?Sunday is October 1st. t t J ? ^Next Monday is first Monday. K>. ttt Franklin County Fair opens Monday. t t t ? The County Commissioners will meet Monday * t 1 ; ?*? The City Commissioners will meet Friday night, October 6th. tit' " ? Cotton was worth 9 % cents a pound in Louisburg yesterday. in ? Wednesday brought a nice rain, breaking the long dry spell. v. It J ?Reports indicate a big cot tbn damage throughout ttfffCq?j$r ty. frem boll weevi)s. '&>>///" ttt W" ? The. Board of County Com missioners met Monday to ar range a loan until the tax collec tions begin to come in. >. : i : ?- -^-Dr. L. B. Skeen, Clinician tfom the State Sanatorium, held a Tubercular Clinic in the Health Office the week of September 11th to 15th, inclusive. ttt ? The Pioneer Construction Co. has moved its offices to the building next to Dr. H. H. John son's office, from the Fuller building near the bridge. t t t ? Battery B, 113th F. A., lo cated at Louisburg, has received orders to increase its personnel sixteen men bringing its member ship up to peace time strength. t J t ? Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dun ston, of Elizabeth City, announce the birth of a son, William Ed- | ward, Jr. on Monday, Sept. 7th. Mrs. Dunston was formerly Miss Ida Fuller. FOR SALE ? 1 fllne Jersey cow coming fresh very soon with second calf, also several nice Guernsey andJJersey heifers. 9-29-lt J. k. MUNFORD. ? HOME DEMONSTRATION ? j ? DEPARTMENT ? ? Lillie Mne Braxton, Home ? ? Demonstration Agent ? ? ? ????????? Margaret Person Wins 4-H Club Dress Contest The annual 4-H Club Dress Contest was held at the Agricul ture building Saturday, Sept. 23, with three girls entering. Mar garet Person, Louise Basa, and Nannie Clea Leonard were the entrants. Each entered the wash dress group and made respectively a blue and white checked rayon, a cotton plaid and a Navy blue Romona cloth. These girls mod eled their dresses before the jud ges, Mrs. Carl Watkins and Mrs. W. N. Fuller, Sr., and a group of interested visitors. Had there been as many as five girls In the contest the winner would have been entitled to enter the State Dress Contest. The girl who wins the Statft Contest wins a free trip to the National 4-H Club Congress. ? ? ? ? ? * * * ? ? ? ?] ? HEALTH DEPARTMENT ? ? ? ? Dr. R. F. Yarborough, * ? Couuty Health Officer ? ? ?????????? The following is a report from Dr. R. F. Yarborough, Health Of ficer for Franklin County, for September: Births ? white 37, colored 34, total 71. DeathB, white 9, col ored 7, total 16. Other ltem? in the report were aa follow*: Reportable diseases: Diphther ia, 1 Gonorrhea 6, Syphilis 15, Tuberculosis 1. All quarantlnable dlsesases quarantined and placardable dis eases placarded. Syphilitic treatments 234, Thi osulfate 2, Urinalysis 16, Wasser mann test 43, Malarial slides 1, Diphtheria swabs 2, Oonorrhea slides 17, Sputum examination t. Toxoid given 17, TypbolA hnmun ixatlon 3-7 doses, SttlilkPox vaccination 1, Tuberculin tested 21. Office visits 466, Consultations 76, County Home visits 6, Inmat es seen 6, County Jail visits 8, Inmates seen 6, Home visit 1, Papers State Hospital 2, Other Institutions 1, Pre-School exami nations 2, Tubercular examina tions 130. C.C.Ci examinations 7, N.Y.A, examinations 2, Food Handler examinations 11, Teach ers 6. Dressings 2. A Venereal clinic was held in the office each week. Two Midwife, Infancy and Pre Natal cllfllcs were held with 17 patients and 21 visitors in atten dance. A tubercular clinic was held in the office the week of September 11th to 16th inclusive by Dr. L. B. Skeen, Clinician from the State Sanatorium. One hundred andthtrty persons were examined with tw? new cases being diag nosed. ?Mteeftto to the Franklin Times Mrs. Ada