Newspapers / China Grove Record (Salisbury, … / Oct. 25, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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.;1 THE ROWAN RECORD Publiahad Weekly. CHINA GROVE "N. O HEWS BRIEFLY TOLD A CONDENSED RECORD OF EVENTS OF THE WEEK. SEVEN DWfS' HEWS AT A GLANCE Important Happenings In All Part of the.NyoVld Summarized for . tno Busy Reader. Southern. The schooner I M. Dantzler was boarded and searched at Mobile, Ala., by United States revenue officials, and, although the government offi cials refuse to make any statement, it is said, upon good authority that munitions of war destined for Mexico 3' were found on board. The Dantzler 'was searched some time ago by the revenue cutter Winona at Pascagoula, but nothing suspicious was found. Captain Fremont, a commander well known- in Southern ports, was said to - ' have been In charge of the Dantzler, but Washington officials have been unable to reach him. As the result of racial troubles at Coalmont, Tenn., seven miles north of Tracy City, one negro coke puller is dead and two others wounded and S. Crick, a white miner, is shot through the knee, according to a spe cial to Nashville, Tenn., from Tracy City. More than two hundred shots were exchanged. Shreiff Shrum and a' posse of deputies have the situa tion in hand and further trouble is not expected. 1 Sixteen persons were injured, one perhaps fatally, and four small busi ness houses were wrecked at Mar shall, Texas, in an explosion of nat- ural gas. James Hargraves, aged 26, of Sa vannah, Ga., shot and killed his wife, aged 21, and then committed suicide at the home of his brother, near Fair fax, Ga. James G. Woodward was nominated for the office of mayor of Atlanta, Ga., In the "run off" primary, defeating Aldine Chambers by a majority of 717 votes. General. An examination of the barograph carried by Lieut. Hans Gericke, win : ner of last year's international bal loon race, and Lieutenant Stelter, who were killed by the bursting of their balloon while making a flight near Grossenhain, Germany, showed that they were three miles above the ground when the accident occurred. The two aeronauts were making a trial flight anticipatory to the inter national balloon race on October 27, when the tragedy occurred. ' The typhoon which swept over sev eral of the Philippine islands oh Oc tober 16 resulted in the death of more than a thousand persons. Four uni dentified Americans three men and a litte girl were among those killed. The coasting steamer Tayabas foun dered off lEscalante. The bodies of fifteen Filipinos and Spaniards came ashore. The typhoon practically . wip ed out the towns of Bogo, Danao, Tole do, Measin and Escalante. The United States cruiser Des Moines, in command of Capt. Charles F. Hughes, steamed into port at Vera Cms. An officer from the warships Visited Gen. Felix Diaz, and arranged an interview on behalf of Captain Hughes. General Diaz then visited the Des Moines, where the American captain and the leader of the new re volt had a long conference, the nature of which has not been divulged. While the Diaz revolutionists hold the city and the Federals have taken up uo . sitions on the outskirts, there has been no coming together of the two opposing forces as yet. Notification that Burgaria, Servia and Greece had declared war against Turkey was given to the British for eign office by the representatives of these countries. The only formality now lacking is the declaration of war by Turkey against Greece, which the Ottoman government has appeared re luctant to do. The final draft of the treaty of peace between Turkey and Italy has been signed. Peace treaty is by no means one-sided or couched in such terms as usually are imposed by vic tor upon vanquished. Not only have Turkish susceptibilities carefully been safeguarded, but the Turkish govern- ment succeeded in obtaining conces sions and a disguised indemnity. ' United States Senator Weldon Brin ton Heyburn of Idaho died at his apartments in Washington after a lin gering illness. He was 60 years old and had been in the senate nine years. The United States revenue . cutter Windom has sail to search the gulf for the steamer Nicaragua, a 400-ton steamer plying between Mexican and Texas ports. The Nicaragua carried a crew of 24 men. More than 500 Servian soldiers are reported to have been killed by the explosion of a Turkish mine. Official accounting of the estate of William T. Burbridge, who was at one time declared to have won more than a million dollars in gambling estab lishments in New York City and Hot Springs, Ark., show that the property left by him is less than $2,000. Secretary Knox and Ransford S. Miller, , constituting the special em bassy dispatched by the president to Japan to represent the United States at the funeral services of the emperor, have returned to Washington. Jonesboro, Ga., is now without elec ' trie lights, the city electric plant hav ing been burned to the ground. Nine-year-old Wayne Moore, after beating his way from Los Angeles to Bloomington, 111., a