00QQOSOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO wilson aims to wipe rl riTTT1 f"T AOC T TEACHERS' ASSEMBLY NEXT WEEK. o OUT CLASS LINES. - -. o o o o o o o o o o o Lifi o o o o o o o o "I want to tell you what wonderful benefit I have re ceived from the use of Thedford's Black-Draught," writes Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky. "It certainly has no equal for la grippe, bad colds, liver and stomach troubles. I firmly believe Black-Draught saved my little girl's life. When she had the measles, they went in on her, but one good, dose of Thedford's Black-Draught made them break out, and she has had no more trouble. I shall never be without THEDFORD'S in my home." For constipation, indigestion, headache, dizzi- Q q ness, malaria, chills and fever, biliousness, and all similar S ailments. ThedfnrH'c Rlart-nMiifrfif hoe y Jk j , wiuujjiii nuo putu llOtlt a OdlC tJi O reliable, gentle and valuable remedy. q O If you suffer from any of these complaints, try Black- Q Cj Draught It is a medicine of known merit Seventy-five O g years of splendid success proves its value. Good for q young and old. For sale everywhere. Price 25 cents. S ooooooooooooooooooooooobo fo)n IM Preserve Your Children's Eyes. i The Eyes of a Child. 1 am the eyes of your child. I am the Color that I inherited from you. I look to you and vtm fioY ifr U that is d' true and pure in the worlcl- 1 am YOUR LIVING Perpetuation, Connecting the Remote Past and the Distant Future. I look on a world that is new and strange to me. I wonder what it is all about. The most wcnderful pictures pass through my eyes daily and hourly. I see magical pictures on a baby brain of crystal innocence. I am the windows of the soul of life itself, and I trust the world. I am priceless, the one thins not for barter nr If hurt or give pain, I know no reason, I may need assistance, I know not. I am here once. If I go, if go I must, I go reluctantly, and never to return. I pain, twitch, and smart with overwork, long hours, or dark school rooms, I weep and cannot sleep, 1 will not stop till my cry is heeded. I may not be as strong as other eyes, I cannot tell, I do not know. 1 sound my warnings daily, I cause burnings, smartings, acnings and dullness. I produce countless ills that are blamed on everything but me. I punish myself. It is relentless, I know not the reason, I see through my eyes and see the world be things bigger or smaller, dimmer or clearer, it is the world that I wt" l n n bette ? must be riSht' 1 have harmed none. Why should my eyes be defective, why should they pain me I know no reason. My parents blame me with dullness, illness and laziness when I know no other world or way of seeing mv cry must be heeded. ' y I, with my sister, the brain, take joy with your joy. Love tnat protects is life and joy to us. I live and thrive on love 1 ogether we perform Herculeanean tasks, and are joyful We sparkle and smile to the world. I need help at limes, help from learned and skilled men who know how and what I should see how much I need and how much to assist nature. f J jhe.livinf Paradox, the weakest, the strongest member or the body. I work in the weakest as well as the strongest body. 1 am first in life and last in death. PARENTS, parents! Listen to the cry of a child. You love me and want me to forge to the front, you wouldn't neglect me one instant if you understood. Give me a fair show. Let me see the world, true and clear, and bright. t 1 am the eyeTs of your child, I need help right now. If I eo 1 never return 1 respond in gratitude to the men who study my needs and know what I must have. I thrill, sing, and dance with joy and gladness when I am rested. Ch Parents! If I need help, let it be only from a man that makes it his exclusive busi ness to know what I need. YOU of ALL people could not be so lacking in love as to permit your child to suffer. A1frSawynU5' chi'8 Eyes examined by a known EYE SPECIALIST, Dr. Kttrciir his entire time to correcting def-ive MENTONEDD W-VDULA,-WILL BE IN YOUR TOWN ON E DATES c, E?ESlgftT: andVISSl5PNPrtUmty ' SeC a man Wh Is an SCHOOL TEACHERS, DID YOU KNOW-That in the Northern cities where they have compulsory examinations of all school children' ey 70 per cent of all backward pupils had defective eyesight, and that 90 p cent of t Lma sZn?TmmJ iat!1,mprovement ? being PrperIy fitted & te? It is a School Teacher s duty to instruct them on this matter. The child does not know and is there to be instructed. My dates are as follows- Meets Again in Raleigh At tendance Will Probably Be Largest Yet. Raleigh is making active prepara tions for the entertainment of the North Carolina Teachers' assembly next week beginning Wednesday evening, November 29, and ending December 1. This will no doubt be the biggest of all the conventions and last year the assembly went well bevond its A- bliC Id UV1 XAlVlly I ' w Gompers, president of the wondertul recrd in Charlotte. Fif- ed their purpose to attend next week and all the officials of the as sembly as well as those of the educa tional department have joined in an