VolUill2 1 And Right The Day Must Win, To Doubt Wwld Be Disloyalty, To Falter Would Be Sin.^’ MEBANE, N. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 18th, 1915 Number 4 Mrs R. V. Jdines R. V. Ja liaiii Ba.sehaH Team will play the boys ; jasper James died at th#' home of her tiom Whitsett Institute. This 1 ! I Washington INews Letter ! KING COAl Base ball Saturday On Saturday, March 20th, the Bing-! James widow of the! For two years President Wilson has ^ ^ managed t ) keep the United States out | f rOgreSS fciVer 4^C^manuing game 1 g f.uther Sfraughan Mon- ! ; rnrinirn ihki. siiriiicr Liit* cii'.LUcii Wh“?i Germany anJ^ France were intervention’ .o be a„ in,ere.ti„, on,, and at 10.i0 o--lock. About tw„i 'j! , we hope that all will be out to se“ it 1 month ago she fell and t>roke her hip | Vera Cruz. Once more the situation j last at war people in .the United States t he i^ame will be played on the j for her recovery were! has approached a crisis. Gen. Carranza I wert^ burning on the average less than ,M, b ine High School g^round. \\ e are never made sd ndiculous by ^ . .1- ^ u u ...I two weeks ago she contracted a severe th*' q jbhties that w'e have, as bv those ' v. t> :iftVct to havp.-Ro-hefoucauld. | cold which proved fatal. She was I deeply beloved by all who knew her A devout Christian and abandoned at that time. However she j been informed in a note sent fiom | coal in a yesjr. When Gar- rallied and was ccttinB on nicely untU field was elected PresUient a d,,ca.'e less there Is an improvement in ron-. diti.ms with respect to foreiRners and i Hie consumption ot coal had risen their interests in Mexican territory ''V under his controf such steps as may be ’ IM rather then that crowds should sig’h ; forme, that from kind»*el tye the j the Baptist church. ti ii’kUntjf tear should atf'al.—NVhite. j She is survived bv two children Mr. j Will James of Caswell and Mrs Luther U. frain from these men, and lot' Straughan of Mebane. Funeral services ih^’tn alone; for ff this counsel of this! were held from the home and she W'as wurU be of men, come lo naught; but i: it be of (it>d, ye can not overthrow J if; l-^?t haply yc be found even lo fight j ,..iiaiMst God-^rhe Acts, v:38,;]9. | noon. in (Caswell county Wedne.^day after- I he use of travelinc is to regulate j iiii:>yInrition by reality, and instead of' must repeat the oft laaii to view an ivreligions one either V. ith alarm o” aversion, or with any ntht^r feeling than regret and hope an tiiotherlv commisseration, — Carlvle. For every person in the United Staten a member of! necessary will be taken by the Ameri-1 n^ore than five 'and one-half tons of can government to obtain the desired ■ coal, bitumious and anthracite, were protection. ; burned in 1914. What does that mean? The sending of a Unit-^?d States ic.- 1*1.. i „ • j * • 1 rr ^ ... . Simply that our matchless industrial cruises to Vera Ciuz at this time is to be accepted as indications that this . latest demand nruiy have the affect of I It means ako thnt a country that buried in the old family burying ground Carranza or the American-^ uses little fuel produces small results I hatmg population of Mexico City. i material things. i The President and his advisers main-! * ., 3 1 r ^ 1 i I . . . , ; As the demand for fuel grows great- I taming secrecy as to the exact nature . j , , ^ ^ , . ! er the price mounts higher. Stephen of the latest developments, but that Ir.- j u u.. nu\ # ►v . ! ., , , ^ . j Girard bought 4.500 acres of anthracite I land in Schuylkill county at auction I and paid $l an acre for it. ! Harry Thaw's father made a ficod I investment in bituminous. He paid $105 j per acre in 1886 for a Westmoreland ■ tract which has yielded ?3,300 per can not otherwise be acre. ' Uncle Sam’s cen.sus telTor found that The longest, windieit and mostexpen- j Connellsville coal, which was worth $50 j an acre W’hen Appomattox was put on the map, is miw 50 times that value. In ihe decade following Sedan, where Store Breaking thi d velopments are of great impor tance can not be doubted. Increasing I Lnst Tnursday Night rillman’s Stor^ [ r^»stiveness t>n the part of some of the I of Burlington was broken in to and ' European qowprs suggested the possi- j robbed of qt.ite a quantity »f goKls. \ ff^vernment has arrived at some uoderstanding with them that Chapel [iili News Frep.iral ion:-; for the iiiau^^uration exercises of rr*“si(i!."nt Kdwr-ml K. (Jriihain on April lit :ue ttikiiii; on i’iiiai sluipe. The list of speakers foi‘ the t!