if HE GLEANER
IBBOKD EVEBY THUBBDAT.
J. P. KEKNOPLE, Editor.
91.00 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE.
I ADVBhTISINO KATKB
: >nu Square (1 In.) 1 tyme 11.00. cieujiuth
»|u«nt Insertion SO cent*. For mora (Mr*
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wi. Local not loss 10 oil. a Una for Bmi j
ftaeitoon; fubaequent Insertion! 6 eta. a line
Transient advertisements muit be paid for
la advance
Theedl not be responsible for
fpm* expressed by correspondent*.
loured at ne Po loffloe at Graham.
H. 0., as aecon alas* matter.
QftAHAU, N. C., Jan. 17,1918.
FUEL CRISIS CALLS FOR DES
PERATE REMEDY.
Wednesday evening United .States
Fuel Administrator Garfield issued
a far-reaching order to relieve the
fnel famine. Tho order ia made un
der the provisions of the Lever Food
Control bill and ia approved by tlie
President and Secretaries Baker and
Daniels. It provides for the closing
down of many manufacturing plants
and other businesses for live days be
ginning at 12 O'clock tonight and
for a suspension of business of the
concerns affected for each Monday
thereafter up to and including
March 25th, except they may use
sufficient fuel to prevent damage by
Ineiing.
The order further provides that
.fnel will be furniahed the' following
in order named, to-wit, railroads,
honaeholds, hospitals, charitable in
stitutions, army and navy camps,
public utilities, strictly government
enterprises, public buildings, facto
ries producing foods foj immediate
consumption, and it a'pplies to all
States East of the Miasissippi. A
severe penalty la provided for the
non-observance 'of the order.
The step Is drasftc, but the situ-
I ation in fuel had grown acute and
the desperate situation called for
a desperate remedy.
Wherever the order can be modi
fied in justice to all concerned, and
eondltlans will permit, modifica
tions Will no doubt be mude.
NAVY IN GOOD SHAPE.
Without mentioning the name of
the Secretary of the Navy Jose
phua Daniel* in n report b.v a ape
daily appointed committee by Con*
great to investigate the progress of
equipment and preparation of thi*
department for war, the committee
found that the work had gone for
ward with wonderful rapidity.
Nothing, it seem*, wax found to
criticise, but there w»» a sum
ming up of the many ac
complished, which showed the Na
v; to be in a /moat satisfactory
condition and u revelation to the
committee.
Two to three year* a;|o a certain
mag a line publiahed articles full of
Violent attack* against the Sccre
• tary of the Navy, charging incom
petence and all aorta of things det
rimental to the g?od name and
fame of the Secretary. It Is grati
fying tq note that Secretary Dan
iela had the presence of mind to
■ay nothing to If!* truducers, but
kept his own counsel and pushed
hla department to efficiency.
ENCOURAGING.
A dispatch from London yester
day Bays there had boon a marked
decrease in sinkings of merchant
men by mine or submarine the
past week. The report says «yily
aix merchantmen of over 1,000
tons and two uuder 1,600 tons and
two flailing vessels were sunk.
The week previous there were
eighteen, three and four, respec
tively, of each class sunk, and for
tho week ending January 2 there
were 21—18 of them ovor 1,000
tons.
This iaan encouraging situation
but it may not continue. The
weather may have had much to do
with submarine activity, but it is
hoped the worst of it is past, as
preparations for successful)) com
batting the submarine are being
ateadily enlarged and improved
by America and her allies.
Some, no doubt, will charge the
•cute fuel situation up to the
Government's tnking over the
operation of the railroads, but
what about the severost weather
in twenty years aud the abnormal
demands upon the railroads on
•eoonnt of the war V
Peace parlying is still going on
between Russia and Germauy with
no definite ends reached.
Cold wnather haa gripped the
war fronts and military opera
tions are practically at a stand-
"TAGjT OUR-SHOVEL DAY."
Fuel Administration Urges Saving of
Goal—The Reason.
Greensboro—January, 30th has
been set/*iitl!& *» NAtional "Tag-
Your-^hovel-Day" by „ the United
States fuel administration. On that |
day school children will tie taga
bearing Instructions for £oal saving
to every coal shovel in the country,
the purpose of this being to remind
each man, woman and child, who
uses a coal shovel that every
shovelful of coal saved means Just
so much additional power and
health and support for the Ameri
can soldier and sailor on the firing
Une.
