Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Aug. 14, 1919, edition 1 / Page 2
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|THE GLEANER ISSUKD BTKBY THUBBDAT. 4. D. KERNODLE, Editor. SI.OO A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. f!» editor Will not be re»pon«ll>le for #tewseqp reeled by cofrefcpondenti. Bntered at the Postofflc* at ir*h»m. V. 0., M second oluan matter. GRAHAM, N. C., Aug. 13, 1919. The government is right after the profiteers. It is right that the innocent should be protected from the profiteering wolves. Nor should paltry lines atone for the wrongs practised against an ii nocent and helpless public President Wilson rose to ilie occasion in calling a halt in the strike situation. Ho told Con gress what and how to get at the root of the trouble, and his plan appears to have met the approval of the press and the law makers. The fight of Senator Lodge and his associates against the Peace . Treaty has had all along a decid. Ed partisan bias. As a political move on the part of Republican leaders it has a "kick" that will : be hard to smoothe out in the i next presidential campaign. Last week the North Carolina I Bar Association held its annual r meeting in and the ; report* of the-'firoceedings indi eate it to have been in every way A •access and an enjoyable occa sion for the profession. During tbe meeting the association had the privilege of hearing addresses by two very distinguished law yer* —Col. Bam. T. Ansell, former Acting Judge Advocate General of the Army, and Thos. W. Greg ory, former Attorney-General of the United States, the former a | native of North Carolina and the latter formerly of Texas Bach one based his speech on the & services he had performed for his p country. At tho end of the ses : aion the association elected Judge f W. P. Bynum, one of North Caro ' Una's most distinguished lawyers, its President. Great Improvement in Strike Situa fion Chicago, Aug. 12—Steady im Jirovement in the situation result ing from the strike of railway shopmen was reported by railway Officials here tonight after receipt I of messages during the day from all parts of the country. It was stated that the strikers are returning to work in prac ; tically evory sectiou affected, with the exception of Chicago, llostou and Atlanta. Hundreds of men were reported resuming work in lowa, Wisconsin and Illinois. Tho Chicago Northwestorn railroad announced removal of the em bargo on freight to lowa points. At the stockyards here 1,102 ears of livestock were received to day, which is 75 more than on the same date last year. Perishable freight switched here today to tallwl 51)2 cars. Passenger traffic still is operating with diftlculty, however, many trains arriving several hours late. Despite reports of general im provement, officers of tho local unions assort that the men are Standing Arm and will not return nntll wage demands are granted. CULL POULTRY How to Tell Profitable Hens From the Unprofitable. To have A good flock, one tlint paya tho moat inouey, hens should be called during Anoint ami Sep tember, »aya I)r. 11. F. Kanpp of the North Corolina Experiment Station. Dr. Kaupp Hugged* that those poullryiuen who do not know how t:t go about this calling get in touch with their county agent or home dcmonatra tlon agent and aak t hem to h«lp. For thoae who deaire to atudy the matter in detail, the Poultry Department of the Experiment and State Collego offer* one-day achoola in culling poul try at Went Raleigh, theae schools give tbe result* of the experi menta with poultry, which catf be carried back to the folks at home. However, it la eaay for tho av erage poultry ke«per to know a good laying hen when ho sees one. She can be recognized by auch signs aa late moulting, Weaohed beak anl ahauk, when of the yellow akin variety, deep body, good capacity, out early and late, happy and a I way* bun gry, end with a large bright red eomb. A poor laying hen can b«(|uick 1/ detected, because nhe goes to ■ooet early and cornea out late in. the morning, moulta early ha* a ■hallow body, » low capacity, a comb that la dry and stiff mul long toe naila. Such a hen a « thia should be quickly disposed of aa ahe only adds cost to