Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / May 12, 1927, edition 1 / Page 3
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**+**2££k fafa^jfcek Brisbane I ”better" nat,oNAL tune .CVERIDGE AND PHILLIPS. In babies twiddle toes. RAILROADS and busses. one not satisfied wit! 50 "5 t ar Spangled Banner” of :he . cj 500 for a better nationa fer Vine hundred and fifty-om tUnC lrt-ers tried and failed. Thf Spangled Banner” will con et 0 make Americans stand up C V ‘\ 0 a thing well you must ge! r' . e d about it. Socrates, great eX ‘ free k teacher of oratory, said Vo convince others, be yourseli " tM r There will be no im- C roved “Star Spangled Banner’ Au real danger inspires some bt ,j, to produce the right song. Vibert J Beveridge died last eek, sixty-four years old, of heart v ’ \ n automobile stops when disease. * , . t . ie engine stops; a man, wh.n his reart stops. One hundred men un derstand a motor engine for one that knows his own heart. There is no “resale” price on s second-hand heart, and heart dis- ; ase is increasing as consumption diminishes. Doctors can cure many diseases, but you must cure your Vn heart, once you have been warned. Beveridge and David Graham Phillips were schoolmates in In lana. and represented their State veil. Phillips in literature, Bever d.e'in national politics. Both are 'one. Is it “entirely illogical,” as ||ne say, to hope that they have Kt acain, or is it, as others say, * perfectly reasonable hope”? A Young Women’s Christian Association committee says: “The modern wife who works after mar riage and continues to bring money into the home is the best type of voung wife, better than the young 'wife who sits at home twiddling her thumbs.” Real wives can testify that there it little time at home for twid dling thumbs, especially after the first baby begins to twiddle its toes. Every young man ought to be able to support one woman, and proud to do it, while she takes care of the children. Working wives, respectable and admirable, should not be necessary. This country treats the Missis sippi problem as a poor man treats his farm, never spending enough, to get it in good shape. Scores of millions have been spent on patch work against flood danger. Now comes a flood causing five hundred million dollars’ damage. That sum, properly spent, under one compre- I tensive plan would have prevented flood and future floods. Railroad men, doing their best to help stockholders, as they are hound to do have concentrated on getting increased passenger fares and freight rates from the public authorities, and that has seemed good business. The time is not far off when good business will consist m finding away to carry passen gers and freight for LESS and ‘nus making more money. - - T ✓ The danger to the railroads is a ?mah ridiculous looking thing on tour wheels running along the highway, paralleling the highway on a “right of way” that costs the moto . r omnibus and motor truck 1 thing but the price of their li oense. Every day four motor buses fcave Los Angeles carrying pas angers to Chicago. That doesn’t amount to much. But they can h ar T twice as many passengers as on this magnificent Santa ’ e . r i c *i'.' Express. And the bus overhead is one man driving and r ' :ier , man to* relieve him. . ' Hjmbus travel is uncomfortable ~a ' e ' and will never compete with AnrS ress train - But WHAT CmxVJ THE FLYING MA that will soon be here? And what about freight hauling omnibus? the Mojave Des ,tarmers buying agricultural nnt lU ] er T from Los Angeles do " a ~'k the railroad to carry it. . i; n . c tarmer calls up the truck i t a: ictorville. The freight _ o* ruck delivers the mowing v ne ’ p!° w or “seed drill” right : re ; .f , termer’s barnyard. The ...TV c °sts a little more per 3 ut t' aan the freight train. • f lt y°u order today you get n.nr T ' anc * ft is delivered at Si.'u'Eß POP i tam Work at All v C. M. Payne. A Haven for Ministers and Families I &JaSli '"'^^*-^^!* ** *jjji****-*-*-**"^ ■••••^• "^'''" >,: « ' -?> dsSr* BBk gßg?<saß& ; %^> l g8&gS8SB&. '.-•■ •- \-v- • ;>. : ; . '•' . v ' SjfiS™!?® 1 ” joS? w '* v ' JT^ CAS .' rg ~ ,-V ?'