Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / March 18, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Alamance Gleaner. HE VOL. XXXV. . GRAHAM, N. C, THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1909. NO. 5 Advice to the Aged. ire brings Infirmities, inch as shi( lug lad cish bowels, wealc kwt Icr and TORPID LIVER. have a specific enecv. on uirae organs ctimulntlne the bowels, causing them to perform their natural Junction. a in youin nnu ...-. IMPARTING VIGO to 'he kidneys, Madder and LIVER, They are adapted to oM ana young. ltOFESSIONAI. CARDS DONALD GULLEY Attorney-at-Law . . BURLINGTON, C. SELLAR3 BOILDINO. 1)11. tt lLI,S.LMfl,JR. Graham - . North Carolina OFFICIO in SIMMONS BUILDlfrt IACOB A. LOSal-B" LONG & LONOi ' Attorneys arid Couisjetlora ftt GRAHAM, It- Ci' T- Attorney -Mi- Law,-'-; GRAHAM, Offlee Patterson Bafldlog 8eoond nepaj. C A. HALL. ': : ATTORNEY AND CODNSEIXOB-AT-LAW, GRAHAM, N. a -JV;. Oflice in the Bank of Llariiaoce' Bulding. bp stairs. JRAV I )S01. 15i .Nihil & BYNFM. .; - X ,.ttoi-neya and QpaOMlpr at Jji'w' Practice 'reprisal ..loVirai'itk' nance county. .., j. ' r An. 8,94 1) ROBT C. STRTJDWICK Attorney 'at-LevvV, "J"- Practices Intthe courts" of Ala mance and Guilford counties. - ' - " Btomach trouble is but a aymptam ot end not to ltseli a true disease. Heartburn, and Indira we inuia 01 iijrspepsia, learttmra, and Indigestion aa real diseases, ret they are symptom onl; Nerve sickness notrrfn. a r 01 a eanaia specuM . It was this fact that first correetlT ted Tr. 1I8S. in the creation of that now van nonnlar Stomac Remedy Dr. Bhoop's Kestorattve. Going direct to t he stomach nerves, alone brought that nicceai and favor to Dr. fihoop and his Restorative. With out that original and highly vital principle, no such lusting accompUabmentg ware aver to be had. For stomach distress, bloating, biliousness, bad breath and sallow complexion, try Dr.. Shoop'i Rostoratlve-KTableta or liquid-ana tee ior your. fe wnat it can ana WU1 do. W sell and fully recommend . i ; v. , ; r-- .- . Restorative GRAHAM 'ORUa CO. - ADMINISTRATOR'S : NQTlCE, Having qualified aa administrator, De Bo nis Non Cum Teatamento Annexo of Rloh- North Carolina, this fa to DoUfy all person ... us vibiidi against in estate oi aaiaoe ceased to exhibit fhera to the undersigned on or before th Ktb day of Feb., 1810, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recov ery. All persons indebted to said estate will rVt, SmJle immediate aettiement. This February 15. JIAW. , ' W. 9. JONES, Long i Long, Atty. , . vil4 0 YEARS'' - Tiioc Martfts riiasi ff Coviiokt Atv Aeyesw iding a aaateb and ilnaiiiine T Jollr amrtsiii car oixntoa (raa whchw aa Uom sUMUy tntiMMnt I, iL h fraa. OldMt unr for eunii P Uk turh Hunu Ai Scientific jltrlcait tisasaansly Br trt assl. IstiBl of any mouM Karul Ta rev: fnar BuMiilbB il n ii I itl w.artMlfi 5 Co iSMaANew Ten I ). M t R. WaaksnctssL U O. yoooooocxwoocwoooooooooo Subscribe '; ' -For The Gleaner." Only , ' J $1.00 per year. POOotOOOOCOCJOOOOOOOOO . I -j 1 mm rs r 4 f-a.WJSeM.w-.f bvui Uw. uaartTwsimi. ah. .' Bill & mi Indigestion ATia SUPl OF' THg' TONGUE Even th Dlgnlfltd English Butler Caa Go Astray at Tim. - A little ' story which has just found its way across the Atlantic from an English country house tells oi toe recent sup made by a new and nervous butler in serrinc' his master, a duke, at the luncheon ta we. Quiet, respectful and assidu ous, he proltered a dish with the in sinuating query: "Cold grace, your pro use?" The slip is so obviously a nat ural onehat doubtless the tale is true. Thus far it is also unchal lenged as new,, although probably by the time it has made the full round of the press somebody will discover that in' its original form it was" an Athentatt"chestnut" in the days of Socrates. An anecdote which at least be longs to the same family used to be laughed over in early Victorian draw ihir rooms. " Among the royalties, great and little, who came to London for the young queen's coronation there was a certain small, dried us, gray haired, bright eyed, brisk -little old leignrnft prince of a tiny pnnciDali xj. ' ne was iaraway cousin to an Iris'h duke, whose estates in Ire- laim he visited before returninc. Fot his entertainment a village cel ebration war arranged, with erames ancFdancesfHin'd especially Irish iies Hamrlog dances. v Th5 'gay old prince was dehght- edi IIe ramfr-hirrlself of a race fa- mous for its dancing. He still pos sessed' a good eye, a quick ear and a light foot.. That same evening in the great nail of the castle, to the whistling of nis host s son, he en deavbred 'to'" emulate some of the feats he had seen. The duke's solemn English but ler was present, and his horror at such unroyal antics was reflected in his eyes. The prince perceived it and, shooting a sudden forefinger at him, demanded imperiously: '-Eh I - Tell me, then, what you think of my dancing I . ' Discreet and dignified, but "flur Tied inwardly; the butler's manner was perfect, but his tongue betray ed him- He answered: "Your royal spryness is certain- lyigh." There was a shout of laughter, and the duke, with- assumed anger, cried sternly: "What! Do you dare to insinuate that the prince is ele- vateq mat ms vivacity is aue to . .. . . A ' '1 11 , any vCther gooa spirits man nis ownr . Before such an accusation the poor butler's last remnant -of com posure vanished, and, turning wild ly, with cla6Ded hands, from his highness to his grace, he protested earnestly: "No", I never, sir, your royal gray ness; no, 1 never, sir, your ice 1" Youth's Companion. ' Th Chinese. ' The Chinese invented printing, 'they" invented gunpowder, they in- ventea irre munuui . wmM. V Tim fnrmers of China were the first to hatch eggs by means of in rmhators. aad the fishermen of Chi na were the first to hatch fish spawn artificially. Artesian wells are of Chinese oriirin. : The nenal code of China is thou sands of years old, and thbdaands of veari old la the uninese civu eer- ir - prarrrinatlon that western llfyjition has at last adopted. : wiwn t;eoriye wasmneion s au flestors wandered in the wet, cold ja-oorla of Britain, theif rnaked and shivering chests painted blue, the Chinaman, dressed in splendid silks, Innncprl in a r.al ace. on a chair of iwrenrl teakwood and marble, read- ine- rihilosoohr and drinking from cup of painted porcelain tea of ex- quisiiu uavur. La ft Till CaHed Tor. WVim Wilkinson went to his of fice) one day last week he felt calm and contented. lie hadn't an f need ta worry about hia wife'i lonennes any more, for he had bought a capi tal watchdog for her. But, alaa, when he errlTed home his wife met him wiia me aepwr ble news that the dog had gone. Thr" aM Wilkinson. "Did he VnsaV th rhain. then?" -No," she replied, "but great. nxdT looking tramp came uctb ua .cted so impudently that I let the dog loose. But instead of tearing the tramp to pieces the nasty dog went off with him.'' . n..t fWttr said Wilkinson. Iwwi the tramp I bought him from!" London hx- preea. " A Paeallar Cpt. . n -.f;nn had turned to the Mi.-,. f fva men. utterly dissim- Car, who ncveruna" rether. One of thew inenwrna o r n loA tr ha a "freak. Hu tjysUij ivun-ut- nam a was John- -John and Jin are ixnmwj - at 3 . .IwWI V queer pair.- opwea -John and anybody ere tjeeet liir " opined foniebody else. i - -t.-tr,ien,. FOOT ouhi o M era hare bhad com plexions bare dyPP. w indication, which will W"1 beootn dr.pep.v L"!. fair skin and -eaiwy l i. K.. ft rat of all rOMt Keen vour atom cb wall by Ui of SJZInnmA and IndigteUoo occiioolly-Jt when i yew 0eed rt. It is pleasant to taae. d j The 8aered Qoos. In Egypt the goose was the emblem fit Seb, father to Osiris. A precious figure of it Is extaut Inscribed "The Good Goose Greatly Beloved." It was the national flag of Burma uud of Kandy, Ceylon. Wherever Buddhism rules the goose Is venerated. There fore It Is a leading motif In the art of Japau and a symbol of peace and hap piness In China. Figures of geese are as Indispensable at a Chinese wedding as Is bride cake with us. In both countries, as also In Burma and Slam, weights are -made In the shape of a goose as a token of good