THE SEMI-WEEKLY ROBESONIAN.
On Saturday, July 26th,
We will open our store to the public We have
been working, buying and planning for tins day for
the past four months, and when you fisit the store
we feel you will appreciate that we have succeeded
in getting together the greatest values in merchan
dise that it has been your pleasure to have offered
you.
In order to get you acquainted with our store
we have arranged to have on sale Saturday some
very extra values. At 8 o'clock we will start
our Spring Sale.
Jardiniere, Each 25c
17 Qt. Enamelware Dish Pan . . 25c
Enamelware Tea Kettle . . . 25c
and other equal values in Enamelware.
Ladies' Hats Shapes . 25c
A full line ot Ribbon, the yard 5 to 25c
If you see them you will agree
these goods are worth three times' our
prices. At 10 o'clock
Men's Shirts, Each . . .
Full size and good quality.
25c
A look at our Hosiery Department should con
vince you that this is the place for you to pur
chase hose for the family. All hose guaranteed to
give satisfactory wear.
MEN'S TIES Now is the time to supply your
wants. To see these is sufficient to cause you to
purchase.
Household and Kitchen Department is as near
complete as one of the best housekeepers could
suggest
2 p. m. Hoes, Shovels, Rakes, each 25c
See these to bow their real worth
8 p. m. Alarm Clock . . . 25c
We guarantee these.
The above specials are only a few of our many
values. Visit our store and you will be repaid for
your time.
Our Candy cannot be excelled and at
our price you can eat all you want
Your Money's Worth or Your Money Back
-J. ...
ROBESON COUNTY SCHOOL COM
MITTEEMEN.
Following is a list as complete as
can be obtained now of the committee
men for the various school districts of
Robeson county recently appointed by
the county board of education, the
first being for the white schools, the
second for the colored schools and the
third for the Indian:
Alfordsvflle township district No.
1: Jeff Bracy, Joe Smith and N. J.
McRimmon; No. 2 Alex Alford,
Alex McGirt, J. B. Bullock; No. 3:
J. R. McLean, R. A. McLean and J.
S. Willis; No. 4: G. E. Bond, S. W.
Cobb and L. R. Rogers; No. 5: Neill
Barker, Mrs. J. G. McRae and Dan
iel Martin.
Back Swamp, No. 2: Gaston Pre
vatt, A. D. Barnes and Jno. T. Single
tary. Burnt Swamp, No. 1: J. B. Hum
phrey, Paisley McMillan and W. E.
Tiddy; No. 2: J. L. Prevatt, E. Odum
and J. C. Baxley.
Britts, No. 1: W. G. Pope, W. L.
Thompson, Asbury Rice; No. 2:
Sidney Williamson, S. D. Lamb, Da
vid Davis; No. 3: J. A. Pittman, W. R.
Atkinson and E. H. Prevatt; No. 4:
W. H. Bullard, F. C. Britt, J. I. Stone,
Jr.; No. 5: J. Z. Stone, E. B.
Stone and Haynes Britt.
Fairmont, No. 1: A. J. Floyd, A.
S. Thompson, Geo. H. Cole; No. 2:
R. A. Pitman, G. H. Floyd and C. W.
Bullock.
Howellsville township District No.
1, G. P. Graham, R. L. Byrd; No. 2:
N. A. Townsend, W. J. Barker, W. J.
Baxley; No. 3: J. M. Butler, Geo. F.
Humphrey and S. N. Martin; No. 4:
J. B. Regan, L. L. M'White and J. D.
Herring; No. 5, N. A. Kinlaw J. S.
Currie, Thomas Kinlaw; No. 6, Jas.
G. Smith, C. W. Sessoms and Sandy
Kinlaw; No. 7: N. E. Rozier, W. II.
Bullock, W. M. Bryant.
Lumberton township district No.
1: F. J. Davis, C. T. Davis and Chas.
Bryant; No. 2: E. N. Prevatt, W. D.
Prevatt, J. W. Lowe; No. 3: Z. R.
Dytton, A. P. McAllister, Jas. I.
Barnes; No. 5: R. D. Caldwell, Oli
ver Britt and Geo. F. Briatz.
Lumber Bridge township district
No. 1: M. L. Marley and L. L. Shaw;
No. 3: J. J. Beard, J. M. Mclver and
J. J. Shaw; No. 5: M. T. McGoogan,
D. S. Klarpp, B. B. Currie; No. 9:
J. H. Chason, D. J. Barlow, W. H.
Carter.
Maxton township district No. 1 :
L. M. Stewart, Mrs. R. T. McElyea
and D. R. Caddell; No. 2: J. B. Sel
lars, Rory McNair and A. J. Cotinyr-
ham; No. 3: J. A. Chisholmr M. M.
