PlpnfATnbpr 0. 1 $26 To v;n and County Briefs I , fr N McK. Buie, of Oakland , went up to Virginia Sat t0 j. • + o his cousins, Messrs. l ] U p W. k* L. Lea. , rr an d Mrs. Moton Leonard, of ( T Yn'o-ton, Visited Mrs. Leonard’s pa-, LeXl Nlr. and Mrs. J. J. Thomas, on 16 t,’ Leonard was formerly j r ° ute Yerdie Thomas. She was mar- ! offer the close of her school near ' ried i t IHSt April. She will teach near Lexington this year. rhp “Shoo Fly” has been taken off , 1 Laboard Air Line. This tram t lt? f om Raleigh to Hamlet and back, ran Moncure in the forenoon for Hiunk't and returning in the after-j noon. , I Rev Donald Mclver, who preached, able sermon at the Presbyterian a v,nrch last Sunday morning, and who C nt much of his vacation here with *? brother, Dr. Lynn Mclver, return jtn hi« home in Bristol, Tenn., this td P k He was joined at Gulf by his -i*v who spent the summer with their ‘people at that place.—Sanford Express. The opening at The Caviness Millin ery and Ready-to-Wear was quite a success. Mr and Mrs. W. J. Myers and sons, after’ spending several weeks with Margaret Womble, left Monday for their home in New York, where Mr Myers work, as an officer of the appellate court, begins again about October 1. Mr. and Mrs. N. M. Alston, of New York arrived ten days ago to—visit the latter’s sister Mrs. Jordan, at the Peav place near Pittsboro. They were accompanied by Miss Ermine Peek, who has spent* several weeks with her aunt in New York Mr. and Mrs Alston’s one son has been with Mrs’ Jordan the greater part of the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Alston will be in the state till about October l. ( Mr Alston is associated with the. Paine-Webber Company, dealers ini stocks, bonds, and cotton. Mr. Al ston gives his attention to the cottoft end of the business and is on the cot ton exchange every day when at work. Mr Alston is still a confirmed coun tryman, though residing in the me tropolis, and enjoys his visits to Lof‘-- ham. While Mrs. Alston, one of the charming Peay sisters, is of course de lighted to be back at the old home stead. Miss Leila Johnson left yesterday to teach again near Tarboro. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Stone of Dur ham, spent Sunday with Dr. and Mrs. Will Chapin. Mr. Oren Dowdy, of Oakland town ship, in the office to renew Monday, informs us that he has taken the Rec-1 ord for forty years or mere without | interruption. Mr. Dowdy is nearly | seventy, but looks more like a man of the fifties. Mr. W. F. Bean, who moved two months ago to Nash county, and wife and child were back visiting relatives the first of the week. Mr. Bean is a saw mill man. Mrs. Wade Barber is at the bedside of her mother, Mrs. Farebee, in a Nor folk hospital. Mrs.. Farebee is seri ously ill. There was a larger crowd here than usual on the first Monday. The com missioners’ meeting, the meeting of the board of education, and the sale of lands for taxes accounted for it. There are actually bargains at the bankrupt sale of hardware and furni ture, as advertised on another page- The editor saw, for instance, a u " dor set of silver plate sell for less than half of the price advertised in a full page Saturday Evening Post adver tisement. Those three Moline Riding Plows at $25 each should come to Chatham. A note from Rev. R. B. Lineberry directs his address changed from Winton to Harr ells ville. Mr. Line berry is a successful Baptist pastor and is well known to many of our readers, as he and Mrs. Lineberry are both Chathamites. Mrs. George Brewer accompanied Mr. B. Nooe to the Sanatorium Sun day to visit Miss Fannie Nooe, whose "ondition is reported as rapidly im proving. Mrs. Thomas H. Calvert and daught~ ers, Miss Patsy Calvert and Mrs. Duncan, of Raleigh, spent Monday in Pittsboro. Messrs. Robert and Gordon May, of Union, S. C., who have been visiting their cousin, Miss Margaret Womble, left Sunday for their home. Miss Dudley Hackney, of Durham, spent Sunday with Mrs. D. L. Bell. Misses Ruby Wright and Gladys Sturdivant are spending a while with Mrs. C. C. Hamlet. Dr. and Mrs. Farthing and son, Watts, of Wilmington, have been visiting friends here. Mr. George Brooks, who has a posi tion in Hamlet, is visiting his parents here. x Miss Miriam Chapin, who is in train ing at Johnston-Willis Hospital in Richmond, is home on her vacation. 