distance o'f 2,000 miles, was arrested at the house of a playmate.. His parents recently re moved from Bloomington to Los An geles, and the lad ran away. : 1 ' - -I , Dr. WtUm Boks, dlrfls-f the Smith observatory and, Professor of astronomy at' Hobert college; Geneva, N. Y., has discovered a comet in the eastern sky'. .; .This is the v twenty seventh comet discovered byV Profes sor. Brooks ; - . ' Before 200 patrons of a popular cafe in St. Louis, Mo., a well-dressed unidentified man drew a butcher knife from his pocket, stabbed to death his woman companion and then took his own life with the same instrument. The woman, who was fashionably dressed, -is also unidentified. The man had a postcard in his pocket, ad dressed to L. D. Morelle.t. Louis." The couple had been in the cafe for half an hour before the tragedy. According to the report of the state examiner made public, ; officials of Darke county are said to. have paid Jsout illegally $291,148.54 w.ithin the last five years. The report states that the public treasury was "boldly loot ed." The alleged-corrupt county offi cials used the basement of the court house for drinking and carousing, ac cording to the report of the Columbus, Ohio, committee which stated that the "swag" was usually divided at these gatherings. One of the accus ed is now in the penitentiary, and other sentenced and several Indicted. It was discovered in Skagway, Alas ka, that nearly $250,000. in gold in the safe of the aFrgo & Co. express office had been overlooked by a rob ber who sandbagged Agent , Herbert Taylor. The robber took a package containing $1,200. When Taylor went into a rear room for a bucket of coal the robber, who had been concealed in a closet, struck him over ttie head. Taylor lay unconscious until found later. The funeral of Billy Rugh, the news boy of Gary, Ind., who gave his crip pled leg that skin might be grafted onto the body of Miss Ethel Smith, thereby saving her life, ' was held, and practically all Gary and many from surrounding towns attended. No building was large enough to accom- modate the crowd, and the service's were held in the street. Miss Smith was not able to attend, but her fa ther and brothers were in the audi ence. Four brass bands played funeral dirges. ' Forty persons were burned severe ly in an automobile explosion which may cost the lives of Mayor Hartman of Petaluma, Cal., and three others. A crowd gathered about a burning au tomobile that had been dragged from a garage. Mayor Hartman, who is a former chief of the fire department, responded to the fire alarm and at tacked the blaze with a chemical ex tinguisher.' The " mayor was thrown forty feet by the explosion, and the crowd was swept by a blast of flame and several persons were trampled upon in the panic which followed. Jack Johnson, the negro pugilist, was charged with abdjucting Miss Lu cile Cameron, 19 years old, in a war rant sworn out by the girl's mother. Bill Rugh, the Gary, Ind., newsboy, who, a few days ago, submitted to the removal of a withered leg that material might be provided for a skin grafting operation that saved the life of a young woman he had never seen, is dead. His dying words were: "I guess. I turned out to be some good after all." Gen. Felix Diaz, nephew of Gen. Porfirio Diaz, the deposed president of Mexico, raised the banner of re bellion at Vera Cruz. He entered the city with .500 men and seized the ar senal and garrison. Col. Diaz Ordaz was in command of the garrison. Diaz then placed men in charge of the two, gunboats lying in the harbor. Defalcations already aggregating the huge sum of $5,6000,000 and con stantly increasing, have been unearth ed in the offices of the Grand Terneu zen railroad at Brussels, Belgium, through the accidental discovery of false share certificates among a small parcel recently sold. Washington. A contract for part of the armor piercing shells for the navy on which the Hatfield Steel company of Eng land recently underbid all American competitors, by nearly two hundred thousand dollars on less than a mil lion dollar contract for 2,000 14-inch shells, and by about three hundred thousand dollars on a contract of about a million dollars for 2,500 12 inch shells, will be awarded to the English concern. For the protection of the military secrets of the United States, Presi dent Taft issued an executive order forbidding foreign vessels to enter these ports without special authoriza tion of the navy department: Tortu gas, Fla.; Great Harbor, CulebraT Guantanamo, Cuba; Pearl .Harbor, Hawaii; Guam and Subig bay, Philip pine islands. These ports are Amer ican naval bases. Upward of $400,000 was expended in the efforts of Gov. Woodrow Wil son, Gov. Judson Harmon and Repre sentative Oscar W. Underwood to gain the Democratic nomination for presi dent this year, according to testimony presented to the senate campaign con tributions committee. Fears are felt in the navy depart ment at Washington for the United States transport Prairie, which, with 750 marines and the United States commission aboard, was last heard from