The Alamanc 0 LEANER. V(j j. XXX, GRAHAM, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1904. NO. 23 E MBS. CECELIA STOWE, Orator, Bates Noos Olnb. 176 Warren Avenue, nmmnn. Iix.. Oct. 22. lWz. Vnr nearlv foar Tean I suffered bom OTarian troubles. The doc tor insisted on an operation a the i w to iret well. I. howerer. ftrongly objected to an operation. Mf husband felt disheartened a veil as i 10 uimu. wiw. mm eomsn i a disconsolate plaee at bert.. A friendly druggist adrised him to get a bottle of Wine of Csrdoi for me to try, and he did to. 1 began to improve in a few dan and my recovery was very rapid. With in eighteen weeks I was another being. Mrs. Stowe's letter shows every woman how a home is saddened by female weaknes and how completely Wine of tardm cures tnat sick ness and bni vms acrain. n health and happi- do not go on suffer- ing. Go to your druggist today sod secure a 91.00 bottle of Wine of CarduL, : ...'.... :. F6I4 Z. T. - HADLEY GRAHAM N. C. Watches, Clocks r and" Jewelry, Cut Glass And Silverware. WEyes fitted. tested and glasses ESTABLISHED -1893 Burlington lb sura nee : Agency INSURANCE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. . Local agency of Penn Mutual Insurance . -r k, Company. , -. Best Life Insur-. ance contracts now - on the market. - Prompt personal attention to all orders. Correspondence solicited. JAMES P. ALBRIGHT, Agent. S- O OO Attoniy-it-Law, GRAHAM, . - - N. C. OOtoe Patterson Bailding 1 Second Floor. . . . . . ffwiLLiM3i(l,JR. ; . . DENTIST . . . .. : - V - North Carolina WICKh SIMMONS BUILDING faeaeaat-Uvac. W. P.Brwva, J a. ' BxfiUJJ &BYMJM, A.ttoruiy and f Hiiieaiii svt Lew ' UUCJNBBOBO. t. , Pnetlee rwnlrl In tha aoarts of Ala eoaair. An.'? JACOB. una. J. CUCKB WHO. ; LOXQ & IAONO, Attom, and Ccmnaelor at Tawr. GRAHAH, K. C m0M EOB'T C. STEUDWICK Attorney -st-Law, . QREEXSBORO. X C. Practices in the courts oft Ala 014 nee and Guilford counties. C.-2 r":---i Csc-h Cure WHEN BOYS FIGHT. Incident That Carries Every Man Back to Barefoot Days. Although victory, actual or pro spective, of course never was doubt ful (either you were winning or the other fellow was winning, according as to which did the telling), at some times it appeared to a spectator more decisive than at others. You were feeling very spunky that noon when amid your preserves you descried a stranger boy, but civilly you challenged him. One may witness two bluff but wary fox terriers thus approach each other. accost and investigate. "Hello!" you wagged that is, said. "Hello, yourself 1" wagged he. "Say, what's your name?" you in quired, as you had every right to do. "Puddin' tame, ask me again, an' I'll tell you the same," he replied insolently. At the unmerited rebuff you stiff ened. "Better not give me any of your sass!" you growled. "Pooh! What'll you do?" he growled back. "I'll show you what I'll do." "You couldn't hurt a flea." "I couldn't, couldn't I?" "Naw, you couldn't, 'couldn't I.' " Walking circles around each oth er, after this fashion you and he sowed crimination and recrimina tion, while larger and larger waxed an audience, hopeful of seeing them spring up as blows. Only when the flurry came did you discover too late how much tall er and stronger and older than you he was. Your bleeding nose showed this to you, and, cowed and weep ing, you retreated in bad order. "I'll tell my big brother, and he'll fix you!" you growled threatening- iy-. ... .... "Aw, he am t got any big broth er jeered the heartless crowd, who saw no pathos in your abused organ. This was true. You had none. "I'll tell my father, then," you wailed angrily another empty boast. And, still sniffling and fear somely gory, with the handkerchiefs of yourself and your one faithful companion quite exhausted, you reached the haven of a friendly pump. Xou had not been whipped not exactly. "Wot licked, didn't your' unKina- ly commented various friends and enemies. "I didn't, either I" you asserted, indignant. "I had to quit 'cause inv nose was bleedin'. It takes more'n him to lick me." J2Ie gavevoua bloody nose, just the samee." You would not admit so much as that. 