PAGE TWO THE ROBESONIAN, LUMtfERTON, NORTH CAROLINA. MONDAY,' AUGUST 25, 1919. Is V; A Flavor for 1 I 1 I II XWT- I II -st" -..(J 1111 II II 1 II II A I I I II CTLL sealed alr-tteht and II 11 II imnfiiiftfniAAf In tho iiiau. . II III I I I I ' I,wJl II is I 05? T I I I ri I STATE AND COUNTY" ; COUNCIL AT UNIVEESI- TY NEXT MONTH A Conference of North Carolina Of ficials and Public-Spirited Citizens On Questions of Absorbing Inter- eat and Concern. ....v''rV Chapel Hill, Aug 22 With" letters going out from Governor Bickett to tho county commissioners, from Dr. E. C. Brooka, . Supt. of -p. pgblic Instruction, to the educational forces from R. F.'Beasley, Commissioner of Public Welfare, Jto the county wel fare officers, and from Dr. W. S. Rankin of the, State Board of Health. Frank Page, chairman of the - Road Commission, A. J. Maxwell of the Tax Commission, to their-respective clientele, urging their attendance up on the State and county council to be held at the University of North Car- HIS FRIENDS VERE ATtlAZEi) Condition So Serious That Friends Thought Jones , Could Not Live Gained 32 - Pounds On Tanlac. "I have already gained thirty-two pounds by taking -Tanlac and now everybody ia amazed -at. my woader ful recovery, Is .'the remarkable svi tement made recently by W D Jones, foreman on the feed floor at tho Rl PaiK- 'j t to$, Sme!'.. "About eight months ago" he con tinned, "I was taken down with what was pronounced malaria. . Then my 'stomach cot in a terrible, fix and ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE. ' Mr. Vaughan, Farmer Tel How He i o l. rr"e 8eed Corn' Hiving Vtollflti'U dmiafatr.trU of the bometime ago aent away for some1, cetsu of Ant-us chais, deceased, ute of pcajgreea.seea corn. i'ut it in a gunney sack and " fating it pn a rope suspended from roof. Rats got it all r-how beats me, but they did because I got 6. dead whoppers in the morning after trying RAT-SNAP.? Three sizes, 25c, 60c, $1.00. Sold and guar anteed bp L. H. Caldwell, R. D, Cald well & Son, Pope Drag Co., Lumber ton. V - -s. " - - -' Bobejon eountr. this is to notify all mum. bavins; cloima against amid estate to present thm to the underiie-ned adminWtratrl prop er ) verified en at before the 2 lit day of Jntr, 192. or thb notice will be plead i bar of thetr nttmrj. - All penona indebted to laid eaUte will please nek immediate ferment. -Thto Sub lUt, lilt. , V. J. CHAVIS. , Administratrix-. T tl Hob. , 1'tabrokt. M. C, what little I forced myself to eat feeemed to- form into lumns. I have olina, beginning September, 15th and; gone as long as three days without lasting for. six days, with Governor eating anything but one glass . of Bickett presiding, the conference is I milk. I developed a frightful case beginning to assume a State-wide 0f rheumatism in my arms, neck and WRfGUEVS because it is supreme in quality. DE5E3 The (Flavor lasts THE ONLY SAFE GUARD AGAINST AN ARCHY OR BOLSHEVISM The Common People Should Be Pro tected Against the Land Greed of the Rich and Powerful. To the Editor of The Robesonian: Farming is the main original source of wealth. On the prosperity of farms the superstructure of so cial institutions must of necessity rest. Society has divided itself into classes according to common inter cats, and almost every one of these classes is well organized for the pro tection of its individual members. These organizations are powerful aH cording to the financial strength of fall. Today in our own country w see strong business men dispossessing small farmers and adding small trr.ctn of land to their already too large possessions. The tenant class i; rapidly increasing, and as its ranks are filled from once small and lrdependent farmers, the stability of oui institutions is in a corresponding ratio being undermined. But the land-grabber argues it is legal. His class has made it legal, because his class made and interpreted the laws; but God has made it unjust to de stroy the home of childhood with! their sacred possibilities. A lamb finds little or no protection in a wolf's den. Has a strong man men tally and financially, the right to take advantage of a poor and needy siamifioance and importance. The Association of County Com missioners of North Carolina in ses sion at Wrightsville Beach recently gave its hearty approval and sup port to this conference of North Car olina officials and pubiTc-spiirftied citizens upon these questions of ab scrbine interest and concern to the entire State in designing official dele gates to attend as its representatives More than a thousand officials have been invited while the entire confer ence will be open to anyone desir ing to attend. Requests lor reser vation of Quarters are already being received by the university aut non- ties, and prospects lor a large at tendance are- exceedingly bright. Th program is being rapidly torn- niati and will be ready for an nouncement in a few days. The con fejence