Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / April 7, 1922, edition 1 / Page 7
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HOUSEWORK IS > BURDEN Woman's lot la a weary oa* at beat. But with backache and other dla tresslng kidney 111* life Indeed be comes a burden. Dean's Kidney PUle have made life brighter for many lxxilaburg women. Ask your neigh bor! ? - Mrs. N. L. Soseley, Loulsburg, aays: "My back hurt badly and when I got down, It was an awful ef fort to straighten again. Sharp pains often stabbed through my kid neys and many times when r got up from jl stooped perttloo, I could ~see flashes befftre mv eves My kldaoyw acted too freely and I felt miserable. Jt wgfl an effort to do my housework and at times my head swam with dlxtlnees. Doan's Kidney PUTs were recommended to me and 1 bought some a the Aycock Drug tea Doan's rid me of the misery and rhave a ad no trouble since." Price $0c, at all dealers. Don't simply aak tor a kidney remedy got Doan's Kidney Pills ? the same that Mrs. Moaeley ? had. FosterFUburn Co., Mfra., Buffalo, N. Y. THE*' FRAN 1LL1N TmES should be -iit y??r home. ? H yrtn are not a gob scrlber, be one. Send In jour sub scrtptlon and help ns to boost for a better cum m unit j. To Cure a Cold la 0ne [>*?> T?tr LCTATlvr HWTgn '? Ii SP the Couth trxj HelUclw ?0j>/?0fk. off ttui L.W.UtOV?S liiasiuieuc cecii ?*"? JOc. SALE OF LAND. Under and by virtue ot the power contained In a corutln M ot truit to J. 0. Mills. Trustee, from J. T. Wilson and vlte, which said deed of; trust Is recorded tn the office of the Register of Deeds of Franklin County In Book 225, page 23, default having been made In the payment of the notes secured by said deed of trust. I will offer for sale at jiublic auction to the hlgTiest bidder for cash at the Court house duui lu llig tONvn ot Loulsburg. N. C. at 12:00 M. on MONDAY. MARCH 5, 1922, the following described tract of land: A certain tract or parcel of land sit uate In HaiTls Township. Franklin Coifnty, North Carolina, adjoining the lands of Samuel Harris, Perry and Patterson, Joe Young, J. T. Wilson and others, and being the land convey ed to W. B. Tlmberlake by Caroline T-imberlake by deed recorded ~~ln the office of the Register of Deeds of Franklin County In Book 71, page 146 and afterwards conveyed to J. T. Tim berlake by Emma Tlmberlake and oth ers, and containing 280 acres more or less. This the 21st day of Jan.. 1922. 2-3-5t J. G. MILLS, Truetee. The above sale was continued by of all nartles to Monday. April 10th, 1922, at about the hour ot noou. This March 6th, 1922. 3-10-5t J. <4. MILLS, Trustee. "Great Destruction" Cyclones, Tornadoes and Wind Storms, cause about as complete destruction as FIRE, when they come. Are YOU protected against this LOSS? If not, YOU had better get busy and be SAFE, not SORRY. We can PROTECT YOU against this LOSS. Rates are very 16w. We can issue you a separate policy, or a Combination, covering both, FIRE and WINDSTORMS. ' \ Insure Your Crops against LOSS by HAIL. Lcita of farmers are ruined on account of not having thla protection. AUTOMOBILES COST MONEY ? We can protect you against loss by FIRE or THEFT, also all other coverage If you -wish it. DO XOU LOTE YOCB FAMLYt Then keep that LIFE INSURANCE POLICY In FULL FORCE, If you have one, if you have no LIFE INSURANCE gersome, all -you are able to carry. Your future Is uncertain. DEATH IS SURE. Remember ? We Insure Everything Insurable and Appreciate Your Business. J C. E. & C. L. Mitchell (or "Uncle Bud's" Agency) YOTJNGSVILLE, - - North Carolina THE value of credit with a good bank may not appeal to you until you need it. Good Credit has been the secret behind many a large and small fortune. Without Credit ho business or individual can be permanently successful. Open an Account at this Bank NOW. ^Establish jour Credit. It will serve you in time of need. LOUISBURG HIGH SCHOOL DEPARTMENT artiTf- - EDITOR IN CHIEF ^ ASSOCIATE EDITOR - ART EDITOR ? POET JOKES J? ATHLETIC REPORTERS - Myrtle Drake, "22 William Webb, '23 Pearl Pearce, '23 Gladys Gill, '22 Ned -Ford, '24 - Louise Allen, '24 .. Allen Kemp, '22 LITERARY SOCIETr-ftEPORT^a,.? Lucy Boddle, '25 Louise Joyner, "25 ( "Slander? There Is nothing which flies so swiftly as sender; nothing which Is uttered v/ttE~ more ease; nothing which is "listened to with mere readi ness or dispersed more widely. Slan der soaks Into the mind as water soani into a sponge! Slander Is like a flife which hnrm a?