>- table occM.sion has been arraged. Aii- diesses will be delivered by Prenident Lowell (d Harvard University, Presi Surface l*ohteness And. Other Manners ((’hristian Sience Monitor.) Tn resj>onse to a remark that the po- litene.‘^s of Ihe Fremh w’s “all on the s.irface.” James McN-ill Whistler once said, And a very goo;} place tor it to b^‘. ” Tlie influence of a recent Euro pean visitor to the United States to the effect that Anieri ans, especially in the dent Goodnow of Johns Hopkins Univer sity, President Alderman of the Uni- ... versity of Virginia, and President Fin- I cities, are sacrifiring politeness to lay of the University of New York. i “'’ffiriency." is at least worthy of con sideration. A few years ago the digni- On behult of the alumni of the Uni- versiiy, George Stephens, of (.'harlotte, memtor of thcclassoF 1896, will ad dress i-he distinguished academic assem blage. Prof I,, P McGehee, (lean of Universiay Law School, has been cho sen us speaker to represent the faculty I'he exercise in the forenoon will be presided over by Governor Ltcke Oaig Secretary of Navy Josephus Daniels will preside as toastmaster at the lun cheon in Swain Hall when the visiting delegates are entertained fied anrl honored president of a univer sity in the South was asked “What are 1 your ideals in education?” The head of j the excellent institution arose from j his chair and, pointing reverently to a I life size painting of Robert E. Lee I which hung on the wall of his office, i excl-iimed “Southern educational I deal? To make grea t gentlemen, gen tlemen like Robert E. Lee.’ He went on to speak of the impression made upon him in the years when he had sat rtiiiiking h.Av things may be. to them as they are.—Johnson. The robbery occured at about four , . . ^ clock in the morning, four o clock: action than w'e have vet seen, in the that it IS unworthy a religious ^ f + r n ^ 1 1./^. - • , that evening, a quantity of the stolen 1 evei.t Carranza repeatel 1 j may lead to more definite and vigorous I plunder was found in the home of j brought to terms. j Koxey McGees a colored woman, j Koxey w'as arrested but afterwards \ released. In the'me?»n time the officers I got on the track of the thieves and trailed them quite a distance, but finally lost them. Friday night a number of thieves broke in to Mr. sive Congress in the history of the na tion came to an erd an noon March 4. Twenty million words embalmed in the •’'o’.igressional Reconl and almost two years of continuous session, is the j the Kiser’s grandtather captured Em- record of the Sixty-third Congress. About $120 a word is what it cost the \ oeople of the United {>tates in actual Geo McAdams store at Cheek Crossing] ... j • / approonations, the record of this ses stole about seventy five dollars worth . ^j^n alone being about $1.120,000,0(H). peror Napoleon IL', this country mined $4 of gold for every $7 of coal This | year we have mirietl over $9 of coal for every dollar of gokl. Bfland [tems Mrs R. D. Bain of Hillsboro and Miss Maud Faucett teacher in the Eiio Graded school rear Hillsboro spent last N^^ednesdaj’ with relati\ near hjfiand |Qf goods shoes, clothing etc. None of I Two of the appropriation bills failed Mr. and Mrs Foust Tapp of j the thieves have been apprehended, I in the last hour. That wa.