J'- s 4 Tfte CMtliam ReCOrd. f?r the war than any other na- - - tion engaged m it. Their coun M." A. LONDON, Editor. try has boen overrun and devas- tated almost from one end to the WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1914. DEMOCRATS VICTORIOUS. Growiag Winter Oats. Washington, Oct. 31. Every southern farmer should grow enough oas to feed his stock dur ing at least a portion of the year. In addition to furnishing feed grain at less cost than it can be purchased, fall-sown oats pre vent the washing of the soil by which much fertility is frequent- At the election held yesterday t.hp Dpmnrrnts rpfnined nontrol h of both houses of Congress, the Senate by at least 10 majority and the House probably 50. Ohio elects a Republican Governor but a Democratic Senator, and Sulli va, Democrat, probably succeeds Sherman, Republican Senator from Illinois. New York elects a Republican Governor and Sen ator to succeed Root, Republican, and Kentucky re-elects a Demo: cratic Senator. Cannon, Payne, Longworth and McKinley, form er Republican Congressmen, are re-elected. In the state, every district went Democratic except the 10th which appears to have elected Britt over Gudger. Of course the entire state Democratic tick et was elected by a large major ity, headed by Senator Overman. A light vote was pclled on the constitutional amendments which appear to have been defeated, though not certainly so. There- turns are coming in very slowly on this vote. lv lost. There is still tima to sow winter oats in the Gulf Perts have been states, thone-h this work shrmlH ! question. Their What Makes Milk and Butter Yellow. ; From Agricultural Bulletin. That the rich yellow color de manded by the public in dairy products is primarily due to the character of the cow's feed is de monstrated by recent experi ments carried on by the depart ment in co-opsration with the Missouri state experiment sta tion. For some years dairv ex- studying this conclusion is other4. Many of their tow'ns have been almost totally destroyed, their larger cities greatly injur ed, their" fields and crops in the country have been destroyed, and the peaceful and innocent inhab itants, old men, women and chil dren have been driven from their homes. The Belgians have ex perienced all the indescribable to specialists of the United States hnrrnrs nf war and dpsprvp th department of agriculture, oats o.i i i ... i -i . sown in tVP Snnt.hprn stnfpa Hnr-i tlOns. sympatny ana suostanuai am oi - 0etober or the firsf. half nf I Chemical tests thewhole world. Our people who; November may be expected to are enjoying the comforts of home .produce at least twice the yield cannot conceive of the sufferings ! of grain obtained from spring endured by the unfortunate Bel-1 seeding. winter grain may be sown on land A MESSAGE FROM MARJORIE By Nellie Cr&vey Gillmore. Copyrighted, 1909, by Associated Literary Press. be done at once if good results ! tnat the intensity of this yellow a.e to.be obtained. According-i UU1UI '"ay, wun certain limits. De increased or. diminished at w 11 by changing the animal's ra- gians. The Belgians had nothing what ever to do with causing the war. The neutrality of that country had been solemnly guaranteed years ago by Great Britain, France and Germany, and yet the latter country invaded Belgium with ah immense army for the pur pose, as stated, of taking a near cut to Paris. Of course, if Bel gium had been as powerful a'na tion as Germany, the latter which produced a croo of cotton, corn or cowpeasthe past summer. If this land has not already been plowed, it will be better to make the surface soil fine and loose with the disk or drag harrow than to delay Seed ing by plowing now. Better re- l i i i -1 s suits are obtained irom sowing witn the drill than irom broad cast seeding, though if a drill is not available sowing the seed broadcast on well-prepared land usually re silts in a good stand. If the preceding croD was well show that the yellow p gment in milk consists of several well-known-pigments found in green plants. Of these the principal one is carotin, so called because it constitutes a .arge part of the coloring matter of carrots. The other yellow pigments in the milk are knowa as xanthophylls. These ' are found in a number of plants in cluding grass but are especially abundant