Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Feb. 10, 1927, edition 1 / Page 5
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■n„r*dun> February 10, 1927 NEW ELAM NEWS ~ 1 and friends in this commun greatly grieved at the news of , lt j, 0 f Mrs. Ernest Boone. Trib :(j ; ,t lu-r funeral services by her Hev. C. H. Norris, and Rev. M I.a nee and Mr. J. L. Griffin, also i „ in v beautiful floral designs attest- I tin- esteem in which she was held. , i was at Pleasant Hill Baptist i t) f which she had been a faithful b. r since early girlhood. Whs,". Tallie Goodwin and Edgar v It!, returned last week after spend k in Atlanta, Ga. Their atten > mostly attracted by the great . Mountain which is sixteen miles ~f Atlanta. M: uni Mrs. Roy Garret and Roy, Jr., , i josday for New York City. They |U . been with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. : \ Kllis. for a few weeks. \j n d Mrs. Walter Gilmore, of Lee . (I „f.. were Sunday visitors in this [t will he remembered Mr. Gil > >r< was with the officers last Sunday when they had a battle in Lee county. U t'hristian Endeavor Sunday night .peti.d prayer was ottered by several members for the men who were wound- A crowd of people from this com munity attended the funeral of Dr. Lasa ter Wednesday afternoon at Gum Sprint Baptist church. rot STILL AND MUCH BEER Deputy J. G. Pike, accompanied by A. W. I.ineberg, J. P. Hobson, Vet Clerk, and Willie Shaw, raided a still two miles southeast of Staley 'Tuesday evening. There were two men seen, but not caught. The still was in operation. About IS gallons of liquor was poured out and more than a thousand gallons of beer. The still was brought to Pitts boro Wednesday morning by Messrs. Pike, I.ineberg, and Clerk. Mrs. Henry A. London, who was in Raleigh last week to make a plea for the Confederate veterans, went from that city to visit her daughter, Mrs. John 11. Anderson, in Fayetteville. The county agent's announcement of the unloading of a car of soy beans here Triday is about the most important news in the paper. The farmer who fails to plant soy beans is doing his farm and himself a grave injustice. If Your Supper Lays Like Lead And you Spend the Night Fighting Hobgoblins iry a little diapepsin. Supper dances, fancy drinks, too much tobacco, coffee and highly seasoned dishes play havoc with the stomach. Diapepsin takes the worst sort of combination of foods, set tles them, absorbs the gassy, sour heart burn and you go peacefully to sleep without a struggle. It is embarrassing to have to refuse eating in company. But if you are a dys peptic you may safely take a chance with any mixture and avoid suffering by the rule of one or two diapepsins after eat ing. \ ou‘ll get more out of life, more pleasure, more health, more strength and endurance. Steady digestion and freedom from acid-dyspepsia is guaranteed any stom ach by the use of diapepsin after eating. Let a 60 cent package of Pape’s Dia pepsin at any drug store. You'll recom mend it. + —„ —— „ —„— „— M —„—„—, i T I I | Crop Time , Buying Passing \ The old and wasteful crop-time buying system is passing, and nobody will say when it is utterly | dead. But some form of dependable credit will always be necessary, and the bank is the logical cred- j it agency. j Strong banks almost universally signify a prosperous community. The community and the I bank mutually strengthen each other. The bank becomes the reservoir for the community’s capi tal, which saves it from wasteful dispersion in speculation and makes it avoidable for the pro gressive development of the community. j I I | THE KEY TO PROSPERITY | The key to the situation is the citizens spending less than he makes and placing the savings on j deposit in his bank, thus building up the available capital of his community as well as his own in dividual fortune. j This Bank not onlv welcomes deposits however small, but pays i j 4 Per Cent Compounded Quarterly on Savings Deposits. [ Start an Account with us. I | The Farmers ’ Bank j PITTSBORO, N. C. 1 w. F. Bland, President W - L ' Langley, Cashier j | A CHATHAM COUNTY DAIRY It would surprise many folk in the county to learn that Cole Bros. (Albert ami Hugh (ole) are milking -10 cows at their dairy