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The Roxboro Courier from Roxboro, North Carolina • Page 7

Location:
Roxboro, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WHY WASTE HUMAN By J. 'E. WaggonerServlce'Bureia Mm llii Do colds settle on your chest or in yont bronchial tubes Do coughs hang on, or -areyosubject to throat troubles Such troubles should 5 have immediate treatment the strengthening powers of Scott's -Emulsion to guard against rohsumptiotfwhich soeasDy'foUbws 1 'Scott's Emulsion contains pure cod liver -oil wbiph peculiarly strengthens the res- piratory tract and improves the quality of the) blood th.e glycerine in it soothes and heals ttedef membranes of the throat? TCES IT PAY TO SHRED STOVEfi1 ty C. J. FHweter, of I Service Bureau Shredded stover increases Its feed-lug value.

Prf. oi ua'Ln-versity pf Wisconsin, tas" conducted experiments rhich -siow that shred-, ded stover is atout .24. per cent more valuable when fed to milch cows than it is Tin: the Uncut form." It is also estimated that about 25 per cent of III 1 1 NQUTH CAROLINA PERSON COUNTY-In The Superior Before the Clerk: Ike Rhew, Mary Cla.yton and husband Alfred Clay-ton, Nancy Painter and husband Richard Paintc J. Yarbrongh, J. Wj'aV Hicks, -Davey Hicks.

i Pa i te A ri Painter, Draughn Clayton, Zach-ery Clayton, John Yarbrough, Arch Yarbrough, JKate Carver and and husband W. Y. Carver, Lu-venia Tuck and husband Charlie For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought 1 HI I Bears the Signature till iii.i iuipi ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT AVcgetaWcErcparationferAs-similatlngtlicFbodaRdRegula-ting the Stomadis andBovdsof PrainotesDestaGicciful-V2ss and RestXontalns ncitlter OpiuauMorphinc norttiucraL Not Narcotic. Bmpkua Stedm jttxJeana him Seed Aperfect Remedy forCansOpa-tton Sour StoiraduDlarrtjoea WorraStCoiwulsionsievensn: ness andLossOF Signature of The CEifTAUR Cqmpaitj; NEW YORK.

Exact Copy of Wrapper. A 'w-tr'- -Bg-ft- Jj Iff Thet harvest which has" justvpad; witnessed a greater iak farjnieip taan perhaps any harvest" Nthaf7 -3 have known. The cry fcr farmjlibjrj ers from the Northwest, megaphoned over the entire coun: Its, intensity -when hard at short range.armers boarded, trains! at the station 'ipffering per- day and In more for tarm help. Their sdlicitatidnsAwer "niet tf the Fu vrv- Btai ituu uuwv siience pi vxne passen At this point one is apt to ask if such isihe ase and there seemsUb be no doubV but 'that it is -is the farm helpy, problem growing greater: eat after year. Ther are many reasons fortnissdme arewured away from thie by the attractions of the city, while turn their backs to the farm because of the drudgery and long ours jthey are.

re--quired to wpronhe" ordinary farm. It is rigH atidrh should work long hours during certain seasons, of the year order to save he crop, but- we find the largest percentage do not stop at this point, but pride themselves la early rising, saying nothing, however, of the work actually accomplished, We do hot wish to eartbiiig, hut In itself wiiinottlel tir.Qf results. We often hear the, old early- Mrd Icatt ft worm" this success. as; not neces: warily due to early' rising, but to know-, ing where to go in other- words, the farmer should combine with rising early and careful planning. Just recently the writer was on ah Iowa farm where a new silo had been trected.

It was discouraging to note that the sijo had been built eight or ten from the, side of the horse ism in fact. It was 500 or 300, feet troni the. place where the silage was to be fed, viz: the' cattle barn other words, a large percentage the ilage would have to carried 200; or-300 feet during feedin time. The energy and time expendrd as a. result of carejessly building the silo at this point can be placed on thft "loss" side of the ledger.

