VOL. XLY Get Rid of Tan, Sunburn and Freckles by mine HAGAN*S Magnolia IffiT Balm, Acts Stop* die burning. Clears your complexion of Tan and Blemishes. You cannot know how good it is until you by it Thous ands of women say it is beft of all beautifiers and heals Sunburn Quickest. Don't b« without it • ay longer. Get a bottle now. At your Druggist or by mail direct 75 cents tor either coiwx. White. Pink, Rose-Red. SAMPLE FREE.V 4 LYON MFG. CO, 40 So. W. St. Brooki r m. ft*. EUREKA Spring Water FROM EUREKA SPRING* Graham, N. C. A valuable mineral spring has been discovered by W. JL Aualey on his place in Graham. It was noticed that it brought health to the users of the water, and upon being analyzed it was ofond to be a water strong in mineral properties and good for stomach and blood troubles. Physicians who have seen the analysis and what it does, recommend its use. Analysis and testimonials will be furnished up )n request. Why buy expensive mineral waters from a distance, when there is a good water recom mended by physicians right at home? For further informa tion and or the water, if you desire if apply to the under signed. W. H. AUSLKY. PROFESSIONAL CARDS JOHN J. HENDERSON Attorney-at-Law GRAHAM. N. C. Olllcc over National Banlc ol Alaantt J", S. C OOK, Attarn ay - at- Law, GRAHAM, N. G Olßoe Patterson Building Second Floor. ML WILL . . . DENTIST : : ; Graham, . - - - Narth Carolina OFFICE ik SIMMONS BUILDING JACOB A. LONG. J. ELMER LONO LONG & LONO, Attorney* and Counaelora at L*w GRAHAM, M. C " DICESTONONE't N»tnr«*ij Restorative. will help. Not only J tfvt* quick, wre relief from indige*. 1 tioo's ilia Heartburn, Dizaixajl Sour Rising*. Acid Mouth; Sleeplo* I nets, etc., but builds up appetite and ) KNOW, j j« I . I am lmproTln* la health I a Uktn» roar madlclae. It § baa helped me ao much. I can't tall I roo bow thankful I aaa. I do not ■ I could „ flow, Wiuiat It if hare raroaimeaded It to war slaea I It baa don* ma en much good. M WILLIS TOWN 8. Mauaon. K«. Car." ft»aM» ~iUl~-»»a,mm*BACK \ ' FACTS, aaa , HAYES DRUG COMPANY, ORAHAM, N. C." • • H»l LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS This book, entitled as above, contains over 200 memoirs of Min isters in the Christian Church with historical references. AD interesting volume—nicely print ed and bound. Price per copy: cloth, 12.00; gilt top, $2.60. By mall *oe extra. Orders may tx> Bent to P. J. KKKNODLI, 1012 K. Marshall St., Richmond, Va Orders may be left at this office. Cloth From Bark of Tree. The famous "tapa" cloth of Poly nesia la made from the Inner bark of the paper mulberry. When of the fln e»t quality It Is bleached to anowy whiteneas and fine as muslin. In trop ical Africa the Inner bark of a legu minous tree Is utilized ID the same way. Indeed. It Is surprising to learn how widely tree barks are employed aa material for clothing the world over. And In the West Indies grows the "lace-bark tree," which yields a deli cate tissue so like lace that many arti cle of feminine adornment are mate fr— * THE ALAMANC E GLEANER Elsie Takes Command * Br WILL T. AMES (Copyright. 1»1». br th. UoClar. N.w«- p.p«r Syndlemt..) A ferry boat load of the shipyard men piled pell-mell over the wharf, across the railroad tracks and onto the main thoroughfare of the town, ot the foot of which lay the makeshift Bllp. They were roughly clad and grimy and strong, and, many of them, hard-look ing. There had been a crap game on the boat coming over and It had not gone amoothly. Three of the men among the thouaand allowed the marka of It, for they .were mort or less bloody and still white with anger. The three, each with a friend or two, atopped at the saloon at the foot of the Btreet to wash off the stains of the row. The rest of the workers paid no heed but hurried on homeward. There was little laughter or Joking. What conversation there waa among them waa unsmiling and It was plain to be seen that the yeaßt of dlacontent waa at work. At the street corner two blocks f£om the wharf a girl afood by the curb, watching the passing throng and look ing for aome one. By and by ahe caught Bight of'a tall, tougbly fash ioned''yourifg fellow with thick hair that looked flaxen by contraßt with his sun burned skin. He spied the girl at the same In stunt, stkld a brief word to the com' pinions of the moment, and atopped beside