'He didn't either. He never touched my nose. It bleeds awful easv. It bleeds sometimes when you just look at it don't it, Henf" Edwin Li. Sabin m ueniury. His Disability. The lawyer was examining him concerning His quaiincations as a uror. "Have you ever served on a ju ry?" he asked. frKTv. m.w a-na-nraroA tVlfl mall. "I've been drawn a good many times, but I was always too smart to get caught on a jury. "What's that, sir?" interrupted the judge sternly. "Do you boast of your smartness in escaping jury duty?" "No. vour honor," said the man. "Not at all. When I said I was too smart, I meant that I was always excused because the lawyers thought T wasn't imorant enough." Chica go Tribune. Ha Was Golna to Be Something. A colored man in Philadelphia re quested his employer to release him so that he could go south. "What do you want to go for. . "fw I's called to a church down "Hailed to a church? What are . nninrr til ofl r p coin' to be sumfin. I dunno whedder I be de pasture or de sex tant or de Testuremsn, but I s go- in' to be sumfin." Success. . Only a Puppy- The youth had just left college, i!. Kia Millar. ana ni suiuiwu, . ., was high. At horns the all engross ing subject was the young mans future career, and he was discussmg with his parent whlcn oi we pro- -fesaions stood most in need of bis Thn fathers laes oi wa .Kilifv was disfustuudr low. - " , , - - lui.. I think," said tne oia man, u you naa Dier aaoru vu v - stools in my office." - - f The young man drew bimsell up, mrA tha hiiA collar srew tight as be trove to swallow his righteous an ger. Folding his arms, he asked: "IS toy servant a uugi "No, but youH growf" eame the crushing response. Unfortunate Interpelatiew. ' Lawley (expert shorthand report er) I ssy, James, the boy from the newspaper office has called for the report of that lecture. Is it finished? . James (a novice) All but a short ten fence in the middle of it, and I cant for the life of me make out from my notes what it is. LrleyOh, just put ia great applause" and let it go. : "s James acts on tha suggestion, and the lecture is sent for publication with the doctored part reading: "Friends, I will detain you but a few moments longer. (Great ap-nlan,)" THE STAR L0VERSv Anolent Japanese Legend of the 7th of July. Have you ever read in the "Sto ries From the Wonderlore of Ja pan" about "the meeting of the lovers?" The legend runs thus: On the .banks of the silver river of heaven (which we call the Milky Way) there lived a beautiful maid en, who was the daughter of the sun. Her name was Shokujo, and she was so serious and so busy that all called her the "weaving or spin ning princess." At last the sun king thought to marry his daughter to Kingin, a young man who kept a herd of cows on the banks of the celestial stream, but no sooner was she married than her character seemed to change utterly, and she became idle and forsook her loom and needle. The sun king thought the hus band the cause of this and deter mined to separate the couple. So he ordered the husband to remove to the other side of the river of stars and told him that hereafter they should meet but once a year, on the seventh day of the seventh month. The sun king then called myriads of magpies, which formed a bridge over the flood of stars, over which the lover-husband sorrowful ly crossed the river of heaven. Then the magpies flew away, filling the air with their chatterings. After this the young wife return ed to her loom and worked diligent ly every day, but every evening the two would go and stand by the banks of the river and gaze longing ly at each other. Once a year they were allowed to cross the bridge of birds, except if it rained, when the. magpies would be swept away. Hut usually the sky was clear on the seventh evening of the seventh month, and the lovers met with great joy. So in' ancient times the people of Japan celebrated this date, hoped for clear weather and wealth and happiness for all, while the girls made a wish that they might be skilled in needlework. This is the legend of the 7th of July, when the herdboy star and the spinning maiden star cross the Milky Way to meet each .other. A FAMOUS CONSPIRACY. The Plot to Liberate Marie Antoinette and Her Children. After King Louis XYI. had been guillotined at the time of the French revolution a bold plot was formed by a few royalists to liber