CSXASLISHED SEPTEMBER 19,1878
Rambling and Scribbling
The Editor Gives an Account of The Towns and People Seen
" In Two Days of Subscription Work Last Week
o i v two days of field work a
k ' but they serve to introduce
* ce Record man to quite a few new
the i., and acquaint him better with
f h e e ° P geography and history of the
f v a nd as many Chathamites
CC V know little of the great old
untv as a whole, we again will take
c 0 readers on the rounds with us.
Visiting Siler City is no rarity,
hut on nearly every visit we have
the pleasure of making new acquain
tances or seeing Chathamites whom
have not seen in quite a w'hile.
imonz those last week was Mr. C.
v page, who with Mr. J. M. Jordan
imposes our list at the surviving
litt le country post office of Brush
r ree k. These are two of our real
tan dbvs and though out of our beat
always manage to get their renewals
t 0 us an example that others whom
we cannot visit should follow.
We intended to spend only an
hour at Ore Hill Friday, but when
we reached the old village, now go
jne by the name of Mt. Vernon
Springs, from the long-time resort
nearby, we found Mr. Chas. Forest
er with a corn-shucking on tap and
tarried. Mr. Forester is postmaster,
merchant and a good farmer, as was
evidenced by the fine pile of corn
that he had gathered from a small
acreage at hand.
Those Ore Hillians take their corn
shuckings seriously. When Mr. For
ester and the editor walked up from
the store, quite a bunch of the neigh
bors were already busily .engaged
and apparently as solemn as owls,
and the solemnity was maintained
till the last ear was shucked. Wheth
er the funereal atmosphere was due
to the thought that the writing man
might be taking notes or to the fact
that the Sheriff had got the com
munity’s prize still a week earlier,
we leave it to them to reveal.
Anyway, the corn shucking in the
bright light of a beautiful fall day
with the shucking as the main
thought in mind differed much from
the recollections of the old-time
corn shuckings in Sampson, when at
night fall the little chaps, after see
ing a sheep or a pig killed and a big
pot out in the yard, supplementing
the smaller cooking vessels in the
kitchen, preparing for the feast
away in the night, were thrilled by
hearing the booming voices of the
negroes approaching from the east
and from the west with the old hal
loaing song of ‘'Bull Row,” at least
that is the way it sounded.
It was only at corn shuckings, log
rollings, and wheat threshings that
the editor’s father ever brought
home a jug, and one of those events
without the toddy would have been
accounted an injustice. It has been
more than fifty years, but the mem
ory of waking and peeping out the
window while the white folk were
eating, and seeing Tom Killett, a
young buck, dancing by a torch
light and to the patting of many
black hands, is almost as vivid as if
it were yesterday—and Tom, old
Tom now, was living when we left
Sampcson three years ago.
But there was a live wire in the
Forester kitchen, who pepped up
things when the bunch reached the
dining room. It was the vivacious
Mrs. Hardin Holliday, an idea of
whose wit and audacity may be had
from a story we later heard of her.
A patent medicine man was selling
his wares one day near her and irri
tating her with a frequent cough.
Soon she called to him if he had any
cough medicine. He, thinking a
sale was imminent, answered “yes,
the best kind,” to which he got the
instant reply, “Why in the devil
don’t you take some of it, then?”
Mr. Bob Gorrell remarked, as all
of us were busily engaged in dispos
ing of the variety of good things to
eat, “I have seen folks go to corn
shuckings and just eat and eat;
thank you for some more of that
stew,” and to Mrs. Holliday who
asked him just then if he would have
some more pudding, accenting the
ing" with unusual clearness, he
said, “Now, Mae, you are putting on
airs because the editor is here; I’ll
take some pudd’n.” And “I’ll thank
you tor some chicken stew.” Cer
tainly, “Bob” is rather delicate, and
just goes to corn shuckings to help
get his neighbors’ corn housed,
weatz bhkM.shrdlu,etaoin shrdlu u
Me were pleased to Tind Mrs.
Forester a sister of Attorney L. P.
Dixon, of Siler City, and thus made
to feel more at home.
ihe editor pitched in to help shuck
that pile of corn, but when it began
to seem too much like work slipped
awa y and called upon Mrs. O. B.
at her pleasant home nearby.
