VOL. XLIX
COMBS OF WOOD
Women of Ancient Egypt Usee
Boxwood Ornaments.
Prof. 8. J. Record of Yale Unlversl**
Describes Various Kinds of Wood
Used Centuries Ago.
The tresses of a pharaoh's daughtei'
were dressed with combs of wood, says
Prof. S. J. Record of Yale university,
who recently made a study of the dlf- j
ferent kinds of woods used by the an
dent Egyptians. These combs were
made of boxwood, which was much
used for carving by the early Egyp
tians, and they were not greatly dis
similar to Isome of the combs which
adorn the women of the Twentieth
century.
"As one wooden object nfter another
from the tomb of Tut-Ankh-Amen hai
been described and pictured in the pub-1
11c press, many questions have arisen,"
writes Mr. Record. "What kinds ol'
woods are these? Whence did they
come? What preservatives have kept
them sound for thousands of yearsl
How can these woods be Identified to
day?"
Professor Record's studies included
the woods representative of the period ■
from 2900 B. C. to 1200 B. O. Wood 1
played an Important part In the lives
of these Egyptians and It had to be
hauled very long distances. Cedar he
found to be one of their most prized
woods, the most famous species being
the cedar of Lebanon, which Is no
myth, as some are Inclined to believe.
The Egyptians used cedar extenslve
• ly for coffins, boxes, large effigies and
for such general purposes as we use
white pine. They also used cypress,
another wood of great durability. The
gopher wood used in making the Ark
of the Covenant was probably cypress,
according to Professor Record.
The yew, a tree noted for Its dura
bility as the cedar and the cypress,
was used by the Egyptians In the mak
ing of bows, carvings and small Imple
ments. Sycamore was used for mum
my cases, but the sycamore of the
ancients was a flg, an evergreen timber
tree sometimes called a flg mulberry.
These species were employed where
large sizes were demanded, while In
the manufacture of smaller articles
the Egyptians used such local growth
as was available, which apparently was
limited to tamarisk, alder and other
minor species. The Egyptians were
skilled woodworkers, cabinet makers
and wood carvers
Wood veneering is not an ultra-mod
ern accomplishment, but it Is In fact
a practice of venerable antiquity. It
was developed by the Egyptians sev
eral thousand years before the birth
of Christ. Professor Record found an
admirable example of this craftsman
ship In the coffin of the monarch Neph
thyo from Melr, displayed In the Ninth
Egyptian room of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York.
That these woods used by the Egyp
tians pave endured the centuries. Pro
fessor Record attributes to the dry
climate of Egypt and not to any pre
servatives employed. Professor Record
identified the different woods by sub
jecting them to Intensive study under
the microscope and comparing their
cell structure with that of the species
as found growing today.—American
Forestry Magazine.
Across Empty Continent.
Two explorers, seventy-year-old
twins, by the bye, have just crossed
Australia from south coast to north
coast and back, covering nearly 6,000
miles In 67 days with- three motor
cars. The explorers passed through
vast stretches of country without sign
of man or beast, an experience, Cap
tain White considers, which most
strinklngly Justifies the late Lord
Northcllffe's lament over the folly
and menace of the "Empty Continent."
Mr. McCallum, one of the two broth
ers, says he was amazed at the abun
dance of fertile country through
Which they passed in the interior, and
Mentions one plain, 190 miles long and
extending east and west as far as the
eye can see, consisting of splendid
alluvial soil. They passed through
Superb pastoral areas with many
rivers available for huge Irrigation
schemes, but the development of!
of these lands would be absolutely de
pendent upon the building of a direct
ftorth- south transcontinental line.
Right to His Teeth.
After a row with his dentist, Hoffy
declared that he would have some
thing to say to that gentleman. The
boys at the club would not think {
Hoffy would have the nerve. When he !
came in a week later they were not
backward In putting the question di
rect: "So you told the dentist what
you tbought of him?" "Bald It to his
teeth," he answered firmly. "When T"
they asked. "Yesterday afternoon."
