THE FRANKLIN TIMES Issued Every Friday 213 Court Street Telephone 283-1 A. P. JOHNSON, Editor and Manager James A. Johnson, Assistant Editor pml Manager SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year $1.50 Six Months . . 73 Eight Months .... 1.00 Four Months 30 Foreign Advertising Representative AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION ? Ne.? York City Entered at the Postofflce at Loulsburg, N. C. as second class mall matter. Those citizens of Louisburg who wish to vote 011 the $18,000 Armory bond issue had better register. Don't put it off until too late and then euss if the issue carries or don't carry. By your actions you say you are not interested, unless you register and vote. Failure to reg ister might affect your voting in town elections next year. It doesn't seem that the Burgin-Deane election ques tion is settled as yet. Another suit has been started, and the old Chairman of one of the election Boards refuses to turn over the records. Regardless of the crookedness found by the State Board they can hardly oust an official without preferring and substantiating charges against him. The outcome will be interesting. The attention of the people of Louisburg and Frank lin County is especially directed to the advert Useiijent in this issue of the Seaboard Store Co. Their argument that people should trade at home if the home is to pros per is absolutely true, and that every dollar sent away whether for groceries, clothing/ printing or hardware or is represented in the sale of crops or banking, detracts its share from the success or advancement of every in dividual in the County. The effect of one dollar is small, but the effect of a million is enormious 011 any com munity in so many ways it would be impossible to enum erate them. Let's all take this sound and sane advice and buy, sell and bank in Franklin County. THE PUBLIC PAYROLL There are more than three million persons regularly employed in full-time public sen-ice in the United States, according to a report prepared for the International Management- Congress by Prof. Leonard D. White, form er member of the U. S. Civil Service Commission. That number of persons whose salaries are paid by the tax payers includes Federal, State, county and municipal em ployees. There are more than 175,000 governmental units in the United States, each having its own payroll and power to levy taxes to pay its employees. Excluding relief workers, the Federal payroll includes nearly 825,000 persons. New York City's payroll con tains 96,000 names. The state of New Jersey has about 10,000 regular, permanent employees, and that is a small number compared with several other states: The public employees include persons who work at an immense varity of occupations. Policemen, physicians, school-teachers, letter-carriers, street -cleaners, engineers, day-laborers, firemen and hundreds of other specialized workers are necessary to maintain public order and op erate the necessary public services in a modern -civilized nation. Nobody would complain of the cost of such ser vices if everybody felt that they were always well and faithfully performed. That is not always the case. Too many persons, are on the public payrolls because they are useful to politi cal leaders. It will take time, but eventually the fact that a man or woman is employed in, public service will be suffic ient proof that he or she is highly-trained and peculiarly competent for the work. To be a Civil servant should be a badge of honor, calling for general public respect, as it is today in England and some other European coun tries, where patronage is not a function of politics. THE CONSUMER'S DOLLAR A question which is often asked but seldom satisfac torily answered is: "Who gets the money we pay for food?" The farmer complains that he doesn't get enough of the consumer's dollar. The retail grocery and meat market complain that they don't make a fair profit on the fraction left in their hands after they have paid for the goods they sell. The answer seems to be, according to the most recent study of the facts, that most of the consumer's dollar goes to the middlemen who move food products from the farm to the retail store. That includes, of course, the railroads or trucks which haul the farmer's produce over each stage of its journey, the costs of warehousing and of processing at various stages, and of all other business transactions required to bring foodstuffs to the place where the consumer finally gets them. This mid dlemen's spread ranges from 52 cents for meats and 53 for dairy products to as high as 76 for bread and cereal fkrodueti and 80 cents for canned goods. That the buy eir of canned goods must pay five dollars for every dollar t?|t the farmer gets seems exorbitant. tig department store, the mail-order house, the ofeain-fltore company, and more recently the cooperatives, jul repqm# efforts to avoid the high costs of our die trfbnticri cutout, in' part at least, the midAe World's Greatest Sea Monster COLUMBIA RIVER, Ore. . . . The enormous cigar shaped bundle of logs above is one of the famed "Benson Rafts" which are cargo and carrier in one, making huge savings for lumbermea. These lumber rafts now go over l,ipO miles on open Pacific, averaging 7 miles per day. Each raft carries about 5,000,000 feet board measure ? the equivalent of 250 houses. man. With each new type some of the less efficient ?)