Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / March 20, 1913, edition 1 / Page 4
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Are You Nervous? What makes you nervous? It is the weakness of your womanly constitution, which cannot stahd the strain of the hard work you do. As a result, you break down, and ruiiv your entire nervous system. Don't keep -this up! Take Cardul, the woman's tonic. Cardui is made from purely vegetable ingredients. It acts gently on the womanly organs, and helps them to do their proper work. It relieves pain and restores health, in a natural manner, by going to the source of the trouble and building up the bodily strength. CARDUI WomarfsTonic Mrs. Grace Fortner, of Man, W. Va., took Cardui. This is what she says about it: "1 was so weak and nervous, I could not bear to have anyone near me. 1 had fainting spells, and I lost flesh every day. The first dose of Cardui helped me. Now, I am entirely cured of the fainting shells, and 1 cannot say enough for Cardui, for I know it saved my life." It is the best tonic for women. Do you suffer from any of the pains peculiar to women? Take Cardui. It will help you. Ask your druggist Vrlti to; Ladle*" Advisory Dept. Cbattsnoo** Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tm, r i »ii(if r lWrr' —"""—*— 1 —'*—**'—"—•*— j bo MANURE FROM THE STREETS. Oil Muit Be Extracted to Maka It Equal to Stabl* Product The department of agriculture re ceive* from truckers and gardener* many request* lii. regard to the value of street sweeping* n» fertilizer. The collectloua from sweepings con sist chiefly of animal manurea, trusb and small particles of -paving materi als, and at the present time, when the use of )iower vehicles Is so extensive, tbey also contain a percentage of oily matter. Experiments were made to test th« effects of the sweepings on crops. Good stable manure was also u*Od In order that a comparison might be made. In almost erery case the sweepings prov* ed to be beneficial. The effect of the stable manure, however, was much greater. It was thought that the oil contained In the aweeplngs might affect tbelr fertilizing properties. In order to study this point the oil wns extracted and Its effect on plant growth wns tested. In every case It proved harmful. The aweeplngs from which It had been ex tracted were next tested. In this caae the growth wns about equal to that caused by the stable manure. In other word*, street sweepings from which the oil tins becif extracted nre prac tically dqual to stable manure In fer tilizing value. If some method could be discovered whereby the oil could lie ecouofrilcnlly extracted street sweep ings. on account of their comparatively low cost, should constitute a valuable source of fertilizer to the trucker and farmer.—Country Gentleman. GOOD GRINDSTONE GUARD. It Keeps the Water From Being Spat tered and Is Easily Mad*. A grindstone that rotate* with • small part of Its lower circumference Immersed In a reservoir or baaln for tho purpose of moistening the atone has a tendency to pick up tbe water •nd throw It In tbe direction In which tbe stone I* turning. Tbe larger the •tone tbe greater the amount of water thrown out, and tbe result la an un - ——fs^i easily mads oar*Derosa or* no. •Ightly and Insnnltary floor, besides -lie)i:i; an nmioynucc and Inconvenience to tbu man who attempta to grind tool* on that side of tho stone. The accompanying sketch show* • pyramid shaped gunrtl. A, that can be aecured to the framework of tha abaft Tbe iipshootlng water encounters It •nd Is deflected back and down Into the baaln below. The guord'a shape I# •ucb that It la uot In the way of amy on* working on that aide of the atone . It Is constructed of gslvanlxed Iron or heavy Un.—Popular Mechanic*. j » NOT NOW, BUT LATIN. ' > A plantation of forest treea ' j | would not yield an Immediate re- { ; i turn, but It would coat little and I | would enhance the value of tbe J | ' ; land each year, hesideo providing 1 ! ! for the need* of tbe futuro.-lowa |, ; Uomestesd. To Get Rid of Rata. To get rid of rata mix op one-half pint of corn meal, one teaapoonfui ol •ngar and one-half tea spoonful of cheese crumbs rubbed tine. Pot this In a saucer and aet It In tb* rata' run ways. Tbey wIU eat of It readily. la • few day* add plaater of parte to ■ new lot of tbe same mixture. Tbe tat* when tbey drink whter will g*t ■ hard lump that will kill them and •care away any that do not eat this formula.