It Always Helps says Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., in writing of her experience with Cardui, the woman's tonic. She says further: "Before I began to use Cardui, my back and head would hurt so bad, I thought the pain would kill me. 1 was hardly able to do any of my housework. After taking three bottles of CarduL I began to feel like a new woman. I soon gained 35 pounds, and now, I do all my housework, as well as run a big water milL 1 wish every suffering woman would give * CARDUI The Woman's Tonic a trial I still use Cardui when I feel a little bad, and it always does me good." Headache, backache, side ache, nervousness, tired, worn-out feelings, etc., are sure signs of woman ly trouble. Signs that you need"Cardui, the woman's tonic. You cannot make a mistake in trying Cardui - for your trouble. It has been helping weak, ailing women for more than fifty years. Get a Bottle Today! MEXICAN REPUBLIC CONTAINS MILLIONS OF INDIAN RACE Problem More Complex Than That Which Confronted U. S. MANY INTELLIGENT TRIBES IMM AC* Mil In ■ tut* of Primitive Sevsger?. While Others Hava fol lowed Iha Waya of tha White Man. Naw York.—Hezloo'a Indiana pre kdl a problem vastly mere difficult and mora oomplei than any the Uni ted States bureau of Indian affairs ever tried to handle, says a writer In the New York Bun. In the first place thciro are more of them. There are now 200,000 Indians In the United Statea, while there are more than 5,000?000 pure blood Indians b«- tweon the Rio Grande and Uautemala besides a larger number of mestizos, • or mixed bloods. A coord In* to the best figures obtain able 84 per oent of the Inhabitants of Mellon (about 18,000,000 souls) are wholly or partly of Indian blood. This la SO time* as many Indians as are now tiring In the United States. Moreover, the Indians of Mexico have been more consplouous )n public affairs than the Indians of the T'nlted BUtea. Benito Juaros, the Mexican patriot who overthrew the Emperor Maximilian, waa a pure Zapotec. Man Bel Altamlrano, the Mexican author and critic; Husrta and Dr. Urrutl* are other Indiana. The prominence which things Indian hare In Maxioo Is dlffloult for the New Yorker who haa never traveled In that land to comprehend. The Mexicans )told an annual national festival In honor of their aboriginal haroea. do ■pito the fact that the dominant ele ment In the population la the strain descended from the Spanish conquer on. Tha Mexicans are aa proud of Montecuma and Ouatemotsln as th» Americans are of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. ■ven the national seal comes from the Asteca, who. tradition says, were Induced to settle on the marshy Islets which are now the City of Mexloo by a sign from thslr gods, an eagle perohed on a prickly pear strangling a serpent. Scholars have declared the Ax tecs calendar system waa superior to that In vogue in Europe at the time of Cor tes. The Mayas of Yucatan are held by some students to hava been even further advanced than the Inhabltante of tha Valley of Anabuac, or Mexico. But the Intelligence of certain In diana only emphasises the complexity of the Mesloan Indian problem. One ■tadsot of the languages of Mexico, whioh correspond pretty well with the tribal divisions, ooneludes there are 17 ikmlllaa of tonguee and ISO dialects. Theee dialects are not slight varia tions, however, bat present differences so great that a man knowing only one Maleot probably ooold not understand a man speaking an allied dialect Tha mountainous character of the country haa kept tribes apart aad emphasised their dlfferenoea. Association In Mex loo does not always mean the melting pot, however. One finds somstimes lfl|f m Ipm I 1 mii t jjf j| r * w!hA Typical Indian Woman of Mexloo. as many aa fMr tribes In tha same vil lage. Thay live in different streeta, each with lta own language, customs. In civillxxctlon the tribes run from the people of the oantral valleys and vis tne ways of the white men, to the wild canntVM Serl of Tlbuicn Island In the Gulf of California and tiie savages of lower California. The last named are among 'the loweat of the human race, nearly reaching the degradation of the Andaman Inlanders and the African buahmen. There arc fierce Yaquls with their enormous bows and arrows. These primitive weapons are even used by Irregular hands assisting the constitu tionalists. It must be