Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / June 25, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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The Alamance Gleaner VOL. XXXIV, GRAHAM, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1908. NO. 19 rifl save the dyspeptic dava of misery, and enable him to eat whatever be wishes. - They prevent SICK HEADACHE, cause tlie food to assimilate mmi aasjr- isn n owujr, iTe mw i)Tni DEVELOP FLESH and solid muscle. Elegantly Take No Substitute. coaiea. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. WILL S. LOU. . , . itentist; . ; . Graham . . - - North Carolina OFFICE in SIMMONS BUILDING JACOB A. L0N3. ' J. ELMER LONG, LONG & LQNGr, Attorney and Counselor at Law, GRAHAM, K. "V j s. cook:, - Attorney-nt- Law, GRAHAM. . .. - - - N. C. Office Patterson Banding Seoond Floor. , . .... . C A. HALL, ATT0BNEY AND OOCNSELLOB-AT-LAW, GRAHAM, N. C. Office in the Bank of Alamance Balding.; ap staira. iohm u tswca. . W.' P. Britun, J a. BkNUAl & BTNUM, Attornejra and Gotineelorsj at Law 0 ivE JBNBBOBO, S V. Practice regularly In the -court of Ala nance county. Aug.t,S41j ROB T C. STEUDWICK Attornay-at-Law, - GREENSBORO Jf. 0. Practices in the courts of Ala mance and Guilford counties. T katler sdvsrtts the Saatlfa leaaiac BasUess Callage, Joel a tow atbabwsUie ess Oar la eaak sMttsa a leaf thaa east, tMT MUT. WBrTB tOOAT. BA-ALL BUSDO CGLLEU Eo, El Grahan Undewriters Agency;? i SCOTT cVVL BRIGHT, Graham, NY C - ;.; - Offloe of ; - ' . Scott-Mebanb MVo Co. , ' OTBBA1XS. . , ' " GRAHAM, X. CU Apr. IS, MOT. HA8. A. SCOTT, Agent , - Southern Live Stock Ins. Oo.. - - - - ' - Oraham, K.O. -OB AB BIB . .. , ... ' We beg; to acknowledge receipt of your favor of the 11th, enakwHig check No. 120 foi $150, the same being in full payment of ourelaim under poUoy No. VI, eoveilng nsuranoe oa oar Iron Gray Dray Horse, which died on the night of the 8th Inst. We wish to thank you for the promptness In which yoor company has handled this loss and will sty, In passing, that a company of this character hat long been needed In our State, and In view of the small premium asked, no one should be without insurance on their Uw stock. ,L Yours very truly, " -COTT-MBBANBk'ra CO., - - ; H, W. Boost; Correspondence Solicited. " OFTCE' AT .' ' .-.I'. THE BANK OF ALAMANCE ARE YOU up ; : TO DATE If yon are not the News ait" Obekteb ia. f Subscribe for it at once and it wHlkecpjoa abreast of the times. ' . v ; Foil Associated Press dispatch es. All the news foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. X: Daily News "and Obserrer $7 per year, 3.50 for moi. Weekly North Carolinian $1 P year, 60c for 6 moa. . NEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO., Ralugh, N.C The North Carolinian and Tna AiAMABci GLEAim will bs sent for one year for Two Dollars, Gash In advance, ' Apply at ThbGixaiot office, Graham N. C OTORTA. IM tat Ut Iraj tft sargi Foley's Honey mad Tar Washington Letter. Washisgton, June 20, 1908. Washington has vacated the centre of the official stage in favor of Chi cago tnis week, with Denver still ahead aa the centre of political ac tivities. Most of the officials high op in administration circles who did not go to the convention are gradn ally departing tor their various sum mer homes. President Roosevelt will leave on Saturday for Oyster Bay, but Secretary Taft has not yet completed his plans for the summer and it is not known just when he will be able to get away from the city. It is known, of course, that he now expects to go to his home in Cincinnati some time in July Complaints come from Chicago that the national convention "dull," and a prominet member of the national committee is reported as saying that national conventions have lost their interest. Too much is predetermined, he laments, the voters having taken the nomination of a President into their own hands and left only the minor details of the gathering to be worked out by the leaders. Secretary Straus of the Depart- ment of Commerce and Labor and Commissioner General Sergeant at tended a conference at Ellis Island this week of Commissioners at At lantic ports where immigrants are landed. A specific understanding was reached in the diagnosing of in. factious diseases to obviate oppor tunity for aliens refused admission at