Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / April 14, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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Gleaner. VOli. XXXVI. GRAHAM, N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1910. NO 9. 1e Alamance Advice to the Aired. Are briars Infirm Hie 8, such as slag. gish bowels, weak kidneys and blad der ana iukkiu uvek. - . ) i a specific effect on toes orgai ana, cumulating tne dowcis, causing them to perform their natural functions as IB you in ami - . .ni nTiiii asi tfira IMKAKIiniU , say. to the kidney. MatMer and LIVER, Tbey are aoapwo iu ota ana young. . FOR Your WAtch -Clock and Jewelry Repairing". HADLEY :& .LOY GRAAAM, N C. Indigestion Dysp3fi3ia ESqxd. WE Whan your stomach cannot properly digest food, of Itself, lb aeeda a little aaslstanoe and this assistance ia read ily supplied by KodoL Kodol aaaita the stomach, by temporarily digesting all of the food In the atomach, so that the stomach may rest and recuperate. Our Guarantee. M two are sot benefited the drossto- wilt at no retain your money. Doat hesitate: nj iruftwt will MS Jon Kodol on these terms Ttw dollar bottle eon tains b times as mnob ss tbe too bottle. Kodol Is prepared st the MMuatorlee of aVO. DeWttt Co Chicago. - Graham Drag Co.-.-'. . ARB YOU onb ci the many thous ands who want to ' xnlora t-iWcs-JerUJ ? ? 11 58DJSSBT UAGAZINB Las taatatated new department, -whose special wwrkj "it is ta ant wn'tnta the reach of every one ess the FAR WEST. Writ for Sample Copy. - ii t" it vi it ii Far fall fertteaJq Mrm ', Snnse t Travel ;i. GluB it Hood BaiUlns, Sao Francisco. GaL occeed wbea eeajjthtag else fafla, Ia neiruUS proatratknt and female weaknesses they are the) aopreme reniedy, as fhonsands have testified. FOR KIDNCY. LIVER AND STOMACH TROUBLE te the best taedfctna rnuoM rt YEARS - EXPERIENCE" Tiuoc Mams . DeetoJtaj 'mV Cc vmoTa . mn H .rt.fc.b.r ' Co". mmtmt. ou f fx imi iin wiim.iw,bi Crfa"' 7 -.yr-a , 7VUt.ttte J t-.i tvw.ie V1 !.- mtir. I""4 a oe,atra.wiMm IXC. . KILLtkx couch VBII'SJ UWLLL 1 ai im Wall T'-T lireeTWHUtrt. Th Society of ScotUnJ rraaiiwi at Ri Spring Tnea 7 by daaoeniaaU of Soot. Tbe pnrpoM la to t;reerre Scotch 'diUoni an.l tv, achirwit tftba Scotch t bo-rie tad broL Mills 11 aaaalaewn- :i loMOOfl 'v Is FIVE BAD TWENTIES. The Judge 8aid He. Really Was 8ure Who Got Them. Not . A-noted 'lawyer of one of the southern states, famous not onlv Ayr jus oruuant mini and legal ability, but also for his rigid code of honesty, used to tell this story on himself: "Soon after the civil war the judge was called on to defend a man accused of passing counterfeit money. The old lawyer, after in vestigating the matter and satisfy ing himself that the man was inno cent of any intent to do wrong and had only paid out money which he had received in good faith, under took the case. When the case came up for trial the jury was so im pressed by Judge 's plea for his client and his explanation of the circumstances that a verdict of not guilty was rendered without de lay. The acquitted man was very grateful to Judge and, after (hanking him profusely for getting him out of the ugly scrape, said : "Judge, I'll never forget what you've done for me, and some day I hope to be able to prove my grat itude. But the only thing I can do now is to pay your fee, and I'll pay whatever you ask. How much is it?" "Well. I think about $1,000 will be fair," replied the judge. "ihats lair enough, sir, agreed the client, "but, judge, the only money I've got is the same kind of money that I -have just been prose cuted for spending. Some of that money is good and some of it is the counterfeit that was wcrked off on me, and I don't know t'other from which. Now, I will pay you $1,500 in the bills that I have got, and you do the" best you can with it." As there seemed nothing else to dey the judge agreed to this, and the client paid him the $1,500 in bills and left him. The judge took the $1,500 to his bank and explained the circum stances to the cashier and asked him to take out the bills which he as an expert pronounced good. The cashier did so, and the judge