Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Nov. 16, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL. XXXVH. Titfs Pi This popular remedy never faT effectually cure Pyspepsia, Constipation, £ headache, B3k>usneoS And ALL DISEASES arising fror. Torpid Liver and Bad Digests Tl)e natural result Is good nppei and solid flesh. Dose small; efegai. ly sugar coated and easy to swallow Take No Substitute.— . . PROFESSIONAL CARDS 3", S- cook:., Attorney -nt- Law, GRAHAM, ..... N. C Offlce Patterson Building Second Floor. , , . . , IOHH (JBAT tSYBUM. W. f. BTKDS J a BkNUAi & BYNUM, A.ttornt>yn uid Counselor* at L*« U.viiKNrtBORO, 8 li. Practice regularly In th* courts of AU •nance county. . I Auir. t. M H DAMERON & LONQ Attorneys-at-Law E. 8. W. DAMEUON, J. ADOL.PH I,ON* 'Phone 850, 'Phone 1008 Piedmont Building, Holt-Nlobolson Bid*. Burlington, N. C. Orgasm. M. O. DR. WILLS. LONG, JR. . . . DENTIST .... Graham. .... North Caroline OFFICE IN SIMMONS BUILDING JACOB A. LONQ. - V J. ELMER LOKO LONG & LONG, Attorneys and Counselors at 1, -w GRAHAM, N. *\ The Raleigh Daily Times RALEIGH, N. 0. The Great Home Newspaper of the State. The news of the World Is gathered by pri vate leased wires aud by the well-trained special oorreapouueuta of the Times and set before the readers in a concise and 1 ns manner each afternoon. As a ohronlclo ot world events the Time* is Indljpensab c, while Its bureaus In Wash ington and New York makes its news from the legislative and flnanclal centers of the country the best that can be obtained. As a woman's paper the Times has no su perior, being morally and Intellectually a paper of the highest type. It publls-es the veiy best features that can be written on fashion and ml-oellaneoua matters. Toe'times market news makes it a busi ness Man's necessity for the farmer, mer chant and the broker can depend upon oom plete and reliable information upon their various lines of trade. Subscription Rstei Daily (mail) 1 mo. 25c; 8 mo, 75c; 6 mo. $1.50; 12 mo. $2.50 Address all orders to The Raleigh Daily Times J. V. Simms, Publishers. ARE VOU UP r f TO PATE " —• If you are not the NEWS AN* Obrkybk is. Subscribe for it at once and it willkeepyoa abreast ot the tijqes. Pall Associated Press dispatch es. All the news—foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. Daily Newe and Observer $7 per year, 3.50 for 6 moa. Weekly North Carolinian $i per year, 50c for 6 moa. NEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO., RALEIGH, N. C. The North Carolinian and THB ALAMANCE GLEANEE will be aent for one year for Two Dollars. Caah in advance. Apply at THE GLBAKBK office. Graham, N. C. 1 , if al v ■ i ; ! BR3llMi7pMo9bnMi» ' ■ !^WjTTiiTiFI ! '■ tM ' 111*»I»1 ''l PVi!V,I •llli Jofl 1 I M * MI 111 H A in | f i likAjj eo years' H W w J |J ik ■ ... ™ I|l ■ J i ■ CwwwS'to teSlS# TJ^»S3X^tS^^SOißl FOLEYS KIDNEYPUIS KM Hisiisw mi IM—si • ;-.•••>. ■'""* piilnHUj . . /. . f I 1 A > • T • '-nn * THE ALAMANCE GLEANER . W i m/H tH tis.fi ■ ... - : . ■ ' "■' 41 * ** ~nf * * 6rft J. Mf> • M/ /, I tx ijL\ NOTES C.M.BARNIT2 wvgsn* CCBSX^MDOMX SOLICITED K J*.? I mti • |Th*a* article* and nhiatratlon* moat not ba reprinted without apaalal permis sion.] TIME TO TIME THAT TONOUK. Why la it traini must alack up apaad When tbajr run through a town And autoe have to slack up, too. When constable* are round* r If this Is law and taw I* matt With Justice to all man !l t. . Jt'a time that limit 1* put on The aftaed of othera than. Now, thara'a that (onlp with bar tonga* That whizzes through a town And In a half aacond runs A hundred people down. And there's that liar that can 11* Faster than horse can trot. Fvo heard him kill a hundred man With just one *hot. Now, I know th* latest stop watch Can't keep tab upon her tongue. And