Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Sept. 13, 1923, edition 1 / Page 5
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oiHNam: " is mild September. Xhi s 1S ~ rorn shuckings. N ext stop com and taters will soon be p o ssum anu -.1 L Bell is on a visit D anie L ’ 'Durham arles Young spent last U- •-S'rs—V 1 ”“ .■e cows anu 11 1 t n an d vicinity was blessed * ■arm ti nrv M London and Miss Mrs- Henr> n haye ret umed home Cam e tQ Ra i e igh. ifter a' L , , fr , Hubert Cross, of Cor- Mr. and m 1 ;; Wednes day with Miss fi;S“" Libeny, in Guilford coun • tnvpd =ows and better equip- RC?l fJI ,wed a demonstration with » ent f f“r hoe- in Perquimans coun ,astures lor y. cl Mrs C. B. Way and chil >lr - fThnmasville, have been on a f friends and relatives in Chat liSll. xlpnrv A- Bynum, of Pitts \° U ss g now sojourning at the A. & f 1 college at Raleigh. He left last reek. Mr J. Dan Dorsett, of Siler City, 1 returned from the Confederate re gion held in Winston-Salem last. reek. Miss Aileen Burns, who is engaged 'hospital work in Richmond, Va., L been here on a short visit to her ister, Mrs. Clyde Bland. Half the value of the North Caro ina cotton crop goes to feed the farm mimals of the state, finds Earl Hos etler of the Experiment station. Deputv Farrow brought Robert Scr *l, a white man, from New Hop/ ownship Friday, charged with mak ng liquor, and lodged him in jail. The boll weevil calls for some pos- I tive changes in the agriculture of forth Carolina. Small grains, legumes nd winter gardens are in order for his fall. Mrs. W. B. Chapin has returned rom a hospital in Durham, where ;he was recently operated on for ap lendicitis. She is greatly improved n health. The Chatham County Fair is tihe ilace to display the agricultural wealth of your community or of the ntire county. What will you add to he display this year ? Pittsboro high schol will open on londay, October Ist, for the fall srm. On account of the new school uilding not being ready it has caused delay of a month. Don’t forget the Chatham County air. Get up an exhibit and be sure ou are there. Pay your subscription 1 The Record and take a chance at ie Ford to be given away. Messrs J. H. Thomas and J. B. liomas, two old Confederates and ■ of the few that went from Chat wei ’ £ at the Veterans reunion at unston-Salem last 'week. A card received from Mr. P. M. w l , who is touring the west, states at he climbed Pikes Peak with his out and ran into a snow storm out j s r . e the mountain. We suppose • ls ha ™g the time of Ms life. A s.npig class has been organized aiikf i Cnapel church. Mr. David I jitp'! 1 Lee , coun ty, is the instructor. 'd v, ln nUmber the young ladies i ioung rn en have joined the class *rtakin™ g m ' Jch interest “> the * e iM i , I T re went to Durham a hosnkuf ?? we ?k for treatment feebl? Gilmore has been >pes t„ b h e ea lh J or . some time and im. : allle t° improve m Dur e h °Peful tj him” 018 Chat:ham ?this weDkVrv^l^ 1 ? irls are irsities 0 f coli eges and uni tar state® *? ate; SOi . ne S°ing to ,n - We shall • P ursu ih of educa th them e 0 IU! SS U them greatly but scessful year best , wishe s for a > ear ' Many left last week. West', whn’1 Co^ w °man nam ‘thsrof Primp w S near Pittsboro, !i ls said to be m’ of this 11 tovvn » almost totai!v\ 1 03 1 years ol d. She b tte about tL b^‘ d and can cnly l time tobe in r^J hat is a buakes J? tjlls old world of tornadoes and W'hjle drivir, i • l et of Pitsborn T C ( ar ±he main kamsev ]„ morning, *L\ the Lft °? e of the reS *tael ha Y ln S twisted off. ~W alk - The car t bee lme f&r the e ry fast h that £ tlme ’ and was hofth eiel ° ne Was in the l rd /ere r nof b V he dates on The j In Y ° ul d have bange ? last wee k. j n stead of A a ' e rea d September I tte 30 - Not “any i i „. fntl '°b to tho < f^ renCe ’ ut we orh, e^rve the n acb so that those I to ch 4e p ?i s ™ a y h^ve i n e the date with i 2 c t°fj. & was unde >- the |; ' a ta,* , : ' corn . but it was • W forgetfulness, .) The editor and family spent the j week-end at his old home in Faye.te ville. Mrs. Rufus Farrell and children are spending the week in Fayette ville. Miss Inez Headen of Siler City, is spending a few days with Mrs. Dew ey Dorsett. Mrs. C. N. Justice is spending a few days with her daughter, Mrs. W. E. Cheek, at Sanford. Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Hackney, Mrs. H. C. Farrell, Mrs. Berta Mann and ! Mr. Ed Hatch spent the week-end in Fayetteville. j I Mr. Rodger Ogden, a medical stu-1 dent at Cornell University, N. Y., spent a couple of days here this week with Mr. Dewey Dorsett. I Mr. W. A. Snipes, of Frosty, called to see us on last Monday. He spent ! Sunday night near Browns Chapel, with his sister, Mrs. H. F. Durham. Miss Rebecca Crow r son and brother, Robert, who have been on a visit here to Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Farrell have returned to their home at Fay-, etteville. Sanford has a firm named Reid & Rush. It is a good firm name to do business under, provided they adver- j tise. People will read their ads and rush to their store for bargains. This is a free ad. Mr. and Mrs. John Dezern, of Rae ford, stopped over with their daugh ter, Mrs. Cecil Lindley, Friday night.' Mr. Dezern is taking his vacation and is on his way to visit relatives in Reidsville and Danville. Anyone desiring to contribute to the relief of the Japanese sufferers, through the Red Cross, will leave their donations with Mrs. N. M. Hill, pres ident of the local Chapter, Miss Azile , Hill, or any other member of the lo cal organization Mrs. R. C. Griffin and two sons re turned from the mountains of North Carolina Sunday, where they have been on an extended visit. Mr. Griffin met them at Lemon Springs on ac count of the delay in the train, caus ed by a wreck on the main line. Miss Nora Clark, who holds a re sponsible position xvith the News and Observer, Raleigh, spent the past two weeks in Chatham county, visiting in the homes of W. W. Dark, H. W. Webster, W. P. Dark, M. W. Willett, A. R. Brooks, Mrs. Francis Patterson, C. E. Clark and S. J. Culberson. From Chatham she went to Winston-Salem to visit her brother. From there she will return to Raleigh to resume her duties with the paper. »***»)j. NEW PRICES ON j| | OVERLAND Automobiles | I NOW REDUCED TO— II | Delivered $595 Delivered | I GET THE BEST THRE IS. SEE « I June N. Peoples « I FREE DEMONSTRATION PITTSBORO, N. C. | j —"j I What’s the Difference in Mule Feed? I XT’S not the amount of feed you give your mules but the j [ JL kind. Just a monotonous diet of corn, oats with hay fails | to supply work animals with a sufficient variety of diet to j ] keep them in good shape. Mules fed in this fashion get | plenty “to fill ’em up.” Picture yourself sitting down to meals of bread and water. I You would soon lose your health. If you could have plenty of : | good meat, and fresh vegetables, your health would soon come j 9 back. You don’t need as big a bucket to measure out a feed of j j O-Molene as you do for a feed of corn and I oats. It takes much less O-Molene. | O-Molene contains the variety of foodstuffs W J j necessary to keep mules in perfect condition. j You get more work from them. Mules like ■ V’MtpLtNt J | O-Molene because it is made exceedingly ap- Itj LESS C B I j petizing by a special process of crushing the / S I* select grains. O-Molene is being used by jl many of the biggest mule owners in the coun try, because it is the cheapest in the long run. T. M. Bland & Co., Near Depot. Pittsboro, N. C. .. l Misses Lessie and Ruby Young I spent last week in Durham with rela tives. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Young and children, of Durham, spent the week end with Mrs. C. T. Young. . Miss Emily Taylor left for Raleigh this week, where she will attend school at St. Marys college. Misses Estis Kelly and Estelle Thomas, of Jonesboro, have been here on a short visit to Miss Louise Rid dle. The Womans Auxiliary of St Bar- ! tholomews Church will have a Hallo- i j ween party on the night of October i j 31st. Everybody invited. Mr. Harroll Hackney, of Siler City, and Miss Mattie Eva Dorsett, of Goldston, spent the week-end with 1 Miss Lelia Justice, on Rt. 2. A game of baseball will be played this (Wednesday) afternoon between Pitsboro and Fuquay Springs. Let’s' go and help the boys win. There will be an ice cream super on the night of Saturday, September ; Jsth, at the home of Mr. A. L. Blake, nine or ten miles from Pittsboro, for j the benefit of the Womans Missionary j Society, to which the public is invited. ! The August report of the meeting of the Chatham county road commis sioners will be found in this paper. It! ; was not possible for us to get it ear- ' I Her. We hope to have the September' report in cur next paper. Mrs. Louis Nooe and little daugh ter, Ellen Ratcliffe, went to Concord ; Sunday to attend the marriage of < j Miss Jessie Williford to Mr. Lee Crowell. Miss Williford is well known in Pittsboro having visited here sev- I eral times. She was an attendant at the marriage of Mrs. Nooe. ! They have a new way to clean up a town of tin cans in Rockingham.; , The movie picture shows offer free ad- ■ missions to the child who brings in three tin cans. It’s a good idea and it