PULL VALUE YOU ALWAYS GET IT WHEN YOU BUY HERE * The housewife who markets here knows that every time her groceries are placed on the scales, they regis ter full value in quality and satisfaction. The tempting, delicious assortment of canned goods, fruits and vegetables we carry make buying here easy and pleasant because you can find what you want at prices that are not exorbitant. Fresh Country Produce at Lowest Market Prices Heavy Groceries, Grain and Feed J. ALLEN HARRIS LOUISBURQ, North Carolina MONEY TQ LEND 6 per cent interest. 33 years time. No bonus. Loans placed in two weeks. See Thos. W. Ruffin In Louisburg Mondays and Thursdays In Raleigh at 401 Raleigh Building & Loan Build ing other days. What Every Man, Woman and Child in This Community Reeds WE HAVE IT A complete line oi quality mer chandise makes it possible for this store to satisfy the wants of every member of the family. Wearing Apparel and Shoes We invite an early inspec tion of the spring stock we are showing at very moder ate prices. furnishings A large and complete as sortment of underwear, hos iery, hats, shirts, ties, col lars, caps, suspenders, belts, handkerchiefs. Dry Goods The home dressmaker will be able to find just what she wants here. All of the de sired materials for, spring dresses. A. S. WIGGS NASH STREET LOUISBURG, N. C. Thinning peaches will increase quality and proDts, finds C. D. Mat thews, hortlcnltrlet for the North Caro. ' lma Agricultural Experiment Station. Tom Tarheel says ha la going to leave his cotton twelve Inches apart In the row this year and try oat this Idea. la 14 to ft Daya ? ? "LAX-F08 WITH PEPSIN" to ? ?pedaDy prspared Strap Tonk-l-axatlre for Habitual Oooatlpation. It rafieraa promptly bat ?boald to taken ratfolarty for 14 to 21 day* scalar action. It Sdnmlataaand i Vary Ptoaaant to Take.* Mo HOW BOOTS TREAT COLDS AND THE FLU To. break up a cold over night or to cut abort an attack of grippe, influenza or tore throat, physicians and dPuggi&ta are now rrmmmrnding Xalotabw the nauaealcsa Calomel tablet, that it purified from'dan gerous and sickening effec|g^ Those who nave tried it say that it acts like irfagic, by far more effective and certain than the old style calomel, heretofore rectynmeaded by physicians. One or two Calotabs at bed time with a swallow of water,?that's all. No salts, no nausea nor the slightest interference with eating, work or pleasures. Next morn ing your cold has vanished and your sys tem feels refreshed and purified. Calotabs are sold ohly in original sealed packages, price ten cents for the vest-pocket sue; thirty-five cents for the large family pack age. Recommended and guaranteed by druggists. Your money back if you are not delighted.?anv. CAREFULLY CULTIVATE YOUNG COTTON Raleigh May 4.?In spite of the very favorable season for cotton that has so far prevailed over North Carolina, it must be kept in mind that a large percentage of the crop was planted with seed of low vitality and unless the season continues unusually favor able, there will be a high death rate of the young seedlings. For this reason Dr. R. Y. Winters, plant breeding agronomist at S tate College, urges that growers give their cotton frequent and careful cultiva tion. This, he states, will help to warm up the soil and permit the air to enter. "Poor stands in cotton are most of ten due to unfavorable weather in spring and lack of timely cultivation between the period of planting and chopping," says Dr. Winters. "The crop is now started under favorable weather conditions but with seed of low vitality. It cool, damp weather or even the usual weather prevails over the cotton section, and the young plants are not properly cultivated, there is certain to be a high death rate of young plants. Frequent use of the weeder, harrow or cultivator will re. lieve this condition." Dr. Winters advises farmers to use these implements between the time of planting and chopifbg because break ing the crust will .cause the soil to warm, up and allov^ air to enter. Slich conditions are favofti-Me " for. young cotton and if not givea, the grower may look for a heavy; loss from dis ease and natural wealujiess of the seed lings. -,.' ? - WANTED Stenographic work for afternoons by experienced stenograper ' - Address Box 11, Louisburg, N. C. 5-8-2t ANNOUNCEMENT OF BIBTH Mr. and Mrs. James Forrest Joyner announce tbe birth of a daughter on May 6th, 1925. Park View Hospital. Reeky Mount, N. C. THE SUN CURE The days of sunshine are Just ahead. There is no greater tonic for a weakened system than the warm penetarting rays of the sunshfne. It is nature's most skilled physician. To get its real benefits, one must be in the sun and get the direct rays. Sitting by the close window and feeling its warmth does not bring the beneficial results that can be acquired by spending as mach time as possible out doors. For those who have the time to give to a garden, great blessings are in store. Men and women who fall in love with their little plot of ground in the back yard