The LEANEE. yOU XXX. GRAHAM, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 190M. NO. 19 LAMANGE CLACK - DRAU6MJ STOCK an POULTRY MEDICINE ' Stock and poultry have few hJbSTwhich are not bowel and irregularities. Blaok- UUrfi bowel and liver remedy ffJock. It puts the organs of Kin a perfect condition. KnmtAnjericanbreederj and mr keep their herds and flock! by giTing them an occ ffloiBa-Draht Stock iSdPoultry Medicine in their Anyrtock raiser maybuya Sosnt half-pound air-tight can Tmm medicine from hfs dealer id keP tock in vigorous SSth for weeks. Dealers gener m! keep Black-Draught Stock and paltry Medicine. If yours doe iend 25 cento for a sample to the manufacturers. The Ctoon Medicine Co., Chat hlW.; v .-;:':. : c; Boontu, Oa., Jan. SB. MBS. MMk-Draofht Stock and Poultry MjlMne U th. bet I ever tried. Our 2. i tooktof bad when yon sent IT th mediotaa and now they an Httiiif so Sua. They are looking sv Mssnt. better. 8. P. BBOOKDrOTOir. --JEWELER- GRAHAM, " '-" r -VN. c. Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware. ' v ! ESTABLISHED 1893 Burlington Insurance Agency INSURANCE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. ' ' - '; :': ' f. -J ' i'' Local agency of Penn . Mutual Insurance jCompany. ' v - Best . ' Life Insar- .. nce contracts now ; on the market. t'Ptpersonal attenUon to alt orasrs. Correspond eao sollolted. i James p; Albright , Agent. J! S. CIOO'E, Attorney-at-Law, fUAM, . . - n. a i . Offle Patterson Building I .y Second Floor. . . . . - li WILL S. MXO, JR. ' DENTIST . . . - North Corolla WlCKm SIMMONS BUILD INU (BYmjm &BYNTJM, "Tn4 Goonavloi-a at rw " 4,-MoBOHO, a. e2f "Snlariy hi the eoarts of Ala - .. Aac t, M If Uoi torn, j. axHKB MHO. ! long & isojra, tka' nd Oonnsssaorw a Zsrsr, CEAKAJf, K. C. ila BTETII)T7ICK V Attsnssv.ruLaw, Jom in the ooarU ofJAk- and Guilford counties. ' ! THE SPIDER'S WEB Rosy complexioned and in her fresh spring toilet, she was truly beautiful. Under her long, silky lashes her azure eyes had a soft, caressing light that illumined her face with kindliness. The form, though somewhat slender, was well modeled, and the: lines of her neck set off all the attractiveness of a head, encircled by a profusion of blond locks. This was the beautiful and grace ful Paoletta, Giorgio's young wife.' In a carriage the newly wedded Dair were proceeding rapidly along the sun filled river bank, thinking of some way oi employing the day. The carriage paused to allow them to admire the flowers upon spur of the incline, where 4he vines, like wild nests, stretched from dis tance to distance, half concealed by the trees. "Do you wish to go up there?" asked Paoletta. She pointed with her delicate hand, from which she had drawn her glove, to the heights of Belle vue. "For what?" Giorgio asked. "We might see a house that would suit us. You know we ought to be looking for one," said Paoletta. "We can inquire at the inn." Giorgio hesitatecL "What of our journey to St. Cloud r he asked. "Let it be postponed for awhile." He did not answer immediately. Finally he said, half reluctantly: "As you will. It really makes no difference where we live so long as we are together." She looked at him brightly, and they descended from the carriage jmd took their way toward the bank of the Seme. The inn was deserted. "Let us mount into that little bal cony, she said. "There is a fine view from there." "As you please." Soon the sun shone less brightly, for a space shone pallid, then van ished. Great clouds heaped them selves up about them, rapid and compact. A strong wind blew, and large drops of water began to falL Where should they take refuge e "There!" said Paoletta. With her hand she indicated a cottage, upon the threshold of which an old woman stood. " Giorgio suddenly blushed crim son, but accompanied his wife m silence. "It is for rent. It can be looked over, said the woman, who nopea to find tenants in this handsome young couple. Giorgio did not respond, but while Paoletta examined the apartments he regarded with interest this slight, boxlike construction, so simply made. As soon as his wife