Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Dec. 25, 1913, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE GLEANER ISSUED EVKRY THIWBDAY. J. D. KERNODLE, Editor. •1.00 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE' ADVBKTIBINO RATES One square (1 In.) 1 time tI.OO, -r«cj Mb fj i jat Insertion Ml cent*. For mora spare ' aud longer time, rates furnished on applica tion. Local not'ees 10 cts. a line for first nsvrtlon : subsequent Insertions 6 ct«. m Una irauslent advertisements must be paid tor advance \ The editor will not be responsible for ,-||ws expressed by correspondents. ■ntered at the Postofflce at Oraham. N. C.. as second cist" matter. GR\H VM, N C., I).«c. 25, 1913. Reports from all part* of the State indicate that the shipments of liquor into the State hav? been unusually large. It will take more legislation than mere State laws to make North Carolina a prohi bition State. The names of W. T. Dortch of Goldsboro and Charles A. Webb of Asheville fur United States Mar shals, and Francifl D. Winston for District Attorney for the East ern District have been sent to the Senate. The name a of W. C. Ham mer for District Attorney was not sent in. D was expected the nom nees would be confirmed Monday, but there is a "hold-up" from the Republican side. The currency bill was signed Tuesday evening by President Wil son, iind is now the law of the land. It passed the House Monday night by a vote of 298 to 80. Sen ator Simmons in recognition of hiß splendid leadership in passing the tariff and currency bills received UIOJJ H)|uuq) ;o ojou i|DBJ£o)NT> uu P/esidcnt Wilson. While dire pre dictions were made if the currency bill became a law, still the great money center of New York does not seem to be disturbed to any appreciable extent. Associate Justice Hoke of the State Supreme Court, who has con tinued bis home in Lincolnton since he has been on the Supreme Court bench, has hutlt a home in Kaleigh J ! nto' it. When Judge ShaW concluded his work as presiding judge of Guil ford Superior Court last week the members of the bar presented him with a handsome gold cano and county officers gave him a hand some gold mounted umbrella, In token of their appreciation of bis courteous and kindly treatment u>. all while holding the courts for the last six months. The liquor shipments Into Char lotte are immense, and the Obser ver says it is*estimated that du ring the season Just prior to Christmas the express liquor ship ments amount to something like t&0,H00 a week. A. M. Todd, convicted in the Federal Court in Greensboro of participating in the hold-up and maltreatment of Deputy Marshal Harkrader and Deputy Sheriff Da vis, in Surrey count.v last winter, was sentenced to two year* in the Federal prison at Atlanta, In Lincoln county recently n lit tle son of Ed Clark was struck by an aolomohile owned by Wright & Johnson, road contractors, and his leg broken. The boy's father has entered suit for tIO.OuO dam damages. , In South Hominy, Buncombe county, L. B. Young, 48 years old, wo* killed by a falling tree. He cutting timber and a sapling bro ken by a falling tree struck him with such force thut he died in a short time. The postmaster at New Bern 6 was recently fired for Insubordi nation and now the assistant post master has been asked to resign. A postoffiee Inspector who exam ined the office ia alleged to have reported that both the postmaster and his assistant were incompe tent. As he alighted Saturday night a Week from the ateps of a railway coach at his home in the town of Keyser, Moore county, George Blue, a negro, well known in Ral eigh, waa shot ( and killed by a bullet from an unknown source. Senator Hoot of New York, hav ing been suggested st the next Republican candidate tor Presi dent, took occasion to say In the Senrte lest week that he had no presidential arpirations and would not accept the nomination if U were offered to him Before this administration clcses, the Senator says he will l 7* j ears old and he could not renutt the service If chosen President. The temperance folks and the peace sdvocateanasked Secretary of the Navy fyaniels to change the custom of christening battleships by breaking a bottle of water on the ship Instead of a bottle of champagne and releasing a white dove as a peace emblem. The Secretary got out of It by 'saying he had nothing to do with it; that the whole christening business Is tn