jjHealth g S| About K N Gone Many thousands of women luffering from womanly trouble, have been benefited by the use of Cardul, the woman's tonic, according to letters wereceive.slmilartothls M one from Mrs. Z.V. Spell, I olHayne.N. C. "1 could not stand on my feet, and Just suffered terribly," lik she says. "As my suf- r?m fering was so great, and he had tried other reme get Cardul. . » I began Improving, and it cured me. 1 know, and my doctor knows, what Car dui did (or me, for my nerves and health were TAKE " CARDUI The Woman's Tonic She writes lurther: " f pi am in splendid health . . . can do my work. I feel I PCji owe it to Cardul, for I was In dreadful condition." |K If you are nervous, run down and weak, or suffer from headache, backache, M etc., every month, try Car dui. Thousands of women praise this medi- cine for the good i» has done them, and n.any physicians who have us; J Cardul successfully with in their women patients, for years, endorse this medi cine. Think what it means to be In splendid health, like Mrs. Spell. Give Cardul a trial. jl All Druggists IJ IMPROVED MACHINES AID LABOR PROBLEM Increased Power Enables Own ers to Cultivate More Land. Of Particular Advantage In Permitting ' One Man to Do Considerable More Work In Given Time In Rala- Ing Crop*. (Prepared by the United Btates Depart ment of Agriculture.) Tho advantage of tho tractor, like that of moat other Improved farm ma chinery, Ilea not so much In the reduc tion of tho cost of performing a unit of work as In tho fnct that It permit* ono man to do considerably moro work In n given tlmo. Thla has been truo of practically all Improved farm machines. Even tho grain binder, generally considered us one Of tho greatest agricultural In ventlona of tho century, which has In creaaed about eight-fold the acreag ono man could handle, has not result ed In decreasing materially the cost of producing grain. Men who hope to reduce greatly tht coat of farming operations by the pur ♦ p.- '■ j I l.' Li K2LJi Farm Tractor at Work. eha*e of a tractor should hear the* facts In mind. Judging by the cxperl enco of tractor user*. It I* not saft to expect any m,«" rial reduction It the cost of farm operations per aen through the use of the tractor, but H 1s safe to expect to ho able to lncrea* the crop acreage to n very con*lder nble extent, and, at the *ame time, thi amount of crop* which ono man cat raise. Furthermore, It should be remember ed that the cost of doing the worl with a tractor In most case* cannot b directly compared with the cost o! doing It with horses, *lnco on farmi where tractor* are used a number ot horse* generally are retained, and anj comparison, therefore, mu*t be math between the co*t of operating thi farm with horse* alone and the co* of operating with the tractor and i certain number of horse*. Not In frequently horse* *tand Idle while thi tractor Is being used for field work because there Is not sufficient hel| available to use them nt the satm time, and In such cn*es part of thi cost of their maintenance must la considered when figuring the cost a farm operation*, since they are ai much a part of the farm power plan as If the tractor. ' Not only should the relative ex .pense of operation with the two meth oda be considered, but also the rela tlve results. The Increased cro| acreage and consequent Increase It Incomes which the purchase of thi tractor will often make possible ma; much more than offset u slight In crease In the operating expenses of th farm. J BUY WAR SAVINO STAMPS ROAD-BUILDING'ROCK TESTED Value of Material Gathered In Many States Olven by Department of Agriculture. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Results of physical tests In 1910 und 1017 of road-bulldlng rocks nre given In Bulletin 070, recently Issued liy the United States department of ngrlcul ture. This bulletin supersedes the de partment's Bulletin 637 and supple ments Bulletin 370, which gave the re sults of the more common physical tests of approximately 3,(550 road bulbllrffc rocks examined prior to Janu- JH* Repairing Road—Cheapest and Best Way Is to Attend to Holes and Ruts While They Are Small. ury 1, 1010. The rock tested came from most of the stales. In n number of cases, In addition to other tests, tho crushing strength of the rock