Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / May 18, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE GLEANER IBSCED EVEBY TH ÜBS DAT. J. D. KERNODLE, Editor. •1.00 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE' Ox *Ol tor will not be reaponaitjle for Hews expaeeeed by 001 leepoudents. ADVERTISING BATES «M* square 1 la.) 1 Una *IM. or each aub saquent Insertion M cents. For more apace and (oncer time, rate* furnished on appllca ■ton. Local not'.ces 10 ets. a line for Aral insertion ; subsequent insertions I eta. a line Translent advertisement! must be paid for ■entered at the Po«tofflc« at Graham, N. C.. as second class matter. GRAHAM, N. C. f May 18, 1911. Some of the good people of Ala mance think they are being "hit hard" by the assessors. Tbe law aays "all property and subjects of taxation shall be fairly assessed at their true value in money." Thst sounds alright: it is alright, when it comes to assessing, if the ssme scheme is followed sll over every county all over the State. But counties like individuals, will not sll come up to requirements. Such being the esse, in some counties fair assess ments will be made, and in others it will be otherwise; and as s con sequence, unlesi the equalizstion board devotes much time to its du ties and performs them well, many will hsve to pay more than their proportion of taxes, snd others will psy less. All the "psuper counties" will fare well to the detriment of the others. Alamance hss never been a pauper county, because her property hss always been assessed at a fair valuation. However, all isir-minded citizens will sdmit thst valuations have been low enough. Much of the property could be val ed higher and there could be no just compls'nt; but it is hardly just, unless it were gen eral, to boost values, because the taxes are bssed on the assessed values. Alamance needs more taxes lor public improvements and an average raise of SI.OO per acre on land would make a taxable value of more than a third of a million and yield several thoussnd in taxes, but it should be remembered thst fully • third would g.i to the State, per haps to help other countios. We believe every good citizen will say the sssessments should be conserva tive—not too high, n.» too lsw. A decision handed down this week by the United State* Supreme Conrt in the Standard Oil Co. CMC has given the trusts and combines a •aovere jolt. That it was unanimous makes all combinations sit up and take notice. The Court said it is • combination in restraint oI trade and must be dissolved. It is expected that the decision in tiis case of the American Tobacco Co., which is expected next woek, will be sbont the same ss that of the Standard Oil Co. « On yesterday a (routing party pawed through Alamance in the inteieet of the proposed new railroad to be' known aa Greensboro, Box* boro A Norfolk Railroad. What Mote, if built, it will take through Alamance ia not known, but a rail- road through ths propossd territory would be of vast benefit as it goes through an almost unsxplored terri tory sofsrss railrosds are concerned. Gen. Geargs W. Gordon, of Mem phis, Tennessee, has been slsctsd Oommandsr-in-Chief of the United Confederate Veterans in Session this mm wssk at LiUle Book, Ark. Ths next bs held st Macon, Ga. The latetst ia that Dias (some call it d-a-s-e, others d-a-ra) will step down. Perhaps this will hold good till ths next mail arrives. On the public road three miles west of Louisville, in Winston eounty, Mississippi, the dead bodies of Cliff Jones and Bruce White, half brothers, colored, were found dangling from the limb of a tree at an early hour Friday.' The negroes had been in tho employ of Johnson Pear eon, a planter, and had been placed under arrest Friday after noon for an alleged attempt to B arson family by )u of strychnine X poison, in drink i men were taken Bty sheriffs by a n the Canadian upported by far ■ further removed ational boundary ir protest to the committee last te Canadian reci ley were preceded of manufacturers per who likewise >lll. Represents- , lers from Illinois, , , New York. Mis. ! rlnia and Mlehi- i the committee. ] Washington Letter WASHINGTON, May 16,-1911 Th« national legislative body now in seaaion in Congress is prov; i ing to be an nnruly team. The Republican majority in tbeSenate c cannot elect a president pro tern. The insurgent Senators have the t balance of power and led by Sena- tors La Follette and Cummins ' were able to defeat Senator Oal- ( linger of New Hampshire, thecau cus nominee. The Democratic house is well organized and ag- ( gressive, and