-4ts power Increases. \ The tongue of slander is ne^r tir ed. We sometimes wonder how it manages to keep itself In employment. It is never so available and eloquent as when It can blight the hopes of the noble-minded, soil the reputation of the pure, or destroy the character of the brave and the strong. Kow can; people do 11 ! ? TTOparsoa of hi&te- -es tate can ? take rfpHyht Jjj slander. It indicates that somewhere In the soul there la a weakness ? an evil nature. Never does a man portray his own fharartor mnro v.tvirily than when h? is portraying another?. There Is something wrong with the person who always has something to say - about somebody, but never anything good. How small a thing will start a slan derous report! A distrustful look, a shrug of the shoulders, a slight raise of the eye-brows or a mysterious and seasonable whisper, directing atten tion to a particular person will often start the tongue of slander. Little is the beginning, but great is the end! What could be worse than ruining an innocent person's reputation? Even though one's reputation is only what he la thought to be. we must confess that a good one helps much< where a bad one is destruction. We may take advantage of a slan derer. When you are ill spoken of take it as a caution. If you have not de served it, you are none the worse; if you hare, then mend. Believe not all you hear nor report all you believe. "Have no ill of a friend nor speak any of an enemy." "Believe nothing against another but on good authori ty, nor report what may hurt anybody unless it be a greater hurt to others to conceal it." Myrtle Drake '22. I? I? I The Tendencies of Onr Literary Societies There ts a growing tendency In our high school to neglect and Ignore the literary societies . The teachers strive valiantly to make them Interesting and beneficial but the stndent body re mains indifferent, and Inclined to treat the matter as a huge joke. To an outsider our weekly meetings would resemble more closely a negro revival meeting than an organization engaged in the pursuit of literature. The debates are often Impromptu and ridiculous and we cannot blame the debators, for the more ridiculous the discussion the more appreciative the audience. The society as a whole rarely honors an earnest performer with its attention. If the prospective voters, when they attain the age of twenty-one, continue conducting elections as they are con ducting them at present the govern ment a few years hence will be In a pitiable Btate. How can we over hope to purify natioual politics when in literary society elections forty-four votes are cast by thirty-four voters? Not even woman suffrage with its vast possibilities and accomplishments will ever be able to correct such evils. What incentive is there to try to mcke the literary society a success, when, during the reading of an instructive paper, one Illustrious member takes a nap and another amuses by pulling the hair of some long suffering sister member. Anything 1s preferable t"> the existing' state of affairs, even the intricate angles and triangles of Geom otry. Annie W. Boddie '22. 1?1?1 \ A Fox Hnnt A few days ago I bought a couple of fine fox hounds. ? There were about twelve more fox hounds scattered around the neighborhood in which I lived. The /ox Iftintlng season had Just arrived and there were lots of foxes in the community. All the boys in the neighborhood wore anxious lor us to meet and have a fox chase. We decided to go the next day. We could hardly wait for daylight the next morning, and by six o'clock we were all ready to start. We had a little pack of fourteen hounds. Ev ery one of these dogs were well train ed ?nd not a single one of them would even notice a rabbit or anything else when on a fox chase. We started at once. After saddling our horses and after riding for a cou Pie r more miles, we Jumped a fox and the dogs were tralHng fine. It looked as if the fox picked out the very worst route that he oould have taken, for we had to ride over some off the rockiest and most ragged coun try. Then he went through some thick woods which led to a large crcck We looked down a hill and saw the fox crossing the creek on a log. The do** were only about two hundred yards behind him then. Wo could not cross over the creek on the log; so w? had to go to a bridge some <lls lance up the creek. Just an we came in sight of the fox again, the dogs had him ? and they had already killed him When we reached them. It was now | two o'clock and we were hungry and I tired and I was very sure thst the dogs were tired too. We decided not to try another chase until some other time, so we started for home about tan miles away. Alex Alston '22. Success The greatest success in life is won by thos- who began by maKing the moat of opporturxities around them. Nearly all young men, whether on the farm or in the office, have splendid op> portunities on every hand, but they do not kht*^ how to utilize them. In our larse nf m-s jt in fminrt that a very lar*e p?