one port to enter at another, a scheme which had been possible by a slight difference in the medical examination at the various ports. It is expected that early in Au gust, at Fort Myer, Virginia, just over the Potomacfrom Washington tests will begin of dirigible balloons and airships by the United States in connection with the work of the signal corps of the army. Cantracts have been let for two "heavier than air" machines and one dirigible bal- oon. from which army officers ex pect to obtain results of preat im portance. President Roosevelt, in conjunc tion with Gifford Pinchot, has taken Btepa to complete the organization of the national conser vation commis sion this week. Already work has begun in the collection of informs tion upon which the preliminary report of the commission will be based in January next. Officials in Washington realize that the political situation in Cuba is serious, but they . place no cre dence whatever in the reports that the foreign element there is foment- arevoluion for the purpose of compelling the United States to maintain an army In Cub beyond Febuary 1 next, which is the date set by President Roosevelt for the evacuation of the Island. Secretary Taft stated, this week, that no re ports of a revolutionary movement had been teceived from Governor Magoon. The municipal and pro vincial elections bars been set for August 1 next, and while the eleo tion may be attended by disorders in some parts of the island, there is littl likelihood that there will be any serious trouble. The information has leaked ouv recently from on who got it from a member of the Bryan family direct, that Mrs. William J. Bryan had confided to her husband her choice for the Vice Presidency on the Dem ocratic ticket, and it is none other than Woodrow Wilson, President of the Princeton Umversityi It is said that Mr. Bryan agrees with bis wife and that he declares privately ne would like nothing better than to have the distinguished educator and historian for a running mats. Ac cording: to this aame anuoruy, the original choice of Mf. Bryan was Brand Whitloctths Sodalist-imo- cratic mayor of Toledo, bnt the ener getic young mayor declined thebon- or oa the ground mat were w plenty of time yet for him to get in to national politics. It seems that Ura. Bryan is not -only a great ad mirer of the historical writings of Woodrow Wilson, but his sno- in the fxlocational world appeals to her. Mr. Bryan, as Ue story goes, has always -consulted bis wife .. tn erarr move Tie has made, and .i.na h has not always followed bar advice, be is said often to nays wian- war . fL d that he bad. He regaros w rWaranO. for WoodrOW WDSOB SS about the wisest suggestion she has yet mads. President Wilson has not been consulted on the subject Hmmrf. an Tuiafumous . opinion local bankers, boai- . n representative .Washingtonians that it would be advisable to abolish the present form of government in the District of Columbia, and substitute a single commissioner or governor on whom should centre all respon sibility and administrative authority. Many contend that the present triple-headed iorm of government is unwieddy, and necessarily imposes on the people conditions which could not exist were the responsi bility of administering local affairs invested in one executive. Allaire at the State Hospital. Statesville Landmark 12th. At the meeting of the board of di rectors of the State Hospital at Mor ganton Tuesday the reports showed there were 1,132 patients in the in stitution on June 1st. The pavilion for female tuberculous patients is in process of construction and will be completed in four weeks. The ex cavation for the nurses' home is com plete and it is expected that this building will be ready for occupancy in six months. By the transfer ence of nurses room from the build ing to the new one and by the adop tion of other expedients, room will be found for 100 additional patients, The pressure for room in the in stitution continues unabated and a committee of the board of directors was appointed to see the State Hos pital commission at its next meeting and inform it of the imperative needs of the institution. Numerous applications have been rejected and it is the policy to take the most urgent cases, those who are most likely to be helped or restored by treatment. For-this reason