Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Nov. 30, 1923, edition 1 / Page 6
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HELP! It is a strong, appealing word ? a word that should be in the lexicon of universal brotherhood. There is a Help that is fostered by this Institution, through its Savings Departments, that will be a benefit to all who become depositors with us, whether it be in the permanent 4 per cent, compound interest Savings Fund cr the 4 per cent. Certificates of Deposit. These all bring just the help wanted, when old age, sickness or unemployment confronts us. Start an account of some kind with us now which will be a help to you later on. P. S. ? A few school bags left. Free to child making Savings deposit $1.00 or more. Alter a hlir I)lnn?r, a heary Desert Is not desirable either (or health or enjoyment. Suts, assorted from the many varieties we hare Just recelre<t. answers the Desert question easily and economically. A (nil and select line of faults and candies (or the holidays. Our line o( Feed Stuffs Is complete and our prices are attract! re. COME ASD SEE WE. J. Allen Harris LOUISBURG, North Carolina TUCKER'S HOTEL and CAFE Main Street LOOISBURG, N. C. The best of meals the mar ket afforda and prepared In the beat of fashion. Plenty of rooms for the accommodation of all who wtah to spend the nlfht, all ' wall furnished. ? J. C. TUCKER Tutfs Pills Enable Dyspeptics to eat whatever theywtah. Cause food to assknOate. Nourish the body, give appetite. DEVELOP FLESH The lady who recommended Wm. Tell to you was some friend of your*. Don't yon think? Well, you wiy so, If you're tried It. 10-ll-12t LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN One black and white spotted Beagle Hound, with brows Mrs. Left By home Saturdaynlght. Reward for Its return to me. W. C. HOLMES, U-23-2t R. No. 1, Loulsbnrg, N. C. FOR SALE OR RENT The store house and lot at Laurel, known as the J. B. Jones store Is (or sale or rent. For terms and prices apply to O. B. EGERTON, R 8, Louis burg, N. C. ll-28-2t AUCTION SALE On Saturday, December 1st, 1 9X8, at 11 o'clock a. m. at the residence In Youngsvtlle township, we will offer for sale all the household and kitch en furniture, terming Implements, stock, feed, etc. belonging to the late J. B. Allen. Terms Of sale ? Cash. This Nor. 14th, 192S. B. Q. ALLEN, ll-16-3t H. W: ALLEN. Exasperating COUGHS NOT only you ? but all those around you are annoyed by lbs constant hacking of a persist ent cough. Dr. King* a New Dis covery breaks coughs quickly by stimulating the mucous membranes to throw off the dogging secre tions. Has a pleasant taste. At all druggists. Dr. KING'S o/scowtr IS LOVING REMEMBRANCE OF LITTLE BESSIE ORMENTLl MATTHEWS We have lost our darling Ormentla. Oh, how hard to see her go. But the angles came to take her and would not hear our "No." Earth has lost Its load of gladness, Heaven seems to us more bright since the spirit of our darling took Us happy homeward (light. Little Bessie Ormentla Mat thews was the sweet daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Matthews. 8he was born Nov. 26, 1922, died July 6. 1923 Just a flower It seems budded on earth to bloom in Heaven. Little Ormen tla was never well from birth, from the beginning of her sickness she was very sick. Skilled physicians were called in and all that earthly power could do was done for her; the Angel band seemed not large enough, they needed one more so little Ormentla was called to swell the number. In vain did loving hearts and willing hands unite with the Doctor's skill to restore this precious child to those who loved her so much, while the somber curtains of grief shade your sky. The world seems empty and cheerless the hearts know the dreary aching voice yet these parents have the consolation of knowing that the little sufferer is at peace the one on whom they lavished their affections is in the land where the wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at rest, twill not be long before they can cross the dark river and join little Ormentla with the hosts of the saved on the other shore. The burial took place near midway at the old family burying ground, the services were conducted by the paBtor of Corinth Baptist church, Rev. E. G. Willis. His remarks were beautiful, most touch ing the great sorrow to be n benedic tion, more strongly the ties that bind the desire for the Heavenly home. Quite a large number ot friends and loved ones assembled for this sad oc Icasion. The little mound was