Why Live An Inferior Life? By Hpv. \V. (?. HukImh ?f St?t?**villr? hvaiiKeliM f?r ILipii-i N. Mission lloartl Who Has Just roiiialu<M a K?*vIym| at i'al\ar> llapliM ( liin i ll of Kllxabt'tli 4 'ily Ill tTn- mad ru?"H ?75 iTTT I~?.. ? representative character from every cuss coming fortli in play his pail In the great Kami'. flaying poor or well they niwn retire, giving t li? I - place to others, who carry the game on and on. The yue-ti, n r?r u. to decide Is. how shall 1 play this game? What part will ( i,;,Ve in this great game of life? will I merely he a "hack stage" nr will | play my part as a l/ri^hi star? Tho fa" "<? succeed, which. We must push on toward success or failure. Why not suc cess Ten years ago I stood on a atreet corner mid look..I at a young man as he digged in a ditch "Did you finish High School."1 | ask. d the man. , "By gosh no" was his reply What 8 education m a man who has a strong body?" he added. "Well my boy, you will change your mind some day l.a,?r (ll ?fc yol| wjJ| * j you had gone t? ?-|,ool and and made something of yourself.", 7?n b?y 1??k"'1 mc ??"" ?' silly I ?mlle as If he thought I was a fool ve year later I saw the same I man. This time he was rolling a' cart up and down the streets gather 1 ing the trash. "We" Old man. I ?eo you have' not been promoted." 1 saiil. |lt?' hung Ills head in shame and rolled his cart 011 down the street. A school mate of mine came to me' one day and told ni>- ihr.t lie was: f.h .8 '? S,0,> Kel,?ol. "H Is all fool-1 10 "'"y In school when vou get out and have a g >od\i, e told t"|ake. said. Hut I told h1111 1 was goinc to st-iv ih<mi ?h"." i nn,RUl-d- "I* slory was ? that of many who lose the spirit of1 education while young. ll"' otI?r hand we find a' fhefr Kh" have fin is lied : wstrhtn^n stand Ing i.lly |,y and watching the great machine of life! hv f?, 'y "lovo ?"' Thi" rlass ' Ir J r' n'T" tlum ,hp uneducated. If we fall to use our talents we com- ' f^LS.L,ln- Th'? <? ? great! - ??. 1111 m is a ur??at trouble with many of the college graduates of today. Tin v fan m has thi ability (? ,|? ? n,|n_ , 1 than the T "UUM worse! man the person who has no ability ' vil e" S6? I,a"lpl ">"? ?( Collin,:! vlllo. Conn., found a turtle an 1 sSen 'nuials and date on the t!lr!L a 1 110 "'<? "nine, turtle under a hnystaiK only about one hundred yards from where h, found I, fifty ?lx y,,?.8 ?go Kiery. one Should ask himself this ques-I tlon. Am I living an Inferior life I We have a great many turtle gra duates today. They have tV,"r 1 never" r,""" "n,'"""""as. but they anything. "yw,l''re "r accomplish | Sometime ago a young lady came' inn,'|et^r0nl C0."rKr- Shp had fh# ht ti school, and graduated will, the highest honors. When she went, n^"h 8he put her diploma J ater ?2r\,"raWCr- S?V,rfll '\e became sick and died. Years later her mother found the! unused diploma." , n Pity." She said, as she looked through her tear stained eyes, at the diploma. ?n^,'h,lrUly wa" 11 |,"y> there is something worse and that is for a and ft f K work hard in school .1 . nn'1 ,,vc 011 without us ing their education to benefit man kind. The person who puts his knowledge into practice is ti?, oni.; lrnn.LPa.U)[ nmounl!' to something. Unused talents noon decay. wnmh.e? wn.rl<l crylnK '"r men and women who are really efficient We i have a surplus of the emotional type mean well but have no efficiency To become leaders of men von I must be efTlclent. You must have i the power to do that for which you I are hullt to do. If you fllll toy? | that for which you are hullt lo do, you have no efficiency. Some men idnc.H ""'V ,leal what we call education, hut no efficiency and i?dr',h,r lh:r n"vor ?" ?nywhe? them I"'Vl'r k"nw" nhout 1. Tou. ""''hi ask what Is efficiency'' JoJm ,h,nK"' n'" *'H'|lng you i ik ' ?r w"n(lerlng if you to *li. ^m M ls k"??'ng how L Ty "rn<-tl<-e. turning to .ehtJv experience and using It to achieve.success." "|t ? Bl(M?p amass one s personality at any time or Place and the elimination of weakne., regret, worry and fear." it is self-reliance, clothed with plu" pnllteness ana the hand of nteel In tho volvrt f"'n, Efficiency Is alertness.! ? ,Tlncl' r"?dlness to ad-| im luJH * to fhp unp*Pecte<l. "It ; prnr"r"' Patience; the measure of a ntan; the ability to use1 on. s passions, ,ikc?. dislikes ha? heart'.nTno0,''; L""1"' ho,ly heart and not to he used by them " " you ?