in yellow autumn i leaves. Farrington turned fro.f. the bookcase with a little gesture of annoyance. His Shakespeare, of all A'umes! now stupid of Thomas to have let out his books without his knowledge or con sent! Only last week he had missed his favorite, much marked copy of Rochefoucault. Presley had nabbed that. But this was a little too much. Es pecially in view of the fact that "Ham let". -was playing that night and there were a couple of passages . he felt he must run over. He crossed the room impatiently and pushed the call bell. ac once by the redoubtable valet The Lost Umbrella. t "I have been coming here for my lunch for years, but never-again." said a man totne, head waiter of a down town restaurant recently. "Sorry." be gan the , waiter. "Sorry nothing. 1 left the umbrella here not rive minutes ago, there was no one near our tab'e. and the waiter must have seen it." "If we find it" "Find it?" it is found. I tell you. and I'll have it now or you'll never see me here again." The man. flushed with excitement, was walking away when he was hail ed by a man .who had entered by the rear door: "Say, Frank, is this your umbrella? I picked it up when we fin ished lunch. Glad you were still here." "Here, but not still." the head, waiter whispered. "The umbrella has been found, but our customer has been lost for. a few days. He'll be ashamed to come in for a little while." New York Tribune. FOR FUNERALS. I HAVE BOUGHT A NEW HEARSE and am prepared to furnish anv style of coffin or casket for funerals, deliver ed free. Give me a trial. C. L. LASATER; Sept. 9, 1914. Apex, N. C..R.F.D 4. COFFINS and CASKETS ! More prisoners have already been captured in the war in Eu rope than were captured during the four years of the War be tween the States. During that war 270,000 Union soldiers were captured by the Confederates, and 220,000 Confederate soldiers were captured by the Union army. Up to the 21st of last month the official reports show that 296,869 persons were cap tured by the Germans, and no doubt the allies have captured as many of the Germans. - All these prisoners, amounting to over half a million, were cap tured in less than three months from the beginning of the war, and during the whole four years ,j of our war. there were less than . half a million captured. I If so many have been captured ! in less than three months, how i j many will be captured during a i whole year? a cAjjene oi ieeamg so large a number of persons is enormous. Not only are so many j men withdrawn from the busi j ness of. life but they are now idle ) consumers. would not have thus violated her fertilized, 100 to 200 pounds of neutrality and ravaged her fields a,clcl Phosphate will be all that and towns. And because Great YmTZTnfl1 W r.;f; u a i, i a 1,ttIe nitrate ol soda will help Britain, as bound by a solemn the fall growth. esDeciallv if th treaty, protested against Ger- soil is not already well snrmlipd many invading Belgium Germany with nitrogen from the growing declared war on that country, Af cowPf as or some other legume. and Great Britain occupies the nST ? 50 f.0!00" nf n u- u 0 nitrate of soda applied when position of a big boy trying to growth starts in the spring will protect a small boy who is'being greatly increase the yield, fought by another big boy. The variety of winter oats The sufferings of th Rolcnon iP08 commonly grown in the neonle remind nf th nBw. ?outh 13 r?d rustproof, Appier, ' -I-yr. 1 . v bawson, hundred bushel. Ban- These pigments pass direct! ' from the feed into the milk. This explains the well-known fact fresh green grass and carrots in crease the yellowness of butter, the only standard by which the average person judges its rich ness. On the other hand, a large proportien of thse pigments is deposited in the body fat and elsewhere in the cow. When the ration is changed to one contain ing fewer carotin and xantho phyll constituents, this hoarded store is gradually drawn upon and in consequence the vellow- ness of the mi.k does not dimin ish so rapidly as it otherwise would. This yellowness increases. however, the instant th? neces sary piant pigments are restored to the ration. Bow to Prevent Croup. It may be a surprise to you to learn that in many cases croup can be pre vented. Mrs. H. M. Johns, Eliria, O., relates her experience as