OSLI 11.50 PEK YEA11 IN ADVANCE The Franklin Times AN ADVERTISING MEDIUM THAT BEINGS RESULTS A. V. Johnson, Editor and Manager. THE COUNTY, THE STATE, THE UNION Subscription $1-0 Per tew VOLUME XLVIII LOUISBURG^N. C? FHIDAV. OCTOBER :l, 191!). NUMBER 38 We Gift of Fate By ALVAH JORDAN GARTH (Copyright, 1919. by the Woatorn N?*i paper Union.) ?'It's too bad!" said I^enu Dawes to her husband. "Everything looks so nice except the bare Hours." "Won't they be just the thing for the dancing features of our house warming?" questioned Norman Dawes. "You see, I've got a good deal of pride." added Leun, "and I want to i appear as cozy and comfy us possible, . with so man/ of my old school chums 1 coming." "Now, don't you get vrorrylng." con soled Norman. "If any remarks are made, Just bluntly Inform the critics that the high cost of living wouldn't permit new furniture and rugs at the same time.** "Well, we two are happy and con tented. anyway, so what does It mat ter If some Ill-natured critic like Mrs. ' Parmly inspects our belongings with f a magnifying glass, and says mean things about our being threadbare and shoddy, and all that? She called me ' that once. Norman?but I'm not shod dy, am I, dear?" "You? Why, you're solid pure gold, ? my pet." cried Norman fervently, and [ Li nn tried philosophically to subdue hs r v In longings. Their little new ho:. ? ? her Idol, and she wanted to ! have :t ms perfect as possible, durlfig j the cm ?'!"?: he street car men Is gonna git moah dan dat fer strlkln', and so is ns," was her explanation.? Louisville t'uurier-.loiirna). In the City Square of Treves, Oer luany, headquarters of the allied mili tary forces, an ancient cross surmount-' ed monument marks the city's center of traffic. For this reason American Red Cross officials converted it, as shown by this picture, into a directory of all Red Cross activities in the d?y. CLINIC HAS PROVED WORTH Organization established by Boetoi) Firm-Will Worthy of Imitation by Other Employer?. A pioneer medical clinic, established 15 years ago to protect the health of 000 employee*, and gradually enlarged and expanded until It now cares for a *>tal of 2,700?that Is the record proud .. .?.. ur-- SB the clinic In the capacity of director and visiting nurse. Now the clinic Is In charge of ? practicing physician and surgeon, assisted by three full-time graduate nurses. During the influenzn epidemic of last winter, over 330 employees were treat ed per day, with only six deaths during the entire course of the dreaded dis ease. All cases were given careful Individual attention and, in instances where no family doctor was, in at tendnnce, Immediate arrangements wen* made for medical en re. / l? Is the policy of the nUr&es in the clinic to advise all employees with whom they come in contact to be in sured. an activity which the firm.Itself handles through an employees' organ ization. The purpose of such advice linn I m Ml lir f If mil,mm ? ployees_jujordOi1 Hint tllfty may receive Its benefits after one week's illness. This arrangement does not place a premium upon the employees' beiug 111, and. at the same Vime the clinic co operates in the matter of insurance, r A dental clinic is_ In a formative state and, no doubt, will be established" In a short time. The plan and method of adminlstratlon-and organization is simply in the making, but it is safe to say that the dental clinic will be as effi cient as the medical clinic. The Modern Hospital, in describing the clinic, says that it has fully proved its value in protecting the health of the employees of this particular cora pany and merits the commendation and imitation of other mercantile and industrial establishments. SEEMINGLY NO AGE LIMIT Applicants for Divorce Are by Ne Means Alwaya in the Daya of Their Callow Youth. There is no age limit to divorce. In Oregon a woman at the age of eighty two years is suing for a decree Jrnm her husband, who is a callow stripling of seventy-one summers. This seems to he another case of too much mother in-law, as the wife asserts that her husband's love has been alienated and undermined through the work of his mother, who is now ninety-four years old and who never did like her, any how. They have been married some ten years now, and the wife said that when the husband took her money to buy an auto "for his mother and wouldn't let his wife ride In It, she knew that his love was dead. When she remonstrated the husband coldJy informed her that she could leave the house. When the wife said that the home was her own and bought with her own money the husband- replied that might be so, but he had thought fully hnd the doed recorded In his own name. Now she has to appeal to the courts. It Is rather rough when a bride of eighty-two has to compete with a ninety-four-year-old motlier-in law for the affections of her husband*