Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / March 14, 1929, edition 1 / Page 5
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THURSDAY, MARCH -14, 1929 ****** * .!******** * * * TOWN AND * * * COUNTY BRIEFS * * . * *************** When you go to Sanford to trade you will greatly help The Record and vourselves by trading with the firms that advertise with us. They are the Vest in the whole town. Mr. Charlie Moore has bought a Farmall tractor of the F. C. Mann Hardware Company and is ready to do ploughing on a big scale. He will probably use it in hauling logs for his mill also. Veteran H. C. Clegg is very low. He has been ill for a long time, but was reported worse a few days ago. The Legion Auxiliary met Tues day afternoon with Mrs. C. C. Ham let. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Matthews and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wirtz made a flying visit to Charlotte and Gastonia Sunday. Mr and Mrs. Roy Beard of Creed more visited the former’s parents Sunday. The body of Willa Williams, a sis ter of Violet Williams, colored, was brought up from Wilmington for burial here. She had been living in Wilmington some time. The Bvnum band has been epgaged this week in boostering the Sanford spring opening. The band was with the goodwill caravan from Sanford that invaded the county last week and went down to Raleigh to broadcast over the radio Wednesday night. Mr*. H. T. Chapin returned Fri day'ir’om a visit to her son in Florida. Mr R. C. Ross lost a bushel of potatoes between Pittsboro and Mon eure one day last week, and wants the fellow that found them to hollow and he’ll go after them. Joe Steele of the western part of the countv, who had become mentally deranged," was brought over and placed in the county home two weeks og o but becoming violently insane last Saturday was incarcerated in jail till it becomes possible to get him into the state hospital. Mr. Jess Johnson’s 12-year-old daughter, on Route 2, is very ill with pneumonia. Dalrymple, M'arks, and Brooks, the popular Sanford merchants, have leased the adjoining store room, formerly occupied by Straud and Hubbard, and will carry therein a line of dry goods and ladies’ and children’s shoes. See their adv. Sanford is having its spring opening and Williams-Belk are telling you of some of the many fine goods they have. Stroud & Hubbard, the Sanford shoe store, are offering bargains in overalls. If you are going to patronize a i picture show, why not patronize the only one in Chatham county? See adv. of the Gem in this issue. Chief Pickett of Siler City round ed up a good part of the city s popu lation Sunday in a crap game. He got seven that round and the names of nine more, all of whom he had lined up for the mayor Monday. The health department of the Wom an’s club was entertained. Tuesday afternoon by Mrs. F. C. Mann. Marvin Bolig, a Siler City young man, came near a fatal accident Sunday, when hit car turned over two or three times, wrecking it but only comparatively slightly hurting him. Mr. T. W. Ellis of New Hope town ship has been quite ill with pneu monia. Mr. S. S. Thompson was in town Monday for the first time after a considerable siege of illness. Mr. J. D. Rogers of Hadley town ship, who has suffered several years from spinters which penetrated his head about twenty years ago, thinks that they are all out. A considerable sliver came out January 23. He feels much better. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Langley visited the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. O’Connell at Corinth Sunday. Mr. J. M. Gregory returned from Watts Hospital a few days ago, after recuperating from an operation of two weeks ago. Recent births reported by Dr. Chaplin: To Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Mann, R 2, a| boy, February 18; to Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Badders, San ford,, R 4, a boy, February 25; to Mr. and Mrs. Grady Pickard, Pitts boro, February 25, a boy; to Mr. »nd Mrs. Marsh Johnson, Sanford R 4, February 27, a boy; to Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Sawyer, a girl. Mrs. Cora Collier of Goldsboro was a guest of Mrs. W. J. Calvert last week. The Winnie Chapter of the U. p. C. had a delightful meeting in the hospitable home of Mrs. W. M. Eu banks Friday afternoon. Mesdames Eubanks, Reid Thompson, and Vic tor Johnson. Wouldn’t it be fine if two hundred subscribers would do like Geddie Fields did Tuesday. Meeting us, he said, “Come on back to the office, I don’t know whether I am behind or ahead, but I am going to pay you a year’s subscription anyhow.’ And he was already a few months ahead. The Record has a poor ad vertising field, and every dollar paid now on subscriptions will help it get a running start for the summer months. Miss' Louis (Brooks was in from ! Brickhaven .for the week-end. Chief Gilmore deserves commenda -1 tions for the improvement in appear ance of the burned area on Main Street. Rev. Jonas Barclay preached at Leakesville Sunday. —<S *************** * * * DEATHS * * jj* jjj ?}c jjc MR. ORREN DOWDY The country has lost one of its best citizens in the death of Mr. Orren Dowry, which occurred Monday morn ing at 3 o’clock, at his home near Cumnock. M. Dowry was in his usual health Saturday and worked on the farm. He was taken ill Saturday night with hemmorrhage from the lungs, and passed away at the hour noted above. The burial was at Asbury Metho dist church, Tuesday afternoon. The funeral services were conducted by his pastor, Rev. Mr. Chaffin. Mr. Dowdy was married twice. His last wife, who was a Miss Johnson, survives him, together with three sons and two daughters, namely, Messrs. Will Dowdy, of Sanford, Cur tis and Everett Dowdy, of this coun ty, and Mesdames Mack Lennon and W. A. Robinson, of the vicinity of Pittsboro. GILLIAM BROWN His many friends in Chatham county regret to learn of the death of Mr. Gilliam Brown, proprietor of the Brown-Buick Service Station in Sanford. Mr. Brown died Monday night at the home of his sister in Carthage and the funeral service was held at the Carthage Presbyterian church Thursday. MRS. KERNODLE Mrs. Kernodle, mother of Mrs. Dailey, wife of the Methodist pas tor here, died early Monday morning at the Dailey home N where she has been with her daughter for the 'last few months. Mrs. Kernodle had been married twice. Her first husband, and the father of Mrs. Dailey, was ReV. Ed ward Howland, who has been dead many years. She next married Mr. L. L. Kernodle of Alamance county, father of the editor of The Alamance Gleaner. She had lived with a niece in Burlington till coming to Pittsboro a few months ago. Mrs. Kernodle was in her 77th year. The funeral service was held at Graham, in the Methodist church, Tuesday, and the burial was in the Burlington cemetery. > VS. 50-50 ACME —<s> HEAR YE! The decision: “It has been found, by the testimony of hundreds of farmers—men of char acter and ability, standing high in their community: THAT —Best results are obtain able when Fertilizer is made 50 per cent mineral, to start the crop grow ing; and 50 per cent organic, to off set the loss of fertilizer by rain, and to strengthen and continue the plant life. This organic nitrogen (ammonia) stays in the ground, dissolves slowly and makes the farmers’ chances of a good stand, and a good yield, much more certain and sure. THEREFORE: OLD RELIABLE ACME MANUFACTURING COM PANY, of Wilmington, North Caro lina, continue to make now,—as has for the past forty six (46) years, only 50-50 quality goods. Ask the man who uses ACME. Ask your dealer or write. ACME MANUFACTURING CO., Wilmington, N. C. <s> IN MEMORIAM —<s> On February 11, 1929, God sent the angel of death and took from our midst one of our best young women, Mrs. Beaulah Jones Johnson. Al though Beaulah was married to Colon Johnson and the mother of four bright children, and in her twenty-ninth year, she seemed but a girl, she was so quiet and Christ like in her demeanor. She professed faith in Christ when a child and joined Emmaus Baptist Church and lived a consistent Chris tian life as nearly as she could. She attended church and Sunday school all that she could, getting her four children ready and bringing them to Sunday school each Sunday. She wanted to train them by the Lord. She was secretary of the women’s class in Sunday school. We miss her presence so much already. She told some of her dear ones before she died that she gas going home to heaven. She was the daughter of George W. Jones and wife, and leaves five sisters and three brothers as well as her husband and children, and many friends to mourn their loss. Not now, but in the coming years, it may be in the better land, we’ll catch the meaning of our tears, and there, sometime, we’ll understand. We’ll know why ckspds instead of sun, Were.over many a cherished plan; Why song has ceased when scarce begun, . , ’Tis there, sometime, we 11 under stand. Written at the request of her class. MISS DORA DAFFRON, MRS. G. M. CLARK, MRS. W. F. JONES, Committee. We all are shaken in a sieve: the littlest fall through—Forbes Maga zine (N. Y.). Childrens Colds | Checked without “dosing.” Rub on « visas . THE CHATHAM RECORD, PITTSBORO, N. C. ******* * * *•* * * ** ; WANT ADS : *************** PLENTY Maine Grown Irish Cob blers at C. E. Durham’s, Bynum; forty