Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / March 21, 1919, edition 1 / Page 7
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In the Health and Strength V of the Wives and Mothers ' Rests the Future Inteeritr We must preserve our womanhood. There is need, greater than ever for strong women. Apparently, the race is not ao sturdy as formerly or our women are victims of an over-civilization and less able to resist disease. Thousands suffer and thousands moro aro destined to suffer from that most insidious of diseases, catarrh. Nlnoty-sevcn per cent of tho people havo catarrh. It Is not connned to tho head, dobo and throat us many suppose. Catarrhal Inflammation may attack the stom ach bowols or any portion of the body whoro there are mucous lin ings. It Is no respector of persons or position. Everyone Is liable to attack. o.MrS ,,Mtlr,y Frlcko. 507 Bornman Bt., Bollovllle, III., was one of-~Us She says: ??I havo weighed as llttlo as 100 pounds. For years J suffered with my stomach, cramps and severe headaches. After read ing T>r. Hartman'a Health Book. I decided to try Poruna. The first bottle brought good results. but as I was bound to get well, I took twelve. Fifteen years ago. I Btarted with Peruna and I wouldn't be without it. My weight Is now around 200 pounds and I am halo and hearty at the age of 63. I can do an much work as my daughter.'* The use of Peruna for forty-five years In the American ftunlly has proved ltB worth- If you are sick, do not give up. try Peruna. Write i-The Peruna Company. Dept. B, Co lumbus, Ohio, for Dr. Hartmon's Health Book. It Is free. Peruna Is sold everywhere in liquid and tab lets. Insist upon having Dr. Hart man's Famous Peruna Tonic. Ask your dealer for a Peruna Almanac* NOTICE OF SALE OF U. S. GOVERN MENT PROPERTY. The following property of tho Unit ed States Government, purchased for use of Local Board of FYanxlln County, North Carolina for -which the Govern ment has no further use by reason of tho cessation of operations by the hoard, will be sold by authority of the Secretary of "War, for cash, to the highest bidder, on Bealed proposals which will be publicly opened at 11 A. M. on tho 22nd day of March, 1919, at the quarters of the Local Board for Franklin County, second floor First National Bank building. List of Property. One Underwood TYpewrlter, one 3x6 1-2 foot Poplar table. Six Oak, split bottomed Chairs, one Nickel lamp, Lot Ink pads. One oil heater, Lot waste paper, estimated 200 lbs. 6 or 8 filling cabinets. .. *' ? Property listed may bo inspocted un til Mar. 22nd, 1919, between hours of 10 A. M. and 5 P. M. at Local Board of fice. Bidders must enclose with bid mon ey order or' certified check marked "Bid check" for the amount of the bid payable to the order Thos. B. McCargo, D. O. & Agt. U. S. in N. O. This check or money order will be returned to all unsuccessful bidders at the time tho award is matte. Bidders must be present or repre sented when bids are opened. Success ful bidders will, upon acceptance of certified check or money order pre sented In payment, be furnished with a receipted bill of sale giving them ti tle to any article awarded to them, and must be prepared to removo any or all of the articles awarded to them in the bidding, which removal must bo with out expense to the Government. The undersigned is vested with au thority to reject any or all bids when in his opinion the best interest of the Government may bo served thereby. By authority of E. H. CROWDER, Provost Marshal General. WM. H. RUFFIN, *-14-2t Chairman. SALE OF LOTS IX BUXN. tly virtue of the p<^afor of oalo con? tainod in that deed of'trust, dated Jan. 18, 1916. mado bjf J. P. Hill to Wm. II. Ruffin, Trustee, and recorded in tho Registry of Franklin County in Book 210, pago 41, default having boen made In the payment of the debt there by snnnrert nnd the holders of said debt having demanded foreclosure-*?