Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Nov. 19, 1909, edition 1 / Page 6
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THE HOWIE CIRCLE COLUMN. Pleasant Eueriina Reyeries. -A GoiymrijDBdi- the Home Gircle at Evening Tide CRUDE THOUGHTS FROM THE EDITOBIaL PEN While you are tbanktul do seme- tbiog to make others thankfal. The darkness of life is never so great bat there is some ray of light to be thankfal for. Thanksgiving is the people's daj; the day that stands for home and happiness; for gratitude and benevo lence; for plenty and peace. Home gathering time, what f ulntss of joy. How the heart bouftds as we clasp the dear hands again, and the eyes sparkle with delight. Fortastes of heaven; while thay let gratitude, let love, and affection so twine abeut that the tendrils will reach the very heart strings and cling through all the years of doubts and disappoint ments, snnshine and shadows. Let is be glaa, and being glad, give thanks. Glad for health, for prosperity, and the promise of pros perity which is breathed from everv hill and whispered from every valley in our broad, green land. Lst lh childien, too, of your horn s laugh ill their young glee that they shall remember and be grateful for the day. Don't mind t eir noise for children's laughter and exclamations of joy are second to no music on dearth. The earliest recorded Thanksgiv ing clay observed in this country in 1621, when the first fruits of weary toil were harvested by the Plymouth Colony. Bradford sent out men to get wild fowl to help out the feast, and full of gratitude for their pre servation and for the scanty harvest they had wrung from the unwilling stony soil, these brave ancestors of ours lifted up their hearts and voiees in Thankfulness to God. Brave men they were, and hopeful, full of en durance, and indomitable force and energy. Food was scanty, peril threatened on every side, and yet these faithful pioneers were ready to praise God for his goodness ana mercy. The summer it gone, leaving be hind it a rich harvest. Plenty reigns benignly throughout the "land. The autumn has filled the barns and. rr . V mm n 1. KiauantJB everywnere to the very whose presence -we wish to flee. He sees only the dark side of life. He sees onlj a kick and a curie; for the world, and what he offers he gets m return. As we go back to the dfd home to spend Thanksgiving Daj with father ana mother and sister and . brother. 9 let us have a thankfal Thankigiviag and a joyous one. r " ' itudjo w iuo Tory I caves and the cellars are overflowing ara comP1- at we see other UUUtCo, wuwb vacant cnairsf tell the with the fruits of the earth. What good reason have the Americam peo p'e, and especially the farming peo ple, to be grateful. Surely our path 8 pleasant and our hearts should he tilled with pace and thankfulness. THANKSGIVING. We havfc many things to be thank ful for in our day and generation and in our beautiful and, fruitful country. The cry ot "bard times" does not sound so loudly through the land as it did a year ago. Men and women are more cheerful. The farmer has had his reward in large crops and fair prices. The mer chant is buying and selling on a bet ter margin. The whole business world is alert with hopeful energy. As a nation we have much to be thankfal for. We have reigious liberty; we have political freedom; our poorer classes live better, dress better, arid have more pleasures than the peor of other nations; we are not ravaged by war, , but peace makes possible industry and plenty. We have r& broad land rich in nat -ttral resources that generation after generation will discover new riches 'and develop new indus tries of which today we do not even dream. If we have, or if we think we hare, but little to be thankful foi as individuals, it would still be wise to cultivate a spirit of thankfulness - for its own sake The only absolute ly forlorn and irredeemable oreat'tira i ri . 1 .-. V--"": . v ovou - a.9 -vuv iuii&iHm mn i tvil.ii cinia taari - l. lj ...