follows: "My Tt was answered lie boy is subject to croup. During tne past- winter i Kept a bottle or Chamberlain's llnnfrh RempHvin t.hp "It seems still more of my books are ; house, and when he began having th.t missing, Ihomas. I am afraid you ; croupy cough I -would give him one nave been careless. I can't locate that ' or iwo uoses ui it ana 11 wouia DreaK edition of Shakespeare any- practically devoid of yellow pig ments and the milk from cows fed upon it will gradually lose it color. It is. of course, indisnut- aoiy true that the breed does in- red calf where." "You left orders, sir begging your pardon to accommodate any of the young gentlemen" "When I rushed off to Europe, eh?" A whimsical . smile made its transient passage across Farrington's scowling face. "Very well. I presume you are right. I was a bit upset, I remember. You may go." But as the man started - toward the door he called him back. By the way, are there any book stores hereabout?" "Xo first class ones, sir." "Any er first class neighbors ?'J "A few, sir." "Good! Scrimmage around and find me a Shakespeare before night and I'll" But Thomas had already disappeared, Marjorie Ilayward was just comm; out ot the front door when Farring- ton's man stepped up on the veranda. llis request surprised her a little, but she was very glad, indeed, to be able to accommodate him She had a copy of Shakespeare some where, she said, an old, battered one, but his "master" was welcome to the use of it, certainly. And with this in- -formation she went back into the 11- brary to search for it. What sort' of people were they, any the attack. I like it better for chil dren than any other cough medicine because children take it willingly, and it is safe and reliable." Obtainable everywhere, adv Green trrass is nrobablv richer L ?i? f T T . . . I v,v UUklUUl. JCH- 1 . . - 1 nate position oi Virginia during croft and Cook are selections or Mn carotin than any other dairy the war between the States. That strains of red rustDroof which Ieed- Uws ted on it will there- state had opposed secession and are said to De D.irticularly valu- fore produce the highest colored Ut t: i t 3 aMe in some localities. Thp Fnl. butter. Green corn, in which aiLCI J-iillUUJIl LLaKl I i ..- . r . " I VQntVirvnVi i-llc ,f; 4-U u: called on her for trnnn r eM. VV 13 A "S ne w, variety ""'rT1"10 vv j wmcn matures a week or ten p-win aiso produce, a gate her sister Southern states days earlier than the red rust- highly-colored product. On the and after federal trooDs had in- proof, and usuallv nroduces as other hand, a ration of Meached - . i ... i - 11 i vaded her soil, and vet Viro-Inin mucn or more errain. As the ver nay ana yenow corn is was the arena of more battles ,?eIS0iin Sf va.T.ieIies ,are and bloodshed than any other holild U?m? Mf state and suffered more of the smaller auantitv is snffifienr. if horrors of war. the seed is drilled enrlv nn woii. prepared lnd, while 3 bushels huence the color of the milk fat; Vm UI "Me are neeaea wnen the vaiJ ianuii aim Liiere "'t v-wiwi ca I 1 l , ... . I Tiri 1 1 trs J r - - aeeu is suwn Droaocast late in tne 1 "c a "ticayunuiiig variation season. The winter turf or Vir- ln the color of the milk fat in ginia Gray is a verv hardv vari- each breed nstnro in cows of the Jersev and i - . i i . . i a or hav Droduction. h:it which vjuernsey breeds the bod v fat is sight of certain- famii in r hits nf xrrit. ! . , t 1 - I A. I i? t 1 i I. . noes not yield as much grain in "cqenuy oi sucn a deep yellow g, pressed tiowers crumbling to . i i ,i i lug ouulijciii states as tne ren hiou owuic uuitners aim con- imuiem sun ox a icuio was larger ana tnere was a rncfnrnnf n nnn 4. tuJsumprs lnnk- with Hia fa ,. r, dear, dead past. Hia Final Plea. A Chicago man appeared at the White House one day during the Mc Kinley administration with a petition containing 7.000 names recommending him for appointment as Brazilian min ister. He was a picture framer. and when he was canvassing for orders he ' took along his petition and asked j everybody in the picture frame busi- j ness to sign it. Almost everybody did. j The man was insistent and finally f reached the president. Always gentle explained to the candidate that he would have to consult th Illinois sen ators and representatives about the matter before making the appointment. "You know," said the president, "we have to select big men for these big places." "Weil." asked the picture framer "won't I be just as big as any of them if I get the job?"