Mothers WANT IT for eroupy children bo cause it quickly clears c way the choking phlegm, stops hoarse, croupy coughs ana allows restful sleep. No alarming croup when Moth er keeps a botte of CHAMBERLAIN’S COUGH REMEDY ' always on hand in the home, feenefita children and grown persons. Np N*rcotic». Solid everywhere, WOMEN FIRST! BUT, MEN, BE SURE TO DO YOUR SHOPPING NEXT. ODUM FAMILY REUNION An Occasion Long to be Remembered at the Otd Home Place of the Late Ferdinand Odum. ( Correspondence of The Robeson iun. An occasion long to be remember ed was the Odum reunion on Thanks i giving day at the old home place to the late Ferdinand Odum 6 1-2 miles west • ■!-1 «■ -r—■fh-Jh - ( ’ ~r' nr' Daily Fashion Hints j ry *«•1' SUEDE AND SATIN AND PATENT LEATHER all offer attractions for m’lafly. The pair that are worn are of soft brown suede with low heel, cut out sides and a bow. Also of suede are the slippers in the cir cle. They are trimmed with a _buckle effect of bronzed beads. In the lower rectangle, from left to rlgnt, OiaCK saun, mac* pawm leather and black satin with suede are the mat, -Sals used. The slip per furthert right is black satin with suede for the beckle-like In step ornament. It has elastic In the front to insure a trim lit. . ^ • ' . - ■ ... i i-— | f Jhe Guiltiest Feeling in the WorU^t I when Santa comes to your home Broke. Start a 1925 Xmas Savings l ^ fund NOW f* W J I The First National Bank I Lumberton, North Carolina. I T. L. Johnson, President ^ I R. E. Lewis, Vice President R. MeA. Nixon, FB C- T. Pate, Vice President C. A. McArthur, Ollier”■ EXIDE BATTERIES j Sales, Recharging, Repairing and Overhauling. | Expert Service and Satisfaction Guaranteed. MIKE HERRING Third and Chestnut Streets * Phone 204 j HUDSON AND HUPMOBILE SERVICE i i , Repair Shop and Sales Rooms j f West Fourth Street. Telephone 196 ! TOWNSEND MOTOR CO. OAKLAND SALES AND SERVICE ~ ! i . I t , , All kinds Auto Repairing And Overhauling. i i Gasoline, Oils and Greases. , BULLARD AND FREEMAN d and Chestnut Streets Phone 204. I SALES AND SERVICE i i DODGE BROS. CARS, NASH TRUCKS. HUGH A.BARNES 1 Phone 374 West Fourth Street. !um of the old home place; Mrs. C. L. Johnson and Mrs. Edwin Martin of St. Pauls, and Mrs. W. F. Prevatte of iLumberton R. 6. * All were present with most of their ! children and grandchildren, making la total of 123. There being no pro gram arranged, the day Was spent in talking, eating, kodaking and getting ; mg acquainted with members of the different families. f- aI. ___ _ 1_i.Ul. I_1 1__ an wiiv 5* vtv. u lUMg wvvti j prepared for the occasion and about 1 o’clock dinner was announced. Rev. A. E. Paul of Lumberton, beloved | pastor of many of those present, of ferrd prayer, after which; every one dnpe iferward and partook o fthe boun ttfiU feast which. had been prepared. Everything one could desire was there in abundance. After every one had partaken to their hearts de sire, there was a-plenty left to feed a crowd tWo or three times as large as the pne present. This was the first reunion of the Odum family, and they are making plans to make it an annual affair. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Humphrey Odum and family of the old home place; Mr. and Mrs. Opie Odum and family of St. Pauls; Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Odum and family of Sampson county; Prof. Owen Odum and family 0 Stonewall; Mr. and Mrs. J. Odum and family of Pembroke. Ti en there were many ' sons and daughters-in-law, and a few friends of the family. After the noon hour the Raft Swamp quartette, composed of Messrs. E. T. and W. F. Prevatte, Fred Stephens and H. M. Odum, sang "They are waiting and watching”, af ter which Rev, H. W. Baucom of Win ston-Salem mude a very appropriate prayer, thanking God for his many blessings to the fanfily in the past, and asking for a continuance of the same. And we sincerely hope that each and every one who was gather ed there for the occasion will so live, until when we’ve called hence, we will be prepared to enter into that eternal | home, where the last great reunion will be, and where sad farewells will ; come no more, and families will never break up; for as we shall meet from : year, to year our ranks will grow thinner, and thinner, but we hope at last to be a reunited family up yonder on that blest eternal shore, where sorrow, pain and death will.be felt and i feared no more, and where we shall clasp the hand of loved ones who have gone on before to welcome us to ' that bright eternal home. WILSON PEACE PRIZE WARD . ED TO AN ENGLISHMAN. 