VbL. XLVIII
Democratic State Con
vention Meets Today
Not a Few Aspirants to Enter Pri
maries—Number of Carolinians
Who Served in World War Not
Available, but Some Figures Given.
FEDERAL JUDGES HOLD FOR
STATE AGAINST RAIL
ROADS AGAIN.
State Bankers Meet at Pinehuret
April 26-28.
(By Maxwell Gorman.)
Raleigh, April 18.—The Demo
cratic State Convention Thursday
is tho event of this week and the
"key-note" speech to be delivered
by Congressman Ed W. Pou of the
fourth (Raleigh) district, tem
porary presiding officer, the out
standing feature of that occasion.
Some of the party's guardians
and "leaders" are on the pre
liminary scene and many an old
political hen will be set during
the week on seven-months egge,
designed to be hatched out in No
vember.
The third congressional district
is causing more anxiety than any
other spot in the party firma
ment at present, there being a
whole setting of eggs in that one
district alone for the prinmry to
dispose of before hatching time.
At least a half-dozen aspirants,
including Charles F- Abernethy
and Larry Moore of New Bern,
Matt Allen of Uoldsboro, Dr. Carr
of Duphtafand others, are expect
ed to file notices this week.
Saturday is the last day for aiiy
citizen who wants to be congress
man, judge, solicitor, state sena
tor, associate justice or corpora
tion commissioner on either ticket
to declare himself and pay his
fee. The lists close next Satur
day night at midnight, though
any notification bearing the
Stamp of April 2i will be accept
ed and filed.
Four judicial districts, congres
sional districts, seven solicitor
ships, scores uf those who will
seek senatorial honors and the
place ou the Corporation Commis
sion were unspoken for by either
Republican or - Democrat. But
few RHpublicans have applied for
any office, though 4 lull roster of
them is expected before the ex
piration of the lime limit.
The twelth juiicial district
showed up with opposition to J
Allen Austin when his feilow
townsuiau T. W. Albertson, filed
his iiiteutiqu to run for solicitor
in that district. Judge T. J. Sliaw,
also of that district, filed notice
of his intent to run for renomua
tion.
Among the latest eni rants listed
are: Thomas J. Shaw, Greensboio,
Judge Superior Court, t welt- dis
trict; W. H. Fisher, Clinton, (It),
solicitor, sixth district ; T. W.
Alberteou, lligh Point (L)), nolic
itoi, twelfth district; G D Bath-),
Burnsville (R ), solicitor, eight
eenth district; Jas. .VI Carson,
Rutherford ton solicitor
seuth district; J. E. Swain, A-»he
yille (L).), solicitor, nineteenth
district.
Figure* About T»r Heel* la the \V«r.
Following a request Troin Com
missioner \V. A. Graham of the
North Ca/oliua' Department of
Agriculture, Senator Simmons ob
tained iuforuiatiou from the Ad
jutant General'* office, War De
partment, sayiug thai complete
figures showing ihe number of
North Carolina men who served
in the world war are not yet
available but the following eati
mates would be given:
"The most recent estimates,
based upon the number of state
ment* of service thus far complet
ed, indicate that approximately
4, 438, 000 men served in the
army as enlisted men during the
period of hostilities, of whom
- • ' • •
THE ALAMANCE GLEANER.
fronr the state of North Carolina.
It has also been estimated that 3,-
865 of the 206, 350 commissioned
officers oamn from that state.
"Recently compiled casualty
statistics show that 2, 505 North
I Carolina soldiers, of whom 7(
were commissioned officers and
2, 429 were enlisted men, lost
their lives during tho period of
the war, and that 3, 823 others,
including 156 officers, were
wounded."
State Win* Again In Railroad Tax
Court Order.
The State of North Carolin»
and the State Department of Rev
enue, A. D. Watts, commissioner,
have again won a court fighi
against the big railroad systems
that have been delaying payment
of income taxes.
Again arguing their suit against
the taxiug department of the
state, the railroads were unabl.
to move the federal judges who
recently denied their application, 1
their honors refusing again to con
tinue the injunction pending the
hearing of that appeal before the
United States Supreme Court.
The carriers are in the anomal
ous position of asking an injunc
tion against nothing. The court
has dismissed the action against
the state. The roads have ap
pealed. But the real purpose ol
the application uow before the
court is to stay the collection of
the taxes. The three judges who
sat in these cases point the roadt
to the highest court. They refuse
to stop payment until they are
themselves stopped.