«? the penalty the Ridge neighborhood visited I although there is a careful look out j administration for taking relativ^es near Efland Sunday j them. It seems a pity that honest the^time of C^ng^ss with the hope-j In order to hold an afternoon j labor should be the prey to such : thieving scamps. in the lecture room of the distinguished Among the college ])residents who j educator and general of the South at attended the awgust academic gather- ^ Washington and Lee university. And ing arc all those in North ..arolina j this »mpresston evidently was not so with the exception of one. From outside j j^u^h that of the instructor as of the of the State will come President Alder- j gentleman mnn of the University of Virginia, j j,, these buisy days of severe com- Pretioent (roobnow of Johns Hopkins 1 increased activity when University, President Lowell of Har- j the nation is making even more insist- vard University, President Finlay of j (Jemands on the schools to turn out New York Univer.sity, Pres dent James j technicians and specialists, it of University of Illinois. President, perhaps a far cry to politeness Belgium Honors America ! In all the clash and tumult of the I war. America is quick to catch a word j from Belgium. Innocsnt past a doubt I and wronged beyond the power of words I Lo describe, the gallant, hopless little naiion makes an appeal to the Amer ican heart ^nd has been made the re- cipeiit of the most efficient and gener ous ouiporing of international relief wliich the history of such endeavors records. On Washington’s Birthday the city authorities ot Louvain resolved that, in token of their “ardent gratitude’ to the Republic, “in the new parts of the city, as they rise out of the ruins, three streetsl>r squares shall receive the illustrious names President Wilson, Washington and American Nation.” The Burgomaster and Aldermen of Louvain could not give voice to what was in their minds. In and occupied na tion there is no freedom of speech. The resolution is but couched in brief and formal words. But it will be understood And no honor that the greatest city or nation in its high noon of prosperity might confer could more deeply touch the American people than will this tri bute from wrecked Louvain.—N. World. Is The Law a Criminal? man as a w'itness Be Sure You Have Money Mr. Bun F. Riley and sons^ Master Frank and Gene of Hills-j boro came out Sunday to visit j"^*' |^y^.rpthe two that failed to pass. To his brother Mr. A. T* Riley [in The Bank Before Writ- ] avoid an extra session the D»»mocratic V Mrk j leaders resorted to the extraordinary I our Vi^ncCK* i>IO j expedient of continuing, by joint re8t>- jNu^ocent sSBung the Atlanta police incarceration (less effort to pass the ship purchase i bill and then attempting to force th- , , I rough the money measures in the final ^P«rtment secure 1 I honrs of the session. The postal service * ^ trumped up charge of larceny. ! bHl and the Indian appropriation bill They knew he was not gniliy, but be- Mr. Harry Fitzpatrick ofj Salisbury N, C. came down last 1 Friday evening and spent the | night with his parents and left s mg More Overdrafts. Considerably interest has been a- smircbed his character in ofder to con vict another man charged uith stealing an ,'\utomobile. The bo30 wother savs Saturday afternoon for Asheville ; among the bankers of the state ^ Jg yout^ alone that the and Other towns in the “Land I o'^^r the order just issued by Comp-| great Parent of creations hath provided of the Sky.” to spend a few troller of Currency John Skelton Wil- Happiness is found with the purring i state constitutione, days Viication, Mrs Jack Price who has been on an extended trip to relatives i lution, the appropriations of last year j her son has never had a blot on his - for the postal and Indian services. i reputation and she is extremely humi liated and sorrowfully distressed. The poliee themselves have com mitted a crime against the federal and not to mention liams, requiring that the barks discon tinue the practice of honoring over drafts. The order which has been re- ■y and the fostering ot gentle manhood, but no one who has traveled widely «nd observed in America has failed to fi»id persons in authoritative places expounding by example and precept the permanent values association with attention to this subject. It is not, how ever, an uncommon experience, in some sections of the country, to find men speaking of “gentlemen" in a way not cat no less than with the playful