Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Dec. 4, 1913, edition 1 / Page 4
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STOMACH TROUBLE FOR FIVE YEARS Majority of Friends' Thou f kt Mr. Hofhet Would Die, B«t * One Helped Him to Recovery. Pomeroyton, Ky.—ln interesting ad vices from this place, Mr. A. J. Hughes writes as follows: "I was down with stomach trouble for five (5) years, and would have sick headache so bad, ,at times, that I thought surely 1 would die. I tried different treatments, but they did not seem to do me any good. I got so bad, I could not eat or sleep, and all my friends, except one, thought 1 would die. He advised me to try Thedford's Black-Draught, and quit Popular Talks cn Law THE UNPAID CHATTEL MORT GAGE. By Walter K. Towers, A. 8., J. D. of the Michigan Bar. Those who are fortunate enough to be possessed of real estate have an available . security when the/ they seek to borrow money.' But there are others of us Who' frfKf occasion to seek an extension of credit, who do not own land, or whose land is already encumbered by a real estate mortgage. Such a one may secure a loan by giv ing a mortgage on the family horse, or on the "farm machinery, or the stock in his store, as rity. Whether the paper which he signs as a mortgage transfers the title to the lender, giving him only the privilege of regaining ownership by repaying the loan, or whether the paper simply gives to the lender the privilege of tak-, ing the property if the debt be not paid, is not of vital interest to the average borrower as long us the result is practically the same. The courts of some states proceed along the theory that that a mortgage does one thing While those of the others take an oppo posite view. This difference in le gal theory is not likely to affect the man who gives a mortgage on his property very directly, un less that property is a female ani mal. Exery stock owner is famil iar with the rule of law that the offspring of domestic animals be long to the owner of the mother. So a calf or colt will belong to the borrower or lender according as the one or the other is looked upon as having title to the mortgaged nnimnl in that par tiular Jurisdiction. The preactlcal and proper way to meet the diffi culty is to avoid it b.v agreeing beforehand on this point and j having it specified in the mort gage itself. The point which interests a man who has given a chattel mortgage on his moveable property as secu rity for money due are with re gard to the payment of the mort gage oi the consequences in case he finds himself unable to pay on time. It is usually specified in the ortgage that the man who gives the mortgage on his property, who borrows the money—ln law he is called the mortgagor—is to retain' possession of the property covered by the mortgage. In the terms of the mortgage title is transferred to the man who receives the mort gage, and lends the money—the mortgagee. In practical effect the mortgagee has a superior sort of a claim on that property to pro tect the loan. If the loan ia not paid in full then he may enforce hia claims against the property. When the debt which the mort gage was given to secure is paid in full the claims of the mortgagee to, the property are destroyed and the mortgagor's title again be comes •'implete. • When the bor rower lu'lfes the money due In good and lawful currency—and money which is legal tender—and tenders It to the person to whom the money is due, on the day and at the place specified In the mort gage the .chattel mortgage Is dis charged. The amount muat be the the debt together with the proper interest charges and it must be def initely offered to the mortgagee held out before him. Though he he refuses to accept It the mort gage wHI, In most cases, be dis charged by this tender. The" debt Will still remain due but the mort gage on the goods will be dis charged and they will be free ' from incumbrance. . If the holder of the mortgage, the mortgagee has transferred It to another, and the mortgagor bas been notified .of it, he should of make the payment to'the present holder ol the mortgage. But If II he has received no notice of the transfer, and ia good faith pays O) uosjad MB °» -«»vo AJUOUI whom he gave the Mortgage, he will be protected" and the mort gage held diacharged. , It may be that both parties feel that the mortgaged property Is worth Just about the amount doe ' and the mortgagor is