$8.00 Set of Granite and Copper Ware T?t?l?t? WITH EVERY MAJES Jf txlhih TIC RANGE SOLD. r 8.00 Set of Granite and Copper Ware TrTIT? WITH EVERY MAJES rxVILlli TIC RANGE SOLD. L ! - M V i LTu U UlU lTu fa 14 1 yV ?m t! R j j13 ONE WEEK ONLY 5TEM 7th to 1 2th ONE WEEK ONLY Save $8.00 AS a special inducement daring our de monstration week onlv, with every MA JESTIC RANGE sold priees always the same) we will give free one handsome set of ware as illustrated here. Every piece of this ware is the best of its kind. Not a piece that is not needed in every Htcken. It cannot possibly be bought for les th in $S 00. Thi ware is on exhibition at our store. DON'T FAIL TO SEE IT. MAJE5TlCRANGE$-ARE-n1ADE'lMALb51ZEg-AWD5TYLE5 "Inq Which Shall It Be? DO YOU intend to continue laboring, burn ing valuable fuel and destroying high priced food with that old worn-out cook stove. You KNOW that old stove eats up a lot of fuel each year. You KNOW you have trouble in getting it to bake just right, in fact, spoil a batch of bread every once in a while you know it costs considerable for yearly repairs. Stop and think and figure. Wouldn't it pay you to buy a good range- a range with a reputation THE GREAT MAJESTIC Malleable and Charcoal Iron RANGE . YOU make no mistake in buying the GREAT MAJESTIC-it's the range with THE REPUTATION ask your neighbors. Then, too, it's made just right and of the right kind of material MALLE ABLE AND CHARCOAL IRON-riveted to gether practically air tight-lined with pure asbestos parts being malleable can't break has a movable resevoir and an oven that doesn't warp that's why the MAJESTIC uses so little fuel, bakers jy-t right every day in the year (browns brerir; r jrh$jH over "'it! until Fr,i") , h-at.s hg5gSBwf water while breakfast' is cooking nnperly handled lasts a lifetime, d cot i tically nothing for repairs. Don't buy the range you expect to last a lifetime "unsight unseen;" you 11 be sure to be disappointed. Come to our store during demonstration week, see the GREAT MA JESTIC have it's many exclusive features explained find out why the MAJESTIC is 300 per cent stronger than other ranges where most ranges are weakest. fiv. c-r "sfiiiPiiki-:aJiV trills i iTV? w ., , i i 1 - ON-LEGS 1F-DE51 lJi I 1 1 i it lil.' l.IiiilLlM ' - . I . : H 17 t i !! mm i . marn IYinJE5TltriEVER-KURri-COWER- (t m EC? ULLEN bEB ATI Q fctffl in EE-ft 1 1 n w i-z3rvir7irr .ir7niNi.ivinr7r7l Pl"7PF. x ncnv r7 iniurm iwwn u mau-ii-i-ij SETTLE : IX UZ-flLLTOPPER-TEFl -KETTLE - !4tfZ- RLL-CPPER TOFFEE-PUT- HEAVY- NfflRBLElZEEV PUMdriS- PAH ILnRBE-nEVER-BURfl-UJlREa-LRIPPIM-Pflrt: 2-rcinLL-riEVER- Z-SMnLL-LRiP-Pn" cnn-RLso-BE ROT5TF.R- i THIS SET OF WARE FREE CHILDREN SOUVENIR BAY 100 TANGO HOOPS FTfFF. Tuesday, between;! and 5pm --l-iAJ Thf first 10 boys and girls who present to THE MAJESTIC RANGE SALESMAN at our store, between 3 and 5 p. m. TUESDAY, written answers to the following questions, will receive a "TANGO HOOP Souvenir" FREE. 1 What range is your mother now using? 2 Do you know anyone needing a new rarge? Who? 3 Why should the GREAT MAJESTIC RANGE be in every kitchen? $1.00 ARTICLE FREE The one giving neatest and best answer to the last question may select any $1.00 ar ticle from our stock, in addition to the SOUVENIR. Don't be discouraeed if you are not one of the 100 to get a Tango Hoop Souvenir. You wili get a MAJES 1 IC PUZZLE CARD. Something for all the boys and girls. Don't fail to get one of these Tango Hoops. It's a new and wonderful toy amus es the old as weli as the young. The Hoop danes forward, hesitates and returns to the operator. Children, it's great, and will be the talk of the town. Be sure to have your answers ready to hand in at our store TUESDAY AFTER NOON, between 3 and 5 Thev must be written answers OTHERWISE YOU WILL NOT get a souvenir. Sp ' 7 All during this week a special t-UZCt ripmnnstratnr Hirpct from MAJESTIC FACTORY will be glad to hor you "AISL ABOUT RANGES" - shy you why the MAJESTIC is the best range on earth at the price. Come, I! You Intend to Buy er Not EDUCATION lies in KNOWING THINGS KNOW why the oven of a range is heated KNOW how the water is heated HOW the top is heated WHY the MAJESTIC uses so little fuel KNOW how a range is made in side and outside. This education may serve you in the future. DON'T OVERLOOK a chance to KNOW THINGS shown by one who knows. COME. Don't Overlook The Date. This Is a Special Invitation To You And Your. Friends And Neighbors SOME GAME OF BALL. Laurinburg Defeated Rockingham 25 Years Ago 52 to 33. The Rockingham Post has found copies of "The Rocket," a newspaper published in Rocking ham twenty-five years ago, and for the past week's clippings taken from it have appeared in the Post. Such items are aiways read with great interest by those who recall incidents that far back. In the current issue the Post reproduces an article that tells of a baseball game that was played in Rockingham between the Laurinburg and Rockingham teams, and is as follows : 'We did kinder promise, out of consideration for the feelings of the 'Junior Blues, ' to say nothing of the game of baseball played here la3t Thursday be tween the 'Junior Blues' and the second nine of Laurinburg. But we must say enough at least to commend the Laurinburg boys for their gentlemanly and cour teous demeanor while here, and to express the hope that, they may come again, both in the ca pacity of ball players and as 'private citizens, ' for they are a clever set of young men. "As to the ball game, it was poorly played on both