kitten; j their violation of the youth’s individual in the armchair of dozing age, as well j rights and disgrace which they have as in either the sprightliness of the* heaped upon him for life. TTT. .01 J i First National Bank of j ^Jan(.e or the animation of the chase. if there is any way to get those in v\inst0n Salem and Greens- Oi-der of ■ t„ novelty, to acuteness of sensation, boro has returned to spend some | comptroller. Washington, Jan. 28 I hope, to ardor of pursuit;, succeed time with her parents Mr and 119^5 ^o the Board of Directors: j ^,hat is, in no inconsiderable degree, an Ml’S Jack Smith near iliilana. j Gentlemen: The granting by some | equivalent for them aM—percepion of Mr. J. B. Baity who has been ' banks of accomodation in the form of j ease. Herein is the exact difference on the sick list for the past few j overdrafts is objectionable and can not j between the young and the old. The days is able to be out again [ be countenanced by this office. This young are not happy but when enjoying practice should cease entirely To faci-1 pleasure; the old are happy when free litate the complishment of this result, j from pain.-William Paley. the subject has been taken up by this j . Mr. J. L. Efland made a busi ness trip to New York and other northern cities and returned a few days ago. office with banking departments of varions states, and these authorities j The new liquor law in ^liss Annie Jordon spent Sun- | have generally agreed that to take the day afternoon out in the country I necessary action to secure the effective with her friend Miss .Cora Cecil, l co-operation of state banks in attain- police officials in jail, the step cer tainly ought to be taken, —else the mother ought to have a good claim on the city for damages. Many a crime is committed in the name of the law.—Wilmington Star. Anarchy’s Professor And _ j Pupils. South Caro- * (New York World). citizen of' There is more than one defect in the Hamerschlag of Carnegie Polytechnic Institute, President Lovett of Rice In stitute. President Moore of Unioii Theological Seminary', President Mat- heson of the Georgia School of '^•'ech- nology. President Murphree of Univer sity of Florida, President Smith of Waohington and Lee University, Pres ident Stevenson of Princeton Theolo gical Seminary, PresidentSoule of Geor gia College of .Agriculture, President j intended to be complimentary. Webb of Randolph-Macon Woman’s ' College, and President Graham of Hampden- Sidney. The following institutions have sig nified their intention of sending dele gates; Cornell University, N.oath west ern Univarsity, University of Penn sylvania, Rochester University, Lafay ette College, Dartmouth College, Le- land Stanford University, Baylor University, Smith College. Colunbia University, University of Missouri Stevens Institute of Tedhnol*)gy, Van derbilt University,. Trinity CoHege (Conn,), Massachusetts Institute of Technology. University of PittaburP, Teachers College of New York. Har- vord College, Wofford College, Purdue University, Bryn Mawr College, United States Military Academy, Medical I College of South Carolina, Mt Holy oke College, Rutgers Callege, Univer sity of Alabama, St. Johns College, University ef Arkansas, George Wash ington Univeasity. The learned societies of America will Keal Sex Equality (Buffalo Express). “We want .suffrage for peace,” de clares an advocate of suffrage and suf ferer from v/ar. But would we get it? Are »iot the women of the warring countries just as keen for war as the men?