WRKjLEYS H -AFTER EUERY MEAL" [I I Mint leaf, peppermint or lus- * II v clous iuicy fruit, either flavor Is a treat for your sweet tooth. " , II I And al| are equally good for II . you. Teeth, appetite and II digestion ail benefit. . II Your nerves will say "thank || you.** your vim will respond. WRIGLEY'S is liked for what I It does as well as for its BIG value at the small \ % Two of a Kind. "Good mottling, sir," eai(l the laud lord to the new tenant. "Just called to see if it would be convenient to pay.your month's rent." "Do you know, landlord, that none of the doors In this house will shut?" "New house, new house; you know It takes time for it to settle." "Ah! then there's a pair of us. I'm a new tenant;,lt takes time for me to settle, too. Good morning. ' Call again." Pittsburgh Chronicle-Tele graph. " No Discharge in That War. There is no man that hath power over the spirit to retain the spirit; neither hath he power in the day of death; and there is no discharge in the war.—Ecclesiastes VIII, 8. f Potash for Side Dressing For side dressing cotton, corn and other Southern crops, 200 pounds Kainit, or 125 pounds 20 per cent Manure Salt, or 50 pounds of Muriate of Potash, furnish the same amount of Actual Potash which is so profitable in preventing cot ton rust and in increasing the yield of cotton, corn and general crops. These are the three Standard German Potash Salts that have been used for gen ► erations to great advantage in the South. Having planted the crop, one cannot afford to let it starve. A good side dress ing may make all the difference between success and failure. _ Try it and you will find that POTASH PAYS ' f ■ The following firms'have requested us to state that they will sell un mixed Potash Salts: A»»mm-Wimwo» Co. Atlanta. Ga. DAWBOO Fnitum Co. Char Ua ton. SC. HA*»T * Co. Sumter. 8. C. A. r. PUNOU. Inc. Charleston S.C. Tax NIT* ATE AGENCIES CO.. M Water St.. N Y. Alao Baltimore. Md„ Columbua. Ohio. Ner 'olk. Va.. Savannah. Oa_ JaekaonvlUe. Fla. 1 and Maw Orlaam, La. V^O Soil & Crop Service, Potash Syndicate fi H. A. Huaton, Manager M / Broadway Growth of the Kansas Language. Judge J. C. Ituppenthal of Russell, author of a Western Kansas diction ary, and student of American dialects to such an extent that he is recognized as nn authority, is of opinion that much of the corrupted French the boys brought home from overseas will remain and become part of our language. "No doubt," he writes in the Luray Herald, "our language will permanently keep such words as bean tote, bone jar, by joe, bullion, calf,- fox paus, Jenny's pa, silver plate, three beans and toot sweet." —Kansas City Star. Another Excuse. * Hub—That button is still off. Wife —Yes, dear, I am economizing on thre'ad. A TERRIFIC BLOW TO LARGER TOWNS MUNICIPAL FINANCE ACT IS RULED TO BE INVALID BY ATTORNEY GENERAL. ' * " * * LEGISLATURE MUST CORRECT The Issue Was Raised by Bonding Attorneys to Whom the Statute Had Been Submitted. Raleigh. Attorney General James S. Manning ruled that the municipal finance act of 1921 is invalid and in doing so held that .a clerical error in the jou>- nal of the senate proceedings caii only be corrected by the legislature itself. It is a terrific Mow to the larger cities of the state, like Charlotte, Asheville, Raleigh, Wilmington and Greensboro. Unless they get relief they are debarred from levying taxes sufficient to indebtedness. The issue was nftsed by bonding attorneys to whom the act had been submitted connection with the of fering of municipal paper issued un der the prpvisions of the new law. They investigated the records and found that the bill is not recorded on the senate Journal as passing a roll call vote on final reading. The constitution expressly says that tax ation measures must pass their sev eral readings on a roll call vote and be so recorded in die journal. "Unless the legislature corrects this error," City Clerk Wf L. Dowell, of Raielgh, saidT "several towns in the state might just as well nail up their doors and go out of business." Counties Want to Begin Work. Eight*counties came to the highway commission with proposals to go ahead and build their part of the state highway system and let the state re imburse them when it was able. The commission accepted the propqpals, and ordered the roads built as soon as the formalities of advertising for con tracts can be complied wtih. Guilford, Granville, Pasquotank, Beaufort, Duplin, Pamlico, and Colum bus counties had delegations here with such proposals, and other coun ties- h»ve delegations in the city wait ing their turn with similar proposals. Candidates for West Point. Washington (Special).