sides. The game was called about 4:30 o'clock, with Laurinburg to the bat. Mr. T. C. Guthrie umpired the game, and if there was any dissatisfaction this writer failed to hear of it. Nine innings were played, and the score stood 33 to 52 in favor of Laurinburg. It is generally conceded, even by the captain himself, that bad man agement on his part had much to do with the defeat of our team. As long a3 Lee Everett was in the pitcher's box and Tom Leak, Jr., behind the bat, the 'Junior Blues' held their own, but when another battery was substituted in the third and again in the ninth inning the Laurinburg team had a soft snap, making 14 runs in the 3d and 18 in the 9th inning. ' 'The Laurinburg boys are splen did batters, excelling our boys in that particular, but as fielders our boys rather beat them. "Thursday evening the Laurin burg team and . visitors were given a reception by the 'Junior Blues.' It was held in the Acad emy Hall, and was quite a social gathering." John L. Sullivan, the former champion of champions, says Jim Corbett did not knock him out ; it was Jim Jams that did the trick. Southern Pines Tourist. NOTES GOOD FOR CASH. Warehouse Receipts With Notes Will Set the Coin. Washingotn, D. C. Notes with a maturity of not longer than four months, secured by ware house receipts for cotton or to bacco, will be accpted by the Treasury Department from na tional banks as a basis for the issue of additional currency which may be used to help farm ers pick and market their cotton and tobacco crops. These notes, according to an announcement from the depart ment, will be accepted at 75 per cent of their face value and must be presented through currency associations provided under the Aldrich-Vreeland law. In making this announcement, Secretary McAdoo declared that there is ad equate power under existing law to issue enough currency through national banks to meet any rea sonable demand, and reiterated his statement that it is "not nec essary to extend the note issuing privilege to State banks." He pointed out that he has power to issue one billion dollars of addi tional currency if required. CURRENCY AS NEEDED. It was explained that since the law gives discretion to the Secre tary of the Treasury this curren cy will not be issued unless offi cials are convinced it is not to be used for speculative purposes but for harvesting and carrying crops. Banks, it was said, will be relied upon to see that the warehouse receipts are accepted which are issued by reliable warehouse men, and that cotton and tobacco stored there is pro tected by insurance and injury by the elements. "The banks and the assets of rency association," said Mr. Mc Adoo, "will be jointly and sever ally liable to the United States for the redemption of such addi tional circulation and a lien will extend to and cover the assets of all banks belonging to the asso ciation and to the securities de posited by the banks with the as sociation pursuant to the provis ions of law, but each bank com posing such association will be liable only in proportion that its capital and surplus bear to the aggregate, capital and surplus of all such banks. NO NEED TO SACRIFICE. This plan ought to enable the farmers to pick and market the cotton crop if the bankers, mer chants and cotton manufacturers will co-operate with each other and with the farmers, and will avail of the relief offered by the Treasury within reasonable lim its. Such co-operation is earn estly urged upon all those inter ests. The farmer cannot expect as high a price for cotton this year because of the European war, yet he should not be forced to sacrifice his crop. "The banker and the merchant should not exact excessive rates of interest and the manufactu rers should replenish their stocks all banks belonging to the cur-las much as possible and pay rea sonable prices for the product. If this is done, and it can be done if every one displays a help ful spirit, a normal condition can be restored and there ought to be no serious difficulty in taking care of the cotton problem." A Careless Clerk. John Maness, head clerk at the Rockingham, is $32 short in his personal funds as a result of leaving the office safe unlocked last Thursday night. At some hour during the night some one entered the hotel, and finding the safe open, took his pocket book. Strange to say, the hotel funds for the day, which were also in the safe, were unmolested. Rockingham Post. i ' ; : . The Worth of an Education. The average educated man, which means a four year's high school education, get3 $1,000 a year. Working forty years, he makes $40,000 for a lifetime. The average day laborer gets $1.50 a day for three hundred days in a year, if he is lucky. In forty years he earns $18,000. The difference, $22,000, equals the value of an eduction. To ac quire his earning capacity re quires twelve years at school, of one hundred and eighty days each, or two thousand one hun dred and sixty days. Divide $22,000, the value of an educa tion, by 2,160. the number of days required and your quotient will be a little more than $10, the average pay per day for the boy who does the four years of high school work. Beside What Was Killed. One day last week Mr. B. L. Mangum, of Chesterfield county, S. C, killed a large moccasin, and when he chopped the snake in two Mr. Mangum had the sur prise of his life when forty-nine little moccasin, each from ten to twelve inches in length, came wiggling out of the mother snake.Monroe Enquirer.

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