"Any worthy cause which enlists
the sympathy of the children is
already half cwon," says Fuel Ad
ministrator McAllster. "Their en
thuslams and eagerness is sponta
neous and catching. When the 21,-
000,000 school children of the United
States start to spread the word of
fuel economy throughout the coun
try, we may be sure that it will
be spread. It is only sane opti
mist to believe that practically
every eoal shovel in the country
will be tagged, and the message of
conservatim thus carried will hard
ly be lightly regarded or forgot
ten." m-
UnitcdStates Fuel Administrator,
Harry A. Oarfield. in a recent state
ment stressing the importance of
"Tug-YOur-Shovel Day," said
"The United -tfrati-a is mining a
record breaking amount of coal in
an attempt to supply the record
breaking demanJ caused by the
war. Coal is the great force >:••
hind the men In the trenches; be
hind the battleship, the transports
the munition factories and the rail
roads.
The war demands a hitherto un
heard of amount of coal. The fue
administration is doing itn utmosi
to supply the emergency demand.'
Through the adjustment of labor
troubles at the mine the increase oI
of the available number of coal
car# and the speeding up of coal
transportation,the fuel administra
tion is endeavoring to supp.'.v army
and navy needs and keep factories
running and homes warm.
"The miners are doin£ their part
to aid the fuel administration in
it* tack. v They are mining more
coal than ever before. The over
burdened railroads are grappling
with the problem of transporting
this unuual |uantity of coal, in
addition to the great amount o.'
war freight which is congesting
their lines.
"As a reult of all theße efforts
an extra million car loads of coal
have been mined this year. Thil
is 50,000 000 tons more coal than has
ever been mined before in any year
in the history of the l.'nlted States.
"We need another million car
loads. It is a physical Impossi
bility to produce thl* additional
amount at once. It must be saved
from the coal already available.
"The American people are asked
to do their port In this emergency
by saving shovelful by shovelful in
factory und home this additional
coal for war needs, and this is the
reason for "Ta{-Your-Shovel Day.
STATUS OF CHILD LABOR
Law Is Explained by U. S Attorney
Hammer.
Owing to a misunderstand! "13 oy
some manufacturer* and shipper* in
lntcr-Ptate commerce a* to the
opinion of the t'nltcd State* Judfc
for the Western District of North
Carolina, who has held that the so
called federal Child Labor Law i»
unconstitutional, f write this let
ter to say that I have prepared a
case on appeal and the same ha*
jbeen served on the appellees, and
the case J* now in the Supreme
(Court of the United States for fi
'pal determination. .
1 , For Information of the public it
IS well to say that the policy of the
Department of Justice i* to treat
a* a valid law every* act of Con
gress until finally declared Invalid,
and this policy will be pursued as
to the Keating Child Labor Law,
pending the appeal of this North
Carolina case, which is now in the
Supreme Court. Accordingly, ex
cept In the Western District of
North Carolina, United States At
torneys throughout the country
will be expected to prosecute any
cases o eurring In theit respective
districts. It Is well to n >te' the
following :
1. Where goods have been deliv
ered for shipment but stopped he
fore bring sh'pped. the prosecution
must be in the district in which
the delivery Is made.-
8. When an Inter-State shipment
has actually '.wen mn-» nroresMi
tion may be either in the district
where delivery for shipment I*
made or I*. any district through
•vhirh m lato which it pasvA
Where, however. th« fact of iu »
comes t > the knowledge of a li«-
rlct attorney. In a district .'.the
than that In which the s'doment i*
made, the matter should be report
ed to the Attorney General, win
will determine In which district to
prosecute.
S. The injunction against tho, dis
trict attorney for the Western Dis
trict Qf North Carolina will not in
terfere with o prosecutions in o'.h"r
districts even for shipments made
•to or through auch districts from
the Western District of North Car
olina.
WM. C. HAMMER,
V. S. Attorney.
Asheboro, N. C.
Although the sun is slow in liv
ing every morning, it is always on
time.
To Change Gray Hair!
Here's the simple, easy safe way
to surely change gray, faded or
lifeleaa hair to a uniform, dark,
lustrous, b6autlful shade—per feet
[ly natural in appearance. Merely
do as thousands have done and ap
ply Q-ban.
Not a quick actfng dye. out de
fies detection. Guaranteed harm
less— 60c a large bottle. Sold bv
Hayes Drug .Company, and all good
drug stores. Try Q-ban Hair Ton
ic L/Q-ban Liquid Shampoo; Q-ban
Soap. Also Q-ban Depilatory.
i\-% Try -T
Receipts and Expenditures of South -
era Railway.
'Washington, D. C., Jan. 10. —
The Southern Railway Company
disbursed during November, 1917,
for labor, material, supplies and
other purposed, $7,120,001 of
which55,941,711,0r83.37 jxrcent.