Reeves is visiting her sister at Clinton. j Mrs. John TJzzelHs visiting rel atives in Wilson this week. t t I Messrs. Buster Poster and James Johnson visited Raleigh Tuesday. t t t Mr. J. R. Gantt attended the Cleveland County Fair at Shelby this week. Miss Bett^ Nea* left Tuesday I for Greenville to enter E. C. T C j for the fall. - Mrs. W. P. Long is guest of Mr. and Mrs. E S. Fulghum, of Hal ifax, this vnpek. tti Mrs. L. W. Morris, of Rocky Mount, of friends near L^Jijifcu^Tpeaaay. / a ' W. T/'\t X X Mrs,/ B; B.' Gupton and little Shelby JeaRy visited friends at Sanatorium" Sunday. 1 1 * Messrs. A. W. and T> P. Ghol son, of Henderson, were visitors to Louisburg Monday. t - * Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Lufsey, of Warrenton, visited Mr. and Mrs. K. E. Joyner Sunday. * 1 * Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Fuller and son, of Hickory, spent the week end with his mother. Miss Sarah Hall,*of Oxford, was guest of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Scog gin, Jr., the past week. 't Jt Mr. Robert W. Sihithwick, Jr., left this week to enter school at Fishburne Military School. t t X Mr. W. R. Young visited Wash ington City and the World's Fair at New York the past week, t 2 J Mrs. B. F. Barinean, of George town, was guest of friends in Louisburguhe past week. i x x Miss Elizabeth Lassiter is as sisting in a Sunday School Con vention in Gastonia this week I t t Mr. Macon Smithwick, of Phil adelphia, was guest of relatives in Louisburg the past week-end. X X t Dr. H. A. Bagby, of Pendleton, S. C., was guest of his brother, Dr. A. Paul Bagby, the past weelr end. til Miss Dorothy Dean Turner, of Raleigh, spent the past week-end with friends and relatives near Louisburg. t t X , Misses Dorothy and Marie Gup ton left Wednesday for Greenville to enter E. C. T. C., for the fall term. Mrs. Ellis Strickland and son, of Rocky Mount, were guests of relatives and friends near Louis burg Sunday. ? * X Mr. and Mrs. Jonah Taylor, of Greensboro, were guests of rela tives and friends in Louisburg the past week-end. T, ^ * J Mrs Raymond Shearon, of Farmville, was guest of relatives and friends in and near Louisburg the past week-end. t ? * Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Joyner and Mr. and Mrs. Duke Champion, of Henderson, visited Miss Edith Joyner at Sanatorium Sunday. * * * Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Medlln, Miss Ethelyn Medlin and Mr D T. Shearin visited Miss Dorothy Medlin at Sanatorium Sunday. XXX Mrs. J. H. Cyrus, Mrs. Davis Pearce and Mrs. Berry Holden, of Youngsville, are guests of their brother In Columbus, Ohio, this week. ? ? ? * A Little Miss Nadine Joyner vis ited ber sitter, Hazel Joyner and aunts, M1m May Johnson and Misk Lillian Sykes at Sanatorium Sunday. SSS Miss Martha Lynn Denton has returned to ber home In Norllna, after spending the past two weeks with ber brother, Mr. Tbomas Denton, of Wood. AAA Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Dula and Miss Laura Wiggs, of Win ston-Salem, spent Sunday with their parent*, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Wiggs, of Bunn, Midshipman Rl< Yar botough Bfeht the week-end with bis parents, Dr. and Mrs. R., F.' Yarborough returning Monday to the U. 8. Naval Academy at An napolis, Md. Miss Alberta Davis, Mr*. Ham ilton Hobgood, Mis* Annie Gup ton of Route2, Mr*. E. F. Tbomas and Miss Talmadge Thomas spent Sunday with friends and relative* in High Point and Winston-8* lem. i V. I t t t t t t t It doesn't mean that summar has gone Just because they are showing tb? women hat* for fait. ENTERTAINS CONTRACT CLUB Mrs. W. E. Collier, Jr. enter tained her Contract club at ber borne Monday evening. Members wbo were present were