Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Oct. 6, 1911, edition 1 / Page 9
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- - J*rofes#ional Card \ ?i? ' i, i __ ?1?. j 0R. JOBi WHITaKER 1'raetTce limited to diseaaoa of Eye, Ear fjose and Throat. In LouUburg first Monday in each month. _ . 8TCAHT DAVIS : ABCH1TE0T \ ^ Louiaburg, N. C. Suburban properties laid tout for development* Leveling arid drainage work, General Surveying. ? j r\R. ARTHUR HYNES F ,E1HNG, Surgeon I>?*ntl?t, Offlre In Ford Huildlng, gain and Nash street, Louutburw, N. C. , Hours: 9 to 4:30. Phone No. 40. - ... ^ ^ J ' . i jjll. H. A. NEWELL, physiWn ' Uiuisborg, N. C. V ph< ne No. 166 ^RANKLINTON HOTEU FrnokliDtoo. N. C. < R. A Speed, PropHett r Good Llrerr io coamec ion J^K. C. H. BANKS ; I . DEflTAL SURaio I L'.-vttbant, N. ottice in Hick* Building, 9 t? n Street. i ' W\~'* ' ?? 1 p H, COOKE _ ..l attobmet-at-lA v "y; Louisbnrg, N. C.jl ; (Jeer Cooper A Pkanbots Stie. Prompt v'atfcentioa gtTen all legal business entrusted to B? v I . 1 DR. J. E. MALONE, StJL Health ; "^ouisburg, N. . ' ' Office i^'Aycbck Drug St< rl, Market i otruet. umce practice, par^ery and consultation. ! ^ ^ JJH. 3. P BURT ~ I I ' I y PHYSICIAN and 3LiJ<JI-Ln J Louisburg, W..CI I Office over P. 8. A K. K. ijlleols Store ( ; I JJK. R. F. VARBOROUuk' I I /HYSTIAN and SLIMEON! . Louinliora. N.U. * I I Office in Yarborojgh & BiJkcett building. I Night rails answered f. om u. W. IHirkett h j. I residence. phone 74. T 1 ' $ } I ^yM- lj^y\V<KjD ItLJFFIN ATfutOlfc^ *TF\AW 1 Losisburg. N. |C. 1 1 Will practice to all courts od Franttiu and adjoining couuties. also in the tnpreme I CmMi,on<1 Id the United 3tufes Dirftnct and I'iflbl Court, over First National II ujwt . I r J lf|l B. WILDER ATTORNEY|AT LAW \ Louisburg. N. fc. ,1 < I Office Qa^fain street in Colper building. i IOPROILL' A HOLUEN I I ATTORNEYS ATLA W I Louisburg. 'N.lc. WVill attend the courts of .Laoklio, Vukce, ' tvWraaville. >Varis.. and U counties, also p Ihe Supreme Couit ., forth Carolitu. Vrompt atWhtion given to follectioiiH m| In Spruill building. I 1 T. W. Bickett. J R. B. Wlilto?\ k KJuisburg* N.,&. ^Franklintoti. \ . <i. | (' YICKETT A'WHITE j _?lH LAWYER 5; * V j Louisburg. N . 11 he settlement o'est^tei l< * e* *eiit->rr?,' Ad-1 ' WaUfrator* an I OuarJiAu is made a spec-ft ] & Alt/. ?\o ' bonds requii d by law ??n be n , cored in ,te \. i UHJcul iiv jfHt-hdvni.cn at ItirkHi i.i'iiiuiig \ 1 y' M. ynSoN \ | tiofcSBY AT La w ' j Loui?bur?. N,-?- . , notice io'STcourtji" OfBrw An Main St root I rffi. 'Jfk-. - - *-. ^ ' " I j f-H. .T.iftBOIl?lJ(?K.-lr ,1 " ' --Art /_ V-' ^A-roRNRY AT Kl W ? i jfcA^oJltl'orK. N._. t,V Ucv! h\i3hfti? iritrft* tal.f? Bipr-Wrivn : uTVaf*? jjj* 1 Egerton i s ; [ K. ^ , ' " j V UONflKAirtOll'sml Bftll DER ' &* <$"""' "i C. ( jT u?Ot .i*?j fefornl kind* of bntlding "tip- 1 p ?, arrt*t|KA4i*fH-? and Tija . Arqhltec- 1 |F j Dft FOFiD ' &' ?' dentiSt ' ^ j ^/riA'Hintpn. N. p., ,. i 1 .* 1??? I i fcjf ROGttas niworker. { LoaJsburg, N. CI Till mak&i estimates 6n alnv- job "ork Guaranteed, Cal on write I on in noed of anything lin my \ i r- ' /* \ ;? . V t . 4 A ' <n PRESSURE OF AIR. It May Readily Turn the Thermometer Into a Fibber. THE BOILING WATER POINT . */On ths Seal* This la Marked at 21! Degrees but Under Certain Conditiona It May Be Several Hundred Degress?The Critical Temperature. Oo nn ordinary Fahrenheit thermom eter there la writteu opposite 212 da grees "Boiling point of water" and opposite 32 degrees "Freeilug point ol water." Neither of these Is correct et cefct for a certain condition of the atmosphere. and that Is when It gives on the barometer about thirty Inches, oi fifteen pounds pressure to the squari inch. This is the ordinary' pressure al what la known as sea level, and to thb all thermometers ore calibrated. In s mountainous region tbe pressure li hardly ever so much at fifteen pounds and water.bolls at sometimes as low at 200 degrees. If water Is boiled In a'diving bell where the pressor# Is forty or flftj