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VOL. XLV Get Rid of Tan, Sunburn and Freckles by using HAGAWS Magnolia JOE' Balm. Acts instantly. Stop* the burning. Clean your complexion of Tan and Blemi she#. You cannot know how good it is until you try it. Thous ands of women say it is beft of all beautifiers and heals Sunburn quickest Don't b« without it a day longer. Get a bottle now. At your Druggist or by mail dire3. 75 cents for either coiui. White. Pink, Rose-Red. SAMPLE FREE. LYON MFC. CO.. 40 So. Sth St., Brooklyn, t*.f. EUREKA Spring Water FROM EUREKA SPRING* Graham, N. C. A valuable mineral spring has been discovered by W. H. Ausley on his place in Graham. It was noticed that it brought health to the users of the water, and upon being analyzed it was ofund to be a water strong in | mineral properties and good ! for stomach and blood troubles.' ! Physicians who have seen the | analysis and what it does, 5 recommend its use. | Analysis and testimonials | will be furnished upon request. ! Why buy expensive mineral waters from a distance, when there is a good water recom mended by physicians right at home? For further informa tion and or the water, if you desire if apply to the under signed. W. H. AUSLEY. PROFESSIONAL CARDS JOHN J. HENDERSON Attorney-al-Law GRAHAM. N. C. Office over National Bank of Muassei J",' s. c o o Attorney~«t- Law, GRAHAM, .... - N. C. Office Patterson Building Seoond Fleor. . * OR. WILLjS. LONG, JR. • ... DENTIST , ; . Graham, .... Nsrth Carolina OFFICE IN SIMMONS BUILDING JACOB A. LONG. J. ELMER LONO LONG A LONG, Attorneys and Counselors at Law GRAHAM, N. C. •' DIGESTONEINE"! N»ture*« Reatorative, will help. Not only pvca quick, sure relict from indigea* tion's ills Heartburn, Dizzinea, Sour Ritinp, Acid Mouth, Slccpleaa neaa, etc.. but builds up appetite and ( entire tyitcm. Thousand! KNOW. Follow their lead— pT^gjCTnirrTii^ V&J "ThmtUrtoKmlUf I=l I am Improrlnc In health nine* I hare been uklni jour medicine. It baa helped me ao much. I can't tail ran how thankful I am. I do not think I could fet alone without It. 1 hare recommended it to many alnc* It haa dona ma ao much food. WILLIS TOWNS. Manaon, No. Car. Dlltdmdat M Uifla —or fur iam« BACK *■ Fr fiatkw coaaudoc FACTS. aaa HAYES DROG COMPANY, GRAHAM, N. C." - • ... • n;i LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS This book, entitled as above, contains over 200 memoirs of Min isters in the Christian Church with historical references. Ad interesting volume—nicely print ed and bound. Price per copy; cloth, $2.00; gilt top, $2.60. By mail 20c extra. Orders may b# sent to P. J. Kernodle, 1012 E. Marshall St., Richmond, Va Orders may be left at this offiee. I tnirte mnrka n««t wpyrlgiu or mo M ■ fee. Ik ixl model, or phtAtm Md 4 H ■ arfip' Urn for FRCK SEARCH mmd ms*A ■ ■ «r peUmUUliiy. n«ak rwfmwr*. I FATEMTB BOILO POItTtMWS f ■ ■ roi oar rm bookMa trll kow, «ku 0 ImM ■ ■ utmgiauar. Wril» loimj. ID. SWIFT & 60.1 PATMT UWYIM, &803 Bm^bSt^VMM^M^C^ THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. WONDERFUL STEPPING STONES MISER SAVER BIG SUM BUT ONLY TO LOSE IT Man Did Not Follow Principles of Thrift—Sola Idaa Wat to Hoard Hla Money, Spending Nothing. A modern Mldai of Chicago, who Ud accumulated $300,000 by never spending anything, recently was de clared Incapable of handling his af fairs. Ha became incapable not be cause he amassed $300,000 but because of the way he accumulated It. He es tranged his family, went to bed with the ohlckens to avoid spending money on lights and lived on $56 a year. Then he ran afoul of the puzillng In come tax law and now his children are to handle his beloved savings. This modern Midas was not a thrifty man. He was a miser. True thrift enhances and Increases the wealth of the world. Hoarding money benefits neither the miser nor his fellows. Wise spending is as essential as wise saying, and wise Investment Is aa Important as either; wise spending for the comforts and pleasures of life aa well as the necessities makes for the thriftiest life and stimulates production. Wise investment makea possible the crea tion of new wealth. The miser savaa but spends noth ing. He seoures only the meager sat isfaction of watching his pile of money grow. The wise exponent of thrift aai aound investment has the oom forts and pleasurea of life and saves at the same time. The foolish man apeads his money for what he neither needs nor really wants; does not at tain the comforts and lasting pleas urea of life and savaa nothing. If the modem miser of Chicago had spent wisely he would have had years of oomfort and happiness Instead of yean of squalor aad want. If he had aavad wisely he would have had the love and reepeot of his family