It is riot infrequently the case that it takes fiftppn or twenty minutes to carry the corn for feeding the horses, and even lenger to feed the hogs and other animals, but if the corn crib were riraperly located it would save two-thirds to three-fourths of this work. By the proper arrangement of farm buildings hours of time and scores of miles of travel can be saved. It is much easier and usually takes no more time to unload a load of corn or grain in a crib or bin in the barn or hog' house than It would to unload it at a corn crib standing several hundred fppt from either. If we were to visit a modern plant that is manufacturing machines for the farm or rther machinery we would Fnd that every casting and every part had a certain route through the works. The, holes are bored or punched with one machine, it is then handed or delivered to the next machine, where the milling or nlaning work is done; In other words, it passes from machine tn machine until the article is completed.

If practised on many farms were in, vogue in factor-' iesv.pither the price of machine's would be higher br the factories would go out of business. Conditions and methods have changed. The farrr now has at his disposal farm earipment which wilv enable him to rp ctpp ter profit? from ithe area farmed it he spends Tart of his tjme planning, the various operations than if the old methods were followed. He should no longer jview his occupation in the of a day-laborer, but from the angle of business man. There is, perhaps, no bccipation that renuires any keener judgment and better manieement thari to.ope'rate a farm successfully.

-n The scarcity of farm labor can be met, in av degree, by so planning operations and growing diversified crops as to distribute the rk over a lon pt rpriod Tbrp 1s no fiction but that the farmers in the 'northwest' in- the whpat sections nd he cotton fprm ers of the south scon realize the. importance and npesity. not only from the standpoint of its effect on te soil. ut from the viejoitit of the laborer, 'o practice better and more complete ri Pat a cotlerpd the government eiinwc that tbp rrly amir 7 neTf farm h'iids pWst dirctlv pronr tf oral the ffrm eamvireni wf Thp npKg of a larger nurobpr cf a f-''' inp- better ivfivwrie r-f. rotation'of crs.

will help to nob tbp 'abor. problem. Wn'iiTit'cl a t. nce-4QG cedar posts for Fir fence, Apply to Joe fT. 'Carver; IMPORTANT NOTICE-Ah who fife for tuition intli? HoxbortV (Trsidp.d: Schools are lirk-pd 10 spHIp before' June30thTlii is impotrtMiit A.

Bl (V Monday nigk my t- j. i p-; Ubeil rewardJ the feeding value of corn stalks is lost by allowing the shocks to stand in the field two months Allowing corn to stand in the field not. only decreases Its value, but it increases the of the Just, remember that, every time yod carry an armful of stalks into the barn 20 per cent of the digestible nutriments contained in the feed go for the pr6duction of physical energy neoes-; sary for doing external work, 43 pipr cent is used for keeping up, the bcdy, and 27 er cent is returned in the milk pail If you handle your corn crop properly you will 37 per cent of the total nujriment in the stalks, and 63 per cent in the ear, but if you allow the shocks to stand in the field to bf beaten by the winter's siorms, you can expect to lose anywhere from 25 per rent to 50 per cent of the total feeding of the stalks. On the average cre from two to three tons of stover are grown. Inthe stalks produced oit an acre of average there are approximately 85 pouiids of proteim, 1,500 pounds of carbohydrates, and 22 pounds of ether extract.

A steer weighing 1,000 pounds require on-half of i pound of protein, 6 pound of carbohydrates, and about one-tenth of a pound of ether extract daily. Figured to an exactness, thtre are carbohydrates enough in an acre of corn to last a steer ten months, ether extract enough to keep him in proper condition for eight months, and protein in sufficient quantity to sustain him for six Probably the only argument against shredding is the cost of preparation. When figured in dollars and cents, the cost of husking and shredding with machine is practically the same as tor hand Figures compiled by men who feed whojle stalks, by users of shredded stover, and by the owners of machines gixe the following facts: Cost of husking 25 acres of shocked corn, and getting the fodder in a stack. The quality of corn used for the basis of the following tables is slightly above the average, forty bushels tc the acre being taken as a standard. The cost of Jabcr is figured at current rates.

Cost of husking 1,000 bushels by hand at 4 cents a brshel. 00 FQard for man during huskiue, averaging 50 bushels per Cay; for 21 days at $4.50 per week 13 50 Cost of handlirg husked corn and fodder from the field, men and team, 5 days at $2.00 per day earh for the men.and $1.50 for the 27 id Board for 2 men for 5 days, at 75 cents per day 7 50 Board for team for 5 days at 60 cents per day. 2 50 Total cost of getting, corn in crib and fodder in stack $91 00 Cost of husking: and 25 seres of corn, figuring tne yteia at 40 bushelspe1' acre, and an avemge day's work at S00 bushels. A ten-roll hnsker and shedder working under ideal con ditions has husked 1,000 busbels oi corn in a day, but to' be conservative re are reducing these figures considerably. We are also figuring the cost of tolng the husking and shredding 3trictly on a bushel basis.

