Thursday, January 24, 1929,
inursaay,
the
CHATHAM RECORD
O. J. PETERSON
Editor and Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE:
One
Six Months - <b
Thursday, January 24, 1929.
HOW AND WHERE TO GET
TAX MONEY
The General Assembly, it seems,
is determined to relieve the land<
of part of the present taxes. There
is a preposition to add an addition
al cent on to relieve the
counties of expenses for roads, ana
there is a bill to tax electric light
bills, moving pictures, etc., which is
expscied to raise $200,000. But all
these proposed taxes nit against
fellows that a •?• -ready paying.
What is needed is to get contribu
tions from the tens ol thousands o.
folks who are virtually paj ing no
tax. A levy of one per cent, on ail
net incomes up to SI,OOO a \eai de
rived iicr- uiitaxc-d sou rets and the
application cf the present incomes
rates to all incomes above SI,OOO
without the present exclusion of the
first SI,OOO for the urmarried and
first $2,000 for the married
would give money galore, and secure
it fairly. Thousands of young men
and women are making more net in
come than the average fain r who
pays SSO a year tax on his le.im.
And there youngs! ?rs, the very ones
for whom the high taxes ur schoo:
have been paid, are paying,^in tens
of thousands of case, not a singm ,
cent of tax. And as vohien pa
no poll tux, practically all the won? |
fr earners cf salaries, includin' j
thousands of teach ts, pay no tax a j
all, though they are making more j
than the average farmer wn> rry-,
$.50 a year tax. and has the help ol
his family on the farm and many an ;
acre in big state of cuitivati n and j
quite a large number in good pay
ture land for stock raising has to
support his family.
Now, this is no guessing. Sire - j
we began to write tms artic.c, a
farmer has come in and we have j
counted up everything hy mat is r a
his place, allowing 25 c-nhs r day j
for vegetables and counting cedar
poles cut, counted in tle woo i us ci j
at $2 a cord, and his share of a ten- j
ant’s crop, and the whole thing le v
cost of fertilizer. a~d other leg t -
mate expenses, incu. ding tee • for
three horses and sls interest on
their value and SSO detrri rat.ow
gives him a net income of about
SBSO. In addition J o his own lr.be-.- (
his wife and big 13-year old boy did ■
considerable work.
Now, the tax on that fairr. is about ;
S6O, and the interest on its assessed j
value is $175. But he lias the rent
al of the heme to partially offset :
the interest.
Accordingly, here is an average j
•farmer, or considerably above the j
average whose net income for the j
whole family is about $8 s O, and h° i
pays S6O tax. Now there are a
dozen or more, women in Pittsoorc
who are getting more in clear-cu i
salaries than he made, and are not |
asked for a cent of tax, and iiv- j
writer cf this article, siryce the burn-j
Ing of his plant, is making more than j
that and is paying considerable leu j
tax than is Mr. Yarn. Any hour of!
the day you will see a big strapping j
fellow on tin street that ::: not ever
paying a r.oi! t. ’/os, sir; give ur
a tax os u- ye-:V aad legal rr ear * I
of t-.'j. ' '/* ** ; ni::hoe and !
othe th': ir.onr:'
would COBS*,
Ol - i 1 real was : pc
crop year.
TO BE ON NOT TO EE?
Th i "N i vu..o :-g dis urbcvl
over a /.; ’ ' /'«i by vr log
Person of i ty to allow ,
alcohol or v;K i 'ey \<> old on a ;
physician’: ore n> u The* fa- J
inouis Vo'stead z-f /v v. uch s de, i
but the North Garolioa laws for-j
bid it. Many of the other states j
permit sales on ph. if ian’-i pre serin- 1
tion, even our next .door neighbor
Virginia.
In Greensboro, for instance, four
administers favor the passage of the
bill and five were i eported in Mon
day’s Daily New-s as opposing. Phy
sicians are similarly diivided. Some
of the latter sav whiskey is never
needed; others think it is and pre
scribe, leaving the patient to get it j
the best w 7 ay he can. And that is
the ground on which Rev. Robt. M'.
Williams of Greensboro bases his ar
gument for the permission. He con
siders it better for patients who are
thought to need wdiiskey to be en
abled to get it without violating the
law and to get the pure article.
