| LIVE TOPICS | -SOMF OF THt THINGS NORTH ? ' CAROLINA EDITORS V j TALK ABOUT j * 01I Rockingham Post: We are neg lectful of an important matter, an Cixy matter to remedy. It U the matter of "sign board*" at all road crossing*. They are needed?badly ii ?ded, not ?o n.uch for us at home, but for the traveller!. We munt be uJndful and eonside'ate of strangers. Fayettvvllle Observer: Mr. John Huie Informs us that he saw a calf, about three weeks old, with five feet, one of the hind 1< gs having two p"rf?'tly formed feet. The two feet on this hind leg are equal ly well developed. This freak of nature is the property of Miss Kate Knight, who resides In upper Har nett. o . ? New liern Sun: A newspaper edl Vor has been nominated for Governor mc the Republican ticket In Ohio this fall. In Minnesota the Democrat ic nominee is a newspaper editor, ?and in New Jersey the Democrats have nominated the President of Princeton I'niversity to head . their ticket, which goes to show that a fnau does not necessarily have to be ? lawyer to fill an executive of fice. ft ? " ? B Charity and Children. Tlif Or phanage truck farm has never con tributed so many or such valuable I products as this year. Our vegetables t>ave been abundant all through the season. Sliced tomatoes, Irish po tatoes, beans, peas and cabbage of on:' own raising, have cut down the Krocery bills and furnished the chil dren fresh and wholesome diet. The ipllk supply has also greatly In creased. The e departments are under the care of Mr. It. F. Crutch- j field who with his force of stout boya, made good use of themselves. j Wilmington Star: When a fellow Is riding on a good road such an elevated feeling comes over him ( he will catch himself whistling mer- j jrlly or imitating the musical notes ol Caruso. Howevt r. If he Is on a bad road and engages In a strug- ^ ;le to get through raudholes and has ills anatomy slung right and left and bounced up and down by ruts and one thing and another, he'll ?surely fall from grace and get as soreheaded and grouchy as an anar- j chlst. lluildlng good roads helps out the up-life movement and In culcates civic righteousness. o Ch-wcnvllle Keflector: Pitt county has held biiother voting primary and The Retleotoi Is frank to say that It does not like the kind of primaries that have been held lure, and be lieves that man) people of the coun ty art "f the same opinion. There int.re debauching of voters Sat urday than has ever before been In any eelction in the county. Whiskey was disrtlbuted freely and It- was disgraceful, to say the least of It. 1 We do not know and cannot say who was responsible for It, but be the guilty ones whom they may. It should be condemned. The obtaining of ( votes by such means was a violation , of law and decency. MxnAvllle Our-Home: A resolu- | Uon WW passed at the superlnten- ! dents' meeting at Chapel Hill re cently dealing with the establishment of at least one school In each eoun- \ rty of the State in which practical agri wilture is to be taught. The Un ion county branch of the Fanners' Union has taken a decided step to wards making sure that the law re- j gardlng the teaching of elementary agriculture in the public schools be ? carried out. It's Just as necassary j that agriculture be taught boys who are going to become farmers as i that those -who are going to prac- j tlce law take special courses In that { line and we rejoice to see these move ments towards preparing the boys ( and girls for practical and success ful farm lives. ... o Gaston ia Gazette: Do you know what Gastonia's near-beer bill is? A gentleman who observes pretty closely most everything that goes on was figuring a few days ago on this and discovered that it is in the neighborhood of $12,000 a year or >1.000 a month, on a conservative es timate. Here's the way he arrived at It. He learned that the near beer saloons receive an average of at least 12 barrels of this stuff each vreek. There are 10 dozen of 120 bottles to the barrel, a total of 1,440 bottles weekly. The retail price, he stated, is 15 cents per bottle. It only requires a simple process of multiplication to ascertain that this represents an outlay of $11,232 a year, or practically $1,000 cach month. Xbese figures are believed to be too Tow. The People Are Awaking. Evidence Is not wanting that the voter* of Virginia are beginning to think about the lnlqultieft of the fee system. Whilst many of them are doubtless not giving a thought to this important subject, there can be no doubt that the day Is not distant when they will do so. Re forms are not wrought In a moment. They are achieved slowly. As It Is wllh good roads, so It Is with the fee system. The people are being aroused to the necessity for these two great reforms. Hear a voice from Nottoway: "You deserve the thai.ks of the people for your editorials on I he system. You d-serve the more thanks because jou must be aware that you are antagonizing a very active and Influential class. I do not assert that all county offi cials concerned will be offended at your loyalty to the public good, and 1 hope that some of them will come out and endorse your views, for they must see the Justice of your position. The fee system, ns op posed to a known reasonable sal ary, hns no ground to stand on. Ev ery rational person wants to know and