VOL. XLV | Life |j| || Was a || I] Misery II Mrs. F. M. Jones, of Palmer, Okla., writes: fly "From the time 1 en- finj ■I m tered into womanhood HI k | ... 1 looked with dread fll jl I from one month to the 1 HI next I suffered with my \ HI I back and bearing-down H E ry pain, until life to me was jU| II a misery. _I would think gj 111 1 could not endure the ET 111 P 3 '" a "y • on S er . and I yW gradually got worse. . . J'J I Nothing seemed to hslp r !' I me until, one day, ... 2 i I 1 decided to > BB TAKE CARDUI The Woman's Tonic __ "I took lour bottles," i [ I Mrs. Jones- goes on to Ijji] 11 111 say, "and was not only j! ij u U greatly relieved, but can U V I truthfully say that 1 have | , "It has now been two B ' B I years since 1 took Cardui, fe |J| and lam still in good V,, ■I health. . . 1 would ad- ||j H vise any woman or girl K H to use Cardui who is a r|j J B sufferer from any female IB If yousufferpain caused j I from womanly trouble, or Is If I if you feel the need of a | H I good strengthening tonic IH ti m to build up your run-do wn jJj System, take the advice ijj of Mrs. Jones. Try Ca- I§! dui. It helped her. We Bj Rffj believe it will help you. I $ I All Druggists | \ BLANK | BOOKS r T Journals, Ledgers, \ Day Books, Time Books, Counter Books, Tally Books, Books, y H Large Books, Small Books, Pocket Memo., Vest Pocket Memo., jj &c., &c. For Sale At The Gleaner Printing Oifice Graham, N. C. THE BEST NOVEL 1 OF THE YEAR I "ERSKINE DALE. I PIONEER" by JOHN FOX, JR. is now running in SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE also ROOSEVELT'S LABOR LETTERS ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE Name "Bayer" is on Genuine Aspirin —say Bayer Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" In a "Bayer package," containing proper directions for Headache, Colds, Pain, Ketnlgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. Xaaa "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets coat few cents. Aspirin is trade mark «f Bayer Manufacture of Monoaeftio pcUmUr of SatteylicMid. THE: ALAMANCE GLEANER. HUNGER KNOWS NO ARMISTICE IN CAUCASUS Colonel Haskell Reports fo fJenr East Relief on Desperate Needs of Helpless. > "Peace may como elsewhere in the world, but hunger knows no armistice In the Near Kast," says ColoneJ 'Vll llam N. Haskell, Allied Mali commis sion In the Trans-Caucasus, In an ap peal to Near East Relief, l -Madison avenue, New York city, for food anil supplies for tile relief of the starvtnc millions. Colonel Haskell is In charge of ail operations and disbursements of Near East Relief In the Caucasus. "There Is no fuel or shelter for the greater part of them djring the terrl • i ri E' i ' P. ■ i | 3 - ! fcift & ■ V ■' I Mmßm t>"; A ;\ . ■ COLONEL HA3KELU ble winter In the mountains," he says, "and the existing food supply is entire ly Inadequate for the great number of refugees without resources of any "" "Bind. _ "By a recent agreement between the I premiers of the republics of Armenia, Azerbaidjan and Georgia to cease hos tilities and settle all differences by arbitration one obstacle to relief work In the Caucasus has been removed and makes accessible a great number of destitute "people who otlrcrwlse would perish this winter. "Two hundred thousand destitute Armenians and Tartars can now bo reached In the districts of Karnbugh, Shusha and Nakhichevan, In the south east section of tiie Trans-Caucasus, and we are planning to extend our work there. The economic situation is so desperate and food supplies so scanty that the Georgians have ordered 100,- 000 persons, mainly Russian refugees without employment, to leave the city of Tlflis. About 45,000 workers In the oil fields of Kaku have been ordered by the Azerbaidjahese to leave the city