WAS paid to individuals and indus
tries looted in the South, this
sum being J512,920 in excess of the
total moneys contributed by the
■South for transportation purposes,
according to figures announced l»y
Comptroller A. 11. Plant.
For improvements to itn road
way and structures, the Southern
spent $1,258,552.70 in November,
1917, as against $1,400,150.42 dur
1 ing Noveinbar, 1916; during the
1 five months ended November 30,
' >7,140,350 58 as against $0,137,
383 80 in 1910.
Kesufts ot operation, exclusive
' of interest, rentals, ami other in
come charges, were as follows:
Qross revenue, November, 1917,
$8,409,702, >in increase as com
-1 pared with 1916, of 81,383,204, or
19.52 per cent.; operating expen
ses, taxes and uncollectible rail
way revenue, $5,998,247, an in
' crease of $1,274,171, or 20.97 per
cent.
Gross revenue for the five
mouths' period, $40,802,500, an
■ increase hS compared with 1910 of
$8,021,849, or 24 42 per cent.;
operating expenses, taxes and un
collectible railway revenue $29,-
087,279, an increase of $0,104,058,
or 20.02 per cent.
Ambassador Francis Stood Off Rus
sian Mob.
Speaking in St. Louis Saturday,
Chas. 11. Crane of the Americm
mission to lltissht, told how Ameri
can Ambassador Francis stood at
the door of the American embassy
in Petrograd and stood off a Rus
sian mob with a pistol. The in
cident occurrd months ago but has
not heretofore been published.
Mr. Crane said that a mob, be
lieving that a man named Muni
(in reality Mooney, the San Fran
cisco dynamite suspect), was to be
executed in this couutry, started
for the American embassy.
Petrograd authorities warned
the ambassador by telephone that
the mob was approaching. Guests
begged him to flee with them, but
he refused, said Mr. Crane. Mr.
Francis told a negro servant to
get a revolver. With this weapon,
the ambassador met the mob at
the door.
"Your government is going to
hang Muni, and we
are going to cleau out the Ameri
can embassy," said the leaders.
"No you are not"! replied Am
bassador Francis. "This is Ameri
can soil and I will kill the lirst
man who crosses the lino."
Mr. Crane said the mob then
dispersed. He said he heard the
noise at the embassy, and arrived
there just as the crowd went away.
From the negro servant, Mr. Crane
learned the details.
Boschee's German Syrup
Why use ordinary cough reme
dies, when BOSCHEE'S GERMAN
SYRUP ha* been used so success
fully for fifty-one years in all parts
of the United States for coughs,
bronchitis, colds settled in the
throat, especially lung troubles. Tt
gives the patient a good night'*
rest, free from coughing, with easy
expectoration In the morning, gives
nature a chance to soothe the in
flamed parts, throw off the disease
hepling the patient to regaih Ids
health. 25 and 75 cent bottles.
Sold by Graham Drug Co.
Six-year-old Helen White,daugh
ter of H farmer in the Pink Hill
section of Lenoir county, wa»
killed by a fall from a wagon.
In Asheville last week the roof
of a garage collapsed under the
weight of snow and wrecked the
building and contents. Sixteen
cars wore in the wrecked building
atpl the estimated damage to cars
is ».I,OCO to >I,OOO.
The inmates of the State home
for Confederate women, near Fay
etteville, are knitting soCks for
the soldiers. Recently 11 pairs
of socks knitted by tho old ladies
in this home were turned over to
a Red Cross society.
Buncombe county commission
ers have asked Gov. Bickett to
pardon 6 convicts on the Bun
combe chain gang on the ground
that 80 womeu and children, com
prising the families of the«ix men,
havo to IHI maintained by the
county while the six men on whom
they are dependeut work for the
county. The commissioners think
the cost is too heavy and they are
willing to call it off if the Gover
nor will agree.
GRAHAM IS NO EXCEPTION
(.rshssi People t'owr Out A* frankly
Here Ai Klwwhtre.
(Iraham people publicly recom
mend Doan's Kidn»v Pills. This
paper is publishing Graham case*
from week to week. It is the
same everywhere. Home testimony
In home papers. Doan's are prais
ed in 5rt,000 signed statements pub
lished in 3,000 communities. Gra
ham people aro no exception. Here
is a Graham statement.
J. N. H. Clendenin, retired farmt r.
S. Main St., Graham, says: ' "I was
bothered a great deal by weak
kidneys. I had little control over
the kidney action and had to get
up many times during the night on
that account. In the morning, my
back was so aoro and lame that
I could hardly get out of bed. 1
read of Doan's Kidney Pills ana
bought a supply at the Graham
Drug Co. A few doses relieved the
pain in my back and one box cured
me." .