1 _____ * Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, form erly Lord Robert Cecil, has been de clared winner of the first $25,000 award of the Woodrow Wilson foun dation. Norman H. Davis, president of the foundation board of trustees announc ed Thursday that Viscount Cecil had been chosen unanimously by the jury of award as the person “who had .ren dered the most meritorious service of a public character looking toward the establishment of peace through just- j ice, and who had done most to give j effect to the ideals and the great plan } for world peace to which Mr. Wilson j gave so much thought and effort.” The jury sat at Boston under chair manship of Dr. Charles W. Eliot, president emeritus of Harvard uni versity. High lights in the English man’s qualifications for the $25,000 prize were listed as: “For five years he has carried on the ideals of Mr. Wilson. “In the Italo-Grecian crisis a year ago he fought for peace, for media tion, for a fair settlement with an honesty and a rightness which could not be denied. • *“He wgfctiu|tKme«tal in gain^pg ^jgHqPHajr ffeayby tabl ing to anuxitfSaSe in the Balkans. “He has aided in the development "CnWTKTSrnatiohal conscience in the matter of mandates—“the sacred trusts of civilization’ dreamed of by Woodrow Wilson. “He has been a pioneer for control in arms traffic. “He has been unceasingly active in behalf of racial, religious and lin guistic minorities.” Samuel J. Cain, 55, prosperous far mer, got out of 'bed at his home in Surry county at 12:30 «. m. on the night of December 4, got his shot gun, remarked to his wife “I am now ; telling you good-bye” and went out \ and blew off the top of his head. No reason assigned; business was pros | perous and home relations pleasant. CHRISTMAS SHOPPING BEARS COMPOUND INTEREST IF THE FIRST DEPOSIT IS MADE EARLY FOR OVER Rftjft YEARS haarlem oil has been a world wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. correct Internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three nises. All, druggets. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. ■p-ii mil >«■ i n i ■■■■! " .■■.. [keeping well] BACTERIOLOGY IN THE KITCHEN dr. rnibenuK n. orbew * CMUtor of «IIB*I.TH" ifUrORT people think of germs or microbes,as awful things which produce disease. So they are, some of them. But there are also good germs that i work for man when he knows enough I to let them. Pasteur, In 1802, showed that the nlr and the soil are full of germs of all j kind?, some of which he proved are : the cause of fermentation nprt some of the diseases of animats m men. At once, sclentillc men all over the world began to look for these little creatures. They fotmd many different kinds and they also were able to ex plain by them ninny everyday things which hnd for centuries been misun derstood. When the housewife In the kitchen mixes her dough for brend, she puts I In a small amount of yeast, * Why 1 i Because she knows from her mother's teaching and from her own experience that the, bread won't “rise” unless the yeast Is pnt in. What is yeast? The human race has used It for ages. When the angels came to visit Lot, before they de> stroyed Sodom and Gomorrab, he gave them “imlearen bread,” that Is, bread made without yeast. God commanded the children of Israel, through Moses, that the feast of the Passover was to be of unleaven bread, because they were not to wait even for the bread to rise before leaving Egypt- Every one knew for centuries that yensf jvas needed to make bread rise, hut uo.ontP knew why. If, i In 1879, ftousen and Pasteur showed j that yeast was a little plant which grew very rapidly in warm, moist