Caddell W. H. McCormick; No. 5: D.
M. McRae, Jno. A. Jones, Arthur McLean.
Orrum township Orrum High
School district No. 1: S. A. Hum
phrey, M. W. Hedgpeth, I. II. War
wick; No. 2: J. W. Bullock, II. F.
Purvis, J. K. Atkinson.
Parkton township district No. 2:
Z. T. McMillan, Neill D. McMillan,
and D. J. Smith.
Pembroke township Number 1:
Neill Mclnnis, E. M. Paul, A. D. Pre
vatt; No. 2: W. A. McNeil!; C. H.
Lewis and James Smith.
Raft Swamp township district No.
1: J. E. Carlyle, W. C. Townsend, W.
F. Prevatt.
Red Springs township district No.
4: J. T. Denny, J. D. McNeill and
A. P. Smith. w
Saddle Tree township district No.
1: M. G. Prevatt, W. H. Powell Ar
chie McDuffie; No. 2: Lei Willis,
Jno. Carlyle, Mrs. R. G. Rozier; No.
3: J. R. Bowen, J. C. Prevatt, Purvis
Powers; No. 4: Jno. H. Powers, Dun
can M'White, J. W. Barker.
Smiths township district No. 1:
P. H. McArthur, D. A. Wilkeison, D.
Smiths No. 2SHRDLUUSHRDLR
L. Stewart; No. 2: J. G. Furcell,
Neill Alford, D. V. Walker; No. 4:
J. K. McGirt, Chas. McNeill, J. S.
Jernigan. -
St. Pauls township district No. 2:
C. Norton, P. Hollingsworth, W. A.
Riddle; No. 5: D. Z. Rozier, E. J.
Fisher and J. A. Baxley.
Rennert township district No. 1:
Arch McGoogan, B. Tolar and W. A
Graham.
Sterlings township district No. 2
Walter Hodge, B. R. Harden, J. G.
Rhodes; No. 3: R. A. Harden, J. T.
Purvis, D. McLelland; No. 4: S. B.
Graham, W. A. Leggett and N .F.
Borden; No. 6: C. L. Page, J. P.
Murray and R. R. Barnes.
Thompsons township district No.
1: (Rowland High School) J. H. Mc
Cormick, W. W. Webster, Graham
McKinnon; No. 3: Jno. L. Stewart,
J W. Crawford and M. J. McCor
mick; No. 4: J. W. Shooter, Cs W.
Branch, Jno. W. Gaddy; No. 6 Jno.
W. Andrews, J. E. Price, C.
P. Grantham; Number seven: Geo.
W. Turner, T. B. Jenkins, Perry Jenk
ins; No. 8: Spurgeon McLean, J. L.
Townsend, F. M. Townsend; No. .9: J.
A. McRae, C. T. Pate, Peter Adams;
No. 10: T. P. Munroe, Geo. B. Lamm,
D. A. McCall; No. 11: G. P. Miller,
Jno. C. McCallum, C. M. Townsend.
t Wisharts township district No. 1:
Gaston- Britt, TT-J.-PhilHpsr--Oscar
Helgren; No. 2: J. M. Smith, I., J,
Belch, G. Lennon; No. 3: Joe. Mer
cer, Eddy Phillips, Pink West; No,
4: J. T. Phillips, I. J. Flowers.
White House township district No.
3: Mrs. N. J. Page J. E. Rowland
and R. C. Huggins; No. 4: P. W.
Evans and C. T. Harrington; No. 5;
J. M. Sparkman, J. J. Page, J. S. Oli
ver;. No. 6: C. M. Oliver, W. F.
Faulk, Jesse Turner.
Colored Race.
Alfordsville township district No.
1: B. D. McKay, Jim Brown and
Thos. D. McCallum; No. 2: T. R. Bul
lard, Shaw McNair, J. E. McNair;
No. 3: A. B. McDuffie, James Mc
Phaul Jno. W. Baker; No. 4: Jno.
A. McQueen, Fletcher McCormick, W.
M. McEachern; No. 5: Jacob Wat
son, Andrew McCallum 'and J. E.
McNeill; No. 6: Davis Williams, D.
C. Bethea, W. M. Laurin.
Britts township district No. 1:
Joel Inman, V. B. Inman, A. S. Camp
bell; No., 2: Span Pope, Sandy
Thompson.
Back Swamp township district No.
1 L. W. Powell, J. M. Hill, A. D.
Thompson; No. 2: A. C. Byrd, G. L.
Lassane J. F. Thompson; No. 3: J. L.
Alford, M. C. Moore, J. D. Moore.
