igton, North c .SATURDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE II, 191*. NO. 1' >W? a Shock to the City Navy and Well-Know P. wilili. ?up?rlntend?nt. Morning worship, it i. a. sermon ?ubj?ct. "Not Uo NlnM?-nl*., Bat tha Dno " Infant clnaa song. Child ran'* -day ?ibtc1m? will be held at tta* First Baptist -Church Bun Jay night, June 11. . ,3k ??ry attrac ih* program I* being ararnged. The music Is-, especially attractive. . Y. M. O. L. Ladies* Day?Mr. B. A. Dwiel the Speaker. A On aocount of the threatening weather last 8unday, whleh was Lad lee' pay^ there ijers rery few ladles present. Ladles will be lnrlt ed again tomorrow. The following Interesting program has be on ar ranged: Music by the League orchestra. Hymn No. 14C, "There's a Wlde neas in Ood's Mercy." Prayer. Hymn No. lBt. "'Tls the Blessed Hour of Prayer." Scripture reading Hymn No. IIS, "How Firm a Foundation." s Collection and offertory. Hymn N?- S*4. "Holy Qhoat, with Light Dtrlne." Address. By Mr. E. A. Daniel. Hymn No. 18?. "What a Prlend We Hare In Jesus." . t Benediction. _ AT THK (MM TOHWHT. BIO. (iRAni OKU ? um OLO. at Mtmury mUtnrb o*J? ? tan oft. will be afcwm ?r the 0?m tonight In tMs Btsfngk Wito I* ?h"?n tin npntHM of two imiHlWn kaartad rrrachnwn. whose weakness la to fa!! In love with the first pretty Woman they aee. Cu pid la a sportive mood Is clearly de picted throughout the entire film which 1* amusing to the extreme. "Coals of Ftrey" a Boat beautiful ?pot In tifte 8panlah Pyrenees on the It the scene in which the a^ry la enacted. Wild acenery different from any yet depicted In a Htm ffcture lenda beauty and charm to an already faaclnatlng subject. The atory la baaed upon the .devotion tft~ m~ peaaaut boy for-hla -poverty aricken mother. "Venetian Ialea," how familiar we all are with beautiful Venice and Ita mirror like canals. The film portrays the exqalalte charms of thla fairy city. "The Bong of the 8urf," Blograph. makes one of the beat programmea the Oem haa presented the entire wsek. : A WORTHY CAUSE. To the Members of the Woman's Bet terment Association: Remember the Wesson Oil Com pany hss generously promised sll the proceMs of the demonstration! next week to our betterment Association. Let ni each one work to make this a success. Come and take lunch or tea or both, and bring your friends with Mfc > ?? EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. CHURCH CONVENTION. . Tb* Stat* convention of the Chris tian Church will be held In thla city during November and preparations are already being made to entertain the large number of visitors ex pected. CALL AGAIN. The editor of the News la Indebted to Mr. H. E. Hodgea for a box of nice peqphee and desires to express appre ciation. WILL HOLD RHVIVAL Rev. J. A. Sullivan .will leave for Rocky Mount Monday morning to hold a revival meeting at the Calvary Baptist Church. His family will ac company him. Dr. W. H. Dixon, of Edwards, war In the city yesterday on profeasional business. TUB SUIT SALE Now On world. I dear tint ? doctor* or ur othar* hare IM right to damaad th?t. "Imply In amp aha happen* to haw a baby, sueh a aplaadld creature ?hould be treated aa an aolma). Ike ?hould be t reeled with common seas* and caramon humanity. Tbe educat ed young American mother U not ?eilectint her aiming function or any other duty. Ae la, 1$ the -popu lar vernacular, 'oato bar Job, all right,' " _ Dr. Charlea O. Karley of New York, specialist In chlldrA'* dUeaaee. pro feaaor la the Ne?T York Polycllnl* Hoapltal, attending phyalclan In tha New York Babr-g-JloaWtat-and tha Naw York N Mf. aad Children** Hoapltel. and aaaaral practltloaer a?ong Now York'* (wealthiest folk*. MM thla today before the American Medical Aaaoclatlog. In convention | ^ Tha^atatement which arouaad htm ? of the primeval mother aad ?aw-borif child ware more hu ?nd aetmtrile *iK theory ot tace suicide. *ay i*t race datafWratio* la dae to ?apld production. Ha said that at pHce wa* MaaaM by clv on. In that It rttecatad the child kt claa* where tha lnfaat mor la terrible, experience showing oat ot one hundred Infant ?. eighty -At* were of botUo4ed C. P. %ahr?r of Port Madison, had laid the ffceta of mortality dren than the oducated young Amer llha ? Mte. aad no one is mora wrtW lag ta-saake ee?jthat ? uUiUc wui com* out of t any application of Ihe White Uoum I was bo confident, >rt horse and rood id bets Mlmon Ash Had for Juno Taft WU IHU! Aldrlch and | tory railroad ] 1. There will toe.no provision for regulating the capitalisation of rall roada. Attorney General WIcKersham. Senator Root, Senator Bailey and other emitoent lawj^ra having found It impoeatble to draft a constitutions! section on the auMect It la still proposed to. br)ng tfU matter before Congress in a ?e pa rate measure and have It threabe^ odt . ? 