Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / June 4, 1925, edition 1 / Page 6
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*Ji4SES l When you finish with this newspaper ( (after you have taken your little scis ! fors and carefully cut out the recipe be ■ l°w for grandma) you can have a Newspaper Race.” Tell the other boys and girls to get their papers too. Be i sure the papers are all of the same size and you’d better play the game outside so that if things get mussy nobody will > scold. Everyone starts on a line and i when the signal to “go” is given, each I drops the paper in front of him, steps over it. picks it up. drops it in front j . and . keeTss doing this over until : the finish line is reached. The first one . over the line wins! i Jelly Cake is Nice to Bake. | Grandma makes such good jellv. i doesn’t she? You’d just love to dig i y. our . silver spoon right down into the tar and cat it that way. I know vou f jrmla. But mercy me. that isn’t good for httle girls and bovs! But nri rp-’tlv TO 3 nf- ■- ' 7 . **»»*.»«* ouaic JOALJf CtUie you, just like this! 3 egg». 1 cup Mlf-rising flour. 1 cup powdered sugar. r j 3 tablespoons sweet milk. She must sift the flour three • then beat the whites and yolks ofTtS separately and mix the sugar with tL ' Next TOm??h the h> ted flour smdually..} the milk ll6 " hlt cs of the eggs and I + Th 1 ls all mixed g'ood and poured into cake tins to bake for 15 rnmutes. When it is done, spread the died 3 sugar jGlly aad sprinkle with P°w- j ; Mammy used to call thorn ’’"goobers,” rich, nourishin’ Southern ptan .i s, and how we loved the peanut CSC ties she'd make with them! N- tr ly every one In the South knows tne tastineos of good, fresh, roasted peanuts. For ! candies and cookies they’re about the } most delicious confection I know. If i you use a cup of peanuts, chopped f coarse, and 2 tablespoons of butter, a i cup of sugar and 3 eggs, 2 tablespoons I flour to roll, you can irfteke some of ; these plump little cookies. Just mix ! dough in the usual way for cookies <• ■ i j add the “goobers.” Bake for abou f t. u ‘ minutes. The children will love them, f Hickory Nut Ccokies Have Fine Flavor. I And thinkin’ of peanut cookies re- f minds me of the hickory nut cookies that Madge loves to make for her boys. Bobby always demands them around this time o’ year. She uses a half cup i of butter creamed with a half cup of sugar, adds three eggs well beaten and a half cup of sweet milk and enough self-rising flour to roll thin. To this is added one cup of chopped hickory nuts. The mixture is chilled before roll- f ing and a stiff dough avoided. This is J baked in a quick oven and when they I come out golden brown and fragrant' j> with that hickory nut flavor, you ought * to see the kitchen fill up with girls and boys! s<fnTPn Island. N. Y.—Miss Jane Phenix. writes:—“l am from the West, for many years I suffered >a^° |(oi ~ was swollen to twice its natural size. I was con -K. *•' % weak and de pressed. had ro appetite. I read your Tutt's Li\ar Pill advertisement and tried them. After a few doses I began to improve. Tutts Pills have kept me free from a return of the illness, and I feel like a new per son Am never without them.” At all dru££tsts. /»r-» *r T* *? «» *» *» ?~*N f» /> T 1 " 7 * r ' r TK’-> i |H| a i% a «p* A h F..,: ,i vtf ;.rP kd rk i^. „%: i'% c* WM —*rf l ' 4*s!? ii * <sfc 4„; £i & V llr-jJ’ „» >J» CU&tL «iSk <S *» <ij By GZKE BYRNES * . _ - “ “ *’ "r" ~'\ '--■( ‘ f How ABooT 1 / co«ir | '"' ap to v,,? "-xS^' i / m rtOOSt fOK juj I CBNMf.U'- A J » l-^UV ! «s?3r^«) V VJ(W.O ;/'V V [M “e • oL-^-\ A \ ; n J . * V <* v ALL SOUTH EAGER TO GET MEMORIAL COINS • \ % y. ■ -T- —n • ' ■* ll * n 1 : ' ' .. V . i /.v : mm Amt I i THE popular affection in vhich the heroes of the Confedt racy are held throughout the Smith 1 is being demonstrated in connet tion j with the nation-wide distrifcutio i qf \ Confederate Memorial Half-Dol ars, minted by the United States Gov *rn ment as a “tribute to the valor of | the Soldier of the South.” i In every Southern State commit ! tees of prominent citizens, appoint ! ed by the governor, are arranging i distribution plans which culminate j on the morning of July 3rd, when ' the Memorial coins are to be sir. ul •k taneousl , released throughout the , country. to that time, banks : and local volunteer committees or -1 ganized in every community are con ducting sales campaigns of coin cer tificates, which are on that date, re- i RADIO FAN CN SAHARA DESERT HEARS AMERICA !