—Announce ment was made by the war .depart ment of the following candidates from North Carolina to be admitted to West Point July 1, following examinations held in March: Thomas Byrd Whit- Charlotte: George Patrick Samuel Zebu.on Lamb, 211 North Road street, Eliza beth City; Pierre Bacot Denson, 42£ North Saunders street. Raieigh; Ed win B. Kearns, Jr., 618 North Liberty street, Winston-Salem; John Camp bell Palmer, 209 West Divine itreet, Dunn. Cooper and Harding Invited. Formal invitation has been tender ed President Warren G. Harding to attend the spring ceremonial session of the Sudan Temple in Raleigh May 18 and 19, and to Governor R. A. Cooper of South Carolina. Though it Is unlikely that the President will find the time to come down certainty is announced with regard to the com ing of the Governor of South Caro lina, and speculation is rife as to the recrudescence of the ancient "what did the Governor of South Carolina say to the Governor of North Caro lina?" Weaver Introduces Bills. Washington (Bpecial).—Representa tive Weaver introduced a bill for sl,. 250,000 for a public building at Ashft. ville and $20,000 for one at Tryon. If a public buildings bill goes through this session of Congress Mr. Weaver •will be on the ground floor with his projects. Representative M. Clyde Kelly, of Pennsylvania, has promised President Foust, of the State College tor Wom en, to deliver the commencement ad dress June 7. Reports From Farmers Wanted. The Stato Department of Agricul ture announces that all farmers are to report the acres of each crop to the tax lister this year This is not for taxation, but for the annual crop census survey that was provided for by the last legislature. This informa tion will be compiled by the counties and not released until next January, when It wil! be In time for the farm ers to use in aiding their plans for the 1922 crops. It is important that each farmer prepare a list of his crops and have ready for listing. Air Mai/ Contract Cancelled. Hopes of an air mal service between Washington and Atlanta by way of Ra leigh went glimmering here when the Raleigh Chamber of Commerce receiv ed notification from the government to the effect that the contract * th Alfred M. Lawson for the airplane service had been cancelled at Mr. Lawson's request. Secretary M. R. Beaman announced that he would take the matter up with Colombia and Atlanta at once in the effort to secure co-operative action for the establishment of the service. THE ALAMANCE GLEANER, GRAHAM, N. C Gas Companies Lose Pig hi. Gas companies operating in seven teen towns and cities in the state seeking to have made permanent the high gas rate temporarily authorized last July during the peak of hlgb prices, lost their fight when the Corp oration Commission issued an order reducing the rate in cities of the Ra leigh class from $2.30 to $1.90 net per thousand cubic feet, and the rate in smaller cities on a similar basis. Below in given the rate 01 dered by the Comtuission, and the temporary rate allo««d last summer: New Old Rate Rate Wlnston-Walem $1.95 $2.30 Raleigh .95 2.30 Durham 1.95 2.30 Charlotte 1.85 2.30 Wilmington 2.05 2.35 New Bern - ... 2.35 2.55 Elfzabeto City 2.40 2.50 Henderson 2.50 2.60 Oxford 2.50 2.60 Salisbury 2.10 2.35 Spencer 2.10 2.35 East Spencer 2.10 2.35 High Point 2.10 2.35 Greensboro 1.95 2.10 Goldsboro .' 2.35 2.55 "Washington 2.35 2.50 • Postoffice Grades Raised. Washington, (Special).—The post office department announced North Carolina fourth class postofficeß au vanced April 1 to presidential grade, with salaries as follows: Angier, $1,100; Banner Elk, sl,- 100; Bayboro, $1,200; Boardman, sl,- 100; Cantlor, $1,000; Cleveland, $1,000; Council, $1,100; Culberson, $1,100; Elk Park, $1,200; Garysburg, $1,200; Lileavllle, $1,000; Lucama, $1,100; Moncure, $1,100; Pinetops, $1,100; Pineville, $1,000; Polkton, $1,100; Rural Hall, $1,000; Seaboard, $1,200; Sparta, $1,100; Star, $1,000; Stony Point, $1,200; Trenton, $1,200; Wliit tier, $1,000; Woodleaf, $1,200; The federal reserve board announc ed that the Carolina Bank and Trust company of Henderson, capital SIOO,- 000 and total resources of $417,276, had been admitted to the federal re serve system. Tag Day in State. K May 7 is the date for the state wide tag day to be observed by the veterans of foreign wars to raise funds for the relief of