Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / June 16, 1913, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE SEMI-WEEKLY ROBESUNIAN a The Character of the bank where you transact your financial affairs reflects in a certain measure, your judgment in matters of business. Associating yourself with a strong, conservative insti- tution such as this not only affords protection for your money together with every facility known to modern banking, but it also adds to your reputation for sound business judgment You are cordially invited to open an account subject to check in any amount or in our Savings Department at 4 per cent, interest, compounded quarterly. Bank of Lumberton TH6 Jackson ' serious Hotel JACKSON SPRINGS, N. C. will open on May 31st, 1913. Operated by S LEONARD TUFTS, OWNER OF PINEHURST. The hotel has been remodeled, repaired, repainted inside and out and refurnished. It has tennis courts, swimming pool, good boating, fish ing, fine orchestra and 1500 miles of fine automobile road. Special rates during June. Address JACKSON SPRINGS HOTEL, JACKSON SPRINGS, N. C. The place to get your Furniture is the LUMBERTON FURNITURE STOltE Lumberton, N. C. THE.' Beautiful Chimney Rock Gap REACHED VIA Seaboard flip Line R. R. Chimney Rock Gap has been for years famed for its beauty in both song and story. Why not spend your vacation at one of the comfortable hotels beautifully situated in this lovely valley. Hotel Rates Remarkably cheap ' $5.00 to $10.00 per week HOMELIKE SERVICE Good Roads ine, LJ.vV.y Good Fishing The Seaboards New, Schedules " . Make it easy to get to Chimney Rock, Rutherford ton and surrounding mountains. Write today for booklet JAMES KER, JR., H. S. LEARD, T. P A., Charlotte, N. C. D. P. A., Raleigh, N. C. WILSON HAS MADE GOOD. TUERftBEIftMA IM-sBbacriptiori iiiii nviujuuiiruii, $1.50 a year Three Months' Administration Vindi cate People's Faith in Him. Washington Cor., 11th, Baltimore Sun. The first three months of the Wil son administration have vindicated ab solutely the faith which the Presi dent's friends had in his ability to meet the conditions which his party faced when it assumed complete con trol of the executive and legislative branches of the Government. In any review of the achievements of the first quarter of the first year's work the fact must be remembered that the opportunities which the ad ministration has had have been limit ed. They have been limited on the one hand by time and on the other by the President's insistence that one thing at a time should be his pro gram. In spite of this, however, it has been clearly demonstrated that the pledges of the party given at Balti more and accepted at Sea Girt will be carried out. The President has stood firm in every contest over them and Congress has sustained him. To gether they have worked out the pol icies which are to guide them during the coming four years. In the first place, the President has remained true to his promise to give the country the benefit of a re vised tariff. He has been assailed by the interests whose special privileges are curtailed; he has been threatened by Wall street; he has been warned even by members of his own party, but he has not wavered once. Revision Practically Accomplished, Tariff revision is now practically an accomplished fact. The Senate, which was looked to as it was always looked to, for protective du ties which the House would not allow, has been trained into line for the Wilson program It has so far even outdone the House in lowering du ties. It has placed live stock and wheat on the free list, after the House had voted'a duty on them. It has virtually accepted free sugar and free wool. It has left lumber on the free list and resisted the clamor of a lobby which demanded protection on this or that commodity. The Senate as a whole has not voted, it is true, upon the bill, but the result of that vote is a foregone con clusion. The bill will be passed just as insisted upon by the President. The Underwood bill, with a few modifi cations, will be passed and sign ed by Mr. Wilson, and the paramount pledge of the party will be put into effect. This is to be followed, probably at this session, by a reform currency bill. The President wants this legis lation as soon as it can be passed, and though there is objection to prolong ing the present session unnecessarily it is a safe guess that the bill will go to the staute books if the White House makes the recommendation in favor of it. Only these two legislative matters were at any time contemplated by the President at the extra session of Con gress. And only these two, with per-. haps a few emergency bills, will be passed. They will have met the de mands of the consuming public for tariff relief on the one hand and the demand of business for an elastic currency on the other. Successful Reorganization. Mr. Wilson has done more, however, than press Congress for legislation. He has reorganized nine executive de partments and organized a tenth one. He has put into motion the whole machinery of the administrative branch of the Government lie be gan this by naming a strong Cabinet and has followed it up by personally consulting with his official advisers upon the important policies which each" has inaugurated. , Furthermore, the President has him self disregarded all the petty re straints which heretofore hedged the Chief Executive. He