'he Alamance Gle vol. xxxyi. GRAHAM, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1910. NO 18. So It may be from overwork, bat the chances are It front an in active LIVERS . With well conducted LIVER one can do mountains or moot without fatigue, It adds a hundred per cent to ones earning capacity. It can be kept In healthful action by, and only by - - TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. FOR ; Your Watch Clock and Jewelry Repairing. . hadleyI&:loy gkaaain, c When your stomach cannot properly digest food, of Itself, It needs a little assistance snd this assistance la read ily lupplled by Kodol. Kodol assits the stomach, by temporarily digesting" all of the food in the stomach, so that the stomaoh may rest and recuperate. .. . Our Guarantee. 82 . mm not benefited the drncgist will at HI M'SllilS We Are Sow Ready Indigestion nee return your money, uoai nesitatei u; r antral win tell yon Kodol on these terms The dollar bottle eontataa tVi tlmee aa much - ea th Mo bottle. Kodol Is prepared at the laboratories el li O. So Witt a Co., Chloaca GrahamJDrng Co j FREE TRIPiopAe PACIFIC COAST ARE YOU ONT ' of the many thooe and who ."want to " exnlore thi AVon CerW i n J suns ir n MAGAZINB; -lias inetirnted a new department, whose " Special work it is to put within die Mtl very om anjBpportnnity to e the FAR WEST. Writs for hemple Copy, ii ' tj - ti ' :t i F" foil prtMjn Uw 'r Sunset Travel r Glob 16 Flood BalldiBd, Sea Francisco, Cat VV,M'Y" 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trsdc Mama larvae Mnetnf a skatrb and dMrtfMna flklr iMfUin onr opinloa frM whihr aa "ttoa w rohablrpM''4 oB.at Moa.MrMU.onetonll. oa PMH Mot tr. UIVM uancr tor wnral ptwtt PaMoui uim tonm.k Muu A Co. noalre mcum, Khooli.ra. ta tha Sdecan: i:r.ca MlaUon ol uiv mmuod loarnaL TVM. St a : foar nontka, ai. aoM by afl aail.ala. ARE YOU UP TO DATE If yon are not the Kkwi Obetteb is. Subscribe for it at once and it will keep ton abreast o the time. : Foil Aj)ektedPndfepatcli- AH the' ncws-foreigii, do tic, national, state and local nth time.- ' Dailj News' and Obserrer $7 P yeari 3.50 for 6 moi. 4 Weekly North Carolinian 4 P"" Yar. 50c for 6 moa. KEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO, Raleigh, N. C . : The North Carolinian and Thb AlajtuscE Gleaxxk will be aent one .year for Two DoHars. Ch in ad ranee. Apply at Th GLEAjrxg o fT.ce. Graham, N.C of V 1 SHOWINGTHE ALBUM The Old Plush Volume Pictured the Family History. A: TREAT FOR THE VISITOR. 8heLearned All About the Twins and Aunt Jane's Little Love Affair and : Sister Gertie's Narrow Escape and a Whola Lot More Besides. .les'm, that's my marriage certifi cate, and them pictures pasted on It Is me and pa the day we was married. No, he wasn't sick, but he was so scared it made him look peaked. Do you like to look at photographs? Most everybody does, I guess. Walt till I get the album, tes, it is kind of a pretty cover real plush. I got It off a book peddler lady dollar down and 50 cents a month. ; Them's twins. There was two of them. They looked Just like you see them there. One of them is my hus band, but nobody can tell which he Is now. Sort of creepy, ain't it, not to know whether your-own husband is one twin or the other? One of them died when he was sixteen, and that broke the set I think It is the sweet est picture in the album, they look so simple and harmless. Just like two lit tle calves. Gnin'nia Jones used to make their clothes herself. You'd nev er guess It. would you? She used to lay the cloth In two thicknesses and cut put two suits at once. 