Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Sept. 22, 1911, edition 1 / Page 10
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Why She Cho.e HZ She choee him oot of all.the crowd <yj Of men that came and went; BU voice wu low, hie tie wee loud, 7 ^ But ehe wee well content. ,, The firet men'e education was Perhape more finished?and Another's manners gave her cause As being much more grand. Another's garments fitted him; - Another's hair was curly; Another's name was "Arthur '?j im Was chosen by this girlie. And not for wealth and not for love Was Jim by Mabel chosed? But that be was the one man of The whole lot that proposed! ?Boston Traveler. The State Fair. We have just received from the North Carolina Agricultural Society a * striking little booklet that is a bright gem in its class. It is tiny, but full of facts and figures about North Carolinaand her Great State Fair that will be | held for the fifty-first-time at Raleigh on October 17, 18, 19. 20, 1911. There are only eight small pages and a neat, very tasty cover, all of a sue to fit in the ordinary envelope. Cuts show a birdseve view of the Fair Grounds while the Fair is going on and Lincoln Beachcy flying in his Curtiss aeroplane over N iagara Falls. There is an appreciation of North Carolina thatjcarries a point in every paragraph, a fact in every sentence, clothed in a style as attractive as the story it tells, and all in one small page. The marvelous progress of the State is told in a comparative table of crop figures for 1905 and 1910, and a similar alinement of statistics of the manufacturing industries. In addition there are comparative values of farm land and buildings, implements and machinery, labor and fertilisers. In a brief review of the work of the State Fair the booklet calls attention to the fact that it is chartered without capital stock, its real property being held in trust to secure a bonded debt, any profits made going into a surplus which is spent in improvements and increasing premiums. The construction of the reinforced concrete agricultural building at a cost of S7.000, the new building for women and other betterments last year are touched upon, as well as the modem poultry building' to be ready for the coming Fair Figures show SI solid carloads of exhibits ?last year against 42 in 1900; 3,501 separate entries against 1,201, and *8,191.54 net premiums paid against $6,596.97. As | evidence that the Fair is recognized as one of the greatest gathering points for i pure-bred stock in tbe South, mention j is made that the Percheron Society of j America is this year offering its special prizes at tlib Raleigh Fair, which is one ' of only four Southern Fairs to be so : honored. It is stated that by resolution of the Executive Committee all questionable shows and doubtful games have been forbidden the grounds. On the amusement side there is borne the news that the Fair has contracted with the Glenn H. CurtissCo. for aeroplane flights each day of the Fair on a guarantee-to-fly basis, the aviator to be Lincolu Beachey or Hugh Robinson. Beachey is tbe bird man who flew under the bridge at Niagara, while Robinson | did likewise at Cairo, III., under a mil- j road bridge over the Ohio. These two | were the only flyers to finish in the cross-country race from New York to I Philadelphia, and both were stars at j the Chicago Aviation Meet, where j . - Ueachey < made a new record for j altitude?11,578 feet. Another attraction mentioned is California Frank's Wild West show with | its fifteen carloads and 200 people, j Then there is The Great Calvert, star j high-wire specialist. Special mention is made of the miraculous painting, "In the Shadow ol the | Cross,'' to be exhibited for tha^firet j time in the Sodth. It has figured at! the great world expositions and been a topic of discussion among clergymen and scientists. But aside from all tins the little book is valuable for the information it contains, and is weil wortb preserving, j Write for a copy to the State Fair,; Jos. E. Pogue, Secretary, Raleigh, N. C. "I