Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Sept. 20, 1923, edition 1 / Page 7
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1"..-, " „ i l u'.V.M! 5 ; If received a car- I **>»+ oay >our| |fef*oes u..vdJo- -e J ISV’uu . W b ‘ S l TTii-i am opening | I UP^ irSL ' k HUS SHop; Will | Ijear 01 r * be «ria vvorK on Oct. Ist- j Ibe I latch ±or» lJ prosperity Pressing j ■ P. Sun’Uix-anc, Propr- * j I C -’ L^rnToAN--I We have $50,000 ! I 1 , g ia rmers of Chatham j I toioa ii hin the next ninety days I county ' ur l “ interest and irom 1 I S til P el t S Chatham Realty Co h f Johnson, secretary, PittsboroJj 1 is a dollar made ; §A Devour dollar where you get spend >°, ul rth Our motto is your y° urm ° ne vorth or vour money back. J®sf - qEED see us. We have FOR fILLP *£ e lot of recleaned, iD f°etl- Winter rye, Abruzzii rye,. te i ted fdover, red clover, Fulghum,, ft® 80 ” j Rust Proof oats. We carry j A ? P 1 line of feed stuff at rea f? nab ! e 1 aft" V) “ in need of anything in! pn “L vou will do well to get my "“JI e. M- Connell, Pittsboro. j P 'iITnF _ PERSONAL PROPERTY | f arm l mile south of Siler Atfn a m.. on Friday, September ,? s r »il offer for sale for cash to j ShiUest bidder the following ar- I m h nf personal property: 1 good 2? 1 good horse, 20 head of milk ; jUf cattle, some purebred, 5 Purebred duroc hogs, 11 goats and a lot of farming tools. J. T Johnson SilerCity. XC. ep lL p QTTTNGLES —I have 32,000 shingles; nine oak and cedar, left in my care for sale. Come and buy them at my mill on Pittsboro, Route 3. T. B. Bray. Uct li " p LofoTNICE - SEED OATS FOR Sale H. H. Cotton Merry Oaks, N. q " ' Sept 27 j EVERY BAG OF FLOUR sold from our store is guaranteed to be good as the best, $6.75 to $7.25 per bar rel. R. M. Connell, Pittsboro. WANTED TO BUY MULE well built reasonable young, about 1100 to 12- 00 pounds; must be good conditioned, and at a reasonable price. Goldie Moore, care Record, Pittsboro. ts THE FARMERS GIN COMPANY, of Siler City, are now ready for busi ness. They will give as many pounds in lint and seed to the customer as he brings seed cotton. Four dollars for ginning. We are The Farmers’ friend. June Dark, manager. ts. SEE DR. MANN at Dr. Farrell’s of fice in Pittsboro next Tuesday or at Dr. Thomas’ office in Siler City next Thursday if your eves give you trou ble. LUMBER OF ALL KINDS and qual ity. Florida kiln dried ceiling and flooring; we buy cross ties standing in woods or delivered to road. VV. F. Bland. ts THE ENTIRE STOCK of dress goods shoes, notions, and dry goods in genera], are being sold below cost at the store ot Mrs. J. T. Henderson in Pittsboro. Come in and get your bar gains. Everything but the groceries go in the sacrifice sale. GASOLINE that furnishes miles to tne gallon can be had at the Square hung Station in Pittsboro. ts. PRE SSING~AND CLEANING done JWJy by The Siler City Pressing uuo. Mad packages given prompt at -1 ion and returned postage prepaid. Stone ’ s Bar ber Shop, Main Siler City, N. C. ts. T FARMERS GIN at Ore Hill, N. I<l 3* i n pen on Wednesday, Sept, w’t dI, a PPreciate all patronage. ae .p ’ Pu dd and Clyde Brewer, Man s s Sep2oc good P acre ?> * n cultivation, for s-ip ° A d n 3 miles of good town, H KttsWro. reSS “ C ' GR -” ““ Re t |; "CHILDREN should Mam at S’? 1 ? atte >'«on. See Dr. it Siler r-V ttsbol '° "ext Tuesday or Si£i^YmA‘-eak hUrSday “ y ° Ur tear LvA —My acre F arm from PiH c if nt ei „J°h nson > three miles ham, N r ° ro * B • Foushee, Dur v-i. Oct. 4-c ' S °. n ~sverland and Wil n°w $59-, rKr autom °hile s ; Overland tion. See T m lV^ ed * Eree demonstra- N. C Juße N ‘ Peoples, Pittsboro, GTrrr— Oct. 4. s hain CH sVn C A BY EYE re '-is office k ; n G i?f r ; .