Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Jan. 17, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
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Alamance Gleaner HE VOL XXXII. GRAHAM, . N. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 17,1907. NO. 49 AW OLD ADAGE AYS. . "A light purse Is a heavy corse" no e.i t i-riv is uio scat oi nine . tenths of all disease mm , go to the root of the whole mat ter, thoroughly, quickly safely . and restore the action of the ' LIVER to normal condition. Give tone to the system and f o d tlesh to the body. Take No Substitute.. T. S. O OOZES, Attorney-at-Law, GUAIIAM, N. C. Offloo Patterson Building Seoond Floor. . WALTER E. WALKER, M.D. GRAHAM, X. C. Office in Scott Bnilding Up Stairs. j-0ffice hours 8 to 10 A. M. ttf'JJnoKK 80-b (and 197-a). 110AD MAINTENANCE PC1NT8ON KEEPING IMPROVED HIGH WAYS IN GOOD CONDITION. Constant and Caretnl Attention Verr Ncceaanrr Value of Seroplnar to Im . prove a tload'. Coating- Inportuu of Draining. ' The maintenance of a road already In good condition and of sufficient. itrength, If properly carried on, la al most entirely a question of wear, say Uobert A. Meeker, state supervisor of New Jersey's highways, writing In the Good Roads Magazine.' The rapidity of this wear varies with the nature of the rock used for the road covering, but even with tho softer rocks there need be no deterioration if proper at tention Is given to lunjntenanee. The problem Is to reduce the wear, both from traffic and the weather,to a minimum by substituting other mate rial for that worn out, and to do this In the most economical manner. The conditions under which wear will be reduced to a minimum under a cer- in;, will s. urn, m DENTIST In Due coniHUcaT Until If U a&iiosf n tfrely worn out , ' " jNotmug is more noglectod than the removal of worn material from rue load. It seems to be regarded mortftr a clearing of the surface from toe taud and, as such, an unnecessary es- pense, wnue in reality this worn ma terial anects the entire composition ef the road covering. Consequently, un less the mud Is 'washed away by na ture from the surface, scraping or sweeping la necessary to preserve the proper proportion of solid stone in Jths roan, varenu tests of the composition In our best road coverings havo shown that from three-fourths to. four-fifths of the material la solid stone.' tbo re mainder being material flno enough to be washed through a cheese cloth. Further careful tests have demonstrat ed that as this' portion of One stuff Is exceeded will the road be soft easily ectod-upon by traffic, water and frost. J In consequence there will be an ex cessive waste -f road material. From the foregoing It Is readily seen that tho matter of road repair and maintenance Is one that requires con stant and careful attention. To attain the best results the most successful means so fnr employed Is to assign a certain section to one man and hold him responsible for the road's 'State. RAISING DUCKLINGS. niiTAlBIKO A BOAD. 0FMC1C in SIMMONS BUILDING lOHSGfUW 1 ma. W. f. Btsok, J K, BYMAi & JtYNUM, A.ttoi-niy& mil Conuselor. at IjM w , u.ucf:N8B0RO, N (j. . ' , fructtco retrnlarly In the court, ot Ala mance county. Am?. 2, 4 1) JACOB A.- LONG. J. ELMER LONG. kQNG & LONG, A ttorneys and Counselors at 1 &w, GRAftAM, N. Graham, ... North Carolina I tain trutuc are good drainage of sur face and subsoil. To attain this object tbo material used for the surface should be hard hi order to resist the wear of the traffic, should not contain too much small stone to absorb moisture and should be thoroughly consolidated and of sufficient depth to bear the loads to which the road is subjected, so that the wear may be confined to the surface. Drainage almost always requires at tention, and there is usually a great deal that can be done to Improve It, at a slight expense, and nothing pays sd well hi the end. Proper core of the sur face Is generally all that Is needed to prevent water from standing on the road or in the gutters, but a dry sur face Is not enough, On