Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Oct. 16, 1924, edition 1 / Page 6
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fAolUotnvllit WJ | Sit We repair Automobiles and fix ? Fords. All work guaranteed. \ \ Give us a trial. Opposite Bank S S of Pittsboro. Phone 74. c § ORGANIZED IN 1903 The name of this institution has stood for financial soundness and efficient service for nearly quarter of a century. On this record we are seeking new business.— May we serve you? BANK OF PITTSBORO PITTSBORO, N. C. A. H. London, Pres. James L. Griffin, Cashier. » Better than a Mustard Plaster p _ i j p i j 11 a For C° u 8“ 8 ant * Colds, Head aches, Neuralgia, Rheumatism T I L%|3iTl 11J and All Aches and Pains y IHlm\f jll ALL DRUGGISTS 35c and 65c, jars and tubes I 1 For Twenty Years j A fifth of a century, through panic and war, good | times and poor, this Bank has steadily grown, and prospered, always serving Sanford and vicinity with— | EFFICIENT BANKING SERVICE | Banking Loan and Trust Co., SANFORD, We Pay 4 Per Cent Compounded Quarterly. 1 J. W. Cunningham, W. S. Weatherspoon, W. W. Robards, President Vice-Pres. Cashier. I R. E. CARRINGTON, Chairman of Board. JJ £ ~ 1 | JONESBORO: / MONCURE: I | I. P. Lasater, Cashier J. K. Barnes. | Tlie Modern The new style note is here sub £7 mitted with unerring good taste, 3 distinction, dignity and refinement. .fik These exclusive effects are present- Jgggpj flmk ed in the Fall exhibit of Good Clothes * A The suits and light-weight over coats are superbly tailored of the I finest all-wool fabrics. Priced to - /////BBMwZfflfzlf give you the maximum in value. *» c. R. BOONE “Good Quality Spells What Boone Sells” DeLuxe Clothiers RALEIGH, N. C \! < > . Musical Merchandise Os Quality O # i > !! vli PIANOS—YICTROLAS— RECORDS, !! Darnell & Thomas J! Our Reputation Is Youxlnsurance” ;?i- « ;; 118 FAYETTEVILLE ST. !* i * RALEIGB, N. G | acre has been secured by the Division of Agronomy of the State College Ex periment Station in its tests with seed com selected from the field as contrated with seed obtained from the crib. In some cases the increased yield was as high as eight bushels per acre with the same variety. This in itself proves that it pays to select in the field, the seed com for next year’s planting, state the agronomy workers. Seed carefully selected in the crib next spring is better than no se’ec tion at all because poor seed results in poor stands, waste of land and la bor and in low yields at harvest. Ag ronomy workers advise that before the corn is cut for shocking or be fore it is gathered, go into the field and secure more than twice as much as will be eeded for next years’s planting. The grower needs to get his as will be needed for next year’s planting. The grower needs to get his seed ears from the kind of stalks that he would like to have growing in his fields next year. When the desired amount has been, secured, the ears should be stored in a place where they will be dry and free from rots and weevils. Some good farmers hang their seed ears by strings or wires rafters and others use tight bins. Next spring, the best of these field selected ears may be used for seed and the remainder discarded. It is also wise to make a germination test before planting to be sure that a good stand will be se cured. Where seed com is carefully selected in the field each year and a good seed patch is planted to supply the needed amount of seed for the entire farm, yields will be improved and the corn will more nearly pay for the time, labor and fertilizer Msec! in growing it, say the agronomy work ers. _ _ ARE YOU A GOOD CITIZEN? No man or woman is a good citi zen until they may have benefited their time by their work. To determine for betterment to pro mote progress and decency these are basic principles of patriotism. No person is a good American be cause they may be orderly—that much is expected—he has not fulfilled his responsibilites until he has determined to make it an obligation to help im prove the standards that he found waiting for him. Because one observes the law, pays taxes, liquidates debts and contributes occasionally to charity, and votes “the straight ticket” is no criterion that he is a -good citizen and the peer of a neighbor. The neighbor might not be the peer of his own traditions. The neighbor hood itself might be indifferent. The community is probably apathetic in many ways and probably found want ing. “He could have sold his honor, but he chose To garb his soul in clean resplen dent robes, And wear his thread-bare patches on his clothes. He held his manhood stalwart to the end, He hungered, but his conscience never starved. He kept the faith with self-respect and friend.” O. P. TIMIST. OUR HALL OF FAME — " sr xr\ NO.&a, NWJ NtNGfc WKAfti /Q* fc FAOJ&R. SKUWUft A AMH Os msSE Tfce Parmer runs Second to nobody i in Importance because he raises Food, a&d without it None of us Would be Important long. Farming |s the Old- ' est Vocation and One of the Most Dig. ! nifted, hut the Farmer works Bard, and when He has earned Enough to him Wen Sir Charles A. Parsons, an Eng lish engineer, proposes to dig a hole in the ground 12 miles deep, to see what kind of minerals he can find. Would take 50 years to dig it. > i tfcjjyyyy / tooch v -the < \ i .. r Rsfssisr / goodies ,oh \ te- I I I MAMMA'S ■ stiEL f V f 1 CmmS== BECAUSE THAT 3 WHAT 6AVE _ , I * WmMwtmi PAPA INDI 6ESTIOt4/ W‘- l AND \ KNOW f | \^^ FeW,LO ) Ay-- I e» [. BIG CONFERENCE ON WAYS ’1 TO MAKE OLD ROADS NEW ■ ■ . t iifu ". T"rr.iir.mri iimiiNi--v-ri.nir^n'~~mrrni|‘ Nin^ii j . Salvaging old roads by resurf ac ; ing them, as shown in this section j of the old Maine Post Road, w fear- I tare of Louisville program. FIVE thousand invitations have been sent to highway officials, engineers, contractors and ; material men in most of the States ( between New England and the Rocky Mountains for a good roads conference at Louisville, Ky. t Octo her 13-15. ! Chief among the