VOL. XLJ iWiMiootkepsl | mg hair healthy [ 5 "By usto*Wildroot regularly. I keep z S my scalp entirely free from the itching z S crust of dandruff, the cause of most - ~ hair trouble. I owe my luxuriant hair = jj —the enry of my friends—to this Z guaranteed dandruff remedy." E WlldrOQl Liquid Shampoo or Wtldroot j wild root = TOE GUARANTEED HAIR TONIC = § * For tale Mere under a r = money-back guarantee 5 Graham Drug Co. Hayes Drug Co. ASPIRIN FOR COLDS Name "Bayer" is on Genuine Aspirin—say Bayer Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" in & "Bayer package," containing propel directions for Colds, Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. Name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cast few cents. Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture «f Monoacetic acidester of Salicylicacid. © - BLANK I BOOKS i Journals, Ledgers* Day Books, Time Books, f Counter Books, j S Tally Books, & Order Books, Large Books, Small Books, * Pocket Memo., , Vest Pocket Memo., &c. ■j For Sale At The Gleaner h Printing Office s Graham, N. C THE BEST NOVEL OF THE YEAR "ERSKINE DALE, PIONEER" by JOHN FOX, JR. it now running in SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE also ROOSEVELTS LABOR LETTERS Trustee's Sale of Real Estate. Ui'deraod by virtue of the power of sale contain*! ID a deed of trust executed by Brown Baynei aod wlf . Mary Baynea, on April 10,1916, and recorded In th« office of the BegltMr of for Alamance county In Book No. 71 of Deeda of Truat, page 3H, the unoersUned Trunteei will offer for •*!« at public outcry to lb e highest bidder, for caah at the oourt houae door In Graham. Aia m a nee county, North Carolina, at ii o cl«>ck M., on Saturday, Feb'y 2i, IMO, the following deacrlbed property: ' A certain piece or tract of land In Ala manoe county, State of North Carolina. In Burlington towuahlp and defined and ae ►erlbed aa followa, to-wit: Ad Joining the laoda of alvla Florance, Dao Hnlpea and Ab Baynea. and - ounded as followa: Beginning at a rock, corner Florance and Baynea line; thence H. ltf& deg E. with Uayoea' line 4 chalna 2SS linka to a rock on E. « cham. U w roc*; ttienc N. 84 *«■ W. 4 oh.ln. to a rock, Alvia Florance line; thence with Flor anoe line 87H deg. W. 7 chain andl 86 link! to tbe beginning, containing lJSiacre,. m .re or leu TbU January 21. 1990. , •- ~ Alamance Ins. Si Keal Estate Co., Trustee. j^OEBEH NONET BACK , - "Cy- \l #lth>wt qufiticnif Huni'iS«l»» " / a( s V * 11 («iU in the treatrr.ent of E «etna. i B I Pv Teller. Rjncworm.ltch.etc Don t I J i become diacouraard becauaeotbaf V §/} treatment# failed. Hunt'eSalv* \ Aa haa relieved hundred aof auh v JPfl|B caaea You can't loaa o® our Monty Bmch Cumrmniam. Try It at out risk TODAY. Frfca 75c jIZKnV For aala locally by GRAHAM DRUG COMPANY, GRAHAM, N. C. BUY THRIFT STAMPS. THE ALAMANCE GLEANER SOME FACTS AND FANCIES ABOUT THE PHILIPPINES | * h There Has Been Much Misrepre v sentation in America About People and Conditions. By MAXIMO M. KALAW, Secretary of the Philippine Mleelen. I A certain lady Exposition saw at toned man In fault less evening dress and accosted him "I suppose yon are "Then yon mnst be Chinese," she Mlximo M. Kelaw. j ln not I am a Filipino," he replied. "How's that?" asked the lady. "I thought they were al) savages living In the woods." "Well, I'll tell you how I came here," he said. "A month before I left the Philippines I was living In the woods, bat the American Governor decided to catch as many wild men as possible, train them and send them over here. So here I am, just as you see." And the St Louis lady actually believed him. That Is what yon would call (ancles about the Philippines. The fact Is, however, that the 11,000,000 Filipinos and their ancestors have been civilized and Christians for 300 years; that the ■oa-Christian population, according to the census of 1818, is only 600,000, and even these are not all uncivilized. Another fancy Is that not until the coming of the Americans were school buildings seen ln the Islands, roads , built, or substantial honses erected. Do you know that for hundreds of | year* the Filipinos have had colleges and schools and that the University of Santo Tomas 1s only twenty-fire years alder than Harvard? That as early as 1866, out of a population of 4,000,000 people, then were 841 schools for boys and 833 for girls? That ln 1892, eight years before the coming of the Ameri cans, there were 2,137 schools? "To grant self-government to Luzon nnder Agulnaldo would be like grant ing self-government to an Apache res ervation under some local chief." Thus spoke a former President of the United States during the Filipino-American war. Exaggeration could be an