ate Queen Marie Antoinette, her two young children and Mme. Eliza beth, the king's sister. ' These con spirators in chief were a curiously assorted trio. First in rank comes the Chevalier de Jarjayes, who had married one of Marie Antoinette's ladies in waiting, a shrewd and ex perienced soldier. The second and third of the chief partners in the scheme were nailers oi tne queen, Toulan and Lepitre. Toulan, once a book and music seller in Fans, was now a member of the commune, an indefatigable, gar. resourceful fiaavm hnnpntlv renublicsn bv COn j - -g -j viction, but with a redhot Gascon heart for s woman in danger and distress. Lepitre was a schoolmas ter and rhetorician. He had a seat on the provisional committee, and, more important by far to the inter ests of the conspiracy, ne was pres ident of the passports committee and could furnish " the necessary passes. A very likely plsn had been elab orated. On a dark night of winter, Toulan and Lepitre being in charge of the prison, the queen and Mme. Elizabeth, disguised as municipal officials, were simply to walk out of the gate, as Louis Napoleon, in his carpenter's clothes, walked out of the chateau of Ham. The little Mme. Boyale was to be dressed like the child of the prison lamplighter, and a loyal kitchen boy was to carry in a basket the small Louis XVIL Jsriayes would have three cabs in readiness, and the fugitives were to tnske for the coast of Normandy, where an English boat would stay for them. The scheme offered very considerable difficulties, but they were not insurmountable. But the poor queen's luck was cold. Lepitre, a romantic coward, failed her when the time came to furnish the -passports. One other chance was left De Jsriayes snd Toulan, doubly strong in their devo tion after the defection of Lepitre, S tanned an escape for Marie An )inette alone, but she would not lesve her children. "It has been a beautiful dream," she wrote to Jsr jsyee. It wss ths last dream of lib erty that sheha4 Corralling m CHeat. A leading king's counsel recently ssid at his club in London that he was indebted for his rise ia the world to the active co-operation of a humble but resourceful individ ual. In the dar when he was a brief less barrister he went one afternoon to read in the Inner Temple library. He had ot been there long when Kk email errand dot appeared. greatly excited and breathless from running. ' . "If you please, air," the boy gasp ed, "a gentleman ia waiting for you at the chambers with a brief. He can't get out, air. I've locked him in." - I Tonther the barrister and the bor hurried back to the chambers, and the gentleman with a brief, who was amused at his capture, afterward became a most valuable j client. . - Labor Unions Require Self Restraint By HENRY WHITE. Secretary United Garment Workers ef America N many trades the unions have beoome so strong that the regulation of their present power is at least as im portant as the acquisition of more power. As the power of the unions increases so do the dangers multiply. PROSPERITY IS ADVERSITY. We have seen reaching the zenith of its strength and all the struggle and sacrifice made to gain that point lost through lack of self restraint The re sponsibility must lie with the leaden, who are in a position to know the limitations of the union and the obstacles that beset it better than the rank and file. It is idle to poohpooh the organized opposition to the labor move ment. It is growing WITH STARTLING RAPIDITY all oyer the country. It indicates an aroused feeling or a revulsion of senti ment on the part of many toward the movement Until recently the preponderating public desire was to strengthen the working class so that it could deal with the employer on more even terms. ' Now dread has arisen that the unions cannot be TRUSTED with power, that it will be exercised to the injury of themselves and society. IT IS APPREHEN8ION OF THE DANGER THAT COMEt PROM AN IRRESPONSIBLE AND UNOUIDED POWER THAT HAS GENERATED THIS OPPOSITION. Beauty and Brains Combined In Woman By Miss MARY COLS MAN. Pramlnant New York Lawyer ST T is a theory of long ago that a woman who is beautiful is NECESSARILY not an intellectual one. -In the olden days when a woman was fair that was considered