Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Dec. 20, 1923, edition 1 / Page 7
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TBYNUM FRIDAY. pLA' ' . personal Items of Interest ■local » nd t 0 Everybody. Tate for Last Week.) (Toe Lat 10 _ Ltt i e Nell Tie, By nU ' n, 0 i Mr- and M . rs * F^ P ’ lent last week m Durham |At» a f; e ?amlm°ther, Mis. J. B. At ■ with h er g ■ water- . d Lambeth and son of | J|r- Mr IL_B. and Miss Lffie i I lonesbo* o 'ith' pisses Lindley and ■ to Chapel Hill Sat ■ for the game. . , following Thanksgiving I On ?un : and Philathea class of the I the School went over to the county, ■ j ca rried fruits and candies I home tes there. IP° the Skon Atwater and family ,of II Jlr ' uro snert Thanksgiving in the ||lpreen ?l J r R ' g Lambeth. I Ijpome 0 J: a nd Lambeth have install- W At liehts in their store, and , IPv eIe * a l* some street lights. Be- Lrl' re , al !we hope to have the whole If tie ,ol Jr ?hte d. ■vi ■#* ‘ ( !t, lvinesS , the new pastor on m Re River circuit, marie a very inter to the school Monday feShool will give the plav “Dea- I Th^h s ” in the school auditorium; «“‘(Sav evening, December 21. Ad- ! on M !rw will be a Christmas tree and . nroeram at the church on Mon following. Public is cordial day ni- Loth. There will be a ly im !,i tme and program at Bock church but the date i Sp S been set for that yet. Pearl Johnson has returned , , vi«*it to Durham and Dunn, from a “POLLY.” A Grateful Little Friend. ThP editor of The Record has a lit- I tie friend over at Corinth. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. T. V. Sexton, and I vk name is Vance Lea. Occasionally «3 the little fellow a batch 9 f I “funnv papers” from our dailies, and I lad week he sent us a nice letter of !?l s We prize the letter highly, amUe have asked Santa Claus to be I exceptionally nice to him. . We highlv appreciate the friend ship of anv‘ person but we feel more I pride in the confidence of children. Women are said to be more adept in learning foreign languages than ■ are nl en. That's probably because they I are more fluent talkers. Bi WANTS ! Ml H |vo THOSE BUYING CANDIES and JM / \ fruits for Sunday school treats, see ■ Ei M. Connell as he has special prices m/ for supplies bought for such purpose. FOR YOUR CHRISTMAS treats and tilings lor ynmstniaS trees, see T. I M. Bland & Co. We are making spec l--y prices on goods for such occasions. I SEVEN PER CENT NON-TAXABLE ■ -LWe have a small amount of our seven per cent non-taxable Preferred Stock for sale at SIOO.OO per share, dividend payable tne Ist of March and September each year. Centra' Loan & Trust Co., W. W. Brown, Sec & Manager, Burlington, N. C. j3.c WANTED CEDAR POSTS, four inch es, up in diameter to as large as they grow, by eight feet long, both ends to be sawed off even. Bring four and five inch posts on separate loads from the larger posts. No doty posts or those with spikes or nails will be accepted. Deliver to Nooe’s Planing Mill. D. B. Nooe, Pittsboro. ts. T. M. BLAND & CO., have every thing you need in apples, oranges, candies, nuts and all kinds of Christ mas goodies, at a special price. FOR SALE—2S acres land, near church, 4 miles north of Siler City, one-half cleared, house and outbuild ings, spring, good orchard. W. M. Sil er, Siler City, Rt. 1. Dec.2op MONEY TO LOAN—We have $50,000 to loan to the farmers of Chatham county within the next ninety days at o 1-2 per cent interest and from 1 to <53 years time. Chatham Realty Co., _• K- Johnson, secretary, Pittsboro ti LUMBER OF ALL KINDS~and tty. Florida kiln dried ceiling and oonng; we buy cross ties standing Bland° dS ° r delivered t 0 road - w - F * \ICTOR BRAND Clothing, dry goods ii* p n ®h°ns; lowest wholesale prices. f are P a id both ways to mer £° to Salisbury to buy. Prices today. V. Wallace & /L° Salisbury, N. C., E. E. Barring s Dec. 20. IP p IT ? G , OOD GASOLINE AND THE °jl» we have it. Get a tank full m ; ii n and o l no l ;e I'be difference in the bor 0 age * CJUare filling Station. Pitts- tfc -•f’v GA ? DY , ORANGES, APPLES, EnffuJi? raisins, Brazil nuts, wa l nu ts, bananas and ot ° ■ Connelll I \p°£ fect i| olieries ’ see R. M. body an/v bought to supply every can’t be beat qUa ity and prices he AND CLEANING done Club Mai y by I The Siler Oity Pressing tention a ‘Plages given prompt at- Located^n^^ etu ™ ed Postage prepaid. Strppf cm Stone s Barber Shop, Main N. C. ts. R *fiehl Y r P u°u ß SHIPMENT WAKE hundrpri a o b ? ge P lants at 12 l-2c. a FVm d* Poland Reeves, Bloomfield N. C. Dc2o-c S ans o Yby buying Ball Band have f° n bottom shoes. You don’t Crutrbfioi ~h alf- sole them. At C. B. N. C. ts f^jL RR AGE IN TOWN to get your nnf’ raiSins or any kind of Christ- lsT m._ B land & Co. ''car^f VE FIVE HUNDRED~BAG bv thp +- new sa lt rolling, will be here saR i 0 f ll ! 