. ; .C"1" JJd- 1 1 1 -.-rf. AfeV-' ri 0"h ! it1 H I J - - 4' f the crown of the aforesaid hat, and in that good natured manner that be longed only to him, he went out, soon returning with a new hat to adorn the head of his bereft friend. Chicago is to pull off a prepared ness parade with two hundred thous and marchers in line. We're with 'em in spirit, but durned if we want to get in that jam. REGIMENT OF NATIONAL GUARD ON THE MARCH Some men are about as useful as a canary bird. On second thought, however, we'd prefer the canary. LAURINBURG GRADED SCHOOL BUILDING. SCOTLAND'S SsCHOOL PROGRESS It begins to look as though the crowned heads of Europe had grabbed a great big bear by the tail and don't know how to let go. A Comparative Statement of the Schools of Scotland County Ten Years Ajro and Now. Growth Unbroken and Steady. More Daily Papers Come Into Scotland Than Any County in State. By L. M. Peele, Superintendent of Public Schools. The growth of Scotland schools fort No. Male Teachers 1905, 3; 1916, 11. the past ten years, while not spec tacular, has been unbroken and steady Every year has witnessed some pro gressive step. The efficiency of teach ers, average salary of teachers, aver age attendance, number of special school tax districts, number of librar ies and home interest have been greatly increased. Good roads, which have made possible inter-school rela tior.s, have been no small factor in arousing school enthusiasm and com munity pride. The influence of the school room is being felt in most of That the people are waking up to their responsibilities is shown by the fact that they are making provision for better teachers and more com fortable buildings by means of spec ial taxes. A glance at the following will indicate what effort the people j are making for themselves. No. Schools having more than one teacher 1905, 3; 1916, 14. . No. Teachers in Special Tax Dis tricts 1905, 0; 1916, 26. Special Tax Districts 1905, 0; 1916, the homes of the county, in that each 11- year sees an increase in the number of periodicals and newspapers that come into the country homes. It is a fact that more daily papers come into Scotland County per capita than into any other county in the State. The type of school entertainment as well as the demands of the patrons has undergone a change during these years. The negro dialogue, so pop ular a few years ago, is the excep tion in the county now, thus showing more cultivated tastes on the part of the people. Five of the County Schools this year closed with big com munity gatherings and listened to elevating addresses of noted men. These are some of the signs that our county is being permeated with the zeal for a higher life, attributable directly to the schools. While human worth can not be read on a page of statistics, still I feel that the recorded difference between the average teacher of ten years ago and that of today, properly symbolizes the difference in the grade of work then and now. So I submit the following comparisons. No. Teachers having Normal Train ing 1905, 18; 1916, 42. No. Teachers having had 4 years experience 1905, 16; 1916, 42. No. Teachers having College Di ploma 1905, 16; 1916, 23. Rural Libraries 1905, 7; 1916, 18. Value of School Property 1905, $5,300; 1916, $37,900. Bal. on hand unused 1905, $2,515.94; 1916, $35.45. Total Expenditure for the year 1905, $6,533.76; 1916, $26,254.92. From the above it is readily seen that our people are interested in their schools. But many of us have not ceased to think of the school as an isolated institution composed of teach ers and pupils the expense of which is paid for by the patrons,, Until we make the actual school work a part of our lives, until we begin to read its library books, until we get down with the children at night and work through fractions again, until the parents begin to feel the invigorating blood of youth coursing again through their veins, the school shall not have begun to serve its proper purpose. Our county schools should serve to perpetuate childhood, and transform life's duties into games to be played. Then the child will begin to realize the bigness of the work he is doing, for father is vitally inter ested in it, and the school spirit will be infused into all vocations of. our country life, fighting old age and its encumbent grouches, and making of our county a veritable fountain of youth. 1 KZar ? '' 2i- . Agfa. iswipw -6 MAIN STREET SCENE, LAURINBURG. A WORD FROM MR. PHILLIPS FORMER OWNER OF THE EXCHANGE TELLS. HOW IT WAS IN HIS DAY AND TIME. By R. D. Phillips. Just a few lines to tell you of my j Those were hustling days in our lit brief connection with the Laurinburg j tie town, and looking backward to Exchange, in the capacity of proprie tor and chaser aicer ye locals. My good friend Archibald Johnson, sat on the editorial tripod most nobly, though it was his first venture into the field of journalism, in which he has proven himself so eminently suc cessful. Time shows me in the light of a true prophet in that now the name of Archibald Johnson is the synonym of all-that is good, true, fearless and farseeing in newspaper dom of the day. Under the enthusiastic, optimistic guidance of the fledging quill driver the Exchange continued to thrive and widen its circulation not only in its own county, but tbro'cgnotit many 'others .Ji them, comes to my mind ye many faces I shall see no more. Among those true citizens none more vividly than Prof. W. G. Quakenbush, loyal, true hearted, clear-seeing, patriotic, religious man that he was. Long may he live in our hearts and lives. His genial face was often seen in our sanctum and on these occasions many words of wise counsel and jovial good cheer fell from his lips. After frequent admonishing to his young editor friend to look well to his personal appearance, none of which had proved effective in persuading him to discard a much loved, black derby hat whose days of becomingness" had long since passed, the beloved professor one day used a more drastic -.!Sr U-M'W I - hi'-J?U 'Jjz.imf fJ&-A .