Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / March 16, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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ARE YOU UP r TO DATE B ■ ■n—urf' If yon are not the NEWS AIC OBERVER is. Snbscribe for it at once and it will keep yon abreast ot the times. Full Associated Press dispatch es. All the news—foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. Daily New* and Observer $7 per year, 3.50 for 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian $1 per year, 50c for 6 mos. NEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO., .. RALEIGH, N. C. The North Carolinian and THE ALAMANCE GLEANER will be sent for one year for Two Dollars. Cash in advance. Apply at THE GLEANER office. Graham, N. C. ! /> Wepromptly^btSQ^7Brftpyj^eiy^ W | ESBDi i 1 Send model, sketch or photo of Invention lor 11 i' free report on Patentability. For free book, i : j Jvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv* KILL™, COUCH mid CUBE thi LUNCB »IT" Dr. King's New Discovery FOBCBKSf s j&fc. AMD Alt THROAT >NP LUNG TOOUBIES. GUARANTEED SATIBgAOTOai OB MOHEY MTOTOIP. LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS This book, entitled as above, contains over 200 memoirs of Mia> inters in the Christian Church with historical references. AD Interesting volume—nicely print ed and bound. Price per copy: cloth, $2.00; gilt top, $2.60. By mall 20c extra. Orders may be ent to PJ. 1012 E. Marshall St., Richmond, V*. Orders may be left at this office. f- - Job Printing? We can save you money on all Stationery, Wedding Invitations, Business . Cards, Posters, etc., etc. THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. ■M The Honorable fi Senator , FRANCIS LYNDE CHAPTER IL TBI BOSS. IN a private dialog room in the In termountaln hotel, whoee en trance portico faces-the caplto) grounds in the chief city of the Sagebrush State, two men were llnleh lng dinner. On the gueat book of the Inter mountaln one of the men had regis tered from Chicago. The name was illegible to the cursory eye, bat since it was the signature of an empire builder it was sufficiently well known Iq all the vast region served by the Transcontinental railway system. The owner of the name bad finished his Ice and was sitting back to clip the end from a very long and very black cigar. He waa a man past middle age, large framed and heavy, with the square, resolute face of a born master of circumstances. Though be figuwd only as the first vice president of the Transcontinental company, Hard wick McVlckar was really the active bead of its affairs and the director of its policy. ▲cross the small round table sat the Tallway magnate's dinner guest, a man who was more than MeVlckir's match in big boned, square shouldered phy- a man half century was written Ojjjy In the thick grizzled hair and h&fVy graying mustacngk "I wish I could convince' 1 you that It isn't worth while to hold KM .at arm's length, senator," McVlckar was saying. "You know as well as I do that under the present law in this state we are practically bankrupt We do a losing business from the mo ment we cross your state line." "Yes; It seems to me that I have beard something like that before," was the noncommittal rejoinder. "You have heard the simple truth, then. And it is a bald injustice not only to the railroad, bnt to the peo ple it serves. We can't give adequate service when the cost exceeds the earnings." "And you are unable to convince the members of the railroad commission?" asked the man whom the vice presi dent addressed as "senator." v "You know well enough that we can't convince an anti-railroad com mission," was the half angry retort "Yet you are still running the rail road," suggested the other. "Yes; luckily the Tr anacon tlnen tal ■ystem does not He wholly within yonr state boundaries. If K did we might as well surrender our charter and go out of business." "All of which bas con* to be a poet ty old story. said the lis tener quietly. "You didn't wake SM motor thirty miles to hear you Ml it all over again, I know. What do you want?" * "We want s square deal, 1 " was ths rurt reply. "Ho do the people of this stats," as serted tbe man across the table. "Ss* kkd us, Hardwick—bled as to death while yon had the chance. Yea ar* lastly. If not legally, la debt to ewesf man In this state who had ever ship ped s carload of freight or paid s pas senger fore over yonr lias before the present rata law went Into effect'' The