VOl,. XLV N y About k N Gone I? women suffering from womanly trouble, hare been benefited by tbe toe -VI of Cardid, the woman's I tonic, according to letters we receive, similar to this one from Mrs. Z.V.SpeH» ofHayne, N.C. "Icould VI not stand on my feet, and IV Just suffered terribly,"' (be says. "As my suf feting was so great, and IV W l he had tried other rerae mi dies, Dr. had us IV setCarduL . » 1 began improving, and It cured VV| me. I know, and my TV doctor knows, what Car did did for me, for my /V nerves and health wen I™ about gone." TAKE " CARDUI Hie Woman's Tonic She writes further: *1 na tm in splendid health... can do my work. I feel I owe it to Cardui, for I wss in dreadful condition." ]f you are nervous, run down and weak, or suffer M from headache, backache, etc., every month, try Cardui. Thousands of women praise this medi- cine for the good k has done them, and many physicians who have usod Cardui successfully with their women patients, for years, endorse this medi- dne. Think what It means 1 to be in splendid health, VI like Mrs. Spell. Oive IV Cardui a trlaL M AS Druggists R PROFESSIONAL CARDS JOHN J. HENDERSON Attorneyat-Law GRAHAM, N. C. Olllee aver NaUaaal Baskal Alaaaan jt, s. coos:, Attorney sjit-Law, GItAHAM. N. f Offloe Patteraon Building Second Floor. IHt. WILL S. Loi\G, JB. p . . . DENTIST ... - Graham .... North Cerelln* OFFICE IN «JMMONP RTTTLDINf JACOB A. LONfc J EI M> BLOW LONG & LONG, A. r. torneyei anil Oonnaalnra at 1 a-w GKAHAIt. is. C BLANK BOOKS Journals, Ledgers, Day Books, Time Books, Counter Books, Tally Books, Order Books, Large Books, Small Books, Pocket Memo., Vest Pocket Memo* Ac., Ac. For Sale At The Gleaner Printing Office Graham, N.C. GIVE A DOZEN GIFTS For the Price of One. Ton can aend mora than IMS 1 ' paaaa full of the moat la- i formative and Interesting raodlnc—daahlna novala of adventure—faaclnatlna tale* I of love tad romance and au thoratlva aoaunents on al- , ✓ j nlHcant topic* of ear time* I ; railt ONLY s4.o*. YOU >AV Merry Christmas Twelve Tlmee a Year with SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE 'ipp : i'- u, iTOjj^Bwp^^ THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. i Famous Women Adopt Armenian Waifs HI i~ II IE CHAPMAN CATT MRS. OLIVER HARRIMAN ADOPTED •ARMENIAN WAIFB There aro at least three happy little Armenians In this holiday season among the more than a quarter of a million pitiable little waifs who are Innocent victims of Turkish barbarity. These three have found fairy god mothers In these famous American women, Mrs. Wood row Wilson, wife of the President; Mrs. Oliver Harrlmnn and Mr/ Carrie Chapman Catt It Is hoped that thousands oi other American women will follow these distinguished leaders and slgnnllze the glad holiday season In America by mnklng happy In the same way thousands of other little orphans In the far-off stricken land where they now are being cured tor by Near Eaat Relief, 1 Madison Ave nue. N. Y. . ... WOMEN WAR WORKERS,! EAGER TO SERVE, 60 TOAIOARMENIANS Mary Vail Andrees, Only Woman to Receive Distinguished Serv ice Medal, Heads Party. Dissatisfied with uneventful civilian 1 lite, after two years' vivid experience a• workers abroad In the world war, • party of young women, led by Miss Mary Vail Andrees, of New York City, have just gone to the Near East, MISS MARY VAIL ANDREES, Distinguished Service Heroine Who Now Goes to Near East where nearly a million people are raftering from disease and starvation. Mlrs Andrees had returned to this country after serving for the Red Cross, but when she read of the sad plight of the Armenians, she at once offered her services to Near East Re lief, the former American Committee •n Armenian and Syrian Relief, whlcn already baa saved thousands of lives ii) Western Asia. Miss Andrees Is the only American woman ' war worker who was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal by Congress. Most of the other members of her party like wise served with honor for the Ked Cress and other war service organi sations. - Among the otber members of the group are the Misses France* and Betty Anderson of New Canaan, Conn., who were decorated with the Croix no Guerre by the French Government; Ifias Margaret Milne of Washington, D. C., who was a member of the Hoover Belief Commission for ltu manta, and Miss Alex Sidney, an Eng llah woman who served for three years with the British Relief Commission In Serbia. Miss Doris Nevln, another member of th* party, 1* a daughter of the late Ethelbert Nevln, the com poser. CoL William N.. Haskell, commis sioner to the Near East for the i'arls Peace Commission and official repre sentative of the Near East Relief, has cabled that the relief workers now in the field are overwhelmed by the msg nltude of their tssk. CoL Hsskell sny» 800,000 Armenians will starve before the next harvest unless they sr* given aid and 120,000 orphan children face death from hunger and exposure. Thousands of refugees sre daily be ta* brought to th* relief centers frora the deserts. Catarrh Cannot lie Cured with I/mi application!, as they cannot reech the aeat of the rtiaeaae. CnUrrli la a loot -Maeae. rri atijr influenced bjr constitu tional eondlt one. and In order to core It you moat take an Internal remedy. Hall'a Ca tarrh Medicine la uken Internally and acta thro the blood on the mucoue surface" of the eyetem Hall'a Catarrh Medicine waa pio acrthed by one of the beaj/phyalclane In thle countr- for years. It la cdmpoeed of tome oi the beat tonlea known, coiflilned with aomo of the best b ood purl fiery The perfect com- Uaallonof the loredlettTaln llall.a Catarrh Medicine l« what proluoe aoeh wonderful raaulta In atarrtial ooi dltlom s. nd for Usttnonlaiv. tme . r. J i HKXar * CO, Prop*., Toledo, o. All Orugi«ii Hall'a lfraily Pill a for conetlpatlon. Burlap Bag His Only Garment POSTER BASED ON ACTUAL PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN AT ERIVAN, AR MENIA, BY DR. M. 8. LITTLEFIELO. Ho Is only one of 250,000 helpless child victims of Turkish cruelty snd oppression In Western Asia. Clad Just as be stnmls In the picture this forlorn little fellow, with hunger-stricken cheeks, hopeless mouth and frail, starred body, j wns found wandering in the streets of Igdlr, Armenia, by Dr. Milton S. Llttlefleld of the Near East Relief. Ho was taken to a Near Knst Relief orphanage, where It was found that his only earthly possession was the slnglo gannent In which he stood—a worn, patched blanket made from a burlap sack. , "I saw this ragged little fellow on one of the busiest business streets of Erlvan, not far from tho orphanage," Maid Dr. Llttlefleld. "He was wandering aimlessly about aDd no one was paying the slightest attention to hi in. ( did not pose him; the picture shows just the way he stood when I backed him up against a nearby wall." The photograph Is the basis of a striking poster now being distributed by Near East Relief, An American $2 Bill Did This —————i • Motherless, fatherless, homeless j— —————i nameless, hungry ai-d clad only In _ rags, the pathetic little three-year-old V shown at the left wandered Into a ife. Near East Relief orphanage In Ar- IjW menla. Another photograph of the Vr* J same child, shown at the right, was rfkf taken a week later, this time showing jH him happy, well clothed and well fed. Somewhere In America Is the happy 'Mm\ man or woman wbo contributed the $2 I Bar bill which wrought this miracle. More than a quarter million other helpless I W little victim* of Turkish cruelty and H| m oppression are knocking at the doors M of the Near East Relief orphanages in Western Asia. Many more American I L——— $2 bills are needed now to let them In and to care for them until they can BEFORE. c#re f or themselves. " APTBH. Free 