^ lann at Dr. Far °r at D r %h next Tuesday next Thursdav ° ffic f in Siler Cit y Sl ?ns aR( j al lp you have headache exa mined u e * PH r e y es thoroughly S^WornoLy I ' l^ ll you frank'-y e( i by eye strain° Ul bea dache is caus pßOM the vVe can n °w offer a very srria n thln / s that you want f:[ s and f ov ' Cost *. Everything for ? llat .anytiL n r Cessit i es - Gi ve us a eveiti es . g x f°p valuables and for &dng. S rt jewelry and watch Sil. R n-? d^ ars ’ the re ‘ N - C. ts See P °*' et WatersA UKE E AIR £? « write j b J st g m ln Four homeJ 'ee,K. c "AM. Councilman, Bon vAtAmT— Se P 20 - property PJ pr .°ved town U %o, N ; c for See A. C. Ray, ts. 1 | WHEN YOU HAVE GLASSES fitted I by Dr. Mann you have the satis faction of knowing they are correct. Then, too, his prices are reasonable, j SEED RYE at $1.25 per bushel; red clover seed 25c. per lb; crimson clover seed at 15c. pound. The Hard- j ware Store, Inc., Siler City, N. C. GET YOUR GAS on Saturday; fill 1 your tank at the Square Filling Sta- . tion. We can supply you with best. DORT AUTOMOBILE for sale; good engine and car runs good, will sell ! at a bargain. See Colin G. Shaw at The Record Office, Pittsboro. GOOD FARM FOR SALE near Pitts- I boro. Address Owner care of the Record. THE SQUARE FILLING STATION in court house square in Pittsboro has those good Auburn and United j States Tires and Tubes that give real service. Prices below the average. See them. ts. ~ EXPORTS WILL BE LARGER. | Savannah Firm Says Cotton Reports Show a Decline. (By Savannah Cotton Factorage Co.) j Savannah, Ga., Sept 15.—The re port of cotton consumed during Aug ust 1923 was given out yesterday as 491,604 bales as against 527,404 last | year. This showed a decline of 35,800 | bales, but was larger than the pre ! vious month. American mill stocks at ! the end of August were only 806,671 i bales as against 1,024,994 last year. ! Foreign exports thus far this year I amount to 362,000 bales as against ! 309,000 in 1922. There is also much more cotton on shipboard a waiting clearance now than there was at this | time last year. ! Foreign news continues to improve and it would not surprise us if ex ports this season prove to be larger than those of last year, provided more than five million bales are avail able from the present small crop. Consumption of cotton by American mills is increasing as fast as receipts of new cotton will permit. Spinners are said to be declining orders for distant deliveries, fearing an advance in the price of raw cotton. Heavy receipts and sales in Texas have failed to break the market down. The crop is so small outside of Tex as that it can be marketed slowly, i thus preventing a big decline. Crop ! news from* the eastern belt is any thing but favorable, and signs point to higher prices. Remedy for Hives.—Mix thorough ly a cupful of molasses, a tablespoon ful of powdered sulphur, and a tea spoonful of cream of tartar. Take a ! teaspoonful of this mixture every i morning before breakfast, until quite relieved. 1 Burns. —Make a paste of common baking soda and water, and apply it promptly to the burn. It will quickly check the pain and inflammation. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM ■ The first American locomotive to enter ac tual service was the “Best Friend" of 1830. Built in a New York foundry, shipped by sea to Charleston, it hauled the first passenger train on what is now the Southern Railway j ‘ Twenty-two hundred locomotives, some of them fifty times as heavy as this famous pioneer engine, and 70,000 cars, operating on 8,300 miles of Southern Railway System lines, are mnv doing the that was be* ■Ulf, v- r>! •S 3 :>v , f jjyr nati and Louisville—and the western gate l l\p fl ? f ways at St. Louis and Memphis—to the 111- \ 1 ocean ports of Norfolk, Charleston, Savannah, | fir ' 2 Brunswick and Jacksonville—and the Gulf H;j! | H. ' ports of Mobile and New Orleans. 