vice president sat op and pot his elbows on the edge of the tabic. "Yon are too many for DM. Blount aad I'm no sppronUce at the gams ei ther. la all the year# we've dickered together yoa'rs always been a con sistent fighter for yonr own hand. What's happened to yonl Haveycc acquired a new set of convictions, or is this only s different wsy of whip ping tbs devil around the stumpf "Oh, I don't know," rstasosd the gueat "We sea all growing niter and wiser perhaps. Yea Mt Mr the debt yon owe ss, do yonr "Do ws ows you anything; Bioootr asked the magnate pointedly, "If ws do ws are willing to pay t in spot cash on demand." x I The big man on the other side of ths table was leaning back la his chair with Us hands In his pockets. smile wrinkling st ths corasrs of his eyss was half genial, half satirical. I "It's lucky we are alone, McVlckar," 1 ha said. "A third party might imagine that yon are trying to bribe ma." | "That"s an right.. Blount Ws un derstand each other. Nothing for nothing Is ths accepted rule la this world of oars, aad we all reeegalas tt. Yon are figuring ea aomatWng 1 know yon are. Kama it If It Is snjr thing Isss thaa a mortgage on ths sarth aad one or two oi the planets I m get It for you." "I am afraid ws are men than a | mile or two apart yet" ssld the maa who was not emoktng after a long minute. "Let e" go bach to the begla i alng and atari over again. I said that | Gordon Is going to be the aezt gov ernor." "I know yon did, sad 1 said It wouldn't be, not if ws can help It" said the rail way' magnrts, With equal determination. "Ths methods you will take to do feat him will Insure his election. Mc- Vlckar. Yon fellows a_re mighty slow ■■■». i.. i .J to learn your lessonr Ydu~don*T know anything but bribery. The timea have changed, and you have not changed with them. 1 aay Cordon will be tbe next governor." Again tbere was a strained ailenca It was tbe vice president who broke It "If we bad tbe safest kind of ma jority in tbe teglalature we couldn't be cure of accompllablng anything with Gordon In the governor's officer" he asserted. "You don't need to be told that" * "Oh. I don't know," waa the calm rejoinder. "Cordon Is an honest man and a fair man. If you could go to him with clean bands, but you could not do that McVlckar. You're too badly out of practice." "You are not putting it quite fairly, senator. We are too badly whipped to take any chancee." "I know. That la what you always aay, and you have aald It eo much, you and your fellow railroad man agers. that you have lost tbe straight forward combination. You don't know how to make a clean fight and It'a your own fault" Once more the man with the square jaw took time to consider. "Your 1 re sparring with me, Blount" he aald finally. "You are talking to me aa you might talk to a committee of the Good Government league. Let's get together. Tou control tbe political situation, and we recognize that fact Mqet me halfway and tell me what you want" "I want a square deal all around. Hardwick; that'a all. And you've got to make a clean fight tbia time If you want me with-you. A new day bas pawned In American polltica. I and" my kind recognise It and you and your kind don't aeem to recognize it That la the difference between us. In the present case It comes down to this; You are going to fight for a rail road majority in the legislature, and you want Beynolda for tbe bead of tbe ticket because you know that you can depend upon his veto If you don't get your majority. You are not going to get Reynolds or the majority either without the help of the party organ isation." "We can put it simpler than that," said the railroad man. "We get noth ing without your help as tbe bead of the party organization. That la why I asked you here to dinner with me to night" "I have been wondering for tbe last half tiour If you really believe that yon need me, McVlckar. When I gave you fair warning two years ago you wouldn't take tt, aad ws did you dp. Are you sure you sre ready now to holler enough T" Once again the vies president re fused to be harried Into making aa s4mlsaion. When be mohe.lt waa as Hp fighUag corporation commander. "There la a Umit to all thinga, Bene 0?