"He was out of town yesterday after
noon." Hoffy was not disconcerted st
this. "1 told you I said it te his teeth."
—Baltimore News.
THE ALAMANCE GLEANER.
HELPING OUT THE FARM WIFE
Mlmoucl Woman In Charge of Hom«
Economics Work of Depart
ment of Agriculture.
A Missouri woman hus set out to
make the lot of the farmer's wife
easier. Dr. Louise Stanley, formerly
dean of home economics at the Univer
sity of Missouri, who recently was
called to Washington to take charge
of the home economics work of the
Department of Agriculture, will eon-
I duct a series of studies this winter
Into the intimate problems of the
farm home.
The work of the government in nu
! trlflon studies and reports on prepara-;
tion of foods Is to be carried on, but
the Missouri woman will go Into phases
of home management neglected In the
past, says a Washington letter in the
Kansas City Times.
For example, here are some of the
Questions her department will study
this winter: * .
How much would the farm wife con
tribute to the farm income If her mani
fold services were put down In terms
of actual wages?
What textiles wear best in children's
clothing on the farm?
If the farmer Is to build a new house
how should t s e kitchen be arranged
for maximum convenience?
What sort of washing machine is
cheapest for the farmer's wife to buy?
Doctor Stanley has submitted her
program to Secretary Wallace and it
has' received his approval. She Will
make the studies In order of their rela
tive importance to ttie homemakers on
the farm.
"Studies of the cost of housing are
at present needed. The cost of hous
ing has Increased to a relatively
greater extent than any other element
in the household budget," said Doctor f
Stanley. Estimates must be readjust
ed, and more definite information as
to the relation of this cost to running
expenses obtained.
IT REMINDED HIM OF BUNYAN
Btory of Dr. Plumptre and Thackeray
Apropoa of Ignoranoe In High
Placet.
Apropos of Ignorance in high places,
the president of Magdalen college. Sir
Herbert Warren, told an interesting
story of Thackeray at the university
extension inaugural meeting at Ox
ford. y
"Thaelteray," said Herbert, "ap
peared In Oxford in various capacities,
once as a political candidate, and on
another occasion as a lecturer on "The '
Four Georges." He applied to J
vice chancellor, Dr. Plumptre, master ]
of university, who figures in "Verdant
Green" as F. P.; for permission to lec-.
ture, and the following conversation
took place:
"'Who are you?' asked Plumptre.
"Thackeray replied: 'I am an ait ;
thor. I think lam fairly well known.'
'"Will you tell me the names of
some of your works?' said the vice
chancellor.
" 'Weil,' said Thackeray, 'I think on
the whole the work of mine which Is
best known is "Vanity Fair."'
" 'Oh,' replied Dr. Plumptre, 'I seem
somehow to connect that with the
name of Bunyan 1' "
However, the vice chancellor was j
sufficiently satisfied to allow Thackeray
to deliver his lectures.—New York
Evening Post.
Orpheus and Eurydice.
Eurydice was the wife of Orpheus,
killed by the bite of a serpent on her
wedding night. According to classical
mythology, Orpheus followed Eurydice
to Hades, where, by the music of his
lyre, he so charmed Pluto, the grim
ruler of the Infernal regions, that he
won back his wife from this most In
exorable of the deities. His wife, how- .
ever, was restored to him only on con
dition that he should not look back at
her until they arrived In the upper
world. When they had almost reached
the limit of their Journey, Orpheus
was go overcome by the anxiety of love
that he looked around to see If Eury
dice was following him, and beheld
her being dragged back Into the in
fernal regions-
Right-Handedness.
Of two pay telephones In a shop, the
one on the right side took four times
as much money as the one on the left.
This curious Influence of the dominant
side of the body was lately demon
strated by evidence that speakers be
fore a large audience have a tend
ency to address the right-hand side If
the speaker happens-to be left-handed.
