THE ELON COL LEGE WEEKLY. January 11, 19] 1. DRUGGETS rULL STOCK RUGS, DRUGGETS, MATTING, PORTIERS, I.ACE CURTAINS WINDOW SHADES, MADE TO ORDER. BURTNER FURNITURE COMPANY, GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA. People’s House Furnishing Company. HIGH POINT, N. C. Wholesale and Retail House FumisherB and Jobbers. IiIANTLES, GRATES, TILE, A SPECIALTY 1890 s, I9IO ELON COLLEGE. A young, vigorous College for both men and women. On Southern Railway, sixty-five miles west of Raleigh, the State capital, and seventeen miles east of the thiriving city of Greensboro. THE LOCATION IS DELIGHTFUL; WATER PURE, CLIMATE HEALTHFUL. Plant valued at $150,000, is modern in comfort and convenience. Steam heat elec tric lights, water and sewerage oonnections with all buildings. Courses Lead to A. B., Fh. B., and A. M. Degrees. Emmet L. A. B., LL. D., President B. A. SELLARS & SONS, High Class Dry Goods- AND GENTS’ CLOTHIERS AND TAILORING MERCHANTS. MAIN STREET, BURLINGTON, N. C. FREEMAN DRUG COMPANY. Burlington. North Carolina. Are the leaders in Drugs, Chemicals and Toilet Articles. CAREFUL ATTENTION TO MAIL ORDERS. Alamance Insurance (Si Real Estate Co. Insurance. Loans and Real Estate. CASH CAPITAL, ?30,000.00 MONEY LENT through this Company on real estate is secured both by mortgage and Company guarantee. The lender receives 6 .per .cent, interest—3 .per .cent,, promptly every six months—and is not bo thered about interest collections. I-* TVT W. K. HOLT, President, R. M. MORROW, Vice-President, W. E. SHARPE, Treasurer and Manager. n. B. SMITH. Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Furniture and House Furnishings, Phone 239, BURLINGTON, N.C. We have recently received another large shipment of Rugs and Art Squares. We can please you as to pattern, color, quality and price in this as well as other lines we handle. We have the most complete stock ever shown in Alamance County, in House Furnishing Goods. M. B. SMITH, BURLINGTON, N. C. JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY AND THREE OF HIS POEMS. One of the sushine souls amongst Amer ican journalists and authors, is James Whitcomb Riley. He is 57 years old, having been born in Greenfield, Ind. 1853 At the age of twenty he went to Indian apolis and began work for the Indianapo lis Journal and has resided in that city ever since. His poetry, published in In diana papers, soon attracted wide atten tion, and, being written in the Hoosier dialect, won for the author the title of “Hoosier poet.” Mr. Riley’s first vol ume, a collection of his poems, appeared ten years after he went to Indianapolis and was entitled “The Old Swimmin’ Hole, and ‘Leven More Poems.” The pseudonym under which it was published, and under which Mr. Riley still writes, was Benj. F. Johnson, of Boon. We are told that copies of this first edition are very scarce and command a high price, a copy having sold in New York not long ago for $28.00, more than twenty times what the book sold for when first published. Mr. F. G. Darlington, of Indianapolis, who is a great admirer of Mr. Riley is making a collection from var ious editions of the Riley books. This' collection now numbers more than one hundred and thirty-five volumes of all sorts of binding, from paper-backs, or no binding at all, to costly vellum. Mr. Riley’s second volume, “The Boss Girl,” appeared in 1886, and is very rare also. It is quoted in the New York rare-book market at $25.00 a copy. These things attest the great popularity of an author who is still livinar. Usually first edition copies do not become so much in demand until after the author’s death, and sometimes, not even then. One can buy rare leather-bound first edition copies of seventeenth century English authors as cheaply as one can some of Mr. Riley’s first edition copies. This is not because Mr. Riley is a man of rare and rich thought, or that he is a great literary ar tist, but rather because he is a soul who dwells close to the average human heart, and he is full of hope and tender sym pathy. He and Bill Nye were friends and traveled and gave readings together from their writings, in Nye’s life time; and Mr. Riley still gives readings from his poems. These exibitions are very popular, for al most everybody is acquainted with more or less of his verse. It is said that his poem “An old Sweetheart of Mine,” has had more readers than any other poem in the English language, Gray’s “Elegy in a Country Churchyard” excepted. 0 The following three poems are in such happy keeping with the spirit, which every one would like to have for himself, and to see also in his fellows, that we select them from a varied collection. Those of us who may feel that we are of those whom cruel fortune hath scratched, or who are down in the dumps, these lit tle poems will help: In a Friendly Sort o’ Way. When a man ain’t got a cent, and he’s feelin kind o’ blue, An’ the clouds hang dark and heavy, an’ wont let the sunshine through. It’s a great thing, O, my brethren, for a feller just to lay His liand upon your shoulder in a friendly sort o’ way! It makes a man feel curious, it makes the teardrops start. An’ you sort 0’ feel a flutter in the re gion of the heart: y You can look up and meet his eyes; you don’t know what to say. When his hand is on your shoulder, in a friendly sort o’ way. Oh, the world's a curious compound, with its honey and its gall, With its cares and bitter crosses, but a good world after all. An’ a good God must have made it—least ways, that is what I say. When a hand is on my shoulder in a friendly sort o’ way. All of us have felt and we understand what the poet meant in these simple but life-touching lines. And in the next is a plea, gentle and persuasive for one to put gladness in his heart in place of gloomi ness. Just to Be Glad. Oh, heart of mine, we shouldn’t worry so! Wliat we have missed of calm, we couldn’t have, you know! Wliat we have met of stormy pain. And of sorrow’s driving rain. We can better meet again. If they blow. We have erred in that dark hour, we have known; When the tears fell with the showers, all alone. ere not shine and shadow blent As the gracious Master meant? Let us temper our content With His own. For we know, not every morrow can be sad; So, fordgettting all the sorrow we have had. Let us fold away our fears And put by our foolish tears, And through all the coming years. Just be glad. Then in this final poem is an appeal to add to gladness the greatest of all heart qualities—love for our fellow men in the hour of defeat, distress, and disgrace. In tliese three poems is linked a chain of hu man helpfulness not to be despised of any one. Let Something Good be Said. When over the fair name of friend or foe The shadow of disgrace shall fall; in stead Of words of blame, or proof of so and so, Let something good be said. Forget not that no fellow being yet May fall so low but love may lift his head; Even the cheek of shame with tears is wet. If something good be said. No generous heart may vainly turn aside In ways of sympathy; no soul so dead But may awaken strong and glorified, If something good be said. And so I charge ye, by the thorny crown. And by the cross on which the Saviour bled. And by your own soul’s hope for fair re nown. Let something good be said. The Internal Revenue Commission ers’ report shows that many more mil lion gallons of intoxicating liquors had been produced and consumed in the Unit ed States during the year ending June 30, 1910, than during the preceding year. In 1910 tliere was produced 156,237,526 gallons, an increase of 22,786,771 gallons ov r 1909. This shows that the decrease in production in the prohibition States has been more than counterbalanced by the increase of production in the license States.