*Pect to rise above the aver-1 an* i uit of mall you muse link energy witli efficiency ami *ork with all your might, always striving f??r tho higher tilings. You must not forget that there is always room at the top. The clay of specialization is upon us ami the day of the "Jack at all trades" has failed forever. There was a time when a man could follow, several trades at the same time Hut that day has gone and a new day has dawned upon us, n day of spe cialization. You must 1? arn to do one thing and do that with all your might. Someone lias said. "1 am only one, hut I am one. 1 can't do everything, but I can do something and what I can do I ought to do and what I-might to do. by the grace of God 1 will do " Tin- world recognizes the person who does the thing in hi? line the host. *lt Is the mail who is pre pared and equipped for Ills business who pets the trade. No one would care to risk his life with un Inex-! perlenced surgeon. No one cures to trade with the merchant who keeps a dirty store and who Is not polite to his customers. No one cares to he taught by an inefficient teacht r. No one cares to ride with an Inexperienced driver. Even in the lowest forms of work skilled labor Is preferable. It Isn't so much what you do as how you do It. lie the best in any profession you choose. It Is the person who keeps ever-, lastingly at it who succeeds. Kmerson said, "If a man write ui better hook, preach n better ser-i mon, or make a better mousetrap' than his neighbor, though he build his house In the woods, the world will make a beaten path to his door." i Hut In order to be recognized you 1 must specialize. Try to do one think well and you will succeed. i "Dig right in and do your bit. Take your dose and work and grin; . Tut your soul right Into It, That's the only way to win. Don't sit down and loudly wall. Just because your task is tough, j That's the surest way to fail. Tackle it and show your stuff." Then why be a failure when nil things are yours? Why remain in active, while others are getting rich? Why remain stagnant, while others are rising to success? Why remain a slave while others are becoming, masters? Why be a failure when' success is easily within your roach? | Why remain satisfied with the J crumbs when you can get the whole, loaf? Why take less of your right-' ful share of life joy nnd success while others are climbing upward and enjoying life? Why sit in idle-! ncss while others are hard at work? Why sit down nnd whine nnd mourn away your life while others are re-, Jolcing? Why live an inferior life while others are living the superior1 life? Few of us realize how short life really is. "We complnln that life is too short, yet we live each day as i if it were a thousand years," said SenncaT "When we have learned the. value of time, then we are on the road to success and not until then. j The average man makes but little J of his chance. A few men In onei day often accomplish more than! many a man in a whole lifetime. Life is simply a mailer of concen tration. You are what you set out to b?*. The thing* you think to-day arc the things you become to-mor row. "You are a composite of the things you say. the books you read, the thoughts you think, the company you keep and the things you aspire to become." \ou must have some plan for im proving yourself and evolving your life into success. Time is your only asset. K.t< h moment is a golden i treasure, and the way you spend it shapes your life ns an individual. I If you would d vote thirty minutes I of each day to the study of some Kpl< ndid id? a. to the improvement your mind, in obtaining a more ac-l curate know b ilge of I IT*' business or' profession you have chosen. In a i few years time you would have| evolved Into a giant of intellectual strength with power to follow any plan or idea to final and positive success. lime is our most precious gift. It knows no prejudice, makes no promises, keeps no record* and asks no questions. You are here for a purpose and each moment you spend foolishly or frivolously is lost to all time?simply, thrown into the waste basket of indifference. Then you must ask yourself the question, have I the right aim in life? What am I living for? What is human life for? How am I using my life? How am I investing my life? When you have answered these questions satisfactory you will realize the value of time to such an extent that you will uie it to the best advantage In equipping and qusilifing yourself for your chosen profession. I'nlesi you know the value of each moment as an invest ment. each day that passes is a stumbling block that sends you blundering on into indefference. helplessness and decline of old age.] Th?n the question is. what art* we J going to do with each hour? Are you going to leave untouched the* treasure of the world fit which you 1 live and lose the great opportunity of a lif*' time? Never before have we seen such a day of opportunity. It is continually knocking at our door. We have but to let it in. "It is pounding a per-' petual lattoo oil your door undl follows you with a club from the time of your rising to the time of your retiring." Are you going to be a person or a personality? All of us cannot be rich nor all of us famous, but every one can be suc cessful. It i* every one's duty to be successful. To be a failure or a par tial failure is something to b? as hamed of for it means that you have not done your duty. Thi're are millions struggling for success. Kach In his own particular line is traveling his own rond. There are as many varieties of success as . there are varieties of peoplr. You** success is not the same as someone clue you know. It is your own ? peculiar brand. If you cannot be a great artist or a great statesman or a gnat author or merchant, you1 can be great in your particular line'.'l You can be a success In the thing you are fitted to do. In choosing a profession a great many people fall to estimate them selves carefully and fairly. They make a grtat mistake to start with and how can they expect to reach th?