Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Nov. 14, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
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' " 1 nn VOL. XXXIII. GRAHAM, N. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1907. NO. 39 HE Have You a Friend? Then tell him about. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Tell him how it cured your hard cough. Tell him whyyou always keep it in the house. " Tell him to ct his doctor about It. Doc- oj mrs use a great deal of it for throat and lung troubles. The best kind of a testimonial " Sold lor over sixty year.." " - - A Had. wr t. V. Arm oo., ww.ii, juu, Alto ai.nuflwtur.gi of f 8ARSAPABILU. PILLS. 1 haik vraoa. - W. km no uortdl W pnbllih -th formal, of aU our maaleliie.. One of Ayer'a Pills at bedtime will hasten rBcwrt PROFESSIONAL CARDS WALTER E. WALKER, M.D GRAHAM. N.C. Office over Biuik of A la manee Up otalrs. a-Office hours 8 to 10 A. M. wT-'Phone 80-b (and 197ra) IIR. WILL S. LOJG, Jl! . . ut,wiiti . ... . Graham . -:. ., Nsrth Carolina OFFICK in liklMONSBUILDlNG JACOB A. LONG. :j, JV-'J- ELMEB LONG LONG & I,ONG, Attorney and Counselors t Jiarw, J, S- COOK Attornay-nl- Law, .GRAHAM. ; 5.-f: N. C, Offloe Patterson Building Second Floor, i . . . .' C A. HALL, ATTORNEY, AMP .OODJfSELWH-AT-lAW,' GRAHAM,liV3..-i V--- Office in the Bank of Alamance Bulding. up stain. 10HH GBAV f t nun. w. p. bi Btxttk, J. B1NIJA1 &BYNTJM, Attorneys and Counselor at Ijmw ti a niJCKBBOBO. M V. Practice reomWlv In the courts of Alt. mance county, ..,-' . Aug. i, M lj EOB'T C. STRUDWICK Attomay-at-Law, ' GREENSBORO X. C. Practices in the courts of Ala- ance and Guilford counties. . Grahan Undewriters SCOTT &T ALBRIGHT. Graham, N. C Offlo of . " Scott-Mebakb M'p'o Co. OTEBALL8. ' GRAHAM, N. C Apr. U,1WT. ' HAg. A. SCOTT, Agent Southern LiT. Stock Ins. Cow .. . Graham, If . O. DEAB BIB ....... We beg to acknowledge receipt of ronr fivor of the 11th, encloettig check Mo. foi 1190, the earn being Jn full payment Hmip.laliB m.i ..-.i i .. Kit T hiv.i i n m jMurance on our Iron Gray Dray Hone. uiea oa we nurnt oi ue nu inw . We wish to thank tou for Ute Dromnta)' a which yoaroompany has handled tal. loet 1U ear, In paadog, that a company of hie character ha. long been needed In oar wet, ana la view of the email premie" Med, no one ahoulA ha without Insurance meir ore atoohv r)COTTMa?Airil' ra OOV H. W.Bcott. Correspondence Solicited. orrcc at THE BANK ORALAMANCE ARE YOU UP - TO DATE If you are not tht News "Air 0Ermis. SuUcribforUat once and it will keep you abreast the times. Pull Associatetn'rwts dispatxh- All the nevrs foreigti, do tic national, state and local flthetime. - Daily News and Obserrer $7 Per year, 3.50 fox 6 mot. WerJJj Kortb. Carolinian f Per Tear, 50c for 6 mot. !fEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO, Raleigh, N. C The Korth CaroIiiiiAn sad Ti Ui4Cu:n will be sent Jfr i t Two PoIUm,.. Cash "adraare. Ar 't t Thi Glxaxi CARRYING UMBRELLAS. Few People Manage Them to the Bert Advantage. "Curious about how some people carry umbrellas," said Mr. Stormel. ton. "We think the ostrich is a stupid bird because with its head buried in the sand it thinks its whole body-is hidden from every body. But plenty of men are quite as stupid as that in their manner of carrying an umbrella. "They carry it in such a way as to protect the front of their bodies and appear to think thev have them selves wholly protected, while all the time the water is eayly drippina uuvm men uuuiis. ino iaci is max not many men know how to carry an umbrella when it rains. - "If it rains and blows then in stinctively they hold the umbrella toward the wind to keep the um brella from being blown inside out as well as to protect themselves from the rain. This is proper. But when the rain is. coming down straight they carry their umbrellas in all sorts of ways, in which they reveal more or less of the'ir personal characteristics. "Here, for instance, is a man who carries his umbrella held in his right hand with the hand straight in front of and in line with his el bow and upper arm, this being the easiest way to carry it. Held in this manner the umbrella really shelters completely only his head and the right side of his body. The rain drips from it on his left shoulder and down his left side. He is either lazy or thoughtless. He is probably both. "Again we may meet a man car rying an umbrella at the cost of considerable effort around in front of t' center line of his body, which is c Tect as to that position, but earring it there too far forward,! wilii tiiu icBiut .uiub wuug no AGCO perfectly dry on his face side yet more or less water drips down his back a man finicky and particular about the front he presents, about appearances, but not so mindful of the substance. "And then we meet the man who carries his umbrella with fore arm straight in line with his elbow, for the greater ease of that position of tho arm,, but with the hand BligMiy turned so as to make the umbrella more completely cover him or with that end in view, which end, how ever, it does not accomplish, for with the umbrella top" tilted it does not cover so large-, an area as it does when carried in a horizontal plane. This is a man who is lazy, but trying by that twist of the hand to ' get something for nothing or without much effort. "And then we may occasionally meet a man who is carrying his um brella in the best possible position for the purposes of the best possible Erotection to bo gained from it, this eing square in front of him, with the umbrella handle all but touch ing the center of the front edge of the rim oi ms nai. carnea bo bs protect him as far as may be bo) back and front, while he carries tl umbrella as low down as can M without touching his hat on top, thus giving himself also protection ss far as possible down around to ward his feet. ; Ana ner we una man who knows lnteUigeBtly what can bo done with the means at hii nnniinand nnrl who M WlUiniT to Put forth the effort required to bring those means to their utmost em ciencv." New YorK Sun. , Hia 8on Weet 8ide. TTnw ara von.Mr. Smith? How is that son of yours making it with his new motor bicycler' "Oh ha had auito s tumDie tne other day," replied Mr. Bmitn., M was speeding at about forty miles an hour along a rough macadam marl whetf all of s sudden me mm machine stopped stone still, out mj son kepton going from the momen tum and slid along the road for about fifty feet before he could stop himself. ... You don't sayl Did W nun your on?" ....... t No, it didn't hurt nun v speaa L but he tore the west side of hi pants. Tore the what r Tore the west side of hi pants. Voll, in the name of whizxing Wla. what side of your eon. pent is the west aider - . ' hr. the side the son sets on. Phuielphia Inquirer. ' War FH Fa aueWay. r-- A fnr the good old V7i which we all admit to be the best, dropped in from church to see a young woman who was writer. To the great surprise and hcrror ef v Atnu UAr. the writer u at work. -The cheery clicfcllck of the typewriter sounded iron tm den. . . .. iv- eWki rilkr. 4o have not so fax ;H.raU training ss to, & composing on Sundayr -I VtV only Jokea-and they are all Jones pa rauun- - Ma fertbblar-e'r saw s-wal Is enaUe Tlat I Toed My wira- Wbt doat yoj oil R. Treat I DM! Tell My Wtfer lelavtW StnltrJ a ta ee vetwm-u ebaaaa. ; Inflated. ' ' Artta fl-jdVrattof aa esmrtefte - rlne Tlewi-Tthi plrtara la valoea ai f-yrn JfiwlloikeT - Well, wM Yt,-, v t watTT ra H. hta't Oientf .w -r.i-n Rrrlrw. A MISSING BUTTON. ; The Way a French Detective Forced a Criminal to Confe... Theatric indeed are some of the methods of the French detectives. They look for the little clews rather than the staring ones. Unlike the English and American detectives, they often do not wait to get irre futable evidence before charging a man with crime, but first charge him with the crime and play upon him so that if he is guilty ho is led to confess. Some time ago a woman was mur dered in Paris, and from her room were stolen 750 francs in money, her watch and jewelry. Two broth ers, George and Paul Amot, had been seen near the house. The night of the day after the murder was committed 11. Hamard, chief of detectives of Paris, entered a wine shop where the ,two brothers were drinking. To the man's amazement he arrested George, charging him with the murder. "You haye changed your coat," ho said to the man, a safe guess if he had committed the murder. 'It was gray this morning, and there is blood on it." "My nose was bleeding," replied the man. "From excitement, I suppose," said Hamard, "excitement caused by your robbery of Mme. Lucas yes terday evening." "I was nowhere near Mme. Lucas last night," said the man, becom ing very pale. "Youliel" roared Hamard. "Look at votur left boot 1" Every one saw the third button from the hoot was zrussfng. "Here's the button," said Ha mard, producing one. "It was found in your victim s blood. Confess r The man confessed. As Hamard afterward said, he had guessed the murderer. The detection of the missing button from the man's shoe was accidental. Military March. In military musio the march occu pies a prominent position and has