The same unconscious tendency may
be seen In the schoolroom.
Befors the Stars and Stripes.
The flag which the colonies all used
before the Stars and Stripes was
adopted was variously known as the
congress colors, the grand union flag,
and the first navy ensign. It consist
ed of 13 stripes, alternately red and
white, typifying the 13 colonies, with j
■ union bearing the crosses of St. 1
George and St. Andrew combined—the .
national flag of Great Britain— -s'lgni- j
tying the mother country.
GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25, 1923
Make South's Idle Lands
"Blossom Like The Rose"
■ ■ _
. -*; v ; : t" '■ "* "?#'*« Wi I *
? ff
Some of the cro.os produced on Southern cut-over la%Js. Top, field of
sugar cane; below, Battle and Satsum.i Oranges.
One of the principal objects cw the t
Forestry Reclamation and Home-'ftlak- j
lng Conference to be held In New Or- j
leans, November 19 22 is to devise 1
ways and means for putting to some I
useful purpose the vast areas of cut-'
over, swamp and overflowed lands In
the South. The conference will be j
held under of the Southern
Pine Association, Mississippi and I
Florida Development Boards and New
Orleans Association of Commerce, and i
the people' of every southern state
and community are considered to bo I
vitally Interested in this movement.
Several million acres of Irld land
In the West have been made to "blos
som like the rase" by reclamation
through Irrigation projects financed
and constructed by the federal govern
ment. The South now is asking that
she be allowed to share In this fed
eral assistance so that those portions
of her Idle lands suitable for agricul
ture also may be ma'de to "blossom I
like the rose."
Many prosperous localities in the !
South which have been built up on !
cut-over lands furnish convincing
proof that largo portions of the cut ;
USE FOR SULPhiTE LlfliUli]
Alcohol and Fuel to Be Derived Krort
Paper Mill Wsste by New
| Process.
Waste sulphite liquid that now pours
from paper mills Into rivers will b«
utilized in manufacturing alcohol and
fuel by means of a new chemical
process recently discovered and thor
oughly tested by chemical engineers.
This announcement, considered one
of the most important !n years In the
paper industry, will be mu le before
the cellulose division of the American
Chemical society by I'rof. K. 11. McKee,
head of the chemical department ol
Columbia university, who was asso
ciated with Dr. Max Kahn, New York,
In the discovery und preparation of
lntarv'n, one of the two c«-. t ; ,it !> dis
covered substances tlint cheek dlu'-etex
"At present, for in ry c ud of wood
used In the paper nJ -i the manufac
turer obtains 1,000 pounds of pulp and
1,000 gallons of waste sulpi ite liquor,
which flows Into the rivers adjoining
the plants, causing death of fi- ii, dis
agreeable odors and i>t aer ini nven
lences so great that 'v\ru nt la. h
have been passed in son.e Mate , : r;d
were they rigidly nfore. d. mills wnaal
have to close down," deelswed Doctor
McKee.
"Under the new process this vas'•
liquor will be fermented a:-.I n L"«)d
grade of commercial alcohol obtained.
Then after the alcohol has l-e.-u dis
tilled off, the residua] material will
be evaporated and may be used as
fuel." —Milwaukee Journal,
Again the Young Idea.
Two small boys were talking togeth
er on the beach.
"I say, what's your father?"
"He's an architect."
"Huh; mine's not. He's a soldier."'
"My father was a soldier In the war,
♦
too."
"Huh, anybody can be a soldier when
there's a war." —London Dally News.
Tenshunl
"You are nor listening to me," com
plained Jane Muchmore at breakfast
the other morning.
"I didn't know you had said any
thing. dear," returned the meek Mr.
Muchmore.
"I havent, but I expect to," said
Jane. —Howard Courant.