the flock and givea practically no re turns. The early pullet which lays while young generally produces tbe beat laying beo. Such a pul let should be marked by a toe punch, becauae when they begin to lay at A or 6 months of age Hbey will moult late in tbe fall god beoome floe egg producers. ,j STATE AND COUNTY COUNCIL At University for Six Days-Begins Sept. 15 -Gov. Bickett . to Preside. Chapel Hill, N. C., Aug. 1 Be ginning Sept. 15; with Gov. T. W. Bickett presiding, the University of North Carolina will hold a State and County Couucil in which representatives of the State De partments of Education and Health and of the Highway, Tax, and Public, Welfare Com missions, together with representatives of County Commissioners and of Corresponding county officers will participate. The purpose of tlie con (ere lice, is to unify the work of Slate and Couuty Officers and Boards and particularly to discuss important legislation jaiied by the recent General Assembly in reference to schools, health pub lic welfare, highway construction' and taxatiou. The Conference will last for a period of six (lays, during which a regular program of conferences will be carried on. Brest. H. W. Chase will officially welcome the visitors and Gov. Bickett will make the opening address of the Conference Monday nighi. Rep resentatives of the Slate and County Officers will occupy the morning and afternoon hours and on the live nit his of the confer ence distinguished speakers from other States will address the Con ference. 11l order to take euro of tlie largo mi in Iter of Uopreseiilalives expected, the University will utilize its dormitories mid dining l oom mid is prepared to entertain ail who may come at the rate of $1.25 per day. The local commit tee in charge of arrangement)* is composed of Profs. K. C. Jlrausoti, ],. It. Wilson and B. W. Knight, The program is being prepared by Gov. iiickett, I'rof. ilrnison, Supt. K. C. Brooks, I)r. W. S. Haukin, Highway Com'r Frank I'age, Wel fare Com'r H. K. lieasley, and Tax C'om'r A. J. Maxwell. The University Summer School completed its work Friday, and to-day the 021 students enrolled in what ban been one of the most HUCoßsful\nessiotiH held here have returned lioine. Of tho i'2l students present it is interesting to note that 273 were men and CIS women; 520 were teaching and 112 moro pre paring to teach; K7 were high school students making up con ditions. Those pursuing courses for college credit numbered 352, while COO pursued normal courses. Kighty-nine North Carolina coun ties were represented, 52 "repre sentatives coming from other States. Prominent Negro Pleased With Gov ernor's Answer. Raleigh, Aug. 7.—James 11. Young, prominent negro leader of ltaleigli,who has considerable fol lowing in the Slate, has personally expressed his approval of the an swer Governor liickett sent to the Chicago Herald-Examiner about the return of many negroes to I lie South. Colonel Young says the Governor has hit the nail on the head in every phase of Ihe men sage sent the Chicago paper, lie is a believer In the South as the natural home for tho.negro man, and says that the members of his race who remain here, or return to the Suite, and follow the Hue of work suggested by the Gover nor, or those suggested by the late Hooker T. Washington and his followers, will makoinorusub stantial progress than the race could make in any other part of the country, no matter what political rights they may attain in these other sections. Industrial equality, Young says, must bo the stepping stones on which tho race may hope to come iuto its own, and that can b» bet ler attained in the Southern States where the people, who has had several thousand years start on the black race in the pioneer work of civilization, really understand and sympathize with the efforts of the negroes. • I (Ml KIM arl. »100 The reader* of thla p»|**r will l»r t»lra•«*] to learn (lilt there la il lea»4 on* dmnlril »n%- raw (bat aclence has h*en ahlv to rum lit ait Ita at*««" am! that Is catarrh. Catarrh being jrrratly Influencr4 l»r constitutional oondi llona r«'|tilrra ronalUutlotial treatment. Hair* Catarrh Medh lor la taken Intrrt all, ami acta thrush th* llloori on the Mucoua Hurfarra