VOL. L
LOVE IN COTTAGE"
BELCWGS¥OI>A3I
Modern Maid Not Willing
to Take Chances;
A large class of girls In an American
college was asked the other day If any
of them would marry,a man whose la
come was bat SI,OOO a year- Not a
■ingle hand was raised. It was only
when a salary of SB,OOO was mentioned
that any enthusiasm was shown, while
many held out for a higher figure.
The opinions of most' girls the coun
try over obviously have undergone a
remarkable transformation In the past
few years.
It Is significant that ta
tills case had tagMfcra course house
hold economics gtydiwas familiar with
the science of devising household
budgets.
The presides* «f a southern, college
recently advised bis students not to
consider matrimiiay on a of
less than $4,00&* yea?v The students'
In this case wffanot-drawn from larger
cities, where trying «oats are at tbelrv
highest, but from .the country .and'
smaU f 4|ww*fc,c4tha.,, They were
crult*4K.h?y«rev* a & from well
to-do families. •,
It naturally mlght.be expected that
the youths of the—Unrge or so-called
fashionably colleges .wquld consider
marriage, unjustified except on a much
larger 1 income - -•
The conclusions reached by the stu
dents of household economics In this
respect will be .read with Interest by
the great mass of housekeepers. With
characteristic academic thoroughness
the cost of maintaining a home In the
country or city baa bean calculated to
the penny.
The rent la aet down as a fixed per
centage of the Income. Allowances
are duly made for food, clothes, edu
cation and The figures
mathematically are correct.
According to these students of eco
nomics, marriage U not Justified on a
salary of less than |4O a week and
few In some colleges would take a
chance at teas.
It la Interesting to note In this con
nection, however, that, more than Jlr
-1000,000 marriages took place In Amer
ica laat year. > „
Now French Fat
In France, "the land of queer ani
mal the Siamese cat has Just
come along a* the latest fad to dis
place the craxy-looking French poodle
in popularity. „ .
The Slamaan cat, with Its bine eyes
and fawn coloring; it* well Into, the
general scheme of certain oriental
fashions and colorings in home fur
nishings now In vogue here, and la -a
very chic and strange pet Indeed.
The French also like It because of
Its datntlneaa In the matter of food.
A "gourmet" la liked here, and a 81-
tmeae cat la such a "gourmet" that It,
would die rather than eat vulgar foqd.
It Is also an aristocratic animal.
Its aloofness ftpm other animals being
te elegant aa almost ,to account fer
Ae present phase of cat worship.
Parlalan dealer* In domestic pets
ire turning their attention from the
poodle to the Siamese cat and are
ieaplng a harvest while the erase
hat*
—— | II SI l
i Erratic Judgment
E— was not experienced In the ltoe
it buyiqg green vegetables at the gro
»ry. One day she went to a store
with the Intention of getting several
toads of lettuce, which were marked
it a sale price.
At sight of the lettuce she thought
the was certainly getting a bargain.
s Vfter selecting several choice heads,
the carried them to the d»ft When
tie attempted to weigh the heads B
Interfered.
-Oh." «be Mid. 1 thought they
were ate cents a head."
"I beg your pardon, miss," answered
the clerk, keeping back Ma brash,
**thls la cabbage."
"Weil, of all things! I didn't knew
tke difference," and ske disgustedly
exchanged tke cabbage tor the desired
vegetable. —Br change.
Agar-Agar
Agar-agar is a pearly white, rtilny
product Invaluable to medical research,
to the hospital, to the kitchen, to the
cotton mn. and to tke brewer. As n
-culture medtnm for bacteria It Is un
rivalel lor It ti the only gelatinous
sobetanoa thet on stand the necee
-04 An * el^
Tlke—m-,
* snd
tNagsil ae glass. ka*tMsa devel
egtedrtjpk a'U»Met.g*oeeM After years
« auy cut It tute required lengths.
It bums IMB readily than Ot
THB. ALAMANCE GLEANER
QiOfimak
Citi*omtOm>,Jll. Y.
Unfle long white halrv
who stands for^th^UnltS#-W«te«r In
cartoons, was originally a real person,
a citizen of Troy, N. Y„ about a hun
dred years ago. The way the term
eame to be applied to the United
States government happened In this
manner:
Shortly after the War of 1812, El
bert Anderson of New York, who was
a contractor of the army, went to
Troy to purchase some provisions. It
was Anderson's habit to stamp..all
boxes containing the goods with bis
Initials and those of the United States,
So that on the end-of each. bos • sept
opt were the letters. E. A. and U. 8.
