"MY BLOOD IN FINE CONDITION" Rvery sufferer from Blood Poison should rend what Mrs. Q. F. Medlln, of Weldon, N. C.. says of her experience: "l wus a terrible sufferer teorn Blood Poison. If the . *?skin would be broken, the flesh would become inflamed, Itch and burn, and develop $ Into sores. Before the birth of ope of my children, my whole body becnma fearfully swollen, and 1 was in a serioutv condition generally. 1 used Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy and It cured me. My blood Is In line Condition. I believe If it had M>t been for Mrs. Joe Persou's Remedy I Avould have died, its value ip priceless." / Away back la the days of Moses it waa said, *'Iq the blood thereof Is the_ life," aud never were truer words /poketi, This vital fluid Is the essence of life and health, and when it becomes immre, impover ished or ptisoned the result is debility, weakness, l<fcs of vitality, energy nnd llfo Itself. Wlthbut good blood,/good health is impossible. 1 / MRS. JSE PERSON'S REMEDY is a sure Sffcclflc for all/troubles due to impure, Impoverished nndr poisoned blood. Such as Ucz&na, Old Boras, Scrofula, and the long tram of attendant ailments, Ineluding Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Stomach Troubles, Nervousness, / Rheum&tism, Ca-* tarrb. Female Troubles/ and gonertrt^'rundown conditions in b<wh men and women. ! It feeds tha blood,?drives out every ve^-j tlge of poison, tones/up the nervous sys- j torn, Induces wound /ind refreshing sleep, [ and hrlngs tie .on two body back to Its natural healthy condition. Mrs. Joe Pdrson'fl Remedy is sclent Hi- i cally prepared! from purely vegetable Ingredients. It nosltlvely contains no opiate i or narcotic of nnv nlnd, no Iodide of Potassium or other mineral?Just a compound of helpful herl>s, nature's own remedy for hu man ills. \/ As a Tonic, Alterative. Blood purifier or Nervine, it has no equal. It quickly con- \ qtters Nervous Prostration ana- Insomnia. ! We don't care how many doctors have J eaUl you couldn't be cured?Mrs. .Too Person's Remedy will cure you If yon will only give It a chance. T^rlte us for testimonials from people., who expected long ago to be dead, but a^e living today and i glad to tell how this Remedy cured them. V In cases of external trouble, lnflamma" tlon. ulceration or Itching humor, our Wash should be used with the Remedy. For sale by druggists, or supplied direct on receipt or price, $1.00 per bottle; 6 bottles for $5.00; 1 dozen by express prepaid for $10.00, bv ^ MIS. JOI FEISTS IEMEST CO., Uttitll, M. C. NOTICE OF EXECUTION SALE. 1 North Carolina, Franklin County. In the Superior Court, J. W. llolTingsworth, va Caswell Hayes. By virtue of an execution directed to the undersigned from the Superior Court of Franklin t ounty in the above entitled action, I will, on Tuesday, the second day of the January Term, 1911, of Franklin Superior Court, it being the 24th. day of January, 1911, at the noon recess of court, at the Court House Door in said County, sell to the highest bidder for cash, to satisfy said execution, ail the right, title ana interest which the said Caswell Hayes, the defendent, has in the following described real estate, viz: that lot or pareel of land in Louisburg Township, Frank in County, near to the Town of , -Louisburg, bounded as follows: On the North and EaBt by the lands of M. S. Davis and on the South' and West by the lands of W. H. Pleasants, containing 6 1-4 acres, more or less. This Dec. 23rd., 1910. W. M. Boone, Sheriff. COMMISSIONERS' SALE OK TIMBERED LAND. By virtue of an order of re-sale, made by the Superior Court of FrankCounty in that Special Proceedings . . ^BititU'd Mrs. Kate White, C. T. ^^Itffcaves et al vs. Julius Tant, Mrs. Rebecca Perry et al, the undersigned commissioners will, on Tuesday, .the 24th day of Januaiy. 1911, it being the second day of - the January Term of Franklin Superior Court, at noon recess of court, at the Court House Door in Louisburg. N. C., offer for sale to the highest bidder, at public auction, that tract of andjinoxyn as the "Tom Rogers tracj^1ifl)urin?s Township, Franklin C$>dnty,N.C.. adjoining the lands of J """" " J. M. White and others and bounded as' follows: On the North by the lands of I J. M. White, on the East by the /lands .of the estate of. Amy Bell on the I '?<tfeouth by Crooked Creek and on the I West by the lands of the estate of A. I J . White, containing 04 acres, more or less. Terms of sale?cash. This Dec. 23rd . 