depos ited the accepted bills to his credit, and then, taking the package of doubtful money to another bank, he made the same explanation and request of the cashier, the bank re ceiving on deposit tne money which, as experts, they pronounced good. "And do you know, said tne judge, "after I had visited six banks I bad got rid of all the money ex cept five twenty-dollar bills, which all the banks had agreed were coun terfeit, and my fee in the case, in stead of being the $1,000 which J originally charged the man netted ma sl.400. and 1 ve always had a suspicion that if there had been a few more experts in the town 1 would have got rid of those last five twentv-dollar bills. What became of the five bad twenties?" some one asked the iuds?- Tm not sure, replied tne oiu lawyer. "My wife asked me fo' them, and shortly afterward she made a trip to Washington. When she returned she showed me a brand, new hundred dollar bill, which she said she had got at the United States treasury. But I never asked her any questions. I knew the treasury department had ex perts : too." Chicago Record-Her ald. ' Enlivening the Table. "You'll be the star of our din ner table tonight," said a materfa milias after an arau?ing conversa tion with a friend she had chanced to meet, "for I'll tell the family all the amusing things you've been say ing.' It's a rule of the house that wo must tnr to remember all inter esting happenings, so that they can be served up with our ioou. i uun i suppose the men rreu m business are really especially bril liant, but whenever they do display . . . it J anr wit he always tens us, u this way w? have groan to ieei uu an interest i4lm that we can en joy hearing even of quite unimpor tant events with which they are connected. It's jnrt the same with Ned'a and Edith's friends, and you have no idea what a jolly crowd we hart at our table sometimes, and it help our digestion wonderfully. New York Tribune. The Pekinese Spaniel. Tbe Pekinese spaniel ht sacred. It wa one worshiped. It is only Dree wtthia the Imperial palace tncloaarea. If a ChtDamaa were foood owning one .v fnriHlbt would be pot to death for aeerllefe. But ao Chl mA dreara of owning each a dog for a pet any ssore tbae a deeoaC charchmaa would dream of owning a Patraetiew .niark dbroosltkma Ia there ta sorb aa canooa aw prlda that they eaoaot endure that any bat themeelTes aaoakt bo act forth for excellent, ao that .arfcea tkey ' J"11' tte, will either seek diaeooat or. tf th b. Uka clear llgM. w trttk a bet of detraction, aa If there were ao-eOU-g 1?J as did oboe Dilate area h- brigM . er-a their aoocoe !rfyeood.-bathey I wfD leave aiat ww -i aaeaeav-Wt"- , , SPRINGTIME A Love Story of the days of the - Revolution, of wonder ful interest and beautiful sentiment novelized from the play by Booth Tarkington and Harry Lee Wilson. It will begin with the issue of THE GLEANER of April 21st. Don't miss it. Subscribe now and get the first number. SYMMES' HOLE A Monument That Was Reartd to a Remarkable Theory. A queer looking monument stands in the city park at Hamil ton, O. A globe, hollowed at each pole and marked with the lines of geographical measurements, is mounted upon a marble plinth. It was erected by Americus Symmes in memory of his father, John Cleves Symmes, a short timo before the civil war. The elder Symmes was the author of the remarkable "Theory of Concentric Spheres, Demonstrating That the Earth Ia Hollow, Habitable Within and Widely Open at the Poles." He was a nephew of the hrst landlord of the country that runs along the Ohio river. Symmes first announced his "dis covery" at St. Louis in 1818. In a well written brochure he asked for "100 brave companions, well equip ped, to start from Siberia m the fall with reindeer and sleighs on the ice of the frozen sea. I engage we find a warm and new land stocked with thrifty vegetables and animals if not men on reaching one degree north of the latitude of 82 degrees. We will return" the fol lowing spring." In 1822, after delivering a series of lectures, Symmes requested congress for a subvention in order to equip an ex pedition. The senate unanimously rejected his