mp S 5 s 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 m IS» railroad rot one ck. Un ci trave- done on king and worth indus* and are when Bckoned, lers and genius ing r fifteen ars. Dr. ly cured inkful, ’ aginaw, iscovery for you. lid be in coughs, oat and it fails ?1.00. •Iphia or M clean- d laf ies olumJ ia all and I [.icm- THE MEBANE LEADER. **And Right The Day Must Win, To Doubt Would be Disloyalty, To Falter Would be Sin.* Vol5 MEBANE, N.C., THURSDAY. APRIL 2 1914 No 7 Clean- Up Day In Mebane. A Alesssage to All. Meet ing of The Ladies Called. I, W. s. Crawford, Mayor, realizing unsanitary and unsightly condition of the town, and urged by many of the ladies and citizens, do hereby appoint and set aside Friday April 3rd as clean up day in Mebane. Everyone is urged to lend hand and heart to the movement. The ladies are called to meet at the Graded School at 2:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon April 2nd to organize a Civic League and to perfect plans for the next day. Come whether you are on The com mittees or no*". Signed. W. S. Crawford, Mayor. PLANS FOR GENERAL CLEAN UP. 1 Each home, factory, and business house, is urged to organize its own force and beginning early in the morning, put its own premieses in order by doing the following things: 2 Collecting and burning all rubbish that can be burnt. 2 Collecth.g into piles or boxes on the border of the streets all tin cans, scrap iron, stone, bottles, earthernware and other indestrijctable rubbish, putting cans into separate piles; 3 Pilling and draining mud holes; 4 Cleaning and liming all stables, poultry houses, pig pens, outhouses, and stagnant place.s and cellars. 5 Destroying or covering all rain barrells or vessels that catch rain water. 6 Extending this cleaning to adjoining streets, alleys and gullers. 2 Every person in the town after doing this in divided cleaning in the morning is urged to bring tools ana meet at the Leader square at i o’clock for the purpose of cleaning up the vacant lots of the town. Any citizen agreeing to set trees on the street border will be furnished maples free of cost if application is made to the Mayor Thursday. Prizes will be given for special work on clean up flay, details of which will be given Thursday afternoon. Key, F. M. Hawley and others will speak on Civic Improvement. GENERAL COMITTEE OF SUPER VISION. Mrs. E. A. Crawford, Miss Jennie White, Mrs. V*\ A. Murray, Mrs. C. J. Kee, Mrs. Paisley Nelson, Mrs. F. L White, Miss Mattie Johnson and Mrs. J. S. White. DIVISION OF TOWN. 1 ’^ourth St. East and North of Rail road. Captains Mrs. F. M. Hawley, Mrs. Claude Newman and Mrs. Woods Patton. 2 Fourth st West and North of Rail road to Graham st. Captains Mrs. W. B. Cheek, Mrs. Ed. Wilkerson, Mrs. W. E. Swain and Mrs. Hettie Scott. 3 Fourth St. W’^cst and North of Graham st. Captains, Mrs. John Shaw, Mrs. John Nicholson, Mrs. Jack Smith and Mrs W. E. Sharpe. 4 Fifth St. South of Railroad and East. Captains, Miss Mary White, Miss Della Fowler, Mrs. Ralph Vincent, Mrs. Geo. E. Holt and Mrs. M. B Scott. 5 Fifth St. South of Railroad and West to Third st. Captains, Mrs. J. H. Lasley, Mrs. J. M. Thompson, Mrs. W. C. Clark, Mrs. M. M. McFarland, Mrs. Clay King and Mrs. A. M. Cook. 6 Third st. West and South of Rail road. Captains, Mrs. Jim Cheek, Mrs. A B. Fitch, Mrs, Wiley James, Mrs. J. D. Hunt and Mrs. Newman Sykes. 7 Business Section. Captains, L T. Johnston, John Iseley, H. E. Wilkinson Mike Miles, R. M. Dillard, Ed. King and E. Y. Ferrall. Factories. Captains, Will Riggs, L. Puryear, D A. White, B. F. Warren, J- S. Vincent, J. T. Carr and John Nicholson. Mebane, Rfd. Mo. 1. Jisses Hattie and Ava Rodgers of Borlington No. 5 spent one day last week with Miss Daisy Ray. Mias Maggie Cheek is visiting relatives on Burlington No. 5. Mr. J. P. Pace is using crutches by having a log to fall on him last week. Spring has arrived as Mr. P. B. Tate has arrived from Jacksonville, Fla., he all ways spends the winter there. L. L. Patton has left home another fine girl Mrs. M. F. Murray is quite ill. Mr. J. D. Andrews little girl has pneumonia bat is doing nicely. Mr. E. R. Cheek of Mebane No. 5 is on No. 1 this week having a big time eating Messrs. E P. Cook and J. L. Fowler spent last week in Graham as jurymen Saturday A. M. at 5 o'clock Mr. S. E. Tate had the misfortune to have his fine house and very near all the contents destroyed by fire. Damage about $3000 with $1000 insurance. Mr. Tate and family have the sympathy of the entire community in their loss If Huerta would get at the head of an army of his soldiers, and Villa would get at the head of an army of his soliers, pnd then get together in a way to shoot one an. other all to pieces, the Mexican questioD. might be amicably settled, at least, it would be approaching a settlement. The Dead Kings of Finance (From the World’s Work.) Individual opportunity in commerce and finance reached its climax, one may say, in the School of the Magnates— during the three or four brief years when every industry of great impor tance was headed by a Man. Just as certainly as Morgan, son of a banker, became the King of All the Banks, so certainly did Harriman, son of a pov erty-stricken clergyman, become King of All the Railroads; Havemeyer, ab solute Boss of Sugar; Ryan and Brady, Twin Tyrants of the Traction; Duke, the Lord of Tobacco; IcockefeUer, the Omnipotent in Oil; Carnegie, che Caliph of Steel, &c., &c. In nearly every great Une of individual endeavor some man or family or group of friends came up and seized autocratic power, and a wealth commensurate with that power flowed in upon them. Havemeyer died- No man came to take his place. Harximan died. No man succeeded him. Rogers died, and with him passed his power. One by one the School of the Magnates slipped away, some into rest, some into en forced idleness, some into various havens of safety from public wrath, some into death. As the ring broke at iast, Mr. Morgan too died quite sud denly. The fortunes of the giants of yesterday remain, for the most part, intact, but the power of the men of yesterday is nowhere pased down from father to son. No new men come to wield the sceptres of autocratic power in any of the giant trades of commerce, tinance or transportation. Items From HiHsDoro. Hillsboro, N. U March 30,1914. Mr. Samuel Gattis, one of the oldest citizens of Orange County, died at his home near Orange Church Wednesday morning. Mr. Gattis was the father of Hon. 3»M. Gattis of Hillsboro, So lictor of the 9th Judicial District. Mr. Gattis was 94 years of age and was probably the closest connecting link between the present time and the American Revolution. His father was a soldier in the war for American Inde pendence. Mrs. Jordan, wife of W. H. Jordan, died at her home in Hillsboro Thursday. Besides a bereaved husband she leayes a family of little children too young to realize their loss. A freight train came very near being wrecked here last week two “hoboes” punctured the air brake. I*; was thought that they intended stopping over at Hillsboro but the engineer seemed to have had other plans. They cut into the rubber couplings and brought the train to a dead stop in a few yards. The cars were badly shaken and jostled but all remained on the track. The hoboes jumped off and made for a get-a-way. One was last seen crossing the top ot Occoneechee Mountain. The other struck for the low country. The train crew was giving such hot pursuit that he waa forced to take to the water. The pursuers, howaver succeeded in capt uring this one and delivered him into the handi of the officers. Superior Court, which was to have convened hpre today, is not in session. Owing to the death of his wife. Judge Lyon is not able to be on hand. The news was received here Saturday after noon and the Sheiiff succeeded in notifying most of the jurors to that effect. There is quite a large crowd here today, liowever, who came to attend court. It is stated that Judge Lyon will open court here Thursday. The loss of these three days will probably make it impossible to try any of the civil cases this term. Helping the fown More strength tc the Civic League, The things the ladies are planning and striving for will make Statesville a cleaner town, a prettier town and a more desirable place to live. The mat ter of oiling the streets, for instance, to keep down the dust, which is not only annoying and damaging to prop erty but very dangerous to health, has been suggested heretofore, but sug gesting is about as far as the men get with many things who will have to push these matters through and make the men do what they should do with out urging. More power to the Civic League. It deserves the aid and en couragement of every citizen.