Newspapers / China Grove Record (Salisbury, … / Aug. 30, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE ROWAN RECORD Published Weekly. CHINA GROVE. N. C. NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD A CONDENSED RECORD OF EVENTS OF THE WEEK. SEVEN DAYS' NEWS AT A GLANCE Important Happenings In All Parts of the World Summarized tor the Busy Reader. Southern. . twvernoru MNeai 01 Aiauama wuuiu like the city of Montgomery to afford him better protection from midnight visitations of burglars. The governor has had Ave visits from burglars, which have occurred within the past few weeks. Altogether, burglars have broken into the executive mansion two, times, and have attempted to break in on three other occasions. Some weeks ago several rings were taken from the governor's mansion John G. Kerner of Kernersville, N. C, and one of the most prominent men in that section of the state, has been shot and probably fatally wound ed oy ax young man named Claude Dickens. Mr. Kerner had gone to his mill plant for some purpose and found several young men drinking and carousing. He intervened when, it is alleged, Dickens became insult ed, Jan into his house, and, picking up a shotgun, emptied the entire load into Mr. Kerner's arm and side at a range of 20 to 30 feet. When I I. Waxelbaum returned to his home in Macon, -Ga., after an ab sence of four or five days, he found that, his home had been converted into a hotel for burglars. The unbidden guests had evidently been making the most of their sojourn and had taken their time in ransacking the house for valuables. They hadT taken a mat tress from one of the beds and placing it on the floor had apparently rested from their labors long enough to play a few games of cards and consume a goodly portion of Mr. Waxelbaum's supply of "nigh-beer." General. If you have been accustomed to go ing to the postofflce on Sunday and getting your mail, or looking for it at your hotel, take notice: "Hereafter postoffices of the first and second class shall not be open Sundays for the purpose of delivering mail to the general public, but this provision shall not prevent the propmt delivery of special delivery mail." That is the language of the postofflce appropria tion bill which has just passed con gress. Half a million people struggled to enter Congress hall in London to gaze on the dead features of Gen. William Booth. There was no disorder. It was not necessary to call for police re serves. Soldiers of the Salvation Army, women as well as men, patroll ed the outside and interior of the big building, keeping the vast throng moving, gently making a way for the old, the feeble or the children. Joseph G. Robin, who ' is in the Tombs in New York City awaiting sentence on his conviction for grand larceny in connection with the wreck ing of the Northern bank, is said to have made another fortune througn speculation which he carried on while in prison. While in the Fombs and during the daytime, it is reported, he occupied a room in the criminal courts building, which is equipped with a telephone end typewriter. Four members of the family of Jef ferson Ruhlo, a road worker, were killed by lightning, which struck the tent they were-mng in near Desota, Mo. Ruhlo, his wife, a 16-year-old daughter and a baby girl were instant ly killed. A grown son escaped death, but wa stunned and severely burned. The foreclosure of the mortgage on a Montana home was prevented and the savings of a lifetime were restor ed to Mrs. Katherine McDonald of Butte, when congress passed the Sho shone irrigation claim bill. Mrs. Mc Donald will receive $11,000 of the $42, 000 carried in the bill for the relief of about 400 claimants who lost heavily by the failure of a contracting firm, which was erecting the Wyoming ir rigation project. President .Taft ap proved the measure in its final form. The massacres by the Turks have extended to the Servian frontier. Tel egram received from Sientiza on the southern boundary say the Turks attacked the town and butchered sev eral of the inhabitants. News of the massacre caused great excitement in Belgrade, and the newspapers issued special editions containing demands that the Servian government protest vigorously to the porte. The citizens are loud in their clamor for a decla ration of war against Turkey. J. W. Moye, an actor, in reaching for his hat, which lalew off his head, fell from the rear platform of a train on the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad near Pelham, N. Y., and was killed. Thirty skeletons and mummies have been found in the southern part of Mexico. Dr. J. F. Goslin, a Big Rapids den tist, his wife and 4-year-old son were killed and his mother probably fatally injured and his son, Burr, 11 years old, slightly hurt when a.freight train crashed into their automobile., near Howard, Mich. The steamer Pennsylvania was se verely shaken by an earthquake dur ing the trip from Panama and while off Manzanillo, on the Mexicon coast. The shocked last at least seven sec onds. The gunboat DesMoines was order ed by Acting Secretary of the Navy Winthrop to visit Mexico. William Sorbet, aged 11, of Abbe ville, La., who three years ago acci dentally killed a younger brother with a shotgun, killed an older brother with the same weapon when it was accidentally discharged. The family is