Ibecause there is no work for them and Tnhvl is scarce. [ Around every station along the rail way nre gathered grotips. «f hundreds ofj people lying /huddled to ■j gether on the ground, the majority of i tinVn too weak even to try to help themselves. From time to time the stronger ones climb on freight cars and movp elsewhere, always seeking better conditions, which do not exist. Two hTtrxired and . sixty-three thousand homeless refugees frog) Turkish Arine | nla thus are constantly milling about throughout Russian Armenia, mak ing the relief,work conducted by the Americans a problem requiring inliulte patience and organising ability. "This Is especially true in view of the existence of 248,000 destitute In habitants of Russian Armenia who pos sess homes, but no food, as well as 150,' XX) Greeks, Russians, Persians, Syrians and Vezldls who have been driven out of parts of Transcaucasia. "brie hundred and forty thousand : Moslems, whose villages were destroy ed in the course of five years of con ■ stant warfare, are helplessly encamped In the open around villages o_f theft former enemies, begging infinitesimal quantities of Hour, which they mix with dirt to give the iiiftshjn of nourish ment. I "These lrtmdrods of thousaTKls.of s if ! fer eg adults, mostly homeless r.nd . larking every necessity of life, having I nothing more-to lose, are concentrated' I in a country as yet Inadequately po- I Heed or governed. They constitute n ! ferllie field for the mm ds of Roishe j vlsm or any form of anarchy, the ) spread of which once loosed would be I Impossible to predict. "It Is geneijiliy admitted in the Cau casus that the Americans of the Ni-ar East Relief already have saved the lives of at least BO.fXX) babies and chil dren and of o,*xl adult refugees nnd destitute. This work still is continu ing." In an effort to procure funds to enr ry on the work and save the lives of I these hundreds of thousand* who oth -1 trwise trttl die ot r*nrrnfon nnd T- Jtosure Stnr F.n>t Relief, of which II. riMlt" Is treasurer, is mnkltig an appeal to the Ain peo ple. •v HowS Till-t I W.. otter One Hunftr.-d fH)I t.r» uevnnt f..r any nip ofTjrirrti Ilea rat.uet tj« cured, •■r HitU'a Catarrh M' ,( iICIH ■■ I 14-i I s lltliFrh MMtelw I-w n ihl£.iii by cnuri'i ("utter-.« lor tl.w pan tti rty-llv i yi-irn. u-j'l t Ks iK-ci,fu" Itaumn n- lie* rf; i foiiili* remedy t»r Catarrh. Hail'* t'atarrb 1 Mfslltlne ueti tliru thy Hl/Oft on iti'- Mie-ou« , mirt.irf ■ expelbntr tim I'oliton ir-'Ui tuc Ij;k.il . n't Ikmlios thr rtl -a*'-«t i- r'; • Atl* r yoa taken IlatlV |iiitsrrti Medl tine torxtiiQtltlwt; wlliseo ,111- [ > ' ii*or jf-fife.it ti»*-Tith. Htar' taking It Miltelne nt once ami iff; rj'i oi ciiiu' rfi. H i.U fur t»'fcUHiOulat*, frtv. A. J. 'HEXBY * CO., ToUdo, Ohio. Sold by all Druirgtiits. Tic. adv GRAHAM, N.C., THURSDAY. JANUARY 29. 1920 - Tells This picture, painted especially for the Near East" Relief by M. Leona Bracker, vividly portrays what words fail to express—the horrible suffering of the women and children of Armenia and adjacent countries. Peace has blessed Europe nnd America for more than a year but In Western Asln con ditions more frightful limn nny war time experiences of the martyred popu lations of Belgium and France still exist Thousands of women and children escaped massacre by the Turkish soldiers only to face the terrible agonies of deatii by starvation. At the present time It is estimated that 1,250,000 adults and fully 250,000 orphaned children are completely destitute and in Imminent danger of death by starvation and exposure. The Near East Relief, 1 Madison Avenue, New York, Is at present the only organization giving aid to these suffering people and Inek of funds still prevents the' reaching of more than