the liar knocks all record* Just a-lyln' with on* lunt. But, aay, aren't laws for buss car* Really, simply all bombast . When -th«y let' these toagu*a J6f W around And kill us off *o fast? C. M. BARNITZ. ' > POINTERS FOR POSTMORTEMS." an old laying, "Money miM the mare go." but boodle's not in It with brains and brains are not all found In books, but practical investi gation Is really the brain furnisher and brain burnisher. Our pedagogical penitentiaries and diploma dispensaries haven't cornered all the gray matter. The whole world'* a free library. There are boobs ,ln the fields, the woods, everywhere. You need only open the volumes and learn. The ani mal kingdom Is a book. We are study lng man, woman and roosters. Note the victim of our knife. We opened him like the leaves of a book. That black "wart" on his wlnjf Joint,' his emaciation, were an Index to his contents. The interior showed dark congested' lungs and cbeesy growth Photo by C. M. Baaaltz. r.'.DHK THK tim that confirmed the tip given by the tu bercle on the wing that the disease WHH tuberculosis. To be a succetstol poultry physician you must study the exterior and In terior of fowls, and the postmortem of a fresh fowl ia easy and not so dis agreeable. First write down all ex terior symptoms, then nail fowl to board, pluck feathers on breast and cnt through to bone at Junction of neck and breast' Bran this MuiKH IMF fore breastbone, cnt down along aides, but not too deep, and draw down the breastbone so that the upper organs are exposed, but do not tear sway the peritoneum, or lining, of abdomen until you have observed the, same. A sprin kle of weak carbolic solution will dis infect and destroy any offensive odor. By a comparison of outside symptoms with Interior conditions you may often secure knowledge that helps yon to a cure or prevent! re to the dlssuas and sure data for future diagnosis DOWTtI Don't put off till tomorrow what you put off last year to do today. Put off your coat snd do it now. Don't expect to butt right Into a fall fair and make a clean sweep If you haven't quality birds to burn those days. Don't wait to cull out the knock kneed crook backs and wry tall runts until after they have gobbled —ougti grub to raise a respectable flock. Don't forget In feeding pigeons that you moat provide both for parents and squabs, and there mast always b« plenty to carry to th« tittle ones til day. Dont sell anything at aurhat thai you wouldn't gladly serve to your Mo tions Ire mother-in-law who is about to writs a wilt leaving all her sposMhs to you. Don't kssp that old hen over anothet season simply because yours ago ah* won a green ribbon. If you can't cui her cockier the preucber will slay hsr without a single compunction of eon jftinri A BUOHOUSE »TO*Y. lhighiwiso experts are still -quarrul |ng on the loueo-question, j, John Bull claims there are six broods of ben Hce; soot Americans claWt three; the chap who gets 000 on bin yell* there are a million, hut a eutt vasa of the bughouse brethren Audi the majority believe there are four principal genera—guuiodes, gouicotea, Mpeurus and manopeu »- and these have their varieties like the fowl tweeds they infest The goniodeo Is bead and neck blood sucker. th« | 1» if "9 yjr'H ffi I ' GRAHAM, N:c., THURSDAY. otoeriTsimplycrawling,"biting, scratch in*. living oa scale*, dead cells and feather material. They are gray, brown, white, yellow, and mottled, are born and live their whole life on the hen and. It 1* said, chlQ to death If i H Photo by C. m. Barntta, - - *■ ",T \ 7 2 t ZiIFSOBUS VABIABIX.U—ICMNtPOB ID MM away from her heat, which dispose* Of the idea that henhouses and neats E ■lousy. The red mite and tick an ■ "crimson ramblers" of the hen- Hie that swarm from the crevices at night to attack the flock, and