“And Right The Day Must To Doubt Would be Disloyalty To Falter Would be Sin.’ Vol5 MEBANE, N«C., THURSDAY. APRIL 9 1914 No 8 WEDDING IN MEBANE Ross=Scott Marriage In teresting Occasion. Wednesday morning at 10 o’clock at the home of the Bride’s mother, Mra, M. B. Scott took place a wedding of rare simplicity and beauty, when the daughter, Miss Margaret Graham Sjott was married to Mr. John R Kos?. Only the near relatives and in timate friends were present, but owing 11 tlio prominence of the family and the wide circle of friends of both the contractinp: parties the affair was of unusual interest. The bride is a young lady of rare culture and charming personality, exceedingly popular chroughout the State. The groom is a well known young business man of ("harlotte, more recently of Thomaa- ville. “Kalm Krest'’ the dignified old colonial residence, back among the stately oaks formed a fitting stage for the ceremony. The east parlor was thi'own open, an aisle being forrri- ei by fluted columns decorated in green,garlande with white, leading to an improvised chancel extendinjr through the large east window. Here the groom received his bride from the arm of her uncle, Mr. B. Frank Meb- ane, of Spray, the ceremony being performed by Rev. F. M. Hawley, of the Presbyterian church. The best man was Mr. Charles Ross. Mrs. Otho Ross played Mendelsohn's wedding march and also some selections from Cho))in and McDowell. The spring colors of pale green, yellow and mauve were carried out bolh in the costumes and decorations of the house. The bride wore a tailored ^oing away gown of green ripple silk over a white lace blouse with hat and gloves to match and carried a bridal bouquet of gardenias, lillies of the valley, and maidenhair ferns. The Dameri oi’ Honor were Mrs W. H. Bason wao wore black taffeta with overdress of figured chiffoi* in shades of mauve and carried sw'eet peas, and Mrs. B. Frank Mebane, who wore black tatfeta with overdress of chiffon in yellow and pale green and carried yellow roses. The ushers w^ere Messrs. James K. Mebane, George Allen Mebane, Frank Ross, W. A. Murray and W. H. Bason. The presents numerous and expensive attested the popularity of the young couple. The out of town guests were: Mr. Charles Ross, Mr. and Mrs. John D Ross, Dr, and Mrs. Otho B. Koss, Messrs Charles and Frank Ross of Charlotte; Mi. and Mrs. Ernest Ross and son of Greensboro; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Caldwell of Charlotte; Mrs. Norwood Simmons of Washington, N. C. ;Mrs. Settle Dockery of Rockingham; Mrs. ,Iohn Park of Raleigh; Miss Bessie Poteat, of Durham; Dr. and Mrs. Geo. A. Mebane and Mr. and Mrs. B. Frank Mebane of Spray; Mr. and Mrs. James K. Mebane of Graham; and Mr. and Mis. W. H, Bason of Thomasville. After the ceremony the bride and groom took av. nutomobile for Greens boro where they wiil take a train for an extended trip North, after which they will be at home at Thomasville. Getting Focused The New York World said that Champ Clark was not in Oscar Under woods class. This is quite true, and it is true despite the fact that Clark was smart enough to be Candidate for the nomination of President, and Billy Bryan thought Kern was great a man. Getting properly focused in tne public eye is quite an alainment Killy knows how. A Demagogue The Leader rejoices with Mr. Under wood in his election in Alabama Mon- df'v before the senatorial primarieSc We shall be glad if he has put Mr. Hobson to rest a good long cime. Hob son is a demagogue and he can not help it. A Back Seat For rhem Wonder if they will make fellows ! like Harker, of the Marten Scottish Chief, set on the platform at the pro gressive meeting, or leave them to crowd in at the rear of the hall Harker and his kind are the ones who started the blooming protri^^Biveness in the Old North State.—Wilmington Dis- patch. Efland Items Miss Maggie Pickard left Saturday for Elon College to make that her fu ture home. Mr. B. L. York went up to Greens boro Saturday night to visit friends. Mr. John Clayton ppent Sunday at home near Cedar Grove with his parents Mr. Thomas Tapp visited his daugh ter, Mrs. John Thompson near Oaks Saturday and Sunday. Miss Maude Thompson of Greens boro came down Saturday to attend her uncle Mr. John Forrest funeral. Miss Dova Jopes of Graham is visi ting her aunt Mrs. Della Forrest in Efland. Mr. R. Teer of Hillsboro and Misses Maggie and Pearl Tapp attended the protracted meeting at the M. P. church in Efland Sunday. Mrs. John Nicholson and children of Mebane came down Sunday to attend Mr. John Forrests funeral also Mr. Shields Cheek of Elon College came. Mr. John Forrest who was taken sick at his daughters, Mrs. Henry Jordan, March 26th, died Saturday morning April 4th and was taken out to his home near Cedar Grove Satur day afternoon. The funeral was con ducted by Revs, Ormond and Stobbina at Cedar Grove church Sunday after noon. The interment was in