Aiid there is no question that
the demand for whiskey for
medicinal purposes encourages the
violation of the law. If a man has
once (V oo..g:A Wii'ckcy for medicine
his mouth : 'is shut against the boot
logger who cold it, and when quite
o number in the community hav
been thus silenced She boet'.crejere
have much freer course to sen ----- ■
concoctions. I
The editor of the Record is kcicvm
to have been a teetotaler nil his i if-?
v.'c*'’ the execution of tne use O:
liquor in a cr-e cf blood poison when
a student at college. And if h >
had such another case, cr. a rrienci
had such a case, ho would tee 1 th.?:
the denial of whiskey .would be an
injustice. For ten long weeks the
writer lay in bed at Wake Fere it.
and during eight or nine of ttiore
weeks the only thing that he could
relish was miik toudy, or m - ~
punch is the proper name. In fact,
for fifty or sixty days that was nil
the nourishment he took, an cl he
lived, though many thotff/nt fc
wouldn’t. The fellow feared tbit
he might cultivate a taste for th'
stuff, but when his appetite came
back the milk toddy was the one j
thing that he didn’t want, --end ha
has not tasted whiskey the 38 years
since nor has he been sick to count.
A man who needs arsenic, opium,
or any other poison except as medi
cine he can buy it legally on a phy
sician’s prescription, and if a sick
person is thought to need liquor,
it would seem fair that he could ge:
chat without having to cause a vio
lation of the law and become dumb
aginst the bootlegger who supplied
it. And there are many women who
violate the law in making wine for
medicinal purposes who would have j
no excuse to do so if wine or whis
key were available \inen actually
considered as necessary by the physi
: eian.
However, the permission would
1 open up new means of violating the
j lav. Yet we believe that it would!
1
[icave more real friends oi prohibi-j
! lien free to report violations oi !
life law. Just suppose you had
! "ought a pint of liquor from an il
,r.l’ dealer for medicine for your j
I self'cr family and then you should j
* i
i I:v -. that the same bootlegger had
-c/ I it vo your son or your neigh
jbci for beverage purposes, what
.vouid yui Jo? On the other hand,
huqmo y u had not aided and abet
! ted in u i nmer violation ,of the, law
aim. w chat the bootlegger was
your neighb r, is their any question
i that you would report him 9 If
!• ou would «:cnort him? If you
f ...
j woulda’:, yofi are no prohibitionist,
ird needn’t /take any pait in this
/vcvuicn. >
Secretary IJlellen, in charge of \
piahiuiticn jen. o. cement, doesn’t
wan any metc money for enforce
ment. Other J v.lio b ire lit fed by the
• Maim that rv,u • a dry evan
•elis Li! • / !. Sena
tn i-Ja: r s has pro] ose o. a bill in the
the appro
ipii at ten 1 l c. nr rc a rt by the
:mnro, 25 million d' liu' and many
!the Smith sunpo. o:. a n sup-
I •in ; i:*c measure. I’ it does not
I 3cc me a lav/ it m -
i the fault of the Renubl'can majority
h nubile n pi ■ il. < sorgia,
i .i ) s<j count on, has cniy 0 en
j cotm’i ~‘ we i:i the heart ol . o-.h
(Cm ohra hove cr.ly ton. It bar i urn
j ••_•• - tfclr.g for cue to be so -n in
!« hi Fw in county. Yet 2.1 o 2.1 c.l n
doesn’t know how he can rrd u v
i .
, more money m en.or:emon«; -J
, ric.p I,’leans now have an ep ertum
'•7 " show vvhe her they re a/;, warn. (
robibi'i r r>. Many of the Jem !
i •b o members of the Senate and
fir- reuse will bcln-th'-rv crcuu th
I funds to make a real but cf pro
i
j ion.
| A). Smith nropcceo to give the
j r.ror' *ds of th? book of hr: cwm
i* n ‘ nmcl es to help pay the debt
l o' the Nr Nora! Dem :ernt*e ccn
'l''. Flo )■; said to have been cv
(i ed $206,000 for the publiciticn
ght-. Mr. Bra n published such
I?’ Kook r.ntl kept the money. Sir/./'
j in asking that the debt be paid b*'
j the m' rr. hen; of the farty in g -nerv"
• and not left for the few rich men to
(pry. who eou’d thus claim i\ g-eato*’
: *rh t to d'Vdate the poticics of the
paity. His plea went out ov r th°
radio, and many r.-sprnr?r are re
ported as coming in. Ha also urges
tbt the party management keep b u sy
during the next three ' r on rs and n f
suffer the party to become mori
bund. The advice of a man who :;e- i
cured almost as many votes as Cox
and Davis both is worth heeding.
i
One Representative, Box, of Texas
is making a loud noise in agitation |
of the Democratic party’s ridding
itself of the Smith element. He i
evidently doesn’t want a National
Democratic party.