-In England are not the women the most active recruiting sergeants? Even in the neutral country do not the women divide as sharply on lines of racial sympathy as their husbands and brothers? Why can’t this question of the ballot be discussed on its merits, without pre tense that w'omen’s hearts and minds differ radically in their workings from the like organs in masculine frames? Women should have the ballot-if they should have it—because they are human beings and taxpayers and workers, not because they belong to a supposedly superior ?ex. Those who would give women the ballot as a means of re be well represented tt the inaugural i society either don’t know what exercises. ! talking abont or are not talk- I about what they know. Intellectu- The Memphis News-Scimitar doegn’t i morally, w’omen are neither want Tennessee to make an exhibit at! ®tter nor worse than men. If this be Undertaker’s Philosophy. A Birmingham undertaker, asked if business and industrial depression af fected his business, replied; “Sure, it does. You see In hard times the peo ple economize. They eat plainer food and less of it and consequently do not get sick. Tine* again, not having any money they don’t call In the doctor in the event of sickness, and—they get well I So you can plainly see how It affects me.” There’s an ounce of phil osophy in what the undertaker says. If we live plainly wq live better, healthier and happier lives.—Mont gomery Advertiser. I lina allows delivery to each — I a eallon of John Barleycorn per month; ^ brain-pan of the average anarchist, i the latest statute in North Carolina The Europea Way. Discussing fire-waste in this country which averages about a quarter of a To be an Anarchist at all argues de ficiencies in several directions. To I. J , • J -ir i- restricts the per capita supply to a; pleach anarchy, threaten anarchy and Ml'. RobeT*t Riley Post Master j t een esire . ou are reques ! for the same period. Where-, organize in secret for the promotion of ■ pent Sunday at home with his , ed to adopt a resolution directing that | reprehensible acquaintance , anarchy, and then, when an overtact Mr. and Mrs rhomas 1 officer or employe of your bank I , is committed in the name of anarchy. . to assert lightly that “it was all a twice as go 'frame-up by the police” in i shall pay or charge to the account of j any depositor when there are not suf-i ficient funds on deposit to the credit of the draw^er of the check to the meet parerits IMey. i\Ir. lohn Labberton of Pitts- bui'o- Penn, spent lapt Friday night with his grand parents i\lr. and Mrs M. L. Efland . . Please forward a certified copy of Mrs Sharpe of Madison is, resolution to this office as soon visiting her daughter Mrs ‘^oe | ^^^p^ed. Let the res- I hompson, | ojutjon show the names of the directors | Mr. and Mrs Charlie Brown j present at the meeting, visited Mrs Brownes mother Mrsi Please acknowledge receipt without l\lary Thompson near X Koads; delay. ilrew Jackson is just order to a place to live in as the State to which (discredit anarchy, is a process of rea- Joseph Cannon owes ntxtivity. Men, who are rogues individials, are in the mass very honorable people. —Montesquieu. liist Saturday and Sunday. i soning difficult to follow, i Probably nothing shows the contemp tible character of anarchy more com pletely than this habitual pose of its advocates. If the members of these inner circles of murder and destruc- j tion were true terrorists they would not whimper in times like these 1 of police persecaution. They would j glory in terror, and instead of accus- 1 ing the police they would defy the com-1 Anarchy is taught here by a slippery San Francisco because ‘^she had noth- we re glad of it. ing except what she is anxious to con ceal.” Isn’t this rather hard on Col. George Marcellus Bailey, native of North Carolina, resident of Texas, and until a few month ago democratic mem ber of the staff of a republican Gov-1 ' "J ernor of the home State of the News-! '’.,5'®'*'’ Scimitar? To exhibit George at gan ■ Francisco weald be to ensure for Ten- f ^ ranee if you have a nessee an exhibit distinctly suigeneris— * amages yjur neighbor the cynosure of all eyes and possibly the envy of all other commonwoalths in the American Union A Misreading Proof, It was the rush hour in cafetaria, : ine of these quick lunch places where j you help yourself and grab a chair and j use the arm of the chair as a table, j says the Cincinnati Enquirer. A | lushed feeder grabbed a •rind chopped out a chair. Tuembered that he needed coffee and he dashed over to the service counter. ; another, tney get his goat and Dreams He’s In Cotfin; Makes Will And Dies. Respectfully, A remarkable case of a dream •TOHN SKELTON WILLIAMS, • ing true and a wish being" 8*'^tified as ^ most of whom are perfeily (’(‘mptrollet. ! a resulc of his dream vision happened Lvilling that some young fool or old I when Patric Joseph Graham of Butte ! crank should follow' its precepts, while ~ I g ^ homo of his sister, Easy to Escape i Mrs. Mary Weldon. The strange story , . 