Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Sept. 13, 1923, edition 1 / Page 3
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
i Miss Kate Vestal I S 1 t bounces her first fall showing of I A MILLINERY | I Thursday and Friday, Sep- | tember 13 and 14, I I . - nO . ltfodels from Rhodes, Lazarus, Dannenbaums, I \dler’s; together with the Store Designs, all fea | ie fined, practical Hats, with prices toi appeal to the | | trade* i I Thanking 1 our friends for past favors, we are here to | serve. % t Miss K. Vestal | I mjssK. LANE. MISS M. STONE. 1 | ‘ SILER CITY, NORTH CAROLINA. f j Attention! Attention! j; p. M. White will be located at Bonlee, N. C., beginning | OCTOBER IST jj ; f or the purpose of buying baled cotton from farmers, gin- !| ! nets, and in fact, from anyone having cotton for sale. | Will'pay the highest market price. Bring your cotton to !; t Bonlee and get the high price. A good live market. Gin- !| ners at Bonlee will buy your seed cotton, paying the top price for it. P. M. WHITE, Bonlee, N. C. I WE ARE NOW OFFERING j| NEW FaU HATS? I' -I LADIES FROM EVERYWHERE ARE AD- M | MIRING OUR NEW CREATIONS IN FALL || | MILLINERY. ALL THE NEWEST SHAPES || 1 from THE SMARTEST SPORT TO THE || 1 NEW SHAPES IN MEDIUM SIZED DRESS ft $> HATS, VELVETS, VELOURS, ALL THE || || NEW MATERIALS. BUY A FALL HAT TO || M MATCH YOUR FALL COSTUME. H II UK <*>> (Ml | ilis-icks Company,l —The House of Kuppenheimer Good Clothes.—» M 4 Where Quality Is Higher Than Price. |j| priiYlflFE?] It is just as hard to keep money safe and working as it ||l jj| is to earn it. jj| P Your money in this bank—in Savings, in Certificates of m deposit, in a Commercial Account is safe. Your valuables M m * n our vaults are safe. Your money in investments which jMi S! we recommend is safe. m n p } We consider the safety of your money which is here on H c^e P°sit or invested upon our advice to be of primary im- |m m P ol ’tance. This bank makes it easy for you to be finan | cially safe. || I The Chatham Bank § ini ri P J - c - GREGSON, President. J. J. JENKINS, Cashier. || || W. A. Teague, vice President. jjj CITY, NORTH CAROLINA. | Musical Merchandise ! Os Quality - j PIANOS—VICTROLAS—RECORDS. _ | | Darnell & Thomas | | “Our Reputation Is Your Insurance.” I | 118 FAYETTEVILLE ST. RALEIGH, N. C. I BRIEF, INTERESTING FACTS Figures and Historical Mention Os Interest. Dearborn Independent. There are twice as many motor cars and trucks in Hawaii than there are in all of China. Amherst college will not graduate a man unable to swim 200 yards or more, according to report. All children born on immigrant ships at sea are admissable to the United States without recourse to law; The Japanese bride on her wedding day receives eleven commandments from her mother. These command ments are rules of conduct which have been handed down from generation to generation, and all self-respecting brides are expected to live up to them. A drop of acid placed on one side of the body of a frog will cause the hind foot on that side to wipe it off. This would seem to indicate intelli gent behavior, yet a frog in which the brain has been severed from the rest of the nervous system does the same thing. Holding to the theory that good biscuits, or even fairly good biscuits, have a great deal to do with the suc cess or failure of a marriage venture, the county clerk of Clarksburg, W. Va., will issue a cook book to the bride along with each marriage li cense. Both the gopher snake and the king snak of our southern states are in veterate enemies of the rattlesnake and are immune to his poison. The in jection of the poison of a ratlesnake into the circulation of a cobra, in the Bronx Zoological gardens, resulted in the cobra suffering no ill. The last type set by Warren G. Harding has been plated in gold and sent to Washington to be kept with other relics of the late president. He set the type in the composing room of the Fairbanks News Miner. At that time % he was presented with a gold . make-up rule by printers of interior Alaska. > When the root of the