THE WESTERN SENTINEL. AUGUST 18. Ti fertilizer! OllS HAT? Yes, we have just closed a mammoth contract with the Tennesee Coal, Iron&R. R. of W tllP Snip Colao -i.r.. , J.' TJAnCVTTT V A TMrTT nmTr wtt irt?e rv a iur me enure counues ui rwivo i 1 n, & i SURRY, WlLKltb, DAVIE, DAVIDSON and GUILFORD, places us in position to handle all carload orders : on a brokerage basis and at prices from $3.00 to $5.00 per ton lower than the same product is beintr sold for at other places. "" .' , . fe . . ! . -- ." It would be impossible to secure cars to handle this business alUn-onp month, or in two months, so our contract calls for 1000 tons to move during ugunSther 1000 tons during September and another 1000 tons in October, with a liberal discpunfon the early shipment. We will have a ship, ment of 100 tons or more coming to our warehouse each week. The August price will be $19.00, September $20.00, October $21 .00 :perrf' We will make deliveries to any point south of Winston Salem of 15 tons or more direct from Birmingham at $17.50, $18.50 and $19.50 during August, Sep tember and October. An additional 50c per ton for freight to all points North of WinstonSalem. LET. US HAVE YOUR ORDER EARLY and save these discounts and avoid the worry and delay always experienced in October rush. THESE PRICES ARE ONE-THIRD LESS THAN QUOTED ON ANY OTHER FERTILIZER OF EQUAL VALUE. Fa Company Winston-Salem, North Carolina winriitriiiiiiii England, Can't Analyze the Sentiment In the Middle West Tews, Auk. 15. (By le Middle West. There's a tlcka In the craw ot the Iteiman. pst of America the British lyie when they attempt to pro or anti ally leanings :m. The Middle West im. It isn't anti ally, but 1 German. they say. it then? 1 have had this tied ma by such leading as Sir William Tlrrell p Strachey, editor of the An American in Europe n during the wor couldn't ? question. Hera In th R military district where M regiments abound you Fw wfty the middle west l sides in the Euronean "ere in th war in TTur. fh officer asks you. You'll throughout the German m Droken English. "What pou on?" K" yon nay. and he smiles. r. E. Rescha anil pmander of the three Min- i"nenu Be has some S600 Mdisrj under him. nil facA and tea if ha H Hke an Englishman."' h- tva of the Minnesota i whose tent Resche has i was born in England a English fare when N thn rnlnnol s.,,1,. cone on. ha i via iH'Mo the colonel, who Is "mnt you promise me you would ride to town with me?" So the man who was born in England and the man who was born in Ger many, both soldiers in Uncle Sam's army, ride away together in an auto mobile, laughing. A British states man puzzling over the middle "Vest, would have broken his thinking ma chine at the very sight. When private C. H. Stingier of Lem lngtbn, Nebraska, was drowned a few days ago, Colonel George A. Eberbly of the Fourth Nebraska found a diver from the British army in his regiment who volunteered to seek the body. Kuan Zoo Lee of Korea and Kear ney, Nebraska, is a member of compa ny L, Fourth Nebraska. Omaha and Hastings companies have several Greeks on their rosters. Such men are likely to add to the neutrality of the middle west. In the Fourth Nebraska also is Win field Haldt, who was on the Carib, sunk by a mine in the North Sea, when he and the crew, with the ex ception of three killed by the explo sions, were picked up by the Germans and later released. He's a neutral type. The First North Dakotas include large numbers of Scandinavians and Col. J. H. Frayne is said to be able to give orders in the Scandinavian tongue when necessary. Two hundred and eighty Quaker cavalrymen from Iowa add a further mixture to the mixed hue of the mid dle west. An English statesman in Texas would shortly find an answer to his question as to why the middle west is neutral. fta Rural School Term Tl-K THREE. a- Bureau of TTrtiK-.ti, own, jj. JJJ be rememWftil in km. F: 'be rural school term, as 9 cw'nty at large, is tbat oo rarm girls have a or 4f, r. !.,.. i . it . - Buurcwr loan r c'ty cousins, in every "llBB mere is n In nil i " farm bovs and farm t"wHe. this discrimlna VlMr PUP" of the r - to., ot tne 314. of the West, L y. In the Ian- ion s,1!' ' ht V, w "orman school, l.dlnf th n, cn0i n.tUbwo Uat 'j tl 8 not ttven tree school prtvUeget." . a A ilA nnll-ltrV lit In effect ana ior mo -- large the rural school term may be in creased wiinoui w.is ";.'- chool or levying another mill or school tax. How can this Improve the average daily atte"dan" of the pupils actually lle,dJ school by a better enforcement of the cumpulsory attendance laws In those states having such laws and by se curing compulsory attendance laws n ?he next .eaion of the !'"' those states without si.ch stanrte and arousing public out the country for a better average dally attendance in our njra school. The enrollment of pupUs In the rura i 1' daily ? STtTT nt low.) r than that in the urban school. (s evident that rural pupils are penal ized in the matter of free school priv ileges not only by the general policy of the various states but also by in different, ignorant or selfish parents who fall to do their duty by their own children In allowing them to remain out of school while school is in ses sion. FORD MAKES