Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Oct. 26, 1916, edition 1 / Page 4
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It Always Helps says Mrs. Sylyanla Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., in writing of her experience with Cardui, the woman's tonic. She sSys further: "Before 1 began to use Cardui, my back and head would hurt so bad, I thought the pain would kill me., I was hardly able to do any of my housework. After taking three bottles of Cardui, I began to feel like a new woman. I soon gained 35 pounds, and now, I do all my housework, as well as run a big water mill 1 wish every suffering woman would give CARDUI The Woman's Tonic a trial I still use Cardui when I feel a little bad, and it always does me good." Headache, backache, side ache, nervousness, tired, worn-out feelings, etc., are sure signs of woman ly trouble. Signs that you need Cardui, the woman's tonic. You cannot make a mistake in trying Carchii for your trouble. It has been helping weak, ailing women for more than fifty years. Get a Bottle Todayl LAND OF THE LONG LEAF PINE Short Paragraphs of Stata Nawi That Hav« Been Condensed for Buiy People of tha BUto. Lectures at Chapel Hill will begin thia year November 15th. The Farm Life School at Startown opened recently with SO students. Adjutant General B. S. Royster, of Oxford, and his assistant, Colonel G. S. Peterson, of Clinton, spent a day last «Mk In Washington. A splendid life sice on painting of Dr. George W. Long of Graham, was presented to the Hall of History by members of the Long family, the cere mony having been in the administra tion building. The Clinchfleld Manufacturing Co. recently let the contract for the hew Clinchfleld Cotton Mill at Marlon to the Gelllvan Construction Co. of Greenville, 8. C. The contract calls for the completion of the new mill by April IS, 1917. The "Million Dollar Train —The Pet ticoat Bpeclal," that went from Now York to the West to win votes for Hughes carried at least one North Carolina delegate. Mrs. B. Frank Me bane of Spray is on the history-making flyer. November 30, Thanksgiving day, will be orphanage day again this year, It has been determined by the North Car oUna Orphan Association, and on that day It Is expected that the contribu tion be made to an orphan Institution in North Carolina consisting of at least one day's salary or Income. Former Congressman John S. Hen derson died at home at Salisbury at the age of 71 years following two weeks' Illness end a general break down. Besides serving 10 years in Congress Col. Henderson, who was a Confederate, had frequently repre sented hie county in the legislature. Mr. George H. Rhea, specialist In bee keeping of the North. Carolina Exten sion Service who has Juat taken up the work In thla atate dealrea a Hit of thoae Interested In bee keeping writ# him at Raleigh giving Informa tion aa to the number of swarms and kind of hives used aa well aa other de tail*. Supt. R. L. Davis, of the North Car olina Anti-Saloon League has issued a statement reiterating the domands that Ilia organization will make on the next general assembly for the tightening of the prohibition law and making more difficult the procurement of liquors •van for ordinary beverage and medi cal purpose*. Farmers and bankers In seven oonntie* ar to hold meetings at once to organise National Farm Loan As sociations aa authorlMd by the n»W ! Federal Farm Loan Act. The Divis ion of Market* and Rural Organlia tlon 1* raaclvlng request* for the ear vlces of an organiser from all ports ot the state. Almost sixty million pound* of to bacco wore reported from ths leaf to bacco warehouses in ths stats for ths Month of SspUmber, according to ths monthly statement* of the Commis sioner of Agriculture. Ths exact num ber of poundk was 89,418,084. Of thl* •mount 68,200,004 waa flrat hand; 9,464,118 was resold; $3,833,84., Ths Stats Board of Election* haa Jttt completed its work of distributing flvs million* of tickets to the one hun dred counties in the stats for uss by •11 parties in th* November slsctlon*. It has been • tremendous task that has required ths closs attention of Chairman Wilson O. Lamb and A. B. Freeman of tha stats board and of a autriber of aaaistants. ' Two new charter* are issued Ths Liberty Hall Store Company of Greens boro, capital 610,000 authorised and 96,600 subscribed by J. L. Kenodle and others for general dry good* business. And ths Armfleld Bros. Company of Monroe, capital $128,000 authorised and SIO,OOO *ubscrlbed by Bnfus Armfleld and others for handling cattle, farm machinery, vehicle* and farm suppliss. i (CARRANZA'S WIFE AND DAUGHTERS VISIT U. •• Laredo, Tax.