BE A GOOD FOR GETTER
_«
Life is to short 14 remember tho
things that would prevent one’s do
ing one's beat.
“Forgetting Un things that are
behind, I press forward," said a brave
old man in lbs first century.
Usually old men lira largely in the
peat, but this aid maa lived in the
future.
He was s good forgsttsr.
Many of us fail because wa do not
forgot. We remans Iyer our failures
and they hamper us. Wa remember
ear victories and they make us vain.
Wa remember oar enemies and flit
tor sway valuable thee trying to gat
even with them. But—
The successful man forgets.
Ha knows tho past is irrevocable
He lets the dead past bury its feed.
Ha Is In too ranch of a hurry to at
tend the funeral of kh ho poo. Ho
is running a race. Ha cannot afford
to look behind. Hie eye la on the
winning post
T>* magnanimous man forgets
Ho la too big to let little Usings
disturb him. Ho forgets quickly and
forgets easily. If anyone does him
a wrong ha "considers the aaarea"
and keeps sweet It la snip your
email maa whe cherishes a lew re
venge. Or an Indian. The Indian
ifrrer forgets and beeaeee ha la /er
aser wanting to pay somebody bask
he never gets ea.
Be a forgsttei.
Bigness dictates it and—
Seeaeea defends H—flelected.
A PLEDGE OP PROSPERITY
Atlanta Journal.
Par away in dswey IWltU whirs
the clamor of commorcc ia never
heard, the elvee of aotl end nm ate
weaving immeasurable wealth.
Through tranquil days and warm,
starry nights they ply their noiseless
task, clothing myriad valleys ia
green, that will ripen betirraee to
gold and crown this country with its
richest harvest
Never was there so fruitful u
promise for American wheat. The
government’s May report estimates
that the yield ef winter wheat will
ba 6*0,000,000 buaheie, an increase
of 107,000,000 war 1913, and If
spring wheat la proportionately a
buodnnt the total crop will approxi
mate 1,090,000,000 bushels
For agrieultura generally, condi
tions are uncommonly auspicious.
Millions end millions of now wealth
ode springing from the earth. Na
ture's kindliest magic It at work, and
all her omens point to a year ef un
exampled proeperity.
Hilt BLUNDER
"Why do you object to women run
oing for oAreT "
"Then we'd have petticoat govern
ment,"
"TRat shows how Intensely Ignor
ant of existing conditions you act.
Woman haven't worn petticoats for
the longest time.**—From This Pitts
burgh Past.
' THE ROYAL ROAD TO SUCCESS
. (By Florence W. Eahslman, Hilton
Grove High School)
Although there is no privileged
reed which leads to success in life,
l yet it is intpretelng and instructive
I to gather hints from the conspicu
ous examples of some of those who
here reached that desired goal.
The post, Longfellow, said Of suc
cess, "Every man must patiently e
bide hie time. Ho must welt, not In
listlevs idleness, not in useless past
lime, not In querulous dejection, but
io constant, needy end cheerful en
deavor, always willing, fulfilling end
accomplishing his lash, that when
the occasion comae he may be equal
to the occasion. The talent of sue
rows is nothing store than doing
what you can do well, without •
thought of fame. If it eonytt at all,
it will come because it is deserved,
not because d is sought after. It is
a voi> discreet and troublesome am
bition which cares so much about
fame, about what the world says of
us. to be always looking in (he fees
of others for approval; to be ejudoux
about the effect of whet we do or
»ay; to he el we ye shouting to hear
thp echoes of our own voices."
The battle of life, is In most cease,
, fought uphill, end to win it without
| a struggle were perhaps to win it
i without honor. If there were no dif
■ Acuities there would be no success,
if thero were nothing with which to
Struggle, there would be nothing to
be achieved. DilRrulUee may inti
midate the weak, but they act only as
a wholesome stimulus to man of res
olution and valor. All experience of
life, indeed, serves to prove that the
■impedimenta thrown in the way of
liumsn advancements may, foe the
moat pert he overcome by steady,
good conduct, honest seal, activity,
Perseverance end above all by a de
termined resolution to turrooent dif
ficulties and stand manfully against
mwanuiw
The school of diffictiluss is the bast
<chool of discipline, for nations as
for individuals. Indaad, th* history
of diAculty would be but s history
of mil the (rest sad good things that
haee yet been accomplished by men.