■ •; : iKwßr Hh The new J. C. Penny Community Home near Jacksonville, Fla., has iust been dedicated and thrown open to retired ministers with fami nes. where rent, light and heat are free. Twenty-two apartments! which house 80 families, a chapel and civic center make up the com munity. It is a memorial to Mr. Penny’s father and mother, his ather having been a Baptist minister. Above is the Chanel; insert is >f Mr. Penny; and, below a typical group now living there. It is non-denominational. Sec’y Hoover Returns To Flood Districts - ■■ ■■■■ | , dS v 5 jßggw V After a hurried trip to Washing ton to personally report to Presi •lent Coolidge and recommend th< lation be requested to donate ter mllion instead of five, Secretary Toover is back in the Mississippi lood districts, as shown above, tc lirect relief work. 1,000 REFUGEES FLEEING NEWLY FLOODED AREA Mem nil's, Tc-nn, May 2 —More Tan 14 000 refugees fleeing the flooded areas in northern rd central Louisana, have poured : to live concentration camps with •i th 2 pas. 33 hours, the Red Cross > nounetd here un'ght. Five thou and are in the village of Delhi, ~ where the population normally •, about 700 and relief workers .re taxeu to care for them. Subscribe to The Record, 51.50 666 is a Prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Dengue or Bilious Fever. It Kills The Germs. _ — K.=—icr^~t , +{as lTwo +|am3)S J ? -An , TO P I'Telus NM-HAT 4 ♦ / j-riME. i~t 15 ?( f * I \ ■ J i A Western Queen i _ || i \ (A* T °~VTi^ Miss Blanche Grimes of Sangci, California, ruled supreme as Queen of the California Raisin Festival, held this year at Fresno and at tended by thousands of visitors. Unusual School Record I “J ' :astc Edwin Nordmann, of Ellsworth, dinn., went through grade school nd graduated from high at la fears o*f age and now is a junior t Dubuque, lowa, college, never taving missed a day or being tar* ly in any of his school life a ecord of 14 years. Subscribe to The Record, $1.50 for 12 months —In advance, please. w ¥ , * Itu T>I?OV*J THE CHATHAM RECORD About your Health tl.il, Vou Should Know by John Joseph G&inet, M. D. ABOUT DIET. If the American people haven’t Deen “fed up” on diet, for the past decade, then there is nothing in what we . see. Almost every magazine, newspaper, or other candidate foi the patronage of the reading public has a special dietary counsel, whe dishes up the most fascinating tech nicalities about calories, proteins carbohydrates, hydro-carbons, vita mines, A. B. and C. You are tolc that milk is all the food necessary for human life’s sustenance; the working man knows better. You ar< told that any sort of meat is deadly and must not be eaten, if you would live long. Some tell you that you should live on raw carrots, raw turnips, raw string beans, raw green ;orn—such advice is about as raw as the fellow who attempts to carry it out. T know of an advertising charlatan wbo is reaping a financial harvest, using “the diet racket.” People fall for it by the hundreds, and stay un iil they realize that they are stung. Folks, especially those of the simpler sort, say “I know there’s a diet for every complaint, that’ll cure it, if we could jest find it out.” Recently a “practical nurse” said to me: “I ain’t a doctor, nor I ain’t a grHuate of any school, but I know that s the best treatment for this girl.” “Please tell me how you know it,” I asked j and for the life of her, she couldn’t tell, not being a doctor nor a gradu ate nurse. A rough, Missouri farmer once told me that he cured himself of typhoid fever, by eating two cans of cove oysters, at one sitting—just af ter the doctor had called, and had told him he must not have solid food! And that farmer had about as much sense on dietary matters, as the ignoramus who tells you that a man can perform heavy manual labor on three quarts of milk a day. When shall common sense take the place of technical fooleries? Prove all things; hold fast to that which is good. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SAL” 1 Under and by virtue of the pew r of sale contained in a certain leod of t mr.de by D. C. Ph i J ips and wife, Martha Phillips, to fialeigh Banking & Trust Com pany, of Wake county, North Caro lina, trustee, dated the 12th day ,f December, A.D., 1924, and re corded in book GH at pages 539-40- 11, in the office of the register of deeds of Chatham county, default having been made in the payment f the notes thereby secured, and he holder thereof having directed hat the deed of trust be foreclos d, the undersigned trustee will of-*, or for sale at the court house door :i the city of Pittsboro at twelve ’clock noon on Thursday, The 28th lay of April, 1927, and v will sell to he highest bidder for cash the fol lowing described real estate in Bear Creek township, Chatham county, North Carolina, more par ticularly described as follows: Beginning at the intersection of right of way of the Southern Rail way Company, and Isaac H. Dun laps line and running with said right of way north 12 degrees west 655 feet to a stake; thence south 77 degrees west 235 feet; thence south 13 degrees east 325 feet; thence south 13 degrees east 325 feet; thence south five degrees west 259 feet to Isaac H. Dunlaps line; thence with his line south 87 de grees east 315 feet to the begin ning, containing 3.36 acres, less 11-100 acres for Bonlee and West ern WLE tracks and beds, together with all machinery, buildings and ] fixtures and other improvements thereon, being the same land con veyed to D. C. Phillips by A. W. Vickory and wife by deed recorded in book G. B. at page 591, in the Chatham county registry. RALEIGH BANKING & TRUST COMPANY, Trustee. Dated this 24th day of March, ! 1927. To Be, or Not To Be — Wet! % ' auto An Ordinance of the Town of Pittsboro, N. C., Providing for the Issuance of Municipal Bonds in the Sum of Forty Thousand Dollars for the purpose of Estab lishing a Water System in And For Said Town. The Board of Town Commission ers of the Town of Pittsb.ro North Carolina, do ordain and en act: Section 1: -—That pursuant to the provisions of subchapter three 1 chapter 56 of the Consolidated 3tafu.es of North Carolina, Volume hree, entitled “The Municipal Fi ance Act, 1921,” and the amend ment thereto, the Town of Pitts- boro, North Carolina, issue and sell its bonds fer the purpose of es tablishing a water supply sys'em in and for '.he Town of Pittsboro North Carolina, which is hereby de jlared to be a necessary expense o. the said town. Section 2: That the maximum aggregate principal amount of the :aid bonds shall be F:rty Thous and Dollars ($40,000.00). All de tails as to the issuance of the said bonds are to be fixed by resolution jf the Board of Town Commission ers of the said Town of Pittsboro, as provided by the said law. Section 3: —That a tax sufficient to pay the principal and interest or the said bonds shall be annually levied and collected. Section 4:—That a statement of the debt of the said Town of Pitts boro has been filed with the clerk of said Town and is open to public nspection. Section 5: —That this ordinance shall take effect thirty (30> days after its first publication, unless in the meantime a petition for its submission to the voters of said town is filed under the provisions of said law, and that in such event it shall take effect when ap proved by the voters of the said town of Pittsboro at an election as provided in said law. The foregoing ordinance was passed on the 18th day of April, 1927, and was first published on the 21st day of April, 1927. Any action or proceeding ques tioning the validity of said ordin ance must be commenced within thirty (30) days after its first publication. E. R. HINTON, Clerk. Subscribe to The Record, $1.50 ! SureTl A. (ft>T>V A U^7‘ /< S -Tell me ) w H-at / Time iTJI / <5, *3>o7? j_VA ?_/ listen / Before you buy anything in the HARDWARE line for the spring work on the farm, see and price our goods. We feel that we know what you want and have got it for you at the right price. Also Garden Seed and Cabbage Plants Here. THE CHATHAM HARDWARE CO- I Pittsboro, N. C. THE OLDEST BANK ♦ ' In CHATHAM COUNTY And Still Going Strong We are here to serve. THE BANK OF PITTSBORO A. H. LONDON, President. J. L. GRIFFIN. Cashier. W. L. FARRELL, Ass’t. Cashier. \Vi+fo SVo\LE.!S (me. I A TunnN C'RACK' r- .- i IdT y T = lA* Tvmo 4amDS,J A; V t v~-' 16 | Couh ; um PAGE THREE by Albert T. RM
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 12, 1927, edition 1
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