Prof&amonal ikird^ 17 J^R. ARTHUR HTNE9 FLEMING, ; Murgeon Osntiat, Office In Pord |U jildinjr. Main and Naah lUaat. 1 Lou La bur*. N. . Hours: to 4(3 I. Phone No. 40. ? ??? ?: ??-t? 1 JJB. H. A. N EWK .L, J PHYSICIAN Louisburg, N. ' I Phone No. 156 j a RAN KLIN TON ?<^TBL I [L : F>va(|ih|toD. N.r. H. A Bpnn*| Kroprirto-. '?? Good IlirerV in coiinm-iiou th jp<. C H. Ba.'IkJ ~ in ,DEsdA(, 3CJIt*)EON I'.-ab*or?, N. 0. bo Office la HtamPaiitfiog, Mnin Street. ec _ - 1 > of p H. COOK E 1 ^ ATfOlV BY-ATLA W 4 ^ Wllnrg N. C. Qrer Cooper tPiltftAitM Store. Prompt pi attention jciTr i ill 1-Kttl bu*i .ic.s* entrusted to me r II - ' r ^ .ar JjB. J. E. M(LONE th PHY8llv\'ViiJ SURGEON to t liiaiihir/, N. P. ?t Office in rear >J Bn^efcT-AUton Pruir Store. Ol * f1' I m . TJR. 8. P. IfUItT \ b< PHir.S#:iAN itld dUROKOV b* I oainburv. N. C. 8t Office orer j*. S. i l| K. Allen'* Sr. >re ?c JJR. R. Ft YAKBOROOGH .. PHYpI 'IAN ao<1 8UHUEON. I l.oti's'turai N. C. ' h< Office In Tmr> truth JH BiekeCt.building. p] Nitrbt calls l|n ???** *. I I Jm T. W Hickett'e [j] reaidenoe, ibuum 74 1 g B. A&1SSEN B(J(lO \ Jh KTT A t LK * ^ a, I L inirtburtf, lA C. Will praeB?M i i 'ill r.ii'cooV* ? rfth Office in Kgerton Build'unr -H WM. jlAY.VO'JD RErTI . >'UT'riJRYEyj1n''L\W ni Lo-Hrtmru, S. C ' jjj Will practice In all court* of Franklin and ? ..adjoining co iur4-M alo in the Supreme Court and in Hi? IJnifc* I State? Dt trict an(i m * Circuit Court. J).Bee orer, First. National 1 m Bank. * fc] , * ?j hi Jfl; im B. WILDER 5 *" 1 " - ' ai ATTORNEY AT LAW I h< LouUbur*, N..C. w Office on Main street in CoOper 'building. 1 J1' ; nl . 1 ; | h. gPRUILL A HoLUEN . - - ^ ArrjtYEY EAT LAW ! St Louisburg, N. C. . ^ Will attend -the court* of Franklin, Vance, Granville, Warr*. and Wake . ounties. alao the Supreme Cou'i t of North Carolina. Q< Prompt attaoti m given to collections Office w in Spruill building. U| T. W. Bickett R. B. Whit* I ft LtuieCorg, N'..t. Franklioton. N. C. J' glCKETT *. YHITE ' a' LAWYERS h; Lo lieburg. N. C. ^ The settlement < >? astute* for executors,|Ad- h ministrators an I Guardians is made a spec- . ialty, anr* seb ?ikU, required by law can be secured in ne ? ffice. W Office in Yarl orough ? .Bickett building bi Main street r* : V< yy M. PER: ON It ATTl RN^Y AT JUW g Lc lis bun. N. C. ci PmuUie iu all e< ae^e.?Office nn M*in Street ^ W' H YARi CpOUOH, Jr. v P' ATTORNEY AT LAW . a L< ilsburg, N. C. ~ 7" All tofful basinet intrusted to mi {^receive ?( jnroffipt attent >o. OfficeJ in ^Egerton ^ M p HOD' .._4U CONTBaI TOI aadJBUILDER * T Lev sburg, N. C. b n ? 'Tradiqar aqenfc fbi all kitlds of bufcitte1. h ^^I B drTford" i BMnST, ci u "* Fran rhnton. N. C., ? 4iX <3 NOTJC E. v, I The place forpooiry,raeD will be n flonndVt E g. s. V hWs ; restIumnt f; having recently nfored In Mead 15 owe new liildin||r. A Hrat-claae meal oatf and Will be .orvad Freeh n m and hot, with tbf.heat lb? market ? #. afford., dome teeee nM. rn Your* to pleaee. >< v - " O. (T. WHITE , p ~ j"t A Vampire How Hia Old Father and Mother Stood'by Their Son Even to j Giving Up the Farm. By F A. MITCHEL. Copyright. 1910. by American Preaa . Association. They say .thai doctors and clergy-1 " m""" ~~nt tUfTTTTHl1tJ' 111 Jt It I an any other class of men. but 1 lestlon' if the endless panorama of cldents typifying the different phases hum an life li Trlfnumit frf fin iss that every day passes before inkers. Sometimes whole stories are meted before us spread over a terra years. 