- ■ a waa pabtt man nuam nu too asm THTiao to sbim aa" tec, and you are pushing as pretty well up to it I suppose you can swlag ' that legislators, aad yon can have It aa& ha imaged! We'll have our gov ernor aad our attorney gonsrnL" "Yon are bsttiag on that are r*aT" smiled ths man In Chs opposite chair, "la that yoor declaration of warT* "Call it anything you like. Ws arc not going to bo Isglslstod off ths map if/we can help It Strong as your aaa- I chine la, you cant swlag Gordon in 'avilaat Reynolds if we pot ap ths dght kind of fight aad whan It ssipsn to Ban kin for sttornsy general yvtfe simply hsvsn't snsthar man la I ths party to pot up sgslast Maa." I "You've settled this definitely In year own mind, have yon. Hard wick T" | was ths quiet question. "I'm sorry, rve boon hoping yon had Issrnsd yonr Isssoa—you and your tribe. I came hare thia evsning prepared to show yon n dsssat way out of yonr trou biss. so far ss this stats Is uuausra ad." Again tbs railroad magnate put hie elbows on the table edge. "What was yonr 'decent way/ majorl" hs ssfcad. I using to r ths first time the ssartssy Utla by which ths sx-ssaator was best known la his home country. "I don't ariad telling yon, though you will call it aa old msn's foolish ness. 1 bars a grown son. McVlckar. Old you know that!" "Yea." "Ha Is a lawyer, sad a pretty bright saa, they tell ma As ! happsa to know, ho la well up on the corporation side of the srgumsnt and 1 have been afraid hs would marry aad ssttle down' somtybM ii the sast rm fSlf "if 1 " Vi'li' GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY; MARCH 16,1911. getuug oldT*Bardwlck, ana ra like to | havs bin with me. Oat of that no- I | don grew another. I said to myself ' . tbla: If IfcVlckaT could have • good, , clean cut young man repreaentlng hla , railroad, a man who not only knew bla business In the courts, bat mlgbt alio know bow to plead bla client's case before the public—if McVlckar could bare such a man as that for hla cor poration counsel and would agree to lire somewhere within shouting dis tance of such a young man's Ideals we mlgbt all be persuaded to bury the hatchet and live in peace and am ity." A slow smile spread Itself over the strong face of the railway magnate. ''Why didn't you s(y in the beginning that yon wanted a place for your boyt" "I'm not saying it now," waa the sober retort "You forget that you have Just been telling me that yon don't intend to comply with the con dition." "What condition?" "That yon turn over a new leaf aDd meet the people of this state half way." "There isn't any halfway point in a fight for life. You know that as well as I do. But we'll givs your son the place gladly." The man who had once been bla own foreman of roundups straightened him self in bis chair and smote the table with his flat. ' "No, by thunder, you won't—not In a thousand years, UcVickart Maybe you could buy me—maybe yoa have bought me In times past—but you can't buy tbat boy! Listen and I'll tell you what I'm going to do. I telegraphed him this afternoon, telling him to throw up his Job In Boston snd como out here. If be comes pretty soon be will be legally a citizen of the state before election. You said we didn't have anybody but Rankin to run for attorney general. I'll show yoa if we haven't!" Mr. Hardwlck McVlckar was not of those, who fight ss men besting the wind. What time the deft waiter was clearing the table and serving the small coffees he kept silence, but wben the time was fully ripe he said what there was to be said. "You've got. us by tbe nape of the neck, aa usual, Blount," he said. "Name your terms." "I have named them. Get in line with tbe new public opinion, and we'll do what we can for you." McVlckar had anticipated tbe thing which was about to happen, not pre cisely in Its present form, perhaps, but in some form which would Involve lbo providing of a place for the senator's son, and he smiled inwardly wben be remembered that he had given Gantry, the division .traffic manager of the Vransconflneffcal, ltuftrabtiops to*(o6i ' up one Evan Blount, a young lawyer, on his next visit to Boston. By all odds It would be better to wait for Oantry'a report before taking any decided steps In the bargaining with Evan Blount's father, but unhappily the crisis hud arrived, and quite prob ably it could not be postponed. None tbe less tbe vice president tried for tbe postponement. "You're asking a good deal, Blount, and you don't seem to realize It If we should agree to meet the people of this state halfway, as you suggest, what guaranty have we that wc won't be compelled to go all tbe way?" The One lined wrinkles were appear ing again at tbe corners of tbe hered itary Blount eyes. "Yoa can't quite rise to tbe occasion, can yon. Hardwlck?" stalled