County Agent Shiver has been
furnishing valuable material for
Chatham county farmers, but he has
set ©ut to make an agricultural sec
tion of the Chatham Reco d this year
that should prove cf unbounded bin-,
efit to ur farmers. We cwm mud the!
a:tides :n this issue to every rer.d- j
cr of the Record. Yes; cv:n merer- j
ants ci.d manufacturers; ;av.y rs,
at:/ electors, preachers and teach- j
o.s, .-.haula read them, dnee no kind:
of real knew lodge is c /er found of j
no value.
Fifty years ago when the father
the editor cf th? record gathered i
y.yj brsheb of corn frem an acre
t ;■ . gj-i • 1 • ' l.(-m :a..a uic iiarv'c-st
frer: he acre was equal to the aver
c y 2.d cf the uplands of Samp
- ecu at" on ci 2at cr ten ac.es.
_et last week t..e papers cavr.en
the report cf 293.6 bu-he.s of corn
grown on three acres of upland by
L. -Daughtiy, Jr., of nmey
Grove township, a r.anr.c which sag- 1
cysts the character of th? land in J
that metis n. Mr. Daughtry won |
the Chilean Nitrate pHze forth? |
whole South, and has indicated t> j
the people of the state what can I
; :c done on a few acres of land.
Actually, when the editor of the
Record as a twenty-year old youth
took Iho census of Sra h C lint n
townsh’p in IdoO, h? Hur d th 1 c,/r 1
yield oi a few of ih .fearms of th?
township equal H*/ the thus-acre
yield of a few of the farms cf the
the poor crop year of 1928. In i'acL,
there was only one fa.m in the town
ship that was making a creditable
yield, and that was a 30-acre farm
belonging to Mr. Georg? Ilat’grnve.
a mile or two from Clinton. K
had so little land that he had de
veloped it. The forme) hlgh-ynld
ing bottom land of the edit r v old
home had become soggy, as tr. ' pn -
fy low lands will when they have be
come compact after a few years cul
tivation, and the sandy lands of u.
700-acre tract had been wo n out
and no one had discovered at that
time the means of making them
again productive, except by letting
then: grow up in pines and stand
for a generation, hou may take th s
record of young Daughtry as anoth
er illustration of the liklihood of
the surplus land acreage growing
greater. If all fo.merly cultivated
should yield in that way. there would
be more corn than could be disposed
of. Yet that is the way to grow it,
letting the balance of the acreage
grow up in timber or be developed
as pasture.
Governor Gardner is reported as
meeting opposition from ol l-tim°rs
o n his secret ballot program, but
the Record hopes that North Caro
lina will secure an election law that
allows everybody to vote his choice
without any officious interference.
If those who have no choice, parti
cularly in the primaries, can be pre
vented front voting at all, it
would be a good thing. Helpers in
thousands of such cases could, how
ever, vote them for choice under
the proposed law as well as heelers
can under the present law. It is a
long time since the constitutional
amendment was passed, and the
number desiring to vote under the
giandfather clause should be much
fewer than then. Accordingly, it
would be no great injustice to give
a secret ballot without helpers, and
if the voters doesn’t have intelli
gence enough to mark th? ballots let
film lose his vote or throw it away.
■( is time for the educational quali
.Vation to begin to operate. Yet
;?':? cf thousands of white women
have been registered contrary to
hu i : requirement, as the time for
I - -<t? n-ering under the grandfather
j ” o '
Nat • > expired before the women
we a e enfranchised, and these played
- - mall pai;t in giving the state to
i uvei last fall.
23. SMITH PRESCRIBES E'OR
FGGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
Yve commend to the high school
—jp'ls cf Chatham county the foi-
I wing treerpt from a message of
I'rcu’den.t Henry Louis Smith ol
\7ashir. ton Lee University to stu
'den in nucha ing to enter college next
fall. ' It in chuck full of wisdom and,
to cun way of thinking, needs the
couw/cr.nt’cn cf many of the young
pc onle.