1920 Calendar and Book for Our Readers. We take pleiwuro in announc IDK that any subscriber or reader of thin paper can Mcuro a vest pocket memorandum bonk with 1920 calendar anil much useful information by MqdioK the poat | ago therefor, three cent* in atampa. GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY. JANUARY 1, l#2o |o I). Hwift & Co., Patent Attor ney*, Washington, I). It con \tains -valuable information about] p»aL presidential elections, show-1 in/? bow each Htate voted In each presidential election during the last forty yearn. It also shown the population of each State dur ing the census of 1890, 1900 and , 1910. Statea the amount of corn, THIS CITY BUILT' WHILE YOU WAIT Fourth Largest Town in Alabama Full Grown in One Year. HAD A MODEL GOVERNMENT Permanent Settlement Around U. S. Nitrate Plant Presented Unusual Problems. f By dIARRET BMITH. Tho fourth largest city In Alabama, peopled with 25,000 eouls of dlveree races und religious, uprooted from far scattered rommunltlee In every part of tho United States and Canada sprang Into being almost overnlj;nr around the great now government am monium nitrate plant down on the open cotton and corn fields at Muscle Shoals on the Tennessee Hlver during the last yesropthe World War. Hera wna a problcmln city building, munic ipal government and commulty wel fare thut has seldom been equalled and the success of Its solution hss never been excelled. The job was in the hand* of the Air Nitrates Corporation which had been organized under tho direction of the Ordnance Department to build plaut and city at Muscle Shoal*. Early In January, 1018, this new town had a few temporary building* and a popu lation of 300. Tills had jumped by the middle of August to more than 21,000. A population multiplied by 70 In 7 months. In the management of the hew towns and army cantonments that sprang up during the war the old tlmc evils that attended the growth of mushroom cities Intro been avoided by the application of modern welfare systems. But nowhere were condi tions more difficult than at Muscle Shoals. Ilcre wn« a, malarial region threatened at tho same time with other deadly disease epidemic*. Trans portation was lacking. No nearby labor was available and the general labor shortage wn* at Its moat acuta stage. Cost* of labor and supplies were leaping over night. Furthermore, Muscle Shoals differed from all the other new wur town* Inasmuch a* It was to be permanent New Government Olvlsed. The managers, besides city govern ment, had to handle the entire retail business of the town. A camp super visor's department was put In charge of the maintenance of all buildings, fire protection and sanitation. The camp supervisor looked after every thing from tho mending of a lock to the remodeling of groups of buildings or laying sewers or steam main*. For the bachelor contingent a commissary department was necessary. The * business department managed the itores, canteens, motion picture theaters, pool parlor*, tailor shop*, dry cleaning establishments, barber shops, newsstands, a hotel, a vegetable (ami and a bog farm where 1,000 bogs were raised on the wastes from eat ing places. It maintained a slaughter house whore these hogs were put through the regular packing house course. It operated a laundry which cleaned 7,403 pieces a day. Then there was a real estate department that rented and managed the family quarters and a housing department which assigned to quarters everybody excepting the families. Under separate Jurisdiction from Its community director were ftie police. The health department. In eharga of a physician from KOW York city, started with a small office In one of the temporary buildings, and wss soon full grown and splendidly equipped. Conditions were favorable to disease. The winter was the •severest on record In northern Ala bama. The men were compelled to work either