THE GLEANER
ISSUED BVKIIY TUUUSPArf "
J. P. KLRNODLE, Editor.
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Entered at the Postofflce at Graham,
N. C., as second class matter.
ORAHAM, N. C., Aug. 10, 101 G.
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION
CALLED.
The Democratic Convention for
Alamance county, NorMi Carolina,
* for the nomination o£ a member
of the House of KejiresentaUves,
and for all of our county offices,
except t»lie Clerk of the Superior
Court, in hereby called to convene
ut the Court House in Oraham, N.
C., at 12 o'clock, noon, on Saturday
August 19, 1916. Hon. 'J'. VV. Bickett
or some other prominent Democrat
Will bo present and address the
convention.
Every "Democrat in Alamance
county is ex-officio a to
this convention anu is cordially and
most urgently invited to be pres
ent and take an active part in this
convention.
This July 19, 1910.
WM. 11. CAHKOLL, Ch'm n
County Dem. Ex. Ci^oj.
Plana for the reorganization and
perpetuation of the Progressive party
as a National political organization
were adopted at Indianapolis, Ind.,
Thursday, at a conference of Bull
Moose representatives. The con
ference, after a heated discussion,
decided it would be impracticable to
reassemble the Progressive National
Convention and fill the vacancy on
the national ticket caused by Theo
dore Roosevelt's declination of the
nomination for President. Instead
the organization will put up au elec
toral ticket in every State where there
is the nucleus of an organization
left, bearing the naino of John M.
Parker of Louisiana, noiniueo for
Vice-President, in the hope of, per
haps electing enough presidential
eloctors who might prove the bal
ance of power in the event of a close
contest between the two parties.
The relief fund for the Hood wnf
ferers in tho Western part of the
Stato lius grown to more than &{('»,-
000, and continncH to grow. All
and more tlian can bo secured will
not be sufficient to tide tho stricken
ones over till they can support them
selves. The Congressional appro
priation will be expanded under the
diroction of the Secretary of War,
while a relief committee will direct
the expenditure of othor funds. Uov.
Craig and other State officials have
gone to view the situation and ac
quaint themselves with the urgent
mod of the sufTererj.
Accounts of destruction by the
Hoods on the 15th and l>th in
Wostorn North Carolina do not in
dicate that the damage was less
than at first stated. The ruin
wrought was all and more than was
or conld be told in first reports, for
the destruction back from the chan
nels of quick information was hard
to get at on account of thu high wa
ters ond the destruction of bridges.
• The Deutschlond's getting away
was chronicled last week. She slip
ped by the allies' cruisers lying out
- , from Hampton lioads. Since, there
haa been nothing heard of the under
sea craft. If the cruisers had chased
,- and captured her the countries ol
the allies would have made it known,
'' certain. The next news to be heard
will, no doubt, come from Germany
that alio has safely hoijjt
ward trip.
Crop reports havo sent the prices
of wheat, corn and cotton sharply on
the upgrade. There is a big short
age according to government re
ports. Wheat advanced more than
eleven cents on the Chicago market
yesterday. Corn also made a sharp
advance. As to cotton, it appears
* "that it will go to 16c.
Candidate Hughes' speeches are
' ■»to full of errors that he has been
called upon to make corrections.
This state of affairs does not look
well for one aspiring to be the Chief
Executive of the greatest country oil
earth. He seems to be |>oorly ]K>sted
or illy advised.
The Southern Railway Co., though
an immence loser by the July Hood,
ia generously hauling free of charge
anything intended lor the relief of
those in the stricken counties.
The Wilkes counjy Farmers'
Union favors a bond issue of $250,-
000 to build roads and bridges in
Wilkes county.
In Union county a shotgun in
the hands of a 9-year-old colored
boy was accidentally discharged
and a 14-year-old campauiou was
killed.
Whitsett Items.
Cor. of The Glcanur.
George W. Hoffman of I-'a.y-'
etteville is here on h visit with
friends. lie and his brother are
now conducting a jewelry store.
Mrs. Samuel P. Whitt, Mrs.
Kflie Clapp, and Mr. and Mrs. J.
W. Summers returnod yesterday
from a trip to Crescent Where
they went to attend the annual
celebration of the Nazereth Or
phans home which is the institu
tion of the Reformed church in
this State.