appeal, as did the gen eral assembly of Ohio two years later. One of his converts, Jere miah N. Reynolds, with the co-op eration of Eush and Southard, both members of President John Quincy Adams' cabinet, and Dr. Watson, rich resident of New York city, fit ted out the ship Annawan in 1828 and set sail in October for the warm and fertile cavity they believ ed to exist at the south pole. When they arrived at a latitude of 82 de CTees south the incorrectness of Symmes' theory was impressed upon them. But before they re turned the author had died in the spring of 1829, fully believing that his calculations were correct, John Cleves Symmes was never nearer to the north pole than southern Canada, where he fought as a soldier in the war of 1812. His geography of the polar regions ex isted onlv in his imaeination. His arguments were so plausible and his pleas so ingenious that thousands of men firmly believed in "Symmea' hole." Leslie's. Both Weed. Somebody had thrown a stone at the village constable as he patrolled his beat at night, hitting him on the helmet. The perpetrator of the outrage was not recognized, but on search ing for the missile the constable found a peculiarly shaped stone, which, he averred, he had seen or namenting the window sill of a man whom he charged with the assault "I experimented with the stone, your worship," said the constable. "I threw it at an old 'elmet of mine, and it made exactly the same mark as that made by the stone which struck me." "But what good was that when jour 'ead wasn't inside the 'elmet? asked the suspect. "I thought of that," triumphant ly retorted the officer, "so I put block of wood inside the 'elmet, and it was just the same as if-my 'ead was in itl" London Fun. The Oavietta. "How much do yo love me?" ' The beautiful creature at his tide looked at him appealingly. "Do yon really want to know?" he asked doubtfully. T must know." Very well, then. I lore yoa a little more than playing poker and a little less than mj Wfular boa nesa. I love yoa more after I have had a good dinner and a good cigar than I do before. I lore yoa about Jialf aa mn-h aa the first girl I ever loved, wb was tea years older than I was. I lore yoaf, extra vi gaocies mora than your economies, becaooe they cause me mora trou ble. I lore what I 'cannot lerify ia ron mora than what I know." -And why," she persisted rm dare to tell me all thia, which know to be trae T Life. Pap, WevleWt MHO. After being tucked ia bed little Madge begged ber mother to stay with her until she got to alep, -for " aha pleaded, "it is all dark, and Madge is so fwaid." "But there ii nothing. to be afraid of," her mother assured her. "Mamma must go right downstairs, lor papa is there alone waiting for her. Now -try to go to sleep and remember that the angels are right here with you and will take care of you "Oh, but, mamma," wailed the lit tle voice, "I d rather have you. Please, mamma, send the angels down with papa, and you stay here with Madge." Delineator. "Au-..r - i .ales," the nat uralist K...J. -1 ivi'iii u bombardier beetle, you Liiuw, that carries a gun of eighteen (Uari, Eighteen times, if pursued, this beetle can shoot Un der cover of the noise and smoke ha escapes. "There's a diving beetle that catches fish. He has a natural diving suit that enables him to breathe nnder water. He will plunge down fifteen or twenty feet after a minnow or young shad. "The sexton beetle spends its life burying dead animals. It lays- twenty eggs in each carcass, and thus the young on hatching hare an abundance of juicy and high meat to feed on. Sexton beetles, working together, bare been known to bury a rabbit. "The skunk beetle is so called not without reason. Dare to come too near him in a garden and be wllkwave his antennae furiously and discharge tbe vilest odor at yon. Tbe common kitchen roach has this skunklike -gift also; hence I don't advise yon to make a pet of him." Los Angeles Times. Owls' Houses. v Owls bouses are for tbe moat part quite without lining. Whether from design or pure larlness tbe bones and skulls of small animals which therfu have killed are left scattered about the floor. Grewsome