excuse at a time when the dignity of the Am erican peoplq demanded the extinction •f Filipino opposition, but do you know that the Philippine Republic, before the American occupation of the had the approval of prominent Ameri cans who were on the spot—like John Barrett, Director of the Pan-American Union, who compared it favorably with the Japanese government? That Ad miral Dewey considered the Filipinos better fitted for self-government than the Cubans? That they had drafted a , constitution at Malalos which elicited I the approval of distinguished Repub licans like the late Senator George F. Hoar? That before the coming of tho Americans they had produced national heroes like the martyred Jose Rlzsl, pronounced by a Republican congress man, Representative Cooper, as, the noblest victim that has ever fallen Into j the clutches of tyranny? And do you know that the Filipinos have not had for hundreds of years any caste system, blood distinction or royal families, and that, unlike their oriental sisters, they are the only Christian peo ple In the orient? People have pictured an Ignorant mass of Filipinos, Illiterate, poor, liv ing a life of servitude for a few wealthy land owners and foreigners, with no houses or farms or property of their own. Do you know that 70 per cent, of the people above ten years of age can read and write and that this percentage of literacy is almost as high as some of the states of the Union? That It Is higher than ln any country of South America, higher thsn the lit eracy of the Spanish people, and un questionably above that of any of the new countries recognized In Europe? Do you know that there are a million and a half farms ln the Philippines and that 96 per cent, of these farms are owned by Filipinos. In other words, that out of the 11,000,000 Christian Filipinos, 8,000,000 of them at least live on their own farms, with houses of their own. Independent of any absentee landlord or foreign master? That 91 per cent of the urban property con sisting of houses and lands Is owned by the natives of the Philippines, and only 9 per cent Is ln the hands of for eigners? Yet these are facta cabled by Acting Governor Charles Emmett Yea tcr to the War Department from tho recent census estimates. Having solemnly promised tho Fiil pi-ios tbelr independence and having gone before the world as the champion of self-determination, tho Filipino peo ple cannot understand how America ran consistently refuse to make good these promises. CLIMATE OF THE PHILIPPINES. Tho Philippine Islands have% mild ly tropical climate. The nlrhts are coal tn J sunstrokes are unknown. Tho temperature record for the past thirty years shows a» average of 80 degrees. Chinese Shoes. The Chinese are gradually adoptlni the European style of footwear. At the present time, almost 40 per cent of the footwear In China Is reported to be of European style. Domestic fac tories of which Canton has twenty, Hongkong Ave and nearly every port of China at least one, are chiefly for the manufacture of the red leather used for the soles of the native shoe*. Th« of native shoes are genef» ally made from cloth or an Imitation box calf. DAUGHTER OF AGUINALDO IN | U. S. CAPITAL! She Meets Many Wives of Amer- i loan Statesmen and I Makes a Hit. wiv. I When General Emlllo Agulnaldo was 1 leading the Filipino army against the American forces twenty years ago he probably iltflo dreamed that some day • daughter of his would visit the city of Washington and would be given a great reception at the famous Con gressional Club I And that the wives of 120 members of the American Con gress and two wives of members of the President's cabinet would call upon | her to pay their respects I - -| But all thla actually happened when Ulss Carmen Agulnaldo, his nineteen year-old daughter, visited Washington j recently. And those wives of the Am erican statesmen expressed themselves | as both charmed and surprised at ths refined, tactful, college educated young i miss who greeted them. "Miss Agulnaldo was simply delight ful," was the expression of one con gressman's wife. "She was very mod est yet she acted so natural and thor- MIBS CARMEN AGUINALDO, Daughter of the Former Leader pf tho Filipino Army. oughly at home that she captivated ev i erybody." Qn another occasion while In Wash ington Miss Agulnaldo was given a real ovation by a Filipino-American audi ence when she recited "My Last Fare well," poem of Dr. Jose Rlzal, the Fil ipino martyr. "Miss Agulnaldo is a student at the University of Illinois, Urbana, 111. While ln Washington she was the guest of Mrs. Jaime C. deVeyra, wife of one of the resident commissioners from the Philippines. The Capitol building and the Congresslonsl library 1 