Lawrence S. Ingle, son and
daughter from South Boston, Va.,
are here on a visit with Mr. and
Mrs. Alexander I'hiUippie. Mr.
Ingle was a student here twenty
eight years ago, and after a tour
over the western part of the Unit
ed States located in South Boston,
where he has made quite n suc
cess in life. While here he spent
a day visiting his old home on the
banks of the Alamance and other
well-remembered places in the
community.
Edward B. Wheeler and B. L>.
Clapp have returned from a busi
ness trip to Chapel Hill.
J. 15. Whitsett who has been
quite unwell for some days, is
much better at this writing, lie
is now in his eightieth year.
Prof. C. C. Wimbish came in
last night after a visit of some
days in Pitt and other eastern
counties.
.The services at the Whitsett M.
E. church which begins at :i p. m
next Sunday will continue through
the week following.
Misses Georgia, Minnie and Liz
zie Clapp were visitors to (ireens
_boro yestofday. \
Mrs. E'lward Clapp is eiitertain-
I ing this week some relatives from
Philadelphia, who are in the
' South for their vacation,
i Miss Ethel I'hiUippie has ae
, cepted a school in Surry county
I for the coming year.
Miss Addie Boone will te.vch at
Jamestown again the coining year
' where she has held a position for
> some time.
It. U. Ellington leaves today for
: a trip of some days to Stokes
county.
Whitsett, N. C., Aug. 4th.
Inheritance Taxes.
Forty-two Slates levy a tax on
inheritances. The revenues de
rived range from $ -115 in Nevada
and in Georgia to $3,500,-
000 iu California and $8,203,000
in New York.
Iu North Carolina the revenue
from inheritances in 1!'14 was
$11),89'.i. Thirty-two States de
rived a larger revenue from this
source. Six of these were South-
i«rn States, an follows: Viiginia
$42,000, TOXIIH $411,000, Oklahoma
$4 1,000, Louisiana S'J7,OOO, Ton
nessee #210,1)00, and Kentucky
Tlio litw sooins to amount to al
most nothing in Okluhoiiut. (Joor-
Kia, Nevada, Mtid North, Dakota.
It (IOOH not yet amount to much in
North Carolina.
In Kansas, Nebraska, Ohio, and
Wyoming the inheritance tax
revenues go into the county treas
uries.
In California $260,000 of the in
heritance tax money went last
year into the public school fund,
$176,(*00 into the pension fund for
teachers, and the balance,
1175,»(>«) into the general fund of
the State treasury.
The first Slate to levy a tax on
inheritances was Pennsylvania
290 years ago.
Only six States have no inherit
ance tax; South Carolina, Florida,
Alabama, Mississippi, New Mexi
co and Khodc Island.
These details of information arc
gleaned from a speech in Con
gress by Chas. F, Curry, Repre
sentative from California, who
opposes Secretary McAdoo's pro
positi to levy a Federal tax on in
heritances. He wants such reve
nues reserved for the State treas
uries.
Suicide and Two Other Deaths at
Camp Glenn.
Private Itucon of the Hendeisoti
company, Third Infantry, shot
himself through the head with a
rifle at Camp Glenn Sunday night.
No cause assigned except tem
porary insanity, lie died iu a
few minutes.
Private Dock Head of Company
I), (ioldsboro, was stricket> with
a lung hemorrhage at Camp Ulouti
about 5 o'clock Sunday morning
and died in 10 minutes. This is
the second member of the same
company to die since the mobiliza
tion .
Ever Salivated by
Calomel! Horrible!
Calomel is Quicksilver ami
Acts like Dynamite on
Your Kidneys.
Calomel loses you a day! You
know what calomel is. It's mer
cury ; quicksilver. Calomel is dan
gerous. It crashes into your bile
dynamite, cramping and sickening
you. Calomel attucks the bones
and should never be put in*o your
system.
When you feel bilious, sluggish,
constipated and all knocked out,
and feel that you need a dose of
dangerous calomel, Just remember
that your druggist sells for st)c a
large bottle of Dodson's Liver
Tone, which is entirely vegetable
and pleasant to take and is 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 I It makes
yoo sick next day; it loses you a
day's work. Dodson's Liver Tone
straightens you right up and you
feel great. Oive it to the children
because it is perfectly harmless ana
doesn't gripe.
adv.
REFLECTIONS ON THE FLOOD
Chapel Hill News Letter.,
Most of us would never do any
thinking at all, if we were not
started out of a vegetative exis
tence by massive and spectacular
events.
