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THE MEBANE LEADER
“AND RIGHT THE DAY IVltST W IIN, TO DOUBT WOULD BE DISLOYALTY, TO FALTER WOULD BE &IIN.”
lol 3
MEBAXE, W.C.. THUBSDAl?., OCTOBER 31 1912
NO 40
PER^J^il AND [03ftL BBIEFS
I'EOI’LK V.'IIOCOMEANDGO
(tiMii'Of inter?st Gathered by
■)i;r RcDO^'J^^r
\ Y. J. K. I^owlinq: has just returned
tn'iii .*( ti ip t-^> Wasbinifton.
Mr . J. T. Shaw and sen Lacy has
lu'f.i visiting friends in Durham.
Miss Annie Lea of Greensboro spent
with Mrs. V/, L. Buhman.
■\li J. W. Lea spent Sunday in
Dai vil 0 returning Monday evenmgr
Messrs. W. S. Crawford and U. S.
Ray Sunday at Orange Grove.
[)r. T. D. Tyson has been in Mebare
for the few days visiting friendF.
We are sorry to state that Miss Callie
Clark is reporied as having appendi-
cit's.
Some p:“ople manage to get stucK on
Themselves without the aid of any ad
hesive.
Mr. A. M. Stanford of Efland spent
the rii ht 'Sunday at the home of Mr.
j. r. >i;aw’s
?tlr. Arthur Shipwash of High Point
itt- nded the foot ball game at Bing
ham Thursday.
Mr. A. B. Buhman of Greensboro
?Tviit Funday here withhia brother Mr.
\V L. Buhman.
Judge Walter Clark candidate for the
Senate has an article on third page
see it an advertisment.
Thursday eve, October the 31 is the
eve of All Saints or Halloeen. The
time to try your fortune.
Miss Magada Malone and Mrs.
Pauline Malone went to Raleigh Sun-
d ly to visit friends at Rex Hospital,
There will be a special communicat
ion of the Mebane Masonic Lodge Sat
urday ni^ht. There will be work in
the third degree.
Mrs. D. E. Wilkinson of Ridgeville,
and Mrs. Lewis Hawkins of Brown
Sumit were visitors at the home of
Mrs. H. E. Wilkinso.i the past week.
Fresh drugs is an important item to
those -who use them, we keep the
best, the uurest. and freshest always
Don’t fail to call at the Mebane Drug
Co
Watch out for the political faker,
we have already heard of a number of
tricks, he was trying to play to deceive
an honest voter. Don’t let any one
mislead you.
Mr. W. H. Carroll, a,leading attor
ney at the bar of Graham is expected
here Fridfy, or Saturday night to de
liver a ppeach in the interest of Judge
Walter Clark, candidacy.
fobaeeo is coming into our "Ware
houses in large quantities. The far-
m^'rs are appreciating the high prices
paid hero for the weed. We have the
most liberal buyers in the state.
It is said that Durham circus crowd
was the biggest ever seen In the ball
city. Ringlings Circus made a harvest
(lay last Monday. Money refunded
and people were turned from the tent?
If you have failed to register up to
last Saturday night, just remember
that you can take no part in electing a
Democratic President this year. Sit on
the fense and watch the procession
The Gate city Candy Palace of Greens-
h>ro is the place to buy your confections
for the holidays. A nice clean fresh
stock all ways cn hand. They can
supply you in any quantites with some
thing real sweet.
Mr. C. C. Smith, our reliable clothing
dealer changes his advertisment in this
weeks issue. He directs attention to
his nice line of clothing, and new stock
of shoes. He will be sure to please
you in style and quality.
Before the Leader reaches its read-
f‘T - ap:ain the Electi'>n will be over,
:i"i{ we will have a Democratic Presi
dent. Mr. Simmons will be nominated
to succeed himself, and this great sen-
at'Tiai fight will be over. Wont you
a!! bi- glad.
Don’t get fooled with any of Bryans
picturrrr, Remember he has no busincr s
slicking his mouth in North Carolinas
I p>olitics and his only reason for doirg
so is because Simmons told him he lal
mposed his presence as a candid *te on
the Democratic party just three times
two much.
Brown*Belk and Co., are one among
Greesboros biggest dry goods houses.
