Newspapers / China Grove Record (Salisbury, … / Jan. 5, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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F : THE ROWANi RECORD Published Weekly. CHINA GROVE, N. C. NEWS OF THE WEEK f ATE NEWS OF THE WORLD TERSELY TOLD. SOUTH, EAST, NORTH AND WEST Notes From Foreign Lands, Through out the Nation and Particularly MSV MS WWWbl j . Southern. .-. Governor Ben W. : Hooper of Ten nessee, an inmate of the state peni tentiary not, however, because he had committed any crime. 'In gath ering -material upon which to base his pardons in- his " proclamation of Yuletide clemency. Governor Hooper: thought the best plan would be to go to prison and see for himself which prisoners deserved consideration. During . his- incarceration the govern or will observe all the prison regula tions as though, he himself were a convict He . was released after 24 hours' imprisonment. One hundred, and fifty indictments against alleged voter-sellers in Lee county, Virginia, were handed to the commonwealth's attorney and others are to follow as a result of the grand jury , investigation into election irreg ularities during the past three weeks. It is generally believed the gflrand Jury probe will result In wholesale disfranchisement of voters in this county. The chief witnesses in the i ii vki i ( trill navH net-n men uuarKeu with handling the money. . ' General. Persia yielded to the demand of the Russian ultimatum that , W. Morgan Shuster, an 'American, who holds the post of treasurer-general in the Per sian government, be dismissed from the service of the Persian govern ment. The Russian ultimatum also calls for the payment of an indem nity which is to reimburse Russia for money expended in sending an armed expedition into Persia to en force her demand. Mr. Shuster's ad ministratiion of Persia's finances has been displeasing to Russia from the start and when he caused the seiz ure of property belonging to the brother of the ex-shah over the pro test of the Russian vice consul Rus sia called for the dismissal of Mr. Shuster, and this has finally been ac ceded to. The Ocmulgee river, fed by fofty hours of unceasing rain in middle Georgia, flooded over the danger line in" the flat lands of Macon, and thirty . M SI'S.. - 4.f- . A ' A. 4.1 1 i ami nets, wiuu me water . at ineir thresholds, fled to higher levels" for gaiety, leaving Deiongings to tne mercy , of the waters. A dairy of eighty cows was flooded, and the ani mals, released by the owners, struck out for the middle of the stream, and disappeared down the current. Fears, over the condition of Em peror Francis Joseph, who is ill in Vienna, were increased when it be came known that all of the members of the Austrian royal family had been summoned to "Vienna. The "eeneral explanation" offered was that following out the traditional cus tom, the- royal family was coming to spend Christmas with the emperor, but there was a growing belief that the summons resulted from untoward developments which have arisen in the condition of the aged monarch. The motion made by attorneys for the ten Chicago packers now on trial in the United States circuit court, asking for the quashing of two of "the five counts in the indictments against the millionaires, was denied The final executive act in the ab rogation by the united states oi tne treaty of 1832 with Russia was tak en when President Taft signed the joint resolution of congress ending the convention on December 31, 1912 With his signature the diplomatic crisis that has overshadowed the two nations since the Sulzer resolution was passed by the house was out of the way. Secretary of State Knox .was the only witness present when President Taft affixed his signature to the1 joint resolution. Cries and groans breaking the still ness at the jail in Boston, Mass., led to the discovery that the Rev. Clar ence V. T. Richeson. awaiting trial on the charge of having murdered Miss Avis Linnell. had mutilated himself severely with a piece of tin So serious was the wound that it was found necessary to perform an op eration immediately. Later in the day the surgeon .said' the operation was entirely successful and that the prisoner probably would recover. " The newly appointed American minister to Cuba, Arthur M. Beaupre, presented his credentials to President "Gomez. The customary courtesies were exchanged between the presi dent and the minister. A New York firm has just been fined $500 for Selling rotten eggs in liquid form. Constitutionality of the Illinois statute to indemnify the owners of property from damage occasioned by mobs was upheld by the Supreme court of the United States. Several cases brought under this law are now pending in the Illinois courts. To an audience that filled conven tion hall in Kansas City, Mo., Col. Henry Watterson .delivered an ad dress in support., of