a flat, water, may be seen stand ing in the ditches to within a few Inches of the surface of the road, in which case both the subsoil and the road coating must be softened by It and remain so long after the water In the ditch is gone. A deeper ditch, a larger culvert or a drain cleaned out -through the. adjoining land is usually sufficient to remove the cause of great mischief. On a hillside, springs under the road and land water from tho sides can be cut off and led away by unaerdrains at a trifling cost The road coating may often be Im proved In composition and rendered harder by scraping, and a fairly good surface can be maintained at all times by Turoper care. With material of all sorts the influence that a good surface has In keeping down wear is greater than ifilght be supposed. Everything should be done to make a road strong enough to bear the traffic without bending or cross breaking and a reserve of strength Js always desir able. Fluctuations of traffic are most -trylagrA road may be strong enough ROBT'C.STRTJDWICK J Attorney at-Law, GREENSBORO JV. V. . Practioea in the, courts of Ala mance and Guilford counties. NORTH CAROLINA ' . "FARMERS Need a North Carolina Farm Paper. One adapted to North Carolina climate, soils and conditions, made by Tar Heels and for lar Heels- -and at the same time as wide awake as any in Kentucky or Kamchatka. Such a paper k BEEF CATTLE. Chat Production Off.r. Front ee , Southern rsrum. A recent bulletin of the Mississippi station, prepared by A. Smith and 0. 1. Bray, states that "the farmers of that state and throughout the cotton,, belt generally are slow to realize the bene fits of stock raising and cattle feeding and thaMt Is mote remunerative than continuous cotton . crowing." Cotton growing has heretofore been the chief source of revenue for the farmer W cotton is pre-eminently the "money) crop" of the region and other branches of farming nave been neglected; The feeding experiments carried on at the station with twenty-five grade steers, two to -four years old, which were classed as medium feeders, using cot tonseed - hulls : and meal, corameaj, wheat bran and bay (Johnson grass and a mixture of alfalfa" and Johnson grass, 2:1), furnish quite clear evi dences "that the feeding of beef cattle ln Mississippi is a safe and profitable Investment and a much more econom ical way of maintaining the fertility of the soil than by purchasing fertilis ers." ,. ' Fertlllxlasj Tobarau, There Is nothing so essential to the tobacco farmer's sueces.i as the propor : handling of U13 soli and maintenance of Its fertility, and thera is, therefore, no subject upon which the fasuiers ki those districts where' their main re JIance must bo upo-.i commercial fer- tillaers should be so well Informed as the proper use of tho various fertilizer materials available In tbo markets ot tbe world. '-' ; FRUIT CULTURE ran seaeihie Method, ami a Snceeaaful Raneh. The method of brooding and of feed ing duckttugs at one of the most suc cessful ranches In Massachusetts Is tbas described by a writer In Reliable Poultry Journal: All duokllngs are brooded In hot water pipe houses of the ordinary bos It over pattern, with" one flow and one teturu pipe, each two Inches in diame ter. . (' ' .:-- .. It' Is aimed to keep the temperature indor the hovers nt between 80 and 00 ilcri-ees rfhd the bouse Itself comfort ift!y wawp. -There is always plenty of fH'sli air I11 the houses at all times, and when the ducklings are two weeks old they get an outdoor run on green rye. The little birds are kept comfort able,, eloau and well fed. Their runs and hovers are bedded with planer shavings. ' . . The water fouuts are galvanised Iron and are placed on a wire cloth fastened on to a board walled pit at a level. with tbe earth floor of the run, so thatany water slopped Is quickly drained away and does not mess up the brooder house. For tho first four days the ducklings are fed four times a day all they will eat up clean In twenty minutes of a mash made of four parts by measure of wheat bran, one part cornmenl, one