VOL. XLYJII Ohio G. 0. P. Balks at Harding Kind of "Normalcy.' Washington Correspondence. Recent political happenings in the President's home state of Ohio are the subject of much discus sion in political circles in the Na tional Capital. President Harding recently inti mated that ho was getting tired of his job, and would be glad when lie could go back to Ohio a pri vate*cltizen. Recent events in Ohio politics indicate that Ohio is getting tifed of the President and win gladly welcome him back as a pri vate feitizen. • The Ship Subsidy bttl was an nounced as ope of the aj 1 measures of the Harding a !i»m istration. The President insisted upon its passage at this session and threatened to reconvene Con gress in special sostion if it ad journed without passing the pot measure of Mr. Harding and Mr Lasker. When President Hard ing decided to assert his leader ship in matters of legislation, he elected to make a test of hit leadership 011 the Ship Subsidy bill. A plank endorsing the Ship Subsidy bill was taken by Repre sentative Fess, the Republican candidate for Senator in Ohio, tc the Ohio Republican convention with a special request for an en dorsement 011 that issue. The Republican stato platform ol Ohio is silent 011 the Ship Subsidy issue. . Time and again the public lias been assured by Republican spokesmen that the President favored the Soldiers' Bonus, and it has been predicted that he will sign the present bill. The Ohio Republican state platform says nothing about the Soldiers' iiouus bill. As a candidate for President Mr. Harding stressed the tarifi and insisted upon making it an issue in the 1920 campaign, although very few people had the tariff in mind in that election. A> President Mr. Harding has urgeii tlie passage of a high proactive tariff bill, and he got one with the sky as the limit in the Fordney- McOumbii' Profiteering „ Tarifi measure. The Ohio Republican state platform does not even men tion the Fordney-MeOiunber Tarifi bill by name. President Harding recently wen\ before Congress and delivered a message ou the coal and trans portation strikes,' and an attempt was made to magnify the import ance of that message, which merely, recited facts known to ever} 7 one who can read. The Republican state platform of Ohio is silent on the President's mes sage and equally so on the rail road strike and the coal strike. Just at the time when there is general condemnation on New berryism, President Harding's en dorsed candidate for Governor ii, Ohio, Car mi Thompson, confesses to have spent 825,000 in the pri maries, although the oflice ol Governor ouly pays 810,000 a year. The statement is published that the local boss in Montgomery county paid out s'2o,( 00 M be elected as stale committeeman. These figures lead the Dayton News to ask: "Is Ohio attempt ing to out-Newberryize Michigan? The signs all point that way." The News also asks, "Ou this basis what are they prepared to spend to attempt the election ol their candidates next Novem ber?" A Contrast The New York Tribune, The Pennsylvania Railroad Company has recorded the grati fying fact that in thn year ended May 51 last there was not one jiasst iger killed 111 a train a'cci deut on its entire a; .-stem. The Pennsylvania system, comprises more than 11,000 miles of road, and carried 152,000,000 passen gers in the year. • The August "grand jury in this county reported that in July last on the streets of this city 81 per sons were killed in automobile accidents and that in the first six months of this year 213 persons were thus ki'led, making a total of 294 in 212 days. Timorous people used to think that railroad traveling was dangerous. THE ALAMANCE GLEANER Nature's Conspiracy as to North Carolina 13y Bion H.'Butler. A glance at the map tells about the whole s'.ory of Nature's con spiracy to make North Carolina great. Seacoast at one end that provides ocean transportation to ports of the world. Short rail carriage to the centers of popula tion. iTild climate in sum me? and winter, which makes a good agricultural section and a de sirable place to live in. High mountains in the west. These shelter the state from the blizzards of the west and also af fect rainfall, giving an abundance all over the state. Liberal rain [falling on the high altitudes af fords vast waterpower, as the ! .streams carry the water down ward to the sea. From the moun tain summits to the fall line is a long distance, giving a "big drain age area, consequently a big vol ume of water to drop to the sea, as well as a big drop. So North Carolina has a great electrical possibility. Soil and climate conditions make easy the production of crops like cotton, tobacco and timber rhat are 