Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Aug. 15, 1919, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
We have just received one of the biggest lots of TURNIP SEED ever brought to Louisburg and are selling them at right prices- It is composed of all the standard varieties. Get your supply now. Ay cock Drug Co. WE HAVE MOVED Oar Shoe Repair business to the Medlin building on Court Street where we will be better prepar ed to serve you than ever before. Come to see us. o o o American Electric Shoe Shop R. E. L. LANCASTER, Mgr. Court Street ^ Louisburg, X. C. FORD RADIATORS 1912 to 1918 Designs Just received in good quantity. If you need a radiator see me and save money. o^ o o HUDSON'S GARAGE R. W. HUDSON, Proprietor Land! Land! Land! Wanted ONE THOUSAND ACRES of land anywhere in Franklin County. We will buy land in any size farmsT Especially interested in fifty and one hundred acr* tracts. See nr. w. R U FFIN First National Bank Bldg. Louisburg. N. C, NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of L?anle F. Collins, de ceased, late of Franklin County, this is to notify aU persons holding claims against her estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 11th day of July, 1920, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said "estate will pi nase come forward and make imme diate settlement. This July 10, 1919. NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of L. E. Jeffreys, deceased, late of Franklin County, all persons holding claims against said estate are hereby notified to present t;nem to the undersigi>ed on or before the 8th day of August. 1920. or this notice will be plead In' bar of their recorery. All persons indebted to said estate will please come forward and make imme diate d late payment. This August 7th 1919. 8-8-?t C. E. JEFFREYS. Adm'r. / SALE OK LAND. Under ami by virtue of the power of 'sale contained in that ileed of trust [executed on the L'5 day of March. 1915, , by Z. W. Parrish to the umlersigned trustee, which is duly registered in the office of i he Register of Deeds of fllWl'llt" Pill1 leijnrsr 01?mc uwiuv. 0 ,the indebtedness secured xnereby, I j will on Monday the first day of Sep tember. 1919, at 12 M.' at the Court Ijiouse door i!> Louisburg. N. C., sell fat public auction to the highest bid der for cash the following real estate, via: Lots number 9 and 151 as shown on plot of land formerly owned by C. G. Wood, which plot is registered in Book 192. Pagje 596. located at Wood, Franklin County, X, C.. also the un divided interest together with all rights title, claim and demand of Z. W. Par rish in and to the Pattie I. Parrish tract of land, bounded as follows: On the North by Mrs. Annie Collins, on the East by J. W. Sledge, on the South bv Mrs. E. S. Green, deceased, and on the West by B. W. Sturdevant. con taining 600 acres, more or less, being the lands devised by Pattie I Parrish to her children-Including Z. W. Par rish. subject to the life estate of W, A. Parrish. husband of Pattie I. Par rish. deceased, by her last will which is recorded in the office of the Clark of the Superior Court. This the 29th day of July. 1919. S-l-lt BEN T. H OLDEN, Trustee. NOTICE SPECIAL ELECTION FOR SCHOOL BONDS. Upon the petition of the County Board of Education of Franklin Cotro ty for an election to be held in Cedar Rock Academy District Noj 3, Cedar Rock^ Township. Franklin County, State of North Carolina unfler the pro visions of Chapter .5 , Public Laws. 1915 of North Carolina, said petition being in due form. It is hereby or dered that an election be held in ac cordance with the provisions of Chap ter 55. Public Laws. 1915 of North Carolina. at which election shall be ascertained the will jdI the people within said district whether there be \ issued bonds for the sum of Seven Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($7,-1 500.00) for the purpose of rebuilding and repairing the school house in said district, said bonds to bear interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, and said bonds to run for a period of twenty years the "maximum tax rate to be levied for the payment of interest and principal i of said bonds not to exceed thirty | cents on the one hundred dollars prop-; erty valuation and ninety ceots on the . poll. The said election shall be held) on Saturday the 16th of August. 