They have two big department stores!
filled from basement to upper story
with the best. A large and well
selected line of dress goods, notions
etc, coat suits readv to wear garments,
millinery, shoes, gents furnishings in
fact an endless line of things to please.
Don’t fail to visit this store when in
Greensboro, it will pay you.
A Fine Sale of Tobaccj.
J. W. W’^right ani Co., of Rfd. No.
2 Cedar Girove made a fine sale of
tobacco on the floor of the Planters
Warehouse last week on Cct. f3. The
sales were as follows: For 64lb3 of
tobacco they realized 20i cts.
For 38Ibs-16^ cents per pound.
For 110-25 “ “ “
Efiand Item*?.
?pent a few days
aunt Mrs. Thn?.
For
For
For
For
For
For
For
For
144-54
15^^5
128-24
52-27
66-36
118 67
75-37
55-25
THE MEBANE GRADED SCHBQL
Honor Roll lor October
Attendance.
First Grade; Julia Long, Mary Alle*
Morgan, Alice W. Fowler, Lucil«
James, Grace CheeK, John Wm Barn-^
I well, Robert Dick, Jamicj Dick, Vern-! spending a few days with her parents
I on Walked, Franklin Lambert, Homer | Mr and Mrs. D. B. Williams near
Fitch, Harry Farrell, Clay Christo- j Efland.
Miss Bessie Baity
la?t week with her
Squiros.
Mr, Robert Sharp, Jr., v. as a visitor
at Mr. George Crutchfields Sunday.
Mrs. Dudley Hastings of Mebane is
StNiTOR SIMMONS AT
GREENSBOilO
Stands Squarely on His
Record, Which he Says is
Consistent With the Bal
timore Platform'
This was a fine sale, and Mebane is
the place to make fine sales.
Election Returns
Mr. W. L. Buhman, the clever and
enterprising manager of the Mecca!
Drug Company, will arrange to give \
the election returns next Tuesday night ^
November 5th. This will be much ap
preciated by oir people.
Bath Room.
Mr. F. A. Terrell, the barber' has a
thoroughly equipped bath rooni in his
barber shop, and is prepared to give
cold and hot baths. The enteiprise of
Mr. Terrell should be given evidence
of appreciation by a liberal patronage.
To Delinquent Subscriber
The Post office department has made
a ruling that a newspaper must not be
mailed to a subscriber after the sub
scription has remained a yeor unpaid
We think it very proper, and we dont
see that a subscriber should wish an
Editor to extend credit to him that
long. We have on our books a few
who are due for one year or more. We
do not believe there is a one in this
list but who realize that fact. We ask
that you remit us at once. We shall
be glad to place you on the honor roll Felcie
and continue the Leader to you.
Final Notice to Tax Pay
ers*
The Commissioners of the town of
Mebane in regular session Thursday
October 24th 1912 ordered the tax col
lector to proceed to collect the re
maining unpaid taxes due the town for
the year 1911, any amounts unpaid
after Nov. 20th will be collected by
due process of law.
J. T. Shaw, Mayor.
J, E, White, Clerk.
Fine Tobacco.
We picked a leaf from a tobaco pile
i »the Planters Warehouse this week
that was a daisy. It was 29 inchcs
long, and 12 inches across, and a
golden yellow, perfect in color. We
were told by leaf experts that such
tobacco would sell easely at 75ct Sper
pound. It was raised by Mr. J. D.
Burden near Ridgeville.
Peculiar Accident
A most unusual accident befell Mr.
F. L. White last week while he was
out bird hunting. Through some un
usual accident he droped a shell in his
gun too small for its caliber, be then
loaded it with one that fit, when he
fired his gun it burst at the breach,
lacerating his hand and otherwise
shocking him.
Ofi to The Circus
The following parties left Monday
morning for Durham to attend Ring-
ling Bros, Circus:
Mr. Ralph Vincent and son, Mr.
Lonnie Crawford, wife and son, Capt.
George Mebane, Miss Della Edell,
Prof, Walter Crawford and wife, Mrs.
Frank Holt, Mr. Erastua Cook and a
a great many others.
