Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / May 15, 1924, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL. L WHERE HOOKED FISH IS PREY OF OTHERS Anglers in Gulf Stream Of ten Find Catch It Robbed Visitors In Florida send numerous big fish stories back to the homefolk, and In many cases the hoipefolk are Inclined to sniff. No sniffing la Called for. Inland residents can hardly real ize the abundance 6t fish in the warm waters of the ocean. Along all the front of the southern resort cities motor boats 20 or 26 feet long can be hired with the skipper add tackle and bait for about 825 a day to go out toward the GulJ Stredm three or four miles to flalu . The sklp(terti know where the flih are to be found. The visitor merely specifies the fish h> wishes to catch, in An hour the boat can be at the fishing' grounds. A strip of fish Is put on tbe hook and the motor boat .moves along slow ly. The angler , may have 75 or 100 feet of line out, and he -wonders how lie can tell when lie gets a bite, with the boat rising and falling on the waves. Sea jfish are game fish. When one strikes, the angler gets the Idea that his hook tias suddenly caught on a submerged idg, so fierce Is the tug. He- has hooked, a klngflsh, a variety of the mackerel. The lln£ Is reeled In. Suddenly the fish has another Idea, and away he goes for fifty feet or so. In comes - the fish again. Mean while the boat owner, who usually keeps all but one of the fish and sells t Item, maneuvers the boat to aid tbe ungler. In perhaps five or six minutes the fish is tired, but still struggling. The angler gets the fish close enough to see that he Is a pretty" fair sire. He begins to wonder what will hap pen when he is brought closer to the boat. Then the line goes slack and Is pulled in easily. Some larger fish has rushed up to tbe hooked klngflsh and taken a bite at him, leaving little more than the head and shotilders on the Une. This is quite common. One man who was out three hours on a rough day off Miami says that he booked eight klng flsh, but two of them were bitten In two and another one was seized by a barracuda, a porpoise or some other bigger flsh, and carried out to sea 200 feet. The bigger flsh, grouper, sall flsh and amberjack and sharks, are caught farther away from the shore, But any southern water fifth tale Is likely to resist the efforts of the most proficlerft liar In amplifying It. —Indi- anapolis News. Sure Thing Mr. Ives accompanied his wife on a shopping expedition and had seated himself at one end of the coat depart ment while Mrs. Ives was looking over the garments. Suddenly he became aware of the fact that his wife was not td be seen. Walking up to the floorwalker he said: "I can't locate my wife anywhere. What shall I do?" "Just start talkltfg to one of/the pretty saleswomen here and I think your wife will soon put in an appear ance."—Judjre. Money Satisfactory "Here is that suit I bought of yon last weak," said the angry customer to the tailor. "You said you would Set urn my money If It was not satis factory." ' "That's what I said," responded the polite tailor, rubbing his hands, "but I am happy to tell yon that I fonnd the money to be entirely satisfactory." —Reynolds' Newspaper, London. Johnny's Rights This little tale would be worthless If It were not fact .Teacher (who has spent an hour of tie "Citizenship" lesson talking about * "Rights")— Have you any rights, John? John (who has apparently wool gathered for one hour) —Yes, sir, two. Teacher (surprised)— Two? Why two? Jobn —A band and*a foot! Your Hairs Arm Numbered Falr-balred people usually have be tween 140,000 and 100,000 hairs on the scalp. Dark-haired gC *"* on an average, about lOMWO; wllue hatred people are said to have only 30,000 balrs. But the Utter appar ently possess one great advantage in the fact that they seldom become bald. One on Him "Tea, Indeed," s*id De Boast, -my bearing Ir extraordinarily acute." "You don't sayl" put in Van Broke. "Can you hear my watch ticking from where you stand?" "Easily." "Wfell, you're a wonder. It's at the pawnbroker's, ten blocks away." Well Instructed The Judge—Now, are you ante you understand the nature of an orflh? The Youth (scared stiff)— Sure; ain't I yer caddy down at the links?— THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. Many Uses Are Made of Centrifugal Force Wljen you get rid of tbe water In ■ mop by twirling It round you make use of one of tbe moat Important me chanical forces. Oentrifogal force, as It Is called (It la pronounced "cen-trlf ngal," by tbe way}, drives tb« water from the rtop just as it drove the stone that killed Goliath from "David's sling. * An object, once set In motloil, wnnta to continue traveling in tbe same di rection, and resists any attempt to , change this direction. A stone MM 14 a piece* of string and whirled In a circle pulls harder the faster it Is whirled. If the string breaks, the stone will continue to travel In the direction It was moving at the instant the string broke; It would travel in a straight line were It Dot for the pull of the earth, which finally brings the stone to the ground. When turning a corner, on a bicycle you Instinctively lean Inward; if you didn't centrifugal force would upset you. , - A motorcar turning a corner at high speed would run on the two outside wheels, and the ln«tde wheels would be llffeil from the ground. Cars turn ing corners quickly are often shown In drawings with the outside wheels clear of the ground, which Is quite wrong. Many uses are made of centrifugal force; the modern cream separator collects the fat partlcfes from the milk by Its action. The little governor that regulates the spe£d of a gramophone depends on It. And the ever-popular "roulette wheel" flings off Its occupants by this force. Residents of St. Kilda Rely on Birds for Food St. Kllda, fifty miles west of the Outer, Hebrides, o la only three ml\es long and two miles broad, and, being very rocky, lta Inhabitants have to be pretty wide awake to make a living. To a great extent they depend upon aea birds for their food supply, and one fowler has been known to catch 620 blrdß in a single day. The fowler sets out with a long deal pole, nine or ten feet lons, with a horsehair noose at the end camou flaged by gannets' quills. Puffins are Auraerous on the Island, and the fowler creeps as near the birds as pos sible without giving them the alarm, thrusts forth his rod plong the ground, works the noose close to. an unsuspect ing puffin, and very (Jpktrously flrops the noose over the bird'* head and secures It. / The birds are treated much like her rings, except that they. need a pre liminary plucking. When that Is done they are split open, kippered and bung In long strings across-the cottage cell ing. In this way the/ will keep for an indefinite period, and provide a puffin breakfast at a moment's notice. China Woof Oil From Nats' Tung or China wood oil la an Im portant raw material in the manufac ture of varnishes, wall paints and enamels, and la largely used by the linoleum and printing ink Industrie#. It Is nearly colorless. quick drying, elastic, and very'tough. The oil la pressed from a nut .tint grows on' tung trees of two spades which ore hardy, deciduous, and about 20 feet high. in China It la uaed chiefly to pre serve the thousands of boats that ply the waterways of that country! For transport, the oil is put in bas kets lined with 10 thicknesses of var niahed paper, each holding about 180 pounds of oil. Thefce baskets are brought to a small city or market placq. In the Interior, where they are pur chased by representatives of export ers.—Detroit News. Dry-Clean White Doge One of the serious objections many persona have to owning a white-haired dog la the trouble of keeping him dean, but the truth, la that a white dog Is Just aa easy to keep dean as a dog of any other color, but not by con stant washing. ' The whole secret of beeping a white dog clean Is to groom thoroughly every day. Oontlan ons washings ruin the texture of the dog's hair. To make a nfilte dog look reallr smart, give him a dry shampoo. Bub him all over with a lamp of or dinary whltlag or chalk. When he la caked with the powd*t_ and looks as If be bad been dinted la a bag of flonr, brush him vigorously se that all the loose powder will be ibaken out and you will find that be will look cleaner than be would If you had given him a wet bath. The Winner The reputation of staying oa your Job. of sUcklng by your proposition through thick sad thla. of putting things tinuugh, no matter how difficult, wfll Be of untold advantage to you. It is the man who does thla who rises to the executive positions and achieves GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY. MAY 15, 1924 YOUTH READS SERIOUS BOOKS Popularity of Novel* la Twonty Years la a Matter of Doubt.' Will tbe youngster* of today, when they readr maturity, adopt as their literature the so-called realism of the moment and look upon the frank novels of the newest school of writ ing as the beat standards In litera ture, or will they return to the books of the Victorian era? What the youth of today will esteem In literature 20- years from now Is a problem with which tpe Children's Book Work com mittee, 384 Fifth avenue. Is wrestling, says the few York Herald. As