heart-broken. " Approximately six'thousahd women paraded the streets of Columbus, Ohio, advocating votes forf women. Most of them trudged briskly over the long line of march under the hot sun, while others in automobiles, i gaily decorated with emblems of equal suf frage, followed in a long procession. The .parade was the most spectacu lar 4 event of the Columbirr centennial. When the procession terminated, it at once disintegrated into a hundred or more crowds addressed by women on Boap boxes. ,,t Hugh S. Gibson, the charge, d'af faires of the American legation at Ha" vana, Cuba, hile entering a hotel in Havana, was assaulted by a Cuban newspaper reporter. ' Mr. Gibson was not seriously injured. His assailant was arrested, and the Cuban secreta ry of state personally expressed his regret to the charge d'affaires, at .the occurrence. Mr. Gibson was just enk tering the hotel at which he habitual ly dines when the man, without any warning, sprang upon him from be hind and knocked him down. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., in a state ment regarding labor., troubles on his father's estate at Tarrytown, made it known that private . detectives had been called to delve into the situation. A detective, with a large force of dep" uties, has been guarding Mr. Rocke feller's 1,000-acre place for, several weeks. About 200 men are employed on the estate, nearly all foreigners. Mr. Rockefeller discredited reports that it was a black-hand warfare. Corporal Cedric M. Long of the Fifth regiment of Massachusetts, is the champion military rifleman of the United States. He attained this hon or at the annual rifle tournament at Seagirt, N. J., after two days of shooting, during which he surpassed the efforts of more than 100 other competitors, including all the crack shots ,in the military service of the United States, regular and National Guard. He scored 235 points against 231 for his nearest rival. The women's Titanic memorial fund was increased several thousand dol lars in Gloucester, Mass., through the instrumentality of Mrs. John Hays Hammond and other society leaders by means of an outdoor society dra matic performance given at the Ham mond summer villa at Lookout Hill. North Shore wealth and social life was represented in the throng, the patronesses including Mrs. Taft, Mrs. Grover Cleveland, Mrs. Eugene N. Foss and many others. President Taft, who was detained in Washington, sent a congratulatory telegram. ' The Ottoman government a,t Con stantinople has received the prelim inary report formulated by the com mission which investigated the massa cre of more than 140 Bulgarians, Au gust 2, near Uskup, showing that the civil and military officials of the town failed in their duties, and that the Turkish troops participated in the at tacks on the Bulgarians. The govern ment has ordered that a state of siege be proclaimed at Kotschana, and that the guilty persons be court-martialed without distinction. A woman and a boy were killed and eight other persons were injured, one probably fatally, by lightning, which accompanied a severe electri cal storm that visited St. Louis, Mo., and vicinity. Attaches of the New York City dis trict attorney's office are investigat ing what is believed to have been an attempt to steal evidence of grafting in the police department by breaking into the home of William Flynn, chief of the eastern division of the United States secret service. The figures showing the amount of excavation 'to be done on the Panama canal indicate that the great work was five-sixths finished on August 1. Harvey Dodd, one of the two Amer icans reported to have been killed in the massacre of Federal troops by rebels at Leon, Nicaragua, had served with the rank of colonel in the revo lutionary army which overthrew. Pres ident Zelaya in 1909. , Washington. Repairmen examining the futnitur& t)f the house discovered that Speaker Clark during the last nine months had used his eavel with such effect that virtually the entire top of the desk was wrecked. One entire section had been pounded away, leaving a large hole, concealed by the green felt that covers the desk. The speaker through out the session made vigorous use of the gavel on all occasions. No speak er since Thomas B. Reed has employ ed the mallet with such freedom. Within an hour after the adjourn ment of congress President Taft was on his private car bound for Beverly and a vacation he expects 'will, be broken but little until December. The white- house is practically deserted, for Major Thomas L. Rhodes, the president's personal aide, and most of the office employees left with the president. Summer offices are to be opened there and probably most of the force will stay in Beverly until late in October. The president will return to Washington for a one-day stay early in September and once again later in that month. Sobered -by the embarrassments of an all-night session of filibusters and disagreements, congress adjusted its differences, invited President Taft up to the capltol once more and wrote 'finis'' after the proceedings of the second session of the Sixty-second congress. The end was marked with a return of harmony. A wild outburst of applause greeted Speaker Clark's announcement of. adjournment as his gavel fell in the house. The floor im mediately became an animated scene, members bidding