— _ n A Paper w estige of a H* curj. A Cou * a Com / Paper. I ESTABLISHED SEPTEMBER 19, 1878. entwistle MILL I BUYS ROBERDELS Stockholders of Roberdel Mffe. Co., Sells Physical Prop erty to Entwistle —$ (From The Post-Dispatch) One of the most important deals, . transfers, made in this section in manv years took place Wednesday when the stockholders of the Rober- V Mfg. Co., sold the property of the c .mpanv, consisting of two large mills, to tfie Entwistle Mfg. so. The deal was consummated at a [.roe meeting of the stockholders Wednesday. The best offer made f r the property was from the En tivistle Mfg. Co., that company, through its spokesman, William Har ry Entwistle, offering par for the , ,ek and assume all indebtedness. T: ; offer was accepted. It means t v, a t the Roberdel stockholders will !ret SIOO cash for each share of stock, or be given the privilege of taking 7 per cent preferred stock in the Entwistle Mfg. Co. The Roberdel Mfg. Co., was or ganized back in 1882. Mill No. 1 was completed in 18S3, and along .bout 1902 another minn was built, known as Mill No. 2. At intervals additions were made to the mills, until at the present time the two Roberdel mills have 1116 looms and 32.000 spindles. Entwistle mill has 1300 looms and 53,760 spindles. The Roberdel mills are listed for taxation at $891,868, and Entwistle at sl,- 006.378. The acquisition now by the En twistle mill of the two Roberdel Mills gives the Entwistle Mfg. Co., a total of 2416 looms and 85,760 spindles. The President of the . Entwistle Mfg. Co., is Mr. William Entwistle, one of the pioneer mill men of this section and one of the ablest in the country. The Secretary-Treasurer is his son, Mr. George P. Entwistle, and the General Manager is his grandson, Mr. William Harry Entwistle. Recipe for a Very Happy New Year — — The following recipe for a Happy New Year is furnished by J. L. Bank head. Hamlet Chevrolet dealer. Bank head says he knows it will work, be cause he has seen it tried: “Take twelve fine, full-grown months, see that these are thoroughly free from all memories of bitterness, rancor, hate, and jealousy; cleanse them completely from every clinging spite; pick off all specks of pettiness and littleness; in short, see that these months are freed from all the past— have them as fresh and clean as when they first came from the great store house of Time. “Cut these months into thirty or thirty-one equal parts. This batch will keep for just one year. Do not attempt to make up the whole batch at one time (so many persons spoil the entire lot in this way), but pre pare one day at a time, as follows: “Into each day put 12 parts of faith, eleven of patience, ten of courage (some people omit this in gredient and so spoil the flavor of the rest), eight of hope, seven of fidelity, six of liberality, five of kind-1 ress, four of rest (leaving this out i? like leaving the oil out of the salad—don’t do it), three of prayer, two of meditation, and one well-se lected resolution. If you have no conscientious scruples, put in about 3 teaspoonful of good spirits, a dash °* fun, a pinch of folly, a sprinkling °f play, and a heaping cupful of good humor. “Pour into the whole love ad lib itum. and mix with a vim. Cook thor oughly in a fervent heat; garnish wi:.i a few smiles and a sprig of J°.v; then serve with quietness, un selfishness and cheerfulness, and a H I PP.v New Year is a certainity.” CAROLINA CADILLAC COMPANY CLOSES DOWN ® The Carolina Cadillac Company, of inston-Salem, one of the biggest automobile firms in the state, filed a antary petition in bankruptcy in federal court last Friday. According 0 the schedule filled out the company /as assets of more than $100,000.00 ! n ex cess of liabilities, but continuing losses made operation impractical. ! y urged off. Increasing number of of cars during the past f gnteen months and falling off of niMness is given as the reason far nrm quitting. ‘ — $ COVERING ON PEACH INSTITUTE COMMITTEE | ! to pressure ot other matters -upn Page of Aberdeen has resign yy.; a member of the executive com u ee of the Carolinas Peach Insti- and Robert S. Lovering of Jack ‘'? n _ priugs has been named in his r " 3 ’ 'l ac "k H. Davis of Clinton, S. Was - as t week added to the com : e-. completing the South Caro hna membership. v The Chatham Record the Christmas j L UJi IliumL.