— Mr*. Dona Virginia Carranza, wife of General Carranxa, Accompanied by her two daughters, •nd Mrs. Alvaro Obregon, wits of the jde facto government's minister of war. arrived at Nnevo Laredo on a special train. The party left for San Antonio. Alonxo B. Garrett, United State* Con mi at Nauvo Laredo, haa been in structed by the Btate Department to phow tha party svsry courtesy. Itch* relieved In 90 minutes by [Woodford's Sanitary Lotion. Never l*U»- SgM b j Qrabajg Dr»f Co. j AUSTRIAN PREMIER is ASSASSINATED DR. FRIEDRICH ADLER, SUPER RADICAL SOCIALIST KILLED COUNT BTUERGKH. POLITICS WAS THE CAUSE Shot Whan He Refused to Convene Parliament.—Special Meeting of Cabinet Held After Killing—Adler Was Newspaper Man. Vienna, via Berlin.—The Austrian premier, Count Stuergkh, who was as sassinated, while at dinner by Arthur Adler, a publisher, was shot three times. Count Stuergkh was dllnlng at a hotel when the publisher attacked him. Three shots were fired, all of which took effect, the premier dying instantly. The assassination of the Austrian premlor, Count Karl Stuergkh, was purely political and was induced by his refusal to convene parliament, BCT cording to the admission of Dr. Fried ich Adler, his assailant, shortly after his arrest. Dr. Adler Is an eccentric and super-radical Boclallßt sometimes known as the "Llebknecht of Aus tria." Ho Is editor of Deer Kempf. At first he declined to reveal his mo tives but after being locked up ho broke down and declared the Prem ier's political policies had led lilm to do the deed. Doctor Adler'i arrest was not ac complished without the wounding of two men who leaped at him after he had fired on Count-Stuergkh. He dis charged the two remaining chambers of his revolver at these men before Austrian and German officers, with drawn rabres .overpowered him. Count Stuergkh was at luncheon with Baron Aehrenthal, Count Tog genburg, Governor of the Tyrol, and two others when a man unknown to the Premier arrived and took a seut throe tables away. He ate luncheon and paid for the meal and lingered at the table. Shortly after 3 o'clock the man arose, advanced quickly toward the Premier and fired three shots. The first missed. The next two struck the Premier In the head. Without a word. Count Stuergkh fell back life less In his chair. Baron Aolirenthal sprang toward Adler. The head waiter ran up from behind the as sassin and grasped the hand that held the revolver. 221 DROWNED AS STEAMER GOES DOWN IN LAKE ERIE Wreck Revealed When Cnftaln, Sole Survivor, I* Picked Up Off Life Raft. Cleveland, O.—Twenty-one members of the crew of the steamer James B. Colgate were drowned In Lake Erio when the Colgate bound from Buffalo to Fort William. Ont.. with coal, went down in a storm off Erie, Pennsyl vania. The tragedy became known when Capt. Walter Grashaw of Cleve land, aole survivor, waa picked up by a car ferry and taken to Conneaut, Ohio, after being afloat 24 hours on a life raft. Captain Grashaw, who. waa master of tho Colgate for only two weeks, became unconiclou* soon after being picked up but waa able to tell part of the atory of the dlaaster. Nineteen of the crew, be said, were drowned when the big whale back vesael founded and two others. Sec ond Engineer Harry Ossman of Cleve land and an unnamed coal passer, were washed from the life raft after expoaure and exhaustion had render ed them helples*. EARTH SHOCKS FELT IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA. Fresno. Cal.