BABY CHICKS CUSTOM HATCHING Cedar Rock-Cypress Creek ? Poultry Association hatchery Telephone No. 1105 R. F. D. No. 4 Louisburg, N. 0 BEGINS WORK WEDNESDAY, JAN. 8, 1930 Custom Hatching $4.00 per tray of 96 eggs. Reservations for any week between Jan. 8 and May 1 may be made by advancing $1.00 per tray. Baby Chicks $16.00 per 100. SPECIAL OFFER Anyone paying a reservation fee of $3.00 per tray be fore Dec. 1, 1929 may have hatching done without further cost ^ r i Jack k Brown MENI Stop, Look and Listen! I am going to sell 50 Suits f dt which sold as high as $29.50 Also Shoes, Sweaters, Shirts, Hats and Furnishings at Prices Unheard Of. JACK'S MEN SHOP LOUISBUBO, N. 0. Near the Ford Garage Now's the Time Nere'sthe Place TO BUY YOUR SUITS s ? TOPCOATS OVERCOATS ? SHOES ' SWEATERS ? HATS DRY GOODS _ NOTIONS * ' ' # At Prices Reasonable. WS GUARANTEE TO PLEASE Wright Clothing & Dry Goods Co. BURN, North Carolina OUB IUKI6H LETTER 1} B U Ships Raleigh, Dec^f.?The effort of Gov ernor Gardner end Ida executive counsellor, who is also commissioner of pardons, to rerlew and pass upon mil petitions for pardons before the latter steps down end out on the 15th; the annual meeting of the State Board of Agriculture, announcement of Li cence Bureau that new plates will lie oh gale at branch offices in serious rerts of the State next week const! tote the major items of administra tion "happenings" dufing the week. The Christmas spirit is showing it self in business circlM and the "shop early" slogan is being passed along as usual. Around thirty paroles have recently been granted by the Governor on rec commendatlon of Jtgdge N. A. Town send, commissioner of pardons, who is desirous of clearing his desk of all applications for pardons before I tiring on December 16th, to be suc ceeded by Odus M- Hull, of Sbetby. The uiiusual number of paroles end commutations granted within the past two weeks is due to an accumulation of applications during the period Jifdge Townsend was engaged in in vestigations of labor disputes at Gas tonla and Marion. There were no clemency dispensations during the Thanksgiving holidays, nor will there l>e any at Christmas, it is said, with out "good and sufficient reasons. Eight of the persons benefitting by paroles recently were serving senten i of more than ten years; A few of the sentences imposed on the men nparoled were for more than 23 years and one or two for 20 years. In prac tically all instances clemency was recommended by the trial judge and solicitor,^either one or both of them. At present there are thirteen con demned men on "Death Row" at the Central Prlaon, bit none of them are to be executed before the end of Uie year. The electric chair has "snuffed out" the lives of ninety-eight men since it was installed, four white men and three negroes daring the present Raleigh cannot qo|te figure out the motive which prompted Judge Town send, the highest paid ot State offic ials, to-retire. His monthly "stipend" was $670.83, the same compensation received by Superior Court Judges, and all traveling expenses on business for the State. Maybe the resignation ? political significance. Time will tell. "Live at home and board at the same place" is to be emphasised at a banqotet at the Executive Mansion on the evening of December 19th when the Governor and Mrs. Gardner will be hosts to -more than 300 newspaper men representing every newspaper published in North Carolina. Drery item on the menu and all of the dec orations are to be North Carolina products. Winter vegetables, pickles and other articles which can be grown In {he State are to be featured ai this ittneheon and Mrs. Jane McKinxmon, State Home Demonstration Agent,, is to be "in command" in the prepara tion of these delicacies. The Gover nor figures that 'North Carolina la sending away annually for foodstuffs around a quarter of a million dollars which could and should be kept at home. The week of December 16-21 is proclaimed as "Live at Home Week* and the proposed luncheon is being planned to emphasize the idea The trial of eight McDowell County deputies charged with killing six Ma rion strikers before the gates of a cotton mill in Marion two months ago is to start In BuTnsville tomorrow with Judge G. V. Cowper presiding. This will conclude the strike cases whioh have been on the front paged of newspapers all over the country for nine or ten months. Eleven law yers are appearing in the trial and the trial is likely to drag along for a couple of weeks. The Governor has named A. McL. Graham, of Sampson. County, to suc ceed Judge Cowper as a member of the judicial conference from the Sixth Judicial District This conference is composed of the 8upreme and 8ug>er lor Court judges, all emergency judg es, the Attorney-Genera] and one practicing attorney from each of the twenty judicial districts of the Stata Mr. Graham is an outstanding mem ber of the bar in his county and dis trict and is considered well fitted for service on the tribunal to which he has been called. A. Ludeke, of New Hanover County, a native of Holland, probably has the distinction of being the first natural ised citizen to hold a prominent posi tion in the State government. Mr. l.tfdeke was recently appointed to membership on the 8tate Board of Agriculture by Governor Gardner and assumed his duties during the week at the annual meeting here or the ag ricltural board. For fifteen years he has been a prominent member of the Dutch colony established at Castle Hayne established by Hugh McRae