the church yard and was attended by an unusually large crowd of relatives and friends of this good man. He leaves a widow, three sans and one daughter besides a large number ot other relatives to mourn their loss. Mr. Forrest was a good man and well liked by all who knew him. Mr. Waldo Forrest who was called here from Indianappolis, Ind. to the bedside of his father is on the sick list. Among those from Efland who attended Mr John Forrests funeral Sunday afternoon at Cedar Grove were Messrs Joe Thompson and W. W. Smith, Joe Murray, Elmo Thompson, Frank Thompson, Will Murray and N. C. Harris, also Mr. and Mrs. Coll Forrest, Mrs. M. P, Efland and Miss Annie Jordan. The Protracted meeting commenced at the M. P. Church in Efland Sundav, Rev. Roland Stubbins will conduct the services assisted by Rev. N. G. Bethea Clean Up Day. The Mayor and those especially interested in Mebanes clean-up day feel gratified and delighted with the way the children, and citizens in general, entered into the spirit of cleaning our town. The Mayor wishes to extend his hearty thanks and appreciation for the co-operation and interest manifest ed. There is not the slightest doubt that the removal of go many cans and rubbish will not prevent a great deal of sickness in Mebane and it it earnest ly hoped that the town will be kept clean and sanitary from now on. The Civic League which has just been or ganized, with the help of the •funior League, which we hope to organize shortly, aim to promote and stimulate interest along this line, as well as beautify and make Mebane more de sirable and inviting to live in. The children deserves a great deal of praise for the big part they shoul dered last Friday and below is a list of the prize winners. First prize of $1.00., James Stewart^ Glennie Clark and Hubert Sykes, Mary and Dandy Rimmer. Second prize of 50 cents. Grace- and Jack Long, William Anthony. John Dollar, Edgar Ferrell and York Brannock, Third prize, 25 cents Ralph York, Lewis Nicholson, Jobe, Paul Fowler. Mme. Pavlowa is reported to have delayed a performance in Chicago the other day because of lack of clothes. Nothing like that was ever known to happen in connection with Mary Gar den, The fact that Villa ' ‘does not expect 0 find many Spaniards who will deserve >3 clemency” has doubtless prepared l^any of that race for the worst. He not likely to be disappointed.— reensboro News, What Could the Governor Say? A local contributor cites a fresh ex ample of the fashion in which the youth cf today trips the ucwary parent: ‘‘Father,’* said the son home from college to his father, “1 must have better rooms a^ college. Why, in the place I room now there isn’t even hot water to shave with in the morning. “Son, when 1 was your age 1 never had hot water to shave with. Did it when the weather wasn’t too blooming CDld, out in the front of the woodshed and made lather out o’ any soap I could find.” “But, father,” expostulated the son, d’dn’t you say you sent me to college that I might hive the advantages you didn’t have?**—Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Cincinnatia man is suing for di vorce because his wife sold his clothes to get money to attend a suffrage rally. The men will, of course, say that he ought to have it; while the the women will, no doubt, hold that it served the tightward right. List of Letters Advertised for week ending April 4, 1914. 1 Ijetter for Miss Kitty Allen, (col) 1 Letter for Georgie Duriiam 1 Letter for Miss Daria Gilbs 1 Letter for Miss Leara Hagis 1 Letter for Mrs. E. K. Kile 1 Letter for Mr. Marion Bradshaw 1 Letter for Mr. T. M. Coltrane 1 Letter for Ellison Farlow 1 Letter for Stere Halim These letters if not called for will be sent to Dead Letter office April 21st, 1914. RespectfoUy, J. T. Dick, P. M.. Ifebane, N. C. NEW ORDINANCES EFFECTiyyTONCE Town of Mebane, SECTION 33. Every privy closet in the town shall be cleaned not less than twice a month, and either lime or wood ashes shall be used every day. The town health officer shall be required to make rounds on the first and fifteenth of each month to see that closets have been cleaned, and at other times to see that lime or asUes is being used. The ex crement shall either be buried with- lime or hauled to a place designated by the town policeman. Any person violating this ordinance ^shail be tined $1.00 and pay for all cleaning deemed necessary. SECTION 34. Every horse or cow stall in the town shall be kept clean and dry, and either carefully littered or limed to keep flies from hacehing. Pig pens shall be kept clean, limed and dry with no pools of water standing on the premises and no filth for flies to settle on or hatch m. The town policeman shall yisit these places not less than twice each month and report all offenses Penalty for violation $1.00. SECTION 35. Every business house in the town shall be required to keep its premises both back and front clean. Unsightly