a venture at is forecast of what may be expected, the committee cites! a. recent artide by Miss Martha Prltchard, supervisor -of school li braries. in Detroit, In which she writes: "What do we, find these reading classes selecting for their voluntary choice of material* to read for enjoy ment? Fiction Is only about one-third of the choice. Travel comes next In the usual school, though among the colored children, poetry la exceeding ly popular, especially In the lower grades. Fairy tales and books of science are about equally sought, and thanks to tbe practice In dramatizing stories, children now ask for plays to read,for fun. Tfye children's-encyclo-, pedis volumes are frequently chquen. "The conscious effort to bring many books into the life of euch child In school belongs admirably with the Idea In education, today so pro nounced—that of opening many gatea Into the city of life. 'Experience to make life a real thing while he is in school,' say the educators, tliat is tlie best preparation for his future.' Very good. The more books on his day'a work hi can handle with profit to his subject's the surer he is of becoming a wise working student In the future, and a real user of libraries, either bis own or thoae provided by a generous public." , HEROISM OF CAT 111 AFRICA Missionary Telia How Hla Pet Saved Nine Kittens Front Death In Hall Btorm. A missionary to Africa tells thla In teresting story of the unusual heroism of a cat he once owned. One day a terrific hall storm came, the sort con cerning which English and American people know nothing. In a quarter of an hour ligil covered the ground to a depth of two feet. Before the storm began the missionary's tliree cats were outside playing; they were all mother cata and bad their kittens with them. Immediately two of the mother cats 90 to shelter, never troubling about the little onea, but the heroine of the story stood Mfer ground. Aa soon as her master managed to go to her he found that she had gsthered not only her own fobr babies, but all the others as well, nine In all, oJtf had stood over them, keeping them v wsrm and safe, while she was nearly froten. She bad Marly died in aavlng them, for poor sides were terribly bruised by the heat 7 ballstfmes. Carefully did the mission ary wrap her in blankets and then be nursed her till she bad recovered. Mirrors as BaokQround*. An art treasure Is beautiful Is it self, but Its very nature .demands aa appropriate setting- frequently, the artistic person can plaee the lovely pieces of his household so that each will net only look well, but so that they are mutually helpful. There la nothing which will set off the beauty of a lamp so well aa a mirror background. Consider an ex quisite lamp set on a wall table against a mirror. The lamp should not be placed la the mathematical center of the m(rror, but to one aide so that. If It be • frivolous lamp It may aeem to flirt with Itself In the glass, or, tf it be a seriouptype, It saay be graatly enriched" by Its own reflection. v Pulling Teeth. Owen McCarthy, ■ recant arrival from the Emerald lale, bad apent a torturing day with a toothache. And after he had flnlahed hla work, to ward evening, he beaT hla way to th« neareat dentiat and impatiently in quired of the extractor of molara: "How much does yes charge for pnllln"oot wan tooth V "fifty centa; acrenty-flre centa with gas." "Seventy4ve data . with gear* gasped Owen. "Bedpd. thin. 111 X round agin early In the morn In' lfa daylight" Everybody"* Masaslne. Relies e# Famous Maaaasre. While excavating for electric con. dnita In Chicago recently workmen un earthed tne akdetona of tbrse Ameri can Indians which arebeologlsts and experts in Ipdlsn lore helleTe to be at least a hudrejl ysara old. Tbf* bonea were found not far frem the place o4 the famous fort Dearborn BILL BOOSTER SAYS ***>> * ***> VJ\MUEU\»CESPeU6M WW OUM Aiwrr VICMt so eamcM. o* \ A.U \Ol£ MAM FINOS FAULT MORS R.EAOUN THAVJ A \MORMESI\ Ifl ■ i. Might Lose Out Arriving nt u winter resort, a mil lionaire made Inquiries at a fashion able hfttel and was given a suite at a very reasonable rtrte'. A few minutes later tbe proprietor noted this and took the room clerk to task. "Why did you make the rate so moderate T" demanded the boss. "Don't you know that man cam* here In his own private car?" "I know that," answered the clerk, "and I was afraid he might decide to aleep In it" 1 i Kafir Courtesy ' ! In ifrica when one hears a native host aay.. to his departing gueat:- "Hutnbu garble" (Go in pence) and the of the guest, "Lula gachle" (Rest in peace), It la bard to imagine soneself amongst untamed savagea—lf one keepa one's eyea