1919,1 the polling place to be at J. O? May's | Store in said District. A new regis-i tration shall be made and J. O. May I is hereby appointed Registrar and B | F. Gardner and J. T. Inscoe are h?re-f by appointed Poll-Holders for said election. The boundaries of said district as i fixed by the County Board of Educa tion oi Franklin County are as fol-1 low?: Beginning at the county line i at Red Bud Cre-k; thence up said! Creek to the mouth of the branch run-, ning between Anna Collins' and Ollie i Collins': thence up said nranch to Its j head; thence Westwardly to and along I line of Buck Collins and Sam Barthol-1 omew to Buck Collins' corner; 1 thence South along Buck volilna* line to the path leading from John Mays' to Saints Delight; thence along said path to Saints Delight church; thence alon? G. W. Ford and Mrs. Tuckers* lir>* Westward to Fords" corner; thence along lines of Ford. Dr. Bob bin. W. O. Stone. J. R. Earl and Henry Harper to the Louisburg-Nash ville Road; thence along that road Westward to J. A. and T. P. Deans1 1 HI lll'l . tlH'IRg gluntfffl I'll m 11 1-111)4. W. W. Boones' lines to John Westers' line and along Westers' line to the Raleigh Road; thence along Westers* and Mrs. Webbs, lines East to Peach tree Creek; thence down said Creek to the Coppede?* Mill site; thence along the Spring Hope Road North ward to th#? Cedar Rock Church for, colored people: thence along lines of | Battle. Gordon and W. B. Coppedge" Eastward to William Inscoes* corner; i thence along the lines of and includ ing William Inscoe. John Inscoe an*l J|imes T. Inscoe and George Boone i to the Shearln line; thence along I Boone, and Shearin line to tb-.- road {leading by Boone's residence; thence along that road to the Louisburg and Nashville Road and along the Louis burg-Nashville Road to the County j line at Belford Church; thence alo*>g County line to the beginning. The registration books shall be op en from 9 o'clock A. M. to Sunset ou each day <Sunday excepted) from Ju ly 11th, 1919 to August 2nd, 1311?. and the Registrar will have said books at said polling place on each Saturday during said period from July 11th, 1919 to August 2nd. 1919. ~ By order of the Board of County Commissioners this the Tth day of Ju ly. 1919. J P. TIMBERLAKE, Attest; Cbjdrman. S. C. HOLDEN, Clerk. 7-25-4: | MOTH'K North Carolina. Justice's Court Franklin County. Before A. W. Alston. Justice of Peace. D. F McKINNE, F. B McKINNE, AND MALCOLM McKINNE. TRADING AS McKINNE BROS. Co. Vs. S. L. PARRISH The defendant above named will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Court of A. W. Alston, J. P., Louis burg. Franklin County, North Caro flna, for the recovery of $150.54 due said plaintiff by account which sum mons is returnable before said Justice at his office at Loulshurg in said County on the 25th day of August, 1919, and the defendant will further take notice that he is required to ap pear at above place on aJ)ove date and answer or demur to the complaint of the plaintiff in said action, or plain tiff will apply to the court for relief demanded in said complaint. This 22nd day of July. 1919. 7-26-4t A. W. ALSTON, J. P. TERRIBLYJWOLLEN Setter ing Described At Torture Relieved by Black-Dranght. KMSYiileT 6a/^Mrs"l<atVLeeAbIe!ol this place, writes: ".My husband is an engineer, and once while lifting, he in jured himself with a piece of heavy ma chinery, across the abdomen He was so sore he could not bear to press on himself at all, on chest or abdomen. He welfch?d 165 lbs., and fell off until h? weighed 110 lbs., In two weeks. He became constipated and it looked like he would die. We had three different doctors, yet with all their medicine, his bowels failed to act. He would turn up a ten-cent bottle of castor oil, and drink It two or three days in succession. .He did this yet without result. We became 4esperate, he suffered so. He was swol en terribly. He told me his suffering 'ou'.J only be described as torture. I sent and bought Thedford's Black Draught. I made him take a big do#?, 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 w? both feel he owe? hi? life to Thedford's Black-Draught." Thedford's Black-Draught win help you to keep fit, ready to* the day's work. Try UI NC-131 YES, I AM STILL IN THE OLD GIN HOUSE ON THE CORNER I am stillin business and am selling flour at a lower price than any other merchant, and in fact anything else that is carried in a first class Groeerv Store. I also have a large supplv of Hay, Grain and Feea Stuff that I can sell at a lower price than tlie other fellow. So why drive l?y store and pav more for your Iced stuff and pull it back up tliat long hill from town. I ?loir't feel sorry for you Mr. Fanner but Gee how sorry I do feel for that poor horse and yoiu* pocket book. "Wliv do you drive right by a ' good thing? Come to see me the iu*xt time you need anvthing in my line and I will save vou 1110 nev. J. W. HARRIS in the old gin house on the corner. 