11| Ij | Operated by men of the South, who have f|f been bred in its traditions to understand its M Vtjfff 1 ; srr problems and its needs, the Southern keeps / P mm i— " ’ pace with the South. The investment in its U |H‘ \\mS - - w »- r j'properties is now more than $710,000,000, V lYn fill A- of which $285,000,000 has been expended in I \f. ; - T the past, two decades. % I' I . With the continued cooperation of the people &' £ ; j ~\ of the South, we will be enabled to com > | 1 ,jT~' mand the capital for the greater transpor- tation facilities that Southern development &000,000 more than it * SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOUTH WANT A SCHOOL TRUCK TOO. Local and Personal News From Our Friends Around Browns Chapel. Pittsboro, Rt. 2, Sept. 17.—Since there are so many school trucks ov er the country, it seems there should be one up this way to carry at least the high school pupils to pittsboro. It I -is impossible lor them to make a 1 grade in six months, hence they are turned back two or three grades on , entering a standard high school. It I is, therefore, time and money wasted to try to run over the seven grades, i Mr. I. W. Durham and family, re- i turned Sunday night from a visit to ! Mr. and Mrs. K. B. Cole near Bynum. Mrs. Cole is recovering from a mad dog bite she received a short time ago. i Misses Lois Perry, Pauline Wright, i Blanche Cheek, and Mary Ellington left for Chapel Hill school last week and upon her arrival there Miss Mary Ellington was taken ill with typhoid ! fever. Mis Lelia Justice left Saturday for her school at Bells. Master Adrian Mann and little sis ! ter spent the week-end with their grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. j Mann. Mr. Henry Clegg, Jr., and family i and his sister, Miss Lizzie Clegg, spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. W. | Henderson. i Junius Durham spent Saturday night with his grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Durham. i i Mr. Will Jones and family, Mr.! Clarence Cole and family spent Sun day afternoon with Mr. N. R. Cole. 1 .M r - J* W. Dark and family were visitors at the home of his mother, Mrs. Emma Dark, last Sunday. They came also to be with his brother, Earl, who was thrown from a loaded wagon last week and run over, injur | ing him painfully but not seriously. I Miss Annie Lutterloh has returned from an extended visit to Sanford and Siler City. Mr. C. W. Lutterloh had another bad spell of kidney colic last week, j Dr. Hayden Lutterloh and wife, of Sanford, called in the homes of (T W. Lutterloh, and W. W. Lutterloh last week. ■j Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Dark called at the home of Mr.* Henry F. Durham Saturday afternoon and purchased a few of Henry’s splendid white Leg horn chickens. ; Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Justice, Miss Ethel Justice, Mrs. Straughan and Bracey Straughan, Mrs. Bright and Miss Beatrice Justice were callers at the home of Mr. T. O. Justice Sun j day afternoon. ! C. H. Lutterloh and family return ed Sunday from a ten-days visit in Arkansas and other places of inter est. Rev. J. J. Boone preached an able sermon on last Sunday morning on : “Love.” Sore Throat.