—States ville Landmark. Difference in Name Only. Republicau papers now say we have with u3 the “ship subsidy democrat." He is for granting the shipping trust a special privilege by which it can keep the money it otherwise would have to pay into the United States treasury in tolls. Some of those democrats who still insist on “free tolls” for a special interest, use specious arguments to prove that free tolls is not a subsidy. Whether it is a subsidy or a bounty or not, it is worth millions to the shipping trust, so what difference does it make by what name governj Went aid is called?—Wilmington Star. Tobacco’s Nip by Frost. Except for some slight damage of the kind never wholly avoidable, all the crops appear to be enjoying good condition or good prospects. If there is ary exception it appears in the form uf complaints from eastern South Car olina that many tobacco plants were destroyed by the last freeze. “The Mullins Enterprise," says that journal “has made extensive inquires concern ing the tobacco plant situation and has reached the conclusion that the pros pect is indeed gloomy. Where some farmers thought they had plenty of good, healthy plants, they now find they hare practically none. While some other farmers still contend that their plants are all right, a close in vestigation reveals the fact that they are dead or dying, and those in position to know declare it will be a hard pull to put out half a crop, taking the acre age as a whole. A great many farmers planted their beds over Just after the freoze, but whether the late-sown aeed will come on in time to make plants for the coming crop is hard to say. A Live 7 own (Cleveland Star) The live and prosperous town of Le noir, beautiful for it situation and sur rounded by the mountains, is noted for its beauty and rejoices in over 4,000 inhabitants. It is a great furni ture mart, for there are six large fur niture factories and these, ship every week 12 car loads of furniture to sou thern towns. It also has two chair factories that do an immense business roller mill and two flourishing bank«^. Its prosperity is mainly due to its big payroll for the manufacturing plants employ 1,200 operatives in its varied industries. Shelby, like Lenoir needs more pay rolls. We are indebt ed to a former popular townsman, Mr. J. Frank Williams, who is here on a visit, for the above information. d Governor Stuart is on solid ground when refusing to recognize the right of the General Assembly to qaalify in way or transfer to any other agency the pardoning power which the Constitution vests solely in the Gov ernor. His latest veto is not only a proper assertion of the authority of his office, but it puts the quietus on a measure which, if put into effect, mast have seriously weaKened the adminis tration of justice in Virginia.—Va, Pilot. All From One Stanly County Tree. (From The Albemarle Enteiprise.) R. M. Stoker, who lives east of the city on Route one, reports that J[he sawed 52 cross-ties from one tree last week. This likely breaks the record for North Carolina. These ties sold for $23,40 for the one tree. The wood in the limbs would make a cord or more of wood, thus making the tree worth more than S25. “Hats will not be »o high this spring." So the fashion journals, but not so the millinery shops. The height of the crown doesn’'t regulate the alti tude of tha price on headgear any more than the breadth or leDsrch of the skirt does the cost of th# dress. Tree Planting by Towns*. Boston Transcript. One of the most interesting of Mon day's annual town meeting.s was that held in Williamstown. Outside of lib eral provision for the town’s) necessi ties and reasonable enjoyment was the adoption of a scheme introduced by President Garfield of Williams col lege 0 the effect that each year there shall be planted along the rosdsides a number ot trees that wiil be valuable for commercial purposes in years to come. Williamstown has about 90 miles of road that lend themselves to such an arrangement. Thoy are of good width and have broad margins. It i'» President Gai field’s idea to block out a public forest on this land, which is public property. 111. 