OVER HALF MILLION CARS IN YEAR On July 31, the Ford Motor Com pany completed Its 1915-16 year with a production of 533,921 cars. This volume of output and its distribution mark an achievement without any parallel in the history of the automo bile industry. The building and dis tribution of these halt million cars has brought a proportionate growth in every department of the Ford In stitution, and this enlargement cul minated in the opening on August 1st of new direct Company branches In twenty-eight of the largest cities of the United States. When the Detroit factory established a goal of 600,000 cars on August 1, 1313, the Ford Com pany bad completed a production for 1014-15 of 300,000 cars and shared ov er $15,000,000 with their retail buy ers. Now the year recently closed has again seen the fulfillment of pre dictions in spite of an increase of sixty-six and two thirds per cent in the mark set over the output of the previous twelve months. To build these cars, the number- of employes at the parent Ford factory has been increased to more tnan 33,000 at the present time while the payrolls of the branch factories and branches have grown to more than 12,000 names. Tim niiftnt.ltlfis of raw materials entering into a half miUion production of Ford cars are beyond the grasp of the average Individual. First there Is 200,000 tons of Vanadium steel hoot (routed bv special Ford pro cesses, 2,000,000 each of wheels and tires, 51.960.350 square reel or ruDoer cloth material in the tops, 2,587,500 .,. feat nf nla.tA class In the wind shields with other stock in propor tion. The volume of these materials has brought about methods In their i jun. mi manufacturing opera- UaUUUUB " .Li .1 tions ithich have worked distinctive Ford savings In production cost ana these combined with new methods of distribution have mad possible the remarkable reaucuons m u prices announced on August j. . miai announcement has yet been made of the proposed produc tion for the ensuing year. REASON GIVEN WHY ' BOVS LEAVE I-Atui . J PMimrl'i fitjinVirrff The lianioru v. ...... - Springs correspondent announce, that the sons of several farmers In that vi cinity are working for contractors thereaboutts at a wwer ri than their own fathers are paying farm laborers. On the face of It. it '. t ..,. h- mn who were looks aDsura. uui, w reared on a W it ooea n t appear altogether perplexing. The Couraot. in Its comment, says: Probably two reasons may be found which combine to send the young men from the farm even though their pay a. way from home is less than that which they might command on the homestead, and one is that few young men, nearing or past 21, care to have their father as the "boss." In their younger days they have had enough of dictation from that source, and they yearn for a change, just as the prodi gal son may have done In his day. When they enter the employ ot a stranger they may bargain with him a little 'more closely than they could with their parent and they realize the fact. The discipline may be more strict or it may be more lax than at home, but at any rate it is different and therefore to be desired. A more weighty reaaon Is the fact that. In working for a contractor, the young man knows that his day will consist of a specific number of hours, and at the end of the last hour he can quit for the day and have, according to a once popular phrase, nothing to do till tomorrow. On his father's farm the young man faces a different propo sition, for there the day begins at sun rise, possibly before, and lasts until Dad is ready to quit for the night. The day may be eight hours long, it may be ten, it may be fourteen, but neither master, nor servant knows until it is ended, which It will be, but in any event, there will be no extra pay for overtime. ICE. CREAM. N WSMPERMEN CONFER N PRINT PAPER CRISIS as much a necessary part of their equipment as their guns. The soldier boys have taught a val uable lesson as regards the importance of good teeth as they have the value of anti-typhoid vaccination. One of the most interesting subjects that could be discussed these days is ice cream. A writer in the Philadel phia papers Is quoted in Commerce and Finance as giving the following very interesting facts concerning the great American delicacy: "Many persons think that Dolly Madison invented Ice cream, but Thy ra Smater Wtnalow declares Dolly Madison was merely the first person to serve it in America. This was at a White i House reception The tBAD TEETH CAUSE 11KBU 1UC cretin BU J At a called meeting of the North Carolina Association ot Afternoon Newspapers, held In Greensboro Tues day afternoon, a number ot the pa pers represented entered into a con tract with the MocQuoid-MUler Com pany, foreign advertising agents, maintaining offices in New York and, Chicago, to represent them in the for-' eign field. . During the meeting matters relat ing to the cost of white paper were discussed. It was brought out that prices now being paid by the publish ers of the afternoon papers range from two and a half to four cents per pound. Those securing the lower prices held unexpired contracts. ' No promise of relief from present if not higher prices was promised. The attendance upon the