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VOL. XXXVII. HEALTH INBURANCE The man who insures hla Oto to wi»a for his family. The man who inaorea his haalth Is wise both for his family and You may buaro health by guard* ln* It. It is worth Euardhif. At the first attack of disease, which generally approaches through the LIVER and mani fests Itself in innumerable ways TAKE - Tutfs Pills And save your health. Indigestion Dyspepsia •Kodol When your stomach cannot properly digest food, of itself, it needs a little assistance—and this assistance is read ily supplied by Kodol. Kodol asalts the stomach, by temporarily digesting all of the food in the stomach, so that tin _ stomach may rest and recuperate. Our Guarantee. «|?2j£Ss^ rsa are no* tenanted—the druekllrt will st sue* return jroar money. Don't hedtsw; anj (rossul win aell you Kodol on theM terms The MUar bottle aontalns K4 times as muob as the too bottle. Kodol I* prepared at the Swalertes ef B. O. De Witt i Co, ClMsssa. Graham Drag Co. ARE YOU F%. UP r TO DATE B ——— If you are not the NBWS AN' OBERVER is. Subscribe for it at once and it will keep yon abreast of the times. Full Associated Press dispatch es. All the news—foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. Daily Newp and Observer $7 per year, 3.50 for 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian £1 per year, 50c for 6 mos. NEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO., RALEIGH, N. C. The North Carolinian and THE ALAMANCE GLEANER will be sent for one year for Two Dollars. Cash in advance. Apply at THE GLEANER office. Graham, N. C. ] We promptly obtain U. 8. and Foreign ESHIB 1 Bend model, sketch or photo of invention for 1 . ► free report on patentability. For free book, How to SecureTQ AnC lIADIfC wrlt *' KILLTHI COUCH M> CURE tm« LUWCB wi ™ Dr. King's New Discovery FOR CB£B£ 8 »-Ss. AHD >ll THROAT AND lUHOTKOUBLEt. GUARANTEED BATISVAOTOBT OB MOHKT BKFPHPKP. LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS This book, entitled as above, contains over 200 memoirs of Min isters in the Christian Church with historical references. An interesting volume —nicely print ed and bound. Price per copy: cloth, $2.00; gilt top, $2.(0. By mail 20c extra. Orders may be ent to' PJ/ KEBNODL* , 1012 E. Marshall St, Richmond, Va. Orders may be left *t this office. Why send oil for yom Job Printing? We CM save yon money on aD Stationery, WeMtafl Invitations, Business UfdsJPostoMl^^ THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. The Honorable f i Senator | Sagebrush By FRANCIS LYNDE Copyright. Itw, kr IM « Smith PROLOGUE. This story of a young man'* honest attempt to "break" the "boss" and the power of the "machine" ts an absorbingly in timate portrayal of the working of the 'wheels within wheels" in a desperate political struggle of today. The senator, strongly in trenched behind his party 'ma chine," presents an almost in vulnerable front, and the con flict between father and son as this young lawyer, single hand ed, fights for what he honestly believes to be the truth and right holds one with a tremen dous sympathetic interest. CHAPTER L BECAUSE PATRICIA (AID "ifO." SOME! one was giving a crash dance at the Conn try club, and Blount, though be was only a week end guest of the Beyer ley*, waa 111 natured enough to be re sentful. What right bad a gay and frivolous world to come and throat Its light hearted happiness upon hlm when Patricia bad said "NoT" It waa like bullying a cripple, he told hlmaelf morosely, and when he had read the single telegram which had com* while he waa.at dinner be went oat and found a chair in a corner of the veran da, where the frivolities had not as yet Intruded. Blount was a level eyed, square shouldered young man of an up to date world, and the stock from which , be had descended waa prosaic and ' practical rather than poetic or senti ; mental. But Just now be was uncon sciously giving a very lifelike imita tion of tbe disappointed lover the ' world over. It was thus, and by tbe merest chance, that Gantry found him. The railroad man at least was unfelgned ly glad. "Pull up a chair," said Blount, not too ungraciously, considering his Just cause to be more ungracious. "I was