a small part of the stricken people. CHURCH COUNCIL ! ENDORSES N. E. R, Federal Body Says No More' Compelling Need in All the Worid. Departing from custom, the Feder al Council of Churches has endorsed the work being done by Near East Relief, 1 Madison Avenue, New York City, tho former committee for Ar- i menian and Syrian Relief which bas essayed the task of caring for 1,250,- 000 starving people in Western Asia. Resolutions adopted by tJjj- executive committee, as nnnounce(n>y Charles 8. Macfarland, general secretary, are as follows: "Your committee recommends that prayers be offered in all our churches for tho.. suffering children throughout tho wurid, especially those who are in ! distress And peril as the result of the \ wnr. "They further recommend 'that we j renfilrtm anil emphasize our Interest! nnd cooperation In the plans of 'Near East Relief.' We know of no need in tho world that is more com pelling tfiau that of the Armenian, Syrian and other peoples In the Ee vant who have already received and must still receive the generous sym pathy of tho American people." j SAVED FROM HAREM Armenian Cirls Reteued from Turks Being Taken to Near Eaat Relief Home. The three pretty Armenian girls In the auto are taklue a real "Joy ride," 1 Joyful having another meaning from that generally associated with auto j riding here. They have been rescued froiri the harem of n Turk after four I years of shn:n-fu' > «-r\ It Oil" end lire Wrist Oilted (o oriß of the Jfi-nr East ' It'-llef rescue homes. No wonder they are smiling for the fldt time since tlfi* captivity. is caring for tunny ttioiuoodsof tlwse . girls until they (T.II find 'heir relatives. A'*o It Is working to save .250.00U | orphans and over a mlllh.n adults froi.i starvation this winter. That Is why i It Is rnak'iiK a nation -i-.| ml t - f i.ds •* t -.irry on Its nobis work. .... „ 7 ()ciesti t Aijititrtil Sttt'spi miner| too fur w'.rn L-* s;ivs tlia' no war j "Icforni if 11 hiiotll'l liO Kivell to tlflj' I oflieer ivh'w ship witn sunk b-y j the ei.i tin, • j j I'ad n-ftiki ','im »- ninkft the x-| ttiw *.: tit inn other art i»t«« have j' pni fonvxnl ntt'l blame bis fttilure | on a life* of publicity. WOMEN ADOPT 10,000 ORPHANS Connecticut to Provide Foster ! Mothers for Little Victims " y of Turks. Ten thousand little victims of Turkish brutality nro to bo foster mothered by the big hearted women of Connecticut as the result of ap peals by Near East Relief, the former Coinmltteo for Armenian and Syrian Relief of 1 Madison avenue. New York city. The women at a meeting voted to "adopt" that number as their share of tho 250,000 homeless and starving hoys and girls orphaned In tho miWi 'eres nnd deportntlons. I • Three hundred representatives of women's organizations attended the meeting at Hartford, at which Gov ernor Marcus H. Ilolcomb presided and j pleaded tho cause of tho stricken peo j pies. Another speaker was Ilenry Mor ] gentliau, former U. H. Ambassador to' ■ Turkey. Assurances that the example of these noble hearted Connecticut women will be followed by similar organizations In all the other states have been received at the headquarters of tho Near East Relief, 1 Madison avenue, New York city. 1,, • j 'lh" liritiNn have arranged f,»r| in largo kup ply of American ho#Hj at ct/fit prlcfM. John Bull cra-ly brings "homo tin* bacon. Jack Detnpscy, the champion 1-fhiKilißt. wntit* half a million to j !x«> lo France aii'l Is^ar-i | p 'titier a* formidable a» all that? I 120,000 STAND | IN BREAD LINE More Than 1,000,000 Face , Death Is Message Brought by . Miss Dakesian. Imagine a bread line of 120,(XX1 fam ished peoplo waiting for twenty-four hours a day for tho dole of food that Is the solo harrier between tliem and death from starvation. That Is tho situation In A'exandropol, a city In Russian Armenia, according to Miss llermine Dakesian, a pretty Armenian girl,"one of the survivors of four years MISS HERMINE DAKESIAN. of tho horrors of Turkish massacres and deportations. Saved by 1111 Ameri can woman, she has come to this coun try and entered Oberlln College.