disabled sol dires of the world war. George Wlseheart, Jr., state com mander of the provisional department of North Carolina, says details are be ing worked out by the committee. The day will be observed, in Char lotte, Asheville, Concord, Durham, Elizabeth City, Fayetteville, Gastonia, Goldsboro, Greensboro, High Point, Kinston, New Bern, Raleigh, Rocky Mount, Salisbury, Stattfsville, . Wil mington, Wilson and Winston-Salem, he announces. The Red Cross, War Mothers, and the Woman's auxiliary of the Ameri can Legion, will be asked to assist In the drive, Mr. Wiseheart said. To Be Older, Wl»er and Grayer. Washington, (Sneclal). —IJavld H. Blair will soon be an older and wiser man. The job he sought after and se cured is the hardest In Washington. Prohibition enforcement has made gi'ay hairs in many heads within 18 months. Btate In Third Rank. North Carolina stands third among: the states In the number of new build ing and loan associations organized since 1895, according to figures that have been compiled by the state in surance department. Commissioaef Stacey W. Wade believes the pro gress of the state along this line is just beginning. Now Two Training Stations. The North Carolina division of vo cational training, which has had head quarters in Charlotte for nearly two years, has been divided into tvo de partments by the central board and headquarters will be maintained in Charlotte and Raleigh. Office of Tax Commission. Washington. (Special).—The office* of the state tax commission will be located In the senate chamber at Ra leigh, unless the council of atat? change their minds, according to Tax Commiosioner Aus Watts who wan in Washington conferring with friends. Highway Commission Meets. Members of the state highway com mission, the governor and the crtu'ncii of state met in the executive office* for the purpose of going into the flnan cial situation and held a long sessiou but did not get in touch with the jov ernor. It heard five different delega tions offering money for Immediate construction of state roads through five counties, these beinp: Granville, Beaufort, Columbus, Duplin and Cald well. Nothing definite was prom ised the delegations from the several counties. May be Fair Apple Crop. While most varieties of apple* have had a large percentage of the buds and fruit killed by the recent Uv* tem perature*. there is still enough live fruit in many Carolina orchard* to produce a profitable crop, according to C. D. Matthews, Horticulturist. "The result* of the March and Ay'l freezes have been variously reported, ranging from 15 per cent Injury to to tal destruction. Many apple orchards In North Carolina, reporting only per tial injury, will produce a profitable crop. INDIANS MEND SKULLS Prehistoric Medicine Men of South America Were Skillful. Bcrapedl the Bone With Knlve* of Bttftie or Obsidian and Covered Hole With Gourd. New York. —Prehistoric Indians of South' America bad crude medicine men who removed splinters of arrow heads and stone bludgeons from wounded warriors by cutting through the skull with knives of stone or ob sidian and other simple Instruments wrought from copper and bronze. Sometimes the patient lived; frequent ly" he went to. the hnppy hunting grounds. These uncomfortable treatments of serious casualties from trlbul skirm ishes still continue in remote areas of Bolivia. Evidence of tills has beeu gathered by tield workers from the AMERICANS HELD IN RUSSIA ' Anna Keiser Escapes as British Sub ject and Tells of the Rancor ftf Reds. Constantinople.—Kusslnn 3olshevlkl ! j are bitter toward Americans, anil ure | I not permitting them to leave Russia, j I said Anna Keiser of Philadelphia upon arriving Jiere. She came to this city on board the j ' steamer iteehld Pasha, which landed j | at Odessa a number of officers aud \ j soldiers who had formerly served In i ! south Russia Under General Wrangel. j | anti-Bolshevik leader. She declared. French, Italian and British citizens i I were alloweji to depart from Odessa, j "1 lett British subject," she ! ' said, "the nww Americans who were j i In Odessa liuvlng been refused per- ; | mission to leave. A number, of Gen-! ! eral W.rangel's officers win were taken 1 to Odessa were shot, and the remain- j | der were tiiken before the cei'trnl | soviet and tlln sent to the army of | farm workers. A good name lost Is hard to regain, j | _2 Sweetness of Spring Air. . The - soft sound of water moving I j among thousands of grass blades Is to . 