tbe boss. "Yoa'd like to be good, of coarse, but you want to be cocksure beforehand that It Isn't going to coat too mnch." "I'm only asking for a little time In which to consider It" was tbe vice president's flnol word. "Yoa luve all the time there Is be tween now and election. I've told yoa what I am going to do." "Yon know very well that we can't allow yoa to do what yoa propoee. With aa anfrleodly attorney general we mlgbt as well go out of business first as last." "It Is up to yoa, McVlckar." was the calm reply. .. " CHAPTER lli A FALSI QAixor or snoun. AS a cburllsb fate decreed It tim ed oat that Blount was not to have Gantry for a traveling companion beyond Chicago. Oa the second day of westward faring the railroad man, whose buainesa fol lows! hla wherever be went, bad in structiona to meet Mr. Hardwlck Mc- Vlckar, his vice president In the 1111- Mis Metropolis, and on tbe morning of the following day Bloant continued I hla Journey alone. Twiv, four boars later tbe expatri ated weetemer bad enessd bis Rubi con. otherwise (he clay colored stream of the Mlssiiart river, at Omaha, and bed entered a pea scenes which ought to have been familiar-should have Mm and were not ee many and gnat were the rtiangne wroogbt daring bis fourteen yean of absence. In tbe smoking car be fell Into talk wltb a prosperous looking man whose thin, hawklike face was so oat of kseping with tbe air of proeperlty—a lone pas senger who bad boarded the train at One ha At Bret their conversation was bald ly desultory. Tbe hawk faced one. It esamsd, was a mine owner whose property, vaguely located eomewbere "In the mountains," was Involved In litigation. It was the reference to tbe litigation w jfceb first drew Bloant be yond the cotMMtaplacsn. the awakened interest being wholly professional Oddly enough, sines be bad never expected to use It bs bad specialised somewhat In mining law, and before many miles bad been clicked off nn der tbe drumming trucks of tbe Pull man be found himself giving opinions and laying down plana of procedure far tbe man who. Investing in mines. i bad apparently purchased mors trso ble than profits. Into tbe cleft thus opened by tbe aa of business tbe hawk faced man In serted n wsdge of csntfcps Inquiry, la addition to We mining propsrtls* bs bad bass, making Invaatments In : timbertande— bad invastmenta, be fear ' SO. since f?>e government had late ly taken socb n decided stand agalnet tbs cutting of timber In the new for ' eat reserves. Again Bloant via good natnredly heipiui. uue of bla claaamatea in the law school had been preparing himself to enter the legal branch of tbe forest service, and Blount had acquired at aecond hand a working knowledge of the forestry situation In tbe west and of the legal status of tbe western tim ber pirates. Moreover, be had very clear snd decided opinions upon the question of the conservation of tbe na tion's timber resources, and be was frank enougb to exprees them emphat ically. ■* If he had been leea unsuspicious be mlgbt have remarked tbe quickened attention of tbe proeperous looking person who seemed so willing to take advice from a chance acquaintance. "If you were a government man your self yoa could hardly put tbe case stronger," waa tbe smiling commentary of tbla person, wbo waa as yet name less to Blount "How do yon know 1 am not a gov ernment man?" said the expatriate, willing enough to play the game as the cards should fsiL "Because you sre not traveling on government transportation," was tbe shrewd reply. "You can't tell anything by tbat," Blount said, laughing. "A good many :%§r» "SSFSCIALLT tr THKY ARB THAVXX,I*O OH a saoitcr MISSION." civilian employees of the government travel on regulsr tickets like other people." "1 know they do," sdmltted the oth er, snd then, wltb s sbsrp side gluuce which Blount missed, "especlully If they are,traveling on a secret mission." "You needn't be nlarmed. You have not told me anything tbe government could make use of," returned Blount, carrying the Jest one necessury move further along. It . was precisely at tbla point, as Blount remembered afterward, that tbe forestry subject was dropped. L*ter on. after the talk bad drifted back to mining and from mining Into politics, tbe bawk faced man announc ed hla Intention of going back to his section In tbe body of tbe car to take a nap. A little further along toward evening the great range whicb bad been vialble for hours In tbe west began to define itself In peaks