Price 60c at all dealers. Don";
! simply ask for a kidney remedy
get Doan'a Kidney Pills—the same
that cured Mr. Clendenin. Ftoster-
Mll burn Co., Prop*., Buffalo, N. T.
RICHARD A. BLOUNT " |
Richard Allen Blount, son of R. E.
Blount of North Carolina, who cap
tured 30 Germans single-handed while
fighting with the for«lgn legion at Ver
dun. Young Blount Joined the foreign
legion over a year ago and has aaen
heavy fighting.
NO "DEMANDS" OR STRIKES
NEARLY ALL CLASSES OF ORGAN
IZED RAILROAD LABOR TO\
MAKE REQUEBTB.
Many Pending Wage Disputes Will Be
Traneferred to Government —Many
Rate Revisions Will Soon Become
Neceesary.
Washington.—Hither wages will be
asked of the railroad adminißt-ation
soon by nearly all classes of organized
railroad labor/ It was learned that
many pending wage disputes will be
transferred Jto the government from
railway execuUve's' boards, and In oth
er cases new demands will be formu
lated for presentation to Director Gen
eral McAdoo, who pubbably will deal
with them through Investigation
boards.
Strikes are not contemplated by any
organization. It Is said, and wage ques
tions will not be put up to the direc
tor general as demands. Railroad la
bor leaders are represented as not
seeking to take advantage of govern*
ment operation to press for more pay,
but rather as pointing out the neces
sity of wage Increases to keep em
ployes from being attracted to other
Industries.
Up to the present, the only general
demands for wage increases consid
ered by Director General McAdoo are
those presented by the four railway
brotherhoods and the switchmen's
unloji, whose president, S. E. Heber
ling, conferred with Mr. McAdoo. The
brotherhoods' rase will be investiga
ted by a board of four to be named
by the director general, and he also
may ask this body to Inquire into the
switchmen's demand, which now is be
ing considered by a committee of rail
road executives reprelentlng all roads.
The director general announced that
ha expected to name railroad directors
for certain sections of country to as
sist him In administering government
operation, but said he had not deter
mined how many would be appointed
nor what territory each director would
supervise. It Is considered probable,
however, that not more than six or sev
en will be named. Mr. McAdoo said
specifically that he did not plan to
name state directors. Thousands ol
applications for positions as state rail
road supervisors have been received
within the past few days.
PAYROLL OF U. 8. BOLDIERB
NEARLY 1100,000,000 MONTHLY.
Ineludss Salaries ef Officer* and Men
In Army and Navy at Home and
Abroad.
Washington.—The payroll of the
lighting forcrs of the United Stateai Is
Is now nearly 100,000,000 a month.
This sum Includes salaries of offi
cers and enlisted men In the army and
navy serving both In this country and
nbroad, family allotments and com
pensation for certain services render
ed. hat does not take Into account
"family allowances" paid by the gov
erament toward the support of fam
illes of oallsted men. under specified
conditions, nor does It Include any ol
the special compensatory features ol
the military and naval insurance act
Rn listed men are paid stated sumt
for re-enllstment, with (5 50 for the
first re-enllstment and $3.30 for each
subsequent re-enllstment, if they art
a clttxen of the United States and
completed the previous enlistment
Beamen gunners get 91-20 extra ft
month stewards or cooks who hof,l
certificates of qualification and arc
cltlsens of the United States get 96-50
a month extra and enlisted men re
ceive 81 costs a month extra for each
good, conduct me^al.
Mea performing specified duties on
shipboard receive extra compensation
ranging for 33 cents jtf month te 930.
How's Thlat
Wo otfer One Hundred Hollars Howard for
>n» COM* of lOtsrrli Iboi cannot bo cured by
Holt's Catarrh Cure.
K. J, CIIKVKV * CO.. Toledo, O.
Wo. the undersigned. have known K. J.
Cheney (or lhe last It jreon), end believe him
perfectly honorable in oil business transac
ilons onu financially able to carry out any
obligations maie by hi* Broi.
NATIO»AI. tuna or Costumes,
Toledo, 0.
It* I s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally,
actlngdlrectly u|Wm the blond and mucous
•urroteoof the system. Testimonlala east
free. Priee 7S cent* per Iwiltlto. Hold by all
Oruxxtata.