It •* bard to say haw much northern
nation* ow* to thasr encoenter with
a comparatively rude and change
able climate, and aa originally star
lie soil, which is one of th* neecaai
*>•* of their condition—involving a
perennial atruggle with difficulties
auch aa that of which th* natives of
sunnier climate* know nothing of. I
An<f that H mmjt b« that through our
hnest products are saotie, the skill
and industry which has bswn naosa
sary to rear than, have Issued ia tha
protection of a rati re growth at msa
not surpasead bn th* globe .'
• ffiaesw hwamsdnWwtBr
individual man must com* out for
1 bettor or for worse Encounter with
it will train hia strength and disci
pline hia skill, encouraging him for
future effort, at the racer, by being
trained to run up the high bill, at !
length courses with facility. Tha
mad to success may be steep to climb
and it put* to tha proof th* asiargiaa 1
of him who could roach th* summit. I
But by experience a nun toon learns
that obstacles are to be overcome by
grappling with thorn; that the nettle
feels ns soft aa silk when it it boldly
grasped, and that the moat effective
help toward realising the object pro
poaed is th* moral conviction, that
we can and will accomplish It. Thus
difficulties often fall away of thorn
solve* before tha determination to
overcome them.
Thurlow Weed, who began Ilf# In
poverty as a cabin-boy and roe* step
by step until ha became on* of th*
leading statesmen of hia day, wrote
Lhasa earnest words to his son, as
he was about to embark in business:
"Much deponds upon yourself. With
mousiiy a no economy i entertain
strong confidence that you will suc
ceed, but indolence or Inattention
will be sure to bring ruin end dis
grace | beseech you, therefore, to
give your whole attention to your
business. •’
Industry and economy in —rty
life, unless soma peculiar misfortune
overtakes you, will narure you the
means of support and enjbyment
when old age seta in and aleknaaa
comes.
And what la equally Important, in
ternet and enterprise Insures the re
spect of your fellow-ciUseni, with
out which life ie scarcely worth pre
serving.
Hut' prosperity moat be earned.
Yen should rise early and If neees
. wr; work late, and above all thing!
be prompt and punctual in doing
whatever you have in hand
Deal justly and honestly with ev
erybody. Money costa too much If
It be not honestly acquired.
Don't incur any unnecessary ex
pense or run into debt
Treat everytmtfy with whom you
have business with civility and et
I tendon. Kind words and eourteoea
nportmenU are essential to soreeea
in business.
Many years ago a man of promin
ence In political and commercial cir
cle* was accidentally drowned, and
in hla pockets were foond the fol
lowing rules, which had evidently
been hie guide to a ueeful end suc
cessful life: “Keep good company
ok none. Never be idle. If your
hands can't be uerfully employed,
attend to the cultivation of your
mind. Always speak the truth.
Make few promises. Always live *p
to yoar engagements. Keep your
own secrets, if you have any. When
yeu speak to a person, Ieoh him la
the face. Good company and goad
conversation are the very sinews ef
virtue. Good character is also above
Dot be wnntltHy injured saospt by
your, own act*. If anyowa If-Ttr
evil of you let your life be so that
IrOith wilt believe them. Mahe no
tinrte to bo rkb; if you would pro*
per. Never apeak evil at anyone.
Be Juet before yen are generous.
Keep yourself innocent if yon wish
to be happy. Save whan yen are
young to »|>end when you axe eld.’"
Any one followiiw thaoe rales closely
is almost sure to gate songs,foot
hold on the Royal highway—guesses.
Fortune, success, fanes, patotion
are never gained but by pteoaly,
determinedly, bravoly sticking, grow
ing, giving to a thing till It ia fairly
aecompbahod. In short, you must
carry a thing through If you want
to be anybody or anything. No mat
ter, if it does cost you the pleasure,
the society, the thousand gratifica
tions of Ufa. Stick to the *n«g »»j
carry It through. Belivs poo were
made fur the matter and that ae
else can do it. Put forth your whole
energies, be awake, electrify your
self. and go forth to the task.
There is bat ana failara, and that
is not to be true to the boot one
knows To us and to our ram there
is only one failara and that to ton.