also Is given. The bulletin also contains a complete record of all the crushing strength tests made by the office prior to January 1, 1010. The average crushing strength of granites and gneisses lies between 20,- 000 and 21,000 pounds per square Inch, according to data In the bulletin, and the average crushing strength of lime stones and dolomites Is between 18, is*) and 10,(J00 pounds per square Inch. ininltes, gneisses, schists, sand stones und quartzes should not In gen eral be used In the wearing course of water-bound macadam roads, li Is stated, and shales and slate should never be used In this manner. Cement ing value tests, therefore, have been discontinued on these materials. MOTORCAR IMPROVES ROADS Farmer In Becluded Rural District Keeps Highway In Qood Condi tion Without Effort. A friend who spent the entire sum mer and some of the fall In a secluded rural district was telling us the other duy about how the farmers kept their roads In good shape In the section In which h« was sojourning, snys a writer In Cleveland Plain Dealer. "There aren't any state roads In that part of the country," he says, "and no brick or macadam. But the farmers keep the gravel and dirt roads In ex cellent shape. Whenever my landlord took a trip to town, or anywhere, be used to hitch a road drag to Ills motor car. Then the car would pull the drag along the mile or two that he was In terested In keeping up. He would unhitch the drag and leave It by the wayside. On tlie way home he would pick up the drag where he left If and ilrag the other side of the road going tinck. And he'd make a round like that almost every time he took the cur out." Nearly All Undersea Boats Are Equipped With Kitchens Where Cook Prepares Meals In the earlier submarines no pro vision was made for cooking the men's mealK. Everything bad to bo en ten Colli. This did not matter HO very much when these craft wero quite aitmll, with a correspondingly small radius of action. Hut when Inrger undersea boats came to be built, the provision of prop erly cooked hot meal* liectime n press ing nwesslty. Ho now, aaya a writer In rent-son'* Magazine, all but the very ol«1e»t type* of Nuhniarlnoa an* fitted with a xiniill (tn I ley, no bigger than a very moder ate-slxcd cupboard, where the cook ha* Juat riHiin to stand In front of hi* iloll'* hnuae atovo. Tills Inner Is elcc irleally heated, In order that the al ready oppressive air may not be fur ther vitiated by smoke or fumes. The menu on board n submarine Is not varied, consisting mostly of slew, with an occasional "mugup" of salt llsh for a change, ami plenty of strong,, plpllig hot coffee to chase away sleep from the tired eyelids. Meal* are eaten out of nlnmtnum dishes In collapsible mess-tables when th»> vessel I* submerged. When the submarine I* running on the surface her crew usually prefer to take their plate* of atew on deck, and the North sea attend* to* Its salting for them. ft—it—it — tt—ft—tt — r it—it —T—6 HINTS FOR \ i POULTRY GROWERS ' ty-ty-iy-v-v-ifi-Q The beginner and the car*lea* should never attempt midwinter hatch ing. The care 1* extensive, the lons great. One old In the business de clare* thnt the beginner should put off hatching until April and May. and the weather then will help him. Winter hatching pay* best for the experienced IMiultrytnan who Uvea close to u good paying broiler market, or the fancier who wanta show blrda ready for the fall fair*. Also, it pay* to hatch. If you can do It successfully, some of the large, alow maturing breed*, such as t'ochln or llrnhtnn. In January. These, If not hatched until late April or May, seldom come Into laying until the hext April—unless their owner know* how to push pullets into laying successful ly. If you batch In January you must not grumble If you get but a half hatch; nnd some of these will bo too weak to live long against the time of year, but this you know—those that do live and grow strong nnd hearty must surely bring you profit early In some manner. If you hatch In winter you must have warm winter quarters for your chicks. I'oultrymen who sell eggs for hatching purpose* quite of ten have all their own flocks hatched aome time before the call for hatching eggs comes In, which Is often not un til In April. . BUY .WAR SAVINO STAMPS*" FARM