boxes, barrels, crates shall be removed on or before the first of each month. Litter shall not be swept upon the streets or into gutters, nor ashes or any waste put into the streets, but must be piled neatly on back premises and removed before it becomes unsightly. Penalty for violation of this ordinance $1.00. SECTION 36 All cans, iron hoops, old stovos on privsie piemises and elsewhere shall be kept collected In a neat pile, and removed or buried every month, rain barrels or otner receptacles for catching rain water shall be covered oi kept free from stagnant water, and all ditches and cess pooN shall be kept drained or limed. When cans or putrid matter is removed It must not t>e thrown within the corporate limits, but placed by the direction of the|town Policeman in some outlying gully out side of town. Penalty for violation of this ordinance $1.00. SECTION 37. Ail vacant lots within the coporate limits shall be kept free from rank weeds and bushes, stagnant water, debris or anything that may become a menace to thehealth^of the community. Refusal to clean when notified will incur a penalty of $1.00 and the ezpenie of cleaning if the town has to do it. W. S. Crawford, Mayor. What Means This? For the pas«; few days press dis patches have been carrying stories relative to heavy retrenchments made by various large railways of the north and west. The Pennsylvania has laid off several thousand workmen. The New York Central has done likewife. The Erie and other roads have fol lowed suit, and all within the period of two weeks’ time. Thia concert of action at a time when conditions everywhere are flour ishing* and when reports show in creased revenue for practically all roads, becomes all the more sugges tive when it is remembered that the appeal of eastern railways for per mission to increase rates five per cent is now being considered by the inter state comme^ commission. Is this action Intended to be a kind of bard luck argument, and will full operations be resumed when the case is settled, or are the roads really faced with a peril in what they call ‘'declining revenues?’*—Charlotte News. L Annual Drain on Animal Industry a Serious Menace (Washington Dispatch.) Experts of the Department of Agriculture festimate that the annual loss from hog cholera in the United States is $75,000,000. They regard the eradication as one |of the in^'st serious problems that lace.^^ the bureau of animal industry, for the loss caused by it is approximately as great as that from all other animal diseases com bined. The loss fro.'n hogs killed outright by cholera in 1912 was estimated at $60,000,000. The loss to the hog in- dustiy indirectly resulting from the disease was about $15,000,000 more. The cholera is most common in the corn States ot the West and South. The two other chief animal .disease are cattle tuberculosis and Texas fever. Statistics upon the annual losses from these two diseases never have been gathered by th^ Department of Agriculture. Texas fevpr and cattle tuberculosis do not cause anything like the number of deaths as does cholera, but the loss to the cattle industry through illness, interference with reprodtction and making cattle j'nfit for marketing is heavy. The losses run into many millions o! dol lars a year. Senators To Be Elected. Senators whose tern:s expire on March 3, 1915, and those whose places will be filled by men chosen in elections held this year are: Bradley of Kentucky, Brady of Idaho, Brandegec of Connecticut, Bristow of Kansas, Burton of Ohio, Chamberlain cf Oregon, Clarke of Arkansas, Crawford of South Dakota. Cummins of Iowa, Dilhngham of Ver mont, Fletcher of Florida, Gallinger of New Hampshire, Gore of Oklahoma, Gronna of North Dakota, Jones of Washington, Newlands of Nevada, Overman of North Carolina, Pi nrose of Pennsylvaniar Perkins of California, Root of New York, sherman of Illinois, Shiuely of Indiara, Smith of South Carolina, Smith of Georgia, Smith of Marland, Smith of Arizona, Smoot of Utah, Stephenson of Wiscontin, Stone of Missouri, Thoiras of Colorado, and Thornton of Louisiana. What Does Burns Think? (Chattanooga News.) Detectivn Bums declared he will not give out the name of the man he thinks killed Mary Phagan, or tell whether he thinks Frank did it until he delivers his report on the case However, the fa mous detective has left several clues. By deduction one can believe that he doesn’t think Frank killed tne girl For one thing, he said recently that the crime showed every trace of the crime- soddened mind. The person who killed Mary Phagan was a criminal' in mind, a thorough degenerate, he said- Later he said that Frank was not a degenerate as was claimed at his trial, and that he was, before the trial, a type of the healthy, smart business man, with an absolutely clean record before the Phugan crime. If these two state ments are to be placed together as a clue to the belief of Detective Burns he thinks Leo