have a world of confidence in Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for I . , have used it With perfect 'success,''' t writes Mrs. M. I. Basford, Poolesville, | Md. For sale by all dealers. ALL WRING. . The Mistake is Bade by, Many ^ LouisburdpitizensK?;V, , JPuu't mistake ttt cause of backaolie. j v- To beVBo.1 yj must know the . cause. \ \ I . \ \| . . ' Ton mrrtt ie>kuir!fcj^. ;on? used any other remedy I ever tried. For 1 bad kidney irouble and I goffered almost constantly fiom backache and distressing pains in mv loins. Sums days I ?ss hardly able to etand for more than twenty mmotes at a time and l/aiely got a full night's {eat- ItoJrk. *everaTskinds of medicm^ and.Mo wore plasters, bat I tounif.no Wslief. iDoan's Kidney Fills were anally jecommeuded to me and gqttnig a Box, I began their use. Thwy rennpred my aches and paio? andr restored me td better health tKanJ had enjoyed for years. Some yeitrs ago I publicly endorsed Doan's Kidney Fills and at this time I am glad to soeak in | their praise again. The benefit I received has been lasting." i For sale by all dea\ers. Prioe 50 cents. Foster* Milburn Co., New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the naiue?Doan's? and take no other. 5?C!5a!S SBSSe " A DREADFUL SIGHT to H. J. Bamum, of Freeville, N. Y., was the fever-aore that plagued his life for years in spite of many remedies he tried. At last he used Bocklen'a Arnica Salve and wrote: Tt has entirely healed with scarcely a scar left." Ileala Barns, Boils, Eczema, Cuts, Bruises, Swellings. Corns and Piles like magic. Only 25c at Aycock Drag Co. Reflection* or a Bachelor. Miffhty few people would lie if it was a good habit. -i A man's political views are governed by his bank balance. It's queer what a good head h man can have for business until he goes into one for himself. A blind man ought to be able to see a girl's eyes aren't green when she says i they are blue. You just can't make a woman see how when you live in a hous, you own it's rent just the same. NO NcED TO STOP WORK. When your doctor orders you to stop work, it staggers you. "I can't" your saw You know you are weak, rundown and failing in health, day by day;, j but you must work as long as you can [ stand. What you need is Electric Bit! ters to give tone, strength, and vigor to vour system, to prevent breakdown and build you up. Don't be weak, sickly or ailing when Electric Bitters wilt benefit you from the first dose. Thousands bless them for their glorious health and strength. Try them. Every bottle is guaranteed to satisfy. Only 50cat Ay cock Drug Co. Winter Cover CropsEvery farmer owes it to himself, to his family and to posterity, to take the best care of his land that he possibly can; to maintain its fertility and to keep it from washing away. Investigators, whether scientists or practical farmers, haye found that winter cover crops of any kind prevent land, in a large measure, from washing and when turned the following spring make it more productive than if no crop had grown on it. All UDOIIIUMIII a number ol | years, in one of the North West states, showed that more plant food was lost from the land daring the months when no crops were grown on it than was taken off in the regular summer crops If this was true in that state where they have long and cold winters when j leaching is impossible for weeks at a time, how much more would it be true in North Carolina with her open winters when plant food can be leached from our soils almost any week during our winter months. - A ton of green rye contains, according to > good authorities, -about 66, pounds n'trowen, 3 pounds phosphoric ! acid and 14 6 pounds potash-. -A'ton of of green wheat contains -10.8 pounds nitrogren, 3 pounds phosphoric -acid, and 11 pounds potash. Green oats contain jnst a little less plant food than docs green wheat. A ton of green crimson -clover contains 8.6 pounds nitrogen, 2.6 phosphoric acid, and 9.8 poinds potash. IV d clover, Bar Clover and tho vetches contain more p ant focxHin tSflr-ffgacr, state