the hands of the contractors Who build the war ships. A colored woman waa arraigned In the recorder's court in Charlotte foe having in her possession morn liquor thun the law allowed— eight and tnree-quarter pints— fc more than a gallon. The plats I Wire staled bottle and the wo jr man's arton.ty, who knew a thing | or twe abbut the short measure I given by liquor dealers, demsnJcd E that the liquor be measured, fn ■ sto; J of having more than a gal g. lon accurate n>ea*ure showed that K- r iLti were nt.t pints at all and Itfet I the voman bad less than a gal- Christmas Time.. We have seen no more appropriate or finer sentiment of the Christmas season that in the following from the Southern Planter: Chrihtmas ib a very ancient feast,. made over and adapted. It therefore represents the feast-day spirit of cheer, gladness and merry making, which seems to have been innate in all ancient mankind worthy of being considered above the brute creation. "Except ye become as little children," —said the great Treacher. Becoming aa little children is truly the gist of Christ mas, the essential part of the feast. Not alone should we be as little children in the innocence and purity of our thoughts, but also in that fresh, frank, direct and unprejudiced way of the child in considering the every-day affairs of life. Here is a glad hand and a good Christmas wish to our read ers. If we have helped through the year in making labor more 'productive, and homes more happy, then we will claim a part in helping along the work of the Master, the spirit of Whose teach ings should be reflected in our Christmas celebrations. Facts About Colds. Idaho Board of Health. Colds are the commonest malady we have. Everybody should know the A B C's about colda. Here are put in practical form by an authority on the subject. , 11. Colds are shown to be con tagious, and, therefore, caused by germs bu the simple fact that they are "catching"; one can take cold from another person who has 'A cold. 2. Severe colds always begin with a sensation of chilliness fol lowed by more or less of a fever —chills and fever. That is the identical manner in which practi cally every Infectious disease caus ed by microbes begins ita career, 3. Like all germ diseases colds have a tendency to run a more or less definite course. They are sclf-imited ; that is. after a certain time they usually begin to recover of themselves. In this way a cold behave exactly as .-dp measles, chicken pox, scarlet fever, pneu moni, etc. 4. Like other infectious diseas es, colds may be followed by in flammatio'n in various internal or gans, producing congestion, of the lungs, liver, spleen, or kidneys. These secondary* results are due to the irritating effects of the poisons (toxins) of the germs circulating in the blood stream of the patient. These symptoms,, of secondary poisoning follow in the wake of attacks of diphtheria and fever. 5. Colds are shown to be infec tious by the ,fact that they are usually, sometimes highly, contag tagious; when we have a severe cold, We can give it to other*, to those individuals who are suscepti ble. 6. Colds, like other contagious muladies can be prevented, con trolled and regulated by Isolation and quarantine, and we ahould hasten the time when they will be thus sensibly regarded. 7. Colds are ihown to be more less infectious by the fact that they can generally, in their earlier stages be successfully treated and effectually absorbed by the use of nntiseptic nose washes and germi cidal throat gargles. That common colds fire of an in fectious nature is further sug gested by the well-known fact that ■ severe cold seems to confer a short-lived immunity upon its vibtim. That Is, a healthy, robust person, who is. Just recovering from a very bad cold, i* not like ly to have another such attack for several months, maybe not for * full year. Some folks have their regular colds one* each winter; then they are seldom bothered for another year. Mr. McConba Had • RCMOO. Chairman McCombs of the na tional Democratic committee, who fused the appointment of ambas sador to France, makes the fol lowing explanation : "The poet en tails the expenditure of about SIM,MK> a year," he saM. "It pays I could not afford to scctept it. 1 sm going back to the practice of law, and I hope to make some money." Explanation sufficient. 