Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Jan. 26, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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VHE GLEANER. : IBSUED EVXBY TBUBSDAT. J. P. KERNOPLE, Editor. SI.OO A YEAR, IN ADVANCE' She editor will not be responsible for | v*>wa expressed by correspondents. ADVBBTIBINO BATBB One square (1 in.) 1 time SI.OO, er eaoh »üb wquont Insertion 60 cents. For more space Slid longer time, rates furnished on appllca- Hon. Looal notices 10 ots. a line for first insertion; subsequent Insertions 6 eta. a line Transient advertisements must be paid for advance E£ti terod at the Postofflce at Graham. N. 0., as second class matter. GRAHAM, N. C., Jan. 26 1910. Salaried Officers. We are printing in this issue an article from Mr. W. E. White of Mebane in regard to putting county officers on salaries. Before saying anything further we wish to go on record as favoring the salary [system, provided it can be adopted without additional cost to the county after allowing our officers a fair salary and in keeping with the responsibilities of their offices and something like those paid by counties where the salary system has been adopted. The proposition was threshed out pretty thorougly in the campaign last fall, and it will be remembered it was a Republican hobby. The idea was not combatted by the Dem ocrats, but they asked and favored a compensation for officers commen surate with the dnties and • respon sibilities of the officers. Salaries for county officers was one of the principal planks in the Re publican county platform; they lost out on it by long odds, and yet they keep it up. That they lost out on it, we do not say there is no virtue in it, for Democrats have adopted the system in several of the larger counties where it was deemed a sav ing could be effected. If the Rfr publicans are and have been so much in favor of such economical measures, why, it is wondered, did they wait till the bulk of them were ousted from county offices in North Caroli na? We venture tbe assertion that, had the Republicans in this or any considerable number of counties felt sure of electing their nominees, the matter of salary, however large it might have been undsr the fee sys tem would not have been mentioned. Again, we say we are not opposed to salaries for the county officers, provided they are sufficient to in duce competent and efficient men to accept the offices and are commen surate with the duties and responsi bilities attached to the offices and will impose no additional burdens upon the people. LUKE LEA CHOSEN SENATOR. Editor of "Tennessan" Breaks Dead lock in Tennessee. Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 23. Striking at the psychological mo ment today won for Editor Luke Len, of the Tennessean, the U. 8. senatorahip in the fight be fore the legislature over the seat soon to be made vacant by James B. Frazier. At 1 o'clock Monday morning Mr. Lea said he would not allow his name to be used to day. At 11 a. m. Monday the fnslonlsts had decided to vot« solidly for one candidate, bnt whom they did not know. At 11.80 •they had decided to drop B. A. Enloe, whom they had been sup porting, and go to Mr. Lea, who had just given his consent to be ing put in the race. He was nomi nated at 11.80 o'clock. When ths last name had been called on the rollcall of the joint session he lacked one Vote, bnt a member who had refused to vote went into the Lea column and later two were changed, giving him two more than the necessary 66 to elect Mr. Lea is 32 years of age and will have the honor of being the first "baby" senator and holding his first public office. McMillan polled 48 votes. Lea's election came on the lltib ballot. When the final vote was token the hall of representatives »nd corridors were jammed with people. When it was announced that Lea had won an animated scene followed. The many women vied with the men in the noise making and filling the air with anything they oould throw. The victory of Lea is one for prohibition and a distinct defeat to the Patterson wing of the party. Though never holding an offloe, Lea has been a hard fighter for H prohibition and has taken part in local fights ontoe side of what was usually termed the reformers. At San Francisco Wednesday Eugene B. Ely, an aviator of note, flew miles in an aeroplane, made a successful landing on the cruiser Pennsylvania, and an hour later, from the cruiser, flew Washington Letter WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 21. 