1 am the repository of one ich story that 1 watched from its ginning to ltvelimux. * One afteruol^I^n weather beaten old rmer with silky white hair scattered er his head cuine to my desk and. tiling out a wallet, asked for a draft' i Denver Tor $200 In favor of Thomas | illiains Lie counted out the money, id then, having uothing to do while le draft was being prepared, began tell me the beginning^of this story. "I'm sendin' the money." he said, o my boy out In Colorado. He went it there a year ago. takln' some oney with,him that I give him, but ? hasn't bad much luck, and It's all >ne. Firs, be got sick: then wheu ? got well he went prospectln' and ruck somepin that looked good, but ime other fellers jumped his claim, hatever that means, and took pshM svay from him. "Then Tom got sick ag^Und rweqt a horseplttle and stayed there three lonths. Now, be's/^ot out of the irsepittle and looftm' about, for.etiimeIn. I'm sei^dlir this mouey to kive Itn a chajiet. Tom's his mother's pet. id slip-lays awake, bights worrltin* Jopt him. I'm mighty food of the iy myself somehow. He was always smart little chap?took lots of prize* id things at 8chule. "When he got old enough to work 1 (ikln/1 htm ?.~t_ uuitu uiui iu u?ri(/ ixit? un iuc iuiui e tried It for awhile, but 1 see purty nick he didn't take to It. \ lie was to smart to be contented to follow a low same 'a his father, who didn't ever get no eddication: 80 1 says him one day: "Tommy, reckon you'd etter feo to the city and work that way. This don't suit you.' He was ilghty well pleased at that. It altost broke ma's heart to part with lm. but she knowed It was better for Im and let him go. "Tom didn't like 1t In town sq well 1 be thought he would. Least a ways e didn't Btuy long in the, place he ent Into. They iriust 'a' thought a eap hira,. though, for ffiey raised Is salary twice, so he wrote me. But b got into a flght with otne of the jad clerks and got bimself discharged, le- said the head clerk, accused blm of :ealjn' some money. "Tom was alius an ambitious little lap, and after .leavin' hip place he included he'd go west and try and o*8omepln big. for ma and me agin e got too o:d to work. So we scraped p $500 and give it to him. and he"? At this moment a clerk laid the irmer's draft on my desk, and the rst chapter of bis story was finished', >r InPbegan to count over his soiled ad torn bills, now and again wetting Is thumb on bis lip as be turned them p. Then, leaving them to me and irefully folding'his draft, be put it In Is wallet, crammed" the wallet down ito the bottom of his pocket and 1th a "Goodby. Mr. Cashier." left the ank. The second chapter of the story la ery short. There is br.nllyjenough In to make a chapter, but there Is a Dod deal beneath the few words reulred to 'ell It. A girl of eighteen ime to the bank, laid down $24, nearr all In silver coin, and asked for n raft to .cover the nmrmnt, "To whom will you have it made ayable?" I asked. ? "Tom Williams*" In a soft voice, allost a whisper. 1 ordered the* draft made out. and le girl stood waiting Unlike the irmer, she didn't tell all JL would have ked to know, ho 1 asked: "Is Torn Will I-. us ;:?u - nrf>t:inr?~ "No." sin- re-'JeiV loo . ii or le floor. I h.wl nr.*- HL-n.1 ?1 - - > " * UIIU MW1. Iiai.vi Ills; iu IIV..I in. il.-> ui om'a -character as iliey appeared ic is father s account of htm. and uow jat money was goin;: t<- btni from hij tveetheart I began m despise liim. 1 anded the girl iln? ilrrife and bad a ood opportunity to study her. for sb< ever once looked up a.t ma Shr Thomas W,llllamsT"~SEe' said She id. I turned her fuiTds~~bver to a lerk to count." and "he, reported that tiey amounted to |G4Sv47. I ordered tie drifT to.