Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Oct. 13, 1927, edition 1 / Page 5
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October 13, 1927 ■■■■*- Briefs Beall of Asheville, has Mi'- Ira re iatives in the county j,een'_— yirs. R- J- Saville, of Pr °r ( spent the week end *ta te C parents here. *ith t he U _ - p Johnson and children Mt ? - b. Nooe to Rjdge aCcon,P‘ ‘ p r ij a y, where she is wa>% s ' lister, Mrs. Louise visiting three weeks. N'ooe toi .(.curred last week in An 1 + 0 f the directors of the B allk p > u dd it should have ****' 'Jh. G. Self. ; been t hal _________ , rhis week the negro fair is j * u ot Siler City.’ If fairs i • n; AV . that city should pros 'lC‘! V- a ,).ivs last week and as • fr H ve ' • this week! [ ; ianyn - . i 1 Jc. Weeks, Jr., ot the j T. ftnipanv, went down to { <• .i:iy to prepare for mov ♦v.itiih to Pittsboro. They the B. M. Poe bunga ,hp w 'ern border of town.! j ( *r qh I rif " _ Whirio Davis Chapter of the j ... n ;j nu-et at 3:30 Friday as- Mrs. H. A. London, r u -he regular meeting for the , of . Dicers and the Chap ■ R; r tlH;ay party, the celebra the -Pth anniversary of the p !0 t P. G. Farrar, principal of t we’' Grove school, Durham coun - with his family, spent the week . dwith his brother, Mr. Wm. Far- Prof. Farrar says his school over 400 students and seven teachers — some school for the country. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Griffin are bereaved, Chester and Mrs. Ches left them and gone to Greensboro. Chester has been in tj, e employ of Mr. Griffin seven teen years, and seemed an in tegral part of the Griffin car. But Greensboro will have to treat Ches. mighty well or he’ll be coming back in short order. Considerable improvement has J been made in the appearance of | the former Chatham Motgj> Com- j pany quarters by the W eeks Motor Company, which is now Ford rep resentative here. Additional equip ment has been added, and the firm is prepared to take care in fine style of all repair work on cars. Mr. Estill Warren of Clinton, an experienced mechanic, is with the new firm, and Mr. Weeks, through this paper, invited all in need of repair work on their cars to bring them to his plant. Remember, Mr. Subscriber, if you jfenew without expense to us, it s a real service. If all our sub scribers should renew without ex pense of agent or postage and sev eral 100 subscribe in the same way, the Record would be put upon a sound basis. But if it costs half the subscription money to get it, .'ou can see that the paper is bound J> weakened. Send in your own renewal and ask your neighbor to subscribe. The Record should be in L he home of every citizen in the county, and will be if he is not too httle to count as a good citizen. Thiee cents a week gets a good “per and helps to make it better and better. MARRIAGE license. Tue following couples have se !t(i marriage license since the > “ ecor d’s last report: Luther Tripp, Carrboro, and • ra Crabtree, Carrboro. R. Matheson and Laura J. R. Phillips, Siler City L n Annie R° u »h, Goldston; David " • oibett and Alina L. Jordan,both Raleigh. •p Charlie Bland and Mr tone , Corrinth; Lloyd 0 I an M Bllen Sturdivant, both Liz-; 1^ 010 ’ Henr W Douglas and j . “- Lf -dnian, Cumnock; Michael p ' ai| d Sarah Crutchfield, " ! ’1 Luther Alston and Min ",Avler. Pitts* oro. V SERIOUS OPERATION Mr. M t r~ ly "‘ • Jordan of Gulf recent a p , a s erious operation at ■Hciloicrlo l *- e j ~ * n °spital, when a tumor h aV( ,, sovera l pounds is said to a( *ount*\ laken from him. At last doing ’ 10Wever > the patient was He a ' as could be expected, of p/ ‘ lot her of Mr. J. M. Jordan m° st ~ jee ß» and is one of the 4 U^l! ' V re spected citizens of * c <sUnty. I CLUB NOTES The Chatham County Club at the University met Tuesday, Oct. 4 Ed. Avent, retiring president called the meeting to order and the following officers were elected: Wyeth Ray, president; Willie B. Morgan, vice-president; Junius