of Thanks and all Notice of En tertainment for profit will be chairged for at the rate of 2 cents per word. Cadi to accompany order. Advertising rates will be furn ished upon request. Published weekly and entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the Post Office at Farmville, N. C., under Act of March 3, 1878. \ Another Military President? “Your remarks in relation to my being a candidate 'for the presidency are very flattering, but I think you will know without the necessity of my saying so to you, that I am not and never shall be an aspirant for the honor. My opinion has always been against the elevation of a mili tary chief of that position.” So wrote Zachary Taylor, whose birthday we are celebrating on the twenty-fourth day of this month, less than three years before he was eleva ted to the high position of twelfth President of rife United States. Zachary Taylor was born in Vir ginia. UiS father, Colonel Richard Taylor, an officer, in the Revolution ary War, moved to Louisville, Ken tucky, when Zachary was a small child. There he lived until he was twenty-four years old, working on a plantation and receiving only an ele mentary education. When an older brother, who had re ceived a commission in the Army of the United States, died, Zachary was appointed to fill the vacant commis sion. In 1812, with fifty men, most of whom were ill, Taylor defended Fort Harrison, on the Wabash, against e large force of Indians, led by Tecumseh. His distinguished mili tary career was climaxed by his vic tories against Mexico in 1846. His brilliant military achievements created great enthusiasm throughout the country and, in 1848, he was nominated by the Whigs and elected to the Presidency. During rile short period of about one year, & which he served as Presi dent before his death, discussion cen tered around the extension of slavery, the admission of California as a State and the Mexican boundary. In observing the anniversary of a soldier who became President, it is interesting to note that this country may have a presidential candidate next year who gained his fame on the field of battle. ED KEMP FUNERAL ZBBULON ON SUNDAY instances with farm order :.1§p* the gregation might see to be thankful for. services are still held in Thanksgiving today has abo a day for sports. The first- New England giving Day was in the autumn of 1621. The Indians and. the colonists feasted together on taxfcey and deer. The first thanksgiving prodaima tion, issued by any President, came in 1789, w*en George Washington ordered a day of thanksgiving for the adoption of the Constitution. Presi dent Madison also set ta day to give .thanks for peace during 1816, but it was not until the time of Abraham Lincoln in 1868, that we had a na tional Thanksgiving proclamation, setting apart the last Thursday in November as a day to be observed. Mrs. Sarah J. Hale probably de serves as much credit as any other single person, for establishing Thanksgiving Day as a. national religiious festival, celebrated on the same day throughout the country. As editor of the Ladies Magfizine in Boston, she began her crusade in 1827. The Ladies Magazine was con solidated with Godey’s Lady’s Book. As editor of Godey’s, which had a circulation of 150,000—the largest of any periodical of its kind in the coun try—she wrote editorial after edi torial was the subject Her last edi torial was printed in September 1868; President Lincoln's proclama tion came less than a month later. In some of the cities of this nation, the children celebrate Thanksgiving Day by dressing in the clothes of their parents, covering their faces with masks and parading the streets, blowing tin horns and ringing bells. Some of them ask for contributions' of fruit vegetables, candy or money to help celebrate the day. This cus tom is probably a survival of the old Scotch Wassail custom of New Year’s Day, which has been transferred to Thanksgiving. The poor in Scotland on New Year's Day go d W ^ ■ ;