Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / April 11, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
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The Ala n ufLEANER,. fL XXXIII. GRAHAM, N C, THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1907. NO. 9 MANGE AN OLD ADAGE SAYS- cx Hght purse la a heavy corse Sickness make a Hgnt purae. The LIVER to the seat of nine tenths of an fflseaae, ;r,;, ... tiia vnnt nf t he whole mat . thoroughly, quickly safely nnd restore the action of the LIVER to normal condition. 5 r.A tone to the system and po!id flesh to the body. : lake No Substitute. ' - C. A. HALL,ir : iTOKNEV AND 0OyNSEURAT-LAWj GRAHAM, U. O.r.;- . Office in the Bank ofAlamsnce Uulding. op staira.- ; j, s. q o :ec, Attorney -at. Law, ?3 GRAHAM, w.7f.S; N. Office Patterson Building Seoond Floor. v' WALTER E. WALKER, M.D. GRAHAM, N. C. Ofioe in Soott Building Up Staira. -. ; . . -0ffice hours 8 to 10 A. 11. ; - 9-Thone 80h (ania; l$7-a),J 1I1L WILL S. MSG, ill ... DENTIST Graham. - ". North Carolina OFFICE in SIMMONS BUILDING BkNUM &BYNUM, Attorney -"d Counaelora at Xjmw U.vcENBBOBO, t te j .ft; Practice reralarlv te the courts of Alb aaticc conntr. ' Aa. , 94 1 JACOB A. LOSS. ,K .-. ELMEB INQ, LONG & LONG, V . Attorneys and Counselor at Xim-v, GRAHAM, H 'r ROBTC.STBUDWICK Attorney-at-Law,-"., GREENSBORO JV.' C Practices in the courts of Ala ounce and Guilford counties. . NORTH-CAROLINA FARMERS Need a North Carolina Farm Paper. -" One adapted to North Carolina climate, soils and conditions, made by Tar Ileels and for Tar Heels -and at the same, time as wide awake as any . in Kentucky or Kamchatka, Such a' paper is The Progressive-Farmer RALEIGH. N. C. Kdited by Cxabesce H. Po, with Dr. W. C. Burk elector B. A. & M. College, and Director B. W. Kilgore, of the AgTicutlural Experiment Station (you know theml. aa aaajatant Atitnrd' ft a year). If you are already taking paper, we can make no reduc tion, but if you are not takiog it YOU CAM SAVE 50C : By sending your order to " as That is to say, new Progressive Farmer subscribers we will send that paper with Thfj Gleams, both one year for llfiO, regular Price 12.00. Addrseea v.. THE GLEANER, ; ; : Graham, N. C Graham I Underwriters Agency Mill 8COTT& ALCRICHT. - Graham, 11 C. Fire and Life In surauce Prompt '? All Orders. CriKr4e . tmi at The bask cfauuiahe WASHING THE UTENSILS. Oara Jn Thla Direction Meant Profit For the Dairyman. Can you never learn That your milk will turn Unless you wash your strainer! And It should be done Immediately, First hold It In a vertical position and flash cold water into It, enough to rinse ut ail the foam, hair and whatever other dirt there may be in It Next take off the cloth, squeeze out the milky water and thoroughly wash by robbing between the hands In a gal lon or more of warm, not hot, water, using several waters. When all the milk is out, and not till then, scald with hot water. Let it soak in the hot water for some time. Use no soap. If washed in this WAV Vftlir ntMlnaa cloth will not thicken and will keep clean as long as It will last We have used one cloth for the past three months. Always wet the cloth beforo using. In washing the tin part be careful about the seams. The milk cans and palls should always be rinsed In cold or warm water, not hot; then thorough ly washed hi warm water. Rub down the seams with a stick. - If the bottom of the outside la dirty have a pan and a rag that are used for nothing else and wash the bottom. Then, using plenty of water In a large dtshpan on a low table or bench, wash the outside of palls and cans. Wash the cans carefully. Then scald the In side of the vessels with hot water. No soap or scouring powder Is needed. But if your wife does not like to wait breakfast rinse your strainer and leave It In cold water. Never allow the milk to dry In it. The strainer cloth may be made of a good quality of cheesecloth. A piece of cloth flour sack two thicknesses makes a very good one. The cloth used for washing the milk things should be used for