^ With her came fourteen other Arme nian girls in charge of Miss Adelaide S, Dwlglit, n Near East Relief worker, who hns been Instrumental in helping to save hundreds of thousands of their people from death by starvation. Miss Dwtght, who Is not given to exagger ation and has seen conditions at lirst hnnd, says more than a million people are facing death by starvation In Ar menia and will perish unless America aids. Herself an eyewitness to tho slaugh ter of hundreds of helpless women and children by* the Turks and a vic tim of tho deportations, Miss Dake sian, on unusually pretty girl, sayi there Is untold suffering In Armenia | and Syria. Sho praises the effprts of! tho Near East Relief, formerly the American Committee for Armenian nnd | Syrian Relief, to save as many of these people as possible. At Erlvan, the capital of the Armenian republic, one hot meal Is given out dally, and-hy thla relief alone the city's death rate 1 has been cut from a thousand dally to an average of twenty. At Alexandro pol, whero tho refugees from Turkish Armenia were driven by thousands, the situation Is appalllug, Miss Dakesian says. It is to avert these wholesale deaths that Near East Relief is making a nation-wide appeal for funds, BOY SCOUTS IN j YOUNG ARMENIA! Strangest Troop of All in Con stantinople Being Made Into Good Citizens. Amftrlmri Hoy Scout training I* nll« ( Jnj( prominently In the rohnbllltntlon of t)Uii(lr'U of llttlu AruittDlu!! hoy • refuKrf»* from tli? Turk! •!» tua«suicri*fi, i j who have b«*o» orgnrilzi*'! Into n in'out j troop In Conntnnfliioplt) um the notutlon ' of ono of the most trouM.'sorw proh | len:ji that confronted tho Ncur Ijist It'* 1 lief worker* In tlmt rlty. Hounded and driven tor four yenrw. hnvlnK wen their |>nr« nt* and relative* slaughtered or woroo by Turks and | Kurdn nnd themnelvcn furred to beg, ■teal or do nlmoHt anything to eke out the barest exJKtenee, these hoy* had completely loat their moral nenne when they finally found refuge In the Near Kant Itellef orphan gen. The boy« had been r'ad In rag« for ■o long tt+ijt they had forgotten how tc take caraorvlritlii*. Thin wa 9 a tragedj when tlie Near Kant Itellef had need.of •very pair of fd>o«»» and of every *»ult of rlothef* f«»r new boyn eonntantly e»im Ing In. Then the boy a were organized n* Boy Krouta and given Iheir imlforma Tliey began to be #-nr"f i »f their •ehooi clotl/ei a« well, UM of their uni form*. They had l>een »o off en hungry they had come to at*al without roH>p»if#e llofi. When they flr*t et»terer| the or phanage* they continued to ntea!. One boy atole a purae from hi* Amerfcan teaeher. For two or three week* after be bacame a Boy Kco»jt he was ot»vloi:*- ly unea*y. One day he earn© to her with the purae In bla hand. ••I don't vvant to give it !»ae|i f M he ■aid relurtnntJy. "Cut I have to. Trn , a Boy Beout nr»w.** ' To form more urout trooj.a to tran* • | form the*e little tin fort urate* tr»tr good fftfl l,f,g i I* onie ot the rc»a*onj" why Ihs Kear Ka*t Itellef, 1 Madlaon •venue. New York.city, U wukiud IU . Appeal for fjimla. Free 1920 (ialenHar and Book for Our Headers. Wn inkn plcHHure in anrioune ini{ tlfJit. nny iwhiertlrer read or of thiM paper ean wemo a vr«Ht |MK*k-t memorandum book with l?iiJo calonflar and timeh uiwful I iiy sending the po»t laKe therefor, three cents in stamps WAR NURSE FROM ARMENIA ASKS AMERICA'S AID Soldier Husband and Battlefield Baby Touring Country With Her for Near East Relief. A mother, father and daughter, tbe latter born In a tattered Ited tlroiis tent In tho ley Caucasus while (tuns roared till around and Turkish aliells, Ignoaing the mercy emblem, burst near It, are touring America In behalf of their native Armenia. They an Gen era! Mezrop Nevtnn AEgopetlan, lils ■■ ■ I j-*.'