farm on the Chapel Hill highway, and are finding sale for all the product in Chapel Hill. They took another fine cow to the dairy Monday. Their most serious setback was the serious illness of Hugh, who spent three months at Johns Hopkins hospital, and who still is enfeebled from the malady that came so near taking his life—an abscess on the spinal cord. CHATHAM MASONS AT SCHOOL THIS WEEK Dr. W. C. Wicker, educational secre tary of the Grand Lodge, has been in ( hatham this week holding schools of instruction in Masonry. He spent Mon day and 1 uesday at Bonlee, Wednesday and 1 hursday at Pittsboro. Tomorrow, T riday, in the lodge at Sanford he will hold an all-district educational rally, at which all the lodges in the 13th district are expected to have representatives, <uid to which all Masons are invited. MARRIAGE LICENSE Since the last list of marriage licenses published in this paper the following white couples have got licenses: ■John h. ( lark and Annie Green, Siler City. 11. B. Phillips and Mary K. Phillips, Gulf. David Toomer and Dorothy 1.. Las siter, New Hill. H. L. Isley, Burlington, and Oda Lil lian Ferguson, Teer. Georgie Vail and Bonna Wright, Siler City. Joseph Petty and Addle E. Creed, Pit I shorn. Albert M. Baker and Jessie Forbes, Sanford. •John Briggs and Mary Etta Horton, Apex, Route 4. Robie Phillips and Verna Hall, Siler City. Henry C. Thomas and Beatrice Petty, Pitsboro, Route 3. CELEBRATES 75TH BIRTHDAY Mr. D. J. Carson, of Williams town ship, was To years old last Saturday, but probably had not thought much about it till his children, relatives, and friends in considerable numbers began to roll up to the home of his son, W. A. ( arson, with whom the father resides. It took four big tables to hold the good things brought and to seat the crowd. Mr. Carson was as spry as a cricket, proving it by dancing a jig. Tom Tarheel says the neighbors laughed at him when lie started to give his hogs all they could eat by using the self-feeder but now the neighbors are building feeders also. NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the powers of sale contained in a certain Deed of Mortgage, executed on the 18th day of April, 1922, by Louis Overby and Emma Overby, his wife, and duly recorded in the registry of Chatham County, North Carolina, in Book FZ, at page 293, the undersigned will sell for cash, at the Courthouse door in Pittsboro, Chatham County, N. C., on Monday the 28th day of February, 1927, at 12:00 o'clock M, an undivided interest of the said Louis Overby and Emma Overby, in and to that certain tract or parcel of land lying and being in Baldwin Township, Chat ham County, North Carolina, and de scribed and defined as follows, viz:- Beginning in the forks of what was formerly known as the Fayetteville and Pittsboro roads; thence with the Fay etteville road in an easterly direction 18 chains to the corner of the public school lot; south 23 degrees east 3 1-2 chains; thence with said school lot east 3 chains to the Fayetteville roacf; thence with said road in a southerly direction 21 chains to a stake; thence east 28 chains to a stake; thence north 12 1-2 chains to a stump; thence west 45 chains to a sour-wood; thence north 28 chains to a poplar on the banks of a branch; thence down said branch as it meanders 13 chains; thence south 80 degrees west 3 1-2 chains; thnee south 70 degrees west 10 chains; thence north 5 degrees west 5 1-2 chains to a pine on the Pittsboro road, thence with said road 33 1-2 chains to the first stake, containing one hun dred (100) acres, the same lot No. 1, as styled in the report of Commissioners. This the 27th dav of January, 1927. R. J. JOHNSON, Mortgagee. Siler & Barber, Attorneys. NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND Under and by virtue of the powers conveyed in a certain deed of trust, executed to the undersigned trustee, on the third day of February, 1925, by Oscar Kirby and Annis Kirby his wife and the same being fully registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Chatham County, in Book GH, pages 594-95, and default having been made in tiie payment of the bond secured therein, and application having been made to the undersigned trustee by the holder of said bond to