WINTER COVER CROPS.
p Every farmer owes it to him
self, to his family and to poster
ity, to take the beat care of his
l%nd thai he possibly can; to
maintain its fertility and to keep
it from washing away^
Investigators, Whether scien
tists or practical farmers, have
found that winter cover crops of
any kind prevent land, in a large
measure, from washing, and when
turned nnderthe following sprifig
make it more productive than if
no crop had grown on it.
An experiment covering a num
ber of years, in one of ihe North
Western States, showed that more
* plant food food was lost from the
land during the months when no
crops were grown on it than was
Uken off in the regular summer
crops. If this was true in that
State where they have long and
cold winters when leaching is im
possible for weeks at a time, how
vjnuch more would it be in North
Carolina with her open winters
when plant food can be leached
from our soils almost any week
during our winter months.
A ton of green rye contains, ac
cording to good authorities, about
6.6 pounds nitrogen, 3 pounds
phosphoric acid, and 14.6 pounds
potash. A ton of green wheat
contains 10.8 pounds nitrogen, 3
pounds phosphoric acid, and 14
pounds potash. Green oats con
tain just a ltttle less plant food
than does green wheat. A ton of
green crimson clover contains 8.6
pounds nitrogen, 2.6 phosphoric
acid, and 9.8 pounds potash. Red
clover, Bur clover and the vetches
contain more plant food in their
green state than crimson clover
does. The wheat and rye m«n
tloned above was probably grown
on fertile laud 'which explains
their high percentage of nltrogpn,
for it is an established fact that
crops grown on rich land contain
;• more than when grown
on poor land. For that reason
grain grown on rich land his a
• higher feeding value than thai
grown On poor land. It may be
fwell for as to remember this when
growing grain for our own own
feeding purposes,
p Rye, wheat and oats take nitro-
gen from the soil and store it in
. " the plant, thus saviug much of
> - this costly element of plant food
■ '* 6 would otherwise be leached
land by our winter rains,
or bunches and thslr
f cs and leaves retard the flow
oi water and act as brakes which
will prevent to a large degree the
[ washing of our rolling lands. The
clovers save the land from wash-
ing in the same way and in ad
dition to this are beneficial by
being able to take nitrogen from
the air through the agoncy of
baeteria which adds to the fertili
k ty of tho soil. But to grow these
k latter crops successfully the soil
R must oontain the bacteria peculiar
■J to the particular crop grown.
H It has been the experience of
T many of onr farmers that any
, crop grown after a wlnter-oover
crop, when turned under at the
proper time in the spring, and
K" -. disked well before and after turn-
I ing, will produce a groat dsal
|| moro, often as muoh as 00 par
lent, more, than if no winter
over crop had been grown. Ths
sod for a oover .crop will coat
om one to -five dollars an aore
tofdlng to kind and quantity of
*1 ussd. This should save to
i soil and aid to the next year's
Sp more than twioe the cost of
Sow at the rate of 10to»O
| pounds crimson clover sesd per
I aero and oover lightly with har
raw or cultivator. These ean be
f aowsd in growing crops, on stub
f ble' lsnd, or after peas. Sow from
- 80 to 80 pounds of vetch per acre
If sown with small grain, and if
I. s«\wn alone put from 40 to 00
W t M|ds per aore. Rye should be
I£li )t the rata of one to one
11 yfialf bushels per aore.
| J A application of manure, or
V Jm 800 to fiOO pounds aeid phos
u yphata, par sore and 20 to 00
fy/ pounds muriate of potash oo
sandy or gray land, will be help
ful to the clovers and vetchea.
For rye or other "«»** yftif it
|f msy bo better to add 2 per oent.
BL It is now tims to oommeaos
iting theee crops in. When
vut In cotton fields it is better to
fas in that way no cotton will
inhooked out in covering the
I /Tut it) the crop that will suo-
H oesd ben in your locality and ax
. pariment with other crops In a
E small way until you are assured
£ they will make satisfactory growth
|Tj» your land and under your con-
T. B. Parkxr, Director Co-
Inoperative Kxperi men ts, N. C.
Decrease of ffegro Population in The
South.
Charlotte Obwrver.