been employed not only to stimu late courage, but also from about the middle oi the seventeenth cen tury to insure the orderly advance of troops. One of the earliest in stances of rhythmical march is the Welsh war strain, "The March of the Men of Harlech," which is sup posed to have originated during the siege of Harlech castle in 1468. In England the military march was of somewhat later development, bit John Hawkins in his "History of Music" tells us that its character istic was dignity and gravity, t In which respect it differed greatly from the7 French, which was brisk and alert. And apropos of this subject the same author notes a witty reply of an Elizabethan sol- to the French Marshal Biron's nark that "the English march, (eing beaten by the drum, was slow, leavv and sluggish." "That may be true," he said, "but slow as it is it has traversed your master's coun try from one end to the other." Chambers' Journal LEARN WHAT T0EAT. Study Your Need and Select Your , Food With Diecration. V In onr ignorance of what the va rious tissues of the body require fotf doing their work we crowd the sys tem with a great mass of unneces sary food, only an infinitesimal part of which can possibly be of use in strengthening us for our occupa- tin ,.m There are about a dozen different kinds of tissue cells in the body, each one requiring a special food, snd those which are especially ac tive in our line of work require a much larger amount of food partic ularly sdapted to their use than the other tissues, which are almost wholly inactive in our vocation. Thousands of men are forcing their brains to do work by stimu lants which only exhaust snd do not nourish, snd then they wonder that they have nervous breakdown or paresis. Other thousands, in their ignorance of scientific feeding, force their brains to do work every hit at which is abnormal, became they do not hare sufficient nourish ment An active brain worker requires a treat deal of albuminous looas, foods which contain phosphorus like fish, oysters and other kinds of shellfish snd eggs. Meat is distinct ly muscle food. It is suitable only, for those who do physical work. The locomotive engineer stuaies feels. He does not throw ell sorts ef combustible things into his fire box fust because they are eombustf ble. He finds out the best kind of fuel for his engine, that which wCl give him the greatest possum amount of combustion with the least waste. He makes s profession of his busineas and studies the re oTiirtrments of his enfrine. But most SSeem to think that they can run the roost complicated kscmnery fa the world-4he great humanen- na without any irtecial stadv, The result is that we use ell sorts of fuel without reference to the particular work we are doing. Bacceos Magatina, ' Poorly educated ss George EL was,' he was capable to a surprising degree of uttering st times shrewd tod humorous remarks. In the Iif of Georre HI-,1 by Lewis Melville, under the title of Tenner Georg," there will be found not a few f the rnral earing. When Chief Lord Baron JlacJonald, a peat snuff taker, and Baron Gra ham, an inveterate talker, were sit ting in the Westminster court, "The court of tho exchequer," remarked .the king, "has a snuffbox at one end and a chatterbox at the other." George sometimes endeavored to find amusement in poking about Windsor,, asking questions of all he met in his rambles. "Well, my lad, what do you want?" he asked a sta ble boy. "What do they pay your" "1 help in the stables," the young ster grumbled, "but I have nothing but victuals and clothes." "Be con tent," said the monarch philosoph ically. '1 have no more." West minster Gazette. V Hourglasaea For Pulpit. The twenty minute sermon is a purely modern invention, as is proved by the number of pulpit hourglasses that are still to be found in. many old churches. In the reg ister of St. Catherine's, Aldgate, the following entry, dated 1564, occurs: "Paid for an hourglass that hanged by the pulpit, where the preacher doth make a sermon,' that he may know how the hour passeth away, 1 shilling". A modern pulpit glass, probably the only one of its kind, is to be found in the Chapel Royal, Savoy. It is an eighteen minute glass and was placed in the chapel on its res toration in 1867. Westminster Ga zette. "An Awfu' Thing." A certain man whose wife had re cently got angry and gone away to live with her mother was met by a friend, who in apparent sympathy accosted him thus: "Man, Jamie, this is an awfu' thine that has befa'en you. Ifs a great peety that your wife has gane an' leu you." '"Deed, man," quote Jamie, "she'll tine waur