appeal to the school boards over the State to give the teachers the extra day which follows Thanksgiving. On Thanksgiving day the teachers will worship in the big auditorium where all the meetings will be held, Rev. Dr. A. A. McGeachery, of Char lotte, preaching the annual sermon. Besides these, Governor Martin G. Brumbaugh, of Pennsylvania, Gover nor Locke Craig and Governor-elect Thomas W. Bickett, all teachers and educational leaders, will make ad dresses. The reception at the gov ernor's mansion is Wednesday even ing and the governors' addresses will be Friday night, the close. President Tells Delegation From Labor Federation His Principal Ambititon is to Put Down Di vision Through Justice. With a Heart. President Wilson told a delegation from the American Federation of La bor last Saturday that his principal ambition is to wipe out all lines of di vision and class feeling in America by establishing justice with a heart in it. Speaking for the labor men, Samuel Federation, congratulated the presi dent on his re-election and baid that the working people of the nation feel confidence in his leadership. The delegation comprised the mem bership of the Federation's annual convention which has been meeting in Baltimore. The delegates came to Washington on special cars and marched to the White House to con gratulate the president on his re election. Mr. Gompers acted as their spokesman. "We have taken joy in upholding your hands in your great work," said Mr. Gompers, adding that the labor ing people had come to recognize that Mr. Wilson stands for justice, free dom and righteousness. Gratified and Cheered. "I need not say that, coming to me as you do on such an errand, I am very deeply gratified and very great ly cheered," said the president in re ply. "It would be impossible for me offhand to say just what thoughts are stirred in me by what Mr. Gom pers has said to me as your spokes man, but perhaps the simpliest thing I can say is, after all, the meat of the whole matter. What I have tried to do is to get rid of any class di vision in this country, not only, but of any class consciousness and feel ing. "Tha worst thing that could happen to America would be that she should be divided into groups and camps in which there were men and women who thought that they were at odds with on2 another, that the spirit of America was not expressed except in them, and that possibilities of an tagonism were the only things that we had to look forward to. "As Mr. Gompers said, achievement is a comparatively small matter, but the spirit in which things are done is the essence of the whole thing, and what I am striving for, and what I hope you are striving for, is to blot out all the lines of division in Amer ica .and create a unity of spirit and of purpose founded upon this, the consciousness that we are all men and women of the same sort and that if we do not understand each other, we are not true Americans. Nothing Alarms as Division. "Nothing alarms America so much as rifts, divisions, the drifting apart of dements among her people, and the thing we ought all to strive for is to close up every rift, and the only way to do it, so far as I can see, is to establish justice not only, but jus tice with a heart in it, justice with a pulse in it, justice with sympathy in it. Justice can be cold and for bidding, or it can be warm and wel come, and the latter is the only kind goal at which his efforts should aim. We firmly believe in hard work and saving every cent possible, for in dustry and economy are the sure stepping stones to success; but at the same time let's never forget that making and saving money for mon ey's sake is a mighty poor sort of business. Money is useful only as it goes to make our lives and the lives of those about us happier and bet ter; only as it goes to make of the farm a place where the highest type of manhood and womanhood may be developed. This fall in most sec tions of the South, high prices for farm products- are going to mean more surplus cash than for a num ber of years, and the farmer must determine the wisest use to which his surplus cash shall be put. We here offer three suggestions: 1. Paint the farm buildings. Pure ly as a matter of economy in saving our buildings from rotting, paint is a splendid investment. As the Ohio Experiment Station points out, our annual losses from the decay and de terioration of unpainted farm build ings is actually greater than the loss from fire. And not only is the use of paint true economy, but the land scape dotted with painted farm build ings impresses residents and visitors alike as a neighborhood that is proud of itself and its achievements. 2. Put in waterworks. As a means of easing the burdens of the farm woman and making farm life more attractive, a system of waterworks is simply a wonder worker. 