playthings for the owl children! But one can scarcely Imagine even a baby owl being any thing but wise and dignified. It la easiest to picture them apparently gravely musing on these skulls like monks In their dark cells. ' ' Since ao many of the owls have their homes in hollow trees, we might ex pect some of their near relatives, the hawks, to be Inclined to e In the same way. One of tbei tbe little sparrow hawk, does nest la tbe flick es abandoned home and In eomfort. able knotholes. This bird, too. Is fat tened with perfectly bare walla and floor, though tbe floor consist of small chips left by tbe decaying wood or by soma woodpecker. St Nicholas. Pasteur's Tribute to Lister. Of all the tributes to the genius of Lord Lister, tbe discoverer of antisep tic surgery, probably tbe moat touch ing was tbt paid to him by Paatevr, tbe famous French scientist. At a meeting of esvauts la Paris . many years ago Lord Lister waa present, and bla brilliant achievements were explained to tne audience by Pasteur. Aa be progressed la his speech be be came more and more emotional, and at last be waa ao carried away by bis own eloquence that tbe tears stood In his eyes. Finally be stepped dowa from tbe platform, took Lord Lister, who was in the front row of the audi ence, by both hands, led him back oa to tbe platform and kissed him oa both cheeks, after tbe manner ox tna French, in full view of tbe assembly. Few could, have looked oa unmoved at tbe areat Frenchman's act of bom- age to tad distinguished English sur geon. ' Baths In Finland. - ' One of tbe greatest trials a visitor ta Finland has to endure la stomas bath. The method of procedure la unique. Plveated of outer clothing and attired ia a light and airy cot ton garment, yoa are along la a sort of hammock composed of cord above a iarre receptacle Hke the boilera fa public laandrtea. This Is almost Slled with cold water. Into which at tbe right moment te flung a Urge red hot brick or piece of iron, which of coarse tees aa overwhelming rasa ot steam to ascend and almost eaoaa Tbea wbea that process has soffleleBtiy long yoa are ebakesi oat of your hammock. Immersed ta com water, and after very drastic treat- der aad wkwr than before year novel It la a mistake to aappoee net caw idea of federaOoa m gofaramsat arse laatod with tbe framare of tbe Catted Scatee tu tltetioa, Laag before the Philadelphia eoaveatioa met faoavaf- ta Bwttsenaaav aaa u adopted by the Bwtae eaa toae waa already. a eld aaa. The Brat at the federal eat of etatae waa made to Greece la tbe laataaca of the celebrated Acheaa aad AetoUea CM & CI. format by the Greek states to save thsmairraa 1 w ar slavery to Mated na Hew Terk Oeed taeae For Hies, Ant-am I sea there's some talk the qtioa of abottsbfag capital paa tehmetit. Weald yea rate to abeUafe T LorW-Ko. tr: capital paaWttamt a good eaeagh for my aaceetora, aaa Te good eaoagh for ma. Fieetiyta rba Standard. Patent Dee Moines Capital, Meroh , lSlu. "The Fourth Estate" has been warning publishers about the risk in allowing credit to new modi cine concerns. It is 'said that there have been only one or two of the thousands or new proprie tary medicine houses have made any considerable money that have started the past twenty years and only a very few more that have met with even moderate success. It is the general Impression that the business is immensely profita ble while the facts are that there ia a larger percentage of failures than in any other line. The new concerns usually start with lot of confidence in the merit of their goods and advertising but soon exhaust their , capital leaving dealers who have stocked their medicines with unsalable goods 09 their shelves. . It ia the experience of many publishers that have ac cepted this new business that they have been compelled to charge off their bills to profit and loss. - There are many old and relia ble medicine houses that continue to do a good or increasing busi ness from year ' to year but the onea ara finding it more and more difficult to become establish ed. Ex. :K ':'" ': The session of the North and South Carolina .Association of Presidents of Women's. Colleges, in