Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / July 18, 1924, edition 1 / Page 2
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Tobacco Twine Lanterns rmometers Our thermdmetefcs have the large red merco) Easy to rejad. : McKINNE BROS. PAY CASH and PAY LESS The Wonderful Pictorial Review Patterns Now on Sale Here! After studying them all, we are convinced that there are rtopat-" terns which combine the chic, simplicity, and economy of Pictorial Review Patterns and we have decided to install them. And now there's another reason for their supremacy. Every Pictorial Review Pattern in cludes that wonderful invention, J The Pict o graf guarantN^ spc-^ cess for nome-il ressm? Abolishes all risk of spoSxig good material. Guaran lei perfect style and fit. Mak rs i^ possible for cverv woma to sew. Even a child can ule it. All Pictorial Review Pat erns as issued commencing vith June will be priced at I'd to 35c none higher. V. Dtv^k 2237 36 cents ism PftiMrcn IN u . %. A. A. T onkel Louisburg, - North Carolina <* tu ft at. attw ? kaartai mum ot m mm, it apu that it m au? MM nantaiM tkas tt Ha fluimw ? * HHiH SCHOOL KMCA.TIOON OF FA RX <H1M>KK> The United States Bureau of Edu cation of the Department of the In terior has made available for the first time reliable facta as to the extent to which farmer children are being educated In high schools. Complete returns from the States of Maine, New Hampshire, North Dokota, Montana, land Oregon show that 3.15 per cent of the total farm population are en LOST MOTION Br THOMAS A. CLAKK Dmi of !*??, Uairtr*it| ?| UWmtU ? '1 needed a little information at Providence, and u there was a young woman ahead of me, I had both time and opportunity to watch the young actions were alow and deliberate. He had no nerrea, apparently, and no ap preciation of the tact that anyone might be pressed for time. Ha did nothing with directness. Ha would dip his pan Into an Ink bottle out at sight somewhere under the deak and than shake It once or twice In the di rection of the floor to rwaove the surplus Ink and wave tt tn the air be fore beginning to write. Cooataaily he was stopping to torn something over or to push something aside In search of a lost natation of tome sort. He would open a drawer, and then shut It, he would wander all to some remote and hidden part of the office for a blotter or a writing pad, or some esoteric tact of which he seemed to be tn need; he would hegltate l> his work and look up as suae one passed. and an this as time wa^ pass Ins. His task was simply to cwy a name and a nnrnher a ad a data la Oka paper be was making out a - taak that be could hare accompli shad to one-tenth of the time tt took him had be gone directly at tL Moat of bis activity waa dmMj lost motion; Q was a little flourish before be began really to do anything; It had little or *o connection with the main task lp hand. As a workat he waa worth About fifteen cents an bodt, cad he caused me nearly to mlaa an en gagament. His method Is not aa uncommon one. Any one who watched MoCaiter at his books would see that he studied la this same way. Host at the time that he waa supposed to be studying, he was filling his fountain pen, or he was looking for his pipe or "v~fr,ff Irrelevant questions of his roommate. He talked or sang snatches of the latest song or dosed over his book. There waa no concentration, no gat ting directly at the point. Moat of his mental activity, tf tt could be eo called, was lost motion; most of his time was wasted. Men tackle moral problems In much the same way. They edge round them, they evade a definite Issue, they play with moral principles as the man In Providence played with the materials on his desk. They get nowhere, because they have no definite objective In view. Their mor al activities are mostly loat motion. Mrs. Harriet McLeUan Mrs. Harriet McLeilsn. aged etghty rIx years, of Atlanta, Oo_ friend of tbe wives of the Presidents since Lin coin. She remembers Mrs. Lincoln by her wlde-straylng honpaklrt; KHk Harrison by her hoc* les-of-nnrtt?m sleeves; Mrs. Qeveland by her enw mons bustle, and Mrs. MrKlnley by her pompadour. Tha first Mrs. Wltaon was a sehoolnnta of one of her daugh ters. Of Mrs. Oooildge aba nK 'There's a real Whits Hons* lady ttt you. Of all the first ladled rt? cmt met sba Is the moat broadndnded and nstnrsL" rolled In high schools as compared with 3.56 per cent of the non-farm population. In three of the five states ? Mslne. New Hampshire and Oregon ? however, higher percentages of the farm population are enrolled In high