'If one of them bad been u girl she couldn't have done It. Turn over the page. That's the gentleman Aunt Jane Dearly married He looks like a col lege professor, don't he? He was so refined and meek and so eloquent at prayer meeting. But hg wasn't a pro fessor; be peddled Grlgg's Infallible cure for hog cholera and lectured on temperance. He was awful poor in his health, and the minute Aunt Jane set eyes on him she made up ber mind to marry htm. Sbe was forty, and she usually got what she wanted, and ev erybody said it was a thousand chances to one that sbe would get him. But just when Aunt Jane was sure she bad him be got wind of It He went back to Massachusetts the next day and died -peaceful. Turn over the page. That's my sister Gertie and a bass Singer we "used to have In the choir. His ' name was Spung Launcelot Bpung and he was a barber by pro fession. Him and Gertie was engaged for six weeks, but sbe fojd out he had a wife and six chlldreu't Boston. so she didn't marry him. He was the sweetest singer! You'd never Imagine he -bad a wife and stepchildren If you could have beard him sing. Ain't It awful how sinful people can be an" vet look so Innocent? Gertie took on awful when she heard the facts about him, and she .wouldn't get engaged to anybody else for a long time, and you know what that means for a cbolr singer. Turn over the page. " Sue Hartwick that is, one of my old girl chums.. She ran-oft with a cattle buyer and got ' married, but that wasn't until five years' after this pic ture was took. She had a lovely char acter so light and playful and that fond of handsome clothes. I remem ber the day sbe had that picture took. She'd been to a picnic with a travel ing gentleman from Cincinnati and sot eneased to him. I helped ber trim the very hat sbe has on. It jtss a green straw with roses, one red and one bins and one yellow. It matched her complexion lovely. Sir was a dark blond with red hair. Ob yes. she always smiled that way on account of one front tooth being out. Turn over the page. .Thafs my Aunt Phoebe by marriage the day she was married. Ain't she sweet? The basket wasn't hers, it belonged to the man that took tbe picture. - Neither was the curls all hers, though they didn't belong to thf photograph man. I've got them now laid away tUI they come In handy. 1 tell pa it's a pity It ain't man's hair stead of lady's, snd then he could wear it Baldness seems to run In his family. His father was so bald thst be ne-er used s brush and coral, for forty-two years; used to comb bis i.t, --uh a flannel rag. That dress Of Aunt Phoebe's Is the lowest necked anybody on either side of our famllj ever had. but then she was a great one for society. Turn over tbe page. Ellis Psrker Butler In Reader. '- Queer Legal Oaths. Ti Siberia. In tbe wild Ostayaks law courta. the natives swear by tbe newly erered bead of a bear, .which U Im plored to subsequently rend sod de vour them should tbey perjure Ibem aelve. while In Aam the epposlaf witnesses tty bold of a chteken by Its feet snd retain each one-half as the clerk ef the court chop It huwo. By undergoing this ceremony they sre considered to be pledged to 4 like fate in the event of their swearing faheiy. Chicago Jqnrnal. tawed His Life. TJon't chide me for carrying a re Tolrer. This little gna saved my lire Tlow errfllng! Tell me about lt" - was starving, and I pawned It. -Cleveland teader. ' ' Th aoemfuL -What sre .the seats of t scon- "Sdnt yen ever bsvs a friend psse tnm perched p la a floe sutomoUler -Louisville Coarler JcrnsJ. "fw ,nd sword sr. bot slow -Wot destrtctto. la compsrlsoa with the fcebbler.-Weele. Hi. Little Jefc. owwcd,Uk.to.ert. . caatatar " " , -Lootavins Uorw' H-V.t -A cynical bachelor toseatag to some JTVho were dc tof f 35. aaked far his news oa U qw- 00: Tt,tT d voted st the rl?yr and escaped- PLANET PROBLEMS. We Really Know Very Little About the Celestial Bodies. "The amount of ignorance not yet removed concerning the planets Is very great," writes E. S. Grew. "We do not know, for example, whether the planet Venus rotates. If it does it may possibly have a life and a vegetation like our own, though we suspect that It Is clothed In eternal cloud. Of Saturn's rings we cannot say whether tbey consist of millions of tiny moons like brickbats or whether they may be even smaller still a veil of shining dust. Of Jupiter we can only say that It Is covered with clouds, though of tbelr substance we know nothing, and; according to Professor Lowell and Sir William Huggins, some of the bands we see on it may be rifts In the clouds- revealing the body of the plan et Little lines crisscross these bands. Photographs