called him he entered the house. A vision of the past rose in his mind. He saw ihe garden, the arbor, the honeysuckle and ivy, now nothing more than a mass of green foliage, under which was hidden a little bench covered with mosa and cone to decay. marble dove, blackened by moistrlre, had been for long years the sole snectator of this devastation. "It is ten years since the house was left tenantless," prattled the old woman. "The proprietor, who was eccentric, did not wish to let it But now he is dead, and I have been riiiwfod to have a card put up. The nmvHuuirv reoairs will be made." Paoletta laughed aloud with hap py, childlike pleasure. t "Am vou willintr to rent this IintiAA. Ginririo?" she asked. "The air might be too bracing for you, my dear. "But not more so than every where in the country," put in the old woman. "Besides, the rent is so little 400 francs a year." . "It is very reasonable said Pao letta. "I shall be delighted to live here. Come, let us visit the rooms. I am charmed with the whole place." He followed her, examined some apartments decorated with gray pa per and red flowers, looked into the duiing hall with windows looking r n the Seine, and as he glanced ut all the past returned to his memory. No longer was a raoiewa who was before him, but Chiara, the girl he had first loved and w hem. , h had often seen seatea in una mu hennitaee. to which he had by chance returned. .-v. . ... . He had lost her while the cup of love was still fuIL But he forgot her in time and married the pretty v.Mit whom he loved. Yet fr- i. .t.i with her a shadow QUCIIUJ " iaed before him the shadow of a vounz ana loveiy ... , ja i. found them settled a ww ., ... n ihm cottatre. The outdoor iue wis a great benefit to Paoletta, who h4 been romething of an invalid. It was arranged that they should pcm the winter in the country. Every day Giorgio went to bud nee, in the city. "ligPaoletta .lone. T1youBgwife,Truty with MM vaj hADPT tM Con ner UCW ev m a tented. She adored nruaic and play ed a gmVdeel in her hours of eoti tude. !.-. tr-w Br and by abe oo - -rj- spider came out oi w Sten to her. Joined by W lad .lender thread to the Wk of. "rror, he got ofe, pin. i Paoletta gradually ceased to fear him. But when to this great spider were added several olEers she re solved to remove this law family. domesticated no doubt for number ' oi years. She called in a carpenter to take down the mirror, laughing to see the tsibe scampering. . Suddenly she uttered a cry of sur prise. Wrapped up as in a net, in vested with a great mass of cob webs, a letter sealed with black fell from behind the mirror. The workman, no less surprised than the young lady, presented the letter to Paoletta, who took it, trem- Diing. un the outside she read: "To be delivered to Signor Gior gio Dorval after mv death." The young wife's heart beat fast ihia letter was directed to her hus band. What could it contain? "It must have been written a low? A..' M .... , " tune ago, saia me workman. "It is directed to my husband," responded Paoletta. The man smil ed musingly. "A letter from a woman," he thought. Should she burn this letter un opened? What might it contain? Should she give it to Giorgio ? No, no; certainly not. After a long time she broke the seal and this is what she read: "My dear Giorgio, I am sick and sod. The house is a prison. I seem to find in it something tragical, lead ing to revenge and death. "Although it is ended, completely ended, do not doubt but we shall see each other again. Is our love to endure but one season? Do you not remember your oath of eternal fidelity? "I have not forgotten and have returned to our nest. Now I would like to die, surrounded by the things you care for. "I have re-entered this room, fill ed with tokens of your love. That reclining chair has seated you fre quently, when, returning from a long excursion in the woods, I came to rest my head against your knees, while you touched the brown locks which fell over my forehead. I have reviewed all that year of happiness day by day and only desire to die in this house, where you and I have