In deep snow or mud above their knees. As a result a pneumonia epidemic developed among the Negroes that spring. I.ater In the year a typhoid epidemic was threatened. Moreover, the site of the plant was In the heart of the malaria district. Hut the pneumonia epidemic was checked, the typhoid threat nipped In the bud, and malaria stamped out. A Hsalth Record Established The little flrst-ald hospital present ly grew to a complete modern Institu tion with a nurses' home snd a sep arate dispensary for dental, eye, ear, nose, throat, genlto-urtnary clinic* and a surgical dispensary for flrst-ald work. During the eight months whea the death rate was not affected by th* In fluenza and pneumonia epidemic* tii* general health rate wa* 12.4 per thou sand per year, which is lower than In most cities In the same latitude and climate, and the pneumonia death rate during tbe epidemic was lower thsn In most army cantonment*. Much of the success ef the health administration Is due To the establish ment of'the Muscle Hhoals sanitary district hy the United Htates Public Health Kervlce. Th« education and welfare depart ment alao had a vital work to perform. There waa a achool population of over 1,000. The Kecretary of War oreated the community organization branch of the Ordnawo I>epgrtment which, with advice and aid of aome of the greitU*t fc'iool men ot the couotrr, preacvlKd the courvoa of attidy (ad recruited teachcra from the beat es tablished ayxlemai ' ——, wheat, oata, potatoes, tobacco, hay and cotton produced by each State in 1919. (Jives a brief synopsis of business lawn, patent lawn arid much other naeful In formation. For four centa in stamps we will aend a nice 1920 wall calendar 10 by 11 Inches. Send 7 on> cent atampa and get the calendar and book. tf BUY THRIFT STAMPS. WORLD'S BIG6EST „ NITRATE PLANT Mammoth Explosives Factory in Alabama Built in Eight Months. ALL SPEED RECORDS BROKEN i Could Supply 13 Per Cent of Allies' Needs Had War Continued. jm£, -M ■y GARRIT SMITH. r Lifting the ban of war aecrecy hat Juat now brought 'to light for the drat time one of the moat atupendoua feata of conatructlon in blatory—the plan ning and. building In leaa than one year of the largeat ammonium nitrate plant In -the world and of a city around It for the houalng of lta 29,000 workmen and their famlllea. At the aame time la revealed one of the chief reaaona why Germany anddenly aurrendered • year ago. The German high command knew that the United States waa ready at Uuacle Slioala, Alabama, to manufacture 18 per cent of all the high exploilvea needed by all the Al lied armlea on all fronta In the expect ed drive of the following aprlng. The flrat person on conatructlon work reached Uuacle Sboala on No vember 20, 1017. On February 18, 1018, ground waa flrat broken for a permanent plant building. On Octo ber 26, 1018, eight montka and eight daya later, the manufacturing plant had begun the production of ammo nium nitrate. When America entered the world war In April, 1017, she had no mean* of producing the enormous quantities of high explosive* necewwry to pro vide the huge army *he planned U> raise. The very fact that our Indus trie* were already worked to capacity providing ammunition to the alllea seemed to make further production for our own use Impossible. Fertilizer Process Turned to War Use. At thl* juncture tho Ordnance De partment turned to cyanamld, a com mercial fertilizer, which had for some yedrs been produced successfully at Niagara Falls, by a process the Ameri can right* of which were obtained In 1007 from Germany by Frank Sher man Washburn, head of the American Cyanamld Company. By this process cyanamld was pro duced by extracting nitrogen from the air and combining It with calcium ob tained from limestone rock and carbon fronr coke. By putting cyanamld through three more processes both am monia and nitric acid can be