Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Aug. 26, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE GLEANER ISSUED KVKBY THURSDAY. J. P. KERNODLE, Editor. ♦f.OO A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. ADVBkTISINQ KATES ma square (1 In.) 1 time SI.OQ, r etcj aub ..;u,-nt lnaertlon (Ocenta. For more (pace 411*1 longer time, ratal fnrnlahed on appllca -la. Local aot!eealO eta. a line for Brat naarttOD ; aubeequent InaerUona 6 cta.a Una iraualent advertlaamenta mult be paid for advance The editor will not be reeponalble for ,-l*wa expreaaed by correapondenta. Entered at the Poatoffloe at Oraham. N. C., aa aecond olnaa matter. GRAHAM, N. C„ Aug. '2O 1915. --I The' North Carolina State Fair Association, with Capt. E. J. I'Srrish at its head, proposes to make the Fair, to be held on Oct. 18th to 25th, an Exposition of the State's re sources, rather than the usual State Fair. To accomplish its aims, the Association has appointed Mr. Dion H. Butler press agent to help put the matter before the people and arouse their co-operation. Mr. But ler knows much of the great resources of the State and it will be his pur pose to enlist t.ie people in the movement. The sinking of the Arabic by a Qermau submarine last wtek looked for a while that it would sever dip lomatic relations between this Coun try and Germany, but the latest in dications are that it will be settled amicably. This was a British ship and the lives of two Americans were lost with it. Italy had declared war on Turkey, an event that had been expected. The object is to opeu the Dardanelles and take Constantinople. Should the aim be effective, Russia, will be greatly aided and place Germany and Austria to great disadvantage. Petition for an Industrial School for Alamance by the Boy» and Girls of Alamance. The following is an expression of the boys and girls of Alamance, and should be given consideration and careful thought by the citi zens of our county. This paper was read at the Annual Picnic of the Tomato and Corn Clubs of our county, August 7, 11)15, by one of the boys of olir countjfc "To tho Commissioners of Ala mance County: Gentlemen:—We, the boys and girls of Alamance county, are very desirous of having established in our county a Farm Life School, in which Industrial Education shall be emphasized, either sep —77 •" nnnnnnllnn wit.ll 0116 of our High Schools. We deeply desire to seo such a school established for the follow ing reasons: First. We are a rural people and we feel that, as boys and girls, we should be thoroughly drilled in all fundamental subjects thai, underlie successful farming and home-making. These subjects are n6t at prosent included in our schools. Second. We believe that we ahall fall short of our duty to our county and to our State and to the possibilities of our own selves if we do not have such prepara tion for life. Third. Our county depends on our farmers for food and cloth ing. We cannot contribute as large a share of these products as we deaire unless we learn bow to do this in early life and have such a beginning made then as will en able us to continue to Improve in our farm methods all our Uvea. Fourth. We feel that farm boys and girla are entitled to the best training In the «world, for the lands of the oountry are in their keeping and unless they manage these lands so aa to preserve and Improve their fertility, the coun try will grow poorer Instead of richer. We therefore earnestly and ur gently entreat you who represent the beat Interests of our county to establish for na an Induatrial school, where all who desire may be trained to become effloient ou the farm, helpful and able in the home, and citizens whose thrift, intelligence and success will make them happy, contented aud suc cessful in their oountry homes." Greenville, S. C., and vicinity were visited Friday by a cyclone which demolished a number of houaeatond destroyed everything In its path, about 200 yards wide. One negro canght in the ruins of his house was killed. J. Charlie Haar, secretary and manager of the People's Supply- Co., retail grocers of Wilmington, drowned himself In the Cape Fear river at Wilmington Thursday morning. Was 44 years old and unmarried. A contract has been awarded the Elliott Building Company of Hickory for the building of the big dam for the Morgant jn Light A Power Co. across the Catawba river, at a point near Nebo. The oon tract price la SIIO,OOO. Trustees of the American Medl elne Gold Medal Award have unanimously selected Samoa- General Blue, of the Pobilo Health Bervtioe, aa the American physi cian who ha* done most for hu manity in the domain of medicine daring 1914. The gold medal for that year has been awarded to him for hi* work in national Jaealth and sanitation. Washington News. Cor. of The Oleaner. Washington, D. C., Aug. 23, 1915.