all sufficient HER FACE WAS TRULY HER FOR TUNE, and it mattered little whether she had a cultured mind, or, Indeed, if she had a mind at all. If a woman was daring enough to choose to be an individual and determined to enter upon a career, one and all alike concluded that she must be utterly wanting j in personal charms. A woman by law or medicine was always, L grace and was at once put down BY But all this was long ago. The American woman has proved tnat a beautiful woman may also be a CLEVER and an intellectual one. She stands Veil out as an example of what Gladstone declared to be a perfect one. "WOMAN," SAID THE GRAND OLD OCCASION, "18 MOST PERFECT WHEN A Man's Color; Should Not Affect His Punishment For Crime white man has in gress, the army, the navy, and IMMENSE RE SOURCES OF AIL KINDS, and yet how is be superior to the Turk in the treatment of a colored culprit f If bis 'Christianity does not restrain his bloodthirsty passion in what is he superior to the half clad African! We are pointed out as lawless individuals of pas sions because in these forty years of freedom we have not come up to his expectations. But what of this man with thousands of years of civilization t What of the burning at the stake of a woman and fight ing for her ears as savages f And what was the crime of this woman t SIMPLY HER LOYALTY TO HER HUSBAND. And what was the crime of this man t He gave shelter to his brother, and when the white men came to take his brother away he shot them. 1 believe that every culprit should hare the treatment that be longs to his crime, but that his punishment SHOULD NOT BE, DE TERMINED BY THE COLOR OF HIS SETN. I appeal to the American people. I appeal to Caesar drunk to Caesar sober. OUR REMEDY IS NOT IN RETALIATION. WE MUST BE STRONO ENOUGH TO RESIST EVERY IMPULSE TO RETALIATION. . If the white man's religion is defective, LET THE BLACK HAN SHOW THE WAY. Those who preach emigration have lost faith and heart ; The ship is not to be deserted because of stormy weather. If we cannot go forward, let us mark time. Here we have toiled, here our dead lie sleeping, and we hare no other home. 'But we claim here more than food and clothing we claim THE EIGHT to be honest and industrious. . ' The Passing of Simplicity WANT to say that WE ALL OO TO THE DEVIL ON 50,000 A- YEAR. At least a great many men I know are going to the devil on that sum, snd few are escaping It. . But how manr men erer went to the devil on simplicity I I VENTURE TO SAY NONE. Today we are raiabf pampered sons and daughters ia this new system, surrounding them with every luxury and idle satisfaction of deaire, and THEY ABE ROTTEN BEFORE THEY ARE HLPE. I repeat it, they are rotten before they srs ripe. 'And the boy in many eases are sinful before they srs bearded. .--'v.'-..-."' V"L SI. BJ ' ' . SUNDAY HAS TO A GREAT EXTENT CEASED TO BE A' DAY OF WORSHD?. Men rise at 10 o'clock, drive until 12, eat a dinner of twelve courses snd in ths evening hold s recep tion for their friends. Ths women snd children follow mucS ths same plan. LET ME TELL YOU THAT AMERICA, THIS) AMERICA OF OURS, IS QOETS LAST OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE THE HUMAN RACE, BUT IF WE PAIL BY DESERTING THE TEACHING OF OUR FATHER HEW INSTITUTIONS ARE LOST. , . . . , ' , -V AMERIGA'5 ; INCREASE- OF CRIMINALITY By Dr. O. P. LYBSTSN, CMeal. Cxawrt ea pHLE the population of ths w pweentnh CRIMINAL has increased 400 per cent inere are today in the institutions 'of the country 115,000 degener ateey f,:"f; isamae snd tr and excluding ths tares bbLUwb paupers. Chicago can equal la its corruption that fearfully eosnpt city Park snd also has the best and largest bureau of criminal Identi fication outside) of Paris. V ' ' ' ! There was never s boy born ia the world who was not sn Ia STLNCTXVE criminal His natural instincts are opposed to h Jaws which society has set up to A GREATER TEST THAN union after union destroyed after who elected to aid humanity either supposed to be witnout beauty or HER SISTERS as a dowd. MAN HE OP ' ENGLAND ON ONE IS MOST WOMANLY." Br Rev. W. H. BROOKS (Co tared! at New York his hands the law, the courts, con By or. mewtu DWKSIfT HILUt Of reekiya United States has Increased 100 GUARD toelf. . EVENTS IN GENERAL. Baaaa Draws Suarar Bee Seed eea Pratt Trees. By B. BENJAMIN, JR. Washington, D.