-Jt r h Eziz - - - i THE GOOD OLD DAYS By Archibald Johnson. It is meet and proper that the Ex change should celebrate its birthday for it is one of the oldest newspapers in the State. During the lifetime of the paper Laurinburg has grown from a straggling country village with streets ankle deep in sand, to the fine modern town it is today. It happened that the writer was a resident of Laurinburg when the Ex change was bom. Jesse Bundy and Tom Covington were in charge. I al ways wondered what the boys were thinking about when they gave the paper such a name; I wonder still. But there is not so much in a name after all, for a bright and winsome lassie can make a name like Peggy look tolerably well. Tom, it will be remembered, after enduring for a season, dropped out, and Jesse took command alone. Many a time have I dropped into the little office to pass the time o'day with the Editor and incidentally to air opinions on many subjects, social, political and religious; for Jesse was a fine talker and full of it. Few of the old Lau rinburg boys can hold a candle to Jesse as a conversationalist. The editor has grown into a big preacher now, and when I meet him I do not feel quite so free and easy as in the days when he exchanged space for coffee and sugar. His steady and widening influence is a matter of pride and joy to his friends. He has made good very good indeed and has written his name a little higher than his boon companions have been able to do. My connection with the Exchange began when Jesse heard and decided to heed the call to a higher realm of service. Seven years the paper had breasted the billows on the sea of journalism, and it was handed over to the new crew in fine shape. I had as my mate Bob Phillips; whose ex perience in the newspaper business was about as extensive as my own. We held the craft together as well as I remember for the space of three years, and then, without having added very considerably to our wealth, but with abounding sympathy for those who try to make their living by run ning a newspaper, we gracefully re tired from the field. Bob looked after the local end of the situation, and being of a social turn of mind made the local column shine. I think I may say with due modesty and with all propriety, the Exchange has never been brighter in its local department than when Bob Phillips on Wednesday mornings came into the office with his pockets stuffed with the gossip of the town, and made Allen mad as a wet hen for postpon ing that part of the work until the ! last moment. Other changes occurred in the man agement of the paper, but no matter what the change, the paper went forth 1 on its weekly mission telling the story J of progress and shouting the praises j of Laurinburg. Never in all this third ' of a century has the Exchange sound-! ed a false note or failed to champion the glory and growth of the town. Of course it has had its ups and downs. Of course now and then some citizen who imagined he or his family had been mistreated would write the editor to "stop my paper", and swear it was about as interesting as a last year's almanac, but not enough of these to seriously injure the paper or utterly discourage those who were doing their very best to make it a proper exponent of the life of the community. It now appears to be solidly estab lished and is an honor to the town of Laurinburg and the county of Scot land. Rivals have sprung up and tried to capture the field the Ex-1 change had cultivated and developed, but the good sense of the citizens of Scotland county held them loyal to the paper that grew with the town, and it stands today the acknowledged or gan and mouthpiece of that glorious little county. As I think of the halcyon days of the past what tender memories surge over my soul! In the days of small things for the paper and for the town I recall the tremendous influence of menv;.now jge to the Better Land, vriwWi'dT n establish both on a solid foundation. First and foremost then is Quakenbush, a very Hurcules in his moral power, and the foremost citizen of Scotland county. And Col. Roper, Capt. Billy McLaurin, Rod McCaskill, Peter McRae, John A. Mc Bryde, Lawrence Everett, Washing ton Gill, Frank Bizzell, Robert Clark, Rod and Jim McRae, and many, many others whose names come trooping in to my mind but which there is neither time nor space to mention. Men like these were the makers of Laurinburg and we would be ingrates to forget them. As we celebrate the anniversary of the beginning of the Exchange and of the county, let us hold in grateful re membrance the fathers who made so heroic a struggle for the fine develop ment that has come, and who wrought so well with painful limitations to bring in the brighter day that has dawned for Laurinburg and Scotland county. tions afford the privilege of choice to the business interest of the town. Then Laurinburg