2. -The Houae prtrtrlsloir for the physical ^alaaUga^-* aU railroad ate. hM four ttme^ ref uaed to adopt a aimtlar clause. S. Hie Item preventing the laau ance of ittjunctl^na against State of flclala In enforcing the orders of pyb lie utilitlea commissions until after a hearing and ten days' notice to the borernor of the State must be dropped or- modified. 4. The prov talon placing telegraph and telephone comHinles under the supervision of the Interatate Com dowu. HMMQniHaili i No I The President doubtless will have his wish In regard to shortening the yoriod or suspending Increased rates. The sixty days of grace before the 1*111 becomes effective will he . elimi nated either In conference or by Joint resolution. Although the word has been passed around the House that all members must put their shoulders to the wheel and shore for early adjournment, the conferreee on that side do not seem disposed, to be hastened. They tiercel? declared this afternoon that the entire summer 1b before them and the autumn too. t If any attempt Is made to weaken the railroad bill In conference there will be such a rempral of lighting in the Senate -as wlHifcveatly prolong the. session beyond the latest date now set ? July 16. All the Insurgents and Democrats have served notice that they win never permit the elimina tion of the Items added by the coali tion. The Insurgent Republicans who with the Democarts yesterday nearly forced the passage through the House of the railway bill exactly as amend ed by the Senate fear that In the con ference the bill will be shorn of some of Its more radical features. One of the leaders said today: "If we find that the ground which we have gained Is being knocked from under our feet by the conferrees we shall try to discharge the con ferrees and Jam the Senate bill through. If this situation develops, the Democrats will have to desert in greater numbersr than yesterday or we will pass te'^ptate bill." LOUISIANA MEMBER WOULD SUPPRESS BRIDGE PLAYING. Raton Rouge, La., June 10. ? Rep-' resentatlve Derouen has gvlen notice Of a bill In the lower house for the | "Absolute suppression of bridge whist" "I am Introducing this mea sure," declared Derotfeik. '-'for %fae benefit of the children of, my 8 tale, I who rarely have the opportunity to know their bridge-playing mothers.' It is also for the benefit of husbands, who hardly have a spiking acquain tance with their ftrldge-playing j jwlvee." CONVENTION CALLED. J The Democratic Congreaslonsl Con- 1 ventlon of the First Congressional District of North Carolina Is hereby' Called to meet in Edentoh, N. C.. on Wednesday, July 8, 1910. ?t*| e*lock p. .m for the purpose of nominating and trans-' IMMIGRATION Awl Education ihe Oiylac K?cd of the Cut Worth St.t. Today. tMj> Rditor CUnnce hw. The folio wins extracts from an.ad dreea by CltraoM Poe, editor of the Progressive Parmer and Gaxette, b> fore the North Craollna Press Aaso clatlon, Wrtghtsvflle, N. C.. June t. 1?10. are timely and to the point Mr. Poe said: North Carolina needa and must . have a larger proportion of white people. The whole Sou th? in fact, la I ?till too apareely aettled. Our eleren Southern States, excluding Texas. I support only 16.000,090 people ot both races, and oiily 10,000,000 white people, while the aame area In Europe supports over 160,000,000 white people. And it must be re membered that up to a certain point which we shall Mot reach for cen turies yet, agd other things being equal, prosperity depends upon den sity Qf population. If you ownod the continent of North America, but lived on It Alone, or if a hundred or a thousand men owned the continent cad ttved on It alone. It would be worth practically nothing to them. Population makes wealth, provided