faith, though the connection Is not obvious. But in ancient Egypt the same custom ruled, and Layard found goose weights among his first discoveries at Nineveh. A row of gigantic geese"surrounrls the great Buddhist temple at Auajapoora. The devout cherish a fond fancy that all geese perform nn aerial pilgrimage to the holiest of lakes In the Hima layas every year, transporting the sins of the neighborhood, returning with a new stock of inspiration for the en couragement of local piety. When the Play Fails. "Patiently, morning, noon, night, sometimes far Into the dawn, the re hearsals go on, first the steps, then the music, theu the words, then the situations with principals and stars in rehearsal and' always the business, the exacting command, the sharp re buke, the tireless round. "How would you like to rehearse day and night, seven weeks, without pay, and find yourself out of a job after the first night? " "Wouldn't you rather rend of a glo rious triumph and see the managers and authors and composers rake in the Bhekels, the golden, glittering shekels, even though they grew fat on them, for the sake of the people who had rehearsed seven weeks without pay? "The tragedy of failure Is back in the land of make believe, down in the crowded dressing room, down where the girls huddle together and tremble, down where one weeps silently and dries her eyes on the skirt of a use less costume." Smith's Magazine. Poor Richard's Alman-c. Dr. Franklin himself in o of the last numbers of the almanac gathered together all the best sayings of Poor Richard, which for twenty -five years had amused and edified the country. These sayings are in constant use at this day. For example, "Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy. wealthy and wise;" "Drive thy busi nesslet It not drive thee;" '"Help bands, for I have no lands;" "No gains without pains;" "Constant dropping wears away stones;" "Thre. removes are as bad as a fire; J "He that by the plow would thrive must himself ei ther bold or drive;" "A fat kitchen makes a lean will;" "Experience keeps dear school, bnt fools will learu in no other." It was such homely max ims as these Inserted In all the little gaps of the almanac that made It so popular. Franklin said ue sometimes sold 10,000 copies In a year, a wonder ful sale for that day. The first number of Poor Kichard's Almanac appeared In 1732. ' Not Well to Butt In. "After the crash," Imparted the first hospital surgeon to the second, "I ran over to where It lay on the pavement, and when I raised It up I saw at once tfiat Its ribs were smnshed. while n canine hole was torn In its" "Pardon me, doctor," broke in the medical student, who bad caught these words as he was about to pass by into the consumptive ward, "bnt If you have no objections I'd like to take a few notes on that accident case." He pulled his notebook from his pocket "Was the case a cbiiar' "No," the surgeon Informed him to hi embarrassment "I was spaklnf of my umbrella." Judge. A Naadsd Chang. The navy department once received from tb commander ra coier or id. fleet an official communication relative to certain changes recommended by him to be made In the uniform sblrt of the enlisted men. Id accordance with custom this letter was forwarded -to various officials for comment or ex pression of opinion, th remarks of each officer being appended on aa In dorsement slip. Each Indoasement In troduces the subject matter of the let ter In a brief, and on of them thus tersely explained the contents:' -Commander in chief dealres to change nhlrt." Lipplneotrs. Rhythm I" Row I no. Bowing means much snore than mere xercia. of muscle. Over It all Ilea the etroog spell of ordered movement, the delight of pore rhythm, which the rowing man ia perfectly joatlOed to eUlmlnf moat be experienced te be ODderstood.-Kield. Not Vary Orn. "Odd. taut It, bow human ways ere In such direct contradiction te na ture r "In what, for Instance T" "Did yon ever about a grass American. oca anyic'T.g pw wkdowr lt.Jor -How ran lever learn te aadWratand that glrlT" -jom can marry berj bet when yce bare done that It wm be tee late for TOPT nnaeTBtannina hii ' iMMftt te joe.