Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Oct. 6, 1921, edition 1 / Page 2
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DDDSON KILLING , USE OF MEL Says Drug Is Mercury and Acts Like Dynamite on Your Liver. Dodson Is making a hard fight against calomel in the South. Evsry druggist has noticed a great falling oft in the sale of calomel. They all give the same reason, Dods'bn's Liver Tone is taking Its place. £i "Calomel is dangerous and people know it, while Hudson's Liver Tone Is perfectly safe nnd gives better results," said a prominent local druggist. Dod son's Liver Tone is personally guaran teed by evepf druggist.. A large bottle costs but a few cents, and If It fails to give easy relief in every case of liver sluggishness and constipation, you have only to ask for your money back. Dodson's Liver Tone Is a pleasant tasting, purely vegetable remedy, harmless to both children and adults. Take n spoonful at night and wake up feeling fine; no biliousness, sick head-- ache, add stomach or constipated bowels. It doesn't gripe or cause incon venience all the next day like violent calomel. Take a dose*of calomel to day and tomorrow you will feel weak, sick and Don't lose a day's work! Take Dodson's Liver Tone in stead and feel fine, full of vigor and ambition. —Advertisement. Proceeding With Caution. "What are your views concerning the tariff?" "You ought to speak first,"" replied Senator Sorgliuin. . "Why?" "Because you are an Influential voter. As a patriotic yet practical statesman it should he my duty, as well as my privilege In this Interview, to reconcile my opinions to yours as far as I can conscientiously do so." » - MOTHER, QUICK! GIVE CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP FOR CHILD'S BOWELS Even a sick child loves the "fruity" taste of "California Fig Syrup." If the little tongue Is coated, or if your child Is listless, cross, feverish, full of coid, or hasycollc, a teaspoonful will never fall to) open the bowels. In a few Mrnrs you can see for yourself how thoroughly It works all the constipa tion poison, sour bile and waste from the tender, little bowels and gives you a well, playful child again. Millions of mothers keep "California Fig Syrup" handy. They know a tea spoonful today saves a sick child to morrow. Ask your druggist for genuine "California Fig Syrup" which has di rections for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say "California" or you may get an Imitation fig syrup.—Advertisement. New Type of X-Ray Apparatus. The West London hospital announ ces the possession of u new ltoentgen ray the design of h Bavari an roentgenologist, and the only one In England which makes use of rays of u wave length not hitherto em ployed. The 'current Is of a voltage greater than 200,000. It Is expected that with this new apparatus dou ble the number of cures of can cer possible In the past will be obtained. The tube gives the highest penetration yet achieved. SWAMP-ROOT FOR KIDNEY AILMENTS There i* only one medicine that really atanda out pre-eminent a* a medicine for curable ailment* of the kidney*, liver and bladder. Dr. Kilmer** Swamp-Root stands the higheit for the reason that it has proven to be ju*t the remedy needed in thouaanda upon thouaanda of diatreuing cases. Swamp-Root make* friend* quickly be cause it* mild and immediate effect is soon reali ted in moat case*. It i* a gentle, healing vegetable compound. Start treatment at once. Sold at all drug store* in bottle* of two aizea, medi um and large. However, if yon wiah first to te*t this gnat preparation *end ten cent* to Dr. Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a ■ample bottle. When writing be aura and mention thia paper.—Advertisement. New Medical Standarda for China. The , United States Pharmacopoeia I being translated into the Chinese language under the direction of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science. Before the wor Germany tried to have the German Pharma copoeia translated into Chinese, with the object, of cgurse, that German manufacturers might export to Chins drugs of German standards. Great Britain has made similar attempts since the war, btit our own standards ure to be adopted. Dont Forget Cutleura Talcum When adding to your toilet requisites. An exquisitely scented face, akin; baby and dusting powder and perfume, ren dering other perfumes superfluous. You may rely oo It because one of the Cutleura Trio (Boap, Ointment and Talcum). 