j-v May 1927 *
Thur s **>! ool^-~^S =
JhbJVeek
>&CsUcfi4^
Brisbane
AD?ES —14073 B. C.
iON’T DIE 0? CANCER
-OVEP.NKEST should pay.
:. ED KQH.EXPIOSIVE FUEL.
pona, scientific gentleman
Africa, says ladies ol
ack a c o used cosmetics
1: ' rr ornaments’ ana painte-'
Astral 111 '
,• checks ' , a - .
1 ~v , n t to extremes, wore neck
™ V‘ 0 f ostrich eggs, and som
-1 V;" --.ainte.l their faces yellow
<: '3 well as red.
500,0C0 years ago.
“fist hatchets," lon
1 like pickaxes, rh
- st • ‘ ‘
. ■ vci ed irom neao tc
'... ■ hair, were proh»
from then* che k
1 :U gentlemen pretVre
''“V%.-in. It has been a lona..
■ c ; -n, to the flapper oi today
but worth it.
~> t of cancer—it isn’t ner
\t the age of forty, one on
tcn persons has a cance:
‘ Q '|i c o ' cancer in the United
S : ,'tVs every year. At least 75,000 d* -
unnecessarily. Autopsies show ilia
thus?.ads, dead of old age, take can
c t r/:o the grave with them.
Pay attention to any strange growth
on the body. A few seconds work
■ Kill often prevent a cancer spreading
Move all, keep in good condition
regular sleep, moderate exercise
much fresh air and your blood wii
take care of the cancer.
The Government has wondered
xha: to do with surplus taxes. It
night use the. first few hundred
notions to indemnify victims of the
Mississippi flood. If Government had
ised its brains and money and had
lone its duty, in years past, the flood
rould not have occurred.
Those that realize the importance
)f soil fertility will be interested
n Colonel Ewing’s casual remark
I hat men digging for artesian wells
I n lower Louisiana, went through sis-
I een hundred feet of the richest soil
I leposited by the great river, a soi
I ar richer and deeper than that Oi
I %Pt.
I Standard Oil of New York will
I sue $125,500,000 new stock, bringing
I ie total up to about $450,000,000.
I The company doesn’t need that trifle,
let employes of the company
Wf cie stock to increase interest in
■'-..r work. They had already bought
I -tn millions of the stock.
I Udine Utley, fifteen-year-old evan
l’ e “ 5t arr >ved to save souls in New
I ork at an unfortunate moment, with
■ Snyder case in full blast. Not
I-'® a New \orker can attend to
Ijverything at once. Still, she saved
■ orty-five souls on her opening night
I tad, in New York. But some
K n ' ed |° Be saved several times.
I e;v or^s n ‘&ht life is exciting.
I!" aitlm ore Jules Askin, artist,
irom nature on the Sabbath.
■if. no * su PPosed to work on
Mil l ln Baltimore. They locked
■he beam- aslcec * : “Who paints
■iunda? u ] ?,,nrise ara d sunset on
■iim M> ’ w^at d° y°u do to
■ uSff. ailer r€ Phed: “Ask the
I 8 ’ iuu re not supposed to argue.”
m wt P ! an f e ail Str - k By hghtning,
H x Pl >drf i, a - s ’ the gasoline tank
l«*cA" n f mgfour - This will
■? e wr,rlf age but will stimu-
Kmaf n no!l '\ x l J, osive fuel. The
Bfeafllv 7- with their extra-
BaaE *besel engine con
f]av
®>. sni'U ’ v '\“ ICSS power, taken
■ill; n "’ - i»elow the flier
■ Ue A deni.
■ ,U>er, John TkHy
‘ rn-ro in ih" South
HU) :r, m the CarviiL
■sen£l ar:il . '
■ '■V-. ) ‘' ' v him. but then
■W / ,a P and writer have
M :f Te. UU;. an insignificant
;;ewest discovery,
JR r; inniifij-g
I•. i poF
■ U
( Wds, >y o rds Ev-
S: ht ”c And Not
Sight
® J C. M. Payne.
I Don’t You Want to Help?
Here is a typical group of Mississippi flood victims—a family of
white tenants—driven to the levee from the lowlands. They are
awaiting the arrival of a Red Cross relief boat to take them to a
camp on the highlands. The Red Cross is still asking for funds
A Daring Effort—Paris to New York
k V i* v r i
• w.'.sSw-:. •.
Capt. Charles Nungesser, daring French Ace, and Eugene Coli
lavigator, who made the first 1927 attempt to fly the Atlantic, Paris
•O New York. All nations anxiously watched and hoped such courage
vcoild be rewarded with success. « When seemingly lost, all ships in
North Atlantic waters made effort to locate them.
| Correct for Summer
A droopy milan straw and a
charming frock of flowered chifforf
garbs the summer girl of 1927 in
apparel that is correct —as shown’
in newest photo from American
style centers.
Subscribe to The Record, 51.50
666
is a Prescription for
Malaria, Chills and Fever,
Dengue or Bilious Fever.