--sUebane. T Ls N. kfodier-4 kof yee ere eice te that Ma? bmb srbe bee bate eallmc dear. Damgfat-! eVart beve be eow, teatna, lor tare ai mm wmm Xxrbanft, It Save His f 'AD thought rd Jose ray !ef.H writes 8. A. Sweoeon, Wetertowe, Wle.wro Tears ot ecxeme, that 15 doctors exrald do cure, bed at las laid ve wp. - Tbeo Bocklea's Arnica 8alre eared it sou ad and Io&IIable for 8kia Krop- tiooe, rcsema. Bait beuno. Boils, rem Sores, Barns, bcsio, snd Hire. 25c at Graham Drug Co. A DIAMOND STORY. Th Way a, Russian Prlnesas DIspo of Her Jewels. A few years ago Iudwig Nissen, a well known wholesale dealer of the Maiden lane district, was in the oflice of a diamond, merchant in London when a etnfligcr cmnc in and oiTerod an unusually beautiful stone for mile. The Englishman did not care to buv. But Nissen thought lie saw a bargain. But he was not willing to buy until ho learned who owned the stone and where it had conic from. The man said he represented a friend, u wo man, who did not care to have her name disclosed. The American was firm. If he could not learn the owucrs name ho would, not buy. The stranger said he would ece the woman and talk the matter over with her. . The next day he came buck and took Mr. Nissen to the woman's home. She lived in a handsome apartment in one of the most fash ionable quarters of the city. It turned out that she was a Uinskn princess who, with her husband and her daughter, had been driven from Russia for having taken .part in a nihilist movement. Of all their large property they had saved only their jewels. She opened a little safe and showed the Ameri can one of the finest collections of '''amonds he had ever seen. They were- worth $200,000 or $300,000. "We sell them a few at a time," she explained4, "just enough of them each year to give us a living. Perhaps you will wonder why we don't sell them all and live on the interest of the money? But my husband has the gambler's spirit. The money would not last a year. So we part from them piecemeal I estimate that there are enough of them to keep us twenty years, Bnd I don't expect to live longer than that." One of those' diamonds forms the centerpiece of one of the most val uable necklaces in New York. A few others are sent to this country every year. In the "diamond horse shoe" at the opora there is never a night when there are not some of the jewels of the exiled princess on view. new York Tribune. - Tim, Not Spso. Mrs. Frink was a trusting soul and rarely questioned the opinions of others about matters concerning which thev were supposed to be in formed. One day she came home with a new pair of shoes under her arm. "(Jot them at ilnde's," ine explained, "and they're the best 1 ever boueht you. . "What is so very good about them ?" inquired her son, for whom the shoes were intended. "Why, the salesman said that you could walk farther in them than in anv others without netting tired, and I said that you couldn't walk very far justnow on account of your knee, you know, and he said that he meant larther lor ine same distance. So I boueht them, and here they are. Save the string, Dlease." She did not notico the smile on her son's face as he undid the pack age, and he was spared the trouble of explaining. youth's Compan ion. Buttermilk a Lit tavar. A French medical man advises people to drink buttermilk for long life. He says that the lactic acid dissolves every tort of earthy depos it in the blood vessels, keeping the reins and arteries so supple and free running that there can oe no dog ging up, and hence there is no de posit of chalky matter around the Joints or of poisonous waste in the muscles. It is the stiffening and hardening of the blood vessels which bring on old age. Butter milk is likely to postpone it ten or twenty years if freely drunk. A quart a day should be the mini r um, the maximum according to taste and opportunity. Th. Disturbing- TdaphWM. "The telephone has destroyed all the privacy of society," said the so ciety girt "It breaks in on every thing. Nothing is