has a right to know what he pays for service, and It >s not a square deal unless he does. There is no room for argumei W there. Ev ery tendency to establish an official class and to waste money on It should be vigilantly watched and actively opposed by every good citizen and by the press. After all. apathy on the part of the people Is our great peril nnd theprlme cause of all of our ills." In this condensed statement, tills able opponent of the fee system has put the case well. There Is no argu ment for the fee system as against the salary system. "The apathy of thf people'' we fear far more than we do the activity of the office-holders. Hear a voice from Southampton, speaking through the esteemed South ampton Democrat: "The seeming Indifference In the recent primary election In our dis trict of the voters not voting will naturally cause our politicians and office-seekers to 'sit up and take notice. "What are the causoaT .... "Another reason Is that many of our voters have decided?and not without cause?'that a few rlngsters will carry things their own way anyway.' "Still another reason is that a clean, honest poor man?be he ev er so competent?hardly feels In clined to offer for office and meet the conditions that are required. "The time was when the battle cry was 'vote to down the negro.' Our people are thinking more than they are voting, but the time Is coming when they are going to vote, and woe be unto the powers that be. "Who are these fee officers who are organizing to get a lease or ex tension upon their offices? Why the cry that it Is necessary to give some officers several terms that they may equip themselves to perform the duties of their offices? If all recognize the danger of our Presi dents succeeding themselves more than two consecutive terms, why should we want a life tenure of office for our clerks, sheriffs, commission ers and others? We have just as good and competent men who would till the office qf clerk of the court for a stated salary of say 91,zuu to $2,000 per annum as are those who are now filling these positions. "Without wishing to pose as a prophet, 1 predict that many of the aspirants for a seat in the next Leg islature will have to define their positions upon the fee system. "The Rip Van Winkle nap will not last our voters all of the time, and when once aroused there Is go ing to be a mighty awakening In this country of ours." You. there is going to be a "mighty a'vakenlug'' b< tore long. Next sum liur, we belie*'.', the people are go ing to exact from the candidates for the General Assembly a binding and uiKiuivocal deciaiation as to the fee system. In the next few years, the office-holders who are hugging the feo ays'em are going to have the fight cf 'i.elr lives, and we much mis take the temper of the Virginia peo ple if the office-holders prevail. The day is coming when a "por man" will feel "Inclined to offer for of fice" and will dare to oppose the of ficeholders who have builded their own personal political machines. The day !s coming when our city and county officers shall receive com pensation on a salary basis and not on a fee basis. The day is coming wh?n the people will rend the veil of mystery and secrecy that en shrouds the treasuries of , the of fico-lioli'irs. ' Ulp Van Winkle" is not yet cwake, but he is tossing in his slumber. He has not much longer to sleep.?Richmond Times-Digpatch. Cuba leads as an exporter of man ufactured tobacco. J GOOD ROADS J Schools and Roads. Th>- Wilson Times takes note of recent investigations that have led the state department of education to favor consolidation of rural schools as much as possible. It says: "Some Interesting calculations ar< being n.ade In the state department of Kducatlon by Supervisor of Ele mentary Schools Drogden as to th>' relative cost of public school educa tion In the smaller rural schools ami the larger supervised city schools. It Is found that In fifteen counties of the state that have answered In qulrles ns to this matter there are forty-three rural schools with only twelve children each, and It Is found ! that these cost considerably inon per capita for the schooling than do the larger city schools per capl ta. And at the same time the small er schools have a low grade teas er, ai a rule. These figures when they are fully worked out are ex pected to make a strong showing for the oconomlc advantage as well at | that of better Instruction for the larger consolidated schools. The onlj ' objection to consolidated school ills t riots Is the facC that a number of pupils are compelled to walk quite a distance. This feature seems to have been overcome In the west by | omninusses wini go aruunu inrougu I the country picking ui> the children and conveying them to school." The tendency of the times is un doubtedly making for consolidation and the school system Is no excep tion to the rule. Much money is wasted each year In the duplication of work unnecessarily in school that ought to be consolidated. In this way terms might be lengthened and school courses made more compre hensive. An important factor in this pro blem is that of transportation?the nearness of the school to the family. And the establishment of a system of good roads will save this prob lem. With good roads schools that cannot now be consolidated can be united