[ over and "Wet" tracts in tho South
can be made as desirable agricultural
lands as can be. found anywhere In
America. The South today Is the pio
net r country as it is the only section
where low-priced farm homes can bo
procured. The cost of reclaiming
southern cut-over and "wet" lands Is
said lo bo about one-fourth the cost
of putting western arid lands In suit
able condition for agriculture.
At the Porefitry., Reclamation and
Home-Making Conference in New Or
leans the problem of utilizing and set
tling the South's idle lands will be
considered from all angles including
reforestation, livestock raising, dairy
ing, fruit growing and agriculture In
all Its branches. It i» hoped the Con
ference will result In an effective
movement that will secure expan
sion of the federal reclamation
policy into national scope so that oth
er sections than the West may bene
fit from such assistance. All persons
interested in the constructive devel
opment of tho South are Invited to
attend and participate In the New Or
leans Conference a-id all southern
congressmen nr" ur > d to support Its
purpo "h.
Diplomacy.
The Young Bride (looking In win
dow of jewelry store) —George, I'd
love to have thnt bracelet".
The Husband —I eiin't afford to buy
It for you, dear.
The Bride —But If you could, you
would, wouldn't you?
The Husband—l'm afftild not.
The Bride—Why?
The Ilushand —It Isn't good enough,
dear.
The Bride—Oh, you darling!— Life.
Shortest of Sentences.
Whijt is believed to be the record
for short sentences pronounced in
Fresno county, California, was im
posed nn George L icht, charged with
vagrancy. The Judge ordered Leleht
held in custody fi>r flftei-n minutea,
after which he was to b ;u • Fresijp.
The llf'i -n-111in 11• sentence was j»rt>
noiiri'i.; tit -eji.ir.ite f,«■ i 111 and his
pal. ' l.ii hum uri'i -ted on the same
Charge.
Ca' /.
,\"e!! -Mr 1.. , kit d. ile
Mid I t■ I \ ry . . iv ...id icry ar
t:.-illl ti re.
Bell —lno ed '! And m picture
did yi,n tak«-, dear? i'i.ihidelphia
Ledger.
Appears PUusibls.
l': >fe- i-• r ,vntlini!«4oKy—lt l» nald
"that tlie t;i>" l inn . ;i> found in India,
ti ed .!c fi>i-nfi nil . professor?
i",o! -••• : iii ' 1.-mi' tnted, iVjiibt-
I*. • hi;,;,- . ft.
Gy~ta . id VVoireh.
A Turd'ii. 'I, ih re lejit ri'oorjs of
York c(,i;..iv, |.r«-ir.ed in the coijrt
hmise at Alfred, Mi ~ mid women
were not alln.ved nn the J,les df Shoals.
One. (Hibernian I'f'Ttt-ft.t I,is wife there,
at liie same time Importing Koine gorWs,
Lengthy legal battles wfPTTr'wiiSed con
eerning tlie mutter. Finally It was Fet
tled that the goats must go but the
wife could stay.
Mixed Situation.
Dnshaway—"Von say your sister will
be down in a minute, Willie? That's
good news. I thought perhaps she
wanted to be excused, as she did the
other day." Willie —"Not this time. I
played a trick on her." Itashaway—
"What did you doi" Willie-—*'l said
you were another fellow I"—l.ondon
Tit-Bits.
DON'T "IMPROVE" ON NATURfc
Introduction of English Sparrow If ;
United States an Example
of Its Unwlsdoj^.
There have been some disastrous ex
pertinents In the direction of "lmprov
lug" on nature. For Instance, whet
rats became such a nuisance in Ja
maica the East Indian mongoose win
Introduced to rid the Island of tin
pest. But today the mongoose is e
greater nuisance than the rat, and be
Ing bigger und hungrier and qulckei|
on Its feet it Is worse than tlic thing
It was Introduced to destroy.