—According to reports received here earth ahocka that were felt throughout southern Callfgr nla were severs at Barkersfleld and-In the oil fields In that district. Power line* between Bakersflold | and Los Angels* were *ald to have . been damaged and It was reported that a Santa Fe Railroad ticket of fice at Tehachapl was wrecked. LLOYDS ANNOUNCE LOSS OF S LIVES AND 5 BHIPS. London.—The sinking of five steam-' ■hip*, two British and three of neu-j tral nationality, with the loss of at leaat eight lives. Is announced by Lloyds. The British steamers sunk were the Huguenot of Newcastle, and ; the Marchloneas. of Glasgow. The ' crews of both ateamors are reported 'to have been landed. The neutral ateamers sunk are the Athens and Haudrot, of Norwegian reglitry, ana the Swedish steamer Alfhlld. ,^TO^ + ATB + JOB + I DOKB AT THIS OFFICE. | 1 % OIVB US A TRIAL. I - . " AFTER A CANDIDATE PASSED THROUGH iLopynam.i HURRICANE VISITS SOUTH GULF COAST 18 LASHED BY STORM.—BIG PROPERTY DAMAGE. Roof* Blown From Homes and Traffic Suspended as Wind Sweeps Over Country at Velocity of 114 Miles Per Hour.—Two Lives Lost. Charlotte. —The Bout# waß swept by a Btorm and rocked by an earthquake Wednesday. A hurricane drove across the middle Gulf States, taking a toll of two lives and causing property and marine losses, while earth tremors drove frightened thousands from homes and offices in Alabama and Georgia, but did no material damage. Pensacola and Mobile were the chief sufferers In the hurricane. One person'was killed at each place and bulldlngß were unroofed, telephone and telegraph damaged and ships sunk and beached. At Pensacola the wind velocity reached a maximum of 114 miles an hour with 110 miles at Mobile, but In neither city did the property loss approach that caused by the hurricane of last July. Mobile city suffered little real dam age but In the harbor two small ves sels were sunk and four beached. At Pensacola one small steamer went down, another vessel 1b missing, three Ashing boats went ashore and two larger vessels wero dnn.i.ged when they came together during the blow. Telephone and telegrnph wires were prostrated for many hours, the city being cut off entirely from the out slife world for several hours. Al though Its Intensity lessened as the , storm swept Inland, Southern Ala bama suffered materially. Torrential rains accompanied the blow, 10.8? Inches falling at Burr wood, La., and the fall being heavy throughout southern Mississippi, Ala bama and In rarts of Georgia, the Stato Camp at Macon being damaged by wind and rain * While two distinct earth shocks wero felt as far north as Kentucky, Ga„ they wero of greater Intensity at Birmingham. Ala., than elsowhere. There office buildings and homes wore rocked and thousands rushed into the streets. The material damage was limited to falling chimneys. FRENCH MARINES MARCH NEAR GREEK KING'S PALACE, Athens, via I^ondon. —Throe hundred French marines were transferred from the Knppelon Exposition building within 400 yards of the King's Pal ace. They marched through the streets with bayoneta fixed and trum pets blowing, accompanied by motion picture apparatus. The front of the large palace structure is occupied by Prince Andrew and Princess Alice. Mlndway on their march the French contlgent met three companies of sailors from the former Greek fleet. When the squads met the Greeks turned down another street. WOMEN REFUSED EQUAL RIGHTS BY EPISCOPAL BODY. St. Louis, Mo. —Women were de nied equal rights with men In two actions taken by the House of Bish ops of tho Protestant Episcopal Gen eral Convention in session here. A proposal to permit women to sit as delegates In the general convention was rejected while a request from tho Rt. Rev. Logan H. Roots, bishop of Hankow, to be allowed to permit women to membership In his advisory council was denounced. MEXICAN ELECTION EARLY PART NEXT YEAR. Mexico City.