Before each box went -outft Ludts
be inspected, and one' of the inspector*,
was an old man, popular among his os»
SQoiates.for his wit and good huinoc,
named Samuel Wilson.' A round . the
Inspecting, rooms he was known* as
"Unele saiu." One time »iie» man
ia asked *u «aiploj»*~Wha*-
tjm -letters the boxes, -J2, . A. and
U. S.. ■ atpod for. The wan, thinking
tease Uncle Sam _> bit, answered:
"EL A...for Elbert Anderson, who.con
tracts for the supplied, and ij,' 8. for
Uncle Sam. who Inspects thein.^"
The joke spread, and before long
bec«B»a.-»en«r»Uy ap
pll»Ato the nas»e .Uncle. Sam. . When
cartoonists, looking for a popular flg-.
nre to Impersonate the Unlt'6»JititSea*.
heard the tale, they used the charae*
teristic Uncle Sam of the Inspecting
room, dressed in flag-like clothes.
Why African Natives
Slay Twins at Birth
The other day a paragraph appeared
In the Mall describing the murder of
native twins In South Africa. The un
traveled man must read this with hor
ror, and rightly too, though I doubt if
he ever thinks of the tribal laws and
customs underlying such a seemingly
horrible practice—customs which the
native had observed for thousands of
years before the coming of the white
man with bis new Ideas.
Unfortunately . Europeans so » often
try to teachijienajive ml»4 too -quiet
ly. They expect him to break suddenly
from his time-old traditions and em
brace Immediately altogether different
morals and Ideas. They are suprised
when he occasionally returns to Ms
barbaric creed, instead of marveling
that snch lapses are so rami That
they are so rare Is a big tribute to the
trust and understanding existing be
tween black and white. > For all these,
to qpr mind, terrible custom., were
originally Intended only for the (good
'of* .the race
Frt>m time Immemorial, twins k»ve
, been., regarded with, horror hy most—if
not tribes. I have tried to
trace the basis of thla belief' In many
parts of Africa, and the nearest I could
come to It vyss this: .
! W hen a woman gives birth she is be
lieved to produce one soul. It by some,
terrible misfortune, that soul should be
i divided, what chance can It have in this
world or the next?— Molly Torln In the
Continental edition of the London MalL
•
Many Flying Animals
In Australia there are at least
twenty species of animals whlflk are
•viators. Among them are.flying squir
rels, flying opossums, flying mice'and
even flying bears.
The name which applies them all
Is "phalanger." This mean* that they
have, extending from the freot to the
hind legs, a membrane which enables
them to float in quite a graceful way
from tree to tree. They are not really
flying animals, but gliders.
The flying squirrel la Mid te be the
moat beautiful mammal In the world.
It Is odd that In the. land where many
, animals fly, birds often cannot fly at
all. Both the emu and the cagsownry
are practically wingless, and have to
depend upon their leng and strong
legs te escape from their enemies. ,
' Maia SarvayimgEaay
American muaenm, geologists on
tketr recent third Asiatic expedition
In Mongolia, in making.« topograph
ical survey of tke regions through
which they pessed were aided by
stone monuments built by Mongols'to
represent prayer* te Buddha* ..Almost
every hill waa crowned with ens of
these prayer-monuments, so tkat tke
map makera could algkt their lnstm»
pents upon the very same spot every
time they used the kill In trlanguln
tlon.
!■■■ _. mm sm
FMf.lsrf4 MMsw
In tke matter of inHumsat In ike
Portland (Me.) ChSmbar of Com
tnerce, Mys tke Boston Globe. He
'hoiks employment for can
* telle as payment snip baasd ani room.
' He ha* a certain flmfl lecoese; wMck
la given him aoWy en eondlttan tkat
he doM not take - naplsiUMt foe
wages. La«k ot week kM tmuaiik
esses, hMca Ms unique nqusst. -
GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY. JULY. 24.am
Who Pekl the rim*/
■ Three race-course followers- arrest
ed on charges of drunk
enness were remanded on baA of £Z
• eacta- One of them produced a wallet
contflthltag three £1 notes and left It
as security. The men did not appear
on remand, and the ball was estreated.
Next day the wallet was shown to the
Judge, who recognised it aa his prop-
Arty. It had been stolen from him
at the race meeting.—Lends* Mall.
fin rib *■ Rotation
It fs generally supposed that the
nebular or planataalmal mattar from
which the solar system has tdeveloped
possessed an original Bp*taß"«f -rota
don around an axis neaalfrtt right
"anglflac4o the plana of the 'ecliptic.
