Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Nov. 29, 1923, edition 1 / Page 6
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$695 ] F.aD.Toledo ■®XHAMPION > ' By special arrangement! Your opportunity to make a personal y inspection and have a complete demonstration of each remarkable | feature of the wonderful new Overland Champion—“ America’s most versatile car.” Sweeping public interest and demand lead us to hold a Champion ! !Demonstration Week I Nov. 2 2 to Nov. 29 inclusive f Plan now to come in! Learn all about this first real all-purpose ,closed car! Get acquainted with its unique benefits for the salesman, the merchant, the farmer and the family! Free demon \ stration! No charge! No obligation ! Come in! Front and rear seats ad justable forward and back tor tall and short people. ■ Qet cuJree ‘Demonstration of cdmerica's fatest and Qreatest cJutomobile Sensation The Overland Champion was introduced only a month and a haif ago. It has taken the whole Nation by storm Demand has nearly swamped the factory! This is the car , thousands and tens of thousands have been waiting for * Steel boiv Washable blue Spanish long i *• * j JUSTICE MOTOR COMPANY, Siler City, N. C. I I • - _ / BEAR CREKK LOCALS. (Too Late for Last Week)' Bear Creek, Nov. 19.—The super visor of the Pomona Cotton Mills and seven others connected with the mill motored to the home of G. W. Burke, one route two, last week, for a hunt. We were told that they killed one pos sum, two squirrels and thirty rabbits. Some luck, eh? Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Holt, and fam ily, of Kemersville, and Mrs. H. J. ISlkms, of Greensboro, were week-end visitors in Bear Creek and on route two. Mrs. Holt, Alma and twins, Jack jr owrscC Wf Truck Chassis • Jw F. 0.8. DETROIT ffi iW wwui■ w Ijr, 1-TW ■»'»■< tr-m AvV 1 1 f 1 | 111 . 4 Body types can be supplied to meet every requirement . |f Ford Trucks Are Bought 1 On Performance Records I Ii you were to ask a hun- Idred - cr a thousand —Ford tru ck owners w hy t ney use Ford trucks, in preference to ail others, they would JR likely say. “Because the m rcrcl stands tm. Th y know uu.i under the •Ji endless grind of dad'' <Io ~- il’fl * 15* sjjj Ford Z’~ h* Weekly Purchase Plan, || THE CHATHAM MOTOR CO. j |i| Pittsboro, North Carolina. ' | 1 CAKS - TRUCKS - TRACTOBJS I and Max, remained to spend the week with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Stack and Mr.. and Mrs. Kirkman, of Greensboro, | were Sunday visitors in Bear Creek. J. J. Norwood has been appointed acting postmaster at Bear Creek, ef fective December Ist. R. W. Dowd, who holds a position in Greensboro, spent the week-end with home folks. Rev. L. V. Coggins, of Semora, vis ited his father, I. P. Coggins, last week. E. S. Baker, who has been very ill, is greatly improved. vice the Ford stays on the job month in and month cut, with very little me chanical care, and with practically no expense lor ||| repairs or replacements. They would emphasize the work this truck dees, not <:s initial cost. gag 50 cubic feet loading space by removing rear seat and upholstery. NEWS FROM ROUTE TWO. (Too Late for Last Week) Siler City, Rt. 2, Nov. 20.—The Red Cross School is progressing nicety with Misses Eilene Daffron, of Liber ty, and Lieta P. White, of Siler City, as teachers. The enrollment is 54. In conference Sunday morning Rocky River Baptist Church elected Rev. DeLancy, of Greensboro, as pas tor of that church. Mr. and Mrs. Tate Culberson, of Washington, D. C., returned to their home Sunday night after spending the past week with their father, Mr. S. T. Culberson. Mrs. Henry Cardwell returned Sat urday to her home in Reidsville after spending several days in the home of her father, Mr. Ed. Johnson, on this route. Miss Eilene Daffron spent last week-end with her parents at Liberty. Born to Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Fox, the 10th, a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Love, of near Liberty, spent the week-end with Mrs. Love’s father, D. M. Smith. Negroes Go Back to the South. With housing shortages, fewer jobs and bleak northern weather, the tide of immigration that carried half a million negroes