cents a peck. EASTER DRESS goods at remark ably low prices at C. E. Durham’s. SILER CITY FLOUR, self-rising, $7.50, and Siler City Red Cow, $2.35 per hundred. JUST RECEIVED car load cement. Prices right. W. C. Johnson. SEED Irish Potatoes, $3.50 by bag. W. C. Johnson. WANTED: To buy your cross ties. Delivered on road or will buy them standing in the woods. See me if you want the most out of your timber. W. C. Johnson. CEDAR LOGS—sell them where you can get the measurements divided. Bring them in. W. C. Johnson. WANTED: Two live married men to solicit subscriptions in this ter ritory for a well known publica tion. Permanent position with sal ary of $40.00 to $60.00 per week. Apply in person at Blair Hotel on Thursday, March 21st, 2 to 3 p. m. MAINE grown seed potatoes, cob blers and red bliss at Poe and Moore’s at 40 cents a peck. MADE-TO-ORDER Suits, Interna tional line, $25 to SSO. Invest your money in custom - made clothes. They pay big interest in style and smartness and every dol lar comes back in service. Let me take your measure. C. C. Hamlet, Pittsboro. CABBAGE and Bermuda Onion plants, all varieties, $1 per thou sand, 5M lots, 75c per 1000. Prompt shipment. Dorris Plant Company, Valdosta, Ga. DEMAND basic slag (the 6 in 1 soil builder) for legumes, spring crops and pastures. Write for folder. H. P. Brown, Distributor, Winston- Salem. GOOD FLOUR AT A low price at R. J. Moore & Co.’s, Bynum. 100 POUNDS SUGAR $6.00; 25 pounds for $1.55 at R. J. Moore’s. AUTO TIRES 30x3 V 2 cOrds at $3.75, and 29x4.40 also cheap; 30x3% tubes only $1.25 at R. J. Moore’s, Bynum. FULL LINE of Ferry’s Garden Seeds, also seed oats and onion sets at R. M. Connell’s, Highway 93. 58 ACRES on Pittsboro-Sanford high way, 2Vz miles from Pittsboro; part with growth of crossties and firewood; plenty of water, good for dairy or poultry farm. Will sell at a low price and on reasonable terms. D. M. Smith, Pittsboro, N. C. THE JEFFERSON Standard Life In surance Company has more than fifty million life insurance in force on North Carolinians more than any other company. Van Elkins represents them in this territory. VALUES—YOU will find them at Hall’s. ~ WHOLE JERSEY milk—ls cents a quart delivered anywhere in Pitts boro early in the morning. Lexie Clark. VAN ELKINS sold more than one fourth million Jefferson Standard Life Insurance last year—nearly fifty gain over any previous year. Attractiveness of Jefferson con tracts was the particular cause of the increase. ' VISIT HALL’S for anything you wish. A complete line to outfit you from head to foot; at prices, too, that suit the shrewdest of value seekers. BUY YOUR feed now to make your crop on; special prices in quanti ties. W. C. Johnson. NEW GOODS being shown daily at Hall’s. You should see their shoes, dry goods, and ready-to-wear prices. PROFESSIONAL nurse. I am lo cated in Pittsboro and offer my services as a professional nurse to the people of Chatham county. Elsie Lucile Peterson, R. N., Tele phone No. 79. CABBAGE PLANTS and garden seeds for sale at Chatham Hard ware Store. VAN ELKINS says that the Jeffer son Standard Life Insurance Com pany, wrote more than twenty-five million in North Carolina last year. No other company wrote half as much. CUSTOM HATCHING 53.50 per 100, $5.80 per tray, 180 eggs. Carl Gilliland, Siler City, N. C. (Feb. 14, 4tc) IF YOU want good inspection on your ties and cedar sell to W. C. Johnson. A FULL line of heavy and fancy groceries, bought right and sold right, at Connell’s on highway 93. FOR SALE Lots fronting Main Street 55 feet next to Pittsboro post office, with two small build ings. Address X care Chatham * Record. MEXICAN BIG, boll cotton seed for V sale—the product of six acres ■ growh from purebred peed costing $2.50 a bushel; Come after them and get them at one dollar a bush el. J. D. Baker, 3 , miles north of Pittsboro. . I WANT to buy your cedar logs and crossties. Highest cash prices paid. W. C. Johnson. SEE ME about your seed oats be . fore buying. W. C. Johnson. ' FOR FEED OATS, sweet feeds, ship stuffs, wheat brand, see R. M. Con nell, on Highway 93. FOR THE HIGHEST cash prices for cedar posts and white oak ties take Pittsboro. TESTED SEED POTATOES, $3.75 per bag at R. M. Connell s, on | Highway 93. DELIVERY HOURS—Poe and Moore will deliver groceries each morning from 9 to 10 , o’clock and each afternoon from 5 to 6 o’clock. Phone in your orders. IN ALL, Van Elkins has sold more than one and one-fourth million Jefferson Standard Life Insurance in and around Siler City and Pitts boro. All other agents combined have not done that in same time. JUST RECEIVED a solid carload of Oats and sweet feed; quality the