the general ar bitration treaties with England and France. The river Avon in South Wales has burst Its banks and is spreading ereat destruction. Predictions are being made that Iee county, Virginia, may rival Ad ams county, Ohio, in the number of arrests for alleged bribery in elec tibns, - as the result of -the work - of the errand Jury, which has been in 84Bion for two weeks past. ; AEmilio Estrada,, president 'of the re Public of Ecuador died in. Guayaquil 'suddenly. -'He ' was 65 '-years of age. President Estrada was -elected to oft fice si January 11 J.9ll, and was Inaugurated on .. September 1: He was taken seriously ill on the 18th of the same month and went to Quito to re cuperate. During his sojourn there a plot - to assassinate : him was dlscov; ered and several conspirators ywpr anested. - Guayaquil is 'quiet. . Opposition members of the - Russian duma v ridicule ex-President Guch- koff's legislative proposal to provide or s tariff war schedules, applicable to the , United States, at the expira tion of the Russb-American treaty of commerce . and; navigation, which he and 7 other signers representing the octoberist and nationalist parties in the .'duma have introduced into that body, The opposition V declare I that the' proposal would strike hardest at the Russian agriculturists and cotton manufacturers. ?: 'U "We have nothing' to hide. We are ready at any , time for the agents of the law to begin investigating,' de Clares President Samuel Gompers, of the- Americas, Federation of Labor, in an editorial on .Labor's Position; Lawful and Progressive," which will appear in the January issue of The American Federationist The forth coming number of the official organ. of the federation, will be the first to appear since organized labor a de fense of the McNamara brothers col lapsed in their confession. Washin?ton.s The exports of the United States to the countries of the rest of the world during the eleven months of the current year ending with Novem ber exceeded the ImportB by some what more than $475,000,000. The value of the exports was $1,867,614,- 510, while the imports were worth $1,392,552,228, according to statistics issued today by the department of commerce and labor. During the corresponding period last year the exports exceeded the imports - in value by about $211,000,000; President Taft tentatively promis ed a committee from the Southern Commercial congress and members of the Tennessee delegation to at tend the next meeting of the con gress to be held in Nashville, Tennr on April of next year. Among those included in the committee are Sena tor Fletcher, of Florida, who at the time in a neat speech presented a handsomely bound copy of the pro ceedings of the last Atlanta congress to the president, and Senators Tay lor and Lea. That the United States will be th loser as the result of the abrogation of the treaty of 1832 between thai country and Russia through tariff op erations and trade relations, was a belief expressed unofficially bj many persons having access to Rus sian -government circles. Russia has indicated that she .will compel the United States to make retribution foi the summary abrogation of the com mercial treaty. . President Taft sent to congress the long awaited report of the tariff board on schedule K of the Payne tariff act, and with it a message rec ommending that the rates on wool and woolens be materially reduced. The report shows that the existing duties on many classes of wool and wool manufactures are prohibitory and greatly in excess of the differ ence in the cost of production here and abroad. The duties are so ar ranged as to keep out of the United States entirely woools of finer quali ties which if imported might be used to displace the cheap substitutes now employed. President Taft calls atten tion to these points and urges that m a 9 1 1 a revision oi roe Bcneauie oe pro ceeded with at once. The' federal government filed suit in the United States circuit court at Philadelphia against the Keystone Watch Case Company, declaring it an unlawful combination, in violation oi the Sherman anti-trust law, and ask ing that it be restrained from car rying on an alleged monopoly in the manufacture and sale of watch cases The government declares that " the company now ' "manufactures and ' sells 80 per cent of all watch casei manufactured and sold in the United States." The senate, by a unanimous vote, formally ratified President Taft's no tification to Russia of the termina tion of the treaty of 1832. The Lodge joint resolution, reported" by the for eign relations committee as a substl tnte for the Sulzer resolution thai passed the house 300 to 1, was adopt ed after an all-day debate over Rus sian discriminations against the Jews of America. The house is ex pected to agree to the senate meas ure. The resolution was introduced for the committee