loved." Paoletta gave a loud cry and fell to the floor. When she returned to her senses, the sun had set, the day was slowly departing, the horizon, tinted with purple, forming a lumi nous garland. Nothing was changed in the life of the world about her. There was the same asure sky, the same strident shriek of the railway train, the hilarious shouts of the children released from school. Was what had passed a dream, some strange fancy ? No, the letter was there at her feet It recalled her to reality. It was true all was true I And suddenly she felt within her heart an enormous weight, and upon her shoulders something lay Blmost insupportable. She remained for a long time mo tionless and silent, making a thou sand projects. Then gradually her nerves crave way, and tears flowed from her eves. When Giorgio returned, he found her calm, but a little nervous. Several daysjoassed, then Paoletta took to her bed. A malady which had not been able to carry her to the tomb a year before reappeared. The physician announced that all was over: she would not outlast the fall of the leaves. She treated Giorgio with cold ness, of which she gave no explana tion. He attended her, watched over her, supplicated her to tell him why she had changed, but she' re mained silent and her calmness made him almost insane. ' One morning she said to him, "You will return early today, will yon not, Giorgio?" He bent over her, kissing her ten derly. "Yes, my darling, he said. That eveninsr when he returned she was dead. She held in her rigid bands a letter the letter of Chiara. In pencil she had added these words: "I am jealous of this woman and of jealousy die. Adieu, Giorgio V From the Italian. . An AaaJosy. The Doctor (angrilyV Look here, Dicer, I understand that yon have been telling people thai yoa would not let me treat a sick cat of yours! Dicer I believe I did say that The Doctor WelL air, youU have to take it back. Dieer Verr welL I wffl. I wOl let you treat a sick cat of mine. I'd not very zona oi im anunu any how. A few Atom of on of s-veadsv fcs a Over bowl or eraainewtal fflah e aoaae kind, half nlled wtta. very act watar ind sat la tb dtotoc room Jos before f.r hi aerrad gtro a deUfbtfol aad tjfU-jno. fiislniissi to tae anoapoarv of tb apartment. BoitaeaM etioa pat oswi la tM panor aaa biiissj thfims waoamsar arraayewisii for a fastfrtty. ThtmtatmOom U apa etaO? TsJoabse to tbo bootees ta a otaan walcft oosaonsnso ia sao of oroparatloa fcsessaso ornffy. la ODtto of an tbo otofeo sad fba Oes of ah) wtadowa to tb cnapmy r MpstfCL TsTW WbI re to be soot wit, m tatsrica ttat baa behind Ckair traasltloa to tbe parametria. Uaey apar at tao wraaf ono a tbe wtoaa) ENGLAND'S HAND RUSSO-JAPANESE WAR By MICHAEL DAVITT. h-M Para men tary Leader HE London press has encouraged Japan hi every way during the last few months to pick a qur.rrel with Russia, while the Anglo-Indian expedition to Tibat waa a DIRECT INCITATION by the Brit ish government to the Japanese to go to war, this expedition being anti-Russian, in policy and pur pose, English diplomacy has played its part in sidiously and well so far in helping to put her chief rival in the far east to the expense and risks of a great war, but tho results may not come up to English expectations. If she forces Russia to strike back, BRITISH INDIA is at tho mercy of Russia's overwhelming mili tary power whenever the war's government may be driven to retalia tion. There is absolutely no connection between tho Kishincff massacre and the present war, unices you wish to represent the Japs as going to war with Russia in order to avenge the outrage on the Jews,rwhicli ts too ridiculous for a moment's thought The local Russian admin istration was CRIMINALLY WRONG and to blame for tho crimes of Kishinefl. In the present war JAPAN IS THE AG GRESSOR and is animated mainly by a feeling of revenge for Rus sian action in preventing the full conquest of China by the Japs in the war between Japan and the Chinese empire. Moreover, Japan is England's ally, and she is playing England's game in forcing a war upon the Russian empire. It