her, autdmfctlcally reaching oat for the bundles she carried. The girl's eyes were shining. "What do you know, Billy? I found a placet ail honest-to-goodness apartment Mrs. Ells heard about a couple that are gty lng out of town—somebody she knows. She's a good old thlnf, after all, Billy, and ah* went right down there and got them to'keep atlll about It till we could get a chance at the place. "I've been down today and engaged It It's an old house, BlUy, but there's three rooms and a bath — and only oile other family, the folks that own It; they live downstairs. I guess they're boosting the rent two or three dollars. But we should worry—with your pay. It's our lucky day, Isn't It, BlllyT" But Billy Noxou didn't respond to the happy mood of his young -wife nearly as she had anticipated. While Elsie lay In watt for him there she had ex pected that he would throw up his hat and shout. Places to live—to really live and keep house like regular civilized people—were simply unob tainable In the town. The Noxon s had been "light housekeeping 4 " In a single room for four months, like hundreds of others. "Don't know as there's any use In fussing about it, Chick," the boy finally replied soberly. "We're likely to have to get to blazes out of this man's town any time now. The gang's pretty sore, and they're likely to tie a can, any time at all, to the bunch of grafters that are running the tea kettle factory over the river." "What do you mean, Billy Noxon— a strike?" "It's a heap sight more than Just one strike, when the blowoft comes. The working man has been carrying the tar end of the stick about as long as he's going to In this country. Here's yon and me living like a couple of bums In a coop of a room and me sweating my hide oft over there on those hulls—and a lot of loafers that don't hit a ship a lick from the time she's doped out till she's overboard, rind haven't even got a dollar of their own money In the plant, pulling down millions. "Living In palaces aud dressing their wives In thousand-dollar furs and swelling around In limousines and play ing golf while we play on a rivet gun —and all off us t All stolen from the working man and his family I And then, when we hit them for a lousy dol lar a day raise, to help pay for the profiteering prices on the grub we eat, they give us the hoot P* Elsie was looking very steadily and studiously at her big husbsnd. "WMIT" she said, as he ran oat of breath. "Well," Billy resumed, "It's abont all over, sis. There's going to be some thing doing, and that right quick. I dunno's It's worth while for us to chsnge from one room to three. May be we'll tie In the middle of a hard boiled shindy In a week or two—and either have some kind of a decent share In things or nothing at all. Death's better than slavery." The boy stared goomlly at a passing tour ing car. The girl was about an Inch above five feet—her'busbsnd about an loch above six. Her ejrelf'had been grow ing blgget and bluer as she listened to his doar'spescfc, Now she seized him by tire ana *nd said: "Billy Nox on, you cotbd home with me* straight. "And don't jfdn speak—or even think—a word tin I tell you td." The somber face of tho boy thawsd 'ato a sheepish grin as be permitted himself to be marshaled along she city blocks to the place where they lived in Mrs. Ells' furnished second floor back. Not until they were la their tr.om, with the door closed behind them did Klsley speak again. "Now," she de clared taking the bandies from Mlly and putting them 01 the table, Tve got something to say to you, you *>lg boob I You've been listening to those darned bolsheviks agsln i You sit Sown there and answer me a couple of questionsand she pushed her husband Into the llmpy-legged morris • hair. 