Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Feb. 28, 1924, edition 1 / Page 3
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SLATS DIARY Friday —well there was a few wirds past among I and Blisters today. I fwen f and sold him a & jHB base ball mit las fall and was pay it in weakly installmints of a nickel a weak. If he had it. but he fell down igBS on the Job and I had to done him for it to ll day. well he admits jiiiiSl ia ddent begin to pay me yet but he %|BgaaMy sed if it wood be any Comfort to me he had H l@i t> e^an to wirry about it H IS sum aready. S a t er d a y—well pa B and and ma had a short Jfctlfi V dis a g reemint tonite ya B when they was a get ready or a par^‘ After ma was all drest and made up she cums down stares and pa looks at her and remarked that she diddent have enuff close on to keep a musketo warm. She replies back that she diddent want to keep cnny musketos warm. They was such a pest anyways. Well she diddent add enything to her close. To make a long story shorten up. Sunday. Well a certain resident of are community has got his self arrested for getting marrved to 2 wimmen at the same time. Ma says a man can get his self into hole lots of t rubble by being marryed to 2 wimmen at the same adentical time. Pa added that he new of sum fellows not menchoning enny names witch got in to lots of trubble by only mar rying 5 that many wimmen. Monday. Teacher balled me out for doing sum thing while her back was turned and after skool I up & ast her how cum she new about it. She sed. Well I can read yure mind. 1 started to beet it rite off for fear she wood read it agen and get nex to what I was thinking about her. At the time. T esdav —well Jake’s unkle had a little baby cum to his house las nite. Then he had more bad luck today when he runs into a bridge with his ford and busted his raddyater and a nipple fenders. Wensday—went to a wedding tonite between a lady of the fare sex and a fren of are family. The poor little bride was a balling fit to eat out her hart and I wood of went to the fellow and ast him to let her off but ma made me shut up my mouth and set still. Thirsday—well I gess we are a go ing to have are telefone tuk out. the service is a getting so bad that ma makes me leave the room evrv time pa trvs to get a number on it here of lately. COMPLETE IN ITSELF Sharpens the blade in razor without removing it. i Quick. Convenient. Easy t to clean. Complete sets i razor, with strop and extra* I • Wades, SI.OO and up. - j Time to Plant\ | an-i. the best varieties of vegetables* 1 i f Id seeds to plant for eadm 1 | purpose is told in the j 1924 Catalog of i wOGDS | i SiiiEDd i i A c pv will be mailed you free • j on request. I Eeduced prices are quoted on , j Seeds, Poultry Supplies and Feeds, (j Fertilizer, Garden Tools and Spray j Materials. » Free Flower Seeds and hqg you may get them is told on Page 3 of ' (’ntalog. Write for your copy. Ask j for a Select-Kite Seed Chart. T. W. WOOD & SONS j Seedsmen Since IS7B \ ' 40 S. 14th St., Richmond, Va. An Investment. Which assures an annual return of not less than 7 and which pays an additional 2 per cent an nually when net earnings on the total capital amount to 9 per cent. in a corporation under the di rect management of a group from among the most successful executives in the Piedmont Sec tion secured by one of the most mod ern and best equipped weaving mills in the South, manufactur ing a consistent line of goods IS WORTH LOOKING INTO For full particulars write BOND DEPARTMENT American Trust Co., Frank, R. Green, Manager. Charlotte, N. C. IN MEMORIAM Contributed. In memory of little Willie Gertrude ■ Williams daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Williams. Gertrude was bom Jan. 18th, 1921, died Jan. 10th, 1924. She had lived here on earth long enough to win the hearts of both young and old. She is missed by everyone. Tho God saw fit to take her home with him, Jesus has taken a beautiful bud, Out of our garden of love, Borne it away to the City of God Home of the angels above. Full blooming flowers above will not do, Some must be young and ungrown too, So the frail buds He is gathering too, Are beautiful gems for his throne. Father and mother weep not or be sad, Still on the Saviour’s breast You shall behold her again and be glad; Beautiful flowers on high, Blooming in beauty in Heaven, she is Blooming for you and for me, Follow the Lord tho’ the city be far, ’Till our bright blossom we see. Be $1 ew to Wrath. Anger, when It is long In coming, is the stronger when It comes, and the longer kept.—Quarles. j Finance the Links! | n > . n B Success or failure—to the Farmer, Tradesman, Miner, Business man, Craftsman, Pro- |mj fessional man, means Finance. Without finance these men would be like a sail boat on a gg? j gs; furious sea without a rudder. | How often do we find the man with big ideas doing little things, and simply because he jg| |J| cannot connect his thoughts with that of finance. B| || Upon the banker depends the circulation of the wheels of industry—remove him and ifni M you remove the hub. We render many financial services—acquaint yourself with them. 8 The Farmers’ Bank I f|] A. C. RAY, Vice-President. T. M. BLAND, President, ffl ERNEST WILLIAMS, Assistant Cashier. VICTOR R. JOHNSON, Cashier M j|| PITTSBORO, - - ' ’• • . KaS* Last year 350,000 buyers ! |gk? waited for delivery. -^l§te r ,' ' . A:1I V P ii! Insure yourself against delay Ar||f||| ■ i this spring by placing your order for a Ford Car now. /Slltis! i ■ t-'iV -a-.