and blgh, bald sboulder lngs of wind swept mesas, and Blount waa glad to find some stirrings of tbe homecoming wanderer's quickened pulse answering to the nearer view of the mountains. At the dining car dinner, whicb yae served whl'e tbe high psaks of the main range were still reflecting the crimson and gold of the sunset, Bloant missed Ms lancbeon companion. . Now that ho recalled It be remem bered that be had aeen nothing of the bawk faced man since tbe early after noon. Bat tbe absence of companion ship was a relief rather than a depriva tion. Almost with out knowing It be found himself hastening through his dinner so tbat he mlgbt return to tbe Pullman window. When at length be bad tbe longed for sight of a bunch of cattle, with tbe solitary night herd banging by one leg In the saddle to watch .lbs passing train, the call of tbe west waa once more trumpeting in -his ears. At a small timber shipping station well within the mountains where tbe logs were shot down to the mills la a trough-like water chute from the wood ed heights twenty miles distant there was a longer stop than usual, and Blount got off to make lnqulriea. There was a freight wreck at some point a few milee farther west and ths train would probably be delayed for several hours. By this time Blount waa on well re membered ground. Forty miles sway In a direction somewhat east of north lay the Blount home domain, where he bad spent hla happy boyhood. Aa bour'e gallop to tbe westward tbe level raya of the setting sun would be play ing upon tbe little station of Painted Hat which bad been tbe eblpplng point for tbe home ranch. And halfway bs twesn Painted Hat and tbs Circle Bar lay the horse corrals of one Dsbbleby, a hermit of tke mountains and tbs boy Evan's earliest schoolmaster In tke great book of nature. Bines Blount could not go on by train, what waa to prevent tbe taking of an immediate and delightful plunge Into tbs bind of bssrt stirring rseol (fCtlODl? Arranging wltb tbe Pullman con ductor to have his band baggage left In Gantry's office at tbe capital, Bloant crossed quickly lo a livery stable op posite the station, bargained for a sad dle bone, borrowed a poncho and a pair of leggings and presently, with tbe sqnesk of tbs saddle leather mak ing sweet music In bis ears, had bro ken violently, for ths moment st isast with all tbe civilised tradltlooa. He would go to sse Debbleby; drop In upon tbe old ranchman without warning and tbas get his Bnt taste of tbe homeland anmlxed wltb any of tbe disappointing changes which were doubtless a welting him st tbe real Journey's end. Now, It chanced tbat the livery sta ble was sn adjunct to the eingle ho tel in tbe small sawmill town, and as Blount swung up Into tbe saddle be was a little surprised to ess bis com panion of tbe Pullman smoking com partment standing on tbe porch of the -hoial.ln earnest talk with three oth ers wbo from their sppesnncs might bars figured either ss "timber Jacks" or cowboys. Binm>» w«« on tbs point of speaking mm y|np»1 > oWD£HI Makes Home Baking Easy Royal Baking Powder helps the housewife to produce at home, quickly and economically, fine and tasty cake, hot .biscuit, puddings, the frosted layer cake, crisp cookies, crullers, crusts and muffins, fresh, clean, tasty and wholesome, with which the ready-madefood found at the shop or grocery does not com pare. Royal is the greatest of bake-day helps. ROYAL COOK BOOK-100 RECEIPTS—IHIX - Send Sams and Addreu. •OVAL tAMiNe rowota eo- new »ow. when be rude past tGe~~porcb on bis way to the northward trail pointed out by the liveryman, but a curious feeling restrained hlra. He was almost aura that the pros perous looking gentleman with the bird of prey eyes was making him the subject of hli earnest talk with the three men of doubtfnl occupation. Quite naturally this Impression deep ened Into a conviction when be looked back from the road crossing of the railroad track and saw that all four of the men on the porch were watch ing bim. After leaving the railroad Blount found himself crossing the broad mesa, with the eastern mountains near at band, and the Lost river range struck out sharply In its sky line against the ■unset horizon. Ou this mesa the trail disappeared entirely, but so_long as lie was sure of the general direction Blount let It go and guve the tireless little broncho i loose rein. Debhleby'a ranch lay among the foothills of the distant Western range, and he was quite sure that be could ride straight to it