remembered, too, that the punitive expeditions of Porflrio bias were never so extensive or effective as the expeditions undertaken In our In dian wars. Had the Indians stuok to gether Cortex might never have con quered them. In Spanish times the tribes were gradually subdued. The Maya tribes were beaten one by one. It Is significant that as late as 1900 there was organised Indian opposi tion to Mexico. In that year the Mexi can troops took the citadel of Chan Santa Cruz at the end of a long, hard campaign. President Wilson's hope In resur recting the Mexican Indians lies In a belief that with a restoration of their land their lost qualities will return. With his land gone the Indian has be come a peon, a dograded laborer. With land, he Is represented to have be,en a contented cottager, fairly virtuous and deeply religious. With a restoration of his lands, how will It be with the Indian? That Is the great riddle of Mexico. To get an Idea of the best that may be hoped one might turn to the pages . it ' Indian Child With Babe. of Diego Duran, the Bpanlsh mission ary, who wrote sixty years after the oonqueet: "There waa never a nation In the world where harmony, order and po liteness reigned so supreme aa in this heathen nation. In what country of the globe were there ever so many laws and regulations of the state at once so Just and so wall appointed T Wbeae have kings evsr been so feared and obeyed, their laws and orders so well observed as in this land? "In regard Indeed to their laws and anclsnt mods of living all Is muoh changed or wholly lost Nothing but a shadow remains now of that good or der. Our admiration la compelled by the strict account and oenaus which tbey kept of all persona In town or country, who were by thle means to be called upon for help In anything they might be ordered to da Thar had their presidents and chiefs and Isseer authorities to look after the old. or the married, or the young about to be married, with such system and or der that not even the newly born ee oaped their notice. "Bo thorough was their superinten dence of pubUe works, that the mas who labored one week was not al lowed to present himself for toil the next, everybody taking his tern with much harmony aad order to the end that nobody might feel Mgrteved " UNCLE SAM GOT HIS CENT Dels were Former Poetmaeter Threat ened With Preeeowtlon If Short age Waa Net Met. Sea ford. CM.—Luther H. Clifton, for seventeen years postmaster at Blades, Del., 'received word from the poet of fice department at Washington the other day that he would be prosecuted If he did not psy a shortage of one cent. He settled, and escaped trouble. The affair was peculiar. Clifton was succeeded aa poatmaster laat Novem ber by Caleb 'R. Cannon. The ao counts were gone over by an expert when the transfer waa made, but It was Impossible to learn the amount of cancellations, this being the beats upon which the postmaster's salary la flxod. - report of t|itexpsrt foajfr was ■ r :tM '■ fes OPERATION OF ROAD GRADER Harrow ahd Packer tym Be Uad to Advantage at Finish to Properly Compact the Soil. When the time cornea to grade the road, put a" plow team at *ork the day before, and go down as deep as you can, turning over the breaking of the previous year. Some folks think that the grader was made to plow with, but I never could figure It that way, writes 8. R. Crawley In Farm Stock and Farm. Then atart moving the earth over the center of the grade. Set the grader blade at a reasonably ■harp slant, and begin on the Inside of the plowing. Carry your first load well up the center of the new grade from either side before you bite Into Good Road Pressar. any more. Then take another load and move It in after the same fashion, and so on until you have come to the outside of the new ditch. In the meantime have one man along with a crowbar to dig stone and a plow team to turn loose on the ditches as soon as the first plowing has been carried out. In other words, don't try to plow with the grader. Not until you have raised the grade to what you want it, and are clearing out the ditches. Then scrape them down to a smooth surface, and carry the acraplnga In. Meanwhile a harrow and a packer can be used to good ad vantage on the grade compacting the soil. And after the whole job Is complet ed, and you have a well-rounded road way built, drive back and forth with a wagon until you have made