—Farm Journal. What Cabbepse Need. Cabbages are gross feeder*, and H taken manure or fertilisers, of Hi* lat ter especially potash (muriate), to pro dace big heads and a big crop. On most firms a piece of land can easily ho aet ■part to raise *ucb a valuable crop as lata cabbages, says tha Farm and Fire ■ Critter Wisdom. As a general proposition It mar be Hid that the sow that has pigs Iwfor*- •bo 1* • year old will disappoint her •wner. | Sorghum la an excellent succulent ' feed for cowa, horses, sheep and bogs When tad green It Mves mors ex pensive feeds'aod keep* stock la fait flaah until other feed* can b* gathered. The safWt boll the dairyman can use j to generally « croea ball. At 3» jt this, may seem a strange assertion Tb* reason. however, to ritnrle. The Nill j that I* known to be cross will always Do not give fresh cowa, Immediately after calving, heavy feed.' Give mild or warm water and a small amount ol light toed. Mich a* bran, that will h* cooling to tbe system and will keej Calve* at tbe age of three or four long' niter I til* In-fore tbey will con Dime con*ldernbte quantity of *lluge. The (beep I* Juat efficient a ma. anre sprender a* be la a manure maker. On hillside* where conrner ant mat, wnate would hardly atlck lons enough to do the ground any goal aheep dropping* take the place of a specially prepared fertiliser. ABOLISH THE OLD BACK YARD Make All the Ground Around Your Home Attractive. NO RUBBISH, NO DISEASE. Co-operstion Between Owners end Tsnsnts Wsuld Do s Qrsst Desl Ts wsrd Changing Pressnt Conditions. It Would Alse Ineresse Values. Why was tbe back yard ever Invent ed? Why need there be a rear and a front to a bouse V And why bare moat j homes two rears and no front? The rear of a bouse was originally designed ! as a place where coal was delivered, wbcro waste was removed and where deliveries from tradesmen were made. Ilut In city homes the gnrbage and the I ashes go out the front door, and dellv | erics are mnde there. In fact, It by necessity Ims become the back door. And what is the back yard? Usually a place to grow, a place for rubbish to accumulate, a place to hang out tbe wash, a breeding place for mos quitoes and (lies and an eyesore to about half the population of tenants, who day by day, month after month, bare to look out upon 1L 80 states tbe Title Insurance News. If ever any one pays tbe penalty for a sin it la tbe owner of real estate, res idential property, wbo Is carrying tbe burden of tbe back yard. How does tbe •wner of such property pay tbe pen alty, and can be escape It? Rear rooms bring leaa income than street rooms be cause of existing conditions. Yet why not make hsar rooina front rooms and correspondingly Increase tbe income from residential property? Take, for example, a block of hooaea running from one avenue to another. Backtng up to each other there are about thirty-four bouaes, twenty feet In width. Thero la a stretch of open land between the two rows of honaee about TOO feet long and approximately 100 feet wide. * Let us Imagine, If we can, that the owners of these seventy pieces of A SMUII IMI liW property got their beads together and decided that they would place this vacant space la tbe bands of two or three or Ore of their number aa trus tees for a period of Ave yean, each contributing alike to the cost, and that fences be torn down, rubbish cleared ap and the plot turned into a minia ture park and playground—ln abort, that the rear of these bouoss become tbe front What would happen? Count ing the number of rooms facing the back yard as about the same as tbooe facing the street and that there Is a difference In tbe rental Income of about 80 per cent. It would bo safe to assume that by making such a change the Income of tbe rear rooms facing our Imagined miniature park would bring In an additional Income of SO per cent In excess of their usual rental ■ value, which on the entire property , would show an Increase of possibly | from 0 to 10 per cent Not tsklng Into consideration tbe increased Income, would not such prop ! srtles always find occupants In prefer ence to others that could not offer this attractive feature? Would wo not be i providing an Ideal