with its powerful \ majority acting as a unit, is pas- , sing much important legislation. It has passed the Canadian rec- iprocity bill and the farmers' , free list bill, and these measure® \ »re now before the Senate. Dele- i gations of farmers professing to ( be representative are besieging ■ the Senate and the President in : an effort to kill the Canadian rec iprocity bill, but on the other , hand there are delegations from .he west and northwest, including agricultural representatives much | more numerotiH, urging the pas sage by the Senate of the reciproc ity act. Chairman Underwood is confident that a much more important tariff program than has yet been presented to the lower House will be passed by this body, the majority of whom it appears Are iu favor of free wool. The wiser heads of the Democratic majßrity are in favor of material ly reducing tho tariff on wool, but ate opnosed to so drastic a measure as admitting it duty free. The wool schedule is an important source of revenue to the govern ment, and to materially reduce the tariff will Increase this reven- 1 ue and will at the same time ena ble the millions of wearers of wool , garments in the United States to dress more elegantly and more comfortably. The bill is of course objectionable to the Wyoming Senator, who the late Senator Dolliver said was the greatest shepherd since Abraham, and a few herdsmen in the sparse set tlements in tho northwest. It will also interfere with the Massachu setts factory monopoly, but it will result in great benefit to ninety-nine one-hundredthsof the population of the Unitod States. One of the most important in vestigations ever made by the In terstate Commerce Commission is that of tho express companies of the United States. This investi gation is now under way. The ' commission has before: it much k material which it is at present | studying and arranging. It is thought that the outcome will be 1 a complete change in the express ' business of the conntry. Quite recently there was held in Wash ' ington a convention relative to 5 the much talked about and writ • ten about parcels post. This was attended by distinguished men from various parts of the country. Some of them have made a f thorough atudy of the expreaa I situati >n. It is somewhat remark - 1 able that the resolution waa paas . Ed by the convention favoring the t complete absorption or control of i (be expreaa companies by the . government. Assuming that p half the thlnga complained agalnat i the expreaa companies are sustain . Ed, it will not be atrange if the demand for government owner ship will be urgent after the In . teratate Commerce Com mission'a I repirthaab«fen published. In the I states of lowa, Minnesota and , California railway commlaaioners , havs recently mads Investigations into the operations of these com panies. Business interssts i throughout ths country are urging an sxaminatlon relative to the express companiea, insisting that thsir rates are exhorbitant and that their practices ars unfair. Last Fall, two hundred and eight h commercial organisations petitioned ths Interstate Com merce Commission to make the inquiry which is now un der way. This commission, let it be understood, has full authority over express rates, regu lations and practices. It is claim ed by thSfce who have thoroughly studied the subject that th re ia no reaaon whatever for the exist ence of express companies inde pendent of railroad companies, and it is a well known fact that the railroad companies themselves i are extensive stock owners, if > they do not actually control the 1 majority of stock of the express 1 companies, and that they ars I using these oompanies to enor- • mously increase theie profits with the result of normously oppres sing the millions who have to resort to them as common carriers. The profits in the esse of some of the oompanies it is known are as high a* 200 per cent, to 300 per eent. There lino reason why the United States should not carry express packages under the parcels post system for the benefit of all the people of the country. -»-i Tew First in Farm Wealth. Illlitli IHM Pint Place and North Carolina Cllmbu from Tweath-flnt to Thirteenth Place. Washington Dispatch, Maj U. The value of wealth produced on farms of the United States was ♦8,926,000,000 dnring 1910, as es timated by the department of agri culture in a statement just issued This is an increase of $104,000,000 over 1909. Texas, with her ten million acres of cotton, wrested from Illinois during 1910 the honor of licing the first state of the Union in point of value