b- ■— * - ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. % Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Mrs. Elizabeth Shields, deceased, late of Chatham County, N. C., this is to notify all per sons holding claims against the staid estate to present them on or before the 18th day of June, 1926, or this no tice will be plead in bar of their re covery. __ All persons indebted to the said es tate will please come forward and ’make immediate settlement. This 15th day of June, 1925. A. C. RAY, WADE BARBER, jun 18 to jul 22 Administrators. I ADVICE TO THE AGED f Age brings infirmities, such as sluggish S bowels, weak kidneys, torpid liver. | Tutt’s Pills ■ have a specific effect on these organs, I stimulating the bowels, gives natural I action, and imparts vigor to the system. | ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Charlie Watson, de ceased, late of Chatham county, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons holding claims against the said es tate to present them on or before the 11th day of June, 1926, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the said es tate will please come forward and make immediate settlement. This 6th day of June, 1925. J. N. RIVES, A. C. Ray, Administrator , Babies Love It * For all stomach and intestinal troubles and disturbances due to teething, there is nothing | better than a safe Infants* and Children’s Laxative. Mrs. Winslows Syrup Lift Off-No Pain! ; Jil i.l I __ , IraUkTcl 1 f 7 : Doesn’t hurt one bit! Drop a little ( “Freezone”on an aching coin, .nstun .. , ; ] that corn stops hurting, then shortly \ you lift it right off with fingers. 1 Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of • for a few cents,sufficient to ( remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn bswifenn the toes, and the foot < calluses, without soreness or irrita- \ tion. ■ ( CATARRH of head or throat is usually ( benefited by the vapors of— VICKS Vapoßub ' Over 17 Million Jar* Used Yearly I , He Owes His 40 Years of Constant Good Health to Beecham’s Pills “In 1884 I started taking Beecham’s Pills two or three at bedtime and can now eat anything I like without feeling distressed. I have not had a sick day in all the 40 years. “I -have recommended Beecham’s Pills to my friends and in almost all cases they have proved satisfactory. *‘l was troubled with sleeplessness andßeecham's helped me very much.” ' F. LOUIS LOEFFLER Rochester, N. Y. Beecham’s Pills bring prompt relief to sufferers Jrom constipation, biliousness, sick headaches, and other digestive ailments. Easy to take and non-habit-forming. FREE SAMPLE —Writ today for free sample to B. F. Allen Co., 419 Canal St.. New York Buy from your druggist in SS and foe boxes for Better Health, Take Beecham’s Pills SERVICE BY PUBLICATION. North Carolina, Chatham co’inty. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT. June 2nd, 1925, Pauline Alston, vs. Alston. The defendant, Joseph Alston, will. take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the 1 Superior court of Chatham county, North Carolina, to obtain an absolute divorce from the defendant; and that said defendant wil further take no tice that he is required to appear at . the office of the Clerk of the Super- I ior court of said county in the court house at Pittsboro, Nerth Carolina, on the 4th day of July, 1925, and ans wer or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint in said action. June 4th, 1925. E. B. HATCH, Clerk, ,ty. P Horton, Superior Court for 1 Attorney. Chatham county. THE OTHER SIDE OF IT. Durham Herald. ! We find the editor of The Chat ham Record moving along the same road of thought that we travel on many matters of public discussion. The following from his most recent publication is a case in point: “Some newspaper was lambast ing the management of one of the prison, camps because a guard shot two escaping prison ers. It does look hard for a pris oner to lose his life in an at tempt to escape. Yet if those making the atempt are allowed to go unscathed because the guards cannot run them dowm and master them with their nak ed hands, it is evident that there would soon be no convicts to guard. If guards are not expect ed to shoot, they should not be allowed to hqve guns. The prob lem of managing convicts, we j judge, is a more difficult one when it is viewed close up than it may appear from a distance. Judge Sinclair, for instance, an nounces that flogging in convict camps must cease. But what is J the boss to do when a big burly fellow refuses absolutely to work?” If guards are to have guns and not use them, why make them carry those weapons ? It certainly isn’t pleasant to lug around a double-bar reled shot-gun and a belt full of shells loaded with buckshot; nor is it merely for purposes of physical ex ercises they are told to tote a rifle or a pistol and several rounds of ball cartridges. And, if the guards are not to carry guns, how long do .you suppose prisoners would stay at work? They