foreclose the same according to its terms and conditions, I will, on Monday, February 28th, 1927 at the courthouse door in Pittsboro, sell for cash to the highest bidder, all the right, title and interes which the said Oscar Kirby and wife own by virtue of a deed from Kemp Kirby conveying his undivided interest in the following tract of land in Williams and Baldwin Town ships, Chatham County, North Carolina, and more fully described as follows: Bounded on the North by Emma Mor phis; on the East by Zeb. Johnson and R. L. Ward; on the South by Ben. Ward and 011 the West by R. L. Ward and .J. J. Hackney, containing 100 acres more or less and being known as the Annette Kirby land. Time of sale, 12 o'clock, noon. This January 25th, 1927. A. C. RAY, Trustee. NOTICE OF RESALE OF LAND Under and by virtue of the authority upon him conferred b> the judgment of the Superior Court of Chatham County rendered in the ease of Martha McClen nalian vs. Jerry Brooks, the undersigned, Clerk of the Superior Court of Chatham Countv, will on MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21st, 1927, AT 12:00 O’CLOCK, NOON, AT THE COURT HOUSE DOOR OF CHATHAM COUNTY IN PITTS BORO, N. C., resell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the follow ing described tract of land, located in Center Township, Chatham County, North Carolina: Adjoining the lands of John Marsh, J. T. Wright, Martha McClennahan, W. 11. Taylor Estate, and Lizzie Stone, and being that tract of land on which Tim Hatch lived at the time of his death; and being known as “The Tim Hatch Plaoe"; containing 16 acres, more or less. This the 29th dav of January, 1927. E. B. HATCH, Clerk Superior Court. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Margaret H. Womble, having resigned as administratrix of the estate of J. D. Womble, deceased, all persons holding appointed and qualified as administra tor, d.b.n., of the estate of the said J. D. Womble, deceased, all person holding claims against the said estate are hereby notified to present them to the under signed on or before the 6th day of Jan uary, 1928, or this notice will he plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the said es tate will please make immediate settle ment. This the 6th day of January, 1927. * G. W. BLAIR, Admr., d.b.n., J. D. Womble, deceased. Long and Bell, Attys. Jan. 20, 6t. SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of the power of sale conferred upon the undersigned Mortgagee, by the terms contained in that certain Mortgage Deed executed on the 24th day of May, 1926, by Brant Alston and wife which Mortgage Deed is duly registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Chatham county, X. C., in Book F X, page 510, to secure the payment of a bond of even date of same, payment of which has been de manded and refused since said bond has become due and payable, the under signed Mortgagee will on Saturday, FEBRUARY 19th, 1927, at 12 o’clock noon at the Court House door in Pittsboro offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash the following THE CHATHAM RECORD described real estate: A certain tract of land situated in Center Township, Chatham County, N. C., and bounded as follows, to-wit: Bounded on the North by lands of Lizzie Stone; on the East by lands of Harlow Taylor Estate; on the South by lands of Waddie McClenahan Estate; and on the West by lands of Joe Alston and being lands purchased by said Brant Alston from W. L. London Estate in 1918 and being situated on Mitchell Chapel Road and containing 87 acres more or less . V. R. JOHNSON, Mortgagee. MOTHER! Child’s Best laxative is “California Fig Syrup” Tongue Shews if K ji \ Bilious, Constipated Hurry Mother! Even a fretful, peevish child loves the pleasant taste of “Cali fornia Fig Syrup” and it never fails to open the bowels. A teaspoonful today may prevent a sick child tomorrow. Ask your druggist for genuine “Cali fornia Fig Syrup” which lias directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say “California” or you may get an imi tation fig syrup. I Our County and Our Town This institution believes in the future of Chatham county and the town of Goldston. With a vast area embracing almost every type of soil in the