sacred to it Yon may be saying your prayers. The telephone. Or In the midst of your bath. The telephone. Or doing np your back hair or, worse of all, a delightful man may be making lore to you, when k-ling, k-ling, k-lingl The telephone breaks off the thread of his theme and he fails to resume it" New York Press. The Nature ef th. Baas. Ura. Ounson was entertaining a risitor when Nora appeared at the loor ol the drawing room. "PTaiaa. mam. will Tex tell mei rtat je want done wid th' oyster shells jet left from lunch H she in quired. I want them thrown awsy, of eotrrse, irplied Mrs. Gonson. Tni, Bum. Bat Oi didn't know phere te threw thins," replied Nora. rDo they be ashes or Jar bridge T Jadge. ; Fortify now agaast I the Grip for it cocoes every seaaow sural rreeetv tke bt little Candy Cold. Cure TihUt-off in this respect a most certain and dependable safeguard. PrerenUcs, at toe "eoeese eugs rill, as wall, also bead off ail com mon colds. Bat promptness It all imporunt. Keep Prev entice ia the pocket or parse, for instant nse. Box of 43 for 25c. SoldbyGmbem DrofCo. UNDER FIVE FLAGS. K Takes That Many to Run Small but Turbulsnt Crete. To the southward, its green clad, snow capped mountains rising from a turquoise sea, lay urcte, tlio is land of mythology and massacre was a picture of sunshine and ani mation of vivid colors and strango peoples such as one seldom sees ex cent in some gorgeously staged comic opera. But even as this was in my mind, says a writer in the Irnvel Maga zine, a gun boomed out from crumbling bastion, and five little balls ran up fivo flags tu IT 3 standing in a row on the uppermost ram parts and broke out into live (lags. the morning brcoze caught up their folds and held them straight out, as though for our benefit, so that we could make them out quite plainly. lour ol them were old friends that I had encountered on all of the seven sea the union jack and the tricolor and the St. Andrew's cross of Russia and the red, white and green banner of It aly but the filth flag, which flew somewhat higher than the others, was of unfamiliar design. The sin gle blood red square, however, bounded by the Greek cross and bearing the gleaming star of Beth lehem, told its own story,, and . I knew it for the nag of Crete. I knew that there was deep sig nificance in the design of that nn known flag and in the position of the four familiar ones that new be low it, for they signaled to all the world that the Turk had been driv en out, never to return ; that Chris tianity had triumphed over Mo bammedamsm and that the cross had indeed replaced the crescent; that the centuries of massacre were now but memories; that peace in the guise of foreign soldiery had, m - T X 1 L M 3 -t-U ior a time at least, iuuuu au Dom ing place in Crete, and, most sig nificant of all, that too strange flag with the single star would be up held if necessary by tho mightiest array of bayonets and battleships in all Christendom. Canea, which is the teat of gov ernment, is the most oicturesauelv -j j- a cosmopolitan spot west of Suez. It is equidistant from theehores 01 Europe, Asia and Africa, it has a mild and equable climate, living it cheap, there ia a large garrison of foreign soldiery, there are no ex tradition treaties in force, and trouble of one kind and another it always brewing. Like a magnet, therefore, Canea has attracted the team and off tcouring of all the Levant needy soldiers of fortune, professional revolution makers, smooth spoken gamblera and confidence men, Egyptian donkey boyt, out at el bows; dragomans who speak a score of tongues and hail from no one knows where all that rabble of the needy, the adventurous and the desperate who follow the armies of occupation and are always to be found on the fringe of civilization. Colorful Zanzibar. Zanzibar it the brightest, richest In color, most energetically com mercial of all the East African Girts. All it noise, activity, glitter, ere the Indian merchant be seeches you from his bazaar. There children swathed in silk and hong with costly Jewel and bangles ttumble . under your" feet