is not at all likely that England will openly take sides with Japan. That would mean THE CERTAIN LOSS OF INDIA to the British, and this would be too high a price to pay for helping a heathen nation like Japan to humiliate a Christian nation like Russia. No, England had quite enough of war in South Africa for the present generation. SHE WILL CHEER THC "8 SHRINKS PROM PACtNO. I do not think any other nation will intervene. The end of this war will be contested on land, the prize being the major control or influence of China as a market ON LAND RUSSIA IS PRAC TICALLY INVINCIBLE. She quest Her destiny end policy 5,000,000 of fighting men fa the to fight an opponent of thJa eiae on THERE WILL SB NO WAR UNLESS BOTH ROWERS BECOME MANY WILL NEVER THrNK OF F1QHTINO RU88IA TO SERVE THE ENDS OF ENGLAND'S BtlNO POLICY OP, ANTI-RUSSIAN PREJUDICE. America ia surely in the same Russia is Uncle Sam's oldest friend in Europe except France, and as Russia is ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN to be the major influence in the matter of the future Chinese market it would be far wiser for the United States to be strictly neutral in this quarrel than to follow England's more selfish and more unscrupulous example. THE BOY OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY By LESLIE M. SHAW, IHERE fa nothing in after as the boy, and there ia no being in the world bq neglected as the boy. There is littlo place, scant room, for him. He is WELCOME in the home AS A BABY; and he is welcome AS A MAN, but there is scant welcome for him-as a boy. . About the only door that swings with sure welcome to the boy, about the only chair that is shoved near the fire especially for the boy, about the only place where he is sure of a cordial greeting, is WHERE YOU DO NOT DESIRE HIM TO GO. It ia pretty hard to win the companionship of your boy. You think yoa know something about him, but perhaps that is littlo.1 Very likely HE KNOWS MORE ABOUT YOU than you do about him. Yet that boy is hungry for companionship, and he will have it He wants the oompanionship of boys. Nothing will take its place. I think boys, as a rule, prefer boys' schools. If permitted to, they will quit the public school if given nothing but girls as teachers. They may remain under the tuition of matronly women, BUT NOT UNDER THE TUmON OF GIRLS. It is not a question of who ia the better teacher. It is a. question of companionship. IP THE TWENTIETH CENTURY SUCCEEDS IN FINDING THE BOY IT WILL BE BECAUSE THE BOY SUCCEEDS IN FINDING HIM SELF. -;: ' : ' : ' . SOME PROS AND CONS OF OUR NEW INDUSTRIAL SYSTEM By PriilSiat JACOB O. SCBURMABJ ef Ci tiarversUy : OME of the features of $ system hare been criticised rather because they are new than because they are erfl. Thus it ia true that the Individual merchant or manufacturer who does a small business fa sometimes eliminated by his colossal com petitor. But, on the other band, the number of failures is reduced. The big estabtishmenU offer steady employment, with wages ap- proxiinafing tbe capacity of the employees, and there IS ALWAYS jivuANii Xja KsJLrAJiLjLi MpcasiUe fodtioat.' The wont danger I see in tbe eeotradon of enormous power in a tbe abuse of this power aa, for unwarranted advance in the price of commodities - provokes a more or less effective oheck. Poten tial eompetitioiv . always slumbering, may at any lime be roused to energetic ttf e. i Yet, when all is aH I think it must be admit ted that we have not yet kerned bow to reconcile b the most effective way the advantages of eap itiilsCie 'production wtlb the welfare of the entire people or how to protect the govvrcmea t of the twpublio'fjcom.the icfiuenoe not, indeed, of the legitizne btereeU of busiiiee cprutomcy:' - I NMONAUV CAN THINK OF NO SAFER OR MORE CONSERV ATIVE STEP THAN A LEGAL REQUIREMENT OP PUBLICITY OP AC COUNTS, SUCH AS. IS NOW DEMANDED OP BANKS AND INSUR ANCE COMPANIES. ' ' f - ' .. . " IN THE s3 ON TO THE TA8K 8HE. HERSELF never crosses the seas for con alike keep her where she can put field, and no nation in Europe wants his own ground. BETWEEN ENGLAND AND FRANCE SUDDENLY INSANE, AND OER position as Germany in this respect Secretary ef taw Treasury the world so well worth looking our new economic and industrial jaxi vo lui we nigner anu saorv - , ' . new system of business is the eon- few bands. Yet I recognize that example, by an FOLKS UK.