part low yrade flour and 8 per cent fine grit ' From four days to four weeks old they are fed four times a day all they will clean up of a mash made of four parts by measure wheat bran, one part cdrnmeaL one part low grade flour, 8 per cent line grit, 0 per cent fine ground beef scrap, soaked first by scalding. Finely cut green clover, rye or cabbage la fed freely. , From the end of the fourth week until six weeks they have the following mask four times a day, all they will clean up quickly: Three parts by measure wheat bran, one part corn meal, onto part low grade flour, 3 per cent fine 'grit, 5 per cent beef scrap, 1 per oent fine oyster shells and a liberal amount ot fine cut green food mixed In mash. .. -... From the end of tbe sixth week until eight week old they have the following mash three times a day: Equal parts by measure wheat bran and cornmeal and 15 per cent low grade flour, 10 pet cent beef scrap, 10 percent green food and 8 per cent grit Keep oyster shells before them. , . From eight weeks until finish at ten or eleven weeks they are- fed three times a day on a mash of one-half corn meal, equal, parts by measure wheat bran1 and a low grade flour, 10 per cent beef scrap and S per' cent grit with plenty of oyster shell. A Year. Poaltrr Acconat. A V'illlnaieitort (Pa.) correspondent of the .American Poultry Advocate says: On Jan. 1, 100S, we bad only eighteen birds ou hand, of which num ber one-half were killed, at differ ent time during tbe year, until we bad but nine left on Dec. 1. The aver age number for the year was fifteen, and they laid 2.300 eggs, which sold for U.Z0; tbe average number of eggs for each ben a.i 158 and the average cash Iccouio 32.70 per hen. The food I cost $10, or $1.07 each, and the net prom 11a. i.uv on oacn nen. xne chlckon wore White Wynndottes, Leg horns. Plymouth nocks, etc. Most of them are pure bred. V Pooltrr Philoaophr. ' -, Care should be taken that there are sheltered spots in tho range so that the birds can find them should a heavy storm suddenly come up. These shel tered too, will be appreciated during the neat of tbo day, Every now aud then an inspection should bo made of tbe range to see that no decaying animal matter la lying about where the stock can get It Dead birds, rats or other animals soon gather a lot of maggots, which the chicks quickly devour. These maggots, once Inside the crop, bore their way Into tbe Intestines of the birds, giving them what Is known as limberneck, the neck of tbe fowl being limp and looking as if broken. Do not try to raise deformed chicks a wasto of time and money. Waste no time dreaming of the suc cess of others. Success In the poultry business crowns tbe efforts of those who help themselves. Do not dispose of your breeders. If they are worth $5 to your neighbor, they are worth $10 to you. Give your birds extra care aud atten tion durlnjr AiiRust. September and October if yo:i want them to win. Keep n fhi:ii loikov.t far hawks. They are feo-linsf Cie!:- younj,'. and brolt ers nre a great delicacy: Koinove t!i ma!;i from th; breeding pens at tbe close "t ":.p--i' s'-ai.in. t Bernhardt a4 Daauub Sarah Bernhardt had just been elect ed a life member of the Comedle Fran- calse. When she found that she bad a paper to sign she became nervous and went to see tbe younger Dumas to tell him that she shrank from the binding terms of the engagement Da mar . advice was unhesitating. "My dear child, don't sign; yonr hair la too curly. People with hair like that" and he passed his Angers through bis wn crisp waves "ought never to sign tontracts for life. Tbe temperament to too Intractable." Sarah Bernhardt however, signed, and, meeting Dumas again next day, confessed the had done so. ."That's all right" remarked Dumas cheerfully. have won COO francs ($100). I bet Mine. Dumas that amount after you left yesterday that you would at once go and sign tbe agreement. Well, shall buy you something with the money. -The next day Mme. Bernhardt re ceived a magnificent arlg of fair hair, absolutely fiat lank aBd straight With It came the following sentence on a slip of paper: "Now that you are really one or the bouse wear this. You will need If thrown away." ; v No, they are not, She gives them to beggars." "Huh! What good does that dor "We are getting rid of beggars." " The Haaltaat Swala. He What would your father do If I told him I Wanted to marry yout 8b He'd refer the matter to me. H (hopefully) And whnt would you. do 1 She I'd refer the matter to tbe yoonf man who proponed to me ad was ac cepted w!i!le you were trying to make up your UiinJ.