PAY YOUR DEBTS
There never was a better time to
pay debts than right now. the prompt
payment of debts is public service to
the community. That sacrifice should
be rendered even at the price of some
sacrifice.
This appeal, "Pay. your debts," is
directed specifically to the man who
considers himself "good" and who is
considered by merchants "goods". It
is an appeal to the man who owes a
few running accounts to pay them and
pay them at once. The cotton grower,
at present, surrounded as he is by un
precedented difficulties, is in a differ
ent class. He is suffering from ex
ceptional conditions, and the mer
chants that he owes are suffering with
him from these exceptional conditions.
But, the salared man, or the man
who has money in the bank, or the
merchant who is safe, should pay his
debts and pay them at once. Debt
paying will start a flow of money
through the channels of retail trade,
past the wholesalers and jobbers to
the banks. If the man with little
wnnnov We nnt nflv the merchant, the
merchant can't pay the jobbers; if the
mercnant can P?",c " the
jobber is not paid he cannot pay the.
banker. If the banker is not P. ne to people in general for he reason
will have to .niJniikatwo mvich is compiled from foreign
commerce and Indu7 h15A.hftt I writers, who use a different system of
Don't shut your fist tight "g of weights and measures, and it is
money you have, if you a we d ebts If both fa and confugi t fi
you are out of debt keep the money out and tnm the valug
till the cows come home I : you are .n Bu))etin
in debt, go pay : t; : relieve the anxiety are given in calories d and it
and the troubles of the man who .g e to hamlonize them w-th
trusted you and who depends upon remembering that one
you. If you owe the doctor thehw-i J
yer, or the merchant go pay them so , lculationecomes b t aimple prob.
they can pay the men they owe. Mart proportion For insncZ the
the money to moving. first article ligted in the is frcsh
It is no use to shut our eyes to pat averag8 edjb,e fa
ent facts, tmsis a v'f"V " ifi what'8ivcn having a fuel value of 1,495
And yet, if all our people s pari I hat a d Be ired t
they owed money wouiu
anfl Dusmess wuum V";"" nf e
tember rtembe7 husu'ally been j
totaTlLllrfiS
and sold goods with the expectation of
-nyinr in Kpntember and October.!
The thirty day accounts of the house-
holders are due, also. The debtors are
blocking the game. They are halting
business. Step lorwara ana pay vtuai.
,, w nflV as much of it as possi-
Me
HEALTH REGULATIONS FOR
BARBER SHOPS, ETC.
The Virginia State Board of Health
has adopted the following regulations
for control of barber shops, public
, t
No peron with any Mease of the
the skin or the lace nau dc snuvcu(
in a public barber shop.
2. Barbers must wash their hands
thoroughly with to&p and water be-j
An etonslinir ST1V TPTKOn. I
3 No alum or other astringent shall axiom about the prophet The machine
be used in the stick form. If used at gun that is playing such havoc is the
all to stop the flow of blood, it must invention of Colonel Isaac Newton,
be applied m the form of powder. United States Army, retired who re-
4 The use of powder puffs is pro- peatedly offered it to his own conn
hibited ' I try and at last in despair of its re-
- 5. No towel shall be used for more" I ceiving recognition sold it to France,
than one person without being laun- Germany and Belgium,
dered. I The Lewis gun, air-cooled, pours out
. 6. The use of sponges is prohibit- a stream of lead at the rate of 1,000
ed. i bullets a minute. In the battle rear
7. Mugs and shaving brushes must Malines I saw trees literally mowed
be thoroughly washed after use on down by these weapons. Tnese guns
each person. .- , are carried in some instances by the
8. Combs, razors, clippers and scis-. soldiers and are also drawn by the
sOrs shall be thoroughly cleansed af-1 Belgian draft dogs, which have shown
ter every separate use thereof. wonderful sagacity and courage in
9. Floors must be swept or moppeu
every day, and all furniture and wood
work kept free irom oust.
10. Running water shall be provided
wherever it is possible to be had.
11. All bath tubs shall be thorough
ly cleansed with soap and water af
ter each separate use
12. All tools or instruments used
by barbers outside the shop in serv
ing any person suffering from infec
tous or contagious diseases are re
quired to be thoroughly and efficient
ly disinfected with 15 per cent, for
maldehyde or by boiling immediately
after using the same.
13. No person suffering from any
infectious or contagious disease, in
including tuberculosis or venereal dis
eases, shall serve any person in any
barber shop, school, public bath room
or bath house or hair dressing par
lors in this state.
