Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / June 10, 1926, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, June 10,1926 W g raduate nurse ■ pittsboro for the time being, llnI In Luc jie Peterson, a recent gradii ■ a nurse , offers her professional t 0 the P eo?le of Chatham Eunty- • PARLOR Bffers Superior Funeral Service Embalming Baskets - Accessories - Coffins Eparate Hearse Service Main lined for Colored Patrons C. ROLLINS DENTIST Siler City, N. C. I office over Siler Drug Store. * I Hours Ba. m., to 6p. m. hITES-STINGS Apply wet baking soda or house ■l J hold ammonia, followed by rvtSKs Ovr 21 Million Jar* Usmd Yoarbr Renew Your Health I by Purification ■w physician will tell you that Perfect Purification of the System ■ Nature’s Foundation of Perfect lealth” Why not rid yourself of Ironic ailments that are unfiermin lg your vitality? Purify your en !e system by taking a thorough ■urse of Calotabs, —once or twice a lek for several weeks—and see how ■ature rewards you with health. ■Calotabs are the greatest of all ■stem purifiers. Get a family pack ■e, containing full directions. Only ■ cts. At any drug store. (Adv.) DYES" I COLOR THINGS NEW j Ijust Dip to Tint or Boil to Dye ! I Laeh 15-ccnt pack age contains direc- I tions so simtile any ■L\woman can tint soft delicate shades or ' dye rich, permanent r ) colors in lingerie, : silks, ribbons* skirts, waists, dresses, coats —s stockinets, sweaters, nan" ;Ti Ts every-thing! Buy Diamond Dyes—no other kind ■and tell your druggist whether the aterial you wish to color is wool or lk. or whethc- it is linen, cotton or HA\ Lj VOLK LYES EAAMiiNED* BY AN EXPERT—COSTS NO § MORE | Dr. J. C. Marin, the well knowng eyesight Specialist and Opticiang will be at Dr. Farrell’s office in 8 Pittsboro, N. C., every fourth Tues-g day and at Dr. Thomas’ office, Silerg in each month. Headache relievedg City, N. C., every fourth Thursdays caused by eye strain. Wher g he fits you with glasses you havtg the satisfaction of knowing that g they are correct. Make a note ofg the date and see him if your eyesg are weak. H His next visit to Pittsboro will b»g on Tuesday, J an e 22. 8 His next visit to Siler Citv will b* H . on Thursday. June 24. § flew Method Quickly Banishes Heavy Coughs Why be annoyed and weakened by Persistent, strength-sapping coughing spells when you can, through a very treatment, quickly stop all irri tation and very often banish the trouble entirely in 24 hours? This treatment is based on the fa m°us p rescr iption known as Dr. King’s in 7 Dlscover y for Coughs. You take just one teaspoonful at bed-time and '2? H l! } y°ur throat for 15 or 20 sec nas before swallowing it. The pre-. < nption has a double action. It not irri» ? 00thes an< f heals soreness and nhil atlon ’ ut quickly removes the an< * congestion which are the c ?“ se of night coughing. Thus, . f . e throat soothed and cleared, iii st °P s quickly and you sleep all night undisturbed. ' fo^i,3l ng ' s New Discovery is for no*? k* che ? CO^S « s °re throat, hoarse- FiS ? ronc , hltis , spasmodic croup, etc. um l° r , chil dren as well as grown ton Economical, Ail* a. ~ ose is only one teaspoon- druggists. Ask for DfysyNgs CougHS SUCCESSFUL YEAR : HAD BY BAPTISTS / i Convention at Houston Hoard Many l Gratifying Reports on Work. Bvtiluttaii Denoaaeed. i $9,000,000 GOAL ■IS SR I - - . This Objective fee* Jfhdoni aud Benerolenoea * B» Bmgks By Co-operative Pseaiea r>— aiou for 1927. T* . Following aa ttammtmlfy goad i*e - ® p< f bi the work of the Waal efcgiehaa •f 4 Iff; •««•"*■*** an tha mio •ion fWlda, thorf hwl jwt bean held at Houston, Texas, one of the moet fffaioaa of the Southern Baptist Convention in recent taarn The 'session was marked by unusual unity, definiteness of purpose and determination' to carry forward the work of the Cooperative Program. . ~ ■kHmE JV *' i DR. GfcO. W. McDANIEL President Southern Baptist Con vention. Following the re-election of Dr. George W. McDaniel, Richmond, Va., as president, he sounded in his inau gural address a conviction on the theory of evolution that was prompt ly and unanimously adopted by the Convention as its own sentiment. Dr. McDaniel said: “I am happy to believe that this Convention accepts Genesis as teach ing that man was the special crea- > tion of God and rejects every theory, evolution or other, which teaches that