OUR YOUNG READERS A Department In which the Young People -mho Bead The Bepublican are Given .an .Op portunity to Express Their Thought, Briefly, Upon Such Topics aa May Interest Them. sXsXsSXs From a Rockingham County Boy. Loral Kditor: I have got to pull fodder. How many of you cousins like to bunt t 1 do. I go with papa mo8t every time he goes. Will all you cous ins be glad when the schools begin f I .wilt 1 like to go to. the school. We are intending going to a foot, washing the third Sunday in September. Henry Smith, do you know who has our school this yearf 1 heard that Mr. Kverett Matthews was trying to get it. WILLIAM M.CRADDOCK. Price, X. C. Koute. o From a Forsyth County Girl. Local Editor: 1 have just finished reading the cousin's letters and think they are getting more and more inter esting every week. How many of you Cousins go to Sunday School f I go, to Doubs Chapel and like it fine. I will close with, a verse: How sweet to meet, How sad to part, How hard to say Good bye Sweetheart. BLUE EYES. Tobaccoville, N. C. Koute 1. o From a Davie County Girl. Local Editor: I have been going to mui' school. My teacher's name is Mitts Li..ie Hussey, a blind girl and I like her fine. I went to Grandma's birthday,' the first day of September. She whs 05 years old and we had a nice. time. I have been going to Sun day Hhool every Sunday and like to go.' I like to read the cousin's letters. 1 have written to some of the 'cousin. but they have not nuswered yet. I will close with a vtrse. Kind hearts are the gardens, Kind thoughts are the roots Kind words are the blossoms, ' 'Kind deeds are the fruits. HEN NY MAY HE NED A It. Mocksvillc, N. C Route 2. o From a Stokes County Girl. Local Editor: As I have never writ ten to your paper I will ask a space to join the cousins. Miss I . Joyce Red ding, I guts your first name is Dere. If I am correct please send on your card. Mr. Luke L. Nobles, 1 gties you are 19 years old. If I am correct please send me your photo. I will ask some of you to guehs myage. I am between 10 and l."i. . If'auv.ot you cousins guess right 1 will send you a card and photo. Miss I). Joyce Redding, is your father a far mer? If any of you cousins know "Tell me Outy Who Tied Your Tie" I would thank you very much for the words'. Iock your love in a wooden trunk, And sport the boy that don't get drunk. MINNIE A. WHITE. King, 5. C. : o From a Stokes County Girl. Local Editor: As I have never writ ten to vour taer. I will write a few Jines. How. inajiv of you cousins are going to school this wnterf I think every one ought to strive for an edu cation. Miss I). Joyce Redding, I will guess your first name to be Ieanie. If I am correct send on your card. .Mr Luke L. Nobles, I will guess your ago to be 17. If I am correct, send on your photo. I will ask the cousins to guess my middle name.- It .begins with . L. and ends with A. And also my age. It is between 13 and "0. A card to the correct guessers. I will not try to write a long letter as this is my first. Would like to get cards from some of the cous ins. Please send me the song "The Ship That Never Returned." A card : -. . r . ii '.I . 3 in return, i win ciose wun a verse: When this you see, Please think of me. NANNIE L. REYNOLDS. King, N. ('. From an Alexander County Girl. to your paper in so long, I will nbwtry and write again.' I think some of the cousins are writing some very inter esting letters. Why don 't more of the Alexander County boys and girls write! I think they are about to go to sleep. Miss Eva MeCarter, why didn't you unswer my card or didn't you get itf My oldest sister got married in June. We miss her very much. I am send ing a subscription to the' paper and nope to get ;a. dictionary, i was sorry I was so late. Anyone sending me the song "The Ship That Never Returned" j, will receive a card in return. I will close with sonvs verses: As sure as the vine grows round the . stump, f You are my darling sugar lump. : When the golden sun is setting. And your mind from care is free, While of pothers you are thinking, Will you sometimes think of mef ZOLA liUWK. Poors Knob, X. C. Route 2. o From a Rockingham County Girl. '-.Loenl Editor: I think almost every thing has been used for a subject. I will use false hair and drinking for . : .. rri n l nf frir!. ttl.lt iniiir. iiirrr arr n - " tr" wear false hair, but there are not many around here still they have not much hair but some have enough. Now I want to sav a word 'to the boys. Never drink nnd roll about on the ground in the muil an.l ruin vour clithes. When you are drunk you will go about curs ; injf and swearing. Never try to go with' a girl when you are, drunk ana girls don 't go to church or anywhere and get him in a crowd aud leave him and don't go with him when he is drinking The best way for the boys to get along with the girls is to be a good, worthy hoy that loes not drink nor curse nor . it x r : finl.tf rarry a pistol in nis jioceu jiim Ryrd your name is Lilly. A. Watson YTA..'