playground for the I children, taking them from the atresia with Its dangers? Would net each re i tresis afford comfort, afternoons and ! evenings, to the occapants of tbe room —men and women who most pass the I greater past of their summers In the ctty? 1 The arsrsjs Muaer population la ' the seventy heuess does not fall far short of 1.000 persons. By renting a portion of the space for the privilege of serving ice cream and sods fountain drinks the** would be safflcteot In come from tbe privilege to more than [The Siege of the Seven Suitors A XOhitnfical Story of Lo*Ve and Mystery Who won the hand of the beautiful Cecilia Hollister, the girl who was wooed by seven men ? Her sister is a bewitching conspirator. Humor and satire mark this charming novel by Meredith Nicholson. WILL APPEAR IN THIS PAPER If you are not a Subscriber, Subscribe now, the Story is worth the price of .subscription. Will begin March 27. INFLUENCE OF THE i PURE BRED SIRE The Connecticut Farmer aaya that calvss from poor milker* abould not be ralaed. Of course tbe paper speak* of bdfer calves. Now. that depend* alto gether whether you have a strong, pro potent *lro behind that heifer or not. Bach a aire will often produce heavy milker* from low producing mother*. We hare had tbe experience of repeat ed Inatancea of tbla kind. Tbe cow. Barah of Jefferaon, though a pure .bred Guernsey, could not be made to pro duce over 229 pound* of butter a year. She waa bred to tbe prepotent *'.r» Eepenore 11. and produced the heifer Bernhardt, that yielded 401 pound* but ter fat in bar Brat milking period at Iwo years of age. This, with other facta derived from a etndy of eminent aires In our own herd ■ays the editor of Hoard'a Dairyman, where we have bred *v*ry member of It but one bull and two cowa, convince* us that tb* groat and preponderating Influence In ahaplng the character or tbe coming cow la tbe aire. There fol low* then tbl* conclusion: A poor aire, poor cowa; a good aire, good cowa. Tbe dominant Influence of tbe aire la eeoa very dourly In the breeding of grade herds. How often do wp aee tbla abown in the placing at tbe bead Photo by Connecticut Agricultural coll*#* The Jersey cow has ter geasm tleas been bred for a mUk o»lr*ia* t» risk la fat rather than quantity, ■he will produce a hundred pound* of butter tram lass milk than any ether breed, wtth the pesslble ea csptkm of tbe Guernsey. The Jar say Is *l*o tb* most tana clou a la milk. Although aha I* tha amalleet of the recocaisad dairy braeda. aha win ssstmUar* more feed for bar weight than any ether eow sad re turn a profit for It Tha flea Jer aey bull ahown la *1 tha toed of tb« Connecticut Agricultural oot i*tp*l * of a mixed lot of very medlnm cowa a pure bred ball. Tb* reaultlng bdfer* la nine casaa ont of tea abow tbe Mood Of the air*, and tb* Improvement of tbelr milking qoaUttos or«r their scrub ■other* ai*o demonstrates it Keep right aa with tbaaa heifer*, breeding them and tbdr dsacsndante to pare bred slrta In tbe same Ho*, wtth cooataat weeding oat of tbe lafe (tor ones aod la • few yean yon have a bald of gnat producers at tbe palL The groat difficulty la tbla matter to that farmer* and many border* eves do aat value highly enough tbe Impor tance of the aire, la making a eeieo ttoa by purchase tbe overruling consid eration with them to not quality first aad price next, but rather the reverse Thto romlnda ua of a rwnark once mad* to n* by a very noted brooder of trot- The Door Of Unrest ' •. *>- I Strange Hallucinations of a Remorseful Shoemaker By O. HENRY Copyright, 1111, by Doubled*?, Pag* 4k Co. I sat an boor by *un In the editor'* room of th* Montopolls Weekly Bugle. I wa* tbe editor. Tbe saffron ray* of the declining •untight filtered through the corn •talk* In lllcajah Wlddop'a garden patch and cast an amber glory upon my paate pot 1 aat at tbe editorial desk In my nonrotary revolving chair and prepared my editorial against the oligarchies. Then In from the dusky, quiet street there drifted and perched blmielf upon a corner of my deek old Father Time'* younger brother. Hl* face waa bcard toee and aa gnarled a* an English wal nut 1 never saw clothea such aa be wore. Tbey would have reduced Joeeph'a coat to a monochrome. Bnt tbe colore were not the dyer's. Stains and patches and tbe work of sun and mat were