pounds a square Inch, Its temperature will be several hundred degrees In Btead of 212. If water Is boiling in i neer vacuum the temperature la sc small that the hand-thrust Into the water would actually feel cold. What has been said about the bolllnj point applies Co some extent to th< freeetng potat. bat here it differs foi different materials, whereas tbe re marks about-the boiling point of watei apply to the boiling points of ai liquids. Bom# substances when they free? become larger,* while others become smaller. On this depends tbe freexinj point at different pressures of atmoe pbere. Water expands on freezing; sc do type metal and some other things All other substances become smallei on freezing. Water pipes burst wher the water freezes. Coins of gold ant oil rclr Ann atamnn^ Inataail ?d Valme molded, for the metals grow smaller or freezing or solidifying, and consequent ly the coin would be wabbly. It has been found that the thing! that .expand on solidifying, as water freeze it a lower temperature whet the pressure is Increased, while tlx others freeze at a higher.. When c substance that expands freezes undei higher pressure than usual It has tc exert more force to shore the pressor) away, and consequently has to use ui more of its heat energy, thus losing more heat and becoming colder. Take the snbstance that contract: when it solidifies. The pressure wil help it to get smaller, and consequent ly the greater the pressure the lesbeat It has to lose on attaining tlx solid state, so It will freeze at hlghei temperature. If the pressure Is greai enough It may freeze or solidify at : thousand degrees temperature, whlcl is high enough to change most snb stances to rapor under ordinary at mospheric pressure. This is one of. the reasons advance) to prove that the Interior of the eartl Is solid, for the assumption Is that tlx core is made up of substances thai contract when freezing, and there Is of course, an enormous pressure a fee hundreds of miles below the surface. In regard to the boiling points oi liquids, there Is an upper limit to the point at which a thing bolls?that is changes to the state of vapor. It 1: called the critical temperature. N( matter "how great a pressure exists 01 a substance. If It Is at a temperatur: greater than Its critical Ifcwlll changto vapor anyhow. The ignorance of this point held back the making of liquefied gasessuch as air. carbon dioxide, etc.?foi many years. The experimenters tried to liquefy gases at ordinary "tempera lures by enormous pressures, whereas If they had Just cooled the gases be low their critical temperatures before applying the pressure llquefactlor would have ensued immediately. This Is the method employed today In making liquid air. The air Is comtressed at first and then allowed tc Issue from a small Orifice, thus ex pending and cooling. Is then pumped back and compressed by the pump allowed to go through the orifice again,, thus cooling still more, until at lasftlt Is below the critical tempera ture\ when^tbe compression caused by the Wmp liquefies It..'? Lawrence Hodires In Chicago ftecord-Herald. " \ In Trouble. . * S "YesA he raid regretfully. "I'm In a Hght corner. My sweetheart Is wild or the -subject of germs and microbes, and she Insists that I must-choose between herVrid my mustache. Tm tc lose one or (he other." . "Lose the mustache, my boy." 'That|s Jusi the trouble. If yon erer saw met without It you'd pity my haunting fear that when It's gone I'll loee the girl too t' __t\_ ' /"? The Simple Answer. A society man at n luncheon said oi a weil known suffragist: "She accomplishes a great deal, but tome bf ber methods are not quite fair. A man once inquired of her husband: "Do you give your wife ah allowance. or does she ask for money when she wants It? " "Both," was the simple.answer." ' In Doubt. "Wste you ever up before met" asked a magistrate. "Shore, I don't know, yer annter. What time does yoor anner get up!"