16 you read this ad. New boro better * R * M - Connell, Pitts * ts OLD CHATfIAM PASTOR DEAD, i Movements of People in and Around Bear Creek. (Too Late for Last Week). Bear Creek, Dec. 10.—Mrs. W. H. Murray, who has been very ill, is im proved greatly, her friends will learn with pleasure. Miss Wanme Fields, of Durham, has ' been visiting her sister, Mrs. W. H. 1 Murray . Mr. R. L. Phillips has moved to Mr.! J. J. Norwood’s place; Mr. W. R. i Davis has moved from the Southern place to the farm vacated by Mr. Phil lips; Mr. A. F. Willett has moved from L. M. Field’s place to the Rives j place which he has bought. C. P. Phillips, of R.. 1„ had the misiortune of losing his dwelling house last Monday, December 3rd, by lire. Very little was saved. Mr. L. M. Fields was a visitor on Rt. 2 during the week-end. Mr. Branson, of Ramseur, visitea at Mr. Charles Wicker’s home Sun- * day. Mrs. M. E. Saunders, of <»Raleigh, has been visiting her parents. Mr* a ?\ d rs * . D. F. Ferrell and son, Elvid, of Greensboro, Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Phillips Mr. and Mrs. G. V* Councilman and Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Phillips all of Bear Creek, Rt. 1, ! were Sunday visitors in the home of 1 Mr. Joe J. Cheek. . Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Loyd, of Burl ington were week-end visitors in the home of Mr. J. W. Loyd. Rev. M. D. Hix, a retired Method ist minister, died at his home in West Durham Monday, December 3rd. Rev. Hix served the Goldston circuit dur ing 1911-12. Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Ellis of Golds ton, spent Sunday in the home of Mr. W. A. Coggins. Mr. C. J. Rives is visiting in Leaks viile and Burlington this week. Miss Clara Brooks is visiting in Sil er City. OBSERVATIONS. Bv Rambler. “Let me see your tongue,” said Dr. Chapin to a young man pat ; ent. “Ah! ha! you have the shirt waist tongue. You have no coat on it, but you are all right.” One of our young men was asked the other day what love was. He re plied that “love was an itchy feeling 1 around the heart which could not be scratched.” “Preachers look for safety first as well as anybody else,” remarked a young lady. “I noticed a car Friday as it slid into a ditch on West Street and was about to turn over, and the first man that hopped out was a preacher. I didn’t blame him, tho.” “At last Pittsboro is on a boom,” remarked a citizen Saturday. “I not iced workmen were digging up the rotten sidewalk on the north side of West Street. That was the worst side walk in the town and has been an eye sore for years. Let’s thank the town commissioners for the improvements they are making.” “Young bobbed haired girls are all right,” remarked a citizen, “but when married women bob their hair it’s all wrong. I knocked on the door of a house here the other day as I want ed to see a person who lived there, when a lady with bobbed hair ,a dress cut short at. both ends, a stranger to me, came to the door. I said ‘good morning, young miss,’ thinking she was a young girl. Then she turned | red in the face and remarked, ‘Thank you, I am a mother and have a daugh ter two years old.’ Well, sir, I was so taken aback that I forgot ( what J went to that house for.” BOYS, IT’S CHRISTMAS TIMES. Christmas has rolled around again l ( and ain’t you glad, boys and girls? We older people are glad for you. But, , say, old folks, 1 t’s you and I go back j to our chi ‘hoo 1 days again. Have ' you forgot how you peeped out from under the kiver to see if old Santa had come down the chimney and brought you a present? Don’t you recollect how you used to eat so much candy and raisins, peanuts and ap-} pies that you could eat no breakfast? And how we little boys tooted our horns and our little sisters played with their dolls ? Can’t you turn your mind back and see yourself when San ta Claus came and how happy you were. How happy mammy a"d daddy were! Can’t you see the picture of yourself in your children today? You were happy in your young childhood and you are happy today because your little children are happy. Ain’t it a blessing that once a year i BILLIE SUNDAY . ) IN " I (Zttutrlortc GDbservcL j SIX WEEKS FOR SI.OO. Every sermon delivered by the world’s greatest evangelist during the six weeks’ re vival campaign he will open in Charlotte, December 30, will be printed in full in the issue j following its delivery. 