by Mr. Lodge oi Massachusetts, as the measure couch ed In the language most satisfactory to the Washington administration whic hsought to avoid giving offense to the St. Petersburg government. There was an echo of the Savannah harbor scandal in the Supreme court when that tribunal assigned for earl J hearing on the "summary docket" the question of whether the United States is entitled to 400 shares el stock in the Norfolk and Westera Railway company as property pur chased for Capt. Oberlin M. Cartel with funds alleged to have been Im properly procured from the govern ment. Mary C. Leary of New Yort claims the stock as indemnity for hei husband going on Carter's bond when he was arrested in ' connection with the scandal. Appeals for the Immediate reform of the country's banking and curren cy system and scientific -tarifl legis lation, based upon entirely new rea sons, stand ou prominently In the annual repor of Secretary of the Treasury MacVeagh, - submitted tc congress'. This statement of the na tion's finances bristles with urgent suggestions for coirecttvesi financial laws. .The secretary of the treasury foresees ta, surplus In the. treasury at the end of .the fiscal f year 1913 oi abont $29,000,000, exclusive, of expen CAftEr OF DAIRY ! HERD Eliminate Animals That , Dairyman Into Debt Run Cows : Must Have Best of : Cars and' Comfortable Quarters If They Are to Give Boat Results Sunlight la Ono Essential. (By R. .O. WEAT&ERSTON15.) To increase . the profits from our herds or decrease the profits of pro auction we' must eliminate the cows which individually run us into debt, u ; . In the. second place we must , foee! sur cowrmpro 'intelligently. Tho feed ing of a dairy herd to producft jprbflta more economically Is a' hard propo sition to put to a man at the present time. Under ' the present conditions the only way to produce vbutter fat at leas cost than we did last year la by increasing the efficiency of our homo powa dairy foods. . The, feeding value of our home grown' foods wtl 'depend largely upon their palatability. By feeding a variety: of feeds we make our rations more appetising and palatable than a few- foods. a . -Ensilage and roots are more palat able than dry fodders. Cows that are fed these appetizing feeds with clover hay will eat more hay than when confined to clover alone. . Early cut hay Is more suited to the ration than late cut hay and the cows Profitable will consume larger quantities of It In feeding" home-grown feeds we must feed such foods In a practical way. as will Induce the cows to eat more. ' The more easily digested the ration the larger the milk flow. A certain amount of energy is required to pre pare these foods for assimilation. In reeding coarse fods we find this is a large per cent. ' Tender pasture grass is more easily digested than dry fodder. Again we see that succulent foods are more easily digested than dry fodders ;that early cut hay is more easily digested than late cut hay and that grain and'; concentrates are more easily digested than hay and coarse fodders. ' We can make a balanced ration from corn ensilage and alfalfa - hay, but such a ration contains an excess of coarse fiber and requires too great an expenditure of energy to digest and assimilate it Such L a ration may be greatly lm prov'i by the addition of a few pounds of concentrates. Cows that are giving milk must have an abundance of protein. The more protein we feed up to a certain point the larger the milk flow. It Is the amount of food over and above that Required to maintain the body that goes to stimulate the milk pro duction. STIRRUP-SADDLE IS USEFUL One of the Most Convenient Things to Have About Farm Handy ( In Case of Emergency. ( The stirrup-saddle is one of the most convenient things to have about the farm, as it comes in mighty handy A Simple 8addle. where there is no other saddle left In the barn In a time of emergency. It is simply a pair of stirrups buck led to a strap. Put a blanket on the horse, throw the strap with the stir rups over. this, and get Into the sad dle. It's a good sight better than riding bareback. Try It and see. Sprinkling Eggs in Incubator. One of the experiment stations has found that by sprinkling eggs during the last three days of artificial Incu bation, one-third -more eggs were hatched, and the , egg that were sprinkled from the third day on gave about 10 per cent better hatch. Sub merging the eggs' did ; not seem -to increase the hatch as much as sprink ling. It was also found that while It is easy to develop chicks in large, thick-shelled, dark. Brahma eggs. It is very difficult to get a good hatch. ' Profit in Camphor. The department of agriculture, after suitable experiments, decides that the production of camphor may be made profitable!, In ; Florida ' ii'V ,?The 'GermVatattdird of Jeeding calls forgone 'and one-quartet : pounds