■ ■ _______ __ ________ *> ' • r 4, » j How would you !ilce to be on the I—-7 - !S hara desert 250 miles south of fT * V |Algiers and get Paris on ths radio j j Uw il)iU*Uciy ? ' Couldn’t that he truthfully de scribed as a real radio experience ? Again: how would you like to be •long the south coast of the Medi- \ terrancan and get six or eight of A. ... / the European stations during the day and all of them at night? w' v -.. How would you like to be in Tu- . . iMKffik:. T- b ni. \,.lii .UVki, I—h. : 7av~l. , Ktfdk * Bscuh*. 4. ' Z*** tfcutLo Z* -frN+j. crh. tfU m C^ c Rcwtf c-iuuz ■* £. ' • O-H. Afu*N(-CA.. * f <=>*■ 4 ! ajMMNr Jzdr&a&HjL ■ ■ <Urus-« Aut Us-xM£ Q&o-ct Ar-xr-Zzjs+t+S cZiy I cp ftafZc* cAs'Dt * >•- f I r ■&**!/' cu-xjft. Hsi fU.ii f ~ . /g / cO “ k+l\, ■*. * 0 / / tf-tftfT-t a^‘^ L -ml ■ . , ... . . . ... »■ I —I- 'i .. i■. I . Sounds impossible and incredible, doesn’t it. But here is the docu mentary evidence. The postcard and . the picture tells the story. i The Carte Postale is dated at Beginning the Central Group of the! Confederate Memorial at Stone Mountain. Genera's Lee find Jaclc~ son are reproduced on the Memorial Coins, soon to be distributed. •deemable in the actual Half-Dollars. More than live thousand banks are cooperating m the distribution. Since less than two million coins of this special issue are available to the South, under the plans an nounced by the -Southern Bankers Committee supervising their distri bution, every city and county in the . South has been allocated a definite number of coins. Once this quota is exhausted, no further coins are. available. Premiums from the sale of the coins, which arc being distributed at One Dollar each, goes to tire com pletion of the great monument to the Confederacy being carved at Stone Mountain, Georgia. Here the dis tinguished sculptor, Augustus Putke man, is placing on the side of the mountain a gigantic panorama of Southern Generals. The five generals chosen to repre sent each state, are selected by a- iTvir-'S, North Af/Jca. March 3rd, T - and is adduced to Paw cl Lrosiey, Jr., Cincinnati, Ohio. It reads, “Fishing hc?s is cot ten but radio is fine. On thi Sahara, using 3 on vius 1 riici.v.%* c*< *u*u. ,t> , traffic rules that do not rule wr —- : :;, 5 xrere is a picture of NeWYofk traffic which shows regulations not regulating. It was taken at * Fifth Avenue and Forty-second Street* on* of the world's busiest corners. - % Note that although traffic is wMivinar north and .south nedas** I ' W 8 , ' : | *8 m I i \ *ST v \ ! j ||j| ' ... ._ l' CAMERON MOKKISON f ; Chair man fur North Carolina' j» memorial commission a ‘[pointed Hy J; each Stale Governor. Beneath the' . [• carved on the mountain there * j is also to be constructed i Memorial! | Hall dedicated to the women of the j Confederacy in which are to be pre- i; served the records and redes of the - | great War between the States. It is* j estimated that tha cost of carving : j the Mountain and constructing the' j Memorial Hail wilt be A the neigh | liorhood* -jf IjAjQ&OJdQO. " r. J D-zsevt. £"/insert 260 xniles s mill cf Algiers, tit the y ranaJ Salimra . v Desert. j&zon tin camels, s *#»m to l # - enjoy iisg the f y&gram. cepatm from Paris came t’trough on the- kitad speaker. Along the: south eo?wt of the Mediler"Wine.