and as sociates. If he had invested wisely he would have been competent to han dle his own affairs. "Waete not—want not" is still the modern axiom of thrift but "want not" must not be Interpreted to mean not wanting the things that make life worth the living. Don't be a modern MUlaa. PICKING UP THAT PIN A story of E. H. Harrlmaa, whs died leaving an estate of $78,000,000, cred its him with one day picking up a small steel letter clip dropped on the toer by a careless employee. I'd like to have aa my annual ln come," said Mr. Harrlman, "the value of material thrown away every year hy Indifferent workers in ths offices and factories of America. In a few yeara I'd be the richest man in the world." "LIKE UM" and "LICK UM From faraway Tulsa, Okla., comes the story that War /Savings Stamps are tremendously popular among the Indians who have grown rich from oil wells discovered on their properties. "oUck-em-on" competitions are popular among the Indian Rocke fellers, who buy the $5 stamps in sheets, arrange their cards neatly and start licking and atlcklng at a prearranged signal. After all the atampe had been atuck on daring a recent content the Indians capped the "Held meat" by lining up aad racing to tha post office to gat the stamps registered. Blue Moss BmoUs-No- Meat won tha rase and had hla stamps registered first. He had peeked en MM worth of War Savings (tamps in sis min utes and fourteen seconds. His time to the postoffloe was 81 seo onds flat fat your money where it will do doable daty for you—ln War Savings •tamps. Money saved is what counts. In vested In War Savings Stamps it mil day and night. "in n multitude of thrifts there is aaiety from worry. Buy wisely, aave MaUlgeatiy. and lnveat in Thrift *Nips aad War Saviags Stamps Psrfums Their Desd. Natives of Torre* Strait inlands, to the north of Queensland, have some pe culiar burial customs. One is the anoint!ru; the bodies with cheap per fnme, the remainder being corked In the bottle and left on the grave. In some cases a cheap stone Is set on ths grave and this "eremony Is usually marked by a three-days' gorge on the part of the relatives of the departed, pig, yams and turtle being shaken down to make room for more by vlg-, orous dancing and singing. GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY. I»19 FIVE DEPARTMENTS ARE AIDING THRIFT Government Bureaus Are Co-op«rstlr\g to Promote Wldeepread Savings Among All Claases of Psopla. Co-operation and co-ordination of government departments In aid of the national movement to promote regular saving, wise buying, sound Investment and reinvestment are shown In a re cent report to the Treasury Depart ment Five departments—Treasury, Labor, Commerce, Agriculture and the Inter ior—are always carrying out plans characteristic of their special domains of work designed to accomplish ths genersl aim—thrift. Not only are the same principles held In common, but Ideas and material are Interchang ed and employed to further the par ticular lines of each department's work. In the Treasury Department the Savings Division la endeavoring to bring home the value of sensible economy as a principle of living; to Interpret thrift, not as miserliness, but as the wise management of one's affairs, taking heed of present and fu ture needs and steadily saving for worthwhile purchases, to take advant age of an opportunity or against a rainy day. The Savings Division of fers the Thrift Stamps and War Sav ings Stamps a practical Inducement to acqurlng the power of a financial reserve. Realising that saving Is greatly stimulated by having a definite object In view, ths Department of Labor has launched an OWN YOUR HOME) movement. The Department of Commerce, In conjunction with the Council of Na tional Defense, is engagsd In a BUY NOW, BUT ONLY WHAT YOU NEED, campaign. The Department of Agriculture has undertaken to have Its county agents and home demonstration agents, numbering several thousand men and women, Include the message of thrift In all their work. In the Department of the Interior the Bureau of Education Is making thrift an Important part of Its Ameri canization program and of Its schools and library work. The Indian Bureau has Issued material and called on all agents to asslat In bringing home the value of Intelligent saving and safe Investment to Uie Indian service. THRIFT TABLE 25 Pennies—l Thrift Btamp. 16 Thrift Stamps=-1 W. S. 8. 20 W. S. S.«=l Hundred Dollat Stamp. 