of -protein to every4 ten- or ; twelve pounds of milk, v;.,-' Another principle is that ' - reeding mineral matter increases' the alue of the manure and-much1 of the profits from high feeding . must he : .made through the i fertility brought onto the farm by -the 'Increased value ; of the manurlal fertllityr . . But, Tilgh feeding; is not always the most' profitable.; VThis Is' a matter that must be worked 'out by the man him self according -to hit r farm and ..'con ditlonk Conditions are -not the' same on twd farms. ; The 'difference in cows, the kinds -and amount i of " available lxomegrown foods, the market prices' of J- dairy f products and -dairy foods, compel; each man to work out the problem as it applies to. his ' own par ticular f arm, always . watching the milk flow, increasing the food and protein until a point Is reached ., that yields the' most profit v' ;. 'C ' ' , Cows must have good care ; and comfortable surroundings , If Jthey are to respond to intelligent feeding. The great? problem In connection with th stable is to keep it warm and wel ven tilated at the same time. Pure air is Just: as. necessary to the cow as food. Sunlight is another essential. Dark stables where sunshine never reaches breed disease. Sunlight is a tonic, a stimulator ' and Invlgorator to ? all animals. . r:,i,"'-., ': '": There seems to be a wide diversity of opinion among dairymen as to howj much' exercise the dairy cow should have, and I wish to say that' I r am not a member of the class who 'believe Milk - Typo. in shutting In the cows from October until June without turning them out for exercise. j There is a muscular tone and vigor that must be kept up to maintain health. With all our .present-day methods of ventilation and Improved methods of tleing the cows, we must give the cows some outdoor exercise if we secure the best results of pro ductoin and procreation. If we look upon the cow as a milk producing machine alone and do not place a value upon her ability to bring a strong and vigorous calf. It may be more profitable"' for us to keep her inside all the liiap where she can turn all of her energy- toward the produc ing of milk alone and be discarded In two or three years and another cow take her place.- Such practice may pay the milk producer but not the" man who is try ing to build up a herd of economical butter-makers. J ' If any man thinks a little exercise a waste of energy let him shut' him self up In a close room kept at the right temperature all winter and con fine himself to Just such kinds of food and see if he comes through the win ter in condition to start a hard spring's work. It the experiment worked well by himself why then be might be Justi fied in trying fit on the cows. TEN PRINCIPLES OF FARMING Few Facts That Tillers of 8oll Should Know and Practice to Better Farm Life. (By the LATE DR. 8. A. KNAPP.) Upon the Inauguration of the farm ers' co-operative demonstration work In the southern states it was - found necessary tb outline some of the fun damental principles of good farming and to Insist that the. tillers of the soil should become familiar with them and practice them as a first step in the betterment of farm life. These principles are as follows: (1.) Prepare a deep and thoroughly pulverized seed bed, well drained; break In the fall to a depth of 8, 10 or 12 Inches, according to fhe aoil, with Implements that will not bring too much of the subsoil to the surface. (The foregoing depths ' should be reached . gradually If the field Is broken with an ordinary turning plow. If the disk plow is used, it is safe to break to the above depths' at once.)" ' (2.) Use seed of the best variety. Intelligently selected and carefully stored. v (3.)-In cultivated crops, give the rows and the plants in the rows a space suited to the plant, the soli and the climate. f.- " (4.) Use lntensire tillage during the growing periods of the crops. . (6.) Secure a high content of humus in the soil by the use of legumes, barn yard manure, farm refuse and -commercial fertilizers. V.r (6.) Carry out a systematic crop rotation with a winter cover crop on southern farms. (7.) Accomplish more work in a day by using more horse power and better Implements. . ' - ' ' . (8.) Increase the farm stock to the extent of utilizing all the waste prod ucts and idle lands of the farm. . . - (9.) Produce all the food required for the men' and animals on, the farm. ' (10.) Keep an account of each farm product In order to know from which the gain or loss arises. ' .Keep Eggs Fresh. , . Experimenters for the Italian miti lstry of t agriculture claim that- eggs may. be kept perfectly, fresh for a year by first coating them with Jar d, then packing them In fine odorless shav lngs so that they do not touch one an Farmers' Educational and Co-Operative Union of America 'j Ilattert tErpedal Moment to ti Pregieurre Africnitnrist : vTouvwill be a better farmer by tak ing your wife's : advice ocastonally. t You' can't expect- to " ioultivate - a neighbor's friendship by harrowing his feelings. 