Infest' the nest. Heat, tilth, weak stock absence of dusting material and lary prostration are conducive to lice multiplication, the third generation of one Individual reaching 125,000 In three months. Bens dust lot* of them off. bat often they get ahead and If not stopped cause more losses, especially among chicks, than disease. Pure Persian In sect powder is death to all lice. Sweet cream or camphorated lard Is a knock er for head lice. For clucks, turkey mothers,'tender pbnlts and chicks we prefer the Persian, but for adult stock there Is no killer more effective and cheap than the following mixture: Four pounds plaster parts, one pint gasoline, one-half pint crude carbolic acid. Mix the add and gasoline, stir into the plaster and. when thoroughly mixed, screen over a newspaper, al low to atand two hours and then dust a reasonable amount into feathers of fowl. Three applications a week apart will finish the lice and disinfect the FEATHERB AND EGGSHSLLB. That tbe fools and suckers,*ren't all dead yet Is shown by, the number of systems adverted and constantly com ing Into being. Did you bite and get bit? The week before Easter Is a good titno to ship capons to market. In picking do not remove feathers from neck, upper breast; thighs, tall nnd wing tips. »_ Two things mostly kill the millions of brooder chicks that decease—too much hettt. too much to eat. This is a rhyme, go take It In time if you'd strike a gold mine. When you estimate the /profit your ben* bring dou't forget to count. In the fun you get out of It. TJiat exer ctee 111 the air and suaslrtne has kept yon from msny a brainstorm. , As your chicks get older you must change to larger grain. If kept right along on chick feed their gizzards do not develop. They keep soft, and In tbe end you bave birds that are weak. So many women are I a (ere*ted in poultry, and hundreds of_ questions wore asked by them whers'we lectur ed' at farmers' institutes. They are sufflly the sine qua non. Wit Lout them man is a fizzle. When you get weary of work don't betom© a Weary Willie. I.lfe is a his tory, and you can't afford to have any POKPH blank nor blotted, so labor on, and may srery page be SIM with good deeds and the conclusion be hap' py- ! i , , .»• 'I i r i When forcing chickens for market a narrow ration will cloy on the appe tite, and Ufa fowl wiJl not «t as niufe aault csa. digest At.tbi* ttma tbo cranimiiiff nacWls Mid by -same, Arsmnass«s lngtsrietjr to Ue btHof fare. A lit Mt» Dm and faartaaa othsr prizes we** offered by tb* state poul try board of Missouri for the best fif teen poultry beaae plans with raslhefls of management There were 200 plans troth nineteen different states submit ted The farm, •* first prim went to Prank K. Mica. Ames, la. With sncb encouragement for the Industry, Is It a wonder Missouri's ahead? "Abracaoaurs ana -«•»*.«/UU>" ... examples of tbe rery few word* to Wbkb tbe saoa rowel occurs firs times io succeeslon as tb* bass of as many euoeoedlna syllables. « BfllHhiHHM I First-caas of drenheaoeaa wss re corded to MSI a a [ ~ ~ ■ j ~ Irrigation Car agricultural purposes . was acceaatrety practised la Egypt MOO ysars prior to tbe adrent of tbe QkrtstUa era. Bonded warehouse system was first authorized la England by art of par- Itament la 1803. It was suggested by Sir Robert Walpote to 1733. but was then defeated owing to Ha unpopular ity. Tbe height of tbe mountains la the ssoon has been measured. One has •H altitude of 38.000 feet sn| ssverat are upward of atjuuu feet In belchl THE IDLE OF 1 PIC Chief Justice Marshall's Ffrtt Case as a Lawyer. P**' *'" 0 HE OUTWITTED A OEADBEAT. Wh*n Marshall Sued Old Haakln Mulled. When the Caas Waa Wen end y>yw»*nt Claim** He Laughed, but Whin th* Climax Cam* He Wilted. Chief Justice John Marshall'* first caae as a lawyer waa tried In Fan qUer county. Ve. It Wae the anlt of Oobn versus Hasldn. aad the descend ants of the great Interpreter ot the c-oneUtutton delight to.thla day to teU of the subtle strategy whereby the budding jurist achieved victory over that cos* hardened deadbeet of a' Haa ' "tin person. 