a path that others will follow. TREES ALONG COUNTRY ROADS Not Only Useful a* Shade to Btock In Fields, but Add Greatly fo Beauty of Thoroughfarea. At a recent farmers' Institute meet ing the planting of trees along the country roads was advocated. It is a plafl worthy of consideration every where. Trees beside country high ways are not of less value and Im portance than along the streets of a city. They are not only useful aB shade to the stock In the fields and to those who travel along the roudiw but they add greatly to the beauty J the thoroughfares and are a distinct asset to the furmera by increasing the attractiveness of their land, says an Illinois writer in" Farmer's Re view. The theory of the speaker was that the trees should be planted Inside of the road boundaries and not on the farm land, and that the planting should be done as a part of the road Improve ment at public expense or by local or ganizations out of a common fund. The work would have to with system, of course, and provision made for the care of the trees once they were planted, but this system could easily be worked out Objection might be raised in some quarters that shaded roads would not dry out eas ily after rains and would, therefore, be muddy at inconvenient times, but the proper training and trimming of the trees would remedy this difficulty. Every one, even the farmer with out a shade tree on his premises, ad mits the attraction of- a shaded road on a hot summer day. Every tiaveler on auch a day greeta a bit of woods or as overhanging orchard as an oaals In a desert land and wishes that It stretches on for miles. The occasion al land owner who has lined his side of the road with shade trees —or even with fruit trees —ls regarded by the traveler as a good Samaritan and bleealngs go out to him. The time will come, perhaps, when tree* along the country roads are desirable and eaaentlal and their absence will show lack of proper enterprise In the com munity. Old-Fashioned Ideas. Of course, there were, and atUI are In Isolated localities, persons who cling to the bad roads of their grand father*, and resist any attempt to make Improvementa. These are those who also regret the passing of the •pinning ' wheel, and the domestic weaving loom, with which the women used to make the cloth for clothing the family. ' It Is w'iful waste of money to spend It upon roads that are not given proper drainage. uiai um> v-.w tun miring officii! >ne cut. Later, howevtr, the department sent word that the debit waa on the other aide and threatened prosecution for nonpayment Clifton paid the money to bis successor and got a receipt Birds Neeeeoary to Man. Fargo, N. D—Minnesota has 400 va rletlee of blrda, according to Prof. Carl B. Wtlaon of the Moorhead Nor mal school faculty, who baa conduct ed a thorough survey. He said that even the despised ohlcken hawk la of ■rent economic value to the farmer, aad that without the blrda mankind eoutd not survive more than a year. CASTOR IA far Xaflwu and Children. lit KM Yh Kin Always Besghl £££«&,tf&zSu uiiCeMJtus J«* |ooj sim J»W : SUNDAY SCHOOL. -Lesson I.— Fourth Quarter. For Oct.. 4, 1914. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lesson, Mark xiv, 1-11. Memory Versas, 8, 9—Qolden Text. Mark xiv, B—Commentary Prepared | by Rev. D. M. Stearns. This- lesson coiuflsta of two parts, the | anointing at Bethany uml tile agree ' uicnt of Judas Iscarlot with the chief priests' to betray Him. The unointlng In recorded hy Matthew. Mark and JOIIII; the mention of the passover and of the sin of Judas by Matthew, Mark mil Luke. According to Matt xxvi, I, 2, It tvas after Jeans had Unbilled tlx- saying* of chapters xxlv and xxv and two days before the passover that lie spoke of Mix approaching betrayal aijd crnclllxioii, and we would con clude from Matthew and Mark thai t!ic supper and anointing took place at that time. l''riiin the aciount lu John xli It would seem that It was six days be fore the pMBKOVer and preceding the HO colled triumphal entry that they had the Mipp.-r and anointing, .it seems Impossible to arrange clearly some times !!te sequence of all the events In our Lord's life, but the gospels were written that we might know lllnmelf rather than the order of events lu Ills life. It l« to some confusing that while l.nkc does not record tills anointing. !.