Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / June 21, 1923, edition 1 / Page 7
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" was very popular with A ?tor * Vn France. A negro who the ffStin” it" for the back areas was V . he could go, was stopped a? f ast , ‘L officer. “Don’t delay me, by a ' vh ? tl {he n egro. *Ts gotta be «uh/ slul . •• “Bov,” replied the offi knoW\ v ho I am? lam cer, (l ° \ r «Go on, white man, you a o-enera*. , «j cer tanly am,” ain.''.", 0 the officer angrily. "Lardy!» 1 the negro taking a second excising 1 , e j s ; j musta been look, *’ lol * cause I didn’t think rtfback* that far yet”-Ottowa «rOLI* THE HEAD” . p stack of Nasal Catarrh, js an to frequent “colds” are The*' oriMeot condition, generally ,n TARRH MEDICINE is i HAb Ijb , Acting of an Ointment, t< Trontn ;_' v an< j a Tonic, ac^ te n?el l0C ;. ‘’ h the Blood on the Mu- Quick £, r faees building up the System, ecus vou less liable to “colds.” end nl^ K r rl ;. .rjsts for over 40 Years Sold Co- Toledo, O. f J. Cheney <v UUm Sr* RATS vour premises of rats by using triple strength rat virus, not a poison, affects only rodents. \\> find it hard to get rats to eat poi nns thev eat this readily. Your mon ey back if it fails. For further information write or call phone 27. Wayside Hatcheries J SILER CITY, NORTH CAROLINA. FfTT^irirßri rT I I Severe I S Indigestion I (|| “I had very severe attacks of ||J ■ indigestion/’ writes Mr. M. H. fi| ■j Wade, a farmer, of R. F. D. 1, R (|| Weir, Miss. “1 would suffer I m for months at a time. All I dared [ ii eat was a little bread and M (|| butter... consequently I suffer- | ■ ed from weakness. 1 would try jfl W to eat, then the terrible suffer- R fjj ing in my stomach 1 I took I || medicines, but did not get any H W. better. The druggist recom- W (j| mended IjJ S Thedford’s ul IiGK-DRAUGHT I decided to try it, for, as I 111 1 had tried others for two Oj tore years without any ini- j r ement in my health. 1 soon Ii 1 d. the Black-Draught was |L ig on my liver ana easing | errible pain. IT n two or three weeks, 1 |L d I could go back to eating, |f \y weighed 123. Now I Isl ;h 147— eat anything I want JL' nd by taking Black-Draught IS not suffer. n ive you Med Thedford’s U : padkages sold, || ,/j^ f"N «>l»9 ‘^ ea ycur heart palpitates, t short of lZ2 y, when ! L J S'mothering x iaint soells, your heart! MILES’ ■ ; satment ' 1 Dsed with heart a 1884, sells it at ; Prusea SI.OO a NEWS FROM BRICKHAVEN. Brickhaven, June 18.—Messrs. Sea well and Hannon spent the week-end near Carthage. Mr. and Mrs. A.A. Marks, accom panied by Miss Annie Utley, Mrs. R. H. Overby and little Beth Overby, motored to Olivia Saturday. Miss Kate Marks came back with them and spent the week-end here with rela tives. Miss Gail Mims, of .Corinth, spent a while this week here with her sis ter, Mrs. Avery Marks. Mr. E. O. Larwrence Mrs. A. R. Law rence, Mrs. J. W. Utley and little For rest and Pauline Lawrence were week end guests of Mrs. Emma Johnson at Morrisville. Mr. June Hackney was a week-end visitor here. A meeting of the Chautauqua com mittee is called this week. Let one who is interested in bringing something worthwhile to the commun ity be present at this meeting. It may seem to some that grumbl ing or rather criticism concerning the road leading from here out to the highway is rather uncalled for now. When the road is in fairly good con dition but the time to lock the stable is before the horse is stolen, and we do not care for a repetition of the past winter’s experience for in one sense of the word this was an isolat ed section of country. Cars could not , run and sometimes for several days those that were carred out were stuck stationary, as it were. Now we are hoping to have a truck on this line next winter to convey pupils to the high school at Moncure. If the roads are not looked after and put in con dition there will be weeks where it will be impossible for the truck to run. , We venture to state that, taking ev erything into consideration, this sec tion of the county pays more taxes than any part of the county and it does seem like poor return when the road is in such condition as to block | traffic. Sometimes patience and long I suffering cease to be a virtue and if | we are to have to put up with the shut-in proposition another winter it I seems that a petition signed by every | citizen from this section and put be fore the next legislature