7 T' i .y-r, ' . '.. Kri A man'who worries - very little may. also be called a man whose compla in cency has worried very many. . The sincerity of a man's religlpn can not be gauged by the number of but tons he puts In the collection plate, t The man who puts la a good part of the winter studying bulletins and f&nn' papers can be told by ( looks of his fields next summer. ' - eome people are always complain ing ? Of their - poverty "who are rich without knowing it Money is hot the real gauge of wealth. A farmer expects ' good wtJrlHttan shlp from the blacksmith and the car penter, but is content to slouch along without having learned his own busl ness.. ' -v ' ; '. .Texas cattle raisers have discover ed that there Is a difference of .800 per cent between they price received by .them and that paid by the con sumer. - ' -" -' Few men "would admit, that their wives know anything about business, but a great many will follow their advice, and then take all the credit for themselves. - : A man driving to town tn the mod was asked if he favored narrowing the roads. "Make them as narrow as you please," he replied, "but for heaven's sake don't make them any deeper." Don't think that you can peg away, day In and day out,, and then some time come to the spot where you can have a ood time. It is much safer and better to take a little at a time as you go along. Whenever prices of farm produce advance a little the cry Is set up that the farmers have formed a trust There Is no man in this country who Is big enough to form a combination of 6.000,000 farmers and operate it as a single organization. FARMERS' UNION IS DEFINED Covenant Among Farmers for Mutual Benefit Care Should Be Used in Selecting Delegates. The Farmers' union is a covenant among farmers for their mutual bene fit Any harm In that? Wise men have said that when farmers are prosperous that all other legitimate occupations re ceive their share of the farmers' up lift; then why Is it that any right thinking man should not be willing to lend a helping hand to the Farmers' union? -': If your union has a last year's bird nest -appearance, better kick It off the limb, and round up a new one. and be sure that the material will not take the dry rot, and then mind the flies and vermin of the new one. Our coun ty unions will soon - elect delegates to the state union. Round up your best men as delegates.- Let your delegates be of that kind of patriotic, liberty-loving farmers who never allow their prejudices or personal interest to lead them away from their duty men of pluck and grit that know the law and good for the Farmers' union, and have the backbone to stand for the good of tbe -union even against friend or foe alike. Farmers' Union Sun (Columbia S. C). EverTry Soybeans? What are you going to do with that piece of ground you didn't get ready for corn? Itwill not pay to let It lie Idle this summer. Why not, plant it to soybeans? This crop will make good hay but is better for soiling or silage. It makes excellent pasture for hogs and sheep, yielding from 5 to 10 tons of green forage per acre. ' . The soybean Is a legume, and in nutritive value Is equal to red clover. As a soil Improver it is excellent. This plant will grow on a wide varie ty of soils, but the richer the soil the larger the yield of forage. Prepare the soil the same as for corn. Drill the soybeans in, from 3 pecks to a bushel and a half of seed per acre, after corn planting time. The heavier seeding is where the crop Is grown for hay or pasture. A common drill can be used with the oat feed opened, and enouglCof, the holes stopped up to give the proper distance between -owb. ;". ', ' . : . ignorance Versus Knowledge. 1 If you will come with me over the state and note the pitiful ignorance of the first principles of correct dairy practice, as it is observed in the com mon, every-day life on the farm, you cannot deny tbe call for leadership and assistance. The child-like sim plicity of fakh with which the aver age farmer follows methods and prac tices of his father and forefathers Is astonishing even to the most careless observer. Obsolete methods, careless Indifference marks much of the. labor applied to the production of milk, qream and butterfat." Prof. John Bower, before the ; Nebraska Dairy Convention. . Farmers' Union Movement It seems strange that southern farmers who have y always : been thought by, many northern farmers, to be unprogressive.' are the first to take up co-operative selling. The Farmers' union has ' among. Its members . over 5,000 co-operative concerns, big and little, and they' are";, getting more for helr .