- ,h rri n ,a THE INK AQUARIUM. Hon to Chnnsre 1U Into Water Coa talulna; Several KUJi. Some time Jvlieu you luire nn even ing party at your house fmrlug ttilH clover trlfk on your plnynintcs: Pre sent n KlUHKful of In!; io (lie. view of the tmertutoru; thru .rove that It Ih Ink by dipping a visiting curd in It and allowing the curd. Now nniHiuiico Hint there; nrc tiub In the tumbler Unit Just tlirlvo on Ink, and yon will prove they ure there by chnnK,nK the ,k to water so that ttie onlookers may see tliem. Throw a handkerchief over the kIosr so as to entirely euveiop It, repent an TUB THICK KXI'LAIKED. Incantation and then suddenly whisk the handkerchief nwuy. The audience will be very much astonished to find the Kin's filled with water clear aa crystal, with several fishes in It The trjek Ih pel formed In this way: Get a p!c(o of thin bluck rubber cloth and line tb? Inside of the glass with it; then tic a black thread to tho upper edge of the cloth. Attach a little but ton to the end of the thread overhang- liiK the tumbler, oh shown In tbe draw lug. Kill the glass' with clear water and introdueo several fish live ones, If you can possibly procure them, but. If not, toy fish will serve. The Ink lent with the visiting card la accomplished by means of a confeder nlu who Is in the audience and who bunds you n card which Is marked with Ink on one Hide. As you dip the card Into fhe tumbler you contrive to turn it around, nnd the audience then see the bluck side, thinking naturally that It has just been Immersed In tbe Ink. - The startling change from Ink to water is effected by pulling out the rubber cloth by means of the attached thread and button when the handker chief Ih whisked away. Some practice Is needed flrat In order to do this with out spilling the water in tho glass. Exchange. Stablioro Paper Wad. Did you ever see a pniier wnd that was no stubborn that It would fly In the face of one who tried to compel It to go Into .the neck of a bottle? ' Tho more you try to blow It In the more It leaves the bottle. You can try this wllb any Inr'e bot tlo and a paper wad or cork small enough to fit very closely In' Its tin-It. , Holding tbe bottle so that It points di rectly at your mouth and phurlng the cork In the neck, the harder you blow on the cork for the purtoe of driving It Into the botlle the more forcibly will tbe cork rush from its place lu the neck. Try this stunt nnd see If you can tell what causes tbe peculiar action of tbe paper wad. tbr froos Arm Cold. Many boys have probably wondered why frogs are cold to the touch, and some of them look upon the little crest urea wftb a sort of horror, bctlev lug that tbey have no blood. Hut aucb la not the case, for they bare not only blood, but they poaaesa nerve and can feel. Terhapa If this were mare gener ally known there would not bo so many benrtlena boys who seem to take special delight In torturing frogs and toads. According to scientists, frogs are void blooded because tbey consume very little air. It is the same with Bsb ea. Without a plentiful supply of air there la not much animal beat, because combustion 1 alow. Tho Loaf Life. "A fihlpwrerk" waa tbe subject given tbo class, and tho children were to write a composition. Tbo teactu-r was much amused while" reading tbo pro ductions over and correcting them when he came to one that unded thus There was but One life lost, and that was found afterward." - De Vea Kaow Who t aele Saaa la "I'spa. said Harry, who was George Washington T" "Georgo Washington waa tbe Father of Ilia Country, my boy." -Well, who's this Viicle Ban tbey Calk about? Was be Washington's brother?" Exchange. Tbo Mooawor. Ever atne Ih world waa young, Bciietnsr fat and hater. Runaway and rae TongiM . Trta to be tba aimater. if roo ii onir b a bit. Kot moBwnt baa be quft- Bnt