-:: \ j..' ■ /gife.:;!, > .o*' * mC . See the Nearest c Authorized Ford Dealer / Detroit, Michigan DEATH OF ELYA JONES At 1 o’clock pi m. on February 19th the death angel entered the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Jones and claimed as his victim their daughter, JElva, who was bom October 16th, 1894. Little Elva had been an invalid all her life, having spinal affection, thus claiming the constant watchful and loving care of her fond parents, who | did all that loving hearts, and kind hands could to alleviate her suffering and to make her life happy, to which she responded with a gentle, and noble disposition, from which there sprung the most lovable affection between her and those who administered to her wants. About two weeks ago she contracted pneumonia, continued to grow steadily worse till the end; when, with a smil ing face and a bright countenance, she looked up towards Heaven and passed to the great beyond to await the arrival of her fond parents, broth er and sister, where they together, with a little brother, that had pre ceded her years before, to that better land, where they shall spend eternity in the presence of the great God who needed her to make up His Jewels in Heaven. I “The dead are like the Stars, i By day withdrawn from mortal eye, : But not exti r ct, they hold their sway, In glory through the sky. P. M. L. Siler City, R. 4, Feb. 23. HOSTESS TO CLUB Siler City, Feb. 19.—Mrs. W. S. Edwards was the charming hostess to the Friday Afternoon Book club this week. i The parlor and living room were : lovely with growing plants and ferns, the valentine idea was dominant in ithe decorations and refreshments. Af ter the usual business was transacted a delightful social hour was spent. Mrs. J. Q. Seawell sang “Springtime,” and Schubert’s Serenade. The hostess, assisted by Mrs. C. L. Fore, served pressed chicken, pickles, beaten biscuits, red and white heart shaped sandwiches, cream and cof fee, and on each plate was a little basket filled with mints. Those present were: Mesdames L. L. Wrenn, W. C. Thomas, W. S. Durham,: S. J. Husketh, J. D. Gregg, J. Q. Sea well, G. F. Wise, Rosa Stout, E. H. Jordan, J. B. Whitley and L. P. Dixon. m m Celebrated “Four Masters.” The “Four Masters” was a name i conferred on Michael. Conary, O’Clery , and O’Malconry. four Celts who flour- j ished in the first half of the Seven* j teeuth century, and who compiled from original documents the Annalg j of Ireland, from 2243 B. C. to the year 1616 A. D. THE SOUTH MUST GROW ITSOWN FOOD NO FARM SECTION CAN BUY ITS FOOD AND GRAIN AND GROW RICH. Atlanta, Ga. —(Special.)—“Few peo ple in the South realise tho enor mous drain there has been on the South's wealth through the steady food and graig buying during the past fifty years. What’s the greater pity of it is the fact that most of this money comes directly out of the farm pocket,” said H. G. Hastings, of At lanta, Chairman of the Farm and Marketing Bureau of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. “For fifty years or more the cities and towns of the Cotton Belt have been furnishing food and grain to the farmer instead of: our farmers feeding the cities and towns. While the cities ; and towns have had the best of this unnatural business, it has really im poverished both country and city.** | “As nearly as can be ascertained, my own state of Georgia has spent In the last 25 years not less than two and one-half billion dollars for food and grain from the North and West, real hard cash money that ought to be •ticking in pur fanners’ pockets. That money is. gone never to return. “It is no over-statement or exagger ation to say that twenty-five billion dollars of the South’® money has gone that way in the last fifty years. It was good, *hard worked for farm money. What we have been doing is spending our lives growing cotton, trading it off for bread and meat at no profit to ourselves. “No use to ‘cuss’ the powers that be in Washington or the trusts, tariff, banks or speculators. They may have had a part but a mighty small part in comparison with the part we ourselves have played. The way to stop that drain on our pockets is to stop buying food, grain and forage and produce those necessary items on home acres. “The time to start is now. Plans lor 1924 are being made. Before a plow is stuck in the ground, food, grain and forage acres should be set aside. These acres should and must ! be first instead of last consideration. j When these are fixed, then the farmer can go as far as he likes with cotton, tobacco or other cash crop safely. “Give the home garden a chance in his food production. It’s a wonderful helper in cutting store bills in half for the folks that will give it a square deal instead of the usual ‘lick and a, promise,’ mostly promise. Start the food production procession