1 i C. O. Harper, a white man, is charged with stealing c&tton from the cotton platform in Qaaton and reselling it. He confessed that he got four of the eleven bales that disappeared. fflftWr DREAD rating fromta by H making your blood rich, ■ puro and actio* to pro- IV oont eoldo, grippa IV and rhomnatitot* Good blood prevents aichneea and Scott m Efnaltionwill energize your blood and create reserve ■strength to endure changing Scott's EmmUon ie not an experiment but has served humanity faithfully for forty yews; it eoutaine the purest cod liver oil—free Cram greatest blood-maker and furnishes tJrs asrsitSS circulation. * *iS. W w gwwmmwom sjcwi m fiNMMgd AT AMY DWUa «TCH»S It-Tf Five Thousand Miles of Working Child Labor Committee Press Bu reau. The procession of working chil dren in America if placed twelve feet apart in tingle file would reach from San Francisco to Boa ton and thence to New - Orleans. To shorten the procesaion until it dwindle* and disappear! the Na tional Child Labor Committee ssys needs to have not 7,60# members, but 10,000, or ene for each half mil* of theae children. The last number of the Child La bor bulletin give* not only several articles of general Interest, and the annual report of the National Child Labor Committee, but also a brief Review of the Committee's plana. First and foremost an abaolute 14-year limit for all gainful occu pations without exemptions must be fixed in all States. At the same time, in order to make the legal age limit an established fact, and a sufficient protection to the child, every State law needs to be amended In some point concerning work permits. It is of next impor tance to regulate the work of all minors by a limit of hours, • 10 or 18* year limit for the dangerous trades, and by medical inspection of minors at work. The committee says that no minors should be al lowed aa a night messenger, and points out that only seven Statea have fixed a SI year limit for this work. " * V Reference is made to the need of discussing the opinion of edu cators and social workers, that there ia no that a child under 10 years can enter without harm. And a apecial plea for more membera of the National Child ,Labor Committee la baaed on the need of taking up with great er emphasis the matter of admin istration and enforcement of child labor laws and other aubjecta closely related to child labor, ouch as Industrial education and the problem of needy families whose children are forbldde.i to work. Haw's This? v Ws offer On Hundred Dollars Heward for ■ay eass of Usurrh that cannot be cured by Hail's Catarrh Cura. _ J,CH*N*r*(X).,ToI«IO,O. Ws, the undersigned, have known F, J. Chuney for the last M ysers, and believe UB perfectly honorable In all business transac tions ana financially able to oairy oat any obligations mads by kla Ursa. WALDISO, Kiss AS* MAITII, _ Wholesale Dnuvtau, Toledo, O. Hell's aslant Curs Is fans Msrnally TUs Hall's rsally Pills £ u Shelby Star- A negro named Bd Watkind, who works for th* Pilot Construction Company, engaged in building the Cleveland Springs road, atole t,V>, a watch and a. suit of clothes from the read camp Saturday night. He was caught at Cherryvllle and tried before Re corder Anthony, who. gave him four months on the roads. ■teasach Treahles Disappear. Stomach, liver ana kidney trou bles, weak nerves, lame back and female Ilia diaappear when Blectric Bitten are used. Thouaanda at wo men would not be without a bot tle ID their home. Blisa Pool of of DepeW, Okla., writes, "Blectric bitters raised ma from a bed of sickneaa and Buffering and. has done ma a world of good. I wish every suffering woman could nee this excellent remedy and find out, aa I did, iaat how good it la." Aa it haa neiped thouaands of oth ers, It will surely do the same lor you. Bvery bottle guaranteed. Mc and >I.H. At all druggists. H. B. Rucklen * Co„ Philadelphia or St, Louis. . adv. Miss Plomlc Btrnti, • nunc la Th« "hospital at Muton, tu burn ed to death Thursday ntfht a week. She was standing before ft* fire Just before retiring and her night drew waa Ignited. Mlsa Barnes waa I jreara old, an orphan, and had Just recently graduated as a nurse. Remains were burled at her old borne in Robeson couatjr. Uw Aln's Foot-Em. The snttanu* powder to hsshakse lato •• vIBIMB, ÜBOf Cardinal Ran) polls, formerly a prominent official of the household of the Pope of Rome, Is dead. He was a lending candidate for Pope when Pope Leo died, Mat fatted of election. -J .... CASTOR IA iKbhUittlOUliM. Tla KM YNHITI Alvtjt BnfH Items of News. county commissioners have decided to build a new )ail. . The Democrat says the mercury stood at S above zero in Boone Monday morning of last week. . Two negro children left alone in their home near Trinity, Randolph county, while their parents were st work, were burned to death. Brwin Mooney, J. A Lea and others shooting partridges in Per son county. Lea's gun was pre maturely discharged—Mooney kill ed instantly. In Bdgecomb county Jess Law rence, 17 years old, shot by the ac cidental discharge of a gnn in the hands of a 12-year-old boy, died of blood poisoning. Mrs. M. L. Chatham of Oakwoods, Wilkes county writes the Blkin Tribune thst she has a cow that produced from April 6 to Decem ber 5-*elght months—J76 pounds of —butter which she sold for Si cts. a pound, making a total of $68.75. The Blkin Tribune says that Jim Hudson, the 30-year-old son of Bill Hudson, who lives in Union Cross section of Surrey county accident ally shot himself Monday of last wepk shot himself, and, died the nfx/ day. His gun was accidentally discharged while he was hunting. Jim Cameron, the negro who murdered In cold 1 blood lait Au gust, Archibald BMW, a prominent ot Moore county, last week wai convicted of murder in the first degree. Mr. Blue declin ed to advance money to the negro to take a package out of the ex press office snd the latter waylaid him and killed him. Ernest 1,. Mice, banished from the State in connection with a sen tence for selling whiskey in Row an county, gets a pardon from Acting governor Daughtridge in order that he and his family may return to Davidson county. Mize, it is claimed, is in the last stages of tuberculosis, and anted to come home - to . die. A dispatch from Newcastle, Col., says that 38 men were killed in Vulcan mine of the Rocky Moun tain Fuel Company, Tuesday a » eek by an explosion of coal dust. Two miners were rescued after the underground workings had caught fire. All the victim* were married and all but six or eight were Americans. The Spanish ambawador at Washington has conveyed to Sec retary Bryan Spain's heartfelt thanks lot- the attitude of the United State* towatds Spanish ref ugees from Chihuahua, Mexico. Similar action was taken by the Spanish minister to Mexico, who requested that the authorities in HI Paso, Texas, be thanked for kindness to the refugees. Complaints made to the Depart ment ot Justice at Washington that a peanut trust was fixing the price of peanuts in Bastern North Carolina, and depressing the price of course, resulted in an investiga tion. Agent* of the department report that, they are unabie to dis cover the existence of a trust, but that the price of peanuts seems to be fixed by the world's supply . Cleve Culbertson was convicted of mprderig three members of the DiUon family at Ray, North Dako ta. fiAd .sentenced to life impriaon «ot JM fl>e people were displeased wifch&e sentence and a mob took .Caltypftfon out of )ail and hung Tfi* New York committee on the prevention of blindne** sound* an Iran by the report that more than half the cases of eye weak ness among men of that city may lie traced to barber shops. It is alleged that bay rum and other face lotions used in some shops contain wood alcohol, and that the inhalation of the fumes or drops of liquid In the eye caused serious trouble. Fifteen persons were killed while playing baseball during the IMI season, according to figures com piled and published In Chiaago. Twelve of the victims were killed by being bit on the head with the ball direct from the hand of the pitcher. Fool tips were reeponsi for the other three deatha. The report points out that an of the players killed were unskilled in the game, and that BOM of the major league players received fatal In juries. , : It ia reported from Aaherille that John H. Carter, former prea ident of the Aaseriean Bank of AahevUle wak convicted a few daya ago in Gilmer county, Georgia, and as ■tanned to aerre two years on the county chain gang. Ha appealed to the Su preme Court of Georgia. Ilia charge a gal net Carter in Georgia is that he hypothecated about llr »o« worth of securities belonging to a small.bonk, and wrongfully appropriated it to hia own aae. Charge* of Irregularities la con nection with haaklag have ba«a brought against Carter eUewhare. If You Eat You Need Digestit Tbe New Relief for Indigestion !l haa been Mated that mm than are proof, Toa eaa try M for jrmreeH rwbiy million people la the Uaited without aay risk—lf It falls *• gtee S'ales are victims of aouie form of to- you absolute aatisfaeUou your money e.nti.M. The Americaa people do will be returned. Brown's Digestif la * not take time eooucht to sat. The re- little tablet eaay to swallow and abso snll Is stomach dlatreaa. gaa. hslditwt lately harmless. It relieves indigestion h d - «st ion and dyspspsla. almost Instantly, at ops food ferments in, jstlt Is the sow relief—it ha* tioa. prereats disuses after sating aad h.