50 years a qrantity of these trees could be an nually cut away, furnishing revenue that would greatly benefit the town ship It is a plan that has been suc cessfully carried out in France. His argument appealed to the meeting, and an appropriation was made for carrying i;n the work the present year. The village itself, where the collegc is located, has one of the finest and most beautiful displays and arrangements of trees in the State. Rather Laugh Than Weep| Flaw in The Defense The man who can make the world lay | A religious worker was visiting a aside its grief and sorrows long enough ! Southern penitentiary, when one to laugh and die^as not lived in vain, j prisoner in some way took his fancy, Mark Twain made the world laugh I says the Philadelphia Record. This and died a joking. A few hours before | prisoner was a negro who evinced a his death, too weak to spoak, he pointed | religious fervor as deep as it was to his favorite box of cigars, and when j gratifying to *he caller, his attetidant shook his head, he inserted I “Of what are you accused?” his finger and had his last smoke any-1 prisoner was asked. The Bath. Express Company Flans Big Building. / Popular belief that tH^ parcel post has left the big express'companies in hard straits was contradicted last wet k by news that the American Express company would erect a two-miliion- dollar office building on lower Broad way. The building is to be thirty-two stories high and is to have a frontage of eighty feet on Broadway^ It will run through the block to Trinity Place and adjoin the newly completed building of the Adanfis Express company. how. After the “funeral orgies,” they | “planted his remainders,” and now. with a pipe in his mouth, he is made to serve as an advertisement for tobacco companies. Such is life after death. R. G. Ingersoll made the world laugh by making fun of sacred things-at least many people think so, but he didn’t. He said the only sacred thing in the world was his family. In Chicago I heard him say this: “fhink of a god, with a bone in his hand, walking around cortem- plating whether to make a blonde or a biunette. Then he had to stop speak ing to give his audience time to laugh and appUud. Some years afterward, at Washing ton, D. C., it was very different, when completely overcome by his emotion, he said, between sobs: "Let us hope, in spite of creeds and dogmas, there’s a better world than this.” At last I read about three weeping women keeping vigil neside his body. “Dey says I rook' a watch,” an swered the negro “I made a good fight. I had a dandy lawyer, an’ he done prove an alibi wif ten witnesses. Den my lawer he shore made a strong speech to de jury. But it wasn’t no use, suh; I gets ten years.” “I don’t see why you Swere not ac quitted,” said the religious worker. “Well, suh," explained the prisoner, “dere was shore one weak spot 'bout my defense^dey found de watch in my pocket.” (.Chicago News.) It WAS not left to Model a doctors to absociate the decline of the Romsn em pire with luxurious warm bathing. Roman writers are full of moralizing on the subject. Seneqa, glancing back at th3 good old times, recalled that the the old Romans, though they warhed th-'ir arms and legs daily, bathed their whole Inexperienced Frank J. Gould, at a luncheon at the Negresco at Nice, said of the flap per: “Wherever Jthe English congregate, they talk of |nothing but the flapper. The flapper, you know, is their name for the young girl in shortish skirts and openwork stockings who still wears her hair in a flap, or plait, down her back. and when the undertaker approached ^ n t:i i j 4. • \'A -j W hat amazes all England tooay is the to screw down the lid, they said:’ ., , , , , “Please, please, sir, give us just thirty minutef more.’ said. “Everything is ready for the cem etery." At length they “planted his remain ders,” and now his pictures adorns the walls of many a saloon. Lease of Atlantic Hotel (Fi^om The Morefcead City Coaster.) The Norfolk Southern Railway Com pany on Wednesday of thhi week leas ed the Atlantic Hotel here to Mr. R.P. Foster of Asheville. The term of the lease extends over a period of five years. flapper’s ‘advanced’ ideas. As there’s a ‘new’ woman, so there seems to be a “But you are delaying matters, ” he .fi •*. • i, “Two new flapper—it is a charac teristic story—were taking tea together in a nursey. The first said as she toyed with a doll: “I don’t like Jack. He’s so crude. “Crude? How?’ said the second flapper. “When he kisses/ the first answered, ‘he smaks.”