price good |s, you |things We |r little nd Id in Har- iree years fine qaali- have in- japer than 11 Counties farms in 0. ilina in to IE THE li ■xy J “And Right The pi^ Must Win, To Doubt Would be Disloyalty, To Falter Would be Sin.’^ ■ Sb ^ i Vol4. i i MEBANE,N.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9 1913 No 91 No Denying /fhe Fact Mebane Leader I have read with interest the articles in the “Leader” from Citizens of Cas- weli and Orange Counties, in regard to I fie road from Orange County line to road leading from Cross Roads ('hurch to Mebane. There is no denying the fa?t that this short stretch of road a aistaneeof only 1 to IJ miles is a very bad piece of road also that it means a ^veat deal to Mebane, especially to our Tobacco market and to the merchants of Mebane. When the Citizens of Caswell aiid Orange Counties propose to come over and help Alamance to build this load, is it^not about time for Alobane and Alamance County to get busy and do something. I am told that this road even now is in a very bad . >indition, and if something is not done qaickly it will be almost impossible to get over it with a load this winter. It is unnecessary to say more. If the people of Mebane «ill go before the County Commissioners and explain U them the importance for quick actioo. I beheve the County Commissioners will jiive speedy relief W. E. White. Some Sales at the Planters Warehouse \V. M. Ward, Carr, N. C. 1464 lbs, Richmond and Thompson, Carr, N. C. 4>5ibs. $133.35. Martin and Harvey, Ba} aes, N. C. 327 lbs, $38.93. Morton and Bice, Cedar Grove, 509 lbs, $100 32. P. Filch, Corbett, 425 Ids. $87.59 Rogers and Burnett, Carr, 844 lbs ? 1^37.53. J. P. Fiten Corbett, £05 lbs $147.f8. Garrison and McAdams, Mebane, Rfd 6U2 lbs, $147.99. Bettie Mitchell, Watson, 672 lbs, S15S.19. Chas. Vincent, Mebane, Rfd, ?, 892 Ss. $166.99. Sail From Chicago To San Francisco. The three World’s facsimiles of the caravels in which Columbus crossed the Atlantic to America are to be sailed from Chicago to the San Francisco Panama Exposition by some Harvard ctudent. It is stated that they will take the vessel—the Santa Maria, the Nina and the Pinta—down the Chicago diainage canal to the Illinois river, thence via the Mississippi, the Golf, through the Panama Canal and up the Pacific coast to San Francisco, These three replicas of the historic vessels were built for the Chicago W irld's Columbian exposition in 1893 and have ever since remained in the Jackaon Park lagoon. The Santa Maria is the largest of the three, and her length is only 75 feet. ^Patton’s Monthly. Death of Mr. J. C. Qualls. On Friday morning Oct. 3, about eight o’clock Mr John C. Qualls, aged sixty-nine, died at the Home of his son Mr. Dave Qualls in North Mebane. Mr. Qualls spent the greater part of his life in Orange County,*’ and for a long time lived near E/fland^^ managing the farm belonging to Mrs. 'Josephine Freeland of Hillsboro. Within a very recent date, Leing troubled with a heart-disease similar to dropsy, he was obliged to give up his farm wovk, whereupon with his wife he came to Mebane to his. son’s home. His last illness, lasting nearly two weeks, was attended with much suffering, and death was a Heaven-con few^ rest. Mr. Qualls iii survived by a wife, and two sons, Mr. Dave Qualls of Mebane, and Mr. Jim Qualls of Burlington. The burial was at Ef^nd Saturday a large number of friends and relatives from Mebane attended it. Odd Fellow Meeting Next I'uesday night Qct. 14th J. C. Walker Assistant Grapd Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Noi-th Carolina will address the Odd Fe}lowB of Mebane in the Odd Fellow Hall at 7:30 o’clock. All Odd Fellows, and those who have been Odd Felfown are invited. The me3ting will be informal.! By order of the Grand Sec. The Diyining Rod (Rambler, in The Chatham Record.) The twig business is as old as the hills. The writer has been hearing of it ever since he was a boy. Here in Chatham, near Pit^sboro, some years ago, a farmer wanted a well dug and wanted It in a certain place. Another farmer who, it is said, could loca*^e water, was called In. He came with his twig and began to move about the yard, finally locating water The own er of the farm dlT not want the well dug where the water had been located but in a certain place near the bam. He would not listen to the “twig to- ter” and had che well dug where he wanted it. Ninety teet was sunk but not a drop ol water found and the well had to be filled up One was dug where water had been located, and it is said that it was the best and cold est water for miles around. The Home