- * & t «>>•• ? '* ••' ■ . 'I LAOY Af#NC AZGAPETIAN. . wife, Lady Anne, and Irenoli 1.-tlier A rax le Azgapetlan, whoae baby eye* opened tipon scenes of horror and Inter ! through them saw much of the Btilfer* ' Inga of the pooplu of Armenia. The family are making their tour un- | der"fluaplcea of the Near KaM Uellef, ! the big organization whleh ham raved hundred* of thouaandH of tho pei»ple| In that part of the world from death by hunger and cold"and I* noon to open | a nation wldo campaign for funda to | complete thu work of saving the nur ' vlvors, Inore than a half million of whom nftjHt jM»rfWi ttnleaa aid comes to 1 them Boon. America Ih their only hope. Oeneral Azgnpetlnn wrved gallantly In tho ItUHslan armle* In the Caucasu? ngalnat tho Turks. Ill* wife, who ac companied him to the front, did noble work for tho wounded and sick, and It wa* while In this nervlco that her baby was horn In a hospital Lent during a battle. An aruiv blanket swung from | two pole* In one corner of the tent wan the baby's crib during the rest-of that terrible winter campaign. \V#th tho j collapse of the Russian armies afiei the Bolshevist revolution the A*gape« I thins returned to Armenia for a brief 1 spell and did their best to allovhiM ■ Hie suffering they found on every html ■ But with a Turkish price on Ids h ad the father flmilly made hi* way with, bis family through Hukn'.u to Kinlnnd and then to till* country. What they tell of condition* and needs In Armenia | Is first hand evidence, i In the fauenrms. Armenia. S-rla,| i Turkey nnd Persia are more than -">),• ] i (KKi orphan*, he|j>|e** little vlet'.tn* o| i war, massaere and deporfnt!»n, and I for the great majority tie only bar be tween them and ah-oliite stiirvatlon, 1* a bowl of hot I-, m : oip day. j Thi* soup i* supp'h d by the Nenr Ka*t Itellef now making an appeal ff tho American people for mifMclenl fund* tft Inert ?•*«« t hI * dole and- to pro i vide ttiese snferfng little one* with I clothing ami give them an edu*atlor that will help them to heroine *e|f »up I jKirthig. ft In cHfltnateil that fnor I than */Vi.fiit) In West, ri, ,yia w ! l! 1 die of ' tar\M!'»n i-nh*>«s Auiericnn a'! I* coatlnued. "Before and Alter" in the Near East ••SCrOrC." "AFTER." y rl , m ,„ry eoi ,f ■ ■!'■ n-Kper' In live !n.vn' time, dimply through tho i,iit'.-!• of mi An. I. I. I. Un in.n»formn|l«n tlml l« being wnmiiM .fully 11. V..S- •; • '■>' t»." N-sr r. 11. lief nt 1 Avenue. New York i \fy. "t .»• f H- «• ArtiK-n'r?r, .i'Mrcji f.bov. n In two picture* ;kt#> fui v« to h!r - , ♦!,. A' tf-r:« i»f. «*• r.r that t«*»''dollar bill. With tbl* money, the .XI ■' . . N...r r.a ' Ilels«.f In Almonte were «M« to rill the poor children -f il.-lr 1.«i11.en.:i..- n.-n tiii.l to clothe *Hli new Kani.n.U ".f - K»!li. wi.sl'll .11 I. N.-nr Ij.rt lleltef Imluntrlal plant end «*w-*d Into gnrm-nn l.y the pother of H.- ei,:Mren. The mother win nl»o paid n nil.nil fee f- rI, r -TO-.- In making U.e KiirnieiiU. n'm a hi'-kv fninllv. Thero are Himihiili'lh of other* not n» luckjr , In the Near linn "mm...:. "l«" a-.*; "f n luck of other ten (tollor bill*, i Near Kn«t Iteltef It u«u:n-r 'he American people to contribute fund* I to wive the stjirvltn In Ilie lll.bh. Inmß It Is entlmated tlmt over 1,250.000 i ndulm nrc In ilwipernt" need, ami 2.Viomi .hl'-trcti nre orplmn* rnd muni bo I cored for Kor t»,e num of n year Near K.i»« Belief can not ooly feed r ev.n.e m,.l »),. Iter 1.11 0n,!,..!, child, hilt enn ill*. ?!vc n emirwj In «luc#- if Hon toward* «lthnuul'W.f Sirt **»•»»' of tlie«o wrphaiu , I , r e heinir •'«.'