Til,? retruiiitijliS for manicurists ana.
chiropodists are very similar in scope i
and conduct. In partcular, they pro
vide that no person suffer'tie: vita
any disease of the skin, hands or fee.
shall be treated in any public mani
cure or chiropodist shop. Persons suf
fering from infectious or contagious
disease, including tuberculosis, are
prohibited from working in these es
tablishments. Paragraph nine pro
vides that "all scissors, clippers and
instruments and utensils shall be
thoroughly cleansed after each sepa
rate use, either by being disinfected
with a 15 per cent, solution of formal
dehyde or by boiling immediately af
ter using.'
LOOK HERE FOR IT
Many an Asheboro Reader Will Be In
terested. When people read about tin? cures
made by a medicine, endorsed from
far away, is it surprising that they
an easy matter. Read Asheboro en
dorsement of Doan's Kidney Pills,
wonder if the statements are true?
But when they read of cases right
here at home, positive proof is within
their reach, for close investigation is
Mrs. E. E. Burns, Fayetteville St.,
Asheboro, N. C, says: "I suffered
intensely from kidney trouble. It be
gan with pains across the small of my
back, then headaches and dizzy spells
bothered me and the kidney secretions
became annoying. I finally get a sup
ply of Doan's Kidney Pills from thej
Standard Drug company ana tney
nuJ 1 linna thm niihlirntinn of
my statement wil be the means of
For sale by all dealers. Price 60
cents. Foster-Milbura Co., Buffalo,
New York, Bole agents for the United f
States. I
K lira ember the name--Doa' nd I
v.- co c'.V.er. J
OF VALUE TO EVERY HOUSEWIFE
Bulletin No. 28, United States De
partment of Agriculture, being "The
Chemical Composition of American
Food Materials," should hang in the
kitchen of every home in the United
States. The bulletin can be bought
from the superintendent of documents
at the government printing office,
Washington, D. C, postage prepaid,
for ten cents.
The document gives a brief history
of the investigation of the chemistry
of foods since the first steps made by
Liebig some fifty years ago; it shows
the various cuts of beef, veal, lamb,
mutton and pork, and then gives ta
bles showing the composition in water,
refuse, protein, fat, carbohydrate and
ash of various meats, cereals, vegeta
bles, fruits, dairy products and nuts,
and the food value of all as measured
by the calories per pound. From these
data it is very interesting to figure
out and arrange a varied and balanced
ration that will go far toward solving
both the high cost of living and the
problem of good health and happiness.
Much of the Polished data on the
- avaiiofcu
find the nece8Bary for 100 Cal-
ones, the problem becomes 453.6 is to
1, 495 as X to to 100, or 10.3 grams.
RHEUMATISM PAINS STOPPED
'
The first aplication of Sloan's Lin
iment goes right to the painful part
it penetrates without rubbing it
stops the Rheumatic Pains around the
joints ana gives reuei ana comiori.
Don't suffer! Get a bottle today! It is
a family medicine for all pains, hurts,
Druises, cuts sore tnroat, neuragia ana
chest pains. Prevents infection.
Mr. Chas. H. Wentworth, California,
writes: "It did wonders for my
Rheumatism, pain is gone as soon as
?p! " ;; . " l" "
friends as the best Liniment I ever
.used." Guaranteed. 2oc at your
Druggist
THE MOST DESTRUCTIVE GUN
INVENTED
This war is verifying once more the
Dattie.
American made automobiles also are
rendering splendid service. The Bel
gian army automobile cammandant
tell me that the American machines
stand the hardest usage and are near
er fool-proof than the European
makes.
The Belgians are making most eff
ective use of armored automobiles
protected by steel shields and armed
with the Lewis guns. The guns are so
light only 29 pounds or less than
half the weight of a soldier's equip
ment that a powerful armament can
be carried in a comparatively light
car.' There armored automobiles are
being driven by racing drivers and by
reckless young society men.