that it Is normally' intelligent and '1 . J Tim Sort of Immigrant* We Need. Of course, we do not Vant the lower-class Kurqpean Immigration. If we can get Immigration- from -Eng land, Scotland, Ireland, Cfermany, Holland, Sweden, etc.,? (Be countries whose blood has gone to "make up our vigorous A melrcan ?tock ? It would be of grest help to us. We are all of us such immigrants our selves or descendants of auch immi grants. From some countries of Southern and Eastern- Europe, on the other hand. Immigration la of a de cidedly lowier order and objectionable because of a low standard of Intelli gence and efficiency. On the very s^me principle, how ever, immigration of a normal or a high standard of Intelligence and ef ficiency Is desirable. Such Immigra tion c%n be had and ought to be had ? In some measure perhaps from our English, Scotch, Dutch and Irish kin folk scares the sea? but chfefl? from our Northern apd ImWm States. Jsti*y?P?< ite twtJrtds of thous ands of the ? most enterprising and, progressive farmers In the Middle West tiave been going into Canada with its long hard winter and bitter climate, not only giving up American citizenship, but actually paying two to three times, as* much for land in that InhospltsrlHe region - a* land of the same fertility comrasWds In the South. We ought to havw brought these men to the Booth. 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. fiSinl^ntllOfl to Solve the Race Prob it mere were no other reason for advocating such Immigration from. North and. West. I should favor-] it as our surest deliverance from our race porblem. The proi>ortlon of ne groes to whites is too large in every Southern State, and my hope is that ultimately the tides of migration and immigration will equalize population until the proportion of negroes in no 8tate will exceed 20 per cent. We must train the negro ? the more ig norant he is the greater the burden on the South ? tout at best the pro cess will be slow, and at present It would probably be not too much to say that in considering our whole population, including our great con structive leaders and captains of In dustry, the average negro In North Carolina In economic worth and ef ficiency Is only half as useful as the white man. In other words. In mating general average of efficiency we should put the white man at 100 and the negro at GO. bo that a coun ty Jialf wRite and half negro would have an average efficiency of 75, or [a handicap of 25 per cent, as com pared with a county with an exclus ive white populstion of a normal de gree of efficiency. Whether or not the difference is as much as I have Indicated, certain it is that the larger the proportion of whites, the higher the average of ef ficiency, the more prosperous will be our every Industry, and the better It will be for every Individual citizen. I including the negroes themselves. Two Wnj* to Bnlld |Tp North ' ? Carollaa. There are Just two great ways to build "up North Carolina. , First and of paramount Unportanco la the way which Oovernor Aycock emphasised | unceasingly In his administration ? the education of all our people; and 1 should only supplement this by put ting more earnest emphasis upon practical education, education that {trains for efficiency, not education : suited to the great urhan centers of [Europe and the North, but educa tion suited to the needs of a great awakening agricultural Common wealth such as ours Is and must be. And socond only to education which Governor Aycock emphasla^d, lis immigration which Oovernor Glenn Ftet out to further, but to which the 8tate did not respond tffccause it *ae not made clear that the Immigration ? m to be of the right sort. *.000,000 Instead of 1 ,300,00 White People. Now lqj us start right ? not by seeking immigrants from Southern Europe, but by advertising our re | sources to the thrifty, enterprising superior court PROCEEDINGS * > ? L State v a. J. Silmen, falae pretense. Defendant enters plea of No Lo Con tendro. whereupon It la ordered by the court that he pay a Ana of l pen ny and coata. Thla waa a case where in the defendant aecured certain notee from W. J. Fioyd through al leged fraud. After going into the trial he rurrendered the papara and entered the plea a a above. State va. Jonah Jennett. house breaking Tried, not guilty. State va. Geo. VanMoon, retailing. Continued. State vs. Lewie Barrow, retailing. Guilty, three months on the county roads. 