Mrs. Stroud will be pleasantly re
tailed by the older Pittsboro folk, as
>he was a Headen, a first cousin of
M- Will A. Headen, who, unlike
Mrs. Stroud, has not discontinued his
Vl sits to Pittsboro, but, on the con
trary, for some reason or other, pays
Particular attention in his drumming
to Dittsboro merchants.
Mrs. Stroud is hale and hearty
tor her age. She has only two chil
dren, a son, who lives with her, and
a daughter, Mrs. E. H., a fine young
voman whom we had also the pleas
ure of meeting.
Mr. L. F. Gorrell was preparing to
ieave in a few days for Craddock,
a *> near Portsmouth, where he will
- xie Chatham Record
j spend the wdnter with his daughter,
Mrs. J. B. Brown. He will have the
Record, however, to keep him in
in touch with things here in Chat
ham. Mr. D. T. Vestal is playnig
substitute R. F. D. carrier for a week
or two and had learned his route
well enough by Friday to get in con
siderably earlier than on his Jfirst
days. Mrs. Vestal has a nice'little
store and had already subscribed for
the Record before the husband ar
rived.
We had only a moment or two
with Mr. W. V. Cheek before the bus
came, but was glad to lear n that his
son, Allan, who suffered so severely
in his struggle with the negro in
Cheek’s store last winter when Mr.
Fogleman was killed, is hopeful of
finally recovering from the effects
of the injuries, though he was that
very day away to see his physician,
we believe. We had the curiosity to
step into the store and see the site
of that memorable struggle, though
the graphic description given of it
on the trial made viewing it a mere
form.
kAortbfiitHodHe cmfwyp cmfwyppp
And that reminds us that we did
not see Mr. N. H. Heritage, the
veteran railroad man, but we are
going again, and especially to visit
the Springs and the good people in
that old community, which we have
known of since our childhood, when
R. R. Vann, having come up to Mt.
Vernon Springs to school, was lucky
enough to win a bride and settle
down there for many years of quiet
usefulness.
As we leave the sun is dropping
behind the sugar-loaf hill from
which the village had its former
name, Ore Kill, because of the pres
ence of considerable iron ore in its
bosom, some of wnicTi was mined in
the earlier days.
We intended to work at Gulf the
next day, but nut knowing just what
the hotel facilities were there and the
Pugh house at Bonlee having been
highly commended in the Chatham
Record last week, we decided to drop
off at that good little town, and
there made a contract*with the Bon
lee Bank and Trust Company to run
its advertisement weekly. So read
these weekly messages from that
strong institution.
Here we learn aiso that we were
mistaken in naming Mr. J. L. Carter
postmaster. Mr. W T addell is the post
master. and possibly the only Dem
ocrat holding such a position within
a hundred miles. Messrs. Waddell
and Carter take turns postmastering
and running- the hardware store.
There are other fine characters about
Bonlee whom we hope to touch up
some time, as we could not work
them all into our story last week. i
At Gulf
Robert Morrisey, the Clinton
youngster who carries the mail from
Greensboro to Sanford, was along
bright and early the next morning
and gave us a lift to Gulf, where we
spent several hours pleasantly with
the good people of that, the second
oldest town in the county.
It was in 1879 that the railroad
was extended from Cumnock, or
Egypt, to “The Gulf.” The road had
been built to Fayetteville during the
war to get coal, particularly for
the arsenal at Fayetteville.
Gulf had an opportunity and didn’t
have an opportunity to become a
real town. As the terminus of the
railroad for nearly ten years, it
should have got a fine start. Unfor
tunately, however, the land at Gulf
was owned by the estate of Oliver.
Ditson, the famous publisher, and
couldn’t be sold, or nobody would'
sell it.
Mr. Mclver and Mr. W. S. Rus
sell were the early merchants, and
Mr. Russell is still flourishing at
the age of 89, and with his son, Mr.
A. H. Russel, a chip off the old
block, is carrying on a good business
to this day. The Mclver business is
continued by the son of the founder,
Mr. J. M. Mclver, a good fellow,
and almost necessarily so as the son
of Miss Lois Anderson, who forty
years ago with her brother, now
Rev. N. L. Anderson, D.D., pastor
of the most important Presbyterian
church in Savannah and author of
a recently very highly commended
volume of sermons, taught our
young’ ideas how to shoot in the
old Clinton Male Academy. We
surely intended to call upon our
old teacher, but crowded till train
time, failed to do so. It is difficult
for us to conceive of her other than
a trim young lady as we knew her
in those older days.