Sens Dr. Smi.h: “If you are hcr
:i Gy afraid cf unpopularity, if you
tie zealously loyal to every local
‘tradition’ and gladly accept the
opinion:' of the ‘gang,’ then rest as
riucd you arc now training to obey
non?e boss, to play second fiddle in
life’s concert, and to remain a help
less victim of your environment. If
you cannot see any use in learning
a dead language, and hence dodge
Latin; if you ‘despise math’ and
I hence quit studying it; if ycu are
| wrapped up in athletics or some oth
er ‘activity’ that you ‘really can’t
1 find’ time for the lab-work some
; cranky professor insists on —in oth
; er words, if you have started up the
long and rugged hill of American
leadership in this age of brains and
have no control of your brain-power
THE CHATHAM RECORD
The Late Tc*~&ickard, His Wife and c hua ,
i i
I
famous light pi ?moter, 'died at Miami Beach, Fla., ot an
infection following an appendicitis operation. He is shown here in a phou
t/iken recently with his wife, the former Msxinc Hodges, and their intuy.
child. Mrs Rickard and Jack Dempsey were among those at the bedside
1 when the maker of champions passed away.
1
J you had better quit wasting time
| and money in school. Your educat
j ion as a preparation for future
I :-:ucce -3 cannot be measured by ex
amination, or grades or even dip
lomas-. It is measured by your ability
to initiate, control and direct your
own mental energy.”
Well, Bishop Cannon has turned
fir, muzzle toward Secretary Mellon
and the senators who are opposed to
tiebbling the appropriation for pro
hibition enforcement. You may be:
'f A1 had been elected president he
would have been in favor of having
enough money to enforce the pro
hibition laws.
Governor Gardner has appoint
ed Highway commissioner Haynes of
Winston as temporary chairman cf
the highway commission. His sal
ary while so serving is fixed at $7,-
500, but it is thought that he will
serve for no salary, just as he and
two or three other: _ commissioners
have as commissioners. That is lib
eral. but it would mean that neith
er he nor the state could afford his
retention on those terms as chair
nan, since no man should be expect
ed to give his full fine to the state
for nothing and th ? state cannot af
foiM to accept- services on those
terms. Mr. Gardner thinks that a
full-time chaiiman is needed, and
one of his problems ’’s to find the
rrani capable of filling Frank Page’s
'hoys. He is seeking a big man, tco,
as pardon commissiioner and general
assistant, and is said to have fallen
upekn his old chum N. A. Townsend
as It he man, but the salary is only
$ L«) 00, while Nat. Townsend gets
$7,'500 as judge. Some more com
binations and dismissals will have to
be made if Townsend gets the $7,500
and (expenses are not increased
NOTICE OF RE-SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
Under and by virtue of a certain
deed' of trust executed by the Chapel
Hill Insurance & Realty Company to
Jones Fuller, Trustee, dated March
IS, 192 1, and recorded in Book of
Mortgages GH, at page 292-293, in
the office of the Register of Deeds
of Chatham County, default having
been made in the payment of the
note thereby secured, and at the
request of the holder and owner of
the said indebtedness, the under
signed Trustee will on Wednesday
For colds, grip
and flu take
:.;a;?k reg.
Relieves the congestion,
prevents complications,
and hastens recovery.
| DR. J. C. MANN I
. s
♦ the well-known ♦
♦ t
X EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Z
I j
I will be at Dr. Farrell’s of- $
x fice, Pittsboro, Tuesday }
♦ Jan. 29; at Dr. Thomas’ ♦
Z office Tursday, Jan. 24, ♦
Z Siler City. Z
1 10 AM. to 3 FM. t
uiiiiiiimunmiiitft?
[the 6th day of February, 1929, at
! 12:00 o’clock Noon, offer for r»-
. [ sa 7 ;■ at public auction, to the h/ghest
bidder for cash, at the Courthouse
Doer in Pitts’ooro, North Carolina,
. the tracts of land described as fol
lows, to-wit:
BEGINNING at a stone at Nat
! Riggsbee’s corner in Alf Riggsfcce’s •
h’no; th°nce North 5 deg. East 100,
1-2 poles to a stun? pile and pointers |
In line of lot No. 4; thence South!
