Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Aug. 16, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
II. A. LONDON, Editor. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1911. VOLUME XXXIV. With this issue The Record begins its thirty-fourth volume and enters upon the thirty-fourth year of its existence. For thir ty-three years it has paid its weesiy visits to its many readers through stress and storm , sunshine and clouds, prosperity and adversity. All that time it has been published and edited by its present publisher and editor, i iii" i i . . wno estaDiisnea it in tne year 1878 and has continued its publi cation without intermission ever since. While thirty-three years is not old for a man, yet for a North Carolina newspaper it is excep tionally old, and it is somewhat remarkable that The Record is the only paper in this State that has been published and edited by the same person for that length of time. Although there are many papers in this State that were established long before The Record, yet no one of them has been published and edited that long by the same person: This is not mentioned as a boast, but rather as an illustration of the short life of the average North Carolina newspaper. Some per sons seem to think that a news-i paper may be successfully pub lished by anybody and without money, but the sad experience of the past has no doubt con vinced them of their error. The sphere of The Record's usefulness has been limited, as is the case with all country week lies, and they are the papers that have quietly and without due ap- . preciauon on the part of the general public done so much for the State as well as for their re spective localities. In its limit ed sphere this paper has always done its best for the promotion of the people's best interests and the upbuilding of our State and county. The Record and its editor have not advocated any measure merely because it might happen to be popular nor hesi tated to oppose any measure even when popular for awhile, like so many that have from time to time attained a temporary popularity. The people in the long run, at least those people whose opinion is worth anything, have more re spect for an editor, or for any man, who has the courage of his The death of Gen. George A Barbarous Lvncun W. Gordon removes the last of Durant, Okla., Aug. 13. A mob the "Confederate Brigadiers" of 500 today captured and shot to from the Congress of the United death an unidentified nejrro who States. He was a brigadier- rtrda attakd atld ihot Mrs; i . j! j Redden Campbell, near here: and general in the Confederate army Safterward burned the negro's at the close of the war and was body. serving his second term as a! The negro was killed after a Representative in Congress from running fight lasting more than Tennessee. For the past two years he was the commander-in-chief of the United Confederate Veterans. He died last Wednes day, f His death brings to mind many sad memories and is a reminder of the lapse of time since the War Between the States. We may no more expect to have an other Confederate general in Congress, for nearly all now have "crossed over the river" and we hope are "resting under the shade of the trees" with their immortal leaders, Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson. an hoar, in which he exhausted his ammunition, returning the fixe of his pursuers. When he fell volley after vol ley of bullets was poured into his body by the advancing mob. It was then taken to the home of his Sanford Criminal in Mississippi Special to the Charlotte Observer. Laurel, Miss., Aug. 14 Der uty SherifT Boutwell today ar rested L. C. Freeman, alias L. H. Hall, a white man who re cently escaped from jail at San ford, N. C., where he is charged with having committed burglary and highway robbery. Freeman, or Hall, arrived in Laurel about ten days ago and was at ' once spotted by local officials as a sus picious character. , In looking over the "reward" files in the sheriff's office, Deputy Boutwell came across a description which Of all the brutal lynchings that have ever disgraced the United States not one has been more barbarous and revolting than that last week in the great State of Pennsylvania. It would seem that no savages could have been more brutal than those men who carried a wounded negro from a hospital and publicly burned him to death. If such a crime had been perpetrated in the South all the Northern pa pers would have been denounc ing it as a