. 1.11 - . A li H VA11P wuj teller wa j;umi. w.;v. " letter was good also. Will some of the cousins please send me ii cardf MOLL1E A. CRADDOCK. Price, N. C. Route . Trom a' Forsyth County" Girt."" Local Editor: I am going to school at Oak Kidgc and have had a nice time My teacher is Mis. Carrie Pearson and - , , fine- I have four studiess Third Reader, Spelling, Arithmetic, and uetoirranhv. T 1 1 ..... -u ttth of January. I hop some j of you COUSin Will ,1 v.;.vjiJ . . . iuc u uiriuunY post card. Jme ask a riddle. What is inai goes ail day with its tongue outf Will RnfiWer ftnmA nmutimi. ir:.. fcteiia Hehael, your age is 1 years. Miss Pudley Rogers, your age is 16 years, I will ask some Geography que- "u iar is ii arouna tne world? How far is it through the wnrl.1t Tii one guessing these correctly will re- true a raru. I - IDA MAY WATtfiva Kernersville, X." C. . I i From a Forsyth County Girt. Local Editor: I hv ..t fin;i..i reading the cousin's letters. and think iue are writing some very interesting ones. I guess all of you cousins! are go ing to school and haying a nice time. Our school begins September j 18th. I certainly will be glad. I will try to an iwrr noiiie History questions: Ethel Phillips, the Ohi French War began in the vear 175.1 v.a. ward Braddock was commander-in-chief LaSalle and Marquette and Iberville uu verr.azano were four French ex plorers. Anna Mullis. in a nt,.h ship Captain landed twenty j negroes from Africa and offered th Slavery had existed in many parts of me worm ior mousands or years.Xegro slavery had been introduced ! by the Spaniards into the West India Islands when the natives them wer iovtermi. uated, yet this was the first introduc tion oi slavery into the United States. If I am correct send on your cards. 1 will elose with a verse: Permit me to plant, In the Harden of vour heart. Oue little tiower e Forvret-me-not. To knit and spin, Was once a girl's employment, But now to dress and have a beau, js an a girl's enjoyment. I EVA WALKER. I Walkertown, X. C. : o : Fjom a Forsyth County Girl, j Local Editor: As I live on a farm you know it takc-s the biggest part of my time to work in the crop for now it is harvest time. But I hope none of you cousins are in my condition. I went to Ureensboro, X. C. one day last week to the doctor. I am now at home in bed. It seems hard for me to have to stay at borne so close. I can't even go up to grandmother's and that isn't more than a mile. Hope all of you cous ins, that can, will come to see me. I will be glad to see any of you at any time. Daisy L. Byrd your age is 13. If I am right send on your card for I cer tainly do love to get them. Some of you guess at my age. It is between l.'l and. 17. The one guessing it cor rectly will get a card. I will ask some History questions. 1. How large was the United States in 17831 2. .-'.Where and how did Daniel Boone spend his early , years! 3. How did , Boone re cover his daughter from the Indians f 4. Why did the Indiihis attack Boons boTOt: NVhy'dbt Jefferson buy New Orleans and the Louisiana Territory! Now 1 will ask you cousins to solve this problem: , How many marble slabs, each 10 inches by 2 feet will cover a noor 10 ft. square! The one answering these questions will receive a card sjtmt my photograph. 1 will close with a verse: Be kind and gentle to those who are old, For kindness ami goodness are better than gold. ELIZABETH WATKIXS. Kernersville, X. C. Route 3. From a Davie County Girl. Local Editor: Guess all of the cous ins have forgotten, me as it has been so long since I have written. Hello cous in Ray and Earl, have you all named your little brother yetf George Staley write again, your letter was fine. I "agree with you about wearing false hair. Iou 't you all think it is time to stop writing little verses and write more interesting letters? Did - you all hear abtmt Mr. Baxter Barkley getting drowned in the Yadkin Riverf He was drowned close to our house.! It is bad for boys to go bathing on Sunday. I don 't guess he had tune to ask the question "what shall -be the sign of thy coming and of the end of the world.'" as the disciples did, but most carefully the Lord answers this ques tion. He first reviews the great events which were to take place on the earth. Jerusalem was to be destroyed, the true people of Oot were to pass through the most terrible period of persecution which hail ever come ujon God's peo ple. The