; 87 deg. East with line of lot No. j
i, 131 poles to a stone pile and j
pointers, corner of Lot No. 4 in T. j
* S. Biggs bee’s line; thence with said
■ line South 69 and 3-sths poles to a !
: f tone and pointers, J. S. Riggsbee’s j
, coiner; thence West with Tyson’s i
line West 43 poles to a white oak;
’ thence South 20 poles; thence North
' 75 1-2 deg. West with Alf Minter’s
line 70 poles to a stone and point
ers, Alf Minter’s line 37 poles to a
stone pile, the beginning estimated
to contain 63 acres, the same being
lot No. 5 as surveyed by R. B. Clegg
and being the interest of Nannie
Thrift in the lands of the late J. A.
' Oldham conveyed to her by parti
! tion Deed, dated May 24, 1917, by
[ A. J.. Rigsbee et als and the interest
.' cf Emily D. Oldham is herein con
veyed by Emily D. Oldham. E.
E. Thrift and wife, Nannie Thrift
to the Cary Lumber Company, a cor
■ poration, and recorded in Deed Book
F. L. on page .179, in the office oi
the Register of Deeds for Chatham
j County. . ,
BEuINNING at pointers, John A.
Oldham’s corner; thence South 89
deg. East 40 chains and 70 links to
a rock pile, A. J. Rigsbee’s corner;
th- :ice North 14 chains and 40 links
to a red oak, A. J. Riggsbee’s corn
er in C. John’s line; thence West 25
1 chains and 75 links to a large rock,
C Johnson’s corner; thence North
35 chains to a rock, said Johnson’s
roi ner; thence West 2 chains and
60 links to a rock, said Johnson’s |
corner; thence North 6 chains to a
large popular, John A. O'ddham’sG
coiner; thence W’est 13 chains and
• 41 links to a stake, John A. Old
, ham’s corner; thence South 56 ;
I chains and 35 links to the first sta- j
tion, containing 120 acres, more or j
I less, and being the land conveyed j
|by Martha Oldham, John A. Old- |
, ham and Emily D. Oldham. W. A. i
Riggsbee and Nancy Riggsbee to j
i Sarah Riggsbee, by deed recorded j
II in Book of Deeds C. M. page 103, j
1 i
Classified Advertising.
| NEW SHIPMENT OF DRY GOODS, ;
latest patterns of ladies’ dresses, j
etc. at C. E. Durham’s, Bynum. |
j
FROST PROOF PLANTS FOR SALE j
—Cabbage and Bermuda Onion j
plants, all varieties, SI.OO per j
1,000, 5 thousand lots at 75 cts. a [
1,000. Prompt shipment. Dorris j
Plant Company, Valdosta, Ga.
VALUES—YOU WILL FIND THEM
at Hall’s.
IN ALL, VAN ELKINS HAS SOLD
more than one and one-fourth mil
lion Jefferson Standard Life In
surance in and around Siler City
and Pittsboro. All other agents
combined have not done that in
same time.
LOST DOG FOX TERRIER,
black and white, large for breed;
gun shy; answers to name Duke.
Lost in the woods near John Grif
fin’s on Goldston-Pittsboro road.
Finder notify T. E. Crisp, Rox
( boro Road, Durham, and receive
> liberal reward.
\ SEE OUR SHOES AND GET OUR
[ prices. It will pay both of us.
> R. J. Moore & Co. Bynum.
> VAN ELKINS SAYS THAT THE
t Jefferson Standard Life Insurance
* co., wrote more than twenty-five
> million in N. C. last year. No oth
| er Company wrote half as much.
I SALESMAN FOR LUBRICATING
\ oil and paint; two lines combined.
> Salary of Commission. The Royce
[ Refining Company, or the Royce
> Pint Co., Cleveland, Ohio.
! SHIP STUFF, $2.40 A SACK, MO
* lasses Feed $2.50; Hay $1.50 per
| cwt.; Flour, guaranteed qualities,
> $7.00 to $7.50 at C. E. Durham’s,
[ Bynum. Feb. 1.
! THE JEFFERSON STANDARD
| Life Insurance Co., has more than (
> fifty million Life Insurance in
| force on North Carolinians more
> than any other Company. Van
[ Elkins represents them in this
territory.
l in the office of the Register of
Deeds of Chatham County, also be
ing same property conveyed by W.