• does mention anrauolnting in chap ter vll. 3>-i»0. which was also in the house of a man called Simon. Bui that was an altogether different event much earlier In Ills ministry and by a woman whose name ts not given, whoso sins He forgave. The event of our lesson was In the home of Martha and Mary In Bethany, whose brother. Lazarus, had beeu raised from the dead (John xllr 1, 21. Matthew and Mark say that It was In the house oi Simon the leper, hut what relation be was to Martha and Mary we are not told and therefore do not need to Itnow. If we think of It and it seems wise to do so, we can ask them when we see tliem. John says that Lazarus sat at the table with Him. What a suggestive saying! The man who/had been four days In the spirit world back onfeurth alive and well—a man whom the chief priests consulted to put tc death because that by reason of him many of the Jews went away and be lieved In Testis (John xli, 0-11). At this supper Martha served, but there Is no record of her being cum bered as in Luke x, 40, so we may hope that she had grown spiritually since that incident. In view of such words ns Phil. Iv, 0, 7; I Pet v, 7, we should never be cumbered or anxious. The words "They tnnde Him n supper" make ui think of Ills [iost ascension words lr Rev. 111, 20, and of the blessed assur ance tlint tf any one will open the doot He will .coin q .111 up* 1 *'*"■' l. As He sat at meat'Miiry chme with an alabaster box containing a pound of ointment of spikenard, very cosily and she broke the box and poured 11 on Ills head and unnlntM Ills feet and wiped His feet with her hair (verse 3 Matt. xvl. 7; Joltu xli, 3) Not only was the house tilled with the odor ol the ointment, but also .thewhole world for He said 111 verse 0 that wberevet In all the world.the gospel should b preached, this th t she hath done shall the spoken of fSr n memorial of her. This wns real worship on the part ot Mary, heart adoration, and it was very costly on her part and very precious to His heart We aru reminded of p saying of David In II Sam. xiv, 24 "Neither will I offer burnt offerings unto the Lord my God of that which doth cost me nothing." Some one has said that In Martha, Mary and Lara rus we have a sample of a well round ed Christian life—in Mnrtha restful service, in Mary real worship and In Lazarus the power of a risen life. There will always be some Indignant ones when more than ordinary (whlcb Is onllnarllywery little) is given to Him. It will be called a tfaste and by other names, while all spent upon our selves will seem all right Judas Iscarlot Is called a thief In John xil, 6. but what about the thieves of Mai 111, 8? If His love to us does not con strain us to spend more for nim than on ourselves then it is evident-thai we love ourselves most How comforting His word "Let hei alone, • • • she hath wrought s pood work on me" (verse 6). Would that some other fnultflndlng meddler* might bear His "Let alone!" If we are sure that we are doing all "Unto Him" we may lie confldent of His ap proval whatever others may say, His other word, "She bath done what shs could" (verse 8), we may not be so sure of. for of how few can It be said that we have done (.11 that we could. He Is the Judge and will surely give all possible credit that He can. He said that sbe anointed His body beforehand for burying, and 1 believe that was her purpose, that she so In tended It. for it wss her custom, when she couid to alt at His feet and bear Ills word. She was not found with the other women who bought spices to anoint Ilia dead tiody and never naed tbem for that purposes She seemed to understand about Ills crael death al the hand of Ills enemies and that sbe could not minister to Illm then, so having mode her prepnraUon, she watched for her optwrtunlly. and He arranged It for her. for he read ber heart How awful the contrast be tween the heert of Judas Iscarlot and this devoted heart that lored Hlu sol Water the horses as often as pos sible; but let the horse that comes In hot drink a tew swallows only, until ho ts cool. • • • All kinds of hay when cured In the windrow and shock has nearly doable tho feeding value of tk«t dried broad cast In the son. • • a Fresh, clean, cool water for hens and chicks and other kinds of poultry la very essential In hot weather. Always water the bona after ha has eaten his hay at night Do not go to bed leaving him thirsty all night * * • Planting encumbers In continuous