will take the form of daily successive conierences airecwu the State departments of Education and Health, and the Highway, isx., and Public Welfare commissions, to gether with representatives of the county commissioners and other county officers. The purpose of the conference is to unify the work of the State and county officers and boards particularly to discuss im portant legislation passed by the re cent General Assembly in reference to schoojs, health, pufflic welfare, highway construction and taxation. On the five nights of the conference distinguished speakers from other States will address the gathering. Six, thousand dollars worth of whiskey bottled in bond by a Ken tucky distiller 5 years ago and ship ped to Geo. Cook, Durham, in a car load of hay, was taken to Raleigh by a revenue officer Thursday night. Geo. Cook's home was found to le at Apex and he denies any knowledge of the whiskey shipped in his name. shoulders, and though I tried every thing I could hear of, I kept getting! worse until I was absolutely helpless. I don't believe I slept an average oft more than three hours out of twenty- four and then the sleep I got didn't rest. me. "I dropped down from one hundred and sixty pounds to one hundred and eight just, a frame of skin and bones and had spent over two hun dred dollars for treatments, but kept on' going down hill. Well, sir, a friend of mine recommended Tanlac. and' after taking six bottles of it I feel like a new man, I have actu ally gone up to one hundred and for ty pounds, and I am gaining every rday. I can eat just anything I want and have a dandy, appetite. Nothing hurts me anymore, and I don't know of any better way to show my ap preciation for my relief than to tell others how Tanlac has helped me." "Tanlac is sold by leading druggists everywhere its members and correspondingly j farmer s necessity to secure his home weak as money is needed. j and then drive the unoffending moth- In government, financial interests! er and children into the rank of the make and interpret the laws; the permanent homeless? masses know but little of their tela-) So helpless is this class of people tions to society except to submit ; and sopowerful is the influence of quietly to the exacting and impov- wealth that neither newspapers nor eriahing burdens that financial inter-1 preachers dare to espouse their "cauie est forces them to bear. The powerful seriously and yet they know that his have always been able to protect t tory teaches the fact that the com rheir interests; the poor have always mon people feeling secure in the -been ignorant, weak, and unprotected possession of their country homes is In their rights. There is no excuse for the only safeguard against anarchy, Jaw, and no necessity for it, unless or Bolshevism. The sooner laber or it protects the weak from the strong, ganizations force land from the spec Land, water and air are three nat-,ulative markets and, limits the num nral elements that God created and be: of acres one man may own, the rave to man for his support and de- sooner will our country be strength- velopment. He made the home the ened to meet the new conditions im- racred writ of society from which pesed on ijt by the advancing broth children should go out into the erhood of man. world trained in the things that H. L. EDEN'S, make for civil and religious liberty. Lumberton, N. C, Aug. 14, 1919. If independent homes are the pil- - lows of Church and State, destroy these and the superstructure must Subscribe fos TRE ROBESONIAN. CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION. To all to Whom These Preaents May Come Green ting : Whereas. It appeexe to my ratUfaetion, by ililw nthnties.ted record of the proceeding for the voluntary diaaolution thereof by the unanimous consent of all the stockholders, AHA In mt office, that the St. Pauls Telephone Company, a corporation of th State, whose principal office is situated at street, in the town of St. Pauls, County of Robeson, State of North Carolina rt. Ininn Miw the htent therein 14 .v.m tkamf. unon whom process way oe served), has complied with the retirements of Chapter 11. Rovisal of 1MB, enthW.1 "Cor porations," preliminary to tne issuing- of thai Certificates of Dissolution: Mow. Therefore. 1. J. BiTah Urimea, aetre- tary of State of th State of North Caro lina, do hereby certify that the baid eorpor tkm did. on the 2Cn4 -lay of July '.MB. file in m office a duly etecued and attested content in writine; n th dUwHtlon of asl eornoration. executed by all tie atockbo Id- era thereof, which said consent and tha, rec ord of the proceeding atoresid r- how on 'file in my said office as provided by' law. . In Testimony Whereof, I nave hereto set my hand and affixed my official aeal at Ra leigh, this 22nd day of July. A. D , lSlfl. J. BRYAN CRIMF8. Secretary of State. 