Becker Guilty of Muder
Police Lieutenant Charles Becker
was found guilty last Thursday night
of murder in the first degree by the
jury which has been trying him for
instigating the death of Herman Rosen-
that, the gambler. The case has been
on trial in New York for two weeks.
“Murder in the first degree," and
was pronounced exactly at midnight.
Becker was remanded for sentence to
the Tombs by Justice Goff until Octo
ber 30.
Mrs. Becker, sitting outside the door
of the courtroom, fell in a swoon when
the verdict was announced.
pher, Murray Nicholson, James Loig
and Jimnrie Dollar.
Second Grado: Effie Miles, Geter
Burton, Ruth Crawford, Vernelle
Lambeth, Jack I.one, Satterfield and
Edgar' Farrell.
Third Grade: Alma itearringion,
Ralph Scwart and Alfred Mebune.
Fourth Grade; Wm Anthony, Bern
ice Fitch, Geitner White, Theron Wil
kinson, Lewis Nicholson, Russ li Walk
er, Carrie Jobe, Corinna Jobe, Claud
King, Hubert Sykes, and Grace Long:
SCHOLARSHIP.
Fifth Grade, Lower Section: Clyde
Rimmer, Glenn Clark, Clayton Lam
bert, and Adolphus Bobbitt.
Higher Section: Gladys Amick, and
T^ottie Long.
Sixth Grade: Sibye Walker, Slade
Vincent, and Addie Louise Johnston.
Seventli Grade: Lottie Satterfield,
King, Mary Rimmer, and
Lillian Rice.
Eight Grade: Gay Bobbitt, Hay
wood Jobe, Earnest Thornton, and
Hazel Lambeth.
Messrs. Charlie Brown and Willie
Murray, Misses Annie Jordan, Alene
Perry and Annie Murray all went to
the show in Durham Monday.
Mr. Wm. Andrews and Mr Wm.
Dixson of Hillsboro was visitors in our
town Monday.
Miss May Forrest of Duke, N. C., is
visiting frionds and relatives in Efland,
Mrs. Lillian Cheek and little son
Forrest spent Saturday in Hillsboro
shopping.
Messrs Frank Boggs and J. J.
Brown took in Ringling Bros Show
in Durham Monday.
Mr. T. R. Fitzpatrick of Durham is
at home a few days with his family.
Miss Bessie Baity left Efland Mon
day morning for Greensboro to spend
some time with her cousin Mrs. H. D.
Smith. Guess “somebody” is wearing
a long face now.
What has It to
it*
Do With
An Unexpected Ascension
Carried heavenward by one foot by
the premature ascension of a balloon,
James Smith, of Bladen county, dandled
h jaddown 1,000 feet in the air, climbed
to the parachute bar and floated for a
mile eastward from the Cumberland
tair grounds at Fayettville last week,
landing with the balloon without injury,
when he became entangled in the
rigging of a hot air balloon as it rose
from its pit at the fair grounds.
Smith was an innocent bystinder i
and was watching the preparations for i
the balloon’s flight when it suddenly 1 On account of the fine weather the
ascended without the regular aeronaut | farmers are getting along nicelv sowing
The Kitchinits have been plastering
Bryans mug at different prominent
points. Beneath his picture printed in
bold box car type are the words.
“Simmons ought to be defeated,” and
further down advises to support Kitch-
in. Some or.e with brains capeable of
explaininsr, should tell what this in
finity selfish and impertnent re
marks has got to do with Mr. Kitch-
ins candidacy. In the first place it is
a species of unwarrented intermedling
from Mr. Bryan, In the second place
he has never said that Kitchin was
any more fit tu be senator than is
Mr. Simmons, But what of it? Is
Bryan a demi god? Mr. Simmons told
him in plain english it was time for
him to stop running after he had been
defeated three times for the Presi
dency, and the old “thing” got mad
about it and that ii all there is to It.
Senator Simmons spoke to an im
mense audience at Greensboro last
Thursday in behalf of his candidacy,
strongly asserting that his record was
what he expected to return him to the
Senate, for it was made in what he
conceived to be the best interests of
, the people whom he represented,
i The Grand Opera House was filled,
I one of the largest gatherings being in
I it ever seen in that city. Considerable
I delegations of Democrats from Rock-
J ingham, Randolph and Alamance
I Counties went to help make up his
I audience, which was attentive and
j frequent in its applause,
j Senator Simmons, standing squarely
I on his record ^nd insisting that it was
consistent in every particular with the
Democratic platform adopted at Bal-
timote, asked for the support of Guil
ford County Democrats, and because
of his record. He made no attack on
his opponents; but put his side of the
case before people whom he thought
were friendly, and asked them to en
dorse his candidacy by reason of its
^tis Last Straw.