You may be poor; yea stay lead lives
of struggle; your occupations may
run contrary to many at the Batumi
delights of youth, you may Uva in
the midst of s most complex and ea
se ling civilisation; you may sac BO
relief, ne outlook to a tadtoas and
dull routine Well, hoar It ail. and
beta no Jot ef heart, or hope, for,
in spite of it all you need not fail.
Br good and do goad and yea will
have wosi something better chaa a
fortune or a cornet. To do this may
rnn save you from abuse, opposition
or earthly loss, but If thiy sad a
thousand other rolewittes tsw up
on you, you will bo ag the promoa
► bees, the tide waves
tua uruut in the ngnt road win
beat a racer in the wrong, u ait
ter* not, though a youth ha eloor; if
ho bo bat diligent. Qaickaoua of
parti may even prove a defect, io
aateach aa tha boy who luaiaa too
roediiy will often forgot aa rowdily;
and aUo became ha Aada aa auad
in cultivating that quality of appli
cation and paraovarawca which tha
■lower yooth ia com pelted ta wgan III
and which proven aa valuable aa alo
ne,. t in the formation of ckftwctar.
Tha beet culture la aot often ob
tained fmm tea ebon whan at achool
or college, ao much aa by thair own
diligent self education, ihwi wo
have becorea prominent la tha oot
■ide world Hence, pwrenta Mod aot
b« in too groat beat* ta £ their
children’, talerti forced laid bloom.
Liat theca watch and
iHWit w.-eU-MJMhgf,.
training do the weak, ud lyt i the
reel to Providence; htllli oao to
it that the yooth M prodded qr free
axerciaea of Ua bodOy power I, with
a full itock of phyuica] haa th; aat
him fairly on the road of aalf culture
carefully train hia habita at ' appli
cation and pemevormaee, and aa be
grow! older If tNi right etujf ba ta
him, be will bo onablod vigoroualy
and effectively to eoMraha wt——w
and make euro of enecooa.
COMMUNITY BUILDING
Impressive sad highly witoHala
ing were the cxsrdsss Thursday
night at tha Aragon Cottac MUI
whan ths opening at tha Coamnalty
Building waa celebrated. Thera was
a large attendance, people Iron tha
city and ether village# being present.
The entertainment eras under tha di
rection of Mre. Lyle and.Mn. Mc
Bwain, who deesxrc great credit far
thb splendid ■ access at the avowing.
Tha musk for the entertainment waa
by the Aragon String Band and the
Manchester Mill Bawd. The Aragon
Bend gave Ha lint performance
which shows that they have some
fine talent which will be developed.
The principal address at tha even
ing waa by O. B. Parka, superin
bindent of tha min in place of Alex
ander Long, the president, who was
unable to be pros sat.
tn hit address he stated that ths
building ares primarily das' to ths
untiring efforts of Mins Mary E.
Krayser of ths faculty of Wlnthrop
Collage, who, over a jAar ago, or
ganised Is ths village what 1a know*
as the "Homs Boildarx." They mat
weekly from house to house cook
inf end sewing, snore properly ay ask
lag, doing lessons In howto econom
ics, wtfsn Anally tha crowd in owe’a
home became a burden. This eon
pled with ths demand far a night
school made tha building Imperative.
Ths Homs Bolldsrs have now equip
ped one room ef this buUdtag far a
, library and reading ream, while Mm
rosin auditorium win bn nand far
games and other recreation.
They Khwe decided tn have open
house now every ’Thursday night.
Visitors are cordially welcomed.
Other addressee made wars by
Rev. H. E. um. Miss Mary B.
Krayser and J. 1. Carbary. They
outlined the work and told ft their
gratiAenUoa at the lailoisft beiag
taken 1st the village. Tb*y sopsoos
ed the opinion that tha Community
House would prove a great benefit
U all. K Is rapidly liannaitag tha
center at social life ef the town.—
By M. R. In Tha MUI Mow*.