DIARRHOEA QUICKLY CURED
"Mv attention was first called to
rnnmhonnin's Cniip. Cholera nnl
Djar,hoea Remedy as much as twelve
years ago. At that time 1 was sen
;ii faimmer complaint. One
uoe uf ;his remedy checked the trou
ble," writes Mrs. C. W. t lorencp
Rockfield, Ind. For sale by all def
ers. GREGORY MADE GOOD
"I want to tell you a little, story
that I believe will interest you," said
Mr. T. F. Patterson, manager of the
Mint Coia Company, as he supped in
to a chair and began talking to the
editor,
."When I was a boy and in school
there came to the town in vhich I was
living, a nice, sweet little woman,
widow and the mother of one child, a
boy. She was without means and be
gan taking boarders to enable her to
keep the son in school. The boy was a
nice, bright young fellow and soon
made friends of every one. Just be
fore he finished the course his mother
lost her boarders, through some-dis-
agreement with the principal of the
school, but the boy finished. Later he
studied law and went to Texas to live
and practice his profession. That boy's
name was Watt Gregory and he was
made Attorney General of the United
States by President Wilson the other
day, and when I saw his picture in
your paper a few days' ago I naturally
recalled his school days and how" he
mace good. It shows what a boy can
do if be tries.
It was a simple, brief story and is
but another one showing the opportu
nities of life and how a boy can overt
gardless of his advantages or disad
vantages.
Watt Gregory, as be is recalled by
his school boy companions, is bow the
lawyer for the whole United States of
Am erica. Salisbury Post
LOOK YOURSELF IN THE FACE
The reaper of death sweeping; over
Europe brings to our mind a thought
worthy ol more than casual consider
ation.
Let us look ourselves in the face
and think think for the benefit of
humanity, for the weal of posterity.
In all parts' of the country schools
are opening for the fall and winter
terms and much of the future will
depend upon the training of the youth
oi toaay.
Never in our history was there
time when it was more imperative
tnat nasty passions and vidictive tern
peraments be curbed and eradicated.
Never was there a time when the
inculcation of brotherly love and a
consideration for others was more ur
gently required.
The youth of today will be the men
of tomorrow, and as we train them
now so will they be then.
The burden rests heavily upon us.
We expect the teacher in the school
to transform our child into a man of
learning and honor and integrity, but
do we stop to consider that more de
pends upon the parent than upon the
educator 7
The one cannot succeed without the
co-operation of the other, but the two
working jointly and earnestly to
gether will accomplish wonderful re
sults. ,
We should think before speaking.
Harsh words and family jars in the
presence of a child gives it its first
lesson in unruliness and puts a sharp
edge to an awakening temper. It is
natural for the infant to copy the ex
ample of the parent
As we expect much from the teach
er, let us give equally of our own store
of patience an consideration.
Infancy demands kindness, gentle
ness and sympathy not the austere
aloofness of age, or the coldness of in
difference.
A child is susceptible to training,
but when it reaches man s estate op
portunity has passed it by.
Shall we heed the lessons of a world'
ly calamity and face the duty that
confronts us ?
Shall we look ourselves in the face ?
HOWS THIS.
We offer One Hundred Dollars Re
ward for any case of Catarrh that
cannot be cure by Hall s Catarrh
Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.
We, the undersigned, have know F.
J. Cheney for the last fifteen years,
and believe him perfectly honorable
in all business transaction and finan
cially able to carry out any obliga
tions made bv his firm.
NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE
Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system.
Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cts.
per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti
pation. SCIENCE OF EATING
(Ohio State Journal)' 4 i
It is said that 15 cents' worth of
food will keep an idle man a day, buti
a man who works hard requires 25
cents' wortlu Whatever one spends
above these figures is for waste. Of
course, this estimate is based upon
the scientific use of food. For instance
it takes about 2,500 calories, that is,
units of heat, to sustain a strong man
in health during a day. All foods are
classified as to calories, and so these
2,500 calories should be divided up
among foods according to their heat
units; for instance, 933 calories of
bread, 828 calories of pork and beans
and 350 calories of apple pie. This
would allow a few ' hundred calories
for fruits and knick-knacks; but
would probably exceed the 15 or 25
cent limit.
But the lesson of all this is that If
a person ate scientificallyxhose his
food with reference to the number oi
calories and th amount of protein, he
could live well on a diet of very slight
cost. As it is, ignorance leads the way
and the ordinary man often complains
that his wages will not pay for his
food. They will if he eats scientifical
ly. But the economic part is the least
to be considered. His health is main
tained and improved by his regulat
ing his diet by the number of calories
ani the amount of rrote;n.
CHAMBEDLAIX'S COLIC, CHOL
ERA AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY
"I advised the 'beys' when they en
listed for the Spanish war to take
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Di
arrhoea Remedy with them, and have
received many thanks for the advice
given," writes J. II. Honghland, El
don, Iowa. "No person whether trav
eling or at home should be without
this great remedy." For sale by all
dealers.