Durham, secretary; Fred Thomas, treasurer. It was decided that the vice-presi dent be in charge of banquets and that Fred Nooe and John London assist him. Regular meetings will be held the first and third Tuesday’s of each month. Ed. Avent is chairman of the in itiation committee, and Royal Shannonhouse and Willie Morgan assistants. There are 26 members of the club this year, which is the largest number on the roll in its histoi'y. All the freshmen are king forward to formal initiation into the club. Chatham county alumni of the University are welcome to be with us at our meetings at ail times. JUNIUS DURHAM, Sec. JORDAN—CORBITT. A marriage of much interest to Chatham people and to many of other sections of the state took place Monday, when Miss Lora Jordan became the bride of Mr. Da vid Leßoy Corbitt. ! The bride is a daughter of that 1 sterling Chatham citizen, Mr. J. M. ’ Jordan, of the Brush Creek com munity, and a sister of Mr. E. H. Jordan, manager of the Hardware Store, Inc., Siler City. She has held a position in the Governor’s office at Raleigh. The groom is also a resident of Raleigh, and is a young man of con siderable distinction. They will be at home at 225 For est road, Raleigh, after October 20. A NEW CAFE. Pittsboro can now boast a second high-class case. Mr. Clyde Bland opened up for business Tuesday morning in the building formerly occupied by the Farmer’s Bank. Mr. Bland has bought the build ing and has remodelled the interior, | adapting it to the case business, j Up-to-date equipments have been j installed and the new case makes a neat and attractive appearance. Formerly there has been no case service in Pittsboro on Sundays. While Mr. Bland regrets that he shall have to have the business open at meal times on Sundays, he feels that the many people passing through deserve some considera tion. PRINCESS HELEN TO DEVOTE HER LIFE TO NURSE’S SCHOOL) Bucharest, Oct. 12 —The beauti ful Princess Helen of Rumania, her faith in humanity shattered and her hope of happiness in marriage shattered by the desertion of for mer Crown Prince Ca r °U today de clared to dedicate her life to Red Cross nursing and reclamation of fallen girls. With encouragement officials of the Rockefeller founda tion, she established a school for nurses in Bucharest, which she su pervised and she formally dedica ted today. There are already 25 studnets in the school, including one Ameri can girl. Princess Helen hopes to enlist the interest of the American Red Cross in the since she is possessed only of the most slender means of her own to con duct the school. The Princess also inaugurated a home for wayward and destitute girls and dispensi aries for sick children and mothers. To her intimate friends the heartbroken princess confided that her love for Carol is dead and she has too little faith in mankind to re-marry, Pier family, however, is eager that she shall wed again in 1 order to divert her mind from her present sorrows. Although Carol ignores her and never writes her from his haunts in Paris, Princesss Helen speaks of the errant prince without the slightest rancor, revenge or re - Iproach. Since her desertion by Carol Princess Helen has lived alone with little King Michael and his pet dog in a cottage in the Carpathian mountains, like a cloistered novi tiate in a convent, she spends her days in meditation and prayer, sur rounded by'books, flowers, trees and birds. One record Chamberlin and Le vine seemingly have overlooked is that of “long distance diving re ■ cord.” New York to a German swamp. _/ :'f ■■ Believe It or Not— Teaches Sunday School r "’ ' 1 vlv.’vlv!^ . ..fAuTOCAgTCI?