? London Anew ess. Pay whet you owe. end you'll km what yooown.?Franklin. w SUNDAY SCHOOL. , Lesson III.?Fourth Quarter, For Oct. 15, 1911. , THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. > T.xt of the Lesson. Ezra 1. 1-11; II, 6470?.Memory Versos, i, 3, 4?Gotdsn [ Ts?&, Mie. vii, 18?Commentary Propared by RoV^D, M. Stoerns. Am wo turn to tl?e story of the return from Babylon some words coma - to -tulnd such us these: "Every pur[ po3e of the Lord shall be performed," "Wbutsoevor the Lord pleased that did He." "Ho worketh all things after I the counsel of His own will" (Jer. 11, 20; Ps. cxxxv, ?; Eph. 1. 11). ! Compare the previous chapter, verses 21. 22, and the words of the > Lord Jesus In. Luke zxlv,- 44, **A11 ' things must be fulfilled which were written In the law of Moses and In > the prophets and In the psalms con corning Me." All the .predictions concerning the captivity of Israel and . Judah were fulfilled, and now undet ' Ezra and Nebemlah the predictions > concerning the return from captivity are to be fulfilled, God controlling'the i hearts of kings to bring It about.' Just ) as surely shall all predictions concern> lug a still future restoration be ful f.llcd, and they shall then be pjucked t up no more nor see evil any more l Neither shall they weep any more f (Amos lx. 15; Zeph. Ill, 15; Isa. XXX, 19). The Lord shall be their everlast " ing light, and the days of their mournI lng shall be 4nded (Isa. lx, 20). He Is quite able to accomplish ah ? that He has purposed, and It Is out i privuege to want with Him and sec C Him do It If we are abiding In Him - He may use as, but He will work oul > His etefnal purpose, and He cannot fall nor be discouraged (Epb. ill, 11 r Isa. xlll, 4). He may use a Cyrus 01 i Darius, an Ezra or a Nehemlah, but 1 He Is ever saying, "I will work, and E who shall hinder It?" (Isa. xllH, 13.) > Cyrus Is one of the seveu men men tloncd by name before they were born Isalnh speaks of him as God's chosen i. one over 150 years before be came on . earth (Isa. xllv, 28; xlv, IT). Just at i' Joslah was mentioned by name and some things that he would do about t 300 years before he was born (I Kingt xlll, 2; II Kings xxill. 15-17). How in > spiring are the words. "I am God. and ) there Is none else; I am God, and > there is none like Me. declaring the ; end from the beginning, and from an clent times the things that are not yet > done, saying. My counsel shnll stand I and I will do all My pleasure.' "Known unto God are all His workf ' from the beginning of the world" (Isa > xlvi, 9-ll;*c(s xv, 18i. ' It was the Lord who stirred up the 1 spirit of Cyrus, the king, to send Ezrt ) and the people back to Jerusalem t< > build the house of the Lord God ol Israel, and It was He who stirred u] - the hearts of all who went baci (verses 1, 5). Cyrus acknowledged I that It was the Lord God of heavet who had made Jilm ruler over th( > kingdoms of this world and hac I charged him to build the bouse at . Jerusalem (verses 2-4). and he called ' for volunteers to go up and do this commanding those who did not go t< f help In every way those who went > It Is all Important to notice this, foi . the church seems to have forgotten It ' and Is giving Itself up to schemes ol ' every kind to draw money from peo 1 pie who are not Interested and whe ' have no part In the Lord's work, nol being children of God.. Notice In Ex xxxv. 5-29; xxxvl, 7, that the ma ! terlal for the tabernacle had to be willingly offered, and they brought sc abundantly that Moses bad to ask 1 them to stop bringing, as more than enough had come In for all the work. 1 Concerning the temple, David said, "I have prepared with oil my might ' for the house of my God, because 1 1 have set my affection to the house oi my God." He also said, "Who am I, and what is my people that we'should be able to offer so willipgly after this ' sort, for all things come of Thee, and of Thine own have we given Thee" 1 (I. Chron. xxir, 2,* 3-14). A willing mind is everything, and God asks no one to give or to do that which He does not give them the ability to give or do (II Cor. vHi. 12; I Pet. iv, 11). The love of -Christ' is the one con"" straining pow?s< Think of the 5f4O0 vepsels of gold and. silver which had been seventy years'ln the bands of the enemy, now about to. be restored to Jerusalem (verses 7-11)1- JOotice also the nearly 50,000 people, (verses 04-65),' and consider the restoration that Is to be from 1 all lands, both "before and after the coming of the Messiah in glory, that Israel may blossom and Odd and fill the face of the earth with fruit (Exek. xxxvl, 24, 25; Isa. Ix. 9; XXVli, 8; Pa. Ixvii. 