5 Hundred Dollar Stamps—Flrsl Installment on your licme. Thrift Stamps will stick when a fel low needs a friend. Make Thrift a happy habit through War Savings Stamps. INTEREST Here Is what one man did. If you don't know him you know some one Just like him In your community. Twenty lasers ago he owned the clothes he stood In and that was about all. Hs savsd fifty dollars the first year; ths nsxt ysar. with a little better wages. esTsnty-five. One thing with another —a wife and family inoiudsd—be has saved an avsrags of five dollars s week for twsnty years What bs saved In twenty y«ars wss about five thouaand dollars. What he has Is twice five thousand—like ths man in the parable His dollars working for him now bring him mors than hla yearly saving. Make Thrift a happy habit through War Savings Stamps. Money speat Is money gone; Invest ed In War Savings Stamps it stays with you. Dominoes for the Blind. Dominoes for the blind are rather ingenious. Recognizing the need of something that would not easily be dis placed as the finders of the blind passed back and forth reading the numbers on the face of the dominoes, the Inventor has given us a set of In terlocking pieces. The mortise Joint makes them hold together no matter how much they are brushed around. The number on ench piece I* Indicated by the raised heads of brass tacks, easily read by the touch. -jn : 1 ' Franklin's Spring Street Home In Philadelphia Within a few blocks of the Friends' Burying Ground In which lien the body of Benjamin Franklin, who»e picture adorns the 1919 Usuo of War Sayings Stamps, is a quaint three-story brick dwelling, one of the places whore the lnvontor philosopher lived while In Philadelphia. The house Is in Spring Street, In the center of Colonial life in the Quaker City. It Is in excellent state of preservation. The 129 th anniversary of Franklin'* death will be com memorated April 17. Franklin's thrifty sayings did much to stimulate among the American people the habits of wiae buying, sano saving, secure invest ment and avoidance of waste. Your Village And Mine It Is just a typical American Til lage—perhaps yours or the one In tha next county. It has two churches and a hotel and there Is the "corner" where the men gather after supper to consider politics and "the state of the Union." Its population is about 2,000. When war was declared It gave Its ■ons with a glad heart, and they marched away bravely—many with a sob in the throat, perhaps, but with a splendid vision guiding their feet. From the training camp these boys went to France and were moved up Into the battle line. The Hun was making a desperate effort to destroy civilization in a bloody drive on Paris. Then — The richest man in the village met the hotel barber and they gripped hands In silence. Their two sons lay dead in the Argonno. The village butcher boy—red head ed and Irish—smiled for the last time. He died fighting that freedom might not perish. The town's Beau Brum mel —he had never amounted to much—won the Croix de Guerre—but lost both eyes. Oas claimed the son of the widow who lived In the little green cottage. At first she could not speak when she received the brief telegram. Then —"John was all I bad. I hoped he would come back. If I had two sons I would give them too." That was all. But— «? America as a whole never felt the real hand of war—not as France felt It —nor as England—nor even as Can ada. Why? Because our dollars stopped the war. They made possible those tre mendous preparations for a long war that resulted In a short war. Never was such a stupendous assemblage of munitions. Germany wilted. Thou sands of millions of dollars were saved. But boßt of all, tens of thou sands of American boys were saved. America prepared on faith. Amer First American Flag » Enter Germany With Our Arm/ of Occupation. FOR SUMMER COLDS Catarrh, Art h ma, Hiy-Fertr, etc. iiuen in the noatril* ■ tmall quantity of PM P.n not (tain the Clothei. At all drug •tore* 30c, He and sl-20 ot mailed direct. hue me comm. i. «**«•, it. c. ica holds Its dollars cheaper than it valued its Sons. The war Is over. Victory Is ours. America escaped the frightful burden of debt which would have been ours If the war had lasted two years long er. v\- still have those dollura In our pockets. And the boys are coming home. But the debts the government did contract- —the debts that won the war —must be paid. They will be paid. America has pledged Its faith, and the faith of America has never been Questioned. Wo are now asked to lend the gov ernment some of those unpaid dollars we still have In our pockets, and. to secure the loan, Victory Liberty Bonds will be Issued—the safest In the world. Then let our hearts—and our purses —say how thankful wo are that, per haps, half a million American boys were saved. HE HAD THE GRIT THAT WON THE WAR Carter Glass, secrolary of elm treas ury, copied (he following note, among others, from the note book of n Red Cross nurse when he was In IVmce: "One boy I shall always remember. His right shoulder wa'i practically shot away and he had a wound In Ills bank and one In hi-: left eye. But lie sat straight up >rd wouldn't lot unybody help him. II" didn't nay a word while they pull.