nothing else. Rinse and dry It when through with It After scalding the milk things put them where they will drain and keep clean. It Is not necessary to sun them out In the dust says a writer in Farm Journal. Good Calves Costly. It iroula be an easy matter to let a calf run with its dam for the first six months of Its life, but while the calf would make a most excellent growth the practical dairyman realizes that the calf would cost more than It would be wortbvsays a writer In American Ag riculturist It requires more skill to raise a dairy calf today than it did a score of years ago, for, requiring more of our cows In the way of milk produc tion and subjecting them to a forced system of feeding, the calves are brought forth under more arunciai conditions and are therefore less vig orous. Feeding ike Milk Maker. ' Tha woli hrod vnunirster that Is Im properly fed will at maturity be but iiuia hotfor than a aerub animal. But If the dam Is properly nourished dur ing the nursing period ana we young animal ailhamilBntlv fed liberally It will attain the normal sice of Its an cestors and display all the leading characteristics of the breed to which It belongs. . A New Yorker' Plan. t n wnnriwnrd. the New York dairyman, has no set way of feeding. It depends upon the cost or reeaarun. In fh msrVnta ha ftfl V. Sometimes I can boy bran cheaply, sometime cot tonseed meal. I watch tne maraet, ouy those feeds that contain me element I want and then make up a ration, rant vear I bouaht a carload of dried distillers' (not brewers') grains. This food contain a large percentage wi protein, la .very dlgeetlble and is cheap. . Keep the Fead Up. " Soma men start out In the fall with ffuvrilnir ration. UT) Elm- - " - ball's Dairy Farmer. They bring the cows In from the patur uu them a variety and quality of feed which cannot help but produce food Thau condition last until th feed bins begin to fet low, then por tions of the ration are cut out, and the m m. 1 I- . am. liar. B the time imu ub"" w - - the holidays are pt the bottoms or some of the bins are in signi. i .t,iw that aonnomv In feeding means catting the feed bill down. To anxtent thle la true, bat economy of production and scant feeding never fo hand In hand. Start well in the fall and keep the ration up until the cows ,k. aanva nact anrlnff. If TOO) moat buy. hoy. If your eowe are good ones you cannot afford to pinch them through the winter simply to ear a few dollar. Too wUI loo onthto -- nv aiul na the flow Of future yean Thle Is UHy UJT the cow are young. ww - 1 . ,ar. and. to keep them right than to try winter more than yoa can feed properly. - Tha Naaa of MM tt-v .in,.ia are heavily fed ea grain, as to fattening, sank or eueray . . w.ln alMaf of Salt at call for bacauae TlM ."T.00 rather deficient In aarc ana ... i .v., aHmalata the OX- cratlon of salt; hoce b"' la well fad on grain ealt taost h ieop pliad wlerly and la nVnt vur animal aUmeets may he : . . w - ..it fa tha ratio. C and ramer. Walek hi the a tama wbaa grato and hay apPrP ttfnl and feadtaf libm Sa rrterlnarta- do- J"". tb. talk to hb. cooOltlany. aad ta toU y tkat M Matn. tumtt earrf a caaf. wortk at aaK aji far aaadlctne aad and joat aa aalaatl. ml 1 M ww The "rr-TZ - Tawtoale. Ato-xaa . ae J -Oataraj' aprma. boot the thn Ok Tonm - armlnov. wttk tag." Tt April the ANCIENT INVENTIONS. . Artlolet of Modern Use That Were Known to tha Homana. "Safety pins were articles of com mon use in Italv Ions- before th I Itoman empire attained the height i of its glory," sayB a writer. "Some I of them were exactly like those of louay, utilizing the familiar princi ple of coiled Bpring and catch. But the material of which thev were made seems always to have been bronze. Many of them were quite ' large affairs, ten inches or so inl length, and hollow, as if designed to be attached to the gown in front, and possibly to contain something or other, conceivably "Sowers. Not infrequently they were ornamented with gems. Another ancient inven tion was the collar stud. It is true that the ancient Romans did