THE FRANKLIN TIMES A. F. JOHMSON, Editer aad luijir ?ae Iwi ... fl.W Eight Month. 1.00 8b Months ,7S r?v lealtl M (Foreign Advertletnu Representative 1 THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION ' Entered at the Post Office at Louls fcurg, N. C., as second class matter. ? "the House passed a bill Wednesday x appropriating fifteen tnriion dollars (or road construction . The second payment on Tobacco brought smiles to the races of a large dumber of Franklin County citizens Monday. ? The fellow who said the first ad vance was all the members of the to bacco and cotton associations would ever get will now have to find another means of misrepresentation. In the- death of Capt. Arch Perry, who served so long as a member of the Board of Education. Pranktla County "has lost a most valuable citt . sen and the school children of the County a loyal friend. J The lower houBe of the United States Congress has passed a resolu tion to amend the Constitution so as to do away *rith the issuing of tax free securities. This is ? lust aid lair action and it is to be hoped will be passed by the Senate and then rati fied by all the States. The bill introduced In the Legisla ture to require all Judges of the Su perior Court to remain In the county seat the tail length of each term, and to hear clvU cases after the criminal cases had been disposed of and other wise to be at Chambers tor any sub ject to be brought before him. Is one of the best pieces of legislation we have Been suggested. L<ets hope It -will pass. The hearty commendation of Judge E. H. Cranmer by the Woman's Club of Loulsburg Is a Just recognition of an honest desire to render our Courts of benefit to our community In lessen ing crime. Some think Be was .^en tirely to hard on the criminal, but there Is no question about the fact that there has been entirely to little fear of punishment at the hands of our Judges to have much tnfluencce on our""eriminal class. Lets hope that now the House has passed the 115,000,000 appropriation to enable the enlargement and possi ble completion of the State Highway road system that Commissioner John Sprunt Hilli will Immediately take over the road from Loulsburg to Hal ifax and make that a part or the State System, whlqh will opdn up one of the main thoroughfares to our Capital; City and with connection to Durham give us a nearer western connection. If this can be done It wtfi no douftt prove to be onfe of the most popular highways in the State. We hope that Mr. Hill will look Into the advisabili ty of taking this over at once. Now that other towns in North Car-" ollna are coming forward With assur ances that members of the two mar. ketlng associations can get credit ac commodations from their merchants another year and deliver their cotton and tobacco to their respective Asso ciations, Loulsburg should get In line. Our banks and merchants were espec ially liberal with their accomodations to members of the Associations the past fall. And they should hasten to make public their position for the fu ture that the farmers may know what they can depend upon. Lets make t Loulsburg unanimous. Call a meet ing Wthe Chamber of Commerce and take action, Evidently the recent grand Jury wss not fully Informed as to the costs In. L . volved wham it recommended to the Board of Gouty Commissioners to Mil the County Home Fsrm and move tt- clo??r t? Loulsburg where modern ??kMIMIbiiih can be ^scared. The truth about (he matter Is the modem ?MMkM they had la mind -light., irj+n aad steam hsat on be sup |M U the present born* a great deal II l f to town. Even though tM grand Jary requested that thai BOKd Ml at oaw or be required to tfcagr hare aot done so, the the wishes of the majority of the t&x payers, or least they huTe not been given an opportunity to approve or disapprove same, and the Board Is not legally bound to abide by the sugges tions of a grand Jury In a matter of this kind. Mr. Commissioners don't act to hastily. MB. 8T0NK WRITES To The Franklin Times, Mr. Editor: ? I will write you a few lines to let you hear from the old Rock