PAGE FOUR The RED | LAMP | ' S T ||| jijj By | ! ]|; MARY ROBERTS RINEHART jj; Copyright by Geo. H. Dorse Company WNU Service July 30. ! I have today borrowed some of Mrs. .Livingstone’s books on psychic re search, and intend to go into them thoroughly. If there Is any proof in a mas 9 of evidence, it is certainly here. On the other hand, one must remem ber that the hope of survival is the strongest desire of the human heart How many, if they felt that this life was all, would care to go on with it? Analyzing my last night’s exped ience, however, I can find nothing in 'my mind before I went to sleep, to ac count. for it. I ate a light dinner, and spent the evening after Jane retired, ■ with this Journal. The night was quiet, and my last waking thought was concerning the wood cutter across the froad, who seems so singularly inactive except when some one leaves the Lodge, or appears at one of its win dows. One thing I have traced, however. It is distinctly possible that the herbal, aromatic odor I noticed at the end oi the experience was due to the leaves he collected yesterday, and which 1 find have smoldered throughout the night. . . . It was after midnight when, just as I was dozing off, Jane came to my door and asked me if I would mind sleeping in her room. “I can fix you a bed on the couch,” she said, avoiding my eyes. “I’m nervous tonight, for some reason.” I went at once, trailing my bedding with me. and while she prepared the eouch. I observed her. She was very white, and I saw that her hands were shaking, but she refused my offer of some brandy with her usual evasive ‘ answer. “I’m alt right,** she said. “I just don’t like being alone.” She fell asleep almost at once, like one exhausted, but the change of beds had fully roused me, and I lay for some time staring into the darkness. I do not know when it was that I be gan to have the feeling that we were not alone in the room, but I imagine fully half an hour had passed. I saw nothing, but I had the sensa tion of being stealthily watched, and with it something of horror rather than of fear. I was rigid with it. Then something seemed to tug at my coverings, and the next moment they had slid to the floor. Almost imme diately after that there came a rush of air through the room, a curtain bil lowed over my face, and the door into the hall swung open. Then all was silent, save for a low whine from Jock outside in the half. How much of this today to allot to my nerves I do not know. Undoubted ly Jane’s nervousness had affected me; equally undoubtedly bed clothing has a tendency to slip from a couch. 1 have experimented today. A gale of wind would blow out a curtain and open an unlatched door. On the other hand, I am as certain today as I have been certain of any thing recently, that I had bolted the door when-1 entered the room. But it was not bolted in the morning. If I have- indeed' actually had a psychic experience, it seems singularly purposeless; Up to this time I have fmagined, correctly or not, that these Inexplicable occurrences have had a concealed but definite objective, if such a phrase may be used. But in this case there is apparently nothing. We have had, however, a develop ment of our own, and this from Edith! It appears that this morning, seeing ©ofctor Hayward pass on bis* round of morning; calls, she went! to> bis office and; on his housekeeper reporting him out, askedi permisstoni to* go into his office and'there- him a note. “A note?” I’inquired. “What* sort of aknote?” “Any sort' of note,” said Editlb “As It- happens, I asked him to tea tomor row. It was all I could think of.” But what she really did was to type a,few lines on his typewriter, tear the paper out and put it in the small vanity case which Is as much a part of : her as the nose she powders from It. (As a net result of which audacious performance Halliday now informs me that the cipher words were not written an the doctor's machine.) A careful; comparison under a mag nffying glass shows this so that even I can recognize it So there we are again. TIMBER FOR SALE? Is so, phone, write, or wire TODAY GOLDSTON BROTHERS Goldston, N. C. — ■ ■ - —" - ? We just want to live, another year or two, to see if they will padlock a congressman.