In many 'ocalities owners of huskers and shre'd-Jers prefer to work by the day rather than by the bushel. nor hire of huske and including the services of engine, 1,000 bushels at 4 ents TK-ee men pitching In the field, 1 days at $2.00 each per. day Six men to haul stoverfrcm the field; 1 day at $2.00 each per Six, teams and wagons for drawing stover to the days at $1.50 per day per Fuel One man for shoveling corn into crib, 1 days at $2.00 per day Board for fourteen rren, 14 days at o-f3 rr dav. Ferft reorired "c-' tear's. VA days at 50 'cents per team 0 7 50 15 00 11 2 5 60 2 50 15 15 7b 3 TotaU $98.75 $91.0 7.7.

hr cost of sTrei-Jed Ftorer. t-vo tpns of stover are p-ouced en a arid twenty-5-e acres are sh e-M tons cf fhreddpflftovpr --n-mvefi. As $7.75 was te con o' sbredc'ed tte er.s ri inT the work With a mactdne when distributed amounts to approximately cents per ten more than the cost cf by -hand and of slacVingah rorn stalks. Besides Ipss 'space Is re-oi'r'ed for.storins: te hr" stoy- There Is practically no loss or wste Af lraves or husks. the stall-? are 1 fe VAO ia jii cstnucu uy jc oest special tou can get it at any vdrug: store, Scott Bowne, Btoomfield.

J. puBicuayris5U3: Will cure your Rheumatistn Neuralgia Headaches, sCrainps Colic; Sprains Bruises. Cuts and Burns, Old Sores; Stings of Insec; Anodyne, used i -ternallyand externally. Price 25v. GI1IGI5ES7EP.SP1LLG DIAMOND roar DrvMht for CHIHKtTtt DIAMOND BRAND PILLS in Red and Gold metallic boxes, sealed with Blue mk.

fcr- cniXBS.TCB ft DUMOND BIIAUD PILLS, for twenty ytarf learded a Best, Safest, Always SOLD. BY. ALL DRUGGjSTS enence Enables, me to feel that I eim better Ttrepar- ilian bii' tv tUUU Tia SSI Si you caring for the p. dead than ever before, it In my new, place of busir ness i nave tne Dest room for displaying coffins and caskets that I have ever had, and I shall carr at all times a line which will enable you to get just what you want. Remember.

these I I goods are ready trimmed for you a'nd when you A come for a coffin or cas- 4 ket for your loved one you will hot have to wait but can get your qhoice 4 at once. I have been serving the people of this, County for more than 23 years and you know my work. If I have pleased you I will appreciate your future work and promise my very best endeavor to still please you, giving the very best service at most reasonable price. Splendid line of Furniture at very "close prices, and of course ami always ready to sell you xhe, BEST buggy at most reasonable price. Come to see me in my new store.

1 3 i E. D. Cheek. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA For Sale! 33 1 acres grain land near Helena. 1 lot on, which is sit-.

vuate a good shop at Helena. 385 acres near Mt. Tirzah. Fine fine buildings. 53.

acres one mile from Roxboro. 100 acres, 2 miles from Roxboro, fine tobacco land. Several desirable buildings in Rcxboro. 100 acres good grain. land near Mbriah.

131 acres fine grain" lahdr near 75 acres fine tobac-, culahd near Aliens ville. 2 jfty acre tracts, 4 miles from Roxboro. of wood on: these. Fire and Life Insurance iieo Stomadi Sweet -liverAcr? IkwelsUeskr of Use For Over Thirty Years THS CCNTAV4 GOMPIV. 4p in-- AW vf fV In uu uu tinir iui mi I i ii Tuck, Susie Ciayton and Bill Clayton, Mollie Painter and husband Bill Painter, Kate White-field and' husband Jim Whitfield, Nannie Wilson ancJ husband.