A settler thought he would make
home in a strange land more homelike
by Introducing the British sparrow, 1
which hitherto had been unknown onj
the other side of the Atlantic, sayi
London Tit-Bits. Mr. Sparrow liked
his new quarters and quickly made
himself at borne, with disastrous re
stilts to crops and native birds.
And what shall be said of the col
onlst who brought a pair of rabbits
from English ileitis so that they might
breed and supply him with his favorite
rabbit pie? There are enough rabbit*
In Australia today to make rabbit pie
for the entire population of the earth.
The authorities have spent millions
of pounds In efforts to exterminate
them, but they still go on breeding
and eating tlio grass the sheep should
have.
MUST CHANGE MAP OF ETNA
Recent Eruption of the Sicilian Vol
cano Probably Has Made
Great Alterations.
Seventeen years ago when Vesuvius
was angry all maps had to be rectified,
after the eruption. The extreme sum
mit of the mountain had become con
siderably lower and the crater was
much deeper. Now the Etna eruption!
was much more violent than that of
Vesuvius, which means probably the I
sides of the Sicilian volcano will also!
have to be changed on the mnp.
In spite of Its great activity the'
eruption of Vesuvius can he observed!
from one end to the other by an ex-'
pert. Doctor Matteuccl spent three
days and three nights In a recess oft
the smoking erijfer.. He was thought
.to be dead. When he returned he
could not hide his Joy, not at having
escaped death by a miracle, but at
being able to make observations on the
spot of this tremendous phenomenon,
of which he hnd been certainly a most
Indiscreet witness.
Ills successor, Professor Mriladrn,
has been observing the different phase t
of fiie recent Etna convulsions. But
he was not able to approach as near
as fioctor Matteuccl on Vesuvius. —
L'Oplnion.
Nudity In Ears.
Women's ears will soon lie visible
—prophesy American hairdressers.
Can It he? Are years of invisibility to
go fill" naught and, as modesty shriek
ing flies, Is another, and the last, limb
to be uncovered in surrender to fash-
Ion?
So long has the world gone without
a glimpse of woman's ears that It will
await with skepticism the emergencies
of the mythical-tinted shells. While
ail along It has been suspeeted that
girls were equipped with auditory ap
paratus, because of the quickness with!
which they could hear nn Invitation to
the movies, It will require Ihe actual
appearance of feminine ears to reas
sure man as to their existence. Then
the shocking nudity of ears will call
for the creation of a League of Nations
branch to deal with the problem.—
Washington Post.
Hindus Great Cotton Spinners.
Six or seven centuries before Christ
the Hindus bad attained great profi
ciency in the art of spinning, weaving
and printing cotton. Some 'if their fab
rics were so exquisitely fine that they
have been compared with gossamer
web, says the Detroit News. They
were highly prized and available only
for the princes and nobles of ttie land; ;
the coarser weaves served as clothing
for the common people.
Following the trail from India to
Europe bin zed by Alexander the Great,
commerce has since continued to flow
back and forth between these two con
tinents. By no means the least valu
able of the commodities that moved In
the stately caravans over hundreds of
miles of Intervening desert and plain
were the beautiful fabrics of cotton.
Movie of Aching Tooth.
An aching tooth In action 1( the
lnte*t subject for the movies In
France. It IK In a film used In a eru-1
sade to Improve the teeth of the peo
ple. The film pictures n throbbing
nerve In its most excruciating stages, i
and those who saw the picture attest
to its vivid accuracy. _
*■
Rats Destroy Coconut*.
Serious damage throughout the vast
coconut groves of British Honduras
hus been discovered to be due to rtt ,,
which climb the trees during the dry
season and attack young coconuts to
quench their thirst.
The Spider.
We gnve some perfunctory admlra!
tion to the landscape, which Is Indee-i
only beautiful to those who aduiir
iand, ami to them perhaps the mrn
beautiful in England. For here is tii
body df the great chalk spider wfi
straddles over our island—whose leg
ure the south, downs and the nort;
downs and tl*- Chllterns, and the tip
of whose rues poke out at Cromer ani
Dover. He Is a clean creature, wli
grows as few trees a.s he can, and thoa
few In tidy (lumps, and he loves to l>
tickled by quickly flowing streams. I!