3. Install a lighting system. Af ter the house has been painted and a good waterworks system put in, the next step in home improvement should consist in putting in a good lighting system. Electricity and acetylene gas are both excellent, and .LC lfet Contents 15 YlnllPrids-j IfS! T-ntinf -tTT.rtCENX 1 similatin4lhcIoi4aiiJlWBli flicafd- ncss and EcstCaiLuiBDi Opiuniilorpninc narlfcml Nor Narcotic. MxSema 1 A rrfed Kenedy for Vorrcs.ranshnsaai Facsimile Sinatotf jsl mm 1 Tor Infanta1 I Mothers Know uenuine uasfe Always Bears the Signature of A m; at . l 1 For Ove Thirty Ten Ear act Copy of Wrapper. TMCMTtullcoiiHat mtm m - mmrw 'I'm ' ' 1 ' i 1 i Quality, Service and Economy Arc the principles upon which we solicit your business KIBLER DRUG COMPANY in their pnnvpnionco ini u . i . , - i w.v, cue ivui tat- of justice that Americans ought tojisfaction afforded verv .oon rPnv sire. I do not believe I am deceiving ! the cost of inctoiio; .myself when I say that I think thsi We must come, Brother Farmer to I spirit is growing in America." know that the town has no right to a I T TTT'o i a izx? TTn I monPoly of the conveniences and im- ;L.kik MAKE OUR iProvement that mak of t,1o FARMS REAL HOMES ihome' instead of merely a house. Out jboys and girls have gone to the Progressive Farmer. towns because they have thnnMif "Yes, Jones is a good farmer, one jof the best around here, in fact," one o his neighbors told us, "but you know everything he makes he puts right back into his place. Last year he painted his house and built a new barn, this year he put in waterworks, and next year he says it's going to be an electric light plant. He may be a fine armer, all right, but I don't see how he's ever going to fret anv- tDing ahead the way he's doing it they would find better things there, life more worth the living. Isn't it time that we were showing them, and all the world as well, that a farm home with modern equipment is the best of all places to live? Paint, waterworks and lights in every farm home will do this as no other agencies can. now about them on your farm? SALES RECORD MOTOR. CAR March 18 " 25 " 25 April 15, Aoril 17, April 17, April 10, May 18, May 18, Oct. 7, Oct. 26, wears j BPvID WATER Monday, Nov. 27th. ALPINE Tuesdav. w V 'Vt MOllU DREXEL Wednesday, Nov. 29th ' Dr. Alfred W. Dula Glasses Fitted Exclusively Home Office: Lenoir, N. C. I The constant drop of water -w . . . " " . it was on the tip of our tongue, to j Ahe constant gnawing Towser masti-; give Jones' neighbor a piece of our' cates the toughest bone; mind in regard to the real meaning : The constant coming lover carries off ! $ I c -leu, line ten-; uius'"iik main; ;ing him that Jones, in his efforts to j The constant advertiser is the man r""15 lxli a pieasant, comfort-; kci-s tne trade. j able, happy home equipped with mod- ;ern conveniences that every home' President Wilson has decided not j should have, had, in our opinion, aitotake a vacation before Congress' very sound conception of the proper j convenes, but may go on one or more, j ' . I vcck-end trips down the Potomac I 1mnilIII rinBirn n the naval yacht Mayflower.: VIRGIfllA FARMER "e WaS UrKCtI to a Virginia; Hestored To Health By Vinol -Ho d Atlee V "1 was weak, run-dowTi ; - ' StTOM- : S.W f- 1. Ache, : SfV..f..' a.fT and .d to , The dull throb of neuralgia i., nuirk. : untill t' V " 1 i'f'P. : .?W Liniment, the i bottloa r, o r;i s"v VK.U,S reo -.-- ivint-uy lor Dr. J. B. Riddle, Morganton Mr. Isaac Lazarus, Morganton Mr. Nathan Lazarus, Xlorganton r E. Sudderth, Morgantcn at Berry Morganton, 11 F.I Mr. J.C. Taylor, Morganton Mrs. Emile Frisard, Morganton at' t t1, Kist,cr Morganton tt t ' McGimsey, Morganton Mr. J. P. Bumgarnor, Morgantcn. Mr. A. M. Kistler, aionranton LESS GASOLINE, MORE MILES PER TIRE. ASK AN OWNER. B. S. GAITHER Agent for Uurke anl Av.-: C MORGANTON, N. C. pain T7 ?T- 4 .notici: The NewsHerafd Reaches the People of i ' 'ifi luKinrT Thrpn rnl T" . apply; ,t quickly rcnetratcs without '? tl I'if .rubbing and soothes the sore muSw.' J " :ain. . , , . i. i - j. bleep my blood is Rood and I am well L . Vinol, which SJ;- .1, ... ?n" d? ProPtly effective lirer Dentono i." uuu coa . l"?lA"?a. Iaers or ointment: does : f A T TrT -r , jriv nninl- 1 r r.. . . 1 1 - urjjanton. ! stores in an-aneso me shin or clo the pores phates, is ! or stiff muscles, chronic rheumaTi'm" condition- iCout. lumban-o nm;n. grives ouirlc Ttir Cfi?l:S; EL'S inflammatioTin . Also at tJw ! inVf w" . . anu, inammation ii xr , vilK urugj. .W4tco UIU1", Dumps and Other' ill North Carolina Towns. i ,nr mjuries to children. Get a bit-! i n -c.; oil ilr.imcnL Tl-' . intcr Ul.d ,ocate n(0 - :t 'fl)c L-.t r- I' - Crr' ?tdJominff the land I)C Uvlt rbbm;; imirrcnt in j , "oke and Child ur.S. V !v Camp Crtc4; :r M StJji "1 ,Iarshaw 'i" and r FJA tO: ? a chestnut vr LV- V;, nous courrc-t aid rira rvr rrt rpents 50 a? to ? " J4U 3 i A' person or j i f y :ov Sntr or ;.i,y joodfer the AilmerAi cf 9 of a warrant for tl t ones, rviulc3, CatUc, Etc c. yoo'ljor your ctrn Au.. fains, Khcumalisni, Sprains, Cutx, Burns, Etc. 23c 50c 51. i Ii At all Dtalr t. i try Tak M not filed within thirtv. j date of this notice, I . rant for the fame :j il -" 4 ih October Jr. I, . T Try u .ew.Hcfa - t!e today at your Drujrjrist. 2.r,c. i i

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