proof of our barbar ism. It seems peculiarly strange and surprising that this inhuman treatment of a wounded negro should have taken place in a State that gives the largest Re publican majority of all the States in the Union. victim. Nearly dead from her in- he believed firrpH Hall h,Wo bo juries, Mrs. Campbell identified it immediately got into communi- as that ot her assailant cation with Sheriff C. a Pettv: The mob then burned the corpse, of SanfoTd. and the susDicion was confirmed. In the mean- Wonderful Swimming Feat. time Hall had disappeared, but Nenv Vnrir A,, iQ PnoaDif wa8 located at banuersvil e. a onof; the lG-year-old 'swimmer of few I?iIes north of this city, this morning and placed under ar rest. He is being held in the local jail pending the arrival of an officer from North Carolina. The business men of Raleigh are somewhat aroused and alarm ed over the oft mentioned rumor that the Seaboard Air Line Rail way is going to build a road from near Moncure, in this county, to Durham. Rumors to that effect have been frequent, but nothing lately until a week or two ago another such rumor started. The object of the proposed road is to make a shorter line" for the fas through trains, as that line would be nearly twenty miles shorter than the present road via Ral eigh to Henderson. Ut course we would not wish any harm to Raleigh, or that our capital city should be side-track ed, yet we hope that such a road may be built, as it would be of Boston, succeeded today in her attempt to swim from ulast 2Gth street, Manhattan, to Coney Is- land. Last year she had to aban- rlnn ft. Bimilar affnrt hananaa rf art. verse tides, but todav although Revenue Officer Shot. forced at times to swim so far cut Special to the News and Observer. of her course that she is estimat - North Wilkesboro. Aug. 14. ea to have covered some 21 miles Deputy. Collector; Robert Henry in making the distance of 18 miles, 4 was shot nrobablv fatallv while . . - - f - she hnished strong, actually on a raid m the : Brushy Moun sprinting as she neared the goal, tains today. The ball hit just MissFitonof was in the water above the eye, but whether it eight hourB and seven minutes, glanced or entered the brain is She took no stimulants or food of unknown. Two doetors were any kind on the long trip. Most 'phoned for, and left immediate of the way she used the breast ly. It has since been heard over stroke but for two stretches she re- the 'phone that two horses were sorted to the speedier overhand. ki;led and the name of the man m n 7 e . r i i i . . i . aueyuumr woiBitD s ieai oi 10- wno committed tne crime wns day had not before been accom- Lane. ph8hed. Several swimmers have Deputy Collector Shepherd, made the trip from the battery to who was with Henry, 'phoned Coney Island, but none from a for a posse, which left immedi- pomt so far up the East river. ately for the scene. Whiskey in Watermelons. Elizabeth City, Aug 12. Tbe watermelon in these diggings is quite popular enough already, but if the story that is being cir culated regarding a Dew scheme to ply the booze traffic is true, there is no telling how many of the luscious fruit will be sold and what prices they will demand. It reached the ears of one' of the county law enforcers this morn ing that at one of the shops down town they , were retailing water melons, which had been plugged, and on the interior of the once beautiful fruit, a pint bottle of whisky cozily rested. It is also stated that various sizes of bot tles are to.be found upon the in terior and the prices on the wa termelons vary, not according to size of the fruit, but the interior matter. It is expected that the price of watermelons will now rapidly rise in price and that the demand will be greater than ever for the popular fruit. FRE spection FIRS 1793 Aehevlile, N. C, ri-aptrpared BOYS for College and for Chris.. n CitiztinfhiDinr I i u years, ar.a A.isivc in nm vj. o., um pet BINGHAM. E ROUND TBI TICKET trotn anyvncre witnin leoo units 10 miy pn-m wnu, uu in. ion, is not convinced that its pairs of ONE STORY brick looms, separated hy a pnrapel WALL, are the REST for Health. Sanitation. Ventilation nnd safety Bminst FIRE. . - . i . mi ii muimiiu r w l . ahM "send for Calalcfiue or come and see. LOL. R. BINGHAM. Snpt., R. F. D. No. t- 1913 A King Who Left Home set the world to talking, but Paul Ma- thulka, of Buffalo, N. Y says he al ways KEEPS AT HOME the King of all Laxatives Dr. King's New Life Pills and that they're a blessing to all his family. Cure constipation, head ache, indigestien, dyspepsia. Only 25c at G. It. Pilkington's. Mr. Job P. Wvatt suicide by cutting his throat committed a few days ago. He was one of the oldest and most prominent merchants in Ilal eigh, held in high esteem by all who know him, and no motive can be giv en for the rash act except bad health. t East Carolina Teachers' Training School. A State school to train teachers for the public schools of North Carolina. Every energy is directed to this one purpose. j. Tuition free to all who agree to teach. 