^New Orleans States. Quits. The Safest Place in The World. (From The Wall Street Journal.) It may soon be said, if it is not al ready true, that traveling on a stand ard American railway is the safest thing in the world. The Pennsylvania for instance, last year handled 111,000- 000 passengers, without killing one in a train accident. This was equal to the population of the United States, in addition to about three times the population of Greater New York, in cluding the towns of the Jersey main land. This road handled nearly 6000,- 000,000 passenger? jr more than one- third of the population of the globe, in the past six years, during which on ly 16 passengers lost their lives. In this time, out of 5,000,000 trains run, only five met with wrecks resulting in the death of passengers. It takes a very high business moral to get such a result. Yet almost no consideration is given by tne lawmaking critics to such a magnificent showing on tha part of the masters of the country’s transportation .lines. A Just Decision. According to a deci«s|(frof 'the su preme court in which the superior court is sustained, a prisoner in this state cannot be flogged by the author- ties. This decision is in keeping with the public opinion of this enlightened age and wiil no doubt meet with the approval of a great majority of the people of the state. It is a matter to be proud that we &re coming on a bet ter day in our treatment of convict, the time for cruel and inhumane treat ment having passed. Gradually we are learning the way to treat our fellow man, even when he wears a prison garb.— Salisbury Post. “It is known,” writes Mr. Anderson “that President Wilson has discussed the North Carolina situation at great length with Secretary Dani.ls and it is not saying too much to state that the President expressed surprise when told the backward position which North Carolina occupies i/i many matters of direct interest to the Wilson adminis tration.” Must have forgotten a lot of things he was told last year.— Greensboro News. A pompous physician who was in clined to criticize others was watch ing a stonemason build a fence for his neighbor. He thought the mason used to much mortar. “Jim," he said, “mortar covers up a good many mistakes, doesn’t it?” “Yes, Doctor," calmly replied the mason, “and so does the spade.”— Harpers Magazine. Billy Sunday is quoted as saying that New York is “going to hell so fast that you can’t see the dost," and it is prob ably because he can’t see vhe duft that Billy declines to attempt to check its downward pr(^ress. Miss Jane Addams says she does not know enough to be mayor, but a great many municipalities in these United States would be a great deal better off if their mayors knew even that much. Albany ministers decided to send a committee to Scranton, Pa., co decide whether they want Billy Sunday. We have read of half a dozen other towns acting similarly. It is not probable that Billy rips around anywhere now adays without confronting committees sent to determine whether he shall be given a “call. "-NCharlotte Observer. We suppose the Raleigh meeting was da tod to suit the convenience of the secretary of state and the secretary of the navy. Yet everybody kncws all there is to be knov/n about Mr Bryan’s political views, and the quality of Mr. Daniels democracy is as well known to those who will attend the meeting as it is to Mr. Daniels himself.—Greens boro News. Just about every community in the stiwte is talking about plans for swat ting the fly, and all signs indicate that musca domestica is going to have an interesting time in North CaroUna this year. The really important thiijg is to starve the brute, and the communi ty seem to realize that, too. “Clean up” IS the watchword all along the line. This is going to be a year of great advance in sanitation..—Charlotte Observer. The Wilmington Star repeats the old saying that “The gods help those who help themselves.” That depends on the modus operandi. There are lots of folks in the penitentiaries who get there by too literal observance of the proverb. The Scanty Creek department of the Memphis News-Scimitar shapes its personals to suit the season: “Miss Cricket Rountree, a sorrel-top pullet from Garter Snake Branch, dropped in on ye correspondent last Friday and left a pair of razorback jaws, a mess of poke sallit and a 'setting of yaller-leg egg. Call again, Terrestrial Seraph.’^ An Offensive Epithet. A woman in the city of Cologn called another one a suffragette.” The offended one is a school teacher. She accepted the designation as it was intended. She accepted it as an epithet, regarding it offensive and slanderous, and proceeded to enter suit against her assailant for slander. The offended school teacher averred that “the suffragettes have shown themselves to be scarcely normal. Educated people are enraged a^^ainst them, owing to their outrages, one would entrust children to me were a suffragette." The defendant was convicted of slander and punished. The verdict of the German court seems to have been based on the con tempt in which the English suffragette is held in Germany.