The Money God. If J. p. Morgan likes that sort of ching, the worshipful praise of his as sociates and dependents must fill him with joy Henry P. Davison told the Pwjo com mittee reverentially that “J. P. Mor gan and Co. could not do wrong if it was possible for them to do as they wanted to.” George W. Perkins burn ed this incense: “If J. P. Morjjan should make a bond issue from the Desert of Sahara it would be subscrib ed to, probably. ’ ’ Referring to the con centration of credit in the home of J. P. Morgan and Co , George F. Baker graciously remarked that “if it got into bad hands it would be very bad; in good hands I do not say that it would do any harm.” Those who would analyze the Mor gan rower will fathom the minds of men who so freely testify to their adoration. Wiih a good Bull-Moose choirmaster. Wall street could be made to sing “Onward, Christian Soldiers!” almost any day new.—N. Y. World. To Drive The Insuifrabie Turk Out. The Balkan allies opened fire on j Adrianople Simday night at seven { o’clock. Immediately after the order! there was a flash and after which j a constant roar of the heavy siege guns. It is now said it will be the purpose of the allies to drive the Turks out of Europe. This job with all its attendant sacrificea should not have been left to the little Balkan States. Osman Nigama Pasha savs when you drive the Turks to despair he will fight like a wild animal. That statement will frighten no one now. The Turk is a cold blooded fanatic, and he is a mad murderer all the time, but he is having a Jittie more regard for his worthless self than he did when the doctrine of Mahometanism waa first preached in Europe and Asia. Left To Fight It Out. Joseph J. Ettor, having finished his work of getting the waiters’ strike under way in New York, has gone to Chicago to starte a waiters strike there. When Boston or Philadelphia or San Francisco needs his services, no doubt he will take the first train to the scene and lend his aid to the cause with equal zeal and energy. This must be an agreeable and congenial occupation for Ettor and the rest of the I. W. W\ leaders. To set a strike in motion, to spur discontented waiters or workmen on to action, to have all the fun of the tumult and shouting, the rhetoric and red fire and waving banners, and then to hark away to pastures new—this must be the very cream of strike leadership. But what of the rank and file who left behind to bear the brunt of the fight? What of the waiters who see their small savings dwindle, their jobs lost, or why, even if successful, gain their point at the cost of great indivi dual suffering? They are not indulging in Pullman cars and trips across the country. Theirs is the seamy side of a “direct-action” industrial war and not so pleasing to contemplate. In ordinary warfare gen3rals stay by their forces and see the campaign out. The I. W. W. leaders have improved on these methods. Their idea seems to be that their obligations end with the successful inauguration of the fight. It is left to the men in the ranks to carry on the campaign with what for tune they may,—New York World. N. C. Encourages The Carrying of Concealed Weapons. A bill has been intropuced in the Ohio 1 egislature making the carrying of a concealed weapon a felony punishable by imprisonment of not less than one or more than five years. This is pretty drastic legislation, but none too severe. The habitual pistol to:er is a constant menace to the public peace and safety and has no proper place at large.—Va, Pilot. Nortrh Carolina in order to make the law profitable to the lawyers she would license her pawn brokers to sell all the pistols posible to the irresponsable class. Represenative Page wants the of fice of County Treasurer abolished. His idea is that the work should be done by a local bank or trust company. He got a favorable report on such a bill for Moore County. This is an idea that is likely to spread, for the trend of the times is for expert auditing in public financial affairs. —Charlotte Observe. Useful Accompllshmentt. Every woman wants a cozy comer nil her own—^be that corner bumbl« or handsome. Every woman who does not have tlid home longing is abnormal. Hom« Ifl made up of little things. One of the largest of th«06 littl* things is the ability to cook whol«> pome food. Sewing and music are next A wom- ^n might be as homely as can b«, but If she can cook a good dinne/, maJc« » Iress, and let her moods slip out of her finger tips on a piano, tbat worn* will have a chance for a truly bap> py home a thousand per cenl better than her beautiful neighbor who can* not make even an apron, and wbo Dooks badly for her family. So I say to mothers, whether 70a (lave money or not, teach your daog^ ^rs all the useful and neeesMr/ things in life, so that they will make |ood, homelike wives on4 motbertb Rousseau'a