Recalling that 30 yean ago
John T. Milner, one of the most
scholarly Alabamians of his day,
expected the increase of white
population and a decrease of ne
gro population to wipe out the so
called race problem within 30
years, the Montgomery Adver
tiser finds cause for astonishment
in the vital statistics of the recent
census on racial lines. While the
negro population still increases,
the increase is smaller every year,
and removal to Northern States
makes the increase in the South
smaller than elsewhere.
Twenty years ago, aa the Ad
vertiser notes, there were f6nr
Southern States which contained
more negroes than whites, as
against only two—South(Carolina
and Mississippi—today. Louisiana
and Florida have become white.
"Both Louisiana and Florida,"
remarks our contemporary, "are
enterprising States in which en
ergetic and successful efforts
have been made to secure white
immigrants from other States, In
1890 Florida had a large excess of
negroes over whites. In 1900 the
white population had so increased
that it was 67,000 in excess of the
negro population. In 1010 its ex
cess of white amounted to 140,000.
Louisiana, which also had a ne
gro majority in population in
1890, showed an excess of whites
of 67,000 in 1000, which has been
increased to 150,000 or 160,000 by
the count which has just been
completed. The New Orleans
Times-Democrat says the
negro population in Louisiana
has been decreased by the ravages
of the boll weevil, and the inabili
ty of the negroes to meet new
agricultural conditions. The
Times-Democrat thinks that when
the census figures relating to
Mississippi are made public there
will be shown a large proportion
ate increase of the white popula
tion of Mississippi and a probable
decrease of the negro population
which showed the large excess of
260,000 in 1900."
Diarrhoea is always more or
less prevailing during September.
Be prepared for it. Chamber
lain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy is prompt and effectual.
It can always be depended upon
and is pleasant to take. For sale
by all dealers.
John Jacob Astor, millionaire,
and Miss Madeline Force, whose
proposed marriage has been much
discussed, were married at New
port, R. 1., Saturday aweek. The
ceremony was performed by Rev.
Joseph Lambert, a minister of the
Congregational Chnrch. '
1100— Dr. £. Detchnn's Antl
Dlurectic may be worth to you
more than 9100 if you have a
child who soils bedding from in
continence of water daring sleep
Cares old and yoaug alike. It
arrests the trouble at once. 11.
Sold by Graham Drag Co.
After he had slashed the throat
of Mn. Albert Vaughan, daugh
ter of a white fanner, shot and
killed one of bis own raee and as
saulted an aged asgrsas, Arthur
Dean, a negro, was taken in hand
by a mob of white men and ne
groes Saturday a week a»d hanged
from a mill shed on the principal
street of Augusta, Ark.
INKMW What Yea Art Tsklag
When you take Grove's Tatt
les* Chill Tonic beoanse the form
ula is plainly printed on every
bottle wowing that it is Iron and
Quinine in a tastless form. No
cure, No Pay. 60c.
A dispatch from Peking, China,
under date of the oth, says for
three days no messages have been
reoelved from the hundred for
eigners gathered atChing-Tu, the
capital of Sse-Chuen province, for
safety from the mobs which have
been running riot in therarround
ing districts for some time past.
The Chinese viceroy ordered the
foreigners to leave the city and it
i* believed they are now making
their way towards the Yang-Tse-
Kiang, about 800 miles away.
Thirty Americans are among the
refugees.
For bowel complaints in ohil
dren always give Chamberlain's
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy ud castor oil. It is oer
tain to offset a ears and when re
duced with water and sweetened
is pleasant to take, No physician
can prescribe a better remedy.
For sale by all dealers.
After alapeeqf M yean, Oapt.
Matthew Webb's feat of nri
mtng the English channel has'
duplicated by Willi** T
VJ TTlUian 1. M»wf~
gpes, a Yorkshireman by birth
and a naturalised Frenchman. It
was Burgess' sixteenth Attempt,
he luring Unit essayed the task
in 1904. Bargees started on the
job Tuesday, sth, at 11.10 am.
and Anishad at 9.00 next moratag
making the passage in 2S hours
aad 35 minutes. A motor boat
accompanied him aad it hi esti
mated that the sigzag coarse of
the swimmer oovered a distance
of Co mite*, fr : ->i -
rr &£-
Aray Wants Men Who Can Ride.