Misses Jean Fleming, Peg 'Ford, Jane Fuller, Mrs. Douglas Perry, and Mrs. Hamilton Hob good. Visitors were Misses Mar tha Parrott, house -guest of Miss Jane Fuller, Mrs. E. F. Thomas, and Miss Alleen Crowder. High Bcore prizes were award ed to Mrs. E. F. Thomas and Mrs. Hamilton Hobgood (or Visitors and club members respectively. Miss Jean Fleming assisted the hostess in serving a sweet course with coffee. On each attractive plate there was a wee china bas ket filled with flowers, as a favor. MRS. WELCH ENTERTAINS On Tuesday afternoon, Mrs. R. H.. Welch entertained the Cur rent Literature Club at her home "The Lone Oak." .The program subject for the afternoon was "High and Dry." Mrs. M.' S. Davis discussed "Moun tain Days in the Highlands And Alps" which was- followed by a review of the Canadian Rockies and British Columbia by Miss [Mary Yarborough. Mrs. T. K. Al len gave a comparison of the Sy j l ian and American Deserts, i The members present were: Mrs. M. S. Davis, Mrs. Walter Patten, Mrs. S. P. Burt, Mrs. M. C. Pleasants, Mrs. I. D. Moon, Mrs. T. C. Amick, Mrs. ?T. K. Al len, Miss Mary Yarborough, Mrs. A. Paul Bagby, Mrs. L. F. Kent, Mrs. Malcolm McKinne, Mrs. J. G. Phillips, Mrs. V. R. Kilby, and J Mrs. R. H. Welch. ? European Summary The German high command as serted last night tliat Warsaw had 1 "capitulated unconditionally" af ter 20 days' land and air bom bardment. Berlin added that the "handing over" of the capital "probably will occur" Friday. About six hours previously the Warsaw radio hud announced the city still was holding out, al though it was a "dost roved infer- 1 no." The Western Front had an ar tillery duel between French and (Herman big guns, (ierman shells went four miles into French de | serted towns. French fire was concentrated on the Hornbach salient , where French infantry approached (Her man fortifications, and on the 1 Saar region. (?ermany announced a "success- : ful" mass air attack on British capital ships In the north Sea, with the (?eriiians "destroying" an aircraft carrier and scoring I I important hits on a battleship. The First Lord of Britain's 1 Admiralty, Winston Churchill, -aid "no British ship was hit," and asserted one (ierman flying boat was shot down and another "reported badly damaged." The Soviet government an nounced that the Russian steamer Metallist had been torpedoed and sunk by an unidentified submarine off the northern coast of Kstonia. German Foreign Minister Joa chim von Kibbentrop arrived in Moscow amid unconfirmed reports that a Soviet-German military pact was under consideration. He began conferring with Premier Foreign Commissar Vyacheslaff Molotoff. Germany was reported by French dispatches to be speeding j concentration of troopfc on the Western Froht as a club to induce France and Britain to discus? peace terms. The Paris dispatches said Fue hrer Hitler was preparing to make a formal pcace offer based on the status quo in Poland, perhaps be fore the end of this week. The British government impos ed upon the country the heaviest taxes ever levied in an effort to meet an estimated $8,000,000,000 of expenditures for the current fiscal year. To help finance the war against Germany, the government called I on rich and poor alike, raising the j standard income tax from 27.0 per cent to 87 .A and hoisting levies on beer, sugar, wine, to- I bacco, whiskey, estates, surtaxes and excess profits. Good Football ^ In Making Wake Forest, Sept. 27. ? While Coach Douglas Clyde Walker, the inimitable dictator of gridiron warfare at Wake Forest College, realises that his Demon Deacons rate at least a toss-up with almost any team in the Southern Con ference, according to press dis patches, he also remembers the little slips that meant