'First—How much money did ws have after two years whea we quit Boxbury snd came here? Wa had $l4O, didn't we? We've been here four months, and how much have we got? We've got 5480 of new money, that's what we've got. And It's clean money, Billy, honestly earned. I'd rather have that than a million that was grafted. We're not jetting along so badly. Maybe somebody else Is getting a whole lot more doesn't deserve It half as much. But I guess these things will be straightened out If fellows like you don't go looney and apoll everything. Anyhow, you never had so much money ahead In- your life, Billy Noxon, and I know It. "Now, who's the head devil over there at the yard In getting up all this LW. W. sentiment? Is It a black-mus zled fellow they call Saunderson?" "Well, Saunderaon'a the amartest, most Independent man In the yard, If that'a what you Zhean, and not afraid to speak his mind. The fellows listen to him because he's there with the goods." "I thought ao. I sat behind hlin and some other anarchists In a street car yesterday, when he ought to have been at work, and I know what be thinks. I heard him tell the man with hint that It was about time the 'boorzhwa' was kept from monopolizing every thing, Including the 'most beautiful and desirable wives' —that'a exactly what he said, Billy Noxon 1" "Well," responded Billy, rather doubtfully, "he meant that a working man can't compete with a rich one for a girl, when he can't send tier flowers and give her buzz-car rides and such things." "Billy, you're a simp. He mount — because he said so—that the women ought to be nationalized. Understand that? Made the property of the men equally, like the food and the clotliea and the houses and automobiles! He said It was too eirly to spring that Idea yet, but It would surely come." Billy tried to say something, but the little wife kept on. "Billy, I didn't tell you before, but twice that black devil has tried to pick me up on the street. Yesterday when he got up to leave the car he grinned at me and winked, and he aald out of the corner of his mouth as he paaaed: 'Pretty peach!' Billy Noxon, do you want me nationalized— for Saunderson? Are you for the bol sheviks or for me?" Billy Noxon found Saunderson In the yard next day, and hammered him for five minutes. He told him that he'd lick him every time he saw him. Wherefore, Saunderson is now agitat ing elsewhere, and there hasn't been any strike In the yard. Maybe every thing Is not exactly na It should he a* between labor and capital, but as between Billy and Elsie, bolslievlsm hasn't a look-in. PARAVANE PROVED ITS WORTH No Veaael Protected by That Contri vance Is Known to Have Been Sunk by Mines. The oddity of the word "paravane," as It now reaches the general public, shows how well an Important secret was kept (ftring the historic years 191T-18. During those years the In vention, perfected v at Portsmouth, England, waa added to aouie 4,(MM) British vessels, and no case Is known In which a ship thus protected was damaged by a sunken mine. Towed under water on both sides of the bow, the paravane, shaped like a kite, met the mooring wire of the sunken mine, deflected the hidden menace to a safe dlatance from the ship, severed It* mooring, and left it free to come to the surface where It could be exploded by gun lire. Seamen nnturally enough soon came to speak of the paravanes as "otters," and they enabled many a vessel to travel safely through mine- Infested waters. Several hundred American ships had lieen thus equipped at the signing of the armi stice, and It is a pleasing thought that the cessation of hoatliltles saved about $10,000,000 which the United States meant to spend In providing paravanes for American shipping. Would Return the Favor. Some years ago there was a Fourth of July celebration at a town In north ern New York, where my father was pastor of a church. During the day several out of town couples came to the parsonage to be married, and one husky bridegroom as soon aa the knot was tied, asked: "What are the dam ages?" Father replied that he made no particular charge for murrylng peo ple, but left the amount to the gener osity of the groom. "Thank you," aald the young man, "I'll do as much for you sometime," and walked out, leaving ua all convulsed with laughter, but when they reached the street the bride would go no farther until "huKby" came back and handed the minister a $2 bill. —Exchange. Size of Ocean Waves. The size of the Atlantic ocean waves has been carefully measured for the hydrographlc bureau, Washington. In height the waves usually average about 30 feet but In rough weather they attain from 40 to 48 feet During storms they are often from 500 to 000 feet'long and last ten to eleven sec onds, while the longest one yet known measured half a mile, and did not spend Itself for 23 seconds. Quest of Novelty. "Henry, I must have a motorcar that Is unlike anybody else's." "I don't see how we sre going to ar range that my dear. Most of the available models seem to be In use. However, we might persuade s manu facturer to build u csr to order shaped like U tee hive, and yon could buzz around In that."