1 There are indications that the i most promising Congress for a score of years has lost its dynamic force six weeks before its end; but little of the legislation begun in December is likely to be enact ed. Some are predicting that the appropriation bills will not be passed by March the 4th. It is almost impossible for a heteroge neous team of over three hundred patriots, statesmen, demagogues and crarks to pnll together as a harmonious whole. A majority of Congress knows that the coun try is demanding a lowering of certain tariff schedules. It knows that the country wants a parcels post and many other important measures, but with half a dozen political factions and ten times as many individuals pulling In sixty six different directions, there is buc little probability of urgently needed legislation. Secretary Wilson and Assistant Secretary Hays of the Agricultur al Department were evidently not in harmonious consultation before they went into print. Mr. Ilays says that the drift of popula tion to the cities makes itlmpossl blefor low prices ever to return, while Secretary Wilson reports an increased production per acre, out stripping the increase in popula tion, and predicts a decrease in the cost of food Btuffs. It is difficult to see how prices can come down when farm lands and farm hands are going up. There Is, however, ground for expectation that the denizens of American cities may, like the inhabitants of the villa ges of Europe, turn farmer. It is not unusual for Swiss and Rus sian farm peasantry to live con siderable distances from the land which they till. Moreover, they walk to their places of work. Possibly the time is not far dis tant when many thousands of American fanners will live in towns and cities and be conveyed cheaply to and from t'ieir fields by electric cars. When the United States bought Alaska about fifty years ago for seven millions of dollars, and a facetious editor referring to its great distance and to its Russian origin, proposed to call it "Dam longwayoff", no one imagined how incalculably rich in gold and iron and fisheries and coal, to say nothing of vegetable productions, that country would become. There are people but little past middle age who can recollect that that part of the country where Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma and i other prosperous states are situa ted, was supposed to be a desert utterly unfit for agriculture. A , great part of Texas was at that time regarded as a sterile . waste, but it is now covered with cities, towns and villages. With in a generation Canada has doubled her population and mul tiplied many times her wealth, , and yet the rich forests of Labra dor and splendid regions about Hudson Bay are almost un , touched. It is not improbable , that the yonnger generation in America will, during the next half oentury, witness such financial and industrial power in the north ern half of the Western Hemis , phere as the world has never be fore known. There is just now much agita tion of the question of fortiflying the Panama Canal. Philanthrop- Ista, peace-makers, or perhaps sentimentalists are opposed to any stop looking toward military pro i tectlon. Statesmen and milita > rlsto, on the other hand, are un i able to see safety exeept in fortresses and big guns. Cong ess , hus been memorialized by dls i tingulshed men and women who i made much of the argument that the Sues Canal was without forti -1 fication and that inasmuch as > England had left this Canal open ; and undefended, there was no i reason why the Panama Canal should be fortified. This state i ment, however, appears to have i been presented without complete i geographical or political knowl i edge. A snm equal to the cost of I the Panama Canal would not be I sufficient to fortify it as strongly - as tiie Sues Canal is fortified. The 3 fortification of this Canal begins r on toe west at Gibraltar, is con . tinned at Nalta, at Cairo and Al r exandria, and on the east at Aden, t In other words, England has full . and tight control of the Mediter , ranean at Gibraltar and of the r Red Sea at Aden. No enemy ean t approach withlu hundreds of b miles of Sues without aooounting , to Great Britain. It is true that there are French and Spanish and 1 Turkish and Austrian ports on ' the Mediterranean or connecting ' waters, but their naval forces are * insignificent as compared to the 1 fleet that England constantly ' maintains in what is substantial ly a British lake. Bust of SettiW "Ransom Unveiled. Raleigh Dispatch, Utb, to Charlotte Observer. The State House was thronged tonight with people for the cere mony of the presentation of the bust of United States Senator Matt W. Ransom to the State by tbe North Carolina State Historical Commissioner and its unveiling in one of the niches of t v e capital. "The Life and Character of Matt W. Ransom," was the subject of the principal address by ex-Judge R. W. Winston, who raised tbe funds necessary for theproducton of the bust at the request of the State Historical Commission, In the glowing tribute Judge W:nston paid to the deceased be said; "Senator Ransom was no such trained lawyer as Senator Badger. He was not a student and a schol ar like Senator Graham. He had not the technical knowledge of Sen ator Haywood, nor was ho the popular idol like Senator Vance, but in his influenoe with the Presi dent of the United States, with the