Theaaet* and the pUaa>%tn general,
a#e isupposed sti 11 AO revolve and to
rbtntAJa the *aiMudirection a* that
Stt the rrotaUon of tha original mass.
Register* Salt in Sea
i, .An apparatus has. been perfected
w-hlch automatically regUteea the
•arnoant salt- in sea water, thus
knowl
edge of the paths fiocean currents.
It Is %lso .aaprqt»d-that it wt* aid In
detecting. 4M» aptsn—a «f icebergs.
It la atf.lna-developed by
"tha Unifed. Statea bnreau of stand
•j Tram# by Laundry Mar ha
• London police rely on the laundry
Marks in clothing to trace criminals
and Identify victims of violent death.
A new regulation would require all
laundries to keep a register of all
laundry marks and their owners.
There are special man on the force
Who are adapt In'this phase of crimi
nology. ,
Richea in Dream Power
An inmate of the Pennsylvania
Home for Woriting Blind baa become
known aa a philosopher among his
friends tor his ability to estimate the
▼slues of life. "A man is as rich aa
his power to dream," he said. He
maintains such power is far greater
In valna than material riches.
Where They-Gall a Halt
"The trouble with the poets,''' say*
the >W'Mtaett (Courier,, "Is that they
*to gre«t >ones to elng.about the soli,
but poor ones to. plow It. Show 'em
the plowhandles, and straightway
they have an attack of spring fever." —
Atlanta Constitution. *
Didn't Car* Mac*
Burly .. North • Countryman (the
*proud'*Vttlniier of h particularly In
significant cup)—" Yes, I've won coop,
aid If any one wants drink because
I've woe coop'be can have bllnkln'
coop Instead 4* —■nmortot (London).
Early Prayer Book
1 Blchard Graftoo, an English chron-,
Icier and printer to King Edward VI.
.Wie the printer of the first Book of
Comma Prayer in 1540. He also
brought out die edition of 1552. He
died about lOTE.
Wen Fama Early
. Bosa Bonheur, the celebrated
French painter of animal life and
landscapes, exhibited her first picture
when she wag only eighteen years old.
At the age of twenty-three she was
awarded a gold medal at the salon.
Fifty Year a to Com•
. Regains is at a distance of 800,-
000.000.00f1.tf00 Utiles' from the earth.
Its light • takes about fifty years to
travel *> as at the rate of 186,000
mile* a second.
. Railway Aato-Ambuktnea
A railway anto ambulance to operate
on the Arlce-LePax railway through
a desert rsgleu ot Chile In which there
are no ie to be purchased by
the gorenmsant :
American Motor s Load
Of 808 motor vehicles registered on
•the island of Martinique, 0M are of
American manufacture, 07 French and
81 from a variety of other countries.
Lifo /* All Too Short
The trouble with spending oua-Jlvfe
looking for soft places la that when
we have found them tkere is no time
left In which to enjoy them.
" " " »" 11 ■ ■
Jadga Not
1 Do not Judge by .appearances. The
man who sticks deeeet to the bulletin,
board may hare n kome to go ten
nOefveeton News.
I Pimm War* imjUr*mm«
In building an airplane"
finav accurate and delicate aa thasvim
making a watck Is uqdnd.
1,1
Franch Cynimum '
' A good marriage* would,4e between
'r blind wife and a deaf husband
BILL BOOSTER SAYS
'VrVJE TWMft tYWT MAKE*
VL/TH\S SUCH A GbOOO tDVM
ftOIAAW PCOPLS OMJUMfr.V
THSttt V40MI&1 VtOtVMMd
i UKSfVUtmtti A MOOS* AMD
LOTTO KAAKB AFCtUMJ
I GROW Boora AMD G6COMC A
Gooocmtcut*
Lava Bear No Myth
Lava bears are no myth, declares
the Portland Oregonlan. A couple of
years ago Irvln Cobb came- to Oregon
to hunt the lava bear. He didn't sea
one, and he was ndvlsqdjtx many One*
gontansfwho have spent outdoors manm
years of tyelr lives that there waa no
such animal. • However, Cobb met one
chap at Fort Rock who Informed Cobb
that if he met a lava-bear he needn't
shoot the creature. "Just kick 'em to
deaths waa the advic& •
' Well, there ore Java • bears In Ore
gon. They're not very numerous, bat
they do exist. One reason why few have
been seen Is that they Uveln the lara
beds where a man dare not penetrate
more than a couple of hundred feet for
fear of being loft and perishing.