The recent flood disaster in our
mountains are an illustration in
point. They are so appalling and
appealing as to arrest popular at
tention; but commonplace, cum
ulative cause have been for years
setting the stage for this tragedy
and no warnings whatsoever have
beeu sufficient to arouse general
public interest and set in play
policies for adequate prevention
and protection.
But enormous losses have now
overtaken railroad , authorities,
hydro-electric companies, and
mill and factory owners. Capita)
is intelligent and sensitive. In
vestors have been a keen sense of
futurity, and dividends must bo
insured against calamity. The
industrial development of our
Hill Country is at stake,|and flood
devastation like this must never
occur in this if it cau be humanly
prevented.
Had Farming and Had Forestry.
The commonplace causes are
two: (1) bad forestry methods on
the pai;t of our timber companies
and (2) bad methods on part of
our farmers. Together they have
decreased the amount of slow and
safe underground drainage that
is promoted by wooded areas and
year-around cover crops.
The lumber companies have
savagely stripped our mountain
slopes bare of timber and left the
slashes ready for forest fires from
any chance spark. Our Hlil
Country farmers have failed to
make this region what nature in
tended it to be—a pasture land
paradise, an area of ham and ba
con, beef and mutton production,
a dairy farming region filled with
silos, cheese factories, creameries
and condenseries, a live stock re
gion protected by permanent pas
tures to the mountain tops, and
by well built terraces for crops
that r»quire clean culture.
Inevitable Penalties.
These are the causes that have
decreased underground drainage
iu this region and increased the
swift, destructive, overrun in sea
sons of heavy rainfall. Asa resnlt
crops are destroyed and iu cer
tain areas the people face starva
tion. But also*!ho hill side farms
are gone and unprotected spaces
set iu clean cultured crops are
bare to the rocks below. Bottom
lands are covered with silt, sand
and debris. Power sites are de
stroyed; mills, factories and
bridges have floated off like straws
and Improved pnplio highways
ami railroad tracks have beeu
torn up for hundreds of miles; in
dustries have been crippled or an
nihilated; an a heavy burden laid
upon the shoulders of taxpayers
j for years to come.
I)iltn»lve Intelligence.
HUM not the time couio to regu
late our timber companies with
reiiMouable statutes ami adequate
supervision, and to develop a well
supported, effectivo forestry poli
cy? If ton million dollars in bond
issues will prevent a repetition of
such a disaster it would be a wise
investment.
And intelligent,self-interest will
surely bring organized big busi
ness uito co-operation with the
utfiuntaiii farmers, to establish a
proper system of hillside farming,
and to reward them with abund
ant market facilities and reason
able profits in the required new
order of mountain agriculture?
Farm and homo demonstration
agents are needed in every moun
tain county; baby-beef clubs, pig
and poultry clubs, ham and bacon
factories, cheese factories, cream
erica and condenseries, s'ock
breeding associations, county
fairs, cattle shows, improved high
ways, co operative market and
credit uuions, roil road facilities,
conveniences, and advantageous
rates.
Ilobsoii's Choice.
All those forms of agriculture
can tlourish in our
gions; but not, unless the farmers
can market their products at a
fair price and profit. Which is to
say, a proi>er hill country farm
system waits upon the intelligent
assistance of organized big busi
ness—railroad companies, powqt
companies, timber concerns,
hauks, mill and factory owners.
If we do not revise our systems
of forestry and farming in the
mountain country, every dollar
that big business has invested in
this region is increasingly in peril
year by year.
• 100 ItrHard, »IUO
The readers of thin paper will tic to
Irani that there m at least one dreaded die
rem* that fcleoce turn been able to cure In all
It* »• niul that I* catarrh. Catarrh being
ir really influence! hy constitutional oondP
lions rvquirrs constitutional treatment.
Hair# Catarrh Medicine Is taken Internally
mit«l act* through thr lllixd on the Mucous
Hurfaces of the Mjrstein thereby destroying
thr loundaliuii of the disease. tffvliiK the pa
thtit strenyth hy building up the const It u
tu»ii and uaalstlna nature in dolnir Its work.
The proprietors nave s • mu.'h faith In the
Curative pcftvera uf Hall's Catarrh Medicine
t»>at thry offer One Hundred Iktllars for an>
ease that It falls to cure Heud for list of tea
litoonials. c
Adores* K. J. Cheuey A Co., Toledo,.Ohio.