Take Hall's Family Pills for couatlpation.
kit
The roaring suffragists want to
become members of the human race
whereas the socialists arc divorc
ing themselves from it. All a mat
tor 61 taste..
tea &.now What Yon Are Taking
When you take Grove's Tasteless
Chill Tonic because the formula if
plainly printed on every bottle
•bowing that It It Iron and Qui
nina ID a tasteless form. No
ni*. BO pay.—s#=. adv.
CHARLOTTE NAN GAINS TEN
POUNDS.
C. S. Pritchett Tells How He Was
Delivered From Terrible Stomach
Pains, and Kidney Disorder.
Thousands of men and women
have stomach trouble and don't
know it. They pay little or no
attention toSj the small warning
signals which come lo them after
every meal—that heavy, uneasy
feeling, flight gas formation in
the stomach, acid risings, and
other symptoms which gradually
grow worse as time wears on until
finally, the victim finds himself in
the grasp of that most common of
all humau ailments, Indigestion.
This, even with the best of care,
is likely to develop inlo kidney
complaint, constipation, rheuma
tism, liver trouble and other seri
ous ills.
"I am a painter," says C. S.
Pritchett of 700 North Graham
street, Charlotte. "For a long
time I suffered from iudigestion
which soon spread to my bowels
and kidneys. My stomach seemed
to bloat with gas until the pain
was almost unbearable. Then I
became costive and was forced to
take powerful laxatives. But all
■ny troubles are over now because
I have found a medicine that has
corrected all these faults. It's!
name is Dreco. I am no longer
troubled with that gassy, bloated
feeling and the pains in my stom
ach are gone. My bowels now
have a regular normal action.
Formerly I had to get up during
the night as mauy as 8 or 10 times
to relieve my kidneys, but Dreco
has stopped that.
'•I now sleep sound and well
and don't have that drowsy feel
ing mornings. I now eat many
things that I couldn't before.
"1 had 'Painters Colic' often
hut since taking Dreco that never
bothers me.
"I gained 10 pounds iu weight.'
Mr. Pritchett is a prominent
member of the First/ Baptist
Church of Charlotte and is well
and favorably known among his
large acquaintanceship. He is
most enthusiastic in hiß praise of
the new herbal medicine, Dreco,
and urges all his friends to try it.
Dreco is sold by almost every
good druggist aad is strongly
reccommended in Graham by Gra
ham Drug Co.
Six fanners of German descent,
- who refused to join the lied Cross,
were taken from their wagons and
' flogged by a Committee of citizens
• of Brenham, Texas, who acted in
' daylight and without masks, ac
cording to a report from Brenham.
° The whippings did not occur at
the same time but at various times
during the campaign.
PREFERS CHAMBERLAIN'S.
. "In the coarse of a conversa
tion with Chamberlain Medicine
Co.'s representative to-day, we had
' occasion to discuss in a general
s way the merits of their different
• preparations. At his suggestion I
I take pleasure In expressing my es
, timation of Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy. I have a family of six
children and have used this reme
" dy in my home for years. I con
• sider it the only cough remedy on
. the market, ana I have tried nearly
all kinds."—Earl C. Ross, Publishar
1 Hamilton County Republican-News
i Syracuse, Kansas.
' Vilhjalmur Stefanssou, the Arc-
I tic explorer, last heard from in
I March, 1916, has arrived with his
party at Fort Yukon, according
. to word received by the uaval de-
I partmeut of Canada. Stefansson,
i head of the Canadian Arctic ex-
I peditiou, has been in the far north
since 1013 and lately there has
1 been some anxiety as to his safety.
SOON OVER HIBJJOLD.
Everyone speaks well 6t Cham
, berlain's Cough Remedy after hav
ing used it. Mrs. Geo. Lewis, of
Pittsfield, N. Y.. has this to say
1 regarding it: "Last winter my lit
tle boy, S years old, was sick with
a cold for two or three weeks. I
i doctored him and used various
i cough medicines but nothing did
him much good until I began us
sing Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.
He then improved rapidly and in
a few days was-over his
I , -
Walter Cottle, an enlißted man
of the United States navy, at his
home iu Dupliu county, ou a fur
lough, shot and perhaps fatally
[ wounded G. B. Parker, a wealthy
, citizen of Duplin, and then killed
himself. The shooting was said
, to be the result of a grudge.
Parker indicted Cottle two years
i ago for hunting on his land.
i ■
' ARE YOUR SEWERS CLOGIOEDT
The bowels are the sewerage sys
' tem of the body. You can well im
-1 agine the result when they arre
1 stopped up as is the case in con
) atipation. As a purgative you
will find Chamberlain's Tablets "ex
! cedent. They are mild and gentle
in their action. They also improve
| the digestion. ;
i There is no law to limit the
Christinas spirit merely to Christ
mas time.