closed. A-courtesy peculiar to the na tive African la his manner of receiving even the most trifling gift. No mat ter how small the object, he receives It in both hands cupped together like a bowl. Try It. It Is most expressive. World's Storehouse Mexico ia often referred to a* the "storehouse of the world" because of the great fertility of It* soli and Its almost Inexhaustible natural* resources. Humboldt, the German naturalist, near ly a hundred years ago spoke.of Mex ico as the "treasure hous* of' the world." Although still undeveloped, Mexico Is one of the most richly mlo pnllzed regions of the earth. How Chief Cot His Name It Is said that "ilain-ln-tho-Face" re ceived hla name as the result of a personal encounter when 'about ten years of age with a Cheyenne boy, whom be worsted; he received several blowa In the face, cnualng It to be ■pattered with blood and streaks where the paint had been washed away. Origin of School* in Scotland Elementary schools were established tn Scotland by the provision* of the elementary education act of 1872. Prior to that, however, education had been regulated by the Scottish parlia ment As early as IfiOfl an act wns passed for settling school*, providing for the maintenance if a school In ev ery parish In connection with kirk. "City of Three Kings" Cologne, In Germany, wax for many centuries known as "The City of the Three Kings," slrne it was supposed to be the bnrial place of the maid from the East who were guided by the star to the stable In Bethlehem on the first Christmas night Retreat of Napoleon On the retreat from Moscow, Na poleon traveled from nepr Vllna to Pari* In 312 hours, a Journey of about 1,400 miles. Thla was an average of almost five miles an hour, and waa remarkable, considering conditions of roads and weather. Irresistible -Tell a man you think a ho** race !• gineter be crooked," aald Uncle Eben, "an* hell be pow'ful Indignant. Je* de same be'* liable to hang around ftjti Information as UJ what de sure thing bet la gineter be." Origin of Name Calvary The name Calvary la derived front "Calvaiia." which la {be Latin equiva lent for Golgotha, meaning ■ tare sknll. TWname waa given to a rock or prominence shaped to give the sem blance of • afculL ?£ Fifing Chaff Host excuses are not worth the msfc- Ing. Thb Golden Age was nuver the pres ent age. A cutting remark: "The lawn needs mowing." ... . . G»od at a distance is better than evil at hancL The taste of the kitchen la better than the smell. He that takes too great a leap falls Into tlie ditch,. . The hatred of knaves Is preferable tS their company. IJe Is doubly sinful who congrato lateaa successful, Vnavo. Some people clamoring for a new religion have never tried the old one. More things come to those who dont wait than to those who do. / Moon, Ages Ago, Was Splinter From Earth Many millions of years ago the earth was not the hard, solid mass lliat It Is now; It was a soft, seml- Ilquld globe, consisting of matter In an almost molten state. Scientists believe that at this time the moon was flung off from the earth l>y what Is Called centrifugal force. Any spinning wheel gives an ei ample of this force. Which endeavors to throw outward matter that Is ad hering to Its circumference. It Is cen trifugal force that makes the rear wheel of a bicycle splash mud onto tlie ctothlng of the cider. The earth In those far-dlstapt days used to spin much faster than It now does, and as.lt revolved It tended to fling off great masses pf matter from Its stirfuce. These would collect to gether In the form of a gigantic "blob" at on«v point on Its curface, and event ually the "blob" was flung Into space, where, owing, to Its own rapid rota tion, It soon become the globe which we call the moon. They Know Beans" If wme one attempted to tell a cer tain six hoy* in Mollis, N. Y„ that there> jsn't any money In farming, they would reply, *Yoo know beans." These boys, member* of a junlwr ex tension club, borrowed money a bonk last spring hired one and one half sere* of land, hired a tractor to plow and harrow It, ataked off rl* equal share* and planted bean*. When the crop wa* ready for shell purposes, they had" 144 bushel*, which they shipped by truck to the Boston mar ket. With the returns they paid off the notes and had a net proflfr-of $7.1.- 77, wlilch paid them more thap $1 an hour for the time they actually spent. —Boston Globe. Boy a Handicap "A boy Is at a disadvantage In an of fice," said Brown. "i thought the cry w&a all for youth and pep," objected Smith. 