DEAFNESS “ fl u™ e Eus°tachian is inflamed you ■ . sound or imperfect H rU ml , ' in ‘-’ intlammation can ■ J; !l ; ; r ‘hearing may be de- MEDICINE will ■ > C-C. Al^_i t _rid your system caused by Bern, ( i v Sum medicine ■«£ s WI treatment o. i®B fcr ifa>-Ucists. , _ ■; a;1 00., Toledo, O. ■ . H I Your work You can t do good ■pork when your head Krebs, your hack aches i ■r you’re tortured by. ■heumatic, sciatic or ■monthly pains. H Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills. ■relieve pain quickly, ■gafely and without un pleasant after effects. ■Your druggist will sell lem to you at pre-war V ■ Regular package 25 ■ses 25 cents. ■Economy package —125 ■ses SI.OO. I Queer j I Feelings 1 I . "Some time ago, I was very raj I irregular,” writes Mrs. Cora raj I Robie, of Pikeville, Ky. “I I suffered a great deal, and knew Kg I must do something for this raj ■ condition. I suffered mostly jw I with my back and a weakness in ra« I my limbs. 1 would have dread- raj ■ ful headaches, f had hot flashes Kg '■ and very queer feelings, and oh, Bg uH how my head hurt! 1 read of raj OARDUI I The Woman’s Tonic | I and of others, who seemed to \k\ I have the same troubles I had, mzj I being benefited, so i began to f&i use it. liound it most bene- \K\ Ificial. I took several bottles .... and was made so much yk better I didn’t have any more ra trouble of this kind. It reg ulated me.” Cardui has been found very % helpful in the correction of many cases of* painful female dis- raj orders, such as Mrs. Robie 50 mentions above. If you suffer raj as she did, take Cardui—a purely vegetable? medicinal raj tonic, in use for more than 40 588 years. It should help you. «j Sold Everywhere. Kgl IMMONS by publication. A the superior court. rtn Carolina, Chatham County. )} une Neal Williams Williams. e defendant above named, L. P. a ms, will take notice that an ac etified as above has been com e(i tn the Superior Court of Chat ccranty, North Carolina, by the , ’ Josephine Neal Williams, to ‘ n , e carriage between the plain ! . t -’ :e defendant annulled and ■:f\an absolute divorce from the ■lv- n . ,l on le grounds that the ■l „ r ia H e v;as procured by duress ■ j influence on the part of H t p the said defend » Warns, will further take ZByuv, ;! lat J '■£ is required to appear M ae CWk 0 f Superior Court of I'ty, North Carolina, at 'ittsboro, N. C., on the ie, 1923, and answer or omplaint in the said ac- Hargrove, of Burling relief demanded in the h dav of April ,1923. iWEY DORSETT, Clerk Superior Ct. imeys. May. 24-R-c. BATOR’S NOTICE, ified as the administra tate of James B. Beal, of the County of Chat irolina, this is to notify ding claims against the present them duly veri uersigned on or before of April, 1924, or this oiead in bar of their re ersons owing the said temSt mard and make h day of April, 1923. rs. CORDIE FIELDS, iN, C - le y- June 7-R-c. BRIEF, INTERESTING FACTS Figures and Historical Mention Os Interest. Dearborn Independent. The average lehgth of life in the United States is 56 years. This is 15 years more than it was in 1870. Article 24, section 2, of the Dutch labor law says that a "workman in a tactorv or shop, shall not no any work between 6 p. m. and 1 a. m.” An arist of New York uses only the many-colored petals of flowers instead of oil paints and thereby achieves most satisfactory and extraordinary results. Blind persons who reside in Ontario ! may travel free of charge on the ; street cars of Toronto. -and environs. | Applicants for passes on this account must be totally blind. Married men employed by the city of Ne\v Orleans hereafter will have their pay checks mailed to their home address. Every man from the mayor down to the street cleaner is affected. Speeders in Akron Ohio*, are fined $1 for each mile beyond the 20-mile speed limit, their machines being tim-1 ed by arresting officers. When ar rested within a school district the speeder-’s fine is doubled. On the famous Liberty Bell in In depedence Hall, Philadelphia, is the inscription: "Proclaim liberty through out all the land unto all the inhabit ants thereof.” This is taken from Le viticus 25:10. A 15-year-old boy of London, Eng land, w T ent into a cage of lions to earn money to pay for an operation-on his younger sister who was lame. He w’on a prize of $250 but the surgeo* would not take it so the boy turned the cash over to his little sister. One of the strangest considerations ever written in a deed is contained in a document recently recorded in La porte, Indiana, by Stella Cizewski and Adam Jankowski. For a considera tion of SI and "a promise of mar riage” Mrs. Cizewski has transferred a towm lot to her