Judges Connor and Waddill,
who heard the informal argumem
of the railroads, granted thirtj
days to the roads, thus staying
the state's procedure against the
companies another month to give
the Supreme Court of the United
States a chance to act. After the
expiratiou of that thirty days the
roads will have to pay what
amounts to a substantial million
dollars annually in taxes. Judge
Connor, sitting alone, set June
15th for the final"bearing on the
income tax feature of the litiga
tion.
Former Associate Justice
George H. Brown of the Supreme
Court, Thomas D. Warren, Judge
Wil'iam P. Byuum aud Attorney
General James S. Manning ap
peared for the state, and Col. W.
B. Rodman, Col. Thos. W. Davis
Col. Harry Skinner, Murray
Allen, W. M. Hendren and James
F. Wright appeared for the several
roads.
Big Time at Hankers' Meet.
North Carolina bankers, iu all
the towns of North Carolina, are
looking forward with pleasure to
next week.
Prominent speakers at the an
nual convention of the North
Carolina Bankers' Association, to
be .held at Pinefiurst April 26-28,
will include Senator Dial of South
Carolina; Walter VV. Head of
Omaha, Neb., vice-president of
the American Bankers' Associa
tion; George J Seav, governor of
the Richmond Federal Reserve
Bank, and Oliver J. Sands, Gen
eral manager of the Tobacco Co
operative marketing Association.
The convention will be called
to order at 11 o'clock on the
morning of Apail '2oth at tbe Car
olina Hotel, and the address of
welcome will be made by Hon.
Robert N. Page, president of the
Citizens liauk aud Trust Company
of Southern Pines. The response
will be made by T. A. Avera of
Rocky Mount. C. C. Kirkpatrick
of New Bern will deliver an ad
dress on "How to Make North
Carolina Pay Dividends."
G. F. Moore of New York
City will deliver an address at the
night session.
On the second day Messrs. Sands
and Seay will speak, aud J. W.
Vaughn of Cartersvllle, Ga., will
discuss the livestock industry.
Seuator Dial and Mr. Head will
speak on the third day of the con
vention which will close with a
business session in th* afternoon.
The Pinehurst management hat
made special provision for enter
taining tne visitors. There will
be golf everyday, races and danc
ing in the evening. A feature of
the meeting will be shooting exhi
bitions by Miss Annie Oakley.
A. M. Dumay of Washington,
N. C. f is president of the associa
tion, and Allau T. Bowler of Ral
eigh Is secretary. The rice-presi-
GRAHAM, N. C.. THURSDAY. APRIL 20, 192 a
dents are: C. E. Brooks of Way nes
ville, John D. Biggs of Willinmstoh
and S. A. Hubbard of Asheville.
T. A. Uzzell of New Bern is
treasurer. '
Former Soldiers and Sailors Dis
missed in Violation of Law.
In view of the recent wholesale
discharges of government em
ployees, including many former
soldiers and sailors, Senator Cara
way (Dem., Ark,) introduced a
resolution calling upon the Presi
dent to tell how many «.f such
former sailors and soldiers in the
classified service had been dis
missed, demoted or had their'
salaries reduced, and cited the
following Federal statute.
"In the event of reduction be
ing made in the forces in any of
executive de&partments, no honor
ably discharged soldier or sailor
whose record in said department
is rated good shall be discharged
or dropped or reduced iu rank or
tn s ilary."
Commenting on this, Senator
Caraway said:
"Quite a number of soldiers
and sailors with honorable dis
charges who were within the
classified service have been dis
missed from the service without*
any explanation. Three of them
are in the Bureau of Engraving
and Printing. There are many of
them in the Navy Yard. There
were some of them in the Treas
ury Department, and the depart
ments are disniissing'soldiers and
sailors with honorable discharges
whose records are good, and we
want to know why.
