Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / July 29, 1920, edition 1 / Page 8
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LIVER DIDN'T ACT DIGESTION WAS SAD X l / ♦ f I Says 65 year Old Kentucky Lady, Wio Telli Hovr Sae Waa tUHercd After « Few Daaao of BUctDraasht Msadorsvflla. Ky.—Mrs. Cynthia Hlgglnbotham, of this town, says; "At my age, which la 65. the liver does not act so well as when young. A few years ago, my stomach was all out of fix. f waa constipated, my liver didn't act My digestion waa had, and it took so little to upset ma My ap petlte was gone. I waa very weak... I decided I would give Black- Draught a thorough trial aa I knew It was highly recommended for this trouble. I began takln* It I fait better after a few dosea My appetite Improved and I became stronger. My bowels acted naturally and the least trouble waa aoon righted with a few -Summons by Publication. North Carolina, Alamance County In the Superior Court. Bank of Haw River vs. C. M. Gant, E. W. Lasley, H. Goodman, et als. C. M. Gant, one of the defend ants above named, will take notice that an action entitled as above hafl been coinmeaced in the Su perior Opart of AlainanceTounty, and that gammons has been issued in said cause, and the plaint ifll lias filed a complaint in said ac tion, wherein it prays judgment against the defendauts for the sum of $447.3'J on account of over drafts drawn by Grabain Motoi Car,. Company against Bank ol Haw River, which said overdraft* were paid by said Bauk, and art now due and owing it by defend auts. The said C. M. Gant will fnrthei take notice that he is required uj appear at the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Alaiiiauct county,. North Carolina, at llit court house in Graham, on or lie fore Monday the Oth day of Au gust, 1920, and answer or deuiui to the complaint which will bt tiled in Maid action, or thn plain tiff will apply to the Court foi the relief uemanded in said com plaint. July 2, 1020. D. J. WALKER. C. S. C. J. J. Henderson, Att'y. Sjulyil ASPIRIN FOR COLDS Name "Bayer" is on Genuine Aspirin—say Bayer Insist on "Bayer Tablet* of Asplria' ia a "Bayer package," containing propei direction* for Colds, Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatitm. Name "Bayer" mean* genuine Aspirin prescribed by phyiieiana for nineteen years. Handy tia boxe* of 12 tablets «eat few ceata. Aspirin I* trade mark «f Bayer Manufacture ef Monoacetic acidsster of Sslicylicscld. t» Summons by Publication NORTH CAROLINA, Alamance Couuty. la the Hnperlor Court. « Lillie Small v vs. R. K. Small. R. E Small, the defendant above named, will take notice that an action entitled ax above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Alamance county by the plain tiff, Lillie Small, for the purpose of obtaining an alwolule divorce ,/rom the said K. E. Small; and the Ntid defendant will fnalitor take notice that he ia required in appear at the office of Hie Clerk of the Superior Court of Alamance county at t)i» court house In Urn bam, North Carolina, on Monday, August 23, 1020, and answer ot demtir to the complaint filed iu naki' action or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relM demanded in Maid complaint Done thitt the 28lh day of July, 102 °' D. J. WALKER, C. 8. C. p_._j.-_ JL. r nn* Ati'ra 29in14l dosea of Black-Draught" , Seventy years' of successful use has made Thedford's Black-Draught a standard, household remedy. - Every member, of every family, at times, need the help that Black-Draught can give In cleansing the system and re lieving the troubles that cume from constipation, Indigestion, lazy liver, etc. Ton cannot keep well unleaa your stomach, liver and bowels are in good working order. Keep them that way. Try Black-Draught It acta promptly, gently and In a natural way. If you feel alugglah, take a dose tonight 7o« will feel fresh tomorrow. Price 25c. a package— Om cant a dose All dnigglsta. \ J. tt HAIR IN PUCE OF POCKETS Kaffir Makee Uan of Treaeee In an Odd Mannor-Oeeullar Headdreaa In Near Hebrldea. Savages an ftrtile in the inven tion of hair contortions. Moslems have been known to shave away all their hair save a small clump in the center, which they think will serve aa a handle by which they may be lifted np to heaven. Natives of the New Hebrides twist their