25c each everywhere.—Ad vertisement ' f Timely Advice. "I want to leave footprints on the sands of time." "Wall, keep out of UM mud." IRISH PROBLEM IS PURELY DOMESTIC DE VALERA AND LLOYD GEORGE AGREEMENT CAUSES MUSH SATISFACTION HERE NOT TO GRANT INDEPENDENCE The Hope of Solution Lies in a Ref erendum by the People of Ireland Who Are Weary of Warfare. Washington. Although officially thfe Irish problem is purely a domes tic matter as between Great Britain and Ireland the fact is the agreement between Prime Minister Lloyd George and Eamonn de Valera to enter a per sonal discussion on October 11th of the questions at issue has caused much gratification here. For unquestionably the settlement of the Trtsh ■ problem will have a bear ing on tha relations_ between tho United States and Great Britain at the forthcoming Washington confer- ence. While there is no such thing as a, consensue of opinion in official quar ters on such a delicate thing as the I Irish problem, a dominant view is that Mr. Lloyd George has cleverly re- j newed the- negotiations with the Sinn Fein without causing either side to, seem to be surrendering its major de- j mand. Such Information as trickles in i from reliable sources .however, indi cates that the British prime minister! is determined not to grant absolute in- j dt pendente to Ireland The hope of solution lies in a refer-! endum by the people who are so weary I of warfare that they are said to be ready to approve the settlement! which the British government Is pre-1 paring to offer. Want* Congress to Adjourn. Washington.—The Harding adminis- j tratlon does not want congress In ses sion during the first few weeks of the disarmament conference. y This desire has been communicated to congressional leaders by high ad-1 ministration officials. Harding Sees Mimic Battle. With "President Marding at Wilder-1 ness Run, Va. —Under the eyes of the .commander-in-chief of all the fighting forces of the United States, 5,000 ma- j rines staged a thrilling sham-battle' on the historic Wilderness battle- ! ground. Longshoremen To Go On Strike. New York. —Several thousand long- j shoremen and checkers walked out in j protest against new working terms agreed upon recently by trans-Atlantic j steampshlp operators and the Inter- : national Association of Longshore men. Y. M. C. A- College Endangered. Springfield, Mass. Fire caused a loss of SIOO,OOO when the Springfield Ice company plant was practically destroyed. The Y. M. C. A. college, close to the Ice plant, was saved. Fleeing F/om Earthquake*. Richfield, U»h. Terrorrlzed resi dents within a radius of 50 miles of here were reported preparing to flee because of fears of another recur rence of earthquake shocks that have rocked this district five times. Fight With Ku Klux Klan. Waco, Texas.—Pistols spat fire and ■ white shrouded riders rode pell men'; In confusion when Sheriff Bob Buch nan attempted to stop a Ku Klux pa-* rade at lA)rena, 14 miles south of here. Farm Loan Bonda For Sale. Washington.—A general offering of i federal farm loan bonds, amounting j to $60,000,000 has been made on be behalf of the federal land banks, Sec- j retary Mellon announced. "Carried Pin For Year*. New York. —Mrs. Katherlne \Law rence, editor and authoresa, of Brook-j lyn. I* recovering from an operation I which removed a pin she swallowed when a child. Woman Deputy Marshal. AshevlMe," N.*' C. Miss Katherlne Rollins, appointed as deputy United Statea marshal here, Is believed to be 1 the first woman to serve in such ca pacity in the South, or possibly else-j where in the nation. Plana to Launch Woman'a Party. Washington. Plans for launching i a woman'* political party, which will. pdt Its own candidates in the field, j were announced by Mrs. O. H. P. Bel mont. Back of It ts millions of dol lars and millions of women. Credit System Aiding Weat. Washington.—lmportant results ,tre| being obtained rrom the agricultural credit arrangement made poaaible Uy the extended powers of the War IT nance corporation Oiea at Age of 115 Years. El Paso. Texas.