not use buttons to fasten their gar ments, but for this very reason safe ty pins were more urgently requir ed, and the latter seem to have been supplemented by studs of bronze, which were in shape exactly like those of today. Of course people in those times wore no collars, but the little contrivance in question was utilized in other ways. "The Smithsonian institution at Washington has got together a very interesting collection of such an cient inventions. Among other ob jects in this collection are thimbles 2,500 years old. They are of bronze, and their outer surfaces show the familiar indentations for engaging the head of the needle. The women in those days had bronze bodkins, made just like those in use now, and for toilet purposes they employed small tweezers of a pattern that has not been altered in 2,000 years. To hold their hair in place they had not hit upon the notion of bending a wire double. But they used for. that purpose straight bronze pins, made exactly like modern hatpins, with big spherical heads. It is from this early type of hairpin, in truth, that the common hatpin of today is derived. "Other curios, from the old Etruscan tombs, are strainers, la dles, spoons and knives of bronze. Such articles, as well as bronze dag gers .and other weapons and uten sils, were cast most commonly in molds that were carved out of hard stone, a pair of stones being re quired to produce the object, which was afterward polished and other wise elaborated. Among the most interesting of the contrivances for thg toilet is a fine tooth comb of ivory, which in shape is precisely like the fine toothed combs of to day. Of course the gentleman of ancient Eome was obliged to shave himself, and he had to use a razor which must have made the opera tion very severe. It was of bronze and somewhat like a small sickle, very broad in the moon shaped blade and with a handle rigidly at tached. "It is well known that the ancient Romans knew how to plate one met al with another. They made and some of them, like Cicero, wore false teeth. Every Roman gentle man had a latchkey which fitted the door of his dwelling. It was at tached to a finger ring, so that it could not easily be lost and would always be ready for convenient use, no matter what the hour or the con dition of the owner." Chicago News. Millet's Diffiotiltie. Two of Millet's famous pictures, the "Sower" and the "Binders," were produced in a damp studio, in effectually warmed by a tiny stove. In order to keep warm he would work with his feet in big wooden shoes stuffed with straw, hunself enveloped in a heavy horse cloth with a hole in it center, through which he put his head I In these pictures Millet had simply sought to express with all his might one of the phases of man's unceasing combat with nature. But "polit ical" parties drew their conclusions. The "labor" party declared that these pictures protested against the misery of the laborer, while fficul critics said that the artist eougbt to set class against class. At this time Millet willingly painted a sign board for a Parisian tradesman. But then he painted It so well in the end it figured in an exhibition of his works in the 8chool of Fine Arts. nUaajA. The black boys of the Sandwich Indian MlADOl uuua " diving fifty or sixty feet for the sake of a few eoppert or a silver piece. At ail tne poru 01 Uoda toarirU are met and sent on their way by the diving boy. A coon u a steamer ia sighted outside the harbor half a dosen or more lithe limbed, dark skinned bUckj lsap into the water and swim oct a mils or more to be the first to bef yon a (puttie, inuaru.