-d oiT tin tight clinging gauze from the r"l. raw, wet flesh that quivered In «p!tr> of bun. When the first wound w.i-i f.i'jihed all he said was: "Do you think I could r-M a minute. Doe, before you do lh" sr. - id one?" "Red, raw. wet fl*»sh" \nioriran flenh. It was not yellow T!nuk of that when you *r" nsk',l to |,ov vic tory Li b'-rty bonds, you wl.o think you have done enough. Never the Same Again. Friendship Is a vase which, when It ; Is flawed by best or violence, or sccl j dent, may n« well be broken at once; jlt can never be trusted after. The I more graceful and ornamental It, was, j the more clearly do we discern the i hopelessness of restoring It to Its for i mer state. Coarse stones, If they be j fractured, may lie cemented again; precious ones, never.—Walter 8. Loo don. CHANDLER SIX Famous For Its Marvelous Motor A Truly Char This New Chan SEARCH the whole market of motor cars, you will find no more satisfying closed car of the coupe or victoria type than the new series Chandler coupe. Closed or open, as you may desire or the weather dictate, it is clean and cozy and luxuriously comfortable in all seasons'; ' Upholstered in finest quality silk plush and with dull silver finish fittings designed in the best of style, there is distinctive character in this car. The Chandler coupe seats four in perfect comfort, or three when the auxiliary chair is not in use. Chandler closed cars, because they so clearly express the very best of the coach-maker's art and skill and because they are so fairly priced, will be over-sold throughout the Fall Season. Despite the largest production in the history of the Chandler Company, the demand for the new series coupe will quickly consume the production for weeks to come. Your early order will be u safeguard against disappointment. SIX SPLENDID BODY TYPfcS SrrtM-l'aurncer Touring '-ar. Sl!')S lour-Pasun(er HaaJurr, 11795 j Foui '!*au9nctr hispatch Car, $1875 Seven• Pastern fer Sedun, 12795 Four-Fasssnfer Coupe, $2695 Uemmuime, 53295 All prt *t f. •. b. filmland | PIEDMONT MOTOR SALES CO., Graham, N. C. CHANDLER MOTOR CAR ( OMI'ANY, CLEVELAND, OHIO POULTRY FOR YOUNG PEOPLE Boy* and Girla Who Take an Interett In Chickens Should Be Given Chanco to Ralte Them. Poultry raising appeals to tho young people In inuny Instances. The boys and girls who like poultry and would take' 1111 Interest In fowls should huve n chance in ru Iho poultry and use the Income ai thoy please. Parents often may help their children to become suc cessful In this way. All Wind. Henry Watterson, the famous ex editor, wan talking about politician*. "Take the wind, the gulT, out of n politician," ho Hald, "and what re mains? "A noted politician's wife wan lis tening to her husband over the tele phone. Five, ten, fifteen minutes she listened patiently. Then she said: '"Excuse me, Chnrles. Just n rno mept. I want to change the receiver to the other ear. This one's so tired." Duly at Home and Abroad. When 7>u are In the city boost your locality, hut when you are out of the city boost your city. Some Romance Needed. If life has never led you down the paths of romance, RU In seaich of It. Kind It In hooks—lose yourself In ro mantic plays. For, you need romance. Let It lift you out of the workaday world and refresh you. Man Who Moves the World. The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists In trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress dc. pends on the unreasonable man. —ller- nard .Shaw. Calomel Dynamites A Sluggish Liver Crashes into sour bile, mak ing you sick and you loose a day's work. Calomel salivates! It's mercury, Calomel acts like 1 ynaraite on a sluggish liver. When calomel comes in contact with sour bile it crashes into it causing griping and nausea. If you feel bilious, headachy, con stipated and all knocked out, just go to your diugglai and get a rxittle of Dodaon's Liver Tone for a few cents which is a harmless vegetable substitute for dangerous calomel. Take a spoonful and if it doesn't start your liver and straighten vou up better and quicker than nasty calomel, and , without makin.f you sick, you just go and get your money back. If you take calomel today you'll be sick and nauseated tomorrow; besodes it may salivate you, while If you take bodson's Liver Tone you will Wake up feeling great, full of ambition and ready for work or play. It'* harmless, pleaaant and aafe to five to children; they like it adv, MOHTOAOKE'S SALK OP LAND Under and by virtu** of the power jof sale in a certain Mortgage Deed executed