in 1924, and a money procession will start to* hard your pocket.” —m « m> All Have Their Place. A cow is a very good animal in the field; but we turn her out of a garden. —Johnson. ■—l 9 KHW TH’ OLE GROUCH — — GV< AWhM UJnU tUAT WOVSE\ NOVJ MOVED MERE seeox tvvk* \uor tw 1 MOir PROGRESSIVE TOMJM AROOM*, AM’ MOW NA VC\CK AM' VOTE AQk\u esto ikaprcv'meut , 9ECUX VT COSTS VA A UU KAOMEM, AM' N&> \M\TH EMVJFP V SETIRE QKj\ &)GVO*B Nemo is a real bargain. It has a low top I and medium skirt. Made in dur- | able pink or white coutil; sizes I 24 to 36 —and costs only $3.00. | If your dealer can’t get it, send name, ad- f dress, size and $3. We’ll send the corset. Nemo Hygienic-Fashion Institute r 120 E. 16th St., New York Dept. S.) ■— - -- ■« If there was no Adam or Eve, as the scientists now assert, who was it began raising Cain?—Scripps-Paine. - IWRIGLEYSI after every meal | Cleanses month and teeth and aids digestion. II Relieves that over- I feeling and acid II Its 1-a-s-t-l-n-g flavor satisfies the eravfng for B Wrlgley’s Is doable value In the benefit and ■ pleasure It provides. 5«aW nt ill Parity ■ ' Os ' " T NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained m a certain mort gage deed executed on the 7th day of September, 1918, by H. M. Nichol son and wife, M. A. Nicholson, to J. H. Henley, which mortgage deed is recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Chatham county, in”Tßook No. F. N., page 58, default having been made in the payment of the notes and indebtedness - therein men tioned, the undersigned mortgagee will, on Monday,. the 24th day of March, 1924, at 12 o’clock noon, at the Court House Door in Pittsboro, Chatham county, North Carolina, ex pose to public sale to the last and highest bidder for cash, the following described tract of land, situated, ly ing and being in Bear Creek town ship, Chatham county, North Carolina, and bounded and described as follows: Beginning at a pine corner, Phil lips’ corner in Tally’s lines and run ning thence as Preton Phillips’ line, N. 112 poles to a stake in Trogden’s I comer; thence as his line east 29 i poles to a stone to another of his corners; thence as another of his lines north 29 poles to a hickory tree, i his corner, thence as his line east 31 poles to a pine his corner, his corner in Gilbert’s line; thence south 126 poles to a dogwood in H. Trogden’s line; thence as his line west 89 poles to the beginning; containing 61 acres more or less. This 20th day of February, 1924. T. H. HENLEY, Gavin & Jackson, Mortgagee. Atty’s, Sanford, N. C. Mch. 20-c. ~ ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Mrs. Lucy E. Mead ows, deceased, late of Chatham coun ty, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons holding claims against the said estate, to present them to the undersigned duly verified, on or be fore the 21st day of February, 1925, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons owing said estate will please come forward and make immediate payment. This the 21st day of February, 1924. C. F. HOUSTON, A. C. RAY, Administrator. Attorney Apr. 3-p. ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Thomas H. Andrew, deceased, late of Chatham county, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons holding claims against the said estate, to present them to the undersigned, duly verified, on or be fore the 7th day of February, 1925, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons owing said estate will please come forward and make immediate payment. This the 7th day of February, 1924. B. M. ANDREWS, Mch 13-c. Administrator. NOTICE OF SALE OF MARTIN M. FOGLEMAN LAND. Under and by virtue of an order of the superior court of Chatham county, North Carolina, rendered in the special proceeding therein pend ing, entitled, “W. W. Fogleman and others, vs. Gurney W. Fogleman and others,” the undersigned Commission er will on Saturday, March Ist, 1924 at 12 o’clock noon, on the premises of the Martin M.Fogle man home place in Chatham county, offer for sale, at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, the following described tract of land located in Al bright township, Chatham county, North Carolina: Bounded on the north by the lands of Pearl Hobson; on the east by the lands of W. A. Lineberry; on the south by the lands of Bascom Lineber ry, W. A. Lineberry and Charlie Coop er; and on the west by the lands of Pearl Hobson; contain ing fifty (50 acres more or less; being known as the Martin M. Fogleman home place. Thi3 the 30th dav of January, 1924. DANIEL L BELL. # Feb. 28.-c. Commissioner. EXECUTOR’S NOTICET” Having qualified as executors of the last will and testament of John T. Paschal, deceased, late of Chatham county, North Carolina, this to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 7th dav of February, 1925, or this no tice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to the es tate wll make immediate settlement. This 7th dav of February. 1924. HERBERT R. PASCHAL, GEO. W. PASCHAL. R. F. PASCHAL, Executors. Attorney. * Mch 13-p
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 28, 1924, edition 1
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