nations of the earth were to be rent with wars. Oreat: calamities were to come upon the earth, such as famines, pestilences and earthquakes. These were to become more frequent and desolating until the final plague of God should end in its destruction. As the days of this world's history should draw, to 'a close, our Saviour promised tha unmistakable signs. would appear in the heavens. The sun would be dark ened, the moon would refuse to give light, and the stars would fall from the heavens. Within the lifetime of the people now living the heavens have been ablare with the glory of these very signs which the Lord said were to proclaim to the world that! its end is near, and that , the second j eoming to the earth of the Creator and Redeem er is the next event before them. The Lord said, "Take heed that no man deceive you. " , MAE SWICEGOOD. Mocksville, X. C Route 4. Water, Water Everywhere! Life's an equatic meet some swim, some dive, some back water, some float and the rest sink. Life, j A Great Advantage to Working Men. J. A. Maple, 123 S. 7th St., Steuben ville, O., says: "For years I suffered from weak kidneys and a severe blad der trouble. I learned of Foley Kidney Pills and their wonderful cures so I be gan taking them and sure enough I had as good results as any I heard about. My backache left me and to my great advantage, my kidneys acted free and normal, and that saved me a lot of mis ery. It' -is. now a pleasure to work where it used to be a misery. Foley Kidney Pills have cured me ami have my highest praise." Helm's Drug Store. A PEEP IN THE GLASS. '- - LOBETTA HOLDS IT UP AND TELLS WHAT SHE SEES,: HOLES III HER HOSE, Attraction by Vulgar Exposure Does Not Win Husbands Decent Men Like Modest Women. The holes in your stockings are not the kind that need darning, at least not with a needle. And you would not fill them up for anything! It is funny to watch you at the stocking counter, of a department store. Very carefully you thrust your hand into the covering that has nothing of the fine "art which so artfully conceals," but possesses all of the revelatory power intimated in the rest of the! " quotation, "yet all things DISCOSE8." If the mesh, is close you toss the stockings conteni tuously back on the counter and look daggers at the clerk for her indirect as sistance to your withering modesty. You want the tissue! effect or the lac Test of open work. So Terribly Fussy. Here is a letter fromi the girl who wrote the fussy! letter about her hatred of dirty finger nails. By the way, she took the reproof like a major. You re member that I told her she needn't be so terribly fussy as to make the con dition of fingerj nails the standard by which she judged people. I intimated that she might have holes in her stock ings and that might get on the nerves of others as much as finger nails both ered her. i "My Dear Friend Loretta: When I wrote you, asking you to ferule the girls who had dirty nails, I didn't ex pect to receive the whipping myself. But you gave j it' to me. You said I was fussy. So I took it without flinching till I j came to the intimation about the holes in my stocking. I NEVER WORE A STOCKING WITH A HOLE IN IT IN MY LIFE. But lots of girls do. And there are. LOTS OF HOLES. And all plainly visible! Ac tually placed there 'to ATTRACT AT TENTION! These thin and openwork stockings nre almost as immodest as going barefooted. And the girls al ways wear short skirts and low shoes, so that their legs are revealed to view. Of course, no ielf-respecting girl would think of exposing her bare legs in the presence of the opposite sex. But these perforated stockings are practically equivalent to (the same thing. And of ten "barefoot" sandals aggravate the impropriety. jNow Loretta, won 't you please make these girls hold out their hands for a .whipping! As you have punished me, pretty severely, please let me off this time, and apply your ferule where 'I suggest, so instead of my pre vious signature, I sign myself "THE GIRL WHO j HAS BEEN FERULED ENOUGH." I No dog that chased an intruding cat up a tree ever undertook the job witk more real enthusiasm than I accede to this girl's request. These abominable excuses for stockings fill me with the same indignant protest that I feel when I see a girl 'robbing herself of one of her most genuine attractions, modesty, aud wearing a porous waist that is sim ply a libel on a class of entirely useful and modest garments. Called It "A Game." I once visited iir" a very rigidly re ligious place,j where dancing was looked upon by. the older people as a direct manifestation of the. devil's presence. And the yoking folks actually danced the two-step right under the religious noses. But