i Mtfoaiie Leaaei ICdltor and Owner* * Entered as second class matter Fefi- uary 8, 1900, at* the Post Office at Mebane, N, onder the act of March 18d7. Issued Every Thursday Morning. SUBSCRIPTION: One^Year, - - . $1.00 rt'ix_Months, • - - .50 Three Months, - - .25 PAYABLE IN ADVANCE and Currency, Postal Money Order or Stamps. CORRESPON J ENCb We wi8h .correspondents in all the nearby post offices. Write at owe. Thursday. August 28 1913 Huerta, the Mexican brigand, has about gotten off his high horse, and now seems disposed to treat with Uncle Sam in some sort of fair way. It is to be hoped that this fellow may find a better successor. If all signs and indications do not fail, there is going to be an immense tobacco crop housed this fall. The yield is plentiful, the quality is good, and it is thought that the price will be yery satisfactory. The complaint of high priced beef will hardly be answered as long as there is a continuel slaughter of calves. There is profit in the sale of calyes, but It seems a crime to slaughter them, for the little there is in it. aiiu siiioui - -' ai.eiiHon. Building down two sides of the Lerder Squ ire would be such a help. Either coal cinders, or sand would be much value as a top dressing. Something should be done, wont the leading citizens push the matter. gold. one short Fame’s but a hollow echo; pure clay; Honor, the darling of but day; Beauty, the eye’s idol, but a damask of skin; Hate, but a golden prison to live in. And torture free-born minds; em broider’d trains Merely but pageants for proud, swell ing veins; And blood allied to greatness is alone Inherited, not purchas’d, not our own. Fame, honor, beauty, state, train, blood and birth Are but the fading blossoms of the earth. —Sir Henry Wotton. j send A Bad Record. The escape of Harry K. Thaw from Matteawan is another disgraceful chap ter in that story of disrepute. Since the slay or of Stanford White escaped the electric chair on a defense of in sanity, he has done more to bring the administration of justice in New York into bad odor than any other one in dividual. Within recent months some thing of his campaign of corruption at Matteawan has come to light.— Ashe ville Gazette-News. He is a Sticker, President Wilson is even willing to stick to his post till the snow flies in order to give relief to the people. Those who keep congress in Washing ton will have to answer to the people for not revising the tariff in accor dance with the wishes of the people.-^ Wilmington Star. There are some Editors that are keenly aliye to newspaper amenities, there are others that have a blunted sense of what propriety is. Just built that way and don‘’t know any better. That is all there is to it. Senator Simmons seems to be of the opinion that a vote will be reached on the tariff bill before many days more. It is to be hoped that the Senators opinion will be phrophetic. The tariff has hung fire much too long causing much uncertainty in business, but should it reach an early adjustment much will be forgiven. Nothing is to be compared for value with goodness; riches, honor, power, pleasure, learnmg, the whole world and all in it are not worth having in comparison with being good; and the utterly best thmg for a man is to be good, even though he were never re warded for it; and the utterly worst thing for a man is to be bad, even though he were never punished for it —Charles Kingsley. You’d scarce expect one of my age is merchandising to engage and hope to get a paying trade without ^he local paper’s aid. And yet I did that very thing. 1 opened up a store last spring this month the sheriff took the stock. Don’t view me with a scornful eye but simply say as I pass by, “There goes a man who seemed to think he had no use for printer’s ink.” There is a truth as broad as earth, and men should know its worth; it is sim ply this—the public buys the goods of those who advertise.—Rutherford Re gister. Civilized Men 5,000 Years Ago (From the Philadelphia Inquirer.) We are apt to feel so proud over the achievements of modern science that we acquire a contempt for people who lived in the distant past. Those with some education will admit that the Egyptians built pyramids which are useless; that the Gieeks were strong on statuary and oratory, and that the Romans were good civil administrators, but these few exceptions seem of Ht- tle importance compared with our own immense superiority. It is this feel ing which has prompted many persons, to decry archeology as a dry and use less stirring up of ancient dust to no puipose. To the average person noth ing is less delectable than wandering through a museum crowded with relica of the past. One of the new sciences which has been erected of recent years is that of anthropology* which deals with the his tory, development and tunctions of the human race. Instieutions no longer expeditions to Egypt to dig up mummies; to Babylonia for cuneiform inscribed bricks, or to Perue for relics of the Incas simply to secure a lot of curiosities. These things are