PAGE EIGHTEEN the rr.Ai,::Li:j mrr:, r::::n:i. ::. c THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1 5 ;,v 'I ' c s fa,. .p. 1" t -1 . Sixth Grade flews Editorial Staff CJItor-in-Chief . .John Earle Lancaster Daisineas Manager Hugh JohnHon Assistant Editor. .. .Smith Harris, Jr. Card of Thanks The Sixth Grade extends its cordial thanks to Major Harris for his gift of a column in The Franklin Press for our paper. Editorial Autumn has come. With it has come harvest time, chinquepin and chestnut time. The weather is grow ing cold ad Jack Frost is again painting the world and nipping our noses and ears. The leaves are put ting on their dresses of red, yellow, and gold. An Announcement Next week we will start an Indian legend of Wayah Bald. P.-T. A. Meeting The Parent-Teacher association met Friday at the school house. One Kood feature of the meeting was that several ladies joined. They decided that they arc going to have an art exhibit, the proceeds of which will go towards buying pic tures for the school rooms. Miss Morgan and her class served delicious refreshments. The plates were made very attractive by sprigs of goldenrod upon dainty white nap kins. It is sincerely hoped that every mother will be at the next meeting Avhich will be held . the first Friday in November. r Book Notice "The Horsemen of the Plains" is an interesting book about a boy's ad ventures on ' the western plains. The story is by Joseph A. Altsheltcr. School News Nancy Jones was absent Friday. Her absence was caused by injuries re ceived when she fell off a horse. The project of forming a Better English Club was abandoned. Harry Blaine has been absent for several days. He has been taking school children to the Indian Fair at Cherokee. Many people from Franklin went to the Indian Fair. Pat was riding a mule when it be gan balking and finally got one foot in the stirrup. Then Pat said: "Well, begorra! If you are going to ride, in git: off." . , , Little JohTinv s , scIvkI - report - n:vi avenue to the heart. As sweet tones set his spirit vibrating with their rhythmis cadences, it seemed that he had found perfection. But the gentle echoes died into silence, the rhythm was stilled; and the heart was left with only a tender, longing memory. The seeker turned to friendship. Here was something more lasting than music or paintings, more responsive than monuments of stone. He turn ed to mother as the truest friend. Here the seeker had found a far higher type of beauty than any tried before. But there came a time when mother was weary and, through lack of understanding, she wounded the young life at her side. There was only orte refuge from the hurt that was "the Christ of Galilee." Here was a character of wonderful inter est to the seeker! He began to study the qualities of Christ: Strength "the lion of the tribe of Judah;" "By him the worlds were framed." Delicacy "the lily of the valley, the bright and morning star." Glory "the sun of righteousness, risen with healing in his wings." Endurance "Christ abidcth for ever;" "Thy years shall not fail." Understanding love "We have not an high priest vho can not be touch ed with the feeling of our infirm ities; but was ,in all points tempted as we arc, yet without sin." "For He knowcth our frame and remcm bereth that we arc dust." "Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." Then the seeker cried in joy, "Now my soul shall rest! I am glad that the flaws in " other beautiful things kept me restless until 1 found Christ. In His character, every virtue, every beautv, is developed to its highest limit." Was the seeker mistaken? In Memory of Robert Beck Robert Beck departed this life September 26, 1928. He was sick al most two months and suffered much agony and pain, although he bore his suffering bravely until the last. He leaves a mother, three brothers, and two sisters, with . ,a host of friends, to mourn his loss. ALL KINDS OF OLD LINE" INSURANCE The Dependable Kind "Performance Beyond the Contract" Inquiries Cheerfully Answered "NUFF SED" W. B. LENOIR, Agent He was in the prime of life when called away. He was thirty-one years, eleven monihs and two days old. Kob, as we knew him,, was a kind and generous boy. He said before he died, "His way was clear." He died in a hospital at Waynesville, the funeral directors from Franklin tak ing charge. His remains were laid to rest at the Old Baptist Church cemetery .on Cartoogcchayc. His grave was a mass of flowers. ASK YOUR CROP THIS FALL? At harvest' time, the crop can ans wer a lot of