than that vet." "What waur can she dae than that ?" anxiously inquired his friend, "She'll come back again," replied Jamie ruefully. Pearson's Weekly. Followed Hia Example. A New Yorker who does his bit of "globe trotting", tells of two old entries that he saw in the visitors' book of a fashionable resort on the Rhine. A few years ago one of the Paris members of the Rothschild family had registered as follows: "R. de Paris." ' It so chanced that the next vis itor to inscribe his name in the book was Baron Oppenheira, the banker of Cologne, and he wrote his name beneath Rothschild's in this wise: "0. de Cologne." - Run Them to Skin and Bon A New Yorker who sometimes varies his horseback riding by tak ing trips through the rail fence belt of Long Island noticed on one such trip a farmer sitting dejectedly on one such' fence. At the farmer's feet was a litter of little pigs so thin they gave the impression of having but one dimension. "What happened the squealers?" the rider asked. The farmer beckoned him to come close, then hoarsely whispered: "Lost my voice. Them was the fattest pigs I ever seen. I used to come out and call 'em to me and feed 'em three times a day. .Lost my voice and had to call 'em to grub by rap ping with my stick on the fence. See ? Now the darn woodpeckers is driving them pigs crazy." New York San. . With Loe ef Intereet. There is s police court magistrate of St Louis who frequently evinces a pretty wit in dealing with fresh or facetious offenders. - To one vagrant brought before him not long ago his honor put the question, "What occupation r -' "Nothin' much at present," flip pantly responded the prisoner; "just curculatin round, judge." "Retired from circulation for thir ty days," dryly observed his honor to the clerk of the court Harpers Weekly. . Hard a) IK Eye. Ton always think of a clerk or bookkeeper as the boy with the job that's hard on the 'eyes," remarked an alavator man the other day. "But this is the job that gets your -A 1 I IX J . Vm. eyes, or at jesai it uwi u. wm a wa ara nhliowt look atraicht ahead of as, snd the blur of things . . . . as we try unconsciously to locus our eyes on them makes s constant eiraln. I vonhl rather be bendina ever a set of books myself, so far as my eyes sre concern ad. iXHUmDW Dispatch. Old Tima Meantiiaalia, Corral OtuerOAng tbe ajouitebaaks ke saw et Venice la tbe aiiaalaanta eeatnrr. wbe ware adepts la tbe art of avertartng, apeak eg tne -eraim a tbe eadieace ef half an koer kC whervta ke ootb eMst hrparboUeaJly axtol tbe nrtaea of bis drags ead eae (acdoaa, tboocb ataay ef tbees are Terr ceaaterfalt aod fatea." Aad tbe setbor ef s Tear Taroogb Enaiaad" OT231 writ ef a aoaaUbnk be saw ta Wtocbaetar: "Ha earaa all mm aalla hia eacfcets for pfaea. It Is a prodigy bow ee wtae s people a tbe Eaclmb are gwllad by eocb pickpockets." Dee'. Am !, ke copla!a4 that tbe tda cvtta were keary. tbe coffee weak, tbe keeoa bora!. aJ J forta. HI wife la the rad looked ap calmly from fcer kttrra. TVot srfWl e enerroor brer I -fal." te ni !- f milS -Jiotody b goii.g l j to at- It r frote you." CI o- SERVANTS' LIVERIES. Had Their Origin During tha Reign ef King Papin of Franoe. So far as tho present writer is aware, the earliest mention of "liv eries" made in history was during the reign of King Pepin of France, who flourished about the year 750 A. D. A form of amusement to which King Pepin was partial was what were termed cours plenieres. These were assemblies at which, upon the king's invitation, all the lords and courtiers of France were expected to be present. They were held twice in each year at Christmas and Easter and generally lasted for about a week at each time. Sometimes these gatherings took Jilace at the king's palace; some imes in tho neighborhood of one of the larger French cities and sometimes in some rural district. While the festival lasted the king took all his meals in public, bishops and dukes alone being privileged to sit at the royal table. A second ta ble was provided for abbots, counts and other leading men, and at both tables there was shown more pro fusion than delicacy, both in the quality of the meats and drinks and the manner in which they were serv ed. Flutes, hautboys ana other mu sical instruments were played be fore the bearers of each course as it was removed from the tables. When dessert was served twenty heralds, each holding aloft a jewel ed goblet, shouted thrice, "Largesse, largesso from the most potent of kings 1" As thev shouted thev scat-1 tercd among the crowds handfuls of gold and silver coins. Then tne trumpets were blown, while