departments and with his col leagues in the Senate, and in the services which hls"pecullar talents enabled him to render to the South, he was superior to them all. Ran som was the Senator every inch of hira." Other addresses were delivered by, A. H. Boyden, Senator from Rowan and B. S. Gray, Represen tative from Northampton county. For the unveiling and presenta tion, Col. J. Bryan Grimes, Secre tary of State and chairman of the historical commission was the speaker. The speech of accep tance was made by Governor W. W. Kitchln whose well chosen words were exceedingly appropri ate and patriotic commending the work of the commission and citi zens in providing these busts of distinguished patriots for ihe State House and pledging the State In preserving them for future generations. The Brightest Spot on Earth. A happy home is the brightest spot on earth that the eye of God looks down upon says a writer. Love and peace in his home sunshine around theman wherever he goes; bnt let there be disorder and trouble, an I there is misery everywhere. There are few worries of life which a man can not now and then shake off, but who can shake himself free from the skeleton in the closet, from the worry of the honsehold, a blister on the heart! A day will tell how many a man carried that with him without winding down to the grave. When husband and, wife are helpmate to each other in the best sense; when or der and love and goodness prevail in the house, then the man who has a hard battle in life to fight can leave his struggles behind him when he enters there. With all our faults we are the most home loving of people, and th at is the reason why we are the greatest of people. Whatever helps home life is a national blessing; whatever hurts home life is a ' national curse and the greatest curse that can touch these i blessings is what would tamper with the peace and blessedness of our homes. Capt. E. S. Blair, of North Will kesboro, died Thursday night In a hospital at Greensboro, where he was under treatment. lie was 75 years old. The mints of the United States during 1910 sent out more than $111,600,000 in coin which nearly •105,000.000 was in gold. The to tal coinage of silver was compara tively insignificent, it being lees than $1,000,000, while $3,000,000 , in pennies and five cent pieces i were coined, More than 6,000,000 . pieces were coined for the Philip i pine Islands and nearly 1,000,000 i pieces were oolned on contract . for Costa Rica. I A 50-cent bottle of Scott's Emulsion 1 given in half-teaspoon ' doses four times a day, '•mixed in its bottle, will \ last a year-old baby near ' ly a month, and four bot : ties over three months, and will make the baby > strong and well and will | lay the foundation for a J healthy, robust boy or ; girt. TO* SALS IV ALL DkUOOISTS > Bead 10c., mm of paper aad this ad. for r ear beautiful Savings Bank and Child's Sketch. Book. Sack faaak contains a Good Lock • Peaay. SCOTT a nowm. se Faarl Stnet. K. Y. -■' HIM i' * v v? v Foodstuffs First. Greensboro New*. We have tried oar hand at advis ing a diversity of crops so often 1 and so persistently that some May think da cranks on the subject, 1 but let that go, \fre still insist that 1 it is one of the most important 1 problems confronting a large ' number of our people. ' In the spring when cotton or tobacco promises large priefeg temptation for a farmer to devote almost his entire time to these 1 money crops is strong, and, some times, in fact, altogether too often, he yields to thaf temptation. But now, when winter is coming on, when he finds that he must sell his money crop at whatever price he can get for it because he : has not the means to live and 1 pay his debts while he holds it, 1 when he awakes to a realization ' of the lamentable fact that he has paid so much attention to bis own main crop that he has not provid ed foodstuffs for himself and 1 his stock during the winter, the question assumes a different aspcet. We do not care what may be the price.of cotton or tobacco or any other crop which must be sold to be of any service to it's producer, we still insist that no man can have the greatest possible amount of success as a farmer who does not first and foremost provide himself with all his own needs from his own farm as nearly as he can and then devote his secondary and not his primary attention to a crop whfch is for sale and useful only when sold. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is a very valuable medicine for throat and lung troubles, quickly relieves and cures painful breath ing and a dangerous sounding cough which indicates congested lungs. Sold by Graham Drug Co. H. T. Hudson, former editor of the Shelby Star, has been appoint ed to a position in the United States Senate in Washington at a salary of $1,650 per annum. hook For The Bee Hive On the package when you buy Foley's Honey and Tar. None genuine without the Bee Hive. Remember the name, Foley's Honey and Tar and reject any substitute. Foley's Honey and i Tar relieves coughs and colds quickly and is safe and sure. Contains no opiateß. For sale by all Druggists. The store of the Roxboro Gro , eery Company (wholesale)at Rox boro was burned Saturday morning with its contents. Loss aboutss,ooo with $2,000 insurance. Use Allen's Foot-Ease. Tbe antls®ptlo powder to be shaken Into i tbe sboea. If you have tired acblag feet, try Alien'« Foot-Kase. It rent* the feet and , makes new or tight shoes. Curesachln«, iwol. lea, bt, Hwea ting feet eass. Relieve* corns and boinons all of pain and gives rest and comfut. AI wads use It to Break in New shoesnrTry it today. Hold evervwhore, eta. Don't accept any substitute. For Free trial package address Allen 8. Olmstud.Le Boy At Buffalo N. Y., 9th inst; the i Standard Oil Co. paid into the ; Fedreal Court $23,766, the fines t assessed against it for accepting ; rebates. This is the first fine ever > collected by the goverment since | the prosecutions under the anti-re bate law were begun. Those unsightly pimples and blotches! External applications may partially hide them, but 1 Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea i removes them for keeps. Gets at the cause—impure blood. Tea or Nuggets (tablet form) 35c. at i Thompson Drug Co. | John R. Kissinger, an Indiana volunteer soldier who allowed himself to be bitten by a yellow fever mosquito during the first ) American occupation of Cuba to ( demonstrate the theory|of mosqui | to infection, has been granted an annuity of $72 a month by | Congress. English Spavin Liniment re moves Hard, SoCtand Calloused ' Lumps and Blemishefficm horses; also Blood Spavins, C urbs, Splints, Sweeney, Ring Bone, Stifles, Sprains, Swollen Throats, Coughs, etc. Save SSO by use of - one bottle. A wonderful Blemish Cure. Sold by Graham Drug Co. Gov. Woodrow Wilson, of New Jersy, will deliver the commence ment address at the State Univer sity next June. — ~ Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is not a commo,n everyday cough mixture. It is a meritorions rem edy for all the troublesome and dangerous complications result ing from cold in the head, throat, chest and lunge. Sold by Graham Drug Co. -Henry Tomlinson, colored, who killed another negro in Anson county for calling him a liar, got 12 months on the roads for man slaughter. " " ARNOLD'S --.7 w .rSS£* BALSAM SUMMER COMPLAINTS by Graham Drag Co. V Graham, N. C. * THESE WERE MEN. | Magnanimous Lives of Grant and I'. Furnish High Hods. * Boston Globe. The search for the North pole may be over, the gearch f or men is stfl\ golag on . Men are alwayr needed. Lincoln need during the civil war. He W >t them by hundreds of thous ands. One of them became pres ident of the United States. After his term of office expired he made a trip to Europe. At Berlin he was hailed as the great general ; who had triumphed in the greatest civil war of all time. Responding to the compliment, he corrected his eulogist by saying that he did not triumph alone. The success ful ending of war was not his per sonal achievement, but the ; achievement of every man who j enlisted in the union army and did , his duty. General Grant was a man. After Gettysburg, when the Confederate invasion of the North was repulsed and the Ar_jy of 1 Northern Virginia had to go back ' to the old line of defense, some sought to lay the blame tor fail ure on that army* But the chief 1 commander of the Southern for- 1 ces said that no one was to blame . for the disaster bnt himself. Yet j his soldiers knew he was not to blame and they loved him for his • magnanimity and pledged him their lives. General Lee was a man. j When Chas. Darwin communi- \ cated to his fellow scientists his , announcement of the famous theory of the origin of species, another investigator, who had hit upon the same notion, said: "Let Darwin go ahead with it." Thus he put aside any ambition he might have had to be the exponent of a theory which was to command the attention of man kind, Darwinism might have been Wallaceism. Bnt Darwin in his celebrated book does not withhold either from Alfred Wallaee or any other person, no matter how great or how small, his contribution to the subject his prais'e for assistance given. Alfred Wallace and Charles Darwin were men. Saved Her Own life. Lebanon Jet, Ey.