-r ^ent of all who gain fnmpl and wealth do so by making the best dl Email opportunities which others do not notice. The sctrolar who U al ways gazing at the stars may ml? the beautiful flowers at his feet. It has b pen truly said that spare mo ments are the gold dust of Ume. It Is the little savings that make men rich. It is the right use of spare mo ments that enable men to win educa tion, ccrmpetenuy and success; One hoar a day In -a few years will give anyone an education that will fit him for life. An hour a day might make an tae inrrerencfe Between a bate f x lstence. and a useful happy living. Die present Ume is the raw material out of which one can make whatever he will. Do not brood over the past or dream of the future, but seize Ihe Instant, do your Txresent duty; niake the most of present opportunity. One reason why the careers of many people are so pinched and narrow 1s because the* do not cherish right thoughts What ever one longs for; struggles for, and holds persistently. In mind tends to become Just In exact proportion to the persistence of the thought. We should think upward then we would reach the heights where Superiority dwells. There Is probab ly no power in the universe that can enable a man to do a thing when he thinks he lff-lncapable. ~ Reuben Strange '22. I? T? I LoaNbnrff Vs. Epsom On Thursday, March 30, the girls basket ball team of the Loviiaburg High- School met the Epsom team at Epsom. Although they were not ex pecting us, when we arrived, they got the p Layers together and there follow ed a very interesting game. A last foul on the Louisburg- side gare the game to Epsom with a score of 10 to 9. Louise Allen. 1? I? 1 Matthew Hails Literary Society The Matthew Davis Literary Society met on March 31, 1922 in the 8th grade room. After the usual opening the following program was rendered: Debate: Resolved: That each High School pupil should pay an annual athletic fee of <3.00. Affirmative Negative Betty Bennett Mary Smith John Phelps Ivey Hale Besale Young John Mills William Spencer Aylia Bane Holmes High School News ? Annie Perry Neal. I Declamation ? Reuben Strange. I Short Story ? Virginia Perry . ! The judges for the debate were, An [nie Perry Neal, William Webb and Gladys Gill. The affirmative won end Betty Bennett had the best debate I There being no furl tier business to rcime before the society we then ad journed to meet again on April 7, 1922. Lucy (>. Boddie . 1? t? 1 j C harles B. Aycock Literary Society The Charles B. Aycock Literary So eiety met Friday, March 31, 1922 in the ninth grade class room. After tho roll call the following program was lendered: ? Song, Sunshine of Your Srrtfle ? Mar garet Turner. Jessie Elmore and Louise *llen. Selection from "Miss Minerva and William Green Hill" ? Louise CJriffin. High School News ? Dick Ogburn. Personalities ? Temple Williams. Songs ? Old Fashioned Garden and l<et the Rest of the World Go By? 8o eiety . With no business to come before the society we adjourned to meet next Fri day, April 7, 1922. Louise Joyner. 1?1?* A Petrified Sheep One beautiful summer day a crowd of boys and girls went to Berlin Springs on a picnic. When we finish ed eating our dinner, we decided to explore the cave, which we bad heard contained a petrified Bheep. After we had crawled several hun dred feet back in the cave a large white object attracted our attention. As we drew nearer, I recognlied a huge rock In the form of a sheep. We all crowded around, afraid to speak because the sheep looked so real. The fleece looked very soft and Inviting; but when I touched it, I was disap pointed, tor it was cold and hard. The head of the sheep was turned to one side and the ears were uplifted as If anticipating the approach of someone. It was a beautiful sight. ? Josephine Bryant '22. Habitual constipation Cared. In 14 Vo 21 Pays ft -LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" Is a ipeclaDy pre pared SyrupToniV- Laxative for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly but should be taken refflflarly for M to 21 days to induce regular actloA, It Stimulates and fafcUtW. Very Pleaaent to Take. ? 60o C* bottle. FOR FIRST CLASS JOB PRINTING | PHONH NO. J 88. GOOD BREAD and ? ? GOOD PASTRY They can only' be made from the best grade of floor. We sell a very high grade, the well known and universally popular brand. It is used and praised by your neighbors in every dlrectoion. Try It yourself for best bread and pastry. Our cured and salt meats are splendid values for fhe money. No ?aste make* them economical. Our Coffees aad Teas are the best the wholesale market can sup ~ply^ 1WeU-_in_strength delicious in flavor. Our eggs, butter ?"?< y ? . i. -"-y -nftnfvtTig 1 to a discriminating appetite. Canned, goods. Bottled goods, Spices, Extracts, SoapsT n?imn -| Potatoes, Onions, Green goods, We make a point of carrying every thing in the eatable line. We also make sr practice of carrying on- i ly such brands as we can consistently anH mentTtoThe most fastidious buyer. Yflil ?rtlt find pelonn 11 valnn wil permit ' ^ _ A. S. WIGGS NASH STREET LOUISBURG, N. C. LOANS & INSURANCE We have money to lend on easy terms, Real Estatt, First Mortgage, Improved farm land preferred. Prefer loans for large amounts. We can make loans on Loulsburg City Real Estate. We writs INSURANCE, LJfe, Accident and Health. Firee, Tornado. Rain, Live Stock, Dogs of every kind. See HOBBS, The Insurance Man, Office 2nd Floor, First National Bank, Phone 269. Or M. S. Clifton, at Farmers & Merchants' Bank. Franklin Insurance & Realty Company LOUISBCBG, North Carolina TUCKER'S C A f E Main Street LOUISBURG, N. C. I have Just opened a first class Cafe in the old Neal building and am prepared to furnish meals at all Jurors, and the best the market affords. Jctf Cream 5 cents a cone. Soft prinks, etc. Prices reasonable, service the best. J. C. TUCKER - Proprietor > Subscribe to THE FRANKLIN TIMES 11.50 Per Year In Advance. ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of W. J. Shearin, deceased, late of Franklin County, North Caro lina. this 1s to notify all persons hav ing claims against the estate of the s*14 deceased, to exhibit them to the undersigned at Louisburg, N. CI R. F. D. No. 4, on or before the 24th day of March, 1923, or this notice* will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persona indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 22nd day of March, 1922. JAMES J. LANCASTER. Adm'r. of W. J. Shearin, Dec'd. Ben T. Holden, Atty. 3-24-6t NOTICE I have this day qualified under the will of the late B. C. Perry as execu tor C. T. A. All persons owing the estate will come forward and pay same and all persons having claims against said estate will present them within one year or this will be plead ed in bar of recovery. This the 22pd day of March, 1922.. (I have bis home for rent 1922) . P. B. FINCH, 3-24-6t Eracutor, O.T.A. A TONlOy Grove's Tasteless chill Totilc restore* Energy and Vitality by jTirlfylng and EnricKinit the Blood. Wl>en you feel It* Strengthening. !rtvJgorRt^<g effect, see bow H brings color to^be cheeks and bow It Improves the SQpeUte, you will then apt^eoiate its true ionic x^riue. Grove's Tastelos*- chill TiHjic is simply Iron nn<) Quininft suspended Vji syrup. So pleasant even children like it The blood needs QUININE to Purify It an* IRON to Enrich It. Destroy* Material genua and Qrlp germ* by Its Strengthening, Invigor ating Effect. 50a DONT FORGET TO SEND ADVERTISING COPY IN EARLY TRUSTEE'S SALE OF VALUABLE LAND Under and by virtue of the power contained In that certain Deed of Trust executed to me by Robert Hunt on the 26th day of April, 1921, duly recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Franklin County in Book 234, at page 356, I will on MONDAY, APRIL 24th, 1922 at or about the hour of noon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the courth6use door Jn Franklin County a- certain tract or parcel of land situate In Franklin County, Franklinton Township. State of North Carolina, and described as follows: Beginning at a stake in the road leading to Mrs. Lucy Conyer's, run ning parallel with said road north William Allen's corner; thence east along William Allen's line to Haywood Plummer's line; thence along Hay wood Plummer's line south to John Hayes' line; thence west along John Hayes' line to the beginning, contain ing ten acres, more or less, being lot bought of Robert Allen. 3-24-5t H. C. KEARNEY, Trustee. MORTGAGEES SALE OF LAND. By virtue of the power of sale con tained in that certain mortgage deed made on? Aug. 16. 1921, by J. M. Pat ton to H. L. Griffin. Mortgagee, and recorded in Book 241 page 562, Regis try of Franklin County. N. C. default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby*secured, and demand for foreclosure having been made on said mortgagee by the hold er of said indebtedness, the undersign ed will on . .MONDAY, MAY-1, 1922 . at or about the hour of noon at the courthouse door in Louisburg, N. G; offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash that certain tract or paree^ of' land, situaW tfl Franfclin Go. N. C. and more partic ularly 'described as follows: "Lying and being in Dunns township, Frank lin Co. N. C. adjoining the lands of Henry Jones, the Debnam land, the land of Crad Brantley, and others, con tainlng 38 acres, more or less, being the same land bought by J. M. Pat ton from G. A. Montgomery and known as part of the Old Home place of Ruf fl ii Debnam. This Mar. 25, 1922. I H. L. GRIFFIN, Mortgagee to the use of Bunn Banking Co. transfers. Wm. H. A Thos. W. RufHn, Attys. 3-31-51 Franklin Ins. & Realty Co, can supply Franklin County with money with the proper Col latteral, Real Estate, First Mortgage, Long Time, Large Amounts preferred 2-24- 12t NOTICE Having a contract with Thomas Jackson, colored, for the labor of his minor son, Johnnie, (or th* year 1931, and he having left my employ with out cause or my consent 1 hereby tor bid any and all persons from hiring, sheltering or otherwise harboring the said Johnnie Jaakson, under penalty as provided by Statute. This March 30th, 1022. S-81-M A. r. JOHNSON. THB FRANKLIN TXMS8 U.M Per Tsar t? Ataaw -1 I ** v1*
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 7, 1922, edition 1
7
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