hair into as many as 600 whip cords. The person who can show the greatest number of these thin hair oords is regarded as one of im portance, and if reverenced accord ingly. Papuans wear large bones entan gled in their hair, but Maoris go one better and allow only sharks' teeth to be used. The Inolcuns, a savage West African tribe, train their hair, into a crest rising not less than twelve inches in height, and then let it fall backward, fan shaped. In Samoa the w'omen dress their hair to a shape somewhat l-tfembling a gigantic royal crown. On the top of the crown, which is upheld by aumeitous thin bones or twigs, they place a wreath of flowers. A wealthy Kaffir trains his hatr into a cbne, open at the top, and articles which the American stows away in his trousers pocket the cun ning Kaffir puts in his hair. FROM MINDS OF GREAT MEN Wisdom Handed Down to Posterity by Philosophers and Thinkers of the Past While one man says of a thing, "It is impossible!" and contents himself with saying so, another one passes him and does it They who cannot forgive others break the bridge over which they themselves must pass, for everyone has need of forgiveness. We cannot say of anything that it is impossible in this marvelous world of invention and endeavor. We can only say, "It has never yet been done." The gold of life does not lie hid den in mines; it sparkles in tiny sands all along the common path of every day. He only who gathers it bit by bit from daily duties and pleasures and opportunities and friendships will find himself the possessor of the real treasure at last. SCARCE AND VALUABLE SUOAR. jJelezitose, a form of sugar ex tremely- rare, and of great value tt> scientists in laboratory work, occurs in a honeyed incrustation or manna on a leguminous tree ip Persia and adjoining countries. Recently it has been found by the bureau of chemis try in a similar product on the Douglas fir in British Columbia. And now it has turned up in Penn sylvania stored away in honeycombs in ordinary hives. The origin of this ctill-eearce sugar is supposed to be due to the attack* on the scrub and, more rarely, other species of pine by a plant louse and a certain scale insect In the course of their activities these creatures produce a honey dew which is rich in melezi toee. In dry summers after the white clover flowers have ceased to yield honey, the bees torn to this honey km tad «ollMt Hi itcrysUUljee (f tilt 40 jh|V jfo» it MMM 3 iM M - v •• w-v fSTATE AFFORD NOT TO LET WOMEN VOTE? READ THESE TAX FIGURES. The lowest city tax rate bat on® (lilted In the 1030 figure* of the World Almanac, pages 702-705) fa in Musko gee, Okla., a full suffrage state. It la /85 cents on the hundred. The highest tax rate In the United States at the same time la In Milwau kee, Wis., $20.17 per hundred. Wiscon sin un{ll 1919 bad no woman suffrage. It now baa presidential suffrage. * Of the twenty-one cities in the Unit od States quoted In the World Almumft: Hat aa having tax rates below $1 ten are id states which hare full, presiden tial or primary suffraga. _ There are bat three male suffrage a'tatea In which any cities are listed with a tax rate below $1 on the hun dred. The suffrage cities with a low tax rate are: South Send, Ind,. 74 cents; Ogden, Utah, 72 cents; Niagara Fails, N. 80 cents; Kaiamaaoo, Mich., 80 cents; Muskogee, Okla., 85 ceitts; Kan sas City, Kan., 82 cents; Hutchinson, Kan., 75 cents;-Fort Wayne, Ind., 6-1 cents; Fort Smith, Ark., 50 cents; Cleveland, 0., 70 cents. ** In 1910 Washington, a full suffrage atate, went out of debt And Wyoming In that year had no need of taxes fftr state government. "Taxea were not levied for the sup port of the state government," said the Anaconda Standard (1910). "The in come of lands, leases, royalties' and in terest on Investment last' year was $808,241.02, while the amount received from .direct taxation was $568,497.5 V There was a cash balance on hand at the beginning of the year of $718,426.