'FIl trm begins September 26, I!il. For catalogue and other information, address A. ROBT. H. WRIGHT, President, Greenville, N. C. 7 X 1 1 sl a INS Hf Any Other. M onar eh One secret of Monarch superiority lies in the wonderful responsiveness of its key action. In no other typewriter in the world do the k ays s j read ily yield to the slightest touch of (be finger. That is why the Mon arch is. easier to oj;ert than any other writing machine. Light Touch Shot Through the Window. Special to the News and Observer. Waynesville, Aug. 14. Last night about 11 o'clock near Ha- English Labor Troubles. London, Aug. 13. Great Brit ain appears tonight to be con fronted by a grave labor move ment compared with which the Accused of Stealing. E. E. Chamberlain, of Clinton, Me., boldly accuses Bucklen's Arnica Salve of stealing the stins from burns o r scalds the pain from sores of all kinds the distress fiom boils or piles. "It robs cuts, corns, bruises, sprains and injuries of their terror,", he says, "as a zelwood. at the house of Jeff Lackey, a negro, another dark London strike iust ended would hea,ing remedy its equal don't exist. chapter was written in Hav- be a small affair. Tocrether with nIy 25c at G. R.Piikington's. wood's history, when Fred More- street battles in Liverpool of a iicau.a iiegru visitor at iiacKev s. moswifious aescriDuon ana se- uunng me severe storm tnat pre while standing, was fatally shot rious riots at Glasgow comes the yaiied near Rockingham last Wednes iii uic iuuliui wiui a siiul Run uy i news oi meetings ot me railway lu"y anernoon ir. uea rresiar, an em- some one who fired through the employes at Liverpool, Glasgow, pioye at Iioberdel No. 2, and young window. The perpetrator of the Manchester, Bristol, Sheffield and Jasper Denson, who lives in the same crime is said to be Taylor Love, other large cities at which threats village, were killed by a boitofiight- a negro, who had some words were made of a general strike of ning that struck the house in which with Morehead during the dav all railwav men. transnort work- thev were sittinar. ana naa made threats that he era and dockers unless existing wuuiu rui nun. ine nero. lay- uisoutes are setuea nroinutiv ana n,, e r: v . -vx iwc, iiao ttuotunucu, aiiu its I oallSlaC lUul V. . . - i yet has not been taken. While that Contain Mercury, ge ot his much benefit to thia convictions and is willing .J Jm stand by them whether popular or unpopular. The Record has no new prom lses ior the future. Our readers must judge its future by the past. With grateful amirecia tion of the steady support given oy our suosenbers in the Dast we will try to deserve its contin uance in the future. T . . - - twailkoad accidents continue to happen with alarming fre quency in this State. Every weeK ior several weeka an acci J j i uent naa occurred m this State hy which one or more persons nave Deen killed and manv hurt The last occurred on last Friday about five miles west of Raleigh on a ireight tram of the Sea ooard Air Line. The crownsheet ot the locomotive blew out and the escaping steam scalded the engineer and fireman very pain fully and scalded the conductor who was riding in the cab of the engine, so badly that he died next morning. When it is considered how eas ily a railroad accident can hap pen, that is, how small a defect may cause an accident, the won der is that more do not occur. Arizona and New Mexico seem to have a hard time in being ad mitted as States, and there is no telling when they will be admit ted. President Taft has vetoed the resolution passed by both branches of Congress for their admission. His main ohiPcti to their admission is his opposi tion to the recall of the judiciary provided in the constitution of Arizona, and one territory can not be admitted without the other. It may surprise our readers to learn that Arizona was first or ganized into a territory by the Confederate Congress, and some years after