responsible for the diversity. On hi* coaree cboea waa th* dnat, con ceivably, of a tbouaand league*. I can deecribe blm no farther, except to aay that he wa* tittle and weird and old old I began to eatlmate to centnriee when I aaw blm. Tea, and I remember that there waa aa odor, a faint odor Uke aloea, or poealMy Ilk* myrrh or leather, and I thought of moaenma. . "I aa glad to eee you. dr," I aald T would offer yon a chair, bat—yon aee. sir." 1 went on. "1 ban lived la Montopolle only throe week* and I bare not mri many of oar dttoena." I toned a doobtfnl eye upon hla dnat atalned shoes and coadaded with a newspaper phraae. "I suppose that yon roe Id* In oar mldstr My visitor fumbled In bto raiment drew forth ■ soiled card and banded It to aw. Upon It waa written, la plain bat unsteadily formed character*, tbe name "Mlchob Ader." "I am glad you called. Mr. Ader," 1 aald. "Aa one of oar older citizens you must view with pride the recent growth and enterprise of Montopolt*. Among other improvement* I think I can promts* that th* town will now be pro vided with a live, enterprising aaws- Pa"- **Do ye know the aame on that eattir asked my caller. Interrupting me. "It to not a familiar one to a**," I ••Id. Again be vWted tb* depths of bto aa dent vsetmanta. Tbla time be brought eat a torn leaf of tome book or Journal brown and Otawy with age. The hssd- Cblldren are much more likely to contract the contagious dis ease* when they have cold*. Whooping cough, *carlet fever, diphtheria and conaumptlon are di*i a*ea that are often contract ed when tha child ha* a ©old. That to why all medical authori ties aay beware of cold*. For the quick cure of cold* you will find 1% «I iuu pug© was tne luntisn Spy In old *tyle type. Tbe printing upon It wa* this: "There to a man come to Pari* 1a this year 1643 1 who pretend* to have lived these sixteen hundred year*. H* say* of himself that he wa* a shoe maker In Jerusalem at tbe time of tb* crucifixion, that hla name la Mlcbob Ader and that when Jesus, the Chrto tlan Meastaa, wa* condemned by Pon tin* Pilate, the Roman president, h* paused to rest while bearing hi* crosl to the place of crucifixion before tb* door of Mlchob Ader. The shoemaker struck Jesus with bis flat, saying: "Go,- why tarrlest thou?' The Messina an swered him, 'I Indeed am going, bnt thou shalt tarry until I come,' thereby condemning blm to live nntll the day of Judgment. - lie lltes forever, but at the end of every hundred years he fall* Into a fit or trance, on recovering from which be finds himself-in the same etate of youth In which he was when Jeans suffered, being then about thirty yearn of age. . . "Such 1* the atory of the Wandering lew, aa told by Mlchob Ader, who re totea"— Here tbe printing ended.' I must have muttered aloud some thing to myself about tbe Wandering Jew, for the old man spoke up bitterly and loudly. " Tla a lie," aald be, "like nlne-tenthf of what ye call hlatory. 'Tla a gentile I am, and no Jew. I am after foot- In' It oat of Jerusalem, my son. but tf that makea me a Jew then every thing that comes ont of a bottle Is ba bies' milk, re have my name on tbe card ye hold, and ye have read tbe bit of paper tbey call the Turkish Spy that printed the news when I stepped Into their office on the 12tb day of Junft In tbe year 1043, Just aa I have called upon ye today." , I laid down my Pencil and pad Clearly It would not do. Here waa an Item for tbe local colnmn of tbe Bngl* that—bat It would not do. 1 was trying to think of aom* con. variational anbjcct with which to In terest my visitor and wa* healUtlng between walking matches and tbe plioceoe age when tbe old man sod denly began to weep poignantly and flirt naafnllj "Cheer op. Mr. Ader," I aald. a little awkwardly; "this matter may blow over In a few hundred year* more. Tbero baa alroady been a decided re action In favor of Judfl* Iscariot and Colonel Burr and the celebrated violin tot Sign or Nero. Tbla Is the age of whitewash. Von most not allow your adf to become downhearted " Unknowingly I tad struck a chord. Tbe old man blinked belligerently tb rough bto senile tears "Tla time." be said, "that tbe liars fee doln' Justice to somebody. Ter his torians are no more than a pack of old women gabblln' at a wake. A liner awn than tbe laperor Nero nlver wore ■aadato. Man. I was at