of Jupiter taken at Flag staff observatory seem to indWIite that these lines, too, are the upper clouds of Jubiter. "But whenever we see a planet we see It badly. Even Mars, the most clearly revealed of them all, Is con stantly obscured by a refracting haze, so that even of the famous 'canals, though nearly 500 In -number, only a few are perceptible at a time, and an unskilled observer would probably not make them out at all. Sandstorms, sometimes snowstorms, sweep the sur face of the planet, and because the winds of Mars are very gentle and slow moving these occurrences take a long time to pass by." London Family Herald. HE AMUSED THE CUBS. Then the Young Lions Took a Turn at Amusing Him. A negro attached to an African hunt ing party met with a curious adven ture, says an English paper. Wander ing one day from camp, be surprised two Hon cubs at play and thoughtless ly commenced to amuse tbem. He was only too successful. The big cubs gam boled fearlessly about him and to bis dismay refused to desist when he wished to leave them. Realizing the danger to which be would be exposed should tbe mother appear, be began to run, but tbe cubs refused to be shaken off and In their play scratched his legs iu fearful fashion. That the creatures were thoroughly enjoying themselves was evident from their manifestations of delight, and before long their unusual cries brought a lioness leaping to the spot. Trembling in every limb. -the negro faced the growling animal, while the cubs.-continued to Jump up at bim, eager for further caresses. The en raged lioness moved round uneasily In a circle, man and beast keeping their eyes steadily on each other. Sev eral times the lioness crouched to spring, but the man, from fear, never shifted his gaze. At length, after what seemed an age, when the negro was reudy to drop from exhaustion, the animal suddenly called her cubs away and disappeared into the surrounding scrub. An Artist's Struggles. Professor vou Herkouier. the famous painter, had such a struggle to gain a living In his early days that bad It not been for his Inexhaustible stock of patience and self confidence be would probably have abandoned art entirely. He sold his first picture- for 2 guineas and later on earned for a short time a couple of pounds woekly for a woodcut wblcb he supplied to a comic paper. This modest salary coming to a stop, he was at bis wits' end to know what to do. He applied to a troupe of minstrels for an en gagement as zither player, but In vain, and then took to designing carets. For some years he battled with pov erty, achieving no success until he obtained employment on a weekly il lustrated JournaL-Londoo Globe. First Oil Wall. ' In the year 1859 E. U Drake of Tltusvllle. Pa, drove tbe Brat oil welL Like other pioneers, be was regarded aa a dreamer or a fool, and e.ple laughed at tbe Idea of tapping a ! terranean oil lake. It waa only by pretending that be was In aesn b of a. bed of salt that be wae able to gel drillers to work for him. When the borer bad reached a depth of h'Ut seventy feet Drake found liU antici pations realized, snd be was the poa ieasor of so oil well wbk b. wllh lb aid of s harfd pump, yh-hled blru twenty-Bve barrels a day.-New Turk American. Malacca Sticka. The most costly walking efk-ka come from tbe Malay archipelago, and Ibe most highly prised stick Is tbe malsrea csne. To Injure etrslgbtnres Ibeae .ticks are reared Id glaas tubes.- A good malacra should bo a yard long. lot leas tbao an loch la diameter al Ue upper end. perfectly trslgbf sod .mootb snd of a very oar cbocolatf color, slightly mottled. It shoo Id I be oaed delicately, for tbe lacquer which aires It Its beautiful gloas Is easily chipped.- Loodoe Graphic ' - ' But They lira Mswainar-Wben a girl H mar ried sbe Is apt to-thlok tvr troobkaa are over. airs. JHwclns-Tea: "be dose ot seemtd reelbw ibirt 1blB rsa go mias with a Mrs.