the war it was again organized as a territory by the Congress of the United States. German Eloper Arrested. Cleveland, O., Aug. 12. Asa result ot the efforts of the gov ernment officials of Germany and tne united states, and the Balti more and Cleveland conferences of Baptist ministers, A. Ciehl, aged 23, son of Dr. Otto Ciehl, noted Baptist minister and au thor, of Germany, was bound over to the grand jury here to- aay, on the charges preferred by Miss Monta Zurmaski, 22 years Old. The couple eloped from Ger many, according to the story she told the German consul at Balti more, and United States Com missioner Walther, three months ago, and located in Baltimore, where he refused to marry her. Ciehl then came to Cleveland. Baltimore Baptist i:onfprnrP officials interested the Clevplanr. conference, and Ciehl 'a nrrpat followed. Ciehl says he is willing to mar ry, hut that her love has tumorl to hate. Child Spends Night in the Woods. Special to the Charlotte Observer. Greensboro. Autr. 14 Aftr having been lost for 24 hniiT in the woods near her home, 2 miles norm oi ureensboro. the S-voor ii i ' w j h oia daughter of Mrs. Emma uiacKwen. wandered to the hnmo T . - oi ueputy Sheriff Georce Lane ate yesterday afternoon nnr? a little while later returned to the mother. The child had left home Saturday morninc rmrl spent the night somewhere alone in the country. The almost frantic mother and her friends had been searching for the chiM and at the time the mother had he child returned to her she was organizing a searching party on a large scale. The child's limbs were scratched and bruised and she was desperately hungrt Otherwise she was all right ahd when fed and given a bath was happy to be at home again. ( Morehead and Love both havei families of their own, another I woman is said to be at the bot tom of the tragedy. A Brutal Lyaching. Coatesville. Pa. Many Cotton Bolls. Special to the Charlotte Observer. Southern Pines. Aug. 13. A 1L ! - gooo-natured rivalry is arising among the farmers as tothenum ber of bolls on their cotton. The crops seems to be better fruited this season than in a long time, the stalks bending . over under An- 13 Zachanah Walker, a nero den- rira" the filling bolls. T'"" . , ""- Farmers who ourneu to a enso ov a mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange tbe whole system when entering It through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescrip tions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do Is ten told to the good you can possibly de- -ivc uuiu mem. nii a uaiarrn cure, manufactured oy . J. cneney A: Co.. Toledo. O.. contains no mer cury, ana is taxen internally, acting directly upon tn blood and mucous surfaces ot the system. In ouyiug Hairs catarrh Cure be sure von mt th g-umue. ii is uen internally, and made In tIpi VKI . . i . . . . " vuiu, ut r. j. iiuaiey c xosiimoniais Treo. Sold by Druggists. Price. 75c per bottle. Tae liall'i Family Pills for constipation. That is why it wards off fatigue anl saves nerve-strain on the part of the stenographer. In consequence, her work is more accurate, greater ia- quantity than it i. possible to ob tain with any other writing machine. MONTHLY" PAYMENTS Monarch Machines may be purchased on the Monthly Iav- ment Plan. Send for Moaarch literature. I P!im tll tlTitur rii - r , . . ...... . j i i t mation. A postcard will bring full infor- DURHAM BOOK AND STATIONERY COMPANY, 112 West Main Street, Durham, N. C. greHram VACATION OUTING The Glorious Mountains of WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA r ir Tvmnrti n or tho ' 11 t.UZ, Ifll I nnmhor rT Krklla Qnr) hlnocnma tn ooys on alire tK,v.foiir u which they ignited about a half u..,ia u .i t , . I me I.TVW uuiiuicu tixazri. tuu tuiio uuui iuwa. j. 116 neiro. who mob of crisp men aud had killed Edgar Ilice, a police man of the Worth iron mills, last night, was first draped to the scene of the shooting1 begg-inar piteously for mercy. He had been arrested by a poase late this afternoon after a search which had stirred the countryside. When the posse finally located him. he was found hiding in a cherrv tree ana witn the fast bullet in his re volver shot himself in the mouth. ii iauing irom ttie tree. Me was re mark, a quantity of stalks are reported that range from 120 upward. m i i ii i ine doiis mis summer seem more than commonly vigorous and big. Destructive Tidal Wave. Victoria, B. C, August U. More than 500 lives lost ana gi eat guaranteed SEABOARD ir Line