Thursday, February 16, THE CHATHAM RECC ll' o. J. PETERSON Editor and Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: One Year $1.50j Six Months *75 Thursday, February 16, 1928 r Mrs. Mary E. Berry, of Chapel Hill undertakes to tell us where the “New Hope” was at which Gover nor Tryon and his army, when mar ching to Hillsboro before the Battle of Alamance; but while she writes an interesting article about a “New Hope*!’ of which there are many, not locate the point re ferred to as the camping plaqe oi' •Tryon’s army, since an army in those days could not have marched from over in Johnson ebunty, their last previous camp, according to the re cord to which we referred, to the “New Hope” she names. And the - New Hope creek (possibly receiving its name from the church Mrs. Berry mentions) flows through New Hope township in eastern Chatham, the inference is fair that it was some point over there that Was designat ed “New Hope.” However, we do not ‘know to what extent "the narra tive, of Tryon’s march we recently read is authoritative • ;; A score of more or less distin guished gentlemen were candidates for the position of secretary of state vacated by the death'bf W. N. Ev erett. Senator Pet. Williams of Elizabeth City, seemed a: first to have the inside track, but Governor McLean persuaded him to accept the-j assistant-chairmanship of the ctate j budget committee, of which the Gov ernor is chairman, and appointed J. A. Hartness of Statesville to the va cancy. Thus two good men are lo cate 4, and Governor McLean gets the man in the budget job that he has long been trying to persuade to accept the responsibility. The latter position is a most important one, and one in which Mr. Williams can be more useful to the state than* as secretary of state. At the meeting of the Republican j * State Executive committee at Greensboro last week -3 of the 33 members present signed a statement favoring Lowden as the Republican nominee for the presidency. How ever, Hoover has friends among the "North Carolina Republicans, and Lowden will not have a walkover in j this state. The Republican conven- i tion is to be held in Raleigh. T. W. Wood and Sons, seedsmen, > with nothing to gain by the rec- 1 Otfrmendation, recommends that far-j mers use Fulghum oats for spring planting. They declare that, in ail their tests, the Fulghum stands out ahead of all other varieties for spring planting, whether for forage or grain. In view of the damage done fall oats by the cold, our far mers should remember this when they go to plant spring oats, which should be right away, as the agri cultural department recommends the planting of spring oats about six weeks before the time of the usual last frost, which may be considered about April 15, though frosts do oc cur later than that occasionally. That would mean that the first week or two in March.is the time for Chat ham farmers to plant spring oats. The tributes to W. N. Everett, j late secretary of state, who died! last week, have been numerous and! laudatory. There is no question * that he was a man among men. His ! burial at Rockingham was attended I by a host of people, including the j Governor and most of the high state j officials. Messrs. A. H. London and '■ J. L. Griffin, of Pittsboro, attended the funeral. Mr. Everett was the father-in-law of Mr. Isaac London, who is editor of the Rockingham Post-Dispatch. The editor regrets the passing of ! Mr. J. R. Blair. He was a useful ! citizen. The high esteem in which he was generally held was indicated by the throng which attended his funeral. Little Mt. Vernon church would not hold more than a fraction of the crowd present. We do »not always agree with Dr. Hubert Poteat but he hits, the nail j on the head when he says “I be- 1 lieve, of course, that older and more I experienced teachers can give valu able assistance to beginners, and I believe beginners should have this assistance whenever possible, but honestly, I wouldn’t swap thorough -knowledge of subject matter for all the text books on method, plus all the method courses on earth.” The trouble with our schools of pedagogy s t!r t they :v e trying to teach many j /ou J-be teachers how to tkach what j they do not know. Instructio nin ! method after thorough knowledge of J the subject is taught, is fine, but is wasted upon an ignoramus. The colorful Miss Neil Battle Lew is, of Raleigh, has announced herself , a candidate for the House from ; Wake. Miss Lewis should run sos * the Senate that Chatham folk may have the pleasure of voting for her. The Record is glad that Tom Cooper, the Wilmington -banker who has served a term in the Atlanta penitentiary and a yea ron the chain gang of New Hanover county for vio lation of the banking laws, is to be freed by commutation of his ten year sentence by the State court to a sentence of one year. Worse men than Tom Cooper have escaped with one prison term, and it is gratifying that Governor McLean has shorten ed the sentence from the State court. 