Frank did not commit the crime. His findings will be another point for a new trial for Frank, and if his disclosures sre anything like as sensational as they are hinted at in hia advance statements he will play several trump cards for the defense in the new trial. More Than Even. A certain lady suspected her hus band was in the habit of kissing the cook, a pretty German girl, and re solved to detect him in the act. After watching four {days she heard him come in one evening and gently pass through into the kitchen. Now, Katie was out that evening and the kitchen was dark. Burning with jealousy, the wife took some matches and hastily placing her shawl on her head, as Katie often did, she entered the kitchen by the back door and was almost immediately seized and embraced and kissed in the most ardent manner. With her heart burst ing with rage, the injured wife pre pared to administer a terrible rebuke to her spouse. Tearing herself from his embrace, she struck a match and stood face to face with Katie’s beau, one of the factory boys. Her husband says his wife has never treated him so well since the first month they were married as she has for the past week. r-National Monthly. There’s A Difference Nell—Don’t you think she has a heavenly voice? Belle—I don’t know that I >hould call it just heavenly, altough She does make an unearthly noise.”—Phil adelphia Record. Chapel Hill News» Chapel Hill, April. From every section of North Carolina high school debaters and athletes are this week coming to Chapel H«ll to participate in State-wide contests. In debate the final contest of the High School De bating Union is the attraction, and in athle tics, the second annual inter-! schoolastic tra^t meet is the drawing j card. Bofh of these events will be! held on the same day, Friday, April, 3. T>e tiack meet will be held in the afternoon, and the debate will be held in the evening. Accompanying the different teams^ there will be many superintendents of schools principals, teachers and friends. Forty high schooly, winners, of both debates in the recent triangular contests over the State, will send their repre sentatives to Chapel Hill for the final contest for the Aycock Memorial Cup. I'hese schools are: Durham, Apex, Holly Springs, Kinston, Pleasant Garden, Warrenton, Graham. Lucama, Statesville, Winston-Salem, Asheville, Betliania, Belmont, North Wilkesboro, Troutmans, Lumberton, Marshville, Dallas, Atkinson, Stem, Lenoir, King, Piney Creek, Glen Alpine, Boonville, Mt. Ulla, Sylvan, New Bern, Whitakers Pikeville. Mason’s Cross, Churchland, Snow Hill, Sparta, Belhaven, Manteo, Gatesville, Stoneville, Leaksville, and Wentworth. This final debate will be the culmination of the one hundred and fifty debates that took place all over the State on March 20, were psrtic- ipated in by six hundred student debaters, ani were heard by fully thirty thousand North Carolinians. The debaters will arrive in Chapel Hill at noon Thuisday, April 2. They will be entertained by the different county clubs of the University. The first preliminary for the final debate will be held Thursday evening, the best teams from this preliminary will be selected for a second preliminary Fri day morning April 3. From these teams there will be selected one team on each side for the final debate which will be held in Gerrard Hall Friday evening at 8:00 o’clock. The schools which will have repre sentatives in the track ^meet are;- Raleigh, Graham, High Point, Asheville Washington, Oak Ridge, Sanford, Friendship, and Huntersville. A trophy cup will be awarded the school whose representatives run up the highest number of points. Letters of congratulation and good wiil upon the success of the High School Debating Union are coming in to the committee from eyery section of the State. Superintendent of the Kenly schools writes: “1 believe this is the greatest movement Caiolina has ever statea.” The Superintendent ^of the Garland schools says: “Our audience enjoyed the dabate very much. We feel greatly benefitted through having gone into the contests.” The Super- intendend of the Jamestown schools says: “In addition to the deoating in the triangle with Burlington and Gra ham, our two teams will debate the teams from the High Point High School this week. The Debating Union is proving very helpful to the high schools of the Piedmont section. ” The Seper- intendent of Bain Academy says: “On the whole, our debates, were fine, and we wish to thank you on behalf of the school and community lor the good work you people of the University are doing for the high schools. Billy Sunday. Charity and Childen makes some observation on Billy Sunday the great Base Ball Evangilist- If a tithe of the 28,000 reported'to have been con>?erted at Pittsburg under Billy Sunday’s preaching prove to be genuine we will be surprised. Billj”, like the othees abuses the preachers j and belittles their work, and the people i who have