all epil eptic cases are rejected and it is use less to make applications for this class of patients. The Kentucky Tobacco Situation. If determination on the part of the obacco planters could have brought 'about an end of the strife, it would have been settled long ago, but aside from the lawless element, . there are scores of men who have been suffer ing for months as a result of holding their tobacco in pool in hope of se curing the price demanded. Tbe tobacco trusts insists it has made no attempt to monopolize the market. It declares that where the most vio lent disorders have occurred it does not buy the bulk of the tobacco, but that tbe Italian Regie, the Im perial Tobacco Company and the American Snuff Company have been the chief buyers. On tbe other hand, the growers declare it is known that all these concerns are but other names for the American Tobacco finmnftnv or are in an agreement in the matter of buying and fixing the price. The trust maintains it is oi leied more tobacco than it needs, and aa the growers have no actual means of knowing just how much their buyers have on hand the Bur- ley people have concluded that tbe absence of one year's crop w.ould be safe at least. Accordingly they have formed their "no-crop" agreement and have secured two-thirds of the acreage of Burley through signed contracts on the part of tbe plant ers. If this agreement is strictly observed, it will mean that of 100,- 000 acres ot the best Bluegrass land there will be other crops than tobac co grown next summer, and that the Burley crop will be short about 100,000,000 pounds in 1908. At an average price of 1 10 a hundred, which would not be a high estimate, this would deprive the planters of Kentucky off 10,000,000, practical ly all of which comes from tbe trust. Bat here another problem has arisen. The tonaatclasses,or renters, declare they cannot make a living on any other crop in their limited space; and a few weeks ago one of the large planters who bad informed bis men that there would be no cropia 1908, found some of bis most valuable cattle poisoned, while on their dead bodies was placed the warning, "No crop, no cattle," J. Slaughter Car ter, in Uncle Remus's Tbe Home Hagaxins for June. ... The Pythian grand lodge, in ses sion at Raleigh, elected Thomas H. Webb, of Harnett county, grand oounoellor, George Hackney, of Ashe villa, grand vice cocncellor; Rer. W. B. Duttera, of Salisbury, grand pre late; J. B. CaflEey, of North Wilkes boro, grand master at arms; W.B. fata, of Charlotte, grand inner guard; a H. Beine, of Blgn, grand outer guard. Tbe next meet ing will be held at HendersonTiUe. Table oil cloth will wear twice as long if a layer of brown paper u tacked on first. Tick Eradication K canned. The Bureau of Animal Industry of the United States Department of Agriculture is resuming active op erations for the eradication of the cattle ticks which prevail in the souihern part of the country and transmit the contagion of Texas fever of cattle. Ita men are being sent into the field and preparations are being made to push the work of extermination vigorously during the warm weather, when the ticks are most active. Since this work was begun, two years ago, an area of about 5G,000 square miles or almost the size of the State of Georgia, has been fr eed from the tricks. As a result the quarantine on southern cattle has been either modified or entirely re moved from this area. Last year work was done to a greater or less extent in the States of Virginia. North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Ken tucky, Missouri, Arkansas, Okla homa, Louisiana, Texas and Cali fornia, and it is proposed this year to continue in the same States with the addition of a small portion of Mississippi. Most of the work has been and will continue to be done in sections contiguous to the quar antine line, the object being to push the line farther south from year to year; but encouragement is given to local work in any part of the quar antined district in the assurance that when any considerable area is rendered tick free it will be released from quarantine. The work is being done by co-op eration between the Federal Gov ernment and the State and local authorities. Congress has appro priated 1 250,000 for the year be ginning July 1, and it is expected that the States