of the hjsiciu thereby d« atr«»yln* thr inundation of tho utaea**, akin* tn«* pa tient strength hjr bulutinjr up thvconatitu* (ton anil naaUUiif nature in d«Hnff Ita work. The proprteUira have a » mu?h faith In tfa curaltve power* of llall'a Catarrh Meolulne teat thay offer t»n* Nundml Ihtilar* for an> caae that II falla to cure Hand for llat of tea tlmonlala. Aildreaa P. J. Cheney * Co., TOledn. Ohio. Sold hy all l)ru»|Ui, Tao, a«K A California San Francisco Chronicle. A lady stopping at a hotel on the Pacific coast rang the l»- ll the first morniug of hor arrival and was very much surprised when a Japanese boy opened thedoorand came in. "I pushed tho button three times for a maid," she said stern ly, as she dived Uuder the covers. "Yes," the little fellow replied, "me she." Perhaps the price of milk will luivo to be rained again because there is MO much gra»s the cows art overworked to eat it nil. k North Dakota is being scolded by tlio reactionaries for being bul shevist and by the bftlshevists for being bourgeoise. Many former patrons of corner saloons arc discovering to their surprise that they have dirigible thirsts. Army men wrnit an "air Secre tary" in tho Cabinet. Why not ? We have a Secretary of the Inte rior, and we need one for' the Circumambient Exterior. COLD STORAGE A BLESSING Tool of Speculator—Should Not be Allowed to Overdo His Role. Now York Tribune. » Cold storage is a uri'Bt blessing —it prevents want® and prov'den n reservoir which waters the market with supplies when need ed, as hii irrigation lake conservi s rainfall. The storage plant la the Joseph's answer of science to I lie dream of i'liaraoii, wherein the loan kine coiiiUincl the fat. But like every other inslru mentality of usefulness and power, it is susceptible of laid employ ment, and there is reason to be lieve, as llie President pofutsout, that in many instances it has passed under the control of the regrater and the forestaiier —has become a tool of the unsportsman like t-poculaior. Goods are placed ' where the germs do not break in and consume, not to save them or to steady prices, but to create artificial scarcity on which greed I may feed. So there is justification for the Jersey law which the President commends to the nation—a law which forbids no man to store,, but demands that the filled ware house shall be duly and season ably emptied, shall perform the f unci ions of the good reservoir and breathe out, as it breathes in, in wholesome respiration. The speculator, the risk taker of society, the insurer who for a fee assumes chances others do not wish to carry, is not altogether the pest some hold he is. But he should not bo allowed to overdo his role and to escape his obliga tion by converting a doubtful thing into a sure tiling. As he is paid to bo a risk taker, lot him carry the risk. If lie buys for a rise, let a time be fixed for hi in.to even up his gains and losses. The storage warehouse will lose no proper part of its function if cleaned out at the end of a cycle of production, distribution aud consumption. OH MY STOMACH "I had stomach trouble so badly that nothing I ate would digest as it should," saitl Sadie K. Hamil ton, Cortland, Maine, as slio be gan a remarkable story of the re lief she has secured from Argo l'hosphate, the ir*w reconstruct ive, stomach tonic and system pu rifier. "Everything tjiat I ate would lie in my stomach like a lump," she explained. "Gas would form and I would suffer distress all the time. I got so I could hardly keep anything down. Trying to get relief, I had my stomach pumped out, but even this did not help me an I continued just as bad. "I kept hearing so much about Argo-I'hosphate that I thought it might may t>e help mo, and I de cided to try it. I have taken two bottles and to my surprise 1 am feeling fine. I can eat anything and I am not troubled at all. "I am completely rid of my old stomach trouble that I had for three years. I have not felt so well for years, and ain certainly clad to endorse Argo-I'hosphate, because I want others to bo helped by this wonderful medicine." "Tho spirit of wanting to help others is what makes suffering men and women give these splen did public endorsements of Argo- I'hosphate," said