!' the older ones have been driven out of business. The earlier types have nevertheless, persisted alongside the new. Retailing and the distribution of goods are so highly competitive that the answer can only be that our com plicated system does, after all, meet certain needs, that people will pay to satisfy them, and that, however large may seem the cost of getting goods from the producer to the consumer, that cost is paid primarily for services rendered and not for excessive profits. The shortest route from producer to consumer, one which eliminates the largest proportion of middlemen's tolls, should be the aim of business and the objective of all legislation affecting prices. The interest of the con sumer is, or should be, paramount to alfotlier interests. OUR LAG IN RECOVERY The depth of the world-wide depression which began in 1929 and affected the economic conditions of every nation in the world, came in 1932. In that year recov ery had got well under way in all countries, including our own, and has been progressing, fairly steadily, ever since. The League of Nations compiles economic statistics for the whole world, with 110 nationalistic or partisan bias. The reports in the League's Year Book are as Af&Ej&ji&ld, unbiased mathematics as are obtainable 'artyCvfiol'b. It comes with something of a shick. there fore, to find the United States at the bottom of the list of great nations in the degree of recovery from the de pression. We were harder hit than any other nation except Ger many. But according to the League's figures, Germany has achieved a degree of recovery many times greater than our own. It is now 24 per cent better off than it was in 1929, while this country is still 36 per cent worse off than in- 1929., while this country is still 36 per cent worse off than in 1929. Japan, Sweden, Great Britain and Italy are in better economic condition than before the depression began; Canada has made an almost com plete recovery and even France, with all its troubles, has made more of a comeback than we have. If it were true that the- credit or blame for the well being of a people depends on the character and wisdom of government, we would be compelled to believe that Germany, Italy and Japan have better and wiser gov ernments than we have. Such a belief would point to the "authoritarian" type of government as the best of all for the general welfare. Few Aihericans believe that an autocratic government is the' best government. It may be that we are paying a high price for the preservation of our individual lib erties. But in Sweden and Great Britain, which stand close to the top in degree of recovery from the world depression, the people have not s aerified individual liberties in any degree. GIFTS THAT LAST WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE. % EXPERT REPAIRS FAYNOR'S RADIO SHOP > REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES Phone 454-6 Louiuburg, If. 0. Sell Tour Cotton and Tobacco in Lonitborg ' ' ? * - -*? In No ynccrtain T<>ncs FIRE HAZARDS Every home, especially those in rural areas, should be inspected for fire hazards during Fire Prev ention Week, which has been set for October 9-15. Doing what can be done, is the glory of living. i CANADIAN EXPORTS I'P United States agricultural ex ports to Canada and via Canadian ports in the first half of 1938 reached a value nearly double thati of the corresponding period in I 1937. ____ _ __ _______ _________ ___ S'lbscribe t" the Fran&llu Times PIANO: Due to previous purchas er's inability to complete contract we will transfer to any reliable party for the balance, a beautiful upright piano or well known make and fully guaranteed. For infor mation where piano may be seen, write Credit Department, Leo Piano Co., Lynchburg, Va. 10-7-3t ASCAP "Old Song Week" Proves Old Songs Never Die J UfkLD SONG WEEK," sponsored by th? Ameri U can Society of Composers, Authors and Pub lishers, was recently commemorated by leading bands and orchestras over the major networks and inde pendent stations, in motion picture theatres, hotels, cabarets, restaurants, etc. Pictured above are a handful of the men and women, living and dead, whose copyrighted works, as members of ASCAP, have been made available, through the .Society's licenses, to enterprises which perform music publicly for profit. Public response to the airing of these well-loved old son$t showed that they had lost none of the ap peal which was born in them before the days of radio. Stage" magazine devoted its entire August issue tb "Pond Recollections" of the old songs. Composers and authors pictured above are: (1) Irving Berlin (Alexander's Ragtime Band); (2) Car rie Jacobs Bond (Perfect Day); (3) J. Russell Rob inson (Margie); (4) Harry Armstrong (Sweet Ade JTt uic Feature! 4 line) ; (5) George Gershwin (Rhapsody in Blue) ; (6) Geoffrey O'Hara (K-K-K-Katy) ; (7) Fred Fisher vmicr me eau;; UO) William Jerome (Bedelia);" (11) George M. Cohan (Over There); (12) Gene Buck (Hello Frisco); (13) Otto Harbach (Smoke Gets in Your Eyes); (1*) Shelton Brooks (Some of These Days); (15) Ernie Burnett (Melan choly Baby); (16) Jean Schwartz (Chinatown, My Chinatown); (17) Rudolf Friml (Only a Rose); (U) Jerome Kem (Ol' Man River); (19) Edgar Leslie '(Among My Souvenirs); (20) James Thornton (When You Were Sweet Sixteen); (21) Joe Howard (I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now);, (22) Harry Von Tilzer (Wait Till the Sun Shines Nellie) ; , (23) Giti Rice (Dear Old Pal); (24) John W. Bratton (Sunshine of Paradise Alley); (25) A1 Bryan (Put O' My Heart); (26) Raymond Hubbell (Poer But terfly); (27) Albert Von Tilxer (Take Me Out to the Ball Game) and (28) Gaa Edwards (School Days). Phofo Bytuticatr