Is pimpled all over with earthwork?
for from the beginning of time inci
have fought for the privilege of stand
ing on him, and the oldest of our teni
pies Is built upon his back.—E. M
Forster, in "The Celestial Omnibus."
Deserts Not Without Water.
The vast stretches lying betweet
the Sit rra h;.i and California am
the eastern fordillerun ranges
mountains) in the L'nit' d States, ant
between the pacific ocean and tin
eastern Sierra Ma ire of Mexico, ei n
stlllite the great American desert, i:
superficially waterless. Its plains a i
• usually barren of surface water savi
for an exceptional saline lagoon. Not
withstanding the apparent scarcity "
water, one of the most remarkable fea
tures of the great American desert ii
that water has been secured often it
apparently impossible places and ■!:!
quantities that have made possible tin
existence of cities and industries, sayi
the Detroit News.
Fish Has a N?sal Pocket.
Fishes possess n smelling faculty. At
examination of the. nostrils of n lis*
reveals the fact that they are not
nccted with the air tube system, as it
most animals, but lend into blind pock
ets lined with delicate membranes wel
supplied with nerves, in fishes watei
Is not drawn through the nostrils, hut;
merely Into the small pockets, nncj
these may he emptied and refill. I
says the Detroit News. The qiuintitjl
of water brought Into contact with tin;
nerves of smell must be comparatively
small. In some few fishes, as in tin
globe fishes and puffurs, for example (
there Is no nasal pocket, the nerve-i
being directed into external processes .
Diet Affects Bird Colors. ""*!
By varying the diet of birds, Profes!
sor Ehrenrelch of Berlin has succeeded
In chungltig the coloring of their feath |
ers. Certain foods will cause red anii;
green parrots to turn yellow. His ex
P"rlments tend fo show that a bird's j
[- '.image depends largely on the dye
s'litf;* contained In food, says the De-|
11 "It News. Dyestuffs put In chicken
feed a fleet s the hue of egg yolks to ij
considerable degree. Caterpillars fid
exclusively on walnut foliage become j
dark butterflies. Indians have long un-j
derstood the art of changing the color
of living birds through the diet method j
Men's Souls Are Tricky Things.
As a matter of precaution I would
advise •womeii to leave tlie souls of
men alone, especially their adolescent
souls. They consist entirely of amor
phous spiritual substances. They have
as many rit. ,'s of sentiment and vapor
ous eloquence around them as tlei
planet Saturn. It is easy to guide
one of the pulpy things into the
church; but when you have done it
you do not know whether y >ll have
committed a blessing or an act of
salvation.—Cora Harris In the Sat
urday Evening Post.
Haddon Hall.
Iladdon Hall Is a famous mansion
In Derbyshire, I.upland, 23 miles north
west of Derby, which has been occu
pied successfully by the Avenelis, Ver
nons, and Rutland*. The building Is
In an excellent state of preservation,
and represents three different orders
of architectures—the Pointed Gothic,!
the Tudor, and the Elizabethan. No !
additions to the structure have been
made since the Sixteenth century.
Reference to lluddou Hull Is made In
Sir Walter Scott's "I'everli of the
Peak."
Animals Froicn for.Centurle*.
The Smithsonian Institution itnygj
that cadaverx, or bodies, of the norih-1
era mastodon and tln- hairy rhinoceros,
have been found In tlie ice of Siberia.
Wolves, dogs nnd bears art? said to
have eaten of the frozen flesh as It;
thawed out. Small portions of the
muscular tissues, skin covered with
hafr, stomach contents, etc., of »me of :
these frozen specimens of the mam-j
moth are on exhibition In the Unitedj
States National niuseifm.