1* Tbla same Haakln, It appears, waa a i man possessed of property. But he was also possessed of a shrewd knowl edge of the law.- He k*pt all a* had •n his wife's naaie, exceptlnr what the ) Statute exempted ' from eelsuro for debt •?^raor.7 —ln an evU aad me mo nt Cohn, who ran a general atore In Hasltln's neighborhood,jtspated him. for sugar and coffee to the amount of ttl. This was years !>efore tlie erup tion of yosnjr Marshall lsto tht" taw, and In tbe Interim Cohn bad given the data for collection- to every yoang lawyer In tbe county tp cut his teeth .. on. Swift ly following Marshall's un furling of his ahlngla to tbe Fauquier Wind* rata* Oil* wtth his dalJt Even the callow atjroser- rseognlsed It sS's veteran among claim*. How ever havtng nothing elae to while SW«y the time, he took, tbe sag*. Coin* promising hlpi alt li* coiild get out of It, which showed Cohn's valuation of It ns an asset. Toung Miirsbsll promptly brought suit..lit which Haakln smiled. When judgment was obtained, Marshall rode out person to. Haskln's place and demanded payment at which Haakln laughed.' And while Haskln chuckled the keen eye Of the young lawyer wandered about the farmyard. He saw on* £low, which jtas exempt under the law; alao one harrow, also exempt; also a bug* leviathan of a pig drowsing lastly In a pen—a very Oargantua of a pig. "Thar* the only pig I-got."' volun teered Himliln, rending tho lawyer's for llasklu. also law wise, kui-w thnt uudoty the statute be was entitled to one'plg exempt from seli ure for debt The future chief Jostle* rode homo pond.Tine deeply. Next day be waa seen strolling around tbe outaklrts of the towu looking Into casual pigsties 11 ud keeping bis thoughts to himself. One noon shortly after a youth, trudging along the big road In front of HiixklnV bouse, stopped to aak for S blto to eat- . Over his shoulder be car ried n guuny sack. Hasklti bandid him out u pone of bread and a chunk of meat and tliev demanded a quarter for tbe repast. "1 haven't got a quar ter," replied the youth; "thought you would give a feller s little annck like that" ) "Not much," growled Hnsklu. "What you got In that bagr "Nsthln' but a-month old pig." an swered the youth. ."Say. If yon glmma. a quarter In money I'll give you the Pig a ltd we ll est) It aqoare." "I rcckou you stol* tout pig." com mented Ba*kln. "flue you wouldn't Mil It MI cheap. - Her*'* j—r Q sartor; the ««er tor, *□(] ll**kln.- with Mm content *t one wbo hits driven x bard bargain, curried th* afcou* over to tbe barnyard and spilled M Into th» pen where lay the porcine Gnrguntun. Coincidental ly thitv rose outof tbe alder bqatje ndjaecut tbp forma of yonng Maraball and another man—lb* other man waa the ceuaiifbls. & bis Mod h* Bald s writ of exWuti*d> He CMitb*d aidaraa- Ij ov«r luto the plgxty and. pointing to tb* fat pefk'tt. said: 1 "1 IHi oqi that pig In the ault of Cobn versus Ilaakln." and ha waved hia hand to a man who waa waittog with an empty wagon down the road, f - "But that pig ia exempt," reclaimed the trate Hsskfh— Tbs law allows me "You've got him r tHer*. H answ*f*a tbe constable. pointing to the a bote ae he trussed np the l«tg fellow nnd call ed to the man in the wsgon to lead k hand. "Yoacaitftmehe your eelec tlon for *x*mptlon after tbe lavy*a made." "Bat the fallow that aald at* the* abote stole him." urged Haakln. grow ing daaparata. T caa't own t UStoa "'"•All right." put in youlid Marshall, wholly «n perturbed. "Mr. Constat** Juar