•HJI*I hy ail i>ru*ifl»t, TV, ' ad\
The people of Asheville ask that
the national government apply its
appropriation for flood sulTers in
replacing highways and that the
people be given employment. It
is work that they ask for and not
charity.
Ju>t the Thing lor Diarrhoea.
"About two y 'aril ago I hail a
severe attack of diarrhoea which
lasted over a week." writes W.
C. Jones, Buford, N. I)."' "I became
so weak I could not stand upright.
A drurfgKist reeominemded Cham
tains' Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea
Hcmed.V. The first dose relieved
me and within two days I was well
ever.'' Many druggists recom
mend this remedy because they
know it is reliable.. Obtainable
everywhere. H \ adv.
Eton College News.
. 4>
Cor. ot The Gleaner.
There is great satisfaction
among the Alumni and Athletic
circles of the College generally in
th» election of Mr. H. E. Atkinson
HH assistant coach and gymnasium
dire tor for next year. Mr. At
kinson lias made a splendid record
this summer as pitcher of the
Durham team and is considered
one of the best all-round athletes
in this State. Before his advent
into professioaal baseball "Big
Hoy' or "Deacon" or "Parson" as
he is indiscriminately called in
sporting circles had the agreeable
habit of pitching Elon teams to
victory in her intercollegiate
games, lie was also centre in the'
Varsity baseball teams for two
seasons, during which time th'f
Elon pig skin tossers captu red the
State Intercollegiate Pennant.
Mr. Atkinson is thoroughly in
sympathy with the ideals obtain
ing here for clean athletics be
cause Ift has himself developed in
the midst of these ideals. lie and
Coach "Jack" Johnson who is tak
ing special athletic stunt work at
the Jlemenway Gymnasium, Har
vard Uni'\A)rsily, this summer ex
pect to give the Elon varsity men
the very final touches in expert
coaching dur.ng the coming sea
son.
The grapnate manager, Prof. A.
L. Hook, announces qhat he has
about finished making his-sched
ule for the next season and that
they include the major teams in
North aud South Carolina and
Virginia. He is very optimistic
over the outcome for athletics this
time. '
The next important matter that
is yet unsettled in respect to inter
collegiate athletics this year is the
pending arrangement with Yale
to play Elon in the city of Greens
boro during the Easter vacation
season when Yale plans to make
a tour of the Southern States. The
latest word from Yale's manager,
Mr. E. J. Winters, who is sum
mering at Holyoke, Mass., is to
the effect that he will conclude
arrangements with the Elon var
sity baseball squad if dates and
other technicalities can be ar
ronged. alt is not certain that Mr.
Winters will bring the represent
atives of Old Eli to North Caro
lina as yet, though he expects to
do so and says he will bo glad to
make arrangements with Elon be
cause of the largo number of Yale
men on the* Elon faculty who are
naturally interested in Altna Mater
and the success of the Yale team
in the South.
Elon College, Aug. fith.
John Savage, colored, was elec
trocuted in the State penitentiary
at Raleigh Friday for the murder
of an aged white man in Wash
ington county.
Caldwell county will borrow
$50,000 at once to repair and re
build bridges and roads washed
away by the flood.
The President has appointed J.
O. Carr of Wilmington district
attorney to succeed Hon. F. D.
Winston, resigned and appointed
Shperior Court Judge.
The State Supreme Court will
meet for the fall term A ugust 28th.
Applicants for law license will be
examined on that day.
John Stanly of Craven county,
18 years old, carrying a revolver
aud the weapon was accidentally
discharged, resulting in his death.
Democratic State headquarters
were opened in Raleigh Tuesday,
last week, and a meeting of the
State committee was called for
the Bth.
The Chatham Mfg. Co.'s mills
at Elkin, damaged in qhe recent
flood, will be rebuilt and enlarged.
The purpose is to double the ca
pacity.
Some parties undertook to pull
off a prize light in Durham. It
had not progressed far when the
officers took possession and put
an end to the matter.
In Durham since the first of the
month all hoteltf and cafes must
serve milk to guests from indi
vidual bottles, opened in the pres
ence of the guest.
The barn and grain aud wagons
in the barn of Hen Barnhnrdt,
county, were destroyed
by fire last week, which resulted
from lightning.