and counties where the work is carried on will duplicate this sum. The committee on ap propriations of the House of Repre sentatives expressed itself very strongly to the effect that the States should bear a reasonable share of the cost and that the Federal work should be mainly confined to States where co-operation is received. Various methods for exterminat ing the ticks used, including trans ferring the cattle from pasture to pas ture suitable intervals, and dipping, spraying, and hand dressing the cat tle with oil and oil emulsion. In sections where there are large herds and large ranches dipping on a large scale is practiced, either alone or in connection with pasture rotation, while in other sections, where the cattle on some farms frequently con sists only of a cow or an ox team, hand dressing with oil is found to be fn oni J piauuutu.o mew. .1 , iL.J The damage caused by tbe ticks and the benefits to follow from their eradication are not generally appre ciated. It is estimated that tbe Texas-fever tick is responsible for about 40,000,000 of loss annually to the people of tbe infected country, and that it also lowers the assets of the South by an additional $23,250, 000, making tbe enormous aggre gate of 163,250,000. To wipe out this heavy foes is the obect of tbe work now under way, and the re sults already accomplished leave no doubt that success is possible, though a number of years will be required for the completion of the undertaking. Much depends upon the cattle owners, who can either hasten or retard progress according as they co-operate or refuse to assist in the work. Literature giving full information as to the ticks, tbe disease which they transmit, and methods for their eradication has been issued by tbe Department of Agriculture and will be supplied free of charge on appli cation to the Chief of tbe Bureau of Animal Industry, Washington, D. a Geo. A. Sherman, Lisbon Red Mills, Lawreooe Co., N. Y., writes: "I bad kidney disease for many years and bad been treated by pby sicans for twelve years; had taken s well known kidney medicine and other remedies that were recom mended but rot no relief until I be gan .using Foley's Kidney Cure. The first hall bottle relieved me and four bottles have cured me of this terrible disease. Belore I bertfl tak ing Foley's Kidney Cure I had to make water about every fifteen min utes, day and night, and passed a brick-dust snbstance, and some times a slimy subsUnce. I believe I would have died if I bad not taken Foley Kidney Cutre." polish, mixed - with torpentine when applied to stoves prevents rust, im blacker and more' glossy and wears longer than if mixed with any other liquid. . Tbeordor eoon peases gNorth Carolina News. State Senator Shaw of Robeson county, died at his home at Lumber Bridge Sunday a week. Gov. Dawson, of West Virginia, is in Asheville for the benefit of his health, suffering from tuberculosis.' Mrs. . B. McCain, who has been postmaster at Ashboro for more than 40 years, has been succeeded by J. Milton Burrow. Rev. Dr. A. A. McGeachy. of Sherman, Texas, has accepted a call to the pastorate of the Second Pree byterian church of Charlotte. ine Jews oi Ureenstrtrro are pre paring to organize a synagogue. Rev. G. Mendelsohn, of Nashville, Tenn., will have charge of the work. A Rowan concern has been award ed a contract for 3,000 yards of Row. an county granite, which is to be used for street paving in Chicago. John Alexander, col., is held in Cabarrus jail without thes privilege of bail on tbe charge of criminally assaulting a woman of his own race Material has been put on the ground for two buildings for tbe State reform school, located at Con cord and bricklaying begins this week. Hollis Craver, one of the boys who was shocked by lightnin g near Lexington Sunday a week when boy named Odell Young was killed, died Tuesday following. Five negro con victB. serving long terms in the penitentiary for various oflences, escaped from a railroad construction camp in Hyde county a lew aays ago. Taylorsvslle Scout: Mr. R. L. Matheson has on exhibition a era ne that was killed on the farm of Mr.E. C. Sloan. The bird measurers 6 feet from tip to tip and ia 5 feet high Carey B. Mercer, 16 years old, son of the pastor of the First Baptist church at Rocky Mount, was drown ed Friday a week while bathing