* the trustee, the undersigned will, on March 28th, 1919, at about the hour of noon, at the Court house door. in Loulsburg, N .C., ofTer for salo at pub lic auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, those lots in the town of Bunn in said deed of trust conveyed and thore described as follows: Lots Nos. 16, 16 and 17 in Block C In the town of Bunn on plot of property formerly owned by North Stato Development Company and known as the Town of Bunn as surveyed and plotted by J. J. Wells, C. E., which plot or map is recorded in Book 192 page 522, Reg istry of Franklin County, reference to which plot is hereby made for a full description thereof. This Feb. 28, 1919. WM, H. RUFFIN, 2-28-5t Trusted. Subscribe to The Franklin Times Liberty Bonds brought Victory. Victory I3ond a and War Savings Stamps bring the boys home. Take care of your dollars now and they will take caro of you later. Put them Into War Savings and watch them grow. Children Love Cascarets?IOc Candy cathartio^ts'harmless ^to tender stomach, tiver and](bowels ? Your child la bilious, constipated and sick. Its little tongue is coated, breath is bad and stomach sour. Qet a 10-cent box of Cascarets and strai ghten the youngster right up. Child ren love this harmless candy cathar tic .and it cleanses the little liver and thirty feetof bowels without griping. Cascarets contain no calomel and can bo depended upon to move the sour bile and poison right out of the bow els. Best family cathartic because it never cramps or sickens like other things. The good salesman is a public ben factor. Get yotlt money'a worth. Buy the best. Put your Havings into War Savings Stamps. TERRIBLYJWOLLEN Suffering Described At Torture Relieved by Black-Draught. RossvlUe, Qa.?Mrs. Kate Lee Able, erf Uila place, wiliest?"Mi UmlMiiit la an engineer, ana once wltae lifting, he In |ured himself with a piece of heavy ma chinery, across Ujs abdomen He was so sore he could not bear to press on himself at all, on chest or abdomen. He weighed 165 lbs., and fell off until he ^yeighed 1 IQ lbg./te two weeks. He became constipated and it looked doctors, yet with all their medirini;, h la bowels failed to act. He would turn up a ten-cent bottle of castor oil, and drlnlc it two or three days In succession. .He did this yet wlttftiut result. We became desperate, he suffered so. He was swol len terribly. He told me his suffering tould only be described as torture. I sent and bought Thedford's Black? Draught. I made him take a big dose, and when it began to act he fainted, he was in such misery, but he got relief and began to mend at once. He got well, and we both feel he owes his life to Thedford's Black-Draught." Thedford's Black-Draught will help you to keep fit^ ready for the day's work. Try Iti NC-131 Tax Notice I must call attention of those who have not paid their State and Coun ty Taxes, that the timo is running short, and that to meet the call of iers, they will have to come forward and pay Give this attention at once.' H. A. KEARNEY, Sheriff FOR THE BENEFIT OF ILLITERATES Bill Introduced In Senate and House In Their Behalf?The Church Organization Will Also Give P: WILL PROMOTE EDUMT1M The Significant Movement of the Times Is That of the Centenary of the Methodist Episcopal Church South?Will SpenSi Mil lions Among the Uneducated. ?. The hot that iwtnl thousand sol diers vere unable to ndrntud tke order* given them from their superior* and that many, many thousands could not sign their own name? to their questionnaires brought to light a con dition so serious that two Southern Representatives at Washington ara now introducing bills to promote tka education of illiterates throughout the length and breadth of America. Sena tor Hoke Smith, ol Georgia, has Intro duced a bill In the Senate "to promote tho education of Illiterates. of peisoa* anahle to understand and aae the kf llah lhnguage. and other leMot p* aona of foreign birth," and tke nae measure has been Introduced ta tta Rouse 4y Hon. William B, Dankhsad, of Alabama. The introduction of this Important bill means a great deal to the South, which. beoauao of its negroes and mountain white?, has long born? ? reputation lor Illiteracy out of ftropor tion to that at the not of the oono try. Just what steps will be immedi ately taken as the result of the passage of the education of Illiterate? bill at Washington cannot be stated at this time, but, certainly, practical meas ures will be put Into operation tor the establishment of schools in both rural districts and cities. Other organizations besides that of the government are at work on tho same problem?the establishment ol schools in the heart of tenement dis tricts and rural communities being a matter of first Importance with all at them. One of the most significant movements of the times In this con nection Is that of tho Centenary at the Methodist Bplscopal Church, South, because that denomination will expead within the next five years ovor ?3,000,000 among the uneducated classes In the Sosthern and Western States. The church Is to raise a fund of ?36,000,000 In an eight-day drtra 1? April, the financial campaign being a part ot the Centenary Celebration of the denomination. The money Ik he lug lalsul ?ILli a view Ui i)UtLlu? His work at the Alnirek as a ouslat basis, ttie church ooaeidertng Its dwtT to the illiterates here in America to be among the matters at first Importance which It should undertake. A survey has been made and the result of the campaign wlU be the apportlmiment of $3/00#.