- 80. The actual expenses of-Wyomlng were $1,805,588.21. After paying all expenses and making some invest ments in - permanent funds, there is carried over a cash balance of $789,- 587.12. With this balance and the income derived this year from oil and mining development, royalties en state lapds, leases and fees, the state will eaally be able to get along a year at least without any direct taxation." Wyoming has full suffrage. In January, 1916, equal suffrage Kan sas paid, off Its last dollar of indebted ness. WHERE MEN ONLY VOTE DEBTS ARE OREATEf In the city of Baltimore, Maryland, where woman suffrage Is rejected, the total population In 1910 was 700,000. The debt of the city Is 166,127,174 or more than S9O per capita, the budget 122,020,009, or more than S3O per Capita. In Richmond, Virginia, another state where suffrage was rejected, the pop ulation of 166,000, is burdened with a debt of $12,518,097 or $75 per capita and with a budget of $5,604,013, or $44 each. (World Almanac, 1920.) In February, 1016, the Denver, Colo rado, Chamber of Qommerce said: "Denver's per capita Indebtedness Is $3.62. Per capita Indebtedness of other cities follows: "Louisville, $50.18; 8t Paul, $48.10; Worcester, lfaas„ $49.90; Columbus, Ohio, $46.06; Toledo, $50.54; Atlanta, Oa., $30.28. "Two million and a quarter dollar* were spent In home's last year, costing from 13,000 to $15,000 each. "The state has made great progress In agriculture. In 1914 It amounted to $89,578,200 and In 1915, to $95,052,000." The Indebtedness of Massachusetts, a male, suffrage state, was In 1913. $22.78 per capita. In California and Colorado, woman suffrage states, the same year, It was $3.83 and $3.70 per capita. In Kansas It was 14 cents and In Oregon 4 cents. (Figure# are from the United States Special -Census report on "Wealth, Debt and Taxation," Table 10.) ELECTION EXPENBEB. What It Coats to Let Women Veto. The state treasurer of every suffrage state has declared that woman suf frage has not appreciably Increased election expenses. Denver, In 1910, re corded the lowest per capita (of pop ulation) cost of voting (14 cents) of the larger cities of the United Btates. In Cheyenne, Wyoming, voting costs 10 cents per capita (of population), s less sum than In any cfty of its slse. It was computed In June, 1918, that New York city could vote all Its wom en for Just one-sixth of what It has been costing to vote Its men. It cost $300,000 in 1917 to vote 001,800 men. It was explained by the election of ficials that an equal number of women could be voted for an additional stup of $50,000, soaking $350,000 In alt It fcal cost the city 43 cents each t» vofce Its men, but It would only aetd a per capita expenditure of 7 cents more to care for as many mow women at the polla. In Chicago's experience It was found that the actual additional cost of the Woman voter waa about one-third. Women pay their foil pro rata share of the taxation for election expenses and they have been doing so for more than a century while deprived by law from casting a Vote. Antla Honored Dr. Shaw. Aatl-suffraglsts are busily defaming the dead suffrage leader. Dr. Anna Howard Shaw. In North Carolina to day. This is what they said of >sr In their official organ under Ate of July IX 1#1»: -There are thousands of women who honored Dr. Shaw for her other Ideals who t*r* did agree wlth her suffrage jfik *l " i y,\). \ •V v DR. SHAW ON THE BOYS' SlflE Dr. Anna Howard Bba*\. the suffrage leader who tost year, had warm friefids in the Tar lieef-st*te, where-her golden gifts of oratory were appreciated with, qxpert valuation. OTn tlie hitherto Unpublished photograph above she Is shown surrounded by a men. and boys' baseball team of Kansas City, Missouri.. It was taken just before her death i. > upon the occasion of her visit to the Boys Hotel. She had a vigorous talk with these young men Just starting on their busi ness lives. Some were newsboy*, some were office boys, some factory (fends, •ll were youn£ all had been left total ly on their own resources. The boys liked Dr. Shaw so much that tbey asked'her to be their baseball mascot If you knew her, you know that she said yes. Whereupon one slim youth opined » "Why fellers now we got the Doctor on our side we sure can lick any team In town." ' POLITICAL EQUALITY AND SOCIAL EQUALITY "Ton did not wait for woman suf frage," the late Dr. Anna H. Shaw, once argued to the men of the South, *but disfranchised both your black and White women, thus making them po litically equal." This ahe said la answer to the men of Louisiana when •he was asked Jo answer from a New Orleans platform the following objec tion to