—Mrs. Minnie Lamb, of this place, says, "I be lieve I would have been dead by now, had it not been for Cardui. I haven't had one of those bad spells since I commenced to nse your medicine." Cardui is a specific medicine for the ills that women snffer. Cardui is made from harmless vegetable ingre dients. It is a safe, reliable medi cine, successfully used by suffering women for more than fifty years. Try it today. For sale at all druggists. It is announced that a concern known as the American Wagon Co. has decided to locate at Asheville to manufacture wagons. Would yon have bettor health, more strength, clearer skin, stronger nerves, more elastic step? Use Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea, the great vegetable regula tor and tonic. One 35c package makes 105 cups of tea. Thompson Drug Co. Fire in the building occupied by the Richie Hardware Company, in Concord Friday morning, caused a loos of about $50,000. sloo—Dr. E. Detchnn's Antj Diuretic may be worth to you more than SIOO if you have achild who soils bedding from incontin ence of water during sleep. Cures old and young alike, It arrests the trouble at onoe. sl. Sold by Graham Drug Co. E. W. Linville, alawyerof Ker nersville, has been appointed post master of that town. POLEYSftffifOIAXAIM foa'linutH TWovac* and CONSTIPATION The Greensboro News endorses Senator Boyden's bill for a million dollar State bnilding and hopes "all patriotic Republicans in the State will do likewise." § *Wa signature is oa every hoi . • the g«aala Paul W. Schenck has bean elect ed president of the Guilford Bat tleground Company to succeed Major Morehead, deceased. Mr. Schenok is a son of the late Judge David Schenck, the first president of the company and the organiser and promoter of the company. OefPttt-s L.tttfe Carly Risers, T*. ttttl- Mtu ----- Albert Winstead, a well known and popular young man, committ ed suicide Friday afternoon by shooting himself through the head at the home of his sister near Wilson. No cause assigned. He was 25 yean old. j Dehorning Calves. JUnoolnfon Newa-1 fy Dehoring is such a operation that it is iflfcult to explaiin why it is ever postponed untilj the calves are fully grown and necessity arises for s awing then* off. To dehorn, secure a pencil of caustic potash at a drug store. When the calf is three days old locate the little knot that indicates the young horn, wet it and rub with the pencil, held in a gloved hand. This is all there is to the opera tion. It constitutes but a few minutes' work and causes no pain to the anitflals. According to the report of the, National Ginners' Association issued at Memphis, about 47,- 000 bales of cotton were ginned during the period from December Ito December 13, compared with 48,000 bales in 1909. The report states that the crop is 99 per indicating a crop under 11,500,000 bales. The report from ginners show that the ginning will be comple ted by January 1. The amount for North Carolina is 658,000 bales. Speedy Trial -of Negro Murderer— Sentenced to Die Feb. 15. At Oxford Monday Nathan Mon tague, colored was convicted of the murder of Miss Mattie Saunders in Granville county December 19, last and sentenced to die February 15. It wiH be recalled that Miss Saunders, her father, Leyton Saun ders, and the little granddaughter of Mr. Saunders, Irene Overton, were murdered and their bodj es burned in their home. There was also evidence that Miss Saunders was outraged and then killed. Montague, a negro of the neighbor hood, was charged with the crime and as soon as he was arrested he was hurried to the State prison at Raleigh to avoid a lynching. Monday he was taken to Oxford for trial, under military guard, and a company of militia was on duty during the trial. Montague was tried only for the murder of Miss Saunders and evidence of criminal assult was excluded. The evidence was circumstantial but very strong and no evidence was offered for the defense. The jury returned a verdict of guilty in eight minutes and sentence was passed by Judge Ward, who presided. Then Mon tague was taken back to Raleigh, to the State prison, to await the day of death. - Ice Jam 14 Miles Long and 40 Feet High. York, Pa., Dispatch, IBth. The ice on the Susquehanna from York Furnace to Washing- , ton borough is still held intact. ' The sudden change has welded > the blocks together and for about ■ 14 miles the ice is a jam. In some places it is 40 feet high. The indications are that there will be no break-up for some time. ! The only danger likely to occur ' is at Safe Harbor and in the vi- 1 cinity of Port Deposit. A num ber of small houses erected close { to the river have been flooded and all the roads which lie close to the banks of the river are covered with ice and water. There has been but little dam agetoone except the carrying down of a lot of cheap boats and the crashing of a number of small fish houses, which were hit by huge blocks of ice and driven apart. What the result will be at McCall Ferry no one can conjecture. The people have all been notified j along the route, so that they arc fully aware of what to expect. ®et The Geamlne Always. A substitute is a dangerous makeshift especially in medicine. The genuine Foley's Honey and Tar cures coughs and oolds quick ly and is in a yellow package, contains no opiates and is safe and certain in results. Sold By All Druggists. Holding that it is not unlawful to have whiskey in possession for personal use, even in the dry counties, the Supreme Court has reversed the finding of the Circuit 1 Court in the case of Elias Book ard, convicted in Spartanburg county for alleged violation