be baa tho honest wM. ' Wbea ha oteeta OMoaier, Ta perretve that Thlnk-o-Wt la the grMter maatrr: Aad next time, tf he la wtae. He leta Talnk-a-Mt adirtee erruk Waloott Halt Mi Toath'a ' onnloai v - . . earartaa Doawhaota. ' Bavarian donghnola bare sliced ap- plea, ralslna and carranta among tbetr mm v. i If T component part. . A rich batter la made of epga. Xuur, angar and a little ground clove and cinnamon a apkro. Tbo retain are seeded and chopped OP wllb tbe apple and mfrants, - then thrown tnto the better: ' A frying ket tle bt filled wltb "deep lard" and epooa fnls of the batter allowed to drop la. Wbea cooked to a delicate brown tbey are moored to drain oa paper, and prtnV"d with po-wdeced sugar before aorriug. 4 f In farmers' bulletin No. 65, Issued by the department of sericulture, Henry IS. Alvord, chief of the dairy division, bureau of animal Industry, says: ."A berd of good dairy cows deserves to have good care, and this can only be Insured by having the right kind of attendants. If the owner la unable to cither attend the cows himself or give the matter personal supervision twice aa m raore- " " m,"JwrCT" "ZV? are trustworthy and fit to be cow keep- era. Every one abould be quiet, even tempered, gentle and regular and clean ly in his habits. A cow abominate an unclean man. Tobacco In all It form Is obnoxious to every department of dairying. All tbe work about tbe berd should be done wltb the utmost system and regularity stable cleaning, groom ing, exercise, watering, feeding, milk ing e fixed time for everything, and everything at Its time, 'on the dot' "Nothing has been produced which begins to compare with tbe human hand as a milking machine. Cleanli ness and regularity are tbe first requi sites la good milking. Next, quiet and gentleness should be accompanied by quickness. Two milker, one rapid and the other alow, tbe cow being accus tomed to both, will get about the same quantity of milk In any given number of days, but tb former will get. tbe more fat Tbe quicker the milking tbe richer tbe milk, If the work is done well and completely. Tbe difference may not be great, but it Is measurable In butter and money. Again, two men milking like quantities In like time, from the same cows or animal, giving milk usually Just alike, will get differ ent result as to richness, and If they change place the richer milk I se cured by tbe same man. Tbo milk fat or butter fat come from tho cow, bat It 1 tbo expert milker that get tb most of It There seem to be an unde fined and yet conclusively proved rela tion between some milkers and tbe cows they, handle which produco this result It I certain tbat change of milkers, manner or time of milking. Ir regularity or auy disturbance at milk ing time may be expected to cause losa of batter fat In tbe milk. In short, It pays, and pays well, to Lave milking done in tbe very best way, by the very best milkers tbat can be found. A su perior milker abould be appreciated and retained as persistently a a superior cow. The former is the more difficult to replace. ' - : : '1. "A very good practice, although un common, is to take every cow to a par ticular place to be milked, apart from where she usually stands, this to be a clean and airy place, like an open shed. Tbe milking shed or room being kept scrupulously clean, with free move ment of pure air, there I an almost certain exemption from what are usu ally called 'animal odors' In milk, but what really are stable odor, or odors from the milker. It may be stated as a fact, and should alwaya be remem bered, that milk as It come from tbo healthy cow Is perfectly pare. -It baa by nature no unpleasant taste or smell. except an occasional result of peculiar food, and all those odors sod flavor wblcb sre often so objectionable get into tb milk after It 1 drawn from tbe adder of tbe cow, Tbey come from tbe ancleaned body of tbo cow herself or from her surroundings, tbe sir of the stable, tbe milk vessel or tbe cloth ing or person of tbe milker. The trouble are all avoidable. . Tbey are not to be charged to tbo cow, bat to the man, her keeper. 