a local druggist. Dispensed by llayes Drug Co. Production of Scent. No substance tluit refuse* to dis solve In "lllor IMH iiii mlor. ft 1* the net mil substance Itself, flouting In par tlrlea In the nlr, tin In the rase of light ■mil KOIIIHI. The damper u tiling Is the more |K>werful the islor It gives ofT. A pleftiiant proof of the fact run |>e 111111 by milking In n garden lifter rain, ft ID the vnpor Of u lli|iilil Hint xmclla A i. l not Ihu liquid In the IUUMH Itself. One Common Tongue. "There was one wont," wrote sn American lied Croaa nurse serving In a French iirmjr hospital, "tliut we quickly learned In Ave languages. It was the word Hint came moat often to the Up*, of sick or wounded sold lent when suffering nr delirium wrung ut terance from them. It I* Mutter, mere, moedt-r, mndre and mother." Natural Cloth. In tropical South Ainerf-a tile Inner hnrk of n s|>cclc* of tree yields an ex cellent cloth, the libera of whlrh are Interwoven much as If the fabric came from a loom. All that I* necessary la to wash and t>eat out the cellular atulf from the Interstice* and, when dried, It la light, flexible and altogether ault able for muklug up luto garments. What Amarlcs la. America Is nn Inspiration. America la n spirit. America Is xonielhlng mystical which Uvea In the ben reus. It Is the constant and contlnuoaa searching of thr human heart for the thing that I* better. —Franklin K. f.arie. Australian Newspapers. l"hr Australian dally, weekly and monthly publication* are considered cri-nt IhMltutlons, cs{M>clally the dallies., nnh the consumption of new*-, print alone Is In rite, probably running Into 4,015) ton* monthly for the com monwealth- '' OVER-EATING is the root of nearly all difs»tiT« ovOs. If your dicostioa Is wash o* out a I kilter, bettor oat loss aadaaa KinoiDS the sew aid to bettor Jlftlos. Pisa sent to take—effective. Let Ki-moidt help strsifktos oat yser dif.stire troubles. MAM BY SCOTT ft KWNI IMPORTANT NEWS THE WORLD OVER IMPORTANT HAPPENINQB OP THIS AND OTHKR NATIONS FOB UVIN DAYS GIVEN THE NEWS IST THE SOUTH What la Taking Place In The land Will Ba Found, la Brief Paragraph* Domestic Walter Dent, aslsstant attorney gen eral of Mississippi, knocked Theodore Bilbo ilowj in a fist fight in the of fice of the secretary of state, Joseph Power, who, with other officers, sepa rated the men. The governor said he was struck without warning. No ar rests were made. Atlanta has approbated one hundred thousand dollars to purchase food sup piles pending settlement of the rail road strike. State troops have been ordered re moved from the scenes ,of the Chica go riots and the stock yards after a general strike of union workers had badly crippled the packing companies and live stock dealers had notified producers to suspend shipments to Chi cago temporarily. New Orleans sold ten thousand pounds of bacon to consumers at cost The Brooklyn street car strike will be settled by mediation. Charles H. McGwire, assistant en gineer of the municipal department of public works, who committed suicide at Los Angeles by leaping from the office of Distlct Attorney Thomaa L. Woolwlne on the eleventh floor of the ball ol records, waa held responsible by public officials fo rthe dynamiting of the home of Oscar Lawler, a prom inent attorney. Will N. Harben, native Georgian, one of the most famous American wrltera and well known as an editor, Is dead at his home in New York. He waa the author of "Pole Baker" and a large number of other stories, most of them dealing with characters of the South. Four persons known to be dead, probably six seriously wounded, prop erty and crop damage estimated at more than two million dollars and two hundred families driven from their homes, waa the toll of the electrical storm which swept northern Ohio. Three of the deaths occurred in Youngsotwn, where two persons were killed instantly by lightning and an other electrocuted by coming Into con tact with a live wire. Efforts to anticipate the results ot any quick switch in the government policy for dlaposal of the 1919 domes tic crop of wheat knocked the bottom out ot values on the board of trade at Chicago. The Choccolocco valley ot Calhoun county, Alabama, lays claim