-produce than ever before. This movement is spreading over the entire country slowly but surely, and ' farmers- of the- porth and west -ought- to Vise. It more thought than they do. PRESIDENT WATERS; TO .BOYS Hgad of Kansas Agricultural College i Makes Interesting TJK Students ,-. .1. on "Opportunity.": 1 " -y ; President Waters of the Kansas Ag ricultural, college recently .used -. the following , language ' ih talking to the students of that Institution: "You are willing enough to assume the entire responsibility for whatever success may come to you,-but you- are Just as ready 'to lay the" responsibility of your' blunders : and failures upon someone' else. r Ijave the' manhood, then; to carry ' both ' ancL have sense enough , to ; profit by both. A success Improperly ; utilized may bey your un doing; a failure used in the right way may contribute ,' to your success more than anything else that 'could happen to you. '' ' T v , Tou may Tiave ! aske f yourself whether you have not come. upon the stage of action too late after ; all the really great thmgs. have been discov ered or accomplished, and you may be wondering if there Is left anyr task large enough to" justify your present pains in ; preparation, '-i ' - - "The truth U. this is the hour of op portunity, and I mean , large opportu nity. So long as famine stalks unhin dered through 1 the - ! most "prosperous countries on the globe, and, there are bread riots in every civilized land; ao long as the world livei' from hand to mouth, never having more than two weeks' food ahead; when such a pros perous and powerful nation as the British empire must protect the : trade routes from foreign countries over which come four out of every - five loaves of bread her people eat the question most fundamental to mankind r-that"of our food supplyIs far from being settled, and will tax the ingenu ity of the best trained scientists and economists that this or any other col lege can furnish. "Thus far In this age, which we class as golden, we have beep profli gate of natural resources of every sort and bur prbgres has been dearly bought 'r- : y J "The problem of maintaining this high standard of, living will give em ployment to the best equipped - engi neers and chemists. When, in the Tace of abundant yields, the cost of living in every land has risen to the breaking point, there Is room for all the help that can be afforded by those trained In the arts of science, of home mak ing and home management "Ycu need have no fear concerning the magnitude or Importance of the work before you. "What may very properly give each of you and us the gravest concern is whether you will be capable of .meas uring up to the opportunities pre sented. ' "If you will go out prepared to do something, and do it right, the world will meet you more than half way and will cheerfully supply tbe chance." A good many farm boys when they come to town of otherwise get away from home take a vacation from church assuming that the essentials of life may be different in the new environ ment To them President Waters says: "It is a mistake for you to suppose that coming to college means a reli gious vacation. '.-You should go to the. church you attended at home. You should not shut yourself away with your books. Jpln a literary society. Take a reasonably active part In col lege Ufa You' are not here1 primarily to be a football player or a college rooter. These things are incidental important but not to be thought of as against the things you came here to do; to fit yourself for life; to study." Some Free Bulletins. The following list of free bulletins on fruit culture may be obtained by writing to the Secretary of Agricul ture, Washington, D. C: No. 113. The Apple and How to Grow IL ! No. 118. Grape Growing In the South. " NO. 154. The Home Fruit Garden: Preparation and Care. No. 156. The Home Vineyard. No. 181. Pruning. No. 198. Strawberries. No. 213. Raspberries. No. 238. Citrus Fruit Growing In the Gulf States. No. 243. Fungicides and Their Use .in Preventing Disease of Fruits. No. 283. Spraying for Apple Dis eases and the Codling Moth' in tbe Ozarks. No. 284. Insect and Fungous Ene mies of the Grape. No. 291. Evaporation of Apples. No. 332. Nuts and Their Uses as Food. . No. 440. Spraying Peaches for tbe Control of Brown-Rot Scab, and Cur cullo. . Knowledge and Application. .President Van Hlse of the University of Wisconsin said in a recent address: "We know enough so that if the know!