Etiquette of Love. Before Rousseau, love was a highly refined form of social intercourse, a species of gallantry conducted with •elf-restralnt, and all the formalities of special etiquette; any extravaganoy, whether in feeling, in speech, or In nction, was banished. But when Saint- Freux, oppressed by his high-strung passions, came to the rock at Meilliere to pour forth in solitude the flood of tils sentimental tears, all the witty re* Bnements of eighteenth century gal lantry, for good or for evil, were final ly swept away; extravagancy was free to lay down the law in love. It waa Rousseau who enabled Mirabeau, In His first letter to Julio Danvers (whom tie had never seen), to declare, “I, also, &m a lover, have emptied the cup of lensibility to the dregs, and could jive a thousand lives for what I love.” (t was Rousseau who laid down a new etiquette of lovo which every petty poet and novelist still adheres to.— Atlantic Monthly. The Opportunity. "Here’t a new s«ct started that latet it core ills by t«e laying li ot hands.** wish it would give dfemonstra- tea OB the amall boy." An Anti-Trust Law ‘Wlth Teeth.” There is now pending in the Wis consin Assembly a bill designed to protect the retailer and the consumer against discriminatory tacties on the part ot trusts and other monopolistic concerns. It defines unfair discrimi nation as any attempt by a corpora tion, partnership, firm or individual to sell the same products lower in one community than in another for the purpose of driving a competitor out of business. Allowonce, however, is made for the ‘‘difference, if any, in the grade or quality, and in the cost of transportation from the point of production.” The penalty for violation is fixed at a fine of from $100 to $5,000, or imprisonment in the county jail not to exceed one year, or both fine and imprisonment. Provision is also made for revoking permission to do business in the State of any concern convicted of violating the law. This proposed statute comes under the category of anti-trust laws “with teeth,” and is of a kind which oucht to be in force and effect in every State of the Union. The practice of invad ing the territory of a competitor, sell ing goods for less than he can make or buy them until the competitor has been driven out of busineps, and then putting prices back to the old level and above, has long since become so common with trusts and monopolies as to be notorious. The States havF the power to put effective end to such methods and so protect their respec tive citizenships against exactions and extortion at the hands of monopolies and combinations ir restraint of trade. This has been conclusively shown by Texas, Missouri, Mississippi, Il'Inois and other Commonwealths, All that is necessary is to exercise that power,— Va, Pilot. Kindness Did It. Unshackled and under the control of a single unarmed gaard tho, twenty five convicts labored a busy month to build a model brick highway just com pleted near the southern boandry of Columbus Ohio. Overjoyed to breathe the open air and pioud of the trusi resposed in | them, the men worked without hint of ■ mutiny or attempt to escape, although j often widely separated. I Each day an auto bus, driven by con | victs, backed up to the prison entrance] for its load of laughing, energetic “highwaymen” Each night it carried them back, tired but uncomplaining, to the shadow of the gray walls. From beginning to end, non one was reported lor discipline, although sev eral of them were life-term men and two were convicted murderers. iSIERY AT RAWLS One of the largest storks of hosiery in the state carried by RAWLS of Durham, N. C. HOSIFRY AT 10c; Ladies hose in black and tans. Mens sox, black and with white feet. Infants sox. HOSIERY AT 15c Infants hose in black, white and colors, 15c or 2 pairs 25c, Ladies hosiery in black, white, tan, blue and pink. Boys and girls school stockings 15c. Sizes in misses hose up to eights are 2 for 25c. Infants sox in black, white, tan and plai'i tops, 15c, or 2 pairs 25c. Mens sox in blacks and colors, also with white white. HOSIERY AT 25c; Ladies silk and silk lisle in blacks and colors. Infants silk sox and hos3 in blacks, whites. Ladies and childrens Cadet hose wiih linen toe and heel. Mens silk sox and silk, lisle, also the Cadet^brands. HOSIERY AT 50c Ladies silk hose in blacks, white tans etc, Ladies finest imported lisles. Mens silk sox in blacks and colors, “HOLEPROOF” HOSIERY; Ladies Holeproofs in blacks, six pairs in box guaranteed six months at $2 and $3 box. Mens holeproof Sox, six pairs in box, guaranteed six months at $1 50 and §3 box. “PHOENIX” SILK HOSE; Ladies Phoenix silk stockings, four pairs in box guaranteed ^hree months at $3 and $4. Mens Phoenix silk sox, four pairs in box, guaranteed three months for $2 box. DURHAM, N. G SHE COULD NOT REMEMBER