— The Hamilton Evening Journal. July 91* Halliday has found the boat. At least he has found a boat which answers Jane’s description. Today be took me to see it. It lies in the small creek which ex tends through the marsh half a mile north of the boathouse, and just be yond Robinson’s point. The boat, evidently an old and aban doned one, gives some evidence of re cent use. That is, although it con tains some water, there is very littie, whereas, as Halliday says, after the recent rains it might well be full.. The oarlocks are wrapped with din gy white cotton cloth, and to prevent their being stolen, or the boat taken ’away, the oars had been skillfully Tcdny He Took Me to See It. hidden in the marsh. Halliday located them hut left them as they were; but with his penknife he cut away a small bit o’ the muffling on the oarlock, for later possible identification. It was in this* boat, Halliday be lieves, that the murderer fled onto the bay from our slip the night Carroway discovered him, and from it too that he later climbed into Carrovvay’s launch and attacked him. Small wonder that the boy’s face set bard as be examined it. Yet, for one must find some humor nowadays or go mad, there was some thing humorous in the careful indirec tion by which we reached it. We made rather ostentatious preparations to go fishing, Halliday working with hooka and sinkers, and I hopelessly en tangled in coils of line. Later, we rowed across the bay and anchored by the whistle buoy, where we fished assiduously for some time. Our approach to the mouth of the creek was therefore of a most desul tory sort, but once around Robinson’s point, we abandoned caution and rowed rapidly. Had Greenough been able to see us. from start to finish, he would have had some basis for his suspicions of me. Whether Halliday’s later discovery has any significance or not we are not certain. Believing that, on the night of the girl’s murder she was brought iu the truck to the water front, and coupling this with the finding of the boat, he left me sheltered from ob servation in the woodland and started through it toward the main road. In a half hour or so he came back again, and reported that he had found tlv track of wheels driven through the woods, and that in one place a barbed wire fence had been taken down and boards placed over it, to permit the passage of a car across it. This is, I imagine, fair presumptive evidence, although it brings us no nearer the identity of the criminal than we were before. One thing, how ever, may be valuable. Edith, who knows a number of unsuspected house wifely things, insists that the strips ■ which wrapped the oarlocks are of a fine grade of material. “Look for somebody,” she says, “who uses linen sheets on his bed, and doesn’t care that they cost twenty-five dollars a pair nowadays.” From which I gather, among other things, that our little Edith has been pricing the equipment of a home. Tonight that old sea-chest which in the boathouse hoids on its top the low hooks which were to occupy Halli day’s leisure this summer, and which so far seem to be used chiefly to hold open his doors on windy days—the old sea-chest contains to date the four clews which are our sole ammunition In the putative expedition against Greenough. They are: ■ (a) Half of a broken lens from a pair of eye-glasses. (b) A scrap of paper, containing a cryptic bit of typing ill large and small ’ letters. (c) The small cap of an ether can. (d) A fragment of white cloth. ) Had it not been for Halliday’s un > wittingly placing a weapon in the 1 enemy’s hands we should also have had: (e) A very sharp knife, with a plain 1 wooden handle and a blade approx * imately six inches long. (CONTINUED NEXT WEEK) THE CHATHAM RECOBP, PITTSBQgQ, it. C. Groceryman Inspire* Thoughts on Economy (From The Maxton Scottist Chief) Some few years ago “the high cost of living” was one of the most talked about subjects. Nowadays people complain to some extent about tight money and hard _times but the term “high cost of living seems to be forgotten. Or it may be the people have investigated the matter and found that the burden is not so much the “high cost of living” but rather the “cost of high living.” There is no denying that on the average, the standard of living has been raised. Throughout the country people are getting more of the things they enjoy than they used to get. In dollars and cents, it is costing some more to live than it did before the war when standards were lower and when only a few enjoyed con veniences and luxuries afforded to day to many. The variods conven iences cannot be had without paying for it; but, being personally interest ed we are led to wonder how many people realize that for the same stan- j dard of living, some families pay j more dearly than others, and we also j wonder if it would not be a good ; thing for families to form economy clubs so that the heads of families might get together, compare notes on household management and ex penditures to the end that those who pay too much, may profit by the ex perience of those especially gifted in the art of stretching the dollar. The writer walked into a Maxton grocery store the other day to buy some vegetable seed. The grocery man happens to be a student of hu man nature, and, though he may not know himself; is also a good prac tical economist. While wrapping my seed he began talking of the advan- 1 tage of having a good garden—-how much money it saved by raising plenty of vegetables. 