-, edge were applied the agricultural product of the nation could easily be doubled. We know enough about sci entific medicine so that if this knowl edge were applied, infectious diseases would be practically eliminated within a generation. We know enough about the breeding of animals, so that If the knowledge were applied to man the feeble minded would disappear . In a generation, and the Insane and crim inal class be reduced to a small frac tion of their present numbers. Even In politics we have sufficient knowl edge so that if it were applied there would be vast Improvement In tbe gov ernment of this country." Crops in Orchards. Professor 8tewart of the Pennsyl vania 8tate college holds that "from the standpoint of the trees, the least harmful are tilled leguminous Inter crops, such as peas and beans, on ac count of their favorable nitrogen and moisture relations. Grass is gener ally regarded as highly objectionable, drawing 'upon the water supply, of the soil. Early sweet corn Is probably the best form In. which to plant ' ' this crop. Melons, cabbage.', tomatoes and early potatoes are used, by many- Bnt we must feed both the crops and the trees. . v - -,w-f; v., ; . V. ; NOT CO M PL! M ENTARYv MaglstrateP-Toa are accused of hav ing kissed this ady. '"What have you to say In your defense? v- : - . Prisoner Nothing looking at the woman) I Vas drunk and deserve to be punished ..- -! - BURNING : lTCHWAS CURED "1 deem it my duty to tell about a cure, that the Cutlcura Soap and Oint ment have made on myself. My trou ble began la tplotchea 1 breaking out right In the edge of my hair on the forehead, and spread over the ; front part of the top of my head from ear to ear, 'and over my ears which caused a most fearful burning itch, or eczema. "For three years I had this terrible breaking out on my "forehead and scalp. I tried our family doctor and he failed to cure it Then I tried the Cuticura Soap and Ointment and used them for two months with the result of a complete cure.':- Cuticura Soap and Ointment should have the credit due, and I have advised a lot of peo ple to " use them." (Signed) C. D. Tharrington, Creek, N-" C, Jan. 26, 1911. Itching Scalp Hair Fell Out ' "I will say that I have been suffer ing with-an itching on my scalp for the past few years. My hair fell out In spots all over my-; head. My scalp started to trouble me with sores, then the sores healed up, and crusts formed on the top. Then the hair fell out and left me three bald spots the shape of a half dollar. I went to more than one doctor, but could not get any relief, so I started to use the Cuticura Remedies. I tried one bar of Cuticura Soap and some - Cuticura Ointment and felt relieved right away. Now the bald spots have disappeared, and my hair has grown, thanks to the Cuti cura Soap and Ointment ? I highly recommend the Cuticura Remedies to all that are suffering with scalp trou ble." (Signed) Samuel Stern, 236 Floyd St, Brooklyn, N. Y-. Feb. 7. 1911. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are' sold " by druggists and with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cuticura," Dept 9 K, Bdston. NOT THE OLD MASTER'S. Visitor (admiring painting) Is that one of the old masters? ; yy y'; Rastus No, sah; dat belongs to de ole missus. : ' Shakespeare Footnote. Ole Mammy Lize was dusting the southern woman's drawing room. She came to a small bronse bust of Shakespeare and began' carefully go ing over him with her rag. r "Mis' Juliet chile, who am dis yere gemmun? , T - - "That is Shakespeare, Lize, a won derful poet, .who died centuries ago." "Dat him, missy? Lor. Tse done hyeaj o Mistah Shakespeare a lot ob times. Ever'body seems to know him. 'Deed,. I done hyear so much 'bout him dat I alius thought he was a white gemmun." . '. Money 8aved Is Money Made. N Dr. Wm. Self, of Webster, N. C, an old practitioner of medicine, tells us that after many years' experience' in medicine he finds it money saved to his patients to use Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein for coughs, colds ' and consumption, ' Whooping Cough, eta At druggists, 25d., 50c. and 11.00 a bottle. - , . y . ' . , The Exception. "Take my advice and mind your own affairs. No man ever got rich lighting other people's battles. "I don't know. How about a law yer?" For rotm CRIP eka' CAVOvn la th best remedy r Ilerea the china- mni t ererlshBM eurea the Cold and restores normal . condition. It's liquid effects Immediately. 10c, S5c, and fiOe. t drug tores-...- v A woman thinks of her future; other women talk of; her past Dr. Pierce's Pelletsy small, sufntr-eoeled, easy to take as candy, regulate and invigor ate stomach, liver and bowels. Do not gripe. Mechanical., kisses are the kind women -give each other. Wlnslow's Soothing- Syrup tor Caildrea tee thin or, sotens tbe gnmm, reduces, inflamma tion, allays pala, cures wind eolie, S5e a bottle. " Most women like the villain better than the hero.' . ITCH, -ITCH relieved In. SO mhratee by WooUord's Sanitary Lotion.: At DrutzlmtM. s The wise" manicure never hits the nail on the .head. ; .y " ... V.-'-y :v:y:--v ::.y--y.. - -r . " s - - s ' ' 1 - " , : ' . - i-:;r-i? - -: ;:vy;;N-y:
China Grove Record (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 5, 1912, edition 1
2
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