- C.At a recent meeting of the American Beet Sugar association Dr. Gullowny gave an In teresting account of tbe visit of an ex pert to Europe, where he Investigated aome of the farms of France, Ger many and Austria where sugar beet seed la grown. Tbe result of bia ob servation waa that he believes aeed can be grown in this country that will produce a beet containing about 4 per cent more augur than the average in Europe or eighty pounds more augar per ton than yet produced. According to Dr. Galloway, an effort will be ipade to develop this feature of tbe Industry in Colorado, Utah and Washington. In germination tests of sugar beet seed, just reported by Expert Baylor, seed grown in tbe state of Washing ton excelled numerous varieties of for eign seed from aundry sources In near ly every particular. TraatMat ( Vrasea Frail Trees. Beports as to damage to fruit treee by frost, especially In New York and New England; have been somewhat conflicting. Professor Waite, patholo gist in charge of Investigations of dis eases of orchard fruits, after looking over the situation in the Hudson and Connecticut river valleys concluded that tbe damage la mainly to peach, Japaneee plum and pear tree, and the moat serious barm la confined to tbe lower levels and pocketa. ' He vis ited the orchards around Marlboro and Milton on tbe Hudson river and also those located at South Glastonbury, Conn., and found In eonveraatlon with the growers that as a rule, they over eatlmated the damage. In several case orchards were already cut down which would probably have recovered If given proper treatment. In bulletin 61, on fruit trees froxen in 1004, Professor Waite states that nearly all peach trees In which tbe bark is stuck tight at the critical point about two feet from the ground may be expected to pnll through, and many that have tbe bark partially loosened may recover. Moderate prun ing back, followed by good cultivation and. unless tbe land Is in very good condition, with a moderate amount of fertilising, Is tbe best course to pursue. CAVING OF RIVER BANKS. . Aa Jaamlaaa Seaeata la PlaatiaaT WlUews rev Fiwteetlaa. The most successful method of pro tecting a soft alluvial river bank is. according to G. 8. Clothier of the bo- wwrwntwn worn raoraornra btvbb sjuhl reau of forestry, to make It sloping in stead of perpendicular and to keep It covered with vegetation. Tbe willow is admirably adapted to holding allu vial soli In place. It Is fsr more serv iceable tor this purpose than walls of masonry, snd tbe facility with which It reproduces Itself by seed, suckers, sprouts and cuttings, both natural and artificial, makes Its use very simple and Inexpensive. The great difficulty with planting any sort of tree on perpendicular banks Is that the caving of tbe soil Is so rapid that tbe planted tree has no opportunity to get a start before It le nndermined and precipitated -Into the river. An excellent scheme has been proposed by Mr. B. Bayles of Kansas. Tbe plaa le ss follows: Green willow poles eighteen, to twenty feet long are secured In ths spring. Just after tbe Ice goes out of the stream. These poles are laid ea the ground near tbe bank two feet apart, with their butts all pointing toward tbe river. Woven fence wire Is then stretched along ever the polee and stapled fast to each on. Sections of wire about 100 feet long can be handled to best advantage. After tbe wire has been securely fas tened to tbe poles tbey are all poshed over the bank together, ea that the butts of tbe poles will fall and sink Into tbe soft mod at tbe wsteVs edge. As the bank esvee off some of tbe fsll Int soil will lodw en tbe wire, partial ly burying and weighing down tbe point, whh-b will consequently striks root and grow. Tbe wire will serve to hold the mass of wllllows together un til tber have become firmly rooted. Tbe ends of the woven wire should be made fast to wire cables running back ever tbe bank aome dtotance and fas tened to posts set firmly In tbe groand. Tbe earing snd erostoa of tbe beak will soon round off Its top corners, and the' growing willows et the water's edge win catch the soil ss It roll down the