WuMoftoo Dl«piUh.
The War Department is strag
gling to make th 6 American caval
ry soldier a perfect, fearless, daah
ing rider—like his forefather* in
the days of the Indian campaigns:
With that, end in view, Captains
Conrad S. Babcock and Henry R.
Richmond and Lieut. Adna R.
Chaffee, all of the cavalry, are
abont to leave this country for a
year's course of instruction in
equitation in the French school
at Samar.
The advance of civilisation
across the continent and the ad
vent of the bicycle and automo
bile are the causes of deterioriz
ing in American horsemanship, in
the opinion of army officers.
In the early days, they point
out, when the West and great
frontiers of this country were only
a wilderness, the United States
possessed numberless natural
riders whose daily routine of duty
waa performed on horseback.
With the flow of population to
the West and the horse losing its
hold as a means of locomotion, all
this has been changed, they con
tend, aud the perfect rider today
is the exception and not the rule.
Upon the return of the officers
from France they will be appoint
ed instructors in the American
mounted service schools. By this
process the War Department ex
pects to gain all the advantages
of the well equipped foreign in
stitutions and thus develop the
American schools of equitation.
As usually treated, a sprained
ankle will disable a man for three
or four weeks, but by applying
Chamberlain's Liniment freely as
soon as the injury is reoelved, and
observing the directions with each
bottle, a cure can be effeeted in
from two to foar days. For sale
by all dealers.
' A dispatch from Hankow,
China, says the American mission
at Wuhu has received a report
that 100,000 persons have been
drowned by the floods caused by
the water' flowing over the banks
of the Yangtze river. Theflooda
ace the worst that have been ex
perienced in many years. It is
estimated that more than 90 per
cent, of the orops have been de
stroyed.
"I have a world of confidence
in Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
for I have used it with perfect
success, n writes Mrs. M. I. Baa
ford, Poolesville, Md. For sale
by all dealers.
Almost identical with the
•hooking fatility that befell Lieu
tenant de Grallly, the French
array aviator, near Troyes, France,
Saturday, sth, one of his country
men, M. Leforrestier, while mak
ing a flight'at Hnelva, Spain,
Tuesday, 6th, was burned to
death in midair when the motor
of his aeroplane exploded. Flang
ing from a height of MO feet, the
body of the unfortunate aviator
was almost completely incinerated
when it reached the gronnd.
- —— DflgittftcA iM iMsflMtaSr ' -
It is not the quantity of food
taken but the amount digested
and assimilated that gives
strength and vitality to the sys
tem. Chamberlain's Stomach and
Lira Tablets invigorate th*
stomach and liver and enable them
to perform their functions natur
ally. For sale by all dealers.
More than 800 progressive Re
publicans from the foureornea of
Minnesota at a banquet in Minne
apolis Thursday night, hailed with
aoolalm Senator Robert M. LaFol
lette, of Wisoonsin, as the logical
standard-bearer ofadvaaced Re
publleaalsn" hi the next presi
dential campaign. Resolutions
ware adapted pledging rapport to
tbo Win In Senator "flat,
last and all the time," la the coo
teat for the presidential nomina
tion.
—BCL9BORB and Kahas an
P?P*Hy
whsn being sharpened. If yon want
them sharpened right and made to
cat as good aa aaw give me a trial.
Will sharp* anything from a broad
axeto a pen-knife. Charge* moder
ate. B. N. Tessas, tins office.
Ths actual money invested in
hotels ia Swltaeriand is 1190,000,-
000. Thn payment of ths inter
est on this sam, ths maintenance
of the properties and a profit on
ths snormous business, whioh am
is practically all paid by tourista
who go to Switxerland in poniult
of health, recreation and pleaaur*.
A DfeatAd Sight
toH. C. Barn am, cl Freeville,
N. Y., was ths fsver-eore that
had plagusd his Ufa for yean in
epitsof many remsdiss he triad.
At last he ussd Bucklsn's Arnica
Salvo and wrote: "it has entirely
healed with seareely a scar left/'
(leafe Burns, Boils, Exema, Cute,
Bruises, 8 waitings, Corns and
SSai D ""S' ** #t
rug
"Let's Beg No Crumbs M -Breve
Words and Tree.