extracted from It and combined Into the explo sive, ammonium nitrate. Mr. Wash burn was Invited to present plsns and estimates for tho construction In tbe shortest possible time of an ammonium nitrate plant at Muscle Shoals, Ala bama, and a contract between his com pany and the United States was enter ed Into under date of November 10, 1017. To have general supervision of plan ning and carrying out the work an or ganization known ait the Air Nltratea Corporation was formed to act aa agent of the Ordnance Department Tills corporation provided the general designs, supervised all the work and operated the camp, the town and the plant It also Installed all equipment In the chemical plant The various other sections of the work were sub let to organizations that were special ists In tbe directions In whlcb they were asked to help. New City Built From the Oregnd. It was necesssry to build • new town to house the Isborers. For this Job Westlnghouse Church Kerr Com pany was called In as contractor. This company also built the bulldlrfgs of the chemical plant, Within four months 12,000 workmen had been assembled and a city capable of accommodating 2.1,000 Inhabitants had been completed, with lodging, restaurants, alores, of fices, police headquarters, schools, fire departments, hospitals, motion picture theaters, electric light and sewerage systems. The construction of the plant proper was begun on February Id, 1018. Just eight months and eight days later the big plant began a steady output of am monium nitrate. The plant contains 118 permanent buildings, with a roof area of over 20 acres. To provide the electric currant It wss necesssry to build a steam power electric plant, for It would have taken three years or more to complete the i dam and hydro electric smtloo now un der wsy. TJ>ls plant, bulirby the J. O. White Corporation, Is one of tha larg est steam plants for developing elec trical energy In the world. T!iv output of tha plant Is 800 tons of ammonium nitrate a day, and this can be produced at Muacle Khoals at a cost less than one-half tha standard fixed price paid by the Oovernilient for am monium nitrate produced by other methods and one-fourth to one-fifth the cost of other high explosives of equal strength. Compared with tba older process of making ammonium nitrate, the savings made by tbla plant would have paid the 100,000,000 cost of the entire plant in About Ana and one-half yeara of operation. Aa a military weapon It Is on* of the wisest and most economical ex>*ndl toraa that the Ordnance Department ha* un4ariakeu. A* an agent In atop pln« tlx? war and a* • futurv proteo Hon to the country Ita value la Inealo* *M*. Setting a Bad Precedent. Vlalta was playing In the yard ant her mother told her It waa time ti come In and prepare for bed. "I don't want to go to bed yet,' pleaded Vlalta. "It's early yet'; let her play a Ul tie longer," Interceded Orandmotbel "No," ber mother aald (Irmly, "a* moat come In now." Vlalta came up tk* atop* aa alowt) aa possible. "Oh, mama." aha aj claimed angrily, "why don't you eb«f year mother!" { ' Ja. 1 KIDDIES NOW MAKING ; KOHEY AND SAVING II i . ' Hftli Oarellna Sohool Seelstlee 11* pert Qrent AoWvlty.—Troaeury Department af United Statae Reeelvee Splendid Suppsrt - Making money and earing It la b*> •eating ao laaa popular among North Carolina eohool children than sracsg prewo-UH Mora popmlar, parka pa, than tka time heaered atudy of read lag, writing and arithmetic ia theaew study of thrift wklek la botes laoorp larated Into tho regular wocb of the aakools. The subject in. taunt In eoa noetlon with tka Test Books « .hittl" whlek aro sent without charge to any taaoher deeirlag them by the War Loan Organisation ot the Fifth federal Itaserve District. Judging by reporta, the aahool eklldren of North Carolina aro going the teaching of thrift one hatter. Al ready a groat asany