northward is begin ning to turn back to the south. The southern colored man finds the north cold too nipping. Also he finds he is the first to be laid off when work is scarce, and that his increased num bers has carried race prejudice to the north. So now the south and the southern winters he is used to seem kinder, and the south needs him. Attend Auction Sale. Chapel Hill News. Mr. Kemp P. Cole and several oth er Chatham citizens, whose names we failed to get, attended the auction sale of land on the Wa-Ha Yonda farm, near Durham, Tuesday, property of General J. S. Carr. The lots brought fancy prices. General Carr’s Occo neechee Farm, near Hillsboro, was al so sold at public auction yesterday. More Than Seven Thousand. Prior to November 14th, 1923, there were ginned in Chatham County 7,842 bales of cotton. During the same pe riod last year there had been ginned 7,219 bales. This is the record as obtained by G. G. Lutterloh, special agent for Chatham. Logical. i May (watching ball-game): Where do they keep the extra bases?. Ray: What for? I May: Well, that man just stole third-base. The world has 17,000,000 automo biles. Bis doors front and rear— no folding seats no seal climbing. grain upholstery. Trunk at rear at small extra price. Triplex springs ( Patented )— rides like a big, heavy car! Bigger new engine—loads of power! Wonderful economy. Famous Overland reliability. Come and see how truly this sensational car will fit your needs ? Don’t miss this opportunity. HI IS Seats and upholstery make into comfortable bed full length of car. . We can harrlly wait for the news papers these days to see who is shot or arrested. SEE YOUR LABEL e^ fc FARM FOR SALE. Joe Griffin place three miles west of Pittsboro on December 3rd, the first Monday in December, at 12 o’clock noon, at court house door, Pittsboro, N. C., the undersigned will offer for sale to the highest bidder all the tract of land and lying about three miles from Pittsboro, known as the Joe Griffin Place, which contains 106 1-2 acres, more or less. Terms: one-half cash, balance in one and two years. Mrs. LYDIA GRIFFIN, Nov. 29-p. Owner. SALE OF VALUABLE FARM PRO PERTY. Under and by virtue of authority conferred upon me in the deed of trust executed by W. Thomas Randolph and wife on the 4th day of February, 1922, and recorded in book of mortgages “G. E.” at page 22-23, I will on Monday, 24th day of December, 1923, at 12 o’clock, noon, at the Court House door in Pittsboro, sell at public auc tion for cash to the highest bidder the following land: Adjoining the lands of B. Nooe, Joe' Beckwith (deceased), and others, and, is lot No. 4 in the division of the lands j of Elizabeth Stone and recorded in 1 Book D. 8., page 374, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Chatham : County, North Carolina. Beginning at ] pointer in Frank Wynn’s line, corner j lot No. 3, thence east 35 chains and 25 links to stake on New Hope cor ner lot No. 3, thence up New Hope to stake in lot No. 5, thence north 75 degrees, west 7 chains to an elm on the east bank of Bush Creek corner ; lot No. 5, thence north 86 degrees west with a line of marked tree's 48 , chains and 50 links to a staK«. Robert Stone heirs’ comer, thence west 11 chains to hickory, Wynn’s corner, thence south six chains and 90 links to a dogwood, Wynn’s comer, thence east 11 chains to rock and stake, Wynn’s corner, thence south 5 chains and 90 links to the first station, containing 48 acres, more or less, being the sarpe ! i land conveyed by H. M. Lewter (wi dower) to Cobb-Bullington Land Co., by deed dated August 30, 1919, and recorded in Book FT of Deeds, page 213, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Chatham County, and con -1 veyed to William Thomas Randolph by Cobb-Bullington Land Co., by deed dated February 3, 1922, by deed re corded in Book page in said Register’s office. This sale is made by reason of fail ure of William Thomas Randolph and wife to pay off and discharge the in debtedness secured by said deed of trust. This 23rd day of November, 1923. L. P. M’LENDON, Trustee LONG & BELL, Attys. Dec. 20 ► i STRANGE AND CURIOUS. Peculiarities That Will Astonish Almost Anyone. A Nevada bishop is gathering quilt rags to