—The disclosures of the en terprising "New York World" has brought to light the fact that the "Fatherland," a man weekly established in New York at the beginning of the war, is run by the Germau Govern ment, .and not by the German sympathizers as was supposed. This paper is edited by George Sylvester Veirick, a hyphenated American, and the foul slanders it heaped upon President Wilson and the Government of the United States has rendered it a treason able sheet and as such, the said Veirick should be dealt with as a traitor. LEO Fit A\K. The New York Jews are having spasms every fifteen minutes be cause Leo Frank was not permit ted to "cheat the gallows" by the Ainiimited ÜBO of Jewish gold. The public is none too well informed about the inside fact of this re volting crime.- Frank was con victed of murder, which convic tion was approved by the Supreme Court of Georgia and the Supreme Court of the United States, and it is generally believed that he was commuted to life imprisonment by the unlimited use of gold, and the manhood of Georgia refused to allow that wretch to escape his just dues, whom the evidence shows, to have been a degenerate of the lowest and vilest type, a moral pervert and moral leper aud a muderer. It is so easy to for get his victim, the sublimely beautiful, sweet and- innocent 15- year-old Mary Phtigan, whom he defiled, mutilated and murdered. Mary I'hagau has been Avenged. Two world's altitude records were broken at Buffalo, N. Y., a few days ago by a new model military biplane. The machine is capable of carrying VOO pounds of explosives and two men. In the record flight it carried two men, 1,200 pounds of explosives and reached a speed of 85 miles an hour. Members of the committee on buildings Aud grounds of the >'hi cago board of education h.ive adopted a resolution recommend ing the teaching of swimming in every public school. ft is esti mated that it will cost the city about $1,000,000 a year to add swimming to tho curriculum in every school. Famine has followed in the wake of the Haitien revolution and the American Red Cross has heeded an appeal for aid for suffering na tives of the island republic. Rear Admiral Caperton reports much suffering for lack of food. The Du Pont Powder Company has received an order, the largest in the history of the company, for ■M'"" "« non OOP and 70.000.000 pounds of powder for tho allies, according to reliable but uncon firmed reports in circulation a» Wilmington, Del. The value of the order is estimated at close to •70,000,060. STATI or Omo. OITT or TOI.BDO I „ Loo * Catj*rr. I Frank J. Cheney make* oaib Uiat ha |la ■anlor partner af tho Dim of K. J. Cheney * I ON dolnf bualneae In the city of Toledo, oounty and Stata aloreaald, and that aald Arm will pax tha mm or On* Hundred Dollar* for each and every oaaa of Catarrh (hat cannot bacuiad by|be uia of Hal I'a Catarrh Cure. FHANK J. CHBNBY. Sworn to bafora ha and aubaortbed In my preeanoe, thla *th day of Dooambar, A. D., MM A. W. OLBA-ON, IHatUl Notary Public, Haifa Catarrh Cura la taken Inlarnally.and act directly on tha blood and muooua aur laoea of tha eyatem. Send for Uatlmoalala F. J. CH BN BY * CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by all Omniata. no. Take Haifa Family Pllla for oonaUraUon. Constituted authorities in Mex ico, Carransa followers, are re sponsible for the bandit outrages in the lower Rio Grande country, accordiug to tho verdiet of a com mittee of promiuent citizens, headed by Congressman John H. Garner, who made a report to Governor Fei guaou of Texas and Maj. Gen. Funaton of the United