state, Chatham’s agricultural possibilities have been merely scratched. Embracing a portion of the one commercial coal field of the state, with promise of early development on a larger scale, and with three hydro-electric plants in operation ::: and other available water powers undeveloped, and one of the largest steam electric plants in the whole country, Chatham county is bound sooner or later to be recognized as the natural home of the ::: industries. With forests that reproduce themselves with startling rapidity, producing materials adaptable ::: for any use from the finest cabinet work to the humble crosstie, the county is assured of a perpetual supply of timber. ::: With shales and clays galore, it will become one of the great centers of the tile and brick indus- ::: I tries, two great plants 20 miles apart now attesting the possibilities. ::: And in one of the very best sections of this great land of promise is <;> THE TOWN OF GOLDSTON, and in this good town !!> THE BANK OF GOLDSTON, jjj An institution safe and sound, devoted to the upbuilding of the town and county. ::: We invite your patronage and your cooperation. Save your money and deposit it in our Savings <;« Department, and thus help furnish yourself and the community the capital necessary to develop the ::: potential resources of our great county and thrifty town. THE BANK OF GOLDSTON Hugh L. Womble, Vresident. T. W. Goldston, Cashier :jj: I Clearing Out Winter Stock n| Hall shows Fall and Winter Dress Material I and Millinery on market at startlingly We are offering our fall and winter dress material and ladies’ hats \ ' at prices far below cost. They must go. Note a few prices: I Peter Pan Prints and Solids, formerly 50c / k i/ N Woolen Dress Goods, fine for Spring Coats, at II J, similarly cuts. ' % Ladies’ Hats, values as high as $4.00, your choice $1 -00 Sweaters for men, women and children almost -y^\ at your own price. /s j SPRING GOODS . !Y/ yd Goods for Spring wear are regularly being received. Ladies’ Spring Hats, beauties, none over $4.00 Men’s Hats at attractive prices. ( y^^k Ladies’ Shoes, very latest thing; don’t fail to yd&fmjm Ginghams 10 and 15 cents Curtain Goods 15 cents and up Special—Mayfield Woolen Mills Preshrunk / 1 an S ' NEW DEPARTMENT Our 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 cent department is booming. Goods going ) and coming. Here you will find the little things you have been so y*^f GROCERIES—GROCERIES 1 The fellow that undersells us on groceries will soon be out of business, for our prices are at the lowest reasonable margin. TOrA [ Full line of Wood’s Garden Seeds. See ad of same in this paper. The Hall Department Store BLAIR HOTEL BUILDING PITTSBORO, N. C. be in everjf Qar^en This tomato, Introduced by us In 1008, leads to day in productiveness, size and quality. Has delicious flavor—is free from acidity—is nearly all meat, having few seeds and practically no core. The vines are vigorous, luxuriant and healthy and bear a \ tremendous load of fruit right up to frost. To matoes weighing two pounds are not unusual. Truly Wood's Famous Brimmer Tomato has no equal. Price, packet 15c; % oz. 35c; % oz. 60c. > T.W. WOOD & SONS, « iZir&s (f Wff 65 S. 14th Street, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. _ iy YOU will glory in these finer varieties. They will help you to better realize your gardening ambitions. For Wood’s are not only finer varieties, but seeds true to type—full of vitality and thoroughly cleaned. Wood's Better Catalog is as helpful as the seeds are good. May we send you a copy ? A post card or letter brings it. »Free . Flower ollections— . age Four MvkS ves Page five You can make a success growing: this fine oelery. It excels all varieties for sweetness, tender ness, crispness and natty flavor. It has broad, golden stalks that blanch easily to a rich appetizing golden yel low. Ours is the original big-hearted strain grown in France from the orig inator’s stock. Wood’s Golden Self - Blanching celery Is noted for its delicious flavor and ab sence of string. Price, packet 10c; ft ox. 35c; oz. tiOo. itfi
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 10, 1927, edition 1
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