tb« burn in' of Effect ef Dehorning * Bull. It to • somewhat deoataole qnestloa Whether dehorning a boll Injure* hla character ao that It will have any ef fect upon hi* breading power*. Some aheerver* sad careful breeders rather favor tbe opinion that dehorning a ball takes away from him certain traits or at least modifies them to such .aa ex tent that his breeding powers are more - niTr ( ,n^tofig"en,Tu ** "SHSF" Laxative Fruit Synip P T'.V graham DRUG CO. I BLANK j BOOKS Journals, Ledgers, Day Books, Time Books, Counter Books, Tally Books, Order Books, Large Books, 1 •' Small Books, Pocket Memo., Vest Pocket Memo., &c., &c. For Sale At * The Gleaner Printing Office Graham, N. C MH. FARMER, GET WISE, ADVER TISE. Beventy-flve per cent of the adver tisers In the Loudon (O.) Democrat are farmers. They are wise to the quickest, slick* •at, easiest way to get bon ton trade, to keep goods moving out and the cash coming in. No, Mr, Farmer, advertising wasn't Invented for the exclusive use of the town merchant to boom business any more than yon were born to stand in ■ curbstone market and freeze off your nose and toes waiting for customers to meand;r along to bny your bntter and eggs at any old price. The prosperous merchant smile* when some fellow with cobwebs on his cerebellum asks, "Does advertis ing pay?" With him it's the sine qua non. Men who fail in business are often blamed for lack of business capacity when it Is simply lack of advertising sagacity. The farmer who advertises in a good medium and backs his ad. with a •qiinia deal lias n olnch. People do .not liny calico, shoes, stoves and paint every day, but every day "they must have eats. The farmer fteds the nation. The people depend ou him for bread, and titer* are always empty stomachs and empty pastry shelves for him to nu. With such continuous demand for bis product why should the farmer travel In th:it same old rut to market ar trnde tils products at the cross roads store or get gold bricked by the city' middleman when an advertise ment will bring hl.m into quick com munication with his customer, build ny a bon ton private trade, give him high er prices and save him so much time, wear nnl tear? The modern newspaper is a business miracle worker, and It not only works wonders for the town mercbnnt, bof for the fanner as well. FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. A tw'o-yr ir-old White Rock hen in the Missouri eps contest laid eighty two eggs In consecutive diiys and up to date of report with her 179 etrgS'Witg ahead of the whole buncb which contained many pullets. It has been demonstrated that hens vary In the time of their top notch perform ance, some doing the trick in their pul let year and others waiting to that pe riod when Dr. Osier would give it to everybody In the neck. One thing the egg laying contests demonstrate—viz. that members of thf. nme breed differ in laying capacity. At one plat e a breed lends, and at an other competition the same breed Is tbe tailender. Tims it does not depend on the breed name, but the strain of' that breed, for a good record. Professor IJpplncott of the Kansas experiment station has been conduct ing egg candling schools throughout the state for the instruction of all per sons deallhg In eggs. By tbe old plan tbe wholesaler only candled eggs and the customer eventually paid for the rots. All the states should give this Instruction. Some hotels refuse to buy docks un less guaranteed not to bare been fed on flah. How different from the day ■when the puddle duck was In rogue! It liTed on moileta. tndpolos, frogs and water sklptier* and was considered an epicurean perfecto. There Is a marked difference In the appearance and flavor of eggs preserv-. Ed with lime and water glass. The wa ter glass eggs are nluioat like new. and then It Is so much easier and more pleasant f* tbe operator than the old, disagreeable, dauby lime method. The old hens and pullets snould be 1 penned separately-* Tlie pullet* should be fed liberally, as they hare not at tained full growth, lint a lavish ra tion for old hen* means overfat, few aggs °nd dlsMKp. Fire thousand dollars waa voted at] thfr American Poultry association meet-, (ng at Nashville (or (be publication of • "Utility Htnndard." If this book la prepared by practical poultry men and aoid at a rvauonatito price It will bare •n Immense sale. Tbe Jewish holiday trade make* a big cut tuto tbe dock population, but some farmers will bold on to docka with tbe false Idea that there la mow In them at Thanksgiving. They thus must expend two months' mora labar and feed, often mast sell for leas and do not get the dock yarda Into rye to renew them for tbe next season. Henri Rk bantam. n negro of Hon*. Qa., oenf«i»ed to ateallnjr 1,000 chick* ens In three months and making over |IOO per month through their aal* Flftj ehickena wa« often a night** kanL FttIEYSOBBOLSMIVE ran —men I fum* **4 ' vr - _' w ■ . •-.J.