thinking of yon Just a little while ago, Dick. I saw your name in the list of transcontinental representatives to the traffic meeting, and—well, at tbe present moment I think ycm are tbe one man in tbe world I wanted most to meet" -— ; s_ _ "That sounds good to me," laughed Dick Gantry, settling himself comfort ably in a lazy chair and feeling in: his pockets for a cigar. "The 'effete east" has corralled you, hasn't ft, Evan? I thought maybe it would when I beard you were taking the postgraduate trills in tbe Harvard law school. By tbe way, how mnch longer are you in fori" I "I am out of tbe law school, if that Is what you mean," said Blount—"out and admitted io the bar. if you git Into trouble with the Boston police lot me know end 111 ask toz. a change of ven tie to tbe greaaewood bills and Judge Lyncb's court" I "Are you ever coming back to the®, Blount? I believe you told me once in the old college days that you ware western born." , "I told you tbe truth, and until to night I never thought much about go ing back," was Blount's rather crypto - gramma tic answer. E 1 "But now yon are thinking of It 7" inquired tbe railroad man. waking up. -That's good. We're needing a few bright young lawyers utfgUtf that why I'm tbe particular fellow .you 't ★anted t»meetr Blount passed tbe newly eone tai*- gram across the interval between tbe >1 two chairs. "Bead that" h* said, n , Gantry, smoothed tbe square of yd i low paper carefully and held it Bp to r tbe softened glow of tbe electric c*U :. ing globe. Its date line canted tbe v ' name of tbe chief city in tbe "grease - wood country," tbe capital of the state, and tbe time markings wjlMently in dicated its late arrival: To Bvan Mir Bleat, gtaiwllah Apart | everything that SM ;!« are set tied to some woman's apros 'string, why can't fed oaam *•*» tsl _ Stow vp with year native OUT j DAVID BIXJUWT. ' It waa characteristic of Gantry thai be folded tbe telegram In the origlna crossings before be banded It bock. -Weill" sold Bleant when the VMM ■ bad grown everton*. " 1 was Jnst thinking," wss tbe re r flectlve rejoinder. "Wo need to ba | fairly chummy In tbe old Ann Arboi Idays, Bvan. and yet I never knew Oil this blsessd minute that Bene lot B Blount was your father." _ "Ho was and 1*" was the quiet ro * ply. "1 supposed everybody knew It" S. "I didn't," Gantry - dented, adding ■ "What yoo don't teU people about ■ yoorself would make a pretty btg bool if it were printed. Long ago you a& ~ Brtttad to me that yen were, weaten born, bat you never toHT am anj •nor*" - "Perbaps It was because there was so little to tell. I bad a boyhood, like other boys—or, no, possibly it wasn't quite the usual. I was born on the Circle Bar when the ranch was a hard day's drlvs from tbe nearest shipping corral on the railroad. At twelve 1 could Vide-line,' 'cut out* and •rope down' like any other ranch bred youngster, and I had never aeen a town bigger than Painted Hat" "And what happened when you were twelve?" queried Gantry. "Tbe greatest misfortune that can ever come to a half grown boy. Dick. My mother died." "That was hard." Gantry assented; then, "Tour father married again." "Not for some years," Blount quali fied. "But for me the heavens were fallen. I was sent away to school, and from school I wqpt to college, to Europe and back here to . the law school. In all that time I've never seen the Circle Bar or my native stats; have never been west of Omaha." "Then the sens tor's—your father's— political life has never touched yoo?" "It touched me on the sympathetic side, Dick. I saw a large beartsd, PATRICIA Ammo. open handed old cattle king wading into tbe muddy stream of politics to [ gratify an ambition that wasn't bis i own—a woman's ambition. In order t that the woman might mix and mln i gie in Washington society for: a brief i minute «r two bo got btmsslf elected > to ffil out sn aneaplnsd term of two S months In the United State* senate bought It some said. That waa thrso years sgo. wasn't It! But Washlng l ton hasn't forgotten. When I wss ' down there last winter tbe > o'clock * tea people were still recalling Mrs. 'Blount's gowns and tbe wild western I naivete of the Hon. Senator Sago -1 brush."