A DREAM OF YOUTH
Bitter resentment toward the auto
mobile for the part it has played in
supplanting the old-fashioned buggy,
caused the following touching little
poem, to be written by a Georgetown
woman, who undoubtedly hasn t out
lived her youth to such an extent as
to forget" "Love s Young Dream."
"I saw a sight this morning
That made my fancy fly
Back o'er the years, in visions
Of blissful days gone by.
'Twas but a tiny symbol.
But, Oh, how did it grip;
A bow of gaudy ribbon
Tied on a buggy whip.'
why v&ak mm
The toll of tuberculosis is claiming
more than 350 victims every day in the
United States, yet lew realize their grave
condition until the critical period arrives.
Overwork, worry, weakness after sick
ness, catarrh, bronchitis, tender throat
all exert the weakening influence that
invites consumption.
To gnard against consumption, thou
sand of people take Scott's Emulsion after
meals because its rich medkiaal nourish
ment strengthens the lnngt , puts vigor in
the blood, and npbnilds strength to resist
tnbercnSosii. Scott 'i Bmnlaioa fa nataxt's
stresgtb-btrilder. Refuse substitutes, ,
WAR MAY NOT HELP AMERICAN
FARMERS
President Thomas N. Carver, Prof
essor of political economy at Har
vard University, and government ag
ricultural expert, has recently prepar
ed for the press a statement on the
probable effect of the war on Amcrv
can agricultural interests. Among
other things, he says:
War makes for scarcity rather than
abundance, ar.d scarcity is bad for the
world at large, though it mav bere-
fit a few. Goods must in the end be
paid for with goods, they may be tem
porarily paid in money. If the war
ring countries have fewer goods to
give in exchange for what thev buv.
their real means of purchase is to that
extent reduced. The increased pur
chase by means of money, with fewer
goods with which to make the real pay'
ments, merely tend to cheapen money,
or which means the same thing,, raise
the price of goods' in terms of money.
In a general way the trading class
rather than the producing class prof
its Dy this situatm.
As to American agriculture, the
European war will be of no benefit
unless it should make agricultural
products more scarce than the other
products. If all the things which the
farmers have to buy rise in price on
the average as much as all the things
they have to sell there will be no gain
to tnem. inis win depend, first, on
the war upon agricultural production
as compared with production in other
fields, and second, on the effects of
the war upon the consumntion of air
ricultural products as compared with
tne consumption oi other thines.
There are reasons to expect an in
crease in th consumption of aencul
tural products in the countries which
are at war. There are more consum
ers in time of war than in time of
peace but men and horses are taken
from the farms and put into the army
less ib consumed on the farms and
more is sent away from the farms.
There is, therefore, an increased
trade in agricultural products rather
tnan an increased consumption.
A STORY GRANDMOTHER TOLD
I wandered back through the seasons
last mgnt
To a time when life wps new:
Moist was mine eyes and blurred was
tne ngnt
As I looked my old trunk through
Under worn dresses, I found a worn
white glove
That he gave when life was new.
Gift of his youth, first token of love
And his promise for aye to be true.
There was the fan that he gave unto
me
In the years when life was new:
From it there came but how could
that be?
His deep voice as it used to dc.
There was the ring that he blushingly
gave
In the years when life was new.
Sealing his promise who's now in the
grave
That forever he would be true.
Naught can restore the sweet joys
that 1 had
In the yars when life was new;
Yet, though my heart is lone, weary
and sad,
I thank God that his heart was true.
M. B.Andrews.
TrinityCollege.
BUSINESS AGGRESSIVENESS
In the last number of "Printer's
Ink," George B. Cortlyou, former sec
retary of commerce and labor, makes
a strong plea for business enterprise
and aggresiveness even in the face of
uncertain market conditions.
'This is not a time for despair," he
says, "but rather for fresh efforts to
push ahead into new fields as well as
for the development of old ones, that
we may rise to our opportunities and
the foundations of an enduring pros
perity.
"Least of all I think this is a time
for the abatement of publicity efforts.
Indeed, these should be redoubled now
because if advertising increases de
mand and stimulates production, this
is the time to advertise. And the mer
chant or manufacturer who keeps his
product prominently before the r,v in
now is not only proving his fa't'.i ;i
the soundnes and strength of Aniri
can industry, and thus setting a good
example to his more timid brother,
but is certain to reap an ample re
ward in the material return that will
come to him."
