LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE
Having qualified as administrator
on the estate of James A. King, de
ceased, before D. M. Weatherly
Clerk of Superior Court of Randolph
County; All persons having claims
against said estate are notified to
present them to the undersigned, du
ly verified, on or before the 20th day
of February, 1926, or this notice will
be pleaded in bar of their recovery;
and all persons owing said estate will
come forward and make immediate
settlement.
This 14th day of February, 1925.
W. C. KING,
304 Howell Street,
6t 2 19 25 High Point, N. C.
NOTICE OF LAND SALE
UNDER MORTGAGE 1
By virtue of the power vested in
the undersigned by that certain mort
gage deed made by W. L. Winslow
and his wife D. A. Winslow, and dat
ed the 18th day of August 1923,
which mortgage is duly recorded in
Bobk 200 at page 577 in the office of
the Register of Deeds of Randolph
county and default having been made
In the payment thereof, the under
signed will on Monday the 80th day
of March, 1925, at 3 o’clock P. M.,
on the premises in Trinity township,
^ Randolph county, North Carolina, sell
at public auction for cash to the high- '
est bidder the two following tracts
of land, being in Trinity township, 1
county and state aforesaid, adjoining
the lands R. E. Coltrane, Mrs. Nan
nie Craven and others and being
more fully described as follows:
Tract No. 1: Beginning at an iron
stake in middle of road in Coltrane’s
line, thence East 12 1-2 rods to Nan
nie Craven’s and Coletrane’s corner;
thence North 14 rods to a stone, Hen
ry Craven’s comer; thence east 19
1-4 rods to a white oak, Bundy’s line;
thence North 1 8-4 rods to an iron
stake in Bundy's line; thence West
28 1-4 rods to an jjon stake in mid
dle of road; thence South along said
road 14 1-4 rods to the beginning cor
ner, containing 1 1-4 acres more or
less.
Tract No. 2: A certain tract or par
cel of land lying and being in Trinity
township, Randolph county, North
Carolina, adjoining the lands of A. F.
Younts on the West, Banner Leach
on the South, Loflin on the east and
S. R. Winslow on the North, contain
ing 16 acres more or less, and being
the same land willed to W. L Wins
low by J. R. Winslow; said will being
duly docketed in the office of the
Clerk of the Superior Court of Ran
dolph county, North Carolina.
This the 28th day of February,
1925.
J. D. HEDRICK, Mortgagee.
D. R. YOUNTS, Assignee.
H C. Royals, Atty for Assignee.
4t 3 5 25.
NOTICE OF LAND SALE
UNDER MORTGAGE
By virtue of the power vested in
the undersigned by that certain Mort
gage Deed made by A. V. Williams
and Flora Williams his wife dated the
8th day of August, 1923. Recorded
in Book 201 at page 332 in the Of
fice of the Register of Deeds for
Randolph county. I will sell at Pub
lic Auction for cash to the highest
bidder on the 28th day of March, 1925,
at 12 o’clock M., at the court house
door in Asheboro, N. C., the following
lands situated in Randolph county.
First Tract: Being numbered and
designated on map of Columbia
Heights as lot No. 5 in block No. 2
and of the size and dimensions as
shown on said map which is duly re
corded in the office of the Register
of Deeds of Randolph County to which
said map and registration refference
is hereby made for a more accurate
description of the property herein
conveyed.
Second Tract: Beginning at a birch
on the East bank of Deep Rhrer;
thence East with Cox’s and Fox’s
lines 82.50 chains to a stone Fox’s
and Stout’s comer in Fox line; thence
North with said Stout line»to a bunch
of maples near a small stream;
thenoe up said stream about North
west to a maple; thence with the va
rious courses of a stream to middle
of Fox and Cox Road; thence along
said road about North to a stone in
middle of said road to H. C. Chish
olm’s line; thenoe about Bast with
H. C. Chisholm’s fyntt to a stone at
the edge of the wo^, H- C. Chith
olma comer; f“*
about *0 yds. to
about
stake
fault
debt secured by said mortgage deed;
Said default having been this sale is
accordingly made under said
This the '23rd day of
1925.