measures to be * discussed are methods of salvaging i old gravel and macadam roads by ! using them as bases for asphalt sut ! faces, thus saving vast sums to tax { payers. | The conference is to be held un , der the auspices of The Asphalt \ Association, which held largely at- I tended similar conferences at Den ver last year and at Atlanta the | year before. Among the speakers on the pro gram are E. W. James, chief or de i sign, U. S. Bureau of Public Roads) ! Major C. P. Fortney, Chairman, - .West Virginia State Highway Com mission, which is building a fifty j million dollar highway system; W. I R* Neel, state highway engineer of / Georgia, where a movement looking ' to a vast increase In the state high way program is under way; Charles l M. Upham, state highway engineer of North Carolina, the state which ’ now pleads all others in highway provemeat: Col. R. K. Compton, di- \ rector of Public Works, Richmond, Fa.» €•* A. of the New Dr- l. ;T«WOS ITIAT WEVER HAPPEBi 5 1, §• ' "Mty.l HO^Ti-V^ ii . ! HATe To sew - - J Jg 4 you -this riH.H.I '1 / /*!» s£Venry /. R. DRANEY, President The Asphalt Association leans Refining Co.; Herbert Spen cer of the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey; Prevost Hubbard, chemical engineer of The Asphalt Associa tion, formerly chief of research U. S. Bureau of Public Roads, and J. E. Pennybacker, secretary and general manager of The Asphalt Association, formerly chief econo mist, U. S. Bureau of Public Roads, An old fashioned Kentucky barbe cue as well as smokers <£Md musical programs will feature the locwl entertainment. .* While the salvaging of old roa& is to be the feature of the confess ence, other subjects on the program are “How the Highway Industries Can Best Serve the Interests of the Public in Highway Improvement,** “Sand Asphalt,** “Black Bose,** “Re search Work In Asphalt Paving/ “Advantages of Bona Issues in tne ' Construction of State Highway Sys- J £ jos** and “Asphalt Maintenance.* ■I to the Pittsboro High year course in Teacher now offered as an additi on > i work in the high school Thi year is given to an intense'J of the work of the elemental by the students whose to become a teacher. 6lt i Provision for Practice i„ T The most important activitv 7 1 course is the daily period students have in practice t. For the first few weeks of the students observe class w* 1 This is purposeful observati,!*' 1 under direction of the instm* Teacher Training. Students !" quired to study the lessons tW to observe; then the observation,’ * followed by a conference K ri,l which the steps in the l essoi J ure are pointed out. Following weeks observation work, the themselves, begin their first w using at first small groups dren and starting with the eii subjects to teach, and then gtad !! working up to the more difficult jects. This enables the students! acquire something of the teenig* teaching and lesson planning * having to wrestle in the with class room management and* cipiline. Late they are able to W an entire grade and are given 2 practice. As the work progegJ two-weeks period is giver! toobsel tion and practice teaching i n them schools. Next spring a demonstrate class of children who hav e never to school before will be organized! teachers under the direction of 4 Instructor in Teacher Training. Other Courses Offered In addition to the work in pradj teaching a course is offered in n eral pedagogy, which comprises oba vation and practice. This course) eludes study of child psychology, Content courses are offered in & lish,. history, geography and in J metic. The students are also gi? ( courses in penmanship, drawing, j dustrial arts, public school music,! physical education. Thus it will seen that the student teachers a given the practical training they net to teach in the elementary grad of the public schools. The Class at Pittsboro. There are now enrolled in this 4 partment of the Pittsboro High Scha ten students under the direction Miss Ruth Berry who comes to Piti boro from the Teachers’ Training! partment of Winthrop College. The! partment is well equipped with sti dard material for teaching, isl equipment was furnished by Chai county. The state department of cation furnishes to Chatham cq the services of the instructor.. Opportunity.* From the above report it carl seen that an opportunity close atha is given to young people who areas bitious to teach but for various res ons cannot go to a normal school! college. Through this course they® be able to secure the should enable them to become success ful teachers. i State Director’s Visit. Mrs.. T. S. Johnson, of the Department of Education, who is wonderfully efficient director of work throughout the state, has recent made a visit to the Department l Pittsboro and reports that we an interested and earnest class! l that the work has started well. 1 influence of this work will be* throughout the county. > JI “JESUS PAID IT ALL”— BILLS INCLUDED. M Sanford Express. >B The following paragraph from the columns of the County News applies to Sanfo *■ well as Lillington and other ttW » in the country: JH “You’d be surprised to i se *!hß names in this stack of unpaid g bills and then look out and s f V £H a delightful time they are i ing in big automobiles and P u iM swell social suctions.” said ceryman who seemed to be J® about the future of his After further meditations he e ■ himself of this bit of “But after a man fails the *sm folks who owe him for his g° be the first to remark that ure was the result of a l ac business capacity.” Here you mor and pathos blended in tence. Probably this gy ocer , s ,- r s‘l ers find away to relieve . science by singing in the ftfl the old familiar song, ‘ Jesu All”—grocery bills included^ PAY MONTHLY for home painted. 1 J}i ial, do the work and let you tial payments monthly. - • t poi ough, Pittsboro, LOOK AT THE LABEL ON
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 16, 1924, edition 1
6
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