on October 2 off the coast of Santo Domingo, whither it had been ordered to investigate the uprising there and interfere if American or for eign interests were endangered. Act ing Secretary Beckman Winthrop has sent urgent dispatches to' all stations in Santo Domingo and Haiti seeking for information of the vessel's where abouts. The long silence has created uneasiness in official circles. American marines and bluejacket's, whose activities were largely respon sible for the crushing of the recent serious rebellion in Nicaragua, may soon be called upon to preserve order at the polls when .the Nicaraguans, by direct vote, choose a president and vice president. It became known that the United States proposes to have guards on hand unless, the Nicaf a guan government can give absolute assurances that the election will :, be impartially conducted. The .election takes place November 2. " y Attention to details PROFITABLE Experience of Louisiana Raiser Proves That Clean Quarters, Fresh Water, Good Food and Systematic Care Are Few of Essen- i ; , tikis Required With Fowls. U. Wv.... jfiav jt v Zr ltviruffi I lllfli. 1 mmunr-' swmmmvmmx Rhode (By Pearl C. Stegall, Louisiana.) I built all my poultry houses 10 by 15 feet and let the cover extend 6 feet in front and 8 feet on each side. I find this a good style of house for this climate, as It gives good sheds for nests or coops for the young sters. I make the' roofs of strips three Inches wide, not over three feet high, and fasten them slightly at each end and by cleats so they can be removed for cleaning. The floors of nry houses and the sheds as well are made of dirt pack ed smooth and then covered with wood ashes. After this has been sprinkled with water, a few times It becomes quite hard and is easy to keep clean. The floors of the houses and sheds are somewhat higher than the ground outside. There is a door on each side and one in front and two windows placed rather high in the back Above the roosts. The doors all open into the sheds under shelter. The doors should be made of wire netting In order to prevent mink and other animals from carrying off the chick ens at night Nests are made movable and are placed on low benches In the sheds. A house of this size will give room enough for 100 hens. The houses are kept open all the time except in cases of very severe storms. Two feed coops for biddies and the young chicks are kept under the front shed, where they are always dry and which allow the young chicks to run out on the ground in the garden. I divide my poultry yard into two plots, one of which contains some fig and peach trees. I sow oats in the fall and field peas in June. The plot next to the poultry yard Is sown in oats in October and they furnish the great deal of green food during the winter, and may be cut if not eaten off by June. I give my chickens free range after they are three weeks old, but take great care to keep them out of the rain and early dew. If you are unable to have poultry house and scratching shed, separate White Plymouth Rock Hen. nesting house, . roosting house, bone cutters, self-feeders and all that sort of thing, just try my plan and you will have good success. I make hests of clean leaves, straw, cotton seed or light trash with plenty of tobacco leaves. I give a broody hen one , old nest the first day or two until I am, satisfied she really intends to set, and then place 12 or 13 eggs under her. I always select the quietest hens for brooders and shut up the others in a well ventilated slat coop and feed lightly on green cab bage leaves or other green stuff with plenty of water. Baked corn bread Is ' excellent for broody hens. ' I mave the slat coops every day, always placing them in. the shade. I believe success In raising poultry Is Orchard Culture. Years ago we did not look for re sults in an orchard under 20 or 25 years. By the present methods we do not have to wait so long. This year I harvested from my orchard of four acres, set just 12 years, from two to four barrels of apples a tree. Last year I picked two " barrels from some trees. This orchard has been worked every year. By proper care and spray ing, we get results in a' short time, which - makes it profitable, -says a willinsure RETURNS FROM POULTRY Island Red. due as much to absolute cleanlinesa as anything else. It requires a great deal of work to keep your coops and poultry houses and drinking and feed vessels perfectly clean, but it pays better than any other kind of work a woman can do in the farm. For grit in winter I save every piece of broken dishes and with a hammer and old piece of railroad iron I. pound it up fine and keep a supply before the chicks all the time. I-use this piece of Iron as a dinner bell and my chicks all come running the mo ment they hear the strokes of the hammer upon It. Sometimes I trade a fat hen to a res taurant or boarding house for a bas ketful of broken dishes. Let me urge farm women folk to keep but one breed of chickens the kind you like best, and the best for your purpose that is for eggs or meat. If you