstrated Catalog, wirte to W. D. BUBLNS. LawawlsJc. arvclaun1
The seat sad esxssefi School la the State." E. Si. Kocace. member of
the LesisUtnre of North Carolina.
H. C
FOUNDED 1838
CHARTED 1859
TRINITY COLLEGE
ITS STRENGTH LIES IN
A LARGE, WELL-TRAINED FACULTY; EXCELLENT BUILDINGS AND
EQUIPMENT; FULL, WELL-ARRANGED COURSES: EARNEST, HIGH,
MINDED STUDENTS; A LARGE AND LOYAL BODY OF ALUMNI AND
FRIENDS; NOBLE IDEALS AND TRADITIONS; AN INSPIRING HISTORY
; . k OF ACHIEVEMENT AND SERVICE. Uttl
Kexl Session bezins September It. 1912. For Catalog ond TZustrated Booklet. adJwj
R. L. FLOWERS, Secretary, Durham, North Carolina