Black women, draped below; their bare shoulders in the colore of the but terfly, their necks and bosoms gay with chaint, balance water jars on their beads. There is no street or house which does not suggest the scenic artist and the limelight We expect the water girle to appear at slaves in the next act and that the sultan's band down in the palace square will presently etrike up an operatic tune. National Magazine. Ah lrrtrwitwUai. Harry was walking with another boy when be was joined by a friend a year or so older and inclined to manners. "Introduce me, Harry," the new comer whispered pompously. Harnr twisted, reddened and at last turned to bis companion with, "Jim. have you ever seen Gilbert Spencer?" No." the other boy answered. - WelL" Harry blurted out, red dening still more and jerking one thumb ever hit shoulder toward the newcomer, "that's mmr uppin cott's. BraMMaaaUng Cmmm. The breecbloading cannon were among the earliest used. We find them on English and other ships as early as the last quarter of ue loor teenth century, and therefore much before the time of the buccaneer. The cannon was a mere tube, bound with heavy iron rmgs, and was load ed by the insertion of the "gonna chamber," aa Iron pea containing the charge, which fitted into and closed the breech, laeee guns were very clumsy affairs la eompansoe with the modern breechloader, bal the principle was he mw. . Thk ia the moat daAcerons time of the year to catch cold, and it is 1 ha hardast time to core iL If yon ahonLl take sold, a few doses of Keonedy . Laxative Cough 8yrnp will act very promptly." Ita laxa tive principle cores Ibo cold by driv ing U from the system by a gentle and nat oral action of the .bowels. Children especially like Kennedy 'e Laxative Coogh Syrup, as it tastes io good, nearly like maple sugar. H ia sold by Graham Drug Co. BaMCING III GIFTED LUNATICS. On Faculty Strongly Dvlopd In Many Insan Psrsons. One of the moat peculiar features ot Insanity U that occasionally one fac ulty, either sight, beurlng, umell, taste or touch, la extraordinarily acute. Cer tain Insane persons. Insensible to every other Impression, have a pronounced taste for musk and can repeat with accuracy an air which they may have beard but once. Others have a recol lection of form and color and display an aptitude for drawing, while more frequently one may meet with an in mate of an asylum who baa a special memory for figures, dates, proper names and words generally. There la a case on record, for In stance, of an Imbecile who at twenty seven had such an extraordinary mem ory that be could solve the most diffi cult problems In arithmetic and algc bra and repeat word for word long poems after once bearing them In another case a boy of fourteen, with a defective brain, who bad the greatest difficulty tu learning to read, could, if allowed two or three minutes to run over a page printed In a foreign lan guage or treating of questions of which be was Ignorant, repeat the words from memory as correctly as if the book bad been lying before him. Very curious was tb case of an other man. a devout churchgoer, who could remember the day when every person bad been burled In the parish for thirty-five years and could repeat. with unvarying accuracy, the name and aga of tb. deceased and mourners at the funeral. And yet be waa a com plot fool, and outside of th. Una of burials be had not one Idea and could not give an Intelligent reply to a single question or even be trusted to feed himself. At Earlswood asylum. England, tbey bar records of imbeciles who eould not only repeat accurately a page or more of any book which bad been rend years before, even tnougn it was a book they did not understand In tb least, but also of an Insan. person who could repent backward what be' bad just read. Another curious case Is that of an imbecile who. In the first place, never failed to go to church and who on reaching horn, coold repent the ser mon word by word, say lug, "Uero Hie minister coughed; hero he stopped to blow his uosc," mid so on. In another case nn Imbecile knew the Blblo so perfectly