man originated in, or came by way of, a lower animal ancestry.” With the evolution question dis posed of, the Convention was able .to proceed with a consideration of its great missionary and benevolent enterprises. Here are some of the outstanding I developments of the Convention: . GOAL OF $9,600,000 SET UP j 1. In the Hope of enabling the | mission boards and other agencies | of the Convention to take care of their indebtedness gradually without , having to top greatly curtail their ’ present work, an objective of $9,000,- 000 for missions, education and be nevolences was set up for 1927, on recommendation of the Co-operative Program Commission. This money will be applied to foreign, home and : state missions, , Baptist schools, : orphanages and hospitals and minis > terial relief, thus taking care of | ; both the state and Southwide Bap- j : tist work. It is hoped the South- ; : wide portion of the budget * will : amount to at least $4,000,000. 2. An effort will be made to en : list 500,000 tithers during the next : year. S. The Foreign Mission Board : reported 18,269 baptisms on its. fields : during the year, a gain of about | over the, previous year.' The ; board has 1,215 churches on the for • eign fields with 140,488 members, > 8,247 out-stations where preaching > services axe held from time to time, ' and 528 missionaries and 2,644 na~ | tive Christian workers employed in > 17 countries. . , 4. Among the results for the year : reported by the Home Mission Board 1 were 833 missionaries employed. 19,744 baptisms, additions to i the churches, 100 new churches and 458 Sunday schools organised, and 402 church houses built or improved. DENOMINATION GIBW DURING • YEAR 5. The Sunday School Hoard $•- ported total business receipts for the year of $1,710,471. Os this amount $380,344 was put back into the gen eral work of the denomination. A to tal of 89,038 awards in teacher training were made, 403 churches were aided by the Architectural De partment in drawing plans for new houses of worship, the number of standard Sunday schools reached 546. With the gains for the past *ear , the main figures of the denomina tion are now given by the statistical secretary of the Convention as fol lows: 86,467 churches, 19,908 or dained ministers, 8,649,330 church members, 21,760 Sunday schools with 2,681,828 pupils, 20,965 church j houses, 3,197 pastors’ homes, $165,- ! 909,278 invested in local church i property $30,771,574 contributed to j local church objects, $8,255,485 to missions and benevolences and $39,- j 027,099 to all purposes during the past year. The time is now ripe for a dis tinct Baptist advance aL along the I line and especially in a support of i tne great missionary and benevolent enterprises fostered by the Co | operative Program, the Convention leaders believe. BUREAU OF HEALTH EDUCATION, If. C. STATE BOARD OF HEALTH HAY FEVER vRIOME persons are very aensi tive to the sting of the bee, jgßkirothers scarcely t BbSidw all. An instance recalled of a perfectly healthy child who on one occasion was stung on thp finger by a bee and within a few mih uteß was completely prostrate. Both eyes were swollen shut and the entlris body greatly disfigured. The heart action and respiration were disturbed and the child appeared dan gerously ill. There were at the homis of the child many colonies of heeb and the child was frequently stung and. always with marked reaction, but only this one time was it so severe. That child possessed a peculiar sensitiveness to the protein injected by the bee when stinging. The father of that child felt a bee sting like the prick of a pin, but the place could scarcely be found a few minutes latei*. The father was immune to that kind of foreign protein. In exactly .he same way, many peo ple are hypersensitive to various foreign proteins. When grasses and plants blossom they give off pollens which act as foreign proteins to which some people are peculiarly susceptible. When these pollens in the air get onto the mucous membranes of eyes, nose and throat of susceptible persons they set up violent reactions. The irritating substance causes reddening of the conjunctiva, and swelling of the tear ducts. There is increased secre tion of .tears which cannot drain ofT through the swollen shut tear ducts and hence the eyes “water”. In jthe mucous membrane of nose and thtfoat there is the same