Dan Godslii game warden for Lake
county, who to to Portland,-says that
he has seen two lava bean. One-was
trapped ■ year ago. by an agept of the
government- biological -mvtrtey: *; TtW
Java bear to about the slze-of a house
cat sad* ts mostly head.' It ldokf ex
actly like 1 rtie-*pgulutton bear, txcept
for Its small si i»,-and-a* tt>r ttd-ttavr
tofd Cobb, the lava -beardoeen* have
to toe shot, for If the hmfter ran get
near enough he enn boot the bear to
dectto- The iter eaughflast-year war
In die lav* 4eld norttiea* «f- Fort
Book/
Royal
Td rattier have a good
than * thrtme; and to, ~J Imagine,
would the khif end Ms etdMt StW. $
writer to the Loadon Dally MaU De
marks. Few people realise. that Sh
majesty auflere from chronic ti flltK
tloa and-how on earth he manage* to
■mile as much as he does posses my
comprehension. The prtocfc-df Wale.
Inherits his father's complaint and II
the despair of his hosts and hostessee
because he practically lives on egfs
and fartoaceoos fodder. His 'mart*
solid dish Is chicken and oven that
has to be chopped np very fln*> £w
him.; Yet he manages as a rale to hp>
pear In the pink of condition, end' Mr
natural nervousness end QdgeMaeae*ha
can hardly keep jtlll for Ave -minute*
together) are admirably -ramoeflafW
In public.
Training tkm lilutt
We have not Ave senses*- hut twenty*
five, Including six so—e of track
alone. Moreover. U Is possible to 4e-*|
velop the seneee to a point whei* we
can feel colors In the dark.— Dr janes
J. Walsh, psychologist, makes %theee
statements In the I'opntar Bdes*e
Monthly. V. .
Contrary to popular belief, he ee~
serts blind inen have no keaasr tones 1
of touch and hearing than ordinary
persons. They have merely, through
necessity, cultivated the hatolt of con
centration, as have tea tasters, textile
experts and other persons who make
extraordinary use of their senses.
£~"~ —*• «9d hearing proba
bly are the senses most generally em
ployed In the more familiar fonna of
human endeator. These can*he traf si'
-only by concentration. r
SinutmrMimmmn '
There la a certain UMe Roeslan re*
tanrant In Paris, where theee are so
many Russian restaursnts time day*
It la altogether chaining, the cooking
la excellent and the wines and the
music are. praiseworthy... A rloUnlsl
and several- -tsfrow oueplratora per
form Uke rirteoso* There (a. In fact
hat one tH—adaa! ailli. and that Is la
, a . placard tatked up near th* Orche*
„tm whttKn reads ft "VMmmtM* Met
celeferes eneeteoea.* (OWNa -aa*
see the famoaa westlustfa) "Bser
cnteurs" In a Rnsslnn rrsfaar—ll The
chOls go np one** spine—From Le
Figaro, Paris (Translated tor the Ka*>
aaa Cltr Star).
The Future of Farm Land Values i
i • !
.
coMPWSQiifIF twmiiEswmi mm or firmer bankrupts
""sates; Jmt» VT'iirr«owm>u rmnoi maMurrrr wprnrnwi
*•s P>-- :
• «»8. MOO
M. ; I \ / MOO.
T». / \ I 4JOO
_J» y jL —±2?o_
«f. f I wo
V—^
M. I MOO
m. 2£:L— a»-
40. i?3SL_
"■ I'M , I • I.M.J..UCIIWIOWWW. row.™*. I too
When former* are making money on their crops the value of plow land i
Tins high and bankruptqlea ar« few. Reverse the situation and the bankruptcy
line tukes a straight upward turn. That's what is happening now. Farmer
bankruptcies are on the Increase, land vslues are sliding tlown the scale due
to the slump of agricultural prices since the war. *
What doee the future hold for farm land owners? Is this the time to bay
or will
The Ssars-Roebuck Agricultural Foundation, after completing ft survey of
. Values covering a period of sixty years, predicts that high land values are
( coming sack and«hat wltMn a decade farm land prices will again be on the cMmb.
From the days of the Civil war to around 1900 farm land values showed lit
l tie change. Lnnd was eonaldered a. safe Investment. Beginning In 1900 values
began to rise; by 1910 the acre price had doubled. Btlll land continued to rise ,
chiefly because of the advance In the prices of farm products.
