Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / June 11, 1913, edition 1 / Page 2
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A Lady's Comment On Medicine and Religion Ths following letter la from a lady whose name I am not at liberty to use. If 1 should mention her name ahc would be known by almost every reader. She writes In part: Dr. S. B. Hart man, Ootumboa, Ohio: "Tour article entitled "Medicine and Religion" has been read and re-read toy me many times. It nee«n» to me that the article oootatns the substance of all that has been said about Christian Science, new thought, sug gestive therapeutics and other forms of mental healing. "I am very much pleased to ob serve that you are putting out Into the world such useful literature. It will do untold good, without doubt; not only for those who take medicine, but for those who try to get along with out taking medicine. Your article is terse, to the point, and will be read by thousand*. "Medicine and religion have always j been very closely associated. Only In I very recent years have the two been ; Ask Your Druggist for Fre REV. P. OLIVER IMPROVING. Much Sickness On King Route 2 Dogs Killing Sheep -Other News Items Of Interest. King, June 9. —We are well pleased with the good showers of rain that is falling which are needed very much. The farmers are doing some planinng for the next few weeks which will bring a lot of hard work. There is some wheat being cut. The wheat crop has a lot of smut. Some fields looks like it is nearlylhalf smut. There is a large crop of tobacco being planted this season Mr. C. H. Lunsford will have about SO acres planted in to bacco on his farm this season, which will take about 300 bags of guano. There is a lot of sickness in this section at present. Rev. P. Oliver of King Route 2. who has been very sick for quite a while, is now improving, as his many friends will be glad t> learn. Mr. Eugene Tuttle has a very s ck baby at this writing. Mrs. J. W. Webster is report - e 1 on the sick list. Mr. R. G Gentry of King Route 2 is suffering very much with rheumatism. Hope he will soon be well again. Mr. W. G. Slate, who has been very sick for a good while is reported as not much im prove I, "ii n i'f he will soon be well again We r 'in' dogs are killing a I >' »:' sVep belonging to Mr. C. H. Lunsford. Mr. D. F. Edwards of King Route 2 has his new house about completed. We learn that a good number of Sunday schools are getting up program* for the Sunday School Convention which will bs held in August. SCRIBBLER | S:ate o? Ohio, city of Toledo, I Lucas County. j ' Frank J Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. •) Cheney & Co. doing business in the City of Toledo, Count} and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and sub scribed in mv presence, this 6th dav of December, A. D. 1886. (Seal) A. W. GLEASON. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free* F. J. CHENEY & CO., , Toledo, O. Address: F. J. Cheney &Co., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation l regarded as separate prof essloos. IMB glad >*tMt brought tbla out M oteaiiy. The tendency of to-day la strongly la the direction at roMtdne and religion coming back, together again. With your lmmenae facilities for spreading useful Information I am sure you will greatly Mslst the progress of the times In sending out broadcast such articles. I want you to Know that your efforts are appreciated. "As to Peruna, I have nothing to say. I very seldom make use of any medi cine. But 1 assure you that your ar ticle has ao enthused me with the good advice It contains that If I have any need for medicine I shall oertalnly buy a bottle of l'eruna. I shall not neglect to recommend It to others also." PE RUNA SOLD AT ALL DRUG STORES. SPECIAL NOTICE —Many person* are making inquiries for the ••Id time l'eruna. To such would say, this formula Is now put out under the name of KA-TAR-NO. manufactured by KA-TAR-NO Company. Columbus, Ohio. Write them and they will ba pleased to bond you a free booklet* Peruna Almanac for 1013. How to Grow late Cabbage. A reader asks : "What kind of cabbage will be best to sow for late cabbages to head in November and December ? When to sow and how to grow?" Seed for late cabbages should be sown at dates suited to the particular section. My corres pondent is in southeast Virginia, and there I would sow the seed in late -June or early in July. Make a very rich bed convenient to water, and then see that the plants never suffer for lack of water. For late setting we want stout plants with stems as large as a lead pencil to live well. Further south, I would sow the seed later. I have grown them very finely in Raleigh, North Carolina, by sowing the seed the first of August and setting them last of that month. Having good plants, they should be set in land naturally moist and more inclined to clay than sand, if there is any choice. But if the soil is rich and heavily manured, they can be grown in j the lightest sand. Cabbages ' are gross feeders and need plenty I of food, and the late crop can be grown anywhere in the South by starting at the right time and glowing them fast. During the growth of the crop a dressing of nitrate of soda will help push them, and two separate applica tion will be still better. 1 | As to varieties, a good strain j of the Late Flat Dutch is good : and grows large. The Danish Ballhead makes a smaller round head, but very solid. For very late planting in the far South, Fottler's Brunswick will be found good. It is a quick grow ing and large-heading sort of a drumhead class. The main things in making late cabbages in the warmer parts of the South, are good plants at the right time, heavily manured soil, rapid cultivation and plenty of moisture. There is a notion in some places that cabbages should not be cultivat ed during "dog days," and, of course, if they are then neglect ed, the crop is ruined. I was once growing late cabbages on a large scale in Piedmont Virgin ia. and the neighbors all told me I would ruin them by cultivat ing them in "dog days." But I kept on and had a fine crop while they had worthless ones, by following this old supersti tion. It never pays to neglect the cultivation of any crop and get it stunted. No amount of after fertilzation and cutivation I, will atone for an early stunting. —Progressive Farmer. THE DANBURY REPORTCK FIRST CULTIVATION OF TOBACCO I R. R. Slate (Jives Some Interest- | i !