dough; that ns It grew, it gave off car bonic, acid gas. The gas made little j bubbles In the dough and so made it light. f Pasteur found that there were differ ent kinds of yeast. Some made sweet j bread, some, made sour. lie showed the bakers how to make pure yeast, j which would always make sweet bread. : Fermentation was another mystery, j Why did fruit and vegetable juices fer- ! meat and turn sour? Pasteur found that It was due to little plants floating Intne air; that If the fruit was heated so as to kill any of these plants that may be in it and then put In airtight cans of jars, It would keep without spoiling. Every housekeeper, when she hakes bread or puts up fruit. i« running n practical bacteriological laboratory and Is using the knowledge which Pasteur gave the world. Before Pasteur’s ttaie there wasn’t a can of fruit, vegetable or meat In the world. Today, w.e can every year millions of pounds of food-for future use. «£>, 1121, Western Newspaper Union.) SHORT COURSES BEGIN AT STATE IN JANUARY Raleigh, Dec. f* 7—Practical short courses in various agricultural sub jects will be given by the school of agriculture at State college during the week beginning January 12 and ending January 17 according, to an announcement by Z. P. Metcalf, di rector of teaching in the school of agriculture. One of the most popular of these courses is the practical instruction of poultrymen given by Dr. B. F. Kaupp and his associates in the poul try department. Dr. Kaupp states that there was a one hundred per cent increase in the attendance at Ru)y Fashion Hint] . f T THE FTJR HEM of this ensemble costume serves coat as well as frock, for the coat hangs right to the top edge of the fur when It is cioeed. Crimson atlk rep combined with matching dnvtyne make coat and froek. ThS frock, by the way, has long puffed sleeves. Fur la lynx. the courses last winter over the pre vious year and indications are that the attendance will again double it self this winter. The entire staff of the poultry de partment will take part in teaching this course. In, addition, one or two experts of national reputation from outside the State have been secured. The course deals with packing and grading eggs for market, caponizing poultry, poultry house construction, mmmmmmmmmmmrnimmmmmrmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm* 00 l~ _________ the control of poultry diseases with familiar household remedies and the keeping of poultry records. This course, like all the others, is offered by the collie free of all charges. Meals will be served at no minal cost and rooms may be secur ed near the campus. Those who wish 'to take the poultry course should write Dp. B. F. Kaupp, State college, at an early date. . i „ I I I I ■ I1"— -- ... -1 ...WSMl- J.JL-. Miss Mary White Nash of Franklin county Friday was awarded a verdict of $6,000 by d‘ Wake county jury in , her $25,000 malpractice suit against Dr. Hubert A. Royster, prominent Raleigh surgeon. The suit was based u'pon the alleged negligence of Dr. Royster in leaving the case in the hands of his assistant after an opera tion and the plaintiff claimed that she had been crippled for life. tst* .gwwntgm aa-uin'i a sl imi Now Is The Time To Buy YOUR Overcoat Because Now Is The Time to Wear IT. You need the companionship of one of these great, big, fine, plaid back 0’coats notw—before Christmas—and you ought to come to TOWNSEND’A to-morrow and buy it—before Santa Ulaus ducks ms remaeers into me lenaers or youi bank balance. A wealth of talent in materials gathered from Bugged Scot land, Spirited Ireiend,, Swanky England and Capable Amer ica are here atpriccs you can afford to pay and that you w riJM ;?*«r •• _._ • . cannot afferd to disregard. 'r' -j- — How about $25 to $40? How about to-morrow morning? L. C. Townsend LUMBERTON, N. C. ’ wflnaEli . . r-- vs. JUST RECEIVED Several More Big Lots,. Dresses And . K;; ’ #" i 0©3t§ ATTRACTIVE STYLES POPULAR PRICES ■ . — ■ • * vEy^ ' m*£ Assortment Holiday Novelties APPROPRIATE FOR CHRISTMAS PRESENTS . , ' .' V* i v Come in and Look Them Over. K. M. BIGGS « . I M I .umberton, N. C. t