States army, at San Antonio, Texas. sloo—Dr. B. Detchon'a Anti-Diu retic may be worth more to you —more to you than tIM It you have a child who soil* the bed ding from Incontinence of water during sleep. Cures old and roung alike. It arrests the trouble at once. |I.M. Sold by Oraham Drug Company. adv. Announcement comes from Ger many that a method has been dis covered by whleh that country can get on without cotton for mili tary supplies; that tha staple la no longer needed for the manu facture of exploalvea, etc., and that should England declare cot ton contraltand the action will not affect Germany in the leaac. Recognition by the United States of the governmeut of Gen-, eral Dartignenave, elected Presi dent of Haiti, by the National Assembly, will not be considered until the new executive haa demon strated h'.a ability to maintain peace and order. Meantime Ameri can naval force* under Rear Ad miral Caperton will remain in control of the aitnatlon on the island. NOT ENOUGH CHILDREN IW ncdn DM proper Itlum of Ad to ssfidestl; Bearish both bed* ad Mil daring the growiag period whea Mtan'l demands are greater then la mature Ufe. Tki* U shown la to mujr pile iictt, Icti bodkt. (rtontat oolds. tod lick of labttkt. For all aoch childrea we my with anmistakabls earnestness: They Med 8oott'» BmaMoa. and need it now. It posaesste ia comeatfated form the vui food eleaießts to enrich their blood. It chaagea weakaeee to HmMh; it makes . them (tardy tad strong. No alcohol. Scott * ■seas, ■nnatilll, M.|. Textile Education at the A. & M. , ■„ j College. A t Textile education in a val uable aaaet to a young man. Dur ing the past year five graduates of the Textile Department of the A. & M. College, Raleigh, have been appointed to responsible position* as follows: Overseer of Finishing in a mill lu Mm chusotts, making fancy' goods; Efficiency Engineer in Engineer ing firm, Fabric Designer in mill; Assistant Superintended in yarn mill; Superintendent in yarn mill; Mill Inspector for Federal Horti cultural Board. This Textile Department is the Textile School of North Carolina and to make this school represent ative of the State and, thoroughly up-to-date, the equipment will be considerably increased during the year by_the addition of dyeing machinery; knitting machinery; plain and fancy looms; combing machines for the manufacture of fine yarns. The addition of this machinery will inako this Textile school one of the best equipped in America for instruction in cotton manu facturing. The faculty of the Textile De partment has beeu rdded to by the appointment of Mr. Henry E. Dick as Instructor in carding, spinning and knitting. Mr. Dick has for the past Ave years beeu instructor in these subjects at the Lowell Textile School. Elon'i Athletic Prospects. Cor. of The Gleaner. Iljiad Coach Jack Johnsou re turned from Columbia this week where he has been spending the summer in studying methods of coaching and gymnasium work and is now putting the gymna siums, that for the young men d that for the young women, both in order preparatory to the open ing. He is also giving attention to getting the baseball, tennis and track grounds in strictly first cKss order. When asked as to the outlook for basketball and baseball next spring Mr. Johnson said that he had never known it to be so bright before. Practically all the old material of both teams will return and many strong new men for each sport have signed up. Mr. Johnson also said he expected to get out bis material as soon as the College opens for some stiff prac tice, and then he would be able to speak with more authority, though he is absolutely sure that he has the material to put out a winning quint in basketball as well as a highly respectable aggre gation in baseball. Mr. Johnson added that large attention would be given this year to track events aud to tennis. Aug. 21,1915. Ever Salivated by liaomeirmmiirei Calomel is Quicksilver and Acts like Dynamite on your Kidneys. Calomel loses you a day! You know what calomel if. It's mer cury ; quicksilver. Calomel is dan gerous. It crashes into your bile dynamite, cramping and sickening you. Calomel attacks the bones and should never be put into your system. ' * When you (eel bilious, sluggish, constipated and all knocked out, and feel that you need a dose of dangerous calomel, )uat remember that your druggist sells for 60c a large bottle of Dod son's Liver Tone, which la entirely vegetable and pleasant to take and la a per fect substitute for calomel. It is guaranteed to start your liver without stirring you up inside, and cannot salivate. Don't take Calomel 1 It makes you sick next day; it loses you a day's work. Doaaon's Liver Tone straightena you right up and you feel great. (Jive it to the children because it is perfectly harmless ana doesnt gripe. adv. Abraham Ruef, once a power in San Franolsoo politics, serving a 14-year sentence for offering a bribe to a San Francisco super visor, has been paroled. The Clerk GsanaM It. "A customer came into my store tbe other day and said to one of m? clerks, 'have yon anything thyt will cure diarrhoea?' and my clerk went and got him a bottle of Qharaber lain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, and said to him, 'jf this does not curs yon, I will not charge TOO a cent for it.' So he took it home and came back in a day or two and said he was cared," writes J. H. Berry A Co. .Salt Creek, Va. Obtain able everywhere. adv Arthur Johnson and A. C. Walker, arrested oq suspicion of being implicated la the murder of Chaa Abt, the eeeentrlo Raleigh miser, were discharged, no evi dence of conaequenoe. rer a Sprained Aakl*. If voa will get a bottle of Cham berlain's Liniment and observe the directions given therewith faithfully, yon will recovar in much less time than is usually required. Obtain able everywhere. adv Monday evening of last week the Wilkes Commercial club 'gave a banquet in honor ot Mr. Wade H. Harris, editor of the Charlotte Observer, who waa in WUkes. Ih law What T« Are Taking When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonle because the formula is plainly printed on every bottle . showing that it is Iron and Qui nine in a tasteless form. No | cure, BO pay.—B6c. adv. Where South Wat First. Th? fallowing facts hive been published. Many who knejv them , have forgotten, and othera never I knew them. A 'cultured woman'- 'recently grouped.them, fo» thr I Nathvillc Christain Advocate | Mt. Holy ok? haa thi reputitlon | of bring the pioneer in the higher education of women, but ths first women's college in the whole wo. Id lis, in 'Georgia. Of scientists, who I rank above Audubon, LeConto, ana Maury? The latter is called .by one the greatest of Americans, honor ed by every country save his own. "A Southern k doctor first used chloroform; a southern doctor founded the New York Poly clinic; a Southern (doctor (McGuire of Virginia) first proposed that doc tors be reguardei as nan-bel ig erents, free to serve the wound'd on both sides, forerunner of tha Red Cross doctor of today. Dr. Kinlock of Charleston, in 1882 ope ned ths abdoafjn of a wounded,. Confederate soldier and" remedied (hi trouble; tha patient recovered, 'ih" account is buried in a medical histoiy of the war and is seen only by an occasional student. Twenty- OJII; vtim later the same operation was (•riM.imeU by a Swiss doctor a few ir>t l.thi latei still by a New York ifiM't-ji, a- i heralded to the world "The first sewing machine, Co tton gin and steamtroat belonged to the South; ,t)lve first rulroid. to South Carolina, yet Southerners v were said 'o be impractical and un-' business-like.' The first ironclad battleship was' a Southern inven tion and was first ,ua»d by the Coi»- federates. The first submarine torpedo boat','hi first ironclad bat tries, lloating and stationary,, were built and t(us?d in ths defence of Charl -aton harbor. The i 1-frt d United States submarine recal sthe brave men of th 3 David who blew up the Hoosatanic and were never seen again, (their fate not bsinnr known until after the war. Would you teach the) youths of today finer things? HICKORY CHIPS. London is evidently trying to make Hotel life popular. It is advertising its girl-bell hops. He is indeed an optimist who saturated with this weather can maintain his poise and manage a smile. Possibly "LaPaloma" is more popular out of than in Mexico at present. It does not mean the duve of peace anyway. Now