^:I Francis Mi Wren, oCZeigfeid’s new horus, dances during the week but •very Sunday morn teaches a buys’ hi nday School class in New York. >he admits her favorite friend is a minister. LOVE (By Edgar A. Guest Fame may come in a dozen way_, Wealth is found in a score of trades, Every art to its genius pays. Skill has various ranks and grades, But soon or late we all come tc know, Love is the same for the high anc low. i Man finds love in a woman’s eyes; Something tender and sweet and true, But be foolish or be wise, Sends him out in the world to woo. A certain woman must whisper “yes.” If love is to crown his with happi ness And whether the maid be dark or fair, Pretty of face or plain to see, If love abide with the mated pair, None in the world canhappier be; For rich or poor it is all the same, Love can exist without wealth, or fame. ! Honor and love have no degrees, Richer than others a man may be; Fame has limits and boundaries, ; There are rank and caste on land and sea, But who is welcomed by love at night Has all that maketh a king’s heart * light. She —Do you think that long skirts make a girl look taller? He—l don’t know, but short skirts make the men look longer. tt|j^ Silk Stockings Have stockings in the very new ! est shades; your old or faded stock ; ings given any tint in the rainbow I in five minutes; with fifteen cents’ I worth of Diamond Dyes! But use ! dyes, not synthetic tints. And be j sure they’re true dyes, j Try a pair tonight! Use Dia mond Dyes and no one will dream j they were tinted at home. And you can do real dyeing with just as perfect results, if you will just use the true Diamond Dyes. FREE: Why not ask your druggist for the very useful Diamond Dye Cyclopedia? Valuabie suggestions, easy directions, and piece-goods sample colors. Or write for free ; copy of Color Craft, a big illustrat jed book sent postpaid address DIAMOND DYES, Dept.NlS, Buv | lington, Vermont. Diamond Dyes , JHstDiptoTlNTfQrßoUioDYE THE CHATHAM RECORD About your Health Things Yon Should Know by john Joseph Gftinei. M. D VALUES IN READING of “Health Hints” may be said to be highly profitable, but we should be extremely cau tious in accepting advice unless its truth is self-evident. The chief ar gument against the intelligent u?€ of coffee, comes from promoter? who are advancing a substitute foi the time-honored beverage. Health admonitions found in advertising matter are, as a rule, “cut on th< bias.” Their prime motive is— ! sales and more sales. < A number of excellent physician? today write for the press, fr,on their ample stores of experience My daily paper carries its healtl column, and I read that in pref crence to happenings in crime o] the so-called “sport page.” I ge more value out of it. A young lach of my acquaintance grew' ill, hel jsase baffled her family physiciai Tor over a year. A specialist snally discovered that she was suffering from lead poisoning, due to a preparation used on her face. She had never read warnings, al though such were plentiful. By reading I learn the methods employed by that most unscrupul ous swindler on earth, the quack who preys upon sick people. The number of dupes convinces me that there are thousands of people who lo not read enough to fit them for intelligent judgment in as serious i matter as their health. They ‘bite” at the most glaring frauds. They feed the vulture that fattens m them. When may intelligence ’awn? Even epileptics are fleeced. Tubercular and cancerous victims are lied to and robbed every day, in the most fiendish manner. The easiest money to get is that ob tained by the medical impostor. Physicians with genuine qualifi cations never advertise; they do not need misrepresentation to fur ther their personal interests. Folks who read intelligently know this. Too many do not read. We wouldn’t be a bit surprised low if some daring young Ameri can airman hopped to Paris and jack over the three-day Fourth of July holiday. 4 i r A C l S • fia i§ a * T® -A- -l*- CHEVROLET -AND THE OPEN MIND |||| The most important element in business success—• pontiac and the most difficult —is to be sure that you have all the facts before you act. To GET them all, from every possible source, is the cldsmobil* first objective in General Motors. The Research Laboratories contribute some. These are nuggets, xlgijp^ left in the crucible, after hundreds of ideas that Oakland looked good have been burned away. The Proving Ground contributes others. Dealers contribute. 