jthey called it "a game." i ou girls call these airy nothings with which you jelothe your limbs, stock ings, but I do not happen to be in the backwoods class.! ou cannot cover from me or from hundreds of other intelli gent people the fact that what you seek is the revelation1 of charms. Personal ly, I HATE" that queer whitey-black look that thin stockings give which you think appeals to the eye of man. Listen to me! The admiration which you attractj by a vulgar exposure of your physical beauties is XOT the kind that wins husbands. Lovers? Yes; ier haps. But deeent men like MODEST WOMEN. And a decent man is the only kind worth while as a H USB AN D. i o THE YOUNGEST GRANDMOTHER. Case of Mrs. E. W. Bender One of the Most Remarkable Outside of Tropl cal Countries Has Three, Grandchil dren at the Age of 30. A grandmother of two children at the age of 29 and three at 30 years, is the record of Mrs. E. W. Bender of Atlanta, Ga. It is claimed that Mrs. Bender is the youngest grandmother on record and her case one of the most remark able outside of tropical countries. Mrs. Bender, who is 31 years old, was born in lrt.HO in South Carolina. She was married! to E. W. Moore at Colum bia, S. C, jn 18!)2. She was only 13 years and 3 months old when her first child was born. This child, a daughter was married in - 1909 to Edward Sin clair, and ill January, 1910, gave birth to twins, the mother being barely 16 and the graiidmother not yet 30. In January of this .year Mrs. Ben der's daughter gave birth to another child, the third of Mrs; Bender's grand children, j Mr. Moore died when Mrs. Sinclair was an infant. Later his widow mar ried E. W. Bender and their union has been blessedj by several children. Phy sicians claim it is rare in this part of the world that a woman becomes a grandmother even in the early thirties. New Theory of Star Formation. i The astronomers of the Harvard Ob servatory aire attaching much signifi cance to the new theory of star forma tion advanced by Prof. A. W. Bicker-, ton of New; Zealand. It is that new stars are pdrt of the manifestation of collisions between- sums, in which a third body Ss hurried mto-space-tobegik its career as a planet like the earth. i,-... . -4- o r , : . When your feet are wet and cold and your body hilled through and through from exposure take a big dose of Cham berlain's Cough Remedy, bathe your feet in hot (water before going to bed, and yon are almost certain to ward off a severe cold. For sale by AH Dealers. DOLLY MADISON GHATS. TALKS ABOUT DOMESTIC UPS AND l DOWNS. HOW TOJM THEM. If We Had Money Would We Know How to Get More Happiness? If There is Love, That is Sufficient if Put to It Best Usee. . Thev seem to be such a happy fam ily." is an expression which I Often hear about certain friends of mine, who, poor in this world's goods, seem to be rich in love. , I have tried to analyze the teason foT the happiness of this family, aud I have come to the conclusion that it is because the misfortunes and griefs which they have suffered have drawn them close together instead of separa ting them. . "Companions in misery" is an ex pression often used, and illness, loss of money, everything but disgrace, nas been the lot of these dear friends of mine, who, with their children, Bet an example for the world to follow. For, after all, it is unity in ramiiy relationships which brings joy and peaee. A" soon as -discord enters, as soon as the two or , three pull apart from the rest, the whole structure of domestic bliss begins to totter. "My daughter and I" one mother tells me, " are nearer and dearer to each other than many daughters and mothers, because we have suffered to gether. She was a sjmiled little girl, and 1 often wondered if she would ever wake up to a realization of her selfish ness. Three years before he died, my husband lost his money and it was then I began to see the stuff of which my lit tle girl was made of. She bore pov erty uncomplainingly. She helped with the housework went to a business high school, entered her father's office, and became a responsible little woman in every way. Since her father's death, she has borne the heaviest burden of care, and we have been drawn together by the womanhood which is in us both. "I know that she would never have Iteen mine, in the sense that she now is, had we continued in "prosjerity. Site would have danced through life, forget ting me, and living only in the pleas ure ot the riiomeut." We are apt to count our misfortunes as terrible things. Wo wail over the loss of money, as if it were the most important possession in the world, yet our greatest grief should be when .we lose love. It is a precious heritage, aud beyond compare. ' It