that the Unised States N«vy has a waiting list, it will hardly do to call naval service un popular. This country needs a waterproof citizenry. If Mexico does not admit a paci fier soon it will need only- an undertaker. If Lake bathers nowadays do not take along umbrellas they are liable to get wet. Apparently the United States cannot manage to do anything that will please Gen. Carranza. A Bulgarian paraphrase: "Come —:>■ llunoflftnia anil we'll help you." Wise amusements are beginning to make themselves accident proof and to advertise the fact. Mexico and Haiti being threat ened by famine, are more disposed to welcome American interven tion than they were. Mr. Bryan denies that he has any political aspirations. And it is so hard in this damp weather to get salt out of the shaken. Britain argues that our prem ises are wrong and so asks us to revise our conclusions. Germany asks us to revise our premises. George W. Perkins Is not very optimistic as to ths outlook for the progressive party In 1916, but George may have )ust got back hla chrcks from the Sink. iWell if the Mexican* should an nex Texaa, they would have to be have thereafter, or Texae would know the reaeon why. Some glrle are re'.egated to tha spinster clasa on account of their cuteneas. If a (young mm his money to bum it is easy to Induce some girl to sty.kai a match. Awe la the testing with which one woman rogarde another woman who wears imported gowna. Getting into debt la like drop ping from 'a balloon. Getting out again is fike climbing • greasy pole.' Amending Tennyeon these dsys to suR theee damn timae, "Wring out Ike old, wring in ths new. A heart of gold le better thin a cheek of bnee. Talk Isnt necessarily cheap even wh?n a nickle talke. When Jealoualy gete buey love, takee a vacation. It'e AS difficult to pay liabili ties It is to collect assets. Love makes the heart light and the parlor dark. Another Georgia Lynching. . Baiabridge. Oa.—John Riggans, a negro, was lynched by a poeee of , farmers ben He was accused of as sauhlag tbe wife of a tobacco planter. Prye Note May Have Effect. Washington.—Oa Its face deal lag , with a single case, the Importance of whlcu could be measured la a com paratively small number of doliors, the American note to the German 1 Foreign Offloe la regard to ths de struction of the sailing ehlp William P. Frye by the Prins Qui Frtedlch may ban results moat Important bj their bearing on tbe whole question of tbe treatment of neutral commerce by tbe European belligerents. Tbe Unit ed States acquiesces In the Oorman proposal that a board fix the value- Red Fox Saves His Brush . By H. M. EGBERT (Copyright. UU. by W. O. Chapman.) - Red Fox showed hi* teeth In a grin as he entered hi* barrow. He bad had no adventures worthy of the name that afternoon, but be meant to have some that evening. That aftemon he had merely slunk through the heather Investigating the food supply. New he curled himself up snugly In hlfc earth and prepared to sleep until nightfall. Red Fox was a bachelor. He was a monster fox, and one of the oldest of the county. His splendid fur was known to every huntsman over a ra dius of leagues. He had pitted Ms wits against the hounds time and again, and always won. Life was nothing without the spice of adventure. They say "a fox loves the hunt as much aa the men, the hounds, and the horses. Red rax waa hunted three times a week, and he knew every trick of his trade. Some day, when his strength and speed be gan to fall him, the inevitable end would come. The hounds would tear his slim body, his mask and pads and. brush would be cut off to adorn some hall. But of that Red Fox knew noth ing. He thought that he was Immor tal. -- When night came he slunk out and was soon going at full gallop across the fields. The house that he had In spected had a new chicken yard. It was the work of a moment for Red Fox to leap from a bough to the ooop He Began to Be Vaguely Dlstrssssd. and seize a fat cockerel by the nock. A M he waa carrying off hla prey he saw the farmer coma oat of hla houss and point a gun at'hlm. Red Fox waa Immediately in the line of lire. He did not know what a gun waa, but he knew that It apelled dan ger. He anarled and ahowed hla