(oe*dh*r '6. TW27. I City-County Briefs m' l-rz'i tiry f business college: at SAlis- R« nter | t Rev. and Mrs. Frown, B° rII ‘ lhe i r home in Bynum, I Mend 3 ?’ all( j Mrs. Cooper I a firl ' the fame date, a girl. I flitm 5 tnt Civile Bland is having the - Alr ' if ' the building recently oc insule,' bv t ], e Farmers’ Bank re- I fUpI ,j ‘,,,1 will conduct a case in ■ nl odeleo »■ • fn,u son of Mr. and Mrs. m ini*** 11 ' r petty drank a dangerous I Ed- Kerosene oil Saturday. I anl ° Ul Ltp attention by its parents to,m f r r hv P-r. Chapin. I and l» ter ' _ -he voung folks home’ Among 1 * ‘ i . upre Miss Mary Sue Poe I SCdith. Wyeth Connie Bynum, pharmacist osf I Wilson. S Webster, an old Chat m ‘ u.,. for 12 years a resident ■ Samite 1 1 W ’. p, ir i u; ir . was a Pittsboro visitor I He talks like coming hmu. He owns a farm in I Hope township. . . r ,j \ii c. Frank Pearce, who \ f j u ,.; r honeymoon with home j , , v . t't a few days ago for j ! Wts:. Fla., where Mr. Pearce j j,, en ter upon his duties as ! t mechanic of one of Uncle [ ; . „,•< erreatest battle ships. )Ir. L. W. Alderman, in charge of I -; ltr Oxford Orphanage singing \ , reports in the Orphans’ v r iend last week a pleasant trip I several Chatham towns. He states the proceeds from the sev ,,.aj points mentioned as follows: Pittsboro, 5125.30; Bonlee and Providence church, S 86.00; Siler I City, SIIO.OO. Mr. W. C. Caudell. of the Golds- I ton section, left Sunday for a visit 1 • ;r two or three weeks to the home " 0 f ji r and Mrs. W. U. Richardson ?oing by Cincinnati, Chicago, and Kansas City. It will be recalled that Mr. and Mrs. Richardson were here last year. They have been gone from the county nearly 20 years. Mrs. Jordan, at the old Peay place, has enjoyed for the past two or three weeks a visit from Mr. and Mrs. X. M. Alston, of New York, who are accompanied by Miss Er mine Peek, a niece of Mesdames Jordan and Alston. Also, Mrs. El mer Long has been with her for the past ten days. Governor Long, too, spent the week end at the old homestead, passing through Pitts boro Monday morning for Hillsboro, where he had court business. Mr. Andrews, patrolman on the section of highway 90 from Pitts boro to highway 50, has moved,with khis family, into the Womble house, •sharing it with Mrs. Effie Sikes. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Faison, of Roseboro, spent Sunday with the latter’s parents. They were ac companied by Miss Hoover, a teach er in the Roseboro school, who vis ited her sister, Miss Ethel Hoover, one of the Pittsboro teachers, at the ■ borne of Mr. and Mrs. Geo.’ H. Brooks. BARCLAY—MATHESON. A gerat number of friends of the bride were present at the Presby terian church last Friday afternoon to see the marriage of Miss Laura Barclay, charming and cultured of Rev. and Mrs. Jonas Baglay married to Rev. R. H. Mat ll‘eson» pastor of the Thomasboro Ft-sbyterian church, Mecklenburg county. Th L le church was beautifully deco “ ri tor the occasion and the cere ; Rv wa,; solemnly performed by . bride’s own father. Miss Vir !nia Connell sang appropriate se lection* fnv 4-L. u ‘ loi the occasion. r nds here and elsewhere wish for tL #i ut ' young couple the richest ul' lest life together and J •? and happy wedded career. 100 GOOD TO KEEP. or found the following typewriter Tuesday al> Hear Mr. Peterson: ■- m rt in your report of the ~ i v 'cner meeting written by * rV | that the talk received most fowl;, p ‘ 1 y was made by herself tit V U * ec * ‘Parent’s at toward the school.’ ‘Mrs E v orton » secretary P.-T. A.” n 1,1(4 Fastest woman is not dis- Pieased w „ a i- Praise but there may be w s ‘cause her own husband in Publ-r 1 employed MRS. BELL ENTERTAINS . . LEGION AUXILIARY • tM e J A Jaierica n. Legiou .Auxiliary met with the president, Mrs. D. L. Bell,, Sept 24, lS27y " ;r ' The. meeting was opened ’’with allegiance- to the flag. After the I singing of “Star Spangled Banner” and/‘America,” the preamble was read in union. Mr. Brewer, rehabilitation chum read a very interesting letter from our soldie.r a Oteen. It was decid ed to send him a chuck for Sep tember. The auxiliary discussed the plan of giving a prize or picnic to the school children who will memorize perfectly the “Star Spangled Ban ner”, and the preamble to the Cons titution. The flag and pole for the school is to be ordered right away. An account of the meeting at Washington was read by Mrs. Bell, j There will be an election of' of ficers at the next meeting. Delicious refreshments were served by the hostess. DISTRICT MEETING OF* THE WOMAN’S CLUBS i i A fall revival of Woman’s club 1 work will be launched at the an nual meeting of the 18th district of j the State Federation to be held in! j the