Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / April 12, 1918, edition 1 / Page 7
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Fourteen Thousand Five Hundred Pairs Oxfords and Pumps At Candler ? Crowell Company's ? ?i^?^^???????????w During the next two months we expect to dispose of our great stock of Oxfords and Pumps for Men, Women, Misses and Children. Read prices below and take advantage of this saving. OXFORDS FOR MEN 72 Pairs Mens Gun Metal Oxfords, Lace or Buton Styles' at $3 per pair 50 pairs Men's Tan Calf Oxfords, Lace or button .. I. at $3.00 per pair 200 pairs best grade Oxfords, rubber bot tom in Tan or Ounmetal.. at $4.00 pair Edwin Clapp Oxfords, 48 pairs Vici Kid. lace or congress styles at $8.00 per pair MISSES and CHUJDKENS 0XF6RDS AND PUTfcPS. 200 pairs childrens white canvas pumps in sizes 6's to 12's at $1.00 per pair 150 pairs Yici Kid pumps, straps or pumps all sizes at ......... $1.00 to $1.50 pair 300 pairs Barefoot sandals, tans, blacks and patent styles at . .$1.00 to $1.50 pair 500 pairs assorted childrens oxfords and pumps, one and two pairs of a style, siz es 111-2-to 2'a, . .at $1.00 and $1.50 pair ?LA1J1J5S OXFiJEfiS AND PUMPS In Patent, Vici or Tan 48 pairs Ladies white 2 strap pumps, spe cial at $1.50 pair 100 pairs Ladies Kid and Patent Oxford? at .,-rrT $1.50 pair 200 pairs Vioi Pumpe and strap sandal? at $2.00 pair 500 psyrs Kid Pumps, gun metal or tan calf, all best styleB, at $4.00 pair Gray Kid Pumps, 60 pairs marked spe?ial at $4.00 to $6.00 per pair 50 Hew Long Goats for ladies at $15.00 to $22.50. 42 ladies New Suits at $18.50 to $30.00 24 ladies New Silk Dresses at $12.50 to $18.50. lOO new silk and novelty woolen skirts at $5 to $12.50 Candler - Crowell Company "Louisburg's Leading Department Store" Louisburg, North Carolina Water Softened With Red Devil Lye Geaas everything instantly. Soft water mikes washing easy, and just a little Red Devil Lye in a tub of hard water softens it Uke rain-water. With Red Devil wash water you use less than half the soap and the daintiest fabrics will be whiter than usual?with little or no rubbing ? it's the rub that ruins. Work? Wonder* throughout the home. It will keep bath-tubs, wash bowls, toilets and kitchen sinks white, clean and sani tary. It whitens and removes grease spol? from flnnr?, windowsr tile or marble, and does the household dirty work in a hurry ? without trouble and with little expense. Red Devil Lye also makes won derful soap, peels peaches in a jiffy. It is the'real housekeeper's friend. Ask Your Grocer. Save the Labels. WM. SCH1ELD MFG. CO.. St. Losu. Mo. It will bo many years before the hen tribe will ceasS^boasting of tho great age attained by their ancestors who flourished during the world war. An exchange says of the great dam to be constructed on Sunday River In Africa "will Impound sufficient water to support 10,000 persons." Just how much water does it take to support a person, anyway? TRUSTEE'S SALE OF LAND. Under "and by virtue of Deed of Trust, executed by B. J. Williams and wife, Laura Williams, on the 21st, of January, 1912, to J. H. Kerr, Trus tPC aaM nt tmat h?lng In Book 177, page 34, In the Registry of Frariklin county, North Carolina, default having been made In the pay ment of the Indebtedness secured by Bald deed of trust and demand having been made for the foreclosure ^here. of, the undersigned Trustee, will on MONDAY, 29th DAY OF APRIL, 1918 at or about tha hour o noon, offer for sale for cash, at public auction at the courthosue door of Loulsburg, North Carolina, the following described pro PeVty, to-wlt: One-fourth undivided interest In a tract or pracel of land Bltuate In Sandy Creek township, Franklin coun ty, State of North Carolina and boun. de<I on N. by Little Shocco Creek; on East by lands of J. D. Alston; on South by lands of Jas. Summervllle and on the West by lands of Isaac Davis, containing 60 acres, more or less known as "Lee Summerville Place." " This the 27th day of March, 1918. 1. H. g?jUL i Up to Parents, Not the Police. The police department ot any city is established and maintained for the purpose of enforcing thelaw, not for the purpose of rearing and training children. And -no police department on earth, however wisely or efficiently tt may be administered, "an aboli3h delinquency in young people so long as their parents permit t nem to run wild. This city has been for years literally infested with petty crime. It Is a well known fact that petty larcemy Is practiced to a shocking degree by boys and girls-and that nothing Is so uncommon as honesty among the gen eration? growing up. Is this the fault of the police depart TBeHT? C5h It be laid at the doora of th? public schools? By no mejma. Ifr Is the fault of Q&relees parents jwho are permitting t^ielr children to "les1 grow." .It la a severe task to rear