fiance. # The password of the Tower of Lon don is known to only three persons. They are the king, the lord mayor and the constable. His majesty sends the password to the lord mayor quar terly. This is merely a survival of one of the numerous old customs in London. Peter B. Kvne, famous short-storv writer, told a Los Angeles business or ganization that he could "see no fu ture for‘the motion picture industry until it gets down to brass tacks and establishes a code of ethics. The drama of today, as represented in the l motion pictures, is for the most part j mere hokum.” Luther Burbank has accepted a place on”the board of directors of the national campaign for boll weevil control. He is one of several leaders in financial, agricultural and scienti fic circles to take an active part in this crusade against the pest that is destroying millions of dollars’ w’orth of cotton each year. The farm of Ellisland, near Dum fries, where Burns w’rote "Scots Wha Hae” and "Tam o’ Shanter,” and i many other poems, has been given to | the Scottish nation by terms of the ! will of the recent owner, a gentleman j of Edinburgh. The buildings as far i as possible are to remain as they I were in the time when they were oc | cupied by Robert Burns. j* • HENDLEY’S COMMENTS * i * Bits of Opinion Noted. ****************** | Some of these calamity howling old | fossils who are forever harping on j the way the world is going to the de | vil, especially the present generation of young girls, gives us a deep and I heart-felt longing to mash in the face I of certain of the aforesaid gentry. In our limited but nevertheless va- I ried, association kith the present day ' voung ’ady it has us. that they are stiil ajout the most perfect of all of God’s creatures. We will admit that they do some things that their great grandmothers would never have dared attempt, much as they would have enjoyed it. but then everybody else is doing things that would have shocked their Puritanic sires. The great majority of modem women are just as good and as pure and sweet as the women of a centry past. Certainly they have different manners and customs trom previous generations and they have k also gained many things that will ! make them better wives and mothers, and more intelligent hpusewives. And in many wavs they are vastly better off than their mothers and grandmo thers. , At last men have begun to realize ! that their wives are worthy of a bet ter fate than that of a househOid drudge and since the great lig- t has penetrated the solidarity * of their skulls they are endeavoring, and with wonderful success too, to relieve some of the burden of their better halves and to make the home mean some thing more than a sweat shop of un congenial labor. The old and honored custom of let ting the tenderness and consderation for their wives drop away with the termination of the honeymoon is fin ally passing out ofwogue and men are striving more with each passing day to bring happiness Into the home for the mistress thereof and there is no thing in the world that will show more appreciation for the. little thoughtful things that makes life real ly liveable than the modern bride.. All the hubbub about the century girl is pure and unmi gitated fallacy cooked up by a clique oj. vi cious and evil-minded busybodies who could better utilize their time in a more productive channel. Personally we can’t see a form thing wrong with the average up-to date woman only her unattainability.; a man on whom she lavbnes a faithful ana better than the creature posing as , a man on whom she lavihes a faithful, I tender and -unchanging devotion. If * men could be brought to realization of ‘ just how unworthy they are of the affection of a good woman there would be fewer divorce couits grinding away. Woman is the most exquisite of God’s creatures and the present day series is just as good as any that has ever been issued and don’t make the j < error of thinking she isn’t. RECORD FOR SAFE TBAVEL ON TRAINS OF SOUTHERN. Atlanta, Ga., 'May 22. —Figures just ‘compiled ’by the safety department of th# Southern Railway System show that a high degree of safety for pas sengers vras accomplished during the year 1922 when the Southern handled a total of 17,668,605 passengers with out a single fatality to any passen ger as the result of an accident to a train o** negligence on the part of the railway. A total of 177,084 passenger trains were operated during th< year and the average distance traveled by each pas senger was 62.17 miles. Had one pas senger ridden the entire distance that these passengers were carried, he would have traveled more than 44,- I 000 times the distance