1-7). In chapter ii. 59-82. we see the necessity of being on the books at)d can understand better the forte of Luke x. 20; Roy IX, 35. If not registered on the La' b"s book of. life thgre is no kingdom or - us. But "whosoever w.ill" may take the water of life freely. and "htm that cometh" shall not be cash .out, so that all who. have heard nay be registered if willing. Vessels suggest people, for ws are spoken of lj earthen vessels, and vessels meet for the Master's use (II Cor. Iv, -7; II Tim. ti,; 21). and we must Be as content ta jee earthen as to be silver or gold, to be second sort as wall as first /chapter 1. 10. 11). Then in verse 9 we read of nine and. twenty knives, and cutting things abound on all sides, all for our good, and to man' If est in these mortal, bodies the Ufa of Teens Christ (Bom. vMI. 28. 29) r " . ? a ' ' ' ' - ?- ? ; k ' ' " ""' ? jm,g Fall If it*8 a surface to I ? be painted, enameled,' pj _ ? stained, varnished or fin- H 17 11 * ished in any way, there's H " 3.11 IS an Acme Quality Kind ER I ? i to fit the purpose. ra- ^ P shabl home, b< time youi A little A I \paints An ! the liom I more atti I some, all ^ refinkh sn< i /I cost. Exj / I by phone / I you Five S I / B House Pai / I McKinne Br LOUISBWRG, > \ - Lost. |kj > Between Ffcrrell's bridge and Maple- I ill |\w I' c ville one autmqobile tire and one auto- ~ 1* 1 mobile lamp, /^jjder will return to i this office and r^ceTV^euitable reward. ySor/sal?. 7 A niceAfentle Jroraes, buggy and har- ? < I ness, for sale clfeaV J- A. "Turner. J. Q DUV 11*1111 [ For Sjae. f One fine JerseylBull 7 years old, . weight, 900 pounds. Will sell for $40 "DreSGrVlIlJ i cash to quick bo^r. I J. W. King. " ? : NX3tackTO every1 TAX PAYEES L As the taxes foi 1911 will . , ~ Am A ATT : be duq October yst, 1911 and Ai A | they haying bem placed in my J hands 'foil col lotion this is to / , notify you tof call at my office /? [ in LooisbuW and settle same / at once. As I am given a | shorter tto collect same U I^.A IVI | than hhsAeen given heretofore * " * it will he necdssary for you to ^ attendyro it at once to save ~ both n us trouble. . y W. M. Boone, iggoi f Sheriff. JUOi \J Bulbs l\ For th . - rrg i i _ * uumowersana Big Stock \J Plants 1 ~t \J You can get some big Our importation of ffdoch and holland r .. .? r bulbs are now arriipnKA By planting the new goods. C early you get bead res Alts. We are leaders in choice apt flowers for weddings and all social If unctions, Artistic TTT_ J. floral offerings/ Ine decorative pot! VV cltC-Ll plants, rose buAes, hedgeXpiants, I ~t shrubbries, evergmens and thaob^treea FlirtllG Price List /on Application ' Mhil, phone, Jnd telegraph orders promptly executed by J. L. p * CO. AARON DEI " *1 ft's* A 'c V- - - t.i**. > - : ? Painting Means ter Comfort i the time to touch by surfaces in the 2dsmse winter is the Vnome is used most, loney spent now for d finishes will make e brighter, cleaner, active, more wholewinter long. _.j EQUALITY JTS AND FINISHES abby surfaces at trifling >Vt advice at our store, o\ mail. Let us tell JtroXg Reasons for Fall os. Co. , N. C. s The Time / / jars, jar rubbers, tops I kettles, sugar and ;mig for canning jeapVprice from LEY HJCKS i lone North \ / e Purpose Buying a of Bargains For My rail Trace values now as we arX making room lome in apd see.us and^ave money. . Thii=/ Space FoX r Announcement \ TZ, Louisburg, N. C.
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 6, 1911, edition 1
9
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