'he raw material for mills and factories driven by elec tric power, and tho state annually renews both its raw material and its power. While other states use up their iron ore and s*lass sand, and their coal and their gas fuel, North Carolina goes ahead mak ing its material and its power froln its constant resources, and it is the one siate of the "Union that has its manufacturing plants based on a permanent source of power and material. Here is an agreeable soctiou in which to live. People from every where come to North Carolina for recreation and holiday. Hero is a section in which industry is en cotiraged by an abundance of the things needed for many times the population we have. Here is a section from which products can be carried* away on sea or land. We have no mountains to cross to get to sea, or to the big buying markets of the North and East — wluich means, to tho bulk of the people of our own country and the bulk of tho people of the world. No man lives who will see the day when North Carolina does not have ample power for all its industries, ample raw material to supply them, or ample agricul tural products for its people. This one State thai cannot squan der its assets nor exhaust thenr. No other one quite like it exists. That is Nature's conspiracy to make North Carolina great. Big Slump in Tax Receipts. Washington Correspondence. Evidence that the economic panic which began with Republi can control of the national gov ernment in 1*921 is continuing to blight business and industry is to be found in figures covering the collection of tax receipts for July.. The decrease in the collections during July this year was $40,- 450,433 compared with the same month of 1921. The particulars of this decrease are interesting They show that business and industry have suf fered from, the actual depression in foreign and domestic trade and probably also from the prospect of the rise in prices and the dis turbance ol conditions threatened by ihe Fordnay-McCumber Profi teers' tariff bill. example, there was a deeline-of |9, 848,000 in the receipts from income and profits taxes in July this year compared with July, 1921. Keep ing in mind the same basis of com parison, the decrease in the other collections were: Estate taxes, 5>10,2?o,000 and miscellanevus re ceipts, including amusement and transportation taxes, 827,177,000. Even more significant is the steady and startling diminution of our foreign trade under the Republican administration. Our foreign trade in the fiscal year ende«t June 30, 1922, totaled SO,- 378,000,000, of which $3,770,000,- 000 represented exports, These figures show a decrease of $3,792,- OUO compared with the fiscal year of 1921, when our foreign trade was valued at 8 10,170,000,000 and $0,516,000,000 was exports. This is a gloomy picture to con template, especially when the GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 14, 1922 SWEET VOICE WON HUSBAND PROTECTION HER AIM Romance of Fortunata New York j College Girl Proves She Has a Mind Telephone Girl and Wealthy Care She Takes to Hid* Young Mexican. the Fact. A romance was recently enacted en tirely by telephone In one of the New York hotejy. Six weeks ago a wealthy young Mexican arrived on business and engaged an expensive suite. A few hours later he WJS knocked over by a motorcar and suffered a broken leg. lie insisted on being taken to his hotel, rather than to a hospital, and since expense was no consideration, he was installed With nurses and at tendants in his own suite. He kept to his room for six weeks and when he felt able to work a lit tle, he hired a secretary and proceed ed to carry on his affairs by telephone. They were complicated and required an immense number of conversations. Within a day or so ho became aware that his calls were bandied with skill and patience. The" next discovery was that the voice at tiie other end of his private line was easy to listen to. There was a smile behind the voice. Day by day the telephone conversa tions grew longer. It began with a respectful inquiry as to the patient's health. Gradually the inquiries went more IJ to derails. iiy Uie end of two weeks the Invalid nnd t: e vole >•. at the hotel switchboard Svere on goo i terms. At the end of a month long conversa tions were the order of the day. When the sixth week had passed the man's brother arrived just as the putient's leg >vas strong enough to permit a visit to the hotel lobby. "Where do you want to go first?" the brother Inquired. "1 want you to help me walk down to the telephone switchboard," (he in valid explained. "I want to see the girl there. And oh, by the way, lam going to marry her." "Great heavens, what's she like?'' was the natural Inquiry. "Haven't seen her yet, hut we've fixed It all up over the phone." The voice with the smile is now di recting an establishment in the City of Mexico.