Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Nov. 4, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL. XXIII. .GRAHAM, N. C, THURSDAY, NO V EMBER 4, 1 897. .; no: 39;; .... ti. . I B jrSfck. RA w m a t , r ,Mt JM-Jletntmacnrtf ffwiM, tlie Telegraph System of Uie lmnuiii body. ;l r'-' Nerve extend from the brain to every part i-r,tii .ot the body auil rsaoh every orgaifa - i- Nerves are like lire BQOilaervaiite Uut Uar4 masters. MerVea are fed by the Wood and are therefore '. like it In character. NsrVeS .wlU be weak and exhausted It the , blood Is thin, palo and impure. nerves nrciiL db strong ami sccnuy II - . ! the blooilS rich, mil .mil vllrrtrnim ' - Merves Anil a true friend in Hood's Hafai) riila becauso it nukes rich, red blood. Merve o their work" naturally and weli, A the brain Is unclouded, there aro no , ' neuralgic pains, appetite and Uifcs- OS Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. All druggists: H. Prepared only by P. .1. Hood A Co., Lowell, Mass. ' ' - the best famllycathartlo HOCK! S FillS and UvcrtimiUaw. esc PROFESSION AT, CAItPS. '.fJL'lC O 11 1 AT' IV.O NU . . Attorney-at-Law, GRAHAM,! '- . . - k. c ''FrmetleaOntbo State nn-1 Vorternl eou'ta. Gfflco over white, Moore & Co.' store. Main Street. . 'Phone Mo. H. ,-Jv 1.KE11N01 I iE. . ATTORNEY AT LAW GRAHAM, - - - - X. C toHH GBAT I1YHPM. W. K F.VSUM, Ju. A.titorn.Pys and Counselors at Law GREENSBORO, N. G, - recHee-sresMlarly minn; county. In the. court of Ala. Alii. 2, 04 iy. DK, J 1?. STOCK ATD, Dentist, GRAHAM, N. .0. Office at reslrlenco, opposite n ipusr I'liun-h, II xt wnrkativr iniblo prions. 1 1 office Mondays ami Satur 4 i.vs. Livery, Bale till Feed STABLES. W. C. Moore, Pbop'k, (.'IfAII AH, N. C. . -eka meet all trnina. Good sIsIb or to a i a 4. Uiiurgex moderate. i-;M-0ih Tfi CHARI-OTrB umm North Carolina's . FOIiEMOST NEWSPAPER. DAILY and Weekly Indepcndeni ancTTJtiirlcss J bigger nil more attractive than ever, it will he n invaluable visitor to the home, the office, (he flub or work room. JThe Daily Observer. -Ail the-.news-of-the world, jom plcte daily Tcpoats frm theStatc - . and National Capitols. $8 year m ivr l-l -.1 -......... CI ' A i)crfit familv joumaL AH the v; 'news of the w-ek. llememlier the :. Weekly Observer. - Only On Dollar n Yvnr. " Send for samplo copies. Address TIIE OBSEHVBlt- CHARLOTTE, N. C ARE YOU UP TO DATE Mfvnn arr'nnt the N'EWS AVT) UPERTEK is. Msnscntie lor it at once and it will keep voa abreast of the times. .run Assuaai.ru t icssuinjjanii- jei. All the nexvs foreign, do mestic, natioDal. state and local all the time. ' -'Oailj ; New and Observer $7 jier year, $3.50 for 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian $1 "per rear, 50c for 6 mos. NEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO., - ' Raleigh, N. C. The North Carolinian and. TnE ALaxaxce (Slkaxeh will W fent for one year lor I wo j Mimrv asn i in Advance. Apil v at The GixAxeb I 00 OS flice, Gralum, N. V'-. .' The First Liberty- Bell ol America. Nashville (Tenti.) American, Oct 17. : ' The following very interesting papraad-bcforethg4'ennes4'ey used niarge hand-bell, biith to see Hiatoricnl Society lust Tuesday by Mrs. Dunicl A. Long, of Yellow Springs, Ohio, formerly Mrs. A, B. Beech, of this city. Mrs. Long was present by invitation of the society. She was highly complimented at the conclusion of, her address,' which - lwasas follows 1 . Iast summer, while visiting the hsme of my ancestors in Alamance county, N. C, I was reminded of the fact that Presidents Jackson, Polk and Johnson were born . in North Carolina, and that the battle of Alamance, "Where tyrants con quered and heroes fell," was only a few miles from the birthplace of Gov. Trousdale. For many years very little atten tion was paid to-the history and early struggles of the patriots in Carolina. At last Dr, Caruthersv Dr. Hawkcs and Gov. Swain did much to show the trials and trans actions' of the Regulators in their trw- light. When the sturdy arid honest Carolinians of 1771 , undertook to to "regulate'' certain , abuses in their midst, allegiance to the crown of England was strong in their hearts. But the exactions o. the Royal Governor and hi; under lings grew to 1 e more than the.