than crimson 'clover di'Cs. The- Wheat- and rye' mentioned above was probably grown on fertile land w hich explains their high percentage of nitrogen, for it is an established fact that crops grown on rleli land contain more nitrogen than when grown on po/.r laud, for that reason grail! grown or, rich land has a higher feeding r'atue than "that grown on poor land. It may be well for na to remember this when growing gram for our own feeding purposes. -ftyc, yrheat and gets take nitrogen I ?from the t"il and store it in the plant, thus saving muob of this costly element of plant rood tha: would' otherwise he bached from the Mai by OUT winter rains. Tfho stools- or bunches and thsir reefs and leaven retuh the fiow of watefund act as Wltcs which wifl prevent to a large degree the washing of Aur^llfipg lands. The cloyegs ?a?e tho j^n^^fSfhujg in the same and Tew sufferer from chronic dysentery, , brought on by scute Indigestion. It also i brought on catarrhal headache which de- \ bllitated ms so I bed tons down three or four boors escb day. My gyAeral health i was greatly Impaired, and I At weak sod nervous. One day I had cWof those ter? ' ; rifle headaches, and my daughter-in-law suggested, that I try Href Joe Person's Remedy. 1 did as, and/the very A ret i dosa relieved* that fetadacfa. I continued 1 to uaa It. and fhr.tha An| time in fifteen 1 yeoraM am well. It la fbe beat medlclue compounded In this worm." I Moat Veople regard /stomach trouble* < ! (and these lntlode Indftvstiou. Dyspepsia. Soar Stomach, Nenromn?, etcj as of Utile conehnnence in petr early stage#. *1 -Never was V more aefloos mistake made. 1 When the wppetlte In (one, the nerves shattered. th\ tempefiraXasd. the body emaciated. spfema of fcaln frequent. sound i sleep lmposaibV refrmhtng rest .nnknowu, I they wake up Vo thft fact that stomach I trouble la a seuonsfmattsr. When this 1 stage Is reached! thf only thing In the ( world that wfiTdbrelyou is , MRS. JOE KMON? REMEDY. It restore* energy\JL laded digestive or- I ran*, stimulates a MAlthy flow of gastric " Juice, and brings eTgy portion of the itusuek bark to normal haalth. It la n atrlctly vegetable coinfbond. and eontnlns t no harmful mineral ImflMjillliil i whatever. I a a Tonic. AlteratlvelBIoed Purifier ami 1 Nervine it has no equal \ Don't permit any dlseAia of the stomach J to go untreated. As s?Km ha you feel the I slightest effects of Indtfesllon or any of t the other ailments direct!* \ttributable to J a derangement of the dlg*tflre orcans. be- I gin at once the use of MmAJoc Person's " Remedy and a complete cwlm will be an e??y matter. If yonr troubna is of long standing, this Remedy will still core yon? i bet It will, of course, take longer. We want,you to write us for testimon- \ laN from -people who once uuFfered the tor- t tures of Indigestion. Dyspepsia and other i stomach ailments, but who are now sonnd 1 and well, and eat what they want without ? g sign of distress. I In cases of external trouble, lnflamma- I tion. ulceration or itching humor, our * Wash should be used with the Remedy. For sale by druggists, or supplied direct oa receipt of price. (1.00 per bottle; 6 bot- L ties for (5.00; 1 doeen by express prepaid I for (10.00. by ' 1 K. JK ponrt noTA, khm.?.c j being able to take nitrogen from the I air through the agency of bacteria which adds to the fertility of the soil. . I But to grow these latter crops j successfully the soil must contain \ i the bacteria peculiar to the particular J crop jrrown. It has been the experience of many I Qf our farmers that any crop " grown after a winter-covet crop, when turned under at the proper time in the spring, and disked well before and after turningr will produce a great deal i more, often as much as 60 per cent 1 more, than if no -winter-cover crop had been grown. The seed for a cover | crop will cost from one to five dollars an acre according to kind and quantity J of seed used. This should save to the I soil and add to the next year's crop more than twice the cost of the cover crop. j Sow at the