-in, using this set, 6 or? 8 'high ; power liuropeant stations came i* with jrcod volume by dapatdit all oi ' them by dark. C; -a usual.Sr ret a , few American after I a. aa. Can . you fl-,h with us this year:? Cored- ' ally, Dv F. Keith" z trians are traveling from East i* West and from West to East. ** How to get pedestrians to ob serve pedestrian regulations is m serious problem. V< Signal towers and traffic offi cers are seemingly not the res solution. •* i i Oa.HOMPHBKVS’ jMr ■ 9 iy m Egg wm \ notice of sale of land near moisotre, n. c. Under and by virtue of the author- j lty of an order of the Superior Court , <s£ Chatham county, N. C., rendered m i the special proceeding' therein pend- ; mg, entitled, “C. D. Thomas and j others vs. Verna' Long and others, s , the- undersigned commissioner will ora Saturday, Xfliie 1925, at 2:00 O’clock p. m. on the premises of the R. H. Thomas: j landes, near Moncure, N. C., sell, at .; puhlietion auction to the highest bid der for cash,' the following described tracts of land, located in Haw River township, Chatham County, Nortn Carolina. . _ First tract —A tract of land in Haw river township, containing 60 acres,, more or less, known as the Joshua j Bolling place, ?md adjoining the lands of Amos Bridges, John*. P. Bridges j and others, except one acre in the THE SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOUTH | » —-■- - - I Whose interest • in the Southern is greatest? We who are devoting- our lives in the service of this railroad like to call it ours. 1 I The investors who have put their faith and money into it to make it an efficient transportation machine — they speak of it as theirs. And you who travel on it, whose goods it carries, and whose business depends on its regular service day in and day out —are you not entitled to call it yours ? We all have a feeling of pride and proprietorship in the Southern, and it is through the cooperative efforts of all of us that it has come to be the great railway system that it is. This spirit will build a greater South ern to serve a greater South. # SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM PERRF’S GARAGE Phone 400 ' SANFORD N. C. —Dealers Jn— Bodge Brothers Motor Cars, ! Parts and Service. ORGANIZED IN 1903 The name ,of this institution has stood for finance ? soundness and efficient service for yearly quarter oi 1 century. On this record we are seeking new business May we serve you? BANK OF PITTSBORO PITTEBORO, N. C. ■l.. -'f *• jLlfij A \ A. lu Pr%. (fenrhii f'*'"’"'* • .* l / . ' >• extreme western corner adiomimr tn* lands of Nathan Harris, Jane and Sii san Bridges, and being the same land conveyed to R. H. Thomas, deceased by A. G. Headen and others by* deed registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Chatham County in Book “D.T.” at pagfeg Second tract—Bounded on North by the lands of J. K. Barnes and the first tract above described* cn the East by the lands of John Bell and C. D. Wilkie; on the South by the lands of Mrs. Aurelia Tavlor* arid on the West by the lands of Clyde D. Thomas; containing 24 acres, more or less. A one-sixth interest in the abovo lands will be allotted from the sam* to N. G. Thomas by metes and bounds, and will not be sold; but all the rest of the said lands wflT be sold This the 18th day of May, 1995 DANIEL L. BELL Ma 28 to Jun 18. Commissioner. ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Mrs. C. H. Strowd deceased, late of Chatham county" North Carolina, this is to notify a R persons having claims against' the said estate to file them with the un dersigned. duly verified on or before the 9th day of April, 1926, or this notice null be plead in bar of their recovery. A! Ipersons indebted to the said estate will please come forward and make immediate settlement. This 7th day of April, 1925 W. C. STROWD, Siler & Barber, Administrator./ Attorneys. To Jn 4-p
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 4, 1925, edition 1
6
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