about this time of year are certain to have a healthful, happy summer. The annual coat of tan will be be coming and the exercise for the mus cles will add years to your life. Weak In Back and Sides "Before the birth of my little girl," says Mrs. Lens Standi, of R. F. D. 2, Mat thews, Ma, "I was so weak In my back and sides I could not go about I was too \ weak to stand up or do any work. I felt like my back I was coming In two. I lost | weight I didn't eat any ' thing much and was so rest F leas I couldn't sleep nights. ) "My mother used to take ) CARDUI ) \ For Female Troubles k so i sent to get it. I im " proved after my first bottle. } Cardui la certainly a great k help for nerrousnese and | weak back. I took six bot ) ties of Cardui and by then I a was well and strong. Just ' did fine from then on. Cardui ) helped me so much." Thousands of weak, suf fering women have taken Cardui, knowing that It had helped their mothers or their frtendn, and soon gained Strength and got rid of their Cardui should do you a lot of good. wicker the Liraw? every TOW* THAT TRIES IT The Herald of Haines City, Fla.. In a recent Issue had the folio wine "Under the caption of 'Why People Come West' the Oakland (California) Outlook states: . " Seattle spends- $260,000 annually L (featuring the gieat Northwest and Se attle spirit. . '"Portland has Just gone over the tcp on a $300,000 goal to advertise Oregon. _ . "San Francisco will have spent $750,000 In a two-year program to show the world San Francisco knows llC w. "'Los Angeles Invests $200,000 an_ nually to make herself the most talked of place In the world, and It's work lD"'San Diego, little but mighty, feels $76,000 Is not too much to ask of her business men to advertise Coronado Beach and Balboa Park, and she gets " "The cities of Florida should spend more money In the right kind ot ad vertising. It Is gratifying Indeed to ? tie the substaulal fund Delng raisrd by the Florida Development Board for the purpose of advertising our incom parable state. Florida's climate is urn excelled anywhere In the world and It is up to the cities of Florida to raise the. necessary funds for leHtni the whole world know 'Why people come South.'" The suggestion of the Herald .ap plies not simply to Florida hut pre eminently to every other state in the South; Florida is doing more adver tising than any other state" and yet there Is still room for Florida to ex pand its advertising activities, for it is through its advertising that the present wonderful development of that state has been brought about Other Southern states, if they would follow Florida's example, could at tract far more attention than they are doing. . , . Advertising does not simply draw men and money from other sections, but it enthuses the people in the place in which the advertising is done. 1 .ve vigorous advertising in the local pa pers of Florida is largely responsible for stimulating the spirit of enthusi asm in local people and in helping them to get a broadqr vision of their own opportunities. The live town is often made alive by virtue of local advertising. The dead town Is one in which comparatively little advertising Is done. , . The town or the state that desires to be left alone without being disturb ed from its long sleep of death should never advertise, locally or outside, for the moment its business people com mence live advertising, its banks, its merchants and its manufacturers com mence to tell their own people what they have on which to build up indus try, a' new spirit will be awakened. Today the most important thing in three-fourths of the towns of the South is to wake up the local people, and this can only come through the tonic of well worded and well placed advertising in all their local papers. When once a town breaks loose In a spirit of local advertising it will then be prepared to spend money lor outside advertising, but the local pa per has a right to enlist the heartiest co-operation of its local clientele, and the better and broader this advertis ing, the more spirit that is thrown into it, the more optimism that is given it, the more quickly is the com munity itself aroused into new life. Then that community is in a position to invite other people to come and take part In its development. No town or city or state has a right to seek to draw outside men and money until it has put its own house in or der until It has cleaned up its streets and paved them if they are unpaved. painted and beautified its homes and put on its best Sunday-go-to-meeting clothes in order to welcome the stran ger who may be Invited there. Any advertising where, in the lan guage of the day, the gqods cannot be delivered. Is worse than useless, because the money is not only wasted but the results are harmful rather then helpful. . The merchant who advertises goods which he cannot deUver wrongs his prospective customer and his own business. The community which ad vertises resources and attrattions in oider to invite outside men and money unless it