Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / April 13, 1928, edition 1 / Page 9
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Teach Your Children i i ^ = "Whenever a boy has learned the valuable lesson of j j saving and-has a b|nk account of -Ms own. you mn rest assured he will be a successfpl business man ami a good citizen. If he has the saving spirit, he has the J fundamental of success wittiiiThiB grasp. ] I Is your boy getting the right kind of a start 1 Has he learned to save and does he have a bank account of his own f ! ] 1 If not, have him come in today and keep at it regu a"t this bank. The-boy will appreciate doing business here as well as the grown-ups. a 9 i i 9 ] I I 1 FLY TIME AGAIN j ScreenDoors - - Wire! i{ Base Ball Goods j j Brighten up your home with Paint. 1 have the Highest Grade Paints and "Duco" Lacquer. I know how to paint and will gladly tell you how to do a good job. i; Guano Distributors, Corn and Cotton Planters Fence Wire I have just made some changes in my Hardware Store. Come around and criticise the job. Tell me how to I: make it better. * ___ I j SATURDAY SPECIALS Don't forget we are running Specials on something In the Furnl. ture line every Saturday and giving 20 per cent off. Watch the pa per each week and see when your time comes. . This Saturday, April Mth will be CHAIRS of any kind. H. C. TAYLOR |j FURNITURE Phon# 305 HARDWARE SuzfiUHmninjEfErartruzianjnfiiBiHi There Is Only One Way 1 ?????? To clean clothes correctly and that is by dry cleaning. It doesn't detract from the appearance and wearing qualities?it adds to them to such a degree that you'll be surprised at the results. I will, remove the most unsightly spot and return the lustre of newness to materials of the highest grade. We take particular pains to see that your clothes are made fit for further wear. That suit shouldn't be discarded?just dry cleaned. City Cleaning Works . Phone No. 821 213 Oourt Street ? Louiaburg, N. 0. SUPPORTS FARMERS' f LEGISLATION (Continued from nag* two) ? ? ? ^ i . i i | surs the committee on rules will re port favorably a special rule provid ing for early consideration of the measure. i,*!' Speaker, fhe Mc.Nary-Haugen bill Is, after all, but an experiment. After It becomes a law. it Is quite Probable, that certain amendments may be found desirable. Those who oppose legislation of this character ma> as well understand that the light for farm relief has just begun. I sub. Tnlt that those who have opposed leg lalatlou for farm relief may well pause and consider now. There are, gentlemen, members on both sides of the center aisle who represent agri cultural districts and who know thai there is no prosperity amongst mil lions of farmers in this Nation. If the efforts of these men are not success-' l a. m1! 8e88lon ot Congress, the light will be resumed In the December 'I fbey are not successful hi the December session, the fight will be resumed In the next Congress. The fight will never end until there Is legislation which will inject some measure of prosperity tntc the agri culture of this Nation, or until our present vicious, unjust, and un Amen can economic system Is changed by aw- This system has stood so long that no one can reasonably hope for a cnange In the very near future. . hsrefore, those who know that agri culture Is to a Urge degree augment throughout the Nation mut unite for some legislation which will bring measurable relief. ,*"? 1Mr '8peaker. we ?re only asking for justice. Some years ago there was a great man in the White House who had a way of coining 5 .Si wh,ch People could not tor 5?,: ,m*n w" Theodore Roose velt. (Applause.) i am proud to num ber myself as one of his friends. He frequently toade Uoc ot a phrase of two wjrds~*iiTch people C.fhnot heTp Jj?nembe:ing whenever the name of Theodore Roaevelt Is mention*. These tWo words were "square deal" "tr,e ,od"/" lu My tumble way. I am asking only for a square deal for the tanners or America. These wren "are not asking for ? subsidy. They are cnlv asking that inasmuch as The ^*yaeHtl^<u^-|rf?teete?r^(naamuch " 1JP?rmltted to exact a pi on table return. t>iat they, too, In'tha u V. ?d<red by the Congress tbe 'f'a'atton which the Congress "nact3. Inasmuch as Congress bv legiibitlon has given to the manufact urer u profitable market, the farmers ofAmerlcahave a right to ask that ~e?W?s legislate m order to enable them To dispose cf , heir surplus crop a fair profit. You have, given the ?anufactqrgr_a market it which thus |i destructive competition in th! farmer h! l?U hava Passed. The rJlht 10 ask- "as ilh ,, ? 