Speaking aa the son of a Con
federate soldier, the writer is sor
ry to see Senator John Sharpe
Williams—who is indeed feat
winning recognition as about the
the strongest man in either branch
of Congress—falling into the er
ror of asking a Federal appropri
ation for a Confederate monu
ment. We are sorry, too, to hear
any talk of asking Federal pen
sions for Confederate soldiers. It
haa been fifty years now since
Sumpter, and through all thia
time the South has kept its self
respect, asking no favors and
wishing none. Let it be to the
end. There is a fine paeeage in
Brown's "Lower South in Ameri
can History" in praise of the
Southerners who, "masters so
long, were maaterful to the last";
who never fell a-whimpering in
the hour of defeat, hat were of
the mettle of the man who "goes
on with the atrong haud, and if
he fights his fight to a finish, can
turn his fSce to the wall and die
and give no sign." We should
cherish no bitterness, but we
should keep our pride. It would
be a tragic and pitiful anti-elimax
to one of the world's mightiest
dramas, It the South, after its
proud reoord of a full half-cen
tury, should now come a-whining
for a few miserable crumbs from
a pension table foul with graft
and fraud. If Federal pensions
are ever to be given the few re
maining Confederates, or Federal
money used for Confederate
monuments, let the North first
make the offer. But for the sake
of all our dead and all our paat,
let not the South humble itself at
this late day by begging Federal
help to take care of the few re
maining heroee who once fonght
our battles. We stand an excel
lent ohanee .of gaining public
contempt by such a policy, and
no chance of gaining anything
else-
A High CJrada Blood Purlfler.
Go to Alamance Pharmacy and
bay a bottle of B. B. B. (Botanic
Blood Balm. It will purify and
enneh your Mood and bnild up
yonr weakened, broken down aya
tem. B. B. B. ia guaranteed to
cure all blood diaeaaea and akin
humora, such aa
Rheumatism,
Ulcers, Eating Sores,
Catarrh,
Kcsema,
Itching Humors,
Risings and Bumpa,
Bone Pain a,
Pimpl s, Old Borea,
Scrof u a or Kernels,
Suppurating Sores, Boils, Car
buncles. B. B. B. oures all theae
blood trouble* by killing thit
Slaon humo* and expelling
>m the system. B. B. B. ia the
only blood remedy that can do
this—therefore it euros and heals
all sores when all else faila, $1
per large bottle, with directions
for home cure. Sample free by
writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta,
oa.
Slnco the beginning of the prce
ent year the total number of
deaths from cholsra in Italy has
paased the 80,000 mark. Tenor
Mid superstition are oausing out*
breaks of violence among the in
habitants, who consider the
authorities responsible for the
safjurge. Health measnres are
opnoaed by the people, who think
that the measnres have been put
Into eifeot for the purpose at
spreading the infection, firmly
Mieving that it is the desire of
the authorities to kill, through
poison, a large number of the
population in that way to get rid
of the poor.
*• XM4U etapWark.
When you doctor orders you
to stop work, It itaDtn jroo. "I
OMVjm say. Yon kwnrra
are weak, run-down tad failing
in health, day by day, but you
mo* work as loaf an /on can
stand. What you need ia Elec
tric Bitten to give tone, atonfth,
aad rigor to yonr system, to pre
▼ent breakdown aad build you
up. Don't be weak, sickly or ail
ing when Beetrie Bitten will
benefit you from tike flret doee.
Thousands bleea them for their
glorious health aad strength. Try
them. Every bottle ia guaranteed
to satisfy. Only 60c at Graham
Drug Co.
The route along whloh Preei
dent Tafl will thread kia way for
13,000 mllea has beea definitely
mapped aad the penciled line
runs through U States, while
orar 100 cities KM red dotted,
showing pansss far speeches on
tariff, reciprocity, arbitration,
conservation and Alaska. The
President's trip win start from the
South station ia Boston Sept U
aad fiaish aft Washington Novem
befl.
___________
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine
Tablets. All drurgista refund
W* Gro vL"Jtanato2
He Saved the Constitution When
Split Thrasteaed. jr •'.
Hickory Duooonkt.