each other goodbye and shaking hands. Old-time political foes buried all differences and feuds. The navy's resources on the Pacific coast have been drawn upon to such an extent that should further trouble be encountered in Nicaragua beyond the power of the present forces now there or en route to cope with, or 1 should some of the American lives or interests in other Central or South American countries be jeopardized, the army will be called upon to as sist the marines. The Tenth infantry, now on the Panama canal zone, would be the first to answer the call. It is not thought probable, however, that any further trouble will be preclp. Hatted. EXCELLENT FOR SWINE iowpeas Almost as Good as ": Clover for Hog Pasture. yprage Plant Well Adapted to Needs of 8outh and Among Best Crops for Grazing Vand Soiling . 8ource of Profit. Hog raisers should grow cowpeas for hogs are fond of them, and they are almost as good, if not fully as good, as red clover or alfalfa, i In fact the cowpea has been described .as be ing to the south what" red clover Is to the north, or alfalfa to the west a. forage plant well adapted to the needs of the region and esteemed among the best crops for grazing and soiling.. ; By. judicious selection of varieties, fields ready for use can be had from midsummer until cold weather, and a good part of what is needed for this purpose can be grown as a catch crop without Interfering with the regular crops grown on the same, ground. This is especially so when they are grown between corn rows, being planted when the corn Is laid by and grazed after the corn is gathered. Probably about half of the cowjeas grown in the south are. grown and grazed in this way, and are regarded as providing the best possible pasture for hogs. They just can't be beat, and more of them should be raised for the bacon and lard makers. When cowpeas are pastured by hogs the droppings return nearly all the fertilizing elements of the crop to the soil and benefit the field near ly as much as though the entire crop were plowed under as a green ma nure. The meat produced is clear profit The crop does not bear contin uous grazing, still it gives abundant feed for a month or six weeks, and by arranging a succession of fields good pasture may be provided during several' months. More actual feed is produced with less waste per acre when the vines are cut or pulled for soiling, for which cowpeas are a great crop. A bulletin Issued by the Mississippi experiment station says that In that state cowpeas for hogsJ pasture, without grain, have given better results than any other crop. In one test the crop was grown on their hill land, where one acre of cowpea produced 350 pounds of pork. In an other test on rich valley land one acre of cowpeas produced 483 pounds of pork. The hogs were turned Into the field when the peas were about ripe. Cowpeas will do well in any state south, and they can be made a source of great wealth to the south by feed ing them to hogs if southern farmers will catch on and plant more hogs and cowpeas. Cost of Brood Sow. It costs about $10 to keep a breed ing sow a year. If she gives you two litters of pigs each year, there should be a clear profit of at least $20 from her, and you have your sow left In the bargain. SATISFACTORY View of the Fire-Proof Smoke House. In response to a query as to a simple smoke house for family use and the best methods of smoking hams and bacon in small quantities the Country Gentleman makes the follow ing reply: A fire-proof smoke house, and' store room combined that has given excel lent satisfaction was built as fol lows: The .building is divided into two sec tions, that facing the dwelling and sit uated at the right end in the diagram being encased in stone walls and closed with dark shutters when desired, an swers a useful purpose for keeping fruit fresh meat and provisions gen erally. The left-hand half of the building is occupied with the smoke house. " The diagram shows the position of the dif ferent parts. The ash pit," surround ed by stone walls and a layer of stone beneath, laid in water-lime mortar, and securely coated with the same, keeps the ashes dry, and no water can enter. The ash pit is entered by an iron door, shown both In the view and section. Over it is a brick arch, con taining several holes the size of a half brick, through which the smoke passes into the smoke apartment above, which Is entered by the outside door on the left end of the build ing, by the assistance of a stepladder. This smoke house Is six by ten feet In the clear. The ventilating window at the end, and the ventilating chim ney at the top, are both opened when .the hamB are smoking, and closely shut when the operation is completed. The top of the .arch forms the floor of the smoke room. A large number of hams may be placed in this room by the following 'arrangement: Pieces of hardwood plank, eight Inches wide and long enough to reach across the room, rest Cane Hard on the Soil. V 'Many farmers avoid planting cane because they think it is hard on the ground. In some respects this, as the j writer has seen, is true. All sorgho icrops have the ability to use the water i content of the soil down closer than .most plants do. The effects are plain ly seen the following season if the .cane is followed by a' spring, crop. However, sowing some legume