kitchen Paint your kitchen walls and wood work white above the wainscoting. It keeps soiled hands away. Its cheerful brightness is always inviting. One quart of Turpentine added to one-half gallon of L. and M. Semi-Mixed Real Paint makes 3 quarts of the highest grade of pure paint, and it is enough to paint a kitchen and two more rooms. For outside painting the very highest grade is long life paint, is nr ade by adding three quarts of pure Linseed Oil to each one gallon of D. and M. Semi-Mixed Real Paint. Sold by Meb ane Supply Company. Attend The Burlington Fair. If you do not see the sights at the Burlington Fair thi^week it wont be the Leaders fault. They Mve promised an interesting fair, atd* tHose who have made the promise are good people and will likely keep their promise. It does not matter whnt fair you attend you will learn sonr.ething, but it is alt ways best to attend your home fair if passible. Working the Wrong Way We heard one of our citizens in town Monday complaining that his cotton was in the fields unpicked while the negro children on his place to whom he furnished rations during the sum mer were attending the school under the compulsory school law. He was in town looking to see if he could not find some way to stop the schools so he could get his cotton picked. He r^aid cotton was selling at fourteen Cents but so far as he was concerned it might as well be fifty as he was in the patch and the negroes who eaten his rations were in the schoo house. We pass this along in order tnat those who made the law may see that it takes foresight ♦o see all the workings of a law which on its face l>oks good. We take it the Board of Education or the school committees in the various districts will provide some way whereby cotton can be picked and let the children go to school also the required time.—Moore County News. Boy With Axe Kills Sevtn, Then Sleeps Peacefully. Marcel Redureauof Nantes, Prance., fifteen years oH, murdered last week with an ax seven persons in the village of Basbriage-en Landreau, Department of Loire-Inferieure. The boy was employed as a vine cut ter. While he and his employer, Georges Mabit, were pressing they quarreled. Redureau seized a huge ax and with a single blow cut Mabit’s head nearly ( If, killing him*instantly. Then Redureau went to the house, the ax dripping with Llood, rushed up to Madame Mabit and hacked her throat till she was dead. Next he killed servant in the same way. » , Still with his dripping ax in his hand the boy went to another room where he slew his employer’s--mother, after which he killed three at 'Mabit’s chil dren who were lying asleep in the same chamber. For some unknown reason he spared a fourth child, aged four lying by their side. Thereupon Redureau went to bed and slept calmv till morning, by which time the bodies had been discovered by the villagers. After his arrest he made a full confession. ■ Great Work Among Negroes. (From The^ Raleigh Times.) Shaw University, which has the honor of being the largest Baptist In stitution for the negro race in this country, began ita Fall term today, and it will have the usual 500 students, representing several States and also other countries and Islands. Work is in progress on the theological building where there will be rooms for 75 students of that department. About a dozen years ago an African prince, who as the eldest sun, would have suc> ceeded his father as King, came to Shaw from Oxford University, Eng land, in order to study and prepare himself to be a real worker ap:iong his pec^e, but he died here. The students from this institution are scat tered all over the world. Qet Busy, More houses is a condition and not a theory that confronts Mebane, that ^eatens Mebanes progress. The Hooery Mills which have been in operation for some time say they can not continue their busine«>s successfully unless they can increase their force, they can not Increase their force unless they can have houses In which to place their tennants. Houses are not here, what must be done? The question is, you must build houses or Mebane will cease to grow, and her industries cease to expand. We learn that the land may be secured trom the Mebane Land and Improvement Company which has of fered to sell land for building at a reasonable price, and the Hosiery Mills will enter into a contract to rent these houses when compleeted at a fair renta for a term of years. It strikes us that it is time for some one to get busy. MR. BOWLAND LOST. Jury Returned a Verdict Against the Plaintiff The Durham Herald of last Thurs day says: After being out about half an hour