Absent-Minded Woman’s Peculiar Rea son for Wanting to Bo Rung Up on the ’Phone. RETOLVED That we ark 's ti l i-' HAMf^ERliVC AWAV AT reducing ouPi ^rocK> WE AI^'E Sr/LL /1AKIMC THE S'PARKS FLV OUrOFOUR. PRICES^ „ A BUSTER BRpJ^M 7^ V The time has arrived when we wish to clean house quickly of all remaining winter merchandise. The very- low prices on all of our regular lines of goods, possessing style and quality, will now speak for themselves. Come, see our good goods and low prices; you will buy and buy lots. Holmes-W arren Co. Mebane, N, C. I Sawmill Demoralized By Bees. (From the Sanford Express.) Mr. Harry Ward, who went to a sawmill near Moncure Saturday on business tells The Express of an un usual occurance that took place there one day last week. A log from a very large pine was hauled to the mill to be turned into lumber. When it was sawed open a large hollow place was found in the log and in this hollow was a swarm of bees spending the winter. Absent-minded persons sorely try the patience of girls In tho New Rochelle telephone office. Not long ago a woman confessed herself sub ject to ejitrome forgetfulness and re quested the day operator on her ex change to ring her up every morning at 9 o’clock. A week later she said; “Centra], what was it I wanted you to call me for at 9 o’clock?" “I don’t know,” said the girl. “You didn’t tell me. You just asked me to call at 9 o’clock." “Tc-./ bad,” said tho woman. “1 know there was something I wanted to do every morning at 9 o’clock, but I can’t for the life of me think what It was.” The 9 o’clock calls continued, how ever, and several days later the wom an took central into her confidence again. “I have found out why I wanted to be called,” she said. “A friend had given, me a canary and I wanted to make sure of remembering to feed it. The poor little thing Is nearly starved. Hereafter when you ring won’t you Just say. Feed the bird,’ and I’ll go straight and do it?” Central promised, and the neglected canary Is now a plump and contented bird.—New York Times. Qaynor And The Press Mayor Gaynor says the nt*wspapers of that city are nasty things, this be ing a view which he has frequently ad vanced with variations. Some such idea as this has occured to us from time to time, but not for the reasons assigned bv Mr. Gaynor. The May«.r was singularlp slow in doing anything about the Becker case, and the news papers, which subjected the city of ficials to what at times seemed violent criticism, found plenty of justification in subsequent events. The Mayor, mainly as the direct result of his own a swarm 01 oees spending the winter. 1 . - .. , i. • u i a 0^0 « obstinency, it seems, has got in bad on As the weather was warm the bees be- , a • » j n . . - la number of occasions. And generally SUREST TEST OF OLD AQE Don’t Look at Your Face for the Signa I of Time’s March'—Watch the Heart. ^ The dear little old lady was Juat as cross as she could be! All because the old-faahioned con ductor had said: “Be careful. Watch out, grandma. Don’t get off the car till It stops.” It was probably the first time that from the lips of a stranger came the verdict that the world had begun to look upon her as an old lady. She must have known that her shoulders were a bit stooped—but old? No, not just In the prime'of life, and the very Idea of that man calling outJ ‘Watch out, grandma!" But after all, what matters what the conductor said? There is a rumor of inner consciousness that should tell one If one is growing old. “Don’t look at your face to see If age Is creeping on. Watch the heart. Beware of allowing care to make crows’ feet there. Oliver Wendell Holmes summed up the philosophy of life when he said: ‘T am seventy years young today.” Every birthday should see one’s heart Founger. The only way te keep from growing old is to keep growing young. The only time to begin growing younff Is before one begins to grow old. There are mental attitudes and limp* ing worse than those of a faltering foot. There are ashes and palm caused by selfishness and narrowness much worse than those of rheumatism. Begin this moment to grow young. A Winter Sunset (By Helen M. Richardson) Low hanging clouds of gray, sun'ess j and cold, j With not a hir-.t of azure or of gold— ! Gaunt, leaflet's trees, tneir branches 1 wide outspread, j With ermine robes bedecked and pano-; idled. i Far in the west the sky dips to the light Crimson and gold allure the eager sight. Then clouds ru^h in and curtam it from view, ' And all the heavens take on a somber ! hue. A line of black athwart the darkening i sk.y I Marks where wild geese in tired squad- j rons fly; While moaning winds send forth a | requiem low j For flowers buried deep beneath the snow. 1 ARING OUT SALC came active and made it so hot for the men working at the mill that they had to hunt more comfortable quarters. After