-ri"aH'bla Bee ord. ' - ' ' " . " v - Relief. ' " -jty ptlear I tsxed very often." -Wett. I anlr yoa rHIrf la the mat way." -WhaV HulT" -jt.rtos H "- Baltlow' Aa fc-sa. - " . The fUal ThU. - - -What's doing la the way ef amneo mentrr asks tbe fcewcomer of tbe old tnbsbitant it esdea. -Baseball game every afteraoon,'' aaswers the old tnbabitaat 'Bear bail? Ton don't mean It! That's great!' I was a fan from way back oa earth. Oa tbe eqaare, do yea have baaeban every dayT" -Sure thing.- ... -"By gtagerthio place salts nasi Baseball! Bay, this can t be aefl, theor -- - ' , -Tea, ft la Tbe borne trass always leeea." Ufa . .. 1 PHYSICAL FEATS. Man's Limited Powers Compared With Those of 8om Animals. By means of mechanical devices, tne product of his own brain, man can sweep along a prepared track at nearly a hundred miles an hour, over the surface of the sea at thir ty miles an hour or through the air at seventy-five; also he can build towers more than 200 times his own height or dive into the earth about 700 times his own height. But strip him of his machines and machine made instruments and he compares rather poorly in the mat ter of physical achievements and capabilities with certain of the low er animals. . Uonsider, lor instance, mans sprinting or running powers. His best speed for a mile is some four minutes twelve and three-quarter seconds, which gives a total of about fourteen miles an hour. The gray wolf lopes along at an easy twenty and thinks nothing of doing sixty miles in a night. The hunted fox has been timed to run two miles at a speed of twenty-six miles an hour. A race horse at full speed travels at thirty-two miles, while a greyhound, which is, 60 far as is known, the swiftest of all four leg ged creatures, runs at thirty-four miles. Man also falls behind in jump ing. Roughly speaking, six feet in height and twenty-three in width are the limits of man's achieve ments in this line. A red deer has been known to dear a wall ten feet high, the chamois can do at least a foot better, while the springbok of South Africa will shoot ten feet up in the air just for the fun of the thing. Some of the beasts of prey are even more wonderful in their ath letic achievements. The black ja guar, for example, can reach a branch fourteen feet from the ground. The greatest jumper in the world is the kangaroo. The sort known as the "old man" has been seen to clear dcadwood fences ten to twelve feet high, while it can leap with case a width of fifty to sixty feet. The record width clear ed by a horse is about thirty-seven feet, while the ostrich in running clears twenty-five feet at a stride. Fish also are of some account in the athletic field. To see a salmcn leap up, perpendicular falls five or six feet high is a remarkable sight. Many of the predatory fishes can travel at the speed of a torpedo boat. In the matter of mero muscular strength man is not quite so far be hind the rest of the animal world, for trained athletes have achieved wonderful feats of lifting. Still, where is the man who could run up a mountain side carrying two others as heavy as himself? A grizzly bear has been known to carry a bullock twice his own weight up an incline of one in three. Harper's. The Pianist's Vacation. An interesting story has got into circulation concerning a fumous pi anist. Unable to tear himself al together away from his art while enjoying a rest in Switzerland, he had a piano taken to a secluded chalet in a wood and every day went there olonc to solace himself. By chance one day some one strayed into the wood and, hearing the- music, spent a pleasant hour tlnnk ing in the sounds irora tne cioseiy shuttered chalet Next day he went again with some friends. At the end of a week the virtuoso discov ered that a big crowd was enjoying his performance. At first he ten inclined to blame this intrusion on his solitude, but better thoughts prevailed, and during theremain(kr of his slay he threw open the shut ters and played his very best. Lon don News. A Teuch of tarcasm. Jlr. Skinflint (on receiving a dep utation from his employees) Well, what's the matter now? Clerk (spokesman) We want to be paid every week instead of every month. ' ' ' , "Ugh! You get all that's do to you, don't yon Y1 -Yes, sir." . "And promptly to a dsyf ' "Yes, sir." Then why do you. want to be paid