make covers for missionaries. The town marshal of Durand, Mich., has been arrested for selling liquor. A 13-year-old girl in Chicago is | under arrest for burglary and shop lifting. Doctors in the United States gave more than 11,000,000 prescriptions for liquor last year. | A Mobile, Ala., negro died a few days ago, aged 115 years. His wife was 110 when she died. Nathaniel Rothschild, of London, has a hobby of catching fleas. He has caught several thousand. The police judge of Atchinson, Kan., fined his wife $1 for speeding. He J compelled her to appear before him in person. A monument to thirty-two children, killed by automobiles in St. Louis within the year, was dedicated a few days ago. John Rogers, of Worcester, Conn., who has secured the conviction of 100 bootleggers, was recently arrested for being drunk. A robber in Pittsburg returned $65 out of SBS he stole from a barber, say ing he just wanted enough to buy a suit of clothes. A horse in Ina, 111., pumps water for the other stock in the lot.' He grabs the pump handle with his teeth and goes to pumping. A goat at Aurora, 111., drank half' a pint of "nitro-glycerine and ate half a stick of dynamite and then walked away. Workmen who saw the goat fled. Turkeys on a Kingston, Md., farm ate the mash from an illicit still, got drunk, and the owner, thinking they were dead, picked all the feathers off them. They are pretty looking things walking about featherless. y— t~ .. i I CALL YOUR YOUR BANKER When you want to invest your surplus funds where there is no chance of loss and where they will earn a good income—call your banker. Ask him what he re commends as a safe investment. It is a pretty safe bet his answer will be “First Mortgage Bonds.” Alamance First Mortgage 6 Per Cent Gold Bonds are an ideal investment for everyone with any amount from SIOO up to invest. Each bond is backed by a mort gage on income-producing property, yields six per cent interest—is safe and secure. There is no safer place for surplus funds. Write or call for full details of this interesting proposi tion. i I ALAMANCE INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO. ; i BURLINGTON, N. C. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $300,000. Capital and Surplus, $350,000. C. G. SOMERS, W. E. SHARPE, Field Representative, Manager. %m nr-r^ga ! W »n>en Pre^^l Women preachers in « the majority 0 f me Will sections. Rev. David r> s tbe n responding secretary 0 f i home missoins of the m JJ 6 i b ° ar d copal church, predicted h ° dist meeting. The woman™ a bo few years will be a m J niste r i, in the country as t\l lar a fi? school he said. pre&ent * I „ Why Father « Grouch,. 1 Twelve to fifteen eery bill for a famih •f ago the 8 erage about sls a VVO W dy bought $25 worth of* ls a t month, it was considered If a family 0 f four V tocr a a week now for grocevil ■ wit b , well. groceries, it i s d( I i MORTGAGEE’S day of April, 1917 by*?hS” l l l wife, Lula E. Lane, forth.' Lanei securing certain indebted purpos « enced by bonds of e™ f ’ as et date and default haiS tenuie 1 in the payment of b , een mi interest on same nds and 1 mortgagee will on u naersigr j Monday, December n*u 1 at 12 o’clock ££ 1923 ’- in front of the nostnffi„„ • l. North Carolina, offer t* O V n i Sller Ci to the highest’ bS r the y?, r ca tract of land, lying and V* foll °Wi hews Township, g Chatham 2 'r Ma North Carolina, described ? i C , o, i n< as follows, to-wit: 6d and defin Beginning at a stone, John corner (in M. M. Fox’s ]Li , llei ning east 108 poles t„ a Siler’s comer (in C H Tmvm n > e thence north wfth C fe Jerry Lane’s lines 70 poles to a Feebee Glover’s corner (in j Pr Lanes line); thence west 45 poles a j*??, 6 ’ , t , he , nce north w ‘th Glovei and Cheeks lines 21 poles to a ston Cheek s comer; thence west w Cheek s line to a rock on the east s , of a branch (Cheek’s comer); then! south five degrees west with M 1 Fox’s line, being in all 94 poles fro Cheek s comer to the beginning, C oi taining 54 acres, more or less. ’ . This 24th day of November, 192 _ _ M. M. FOX, Dec. 20-c. Mortgage
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 29, 1923, edition 1
6
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