The Mocksville Record am
Stateevllle Landmark have bee
recently talking about Gen. Wm.
B. Davie, one of our greatest men.
While they have him still upon
the stage we want to say that
through him North Carolina won
the honor of saving the constitu
tion.
The fight between the large
States and the small ones in the
convention of 1787 had waged fu
riously. The small States were
opposed to having Senators as
WQH as Representatives chosen
according to the population., fhey
threatened to disrupt the conten
tion by withdrawing if this was
passed. It was then that Davie,
representing one of the big States,
declared he would stand for the
same substantial representation
from all the States. The whole
North Carolina delegation stood
with him—Richard Dob b s
Spaight, Wm. Blount, Alexander
Martin and Hugh Williamson.
When the vote came np on the
"Connecticut compromise," Mas
sachusetts, by an equal division
of her delegation, stood neutral.
Pennsylvania, Virginia, South
Carolina and Florida voted no.
Against that four Connecticut,
New Jersey, Deleware, Maryland
and North Carolina voted aye. •
Hon. Hannis Taylor, the great
constitutional lawyer, calls this
"the most brilliant and yet, also,
the most unfamiliar page in the
history of North Carolina"; and
he adds:
"If it had not been for thia
Commonwealth's great act of con
science in thus taking sides,
against her own interest, in favor
of thu Union, Washington's ad
ministration might never have
occurred; John Marshall might
never have presided over the Su
preme Court of the United States;
William Gaston might never have
sat in the Congress at Washing
ton. How pitiful a contribution
to civilization was the charge of
the Light Brigade at Balaklava
when we compare It with the act
of North Carolina's immortal
phalanx, which lockejl its shield
and saved the constitution at
Philadelphia."
To Replace Foreigners in Consular
Service.
Washington Dlip»toh.
The question of supplanting
with American citizens the great
number of foreigners who hold
positions in the consular service
of the United States will be taken
up with Congress at the next ses
sion, when the State Department
will ask for an additional number
of consular assistants to replace
men owing allegiance to other
countries.
These foreigners, employed as
clerks, sometimes occupy the re
lation of Vioe-oonsnl. The custom
of bringing foreigners into the
cause of the impossibility to Be
cure Americans for this eta-ieal
force far away from home with a
maximum salary limitation of
SI,OOO.
With a greater number of eon*
sular assistants, appointed by
competitive examinations, who
would be eligible for promotion i
right up through the line of the
consular service, it is
that the situation can be met.
In some casse the foreigners in
the service are also merchants in
the towns to which they are ao
credited. Officials of the Metal
Department point out that this
seems rather ipcongruous, in vleW
of the fact that the primary ob
ject of the consular to
promote JMMhbtfttaadih
l" ll.' U'.l'iii I|j It
yWT6#4i H#IM»
Every.\sa* a large number of
poor sufferers, whan*, lunge are
M«e and racked With eougba, are
urged to go to another climate.
But this is costly and not always
sun. There's a better way. let
Dr. King's New Diaooveiy cure
son, et Calamine, Ark., "when ail
else failed and 47
in weight. It'ssurely the kingof
all eongh and lung euree." Thou
troubles. Me and 11.00. Trial
bottle free at Graham Drue 00.
Ike State entomologist of Sooth
Carolina tamed ftfli esder prehib*
iting, after September 10, the la
portatlon of ootton Into the State
from Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma,
Mississippi and Lotrinlane, on ac
count of the boll weevil. Ootton
manufacturers this ii toe
drastic and the matter Sa tab*
further discussed at a conference,
In Wilmington Monday night
Jim shot Wal-
V * * J'- ,' 7 ■'
Bleb mood Ttme#-J)l«p«tch.
A new legal text-book, "The
law of Motor Vehicles," has just
appeared. The volume has 700
pages of decisions by State and
Federal Courts in automobile
cases. It should have the care
ful inspection of motorists, for it
lays down the principles of law
which must guide their future
conduct. ■
Interesting and important are
the decisions which hjive to do
with the rights of travelers afoot
aa against those in automobiles.
Here are some of the points madfe.
When there is any danger of a
collision with a person on foot,
the driver of the ear must not on
ly sound a signal of warning, bat
he maM reduce the speed of his
machine and bring it to a stop, if
necessary. The pedestrian has
...The Average Business Man...