would not be amiss. If we can’t get a road then I perhaps a neighboring county might | be prevailed upon to lend a hard. Mrs. Lee Rich and little Dorothy I Rich, of Rocky Mount, are spending I two weeks at the Boylan ranch with , Mr. Rich. The latter is an employee ' of the Pheonix Utility Co. Quite a number of the people from I this community will take the typhoid vaccination wheih is being given at j Moncure on Saturday from 10 a. m. I until 12 m. The hours are rather in ! convenient for many and some who | wished to take the vaccine were un able to do so. The game with the Phoenix boys ! Saturdav was a close one but it was j decidedly an interesting one. The score was tied in the 9th inning and , the 11th ininng ended with the score 4 to 5 in favor of the Brickhaven team. GENERAL NEWS BRIEFS. ! Shovt Items of Common Interest to All. Florence, S. C. —Formal opening of | the Pee Dee river bridge joining Flor i ence and Marion counties was held under clear skies and typical holi j day temperature. Columbia, S. C. —A hearing was 1 held here by the South Carolina rail road commission, relative to a pro posed reduction of passenger fares ! within the State of South Carolina : from 3.3 cents a mile to three cents. Washington.—Cotton consumed dur ing May amounted to 820.965 bales of lint and 51,723 of '{inters, compared with 577,396 of lint and 52,192 of lin ters in April this year and 495,337 of lint and 58,037 of 1 inters in May last year, the. census bureau announced. Montgomery, Ala.—Permission to expend approximately $10,000,000 in the erection of a hydro-electric dam on the banks of the Tallapoosa river near Tallassee, Ala., was granted the Ala bama Power company by the Ala bama public service commission. The dam, when completed, will be one of the largest hydro-electric plants in America, developing 132,000 horsepow er. s ■ ' ! New York. —Enforcement of prohi bit'on in New York State by Federal officers would cost $100,000,000 annual •v, Prohibition Director Canfield de clared in letter to Mayor Hlyan thank j ing him for the promise of co-opera tion from local police. Some chaps virtuously quote “hiring j the hand that feeds him,” then go out ! and kick the old sow that not only; “keeps the pot boiling,” but also keep:- something in it. Dr. Ca l Taylor might put it: What; it costs you to feed them wrong is the difference between the ret returns from doing it right and doing it the way you do. NOTICE OF SERVICE OF SUM MONS BY PUBLICATION. In Superior Court, Aug. Term, 1923. North Carolina, Chatham County. Morris Brooks vs. Alma Brooks The defendant above named will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Su- . perior Court of Chatham County, j North Carolina, to secure for plaintiff an absolute divorce from her; and the said defendant will further take no- ! tice that she is required to appear on! or be'ore the 6th day of July, 1923, at j the office of Clerk of Superior Court ; ! for Chatham County, North Carolina, 1 lat his office in the court house and answer or demur to the complaint in, said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded ; in said complaint. j This June 6th, 1923. i J. DEWEY DORSETT. j Clerk Superior Court, j R. F, PACHAL, Attorney July 5-c NORTH CAROLINA EVENTS. News in Concise Form For The j Busy Reader. j Salisbury.—A number of local busi ness men are holding conferences and planning to take over the Peoples Na tional bank wheih closed here. I Washington.—Eleven elementary j school pupils won State prizes for North Carolina in hte last national safety campaign, according to an an nouncement today by the Highway i Extension Board. These token, checks 1 and medals, have been sent State sup ; erintendent Brooks for presentation. ! Greensboro.—lt was lack of enough I to eat that caused a “strike” of Guil ford county convicts at the High Point I camp, W. C. Jones, county commis sioner having jurisdiction over that camp, stated. There were rations in : plenty sent the camp, but the convicts were not getting them. The cook was a thief. Hickory.—City council passed on second and final reading an ordinance submitted by the electorate of Hickory the question of issuing $300,000 in ! bonds to erect a high school building ! on the large tract of land recently giv ien to the city by the trustees of | Claremont college. The election was ' called for Tuesday, July 31. Goldsboro.