- They foDow the steamer In and ehmb wp tha tide when she slides up to the dock, ud they shove their woolly head over the railing to look for a gener etat and enriooe tocrist who will pay for the exhibition they are wiiiiiif to give at a moment's notka. Thnnaarula have nroooonoed Hoi- u-. CvV. Una n Lain ' Tea' ' the rentes healing power om earth. Wbea medical eaeocefaal Usuo- eeeda. Makes yoa . well ana keeps you wX , so cenie i or Tablet. Thoeopeoe- Vng Co. Eght eaodidalea are already an nounced for the mayoralty race io lbs Detnocralio primaries in Ashe- villa : . - " . - the Rise of Jimmie Johnson. a - ""Tn r IBOY WANTED Little Jimmie Johneon waa m very llkaly ladt Sharp aa taaka, and looking out for ehanaes la be had. Watehad tha paper found enei. "WANTED Bay far oMo warib"1 Want and got tha Job at enoe and bustled Ilka a Turk. Really Worth Reading. At certain time In the year, and particularly a month or two before the Christmas holidays, new books come Into newspaper office for review faster than any one man can possibly read and review them with Justice ei ther to himself or the book. Be glances through them hastily, unless they are by noted authors, gets a salient point here and there and "writes them up" as best he can. Then he forgets all about them. "A friend came to me one day and expressed bis gratification at the way I had written up a new novel by a comparatively unknown author," said the literary editor of a Chicago paper. " Ton expressed my Idea of It exact ly,' he sold. It is one of the remarka ble books of the yean The plot le ab solutely unique, the treatment of It la bold and original and the dialogue crisp and delightful. It will make a great hit'- - "Well, I said, If It Is as good as all that I'll read It"-Youth's Com panion. How tha Game Rank. Tn tha cam kingdom tha rnbr. tha Atnmnnjl tha MnAnU and tha -afiiw phlre constitute "the' big four" and take precedence and In the order-nam, ed of all other precious stones. Tha noarl la of aioni not a atona. It hflfl a standard of Its own. Tha expert teat of the gem Is it color, its aegree ei clearnees and Its perfection of cutting. Upon the last depend it brilliancy. In the diamond the "brilliant" cutting holds first place. Tha other stones, are cut altogether differently they are crystallized In different systems-la fact they differ In another respect, the diamonds being a mineral carbon, the finer ruby (the oriental) a variety Of corundum, the emerald a variety t of beryl and the sapphire a colored va riety of corundum. What la technical ly known a the ntep cue i an a sential to bring out the fire of the last three.-New fork Tribune. How th Pulo Varlaa. Tha tinman nnlaa has rather a wide ran bnt tha tensral average may he pat about as follows: At birth, 140; at two years, louj ac-irom auwvu w nineteen years, -0; at manhood, 7S; old age, 00. . There are, however, great variations consistent with health. Na poleon' pulie 1 said to have been only rnrtv.fnnr in tha mlnataV case is also related of a healthy maa of eighty- aevea whose pulse was seMom over thirty during the last two years of his life and sometimes not more than twenty-eight Another maa of eighty aaven rears of are anloyed coed health and spirits with a pulse Of twenty- nine, and there la aiso on reccru uw mrlntia inatanca of a man whose puis in health was never more than forty- five, and, to be consistent in nw incon sistency, when be had fever his pulse fell to forty insteaa or. nsiag, as u usual ; ; AM By E. Phillips Opp::h:!ni Copyrighted ' Ulnttrated bf Verier This is oaa of th saoa thrOUag.' U.tU.y4 wrltt- by the taa sooac eanuac. isuuu. iaa ty ef thaaaotai tbasaaasof which the ,0. .11 loom taa paiWlo i aad kalpieaa, bat at last Abovw Poyatoa aaf Ova as sit idle aad kalpieaa. 1, Q .M 1 - KisxLv nuus aaisettesiS araTasaTSi , M jrtlsS-- a jf 'T0.Be3a.i1. 0'j.liext lsr.'3 CD.iT MISS Wrestling For Exerelee. 