ANIMALS TYPES AND BREEDS OF HOGS Two Kinds Are Found to Greater or Less Extent" In Most farts of United States.' (Prepared liy the UnlU-d States Depart, nr.ent of Agriculture.) There are two types of swine, name ly. the fnt or lnnl type, and the bacon type. Jloth types are found to a great er or less extent In most parts of the country and are the outcome of local conditions rather than market require ments. Tho lard typo prfralls In sec tions where corn Is used us the prin cipal feed, and tho bacon type Is gen erally found on farms where tho hogs require a variety of feeds. Tho lard typo of lings Is ono which has n compact, thick, deep, smooth I.oily und Is capable of fattening rap- Idly and maturing early. Tho hams, buck, and shoulders aro the most val uable parts and should be developed to' the greatest possible extent. The whole body of the animal should be covered with a thick layer of flesh rep resenting the extreme development of meat production. This type of hog, Un der good conditions, should weigh 200 pounds or more when seven to nine months of ago. This Is tho most pop ular market weight. Due to the facts Hint corn Is the most abundant hog feed and lanl hogs mature very early, this type predominates. The most popular breeds of the lard type are the Berkshire, the I'olahil li I mi, tho Duroc-Jersey, the Chester White, and the Hampshire. The Berkshire bad Its origin In Eng land and takes Its name from a shtre or county by that name. The color Is white markings In the face, on l lie feet, and on the tip of the tall. The face Is moderately dished and tho snout Is of medium length. The ears are usually erect, though - ncline forward In aged animals. The Polund-Chlnu originated In But hT and Warren counties. Ohio. Tho breed takes Its name from the two Im eds from the crossing of which It la supposed to hove resulted, namely, a Poland' breed and a Chinese breed. Tho color Is black with white on feet, fuce, and tall. The face Is nearly straight und the Jowl Is full und henvy. The Duroc-Jersey hail Its origin la tho blending of two red breeds, tho Jersey Beds of New Jersey nnd the Durocs of New York. The color Is cjurry or yellowish red. The face Is frH*litly dished, the snout Is of medium lehgth, and the ear Is drooped. Tho 'original Chester White had Its origin In Chester county, Pa., henco the name. There are two other strains known lis the Improved Chester White or Todd's Improved Chester White, and the Ohio Improved Chester White, com monly known as the OIC strain. Tho coloi Is white. Tho fuce Is straight; the snout Is usually longer thun that of ll,e I'olanil-Chlna. The car Is drooped. In general conformation tho Chester White and Poland-China are very much alike. The Hampshire breed was formerly known by the name of Thin Bind. Tho breed seems to have had Its origin In Hampshire, England. The. color Is black with n white belt 4 to 12 Inches W w * - ***■ M. •. ■.V .4*lf. - A Bacon-Type Hog of Tamworth Breed. wide encircling the body and Includ ing the forelegs. The face Is straight and the ear Inclines forward but does not droop. The bacon type differs from the lnnl typo In that the animals aro more ac tive, havu longer and coarser bones, anil do not enrry as much fat as the latter. Their bodies are longer thun those of tho lnnl hogs. The bums and shoulders are light but the bodies aro deep and wide. The most popular market weight ranges from 175 to 200 pound* The moat common breeds of this typo are the Tamworth and tho York shire. The Tamworth Is of English origin and takes Its name from Tamworth In Staffordshire. The color varies from n golden red to ii chestnut shade. The fore Is practically straight, the anoui Is long and straight, nnd the ear la In clined slightly forward. The large Yorkshire breed originated In Englnnd und takes the name of the shire of that name. The color la white. The face Is slightly dialled and the snout Is of medium length. Tho ears urn largo and erect, but may Incline forward In'old animals. WWJWJ mwwwwww PREVENT FOREST FIRES :! U'ropartd by Uio United Stairs De partment of Agriculture.) Forest IIr !