—lt became known that the election* for tho presidency of the Mexican Republic will be call ed late next January or early In Feb ruary. At the same time election* for members of congress will be held. The holding of presidential and con gressional elections at tho beginning of 1917 would mean that tho Presi dent wonid bo seated before the sue cessful American prssldental caudl date takes offlcs. NORTH CAROLINA BRIEFS. • " Mr*. Jackals Daniel Thrash of Tar boro, was elected president of tha | North Carolina dlvlalon of the United Daughter* jof Confederacy at their ! annual convention at Gastonla last week. Buncombe county feels slighted. When the federal relief fund for the restoration of roads in the stricken district was distributed to Buncombe, although this county suffered as I heavy road losses In the flood as any , county In the west. | The spoke and handle factory of tho Germonla Manufacturing Company at Wilmington Waa destroyed by Ore. It waa not discovered until the flame* had gained such headway that tho fire department was unable to do any thing. j Dr. R H. Wright, president of ths Eastern Carolina Training School, spent the day In Raleigh aa president of tho North Carolina Teachers' As sembly, going over tentative program for ths annual ssssioa in Raleigh Thanksgiving week with Secretary E. E. Sams. Th* official program will ba made public very soon aow. ~ ' "• " "l . .fiA i ' RUMANIANS ON OFFENSIVE AU3TRO-GERMAN FORCEB ARB FIERCELY FIGHTING IN MOUN TAIN PAB3EB. Great Runlan Front Battle Continue*. —French Troops Make Fresh Prog ress South of Somme.—German At tacks Are Repulsed. London.—Having held the Teutonic Allien in the mountain passes on the Transylvania-Rumania border for sev eral days, the Rumanians have taken the offensive at various poiuts and now are declared to be pushing back their adversaries, who are leaving prisoners and guns in the hands of the Rumaninas. Berlin, however, controverts this statement by the as sertion that the Austro-Germans are engaged in successful fighting in the mountain passes. Generally speaking there is no change In the situation in Macedonia, although both the Entente and Teu tonic Allies make claim to minor suc cesses on various sectors. The Bul garians in the vicinity of Monastlr are bringing up reinforcements and a large number of trench mortars. Except on Mount Pasublo, in the Trentino region, where the Austrians in violent attacks recaptured positions taken Tuesday by tbe Italians, only to be driven out again, artillery duels ere taking place In the Austro-Italian theater. In the fighting south of the Riv4r Somme in France, according to Paris the French troops have made fresh progress between La Maisonette. North, of\ the Somme a German at tack on the French linos north and east of Sailly-Sailllsel was rfepulsed, says the French War Office. Berlin says that in their attacks on the Sars-Morval front the British cap tured German positions, which later were retaken, by the Teutons. Heavy rains fell Thursday on the British front and except for m slight gain by the British at Butte de Warlen court and the repulse of a German counter-attack there, comparative quiet prevailed. SIX ENTOMBED, 9 MISSING IN W. VA. MINE EXPLOSION Rescuers, Working With Feverish Haste.—Coal Du*t Cause of Dis aster That Wrecks Plant. Fairmont. W. Va.—Six men are known to have been entombed and nine others are missing as a result of an explosion of coal dust In mine No. 7, of the Jamison Coal & Coke Co., at Barrackville, near here. The interior of the mine as well as the tipple and other buildings were wrecked by the blast 200 men are working desperately to clear away the dobrts. The work of removing the wreck age was superintended by R. H. Jami son of Pittsburg, general manager of the company, who happened to be In Ralrmont. A rescue cfcr from the Pittsburg station of the Bureau of Mines is here. About 260 men are ordlnarly em ployed in the mJne, but owing to a shortage in cars, were not working. NO BTATEMENT ON U-BOAT ACTION BY U. 8. NOW. Washington.—The United States wilt not feel called upon to make public any statement on the raid of the U-63 or the subamrlne situation In general. It wan learned authorita tively. as a consequonce of the state ment In parliament by Viscount Grey that his government would not make any official representations to this country until such announcement Is undo here. EPISCOPALIANS REJECT DIVISION ON RACIAL LINEB. SL Louis, Mo.