4 -. : *| Senator Copeland, of New York, came down the other day and made an Al. Smith speech in Charlotte. The crowd was limited to the size of the court room in which he spoke, but it is estimated that near a thou sand representative citizens, of Char lotte, and nearby towns, heard and applauded him when he showed that Catholics are not the demons they are sometimes pictured. ffe. showed a photographed copy of the bond that secured the freedom of Jeffer son Davis - from Federal prison and menace of the gallows. The bond was signed by New York Catholics. He referred to Judge Gaston, an other patriotic Catholic. . Senator » Copeland declared Smith is 4iot against the nullification of the pro hibition amendment, that the amend ment is here to stay, but Smith is in favor of repealing or amending the Volstead act which defines an in toxicant as one containing a mini mum of one-half per cent, alcohol. The distinction between the amend ment and the Volstead definition of an intoxicant, uder which the mak ing of persimmon beer is probably prohibited, is a distinction that need ed to be emphasized. It seems that th eaverage man, thinks that the Volstead act is identical with the amendment forbidding the manufac ture and sale of intoxicants. About the repeal of the former no ques tion is raised by the Smith candi dacy; but the definition of “intoxi cant” is another question. One woMd have to drink almost a gallon of a half-percent concoction to get a ctibic inch of alcohol, and there certainly is room for doubt as to the correctness of a definition that makes such a liquid an “intoxicant.” There is no question that Gover nor McLean has chosen a capable man for secretary of state, and here is hoping that Mr. Hartness will have no opposition in the primary for the retention of his place. Since the Charlotte eonvention practically every man who has filled a state house office following the nominees erf that noted convention have been appointees or deputies, indicating that, after all, the people hav,e very little to say in the election of those officials. The appointees have been in all cases as strong men as could have been secured through the pri mary, if not stronger. Anyway, the people have ratified the choices of the appointing power, and we hope it will be so in the case of Mr. Hartness. The one exception to the rule cited above is Mr. Grist, who won in a primary through the sup port of the American Legion. In truth, the way things have turned out, there is good argument for making the state-house officials ap pointive. Certainly a Governor has a better chance to know the quality of applicants than has the average voter. NEW HILL NEWS Messrs W. H. and R. C. Beckwith attended the funeral Thursdav after noon of Mr. Mills who was the for mer’s brother i n law. Mr. Mills had been sick a long time. He was laid to rest in the Greenlevel cemetery. Wilma Goodwin, the little daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Goodwin, has been confined a week with pneu monia, another little daughter, Fran ces has influenza. We hope these little girls will soon recover. I Mr. G. F. Carr spent last week in Southern Georgia, with his aged mother, Mrs. Amie Carr, who is ill. Mr. Carr was accompanied by a brother from Washington, D. C. Dr. C. G. Upchurch is sick and j has been for several days. We re | gret very much that he is sick and hope he will soon be well again. And too. he has so many patients need ing him badly. We were sorry to learn of the | death of Mrs. Henrietta Poe who died at her home in Apex last week, after a lengthy illness. Mrs. Poe was reared in Chatham county and was before her marriage Miss El more. She was a very good woman, and was. held in high esteem by all * j who knew her. She was brought to Gum Springs j and laid to rest. j After an illness of two weeks Mrs. C. D. Moore passed away last Fri day night. All that professional and loving hands could do was done to relieve her of her sufferings and if possible restore her to her health again. She was before her marri age, Miss Ada Council, only daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Council. She was married about forty-eight years ago to Mr. Carey D. Moore, to this union there was born six daugh ters and three sons. One daughter, Mrs. Nina Copeland, died years ago. The youngest daughter, Mrs. R. E. Boone, died the last of January of 1927. Tfte four surviving daughters are Mrs. Walter Stone, Mrs. L. A. Copeland*' Mrs. R. L. Hatcher and Miss JenrHe Moore. The sons are Ernest aitd Bennett Moore of Ra leigh and -Newton Mdore of Pittsbo ro. She .also leaves her devoted husband and eleven grand childrens Mrs. Moose was nearing her 67th birthday. She was especially gifted in all kinds of fancy work, and was never idle. She was laid, to rest in Pleasant Hill cemetery Sunday af ternoon, beneath a mound of beau tiful flowers. She was a member of this church, funeral services \vere conducted by Rev. Cad Norris and Rev. R. R. Gordon, both of the Bap-- tist church. There were many peo ple present at the funeral —many coming from a distance. Messrs B. W. and James Thomas | of Henderson spent Sunday with Mrs. Bettie Mr. and Mrs. Frances Mann and two of Raleigh,” were Sun day guests <*f Mr. W. T. Mann. ~ We are sorry to note the 'illness of Messrs. W. A. Drake and Clar ence Holt, and hope they will soon be well again. Mrs. Charlie Bryan of Apex, Mrs. Clarence Desern, and Miss Grizell and Leslie opeland of Raleigh were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Copeland. Mrs. J. H. Webster and little daughter, Eveiyn of Greensboro are -guests of Mrs. Addie Webster and family. , Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Sturdivant of Cary spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Sturdivant, BRICK HAVEN NEWS Mr. P. C. Cox of Franklinville was the week-end guest here of Mr. B. M. Dickens. Miss Cecil 'Seawell spent Satur day and Sunday with her father, Mr. J. W. Seawell of Carthage. Miss Ruth Kennedy who has been convalescing from an attack of meas les returns to Salem Academy to day where she resumes her studies. Ruth is a member of the senior class and is making an enviable scholar ship record. The oyster supper given under the j auspices of the Brick Haven S. S. ! although not successful financially as we had hoped*—was a very enjoy able occasion* indeed. The evening passed quickly and pleasantly and we wonder if it would not be wise to l have these get-to-gether meetings more often. The good-will and fel lowship enjoyed at these meetings is well worth while. Rev. and Mrs. C. L. Dowell and j Miss Della Dowell, of Forestville i were recent guests here of Mrs. O. C. Kennedy. Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson of Raleigh spent Saturday in the Mi lage. Mr. Johnson is the very effi cient and popular secretary of the Cherokee Brick company. Mr. and Mrs. ft. H. Overby and j children spent, the week-end at Me- j Cullers with Mr. Overby’s parent.;. Mrs. Claire L. Harrington and children were week-end guests of rel atives of Aberdeen. Mr. Ben Utley of Mt. Gilead spent j Sunday here with his mother. Mrs. j J. W. Utley. Miss Virginia Catheli cf Raleigh was a recent guest here of Mfss Ruth Kennedy. The community Civic club will hold its regular monthly meeting at the school Thursday evening. Every member is urged to be present. Mrs. Lawton, nee Miss Louise Harrington, spent last week here with her parents. Mrs. Henry Gorham, formerly Miss Eunice Thompson is spending a while here as the guest of her pa rents.. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Thompson. Tom Thompson is quite ill with a severe cold. We hope there will be no complications and that he will soon be out again. -His father, who was very sick for a few days the past week is able to be out. Little Jewell Lane Overby was also on the sick list last week. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Harrington and little Misses Mildred and Phyl lis Harrington spent several days j last week with Mrs. Harrington’s pa- ! rents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Buchanan j of Bonsel. - BROWN’S CHAPEL NEWS \ _____ Tuesday of last week a residence more than a hundred years old, but in good condition, was burned. It was. occupied by Mr. Numa Cole. Mr. Cole discovered the flames, of w'hich had already broken through the roof, when he started out to work j right after breakfast. His call brofj help and, owing to the fact that the old home had double doors, much of | the furniture was saved. Fortunate ly, too there was $llOO insurance, which will help in building back. For the present Mr. Cole and family are ! housed in a little outhose which he i and sever-al of his good neighbors fit- i ted up for occupancy. Mi*. I. E. Crutchfield, in helping to lift a wheel of a small gasoline en- • gine, tore some tissues loose from i his backbone and is confined to his bed. I Mr. J. B. Thompson is suffering ! from high blood pressure and is \ under a physician’s treatment. We hope next Sunday will be a pretty day and that Rev. C. M. Lance I will have a large congregation, as I an important matter is to be brought ‘ before bis people. THE CHATHAM RECORD I 1 Today I SOMETHING NEW IN TAXES I MARRIAGE A SCHOOL | SAVE A LITTLE PROTECT NATURAL RE SOURCES By ARTHUR BRISBANE A learned legislator says married women ought not to work* and if their husbands earn as much as $2,- 000 a year, the woman’s earnings should be taxed 20 per cent. - Under old laws a husband could take what his wife earned; even now in England he controls the children that she produces. V For the State to rebuke her in dustry by taxing her earnings. 