ev en the best of children and ground them in the principles of right living anil right thinking. Too many par ents find this task too onerous for them to face. "Oh, he'll turn out all right," says the father whose young son has been guilty of falsehood, petty theft trespassing on a neighbor's property. "I was full of devilment when I wM young_and see what a fine man IVo grown to be." Usually the boy ao? turn out all right, but sometimes he doesn't^- Sometimes, little criminal | Instincts that are neglected by hope ful parents develop beyond the point where they can be checked by ordinary means. And tho child that had a right to be well trained and safeguar ded becomes through some unexpect ed misdemeanor a charge and ward of the state. Parents cannot take their responsl hiiities too seriously, especially where, their boys are concerned. The suppo sition that girls must be carefully trained and watched over and that boys will somehow take care of them selves is a shallow conception of pa rental-duty. ?~"i wsn yau wntft BMBMfiing to mothers, begging thom to be more vigilant In the care of their sons said one of our best and most sub stantial citizens. "If I am a decent, law-abiding man. It Is because of the way my mother looked after me when I was a growing boy. I was not al lowed to run around promiscuously, to loaf in pool halls and stay out late. I was taught by her to protect, not to prey upon women. I had to give as strict an account of myself as my sis ter did. There was no sex discrimina tion in our family, There was no dou ble standard of morals. My parents never said, 'Oh, boys will be boys.' They were Just as solicitous concern ing my conduct and character as if I had been a girl. My mother never went to bed until I was in for the night." Nor is this man a sissy or a molly coddle. He is one of the most human, robust and broadminded men In Okla homa City. H* is a man of unaA&tl MU honor, on* who make? no com promises with himself. He was taught only one way. He knows only one way?and that way is to go straight. The carelessness of parents is the i result not so much of indifference to the welfare of their children as to a tendency to b? over-optimistic, to be lieve that "things will come out all right in the end." This is an essen tially American tendency. It is to this tendency to "hope for the best" that we must charge the folly of our dream that we would never become involved in the war. It is this same tendency that has made spendthrifts of so many people who have never thought of 'saving for their old age. It has be trayed us into sheltering the enemy viper in our bosom, to be tolerant to the point of foolishness. This dis honest kind of optimism that will not face facta as they are is working in calculable harm to thousands of promising American children who have a right to the most intelligent and judicious training, who have a right to bo taught a philosophy of be ing that will stand them in hand in the years to come. The obsessions of fathers in their business and the obsessions of moth ers in outside interests have been big factor in the growth of youthful de? linquency. Life has become so com plexes?^ full of temptation; we have departed so far from the simple stan dards of our grandparents that it is no easy task to bring up children to day. It requires an almost inexhaust ible fund of sympathy, patience, love and resourefulness to stem~?the tide of common protest that everybody else's children "are doing it." It is as heavy tax upon parental ingenuity to make children happy and keep them good.?Daily Oklahoman. * I NOTICE. By rlrtue of the pow*r eontat*e4 U a deed of Trust executed by I}ry&Ut Green and wife and duly recorded t* book 177 at page 298 In tke Reglfltqr of Franklin" coonty and d&AuifKl Ing been made In the note secured by said deed In trust; at the request of the holder of said note I shall on MONDAY THE 6TH DAY OF MAY 1918 at the courthouse door In the town of Loulaburg, N. C., sell at pub lic auction to the highest bidder for cash the real estate described In said deed of trust. Lot No. 1 In the dlviq. Ion of lands of Hawkins Ore. i, be ginning at a rock Matthew Neal'e corner In Perry's line, then N 66d E 58 poles to a rock corner for lot No. 2; thence N 80d W 153 poles 6 links to a rock and pine pointer Neal cor ner; thence S 76 l-2d E 108 poles to beginning, containing 40 acres, sub ject to a dower Interest In soil land of 10 acres described In said deed In trust; This March 27. 1918. W. H. RUFFIN. 