near Wilmington and his- agricultur al activities reached the ears of the Governor with the result recently an nounced. He is expected to fit it nicely with the farm program. In his report to the Board Com missioner Graham, of the State De partment of Agriculture, reported en couraging progress in all divisions during the past six months. This year the six test farms will have for distribution around 1.S00 bushels of pedigreed seed of different kinds which are to be fllatributed to the farmers over the state at reasonable price, the Commissioner told the Board. Touching the work of depart-, ment inspectors Mr. Graham said that for the calendar year 1929 Inspections have been made as follows: Straw berries, 975 carloads and 182,000 pack ogee; sweet potatoes, 175 carloads and 54,000 packages; Irish potatoes, 2,681 carloads and 615,000 packages; peaches, 240 carloads and 88,000 pack ages; apples, 86 carloads and 6408 packages; huckleberries, 17 carloads and 8,924 packages; peas, 18 carloads and 5485 packages; cucumbers, 176 W?WCS Xmas Specials! BEGINNING TODAY We will give our $12.50 Permanent Waves for $7.50 Also remember Our Duradene and Princess Waves for $5.00 Get your wave early and aToid the rush. CITY BARBER AND BEAUTY SHOP Phone 1M Loiiihhy, N. C. arloads and 87,500 packages; beans, 149 carloads and 144,500 packages, le also stated that 5,384,837 pounds if lire poultry had been marketed luring the season and that there are >1 licensed warehouses in the State ?stem, with a capacity of 166,000 alee of cotton, accommodating to tecember 1st 105,651 bales, a big ncrease orer last year. The fruit r last yi ly inspection work showed that elgb How One Woman Lost ^ 20 Pounds of Fat Lost Her Double Chin?Lost Her Prominent Hips?Lost Her Sluggishness * n ____ Gained Physical Vigor?Gained in Vivaciousness? Gained a Shapely Figure If you're fat?remove the cause! KRUSCHEN SALTS contain the 6 mineral salts your body organs, glands, need to function properly. When your vital organs fall to per form their work correctly?your bow els and kidneys can't throw off that weste material?before you realise It ?you're growing hideously fat! Try half a teaspoonfu) of KHUS CHEN SALTS In a glass of hot water e?ery morning?in S weeks get on the scales and note how many pounds of fat have vanished. Notice alio that yon have gained in energy?your akin ia clearer?your eyes sparkle with glorious health-, you feel youhger in body?keener in mind. KRU8CHEN will give any fat person a joyous surprise. Get an 86c bottle of KRUSCHEN SALTS at Boddie's Drug Store (lasts 4 weeks). If even this first bottle doesn't convince you this Is the easi est way to lose fat?If you don't feel a stfperb Improvement in health?so gloriously energetic?rigorously alive ?your money gladly returned. ty crate* of cltrua fruits were ordered returned to Virginia during October and thirty-seven shipments, found during November, were ordered de stroyed or sent away from the State. According to a Government census taken in the fall of 1928, there was an average of 5.8 pigs per farm in this State a figure four tenths of a j.ig higher than the average reported in the spring of this year and another census has been started with the view to obtaining similar information | in this respect at the present time. I Of the 873,125,000 authorized by Con gress as Federal aid for road con struction, North Carolina has been apportioned $1,722,673 for construction work in the fiscal year 1931. State "highway departments~aie to proeeod right away with preparations for the expenditure of this appropriation dur ing the next construction season. The federal aid fund is apportioned among all states and Hawaii In. proportion to their respective areas, populations and mileage of post roads, and the share of each state is available, it is said, for expenditure on roads includ ed in the federal-aid system under the joint supervision of the State high way department and the United States Bureau of Public Roads. The State Commission plans the construction of 54 miles of highways right away and will receive bids here on December 17th involving 1600,000. A delegation headed by Col. John ? (Coatlnnad nn pigs tan) ? CHRISTMAS REMINDER... CHRISTMAS IS DRAWING NEAR AGAIN. IT SEEME NOT LONG SINCE IT WAS HElfK LAST YEAR WHEN WE PUT OFF BUYING TILL IT WAS MOST TOO LATE. LETS BE READY THIS TIME WITH BUYING IN TIME WHAT WE NEED IN ORDER TO AVOID THE RUSH. COME TO US TOR ALL THINGS GOOD. TO EAT YOU WILL NEED FOR THES FESTIVE TIME. OUR STOCK OF FANCY GROCERIES IS FULL TO OVER FLOWING FOR THE HOLIDAY TRADE. COME TO OUR SANITARY MARKET FOR CHRISTMAS MEATS, FISH AND OYSTERS. ONLY THE CHOICEST WESTERN MEATS FROM REFRIGERA TOR CABS COME INTO THIS DEPARTMENT. AND EMPHASIZING QUAL ITY IN THIS DEPARTMENT IS THE CAUSE OF THE INCREASING DEMAND FOR OUR PRODUCTS. And say Merry Christmas with OUR FRESH GROUND COFFEE We Have Gifts That Last?* Worthy of Your Inspection L. P. HICKS ON THE BUSY CORKER LOUlSBOM, N. a Use the Old Reliable ytrl ptucjous Bri t and Pastries y The following guarantee by the mill Is printed on every sack: "We guarantee every sack of Zephyr Flour to give satisfaction. If It does not, return half of the sack to your Grocer and get all yonr money back." T?Y YOU* 5KIU.WH P L FLOURTHATWIU: | HELP YOU SUCCEED I HAs Been Tried And Proven ? In A Million Ovens FLOUR And Proven LOUISBURG GROCERY CO. Mill Distributor! to Merchants for Franklin and Adjoining Counties

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