1 he public contributes. Every department contributes. Through the whole organization runs a spirit of s inquiry and of rigid insistence on proof. Out of such thinking come the new models announced from time to time by Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Oakland, Buick, LaSalle, ijli Cadillac —all with Fisher Bodies. And by Frigidaire. Cadillac Each new model is a tested step forward. Nothing a goes into it as a result of habit or guess or pride of opinion. / delco-light electric plants Nothing counts but hard-won facts, gathered and ‘(frig^ai re^) used with an open mind. The electric refrigerator j I GENERAL MOTORS rr A ccr for every purse and purpose ” CLIP THIS COUPON ———————— JpEgF General Motors (Dept. A), Detroit, Mich. Please send without any obligation to me, your illustrated book- CHEVROLET 111 OAKLAND [—i CADILLAC CD let, “Where Motor Car Facts Are Established,” together with PONTIAC ED BUICK ED FRIGIDAIRE ED information about the particular General Motors product or products I have checked at the right. OLDSMOBILE CD LaSALLE ED DELCO-LIGHT ED A Western Queen 11 «fc sapr* mM smrm mm o's if # Ji niff \ Miss Blanche Grimes of Sangei California, ruled supreme as Quee. of the California -Raisin Festival, held this year at Fresno and at tended by thousands of visitors. SANFORD EPISCOPALIANS BEGIN WORK ON CHURCH Sanford, —Work has begun on the j new church building which the I members of St. Thomas Episcopal ) church will erect on North Steele Street. The congregation bought the lot some years ago and have been looking forward to the time when an attractive edifice could be erected. The building will be of j English design, withm face brick from a local plant and when com pleted will be a pretty building. | The building committe are Rev. R. , G. Shannonhouse, Norwood G. Smith and W. W. Robards. JURY LIST ! For Criminal Term of Court Be ginning October 24. The following names compose the jury list drawn for the term of court beginning October 24th, at which Judge Grady will preside. Hadley township—S. M. Clark, Cape Fear, J. C. Sea well, Fred I Johnson, A. F. Harrington, W. A. Drake, R. F. Sturdivant; Albright, K. S. Carter, Claude Thoippson; New Hope, G. T. Yates, 'Dv L. Thomas, A. W. Luther, J. El ’Stone, W. R. Stone, R. W. Seymoce; Gulf, Hugh Womble, E. M. Goldston. Matthews township Lonnie Thompson, J. E. Fox, C. A. Poe, A. S. Edwards, W. A. Hendren; Hick ory Mountain, L. T. Dark, C. S. El- Study f^i^k j i A face to face meeting with facts things accomplished, things left undone and a searching out of factors which have been millstones about the neck on the road to success, has often resulted in a complete right-about-face for many a man. It’s good practice for all—because one learns that while i “money is not everything”—it is a mighty convenient tool. This institution is an advocate of thrift in savings, but there are other important service departments here wherein we can and do serve our patrons to a profit for them. MAKE THIS BANK YOUR BANK. THE BANK OF PITTSBORO PITTSBORO, N. C. A. H. LONDON, Pres. J. L. GRIFFIN, Cashier. 1 We Sell For Less! Try Us And Be Convinced CARTER FURNITURE COMPANY Everything for the Home SANFORD, N. C. PAGE FIVE - ' - r -• : .y -C --, ( more, John C. Bowers; Bear Creek, ;iC. L. Bray, H. A. Brooks, John C. Kidd, W. B. Talley; Centier, J. T. | Petty, R.*T. Farrell, W. M. Perry, J. [ W. (Dock) Griffin, Lonnie Cooper; | Baldwin, W. B. Riddle, Peter Thrift, C. A. Snipes; Williams —W. R. Johnson, C. R. Goodwin; Oakland, R. R. Seagroves, J. T. Griffin; Haw River, J. V. Ray, P. S. Lasater.
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 13, 1927, edition 1
5
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