9 ; r Messrs. Frederick and Garner John son, who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Logan Womble, have returned to their home in Atlanta. Miss Louise Brooks entertained with three tables of bridge at her home Saturday night. Mr. Herbert Morris, of Raleigh, spent the week-end with his grand mother, Mrs. R. M. Burns. Miss Norma Shannonhouse, who has a position in Charlotte, is spend- i ing her vacation here with her pa rents. She has as h r »* guest Miss Margaret Menzell, of Charlotte. THE FELLOW IN , BED 14 i I By J. B. KAYE i U (© by W. G. Chapman.) WE CALLED her Miss Mitram, although everybody knew that Nurse Mitram had been married. But nobody knew it until she put on her wedding ring, and that was not until the senior sur geon had showed unmistakably that i interest in Elizabeth Mitram was J m °re than a purely professional one. | Dr. Carrutliers went about his work i like a man who has received a stun ning bl »w for several weeks after that. I had just come off duty and was dog-tired when he knocked at the door of my little office bedroom. “Jack,” he said, “I’m in a good deal of trouble, and you’re the only friend I have to whom I want to it. It’s about Miss Mitram. “You see, Jack,” he continued, “I’ve I been clean daffy over her ever since she Came here. Why everybody else isn’t I can’t pretend to understand. Shocking bad taste, it seems to me. But of course I’m not worrying over it. However, you know she is mar ried, of course?” “Was?” I hazarded. “Is,” he answered with a groan. “Brute of a fellow, too. Married eight years ago, when she was a girl of sev enteen. It was a runaway match, and he had been a jailbird then, although he posed as a gentleman. lie was a valet, I believe, and learned the man-; ners of gentlefolks in that way. Well, he thought she had money, and a month after the marriage, when he found she hadn’t, he abandoned her. , She hadn’t much left for him by > then, so it was the kindest thing he 1 could have done. But, though she loves me, she won’t get a divorce. Doesn’t believe in divorce. So there you are. What am I tQ do?” “I don’t know, Fred,” I answered frankly. “You’re asking me to solve the oldest unsolved problem on earth. You must decide for yourself, old man —you and Nurse Mitram.” He agreed with me that It was up to him, and a few days later he told me he had talked it over with her and had decided to take a post In Texas which had been offered him. That seemed the only thing possible. It must have been a week before Carruthers’ projected departure that a patient was carried Into the hos pital from a cab. We put him In the i general ward, wtiere Miss Mitram was 1 night nurse. I was acting house surgeon at that time, and I was going the rounds when Carruthers came up to me, as white as a sheet. “Jack,” he said, “it’s all up. I knew it would happen.*’ “What?” I asked. “That fellow Johnson in bed 14 Is Elizabeth MitTam’s husband!” “Nonsense!” I answered be cause the shock was almost as bad for me as it had been for him. Von see, every one had looked with sym pathy upon the senior surgeon and the pretty nurse in their unhappy love affair. “Go and see her, Jack,” he said, pressing my hand. There is not much privacy in’a hos pital, but bed 14 occupied a little al cove at the end of the room, and one could speak there without being heard by the others. Nurse Mitram was standing beside Johnson, and the fel low was looking up at her with the face of a man under sentence of death She beckoned me to follow herto the night nurses’ room, and there she wheeled on me like a tigress. She drew a paper from her apron pocket. “Will you please read that,” she said to me. It was brief and to the point. It offered a reward of a thousand dol lars for the arrest of a certain Larrt son, who was wanted on the charge of theft. He had been the valet of old Montague, the-milllonaire, and had made off with all the cash he could lay bis hands on and, what had ,en-, raged the old man most, some minia tures of a dead child of his. Hence the offer of the reward. The photo graph accompanying the article was that of Johnson. “What are you going to dor* I asked. v «i have told him to give himself up,” she replied. “Well.” answered, “of course we are not informers, but—” I never saw a woman go all to pieces so suddenly as she did. She burst Into hysterical laughter and sobs and clung to me wildly. “You don’t understand.” she gasped at length, when I had quieted her a little. “He is penitent. Do you un derstand bow, Mr. Drake? He wants me to go ba<* to him. And I am go fng—after - he ’ has served his sen tence.” Here was a wretched dilemma. The mao, broken by disease, outcast hy hi* own actions, had drifted Into the hos pital to come face to face with the wpman whom he had ;rulned. . r I went to the bedside alone. John son was staring up at me with hollow eyes. / “She has told you?” he asked. “Yes,” I answered, and it was all T could do to refrain from insulting the creature as he lay there. “Doctor,” he said. “I’ve been a pretty bad sort of customer in my time, but It’s all over now. The po | lice have been notified, and they are coming for me. I guess.” “1 wish to ueayen you had stayed 'tttt I away, or gone to