—Juan Floras. 116 years ol*. died here. His wife, 101 years olu and a son. aged 80, survive. Mr. Flores witnessed the attainment of Mexico's Independence centenary celebrattoa which waa recently ob- REPEALS VARIOUS WAR TAXES Under Amendment* Inheritance, Liquor Taxes and Tax on Tobacco Would Remain as In Bill Proposed. Washington—A manufacturers' sales tax of three per cent } w&a formally proposed £o the senate by Senator Smoot, republican, Utah. The senator explained that this would be in substitution for "all of the various war {axes, the excise taxes, luxury taxes, stamp taxes, capital stock taxes, transportation, telegraph and Insurance taxes, the taxes on soft drinks, Ice xream, cosmetics, admis sions and daas and all of the other '75 varieties' of obnoxious, discrimi natory forms of taxation," which would be repealed on next Jflnuary 1 under a series of amendments to the revenue revision bill offered by the senator. Repeal of the excess profits tax as of iast January 1 instead o? next Jan uary 1, as planned by both tho houso and the senate finance committee, also was proposed by Senator Smoot. Under his amendments, the corpora tion income tax would remain at 10 per cent but there would be no change in the present tobacco, liquor and in heritance taxes. Improvement In X-Ray Outfits. i Washington.—lmprovement in med ical x-ray outfits to the extent that |all (lander of electrical shocks and hums had been eliminated was de j scribed to the American Roentgen I Ttay Society by Dr. W, D. Ooolidge, ef ithe General Electric company's labora tory, at Schenectady, M Y. t - Conspiracy is Charged. | Cincinnati, Ohio. —Charging conspi racy fti restraint of trade, to wit, a I combination .to fix the price of ce-[ Iment, the Hamilton county grand Jury returned a blanket indictment jof a score or more of material and sup | ply firms and Individuals. Great Exposition Closes. Charlotte, N. C. With several thousand people present, an air ot Jollity and merriment seldom seen in ! a Charlotte gathering and with one ot the best musical programs presented /in the entire 16, the Made-in-Carolina | exposition came to a close. Rents High in Los Angeles. I Los Angeles.—With the exception jof a few isolated instances, rents In this city still remain at the heights to which they soared during the rast two years. This Is due to the great demand for homes and business prop erties. • Meets Death With a Song. ' Chicago. Singing a popular song, Carl Wanderer, convicted of the mur ider of his wife, her unborn babe anc» a "ragged stranger," whom he hired !to stage a fake holdup, was hanged at the Cook county Jail. Given Rousing "Send-Off. Columbus, Has. —Hundreds of Kan sas coal miners were here to see Ale*- ander Howat and August Dorchy, their president and vice-president, "off to Jail." Baby Blimp is Demolished. 1 Dayton, Ohio.—A bolt of lightning In an electrical storm demolished a ;"baby blimp" dirigible balloon sta tioned at Wilbur Wright aviation field. Costly Postofflce Building. ! Columbia, S. C. —A new postofflce which cost $350,000, one of the hand • someSt In the south, was .opened here. The building has been in course of construction eince before the war. t Hotel Fire In Washington. Washington. Two persons are I known to have lost their lives in a fire which partially destroyed the Na tional hotel, on Pennsylvania avenue. , a few blocks from the national capltol. ! The dead are eQorge Mason, Char j lottesvllle, Va., and Miss Catherine | Dean. 25, a telephone operator at the j hotel. More than 300 guests were asleep in the building when the fire broke out. The hotel was one of the oldest in the city. Henry Clay died there and Abra ham Lincoln frequently dined there. Earthquake at Lo» Angeles. Los Angeles, Cal. —A slight earth quake shock was felt in the southwest section of Los Angeles. The tremor lasted but a few seconds and no dam age was reported. Reduced Ratee to Reunion. | Chattanooga, Tenn. —The Confed erate Reunion Committee has been au thorized to make the announcement aa official that the railroads will pant a rate of one cent a mile each way for the Reunion that meeU here Oc tober 24th to 27th inclusive. Salary Increases Disapproved. Indianapolis.