<&Lston iij/fnri ' THE Christmas city ev- M erybody called him Uncle ■v&y I Kriss. None of the young | people knew that lie had any other name. But ev erybody knew that Christ mas would not be Christ // 'I mas if Uncle Kriss did not direct the festivities. Uncle Kriss was neither rich nor poor. He had no family of his own. Nature fashioned him on the pattern of Santa Claus. He was never happier than when planning' a happy Christ mas for the town —the town which came to be called the Christmas city. Long before Christmas Uncle Kriss would go day after day with the boys and girls into the hills to gather ever greens and red berries for wreaths. A truck was sent to haul them to town. Then for a full week every body worked mak ing Christmas , . wreaths. A big P bow of red crepe I jj ;jpj paper was fastened I j^jLJLj| to the bottom' of |OLjOJ : each wreath. On the day be- ; __±s fore Christmas =•=#' there was a Christ- 'f/fa mas wreath in the ""|j front window of 1 SI every home, rich ——l o r poo r. Tli e Christmas city . -As jM looked to be, as 1 it really was, the Bh| home of Santa iRIH Claus. There was jf "f| always a big tree 'I * erected in the street downtown and decorated with colored lights, cotton and tinsel. A small tree was sent to every home in town where there was a child.* “Give the people plenty of Christmas,” Uncle Kriss used to say, and they will need no police nor jail. The town had a small jail but only once in ten years had there been anybody in it on Christmas day, and then there was a Christmas wreath in the little window behind the iron bars. On Christmas morning Uncle Kriss formed the men into a company of gfiod fellows and sent them from home to home among the poor to see that no child was missed and no one was cold or hungry on Christmas day, in the Christinas city. ((c). 1929, Western Newspaper Union.) $ MR. PERRY’S BIRTHDAY While the editor was down feasting at the Governor’s ansion in the oc casion so his birthday last Thursday evening, Mr. B. A. Perry, who has the same birthday, but is only 52 years old, was being given a surprise by Mrs. Perry with a birthday sup per. Guests present were Mr. and Mrs. Orren Rives and Mr. H. A. Bynum. $ DEATH OF MRS JONES Mrs. Loula Jones, who for many months has been an invalid, died at the home of her nieces, Mesdames Pauline and Emily Taylor, last Friday night. The burial was at New Bern Sunday, beside her husband, who is buried in that city. Mrs. Jones was a most estimable lady and had many friends in Pitts boro and other parts of the state who regret her passing. LEE COUNTY BOY SECURES 94.4 BUS. CORN PER ACRE Walker Thomas, a twelve-year-old boy of Jonesboro, according to the Sanford Express, made a yield of 94.4 bushels of corn on his club acre. Allowing ten dollars for the rent of the land, 20 cents an hour for his own and hired labor and ten cents an hour for the use of a horse, $3.00 for each load of barnyard manure, and deducting the value of more than two tons of stover, he estimates the cost of the corn per bushel at 26.5 cents. There is hardly any question that the land is in better condition than it was before the crop was grown. The way to make corn is to make it. No acre of corn should be planted in Chatham county next year without the reasonable expectation of making fifty bushels to the acre, unless it is upon land where • there is risk of flooding and the use of fertilizer in sufficient quantities would increase unduly the risk of loss. But there is plenty of land in Chatham above flood water levels, and on these it is easier and safer to make 50 busnels to the acre than 15 bushels. At the latter rate one must have o 3 1-3 acres of land to make a hundred bar rels of corn and do three and a third times as much plowing, and more hoe work, for the ranker the crop the fewer weeds. PITTSBORO, N. C., CHATHAM COUNTY, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1929 more rror- that c-cntercd the /Y'VA /f / 0/\ (\ \ . \ i^stianffalHvbboULa"Chjld'. J* l%hOn sLv**/\\ Little children, with theim laugh ter // *//// A and/4£ars, their joys andl tiieir sodn-fer-^/ Jy/yZ* ins till cits oLatljinankjnd,)“f£r 1 L such isThe I the family, and the family I the true spirit of ' ce of Christ maT^%^?tcr?vsrycrevic€ ? f /U// lif&, but-ofily about v. jy ' die family hearths tor e know tne i fulLglow ofjjs effulgent warmtii |Vjr j i ATgjJE.instinct / | J. spoLthe^souUwhich Lrz^V it family together and ifi/y come again as y -j I \/// * Then the aWdoft- j)/1 j/UlmTc \ 'lk /lm'/( PROSPERITY AND THE EVIL ENCHANTMENT At the wonderful “iive-at-home” dinner served Thursday evening at the Governor’s Mansion, not a reg ular speech was made, but the following article from Gardner’s hand, or head and heart, printed on the menu, served to carry the all-sufficient message to the editors of the State, and through them to the great hosts of their readers. It follows. Digest it as well as the editors present digested the great variety of home-grown viands that greeted thm on that festal' ocasion and it will do you. PROSPERITY AND THE EVIL ENCHANTMENT North Carolina’s supreme problem today is the pro ri”^ + ion of elementary necessities. The