crop in early summer after harvesting ' a rran of cane would bring the soil into Be sure "there are ' no lice on .the hogs. Keep the calves in clean quarters out of the hot bxoL - - .' . ; ' , ': Do not put the" colts in a pasture fenced by barbed wire. A bottle of vaseline Is handy to have around at milking time. Scours in pigs is an indication of Indigestion in; the mother. It may be wise to protect the colts from the flies during the day. If a cow falls off In milk now It will be hard to bring back the flow. ' Cows can't be blamed for trying the fences when pasture gets short. Wheat middlings is one of the best feeds for young and growing pigs. Be sure the mares and colts In pas ture have shelter from the hot sun. 1 Only a little buttermilk not worked out will' mean rancid butter In a short time. ' " Three hundred dollars In a silo beats having that much money in the bank. Whole oats placed on a dry, raised platform are a most profitable feed for young pigs. The man with cows coming fresh In the fall has cream to sell when the price is up. Fruit of every kind should be thor oughly cooled before being packed for the market 1 y Ducks as a rule are hardy. They do not have the gapes. The weakest part of a duck is its legs. Chicks on a hard board floor soon developyleg troubles. Sprinkle fine earth or sand over it. Ewes that are broad and long will make good brood mothers, and produce vigorous offspring. Orchard men of noted fruit sections of the country practice thinning as faithfully as they do the spraying and pruning of trees. Pigs that have been properly grown up to five months with big strong frames, can be rounded up quickly for market with a ration consisting large ly of corn. '' : ? i In selecting a ram always pick out one that stands square on hfs legs and shows courage and masculinity. A slow, poky animal will prove a dis appointment When pure-bred swine are kept for breeding purposes they should be given every opportunity for bone and muscle development, rather than the production of fat . When disposing of some of the old stock pick out the poor layers. They are "Just as good" for roasting pur poses, and you cannot afford to part with the money-makers. Necessity for Fresh Air. Fowls are obliged to throw off much of the waste of the body through the lungs. They do not sweat in the sense that do other animals, but Instead breathe several times faster than sweating animals when heated. To keep in good health a hen requires nearly seven times the amount of fresh air in proportion to Its size as does a horse. FIRE-PROOF SMOKE HOUSE Diagram of Smoke House. on a ledge or projection from the walls on each side. These pieces of plank have hooks driven in on both edges far enough apart to receive the hams, so that a row may be hung on each side. When full, each is pushed along to one side and another filled, and so on till all are in their places. The ventilators above are then open ed, and smoke is started on the heap of ashes below. For 'this purpose, cobs are used, or unseasoned maple, or body hickory. The smoking should be slow. By the time the smoke has passed up through the opening in the arch, it has become cold, and cannot heat the hams. Ten or twelve days will usually be enough for the com completion of the operation, when the ventilators at the end and in the chim ney above are closed shut The hams being now kept perfectly dark and thoroughly excluded from the air out side, they will keep in good condi tion; flies will- do no injury through the summer with a small fire started once a month, and with the upper ventilator partly open at the time. This obviates the common and trou blesome task of encasing the hams in muslin, , whitewashing them, or packing them in; oats or ashes. It is obvious that the apartment used as a store room may be omitted, and the smoke house built alone. The smoke -room in this building is six by ten feet in, the clear, which is larger than most families require. The great points here attained are perfect protec tion from cool smoke, ready ac cess, and handling, and an easy mode of keeping the hams through the sum mer in perfect condition. Double brick, hollow walls might be even better than stone. The rafters should be ten inches wide, strongly lathed, plas tered, and filled with sawdust to keep the room cool. fine working order for either wheat or corn. One Good Mutton Breed Best. r Mutton 1 sheep should never be of mixed, breeds on one farm. Get one good mutton breed, stick to it and de velop the highest notch possible. A lot of mixed lambs never bring the highest price on the market It is thoBe of one breed, uniform - in size, shape and condition that get the big money. MILK HOUSE FREQUENTtr IS OVERLOOKED fi nil BBffi life : Exterior View (By J. K. BRIIXJMAN). While it sounds strange, it is true that many farmers who are making the larger portion of their yearly in come from milk have no milk house. They have a calf shed, implement house, barn, corn crib, granary; etc, all built for the purpose of caring for and protecting the various products tor tools used on the farm, but they have never thought It necessary to build a milk house. Many model housekeepers are compelled to keep milk In unsanitary rooms, such as some outbuilding, the cellar, kitchen, or other general purpose room'for the reason that there is no