. •• • I. •• are providing funds fur tU« support j of one or more over # given ; _____ Jtol). Swifi tK (a., rat'M Aflor ueys, Wa^jilti^W'D, \>. C. I' con t/iinH valußblc tnfortiiafioti about past presiiletitinl el^ctiotiH, klujw i how eaeli Stuto volod iti caclt pre>iWletitln! *|oetii>n the last forty yearn. It alno shows j the jiojuHaf ion of each StAfo dnr . in% the of l0 f jQ aad i 1910. State.s the amount of corn, Cardinal Gibbons Asks Aid For Starving Armenians HBlHm Tllls 18 th * Wmt mcssago from Ifcy't ;■*».James (CUrdl na 1) Gibbons yg read at the I fv ST* big meeting In ' 4 -'li Washington In *4n a '"" Near East He »; U-f. The ven erablo prima te , of the Catholic Church In An.erl.-U In In tensely lnter .® International.) ested In the Cardinal Glbbonc. »W ,e » l *Mch the Near East Relief will make to the country In February for funds to support Its .work ninons thu starving peoples of that stricken land. To the Wash ington meeting he wrote: . "Advices and Inforiiintlsn coining from the Near Kast cannot be doubt ed. There. Is great actual suffering and famine. These people, recently become Independent and r"len«"d from bitter thraldom, cannot sup port themselves. .Ami the ChriKil.ut and common Distinct* ,f humanity which hnve proiApled the people of tlio United Slates during the last hvo years to relieve the distress and needs, especially of the Near Mast, tiiusf not bo allowed to grow cold and bo diminished. "I hope we shall all unite In this present emergency and be able to culled sulllclent funds to enable these people to llve«nd work until next summer brings them perma nent relief and subsistence. I call upon nil to respond generously to the appeal now being made anrl trust ll.at tho committee will be gratified with the results." $5 FERMONTH FEEDS ORPHAN Clcvefand H. Dodge Shows What Near East Relief Can Do in Efficient Purchasing. B'iyln« In wholesale lots and under the most favorable ouvkot conditions, Near East Relief of 1 Madison uvenue. New York city, with representatives in every stale of the Union, has been able lo bailie tho high cist , of living so far an relief supplies for the suffering mil lions of the Near East are concerned. Cleveland 11. Dodge, treasurer, 11. a statement shows that the committee Is I able to provide food for the people of the Near East at prices much lower than ll.e average charge here. A donation of sf per month will pro rl'lu food for one orphan, ?10 per month ptovldc not only food, but also clothes and shelter for one orphan, and for ?1!5 per month attendance at school Is assured to each orphan In ad dition lo food, clothing and shelter. In the appeal for fntnl*--tn #al'ff-tho ■tni-vlng remnants of the Armenians and other western Asia (.eoplea. Near Eiist Itellef l« Inviting tho American public to "adopt" an orphan at the rates given here. Over 210,000 home less children are In need of help In fhe Near East. Women's organizations, lodges, churches and soda! clubs are re»|iOf.rtlr,« to the nppeul by adopting quotas of orphans for support over a | dellnlto period. wlic.', oats, potatoes, tobacco, lu.y and coll on produced by each Suite in 1919. Gives a brief 0 synopsis of business laws, patent ibi«i and in well other useful in formal ion. For four cents in 'stamps wo will send a nice 1920 wail calendar 10 -by .11 inches. Send 7 on." cent stamps -and get the calendar and book. tf NO. 51 Atlantic Coast Inventors. ! Tho following patents W(ij»W just issued to Atlantic Ctaa«f*i|| clients, reported by D. Bwife Co., Patent Lawyers, Washington, * >3 D. 0., who will furnish copies of "i any patent for ten