3-29.6t Trustee. Subscribe to THE FRANKLIN TIDIES , $1.80 Per Year, In advance, f LEMONS MAKE SKI Ji WHITE, SOFT, CLEAR Make this beauty lotion for a few cents and see for jonrself. What si" or woman hasn't hoard of lemon Juice to remove' complexion blemishes; to whiten the skin and to bring out the roses, the freshness and the hidden beauty? But lemon Juice alone is acid, therefore Irritating, and should be mixed with orchard 'white this way, 8traln through a line cloth the Juice of two fresh lemons Into a bottle containing about three ounces of orchard white, then shake well,and you-have a wtjole quarter pint of skin and complexion lotion at about the cost one usually pays for a Bmall Jar of ordinary cold cream. Be sure to strain the lemon Juce so no pulp gets into the bottle, then this lotion will remain pure and fresh for months. When applied dally to the face, neck, arms and hands it should help to bleaofc, clear, smoothen and ber.utlfy the skin. Any druggist will supply three oun ces of orchard white at very llttlo cost and the grocer has the lemons. NOTICE. ? Special County School Tax Election. Upon petition of the County Board of Education ? of Frankln County, State of North Carolina, said petition being In due form and properly pre Trented-!? the Board of-County Com missioners 6f Franklin County,.. State of North Carolina, It is hereby order ed that an election be held In said County of Franklin, State of North Carolina In accordance with the nro | visions of Section 4114 Pells Revlsal 11908 as amended by an act of the Gan jeral Assembly of the State of North Carolina at Its session of 1911 chap ter 71 at which election shall be as certained the will of the people in said County of Franklin, whether there shall be levied on all taxable property and polls of said County a ta??~nnt tn aTraari 20.-(thirty) cents on the one hundred dollars val uation bf-property and 90 (ninety) cente trti each poll to, supplement the School Funif of'said County. The Bald election shall be held on ( the 14th day of May. 1918 and the polling places shall be the usual poll ing or voting place in each precinct or Township of the County. A new registration shall be made and the fol lowing named persons are hereby ap pointed registrars and pollholders for their respective Townshps or pre clnccts, to-wlt: Dunn's township, W. H. Williams, Registrar and S. B. Mullen and Rob ert Wright, pollholders. Harris township, J. D. King, regis trar and Caius Chamblee and J. T. Mann, pollholders. Yotiflgsvllle township, O. M. Perry, Registrar and J. R. Tharrington and C. A. Garner, pollholders Prankllnton township, B. A. White, Registrar and J. B. Nicholson and R. U. Hicks, pollholders. Hayesvillq township, R. G. Wynn, Registrar and Arthur Me?lin and Lo well Rodgers, pollholders. Sandy Creek township, J. R. Par rlsh, Registrar and A. 3. Gupton and John Carr, pollholders. Gold Mine township, John H. Wood, Registrar and R. C. Gupton and Joe Shearon, pollholders. Cedar Rock township, Eugene Ful ghum, Registrar and W. O. Stone and W. P. Cooke, pollholders. Ojpi'pa Oiwh twwualiiii, P. P. Wuuii, Registrar and W. H. Delbrldge and Joel Wilder, pollholders. Louisburg township. A. W. Alston, Registrar and B. N. Williamson and D. C. Tharrington, poll holders. The Registration hooks shall be open from the 13th clay of April, 1918 to the 4th day of May, 1918 and the registrars will have said books at their respective polling places on Sat urdays daring said period. By order of the Board of County Commissioners for Franklin County in regular meeting assembled, this the 1st day of April, A. D., 1918. J. Dl ALSTON, Attest: Chairman, j J. B. YARBOROUOH, Clerk. 4-5-5t I N. B?For Frankllnton _townshlp S. C. Ford has been appointed registrar In Heu of B. A. White, and W. P. Ed wards, one of the poll holders In lieu of R. U. Hicks. v. J. D. ALSTON, Chairman. J. B. Yarborough, Clerk. Subscribe to THE FRANKLIN TIMES Only $1.60 Per Year, In advance. WANTED. Pure Bred or Barred Rock hen?. Write or phone MACON Q. SMITHWICK, 4-5-2t R. F. D. 6, Loulaburg, N, Cl PASTURES I hare leased the property known M ? iwumiw ?II ftlTffKir and Sandy Creeks and can furnlsk pastorage tor any cattle at reasonable rates. Also will pay the highest mar ket price for dry cattle. See E. N. Williams. L<oulsburg, N. C., R. F. D. So. 6, or Dr. J. O. Newell, Loulsburg, N. C. Subscribe to THE FRANKLIN TIMES Only $1.60 Per Year, in adrance. LOST. A bunch of keya on Saturday, March 30th, In Loulsburg. Finder will be re warded by returning name to H. O. PERKY, M. D., 4-6-tf. Loulsburg, N. C. Wonder If those wooden shoea ao strongly urged by some, will pr0?6nt or cure cold feet. If they will, the country can stand for them. Subscribe to THE FRANKLIN TIMES Only J1.50 Per Year, In advane?. NOTICE TAX PAYERS All who have not paid their Stat? and County taxes for 1917 must come and settle at once, as the Treasurers for the different, fiinrls" troughout our County need' this money and the law says we must collect. ----- --?-?m H. A. KEARNEY, Sheriff
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 12, 1918, edition 1
7
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