—New York Sun. 1 "Curbs Fit for Heroes to Star.d in." The New Statesman silys that I.on don lias not had so many beggars within living memory us today, and the worst of it is, they have none of the romance of beggary. "They are prosaic, dull, hopeless. Most of them look us if they had been j horn to he commonplace citizens, earn ing a more or less honest living lite [ you and rue. To speak strictly, indeed, they are not beggars, but collector-.' They stand on the curb; they wait in the' doorways of restaurants; they haunt the streets of the respectable, j All the time tliey keep shaking their narrow white boxes, and asking for uiore. "They vary from the sullen to the | responsive. Some of them seem ?•, de mand a right rather than to beg a> favor. They believe that there Is money somewhere, and it is only just that it should be shared. "It Is the habit of civilized societies.: at the end of a great war, to yrovide curbs lit for heroes to stand on." Is "Deceased" Man Dead? A .TefTersonville. woman, who for merly lived at Gr-wastle and sup- j poses that Is the reason. she was chosen to receive tlie letter, has re- j celved a communication from a rest 1 den of Putnam county, of whom she ] had never previously heard, asking for information concerning the writ er's brother, who lived In .TeflVrsorj vllle for many years, reports the In dianapolis News. The writer sa d she hud not heard froui him for (he years, and letters had brought no an- 1 mver. She sent a registered letter at' last, she said, and it was returned 1 to her marked "deceased." "I should like to know," she said, "whether he: Is dead." The answer went bark. "He Is, since November, 1019." Hut the woman believer the Post Office j department should oe more explicit. Found Red Dyo In Fruit. A German medical Journal repo ts the lnjt ry of u young girl at Fraak-J fort from tin: point of a hypodermic! needle'which she us.alio ved w >!(. eat-; Ing a blood oraag . de- 1 veloped the fact that t!ie ne die had been tilled with j; rt 1 aniline dye. The girl, it seems, had purchased a ! dozen of the orung'-s. These were examined and It was found that all contained tin Inject n of th> same nature. It appear chat fr adit o'f this sort are no novelty In Germany, similar caf;es often having been re ported—the chemical transformation or ordinary oranges into fake blood oranges.—From Le Petit Parlshn. Paris. (Translated for the Kansas pity Star). — . worst is yet to come.in tlie opera tion of a prohibitive tariff that is sure to throtthS our foreign com merce, leave vast surpluses of' agricultural and manufactured products without buyers and thus clutter the domestic markets to the injury of all classes. It Is time for the college girl to meet the charges heaped agalnut her. Slie Is called frivolous, empty-headed, and her appearance Is considered wrong in every detail. Now she Is driven to confess that It Is all done for self-protection, writes Olga Owens, In Judge. With a ndnd as valuable as hers, the college girl Is not safe. In these dStys of constant holdups and rob : beries, ruthless bandits are waiting at [every turn. How can she go abroad [\irocmlining to the world the vust wealth of knowledge that is hers? Ob viously, Nhe must disguise It. iyuppose she lets her hair growl : i'inr ;d up i u a 1 end already enlarged 1 by so mucl learning, she becomes so .conspicuous that, she f;drs ;>rey to tho livst intellectual cr>>ok. *S> she bobs it. Suppose siie wears long skirts, or , even a modest collegiate gown. Would it he surprising if some dark night she is held up, snd at the point of a pistol I made to recite the whole of Homer's, | "Iliad" to some desperate college pro j fessor? So to be doubly she rolls ler stockings. Education Is a con- Fpicuous thing, and if the Student ap plies a little powder now and then to cover up its shining light upon her face, she should not be condemned. The desperate age In which we live lias made ail this necessary. So it Is with admiration and pity that we should regard her, bravely adopting thfc- latest styles, without complaint. Not even the reformer wears "tils pocketbook where It can be teen. The proves that she has a mind by hiding it. SUCCESS Of "SILENT NINE" By Its Use Airplane Passengers Are Enabled Freely to Converse With Each Other. A silent airplane engine has at last i been In-vented. In a recent test the deafening roar i. of the engine and exhnust wns com pletely eliminated when fitted with the "Silent Nine," as the new Inven tion Is called. , Passenger!) will