1 of Graham wasdisclosed when Attorney It is sometimes said by people and , . i Louis E. Haven appeared at the court- by newspapers that crime is not less- • 'house to record a will written by slice of pie; . capital punishment. In Great j - i,- j 4.1, ’ Then he re-1 _ . , takes the life of ^ hours prior to his death. Mr. Graham, who had been ill fori several weeks, took a nap shortly be-. his instigators assume airs of injury and innocence. The true policy in dealing with this evil is, while running down the dupes, to omit no effort to fasteu upon their tutors the greater guilt that properly attaches to them. property, ynu pay his damages. In Ger many, if you have a fire, the first callcr is a polieceman, and he takes I you to jail. There you have to prove ; that you are not responsible, through I negligence, or any act, otherwise you ■ (Washington Star.) i ''JZ Dr. Fritz Metzler of the University I departMent.” of Heidelberg said to a heckler in the | course of a neutrality lecture in Den-1 ver; “My good friend, you misread me. Purposely you misread me, my good friend. You are as bad as the WifeJ who was disgruntled. | a‘To this wife who was disgruntled One Race of Men. Expansion and combination must go on until ail nations or combinations of nations have become absorbed into one comp’ete whole, according to Al fred W. Lawson—a solidified people as large as the earth itself, a great and glorious unification of all the races, to which boundaries between different countries will mean no more than che boundaries between the dif ferent states mean to the Amerieaa citizen today, and when race prejudice and patriotism will cease to exist en tirely. Progress and expansion must go on, notwithstanding that the aver age human being has some sort of a dull feeling that this must all end ia the year of 1914. Modern Solomon. A Georgia magistrate was perplexed by the conflicting claims of two negro women for a baby, each contending* that she was the mother of it. The judge remembered Solomon, and, drawing a bowie knife from his boot, declared that he W’ould giye half to each. Tlie women w'ere shocked, but had no doubt of the authority and purpose of the judge to make the pro posed coi(ipr:>mise. “i)on’t do that, boss,” they both screamed, in unison, “you can keep it yourself.”—Case and Comment. Poor Hen. A couple of Pennsylvania farmers, a man and wife, drove from their farm to the nearest railway. The man, small and scared, sat meekly beside his w'ife, who filled two-thirds of the sea*> arc* only spoke to command. Finally the station was reached. The woman hustled in, settled her numer ous bundles, and sat down. Looking over her goods and chattels, she sud denly missed something, and looking about, discovered that her husband had remained outside on the platform. She rapped sharply on the window. “Hen!” she called, pointing to the bench beside her, “Come set.” j Go to Rimnr ers for Meat, Meal Flour ! Lard and Mollasses. A Chargfe In Tiie darkness young bride said, over their afternoon ] (O. C. A. Child, in New York Times ) coffee and coffee cakes: Out of the trenches lively, lads! Steady, steady there, number two! ‘I am so sad. Gustav is away on a Britian, when a man business trip. This is the first time Step like vour feet were tiger’s pads-- , . Crawl when crawling’s the thing to do! Column left, through the sunken road? Keep in touch as you move by feel! Empty rifles-no need to ioad- Night work’s clos-e work, stick to steel! 3ince our marriage that I have been left alone. ’ “ ‘Oh well don’t worry,’ sneered the other, ‘it won’t be the last.’ ” F’or bargains for cash go to J. M. Rimmers or call, phone no 78 Fourth Street. —Mebane N. C. homi- Beachy Killed Lincoln Beachy, the ayiator, was When he returned with his coffee his : cide is abont one-eighth as frequent as | supper and dreamed that he saw chair was occupied by another hurry- | g^u^try. Trath is execution | himself laid out in a casket, So im- u[) dinner. | jytyrder in this country is a rare | pressed was Graham that after supper j killed while making an exhibition fight ■‘E.xcuse me,” said the first man, j much o’amble ■ he summoned Attorney Haven to his j at the Panama-Pacific Exposition Sun- “}iut that IS my chair.” j thing, ihere is ^ ^ ^ j office and related his experience, ir-j day. At an altitude of about 7,000 feet it—we j)refer to believe the ' « > _ . ...- ^ sharp descent. The and watch the (jet the Facts Strai}2:ht. Some of the newspapers, either be cause they have not read the act or Curse you, there, did you have to fall? Wait for shadow’s clouds. When It’s moonshine, down you go! Quiet, quiet, as men in shrouds. Cats a-prowl in the dark go slow. thing. There is ‘How do you know it is your chair?’ j about it—too much chance to escape j lawyer draw op a will, j Beachy began demanded the occupant in a surly tone, punishment of any kind.—Greensboro attorney laughed and in an effort } wings of his aeroplane collapsed and “Because I can prove it,” stated the | j to ease Graham’s mind suggested there the machine plunged into San Francisco it?” asked the lirat man, “How can you prove oocupant. “By the seat of your pants,” was the reply. “You are sitting on nfy pie.” Tomatoes Provide New Inrfustry. Extracting the oil from tomato seed has become a conslderftbl® indiMh try in ItAlf. . _ _ j [ was no need of hurry, but this client 1 was obdurate and the will was drawn •j. • J.V.- uD Graham leaving his property to If the average community in this'^P’ ^^anain ^ land was half as zealous in enforcing j sister. the written as in applying the “un I ■■ writlen*’law. deeds of violence in these 1 ... wnueii law, Rimmers is the place to get your United States would soon become as ivimmers ,, , . , tT j - . I A.U cTftrden seeds of all Kind, Ponderosa «>naDiciou8 bv their absence as they , u conspicious oy I ,nd Bimner Tomatoes, none »>ette^ now are by their presence. Bay. The 4one female member of the Col orado State Senate has demanded to be treated like a gentleman. This would seem to put it up to her male collea gues to act the part of “purfick lad ies.” wish to prejudice the uniformed against former-^ try to make it appei,r, or at least leave the impression, that the rural segregation measure, proposed by the Farmers’ Union, would prevent a far mer renting land to negroes. It does nothing of the sore. Damn your feet and your blind-bat eyes! Caught in the open, caught-,that’s all! Searchlights! Slaughter—we ment surprise! Sharpnel fire a bit too low- Gets us, through, on the richochet! Open order and in w’^e go. Steel, cold steel, and we'll make ’em pay. Rimmers is the place to get Apples, I ^in? Left, wnile men go on to Oranges, Bananas, and Candies. Cake?, Crackers men go on to die! Take them in, sergeant, take them in! Go on, follow good luck—good-by! What Doe& Companion ship MearT to You? “I hate to be alone,” said a woman the other day. “I want somebody around.” Her remark was a gage throw'n down as to the meaning of companion ship. It set me to thinking. I been to wonder what is the idea of com panionship that most of us entertain? From this remark the others she subsequently made, her idea of com panionship was to have somebody about. She wanted somebody to talk to. She wanted to hear somebody moving in the house. She didn’t care much what they talked about or what they did. It was the dead stillness of a house with nobody in it but her self that appalled her. That was her idea of companionship —just somebody about. “Of course, I would rather they would be pleasant,” she admitted, “and not have a bad temper. But i’d rather put up with that than live alone.” We Charge We charge twelve and a half cents on shirts with cuffs, collars two cents each, cuffs four cents a pair, Compa re these prices with those you have been paying other Laundriei. Star Laundry Mebane N» :C, iiffl