condition. In an Effort to expel the irritant there' is anuch sneezing. When the nasal pas sages become so swollen that it is hard to breathe through the nose, the patient begins breathing through the mouth. If the patient still remains in a polluted atmosphere then these ir ritating pollens are inhaled directly ■ into the lungs where the bronchi and I | bronchioles become congested so that breathing is difficult. This stage is called asthma. The entire body is equally sensitive except where the outer protective lay er of the epidermis prevents the ab sorption of these pollens. If this pro tective layer of epidermis is broken by a slight pin scratch and the offend ing pollen applied to the scratch there will result a red and swollen wheal. I By utilizing this point the physician is enabled to use test pollens on scratches in the skin and thus deter mine the exact pollen or pollens which cause the individual damage. In many cases frequently repeated small in jections of an extract of the offending pollen will finally produce in the in dividual a degree of relative im munity. Many things other than plant pol ! lens cause hay fever and asthma. Dander of horses, dogs, cats, feathers and many foods cause severe reactions in some people. The Disappearing Party Line Chapel Hill Weekly. President Coolidge’s speech at Williamsburg is one more bit of evidence of the absence of any real line of cleavage, in princi ples and policies, between thej Republican and Democratic par-j ties. Here a Republican Presi-| dent, championing the good old Democratic doctrine of states’ rights, was interrupted by Virginia audience. Everywhere rounds of applause from his we find one party embracing some tenet, or so-called princi ple, of* the other, or surrendering one of its own. North Carolina is Democratic—yet everybody who knows anything about sen timent in North Carolina knows that the most influential inter est in the state, the textile in terest, would well nigh die of fright if it thought there was any danger of a low tariff such as Democratic platforms de mand. And the Democratic states of the South threw Jeff ersonianism over with the ut most indifference when they supported national prohibition. In the Greensboro News R. R. Clark observes, sagely, that the opposition to centralized gov-j ernment quickly disappear? I when we decide state autonomy j stands in the way of our get-! ting what we want. “The prin ciple is ignored/’ he says; “the THE CHATHAM RECORD object aimed at overshadows all objection.” With the presi dential nominating conventions two years off the Democratic party leaders are still franti cally searching for an issue— and they find that every one they pick up either dribbles a way like water or burns like a hot poker. Perhaps Hie Repub licans, too, have no great issue. But they don’t need one. They bank on “Let well enough a lone.” This may not be an in spiring battle-cry, but it has a powerful appeal, in times of peace and quiet, to the vast ma jority of voters—to the millions of the specimen that Mencken Calls the homo boobiens. .■ : i Hhi ! •’ f ;, jji 1 Another “Bull” Durham 1 j&P; advertisement by Will f Rogers, Ziegfeld Follies 1// and screen star,and lead- A// . Ing American humorist* / More coming. Watch £ Jjfmaf • for theta. ♦ The Farmer Can’t Stand Much More Help Like He Has Been Getting Congress say they are helping the Farmer. They are inWashingtonON salary. He is home trying to pay it. Farmers have had more advice and less relief than a wayward son. If ad vice sold for 10c a column, Farmers would be richer than Bootleggers. And when they get all through ad vising, there is just one thing will help the Farmers. That is eliminate some of the middlemen and let the two ends meet. The Consumer and the Producer are two men in America that have never even seen each other. Cut out the middle and tie the two ends together. When a steer starts from the feed pen to the table, there is about 10 to take a bite out of him, before he reaches the family that pay for him. Who wears the best clothes or i drives the best car, the fellow who raises a bushel of wheat, or the work ing fellow who goes up to buy a sack of flour? Why neither one of them. The ones in between these two have their private Tailor and “Straight Eights.” The Government just told Agri culture, “You are in a hole.” They didn’t offer