20 per cent would be something nev£* Bolshevism decides that little girls must_ not play with dolls, because that encourages the bourgeois or i capitalist idea of . family life»-devel | oping a taste for motherhood and , | household duties. Bolshevism interprets the little girl with 3 doll correctly, but will ..no more overcome the love of dolls than it could overcome the instinct jof self preservation. Maternity is | planted in the hearts .of little girls by a Power far above .Bolshevism, just as angbition of kind is planted In the hearts of little boys. An dthat ambition is what makes Communism an impossibility. Dr. M.'S. Taylor wires from Chir cago, your opinion on legalizing companionate marriage.” That question was settled when Eve appeared from Adam’s rib. Woman is naturally monagamous, is determined to make man so, will do jt eventually, and marriage is the of jiionogamy. A companionate marriage expres ses doubt, proves lack of The confi dence on which marriage should be based, and, while it is perfectly legal now, divorce being legal, it is a poor, cold-blooded sort of marriage, v - Fortunately, the average young couple have no doubts whatever, and ’ only regret the marriage cannot last a million years just t oprove it. it. v Sometimes they are disappointed, nearly always through the husband’s fault. But meanwhile the children have been born, blessed with the in fluence of trust and affection. The value of a man depends on the respect of his father and his mother for each other. If husband and wife start marri- j age in doubt, each leaving the door j open for escape, the Children’s in- 1 feriority will reflect their parents’ 1 “I may decide to quit” marriage. The important thing in marriage is the quality of the children, and ! the next generation, j William Fox has bought 307 more i theatres, seating 350.000 for SIOO,- i 000,000. Twenty-five years ago, Fox got in- j to the theatre business because his j employer refused to pay his sl7 a | ! week salary. Fox had just married. , The employer said, “Not only I j can’t raise your sl7 a week, but 1 yon are getting $2 too much. I am j ioing to pay what you are worth, ! $15.” Fox had saved SSBO on sl7 a j w'eek, got control of a tiny moving ; picture theatre, that could take in j $7.30 when packed. Now he has | 356 theatres. Always save something. If you have brains it will increase. If not, raving will out of the poor \ house, anyway. - j The Prince of Wales, hopefully ’ discussing trade revival, wonders whether human beings invented ear rings or trousers first. Man’s pas sion for adornment, he thought, j probably produced earrings before j clothes. 1 He is right about that. Darwin tells of Patagonian ladies, living in a climate often bitter, that would not think of coming from their huts to let a stranger see them until they had painted their faces and arranged their hair. But they did come out without one stitch of clothing. A British nobleman, by the way, owns a pearl earring taken from the ear of King Charles the First after his head had been cut off. The United States pays more to ward the expenses of the League of Nations than any other country ex cept Britain —although we are not Watch for the New Things! I The buyers are in New York this week, I searching the market for the very newest if things to be found. | The only way we can prove to you that we have the Newest X Always, and at a price you will not find Any Other Place is to see \ gui line. Come in and let us show you whether you buy or not. || CAVINESS SHOP } PjTTSejORO, N. C. SILER CITY, N. C. 1 in the League. That’s usual. We paid more than any other nation for that war—about fifty-nine million dollars a day while we were in it, and we lent the allied fighters ten thou sand millions of dollars—yet it was n’t our war. Our troubles will come in Ameri ca when our natural resources are exhausted—coal, iron, oil, forests, etc. At present we are busy using, wasting. Some day we may be busy regretting. Emil Kekich, sent to Sweden by Herbert Hoover’s Depart ment of Commerce, reports- that Sweden has solved her forest prdb lem. The annual growth of timber in ! Sweden exceeds the annual cut- j ting by 100,000,000 cubic feet, or , 1,200,000,00# lineal feet. MOVES HERE FROM HALIFAX i ■ i At the instance of Mr. J. L. Love, j Come To Pittsboro | ' - jj: ;> Wednesday Afternoon, Feb. 22, :: j; (Washington’s Birthday) and see the !►, NEW FORD TRUCK I j: ' ;> | in our snow rooms. i: J! This truck will be here for the afternoon only, and J[ <► we want you to see it. ~ J! O • •• *' * o ■ Weeks Motor Co. o Pittsboro, North Carolina ■"<* Jt n o j EXTRA SPECIAL I Three packages KOTEX for |j I 98c | . . || 1 Regular 65c sizes ;; X <« ♦ Ladies’ House Dresses in prints with neat organ* o ♦ dy trimmings. Large assorted patterns. Sizes 16 to \\ 2 48 going each— <► I 98c I Z New lot ladies’ Coat Suits made of tweed and Jt X Kashir cloth. Crepe de Chine lined— ]► I $9.95 | | Williams-Belk Co. jj ♦ Steele Street, Sanford, N. C. <[ I 1 ~ Mr. N. L. Shaw, of Halifax county, has moved to Chatham with his fam ily. He has brought Mr. Bob Far rell’s old home place near Pittsboro, and will soon be located there. His family has been here for a few weeks, on one of the Bland farms. Mr. Love, who is himself a native of Halifax, says that Mr. Shaw is a good man, a good neighbor and a good farmer. He aiso predicts that other Halifax farmers will soon be coming this way. Land up here is much cheaper than in Halifax, but Mr. Love says that Chatham land will produce -as good crops as the ! higher priced Halifax lands. { Let the good work go on.. The j Record welcomes Mr. Nash, and hope, to see others ’from his old section ! come up to Chatham. I Mr. Shaw paid every dollar of the j price of the farm cash, and that j indicates the kind of farmer he is. PAGE FOUR