-en fouad a certain, quick aad par- cures dyspepsia You aaed It even iraueat remedy. Thouaands of people though y>u are not sick—lt aids dlgss bsve found relief from H% eee. Their tioa and (Ives you all the aourlabmeot op fjlf la our office ALAMANCB PHARMACY. "Movies" High, But Popular. Charlotte Chronicle. It is that the amount of mojey that annually goes from the pockete of the American people to tbemoring picture managers and promoters in the man of nickels ag gregates $3,500,000. This sounds like an enormous amount of money, ana it is, bnt the fact remains that the moving picture men are finding that this lacks much of being a clear profit. It costs something to pro duce the business they are securing The actors aro gradually making in creased demands on the manufactur ers. We are told that the picture of a parachute descent from the 37-story Rankers' Truat Building in New York netted the man who made the jump SI,OOO. A woman who risks her life in the lious' cages gets $lO,- 000 s week for her hazardous ex periences. ' According to the Boston News Bu reau the "Quo Vadis" film coat the producers not less than $280,000. The film waa manifolded into 400 copies of 8,000 feet each and sold at 25 cents a foot, for a total of SBOO,- 000. A steamer of 12,000 tons was sent to Iceland with a crew and a company of 400 to produce films for the drama of "Atlantic," at a cost of $225,000. The makers of the film showing Forbes-Robertson as Ham let, paid $75,000 for die use of a castle, and costumed 400 people for this purpose. The whole expendi ture waa $250,00), but they sold 3,000,000 feet of the film for $750,- 000,. 'The Tiger Hunt" film re quired an outlay of $236,000, but it also sold at 25 cents s foot. For making the film of the lamented Captain Scott in the Antarctic $250,- 000 waa expended, and the royalty already collected by Mrs. Scott ex ceeds the original poet of the picture. To actors of ability taking part in the making of moving picture films S3OO to SSOO a week is paid, bat freak persons get aa much as S3QO to SSOO a day. A legal holiday for rural mail carriers at Christmas is proposed in a bill bp Representative Young of Texas. Representative Small of North Carolina has introduced a bill to grant to mail carriers on Star routes the same holidays the same holidays as are now observed by rural carriers. For the. first time since the civil war the enlisted strength of the navy has pafcsed the SO,OOO mark. The total is 50436, representing a net gain of 2,068 since July Ist. last. year. Officials say they ex pect the navy in a short time to recruited to its maximum strength of 611,500. A bill giving San Francisco wa ' ter power and water aupply right* | in the Hetch-Hetchy Valley of ' Toulumner river, in the Yosemite National Park, passed the Senate ' Just before midnight Saturday by a vote of 43 to 25. The bill pre -1 viously passed the House in the ' same form and goes at once to the President for hi* signature. The fight excited national interest. Fire which started in the boiler room of a' laundry in Saliabury, Tuesday night of laat week threat ened the business section for a time. The barns of F. M. Thomp son and Dr. J. B. Council were burned and the Sunday School room pf the First Methodist church Was badly damaged, i The properties of the Worth Manufacturing Company, including a cotton mill at Worthville and one at Central Falls and land in ' Randleman were sold at auction Tuesday a week. Wiley L. Ward ' of Asheboro bid off the mills at t0,900, and the property at Ran dleman wae bid off by A. C. Marsh tor *M£OO. The Supreme Court has affirmed 1 the lower court in State va. Den | ton, from Bdgecomb county. Djn ton, a liveryman, is under sentence of a year on the roads for having in his possession 400 gallons of K [ quor. His stable waa searched and