JAMES A.
4t 3 5 25
NOTICE
Having qualified aa executor on tha
estate of L. E. Brady, daaeased, be
fore D. H. Weatherly, Clerk of the
Superior Court of Randolph County;
all persons having claims against
said estate are notified to present
them to the undersigned, duly veri
fied, on or before the 14th day of
March, 1928, or this notion will be
pleaded in bar. of their recovery; and
all persons owing said eetata will
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
Pursuant to authority given in. a
certain deed of trust, bearing date
of December 28, 1922, and recorded in
the office of Register of Deeds for
Randolph County, in book 200, at
page 320, by J. B. Beck and his wife,
Annie Beck, to I. C. Moser, trustee,
to secure the payment of a certain
bond of even date therewith for five
hundred ($500.00) dollars and the in
terest due on said bond, default hav
ing been made in the payn^nt of said
bond and the interest due thereon,
both principal and interest being now
past due, and written request haying
been made by the holder of said bond
upbn said trustee for the payment
thereof, the undersigned, trustee, will
at 12 o’clock, M., on Saturday, the
28th day of March, 1925, at the court
| house door, in Asheboro, North Caro
jlina, sell to the highest bidder, for
cash, at public auction, the following
described tract or parcel of land, sit
|uate, lying and being in Richland
j Township, Randolph County, North
I Carolina, and more fully described by
metes and bounds as follows, to-wit:
Beginning at rock comer, Bettie
Johnson’s comer and runs West 18
! chs. and 52 Iks. to a stone comer;
[thence South 4 2-3 degrees West 1
chain and 80 Iks. to a stone; thence
North 80 degrees West 1 chain and
86 Iks. to a stone on the East bank of
the creek; thence down the various
courses of said creek 25 chs. and 27
Iks. to a stone in the East side of
said creek, P. S. Bean’s line; thence
East 80 chs. to a stone; thence North
18 chs. and 63 Iks. to the beginning;
'containing fifty (50) acres, mere or
This the 23rd day of February,1925.
I. C. MOSER, Trustee.
4t. 3-6-26.
NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND
Under and by virtue of an order of
the Superior Court of Randolph coun
ty, North Carolina, made in a certain
special proceeding entitled S. Q. Col
trane et al Vs. Mary S. Tyer, the same
being No. 510 on the Special Proceed
ing Docket of said county, the under
signed commissioner will at 12
‘o’clock, M., on Saturday, the 4th
day of April, 1925, sell at public auc
tion, the the highest bidder, for cash,
at the court house door in Asheboro,
North Carolina, those certain tracts
or parcels of land lying and being in
New Market Township, Randolph
County, North Carolina, adjoining the
lands of W. L. Steed, W N. Coltrane,
S. XI. Coltrane and others and being
more fully described by metes and
bounds as follows, to-wit:
Tract No. 1: Beginning at a stone
on the East side of the gravel road,
Walter Coltrane’s comer, running
fEast 3 degrees South 8.90 chs. to a
stone; thence North 5.95 chs. to a
stone; thence West 7 chs. to a stake
in the gravel road; thence South 15
degrees West 6.40 chs. to the begin
ning, containing four and seventy
three one hundredths (4 73-100)
acres, more or less.
Tract No. 2: Beginning at a stake
in the gravel road North West comer
of lot No. 1, running East 7 chs. to a
stone; thence South 5.95 chs. to a
stone in Walter Coltrane’s line;
thence East 3 degrees South 22.60 chs.
to a stone on the West side of the
branch, Wm. Beason’s comer; thence
North 26 degrees East 11.50 chs. to
A stone formerly a black jack; thence
'North 62, East 13.87 chains to
a stone on the East side of the old
Coltrane Mill road, Steed’s comer;
thence North 22 degrees. West with
said mill road 8 chs. to a stone;
thence South 75 degrees West 30 chs.
to a stone; thence 12.50 chs. to a
stone in an old road; thence South
15 degrees West 8.75 chs. to the be
ginning, containing fifty-five (55)
acres more or less.