* » Gantry was chuckling softly. » "Land of lore, Evan," bo said, "you're an educated man, all right ' but you're got a lot to I ears yet— | about tbe senstor and bis politics, I 1 mean. Great snipes, man, ho Us't is 1 It for tbe social frills and furbelows! ' Ho never was. Let me Intimate s few ' things. Politically speeklng. David Blount Is the biggest man la bis state today. He can have anything be 1 wants, from tbe bead of tbe ticket ' down. Too spoke rstber sneeringly Just now of bis two months in tbe " senate. Ho might have gone back If 1 be had wanted to. and he actually did a nrecb mors difficult thing—named bis „ successor. I can tell yon tbe situa tion oat in tbe groawwsnd country If _ yesi want to knowlt" , "Make it stmpte," was Blount's «*•» * -The outlook for me Is pMtlssly what Y. Blsin s doaon other ststss this year— , everything ptoanistng a renewal of the bullbeadstd legislative light on the raH l_ roads," said Gantry. "There to only o on* ton* before the people, and that 1.. is tbe Transcontinental railway. The o refer mora. as they call themselves. 1,. wnM Ilk* to legislate as ont of «ls» onus. We shall beat the tomtom an* y do our best to stay on earth." "Kato rally," said Blount "And mr u tethsr—bow doos be stand r „ The MM o t your baring to ask « seer exclaimed Gantry. "Bat rosily " I wtoh I conld ton yea There are a A good many people in our' neck * woods who would like to kuow.' ft wttl moke all the difference in tbs rt world when it COCSM to a showdown." *1 -Why wtt! Uf "Becauoe, apart from the railroad » and th* aitt-Mlbead fsrtlMS, these to • vsry complete and smooth running * -And my father to IIMHIII with It, marhhiiT" " Again Gantry chohott over the sin gnlar lock of information discovering * itself In Blounfs question. -Land of gloryr bo ejaculated. J - "Where hare yon been burying your self, Evan T Didn't I Just toll yoo that t. be is the biggest man In the stats 1 Ob, no"—with heavy irony—"he lent >k Identided with th* machine; be msrely t awM It and'runs It" ■ -into,"- asld Blount, and a MOs V later, "Thask you, Okie; I an pretty HftLal 91 touch. JUL jrqftlTQ dleesr- GBAHAM, N.C., THURSDAY, MARCH 9,1911. •red' 1 ' Then ha changed the subjoct abruptly. "How long will your traffic " meeting last?" "Wc practically finished today. An hoar or two on Monday will settle It" "After Which you'll go west?" *3sy the Monday noon train. If I can make It" Silence for a time until Blount broke In upon Gantry's tapping of the dance music rhythm with: "If I can get ready I may go vfltb you, Dick. Would you mind?" "Tea; I would mind so much that Td willingly miss a train and worry out a few more of the chilly Boston hours rather than lose the chance of having you along. Brer meet your father's— er—the present Mr*. Blount, Evan?" bo asked suddenly. "No." "She is a fine woman." Gantry ven tured. "So I bare understood." This time Blount's reply was icy. But now Gan try's eyes were twinkling, and be pressed bis advantage, , "You'll have to reckon with her If you go to the greafcewood country, Evan. Next to your father, she is the court of last resort. Indeed, there are a good many who say that she Is tha court.** Dlount said nothing. Nevertheless Gantry tried once more: "Not interested, EvanT" Blount turned and looked his com panion coldly in tbe eyes. ', "Not in tbe slightest degree, Dick. Will you take that for your answer now and remember it hereafter?" "Sure!" laughed the railroad man. "I didn't know it was a sore spot with you." He found a match and relighted his cigar. When he began again be was still thinking of tbe "apron string" clausa In tbe senator's telegram. "I can't- understand how any man with western blood In his veins could • ever be content to marry and settle down In this overrtvilised neck of WOOdS," ho BAld. "Can't you 7" Blount smiled, with largo lenience. "No, I can't," asserted tha western er, adding: "Of course I don't know the eMtern young woman. Bba may be all that is lovely and enticing"— "She is," declared Blount, with the ale of on* who had lived long enough to know. "Too say that as If you'd been tak ing a few lessons," Gantry laughed. Then, with tha friendly impudence which only a college comradeship could excuse, "Is sba here tonight?" "No." "Tell