The war brought higher prices for farm crop values increased./
The result was a land boom. By 1920 thfe average price of land per acre waer
tOO, S9O higher than In 1917 at the opening of the war. Farm bankruptcies
dropped, from 2,000 in 1917 to 1,000 in 1&9. . )
During the prosperity period erf the war many farms were bought Dor-
Ing the land boom It Is estimated 'hat 10 per cent of the country's farms
changed.bends. Following thswar the.collapse In prices of grains and live,
stuck sent land valuea tumbling for the first .time In twenty-five years. Average
plow land decreased In value from an average of SOO per acre In 1920 to SOS In
1923. Crop values per acre fall from SBO In 1919 to sls la 1021. Daring the
past two years there has been a gradual increase, the average for 1922.being
S2O and last year the average rising to $22. Fanner bankruptcy proceedings In
the federal courts jumped from 1,000 1n'1920 to 6.000 In 1928. More than Bft
per cent of ttoelandottnera In 16 corn aqd wheat producing states In the npper
Mississippi valley Inst, their farms: _ ;
' In tweotjsfivq. years the United States should be producing on a domestic .
basis In practically every thing, unless production makes material Increases.
People are (paving from Then the farm-fo-clty movement will reverse
* Itself. Land values will Increase with the price levels. Bankruptcies will de
crease with the rise In l«nA>valaa%. The present tendency In prices Is down. :
They may continue down tat a dacadf. During this time land prices may sag .
'considerably. • But wlth a returq of production prices of farm land will go op. •
The Trend in Labor Supply and Demand
SS3BBB i»i» i»ao 1931 1922 [• ims i»24 |
NODMAC
no* • i
»o»»
' \
, *» y
I ao * \.* */ m \
■* **
' 7y * _» \y/
TO* ~
~ 4 \ - T — —— l
II Farmers are Mtttoc dm* Mart help. The demand Is estimated at only 89
•*per oent of aoniial as prepared with 9(1 per cent a year ago, according to a
statement Issued by the Washington office of the Sears-Roebuck Agricultural
Foundation based on data from government sources. The low purchasing
power of farm products has forced the farmer to rearrange his operations. . He
is coming to depend largely on his own and his family's labor. In many cases
ti* hired man Is being dispensed with entirely.
Farm.help costs, moi* today than at any other time in the past slxty-oae
Jiaera. Wages demanded are higher than a year ago and rates for 1028 aver- tj
aged above all preceding years. The peak year In the wage scale was 1n 192 a
That year labor was scarce. According to the accompanying chart, In June of
1930 the supply was hot 78 per cent of nonpal, while the demand was 106 per
cent of normal. During the latter half of 1910 and through the first six months j
of 1921 the. labor supply curve took • sodden upward swing, snd In Jane of
toOl M wen 95 p««; cent of norm a),.while demand bad dropped to 87 per rent «
Until'ln June of 1022 the supply, carve continued to rise, reaching Its height at ,
lOfir par sent of normal, while the demand was bat 89 per tent normal. I
With the beginning Jf 1928 city labor wagea Improved.
centers drew farm help cityward. .Farmers hall to pay wagea out of proportion
to what the farm could earn to hold their men. In Jane of 1928 the demand
saw 96 per cent of normal, while the supply carve was Bagging to 84 per cent.
ThO latter half vt ihe year-deihand laaaaned, due to excessive labor coets and
the increasing supply.. This yegr demand hss made still farther decline, nntfl !
now H is »atdlper eentof normal, while labor supply, which k era dually la
ereasKg, fa Wethnaled -Srtntnd 80 per cent J
Bn—xyJo iJm ■mMnithaliafpeal« i
to ta. write* Ma-OMver-L4d«t'in H>*
.per'a. We- nyrtind ll anrtae.p grqat
,varUrtj' of foraMk »r And It da'baemlag
.probakle tkft what, we call. matter la
on* of tbeae tonne. Miami fha forma
of enarar that wo know -aw convert
Ible Into another, The energy-of mo
tion tum into bent. 80 doe* the en
ergy of correal* imJaea It U
converted Into the energy of chemical
separation or electric charge. Conver
[«lua irwm one to another wlthoat hw
tla tbe atgn manual of energy. And the
proof that matter te a form-of energy
will nut he el Inched an Ul U can hedeua
onatratod that matter, -too, 4a coaverfr
lhl« into other tormM energy.
Mutt Have Bmtn Slow
"Mother, I'm afraid that papa was
pretty alow when be wu a young
man." "I'm afraid you're right, Helen.