appealed particularly to the young Flllplna, while the beautiful sights from the Washington monument thrill ed her with delight When asked how she liked America, she smiled and an i swered: "It Is a wonderful country. I didn't ' like winter at first, but since I have learned how to skate 1 am having fine times. All the Americans whom I have met havo been very good to me. My | friends in Urbsna and my classmates | in the university are Just lovely, but I cannot help feeling homesick at times because I am missing my father. My coming here was Indeed a great sacri fice for him, for wo are very close. He is so good to me." Miss Agulnaldo Is Intensely patriotic, j She does not conceal her resentment when she hears or resds of a misrepre sentation of the Filipinos. "It Is un fortunate," she once exclaimed ln s voles full of sadness, "that my country and my people are hardly known, much less understood, by tho people of Am- I erica." Politics is tabooed In any conversa tion with this Filipino maid. Hhe evades the topic by replying that she is too young to express opinions on things political. "AH I can say," she I declares, "Is that I share with my j father ln the desire for Independence j for my native land. There Is no ques tion sbout our being sble to govern ourselves." Filipinos declare Miss Agulnaldo has S "genuine Flllplna temperament"— that Is, she does not believe In the oc cidental custom of "dates" between , young men and women. She does not see snythlng wrong tn it, she says, bat ' It Is such a violent departure from the custom ln tho Philippines thst she can not adopt It. t "You might laugh at me," she said, "but I cannot go out with one single escort unchaperoned. I simply csn't I will go back to my country with tho soul of a Flllplna." A newspaper In one of ths large Am erican cities that Miss Agulnaldo visit- { sd expressed the opinion that she would no doubt he greatly Impressed by the sight of street cars and some of tho fine residences she would see, bat tho trutk Is the young lady was raised la Msnila, where she has seen an *p to-data street car system all her Ufa. It is said that lli rain Johnson j plana to rip Senator Hardin# up the Hiram ia rnad with him because he haa never done or said anything to make anybody mad- Governor elect Edwardaof New Jersey ia going to challenge the, Federal prohibition amendment. We still have a few Don Quixotes tilting gallantly at windmills. I GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 5, 19«> Rice Terraces Are World's Masterpieces This Is a photograph of the Ifugno Igorrot rice terraces, which are among the most remarkable of their kind In the world, They are one of the many marvelous sights for the tourist to see ln the Philippine Islands and are to bo found in the Ifugao district of the Mountain province. Northern Luzon. The height of these terraces, which are held up by s ono walls, Is from 4 to 18 feet averaging 8 feet high. It Is estimated there ure 12,121 miles of eight-foot stone walls In the Ifugao terraces, v hich is approximately half tho distance around the world. These terraces are skillfully Irrigated by water brought lu troughs along (he precipitous mountain sides over long distances. How Would You Like to Harvest Two Crops of Corn a Year as They Do in the I'hilippines? No, reader, this corn was not grown by one of our local fnrmersl It wasn't grown ln the United States, even. It was grown In the furoff Philippine Is lands by Filipino schoolboys. Two One crops of corn a year are produced In the Islands. The Philippines are doing some won derful things In the agricultural line. The Philippine government has tine ag ricultural schools throughout the Is lands, and the Philippine legislature, composed entirely of Filipinos, Is each year making larger and larger appro priations for this Important work. Ihe staple food of the Islands Is rice, but corn is coming right along In popu lar favor. Its use was given great Im petus In the last yuar because of a rice MANILA CARNIVAL BiU ATTRACTION OT 7 T?ap EAST This Is the sesson of the year when | tho Philippines become the playground ' for the entire orient It Is carnival season in Manila. In 1908 the first was held on historic Wallace Field In Manila In February, when the climate! Of the Islands Is at Its best, snd each I succeeding year there has been a lurg er and more elaborate celebration. The 1920, or Victory Carnival, will be the greatest event of Its xort ever held snywhere In the For East. There are commercial and govern ment exhibits In connection with the carnival, and on no other occasion Is It possible to gsln at once such a com prehensive Idea of the production and In Eastern countries, a man partook of refreshments