—Nashville Tennes sean. Art of ‘^Suffrajitus” Be ing Taught Women The latest development of suffragette militancy is the art of “suffrajitus. ” Militants who are assigned to political meetings and to get in a word for suf frage are being coarched in the new art, the chief feature of which is ab ility to twine arms and legs around a chair or pillar in such a way that it would take a small army of ushers or policemen to pry tne disturbers loose. The system worked well on its recent trial at a meeting addressed by John Bums in Stratham until the head of the local government board ordered the stewards to remove the chairs as well as their occupants from the hill. The Labor party, which m spite of its advocacy of equal suffrage, is be ing attacked because of its alliance with the Liberal government, has hit upon a novel plan to meet this latest move of the suffragettes. Husky worn en stewards are being employed to deal with the interrupters, and, as one labor leader explained, the plan is a distinct success, because on account of a subtile point of militant psychol ogy, the sense, of martyrdom is less comforting when one is ejected bv a member of one’s own sex. At a re cent demonstration the militants cried despairingly: “Why don’t you send your men to put us out.” body once a week. Even when Scipio introduced a warm bath into his villa the bathroom was “small and dark, after the manner of the ancients,” with no pretensions to luxury; and the ear lier public baths were so simple that the aedile merely tested the tempera ture with his hand. Things moved sn rapidly and such emperors as Com- modus bathed seven or eight times a day and took their meals in the bath. Considerable pomp used to attend tho entrance into the water of the Duch- esse de Berri, who nearly 100 yeaisago first made sea bathing fashionable in France. When the duchesse went bath ing at Dieppe her arrival at the beach was hailed with a salyo of artillery. The holder of the then newly created post of ‘'Inspector des Mains” had to be there to receive her, attired in a resplendent unifornr, cocked hat and white gloves. This functionary led her royal high ness into the sea until the water reach- ed his knees, when he retired with three profound reverences. The duch esse, who was an expert swimmer, then proceeded to enjoy herself. Terroized by Petticoats Before she was put on trial the mili tant suffragetta who slashed the Roke- by Venus had started her “hrnger ttrike.” This was her way of givii'o; notice that she proposed to intimidate the Government into releasing her promptly so that she might destroy more public or private proper t/. If the Government had the corrage to treat May Richf»rdson as it treats lunatics and insane crim’ial, ‘he would stay in jail for the full tevm of six months to which she has been senten ced. There are plenty of women in English prisoners who do not stay there trom choice. The Richard.son women ranks as privileged criminal merely because she glories in having committed a deliberate crime and in-;' tends to pose as a martyr by refilsing food. If she is forcibly fed by all England will resound with a hysterical outcry against the bratality of officers of the law who will be merely dis charging their duties. But forcible feeding did not first come into us with Mrs. Parkhurst’s appearance as a teacher of violence, and it will not end when women secure the suffrage. There have been few more ridicu lous spectacles in modem government than that ox Great Britian terro!zed by petticoats.—New York World. His Difficulty. “The millionaire superintendent of a Sunday school was giving the children a talk|on businest success. It was the Sunday before Washingtons birthday and he said: “Be industrious, my children, and you and no i succeed. Be loyal to your employer £ never look at the clock, put the firm’s interest before your own, and success is sure to come. You remember, do you not, the great difficulty George Wash ington had to contend with?’