session in Baleigh last week, waa Lugely attended. Dr. E. C. James, of Greenville, 8, C, was elected president and Greenville was selected, as the next place of meeting. Mrs. Lucy Robertson, of Greensboro, was .. re-elected secretary. Tbe association adopted resolutions pledging tne colleges not to admit tuberculosis student and to require vaccination. PromDt relief in all cases of throat and lung trouble if you use Chamberlain's Cough Reme dy. Pleasant to take, soothing and healing in effect. Sold by all dealers. While racing on a track in Sa vannah, an automobile driven by Alfred Marshall and Harry Noyes. "promenent young society men," became unmans treble, left the road and struck first a negro girl, a negro man and a negro woman who were on the sidewalk, in juring all three probably fatally, Then after killing-two cows the machine turned over, badly In Juring Noyea. Noyes was sent to a hospital and ICarshall was ar rested to await the result of the idjury to the negroes. . At San Sebastian, Spain, Set orday, Hubert LeBlon, a French aviator, was killed while making a flight in his aeroplane. At Stet tin Germany, Sunday afternoon, the German ballon Pommeraa fell into the Baltle.sea. Three men were killed and one was serious- 17 injured. . ... wee e th Baa est MwmmmwU. The fMtpeadlraUrttr of a moaameat Is vtafbly streets by tbe rays of the aaa. Oa every eenay day tall mooa maat baa .regular swing wadiag away from the aaa. This phenomenon Is dae to tbe greater expeneloa ee tbe stde ea which the rays of the eaa fa A aeadamai placed taelde. any. Vatosse eeiama. ha Trafalgar square, weald bo fowad to describe ea every fleer day aa efltpee of nearly half as la dlamafsev-Bngllah Merbanie. Their Uasls yea aever eaai ii', Tamr uray did taqatrrd the y hiSJiairt of the atd -WeU. yea eaav" raptled Che stogie eaa, -wbea I -waa qahe yeaag I re solved that I woeJdat harry aatfl I foaad aa ideal raaas I was difficult mt after assay years I -Larky beggarl And theaT- -Bbe waa looking for aa aadly. Surprising Facts About the Medicine Business. Ii., r.i:h. . It Is a ri:ii Lii.-iiuhtf to believe that tbe rich an Iio Uin uh down. As a matter of fmt. iluy urc pulliug u up. If there were uu rich people to keep our eyes giued upon tbe great gulf between buvlug and not having none of ua would hustle. We have to bare tbe rich uiau's inanitions prodding us, bla power scourging us and hta auto mobile butting ua to get anywhere at all. We bure to see his wife and daughters In silks and Jewels nud realise what our own wives and daugh ters without these things tbiuk of us as providers to peel our couU o3 and get Into (be game. None of us can go out driving with such ax we bare and suffer the rich man to whiz past us in prism glass and burnished brass, throwing dust in our eyes und gagollne in our hair, without doing better In tbe great prea of human eudearor for tbe next two or three days anyway. Bless ed are tbe rich, for tbey fill us with shame and new resolve and make us to wonder what In tbe Sam Hill we have been doing all these years. St Louis Poet-Dispatch. Byron's "Bride of Abydos." It was after Lord Byron arrived In Greece that be wrote that beautiful poem "The Bride of Abydos" and that exquisite song tbe "Maid of Athens," which, says a Paris contemporary, every Englishman of culture knows by heart Documents enable us to estab lish the true Identity of the heroine of this poem. She was one of the three daughters of Mr. Black, English vice consul at Athens, at whose bouse Byron for some time lived. After tbe departure of tbe poet Theresa Black married an archaeologist M. Plttakls, whose widow she became several years later. . tier beauty, ber charm, her elegance, conquered every heart, including Byron's. In 1873 the hero ine of the poet was an old woman of upright figure and still showing signs of her former beauty. With age bad come poverty. Tbe London Times, moved by ber distress, opened at this epoch a subscription in ber favor. She died In 1875. London Globe. The Gun Charmere. Among the more superatltiously In clined of tbe sporting Cingalese are gun charmers, who allege that a gun may be