cents apiece to*?." our readers: Virginia—Walter O. Borcherdt, Austinville, flotation apparatus, (aoid); Chas 11, Printz, Lnray, f currycomb; C. K. Hehruder, Pu- e A laski, air coupling. North Carolina'— Benj. F. Dear- " Hall, Jr., Wallace, automatic safety railway switch; Chas. -F. llelderman, Leitksvile, stop mo tlou for looms, (sold). Sohth Carolina— RobertC.Pick- ■ ens, Spartansbarg, slasher hood; Maurice M. Giasser, Charleston, revolver clip; August A. Belk, Mouut Croghan, plow attach ment. Looks Years Younger--* No Gray Hair. It seemß so unwise to have jfray, | faded or lifeless ,JBu*ir these days, t. now that Q-ban Hair Color Restorer will brin£ a natural, even, dark shade, wit ho it detection, to gray or lifeless hair Have handsome, soft, lustrous hair jj in abundance without a trace jf jU ot gray. Apply Q-ban—guaranteeqM harmless—j(k alaigc bottle—raonq(|M back it not satisfied, sold by Hayes Drug Co, and all good drug stors. Try Q-ban Hair Tonic r 'lK',jß quid Champoo and Soap. Cfcbem ■] . PROFESSIONAL CABLET JOHN J ( HENDERSON Attorney-at-Law GRAHAM. N. C. mil( over Nullon.l Bank at AtiMMt 31 J", S. CO OlZy Attors#»-*t.Uwf GRAHAM. - N. 0 Office Pafteraoti Bufttflbg ttacorid Floor. .... lilt. WILL N. LOKti, Jit. . . . DENTIST . . , Graham . - - - Narth Carallns OFFICE I* HIM MONB BUILDJf>'»* tCOBA. I-OHO J. X) MSB 1(10 LONG & IiONO, ! Utornwyn und oun»elor« ftt 1 GRAHAM, N. G. Trustee's Re-Sale. Under and by virtue of tli| power of siilo contained in a cer tain deed of trust executed to I In. undersigned trustee on JanuHty 2(51h, 1018, by Mrs. Bailie Sitnn iii.'l'm Harrison and husband, 11. J. Harrison, for tlie purpose of se curing the payment of four certain j bonds of even, dale therewlih, » which deed of trust is recorded in 1! the Public Registry of Alamance county in Hook Of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust No. 73, at page 204, default having been made in the payment of said bonds and the interest thereon, the under- , signed trustee will, on MONDAY, FEB. 2, 1920, tit twelve o'clock, noon, offer for • sale at public auction to the high est bidder, for cash, at the court limine door of Alamance county, in Graham, N. C., a certain tr;u?t or parcel of land lying in UoOti Station township, Alatnanco coun ty, North Carolina, on the south west side of Haw river, and bounded as follows: Beginning at a locust tree at or near llilw river at the bridg.va corner between Peter and George Summers, and running - thence north (i7J deg W 9 elm to a stone; thence N H7 deg W 35 chs I" a cherry tree; lhei.ee in a ill reel line to u while-oak; ilienee N 87i-dcg li 1M chs and 7 links to a stake in the big road; thence S I deg E 11 chit H...1 40 links to ii ntake; tlu-u e S. 87 J deg E 'lt chs to a gum on I Haw river, a corner on Mary I Walker's (formerly A liner Janus' corner); thence tip said river as it meanders to the beginning, | making by estimate one hundred I acres, more or 1 ckh, Under the advanced bid placed : upon Said land its allowed by law since the l ist sale, bidding will begin thereon at $47.26 per acre; said land having been previously sold December Ist, 1919. Tho trustee reserves the right lo sell only a part of said land sufficient to satisfy said deed of trust. This of Jan., 11)20. Alamance Ins. As Ileal Ustate Co., Truatce'. E. S. W. Dameron, Att'y. LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS This book, entitled as above, contains over 200 memoirs of Min- . isters in the Christian Church with historical references. An interesting volume—nicely print ed and bound. Price per copy: Cloth, $2.00; gL'i top, #2.60. By mail 200 extra. Orders may be sent to P. J. Keknoulk, 1012 K..Marshall St., .. Richmond, Va. Orders mav be left at this office. c * M ■> m