"There is a crv all over this
country now that there is no re
spect for the law. How can we
complain when some one becomes
a bootlegger if the highest execu
tive officer iu the land and cabinet
officers disrtgard the law and de
prive men of their rights? We
canhot build up a respect for law
und at the same time let those
who are charged witu the duty of
enforcing it iguore it. The law is
as binding upon the President a
upon the humblest citizen in tho
land;'
Senator Caraway brought ou a
coloquy with Senator • Sterling
(Newberry Rep., S. D.), Chairman
of the Civil Service Committee,
when he expressed the belief that
his resolution would be smothered
in committee, and then added:
"But there is a court of appeal,
above Presidents and rfbove Cabi
nets, to which court these people
who have had their
blackened, and who have bet n
denied the right to make an honest
living, can appeal. These women
who were discharged can appeal
to that court. These ex-service
men, who went out when Congress
declared that a state of war ex
isted between this country and
Germany, who laid down their
civil employments and imperiled
their lives and their futures to
save this country, now have their
rights taken from them by the
Executive and the Cabinet, anu
they have an appeal. It lies be
yond this administration; it lies
in the common sense and fairness
and justice of the American peo
ple, and I am confident, sir, de
spite all that may happen hero,
despite what the Senate may do,
that the American people are go
ing to hear that appeal, and do
justice by these men and these
women. I do not care whether
they vote the Republican ticket
or the Democratic ticket; they
have a right to look to the Ex
ecutive and to Congress of tho
United States for justice, and
when it is denied them, there is
somebody, somewhere, who is go
ing to rebuke those who sit in
high places, and ignore the rights
of those iu humbler stations."
Funny World
Crawford —I suppose there'll
always be jealousy among the dif
ferent sets of society.
Crabshaw —The next genera
tion will probably see descend
ants of smugglers turn up their
noses at newer families which got
their start in the bootleg business.
The big reputation of Tanlac
has been made by doing what
other medicines failed to do. Foe
sale by Farrell Drug Co., Graham,
N. C.
Collectors meet many men of
promise.
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION
Delegates to State and Judicial
Conventions Elected
Pursuant to the ,cal| of the
Couit y Chairman, C. R. Love,
ihe -Democaatic.'Convention- met
in the Courthouse .in Grab tin, at
11 o'clock* * Saturday, (- ApriJ 15,
1922. W. S. Coulter was elected,
temporary chairman, and J),, J.
Walker, temporary, _secretary.
The object of ihe c invention, as
slated by the chairman* WHS to
elect delegareß to .tire State, Co
nvention, that is jo meet iu R-if
eigh, Thursday, Api'il 20tJu.t ..
The following' ware nominated,
ahfl elected, as delegates aud al
ternates to the State convention:
Delegates: R. J. Thompson,
Fred HomeSvood, Mrs C. K, Tap
scott, J. J. Lambeth, W.S Franks,
R. L. Holt, L. A. McCauley, E. S»
Parker, J-rif Pleas Ueanes,. ,1.
BuCk tier, Jack Roiioy, \lr*. J-
Uolph Long, Ebb Holt, Ed J
Braxton, Miss Alma Stookard,
J. Williamson,' L'hiis A. !Q»onip*
son, Mrs. Kerr Scott, ,\\. O.
Warren, ■A. Is. Fitch,. Waiter E.
StaiulMCk, A M Carroll,, ,W. K.
Holt, O F. GPOW.HOII) C. LI. Love,
Mrs J. II Vernon, Mrs. W.J.
Barker, C.D.Storv, Mrs.-Allen
Bur.oughs, T. ll.* Iseley, ThoW
Sewell, E B. Horner, Mrs. A. 11.
King, W. H. Carroll.
Alternates:- Mrs.-J. M. Coblo,
A S. Thompson, J. B. Gerringer,
E. C. RulnJbley, J.-S. Gilliam*
Lawrence Huffmau; John Vaughn,
Mis Allen D. Tate, Mrs. P.A.Holt,
Dr' W. S. Long, Jr.,. L. C.
Allen, A W. Norwood, William
Coble, Walter Stockard, Miss
Lavina Lewis, Henry James, M ss
Annie Minor; W. Wi Corbett, J. S.
Vincent, Miss .Jenuie, Lasley, Mrs.
E. L Dailey, John M. Cook, W.
J. Geaham, Dr. T. S. Fancette, ('.
L. 3hoffner, A. A. Apple, Miss
Cor.una Gant, Mrs. tola Line
berry, Miss Lena Walton, Mrs. F.
L. Gr.ves, Mrs J. Rainey-I'srker,
W. li. Sellars, J..-K-. Moone.,
It was uloved and capried that
any citizen or citizens attending
the convention, who has not been J
named a delegate, shall be deemed
a delegate either to the J.udicial
couventiou or tliO State conven
tion, or to both.