in Tar river, two miles from Rocky Mount. Mr. Avery Nelson, seriously hurt a short time ago while trying to put a belt on an overhead pulley at the plant of the Lenoir Veneering Co. at Lenoir, died last' Friday night a week. Ex-Congressman A C. Shulord, of Catawba, manager for the Hearst -Independent party in North Caroli na, has organized a club at Wilming ton with a reported membership of 75. Mr. T.J. Lassiter, editor of the Smithfield Herald and former presi; dent of the 8tate press association, and Miss Ren a Bingham were mar ried at tbe home of the brid e's moth' er at Smithfield Thursday. Gov. Glenn has offered a reward of 175 for the capture of Ben Wil- kerson, a convict from Vance coun ty, who was under a life sentence, but who escaped. Wilkerson is white man and was sentenced to the penitentiary for life for rape. Mrs. McMshan, aged about 70 years, wss found dead in bed at tbe borne of her granddaughter, Mrs. Ray Clement, in Winston Friday mornin&a week. The deceased had moved to Winston from Davie coun ty about a year ago, 'Geo. A. 8ummers, who wss serv ing a term on the Guilford county roads and was pardoned a few months ago on account of the condi tion oi his health, died at bis boms at Springfield, III, a few days ago. He was convicted of embezzling 11, 400 from the Singer Sewing Machine Co. , of which he was agent Wadesboro Messenger, 6th: Mrs. Troy Moore, who lived just across the line in Union county, died sud denly Sunday while milking a cow. Mrs. Moore after cooking breakfast and cleaning up her borne, went to the lot to milk tbe cows. She ap peared to be in her uoal health aad the first sny one knew there was anything wrong she suddenly rose to her feet and, after taking a step or two, fell and died instantly. - Tbe matter of establishing an orpbange by by tbe Pythians of ths State has been under consi deration for several years, and at the meeting of the grand lodge in Raleigh last week a committee was appointed to secure ta forma tion aa to plans and cost of building and equipment aad to make a reooooamaadalioa as to a gyatem for tbe eeUblishmeat aad maintenance of an orphanage. This committee wffl report at tbe next mertioe; of the grand lodge. Toughen lamp chimneys by set- .1. am Ka tYa ia viM wreiar uug whkh fallowed to slowly come DOU. North Carollaa Patents. Granted this week. Reported by C. A. Snow G. Co., Patent Attor neys, Washington, D. C E. H. Barber, Henrietta, Fly-shuttle mo tion. C, M. Beaaley, Mon roe, Printer's gage. For copy of any of the above patents send ten cents in postage stamps with date of this paper to C A. Snow & Co., Wash ington, D. C. Graad Family Mceielae. "It gives me pleasure to speak a good word for Electric Bitters," writes Mr. Frank Conlan of No. 436 Houston St., New York. "It's a grand family medicine for dyspep sia and liver complications; while for lame back and weak kidneys it cannot be too highly recommend ed." Electric Bitten regulate the di gestive functions, purifys the blood, and imparts new vigor and vital ity to the weak and debilitated of both seves. Sold under guarantee by Graham Drug Co. 50c. At Fayetteville Sunday night a week Mr. Abner Jackson, a book keeper, was attacked on tbe street by two men, knocked unconscious with a club, dragged to a secluded place and robbed of what valuables he had only a few dollars in cash. About an hour later Mr. Jackson regained consciousness and his cries brought help. He injuries are ser vere, but not fatal. Thinks II Bavael Him Ule. Lester M. Nelson, of Naples. Maine, says in a recent letter: "I have used Dr. Kingj New Discov ery many years, for coughs snd colds and I think it saved my life. I have found it a reliable remedy for throat and lung complaints, and would no moro be without a bottle than I would be without food. ' For nearly forty years New Discovery has stood at the bead of throat and lung remedies. As a preventive of pneumonia, and healer of weak lungs it has no equal. 