Baptist church at Zebulon on j I Thursday, October 13, the program j beginning at 11 o’clock and closing) at 4. Mrs. Clarence Chamblee, of Zebulon, is chairman of the district and Miss Susan Iden, of Raleigh is, secretary. There are fifteen clubs in the dis trict, including the following: Apex, Woman’s Club; Bonlee Woman’s Club, Chapel Hill Community Club, Durham Woman’s Club, Durham Study Club, Brickhaven Club of Merry Oaks, Pittsboro Woman’s! Club, Raleigh Council of Jewish Women, Roxboro Woman’s Club, Siler City Woman’s Club, Varina Friday Afternoon Club, Wendell Mothers Club, Zebulon Wo i man’s Club. A prize will be offered to the club having the largest per centage of members in attendance. In addition to these clubs, the Home Demonstration Clubs of the district, who are affiliated with the State Federation through the Farm Woman’s Bureau, are expected to send delegates. Each club will pre sent a written report of the year’s work and much inspiration will be gained by club members in hearing what other clubs of the district are doing. According to the usual plan of entertainment, delegates an dvisi tors will bring box lunches and the Zebulon women will serve coffee and dessert. FfrrT 1 ha er*t —-l—. if —, AN is undoubtedly car [yf nivorous animal. Ask a: y ■ riousewife who has oJen d her lord and master, or the son and heir, a pick-up supper, or d dainty little luncheon consisting of a souffle or some other airy trifle. She was probably the recipient of many black looks and loud pro tests. By the same token, to the mas culine mind a sandwich is not a sandwich unless it contains some thing as heavy as horn, tongue, or at least chicken. Offer a man one of the feminine favorites, sveh as lettuce, egg or olives chopped with mayonnaise, and he will look upon them as mere piOie and eri a dozen at a sitting without feeling that he has really tasted food. Can you not imagine how much more ingrained this taste for meat would be in the con firmed bachelor who has never felt the deterring feminine in fluence where food is concerned ? There are no meatless days on the calendar in hachelordom, nor in clubs wh°re it assembles. It is or one mind on that point. Even -when life wi'.h its dc mesr bliss and the feliciries of che home has passed him by, >.vh'vi the .ioys of single blessed ress have begun to pall a bit erstwhile rapture of “wine, vonen and song’ s<v-ms.a lr -le North American Map “ Huge Snow Ftelife* Within 7 Miles Os .Etyuatpi:; A.iso Ancient , Houses Found . * New York, Sept. 30—From scien tific expedition that have passed the summer exploring odd places on the globe comes information that the map of North America must be revised, and that huge snow fields exist within 50 miles of the equator. “The entire map of North Ameri ca has been changed and a new range of mountains * discovered,” said a radio message $o the Asso ciated Press fi*om Donald A. Ca dzow, ethnologist, with, the Putman Baffin Island ’expedition, now off the coast of Labrador. The mes sage came via Station DW at Au burn, N. Y. * The message also told of the find ■ ing of ancient houses on Baffin Is land of a hitherto unknown people who apparently antedated the pres ent Eskimos there. And of the dis covery of indications that the Is jland was once a part of the Coast jof Labrador. The news of equatorial snow came from Dr. James P. Chapin, Associa ted Curator of Bi,rds of the Ameri can Museum of Natural History, j who with Dewitt L. Sage, returned j from Central America, j They brought 2,500 specimens of birds and small animals, and told of ice fields at an altitude of 15,400 feet on the Ruwenzori mountain range, which the native bearers re fused to approach because of the fear that snow would kill them. FOREST FIRES RAGING ON HARKER’S ISLAND Morehead City, Oct., 2.—A call for aid came to the local fire de j partment at 5 o’clock this after noon from Harkers Island where forest fires are seriously threaten ing the village of Harkers. In creasing high winds are making the situation more dangerous. Har kers has no fire fighting equip ment and few men. Local fire fighting units are awaiting orders from the mayor to send a pumper to the scene of the fire. One of Every Nine Wrecks Os Automobiles are Fatal Raleigh, Oct. 4—Approximately one out of every nine automobile accidents taking place on the state highway system during the month of August resulted fatallyl, accord ing to a compilation made today by the automobile bureau of the state department of revenue. Four hundred accidents were list ed as occuring and 42 of these were fatal. ■ stale and unprofitable, then the ' aged clubman can still find solace* i in his mutton chop. Not the common or garden variety per haps, but the thick, juicy, lus cious English sort, the savory kind, served with hashed brown potatoes and red-hot biscuit. But here is a suggestion which should make even the most blase of aged clubmen sit up and take notice, a toothsome way of pre paring that same chop, of dressing it up, so to speak, and making of it a real Epicurean morsel—a dish fit for a king. Even the name of this delicacy has an intriguing sound: * “Hawaiian Pineapple Stuffed Mutton Chops. 