savings societies have been organlaed ia the schools of thla state, and the pupils here and nil over tho dlatiiet as well are busy devlslag waya of earning money In order that It may be wlaaly Invested In Thrift Stamps and War Saving* Stamps. la Thrifty Yeungeter. In ob* of ths Mkool* In thla dis trict tbsr* la a youngster who baa laid th* foundatlaa of a proaparona saraar by plowlag and by aalllai vegetables. Whaa all tba work wu dona tha lad counted tha money ha had put in bank. Ha found that It amounted to Just twenty-fire dollora. Many of th* world's riohaat man be (an Ufa with loss than twenty-Are dollars. But they tared thair money and lnrseted ft wisely, thua aaaurinc SHHMi In on* of th* t-A grade*, so a teach er reports, os* of tha glrla has earned no lean than twenty dollars by help ing around tha house, while membera 4 a airings society that flourlahea In a 1-A grade hare made about twenty-fir* dollar* doing each odd jobs as feeding- tha ehlekena, tying tobaoeo and chopping graae. Several boys who ar* member* af sarlags societies which are particu larly actlra have bought clothaa with man*y they earned la similar ways. One Utile fallow did *o well helping Vl* father that h* waa paid tan dol lars. As h* r*c*lr*d th* money he bought Thrift fllUmp*, showing that JU already knew how to ear* and iu r*st what h* mad*. Papular among th*** atnall tnveet *r* are tha Penny and Nickel Bar ings B*oks Issued to all' school pupils desiring them, fa the days whsn, to ■any tot*; lie prlc* of *ren a Thrift ■tamp, may be too hug* to ** gotten together all at *nce, and wh*n en* Just must buy an occasional all-day sucker or * oentaplece bite of candy, lot* *f youngster* think It wis* to ear* a penny *r a sickle at a time. .The coin I* deposited with th* t*ach •r'*for aafe keeping, and aha atampa th* *artnga cards to show how mach ths child has put in his account. Wh*n th* total Is lsrgs *nough. It go** Into th* purohaa* of a wh*la Thrift Stamp*, Piling up monay of your own I* a gr*at gam*, play*d in thla faahion, and gam* that I* daily growing In favor In North Carolina schools. PILB UP YOUR DOLLARS «0 THAT NO ONK CAN KNOCK THIM DOWN. Many a tired lad baa slipped hit I coat on whan tba whittle blew and ■aid derialvely: "Anotbar day, anoth ardollar. A million day*. • million •lr«." Ha baa aald a mouthful In bit tor Jaat and without knowing it. For tar swat and without knowing 't. roe tka dollar* do plla op It tha *t*ok la not knockad ovar. Bona financial sharpehootar la al way* funning for dollar*. Thay ean pick tham off at a mlla Ilka Anala Oakley cracking clay plpaa In a ahoot tng gallary. But If y6u put eoma of your dollara uadar cover bafora any on* can draw a baad on tham, you laava a alhn acora for tba profltaar and tba graftar. Tha aafaat protection from thoaa aharpahootar* la War Saving* Stamp* bought rrary payday. If you give tham your whola bank roll to ahoot at tbay will bit It for a perfect acora. Make tham waita a llttla ammunition War flaring* Stamp* ara abaoluto ly *af«. They pay a high rata of In land and you ean gat your money In full whan you nead It. Whan (hay pile up, nobody can knock tha alack arar. PROVERBS. S***t thoa a man dllllgeat la kla bnilneea. ha ahall not atand before king*, ba ahall ao: Hand before mean man. Prov II :M. It la the moral aupport of capital back of him ,that give* tha dUUant man dignity 'la tha praeenca of tha king. Buy [W. 8. 8. : The aluggard will not plow by raa, aon of tha cold; therefore ahall he bag la harraat and hare nothing Prov. SO:4. Tha allra man plow* un iter hardahlp faaata la harraat aad jaavas Mr.plaa, until ha eoma* to » day whan ha may alaap lata • [aMty morning. Bay W. 8. 