8tate vs. Albert Cooper, retailing. Guilty, thirty days on the county roads. r* Slate vs. Lewie Barrow, retailing. Nol pros. State vs. Allen Grimes, retelling. Guilty, three months on the county roads, to begin at expiration of form er sentence. * . Stste vs. Arthur Green, forcible trespass. Plead guilty, sentenced to three months on county roads. State vs. Frank Collins and Harri son Stokely, burglary. Tried. By consent a verdict of not guilty was entered as to the charge of burglary, and defendants enter a plea of guilty of forcible trespass. Sentenced to two months each on the county roads. The grand Jury submitted the fol lowing report: Jo the Honorable Judge of the Su perior Court. Greeting ? We, the grand Jury fof May term, 1910, beg leave to submit the following report: We have finished the duties as signed to us by the court so far as it has been possible to do so. All the bills have been passed upon and re turned. The public buildings, court house, Jail and county home and the convict camp have been examined and found In good condition. Respectfully submitted. T. F. JORDAN. | < Foreman. Tuesday will witness the greatest aale of city lots ever made In Wash ington. The sale will be by Penny Bros., who sell lots one a minute. ' They will auctioneer off the property on Market street known as the race track, and this will be an excellent opportunity to secure a home site, as the location is desirable and the plats will surely Increase In value. Mr. I. W. Rogers, the clever adver tising agent of the auction com panies. state that all who attend will [richly enjoy the music which will be played all- during the sale. After the sale Is over money will be scattered In the crowd and amtising songs will be Joined by the Immense band. The ladles are especially Invited. make them come. Emerson was right when he said that "erterjr man who comes Into a city with any purchasa ble talent or skill la- him gives to ev ery man's labor in the city a new worth," and If an ignorant negro slaw in the old days wag worth $1,000, certainly we may assume that a thrifty and Intelligent white Westerner, bringing not only him self, but In moat cases substantial ac cumulations as well, should be worth many times as much as an asset to the State. The last census year North Caro lina had only 1.200,000 white peo-| pie. It should have 4,000,000. Con sider for a moment how much more Influential our papers would be, how much more Important every Institu tion In the 8tate would be. how much more varied would be our industries, how much better would be >>ur school8_and roads and railroads, how much more attractive would be coun try lif* in our thickly settled commu nities and how much easier It would be to get telephones and water-works | and trolLey lines and local libraries and all the advantages of twentieth I century life! Let us take an our watchword "Education snd Immigration ? Both of the Right Sort." A l>re?m of North Camllna'x Future. For seventy yearn now North Caro linians have been going West to build up the new States of that greBt empire. Now let us welcome back their children and neighbors to help us build here a great, prosperous and populous Commonwealth, where the masles of the people trained to as high standards of efficiency as any where in the world, shall develop a? symmetrical and well-rounded clvl^ lixstion: a splendid and forceful dem ocracy of trained. Intelligent and thrifty home-ownera from among whom ahall cora? not only a Jefferson and a Marshall, not only a James J. Kill and a Thomas A. Edison and a Seamon A. Knapp, not only men whom all the nation shall know as leaders In Industry and In public af fairs, but poets and seers, sculptors and artiste ? if not a Titian at least a Reynolds or a Millet, if not n Michael Ajxg^o at least a St. Gau dens'or a Ward, if not a Shakespeare at least' a Browning or a Tennyson, if not 'a Savonarola, at least Bome great Religious leader who ahall put the church into Tital relations to modern thought and give it a new baptism of spiritual power ? all these j oatll NortMtegttoBhall stand forth FEEH6 BETTER ^Business