-e children of the forest would tubmit to. . They had that inherent love of liberty so strong hi the Saxon rae. "The Regulation,'' pays Lyndon Swymr-"was the earliest develop ment of the essentially American idea that taxes and fees must be paid only by the people according to the laws of their own making." Although the troops under Gov. Tryon vanquished the Regulators, and many of the best men in North Carolina opposed the course pur sued by the Regulators, their princi ples wcro-the gi ri of liberty which blossomed into our nation's inde pendence, A copy of the Mecklen burg Pei'iaration was carried by Capt. Jack from North Caioliiia t Philadelphia while the Continental Congriss ras in"casion: and whilo th Nr.h C ir-ilina d.dejates in that bo ly thought it a little premature and did not present it, no doubt Thomas Jefferson and others had nn opportunity of eeeing it before Jef ferson penned his imniorlal dof u ment. lie amplified but did not originate the nr.4 Declaration of In dcpcncc on this continent. That honor rightfully belongs und must forever remain with the brave and heroic sons of the old North Stato. From thin firt assembly at Mail dock's Mill (October, 1770) to the final catastrophe, on the banks of the Alamance (May 1(5, 1771), the great principle laid -down-1 was no taxation without representation. BauiTufl copied f win oi igi na Is o4 file in London the . reports which place the ''Object,. endi and intent of the Regulators in a true color." Col. John II.. Wheeler, the historian of North Carol imrsaysftbiriP gagetnent: "Thus ended the Iwttle of the Alamance. ' Thus, and here, was the first blood fpilled in tbe-'C United States in resistance to exac- tions of English rulers." :i We clipjied the following from The Alamance Gi.eankfi of Gra ham, ALnnance couuty, N. C., pub- lished A ug. 2C, 1897. "The first battle of the American Revolution was fought on the banks of the Alam?nce in this county, May, 16, 1771. The British forces were led by Gov. Tryon. and the Regulators, known as the Alum. trice Regulators, by Herman - Husbands. It was not until lo79 that any steps wire taken to mark the Knot- where the Regulators fell. This move ment was set in motion by a eHxch made by Dr. Daniel Albright Long, who was at that time President of Graham College. He made a speech near the rpot, July '4, "187'J.' and called upon the citizens to organize and erect a monument. This was done May 29.1SSO, when Col. T. M. Holt Judge Fovrlc and others m.vle appnpriate . oddn-rscs. Dorhatn, through the generoFity of Col. J. 8. Carr, furnished the . mu.ic. TJhe iiresent editor of tlc Glkaxer wrfs standard-liennt. A nunt'iT of in - . i tercs.ing rclus a cre brought out on that memorable occasioiir Thou sands were present. ,, As the Regulators had no , drum, warn their comrades of the approach of the" J3ritish, and to call; their forces together.!,'- Since Dr. Long was the piiuio mover in organizing the movement for the erection of the monument, and saw it carried io a final consummation, the Liberty Bell was presented to him. It was on exhibition at Charlotte for some time this year, but is in Alamance county now at the old. homestead, Haw River Farm, owned by Dr. D. A Long." ., ' : o ; , ;; " . The Iwttle , of Ala-nance .made possible the Mecklenburg Declara tion. In "Sketches of North Caro lina" by William: v Henry Poole, (1840), you will find the following: "While the committee were out discussing these 'resolutions (i e., the Mecklenburg Declaration), the convention continued in session and Was addressed by several gentle-' men. Uen. Joseph" Graham,' then but a "youth, and present at the deliberation, relates an interesting incident ; A member of the com mittee who had said but little be fore, addressed the chairman as fol lows : 'If