weekly instead of monthly?" "Please, sir, it's so wa won't be fettin' the lumbago carryin' home onr wages." London Answers. ' , Attendeel U IL . Hardware Dealer What was old Krankey kicking about? t' Clerk He wanted ten pounds of nails; said he'd pay for them and take them home himself; wouldn't t7ust ns to deliver them, he said. Hardware Dealer Surly old codger I I hope hell sweat for ft. Clerk Oh, I took care of that I threw in an extra tea pounds, and ha never knew it Philadelphia Press. - - partial ta Ataimala. "Cborca-ls aba food of Gotbaat-OB. yea; sbe married a Wan tract beart-teakera BtaUemaa. -So yo believe ta tetopetfcyr -Tea." aaawerad Mr. Meektoa. -Tboagk Henrietta Is Bailee away I cam tU exactly what sbe la thinking aboat tola mlnala." -And doc aba know year anewer?" -She doea. Sbe Is wishing I weald harry along that bund red aba wrote for, and sbe knows res worrying a boat where tba cash coming from." Washtagtoa Star. SYSTEM ON A DINING CAR. Every Inch of 8pace In Its Little Kitchen la Economized. The kitchen of a dining car is a striking example of what can be done in economizing space. Every inch is used. Water tanks are suspended from the ceiling. One wall is lined 'with the big range and heating ovens, whilo on the other are storage boxes, receptacles for pans, pots and other utensils and a row of cupboards up under the ceiling. At one end, between the kitchen and the dining car proper, is a lit tle pantry, which serves as a sort of vestibule. That is where the wait ers place their orders jm3 receive dishes. Every separate article of food and equipment has its place, says the Woman's Home Companion. Every corner and nook in the car has a particular function. The sil ver is in one place, the milk and cheese in another, the meat in an other, and so on through tho list Everything perishable is kept in a refrigerator. While the Car is in action the conductor from his position be tween dining room and kitchen keeps his eyes upon the ten tables and endeavors to see that none of the diners is neglected. For all the supplies on the car he is held to strict account. On his trip sheet, as it is called, is put a list of every thing taken on tbe car when it starts out. A record of all articles sold is entered upon the sheet, and when the car comes home, again all that has not been sold must be on hand. The equipment of a dining car conforms to standards, just as Ho locomotives, trucks, Tails and ties. Dishes aro made according to es tablished patterns, ench piece of china having the company's mono gram upon it. The sumo is true of the linen, silver, menu holders everything. Thus a loss can be eas ily traced. The waiters nre allowed $20 a month for breakage. All damage in excess of that, though, they have to pay for, and the cost is divided among them equally. Gallant Victor Hugo. During the latter years of his long life Victor Hugo was yery fond of surveying mankind from the van tage ground of tbe top of an omni bus. He used to make long excur sions through the gay city perched on the top of the homely bos, which . he seemed to prefer to any other vehicle. An amusing and charac teristic anecdote of the great poet, who was most courteous and atten tive to the lovely sex, it related by renew. One fine day, as he was enjoying a nua under tnese condi tions, a fascinating young woman climbed up . to the summit of the tramcar on which he was seated and steered her way toward the only va cant place, which happened to be the one next to him. sue was about to take possession of it when a sudden jolt sent her instead into Victor Hugo's lap. Aa soon as she had recovered herself the pretty girl turned to the poet and, her fair cheeks suffused with crimson, said, "I beg your pardon, monsieur." "And I," ha replied gaUantly, "thahlc you, mademoiselle." - Tongue Twietara. Repeat these sentences rapidly the quicker the better: The bleak breeze blighted the bright broom blossoms. , : Two toads totally tied tried to. trot to Tedbury. Strict, strong Stephen Stringer snared slickly six sickly silky snakes. Susan shin eta shoes and socks. Socks and shoes shines