of her principal farm crops which aggregated $364,110,- 000, an increase of 14.9 per. cent over 1909. Illinois, with $290,- 295,000, dropped to second place, the decrease having been 13.9 per cent. lowa held her place as third state, while Kansas, in 1909 fourth state, dropped to teuth. Georgia mado a rapid stride In crop production for the year and jumped from tenth to fourth state, with a total of $2lO, 192,000, an increase of 26.5 per cent, over 1909. All the other southern states made good increases except Louis iana and Kentucky, South Caro lina made the largest, 28.4 per cent, or $140,009,000, jumping from twenty-first to thirteenth state. North Carolina jumped from twenty-second to eighteenth state, with a total $122,037,000 or an increase of 18.3 per cent. He vised figures of the depart ment of agriculture's cotton re port indicate the area planted in cotton in I*lo was about 33,418,- 000 acres, instead of 32,196,000 acres, as estimated last June. These figures will bo used as a basis in making the estimate on June 2of the acreage planted to cotton this year. The yield per aero in 1910 is estimated at 170.7 pounds and the area picked 32,- 304,000 acres. The first cotton report of the department of agriculture this season will bo issued Friday, June 2, at noon eastern time, and will give the estimated acreage of cotton planted this year with the condition of the crop on May 25, Fly Catechism. Wllkaboro Chronicle. 1. Where is the fly born? In manure and filth. 2. Where does the fly live? In every kind of filth. 11. Is anything too filthy for the fly to oat? No. 4. (a) Where does he go when ho leaves the vault and the man ure pile and the spittoon? Into the kitchen and dining room (b) What does he do there? He walks on the bread, fruitand vegetables; he wipes his feet on the butter and bathes in the buttermilk. 5. Does the fly visit the patient s'ck with coiißUmption typhoid fever or cholera infantum? He does—and may call on you next. 0. Ia the fly tlangerons? He's man'a worat pent and more danger ous than wild and rattle anskes. 7. What disease does he carry? He carries typhoid fever, tuber culosis and summer complaint. IIow? On his wings and hairy feet. What's his .correct name? Typhoid fly. 8. Did he ever kill any one? He killed more American soldiers in the Spnnish-Amerlcan war than the bulleta of the Spaniards. 9. Where are the greatest number of caaes of typhoid fever, conaumption and lumner com plaints? Where there ars the most fllss. 10. Where are the most flies? Where there is the most tilth. 11. Why should We kill the fly? Because he may kill ua. 19. How should ws kill the fly? (a) Destroy all the fllth about the house and yard; (b) pour lime in to vault and manure pile; (c) kill the fly with a wire screen, peddle, or sticky paper or kerosene. 13. Kill the fly in any w*y, but kill ths fly. 14. If there Is fllth anywhere that you cannot remove, call the officer of the board of health and ask for relief before you are stricksn with disease and perhaps death. James Alvis Patrick, a member of the Raleigh police force, waa arrested last week, charged with tie seduction of a young lady living near Raleigh, and gave bond. b new a ——— as well as a winter remedy.* It has the same invigorating j aad strength-producing ef fect in summer as in winter. J Try k In a Uttl« cold milk or water. »• MLoaucciro THE FOREST RESERVE CASES. Supreme Court Deckles in Favor of Government. Washington Dispatch. Ist j The legal battle against the for- f eat reserves of the West in par- ( ticular and conservation by the Federal government of natural resources in general was lost in the Supreme Court of the United , States. That tribunal not only uphold the constitutionality of the establishment of the vast re- ( serves for any national and pub- . lie purpose, but it settled once for all that the Federal govern ment and not the States may say how the reserves shall be used. The immediate results of the conclusion of the court are that '■ Fred. Light, a prominent Color- , ado cattleman, will remain en- j joined from allowing bis cattle to graze on the Holy Cross forest re- , serve in Colorado and that Pierre Grimaud, J. P. Carajous and j Antonio Inda, California sheep men, must answer to the indict- mont charging them with grazing sheep on the Sierra forest reserve j without a permit, in violation of regulation 45 of the Secretary of Agriculture and the statute of Congress of 1891. The subject was dealt with in two opinions delivered by Justice Lamar. The entire court con curred. The basic principle upoq which lie proceeded was that "the nation is an owner and has made Congress the principal agent to dispose of its property." The constitutionality of the vast forest reservations of the far West i and the validity of the modern conservation policy were raised earl.