derlivify, causing a bank to form of Just tbe right slope to resist erostoa meet effectually. WaoabL or Japanese horseradish, a aew Introdnctioa of tbe department of agriculture, as not white, bat of a SeB eare shade of green asd has a fresh. ess sod sbarpoese so like that' of the horseradish of this country. Its eut ural prefer encee rearm Ne those of the feme aiuletaie and shades la lww What Tea Are TsMag Wbea you take : Grove's TssUess Chill Tonic becatue tbe formula is nlitnl . nrinlail on eVerT bottle snowing that it is simply Iron and Quinine in s taMeieas form. o Cure, No Pay. 60a It iant a difficult matter for a doctor to asscertain what ails s patient. All be has to do is to per form the autopsy. 4 " ' I mm. RELIGIOUS THOUGHT. I bis aieaae rraas the Teaehlaa f All Deaamlaatlaaa. Commune often with yourself. Be honest. Dare to look in your own sooL Rev. Henry Frank, Independent New Tork. , ew Tasaarhf lattarlaas. The Christian Stloutlsts and the Di vine Scientists and the splrituallats srs sll Unitarian in tbelr theology as well ss our sister church, the Unlveraallsts. This growth of the Unitarian heresy Is the result of scleutlfic ideas. Rev. Dr. Utter, Unitarian. Denver 04's ProsranaM. In every realm God's programme Is to move from tbe lower to tbe higher, from tbe simple to tbe complex, from the Imperfect to tbe perfect ' This Is the eternal law. and. since "God Is in this world, it must be moving on to ward tbe better day. Rev. Polemua H. Swift, Methodist. Chicago. Urimm. BreatalasJ a Milt 1m. To blm who believes that Jesus Christ is tbe King of ages, ths eame yesterday, today and forever, the scenes he passe tbrougb are living and breathing realities, with eyes en lightened by divine faith, be sees them re-enacted before him, snd he is him self a prominent actor therein. Rev. Dr. James 7. Looghlln, Catholic Pitts burg. Tvath mt the Besasveettoa. Christianity stands or falls with ths truth of tbe resurrection. If Christ be hot risen, then there ia no Christian ity. Tbe resurrection involves the whole story of the Incarnation He who has risen must have died, he who has died must have lived, and he who has lived most have bees horn. Thus ths empty tomb of Jerusalem proves the holy manger of Bethleheav-Bev. A. Lincoln Moore, Baptist, Kew York, aie-hteaaeaese aa s eases Hi. Only of the godly la It said-whatsoever he doetb shall prosper.; Oa tbe other hand, a positive curse Is pre nounced on the disobedient, and the essential curse le tbe lack et pros perity. The keeping of the Chriatiaa religion Is tbe greatest known prod near of prosperity. Instance every Christian nation. Nevertheless there must be many fools, for prosperity Is a fruitful cause of overthrow. Rev. Dr. O. Bkfc ley Burns, Methodist, Philadelphia. Cmm t CiMM. Men are not driven to unbeBsf by tbe failure to comprehend the hand which creates a universe, but to the ear which listens to music of an atom. Bin Is sot continued and multiplied on the earth for the lack of tongues to otter right eousness, but from tbe lack eC sancti fied ears on the part of those who preach It, ears so keen that the may bear among tbe discordant sounds ef earth every bit ef harmony that speaks ef hops for tbe life that utters tt-Bev. W. Everett Johnson, Episcopalian, New Tork. : - : Tha Mam Wha Valla, The world has laurel wreaths for what It calls success and forgetfsloess for the man that fane, ret history hae been mads end man redeemed by mea who failed to win applause. Tbe poli tic las who la "regular" gets tbe plaee. aa a rule, and tbe man who stands for principle, who makes a brave fight and gets defeated, le looked upon with pity. But It is fsr better to battle for the right la tbe face of certain defeat then to win In the wrong. The time will come at last when tbe crown will be given to the mas that falls. Rev. Brace Brown, Christian, Chicago. VmHr tha ttalveisa. , The universe la a unit There la aa much matter today to the grain as there wss tbe day God made tbe wertd. Verms change and are destroyed, but matter sever. What la tree of matter Is true of souL Made la tbe image of Ood, mode a lire by hie breath,, we have divine origin, and therefore all tbe souls In tbe universe are from him. Aa apple may be cut la a thsseead parts, and you may find all but eae. but your apple le not whole. Tbe aaV verse of souls divided Into aemb arises hosts, one gone, yea no longer have a unit Rev. a 3. Harris, CsJversanst, Atlanta, Oa.