- •»-*»«-« v .-yrseadGs **•■ 41> SOUTHERN RAILWAY A Direct Lime To All Points NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, WEST. ' Very Low Round Trip Rates to all Principal Resorts. Through Pullman to Atlanta leaves. Raleigh 4:05 p m arrives At lanta 6:36 a. m., making close connection for an arriving Montgom ery following day after leaying Raleigh, 11:00 a. m.. Mobile 4:12 p. m., New Orleans 8:20 p. in., Birmingham 12:15 m, Memphis 8:05 p. m., ypnmm City 11:20 a. m. second day, and connecting for all other points. This par also makes close connection at Salisbury for St. Louis and other Western Points. Through Parlor Oar for Asheville leaves Goldsboro at 6:45 a m„ Raleigh 8:35 a. m., arrives Abbeville 7 .40 pm„ making clone connec tion with the Carolina Special and arriving Cincinnati 10:00 a m following day after leaving Raleigh with close cv.unectiou for all points North and North-West. . ' Cullman for* Winston-Salem leayet. Raleigh 280 a m. t arrive* Greensboro 6:30 s. m., corSfehWfcfcr all points North, Soneh, East and West. This car is handled on trS^jil-leaving .iolidsboro at 10:45 p. m. • If you desire any information, please write or call. We are herew furnish information as well as to sell tickets. H.F.CARY, J. 0. JOljfES, T. P. A., General Passenger Agent, 215 FayetteviUe St., Washington, D. O. Raleigh. N. C. ■ bO VEAOS -n JLrnol A BAL&» ■ Worronted To Cure ■ ALL SUMMER SICKNESSES BY| I Graham Drug Co. I 'John Beatl Sneed, a wealthy West Texas ranch owner, has been acquitted of the murder of Al. Boyce, Jr., at Amarillo, Texas, last year. Sneed shot Boyce to death at the first meeting of the two after Boyce eloped with Mrs. Sneed about a yean before the killing. Al. Boyce, Jr., was the second member of th"e Boyce fam ily Sneed had killed on account of developments following the elope ment. $lO0 —Dr. E. Detchnn's Anti Diurectic may be worth to you more than SIOO if you have a child who soils bedding from in continence of water during sleep Cures old and young alike. It arrests the trouble at once. sl. Sold by Graham Drug Co. A dispatch from London last week says the country residence of David Lloyd-George, British chancallor of the exchecquer, was practically destroyed Wednesday by a bomb which the police say was placed there either by mini itand suffragettes or their male sympathizers. Nobody was injur ed, as the residence was not oc cupied. English Spavin Linimnet re moves Hard, Soft and Calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses; also Blood Spavins, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Ring Bone, Stifl«-s, Sprains, Swollen Throats, Coughs, etc. Save SSO by use of one bot tle. A wonderful Blemish Cure. Sold by Graham Drug Company. Sepia, the brown which Is used so much In |ij' t;nc ro!orl»c, Is secured from the citft'ulisli, Uoiiig the fluid that It eialta for the purpose of muddying the water wlieil It Is nttacked. "Stornge cgfc* nre sick" U the phrase used by the Packer to describe the ess situation n short time slate. It mlpht have added that the fellows who own the cold storage ipsa are a "good deal sicker." One of the chief diversions In the vl elnlty of Maiden Hock, W'ts.. Is rabbit hunting. The other day a group of men chose sides and hunted for two hours. The winners tagged sixty seven rabbits and the losers fifty-two. If the barrel of apples Is not being consumed at a rapid rate and tbey are not a long,keeping variety It la a good Idea to go over thetoarrel occasionally and see that those apples showing de cayed spots are removed for immedi ate use. Whek the thermometer is shuddering around 20 below zero the human does pretty , well If be keeps the boose Ores stoked ao as to prevent the water