millions sent out of the State annually for the purchase of food and feed stuff which might easily be produced at home represents nn extravagance and a loss which must shortly, unless immediate and far-reaching remedial action is taken, re sult in economic disaster. This is potentially one of the richest agricultural regions in the entire world. There is no reason, other tHan onr owri deliberate disregard of familiar economic laws, why it should not be a land blossoming in pros peritv and with the gaunt spectres of undernourishment and hunger unheard of. What is there that we need that we can not nroduce at home? Is there anv evil enchant ment unou North Carolina’s rich acres that would prevent the growth of corn, wheat, potatoes, beans, apples, hay, „ and the great secondary crops of cattle, hogs, and poul try ? Thp only evil enchantment I know of is that of the po-raUed “™onev crons.” Deserting the green oasis of diversified farming, our people have followed the mirage n f Vt m rQ nrofits cotton and tobacco into a trackless desert of uncertaintv and gloom and instead of the antici pated profits, they have harvested deficits and, in a tragic of instances, actual undernourishment and want have resulted. This dinner, p-iven chiefly in honor of the members of the North Carolina Press Association because of their £reat power to shape and mould public opinion, drama tizes a single remedy for serious situation. Let North Carolina produce its elemental food necessities and pros perity and plentv will not be long in returning. For the process is cumulative in its operation and the more corn, hogs, cattle and poultry we raise, the more will our cotton and bring. In this wav—and in this wav onlv —can thev be once more converted from “hunger” into “money” crops and substantial and enduring prosperity assured. O. MAX GARDNER, • Governor. AjTSnN THE east of a cloudless M sky shone a bright star as p||ij I a beacon, over the town. I Groups of town folk hur —sPTvgz* rying in its direction ap peared as the wise men w * lo followed the star of Every one would be attending the Christmas entertainment given, at the church, so no need to keep his fruit shop open, decided Matt Hughes, as he joined the happy joyous throng bound in that direction. From where he sat he could plainly see the star, and he fell to dreaming of another Christmas when that same star shone as brightly as now, but instead of the snow-clad hills of New England there was the wide expanse of the California desert. Across that desert toward the star rode a lone horseman, a song on his lips and a smile on his face. From his saddle hung several packages in the bright holiday wrappings. As he jirew near a cabin the song changed to a shout of greeting which died to a low exclamation of surprise as he saw there was no welcoming light. After searching in the dark he had struck a light, and then had come the discovery of the written message. It was the same old story —unaccustomed to the desert the confronting one trying to conquer it had proved too big. How ard James, the playmate of his child hood, college friend and later neigh bor out here in the West, proved now to be the real love of Dolly Hughes instead of Matt. One day the name James Howard was spoken in his presence; the sim ilarity in the name of his former friend caused him to locate the man. Then he learned that Dolly had not survived long after reaching there. Matt Silently Extended His Gift. With a curse on his lips the husband left, and although the two had lived in the same village for several years, they had never spoken to each other; but Matt had never revealed the identity of the other man. Words of the program mingled with his dream, such as “The Glory of the Lord shone ’round” and “They brought Him gifts” and the words of the min ister at parting—“ Little children love one another.” An idea which formed quickly in his mind crystallized into action and Matt found himself hurrying first to his 1 shop and then to a little home in the other part of town. Entering the presence of his once while friend, Matt silently extended his gift. “Matt!” the word was half a ques tion and half an exclamation. The ; one addressed placed his offering in , the other man’s hands. 1 “Howard,” he said, “I have brought a token of forgiveness.” As he saw 1 what the basket contained Howard - clasped the gift more tightly. “A basket of California grapes!” he cried over and over. “Just what I have longed for.” “Why it’s only a basket of grapes,” stammered Matt “No,” Howard after a moment re plied in a choked voice, “it’s much more than that; it’s an answer to prayer.” “Well,” Matt said as he turned to go, “I’m glad that you like them.” At the door he turned and extended his hand. “Merry Christmas, Howard,” he said. The other grasped the outstretched hand —“Merry Christmas Matt, and Cod bless you.” Anu the next mo ment the bearer of the gift was out under the stars. (©. 