-. . the chronic grumbler - from v uf f m -factory. Appljctc -f . itts, Macon, N C , . Wis A LOeK OTTO HOMES. Thanksgiving! What magic in that word! And how it comes with a vision ef fathers and mothers who are awaiting with loving hearts and glad anticipations the coming of chil dren and grandchildren. And now they gather at the familiar firesides and around the bountifully laden tables, happy, unbroken group. Ah! what sweet memories cluster around those by-gone, never-to-be- forgottijn days! Bui the scene uuauges. ine lamay circles have oeen broken mte by death. Father and mothers, and perchance some to whom they had extended Thanks giving greetings in the earthly homes, have gore to the Home w caM li unions there are now "Vacant rooms, each made a sacred place, By-echo of a missing voice, or dream of vanished face." Thanksgiving! Again the kaleido scope is turned, and what contrasts are revealed to us Glimpses of the morrow! Uf homes where plentv and good cheer abound. Of cbnntrr nomes, wnere notes of preparation nave Deen sounding for weeks, and table amd pantry and cellar are full ;o overflowing with "Thanksgiving fixins," where the bisr Iom ar blazing merrily in the old-faahionnd fireplace, where Thankseivint? is tha day of the year. Of city homes. y where wealth and luxury preside ov er damtly appointed tables and costlv viada. Ot homes vhir. l-'VIWJtJ, 11 not grim want, dwells, whose tables oear bat the semblance of a feast. Of homes blighted by crime, or the curte of drink, where even the words "home" and "Thanksgiving" seem but a hollow mockery. We look into home 'fall of mirth and gW- homes where serene old age and happy childhood are found hand m hand homes where f am ilv j 7 Admiriistatorrs Notic .TiDf qnalified as - ad- ministrator of H. T. Denton, to me on or hfn.T- . .J?rl or iu not,co wU! be pl.ad L.l ot their recorerrti : Alf ing aia esUte WUI mat. pavm-l at onoe This Not. 3rd. 09 u. v,. Admr. Administrfltor'fl 4. .Having qualified as administrator of of JnkHn1 "S? deceased, Uto Sflfei J?",81! the7 ea- tZiha lo hjbit them to the, undersigned on or before the SlSiSSM.V thU Jo! .v " iW uoyican in nr nf th.l. erf. All nonnnt irAi . I5VUT ii uiucuvw io said es tate will please mvA ?r,i:!7 meat thU Ka" -.?! Pf Wm H RuffinT Attf 1 1 llant Dissolution Notice The firm of Mm n n oon dome a irentrAl fnrir... i o rj UUB' 1UB8B rranitunton, N. C. haaJ Man thio .Inf i t . I consent, by Mr. Jno. M. Best with drawincr from said f5rm TK- i bus iness Will h rvinttnn,1 . - uuuit me feame name and haa assumed all re sponsibilities of the firm, and has also purchased all accounts bf said firm- Mrs. D. G. BEST JOHN M. BEST! Sale of Valuable Land Bv authoritv nf a S.,A r .v Sun en or Cmirt of pv.vi: 1 teTed at the October terra, 1909, and by wu.em, ut an parlies interested, I will as eoramissioner of the court, on Mon- 77 V18.6 day of -December, 1909 at 12 o clock m., sell to the hihsst bidder ror cash at public auction at th court house doo; of Franklin county, Louis- r'1 cenain tract or land situated in BVanklinton townshi, Frank hn county, adjoininji the lands of B H W maton, George Winston and others and more particularly described as' follows: , Bounded on the west by the Ian. ! of D. H. Winston, on the south bv the lands of C S Williams and George' Win- ?iM' on the ea8t by the lands of C S Williams and T X Beres. and on the north by the lands of J L Mitchell containing 132 acres, being known ai the Yarborough home plaee-, and the same land conveyed to J E Yarborough by M Purefoy and wife and recorded In book i46, page 3, records of Register of Deeds office for Franklin county and the same conveyed to M Purefoy by deed from J E Yarhnrnmyh f-t recorded in book 148. nar I4r, mA Register's office. W. N. Jones, Com sad stor iof loss and beravamnt May He, who in the past has given His grace' to the sorrowing," grant nnto all such from the highest to the lowest "the garment of praise for the spirit of hearenliness,won thia Thanksgiring day! ' 4c Le't us give thanks with all onr hearts, forgetting tor 'one dar th 'cross-purposes, the' "strife, untiring