keep turkeys, ducks or guineas do not let them into the chicken yard, butt keep them in a separate place. Everything about the duck and turkey yard must be kept as clean as possible all the time. If the drinking vessels and feed troughs of the ducks and turkeys are allowed to become sour and dirty, trouble will surely follow. Cut out old wood in currant bushes. Everyone should have, a strawberry bed. The bulk of the dairy cows fail to earn their board. The pruning shears can be used every month in the year. The beef cow ought to produce enough milk to rear her own calf. When we all adopt the pure food law on our farms there will be less hog cholera. To Increase the supply of cattle it will be necessary to stop the slaughter of heifer calves. Get rid of the windfalls as fast as possible. It means the destruction of many insect pests. The Shorthorn-Angus cross, produc ing the so-called "blue grade," is very popular in Scotland. The raising of winter lambs is 'a specialty, that yields good returns and which makes pleasant work. In packing grapes discard all green, overripe or shriveled specimens. Use ten pound baskets. Strive . for neat ness. . - .. . Horticultural work goes on forever and is hard labor. If you don't like the work you will not make a success of it. Unless you have more than you can profitably dispose of nearby you will find it best to sell in the home mar ket The cow that always looks wild out of the southeast corner of her eye surely has a master that needs edu cating. With a pair of scissors or sheep shears pinch off the blackberry, canes when they reach a height of three br. four feet. ..... If you want a little fun leave the lot gate open. But the 6tock will ; get more fun out of getting out than you will get out of getting them in again. It is poor policy to allow a young boar to cover more than one sow a day. Thus it is not advisable to allow the young animal to run with the: sows. The breeder of pure bred stock ot any kind Cannot ignore the market for common stuff, the sort of stock de manded by the buyers and the types that are most in favor. writer In an exchange. A buyer who came into my orchard before we had picked any of the apples this year said to me: "That is a -sight which compares with the western apples that grow Just that way. The trees are about the same size." Every ap ple was perfect It showed that by proper care we do not have to wait 25 or 30 years to get fruit Load the team according to. their strength and use the whip as little as possible.. - SELrCiTTTOR"SEED System Of Best Corn Growers Should Apply to St aple Arkansas Planter Picks Out Biggest Earliest and Well-Formed Stalks I and Allows No One to Touch Them but Himself. Up north the corn raisers are begin ning to select their seed ears in the faU Instead of waiting till a few weeks before planting time, and pick ing out' the beBt ears from what is left in the crib. The man who raises cotton ought to do the -same thing. We are always in a great hurry to get ithe crop picked. As- fast as.it opens we get it to the gin, sell the seed- and -the-lint, and then way along at the close of the picking season we be gin to think about seed for next year, writes an Arkansas planter in the Farm Progress. We get the latest plants that mature, and then we won der why the crop doesn't ripen earlier. For several years I have been going through the fields and picking out the biggest, earliest, well-formed stalks, and driving a stake down by the side of them. I allow no one to pick from them but my self. It is all right to take the first bolls that ripen and put them in with the rest as the field is picked, but I save the second picking, or middle crop, and keep it separate from the rest. I dry it out carefully and gin It by hand during winter. In this way I am sure of getting seed that matures ear ly, and that is from the best cotton on the place. My cotton ripens about ten days to two weeks earlier than most of the crop around here. The crop is getting better all the time, for the plants; are stronger and more vigorous than those that are grown from seed se lected haphazard out of the late ripening, stalks. I take pains ta see that this hand picked seed is stored in a dry place, and one where it will not heat. It is a Bimple method, and there is no ex pense about it To select and prepare seed in this way takes but a few hours altogether. If it Is too much trouble, or if the amount of seed required is too great to make hand-picking practicable, se lected bolls can be ginned seperately. Have in you'r mind's eye Just what constitutes a good stalk of cotton, and spend all the time that you find necessary searching for It. I like the plants that have short joints, big bolls,, well-formed leaves and a gen erally thrifty appearance. , I know a few planters who have taken their best plants for seed, and planted a special patch with them. In this way they have developed a spe cial variety all of their own in a couple of seasons. All of them report In creased yield and earlier maturity. When the work of the boll