•*. arc unnecessary and preventable. They destroy existing forest*. They destroy the possibility of future forests. They destroy an Important market for labor. They destroy the beauty of a region. Tlicy destroy property. They destroy home*. They ikMro; Uvea. They destroy prosperity. They destroy foodstuffs. Why Arc You Gray? Wh.v look Older than yo i fool' Now that horn many {horn in J have proved that Q-ban llai * C>l or Ri-»toriT bring» a unlfo-m uniform, (lurk luttrouft shu-li' to gray or faded hair—yau rvail y ought t utr.v Q-ban. K-ady to ir, - -tfuar.inteod narmloni—s9c for a buttle—money Hark I! not «at lafied. S >ld by Haves Dnii! Co and all good dm;; »tor -». Delight fully beautifying. Try O-tmn tin I Tunic. Lijui'l Ciinrnptio; Soap. Al* Q -ban n?pil 'tor.v, lir sjperfii OUH hair. ODER VINEGAR CAN BE ON FARMg * Applet Converted Into Table Condiment Good cider vinegar which will meet the requirements of both federal and ftnto food law* can bo made on the farm, gay the specialists of the bureau of chemistry, United States department of,ugri Culture. Cider vinegar IH made by subjecting apple cider to a process of alcoholic fermentation by which the sugar In the apple juice Is changed to alcohol, producing what Is commonly called bard cider, and then subjecting the hard cider to a process of acetic fermentation by which the alcohol is changed to acetic acid. The acetic acid gives to vinegar Its characteristic sourness. Windfall apples which are not green or rotten, small apples, and any sound apples that cannot bo marketed ns fruit may be used protfltably for Vinegar making. Neither green nor rotten apples will make good cider or Apple Cider is Changed Into Alcohol, Which In Turn Is Converted Into Acetic Acid in Making Vinegar. vinegar. Dirt, grass, leaves, and any foreign substance, if allowed to get Into the press with the apples, will not only Injure the flavor but may retard the vlnegaiMnaklng processes. The apples should be ground fine and then pressed slowly. As much of the Juice as possible should be pressed out, but It Is not profitable to add wa'ter to the pomace for a second pressing. The cider should be allowed to settle for a day or two in loosely stoppered, bar rels or other covered receptacles. t _ There fire two well-known processes for converting hard cider into vine gar. One Is known as the slow-barrel process. This Is the simplest and requires the least work and attention, but the disadvantage of requiring a long time for completion. The second metjiod Is known as the rolling genera tor process, which Is more elaborate and requires dally attention. HOARDING AND PROFITEERING Dealer Bhould Not Hold or Contract for More Than Reasonable Re quirement* of Trade. (Prepared by the United States Depart-' ment of Agriculture.) To sell farm equipment on the basis of what it would cost the dealer to replace It may be considered profiteer ing, according to a statement Issued recently by the office of farm equlif ment control of the United States de-1 partment of agriculture. Persons who have sold equipment at replacement values when costs were high must continue to do so If prices go down, even though such sales bring less than the original cost .price of the stock. Moreover, those whose sell- ; Ing ptlce Is fixed In relation to high replacement prices must restock Im-1 mediately and carry the same quantity j of equipment throughout the high- j price period as they had at its begin-1 nlng, In order not to profiteer. Those 1 who desire to sell out without replac-1 Ing thfclr stock should not sell at a prevailing high price, but at cost iflus a fair usual profit. It will bo considered hoarding If manufacturer or dealer holds, con tracts for, or arranges for more equip ment than the reasonable demands of his business require. Dealers finding themselves with excess stock on hand through Inadvertence should sell their excess holdings at cost plus a fair , usual profit. The hoarding of farm equipment Is , defined by the act of congress of An- j gust 10, 1017. Manufacturers or deal- j ers who hoard will be dealt with un der the terms of this act of congress and not under the ruling as to replace ment values Just Issued by the equip ment control office. BENEFITS OF MOTOR TRUCKS Cross-Country Hauling Again Has Be come Widely Used for Inter- City Transportation. An even century ogo transportation Interests centered on Wheeling, W. Vu. That year *uw the Cumberland road —the wagon highway planned