common cat tail is macerated and boiled, a sirup of an excellent flavor is produced. This > was commonly used by the Iroquois | Indians on com meal pudding and as j a sweetening for other Indian dishes. > Cat tail roots are said to contain as , high as thirty per cent of sugar and starch. > All botltes found along the high ways runing through national forests 1 of the West must be gathered up and buried or placed on the north or shady : side of some mountain. Glass bottles jj absorb the sun’s rays to a heated so- J cus and start fires when conditions > are just right, according to Federal jj forestry officials. > One ounce of gold pays wages for j twenty hours work in the United I States, fifty hours work in Great Brit > ain, ninety hours work in Japan, 100 ! hours work in France, 200 hours work II in Germany. This means that Ameri > cans must maintain their past record ] for high output per man to guarantee ij prosperity which will mean work for i; all of us. “The United States must stop kill s ing its presidents,” said Mrs. Doug j lass Robinson, sister of the late pres- II ident Roosevelt, in commen ting on the death of President Harding. “No man who comes to the Presidency after the age of fifty can bear, without se rious cost to his health, the enormous J obligations put upon him by the Am | erican people. !) j | Prosperity 1 Well painted barns and sheds give | a look of prosperity. Os greater importance than “looks’ ’ how ever, is the protection against loss from decay and deterioration. Lucas Barn Paint 5s a high-quality, non-fading paint, specially made for preserving and beautifying barns, stables, fences, sheds and bridges; also for roofs and structural iron work. One gallon will cover 400 to 500 square feet of wood, or 500 to 600 square feet of metal, one coat. Let us give you an estimate on paint for your barns and other farm buildings* THE HARDWARE STORE, Inc. Service and Satisfaction Guar anteed* SILER CITY,. C. MONCURE SCHOOL OPENED. Bits of Interesting News From our Neighbors in Moncure. Moncure, Sept. 10.—Miss Ruth Ow ens, of Wilmington, visited Miss Vir ginia Cathell last week. Mrs. J. E. Cathell, accompanied by Miss Ruth Owens, spent last Friday m Sanford, visiting relatives. Misses Hilda Wilkie and Virginia Cathell spent Thursday in Jones oolo with friends. Little Francis Sue Poe, the four year old daughter of Mr. Bailey Poe, °f Dur mm, has spent two months with Air. and Mrs. M. T. Wilkie, whom she loves very much. Mr. Edwin Cathell left last week for Wake Forest College where he entered for the Fall term. Mr. R. W. Utley also left last week to enter Elon College. Mrs. Sam Womble and Miss Amy Womble spent last Friday in Raleigh shoping. Mr. C. D. Orrell, of Yemassee, S. C., was in town Saturday. Moncure ball team played the San ford cotton mill boys Saturday af ternoon. The score was 3 to 5 in favor of Sanford. Moncure schol opened last Monday, Sept. 10, with an enrollment of 200 pupils. There were 50 in the high school. Several more sutdents are ex pected to enter soon. As several schools have been consolidated with Moncure school, Jenks school between Moncure and Pittsboro, New Elam and Brickhaven schools were represented in the opening. The truck form Jenks school did the work of two trucks this week, bringing the pupils from New Elam. Mr. H. G. Self, the principal, intro duced the following new teachers: Miss Daisy Lee Northcutt, of McFar lan, the 6th and 7th grade teacher, Miss Margie Perry, of Siler City, the music teacher, Mrs. H. G. Self, of Siler City, tne 4th and sth grade teacher and Miss Edna Hedricks, of Stoney Point, the primary teacher. Rev. R. R. Gordon, of Pitsboro and Prof. W. R. Thompson, of Pitsboro, made talks. A good number of the pa trons and some visitors were present at the opening. The revival at the Methodist church is still in progress. Rev. J. J. Boone is doing some excellent preaching and several have been converted. Sunday morning at 11 o’clock he preached on: “Love Never Faileth,” which was found in 1 Corinthians 13:8. Sunday evening the main points of his text were Society Never Forgives, Nature Never Forgives and there’s no one who will forgive but God Himself. LOCAL ITEMS FROM OAKLAND. Moncure, Rt. 2, Sept. 10.—Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Bums and children, Syl via and Thomas, of Siler City, are vis iting relatives in this community. W. D. Burns and family spent Sun day with her grand mother, in Orange county. Mr. Henry Durham and family spent Sunday with Mrs. Durham’s sister, Mrs. W. M. Burns. Mr. Dur ham was present at our Sunday school and made a very good talk on The Need of God in the Home. Miss Zelma Gunter went to Dur ham Saturday where she expects to resume work. Mr. C. E. Bland and family spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Burns. Miss Kathryn and Swindell Knight visited their sister, Mrs Cyrus Brown, last week. Messrs Percy Gunter and Jamie Perry spent the week-end in Durham. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Clegg spent a few days of last week with their daughter, Mrs. N. A. Perry, Miss Gladys Maze, of Sanford, spent the week-end with Miss Emma Lee Knight. Mrs. W. B. Knight and children, W. B. and Ruth spent Sunday and Monday with Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Clegg. * 4s 4« 4* 4s 4* 4« 4s 4« 4s 4s 4s * QUERY DEPARTMENT. * * Answers by John * 4s 4: 4s 4: 4s 4s 4* 4s 4s 4: 4s 4s Is there any danger of a person 80 years old dying with tuberculosis? Mrs. G., Moncure, N. C. Well, there might be, if the person contracted with the disease in their youth. Is baseball a dangerous game for boys to play ? “Mother,” Apex, N.C. Ans—No. Sometimes the batter lets the bat loose and strikes a player on the head and kills him. Otherwise it is a safe game. Is it wrong to make whiskey? C. C. C. R., Bennett, N. C. If the officers get you, it’s wrong. If they do not get you and you make good whiskey, a lot of .people will glory in your spunk. I am nearly bald, can you tell me what will remedy the matter? John Z., Pittsboro, N. C. Ans—Tell me what kind of wife you have, John, then I will know more about your case. Which is the proper way to eat your food ? Answer and settle a ques tion. Johnnie, Goldston, N. C. Ans —I is immaterial, Johnnie. Some people eat with their fork, some with a knife and fork. That’s fash ionable. Some use their hands. That’s damnasty. Mostly hoboes eat that way. Which is the most safest way to travel? -I am thinking of going on a long journey from home and can go either by water or rail. Miss P. X. Bynum, N. C. Ans—l’ll have to quote you what the old darkey said: “If you are rid ing on the train and have a wreck, dar you is; but if you are on a boat and the biler blows up, whar am you ? Cough.—Boil one ounce of flaxseed in a pint of water, strain, and add a little honey, one ounce of rock candy and the juice of three lemons. Mix and boil well. Drink as hot as possi ble. . , ► ' Watch—Your Pocket Bookll paint FACTS Illustration describes how to make BEST—PURE—PAMT For $ 2 - 82 a Gallon YM Sir L&M SEMI-PASTE PAINT H p (xrAis is White Lead and Costly White They are simplvadding Linseed **s2?® °f ou to l& m Semi-Paste Paint wear, as proven by 50 years of Quickly done. Saves you Money utmost Satisfactory USe* j^AST- c °ST—because in Semi-Paste form, and therefore you mix 3 quarts of Linseed Oil into each gallon, and so make 1% gallons Pure Paint for $2.82 per gallon. Sale byHeaeaeßaneeßi W. L. LONDON & SON, Pittsboro, N. C. C. B. CRUTCHFIELD, POLLARD BROTHERS, COVINGTON HARDWARE CO., Burlington, N. C. WOMAN CAN BE CHARMING. She who would charm must devel op in herself a power of self-control j that is strong enough to rise to self- I effacement when necessary, says an exchange, And, having done so, shej can start to play her part of a charm- I ing woman with fair prospects of suc cess. Siie effects an entire subordina 1 tion of her personality to the person* alities of ethers. It is by making eth ers conscious of themselves, of their own importance and value, that she gets the fullest recognition from them of that individuality that she has been