KVRRYTHING THAT U STYLISH
U ahaam la aar Mltltnaay Dayart
mant at OoMataia'a. *
SOY'8 ■ RUTTS—A 8X>* FOH CV.
ary bay from 4 U 18 yaara at
GaMatalB’a. Dana. M. a
OUB SYSTEM OF CRIMINAL LAW
__
Ko criminal «u ia Kent Uhh
haa netted adder interest througb
««t the country than that of the four
“gunman" who paid thp penalty at
their crime lut month. The murder
•f which they ware guilty drew nt
teatioa to the erganlaed gangs of
ruffle ns la New York City, aad la
cioMly related to the allegation of
pellce “graft” and police protection
of law breakers—matter* that are to
hare a second Lasting in court. And,
u in every murder case, the question'
of capital puninhamnt of courm war
raised.
But aside from the dramatic ns
pocta of the case, the Ingwtent las
mi of the affair ia that H illustrates
how uncertain Is justice ia this coon
try. If, in this cate, justice was
done at last. It la neeertheiaas true
that we sigh with relief li era urn It
was not defeated—a fact that in It
••If «n<pmns the whole system, far
no good system loaves muck doubt
as to the outcome.
Our legislators have a duty to
perform that they have no right to
shirk. Many of them are lawyers
Who pees their Hens in courts where
the rules of procedure give guilty
men a choice of loopholes by which
they can escape punishment; and
some of the lawyers make a Irving by
wring Scoundrels from the punish
ment they deserve. The great body
of thorn are high-minded and honor
ab%, but ought not to remain passive
hi the fact of the condition* that
hedge the administration of justice
today.
Thai* ihould bm mom* way of cn
ablioff wiUaMM to kaap thair oath
to tail tha whole track, and of ov*r
ruMng the objection aura to ba nmdc
whanarer ana of them ia about to tall
eomatfclng that would faster guilt
oa the prisoner. Tha cfcLSSK —fry
tUni of juatico is a blindfolded god
daaa, bat our deity asecns rather to
ba one af those of wham it is said,
"Thane are aena so Mind as thone
who will oat aae." la a great ata
jority of ratal, tha truth probably
ia In trawling it aa a "Latin republic"
Instead of oa "an empire of Indiana"
Who bare no rani conception of wtwt
eatf-gorommant nysana As a amt
tar of fact, two-fifths of the entire
population of Mexico ia para Indian,
and foar-ftfthe hats more or leas In
dian blond.
This appeal of tha French in Max
** m»r ba tainted with exagera
tion. but that oaay ta understand,
and, in the drcunwtaaaaa, easy to
pardon. It does bring oat tha caat
pfcx nature af tha Mexican problem,
and shows this country that In try
ing to solve that pcoWani H haa tok
en oe duties toward the whole dvtl-'
Mad world— Tooth's Omapanioc.
ou* SauioIm “
This paper triee te keen in the
middle ef (he reed. It has no eym
pathp whatever with these violent
gentlemen who eeean to tnt-k rk»»
railroada aye anemias to th* country,
and whoee chief buelneu U to palace
and plunder. We are clad to observe
a gradual and wholesome chance in
peblic sentiment with reference to
railroada. Thia can ba aaaa in tbs
verdict, tendered by j arise of leu
yeara The petting fogging lawyer
Snd* it a much harder matter then
formerly te induce twelve aware men
to 10b a reUroed in order that ha can
hove the chance te rob the client who
trusted him. Railroads ary great
civitiiara and promoter* of indus
trial progress. The Southern Rail
way haa done more for Piedmont
North Caroline then nil other agen
c*Oe combined. It found a raw and
crude section and converted It isto
the garden spot of the world. 3plaa
did eMoi bevy sprung up along its
lame and every farm ef industry
feel/ the thrill of new life that this
great system haa produced. We
have every reason to be grateful for
what the railroads have dona, are
doing and, if tN»y are net baahrupt
ad by demagogues, will do far tbs
State, While all thia la true we all
know that for aotna strange reason
that haa never bean explained North
Caroline was shamefully discrimin
ated against by tba railroads
in the matters of freight rates. Vir
ginia baa kfeen their pet, and they
bnve termed the tide of rmuna
away from ear own towns and peur
ad the rlefeae of the State's resourc
es into tba laps of Riehmead and
I'vmno. i nw aiieruninauon ought
to ba ramovad. Tha railroad* oat*
a* much to North Carolina aa thay
do to Virginia Thoy ought to giva
"oqaal righta to nil aad apodal prtv
Daga* to non#." W* hava a eoaa
mlaalon appolntad by tha Governor
to look into thaa* quaaUont, form
thair conrluaiona aad mak* thair do
deiona a* to tha fairnaaa aad juatioe
of tha rata*. Thay an toe Mg to ba
pullad around by politician* and too
eoufagooaa to bo frightened by tha
darner of demagogue*. Ttyry will
da tha right thing aa thay an given
to aa* tha right, and acrlbblara who
an prejudiced on either aid* mad
not waata ink and energy In tpacial
pleading, doleful praittetloaa and Mn
Mar insinuation* Good man every
whan want On railroad* to have
juatioa aad >utie* thay will gat at
tha knadt of thaoe man who have
bean elothad with authority to ad
juat tha praoant laaqaaIMp*—Char
ity and CMdran.