Susan. She ceaseth shining shoes and socks, for shoes and socks shock Susan. ' A haddock, 'a haddock, a black spotted haddock; a haddock spot on the black back, of a black spotted haddock. Oliver Oglethorp ogled an owl and an oyster.' Did Oliver Ogle thorp ogle an owl and an oyster ? If Oliver Oglethorp ogled an owl and an oyster, where are the owl and the oyster Olirer Oglethorp ogled? San Francisco News Letter. Oainf One Bettor. Ma faither's a soger," said lit tie Scotch lassie. - "An ma faither, too," said ber playmate). , "Ah, bat ma faither's a brave num. He's been in war, an' he's got s haJe gang o medals. An' he's got the Victoria cross. The king pinned it on him wi' his ain hand!" breathlessly announced lassie No. 1. "An' ma faither's brsrerer l" cried the other little one. "He's been in dozens tf wars, an' he's got gangs an' gangs o medals an' Vic toria crosses. An' he's got a bonnia wndden kg, an' " with a trium phant shriek "tbe king nailed it on wf his ain hand." London Ex press. , That combs are of ancient erlgu Is prove by tbe fact-that they ware found Is the raiae ot PsmaaU. Bread as snaae owes many efher grafe than wheat aad rye. The bread f India aad China frequently has muet for Km snaia tagredieat. Peaa, leans and ether seeds are aawd tor tba making of cakaa. and hs Sovtb America tba eaawsvw cake la oe.lv aa anfermented Da4 aaade frees tapleca. w ..m Met. tna. mi cut he placed tne eat cakeeof ScoOaad and the revs' cue, e wm v North Carolina Needs Immigration. Extracts from Ad.lreta of Claroaeo Poe, Edi tor ot The Progressive Farmer and Qazotte Before tbe North Carolina Press Associa tion, Wrlghtsvllle, N. C, June 9, 1010. North Carolina needs and must have a largor proportion of white people. The whole South, in fact, is still too sparsely settled. Our eleven Southern States, excluding Texas, support only 10,000,000 people of both races, and only 10,000,000 white people, while the same area in Europe supports over 160,000,000 white people. And it must be remembered that Hp to a certain point which we shall not reach for centuries yet, and other things being equal, prosperity depends upon density of population. If you owned the continent of North America, but lived on it alone, or if a hundred or a thousand men owned tho continent and lived on it alone, it would be worth practically nothing to them. Population makes wealth, provided that It is normally intelligent and efficient. TttE SORT OF IMMIGRATION WE NEED. Of course, we do not want the lower-class European immigra tion. If we can got immigra tion from England, Scotland, Ira land, Germany, Holland, Sweden, etc., the countries whose blood has gone to make up pur vigor ous American stock it would be of great help to us. : Wo are all of ns such immigrant ourselves, or descendants of iuinuirrants. From Some countries vt Southern! and Eastern Europe, on the other hand, immigration is of a decid edly lower order and objection able because of a low standard of intelligence and efficiency. On the very same principle, however, immigration of a nor mal or high standard of intelli gence and efficiency is desirable. Such lmtnlgratipn can be had, and ought to be had in some meas ure perhaps from our English, Scotch, Dutch, and Irish kinsfolk across the sea but chiefly from our Northern and Western States. For years now hundreds of thou sands of the most enterprising and progressive fanners in the Middle West have been going in to Canada with its long hard winters and bitter climate, not only giving up American citizen ship, but actually paying two to three times as much for land in fit InkUinltiilils mntnn mm l.J nf Tna lamn fa 1 1 1 tt nnmm amlu 1 uv SVCBjieiV AVAVIlll'T V VIII SSI CWSMr in the South. Wo ought to have bronght these men to the South. They know our institutions, our language, they are industrious, thrifty, wide-awake, and many of them are of Southern ancestry who should naturally come back home. Let's bring them back. IMMIGRATION TO SOLVE THE BACK PROBLEM. If there were no other reason for advocating such Immigration from tbe North and West, I should favor it as our