me about bar," Gantry begged. "I don't often read • love story, but 1 like to hear 'em." i "There Isn't much to tell, Dick," said Blount "I've known her for a year, and I've loved her from tha first day. That is chapter I, and chapter 2 ends the story with ona small word. says 'No.'" "The dickens she does I" said Gan try in hearty sympathy. "Tough, isn't tt, old man? What's tbe obstacle?" "It Is Miss A oners' career. Sba baa been studying ft home and abroad in preparation for aoclal settlement work In tbe large cities. Of course I knew •bout It But I thought—l hoped"— "You hoped It waa only a young wo- 1 nan's fad. which it probably is," Gan try cut in.. "Y-yes. I'm afraid that was Just what i did hope., Dick. But 1 couldn't talk against It. Confound It all, you can't go about smashing Ideals for tbe ' people you love best!" It was quite late wben Gantry, plead ing weariness on'the score of bis bard week's work at the railroad meeting, went to bed. In tbe long talk with Gantry Blount had learned many things about the po litical situation In bis native state— tilings which were enlightening, if not particularly encouraging. Oddly enough, be bad not recognized 1 In Gantry a skillful special plesder for tbe railroad Interests: hence be was preparing to go to tbe new field with a rather strong prepossession In fsvor of tbe defendant corporation. Gantry had Intimated pretty broadly that there waa room for an assistant corporation counsel for tbe railroad, with head quarters In tbe capital of bis nstlve ' state. Blount saw at once that tbe re quirements would be political rather than legal, ana in bu> uiluu's sjs he ' saw himself standing firmly as the de fender of legitimate business rights In 1 a region where popular prejudice was * capable of rising to anarchistic heights. ' Tbe picture rather pleased blm. Ha t would not have been a true descendant ' of tbe fighting Blounts of Tennessee if ' the prospect of a conflict bad bean ' ether than inspiring. | It was sftar tbe ashes bad been . knock*! from tha bedtime pipe that \ Blount left his chair and the secluded earner of tbe vesanda to go and win der among tbe parked automobiles on tha lawn. , Blount bad Just awakened a sleepy chauffeur to ask blm to uncovsr tbe ' silni of a new Italian car whan a 1 stir at tha Tetania entrance told bin ' that at. leaat a few of tha dancing ' guests ware leaving early. ' Ha draw back when tha little group I on tbe veranda came down tha steps, >• preceded by a clnb footman, who was » calling tha number of tbe car. And It > was not nntO be was turning away that ha found himaalf face to face with • vary beautiful and very clear eyed young woman who was buttoning an automobile dnst coat up under bar chin. "Patriciar be bant oat "Tor pity's ' sake, you don't maaa to tell me that ' you have bean here all tbe evening?" ' Her qniet smile gave tbe Impression ' not quia of frigidity perhaps, but of * that quality of sersne self possession ' which strangers sometimes mistook for (OldlMk * "Why Shouldn't I be barer sba » asked. "Didn't you know that tha II Cranfords, tbe people who are enter taining, ware old Mends of oarsT" ' Blount sbsok Ida bead. "No. I didn't know It and because I didn't I hare > loot aa entire evening. It was end I of you to deny as* this last evening, Patricia." L "This last evening?"" aba echoed > "Why last r m * "Because lan leaving Boston and * Maw England Mooday. It Is the only t thing to do." f "I am sorry yon are taking It this way, Evan," she deprecated in tbo st»- * torty tone that always mads him hot r ly resentful. "K hurts B»y sense of '* arannrHn* * V-- ,' : • j A Story of Political Trickery and Love, of Action, High Purpose and Real Thrills BY FRANCIS LYNDE Author of "Red Butte Western," and Other Successful Books Take Time to Read This Story No Matter How Busy You Are It Is Being Talked About All Over the Country This Story starts this week. II you want |it, 'subscribe now and get this week's paper with iirst chapter. "sometime* I think 70a Daren't any MOM of proportion, Patricia," be said bait moronely. "If yon hare I am sure It la dreadfully distorted." A white haired old gentleman in the tonnean waa calling Impatiently to Pa trida to eome