to having the champion rattlesnake killer of the season. Adair Hill killed 21 rattle snakes. Hill says he came upon one big diamond rattler which Immediate 1 ly gave battle and was killed after a struggle. It Is reported that German agents are trying to force the raising of the embargo on potash, so they may be gin shipments to this country Immedi ately, although their stock at present Is said to be email. German agents, In their effort to re gain control of the potash industry In this country, ate reported to be sup ported by the fertilizer trust ot the United States. i •Washington High nrlces, President Wilson says, are not justified by shortage of sup ply either present or prospective, but are created in many cases artificially and deliberately by vicious practices. Retailers are responsible In large part for extortionate prices. President Wilson has laid specific proposals before congress for check ing the high cost ot living, but at the same time declared permanent results cannot be expected until peace time basis Is fully restored by ratification of the peace treaty. The country's corn crop showed a decrease of 27,062,000 bushels, as a re sult ot weather and other conditions during July. , The average age ot all United States men killed in the war was 23. This emphasizes the youth of the American army. President Wilson has decided to ad dress a message to congress recom mending additions lleglslation to aid in reducing the cost of living. Department commanders have been Instructed by the war department to prosecute vigorously their campaign to obtain recruits for the American force* in Siberia. Agenu ot the department ot Justice will terret out all hoarders of neces saries and trofltaars throughout the country, who will be prosecuted under the food control act. American reports say that Rouma nians entering Budapest, the Hungari an capital, are demanding hostages and threatened to kill five hostages for each Roumanian soldier injured in Bu dapest. Seven hundred and fifty-six of the United States soldiers killed In action were victims of gas. Increase in the number of national banks In July was the greatest ot any month in recent yearn. Oreat Britain has settled her obli gation to tha American government tor munitions negotiated for during the war. President Wilson recommends that goods released from storage {or Inter state commerce hear the selling price at which they went Into storage and requiring that all goods destined for Interstate commerce bear the price at which they left the hands of the pro ducer. Says President Wilson: "We and we almost slonj nol hold the world steady. steadfastness and selfposseiHgLpt'pcncl the affairs of nations jOTßqpfcre. It U In this su preme on«l» the crisis for all man kind (hat America must prove her mettle." The project to build the St. Mary's itrer canal from the port of Bt. Mary's On . across the base of the state of Florida to the Ottlf of Mexico, took on new Interval In Waahlngton when Senator William J. Harris of Georgia Introduced a resolution which directs the aacretaiy of commerce and the Inland waterways officials of the rail raod administration to submit all available data and facts on the scheme to the senate. Increased rates on cotton and cot ton from points in southern territory to various destinations in the United ft«l*s and Canada, asked by sooth- Mi tern railroads In connection with carrier#, not under federal control, have been approved by the Interstate commerce commission with .ut formal hearing. Glenn E. Plumb, author of organized labor's bill for public ownership of the railroads, who waa formerly a cor poration lawyer, much in the employ of the railroads of the West, and la now In the employ of the railroad bro therhoods, took the stand before the house- interstate commerce committee, and declared that every railroad sys tem In the United States waa sub jected to a systematized plundering under private ownerahlp. The permanent military policy rec ommended by the war department, in volving under revised estimates, a standing peace army of 676,000 and universal military training for youths of It years of age, would cost the county nine hundred mlltion dollars annually. Gen. Peyton