That is sound doctrine. We are
bormd to suffer to seme extent in the
vcr'.d-'vi('e disturbances of Inddoiry,
commerce and credit, br.s nj oi-.er na
tion in the world is so capable of
weathering the storm. Now, more
than ever, we can get business by go
ing after it, and we can perero pros
perity by expecting and preparing for
it. Wmston-balem Journal.
DON! HURT YOUR
LIVER WITH CALOMEL
When your liver becomes torpid
and sluggish, you can take calomel
and whip it into action, but the cal
omel will leave your body weaker and
sicker than ever. Calomel is a very
powerful drug, a form of mercury,
and need never.be used because there
is a perfect remedy to take the place
of calomel, that has all of calomel's
good medicinal effects with none of
its dangerous and uncertain follow
ups. Its name is Dodson'a Liver Tone.
The Asheboro Drug Co., sell Dod
son's Liver Tone with the guarantee
that if you don't find that it treats
you much better than calomel, they
will give you your meney back with
a smile, Dodson's Liver Tone is a true
tonic for the liver, purely vegetable
and with such a pleasant taste that
it is no trouble to get children to take
it It is absolutely impossible for it to
do anyone any harm.
A REPUBLCAN TRIBUTE TO THE PRESIDENT
"President Wilson has made good,"
!m Fort, of New Jersey, at the Wilard. "He has not only led his party in the
path he thinks is right, but has won the high regard of the people in all sec
tions of all parties. I do not speak ofthe President in this way because he
is my neighbor, but because I believe ne has made good as the head of his
party, and though I may not agree with him in politics I can not fail to see
that he is honest in his endeavors, sound of judgment, able and patriotic. The
President is one of the most human men I have ever known, and a sincere,
friend." Washington Post, March, 1914.
ACHIEVEMENTS OF EIGHTEEN MONTHS OF DEMOCRACY
Tariff Revision Downwards.
Income Tax.
Currency Reform. . ....
Dollar Diplomacy abolished Human Rights Substituted. '
Lobby driven out of Congress.
Panama Canal completed. ,
American Merchant Marine established without subsidies.
Alaskan Railway authorized and survey began. N
Popular vote for U. S. Senators made effective.
Two great Railway Strikes averted by arbitration.
Telephone and Telegraph Trust Destroyed.
Parcel Post extended and cheapened.
Deficit in Postal Service wiped out
Trust Dissolutions made effective.
TAKE YOUR CHOICE
One Operator's plant is black
With smoke and everlasting dust,
The grounds are filled with slate and
slack
The grass is blighted with a crust
Of soot and dirt; the very air .
Is full of flying dust that clings.
And round the coal plant everywhere
Are ugly sights and ugly things.
The yards are bare, the town is
bleak.
The miners' homes are shanties
small,
All foul and brackish runs the creek
And smoke hangs heavy as a pall;
Squalor and misery are plain
And life is dull and gray as slate,
And in men's faces there is pain
And hopelessness and sullen hate!
But here's a pleasanter resign,
A plant that's bright and fresh and
clean,
And round this colliery and mine
The trees and grasses are growing
fi-reen.
The miners' homes are homes indeed,
Within the yards the children play,
And in the people's eyes we read
That life is neither harsh nor gray!
I don't know which plant pays the
best,
Which yields the biggest dividends,
But I know where the owner's blest
With miners who are men and
friends,
And when these operators meet
The fate of all humanity
And face the Final Judgment Seat
I know which one I d rather be!
Written expressly for Coal Age by
Barton Bradley.
MY CREED
I hold that Christian grace abounds
Where chanty is seen; that when
We climb to heaven, 'tis on the
rounds
Of love to men.
I hold all else named piety,
A selfish scheme, a vain pretense;
Where center is not can there be
Circumference?
This, I moreover hold, and dare
Affirm wherever my rnyme may go
Whatever things be sweet or fair,
Love makes tnem go.
Whether it be the lullabies
That, charm tn refst the nursinir bird
Or the sweet confidence of sighs
And blushes made without a word.
Whether the dazzling and the flush
Of softly sumptuous garden bowers
Or by some ebin. door, a bush
Of ragged flowers.
Tis not the wide phylactery,
Nor stubborn fact, not stated pray
ers. That make us saints; we judge the
tree
By what it bears.
And when a man can live apart
From works, on theologic trust,
Know the blood about his heart
Is dry as dust.
Alice Cory.