weevil is taken into consideration it is easy to see that a field that ripsn early is really worth much more than the one that follows it to the gin two weeks further along in the season. It does not make much difference whether a man grows five bales or fifty, the good seed question is im portant to him. . It will help him to make more cotton on the same acre age, and that Is what we are all try ing to do. COTTON PICKED BY MACHINE Bolls Are Removed From Plants Without Fear of Injuring the Foliage or Blossoms. A cotton picker" has been invented by H. Skaer of Tamaroa, 111., that is arranged to readily remove or pick the ripe bolls of cotton from the plants without danger of-injuring the foliage or blossoms, and permits of repeated use to gather all the bolls as they gradually ripen from the plants upward to the top thereof, says the Scientific American. For this, .use Is made of air propellers arranged to pass along the lower portions of the plants and forcing an air blast up wardly against the bolls to detach the . ' Cotton Picker. same from the plants, and a conduct ing tube above the plants for receiv ing the detached bolls. The engrav ing "represents a' longtitudinal central section of the picker Keeping the Hogs Growing. A hog 4 should ' weigh ' a , pound., for each day it5 is old until is practically .mature. . po. yours come, up to that standard? If not, the breed or treats ment is " wrong. Generally, the -breed is'TSetier "than - the treatment Keep the hogs growing on pasture crops and a grain ration. You lose money by allowing them to stand stilt Get Ewes in Condition. - As the, breeding season comes on it Is always well to feed the ewes some grain and to get them in uniformly good condition... When' this. is done the chances for uniform breeding and an excellent crop of lambs is improv ed. Pure-Blooded Stock. Select a breed and stick to it Con siderable time is required to build up a good' flock and nothing is made by continual changing. Always keep pure blooded stock. Raising Baby Beef. Baby beef requires the services of a feeder who is rich in experience as well as much time and a high grade class of calves to begin with. .- WEEVILS INJURE CORN Loss in Gulf States Amounts to $20,000,000 Annually." Building for 8torlng Should Be Thor oughly Cleaned Before New Grain.. Is ''Brought In Fumigation Is Excellent ' It has been estimated by competent authorities .that the annual loss caus ed by weevils in the gulf states to stored corn alone amounts to $20,000, 000. - Although corn is our principal grain crop,, the loss sustained by oth er grains will undoubtedly amount to several millions of dollars annually in these states. Our winters are so mild that the' insects continue feeding all of the year and many species have several more generations in this climate than they have further north.. , n. When possible ; grain should be stored in a building by Itself. Before bringing in new grain this building should be thoroughly-cleaned out. All old grain should be carried away and the floors and walls carefully swept off. In the south the corn can be al lowed to dry thoroughly before being brought In from the fields. The crib must be made air-tight an when the grain is brought from the field it must be thoroughly fumigate with carbon bisulphide. It is a colo less liquid with a very - strong, dis agreeable odor, which soon disappears. It is the simplest, most efficient and most inexpensive remedy for all in sects that affect stored grain and oth er stored products. It is a deadly poison and all insect life will scon be killed. It is absolutely essential that the room be air-tight If you cannot make your crib air-tight use a bin of some kind. When it is- necessary to use an open bin or barrel for this work . the bot tom and sides should at least be air tight. Then after placing the carbon bisulphide in shallow dishes or parrs on top of the grain,' cover the : bin or barrel tightly with blankets or canvass for at least thirty-six hours. Forty eight hours is better and the grain will not be injured for either planting or for use as food. One pound of carbon-bisulphide to every 100 bushels of grain is sufficient However, it is better to use at least two or three pounds of. the liquid to every 100 bushels. If after the room is opened it is found that the insects have not all been killed it will be well to look carefully for any places where the gas might have escaped. Caution. Carbon-bisulphide gas is highly inflammable and no form of fire should be brought near the place being fumigated. With ordinary pre- caution there is nothing to be feared, from the use of this substance. GOOD FOR LATE CULTIVATION Home-Made. Harrow Proves Biggest Money-Maker of Any Machine on Farm of Iowa Man. This little home-contrived harrow made us more money last year than any other machine we possessed. We plowed our corn with the two-horse Harrow for Late , Cultivation. cultivator until It was too large to go through again, then put a wire calf muzzle on one horse and went be tween the rows with the harrow until