ns a dominating factor In leading settlers to the great West—completed as fur as the outlying town on the Ohio. Fif teen years later the road had been ex tended to Columbus; In another decade It crossed the Indiana state line. Then came the steam railway. With the arrival of this new transportation colossus. Interest In the Cumberland and other highways waned rapidly. Road building all but'"stopped, long distance hauling by highway stopped, too. And now, offer three-quarters of a century, cross-country hauling ngaln has become a widely recognised form of Intercity transportation. The pow erful. big load motor truck again has ushered In the highway as an Impor tant |tart of oar national transporta tion system. "MEMORY MAPS" ARE FREAKS Try to Draw Outlines of the Various Countries and You Will Be Sur prised at Your Ignorance. A man and wife wat at the table at their home trying to draw the outline map of Europe, from memory, ob- , nerve* the Ohio State Journal. They : anon found that they knew little about It. They had been reading of European eventa for year*, and yet when they cntiie to putting their mind picture of the continent on paper they forgot their geography entirely. The man had read Anabaala and Homer In the original and yet put Greece between the Adri atic and the coast of Spain, and left Austria out altogether. The wife had Spain and France aide by aide on an east and west line, with Belgium to the north, covering both, whlla ahe made the lHx>t of Italy a fashionable $lO gnlter. Anyone looking at the two mnpa could tell they were not of America or Asia, but of where, he couldn't aay. Rut seriously. It Is a delightful amusement and might with profit be in dulged in more. After one gets through with Europe, take the other continents and the countries that belong to them. And then one might come nearer home. It would be really aad to observe the Ignorance concerning our own locali ties, but It would be amusing, too. Just for fun. have ■ company draw maps of Great Britain and Ireland, or Turkey, China, Kansas and Nebraska, Louis iana, Delaware, etc., and much sur prised yoji will be to see how this old earth had changed since you trusted it to your memory. MUSIC REACHES THE HEART Performer Dealing In Emotions Cap tivates Women More Swiftly Than the Poets or Painters. The poet deals In words, while the painter deals In color and form, but the musician deals In emotions and therefore his appeal to worries is al ways more swift, as It Is always more subtle, than the appeal of any otheT artist. - l Such, summed up by a writer In the Philadelphia North American, is tho. latest theory to explnln the lure of mu- ] sic for women and the attraction of ■ the dark-eyed, long-haired musician, himself. The average woman, say the theor-1 lsts, Is hemmed in with conventions that make her feel a prudish dlscom- j font If a book or a poem talks too open ly of what she thinks of, but never puts Into words. With a picture it Is the same way, but In the music, sho j hears with emotional delight all tlio romanticism, all the beauty, and all the vague dreams which she hides so closely from quence she reads Into the music her own feelings, and then she confuses tho musician with his music. He, too, is keyed up to a high tension; he feels telepathlcally the emotion he has com municated, and so a spnrk Is kindled between thetp. As for the result — well, sometimes It Is love, sometimes a momentary Infatuation—that all de pends upon how much music they hear together and how much pent-up nerv ous emotionalism lies burled In the woman's soul. BARBERRY AIDS WHEAT RUST Proof of Close Relationship of Disease on Common Shrub and Cereala Seen in Indiana. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Further proof that there Is n close relationship between the rust of bar berries ami of wheat and other cer eals has resulted In active campaigns to eradicate the shrub In many com munities. Two rather striking cases ot th{p closo relationship were observed recently In Indiana. In one locality a fleld of wheat, along one side of which grew a burberry hedge, was practical ly destroyed by the black stem rust. The cuse was so clear that 17 farm ers held a fleld observation day under the guidance of the county agent and Immediately drew up resolutions, In which they stated that the relation was so clear that they wished to go on record as favoring legislation to erad icato all barberry bushes from th state. In another case a hedge of bar berry and two deep plantings wer« found on a farm upon which a wheat Held was so badly affected that the crop was a partial failure. A second fleld near by was very seriously affect ed as well as a number of fleldf in the vicinity. Similar cases have been observed In a number of othei states, and public sentiment favoring the eradication of the common bar berry Is growing rapidly. It Is salO that Japanese barberry docs not har bor tho wheat rust. PLACE MACHINERY IN HOUSE Protect Valuable Implements From Exposure In Winter—Paint All Iron or Steel Parts. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) The cost of machinery and Imple ments Is constantly Increasing. Pre pare now to protect Implements and machinery from exposure during the coming winter. As far as possible all Implements should be placed tinder a dry shed. Woodwork should be paint ed and all exposed Iron and r.teel parts should be either painted or cov ered with grease or oil to prevent routing. Better Dairymen Needed. Not so much better cowa aa battel dairymen Is the need. ItUU-.M Y-TlSM—Antiseptic, Re roves Rheumatmni, Sprains, Neu alxgin, eie. \ Mothers of France | Mothers of France—we fend our son* to you. The ships go out from morn to even tide, Bearing with them the hope of our young * land. That they may stand In battle side by side With those, your eons, who die so well ' for France. We shall not be less brave than you have been. With patient hearts we pay the price you paid. And waft our sons—but some will not come home, Nor shall we over know where they are laid. Remerriber us—for we are mothers, too— When fair peace gilds your land, and pop pies grow Over your battlefields. Do not forget Our sons, whose alien graves we do not Know. Tend thou our homeless dead—mothers of France. —Anne Bunner, In Everybody's Maga slne. _1 . ' FALL WORK WITH POULTRY Overcrowding Is Liable With Growing Chicks Unless Closely Watched— Three Big Points. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Growing chicks should be looked aft er very closely, as overcrowding la liable to happen, owing to the fact ttuit the chicks are getting larger and need more room. This Is a very Im portant point. Care given the flock at this time means a profit; lack of care, a loss. The three Important points are (1) fresh air, especially dur ing the night, (2) fresh water at all times and (3) clean quarters. • In every Instance where egg pro duction is the end sought, the pulleta should be put Into winter quarters as soon as possible. Their winter quar ters should be ready In advance. At this season cockerels should be se lected for next spring's breeders and placed by themselves with plenty of run If possible. None but strong, vig orous specimens should be selected. Culling can be done all through the year, but at no time Is It more profit able than at this season with the grow- Hens Scratching in Autumn Leaves. ing flock. All the weaklings should b« culled at once. This will save fee! and give the stronger birds that re main room and opportunity to becom« more vigorous. The laying hens should be gone over again very carefully al this time and Inferior ones should b« taken out and marketed or eaten. B» sides culling for egg production, 1001 l out for lice. Hens that have becom too heavy or too light should be dl» carded. ™ 5 WOOD FOR FUEL | * (Prepared by the United States De- J * partment of Agriculture.) J 5 Iturnl schools and churches, J * even more than homes, should * restore the old wood pile and J * make themselves sure of J $ warmth this winter. Every * * building used during only part J $ of the day or on one or two + J days a week should burn wood. J Value tt Good Roads. The value of good roods Is now rec ognized everywhere, but few know how easily und how cheaply they may be had. HELPS WIN WAR (Prepared by the United States De partment of Agriculture.) The man who would like to burn coal because It Is easier and handier, but who thinks enough of his country and the boys "over there" to shoulder his ax, brave the winter wind, and go out and cut wood in or der