C. March, chiqt of staff told the senate military sub committee, considering army leglsla tlon. General March asserts that the pres ent time is the moft appropriate for Inaugurating a system of military training Inasmuch as military camps are In readlnecs over the country and also the necessary equipment. President Wilson has Issued a for mal statement saying that the "frank statement" made by Viscount Uchlda as to Japan's policy regarding Shan tung "ought to remove many of the misunderstandings which have begun to accumulate about this question." Viscount Uchlda Bays: "The policy of Japan Is to hand back the Shan tung peninsula in full sovereignty to China, retaining only the economic privileges granted to Oermany and the right to establish a settlement under the usual conditions at Tsing-fao." Foreign The Spanish parliament has approv ed the proposal that Spain join the league of nations. Nicholas Mlsu, of the Roumanian peace delegation, was called for the second time before the supreme coun cil on aceount of the Roumanian re fusal to comply with the demands of the peace conference. The attitude of the Roumanians Is causing great embarrassment to the supreme council. The surrender ot General Kruska, commander of the German prison camp at Kaiser, has been demanded by the allies as the first of the enemy officials to be tried for violation ot International law. The Belgian chamber of deputies unanimously ratified the peace treaty with Germany. An agreement-for the sale of Amer ican army stocks in France for $400,- 000 waa signed by the French, says Marcel Hutin, in Echo de Paris, King George conferred upon Premier David Lloyd-George the Order of Merit as a sign of the appreciation of the English people of Mr. George's war services. Lieutenant Godefroy, a French avi ator, performed the feat ot passing under the Arc de Triomphe at Paris In an airplane flight. A dispatch from Vienna by way ot Copenhagen says that the United States has sent an ultimatum to Rou manla demanding withdrawal ot the severe armistic terms presented to Hungary on pain of cessation of the ahipment of food to Koumania. Herbert Hoover, head of the inter allied relief commission, has stopped all relief supplies on their way to Bu dapest, taking the position that he would be unwarranted in letting sup plies reach Hungary while Roumanians are now depriving the people of food atuffs. The supreme council has sent a note to the Roumanian authorities begging them to conform to the conditions of the entente and not to embarrass by previous decisions the work of the Interallied investigation committee sent to Budapest. A Paris dispatch says that telegrams from American officials at Budapest state that Roumanian troops upon en tering Budapest started plundering in the suburbs. Fifteen or twenty civil ians were killed by the Roumanian! during the day. Great Britain purposes establishing a central authority to deal with profit eering. The settlement of the Adriatic ques tion, affecting Italy and Jugo-Slavia, Is Imminent. The cities have not altered their de cision to hold the trial ot the former German emperor in London. CARE OF HORSES' SHOULDERS Prevent Accumulation of Dirt and Dandruff en Collars, Especially If Boreness Develops. Do not nse sweat pads. Keen collara clean of dsndi-uff and dirt, especially If soreness develops. Sponge the shoul ders of work horses with cold water at night after work. If they are sweaty at noon, sponge at noon also. Care ahould be taken In fitting collars on work harsea. Many collars are too big or too loose. If the withers are fat or especially full, the fitting of col lars will need extra care.