in the dark if need be. It was some little time after be had left the shoulderlngs of the eastern range behind that a curious thing hap pened. Far away to the right he heard the •ouiul of galloping hoofs. Though the moon WUH nearly at Its full aud the treeless landscape was bare of any kind of cover, lie could not see the horseman who wns evidently passing hi in and golug In the same direction. At first he thought It was some one who was making » detour to avoid him. Then ho smiled at the absurdity of the thought and concluded that he himself was off the trail. This conclusion was confirmed a lit-' tie later when two 9tiler travelers, an- 1 notiocing themselves to the ear as the 1 first one had done and also, like the; first, invisible to the sharpest eye ' ■weep of the brown plain, passed bim •t speed. After tbst be had the solitudes and immensities to himself, aud It was not until the broad mesa bad been crossed •nd the broncho was plaklug Its way among the hogback hills of tbe west em range that tbe boyish thing be had. been led to do took sbspe as a ven ture which might have discomforting Consequences, for after the broncho had wandered through many canyons and had climbed a good half score of the hogback hills the young man from the east reluctantly admitted that the boyhood memories were altogether at fault In tbe deceptive moonlight He was very thoroughly and painstaking ly lost. (TO BB CO.FTIIICCD.] O dest WUte Woman in the World Born in North Carolina. Charlotte Chronicle. "the South Carolina papetf will now throw fit*, sure enough. lieal this from The Baltimore Son —it iaaapeclal from Fort Worth Texas At tbe great age of 130 yearn and undoubtedly the oldest white woman it the world, Mr*. Lucy Owena ia dying at tho home of her daughter, a centenarian, a fow mile* West of Long View. Mrs. Owena waa born in North Carolina when the Revolutionary War broke oat, and three yew* later •be aaw George Waabington. She ia the only living peraon who haa aeen Washington. Many have questioned her age, but invoati; gation of records shown that she give® her age correctly. Until a year ago ahe could aee and hear exceptionally well and could walk about her room with the aid of a crutch. Born in North Carolina one hundred and thirty-aix years ago and not dead yet! And ber daughter alive at 1001 No use for South Carolina or any other State to try to beat that. CASTOR IA for Infants and Children. nil KM Yn Km Atajt Boogkt Chapel Hill News. Cor. of the Gleaner March stb, I*ll. The varsity and scrub baseball teams lined up for the first practice game of the season Friday after noon. The scrimmage lasted seven innings and came out 3 to 1 in favor of the varsity. The line up for the first string was: Lee and Sloan, pitchers; Witherington catcher; Calmes, first base; Hasty, second; Lindsay, short; Edwards, third base; Hackney, center field; Page, left field; McLean, right field. The prospects are that Carolina will havo a fast infield and will be weak on batteries. Clancy has announced his inten tic n to try to develop a team that can win by its hitting and base running, things that he saya win the majority of college games. The first round of the pentan gular debato between, Carolina, Virginia, Vanderbilt, Tulane, and Gooriga will come off this spring, probably" on Ap il 22. The question is national income tax. Each college will debate both sides of the query. Carolina has the negative against Virginia and the affirmative against her time honored enemy, Georgia. Carolina won from both Georgia 1 and Tulane last spring and from | the University of Pennsylvania : last fall. A strong crowd has entered for the preliminary con- 1 I test that will be held this week and tbo prospects are that Carolina will be able to keep to the high standard that she has (established during the last ten yeais. The basket ball team closed its season with a close game on Vir ginia's floor Wednesday night. Virginia and everybody interested in the outcome expected Virginia to win by a heavy lead. The score was only 24 to 16. Carolina came back in the second half and scored nine points to Virginia's 8. This was the first basketball team that has ever represented the Uni versity and their work is regarded as having -been highly successful. The officers for the V. M. C. A. have Iwen nominated for next year as follows; J. C. Jockart; president; Fred Drane, vice presi nent; G. E. Norman, secretary; \V. D. Harbee, treasurer. Hishop Itobert Strange of