The lamentations of Manager Mc-
Ninch are voiced unreservedly in his
last political advertisement. This time
the wail goes up over the recent action
of the Democratic State Executive
Committee in permitting scratching of
tickets and barring from the senatorial
box only those who have voted for a
Republican. That was what the Kitch
in people wanted. They raised more
dust about the first ruling of the com
mittee than did both the other factions.
The new ruling will not only work
equally fair to each of the three can
didates, but will prove of positive >n?n-
efit to Kitchin in the fifth district. We
should have thought that with his past
sad experience Manager NcNinch
would have had his eyes open to the
folly of continuing to try to fool the
people ot North Carolina.—North Car
olina.
Mr. Lester Hooks spent Sunday at
Mr. John Baity s.
Misses Maie Richmond, Clytie Hooks,
Annie and Minnie Murray also Lee sound foundation on public service.
Hooks was visitors at the county Home
Sunday.
Mr. Will E. Thompson spent Satur
day night in Hillsboro with friends
Messrs. Coll Foi-res*’ and Mac Efland
attended the show in Durham Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Smith spent Sun
day with their son and wife Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Smith near Hillsboro.
We forgot to mention in our last
weeks items about fhe deer hunt which
Messrs. George Thompson and Bob
Dixson of Efland and Morris Pridgen
and Bill Fields of Greensboro took near Packed. There is
Wilmington, N. C., they succceded in | work and
The Apple Harvest on the
Cone Orchard
(From The Lencir News.)
We had a conversation yesterday
with Mr. C. P. Downs of Little River
Township, this county, who has been
helping to harvest apples on the big
Cone orchards at Blowing Rock. He
says that the harvesting is about half
done and that 10,000 to 12,000 bushels
of apples have been gathered and
a large force of
a good swift hand
baggirg one fine deer and lots of small j gather 30 bushels of apples a day.
game and had oceans of fun. They i Mr. Downs
says to Raleigh parties and are being
shipped as rapidly as possible. Mrs.
report an exciting chase and a fine time.
Misses Sallie, Pearl and Maud Efland
all attended the show in Durham Mon
day.
Paw-Pau-Queese.
Cone is paying 37 1-2 cents a barrel to
have the apples hauled to the depot
here and a number of teams in addit
ion to her own are engaged in carting
them down.
Orange Grove Items
The Primary Resolution | Tightning The Rains
ratching Smith’s foot
of a rope.
with the noose | wheat and gathering corn
Mr. Webbs committee was called
together last Thursday night to undo
the work that spite and spleen had
forced upon the comrr'ttee.
Many Democratic Speak
ers Secured.
The Democratic national committee
has announced that 350 speakers would
be put on the stump in New York state
this week for the conclusion of the
presidential fight. Each of the three
leading parties is to have a demonstra
tion in Madison Square garden during
the week, the Progressives on Wednes
day.
Got His Character Back.
Not since the great white supremacy
campaign has there been such a politi
cal gathering as the one at Concord
Saturday attending the Democratic
rally. From early morn until the great
parade formed fat 11 o’clock people
streamed into the city. Men, women
and children came, every avenue leading
into the city being lined with a great
concourse of people, it being estimated
that 4,000 people were there.
Hon. Locke Craig of Asheville,
Democratic nominee for Governor,
was the guest of the day. He arrived
on train No. 11, and was met at the
station by a parade which extended
from the Lutheran Church comer to
the Cabarrus Mill, three-quarters of a
mile. More than 300 men were on
horseback and these, with a line of
floats and automobiles, formed the
procession.
I After a session continuing until past
1 midnight and in which one series of
Messrs. W. S. Crawford and U,
Ray of Mebane visited tlieir parents!