—Birmingham Age- Herald. Pointed Advice. "Oh, doctor." cried a wild-eyed man. "I am dreadfully afflicted! The ghosts of my departed relatives corne and perch on the tops of the fence |>osts all around my yard when dusk Is fall ing. I can look out Into the gloaming an) evening and see a couple of dozen spooks solemnly sitting on top ot that many posts, waiting, waiting, waiting. Ob, doctor, what shsll I do?" "Sharpen the tops of the posts," briskly replied the physliisn. Five dollars, please."—Judge. Roadside Fruit Trses. The genius of the roadside fruit or not tree Is the hospitality which It symbolizes, end the spirit of neighbor ly qp-ope ration. It la an established Institution In parts of Europe, as is France, Italj and Germany. It is a practice worth thlnttng about Both esthetic and utiltlarlin purposes would be served by general adoption of the rule 1a communities sufficiently organ ized to give necessary can to the tress once they hare been planted. GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY. AUGUST 21, 1910 EXPECT 10 COLLECT soMorno.ooo SOUTHERN METHODISTS OUTLINB PLANS FO« HANDLING GREAT CENTENARY FUND. Orgsnlsstlon Will Collect Largest Amount Ever Handled By Any Religious Denomination Anywhere. The Centenary Commission of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, has announced Its plan for collecting the $53,000,000.00 which was pledged for the missionary work of the church In the recent eight-day drive. The plan was prepared and will be diroct* ed by Colonel John E. Edgorton, ot Tenneaaee, the general centenary treasurer and the director of the de partment of finance fir the Centenary Commission. Colonel Edgerton Is a well known business man. lie Is president and manager of the l»banon Woolen Milla, president of tho Tennessee State Manufacturers Association, and during the war he was a member ot the executive cominltee of the war In dustry board appointed by President Wilson. "Our slogan Is no shrlnkago, but an Increase," said Colonol Edgerton re cently. "Just as the Southern Metho dist church bas surpassed all records la securing pledges for benevolent purposes and has ralsod the largest asm ever given to any church at one time In thQjilstory of the world, so do we expect to set a new record in the collection of these pledges." An Extenelvs Organization. The organization through which these pledges will be collected has lour centers of responsibility. The first Is a general finance commission with headquarters at Nashville, headed by Colonel Edgerton. This commis sion has prepared the standard plan and will direct the entire movement, handing down to the various bodies throughout the church detailed plans for their guidance. There will also be a conference cab inet In each annual conference of the church, about forty In number. These conference cabinets will be composed of the Conference Missionary Secre tary, Conference Campaign Director, the Lay leader, and the Conference Centenary Treasurer. Each of these officials have certain specific duties, and will direct the work of collecting all the pledges in each annual confer ence. In each of the four hundred districts of the church there is a similar cab inet composed of the Presiding Elders, the Lay leaders, Cempalgn Directors and the Chairman of the Methodiet Minute Men. The Conference Mission ary Secretary la an ex-officio member of all dletriot cabinets The work of collecting In the dlstriots will be su pervised by thle district cabinet Twenty Thousand Churches. la each of the 20,000 local churchee there will be local cabinets composed of the pastor, the centenary treas urer, the campaign director, (he lay leader, the chairman of the minute men, the Sunday school superintendent and the president of the Woman's Mis sionary Society. Thle cabinet will do alt the actual work of collecting the individual pledges. The persons who mado subscrip tions wilt be divided Into lists o( twenty-five and the lists will be placed In charge of s certain member of the churoh cabinet who will collect all pledgee as they come dun. One feature of the etandard plan Is that the local church will be respon slble for collecting the full amount ol Its subscription. If