Mr. Hill Shelburn, 24 years
old, of Greenville, committed sui-*
cide Thursday night by shooting
himself with a pistol. No cause
assigned.
Cases of infantile paralysis—
the disease that has been epidemic
in New York city for several
woeks—have been reported at
various places in the State. Two
wises are reported at Concord and
one at Kaunapolis.
Ambrose Whisnant ol Rhodium,
charged with the murder of John
llice at bis home in Catawba
county March 26, 1015, has been
arrestod and is in jail at Lenoir.
Chief Justice Walter Clark of
North Carolina is spoken of as
one of the United States commit:-
sioners to negotiate with the
Mexicans over the questions at
issuo between the United States
and Mexico.
It is announced that arrange
ments have been made for the
erection of a magnificent tourist
hotel on the site of the old Kenil
worth hotel in Asheville. The
grounds will be made in keeping
with the hotel.
Rev. Dr. Neal L. Anderson, who
has been pastor of the First Pres
byterian church of Winston-Salem
for the past eight years, has re
signed to take the presidency of
the Austin (Texas) Theological
Seminary.
"Safety Firet"-What it Means in the
Home.
Safety Engineering.
Solomon said: "Wisdom is the
principal thing, therefore get wis
dom, and with all thy getting, get
understanding." In what better
manner can this wisdom be used
than in getting a good undet
standing of the best ways in which
to safeguard our home?
A home to bo perfectly safe
should have a good foundation.
First of all, it must be built on
the principle of cleanliness. Clean
liness should be practiced by every
housewife. The house should be
kept clean. Care should be ta
ken that no decayed vegetables
are allowed to remain In some se
cluded corner of the pantry.
In a home whore there are chil
dren, care should be exercised to
keep matihes out of the reach, of
inquisitive little fingers. In a
neighboring city the mother of
two little tots left them alone in
the honse for a short time. On
her return she was horrified to
see her 3-year-old boy enveloped
in flames, from which he died a
few hours later. Had she put
into practice the principle of
"Safety First," by putting the
matches under look and key, if
need be, the parents would not
now be mourning the loss of that
little life.
The practice of filling4he gaso
line stove while burning is very
dangerous. Many lives are lost
each year in that way. The gas
oline stove, at its best, is a danger
ous convenience. The day is not
fat distant when it will be dis
carded for the electric devices,
which are being perfected in such
a manner as to make the cost of
operating nominal.
Compliance with the laws of the
by painting the gasoline can
red would prevent the mistaken
use of gasoline for kerosene,
which is another cause of the loss
of a great many livts and. the
burning of many homes.
The practice of keeping poison
ous drugs in the household medi
cine chest is another source of
many accidents. It may be seen
from the instances mentioned that
"Safety First" should occupy a
prominent place in every home.
It is as necessary there as it is in
the largest factory or shop.
BUMPER BABY CROP
75,612 Babies Reported Born in North
Carolina Last Year.
According to preliminary sta
tistics compiled Aug. Ist by the
Bureau of Vital Statistics, there
were 75,612 babies born in North
Carolina in 1915, says State Board
of Health Bulletin. This is equiv
alent to a birth rate of approxi
mately 31 per thousand of popu
lation. This birth rate is con
siderably above the average birth
rate reported in the United States
and is particularly gratifying
when we note that during the
same period, 1915, there were only
0,807 deaths reported from babies
less than one year of age, or ap
proximately 9 per cent, of the
babies born during the year.
While ordinarily this is a much
lower percentage of deaths than
would be expected in a State with
a mixed population, and while it
is much lower than that reported
by the average in the registration
area, we believe that the greater
number ot these deaths were pre
ventable and as health conditions
improve in North Carolina we may
confidently expect a correspond
ing reduction in the percentage of
baby deaths reported.
Some interesting facts about
the baby death rate are that the
counties having the highest death
rates were in general those coun
ties known to have one or more of
the following conditions: First, a
low percentage of white popula
tion; second, a low per capita
wealth; third, a high percentage
of illiteracy and, conversely, those
counties having the lowest baby
death rate in general have the
greatest per capita wealth, the
best schools and the largest per
centage of white population.
It is predicted that it will be
nearly three weeks before trains
will be running into I,enoir again,
says The Landmark.
You Can Cure That Backache.