much to the benefit of ail concerned. Better schools and bet ter roads go hand in hand and In the long run are dependent one up on the other.?Klnston Kree-Press. Our Roads Neglected. It is a shame and rebuke to the people of the South that so little care has been devoted to the de velopment of their public roaHs. For generation after generation they have neglected this most important adjunct of respectable civilization to their own immense loss. The sand-clay road can be built for about $;"00 the mile, and is most ex cellent for all ordinary traffic. The macadamized road can be built for from $ 1.200 to $2.500 the mile. Many of the experts regard the sand-clay road, when properly constructed, as all that is required. There has been a very encouraging forward move ment In quite a number of the coun ties, but the general scheme of a State system of highways has not been worked out as the necessities of the people and the interests of the Commonwealth demand.?Richmond Times-Dispatch. In the long run it Is the good roati that Is the cheapest. It stays In good condition longer; repairs on It, when necessary, last a long time; It Is an Investment that pays.?Rich mond Times-Dispatch. Benefits of Rural Delivery. A rural mail carrier, writing to the Springfield Republican, says he hears a good d^al about the cost of rural free delivery, but hears prac tically nothing about Its profifts. He admits that it is no easy matter to figure up the credit side of the business, but he makes a pretty fair showing. The carrier says the number of pieces of mall matter handled since his route was established has in creased from fewer than 3,000 to more than 6,000 a month. The num ber of pieces of mail collected is more than three times what it was at the beginning of the service. His route Is twenty-two miles in length and he delivers twenty-four daily pa pers where no papers were tak?n before. They would not be taken now, he adds. If the route were dis continued. Farm values, he says, have been Increased, and "while It is not "asy to measure in dollars and cents the Increment In value due to the service the fact that It ex- j l&ts makes the farms more marketa- : ble." He knows that there has been an Increase In the number of farmers. Moreover, along his route there are "a number of young men who have j reached the ages of discretion and decision who are remaining on the farms." He Is confident they would not be there if present conditions were identical with those of ten years ago. That all the credit for | this is due to rural free delivery he | doea not claim, but he thinks the i rural mall route has been "an im portant factor in the equation." The benefits of rural delivery are many and varied. The service, of course, costs a great deal of money and there Is no promise that It will become teifsustalnlng in the imme diate future. Aside from the ques tion of postal revenue its establish ment has been amply justified by the dally newspaper to localities not previously reached and is making the young men content to remain on the farm. It is making the farms more valuable and the farmers more in telligent, and any agency that ac complishes these things must be necessarily a valuable aid to the c ountry's development. The farm is the foundation stone of prosperity, and anything that helps the farmer helps everybody. The Government is spending a big sum of money on rur al free delivery, butl t is money well *pent and the wisdom of the expen J diture will be more and more appar i ent as the years go by.?Louisville Courier Journnl. Lloyd W. Bowers. I When the intelligence of the death ! nt Solicitor-General Lloyd Wheaton Mowers was flashed to the American people yesterday perhaps there were few who could recall anything about him, despite the fact that President Taft announced that it had been his purpose to have appointed him to the United States Supreme Court "if opportunity offered." He was a bril liant lawyer, but he attended to his arduous labors, content with the sat isfaction of duty done rather than with consplcious place in the public eye. As Solicitor-General of the United States, his record has tfeen rarely equaled. He never lost a case which he argued. The most luminous fact in his rec ord, however, is that he left a lucra tive law practice in the fullness of his strength to serve the Govern ment for what must have teen to him a very small salary. When he was offered the solicitor-generalship by President Taft, he was general counsel of the Chicago and North western Railway, recognized as one of the 6,best lawyers in the Nation. During his sixteen years' service as general counsel, no charge, technical or otherwise, was made against his road. Yet he relinquished material consideration "at great personal sac rifice," as President Taft said, and gave his fine legal mind to the use of his country. Worn with the cares and duties of his high office, he end ed his life as a patriotic public ser vant. Fighting alone, single-handed, he caught the attention of the whole country last March when he defend ed the constitutionality of the cor poration tax provisions of the Pavne Aldrich tariff law before the Supreme Court. On the other side was a veri- ' table host of the ablest legal talent ! in the country. He was to have ar- I gaed the Standard Oil and income tax cases in November and the cor ! poration tax case soon afterward, j It Is said that his mastery of these cases was complete. His loss, at such a time, is doubly lamentable. In his self-sacrifice, he showed that he was a true patriot; in his legal service to the Government, he was second to none in his day.? Richmond Times Dispatch. Not a minute should be lost when a child shows symptoms of croup. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Riven as soon as the child becomes hoarse, or even after the croupy cough ap pears. will prevent the attack. Sold by Hood Bros. Mrs. Benham?"Do you remember that It was a bright moonlight night when you proposed to me?" Benham?"The night might have been bright, but I wasn't."?Pathfin der. NATURE'S WARNING. Smithfield People Must Recognize and Heed It. Kidney Ills come quietly?myster-j lously. But nature always warns you. Notice the kidney secretions. See If the color Is unhealthy? If there are settlings and sediment. Passages frequent, scanty, painful. It's time then to use Doan's Kid ney Pills. To ward off Bright's disease or dia betes. Doan's have done great work in this locality. William W. Cox. 232 Oak St.. C.olds boro, N. C.. says: "I suffered from dull pains in the small of ray back and a soreness across my kidneys. I was scarcely able to straighten when first arising in the morning and ad ded to this was a weakness of my kidneys. The kidney secretions pass led too frequently and contained sedi ment. Doan's Kidney Pills corrected the kidney weakness and disposed of [the backache.'' For sale by all dealers. Price f.O [cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the I'ni ted States. I Remember the name?Doan's?and .take no other. RTwoin I I When you feel that you fji I I can hardly drag through |fj i I your daily wrrk, and are j J tired, discoi.raged and J| i-| miserable, '.ake Cardui, I . i I the woman's tonic. I . Cardui is prepared for H f|| the purpose of helping jjl women to regain their 1^ ? strength and health. Lji Not by doping with B fil strong drugs, but by the If" ? gentle, tonic action, of i? | pure vegetable herbs. m iiGARDUl The Woman's Tonic PI Mrs. L. N. Nicholson, |?| of Shook, Mo., writes: H "Before I began to take K3 I Cardui, I was unable to H afc do any work. 1 have Hi taken 5 bottles and have ^ 0 improved very much. I N fp can do the most of my B 1 housework now. P "I ca^'t say too mich p* V for Crr lui, it lias done so Egg B Yoi ?: ruggis* sells Car- 9 | dui. Get a bottle today, A survivor of three wars and three wives wants to marry at the age of 94. Some men never get enough fight ing.?New York Herald. Children think not of what is past, nor what is to come, but enjoy the present time, which few of us do.? La Bruyere. flJRIMITURE! A1 4 NtW PIACt I want e\? rybody who trades at Four Oaks to know that I have moved Into the new trick store next door to .\Iassengill Hardware Company and that 1 keep a full stock of FURNI TURE such as BEDSTEADS, MATTRESSES, WASH STANDS, CHAIRS, BED SPRINGS, COTS, ETC. I keep also SUIT CASES, TRUNKS and RUGS. BED ROOM SUITS a specialty. I make picture frames. 1 ask your patronage. W.H.LEE FOUR OAKS, N.C. THE JNO. A. McKAY MFG. CO., Dunn, N. C. Machinists, Iron and Brass Foun ders, Castings of all kinds. We make the best Swing Saw Machine In tht world for the price. OLD MACHIN ERY MADE GOOD AS NEW. Hlgb grade work guaranteed. Agents foi the leading makes of Machinery Good stock of machine supplies al ways on hand. Agents for the celebrated Farquhai Machinery. Agents for the Desmond Injector and Phillip Steel Split Pul ley. Wood's Trade Mark Farm Seeds are best qualities obtainable. Our NEW FALL CAT LOG gives the fullest in formation about all seeds for FALL SOWING. Grasses and Clovers, Vetches, Alfalfa, Crimson Clover, i Seed Wheat, Oats, Rye, Barley, etc. Catalogue mailed free on re quest. Write for it and prices of any seeds required. , T. W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, Richmond, Va. A. M. NOBLE Attorney-at-Law Sinithfield. N. C. Money To Looq W. J. JACOBS ARCHITECT and BUILDER Contractor of Wood Brlek and Concrete Building*. Nice Residen ce* a Specialty. Selrr.a , - - N. C. J. R. WILLIAMS Attorney-at-Law Real Estate Bought and Sold Clayton, N. C. Dr. W. B. Johnson, Dentist CP STAIRS IN SANDERS' NEW BUILDING SMITHFIELD, N. C. Dr. Paul Fitzgerald DENTIST Offce OveriBa.nk Selma, : : N. C* S. S. HOLT ATTORNEY-A T-L AW Smithfield.N.C. Will Practice Wherever Services Are Desired. Four Oaks Lumber Company Contractors and Builders Do you want a house built, or do you use building material? It so give us your work. We manufacture and sell Rough and Dressed lumber. Shingles, Brackets, Porch Trimmings and turned work. Heavy Turning a Specialty. Come and see our Mater ial. Four Oaks Lumber Co. DO YOU WANT A MACHINE? If you want the best Sewing Machine buy the IMPROVED NEW HOME If you want needles for the machine you have send 30 cents in postage stamps for one dozen of. them. By buy ing a dozen at a time you get assorted sizes. For Sale by J. M. BEATY. SMITHFIELD, N. C. I ALWAYS | I PLEASED I ^ That's the Verdict Of Those Who J^j Patronize Jp | Our Grocery 1 Our stock is complete Our Clerks Courteous Our Prices Are Low || I Let Us Please | | You, Too | I =_=_ I ||S. C. Tumage | i