'From that the conversation drifted into the subject of management and money-spending in general and this groceryman and practical economist said “it is surpris- j ing how much different there is in the amount of money expended by different families. He has observed two families of the same size and j practically the same income; one he says will manage to get along on half the mount spent by the other. | And he ventured the assertion that 1 half the amount spent 'by the other. Picking up a jar of salad dressing, he remarked that one lady would pay 49 cents for that while another would take a little Wesson oil and make something better for 20 cents. Some may think that by such talk that this merchant was furnishing a stick to crack his own head, but not so. For he hastened to add that as a rule the people who manage well and stay within their incomes are the most satisfactory customers because they are better able to meet their obligations. There are exceptions to the rule of course. He meant to deal with average customers as may come under his observation day by day. This subject of personal and household economy is as old as Benjamin Franklin, and of -course even much older than that, but after our chat with a neighbor, the gro ceryman, we are moved to remark that it is still just as important to take care as to spending as it is to speed up production or to be con cerned about our earning power, and we ought not feo forget that the per son who spends half what his neigh bor does for essentially the same liv ing will soon have additional earning power in the form of saved capital. ® More About Kudzu (From The Monroe Enquirer.) Fearful of wearying my readers I had about come to the conclusion to say no more, for the present at least, about kudzu. But I ( note in Tues day’s Charlotte Obsarver where “at tention is called to the possibilities of this fine legume in reclaiming worn-out land, the utilization of rough, rocky lands unsuited for cul tivation, for pasturage, and for the production of enormous quanities of hay on any land.” The Observer is absolutely right in its contention as to the value of kudzu, and should be commended in its effort to get the farmers of Piedmont Carolina interested in a plant which eventually will prove the farmers salvations. Right now there are a number o>f fields here in Union county, and also O by McCormick A Company, 1928 KILLS —Flies—Mosquitoes—Bedbugs—Roaches—Moths— Ants—Fleas Waterbugs—Crickets and many other insects I Write /or educational booklet, McCormick & Co., Baltimore, Md. I Bee Brand I Insect Powder I or Liquid Spraq I 7 cMtaot fOTiA, WB will 50c, 75c and *1.25. Gun— 3oc •apply direct by Parcel Pm* Powder- 10c, 25c, 50c sad f LOO «regular priest Gua— 2se in Mecklenburg, knee deep to waist deep in Kudzu. Very little corn has been planted the present year m these counties because of the very wet spring and summer seasons. Had our farmers, who apparently will have very little corn with which to feed livestock the coming winter, a few acres each in Kudzu a distressing situation would have been avoided. Wet season or dry, year after year, Kudzu produces enormous crops of fine hay. It never fails—needs no fertilization of cultivation. I have yet to find a man who has grown this splended legume who is not a Kudzu Krank. Piedmont Carolina can never be come a prosperious country until it becomes cow-minded. Cattle may not be profitably grown unless there is cheap feedstuff in greatest a bundance. Kudzu, as the Observer states, may be grown on practically worthless soils. It will enrich the land, afford pasture for three or four cows per acre over summer, or will produce five to eight tons hay per acre. ® ] Too Much Forgiving | (From The Harnett County News) Judge Sinclair stated in court here last week that a great majority— practically all —of the cases of