around the earth. • Four passengers were killed as the result of their own acts in violation of the safety rules established for their own protection. Os these, two fell from moving trains, one attempt ed to board a moving train and fell under it, and one jumped through the window of the coach in which he was riding. "Tnese figures,” says a statement issued by the safety department of the Southern, "show that, w r hile the Southers has attained a remarkable degree of efficeincy in protecting the passengers who ride on its trains, no refinement of .protective features can insure the safety of persons who care lessly or deliberately violate the com mon laws of safety and rules which have been established for their pro tection.” HARMON PROTESTS ACTION. \ i Had Mix-Up With Volunteer Fire men at Chapel Hill. Chapel Hill, May 22.—J. O. Har mon, president of the student body, made a talk in chapel last week against the action of a group of stu dents w’ho got into a mix-up w T ith the town’s volunteer fire company recent ly* Some of the students crow r ded too close to the company, which was call ed out by the burning of an old one room, unoccupied wooden structure on the main street in front of the cam pus, and the company turned the hose on them. Then there was some throw ing of missiles, and one of the fire men got a painful blow on the leg and another one a lighter blow in the back. The episode was over in a minute or so, but it stirred up bad feeling between the firemen and some of the students. Mr. Harmon reminded the student body that the firemen were doing their work without compensation at considerable secrifice, and said that whoever was responsible for starting the trouble last week, there was no excuse for throwing things. He de clared that students as a whole had no sympathy with such action and urged that henceforth they show a spirit of co-operation with the firemen. PITTSBORO 2, NEWS. Pittsboro, Rt. 2, May 21.—Miss Do ra Clark visited her grandmother, Mrs. Ellen Clark, last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Cockman spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Ferguson. Misses Elva and Ola Jones, Edith Clark and Ralph Shaw spent Satur day night and Sunday visiting rela tives at Bennett. Miss Eulalia Clark spent last week with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Daffrom. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Johnson and family spent Sunday with their daugh ter, Mrs. C. S. Burke. Mrs. John Brown spent Saturday ov>ri S’-ridnv with her daughter, Mrs. J. T. Harris. Mr. J. L>. Cooper and familyspent Saturday and Sunday in Randolph county with relatives. Miss Hayes Ferguson spent several days last week with her sister, Mrs. A. E. Cockman. Mr. and Mrs. Darnell Thomas visit ed Mrs. ‘Thomas’ mother, Mrs. T. E. Carroll, Sunday. Mr. A. L. Johnson has purchased a new automobile. Mrs. W. R. Perry and Mrs. Ellen Clark visited Mrs. Willie Johnson last Tuesday afternoon. Miss Ola Jones is visiting her sis ter, Mrs. E. E. Johnson, at Siler City. BUILD A HOME NOW! Garner Hill, Gladstone, N. Sells Rat-Snap, He Says. "I sell and use RAT-SNAP. Like to look any man in the face and tell it’s the best. It’s good.” People like RAT-SNAP becouse it "does” kill rats Petrifies carcass —leaves no smell. Comes in cakes —no mixing to do. Cats and dogs won’t rouch it. Three sizes, 25c, 50c, SI.OO. Sold and guar anteed by Pilkington Pharmacy, Chat ham Hardware and W. *L. London and Son. Notice of Stray Mule Taken Up By J. A. Eubanks ► Any person or persons owning the following described mule can get said mule by paying the cost of advertis ing and the feed bill to J. A. Eubanks, of Bynum, N. C. This mule is an iron gray horse mule, about 12 or 15 years old, lame in front feet. This advertisement is done by the Register of Deeds of Chatham county as provided by law, found in the revisal of 1905, Sec. 2833, Ch. 29. C. C. POE, . Register Deed Chatham Co., N. C. | June i4-c. i DABYS COLDS are soon "nipped in the bud” / without "dosing" by use of — j vuuut Over 17 Million Jan Used Yearly \ MORTGAGEE’S LAND SALE. Under and by virtue of the power of £ale conferred upon the undersign- (, ed by* the terms ®f a mortgage deed ! executed by T. J. Henry, and wife, Dosky Henry, on November 15, 1921, *(j to secure the payment of three bonds | of even date with said mortgage, one < bond maturing November 15th, 1922, and said mortgage having a provis ion and power of sale in case of de- < fault in the payment- of either of the [ bonds at maturity, and default hav- [ mg been made in the payment of the - bond maturing November 15th, 1922, payment of which has been demanded . and refused, which mortgage deed is duly registered in the office of the ! Register of Deeds for Chatham county ! in Book F. Z., at page 299, the under- ; signed will expose to sale at public ; auction, to the highest bidder for ; cash to satisfy said bonds, on Friday, June Bth, 1923, at the court house door, at Pittsboro, N. C., at 12 o’clock, noon, the following described lot of land situate in the town of Siler City, in Matthews township, designated by the map and survey of Oak Lawn sub -division as lot number six in block B. bounded as follows: Beginning at corner of Hill and Samuel streets, running with Hill street 70 feet to lot number 5; thence with lot number 5 175 feet to comer of lot number 5 in lot 14; thence with lot number 14 70 feet- to Samuel street; thence with Samuel street 175 feet to the beginning. Registered in Book E. N. page 602. This the Bth dav of May, 1923. Time of sale—Friday, June Bth, 1923, at noon. Place, Court house door. Terms—Cash. R. H. JOHNSON, Dixon & Dixon, Attys. Mortgagee. May 31-R-c. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. j Having qualified as administratrix c. t. a., of the estate of W. H. Taylor, deceased, during the mirority of the executrix named in the Jast will and testament of said W. H. Taylor, Paul ine Taylor, this is to notify all per sons holding claims against the said estate to present the same) duly veri led, to the undersigned on or before „ the 3rd day of Mav, 1924, or this no tice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to the said es tate are requested to make immediate settlement of the same to the under signed. This the 3rd day of May, 1922. Mrs. LULA A. JONES, Administratrix c. t. a., W .H. Taylor Long & Bell, Attorneys. June 7-R-c ;■ ■ -■— ? NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. The undersigned, having this day qualified as the administrator of the estate of R. M. McGhee, deceased, late of the County of Chatham, this is to notify all persons holding claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 10th day of May, 1924, duly verified, or this notice will be plead in bar of their re covery. All persons owing the said estate will please come forward and make immediate settlement. This the 10th day of May, 1923. D. P. HUNT, Administrator of Estate of R. M. McGhee, Route 1, Chapel Hill N. C. June 14-R-p. 1 , I I .JjjplSL Financial \ Independence j «« “INVESTIGATE In the Makingl H BEFORE INVESTING.” H !|l| For the person seeking financial independence there is no better way to start than by purchasing Alamance M First Mortgage 6 percent Gold Bonds. jwl Secured by mortgages on income producing property fl 9 nmTmn ™ and yielding 6 percent interest these bonds are an ideal M WRITE FOR FREE BOOKLET investment for not only the man with SIOO to invest but || BONDS f or the thousand dollar investor as well. || I* Tj Write for free booklet “Bonds” and learn more about M these bonds and what acquaintances of yours think of jg Alamance Insurance and Real Estate Co., I CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $300,000. . M W. E. SHARPE, Manager. C. G. SOMERS, Field Representative* ||j H BURLINGTON, N. C. || plan Is a Machine 1 ill || Knowing this you should insist on keeping your body jj| jp| mechanism in good condition. The result of Chuoprac- |J ;P| tic Adjustments are proof of their merit. Consultation M fn| and Spinal Analysis Free*. Ip H DR. ERNEST C. BROWN, |f- ' |ft| |1 Palmer Graduate. CHIROPKACTOR Sanford,"n.C. |f P ■ raj - —v : j| The Money j |» We have a full and complete stock of the best in Fur- j; niture. Why go from Chatham county when you can get { !; it at home cheaper. We have the best ’for the least money. Also general line of Hardware at the same low ;! prices. . Call on us. |j i Funeral Directors and Undertaker’s Supplies. LATEST, MOST MODERN DODGE HEARSE. | WALDEN & THOMAS jj :j MONCURE, NORTH CAROLINA. j! , H Hardware Headquarters For Cen- || raj . tral Carolina P H| || We carry the largest stock of General Hardware, Vehi- |!| im) cles, farm Implements, builders’ Hardware, Paints and m <s> Auto Atcessories within a radius of 40 miles from gan ill ford - ‘ : : : : : : : : M M' II The Quality and Price the BEST. |l| 1 . LEE HARDWARE CO. 8 f| SANFORD, I Seaboard AiMine Railway THROUGH THE HEART OF THE SOUTH Schedule Effective April 16, 1922. I No. 212 8:30 A. M., For Moncure and points north * * and south. No. 234 2:15 P. M., For Moncure and points north *. and south. For rates, routes and other travel information, call on H. D. GUNTER, Agent., JNO. T. WEST, D.P.A., Pittsboro, N. C. Raleigh, N. C.

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