will all run away in 24 hours if they were not afraid of be ing shot. And, if you can’t keep them in prison, why have a prison ? Why have all our legal machinery if the I court sentence is not to be carried out? .As The Chatham Record says, there are two sides to that question, and if the public were just a little more familiar with the problem of handling and maintaining discipline among a bunch of criminals there would not be so much criticism of prison methods. Os course, the guards haven't a right to be unduly severe, inhuman or brutal, but they are expected to use judgement in sufficient quantity to know what to do and when to do it to maintain discipiline among tiie menaces of so ciety which have been sent there for society's protection. < Wild Ponies of West Put to Econom ic Use in Fattening Hogs. Olympia, Wash., June 24. —The ap parent success of an experiment in converting horse flesh into hog jeei has given rise to the hope among . eastern Washington stockmen tnat a practicable means has at last been ' found to rid Washington ranges oi . thousands of worthless wild horses, , declares Horold Dobyns, field leader . for the biological survey, who re nun . ed recently from a coyote hunting , trip in Benton county. Cattle men and wool growers have long consid ered the horses a menace to the live- . stock industry, since the animals, de- . scribed locally as “knothead Cayus— es,” place an added burden on tne none too abundant range. In recent months, Mr. Dcbyns said an enterprising individual has estab lished a slaughterhouse and hog feed ing plant at Plymouth, on the south ern border of the Horse Heaven country, long famous as its name implies as a horse range. The horses are purchased at an average price of about $3 a head, which while low, enables the owners of the long • ne glected ponies to realize a profit by rounding up their otherwise value less animals, and the supply has so far kept pace with the demand. The slaughterhouse is modern in every respect, Mr. Dobyn said, and none of the Carcass is wasted. The flesh is cooked with com and other cereals for hog feed, the hides bring about $2 each, or nearly the cost of the horse, while the bones are dispos ed of to fertilizer plants at a price said to average sls a ton. The hogs are shipped in fattened and then re shipped to the markets. Approxi mately 600 hogs are fed at a time, . while there is always a supply of horses awaiting slaughter in the cor rals. When the supply of cheap horse flesh is exhausted at Plymouth the slaughterhouse will be dismantled and moved to other fields. v it was pointed out. I . 1 Keep your drinking water clean and pure by building a concrete well curb and platform, is the advice of E. R. Raney, extension farm engineer i That the dairy cow has a marked effect on the health of nations is shown in a recent study of 24 coun tries made at the Ohio State Uni versity. In New Zealand where there are 25 cows for each 100 persons the death rate is only 10 per 1,000 in habitants as against 31 deaths in I Chile where there are about 5 cows to every 100 persons. COUNTY AGENT PROVES THE VALUE OF LIME Raleigh, N. C.. June An interesting demonstration on the val ue of lime has just been completed by George Evans in Davie County. In the fall of 1923 Mr. I. G. .Roberts of Cana undertook this demonstra tion with Mr. .Evans and although the land was very thin and poor the results show conclusively the value of lime applications. The field of red clay soil was divid ed into four sections and ground pounds per acre. The remaining sec tion -was left unlimed as a check on the other plots. Then the whole field was sown to wheat using 200 ! at the rate of 1,000, 2,000 and 3,000 pounds of 8-3-3 fertilizer to the acre. | In the spring a mixture of red and alsike clover was sown upon the wheat and ; 200 pounds per acre of 16 per cent acid phosphate was used.. j A good stand of clover was secured all over the field and the lime show ed that it was going to be of great benefit to the crop. The clover matur -1 ed and was cut for hay, each section being weighed separately, with the J fololwing results: iNo lime 492 pounds 1,000 lbs. lime 1,032 pounds 2,000 lbs lime 1,344 pounds 3,000 lbs lime 1,308 pounds This land was of about average acidity and of much less than aver age fertility but the t value of lime stands out as clearly from others as enununu nu nu nu nu nu nunu as 1 though the soil had bee rich. From this demonstration and others carried on over the State, E. C. Blair, ex tension agronomist at State Colege, recommends the use of 2,000 pounds of lime to the acre/as this amount does as well if not better than larg er applications. “THIS IS TERRIBLE.” Monroe Enquirer. When a police officer makes a mis take and kills somebody it is a se rious matter. If the officer happens to be a prohibition officer, engaged in enforcing that particular law, . his mistake becomes a matter of “grave i national concern.” Newspapers and individuals demand the