now be nble to con verse with ease while In the air, and not lie forcefl to shitit at the top of . their voices. The ".Silent Nine" Is very simple in construction and In principle, says 1 London Answers. It consists of an expansion •chamber fitted to the end of a long exhaust pipe, and arranged In such a way that the gases from i the engine are cooled Immediately they leave the red-hot exhaust hole. | This is the secret of engine silence. The Inventor Is Major Grant, the ! superintendent of the., Croydon air drome depot. One "Silent Nine" enn he sold at a profit for less than £lO (S3O), and already there Is a great demand for It. Damascening Art Revived. To the father of Zuloaga, the Span | Ish painter, the world is Indebted for the revival of the Moorish art of ; damascening, according to an article In Conquest, a Hritlsh magazine ef j popular science. Senor Zuloaga himself made many fine pieces and Inspired other workers In tl>'s beautiful craft. "Toledo daman* j cenlng," as It la often called. Is a proo j ess of lncrustlug gold upon steel. I l ine lines are cut upon a blaekened steel plate, and Into these lines thin gold wire Is beaten with pointed tools. The s! tiling gold produces a bril liant effect against the background of j darl- steel, ai d when skillfully wroi.arht If to ho flowert, beas's, ® birds, and -wrol'H In which the Span ish ar'Ut delights, the result Is.sald to he e\ ■ remely b aut ftjl, u«d examples of the ware are hi' lily prized by col lectors.—From the Outlook. We ving and Spinning. It Is likely that the art of weaving, | In its most elementary form, wns prac j feed fong bef#re men abandoned the : use of anltnal skins for clothing, or I perhaps even before they tpdopted Clothing at all. No doubt it begun j with the first crude attempts of primi tive women to weave twigs Into some | kind of, object. After they had succeeded In making baskets and similar articles. It prob ably occurred to some bright cave woman tbrt cln'hlng might be made by werving some soft material like { Tool, gays a writer, according to the Detroit News. To do this it would be necessary to twist tufts of wool Into long strands. TSi.ss the beginning of | spinning. And ns the strands of wool were nor stiff like twigs, !t would be r,a■, ■ ,r ~ to have a certain number 1 of 'hem taut between poles or some- I thing In order to weave the fabric. Thus the first loom. "Now" is always the tiuie for (the man of action; the man who awaits opportunity is sc**cely likely to recognize it when it comes. Those who command it achieve success. RUINED HER HUBBY'S SWORD Princess Mary Used Weapon of Vl* count Lascelies to Cut Open Her Wedding Cake. Viscount Lascelle'B sword might do henceforth for a can opener, but as a weapon It Is probably out of busi ness for good. Princess Mary used It at the wedding breakfast to cut a London wedding cake. We need no further account of Its condition. It Is ruined. No temper of Damascus could emerge from such a test other than a bent and hacked-up thing, un fit for further service except splitting shakes, or perhaps taking up carpets. Prince Henry offered to get a hatchet, but the bride, with that pret ty persistence In destruction which sometimes Impels the sweetest of women to dig out a jammed washbowl plug with her huslmnd'B rator, re jected 'lt and sacrificed the sworl. Anticipating the wre- inge that w: i about tu ensue the di. . of York sug gested a Louis gun fo: the Job, but the lady went ahead, and strewed the plain with crumbs and chips. The devastation mi'«t have been aw ful. We can think ol hut one parallel to that chaotic scew nnd that oc curred when J. I>. Galloway returned from overseas, where ho had bee i serving as a major, arid was nmde t > serve ft cake at. a certain club dinner. He fell upon that cuke as though it had been a platoon of Prussians, "and soon had It beaten, butchered, routed and dispersed all over Ids end of the table. Whereupon O. K. Cushlng re marked : "I understand for the first time In my life what Is meant by the old phrase, 'tho otllcer's mens*' " —From the Ar«onaut. GIVES LIFE TO MARIONETTE Latest Idea la to Have Living Heada Cleverly Placed on the Bodies of Cardboard. Tlte newest thing In the way of a marionette Is made of cardboard, with out a head and with pivots to provide Joints for Its arms and legs. It has no head because that feature of Its anatomy Is to be represented by- the head of the person who operates the fiuppet, and who rests his chin In a cut-out notch In the upper edge of the cardboard (or wooden) background Just behind the marionette. This back ground Is painted to represent the drop-curtain of a miniature theater, and attached to