teeth, down and let Red Fox gallop away. For nobody darea to shoot a fox In England unleaa he want* to bring down upon hla head the wrath of a hunt-loving countryside. Red Fox bounded away toward hli barrow. But at a distance of five hun dred yarda some Instinct caused him to atop. He smelted something. II waa a man, somewhere near him, aad he knew that the man was not paaaivo ly hostile, aa all men were, but an In veterate enemy. Cautloualy ha skulked forward until he came within eight of hla burrow. Then, crouching In the undergrowth, he aaw the man banding over It Rad Fox akulked there until the man was gone. When at last, by devious ways, h« reached his burrow, he found tt closed. The man was the earth-etop per, and ha bad blocked Red Fax's home ao that ha should npt be able tc evade the hounds on the morrow. II would be a chaae to the death hl» death! Vaguely nneasy, Rad Fox sniffed about the place, and then, waned by his same Instinct, he trotted about hall • mile away, Dfto a gono patch, where he lay down and devoured the cockerel. Afterward he want to sleep, with one ear drooping and the other alert tor possible enemies. The sun had been up'some Urns whan Red Fox lazily stretched his limbs and prepared to stir. But as ho did ao he scented a peculiar and hated odor, so like his own that ha ahowed hla teeth In fury. It was not that of a rival fox, however, but of th« sniff lag hounds that surrounded the gone covert. They had scanted him and ware on his trail. Behind them rods the mas ter and whlppertn, and grouped la the distance was the crowd that had gathered for the hunting. ■ Suddenly, with a bay, the oldest hound daahed forward toward the spot where Red Fox lay. Aad Instantly Bad Fax had leaped from the covert aad waa racing along the ditch. The huntsman blew a blast upon his horn. The hounds bayed, the hunters hurried up at the gallop. In an in atant the whole field waa on the track of the hounds, aad they ware puraa tng the Isaa, lithe ahadow that raced over the Holds. The huntsmen strung oat la a long line. The houada daahed forward at fall spaed. They aaw Rad Fox ao longer, but hla aoeot waa plainly dte cernlble, aad though hla flrst hurst of spaed waa greater thaa theirs, tt ooald not last Red Fox, looking back, aaw the houade two Be Ids away, aad the horaea leaplag the hedgee. , Red Fox had been hunted asaay times, aad had always goes fires. Bat now be began to be vaguely distressed. His meal had been a hearty one, aad ho knew that his aarth was stopped. He came upon a brook, trotted down tt to throw off the eoeat. and emerged oa the same aids, half doahUag upon his tracks. Ho halted la a patch of farae to gat hla wtad. He ahowed hla teeth again, but this time la a laugh, aa he saw the bonds , valaly coating up and down the stream for the scent, lie trotted quietly along the bank. He waa roioleiag la the sao oass of his maneuver when with a load hoy the oldest houad took ap the eosat again; aad once man the whole Thirty-One-piece Dinner. Sets For GLEANER Subscribers i * Pay $2.95 and you get any set you want, and you get credit on The GLEANER for one year. 5» __ - fe Beautiful goods. Will make a nice present, or give excellent service on your own table. This ware is bought and shipped direct from the factory and you get it without paying a cent of profit. Each set is well packed in a box by itself, and will be delivered at THE GLEANER OFFICE, GRAHAM. "" Now t£e ~cha*e was on la eeriest Rad Fox pat forth all Bis a peed, elneo cunning waa no longer serviceable. He could etlll gate oa the hounds, ell ex cept a few of the older oaes, hardened by yean of the chase. Hounds aad horses wen string out ovsr the fields behind blm, but the old houad still led the remnants of the pack, dogged ly and untiringly. Olancing back over his shoulder. Red Fox saw that of all the horsss, only two were near him. One carried a man In a red bunting ooat, the other a woman. They were galloping side by elde. It seemed to Red Fox that then waa a certain hostility between them. Red Fox could scent friendship and enmity In human beings, as well aa anlmala —that waa of the eassnce of his lifs —and he notlced'how. In aplta of their neaness to each