repeal of a law that is so enforced, etc., and abuse the officer. There is another side ,to the ques tion, the officer’s. The bootleggers and moorish Tiers, also shoot to kill. When the officers d'e the same news- j papers and individuals lock on si- ' lently, explaining that the incident shows that prohibition will never be enforced. SUGGESTIONS T ’OR SUMMER PASTURES . Raleigh, N. C.,. June -—“lt is ! posible to overgraze a pasture bvi putting too many animals on it,” j says S. J. Kirby, pasture specialist j for the State College extension di vision, ‘but as reasonably close graz ing is beneficial, more loss is sus tained by undergrazing than over grazing. To insure a good summer pasture, Mr. Kirby gives the following sugges tions, “Weeds shade the pasture and use much of the plant food and soil moisture which results in poorer pas tures especially during dry spells. It is therefore necessary to cut the weeds either by hand or a mowing machine. “In new or cut over land, bushes should be cut down. If allowed to grow at will or until the full moon in August before cutting, as is too frequently the case, the pasture will , need re-seeding the following year, i “Pastures should be top-dressed in the spring using either phosphor ic acid, stable manure or lime, but it will not hurt to top-dress at any time. A combination of all three ma terials will in some cases be neces sary or other materials of equal fer tilizing value may be used. Mr. Kirby states that, where there is a good sod completely covering the ground that weeds give less trouble and the clovers and grasses iaro less likely to be injured by drought. “Let some oif the plants make seed and then reseed either in the fall or spring,” says Kirbj), “and a good pasture will result.” ONE WAY TO STOP IT. Monroe Enquirer. W. M. Gordon, who travels around over the country quite a bit, is an observant citizen. Some time ago he entered a cigar store at at town in Eastern Carolina and there he saw a number of checks pasted on the under side of a glass show case. Each check was “no good,” and had been returned to the cigar company wihich had accepted the worthless pa per from various customers. On each check appeared this legend: “No Funds.” But the store management had placed the names of the persons who gave the bad checks just as plain where the public might see and know the guilty ones. Publish the names of drawers of bad checks and the practice will soon cease. IS FORD REALLY GOING TO BUILD IT? Sanford Express. According to reliable information ! gathered by the Clinton Independent, j the source of which cannot be divulg- | ed, Henry Ford’s railroad from his . j coal fields to the coast will pass 'through Sampson county. Work on | the proposed road is already under jway, and a tentative route has been I surveyed by his engineeers, says The j 1 Independent. • Cleanliness is the one big asset in ! milk and cream production, say live- j stock workers of the State College extension division. The barn, cow, and all utensils used in handling i jmilk anti cream should be’ 4 ’clean if j the best cream is to be produced. right here in this cap" “See this pin hole. It’s all plugged up with mud and dust. That hole’s the start of your gas feed system. When you use up ten gallons of gas ten gallons of air have to get into your tank. If the air can’t get through the cap you’ll get a vacuum in your tank and the gas won’t flow freely. You’ll have trouble sure as shootin’ if you don’t clean that hole out once in a while.” It takes years and years of practical experience to learn how to “shoot trouble” on every make of car that may come into a garage. It takes much longer to learn all the intricacies of petroleum re fining. We’ve been at it for two generations and ' experience has taught us how to turn out good motor oils of uniform high quality year after year. People who realize that “experience counts” in oil refining ask for “Standard” by name. STANDARD OIL COMPANY ( New Jersey ) Oils You Can Trust! Buy Tubes as Carefully as you buy Tires THERE are two ways a car built to give mileage and get owner can buy tubes. mileage. He can go out looking for price They resist heat, hold their —and get it. shape and retain their elasticity* Or he can buy tubes that will To get all the mileage out of a give his casings a chance to deliver new casing or to make an old the mileage that is built into them, casing last—put aU. S. Royal or U. S. Royal and Grey Tubes are Grey Tube inside it* U. S. Royal and U. S. Grey Tubes MiJi of RW.Jvr ®are Good Tubes / A B FILLING ST A TION 1 ■■ 1 I A CAR LOAD Fruit jars, Lids and Rubbers now in stock. Round jars Square jars. Good Luck jars, canning club jars, both zinc and glass top jars, sizes one-h-alf pint to one half gallon. —Jelly glasses, Ice tea and table glasses, tin cans for hand sealing. Wholesale price on jars in gross dots. —We carry everything needed in canning, preserving and pickling suppiles. LEE HARDWARE CO. Sanford, North Carolina S