1910. WM. H. Ritfftv ? If COM. W. M. Person j .. LAND SALE, r order of the Superior Court of I iklin County in the specia proceedin tit led "Sue P. Alford, Admx. of Alford, dec'd, vs B. N. Alford et heirs of L. S. Alford", I will sell ablic auction to the highest bidder, le Court House door iu Louiaburg. 1 i ^*y nf iary, 1911, that tract cf land situn Franklin County and Cypress ik Township, adjoining lands of C. 'aughan, Mrs. R. Y. Yarborough, others, and described as follows:? legiuntng at a stake, C. M. Vaughcomer; thence N. 11-2 E. 25.55 as- to a stake, formerly a pine ip, Vanghan's corner in Mrs. Yarug's line; thence by old survey e from copy of Mr. Fuller's survey ?ut thirty years ago, S. 87 degrees 1.10 chains to a stake, now Mrs. trough's corner; thence N. 8 des E. 1 chain to an elm ; thence E. ) chains to an ash on Little Creek; ce S. 8 degrees E. 1 chain to the J. Davis Comer; thence west 20.50 ns to a pine stump; thence S, 5 dos W. about 7 chains to a stake and ters in Harris's line; thence in a line N 881 2 degrees W. 16 chains stake south of the creek; thence 1-2 degrees E. 8.25 chains to a , thence N. 881-2 degrees W. 16 ns to the beginning; containing hundred [100] acres." le terms of the sale are one third i, balance in twelve months with rest at 6 per cent from date of This the 21st day of December, K B. White, Com. NOTICE faying qualified as administrator ibrsm Frazier, deceased, late of oklio county, this is (<> notify all gins having claims against the te of said deceased to exhibit n to the undersigned on or before 29th day of Deo.-, 1911, or this o? will be placed in bar ot their 'Very. All persons indebted to estate will please make iinraedsettlement This Deo. 29tb, 1910 HARROD FRAZIER, Adm. M. Person, Atty 1?> . ? WrWf$> 7 % & ' I ' ' \ .' ' _ THE HOME CIR Plsasant Evening Rever cated to Tired Motl the Home Gircle i CRUDE THOUGHTS FROM ONK KIND OF MAN a dourteay to women, old and young, should be a part of everybody's borne training. Without if'he is likely to j be boorish and sellisb; and a rude, | overbearing brother and son is in j danger of developing into an. exact- ^ ing, discourteous husband. He is . likely to boloug to the class of boys v who come into the house and say to t their skyers: "lleie, Mary, you've got the oliair ? I always sit in, and Katie has the paper I want! Let tue have them!" f He receives the chair and paper , without a word of thanks, and then , says: . , "There's a button off my overcoat, j and I yvant one of you girls to put it ^ on before morning. Mary, run and get my slippers." His hat, gloves and overcoat have ^ been thrown down m different parts of the room for his mother or sisters ' to pick up and put away; His moth- 1 er comes into the room and he says: "Mother isn't supper most-ready? ' I am half starved!" "It will be ready in a few min- . utea," hia mother replies. "Well I wiab you'd hurry up." At the table he is served first and always baa the beat of everything, a oourae well calculated to foster his 8 selfishness and autocratic tendencies. * " . , In his own home he is a sort of despot. He feels that bis personal comfort should be the chiet end and aim of his wife's life. A delayed meal or a broken off button brings on an aoute attack of utiforgiveable offense, and a missing called sulks. lie is likely to be one of the men who keep their seats while ladies stand in the horse-oirs, arguing while he does bo that "women have just as much right to stand as men." Obtrusive discourtesy of this kind nearlv has its orign in the early home life of the man who manifests it. ? * . WHEN WOMKJf SHOUl.D MAK11Y. Probably the best time for the average woman to marry would be any age between twenty-four and thirty-five. It is not said that no woman should marry earlier or later than either o these ages; but youth and hnnltli and ?irrnr ara nrdina?lv ? - V.?MU..., at their highest perfection between these two periods. Early marriages 1 ore seldom desirable for girls and that for many reasons. The brain is immature the reason is feeble and the character is unformed. The con- 1 sideration which would prompt a ' girl to marry at seventeen would in ' many cases have little weight with 1 her at twenty-tour. XI seventeen 1 she is a child, at twenty-four a wo man. < Where a girl has intelligent parents, the seveD years between seven ' teen and twenty four are the .period ' when mind and body