Mr. J. R. Moore was on the job
at the Mclver store. M,t. Mclver
was away. Mr. Knight is a sales
man at the Russel store. These
stores are at the old village site,
while a good brick block adorns a
site at the depot, in the center of
which Mrs. Hill, wife of the super
intendent of the Coal Glen mine, an
Englishman by birth and training
as a miner, has a good store and
does a fine business. On the south
side is the post office, of which Mrs.
Devereux is the genial and efficient
mistress, who promises us to write
the weekly happenings of Gulf for
the Record. On the north side of
the block Mrs. O. A. Beal conducts
a good little case. The Record will
o
(Please turn to page four)
PITTSBORO, N. C., CHATHAM COUNTY, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1927.
Today
TO MEET CONDUCTORS.
LINDBERGH, FORD, MARIE
CHEAP AT SIOO,OOO.
GENERAL MOTORS IN AT
LANTA. >
By ARTHUR BRISBANE
In China a labor party is trying
to seize a Canton, material law is de
clared and more of China’s 400,000,
000 join Confucius, and perhaps hear
what he thinks of fighting China.
When Bertrand Russell visited and
wrote about the Chinese, he conclu
ded that their salvation would be to
wait, endure, let the wirtes kill them
selves off. Then the yellows would
rule.
China is not taking that advice.
Yellows are as foolish as the whites
about killing.
Students at Chicago’s Northwest
ern university vote Lindbergh and
Ford “the biggest men of the year.”
Queen Marie leads the women.
President Coolidge, Mussolini, the
Prince of Wlaes, Maybr Thompson,
Edison, Tunney, A1 Smith, Babe Ruth
get votes.
Ruth Elder, charming young lady,
attracted attention and newspapers
gave her at least $100,000,000 worth
of free advertising. Now the intelli
gent Loew company gives her SI,OOO
a day for 100 days to tell about it
in vaudeville.
For SIOO,OOO intelligent Mr. Nich
olas M. Schneck gets the benefit of
$100,000,000 worth of publicity.
Madame Curie could not get SIOO,-
000 for telling about radium. The
people want action.
General Motors announces the es
tablishment of a new plant in At
lanta, Ga. This is a tribute to the
automobile-buying power of the
South, the outstanding position of
Atlanta as a distributing center and
the common sense of Mr. Sloan and
others that run General Motors.
Atlanta’s Chevrolet plant will give
work at good wages to many. Mr.
Knudsen, head of the Chevrolet com
pany, says: “A plant in Atlanta be
came not only a possibility, but a
necessity.*'
Germany signs the League of Na
tions ogreement ‘affording protec
tions agreement “affording protec
after childbirth.” A woman would
be allowed to quit work six weeks
before the birth of a child and re
main away six weeks afterward, with
pay and free medical attention.
That pounds almost like ciziliza
tion —government compelling the
employers to do for women what in
telligent horse owners did for mares
a thousand years ago.
A tax assesser at Washington, D.
C. values White House building and
grounds at $22,000,000, the capitol
$53,000,000. State, war and navy
buildings, $13,500,000. Treasury
building, $23,000,000.
Uncle Sam should get some flying
machines to protect all that prop
erty. A dozen bombing enemy fliers
could soon knock those buildings
around the ears of men that live or
work in them.
A i.ew high mark in LTnited States
finance and prosperity. Nationa
banks, including Alaska and Hawaii
report to the comptroller of the cur
rency, resources amounting to twen
ty-seven billion, two hundred and
seventeen million, eight hundred and
twenty-four thousand dollars, beat
ing all records.
This doesn’t include trust com
panies, and other great money insti
tutions.
This is a rich country, getting
richer every minute. Its citizens
earn each year ten billions more than |
it costs to live. Don’t sell the United
States short.
A mother and father hid S6O in
a bureau drawer, telling only their
13-year old daughter, Christina,
where it was. It disappeared. Three
times the mother accused the child.
The girl denied that she had stolen
the money, then drank carbolic acid
and may die. Not all parents realize
a child’s intensity of feeling.