questions. And perhaps the most important of all is the question of spray material effective ness. Ask your crop now? If you got satisfactory control of your orchard pests, you are to be congratulated. If not, seek a better method of con trol until you find it. The real proi it is in preventing crop losses. We Deliver To You On Time Tell us when you want that job of welding and it will be yours at the right time. We work by clock and calendar, because we realize the value of time to you and ourselves. Some important link in - the, machinery, r e q u i r ing our welding, must be returned to you, prompt- iy. .v. GAINESVILLE IRON WORKS GAINESVILLE, GA. gOOff"ailir ills ""Hum Iter- too- nmn rrr task for it. "I'm losing patience with you," she said. "How. is it that the little Jones boy is always at the head of the class while you stay at the foot?" "You forget, Mother," said Johnny, "that Bobby Jones has more parents." , I X-Ray Sermon -The Quest For Perfect Beauty In getting acquainted with the world, a certain young person decid ed to make a search for perfect beauty. , He first turned his attention to sculpture. Here were grace and strength, the dreams of artistic .souls expressed in stone and bronze. But the beautiful statues were cold and hard and, in some way, unresponsive. The seeker turned to softer types of beauty to paintings, flowers, and sunset-glories. Here was more deli cacy, more life anil light. But the paintings grew dull from age, the flowers were blackened by frost, and the sunset darkened into night. The seeker's next .step in his quest for beauty led him to the kind of beauty which has Jhe ear . as its V ?& ,' I W. C. llCrJ!TREE, M. D. Pellagra A Specialty If you have any of the following symptoms, I have the remedy, no mat ter what your trouble has been diag nosed: Nervoueness, stomach trouble, loss of weight, Iobb of elcep, son mouth, pains in the back and should ders, peculiar swimming in the head, frothy Kke phlegm in throat, passing mucous from the bowels, especially after taking purgative, . burning feet, !rown, rough or yellow skin, burning or itching (-kin, rash n the hands, face and arms ri'-embli:ig sunburn, habitual constipation, (tonietunes alternating' with diarrhoea) copper or metallic taste, skin .Fensitive to eun heat, forgetf uIhcsb, despondency and thoughts that you might lose your ''mind, gums a fiery red and falling away from the tcetb, general weakness with loss of energy. If you have these symptoms and have taken all kinds i of medicine and still sick, I especially i want you to write for my booklet, Questionnaire and FREE Diagnosis. W. C. RQ1JNTREE, M. D. AUSTINtoCAS. FO?C 1130. "0 1 u ft!) (1.(1 ft!) ft!) ft!) (HI ()() Of) ft!) II!) Have you seen the sensational new Models Four and "60" now on nl '..I.. We offer the following improvements without extra cost on the four cylinder line and at less cost on the six cylinder: . V QUI ST the most remarkable advance in automobile construction ..... a new method of bodyonstruction worked out by Durant engineers over a period of years. for elimination of body noises. This unequalled feature, coupled with a rubber-mounted motor on the Four and Lanchester damper on the "60", straight line drive, quiet transmission and differential gears, long springs with quiet shackles, and balloon tires, produces the most luxuriously quiet automobile in the historv of transportation. THE MOST COMPLETE LINE OF STANDARD AND DE LUXE BODIES . BEAUTIFUL STYLES AND COLORS CHROMIUM REPLACING NICKEL ON ALL FITTINGS COWL LAMPS NEW TAIL AND STOP LIGHTS NEW AND MORE EFFECTIVE BUMPERS NEW MODERN LARGER STEERING WHEEL NEW INSTRUMENT PANEL IMPROVED IGNITION LOCK MORE REFINED BODY HARDWARE LANDAU IRONS ON COACHES De Luxe roadster and sedan rqc wefittorj th wire wheels, wijdh two expa wheels mounted in fcnclcr wells, tulsped bumper and trunk rack on the rear, and chromium cowl band. The brilliant new Durant "60" has a longer whcclbasc, with all that this implies in finer riding and driving qualities. And both Fours and Sixes retain these well-known features: The famous Million Dollar Motor, more perfectly balancedstraight line drive assuring remarkable smoothness of operation and freedom from repair. Bcndix quiet, positive mechanical 4-whecl brakes, long elliptical springs, balloon tires and the perfect proportion of weight and power that results in unparalleled Durant performance. Mashburn-Morgan Mentor Go. PALMER STREET hri. - ' W 06 I - . p. 1, Pit

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