and take bar place ao that be might cloae the door. "It la yoo who bave the dlitorted perspective. Evan." abe countered. "Where art you going?" "I am going west day after tomor row." "How odd!" abe eald. "We are go ing west, too—papa and I—though not quite ao aoon aa Monday." "Too are?" be queried. "Where abonta tn the weetf She did not tell him where. The car motor wn* whirring, the chauf feur waa awlnglng up to his neat be hind tba pilot wheel, and the old gen tleman in ibe ionnenu waa growisg quite violently Impatient "I ahan't aay goodby," she said hasti ly, giving blm her band at parting, "nor aha 11 I tell you where we are go ing. Let it be auf wladaraati— dW we meet again." (TO N cotmatm.) Foley Kidney Pilfai. Naurtalize and remove tlie pois ons that cause backache, rheuma tism, nervousness and all kidney and bladder irregularities. They baild up and restore the natural action ofthese vital organs. For Sale by all Druggtata. A New York dispatch of the 23d ■ays the quotations for eggs on that day were the lowest for Feh ruary in 40 yean. Fresh eggs were quoted at 20 cents with a prospect of a fall to 18 cent* by March 1. The low prices are said to be doe to mild weather and large receipts, due to Increased production. "Foley's Honey ami T« la the beat cough remedy I ever used as it quickly stopped a severe cough that bad long troubled me," says J, W. Kuhn, Princeton, Nebr. Just so qnickly and surely it acta su all cases of coughs, colds, la grippe and lung trouble. Refuse inbstitutea. For Sale by all Drug gt> »• CASTOR IA for lafaats and CUldrra. Hi IM Tw lUw Ahnp Buftt Two resolutions asserting the existence of monopolistic control . of the coffee market by Brazilian , production interests, anl Araeri- ■ caps and Europeans interested . with them, and calling respective- , upon the President nnd the Atty. General of the United States to report whether any Inveatigft- , tlou of the matter has been insti tuted by the government, were in troduced In the House of Congress last week. A NpeeUl Medicine for Kidney Ailment*. Many eldorly people have lound in Foley's Kidney Remedy a quick irlisf and permanent benefit kidney and bladder ailments and from annoying urinary irregulari ties due U> advancingyoartr. Isaac N. Regan, Farmer, Mo., says: "Foley's Kidcey Remedy effected a complete euro in my caso and I want others to know of it. For Sale by al' Druggists. The $40,000 damage suit lnsti r tute in Forsyth Superior Court in 1903 by District Attorney A. £. ' llolton againstN. Glen. Williams, was non-suit by the plaintiff last week. It was a civil suit and grew out of an assault made by I Williams on Holtoo with * whip 1 in Winston In 1902. Whlleprooe cuting Williams In Yadkin county 1 a few year# prior to that time, k llolton, It was alleged, made ' charge* to which Williams took ex ' ceptioo and the assault followed. 1 A Cold, LaGrippe, then Pneumonia. Is too often the fatal sequence, Foley's Honey aud Tar expels the * the cold, checks the iagrippe and * prevents pneumonia. It is a ' prompt and reliable cough medl -1 cine that contains no narcotics. ' It is as safe for your children as 1 yourself. Sold by all Druggists. 5 Turn the colts ID the yard every day for exorcise. § >hlt rifSMar* >• on mty ►' tk* (eaatM Laxative liromo-C ? mm* mm IMIIJ t»— -we— m _ -mm FOI£¥SOmNOLaUIIV£ 1 smm ■ Tiwui 10 jl rtrnnri-nn The House has adopted a joint resolution looking to anjnvestiga tion of the so-called match trust. The resolution is the result of the recent recommendation of Presi dent Taft that the use of white phosphorus Tn matches be pro hibited because of the injurious effect upon einplopes in match factories and the disclosures fol lowing a brief inquiry by the com mittee on ways and means. To Cure • Cold In One Hay. Take Laxative Uroino Quinine Tablets. All druggist* refund the money if it fails to cure. E. YV, Grove's signature is on each l>ox 25C. liecanse he called her his "ownty donty darling, sweetest | honey bunchums girl of the gold lest West," David 11. Decker, a wealthy civil engineer of New York, must pay Henrietta French a prepossessing young woman from I'ierre, South Dakota, $lO,- 000 as heart balm. She sued him for breach of promise and the jury