Sam Wilson, Mad Painter. NOTICE vs. Luvenia Murry and husband John Murry, Luther Gentry, Frank Clayton, the children of Buck Rhew, and the Children of Jesse Rhew. The defendants above named, to wit. Luvenia Murry and husband John Murry, Luther Gentry, the Children of Buck Rhew, and the Children of Jesse Rhew.

Will take vnotice, that arr action entitled as above, has been commenced in the Superior Court of Person County, for the purpose of selling the land belonging to the estate of the late Ruffin Rhew, for division among the heirs at law. And the said de fendants will further take notice that they are required' to be and appear, before the Clerk of the Superior Court for Person County, at his office in Roxboro N. C. on or before Monday August; 9th 1915, at 10 o'clock a. m.

and answer or demur to the petition in said Special proceeding or the plaintiffs will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the petition. This April 26th 1915. D. W. Bralsher C.

S. C. THE NORTH CAROLINA College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. Young men seeking to equip themselves fur practical life in Agriculture and all its allied branches; in Civil, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering; in Chemistry and Dyeing; in Textile Industry, and in Agricultural Teach ing will find excellent provision for their chosen careers at tlrp State's Industrial College. This College fits men for life.

Faculty the coming year of 65 men: 767 students, 25 buildings Admiralty equipped laboratories in each department. County examinations at each county-seat on Julv 8th. For catalogue, write E. B. OWEX, Register West Raleigh, N.

C. OAK RIDGE, N. ALLEN HOLT, Pres. T. E.

WHITAKER, Sec-Treas. Fbr 63 years a leader in youths' education. Preparation that opens the way to bigger accomplishments, in College, Business and Life. 350 acres in athletic grounds, orchards, and farm. Six modern school buildings.

Steam hbflt and showers. Library. Active, well equipped Literary Societies. Healthful, accessible location near Greensboro. More than 1000 feet above sea level.

Sane moral influences and associates. Courses thbi ugh)y covering Literature and Seienoe, business, Teaching, Music, Athletics. Strong teachers, who know boys; discipline and government which appeals to their pride and manliness Cost Reasonable Session opens Sep-. tember 7th, 1915. II Writ? early for illuttrated catalogue.

OaliRidge Institute Oak Ridge, N. C. 16 "We offer OneHandred Dollars Uewanl fo nrr case of Catarrh that cannot lw cured Lj" iiIi'c Cutarrh Cure. F. J.

CHENEY TacCo; O. the nndersigned, hnve knon Z. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe hia. perfectly honorable In Jill business trans. and financially cble to tvrry out anyobligatLo.

made by bis NAT. B.VNK COMMETirn. 'Xoleua, Ohio. Hall'i Catarrh Core Is taken 'i SIrectly the blood and uurfa--. the system.

Testimonials- ar.i frt. per Sold by all pniirhta. I How PERPETION Oil? COOKStdVES "NowServing 2,000.000 Homes 5- LOOK FOR THIS NEW PERFECTION GIRL You'll see her in the windows and on the counters of hardware, furniture and department stores everywhere. She stands for the NEW PERFECTION OIL COOK-STOVE the simplest, most efficient Oil Cookstdve made. Already it has made cooking easier and kitchens cleaner for over 2,000,000 housewives.

Made in 1, 2, 3 and 4 burner sizes; also NEW PERFECTION stoves with fireless cooking oven attached. Use Aladdin Security Qil or Diamond White Oil to obtain the best results in oil Stoves. Heaters a.id Lamps. PERMWI0H STANDARD 0L COMPANY, Washington, D. (New jersey) Charlotte, N.

Norfolk, Va. (BALTIMORE) Charleston, Wyf In an excellent cdndiUon for hedling Horse or-was stolen ftym They, pgt; only act as an atscrbent.atfir. J. place. He is pound of absorbent stover, atsorbnl JsmalUb iV liirse weighing about 2.5.

pound. of -liquid, T5ut the vegctabrr0 on( vvliite'hind foot," "a small matter when returned the a It jJf tween bis a forms humus The ferUlizingvalue lnot 1m bii ipfrbind Jeaboutthe -r the ai1-s Darvesiea ujr au 7nA nr flhnt 1175.00 Vorth; of "fertiliser can be returned his return J.B. oocWale, C..

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About The Roxboro Courier Archive

Pages Available:
10,584
Years Available:
1885-1917