8old under guarantee at Graham Drag Co. 50o. and 11.00 After a long aearch Thursday night the bodies of Joseph and An dre Beaudry, 8 and 4 years old, were found locked in a trunk, at their borne at Falls River, Mass. It is supposed ths children hid to es cape going to school. The trunk had a spring lock. Tbe medical ex aminer decided that their deaths were due to suffocation. The inter-' ior of the trunk and the clothing and bodies ot the children gave evi dence of the struggles which they had made to escape before death finally overtook them. "I have been afflicted with kid ney and bladder trouble for year', passing travel or stones with excru ciating pain," says A. H. Thames, a well known coal oprerator oi ui falo, O. "I got no relief from medi cine until I began taking Fotey'e Kidney Cure, then tbe result wss surprising. A few doses started the brick-dust-like substance and now I have no pain across my kidneys and I feel like a new man. It has dons me 11000 worth ot good." Foley's Kidney Cure will cure every form of kipney or bladder disease. J. E. Cole, a farmer of Spartan burg oounty,fl. C, and his son Al bert, 13 years old, were killed by lightning Thursday. During a thunderstorm Mr. Cole went to a window to let down a sash. Ths boy went with him and as they were lowering the sash both were killed by lightning. Ta Beat P1U Bva SaM "After doctoring 15 years for chronic indigestionr and spending over two hundred dollars, nothing has done me as much food as Vt. King's New Life Pills. I consider them the best pills ever sold." writes B. F. Ayseue, of Inglesids, N. a Sold under guarantee by Gra ham Drug Co. Zdc. When inakinff a skirt put the band on aad bang it ap over night before finishing at tbe bottom. In this way the goods sag before and not after it is finisbed. Manydrees makers even attach light weights to tbe bottom so thai the goods can stretch all they wilL Te Oas;a Oaa as sm say Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tableta. All drugxiats refund the money if it fails to cure, C W. Grove's sis-nature is on each 25a box When candles are bwned abort, bmU them and mix with ad equal part of turpentine aad you have fine poliah for floors, -oilcloth and stair ways. Cures diny speBa, tired Jeeliaga, ttftfneH and liver troubles, keeps En well ail summer. That' what caster's Rocky Mountain Tea will do. Try it and you will always v T.klw. Thnr LV?L' r-. Chas. - Lindley, lineman, waa caught among the live electrio wires while working on a pole in the streets of Columbus, 8. C. and roasted to death in the sight of people power lees to render him aid. His body remained on the wires some time be fore it could be taken down. The trouble with most cough cures is that they constipate. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup does not constipate, but on the other hand its laxative principles gently moves the bowels. It is pleasant to taice ana especially recommended to chil dren, as it tastes nearly as good as maole sugar. Sold by Graham Drug Co. The executive committee of the Dunkard's national organization, in session at Des Moines, Ia., last week, expelled from the church 75 women of Dayton, Ohio, who refus ed to wear church bonnets and want ed to wear "Merry Widows." Insist upon DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. There are substitute, but there is only one original. It is healing, soothing and cooling and is especially good for piles. Sold by Graham Drug Co. Dr. George H. Crowell, for 11 years superintendent of the High Point graded schools, and recently re-elected, has resigned to accept the chancellorship of Epworth Univer sity, st Oklahoma City, Okla., con trolled by the Northerb and South ern Methodist churches jointly. The unpleasant odor from new paint can be removed by placing pails of fresh water in the rooms. To freshen leather chair-seats, valis es, bags, etc., rub with the well beat en white of an egg. To brighten silverware rub it with oatmeal. . Thousands Hare Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it Frevalcaer of BUdaey Disease. . ni. m. r 1 1. chi. alarm- must lvpiw w - ..