has brightened up and dean e(; up and painted up is doing itself ham and if a prospective investor or Settler comes he Is driven away and takes an unfavorable impression wHh him. Therefore, let every com munity in the South that wants to dPveloD wake up, clean up, paint up and begin an active advertising cam pagn An the local P#Pe? * 1.12 own Duslness Interests. Then, and only then, can It afford to go before the world and invite others to come. Manufacturers Record. NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Mrs. Lizzie M. Win ston, deceased, late of Franklin Coun ty, notice is hereby given all persons holding claims against said estate to present them, duly verified, to the un. dersigned on or before the 1st day of May, 1926, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate Will please come forward and make immediate settlement. This April 80. 1920. W. W. 8HEARON, Admr. W L. Lumpkin. Atty. 5-8-6t To Stop a Couch Quick take* HAYES' HEALING HONEY, a cough medicine which stops the cough by healing the Inflamed and rotated tissues. A boa of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE fo Chest Colds. Head Colds and Ckoap Is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES' HEALING HONEY. The salve ahonld be robbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Ckoup. 5 lor HAYES* MONTY, This-Label Protects -.Yfta ? ' " i , It's the logical This Label thing to do " y??r -to buy your Guarantee , of Value Used Ford Car from Your Nearest ? Authorized Ford Dealer Save lives With Concrete Do you know the condition of the school that your children attend? Is it a firetrap? It is imperative that all old frame buddings, used for public gathering, be replaced with fire proof concrete structures. The cost of Portland Cement is exceedingly low in comparison with other building materials. It Is the cheapest of all manu factured commodities. Talk to your building material dealer about Atlas Portland Cement. He will tell you its ad vantages in construction of all kinds. u ATLAS l| PORTLAMtfillffln *'91te Standard by Which all other makes are measured" NEW COMPANY We wish to announce to the Public that we have pur chased from Dr. H. G. Perry the business formerly known as Aycock Drug Co., Inc., of Louisburg, N. C., and shall carry on a first class drug business at the same place formerly occupied by that firm. Our aim is to carry the best that is to be had in our line, and give courteous and prompt service. The business will be under the immediate management of S. P. Boddie, a Registered Pharmacist. We will appreciate your patronage. The style of our firm is Boddie Drug Co., Inc. Louisburg, N. 0. Day Phone 329 . Night Phone 231 NOTICE , North Carolina, In Superior Court Frpjiklin Co. Before the Clerk. Jeaaie T. Merritt ys. *" Coleman Merritt. The defendant above-named will take notice that an action .entitled as aboYo has been commenced in the Su perior Court ot Franklin County, North Carolina, by said plaintiff against the said defendant for a di vorce from the bonds of matrimony upon the grounds of desertion and having lived separate and apart from plaintiff for more than Ave years; and the qald defendant will further take notice, that he is required to appear r.t the office of the Clerk of the Su perior Court of Franklin County on the 16th day of June, 1925, and an swer or demur to the complaint in said action on that day or within twenty days thereafter, or the plain tiff will apply to the court for the re lief demanded in the said complaint. This the 7th day of May, 1926. J. J. YOUNG, C. S. C. for Franklin County. G. M. BEAM, Attorney for Plaintiff. 5.8-6t LJ ? - ' * ? ? HUW! J Lawn Mowers, Lawn Hose, Lawn Sprinklers and Hedge Shears at L. P. HICKS. 6-8-2t Garden Plows and Garden Tools at L. P. HICKS. 6-8-2t r COMMISSIONER'S SALE OP LAND Under and by virtue of a decree of the Superior Court of Franklin Coun ty made in the special proceeding in said court entitled F. H. Allen and wife Lou Reynolds Ford Allen v. Cnar les Gee, a lunatic, and 8. A. Newell, Guardian ad litem of said Charles Gee, the undersigned commissioner will, on MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1925 at the hour of twelve o'clock, noon, sell at public auction at the court house door in Loulsburg, N. C? to the highest bidder for cash, the followLg described real estate: A certain tract or parcel of land lying and being sit uate in Loulsburg township. Franklin County, North Carolina, adjoining the lands of W. A. Jones, J. J. Allen and C T. Hudson, containing one hundred end fifty acres, more or less, and known as the old Gee place. This sale is made for the purpose of effect ing partition of said tract of land among the tenants in common there of, and a fee simple title will he con. veyed" to the purchaser at the sale. This the 8th day of May, 1986. W. H. YARBOROUGH, 6-8-6t Commissioner,. Can supply your Garden Seed wants with fresh reliable stock at X* P. HICKS. 6-8-2t Electric Bulbs and Electrical Fix tures at L. P. HICKS.