llint If you asked him where such and such a verso' was to be found tio could tcli without hes itation nod repent the chapter. All these Instances nr. well authenti cated, and others equally amazing aad true could bo added. And Just ns there on. sense which Is sometimes won derfully acuta Id persons of weak In tellect, so In the rnse of blind people the tens, of smell or bearing Is ofleu Try keen. One of the most remarkable case on record waa that of Julia Brace, a fr male deaf sad blind mute who con Id distinguish brothers and sisters by small and who recognized anybody ah bad met before by lb. same means. Phlladeipbia Inquirer. A Rhymed Task Mast sr. Ia the studio of an artist on Madi son avenue there ia a algn that would nulled for almost any place where there Is work to da Of courw It Is exceptionally well adapted to tb needs of dreaming artists. It reads: Wnana'sr aFteak fa pot I. you Dea l Mir alt aad vuw M Hot be eontasrt aad wish It Sooa Baste at aae aad oo It la this studio It was of course artis tically printed and framed. Within vUw of the motto every one wa hard at work, and the man woo sat nmreal said It never est him a niomri.t'e rests He roald not look at an uuJo labed Job without seeing or bearing the Jtafle of the rhymeK.w York rraaa. ' Why Ha DMitt Rise. It was married man's nlcbt at Ine revival averting. "Let aU roe hus bands who have tronbt on your minds stand epr snooted toe sMnottoo- al preacher at the height of bis spasm Instantly every man In toe cborcb rose to bis feet except eoe. -Abel" exclaimed the preacher. par sng oat at this lone sitter, who ecra pted a chair near tbe door and apart from tbe other. To) are tbe one In a mllltoo.- - "It ala't that.- piped beck tbla eoe balplaaafy as the reel of tbe congrcga ttoa tamed te gase sospictoasly at -I rant get ap. I'aa paralystdr Mew Sraetaa Paautd UsM. ' Tottng is soaetblng of e hazard at tlawe If w de sot happen te beve tb. atala guidance of tbe eld darky Jaal tor ta Prtae4oL Ernsts, being asked hew be kd voted, replied: "la lb asabnla: nab. I was lariined le de Ite pabilcaa eaeae. for tbey gave as. S3, bet te the artemooa d. Deanorrate aav. me 92 So. aaX I voted de Dra crat tkkrt atralgbL because dry waa de leas romp, aaa de Irae rorrap. tahr Sarreaa lisgazue. Th. Real lUatw. - "Tar par chi'.d d!-d fnm railu' loo borh wat.iUiiikn - nuh! l-r rlrft u V-!i u!i lUnc aa an tutx h alaiB-.l"I -n." -Wen. dra. rr sn't f n-ora ty A sw W RZEAtVL. MtolattfyPur The finest, most tasteful and wholesome biscuit, cake and pas try are made with Royal Bak ing Powder, and not otherwise. Royal is the only Baking Powder mad from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar Clear the Complexion. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup slim ulatea the liver and thoroughly cleanses the system and clean tbe complexion of pimples and blotches 11 is me tiest laxative tor women and children as it is mild and pleas ant, and Ones not gripe or sicken. Orino is much superior to pills, aperient waters and all ordinary cathartics at it does not irritate the stomach and bowels. Graham Drug Co. Captain W. II. Matthews, of the fifth police precinct in Washington City, was shot nnl killed while sit ting at his desk in the Station house Friday night, by Policeman Collier. Without the tligliest warning Col lier entered the station and went immediately into the captain's oflice, where he jerked from his pocket a revolver and began firing bullets into Matthews' boJy. The cause for the killing is a mystery, even to the associates of Collier. The latter, it is alleged, had been reprimanded l.y Cant. Matthews, Collier wae locked up A spring tonio that makes rich, red blood. Brings strength health and happiness to the whole family. Nothing equals Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea at a Spring regulator. 