--. be increase and remarkable previlency 9 a( lilnj.wtiaa Whilekidneydia orders are the mmt common disease that pre vail, tney are almost the last recognized by patient and phy sicians, vho eon- (Ml tliffiUlMi with factoring (h tftet$, while the trig- mat oweuss uuuci umn. What To Do. There is comfort In the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer s Bwmmp-Root, the great kidney remedy, fulfills every wish in curing rhcnmatlsiii, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It correctl TlnaMIity to hoM water and scalding pain in pasting it, or bad enacts following ate of liquor, wine or beer, end overcomes that unpleasant ne cessity of being compelled to go often daring the day, and to get np many time daring the night, the rmld an J the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stand the highest for Its wonderful cures of the most dis tressing ease. If you need a medicine vou should have the beat. Sold by drug Eist. in fifty-cent .ndesW ou may nave a " " book that Mil au about it, both sent free k. .tl AiMraaaDr. lUlmer & Co., Bing- DIUHUB, f a . . . - writing mention this paper and don t make any mistake, but remember the name. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Biflghamton, M. Y. I Notice is hereby given to all the qualified voters of Alamance conn-i- in ik. Rial nf North Carolina. that ths Board of Commissioners of said county bavs this day, at a reg ular meeting of said Board, held on the first Monday in June. 1908, ordered an election to be held in said county, the first Thursday in August 1908, upon the ques tion of issuing bonds of sale miol. In tVia inn of two bundled thousand dollars, running nity years from tneir oaie, ior vue purpose of building good roads in said county. This election will be held st tbe various voting places or precincts in said county on ths FIRST THURSDAY IN AUGUST, 1908, and those voting in favor of said Good Roads Bond issue shall bavs written upon said ballot, "For Good Roads Bond Issue", and those voting sgaiost said Good Roads Bond Issue shall have written upon said ballot "Against Good Roads Bond Issue." Motioeis also hereby given that . - . a . a a new ragistrauon oi in vrars ui Alamance county is to be made, that all nnalifiad votera at Ala mance county who desire to vote In said election shall register ior said election, otherwise no voter not registered for said election will be to titled to Tote ia said election. Attention is especially called to the requirements for said election as contained in Chapter four hundred and seventy-seven (477), of ths Public laws of 1903. - ra-rlar of the Board of Com- miatioDera of Alamance county. . erw w tWS VT tUA3. V, JJa.?iolJZl, Reg. of Deeds, and ex-Officio Clerk ot Board. aluTrt'!') . -A3 Notice of BondElection My Hair Ran Away Don't have a falling out with your hair. It might leave you! Then what? That would mean thin, scraggly, uneven, rough hair. Keep your hair at home ! Fasten it tightly to your scalp 1 You can easllydo it with Ayer's Hair Vigor. It ia something more than a simple hair dress ing. It is a hair medicine, a hair tonic, a hair food. ",' . , , The best kind of a testimonial " Sold for over eixty years." at. O. aVwwt Ck IaOVWlat Mkmfmmt 0 iTiannfaWtstjajyfa mt SMSAPAHUU. PILLS. CHE8KT reCTOSAL. yers .aaaafaaaaaasAAaaaaaaaaaaa eadaches This time of the year are signals of warning. Take Taraxacum Com -pound now. It may avs you a spell of fe- -ver. It wi II regulate your bowels, set your liver -right, and . cure your indigestion. A good Tonic. i : -An honest medicine MEBANE, i n. c. ; NORTH CAROLINA FARMERS . Need a North Carolina Farm j ; Paper, ..vr One adapted to North Carolina climate, soils and conditions, made by Tar Heels and for Tar Heels--and at the same time as wide awake as any in Kentucky or Kamchatka. Such a paper u The Progressive Farmer RALEIGH. .N.fC.r.j . Kdited by Clabemck IL' Pos with Dr. W. & Barkett,ector B A. & M. College, and Director B. W. Kilgore, of the Agricutlura! Experiment Station (you know them), as assistant editors $1 e year). If you are already takinf the paper, we can make no reduc tion, but if you are not. taking il YOU CAM SAVE EOC ; By sending your order , to vt That is to say, new ProgresBirr Farmer subscribers we will send thst paper with Thb Gleakkb, both one year for tl 60, regular price 12.00. ,, ; i . Addrsesa THE GLEANER. . Graham, N. C. KILLthi COUGH aibCURE thi lut:c3 WITH lev; Discover; tna rouuna an..,., a. FBTT"! ivuVOLD8 Trk. ,o h. WaUT"aoTsBtr"?T'"""r. OUAB-aHTE-EPBATISFAlw... OS MOBTXT JLXnJMDilX I oofjooooooooootjooooooooocxr : 5; f i "4 f 1 ' f Subscribe ' ' , .For ' " . ' ' ; ' The Gleaner.. 1 . .. Only $1.00 per year. eooooocootxx'ii:yooooooGx- roii3E::3T yd lieier il W maa and tteTTTTDeo mm wau mm of.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 25, 1908, edition 1
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