he offered a guest to show they were not ; poisoned. You better insist on a ! vendor sampling the liquor he tries to sell you, Lloyd-George nays people who think England can be forced into granting separation to Ireland have not read the history of the last five years. shortage. Other Important Philippine crops are hemp, sugar cane, cocoanuts, coffee, tnploca and pineapples. Lum ber Is also an Important Industry. There are hundreds of thousands of acres of land lying Idle In the Philip pines, which have n greater area of fertile land than Japan—this In spite of the fact that the population of the Philip) ' «•* Is 11,000,1X10 while that of Japan around 515,000,000. There Is every n .ison to believe that some day tho Philippines will have a population as large us that of Japan today. Ths Filipinos ure tlm only Christian people In the orient, and their young men are working nlglit and day to prepare themselves for the responsibility of citizenship In tho Philippine Itcpubllc, which they believe to be near at hand. j development of resources of the archi pelago as that wbl'h Is offered the visitor at the carnival city. in the evenings Hi** carnival becomes the center of Philippine and oriental i social A huge open air audi- I! torium M-rve* for the elaborate nightly 11 halls, and on Us mammoth floor thou ■l sands of couples swing together to Ihe . I strains of music furnished by the fa •! moui Constabulary and other military I bands. Probably al no other plare ln the world will one see an equally Im -: pressive cosmopolitan »[>ectnrle, i \ The Manila visitor who can plan Ids t J trip to arrive At the Peart of ths Orient •'.for carnival tlms may well deem him- I; self fortunate. Free 1920 Calendar and Book for Our Readers. We lake pleasure in announc ing that any subscriber or reader of thin paper can secure a vest ' pocket memorandum book with 1020 calendar and much useful i information by sending the post age therefor, three cents in stamps GOV.-GENERAL OF PHILIPPINES FOR FREEDOM Declares It Not Right That Free dom Should Longer Be Withheld. ■y FRANCIS BURTON HARRISON, ' Qovornor-Qsnoral of tho Philippines. (First Article.) My six years' ex perlence as gov- K ernor - general of H the Philippine Is- F lands have con vinced me that the Filipino people are ■ 4W ready anil fit to 1M havo their lade- W : "SlyW pendence. I have recommended to HP Congress, as well as to the executive sd ministration, QovToen. Harrison £*^ D n s t tr d,n * As to the question of ths stability of government I wish to say to the Am erican people upon my responsibility as ths governor-general that in my opinion there exists today in ths Phil ippine Islands a stable government which I think should answer the re quirements laid down by Presidents Grant and McKlnley, and as I under stand it, also by Mr. Root —namely, a government elected by the suffrage of the people, which is supported by the people, which Is capable of maintain ing order and of fulfilling its interna tional obligations. I am very glad to go on record as be ing eatlrely ln sympathy wltji the as pirations of the Filipino nation for In dependence. I have recommended to Congress that tn granting Independence aonie provision be made similar to what Is known as the Piatt amendment In the treaty with Cabs, which restricts ths ability of the new republic In borrow ing of foreign governments and also permits the United States to Interfere with tho affairs of the new republic In case conditions of disorder should bs found to prevail. Such recommenda tion does not come as an expression of the views of the Filipinos; It Is my own view of what would be deslrabls to secure a feeling of confidence and satisfaction on the part of al| persons who have already Invested money In the Philippines or who contemplate do ing so In the near future. Rut It Is /not right that Independence itself should longer be delayed. By temperament, by experience, by financial ability. In every way, the 11,000,000 Filipinos are entitled to be free from every government except of their own choice. They are Intelli gent enoukh to decide for themselves. I have found the native Filipino of ficial to be honest, efficient and as ca pable of administering executive posi tions as any men I have met anywhare In the world. These officials are today governing 1,000 municipalities and forty-two provinces, economically, efficiently and for the good of tho entire people. They have a native congress, Including many graduates of Yale, Princeton, Harvard and other American universities. Oth er members are graduates oiMnto To- otijer Philippine universities, and tn education and ability they com pare favorably with any I know. They have leaders like Speaker Os