has cut loose from the old policy of secrecy of action; from the old tradition that a President had no right to visit the Capitol; from the old precedent that Congress had the right and not the President to name officeholders. He has exposed the powerful lobby that is seeking to defeat his tariff pro gram. He has refused to leave Wash ington while official business de manded his presence here. He deliv ered a message in person to Congress. He has met successfully a serious foreign complication. All this and much more he has done in three months. And as it is almost dally ieniarked in Washington, he has not made one single blunder. He has shown clearly the uselessness of a rtliird party. He-has-obscured Theo dore Roosevelt as the leader of pro-. gressivism and has brought together the radical and conservative wings of his own party. All this has been ac complished "without any of the fright ful results which were predicted. Bus iness has not been disturbed. The threatened panic has not been mater ialized. The country has not been plunged into a state of revolution. No body can say what the future will bring forth, but it is a simple matter to see that the past has met the ex pectations of the President's support ers. J. F. E. The name Doan's inspires confi dence Doan's Kidney Pills for kid ney ills. Doan's Ointment for skin itching. Doan's Regulets for a mild laxative. Sold at all drug stores. C. H. Duls of Charlotte Appointed Judge. Charlotte Chronicle, 13th. Mr. Charles H. Duls, member of the firm of Clarkson & Duls, was yester day notified of his official appointment by Governor Locke Craige as the first judge of the newly created fourteenth judicial district, composing Mecklen burg and Gaston counties. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA NOTICE OF SUMMONS AND WAR RANT. North Carolina. Robeson County. A. K. Morrison, vs. . . Murphy M'Arthur f Superior Court September Term, 1913 The defendant auove named will take notice that he is required to be and appear before the Judge of the Superior Court of Robeson county, at a court to be held on the 8th Monday after the first Monday in July, it be ing the first day of September, 1913, and answer or demur to the complaint of the plaitiff which will be deposited in the office of the clerk of 4he Super ior Court of said county within the first three days of said term; and let the defendant take notice that if he fail to answer the said complaint within that term, the plaintiff will apply to the court for relief demand ed in the complaint. The defendant will take further notice that the plain tiff claims the sum of $180.00 ' or thereabout, with interest on the said sum from the 27th day of Jan. 1911, due and owing to the plaintiff by account. The defendant will also take notice that a warrant of at tachment was issued by the Clerk of the said court on the 9th day of June, 1913, returnable at the time and place above named for the return of summons, when and where the said, defendant is required to appear and answer or demur, or the relief de manded In plaintiff's complaint will be granted. This the 9th day of June, 1913. C. B. SKIPPER, 694M C. S. C. Robeson County. Most Children Have Worms. Many mothers think their children are suffering from indigestion, head ache, nervousness, weakness, costive ness, when they are victims of that most common of all children's ail ments worms. Peevish, ill-tempered, fretful children, who toss and grind their teeth, with bad breath and colicky pains, have all the symp toms of having worms, and should be given Kickapoo Worm Killer, a pleasant candy lozenge, which ex pels worms, regulates the bowels, tones up the system and makes chil dren well and happy. Kickapoo worm Killer is guaranteed. All druggists, or by mail. Price 25c Kickapoo In dian Medicine Co., Philadelphia and St. Louis. Subscribe for The Robeuonian. The fatigue of shopping is mostly felt in the feet, but ladies who wear WHITE HOUSE SHOES are not troubled in this respect, for they are as comfortable as they are elegant. Summer days are at hand and it is time to select your Oxfords and pumps we have a complete line of the famous WHITE HOUSE SHOES in Black, Tan and White all the latest models. Come in and examine them. We will take particular pains to fit you. John T. Biggs Co., Inc. LUMBERTON, NORTH CAROLINA. M;-iiki'jwwKiyMrir.ii: fry' A CHANCE TO GET Engraved Stati onery. And Pay Nothing for the Engraving Simply clip this coupon and either bring or send it with 30 cents in addition to a year's subscription. A plate or die alone for your engraving- at any stationer's, will cost a couple of dollars. Here you get your initial engraved for nothing in beau tiful colors. But you must act now, if you want this rare bargain. G I Engraved Initial Stationery Coupon Enclosed find $1.80 for which send me immediately, as per offer The Robesonian for one year (or renew ray subscription, if already a subscriber) and 24 sheets and 24 envelopes of the finest grapaperJheyeJoJearrMal, engraved in six different 1 designs, each design to be tinted with a different color. The 25c is to pay for the stationery, there being no extra charge either for the engraving or the Art case in which it is packed. THE ROBESONIAN, lumberton, N. C. CSV
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 16, 1913, edition 1
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