-Philadelphia Satur day Evening Post. A full stock of Coffins and Caskets always on hand and sold at ail prices. Ail kinds and sizes. B. NOOE, PITTSBORO. N. C Beware of Cheap Substitutes. In these davs of keen competition it is important that the public should see that they get Chamberlain's Cough hntr- rta r, -"""J LlKJ" "dive ou US 111 U ICS SSOIU ' a X "u jt for the sake of extra profit. Chamber moved in the day before and were al- Iain's Cough Remdv has stood th ready beginning to borrow people's books? she wondered good naturedly. The State Fair of people, held last week at Ral eigh, was the most successful that tney have ever held in this etv which is valuable for pasture state, and, we may say, in any uLiiei state, ine numoer ot vis- At last sne came across the rusty little volume, stuffed to overflowing with old letters, clippings and scraps of memoranda. She held it up and hook them out m a shower, a swarm of memoripn suddenly aroused by the long buried Cough Renvdv has stood the test and been approved for more than forty years. Obtainable everywhere, ad better display of .exhibits than eve ueiurcj. in address was delivered by Gov. Craig, which so much pleased his hearers that hey at once invited him to de . lver another address at their :air next year. The exhibits made by our colored citizens were highly creditable to them and showed a very erra tif vino- nrn - ' o r ' v With a smothered sigh she caught !!T1fl si7o nf tlio 11 beel Irom these Pfrer?a T?nr of the fat springs from the same causes as the yellowness of the milk fat, and there is no reason tor objecting in one case to the very thing that is prized in the other. While the condition of the cot ton farmers of the South de serves the sympathy and assist ance of all others more favored, yet their condition is not any worse than that of many thou sands who do hot raise cotton. Belgians in Destitute Condition. Brussels, Nov. 2. Between G 000,000 and 7,000.000 Bele-ians nave little or nothing rn nail - w W-JJ home. They are a neonle a most without a country, -Foodstuffs, forage, horses. nat. i i . . - gress made by the colored nennl. a "ut an - . - ,,v "ccicu Dtigian array nave ui tms aidte since emancipation, been seized by the Germans j-ncoc annual xairs oi our colored A iaci-1'-cl,1J' every acre is now Donulati On are PnllM rrari Kit swept ot everything valuable best white nennlp ak " is estimated that there are now sUro th. ov. txx' clIa"B 111 ngiana and .xx aMvicuduuii oi tne ouu.UUO in Holland. errortsot the colored people to estimate made here places the comfortable. (Jet a bottle of Sloan's elevate their race and improve nuiber of Belgian homes de- jinin?fnt ff 25 f any druggist and their condition. As we have of-or uninhabitable atone Ynd ten stater! w ronocf i million. neuralgia, sciataca -and like ailments. , .v-v. ma i, uictc I A Torr.r.f -fVv, T:,l ki, i:7D. j T IS a mnr-a IriAu, . , . . rKVA " '"K says """." uui sausaeu, out n,uuijr icciuis in mis tnat the supplies for the brenrl 16 uoes give almost instant relief, adv state oetween the two races than "ne have been exhausted and ni;iom, rtl 1, : u iine reenino fan no rocnmaH nni i -"- "ui m ui i , . " . 'vouiucu wuiv uuaiiLitv amone- rne ner.rn enm. South. wnen American food arrives. nrodneinff jstaf.ps riifi.n,-0-h0J me DCUUie UJ. Cattle IOrthP incrfirct hntin 1Q1QU l, i i o. ., ,i1KJVJ, Uui in jlij-u iiic vaiuc tlx IN the Crimean war aw" cs I,lcl& ,1L inf country with- the Oklahoma production exceed- uut ucci. mim aim cneese. The d that of California bv norl,? j a. vkJ. A J $14,000,000, It Really Does Relieve Rheumatism. Everybody who is afflicted with rneumatism in any form should l-v all means keep a bottle of Sloan's Lini ment on hand. The minute vou feel pain or soreness in a joint or muscle. batbe it with Sloan's Liniment. Do nor rub it. bloan's penetrates almost lmmeuiateiy ngbt to the seat of pain, re levinfr rno nnr tonriar mm in rni x ne lowest ing ana making the part easv and .Kussia, and now Ener and and France are uniting with Russia in We reter particularly to the wage .fighting Turkey. This fact fore earners in the