'lt may be. But A boy Is at a disad vantage Just tile same. . He has to think of automobiles, whether be has one or Hot. He has to thlAk of canoes, gdl£ girls, shows, mandolins, baseball, vacations, race horses, dancing and bualneA." "Welir "While an old married man haa to think only of business " His Record "See that old feller tottering along 'on the other side of the street there?" asked the landlord of the tavern at Peeweecuddyliump, "That's Hod Dur nltt, our oldest Inhabitant." "H'ra!" responded the hypocritical guest. "What lias h ever done of any consequenceT" "Done! Why, cat-fetch It, he's lived here all his llfo!"—Kansas City Star. Pertinent Question "With thla machine," argued the agent* "waahlng Is made so easy that yon can dlapenae with the services of a laundress." "But will It tell Ae off that Is go ing on In the neighborhood?" Inquired the woman—Boston Transcript. Sliding Down th» Icing "Will you Jotir our party in the Jain preserves?' asked (he first fjy. "No," /mid the second fly, "the lady of our house has baked a rake with Idas on It We're going In for win ; ter sport®."—Louisville Courier-Jour naL Only Explanation "Perhaps you eun explain, Mart*, bow it -was that 1 saw you kissing the chauffeur In the kitchen T "I'm rare I don't know, ma'am, un less yon were looking through the key hole." Real Meaning of Words Used Almost Every Day When u person U in an unhappy pre dicament—"between the devil and the deep seu"—he Is sometimes said to be "between Scylla and Charybdls.™ Ac cording to u Greek legend, these were two monsters, one of which lurked on euch side of a narrow sea passage. In ateertng liis vessel.ln such a way as to escape one the unlucky mariner fell Into the clutches of the other. There are two words —panic and hygienic—which we use almost" every day. "Panic" la a sudden, unreason ing fenr of something. 'lt la derived from the name of the god of shepherds —l'an —whoiie presence as he lurked in visible amongst the thickets or reeds, made Itself felt by mortals, and sud denly smote them with a fear so acute that they' (led from the unseen. "Hygienic" Is derived from the nam® of the gnddesg of health —Hygela. How mapy people realize when they speak of putting an animal into a lethal chamber that the u: me comes from I/O the—a river on t »e borders of Hades —whose waters 1 rougUt for getfulness to whoever drank of their? And when they describe something a* being lu, n state of "chaos" do (hey ever think, that they are naming the first ttf (L'l the old heathen puds— ruled over confusion be fore any other gods exl'.-ietl? "Under his ijeglV' Is another phrase often used.. "Aegis" was the name of the shield Iw' the goddess of wisdom, Minerva, and Is used to Indicnte what the shield afforded —protection. Nicknames Represent Character oi Cities Unfortunate in the city which Iti Its career lifts riVt been dubbed My xoiiie nlcknamo#r other. Some the nii-k --naiues of cities express admiration, some are frankly deprecatory, others are facetious, and all represent In some m&afture the ehuructer of |he city. New Vork city "is blessed with many nicknames, for whatever may be lt» virtues or Its vices, no one will deny that It has character and distinction. Perhaps It Is best known as the "Em pire City," a sobrhiurt clearly earned by its premier position in the United States, its weulth, "Its population, its enterprise anil its influence in the em plre'of the Western world. "Gotham," a name first applied hu morously by Washington Irving, comes next, 1 It Is mi allusion to that older Gotham, the extraordinary stupidity of whose citizens won theni the ironic appellation; of "The Wise Men of Gothaiji." Much-nbusad Brooklyn Is preten tiously called "The City of Churches,'* but is also known as "tfew York's bedroom," Stephen Girard Stephen Olrard (17501831) was an American merchant Mid philanthro pist, burn nt Itortfeaux. Frtince.' He was greatly Interested In the first United State* bank, which he made one of the soundest financial Institu tions In America. During the War of 1812 he wflsthe chief financial sup port of the government/ On the re rluirterlnc of the second United States hunk, 181 fi, he became one of Its prin cipal stockholder* and directors, and exercised a dominant cpntrol over Its policy for many yen**. He left al most his entire fortune of ?7,500!>00 In public benefactions, chief of which was Olmrd college. In the regulations for the control and management of which he Incorporated hi* Idea* as to freedom of thought and religious belli*. To Cement Agate Ware Tlie old # cement tOflde by mixing' litharge with glycerin I* a* g«>d as any for mending hole* In kettles, jinn*, water etc. The lit': ar;;e and glycerin should be k»pt .