-r.jhpuiiuu Magazine. RALElGHTiJT C. ited by Clarence H. Poe, with Dr. W. C Burkett,;ector B. A. & M. College, and Director B. W. Krlgor, of the "Agricotlural Experiment Station (you know them), as assistant editors ($1 a year). If you are already taking the paper, we can make no reduc tion, but if you- are not taking it YOU. CAM SAVE 50C Bv sending your order to us That is to 'say, new Progressive Farmer subscribers we. .will send that paper with The Gleaner, both one year for $1 50, regular price 12.00. Addraesa THE GLEANER, Grabamt N. C. Ti - n ' r j-tryurgr a roaa may oe strong enpugh I He rrOgreSSJVJattRer to bear the ordinary loads that pass over it and still be unable to support the excessive weights that may be brought upon it ' When we know a road is to be subjected to heavy strains, it Is always better to strengthen .it by placing an extra coating upon the sur face rather than wait until the road Is broken and disrupted. When a road Is broken or "cut Into by excessive weights It is no longer a mere matter of replacing wear, but of expensive re pair, and often of entire rebuilding. To replace wear that Is unavoidable Is a very simple matter when constant attention Is given to tbe road. It is only when tbe surface Is neglected for a long period that tbe matter of re pairs becomes a serious one. A little attention to drainage, the removal of slight obstructions from the gutters, tbe clearing away of rubbish from the months of culverts, tbe removal of grass and brush from ditches and tbe careful spreading of small quantities. of stone over depressions as soon as they begin to appear, will keep a yqad Prompt destruction o windfall ap ples will tend to lessen' the amount of wormy fruit In future. - Beet methods of marketing should occupy the atten tion of producers. Good fruit nicely put up will find a good market - All tbe small fruits may be fall planted currants,' gooseberries, rasp berries, blackberries and grapes, Thin late fruits. This is much better than propping up the limbs and gath ering and marketing a lot of .Inferior tuff. , ' TJse fresh up to date., packages and improve as much as possible on the usages of your particular market ' Pruning may be done where needed.' In young orchards hunt for and de i stroy borers, . ta '. Prune eat all old wood and' part of tbe new from the currant bushes; In setting a young apple eV pear or chard this fall prepare the land early and set .the trees .in October at the north and later farther south. Btona-J fruits should be planted In tbe spring. IJ For (ha Wtatea ow. It la not too early to commence D lan ding on how yon are going to boose loose rowis comfortabtT this wintav. Ton expecT some eggs from tnem when the thermometer runs down and the price ran up. and yon should plan to -give them pretty good care Ijf yon don't wisn to be disappointed. Some turnips, beet and late cabbage are good whiter greens.. These will help produce winter res. EstST SnMpariona. Eggs from bens that are too fat or too poor do not hatch well. Eggs from hens ttrat hive been forced for egg pro duction during -the winter months do not bateb well as rule. 1 There Is no such type as an egg type, a fallaey mainly built on speculation, never on observation. There are no known means to tell whether an egg will hatch a female or a male, but it is generally conceded mat the malm preponderate where young mules are muted to' bens, but even this iray bo doubtful. , ' Eggs firom porfectly mature birds' produce stronger chicks than eggs from Immature stook. ' Don't trouble tbe ben at the time of hatching. patient and keep out of ber sight- You will get a better hatch by so dblug. . Don't sprinkle or Immerse in water the eggs the day before batching. It will do no good, whatever Is said to the contrary, and only Impair your chances' of a good hatch. Cottea.ed Meat. 