you resolve on independ ence, how shall we bo absolved from the obligation of the oath we took to be true to King George the Third, about four years ago, after the Reg ulation buttle when we were sworn, whole1 militia companies together?" Great excitement ftl lowed. -They decided that allegiance and protec-tionwereretproealrftnd-that the oath was bhiiling only woile the King protected them in their rights as they existed at the lime it was taken. May 30, 1775, the second Mecklenburg Declaration was made. Whilecomparisons may always be more or less invidious, yet it is just and right that we should turn to the pages' of reliable history, and take a culm dispassionate view of facts. A few quotations only will be suflicierit to show that the people of North Carolina led nil others in the cause of American liberty, Ban croft well says : "Ate there any' who doubt man's capacity for self government ? Let thein study the jhiitory of North Carolina." . As early as 1GS7, the li' crly loving sons of -North "Carolina imprisoned the president and dep uties of Jbnropxietnrie.-', and with Quaker-like seriousness and delib e ation .organized a government suited to their needs. As early as 1704, "the people of North Carolina in an address of the assembly, claimed the inherent right and exclusive privilege of imposing their own taxes.' (Bancroft, vol v., tage223.) r ' . , In 177G,jtihile all other colonies indulged in threats of -resistance when the. stamp act was proposed, or-Httmdod-jitfuulon, "Ihe inhahu. tants of North Carolina set up looms for weaving their own clothes," ( Uancroft, y A , ' V. , nge 3-39. ) In January, 177ti, tlie' sons of Libert jr-fidd i regular meetingsjarid urged that 'that : there, was only safety for the colonies in the firm union of the whole.'' (Bancroft, rol. v., page 377-57 -'Agnin, (voLlv., page .77). in speaking of the Scotch-Irish I'rts byterianj, Bancroft says: "Their training in Ireland hail kept the spirit of libertyAnd. JJigyndlnjM " 'T"MwmemMetiit rsluaMe timber, crd- to resist unjust government as frebh fi fcmsin an, t Und . .... I 't jl L JI. . . n - 1 . in their hearts As thouch they had Iwcn listening to the preaching of Knox, or musing over the political .owed of the Westminster Assembly. They brought to America no sub missive love for England, and lh ir experience and their religion alike bad tho meet . iippreaaioo nith prompt re-'istancc. We shall find the-firet voice pubTit ly raised in America to dissolve all connection j with Great Britain came not from the Puritan of New England, or the Dutch of New York, or the planter of Virginia, but from the Scotch Irish Presbyterians of North Car-ol-'na." ' . Tennessee is my native Slate, the State to which my ancntors came from Virginia and North Carolina. I love every inch of her 'iL from the trerle-s dome of the Appala-I Ichinn tn the ndhnjr tide f lhe-r- 1 . ... . I ,1 T I llicr ol v aurs. lui lae ocu i now hold in my handthe first Liberty Bell of America belongs to North Carolina, and was UBed to call to gether the first men who shed .their blood in these United Stales in re sisting the advocates of despotic power. The battle of Alamance took 'place nearly four ye on Jeforo the patriotic sons of New England fired a gun at Lexington. .' To North Carolina will 'ever re main tjie honor of making . the first Declaration of Independence, which is the pride and gloiy of every American. - Negroe in the Government Service. Washington Dispatch. In response to numerous inquiries on the subject, the number of ap pointments of. colored persons to positions in -the government during the eriod from March 4, last, to October 15, is ascertained to have been 179, currying salaries amount ing to $129,390 per year. Of these appointments four were made under the State Department, 72 in : the Treasury, 18 in the Interior, .10 in the Department of Agriculture, 8 in the Navy, 14 in the Postoflice De partment and 53 in the Government Printing Ollice." The number appointed during the same period in 1889 was 90, carry ihp; annual salaries amounting to $75,090. The promotions during the period from March 4, 1897, to October 4, .number. 