yesterday sfternoan, the jury in the case of J. E. Bowland against the Southern railroad and the Western Union Telegraph company, returned a verdict against the plaintiff. This was the case in which Mr. Bowland sued these two companies jointly for ^$10,000 On account of a broken arm Sustained when he fell from the plat form of the Southern station in Meb ane. The case was one ol the hardest fought legal battles that has ever been waged in the court house. The whole of yesterday was taken up in the j^peeches of the alcomeys in the case. The arguments were started Wednes day afternoon. Yesterday the lawyers spoke nearly all day and late in the in the afternoon the judge charged the jury and sent them off to make up their decision. One War Enough. (Detroit Free Press.) Robert Bridges, the new British poet laureate, is a fastidious critic, and hence sees lltlle to admire In the com monplace verse of Alfred Noyes. Noyes once brought to Mr. Bridges two very long odes that he proposed to submit to the English Review. “I’ll read them both aloud,*' the young man said, “and afterwards you will tell me which is, in your opinion, the more likely to be accepted by the English Review.*' Poor Mn Bridges sighed and settled himself in his chair, and Noyes, in his loud, harsh voice, read the first ode. It was very long, And at its conclusion Mr. Bridges leaped to his feet and said briskly: “Now, my young friend, 1 can ad vise you. Send the other ode to the Review.” Menace To The Nation (Philadelphia Ledger.) Though Sulzer may be stained and striped, good government, independence and honesty must make their stand for him or be counted cn the side of bad government, of humiliating subjugation of the people to autocratic and irrespon sible rule, of dishonesty. Let Tammny succeed in this audacious conspiracy, let Murphy work his will even on the govenor of the state, and nothing but a political ' revolution will be able to stay him. He is out to plunder the state not only of its money, but of its j independence, its self-respect, its sovereiirniy. Money Money has been called the root of all,evil by some reckless person. But if such is the case (and the facts to b3 obtained are strong for the accu sation) we would all greatly enjoy the sensation of owning a Washington for est whose inmates are supported by the victim of evIL Verily, they would enable us to ward off an attack of the bill collector and sass the bankers with impunity. Money is a potent factor in almost every walk of life. A coin adnomed with the portrait of a buzzard can re move all obstacles that beset the aver age individual, even to the eradication of his mother-in-law. Money is a pow erful magnet. It can attract a gout- infested man seven leagues away and force him to throw away his crutch and sprint across 't new ground field with the rapidity of a trained book seller, Money affects the descendants of Adam in sundry forms and fashion?, A college youth will contribute to the winds in one night his entire month’s allowance ar.d then complain that he is a mendicant and a victim of the old man’s parsimonious habits, whereas “Texas Ike” or some other gentleman of road prestige will count the ties from Vermont to Oakland and strong ly protest against the tactics of the money trust. Money is a perfect stranger to news paper men. If a dollar should summon the audacity to enter the haunts of a journalist, he would be seized as a suspicious character, and held for iden tification by the police. For this rea son sleeve men pick reporters and psr- agraphers as the object of their at tempts. knowing'that the news garaer- ers could never detect a spurious piece of money. This undeniable fact ia to be greately regretted. That the mem bers of the fourth estate should suffer from want and privation for the sake of a few mensly plunka is a burning shame ana a reflection on the manhood of humanity. It was ever thus, how ever and will thusly cont^inue, until Gabriel sounds his call for the close of terrestrial activities GREAT STATE FAIH The smallest things become great when God requires them of us; they are small only in themselves; they are always great when they are done for God and when they Eervd to unite us to him eternally. — Francois Fenelon. Idlers can not even find time to be idle, or the industrious to be at leisure. We must always be doing or suffering. —Zimmerman. A North Carolina jud^e' is quoted as saying that the telephone is answer able for fifty per cent of neighbor hood quarrels and one hundred per cent, of all the popular silliness. But. may we be pertnltted to ask, were ! neighborhood qf^rrels and silliness things unknown before the invention o(^“talking by wire?” Card of Thanks. In the affliction that has recently befallen my family in the death of my ‘2ther, my neighbors and friends have f-xhibited the kindness and most patient 'd .tention, and shown us every consider ation that a thoughtful sympathetic people could show. We feel the most profound gratitude and beg to express t) all our most heartfelt thanks. Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Qualls. Good words will do more than hard speeches; as the sunbeams, without any noise, made the traveller cast off his ck>ak, which all the blustering of the wind could not do, but made him Dind it tighter.—Anonymous. But fate ordains that dearest friends muat part.—Young. Libt of Letters Advertised For the week ending Oct, 4 1913. These letters will be sent to the 1 Letter for Mrs. Mary J. Wiltow I “ “ P. S. PiJ)er 1 “ “ Miss Sosan McAdoo 1 “ ** Emina Hart 1 “ “ L. F, Herring 1 “ “ W. S. Clailr. Dead Letter Office OcL 17 1913. If not called for. In calling please give date of list Respt. J, T, Dick, P. M. Mebane, N. C. Boys And The Farm. (Chicago Reoord-Herakl.) The question of keeping “the child ren” on the farms is largely a question of educational reform and to some ex tent a question of recreation and amusement Not only are good schools, primary and secondary, essential, but these schools should serve as social centers and should have reading rooms, rooms for games and exercise, rooms fcr social meetings and dances. Youth is youth; sound moral advice alone will not keep bcqfs and prb in the country. Make it more attractive and interesting for them. ' Be not diverted from your duty by any idle reflections the silly*world may make upon you, for their censures are not in your power, and, consequently, should not 1^ any part of your con cern.-Epicetus. There is no harm in being stupid, so long as a man does not think himself clever; no good in being clever if a man thinks himself so, for that is a short way to the woist stupidity,— MacDonald. Plants in Sleep To make some nook of God’s crea tion a little fruitfuller, better, more worthy of God; to make some human hearts a little wiser, manfuller, hap pier. more blessed, less accursed! It Is the work of a God. A (jerman inventor claims to have perfected a medianical contrivance which will tell bow drunk a man is, but our reprehensible acquaintance says that wh^ a man has reached a c.ertain sti^e of drunkenness he doesn’t want to know and doesn't care how drunk he is. I see the day coming when man, with his infinite aptitudes and capa bilities, joyously creating for himself good thhigs out of the infinite re sources of the universe, will live in a world in which youthfulness, wealth; abundance, peace, progress and happi ness i7ill supreme.—Neweombe. Took it Good Naturedly Four-year-old Tom was expressing his sorrow and angei'* at the act of a neighbor who had drowned four “beau tiful little kittens. % “she might have given them to me,” said the boy. “Never mind, Tom,” said grandfather, “we have lovely kittens of our own. We have a nice little boy kitten—” “That’s me,” said Tom proudly. “And a lovely little girl kitten—” “That’s sister Ella,” said Tom, point ing his spoon at his sister. “And the dearest old cat in Cali fornia—*' “That’s grandma,” said the youth exultantly. Grandma glowered for a second of time and then she burst out laughing. —»Los Angeles Times. (> rom the |Scotsman.) Clover shuts its leaves before rain and at night, brintj^ing two of its three leaves face to face and folding the third over the top. The young blos soms are also carefully sheltered by inclosing leaves which move forward in the evening and "vrap them around. There are two plants in the garden whose flowers sleep by day—the night blooming stock and Lychnis vesper- tina. The former is withered and shriv eled in daylight, but expands and ex hales a vanilla like odor at night The Lychnis is white, and in bright sun shine every flower closes and hangs limply down. j As the sun sets this Endymion plant awakes expectant of the moon. The drooping calyxes raise tiiemselyes and slowly expand their flowe.s; it visibly ceases to droop and fade, and the plant, wliich almost died by day, is adorned anew. Ita eister, the red Lychnis, shines by day, and ia called diuma, but this white one has k)ng left the beaten ancestral path and has become vespei^na. As it opens, small flies appear and visit it; the calyx is of that reddish hue which they approve. The sundew which attracts flies shows the same dull red fn its leaves. It is not a rarity, but