1 j Billy Sunday’s thrilling phraseology, his striking gestures and platform antics, and the maimer in which his sermons are received by thousands who will jam the specially con structed tabernacle, will be duly recorded by an Observer staff reporter. The fact that The Observer is a morning paper will enable it to give a more complete re port of the services than any other Charlotte newspaper. In addition to the complete Sunday reports, The Observer will carry every piece of news developing in North and South Carolina, the local news handled by a large corps of re porters, and the world news gleaned from a complete Associated Press service. Features, comics, special articles of general interest and an editorial page second to none in the South, make up a paper that is more than desirable. SPECIAL RATE OF ONE DOLLAR TO NEW SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE SIX WEEKS IF SENT IN BEFORE DECEMBER 20. we can forget our troubles and sor rows and look back and see ourselves as we see our children today. | Good old Christmas. Happy days for the many kids today, who will be grown tomorrow with their children looking for Santa Claus as we looked for him in our childhood. ! But go to it, you old folks. Get 'mung again. Let the women get their dolls or babies and the old men their horns and let’s all be young with the children of today. JOE SNYDER, who doesn’t care today whether he has i any job or not. This is Christmas. ! BROOKS & EUBANKS We have the biggest stock of Christmas Gifts and Toys I ever carried. Also a full line of Fruits, Candies, Nuts, P Raisins. In fact everything good to eat. g A full line of Trunks, Bags Suit Cases and many other I Dependable things that make useful, practical Christmas Gifts. BROOKS X EUBANKS PITTSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA. . "nnniM 11 imunimwMß— Second Tax Round For your convenience I will be at the places as below stated for the purpose of collecting taxes: January 1924 Walter Mann’s Store Tuesday Morning 1 G. W. Perry's Store Tuesday Afternoon 1 J. I. Lindley's Residence Tuesday Night 1 Hargrove's Store, near Buckner's Shop __ Wed. Afternoon 2 Kimbolton, Burke's Store Thursday Morning 3 Wesley Thomas' Store, Thomas' MilL Thursday Aft. 3 T.M. Teague's Store Friday Afternoon 4 Goldston, Bank Saturday All Day 5 C. G. Sharpe's Store Tuesday Morning 8 Gulf, Bank Tuesday Afternoon 8 Bear Creek, Emerson's Store Wedn'day Morning 9 Bennett, Bank Wednesday Afternoon 9 Rock Hill Supply Co's. Store Thursday Morning 10 W. A. Phillips' Store Thursday Afternoon 10 Ore Hill, Cheek's Store Friday Afternoon 11 Bonlee, Bank All Day Saturday 12 Jim Hamlet's Store Tuesday Morning 22 W. A. Allen's Store Tuesday Afternoon 22 Bynum, Moore's Store Wednesday Afternoon 23 Moncure, Bank Saturday Afternoon 26 Please arrange to meet me at the place most conven ient to you and settle your taxes promptly. Thanking you to co-operate with me, I am, Yours very truly, G. W. BLAIR, Sheriff. Jailed in Sanford. Sanford Exprses. Sam Dorsett who hails from Chat ham County, and Marie Withers, who is though tto have come to this place from Greensboro, were arrested here last Sunday night by officers, charg ed with immoral conduct. They were placed in the city lockup and given a preliminary hearing before Mayor Fitts Monday morning. In default of a bond of S2OO each they were sent to jail to await trial at the next term of Lee Superior Court. LOOK AT YOUR LABEL I' Everything You Need in GROCERIES We have everything you need in fancy and staple Gro ceries at reasonable prices. The housewife is well ac quainted with our service—attention—and the quality of our product. Here you’ll find high quality and low price. BOONE BROS. - - Ernest and Jarvis PITTSORO, WHEN THE SHADOWS LENGTHEN! Do you want to wander happily toward the setting sun? Peace and contentment and independence? A life well-lived ? Then you must start saving now. There is no choice— “as ye sow, so shall ye reap.” Start at this Bank Today! THE FARMERS’ BANK A. C. RAY, Vice-Pres. T. M. BLAND, Pres. ERNEST WILLIAMS, VICTOR R. JOHNSON, Assistant Cashier. Cashier. !! j MOTHER—SiIk Stockings. || WIFE—Silk Stockings. || DAUGHTER—SiIk Stockings. M COUSIN JANE—SiIk Stockings. M KATHERINE—SiIk Stockings. M SALLIE’S MOTHER—SiIk Stockings. J| SISTER—SiIk Stockings. || AUNT LUCY—SiIk Stockings. M MARY—SiIk Stockings. |j| JOHN’S WIFE—Silk Stocking.s M Humming Bird Silk Hosiery $1.50 a Pair. in| STROUD & HUBBARD 1 H THE SHOE AND HOSIERY STORE. |f II SANFORD, NORTH CAROLINA M I Eyes of the World Are on the! < ► Jbt Economical Transportation \ ► Sales and Service j \ \ Parts Depot I > Bonlee Motor and Machine Works, | l Bonlee, N. C. * f f I *tn Itttt ft 01M M ttt M IMI EAGLE No. 174 For Sale at your Dealer Made In ti to grades ! ask for the yellow pencil with the red band EAGLE MIKADO EAGLE PENCIL COMPANY, NEW YORK
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 20, 1923, edition 1
7
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