Sunday near the Grove. j a flood of new ones offered fol-
Miss Pearl Crawford spent last week j lowing an unsuccesslul motion to ad-
in Chapel Hill visiting relatives, andcnj journ, the state democratic executive
Monday took in the circus at Durham. i committee adopted the followiner
Those who attended Ringling Bros. 1®°'““°" W. McLean, as
^ ' preting the meaning of “democratc
™ state conven-
tion rules to be voted in the primaries
make a li&t too long to put in one item.
All had a circusss time. Got that?
A Kind Word from Col.
Gray.
Dear Mr. Foy:-
Please find check enclosed for $1.50
I sincerely hope that the ‘‘Leader
will grow with the growth of Mebane.
We think that you are doing a great
work for the town. Through your
efforts the railroad company has made j purely personal
hoes are an important part of our
I'or.'onal protection. A good shoe and
a •.'rp looking shoe should ever be the
ill’ll I‘Very purchase. These conditions
Ik? satisfactory met by seeing J.
M Hendrix, and Co., of Greensboro
thj reliable shoe house,
'i bore are but few people but what
;ir some kind of jewelry, and there
irt i;o f;la?s of goods that it pays better
to rieek a reliable dealer to buy from
a jeweler. We know nothing j
at)Hi)iutely about jewelry but what we i
told. Get your information and
purchase fr'*m an honest dealer. Schifl-1
Jeweliy Co., of Greensboro stands
the head of the list. Don’t fail to
fead their ad in this weeks issue and
them.
the trackage safe East and West of
Mebane whereas in the past it has
been very unsafe. You have brought
the tobacco business h^re and your in
fluence in [many ways has brought
improvements.
With best wishes I am
Sincerely yours,
Preston Lewis Gray
Principal of Bingham School.
Bryan Does not Favor
Kitchin
It is an other dirty game of Mr.
Kitchin friends, to issue a lot of flam
ing posters in Charlotte, in which
bome of Bryans rot is quoted, and it is
so arranged as to have it appear that
Bryan favors Kitchin, Bryan has
never said a word indicating that he
favored Kitchin, but he has expressed
himself as favorable to Clark.
Bryans objections to Simmons is a
character, because
Murder Most Foul
Murder apparently most foul
committed in Greensboro when George
G. Thompson, devision freight agent
was shot to death without known pro
vocation in the home of William F.
Blair, having been invited to Blairs
home. As we eo to press we have not
space to giye details, but it is sa d
aided by influential relatives and a
rich legacy from his father who re
cently tied, he will put up a strong
fight for his life, and with the lax
c iminal laws of North Carolina
likely win out.
Simmons had manhood enough to tell i
him that he had run the Democratic
party as near to wreck and ruin a? he
should be permited to do. We rem
ember the circumstance and Mr. Sim
mons language used on that occasion,
was very temperate, more temperate
than Bryan desend, and because Bry
an in the infinet littleness of his self
ish soul spite his ransom at Mr. Sim
mons. Kitchin, the smooth adroit
politician tries to have it appear that
Bryan favors him, when he knows
was I there is absolutely nothing to support
such a claim.
We are sorry indeed to learn of the
very serious illness of Mrs. Robert
Cheek. Mrs. Cheek has been a patient
sufferer for sometime with lung trouble
and we hope that she may yet be
spared many days. Mr. Luther Cheek
of Clayton with other relatives are
attending her bedside.
Miss Jones of Durham who is the
principal of the Orarige Grove school
for the coming year airived Saturday
and will begin teaching next Monday.
We wish for Mies Jones and the school
the greatest scccess and if the patrors
and friens of the school will do their
duty we will have a successful year.
Mind we say duty, and a person who
srinks this duty is not a good citizen.
On October 26th Mr. S.'^M. Roberson
succumbed to the infirmities of this
life and quietly and peacefully passed
iuto that blessed rest that is promised
the faithful of the Lord. Mr. Rober
son was a gentleman of the highest
type and a concerated Christian. He
was a member of Cane Creek Baptist
Church but was buried at Moore’s
Chapel near Saxapahaw. He leaves
two daughters, Mrs. J. W. Cheek, Jr.,
and Miss Lula
for United States senator:
“Resolved: That in the opinion of
the committee the words ’democratic
ticket’ ns used in the 4th and 10th
rules governing the senatorial primary
adopted by the state convention shall
be construed to permit any elector who
^ shall have voted for nominees of the
I democratic party only and who shall
I not have voted for any candidate on
I any ticket on opposition to the demo-
1 cratic ticket to vote in the senatorial
primary.”