35 cents. Urabam Drug Co. Any man who thinks more of a dollar than he does of his self-re. tpect is in the insult-proof class. A sudden attack at niuht of aorot- form of Bowel Complaint may come to anyone. Hvery lanuly abould he provided with a bottle of Dt. e-eth Arnold's Balsam. Warranted by Graham Drug Co. A lot more people would take a friendly interest in you if you made a noise like a roll of greenbacks. Dangers of Pneumonia. A cold at this time if negl-cted it liable to caut-e p'luemorii which if so often fatal, and afur the patient lias recovered the lungs sre weaken ed, making them peculiarly tuscep libido the development of consum thru. Foley's Honey and Tar ail) atop tho cough, heal and strengthen the lunge and prevent pneumonia. La Grippe coughs yield quickly to the wonderful curative qualities of Foley's Honey end Tsr. There is nothing else ''just at good." bam Drug Co. Gra- Men are so contrary that if their wives wanted them to stay out late they probably wouldn't do it Thousands are tick every year with to 1 e torm ot Bowel Complaint Thousand are cured by taking Di selh Arnold s Ualssro. warranted to give satisfaction by Graham Drug Co. There it probably nothing quite so sad at tbe actiont of a man who tries to be funny and doesn't, know how. $100 Dr. E. Pete-lion's Ami Diuretic may be worth to you more than $101 if you bive a child a ho toils bedding from inoNitintjuc. of rater during sleep. Cures old and young alike. It arrests tbe troulrU at once. $1. 8d.l by Graham Drug Co. fake two narte of the wind and two tarts of the noise, mix thorough ly, and yoa bare a political dobaie. Nothing in the wsy of a Coogti is quile so annoying as e tickling I rat ing, wheezing, bronchial Cough. The quM kert relief comes perba from a prescription known to Droggistt every here ae Dr. Shoop'a Cough rtemedy. And beeideo. it is no thoroughly b arm less that mothers give it with perfect safety ereo to the yoangert babes. The tender leaves of a simple mountain shrub, give to Dr. 8 hoop' t Cough Remedy its re markable euralive effect. A five days' lest will telL bold by Gra ham Drag Co. , Fortunately bot lew people are mind readers, therefore they never discover what their neighbors really think of them. J .ui-onxja... . lauatte Ta Ul Ta tie Mpi e Goose Grease Lmimcht Cures 9 fh, A,,,ri?MS7r.e '- Z "y . . . , Mamma, go to Thomp son Drug Co.'s and get a box of Mother's Joy and a bottle of Goose Grease Liniment : : : : t You can't afford to be without these in your houac. Mothers' Joy is made of pure Goose Grease and Mutton Suet with the most costly medicines known : NORTH CAROLINA FARMERS Need a North Carolina Farm . Paper. - One adapted to North Carolina climate, soils and conditions, made by Tar Heels and ' fr Tai Heels and at tbe Same time at wide awake as any in Kentucky or Kamchatka. Such a paper It he Progressive Farmer' RALEIGH. N. C. j Kdiled by Clarknck H. :. Pox, with Dr. W. C Burkett,ector B. A. de M. College, and DLeetor B. V. Kilgore, of the Agricu'lural Experiment Station (yoa know them), as assistant editors ($1 a year). If yoa are ahead) jking the paper, we can make no reduc tion, but if yoa are not taking it YOU CAN SAVE EOC By tending yoflr order , to os That ia to tayt new Progteesire Farmer subscribers we will send that paper with Tbc GuAJnts, both one year for $1 60, regular price $2.00. Addrseca - : THE GLEANER, Graham, N. C. a iiiitiiitfstiiiiiiii eadaches This time of the year are signals of warning. Take Taraxacum Com pound now. It may av9 you a spell of fe ver. It will regulate your bowels, set your liver right, and cure your indigestion. A good Tonic; J An honest medicine, araxacum lo. IMEBANE, N. C. EREB TRIP to,th PACIFIC COAST AU YOU ONE of thai aad wrho "t to arxalore tt- ' W eat eWW t 1 1 1 SUNSET mGAZLTO wkos. at e tU at IJTtry Mst M Mf)(M falBa.1V w9 see tU FAR-WEST. Write for Sil Cwwyv it tt tt tt tt . -Fee-faBi Sunset TraTe. CInb I. IleeJ aWLas San FraaarJaoa. CJ. TfJffO lean enprly a few Comb Bui Orpinrt. ,n e-gfla n Utom who want to raie 1' txnt winter layers, urgw aire ana finick frmsrer Pric-A SI TO I -r sotting. B. X. Tcaxtl.Gral.am.N.C. emember J OftZAOw week ltei-T-:3TCu:3 IUaaw)t and t ia4e- Hhja ham Drug Co.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 18, 1909, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75