1 "Wltb tbo exception of some extraor dinarily largo milkers or for short pe riod when tbe yield is largest, there is no gsln In milking cow more than twice a day. Within limits It Is true tbat If properly dona tbo oftener tbe cow is milked tb richer will be tb milk, but tbe difference I very alight and seldom if over enough to pay for tbe extra labor. ' In on of tbo most noted and rally authenticated case of Immense milk production by one cow (a ton or more of milk month for a year) the cow was milked every six boar for-3C5 days, every time by tbo same man and always within, two min ute of tb right hour. Thia remarks bio record was without doubt largely do to tbo milker, wbo ws tbo feeder of tbo cow aa well. Indeed tb year's performance by tbe man waa a note worthy a tbat of the cow. . Aa Isiswrt frteataa. Ieeuwarder. 2917. I'rieauin II. Is tbo property of C r. Hunt of Man ilas, H. by whom be w recently LsacwsBDaa. sit, r. a. a. Imported. Ill aire waa Dick, 2502, F. IL B and dam'Leeawarder XIX-, 0605. F. U. R, with a record of 10,492.1 pounds of milk In 2M day, 410-2 pound of batter at four years old. . Dalrr at tho Be. Loala Baooatflaw. The dairy eectioa of tbo world fair will occupy ttXOOO square feet In tbo Palace of Agriculture. Tbo model trewmory wul saw 1&0OO ooenda or milk dally and will bo equipped wltb tbo latest batter and cheese maklnc apparatns. Connected with It win bo a BBodet dairy leasJuooam. Mr. George K. Babcock was thrown from bis wagon and severely bruised. He applied Chamber lain's Plain Balm freely and says it is tbe best liniment he ever used Mr. Babcock is a well known citizen of North Pain, Conn There is nothing eaual to Pain Balm for sprain and bruises. It will effect a cure in one-third the time required by any other treatment For sale by all druggists. , Women as Well as f.Ien '''A '.' :' aw '.' "' aar '" at " Aremaae ituseraDie vy : Kidney Trouble. Kidney trouble prays upon tbe mind, duv courages and lessens ambition- beauty, vigor ana cheerfulness soon vlIJr!f ' disappear when the kid neys are out of order or diseased, ' Kidney trouble has become so prevalent that it is not uncommon for a child to be born afflicted with weak kid neys. K the child arm ate too often, if tho urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child reaches an age when It should be able to control the passage. It I yet afflicted with hed-wettine. denejid www It. the cmm of ' the difficulty Is kidney trouble, and tbe first step should b towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble la due to diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as moat neonla aunnoaa. - . . : r. women aa well as men are made mis erable with kidney and bladder trouble. and both need the asms great remedy. The mild and the Immediate effect of Swamp-Root la soon realized. ' It Is cold by druggista. In fifty- cent and one dollars sizes. You may have a sample bottle by mall . free, alio pamphlet tell- wui iT- Ine all about tt. Indudtnr many of tb thousands of testimonial letter received from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer Sl Co.. Binghamton, N. Y., be sore aad mention this paper. . . , - Don't make any nlataae, bat remember the name Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's ttwsop Hoot, rod the addraaa, Bingham to a, M. I", on evarr bottle. , -. eAAAAAAAAAAAi AAAAAAA ber I e daches This time of the year are signals of warning, Take Taraxacum Com- Dound now. It may save you a spell of fe ver. It will regulate your, bowels, set your liver right, and cure your indigestion. A fiood ionic. An honest medicine. MEBANE. N. C. Bueeesson to Boh. WUuaau a Kay. Undertakers Embalmers. BURLINGTON, N. C. t i PHOBTtM. aTYTTTYTTf TYTTTTTTf TTTf f T We manufacture And are prepared to -. Furnish on short notice All kind of Rough and dressed Lumber and - Sash, Doors, -Blinds, moulding, etc. Mantels and scroll work . A specialty. GRAHAM'N.C. rxXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXKwJOOOOq Subscribe For The Gleaner. Only $I.00.per year. oooococoocr ' ' " Dvnt' w; i. i emem araxacum lo WALKER BROS