This takes the place of the noted
Hackett resolution formerly adopted
bv the committee and repealed at this
meeting. The Hacket resolution raised
a storm of protest >»s being too iron
clad in that it required that vote in
the senatorial primary an elector must
vote the entire democratic ticket, na
tional, state, legislative, county
township, -
How J. B. McNamara and Ortie E.
McManigal carried away nitroglycerin
by the wagon load was described by
Charles C. Kizer at the trial of the
accused “dynamite plotters” at Indian-
apolif, Ind., last week
Kizer, who now lives at Tulsa, Okla.,
was the manager of a plant for the
manufacture of explosives at Albany,
Ind., when in 1918, he said, the dyna-
j miters began euying nitroglycerin from
inter- ' hauling it away in wagons to
Muncie, Ind. The government, in
charging the 45 men on trial for
complicity, asserts that the McNamaras bath of
resorted to nitroglycerin in blowing up
jobs after they found dynamite was
not strong enough, and that they
rented a houge in Muncie to hide the
explosive.
“One day in response to a telephone
i call from Indianpolis, ” said Kizer, “I
j met J. B. McNamara at Muncie. He
j represented himself as being George
j J. Clark, a contractor of Peoria, 111.,
I and said he wanted nitroglycerin to
blow up some ditches near Indian-
p polis. He said he had tried dynamite
and it was not strong enough. I agreed
to sell him twenty quartd and I deliv
ered it to a farm three mile« from
Albany on Ithe road to Muncie. A
month later he bought thirty quarts.
I did not hear anything from him until
a year later when he and McManigal
bought 120 quarts. When I took it to
the farm they had two rigs waiting
and had prepared 12 boxep in Swhich to
pack the cans. Afterwaids 1 wrote to
Clark at the address given at Peoria,
but the letter was returned.
Within Striking Distance.
Since 1876 the people of the United
States have been seeking relief from
taxes imposed upon them by war and
privilege. They voted against them
that year as Democrats They voted
against them as' Democrats in 1884
and 1892.
Free silver, Cuba and Mark Hanna
diverted their attention, but in 1908
they voted against them again as
Republicans under the promises and
leadership of Mr. laft. They have
accomplished nothing. Many taritf
taxes are higher to-day than they
were when Grant met Lee at Ap
pomattox.
The civil war cost hundreds of thou
sands of lives and $4,000,000,000 in
money. It added $2,700,000,000 to the
national. These are impressive figures,
but there are others.
Trusts organized since Mar»f Hanna’s
time to kill competition and oppress
consumers have capitalized the extor
tionate tariff to the amount of $31,-
000,000,000. One-half of this colossal
sum, or nearly four times the cost of
the greatest of wars, is water.
These thirty-one thousand millions
represent Wall street’s idea of the
value of privilege and monopoly. They
are as much a charge upon the people
as the interest-bearing debt of the
United States. They pinch every
table and every wardrobe. The cost of
living is figured in war prices to-day
because we are still paying the taxes
imposed by war, with the trust plunder
added.
Most people were inclined this year
to end an abuse long recognized when
a new party appeared entreating them
to forget the tariff and to enlist in an
emotional campaign for “social justice.’
Sincere as many who figure in the
movement undoubtedly are, it is
distracting and confusing If successful
it must give the greatest of our wrongs
a new lease of life. This fact accounts
for some of its most powerful sup
porters.—New York World.
Brother Claude Adieu.
and
Golgotha.
(From the Christian Herald.)
The one spot which more than any
other has controlled the history of
Roberson with many | Europe lies, strangely enough, not in
other relatives to mourn their loss.
Mr. Roberson had been making his
home at Mr. Cheeks for sometime and
his last days were spent there. The
entire family have the sympathy of
the community in their sad bereave
ment.
On Sunday morning Nov. 13th at 11
o’clock Rev. J. D Andrews will preach
Europe itself, but in Asia. For the
possession of the site where Chri«t
“suffered, was buried and rose again”
more blood has been shed than for any
other. An immense number of lives
Tlie Last Straw
(From Webster’a Weekly.)