—Ohio State University. GAPES |N LITTLE CHICKENS Disease Kills Mors Young Fowls Than Any Other Aliment—Disc our ages Poultry Keeping. Probably more little chicken* are killed by gapes than by any other one disease. On nearly every farm at least a few chickens die every spring of this tronble, and on many farms the loss Is so great at to discourage the keeping of poultry. FATTEN DUCKS FOR MARKET For Two Weeks Give Mixture of Com. meal, Middlings, Bran, Meat Scrap and Green Feed. Before marketing the ducks, fatten for t#o weeks on a mixture of three pounds corumeal, two pounds mid dlings, one pound bran, one pound meat wrap, one pound green- feed, three per cent grit Moisten with soar milk or buttermilk. IT ted quite wet* Use «f Drinking Water. Drink whatever water you desire with meals, but do not take lee water, and do not nse water merely to wash food down your throat. Water aids di gestion by helping to liquefy the food and by bringing the gastric Juices Into closer contact with the food partlcfo*. Water does not affect the enayines and weaken them by dilution a» some peo ple maintain, because the power of the enzymes depends not on the percent age which 1s present but upon their total amount and chemical composi tion. State College News. West Raleigh. N. C., Aug. 1-1 Announcement of couiaea at tbo North Carolina State College, /• .r ibe Mgsion beginning September 3rd, i* the subject of the B'ale College Record for August. This is a pro lufely illustrated booklet earning pictures of the buildingp, elAaa w rk, laboratories and college at:- linties, and grneiiil information re garding the college ami ils fTeringS in technical education. The iul 11 a'io i is designed pri marily for distribution IIUI ng prim ped ive students. Tim iKvuo of "'i'eehaical Education" which was gotten out in the -apring bus been exhausted. The new "Announce ir. ut of Courses" covers somewhat tli i same informal >lll and is now available to a l l tboeo who. weri pot provided with the icimer record. LEMON JUICE IS FRECKLE REMOVER Girls! Make till* cheap btauty lotion to clear and whiten your skin. Squeeze the juice of two lemons Into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake well, anil you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and complexion lieautitier, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ouiicis of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day uml see how freckles and blemishes disappear anil how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It Is harmless. ad v Wlmt many of the chieftains of Congress need is less bone in their heads and more in their hacks. Under the old English dictum a man's house is his castle, but is it also his distillery aud brew ery? Trustee's Sale of Real Estate. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a cer tain deed of trust bearing date of December 19th, 1916, and duly re corded in Book of Mortgages and 'Deeds of Trust No. 71, at page 272, in the Public Registry of Ala mance couniy, the undersigned trustee will, on -MONDAY, AUG. 18, 1919, at 12 o'clock, ndon, at the court house door of Alamance county, at Graham, North Carolina, offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, a certain tract of land in Haw River town e'lip, Alamance county, State of North Carolina, adjoining the lands of Mrs. Henry Brown, J. M. ijtone, C. D. Johnson atfd others and bounded as follows: Beginning at an iron bar in the Haw River road, corner with said Biown; running thence S 62° W1 chain 70 Iks to an iron bar in said road, eorner with said Johnston; thence N 17£° W schs64 Iksto an iron bar, corner with said Johnston; thence N 73° E 1 ch G7| Iks to an iron bar, corner with Laid Brown; thiuce S 17E (back sight 16 3-4 J ) 5 chs 30 Iks to t'je beginning, containing 96-100 of an acre, more or less, on which is situated a seven-room dwelling. This July 15th, 1919. Alamance Ins. & Real Estate Co., Trustee. Trustee's Sale of Real Estate. Under and by virtue of power of Halo contained in a deed of trust executed by B. E. Teague (now deceased) and wife on September 20th, 1913, and rocorded in the oiflce of Register of Deeds of Ala mance county in Book N*jl 62, pages 84, etc., the undersigned trustee will ofTer for sale at-pub lic outcry to the highest bidder for cash at tha courp house door in Giahatn, Alamance county, NortljX'arolina, at 3*30 o'clock in the afternoon, oil SATURDAY, AUG. 10, 1910, the following described property; Lots No*. 