mena of the House of Representatives snd President Quezon of the Senato who would adorn any office. The Philippines are away ahead of the United States In successful govern ment ownership and operation of pub lic utilities. The government took hold of ths steam railways and made them pay a profit of 1,000,000 pesos a year moro than under private ownership. It took hold of the highways, and we havo 7,000 miles of the best mac adamized roads In tho world. Tho Manila city government Is about to take over the street railways and tho gas and electric plants, while ths ter ritorial government Is arranging for ownership and control of the coal sup p'r. The movement for Independenes Is s pesceful one. No territory was mors loyal to Uncle Hern during the war. It offered an armed and equipped division to our government, gave It a subma rine destroyer and oversubscribed Lib erty loans snd Red Truss funds Two million nstlves speak English fluently, snd there are 700,000 English speaking children ln the public scheols. I am mere then wlHlng to retlrs If the Filipinos csn lie grouted whst they deserve —s government like that of tho United States. A MISREPRESENTED RACE. The Filipino people are a much mis represented race. The frequent pub lication of pictures of semi-naked Min danao Uoros and Igorotes hss caused a great many Americans to believe they are typical of the Inhabitants of the Philippines. Such Is fsr from tha esse, however. Of 11,000/(00 Inhab itants of the Islands, 10,300,000 are • Christian, civilized people with a cul ture and refinement thst will compare very favorably with that of other na tions. Tho Filipino women are excep tionally modest A street flirtation in , Manila, so far ss a Filipino woman is ceacsenad, Is something that la si meat unknown, aa any American that baa visited Manila will testify. to D. Swift & Co., Patent Attor neys, Washington, D. C. It con tains valuable information about past presidential elections, show ing how each State Voted in each presidential election during the last forty years. It also shows the population of each State dur ing the census of 1800, 1900 and 1010. States the amount of corn, FILIPINAS 6ET BALLOT BEFORE AMER. SISTERS Senora de Veyra Describes Status of Women in the Philippines. The Filipino woman Is deatlned U be In the world'* spotlight more than ever before aa a result of the new* Juat received by cable from Manila to the effect that the Philippine aenate hay paaaed the equal suffrage bill giving women fall political rlghta with men. Thla would Indicate that the Flllplna may beat her American alatera to the ballot box. The Flllplna haa many admlrera who predict ahe will make rood If ahe ceta the vote, Juat aa ahe haa made good In the very Important role ahe haa oc cupied In the family and bualneaa life of the Phlllpplnea ever alnce th* In troduction of Chrlatlanlty In th* i*- landa three centurlea ago. "Amerlca'a advent In the Philippine* dla covered a wonderfully Intereatlng, reaponalve little being, the Filipino wo man," write* one American concerning ifp , ffln MffiH 'VHB Jr ■ MRS. JAIME C. DK VEYRA, A Flllplns who Is doing Important work for h«r poopl* In the United Statae. tho riMplna. "Mothering tho only Chrtitlan people In the fir east, aha bold* a place of authority, lore and re aped In fumlly and aoclal Ufa that If not accorded to women In countries neighboring the lalnnda, or In India, China or Japan." A Flllplna who la doing an Impor tant work for her people In the Unit ed Btates la Mr*. Jaime C de Veyrs, wife of the realdent commissioner from the Philippine*. Not only ha* ahe fre quently addraaaed the wive* of mem ber* of Congreaa In Washington aa ta condition* In the new Philippine*, but ahe ba* vlalted various cities, speaking before women'* club*. The aenora wear*, In giving her talk*, one of tha beautiful gown* of her home land, a delicate pineapple fabric, band-woven and hand-embroidered, shaped Ilka a gauzy-winged butterfly. "In many way* the path of the wo men of the Philippines I* eeey," aaya Benora da Veyra. "Law* made by her have combined the best of American and Rpanlah precedents, snd she has come Into ber own with far less Strug «te thsn either her American or her Spanish slaters. Married women may hold property In severalty. They are guardians of their own children. Theae are vested lights and cannot be takes away from her. , "I'rofeaslonal opportunities are a* good for women aa for men In the land froin which I come. The ITlllplna I* by cuatom the dictator In the home. Bhe Is uaually the keeper of the family treasure. Practically, all of the small ■hop* In Manila are conducted l>y wo men. Women are already members of the Philippine Bar Association—• thing