-be aaide out. placed a balr before the- old la:ly and said, rlth a view tx> nijr enlightenment: "Mr: Will tuns prctiy busy?now*ays?" , "No, pa ain't, busy. .He's sick. I rlsh we had our boy here to help us. [e'a out In Colorado per apectln*. He iyi he's strujek itnulne or n-gotB' tc trike a mine* or someptii and wants )me money for grub staTcta* .or someIn like that. "We're dtlidlii' hloa aU we kin jest now. but bope to send him 6ome more blme bj\ We bad Bomr ~ money waved up for old age. but we've liiN U ihdrnvvln' ou Ij: for Turn. Mild this, la all there is left." When Mhe went out witb her draft j 1 found myself boiling witb lndiguu j tlm^it this worthless scamp, wbo want sucking the Tlfeblood out of bis old father aud mother?even hie sweetheart There was a visit from the sweetheart after this- to ask v for ti draft of $18.50. which convlnced me that Toui bad accepted the last uitioutii she had 1 sent blni. Then one day the old fanner came In pale and. trembling, evidently just out of a. sickbed, with the check ,or a mortgage cothpitliy1 for $!.- " 000. He asked for a draft in exchange for it payable to this vampire of a son We bankers make It a rule to mind our own^, business, but I had readied a point where I could no louger refrain from warning this poor old man. "So you have mortgaged your farifT ~ to send money to your son?" I said. "Yes; Tom's iu powerful need of i money. -The mine he thought was J goin' to turn out so fine petered out.. He says it closed up as he went down iusteod of openin'." "And you lost all the money you sent bjrn for the development?" "Yes. we lost it." replied the old mau with n tremulous voice. "Aren't you afraid you'll lose this too?" >. "I dunno. Tom's got another mine. He says he's sure o' thifr." "Of course it's nonbusiness ct mine, 'but ( don't like Kf see you. a wold fhan^ 'mortgaging jt>ur farm to send money to a sou who should be giving you |m^My^tttstead of jou giving It to him. Suppose you can't pay the Interest on the mortgare wlien It is due. You will lose your farm." The old niafe stood wiping his face' with a bandanna handkerchief, the pic tute of misery. "I know what yer mean/' he said, "but ma she won't keep back anything the boy wauts. She never dirt I always told her sbe'd spoil bim." "I'm afraid she has spoiled him. I You should know that your son Is not j wasting( your money at gambling or something like that and telling you that he's on the verge of -making a fortune to a mine before risking any more money on him.'* "That's what I tell ma." At this moment the draft was laid before aie.' bat Instead of banding It to him 1 said: "Hadtft you better think this overt" Be stood, his eyes tiled on vacancy, slowly swaying or tottering, and 1 knew there was a great contest going on In his mind. His lov? for his boy conquered "I'm bilged to you. Mr. Cashier.'Jind ' meblie you're right, but I alios bellev1 ed In m.v Tom. and I can't go back on ! him dow." | 1 banded him the draft, and be scuf| fled slowly out of the bank. I The old man must have borrowed all be'could on his farm, considering the transaction as a sale, for be failed ' to pay the first Interest that fell due on the mortgage. I knew this, because I saw In a newspaper a legal notlfe of foreclosure proceedings on bis farm. "Well." 1 sighed, laying down the paper, "the old man has given bis home to bis reprobate son; be has nothing moie to give. 1 shall not suf> fer again at seeing blm come Into the bank to do what 1 can't prevent bis doing." I The same day I met the young gtrl on the street whom 1 was sure was , Tom's sweetheart. 1 stopped her and ' asked: "Is Farmer Williams turned out of house and home?" "Not yet. sir." < "But he will be?" "I suppose so." i "Has his son sent him anything to ; help him?