willing to have the mortgagee take it in full settlement and that the mortgagee Is willing to receive it. If this is done under a definite agreement the mortgage is discharged. | taking'other medicines. I decided to take his advice, although 1 did not have any confidence in it 1 have now been taking Black-Draught for three months, and it has cured me— haven't had those awful sick headaches since I began using it I am so Mtknkful for what Black- Draught has done for me." Thedford's BlacK-Draught has been found a very valuable medicine for de rangements of the stomach and liver. It is composed of pure, vegetable herbs, contains no dangerous Ingredients, and acts gently, yet surely. It can be freely used by young and old, and should be kept in every family chest Oet a package today. Only a quarter. j4l In most states It is held that once the mortgage has become past due, the mortg{j;or having failed to pay it in full'at'the time specified, the holder of the triOrf 1 - gage has become ownt-r of, the property and has this light to claim it without further ceremony. It is only necessary that he claim' it and take possession in a peace able manner. Jn a few states, as Michigan, North DaSota,' Nebraska, Oregon, Texas, and Washington, foreclosure proceedings, are neces sary Htffyre the holder ,»l a chattel mortgage can take charge of the property covered. But even though the mortgage debt Is overdue and the holder has taken possession of the prop erty, the mortgagor's right* are not at an end. He', stHl'has is known as an'equity of tioti—that is |be r has the right to redeem the property by paying all the money due, Including principal and interest and all necessary ex penses. The time within " which one tnay redeem after the day when the mortgage- -waa-. dutj, known as the period of redemp tion, i« fixed in a few- v states by a statute, S*t Jitv MaiffPf Massarttf setts, Minnesota |nd flfhode Island, where it is sixty days, and Ken-; (|itliy u where it is five years. In Oth'er states the courts allow they deem to be a reasonable time. I4iider> gll. |pe ciVc}ip>sfcnftl The mortgagee, the holder of mortgage has It within his power' {o cut. off thl* equity of redemp tion. Be may "bringforeclosure proceedings in a court of law by which the mortgage is definitely closed,* By ceedings dispositionals made.wfojhe the property at' a iffrtrtgafe Mile under the direction of the court. From the proceeds the expenses of the sale are paid, the nmobnt due the holder of the mortgage, under the mortgage Is paid, and if there is Mill u' balance remain ing it Js turned over to the man who originally gave the mortgage. By the terms of many mortgages of movable property the holder, after default of payment, has the right to conduct a public sale of the property for himself,' Without | having » reeoursf "to. »foreclosure proceedings. This sale rfiast lie fairly conducted In every regard, and should always -be' by public auction, though private sales 4r4 countenanced or agreed to by the mortgagor. • The proceeds of tlwv sale are disposed of in exactly the same manner as after a sale on foreclosure. Kither a foreclosure or • a sale- ssdsr •» power in »he the mortgage cuta off the equity of redemption. Thua It is io be noticed thit tjie mortgagor— the .map who gave the mortgage haa a very real inter est in the property, even after the mortgage la overdue. If It la worth more than the debt the sur plua muat be returned to him,-and ao lie haa an Interest in seeing to to it that the aale Is fai/ and for the highest possible amount. ' No tice should always be -given—the mortgagor of the sale of the mort gaged goods In . tlifie so that" he may attend. If the goodr do not bring enough to pay" the debt due the mortgagor Is'persrfnally liable for the balai6e, •- 3 * Mule aCofHtxxiOrrW* The Fr*nkilln County Circuit Court of Kentucky, had decided that a mule ia a common' car rier. under the term* of tlje ttynble indemnity clause of an accident In surance polcy. The original woi*d ln( of thla clauae *peclfed that the double indemnity would be paid if the Injury *a» jbn a " moving pubHc conveyance', propelled by mechanical power.*" For brevity thla Waa 'Changed td "common carrier", and tha point made by tha complalniant waa that he waa thrown off a mufe while rousing the mountains, where mule* are a common- ineatta ol con\e>anceu 1 1 Bitters 1 j Mod* A Now WanOfHlm. • "IwMwflartnffrom stints «▼ |cm*bwd and bMk£wrtjee H.