towns, whose fm-! ibly illustrates the 'truth of the ilies depend on their daily wages ; old saying that "Time makes lor their suprort, and who have strange bed-fellows of us all been thrown out of employment. war, sixty years ago, England and France supply of ffrain has been rut iff united with Turkev in ficrhtino- For several weeks Fl witn tne book. Thomas thanked her elaborately and hastened away. , Mar jorie waited till he had passed up the snort stone walk of the house nest door. Then she buttoned up her coat and walked down the gravel path to tne gate. Farrington took the volume turning the yellowed leaves with nngers till he should come to "Ham iet.' Hut suddenly he paused, his eyes narrowed curiously and his heart gave a startled jump. A brief extract from "The Merry Wives of Windsor" caught his attention. "Ask me no rea son why I love you, for, though love use reason for its precision, he admits him not for his counselor." The passage was heavily under scored, and belbw It were scribbled ln corroboration the initials "M. II." W. F." They were hers and his I Marjorie Hay ward! The name sent his thoughts tumbling tumultously back over the past, sent the blood tin gling even to his eyelids. How many years nearly ten! since he had called that name. Yet how many days, in deed, had it been absent from hi3 heart? The minutes flew by as he sat there wrapped in meditation Thackeray on Fame. Thackeray's literary work did not help him much wbeu he sought to enter the house of commons. The Rev. Frederick Meyrick in his "Mem ories of Oxford" tells of a dinner elven when he stood as a Liberal for that city: "I remarked to him that his must be a special experience, as he was known by fame to most of those whose votes he canvassed. 'Now. he said, layiug dowu his knife and fork anu holding up a ringer, 'there was only one man among all that 1 went to see who had heard my name before, and he was a circulating librarian. Such is mortal fame.' " That was in 1S57. ten years after the bublication ol 'Vanity Fair " CUT FLOWERS. WEDDING BOUQUETS, FUNERAL DESIGNS. PALMS. FERNS. BLOOM ING PLANTS. CABBAGE AND TOMATO PLANTS All orders given prompt atten tion. M. J. MCPHAIL. phon No 94. Florist. SanforiJ. N. C. Receiver's Notice. Notice is hereby given the deposit ors and other creditors of the Bank of Merry Oaks to present their claims to me before the 14th day of January, 1915, or they will be excluded from participating in the dividends that may be paid its creditors. This notice is given in accordance with the order made by Judge George W. Connor di recting the same. All persons indebted to the Bank of Merry Oaks are also notified that they must pay up without delay, or suit will be instituted against them. FRED. W. BYNUM. Receiver, Pittsboro, N. C. H, A. London, Attorney. mfoS Dr. R. M. Farrell, DENTIST, Pittsboro, N. C. Offices in new postoffice build inc.' ACR 1 r r, . " wmuc iiuuis iruxxi o a. m tooD. m. The Engine Plunged in River. I r. I.'' i. J condition of the ynjvu. wage-earner in any town Wilmington, Oct SO -The bio- . ... njav, ui tne conon oeauoara ireignt engine, No farmer. The latter, for instant ,733 at 7 a. m. vesfprtr' ' " . - , J wwwv-i , X ii a able to help the eastern Dortion Lived on 10 Cents a Dav,. but now Bruges. Ghent. Ant. Tacoma. Wash.. Oct. 31.. John werpand Ostend are suffering Hicks, aged 78. wHo lived in a tne same distress which earlier berell the eastern part of the country. The single ray of hope is af forded by the American commis sion for relief in Belgium. The liberality of Holland is described as splendid bulTtne country's grain supply is exhausted. Great .Britain having limited Dutch irr shack on the Northern Pacific right of way, is dead, after hav ing lived tor years on 10 cents a day. His diet was soud. bread and coffee. Sixty years ago Hicks is said to have owned 16 acres of land in what is now the heart of Chi cago, tie nrst came into local prominence in 1911, when he ap can keep warm during- the cam.1 tmck fo quietly rolled up the Portations, the sole source of an Pealed to the county commission ing winter tvhavinffnlentvnf f,10i open draw ln Hilton bridge and adequate lood supply is the Uni- ers to increase his charity allow a v-. u-ont A : i. . i i Tfn ra Toa I o n na rrn convement, but the man in town too th. ?tream'it