Sale of Real Estate
U Oder and by virtue of tie terms of a aer
ials mortgage deed executed aud delivered
to Alamance Inaurance * Heel Ketate Oonj.
uaojr recorded In Book No. •!. of Mortrnke
Ueeda, pare 90. In the o»oe of tbe KrvTater
of Deed• fur Alamance county, to aeeure an
Indebted neaa evidenced by a certain note
tbt-n-ln described, default bavin* been made
In Ike iay men I of aald Indebtedneaa, Us
undrnlsned will, on
MONDAY, JAN. 28, 1918,
at 13J o'clock p. m, at the court bona* door
In Unlua, N. U. offer for aale at publle
outcry lo tbe big beat bidder, lor cub. the
followlna deecriqed land aod premiers, to
wn: Adjolnluc Holt and Sellara H,recta.
Alamance Inaurance and Heal Kit ate com
pany, and otb re, bounded aa follow,;
lb (ln Inr at an Iron aUke on tbe North
corner of Hollars and Halt street*; tunning
thence with Ibe line of «ald Sellers street
nortbeaat ISO feat to corner on aald atreet;
tbenee aoutbeaat parallel wlta Holt street as
loot jo a oornar on Alamance I oauranoe and
Heal ksute Company's line; tbe nee with
tbeir line aouthwevt IWleet ruputng parallel
with Hellars Street lo corner on Holt ittiaet;
tbence wltb tbe line of HoltSlreet north west
«feet to tbe bealnnlnf. belts a part of lot
No Bin tbe new survey of the oily of Bar
llngton, on wblob Is duiated a modern eiffbt
room bungalow.
1 ALAMANCB'INB. *KKAL' CBTATB CO„
Mortgagee. !
Re-Sale of Land!
Pursuant to an order of the Su
perior Court of AUunanc* county,
made in a special proceeding there
in pending, entijed J. a. Holt ana
wife, Minnie B. Holt, and others,
va. Settle ana others, where
to all the devisees of Qeorge M.
Noah are duly constituted parties,
the undersigned commissioners will
sell to the highest bidder at public
auction, on
SATURDAY, Jan. 2ft 1918,
at 12 o'clock? noon, at the court
house door in Graham, all of the
following described real property,
to-wit:
Three certain tracts or parcels of
-land, lying and beiitrf in Patter
son township, Alamance county,.
North Carolina. The said three
tracts adjoining each other, and
constituting: one tract of 269 acres,
more or less, and is known as the
Jerry Noah place..
TRRMS OF SALE: Ons-third of
the purchase price to be paid in
cash, the other two-thirds to be
paid in instalments wKhin six ana
twelve months. Deferred' pay
ments to be evidenced by oonds
of purchaser hearing interest at 6
percent. Sale subject to confirma
tion by the Court.
This is a re-sale, and bidding
will start at $771.10.
This the 10th day of Jan., 1918.
J. DOLPH LONG,
I. C. MOSER,
Commissioners.
Notice of Sale.
Under and by virtue of the poWer confer,
red upon me by the will of James W. Wyatt
deceaaed, duly admitted to probate the 18th
day of June. 1017, and recorded In the offloe
of the Clerk of the Oo irt for Ala
mance county In Hook of Wills No. 6, page
309, the undersigned Executrix will, on
MONDAY, FEB. 4, 1918,
at 1:80 o'clock p. m.. at the court house door
In (Jraham. N, C. offer for sala at public auo
tion to the highest bidder for cash, a certain
tract or parcel of land lying and being in
Alamance county. Pleasant Q rove Townsblp,
No tta Carolina deacrlood as follows;
Adjoining the lands of Jobn Hodgers, Dr.
McKolght itud otbers and bounded as follows:
Beginningaca stake on tho great road run-'
ning North with lipnson'it line forty-lour
chains and sixty links 90 a black Jack; thenoe i
Houth 60 deg West thirty one chains and fifty;
links to a rook on the North side of the great
road; thence with said road to the first sta- ;
tion, containing 64 acres, more or ltss.
This the 2nu day or Januarys 1018.
EMMA WYATI, Executrix.
Legal Notice!
ALAMANCE COUNTY,-
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT.
Citizens Bank, which sues -on be
half of itself, and all other cred
itors of the defendant who will
make themselves parties to this
action,
against
Southern Structural Steel Corpora
tion, defendant.