125, carrying salaries aggregating 475,740. "4The number promoted during the same period in 1889 was 20, with salaries amounting to $17,8.00. - Soanda Like Vance. ' Concord Times. In "Dowd's Life of Senator Z. B. Vance," on page 21, the following anecdote is related : "The venerable Dr, Mitchell took his class on a geological excursion ('Vance being a mcmbj ). -On their way they passed an old millhouso which had not oeen used for years. Viinee, with his utmost gravity, said : 'Doctor, do you think that old milihou.se is worth a dam ?' " Here the author stop, but a writer in Fayetteville finishes it as he has heard it : "The doctor replied : 'Well, Mr. I Vance, it has the appcaranco of j having been a valuable place in the prvstj-nrid with a gr.od house, and a new dam it ..might be made a val uable plate again. Now, I would like to know what you think of it ?' 'Vanee,still retaining his gravity, ssiid : 'Well, sir, I am of the same opinion. Although the house is di lapidated and about rotted down, there is a dam site there yet.' " The Meanest Man. Kinston Free-Press. That mean Onslow counly man who wanted to put his poor old father on the county as a county charge is named J. W. Shepard and does a mercantile business at Pol locksville. He is raid to be worth $8,000 lo $10,000. The old man was offered a home bj a son in-law. If ever there was a proper subject for "tar and feathers" we think' J. W. Shepard one. The people should boycott his business and OHlracie him socially. . What Cared, the tibjr "Homl2 Sarsaparilla has cured our baby of running sores tor which wo doctored her for a long tiroe. It haa relieved me of rhcumaticni. My witii was troubled with "sick beailacbes and could get nothing to relieve her until she took Hood's PilU IL L. I'lCKE.w, Lock Box U, Ellenboro, W. Va. Hood's Pills are the only Pills to take with Hood's Si rsa pari I la. Easy yet efficient, : " Parties who have recently passed Ihrou&h the Dismal Swamp pay that everywhere can Itescen dead animals which have either Ix-cn burned or nerisheil for lack of water. Irjre have I pen dcstroyid. Immense trees are burned to their roots. There is no water in the swamp, and bears, panther, deer end other n il I animals flock to Lake Drum mond to slake their thirst. The lake in lower than was ever known licfore. - How to Core Billoa Colic. I sunerol for weeks with colic and pains in my stomach caused by biliivusness ami hail' to take medi cines all the wbiln unlil I used Chamberlain' Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Iloinctly a hicli rurttl ine. I have since recommended it to n giMNl j many people. Mrs. F. Bui.teb, Fairfiarrit, Conn. IVr ons w ho ar aubjeet to bilious colic csrn ward off tbc alloc k by taking this remedy as soon as Ihe first symptoms apjiear. Sold by T. A. Albright & Co. Tlte daie-of-tbe'-ting of the Stnte ISoard of Medical Exaniiiwr has Lorn changed from OctaU-r 2".lh to Novimlcr ythv ' " WEEKLY WASHINGTON LETTER. From Our Regular Correspondent. - - ! Washington, D. C, Oct. 29, '97. , Mr.i McKinley and his admin istration have nobody but them selves to blame for many persons regardingnfioir 7 now-you-see it, now-you-don't-see-it, mani pulation of the Union Pacifio-Jluilroudtiuea' tion as a thimble-rigging amo in which the people have been bun coed. For the sale of the road was to be postponed and then it wasn't. Those who have carefully studied thi matter say that the administra tion deserves no credit for the raise of $8,000,000 in the bid for the re organization committee for the pro perty ; that it was a question with the recognization committee of los ing .'all. the 8 wag or of giving up enough of it to hush the. publio clamor which had compelled the announcement that the government would ask the court to postpone the sale of the road for six weeks, in or der to eive intending competing bidders a