I RECO An Unequaled ADVERTISING Medium An Unequaled ADVERTISING Medium o VOL. XIX WARRENTON, N. C, FRIDAY MARCH 20 1914, NO. 5l $1.00 A YEAR A Weekly Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of Warrenton and Warren County. 5 Educational press service. woman rural school super ior to supplement the work of th county supermienueni oi e instruction is the latest p in lui i cuutauuii in v - tho state. Such a supervisor is ! join-: a most successful work in I ) well county, developing a demonstration schools to r,v what kind of work can be V-,no in elimentary schools hav efficient supervision, five Vther councies now have women r-iral school supervisors assist ing the county superintendent in"a similar way. The plan was nrst projected and worked out bv L. C. Brogden, state super yisr of rural elementary schools, in conjunction with the Southern Education Board and in the State Departument of Education. Its adoption in Mc Dowell was secured and it is working s wall there that it is vjopcd that little difficulty will be experienced in having other L-;;.;:i:ies adopt it. L.sceid of scattering her et- Secretary McAdoo and Miss over the entire county, xhe j Eleanor Randolph Wilson, MD:well supervisor this year is youngest daughter of the Presi ded bg her lime to ten schoals, dent and Mrs. Wilson, were en suing to mike them demon -1 gaged, the marriage to take sriurion schools, to show ho wj place in June. There was no the country schools can be made ' announcement from the White t3t:a n for practical rural liv- ( House, and when the attention r.x when they have proper; of officials was drawn to the re tehing and prupei 'supervision. ; port they refrained from making U .d r her direction and wTith the any comment or denial. u;uii kjl .aic icauicia in; th?ie schools and the county ; ; ; ii'ir.tendciit, approximatel v ;;v) nundred boys have been ;n::ying practical agriculture, v...'. j one hundred giils have L . . : doing dehnite and D-ac" : : -.vzsrk m sewing, l ms i .: work has been done; .:.. i. the high schools, but ! i; i - ii a w ihiut; for the elemen-! ::.: y sjruols. giving the children an rx-.epiionally efficient element-: riaiaing, this plan is hav-j Washington society has observ an effect on the com- ed the couple at many a dance munity. Tne people of Ash- :ord? one of the commuities inj Thich this plan has worked; well, have petitioned to raise the bcal tax from 20 to 30 cer.t?, in order to add a room to their two teacher school, ! making it an erhcient school of the three teacher type. Thev also intend to build a Permanent home for their male principal, so as to secure his services for the community for the entire year, instead of for only six or seven months. More than this, the plan is having a striking effect on the rural teachers. Made to realize their deficiencies by the skilled supervision which they have had, many of them, now that the rural school term is over, are taking practical teacher training courses of six weeks at the Nebo State High School. Here they study methods and Practice of teaching under the skilled teachers of the high school and under the supervisor, not only receiving instruction in the most advanced primary Methods, but observing the tt'erk in the high school class rooms. Tne supervisor uses one of tne rooms in the hign school building as a model to show the student teachers how to make thejlittle one room country school attractive, comfortable, and more homelike. The lectures and class room observations are followed by carefully planned conferences in which the stu dent teachers are .questioned on the most vital things observed n the recitation. It is a part of the plan of the State Department of Education to establish in connection with the best state rural hisrh school or farm life school in each county similar short teacher training courses, to teach these teachers how to make the aver age rural elementary school more practical and efficient BEST FAMILY LAXATIVE. Beware of constipation. Use Dr. Kind's New Life Pills and keep well. Mrs- Charles E. Smith, of West Franklin, Me., calls them Our family laxa tive.'' Nothing better for adults or aged. Get them today 25c. All Druggists for by mail. H. E Bucklen & Co., PhiJadelphi nd St. Louis Prospects of Another White House Wedding. Prospects of another White House wedding became more definite todav with the persis tent renewal of