State of Nerth Carolina—
To the Sheriff of Alamance County,
Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to
summon the defendant above nam
ed, if it be found within your
county, to be and appear before
the Judge of the Superior Court,
at the court house in GVaham, on
the second Monday befor the first
Monday in September, 1917„ and
answer the complaint of the plain
tiff within the first three days of
the Term, and in default thereof
the plaintiff will apply to the
Court for such rolief as may oe
entitled to.
Herein fail not and of this sum
mons make due return.
Given under my hand and seal
of the Court 21st day of May, 1917.
J. D. KERNODLE, C. S. C.,
Alamance County.
Notice of Receivership.
The stockholders, deal
ers with, and all other persons in
terested in the affairs of South
ern Structural Steel Corporation,
will take notice that an action en
titled as above has been commenc
ed in the Superior Court of ,Ala
mance county, summons as above
was duly served, and the under
signed was duly appointed receiv
er of the defendant, and has made
his bond and under order of. Court
publishes this notice to the ena
that all persons who may be inter
ested may make themselves parties
to this action, or answer the com
plaint therein filpd on' or before
23rd day of January, 1918. All per
sons having claims against the de
fendant will present the same to
me properly authenticated. .
This the 12th day of Decern oer,
1917.
' WM. 1. WARD, Receiver
So. Structural Steel Corp.
decl36ts.
Re-Sale of Land!
. Under and by virtue of an order
of the Superior Court of Alamance
county in a special proceeding en
titled Edward Guthrie, et al„ vs.
Will Guthrie,et a]., the undersigned
commissioner will otter at public
auction, to the high&t bidder, on
SATURDAY, JAN. 18(, 1918,
at 12 o'clock, noon, on the premises,
in Newlin Township, the following
described tracts of land, to-wit-
TRACT NO. 1 A certain tract or
parcel of land lying and being on
the waters of Mary s Creek, adjoin
ing the lands of Mary Wright, Ma
ry Shaw and others, ana containing
43 acres, more or less. ,
TRACT No. 2. A certain tract or
parcel of land lying and being on
the waters of Mary T s Creek, adjoin
ing the lands of Stafford, Mary
Woods, Rachel Thompson, and oth
ers and containing 37 acres, more
Hess.
TRACT NO. 3. A certain tract or
parcel of (and lying and being on
the waters of Mary's Creek, known
Bathe saw mill and cotton gin jLract,
and contains one acre, more or less.
Terms of Sale: One-third cash,
one-third in elx months and one
third in twelve months. Defferred
payments to bear interest. Sale
subject to the confirmation of the
Court.
This December 147*1917.
J. J. HENDERSON,
Commissioner
Certificate of Dissolution
To All to Whom These Presents May Come—
Greeting:
Whereas, It appears to my satisfaction, by
duly sutbentlcated record of tbe proceedings
for tbe rolutftary dissolution thereof by the
unanimous consent of sit tho stockholders,
ilei-oalted in myofßee, that tho Gates Hosiery
Compauy, a corporation of this Htate,
whoso principal offlfte la situated at Mo —-.
Street, in U» city of Burlington, county
of Alamance, Btale of North Carolina
(Walter U Gates, being tbe M.ntUimla
ana In charge thereof, upon wtiom process
may be aervod). baa compiled with tbe re
quirements of Chapter 11. Hevisal of 1(06, en
titled "Corporations," prellmlnsry to tho
Issuing of this Certificate of Dissolution:
Now. therefore, I, J. Bryan Urimes, nonro
tary of Slats of toe State of North Carolina,
do hereby certify that the said oorporation
did. on the aith day of Dec, 1»17, flle In mr
office a duly executed and attested consent
In writing to the dissolution or Mid oorpora
ttoo. executed by all tbe stockholders there
of, which said conaent and the record of tbe
proceedings afore*.id are now on Die In my
asid office as provided by law. '
In tealliuon. whereof, 1 bare hereto sot ay
lawtfMasvs & r*
MSa&ssa*
ur*»» — —--wm - - WW t C \m
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Through the addition of several new* (
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North Carolina readers a in oat comprehensive newspa
per, bristling with interest from the first to the very j t
( ' last page. In fact it is the greatest news value ever . ,
offered by a state daily. At a great expense we have
, secured the simultaneous publication rights for the
* following. V
London Times-Philadelphia Ledger Cabfe Service, giving a clear-
J i insight into the great world war from the European standpoint. (
David Lawrence's Washington Articles, copyrighted by The New
( ' York Evening Poet, handling the war from the
J • American government. I J
CoL Theodore Roosevelt's Editorials for the Kansas City Star,
| discussing current topics ia his usual clever, piercing atyle.