-.' "No.' sir. He wrote to say that he was' awful sorry to see the farm go. i but he coulC not help It." -> "H'm. Do you think a son who will treat his father and mother like that i would treat a wife any better?" P Tears cume Into bei eyes. 1 was ashamed at giving her this useless . pain.'I walked oh. About a month after this strapping i jwuujj icuuw wnn a tine, manly face , came Into the bank and aald he wished to opeh an account. I assented, and he made a deposit of $49,500. "Will yon please leave your slgna i ture tu this bookW I said. He took up a pen and wrote: i "Thomas Williams." i j "You Tom Williams?" I exclaimed. * [ "Yes. What do you know about 11 me?" I "Son, of Parmer Williams?" II "Yes;" I "Sold your mjne?" . I "Yes; I've sold a mine In Colorado, : or two-thirds of It , This money I'm . I leaving with you Is the first cash pay1 meat; there ere two others of $50.00(1 i each", "Has your father's farm gone to the ; mortgagee?" "Not Cm In time for that. 1 was afraid 1 wouldn't be. though Anyi way. I'd have bought It back. If It iBfcn't been for the money father sent me 1 couldn't have carried the deal through. I expected the farm to go r foi I lie mips.1' ?-?? "And the young girl to whom we gave drafts payable to your order?" He colored and said; "It's In with 1 the rest, but she mid I'll be one anyway. 1 shall transfer' two-thirds of this deposit to father Vtook hint m jtufl mothar In ^1* thlM* " J >tvrnt to see the old farmer and his wife and found them Jubilant. "1 'told you I bod confidence In my boy," t the firmer said. "lie wa? always ? : straight" V ? i I attended Tom William*' wedding mud kissed the bride. I couldn't help '?* . V . ' 1 _ ; \ * f DFE'S UPS AND DOWNS. Th? Magnificent Revenge of a Gov-""^^ ornor jt Mmouri, While Uobvrt Stewart was governor of Missouri a sleamboat man was brought in from the penitentiary as an applicant for a pardon. He was a large, powerful fellow, and when the governor looked at him he seemed strangely affected. He scrutinized the man long and closely. Finally he signed the document that restored the prisoner to libeHv. Before he handed i? to him ne said. "Vou will eommit some other crime and he inline peniten- tiary again, 1 fear.'" The man solemnly promised that he would not. The governor looked doubtful, mused a few minutes and said: "?otr will go back on the river and be a mate again. I suppose?" The man replied that he would, "Well, 1 want you .to promise me one thing," resumed the governor. "I want you to pledge your word that when you are mate again you will never take a-hillet of wood in your hand and drive a sick boy out" of a bunk to help.you load your boat on a stormy night." The steamboat man said he would not and inquired what the governor meant by asking him such a ques"Von. The governor replied: "Because some day that boy may become a governor, and you may want him to pardon you for a crime. One dark, j stormy night, many years ago, you ] stopped your boat-on the Mississippi^ river to take on a load of wood, j There was n hoy on board who was I working his passage from New Or- ! leans to St. I.ouis, but he was very j r 1 oitR wt icci aim n ao ijiug iu a bunk. You had plenty of men to do the work, but you went to that boy with a stick of wood in. your hand and drove him with blows and curses out fbto the wretched night and kept him toiling like a slave until the load was completed. I was that boy. Here is your pardon. Never again be guilty of such brutality." The man, cowering and hiding his face, went out without a word. ?Exchange. Origin of "Whig." Several reasons have been assigned to account for the word "Whig." 1, By some the word is supposid to he a contraction of a longer one. ; "whiggamorc," which in some parts of England and Scotland, especially Scotland, signifies a drover or herder. It was in 1(179 that the word first became common