the report that Seci etarv M cAdoo hims2 It said it would be indelicate for him to comment on the subject. Nevertheless official Washing ton is taking it as a definite fact that another wedding: at the White House will be solemn ized in June, after the adjourn ment f Congress. Many ner soi: .vho know Secretary Mc Adoo were not surprised at the report because he has been a frequent social visitor at the White House during the year. ;as well Mr. McAdoo is fifty years old, while Miss Wilson is twenty four. He is a widower and hs six children, one son and one daughter being married. Re cently a grandson was born to his eldest daughter in Arizona. Mr. McAdoo knew the Wilson family before his entry into the Cabinet and has been an inti mate friend of the President early in the pre-convention cam paign. ' Miss Wilson was educat ed in the private schools at Princton, N. J., and during the Jat few years has been making frequent trips to Philadelphia to an art school, whee she has studied painting Exchange. SPRING BLOOD AND SYSTEM CLEANSER. During the winter months im purities accumulate, your blood becomes impure and thick, vour kidneys, liver and bowels fai to work , causing so-called 4 Spring , Fever." You feel tired, weak and lazy. Electric Bitters the spring tonic and system cleanser is what you need; they stimulate the kid neys, liver and bowels to healthy action, expel blood impurities and restore your health, etrength and ambition. Electric Bitters makes you feel like .new. Start a four weeks treatment it will put you in fine shape for your spring work. Guaranteed. All Druggists. 50c and $1.00. H. E. Bucklen & Co. Philadelphia or St. Louis. THE M ORDECA I SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. The Celebrated Mordecai School For Girls in Warrenton From Eighteen ten to Kighteen-twenty (By Rev. B. S. Bronson ) The world is the home of the left the School to take up their Jew and vet in his texture the home qualities of endearment between man and wife, parent and child, fit safely and snugly. Mr. Jacob Mordecai, born in Philadelphia in 1762 and having married his cousin, Judith Myers, of New York a lovely and most loveable woman, in 1785, after, several moves Fettl ed in Warenton in 1795 to en gage in Mercantile business. Apparently lacking the rare commercial instinct of his Race, about 1808 he was overtaken by such serious financial reverses as to throw him from an easy com petence to an absolute poverty; making the maintenance of a laige family a very alarming concern. At first he became a Steward of the Academy, tak ing a house without rent for the boarding of pupils. But finding the reward inadequate, then came the decision of the jues - r-p t.- o tot - Qjrj j It seemed a very hazardous experiment. Though he and' mentally refined, yet they -vere ! the only family of the Jewish i Faith in a large art a of countr ! . . . . - i exposed to ail the prejudices 'otten cneris.iea against mem- bers of that Faith, him, he had It ; pilv for a grown daughter, Rachel, richly .1 ji : j. ' ; l en" f ' ( 1 VT I '. VI' 1 ! 1 4- I r- ! 1 I I i I 1 l 1 1:1 (J 7 ; I M mental jand moral qualities clearness ; oi vision and steadiness or pur- i pose, and at his side an English ! I gentleman, Mr. Miller, of I complishments, and at his early command Messrs. Archille Runket and La Taste, French men ;refugees from San Domin go, as teachers of French and Music, and his son Solomon, who had been educated by the noted teacher, Mr. Marcus George. He and his daughter, Rachel decided to open a school, renting ther old home and tak ing their Store house as a School session, begun in 1810 deter mined the future of the School. Soon their School reached the maximum of eighty pupils, be yond which, though often so licited. hey would not let their number go. In the meantime they had taken an unfinished building, near the site of the Methodist Church, and fitted it up for the accomodation of their School. In its third year the teachers having moved, as usu al, from the rooms the Candle sticks to secure an early retire ment of the inmates, a girl ad justed a candle to the Wainscoat ing of her room to do some sewing, and falling asleep, the building was set jsl fire and de stroyed; but fortunately the eighty inmates, were rescued At once action was taken for their removal to another build ing, which afterwards, through some changes, became the