some other hospital,* I answered. I watched Nurse Mitram pretty closely that evening, but she went about her work very quietly. She had herself under complete control, hut it was a question how long it would last. It did seem a wretched sit uation but there tfere her principles, and there was the sick man, helpless, penitent. I am sure his conversion was sincere. Knowing her, I' knew she could not have done otherwise. Sure enough, next morning about six o’clock, a police officer came into the ward and posted himself beside the man’s bed. That was too intoler able, however, and we arranged that the officer should call for the fellow as soon as he was able to leave. Wt had a little difficulty In convincing them at headquarters, but Carruthen could work wonders when he was per suasive, and finally we had our way The days went by, and Nurse Mit ram and Carruthers avoided each <*h er so carefully that I don’t think they met for about five days. But. as 1 was saying, Nurse Mitram’s self-con trol couldn’t last. It was on the nigh! before Carruthers’ departure that she broke down. I w r as in the ward beside one of our patients who was ill enough to have tire screen drawn round him, so that nobody could see me. He occupied bed 13, in the corresponding alcove opposite that in which Johnson lay. and the door of the night nurses’ room was only a few feet away, at the end of the room. Nurse Mitram was just coining on duty and had gone in ts get some charts when I saw Carruth ers step quietly after her. Next min ute I heard them talking together in side, and Nurse Mitram was sobbing as though her heart would break. Decency demanded that I should make my presence known, but I couldn’t bring myself to let them see me. I could hear every word of the whispered conversation, though I could see nothing. Carruthers was as hysterical as she was. “You can come with me,” he was urging. “Why should you ruin your life for that miserable man?” Nurse Mitram said something about duty. “You have a higher duty,” said the senior surgeon. “You have a duty to yourself, Elizabeth. Do v«>u iove him?” She must have shaken her head, for no answer reached my ears. “But I love you and I need you,** Carruthers exclaimed fiercely. “Look at it from the practical pont of view. You are ruining two lives to save oneJ’ “It isn’t mining a life to be ftlthful and—and true.” she sobbed. “I tell you, Elizabeth, you are act ing quixotically,” he answered “Come with me. Oh, my dear, I must have you, and you want me, too, I know In Texas you can get a divorce —■” “I can’t, my dear,” I heard her whis per. “It would be the sweetest thing in the world for me—for me and for you. But one cannot buy happiness at such a price. There is the principle —and not that alone, my dear. H% has his chance at last, and he needs me more than yoa do. You are strong and ' - * ~ l'fe without yield in; --. temptations. But he Carruthers tried for hqlf an hour, as it seemed to me—though It must have been Jess —to convince her. At last he yielded. Then she took his face between her hands and kissed him on the lips. “But I shall always love you, my dear,” she said. “Wherever you are, remember, my love shall always fol low you.” I was glad when they came out, leaving me to make my escape un observed. It would have been amusing under other circumstances to see the strict ly professional manner which both adopted on the following morning. The senior surgeon was making hie l§s(: round of the hospital. He was to go off duty at noon. They tvere standing beside the bed In which Johnson lay, and the fellow was looking up at them humbly, as he always looked. I am sure his con version was sincere. Johnson,” said Carruthers. “we are going to let you sit up awhile this morning, and the day after to morrow you ought to be well enough to —” There he checked himself In his unlucky speech. “Help me raise him. nurse,”, he said to Miss Mitram. They put their hands beneath the fellow’s shoulders and slid him up ward upon the pillows. I had no ex cuse for remaining In the vicinity any longer—and, as a matter of fact, I didn't want to. I had left the ward and was half way down the passage when I heard Carruthers coming after me. He called me from the door. “Drake,” he said, “come here,” ; , V His voice was as agitated as It had been the night before. I turned and, hurried back toward the bed %lth him. Johnson had slid back on the pil lows again, and his eyes were closed. His face was the color of marble. Nurse Mitram, almost as white, kneeled at his side. I raised the limp wrist; there was no pulse in it Tht was dead. It was quite simple, physiologically speaking. There had been a clot o1 blood which the change in posture had carried to the b?art. It sometimes happens, as we surgeons know. Bu; somehow