8 4 4 Mon. "Why I Put Up With Rata for Years," Write N. Windsor, Farmer. "Years ago I bought some rat poison, which nearly killed our fine watch dog. It so scared us that we suffered a long time with rate until my neighbor told me about . RAT SNAP. That's the sure rat killer arid a safe one." Three sizes, 25c, wc, i.uu. soij ana guaranteed oyi L. H. Caldwell, R. D. Caldwell & Son, -DELAYS ARE DANGEROUS" Tou can't afford to neglect BOWEL DISORPERS. The minute they etart give them attention serious and intelligent attention. Diarrhoea, Flux, Cholera Morbus, Colic, "Summer Complaint", Chol era Infantum and the like are deadly dangerous if allowed to "run on." There's a remedy! life safe! It's DR. . THACHER'S DIARRHOEA MIXTURE -in successful use for half a century (through two chol era campaigns). Sold at all drag stores for 25c. Compounded in the laboratories of the THACHER MEDICINE CO, Chattanooga, Tenn. Get a bottle and have it in tha house ready. Particularly for the CHILDREN; and then WATCH the kiddies and .give them tale good old mediciae promptly. For Sale by Pope Drug Company Pope Drug Co., Lumberton. NOTICE OF FOSECLOSURB SALE. Under and by virtue of power and author ttj contained in a Judgment of the superior court of Robeson county in whi:h W. Lennon is plaintiff and R. J. Lefsett and wife Mary M. Leg-gett are defendants beta a judgmeut of foreclosure I will on Monday, the 1st day of September, 1918, at 12 o'clock, m at the court bouse door (n the tow of Lom barton, .N. C, sell at public auction to the hie heat bidder for cash, the following scribed tract or parcel of land, lying in St. Pauls township, Robeson county, N. C, more particularly described , as follows ; A part of a tract of land granted to Mary M. Leggctt by the State of North Carolina beginning at a stake in m stump and runs jMiuth 34 degrees anl 16 minutes west 9.62 chains to a stake near the railroad track; thence 'north 59 degrees and 30 minutes west 12.66 chains to a stake thence south 'M de grees and 15 minutes west 12 chains to a stake; thence south 82 degrees and SO min utes west 7.88 chains to a stake, cum and pine pointer; thence south 65 degrees and 13 minutes - east 24.90 chains to a stake, pine pointer: thence south 80 degrees east 28.85 chains to a stake by an oik ; 'hence north 84 degrees and 16 minutes east ti chains to a pointer in said grant Jne; -thence north hi degrees and 15 minutes west 28 chains and 38 links to a point within said grant; thence north 84 degrees and 15 minutes east 11 chains and 60 links to a point in said grant line; thence north 65 oegrees and 15 min utes west 8 chains and 57 links to the-' be ginning. 1 That the 31st day of July, 11. JAS. a. PROCTOTt. 114 4 Mons. Commissioner, 1 Sl A.v WW mm. 1 WE HAVE THE BEST LINE of School Goods This Year we liave ever had. Dandy Pads and Composition Books. Novelties in Pencils and Pencil Boxes that will Make the Children Open Their Eyes. A Nickel or a Dime will do wonders in buying for school. You can send yonr children to us to buy for themselves. We'll treat thera more fairly than if you were with them. ,t5j:Bt -t?Hs: . " """ ''"' "' an'i iimm-VM, ( phqhb7z) J &JF LUMBERTON, N.C. 0 Fayelteville Conservatory of MUSIC This institution will open its doors on Monday, September 15th 1919, ready to instruct pupils in instrumental and vocal music. ' The school will be directly under the supervision of Miss Char lotte Ruegger, graduate and teacher of the Conservatory of music at Brussells, Belgum, as director. Miss Ruegger is recognized as a virtuoso and teacher of the violin of rare ability and is a distinct acquisition t0 any institution of this character. Assisting Miss Ruegger will be Dr. Edward Gleason, professor of , of piano and organ; Mrs. Eva Korb Gleason, professor of voice; Miss Ethola Frost, professor of piano; Miss Mary McGill, professor of voice; Miss Mary Beckers, professor of French, piano and violin; Miss Isabel Nichols, professor of English and piano and Miss Pat tie Foote Herring, assistant harmony instructor. In addition, Mrs J A King will have charge of theprimary department in piano instruction, with Miss Mildred Youngblood as assistant Catalogues will be ready for distribution on or about ' July 15th, 1919. Registration for tuition may be made by addressing FAYETTEVILLE CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Mrs. J. A. King Secretary nd Registrar. A J. JEWELER I have a nice line watches, clocks, cut glass, silver- ware, China, Fountain pens, and jewelry. No Bargains to offer, but can sell these goods at prices reasonable with other things you have to buy. Come in and see. Next door to K. M. Biggs llliillliilSlllli mm 1 0aaaa44Aaeajaaaae r 'ir- ...... ail 10 -i: ' " 'A ' " -'; .... .!. : - . :. c Airirived i&romni St. Louuis, Mo., Atugimslt 3ird. This is the best assortment of Horses and Mules we have shipped in years. iv iLo 11" LJ iLi JJLf iO.iiXio ILJlUlliliiiMJv (Do In our assortment of Buggies, Wagons; Hame buy just the kind y 6u want 1 to .LERAND