\ in this case in the Circuit Conrt of the Uuited States for the district of Colorado. The United States government had brought suit to enjoin Fred Light, a prominent Colorado cat tle man, from causing or permit ting his cattle to trespass upon the Holy Cross forest reserve in Colorado. A stubborn contest arose and among the other defenses put forth by Light, was the one that the formation of the Holy Cross reserve, without the consent of the State of Colorado, was un constitutional. As the othervast reserves of the Wpst had been formed by a similar process of Federal action, in withdrawing i public land from entry, the argu ment applied by analogy to them. The injunction was granted and an appeal taken to the Supremo Court of the United States. Throughout the contest the Fed i oral government claimed that when Light turned his cattle onto > his ranch, adjoining the forestre- I serve, they followed well defined i cattle trails, in order to get grass ; and water, directly to the reserve r where there existed superior grass and water supply. Such a practice t the government contended, was i tantamount in law to Light driving 3 the cattle onto the reserve. The defense met the govern,- * ment with several arguments. In - the first'place, it was pointed ont - that the reserve had not been-fenc ed by the government and a Colo ? rado law provided that no person • should recover damage for trespass . unless the land in question was r fenced. Therefore Light pointed ? to this law as barring the gov erraent from relief. The govern f ment retorted that the fence law i applied only to individuals, and i not to the State of Colorado or to the United States. If it was t meant to apply to the United , States, it was argued by the gov ■ eminent that the law was nnconi i titutlon.d. One of the sharp issues of the caae was centered on this ' point. So widespread was the interest > in the ease, and so vital the ques tions Involved, that the State of 1 Colorado threw itself into the con i teat. Attorney General Barnett . waa authorised to assist Light in fighting the Federal government. He did so. The Attorney General empha sised the argument before the Su preme Conrt that no provision of the constitution empowered the Federal government to "conserve the national resources," by pro i riding for a continuing timber supply, regulating the flow of streams and preserving power sites from being monopolized. He urged that the withdrawal of snch large Jracts of land, said to be one-fifth of the entire area of Colorado, was the denial of equality with the older States which had been al lowed to exercise dominion over all the territory with in their boundaries. B,W ™" U ■orcurjr will «uialy DMROR lb* MM of ■Mil and oouMaly dorsum tho whalei ay*tom when oofarlte It throoih tho mnooa* lurtiwl Such artlclra abould uovor bo uaod ozooot on prvocrlpUnnt from rvputabla phy oXlono, aa tho Hisi|« tfcoy will do I* tea foM to the- «ood run oao poaalbly delr* f roOD then. Hair* Catarrh Cora, manufactured by P. J. Chonor m Co., Tolodo, 0_ oontalo* no laareury, and la takan tatomally, aetiac dlrcoUy upon tho blood and mnoou* lurfaoo of tho ayitem. In buylna Hall'■ Catarrh Cur *s TakeHaU'iraaallyPHl* for oon*UpaUon Proposed Change of Inauguration Date. Washington Dispatch. A change for the date of the inauguration of President is as sured of ratification by the Sixty second Congress and it is not im probable that similar action will be taken to change the date of holding the national elections. This assurance has been given by a two-thirds majority of both houses of Congress to Representa tive Henry, of Texas, chairman of the House committee on rules, who introduced recently a joint resolution providing for the sub mission of this proposal to the Legislatures of the States. The proposed amendment of the constitution of the United States changes the date of the inauguration from March 4, usu ally an inclement day in Wash ington, to last Thursday in April. The date of holding na tional elections would be changed from the first Tuesdaj in Novem ber to the first Tuesday in April preceding the expiration of the terms of the President and mem - bers of Congress. Provision is made for extending the term of office of these officials after the ratification fcpm March 4 till the April date. Lutheran Synod at Wilmington. The North Carolina Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church is in session in Wilmington. This Synod, according to the last published report, has a member ship of 8,977, and including mem bers not yet confirmed, 11,385. One year ago there was reported to the Synod a net gain of 619 members for the past closed. 