Pain along the hack, dlulneM, headache
and gennerai languor. Uet a package of
Mother Gray's AuatrallaLeaf, the pleasant
root and herb cure for Kidney, Bladder
and ITrlnarir troubles. Whu you feel all
rundown, tired, weak and without energy
uae this remarkable combination naturea
hert>a and ruota. Aa a regulator It baa no
equal. Motbar Oray'a Australian.Leaf la
Sold by Druggists or sent by mall forSOeU
■ample aent free. Address, The Mother
Uray Co., Le Boy. N. T.
Walter Smith, a negro, has been
arretted, suspected of having been
guilty of holding up with a revol
ver and robbing Raleigh citizens.
Itch relieved in 20 minute* by
Woodford's Sanitary Lotion. Never
fails. Sold by Graham Drug Co.
VICTORY FOK CAHDI I.
Hamilton County Herald, Chatta
nooga, Tenn., June 23, l!ll(i.
We are rejoiced at the great vic
tory won by Z. C. Patten, Jr., and
the Chattanooga Medicine Co., at)
Chicago.
The jury returned a verdict in
favor of the makers of Cardui, the
woman's tonic, and held the Ameri
can Medical Journal guilty of libel
for publishing that Cardui is a nos
trum without merit.
In short, the United States Court
has planted the seal of its approval
upon the remedy Cardui after one of
the most exhaustive trials in the his
tory of the country.
All Chattanooga will rejoice, and
the verdict will attract nation-wide
l attention. advt
t> f f ft f f
l ROGER CASEMENT
[ Executed In London for High
,( . t Treason. v
Shoot Clerk, Steal $37,000.
Five motor car bandits held up pay
clerks entering the plant of the Bur
roughs Adding Machine cotnpany, In
Detroit, Mich., and after shooting one
of the clerks, escaped with bags said
to have contained $37,000.
Employes of the Burroughs plant, In
another car, gave chase, and a running
fight ensued down Second avenue. One
of the robbers was reported wounded.
The bandits were armed with rifles.
Hundreds of employes of nearby mo
tor car factories witnessed the hold-up.
Later Teports said the Burroughs
guards apparently failed to realize
what was occurring, and did not at
tempt to resist until too late. One
guard said he thought a motion pic
ture scenario was being Btage l._
Stork viilta Woman on Train.
A baby was born between Har
rlgburg pnd Lancaster on a Penn
sylvania railr(sHd train. The mother,
wife of a German clergyman, was
on the way from Chicago to
Rahway, N. J., where she and her
husband- planned to spend their va
cation. The visit of the stork was
made In a Pullman car. Physicians on
the train attended the woman. Ar
rangements were made to take the
mother and child to a hospital In Phil
adelphia.
Baldwin* Get Big War Order.
Officials of the Baldwin Ixicomotlve
works, In Philadelphia, declined to
confirm or deny a report from
New York thaj the company had re
ceived an additional order for shells
from the allies, totalling $15,000,000.
The report had It that the shellß were
of the six-inch and twelve-Inch sizes
and were to be delivered as fast as
made along with shipments of other
orders placed by the allies some time
ago.
Baby Bites Golf Ball; Diet.
Marie Vocatquro, 14 months, was
crossing the dining room of her home
In Nutley, N. J., when she discovered
a portion of a golf ball. She crawled
over to seize it In her little hands.
Her teeth cut Into the acid-filled core
and the preparation spurted down her
throat. She was unconscious when
she was found by her mother.
Boys Catch Big Bass.
William Kantnor and Harold Meek,
aged 11 and 12 years, of Schuylkill
Haven, caught a ten-pound bass at tha
Red pond. The giant Ksh, measuring
riVer thirty Inches, was seen by the
hoys coming Into shallow water and
wading in they cut off Its retreat and
threw it out on dry land.
Lightning Kills Woman.
Mrs. Frank Pardoe, forty-three
years old, of Sunbiiry, Pa., was In
stantly killed by lightning. A nine
days old baby In a crib nearby was
unhurt and the woman's husband and
te nother children who were In the
same room escaped injury.
W. Va. Democrats for Suffrage.
Woman suffrage In West Virginia
is believed by suffrage workers to be
a strong probability following receipt
of a telegram from Clarksburg, where
the state Democratic convention Is In
session. The convention came out
flatly for .woman suffrage.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELPHIA—FIAJUR —Quiet;
winter clear, $5.25@5.75; city mills.