Railway SCHEDULE. Effective Jan. 8th 1911. Direct line between New York. Flor. Ha, Atlanta, Birmingham, Memphis, New Orleans and the southwest, sub jeel to ehauge without notice. Figure, given below are for the in foruiati m of the public and are not devastation ashore and afloat re sulted from a typhoon and tida! wave, that swept over Japan July 26tb, according to advices by the moved tn th a l.naniroi Qri i.o ateatuer impress of Japan. At nvA lokio the tidal wave swept awav oianv homes. A tornpdo boat LYNCHERS WILL BE PROSECUTED- was sWeut ashore at Tokio and Philadelphia. Autr. 14. Gov. several steamers, foundered, while Tener. while hern tnnicrhf n the big liners dragged their an- w & W I . route to Baltimore, declared that choJPH- lho losa at -Tokio was 4,- those responsible for last nio-ht's 000,000. The typhoon brofc tbp mob violence at Coatesville must, corner in the rice market, the firm be prosecuted viororouslv and that had cornered is losing hun- Trains leave Pittsboro as follows: No. 23 8:40 a ui, connecting at Mon cure witn No. 38 for Portsmouth Norfolk, which connects at Wel don with the A. C. L for Eastern Carolina points, at Norfolk with that it the local authorities fail ed to promptly take action against ine ring leaders, a special mves tigation would be ordered bv . - mm. dreJs of thousands of bushels. Seemed to Give Him a New Stomach. 'I suffered intensely after eating and no medicine or treatment I tried seem- j ed to do any good, writes H. M. Young- Inters, editor of the Sun, Lake View; Ohio. "The first few doses of Cham- Mistook Wife for Burglar. Meridian. Miss.. Aue 12. Mistaking his wife for a burglar, berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets G. W. Watkins shot and Drobablv gave me surlsing relief and the sec- f i 11 -m " J I 1 ill a iaiauy wounded her at an earlv riour this mornincr. Mrs. Wat- kins had gone in an adioininc room to close a window. Watkins hearing what he thought to be some one trying to tret in thp onu uoiue seemea 10 give me a new stomach and perfectly eood health. For sale by all dealers. ..' ; Stabbed With Hat Pia. ISew York. Aur. 14. Oiiarrel J 11 " . . . -v wmaow, leaned over the sidp nf amonr vouno- women rptnrmn. nis Ded and tired, the bullet pass- Pary this morning from a Long- Xl 1 1 ' 'flit'' t -r i t . . O xsiana resort resulted m liJ-year-old Alveda Carpenter being stab bed in the heart with a hat pin. IThe police arrested her compan- I a ion, cnarged with murder. mi - . inree white men, Calhoun crooKs, uacK Campbell and Char ne sioan, and a negro namec Cox have been arrested at Ji Doro on the charge of st; me Dig nre that destroy mucn oi mat town, a few ago. Jett nes ting so ,eeks Ung through his wife's body. MM-HMBMHMM France Suffers Drouth. Paris, Aug. 14. The unusual heat and resultant drouth in France continues without inter ruption. Lack of water has been responsible for costly vil lage and forest fires in manv parts of the republic. At Mery-sur-Seine, in the deDartment of Aube, 50 houses were burned yesterday. fill Ste imshin UneS for nninlo nnrth No 240 --:J:,'0 n m. annrw.r, at. M.m. cure with No. 41 for Charlotte. Wil mington, Atlanta, liirmingham, Memphis and points west, No 41 connecting at liamlet with No. 4'A. for Jacksonville & Florida Doints. No. 29 Will arrive at Pilt-sboro ll:2i am connecting with No. 41 with No. 38 from the south. No. iMI Arrives at Pittsboro 6: H) m. connecting with No. 41 from points north. Trains between Moncure atJ Pitts boro operated daily exeept Sundav. lor rurtner lniormation apply to B. M. Foe. airent. Pittsljoro. or wYir. tr. II. 8. LEAKD, Division Passenger Agent, No 4 West Martin Bt , RHteleh. N. (3 ELON COLLEGE (Co-Educational.) Ucllglitfully situated in the mil country. Unsurpassed in healthful- ness. Modern in equipment. Steam heat, electric lights, baths, sewer age, with the advantages and none of the disadvantages of citv life. An ideal institution for tha education of young men and young women, with. 21 years of successful history behind it A liigli grade college, whose graduates are aamitted without ex amination to the graduate depart ment; oi ine great universities. "The Land of the Sky" " "The Sapphire Country" "The Balsams" Where there is health in ev.?ry breath. The climate is perfect the year round. In Spring and Summer the Region i3 ideal. REACHED BY The Southern Railway Solid Through Train, includ ing Parlor Car, between Ciolds boro, Ashevillc and aynes villevia Raleigh, Greensboro, and