best. Prices right. R. M. Connell. HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for crossties and cedar posts. You may measure posts yourself ans be sure you get right measures. R. M. Connell, Highway 93. CHICKEN FEED, sweet feeds, oats, etc., wholesale or retail at lowest prices at Poe and Moore’s, Pitts • boro. EXECUTRIX NOTICE Having qualified as executor of the last will and testament of A. D. Burgess, late of Chatham County, I hereby warn all persons having claims against the estate of the said A. D. Burgess to present them duly proven on or before the sth day of March, 1930, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery. All persons owing the estate will please make early payment. This the sth day of March, 1929. BEATRICE BURGESS HENDERSON, Executrix (Mch 7-Apr 11, 6tp) ® Round after round is the way the pugilist ascends the ladder of fame. f/ou Only Haiw ONE Ay' Guard. thern^ DR. J. C. MANN the well-known EYESIGHT SPECIALIST ’ will be at Dr. Farrell’s Office PITTSBORO, TUESDAY, March 26 at Dr. Thomas’ Office SILER CITY, THURSDAY, March 28 i ¥. : * : * • £ • 1 Quality Machines I ¥. r : ¥. tor : I Profitable Farming £ The J. I. Case Company bought during 1928 the i ¥ • +[ whole plant of the E. & B. Company and thus has great- ) : ly enlarged its already immense production facilities. : ♦: These are among the very oldest firms manufacturing : ♦t | t: farm machinery in the whole country. j i A MACHINE FOR EVERY FARM OPERATION j fc : £ The Case--Company manufactures the following : n kinds of machines and every one of them is good as l £ the best: 5 T* Tractor* Skid Engines T Threshers V. Combines £ Windrow Headers A* Steam Engines Hay Balers Silo Fillers Fuel and Water Tenders S Road Rollers Walking Plows ik Middle Breakers S Sulky and Gang Plows (fl Two Way Plows VP - Tractor Moldboard Plows £ Riding Disk Plows Wheatland Listers 1 $ -. H. A. Bynum and B. A. Perry handle the Case fine ; 3 in Pittsboro and will be able to furnish parts for any i!;i j 2* Case machine. Prompt service guaranteed. ’ ■ "-> » j $ Tell us of your machinery problems and be sure to ■; $ read all Case machinery ads appearing in this paper. 3 H. A. BYNUM * B. A. PERRY •T* §gi NOTICE OF SALE OF PITTSBORO BONDS. Bids will be received by the Board of Commissioners of the town of Pittsboro at noon, March 18th, 1929, for the purchase of SIB,OOO Public Improvement Bonds of said munici- dated January 1, 1929, and maturing SI,OOO on January Ist, in each of the years 1932 to 1949 in clusive, denomination SI,OOO, princi pal and interest payable in NeW York < City. Interest rate 6%. Bidders must present with their, amounts a certified check for 2% of face amount of bonds bid to secure the town against any loss resulting from failure of the bidder to comply with the terms of his bid. The right to j reject all bids is reserved. E. R. HINTON, Clerk. Mary Temple, 3-year-old child of Spokane, Wash., became separated from his parents and spent a night alone in the mountains with no serious results. WANTED i 1000 Working Men to see the good $1.50 heavy full cut Over alls we are selling for SI.OO a pair. All sizes. Boys in same quality and kind,.priced 75c, 85 c, qnd 90 c. Stroud & Hubbard Sanford, N. C. ROOFING- All Kinds at Right Prices Stoves and Heaters Builders’ Supplies Anything in Hardware Lee Hardware Co. SANFORD, N. C. Ridge Busters Wheatland Disk Plows Great Plains Disk Plows Marsh Plows Brush Breakers Spike Tooth Harrows Spring Tooth Harrows Harrow Carts Disk Harrows Orchard Disk Harrows Clod Crushers Qrain Drills Corn Planters Cotton Planters Cotton and Corn Planters Manure Spreaders •; • • * >5 , .U. YOU TRY IT! llt s not our “ say-so" but our “know-how** that makes SCOTT’S EMULSION so easy to take and so pleasing to the palate. Scott's spells in- jMk creased strength, sturdiness, efficiency. f Time to Plants I and the best varieties '■ : of Vegetables • Free Rower Seed - Collections t And how to get them. ~ * are told in the (golden t> Anniversary Catalog wL’\l i/a. oP ' >", rm IfWOQdSI I SEEDS 1 ti ial li— Write for your copy today. T. W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen Since 1879, Listers * .' ! Walking Cultivators « Riding Cultivators 4 Sled Lister Cultivators ! Lister Cultivators * Beet Cultivators J Cotton Choppers and Culti- * vators J Grain Binders J Corn Binders * Mowers « Snlky Rakes « Side Delivery Rakes * ; < Hay Loaders; j Stalk Cutters " -fy ' i-A'i < * Field Tillers ] •.- r , < PAGE FIVE
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
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March 14, 1929, edition 1
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