—Disapproval of salary increases of approximately SO per cent for officers of the United Mine Work ers of America was voted by the (union's convention. Ma eons 0* Next te Portland. AsheviUe. N. C.—With the selection of Portland. Maine, as the meeting place tor the triennial convocation In 1924 and the election of offleere, the 3th triennial convocation ot the gen eral grand chapter of Royal Arch Ma eons rioted here. • 1 THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. GRAHAM, N. C TRUMAN NEWBERRY DECLARED ELECTED ' WAB CLEARED OF CORRUPTION AND ALL OTHER CHARGES BY SENATE COMMITTEE. ! CASE IS NOW .UP TO SENATE ] On But Two of Major Issues Wer; the j Republicans tand Democrats in Harmony in Reports Filed. | Washington. Opinions conflicting; along party lines were presented by I majority and minority members of the I senate privileges and elections com jmittee on the Ford-Newbarry 1913 i senatorial election contest from Michi-j Igsn. The majority report cleared Senator ' Truman H. New,berry, the republican I candidate, of corruption and all other f charges and recommended' that he be seated. The democratic men? bers asserted that Senator Newberry was nominated by "corrupt and illegal methods and practices" and recom mended that his seat be declare 4 va cant. • With the filing of the reports, the case now goes to the senate for final decision, which probably will e«t be | made for several weeks. Meanwhile, j It is understood. Senator Newberry | will not attend the senate sessions.' O nonly two major issues were the republicans and democrats in har mony in the reports filed. They agreed that Henry Ford, the demo cratic contestant, had not been elect ed to the seat from Michigan. They | also agreed that too much money had i been spent in the Michigan primary. Bottlers Endorse Sales Tax. Raleigh, N. C. —Adoption of a reso- j lution protesting against the proposed i excise tax on manufacturers of soft j drinks in the new revenue act and fav oring a manufacturers' sales tax on all Industries featured the eighth an nual convention of the North Caro lina Bottlers Association here. / ' __________ Emergency Measure Proposed.. Washington. Possible emergency measures by municipalities to cut down the number of the country's in voluntary idle. were taken up at the public hearing before the public works committee of the national con ference on unemployment. State Manufacturers Meet. Chicago.—Taxeß, transportation and new transportation legislation are among the matters scheduled for dis cussion at the sessions of the national conference of State Manufacturers' As- j sociations, which opened here. I ' Former Soldier Under Arrest. Denver. Dr. Gilbert L. Lininger, Pueblo dentist and former army of- j fleer, was # arrested at Pueblo on a i charge of theft of army dental sup-1 plies during August, 1919, while sta tioned at Camp Jackson. Reply to De Valera. London. The Sinn Fein leaders were invited by Prime Minister Lloyd George to a conference in London, Oc- j tober 11, on an Irish peace* adjnst-! ment. The invitation was extended in ] Lloyd George's reply to Earnonn de j Valera. • International Justice Court. Geneva. —Professors of International J law constitute a majority of the mem- j bers of the new court of international j justice as just elected by the League j of Nations. Trucks Ruining Ratyroad. Athens, Ga. —Automobile truck com- j petition may force the Gainesville j Midland railroad into the scrap pile, according to a letter from W. B. Veas ey, receiver for the road. Grippe Attacks Babe Ruth. New York.—Babe Ruth is confined to bed at his hotel here with an at tack of grippe which prevented him from playing with the New York team against the Athletics at Philadelphia. Ku Klux Klan Condemned. Indianapolis.—Preceding the parade | the G. A. R. delegates met in a busi ness session and passed a resolution condemning the Ku Klux Klan. The Sons of Veterans passed a similar ree olutlon. Test of Charleston Harbor. Charleston, S. C. —The heaviest draft ship to enter this port in several months was the tanker Bradford,'with a cargo of SO.OOO barrels of crude oilj from Port La bos. Mexico, for the re finery. To Consolidate Railroads. . Washington.