> He alwaya paid his debts, and used
' good English, and never saw a cabaret,
' and hadn't any dabs, and was able to
I support s wife before he married—
yea, I guess he was pretty slow."—
Boston Transcript.
Life of Railroad Spikmt
The durability of railroad ,spU*g
j depends entirely on tbo type of tack
and traffic hauled; hgwever, heavy
spikes should last abodt fifteen yearn
sad light spikes from twenty-one to
twenty-five years. For genet*} re-,
pairs approximately thirty-six spikes
oar mile per montji may b? used. J
NO. 25
Many Dialects Found
in "English" Language
The English language, observes the
Kansas Cltj Times, belongs to the
Teutonic brahch of Iw Indo-European
family. It is a subdivision of the low:
German, which In turn Is a division]
of the w«t Germanic branch of the;
Teutonic group. It is customary to
divide the language Into three periods,
Anglo-Saxon or old English (440-10G8),;
middle English (1000-1600) and. mod-i
era English, from 1500 to the present.
The year 449 marked the invasion of
Britain by the first of the Teutonic, or
low German, tribes who overran the!
Island in the Fifth and Sixth centuries.
The invaders found in Britain a race
of people who spoke a Celtic dialect,)
and these, after 150 years of lncessunt;
fighting, were driven into Wales and!
Cornwall. The conqueror's speech, to :
whlfh the name of Anglo-Saxon is>
given, became the language of the
country and the foundation' upon
which modern English Is built
During the centuries before 1000
many words were taken from the Cel
tic tribes. In the Sixth century came
Roman Christianity and the addition
of many Latin terms and grammatical
forms. The Danish conquest of the
Island added considerable of the Scan
dinavian element.
The middle English period began
with the conquest at England by Wil
liam, duke of Normandy, who broke
the power In Harold at the battle of
Hunting* in 1000. , The French lan
guage.was spoken for the next two
centunes by the upper classes, law
and schools. The conquered
held on lt» Hps the English
-"language and finally It became domi
nant. About 12S0 the two languages
began to merge, English absorbing al
most the entire body of French.
In the Sixteenth century the devel
opment of modern English began.
Since that time borrowing and assimi
lation have gone on continually
through literary, commercial and po
litical relations with other nations.
Preimrved in Print
Ail that mankind has done, thought,
gained or heen, it Is lying as in magic
preservation in the" pages of books.*
They are the chosen possession.—Car-
lyle.
Modern View of It
Amelia (looking at the Laocooa
group—"Ah, yes, firemen, I see. But
how did they become so entangled in
the hoseT'---Boston Transcript.
High Cott of Election*
More tlinn eight tons of paper were
used and 750,000 votes counted in the
election of a miners' secretary In Eng
land recently.
Mrs. Crandall (Iowa) Tails How Ska '
Stopped Chicken Losses
"Hit Iprlnf. rata kilUd *ll our baby chick, With
I'd known «|»at Rat-So* before. With jut mm
Urft package we kilted tvanns strata. They wool f
get tUa year's batchca. IH bet." Rat-Snap b goaf, f
aotecdaadielbforaSc.6Sc.tl.2S.
Sold indfUtfifttocb by I
GRAHAM DKCO COMPANY,
I PROFESSIONAL CARDS
J. B. BALL, D. C.
CHIROPRACTOR
Nervous and Chronic Discuses,
BURLINGTON, N. C. I
OMre: OverNUiAlirr Rowland'* » "re.
Telephone*: offlce. »«i. Mesldeftre. It).
LOVICK H. KERNODLE, J
Attorney.at-Law,
GRAHAM, N. C.
S. C. SPOON, Jr., M. D.'
Graham, N. C- I
Office over Ferrell Drug Co.
ll' urs: 2 to 3 and 7 to tf p. in , and
by appoint ment.
Phone 9T| |
GRAHAM HARDEN, M. D.
Burlington, N. C.
Office Hours: 9to 11 ft. m.
and by appointment
Office Over Acme Drug Co.
Telephones:. once'* HI -Residence '2it .
I : _|
JOHN J. HENDERSON,
Attoraey-al-Law
GRAHAM. N. C.
Olllea over Natloaal Baakal Alaawac j
Tn s. COOK:.
Attorney-at-La «**
f rR4HAM, .... N. 0
Ofln Patterson Building
8«ooad Floor. . . -1
l)L Will UOTfl. JR.|
. : : DENTIST : ? e
ftrafeaa, .... North Carollaa
OFFICE IN PARIS BUILDINQI