sny subscriber dies or meets with misfortune auch as to render It Impossible for him to psjr Us pledge. It will be the duty of the church cabinet to aecure another pel son to take the place of the one thus become delinquent It le also propoeed that every new member who comes Into the church shall aleo be aaked to make a contrV button to the Centenary fund. The Centenary fund of 111,000,004 will be used for the church In an ex. teosloa of Its missionary work throughout the world Several mllllos will be spent In the devastated re gtona of France, Delglum, Poland and Russia. Other ml I Hons will go to th« seven foreign fields oocupied by tbt chareh—Mexico, Bradl. Cubs, Africa Chlaa. Japaa and Korea Other mil Hons will he spent In the Industrie, sections Of the great dtlee, la thi mountains, among the immigrants, tlx nsgrees bad the Indians, snd In build lng ehurehes ia the missionary tern tsry of the United Ctetae Arctio Light. At noon of December 21, the short est and darkest day of the year, we could easily detect a faint glow of ; light In the south. The true dark ness of night Is a result of the com plete disappearance of all traces of twilight, which occurs when the sun reaches a point of 18 degrees below the horizon. Onr latitude was 78 de- • greet 20 minutes, therefor* the sun at this time was only about 12 degrees below the horizon. —From "Four Years in the Whits North," by Donald B. McMillan. GRASSHOPPER IS GOOD FOB FEED When Dried They Can to Poultry Flock With Other Feeds During Winter. INSECTS HIGH IN PROTEIN Poisoned Bait Recomrflended Consists of Bran or Sawdust Made Tssty and Attractively Addition of Molssses snd Fruit (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) When grasshoppers make fhelr ap pearance they can be destroyed by the common poisoned bait method. But there la another way of getting rid of grasshoppers that makes the pests pay for the trouble of killing or catching them. Tills method consists of driv ing a grasshopper catcher through an Infested field, catching all the grass hoppers that hop, and then feeding the Insects to chickens. They can be dumped Into sacks nnd hung up to dry and fed.ns dry grasshoppers, or If It Is preferred to feed the grasshoppers alive, the machine can be hauled to the poultry yard and placed so that the front will face the light The Insects will find their way out but not too fast for an ordinary flock of chickens. Thus the grasshopper catcher becomes a poultry self-feeder. An analysis of grasshoppers shows them to be high In protein and there fore good chicken feed. It is known that chickens are more productive when Insects are n part of their ra tion, and grasshoppers when dried can be used with other feeds during the winter. Make-Up of Poisoned Bait The poisoned bait recommended con sists of bran or sawdust made tasty and attractive by the addition of mo lasses and fruit and treated with an arsenical poison. The following form ula Is recommended: Bran (half und half bran and hard wood sawdust, or sawdust alone), 211 pounds; parls green or crude arscnlou* oxide, 1 pound, or white nrsenlc, pounds; molasses (cheap feeding grade), 2 quarts; lemons, bananas ot oranges, 0 fruits, or 1 ounce of cheap lemon extract; water, obont 2 to 4 gal lons. The poison should be thoroughly mixed with the bran. Tho water, molasses and finely chapped fruit oi extract are then mixed und added. Tho mixture should bo wet so that It molds In tho hands but Is not "soppy." The bolt should be scattered broadcast at the rate of seven to ten pounds to the acre, applications being made In the early morning. In clover or alfalfa much material and labor can lie saved by first cut ting around the field until there re- V j/wiil/y.., Grasshoppers Can Be Captured In Thli Portable Cage. mains u small central uncut area whert the grasshoppers will huve gathered nnd may be quickly and cheaply do." stroyed by the poisoned bait. If the grasshoppers are feeding In corn ot young trees more water, or better. Inert molasses and water, should be mill ed, and the mixture thrown forcefully so that the particles will adhere to th« crops to be protected. How to Mike Grasshopper Catcher. The grasshopper catcher, which hat an advantage over the old-style hop. perdozer, In that the Insects can be Utilized for chicken feed, Is nbout Ifl feet long with an upright but