1. i r Churches of the Synod are valued at 313,350. Last year the total amount received for the va rious beneficences of the Church in this Synod was $21,962.80, be ing a gain over the previous year of $12,702.35. Amount contribu ted for all causes last year was $71,086.60, an increase of $24,- 644 over that of the previous year. Foley Kidney Pills take hold of your system and help you to rid yourself of your dragging backache, dull headache, nerv ousness, impaired eyesight, and of all the ills resulting from the impaired action of yjur kidneys and bladder. Remember it is Foley Kidney Pills that do this. For Sale by all Druggists. Dr. C. A. Shenek, formerly head of tho Baltimore School of Forestry, who has been abroad with a class of students studying forestry in Germany, has returned to North Carolina with his class and thoy are now studying fores try in the vicinity of New Bern. John D. Rockefeller would go broke if he should spend his entire income trying to prepare a better medicine than Chamberlain's' Co lic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for diarrhoea, dysentery or bowel complaints. It is simply impos sible, and so says every one that has used it. Sold by all dealers. Col. A. S. Buford, president of the old Richmond and Danville railroad (the predecessor of the Southern), a distinguished Con federate soldier and prominent in railroad and business affairs 30 years ago, died Saturday 6th inst., at his home in Richmond, aged 85. He was the father of Mrs. Clem Manly, of Winston, this State. Te Care a Cold la Oil Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on each box 25c. The Ministerial Association of Charlotte has declared in favor of the organization of a law and or der league in that town, especial ly for the enforcement of the prohibition law. The resolution adopted by the association in this connection recites the current re port that liquor is sold at the drug stores without restriction. Good results always follow the use of Foley Kidney Pills. They give prompt relief, in all cases of Kidney and bladder disorders. Try them. Sold by all druggists. In the Circuit Court at Chicago Friday Jndge Petit decided, that the Illittoia Senate could not force inspection of the private accounts of Edward Tilden. Ilia decision upheld the writ of habeas eoipus obtained by Tilden, O. W. Benedict and W. C. Cummings after they had been arrested on charges of tho contempt of the Senate in refuaing to present the accounts to the Helm committee, which is investigating the elec tion of United States Senator Lor- imer. Tilden was named by Clarence Funk, of the Internation al Harvester Company, aa a per son to whom he was directed to end a cheek for SIO,OOO to help I repay a fund of SIOO,OOO said to have been used in electing Sena-1 torLorimer. ' The Winston Journal says a fire that wonld have caused dis astrous results bat for the merest chance occurred on Muddy creek early Frday morning a week, when more than 60 feet of the long trestle on the Mocks ville- Mooreeville road was destroyed.- As the result of the fire, traffic on that branch of the Southern was considerably delayed all day Fri day, it being necessary to trans fer passengers, mail, etc. The trestle caught Are during the night and a farmer who saw the light gave the alarm, which brought help to save the trestle and prevent a possible wreck. Children Who Are Sickly. Mothers who valus their own comfort and the welfare of their children, should never be without a box of Mother Gray's Sweet Powder for Children, for use throughout the season. They Break up Colds, Cuie Fererlshness, Constipation, Teething Dis order*, Headache and Btomaoh Troubles. These Powders never fall. Bold by all Drue Stores, Sto. Don'taoeept any substitute. A trial package will Be sent free to any mother who will address Allen S. Omited, Le Boy. N. Y. Ben Brazwell shot and killed his brother-in-law, Wm. Vaughn, at Pleasant Hill, S. C., Thursday afternoon. Result of an old gcadge. English Spavin Liniment re moves Hard, Soft and Calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses; also Blood Spavins, Curbs, 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. The Southern Baptist Conven tion met at Jacksonville, Fla., yesterday. In