Members of the clergy will dis
cuss the drama today and listen to
Mr. Otto H. Kahn tell about it. Pro
ducers of certain plays say they hope
the “Church and Drama Association”
will attack their plays. “We would
put a pastor on the payroll if he
would denounce us.” *
A dog will gladly dig up a decay -
ing bone if you tell him where to
find it. Many citizens unfortunately
will attend a rotten play, if you
will tell them where it is.
Lord Cecil says the British have
“banged the doors” on any navy
agreement with the United States.
Thanks to Britain for encouraging
the United States to mind its busi
ness and its own rules for its own
navy.
A country that could manage it
self with fewer than 4,000,000 popu
lation should manage itself with 115,
000,000 population.
GARNER HAS SOLD
I PHONE SYSTEM
Central Carolina Telephone Co.
Takes Over Chatham
County Lines
W. H. Garner has sold his tele
phone property in this county to the
recently organized Central Carolina
Telephone Company, with headquar
ters at Troy.
For several weeks the larger com
pany had held an option on the
property. The option had only one
or two more days to run when the
purchase was made one day last
week.
Mr. Garner foresaw a considerable
outlay for improvements, especially
at Siler City. In fact, a telephone
system in a growing section calls
for constant investment, since a
considerable growth of any commun
ity necessitates many new connec
tions and possibly a new central out
fit altogether. That is the situa
tion at Siler City, we understand.
Mr. Garner has devoted his life
largely to the telephone business,
though, as in many cases, it was a
mere accident that turned his at
tention that way. He had just clos
ed a school when a young man and
was at his father's home over in
Johnston county when a line was be
ing erected right by the door. When
he went out from breakfast one
morning the boss of the job rather
jokingly told him to put on the
spikes and go up a pole and fasten a
wire. Garner told him he could do
that very thing and did. When he
came down he was employed to help
out with the work, and from that
moment to this has been a telephone
man.
He came to Chatham with only
SI,OOO, and part of that borrowed.
He first got possession of one vil
lage plant and has constantly in
creased his holdings till he had prac
tically all the lines In the county,
including the exchanges at Siler
City, Pittsboro, Goldston, Bonlee —
in fact, all the towns except those
on the S. A. L. railroad, which be
long- to the Southern Bell, which also
has a line from Moncure to Pitts
boro, connecting with the Pittsboro
exchange.
By selling Mr. Garner is able to
see actual cash for his long term of
attention to business; while to hold
meant the continual reinvestment of
all profits and possibly the securing
of additional capita!.
Young Man Dies
Os Hydrophobia
' i
-
Clarence Fields, son of Mr. and
Mrs. D. H. Fields, who live three
miles this side of Goldston, died
Sunday morning of what Dr. R. M.
Fields diagnosed as hydrophobia.
The burial was at May’s Chapel
Monday, under the auspices of Mr.
Jeter Griffin, Pittsborqs funeral
director. The funeral services were i
conducted by Rev. R. R. Gordon, ofj
Pittsboro.
Dr. Fields was first called in on j
the 16th. A few days later the young)
man went into convulsions, strong- j
ly showing the symptoms of hydro-;
phobia. The family knew' of no dog’
bite that might account for the dis- i
ease and the victim was beyond the
point where he could give an account
of the possible source of hydropho
bia. The physicians sent a sample of
the sputum to the state laboratory
for the hydrophobia test J)ut no re
port had been made when the death
certificate w'as signed.
Clarence was 22 years of age, and
has thus been cut off in the heyday
of youth.
Goldston News
Miss Edith Roberts, a member of
the school faculty, will spend the
Thanksgiving holidays w'ith a friend
at Polkton.
Miss Pearl Johnson will spend the
holidays at her home at Bynum.
Miss Ola Harmon will spend the
holidays at her home near Pittsboro.
The remainder of the faculty will
be in Goldston during the holidays.
Mrs. Moore’s third grade won the
half holiday for last month.
The honor roll pupils for the last
month are the following: Fola Burns
and Irene Hilliard 7th grade; Her
bert C. Watson, 4th grade; Mary
Erma Rives, Janie Paschal, Eliza
beth Ellis, Casey Hilliard, 3rd grade;
Nancy Ellis, Mary Lois Harris, Ist
grade.
The Goldston boys’ basket ball
team will play their first game of
ball for the season this afternoon,
with Bonlee.
Mr. Leon Goldston, of Texas is
expected here this week to spend
the holidays with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. L. Goldston. Mr. Gold
ston has recently married and will •
bring his bride. They are just re
turning from their honeymoon north.