careful not to obtrude. She conveys by subtle sip ns, her steady sympathy with and her understanding of their complex rat ores, and gives them the definite impiession that they themsel ves are entirely pleasing to ner. If ohe can do this and at the same time refvam f/om obtruding her point of view, and more especially, her own claims to be understood, flattered and liked, she not only wins the le ward of popularity, but adds to rfce substantial wojth so her character. Instead of tiying to impress others with the consciousness of no*v much she knowi, she impresses them with their own possibilities. Instead >f lay ing to dazzle with conversational dis play of *>it and epgram, she uses her skill to turn the conversation into channels in which her compannis can swim at ease, keeping it by deft ease, from drifting into pools of inconveni m |» A universal custom AltSf that benefits every- Every body ‘ Aids digestion, Fie HI c * eanses foe teetk, soothes the throat. a good thing A to remember - " T "lo most everybody 30 x y/% means usco Jij? XJATURALLY USCO’S BleMfr//(k could hardly have de- jSfcffcjj* \)//\W livered such money’s worth jj \ ance every time—no two I And no two opinions about 3lf'/ Wl ■ 1 what tire to get again after a fl man has once used USCO* fli v|!llP#Mere lo Tuv 1 Trade Mack SQUARE FILLING STATION. W. L. LONDON & SON. Pittsboro, N.C. " / ! * • D. T. MOORE ' ' Bynum, N. C. 1 “ . ■— ent depth. She need express no views but she must give attentoin to the views expressed by others. She need say little, but^she must listen well. Her reputation for cleverness will n« t suffer. It is as pleasant to recognise by word or look the graces and charms of our friends as it is to enjoy and profit by them. Profit we do undoubt edly, since all that makes existence fairer, makes it better, and a whole some discernment of lovely traits, whether physical, mental, spiritual, adds to our faith in humanity. A genuine compliment is a sincere recognition of some excellence n our friend, expressed in gracious, tasteful words. Yet there are implied compli ments, which indirectly, but not less surely, carry pleasant mesages. The warm welcome, the radant smile of approval, say more than words can convey, and are just as significant as mathematical exactness of phrase. The compliment of listening with a respon sive, silent attention is one of the sur est marks of apprecation, and the pretty way of quoting the opinions or appealing to the judgment and taste of our friends is a mode of offering delightful incense. RESALE VALUABLE LAND. By virtue and the power vested in the undersigned by reason of a certain mortgage deed duly executed to I. H. Headen by Harrison Marsh on the 31st day of March, 1919, and trans ferred and assigned to A. Schiffman by the said I. H. Headen and record ed in book No. F. 1., page 588 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Chatham county, North Carolina. De fault having been made in the pay ment of money thereby secured, the undersigned will resell at auction to the last and highest bidder for cash at the court house in the town of Pittsboro, N. C., on Monday, the 24th day of September, at 12 o’clock, noon, or soon thereaiter the following described lands in Bear Creek township adjoining the la. ds pf Jerry Murdock, Prissy Pass, Mat Pugh, Will Bass and others and bounded as follows: Beginning on the railroad, Alfred Glosson’s corner in R. M. Gorrell’s old line; running thence north 4.5 degress east 48.5 poles to a stake, Jerry Mur dock’s corner; thence south 84.5 de grees east with Jerry Murdock’s and Prissy Pass 48.5 poles to a stake, Pris sy Pass and Mat Pugh’s corner; thence south 4.5 degrees west 48.5 poles to a stake in Gorrell’s old line, now Mat Pugh and Will Bass corner; thence north (34.5 degrees west with Will Bass line to the begininng, contain ing 10 acres more or less. This Bth day of September, 1923. I. H. HEADEN, Mortgagee. Sep2oc A. SCHIFFMAN, Assignee.
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1923, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75