Sergeant Empey's Stories about trench life' in France, written 1 '
1 after 18 month actual fighiting experience.
All of the above are Big News features —a Super Newa Servioe i j
I • which augments and supplements the splendid service
of the Associated Press, the excellent work of P. R.
Anderson at our Washington Bureau, our v I |
l | • interesting Raleigh service by W. T. /
Boat and our splendid state news
service. ' _
Write immediately for sample copy. Subscription rates are still
, the same: Daily and Sunday $7 per year; Daily only 15 per year.
Greensboro Daily News >
I" 'it |
Greensboro, N. C. *
Only North Carolina Newspaper Having Two (
Leased Telegraph Wires /
Safest Druggist Sells E-RU-SA Pile Cure
Because it contain* no opiates, no lead, no belhUjyma, no poisonous v
drug. Another Pile medicine containing lnjurons narcotic and other
poisons cause constipation and damage all who use them,
K-RU-SA euros or S6O paid. if
Hayes Drug Co., Sole Agents, Graham, N.C.
To Whom It May Concern:
This is to notify all users of automobile, bicycle and .
motor cycle casings and tubes that they are doing their
bank account a fearful injustice in not using Pennsyl
vania Rubber Company's goods. The best —no others
sold here equal to them" A written guarantee. Should
one go bad, then the most liberal settlement. Ask
ihose using Pennsylvania Rubber Company's goods.
See me or waste your money. X
Very truly,
W. C THURSTON,
Burlington, . . N. C.
-
I Promise
Every accommodation consistent with
Safe Merchandising. .
I Want Your Business
The proper service will retain it.
Your Dollar
/ Will buy as much from me as the
other fellows.
FULL LINE OF DRY GOODS, NOTIONS
AND GROCERIES.
J. W. HOLT, - Graham, N. a
MULES FOR SALE.
Always from 100 to 300 Head of Horses and Mules of all
description For Sale at my Stables in YORK, Pa.
65p.26t J OC Kindig,
r
Sale of Real Estate
Under and by virtue of the pow
er of sale contained in a certain
deed of trust executed and deliv
ered to Alamance Insurance & Real
Estate Company, as Trustee, ana
recorded in Book No of
Mortages and Deeds of Trust, page
ister of Deeds for Alamance coun
ty to secure an indebtedness evi
denced by twenty-five bonds
therein described, default having
been made in the payment of said
indebtedness, the undersigned trus
tee will on
MONDAY, JAN. 2% 19X8,
at 1.45 o'clock P. M., at the court
house door in Graham, N. C„ offer
for sale at puolic auction to the
highest Didder for cash,- the fol
llowing described land, to-wit:
A certain tract or parcel of land
in Alamance county, Burlington
township, and State of North Car
olina, adjoining the lands of Ireland
Street, Mis* Etta Ireland. J. A.
Ireland and Miss Florine Robert
son, and others, and bounded as
follow*:
Beginning at the corner of Miss
Btta Ireland on the northeast side
of Ireland Street, running thence
with the line of said Btta Ireland
northeast 213 feett o corner on J.
AA. Ireland's line; thence with the
line of said Ireland West 66 feet
to corner of Florine Robertson;
thence with her tin* southeast 313
feet to corner on n-eland Street;
thence with the line of Ireland
Street 66 feet to the beginning, be
a part of the land conveyed by
J. R. Ireland, deceasedt o St. Clair
Ireland, and recorded in book of
Wills in the office of the Clerk of
the Superior Court of Alamance
county, North Carolina.
, Alamance Ins. & Real Estate Co.
This TJecember 24, 191^°
Timber and Wood Wanted!
If you have soy timber, wood, of
timber land to sell, let me hear from
you. I want to buy the same.
W. C. Thubston.
3janßt Burlington, N. 0.
When the Kaiser pulled the trig»
ger in 1914 he did not Juow that
the kick of the gun Was going to
put autocracy out M business.
EAST f 0 GET, EAST TO
USE "DIGESTONEINE" AND WIN
sulc4 relief from sour,
r.aiiy stomach, dimnese and tlim
indigestion ilk Tons your entire
•ystem, stir up your appetite by iol- *
lowing the lad of thousand*--
hJJ -nwiuyf jumr* iHJ
I ban nerer taken anrthlnf (bat
"dl hsn
•prot hundrel, of dollars Witt other
* bothered ow ST*
jean with what wu wmmwi
Sad no *
JAMJtS W. STOKES, Oallatia*, lU. J
Hayes Drug Company
Graham
* ' % lISI
llbujiesd it-
it., I
ter I
THE"POCKET
SELF
FILLING"
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