Congratulations are extended to the j
popular couple.
Ms. Fitts, who has spent some time i
here with relatives has returned to \
her home in Fayetteville.
Stockholders of the Lincoln com
pany which Ford bought are bring
ing suit against the old man for many
millions. Plaintiffs in damage suits,
as well as death, love a shining
mark.
BONDS SOLD AT
GOOD PREMIUM
Fifteen Bidders Make Sale Os
County Funding Bonds
Competitive Sale.
Whatever may have been thought
of earlier sales of county bonds,
which it seemed might have been so
advertised a§. to assure as few bid
ders as possible, the sale of SIOO,OOO
of funding bonds last Thursday was
a really competitive sale, and the
bids varied from par to a premium
of about two per cent.
There were two batches of the
bonds, one of $63,000 for the fund
ing of the general indebtedness of
the county; the other of $37,000 for
the funding of school indebtedness
accruing before March 7, and accu
mulating for several years. The two
made a. total of SIOO,OOO.
There were fifteen bidders. Wells,
Dickey & Company, of Minneapolis,
were the highest bidders for both
batches, with the exception of a bid
by Sheriff Blair as treasurer of
the county for the $63,000 issue.
Their bid for the first batch was
$64,490.58, and for the second lot,
$37,875. They were awarded the
school bonds, but the county treas
urer bid $64,800 for the first lot
and that was awarded to him, or to
the county.
Thus the county has bought its
own indebtedness. It was this way:
The county had used the sinking
funds of the various districts in
paying the indebtedness of the school
board and possibly part of the gener
al deficit. The $37,000 of school
bonds will pay back to the county
the money used for the schools. From
this the sinking funds may be re
stored. But those funds would have
to be deposited in a bank or loaned
elsewhere, and at a rate that would
hardly equal that of the bonds. Ac
cordingly the commissioners seem
to have figured that they could save
the county money by investing the
sinking funds in the county’s own
bonds, and thus it results that the
siking funds of the bonds exist only
as another county indebtedness.
However, it is in such form that if,
for any reason, a call for actual
cash from the sinking funds should
come, a sale of the bonds could be
readily made, and the cash secured.
It looks like lifting one’s self by
his own boot straps, but it seems to
work.
The bonds are 4 3-4 per cent, the
lowest rate at which any county
bonds have sold ,at least in
several years.
Soy Bean Harvester
Successfully Used
Mr. W. H. White and Mr. Tal
mage Siler, two farmers near Siler
City, purchased a soy bean harvest
er this summer. In spite of the fact
that they had had no previous ex
perience with a harvester, these two
men harvested 200 bushels of no. 1
Mammoth Yellow soy bean seed this
fall, and some of this amount will
probably be available for sale to
farmers of that vicinity. This is
probably the first bean harvester
ever used in this county. However,
considering the large quantity of
beans that are seeded in this coun
ty ever year, and the uncertainty of
the farmers being able to obtain suf
ficient amount of the seed each year,
it is hoped that farmers in more
communities will obtain these har
vesters.
Lespedeza, or Japan Clover, seems
to thrive on land that is too wet
natured for other crops. Last Tues
day, the Agent visited a six-acre
field of this legume that had been
seeded on Mr. J. F. Fox’s farm in
the Rocky River church community.
It was one of the best stands of les
pedeza ever seen by the Agent.
Practically every foot of the land
was covered with a thick growth of
this legume, and part of the field j
that had previously been too wet
for anything else, had a fine growth
of Japan Clover. Mr. Fox states that
he seeded part of this field last
spring, and part of the field during
the previous spring. He seeded at
the rate of 12 pounds to the acre.
This clover will be turned and fol
lowed in corn next spring.
The County Agent is still taking
orders for government explosive,
orders for 1,000 pounds being taken
during the past week. The date of
ordering is being postponed as much
as possible in order to allow some
farmers who need this explosive to
obtain it. However, it is expected
to order within the next three
weeks. The cost of this material is
$4.75 per 50-pound case and cash
or checks must accompany the order.
N. C. SHIVER, County Agt.,
In office Saturdays and first Mon
days. Pittsboro, N. C. Nov. 18, 1927.