of the , act of 1909. The opinion is the first passed by the Supreme Court , on that aeetion of the act which , prohibits "keeping in possession" , of alcoholic liquors in dry conn- \ ties Circuit judges have held 3 that the section applieis to liquors for personal use. oaitoaza. rsen Us _y* TH Kin VNRm Mans tail s " Enormous Fire Losses. Durham Son. The startling announcement is made that notwithstanding this eomntry has the best fire fighting equipment in the world, it eaoh year loses more than two hundred millions of dollars by, fixe. This is said to be four or five times as much as is lost in all the European conntries. If this is so we might learn something valuable from the way onr foreign neighbors manage things. The president of one of the fire insurance companies has said that if the loss by fire in this country could be cut down to seventyfive millions a year, the saving wOuld be equiavlent to adding a billion dollars to the wealth of the country every ten years, The conditions are bad,but better than in former yean, for concrete and steel are to some extent protecting cities from the holocausts of former days. North Carolina News. The Boone Democrat says the people of Watauga are violently opposed to surrendering any of the territory of that county to the proposed new county of Avery. Link Puden, a young Quilford county man who had been connect ed with the Salvation Army, was kil'ed by a shifting engine in Greensboro Sunday night. A movement has started looking to the building of a trolley line from Silisbury to Cooleemee, Mocksville and perhaps Yadkin ville and other points north of Rowan county. Ignoring repeated warnings, to keep away from a live wire which had fallen to the ground in Ashe ville Friday, Julius 3ryson, a ne gro aged 40, picked it up and was almost instantly electrocuted. The Gypsy cases in Anson coun ty, which have been so much be fore the public, were settled last week by compromise, in Anson Su perior Court, and all parties 'ln dicted released on the payment of fines and costs. Charles L. Wilson, aged about 24, a brakeman on the Southern railway, fell from the top of a box car on a siding at Gastonia Satur day and his foot was so badly crushed by a car that it had to be amputated. At Goldsboro Friday morning fire destroyed the laundry build ing of the Odd Fellows' Orphans, Home with a large portion of the wearing apparel of the orphans. The machinery was also destroyed and the loss will reach up into the thousands. Several firemen had narrow escapes from being se riously injured by falling through the burned flooring. Congressman Cowles has appoint ed Hilbert Fisher,Jof Rowan coun ty, a cadet at West Point. The Salisbury Post says young Fisher is a son of Mr. M. G. Fisher, who lives near Faith, and who was the Republican candidate for sheriff of Rowan at last election. He has been a student at Mt. Pleasant college for the past two years aud is an exceedingly bright young man. ' New Orleans won the first round of the'fight for the location of the Panama exposition Friday when the exposition committee of the House of Congress, by a vote of nine to six, decided in favor of it as the site for the fair to celebrate the opening of the Panama canal in 1016. After long consideration of the claims of the two cities, New Orleans and San Francisco, 1 the committee voted' to report 1 favorably the bill recognizing i New Orleans and authorizing the selection of a board of comuis- ; sioners. Rev. William Heth Whifeett, D. D., one of the most noted clergymen and scholars in the Southern Baptist denomination, died at his home in Richmond, Va., Friday afternoon in the 70th year of his age. Dr. Whitsett was a native of Tennessee and a Confederate cavalryman under General Forrest. After the war he filled many prominent pulpits . and later became a professor in the Southern Baptist Theological 1 Seminary and then president of ( the institution. That Oapt Robert E. Peary came within 1.6 miles of the North Pole—near enough to establish his claim of having been at the exact ■pot—is the decision of the House committee on naval affairs, which has been oonsidering the bill to retire Captain Peary with the rank of rear admiral. It is reoommenid- 1 ed that Peary be given the thanks 1 of Congress and retired with the ' rank of rear admiral. ] • i ' v "" nT " ■■■, "1 ... 1 OASTORIA. B~.». ink ; /VJUST Khcunwcidp S IT CURES Rtnuttn Blood The cause of rheumatism uric acid In the blood. To cure ?h matlsm this acid must be expelled the system. Rheumatism is an nal disease and requires an intirn i remedy. Bobbin* with oils and iinV menu may ease the pain, but they no more cure rheumatism than n.T I ', wIU change the liber of rotten wooS Cures Rheumatism To Star Cn,... I Science has discovered a perfect complete cure called Bheumaclde. iw ed In hundreds of cases, it has effect!" , marvelous cures. Bheumaclde remold InstdeT'sweeps the Olsons'out™ 1 ? *kldne » Bobbitt Chemical Co,. Baltimore Md - Gets At The Joints From The in»id e . RjmwA / IT CURES i Simmons' Alamance Pharmarv ( Graham, N. C. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICET Having qualified as administrator of the estate o! Thomas F. MoVey, deceased thl * to notify all persons having claims analns! the estate of the said deceased to present the sa.ae duly authenticated to the underslitiieii on or before the Ist day of February lap' or this notice will be pleaded In bar of thelr're -1 cover*. All persons Indebted to said estate will ulease make immediate settlement Ihli January, 28,1911. G. F. McVEY, Admr of Thos. F. McV ey. Re-Sale of Land. By authority of an order of the Superior Oourtof Alamance county, N, C., made In a special proceeulng to wulch all the heirs at law of Sam'l W.Faucetteand Elizabeth, Kau oette dec, are duly constituted parties, the undersigned will offer at public sale to the highest bidder at the Court Houie door in Graham on MONDAY, FEB. 6, 1911, at 12 o'olook m., the following desorlhed r al property, to-wlt: Two certain tracts or par oels of land lying and being In Alamance county. State of N. C., in Melville township the said two tracts lying adjaoent and bouud ed as follows: First Traot: Beginning at a dogwood, be ing Levi *aucette's oorner, running north oaains and 18Unas to a mulberry; thence south 75 dec west 40 ohains to a stake; thence soathlllegwest7 chains and 80 links to a hickory; thenoe east ( chains and 80 links to a black oak: thenoe south iij deg east & ohains and tt links to the first station, con taining ao At KKa, more or less. This is the traot of land that was allotted to Samuel W. Fauoette, deoeased, by the com missioners, under and by the direction of the last will and testament of his lather, John Faucette, It being lot No. 4 in the plot and report oi said commissioners. Beooad Traot: Beglunlug at a mulberry on great road, running north 67X deg. west H chains and 72 links to a rock; thence north 77 deg. west 14 ohains and 76 links to a stake; thence sonth lideg. west cnalusaud lu links to a stake; thenoe north 76 deg. east *1 chains to the first station, containing flu acres more or lefts. This is the tract of land that was allotted to KHiabeth Fauoette, deceased, by the com missioners appointed under aud by the last will and testament of her father, John Fau oette, It being lot No. 6 In the plot and re port of said commissioners. Said report is recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Alamance oounty, Book Mo. ti page 2ftj. These two tracts of land Is valuable proper ty, considerable timber thereon, well water ed and conveniently located to Mebane, . J. • The bidding will begin at *990. Terms of Bale: One-third of the purchase price to be paid In cash, one-tulrd in .six months, ana the remaining one-third at lue expiration of twelve mouths from date of sale, deferred payments to be secured by notes of purchaser, bearing Interest from date of sale, title reserved until price Is paid This Deo 1,1910. 1. ADuLfH Lu.NC., Commissioner. J WOOD'S HIGH-GRADE l/Farm Seeds. \ We are headquarters for the best in all Farm seeds. | Grass and Clover Seeds . „ Seed Corn, Cotton Seed, Cow Peas, Soja Beans, S Sorghums, Kaffir Corn, £ Millet Seed, Peanuts, etc. r "Wood's Crop issued Special" monthly gives timely information as to seeds to plant each month in the year, also prices of Season able Seeds. Write for copy, mailed free on request \\ T.W.WOOD4SONS, // i| Seedsmen, - Richmond, Va. / a—" ja What will you take for that Cough you have Bill? I don't want it, but if I had it I would take Bloodine Cough Checker, a 25c bottle will cure you. Graham Drug. R. C. Pitts, of Winston-Salem, N. C., was killed while attempting to board a freight train at New Orleans Monday night a week. His indentity was discovered by papers on his person. English Spavin Liniment re moves all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavins, curbs, splints, sweeney, ringbone, stifles, sprains all swollen throats, coughs, etc. Save S6O by the use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful blemish cure known, Sold by Graham Drug Co. The people Of California re cently by vote, authorized the State to borrow $18,000,000 to con struct a system of State highways conecting the various county seats of the State. I• ■ ' Bloodine Ointment cures Piles> Eczema, Salt Rheum, Old Sores, Fever Sores, Itch and all Skin li" ritation, 60c a box, mailed by The Bloodine Co., Inc. Boston, Mass. Graham Duig Co. The House of Congress Wednes day adopted an amendment to the Moon hm codifying laws re lating to the judiciary, which wil have the effect of Stopping the practice of corporations doing an inter-State business from taking practically all suits against them ont of the hands of State courts and placing them in the I' edei al courts.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 26, 1911, edition 1
2
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