Tract No. 3: Beginning at a stone
on the East side of the old Coltrane
mill road, Steed’s comer, running
North 62 degrees East 20.13 chs. to
the middle of Deep River; thence up
the river 25.25 chs. to the ford and -a
rock in the ford; thence West 3 de
grees North 3.50 chs. to a pine;
thence West 38 degrees South 7.50
chs. to a big rock in the bank of
branch; thence 8 1-2 degrees West 5
chs. to a stone; thence West 3 1-2
South 2.25 chs. to a stone on the East
side of the old mill road; thence
South 26 East with the mill road 11.75
chs. to a black oak on the West side
of the road; thence South 22 degrees
East 11.40 chs. to the beginning, con
taining forty-nine (49) acres, more
or lass.
Tract No. 4: Beginning at a stone
in an old road, Northwest comer of
Dot No. t and running East 12.50
chs. «e a stone; thence North 75 de
grees East 30 chs. to a stone in the
old Coltrane Mill road; thence North
&2 degrees West 3.40 chs. to a black
oak on the West side of road; thence
North 26 degrees West 11.75 chs. to
a stone on the East side of said road;
thence West 3 1-2 degrees South 1.60
chs. to a rock in field; thence West 12
degrees North 9.40 chs. to m.
thence South 6.40 chs. to a
mon tree; thence West 18.36 chs. to
a stone on the West side of the grav
el road; thence South West with the*
gravel road 3.25 chs. to a stone on
the West side of the road; thence
degrees West 15 chs. to the
', containing fifty-eight .(68)
more or less.
No. 5: Beginning at a stone
West side of gravel road, run
1.35 chs. to a stone on the
of branch; thence South 15
West 2.60 chs. to a stone on
side of gravel road; thence
with the road to the
one-eigirth
*ra or less.
ofV.
it 3 12 26
the office of the Register of Deeds of
Randolph County, I will sell at pub
lic auction for cash to the highest
bidder on the 11th day of April, 1925, [
at 12 M., at the court house door in
Asheboro, N. C., the following lands
situated in Randolph county.
Beginning at a stone on the West;
side of Cox street, W, C. Hammer’s!
comer; thence along said street South !
3 dbgrees East 5 poles to a stone;
thence North 83 degrees West 12;
poles and 10 links to a stone at Fay
etteville Street; thence along said
street North 8 degrees West, 5 poles
to a stone, "V. C. Hammer’s comer;
thence on Hammer’s line Sotlth 83 de
grees East 12 poles and tea l'"ks to
the beginning containing three
eights of an acre more or less.
This sale is made on account of the;
non-payment of the sum of one thous
and dollars and interest secured by
said mortgage deed; said mortgage
deed contained a power of sale au
thorizing the undersigned to make a
sale of said land in the event of de
fault being made in the payment of
the debt secured by said mortgage
deed; said default having been this
sale is accordingly made under said
power.
This the 2nd day of March, 1925.
ESTELLA KIME,
4t 3 12 25 Mortgagee.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Having qualified as administrator
on the estate of W. L. Wood, de
ceased, late of the County of Ran
dolph, this is to notify all persons
| having c’aimj against said deceased,
co prereu: same to the undersigned
I on cr before the 1st day of March,
: 1C26, or this notice will be pleaded in
bar of their recovery.
This the 25th day of February,
1925.
C. H. WOOD,
Administrator of W. L. Wood, dec’d.
Asheboro, N. C.
6t 2 26 25.
NOTICE
Having qualified as executrix on the
estate of O. E. Henderson, deceased,
before D. M. Weatherly, Clerk of Su
perior Court of Randolph county; All
persons having claims against said
estate are notified to present them to
the undersigned, duly verified, on or
before the 14th day of March, 1926,
or this notice will be pleaded in bar
bf their recovery; and all persons ow
ing said estate will come forward and
make immediate settlement.
This 5th day of March, 1925.
MRS. FLORENCE M. HENDERSON,
Extrx., Archdale, N. C.
6t 3 12 25.