• 1 h—-UT— -•I DESTRUCTIVE SOUTHERN CORN ROOTWORM . * • ' , f V^H. vnn ; _.r , Cornfield In Cotton 801 l . : The southern corn rootworm or bud worm, a destructive Insect that In fests the south, and especially North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkansas and Oklahoma, Is treated In JBulletln No. 6 at the department of agmfulture. The Insect has a greenish yellow east, la spotted twelve times and resembles the striped cucumber beetle. It not only attacks corn, but feeds on wheat, oats, rye, barley, buckwheat, alfalfa, cowpea, soy bean, clover, timothy, milo malse, Kafir pearl millet, vetch, Johnson grass and rape. The beetle has caoaed great losses to farmers especially in the south. It attacks particularly the young (row ing corn and ft does its greatest dam age in the'low damp lands locally known as "black landa." It eats di rectly through the outer walls of the base of the plant Into the heart, usual ly . just above the base of the roots. The female cotnmincee egg laying soen-after the first warm weather of spHos/ }>»/ 1 The rootworm has Its' natural anemlee among which are the bob white, California quail, prairie chick en, wild turkey, yellow-bellied sap- HO'a is ECONOMICAL ANIMAL NEGLECT OF PIGS IS FATAL ' «?' —,"" T K, ■ L >lfty-Two Per Cent of Food Eatsn by Maks Growth —Pig- ' uVirl Obtained by Expsrts. The American hog Is the most eco nomical of animals. Of what a horse eats St per cent.'goes to waate. Forty four .per cent, pf, the food consumed by oattle" Is similarly lost, and SI per cent, of'ill that sheep' take Into their stomachs. Only 12 per cent of what a pig eats wasted. Fifty-two per v ' . if j.'* Excellent Hog Cot J.l - oent. of the food eaten by a hog goes to make growth A Aheep utilizes only SB per cent, pf It# sustenance for growing'. Which mean's, of oourse, the production'of'meat '* These figures are obtained from re sent experiments made by govern ment expert*, who And, as a result qf their study, that the pig haa what they call an "economic superiority" even over poultry'.' That la to aay, It produces more m?at In proportion to t(s' weight, and the animal *Welghs mors In proportion to the amount of tood It consumes. Elghty.four per cent, of the carcaas of a hog la utilised as meat; of the beef Animal, 76 per cent la tdlble, and of the sheep only. 64 per cent Thus It appears that a greater percentage of pig Is available for food than of any other domestloated creature. Oslry Clssnllnsss. . Absolute cleanliness Is the first requisite In making good butter; sanl tanr surroundings come next, and right taaperatare, with attention to dstails la the cars of eream, third. We make Mtf H pounds each week, wrap It in parchment paper and aell direct to the conaamer. In order to keep a uniform color we use one to four drops of vege table coloring to the pound, the amount depending upon the time of ' * t tail Cows Often. ▲ subscriber wantb to know bow often cows should be riven salt, and It ffedlng it toe frequently has detrimen tal ettect upon the butter. Com should be salted at leaat enee a weak. The beet plea la to have aalt adder cover whom'the cows can go to It at wUI. Rock salt of oourse, la beat tor thla purpoeat• ■ ' Feeding Ceueta. It-It the tall feeding on good, aonnd food that makea tha paying differ ence between the plump, * til-teeth ered chicken* that Bofcuaapd the beet price aad the"le*a. thln-featherlng specimen* that are too often a drag oa the market. • !> C'tllforal* Wen** gerteeefy Altraei ■"A ahort time ago I contracted a severe cold which eettled on tty lung* and cauaad ma a "great deal of annoyanca. I wotHd have hale bad coughing tpellt and my lung* ware ao *ore and Inflamed I-began to be *erlo«al]t alarmed. M friend recommended -Charabfcr- Hn Cough Krmedy, aajlng *he had uaed It for year*.. I bought a bottle and .it relieved my cough thf firat night and In a week I we* rid of the cold and eoreneaa oT imy lung*." writaa Miaa Marl* Oerber. Sawtelle, Calif. F6r aale Iy all dealcra. adv. 'Andrew Joyner, Sr., the VateVan newipaper man of Oreansfcoro ha* fcipen offered a poaltton paying 15.900 a year with tha Panama Exposition at Sun Francisco. The place wa* offered to Mr. Joyner by hla old friend, J, Pence. 