surest de- liveranoe from our race problem. The proportion of negroes to whites is too Urge in every South ern State, and my hope Is that ultimately the tides of migration and immigration will equalize population until the proportion of negroes in no State will exceed 20 per ceut. We must train the negro the more ignorant be is tbe greater the burden on the South but at-best the process will be slow, and at present it would probably not be too much to say that in considering our whole popu'atlon, including our great constructive leaders and captains of industry, the average negro in North Carolina in econo mic worth and efficiency is only half aa useful as the average white man. . In other worda. In rating general average of efficiency we should put the white man at 100 and the negro at 50, so that a county half white and half ocgro would have an average efficiency of Ii, or a handicap of 25 l"r cent as compared with a county with an exclusive white popula tion of A normal degree of effi ciency - . " Whether or not the difference is as much as I have Indicated, cerUin ft Is that the larger the proportion of whites, the higher the average of efficiency, the more prosperous will be our every in dustry, end the better It will be for every Individual citizen, in cluding the negroes themselves. : two WATS TO BOLD CT - WORTH CABOUSA. There ere Just two great ways to build up North Carlina. First and of paramount importance is the way which Governor Aycock emphasized unceasingly in his ad ministration the Education of all our people and I should only supplement this by putting more earnest emphasis upon practical education, education that trains for efficiency, not education suit ed to the urban ceuters of Europe and the North, but education suited - to the needs of a great, awakening agricultural Common wealth such as ours is and must be. And second only to education which Governor Aycock empha sized, is Immigration which Gov ernor Glenn set o..t to further, but to which the State did not respond because It was not made clear that the immigration was to be of the right sort. 4,000,000 INSTEAD OF 1,200,000 WHITE PEOPLE. . Now let Us start right not by seeking immigrants from South ern r Europe, but by advertising our resources to the thrifty, en terprising and progresssve farm ers of the North and West men of our own stock who now only need an invitation to make them come, riinerson was right when he said that "every man who comes into a city with any purchasable talent or skill in him gives to every man's labor in the city a new worth," and if an igr norant negro slave in the old days was worth $1,000, certainly we may assume that a thrifty and intelligent white Westerner, bringing not only himself, but in most cases substantial accumula tions as well, should bo worth many times as' much, as an asset to the State. The last census year North Carolina had only 1,200,000 white people. It should have 4,000,000. Consider for a moment how much uvete influential our papers would be, how much more important every institution in the State would be, how much more varied would be our industries, how much better would be our schools and. roads and railroads, how much more attractive would be country life in our thickly settled communities and how much easier it would be to get telephones and water-works and trolley lines and local libraries and all the advan tages of twentieth century lifel Let us take as our watchword "Education and Immigration " A DREAM. OF NORTH CAROLINA U FITCKK. For seventy years now North Carolinians have been going West to build up the new States of that great empire. Now let us wel come back their children and neighbors to holp us build here a great, prosperous and populous Commonwealth, where the masses of the people trained to as high standards of' efficiency as any where in the world, shall develop a symmetrical and well rounded civilization ; a splended and force ful democracy of trained, intelli gent and thrifty home-owners from among whom shall come not only A Jefferson and a Marshall, not only a Janscs J. Hill and A Thomas