* “Yes, sir; yes, sir,’ the children piped. “And what difficulty, what almost insuperabl3 difficulty nearly crippled the great George?" The Grown Up Way It was a little Boston miss of fiye years who, upon being asked by her Sunday school teacher to whom she said her prayers, replied, **When I was a little girl I used to say them to mamma, but now I say them to the bed."—Harper's Magazine. Quick Transformation A young minister was invited to pass his vacation at the summer home of a wealthy member of his congregation The little daughter watched the young man closely during the visit, f nd one morning sat down beside him and b^ gan to draw on her slate. “What are you doing?” the minister inquired. “I’m going to draw your picture,’ replied the child. The young man sat very still, and and the little girl worked away earn estly. Suddenly she stopped and com pared her work with the original. “I don’t like it very much.” she said “I guess I’ll put a tail on and call it a dog.”—Exchange. Instances of the value of advertising long ago became needless to point the moral, but they may still be used with out boredom to adorn some particular tale. There is the case of the Coca- Cola Company. The statement of this concern shows that the capital has been continuously maintained at $50,000, and that with such a capital the surplus and profit and loss balance together has a bock children."—New Orleans States. ^ " are $8,900,000. The stock He couldn t tell a he! chorused the , i-i cuuiu » uc. me $17,000 a share. Every body knows that the Coca-Co^a people got there and that they stay there by means of innelligent, vigorous and Lillian Russell^says men are and always will be, but then, it fools must persistent advertising. Otherwise they be reaiembered that Lillian, as rauch- ly-mavried as she has been, has not had ail the men of her day and gener ation as husbands. Clears Complexion— Removes Skin Blemishes Why go through life embarrassed and disfigured with pimphs, eruptions, blackheads, red rough skin, or suffering the tortures of Eczema, itch, tetter, salt rheuni. Just ask you Druggist for Dr. Hobson’s Eczema Ointment. Follow the simple suggestions and your skin Worries are over. Mild, soothing, effective. Excellent for babies and delicate, tender skin. Stops chapping. Always helps. Relief or money back. 50c., at your Druggist. .Not For Him Goodheart—I’ve got you|down for a couple of tickets; we’re getting up a raffle for a poor man of our neighbor hood. Joakley—None or me, think you. I _ wouldn'^t know what to do with a poor j man if 1 won him.—Christian Register. Thero are said to be 239,000 female stenographers in the United States. This helps to explain why the chewing gum manufacturers grow rich so rap idly. A Cure For Sour Stomach Mrs. Wm. M. Thompson, of Battle Creek, Mich., writes: “I have been troubled with indigestion, sour stomach and bad breathl After taking two bottles of Chamberlain's Tablets I am well. These tablets aie splendid— none better." For sale by Mebane Drug Co. Wanted S'" Mrs. E. P. ChecK Your April Cough Thawi^^g irost and April rains chill you to the very marrow, you catch cold —Head and lungs .stuffed—You are feverish—Cough continually and feel miserable—You need Dr. King’s New Discovery. It soothes inflamed and irritated throat and lung^, stops cough, your head clears up. fever leaves, and you feel fine. Mr. J. T. Davis, of Stickney Corner, Me., “Was cured of a dreadful cough after doctor's treat ment and all other remedies failed. Relief or money bazk. Pleasant—Child ren like it. Get a bottle to-day. 50c. and $1.00, at your Druggist. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve for All Sores would s^'ill have little more than a local business in Atlanta, if they had that. This is the tale of the Coca-Cola drirk. Charlotte Observer. Nothing So Qocd for a Cough or Cold When you have a cold you want the best medicine obtainable so as to get rid of it with the least possible delay. There are many who consider. Cham- 1 berlain’s Cough Remedy ensurpassec. Mrs. J. BorofF, Elida, Ohio, says “Ever since my daughter Ruth was cured of a severe cold and cough by Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy two years ago, have felt kindly disposed toward the manufacturers of that pre” paration. I know of nothing so quick to relieve a cough or cure a cold. For sale by Mebane Drug Co. Exclusiveness. She—No, I read [hardly any of the modem novels. He—Why is that? She—There are really so few people in fiction nowadays that are fit to -associate with.