CAN FORGIVE ALMOST ANYTHING
EXCEPT
Poor Writing
He Does Not Have Anything to Forgive
In the work produced by the
IMIMLEimrnUES
W JIAMMONO I
J FT
Mode l Model
■•"It is an established fact—it does the
FINE TYPEWRITING
OF THE WORLD
- And there Is a reason why—
(Washington Branch)
THE HAMMOND TYPEWRITFR CO.
524-335 Colorado Bldg* Washington. D. C.
B. N. TURNER, Local Dealer, GRAHAM, N.C.
_ Civ SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Direct Line To All Points
NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, WEST.
Veiy Low Round Trip Rates to all Principal Resorts.
Through Pullman to Atlanta leaves, Raleigh 4:05 p. m. arrives At
lanta 6:35 a. m., making close connection far an arriving Montgom
ery following day after leaying Raleigh, 11:00 a. m., Mobile 4:12 p.
m., New Orleans 8:20 p. Birmingham 12:15 m., Memphis 8:05 p.
m., Kansas City 11:20 a. m. second day, and connecting for all other
points. This car also makes cloße connection at Salisbury for St.
Louis and other Western Points.
Throngh Pullman to Washington leaves Raleigh 6:00 p. m. arrives
Washington 8:53 a. m., Baltimore 10:02 a. m. t Philadelphia 12:23 m.,
New York 2:31 p. m. This car makes olose ■ connection at Washing
ton for Pittsburg, Chicago, and all points North and West and at
Greensboro for Throngh Tourist Sleeper for California points, a&d
for all Florida points.
Through Pallor Car for Asheville leaves Goldsboro al 0:46 a. m.,
Raleigh 8:35 a. m., arrives Asheville 7:40 p. m., making close oosmec
tion with the Carolina Special and arriving Cincinnati 10:00 a. m.
following day after leaving Raleigh, with dose connection for all
points North and North-West
Pullman for Winston-Salem leaves Raleigh 2:80 a. m., arrives
Greensboro 0:30 a. m., making clow connection for all points North,
Sbnah, East and Wert. This car is handled on train 111 leaving
Goldsboro at 10:46 p. m.
If you desire any information, please write or call. Weare here to
furniah information m wellas to sell tickets.
H. F. GARY, W. H. PARNELL, T. P. A.,
General Passenger Agent, 215 Fayetteville St.,
Washington, D. 0. Raleigh. N. C.
Fire and Life Insurance
GOOD COMPANIEB
SAFE POLICIES
CAREFULLY WRITTEN.
» i i 1 Mil i
A part of your business will be appreciated.'
B3* All Kinds of Insurance, "fgf
CBAS. C THOMPSON, - - Agent
GRAHAM, - -- -- -- -- - N. C.
-• I - « Al It -.L ■ ; . . ' :\""J 'C .-Ml. _ ■K ■. '
Cn.au PIOTVTn Clean... the
Headache, Soar Btom- UIIIJIL thoroughly and olmm
Mb, Torpid Lirer tad " «# ■■■».«* sallow complexion oI
Ftt
GRAHAM DRUG CO.
1& Old standard
Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic
hat stood the test 25 years. Average annuel sales
over One and a Half Million bottles. Does this record
of merit appeal to yon ? No No Pay. 50c.
start. K\ tho driver must give way
to him. In passing a street car
at a regular stopping place, the
motorist most slow down and pass
the car at a distance. If he goes
by the car rapidly he will be held
responsible for any injury he in
flicts.
'The gist of the decisions is that
the person on foot has the right
of way, within reasonable limita
tions. Usually, the motorist must
give way for him. The chief bur
den of responsibility is on the
motorist, not on the pedestrian.
The principle will be enforced in
every judicial test.
TOIBV KIDNEY PILLS
Will reach your individual case if
you have any form of kidney and
bladder trouble or urinary irregu
larities. Try them. For sale at
all druggists
The Great Home Nawspaper of the
if 1. State. ' y»: !
lnr manner each afternoon , •■■■
e °Ss* woman't purer tho TimoaMUiao* *ttr
vary bout features that cna be writt»B~Ba
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