pres ent Mordecai Building of the Warrenton Academy. The School was continued with un broken success to the year 1820. drawing patronage from Vir ginia as well as North Caro lina and educating hundreds of girls, when the Mordecai es residence in Richmond, Va. Mr. Runket, who had mai ded their daughter Caroline, continued the School for a time. The writer knows no more touching indication of the de votion of the pupils, especially to its Lady Princ;pal, Mrs. Mordecai, than is illustrated in the action of the wife of Hon. John Y. Mason, of Virginia. He had been Secretary of the Navy of the U. S., .Attorney Gmeral of the U. S. and was about to,; leave the United States to fill the roiticn of Embassador (?) to France. His wife called upon Mrs. Mordecai, now a silver haired ell h.dy. to ask her Blessing. Kneeling down by her side, with tears flowing down her cheeks, the old lady, with !IW"us upon ner nsau, it- 1 cited the Pricstiy Beaediciion : The Lord bless Thee and keep Thee;. the -Lord make His Face to shine upon Thee and bo flpim7SS 1lntn TJ. tVm T r-1 j rj;hee ! .-. -1 T . -r , T1 1- "D i (Was this to b: a preparation for her i-ii on bv trie death 1859, jofIr Ma;orl in Pa, rx I befof-he close of his Embassy flnon-o vVjiVi Tis Tsnhl ! Mordecai could weild over oth- , j Mi;s Maria Jgwcrth, thy popular Eng'ish Novelist of her dav. Miss Edge worth had peciallv obnoxious to Miss Rach el. She protested in a letter to Miss Edge worth of the wrong done her Race by the portrayal. Miss Edge worth, in her re sponse, apologized for her a tion. A correspondence thus begun was continued bv repres entatives of both families for more than ninety years, and is still maintained. Miss Rachel S married, in 1819, Mr. Lazarus, j ui J liiiiiiti lull, uctainc c vxAi.xo- tian woman and died in 1838 the same vear her father died. I append some extracts from the advertisements of theSchooi. as well as a Certificate of Merit, kindlv furnished me by Mrs. W. A. Montgomery, of Raleigh, formal and statev in language. Did the Girls in their educa tional training reflect the type? "The course of instruction to be pursuedwill be adapted to the varied dispositions and genius of my pupils; not loosing sight of systematic arrangement and progression; my object not merely to impart words and exhibit things, but chiefly to lorm the mind to the labor of thinking upon and under stand ing vhat is taught' ' "Terms: For Board. Washing, Tuition and Lodging, one hundred and five dollars per annum." "Miss P. closes her studies with credit, and is assured by her Preceptors that the obliging disposition which she ever evinced has not passed unnotic ed, but obtains for her a well merited place in their regard." The Mordecai family Srepre seted vry marked mental en- dowments. The oldest son, Moses, became a distinguished lawyer and settled in Raleigh. As sharer in his abilities hi?e as this was a central point grandson is now the distinguish ed Professor of Law at Trinitv College, Durham. Another son, George W. Mordecai. long an eminent Banker in Raleigh and extensively knovn through the State for his high virtues. Another son, a graduate of West Point in 1823 at the head of his Class, was appointed by the Government, m Company with others, to inspect Foreign armies. The son of another son married the daughter of Rev. Mr. Norwood, Rector of Episcopal Church in Warrenton, and afterward as Rector of St. Paul's Church, Richmond, Va. Another son of erreat promi se was killed in a duel in defence of a woman's fair name, by Page McCarthy, of Richmond. The Mordecai iamily lived for twenty five years in Warrenton, and few families, if any have lett a brighter Record in her History. Nash Elects. At a recent meeting of the Nash County Board of Health Dr. B. E. (Washburn of Kuther fordton was unanimously elect ed Whole Time County Health Officer. Dr. Washburn was selected from a list of twelve or fifteen applicants for the position and is considered unusually qualifjed lor such work. Dr. Washburn hjld? the de grees of A. B., A. M. and M. D. being a graduate of the Uni versities of North Caioiina and Virginia. 