23, 11 and 12 in the plau and survey of the A. Lacy Thompson bind, lying and being on the macadamized road leading from Burlington to Oraham, said plot having been made by Lewis 11. Holt, County Surveyor of Ala mance County, and recorded In the office of Register of Deeds for Alamance county. Lot No. 23. Beginning at a stake, the intersection of the road leading from the macadamized road to Graham and Thompson Street; running thence N. with Thompson Street 3$ deg E. 200 feet to a stake, corner of Lot No. 22; thenco S 82 j deg E 80 ft to a stake, corner of Ix>t No. 24; thence S3} deg W 200 ft to a stake on the rond leading from the macad amized road to Graham and cor ner with Lot No. 24; thence N along the line of said road 82} deg W 80 ft to the beginning, con taining forty-four one-hnndredths (44-100) of an acre. Lots Nos. 11 and 12. Beginning at n slake on the north side of Williamson Street and corner with Lot No. 13; runniug tbence N 82 3-4 deg \V 160 'ft to a stake, corner with Lot No. 10; thence N 3£ deg K 232 ft to a stake; tbeuce N 85 deg W ICO ft to a stake, cor ner with Lot No. 13; thence 8 3+ dog W 229 ft to the beginning, containing eighty-two one-hnn dredths (82-100) of an acre. For a more complete descrip tion of this property, reference is hereby made to plot of sa'd lands. liese lots were p ire based at t*>« auction sale of the A. Lacy Thompson property on January 30th, 1909, and March 27, 1909. This 11th day of July, 1919. PIEDMONT TRUST COMPANY, Tnutee. fy San HMRV -Flu' left » 111 • rery weak, ran- x *'! BtlKHi* down condition. I *u so nerrou* Y»V MllfftS ?' that my Band* shook Ilk* an old man \W? , 7 Tmtrv 1 with tic pals/. My kidneysi wereln Vgl// y y / bad shape, and mj Ilrer slog*ish. My , AfC / FVf / food dlsested wry poorly, and I often i \ j%JI =77 —■> bad cramp* In my stoma Co, and was xl» 1 I bloated with fas. . „ (\\ V /J iV//Uv\ "I took a bottle of DRECO, and It \\// Vi. 4 //>«\w«nt rlgbt after mj troubles onkk. W \f \ AY/ / nerres are now steady and my HI II 23 v- SfeB 5 * r n d ; Ta'sr A plants which act on the rltal organs Ea pleasant and prompt manner. S-^ I J The "Green Flag" Smile I It the Smile Worth While! I The Smile that "Won't come off"— There was a time when he didn't smile, When he drove hi* motor car: For the engine knocked and thumped and bucket^ And gave him a terrible "jar"-*- It's different now, when he takes the wheel. And starts for his daily spin; H He uses "GREEN FLAGF to lubricate, H And his car runs as smooth as a pin. There are two great essentials in lubrication. First, the quality of the OIL, and second, the correct grade or "body" for your particular car. The "GREEN FLAG" MOTOR OIL supplies these two great essentials. It is the highest quidity I ■ Motor Oil, and is made in varying grades of cons is* H tency to meet the requirements of your particular H motor. Your dealer has a chart that guides you to selection. The quality of "GREEN FLAG" is all the guide you need as to a CHOICE of motor 00. Keep it ia I your mind, always, that you can not exercise too I ■ much care in the selection of a motor oil; the correct B ■ grade; and never try to run your car without a full I supply in the lubrication box. Then you'll keep smil ing like the man in the picture. The following well-known and reliable dealers are exclusive agents for "GREEN FLAG" MOTOR OIL I in this county. They guarantee "GREEN FLAG". H I It irill pay yon to go out of your way to buy "GREEN FLAG" MOTOR OIL— ■ Graham Motor CarXo., Graham, N. C. I "j EJkin Motor CoXMebane, N. 0. Andereon Motrr Co., Burlington, N. C. WW the Hessian Fly, the heavily increased yields, ju Mr lowering the cost pet bushel—these make M fit the satisfied smile of the farmer who uses „ £|| f ROYSTER'S I I FERTILIZER -|S| | ul Every wheat grower should have the new book— Wheat If W Growing For Profit. It tells just what to do to get the most ft JJJ from your crop. Send the coupon today and receive it free.' M F~ S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY «1 Please send me your free Wheat Book M EAST CAROLINA TEACHERS' TRAINING SCHOOL I*'* A State School to train teachers for tlic public schools of North Carolina. Every energy 1» directed to this one purpose. Tuition free to all who agree to teach. Fall term begins September 24, 1919. _ For catalog and other information address, ROBERT H. WRIGHT, President, GREENVILLE, N. C.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 14, 1919, edition 1
2
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