J. Brogden, Commissioner to the
Cary Lumber Company, recorded in
I Book of Deeds F. Y. on pagrs 80
and 81 in the office cf the Register
of Deeds of Chatham County, North
Carolina.
This property is being offered for
re-£?.ic on account of an increased
bid. The bid on said property will
begin at $357.50.
This the 21st day of January,
1929.
JONES FULLER, Trustee.
Jan. 24, 2t.
MRS. NOOE HONOR GUEST
l
1 A charming affair of the past
week was the party given by Mrs.
Waiter Johnson and Miss Cordie
Harmon, honoring Mrs. D. B. Nooe,
a recent bride.
Btidge was played at four tables,
the guests enjoying several spirited
progressions. A delightful sweet
course with coffee was served by
the hostess assisted by Miss Jennie
Connell.
Mrs. Nooe was presented with a
oeautiful silver basket by Mrs. John
son and Miss Harmon.
Those p.ay.r.g were Mesdames D.
B, Nooe. Y7. P. IT rton, Wad<=> Barb-
I Victor Johnson, James Cordon,
JE. R. Hinton, Charles Matthews,
• Edwin Hatch. N. A. Moore. J. S.
S Walters, J: M. Gregory, G. W.
j Blair, R. M. Farrell, and Miss Pau-
I line Taylor.
SOMEWHERE TO GO
Come Carolina school house on
! SaPur/ay ought, the 26th of January.
There will be a n?gro minstrel giv
en free. Come and laugh away the
0.-if : . We v.iil also have boxes to
sell, a vot ng contest, and other
things to entertain ycu. The public
is invited. Girls are urged to bring
boxes.
Idle money will be used for the
benefit of the school.
We are expecting a large crowd
aud a very interesting time. Don’t
n y ~ •v 2 fun! Remember the date,
January 26th.
M. M.
Stop and look at your label,
•sopqciucqnu Gtrcva uoos ion suq aqs
?TUiqi sn sotyutu oSu * 9UI D + S,I 9
aqi ucj tiysua u uaas ;snf suq suuoY
90-[ uumpuT u: Sul\i[ uuuioav y
Mr. Lee Durham of Burlington is
spending a few days with his broth
er Mr. I. A. Durham on route 2.
On account of a water shortage
the inhabitants of Chemnitz, Ger
many, are forbidden to bathe ex
cept on Sundays. A small boy s
paradise!
'
I CUTTER and THOMPSON
!
A-rchitect & Engineer
Makepeace Building
Sanford, N. C.
(f 66
is a Prescription for
Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue*
Billious Fever and Malaria
j It is the most speedy remedy known
I lost —BLACK AND TAN DOG
j (female) —lost .near G. G. Barns’
| home in Haw River township, or
' near Moncure, about Jan. 1. Rea
dable reward. C. B. Fox, Siler
| City R. F. D. 1. Jan 24,31.
| FRESH MEATS RECEIVED EV
! ery day, prices lower than in large
j towns. C. E. Durham, Bynum.
TEXACO GAS AND OIL AT C. E.
Durham’s. Bynum. Also Auto
mobile accessories.
WHOLE JERSEY MILK—IS CTS.
a quart delivered anywhere in
Pittsboro in the morning.
Lexie Clark.
VAN ELKINS SOLD MORE THAN
one fourth Million Jefferson Stan
dard Life Insurance last year—
nearly fifty thousand gain over
any previous year. Attractive
ness of' Jefferson contracts was
the particular cause of the in
crease.
VISIT HALL’S FOR ANYTHING
you wish. A complete line to out
fit you from head to foot; at
prices, too, that suit the shrewd
est of value seekers.
FOR THE HIGHEST CASH PRICES
for Cedar posts and white oak
ties take them to R. M. Connell,
Pittsboro.
NEW GOODS BEING SHOWN DAI
ly at Hall’s. You should see their
shoes, dry goods, and ready-tc
prices.
PROFESSIONAL NURSE —I am
located io-. Pittsboro and offer my
services as a nrofessional nurse
to the peonle of Chatham county.
ELSIE LUCILE PETERSON,
R. N., Tel. No- 79.
THREE SPOOLS OF J. P. COATS
snool cotton at R. J. Moore’s for
10 cents.
GOOD FLOUR, GUARANTEED TO
nlease at $7.00 a barrell at R. J*
Moore’s. Bynum.
BUY YOUR GOODS AT R. J-
Moore’s and save the difference.
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