'Cottonseed meal for feeding should be of S light canary color, with sweet natty odor. ' Tbe presence of hull makes it dark In color and adds lint Tbe best meal Is nearly free from lint or short cotton. - Fermentation and beating before or after tbe seed is crushed and pressed render tbe meal dark In color and of bad odor and flavor. Such meal is only lit to be used as fertilizer. When added to dairy rations only two to four pounds of cottonseed meal should be used per cow each day, the latter amount only after "Vie animals have become accustomed W it ' '; t Pruning Orapaalaaa. The trimming of grapevines should be- done while the ground Is cold; re marks an exchange. Tbe portions cut away, as .well as the refuse around each vine, should be burned. If there are evidences of rot last season. It will also be an advantage to scatter air slaked lime around tbe base of each plant GARDEN REMINDERS Hers 8torl.. Here are some horse stories from the Kinsley (Kan.) Graphic: Some persons were talking about the slow ness of horses. "There's Kelly's old gray, ion couldn't whip ber Into a irot," said one." "Johnson's black mare will beat that. She refuses to help herself to the barley at night! for most times she isn't through attngher dinner," said another. "Old Waters' tpindleshank takes the prize," put in a third. "She is dou ble jointed in tho knees,' She walks both ways at once." "I stood in the road," drawled Shepherd, coming in late for hi dinner, "for twenty min utes talking to Meyers, and all that time his baj mare never stopped."'. Yonng onions will bear a surprising amount of froit Prepare open seed beds now for the planting of seed tc beVlone In February and March, ac cord lug to latltnde, advises an ex change. ; "v- ,.i . Asparagus beds should be liberally manured. New beds should now be made. Set the plants six Inches dean. Cabbage plant should be set In heavily manured ground. Bow seed of tho early summer variety for a later apply. 'Daring dry was finer run tbe cultiva tor through all old strawberry beds that 1 are weeding and set out new plants.' Examine ti peach trees for borers. Prune raspberries and blackberries, flow the late varieties of peas at this season. Elixir mt Yoath. In former times elder flowers were treasured not only by lover of hedge row beauty but by those who desired to preserve their own beauty and youth. According to tbe seventeenth century prescription tbe elder flowers wore to be gathered on midsummer day, powdered and put Into borage water, which was to be drunk daily for a month, tbe first thing In the morning and tbe lost thing at night This was a much prized elixir of youth. By com mon conscut there ha always been something supernatural' about tbe elder tree. In Denmark It la protected by the older mother, without whose leave It Is dangerous to pluck the flower. In Germany the bat should be taken off to It And In England it has been variously considered tbe tree of the cross and tbe tree upon which Judas hanged himself, to be treated wltb reverence or fear accordingly. London Chronicle. Written on Slate. General Lew Wallace wrote the first rough draft of. "Ben-Hur" on a slate, giving as bis reason that erasures could more readily be made. After satisfy ing himself with a sentence written In this way he would, with a soft pencil, transfer tbe writing to paper, and Anal ly, when everything pleased blm, be copied tbe entire manuscript In Ink with the precision of an engrossing clerk. It Is declared by those who were personally acquainted with General Wallace that "Bon-Hur" was written and rewritten at least thirty time, and that when the final copy was sent to the publishers there was neither a cor rection nor an erasure throughout tbe manuscript Tbe printer set up tbe copy exactly as It was written, and tbe author himself never corrected a proof before toe book was sent to press. A Little Short at ran. Mr. Tyte-Thlst More money?' What hare you done wltb that dollar I gavs you last week? , Mrs, Tyte-Fhlst That's In tbe savings lank, but I can't draw tho Interest on It till next Jan nary. I want another dollar to run tbe bouse on In tbe meantime, Chlca go Tribune. ' ; . - Dla ContH.atlen. "What did that old miser put dowL when you asked him to contribute the charitable fund V "His foot."