Page Six L THE SESQUI FROM THE AIR '' 9 An Idea of the size and scope of the Sesqul-Centennial International Exposition, which will be held in Philadelphia from June V to December 1, to commemorate The Isoth anniversary of the Declaration of American Independence, is given in this photograph. In the foreground is the great Municipal Stadium, which seats 100.000 persons. North of the stadium can he seen two of tb.e vast exhibition buildings. The first is the Palace of Agriculture and the second the Palace of Liberal Arts. Opposite the latter building is the big auditorium, which seats 20.000 person! on a single floor. To the left of the stadium cap be' seen the world famous Indian building, the ThJ MahaL ' x # Postmaster General Out to “Teach” Addressing Washington.—Lack of street and number addresses on letters has be come such a drag on the postal serv ice that Assistant Postmaster General Bartlett has begun a general cam paign to educatg the business public in the necessity of giving complete addresses on all letters. Postmasters have been requested to take up the subject with advertisers in their cities with a view to having a com plete address appear in all advertise ments In newspapers and magazines. xx>oooo $ Relatives Get Rest y V New York. —“I giye and be- A X queath unto the New York X a Women’3 League for Animals X X' S2OO for the sole purpose of X X taking care of my cat, Bunay,” X a read a provision in the will filed X X for probate in th’e Surrogate’s X q court of Miss Cecelia Romain A I q Stinson, who died in Belleaire, X : Q L - I. 6 j Q Miss Stinson, whose estate is A Q estimated to be worth more than O 0 SII,OOO, made bequests to the A 0 American Society for the Pre- A A/'vention of Cruelty to Animals, 6 A the Bide-A-Wee Home for Poor A A Cat% and Animals, and an nddi- A A-tional legacy of the v 0 Women’s League for Animals.* y V Caroline Virginia Moyle, 0 0 “daughter of my dear friend v 0 Seth Movie,” receives SI.OOO. y 0 The residue is divided among y 0 relatives. Y 0 0 >OOOOO.OOOOOO 6~r* rjo ! i? a -?r script.on for Malaria. - c.nri Fever, Dengue rr Rd’cus Fever It the Gcr.i.B these added •’ ff% • #fi Qfj Y 0 /T-% ”§'M r'* *t"S*3 //"*' ’§'■'?/ /T\ /%./k CClf mAii/MuCilOil * . j ) In the 1927 Buick you will find a host of im provements. Here are some of the luxurious 0 details: Balanced Wheels. 'e 3 Heel Operated Heater Control. Thermostatic Circulation Centro!. 5 Giant Tooth, Quiet Transmission. Jet-Black Tires with Jet-Black Rim*. . Suction Tip on Windshield Wiper. Exclusive Upholster ings and interiorwans* Arm Rests on Rear-Deck Seats. { . Recessed Windows. * Coronation Colors in Dyfco. A-4-1S . CwK. sh J2k S r Si BUICK ?F*s W* *9T% 1# V W ?*»^4 ¥Ek DUiti Brown Service SANFORD pick * y tation a N. Carolina Geranium Town. , . “Many orchards of clove trees with their shiny evergreen leaves can be seen on Reunion. The clove buds are in clusters. First they are green, then they turn red, when they are ready to be picked. “Another specialty from which Re union profits Is vanilla. The produc tion of vanilla orchid beans. Reunion shares with the Seychelles to the north and with Mexico. • “There are three towns on Reunion with a population of more than 18,000 —St. Denis, St. Ihecre and St. Paul. If Abd-el Krira Is given Ms choice, St. Pierre >vou!d appear to be the most attractive for a permanent residence. It is the center of the island’s trade In essence of gehiniinn. The flower that decorates our houses and gardens, Is a commercial product here. What a prospect. A life of pensioned ense on a tropical Isle amid acres of gerani ums i” ELKINS FUNERAL PARLOR Offers Superior Funeral Service Embalming Caskets - Accessories - Coffins Separate Hearse Service Main tained for Colored Patrons ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE Flnvincr this day qualified as Ad ministrator of the estate of Joseph H. Overby, deceased, late of Chatham r' t Cp.tol’rj' , T do hcrebv notify all persons having claims a-1 gainst the estate to nresent them duly 1 proven to the undersigned on or be- • fore the oth day of July, 1027, or! s kis notice will be pleaded in bar of! their recovery. All persons indebted to the estate are requested to make immediate pay ment. This the Sth day of July, 1926. J. E. HUNEYCUTT, 203 S. Tryon St., Charlotte, N. C. Administrator of the estate of^ 11. C. J.cnes, Atty. for Administrator. 1 Joseph H. Cherby, deceased. ST. THOMAS FREED FROM ALL CRIME 1 I i . j | Police Commissioner Applied S i 1 | j New York Methods# §I . i j i New York.