1929, Western Newspaper Union.) Subscribers at Every Postoffice and All R. F. D. Routes in Great County of Chatham VOLUME NTTMRER 15 19 GIANT RAILROAD SYSTEMS PROPOSED I. C. C. Plan Would Make Great Changes; Seaboard May Oppose Merger 4'. ' . , ... ■ Consolidation of steam railroads into 19 competing' units that would radically re-shape the nation’s trans portation map was outlined by the interstate commerce commission Sat urday in its long expected unification program drawn by direction of con gress. Two of these systems would be in New England, five in the east outside of New England, three in the south and nine in the west. This plan w r ould hook up the Sea board with the Norfolk & Western and other roads built around the Wabash as the key road for the unit, and would make an incongruous rail system extending from St. Louis to Philadelphia and Baltimore, and thence down the coast to Miami and back west to Birmingham. A num ber of the big systems are expected to oppose the plan, and the Seaboard is almost sure to join them. The report drew immediate protest from western senators and Democratic leaders in congress because it pro vides for no trans-continental route, connecting the Pacific and the Atlan tic seaboards. The Southern Railway and the Atlantic Coast Line would be left practically as at present, with added mileage to their control, v It is in the Seaboard hook-up that most in terest in this section centers. Under the commission’s plan this system would be one of the longest in track mileage and the most ill-shaped big rail system in the world. The lines allotted to this system include the following: Wabash-Seaboard System Wabash, Lehigh Valley, Wheeling and Lake Erie, Pittsburgh and West Virginia, Western Maryland, Akron, Canton and Youngstown, Toledo, Peoria and Western, the Ann Arbor, Chesapeake and Ohio of Indiana, the New Jersey, Indiana and Illinois, the Manistique and Lake Superior, the Norfolk and Western, the Air Line, the Toledo and Ironton (one-half undivided inter est), the Chaffee; the East Berlin, the Emmitsburgh; the Susquehannah and New York, the Williamsport and Noi'th Branch, the Chesapeake West ern, the Valley River, the Big Sandy and Cumberland, Franklin and Pitts ylvania, Marion and Rye Valley, the Virginia Southern, Cumberland and Pennsylvania (undivided one-third interest,) the Aberdeen and Rockfish; the Bennettsville and Cheraw, the Birmingham and Southeastern, the Buffalos, Union Carolina, the Cape Fear, the Cliffside, the Carolina-and Northeastern, Durham and Southern, the Edgemoor and Manetta; the Piedmont and Northern, the Georgia, the Southwestern and Gulf, the Greenville and Northern, the High Point, Thomasville and Denton, the Lawndale railway, the Macon, Dublin and Savannah, the Maxton, Alma and Southbound, the St. Louis and Han nibal, the Mpore Central, the St. Mary’s, the Atlantic and Yadkin, the Townesville, the Virginia Southern, the Warrenton, the Mcßay Terminal, the Tampa Northern, half interest in the Winston-Salem Southbound; and, half interest in some other lines. ——<3> McDowell Deputies Freed by Verdict Eight deputies of McDowell coun ty, on trial last week at Burnsville for the death of six textile strikers in the rioting at Marion, October 2, were declared not guilty by the Yancey county jury. The jury de liberated on the case for 22 hours. The verdict was anticipated over the state, news reports of the trial in dicating that the defendants had made out a good self defense plea. The eight men tried were Webb Fender, Robert Ward, Charles Tate, Taylor Greene, William Twiggs, •James Owens, Broadus Robbins and Dave Jarrett. They were indicted on a second degree murder charge. Ju-age G. V. Cowper completed his charge to the jury at 11:20 Friday morning and the verdict was render ed at 9:30 Saturday. One of the jurors is reported to have said that the jury stood ten to two for acquit tal the night before, the two who held out for conviction being won over after a night’s sleep. ® Banker of Charlotte Admits Embezzlement H. L. Davenport, vice president of the Ameircan Trust Company of Charlotte, one of the biggest ba'nks m this section, was. arrested Satur day on a charge of misappropriating 548.000 of the bank’s funds. He ad mitted his guilt. The shortage in his accounts was discovered Wednesday, and 7 s said to have occurred in con nection with the recent stock market crash. Davenport was bonded for more than SIOO,OOO and the bank will suffer no loss, unless a final check up shows the amount taken to be much more than now seems likely.