giving women the vote: "If you give the ballot to women, won't you make the black and white woman equal politically and therefore lay the foun dation for a future claim of social equality?" "If political equality Is tile basis of Social equality, and If by granting polit ical equality you lay the foundation for a claim of social equality, you have already laid that claim," was her an swer. "But yon have done more than that Too have put the ballot into the hands of your black men, thus mak ing them the political superiors of your white women. Never before In the his tory of the .world have men made form er slaves the political masters of their former mistresses." WHO WILL GET • THE CREDIT? The Case for the Parties. Of the 35 states that have ratified the Federal Suffrage Amendment, as shown by the map below, 29 have Re publican Legislatures. Republican leaders, angling for the woman vote In November, have madq much of the larger proportion of ratifications as sured by the Republican party. "Which would be a logical argument," says Miss Gertrude Well, president of the North Carolina Equal Suffrage League,, "if the relative proportion between Re publicans and Democrats were the es sential thing. But It Isn't The essen tial thing Is the thirty-sixth vote. What good does It do for Republicans to give 29 states, what good for them to give 85, without the thirty-sixth) "It la the thirty-sixth atate that counts. It is the chance to be the thir ty-sixth state that makea North Caro lina the pivot of responsibility In the Democratic prospect in the 1920 elec tions. If North Carolina ratlflea, if the Democratic party has to come to the rescue at .the thirty-sixth hqur and aave the dky for the amendment after the Republican party has brought It to the very gates of success, only to ditch It there, why, the whole. advantage swings to the Democratic side. It will be the Democrats, not the Republicans, who will have the vital claim on the women's vote." [ J KMNO TW H WW* Mn Hav* ftatHM thi F«*ral tMirnif« Amihlh* IN*; >4 |f Mw li ai Ag M I WOMEN VOTERS OF THE U. S. A. Ratification or No Ratification. '' » Ratlflcatlon or none, the women of thirty states are going (o vote for the nexi President of the United States. North Carolina is one 'of eighteen states whose women. aVe barred from the November Presidential elections. Here are some tabulated figures of timely merit In the fifteen states listed as "full suffrage" Women vote on exactly the same terms a* men. . In nine states women have, Presidential suffrage only. In the four where-they have Presiden tial, plus municipal, they will vote for President, and for all municipal of fices, but not for state offices, In gen eral, though there are a few state of fices in particular that they will vota for. In othfir words, they wiij, vote for offices that are yot created by the state constitution. Fifteen Full Suffrage States. .. Women * * 21 years State *" ' and over 1. Arizona ,V,.r w ..... 48,410 2. California • 872,802 3. Colorado ........>.....; 264,647 4. Idaho 105,146 - 5. Kansas 471,854 ft Michigan 848,016 7. Montana- 108,075 8. Nevada 26,611 0. New York 3,125,000 10. Oklahoma 470,176 11." Oregon 221,008 12. Sooth Dakota 161,024 13. Utah 100,648 14. Washington \... 444,919 15. Wyoralrig 37.148 7,303,288 Thirteen' Presidential or Presidential . Plua Municipal Suffrage States. Women f 21 years State .and over ia 'lllinois yU...... 3,899,160 • 17. Indiana 800,484 18. lowa 603,644 l 19. Maine 234,765 20. Minnesota 558,528 21. Missouri. 931,998 , 22. 'Nebraska 318,903 \ 23. 'North Dakota ..... 157,903 24! Rhode Island .... 183,030 25. 'Tennessee 564,104 2d. Wisconsin 653,936 27. Ohio 1,496,225 28. Kentucky ...» 597,149 i 8,809,829 1 (Those starred have both.) Vermont ★omen have state-wide mu- ! nlcipal suffrage. They cannot vote for president.orfor congressmen. In none 1 of the and presidential : plus murtldpal suffrage can women , vote for congressmen. Two Primary Suffrage States.* { (The"chance to help choose the Dem rtlc candidates at the Primary la only choice any voter can effec tively exercise In the states of the South. Ohio women also have pri mary suffrage.) ' 29. Arkansas J 356,514 30. Texas 999,106 . 1,354,680 Making a grand total for the thirty States, women 21 years and over, 17,- 467,797. - H . ••'.