milk house. - Milk should be kept in a room used for no other purpose, and in some states an attempt has been made to pass laws governing the keeping of milk on the farm, that is, milk that is sold or used for any purpose except on the farm. The small milk house here shown will certainly cost several dollars, but Is it not worth it? The structure should, of course, be built of cement but build it of brick, stone, or even wood if you cannot build it of cement The idea is simply a sug gestion. The screened-In porch, for a workroom would come in mighty hah- DIVERSIFY IN FARMING One-Crop System Fails to Bring Permanent Prosperity. Not Enough Attention Given to Sys tem of Rotation by Average Farm er Raise More Live Stock to Increase Profit That a one-crop system has failed to bring permanent prosperity to any considerable area is verified many times in the history of agriculture. However, much has been gained by de voting certain limited areas to a one crop production. We believe the above fact to be true and that enough attention is not given by the average farmer to a system of rotation which Is adapted to the soil and climatic conditions with which he must deal, says the Gem State Rural Journal. The fact that one locality will produce fruit successfully has led men to squander their means in attempting to grow commercial orchards where only failure can possibly be the reward. A crop rotation should contain only such plants and products as are adapt ed to the soil and climatic conditions, and have a commercial value either directly or Indirectly. However, it is not enough to know that a crop will grow well and produce abundantly. This is the chief difficulty now where there is a superabundance of alfalfa produced with not enough foresight given to the disposition of the crop after it is grown and made into hay. Too many trust to an uncertain mar ket for the raw product, and give too little attention to the' conversion of the raw material into the finished article. Every rational system, of diversified farming must embrace the growing of animals and the manufacture of ani mal products either on the farm or in the large central plants. To grow more animals successfully a wider range of farm crops ' is necessary. More grain and cultivated crops should be grown to combine with the staple hay and pasture crops to get the best results, and reap the largest returns for labor and capital invested. Many of the old alfalfa meadows should be plowed up and put to growing other crops for a term of years; and the newer and the old worn-out lands would be much benefitted by seeding to alfalfa. Oats and barley produce abundantly and wheat as well, after the alfalfa. All kinds of hoed crops do well, including the potato and root crops. In growing a young orchard it does not hurt to plant some hoed crop between the trees, such as corn, potatoes or beans. ' This is putting Into practice the theory of rotation. 'As the trees grow into bearing the space between the trees can be seed ed to clover for a time to advantage, thus carrying still further the Idea of growing a variety of crops on the land. But above all things see to it that more live stock is produced to consume the surplus and the waste material which Is found on every farm, and which should contribute to the net income of that farm. Worth of a Hen. France classes the wjrth of a hen more for the production of meat and eggs than she does for the fine feath ers or standard looks. Some years ago the poultrymen aimed for show rec ords, and while they no doubt gained their point they at the same time ruined the stamina and thrift of the hen for commercial purposes. Today it Is different Utility has taken a front seat and all breeds are bred up to conform with the ideas of the mar ket poultryman. . . - Pure Bred Cows. Cows that give 250 pounds of butter fat, or 8,000 pounds of three per cent milk, are not accidentally bred or pur chased of cow merchants with their variegated assortment They must be bred from cows with high record milk ancestry behind them and sires from the same kind- of ancestry. Here again comes In this breeding direct line from one breed, as the hen fan ciers assert, the same strain of an in fluence or family of that breed. of Milk House. IV'A I Q OXivc. w y, vo' so: S3 Floor Plan of Milk House. dy along about fly time and the drive way certainly would be used. The side porches are for keeping out the sun, but they would be utilized for stor ing many things as well as for sun ning milk cans, etc. The size of the room will, of course, depend on the number of cows kept but a room of the size given on the floor plan will be found ample for quite a number of cows. SET PLANTS IN MIDSUMMER Henry Jerolaman, 8trawberry King, Tells of Methods Employed to Get 8,000 Quarts to Acre. In the famous strawberry section about Hilton, N. J., many growers set out new beds' the last of July or early August says the Agriculturist Beds thus set are fruited the following year. . Immediately after the crop is har vested, which usually ends about the first week in July, the strawberry mulch is raked off and the soil worked with a hoe or rake. Runners for new plants are put out and layered in the usual way. As soon as they are large enough they are set out in the new beds. The strawberry king, Henry Jerola man, says: "The