barrels of liquor found stored in | the hay. He explained that the li quor belonged to another party and that he waa holding it as se curity tor a loan, but the court didn't accept the explanation. President Wilson give* it out that he will grant no pardons du ring the holiday* (imply because It is Christmas, but ptiudon cases will be considered on their merits. Any other course, it is etated, would swamp the President with with a deluge of pitiful petikras tor freedom on the holiday, for no other reason than that the see of "peace on earth, good will to men," I* at hand. Bobt. Msrshsll, negro cook la lb* Kilt's dub in Colombia, 8. C„ wai shot and kilted Saturday night bjr tba accidental discharge of a piatol in tba hand* of Thoa. H. Peeples, Attorney General of South Caroliaa. Paeplea aaid hi* mother had to make an automobile trip with a strange chaffeur aad he pat the piatol to the automobile for her protection. When aha re* turned he took the piatol into the dab to put it away. A friend aak ad Urn to aeo the weapon, and i> handing it to him the piatol waa accidentally discharged killing the negro. Peebles waa released oa hia own recognisance to appear in court in January. Twenty-Five 31-plece Dinner Sets For GLEANER Subscribers Pay $2.95 and you gejt any set you want, and you get credit on The GLEANER for one year. ■ / " Beautiful goods. Will make a nice present, or give excellent service on your own table. This ware is bought and shipped direct from the factory, and you get it without paying a cent of profit. Each set is well packed in a box by itself, and will be delivered at THE GLEANER OFFICE, GRAHAM. - mix. *" . * *X'. 'I: ■ .L"' : .Hr, ■-$ •'• *, . ® Within sixty days there will be awarded to North Carolina young ladies ® © thousands of dollars in valuable prizes by the GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS. © I Contest is just starting in which you should become § I interested-Prize List is very attractive |. x Capital Prize - v - - - $1250 Case Automobile x 0 Grand Prize - SSOO in Gold Coin g) ® District Prizes .... 5 Awards of S2OO in Gold Coin © © ..... 5 Awards of SSO in Gold Coin ® © .... 5 SIOO Diamond Solitaires ® © Special Prizes - - - - S3OO. in Gold Coin © Pro Rata Prize ... . . - - SSOO in Gold Coin §; ® NO ONE WILL LOSE ALL WILL HAVE EQUAL CHANGH WRITE TODAY @ THE GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS ■ Incubators in Egypt %. Announcement is made by W. H. Cidnu, MI English investigator, that be has discovered how the ancient Egyptians Incubated chick en* to the number of 130,000,600 a year. Be haa found incubators which he states were used in Egypt 5,00 Oyears ago. The secret has been well guarded but it haa been laid bare at last. They had had no oil atovee, or gas or elec tric, heated incubator*, but they had oven* which worked much better, even though they required more conatant tending. Bach oven was calculated to hold 7,000 eggs, and the fuel by which it was heat ed consisted of ehopped straw and iong, but for the last ten day* of batch the energy was supplied by altogether by the chicken* them selves. It is the commonest er ror of those operating our modern incubators to use too much heat, especially toward the end of the period, and we may now learn from the old Egyptians how not to do things as well as bow to do them. The use of the straw and other light fuel shows that Egyptians were most careful to avoid too much heat at any stage, and the uniform success with which they met shames our modern progress and so-called sci entific achievements. We thought that we were the flret in the world to hatch chickens and other poul try'in incubators, but we are only about M eenturiee behind the times. Chairman M H. Justice of the special commission for adjustment of intra-State rates has changed the time of the hearings on the exceptions from December 17th to January ltth. This ia oa aceounty of tba let that the inter-State rates beglaaing Dec. IMb ia Greensboro. It waa found to be impoadble for Intaa-Stata Commerce Commisaion and tba a pedal commiaaioa to bold their baartega at tba aaaae time. Mr. Barle Marrow a prominent druggist of Haaslet, waa instantly killed at WUaaa Page seriously in jured Tuesday afternoon of testt weak when Morrow's automobile turned turtle. WH liana Dee ring, pioneer manu facturer of harvesting machinery, died laat week at Miami, Pla., and the remaina