curved piece of tin In front and so nrrnnged that the grasshoppers will strike It an they hop iip, falling to the bottom nnd back through a narrow trap opening Into a box behind. The tin front does not extend quite to the bottom, where, Just In front of the tin shield, Is a strip of tin so placed that there Is nn opening nbout 1% or 2 Inches wide. This front strip or lip may be made by nslng n 1 (1-foot length of gutter, one side of which Is flattened outward. The back nnd top of the l>ox In the | rear Is covered with wire screen and I the top should tie so hinged that It can easily be opened and the accumulated grasshoppers shoveled out as needed. A horse Is hitched to nn extended beam at each end and the catcher dragged through the Infested nren, b* ginning at the sides and working to ward the center of the field. ENSILAGE IS VALUABLE FEED It Is Excellent Feed for Cows, Sheep, and Beef Cattle—Silo Is Good Investment White you are canning fruits and vegetables for your home, a* you sure ly will, why not can (ensile) feed for your live stock? .Ensilage may be (ailed canned feed, and It Is n very valuable feed for cows, sheep and beef cattle. The silo will be an In vestment If you have mail}' eulinal* to feed next winter, V i 3 The Office Boy's Trouble. The office boy bad been sitting for hours at a typewriter, gazing vacantly Into distance, and the force was becom ing worried. "He's sick,""suggested the kindly, old, gray-haired Iwvjkkeeper, but the blonde stenographer Insisted thero most have been some tragedy at home. The suspense ended when the lad suddenly turned to the fat claim clerk snd Inquired; "Hay, Mr. J ones, how do you spell Thelma?" Loyal Amarlcarul Get Together on National War Savlnga Day. WAYS OF EARNING MONEY DURING SUMMER VACATION Many Opportunities Open to Children Who With to Encourage Hablta of Thrift and Saving. A uroat many question! about bow | children may earn money In order to purchase Thrift and War Savings Stamps during th« summer vacation period have come Into the War 1/Oan Organization at Richmond, and U is to answer these Inquiries that tha present article has beeu prepared. The suburban or country child prob ably has tho best opportunities (or making money, though selling papers and magazines, running errands and doing chorea offer several ways for the city child to earn the where-wlth ull for Thrift Stamp*. In the country thcro Is first of all tha garden, and at this time growing food stuffs should receive special at tention. It l> not too lute to plant fall crops which may bo marketed with profit, lettuce and radishes are easily grown and always And good markets, especially In the Into sum mer and fall. There will probably be more of some kinds of vegetables In the garden than run be eaten or can ned. These shpuld be Hold. On almost every farm there la a time when much of the fruit rlpene at once, and the problem of disposing of It arises. Some of It Is eaten, some preserved. A quantity of It not In frequently rots. This should be told If there I* a market near enough, but If such la not the rase the children can put It up and sell the canned stuff In the fall. Pigs, chickens, turkeys or rabbit* ace easily raised In the summer vaca tion, and all of them will bring In large returns for (be time and labor. Herry picking Is another way of mak ing money that children should enjoy, and this year there Is a plentiful crop Many mothers and fathers will be glad to pay the children for taking care of the yard, cutting wood, run ning errands or doing dally chores. In fact there urn *o many way* of oarning tnpney during the summer that the list might be Indefinitely lengthened Hut of course the object of any and all of these ways is not simply to make money, but to make end save money; In other words, enough to buy War Savings Stamps which will bring In four pr-r cent in terest. compounded quarterly. You can do this, every boy and girl In this big country A. B. C. OF IT AGITATORS and IJOI.SIIKVIKI howl CONTINUALLY, DENOUNt'INO EVERYTHING! they FIND In the OOOD old System. HANDED down to ua, INTACT JUST as our lj]i? KIND forefather* LETT It. to MAKE tho young NATION * OPULENT and Kree. PROTECTOR of all In QUEST «f Liberty. RIOIIT and Equality! SMITE down THESE vile efforts to UNDO our nieeslngsl VINDICATE AMERIC A! WAR SAVINOS STAMPS EXTERMINATE Reds'" YOU can