other, the woman kept her horse's head tuned from the man's horse. Red Fox Imag ined, also, that there was a sort of ri valry between them for his capture. He waa frightened for almost the flrst time In his Ufa. He began to dodge aad double. Suddenly ha re membered that the little stream which he had paaaed earlier that morning wound Its course not half a mile die taln, In some dense fir patches. It hs could make that he might throw the hounds off the soent They were not fifty paces away when he daahed into the fin Before him rolled tha brook, wider here, and afforded him the supreme opportunity that he required. He sprang into tha water and swam hard up stream, only hla whlakered face appearlag above the surface. As he swam between the overhang ing branches of the leafy haxel bushes that fringed the atream he heard the baying hounda bunt Into tbe fin He heard the leader'e bay change Into a whine and knew that hla pursuers wen at faalL Red Fox showed his teeth once man, this tlms in another laugh. Ho had baffled them, aa the wise old fox had done so many times before. The ground sloped sharply toward the brook. Red Fox, still swimming, aaw tha two horaea stop on the vsrge. Tha aaa palled back his animal, bul the girl's hone, slipping on the wel beak, fell over, pinning her beneath Its body. Instantly the man leaped to th ground and boldiag tha reiaa round his arm, bent over the other. "Muriell An you hurt? An you hurt daarr* he asked la aaxtoat tones. But the girl did not answer bias. Iks horse had fallen upoa her am aad shoulder, bruising thsas badly. Iks had faiated from the pain. The man kaalt at her aids. Hs spraag to hla feat agala, filled his hal at the stream, aad, returning, he gen aprlnkltag water lato her faoo. She sighed, aad at length opened her eysa "Muriell Muriel, dear! I have been a beast!' exclaimed the maa. "Can you ever forgive met I loved yea all the while." Her lips wen quivering, bat mats from mental thaa from physical paia ' "Tou told ma I waa a hard, anal womaa, Arthur I" aha aobbed. ; "I waamad. Toa an aa aagel, Ms rid. Forgive mat Bay that you wIE forgive ma!" "Do you love me, Arthur f Do yos really lon me, after aHT" Her votes was piteoua. "Arthur, 1 coaldat ttvs anises you loved me." Ho had extricated bar from aadss the animal, which now scrambled tc Its feet aad stood looking down apos them. Ho raised tha girl aad drew hei lato his arma. "I love you forever aad ovsr, dear,* ha said. She leaned bar head upoa hla shoal dsr. Their Upe met Tha maa took something from his pookst aad slippsl it tack tn*ft tta Aocvitomtd plioti II sacircled the girl's Bager, aad tha Ms ssoad soUtain sparkled brightly. •addsaly the girl pointed lato the brush. "Look! Leak, Arthurl" ska a» eialmed. "Tha little raacall I havaat ths heart to call the hoaada," aaswsnd the Aad- Rad F*. atffl uatakaa, loped haosewaad at aa eeey gait Oaoemore he had saved that aplsadid far akd brash, aad with his pads he delicately wiped the water from the aeask which waa aot yet haaging tt aoeee haate man's hail. "Ike papers say the parsulai armies an sweeping throagh the coaa try." "I suppoee that accounts for ths panned ones duetlng." General Scott seems to have the kind of a man Villa his been de etiaed to meet all along. . - - Coble-Bradshaw Compnay BURLINGTON, N. C. Car Load Ontario Grain Drills JUST IN See Us And Get Prices Before You buy—We'll Save You Money OLIVER PLOWS TYSON & JONES and HIGH POINT Buggies, and Harness—All kinds. Paints and Oils. Shelf Hard ware of all Kinds. i Car Cement Just In--Prices Right COBLE-BRADSHAW CO. • Trustee's Sale of 'Real Estate. Under and by virtue of power of tale given In two oertaln deeds of trust executed by M. 0. Flsnnlgan and wife, Laura PlannlKan, on January lath, MIS, and May ffftb, 1914, respec tively, and recorded In tM offloe of Heilster of Deed! for Ate mail oe oonntj in Book No. M, pern IK, and Book No. t2, page «7. etc., re spectively, the undersigned Trustee will offer for ale at publle outer; to the hlf beat bid ler tor oaah, at the oourt bouae door inOra- wont;, North Carolina, at SATURDAY, SEPT. 25,1915, the following daacribsd tracts of land*' FlretTreot—A certain lot or parcel of land |ria« and being sltuats between tke lntersec Mo if last Harden and Bast Kim Streets sttawSs A 2n^\. , JKEsr " a Beginning at aa Iron bolt, aoraerwlth Z. dir. tbe Intersection of Bast Harden street and Haw Hirer road; thenoe 8 41W U7.7 ft loan Iron bolt at the Intersection of Bast Kim at. ft to aa Iron bolt; tbeooe K4V.W rrift to an iron bolt; tbeooe II HK Wmft loan lion bolt; iKahea N » w ISO ft to tbe beginning, eontalntnc two (I) acres, aon or lees, on wake* said lot there are lour dwelnaga. 