the Eastern Diocese of North Caro lina spent last Sunday and Mon day and Tuesday in Chapel llill. He preached in Gerrard Hall Sun day night and on the two following days waa in tbo Y. M. C. A. building to receive his friends among the students, llis sermon in Gerrard Hall drew a large crowd Of student! as his sermons Itlways do. Profesaor M. C. S. N >ble deliver ed three addresses before the Caldwell Teacher's Association, the teachers and the c tizens of Lenoir, March 3 and 4. A Cold, LaGrippe, then Pneumonia. Is too often the fatal sequence, Foley's lloney and Tar expela the the cold, checks the lagrippe and .prevents pneumonia. It is a prompt and reliable cough medi cine that contains no narootics. It is as safe for your children as yourself. Sold by alt Druggists. Mr. Jake Rhinehart, of Hickory was made desperately ill by eating crystal izod Assafras extract. NO. 5 PROFESSIONAL CARDS 11 ■; .*U =g— R, S. COOK, Attorney-at- Law, GRAHAM, N. 0. Offloe Pattenon Building, . Second Fleor. (aaa w. P. Bra an, ja BIrNUJU & BYNUM, Counaalon at Law a.vh.KNBBOBO, M U. Practise regularly ta the aowta of *l*. naoce coonir. Aa*t,Mlj DAMERON & LONG At lorney a-at-La w B. 8. W. DAMBHON, J. ADOLPH LOX4 'Phone *O, 'Phone IMB Piedmont Building, Holt Nlofaolaon Bldy. Burlington, H.C. Graham, M, O. S WILL LONG, JR. ♦ • t DENTIST Hi i Graham, . ■ - . Nerth Carellaa ' OFFICE ik BJMMONB BUILDING i .r. fACOB A. LONG. J. KI.Mtl LOVQj LONG & IiONG, ittomeya and Connaelora at Law GKAHAIf, K. DR. FA G. GOWER DENTIST GRAHAM, N. C. Office: Over National Bank of Alamance. Ifeb-tf Winston Sentinel: Mrs. Hardin Truitt, of Mt. Airy, while en ro~te to Greensboro Sunday to visit her daughter, was stricken with heart failure on the train and died be fore a physician conld be reached. Mrs. Truitt was about 60 yean old and had been visitimg relatives at Germanton. When she left there Sunday she was enjoying exellent health. —Ambitious young men and ladies should learn telegraphy, for, since the new 8-hour law be came is a shortage of many thousand telegraphers. Positions pay from SSO to S7O • month to beginners. The Tele graph Institute of Colombia, 8. C. aid live other cities is open ed nudor supervision of R. R. Of ficials and all students are placed when qualified. Write them for particulars. The Charlotte mint—correctly speaking only an assay office— will do business for another year. The Secretary of the Treasury recommended that the appropria tion for its maintenance be dis continued but Senator Overman got the appropriation through the Senate. The Ilonse refused to agree to it and the matter hong fire for a time, but, through the strenuous efforts of Congressman Webb and others, the House At last ylfild«L English Spavin Liniment re moveeAil hard, soft or calloused lumprfSpd blemishes from hones, blood Spavins, curbs, splints, sweeney, ringbone, stifles, spnins all swollen throats, coughs, eta. Save SSO by the use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful M blemish cure known, Sold by Graham Drug Co. Horace Gregg, an employe of the Champion FibnCompany at Can ton was scot and perhaps fatally wounded soon after going to work Tuesday morning,by O. L. Walker a fellow employe. Walker says Gregg jumped on him and he shot in self defence. He is in jail at Waynesvllle. Gregg was taken to an Asheville hospital for treat ment. *, £. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets are safe, sun and reliable, and have been pnlsed by thousands of women who have been restored to health ih rough their gentle aid and enntive propperties. Sold by all dealen. The United States Senate finally yielded to the Hooaeln refusing to allow $90,000 for distribution among attorneys for alleged serv ices for Indiana. Marion Bntler and aasociates, it ia said, would have received a large part of this amount had the claim been allow ed. Those unsightly pimplee and 1 blotches 1 External applications may partially hide them, but Holliater's Rocky Mountain Tea removes*them for-keepe. Gets at the cause—impure blood. Tea or Nuggets (tablet form) 85e. at Thompson Drug Co. Edgar Stripling, former police chief of Danville, Va., arrested for killing W. S. Cornett at Hamil ton, Ga., 14 yean ago, was placed in jail at Cobambus Ga., last week to'await the disposition of his case. A strong effort will be made to secure his pardon.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 16, 1911, edition 1
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