THE ONLY LIFE WORTH LIVING
Friend, the life that is lived with
Christ in God
Is the only life worth while;
It is true that you'll meet with many
an odd
As you are journeying over each
mile,
But the life that is lived with Christ
in God
Is the only one worth while.
Yes. the life that is lived with Christ
in God
Through it all, is the one that can
smile.
Travel back o'er the paths that the
saints have trod,
Of the saints whom naught could
beguile,
And the life that was lived with!
enlist in vioa
Was the only one worth while.
There is naught in the life that is liv
ed with God
That can mar a joy or a smile;
Everybody entombed down under the
sod
From the pole to the far distant
Nile,
Is proof that the life that is lived with
Uod -
Is the only life worth while.
. M. B. Andrews.
Trinity College. .J '
CASTOR I A
For IaJ&ata as4 Children.
Tli fki Yea Hm AJiajsEl
observed former Governor J. FranV-
EASIER ENTRANCE TO WEST
POINT
The War Department is trying to
make it easier for bovs. or vounsr men
to enter the United States Military
Academy at West Point
The Secretary of War is proposing
to admit the following classes of boys:
1. Those who are students in good
standing at any college or school of
technology approved by the Bureau of"
Education.
- 2. Those who have graduated from
any approved preparatory school or
public high school.
3. Those who have passed fourteen,
units in the examinations of the Col
lege Entrance Examination Board.
In short, it is intended to make en
trance to West Point as easy as to
any good college.
WHAT MEN THINK
The first question a man asks him
self when he sees a girl flirting is .
whether she is a nice girl or not a.
doubt is raised at once. This being
the case, no real modest girl can af
ford to indulge in the pastime. When
a young girl throws aside that modest .
reserve so becoming to her, and which
so elevates her and enables her to
command the respect of all, she loses
her greatest charm and becomes rath- -er
common and cheap. Flirting may
seem to the giddy and thoughtless girl
to be very amusing, and she may even;
get an idea that she is quite fascinat
ing to the yearling boys who are al
ways ready to meet her halfway i
the same game, but if she could once
overhear some of the remarks made
by these same boys when her name is
mentioned and she not present, well'
wager that she would be cured of any
fluaiu Ait a tints at- iK.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Report of the Condition of the
THE BANK OF RAMSEUR
at Ramseur, in the State of North
Carolina, at the close of business Sep
tember 12, 1914:
RESOURCES
Loans and discounts .... $114,376.94
Banking house $2,000; furniture
and fixtures $2,000; 4,000-
Demand loans 67,000.00-
Due from banks and bankers 39,011.96
Cash items 4.57
Gold coin 3,625.00-
bilver coin, including all minor
coin currency 2,203.33
National bank notes and other
U. S. note 1,150.00
Total $221,371.79
LIABILITIES
Capital stock paid in $12,000.00
Surplus fund 8,000.00
Undivided profits, less current
expenses and taxes paid .1,802.65
Deposits subject to check .. 68,376.70
Demand certificates of dep. 12,648.00
Savings deposits 116,179. 76
Cashier's checks outstanding 2,039.48
Accrued int. due depositors . . 325.00-
Total $221,371.79
State of North Carolina, county of
Randolph, fs:
I, W. H. Watkins, President of the
above-named bank, do solemnly swear
that the above statement is true to the
best of my knowledge and belief.
W. H. WATKIXS, Pres.
Correct Attest:
E. B. LEONARD,
E. C. WATKINS,
I, F. CRAVEN,
Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to before me,
this 16th day of September, 1914.
I. F. CRAVEN,
Notary Public.
NOTICE
Having qualified as Admr. on the
estate of N. A; Kime, deceased, before
W. C. Hammond, Clerk of the superior
Court ofRandolph County, all persons
having claims against said estate are
notified to present them to the under
signed, duly verified, on or before the
19th day of September, 1915, or this
notice will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery; and all persons owing said
estate will come forward and make
immediate settlement.
This 14th day of September,-1914.
- G. A. PATTERSON,
Liberty, N. C.
NOTICE
Having qualified as Extr. on the es
tate of Louisa Rains, deceased, before
W. C. Hammond, Clerk of the Superi
or Court of Randolph County, all per
sona having claims against said estate
are notified to present them to the
undersigned, duly verified, on or be
fore the 18th day of September, 1915,
or this notice will be pleaded in bar cf
their recovery; and all persons owing"
said estate will come forward and
make immediate settlement
This 14th day of September, 1914.
C R. LAMBERT, Extr
Ore EUl, N. C