one more time. Good many of cur farmers have Bowed their plant beds and ure going right ahead with their farm work. Such as getting wood and hauling out manure, and some are clearing new grounds which they will put either In corn, tobacco, or cotton. I heard one man say the olher day. that he was going to try to make two 500 pound bales or cotton on cne acre of land, this year. Well that is all right. It he will try as hard to make a plenty corn and meat itlso. Small crops where they are well ma nured and cultivated is the only way to clear any money because you can do your own work and at tlxe end will have more money than the one that cultivates a large crop and half works It. By all means mate a plenty of corn and hay for your own (arm. Keep plenty of hSgs and cows to eat up all of the extra feed. I / Well, Mr. Editor, I Was 'Hi Louis burg all of last weeiT attending Court and I was well pleased wltn our new Judge. If every Judge was like him I think they would soon break up so much pistol toting and some of the whiskey making and automobile driving when drunk, for whiskey ami pistols have causea two deaths and three others to be snot, in leas than one and a half miles ot my home in less than six months. My observa tion is fines are no good, but when you send them to the road for twelve months or two years you will see that it will lessen the crimes to a great ex tent. Well I see from the- newspapers that some of the Representatives In the Legislature are clamoring for more road bonds. Well, Mr. Editor. I don't see any use of any more bonds unless they use the money to a better advantage than they are using it. Now I don't want to criticise any one but working the roads 1* a plum farce ad tar aa the work on keeping up the State Highway in this township is concerned. It is every day talk that it cost about twelve dollar* a day for' hands, truck and gas and as I see it there Is very Uttle done. So I think it is time to put a stop to wasting pub lic money, not only In mads but in everything else, until tne tax payers can get on their feet better than they are now. I went to HocKy Mount the other day and I found tne road from BelfoTd church to Nashville had been scrCped over as I went on and when I tame back they scraped It gvar again, wltlch mis twice In one day. And I found out ths* man was OK Ills iob at sunup and until dark. You know as well as I do that you aan't do a days work to start at nine o'clock and stop at four. It Is nothing but a waste of the public money. Some of the places where we have to turn out to detour are so bad you could not get through them unless you had help. The waste of the tax payers money Is what makes it so hard on them. If the money was properly spent it would not take so much to do the work. But Mr. Editor as I see It every one Is trying to get all the pie he can and do as"llttle as they can to get by with it. How much longer will this extrav agance last, no one kn< rws. But not much longer I hope. For when they tax them to death and they can't make enough to live on and pay the tax then the wasting of the money that .we pay fo^ taxes will have to stop. There are some people who are al ways ready to vote more tax for every thing that comes along. I hardly know how to blame them for they are most sure to have their part of the tit and get their share of the milk. I hope our Representatives will keep a Keen eye on Increasing, for we are laying to much taxes now. I think they had better go slow. And I think they will. For I have the uttermost confidence in Harris and Mr. Cooper both for I have known them all of my life and went to school with them In our young days and I know them both to be good honest men. They tell me we will get the second payment on our Tobacco soon and I hope we will as we all need It very bad to meet our obligations. I like the cotton pooling better than I do the tobacco. If It hadn't been for the pooling of tobacco and cotton we wouldn't have gotten more than h?lf of what we will get. Yours with best wishes, ' W. O. STONE. TOBACCO GROWERS CELEBRATE AGAI* Orfranlxfd