so much last season ap<$-tp the two games alrealfy pi*/?d by the Deacs this year. C That'* the >cason Walker Is drilling his boysVall this week on those little thlngk, as a part of an extensive preparation for the dog fight conflict pkxt Saturday at The Rhoades Family by^Squier THE EMPTY PAY-ENVELOPE? Automotive Una in the United State* average ?tore thaa $50 per ear annually. Mora thaa half ef the natloa'* motorists earn lea* than $30 a week. If motor taxea were collected in one lump tun, many motorist* would have empty pay-envelopes two weeks ef the year. . Chapel Hill with Raymond B. Wolf's University of North Caro lina Tar Heels. One thing that is being stressed primarily is pass defense, for the Wake Forest men tor knows well that a deceptive j pass play over Carolina way is as | common as fried chicken on Sun- , day in Dixie. The Tar Heels, as always, have 1 a football sky studded with stars. ! Severin and Mallory, veteran ends snagged passes last season and against the Citadel last week with the surprising regularity of a new dollar watch. Slaglt* and Kimball j are revered tackles to Heel back ers, to say nothing of Woodson and Abei nathy who capably serve at the guard post. And the backfield picture is even brighter for the Heels. Be cause of the syrupy sweet Lalanne the swivel hipped lad up from the 1 Bayou country, and General George Stirnweiss, Carolina fanB look forward to a pleasant 'after- j noon this Saturday. Then too. a good pair in anybody's backfield i are Bobbitt and Sadoff, and well 1 does Wolf know that. But to say the Heels possess more downright good talent than does Coach Peahead might be climbing out on the limb too far. His backfierd, composed of May berry, Polans Ringgold and Gal lovich or Edwards, will certainly stack up with any in the Southern Conference when it comes to lug ging the ball. But that second edition of the four horsemen does not far ex ceed their team mates in the for ward wall, who are: John Jett and Ed Woolbert, ends; Tom Tingle and Louis Trunzo, guards; Butch Clark, center; and Clem Crabtree and Rupert Pate, tackles. Pate, who bails from Goldsboro, is captain of the Deacon squad. Which saga, simply told, means that Coaches Wolf and Walker could well hold a joint worry fest this week. But you needn't count on that. At both the Chapel Hill and Wake Forest games Saturday there* were enough scouts to or ganize a large troop. In this case, he who hesitates is lost. rrTTFi NOW IS THE T1MK TO ST(K'K YOUR I'ANTBY. BIO VALUES ? BIO SAVINOS. p I r K I r Sweet Whole f 1 v IV Li JL Mi vpH Or or Mixed, Quart 22? 3 - 8c I'kpi. Jack Front TABLE SALT ... 10 Pkg. N.B.C. 1 A; SHRED. WHEAT. iv BLUE LABEL -J A. Super Suds, pkg. I <'k. I'alniolive FREE! Mmit?d (Quantity "QUAKER" MACARONI, 2 pkgs 15c "Red Tokay" Finest Quality ICc GRAPES, 2 lbs. U ' I Good York OCc APPLES, peck ^ 3 - 14 Oz. Cans "Campbell's" ICc TOMATO JUICE ...*>* 3 Cans New Full Pack TOMATOES 20? ? FARMERS NOTICE ? WE HAVE LARGE STOCKS SEED GRAIN BOUGHT BEFORE LATEST PRICE ADVANCE. SEE US BEFORE BUYING. WE ALSO HAVE * 'IT 1 (* 17 I? 17 C A KT FOR TREATI,I'0 WHEAT tCluLj Ail OATS AND BARLEY. INOCULANTH FOR CLOVERS, PEAS AND VETCH. 6. W. MURPHY AND SDN Louisburg, N. G ; '\>U ! CLOVER VETCH - WINTER PEAS Va. Grey, Fulghum and ?? ?*" ? Fulgrain Oats. A* Wheat - Beardless Barley Abruzzi and Winter Rye. Wood's New Crop Turnip Seed a pound It is not too late to sow. r ~ - HARDWARE TRUCK COVERS \\ x 6 to 20 x 24. Larger Sizes on Special Order. STOVES AND RANGES HEATERS - FULL LINE FLORENCE POT TYPE FUEL OIL HEATERS iw. ' , : Large and Small Radiant and Circulating. % . ? mtm 25 ?i ! . %ops lfiFM SEABOARD STORE CO., INC. ? WHOLESALE - RETAIL Pay Oath and Pay Less ?/.!. D. 7. McKInne, President **