rate of 15 to 20 pounds V c> imson clover seed per acre and cover lightly with harrow or cultivator. These fan be sowed in growing crops on stubble land, or after peas. Sow from 20 to 30 pounds of vetch per acre f if sown with smill grain, and if sown 1 alone put 40 to 50 pounds per acre. Rye should be sown at the rate of one to one and a half bushels per aerce. An application of-manure, or from 200 to 500 pounds acid phosphate, per 1 acre and 25 to 50 pounds muriate of potash on sandy or gray land, will be helpful to the clovers and vetches. For rye or other small grain it may be bet- J ter to add 2 per cent nitrogen to the I above. ' J It is now time to commence putting 1 these crops in. When put in cotton k fielis it is better to sow immediately I after the pickers, as in that wny no cotton will be knocks out in covering the i a yd. Put in the crop that will succeed best 1 in your locality and experiment with a nfhn, n." ? i. ? '' ? ? 4 .-^-po-m-a?onmrt?way?until you are assured they will make satisfactory growth on your land and land and under your conditions. T. B. Park EU, Lirector Co-operative Experiments, N.C. State Department of Agriculture. Diarrhoea is always more or less prevalent durinjcfeeptember. lie prepared for it.^^ytjy^erlaiii'a Colic, Cholera aud DiaarhSn^ Remedy is prompt and effectual. It ear. always be depended upodyand is pleasant to take. Por^sklc by wl dealers ' Lost ' i A Hdies gold walciN, n<l fi.li some-1 where-hrt\reen It J. Co :.nd 1'er-. ry'a mill. Finder will hi lr>v;,'.i!y rewarded by. returning to ( R. J Cow EII8 Bulbs Cut flowers afldj ^ .Plants 'Our imporUtijft o freiicHsjnr, hollai)d>j I bulbs ?ro now an v:.ng. planting I early you get be t results. >tfe are i leadt.-s in choice c t flower* foj^bsmd-i I ' dings ai d aTTaoCia firttions. AMMUJ , floral olrerjtgK. ne decoratiy* mitp jesu&Si sirsustij !Bhc.?i MM ?-A?nl^?Bsn ( Mail>,- phone, aul telegrn|.h orders i ^?ron?t|jrfc'xecute'l by. . J J. lJ O'OpiNN & CO. 5 1 4' aMjkh, n, c. . - i S?. > ' .-'-fv-' .i% im ft' i W5$k j>;i'MiV \ '<< ' W i P Just foSived" a I p ... furni W It Will Beto Your Interest c " \ c? f* We have the goods ai d at pt save you money oA a ly pui ^ take our word for iV but I Come \ai W You will be welcome wnbth f rl \ L Remei j? Our Unddlakir bt is always up-tp-date a L ' Gome to .5 * W. E. White Fui kg . Louisburg, - N( 1 arr>rinrr> 4 r t? c - > it I ?/. o. ?UIU D. JH. Wlii f-?"? ^Riverside , p INDEPEI > ' r Louisburt r8 x L Louisburg, N.J&. W|.-. i-'. ' , r*R'.'? 'V>7' * -vu. ? .i *' # ? L f ? v i Tobacco is HIGH and on every, sale ii ?0* hitch up and come to the Rivers ideind ipe; I [ it really is. We boys are going to s? j th K brings the top dollar and there are tlree I Lt pose and we know our business and urt M Busy to attend to it. In fact we a e r 1 Warehouse for the benefit of tobacc > pis e?, rega^aiess of ytfjjpther it pleases our :om] ^ side a^d make,ypurself at home. r mmB- N. Will Vj| Sm#' * v F ' nv/Aji L" ' ''-to J >*>*.. H \ ,-f , ' , < v : J" V ' * ' / * Try t' , Tj-Jj ; ... . . ...V', . :% <$!* * . _:>; <;* \.A V ' -Vr-*" "rv * A ; V v*? " > 'V; J.', . Wj"r ' f -i V - 'v. . >? ? *'*" . ' .-\i ,'t\ WE ; .v. -- i v% v'~ .. " ; Af, .1 U.r. I .V^wTjW; ^ i&iAtf: ^ ?? ' Jl* 11' I I X w U ^ Jig Lot of Nice 3 TURE... A to See Me Before You Buy Z the right pricesjand can J rchase you want. Don't nd See J er you purchase or not. ^ ig\Department K ind atyouj^ervice.. "j IS >rth Carolina. J iamson J. R. Collie J * ndfnt | Varehouse 3 ;,N.C. V ta September 8th, 1911 J I is HIGHER. You will just have to J ld^Ht Warehouse to find out how high at toolkQeo put oh the Riverside floor of us arouh^each pile for this pur- ^ hermore it keej)s us awful Dog-Gone -Jp unning the Riverside Independent inters of this section "(and ourselves) 1 jetitors or not. Conic to the River- 'fj iamson J. R. Collie s " - - -i y, \ ' ' 7 : v;?. ' *7:* I'p 4 - 3S?Sfc"' ' .?8Hi
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1911, edition 1
10
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