few have seen its blosoms opened. Raleigh, October 20-25 The indications are that this will be the greatest Fair and Exposition ever held in North Carolina. Three new stock buildings, modem in every respect, and 65 x 150 feet each, have been built thif" year, ensuring- adequate accommodations for horsef.. cattle, sheep and swine. About 600 head of live-stock will be exhibited. Theie is great opportunity for stock raising in this State, and it is earnestly hoped that our farmers and breedera will look over these exhibits carefully. Tremendous displays of hoitlculturc and farm products, com, cotton, wheat, rye, tobacco and such articles vj^ll be shown, and displays of farm machinery and labor-saving devices. Many counties will make exhibite, and some of our towns will make collective displays. Eigl'teen acres of new ground have been added with a new entrance and roadway, with ample parking places, eliminating the dangerous crowding and congestion of vehicles.' One of the most interesting and instructive features will be the Better Babies Contest under the auspices of th-* State Board of Health, with sixty- five prizes. Practical instruction as to the care of babies will be given free. The racing will be unusually good. Many fast horses have already been entered. The Third Regiment Band will furnibh music. Prof. Walter W. Raub and Mme. Lawrence (Mis. Raub) will ascend each day in two balloons side by side and will drop in double parachst.e leaps from an immense height. The Great Damman Troupe of German Acrobats will perform marvelous stunts on the trapeze in front of the Grand Stand each day. Among tne paid attractions are the merry-go-round, Ferris-wheel, motord rome ami Midway Shows, and Oklahoma Bill’s Wild West Show. Pain’s Fireworks Company of New York will put on for four nights, Octobor 21-14, their tremendous spect acle, the “Last Days of Pompeii.” This is grand beyond description. Thv ancient city with its towers and temples is seen before the spectator with the people engaged in a grand procession and ceremony before the doors of the pagan temple, introducing the entran- cingly beautiful Fire Ballet, the Golden Pony Ballet (from the London Crystal Palace^ superb and sensational aerial and acrobatic specialties. Flower Girls, Dancing Girls, Roman Senators, Priests, Guards, Gladiators, Incense and Flame Bears—in all two hundred and fifty performers, gorgeously costumed. Suddenly in the midst of the revelry the mighty Vesuvius, with a deafening roar, hurls forth flams, burning lava and ashes, and the once proud city is bulled forever. The gloom and aw e of the scene of destruction will be lightened by a magnificent display of fireworks, set- pieces of exquisite design, fire-flowers, dragons, snakes, rockets and bombs. Music by Pain’s Pompeiian Military Band. Remember the dates, Octobef 20-25. Reduced rates on all railroads. Ask the agent. It is a celebrated thought of Soc rates that If the misfortunes of man kind were cast into a public stock, in order to be equally distributed among the whole species, those who now thi"l^ themselves the most unhappy would prefer the share they are already possessed of before that which would fall to them by such a d ivision. — Addison. If you glance at history’s pages. In all lands and eras known. You will find the buried ages Far more wicked than our own. As you scan each word and letter. You will realize it more. That the world today is better Than it ever was before. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Worry pulls down the organism, and will finally tear it to pieces; nothing is to be gained by it, but everything is to be lost. Look out for the bright, the brightest side of things, and keep thy face constantly turned to it—An onymous. What is defeat? Nothii^ but educa tion. Nothing but the first step to something better.—Wendell Phillips. E^gs promise to be very cheap in Philadelphia for a time and then to rise to record-breaking heights, because of the law which forbids cold storage longer than eight mcHiths. Bum actors would do well to give the dty of Brotherly Loye a wide berth until the rise comes. He serves all whb dare® to be true.^ Emerson. ^ Bee Marvelous We}|ht Carrier. A bee wiU carry tw|ti> |ta velibt IxL honey ps Whenever luxury ceases to be inno cent, it also ceases to be beneficial. — Hume. Wilt thou draw near the nature of the gods? Draw near them then in being merci ful; Sweet mercy is nobility’s true badge. Shakespeare. Ah, be kind! Lite hath no secret For our happiness like this; Kindly hearts are seldom sad ones, Blessmg ever bringeth bliss. —Selected,