LOUISBURG'S Leading Department Store WANTS xOUR TRADE Everything fo\^verybody At Lowest /JFtices F. A. Roth /Company The Store That Always Sells The Cheapest LOUISBURG, North Carolina WATCH THIS SPACE NEXT WEEK Something will be of interest to Your true friends Scoggin Drug Stb?^ 0. L. AYCOCK, L. E. HCOGGIN DURING JULY AND AUGUST \ The person receWIng the large* t nnmher of stlrer tickets (riven fer cash purchases, will get a set of knltes and forks. The periM receding the seemd largest nnmher ef "liter tickets will get a set oft tea spoons. The person rtcelTlng the thlr\largest /lumber will get a sugar spoon and hotter knife. L \ I . a (let raluable sllrerware with 86 jear\tuarantee by trading at ? ' 2l 't ' y ?%? Vs THE LADIE& SHOP > - "--iKJuiaburK.Uf, 0. Mrs. R. R. Harris, Prop. Mrs. J. A. Turner, Mgr. Take for tne lrver Beware of UtaHon*. Decnuvd the genoiiMU 10c uJ 3Sc puk. MM b?uU| above tra4e mark. Substituting branded wooden covers for the old burlap bags formerly used as covers (or the potato barrels and better grading of the potatoes brought an Increase In price of 26 to 50 cents per barrel to farmers In Pamlico Coun ty this spring reports county agent R. W. Galphln. Gained Ten Pound* WITH him every second count*. As he whfaks you to or from the station he doesn't want to change out of high on any hilL As he dodge* through traffic his engine must always be set for a spurt of speed. N# wonder the up-to-date taxi m<& are all us^g the new fuel ? "Standard* Eti It seems to have been made for You, too, will find it a wonderful your car. It absolutely prevents That means that you will get r~ the hills, less gear shifting, less flfrfhUity tn traffic cad better Take tj from the taxi man Standard" EthyL STANDARD OIL (New J, "ftf Etby4 GmdUm to * comMn?rion oi (fee old niAaHe "Standard* fl? niim tad SdiH ? G?arrml Motor* product Try ifc* n?w fuW am rtjrv# tow AO ymmm f?nJu Yom will Immwileteiv c urtm itu foQ owing ImprimM^f, In ?WT operadoa oi roar cvi ' L Ovtattr fuel dkkacr L Mora pow? | Jb No more 1*1 knocfci ' 4. Quirk or Kc?W?boa 3. Leu gcmr vKlftiag 5 L?*? tlknrtofi \JZ- Bwtee fcuufcJUog te rrmfftc "STANDARD" ETHYL CASOUNE P4.THBB ftAOBTB ACTIO* I ? his fooac (on, WllUaaib "?ar vfaen Om ttmm mmm Oat n ctu* i?w?in' nlwwit fl Hi I |U ll? eh."1 httebcd up wtth, remember tkat 7% can't ?Ja too Wffc? ?nr ttM humblest Utlla n?w at ft t?tw" vUl cmaa? a* tmt m Da* troaM* itf wui ?? far Jan u fena In the lone ran u Ma awaUeat-toofcln' qtaen je kin pick Convention oratory la very largely a matter ot obituaries, stale stories and noise. BELIEVES THERE IS MONEY IN FARMING Italeigh. July 21. ? *1 know that farming can be made to pay if done right for I have made money each year."' is the qualified statement made to County Agent Kope Elias of Meck lenburg County ? by D. F, Withers of that county. Mr. Elias states that B. F. Withers would be classed by some as a city farmer but thathe is doing the kind of farming of which any dirt farmer could well afford to be proud. In reporting on a trip to the Wither s farm recently, Mr. Elias says: "Five years ago his doctor told B. F. Withers that he would have to get out of his office if he wanted to live. He therefore turned his attention to the worn out farm of his chlklhood. He bought a few cows, a car of lime. Give mo Feathers 8240 Hello I Just wanted to reAind you I need a lot of feather-making materials^ Viy feed now. I have to make about 8,000 new^reatVers before I start my winter laying ? and I vm int tdkget through my molt quickly, so I can lay lop of egg&vhen prices are high. You say Purina ChWIten Chowder is full of that protein stuff that maces feothersNand eggs? That's what I need. Send^ome right ou\ L. R. H /oKS Louisburg, N. C. Phone 42 At thl Store iW th th? Chfcktrboard Sign sowed soybeans and cowpeas in the summer and put In some erimeon clov er and vetch for winter cover cropa. On a recent visit to this farm I found a field of oats that would make an average ot 60 bushels to the acre. In another field, of eleven acres, alfalfa was about three feet high. When Mr. Withers started to improve this land it wouicTnot produce &d mush as ton bushels ot corn to the acre. Now it Is one of the most productive farms in the vicinity. Reports like this come to the State College extension division week after week telling how the use of legumes will Improve the soil, build up the fer tility of the land, and help to convert a worn out farm into a moneymaklng enterprise. Agronomists of the exten sion service state that now is the time to make planH for sowing winter cover crops this fall. Many farmers are mak ing a success of alfalfa and land can be started this fall for planting to alfalfa later. Some part ot the farm should be planted to legumee each year ptate the extension agronomists. thousands of them srxtllod, prowou wcw/. ctrxd doffnvd rn* Webster's New bTTERNAnONAL DlCTlONABr Thm ??szs;-. Oof tho ?OOO itWrmboM 407.000 word* * ^ QmHHw A Hnr^y? 1 Dictionary Words, ap*HoMo G*C MERRIAM CO . JwkdUU.Ihii..UJJL - OOM*Y t*lK 0? kOUB - MfcrtfV AH.lt*

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