DISTHUST OF THE LAW
W* print today a vary paiataf Wt
<*r from a ran aipiadant who pro
taota against tha light aaatanc* im
peaad aa yoang Hording. It la not
a ptaaaant latter to read or to print;
It eontaJee many thing* ill of a*
think end prof or not to my; bat they
«r» true.
Haro aro tho plain facta In tha
mm: Thia yeaag au worked la a
bank which bandied tha saving* of a
largo n amber of coat wage mrimi
He bed la castody tha money which
men end women had mraod through
hard labor- money that represented I
finite earing, infinite me rifle*—
money men aad woman had laid aalda
for the education of their children
end foe the protection of their eld
age. Harding waa temptad to tire
beyond hi* omen*, temp toil ee many '
a man la tempted, ead he fell ee I
arnny a au ha* fallen. He did not
commit a eingla offer,ee or (Mel in 1
the agony of a tingle financial etrak.
L)ey by day he felalfied hia retaraa
rode la automobUm aad lived gaily—
on tha eerniaga of other people. Had
be fallan ence or twice. Or even a
doien time*, w* ihould not new be
writing them word*. But ho atoie
or,nth after month—more it«i |lg^
000 In the aggregate—atoie while
hundreds *f wags earnor* were atint
•ng themaejvm to save. He. was ar
rested, aa ha meat have know,, ha
would be, was smiling at his prelim,
inary hearing, but rapmtadi and was
tearful when eked before the hoot,
ings court. Ho received a sentence
of two yaare which may bo commuted
to one year by good conduct in tho
prison. At this rate ha will serve
ora day In prtaoa for ovary $17 he
Mole.
wuuio not niio tM Hoy s We
•r bring sorrow to his parent* whoa*
Heart* are agonised at hit theme.
Cod know* w* aympethii* with them.
But i> thla eeotane* a Joet ana ah
aekiteiy or comparatively T It Ihe
protpeet at a years' impnaonmaat
a sufficient warning for other young
man who any he temp tied to steal
<19,000? Is it jostle* compared with
the verdict* given man ignorant,
friendliness marpnele? We recall u
case—it waa not many year* ago—
when a young ns great la a Virginia
city forged aa order for <t.S0 re
ceiving the money and spent it. She
waa arrested, breogtt before the
court end sentenced not to thirty
< days, or to six months, but to flva
years At this rata, aad with al
lowance fer her half tins, aha will
serve one day ia prison for every
two mill* aha stole I
The hawk dork, steeling the funds
of small depositors, expiates hi* crime
at the mt* of 1*7 s day; the ignor
ant ntgraaa, robbing a merchant, ex
pistes bem at tha rata at two mill*
a day! Can man call this fustics r
Can man expert tha lawless to re
aped tha statues at tha common
wealth or to M their tea to okr
courts whoa w* aa* saah tasjatlhy.
aa this baTera tha bar af Ih* law?
I war courts are distrusted aad “fua
I tW is stocked? Richmond News
1 tartar
WASTING MONEY OK THE
ROADS
Yaaceyville Sentinel.