lar ency and like crimes are chargeable to white boys between the ages of 18 and 22. His statement is not new. We hear it ever so often. I But what is to be done about it? Is there anything being done about it? Yes. There is this much being done. The young men who commit the crimes are hailed into court and a crowd sits around and listens to ( pleas for leniency. The Judge is persuaded that the crimesters are the best boys in the world but that they 1 have “gotten into bad company” when in fact they have been in no one’s company except their own. More often it is the case that they are so bad that no one in the com munity will associate with them. , Then the forgiving is done. The j crimesters are told to go to work and be good—something they have t never learned to do. I What is the punishment and what I is to act as a deterrent against fu ture committing of crime? Nothing ,—nothing at all. In the opinion of the News there j is too much forgiving and too little ‘repentance in these cases. Only last I week this writer saw a young white j man sitting in court listeing to a i plea for leniency in a case in which ihe was charged with crime, and he ' was laughing—a sneering laugh at that! 1 It is well and good to exercise the J forgiving spirit after tnere is some ( evidence of repentance. But to be so quick to forgive, and even before the guilty party has shown signs of re pentance, or has had time to decide wheather he will repent, simply means that the crimester is getting away with his wrongdoing. The News believes in the forgiving spirit and leniency and all that sort of thing. But where it is not deserved and not appreciated, we wonder where it will end and what the result will be. What is the cause of the condition that justifies the statement ( of Sinclair that practically all of the I larency and such like crimes are ! being committed by white boys be tween the ages of 18 and 22? ' In our opinion it is because there ;is too much forgiving where it is not deserved nor appreciated. <§, “WOODENSHOE” GIRL “I call mv wife my ‘better half.’.” “Why?” “Because she’s always saying, ‘You better half that tire patched,’ and ‘You better half your tooth fixed,’ and ‘You better half this,’ and ‘You ; better half that’!”—Life. , I ® , I Poetry is the morning cfcream of . great minds. ’j NOTICE OF SALE ;) Under and by virtue of an order 'j of the Clerk of the Superior Court ■ of Chatham County, North Carolina, > in the proceeding entitled “K. J. Smith against Mrs. M. A. Smith and (husband, Manley Smith” the under . signed commissioner will, on the ’> 31st day of July, 1929, offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the fol -1 lowing described real estate, to-wit: i NORTH CAROLINA I CHATHAM COUNTY: ' I, G. W. Blair, sheriff of the 1 county of Chatham, do hereby certify that the following described real estate in said county and state, to wit: acres in Matthews Town ship was, on the third day of Octo ber, 1927, duly sold by me, in the manner provided by law, for delin quent taxes of M. A. Smith for the year 1926, amounting; to $25.34, in cluding interest and penalty thereon and the cost allowed by law, when and where K. J". Smith purchased said real estate at the price of $25.34 Dollars, he being; the highest and best bidder for the. same. And I further certify that unless redemption is made of said real estate in the man ner provided by law, the said K. J* Smith, his heirs or assigns shall have the right of foreclosure of this cer tificate of sale by civil action at the expiration of one year from the date of sale. In witness whereof I have here unto set my hand and seal this the 4th day of October, 1927. Sheriff It being the lands on which the said Manley Smith now resides*, lo cated near Route 90 of the State Highway leading from Pittsboro, to Siler City. , , . Place of Sale: Courthouse door at Pittsboro, N. C. , _ Time of Sale: 12 o’clock noon. _ Terms of Sale: Cash. This the 29th day of June, 1929. W. P. HORTON, ' Commissioner NOTICE OF SCHOOL ELECTION NORTH CAROLINA: CHATHAM COUNTY: OFFICE OF THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, JUNE 3, 1929. In accordance with the petition duly filed, as provided by law, and as more specifically provided by Arti cle 17 of the Codification of the School Laws of North Carolina, wherein one-third, or twenty-five, of the qualified voters, who have re sided at least twelve months in the proposed school district, have pe titioned the Board of Education of Chatham County, to request the Board