—The only criipae to be; found today on St. Thomas, Virgin; Islands, is the salary paid to the po lice commissioner. At least when he arrived here on the Colombian liner i Haiti, he said “it was a crime to take! | the money.” j ) The commissioner of police for St., Thomas is M. J. Nolan, former cap tain in the New York police depart-; ment, in charge of the West Thirtieth street station. New York methods - have put the damper on St. Thomas’, intentions to support home industries and have its own little crime wave. * j “There'isn’t a crook*of any kind ini St. Thomas,” Commissioner Nolan said! upon his arrival. “It has become so quiet down there that I’m ashamed to; go around and collect my salary.”' In order not to feel guilty o< a ; holdup, Commissioner Nolan said he! , waits for them to send liis salary to him. On a visit to the Virgin' Islands six years ago to see nis son. Dr. Roger i Nolan of St. Croix, h> told St. Thomas' j oflieials of New York’s methods of'.i cleaning up the underworld. At the ! time pickpockets, thieves and' holdup i j men had an open season all; year; round. The officials extended! an in vitation to Captain Nolan to' apply' these methods. He came, he saw,, he established a 1 dead-line, bought new uniforms for the 40 members of the police force and In two weeks the crime wave disap-, peared like a marcel in hot weather.. The only trouble left to the. police, Commissioner Nolan said, “I that neither my force nor I have anything to do.” SUB FROM ABOVE i Tins smart piece of photography shows the submarine 0-3, of Uncle Sam’s navy, as it appeared in the striking maneuvers of? Block island. | / Crop Area Falls Off els Population Gains Washington.—For the first time in history there bus been a decrease in the crop area of the United States. Despite a marked increase in popu lation, there was a reduction in thei last live years of 19,000,000 acres in the area of harvested crops, the De partment of Agriculture has disclosed in an analysis of the agricultural cen sus statistics. Notwithstanding the decrease, the crop area still is suffi cient, in the opinion of department experts, to maintain a large volume of agricultural exports. The 19,000,000 acres have reverted to pasture or have been allowed to, lie idle, the cause being attributed chiefly to t!:** agricultural depression of the last five years. Largely as a result of the war-time prices, about 40,000,000 acres of pas ture land were plowed up and put into crops between 1909 and 1919. and about 5,000,060 acres of forest land cleared for crops. Nearly half of tills total, experts believe, was used to meet the increased European demand for foodstuffs. Owing to t!»fc extraor dinary demands of the war period, the acreage of crop land in 1919 was near ly ten years ahead of what had been the previous rate of expansion rela tive to increase of population. A . Plotted Path of the Hurricane by Radio Washington.—The use of the radio compass in plotting the course of a storm has been revealed by an experi ment made during the recent hurri cane which swept the West Indies and the coast of Florida, according to a statement from the Navy department. Lieut. E. H. Kincaid, navigator of , the navy transport, Kittery, plotted the hurricane by taking' bearings while the ship was on the way from Port Au Prince, Haiti, to St. Thomas. Virgin Islands. lie took the hearings of the point of heaviest static and from this data computed the center of the sweeping storm. Checking this with later weather reports, he found ' he had accurately plotted the path of the hurricane. THE CHATHAM RECORD SCHOOL BOND ELECTION i. . i I Notice cf Election on Question of j ■ Issuing Bonds for Erection of School Building at Byusnn 1 > North Carolina: J Chatham County: ! Office of the Boarcf of County Cotn i missioners of Chatham County, North Carolina, August the 9th., 1926, the following resolution was introduced by -C. C. Hamlet: ; WHEREAS, a petition duly signed by the Chairman, T. B. Bray, and by , the Clerk, W. R. Thompson, of the , Board.of Education of Chatham Coim-i ty, North Carolina, requesting; the Board of County Commissioners of Chatham County to order amd call to be Ibeld in Bynum School District, Baldwin and Center Township; Num , ber Four, which said School District is bounded and described as follows: ! BEGINNING on the West ‘sank oi Haw Rivet* at W. H. Hearne’s South east comer, thence around said W-. H. Hearne’s land back to said river; j thence up the said River to Or. W. j Moore’s* corner: thence with Metre’s ! South line to and with J. B. Atwater’s j line to J.. E. Sturdivant’s, line; thence ! with Sturdivant’s, Atwater and Tave J Cooper Western line to Cooper and | Williams corner near Pittsboro Road; I thence with said old Pittsboro road I Northward and across the road t* I W. A. Cooper's, comer; thence with j W. A. Cooper, J- M.. Dismukes’, W. Wi | Meacham’s,. Wearable's and O’conner’sv | west line to* C* W, Bynum Lne; j thence down G.. W. Bynum’s line to Perry’s creek,, crqssmg said creek and with Powellfs west Mne to the river; (all the names mentioned in the above boundaries* being am the inside and are included; in this School District); MONEY DO LOAN—SIOO,OOP to loan the farmers of Chatham county within next ninety days. Loans from 1 to 30 yeasrs at 5 1-2 per cent. V. R. Johnson, Pittsboro. . ■ JSSUr 4 | and digestion. x i It 9 r , - 'THE PASS WORD IN ANY TRAFFIC Q&m The CwtomßuiitMeter jjj j I Carts 5 emts Mors - Worth If OIL QQMPAMY (N.J.) tb-vee a-rom Haw £iver a«d up tip I Ka.st.BaMk at Mve* to the- Orang -Mtounty Ese; thence 1 East with thr ' Orange County te the Northwest e easier ,of Fair-view School District; thence about Smxth with the said Farrview School District and the old Chapel - School District line to the West line of Mann’s Chapel School District, New Hope- Number seven; thence continuing .about south with the* line of said Mann’s Chapel School District, NeW Hope Niamher jeyen, affid the old Greye School Dis rict to tfee East /flank- of Haw at a point opposite the Southeast cor ner, of said „W. PL Beanroe’s la»d; ! thence acsaid river to the said Hearne’s Scaitheast corner, the place of beginning:; including and embrac ing within said boundaries all the property embraced and included with , m the special 1 School Taxing District composed of Bynum, Mount Pleasant, | Union and Manx's Chapel School Dis j ricts, a special election to be held is said School District on' the 1 9thi day of October, 1926 h for the purpose of submitting to the’ qualified voters of said School District and allowing them to vote on the QisestioA vsoi to ex ceed! Tliirty Thousand ($30,000.00) DoHscrs of Serial bonds of said School District of Baldwin and Center Townv number fourt and levying a sufficient annual tao, not t& ej&eedf EIFTTY CENTS on iSit ope hundred; j dollars worth of property, to pay the j ;ame, for the purpcM« of building, pisErchasing a' «te and equip ping *at school building or build- mod said School District, has beem presented to the Board of Cb«M.y Commis;4oners; and said! bo aria to bear infiifrest at the k#te- not to 1 exceed six. per cent per annum; and said bonds to be serial bonds, aaxf that each issise so mature tShct the? principal amount ofl'iia'isHas shaS be payalSe in annual instellmeiHti3' ear series, beginning not more than* three years after the date of tide' bnrnEr of such issue ntfd ending not mare? tSaam thirty years# after such issac:: NrDW,. ITMEREFORE, in; pursuance of ftie - . piajwTeioffls of Chapter 136 of the Public- Lawa of Northi Carolina, Regular Sesgaon of 1923, and Chapter 121 off the- Ftaiblie Laws of North Car olina; Extra Session of and the Piiblic Law» of North Carolina Regu lar sesßien’ of 1025, and tlnx amend ments thereto, be it, and it ass hereby resolvafd by the Board of County Com missioners of ChathanTOounty: FIRST: That Hie petition and re quest of the Board of Education of Chatham County be, and the same is Jiereby approved and allowed; that it be, and is hereby ordered that a spe cial School Election be held in Bynum , School -District, Baldwin and Center Townships, number four, on the 9th day of October, 1926, for the purpose of voting on t!ie question of issuing not exceeding THIRTY THOUSAND ($30,006.60) DOLLARS of serial bonds of said Bynum School District, Baldwin and Center Townships, Num ber four,, and levying a sufficient an nual tax, not to exceed FIFTY CENTS on the one hundred dollars worth of property to pay the same, for the purpose of providing funds for- the building, erecting and equipping a School Building and the purchasing of a site for the same, for said School District; that the said bonds to bear interest at the rate not to exceed six per cent per annum, payable semi annually. and to be serial bonds, and i each issue thereof shall so mature that the aggregate principal amount of the issue shall be payable in annual installments or series, beginning not more than three years after the date of the bonds of such issue and ending not more than thirty years after suc date, and no such installment shall Ttars&y, Sumter 2, ”>e mate than two and * as. great in amount a§ tho" 11 prior installment of th?