chance, and that Mr. Aftxj Kinley was in too great a hurry to withdraw tho application for a post ponement of the bale. No . interest could possibly have suffered by tho postponement of tho sale, and the creditors, other than tho govern ment, of i ho road might have been greatly benefitted. -Members ot the administration m.ty throw bouquets at each other over this bus'ness, as they try to make tho country lie lievo that they accomplished some thing which deserves praise, but the country has a way of getting at tlte inside of things, and it will do so in this case. There must bo something about the New York city campaign which provokes. men to profanity. Secre tary Bliss is not ordinarily a pro fane man, but ho has been using ugly cuss words in publio to em phasize his denial of the charge that funds of the Republican National Committee, of which he is Treasur err were being used in behalf of Gen. Tracy, the Platt-McKinley candidate for Mayor of greater New York. Mr. Bliss should read his Shakespeare, and ponder his com ments upon the fellow who protest ed too much. . Tho screws have never been turn ed upon Ohio republicans employed in the government department hard er than during the present week. Many ot them having pleaded as an excuse for not going homo to vote, Boss Hanimwiit a bi batch of railroad tickets something like 500 from Washington to Colum bus, Ohio, and return, to his Wash ington agent, and thee tickets have been placed in tho hands of thoso Ohio republicans who had claimed to bo too poor to buy their railroad tickets, and each of them has bd-n informed tlvat by ' calling at tho Hunna headquarters in Columbus in person he can secure round trip free transportation from that city.. to his voting place in the State. And that isn't all ; every one of these men has leen given a hint that it will bo very unwise for him not to go homo and cast his rote for the i fauna ticket. Nothing worse than this was ever done, even in ihe day when a republican candidate lor President unblushinirly Udoirraphed asking tho chairman of the National Committee, "How are the depart ments doing?", .bull, there are peo ple who swallow all the stuff about civil jery emanates from Mark Hanna's administration. The great McKiuley Cuban iohcy, which was u?ed nt the extra session to prevent the I louse from taking up and adopting, as it rhonld have done, the joint resolution which the Senate adopted, directing Ihe re cognition by this government of the belligerency of thu Cubans, has, it' the friends of tho administnition know what they are talking about, lcen abandoned, and Mr. McKinley will refer the whole business to Con gress for solution.. This seems an astounding statement to make, but it is the McKinley followers who aro making U in Washington. SjKtin's reply to the McKinley Milicy, which rvached Washington this week, seems to have lnken the main spring of the policy, if there really ever was a definite jmlicy, which many doubt. It is seiui of ficially atated that the communica tion fnm Sain will, as a result of an understanding lelwccn the two governments, lie kept from both the Sjianich and tho American pul lic antil aflcr it has been ubrmtted to Corrjiress by Mr. McKinley. I-istSorinz Mr. McKinley said in effect to Congress : keep your hands off this question; 1 can handle it without your assistance, anil in De cember he will appeal to CiMigrcss for orders as to w hat he shall do with it. This sort of thine would re hnmiliaUng to a sensitive mnn.j Meanwhile crcrrthini else has Iwn ! ... . . dropped anl Mr.xMcKinicv, John Iters jifLl hefti I miu M nt tion hare gone to tllini to try to vr an.ide tbc voter t' keep 'heir hands bll Marcus Aartlias Hamia. . WASHING FUNNELS. Mr. 8. T. Barer Describe How It Can be Hone rrrfectly. . . . ' ' : .... ....... ",i ' V " "Shave a quarter of a pound of soap into a granite saucepan, add one quart of boiling water, stir over the hre until dissolved," writes Mrs. S. T. Rorerof "Handling the Fam ily Wash," in the November Ladies' Homo