was a small town with no very bright prospects, easily thrown into a panic by any rumor of the shops being moved. Now it is the Court House town of the State's best county with its face to a glorious future growing and spreading to greater areas. Then the Exchange was a four-page, poorly printed paper making a weekly visit to not more than five hundred homes. Now I sup pose it goes to at least fifteen hun dred. With its eight pages of inter esting contents, well printed, it should go into at least three thousand homes every week. What a change! What a change! But I hope it a prophecy of still greater progress. Now, Mr. Editor, in your way to success in giving your readers the worthy paper you do, I suppose you have encountered the scores who could run a better paper than you do, also the dead beat who reads but won't pay for your sweat of brow, also the self-constituted correspondent who is mad because you couldn't decipher his hieroglyphics with a great family of other trials and ordeals, but keep your powder dry, stay in the middle of the road, keep your ears to the ground, your eyes to the best things of life and your heart humble, and you need have no fears about the fu ture. Weldon, N. C. SI Cotton Seed Wanted Planters who have Cot ton Seed left over from their planting can get the top of the market for them at PLANTERS TRADING COMPANY LAURINBURG THEN AND NOW By J. D. Bundy. was The Laurinburg Exchange founded in 1882 by T. T. Covington, of your town and myself. It suc ceeded the Laurinburg Enterprise, the publication of which had been sus pended a year or more. This change of the name of Laurinburg's paper was caused by the fact that the pro prietors of the plant wished to avoid being hampered by a prejudice creat ed by the Enterprise having been last published as a Liberal paper in at tacking the policies and administra tion of the Democratic party. At the close of the first year I purchased Mr. Covington's interest in the Ex change and continued the publication of it to the close of 1891, during which period I did not grow financially fat, and am thankful to say, did not make an "assignment." Of the changes which have come since 1883 for the better there is abundant evidence of many. Then the town unwisely relied alone on the railroad shops along with the sur rounding farming comnVinity for revenue and growth; and thereby heeded not the knocks of opportunity for greater growth by the creation of any manufacturing plant. Now the town, deprived of the railroad shops long ago, has revenue from six or more manufacturing plants, whose permanence depend not upon the spirit of combination for ttie sake of THE HAMLET HOSPITAL DR. W. D. JAMES. Surgeon in charge Hamlet, N. C. . A thoroughly equipped institution for the scientific treatment of X-Ray, Medical and Surgi cal Cases. Trained Nurses furnished. Special attention given to the Surgical Condition of the Ear, Nose and Throat. business of any corporation. Then the residences were of the cottage class simply. Mow many im posing, well-planned ones grace many principal streets of the town. Then the streets were clothed in darkness after nightfall, except occasionally a dimly burning oil lamp on some lone some corner. Now the brilliantly shining electric light guides the way of the traveller through its limits. Then the fires, once started, simply burned their way to the great loss of property almost totally unchecked as long as they found anything to burn. Now just a signal of distress is given, and soon a stream of quenching water is pouring from hydrants on the flames. Then in raging, bad weather, it was slush and mud to get anywhere. Now the dweller therein can step from his front gate upon a concrete side walk and reach his store, office or church with almost mudless shoes. Then there were no banks to facili tate the transaction of business. Now there are three of the best managed and most reliable banks in the State. Then the school facilities were uncer tain and subject to constant change. Now the town boasts of a stable, well equipped graded school, the pride of the citizenship. Then the town had the burden of no competition in rail road convenience and accomodation. Now two competing railroad corpora- SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY THE PROGRESSIVE RAILWAY OF THE SOUTH Schedule Effective May 28th, 1916 v Trains Leaving Laurinburg xTo. 198:25 A. M. Local for Hamlet, Charlotte and all in termediate points Through Sleeper Wilmington to Charlotte. Open for passengers at Wilmington at 10 P. M. No. 137:27 P. M. Local for Hamlet, Charlotte, and all in termediate points, Connecting at Hamlet for all points North, South and South West. Pullman Parlor Car Wil mington to Charlotte. Through Daily Pullman Service Wilmington to Atlanta. All Steel Cars. On Friday Through Sleeper. No. 20 8:35 P. M. Local for Wilmington and all intermediate points, Through Sleeper Charlotte to Wilmington. Passengers may remain in Sleeper until 7 A. M. No. 14 9:07 A. M Local for Wilmington and all intermediate points, Pullman Parlor Car Charlotte to Wilmington. Through Daily Pullman Service Atlanta to Wilmington. All Steel Cars. Through Sleeper from Birmingham Sat urday; For additional information, as to rates, schedules, or re servations, call on local agent or write the undersigned. J. Watson, Agent H. E. Pleasants, T. P. A. Laurinburg, N. C. Wilmington, N. C. John T. West, D. P. A. Raleigh, N. C. Patronize Our Job Department