0 detnand, that Congress |>houl.| also help him find a profitable market for the surplus "product of his -1? making this request. I say fTC the name omiebdore Roosrvglr; Jlli 0nly ask,n? a Stfuare {jeal- H? demands nothing more he has a right to expect nothing else, ^vl tatLjiot resume my sw,t. Mr. speaker, without referring to another meilUTfe which. I submit, ought- to |have consideration before this session o. CongresK adjourns. I shall only take a momenNjf time. I refer to the d sabled emergency Am tlrement bill. Let hie parlimentary history crt J.n the Sixty-seventh Congr called Tyson-Fitxgerald M the Senate by a vote of 60 to lHjn the Sixty-eighth Congress It pa.?Aj the Senate by a vote of 63 to 14. in the Seventieth Congress It passed the Senate February 16, 1928, without a record vote. Mr. Speaker .since the armistice was signed 500 of these Wounded of fleers have passed into the great bel y?nd- If,we are going to do anything, Mr. Speaker, In this regard, it oustht tc be done how. Now. I submit, in view of the*legislative history of tills measure, It should be included In the legislative program of this House. Let us meet the issue squarely. Let us vote, this measureup or" down. The measure should not be defeated by strangulation. Parlimentary tac tics certainly should not prevent con sideration. yle^d'v Iftmn>er" WIM <he gentleman Mr. Pju. I yield. Mr. Hammer. As a member of the Rules Committee, jnay we not have a special rule to'conslder the bill? Mr. Pou. You will have at least one vote, and X believe you will have a rule from the Committee on Rules whenever the request is made. I wUl say to my colleague from North Caro lina that In the last Congress the Com mlttee-on titles granted a special rule providing for the consideration of this eminently just measure, but the rule was agreed to during the closing days of the last Congress, and for some reason action was not taken. Remember, gentlemen, these are the officers who led the charges In the great World War. Their wounds bear testimony to the part they took tn the struggle to save civilization to the world. They are the men who led the charge at Chateau Thierry on that hot July day. a charge that was followed up with other charges which never ended until the Germans wer brought to their knees. Mr. Hudspeth. Will the gentleman yield? Mr. Pou. Yes, Mr. Hudspeth. Is the gentleman re. ferrtng to the Fitzgerald-Tyson bill? Mr l*ou. I am. . Mr. Hudspeth. I think there Is hard ly anyone In my district who has not petitioned mq in favor of that bill. Mr. Pou. I am glad to hear It. Mr. Speaker, I am convinced that there has aot been a minute since the Tyson- ntsgerald bill passed the Se nate the ft ret time when It would not have received a majority vote tn thle House if a vote could have been had. There are only a little more than S.OM only offic of thede pffloera living; originally there were thirty-live hundred. Let us not sidetrack thla measure, but let us pass It If we are going to pass |it at all before more of these men die. Because of their wounded condition the mortality among these officers is large? than It would otherwise be. Officers in the Navy from civil life enjoy the privilege of retirement si. mllar to thctee embodied In the Fits. gerald-Tyson bill. Let there be no 'discrimination against similar officers {c.T the Army. The necessary appro | j rlation will not be large. As 1 have 'st-ld, already 500 of these officers have .died. Let us.-before this session ends, {pass the act of justtce to the rematn. iiiK 3,000. (Applause ) 4.13-lt i II ILL FLAM TOBAlrf) SAT FA KM REPORTS Raleigh. April 2.?An Item of sig nificance to farmers of North Carolina : Is Contained in th? recent government report of Intentions to plant by some 150.000 farmers of this and other states which shows the acreage to flue. ! cured tobacco will likely be lnrreas 'ed over ten -ercent this seaspn. ( "The governmental agencies are not allowed to collect information as to the intentions of farmers to plant cot. ton and we have no accurate means of knowing whether the acreage will be expanded, yet we do know that to bacco wil be Increased by 10.5 per cent and this will likaly cause a ser. ious situation this fall," says I. O. Schaub, dean of the achool of agricul ture at State College, indications I from prlvcte sources show that the [cotton acreage will also be slightly jfr.ircased but when -wa-add an In. 