rows Insures fruit from one to two weeks earlier thaa the hill method. • e • If the strawberries bar* been picked two seasons, spade np the beds and sow the land for some late planted crop. e • e The woodpeckers do a wonderful amount of good by digging out and do-' vourtng young worms and Insects on trees J* t>' r WELL TO 1U) FOR THE FUTURE & Worty Remembering When OHe I* Making Plans for the De sired Home. * DESIGN FOR FAMILY OF TWO « Arrangements That Would Suit Al most Any Couple, Though of Course Moot Women Would Wish to Work Qjit the Details for Herself. By WILLIAM A. RADFORD. Mr. William A. Radford win answer questions and give advice FREE OF COST on all subjects pertaining to the subject of building, for the readers of this paper. On account of his wide experience as Editor, Author and Manufacturer, he Is, without doubt, the highest authority on all these subjects. Address all Inquiries to -William A. Radford, No. tsxl Prairie nvanue, Chicago, IIL, and only enclose two-cent stamp for reply. , Building a house for a home Is one of the most Interesting propositions that a man can undertake. Every married man expects to build a house, and every alngle man hopes to do so some time. If he don't he Is not con structed on the right plan. It often happens that a man has a small fam ily, which may consist of himself and wife and possibly one small child. They do not want a large house —they don't need It and they don't want the care of it; but, at the' same time. It Is only business to build In such a way that the house may be sold If occa sion should require. But no matter how small the house may be, a wom an wants the downstairs to appear right She naturally takes pride In having a well-arranged house neatly furnished and well kept If the plan suits her, she is perfectly happy In working out the details, w In the plan here shown, only two rooms are finished upstairs. About one-third of the upper floor is left un finished, to be used as an'attic store room. This saves expense when build ing, and the housewife has fewer Iv - 2# ' %/^ ■»■ H5» - - rooms to take care of afteoward. Two rooms may be added here any time In the future, at very little expense. Two bedrooms and bathroom up stairs make a very nice arrangement for a family of two, and leave a spare bedroom for use when required. The bedroom downstairs may be made Into a library if so desired. It is really more appropriate for this purpose than it Is for a bedroom, If so wanted by the family. Families are different; their tastes and requirements are dif ferent; what suits one would not salt another; but this room wonld make a very nice library or smoking den, and that is what every man should have. If he doesn't smoke, some of his friends do; and most women object to having tobacco smoke scattered promiscuously through the house, and they cannot be blamed for this objeo ~ | I I First Floor Plan. tlon. The house means more to a woman than It doea to a man; and It Is her pride and ambition to havs It exactly right, and to have things ss nice and delicate as her keen sense of propriety suggests. The sitting room and dining room In this plan are almost like one long room. The archway may bo fitted with portieres or not If portieres are used and looped well back, the view Is not obstructed to any great etteut, end a company of a dozen or two may comfortably occupy the two rooms The general plan of this house fc what used to b* called the "Bos toe" Keep the chicks oat of damp plaoes and watch for roup. Dampness affects the feet and legs of the chick. The higher the breed, the greater the car* must be. e e • There are still some pretty poor bolls In this country. Wherever yon And one of those snlmsls, you will find a man with whom dairying la a dis mal failure. e e e , Fmlt trees Is the orchard must be fed like so many pigs in a pen If the trees are to produce well. Unfertilised fruiting plants will not yield enough to pay for their care. 1 • e • "Boil" la a mixture of earth, water and air. Too much of either la bad; too little means partial or entire crop falls re. Cultivation, early and oft**, gets conditions right •• • ■ The world never yet saw the beat cow. Don't be afraid you will ha lonesome In your hunt for her. There are- a lot of men looking, and you may as well be at the head of the 'heap aa not # . style. It to rathe* after IftSg tnd narrow order, feet