sought, to add to our knowledge of mankind, to complete his history not by the old method of poring over books which contained to a large extent mere opin ions of unscientific men, but to make the past speak for itself. Napoleon has many crimes to his credit, but one of the most construc tive things he did was to found the science of Egvptology from which archeology in general and anthropol ogy have been derived, Egypt, Baby Ionia, India, I’orsia, Crete and Central America are only a few of the ancient countries which have been explored in an orderly manner and they have re vealed to us that human nature has changed liltie in historic times and that the a'lcient civilizations were in many respects the equal of our own. The finest jiwelry in the history of the world v/:is n>ade on the banks of the Nile. The city fathers of ancient Nippur foujjjht over opening streets nmch as do our councilmen of today. Freight rates were a burning issue centuries before the battle of Phar- salia. Wonion owned estates, wore corsets and holililo skirts, painted, pow dered, flirleil ;ind ruled men 4,000 years ago just as they do today. Deeds of land 5,(>U0 years old are as exact as those drawn up by a Philndelphia con veyancer. Inns were regulated much on a modern basis and the merchant was surroundetl by an abundant code of laws. TliC markets wero filled with shoppers and the homes with gossip. Pictures on vases many teousand years old show that the afternoon tea was conducted much as now, while the gameo were more skillful than our own. REMEMBER THE LOVED ONES Pathetic Religwus Ceremony That la Observed People of the Isle of Ushant. In the Island of Ushant—^the “Tala of Fear”—^there exists a custom prob* ably unknown in any other part of Christendom. When a native dies abroad or Is lost at sea, his relatives have a small wax cross made, some seven Inches long. This Is solemnly taken to the church and presented to the priest, who deposits It In a box, shaped like a cinerary urn, that hangs on the south side of the altar of St. Joseph. This is called the “Pro Ella** cross, and Is supposed to stand for the spirit of the dead. These memo rial symbols are allowed to accumu- late in the box till the next church mission comes round. As these revl-l val services are held only once In ev»- ery four or five years, the number of i' crosses may be very considerable. A day Is then set apart for their solemn Interment. It is the great day, the climax of the mission. The church la draped In black and crowded with a mourning congregation, many of whom break out Into loud walling. The crosses are brought from their urn In solemn procession, a requiem mass Is said over them, and then they are carried to the churchyard, the iron door of the tomb Is unlocked, and they are Interred with full honors. Throughout the year hardly a day passes but some pious soul comes to sprinkle the tomb with holy wate* and say a prayer before it for th« dead.—^Wlde World Magazine. ROPE FOh MPiUB CLlfi^BERS It Is of Special Manufacture and Con> bines Strength, Flexibility and Lightness. The rope used by Alpine climbers Is of special manufacture, combining as far as possible the differing quali ties of strength, flexibility and light ness. Three quaiities are in general use, being made from Sisal, Italian and Manilla hemps respectively, rnd occasionally, when cost is not consid ered, of silk. The latter, though very light and strong, is not so durable as the others. That which finds most favor among British mountaineers is known as Buckingham’s Alpine rope; it Is made of the best Manilla hemp. In the year 1864, Mr. McLeish re calls, a committee of the Alpine club made tests upon a number of ropes suitable for mountaineering. Of the two that were approved one was made of Italian hemp and the other of Manilla. They both had a break ing strain of two tons and sustained the weight of a twelve stone man after falling from a height of ten feet. Non-mountaineers have some times considered this Insufiicient, but It Is highly problematical whether the human anatomy could survive the sudden compression of a thin rope arising from any greater fall.—Fry’s Magazine. iebane Real Estate & Trust Co. f % bonds, on % Will sell you a farm near town. VViii build you a^hous^in'town. vVili.insure your life, house, and horse. Will sell you first mortgage, 6 per cent. p;ood 12ci\ estate. vViH help in every legitimate way to build up MebaneC ^nd surrdunding country. Will cut you '"roughllumber, both oak and pine for kny building purposev«?. Ler.d us your encouragement, and give u^ ncFs. % your busi- ^ Walters. Crawford, Pres. Office over Post Office He who has no mind to trade with the devil should be so wise as to keep away from his shop.