been faithfully served by these same preachers shout like horse racers at Bill’/’s hits and pour out their money on him by the thousand. Billy is doing the best business, considering the capital invested, of man in the United States. He is coining the money and his baseball business which he followed heretofore, is not in the same class with the preaching business. We would be sorry to see Billy invade our community. He would drain it of its coin in the first place and his preaching would unsettle and hinder the work of every pastor within the marvellous irfluence of the iran. That he is doing some good in the world We have not a doubt; that he is doing a great deal of haim we are equally sure. The kingdom of God cometh not with observation, the blare of trumpets, flaming advertisement in the news papers and a general up stir in the community equal to ten circuses rolled into one It comes in the stillness of the night, in the quiet hour of evening, through the voice of God’s monitor within, and through the means of grace provided by the Lord. The ideal preacher is not a blustery egotist, but a gentle, humble conLCerated pastor with a shepherd’s heart! In The Dewberry’ Fields. (From The Moore County News.) The dewberry fields around Carth age present a most prosperous and most inspiring sight and with their vines tied with white twine around new stakes besprinkled with the green leaves indications are for a bumper crop and all our farmers are jubilant over the prospects of high prices and full pockets. Senator Tilmao says he restored him self to health by means of hot water. But bow did he manage tc -get sick in the first instance? He has been in hot wpter ever since he ‘‘arrived in public life. Careless Platforms. The democratic party has only one sore toe, but it will soon get well. It was slightly mashed by one of the planks in the national platform. This ought to make politicians quit putting in the plattorm declarations for some thing for which there was no great popular demand.— Wilmington Star. Resolutions of Respect, JOHN H. FOWLER. Mebane, N. C. April, 4th, 1914. To the Master, Wardens and Brethren of Bingham Lodge, No. 272 A F and A. M. At Mebane, N. C. We your committee appointed at a former communication of vour r.oda-e to draft and submit to ^he Lodge suitable resolutions cone*^rning our late brother John H. Fowler, respectfully report as follows: Whereas the Great Architect of the Univerce, Our Heavenly Father who doith all things for the best, has seen fit to remove from our midst our late brother John H. Fowler; and, whereas we desire to place on tne records of our Lodge some memorial of our said brother, therefore be it resolved: 1. That in the death of John H. Fowler this Lodge has lost a devoted brother who exemplified in his daily life those truly masonic virtures, friendship, morality and brotherly love, 2. That in the death of brother Fowler the State of North Carolina, and ospecially the town of Mebane, (where he lived the greater part of his life,) have lost a loyal and patriotic son who was ever an advocate of the highest and best in North Carolina citizenship. 3. That having been, for many year, a member ot the Christian church, and a good citizen at all times, we have reason to believe that in his declining yeas he enjoyed the happy reflections consequent upon a well spent life, and that he died in the hope of a blessed immortality. 4- And while we bow, in humble submission, to the will of Him who doith all things well; this Lodge feels its loss, in the death of brother Fowler; and desires to express to the widows and near relatives its sincere and heartv sympathy in their great berievement, 5. That these resolutions be spread upon our records, a copy be sent to the deceased brothers family, and one to the Orphans Friend and Masonic Journal, and one to the Mebane Leader with the request that they publish same. J. T. Shaw, W. W. Corbett, U. S. Ray, Committee. Dime’s Worth of Farm (From the Breeder’s Gazette.) Land is cheap. For easy figuring let us say it is w^rth $1*0 an acre. A square rod, then, it is worth only (1, and 10 cents* worth will be little more than 27 square feet, or a little farm slightly more than five feet on a side. How often a boy will waste a dime and think nothing of it. For a dime he can buy land enough to hold a flower bed, four hills of clover or a peach tree! The boy who can save a dime can become rich. Make a dime look like a tiny farm. The boy who leams to save a dime and to know values will some day come into his own. * Put His Own Money In Before the passage of the present strict banking laws in Wisconsin start ing a bank was a comparatively simple proposition, say a Everybody’s Maga zine. The surprisingly small amount of 1 capital needed is well illustrated by the i story a prosperous country town bank er told on himself when ^sked how he { happened |to enter the banking busi