arras* Atmf Jos r*c*4vtag ateiaa good*." i •. But Qaakto had dad to the aafety of bla back porch, seeing wMM the sea atable. MarahaU and the mas to the wagon bustled the ceropUtnteg parkar aboard and drove away, leaving tka bewildered Haakln to ramtoste at lat aure over the totrlescias gf.tke lav. which pem»ita a sun to keep evae his religion to hia wife 1 * mm, bat rev isbe* away hi* ohotoaat pig from as ■dor his vary ansa And. coo eluding, the multiple de scendants of tke great Jotaa alee (to light to tall hew (hat pig aald far 919 S» —eooogb mat only to pay *e aneieet HSisa bet *e satisfy exactly «be 4e> manda of coert and ronatablc for coata, tof ring not a penny over for tIM grtef atrtcken and wick ad Haakln To which tbe reader may add "And the* an livad heppUr after"- oscept Haakln.—Now fet Tie* An Old Oroek Suparatltien. ' Dortog tbnntlenlnrai*' it waa a Greek cuatouj to pat out thait Ore* and hbw and b«vp wita the lip*, tbua wbo produced ibo tbsedff and ilglit v tlbatlena to tbe Celt. Among anettort tirartca'andKeemna the pouring out of a libation to the god* waa a Common religion* obaer rauce. r M\ LIQUID PORES. • An Entertaining Experiment With Al cohol nnd Water. It la set •**]■ tu Imagine UqaMs ss hnvlog pore*. tUyugh thin seems to b« tlie case as sbou-n by certain familial expert men ta When a certain amoont of potvderod sugar Is slowly posted Into warm water, the wfter will 41» solve tbe sugar and appear to absorb It without Increasing It* volume. Sim ilarly, when alcohol Is poured lot* wa ter the resulting volume I* lees tbaa tbe sum of tbe two volumes. " Kor liistancO. If #fty parts ot wstsi and flUy ports of alcobol be sUxed to getber. tUejt will make only nlnety-foui parts. Apparently on* of the Un>ida ba* entered lata tbe "pores" of Om other. This experiment, as commonly performed In laboratories, consists la putting measured qaanUtle* Of tbe two liquids together, bat tM*> effect weal be far more striking were it passible for students to see one of tbe liquids actually "aoskta#' into tk« other. This can |m> don* lu the following way: Take two glasses, on* Ailed to tht brim wltb water shd ttM other with alcohol. Is order, to show the effect to better advantage, color the alcohol wltb red Ink. The glasses should not be over fall—that is. tbe surface ef the liquid should net bulge above the rtm of the glass. When everything It ready, place a sheet of paper over th« giii«» full of alcohol, and wttb a hand on t)n paper to keep lt dowxt .m, th* rim of the glass invert tbe tumblhr. and tbl) Hqnid will remain la the gtata, owing to the air prcssnM oaths psper. Now place the Inverted tumbler ove« th* glais full of water and carefully dr»w out the This can be do** without spilling a drop of alcohol, and yet as soon as the paper Is removed tbe alcohol will commence to drop, Owing to t& faet that It is colored 11 Is poeslble to see the alcohol actually "soaking" into, th* watsr, while tiny air babbles thst were formally contain ed In the "itores" of th* water rtss slowly to jtbe top of the tumbler. This will continue for *om* little lime nnUI a roniiderable air space forms la ttM top of the tumbler. Sporting Notes. Ben brook, the former Michigan foot ball player, may coach the Bucbtel college football team next fall. nantir Murphy, tbe Athletics' rtgb' fielder, say* the New York Highland er* bare too man.v signals. Too mnuy ■lira*, necordlpg to Dan. are too nnu-b for the ordinary run iif ball player* over Hit the major leu i ll* teams one finds It- impossible to dlW'ov er a hetter outfield tbau that of lh« Boston Americans. In hitting, base running, throwing sod covering ground Speaker and Hooper are is s class by tbemaelves. State Lines. In Maryland s candidate for ofllc* cannot legslly pay tbe car fare of a voter. ■> In 