of County Commissioners of Chatham County to call a special election for the purpose herein men ' tioned, and an election is hereby I called to be held at the residence of C. P. Teague in the district here inafter described on Saturday the 3rd day of August, 1929, for the purpose of voting a special school tax, not to exceed twenty cents on the one-hundred dol ' lars valuation of the property in said district, to supplement the public * school funds which may be appor ’ tioned by the County Board of Edu cation in case such special tax is | voted, in the following described ter ritory, to-wit: BEGINNING in the Randolph County line near Staley in the public road leading from Staley by (not in cluding) L. C. Siler’s and C. C. | Cooper’s, thence east along the north 1 boundary of Staley local tax district in Chatham County (formerly Woodsdale district) to the bridge at ; the head of Albright’s mill pond, ; thence east with the courses of Rocky River (including) the lands of ' Luther Bridges and Harvey Cotner ; to the west boundary of the Garfield ' Swain lands, thence along the east ' boundary of Harvey Cotner’s lands to the east boundary of (including) R. D. Teague’s land, thence north along the west boundary of (not in ! eluding) W. J. Thompson’s land to 5 the (including) A. J. Clarke lands, thence north along the east bound ary of lands of A. Clarke lands > (including) the Cotner heirs, W. B. Teague, the Widow Thomas, to the Alamance County line; thence west i with Alamance County line to Ran > dolph County line, thence south along { Randolph County line to the be ginning. At said election of the qualified s voters in said territory who shall have registered shall be entitled to . vote, those who are in favor of the levy and collection’ of said tax or taxes, shall vote a ballot on which ■ shall be written- or printed the words 1 “For Special Tax,” and those who ’ are against the levy and collection j of said special tax or taxes shall vote 1 a ballot on which shall be written, or printed the words “Against Spe cial Tax.” For the purpose of carry ing out said election C. P. Teague is. * hereby appointed registrar, who shall [ keep his books open from Saturday, * the 29th day of June, 1929, until Saturday, the 2.7th day of July, 1929, (both dates inclusive, for the registra ! jtian! of the voters within said district or territory, and a new registration » lis hereby ordered; the registration ,and the election shall be conducted !ui pue japun se se | accordance with the General Election • Laws for the election to the General Assembly. David Lashley and C. R. Thompson are hereby appointed poll holders to aid in said election. After closing the polls on election day the registrar and poll-holders shall proceed to count the votes for and against said election, declare the results of the same, and certify the same to the Board of County Com missioners of Chatham County. This the 3rd day of June, 1929. R. J. JOHNSON, Chairman, Board of County Commissioners, Chatham County C. C. POE, Clerk ex-Officio to said Board of Chatham County Commissioners. (June 27, July 4, 11) FORECLOSURE SALE UNDER DEED OF TRUST UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power of sale contained in that cer tain deed of trust executed by Alli ance Manufacturing Company, to the undersigned Trustee, dated Feb ruary 9th, 1929, and recorded in the Registry of Chatham County in Book GU, pages 119-20, and default hav ing been made in the payment of the indebtedness therein secured and demand having been made upon the undersigned Trustee to foreclose for < the satisfaction of said indebtedness; the undersigned will on Saturday the 20th day pf July, 1929, at twelve (12) o’clock noon in t 1 THURSDAY, JULY d front of the Courthouse door .4 Pittsboro, North Carolina, offer f &t sale to the highest bidder f or cash* the following described n ’ BEGINNING at an iron 50 feet from center of Railway tract, M. F. Morris corner* thence south 47 degrees west h ’ line, 18 poles to an iron in Cheek’s line; thence South with Cheek’s li n 8 poles to a stone, I. P. CoggiJi corner; thence east with Coggi n ~> line 19 poles to stone and pointer*- thence north 47 degrees east 13 po w to an iron Southern Railway right of way; thence with said right of 21 poles to the BEGINNING, corf taining 2 acres, more or less, and being the lot of land conveyed to the party of the first part by J. Emerson, and to J. W. Emerson bv S. J. Emerson estate, it being the same lot of land upon which is now ; located the Gin