- .. Chrtstlaa rattawahta. We are saved by fellowship. Oh, what a great and oftea forgottsa truth! We are aaved by fellowship!, first, by tbe holv fellowship of Jesus Christ. and then we are also most profoundly lnflueocsd by our fellowship wttB other. Hew careful ought we all to be of what we think and do and say! The existence ef tbe Chrtetiaa church Is accounted for, first of all. of coarse. by ths plaa of Gd and his purpose ta Christ to secure a glorious church ss tbe bride of tbe greet bridesoem, Je sus Christ, but after that the church la accounted for In tula fact of a hea ly fellowship of kindred soda, which the church makes possible and which It reallaas for every true child ef Ood. Rev. Dr. B. Trumbull Lee, Presbyte rian. Philadelphia. ; Tha aeesaa Mnii There is purpose behind an that Is and Is to be. If any soul awed by the majesty and sublimity ef the match- lees truth to which tbe day or n rectioa gives emphasis asfca. -Why am I to Bve Immortally r It may Sad aa ewer when tt consider, oa the hand. Its own actual and possible sett sad. ea the ether, the actual and p Me eoadltkme of other eoola end the moral universe. We are all mentally and morally more tbaa we were at btrth, bat what naiBMless heights ef Intelligence asd goodness tower before as toward which we have not a yet made tbe enghteet advaaee! We have an made coutribetieae toward the lae- prevsmsat of other Uvea sad the as vaacement ef the klsgdom ef heaves. hut hew much remains ef the work that most be done before all mea perfect, even as their rather la heaves Is perfect and harmony rvtjroa throagb aot tbe meral aalverset-Rev.- iVsder- lek P. Priest, Ualversallst Chicago. Ta Com s CaM la Oaa Oay Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the if It &ila ta mire. K. W. Grove's signature is on each box. 200. A rirl mar be wise, but if she wants to marry she is foolish to anneer more inteligent than the man she is trying, to induce to pay bar board for hie. Women as Wtfl ta llzn Are Made fIbcrcL!3 ly Kidney ; Trouble, . Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis courages and lessens ambition- beauty, vigor sua cheerfulness soon disappear when the kid neys ore out of order, or illsnssed-' Kidney trouble has become so prevalent that it Is not saoommoa for a chOd te be bora afflicted win weak kid neys. If the child artn atea too oftea. tf the arine scalds the flesh or tf. when ths child reaches aa age when tt should be shls to control the passsgs, B la yet afflicted with beeVwelUng, depend pon It, the cause of ths difiievlty is kidney trouble, sad tha first step should be towards the treatment of mess Important errsas. This unpleasant trouble Is due to a diseased cooditioa of the kidneys sad bladder sad not Is a habit as most people suppose. - - Women as well as mea are made mis erable with kidney sad Madder Irosble, and. both aeed the same great remedy. The mild and ths hn mediate effect ef wamp.Reot Is seen resBied. It Is sold by drurvfsts, fas Bfty- t sizes. Youmsyasvsa sample Dotus ny man free, she pamphlet tsB- IngaB about tt. mctasme; many ef tbe thousands ef testimonial letters recehred sVoni efirffws cwrade 1b wi raluf Dt KflflMf , fc Co- Binghamtoa, N. Y, be i OUS Duat aaha aav m auaa HwaaiD-Raot. Dr. Hoot, ma tae sua less. aaaaaAaaaaaaaaAAAAAAAAAAAei m lies This time of the year are sicrnals of warninrr. Take Taraxacum Com pound now. It may save you a spell of fe ver. It; will regulate your bowels, set your liver right, and cure your indigestion. r A good Tonic. An honest medicine. . ME BANE, I N. C. alAAAlAAiiAilAAillAiAASAIS a v . ... , ,-- .-., ..... SsBata, WUllaaaa aajj Undertakers Embalmers, BURLINGTON, N. C fc 3 moBBss. . .: v ' . b i .a." "" .i i: ' . ' : We manufacture -And are prepared to . F nrnish on short notice : AH kinds of ; Rough and dressed Lumber and 1 &!!;;"!! . - . Sash, Doors, , Blinds, moulding, etc. Mantels and scroll work A specialty. , GRAHAMJN.C. oooooooooooooooooooooctr" Subscribe For The Gleaner. 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