mTssed , C I Even the few Brians with will have nothing with which to passing through the draw by a monev cannot buy food. There buy.high-priced fuel, and he and matter of six inches. The loco-' is no wneat. flour, coffee or salt his family will suffer much from motive twisted itself from the1? ,be had at any price. In many cold. The nnpmni m Fam. ana the 32 box came to a Flues conditions are worse than halt -with t-ho l earner m town raises no.hing to over the waterT EngineeS: eat, but must buy . or beg all his shaw a" d Fireman Galloway both family eats, whereas the man in narrowly escaped with their lives. the country raises something to eat and can get along muh bet ter than the former. So, while our cotton farmers are bemoaning their unfortu nate condition, let them remem ber that A 60-Cent Dress and a $2,000 Rinjf. From the Greensboro News. A Greensboro man who was in Turlington the past week attend in? the cotton goods fair asked a iaay the cost ot a handsome dress in country districts. Bakeries are closed and vegetables are the only diet. Supplies that the Americans commission is ship ping will help a little, but thou sands of Belgians positively are hungry. J.T ,i . , " IF Mm "J tT V "ir mitnWi nits-. ' i "i "icio iiiuuu one was wearinar ana was in. more unfortunate. formed that the sum was 60 cent s un tne nnsrers of one. nf ht r Try This for a Cough. ) Thousands of people keep coughing because unable to get the right remedy. Ougbs are caused by inflammation of throat and bronchial tubes. What you need is to soothe this inflammation. Take Dr. King's New Discovery, it penetrates tne delicate mucous linine : - The Belgians have suffered hands Tere diamonds estimated S wnFSrSS1 iees more and are suffering more wound $2,000 This gen- i than any other people who are tleman declared that the dress of New Discovery quickly and eomplete- attQfcrt k u n cotton goods looked as beautiful lv stoPPed my cough' writes J. r. attectea by the war in Europe, with the Aa a "aZZZI "i Watts, Floydale, Texas. Money back :! and yet they are less responsible fine silk would have looked heSSf satisfied' but n near,yaiwav8 a month, ar. d simple methoo ance from $3 to then outlined his of living. "In the morningI eat bread and coffee. I don't bother to eat anything at noon. It's quite a nuisance eating by one's self, nnyway," explsin-d 'Hicks. Then for my meal in the even ing I have soup. I buy a pound of coffee and make it last me a month by boi'ing it as long as it will color the water." Friends who knew the old man well say he p rsisted to the last in living on his allowadce of ten cents a day. Don't Delay Treating Your Congh. A slight cough often becomes seri fs ugS-.get congested, bronchial tubes nil with mucous Your vitality is reduced. You need Dr. Ball's pine-Tar-Honey. It soothes your irritated air passages, loosens mucous and makes your system resist colds. Oive the ba y and children Dr. Bell's Pine Tar-Honey It's guaranteed to help them. Only 25c at your druggist. ad gan again to slip the leaves absentlr through his fingers, when abruptly they came in contact with something aliei. He glanced closer, almost indifferent ly, and started again as his craze rest ed stupidly upon an envelope stuck to one of the pages and addressed in full to himself addressed in Marjorie Hay ward's clear, resolute characters half a score of years ago. when thev had both lived in the same little west ern town. Without a second thought as to whether he should or should not onen It Farrington deliberately tore the let ter from its inclosure and read: Dear Walter I have hpn fhiir, things over, and, after all, you must be right. I made the mistake, and I am willing to acknowledge it. We love each other too much, do we not. to let a silly ! quarrel separate ue for life? Come to ma : tonight. I shall be waiting for you. Aa ! ever MARJORIE. j For an indeterminate space Walter j Farrington sat half stunned. What bad happened? What could it mean? : Had she changed her mind about send- ! lng the letter, or had there been some ' oversight, some carelessness, In the posting? And Marjorie herself, .where was she now? Could it be that she was less than a block away at this minute? Distress in the Stomach. There are man jr people who have a distrese in the stomach after meals. It is due