18(10 the atate of Minnesota had a population of 170.000 and not a foot of railroad within Its borders. Arizona again led th* *tat** in the production of eopp*r last >'*ar, with Montana second, Michigan third and Utah fourth. Although wood. ven**M #r* made In nor* than thirty states,' IS toots, Mk'bt gas. Florida and Indiana taannfactsr* nearly ouf-thlrd of th* entire produc tion of the Cuttsd State*. German Gleanings. iVj 8 i *■> The Uerii iu empire U*« tweotj lij* stttutlona tor the far* of Cripple*. HaMrmil drunkard*' to Prawla may legally b* pal la charge of gssrdlan*. Kruppa. the famous firm of gun Maker* at Bssen in Oermany. reccptly completed their flfty thousandth gun !' OertDnuy'* oldest Salty paper, tb* Wo*#l*vb* Zeltuag, tap 100 year* »i raAr Aerial Flights. A Pitta burg man baa Invented an air »blp which. b* aver*, can travel from New York to tvondoS to three hours. Then tbere waa Bsrop Muqchauaeu and Jdtos Vorte.-Milwaukee Journal The mat or an alniblp U large, but baldly large enough to Justify the theory that aviator* grow reckl*** be sause tb«jr are broke and 4o not «src iiWbat 'licomea of tbem.—Waahingtoe mSf. . , , .■ " ' Facts From Francs. Street a to Part* w*rv Srst paved to tm. , In all ont of the laat ntoeweo y the death* In Prance have the birth*. Nearly 300 ***** of grouad near Pari* Ste devoted to ralalaa yonag tree* of peculiar abepaa far ambrelta handles. There weve fl&noo banes to avrviee withto the w»Um of Paris to 190 a Ktoe year* later there were TSASO, asd thalr aaaiber Is d*«»«a*>ug tOM a year. 4 -Kltti* Car**." Scotch akippor* conaider tb* dep "kittle cargo," aid anticipate s storm or mischance If they have a black coat ea boar! K Queer Arrangement. X*w York Oaaette aad Oenassi Afl vert leer on Xov 10.' ISH. cbrooiclad tbe death of Solomon Croak, who bad married two elsfsr*. living with sack a week at a time. He had tweety-sU children i , , Sen* Setting.. Bona setting began to be acisatlScal * Dractiotd In IttW. Quejtevy. , Qrigto sf tb* Caked Stare* eery da to* tram Oct. IS. 1776. wbea tbe Uontteentai concrve* authortsed the equipment of. two crnlaer*. mounting ton and fonrtaaa guna respectively. ... l._ , r . a_LAi s am. 't Spiders are aald to -work over their eld *Uk aad tbna save them selvee tb* trouble of extracting aad compounding It afreab. Green MinuHiig—Velvet Bean. While It' will not mature m el in our short season, the velvet berni hits no equal its a soil improver. Think of h plant gt-swinjr a vine 75 feet long bearing lohvph 4x3 Inches with three of ! these Iciivm on every leaf stalk and the !«•. f stalks set thick on the viiie. Wlmt a mass of vegetable matter this would make to pl6w down for toil improvement! It is fabulout the amount of greeii vegetation thlk pJnnt will produco to the n6rt>. The usosl objection offered to the use'of this plant Is tHat'lt thsVes so much vlne'that a dike harrow cannot he forced through it if grown where the land la In a fair state of cultivation. ' The velvet 'beati is not a' dative of the UnltM States but Was im ported from India, ft requires a long seasou In which to ripen seed, but can be grown successfully for soil improvement purposes hi moot of th 6 piedmont and id all of the coastal plane* soctiou. It sliould be planted as, aeon a» all dauger of frost has paaMd>a« itte not at all hardy. Some farmers llud it good practise to let the frost get tbe crop before plowing It under In order to rednee the bulk of vegetable matter to be tamed under. Uls also a good practise, la some cases, to let the vines He on the ground over winter and turn them under in the spring prior to planting. The velvet bean runs in nitrogen and potaah. The follow ing table shows a ton of gre4n velvet beau vines to contain 11 lbs. of nitrogen, 8.8 lbs. of phos phate, and 11.4 lbs. of potash. The number of tons that can be grow* on an aero is very great, but a fair average is about twenty. TABLE. Composition *> Green Velvet Bean. Cssm pared with the *fl'rc«li Huro* and Cow Manare. Nltio- l'hos- l>i| '"•**u. phst*. >*. Velvet U*ans. 11. S.