A RESTRAINING INFLUENCE
(“O. J.” In Greensboro News)
Chatham’s O. J. Peterson of the
Record, suggests that we’ll bear
watching lest we do something to
break into the state prison camp
with a patch of 12,000 collards. Not
this season, Pete. We’ve just tasted
our first Chatham rabbit barbecued
and have no notion of getting any
farther from home than Mount Ver
non Springs while the rabbit season
is open.
VOLUME 50, NUMBER 10
NEW FORD COMES
OUT IN PICTURES
* ■■ ■
Car Photographed in Michigan
Is Reproduced in Maga
iznes And Papers
The much talked of and long
awaited new Ford has at last made
its appearance, at least in .certain
places. A two-door sedan was pho
tographed in Brighton, Michigan, as
it stood on the streets. The picture
appeared in several papers and in
Motor Age, a magazine.
The sedan, according to a report
about six inches longer in wheelbase
in this magazine, appeared to be
than the Model T. It was finished
in a light green and while low in ap
pearance appeared to have increa
five wire wheels, four-wheel brakes,
sed body room. It was equipped with
speedometer, oil pump, water pump,
bumpers front and rear, standard
gear shift and bullet-type head lamps
These features were noted while the
car was parked for a time at Bright
on.
The front of the car closely re
sembles the Lincoln. Body line are
ggenerally graceful, the hood line
being high and meeting the waist
line of the body which is also much
windows are much wider than in the
higher than in former models. The
former models with the rear win
dow curving as it meets the rear
quarter. The roof line rises slightly
to the rear quarter where it is round
ed off.
Reports at the River Rouge plant
are that the assembly line started
running soon after November 15.
Engines for the new car are now
going through at the rate of about
1,000 daily. The die and tool rooms
at the plant are in full operation.
It is expected that production of
200 cars daily will be inaugerated
about November 21. Production plans
are for as high as 12,000 daily by
June 1.
ERROR IN ADVERTISEMENT''
A serious error oecurrs in the ad
vertisement of the Siler City Hard
ware Co. That fine $135.00 range
is to be sold for $97.50 and not $9.75
as printed in the advertisement. That
part of the paper was printed before
the error was discovered.
BROWN CHAPEL ITEMS
Rev. C. M. Lance held a Thanks
giving service at Brown’s last Sun
day. It w'as an appropriate service
and a really thankful congregation
heard him, and expressed their thanks
by giving the pastor a good uound
ing. This mark of appreciation falls
to Pastor Lance on his return for
his fourth and last year’s work on.
the Pittsboro circuit. We hope to
make this the best year of the four.
Junius Durham of the University
and Kiah Henderson of a Ralegih
business school are home for the
Thanksgiving holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Crawford and
William, of Fayetteville, have been,
visiting relatives in Chatham, Orange
and Alamance. Mrs. Crawford is a
daughter of the late John H. Dark
of this community.
Mr. Ben Nicholson, the big poul
try man of Alamance county, with
his family spent Sunday with Mrs.
Nicholson’s sister, Mrs. F. R. Hen
derson, and was a welcome visitor
at Sunday school.
State Highway No. 93, Pittsboro
to Graham, is now being maintained
by the state. The route selected is
the one nearer Haw River. Others
would have been glad to see another
route selected. This relieves the
county of another road.
Mrs. Meacham of New Hope town
ship is with her grandson, John R.
Goodwin. Mr. and Mrs. Goodwin
are the proud parents of a little girl.
LEE COUNTY FARMER COMMITS
SUICIDE
News came to Gulf Saturday while
the editor of the Record was there
to the effect that Mr. T. M. Allen, a
Lee county farmer, aged 64, had
been found hanging to a tree. It
w r as stated that Mr. Allen has been
som,ewhat off in mind for tw T o weeks.
He had declared when he left home
that he was going to Gulf to pay an
account at the store of Mr. W. H.
Hill. Soon after he left it was dis
covered that he had not taken the
money to pay the account and that
a certain rope and chain were miss
ing. A search revealed the body
hanging from a tree.
It was also stated that he was
distressed about money matters, but
that a check for SI4OO was received
soon after his death.
ALL DAY
December 3rd
a foot specialist from the
personal staff of Dr. Scoll
of Chicago will beat our
store to examine all hurting
feet FREE. Come and bring
all your footsore friends.
STROUD & HUBBARD
Sanford, N. C.