9 ’ They are prepar ed after th ! s fashion. Clean chops, cut one and one-half inches thick, and make slit in meat, cutting tc the bo~e. Melt butter, add chop ped onion, minced parsley and cook fi”e minutes. Add flour, salt and v"- H—drained crushed pineapple. Cock fi-e minutes longer. Press this mixture into slits made in chops and hold together with tooth picks. Day chops in shal hw pan, bake in hot oven (450 d- g. F.) twenty-five to thirty minutes. * When partly done sprinkle with s? T t and neppqr. Ts chops do not twown sufficiently in oyen, place under broiling flame p or a few minutes. Garnish with parsley. ~. „ u .- ; THE CHATHAM RECORD Use Local Stone FaKOt Buildings t s »!» -Si-. • •. .vr J.‘ = - \9r/ •* , • . s - v r • r average farm in; Nort’S Carolina Is gathered in unsightly heaps with no attempt to make it beautiful or useful, while in some other sec tions of the United States, this stone is made to serve in a wide range. “I have been much impressed by the wide range of uses made of local itorae in New England,” says Dr. Jasper L. Stuckey, geologist at State College. “Stone fences,stone pillars, stone chimneys, foun dations for houses and cellars lined with stone are everywhere abun dant. On the other harid in our state the waste stone about the farm is gathered in unsightly heaps in the center or around the edges of fields with little or no attempt to make it either useful or beau tiful.” Dr. Stuckey states that there was a time when local stone was more widley used. In a drive over parts of Wake, Johnston and Franklin counties he observed a number of farms of pre-Civil War days where stone was used extensively. The abundance of slave labor was one reason for this, he believes. But stone is cheap building ma terial, thinks Dr. Stuckey. Ernest Flagg, an architect of New York, has shown that stone may be used by farmers for practical construc tion. Mr. Flagg finds that this material is about as cheap as oth ers and is made possible by erect ing wooden forms such as is used for pouring concrete. Ordinary labor may be used to set the stones in the form. They are then held together by a mortar made of ce ment and sand. When the wall has • ' • * 'Yen cciii buy these products with confidence YOU are doubly assured of quality hnd continuing service when you buy a General Motors product. Behind the resources of these seven famous cars and of Frigkiaire and Delco-Light stand the resources of the whole family cf General Motors. Each is tested end CHEVROLET. 7 models, $525 to $745. Amazing combination of beauty, perfor mance and low price. 3-speed transmis sion. Beautiful Fisner Bodies. Duco finish. Fully equipped. Also truck chassis; %- ton, $395; 1-ton, $495. / OAKLAND. , 6 models, $1045 to $1265. The “All-American” model is a bigger, better, more beautiful car, typifying General Motors quality and value in the medium price class. 4-wheel brakes. > CADILLAC. 26 m0de15,53,350 to $5,500. The standard of the fine car world. 90-degree V-type engine. Bodies by Fisher and Fleetwood. 500 color and up holstery combinations to choose from. i (ALL PRICES F. 0.8. FACTORIES) GENERAL MOTORS "A car for every purse and purpose ” —CLIP THIS COUPON-—*"— General Motors (Dept. A), Detroit, Mich. Please send without any-obligation to me, your illustrated book let( “Where Motor Car Facts Are Established,” together with information about the particular General Motors product or products I have checked at the right. , j" , . set, the form is removed and a solid wall remains, a adfifttUig. tfejs method* states Dr. Stuckey, the waste stone on ! practfeklly aft‘farms WesfoffHe i fall ifne m&y-'fee -used' t<s advantage: Such local stdne may be rused for foundations • or barns Ha ad, ..in walls for-tobacco barns; ■ Who is to Stop Feeble-Minded •• • Persons From Wearing a Mask? Someone has said that this tele vision will put a stop to some fee ble-minded person’s calling bn the phone and saying: “Guess who this is!” But what is to stop the feeble : - minded persons from wearing ” a mask?