—^ South Tis not the fairest form that holds The mildest, pui est soul within; business} ’Tis not the richest plant that holds The sweetest fragrance in. —Dawes. The escape^ of Harry Thaw from Mattewan prison of New York State but tends to bring that very undersireable character in the spot light again. Harry Thaw is unquestionable a murderer, and should have been electrocuted seven years ago, and would have been if it had not have been for the Thaw millions. His case illustrates how money may be used to defeat the ends of justice. Money not only saved Thaw from the electric chair, but it has given him a fighting chance to win his freedom from the assylum. The public have not had sympathy with Thaw, it only feels that he has enjoyed certain privileges entirely due to the fact of his enormous wealth. We copy an item from the Greensboro News which appears in this weeks Leader which is headed “The Record to Date.^’ The article be^ns. This is the 24 of August. Every other day since the beginning of this month some human being has been hurled into eternity, by violence in the State of North Carolina. In fact to be more explicit some one has been murdered. But what makes human life cheap in North Carolina, it is because the State encourages the pistol toting habit, it is because dollars can purchase exemption from the penalty of committing murder. Henry Lane Wilson’s Finish (New York World.) Henry Lane Wilson, late ambassador to Mexico, would have been separated from the public service long ago if it had not been for the fact that no suc cessor could be appointed without re cognition of the Huerta usurpation. Many sins are properly chargeable to the acount of American diplomacy, but in all the category of blunders and boorishness there is nothing that equals the attack of this discredited ambassador upon the foreign policy of Great Britian aud that of the United States as well. What interest, person al or political, can moye a man in such a station to insalt a friendly power, to heap embarassments upon his own country and to close his official career in ignominy? Mebane, N. C. DR. JOS. H. HURDLE DENTIST Office in New Post-office BIdg. Mebane, N« C. Not Gullible* The little eirl came running in to her mother with a woeful countenance and a hopeless story, relates the National Weekly. “My dolly is sick, ” she said, “and j I don’t know what to do about it, I gave her water and she can’t swallow that; sister gave her a pill and she can’t swallow that.*’ “Well,” said her mother, who lean ed a little that way herself, “don’t you think you had better try Christian Science for her?” “We have tried it,” said she, “and she can’t swallow that ” The Arkansas traveler did not need a roof on his house when the weather was fair, and he did not care to build one when it was raining. The streets of Mebane are fairly good for travel when the weather is fair, and when it is raining and mud is knee deep, it is then impossible to build them. The Leader has been urging all this summer that something be done to permanently improve this condition, it is importantj True happiness (if understood) Consists alone in doing good. -^Somerville. The world was sad the garden was a wild! And man, the hermit, sigh’d till wom an smiled. —Campbell. THE BEST PLACE IN GREENSBORO To get the best to eat la at the HENNESSEE CAFE Open until micinight. 342 SOUTH ELM STREET Near passenger depot J, R. DONNEL Pro. THE NORTH CAROLINA state Normal and Industrial College Maintained by the State for the Wom en of North Carolina. Five regular Courses leading to degrees. Special Courses for teachers. Free tuition who agree to become teachers in the State. Fall Session begins September 17th, 1913. For catalogue and other infor mation, address Julius I Foust, President Greensboro, N C Mary had a new style skirt. All split up to the knee. And everywhere that Mary went The rubber necks could see. —Hopkinsville Kentuckian, j But you don’t tell us, brother, j What the rubber necks could see - Was it only the slit skirt, | Or was it Mary’s knee? —Cadiz Record, And everywhere that Mary went The gazers grinned and chuckled. For between Mary and the slit There waren’t a single ruffle. —Athens Athenian The North Carolina COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE AND ME CHANIC ARTS The State’s Industrial College Equips men for successful^ lives in Agriculture, Horticulture, Stock rais ing, Dairying, Poultry Work, Veteri nary Medicine; in Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical Engineering; in Chemistry and Dyeing; in Cotton Manufacturing. Four year courses. Two, and One year courses. 53 teachers; 669 stud ents; !^3 buildings; Modern Equipment. County Superintendents hold entrance examinations at all county seats July 10. Write for complete Catalogue to E. B. OV/EN, Registrar, West Raleigh, N. C. GEXXXXXXX: You Need a Tonic There are times in every woman’s life when she needs a tonic to help her over the hard places. When that time comes to you, you know what tonic to take—Cardui, the woman’s tonic. Cardui* is com posed of purely vegetable ingredients, which act gently, yet surely, on the weakened womanly organs, and helps build them back to strength and health. It has benefited thousands and thousands of weak, ailing women in its past half century of wonderful success, and it will do the same for you. You can’t make a mistake in taking CARDUI The Woman’s Tonic Miss Amelia Wilson, R. F. D. No. 4, Alma, Ark., says: .'