—A thousand more or less Klansmen of the imperial order of i the Ku Klux Klan paraded through i the streets of Goldsboro while 15,000 people lined the streets to see the : white clad knights do the march stunt. Fayetteville. That the present ; guards at the convict camp in Cedar j Creek township be removed and “hu j mane men put in their places” that 1 more constant and efficient medical i attention be given all county prison i ers, and that Cumberland county build a new and modern jail at once, are among the suggestions urgently press ed upon the local board of commis sioners. j Fayetteville.—Gus and Mann Pate, j well known young farmers of Gray’s Creek township, charged with killing i George Marsh, negro preacher and ! farm hand, wounding W. B. Coates, i wealthy land owner, in a pistol battle that followed the Pates’ refusal to allow Coates to enter their barn, were . freed by a coroner’s jury. Walnut Cove.—Ledlow Joyce, neg ro, the oldest man in Stokes countv, and doubtless the oldest man in the entire State, if his age is correctly surmised, was buried recently. Reports have fixed his age at 128 years, it having been generally said that he was born in 1795. Whatever his cor rect age, certainly he was very old. Morehead City.—Secretary E. L. Middleton of Raleigh, who recently visited this city with a view to ar ranging all the details at this end ; of the line of the Baptist Seaside as sembly v’hich is to convene June 24 to July 1. * Chapel Hill. —The University sum -1 mer school started this week. Raleigh.—An average condition of 87 percent, 4 percent better than a year ago, 2 percent better than a 10- year average, was the June condition i of the North Carolina wheat crop. i 1 Rockingham.—A ten-year-old son of Burkett Purnell was run o ,T er by a shifting train on the Rockingham rail road and so badly injured that he died two hours later. Raleigh.—North Carolina crops last year averaged S4B per acre while those of Illinois brought S2O; lowa, s2l; Minnesota, sl6 and Nebraska, sl4, ac- , cording to a report made here by the : crop reporting service of the depart ment of agriculture. Reidsville.—Residence of Coy T. Neal, of the Rock Hill section of; Stokes county, was destroyed by fire, the loss being about $5,000 with $2.- .000 insurance. This is the second j time Mr. Neal has lost his home by j fire during the past two years. He also had his automobile stolen rex >ut ly. I Thomasville.—D. H. Clodfelter, a\ member of the Thomasville police j : force off and on for the past 22 years, j * was struck by southboucu Southern freight train No. 52. The left side of the officer’s skull was crushed and death resulted. j. Wilson.—A few days ago Jesse \ Ward, janitor at the Wilson negro graded school, his wife and six child j ren became nauseated and began to ! vomit after eating heartily of poisoned cabbage a d soon the old man died in agony. Another member of the fam : ily died, two are. out of danger and j four have been removed to a hospi- ' tab l Raleigh.—Selection of Dr. B. W. | Kilgore as dean of the agricultural department of State college and the consolidation of agricultural experi j meat and extension work under the i college was recommended at a meet : ing of a joint committee from the State college and the department of agriculture, with Governor Morrison. WORTH CONSIDERING. The farmers must be organized to have complete control over all the bu siness connected with their industry. Dual control is intolerable. Agricul ture will never be in a satisfactory | ! condition if the farmer is relegated to the position of a manual worker on j ; his alnd; if he is denied the right of a manufacturer to buy the raw materials of liis industry or trade terms; if other people are to deal with his raw materials, his milk, his cream, fruit, vegetables, linstock, grain, and other produce; and if these capitalist middle-agencies are to i manufacture the farmers’ raw mater ial into butter, bacon, or whatever else are to da all the marketing and export ! paying farmers what they please on ; the one hand and charging the pub- , i lie as much as they can on the other 1 1 hand. —Geo. W. Russel, ii> “The Na- i tional Being.” TRUSTEE’S SALE OF LAND. By virtue of the powers of sale contained in two certain trust deeds, one bearing date of December the Bth, | 1917; the other of April 24th, 1919, executed by Luther M. Riggsbee and , Tellie Riggsbee, his wife, to R. H. ■ Hayes, Trustee, the undersigned hav ] ing by a decree of