strawberry is a vig orous feeder, and should have plenty of plant food when it needs it most I use well-rotted horse and cow ma nure mixed. Spade or plow it under and work the soil until it is well dis tributed. "After the plants are started put some fine, well-rotted manure or com post around each plant This may seem troublesome, but It pays. It hot only fertilizes the plant but protects It during the winter. My rows are two feet ten inches apart, and the plants are every 15 Inches In the row. rwlth this method I have no trouble in getting six to eight thousand quarts an acre." If the plants are set during a hot dry spell, they 'should T be watered. Mr. Jerolaman always puts a pint of rain water to each plant After drop ping the roots in the hole made with the hand, the water Is poured in, and the dirt drawn around the plant Each plant should be shaded in hot weather during the middle of the day after it Is set at least two days. Strawberry baskets are turned upside down over each plant If plants are very large, old peach baskets or anything of that sort can be used. OPERATION OF A GAS ENGINE Plan and Illustration for Stopping ' Pump When Tank Is Full Simple and Inexpensive. J. W. Moeller sends the Iowa Home stead an illustration and plan foi stopping a jump spark gas engine pumping water when the tank is full. Take some insulated copper wire. Jump Spark Gas Engine. which does not cost much, attach one end of wire to spark plug, then run wire up to ceiling where it is out of the way. Fasten with some staples and then run end of wire down to top of tank. When tank is full the water' will touch end of wire and short circuit the current which' stops the engine. By this plan the engine may be started and left for an indefinite length of time, for when the tank is full the engine will stop. Feed for Lambs. Tobacco stems chopped fine or to bacco sweepings mixed with salt are good to feed young lambs, particu larly if they are affected with -worms! Every time one out-rxrwaon suit Is to introduce a yet greater num ber of unlike qualities, and these never seem to assimilate, two undesir able dairy qualities never unite to pro duce Improved dairy attainments, but differentiate. N Drain All Low Spots. Why not drainall those low spots after the crops have been cared for and add to the acreage? ;! . , ., TANK wwl? I J FOR Jjuncheon or picnic sandwiches, nothing equals Veal Loaf 'Or. atfre it cold win crap new lettuce. It U a fcaaty treat and economical a welL ', At Att.Croemrm ' .Libby, McNeill & Libby uucago More often it is the man who gets justice that kicks. A woman seldom hits anything she aims at especially if she throws her self at a man's head. A great majority of rummer Ills art due to Malaria in suppressed form. Las situde and headaches are but tiro symp toms. OXIDINE eradicates the Malaria germ and tones up the entire system. The old hat on a woman's head hasn't the slightest resemblance to the new one she has on her mind. For SUMMER HEADACHES Hicks CAPUDirfK la the bsai remedy no matter what eavoaea them whether from th heat, alttlnjj In draughts, fereriah condition, etc lite 26c. mod 60c per bottle at medicine tores. And many a girl who starts out with .the intention of making a name for herself winds up by turning the job over to some man. If your appetite is not what it should be perhaps Malaria is developing. It affects the whole system. OXIDINE will clear away the germs,! rid you of Malaria and gen erally improve your condition. The Long and Short of It "Struggling young lawyers mix things up, don't they?" "In what way?" They seldom have a brief career when they run short Cost of Living Reduced. The King Fruit Preserving Powder will keep perfectly fresh all kinds of fruit, apples, peaches, pears, berries, plums, tomatoes, corn, . okra, cider, wine, etc. No, air-tight jars needed. Used more than 25 years from New ! York to Florida. A small package puts up 50 pounds of fruit and taste is just as when gathered. . Saves money, time and labor. Barber Shops' in China. Since the Chinese revolution a great many Chinese have had their cues cut off, and this has led to the opening of i a large number - of barber, shops throughout the far east wherever Chi nese are -located, says ah exchange. Several progressive business "men of Singapore, anticipating this, imported a lare number of American barber chairs, and they are now unable to ' get supplies qrickly- enough. It has also been , learned that the Chinese in sist on having American hair clippers, and refuse all other makes offered them. . It would Seem that American, manu facturers of barbers' supplies should experience a large increase in their f Oriental trade:' STERN NECESSITY. He Isn't your bathing suit rather loud? SheIt has to be loud' I'm trying to mash a deaf old .millionaire. A Large Package Of Enjoyment Post : Served with cream, milk or fnritfresh or cooked. .. - - Crisp, , golden-brown - bits of ,wbite '. com delicious and wholesome -' A flavour that appeals to young and old. ft Sold by Oracers. 6 Toasties ' , . 7'MW j atug o m mm v m t w mm -ww-rvjr wmg m m m .V" . .. t I': .-'... -c- :.:--.. v-C-w; K: L': :'-( ( V- A- :'. '; . Jfv; - S.--O--
China Grove Record (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 30, 1912, edition 1
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