I have believed in Provi dence since then. Carruthers is still at the hospital hut his wife las never been insid< the gates since then. Still, I nee be nearly as often, for Fred and I ar* better u* than ever. BUSIES LOCALS I | 'Highest cash prices paid for cross- 1 f 0.5 Whfteoaks ; C *7 Scents Co^eli n a e nd n johnso„ may be h:ckory -Jp? FINE ENGLISH Beagle Pups or kale, also their Mother, 2 Id, a well trained rabbit dog. Puns > lO each ; mother $25. W. J. Stephen- i on, Corinth. Sept. 7, 2tp. n Bulletin No. 1408 the U. S. Dept, of j Agriculture it was stated that flies! leposff disease germs in two ways.! Not only in the excreta but also in : the regurgitated matter sometimes! called vomit spots.” The fly is the j filthiest insect knowy Do not tol-1 erate a single one. Fly-Tox your' home against flies and other insects, i r ly-1 ox has a pleasant odor. It is I harmless to mankind and animals. It will not stain. Get Fly-Tox from your dealer, always in bottles with blue label. Fly-Tox against mosquitoes and flies. Fly-Tox against ants, spiders, etc. WANTED—Man with car to sell complete line quality Auto Tires and Tubes. Exclusive Territory. Ex- SfEfJX® not pessary. Salary $300.00 per month. MILESTONE RUBBER COMPANY , East Liverpool, Ohio. 123-Acre Tract, 50 ascres, cleared, located near Sheriff Milliken’s farm 3 miles from Pittsboro, for sale. Good land; good buildings. See it and price it. Wes Lynn, Pittsboro, Rt. 1. | E. W. ELLINGTON Contractor and Builder Pittsboro and Chapel Hill Let me figure on your job if you ire considering building. Now building for the Pomnton Lakes Weaving Co., Pittsboro, N. C. A WORD OF THANKS To those who were so kind to us during the illness and death of our daughter and sister, we wish to offer our heartfelt thanks and praise. May we be able to repay the debt of lov ing service, is our great desire. ' I- W. Farrell and Family. R. L. PUGH & SON Complete Funeral Service Hearses for white and colored patron* Bonlee, N. C. GRADUATE NURSE In Pittsboro for the time being, Miss Lucile Peterson, a recent gradu ate as a nurse, offers her professional services to the people of Chatham county. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT AUGUST 31ST, 1926 NORTH CAROLINA: CHATHAM COUNTY: Tom Duglass vs. Lillie Duglass SERVICE BY PUBLICATION NOTICE The Defendant, Lillie Duglass, will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Su perior Court of Chatham County, For Cash But For Less* We Sell It For Cash And Sell It For Less Oats Per Bag, $3.25 Best Grade Sweet Feed, $2.50 Good Grade Sweet Feed, , $2.25 Corn Meal Per Cwt. ' $2.65 Choice Timothy Hay, $1.60 Covington’s Fancy Molasses, Per Gal., 80 cts Sugar Per Lb. 7 cents; by the hundred pounds 6 3-. Full Cream Cheese Per Lb. 30 cts. Lard, 45 .Pound Cans, Per Lb. 17cts Maxwell House Coffee, , 50 cts* •\ . . f ■ *, ►.? ✓ • ■- • - Loose Arbuekle 33 cts. Large Size Tomatoes Per Can, . 15 cts. Small ” ” ” ” 10 cts. Salmon 15 cts* Good Heavy, Overalls sl. 50 $7.50 Rain Coats Reduced To $5 *OO Flour The Best Per Barrel $8.25 Gementperbag SI.OO Carload new salt, per hunded pound sa§k, $1.20 ' We Sell It Cheap, Sell a Heap, And Keep Eternally at it. Visit our Stores at Pittsboro and Moncure and be Convinced { CONNELL & JOHNSON. ! North Carolina, to obtain an absolute divorce from the defendant; and the defendant will further take notice that she is required to appear at the of fice of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Chatham County, N. C., in the Courthouse in Pittsboro, N. C. on the Ist day of October, 1926, and answer M' t I 1 fvjjy | MAKE IT THE RULE ON PAYDAY 8 XS • g That you will deposit something to the credit of * ;;; || your savings account with us, if it’s only a very j«« 8 small amount. |f That’s a rule that has made many men rich. And ! 8 .there is no risk about it and it isn’t at all hard to do. If you haven’t an account with us, one'dollar is . tt enough to start one. ::: 8 Come in and talk it over with us. 1 The FARMERS BANK 1 PITTSBORO, N. C. J| Pe rry’s Garage, I Phone 400 SANOFRD N. C 111 8 —Dealers In— -1 Dodge Brothers Motor Car | 1 Parts and Service. l* * ;; < Winter Around tne Corner jjj 4 N ' * J |J | I!! Winter is just around the corner. ii Buy your furniture now, before the fall cleaning, and be ready for cold weather. ' ij We have a complete line of house furnishings. Special reduction on all Refrigerators and porch swings. Central Carolina Furniture Company’ ;; The Best in Furniture for the Home SANFORD, N. C. STEELE STREET PHONE 241 or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff wifi apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint in said action. E. B. HATCH, Clerk of the Superior Court of Chatham County, North Carolina. IW. P. Horton, Attorney. PAGE FIVE