Fanner* Take Hone Seven Million Dollar* Thl* Week. The Tobacco Grower* Cooperative' Aesoclatlon established another record I ant Monday whan U made the biggest payment ever dlntrlbuted In a Mingle day to tobacco farmer* In Virginia and North Carolina. Member* of the aasoclatlon doubled their money at M town* of the old belt and carried home the beat part of ?even million dollars in cold cash. Thl* week's sudden tidal wave of prosperity has caused wide spread satisfaction amove the organised grow or* and the merchants, bankers and fertilizer men who hare reaped a rich harvest from the second cash payment of the association In Virginia and Western Carolina. Celebration* and mass meetings at several point* marked the aecond dis tribution. Oliver J. Sanaa, executive manager of the association, addressed a mass mef(lng of growers at Booth Beaton wUra the farmers of Halifax county received 1*00,000 aa the aao ond advance and member* of the asso 1 rtatloty-.- declared their average e< | Aftar Eery M*al WRKSIEYS Chew yonr food well, then use WRIG LEY'S to aid digestion. It also keeps the teeth clean, breath sweet, appetite keen. Thm Grmat Aimttcoji Swmmtmmaf $18.80 per hundred received, to date was as much as they got (or last year's crop. "Cooperative marketing last July was a prospect and a hope," said Man ager Sands, "today it is an actual (act and will progress and improve with time. The statements or its oppon ents have been repeatedly dls proven . They will now have to find new points to attack." Similar enthusiasm among associa tion members marked the great gath ering ot members who came to the cooperative floors early last Monday to receive* their checks at Danville, Winston-Salem and other large mar kets. The assurance given the grad ers last Monday ot more payment* to follow their second caatx disburse ment Increased the satisfaction Tand confidence of the members of theXblg cooperative. Backing up the policy of the association to call upon all land owning members to deliver all tobacco grown upon their land to the association In 1923, thousands of grow ers have taken contracts to their homes with the- determination to_sii the membership campaign and Ihcrjisse the sign-up In America's largest co operative marketing association jo 100.000 growers. . . Hundreds of merchant* and bank ers are rallying to the support ot co operative marketing for the coming year. Stating that tnetr ? dealings with the members of the cooperative associations were entirely satisfactory In 1922 from SO to 40 merchants . at Eastern North Carolina nave adv ertJsr ed their desire to extend aid 'to %U. worthy members of the association since Its markets reopened this mq^Oi. Influential merchants of Hayr Mount, Kinston, Fremont, LaOrdU Deep Run, ?now Hill, emlthfleld ?M other points of Eastern Carolina -UM advertised thdir support of the to bacco and cotton associations during the past ten days. Scarcely a town remains In the to bacco and cotton area or tne Carolines and Virginia where the members of the marketing associations will fall to Jlnd the support of friendly bank ers and merchcants In marketing their next year's crop< The third cash payments of the as sociation will begin next month with Its members in 8onth Carolina. BRITAIN SEES WAR STARTING AS RESULT OF RCHR INVASION Fear Is Expressed That England Will Be Forced Into Some Form of Inter vention; Many Humor* London, Jan. 2&. ? The critical situ ation in the Ruhr Is a subject of much anxious comment by the morning newspapers, which regard the out look as so dangerous that It Is lmper. stive that some way be found for re lieving the deadlock. Fear is expressed In Bome quarters lest Great Britain be force* Into some form of active Intervention against her will. Rome circles are also fear ful that if France pursues the present lines of her policy she will be obliged to Increase her forces greatly in the occupied district with the result that Germany may follow with military ac tion which would mean war. There already has been a report that Germany was arranging tor relnstl tute