the front of It, at the bottom, Is a little platform for the puppet to stand or dance on. The movement of the marionette's arms and legs are controlled by strings which pass through slots In the top edge of the "curtain." Its living head, of course, does the talking, and may be disguised suitably for the various characters represented by a number of such cardboard dolls. —Philadelphia Lodger. . Charge Extra for Children. Dining out Is a sophisticated luxury, according to table d'hote restaurants which are charging 25 cents extra tot serving children. "Children take up a chair," ex plained the manager of a popular eat ing place, "and their parents order special dishes for them to be prepared In certain ways. Qur waiters would rather serve three tables of adults than one table with a child at It" "Do you add the supercharge to the hill If the child takes a regular din ner?" he was asked. "No child could finish one of oar table d'hote meals," he boasted. "And .even If he did, he'd have to be waited on at every course." "Haven't the waiters children of their own?" the customer Inquire*! In dignantly. „ "Yes." replied the tanater, "the have troubles of their •vn."—Chicago Journal. Maimed but Good owimmera. Swimming jis qeiM easy,, and Is even beneficial for these men who have lost a limb, e»[ dally In salt water, which serins t*o benefit the maimed limb. At a svlnfming mate'; organized at Brighton ;or i o-calle disabled men, 16 competitors entered the water. Ten of these had lost ono leg, three were minus an arm, and the remaining three had no legs at all. The course wus from the Palace pier to the West pier, and 15 of the lfld competitors covered the whole dis tance, roughly three-quarters of a mile. The ono who failed had to leave the water half-wny owing to cramps In the stump. "It was perhaps the most remarkable swim/that lias ever taken place In hlsto/y," comments the author of "The Haarfhook for the Limbless," from which the above facts are taken. The Modern Vamp. The modern "vamp" is a colloquial contraction of the term "vampire," v-setl in the sense of the "rai? afid the I.one and the hank of hair" type of woman, "who did not care," described by Kudyard Kipling in his famous poem of that name. This word la being used as a verb, meaning to ex tort money or other valuable article* from; aiao, to flirt with. That's in the Bible. The Bible contains 3,556,480 letters, 810,007 words, 31,175 verses, 1,189 chapters, and 06 books. The longest chapter Is the One Hundred and Nineteenth Psalm, the shortest and middle chapter Is the One Hundred and Seventeenth Psalm. The middle verse Is the eighth of the One Hun dred and Nineteenth Psalm. The longest name Is In the eighth chapter of Isaiah. The word "and" oacurs 47,527 times. The thirty-seventh chap ter of Isaiah and the nineteenth chap ter of the second book of Kings are alike. The longest verse Is the ninth of the eighth chapter of Esther. The shortest verse Is the thirty-fifth verse of the elevenUi chapter ef John. In the twenty-flrst verse of the seventh chapter of Ezra Is the whole English alphabet. Solicitous. Bobby was a manly little fellow" about live. One day his baby gl>! cousin, iiliout two, came to visit him and as they were pretty good friends But by allowed her to play with a mi ill Ja; inese hand warmer for wli c'h he had u great affection. He would sit i nd study the "little stove" for a long Ime and was very careful that uo hun i should come to it. When bedtime cane Utile cousin thought bhe would'like to hold the "little stove" and Bobby, who wished to be courteous to his guest, reluctantly said good night and trotted off to his own bed. His mother noticed a rather hur ried reeling off of his usual prayer, then In a distinct voice there was added: "God bleth the little ITuby and keep the little 'tove sale."—Exchange They're Sometime!! In the Way. Jack —Well, what's the Idea of cut ting It off now when It took you so long to grow It? BUI —Of course, you saw me catch Gladys under the mistletoe during the last dance. «- "Oh 1 Wouldn't she kiss you on ac count of it?" "Not exactly, but she became so unconscious that she lost her gum In It"—Boston Beanpot. Oldest Living Newspaper Man? Amuble Malllet-Salnt-Prlx, a Pa risian journalist, who was born In 1821 and is therefore in bis one hundred and second year, Is In all probability the oldest Journalist alive. He Is at least the oldest working newspaper man, for he Is still vigorous and not only writes u weekfy article In Uie Abellle de .Heine-et-Olse, published In Corbell, but actually makes up the go r per.