□( Information to The Tobac- j co Growers As to How to Re plant and Regulate the Ripen ing of the Weed. Early, rapid and thorough cul-1 tivation is necessary to produce first class tobacco. The old turn-, plow is still being used on my j farm for most of this work. To bacco thrives only on a dry soil and the use of the turn-plow will, i keep the land better drained. ; Then in cultivating tobacco ; the soil is always worked to- j ' wards the plants. Front the j above it can be seen that the j cultivation of corn and tobacco, are practically opposite. This is a day of machinery, j Every year farmers are adding time and labor saving machinery j to equipments. Herein lies an j :opportunity for some ingenious; farmer to invent a machine j i which can compete with the! hand, hoe in cultivating tobacco, i My advice to the farmer is to! put in only what he can properly I care for and continue to do his work with his hands. This will insure its being done thoroughly. In giving tobacco the first cul tivation, the old soil containing the grass should be plowed into the middle of the row, the soil around the plants should be slight ly loosened, and some fresh dirt pulled up to take the place of that which has been taken away. The field that has been in cul tivation for several years will require more work in cultivating than soil that has been recently cleared. Along with the first cultivation comes the replanting With most of us this is a big job while in other cases, where the plants are properly set, the work is very small. The replanting should commence as soon as possible! after the first plants have died, j The season should not delay this work. If a rain does not come !at the time your tobacco needs j j replanting, plant by an artificial j j season. Replanting is the cause of j tobacco's not ripening uniformly, and this adds extra labor to the growing of the crop. None of !us care to have our whole crop ripen at the same time, but it would be much better if the i uniformity of ripening could be | arranged by fields instead of being scattered throughout the crop. To a certain extent, there is a way to prevent this trouble. Treat the backward plants with nitrate of soda or with a mixture composed of one half nitrate of soda and one-half sulfate of potash. Apply in the afternoons when the plants are dry, at the rate of from one to two tablespoonfuls to each plant. This top-dressing should be sprinkled beneath the bottom leaves. Never allow it to remain upon the leaves of the plant. The above is one of the best methods I know of for helping the plants ripen uniformly.— R. R. Slate, in Progressive Farm er. BEST LAXATIVE FOR THE AGED. Old men and women feel the need of a laxative more than young folks, but it must be safe and harmless and one which will not cause ijain. Dr. King's New Life Pills are especially good for the aged, for the act promptly and easily. Price 25c. Recommended by all druggists. Right Here Is Your Chance To Buy That Typewriter! This is a Straight-from-the-Shoulder Typewriter Talk by a Typewriter Man to the Readers of the Reporter. , >«» i ' ,tl ."' r typewriter Wlwther you have liml It lit .'»iir expeiiKe. If you wYietheryuu "use t'heinor will permit lis. uo t. THIS IS THE NEW VISIBLE FOX " BETTER THAN THE BEST OF ALL OTHERS " Sent on Free Trial, Express Pd. —rww——w———mmmmmnmmvmm Look at the illustration of our New Fox Visible Typewriter, shown above, and compare it with any other typewriter you have ever seen or used. Here is a really VISIBLE typewriter —note that the printing point is on top in plain sight, and that the type bars rise from where they are lying and strike the platen in full view of the operator, and in a direct line of vision, and that all of what you have written remains in full sight until the paper is removed from the typewriter. Compare this with those old style typewriters, that some firms are still advertising as visibles, but on which the printing point is beneath the typebars, and you have to look down into them—or between them—to see what you have written. Touch a key in the keyboard and you change the color of your writing instantly from black, blue, or purple to red. Press the Tabulator Key at the left (in front) for paragraphing, writing the compli mentary closing, etc.: also for all kinds of billing. At the right (in front) is our Back Space Key. This moves the carriage backward for making corrections, or putting in punctuation. This key also enables the operator to erase a word of three letters and write one of four in its place. Press the Stencil Key shown at the left (front) for making stencils from which thousands of duplicate letters can le made. Four rows of keys reduce the shifting one-third. The right Shift Key locks automatically for writing in all caps. A positive automatic Line Lock presents you from writing beyond a predetermined line. The ribbon travels in a "zig-zag" line-not straight across from spool to spool as on others—thus using all of the ribbon and making it last three or four times as long as on other typewriters. The ribbon automatically re-winds itself from one spool to the other without any attention from the operator. Carriages are interchangeable, and run on ball bearing tracks. Platens are re movable, so that both a hard and soft platen can be used on the same typewriter. 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Comfrey, Minn Thousands of children in the United States who are suffering from attacks of epilepsy are a burden and sorrow to their parent 3, who would give anything to restore health to the sufferers. Dr. Miles' Nervine is one of the best remedies known for this affliction, it has proven beneficial in thousands of cases and those who have used it have the greatest faith in it. It is not a "cure-all," but a reliable' remedy for nervous diseases. You need not hesitate to give it a trial. Sold by all Druggists. If"tfl« first bottle falls to benefit your monsy la retyrnsd. MICKS 1 OIIOTTf DAILT ODSfPVfR SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Daily - $6.00 Per Year Daily and Sunday - - 8.00 Per Year Sunday only - 2.00 Per Year The Semi-Weekly Observer Tuesday and Friday - - SI.OO Per Year The Charlotte Dail> Observer, issued Daily and Sunday is the leading newspaper between Washing ton, D. C., and Atlanta, Ga. It gives all the news of North Carolina besides the complete Asso ciated Press Service. The Semi-Weekly Observer issued on Tuesday and Friday for SI.OO per vear gives the reader a full re port of the week's news. The leading Semi-Weekly of the State. Address all orders to The Observer Co. 1 CHARLOTTE, N. C.
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
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June 11, 1913, edition 1
2
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