1 the hearing as the sweetness.of spring I | air to the scent. It is so faint and » no diffused that the exact spot whence \ It Issues cannot be discerned, yet It Is ! distinct, and me footsteps are slower ! as 1 listen. Yonder, In the corners j • if the mend, the atmosphere Is full of ' | some ethereal vapor. The sunshine i | siavs in the air there as if the green | j hedges held the wind from brushing | j It away—Richard Jeffries. Proved It. Rich I'ncle—You might as well stop j mooning about Miss Bute. She hasn't j been In love with you. She's been j after the money she thought you'd In herit from me. Nephew—lmpossible! Why do you ! think so? Rich Uncle—l Jiave proposed to her I myself and been accepted.—Boston I j Transcrlpf. if You Need a Medicine You Should Have the Best Have you ever stopped to reason why j .t is that so many products that are ex | tensively advertised, all at once drop out jof sight and are icon forgotten? The reason is plain—the article did not fulfill ! the promises of the manufacturer. Thia j applies more particularly to a medicine. | A medicinal preparation that haa real I curative value almost sells itself, as like ! an endleaa chain system the remedy is | recommended by those who have been benefited, to those who arc in need of it. A prominent druggist says "Take for j example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a | j preparation I have sold for many years J and never hesitate to recommend, for in j almost every case it shows excellent re- I |,ffllta, as many of my customers testify, j | No other kidney remedy haa so large a : ■tie." | According to sworn statements and I verified testimony of thousands who have ' I used the preparation, the success of Dr. | Kilmer's Swamp-Root ia due to the fact, j so many people claim, that it fulfills al i most every wish in overcoming kidney, ' liver and bladder ailments: corrects uri- j 1 nary troubles and neutralizes the uric I acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of I I Swamp-Root by Parcels Post. Address Dr. Kilmer 4 Co., Ringhamtnn, N. Y., j and enclose ten cents: also mention this paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores.—Adv. That's All Right. I By-laws proposed by the Seine de- j ! partmental council. Km nee, for street j ! car* and omnibuses operating In the j | district, will compel men to give up j their seats to elderly women or j ; mother* with children. Brooklyn i Eagle. Catarrh Catarrh I* a local disease greatly Influ enced by constitutional conditions. | HALL/8 CATARRH MEDICINE la a Tonic and Blood Purifier. By cleansing the blood and building up the System, i HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE restores normal conditions and allowa Nature to lo Its work. All Drugglata. Circulars free. V. J. Cheney * Co., Toledo. Ohio. But Seldom Are. -Cobb—"Doea he consider himself a Idg gun?" Webb —"Yes. lien of small caliber usually do." Springtime. "The Lord lovetb a cheerful liver."— '• exchange. American Museum of Natural History. Of nearly skulls collected In South America by the late Dr. Adolph Bnndeller for exhibition In the mu seum, about 5 per cent has been oper ated upon. To-surgeons the practice Is known as trephining. It consists of removing a disk or button of bone from the skull with a saw called a trephine. Complex fracture of the skull with depression of the bony plates must have been common occurrences dur ing the undent tribal wars when clubs headed with stone and copper along with slings, the. "bola" and the "lllul" were offensive weapons, said the re ports of the museum's Investigators. A natural procedure, they opined, with victims who survived skull frac tures must huvetbeen attempts to re move the splinters of bone that pricked the brain, or to cut out frag ments pressing upon It. Warlike clans fight Intermittently Solons Send Pages to Witness Circus Sacrnmento, Jal. "Mister Spenker-r*!" "This Is circus day," said Assemblyman Frank L. Coombs, when the assembly convened, "I think tint If this assembly could take a day off yesterday to go to the ball game It might let the pages have the afternoon to go to the circus. Wo were all boys once, except those of us who were girls." Then Mr. Coomba, whose suggestion wns approved unani mously, gilded the Illy by tak ing up a collection to pay the pages' admission, buy their pea nuts and otherwise make the day bright, and Ave small boys stepping high find smiling wide ly, left for the lair of the blgod sweating behemoth. Islanders are snld to live longer tliun