8. Rica Flelde Increasing. Rice growing was flrat began Id Manchuria by the Korean* who moved into that country, bnt now the Chinese are prlnctpally engaged In thla Indus • try. The Japaneae are also opening ap wild lands for paddy flelda along the railway* In varloua parts of Man churia, and tha area of lie* flelda li Increasing each year. Tha present rice crop amounts to about t,OOQfiOC lu&cli innwHy, OVER-EATINMI it tba root tl nearly all digeatfrrs I* rrfl*. If y our dS«e»tion U weak or I J oat aI kilter, batter eat let* and (US 1| Ki'HOIDS tba now aid to battar ditnlioa. I Plaaaaat to take—effacttra. Lot 1I Ki-moids balp »traighten oat four I dig eetira troubles. MAOK BY SCOTT ft BOWMK MAURI or SCOTT* EMULSIOM I Summons by Publication. NORTH CAROLINA, Alamance County. ,*3 In the Huperior Court. Clyde M. Lowe, Plaintiff, against , , fßk Mary Lowe, Defendant. The defendant aliove named will take notice tbat an action entitled m above has * boon commenced in tbe Superior court of Alamance county to obtain a divorce; and tbc said defendant will further take notice that be Is required to appear be fore tbe Clerk of tbe Huperior court for the county of Alamance at bi office af the court house in G rahom.North Carolina, on the 12th day of January, 1920, and anjwer or demur to tbc complaint of the plaintiff, which will be depoaited in tbe office of tbc said clerk of tbe Superior . court of aaid county on or before tlie la-ij turn d"y of this summons, or the plaintiff- , will apply to tbe court for the relief dM ■■landed in thlß complaint. D. J. WALKER. C. 8. C. >1 This oth day of Dec., 1919. B. S. W Damcron, Att'y. Ildec4tf Dandruff was killing my hair" ! i "My bead itched unbearably aadnßr"® S hair waa com in* out by tbe handM. K9 I S AfewapplicatioiuofWildrootlooacoed S - and removed quantitin of dandruff— 81 I - tba itdiinastonped. Today it is thicker - and more Beautiful than enr." z Wlldioot Liquid Hh.nipnn or Wll4m 3 I s #BisSa? !6?.'sr*s2::"as I : Imlniit Iwilppootl = the guaranteed Hath tone = For tali Inn wniw a I monty-iadl tuaranim Graham Drag Co. Hayes Drug Co. Jaa. 11. Rich W. Ernest Thompson Rich 2 Thompson Funeral Directors and Embalmers MOTOR AND HORSE DRAWN HEARSES Calls answered anywhere day or night* Day 'Phone No. 86W Night 'Phones W. Krnest Thompson 2502 Ja-t. 11. Rich 54H-W SPgf* •• DIGESTONEINE'! Nature'* Restorative, mIU Ma. Not only gives quick, we relict from in£fe»- tian'a ill* Heartburn, Dizzinei*, Sour Ruinp. Acid Mouth. Steeple** neai, etc., but build* up (ppetite and entire system. Thousand* KNOW. 3 Follow their lead— 1 ||WWI UAVfciAAll^ l±£/ "TW IU1W" ia I an laproatac la haalth alac* I kanjMß It a to* ywr madietaa. It a baa hrliwt ma an much. 1 eaa't tall ' ™ foa how thankfat 1 am. I do est ' think I could cat along without It. 1 h*»a t~.,mn,.n4«t It to maar atae* J It haa dona ma as much food, ;» WIIAIS TOWNS, ItaBMB, No. o*r. DHolnH h -W/o-ar (aor BACK Fm f lather uorutcin* FACTS, aa* , HAYES DKUU COMPANY, i GRAHAM, N. C.' v J I Summons by Publication. J North Carolina, Alamancf County, a In the Superior Court. Bertha tang, Plaintiff. , a against - Roy Long, Defendant. Tlie defendant al>ov- named will take Jj notice that ail aetion entitled a* above ha* been commenced in the Superior court of Alamance county to obtain absolute di. vorce: and the said defendant will further take notice tlmt he i» required to appear before the Clerk of the Superior court for the county of Alamance at his olltce at the court house in Oraliam, North Caro- " i lina, on the 12th day of January, lU3O, and answer or demur to the complaint of the plaintiff, which will be depoa'tedin the office of the w»il clerk of the Superior court of said county on or before the re- JjjS turn day of. this summons, or the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief dc mantled in saiil complaint. I). J. WALKER. C. S. C. M This 6th day of Dec., 1919 lldectt ..M E. S. W. DAMERON, Atty. Straight agitators might as well .J| recognize first us Inst that publie a patience also has its "irredaeiblej® minimum."