It Kills The Germs.
C —A USST
Highest Yet
i
EVEN NP\TUR-E adopts the
installment VLAN — /
STARTING
Z=j
I ]
5 |k| M iL_.
1?&a"d j a j —')
Cr| MeS,T+|ei?e
IN it!
CJ? \Og[ I I SAVJ T-HeM.I
a It's tulua s
1 v-ioT?ja
THE CHATHAM RECORD
About your
Health
Things You Should Know
(by John Joseph Gaines, M D.
“TUBBY” MEN
There are so many of them —and
the number seems to be increasing.
They are graduates of the six o’cjpck
dinner university. They are also
Knights of the Swivel-chair; they
may belong to the Don’t Worry Club.
They move about on foot when they
find it impossible to ride—on cush
ions. . With every puff of shortened
breath, they announce the badly
neglected sewer they carry around
with them. No, Madame, I’m nol
talking to you; I know better than
to tell a woman she’s tubby.
I have been a sufferer from this
acquired deformity, and, know
whereof I speak. It came upon me
by stealth; people said to me, “How
wonderfully healthy you look; you
are getting fatter every day.” People
love fat things.
Suddenly I was attacked one day
on the street —I felt that I was dying!
My pulse registered 145, weak and
irregular. I “sat up and took notice’
from that hour. Careful investiga
tion revealed that I was suffering
from a stealthy, slow-acting poison
— ldican. This stuff forms in a ne
glected colon, and gradually under
mines the entire cardio-vascular sys
tem —the circulation. Had I expired,
the newspapers would have said that I
died of heart disease; it would not
have been true; death would have
been due primarily to that 48 waist
band of mine, and the load of poison
inside it! Just as many a “tubby*
man dies today, from putrefying sub
stances in a neglected colon. I have
no patience with laying the blame or
the heart, when it is simply poisoned
to death from the sewer!
It took me over two years to re
cover from a condition which would
certainly have killed me. I used a
mixture of the sulphates of magnesia,
soda, lime and potassium for a
“house cleaner” and, I still clean
house with it every day. I quit eat
ing enormous lots of sweets, cake,
preserves, etc.
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE
SAL’’
Under and by virtue of the pow
er of sale contained in a certain
deed of t.ust made by D. C. Phil
lips and wife, Martha Phillips, to
Raleigh Banking & Trust Com
pany, of Wake county, North Caro
lina, trustee, dated the 12th day
of December, A.D., 1924, and re
corded in book GH at pages 539-40-
41, in the office of the register of
deeds of Chatham county, default
having been made in the payment
of the notes thereby secured, and
che holder thereof having directed
chat the deed of trust be foreclos-
d, the undersigned trustee will of
er for sale at the court house door
in the city of Pittsboro at twelve
.’clock noon on Thursday, the 28th
day of April, 1927, and will sell to
che 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.
Bang! Goes the Receiver
I
Adventure Pays
'■ -'M
Could you be mad at him? Mor
is Halegna is only 9 years old,
nd he sailed, stowaway, from N.
{. with 14 cents, for Cuba. He
;ailed back home with $14.14 —gifts
rom passengers.
•pjoaaj apnjiiiß pjjom
Asa t tf)iM qiJßa oj uanjaa oj
)joo jsnßqxa am pajind aq uaqM
.sausnoiasuoa Suiso[ sbm aq jaaj
)00'lt 1« lH«n ‘ ill ‘Pl 9 !d »o3S
iooijtq aajj e ui dn puß dn juaM 4 -y
S'fl "D aujoqiMßH jdß'i
lama
3 f^ioic&/
• hJ
\ I should be killed!
%
\ Bee Brand Powder or
\ Liquid kills Flies, Fleas,
V Mosquitoes, Roaches.
\ Ants, Water Bugs, Bed
\ Bugs, Moths, Crickets^
\ Poultry Lice and many
J other insects.
I Powder Liquid
/ ioc and 25c 50c and 75c
/ 50c and SI.OO $1.25
/ 30c Spray Gun 35c
/ ‘Wnteforfreebookletonkill
/• ing house and garden insects
I McCormick & Co.
Baltimore, Md.
I Bee
\ Brand
i INSECT sjg|g
£ E R
ggP^LIQUID
Raising of foxes has been under
taken in France with §150,000
worth of Canadian foxes as a be
ginning.
... . -T^a
(Tsut -T+le-V A'R’e
Not A'R'Rai'J&e'D,
? ,'T+iE-T?E'-5 J
]m T, , i?ouT3uE.y
LISTEN
Before you buy anything in the
I HARDWARE
I 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
Pittsboro, N. G.
THE OLDEST BANK
In
CHATHAM COUNTY
And
Still Going Strong
We are here to serve.
v. i
THE BANK OF PITTSBORO
A. H. LONDON, President.
J. L. GRIFFIN. Cashier.
W. L. FARRELL, Ass’t. Cashier.
a! _ . Itair eNou64?JTM
—r NME.LL'U-k ;
PAGE THREE
by Albert T. Reid