1. •_ Itch relieved in SO minute* by sucker, red-headed woodpecker, night hawk, kingbird, red-winged blackbird, oriole, rose-breasted grosbeak, cliff swallow and robin. The bulletin etatee that after having made its way into the crown of the young oorn plant the shoot la ruined and the plant will throw up worthless "suckers," which produce no ears and aeant fodder. In the light of all the information the department haa ob tained, it seems that the farmer's only hope of relief from the ravages of this pest ilea in so timing his planting in spring aa not to subject his crop to severe attacks. Nearly all the complaint* reaching the department from the south refer to crop* damaged by the beetle* In March and April. Therefore, tt pear* that there might be a possibility of preventing much of the lou to southern corn grower* by planting corn at a date that will bring the young plant* above the ground at a time after molt of the egg* have been depoelted and not so late a* to tnvlt* attack from the second generation which li evidently abroad In the field* In late June and early July. •light Mistake In Feeding or Water ing May Prove Disastrous—Al ways Exerclss Great Care. Many a fine litter of pigs Is lost by a little neglect at a critical time. A slight mistake In feeding or water ing the sow may prove fatal to the young pigs, and the greatest care should be exercised to Insure against loss. Even a coM drink given to the bow after farrowing often proves fatal to the pigs, and 'all liquid given to the sow for a day or two after farrowing should be slightly wanned, so that the chill is removed.' For the first twenty four hours after fafrowing give the sow no solid food; a warm drink with a handful of ground oata, short* or bran to color the water is all that is necessary. * x r The second day the drink ahould be made .soomewhat thicker, gradually in creasing the allowance to keep pace with thr demand* of the Utter. Should the aow lose a little ileah In the be ginning. all the better, for the danger lies In overfeeding, thereby cattalng fever, which 1* quickly transmitted to the pigs. A light, cooling diet la demanded, and aa the pigs become older and re quire more sustenance the food can be Increased'until the sow is on A full nutritious ration. Now get the early pullets into win ter quarters and feed them for eggs. • • • It never pay* to allow any animal to go into the winter ,in a poor condi tion. e • • When not too expensive, potatoes may be fed to cows in limited quan tities. e e e The beet plga are the oSaprlng oi mature mothers and vigorous young aire*. e e e If there were fewer whlpe la the world there would be fewer agly horse*. • e • A brood sow should have length o4 body, but not too high from ths ground. so e Arrange the feed and leading places so aa to have all thing* eoa vanient see Nothing la so well calculated U make pigs grow as a beunUful supply of sow'* milk. see la the fail la a good time to tol dresa the lawn with a good applica tion of mil rotted manure. a • Psmpneaa In the poultry bow* will canae lota" of trouble. Therefore, makt the root tight so that tt will be dry. i• • e A lot of extra nude bird* will light among themaalvee and worry the real of the flock and had better be dispose* of early. Hew to Bankrupt the Hectors. - A prominent New York phyaidan aaja. "If It were not for the ihln stockings and thin soled shoes worn by women the doctors woUl prob ably be bankrupt," When )rou contract a cold do nut wait for it to develop into pneumonia, iHlt treat tt at one*. Chamberlain's Couch Remedy |a Intended eape clslVjr for cufhs and colds, and has Woo a wide reputation by its Cure* of these dlseaaea. It ia most effectual and I* pleasant and safe to take. For sale by all dealers adv. The Blkin Tribune says that Mir. Valite Tale, M years old slashed his throat with his knife with sui cidal intent and died two days la ter. He was In bad health and his tnind had become unbalanced. t* Osrs a CsM la Ow Day. Take Laxative Brotno Quinine Tablets. AU druggists refund the gl —'■ Advertising Talks ' ii i, =ii ATTRACTIVE STORE AIDSADVERTISING Dealer Should Make Plaoe oi Business One People Turn to Naturally. One of the corners a few blocks from our factory 1* especially well lighted, hjti an observant manufactur er. It baa a large electric arc light and one of those small gas street lamp*. If you were to walk by there any of these warn summer nights, you couldn't help but notice the flying army of etectrlo light beetles and oth er Insects that are attracted by the bright light. But they all keep near the big are light, although now