—A tentative plan for consolidation of all American rail roada into 19 great competing sys tems was announced gy the interstate commerce commission. „■ ' _________________ Shrlners' Hospital Sites. Atlanta. —Locations of six of nine free hospitals for crippled children which the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine are to establish hi various parts of North America at a cost of $1,000,000 have been decided upon by the trua teea NO PERMANENT TARIFF AS YET Chairman of Finance Committee Deters mined to Push Tax Bill to Passage as Rapidly as Poaaible. Washington.—With a view to expe diting action on the peace treaties with Austria and Hungary and on tax revision legislation, repub lican leaders planned to put through a program calling not only for night j sessions of the senate, but for the be | ginning of the day sessions an hour j earlier than usual. The tax bill would ' be considered during the day and the treaties at night. There is a desire to dispose of the treaties before the beginning of the conference on the limitation of arma ments and, since the three pacts must be acted upon separately, leaders plan to lose no time in getting their consid eration fully under way. Chairman Penrose, of the finance committee, is determined to push the tax bill as fast as possible. He is still hopefur that it can be put through with two weeks' consideration but opposition to some features appar ently has taken on a wider range than at first was anticipated. I Spangier's Spring is Doomed. Gettysburg, Pa.—Spangier's Spring at which Union and Confederate sol diers drank together dicing a lull in the fighting at the close of "the sec ond day of the battle of Gettysburg, July 2. 1863, may pass out of exist ence. Typhoid, fever germs hare been found in the water. I . Henry Neal is Dead. Washington. Henry Neal, for 45 years door-keeper at the office of thfi speaker of trhe house, is dead. The son of a Seminole Indian- chief, Neal | was appointed in 1876 by Speaker The eight succeeding speak ers retained him. i Hundreds Killed by Typhoon. Tokio. Several hundred persons [ have been killed by a typhoon in i central Japan, centering upon Nago jya, on the island on Hondo, where a j tidal wave destroyed crops and houses. Several staemers were sunk. * A Royal Commuter. Parl^. —King Alfonso of Spain has ojined the ranks of royal commuters. An air-taxi designed for his personal use, has been completed by a French firm. The machine will make 130 miles per hour^ Swanson Will Be Candidate. Warrenton, Va.—ln a letter to Thos. A. Frank, editor of a local weekly pa per, made public by Mr. Frank, United States senator Claude A. Swahaon an-' nounces he will be a candidate for .renomination to the senate. To Fight Dry Movement. * Lausanne, Switzerland. —A commis sion to fight against an invasion of I Europe by an international prohibition j movement originating in the United I States was appointed by the Interna | t'onal Anti-Prohibition Congress. Southern Asks Bond Issue. i Washington—The Southern railroad applied to the interstate commerce commission for permission to issue $5,655,000 in Georgia Pacific bonds. Another Democrat Resigns. Columbia, S. C.—J. Waites Waring, I assistant United States district at ; torney for the eastern district of | South Carolina, announced his resig ' nation, to take effect October 1. 150,000 Refugees in Petrograd. Riga.—Approximately 150,000 refu -1 gees from the famine districts of Rus ' sia now are in Petrograd, says a wire | less message received here. WILHELM II IS DYING. Berlin.—-Wilhelm 11, former King of Wuerttenburg, is dying of bronchitis | and.heart trouble, said a dispatch from j Stuttgart. Man Runs Amuck; Kills Two. Tampa, Fla. —Angered because his wife was suing him for divorce and the custody of two small children, C. I'O. Clark, 30, ran amuck at Arcadia and committed suicide after he had shot and. killed two persons and 1 wounded Mrs. Clark, according to re ports received here. Negro Drifting From South. Washington.