are moat amen- 1 able to wise discipline and best re- ' pay the thought and toil devoted to ' their development. Before seventeen few girls have learned to un- ' deratand what life is what duty is. They cannot value what is best either in the father's wisdom or in the mother's tenderness. When married at the childless period they are like young recruits taken fresh from the farm and the workshop and hurried off to a long campaign without any period of preliminary drill and training or like a school boy removed from school to a curacy without being sent to the university or to a theological hall. Who can help grieving over a child-wife especially if she has children and a husband who is an eic- ! perienoed and possibly an exacting boy-man. The ardor of "hie love soon cools the visionary bliss of ber poetiosl imagination, vanishes like the summer mist; there is nothing left but disappointment and wonder that what promised to be so beautiful and long a day abould be clouded A . .. \ ?* / ! - ' CLE COLUMN. ies.?R Column Dsdiners as Thoy Join at Euening Tide THE EDITORIAL PEN I most before sunrise. tO* Youth in sweet with its tiery filer prise and I suppose mature manlood will be just as much go, though u a more calmer way, and age, [uicter xtill will have its own werijs ?the tiling is only to do with liftvlmt we ought, and what is suited to >ach of its stages; do all, enj'kV them ?andt I suppose these two rules unouni to the same thing To die is a serious tiling; to live is ar more serious. Living, we hccu nulate die evidence that shall lie u#ed against us when passj hi'ougli death to the judgment. Learn to think seriously of ?if - that rou may think seriously of death. ? 0. _ Now that the ladies ate sugftieraLy employed as stenographers^and VDH\vriter operators the uolunins hi lews papers are bur lened witli cuarse ittempts at humor, in which the iretty amanuensiB ami her alleged lliriations with the business men are he inspiring theme. Perhaps these okes, on account of their insipidity, re harmless and do not deserve the ligmty of a remonstrance, but neverheless, we enter bar protest agaiast inv attempt to place in a ridiculous ir iruproper light the honeat and vorthv occupation of a woman. All lonor to the girl who has the energy iluek and determination to qualify lerselt to ~he sustaining and niakr lerself uaefulln (the ureat world o1 justness and flighting, withering lhame be his portion who woulc ilace the lightest straw 111 her wav There are enough actual follies weaknesses and foibles of men t< atigh about without making inno sent women the subject of ridiculi liy making them figure in incident: sntirclv the product of an inipuri imagination. The shafts of ridiculi should be aimed only at those/win ieserve punishment and ^fchi-re ari unough of ilus class, t.lpd knows; ant nit and humor hike their churn When indulged.-in at the expense o anything that is .good au<t useful A womira reputrtioii is too (ielicat to be roughly handlod and any ligli treatment of her occupation injure her who is identified with it. acknowledge it. Louisburg Has to Bow to th< Inevitable?Scores of Endorsements Prove It. After reading tile public state Tient of this fellow-sufferer givei below, vou must eoimyto this conolu lion: A remed* which cured year igo, which has lent the kidney* it juud l.ealLli aifiLt, liii hu tuliui jpon ta pertoriijAhe. same work ii ithor cases. Read this: Mrs W. C. Jones, 121 N. Blood irorth St., Raleigh, N. C., says: "M: sackached constantly sad often I ha< tains across my loins. Sometimes ] ras in auch bad shape that I eould lardly get up tfter sitting for awhile I did not get my proper rsst a light and I suffeied intensely froir Rheumflcife S IT CURES Rkeamatlau and Blood Dli#iaei The cause of rheumatism Ia excess uric acid In th? blood. To crfre rheumatism this acid must bo exnfclled from the system. Rheumatism if an Internal disease and requires An Internal remedy. Rubbing with o/s and liniments may ease the pain.mut they will no more cure rheumatism than paint will change the flbtr of rotten wood. Cares Hhennstli m Tf Stay Cared. Science has dlscc veref a perfect and complete cure callei Rlfeumaclde. Tested in hundreds of asdb, It has effected marvelous cures. th/umacldo removes the cause, gets at tm Joints from the Inside, sweeps the dbisons out of the system, tones ut* th jfatomach. regulates the bowels and kldfAvs. Sold by druggists at 60c. and Jlf In