help Put ZEST Into your WAR SA VINOS SOCIETY. HOW ABOUT ITT Someone is saving the money jron trade Who I* depositing your dol lar*T Save them *nd~Ttw|m*ft- tbwn yourself. Sing a song of Savings Stamps. The coet of living's high, Rut have yon counted all the thing* he** Savlnrs Stamps will buyt „ Wanted Pleasure Prolonged. Julia was Invited to a birthday party given at an exclusive tearoom. When she was asked to clioose dessert she anld: "I believe I'll take gum—lt will make the party last longer." Paws Her* for Reflection. Said the facetious feller, "The main difference between valuable city prop erty and valuable dog* Is that the v. c. p. la sold by the front foot, while the dog U Je*t charged for all over." BEN FRANKLIN EARLY LEARNED FRUGALITY Or««t American Exemplar of Thrift Knew Valua of Regular and Sys tematic Saving For Future. Thrift la not stinginess. In fact it la more often than not that the thrifty man la the one who la truly generous. Benjamin Franklin, our national ex emplar of thrift, waa. from boyhood up, alwajra liberal and unselfish. Rene Rache, hla great great rreat grand son, gives an instance of thla charac teristic of hla ancestor In a story he tella: "The price of bread two centuries ago waa a penny a loaf. Thue It hap pened that Benjamin Franklin, a boy of seventeen, on arriving phla, waa able to l>uy three loaves for three-pence; and with them he walked up Market Street from the wharf, holding one under each arm and eat ing the third. An hour later he gave two of thejn to a woman and her child who had been fellow voyageri up the Delaware." Rene Bache goes on to say of Franklin: "Where hla own expendi tures were concerned he waa alwsys frugal, saving what he could out of his wages as printer, while hla fel low-workers spent theLrs as faat aa they got them, or faster. In this way 'it came about that, while a mere | youngster In a printing office, he lent them money every week "Though the earnings of moat of them were greate- than his, he was capitalist. By the middle week they were penniless, and cams to him for loans to carry them over until payday, lie would accept no Interest, but each Saturday, on getting their money they gave hack to hlin what they borrowed—only to repeat the borrowing a day or two later" The secret of Franklin's success was systematic and persistent saving, from the lime he first began to earn money. And nlwaju having a savings fund he wan ever teady to grasp his opportunities —those of lending a helping hand as well as those of self betterment lyet Benjamin Franklin be your ex nnilpar —atari Having today. Thrift Stamps are an easy beginning and pave tho way to a certain future. IHRIFT Without me no man haa ever achiev ed success nor Ims any nation ever become great. I have been tho bed rock of every successful career, and cornerstone of every fortune. All the world knows me and most of the world heeds my warning The poor may have me aa well as tho rich. My power Is limitless, my appllo*. tlon boundless lie who poaseaseH me has content ment In the present and surely for the future I ain of greater value than pearla, rubles and diamonds Once you have me no man can take me away I lift my poasessor to high plane* of living, Increase his earning power and tiring to realisation the hopes of- his life I make a man well dressed, well housed and well fed I Insure absolutely agnlnat the rainy day, I drive want and doubt and care away I guarantee thoee who possess me prosperity and success I have "lulled those of low degree, and those of high degree have found me « helpful friend To attain me you need put out no capital hut personal effort, and on all you Invest In me I guarantee divi dends that last through life and af ter ' I am as free aa air I am yours If you will take ma. I am TFRIFT Wnr Savings Stamps are better thaa j money because they earn more money. Forests of Camphor. One of the most ln>i>ortnnt of Jap an's monopolies la the camphor pro duction of the Islniul of Formosa. The present area of camphor afforestation la 10.650 acres, nnd some of the trees are from 800 to I,WO years old. Carob Tree Yields Dye. It has been found that a dye of khaki color can be obtained In Argen tina from the wo(«l of the enrob tree. NO. 28 Ever Salivated by Calomel? Horrible! Calomel is Quicksilver and Acts like Dynamite on Your Kidneys. Calomel loses you a day!