2 miles North on Main Street lOl'ISBl'BO, North Carolina No Worms In a Healthy Child All children troubled -with worms have an un healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a rule, th?re is more or less stomach disturbance GROV E S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly for two or three weeks will ecrich the blood, im prove the digestion, and act as a General Strength ening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then throw off or dispel the worms, and the Child will be in perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle. If you haven't shoe trees for your "*'i 1 " 1 in ir11 !i _i i; i . are not being worn; it will help pre serve their shape "Why I Put Up With Hats for Years" Write* N. Windsor, Farmer. Years ago I br-ught some rat poison, which nearly killed our fine watch clog. It so scared us that we suffered a long Hm?? -wt?-fr- rats until inv-n^ighbor told me about RAT-SXAP. That's the sure rat killer and a saiV one." Three siz es. 2?>c. r?0e. SI.00. Sold anil guaran teed by Allen Bros. Co. Dagi>sseau. one of the chancellors of France, wrote an able and bulky work in the - successive inienvJus of, waiting for dinner. "See 'Gets-It' Peer Off This Corn." L Leaves The Toe as Smooth as the Palm of Your Hand. ?Th Alcorn naverffraw t h .if "C.eta It" will not get. It never irritates the fleBh, never makes your toe sore. Just two drops of "Gets-It" and presto! the corn-nain vanishes. Shortly you can peel the corn right If ? Wond?rf?] to Sm MG?te-(t" Off Cora.) off with your finger and there you are?pain-free and happy, with the toe am smooth and corn-free as your palm. # "Oeta-Tt" !? the only safe wav In the world to treat a corn or callus. It'? the ?ure way?the way that never falls. It 1? tried and true ?used by millions every year. #It always works. **Qet?-It" make? cut ting and digging st a corn and fuss ing with bandages, salve? or any thing else entirely unn?c??sary. ?*Get?-It," the guaranteed? money back corn-remover, the only ?ure way. cost? but a trifle at any drug ?tore, irrdby E. Lawrenoe A Co..Chicago. 111. Bold In L/mlsburg and recommended an the world's best corn remedy by P. R. PLEASANTS. NEW POLICY FORMS TOTAL AND PERMANENT DISABILITY Waiver of all future premiums; and, in addition, A lifeToiif* annual income to"the insured; and, in addition, Full amount of policy paid at death* without-'deduction of the income payments or of the uhpitid premiums. Inclusion of this provision is optional with the insured. DOUBLE INDEMNITY Double the sum insured will be paid in case of accidental death Inclusion of this provision is optional with the insured. f LIFE INCOME A monthly, or quarterly, or half-yearly, or yearly income, for life, if desired, instead of payment of the policy in a single sum. GENERAL PROVISIONS Dividends automatically used to buy fully-paid-for addition al insurance; oc ?kirJfcjfr May be drawn in cashVor - **''% May be used to reduce current premiums; or *? May be left to accumulate at interest, subject to withdrawal by the insured. Choice of dividend use may be made at any time; 110 medical examination required. . Post-mortem dividend in first year, if death occurs. Loan, cash surrender, paid-up insurance, extended insurance, after three years' premiums have been paid. And Loan at end of first or second year toward payment of an ac cruing premium. ' Interest not payable until maturity of loan. Loans may be paid off in sums as small as $10. Free from restrictions as to residence and travel. SHINING FIGURES Since it begso- business in 1843. The Mutual Life lias paid in death claims $638,577, 075. The Mutual Life lias paid in matured endownments and annuities $216-399,361. The Mutual Life has paid in cash dividends to policv holders $290,990,90?. The Mutual Life's total payments to policyholders have \>een $1,467,820,878. The Mutual Life lias paid to and accumulated for its policyholders $283,877,531 more than it has received from them in premiums. R. P. TAYLOR MANAGER RALEIGH DISTRICT House Furnishings This is my line and I am in po sition to show you almost any thing you want. See our Kitch en Cabinets, the piece of furni ture for the kitchen that all housewives appreciate and need. Get a nice Hammock Porch Swing or other porch or open air fur niture to add to your comfort these hot days. Anyway come in and lets get ac quainted in a business way. J. S. Williams FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING Louisburfc, - - North Carolina
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 15, 1919, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75