charmed In different ways and by different methods. An essential part of tbe process, however, appears to be the muttering of certain formu lae. - A gun. tbe charmers aay, may be charmed In any one of tbe following four ways: (1) So that It will wound the animal Bred at but will not kill outright; (2) so that be who carries It hall And nothing worth shooting; (8) so that It will not kill anything flying, but will kill animals that run, and (4) ao that it will not kill anything that runs, but will kill anything flying. No gun can be charmed at all If tbe owner takes tbe precaution of rubbing some pork fat on tbe barrel or at taches a piece of tbe outer skin of the rat snake to tbe stock la auch a way that It cannot be seen. Mm m Caal Fire Protects Itself. A curious way la which a lire In tbe heart of a. coal pile keepa itseir rrom k.ln. nn inn la noted In a mining Journal. Such fires often start In the Interior of large piles or coai owing to neat developed bj alow oxidation, which la prevented by tbe alee of tbe pile from escaping Into .the air. Such Urea are difficult to put out owing to the fact that tbe burning mass turns the coal around It Into coke, which is nearly Impervious to water. Tbe pile may tbuf bo thoroughly . drenched without putting out the Are, which It never really reaches, Tbe only way to deal with tbe situation la to drive Into the pile a sharpened iron pipe, long enough to reach tbe burning coal, aad then to couple a bose to the upper end and turn on tbe water. . - The Cocoa Plantation. A traveler In South America, where the cocoa tree la largely cultivated, speaks of the great care with wblch the young planta bave to be protected from tbe sun, which If very strong is fatal to them. To secure this protec tion tbe planters shield tbem by ba nana trees and ptalntaln trees, the broad leaves of wblrb give them the needed shade. . And even when they are fully grows tbey need protection, which Is glvea by trees known aa 1m mortels," or, aa tbe planters call tbem, -the mother of the cocoa. Jhus tbe whole cocoa plantation baa a sort of canopy. A Startler. A gentleman whose bearing la de fective at the owner of a dog that is the terror of the neighbor hood ta which he Uvea. Tbe other day be waa accosted by a friend, who aeld: -Good ajomlog, Mr. D. Tour wife made a very pleasant call oa us last evening.- Tm vary eorry." came the startling reply. -Ill see that It don't occur agala, for I'm going to chain ber up to fninro." Loodoe Tetearapb. Orlfia of the Word Storting. The origin of the word "sterlin is very curious. Among .the ear Taintcrs of coin in northern K in; were the dwellers of cactcrt r many. They were so sk ii.'at i: their calling that number of t'.cr were invited to England to ma :.; facture the metal money of i!u kingdom. Tbe - strangers were known ss "easterlinga." After a time the word became "sterling," and ia this abbreviated form it has come to imply what is genuine in raoaey, plate or character. UM Lease) aaat Mueie. Aeoaatry girt la Dahlia treat bate a restaurant -for her roach. . She was asked if aha woaM have a meat dinner Tathl reach aad moaic." Betag csuioaa, aha chose tbe light leach and aaa aad was laamsdlatoly ebowa fatto a rasas where other taqaiattlva aa a aoa-tted ht not anUeAng ner- f arms are apoa tbe Jewsbarp by eaa mt t araltara. She felt at the ead of the asar that aba had paid high for bar cariosity, bat she eoaM mesa ao eoarplalat. . . . Mil UUltiXi DAKED FOOD; fresh, good, ivholtome, economical, nemuix sr; ITlllliE Willi ' -. JJ i iW)m No Alum No Unto Mr. Proctor, of Durham, has given 25 acres of land in the vic inity of that town for the erec tion of a Children's Home. The building, to cost $30,000, will be erected and maintained by . the North Carolina Children's Home Society, which has headquarters in Greensboro and is under tile management of W. B. Streeters.' One Conductor who was Cared. -., Mr. Wilford Adams is his name, and he writes about it "Some time ago I was confined to my bed with chronic rheumatism. I urieil two bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy with good effect, and the third bottle put me on my feet and I resumed work as conductor on the Lexington, Ky., Street Railway. It gave me more relief than any medicine I had ever us ed, and it will do all you claim in cases of rheumatism.".1 Foley's Kidney Remedy cures rheuma tism by eliminating the uric acid from the blood Sold by all drug gists. 