nice and 38 feat long, exclusive of patches. There are some advantage! in a house of thla ibape. You get mot* light and better air. The rooms may be placed to better advantage wttu out using diagonal partitions, which are objectionable because they do not leave nice corners In which to place good pieces of furniture. Kvery cor ner In thla house 1* square, except at the bay windows; and nobody wants a square corner in a place of this kind. The display here la princi pally composed of curtalna, and a nice chair or two designed for looks as well as for oomfort The general air of this house Is what may be called "tony." It has a neat, clean, dignified appearance, rather on U» prosperous order; but the beauty Is In the design rather than In the ex pensive finish. The materials are good but ordinary; no unnecessary work or expense Is specified, but ev erything ts plain and substantial. The back porch Is a feature a little oat of the ordinary. It Is Intended for 1R B * l f'zl LJh • rrri Second Floor Plan. a sort of summer addition to the kitchen, an outdoor workroom that may be enclosed with climbing vines and furnished with a couple of old fashioned rocking chairs with ging ham-covered cushions somewhat on the grandmother order, but comfort able, as everyone knows. This back porch offers a good place for an toe box, especially In the summer time, which Is the only time In the year ' when an loe box In thla kind of a house la really necessary. The cellar | la cool enough at other times, and I It U fairly convenient to the kitchen. The outalde grade entrance to the cellar la a great help. It glvss aa easy entrance from the garden tor carrying thlnga In and out without tracking through the kitchen—a fea ture that every woman knowa exact ly "fiow to appreciate. ▲ long cellar like thla la eapeclally well designed for keeping fruit With a partition behind the furnace, the part under the kitchen may be kept cool enough to keep applea and vegetables without drying up. The cellar walls are built with cement mortar and broken atone or rubble. All stone wall surfaces are plastered outalde, and the joints filled and pointed with black mortar, which gives the wall an attractive finish. If the house faces the north. It would be better to put the fruit room In the front end of the cellar. The north end' is several degrees cooler than the south and; and It is not necessary to run furnace pipes past the partition In the sitting room. To reach the front bedroom, an up stairs pipe may be placed on an In cline through the wall partition. Buch little details must be looked after by the owner. That bedroom upstairs would be difficult to heat from a fur nace, with the pipe Improperly There Is a right and a wrong way to put In furnace pipes, and my expo rleoee la that the eye of the owner Is a little better than the eye of the In spector. In arranging furnace pipes. It la a good plan to study the different rooms before the building Is started. Almost as soon as the cellar wall -la built, you want your furnace pipes la place. Tou want the hotteet pipe la the sitting room, aad the naxt hottest pipe la the bathroom. The old-fashioned way of heating a house was to lead the biggest pipe to the lower hall, and let the air float up stairs naturally; but natural condi tions cannot always be depended upoa to furnish good results. A good fur nace man. If glten plans before the building Is started, can lay out a sys tem of pipes that will heat every room without passing the air through the front hall. There Is aaother ex treme to thla propoeltlon; and that Is to keep the front hall ahut off, aad not have aay air carried la that direction. Tbia la as much of a mistake aa the other. Ventilation, la Just aa impor tant aa heat, and you csmnot have good ventilation with the hallway ahut off. Barnyard manure, available on every Harm, makes one of the beat organic fertilisers to use. aad every (armor ought to eoneider ways and means of preserving It When loft in the open In piles for even a short time the loss 1 Is very largo. e e e Fertility may be restored to won o«t land by saving all aalmal manures aad potting them oa to the laad; by making use of all crop residues—that Is, putting back Into ths soli ovary thing not used for food; by taming uader green manuring aad catch crops. Meantime, politics strangles and fumes at being thrown Into the discard. ••• • ' When