•> :••'■' Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind You Have Always Bought, and whidi has b&n la use for over over 30 years, has borne the rignatof of, jf - and has beien made under his per /7* sonal supdvisloa since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in "this. ' All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are but Experiments .that trifle with and endanger the health of Infant* And Children—Experience against Experiment. .WhatteWASTORIA^ Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance, to age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has . been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, "Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising ' therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aid# the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep* . the Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS In Use For Over 30 Years The Klnid You Hive Always Bought THE CEMTAUW OQ»fIi»AMV. M«W VOWK OITV. _ THIN PEOPLE NEED MORE IRON IN THE BLOOD ' t - • ' New Form of Liquid Iron Feeds the tissues through the 8100d —Builds Firm Flesh 4 . —Fills out the Hollows Appearances count for a lot in this world, and If you are thin and scrawny and "below weight," you can't help but feel sensitive and en vious of your'neighbor who is plump and sturdy and wno looks well nour ished. But there is another side—thin peo ple are usually sick people. The food they eat does not give them the prop er nourishment —or perhaps they are extremely nervous. The blood does riot make strength and nerve and flesh as it does m the normal, person. . • It is a remarkable characteristic of Acid Iron Miner al—tbe new nat ural form of soluble iron—^totitisa take it find after a short time thit the hollows are filling out; that the For Sale by All Good Druggists. Bur well & Dunn and John M. Scott & Co., harlotte, N. C., Distributors. Trustee's Sale of N Real Estate. By virtue of the power of sale contained in a mortgage deed'of trust executed by Mamie Lee and husband Allen Lee on the 13th day of April, 1916, and re corded in the office of the Reg ister of Deeds for Alamance county, in book No. 71 of Deeds of Trust, page 39, the under signed trustee will offer for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, at the court house door in Graham, North Carolina, ai 12 o'clock, noon, on MONDAY, AUG. 9,1920, the following 'described prop erty : - A certain tract or parcel of land 1 in Burlington township, Alamance county, North Caro lina, and descpbed as follows: Adjoining the lands of Brown Cooper, Henry Browning, John Chamber* and others, and be ginning at a rock, corner with said Browning; thence *S deg E 4 chs 23 Iks to a rook; thence 2i deg E 4.82 chs to a rock, corner with said Cham bers; thence N deg W 4.44 chs to a rock, corner with said Chambers and Cooper; thenceN 3 f deg S 4 chs 82 Iks to the be ginning, and containing 2 acres, more or less. This July 6, 1920. Alamance ins. & Real Estate Co., Trustee L. C. Allen, Att'y. Break j mt Cold or LeGrippe vftk ' few dotes of 666 flesh becomes firm and healthy, that even a space as a replaced angles and scrawniness. And with this increased weight comes a better appetite, more re freshing sleep and a marked increase in vigor in every way. Thin people can idee Acid Iron Mineral to improve their appearance, and they will find their health bene fitted at the same. time. Physiciahs say that this power to build new tissues and firm fleshes due to the extraordinary attraction the blood has for this particular combination of iron. Druggists refund the purchase price u you fail to get the result you seek. | Used 40 Years* j CARDIII £ The Wwa's Tonic f Sold Everywhere Z WMi—fiiti, | If Burned Out Would Your Insorrnce Pay the Loss? Examine yonr Fire Insurance Pol icy and see if you cany enough j lnsurance. Prices of are wiry high | and yon would be a refy heavy loser in case of fire. We can protect yon from such loss. jW Graham Real Estate Co. Ptaw 844 - GRAHAM, N. C: l»Xp jwjjo m fcramu JO Amwf *npi«oxj» in Mp as» übokm* in pm »idat]p ot fnojVMjp »«m •ao» PMOTKL, p*a TVW3J.VW XSIB JLNOd "S3MI ONOWVIO- Ana
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 29, 1920, edition 1
8
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