-Baltlroore American. To wait and be patient soothe many a pang. Dutch Proverb. Vrlntara Ervera. ; reader forward me a pleasant ad dltlon to my collection of printers' er ror, say T. P.'s London Weekly. It was told blm by tbe late C Farqunar- on Flndlay, for some year editor of tbe, Dover Chronicle, as baring bap. poned to him personally. He had Oc casion to write of to "blind guide who strain at a gnat and swallow camel," which appeared in print "who strain at a quart and swallow a canal." . Did any of my reader notice, I won der, a delightful error of this kind in one of the reviews. In which Sir Henry Oampbell-Bannerman was described a "brandishing a mailed fish?" It rather remind on of the famous .Spoonerism about "feeling a half warmed fish In your bosom." . :"; Thro-wlns the aadkerohieC Statement copied from an old manu script: "In tho Foundling Hospital the Boy are bound apprentices, the Wo men when marriageable are conducted In procession thro y streets, and any YoonvfaM who sees one He wd wish for a WtfO Hat liberty to mark Her by throwing tit koudkerchief." Tho fur ther fonMNtM required previous to matrimony are not stated. Perhaps this pecnlarr custom la tbe origin of the expression "throwing tbo band ker chief. "Nineteenth Century. -' . Llanroa' Talla. Certain lizards are remarkable for the fragility of their tails, although this weakness Is not always tbe draw back that may be Imagined. The dia mond tailed gecko, for Instance, fre quently owes It existence to the readi ness wltb which its caudal appendage can be snapped off. This reptile, which will perch upon a rock bead downward and tall In tbe air, Is liable to be prey ed upon by hawk. One of these for midable birds will swoop down upon a lizard and aelze what It take to be the bead, bat 1 really the tall Tbe brittle tall snaps eff, and tbe gecko wriggles away, not much the worse, to grow another. ' Iealaad MaJL When tbe wind blow from the seats and one of tfio Islander of south lee- land wishes to communicate with tbo mainland he pat bis letter Into a well corked bottle, and to insar their de ll very he Incloses at tbe same time a plug of twist tobacco or a cigar. Tbo wind speedily Impels "the bottle to tbo shore of the mother Island, where peo ple are generally on tbe lookout - H.w She Knew. Mr. Jenkins Tbe moment be kissed ais I knew be bad been drinking. Mrs. Supple You mean yon smelled bit breath?' Mr. Jenkins I mean that Mr. Jenkins never kisses me except when he has been drinking.- It the Quiets Cough This is one reason why Ayer's I Cherry Pectoral isso valua-J ble in consumption. It stops I the wear and tear of useless I couEhing. But it does morel it controls the inflammation, quiets the fever, soothes, heals. Ask your doctor about this. The best kind of a testimonial ' "Bold for OTr sixty l-ears." yj SCMh) hwf.O. Ayw 00., Xrowell, KaN. i WW! uimnuxmKB ox yers SAKSAPARlLLA pills; bair vigor. W.h.T.noaMret.1 W. pobllah to. foraala. ef.U ear meaioinee. Hasten recovery by keeping tno bowels regular with Aver'e Pills. aAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA. m 41 1 3 4 Mm her ieadaches E This time, of the year are signals of warning, Take Taraxacum Com pound now. r It may sav9 you a spell of fe ver. It will regulate your bowels, set your liver right, and cure your indigestion. A good Tonic. An honest medicine Taraxacum IMEBANE. N. C. 0 Unpleasant Crltlefaa. Mrs. De Style exhibiting picture) Yea know, my ilaogbter paint from nature. Critic Far from It It New York Times. Whan He Swore Off. ' Be swera that be would