the tablet form at 25c. and 60c., byfmall. Booklet free. Bobbltt Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md. Gets At The From The Inside. Rlicumflcife /" ITCUBES . .. ' V Why does Great Britlan buy \ Its oatmeal of us? Certainly it seems like carrying i coals to Newcastle to speak ol expert- ' ing oatmeal to Scotland and yet, every year the Quaker Oats Company sends hundreds o! thousands of cases of Quaker Oats to Great Vritian and 4 Europe. t The reason is simple; while the ' English and Scotch have fer centuries eaten oatmeal in quantities and with a regularity that has made them the most rugged physically, and active mentally of all people, the American has been eating oatmeal and trying all the time to improve the methods of manufacture so that he might get that desirable foreign trade.,? , * - ? How well be has succeeded would be seen at a glance at the export reports on Quaker Oats. This brand is without a rival; is packed in regular packages, and in hermetically sealed tins for hot climates. 51 headaches The doctor's medicine. " brought md no relief and wjieli I heard of the good work Linares Kidiiey Pills wrre doing in cases like mine, I got a box. This remedy drove,away ray aches and pains and restored me to better health than I had enjoyed for JearsV (Statement 1 given January 30j 1908.) BE-KKDOliSBMKXT. On December a, 1910, Mrs. Jones added to the aliove: "I have not been troubled to any extent by my back or kidneys stnee I used Doao's Kidney PillB some years ago. I still take pleasure in recommending this preparation." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New Yerk, sole agents fer the Unit ad States. Remember the nam??Dean's and take no other. CMUErrnsptjLs DIAMOND BRAND ' LADIES I t Ask y~r I>ri IMI I for CHT-CEBS-TBR'S A DIAMOND BRAND riDLS in Ran nnS/>\ r Gold metallic boxes, sealad witk Blue\%?7 Ribbon, Takb no oTUEa. % of yo*r V/ I i>m?ut ui uk hr <n rain Tiara V DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for twenty-flw? years regarded as Bast .Safest, Always Reliable. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS 'I TIME PUPRYU/U ?B P WORTH > trie-, c?cn I yvncnL tested ' Pine9alve ACT3 L,l4fcA Celtic? t '~orJ{E.T w-rrw pOLLii t " WE OFFER. FOR. .SALE L THE FINEST 3 COPF1N BI/.SI WE S 1 - ' b 1 CLII ' AND FIND i HAVE TWO C $25 EACH. AND ANoTH HAVE HELPE WEEK.S, WE We have come in i until you - - - J and kitcl J.W. HC I LO r ' :\ " ' * ^ t ' * (Jr - The Big I 0 First to Make a St Ginghams. Ab( Now Foil Dont fail to see the real hargaius they are already on exhibition, do vo spring and summer sewing. Let me j black goods and have in stock or 011 fh in this seosons Voils, Mohair. Chiffoi B8, 36 inchss, all si[k talfeta, etc. If y aure to give the Big Little Store a loo requested Messrs Ziegler Bros, to senc they will arrive today, and I have the oome to see them, select pour style, \ measure, insuring you a fit and guara jible to obtain at auy price, and remei per cent cheaper in price than any adv ?n never fool, (some don't care- Wh might be cheaper elsewhere you ir. sundle leaveB my store it is paid for Ss*\. R. Z. EC v v v v >..? v v???'if 'J v H J OUR ENTIRE UNDERT. E.S.5 THAN CO.ST. 2 H IN THE COUNTY. WE 6 HESS. CALL FOR TER HAVE HI TO FTON con WE ARE CROWED FoF 1HURCH ORGANS WE OF TWO PARLOR ORG AN J ER AT $35, WORTH I D US TO .SELL 20 PI A : HAVE ONLY ONE LEFj' a car loadf of 30011. Reserve yc . see us. Uew si( len safes. (LUNGS UISBURG, N jttle Store Lowing^jl New Spring >n/Twenty Pieces wice ae Many ow Soon +;} in white goods, laces and embroideries, u know of a better, line to commence >/ jet yon busy 1 am making a specialty of S e way all of the best [at moderate-prides] 1 uanama, silk worp, aHenrietta fine serg- /_ on desire to practice economy you will be */ k before making your purchases. I have i I me a line of sample shoes and slippers/ , privilege of keeping them two vreekzZ ?eel, width, etc, in fact I will take/Vour nteeing to deliver just the best shob posnber Ziegler are better in quality ana 25 enised shoe- Some of thq/people you en its advertised or whep^ you think. it lay know its cheaper hbre for when a -K / y jERTON V ^ ? "i* "i4 "i1 SJ* "i1 "i* ^ ?i? ?i? ?i? i AKING GOOD J EAR.SE, ONE. o our of THE MS ETC. I0VED INER . Room, we TER. $ 1 5 AND ONE AT $25 >oUBLE. YOU IN TWO , BUT pianos to >ur orders ie boards * =?= --? # , WORTH

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