persona living on the mainliitid. Libraries in History, Hnrvard college led the way In America 10 the first library. This in stitution ivni established Iti IBHK Mis ty years Inter, In 1700. » public llt.rnry was founded In New York city. The following yenr the Viile library wno founded und In 1781 Iten.lamln Krank lln started n »uhscrl|i(iin, library In Philadelphia, the tirwi of |t* kind in America. The United States library, uow culled the 11 bnii » of congress, What Alcobronze li. Possessing the luster and color of gold, stronger, " tougher. and harder than ordinary bronze, a new alloy of copper and aluminum bids fair to have a wide use. The new metal has been named alcobronze. It Is stated by Its sponsors that the new alloy can be wrought, forged, or rolled without deterioration. It also resists the action of the air, acids, and salt water. Tills makes It par ticularly suitable for forglngs, pro pellers, arid other ships' parts.—Popu lar Science Monthly. Modesty keeps some |>eople from telling the naked truth. MALARIA CURED / 7 days OR YOUR MONEY BACK Read What Doctors Say About It tern Rsaulta From ANTIF DT W C. Tsbb, Blaine, Miss. Physi- LASMA tun and Surgeon, m tent a complete treatment of ANTIPLASMA for mak- 0'- J. 9. Hilburn of Rf>« Bluff, Ark , ing tests in Malanal Cnn The result *>*o put ANTIPLASMA to tlx tesr in of Dr. Tabb's investigation ii contained of his Malarisl Cases. The results in the following letter received from "« r * most gratifying to him. He wwte him—"l had occasion to meet one of back—'"l would like to know i/ I cannot your represenvaiivea— who gave me a buy ANTIPLASMA in the bulk—l bet lie of ANTIPLASMA—send m# » have used it in several instances and hail doaen bottles by return mail." have obtained excellent results " A Guaranteed Malaria Cure for Children at well a* Adults In Capsule Form—and Tasteless DOES NOT CONTAIN Alcohol, Narcotics, Quinine, Arsenic, Mercury or Habit-Forming Drugs If Your Druggist Doesn't Sell It, Mail »2 00 to the Vino Medial Co.. 200 West Houston St., New Ycik. N V., and one bouie containing complete seven-day cure will be immediately sent you postpaid. Antiplatma is Malaria Insurance at a cost of $2 per year even today 16 the wlUls of Bolivia and skull fractures are common. Other heads are perforated now and then la the bacchanals and festivals whooped up occasionally with great quanti ties of Intoxicants, tho Investigators reported. When the laughter and the free-fcr alls qulpt down, the medicine m.-a get out their sharp pocket knives aud make Incisions into the Injured skulls of the sufferers, frequently covering the apperture with gourd. During the operation they scrape around the wound with a chisel. Modern anesthetics are unknown te the medicine men. They put their pa tient into Insensibility by constant use of the "coca" plant. This also Is employed for healing purposes and li commonly applied to wounds, bruise® nnd contusions. ' Broke in on the Blessing. Weston, W. A a.—Prohibition officers interrupted Dave Able us he was say ing grace over his noonday aieal and arrested him on a charge of operating a moonshine still. CLAIM CLAM MIGRATORY FISH Fishermen Ask Supreme Court o/ United States to Pass on » Afle-Old Question. Washington.—The age-old questioa of whether a clam Is a migratory tish came to the Supreme court for de cision. Mussel fishermen operating on lAt tle river, Mo., appealed for a review of decisions holding that removal of the shellfish from a public stream passing through -private- property «ai "trespass," despite state laws ves'iu* all rights to game and Bsh In the public. The lower court held that "the fresh-water mussel Is a shellflsh capable of locomotion sufficient to bring It .within the cntegory of migra tory * I . Hacked by two electric lamps, &a Ohio Inventor's license plate for auto mobiles shows red light through per. forated numbers when a car is about to stop and greeft light when it move* ■gain. .1 was established In 181)0, but n >Bl4 It was burned by the British, it waa rebuilt and now contains nearly 2,000.- 000 volumes, and Is one of ths anest In the world. As far hack as 540 d. C., the first public library known te the world was founded at Athena. England's first library at St. C'hlcata Journal. There's Safety In Silence. People seldom find It necessary te upologlze for saying too little. H— __— Have YovlTried Theml Ask Your Druggist or Dealer TrialStza 10 eta. —Regular Site 25 eta. GILBERT BlOfc * CO., BAltlnon, Hi FRECKLES ISsSS&g