$6.75®7.25.
HYE FLOUR—Steady; per barrel,
|4.60@>6.
WHEAT—Quiet; No. 2 red, $1.33®
1.86.
CORN —Firm; No. 2yellow, 94®95c.
OATS—Steady; No. 2 white, 51
®ft<RY Live, steady; hens,
20® 21c; old roosters, 14® 16c. Dressed
steady: choice fowls, 22V4c; old roos
ters 15 He.
BUTTER —Steady; fancy creamery,
12c per lb.
BOG 6 Steady; selected, 34@>35c;
aearby, SOc; western, 30c.
Llv* Stock Quotations.
CHICAGO— HOGS—IOc higher; mix
ed and butchers, 19.15@10.15; good
heavy, $9.50® 10.15; rough heavy, s9®
9.40; light, $9.40® 10.10; pigs, $8.60®
9.35; bulk, 9.35®9.95.
CATTLB—IO®2Sc higher; becvoa,
$6.85010.50; cows and helfets, $3 75®
8.88; stackers and feederß, $5.75®
7.75: Texans, $7.10@8.40; calves,
>10.50® 12.50.
BHEHP—Strong; native and west/
era, $3.50tt8.40; lambs, $8.«6@12.50.
Vou Know What You Are Taking
When you take Grove's Tasteless
Chill Tonic because the formula lr
plainly printed on every bottle
showing that It is Iron and Qui
nine in a tasteless form. No
cure, no pay.—6oc. adv
It is reported from Mexico that
Gen. Carranza will retire as first
chief-of the consttitutionalist forces
to become a candidate for Presi
dent of the Republic. He is In
eligible to the Presidency as long
as he retains his military posi
tion.
Cure lor Cholera Morbus.
"When our little boy, now ten
old, was a baby he was cured
of cholera morbus by.
lain's Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea
Ramedy," writes Mrs. Sidney Sim
mons? Fairhaven, N. Y. ''Since
then other members of my family
have used this valitaole medicine
for colic and bowel trouble with
good satisfaction and I gladly en
endorse it us a remedy of excep
tional merit.'' Obtainable every
where. • udv.
V
r *
| , THE CREAM OF ALL ICE CREAMS !
i . XI
i > Let them have this refreshing dessert several
i days a week —its so delicious, so cooling, so pure * i
| Ask for the "VELVET KIND" at the nearest \
i /lealer^XYou'll find your ideal ice cream I
"N | ■, TODAY > •>
% .. ;% 'V
, The "VELVET KIND" Ice Cream
Sold by Graham Drug Company
I • N I ■ ■
"he loon Motor Car Co,
At W. E. Petty's Old Stand
GRAHAM, N. C.
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Repairs for all standard cars sold here.
Cars for Hire. - - Open All Hours.
loon Motor Car Co.
Phone 558 J. GRAHAM, N. C.
North Carolina College ol Agriculture
And Mechanic Arts.
Young m?n seeking an education which will them for prac
tical lite to, Agriculture and all S,t|i allied branches: in Civil, Elec
trical and Mechanical Engineering; in Chemistry ana Dyeing; in Tex
tile or other Industries, and in Agricultural teaching will find excel
lent provision for their chosen' careers at the State's great Techni
cal College. This College fits men for life by giving practical in
struction as well as thorough scientific education.
Four Courses in Agriculture, in Chemistry, in Civil, Electrical ana
Mechanical Engineering, and in Textile Industries.
Pour year, two year, one year and Summer Normal courses in Agri
culture.
Numerous practical short courses.
Entrance examinations held at each coupty seat on July 13th.
For catalog and entrance blanks, write
E. B. OWEN, Registrar,
" West Raleigh, N. C.
june29—july 13, 27—aug 10, 24, 31.
j The 1
I Greensboro Daily News i
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2 30th. Your acceptance of this special price will also entit,l« 8
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* this special price. Remember this is campaign year and we 2
2 handle the news impartially. 2
Greensboro Daily News
2 GREENSBORO, N. C. §
» •
Summons by Publication.
State ot North Carolina,
Alamance County.
In the Superior Court,
Before the Clerk.
Humuaoiia for Kellef—Special Pro
ceeding!.