—-Rejection by the House of Bishops of a proposal to divide the Episcopal Church along racial lines and a clash between mili tarist and pacificist In a debate on prayer In the House of Deputies were outstanding features of the general convention here of the Protestant- Kplscopal church. The House of Deputies concurred In the upper house's action in refusing lo provide negro dioceses under negro bishops. Help For Girls Desiring Education. We have on our campus an apart ment house, a two storyb uilding of 25 rooms, with a frontage of 100 (eet which may be used by girls who wish to form clubs and live at their own charges. ' Pupils can live cheaply and com fortably in this way, many of them having their table supplies sent to them from their homes. For further information address .J M. Rhodes, Littleton College. Littleton, N. C. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE GLEANER SI.OO A YRAR sloo—Dr. E. Detchon'a Anti-Diu retic may be worth more to you —more to you than SIOO if you have a child who soils the bed ding from incontinence of water durinir sleep. Cures old and young alike. It arrests the trouble at once. 11.00. Sold by Graham Drug Company. adv. MEXICANS IN GLKH WITH U. S. SOLDIERS AMERICAN AND MEXICANB EX CHANGE BHOTB NEAR SAN JOBE ON RIO GRANDE. IN A 45-MINUTE ENCOUNTER Firing Bklrmlsh Formation From Cov ered Position* In Big Bend County. No Caiualtles Are Reported.—Will Investigate. San Antonio, Tex. —American troops and Mexicans clashed near San Jose in the Big Bend country, according to a report received by General Funston from Col. Joseph Gaston, commander of the district. The fight lasted for 45 thlnutes. No losses were suffered by the Americans and Information is lacking regarding loss among the Mexicans. Colonel Gaston's report said that a. band of about 30 Mexicans opened fire on a detachment composed of 23 men of the Sixth Cavalry and Texas National Guard Cavalry squadron en gaged in patrol duty between Presi dio and Ruldosa. Lieutenant Gud ington, of the Texas squadron, com manding the troops, ordered his men to' return the fire. A vigorous exchange of shots con tinued for a period of 45 minutes, the Americans and Mexicans firing in skirmish formation from covered po sitions on either side of. the Rio Grande. Information from Colonel Gaston did not indicate that the United States troops crossed in pur suit of the Mexicans. After the fight Lieutenant Cudington returned to Ruidosa with his command. Whether the Mexicans were de facto Government troops or members of a bandit band was not know by General Funston. COMPANY OWNING BREMEN REGAROB BUBMARINE LOST. Great Anxiety Prevail* Among Fami lies of Crew—Difficulty In Obtaining Sailor* For Other Ve**el* Feared. London.—An Exchanga Telegraph Company dispatch from Amsterdam says a telegraph received there from Bromen confirms the report that the German Ocean Navigation Company has received no news from the com mercial submarine Bremen and that she is regarded as lost. Great anxiety prevails among the families of the crew virtually all of whom reside in Bremen and it is ex pected difficulty will be experienced in obtaining crews for other com mercial submarines which may un dertake trans-Atlantic voyages. According td this Information the sailing of the Deutschland on another voyage the Atlantic has been aancelled. Baltimore. —Paul G. L. Hilken, Am erican manager of the company own ing the German submmarlnes, admit ted that the Bremen was a month overdue, that he feared an accident had happened to her machinery and that she had been lost with all her crew. PRELIMINARY PLANB FOR U. C. V. REUNION BEGUN, Washington.—Preliminary plans for the 1917 reunion of the United Con federate Veterans—their first gather ing In Washington—were discussed here at a meeting of the finance oom mlttee of the general reunion commit tee. The exact date for the gathering has not been determined, but mem bers of the committee said it probably would be held In May or June, the plans being to have the entertainment of the veterans spread over a week, with evcurstons to Gettysburg and other nearby battlefields. 