by Oraham Hra fifth aw ind wife, Lucy Arm Hradshaw, to the I (irahain Loan & l'rust Company, and dated March 1 \ 1915, and re corded in the office o f the Register of Deed* for Alamance county, in Hook of Mortgage Dee 's arrl lseolf» I of Truftt J jo. V) at i>i?.» 41?, and default having been made* in the r'ment of the sji I debt secured said mort jare th n undersign ed mortgagee wiif offer at pi»»lic Mil**, at the ci trt ho.ise door in Oraham, on SATI'HDA Y, OCTOBKK 4, l'Ufl, at 12 O'CIOCK v "hoon, th? following described tiact of land; A certain tract or parrel of Inn i lying and being in the Town of (iraham, Alamanec county, North Carolina, adjoining the lands of VV. J. Nicks, (Icorge S. Mabry, deceas ed, and bounded an follows Beginning »»t a corner with W. J. Nicks on the North si le of said street, South thence S with said street s'» feel to the c >r ner, or Iron bolt, with said Mibrv; thence W. with *hc Jin'* '»f sa : I MV bry 124 feet t » an iron bar or holt in the line of said Mabry ; thenep N„ so feet t » at) iron b >U in .he line of ftaid Nicks; thence vth the line *'f s lid NicJ'.p 111 feet to t ?»• beginning, and e.»ntain'ng S |. (eel. Said tr.tct or ,»aree| of lind in sold subject t > a pri >r mortgage in the worn of t» .John Kf. floffman, as evidenced i,y r«*co-d --«»d moiigj»jrc in the offt* - * of the Register '-I l) «*ds. in Mo:t».»ge Hook No f, I page .'Bl. Terms of sale. C ASH. Tlds August 'li. 1019. ORAHAM LOAN fc TH I ST CO., Mortgagee. J. A. HKNDI-KSON, Atty. ■ vrAQs rrouTATioN m a ARNOLDSM R BALSA" IALL SUMMER SICKNESSES BY! ;I:AII.\M R>ITI;; (:•> Summons by Publication. Xliilr nt North Carolina. Count) of Alamanre. In tin- »u|tirlor Court. Before the Clerk. •loliri Henry Vincent and others vs. Marie Johnson, George Ed. Holt, She Ito n Moan, Floyd MOBS and otheni. The defendants above named will take notice that a special proceeding entitled as above has been commenc ed in the Superior Court of Ala mance county for the purpose of selling land for partition; that they are required to appear at the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of said county at the court house in (irahain on the 27th day of Septem ber, 1019, and answer or demur to the petition on file, or the relief de manded will be granted. This the 21st day of Aug., 1919. D J. WALKER, C.S. C. Long & I-ong, of Alamance Co. Attys. 4Sep4t NO. 32 Jas. 11. Rich W. Ernest Thompson Rich I Thompson J Funeral Directors and Embalmers MOTOR AND HORSE DRAWN HEARSES Calls answered anywhere day ornight - Dav 'Phone No. 86\V Night 'Phones W. Ernest Thompson 2502 Jat. H. Rich 54»i-W Trustee's Sale of Real Estate in Burlington Township. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a cer tain Deed of Trust executed by F. J. Lacy and wife to Alamance In surance and Real Estate Com pany for the purpose of securing the payment of six certain bonds of even date therewith,,which deed of trust is recorded in Book of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust No. 77, at page 2:»7, in the Public Registry of Alamance county, de fault having been made in the paymeut of said bonds and the interest thereon, the undersigned trustee will, on MONDAY, SEPT. 22, 1919, at 12 o'clock, noon, at the court house tloor of Alamance county, '"§ in Graham, North Carolina, offer for tiale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, a certain " . tract of land in Burlington town ship, Alamance county and State of North Carolina, adjoining Webb Avenue, (J. F. Blacltmon, Ivey and others, and bounded as fol- J lows: . Beginning at a corner of G. F. ' Blackmon lot on Webb Avenqe; running thence with the line of said Webb Avenue East 60 feet Uk corner with said Ivey; thence with the line of said Ivey South 110 feet to corner on Miss Alexander's line; theuce with* the line of said Alexander parallel with Webb Avenue 00 feet to corner on Black mon's line; thence with the line of said Blackmon 110 feet to the beginning. On the said lot is situated a four-room dwelling. This August 14, 1919. Alamance Ins. J: Real Estate Co., Trustee* J You Can Cure Tbat Backache. Pain along tbe back, dlulneaa, headache and fonnerat languor. (Jet a package of - Mother Gray"# Australia Leaf, the pleaaanft jM root and berb cure for Kidney, Bladder and Urinary trouble#. Whon you feel all M run down, tired, weak and without eoemf JjaM uie this remarkable combination f nature. jSW herbs and root*. Aa a regulator It haa najjM qual. Mother Gray's Australian Leaf Ifffiß •old by DrugglaU or lent by mall for SOoli ■ sample* tent free. Addresa, Tbe MotMP 1 Gray Co., Le ROT. N. T
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 18, 1919, edition 1
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