the Wake of the Htulei. The little son of Mrs. O. B. Palmer, Little Rock, Ark., had the measles. The resnlt was a severe cough which grew worse and he could not sleep. She says: "One bottle of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound completely cured him and he has never been bother ed since." Croup, whooping cough measles cough all yield to Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. The genuine is in the yellow package always. Refuse substitutes. For Sale by all Druggists. Indictments have been returned against 18 citizens of McLean county, 111., for lynching a negro. Warning to Railroad Men. E. S. Bacon, 11 Bast St., Bath, Me., sends out this warning to railroaders: "A conductor on the railroad, my work caused a chronic inflammation of the kidneys, and I was miserable and all played out. A friend advised Foley Kid ney Pills and from the day I commenced taking them, I began to regain my strength. The in flammation cleared an 11 am far better than I have been for twenty years. The weakness and dizzy spells are a thing of the past and I highly recommend Foley Kidney Pills." For Sale by all t)ruggists. A summer hotel at Flat Book, two miles from. Ilendersonville, was burned Sunday morning a week. Loss estimated at $20,- 000, insurance SII,OOO. Building was the property of C. E. Roper. The State Department of Agri culture estimates that the cotton acreage In North Carolina this season is 1,522,800, an increas* of around 8 per cent, over the acre age last year. The crop con- ditions at this time are decidedly backward. / Safe Medicine for Children. [ Foley's Honey and Tar Compound is a safe and effective medicine for children as it does not contain opiates or harmful drugs. The genuine Foley's Honey and Tar Compound is in a yellow package. Sold by all druggists. Sheriff Win«tead, of Person county has resigned. The Legis lature passed an act placing the county officers of Person on a salary and the sheriff didn't think the salary was big enough, inas much as he has other business. The sheriff is a Republican, bnt it is not supposed that he had any influence in fixing the salary. $lO0 —Dr. Detchnn's Anti Diuretic may be worth to you mere than SIOO if you haveachild who soils bedding from incontin ence of water during sleep. Cures old and young alike, It arrests the trouble at once. sl. Sold by Graham Drug Co. The North Carolina Orchards Company ia the name of a new corporation that has been given a charter by the Secretory of State and will begin soon the develop ment of 10,000 acres of land in Harnett connty for orchard and tracking parpoees. DO YM Bar* the aifffct KlaS of Holp Foley Kidney Pills furnish yoa the right kind of help to neutralise and remove the poisons that cause backache, headache, nervousness, and other kidney and bladder ailments. For Sale by all Drag gists. The lettuce crop is a great as set to the eaat Carolina trackers. The price was especially good this season. One small tracker near Wilmington had one and a half acres and thus far has dear of All expenses, tl,Boo, and ia not yet through shipping. SOUTHERN RAILWAY Direct Unc To AD Points V/> NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, WEST. Vary Low Rround Trip Rates to all Principal Resorts. Through Pullman to Atlanta, leaves Raleigh 4:06 p. m. arrives At lanta 6:35 a. m., making close connection for and arriving Montgom ery following day after leaving Raleigh, 11:00 a. m., Mobile 4:12 p. m., New Orleans 8:20 p. ra., Birmingham 12:15 m., Memphis 8:05 p. m., Kansas City 11:20 a. m. second day, and connecting for all other points. This car also makes close eonnenuon at Salisbury for St. Louis other Western Points. Through Pullman to Washington leaves Raleigh 0:50 p. m. arrives Washington 8:53 a. m., Baltimore 10:02 a. nj-, Philadelphia 12:28 m., New York 2:31 p. m. This car makes close connection at Washing tan for Pittsburg, Chicago, and all points North and West and at Greensboro for Through Tourist Sleeper for California points, and for all Florida points. 