NOTICE
Having qualified as administrator
on the estate of T. M. Crowson, de
ceased, before D. M. Weatherly, Clerk
of Superior Court of Randolph coun
ty; All persons having claims against
said estate are notified to present
them to the undersigned, duly verified,
on or before the 14th day of March,
1926, or this notice will be pleaded in
bar of their recovery; and all persons
owing said estate will Come forward
and make immediate settlement.
This 9th day of March, 1925.
CHARLES W. REDDING,
6t 3 12 25 Trinity, Route 1, N. C.
NOTICE
North Carolina, Randolph County.
In Superior Court
Raleigh Butler, Adm.
vs
Naomi Baldwin, -- Martain,'
heirs at law of Mollie Martain, de
ceased.
To Flora Martain, take notice.
The defendants above named will !
take notice that an action entitled as
above has been commenced in the Su
perior Court of Randolph County to!
sell land to raise assets to pay the i
debts of Mollie Martain, deceased; and
that said defendant will further take
notice that she is required to appear
at the office’of the Clerk of the Supe
rior Court for Randolph County on the
28th day of March 1925 and plead or
demur to the petition filed in said ac
tion or the petitioner will apply to the
court for the relief demanded.
This the 27th day of February 1925.
D. M. WEATHERLY
Clerk of the Superior Court for Rand
olph county.
4t. 8 5 25
NOTICE OF PARDON
The undersigned hereby gives no
tice that he will on or before the 1st
day of May, 1926, apply to the Gov
ernor at North Carolina for a pardon.
Defendant submitted to receiving one
Ford Automobile knowing the same to
have been stolen, at the June Term
1924, of Superior Court of Randolph
county. All persons objecting to said
pardon or protesting against the same
Will file their objection'on or before
the date above mentioned.
This the 17th day of March, 1926.
BILL BURNS.
4t 3 19 25
administrator
Johnson, de
NOTICE
Having qualified at
on the estate of J. I.
ceased, before D. M. Weatherly, Clerk
of Superior Court of Randolph coun
ty; All persons having claims against
said estate are notified to present
them to the undersigned, duly verified,
on or before the 21st day of March,
1926, or this notice will be pleaded in
bay of their recovery; and all persons
owing said estate will come forward
and make immediate settlement.
1«th day of March, 1925.
L. C. JOHNSON, Admr.,
19 28 Franklinville,
der, for cash, at the court house door
in Randolph county, at 12 o’clock M.,
one the 25th day of April, 1925, the
following described real estate, to
wit: •
A certain piece or tract of land ly
ing and being in Randolph county,
North Carolina, adjoining the lands
of J. W. Johnson, Cranford Heirs and
others and bounded as follows:
Beginning at a stone heap formerly
a dogwood; thence South 38 chains to
:a stone heap, Snider’s comer; thence
West with Snider’s line 36 chains 38
links to a pine knot, Crosses comer;
thence with Spencer Wood’s line, now
C. R. Thompson’s 15 chs. and 75 Iks.
to pine knot formerly a white oak;
thence E. 2 chs. and 50 Iks. to a pine
kriot in Wood’s corner; thence North
'with Wood’s line 8 chains and 16 Iks.
to a hickory on the bank of Second
Creek; thence East with said creek 4
'chains and 75 links to a White Oak;
thence North 25 degrees East down
said creek by the end of the dam 20
'chains and 60 links to a large white
oak on the East side of the creek;
thence East 6 chains and 50 links to
a stone; thence 40 degrees East 6
'chains and 50 links to a White Oak;
thence North 85 degrees West 4 chs.
and 25 links to an ironwood on the
East bank of said creek; thence North
[ 75 links to a stone on the old line;
thence East on the old line 15 chains
and 25 links to the beginning, contain
ing 118 acres, more or less.
Said sale was ordered and is to be
made for the purpose of foreclosing
those certain mortgage deeds which
are to be found of record in the office
of the Register of Deeds of Randolph
county, in Book 191, page 208, etc.,
and Book 194, page 194, etc., and the
sale will be subject to the confirma
tion of the court.
This the 23rd day of March, 1925.
H. M. ROBINS,
3t 3 26 25 Commissioner.
