BE PREPARED! Prevent infections and disease by using the right medicine at the RIGHT TIME. Every household should have a well stocked med icine cabinet. It will save you many hours of worry and many days of pain. Check over your medicines you need and phone us. Our drugs are always Fresh and Pure LET US BE YOUR DRUGGIST L. E. Scogtjin's (New) Drag Store "A Good Drug Store" PHONE ? 310 CHILDREN BED ROOM_ SLIPPERS FREE With every pair of children's slippers or shoes at regular price we are going to give, free; a pair of children bed room slippers. This offer is good until July 15. Wright Clothing & Dry Goods Co. BUNN, North Carolina A Get-rich-quick tip may make you poor The amatemQ speculator invests in Faith and Hope. The desire to make more money blinds him to the risk of losing what he has. When ne sees His capital dis appear he realizes that easy money is the most diffi cult to get. PUT YOUR MONEY WHERE YOU CAN'T LOSE AND ARE SURE TO GAIN When yo?deposit with us you avoid risk, worry and uncertainty. Yoar money will be safe all the time, always available on demand and it will increase steadily with a definite rate of compound interest. START A SAVINGS ACCOUNT Citizens Bank & Trust Company / HENDERSON, N. 0. "The Leading Bank in this Section" Li4-u nrauu" ? Sabrcrlb* to Tk? Franklin Tlma* Mr T mt tm -INSURE Aim 11 SUM -BE BUM Hlvtt *. W. WATSON U4-U INSURE for first clam fob raurrnd '< PHONE tn 0111 RALEIGH LETTER (Continued trom pace two) ot the State Medical Society and the! State Induatrlal Commlasion have reached a decision (or the appoint, inent of a committee of five from the Society to confer with the Commission relative to the setting up of a tentative scale of fees to be charged under the provisions of the compensation net. The president of the Society will serve as chairman of the committee which he la to appoint soon. The State Sinking Fund Commission In session here during the week dis cussed the act passed by the 1929 Gen real Assembly regulating the issuance of bonds and notes by conntles, cities and other , local nntts, but postponed definite action for some days so that Governor Gardner, who was out of the city attending the reunion at Char lotte, can by present. The Commis sion is composed ot the Governor, Au ditor and State Treasurer. Jadge N. A. Townsend .executive counsel, rep resented the Governor at the recent meeting and It was announced that the debts ot counties and cities at the close of the last blennlum was $384, SOO, 792, exclusive of a State debt of $154, 819, 600 on the same date, June 30, 1929. The 1929 act gives the Sink ing Fund Commission large powers, including authority to prevent the contraction of any debt without a vote of the people. Applicants for positions on the State Highway Patrol have, through rigid examinations, been reduced to thirty, five. These are at present In the patrol training school at Camp Glenn, Morehead City. Applicants for these positions are given to understand that they must know how to work and not mind doing It. Ine State Weights and Measures Act, amended by the 1929 General As sembly, which made provision for the creation of a fund for the Inspection of weignts and measures in the State, takes from the Department nf Agrl. culture the right to collect the fran chise tax for its enforcement and places that duty upon the Department ot Revenue, according to an opinion Issued by the Attorney General, which leads Commissioner Graham to defer appointment of a Commissioner of Wetghts and Measures until he can ascertain the amount-of money to be made available for the administration of the amended law. Raleigh people manifested keen In tel est in the arrival on Thursday the Southern Railway System's strange little locomotive "Best Friend," at the Union Station, where literally hund reds of folks called to "pay their re spects." States for actual railway service, it is said, the original having been built for the South Carolina Can al Railway Company, now the Charles. in North Carolina and been Inspected by 50,000 people. The following delegates have been named by Governor Gardner to the National Conference of Social Work meeting in its fifty-sixth annual meet ing, June 26 to July 3, at San Fran, clsco: Frank Graham, Chapel Hill; Dr. Carl Taylor, Raleigh; Dr. Howard W. Odum, Chapel Hill; Mrs. Mary Camp Sprinkle, Raleigh; Mrs. Marion Crawford Adams, Greensboro; Mrs. W. B. Waddlll, Henderson; H. L. Mill Burke. LaGrange; Senator H L. Mlll ner, Morganton; Judge William York, Greensboro;- Mrs. Walter Parsley, WiT nington; Miss Clara I. Cox, High ptlnt; Col. W. A. Blair, Winston-Sal em; Miss Gertrude Weil, Goldsboro; Miss Lola Glide well, Reldsville; and W. E. Stanley, Durham. Col. J. W. Harrelson, director of the Slate Department of Conservation and Development, is getting credentials ready for North Carolina sportsmen who manifest a weakness for either hunting, or fishing, having placed an order for.312,000 license buttons and blanks. 