'Wrestling, the "mlcrocosmos of gym nastics," is a fine form of bodily exer cise for those who enjoy hard muscular work after the tedious business hours of the day and' may be practiced adapting it to circumstances by the man of a ripe sge as well as by the boy of ten or twelve, especially the form known in this country as catch-as-catch-can (which Is about Identical to one form of Swiss wrestling). I ex changed -the Oreco-Boman (or , Gee man gymnastic) stylo for this one about twelve years ago, and I was then over forty years old, and still en Joy It much If my opponent is of my own weight or a little lighter and If it Is deprived of Its potential roughnese by a gentlemanly spirit of the part ners. New York Medical Journal. . - Precautions ef Old Tim Dealers. v It was formerly the practice among physician to carry a cane having a hollow, head, the top of which was gold, pierced with holes like a pepper box. The top' contained a - mall amount of aromatic powder or of snuff, and on entering the house or room where a disease supposed to be Infectious prevailed the doctor would strike his cane on the floor to agitata the. powder and then apply It to his hose; hence all the old prints of physi cian represent thorn with canes to their nose. ' ' - A, Marriage Warning. Jn Germany all marriages bar to be contracted before a register p;vlous to the cersniony In church, which Is optional.' The' law requires public notice to be given of tha match, and this notice Is generally exhibited la a box hung up at the town ball or oth er anuSlclpal building. The following official announcement appeared lately In a small towni "From today there Is fixed at the town ball the new box, In which au those who Intend to enter the married state will be bong." ... . -Net Labor Lee. - The saf bore a paper stating that there' waa nothing of . value within. Nevertheless tlio burglar blew the re ceptacle open, finding the statement correct ".Well," be remarked, gather ing np hat tool. "It's worth something to ascertain that there are still people who tell (he truth." - Philadelphia Ledger. ' Tha Opportunity. ,y Opportunity has all bar hair on her forehead, but whan aba hw passed you cannot call bar hack. She ha no tuft whereby you ran lay hold on her, for she le held en the back part of ha head aad never rstorns-rrsncole Ke beiale. - . - The weakoet firing era tura-by eoo centratlng hi powers on a single ob ject can aceocnrllh aomattilng; the trogaat by dispersing bis over many aiay fail to accomplish anything. Can abaorbtaf. faactaal "-1 - f ire eV FhyOle I r 'J awaaay IT I Paris Has No Wash Day. Paris scrub all her washing out in the country that is, the bonton Parisian. The city laundries that do up the linen of the foreigners from England, Asia and America wash by machine und dry by steam heat un der the pavement or near the sewer arteries. It h aninst the law to hang out wash. If a tenant put a pocket handkerchief or a towel in the windov to dry the conciergo would have a fit, and if ho couldn't persuade her to remove the nuisanco ihe gendarme would. Large and small concerns send delivery wagons about for work, which is expressed to the country and returned in a week or ten days. The work is ex quisite and prices are reasonable, but tho strain on the garments io treble the wear. , A Battle of Butterfliea. "A battle of butterflies," said tha Japanese viscount firmly. "Impossible!" cried tho lady on his right "Oh," the viscount insisted, ,"the thing Is authenticated. It happened on Aug. 20, 1889. Tales and poems with out number have been written on It On the evening of Aug. 20 two oppos ing armies of the butterflies fought an aerial battlo between NoJIma and Ea vasakl Mura. The fight continued till sunset when the smaller army turned and retreated, the victors pursuing It till all were lost In the rosy sunset haze. The ground beneath the combat was thickly strewn with wounded and dead warriors. The battle drew a thou sand people. It occurred about thirty feet up In the air. The spectators were amased and horror stricken to see these gentle blue butterflies grappling and struggling furiously and silently la a blue blizzard above their heads." Learning Japanese. The Japanese language I not difficult to learn, but for a foreigner it needs Immense application before he can read a single sentence In the Chlno- Japanese hieroglyphics. It Is a curious fact however, mat the complexity of the system make no difference In ed ucation, for It. seems proved that though the apparatus required for read ing Japanese Is two syllabaries and more than 2,000 characters, many of which have more than one sound, yet a Japanese child learns to read as quick ly aa a European child does. London Standard. Soolable With the Pig. A candidate on paying a second visit to the bouse of a doubtful voter was somewhat surprised at hearing him say that he would support him. "Glad to bear It" said the candidate. 