One Way to Look at It.
Little Girl in ISox (at the play)—j
I didn't think the lady wus so bad,
muiiiuiy.
"Bad? Why, what do you mean?" j
"That they should make her 'do It
•ver."-^Llfe.
Fading Affection.
"You don't love me any more; you [
don't even tell rne that I make you !
sick."—l'nrls Journal Amusant.
We like the cockney version better. 1
"You dahn't knock me abaht." —iioe*,
fc'D Transcript.
NO. 33
BILL BOOSTER SAYS
*
Oe.(Wi3; AS HOVJ 1 OOMf RK
p&er -TO UVE more TUAM
A COUvH-E OF HUVJOfcSO N6A&S
UOUGtER, AMD COUS'OHSMViG,-
AIA THE. THWQS V NAkif XQ
00, t PiQiC ER. \ AUT GOT A
M\UUTE To VJAVTE KkWCKiMO-
AUD ViOLF\Ur
ABOUT V OOUX* UKE«
Ilk, i
[l
Breeding Snakes. *1
The breeding of snakes has hf-«oM J
a reeocn!zel industry. The «kln if |
the- snake is used in nmking/ many 1
leather r. .veltles, while the fat of the I
silnke's car-as# a:i oil wl±l.h is j
valued in he treatn ent of n liar 1
rheumatism. Even for the sn -*-*s ]
venom there is a market, since It .as
a recognized medicinal value and tads j
a ready sa'e pmong physicians and :
chemists. I
Business Before \
"I'arllni-'." exclaimed the happy bos
band after ttie minister had pro- *
nounced the frtu: words. "I am not
w rtiiy of yo i." "Of course you are
not." ahe r«-i■; ed ; "hut a"!er a gi—L has
celebrated h. r twenty-fifth birthday
for five cous'i'Utive years she an't
afford to he toe particular."—Clxl*«
nati I Inquirer.
td 6 1
*
is a Prescription for Colds, '
Fever and LaGnppe. It'stne !
most srjceuv remedy we
Know, preventing Pneu
monia.
PROFIT ..UNAL wAKL>d
J. ii. BALL, v. C.
i riiKomitOi
.servuii.-. ...id I'hr >uu- U •.v.-cwfea,
. in . i ,ii i •.%, \
Ottire: lit Hi,
iclt'j.a .ii. •(.,». . . ~o . UK
LUVjK S\ i . ;iL •*. i
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O A A. 1 A M . ;> . C .
%» ."lair a .villi -I ~:n .1. I! • .J.-iNoi:.
O.it t' oii-r Siillu..;u iliiik oi vl..ui nice
i.iJ vWS U. CQQi'Eii,
AUomcy and Coutiivilor-.it-.Law,
BURLING FON, N. C,
Associated wil'.i W. S. CoulUt,
N'.. *45 lurst N •%oua! Br.uk Si«%.
J>. t, iHOOi\, Jr., iwa. D.
(■ruiiam, .N. t.
it * «. vei I-' iieti I >ru_- i u.
• I ■«-; - itt .I ami 7 tu 1 ,i. iii , ami
»y n' iiic*!*t.
i'iioue V
GrfAHAivl HARDKiM, M. D.
Burllagtoo, N. C.
Office Hours: y to 11 a. a»,
and Uy uppoiatnii iu
Oiliie Over Afiue. i>rug Co.
frltSibiWti ottice ! 10— Keaideace *itil
JOdN J. UENDERSOS
Attorney ai-Law
'JKAIIAM, N. C.
Jlllce over National Bank ol Alamane
r, s. co o '^z y
Attofn.jf-nt- Lmi e
KAHAM, ... N. C
once Patterson Building
g«cond floor. . ,
!»li. \Vli,L^l,i)\lJ..!R.
DEN-HST ? ! I
[ reiim, - - * - Cmrt 'lna
i )FFICfc. IN PARIS BUILDING