cover ed with beautiful flowers, tokens of ! friendship and sympathy ror the be jreaved family who had labored so [lovingly to keep life In this little body. ! Little Ormantia leaves to mourn their I loss a father, mother, three sisters and brothers, Eula Mae, Elolse and Joeannie, Claude, Edward and Eugene. [ Besides a host of friends and relatives. [The bereaved ones have the sympathy ; of the entire community and to the God who has bereft them we com mend their keeping and bid them say his will be done. Dearest Ormentla thou hr.st left us and our loss we deeply feel but tis God who hath bereft us he can all our sorrows heal, yet again we hope to meet thee when the day of life is fled then In Heaven In joy to greet thee where no parting farewell Is said. o A Bat Th?t Didn't Smell Alter Being Dead for 3 Months "I swear It was dead at least 3 months," said James Sykes, Butche-, West field, N. J. "We saw this rat every day. Put a cake of RAT-SNAP behind a barrel. Months later my wife asked about the rat. Remember ed the barrel, looked behind It. There was the rat ? dead, not the slightest odor." Three sizes, 36c, 65c, $1.25. Sold and guaranteed by CASH OROC ERY AND MARKET. Adv. Snbscrtb* to Ths Franklin Times Free Flower 8eeds Toa wtP ba glad to k aow that Hi tinea* , "Tha Sooth'* n??ilTi?n" win ?1t? away about J, 000,000 p?c>?ti of mi of tha Bouth'a moot popular fkrw an thla iprtai- ... Than li nothing to tha homa that aaa aomjara with rich eelora* Qowara. n*r brtgfctaa aa all up Ul maka any koua aihaullia. Toa sarft plant too many flawara and thl* opportunity to iM RhMar rotplaa. Brartaadaf TVow ?ra, lihmtaa, Ooamoa and Mazlcaa Bum Aw Baah abantataly traa, U oartalnly to ha walaomad by aB raadara of thla papar. ' Ton oaa cat thamt Joat wrlta to tUM*g* tor tha nmr lttt Oatalo*. it' tana you bow to |*t Oowar aaada baa. It baa 100 pagaa of baaatlM photo' graphic platufea and aanaut daaortp tttoa of gardaa Oowar and fMd aaada. bmlba and pianta, aad alao la Ml of halpful Information that la Mated aim oat daflj la arary Southaca bona. lt*? tha moat rmlnabla aaad book afar pahUahad aad you wfll ba mlghtjr gUi yon'ra got It Joat wrlta ui Mk tor tha mw Catalog. H. ?. HACTINM CO, Hare you tried William Tall Flour T If not, **k your neighbor about It. 10-12-12t No Worm* in u Atlanta, ha. throw off Of dl> ? 1 laparleet heaJta. i Ait children tronh' health? color, wh ' 1 rale, thera ta m< GROVE'S TASTF' loatwoor tbrr? > prtvethadifenk.' rote* Toole 10 tb- ? COOUDGE ASKS NATION TO OBSERVE "GOLDEN RULE SUNDAY" ON DEC 2 m a m ?m k, ft. ?. ??? ? Til* plana for the observanoe of Qol<Jon Rule Sunday call upon the people of America to serve a menu tn their home* similar to that srrred In the orphan ace* in the near east, the difference In ooit of the orphanage menu and the ordinary meal to be oontrlbuted to orphanage work overseas. The observ ance U very appropriately Axed tor the Sunday following Thanksgiving. Having on Thursday partaken from well-laden tables as a token of rejoicing to the prosperity of America, it Is fitting that on the following Sunday people give special consideration to the needs and distress o i those who are less highly favored. ? - REFUGEE MEAL FOR AMERICANS Whole Country Asked to Adopt Orphanage Menu for Just One Sunday Dinner. RELIEF HAS SAVED MILLION People of All Nation* Will Figurative ly Gather Around Same Table ma Practical Sign of 8/mpathy With Near Eaat Sufferer*. How many comfortably fed, clothed and housed Americans will alt down to a Sunday dinner of rice, corn grit* and soup ? typical orphan fare? on December 2, as a practical test of the golden rule? The question !s asked today by Charles V. Vlckrey, general secretary Of Near East Relief, who Is In charge of the plans for the general observ ance throughout the United States of "Golden Rule Sunday." In an Inter view, Mr. Vickrey said: "If American people will renounce for one meal the food they are accus tomed to eat, and contribute the dif ference In cost to the support of starr ing children In the near east, the situ ation In Greece, Armenia and Pales tine will become Infinitely more real to them. "I have recently returned from sev eral months In those countries. Ameri ca is a name to conjure with there. Bitter reproaches are heard against nearly every other country, but none agalnBt vs. That !? because people realize that Americans have gone to them with a helping hand and a square deal, rather than with the mailed fist "America oould well have afforded to have spent every penny