“I think Cardui is the greatest medicine on earth, for women. Before I began to take Cardui, 1 was so weak and nervous, and had such awful dizzy spells and a poor appetite. Now I feel as well and as strong as 1 ever did, and can eat most anything.” Begin taking Cardui today. Sold by all dealers. Has Helped Thousands. Extraordinary Val ues in Ready-to Wear Dresses Never was a time when a woman could be without a natural color Linen Dress, especially in traveling during the heated season. TUB DRESSES FOR THE HOUSE Might as well try to go without shoes as a Wash able House Dress. Why try to make them when they are to be had here at a mere song of a price. Gingham, solid-color chambrays and Percales, many stripes and checks are in the lot. Look at the prices $1, $1.25, $1.50, $1.69, and $1.98. Ellis-Stone & Co. Durham, JN. C. .|o FOR SALE Two farms known as the Tate and McCracken Farms—200 and 116 acres—situated on Hillsboro a- bout four miles from Mebane and same distance from Efland. About one-half clear, balance in wood and tember. In good state of cultivation and adap ted to tobacco, grains, grasses and fruit. JiJach farm has a good house, necessary out houses, wells and springs. Convenient to churches and schools, Farm values in this section are increasin.o: rapidly, and these farm are a great bargain at $25 an acre. Will arrange for you to see this property. Southgate ■ Jones Company Durham, N. C, Typewriters of all makes at reasonable prices Name the machine yu want and let us make you prices. GREEN a POTEAT, Book-Sellers 6c Stationers Durham, N. C. To Prevent Blood Poisoning apply at once the wonderful old reliable DR PORTER’S ANTIS5" W '2EALING OIL. a sut gical dressingr that t«lt«ves pain and heals e the same time. Not a liniment. 25c. 50c. $l.Oc Farms for Sale 150 acres of improved land, gopd 6 room house, large, barn and good out houses, six miles East of Hillsboro, $3,500. 340 acres on State Highway one mile East of Hillsboro, practically level and easily cultivated $22.50 per acrc. 226 acres an Southern Railway, and State Highway one mile East of Hillsboro, practically enough wood on place to pay for it, $5,000. 74 acres 3-4 mile West of Hillsboro, beautifully situated, 30 acres open, balance in wood land, within 75 yards of State Highway, 7 room house in a large oak grove overlooking Hillsboro and the old Horner school property, $2,500. 110 acres of wood land in Bingham Township, $5.00 per acre Write for Further Particulars to ORANGE TRUST CO. I Hillsboro,- North Carolina OREAT FURNITURE EMPORIUM When you can all ways find suits, that Vvill suit you. We furnish a house from parlor to kitchen. Everything, and at moderate price, on any terms you may wish. Don't forget that we can supply you. Green £c McClure GRAHAM, NORTH CAROLINA. isssra Panacea Is Calling You Leave off dull care for a time! Come to this ideal spot where Nature has so graciously and beautifully bestowed her gifts! There is no more wonderful health restorer than Panacea Mineral Spring Water. The New Panacea Hotel under new macnagement this season, is strictly first class in every respect. An excejlent orchestra, spacious new ball-room, fishing, bowling, tennis, unexcelled cuisine. Consider the advantages and attractions and heed the call! Come to PANACEA! > Further information furnished. Yours very truly. T. C. Jones, Jr. Mgr. LITTLETON, NORTH CAROLINA. Refresh Yourself During the summer days o CL t our Soda Fountain The most delicious drinks with pure fruit flavors JUST TRY OUR FOUNTAIN ONCE MEBANE DRUG CO BRING YOUR PRESCRlin'IONS TO US XHan (By \Vhen a m And he’s And the c An’ won I 's a grea f'er a fe His hand u In a fric It makes J It makes All’ In the r You can la You don’ When his In a frie Oh, the wo With its VVith its CJ But a gO( An’ a good Leastwa; When a ha In a irie Good I w days form cinv dost-’ and caso be IV nu of a ClK’d remedy, (li'ali'i’s. hen a with of bo ■tl soun s of ci l)iarrh( , it is 1 thusia ‘dy, an severe Try lt| on Our happ l;Llt hat we ynious Ulin in w The r.niU Ion tit :i ’ur, hr (!■(>'her inj (li:lti ly (’hamberlai robs cuts a terrors. / (Ion t exir^t )nl\ 2r>c. i Ho who has jifaine Tho l)attle! monfj For w'nen tl sel f, Hast made l.eous Remarl “1 was about July medicinc an relief only I was unabl weight drop 1 >^ufrered f I was adyis Coh'c, Chole 1 used two 1 permanent N C. For s Lawy One Paris t^ck off th lovered thai Bgal advise llty, from vi lually In fe taged to de irban court. His client auyor’s pn tfter a heal t)urt the cll Ue River M How Tl ('onstipat ailments miserable. lets, keep you will ^*y ail deale ani av ai Boon to ■A- (xerm„, put on 'vhlch he ^ hoon of the ^«art dls€£ benefited K^ound floo Vator that ®^U)per has It i8 m, *ts propertl Is easy tc Minis Jiev H. praisinp ^or conatipj Life P home sh hotter rep^ *>f>wels. El them. Prict 1 A NEWS CORNE Sou Heavy Roods, coi ''egetables. ^'I'ossinfr rai M