160,000 of these were ordered last year. The price per thousand this year Is to be 620.66 and winner in the bidding for this order is Bastian Brothers Company, Rochester, N. Y. Fees to be charged for combination II. censes this year will be 64.60 for Btate, and 617-26 for non-resident; hunting and trapping, 63.00 for county, 6F.25 for State and 633.25 tor non-resi dent. Mrs. T. W. Btckett, wife of North Carolina's late ahd greatly beloved War Governor" was recently elected unanimously to the position of Com missioner of Public Welfare for Wake by the county commissioners. Mrs. Blckett has held this position for near ly fire years and her work warranted re-election. The last batch of opinions to be handed down by the Supreme Court for the present term is expected on Wednesday, June 12. and adjournment tor the summer will be next order of that tribunal. Honorary degrees of Doctor of Sci ence were awarded by State College daring the week to Stuart W. Cramer, prominent textile manufacturer of Gaston county and William D. Fau. cctte, chief engineer of the Seabord Air Line, along with degrees present ed to 228 college seniors, graduate students and professional men. Governor Gardner, who returned Friday night from the Confederate Re union at Charlotte, was notified by Mayor Rankin, of Oastonla, that four policemen there were shot and a na tional textile worker's union organizer slightly wounded In a slash between the officers and strikers from the Lo ray Mill there, following an Incendi ary speech by Fred E. Beal, Southern organiser for the National Textile Workers' Union. Instead of respond. Ing to the request for troops when the disorders were ''reported. Governor Gardner asked local authorities to take charge of the situation. Condi tions In the mill districts of Gastonla have been serious for weeks, with lit tle prospects of Improvement. It Is said that Secretary of W%r James W. Good will, on behalf of the Federal government accept the 660, 000 group memorials this State will anveil at Gettysburg on July 3. An omelet made from the egg of an cstrlch aould feed sight persons, ac cording to a recipe, but who would sent to sat the omeletT EACH BIT OF LEARNING HELPS THE POCKETBOOK Nevertheless, one does now and then get It said In an oblique manner, as the Department of Agriculture did] ir. a recent bulletin entitled, Does Eda. cation Pay the Farmer? Wherein It set forth In the simplest possible way tho results of a surrey made on a cross section..of the wholfe country. This bulLetinsald: It was found In Texas that every day spent by a child in school might be considered worth nine dollars. This estimate was arrived at by taking 120,000 as the total earnings of an un educated laborer over a forty-year period and *40,000 as the total earn-: Ings of a high-school graduate who had spent twelre school years of ap. pioxlmately 180 days each in acqulr. lng training. The gain In wages, $20, 000, due to these 2160 days of school represents a value of about $9.25 a day during the period of the schooling. The average net earnings of Georgia farmers without any Schooling were | found to average $240, while those who had common-school education earned $565.50, high-school graduates $064. 50, and those who had completed \ ? ,# an agricultural-college course earned $1264. Those who had taken only aj short course earned $895.95, or almost] tour times as much as those with no | education at all. | In Indiana, Illinois, Iowa and Kan.' sas> the surveys showed again that the best training made the largest Incomes In both the owner and tenant groups. In Missouri the hetter.edu-' cated men own four-flfths of the land, they operate, keep more livestock,' br.ndle more crops with each work-| man employed and do about one-fifth more business. An interesting fact] brought out by the Wisconsin survey |was that the farmers with blgh.school education acquired the Ownership of' ,their farms In. about seven years,' !while It took ten years for those with only a common-school education to 'acquire a clear title. Among those In any given capital group, tbe high-' school graduate at any age was making more than the common-school farmer several years older with the same amount ot capital Invested. Without exception, every study shows that the man with the greater training enjoys the greater prosperity. Subscribe to The Franklin Times COXPLMESTABY TO FBAXKUV* BECOBD8 As an evidence of the progress made In the Auditor's office In Frank Jin Count; In the accounting of- the several funds the following letter from Mr. Charles M. Johnson, Execu tive Secretary of the County Govern ment Advisory Commission, request ing forms of reports, to be recom mended for nse In other. Counties la' quite complimentary and conclusive. The letter follows: "I wish you would Please make me up a copy of the statement that you riake to your county commissioners each first Monday, and mail to me. I expect to use It as a model for other counties and suggest to the Boards of Commissioners of each county In the State that they require the county ac countant to submit a statement of that hind each first Monday." London is experimenting with syn. hetlc rubber paving blocks. Experts ay they have found the material to be better than the wooden blocks and fsphalt, because it reduces skidding, eliminates vibration and is water proof. PRICES MASHED! ON ALL Spring Goods Folks, now is your opportunity to buy first class merchandise at low prices. Look at our goods and prices before buying elsewhere and be con vinced that we are selling good merchandise lower than any other merchant. Men's Solid Leather Plow Shoes $1.95 Men's Blue Work Shirts ___ 49c j Men's Summer Pants 98c Men's and Boys' Straw Hats ;' 25c i Men's and Boys' Heavy Weight Overalls 98c Men's and Boys' Dress Shirts 89c 40-inch fast color Voile, all shades 25c Riverside fast color Shirting 12 l-2c New English Prints, fast color 25c 36-inch Drnid L L Sheeting, per yard 10c 36-inch Curtain Scrim, per yard 8c 32-inch Amoskeog Dress Gingham, per yard 15c Ladies' Patent Strap Slippers $1.95 Ladies' Strap Kid Slippers * 1.95 Ladies' Gray Beige parchment skin aDd all - other novelty shades in new Slippers 9.95 Children's Patent One Strap Pump 98c Misses' Patent One Strap Slippers 1.45 Large Misses' Patent Strap Slippers 1.95 Girls' and Boys' Tan Lace Sandals . 1.45 Men, Boys' Women's and Children's Tennis Oxfords and Shoes 89c UaS ?ik Dresses, Ml colon ^95 te&2? ">??'?> j?, || Men's Tan or Black Oxfords . $2.95 Boys' Tan or Black Oxfords 2.45 Men's New Spring Dress Straw Hats 1.45 Men's New Spring Suits 9 95 F. A. Roth Company The Store that Satisfys or Your Money BacK. Louisburg, N. C.