Every an end then we learn that
the road true tees of some township
in Caswell hare Invested in a road
machine. It is a matter ef some re
moras to us to say the least. No
doubt those machine■ are honestly
built «"d suitable for toms purposes,
but under our present system and
with our limited supply of money,
h is, in our opinion, the height of
folly to buy them especially far the
individual townships. They are seed
maybe, one* Or twice, over the roads
of a township, and than abandoned
by the roadside, a scrap-heap monu
ment to the people’s money. Used
as they era, once ovary year or two
ova* our rod clay roads, with no
follow-up assistance, such as tend
ing, draining and filling In of boles,
they are not only worthiest but ab
solutely ruinous to the roads. We
dare say that the taxpayers will bear
us out in the assertion that the
worst roads in the county today arc
the roads-that have boon worked the
moat with machine and plow. Wa
know stretches of roadway in the 1
county, which ware natural land-day ,
roads years ago. Now they are al- |
moaOmpaamMa, the under-*lay bar
mg bean thrown on top sod the up
per surface put out of sight. In.the
southeaster 1 parts at ear .courty
where the sail is mors or iota sandy,
road machines sod plows may be al
right, bat they are a decided disad
vantage to a greater portion of tho
county. These implements era need
ed to shape up the road bad, if wa |
are going to follow with aastd or aoil
or aeon spHt log drags—but we deal
de it in Caswell. Wa plow up the
rad day. and leave the mat to the
1-ord. And wa reckon the Lord la
ashamed of our part of the work
and don't help us much! It is, then,
a matter of but a short time for oar
nsrrowtire wagons to rat into the
mud. to the hah. And, there you
are I
JAMES ARCHIBALD CAMPBELL
Whm Waka Parent College grade -
' etod Jamaa Archibald Campbell in
IPI1 be did art take bis diploma with
the retard af having bean tfca shat
brilliant student who war attended
t% Institution. At tha Urns of gred
aatioe ha eras 4» years af ago and
with him two acme, testis and Car
lyla, graduated. Tha younger men's
diplomas mood for four years' work
1 for which they bad bean wall pro
parad at homes tfca father-, stood for
the la bos sent labor of poors.
K isn't to he understood, however,
that Jim Arabia Campbell could not
have maeSarad a cottage course to
!um rogalatiaa torn. Ho had ham
I wo togy doing other thing* that to
had to leave callage at tto and od hi*
aoptomor* year and tto raaulader
I of Ua work of Ua degree >u dan*
. by hinaelf while engaged la faaefa
lag huadrode of boyi aad preaching
•vary Sunday.
Thte particular brand! rf tto old
| Scotch family of Campbell will prob
atly iwrwr become wealthy. Car
teialy oo aaaaber of tto peat three
gatoratioa* toa dor* »>. Preaching
aad leaching followed #vrr aa **rv
•aUy era aboat apt t* laava a North
' Carolina area at tto and of the yaar.
I Tto fattor id J. A Campbell waa
poor. In 1«* to and Jim Archie
ware In tto mm# clam at actoat.
| When tto fattor became a juaartoi
I bit aon waa tto flrat paraon to bap*
toad.
Nr. Campbell began tcarklag In
ltoO, working in tto public ■choola
ad Harnett county. In I Mb he an
tarad Wake Forcat College, leaving
at tto end od hi* aacond yaar aad
founding 8010*1 Creak Academy in
a one-room boor* in 1887. The lint
ymra* pupil, numbered It aad from
tbit humble bogies iag baa grown
tha apinndid preparatory in at it a tic*
which now toa enrolled over MO otu
dant*. repramattng 64 counties of
North Carolina and U other atataa.
Building* and ground* ftro worth
about 840,000.00 in a reramunhy
when real aetata doe* not briag city
price*. Tto academy i* located Might
mile* from Ulltngum, 1* mil** from
Doan and font mllce finnt Caati. tto
naaraat railroad Marion.
Dwrlnfr iMJn period Wtwen hit ef
forts a* « tearher And Ms lesvfef
Wake Furpri. Mr. Campbell had bom
preparing himself for the Uaptlat
aelulutry and m orris hied in MM,
nm-ring Chalybeate Spring* church
Brut, Frioodahip, Mount Tabor aad
Dunn c). jrchee, whirh came under
hit charge in the order named. Since
beginning the pastorate of the Duan
church in lBBp he has not bad a re
cant Sunday. Ha has praathad at
Reneon, Holly Springs, Dube, Coats
aad AncV*r- Ha haa bare pastor at
Buie's Creak since MBO.
For over thirty years ha has bean
dark of the Little River Baptist As
sociation which now haa %jm mem
bers. Ha Lav bean a trustee of Wake
Foreat College far eight years, being
a trustee at the tine of his gradua
te* For six gears he reived his
cuunly as superintendent of schools.