the bet ter class spectators shouted and the meaner sort scrambled and often fought vigorously for the money scattered by the heralds. Charles VII. of France put a final stop to the cours plenieres, alleging that tbe expense attendant upon ms wars with England made it impossi ble for him to continue them. One of the severest causes of expense, it was explained, arose from the fact that, beginning with Jung i'epin's time, etiquette and custom alike de manded that the king should upon these occasions give an entire suit of new and gorgeous clothing not only to his own servants and re tainers, but also' to those of the queen and all the princes of the blood royal These garments were said to be livres that is, "deliver ed" at the king's expense snd from this word 'the Kngllsn word "livery" was derived, as was the cus tom of providing servants with "livery"- from the above mentioned Eractice of certain of the French ings. London Standard. ' A Ready Reply. It was on a P. and O. liner, and the stewards were being drilled in waiting at table. In thr course of the drill they lined up outside the saloon with empty dishes, supposed to contain curry and rice, and on s bell being rung marched to their respective tables and proffered the dish to each seat containing an im aginary diner. The eagle eye of the purser noticed that one steward, a cockney named Bill, deliberately passed one of the seats without Sroflering the dish. He strode up to id table, and hii manner betokened trouble for Bill. "Hi, you I What do you mean by missing that sest?" "Oh, that's sll right, sir replied BUI, not a bit put out 'fThatVent don't tako curry." London Illus trated Bits. If the Sun Waa to Chang Color. . We have grown so sccustomed to sunlight of tbe present coloring and shading that we can scarcely com prehend the conditions that would arise if tbe son were to suddenly change to some other eolor. If the sun were blue, for instance, there would be only two eolors in the world blue snd black or if it were red, then everything would be red or block. In the latter case we should have red snow, red lilies, black grass, black clear sky and red clouds. There would be little variety, however, if the sun were green. Things that are now yellow would still remain that color, but there would be no reds, purples, orange or pinks and very few el those cherry hues that make the world so bright CWfad Up Him. The proprietor of the celebrated mountain inn was showing the new guest the beautiful surroundings. "Ah, thru cliffs r said the pro prietor rapturously. "In an elec trical storm they ere swe Inspiring. The next time e storm rises see that you are standing on the porch of the inn. Why, sir, the air le ahrsys heavily charged.'" 1 don't doubt it," laughed the new guest, winking at another late arrival, "and if I don't happen to be standing oa the porch I can feel assured that it will be heavily charg ed anyway- on ray btIL" Chicago News. 1 Wreeifl TV ' t keve ems all tbe way eat bare, aakf tbe ktodarf oof. " eae TOr beae- CfnJ atmart." -Boeaebodr-s keea Waste je atraasar.- replied Arbnaa At It abst eabaa.'-Cbteafe Record-Herald, Weary Walker D world's aO wrema TtraoJ Tatte-Wors eatla r"e rwl Weary Welkev-Ef rd a had da ssakxrf av It ra aaade all de roade reass 4wvkiO-CkaeafO Sew. National Capitol Notes. On Nov. 16th there will be a new state added to tbe sisterhood. That is tbe date the President has set for issuing the Oklahoma proclamation. It might have been done sooner as the document is now in Washington, but there is a good deal of business waiting to be cleaned up before the territorial courts and the date of the proclamation has been set back as far as it can be under the law. It is interesting to note that though the new state will be pro claimed and admitted, there will not be another star added to the flag till next fourth of July. Then there will be a new flag issued with 46 stars in the field instead ot the pres ent 45. This is a matter of custom. New flags will not be issued in all cases, but the stars ,ill arranged with eight in some of the rows in stead of six, preserving the balanced rectangle of tbe field and making the change only appreciable to the trained observer. - Congress is always well to the front with new inventions either when there is .a chance to spend money or to add to the convenience of the senators or representatives or both. The latest thing proposed is a centra) dictation and type writing bureau for the new House and Sen ate office building at the Capitol and for such of the members as want to work by the new method from tbe