still Impossible In Great Britain. They are alao successful as physi cians," Life la realty a flfty-flfty proposition for women In the Phlllpplnea, accord tog to the aenora, who has taken such • prominent part In women's work there that she hss sometime* been re ferred to s* "the little mother of them sll." She was the assistant matron of the Normal llall Dormitory for Girts when ahe married. She speak* Eng lish fluently and puta ber little talks "over" with resl tsct She hss four children. An evtdence of her enter prise wns her action last yesr In mss tering shorthand se she mlglit be "use ful ts her husband st home In the eve •ings Is esse he wishes ta dictite s few letters or s speech." [ wheat, oats, potatoes, tobacco, hay and cotton produced by each State in 1919. Gives a brief synopsis of business laws, patent laws and much other useful in formation. For four cents in stamps wo will send a nice 1920 wall calendar 10 by 11 inches. Send 7 one cent stamps and get the calendar and book. tf NO. 52 Why Are Yon GrayTjl Why look Older than you fami Now that Bom many thouaaad»jß have proved that Q-ban Hair OMB or Restorer briDga a unUornfcgl uniform, dark lustrous shade to gray or faded hair—you rMffijral ought t otry Q-ban. Ready W! J use—guaranteed harmless—soc for a : large bottle—money back if not sat- ' i lsfied. Sold by Hayea> Drug 00. *| and all good drug stores. Delight- | fully beautifying. Try O-ban Halr' J Tonic, Liquid Champoo; Soap. Also Q—ban Depilatory, for superfiu- SJ oiw hair. PROFESSIONAL CARDS " J JOHN J. HENDERSON Attorney-at-Law GRAHAM. N. C. 1 Olllcc over *- nn ), J", S. C OOK, Attorney *nt- Law, GRAHAM, .... N. 0 Office Pattorton building Second Fleor OR. WILLS.LONG,JIU . . . DENTIST . . Graham. . . - North Carallaa OFFICK IN HJMMONS BUILDING ? IACOB A. J. KIMEB IOHS LONG & LONG, A.ttorn«x* and CounMlori at Law GRAHAM, N. 0. - -- ... ——■ NOTICE Of Npeclal Kleellon and of New Regis, tratlon of Voter* Therefor CoaesMfUHr 1 the laaue or Bonds lor Road In prove* menu by Cirabau Townahlp. All personsare hereby notiftalM that, pursuant to an order of the * Board of Commissioners of Ala- J mance county, made af a regu lar meeting held on the first » Monday of January, 1920, there will be held in Graham town ship, Alamance county, North Carolina, on Tuesday, the 2nd day of March, 1920, a special election to decide whether there shall be issued by said township ♦50,000.00 of coupon bonds which shall run for the period of fifty years, and which shall bear interest at a rate not in excess of 6 per cent per annum, pay able semi-annually, and the pro ceeds of the sale of which Ah:ill be used for the construction of | a road leading north from the 'JL town of Graham in the direc-|l tion of the old Bellars Mill sitief? and crossing Haw river to said township line, and for the pur pose of building and construct ing a bridge to cross said Uaw river between the town of Gra ham and the said township line at a point to lie designated by the Commissioners appointed to '1 expend the proceeds of the sale ■ of said bonds. For the purpose of said elec tion a new registration of voter.; is ordered. The registration books to lx! used at said election will be open for the registration of voters for twenty (20) dav-v preceding said election. For the purposes of said election A. R. Henderson is appointed Reg istrar, and J. S. Cook and C. P n, Harden are appointed judges. Said election will be held, and in all respects as provided in Chap. 122 of the Public La wis of 1913, and the acts amenda- . tory thereto. Said election will be held at the regular {Killing place for general elections in said Graham township. By order of the Board of Com missioners of Alamance county, at a regular meeting held Mon dny, January 5, 1920. B, M. ROGERS, Clerk of the Board. LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS This book, entitled as above, contains over 200 memoirs of Min isters in the Christian Church with historical references. An Interesting volume—nicely print ed and bound. Price per copy: cloth, $2.00; gi?* top, $2.50. By mail 20c extra. Orders may be ' sent to , P. J. Kkkkodlb, ;-*1 | 1012 K. Marshall St., Richmond, Va. i Orders mav lie left at this offlee. PATENTS OBTAINED. If you b&ve an invention. ' to patent please semi us a model or sketefcr with a letter of brief-eipianation for pre ' liininary examination and advice. Yon, disclosure and oil business is strictly coo ' (Mentis), and will receive our promptaad l personal attention. ' D. SWIFT * CO.. ' PATENT LAWYERS. WASHINGTON. D. C. I e _ ul ® i Have you dropped a blot yet on your new leaf ? The flood of Christmas bills is ' the severest test of a man's reso* ' lution to qnit swearing. ijj