in the | British isles, when the struggle was in progress between the peasantry and the-aristocracy to have or not > to have the bill passed by" parliament to exclude the Duke of York from the line of succession. All who were opposed to placing the duke iff" the line of succession were ' derisively called "whiggamores," or ""drovers." i But Scotch tradition gives a dif-1 ferent reason for the existence of | the word. -It. is this: During the ! early religious wars in Scotland the weakest of* the factions used the w^rds "We Hope In God" as a mot-1 to. The initials of these words) were placed on their banners, thus,] "W. H. I. G.," and smraHdl'the fol-1 lowers of that clan were given the j title of "Whig," which was after- j ward attached as a party nickname. Perfectly Frank. . "I've listened to many divorce cases," said a I,ouisrille judge, 'Tmt | never have T heard such an all cmbracing appeal for separation as that Virginia darky gave before the country justice in Virginia. "Why, Sally," said the justice, "what are you doing here?" "Well, jedge. I wants a divorce." "You want divorce, Sally! Why, I thought Bill was a good nigger. Ain't he good to you ?" , "Oh, ya-as, jedge; Bill ifin't never Ijit me a lick in his life." "Well, doesn't he support you?" j "Ya-as, sir; he give mo GO cents) last Saddy night!" "Well, what in the world is the I matter with you, then?" "Jedge," said Sally in confidential' tones, "to tell you de truf, I jes' los' my taste for Bill."?Louisville ) Times. Optimism. When the optimist was disposoaoond m r\A f ^vnttfn olnnir tTllll Hlfl household impedimenta, into the ] cold street he chuckled furiously. ; "Why do you laugh, my friend?", inquired a passerby. "Because I have just now been I emancipated from toil," replied the ' optimist. "For years my life has | been one long struggle to keep the wolf from the door. But now thatI have been deprived of. the door I ] no longer am compelled to toil. Sweet indeed are the uses of adver, . sity!" Then the optimist' walked off, whistling gayly, into the sunshine. ?New York Sun. ." ' I ' 1' - ^ _ . * ? - -- * ! -J? ^ t Are.Y ou | Honest? | 1 With ^our land when for the K sake of sa^dng a few doltars B you use a fertilizer whose K only recorimeiydation is its U analysis. ,lt reduires no spe- * H cial knowledge to mix mate- U -. rials to analyses. The value R of a fertilizer lies in the ma- 'U terials useo( so as not to ^ H . over feed Jthe plant at one time and starve at another. y I* This is wntr Royster brands ' D ? 4 are so tpopular. Every ingredient has .its particular U work to do. Twenty-fiveyears experience in making y goods/for Southern crops has - enabled us to know what is . required. R uibi iraae huitk lsun every Mf gs J TRADEMARK U 3 HfiSfcr x 8 REGISTERED s -w F. S. Royster Guano Co. n ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^NORFOLK^VA.^ ^ ^ ^ ^ J FURNITURE! ^NS^V\ 1 * ' u 1 X We with t? inform our customer* and friends that we have moved our large stocky of FURNITURE AND UNDER' - ! J ' ? Tai/imA lei mm ire \ i MrxiiNva ourrLic.o / - r x i i to the building on Nasjl street formerly occupied by the dispensary, where we will ba'glad to have y^u call to see ua when iw town. Hill &. Sledge GROCERIES! . . \_ ; i \ - ; ; ' . \ v We have a nice fresh stock of Groceries that we would 'be glad te have you examine before making yojir purchases. We dan save yoa money on anything in our line. . " - -\ . 2 ' t -a. tt_ v ; 3 m^ii_ ivtr*ld.i. .L/Cl us onow zou ana iauK wud xoa We also carr,y a nice line of General Merchandise and Fruits When in town give us a call, we willl do our utaeafrfi* make your /visit pleasant fiFn H rhnop-FR ' / MAIN STBHET l/oUISBURQ, N G. ^T7" .