* heights of success. They simply pick out what they i**rtn a successful person who has made lots of money and try to follow his profession, no matter what the profession may be. The probability is. that the one who chooses hi.; profession in this maunerl will he a failure. We need to u?e I common sense in estimating our equipment and not confuse a liking for rewards of a special gift with the! gift Itself. We must be on our guard ? against over-estimating ourselves as J well as under-estimating ourselves.] one is as pathetic as the other. Among the ranks of all the pro-; fessions we find those who do ni?t . belong where they are. lly chance! they have gotten there, but by the! unwritten law they belong some-[ where else. Perhaps they failed to I ask their niak^r their place Jn life, j It is He who should guide us in so important a decision, llut we fail in I (Continued On Page Three) ?x~x~x~x~x~x~x~x~x~x~x~x"x' Meet your friends at our Clean Soda Fountain. THE APOTHECARY SHOP TAakeY ourllens Lay More Eggs Mash FOR SALP Br Aydlett & Owens Phone 4l( Elisabeth City, N. C. SELF-HANGING Vudor VENTILATING PORCH SHADES A New Pnllc?y .hut will not stick or bind, no informed nt the ends. Oil stained not to fade. The best shade made and as cheap us any. Nn (hame For lliiiminu rMELICK SPECIAL IN MENS' SUITS $15m,1415 All Wool Suits We have selected nhout one hundred suits from our stock that sold at 820 to 830?just some odd suits tlmt we desire to sell quick. Tliey lire sizes 33 to 12; hut most of them are 35 to 38. They are for young men and mid die-aged men. No old, out-of-style suits, hut real good all-wool suits. The special price to sell quick is Fifteen Dollars? CHOICE CHOICE VALUES I VALUES TO WW ? a TO 830.00 ?30.00 MITCHELL'S PHONE 100. O. F. Gilbert, Prop. 'WWW Announcement SPENCE MOTOR CO. 211 SO. KOAI) ST. Q I AM NOW CONNECTED WITH THE G G G G G G G We have installed a modern vulcanizing plant, and q ?ill he in a position to serve my friends and ens- jj toniers in a manner that will please you. |j G BRANTLEY McCOY jj PHONE 2 1. G G I Nov/ Here I WMWWIMIWUWW\M?<WM?WWWWWIMiVMWWWWW jj THE LIFE OF j W00DR0W WILSON I By JOSEPHUS DANIELS J Former Secretary of the Navy and Intimate E Associate of President Wilson [! G Jose pints Daniels says: ' This book will be a life of Wilson, the man, as I saw him and knew him. I am familiar with the life of the former President. Besides the eight years I was under him as Secretary of the Navy, I was also associated with him when he was in Paris as the world's greatest figure. There are and will be many more lives of the war President written, all from different viewpoints. It is my aim to present the life, the whole life, of the man?not a book merely for politicians. I shall deal with his charac- E ter, surroundings, environment?what he em- 0 bodied. I want to lay bare the true Woodrow Wilson as man, politician, teacher, father, President, to the world. The Authorship of this Work is a Guarantee of Its Authenticity Cloth. 3flit I'npes. 32 Full-Pane Illustrations Q G The Advance lias made arrangements with the. [j publishers to handle this hook for Elizabeth Q City's territory. The price for the hook alone is [j 82..">0; hut The Advance will give a copy of the Q hook as a premium for a new 12 months' suhscrip- [j lion to this newspaper, provided the subscriber is [jj in Elizabeth City's rural trade territory comprising [I the 10 counties of the Albemarle. To old suhscrili- | ers in the above territory or to new and old sub scribers in Elizabeth City the Ixtok is offered with The Advancc 12 months for $5.00. These honks are now ready for delivery. Publishers: THE JOHN C. WINSTON COMPANY Philadelphia ! ?amain j?bDi G Attention Mothers Your hoy will look cute in u Holi White Suit, 3 to 9?81.25 to S3.15. Genuine linen and oth er good washable Suit*, all fust colors; Bobbie Lee hat* to match. See window display T. T. Turner & Company Cars at Special Prices Used But in Good Kunnin; Shape Buick?G Cylinder Touring. Buick?-1 Cylinder Touring Chevrolet?-1 Cylinder Coupe Ford?Touring without starter. tlASH or CASH and TERMS Tide-water Buick Co. Inc. | LET MICK BE ? I Y O V R TAILOR $ ? ?j. 218 Kramer Untitling .j. <K~XKK~>*X~X~X~X~X~X~X~X~X~> See our window display of Electrical Appliances, Coffee Percolators, Toasters and Flat Irons. A one day special ?3.98 each. Wednesday, May 21st, open at 9 o'clock a. m. W. S. WHITE & CO. 410 E. Matthews St. PHONE lit Standard Pharmacy THEY WILL SEND IT. Best Creamery Tub & BUTTER | Per Lb 44c MORGAN & SONS Phone? 256 & 396 | Fresh f Vegetables AND STRAWBERRIES Orange*, 60c perk J. W. Shannonliouse & Son PHONE 1*7 666 ii a prescription for Malaria, Chill* and Fever, Dengue or Billioua Fever. It kill* the

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view