Ha haa been announcing worker In
edacatlen - from hie early mshImuI
aad has warn wall. Kot -nirtfirifl
ahowy as a man, teacher, or preacher
He haa probably peeachad mare fa
acrals than any man la tbit section.
Dans mare hard work far tha eaaaa
ad education than any are la tha
THE FLOWEK8
Can w» conceive what human tty
won Id ba if tt did oat know the flow
er*? If them did not exist, if they
hmd all beer hidden from our gaxa,
as are probably a thousand no laas
fairy sight* that are all around us,
but invisible to oar eyes, could our
character, our faculties, our seam
of tbo beautiful, our aptitude for
happiness, bo quit# the same? Wo
should. It Is truh. la nature have oth
er syleadid manifestations of luxury,
exuberance, and grace; other des
ilmg efforts of the superlative fore
oo: the SUB, the iters, the varied
lights of the moon, the azure sad the
ocean, the dawns and twilights, the
mountain, the plain, the forest' and
the rivers, the light and the tram,
and lastly, nears, to us, birds, pra
deos stones and women. Them are
the ornaments of our planet Yet
but for the last three, which belong
to tbo asms smile of nature, horn
grave, austere, eltnost sad, would
ba the education of our aye without
tht softness which lbs flowers give?
—Maurice Maeterlinck.
THE TRADEMARK OP Ml KOR
AN CE
a
"1 don't blame my mother, bermuae
dosMIcae ihe thought *he wet pro
terting "»• when she would sat have
m* vaccina tad Many a timr Hava I
hoard her sap that virus waa filthy
and would give me errafula. I knew
no better and grew up to manhood
uevacclnatud. While r waa on the
med ten years age, 1 (tapped over
night in a team where then wet mn .
epidemic of to-called "ckteksapax"
vary mild, they said, and *■-1—
! went heme and in two weeka de
veloped t mall pax hi Ha virulent
form. Tor three weeke ] a offered
the torture* of pwrditien. and wham
I waa well again my face waa fear
fally pitted, aa you eee. Thw near*
■m bad enough, heaven kaowe, far
they diafigut* me for Hfe, bat I hate
them (till non for another reason.
Why? Hectare they brand me for
life with the trademark of ignorance
and Buffering."—Virginia Health Al
| manor
A CKARPKCKRD husband
The little mild, bald head men eet
tlad down la the train to read, and,
foaling drowsy after a trying day at
bwdneea, foil (deep. On the hat
rack above waa a faro dime (tab In
a bucket, and reaching the edge of
the rack, It foil, alighting ea the tit
tie men's shoulder and grabbed Ua
ear te study Keetf
All of the paansa goes awaited ex
pectantly far developments, but all
they heard was:
-Let go, Sarah I I tpll yea, I ha
base at the oSee all the rii'ng -
Chieage News.
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AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE
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We offer the fallowing car* all in good condition,
for tale at a bargain: One 5 paaiengrr blander*. One
Ford Roaditer, One four pauenger Buick. and one *
5 pauenger Jaduoo. Every one a bargain. See u*
for terma and other information. f
MASSE JGILL GARAGE,
i; DUNN, NORTH CAROLINA. i:
( ’*’T’**,»* ' ’ **"»»»** www vw • WVfWfV t ♦ •♦♦♦♦♦♦♦<
!! A BANK OF STRENGTH I!
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.
The Tint National Bank has a
•olid foundation from a *—rt~tti
point of view. It's capital and Prof,
ita amounting to nearly Beveaty-ftee
thousand dollars, and its ruminaa
of Thrao hundred and sixty thousand
dollars an ample far the protection
of all deposits; He management a
prudot.t and earsful, sad it is safer
the supervision of tha United States
Government, being subject to regu
lar sxaminaftlon under the ftrsstiaa
of the Comptroller of the Cnireacg.
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We cordially invite all pereooa who deaire positive
; •««*r for their money to make thia bank their banking !
i > "OflH.
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I! FIRST NATIONAL BANK !!
: DUNN, - - .. N.C. i:
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j WILSON & LEE, j
j PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS 5
| DUNN, N. C. - PHONE 21 j
S Everything Usually Crried in a First f
a Class Dru^ Store. We are prepared to ■
s serve you. We will give you service f
I and quality. |