the corn was made. The harrowing kept a fine mulch on the surface, did not cut any roots, and kept the mois ture that came from the subsoil from evaporating. Our corn kept green and growing long after other corn planted at the same time was Head, writes W. I. Raymond of St Charles, Iowa, in the Missouri Valley Farmer. .We also used this valuable little tool in our late potatoes after they were too large to go through with the two-horse machine. We went through them once a week, narrowing the machine each time as the vines grew, until they covered the' , ground. We harvested 180 bushels of choice, large potatoes from 112 square rods of ground, and I consider the little1 harrow played no small part of this yield. It is also a money-maker in the garden. Market for Lambs. Whenever the farmers are engaged in the producing of prime lambs for ; xuai act at cuAjr oaowu. ui luo j cai , iuc business has proven highly profitable. Of course the best markets are just before Christmas and in the early spring; at this period the prices are always high. f'-" America ia becoming a great mutton-eating nation, and if the farmers will. Improve their flocks and their methods of feeding there is no reason why : the native lamb market should not prove more profitable than that controlled by the range district Pruning Is Best. Propping up trees Is a bad habit to fall -into. If the trees are properly thinned in June more profitable re sults will be obtained in the fall. Thinning "means better quality and more profit . Remember this point next season. Succulent Feed for Ewes. If the ewe lambs before it is time, to turn her. out on pasture, jshe. should be fed heavily -In order to , keep up a heavy flow ot milk. This means some succulent food, 1.5 pounds of grain and at least two pounds of hay daily. Stable Floors. One of the easiest ways to stiffen up a horse is to compel him -to stand on a plank floor, when not at work. dj 5 It's hard enough to keep house If in perfect health, but svoman ,-who is weak, tired and suffering all oc the time with an aching back has a heavy burden to carry.' AMf woman In this condition has gooff cauBe to suspect kidney trouble, especially U the kidney action seems disordered S all. Doan's Kitoey PiUstove cored thousands olwomen suffering fftiSa rJay.; : It Is the best-jecom-mended special kidney remedy. ? :-. , A HAlTlANtt CASE. .: tars: "1 teemed ' ' to bave dropsy. Vj feet and hands were swollen and . tbere were ter lible paine In my baek. ' I ' - eooldnt 'sleep . and tor one " wboto winter, could ; not get oat. I doctored but natbing helped me. until I used- Doan's Kidney Pills. Blent boxes Hi.il. mji wall Get boss's at any Dro Store,450c a Box 9 money FOSTEP.rMHJiyRKjCO.. Buffalo. N. V. -r . 41 A m .nit - It r hani. 1Sfifn outbldg-s.. 'lis fruit-trees etc. ' Ideal poultry and dairy, farm. , K. I Dickey. Cohasset. Va. RELIEVES TIB ED EYES - While thou livest keep . a good tongue in thy head. Shakespeare. , ITCH Relieved to SO MmmtM. Wooiford'B Sanitary Lotion for all kinds of contagious itch. . At Drug-gists. Adv. Blessings often come disguised, but the wolf at your door never does. To prevent Malaria is far better than to cure it. ' In malarial countries take a dose of OXTDINE reirularly one. each week and save yourself from Chills and Fever and other malarial troubles. Adv. - ; Dull. "Was your aviating meet a suc cess?". . . - ' ; - ' - "No, not much of a one.- There were only three v accidents , and - no fatalities.". ' Open Air Schools Grow in Favor. With the opening of the fall school term over 200 open-air schools and fresh-air classes for tuberculous, and anaemic children, and also for all chil dren in certain rooms and grades, will be in operation in various parts of the United States, according to the Nation al Association for the Study and Pre vention of Tuberculosis'. All of these schools have been established since January, 1907, when the first institu tion of this character was opened in Providence, R. I. On' January '. 1st 1910, there were only 13 open-air schools in this country and a year lat er the number had increased only to 29. Thus, the real growth la this movement has been within-: the last two years. Massachusetts now leads the states with 86 fresh-air schools and classes for tuberculous, anaemic and other school children,' Boston alone having over 80. New York, comes next with 29, and Ohio is. third with 21. Open-air schools have now been estab lished in nearly 50 cities in 19 differ ent states. " EXCEPTIONAL LUCK. "Did Gadderly have much luck on his fishing trip?" "Remarkable luck! Why, everyone believed the talea that he 'told!" A Million Persons Breakfast every morn ing on . , . . st HP ioa Suppose you try: the food with cream 'and sugar, as part of break fast or suppen You may be sure it will be a delicious part. "The Memory Lingers" Poetum Cereal Company, Ltd. . r .Battle Creek, Cicb. , ; Po sties
China Grove Record (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Oct. 25, 1912, edition 1
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