Burnt Swamp township district
No. 1: J. D. McMillan, J. H. Blue, J.
R. Buie; No. 2: J. H. Bethea, W. M.
Morrison, Edmond Leach.
(Continued on page three)
The Disappearance of the Young Girl.
Baltimore Sun
The extract from the Pictorial Re
view, which we print, on this page,
expresses a feeling that is in many
hearts. "What has become of the
young girl?" is a question that has
long been troubling not only old
fashioned men and women but the
younger men of today, who realize
what the disappearance of feminine
innocence means to their own future
and the future of the race. We are
fond of talking about the conser
vation of our natural resources, but
how far is modern education and
modern training destroying what in
a moral sense is more important than
all the physical wealth of the earth?
We deplore the senseless slaughter of
birds of beautiful song and plumage,
but are we not murdering something
infinitely finer and more valuable
when we eliminate the modesty and
innocence of the young girl of the
past, and substitute for her a person
who at 16 has all the maturity of
manner and all the familiarity with
the problems of life that belong to
the woman of 40? Maidenhood no
longer stands where the brook and
river meet. The living human poem
which she represented is in danger
of being lost, because the mental and
moral condition which produced that
ideal no longer exists. We have given
her to eat of the tree of knowledge,
and though she has become as wise
as the serpent she is not as harmless
as the dove. The sweet suggestion of
Eden has disappeared.
This is not a protest against care
ful training. It is a demand for more
careful and better balanced training.
The tendency of the age makes for
coarseness and hardening of moral
sensibilities in woman for casting
the feminine mind and nature in the
same molds as the masculine. To
what will a, race of such new women
give birth? Will the world be better
and stronger for them, or will it only
be smarter and less moral?
B
Don't Forget
tint we are taking subscriptions for
stock in the Eighth Series of the
Robeson Building and Loan
Association
Stock will be issued July 1st We have
helped others. Let us help you. You will
do well if you want to save your money or
if you with to build a home to investigate
the BUILDING AND LOAN PLAN.
Build your home with rent money.
C. V. BROWN, Sec and Treas.
At Bank of Lumberton
. - . .
The Difference Between "The Sum
mer Girl and "The Summer Wo
man.' While the former is having a "good
time" the latter is too often dragging
around nervous, run down, tired out,
with aching back and weary limbs,
sleepless and wretched. Often it is
kidney trouble and not female trou
ble and Foley Kidney Pills are a di
rect and positive help for the con
dition. For sale by all dealers.
NOTICE OF SALE.
Under and by virtue of authority
given in a certain mortgage deed ex
ecuted by Warren Revel and wife,
Hattie J. Revel to Thomas L. John
son which is recorded in Book 25, at
page 51, office of the Register of
Deeds of Robeson county, the under
signed will, on Moday the 18th day
of August, 1913, at 12 o'clock noon,
at the court house door in the town
of Lumberton, offer for sale at pub
lic auction to the highest bidder for
cash, the following described lands
and premises, situated in Britts town
ship, Robeson county, North Carolina,
bounded more particularly as follows,
to wit:
Adjoining the lands of the Butters
Lumber Co., David Martin, Atlas
Britt on both sides of Iveys Bluff road
and being the same land formerly
owned by William Britt, and upon
which W. T. Britt formerly lived, con
taining 50 acres, the said lands hav
ing been conveyed to William T.
Britt by Lewis A. Lawson, and con
veyed by William T. Britt to Mrs.
Susan Proctor by deed dated October
4th, 1897, which said deed is recorded
in Book W. W. W. page 485, office of
the Register of Deeds of Robeson
county.
This the 10th day of July, 1913.
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
7214mon Attorneys.
ID
eparei !
This is the season
of the year when we
are making prepara
tion for the coming of
the time when that
Tobacco which you have planted
will be ready for curing.
Have your flues made
now, so that there will
be no delay. Place
your order now.
McAllister fldw. 60.
OAK RIDGE INSTITUTE
A SELECT school for young men and boys. Prepares for College,
for Business, for Life. 249 students last year. Sixty-second
year. Located near Greensboro, N. C, over 1000 feet above the sea
level, in view of the mountains.
Beautiful catalogue will tell you more. Send for one.
J. A. & M. H. HOLT, Proprietors, Oak Ridge, N. C.
THE -
Beautiful Chimney Rock Gap
REACHED VIA
SeaDoard 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 Remarkablyjcheap
: $5 00 to $10.00 per week
HOMELIKE SERVICE
Good Roads Pine, LJ v r.
Good Fishing
The Seaboards New Schedules
' i
Make it easy to get to Chimney Rock, Rutherford
ton and surrounding mountains.
- Write today for booklet
JAMES KER, JR., H. S. LEARD,
if