and then a couple of big hard-shelled beetles will fly down around the small lamp post They never s4em satisfied, however, with Its flickering, so In a very little while always buiz back to the strong glow of the are. They just naturally atlck around It, not because they do a lot of thinking, but because Its bright neti attracts thfPi, Hare'f a thought that occurred to me when passing that corner the oth er night: . i The dealer who. will make his store so attractive that people naturally turn to It as TDD place of town, where things are always reliable and where they wIU be never disappointed, that dealer will draw trade from his more shlfUess competitors as surely as the big are light attracts the Insects from the lamp poet's flicker. And do you know the best on earth to make your stove most attrao tljeT Good advertising Is the answer with emphasis on "the "good." To be good, advertising most be truthful, so If you advertise to Impress people with the fact that they are welcome In your store and that you are offering excellent values, then your store must really be attraotlve, speaking a wel oome at all times, and your stock must really be as line as you say It Is. 1 If your store cant stand for good advertising now, flx things up and then go at the advertising strong. Use newspaper spaoe systematically, with new copy for each ad. Always have a good window display and change them as frequently as possible. Then when people get Into your store, where they are made to feel welcome and at home, don't you think they wIU be glad to buy, and to come again T Good advertising does pay—lm mensely! Tears ago many a mer chant was a good advertiser, but didn't know It HIS personality, his methods of doing business and his store were hlj advertising mediums. Now we are Hiving In the second decade of the busy twentieth century, and we've got to do our advertising, like everything else, In an' up-to-date way If we expect to keep In the race. Develop then, all the good points of the old tithe merchant and add to them the printer's-ink-sort-of-advar- Using, which would have made the old timer so much more suooessful. and without which the modern merchant cannot arrive at his beet It requires nothing more or less than the appllcaUon of the little les son we have learned from the arc light and the lamp post: The biggest | brightest and most attractive com pels Interest and holds the crowds. - Human Note Pays. The medium being right the most oommon source of failure In new* pa per advertising la the lack of human slement In the copy. Too many advsrtleera walk on stilts when they get Into print ~ It Is the human note that pays. " The man who make* his "ads" Interesting, and puts them In en Influentlsl newspaper, never lacks readers and always gets satlsfactonrreturne. How—t Advertising. The only idTHtWai that jtn to kotM advertising. This principU U so wall understood by bullosas rasa today, that most of ths advertising dona to the oolamns of tkf re potable MWptpwi li hon—t Cfcoeiurioiuriljr, however, aa .ansnriipuloae man tbtoks ha oan deceive his castomsra and (si away with It Any temporary noes— that he may have Is at the exposes of the honest advertiser and of the pab- Ucatloa whose oototnns ha helps to discredit " To pot the dishonest advertiser oat of baslmss to ths aim of all rapatable advertisers and pabUcatlona. Print er's Ink has been wodarttm a earn pfip (of apUa* dUhon eat advertising. This wtotar two rtatae, Ohio aad Hlnneeota, have an aoted the tow which Printer's Ink had drafted. Thto tow provldea that the pano* or firm responsible for "an trae, deceptive or mlalsa'dlng adver tising" shall bs guilty of a mlsds ■Manor. Pits Hl* Cue Exactly "When Utter was sick about six rears ago he read an advertise ment of Chsmbarlain's Tablets in the paper* that f|t his case ex actly, writes Miss Margaret Camp bell, of Fprt Smith, Ark., "He pur chased a box of them and hat not been sick since. My sister had stomach trouble and was also ben efitted by them." For sale by all dealers. adv. In Stanley «oi|t7 the 3-year-old child of Mx. and Mrs. John Low der accidentally tell into a bar rel of boiling Vater which waa prepared to eeal a hog. The lit tle one lived only a few hoars. Cared livsr plaint. "I waa suffering with lieer com plaint' "says Iva Smith, of Point Blank, Texaa, "and defied to try a Uc box of Chamberlain's Tat£ leta, and am happy to say that I am completely eared