Journal. ' Pour this into a tub half filial with water at a tem perature of 100 -Fahrenheit. Mix well. Have on the left side of the tub a bucket of clear, warm water, 100 .Fahrenheit, into which you may put a half-tcaspuonful ot house hold ammonia. Take each piece of flannel singly and immerse it in the suds. Soap should never be rubbed on flannels, nor should flannels ever be rubbed on a board. Wash them by pressing and drawing through the hahd,'. rubbing the soiled places' quickly with the hands. Kmse at once in clear water, and wring by pressing one hand under the other, or through a wringer. Never twist in tho wringing. Shake well and hang to dry immediately jthen pro ceed to wash the second piece. The flannels when nearly dry must be takon from the line and pressed with a hot iron. Be careful that it is not, however, too hot, or it will destroy the color. Flannels washed in this way will retain their soft tex ture and original size until com pletely worn out..' No deviations from these directions, however, can be made. For colored flannels make ft suds as above. To the warm . water for rinsing add ' four tablcspoonluls ot white wine vineH gar, or a tiny bit of acetic acid which has been throughly dissolv ed. It is always well to wait for a bright day before waslring flannels. They should be dried as quickly us possible." The three year-old loy of J. A. Johnson, of Lynn Center, III., U subject to attacks of coup. Mr. Johnson savs he is satisfied that the ! timely uso of Chamerlain's Cough Remedy, during a scvero attack, saved liis little boy's life. Ho is in the drug business, a member of the firm of Johnson Bros, of that place and they handle a great many jiptent medicines for throat and lung diseases. He had all these to choose from, and skilled phy- sician.4 ready to respond lo his call, but selected this rcmc'y ror use m his own family nt a time, when his child's life was in danger, because he knew it to be biipcrioi t any other, and ruinous tle country oyer for its cures of eroup. ' Air. Johnson say this is thobest selling cough medi cine they handle, and that it gives splendid satisfaction in all cases. Sold by TV A. Albright & Co. . 8 anshoro correspondent New born Journal : Elias Ambrose, col., had five ten dollar bills in his pock et yesterday, in the rain, he got uiem wet ami hiki mem on uie stove with a flat iron on th m to dry, the got ton hot for tho bills and .1 . I l3.1 .i t... burnt them to a dust before Elias knew itr When, in need of a remedy to relieve pain you want Ihe surest, quickest and best, such a one is Rice's Goose Grease Liniment, it relieves all pain at on-e, it cures croup, cough and colds as soo i as used. For sale and guaranteed by nil drug gists and general stores. It relieves whooping ough. - . Tho-pcnitcnl iflryalimtori before Inst unanimously decided that Kirby Siniih, son of the super intendent, had ln guilty f the grMwiMtiinmonditjLwitb two ofJhe criminal insane : that the chanics arzainst him were fully proved : and commend Dr. Geo. L. Kirby and Superintendent Smith for promptly discharging him as sujwrviBor. "The worst cold J ever had in my life was cured by Chamlfcrlain's ('4ugh Remedy," wrilm W, H. Not ton, of Sullcr Creek, Gd. "This cold left nie with a coujrh and I ' was expectorating all the lime. Tlie Remedy cured nie, and 1 want all of mr friends when trou- bhd with a c iugh or cold to use if, for it will do them good." bold.by T. A. Albright & Co. Halifax counly has a large num lcr of n-cro Kislinastcr. I'cs'de Ibosc already reported the offices at Essex and Its arc mannged by ne groes and cfTorts are being mada to get a negro apMiiitcl iwntinasJer at Hingwood. liiereare now elnht or nine ncro poitmastcH in Halifax county. J. C. pKrry, one of. iho ltcst known citizens of Stenct r. MoH tcstifii1 that he cunnl himself of the worst kind of piles bv using a few Ihixps of HeWitt's .'Witch Hszd In. a . t t a . a !aive. lie nao ixH-n imuoici wim nihil for over tbirry years and had nsel many different kimls of aocall cd cures ; hut DeWitt's was the one that did Ihe work and hewi I verify this statoownt if any one wf-hnn to write him. Sim:ii6:i.