—Chicago Post. ‘ Some people do things from force of habit*—some don’t have either force or, habits either when it comes to doing anything. FOR SALE. Two good mules, work anywhere; Ages four and five years. Cheap. Mrs. W. H. Johnson, Rt., 1, Bear Creek, N. C. ' b NOTICE OF THE ISSUANCE OF COUNTY NOTES Ordered by the Board of County Commissioners of Chatham County 1. That a note of Chatham Coun ty shall be issued for the purpose of defraying expenses and carrying on a six months school term Chatham County, same being a part of the State system of Public Schools, to the maximum principal amount of $25,000.00. 2. That a note of Chatham shall be issued for the purpose of paying necessary expenses of Chatham PONTIAC. 6 models, $745 to $925. Lowest priced six with Bodies by Fisher. Daco finish. Extra - powerful engine. Value proved by ever-increasing sales. fOR CAul BUICK. 16 models, $1195 to $1995. All the world knowsßuick’s worth. “Get away” like an arrow from a bow. Vibra tionless beyond belief. Famous 6 cylinder “valve-in-head” engine. 4-wheel brakes. Beautiful low bodies. ■ 0,1=*.. dM2u^!sD FRIGID AIRE —the electric refrigerator. General Motors Hals applied the processes which have made the automobile avail able to every family to the production of Frigidaire, its electric refrigerator. i County, for general. County purpos es in the state sum of $18,0Q0.00. *. .fciJL ; That. the rate, .of interest of 1 said notes, both School and Cobnty, i shall be'five’ (5 jupdf’ cent. •' ‘ 4. ’Alai both of said notes shall ‘raft ’for a period of ’six' hionths 1 ffom ' date thereof. Ju ! 5. That .a tax sufficient to pay the principal and interest on each of said notes has been duly ievied. 6. That this order shall take ef fect upon its passage. On motion of W. T. Brook, sec-] • onded by C. D. Moore, the fore i going was introduced by the fol- I'j lowing roll-call vote, towit: ■" Commissioners voting in favor t of said order: R. J. Johnson, Chairman; C. D. Moore; W. T. Brooks, i No commissioners voting against ! said order. , NORTH CAROLINA: ’ CHATHAM COUNTY: I, C. C. Poe, Clerk to the board of County Commissioners of Chat ham County, North Carolina, do hereby certify that the foregoing • is a true and correct copy of an or der introduced by the said board at a regular meeting held in the Court House in Pittsboro, North Carolina, on Oct., 3rd, 1927, as all of which appears of record on the minutes of said board in my office. I further certify that said board is composed of three members and that three members were present at said meeting and that three members voted in favor of the introduction of said order. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I i have hereunto set my hand and seal of said county is hereto affixed, this the 3rd day of October, 1927. I C. C, POE, Clerk Board of County Com l missioners of Chatham Coun ; ty. i (Seal of Chatham County.) • • .1 proved. And in the prices you pay for these products, >cu -share in the economies of vast production. We invite you lo learn more about these products by sending in the coupon below. Mail it today before you forget. No obligation, but interesting reading. CHEVROLET □ OAKLAND □ CADILLAC Q PONTIAC □ BUICK □ FRIGIDAIRE □ OLDSMOBILE □ LaSALLE £] DELCO-LIGHT □ * Address ... -SS b ' . . .■ . , ■ v • " “ : • • -*V How the women must laugh at ‘ : ' -»Vr »v. . .the men. ~ " . -• •• '•* r- Unneessary solemnitjfrjis funny tc> anyone wftjf is 5 giitpd£44|h a sense of hunfcu*! JUI V xr> 5 * } '*"• • .. . -_i. ... ’t —- ‘ The beauty^pctors.can, help the* | almost .anything I except thick ankles. I t t Many Get Bade Young Appetite < <u.:- | Quick lunches,usually cold,gulped down so the “dinner hour” will not be over before you can do a little playing, is the best way to ruin your stomcah, and you suffer from indigestion, heartburn, bloating, nervousness, headaches; and, worst of all, you get thin, pale and weak. If you must eat that way, always keep a package of Pape’s Diapepsin handy so you can chew one of the pleasant-tasting tablets after your meals. It keeps the food sweet so your stomach can digest it. Follow the experience of • thou sands who again have a young ap petite. All druggists recommend and guarantee Pape’s Diapepsin to relieve indigestion and sweeten the stomach in 5 minutes. OLDSMOBILE. 7 models, $875 to $1075. New lower prices round out Olds mobile’s master-stroke of General Motors’ value-giving. 4-wheel brakes. LaSALLE. 11 models, $2495 to $2995. New and beautiful car designed and built as companion car to Cadillac. Has V-type 8-cylinder engine. Marvelous lines and bodies. Continental in appearance. / //^^\ /nJ MAKERS OF . / S V DELCO-LIGHT PRODUCTS \ \ / DAYTON. OH IQ. U.S. A. \ DELCO-LIGHT electric plants. Provide the conveniences and labor-saving devices of the city for the farm. Electric light and power plants, water pumps, etc. Used in over a quarter million homes. PAGE FIVE

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