Salisbury. Other conven ent through car arrangements. SUMMER TO U IUST TICKETS ON SALE UNTIL SEPTEMBER jotli, 1911. Let Your Ideas and Wishes be Known. Atwater & Lambeth Bynum, N. C. Now on hand a fresh and full line of General Merchandise, including everything need ed by MEN, ' WOMEN and CHILDREN. Call and see for yourself. New lot of Wagons,Buggics and Surreys. April 12, i:ll. H. WOOD, D. P. A. Asheville, N.C. J. O. T. R. H. DeBUTTS T. P. A., Charlotte, N. C JONES, P. A., Raleigh, N. C. YBJ cash H V you do through the World's Largest Farm Agescy Thousands of sales everywhere prove right methods. No advance fee required. Ask our gent today for free listing blanks. E. A. STROLIT COMPANY BoatoN New York Philadelphia Pllfabarg Chicago H. H. JORDAN, District Agent, JORDAN, N. C. Call SUer City, N. C. Salisbury Post: It is said the Yadkin river has now reached the lowest stages of water in all its history, and that rocks are now laid bare in the middle of the river that had never been touched by, the sun's rays be fore. Many of the small streams running mto the river have gone dry and some of the ferries above Salisbury have been abandoned on account of the low water. and harbor at Southport, and will ask for an appropriation for that end. The Navv Denartment is nlan- ning for a new coaling station Maintains also music, art, ex picasiuu, cumui.reiai ana prepara x torv departments. Four courses leadiner to decrrpps. Special Normal Courses for Teachers, approved and endorsed by State Superintendent .loyner. Terms moderate -'$132 to $187 per session of ten months. For catalogue or other information, address (mentioning this paper) W. A. HARPER, President, Elon College, X. C. mm mm CI 14 an stimulate the TORPID LIVER, strengthen tbe digestive organs, regulate the bowels, and are tin- equaled as an ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE, In malarial districts their virtues are widely recognized, as they pos sess peculiar properties in freeing tbe system from that poison. Ele gantly sugar coated. lake No Substitute r COMMISSIONER'S SALE OF j LAND Under and bv virtue of I me power 01 sale couferred upon the undersigned by an order of the Supe rior Court of Chatham county, in the special pr ceedings therein pending, ntitled L. N. Womble, administrator ofl S.Collier v.. Airs. Willie Collier et ds, the undersigned commissioner will eJl lor cash 10 ihe hi?:. est uki der, at. the court-house door in Pitts-bcrcr'- C, on the 19th day of Au gust, 1911, at 12 ..'clock in , subject to the -vver right therein of Mrs- Willie Codier, the following described lands in LVin re township, Chatham county, N C, and bounded as follows, to wit: Hoginning at a dogwood, the old mill rond, Harris' . corner, running tl ence west 54 poles to a stone p ie thence south 40 poles to a stone pile with white oak noiuters: t.hfinfa w.-t 40 poles to a stone pile; thence north 1 TKa Nvl 40 poles; thence west 14 poles; ti.ence 1 "G INCllil Carolina -- v.vo u. suiuej ineTCM east a.1 Oil VT 1 poles to a stone; thence north 49 poles 1 013.1 lNOrilial an CI to poplar pointers: thence past 4il ! !? A the"c? souh SO poles to j 1 J . 1 r 1 ! r.am ruuj mence aown srfid road t Z11UUSL1 Idl VU. itt. containing fifty acres, !- . . : Maintained bv the State for the Women herX notffl Jii ar' d( 1 Collier's line, running north 35 yard? lcadin to degrees. Special courses for xxKicuy uuuiy an peisons noldiri. thence wast. 14o xorric u tonri Coffins and caskets : A full stock of Coffins and Caskets always on hand and sold at all prices. All kinds and sizes. B. Nooe, Pittsborc.N. r. CUT FLOWERS. WEDDING BOUQUETS, FUNERAL DESIGNS. PALMS. FERNS. BLOOM. ING PLANTS. CABBAGE AND TOMATO PLANTS All orders given prompt atten- tion. M J. MCPIIAIL, phone, No. 94. Florist, Sanford. N. C. A. I A DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. n(rreU?rTe.sn f Having qualified as the a.imin . Second tract. claims against sid decedent nioit tne same to me ; gust 2, 112. This August 2. 1911 I M. T.WILLIAMS; 11. A. London & Son, Attorneja. aeceuent to ex- So yards; thence east to the beginnimr i to become teachers in the St on or before Aw- containing one acre, more or less. i session begins September 13, This July 13th, 1911. R-H. DIXON, Commissioner tato. ltfll. Fall For catalogue and dress other information ad- IJIiUS L F0DST, Fresidenl, GreensBorcv K C
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 16, 1911, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75