1 thought you were against me." "So I was at first" replied the voter. "Wban you. called here the other day and stood by that pigpen and talked, for half an hour ye didn't budge me an Inch, but after you bad gone away, sir, I got to tliinkln bow ye'd reached yer hand over the rail and scratched the fig's back till he lay down wl' the leasure of It I made up my mind that when a man was so sociable as that wl' a poor fellow creature I wasn't the on to vote against him." Hew Raelna Made Friends. Do not think that 1 am sought after by tho groat for my drama. Coroeille composes nobler verses than mine, but Bo one notice him, and be only pleases by the mouth of the actors. 1 never allude to my works when with men of tha world, but I amuse them about matters they like to boar, liy talent with them consists not In making them feel that I have any, but In showing them that tbey have. Hie Intelllgenee. Purchaser Ton told me that parrot I bought of you waa tb moat Intelli gent bird in your collection, while the fact Is be doesn't talk at alL Dealer That's what I meant when 1 spoke of bis Intelligence. Th Seoret. n-Wbr did ftn tell roe this If It wss such a KvrotT She But If I didn't tell it to romeliody bow eoul4 anybody know I ulil keep a secret ? Baltimore Aiiitdcen. . . Ago &X' v.jt ir--J:. ri ch ll'sh. as some say. It tjdt os true cUUreo,-aoath. ri m Cared ol Bketuaallaas.. Mr. Wm. Henry of Chattanooga, Tnnn hast V oil rvt nlio n i n V a d 1 nf i a UUU. SIUK I UvlllUaVIOiU U AJ IO iJi arm. "ine strengtn seemed to nave gone out of the mucles so that . it was useless for work," he saya. ! "I applied Chamberlain's Pain - Balm and wrapped the arm in flannel at night, and to my relief I found that the pain gradually left me and the strength returned. In three weeks Ihe rheumatism had disappeared and has not since returned." i If troubled with rheumatism try a few applications of Pain Balm. You are certain to be pleaeed with the relief which it affords. For sale by Simmons Drug Co. In eome parts of Egland auctions are held with a minute sand glass. The highest bid made between the time the glass is turned till the sand runs nut wins the article that is un der the hammer. When you need a pill, take a pill, and be sure it's an Early Riser. De Wilt's Little Early Risers are safe, sure, Satisfactory pills. The pills with a reputation. They do not gripe or sicken. They are sold here hy J. C. Bimm ns Drug Co. The annual -consumption of pea nuts in this country amounts : to some 7,000,000 bushels, the produc-, tion of which forms a not unimpor tant industry in the Southern States Kodol For Dyspepsia clears the stomach and makes the breath i a sweet as a rose. Kodol is sold by druggists on a guarantee ;. relief plan. It conforms strictly to. (lie National Pure Food and Drug La w. Sold by J.- C. Simmons Drug Co.! . Alpbonse Daudet is said to have received for "Sapho," published In 1884, the record price of over 200, 000. . g; I - Harness Shop j FIRST-CLASS I UP-TO-DATE - j HARNESS MADE TO ORDER. Repairing a Specialty - . . .i All strictly hand sewed Np machine work. - . ' ' U Patronage Solicited. . Satisfaction Guaranteed. . WILL D. TURNER, P. R. Harden Corner. GRAHAM, N.G Mortgage Sale! Paranant to tha rovers vested la th aaort safsaa by virtue of a certain morUraa oaed socutad by A. i. Kemp ana Vide Kemp, bis wife, to Thoaia. W. rpoK and Kraal us P. 1'iK.lr n. lb. Iltk ilirol June. lane, and tfulv raooraao in tna omoe ui in. tiirucr ui iMvds for Alamanee onanly. In Book Ho. M of M. D.,oa pasr.41 totia. lbs andarsniBad will espoas fur aals at publle auction fur eaaa, at we eoun aoaae soar ia wrsaaa.ou SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1907, at M a!ork. noon, a oertala tract ryt land lytn end nrin. In the eounir ol Alamance, Mtaienf norta taroiina, in aiemiie towa .hlu. adlulnlna tb. lands of S. W. Tnomp am, Joka Moor aad (Users, aad boaaded a foliowa laasinnlnc at a stake Ortea Metaui old taramt, now If. W, Tkosjtpena, thrnoe tbe Solars old Una V V., t ebalne Ut a stak. tbmee a., r i W.,a rbalns link. Io while Slot rock, tb.no. N. WJtl-. S rhalne I llnkatoaeormr. tbno. H , TO w., 4 ebs. en Haas to a rork earaar. Ineaca a . K . ebalns J links sn a rork. Ire Matan.'