«ep mile nnfll needed, and »nl.v *s 'much ns Is re quired at th(i time should be ndxed. as'the mixture U hardens. This kind of hard putfjr la also useful for puttying the glass In aquariuifcs. mend ing auto nidlatorrf, fhclng burners to kerosene lamp* and doing similar ft'- pairs where a hard and resistant ce ment la required. I,!th;ir;{o Is n .red dish piro'der which can be bought at pat dru/ store; It I* ai\ oxide of lead — "red le::d." - » \. ** " . Scr.ior Crother Hoi pa Kid. lt'« mmt to lie ;i kid hroih -r. Keep* I a fellow right up on his toes. Vou 1 wonder whether you can t»p*ser nljjfv j bra, or sv/imnslng. or a certain vnca tion JoU x i "Sure you crtn. ntch In" sajra the senior In your family fraternity. And >ou do, hard. Quadratics or the Aus tralian TawJ or an ewnrting boss, you've got tir uuikr g« jtd. Tlie frater nal protTding you ft may iua:»u you aquln v but. It helpn you to- win through. M (]S«od w«jr|!" says your senior brother. Ant! ihen you conld go out and lick tlie wertd. It's evKit to Ite a freshman In a fiUJiHjr frt|tevr.!r.v . . . Sort of -fun to iv-: n In luen;!:il,s enior, too. —American lioy. NO. 15 Garden. Moles The chief food of ordinary gardes moles Is composed of earthworms, J grubs, caterpillars and Insects of vnrl- fl ous kinds. In captivity moles have , j been known to eat birds, mlcA ttMT' J it her flesh. During the summer these little animals burrow about In the light topsoll searching for food They go deeper In winter and hibernate, or at lenst live In a semi-dormant state. Al- i though moles do considerable damage, by upheaving the ground In lawns and gardens, they pertly, recompense for * this harm by destroying Insects which • prey upon the roots of plants. The eyes of the moles are very small and sunken, being almost hidden In the soft fur. It Is now believed that the eyes > of garden moles are degenerate and serve practically nojnse as organs of sight Moles seldom" come to the sur face of the ground except at noontime. | Tills habit has often been observed, bat • never' adequately explained.—The I Pathfinder. • " | fl How Many Is a Few? "An editorial under the caption at How many Ik a fewt' r -calls to my . mind an Incident of try boyhood," writes a resident of l.uena Vista, | j Colo, to the Pathfinder. "I was as sisting my father, who was a mints- j j tor In Congregational clinrph, In excavating a well, my duties being to turn tjie windlass which drew the buckets of dirt to the surface. I called father's attention to the fact thaf It ! whs almost quitting time and he re ; marked that be would take out a few 2 | more buckets. I asked hlui hjw many d few was. He replied that 'according A | to the lilble a few meant eight.' Ac cordingly, we took out eight more buckets of dirt, and the same evening I asked, him where he obtained the Information tit) to a few meaning eight. For answer he referred me to I Peter 3:20 where. In speaking of the nrk. It states a "few, that'ls, eight souls, were saved by water.' " . ..... —■ ■- II_ I| mgm ■. t . •• A Power of the Mind It is only by thinking at>but great nnd good things that we come to love . • them, and It Is only by loving them tlint we come to long for them, and It Is ooiy by longing for them that we are Impelled to seek after them. When We Deteriorate I | A man begins to deteriorate, to go • toward'fallure, not when he loses all * of his material possessions, not when lie faltk In his undertakings, bnt when | he loses faith in himself, in his abll. ' Ity to make his dreams come true. Might at Well Die Young ' When everybody lives to reach th« century mark It won't be so epsy lor centenarians to get a hearing on their philosophy of life. - Girls, Ws No Use No woman can keep from looking eld when It comes time for tier to be o|d. Bobbed hair only makes matter* ' Worse. m ——J ii—iiu4- PRO FISSION AL CARDS J. B. BALL, D. C. CUIHOPitACTOR r iNervoiw and Chronic Diseases^ N. C. Odicct Over >IU( Alice Kowlaud's Mture. T. IV,.U .IIC-: oiltce. »M 2. Hesideuce, UK LOVICK ft. KEUNODLE, AU«raey-at.Law, . G3ABAM, N. C. S. C. SPOON, Jr., M. D. tirai ani, N. C. , ;f|| Office over Ferrell Drug Co. ifl urn: *2 to 3 Mid 7 to I .' p. m, and &>' ajuioiu'inoi t., ' i'lioiin '.»7* JGISAHAM HARDEN. M. D. Burlington, N. C. Office Uours: 0 to 11 a. m. and ; *l3 , Qfllce Ovor Aen:v. Jir.jg, Co. Tele>l'one«* Office lid-Residence 2(11 JOHN J. HENDERSON , Attorney-at-Law GRAHAM. N. C. , M . Ditlcc ovtr NaUsnal laskU Almsc ' Attsrssyst'Lae l "H.«o tamo BulM|n« WIUUMft.JR. .«• ;V ~..v. *
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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May 15, 1924, edition 1
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