—Revised figures of the ! census bureau. Just released for publi cation, emphasize previous announce ment that the negro drifts from tha south Into othgr sections of the Unit ad States. •—-jtflg Salvage Suit Piled. Charleston. S. C. —Suits aggregating 1250,000 have been filed in federal . court as a result of the Are aboard | the S. S. Pinellas some weeks igo when machinery of the ship and cotton I were damaged. No Hope For Tariff Now. Washington." —An expectation that the special session of congress will be able to complete a permanent re vislon of the tariff before Its termina tion in December, Is understood to have been abandoned. Gets Beat in Congreaa. Boston —A. Piatt Andrews, former assistant secretary of the treasury, was chosen to succeed Will Fred W. Lnfkin aa congressman from the Sixth Massachusetts tlilrict at the special election. ACTIVE ARMIES OF "GREATER NATIONS ESTIMATE MADE THAT SIX MIL LION MEN ARE UNDER ARMS IN THE WORLD TODAY. CHINK OCCUPIES FIRST PUCE Of the Nations Who Are Not Distress ed by Civil Strife, France Is Far in the Lead With 1,024,000. • Washington.—Active armies of the 14 most important nations ot the world today include approximately 6,000,000 men, according to figures ob tained here and regarded as reason ably correct. * With the inclusion of land armaments in the agenda of the forthcoming conference on limitation of armament 3, these are thd -1 figures with which it is expected the assem bled delegates will have to deal. While China stands first among the nations in this summary of soldiers actually under arms about September Ist, last, being credited with 1,370,- 00$ active troops, France is far ahead among the nations not distressed by civil strife, in the number of "men with the colors. The French strength is placed at 1,034,000 men, the Brit ish empire standing next with 740,500 and Germany last with 100,000. The United States stands thirteenth with i 49,000 men in the" regular army, ex ceeding Germany, while Italy has 350,000 and Japan 300,000 active troops. • ; • Flgure| for other powers include: Russia, 638,000; . Poland, , 450,000; Greece, 255.000; Spain, 253,000; Switierland, 107,000; Turkey, 152,000; Czechoslovakia, 150,000. ✓ Cotton Off $9.50 In New York. New York. The cotton market made a sensational break following the publication of the official crop condition figures by the department of agriculture. . After selling up to 21.95 Tor December delivery a new high record, prices broke $9.50 per bale. Decline in Cotton Condition. Washington, -r- Further decline in the condition of cotton during Sep tember resulted in a reduction of 500.000 bales in the forecast of pro duction issued by the department of agriculture, which places the total crop at 6,537,000 equivalent 500-pound "bales. Increased Paper Demand. .jr.- Washington.—lncreased demand for commercial paper and, generally,' a slight reduction in rates were noted i the review of tbe acceptance mar ket published by the Federal Reserve Board. Two Hundred Liquor Violations. Greenville, S. C. More than 200 cases charging violation of the na tional prohibition law will be taken up at the Greenville term of the United States court, District Attorney Ernest F. Cochran announced. Guatemala Joins Federation. Washington.—Ratification by Guate mala of the constitution of the Feder ation of Central America was formal ly consummated at Guatemala City. , B'eak-Neck Pursuit of Liquor. Athens, Ga. —A break-neck pursuit ofa whiskey-running automobile end ed four miles from Athens when the whiskey car turned turtle. One hun dred gallons of whiskey and tbe car were confiscated. I ______________ Dr. Hadley is Re-Indicted. Richmond, Va. Dr. William Amos Hadley was re-indicted in the Henrico county court on a charge of murder ing his wife, Mrs. Sue Tinsley Hadley, whose boay was found Jn the James river December 30, 1918. $2,000,000 Cotton Compress Loss. Morrillton, Ark. —Loss estimated at $2,000,000 was suffered by the Morrill ton Cotton Compress company when fire, started by a bolt of lightning, de stroyed two sections of its plant and 16,000 bales of cotton. King Wilheim 2d is Dead. Stuttgart, Germany.