—The Argonaut. The Trumpeter of Cracow. "Centuries ago the Church of St Mary's, Cracow, had been an outpost of Christendom, used as n watch tower against the Invading Tartur; a soldier had been kept continually stationed there to give warning on a trumpet of the flrst approach of danger. In the Fourteenth century, whilst arousing the city, the trumpeter had been struck In the throat by an arrow. His call had faltered, rallied and sunk. With his dying breath he had sounded a final blast, which had broken off shor*. The broken call had saved Crcofl. Ever since, to -ommeinorate his fa.th fulness, there has never been an hour, day or night, when his broken trumpet call, ending abruptly In an abyss of alienee, has not been sounded from the tower." —Conlngsby Dawson In his book "The Vanishing Point." To "Wash Pa- Many years ago. a teacher In the Indianapolis public schools, who la now widely known In club work, 1 re ceived the following excuse from a lid In a poor district: "Dear Teacher —Please excuse Mary's i >s»-nc 'ihe laid to stay horn' to help her Ma wash her Pa." t '"llie signature, "Ih *o writ ten. chgnj -d what hd hImI ud to buy ten el J, ( A WAY OUT * A Menident u l.nlum show* the Waj. There's one effective v. a\» fo re lievo kidney backache. Liniment and plasters may re lieve it: . Bat they&eldotn reuub the cause. Backache\s cause to buspect the kidneys. Doan h Kidney Pills are for dis ordered kidneju. Graham people back tLem up. Read a cace of it Mrs. V. T. Ezell, X. Maple Street, says: "I was almost disabled with pains in the small of my back, ana I suffered ail the time. I was so nervous and had mich headaches I could hardly endure the misery. One of our family had used Doan's Kidney Pills with good results and told nie to try them. I took this remedy and the pains and all ether troubles disappeared.'" Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Kzell had. Foster-Milburo Co. Mtra* Buffalo, N. Y. NO. 32 Cultivate Young Trees and Vines: Feed Them and Keep Them Clean C. L. Newman, in The Progressive Farmer. It is a sin, a sin oi omission, to neglect to plant frait trees and vines for the pleasure aud health of our loved ones and for the profit: that a surplus will bring. It is a far greater sin to plant tree? and vines and not give the care that is necessary for them to be able to serve their mission. Fruit-bear ing plants that are neglected are worse than buried talents—they are decaying talents wasting time, land, aud mon#>y. Orchard cultivation is fcr the purpose of preventing veed- and the formatioa-of a soil crust Neglect of cultivation in vites failure. Portii ',*tioT is th purpose of supplying needed plant food for making fruit. Neglect of fertili- -f Ziit 'on invi:es failure. SpiSying, dusting, and similar procedure are for the purpose of cleaniut; the plants of i ieir insect: ~ and disease enemies. Neglect of these invites failure. If one really wants fruit, it may be gotten by the payment of the price in diligence and care. We must cultivate the trues, f-ed them with proper fertilizer, aud keep them clean by proper spray iug. NOTICE. All persons,,firms, or corpora tions, holdingclaims against the Enterprise Company, a corpora tion, with its principal place of business at Mebane, North Ca rolina, will take notice that the undersigned has been duly ap pointed, is qualifying and acting i as receiver of said Com pan 7, and that persons, firms or corpora tions, holding claims against said Company will file said claims, duly itemized and verifi ed, with the undersigned receiver, on or before the first day of De cember, 1922, or else this notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery j of said claims. All persons indebted to said Company will please settle at once. W. 0. Wahren. Receiver of Enterprise Company, 31aug4t Mebane, N. 6. 0()(J is a proscription for Colds, Fever and LaGrippe. It's the | most speedy remedy we know. PROFESSIONAL CARDS . LOVICK H. KERNODLE, Altorney-at-Law. GRAHAM, N. C. Associated Willi John t. Henderson. Office over National Hank of AlamauM THOMAS D. COOPER, Attorney and Counsc lur-rt-Law, BURLIIS t' : TON, N. C, Associated with W. S. Coulter, Noj. 7 *nd 3 First National Bank B'dg. i. C. P3ON, Jr., mTS ur-ibam, N. Z. Oft if over Ferrell Drug Co. Ho r*: 'i to .'i and J 1 to 9p. re., and by appointment. I'Jione 'J7 GRAHAM HA IDE W, M. O. Burlington, N. C. Olilce Hour*: V to 11 a. in. nuil !,iy appuintmuut Ollice Uvor Acm'.- U.uj Co. Telephones: Office -14U—Keaidence v:« 4 JOHN J. HENDERSON * Attorney -a t-L. W GRAHAM, N. C. O tic* over National Baikal Alanaae T. S. 000 Attarnty-at'La* !H A HAM, - • ■ N. C | Office Patterson Building second Floor. . , . " i»R. WILL S. LOSS. Jit. . ; dentist : : : | Graham - - - - North Carolina. j OFFICE IN PARIS BUILDING)