of her re Hef funds as a long-sighted, cold-blood ad business proposition. The good will that has resulted from relief work In the near east 1s of Incalcul able value. When these orphans we aM oaring for today grow to man hood, they will become the leaders of thetr nations and their eyes will tors toward America. "At least a million persona In the Mar east would not be alive today had H not been for American aid. Bven today, 100,000 persons are being eared tor day to day by the Near East Re Hef, mostly woman and children wbc would probably pariah la a few days or weeks If the worV seased. "Oaf workers are' aow concentrate lac not only oh the physical care ol our SO, 000 orphans, but on their In dustrial training aa wall. At the age of 14, when an orphan leave* our ear*, ha Is eqalpped to enter some useful trade or business. In Naraseth (here are boys working In our carpen ter shop a few feet from the spot where Christ tolled. In Macedonia, hundreds o t Greek orphans are learn ing farming In the atmosphere wbers Paul spent many years In establishing the first European churches. "Five dollars a month provides food and physical necessities for an or phan, and $100 a year provldea for hli education aa wall. The observance of Oolden Rule Sunday by a mil lion American familial' will provide enough funds/for thousands of orphans "When people break bread together, they become friends. On this Inter aadonal Oolden Rule Banday people ef all nations figuratively will gathei arouad the same table, partaking ol i the same food representing the mtnn . which the unfortunate children dt the ? near east hope, by the benevolence ol tha West, to eat 3(15 days In the yc.tr But even this simple menu the or piians cannot have unless the rest ol tha world practices tha Golden Rulo.' FOURTEEN NATIONS SUPPORT COOilDGE European Countries Join Ameri can President in Backing Golden Rule as Prac tical Program. Geneva, Switzerland. ? Officials of re- j lief organizations from fourteen Euro- | pean countries have asked their gov- I ernments and peoples to Join in a J great International movement to save j the destitute orphans and widowed i mothers in those countries of the Near J East that have suffered from recent i war*. Deo. 2 has been set aside as "Golden ; Rule Sunday." On that day people i -will be asked* to observe the broad 1 principle of the Golden Rule by fore- 1 going their usual noonday meal and | eating instead the frugal ration usually j partaken of by the parentless children j of Greece, Armenia and Palestine. I The world's people will then be 1 asked to contribute the difference in j the cost of the two meals to the prin | clpal relief organization In their coun- j try, to be administered for the needy j children. , j ^Notable people In Europe who will ; I co-operate to give the day an Inter- t i national aspect are King George of | Greece, Wince Carl of Sweden, ex | Premier Clemenceau of France, M. I I Paul Hymans and Dr. Alice Masaryk. ) AMERICAN FOODS BEST I SAYS FAMOUS DOCTOR ?_ 1 Athena. ? American standard food ?toffs are the best In the world, says Dr. Mabel Elliott, famous woman phy sician. who for the past two years hag been medical director of American or I phanagea in the Near Bast. From the . standpoint of parity and high food , Talus, she asserts that no European nation can compete with the United States, and for this reason she Insists on American products In all orphan ages and hospitals. In order to meet adequately the needs of undernour ished children. Dr. Elliott's annnal report, ram ming op the results of the care of I (0,000 children In orphanages as well , as cUnlcs for 50,000 additional chil dren in refugee camps and homes, ' says: t j "Stable American foods are now the backbone of all our menus for re building children who became weak and anaemia during the refugee ex I odus from Asia Minor. Oar menus contain, not only bread made from American flour, and corn grits In por | ridge and itqwa, but also the liberal I use of corn syrup. American con i densed milk and American oocoa and macaroni, thus making a balanced ration to meet all the sclentlflo re quirements as to relative food raluee, calories and vltamlnes. The favorite orphanage pudding Is composed of corn grit# with cocoa, sweetened with corn syrup, and made more nutritious and palatable by add tng a sauce of American condensed milk. Such a pudding has a high food ralue and Is very economical ? no other equivalent food value could be obtained from other foods at twice the cost. Moreover, It Is so palatable that children eat It eagerly several times a week,- and never seem to tire of 1L The American people. In pro viding for these parentless children such pure and wholesome foods from thel* own tables, are certainly making a practical application of th# golden rule." , Dr. Elliott has recently returned to America to arrange for the publica tion of a book of her experiences un der the title of "Beginning Again at Am rat." NEW VIM FOR WEAK, W:i PALE WOMEN f~ *V) -->y yy.r <rk nr.d have J . ? - r r.T.