rooms in the old Capitol building. The scheme is a device of the Swe dish inventor Poulsen, he of wire less telephone fame. . It is a machine that will take dictatiou over a tele phone wire at a distance. It is really a remarkable and uncanny acting piece of mechanism. There are two big spools carrying a very fine steel wire. This wire is wound from one spool to the other by s small motor. ' Tbe dictation is dore into sn ordinary telephone trans mitter that may be located fifty miles from the machine, but tbe conversation or letter or whatever is to be recorded is printed In invis ible waves of ' magnetism on this wire as it passes over an electric needle. All that . the Senator has to have on his desk is tbe telephone transmitter hung over a small disk like a little clock face with an indi cating needle that, tells him whether hia recording wire br running out on the distant machine. When he finishes dictsting, the typewriter in the central bureau simply reverses the motor on the recording machine and puts the letter or speech into typewriting snd sends it to him completed. There is do clack of s typewriter in his office, no stenogra pher to sit around and listen to con versations with his visitors snd no dirt and muss from shaving down wax records. Dictation from any committee room can thus be taken in tbe central bureau snd there all the work of transcribing is dona Tbe record remains on the wire in definitely and withstands all sorts of bard ussge but can be instantly wiped out by a contrary electric cur rent after which the wire is ready for use again. - - ' Senator McCumber was at tbe White House a few days ago with the draft of a bill that he will intro duce early in tbe session. It pro vides for chartering corporations by the federal goverment. It Is aimed to meet tbe demands for federal charter that have been put forth in many quarters. Tbe books of tbe corporations will be open to tbe in spectiun of the Department of Com merce and Labor snd the amount of stock and bonds issued will be fixed bv.the Devsrtmeot based on lbs actual value of tbe assets of tbe com pany. Any existing corporation can apply for and secure a federal char ter without reorgsnixatina;. The adoption of tbe federal charter is made optional snd not obligatory but it would act as such a guarantee of stability and proper administra tion that it is thought it would prove valuable asset Tbe President did not express himself on the meas ure, but it is in line with some of his utterance and is likely to bsve the support of the sd ministration. James Hamilton Lewis waa one of tha distinguished callers at tbe White House recently. Thie former representative, be of the radiant whisk era, has worked up a reputation as rather aa odd character. But be is an astute politician and a keen obserrer so that his remarks carry the weight that attaches from com ing pretty dose to the rank and file reter. He is rather a third term man, but what be said emphatically was tbv4 it President Roosevelt nn sgain, Wniiem Jennings Bryan would not Conversely u Boosevaii did not run, Bryan would take the Democratic nomination and would draw a good deal of the strength that would otherwise go to swell the Roosevelt vote. President Rooa jvelt is very well sat isfied with the way in which Secre tary of the Treasury. Cortelyou handled the government end of tbe recent money panio in New York. Government funds to the extent, it is said, of 125,000,000 were deposi ted with the national" banks and this action did much to restore publio confidence and relieve tbe money stringency which was really the chief cause of tbe panic. But tbe action of tbe Secretary of the Treasury has not met with such warm approval from a number of observers. It is reported that Repre sentative T. W. Sims of Tennessee is preparing a resolution for thorough inquiry into this use of government funds. He claims that tbe action was without warrant in law and predicts that as soon as the government support w with drawn the market Will go back and the panio be renewed. Mr. Cortel you also made a good many enemies in the South at the time of tbe panic by refusing tbe same aid , to the southern planters that he extended to the New York banks. Mr. Burleson of Texas called on him at that time and pointed out that many of the big cotton men of tbe South were being forced by tbe banks to sacrifice their cotton beotuse the banks needed the money end would not holt? the cotton as collateral in the warehouses as they had been in the habit of doing. He wanted a few millions of government money deposited with the national banks