8 sco ad Tract tot Wo H of the plot of tbe yianalgan land looated on Haw KlrarKoad which Blot is recorded In tbe offloe of Begl* Mr of Deeos for Alsmanne oounty. In Book Mo. 1, pags ft, to wbleh aid plot rsference is hereby expressly made. On this lot Is ritn stad a three-room oottage oocupted by tan- Bare aad except certain portions that bare baas releaseil froas tbe abova descriptions. ™* *** 1M BDk/oNT^tEubt'uo .Trusted. Notice of Truetee's Sale of Seal Estate. Coder and by Tlrtaa of Ibe power of sale nonlalaad In a tartala deed ci trait ex«- eniad on tbe latday of July, IM4, by W. J. M^^y.-iJiSraAOT'ss; puraoaofssiariaglhopajmatof aaertaln lag been made in the payment of aud bond ana the lateieet thereon a* maturity, said deed of Hast batag duly isnordsd and pro bated In the oSno ggtaa Baglater of Deeda f OESDAY, BEPT. 7, 1915, at tha ooart hooaa door of ll«m%nooanty. at Ureham. North Oarollna.nl 1M o'clock p. a, oner for ah at rsWt Malta to (be big beet bidder, tar aaah. the fallowing de ssrlbed real estate, to-wit: Certain lots or parcels of land on Andrews ■Mat. in tha ally of Burlington, Alamaaee oouaty, Berth Carolina, known and deecrlb ed aa (oU No, M and No M In the aaw surrey, the aaae bain, a part of lot No. HI aad lot go. 1M aooordlng to the plaa of asld dty of T ALu^ l %^ifHi^ l awrATß op, j True tee. Notice of Trustee's Sale of Real Estate. Under and by virtue of tbe power of ale contained in a certain deed of trust exeouted l>7 J- H. fates and hli wife, Annie dates, on theSrd day of December, ISIS, to tbe Ala mance lnaursnoe 4 Heal Bstate Company for Ibe purpose of securing ibe payment of a certain bond of even date therewith, due and payable on tbe Srd day of December. Ml 4, de fault haying been made In the payment of said bond and tbe Interest thereon at ma turity, aid deed of Irani being duly probated and recorded In the offloe of tbe Beglster of Deeds for Alamanoe county. In Book of Mort gagee and Deeds of Trust No. CI, at page 1 7, tbe uodeMgned Trustee will, on MONDAY, SEPT. 20, 1915, at 140 o'clock p. m„ at the oourt bouse door of Alamaaee oounty. Graham, North Caro lina, offer for sal* at public auction to the highest bidder for oaab. the following de scribed property, to-wit .• First Treat—A oertaln tract or parcel of land In Alamanoe oounty and Bute of *ortb Carolina, adjoining tna lands of J. W, Gates aud others, and bounded as follows: Beginning at an Iron bolt on (Mlmer Street onoomerof T. 9. Nicholson's lot: running South todeg W 100ftloanlron bolt; fhinti HK dag 10 m W WO ft to an Iron bolt «»/• W OaUa' line; thence N W deg 1 with said Oalas* line luo feet on corner of T. O. Nicholson's lot; tbeooe with said N'cbol aoa'sllaaHNdegWm B ilXJft tha beginning, ecu mining about one-half an sore, more or laaa Oathla lot la looaled a six-room modem oottage. . Seoood Tract—A oertaln tract or parcel of land attested In the town of Burlington, Ala ssaaee oounty and -lata of North Carolina, an« deaorlbed aa followa: Being a portion of lot No. >of the town plot of Burlington, sit uated on the Souths de of Davia near Came ron street: •- Beginning at a stake or bolt on Dsvis street. Ml feat from tbe oorner of Da via aad UaaM rpn streets: running tbeooe parallel with Cameron street, fit feet U> a take or bolt: thenoe Northweat ltd feet lo V, H. Snyder's Bne: tbebee with said Snyder's line to Darts street 1» feet; thenoe wllh Davla street KM feet to the beginning. T co„ Trustee. i oven (XPimiNCi CorrmowT* Ac. Anyoaassedlag a skat ah and deaertatlea mar Nobody aeema to hear anything any more iof a certain war with Sertrfa. . .
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 26, 1915, edition 1
2
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