. enrwer, Ihaace N W K., U ebalne t link, tn a ataka, tb.ncaa-.as- a, it raalo. n nnss in tn. bn,lnia. and eoatslalna by eellssatkMt Tarn la a mil Id Ins on this plaa bat the eraatar part Is woodland Uare baln( eaoasS woiia nun par iur 11. . SEMASrU.PIIMtK. Haiab tt. ISSI. Mortsr anaae rwaa ykwaa pea . try aarwain, roar sua seal It lea taea Wis .ioeaeaon SB w Iaf aaaaf fajaa.re ell rn taa Soaia. wboetartad I if. wiia oalpa few acras aajdeeow-bonaptcw. Haw.afuvwMn, i lartunrrs lor aaan, Jwmn. k i araarsnca. aMad wbai Uar, aajtia I win- Aa woaraaaMalnrlve I aa. La etaa.se to pa, eoat a, wraa- mot aad pinigw oa a mofr enrs aad ak for us-laia-Camiaa tes-Ui- Va-Hele CarellaaChssilralCa., Bbaaaoad, Ta. Atlaata. Oa. Norfolk. V a. Sara. ft. Ivrkaaa. W. CL U mm , Ala. C baria-saa, Id" i la Saiuanra, Ui. Iacra'aVs KM Per Are p- ceil NOiSJr fJ Tsa-aMaarateswnar 11 Vbinst warm U poa weali f Taai, Uetaatoraaaoaead-la- 1 I - arnai waa yi.ias pea . f do waa r aia, r a For the Children To succeed these days you must have plenty of grit, cour age, strength. How a it with the children? Are they thin, pale, delicate? Do not forget BAyer's Sarsaparilla You know it makes the blood pure and rich, and builds up the general health In every way. ' The rhlMnm nngt ponlhly have raaSbeaWh utile tlte Hownl, nr. in propar eonaiiMm. sy rent an? cnii.tlpntlun liy kItIim im.il tenure duuia ol Aial'i rllla. All Tegalalil.ga-ata- JCsa lr J- O. Armr Co., Trfrw.Il, Aie m .n u Iwterwi n 9 flAiRvwoe. 1 10 IC auE tUM- W Snf.B j citeatv pectokal. l:svt na -rfit, ! V' ptlbll.1l tnrpnrn cf:l ur tnMlial&aa.. II This tima' of the year are signals of warning. TakeTaraxacum Com pound now. It may avs you a spell : of fe ver.. It; will regulate your bowels, set? your, liver right, and cure your indigestion. . An honest medicine araxacum i -. - OMEBANE. I N.C.. Weak Hearts Ara dua la Indlreatlon. N!ntv-nina of every ana hundred people who have heart troabis oaa lamambar wben It was sbnpl Indlfa. Hon. II is a solan Uflo fact that all ease, of heart disss, not orfsnlo, ara mot only traoaablelo, but sra the direct result of Indi gestion. All food taken Iota tha stomach which fails of perfect dlraattoa ferments aad well, the stomach, pulling U up agstnet 0 heart. This Interferes with th acttoa ef the heart and la th course of time tha 4a Koala but vital organ beoomes diseased. wbieaaawaslas bad suse asif had haarl wcablw aKktt. I took Kodol Dreji.m Cere tm seosl I u4c4 1M3tttVvYoCa sad lahava tha stomach of all airvoa trala aad the heart af all praesurs. . 11.00 Sl-s koUtnf 7 tawas rhsktaf alaa, wMck Mlia (or f O. . a a. Ok oewrrr at oob. onwmo J. C. Simmons, Druggist v3iaCuro Y,u , .vl.ki von eat. Th'.i ii.' '-. tsilns all of tha fii't-tt- - ;.ls all kinds oi fofd. 1 .-..i'iu5 cUef and never falla to t '.' i iv vou to eat all the foe J r 'i v -:iv '! lit mostsenaltlva t--niact.u.auVoJi. PlUnwrnanr tirsjinl of dy&pl'." uave oeen ! 'irrv;rji uing else failed. Ia u.i .wt-ii t r the stomach. Cnlio rea wita ;rc k ftcmabf thrive on It. First do i-.tiivca. Adietnnnecessary. Coras till Icmach trootles BaSLbuti: ecttutaal Uawe wbeifte. ear tmmi aT0al.aaMraar pnmod inwmics sa fnafweart ea r-w4 iiry. r- re bank. KtwTTRICE-f'SSJir- EaSnav.1 . o.tt U4T- warn raoevT, - WALL PAPER T.-x C. - qoalitr, at half n?ul f n -e. L" lino of eamplea to se'ect frC'tn. l a per hacging at m.aTal 'e r'' en i work wt-.rrtnry. JI 2 I'.. ERADSIIAV,. A r f KememDer i " " ' -:':; - ... ,, k r Headaches I 4 kata.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 11, 1907, edition 1
1
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