'or several years he was librarian at' both univergi- jtier. Alter graduation m meai- ine at The University of Virginia he spent one year in hospital practice end later, a year in private practice at his horn e town. This he gave up to accept a position with The Rockefeller Sanitary Commission as field director, in which capacity he has been empljyed for the past year. Nash Co-inty is fortunate in securing the services of. this particularly qualified young phy sician who will devote his eutire time to preventing sickness and reducing the death rate in that county. Nash County is co be congratulated for taking this vvise and progressive step. It is unfortunate that more of our counties do not do likewise. STUBBORN ANNOYING COUGH CURED. "My husband had a cough for fifteen years and son for eight years. Dr. King's New Dis covery completely cured them, for which I am most thankful writes Mrs. David Moor, Sagi naw, Ala. What Dr. King's New Discovery did for these men, it will do for vou. Dr King's New Discovery should be in every home. Stops hack ing coughs, relieves la grippe and all throat and lungailments. Money back if it fails. All druggists. Price 50c and $1.00. H. E. Bucklen & Co. Phila del phia or St. Louis. Mass Meeting of Citizens A mass meeting of the citi zens of the County was held in the Court House on Monday to take steps to organize a Co-operative business, under the aus pices of the Farmers Union. Quite an enthusiastic meeting was held, and quite a number of shares of stock were subscribed .on citizens. It was to have Headquarters art nd the County Seat. A char ter was applied for. The business will be conducted upon a purely mutual plan. Goods will be sold for cash, and profits returned purchaser at end of the fiscal year. We wel come this Co-operative enter prise to our midst, as it will mean much to this community. As we understand the purpose of the stockholders, it is to sell at market price; but in so selling' he purchaser gets his goods at cost, plus the cost of doing busi ness. It will hold out to the cash buyer an inducement to trade where he will stand the chance of getting back in divi dends his profits. NOTICE. State of North Carxlina, In T!ie Superior Court. Wsrren Coun y Ben Fishel, Plaintiff, vs. W. K. Wright, Defendant. Whereas, on the 3rd. day ot February 1914 Ben Fishel, the Plaintiff in the above entitled action, applied to the Superior Court of said Warren County for an attachment against the property of W. H. Wright the above named Defendant, on the grounds that s iH Defendant was indebted to saidPlaintiff in the sum of One Tnousand and Seventy-three and 44-100 Dollars ($1073.44), and trial said De fendant is a non-resident ot' the State of North Carolina; and whereas the Simmons issued in -aid Action was by th Sheriff' of said Warren County, on said 3rd. day of February, 1914, re turned With the following en dorsement: "W. H. Wright, the Defendant within rnn d, can not after due dilligence be found in Warren County:" and where as affidavit was mad ; by said Plaintiff to obtain service by :!i-;i .'cation : and v,rhere-i an at tachment, on said 3rd. day of February 1914 was duly sued out and levied upon all the right titla and interest and Defendant W. H. Wright in certain Real Estate situated in the County of Warren, State of North Carolina; and whereas on said 3rd. day of February 1914 sn order was made by said Superior Court that notice of this Action be published for four successive weeks in The Record, a news paper published in sa'd Warren Countv, setting forth the title of this Action, the issueine of the attachment, and requiring the said Defendant, W. H. Wright, to appear at th. June Term 1914 of the Warren Super ior Court to answer or demur to the Complaint of thePlaintiff in said Action, Now, Therefore, notice is hereoy giv.m to W. H. Wright, the Defendant in the above ac tion, that an action has been commenced by Ben Fishel a giinst said W. H. Wright for the recovery of the sum of $1073.44; that a warrantof at tachment, returnable to June Term 1914, of Wan en Superior Court, has been issued and levied against his interest in certain Real Estate in the County of Warren, and the said W. H. Wright. is hereby further notified that he is required to ap pear before the Superior Court of said Warren County at the Court House in Warrenton, N. C. on the 15th. Monday after the 1st. Monday in March, 1914, . and answer or demur to the Complant in said action, or the relief demanded in ?a:d Com plaint will be granted. This the 25th. dav of February, 1914. J. R. RODWELL, Clerk Superior Court, feb 27 4t Ctiattle Mortgage Blanks For Sale at Record Office. by W