conscription* but official confirma tion of this was forthcoming this morn lng. Another report, this rrom Paris, said that General Ludendorf had been recently at Muenster, wnere he wit nessed maneuvers, this however, was also unconfirmed . . Some Commentators entertain the belief that France Is con-rtnced she has miscalculated the German temper and finding the results of the occupa tion not what she exported, seeks a means of withdrawing. If possible with out loss of her prestige. To this end, It ls stated here, Prance Is reexamining the Britain and Italian proposals which she rejected at the Paris conference. Meanwhile, today's developments la the Ruhr are awaited In Oreat Britain with much anxiety. To Stop a Cough Quick ' A1JNO HONEY. ? 2E2 at ?tiM> So CdMerftSS K *. rs iMIMdAl HAYES* SANpY CHEEK ITM8 The many trWads of Mrs. Asberry Dennis regret to learn of tier suiter. Inn from pa stuck of appendicitis . Muter Lonnle Bunrette and Miss Nona Burnett*, who hare been suffer ing from pneumonia are Improving. We hope they will soon back In school . Mrs. O. C. OuptonH visiting her daughter Mrs. 8. N. Nelms. Miss Annie Mae Qupiou. of Hender son, spent the week end with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Gupton. Mr. and Mrs. C. Q. West and Mr. and Mrs. Auburn Allen and Mies Alice Allen visited Mi^ and Mrs. Caleb Al len. of Wake Forest, Sunday. Mrs. Caleb Allen, Jr., ts sick at her home with influenza. A number of our young people at tended the play Unacquainted^ with Work, at Cedar Rock last Thursday night. They reported a very enjoy able time. We are very sorry that Mr. Clinton Nelms went to Cedar Rock to the play last Thursday night and had his mo tor meter stolen off his Ford. Miss Bet tie Burnette and Miss QUI and Mr. John Woodlief, ot? Kittrell, were pleasant visitors in our commua lty recently. Mr. Percy Winston from Rocky Mount was a pleasant visitor in the community Sunday. Miss Annie Mae Gupton visited her sister, Mrs. Bnnis Lancaster Sunday afternoon . Jan. 9, Mr. S. N. Velms passed a way at his home following a few days suffering with pneumonia. Mr. Nelms w6s a faithful member or sandy Creek church. He leaves to mourn their 1088 a widow, who was Miss Lela Gup ton, before marriage, und one sister, Mrs. Collins, of Henderson, and three brothers, Messrs. G. W. Nelms, D. N. Nelms and Cm G. Nelms. G. TO Jf Elf BEES OF COTTON A8S0CIA. TIOJI All members of the North Carolina Cotton Growers Association in Frank It!r?ounty who have not received their second advance will take their dupli cate certificates of delivery and call on Mr. J. S. Howell, who will get the matter straightened out at once. Mr. Howell has assumed this respon sibility and we are sure he can give you quick and efficient service. The tabulation of the card teporta i shows that there were 14,063 .bales of cotton,- counting round as half bales, ginned In Franklin county, from the crop- of 1922 prior to January 1, 1923, as compared with 11.248 bales ginned to January 1, 1922. ? .? ? . COW FOR BALE One flue. 'cow for sale/apply to v " MRS. J. H. SLEDGE. 1-26.31; V Mapleville, N. C. Good Soap at less than lc a Cake A Powerful Cleanser for Kitchen and Laundry Ea?y to Make with Red Seal Lye -Here is the way to true soap will free them immediately, economy. Why buy expensive TolUtt ?nd link. .houM b? frequently laundry soap when an excellent disinfected with Red Sol Lye. It killa pure soap may be made with Red th* *?*** . . .. T VJ. a fr.,,;An ?r I? there an old lamp in the hotiM that Jse4l_ ? . w need* cleaning? Red 8eal Lye will make cost? One can of Red Seal Lye it ehine in a jiffy. will make 20 cakes of pure soap, Scour that dirty skillet with Red Seal {or %%^?s^.tk!!,uk.n,,<r.?gT?,.b.. odor. aJl washing and scouring purposes. in<i h*? any number of other uui about Eaey directions in the can. the bouse. There are many more ways to use this won derful household neces sity? each one a re>l jnoney saver. If the drains show signs of clogging, a little Red Seal Lye sifted into the pipes Red Seal Lye la put up in neat round cana and ia ac