rendered a Verdict in her favor. A man who used that sort of talk to a woman ought to have It U> pay for. A Mother'* Safeguard. Foley 1 * Honey and Tar for the children. Is beat and safeat for a'l coughs, colds, croup, whoop ing cough and bronchitis. No opiates. Sold by all Druggists. Fire that started from an ex plosion of a quart of gasoline, with which k workman was cleaning a new automobile Tuesday destroyed the plant of the Ilaynes Automobile i Co., at Kokomo, Ind., causing •750,000 damage. It is believed that a workman, George Bauer, ' lost his life in the flames. Short elrcnitingof an electric light caus ed the explosion in the assembly room of the factory. One hundred completed automobiles were , destroyed. OABTORSA. ► „1M Ui Vw Hia Ahwp twit NO. 4 PROFESSIONAL CARDS J\ s. cook:, 7 Attorn ey-at- Law, 3RAHAM, ■ • • • • N. C. omoePgtterwjn Building Seoond Floor. . . , , , ;■?: ro*A JBA r m* ou. w. T. BTMDM, J ■ . BKMfM & BYNUM, A.ttomej« ind CoanMlora at Law H u Practice regularly to tl»e court. of Ala nance county. Aug. t, M If DAMERON & LONG Attorneya-at-Law B. 8. W. DAMEKON, J. ADOLPH LOW A 'Pbon. W>, ' 'Phone lfpa Piedmont Building, Holt-Nloholson Bldg. Burlington, N. 0. Graham. N. 0. DR. WILL S. LONG, JR. . . i DENTIST 4 4 i Graham, . - - - North Carolina OFFICE IN SIMMONS BUILDING " t 'ACOB A. LONG. J. ELMER LOKO J LONG & LONG, A.ttorn«ya and Counaelora at Law GKAHAM, N. DR. F. G. GO WER DENTIST GRAHAM, N. C. Office: Over National Bank of Alamance. tf.b-tf —Ambitions young men and ladies should learn telegraphy, for, since the new 8-hour law be came effective there is a shortage of many thousand telegraphers. Positions pay from SSO to S7O a month to beginners. The Tele graph Institute of Columbia, S. C. and five other cities is open ed under supervision of R. R. Of | flcials and all students are'placed when qualified. Write them for particulars. It is stated that the death of Gen. W. L. Cabell, of Dallas, Tex., Wednesday, loaves only about half a dozen general officers of the Confederate army still living. Among them are Oenerals Simon B. Bucknerof Kentucky, Marcus J. Wright of Washington, D. C., D. C. Walker of South Carolina, George W. Gordo/* of Tennessee, Clement A. Georgia and T. T. Munford of Virginia. English Spavin Liniment re moves ail 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. Advices from China to the American Red Cross last Thursday are to the effect that conditions in the fami..edistrictsaregrowitfg worse as days go by. That 2,500,- 000 Chinese will die for want of bread if assistance Is not rendered immed'ntely is the prediction in a statement made by the organiza 'ion. This number comprises nearly the entire population of the northern part of the province of Kaing-Su and Anhui. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets are safe, sure and reliable, and have been praised by thousands of women who have been restored to health through their gentle aid and curative propperties. So'd by all dealore. A dispatch from Tonopah. Nev., says 15 bodies of miners burned to death in a fire in the Belmont mine were brought to the surface Friday. It is believed that there are some four to eight bodies still in the mine. The last four bodies recovered were frightfully muti lated. They came from the- bot tom of the shaft, which is 1,150 feet deep. The lire was extinguish- ed with little damage to the mine. 4 Six Americans are among the 15 dead, the rest being mostly Slavon ians. Those unsightly pimples and blotches 1 External applications may partially hide them, but Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea removes them for keeps. Gets at ' the cause—lmpure blood. v Tea ; or Nuggets (tablet form) 35c. at i Thompson Drug Co. Mrs. Maud Powell Carpenter, wife of Mr. D. J. Carpenter, until ' recently of Newton, died last week at Stake, Fia. Mrs. Carpen , ter was a daughter of the late Dr. I Tate Powell and recently moved i to Florida with her family. Her husband and four children survive. OASTORIA. * Bwntte l»Kl You Hart AlwajS BMgtf
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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March 9, 1911, edition 1
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