It was moved aud carried that
the committees of the various
voting precincts, together with
their chairmeu be reaffirmed, as
such chairmen and committee,
until their successors sliall bo
I elected at the regular county con-
and the various chair
meu of the said committees are
constituted an advisory boaVd of
the cjuuty chairman aud the
"County Board of Elections.
All Cows in County to
be Tested for Tuberculosis.
The County Board of Commis
sioners, on April 3rd, agreed to
meet tiie offer inale by the State
and Federal governments to test
the cattle in this county for
tuberculosis. This move ranks
with the stock law and the "Tick
Eradication" law. It is a very
important niove for the dairy in
dustry for the couservation of
henlth of all who drink inilk,
nature's best food.
Within the next sixty days
plans will be made for tlie Jest
ing of all cattle. Those found to
be infected will be killed or quar
antined. For all vrade cattle the
State will pay $25 and the Federal
goveruineut a like amount. For
purebreds a total of $1(X) will be
paid
Several herds in the county
have been known to be infected.
A county free of this dreaded
disease is a valuable asset. At
least 25 per cent of all tubercu
losis in the hurpan family comes
| from drinking ' infected milk
Thirty-six people died ip.lhe
county last year of tub»*rculo»»ls
I have often beeii ask ml by pur
chasers of cattle here tf there was
auy tuberculosis in the county.
We can tVothfully say after this
test that there is none.
W. KKKK SCOTT, •
(Jo. Agent of .
Alamance County,
Harness your en rxy with Cum
mon seuse.
Tailor t»ir«t it* known by that
name because it bo»»» the leaves
of its nest together.
Cooperative Tobacco
Association.Notes.
llnudfeds of contracts reaching
Raleigh, headquarters of the
Tobacco Growers Cooperative
Assouiaiiou, every week marks
lio MU'vohHful start of the cam
pa gii fur h 70 per tout meuiber
snip.
Carrying out its policy of ob
taining tlie services of leaders, in
the loiiacco the Tobacco
Growers' Cooperative Association
Ims announced the appoiulhient
jof another groiipe of men whose
names are widely known iu the
tobacco world.
! Charles L. Smith, District Man
ago r of the Universal Leaf Tobac
co Company, has accepted the
position of District Supervisor of
Graders iu the Leaf Department
oftlte I'obacco Growers' Coope
rative "Association. , .
'"Couiuieuiiug ou Mr. Smith's
appointment, R. R. l'attersou,
Manager of the Leaf Department,
said,, "We consider hiiu one of the
best leal tobacco meu iu tho busi
uet-s and his reputation among
the tobac o men iu the Eastern
Carolina section is unsurpassed."
Another veteran of the tobacco
trade, who leaves the Imperial
Tobucco Company for the Tobac
co Growers' Cooperative- Associa
tion, is W. I. Skinner, of Green
ville, N. C., according to an-,
nouucemcut by R. R. Patterson,
Manager of the Leaf Department
at Richmond, Virginia.
Beginning his career as a buyer
with J. M. Meadors at Gxford, N.
C.,when fifteen years of age, Mr.
->k in nee was later connected with
E. S Carlton & Company. Later
going to Wilson, with Richuioud
Maury fc Company, he became
connected with the Maxwell To
bacco Company after the dentil
of Mr. Maur) and remained with
.that company until the foruiatiou
of the Imperial TobacCo Cotupauy
iu 1902.
For sixteen yearsj Mr. Skinuer
has beeu Branch Mauager for the
Imperial at Greefcville.N. C., aud
is .described by, General Mauager
R. Ii Patterson as su expert iu
the tobacco business. He will go
to the Leaf Department of the
Tobacco Growers' Cooperative
Association.
' E. L. Waltdn, until recently
owuer of the Bauner Warehouse
at Danville, Virginia, will become
Mauager of the Warehouses for
the Bright Belt of Virginia in the
Tobacco Growers' Cooperative
Association. Mr. Walton has had
twenty-eight years expedience in
the Warehousing business.
W. M. Fallon, for eighteen years
Branch Manager for the Imperial
Tobaco Company of Durham, N.
C., joins the "Leaf Department of
the growers' association. » C. O.
Dixou, of Muliius, S. C., well
know Q to the tobacco trade, has
become Managed of Warehouses
for South Carolina.
J. S. Neal and John Dixon, prom
inent warehousemen of Mullinß,
S. C , have'transferred their ware
houses to the Association aud will
aid the organized growers in their
Warehousing and Leaf Depart
ment, respectively.