amok bis last Clnr en New Tear", dart No clraum.tanc. should tempt blm from His stern rerolve to stray. Bis fellows, straightway they began Thai earnest man to joah. They knew front long experience . That awaarln 8 Is besa. ' Be kept Ms word. Those knowing men They simply lost their bets, line New Year's day be has set smoked A thing but clfarette. , , - Waahlnctoa Post. Preelae, hat Aetd. The women wltb thin Hps and raspy voice stepped np before the languidly Indifferent ticket seller In the railway station. ' ' . "Where do you want to go?" be nak ed as his Jeweled fingers riffled a bunch of pasteboard. "None of your business where I want to got" she snapped. "Just yon sell me a ticket to New York, but bear In mind that I'm going there because I've got to; not because I want to." Washing ton Star. Effective. Mr. Bowler I should like to know what good all these cooking school les sons are doing our daughter? Mrs. B. Everything she cook aht bring home. "Yes, and none of the family will touch 'em, and tbe things are Just 4nlte OOhaad. Standar Did that deaf mute orator make a set speech? Doyle No. Ho poke offhandy Cleveland Leader. elhaerly. She I hare not seen you for an age; Herr Doctor, notwithstanding that w live only a few street apart here In Berlin. I learned with much regret that you've been 111 Herr Doctor Who told yoo that? Sbe-My, brother wrote me from Induu Fliegende Blatter. Speaking of the Irony of fata, why la It that a man' friends sometime for get blm, bnt bis euen-lea. never?- Tor rill (Tex.) Tranecrlpt Preleetrd. Miss Wellon The Impudent thing told me to my face that I was getting old and wrinkled. Mis Tartun I wouldn't mind It She didn't say It to your face, you know. Sbe couldn't see that Chicago Tribune. 1 Weak Hearts Are doe to Indigestion. Ninety-nine of every one hundred people vho have heart trouble etus remember when It was simple Indigos. Don. It Is a scientific fact that all ease o. heart disease, not organic, are not only n-aosable to. but are the direct result of indi gestion. All food taken Into the stomach hleh (alb) of perfect digestion ferments and well the stomach, pulling It op against the heart. This Interfere with the action o( the heart and In the course of time that attest' but vital organ becomes diseased. . Mr. D. Kanbbxet Nana., O.. mi I hail Momich feeaMe awl wu l Ua tete u I hd hairt trouoie Hk a. I look Kodot Drajwpa. Cure far about lam SMatks aid H owed aw. Kodol Digests What You sUt and relieves the stomach of all nervous strain and tbe heart of all pressure. ' BeWesealr. 11.00 Sir. hokttn 2 times lb bW Ha, irtlc. eall. for 80c f a. a Dew iTT oa, ohioaqo J. C. Simmons, Druggist PIXE-ULES for'thim-styi SO DAYS' TRIATMCNT FOR SI.OO rni T hetter edrerMM the oath's Leadlas eelaees Oallafe, Jort a few aaholanaipe ar. aOued la eeoa aeoUoa at leas thaa eeel. BOT P1LAT. waiTl TODAY. SA-iULBUSDO COLLEGE, Kaci, Cl W M -TM T 10 Salesmen. 8 Salesladies. 8 Cash Boys EP f i or Girls Apply at the Store At Once. R. HARRIS stock of Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Suit Cases, Gent's Furnishings, etc., turned over to the Nev York Credit & Collection Co. who will inaugurate the most sensational bargain event ever attenmpted in Burlington. Sale starts Thursday Jan. 17, at 8:30 a.m. We do not wish this sale to conflict wish the many fake sales that have taken place in Burlington, this sale is bona fide everything we 'advertise is here. Space won't allow us to quote prices. Our circulars are now being distributed "get one". R. Hards' StoFC, on-'-'tllttc Xomcip; . BURLINGTON, N. C. New York Credit and Collection Co. WATCH FOR THE BIG RED SIGN "3 OOOOOOOOOCCOOOOOOCOCwCCCO w wwwww w w w W w WW WW ooocoooocoooococoooooocco Fixtures for Sale ROOM nnir dcmt . 00 0 0 gjr W W W yv ,44 -A w w . 0 e w 0. r" 0kt nFt.. j- sjjr1 '0 00 ggt tafen 0 0 "0 JF $0 pjf NnW 0 -hniF aw .!- 'W www
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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Jan. 17, 1907, edition 1
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