4 KILLED, 1 NEAR DEATH, AS TRAIN BTRIKEB AUTO. Altoona, Pa. —A woman and three girls were Instantly killed here and the woman's son probably fatally in jured when a Pennsylvania Railroad train struck an automobile in which they were riding;. EDISON GETS DOCTOR'S - DEGREE BY TELEPHONE. Albany, N. Y.—A degree of doctor of laws was conferred upon Thomas A. Edison over the telephone by Dr. John H. Flnley, president of the Uni versity of the state of New York. Mr. Edison was in his laboratory at Orange, N. J, while Dr. Flnley was in the auditorium of the New York Educational Building here. Bight hundred persons, using as many tele phones, heard Dr. Flnley confer the degree and Mr. Edison accept. INFANTILFE PARALYSIS IS STILL DISEASE MYSTERY. Milwaukee, Wis.—lnfantile paraly sis still remains a mysterious disease to the medical profession, particularly as to Us origin and to a great degree In Its transmission, according to med ical men who discussed the subject at a meeting of the American Associa tion for Study and Prevention of In fant Mortality. Dr. Wade H. Frost, past assistant surgeon of the United Stales Height SSrvlce. was the prin cipal speakers. NORTH CAROLINA BRIEFS. It Is reported that numerous hunt ers are violating he bird law through out the state and that a ruthless de struction of quail Is being made dally. T. P. Mallorle Is at his home In Flat Rock on a furlough from the British army. Although he has made Flat Rock his home for a number of year* he Is an Englishman by birth, and when the call of his country for vol unteers came he went over and en listed and has been In the army ever slnca. Announcement was made In the cotton mills of Alamance county that an lncreaae of 10 per cent would be given the operatives. Governor Locke Craig has appoint ed delegates from North Carolina to the Southern Commercial Congreea, which aaaembles In Norfolk. Va., on December 11, and before which Presi dent Wood row Wilson will be the principal speaker. Oovernor Locke Craig is also on the program for an address. The engineering companies of the North Caroline National Guard have ft h. * »• Mr*. Sallls C. Noble, an elderly woman of Salisbury, met instant death at the Council street crossing of the Southern Railway recently. In some unaccountable manner she got be neath a freight train some distance back of the engine and the remainder of the cars ran over her mutilating her body terribly. The executive committee of the North Carolina Press Association in session at Durham decided to hold mid-winter meeting of the association at the University of North Carolina in December. Mayn prominent speak ers including ex-president William Howard Taft will be invited to speak at the mid-winter meeting with ad dresses by prominent speakers. The North Carolina apple crop prom ises well this year. Several of the leading varieties will yield far mors than they did last year. In a state ment Issued the department of agri culture says that the wlnesap, Rom« beauty, Tork imperial, Stayman wine sap and llmbertwlg have increased over the last crop. h iniiniiiiiniHMiiiH I Making the Little I | Farm Pay I I By C. C. BOWSFIELD | Next to having a comfortable home and a contented family the real test of farm success Is In securing a steady Increase of ucreage profits. Many pro gressive landowners, especially those occupying small places, have caught the vision of this kind of farming. The corn crop the country over aver ages about thirty-five .bushels an acre, giving a gross return not above $24 and a net profit of about sls. All grain farming is on the same level, sometimes returning a little more prof- It and often considerably less. Capable farmers grapple with this problem of raising acreago profits In OOBN RETURNS OOOD ACnMAQI PROFITS. various wnys. Naturally the first Idea is to Improve the methods of cultiva tion—to rotate crops, build up soil fer tility, use great care with seed and put In a little extra work all along the line. Those who think of an improved sys tem and are determined to get out of the rut will get results in proportion to their skill and efforts. Expansive ideas will come with