in the South the same as in the North. But the S ecretsry ssid that he did not see bis way clear to do this. He rowejht at 6ttyefera David Parker, of Fayette, N. Y., who loet a foot at Gettysburg, writes; 'Electric Bitters hare done me more good than any medicine I ever took. Kor several years 1 had atomacn trouble, and paid out much money for medicine to little purpose, until I began taking Eleclno Bitters. I would not take low for what tnej bare done for me." Grand tonic for the aged and for female weak nesses. Great alterative and body builder: sure cure for lame back and weak kidneys. Guaranteed by Graham Drug Co. 50c. In Charlotte one evening last week about dusk, Mies Rosa Witherepoon, a stenographer, while on her way home, was seized by a young negro, thrown to the ground and her band bag violently wrenched from her band. A small amount of money was taken from the bag and the bag left a short distance from where tbe attack occurred. The negro escaped before help arrived. AppaaaialtJa la dne in a large measure to abuse of the bowela, by employing drastic purgatives. To avoid sll dsneer, use only Dr. King's New Life Pills. The safe, gentle cleaiwers snd invig- orators. Guaranteed to cure. head ache, biliousness, malaria and jsun dico, at Graham Drug store. 25c. The Gastonia G turtle says that W. If. Rowan, a telegraph operator in the Southern railway depot at Low ell, Gaaton county, shot himself through the breast Sunday night a week inflicting a wound which though serious will hsrdly prove latal. It is siid that Rowan was drunk st the time of tbe shooting. but whether tbe shooting waa acci dental or with suicidal intent is not known. ' I ain't feeling right to-day, Something wrong I must say; Come to think of it, that's right I forgot my Rncky Mountain Tea last mgbt Tb odd peon UrugCo Mr. A. M. Powell, a prominent citizen and bueneas iaian of Raleigh, died Sunday a week, lie was three times mayor of Raleigh and was al so prominent aa a member of vari ous lodges. Trial Catarrh treatments ais be ing mailed out free, on rrqoeat, by Dr. Sboop, Racine. Wis- These teats are roving to ibe people without a penny a cost tbe great value of thie scientific preacription known to druggists everywhere e Dr. Sboop's Catarrh Remedy. Sold by Graham Drug Co. Raleigh day will be obeerved at the Jamestown exposhioa about the 2&h or 27th of the mooth and Gov. Glenn will be the orator of the day. DeWitt'o Lillle Early Riser are the beet pills made. They do not a a s- frv a-i gripe, ooia cy uranam irug io. rorasL:: at-, i r ! Advice to the Aged. . Are bring Infirmities, sock as slug Stan bowels, weak kidneys and blad der and TORPID LIVER. Tutt'sl IS have a specific effect on these ergons, Btimulatlng; the bowels, causing ilxm to perform their natural functions aa fayouthaad IMPARTING VIGOR. to the kidney, bladder and LIVER. They arc adapted toold and yoong. , r eadachesi This time of the year are signals of warning. Take Taraxacu m Com -pound , now. It may avs you a spell of fe ver. It will regulate your bowe's, set your liver risrht. and cure your indigestion. A good Tonic. An honest medicine IMEBANE. N. C. KILLthe COUCH and CURE THE LUNC3 tlciv DiscQyCiy MS LL THROAT AND LUNOTROUBIE. GUARANTEED SATlSFACi'Oiil OS MONET &EFUHDED. Weali Hearts D Are do la Indigestion. Nlnetr-alne ef av .1J eae hundred people wbe have hacrt trouble oaa remember whan It was simple rod!( js. Hon. It Is a adannne fact that all ease ef heart dlwiiee, not organlo. are not only traoaabl to, bat are the direct reach ef ad faettee. All food takes Into tbe stomach which falls ef perfect dlfeeuoa ferments ar.d wells the stomach, puffinf It p against the heart. Tola Interfere, with tha action of fa heart, ead ta the oours of Urn thai Ss Hosts ka vital erraa atr. D. Kagela, el Nevada, fX. awst I! a. I too Rasat Drayaaaa Car ear easat ass aSWkl M. awe a. I ke Kodoi tXgaats What Yo Cat aad rabavaa the stomach ef all aarvaaa avals aad the heart ef all praaaora. leer. St.oe sto MAwSHtsaw Stoato ens. erucs m Mr sue. be S.O. DeWfTT OO OMOAOO Spring Is here, and you want your olai Harness put in gooc shape for the sum mer work. Take them to the : : : : : : TURNER HARNESS CO. and have them re paired, or better, bay, a new set- and made and guaranteed not tc' rip or break In one year, 11 they Co, mzC: zood free of cost I: yon. iry ns once. WILL D. TURTkER, P. R. Harden Sorocr, GHAHA1L,N.C. KT LaT. aa, fTp-aj " U:::.ve I m i Hemeier Taraxacum n ,i0
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 14, 1907, edition 1
1
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