to indigestion and easilv rem edied by taking one of Chamberlain's Tablets after meals, .vlrs. Henry Pad ghan, Victor, N. Y., writes: "For some time I was troubled with headache and distress in my stomach after eat ing, also with constipation. About six months ago I began' taking Chamber lam's Tablets. They regulated t: e ac tion of my towels and the headache and ether annoyances ceased in a short time." Obtainable everywhere, adv MORTGAGE SALE. iSv vir tue of a morteaee executed hv Will 1W1..R . ..J "nimui AcvjiiiiieiireiuG ann witp Mary, to Mrs.Il.C.Kennv and register ed on page 157, in Book "EA." in t,h oince or tne register of deeds of Chat ham lounty, I will sell for cash, at the court-house door of said county, at 12 m., on Saturday, Nov 7, 1914, the tract of land described in said mortgage, in Centre township, Chat ham county, on tne north side of the Gum Sprint road, beginning at Rod- gers and Webster's land, running At last be be- u poies east to stake and pointers, then south 81 poles to stake and noint,- ers, then west 40 poles to pointers, then 86 poles back to the beginning. Oct. 7 1 10.1 4 MARY A. WYETH, Executrix of Ruth C. Kenny. H. A. London, Attorney. SEABOARD Air Line Railwav The Progressive Railway of the South SCHEDULE. Effective Jan. 4th 91 4. Direct line between New York.Flor Ida, Atlanta, Birmingham, Memphis New Orleans and the fouth west, sub ject to change without notice Figures g' ven below are for the In formati on of the public and are not guaranteed. . uuc Trains leave Pittsboro as follows No. 2128:40 a m, connecting at Mon cure with No. 18 for Portsmouth iNorfo'k, which connects o- wi don with th A. O. L for Eastern Carol ma points, at Norfolk with v S,steoT-8hlD lines for Pints nortb A0 :4o p m, connects at Mon curewithNo. 11 for Charlotte. Wil mington, Atlanta, Birmingham, Memphis and points west. No 1 1 connecting at Hamlet with No.' A tor J acksonville & Florida point No. 231-Will arrive at PittsrjorSo a m connecting with No. 11 with No. 18 from the. snntv, 1 Wlth No. 211 Arrives at Pittsboro m, connecting with No points north. The Pittsboro train connects at Trains between Moncure an J Pitts boro operated dailv exeem. Snni,. F?f further information apply to B M. Toe, agent, Pittsboro, or write to J. T. WEST, Division Passenger Agent, No 4 West Martin St -RalelKh. 6:10 n M irom I jmwm0ww V1 -" 11 I Xlfel'S "U and act5on' fiIIe" the I I t:M,V7mr fire of fine nsoiration anrf fniin, I 'S. -''SSss,. . . ,sSSS' I V action. nre of tine inspiration and followed by 250 short stories of adventure, will make eYOUTITS COMPANION! Better Than Ever in 1915 ' Then the Family Page, a rare Editorial Page, Boys' Paee Girls' Page, Doctor's Advice, and " a ton of fun," Articles Tof Travel, Science, Education. From the best minds to the best minds, the best the world can produce for you and everyone in rne nome. i nere is no age limit to enthusiasm for The Youth's Companion. ' CUT THIS OUT s"dU (or name of this paper) with $2.00 for The COMPANION for 1915, and we will send FRFF Aa the 'ssues 0f THE COM riVE. P ANION for the remaining weeks of 1914. FREE Jlffi COMPANION HOME x M.. CALENDAR for 191S. THFN 11,0 52 Weekly Issues of lnL11 THECOMPAfJION f oMM 52 Times a Year not 12. Send to-day to The Youth's Com panion, Boston, Mass., for THREE CURRENT ISSUES FREE. SUBSCRIPTIONS RECEIVED AT THIS OFFICE 8 TPS 7 '1 fA and here at R is ovj at an erels Fred Erah - J. J. R. F have plant $1.25 1 put o gated -I the straw! his ga ber. move theN . ner o street! -T bit is eral b had nj atabld -0 to enj ter th partri numer -O tended dates i tended Blesse nothin appoinj -Tli ing ha whitei lor, th thougH lor has ham ei -A . Mr. N. cian for were 2 in this this ye there v W a bip: rf ard, a boro, i plant, and st built tK in the -OA county which fever-h his lip A lady these c so man paitrn. -Ou ever hz for gat ton and pleased ally lari sowed confide mer wi -Til' say thj was on derly i taken sides 1 one an defeat, was cai ly spiri note it. Th. classes school i Man W auditor Saturds An arjrrl adults d will be are for auditor A Citv las the ovei road fr! City outf without this falK are ma in that : ate att almost vrmas if ri yis stranjf have to not insi r4L .......... .... . . - - ... . ; - - ---Si'v- y

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