Outlook Show* Mac! Improvement. DUNN S | WEEKLY REVIEW HrttlMnent of iUUroMl Rat? M*Ut Had m HmtintmcU>rj Influrare Upo Trmde OomMUob of Coaatrj Xe. UuImvm Comes Fonnwd and Bet tw Pfllai New York, June 10. ? R. O. Dur. & Company's weekly review of tradv uy?: With a compromise effected on tho question of railroad rates. whlcL, though depending in part on action by Congress on the railroad $U1, i* regarded as satisfactory, and wltl crop prospects for both wheat an<> cotton decidedly good, the bualnas* outlook shows much lmprovsa?en ovsr last week. 8tocks of plglron continue to. ac cumulate, yet curtailment of * pro ductloa waa oa a much less extensive scale Aiulng May than In the ptecad log month. New business comes for ward la slightly larger rolnme and h better feeilag exists as a result of ttan com promise regarding freight rata*, Talked of cancellations of equlpnen; orders have not materialised, aad lb. railroads continue to place soma Im portant contracts In certain lines. Formal notice from the largest pro ducers of cotton and woolea good, of an Intention to curtail production very materially bespeaks the dlBcul ties besetting textile lines as a conse quence of the subnormal demand anc the pressure upon costs Induced bi the high and uncertain values on raw materials. Manufacturers are purchaalng In a limited way and there Is some In creased call for staple dpmestico while the miscellaneous export trade continues quiet, but fairly steady. Values are generally steadier. Trsde la footwear continues quiet. TOWflHf XMK OAUCIY. * ' Tonight Is thief last night of the en gagement of Mile Ttna and Baby Irene. This popular vandevflle team has more than pleased the large au dlences that have nightly assembled at the Gaiety during the perseat week and no doubt the house will be pack ed from the time the doors open to the last show this evening. If you want to get a good seat and enjoy their farewell performance tonight you vHIl have to come early. The leader on the picture program for tonight Is "Love Among the I Roots," a beautiful motion picture | fantasia by the Biograph. company. 'The story of this Biograph produc tion runs along rather novel lines. It shows In symbolism the powerful In fluence of love. The characters are more mythical than real and the scenes- are laid in a land of romance. The great lady of the land falla In, love- wtTh ttrt'lowly gardener, while the great lord loves an humble but pretty lacemaker. Th? scenic beauty of the subject has never been equaled being a series of wonderfully beauti ful floral bowers. For a comedy picture "An Inter rupted Honeymoon" is one prolonged roar of laughter, a delightful story, splendidly acted, and perfect In every detail. A PROSPKROIS year. The last Sunday in May closed the first year's work of Rev. R. v. Hope, pastor of the Christian Church. Judging from comments heard on the report which was ftled last Sun day, the year's work was a successful one. There were 52 new members added to the church record during the year, and It Is clear of all debt ?nd In excellent financial condition. The pastor, while yet a young man. has shown his ability to come up to the requirement# of his calling and has endeared himself to the mem ^hrof his church. HAT FIGHTS TWO SPARROWS. Crowd In Busy Brooklyn Street Sees Odd Combat. Brooklyn, N. Y.. June 10. ? A half grown rat, evidently escaped from one of the hadnsomc dwellings on Montague street, started yesterday to 1 visit Court street. For a block It ran along the curbing until It reached the Mechanics' Bank Building. There J two sparrows saw and to the amazement of persons pasaing, promptly pounced upon it. Then ensued a remarkable combat. Tlys sparrows began a combined at J^ack upon the rat that put It on the " defense. In rain the rat tried to bite Its opponents. It sat upon its haunch es and snapped its teeth, but the spar rows kept out of reach, and angered It more by darting suddenly upon It and grabbing It by the tall, upsetting it, to the amusement of a big crowd. After ten minutes' of fighting the rat sought to escape. Little by little it fought its way against Its winged as sailants until It reached the corner of Court and Montageu, where it darted down a sewer, leaving the furiously twittering upon the