will clean up the town of tin cans, provided some smart children don t find out where the cans are hauled and keep returning them. In a card to the editor from Lamar, I Colorado, Mr. Frank M. Nash says: i “I stood on the summit of the peak , one day last week and if it hadn’t j been for a blinding snow T storm, am ; sure I could have seen the court housa at Pittsboro. We climbed “up” two miles in a distance of 25 miles over ■ the winding, twisting, serpentine, but most excellent road, in our little ; Ford, over the world famous Pikes j Peak Highway. We are now homeward • bound.” I Cotton was selling in Pittsboro on Tuesday at 27 cents. I Mrs. E. D. Carr and her guests, Misses Maggie Ellis and Miss Jenever ette Seymour were callers in the Rec ord office Tuesday. Mrs. Henry London Fell and daugh ter, Miss Bettie London Fell, of Tren t°n, N. J., Mrs. James H. Cordon, of Ralefgh and Mrs. Fred Jerome, of Clayton, spent Tuesday with Mrs. Henry A. London. Mr. Syllus Perry has sold his farm I south of town to Mr. Rufus Johnson, j Mr. Perry has bought the old Haugh | ton home, with five acres of land at tached. 30c Cotton We believe the market will advance to thirty cents this Fall. Don’t sell your cotton now but consign it to us to be held. We will make liberal ad vances on your shipments. SAVANNAH COTTON FACT ORAGE CO. Savannah, ... Georgia. IP* * * | y MILLINERY SHOWING Thursday and Friday, SeptemberlSth and 14th, Be Sure to give us a Call on these Dates Fetching, Isn’t It? Yet this French Tam, of a | model surpassingly popular in Paris, is only one of the scores bf just-from-France [ creations we invite you to [ see and try on. Visiting our shop xtfill he \ your next best thing to tour • ing the famous Parisian l ateliers. These nev? hats invite you— and they’re mighty inviting. May v?e pass along to you the advance fashion news of the millinery world? “Tomorrow’s Millinery” is yours FREE, just for the asking. MISS BESSYE CAVINESS, MISS BEULAH HEADEN, Siler City, North Carolina. i __L R. R. RAMSEY, Heavy Hauling or Drayage of any Kind Passenger Automobiles at your Service day or night. Phone 23 Pittsboro, N. C. And Sinking forthe Third Time! PERHAPS YOU KNOW THAT AWFUL FEELING—the something that seems to grip our vitals when we are penniless. Most of u s have experienced it at one time or anothec. THAT FEELING IN YOUR OWN HEART is the best advertisement on earth. But perhaps this reminder will bring home to you again the importance of systematic saving. THERE CAN BE NO REAL SUCCESS or Independence without saving! Do yours at— ’„ __ . T-.ITTp I THE FARMERS’ BANK A. C. RAY, Vice-President. T. M. BLAND, President, j ERNEST WILLIAMS, Asst. Cashier. J. D. EDWARDS, Cashier; I • IlJ| You are Cordially Invited to Examine the H H NEW FABRICS AND IMPORTATIONS For the Coming Season at the Demonstration of The HI FALL AND WINTER TAILORING EXHIBIT j|P HI To be Held at The Store of ON MONDAY AND TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17th-18th ||| W. L. London & Son 1 PITTSBORO, m ————™ i—mi It’s a Fact! Did you ever stop to think that the buying of groceries and those things that you eat, is the most important shopping that you <do ? Well, if you never did, we want to tell you that it is a fact! No one can be too careful to se lect the good, fresh things that the market affords. It is is really very important. We make every effort to keep just the things that you need and we solicit an or der from you. BOONE BROS. - - Ernest and Jarvis PITTSORO, I THE BEAL MONEY I OF THE UNITED STATES IS | I Th a Check Book: j In the old days it was cattle, or tobacco, or shells, or | ; I coon skins. Then it came to be gold and silver, and paper 1 j currency. | Any of these factors would be inadequate today. Now I 1 | the bank check is the circulation medium. Put your money in the PAGE TRUST COMPANY’S | bank. Leave it there instead of calling money out and car- j I rying it away, in your pocket, to a store, in a tin can, in | I the chimney. When you want to pay a bill draw a check. | There you have created currency. It pays your bill, and .1 that same process is going on all over the United States.. I The vast bulk of business is done on the currency of I ! checks, and they are sound. ; | Keep your money in the bank and your check book in | your pocket. Instead of keeping your money in your pock- | et. Then circulating currency is abundant in this country. | And your money is SAFE. | le Page Trust Co., Sanford, N. C. I ASSETS OVER I FOUR MILLIONS. I Ijl J
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1923, edition 1
5
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