to save coal, is helping to win the war. Toe Often Fertilizer Is Pitched Out ft Barns and Exposed to tho Winter Rajns. (Preparsd by the United States Depart roent of Agriculture.) The time Is approaching when mud of the stock will be kept In barns ant sheds more or less of the time. Prep uratlons should be made to take cart of all manure that accumulates durln) the housing season. Too often ma nure Is pitched out of the barns an exposed to the winter rains. When manure Is leached In thla way thi most valuable part of the fertilize! constituents Is carried away to thi streams and lost to the farm. Whet the manure Is removed from the stall! It should be placed In a covered she or pit and packed down so as to pre vent leaching and flre-fanglng, or 11 shocld to spread upon the fields when It can be plowed In Immediately or ap plied as a top dressing for grasses. Look out for Span ish Influenza. At the first sign of a cold take CASMRAM QUININE Stnted cold rrniwlj! fa# JO ttWH IIMIII —fi rare, no «ton faarti ap scold in 14 boon —relieves (rip la 1 day*. Ifnaay baekifltbUa. The genuine baa baa ■ Rod tap with Mr. HUT* picture. Al All Ding Steail. Children Cry for Fletcher's The You Have Alwayß Bought, and which has been in use for over over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per /Jr s- i 80,1111 supervision since Its infancy. StAi4C Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children— Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, "Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought TM« OKHTAUH OQMWWV. H.WYOKKOITY. , Summons by Publication North Carolina, Alamance in the Superior Court, January Term, 19i». Alice Hill, Plaintiff, vs. James Hill, 'Defendant. The defendant above named .m take notice that an action e,. titled as above has bet-ncoin.ni;iK. Ed in the Superior Court ot AU mance County for the dissolution - che bonds of matrimony a vinculo matrimonii between the pla.utu and the defendant; and said d fendant will further take nouu chat he is required to appear ai the term of the Superior Court oi said county, to be held on the sixt. Monday before the first Monday i March, 1919, at the court house J. said county in Graham, X. C., a.i answer or demur to the comphi.a in the said action, or the plamtu will apply to the court for the re lief demaded in said, complaint. This November 12, 1918. J. D. KERNODLE, 14nov4t Clerk Superior Court TRUSTEE'S SALE OP R'SAL ESTATE. Under and by virtue of a certain deed of trust executed b A. M. (jar wood to Alamance Insurance & Re al Estate Company as trustee, on October 26, 1917, for the purpose oi securing the payment of a bonu of even date herewith, which de.d of trust is recorded in the office o. the Register of Deeds for Alamance county, in Book ot Mortgages anu Deeds of Trust No. 73, at pag 188, default having been made i.i the payment of said bond, the an dersigned trustee, will, on MONDAY, JANUARY 27, 1919, at 12 o'clock M., at the court house door of Alamance county, in Gia ham, North Carolina, offer for salt to the highest bidder for cash, t following described property, to wit: A certain tract or parcel of lanu in Burlington township, Alamance county, Sta'e of North Carolina, ad joining the lands of Mrs. U. u vVhite, Miss Zora Albright and oth ers, the same being in ' thecorpor.it.' limits of the city of Burlingion, ana bounded as follows: Beginning at an iron (bolt on the West side of the street-t-name un known; running S. 83 l-3 x def. W 327 feet to a rock, *-corn&tL with Mrs. D. H. White; thence ST"Tr$- deg. E. 255 feet to an iron bolt, cor ner with Miss Zora Albrigh: ; thence N. 61 deg. E. with the line of sail Albright 237 feet to an iron b >)t on said street and corner of sli I Albright; thence N. 29 deg. W. C feet to the beginning, con-a n.n ; ope acre, more or less. Alamance Ins. &Rea. a e Trustee. his December 23, 1919. DO , y QU WANT A NEW STOMACH? If you do "Digestoneine" w U give you one. For full particulars egard mr Miis wonderful Remedy "vhich ha* benefited thousands, apply to HAYES DRUG CO. I trade mark! »i»l cowrlirtit» ob«m«) .rno £ ■ f««r. hud iuwtl«l, aketfbe* or photo® and do- ft ■ terlption for f*RGE SCAHOH »«l r»vorl ' ■ or patonUMlfty. talnta"" 1 I PATENTS BUILD fO«TUIII» '" ft ■ , lrt ! (Kir (rr* bookbo t»ll how. what u> lnremt V I and HTe 7W money. W niw tOd»J ■ ID. SWIFT & co. I PATENT UWYIH, ■ 1,303 Seventh St, WwhtagtwUUj.^ ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified a« Administrator of the •Mate of Alrln DUOD, d«*ea»ed. the undenlgned hereby notlfle*all penont hold ing claim* agaluat tbe Mid e»Ute to prejent tbe MDK, only authenticated, on or before the 14th da* of Nov., 1»1», or thl* notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery; and all pereon* Indebted to Hid e*«*te are request ed to make Immediate *ettlement. TkUUrt.Sf.lUt. w VINCENT, Adm'r Hoovfti of Alvln Dixon, dec'dl ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Having qualified a* Admlntatra'or of tbe eitaU or L. W. A. Hayor*. dec'd, th- under lined hereby notlfle* all ptr»on* holding claim* against «ald eaiate to present tbe doe duly authenticated, on or before the lMhda> of Nov., 1»1», or this notice will be pleaded lo bar of their recovery. All perao ■ Indebted to aald e*tale are requested to make 1m medUie settlement. Thla Nov, llth, 1918. M. L. BAYNBS. A'lm'r ltnoqtt of L. W. A. Maynes,dec'd. BUY WAR SAVING STAMPS S Used 40 Years g CARDIIi { The Woman's Tonic J qi Sold Everywhere £ • -. s «•••••••••••• NOTICE OP MORTGAGEE'S SALE OP REAL ESTATE. —^ Under and by virtue of the pow er of sale contained in a certain mortgage executed by R. T. Shoff ner, and his wiie, Lula Shoff ner, to Claude Cates, on April 16, 1917, for the purpose of securing the payment ot a bond of even date therewith, which £>ond ancf mortgage was by Claude Cates du ly transferred to the Alamance In surance & Real Estate Company, on June 15, 1917, and default having been made in the payment of said bond at maturity, the undersigned will, on MONDAY, JANUARY, 6, 1918 . at 12 o'clock M. offer for sale public auction to the highest bid der for cash, at the court house door of Alamance county, at Gra ham, N. C., a certain j>iece or tract of land lying and being in Alamance county, North Carolina, in Burlington township, and de scribed and defined as follows: Beginning at a. rock in the road corner with John Morton and Wil liam Boon, and running thence S. 16 1-4 deg. W. 2 rfw 10 links to a stake, corner , with Baxter Day; thence S. 85 deg. W. 4 chains 25 links to a stone; • thence N. 3 1-4 deg. E. 2 chains 25 links to a rock,'corner with William Boop; thence N. 85 deg. E. 4 chains and 75 links to the beginning, and con taining one acre, more or less, upon which is situated a 3-room frame dwelling. CLAUDE CATES, Mortgagee. Alafoance Insurance & Real Estate 'Company, Assignee of Mortgagee. This December 4, 1913. ■ to YEARS riPUTATION M M ARNOLDSM H BALSAIJ M m ~ Warranted To Cur« ■ ■ALL SUMMER SICKNESSES BY| GRAHAM DRUP. ?o EXEC! TOR'S TIE "iWi Under and by virttie of ths ll thority and direction conti'.ned in the last wil! ind teiti i" 1 ' eline Tinnin, deen-l rh h will and ti-st rmcn' i 1 in the office of th * 71 r: Court for Alanines c-i.i.i'y sh ' derslgned, d il / app >ii• i u • I ed and acting nxeoutor >' - 1 i I 1 line Tinnin, decest'd, \v II H-.>l| public auction, to thf> hijhost der, on the premis'B on v "orth M Btreet, in the town of Grahnn. >( 12 o'clock, noon, on. SATURDAY. JAN. 11, 1919, the following real property to-rit The south one-half of the 1«t >1 which the home of the late Adelin 1 Tinnin is situated, on North Miin Street in the town of Grahim, an'J adjoining the said Xorth Miin S . John B. Montgomery, and othe-s, and being one-hilf of the slid lot of the late Adeline Tinnin. This is a re-sale and will commence at $550.00. Terms of Sale. One half cash and one-half in six months. This Dec. 14, 1918. J. B. MONTGOMERY, Ex'r of Adeline Tinnin, dec'd. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Having qualified as executor of the will of J. W. Veague, deceased, the undersigned hereby notifiei all persons holding claims the said estate, to present them, duly authenticated, on or before the Ist day of December, 1919, or this no tice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery; and all persons Indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate settlement. This Nov. 28, 1918. CLAY TKAGUE, Ex'r of the will of J. W. Teague, Route No 3., Liberty, N. C 28nov6t.

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