property of the party of the first part. Also all the gijf presses, machinery, motive power : beltings, shaftings, tools, etc., used with and in connection with the operation of the cotton gin located upon said lot, whether the same be fixed to the real estate or not. This the 18th day of June, IQ9Q WADE BARBER" ’ Trustee NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SAIF Default having been made in pay ment of the indebtedness secured by that certain deed of trust to me as j Trustee for the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company by V. B. Elkins and wife, Willie Jordan Elkins, on the 16th day of June, 1924, and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Chatham County in Book GH of Deeds, page 405, et seq., I will, under and by virtue of the power of sale vested in me by said deed of trust, and at the request of the cestui que trust, and for the purpose of discharging the debt secured by said deed of trust, proceed to sell to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Courthouse door, in Pittsboro, Chatham County, North Carolina, at 12 o’clock M. on Monday, July 22nd, 1929, the following described land, to-wit: Beginning at a stake, corner of Raleigh and Jordan Streets, and run ning South 25 degrees East with Jordan Street 175 feet to a stake, on West side of Jordan Street; thence South 65 degrees West 125 feet to a stake; thence North 25 de grees West 175 feet to a stake on the South side of Raleigh Street; thence with Raleigh Street, North 65 degrees East, 125 feet to the begin ning, and containing 21,875 square feet. Same being the land conveyed to “Mrs. Willie Elkins” by Cattie M. Jordan, by deed dated November 4, 1920, and registered in Book F’W at page 458. This the 14th day of June, 1929. JULIAN PRICE, Trustee Brooks, Parker, Smith and Wharton, Attorneys, Greensboro, N. C. NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtue of a certain decree made and entered in that spe cial proceeding now pending in the superior court of Chatham county, North Carolina, entitled “James L. Griffin, Administrator of J. J. Brooks versus Mrs. Sallie Brooks, et als,” the undersigned commissioner will on F Saturday thfe 13th day of July, 192$ at 12 o’clock noon, in front of the Courthouse door at Pittsboro, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, all that certain lot or parcel of land lying and being in Center Township, adjoining the lands of T. M. Bland estate and others, and bounded as follows, viz: Gn the north by the lands of T. M. Bland; on the east by the right of-way of the Pittsboro Railroad; on the south by the Jenks land, and on the west by the Newman lands, con taining 35 acres, more or less, and being more fully described and de fined in the title deeds which he held the same, SAVE AND EXCEPT, HOWEVER, from this tract of land the dower interest of Mrs. Sallie Brooks in and to the following: | BEGINNING at the southwest comer of the- J. J. Brooks lands, 'Jenks line and running thence about ; east 163 yards; thence about north 1160 yards to a cedar tree in grove; thence about west 180 yards; thence about south 190 yards to the be ginning. ! This the 10th day of June, 1929. WADE BARBER, . Commissioner Siler & Barber, Attys. FORECLOSURE SALE UNDER DEED OF TRUST Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that certain deed of trust executed by H. G. Goldston and wife, Gola Goldston, to the- undersigned Trustees, dated June 23rd, 1928, and recorded in the Reg istry of Chatham County in Book HA, page 621, and default having been made in the payment of the in debtedness therein secured and de mand having been made upon the undersigned Trustees to foreclose f 01 ’ the satisfaction of said indebtedness; the undersigned will on , Saturday the 20th day of July, 1929, twelve o’clock noon in front of the Courthouse door at Pittsboro, North Carolina, offer for sale to the hig bidder for cash, the following de scribed real estate: BEGINNING at a .stake in the fork of the west and east prong of Indian Creek; thence up west pr ,T ‘2 of Indian Creek its various courses 41 poles to an ash on said creek, thence about north with hedgerov -112 poles to a stone in Cleve Gunters line (formerly W. L. Goldston HneL thence about east with said Gunters line 62 poles to a sweet gum on east bank on the east prong of Creek; thence down said creek ! -' various courses to the beginning, c° n ‘ taining thirty three (33) acres more or less. This the 17th day of June, 1929. WALTER D. SILER & WADE BARBER, Trustees