exposed to ths sua of am bition the world gets freckled with war. •• • • Prof. William H. Taft also has nohing to say, but contrary to his custom he Is not asylng it. ilrWitt j unit cart; Rucrt rSIMSTM HI For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have I Always Bought H|||: ' ALCOHOL 3 PEK CENTTI M M \ Prowote«l%sttottflroW f / Jlif SiiSfl r: nessandHratContatasneto 01 /ft \V Hii OpiumXflnttnenflrMted. fi \\ I r H i " otNahcotic - t Alr ■i p *if iMff *"*" wy# A»(r se v/ For Over I Thirty Years Ife^CflSTOßlfl Exact Copy of Wrapper. C«*T»OII HUHIT. ««>• »»■* em. I UP-TO-DATB JOB PRININO i I DONB AT THIS OFFICE. | 1 n n iV? if i nYm tm i ■ to YEADS REPUTATION m M ARNOLDSM A BALSAI ■ Warranted To Cure _ ■ ■ALU SUMMER SICKNESSES BY* 'I Graham Drag Co. I- Buck Jen's Arnica Salve THEWORLD-FtMOUS HEALER or Burns, Boils, Cuts, Piles, Eczema, Skin Eruptions, Ulcers, Fever-Sores, Pimples, Uch, Felons, Wounds, Bruises, | Chilblains, Ringworm, Sore Lips and Hands, Cold - Sores, Corns. U ONLY GENUINE ARNICA SALVE. I MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS. I flfloAT AH.DRUCCIBTB.I THE NORTH CAROLINA State Normal and College Maintained by the State for the Women of North Carolina. Vive regular Course a lead ing t odegrees. Special Courses for teaobet*. Free tuition to those wbo agree to beoonie teachers In the Htate. Fall BCMIO I begins September lflth, 1(14. For oatalogne and other information, address JULIUS I. FOUBT, President lljuuelßt Greensboro, N. C. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE GLEANER, 11.00 A YEAR -IN ADVANOB.- ■EAUTY HEALTH SCHOLARSHIP Uvwt nuas la Ike Soeth. MlUtlol locuioo. Das* nil watac. Twt.tr-two ma without s rin lU am O I IIIIISH dttawa duo iikleilci. A MmlM Boao.Ua writasi "01 ,11 tkocoiirtM I tin tUM la dins ss laiaiaaiioeal fltM Ucmutj el cktMaa Uaw, tka Mdi X nsa Collate MM to B. tko WM ctHnlu." I ■*■■■ Wdn si «n lot calalacsa sit Preslds*. W.A. HARPER, Boi Uoa Collega. N. C. Dixon's Lead Peocila are Iht | are THE BEST. Try them | and be convinced. They an I for sale at thla office.—sc. IllWll»sHMSii|rtZ«l*'«»wl k. lu4 akotAss ar |>mssH> ■ ssrlpHna far PHEE.SEAWOM aadnpsrt ■ *VATSNTS BUILD FORTUFWS I JWL OarfnshaskMsMlkaw, akall*to«as I aadsMjnaiaaaar. WHS. today. D. SWIFT T CO. I I Very Serious ft Is a vaiy aarioos mattar to aak tm one liadkina and hare the wrong on* ghraa yoa. For thia asaaoo we ntge you in baying to BLACK-DRTUGHT Uver lifrtkif ITha rapotatioa of this oU, ralla. Ma medietas, far constipation, fa*. Sigisrisa awi Mrar treobia, ia ftrnv (r aaHMkbad. It doaa not Imitate ether waSiclnn It ia better than others, or it weald not be thafe vorfca IM powder, with a larger aale Hum ad ethara combined. SOU) Of TOWH PS An You I Woman? i« Cardui The Woman's Tonic FDR SALE AT ALL DRUGGISTS P« —— m■ i 1 ■ f r wiiw I— BLANK BOOKS Journals, Ledgers, Day Books, Time Books, Counter Books, Tally Books, v Order Books, Large Books, Small Books, Pocket Memo., Vest Poeket Memo., &c„ &c. For Sale At The Gleaner Printing Office Graham, N. C ARE YUU R* UP r TO DATE ■ 11 you are not the NEWS AN' OBERVER is. Subscribe lor it at once and it will keep you abreast >t the times. Full Associated Press dispatch es. *'l the news—foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. ,Daily Newe and Observer $7 per year, 3.60 for 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian £1 per year, 50c for 6 mos. SEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO., RALEIGH, N. C. The North Carolinian and THB ALAMANCE GLEANER will he sen'- for one year for Two Dollars. Cash in advance. Apply at JHE GLEANER office. Graham, N. C. LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS This book, entitled as above, contains over 200 memoirs of Min isten In the Christian Church with historical references. An interesting volume—nicely prinv ed and bound. Price per copy: cloth, 12.00; gilt top, $2.60. By mall 20c extra. Orders may be seat to P. J. KCBMODLX, 1012 E. Marshall St., Richmond, Va. Orders may be left at this office. HOUSES and LOTS and FARMS FOR BALB—On account of my health, I will at 11 all my real es tate, consisting of 23 housea and lota. Including my home; all occu pied, and three small farms, suit able for dairying or trucking. Above property all in and adjoin tog town of Graham, and near the car line. For terms apply to DL M. Walker. Graham, N. (£