school than of the non-farm poufotlon. In these states It is significant that through centralisation of high aebools more than 80 per cent of all hlffh schools serving farm children are comprehensive four-yeor high schools CLOVER SEED Buy While The Price Is Low The McGhee=Joyner Co. FRANKLINTON'S BIGGEST & BEST STORE PHONE 47 PHONE 47 Cud I use a variable condensw to tune the primary of the remodeled coupler. Is often asked. The answer Is. yes, but It Is not necessary. If a variable condenser Is used In series with the uerial. Just add ten turns to the primary. Two dry cells will not work bet ter with a \V1>12 tube, bat they will have a longer life If they are cod neeled In parallel. Before mounting radio parts on a busel>oard, sandpaper the rough spots down and give It a few thin coats of shellac or varnish. This will prevent the board from absorb lng moisture and causing short cir cuits where bus wire rests on the hoard. "A" batteries deteriorate quietly in summer because of heat and hu midity. Two dry cells In parallel win last more than twice as long as one dry cell on the same load, be cause the efficiency of these cells remains higher on the lower current consumption. It Is economical, therefore, to use a double bank of batteries connected ? to a ilty tube. The capaclrv oZ a phone condenser is usually .001 or .002, while a find condenser which la to be Ehunted across the terminals of a load speaker la .009 or .000. Ail *7l" battery switch will eUffiU nate the necessity M turning t&e rheostat off when through Oslng th? set Ty Coob, Jr., Plays Ternni* Ty OoM). J V, Tftto P&tT* pratty good >wi>^ DM taaakco Oat pons fbr twuli But ao fkr iaafl aoeeawM ta (bat wort as Ma 4ad ?d to ML lte ?on at tbs worwr? grartwt baatfmii Bto?r la ghown la a tmrroamant ta wtdch lta took part i?"?f ?* Ha Aa bcatan ta Ma mid ma**. while In the two States where lower percentages of the (arm population are enrolled more than 50 per cent of all high schools serving farm child ren are small one, two, or three-year high schools. tMcidedly higher percen tages of girls are enrolled from both farm and non-farm groups. On an average the percentages of girls en rolled are more than one third higher Nemesis of Fakers Baoadtct W. HoUlen at HMttonX Conn^ who ?u ttw foreman of the grand Jury tn OamwcOmt that InvaatV gated fake doctor*. One hundred and ?eventy-nlne wore found guilty of prwtv ttdn* without a lleonae, and one gnflty of manslaughter. than for boys. If education Ib worthy anything for productive work, either we muBt depend more and more upon our women to do the productive work of the world or we must flndsome solution for the problem of getting our boye In school. NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of authority contained In a certain deed ot trust, executed to the undersigned trustee by Viola Inscoe, which said deed ot trust Is duly recordedfln the Register of Deeds office of Fr, Book 250 pae 79, t thereby secured bel demand having bee: for foreclosure, the lng been offered fo June 9, 192A when Card becamefhe la der at the su bid having be iklln County in |e indebtedness past due and made upon me .id property hav sale on Monday md where W. H. and highest bid of $450.00, and the said railed within the time prescribed by llw blr a deposit with the Clerk of the Sfaef or Court of 10 per cent ( $45.00) n Jill on Monday the 28th day of Ju hri 1924, at about the hour of noon, atMlie court house door at Loulsburg, NIC., offer for sale to the highest bidJkr for cash the fol lowing describe nroperty : Situate in rrvikllnton township, Franklin Counly, ra. C. Bounded on the North by the/lan? of A. B. Wester, on the east by the litads of Jim Hewey. on the soutrf by t\e Loulsburg and Frankllntqn/road, on\he west by the landB of Mr. Layton. Containing about 1 aHre, more or loss, Being. the home plafc^ of Viola Inscoe, aid being lots Nos. 1, 2 and 3 In the Bub-dlvlslon of tbe A. B. Wester lands. For plat of w'hlch map book 1, page 107 In the office of the Register of Deeds of Franklin county. ThlB July 10, 1924. S. A. NEWELL. 7-ll-3t Trustee Why call them "grass" widows when they are no longer green? Not many things on the stage will bear close Inspection. Love In a cottage Is sweet In pro portion to the. amount ot food 06 the table. "I - w ? Subscribe to The mm klip Times FOLKS INOUB TOWN "C 0 w * ?* - * j - / > /'l' *<HAT it ^d?sft <&Si hv ?! \Sl " V / ,-J ?oj fct a !n
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 18, 1924, edition 1
2
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