—Former King William II of Wurtemberg is dead. King William had suffered from a se vere form ot bronchitis and his death was due to that and heart complica tions. Judge Grosacup Dies at Sea. , Liverpool. The steamer Carolina arrived here with the body of Judge Peter S. Grosacup, formerly of Chica go, who died two days c*it from New York. Death was due to heart dis ease. A _______________ Accepts Wage Reductions. New Orleans.—Acceptance of recent wage reductions was voted here by union longshoremen. The new scale is for 65 cents an hour, with $1 for overtime. . —— , Strike on Wage Reduction. Chicago. Counting of the strike ballots of 259,000 members of four railroad anions will begin here with the possibility of a general strike by more (ban 800,000 railway men in pro test against 1$ per cent wage reduo iioa t Makes Hard Work Harder \ bad back makes a day's 'work twice as hard. Backache usually comes from weak kidneys, and If ( headaches, dizziness or urinary dis orders are added, don't \vait —get help before the kidney disease takes a grip—before dropsy, gravel or Bright's disease sets In. Doan's Kidney PilU have brought : new life and new strength to thousands of working men and women. Used and recommended the world over. A.sk your neighbor! A North Carolina Case J. F. Tate. 520 S. Morgan St., Shelby, 4*9 2E3JI» N. C.. says. "My back kI, was weak and there _ was a dull, heavy ag gravatlng ache across Jff|Snr]Q& AflrJ the small It. When|ftTE3Mbyra| hardly get up agaln.K Black specks appeared|k\ before my eyes and was dizzy. Mornlngspf-Ts3C^^3B| I felt tfred and down. My kidneys *)H were also weak. ■ Doan's Pills, In a short time, entirely cured me." Get Dean'* at Aar Store, 60c a Boa DOAN'S VI&V FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. V. ECZEHAH Money bmk without question J\ uy\ if HUNT'S GUARANTEED SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES L (Hunt's Salve and Soap), fail in f I the treatment ofltch, Eczema, W j I Rlhaworm.Tetterorotherltch- f I#/ / I Inaskindiseases-Trythistreat-* ment at our risk. Sold by all reliable druaaists. A. B. Richards Medicine Co., Sherman, Texas will reduce them and leave no blem ishes. Stops lameness promptly. Does not blister or remove the hair, and horse can be worked. $2.50 a bottle delivered. 'Book 6 A free. W. F. Ynn. Inc.. 310 Tempi* St, Sprinrftld, Mitt. a a*| fl II On at rmllmt and soH* «J» comfort (or thosa Miirnaii m niIUICII lIV ® HALL a RUCUUT KM. L * *' 147 WimlrFUu, H.Y. Salve fc'SORE EYES Pertinent Inquiry. The newest member of Miss Jones' Sunday school class was a lad whose frankjiess was equal to his curiosity iu many matters. On one occasion Miss Jones made a few remarks touching untruthful-* ness and Earnestly endeavored to im press her charges with the necessity of being truthful at all times and under all circumstances. Novr the new pupil appeared to b.e intensely interested in Miss Jones' re marks, and, after due reflection, put this query to h«r: "What I'd like to know, ma'am," .he said, "is it a lie if nobody ever knows?" —Milwaukee Sentinel. Fraudulent Alchemists. Discussing the work of Roger Bacon, regarded as the greatest philosopher of the Thirteenth century, Prof. Wil liam Romaine Newbold of the Uni versity of. Pennsylvania, who has suc ceeded in finding a key to this won derful book, speaks of numerous references to alchemy. In Bacon's time alchemy was considered a science and we have records of many workers, some of tliem honest In their beliefs, but. many of them were simply Im posters using the desire for gold to obtain large sums of money from their credulous victims, the New York Sua explains. ■ .«. ■ eSK I is wonderfully protected and colic, diarrhoea, constipation, and other stomach and bowel troubles are quickly banished Oor avoided by using MRS.WINSLOWS TV. labels' aW CkUrsa's KxsUtar This remedy quickly aids the stomach to digest food and produces most remark able and satisfying results in regulating the bowels and preventing sickness. Pleasant to |ln plea—nl to take. Harmtae*. poraly vecetabla. Infants' and children s recaletor. formula on label. Gaarantaed non-narcotic. nrm-alwnhoHc „ AO Drmmtif EASY TO KILL STEARNS' ELECTRIC PASTE **'*' *— "TT Bstlai TkM Tieee ass falls." KBMII, IT» Wublnatoa St.. Chleaao, IU.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 6, 1921, edition 1
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