-; -t>. ;,m pleasures ji. : J..C r;t rM oi that rca ?.ii .Tii i-h your thin U-"! n 1 "'.it ftiw tn t?'i? > . i ?.*!-: Jt will h:Jp ... voi:;.vrfuli)\ _ .!.t your druu . in t '.'il i, ./.il l fti*. .1 l&blotB. - . , - TV .1 ViM ?r Tn ?"* rotrt't ?, .. r.a. ? LcAiih>lMj(S:n| ? . ?? ? '.'.'j-J ** !'? Ji* -*V u: ^ *n, write Vidt/ . .* ???-# ? ' r: .1 ir?r of Table U. Ssr.J : ? r.. ? j" t ii;i.r 1 iaJ UvI.Itcm t?> J. i.ii-.v-.iia.a Cv., l?2 \?oiwa SU, N. Y. QvlAq's papiO-JS^an^an TonJe and B Isoci. Enricher ., . .jpueaianaaMlHkM^ WOOD DEPARTMENT (Continued from Page Three) irlbuting 21, offering 68c, prepared lea sons 15, attending preaching 21. Junior Dept. ? enrolled 37, absent 7, present 29, on time 29, bibles 14, No. contributing 29. offering 48c, prepar ed lessons 18, attending preaching 29. Primary Dept.? enrolled 28, absent 14, present 14, on time 9, No. contrib uting 10, offering 10c, prepared les sons 6, attending preaching 14. Beginners Dept. ? enrolled 18, ab sent 6, present 7, on time 7, No. con tributing 5, offering 5c, attending preaching 7. Totals ? enrolled 234, absent 84, present 155, on time 150, bibles 68 No. contributing 149, offering J8.00. prepared lessons 91, attending preach ing 155, new pupils 2, visitors 6, grand total present 163. enrolled in main school 234, enrolled in Home Dept. 32, enrolled in Cradle Roll 27, total en rollment Sunday school 293. ? ? LOCAL JiEWS Miss Bessie Lou Collins and Mr. Sturgcss Collins, Middleburg, were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Philip G. Stur ges Wednesday. Messrs. N. C. Gupton, Joe Shearin, C. G. Wood and Harvit Gupton went to Raleigh on business Wednesday. Messrs. J. M. and Marvin Wilder were Louisburg visitors Thursday. Mr. Alex We3ter went to Louisburg Thursday. Mr. Sam Harris, Henderson, was a visitor here Wednesday. _Misses Nancy and Annie Gupton and Mr. Buddie Gupton were Gupton call ers Tuesday afternoon. Messrs. E. F. Austin, Henderson and John Yarborough, Louisburg, were visitors here Tuesday. Mr. Cleveland Gupton visited War renton Tuesday. Messrs. Saint Leonard and Gus Wes ter went to Louisburg Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Fuller and child ren were Louisburg visitors Tuesday. Messrs. John Burt and Early Den ton went to Raleigh Tuesday. Mr. W. L. Turner, Norfolk, Va. was here on business Wednesday. Mr. I. C. Spear, Norfolk, Va. wa3 a visitor here Friday. Mr. J. S. Shearin had the misfortune of losing a fine hog last Saturday sup posedly from cholera. It weighed about 250 pounds and had beon sick only about two days. There are sev eral other hogs in the community suf fering from the same malady but their condition seems to improve. Misses Fogleman and Woodburn and Mrs, M. T. Griffin went to Rocky Mount Saturday. Mr. Bennle Tucker was a visitor of Louisburg Monday. Misses Annie and Nancy Gupton and Messrs. Sidney and Buddie Gup ton were visitors of friends in Roan oke Rapids Sunday. Dr. H. M. Beam spent the week-end at his home in Roxboro, accompanied by Mr. Cleacy Gupton. Mr. W. D. Fuller went to Rocky Mount on business Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Lewis and family visited Mr. and Mrs. C. R' Lewis and children at the Gold Mine. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Burnette and Mr. Jlmmie Burnette, of ILaurel visit ed Mrs. H. B. Burnette Sunday. Quite a large attendance appeared at the Sunday nljlit service. Mr. Cleveland Gupton and mother, Mrs. N.'O. Gupton visited their sis ter and daughter, Mrs. W. E. Harris of County Line. Misses Lucy and Grade Burnette vlolted Mrs. R. p. Jones Sunday after noon . Mr. and Mrs. Mark King of White Level visited Mr. and Mrs. Arch Gup ton Sunday. Mr. H. T. Wright visited at Mr. and Mrs. Joe Shearing and Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Fuller's Sunday. Mr. Roy Strickland, of Whitakers ? was a visitor here Sunday.
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 30, 1923, edition 1
6
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