- Yoa know what calomel is. It's mer cury; quicksilver. Calomel is dan gerous. Xt crashes into your bile dynamite, cramping and sickening you. Calomel attacks the bones and should never be pat into yoar system. When you feel bilious, sluggislu constipated and all knocked out* and (eel that you need a dose of dangerous calomel, Just remember your,druggi»t sells for a few cents a large bottle of Donson's Liver Tone, which is entirely vegetable and pleasant to take and is a per fect substitute for calomel. It la guaranteed to start your liver without stirring you up inside, and cannot salivate. Don't take Calorhel 1 It makea you sick next day; it loses you a day's work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens you right up and yoa feel great. Give it to the children because it is perfectly harmless ana doesn't gripe. TRUSTEE'S SAL® Of Real Estate in Graham. ? Under and by virtue of th® power of sale contained in a cer tain Deed of Trust executed to the undersigned trustee by A. W. Hollie and wife on March Ist, 191 C, for the purpose of securing the payment of four certain bonds of even date therewith, default having been made in the pay ment of said bonds at maturity, the undersigned Alamance Insu rance and Heal Estate Company as trustee will, on MONDAY, SKPT. Bth, 1919, at 12 o'clock in., at the court •" house door in Uraham, North • Carolina, offer for sale at publio'| autcion to the highest bidder for i cash certain tracts or parcels of land in Graham Township, Ala mance County and State of North Carolina, ad joining the "North Carolina Kail road Company right of way, C. W. Whitfield, Will Freeman, Mary Long and others, bounded as follows: Tract No. 1. Beginning at an iron stake on the right of way of N C II It Co, running thence with the lino said NCRR Co. S 79J (leg E GO feet to an iron stake; thence N 1 deg W 190 feet to an iron stake; thence N 88 deg W 40 J feet to an iron stake; thence S 6$ deg K. 181J feet to au iron stake , and the beginning, being Lot No. t in the' survey of the Walker property. Tract No. 'i. Beginning at an iron stake on llollie's line, run ning thence S 88 deg E 00 feet to au iron stake on Whitfied's line; thence with the line of said Whit field N 1 deg W 90 feet to an iron bolt; thence N 88 deg E 06 feet to an iron stake; thence S 1 deg £ 90 feet to the beginning, being Tract No. •"> in the survey of thai :s Walker property. Tract No. Beginning at an | iron stake on corner of Lot No. 5 and C W Whitfield lot, running t hence with the line, of said WbitK field and Freeman N 15 deg E. 42 feet to a rock ; thence N 1J deg E I'JIJ feet to au iron bolt; thence N «t>s deg W 117 feet to an iron bolt, Mary Long's corner; thence S :i deg W with said Mary Long'ii line 119 feet to an iron bolt; thence N MM deg W (i» feet to an iron bolt, thence S 2} deg W 43 feel loan iron bolt; thence 8 88 deg K 197 feet to the beginning and being Lot No. 7 in the surv.ey made by Lewis 11. Holt, Octiber 1 Stli, 191.1. This Aug. sth 11)19. Alamante In». & Real Estate CO™ Trustee. •tan. 11. Rich W. Ernest Thompson Rich 1 Thompson Funeral Directors and Embalmers MOTOR AND HORSE DRAWN HEARSES Calls answered anywhere day or night F>av 'Phone No. BCW Night 'Phones \V. Ernest Thompson 2502 m Jan. 11. Rich 54#-W ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE. II a\ In« qualified ait Administratrix Of the estate ol Hanks R. Teague. deqsM^- the undersigned Ihoreby notifies flippy ►om holding claims against said etb iste to pn-M-nt the sani*. duly authen- Heated, on or before the r»th day of July. I'JSW. or this notice will be pleaded In bar or their recovery. All per«ons Indebted to said . i**tate »re requested to make immediate set- Ue ment. This Juoe 23.191 V. • M «"*. KAHA 11 F. TEAOUR. AdmVz. 4 of Hanks E. Teague, deo*d.' B. 8. W. Daraeron, Att'y. UulfO ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. j llavlnx iiualltled as Administratrix of tfea 1 e«tate of J. liedford Patton, ilectwl. the underslirnert hereby notifies all persona bold- J In* claims HKUfnat the said estate to the same, dulv authenticated, on or the 2!ith day of Julv, IWO, or this notice bs pleaded In bar of their recovery; and >|H persons Indebted U> said estate are reqoeamH ed t» make immediate settlement. This July sth, MH». O. L. PATTON, AdraT of J. lied ford Patton. /.ong & Long, Atl'ya.