pipes and plants from freezing and keeps himself fed so aa to generate the bodily heat needed to make such weather en durable. Exercise is a good thing, but It is possible to get too much of it, as is true in the case of a number of other very good things. Sometimes boys, and more often girls, who ve of a frail and nersons makeup suffer serious in jury in participating in those sports that are really a tax on strong consti tutions. In man) sections of goat seems to be taking a place as the poor man's Cjfmf yjuod uillk animals may be lire in any place where a big dog car live. Almost any city back yard will ssrre as a pasture, while the lawn cut tings and a small ration of grain will Insure a regular and cheap milk supply. The unthrifty appearance of many young bogs'is doe to their being in fested with the long white worms which may he seen bottled op lu the window of almost any druggist who has a "worm killer" for sale. The medi cine which goes under this aside will kill the worms, and ao will a little tur pentine mixed in the alop with which the bogs are Jed. Having been quite successful in breaking the egg corner, the house wiTes' leagues of some of the larger cities are now tackling the apple sit uation. inasmuch as they think then, Is altogether too wide a margin be tween what the grower got for his ap ples and what the retailer is now sell ing them at. It Is fair to sesame that a measure of success wUI attend the I Very Serious It is a very serious matter to ask for one medicine and have the wrong one given you. For this reason we urge you in buying to be careful to get tho genuine— * THEDTORD3 ~«> BLAck- Bk^C-HT liver I The reputation of this oi.t, relia ble medicine, for constipation, In digestion and liver trouble k firm ly established. It does nri mitate other medicines. It la beltn than » others, or it would not bo the fa vorite liver powder, with » larger sale than all others combined SOLD IN TOWN Fa g l . ' , - wkkUMi/ OVER 66 YEARS' EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKI DESIGNS r rn?' COPVPIGHTS Ac. Anyone §«ndlng a sketch and * t»tlon may nnlnkly ascertain onr opinion frc. •tether an invention la probably patentable unnmunlca* tlons strictly confidential. HANDBOOK op Patent* Ment free. Oldest agency for securing batonts. Patenta taken through Munn A Co. receive ipecial notice without charge, In the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Larrest cir culation of any solentlflo journal. Tor \si a year: four months, $L Bold by all new* ilert. Indigestion w% and*-* e Dyspepsia "Kodol When your stomach cannot properly digest lfcod, of itself, It needs a little assistance—and this assistance is read ily supplied by Kodol. Kodol aaslts the stomach, by temporarily digesting all of the food in the stomach, so that thj stomach may rest and recuperate. Our Guarantee. gJVS yen are not benefited—the dramrist win at soee return jour money. Don't hesitate: say irnsrlst will »cll yon Kodol on these terns The dollar bottle contain, lib times ss BUMk as the too bottle. Kodol Is prepared st the Shssatertss st B. C. DeWitl a Co.. r Graham Drug Co. 1 Constipation "For many yean I was troubled, in spite of all 80-caUed remediealnsed. * At last relief andcure In thoee mild, yet thorough and really wonderfnl DR. KINC'B New Life Pills Adolph flchlnseek, Boßsto, H. T. —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 pity from 160 to 170 a month to beginners. The Tele graph Institute of Columbia, S. O. and five other cities is open ed under supervision of R. R. Of ficials and all students are placed when qualified. Write them for particulars. res Know What Vea Are Taklaf When you take Grove's Tut less Chill Tonic because the form ula is plainly printed on every bottle showing that it is Iron and Qainine in a tastless form. No cure, No Pay. 60c. Mr. H. B. Ounter, editor of the Winston Journal, has retired 'from that paper to edft the Insurance Forum, a trade' publicaUon de voted to the insurance field and development in the South and re cently established in Greensboro. John Parker, a colored employe of the John L. Roper Lumber Vicinity of riddled With bullets at that place last man named Lane* with an
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 20, 1913, edition 1
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