The authorized statement, paade
through his sectretary, tnac Woodrow
Wilson is nos taking any part in the
senatorial contest in North Carolina, is
“the straw that breaks the camel’s
back.” It disposes of Governor Kitch-
in’s statement that Mr. Bryan’s se-
And now that Brother Claude has
trailed the state with his terror-stir
ring presence, bathed it in a shower-
livi 1 eloquence, saturated it
with the magnetism of his august pres
ence, terroized it with his dread
threats, and warned it lest it turn trait
or to the magic name, “Kitchin,” we
becalm ourselves to feebly observe
that the sun still shines, autumn leaves
fall, cows continue to calve, the goat’s
tail persists in point-ing skyward, and
the general order of things stays put.
When ia the camps of the governor,
word was whispered abroad that
i Brother Claude was coming—Brother*
Claude the terrible—it was predicted
that the Simmons boom would collapse
and break into a thousand stems.
For who would brook the ire of
Claudius rampant? Who could stand
for long before the terror of his ad
dress? What purblind spirit would
dare defy this awe-inspiring champion
of brotherly merit.
But somehow the unexpected has
happened; Simmons still lives and
moves and has his being. He breathes
and dreams and carries on converse
with his fellowmen. Instead of wither
ing before the ribald charges of party
perfidy, he has grown fatter, more con
fident, more peaceful at spirit, more
sure of the correctness of his course,’
The state has not thrown conniption
fits in the presence of the holy terror
of Scotland Neck.—Charlotte News.
and for six hundred years before the
Crusades, and even to the present time
a constant stream of pilgrims has
a special sermon at Orange Grove tO 'PO'^*^®d into Jernsalem to worship at
the Junior O. U. A. M., of this place. | the spot made sacred by the crucifixion
No one who can possibly be present j of Christ.
should miss this sermon. Everybody ! From the fourth century after Christ
were laid down during the Crusades; j cond shot at Simmons was due to a
conference between our presidential}
nominee and the Nebraskan, at which I
the North Carolina situation was dis-1
cussed. Governor Wilson’s attitude is
the final and complete answer to the
“nineteen charges” and other like
matter urged against our senior Sena-
Mebane M. E. Churc!^
South.
Rev. B. T. Hurley, Pastor.
N. H. Walker. Supt. S. S.
Preaching every 3rd Sunday at 11:00
A. M. and at 7:30 P. M.
Prayer meeting every Wednesday
evening at 7:30 and a union prayer
meeting ever Sunday after noon at
3:00 o’clock conducted by the young
invited and a cordial invitation given • until fifty oears ago this site was gen-j tor. It he regarded Simmons as “a i men of the town.
to all Juniors.
^111
The Kitchin partisans kicked on the
rigid primary rules first adopted. Now
they are kicking on the modified rules.
The only thing that would please them
j would be a construction to the effect
' that nobody is a Democrat who does
not first take an oath to vote for
Candidate Kitchin. As ridiculous as
that sounds it the plain truth—Char
lotte Observer
Of the Hen
The eagle is the bird to soar.
The hawk is king of the woods;
The mocking bird can sing the
score
But the hen delivers the goods.
Cincinnati Enquirer.
! erally conceded to be within the Church j menace” to his administration it would j Sunday school every Sunday begin*
of the Holy Sepulchre. Now two sites j be his duty as the head of the party, j ning at 9:45 a. m.
dispute the claim of oeing the actual j to say so. The fact that he is hands! Everybody welcome to all these ser-
Golgotha. This latter claimant is “off” means that he is willing to trust I yices.
known as “Gordon’s Calvary,” though either of our three candidates on Nat-j ^
to an American, Dr. Harlan P. Beach ional issued and is not disposed to in-1 F*Or Sale*
terfere in a local contest. When the
head of the party is neutral. North
of Yale University, is due the actual
discovery of it. General Gordon, the
Fifteen nice registerd Berkshire
hero of Khartum, haying first
for it general recognition.
secured' Carolina Democrats may be relied on pigs three months old, apply to.
to attend to their own business in their j
own way.
Felix Graves, Mebane, N. C,