The appointment of P. E.
Chambers of Blackstone, Va., a»
Manager of the Warehouses for
the Dark Belt assures the northei n
territory of the Marketing Associ
ation strongleadership, according
to T. C. Watkins, Jr., Manager of
Warehouses for the-'Association
Removing Acid
spirit* of ammonia to neu
t rrtliz'f any acid slain un clothing,
lhen wash with wat«r and if nec
oMnry apply chloroform to restore
the color.
lintel Clerk—llow altout an
oni Mm room? /*
TVa i>ack —Would it cost much
more to sleep inside?
,Soni» NiiaiU in Ce.\ lon attain a
1 ngih of from four to five Inches.
Wo in Tanlac aud BO
will you if you try it. Hold by
Kartell Drug Co., Qruhaui, N. C.
"HELLO" BARRED IN BOSTON
According t» Superintendent of
Schools Burke the Word le Both
Undignified and B!ovenly.
Do not «ay "Hello" when you pick
op the telephone.
Avoid "Nope" and "Yep" In your
conversation when you mean "No" or
"Yea."
If Boston In going to sustain lta rep
utation as the Athens of America, It
must quit the use of theae barbarisms,
according to Jeremiah E. Burke, new
superintendent of Boston schools.
It Is more In accordance with Bos
ton culture to aay something like
"This is Mr. Smith talking; with whom
am I converaingT"
"There are many words," Superin
tendent Burke says, "which may be
used in place of that moth-eaten, un
dignified and impolite' word 'HeUo.'
Its use is condemned in Boston
schools, particularly lnclasses In mftes
manship where knowledge of dignified
and grammatical English is essential.
There Is m> excuse for the use of
•Nope' and 'Yep' In conversation. I
believe that If Boston school children
will check themselves in their use,
parents at home will gradually dis
pense with their use.
"My advice to the children In Bos
ton schools Is:
"Don't be slovenly In the use of Eng
lish. Slovenliness Is the result of hab
it, and once tolerated, It is likely to
cling to all of us until mature life."—
Boston American.
ETIQUETTE THAT SEEMS ODD
Table Manners at the Time of Chau
cer Were of a Decidedly Primi
tive Character.
Tabic manners at the time of Chau- j
cer were described In a lecture by
Kenneth Hare, author nnd poet, on/' A
Holiday In London In the Days of j
Chaucer." Ktlquette tjj those days (t,he 11
latter half of the Fourteenth cen- I (
turyj demanded that meat should be ■ ]
held between two lingers and a thumb
of the left hand, &nd no more, If one .
was to be received In polite society. '
After soup, pike roasted In claret and j
flavored with strange and varied splcea j
waa eaten. Then followed partridge
roasted with saffron, cloves and Kin- j
ger, and Jam tarts and Jelly.
It was the custom to change the j
cloth with the courses, and one read .
of one feast In which each new cloth |
was scented with a perfume appropri
ate to the dish. In Chaucer's day the j
bath In construction was not unlike a
miniature pulpit, and a bouquet of j 1
sweet scented herbs was hung over \t [ ■
for the stream to draw out their re- j
freshing qualities.
____________
The Man In ths Moon. |'
Observations made from August,
1920, to February, 1921, by Prof. Wil
liam Henry Pickering of Harvard, who
la one of the world's leading astron- 1
oroers and an authority on lunar and j
Martian phenomena, tend, he asserts, |
to prove beyond doubt that life exists '
on the surface of the moon. The '
professor bases his assertions on a |
aeries of telescopic photographs at a 1
crater with a circumference of 37 [
miles. Hundreds of photographic re- j
productions have. It It stated, proved
Irrefutably the springing up at dawn, i
«ith an unbelievable rapidity, of vasti
fields of foliage, which come Into full j
blossom Just as rapidly, and which
disappear In a maximum period of 11 j
days. The plates also show that great |
bllzxards, snowstorms and volcanic j
eruptions are frequent. "We And," J
says the professor, "a living world at i
our very doors where life In some re
spects resembles that of Mars—a
world which the astronomical profes
sion has In past years utterly neglected ;
and Ignored."
———————— :
Ship Has 18,000 Bpoona.
We may be cutting down our war- j
! ships. There Is no reduction In our
! liner*. Tills applies to nlr,e no well ns
i to number.