#00 among the vartoos Illiterate population as follows: Mountain pop utotlon.' ?TCO^OO; Immigrant, ??00,0S0; negioes, ?M0,?W,?fudkmr, llW.tW, ootton mill population, ?XSt.000; Chris tian literature for all of them, ?100 000 With the definite step undertaken at Washington, with one denomination already completing its plans for fur thering the work among thorn, and with other charehea and organizations getting ready to }otn hands In th?*r behalf, It is more than possible that the illiterates of the South are In a fair way to soon become educated dtl sens of the United States. METHODIST LEADERS RETURN FROM fRANCt Three prominent leaders of tke Methodist Episcopal Church, Sooth, have Just landed to America, after spending two months ta Rurope, where they went for the purpose fl* lnvaatl gxuMa? actual conditions aa<T deriding upon a program ter ttie expenditure of tft.-000.0Wl. which sum vrilT be allotted to European upbuilding by the Cento nary Ooramission of the denomination. The three returning churoh leaders ar? Bishop Jamas Atkins. Chairman at the Centenary Commission; Bishop Walter LAmbuth, ivho has been tn Bo rope for nearly a year In the Interest at his church', and Dr. W. W. Plneon. Oeneral Secretary of the Misaloa Dr. Itn son and Blahop Atkins re turned to the headquarters of the d? nomination at Nashville the tatter p^rt m directly to his home at tarsia. White tks plans tor the Bsropean work have not been announced as yet, the returning members of tke caputs alon aay that ther have mapped oat a very satisfactory program and that five million dollars of'the^Oentanary fund win be expended la upfceUdiag schools and churches In fte devastated item* TALK about smokes, Prince Albert is geared to a joyhandout standard that just lavishes smokehappiness on every man game enough to make a bee line for a tidy red tin and a jimmy pipe?old or new I Get it straight that what you've hankered for in pipe or cigarette makin's smokes you'll find aplenty in P. A. That's because P. A. has the quality ! You can't any more make Prince Albert bite your tongue or parch your throat than you can make a horse drink when he's off the water! Bite and parch are cut out by our exclusive patented process! You just lay back like a regular fellow and puff to beat the cards and wonder why in samhill you didn't nail a section in the P. A. smokepasture longer than you care to remember back I Buy Prince Albert everywhere tobacco is ?old. Toppy red baft, tidy red tint, handsome pound and half pound tin humidore?and ?that clever, practical pound cryttai glass humidor toith sponge moistener top that keeps the tobacco in each perfect condition. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. Oat of Father's Hands. I'd like to get that scftLfyf mine to spade up the yard. Well, why don't yiu direct him to do it? I don't know if I have a right to without consulting his scout commis sioner.?St Louis Globe-Democrat. Old Newspapers tor sale at the TIMES OFFICE. 25c per hundreds Wise men make proverbs that fools may misquote them. Reef Fat Substitutes. Norway has discovered that beef suet is not absolutely nccessary to the manufacture of margarino. Cod liver oil, herring and other fish oils are said to be excellent substitutes. A Joy Promoter. Did you do anything to make the tie holiday party more cheerful? Yes, replied the small girl; when fa ther and mother tried to make me sing and recite I absolutely refused. Gabriel will play the last trump In the game of life. So long as there Is sentiment in life so long will there be a Santa Claus. THE FRANKLIN TIMES $1.50 Per Year in Advance. Old Newspapers for sale at the TIMES OFFICE. 25c per hundred. A man may feel his oats and still lack horse sense. in Tree Planting by modern methods will be given at Oakhurst, the farm of Mr. A. F. Johnson, about one and a quar ter miles south of Louisburg by MR. R. L. DUNN . REPRESENTING The DuPont Company ON Wednesday, March 26 This will be a very interesting piece of work and Qne might gain valuable information in regard to the use of explosives for farm work. Everybody is Invited to be Present
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 21, 1919, edition 1
7
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