war* buried at Bvsns ton. IU. He staked hia fortune M yeara ago on tb* automatic binder dsvice for wh*at harvester* and Its aucceas revolutionised the method at harvesting tba CTOD.. Convict Got Judgment for Overtime. Shelby Star, 16th. A unique case wa» tried before 'Squire T. K. Baroett yesterday. Zem Hamrick, who was in the shooting scrape at Douglas Acad emy, near Lawndale, last Spring was given tour months on the road. An act passed by the last Legislature, to encourage faith fulness among the convicts, allows a discount of S days each month on their time for good behaviour and good work. Hamrick was worked the full four months, but claimed that he was entitled to re lease 20 days earlier because of his good conduct and good work, and sued the highway commissioners of No. • for IpO. The court allowed *3O, which was tt per day for his overtime. The commissioners took an appeal to the Superior Onurt on the ground that Hamrick's conduct did not entitle him t4> the discount on his time. 910*—Dr. B. Detchon's Anti-Diu retic may be worth more to you —more to you than SIOB if you have a child who soils the bed ding from incontinence of water dunDjr sleep. Cures old and young alike. It arrests the trouble at once. SI.OO. Bold by Oraham Drag Company. adv. The (ire insurance investigating committee employed by the lut Legislature, met in Raleigh laat week and employed Kitchin ft Manning aa attorney* to conduct the investigation. The committee decided to meet again February 8, "and will take up the investigation at that time pud continue until it is finished. VeaKaew What Yea Are TaLlag When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic becanae the formula is plainly printed on every bottle .ahowing that it Is Iron and Qui nine in a tasteless form. No cure, no psy.-Ne. adv. Haleigh Times: Supt. C. C. Wright of Wilkes county says compulsory education has had • remarkable effect there. Thirty new teachers have been required, and In some school districts every child of school age is in attend ance. This is also the case in sev eral districta in Wake, and there are several districta in which'there are more pupils In the echool than there are in the district, this be ing because the schools are so popular that children in other dis tricts are sent to them. Subscribe for THB QLBANER— SI.OO a year in advance. . ki ■ 1 Re-Sale o! Valuable REAL ESTATE. Because or advanoed bids, and by vlriue ol an order of the Superior Court of Alamanoe county, made In a ttpeclal Pro ceeding* whereto all the helra-at-law and widow of the late J. B. McPhcrnon were made parties for the purpose of selling for parti tion the real property of Mid J, B. MePher aon, deoeawd. In Alamanoe oounty, 1 will oaer at public sale, to the highest bidder, at the court houae door In Graham, N 0., at 13 o'clock M: on SATURDAY, DEO. 27,1913, tLe following described real property,to-wl t Tract 1 la Urahait township, Alamanoe eounty Mate of North Oarulfna, adjoining me laDds of h«lr» at H, A. Murphy.daceasad, and others: —Beginning at a poet oak tree corner with J. K. tiou. running thence N Ml I degrees W Ml chains to a rock In said Long's line on SFto a um ocr"w o^SfxTroaO; 81SKio°«'.&k tomHU™ ofay's line .04 links N W of a small white oak gSijlSßpe with said Wurphy'i line 8 88 dig llSJSeha to a rock on wast bank of Haw river, earner with aaM Muruht; theooe up ■r"l«r,«>enoe 8 «S> 4 deg K IS.BO obs to the heglnnlng. containing UUSacrea, asoreorless. Tract 1 gsspssre Mq MM, corner of J. a BoPharaae .04 Ik* 21 Wofa WUMt; t «T oha to a rook orironpolt taa mM heir*lioou>■ branch,oor nor with Mid Moor*; thenoe up hM branch « " JMMtora. as follow.: if n dec B I.M £•»«• *9* W roh. » n de« W1 JO eh. * * *"*H ■ «•« oha, M « dec * "•«!».** if w let ■ (IdeJTw m Ik *, * >9i*% J*£»•*."w*»i**.f? liH d«f w 1 ofc to » rook on mm btok of wldbriMk,tonld Loojl line.croer with thenoe H n dog ■ IMB eh. to a State la (aid Long's 11 oe, oorner with Mid JUPWnon; thenoe 8 11 dec Winch, to* r Oto^eomMr with atldMePhUMw; tteo.e t. a. tgSXEi, zs: ****** ow. third In twwlr. Thl. December S, Mil W«. I- WilD, OIMMw, WM. L W*id, Attoway. *-C. Constipation •Tor many troubled, in rssfesss WWSii"" k ™ , '" ,d DR. KING'B New Life Pills iMt* lUil—wt. 1*11,1,1 TTTTTTT IT! lITTTIHTWI ■— ——
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 25, 1913, edition 1
2
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