companied by complete in structions. Write ua today for a frae copy of the Red JLyal Book let which explaina all of itft many usca. Insist on the genuino granulated Red Seal Lye. Take no substitute. P. C. TOMSON & COMPANY, Southw.rk P. O., Philadelphia, Pa. AANTAL STATEMENT Showing the Receipts and Disbursements of the General Fond of Franklin County, From December 1st, HOI <u December 4th, 1922 1921 Dec 1 to cmt overdraft brought forward from Nov. % 7,103.14 Dec 3 by amt deposited by Sheriff (1921 taxes) t 2,500.00 Doc 6 to amt pd J J Barrow-, Judge Juvenile court 25.00 Dec 5 to amt pd H W Perry, salary auditor 125.00 Dec 5 to amt pd Dr J E Malone, hoalth officer 150.00 Dec 6 tc-amt pd Dr J E Malone quarantine officer 35.00 Dec 5 to amt pd Pauline Smith, Home Dem Agt 75.00 Dec 5 to amt pd J C Jones welfare officer 75.00 Doc 5 to amt pd J C Tucker Jail keeper 25.00 Dec 5 to amt pd Henry Portls Janitor : 35.00 Dec 5 to amt pd A J Joyner 4th qr Com and mileage? 39.35 Dec 5 to amt pd >P Timberlake 4th qr Com & mileage 26. 00 To amt Cr by error to Q P fund, due Sal fund (Dec 1920 330,00 Dec 5 to amt pd C C Hudson 4th qur Com 25.00 Dec 5 to amt pd W D Fuller 4th qr Com and mileage ? 43.00 Dec 5 to amt pd W C Wilder 4th qr Com and mileage.. 30.60 Dec 5 to amt pd S,C Holden stamps ex and telgrams 9.65 Dec 5 to amt pd_ Franklin Hotel dinner for Jurors 10.50 Dec 6 to amt pd Henry Wiggins 1 load wood Nov eourt _ 4.00 Dec 5 to amt pd McKinne Bros Co stove pipe and lock " .2.46 Dec 6 to amt pd Mrs H W Perry 11 days Court 8 ten 110.00 ? Dec 5 to amt pd Lbg L & W Co 1 and w C H and Jail? 14.50 1 Dei 6 to amt pd H A Kearney acct rendered -- 79.00 Dec 5 to amt pd Joe L, Seawell costs Williams ts ComB 13. OS Doc 5 to amt ifd P J King capturing still ! 20.00 Doc 5 to amt pd Edwards and Broughton acct CSC ? " 7.21 Dec 5 to amt pd Edwards and Broughton for Fee book ;i' 32< 19 4 Dec 5 to amt pd J J Barrow CSC costs J M Allen v Com 10,00 Dec 5 to amt pd J A. Marshall capturing still 20.00 Dec Bo amt pd H A Kearney 1 J tor col 1921 taxes 675 . 00 Dec 6 by "nt dep by CSC Jury tAX and Sten fees _ 22.80 Dec 8. by amt depyhop rentitC Tayler ... ? 10. 00 To voucher pd O W Dobbin Wma v Com* yeft off Nov) 85.00 * 9.484.M ? -VHjaa.so Pec 31 by amt overdraft carried forward to Jan ? $,96d.84 > % >,484.64 IM84.64 i?2 - v . ?. Jan 1 to amt overdraft brght forward from Dec , 6,9S1j<84 ,, Jan 2 to amt pd J J Barrow Judge Juvenile court , n , ,36.00 ,, ? : Jan J to amt pd'H W Perry' salary auditor ' 126.00 ) >+ ? _ Jan 2 to arat pd Dr J'B Malone quar officer. _ 56 .{00 ,5. ? Jan 2,to amt pd J C Tucker Jajl keeper , '?$*> ? ' ' N OTICE - To Members of the Tobacco and Cotton Growers i ?? ? * J ; Co-operative Associations Our dealings with the members of the Co-operative Association has been satisfac ' > tory for 1922 and to further show -our confidence in the Association we are willing to furnish the members supplies tf-they merit credit, so far as we are able, for 1923. We are taking this position NOW in order that the membership may know that they can deal with us and still deliver their tobacco and cotton t^ their respective As sociation. Spring Hope Supply Co., Supplies. Spivey and Matthews, Supplies, Davis and Joyner, Supplies. The Citizens Bank of Spring Hope. ? ' I (The First National Bank of Spring Hope J. M. Sykes, Cash Grocer. Spring Hope Drug Co. . Citizens -Drug Co. Spring Hope Grocery Co . , "Wholesale . O. B. Bainees, Hardware. r . Tant and Baines, Cash Grocers. H. E. Edwards, Cash Grooer. Bunn and Luper, Dry Goods. R. S. Coppedge, Cash Grocer. Bell's Cash Grocery . Spring Hope Cafe . ? L. E. Markham, Plumbing Contractor. Geo. W. Bunn, Dry Goods and Notions. E. CrBullock, Cash Grocer . J. A. Tunuell, Cash Grocer. J. C. Brantley, M . D . J' F. G. Chamblee, D. D. S. . South side Pharmacy, Druggists. Pitts Motor Co., Ford Sales and Service. M. L. St&llings, Barbecue Stand . I. B. Gardner, Live Stock and Vehicle*. H. Brantley, M. D. * Tha % C. May Co.; Geueral Merchants . Spring Hope, N. C.

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