amouion, and anrsquittd disappoint ments of hf, Ut as diaw a lone-.dpfin gulf from the perennial fount of real sincere gratitude, and" our whole be ing will overflow with a new, strange lite, a gladness which is made mani- test m our ebrity, m on very steps and voice, v - ' '' G54S:-'. LJJ fr fC A A L n a. - .III I . V t I II II II III I Trustees Sale of Laud By virtue of a power of sale contained in that certain AtA nf trust on the 30 day of October, 1908 by C A Hale. Lula Hal nH w n u-il w" h yifSl?n Tratee, &nd duly recorded in the Registry of Franklin connty in book 162 at pag 390, default having been made in the payment of the in debtedness thereby secured, and de- iuauu iur ioreciosure Having been made the bond secured by said dtjed, the un dersigned will nn MnnH.. V, u .1 - of December, '09, it being the first Mon - yay in naiu monin, at aoout the hour of noon, at the court house door lu Louisbur, N. C.? offer for sale, to 'the highest bidder at nnhi; an.t; cash, an undivided two fifths interest ui that certain tract of land by said deed of trust conveyed, and therein de- Bounded nn tho VaWI, k. ti,w.- boroufirh, on the East by Louisburoand Warrenton Road, on South by Mr. W. d. Mumford anH on VtTam k.. rr it cov u jr vi. . I'Ord. and enntntninir ?o a oo less, and being parcel of land bought bv aoiciium r,. u- urown. lne in terests herein contpvAH ra th i;rA . tate or interest of aid C. A. Hale and xne one-finn interest each of W. G Hale and Lula Hale, children of Ba:d ! L. A. Hale and Pttti Uola nrn - --- 'iv, ' in iu i ouerai; tne same time and place the iouowing personal property conveyed in aforesaid mortgage: One ton hmr. fy, one gray mare. This 5th day of M. S. CLIFTON, Trustee. $100 Eeward, $100 ease that scieaee has btTab'e to in He stages, and that i Catarrh HaSV r tarrh Cure is the only pogitiV Sti know, to the nedIeaf5IenSata,Sw hem n constitution iwaa ISS ftitutional treatment . hSVbTSSU? rD inmouB surtaxes of theSStoST aS SoKh iiboSal's.,a,,B,, ' 'r li-tTt - GHENEr & CO ; Toledo 0, i Take Hall's Familv Pills f or eHatlpaUon FOR? SALE. At a BanratW o J ' ; t2-t' jLl"j. with canleeed, 3f head blocks, v Just Notice of Land Sale Under and by virtue of a 'power con tained in a certain mortgage made to Mrs Lucy Batchelor, deceased, on the 7th day of July 1906, by E T Wright, recorded in book, lofr on page 140 o? iranklm county Registry, to secure two eertain promissary notes of even date therewith, the said notes being for the purchase price of the lands herein after described, the undesigned, ad ministrator of the said Lucy Batchelor, Jecea8ed. will xn- Saturday November 27, 1909, oetween the hours of 11 am and 2 p m at the court house door in Lpuisburg, offer for sale to the highest bidder, a certain tract or parcel ofland in Dunns township, Franklin county, described as follows: - J Being the same land conveyed by v7 Batchelor to the, said ET WnghL of even date with the said mortgage, situated in Dunn's township Fnkhn county, adjoining the land if the said E T VrighV and others aud be- 5 v --' viuw-er iraci ox the r j J "if,4JUlK zoaa ana ct the K Wright on the nJrth east and south: at,a T r,n j.-s vr the jury report fiftj. 2ZJ?flf'l ft? cI"k office oTS We have 285 Jrons Suits that-cost us from $7 to $11. They nre 'not stylish but GOOD QUALITY I 1 lfOMI III . Ve will sell you your choice of the lot for 00 Come quick If vou want good suit Chcp. P: I & K. . ALLEN'S TheM n. ans ntore Master Tailored Clothes THK t7XTHKS THAT AHK Money's Worth OR Money Back Why Uk a chatr on ciclt that yoe ioc l ktow uhozV yoor fwtb in F W. WKeJ. M Ur Tailored aoO a. ifcu U- and ar aJwav .c4d a htlle than too rT ber. suits rnoM to t2s.o O o OVKHCXMTS KliOM 3.S0 to ';o We arc wil toclcd -th Walk ovtr Shcx, lh kind ILaI aJar wrr. wl And ih Hho, tUt rukw UfeaJk exrr. CIlOSMrTT of UATS. All Uu.t atV r0 w. 7 Lduisburg's Qothier 1 7. -.i 5 - J r' 1. 7' V - ' - - . ' . ' '
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 19, 1909, edition 1
6
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