and can rec ommend them to ever one." For .sale by all dealers. adv. tws iti tain am i «i mur CLOSET IS OF NO ADVANTAGE I Actual Test Demonstrates Poultry De > Better Without Curtain—Found to Be Unnecessary. t In the curtain-front type of poultry | house-used at the Maine experiment station a feature of the orlglnM plan j on which considerable stress was laid was the canvas curtain In front of the | roosts. , This curtain,'together with the back wall of the house and the droppings board under the roosts formed a closet In which the birds were shut up at , night during cold weather. When the I curtalaJront house waa first devised It . was thought essential to provide such t a closet to conserve the body«heat of t the birds during the cold nights when , the temperature might go well below , sera Experience has shown, how ; ever, that this was a mistake. Act . ual test shows that the roosting cloe i et Is of no advantage, even in such a severe climate as that of Orono. On i the contrary, the birds certainly thrive i better without the roost curtain than > with It It has been a general ob . serration among users of the curtaln , front type of house that when the i roost curtains are used the birds are ; particularly susceptible to colds. It Is not hard to understand why this . should be so. The air In a roosting : closet when It Is opened In the morn ing Is plainly bad. The fact that It Is i 'warm in no way offsets physiologically •. the evils of Its lack of oxygen and ex cess of carbon dioxld, ammonlacal va i pors and other exhalations from the bodies of the Urds. For some tWe past it has been felt that the roosting closet was at least unnecessary, if not In fact a positive evil, says a writer in the Baltimore American Consequently the time of beginning to closs the roost curtain in the tall has been each year longer de layed. Finally, in the faU of 1»10. It iwas decided hot to use these curtains at all during the winter. Consequent' ly they were taken out of the house, or spiked to the roof, as the case might be. The winter of 1910-11 was a severe on*. On several occasions the temperature dropped to SO degrees be low sero. yet during this winter the mortality was exceptionally low and the egg production exceptionally high. I In view of this experience the sta tion has decided to discontinue the use of the roost curtain, it would seem to be generally understood or at least unnecessary. MAKING ROOSTS MITE-PROOF Uprights Bet In Qusrt Cans 'of Water I With Kerossne on Top Prevents Progress of Parasites. ' (By L H. COBB, In the Farm and Fire side.) I' Anyone who has tried to clean out the mites from roosts that are built In to the hen-house will appreciate the I simple plan given below. I make my sets of roosts sir feet high, with three Mite-Proof Roosts. ; two-by-two-inch roosts. The uprights i are set in quart cans of water with a ; 'half Inch of kerosene on top. Mites cannot get on this roost unless car- ( rled there by the hens, and it can be { easily taken through any door and , ; cleaned. 1 IDODUrarNOfKI It takes 28 days tor a dock egg tq • • • Do not disregard breeds and keep anything that Is a fowl. • • • The merits of the scratching shed are shows during had weather. • • • No one tarn Is large enough tar store than one variety of fowls. • • • Pay well for a well-bred mala, but do not accept i scrub as ■ gift • • • Have a clean, warm, dry plaoe with straw or ltttsr lor the roosting quar ters. e e e The avenge tanner who grows large crape of grain on his tans Is tIM poof cut footer • • • Coarse sand and gravel will reduce! the amount of grtt needed by the ' Cowls, tat cannot take Its place. | * ' • The ducklings will grow so large In ten days that the chicken tan cannot hover n domen —then yon may as well If yon can put two or three broods with one tan. • e t Keep plenty of water before the' duckri. Sadden death among the ducks can often he attributed to a lack of water. ( The 14th annual session of the Noerth Carolina Literary and Hit tori eal Society closed In Raleigh Friday night with the election of Dr. Archibald Henderson of the University of Noerth Carolina as president, to eacceed president Few of Trinity College, who would not accept another term. The event of the evening was the ad dress by Jusserand, the French ambassador at Washington. I. twwtiifciwa. I »"* Tinwi mnimiinn^ %,!Srisji I wxl T* P W. AJtAWt .. . Children Cry for Fletcher's Th«> iri«J Yon Have Always Bought, and which has been ■ in IN tor over 80 yean, has borne the signature of and has Veen made under his per* SV sonal supervision sine* Its Infancy. ' Allow no one to deceive you in tills. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good " are hnt Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria Is a harmless substitute forXtestor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age Is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years It lim been In constant use for the relief of Constipation, . Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. .The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS the Signatureof^^^_ The Kind Yon Have Always Bought In Use For Ovor 30 Years TH» ! 61), SOUTHERN RAILWAY 1 Direct Line To AH Point* NORTH* SOUTH, EAST, WEST. .. / Very Low Round Trip Rates to all Principal Resorts Through fyllman to Atlanta leaves, Raleigh 4:05 p. m arrives At lanta 6:35 a. m., making close connection for an arriving - ery following day after leaying Raleigh, 11:00 a. in., Mobile 4:12 p. m., New Orleans 8:20 p. m., Birmingham 12:15 m., Memphis 8:05 p. m., Kansas City 11:20 a. m. Becond day, and connecting for all other points. This car also makes close connection at Salisbury for St. Louis and other Western Points. Through Parlor Car for Asheville leaves Goldsboro at 6:45 a. m., Raleigh 8:35 a. m., arrives Aeheville 7:40 p. m., making close connec tion with the Carolina Special and arriving Cincinnati 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 close connection for all points North, Soneh, East and West. This car is'handled on train 111 leaving Goldsboro at 10:15 p. m. , sir If yon desire any information, please write or call. We are here to furnish information as well as to sell tickets. H. F.CARY, •J. 0. JONES, T-P. A., General Passenger Agent, 215 Fayetteville St., Washington, D.«G. Raleigh, N. C. 1 English Spavin Linimnet re-1 moves Hard, Soft aod Calloused Lamps and Blemishes from horses; also Blood Spavins, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Ring Bone, Stifles, Sprains, Swollen Throats, Coughs, etc. Save SSO by use of one bot tle. A wonderful Blemish Care. Sold by Graham Drag Company, adv ' ' Madam, Read McCali's The Fashion Anthority MoCALL'3 k a kr t e. artfctk, kaixi sonlely Hl—Urated 100-pag* monthly M«nihw that It addiat to the happl aw and efficiency of 1.100,000 Wnsssn cock men l h. Kach Issue Is brimful of ftwlilon*. fancy work, Inter*"!' N* fheft gU-rU *. ami KKKM of labor-savin* and mow y-eavlng klent ta women. Thcr* ar«» more than 10 of UM newest denims of the celebrated McCALL PAITKI'.NB la each Issue. McCALI, PATTERNS am fttmoos Ihr . style, At, simplicity and euuoin/. Only 10 and 16 ceuu oacti. The pfiWKh jrs f McCALI/8 will spend thoumnris of rinlliini extra In therotnln* mouUu In order u> ke»p MrtMLL'ri bead and shoulders atmu* all otfwr women's macaalnes at any rrl«-e.e» However. McCALI/B Is ouJy U*i a year; ponlUvsly worth 11.00. Tea ll** S»*e* Ox jM*ef Patera ft** from yotur flntf copy of li«CALL*B, If rim aubacrtbe quickly. m MM mmm t» DOTt-Mlitilwanri UlUU'lnMa. fat m (irrmuv cmtab>ru« hm»li cap* mi feS> tna ceMktfur aM IfM M aeaasM. This School is Supreme InTeachingLawbyHaD ITHE ORIGINAL SCHOOL] m ' trt ytAPS oto.HAi.ON ARNOLDS; A BALSA) I r£^*'™" EiSES 1 Eflglamfa HiflMt Pttai Scafell pUus, in Cumberland, SAO toK high, la the loftiest point la Bar luA Canada's Militia. All able bodied ettteena of Oaaada are liable tar "»IHH«I ""T* l tba a«e of elxtr. SUB3CRIBB FOR TELB^ dLBAKBB, BLANK BOOKS Journals, Ledgers, Day Books, Time Books, Counter Books, Tally Books, Order Books* Large Books, Small Books, Pocket Memo* Vest Pocket Memo* Ac* Ac. For Sale At The Gleaner Printing Office Graham, N.C I Very Serious U to a very aerloue matter to aek tar one waMrlia end have the woof one (iveo you. For thia taaeon we K|e you in buying to to careful to get iba genuine— BLACK-&HT Liver Medkiae I- The reputation of thie oi l, reUa bla medicine, for conatipa?ion, fat. SfeMfanantSver trouble. la «rm ]r eerebrtahed. ltdoeanot Imitate Other medic! nee. It la bettri than Other*, or it wopld not be the fa. wertoe Irree powder, with a larger aale thaii all othcra combined. SOU) Pi TQWM w / , WUMLD, OVIR j|^^^Hkt(KMOICC "oUSsvI
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 4, 1913, edition 1
4
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