A. Edison and A. Seaman A. Knapp, not only men whom all the nation shall know as leaders In industry and in public affairs, but poets and seers, sculptors and artiste if not a Titian at least a Reynolds or a Millet, if not a Michael Angelo at least A St. Gaudens or a Ward, If not A Shakespeare at least A Browning or a Tennyson, if not a Savonarola, at least some great religious lead er who shall pot the church into vital relations to modern thought and give 'it A new baptism of spiritual power U these until North Carolina ahall stand forth as baring developed the beet- rounded civilization of which any American State can boast. "It cured me," or "It saved the life of my child," are the ex-n-estona too bear every day about Chamberlain's Colic, Chol era and Diarrhoea Remedy. This is true the world over where this valuable remedy has been intro duced. No other medicine la nee for diarrhoea or bowel complaints has received such general appror aL The secret vt the success of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is that it coxes Sold by all dealers. The Southern railway Wednes day put in operation the double track service between Salisbury and Concord, and service on the double track from Concord to Charlotte wfd begin on the29thr Often T&o Kidnejs Aro - Weakened fcy CTcMTcriT Unhealthy Kidneys Hake Impure Blood. Weak and unhealthy kidneys are re sponsiblefor much sicknese andsnfferinjj, - wereiore, n aooney trouble is permitted to. continue, serious re sults are moat likely ; to follow. Your other organs may need at tention, Dut your aua- . neys most, because they do most and . -( : anouiu nave sucuuuu first. Therefore, when yourlcidneys are weak or out of order, ; you can understand how quickly your en- -tire bodv is affected and how every organ - HI (. I -J MP seems to fail to do its duty. " If yon are sick or " feel badly," begin -: taking the great ' kidney remedy, Dr. . Kilmer's Swamp-Root. A trial will con- , vince you of its great merit. ,. The mild and immediate effect of : Swamp-Root, the treat kidney and bladder remedy, is soon realized. It stands the highest because Ita remarkable health restoring properties have been proven in thousands of the moat distress ing cases. If yon need a medicine yon should have I et&e i ! best. Sold by druggists in fifty-cent and one-dol lar sizes. You may I nave a sample botue J by mail tree, also pamphlet telling; yon how to find ont if yon have kidney or bladder trouble, if en ti on this papes-. when writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. Don't make any mia take, bnt remember the name. Swamp- Root, and don't let , a dealer sell yon something in place of Swamp-Root if yon do yon wiU be disappointed. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DAMERON & LONG Atlonseys-etXew . E. S. W. DAMERON, J..ADOLPH TjONO, Phone' MOB 'Pbonetea, Piedmont Building, Burlington, N.C. Holt-Ntobolson Bids;, eraham.N. a DR. WILL LONG, JR. t I t DENTIST ill: Graham, "" North Carolina 0FFICK m SIMMONS BUILDING racoB a. L050. j. nun Lom. , LONG & LONG, - A.ttorn)ra and Coranawlorai ah Xevw GBAHA1I, X. S. O OOKIv , Attorney-law. GRAHAM, i MMM I .MU..-: M ...... 1 N. C 001c Patterson Building Seoond Floor. . . . . , loan Oaar Bra ear. , W. F. Brsrvar, Ja ' BXNUM &BYNTJM, , Vttornerysi and Counawlora t Zjw ' QKENSBOBX, Si". ' Practice rerolarlr Is the eourta of Ala- nance eonalv. Anea,Miy eadaches This time ol1 the year , are signals of warning, v Take Taraxacum Com- Dound now.. It may. av9 you a spell "of f e ver. It will regulate, your bowels, set your liver right, and ;cure , your indigestion. a good ionic. - An honest medicine , araxacum Lo, MEBANE. U: c. KILLtmi couch iD cunc the lu::c3 I Dr. tiizz'G a he , UiwUWliks rf!9 sfOUCH3 Y7 wu AOLL.A t a tm m all most oipit" r O V ARA KT iJk O S A 1 1 o f A . OB StOKXT JiXJ-UaDi-X SCISSORS snd ' Xnivea are easily mined if not properly gronn 1 when being aharpenad. llj i'- '. them sharpened right and t s I: t cut aa good aa new give me at Will sharpen anythir lrci a ax to a pen-knife. Cnar- r s. B.N. Teas is, u.s c O A. O T CI i J tfca ' iSt'! r -