4 Mr. John B. Sherrill, editor of the Concord Times, has bought the Concord .Tribune from Mr. 3. B, Hurley. He will consolidate the paper with the Times and continue the Tribune as a daily. Mr. Hurley has for some time de sired to retire from ' newspaper work. Mr. Sherill now"oontrols the newspaper field in Cabarrus. There's no better Spring tonic than Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. The standard for thirty rears. Tea or Tablets, 35c. Get a package today, and youTl thank us for the advice. Thompson Drug Co. Nineteen cases of drunkenness appeared in the Charlotte record' era court Monday morning of last weekv the product of Saturday night and Sunday. In Concord they have had to enlarge the lock' up to take care of the Saturday night and Sunday drunks. , Watch for the Comet. ' The Red Dragon of the sky. Watch the children for spring eouichs and colds. Careful moth ers keep Foley's Honey and Tar In the house. It Is the best ana safest prevention and cure for croup where the need Is urgent and immediate relief a vital necessity. . Its prompt use has saved many lives. C-.ntains no opiates or harmful drags. - The ifenulne is in a vellow package. Remember the -name, Foley's Honey and Tar and refuse subeti tutes. Sold by all druggists. Dogs invaded the premises of Mr. Ben J. Council, of Watauga county, on night last week and killed about $75 worth of fine reg istered sheep. Mr. CouncU waa so dutenhesrtonedwith his loss that he sold his entire herd of sheep to Mr. Ed Shipley. The price received per head was $12. r ' Every family and especially thoso who reside in the country should be provided at all times with a bottle of Chamberlain's Liniment - There ts no telling when it may be wanted in ease of an accident or emergency. In is most excellent in all cases of rheumatism, sprains and bruises. Sold by all dealers. Newton Enterprise: We are in form by Mr. S. H. Jordan, of Conover, that the St. 'Mary's shooting preserve, in Catawba county, will erect a club building ear Conover. during the coming summer, lhe plans lor ue ouiia ing show that it will be, when completed, among the most hand some in the State. ' . - . TOItlA.. tmm fas '"' la LaOca torn ttri V til' Iw i 4 Dr. C. C. Weaver has resigned as president of Davenport Col- lege, Lenoir, the resignation to take effect at the close of the school year. j AGENTS WANTED: Men or Women to work in- Alamance conn-' ty' Can aasilymake f 15 to f 25 per week. Address "V,". Drawer "Ar Raleigh, N. 0. ' ' ' - . . .. . ."... -'. 'w' '.;:: 1 f . ; PROFESSIONAL CARDS , DR. WILLS. MSG, JR. '-;'- i' DKNTIST i?t t Graham, . . - Nerth Carolina OFFICE in SIMMONS BUILDING lAcoB a. toHs. . . 3. rxatxn MHO. LONG & LONG, ; GSJaaJEaUeaJsCa K a x, s. o 0021. ' Atterney-at- Law, - ;. GRAHAM, ,- . " -- N. C. ' Offtoe rattorena Building' r v -BeoondFleoe, , . . .?Zt, f oaw J aa r Bra oa. W. F. Bma, Ja , 1S1NUM &BYNUM,- Attorney and Con 11 I ore) at Imrmr ' GaBKMSBOBO, U, . C PracUoe regularly la the eoarte of Ala- . eonaiT. - ? ABaa,siy o ber eadachesi This time of the year are signals of warning, Take Taraxacum Com pound now. It may av9 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 . araxacum Lo, MEBANE. "N. c. ARE YOU UP TO DATE If yon arc not the News at Obsstsb is. Subscribe for it at once and it will keep yon abreast ot the times. - Fall AssocIatedPreitsdispatcIi ea. All the newsforeigT), do mestic, national, state' and Ix . 1 all the time. . .' . Daily News and Observer 7 per year, 3.50 for 6 not. Weekly North Carolinian 1 per Tear, 50c for 6 mos. news & observer run. CO , Eaxeigh, N. C The North Carc'.iriia en 1 7 Alamaxcb Cleaxis v"1 1 for one year I t Tv I " Cash ia a Jvar . - ' - r : GLEArz c C - aH&r -
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 14, 1910, edition 1
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