to pull them out, but they did say, “We will get down in there with you. ” I want to tell you right here, I don’t know what would have hap pened to the poor farmer if it had not been for his old friend, “Bull” Durham. It’s the only thing he has been absolutely able to rely on. And I want him to know that myself and “Bull” Durham are with him right to the poor house door. P. S. There will be another piece here a few weeks from now. Look for it. Bull Durham Guaranteed by INCOAPORATKD 111 Fifth Avenue, New York City Standards. I | The nationally known J f roofing products sold ex- | 1 ciusively in this territory by | Budd-Piper are standards I J for judging: v I ■ i Johns-Manville Asbestos I \ Roofing; I Richardson Super-Giant I 5 Shingles; I j Rubberoid Strip Shingles; I f § Cor co Galvanized Roof- I I ing and Shingles; I \ Potts’ A. li T. Roofing Tin; I Buckingham and Vt. Slate; I j Ludowici Tile Roofing, I | ♦ 1 I -S'" i . / 7/ie BUDD-PIPER' ! 1 ROOFING CO. ; ■ r' ' DURHAM . Jl. j • !»• N-C- i ■ i * # * .?• \ * . Have Your Car Washed ]| 111 * at Boone’s Service Station Just out of town south of the' Court House. No sudstitute with ’us. We !| ve satisfaction I Remember us for i|| Gas, Oils, and Gennine Service. R. E. Boone, Manager. im:n«mmmmm«tm»»K»!n»mn»:!»nwmßß»»:n»:twß»»t»::minm»amf : j Perry’s Garage Phone 400 SANOFRD N. C —Dealers In— Dodge Brothers Motor Car | Parts and Service. , STATEMENT AMERICAN RESERVE FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY CONDITION DECEMBER 31, 1925, AS SHOWN BY STATEMENT FILED DOLLARS Amount of Capital paid in cash, 400,000.00 Amount Ledger Assets Dec. 31st previous year, $3,265,114.62, Increase paid-up capital, None; Total, 3,265,114.02 Income —From Policyholders, $1,420,719.54; Miscellaneous, $255,989.55, Total, 1,676,709.09 Disbursements —To Policyholders, $1,464,660.10; nno AO Miscellaneous, $676,347.92, Total, 2,141,008.02 Fire Risks —Written or renewed during year, $820,718,167.00 In force, * 787,490,007.00 All Other Risks—Written or renewed during year, $116,126,307.00, In force, 111,538,823.00 ASSETS Value of Bonds and Stocks, * 2,37o ’inn na Cash in Company’s Office, . . . . ir; aQ^? Deposited in Trust Companies and Banks not on interest, 15,894. bl Deposited in Trust Companies and Banks on interest, 321,b9L&3 Company balances, representing business written subsequent to October 1, 1925, j 1 £2,865.38 Interest and Rents due and accrued, , . . 29,52b.2T Market Value (not including interest) of bonds and stocks over book value, 215,122.3 Total, 3,045,464.29 Less Assets not admitted, £°s® Total admitted Assets, 3,045,464.29 LIABILITIES Net amount of unpaid losses and claims, 215.395 00 Unearned premiums, . _ . 1,392,082.02 Estimated amount payable for Federal, State, County and Municipal taxes due or accrued, 1»250.U9 Loss Rpserve So>vvv.Uv Balance under Excess Treaty if premium (In litigation) Uncollectible, - 108,499.59 All other liabilities, as detailed in statement, oin’cnoii Total amount of all Liabilities except Capital, 1,819,509.11 Capital actually paid up jn cash, $400,000.00 Surplus over all liabilities, $825,955.18 Surplus as regards Policyholders L225,95&.1» Total Liabilities, 3,045,464.29 BUSINESS IN NORTH CAROLINA DURING 1925 Fire Risks written, $418,074.00; Premiums received, 11,611.46 All other Risks written, $-133,473.00; Premiums received, -144.83 Losses incurred —Fire, $5,805.56, Paid, Losses incurred —All other, $85.11; Paid, 71.11 President, T. B. Boss /Secretary, A. T. Tamblyn Treasurer, B. M. Carvalho Home Office, 84 William Street, New York City, N. Y. ; Attorney for service: STACEY W. WADE, Ins. Com., Raleigh, N. C. Manager for North Carolina Home Office, New York City. 8 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, (Seal) INSURANCE DEPARTMENT, Raleigh, May 25th, 1926 I, STACEY W. WADE, Insurance Commissioner, do hereby certify that the above is a true and correct abstract of the statement of the American Reserve Fire Insurance Company, of New York City, New York, filed with this Department, showing the condition of said Company, on the 31st day of December, 1925. Witness my hand and official seal, the day and year above written. STACEY W. WADE, Insurance Commissioner. Page Three
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 10, 1926, edition 1
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