the Superior Court ! of Chatham County, North Carolina, i been empowered and authorized to ex ecute the trusts therein named in lieu of the original trustee, we will On Saturday, the 14th of July, 1923, ; at 12 o’clock, M. sell to the highest bidder for cash at Court House Door in Pittsboro, N. C., the following tracts or parcels of land, lying and being in Baldwin Township, 1 Chatham County, N. C., viz: ! | First tract: That forty-five acre tract devised to Luther M. Riggsbee by the last will and testament of W. , i J- Riggsbee, deceased, bounded on the 1 i North by the Home Tract of the late j I W. J. Riggsbee; on the East by the ; lands of E. M. Fearington; on the : South by the lands of E. Morphis; and 1 on the West by the lands of T. W. Herndon and I. J. Morris. Second tract: That thirty acre tract also devised to Luther M. Riggsbee by W. J. Riggsbee, deceased, bounded on the North by the lands of Miss Cara Riggsbee; on the East by the lands of E. M. Fearrington; on the ! South by the lands described as tract First, and on the West by the lands of E. M. Fearington. This land is embraced in the deeds of trust above mentioned, one of which is registered in the office of the Reg- J j ister of Deeds in and for Chatham ’ ! County, North Carolina, in book “F, I” page 365, et seq; and the other j in said office and in book “F 1”, page 494, et seq, and the authority of the undersigned to sell the same is coin- ! tained in a decree duly entered in the Superior Court of Chatham County, N. C. This June 11th, 1923. WALTER SILER, WADE BARBER, July 5-p. Trustee. LOOK AT YOUR LABEL FOR SALE BY ELDER MOTOR CO. Siler City, N. C. , l CHATHAM MOTOR CO. Pittsboro, N. C. j ! 1 IHi ffi ■ !| ... I! i M fm || “INVESTIGATE IP BEFORE INVESTING.” m ikj If ip | jifjj !«$ WRITE FOR FREE BOOKLET ! ii) “BONDS” M m m in 1 |I I <v-♦> III: | . | §1 jllffllfllGS ilSPlilfifl ilff Rfti] ■ fa «i nilUliHlivif illiJlil 8111vv 881 eivHi &B&#iUlv vv§^ CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $300,000. || 1 1 W. E. SHARPE, Manager. C. G. SOMERS, Field Representative. JH| f| BURLINGTON, N. C. Jtt Rummer time and prices As the old Summertime draws upon us we more fully realize the opportunity to sell goods that are needed and demanded and to make the prices right. We have every thing you need and your trade has built up a big business for us. We shall continue the same service in the future. FARMERS’ ALLIANCE & FARMERS UNION STORE. We are the Fanner’s Friend Siler City. N. C. in ■■ ' ■——» i —■— Why Not HaWX Permanent Wall Finish? i Why be satisfied with a wall finish that requires renewal every few years, at add ed expense, when for practically the same first cost you can have walls and ceilings , that are > / y c ßeautiful Sanitary Washable able %■ Lucas Lu-Co-Flat wftfglw you uch a finish and more. It dries with a list velvety finish, en tirely without gloss, and is suitable for every room in the house, including kitchen, bath and laundry. Let us tell you more about it. THE HARDWARE STORE, Inc. E. H. JORDAN, Manager, SILER CITY, N. C. Service and Satisfaction Guaranteed. Phone 139. ‘ -—null rmrr| , „ , iwn ■ll ■■nnnmiri ——— J | The Best Fo L r e *, e Money jj We have a full and complete stock of the best in Fur- jj j! niture. Why go from Chatham county when you can get jj 11 it at home cheaper. We have the best for the least ![ money. Also general line of Hardware at the same low jj jj prices. Call on us. jj I Funeral Directors and Undertaker’s Supplies. !| LATEST, MOST MODERN DODGE HEARSE. | WALDEN & THOMAS MONCURE, NORTH CAROLINA. <! m . - 1 <♦>> II Surplus Funds ■ g <■*>> „' , ' . 1 Properly Invested || WHEN YOU INVEST YOUR FUNDS WHERE THERE IS NOT THE SLIGHTEST CHANCE- OF LOSS AND ||j WHERE YOU AT THE SAME TIME DERIVE AN IN COME FROM THE INVESTMENT, YOU HAVE WISE- j||j LY AND PROFITABLY INVESTED. $ it ALAMANCE SIX PER CENT GOLD BONDS. Mj ARE ISSUED ON FIRST MORTGAGES PLACED ON Ira] INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY.. YIELDING 6 PER p CENT INTEREST THEY MAKE A WORTHY INVEST- m MENT FOR THE PERSON WHO WISHES TO INVEST <$ WITH ABSOLUTE SAFETY. ISSUED IN VARIOUS DENOMINATIONS THESE tlj BONDS MAY BE HAD BY SMALL AS WELL AS LARGE INVESTORS. ' &Z WRITE FOR FREE BOOKLET AND LEARN MORE M ABOUT THIS ATTRACTIVE OFFER. 11l . - :% ■■ : F -1
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 21, 1923, edition 1
7
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