-, tho ' Dr.ig-si.- ' v, -. . Koral osakaa the food pare, , i t 7 FGVBin Absolutely Pure v Negro Ticket in Ohio. Wilmington Star. , In Ohio the negroes hare a full slate ticket, comjxised entirely of merv of their own race. It is called the "Negro Pi otection" ticket," and the petition to put it on the official 'bal lot was signed by 10,845 rot ers. These were nearly all negroes, and if the tie'ret is supported only j lr lhse who signed the petition it may cause trouoie in tne ucpuniieun camp. There ore 80.0t)0 ' negio voters in the state and the nomina tion of the ticket n sulis roin a failure of the Republican : white bosses to give, the ney roes pnp'r recognition in dealing out political pie. ' ; " ' Southern and Western . stock 'men kiiov n good thing whi'ri thcr see it therefore : for 'scratches, sweeny, ring born- ptrains, prains, bruisi. sndille and hnrnchS galls and ail m entsof horses, they use llic e's Goose ( reasexliiniment, it is phkI for man as heart. Sold and jiuar nntied by all druggists and gtneral stores. - ' ' Ralciph cnriefpVr.dent Messenger, 25t h : R. P. illianis,of Craven county, was here to-day to confir with the state suerinlendent of pob'ic instruction relative to the liuilding of a public, rOftd froni Rivenlale in Cniven to Stella , in Carteret county, threugh ' lOO.fiOO acres of Slate swamp lands. . b'tate Engineer John R. Itamsuv is to lav f oil' this road and the State is U j furnish thirty convicts to grade ,it. J. M. Thirswoad, of Grosbwk, Tex., says that when he has .a jqol ui indigestion, aiul feels .".had and sluggish, he takts two of DeWitt's Little Early Risen at night, and he is all right the next morning. Many thousands of others do .the! same thing. Do r you t Simmons, , tho DlUggist. r-.- It is Btalcd that ono of tho stock holders of the North Carolina rail way will make application for a re- m-iror (or lh riMil nn friA trronnl4 7 . " ; ,(lt (he governor is squandering tho j fun,i8 of lJie road.A large nunilT j of a,0ckliolder are said to favor this plan and say Gov Russell is hiring a large - nnmticr oi lit wy era in me State with the object ti, furthering his own political ends, and that the treasury of tho road is footing - the bit's. '- ' Details, liltlo things, . Utmost care, Ihe having everything right, are all hi'lpiug toi mnko tne BUCK KKIN 1IKEECHES the most popu lar working pants on earth. -Tlio seauis are rightVciit right, look right they kccplIit'kAm Uims a nd never rip ; they are nearly wear-proof. ' The R.'dcigh corresjKrndent of tho New hern J ounml - say iU'opu lit 4 -are losing gmund in two directions one part going toward the Demo crats und one portion toward "iho Republicans. Thus both Jttithr and Harry Skinner ; are lowing ground.. . ' I '-' ' . You can't afford to risk your life by allowing a cold to develop .into pneumonia , or -consumption..: In stant relief and a certain cure are af-for-leil by One Minute Couh Cure. Simmons, the Druggist.''.. I ' Gen. Nelson A. Miles), major gen eral commanding the Ujiited, , State ' army, recommends an appropria tion by Congress of 8397,0tX) Air the coming hsc-.il year for modern lorti- ficattnnfc and high power guns fur the defense of Wilmington T ' Disfi 'urement for life by bums or scalds mav bo avoided by nsine De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve, the ercat remedy for piles and for all kinds of sons and skin troubles. Simmons, the Druggist. monism is. makirtr consuura'io headway in " Rot kinuliam . oouotr . and a church is lo ! rnt-lcd to the "Naneo neibUrhoNl." Then is no need of little diiMum hein tor! ii ml t-y.raMhead. rczio:t and skin eruptions. Dt-Wiit', Wilrlrllazct Millie tnsliiitTx h'cf snl cu" i cnnarr- ntly. bin m his, the I.'rugist. " Hi'
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 4, 1897, edition 1
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