the disposition to do things. For instance, M. D. Crow of Audu bon county, la., secured acreage profits of nearly $l7O by combining corn, rape and hogs as a farm feature. He bad formerly raised corn at sls to |2O an acre. Some difference! Just before he laid by bis corn in June two years ago he sowed Dwarf Essex rape broad cast In ten acres of it, using five pounds of seed per acre. The eultiva tor covered It. and about six weeks later 170 spring pigs were turned Into this ten acre field. They remained there until early winter, when (he corn bad been cleaned up and the rape kill ed by freezing. When winter came be found he had a numerous bunch of thrifty half frown hogs with nearly unappeasable uppetites and a surpris ing capacity for further growth. He fed them corn, mill feed and tankage until March, when they were sold at $7.5Q per ICO pounds, bringing $2,- 040.75. Up to tlie time they were Bold these bogs had consumed 2,100 bushels of com, valued at 40 cents per bushel, or $864; also mill feed and tankage cost ing $80.50. Thus their total feed bill was $044.50. leaving a profit of sl. 800.20. As Mr. Crow figures it. this $1,090.20 represents tbe returns from the ten acre field of rape and corn, since full allowance has been made for all othei feeds. Hence he realised $109.02 per acre from this field. The same kind of an experiment Inst year brought similar results, so that this farmer ha>> demonstrated a method of making hie corn return an acreage profit far be yond what people ordinarily dream ol Eight experiments with rape and corn have at tbe lowa station, with results strikingly like those obtained by Mr. Crow. By-aver aging tbe results of those experiments, using precisely the same values for potk and corn ns were given by Mr. Crow, It is found Ibnt the average pro duction of pork per acre was 3,845 pounds, worth at $7.50 per 100 pounds $288; that the average cost of corn and other feeds required to produce this amount of pork whs $123 and that th( average return per ai re was $lO4 net i run. The only metal that Is found in more than one color Is Iron, which appears In almost every shade. The 34th annual Convention of North Carolina Woman's Christian Temperance Union was held at Wilmington. Gov. Craig and family have ta ken up their residence in the ex ecutive mansion in Raleigh after a couple of months in Ashevilie. Small Store-bouse For Rent Well located close to tbe beat trade in Graham. Price reasonable and building ready (or occupancy now. J. M. McCRACKEN„ Mnovtt Graham, N. C. Children Cry for Fletcher's 21 U W |il I] m imp A H I ™ H ill | ■ ■ ■■ w aOTS^^^»ss^s^^?sSSsswsi^@XXSyx^S!eisas»«»a*" The Kind Ton Have Always Bought, and which has been In use for over 30 years# has borne the signature of y> - and has been made under his per - ' sonal supervision since Its Infancy. -ecZcJZttej Allow no one to deceive you In this. , All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trine "with and endanger the health of intanti pnil Children —Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Byrnps. It Is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor otlitir Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverlshness. For more tha.i thirty years it has been In constant nse for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. —lt regnlates the Stomach and Bowels# assimilates the Food, giving healthy and'natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought ▼Hi OKNTAUN COMPANY, NEW YORK ClfV. LAND OF THE LONG.LEAF PINE Short Paragraph* of State Now* That Hav« Boon Condensed for Buay Paopla of th* State. Mount Airy now hai SIOO,OOO worth of new buildings under construction now. Manufacturing plants In Durham are Increasing their forces and using night shifts. . A Wilson county farmer raised $2,- 000 worth of potatoes on eight acres of land this year. Another evidence' that Albemarle is really putting herself on the map is the fact thftt December 1 the city will hare free delivery mall aervice. The Burke County bond issue for good roads waa brought up to $210,000 when Quaker MeadoWws township voted (25,000 by a vote of 74 to 