Take the White Stnr liner. Majestic.,
! The Inrgest steamer in the world Is
aptly named! Its tonnnge Is VJ.OOoj
I and It Is to carry ]•»,**> knives. 10.000
; forks 18,000 spoons, 4&.000 pieces. of
plate In all, 178,000 pieces of linen
and 270,000 pieces of crystal nnd
1 glassware.
When one sdils It cargo, crew and
liassengers, one's hrnln almost stag
gers at the responsibility which will
rest on the shoulders of the captain.
—London Answers.
Shoved Off.
'lire Chasseurs Alplns, those classy
French fighting men who helped train
tho marines who first went to France,
could never quite get accustomed .to
sume of the marine corps lingo. One
of the 111 us Devils bad learned the
meaning of the sea-going phrase
"shove-off," but when be liad his first
chance to use It he was—as the say-
Is—not there. •'
-Hey, French," said a Leatherneck,
"have you seen our lieutenant
around T*
"Out, monsieur, uvl," said the pollu,
■-truKK'lng to remember the elusive
phrase, "he have—what you call
pushed oter." —The Leatherneck.
NO. 11
Roosevelt vs. Harding.
Discussing the dismissals of the
officials of the Bureau of Engrav
ing ami Printing, Representative
Robert Walton Moore (Dem., Va.,)
not ouly pointed out who probab
ly prepared the order of dismissal,
but drew this striking contrast,
between the action of President
Harding and what would have,
been the action of Theodore
Roosevelt in similar circumstances
Mr. Moo I'M said
"It is a circumstance of marked
significance in the estimation of
those who dread a return to the
spoils system that only a few days
before the President's order wag
issued his Attorney General pro
claimed himself hostile to the
present system. His" utterance
was not rebuked by the President,
but, nevertheless, I am relucant
to believe that he spoke with the
President's authority and ap
proval. There have been Presi
dents who would uot only have
rebuked him, but dismissed Jhiua
for the good of the service. -Mr.
R >osevelt, who would now, had he
lived, almost certainly be in the
Presidency, who abhorred the
spoils -ysteuis and was among the
staunchest and mo*t resolute de
fenders of the merit system, wonld
Bitrelv not have-countenanced the
Uociriue wh eh the Attorney Gen
eral has proclaimed, nor, in uiy
opinion, is it conceivable that he
would have signed the order which
tho Attorney General doubtless
prepared/'
Gleaning Rubber.
Kerosene will clean rubber, es
pecially rubber that is constantly
cotring in contact with water as
rounds of a. clothes wringer.
Rub-My-Tiam, anticeptic and
pain killer, for infected sores,
tetter, sprains, neuralgia .rheu
matism, —ad.
Crater of an extinct volcano in
Java is called the Valley of Death.
You get your money's worth
when you buy Taulac, because it
prpduces results For sale by
Farrell Drug Co., Graham, N. C.
Distributing our wheat crop is a
greater feat than growing it.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
\
LOVICK H. KERNODLE,
Attorney-atLaw,
GRAHAM, N. C. ;
' Associated with John I. Henderson.
Office over National Bank of Alamance
THOMAS D. COOPER,
Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law,
BURLINGTON, N. C,
Associated wilh W. S. Coulter, >
Not. 7 *nd 8 Fir«t Nstlonsl Bank Bldg.
S. C. SPOON, Jr., M.D~
Graham, N. C.
Office over Ferrell Drug Co.
Hours: 2 to 3 aud 7 to 'J p. in., and ,
by j
Phone 97j
GRAHAM HARDEN, M. D.
Burlington, N. C.
Ollliu Hours: 0 to 11 a.m.
nnd l>y appointment
Offlce Over Acme Drug Co.
j Telephones: Office llO—Residence 261
JOHN J. HENDERSON
Attorney-at-Law
GRAHAM. N. C.
Olllcc over National Bank ol alsmt,
r. s. "a ©oic,
Attarnay-at- Lao
KAH\M. - - • • N. 0
I .. omou Patterson Building
Second Floor. . , .
Wt. WILIUOMJR.
. DENTIST ; : :
.Kilt - - Nsrth Carolina
KKICK IN PARIS BUILDING
I
J. RIMRII I. l.\G LOUIS C. ALLEK
Durham, Si. C. ,■ »rahaoi, N. C.
LONG & ALLEN,
. i.,m»ys nnd CJonnsslnrsat 1 .»v»
■ Gkauam, a. C.