« lit , yfi*S ' fM> |3 rr*sS Horn* Ma oars, a.; 14 J I Mow let us see how much plant food this growth would add to our teu acre Held. Twenty tons would add to oue acre 220 lbs. of nitro gen; 56 lbs. ot phosphate, and Ti9 lbs. of potaah. . We have only to multiply these figures by ten to get the nlant food added to the ten acre field. Should the farmer (which is hardly probable) to out this mass of vine* to piedes with his sharp disc and plow them under he would add to the soli ot his tea acre field, 2,200 lbs. of nitrogen, aud irender available, 060 lbs. of phosphate* and 2,280 lbs, of potaah. This, you will note, is as much nitrogen m you can get from about 2&0 tons of freah cow manure or 61 ton* of an 8-3-2 commercial fertilizer. The phosphate fouud fa thlg amount of green manure la aqnal to that found in 360 tons of freah cow manure or to ,81 tout of an 8 %-2-commexclal fertiliser. The potash thus rendered avail able la equal to that found in 312 ton* of freah cow titan una or in 67 tone of 8-2-2. i The amount pf nitrogeu thus snatched front the air and fed to 'i tbe crop In the short space of oue t year is equal to that removed by ' 200 b tie bote of corn, 800 bnahela | of onto, 160 bushels of wheat, or i six 900 lb. bales of cotton per asm. Or, figuring otp a teu aero baste, then Is as ssuah plant food rendered aval labia on this tea sera i tract as would be removed from it by 2000 bushels 6t ootn, 3000 | bushels of oats, 1600 bushels of wheat or sixty 600 lb. balsa of cot ' ton. Not only so but the after | effect of thte enormous amount of 'vegetable matter plowed into and > mixed with tho soil will show for | yean to come. J. L. Bububhh, N. C. Dep't of Agriculture. A PatSer* Veageaaee : would htve fallen on any one who attacked tin son of Petev Bendy, of Saolh Rockwood, Mich., but be was powerlen before attacks ! of Kidney tconble. "JDootoiacould not help him," he wrote, "so at ! teat we gave bltn Electric Bitters aad be improved wonderfully from taking six bottlee. Ita the best Kidney medicine I ever saw." Backache, Tired feeling, Nervous ness, Loss of Appetite, warn of Kidney trouble that may end in dropsy, diabetes or Bright/a dis ease. Beware: "Take Electric Bitten and be safe. Every bottle guaranteed. 60c, at Graham Drag Co. § / v rata atfiiaK. ■ , Jimry s» (a**la Laxat.v ,ino-t t*»w* UW aaaii ia»i «tee • *«e Om Are You Nervous? What makes you nervous? It is the weakness of your womanly constitution, which cannot stand the strain of the hard work you do. As a result, you break down, and ruin your entire nervous system. Don't keep this upl Take 1 Caidul, the woman's tonic. Cardui is made from purely vegetable Ingredients. It acts gently on the womanly organs, and helps them to do their proper work. It relieves pain aad restores health. In a natural manner, by going to the source of the trouble and building up tfaa bodily CARDUI WoinaiftTonk Mis. Oner Fortaer, of Man, W. Vt, took CasiuL This Is what she says about it: "I was so weak and nervous, I could not bear to have anyone near me. I had " fainting spells, and I lost flesh *my day. The first daee of Caidul helped me. New, 1 am entirely cured of the fainting speHt, and I cannot say enough for Cardui, for I know It saved my life." It Is the best tonic for women. Do you suffer from any of the pains peculiar to woaen? Take Cardui It will help you. Ask your druggist VMT* uaMfjMiowyPut, cm u am c«L.c>^i>iGmT*^ hr»nl7rhiiWillill. ««411 tet We—lrw. 1» ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ...The