8. The secretary of state has licensed >1,825 automobiles since July 1 when the license year opened. Applications are coming in on an average of 50 per day. The Farmers' Manufacturing and Ginning Co. of Ellenboro, Rutherford county, caiptal $15,000 authorized and $6,700 subscribed by J. A Maurey and others. Because the prisoner is found men tally unbalanced Governor Craig has granted a pardon for William S. Stan ley, who was May, 1915, convicted of embezzlement. Effective October IB section eight of the Clayton act, will be in force. This section prohibits private bankers under certain condition from serving as officers or directors of member banks. Theodore Vance Terrell, aged 50 years, son of the late Captain W. S. Terrell of Sonoma, Haywood county, died at his home at Cooleemee as a result of Internal injuries received from an autoomblle accident several days ago. The Carolina ft North-Western Rail road, which has hardly recovered from July's flood, was struck another heavy blow last week when two trestles across streams near Mortimer were partially destroyed by the high waters of the Catawba. The new wing of Biltmore Hospital at Ashevllle, built by Mrs. George W. Vanderbilt and Mrs. Alfred G. Van derbilt as a memorial to their hus bands, was thrown open to the public and a reception held while the new building was inspected. Friday and Saturday, October 27 and 28, the Western North Carolina Weekly Press Association will hold its quarterly session in Hendersonvllle, the members, who are publishers oi weekly papers In the mountain section o( he state, will b« the guests ot The French Broad Hastier. »V L— ARE YOU A UP f TO DATE B If you are not the NEW 9 AN*" OBERVER is. Subscribe for it at once and it will keep you abreast pt the times. Full Associated Press dispatch es. *'lthe news—foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. Daily Newt* and Observer $? per year, 3.50 for 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian $} per year, 50c for 6 mos. MEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO. RALEIGH, N. C. ——— 0 The North Carolinian and THE VLAMANCE GLEANER will be Bent for one year for Two Dollars. Caah in advance. Apply at THB GLBAXBB office. Graham, N. C. _w k jpvx— I Are You a Woman? | M? Cardui The Woman's Tonic m SALS AT ALL EHUG3ISTS b'J YEAP:- PLPUTATIOh MM ' A pals An ■ warranted To Cure laljl summer sicknesses by! f Graham Drug Co. | DO YOU WANT A NEW STOMACH? If you do "Digestoneine" will give you one. For full particulars regard ing this wonderful Remedy which has benefited thousands, apply to Hayes Drug Co. Very Serious ■ > It ia a very serious matter to ask I for one medicine and have the I wrong one given you. For this I reason we urge you in buying to I be careful to get the genuine— BUCT-SGHT liver Medicine IThe reputation of this oi.l, relia ble medicine, for constipaSon, in digestion and liver trouble : is firm ly established. It docs not imitate other medicines. It is butter than others, or it would not b j the fa vorite liver powder, with » larger • sale than ad others combined. SOU) IN TOWN F3 trad© marks mid copyright* obtained or no tvc. K« nd mod si, sketches or photos end do* H ■crlption for FREE SEARCH and report ■ on patentability. Ilank reference*. PATENTS BUILD FORTUNES for ■ you. Our free booklets tell how, what to invest ■ and save you money. Write today. D. SWIFT &CO.I PATENT LAWYERS, THE; Charlotte Daily Observer Subscription Rates Dally, - - - - $6.00 Dally and Sunday 800 Sunday .... 2.00 The Semi-Weekly Observer r. Tucs. and Friday - 1.00 The Charlotte Daily Observer, Is sued daily and Sunday is the lead ing newspaper between Washing ton, D. &, and Atlanta, Ga. it gives all the news of North Caro lina besides the complete Associat ed Press Service. The Semi-Weekly Observer, is sued on Tuesday and Friday for fl per yea* gives the render a full report of the week's news. The leading semi-weekly of the State, i Address ail orders to OBSERVER CO. CHARLOTTE, It. C.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 26, 1916, edition 1
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