ness. “Well,” he said, “Ididn’t have much else to do, so I rented an empty store building and painted ‘Bank’ on the window. The first day I was open for business a man came iji and deposited $100 with me; the second day another man dropped in and deposited $250, and so, by George, blong about the third day I got confidence enough in the bank to put in a hundrei myself.” Not Ti> Desecrate Easter. Washington Herald. So far it has not been made plain what those who originated the move ment to prevent the “desecration of Easter” hope to accomplish, or why it is necessary or desirable to accomplish anything. It must certainly be admittenl that Washington is innocent of the charge of descration, even if its people do don their new spring clothes on Easter Snnday. On that that day the whole city flocks to the churches and there the one dominant note is joy and thank- fulness. Nature smiles in myriads of blossoms; th^ somber days have pass ed and sombtr thoughts are put aside. What more fitting than that men, wo men and children should want to Uiook their best and should choose that day for putting on their spring attire? It is difficult to detect anything ap proaching harm in such a custom. If the new movement is to find any place here its promjters will show more reason for existence than has yet been disclosed. When Lillian Russell says “men are fools and always will be,” it must be admitted that she speaks from out of a varied and abundant matrimonial experience. Spaniards Ordered Out of Torreon. Gen. Francisco Villa at Torreon has ordered that the 600 Spaniards of that city be deported He issued instructions that trains be proyided immediately and that the exodus to El Paso, Tex., should begin at once. Their property will be confiscated, temporarly at least. It is the tragedy of Chihuahua over again and is said to express the deep rooted suspicion and even hatred with which the native Mexican, and particu larly the peon, looks upon the Span iard. Villa expelled the Spaniards from Chihuahua four months ago, and since then repeatedly has said other Span iards must get out of Mexica. His abid* ing conviction that they were working against the revolution found frequent expression while he was in Juarez, when he asserted he would execute everyone that he found in Tarreon. Make Your Candidate Tell Where He Stands Every time heretofore that we have sent a candidats to the Legislature from our county, ” said a public spirited citizen to the writer yesterday, “we have been buying a pig in a poke. We didn’t know where he stood about any thing. In fact, a candidate seemed to think it his chief purpose to keep the people from knowing where he stood instead of to let them know.” *‘But we are going to change all that this year,” he went on. “I don’t know who’s going to be our Senator, but one thing sure, he has got to give us his platform.” It is to be hoped that voters in a thousand counties in the South are feeling the same way. Our faimers need to give less attention to electing candidates and more attention to selecting them. Have a county platj form if possible, but if you can’t get that, at any rate make every candidate for the Legislature give his yiews on all such issues as we suggested last week, and then vote for him according to whether his platform is good or poor. The only real test is as to how a candidate stands on these measures for the upbuilding of the county and the State. We have said that we want to see more farmers in the Leerislature, but we had rather have a constructive, progressive lawyer any time than a standpat, unprogressive farmer. We have known some farmer legislators who had become ultra-conservative and “set in their wrys” and did more harm to the farmers’ interests than anybody else in the Legislature.—Progressive Parmer. Are Many Kinds. One of the main troubles with the democratic party is that there are so many different kinds of democrats. There are {progressive democrats, conservative [democrats, standpatters, and just how many more kinds we do not know. What the party most needs is much greater number of just plain democrats. ^Henderson Gold Leaf. Since the first of November more than 250,000 immigrants h&ve passed the gateway of Ellis Island and been dumped in New York, explaining in large measure the huge problem of the unemployed now demanding solution in that city. The “melting pot” is slightly choked at that point. Wood Wanted We have subscribers who are behind on their subscription who might bring us some wood, for the present we will be glad to have several loads. Please bring us the wood. \ Philadelphia medical professor having remarked that tuberculosis germs will die in whisky, but will live three years in water, the Houston Post avers: “If thiij man lived in Tennessee the people would kill him.” On the contrary, some of them would want to canonize him for having suggested such a good excuse for ordering another jug.