Average Business Man... f| CAN FORGIVE ALMOST ANYTHING « ! EXCEPT Poor Writing He Does Not Have Anything to Forgive In the work produced by the 1 iMHimEnm - ( • ' > % 'MOJF JC Model NO# 12 No. 12 ••"It ia an established fact—it does the 1 FINE TYPEWRITING OF THE WORLD { And there Is a reason why— | (WukbtflM truck) | THE HAMMOND TYPEWWTFR CO. £ 324-335 Colorado Bldg., Washington. D. C. } B. N. TURNER, Local Dealer, GRAHAM, N.C. JL VALUABLE Land For Sale. Br virtue of tM power* T«U4 IS a* under of Itnjnitar, ItOt, and reclstarad la Ita tjgjfatS&ena MONDAY, DEC. 4, 1911, •I »»»W o'clock, 0000, || tb* court bouw daor In Orahwa, Mil at public outcry to the b«at bidder, for caah, lb* followlnf daeorlbed raal property, io-«ltj A iraol or partial oil nd ■ltuate and belat la Melville Towbtblp. Alamance County, North Carolina. and daeerlbed aa followas Lrln* oa fbewaten of MCAdaml Crrek. aad halof tba laoiejiropeijy conveyed to K. W. TlioSpdOn by w. f.~ wklta- to whota It isi *LaaiKt WtfAAgrc r*atet«raj la tba oMoa of tba Mania* ol IMMi for Alataaoo* otinty, In Book No. M. of Ib'ili. on pagte It to It. aad rvfarenoe l> nadr liinrcto for nor* particular detcrlp ttou. Maid trae* or parcel oflaad.jolaad tba laartt of tba following partle*! Monroe law, mood, aad conlalo* MB aaree. aim or lea*, aad It tbat tract or ptMol Hum conveyed to laid T> fboapaoa b/ Ollaa Mebena aad T. B. Wrldbt aad We* known aa tba Uliaa Metaaatkiarter Plaa*. Proaa Um above I aat ar paraal of land tear* la to ba er*. anted aa aat eeaveyed hereby, it aoraa, wbMb waa oonvayed br tba aaldT. 6. Tboapaoo to J oka tea M fcwflSEisrs earth of tba traek at. tba Nortb Carolina Kailioad. Tbladeedlt lateaded aad doeeeoa •Murray tatoUtMol tba Melville Hrlck maaaa IJuuntr In Deed Rnflater Mo. M.oa paeaaW toAaed rafertoea la laade toiald of default b» tb* dill li.Meaferd aad Mbwifb, Jea aU Miwb.rd, la mm pavaaat of lb* aotaa •acaradby taktdMdofiruatrafarrad to. TMt la vary ralueot* land, aad upon It an valaael* Improtaawnta, Including: barn* aad a d wattia* bouea. It Ue* naa»diat»ly upon tb* i all mad, about oa* alia free* tbet«wa at Mebaa*, and la la a klfb rtate of aulO *T I b?*i'^ J t?"Sd 4 'raal property It bayoad a a rAKCB. j*.. «• Trustee. COMMISSIONER'S SALE LAND. Mpiaessaixxssivt eaedfiat wbereto all tb* katn at law of laa flea tb* Mil piaatr of iald deeeeaed, la tatd f wljl ogarat pubUo SATURDAY, DRC 2, 1911, itacMer of IMada for Alaanaoa County, at mTm wbteh U rafarrad to for mora par tlnTiMi ilktiiiliillnn Taraiiof Me: CAAH. Hale *ubject to CO* B TMi'octobtr'atk, Mil. J. b. OuOKt CoDmkMtonar. NO. 40 LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS ThU book, entitled m above, oon tains over 300 memoirs of Min - isters in the Christian Chorch with historical references. An Interesting volume—nicely print ed aad bound. Price per copy: cloth, 13.00; gilt top, $3.00. By mail 30c extra. Orders-may be soot to P.J. Kn&MODLB, 1013 K. Marshall St., - Richmond, Va. Orders may ho left at this oOeo. Indigestion nAND° • Dyspepsia Kodol mSrjsvssfirsiiT&i, Mtstsasa—sad this sstfataasals tsad af tha food in the atoisach, so that Uu atomaeh niajr raat aad raeapersts. Our Guarantee. tSSfu SL%^'y^Str a -' « $CTdaLr wtu u '°* ** ***" tana a£E. k s t i"Hk , !?SS3 : .a l 1 . 1 ~'i . ' ' 1 I Very Serious His a *mr aalsts a«M t» a* tor oaa madWaa aad km *» wrong ooa givea yea. Par iW* itamvtap yea is beyetg is BUckSgKT Ltvcr Meddne I tfce || 111 mil s>«M»a«d.Wa»l |p Watkliif. It doaaaot iottata ■ Slhara, or it wo«U not ba tha to- I worita Mrar pnaiSw, with a lat|tr I sale ttsa aa nth— oombinaa. I aoBtaTQWM »| TOIEYSKDWEYPniE Imp liIMIWI iIBM—H 8l»»>
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 16, 1911, edition 1
1
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