—Gargle with mixture . of salf, vinegar and pepper everv 3 hours or put teaspoonful of baking soda in half glass of water and gargle freely. See Diphtheria. NORTH CAROLINA EVENTS.I | I News in Concise Form For The I Busy Reader. i Greensboro—Four homicide cases are to be tried in Guilford county this week. I Fayetteville—The contract is to be i let for the new hotel building on Oct ober 8. I Asheville—Richmond M. Pearson, diplomat and politician, is dead at his home here. I Greensboro— Jesse Benjamin, of the Vick Chemical Co., escaped death in Yokohoma, Japan. Maxton—Dr. J. O. McClelland caught a 10-pound bass in Florida. He had the head mounted. Winston-Salem—The 34th anual Conference of the Western North Car olina Methodist church meets here on October 17. Goldsboro—Wilmington Beach is the name of a new resort, 13 miles south of Wilmington. A 40 room ho tel is to be built there. Newberne—Seventy-five per cent of the cotton crop of Pamlico county has been destroyed by the boll weevil this season. Greensboro—Up to last Thursday 1400 students had registered at the N. C. College for Women. This is 100 more than ever before. Greensboro—James Hill, white, lost $2,000 in bond money, an automobile and 78 quarts of real Holland gin when he failed to show up for trial. Maxton—A heavy truck, loaded with groceries, fell through a bridge over a creek near town. Groceries were damaged and the truck rescued. Charlotte—Miss Virginia Shook was fined SIOO and costs by Judge Wade H. Williams for reckless driv ing in which two children were hurt. Salisbury—Roy A. Caudle, proprie tor of the Terminal Hotel, has been sent to the roads for 16 months. He operated the hotel for immoral pur poses. Salisbury—Judge Long sent Walter Parnell, young white man, to the county roads for a term of eight years for shooting deputy sheriff Lee Ran kin last week. 1 Wadesboro—oFr stealing a ham Judge Stack in sentencing the negro, had it incorporated in the sentence that the negro must not be allowed to eat any ham in sixty days. Durham —The Julian Carr Chap ter of the Daughters of Confederacy have refused to have anything to do with the dedication of a monument on the Bennett place where Sherman anc Johnson surrendered. j | NEW PRICES ON | 1 OVERLAND Automobiles f I NOW REDUCED TO— I I Delivered Delivered | I GET THE BEST THRE IS. SEE | | June N. Peoples f | FREE DEMONSTRATION PITTSBORO, N. C. J Our Furniture Arguments are mostly found in the Furniture itself. We gather from here, there and everywhere Furniture that we are glad to show you, glad to sell you and not afraid to guarantee. Because we know that every article that you put into your home will be advertising us for years. Is there a Furniture need in your home just now ? If so don’t get supplied until we have a chance to figure on it. Marley Furniture Company Funeral Directors and Embalmers. Siler City, N. C. Phone 21. Motor Hearse Service. foPPOTHf Ml We offer at bargain prices, cost not considered: '§§ One 8-horse Ingeco Oil Engine, new. H One 4-horse Ingeco Oil Engine, new. |Mj ml One 12-horse Ingeco Oil Engine, used. M Us One Wade Drag Saw, new. |R| | LEE HARDWARE CO. 1 || SANFORD, I THE WINCHESTER STORE. M jjjf Jwhy Not I BECOME A DIRECT 1 BUYER OF BONDS ? Many people are buying Bonds yet they do not know it. Part of the money deposited in Banks is invested by the - Banks in Bonds. Insurance Companies put much of their Capital into : Bonds. When Institutions of this kind buy Bonds it is certain that they are a safe purchase. I Alamance First Mortgage 6 Per Cent Gold Bonds furnish you the opportunity to become a direct buyer of bonds. They also yield you six per cent interest. Issued on property that has been justly appraised and is sued in denominations of SIOO, SSOO, SIOOO these bonds are an ideal investment. ALAMANCE INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO. BURLINGTON, N. C. , , CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $300,000. C. G. SOMERS, W. E. SHARP, m Field Representative, _ Manager. Bub ■■■■■■■ iiwi
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 20, 1923, edition 1
7
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