1 . Through Parlor Car for Asheville leaves Goldsboro at 6:40 a. m., Raleigh 8:35 a. m., arrives Aaheville 7:40 p. m, making close connec tion with the Carolina Special and arriving Cinninnati 10:00 a. m. following day after leaving Raleigh, with close connection for all points North and North-West. Pullman for Winston-Salem leaves Raleigh 2:30 a. m., arrives Greensboro 6:30 a. m., making cloee connection foT all points Nqrth, South, East and West. This car is handled on train No. 11l leaving Qoldsborr at 10:45 p. m. If you desire any information, please write or call. We are hers to furnish Information as well as to sell tickets. H.F.CARY, ~ W.H.PARNELL, T.P. A.. General Passenger Agent, 215 Fayetteville St., Washington. D. C. Raleigh, N. 0, Another Solid Car4oad_of FURNITURE 'i' _ - ; _ J., j. ; HUM.4I iIB We are unloading another solid car-load of Furnittre this week and have bought it so we sell at prices l""~ 1 1 " I that will sound good to those wish ■ ing furniture of any kind. •* I I ■M We believe in carrying the goods. We believe in quick sales and small profits. We believe in satisfied cus- Ask your neighbors about us and Hj come see for you reel ver then you will understand why we move the goods. , T "7 I ' • i GREEN mm FURNITURE CO. GRAHAM, N. C. The auto of Mr. Jeremiah Goff, of Charlotte, is au expensive proposition. Not long ago it killed a man and Qoff had to pay damages. Lately, in Mecklen burg Superior Court, two colored people were awarded $225 dam ages against Goff. They were in jured in a runaway, the team be ing frightened by GofTs automo bile. i CASTOR IA For TnfttnU and Children. Fhe Kind You Hill Always Bought Lieut. Gov. Newland is urging on Gov. Kitchin the pardon of Thomas B. Whitson, the Mitchell connty man who nearly 20 years ago waa sentenced to be hanged for murder, waa commuted to 30 yean in prison, escaped four years later and was for 16 years a citizen of Kentucky, having mar ried and settled down in Fletcher, Ky. Three months ago he was returned to the State prison. Prompt relief in all cases of throat and lung trouble if yon use Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Pleasant to take, soothing and healing in effect. Sold by all dealers. Dr. Clarence Pickens, a dentist of Weaverville, Buncombe coun ty, was acquitted of the murder of Jerome and Furman Capps, brothers, near Weaverville, last August The plea was self-de fence. The dentist alleged that the men attacked him with rocks and a knite and that h* didn't shoot until they got him down and cut him. There were no eye witnesses but i circumstances corroborated the dentist. Foley Kidney Pill* are a true medicine. They Me healing, strengthening, antiseptic and tonie. They act quickly. For Sal* by all Druggists. At the recent term of Yadkin Superior Court, one Ben Sparks, well filled with mountain dew, refused to sit down when ordered bythefheriff. Judge Lyon took a hand and Sparks Insisted on aiguing the matter with the court. The result was a sentence of 80 days in Jail, but waa re leased the sime day after he waa sober, by order of the judge. OAiSUOHXA. UMwHiw MwyifcQ* ' ■ ~ Rhaimacife \ rr CURES Rttnutln ill Blood Dlxeaiei The cause of rheumatism Is excess uric acid In the blood. To cure rheu matism this acid must be expelled from « the system. Rheumatism is an Inter nal disease and requires an Internal remedy. Rubbing with oils and lini ments may ease the pain, but they will no more cure rheumatism than paint will change the fiber of rotten wood. Cures Rheumatism To Stay Cared. (Science has discovered a perfect and complete cure called Rheumaelde. Test ed In hundreds of cases, It has effected marvelous cures. Rheumaclde removes the cause, gets at the Joints from the inside, sweeps the poisons out of the system, tones up the stomach; regulates the bowels and kidneys. Sold by drug gists at 60c. and II; in the tablet form at 26c. and 60c., by mall. Booklet free. Bobbltt Chemical Co., Baltimore. Md. Get* At The Jolats From The InnHs. wtgwafc Simmons Alamance Pharmacy, Graham, N C. EGGS FIR HATCHING From Buff Orpingtons—tbe great winter layers, 8. C. White Legorns and Golden Seabright Bantams, for sale cheap, quali ty considered. Call on or write mo. B. X. TURNER, Graham, N. C. Thermo-Applicator Th* Scieatillc Tmhsol lor Piles. RenorrlMids »d CM ETaI sUpatiea ■ ll TheAppli- U/fr |f . cator is a * 0? thoroughly scientific and Tbc ■■ effective treatment, , Rett HI because it enables the . Trrsl- Hi patient to apply cold mm HI or "eat directly to the ■ HI 1 parts, both - internal Z'„ HI and external, at the V 1 ** same time acting as a . t«r _ Dilator and holding ,Ka*wa the ointment in • contact with the diseased parts untilabsorbed. SentjOn I The TWmo bhrhlr I reeommsnded sad ussd la practice by IHV Whs Physidaas aed Svr- H gsses It wu) be ssat anywhere an receipt at pries «.« and. If after B1 tmkt* Fnt GRAHAM, DRUG CO. ARNOLD'S BALSAM Diarrhoea by Graham Drug Co. L Graham, N. C. IWs slgaatare Uon erarjr hax ef the geaala raum
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 18, 1911, edition 1
2
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