'creased acreage of 10 percent to that [or from 15 to 20 percent for last yaar | with tobacco, we shall likely suffer ,from low prices this fall! Cigarette , consumpl'cn is increasing by about |9 percent each year but the hurley {tobacco rrowers Indlcaitte that the; will also increase their acreage by jti4 percent. Since hurley la also used ill 'cigarette manufacture. these two ' incteases will certainly give and ex ttcrhIv > crop In a study-of the Intentions to plant ' report. Dean Schaub finds that the core am age will be increased slight ly ?i Mirth Carolina. Hay will rematn as "for last year when the farmers itmde h good increase and peanuts |v.-ill hp in.-reased by shout eighty per I cent in this State and 12 percent as MiT, average for tile peanut bett: Sweet 'prtatoes will be increased in acreage 'by the p"rcent and Irish potatoes by -ritf percent;?Only average ? prices- svtlA 1 probably be secured with these two rtops. Mr. Schaub states that the 'average increase for all the main crops.- except?ciittun, -wtti be three rrercent hrrger than the acreage hare-, csted in 1927. in general., the intentions to plant : report follows the outlook for farm 'ciops In 1929 as issued by the college {during February. FIDDLERS' CONVENTION AT WHITE LEVEL SCHOOL " ~sat iirii5rTngTtr"A(tm~Tr, raw-wrrr be a Fiddlers' Convention" at White Level school. All fiddlers are Invited and urged to come. Cash prises will he awarded the best players. ---1 Proceeds from entertainment will be used hv Parent .Teachers Associa tion for the school/ Cordial umia- I t<on extended to all to enjoy an even ing of recreation. SabserfDe to The rranxlln Times W ^LOWEST Feed Costs ?fcjf feeding the' feed that turn* iteelf Into egg*. It auppHea the necemary Cein_ for producing egg white*. It i keep* the chicken* in trim for laying rfflffinONU JEWEL EGG MASH i* a balanced feed containing mea^ ?crap*, corn meal, alfalfa meaL wheat bran, linaeed oil meaL ground oat*, calcium carbonate?ingredient* nee* eaaary for egg making. ? Keep the egg ba*ket filled hy aeeing Jrour local dealer?the International He will recommend the Egg Ma.h that make* yon profit from white; INTERNATIONAL SUGAR FEED CO. For Sale by G. W. MURPHY & SON *> .V" FROM APRIL 16th to ?l?t MARIVONNE TOILETRIES v A $10.00 ACQUAINTANCE PACKAGE FOR ONLY ?1J3 AN It THE COUPON BELOW THIS IS WHAT YOU GET MARIVONNE ROSE CREAM 9 -50 . MARIXOSMJELSHAMEQQ r-- M MARIVONNE CLEANSING CREAM 1.00 MARIVONNE COMPLEXION POWDER 1 1.00 MARIVONNE TALC POWDER 1 .50 < MARIVONNE DEPILOTORY 1.00 MARIVONNE EAU DE TOILETTE j 1.50 MARIVONNE PARFUM NARCISSA 2.50 MARIVONNE BRILLIANTINE ? 2i .75 9 MARIVONNE POSTU ROUGE j. .7A *10.00 FOR ONLY THE COUPON AND $ 1.98 BRING COUPON AND *1.98 AND GET THIS PACKAGE WARIVONNE COUPON Worth $8j02 to you Name l<I*iro?s 1 Boddie Drug Co., Inc. Looiaburg, N. 0. D Under the new law. passed by the Legislature at ' the regular session of 1927, all tax on land not paid by May 1st will have to be advertised, and all tax on per 3onal property not paid on the above date will have to be levied on. I hope you will not blame me personal ly if I am forced to collect by either of these methods as I have no choice. - ??-?y Respectfully, F. W. JUSTICE. Sheriff. B. HAGEN PIANO TUNING with v W. E. White furniture Co. NEW LIFE FOR YOUR WARDROBE For only the small qost of having your clothes dry cleaned and pressed. When you compare the cost with the results?the great difference that it makes in the appearance of your clothing?you'll wonder why you haven't used our service much more than you have. There is twice the wear in your garments when you keep them well pressed and cleaned and your appear ance is always immauculate. We call for and deliver, giving you the quickest possible service at all times. CALL US TODAY Stallings Dry Cleaning Works Phone 105 Nash Street Louisburg, N. C.' =====3=== CTOLBN - OKI BLACK FEMALE ItuA j?U*w l?c* ?ltt )Mf out ta l?rt or. B*waH for ni mUm U Or wmtmt. L W. hr. *? C* ?? IRNTA B?J CALIFORNIA EFAP PEACHES, 15e, I.Mt A. J. JARMAN. for ratarr uuajsb job mtrrota Fruit grows will organist a promote the giuoteg of high erode applet, other traits.
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 13, 1928, edition 1
9
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