Piedmont Trust Company, as ad
ministrator ot Miss Fannie Al
bright,- deceased,
i Martha Thompson and husbaiia
John Thompson; Sadie Shoe ana
husband, John Shoe; Ella Sharpe
and husband, Alston Sharpe; Re
becca Qibson and husband, James
| Gibfon; Barbara Catherine Nich
olson and husbund, Theohilus
Nicholson; Mrs. Uattie Murray
and husband, S. L. Murray; Re
becca Viola Albright and hus
band, Joe Albright; Lawrence U.
Nicholson and wife, Mrs. L. Q.
Nicholson; Cornelia Herbert Holt
and husband, Herbert Holt;Mich
! ael A. Nicholson and wife, Mrs.
M. A. Nicholson; William Mur
phy Nicholson, Xzora B. Nichol
son, Dora V. Nicholson; Mrs. Re
becca Noah and husband, Martin
Noah; Mrs. Fannie Lindsey anu
husband, C. L. Lindsey;; Mrs.
Addie Heritage and husband, Carl
Heritage; Ross Cheek and wife,
Dora Cheek; Will Moßer; Mike
Moser; Mrs. Wesley Moser and
Jane Moser; Mrs. Kebecca Cude
and husoand, W. W. Cude;
Maggie Albright; Lemuel Al
bright; Tom Albright; Minnie Al
bright; Maude Cheek; Mrs. Blair
Boone and husband, Blair Boone.
The defendants above named, and
more especially Wm. Murphy Nich
olson, George Albright, Maggie Al
bright, Styihen Albright, Lemuel
Albright, Tom Albright and Min
nie Albright, will take notice that
a special nroceedings entitled as
above has ieen commenced in the
Superior Court of Alamance coun
ty, North Carolina, for the purpose
ol selling the lands of the late Miss
Fannie Albright to create assets for
the payment of the debts of the
said Miss Fannie Albright, dee'd,
and the said defendants will fur
ther take notice that they are re
quired to appear before the Clerk
of the Superior Court of said coun
ty and State on Saturday, the 2a
day of September, 1916, and answer
to the petition filed in the said
special proceedings or the petition
ers will apply to the court for the
relief demanded in said petition.
This the 2nd day of Aug., 1916.
J. D. KERNODLK,
Clerk Superior Court,
Trustee's Sale of Real
Estate.
Under and by virtue ol the power of Halo
contained in a certain Deed of Trust execut
ed by Cicero Whttemoro on June Ist, lUIS, tj
the Alamance Insurance and lieal Kstate
Company for the purpowe of securing the pay
ment of a bona of evon date therewith, due
ani payable June let, 191«, said Deed of Trust
being duly probated and recorded in theolllco
of the Register of DOOMS for Alxmance coun
ty. in HOOK of Mortgages and Deeds of Trunfc
No. 66, at page 128, default having been inado
in the payment of said bond at maturity thu
undersigned Alamance Insurance and Heal
fcstato Company, Trustee, will, on
MONDAY, SEPT. 4, 191G,
at one o'clock p. m., at the court bouse doo
or Alamance county, at Urabam, N. .olfer
for sale at public suction to the highest bid
der for caab, the following two tracts or par*
eels ot land, to-wit:
Two certain tracts or parcels of land
bounded and described as follows:
First Tract—Lying and being in Alamauoe
county, North Carolina, adjoining the lands
of the late Washington Dixon, W. Barnwell,
tt. F. Martin and others, coniainiug *6 acres,
moro or less, and fully described In Deed
Book No. aB, pp. 221, as follows, to-w|t:
Beginning at a staka in 8. F. Martin's lino
and corner of lot No. 1; thence N HU deg \V
44* chs to a stake, corner with No. 1: thence
N 2 dew K 10 chs to a slake, corner with No. 4:
thence deg B 50 Iks to a white oak; thcnco
a U6 chs to the first station, couiainlug forty
five acres, more or less.
Second A ract—Also one other tract of land
being In the said county and state. and lu
Pleasant (Jrove township, known us a part
ol the James Durham land idecea»c;d), con
taining twenty-four acres, more or k-ss, and
bounaed as follows: On the North by S. F.
Martin, on the East by H. F. Martin, on the
West by A. J, McCauiay, deceiiM.d, and ou
South by Alvin Dixon, containing 24 acres,
more or less. .
This July 81 Ht, luifi.
ALAMAM'K INS. X UKAL KHTATK CO.,
Trustee.
, Advertising In h
THIS 3
PAPER . I
GoccUnvestment >