meeting was quite large and the business ses sion, which was held at the Guilford Hotel, lasted from two to six o'clock. The papers represented included The Sentinel, Charlotto News, Durham Sun, Salisbury Post, Rocky Mount Telegram. Concord Tribune, Hickory Record, ' Fayettevllle Observer, Wil mington Dispatch and Henderson Dis patch. ' It was decided to hold the annual meeting of the association in Durham on the second Saturday in October. The business managers of the Ral eigh News and Observer, Charlotte Ob server and Greensboro News also held a lengthy conference in Greensboro at the same time and discussed the white print paper situation. An informal agreement was reached to curtail the use of print paper as far as possible. WANT VETERANS TO WEAR IMMORTAL GRAY CLOTHES. The Wilmington Star haa it this way: - ' That' every Confederate veteran should wear the gray uniforms that gained immortal fame through many brave deeds on scores of battlefields in the war between the states on every public occasion is the opinion of Lieut Gen. J. Thompson Brown, of Richmond, Va., who was recently ap pointed commander of the Army of North Virginia of the United Confed erate Veterans. The distinguished vet eran has written a letter to Gen.James I. Metts, commander of the North Car olna division, urging that he take some stop toward seeing that veterans are provided with uniforms to wear on public occasions. General Metts has Just issued a gen eral order to the various camps throughout the state calling attention to General Brown's suggestion and ex pressing his cordial approval. Atten tion is called by General Metts to the fact that Cape Fear Camp, U. C. V., of Wilmington, has for years made a practice of wearing the gray uniform on all public occasions In which the veterans capacity. participate ' la any publlo CANES FOR WOMEN Paris, Aug. It. The British offl " cert' "swagger stick" la seen again in the delicate bejewelled hands of ; French society women in the Boisde ; Boulogne. It is the third time in re-' cent years that the fashion of "canes ; for women" haa been tried. They ' appeared at Trouville In U9S In the : hands of a well known Parisian au- ; thoress. A spasmodic attempt to in-', troduce it was made soon after the j British troops began disembarking in French ports, but it got no farther than the boulevards. The boulevards j finally tired of it, than the faahloaa-1 ble "faubourgs" took it up. ' It is carried only In the Bo is dei Boulogne and it goes with th inev- itable short skirt, with gaiters prefer-' ably to high boots and with a Jacket ! having four pockets and resembling,) even to the brass butons, the regular tion khaki vareuse of th British of- j fleer, A Jaunty velvet toque reaem-; bllng the army fatigue cap complete, the martial air of the costume. The fashion haa not been so general elnce : the directory, about the same time ' that London tried "muffs for men": and while Vienna was experimenting with "monocle for women." innniMrM i ed how it was made, and from this small beginning the ice cream business has grown until, according to a cream ery expert, who has followed the de velopment of the business in America, the American people last year consum ed 250,000,090 gallons, which, figured at 80 cents a gallon, means a business of 200,000,000." It is said that the first ice cream was mad by a London confectioner named Gunton, aud from him others learned to make It and It was intro duced in America by Dolly Madison. Hut his method of freertng was rnide and uncertain. It remained for Nancy Johnson, the wife of an American na val officer, to invent the ice cream freezer. Today the ice cream busi ness baa outgrown th small freezer. Vast qusntfUes are frozen by special machinery. It is said that the average con urn p. tion of ice cresm In the Lnltd States is sixty dishes a year for each person. Chattanooga Times. OF MANY REJECTIONS The fact that bad teeth was : the cause of more rejections among the enlisted men of the State militia than any other one defect, perhaps, Is suf ficient - testimony, says the Stat Board of Health, as to the direct rela tion that exists between bad health or Inefficiency and bad teeth. As a matter ot fact, no greater lesson baa been learned by the troopers and the people in general as a result ot the re cent mobilization of troops than the importance of a sound body and the dependence ot a sound body upon sound teeth and a clean mouth. The Germans years ago realised that the health of their soldiers de pended no little upon the condition of their mouths and teeth, and during the present war dental clinics have been maintained regularly wherever th soldiers have been encamped. Oth er armte have not been alow to fol low Germany's example and now good teeth for soldiers la considered ,1.E lm MM HiHItM tltMUMnMMW1 Pur (Mood mcQja-lVfect IWlh I V o TRADE Will MakoYo Pure piJ$ft ' W1 1.TheSwiftJ CI &)! AT LA" l tt: .OA. mm .. . m w WHITSETT INSTITUTE Whitsett. Guilford County, North Carolina llMlilWMllRtfiIuMunilrMtaa, tntoMbrOfthM, U Sulam, JM m far Life. SiwintH BM. SrtHh IMS. tm k twHkfu nmm him wtf Imiitm, . O. ttr IwjiM 0MUiu, Tlw, ., u4im Mm mI1m. ' W. T. 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