the bees had scattered the mill people were rewarded for their loss of time by finding the hollow full of honey THE CHARLOTTE DMLY OBSRE YER. he has tried to take it out on the press j of the metropolis, a device which has not worked. It strikes us as a remarkable circum stance that the Mayoa of a great Americin city should have no friend among the newspaper people. Does such a sit’iation exist anywhe»’e else? SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily $6.00 Per Year Daily and Sunday 8.00 Per Year Sunday, only 2.00 Per Year THE SEMI-WEEKLY OBSERVER Tuesday and Friday $1.00 Per Year Bird’s Nest In Mail Box. Probably a bird’s nest lu a rural mall box is a rare thing. If It has ever happened before, but out in Oswe- gatchle a small bird has taken posses sion of a mall box and has already I built her nest and laid three eggs and ! It looks as though she would complete Iher work of hatching and rearing her The Charlotte Daily Observer, is-1 young, sued Daily and Sunday is the leading | The particular box picked out by newspaper between Washington, D C. and the Atlanta, Ga, It gives all the news of Morth Carolina besides the complete Associated Press Service, The Semi-Weekly Observer issued mall and v/111 sit on her nest as uncon- on Tuesday and Friday for $1.00 perjcemed as can be. The mall box has year gives the readers a full rep3rt of \ been fixed so that It will not close en- the week’s news. The leading Semi- \ tirely so that the bird may complete Weekly of the State, ders to A Delicate Point. “They are a happy Sewlckley couple, rhey haven’t been married very long, tn fact, the honeymoon hae barely n^aned. An elderly friend met the bridegroom down town yesterday and ilapped him on the back. “Well, happy as a lark, I supposeT” “Oh, yes.” “How’s the cooking?” “I have one trouble there. It’s Just ;hls, my wife has been preparing angel tood every day for dinner.” “You must be getting tired of it.” “I am. Yet I feel a heiltanay about laying anything. How soon after the honeymoon would It be proper to ask tor beefsteak and onions?” Behin 1 the stable doors safe housed and warm. The cattle fear no sting of winter stcrm; Chewing their cuds they dream of meadows green When Spring again shall miracle the scene. Then suddenly the stars leap to their place And one by one the heavens with radienca grace— iJafe guarded by their care, at God’s behest, All nature slumbers now in quiet rest. m FOR 30 DAYS to make room for new goods. A lot of skree- mer oxford shoes re- gular pri^e $4 now go- ingfor $2.50. A lot of ladies high cut shoes and oxfords, former price $2.50 now goino- at $1. A great re duction in the price of all clothing to make room for spring goods Receiving clothes and spring shoes daily, prices right, come and look before vou biiv. Your friend, G. G. SMITH Had One Resemblance. Ono night, in a Texas town, John McCullough’s company was playing “Ingomar,” and young Sothern was to be the leader of the barbarian army. During the day he and his compan- lons-ln-arms ransacked the town for fur coverings in which to appear on the stage. They secured some skins irhlch had been Imperfectly cured. In ihe scene w'here the barbarians rushed on McCullough the tragedian ftood aghast and almost forgot his lines. When the curtain fell he turned to the fur-covered battalion and said: *Boys, you don’t look like a barbarian irmy, but I’m d d if you don’t unell like one.” I the bird Is one that is in use dally and ;the mall carried never misses a stop I at this box. Mrs. Bird seems to enjoy jthe Idea to have the mail carrier lift jthe cover of the box and deposit the Address all or | task of rearing her young. It is The Obssrver Company Charlotte, N. L. not known what kind of a bird this is, I but it Is thought that It is a phebe, j being brown of color and about the ; size of a sparrow and laying sky-blue jeggs.—^Watertown Correspondent NevJ I London Day. WE HAVE IT A nice line of trunks, suit cases, and hand bags. Hats, Shoes and a general line of gents^ furnishing. NICE NEW STOCK PRICES RIGHT EBANe,N£. WEWANT to see the samples dis played at OUR STORF Wednesday and Thurs day February 5th, and Gti: 1913. Be sure to call. Yours to please, H. E. Wilkinson Co THE STORE OF OUAT.IT^V JMebane, JN, C. indi.a Not a Nation. There is no Indian nation, and tht nations of India differ, not only in In terests, history and tradition, but they differ In regard to race feeling, apd 1 there Is strong hatred and jealousy be tween parts of India still. There la nothing that keeps the peace in India but British rule. I Vtluabl* Lace Handkerchiefs- )' Solkmalds In Switzerland landkerchiefs of lace that readily . lor |6 apiece—some. Indeed, for iiauoh SB $50 each. No Doubt Afk)Ut It, |/ And every good husband, no doul5ti y sure that he is married to one of tho Wenty world’s greatest women.