is the history of all time that money does not bring happiness. You remember Midas, whose touch turned everything to gold, until at last his own little daughter was ouly a silent, shin ing statue. Then the old king cried out for the love of the little child who was more than all the wealth of the world to him. A man prospering in every way, said the other day, "I don't believe that my wife and I get half as much out of life as we did when, we ' lived on eighteen hundred a year -instead of eighteen thousand." We who are poor are apt to insist that if we had money we would make such good use of it that we would make not only ourselves, but others happy. Yet I remember a clever story of an old couple, who, reading of a great fortune which had been left to certain heirs, be gan to plan what they would do should they inherit such a large sum. Their town, they asserted, should have a fine library, the poor should live in model tenements, the church should receive thousands for missions. In the midst of their dreams the news came that a fortune had been left to the ohi man and his wife. They be gan to plan at once, and, behold, not for others, but for themselves. Automobiles, trips abroad, a bigger house, these things they must have, and when they had divided up -their in come to meet their new wants, they found that there was nothing left for charity! There is a great deal of human na ture in the storv. Perhaps most of us are like that. If we had money, we should not know how to make it bring us happiness. We have lave, and it is our privilege to put it to its best uses. IX)LLY MADISON in Philadelphia Press. A Bit of Money and a Motor Car. Young Beattie, who killed his wife has given out an interview in which he says , that the reason he was con victed was liecause he didn't have "an up-to-date jury.". "I'll tell you old loy,"h'e is quoted as saying, "a fellow's up against it when be is to le tried by a bunch of countrymen from the backwoods like those that tried me. I never had any chance from the beginning. They get married young, bring up big families, work around the farms. What do they know about a city or a city's life! What de they know about how easy it is for a young fellow nowadays to get mixed up with a girl like-Beulah Binfordf In a city you newspajcr men from the north all know this it is almost impossible for a chap with a little bit of money and a motor car to avoid getting mixed up with those women. He can't help it." Thirteen-year old girls are probably not so dangerous as Mr. Beattie would make it appear, and the good men and true whom he thus criticizes are to be congratulated that they are the sort of men Mr. Beattie pictures them to be. But Mr. Beattie is quite correct when he suggests that the parent who turns loose in a city a boy in his teens with a bit of money in his pocket and a mo tor car at his disposal, might as well con sign him to the devil and be done with it. If he doesn't land there in the end it will be a miracle. Xews and, Courier Common Colds Must Be Taken Seriously For unless cured they sap the vitality and lower the vital resistance to more serious infection. Protect your chil dren and yourself by the prompt use of Foley's Honey anu Tar Compound and not its quick and decisive results. For coughs, colds, whooping cough, bron chitis and affections of the throat, chest and lungs it is an ever ready and var uable remedy. Helm's Drug Store. t t t t t t t I Visit the Clothing is CHEAPER this Fall than Jast.p understand the advantage of buying frorh I ) . t ) NO OLD STOCK. I Ess ( ( 1 SUITS WORTH $6.50 $7.00 $7.50 $4.90 COLORS Worsteds and Cassimers. Cnpyrichl lM M Jl Mkluri itrm fc Cm fil IV ' OTHER SUITS, $12.50, $15.00, $18.00 up to BOYS SUITS, 5 1 .48, f pare our Prices. 420 TRADE STREET. Always' tfie Best - . - ' . ' - - ! 3.. i . - ' - ,!.;; ' v .'h; . ; ' :-Ainli:':;:;V ' - - - - f " . ': a ' ,......;- ' ' ' ' .. ---V ,, - V. . . ".- " ' . ! :!5 :!t : V- p .-' " Chewing Tofajacco. , , i - I ; ' MANUFACTURED BY 1 -. i i TOBACCO pO WlNSTON-SALIiM, N.'d. a Newest Clothing Store i MEN'S and 13 SUITS We were especially I fortunate is securing a BIO LOT of Men's aitd Boys' Suits from one of America's largest Clothing Factories at a BIG D1SCOUN 1 for cash. I lots as follows : MEN'S SiJlTS SUITS WORTH $8.50, $9.00, $10.00 C7 OC 1Uak., Hrowxs Double and Single Breasted. $ 1 .95, $2.50, $3.50, $5.00 up to $8.50. 'FOLLOW THE ARROW" o o o o o o o o ... Z .i " - () .2 ) ( ) ? (s) Therefore you can a NEW STORE- (i ( (.) (J () ) 4 () () () () ) ' We have nut these In 3 () (it ) 4 () () ' () s ( SUITS WORTH $11.00, $12.50, $13.50 $9.75 WOOL All Colors and Styles. $25.00. . Com- WINSTON SALEM. N. C. WW )