NOTICE
Having qualified as executrix on the
estate of F. R. Fuller, deceased, be
fore D. M. Weatherly, Clerk of the
Superior Court of Randolph county;
All. persons having claims against
said estate are notified to present
them to the undersigned, duly verified,
on or before the 30th day of March,
1926, or this notice will be pleaded in
bar of their recovery; and all persons
owing said estate will come forward
and make immediate settlement.
This 23rd day of March, 1925.
MRS. CORINNA FULLER, Extr.,
Route 4, Thomasville, N. C.
6t 3 26 25.
BAD BACK TODAY
I ■■ •"■*
'Then Find the Cause and Correct It
As Other Asheboro Folks Have.
There’s little rest or peace for the
backache sufferer.
Days are tired and weary—
Night brings no respite.
Urinary troubles, headaches, dizzi
ness and nervousness, all tend to pre
| vent rest or sleep.
Why not use a stimulant diuretic to
'the kidneys?
Use Doan’s Pills.
Your neighbors recommend Doan’s.
Read this Asheboro case.
1 G. T. Macon, Cox St., says: “My
kidneys acted too often at times and
! then again, not often enough. I suf
fered a great deal from backache and
couldn’t sleep at night. Mornings, my
back was so lame, I could scarcely
bend, and I also had frequent dizzy
spells. I used Doan’s Pills, getting
them from the Standard Drug Co ,
and they were just what I needed. I
soon felt better.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—-get
Doan’s Pills—the same that Mr.
Macon had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
Cotton Crop In The United
States Largest Since 1914
The census bbreau reports the
largest cotton crop since 1914 grown
in the country last year. Final gin
ning reports show 13,618,751 bales,
■which is larger than the 1923 crop by
3,479,080 bales. Of this bumper crop
North Carolina produced 823,278
bales as against a million in 1923.
The largest crop was that of Texas
which amounted to over four million
bales. Arkansas, Georgia, Mississip
pi and Oklahoma each produced a lit
tle more than a million bales.
Mr. J. S. Ridge, special agent of the
bureau of census for Randolph coun
ty, reports 2,373 bales ginned in this
county from the 1924 crop as against
1,980 bales for the crop of 1923.
Hire Employed An Executioner
Worden Sam Busbee of the state
priaon has announced the appoint
ment of Joe Stone of Robeson county,
a guard at the prison, as temporary
executioner. Stone gets $25 for every
'time he turns on the switch sending
the death current into a prisoner’s
foody. He will officiate today for the
first time when Albert Harlee, also
of Robeson county, is to be executed
for murder.
TRINITY NEWS
Mrs. Snider, mother of Mrs. Lee
Royals, visited her latt week.
Mrs. Tyndale, who has resided here
for the last four year*, has gone to
live with her daughter in Virginia.
Edgar Pepper, wife and little
daughter, Josephine, were in town
Friday.
Lee Andrews, who has been quite
ill for some time, is better we learn.
Mr. and Mrs. Wagner axe off tak
ing a much needed rest, will be go*1®
for a few weeks.
Some are going isto the chicken
business extensively. They have the
brooders for the young chicks, and
are going to have a lot of “fryers”
by summer.
We learn several have contributed
most generously to the building of
FIVE GALS. PAINT FREE
A large paint concern, in futher
ance of an advertising and introduc
tory campaign now in progress,
offers to give, free of charge, five
gallons of its best house paint, any
color, to one property owner at each
postoffice or on each rural route in
this county. This concern wants
its paint on a house in each local
ity this season which is the purpose
of this remarkable offer. Persons
interested are requested to write the
Kero Paint Company, 213 South
7th St., Louisville, Kentucky.
It pd. * (Adv.)
A Murder In Montgomery
Atlas Poole, aged 32, an Onville
'merchant, shot and instantly killed
Dave Harris, sawmill man of Mont
gomery county, in a drunken quarrel
last Thursday night, near the Harris
home about five miles south of Troy.
Harris was killed by a shot from a
shot gun fired at close range, the load
entering his body just a few inches
below the heart.
ABOVE THE KNEES, PLEASE
20 MILLION FEET A DAT
SALMON BUT NOT CHILDREN
AN OLD BIBLE
Paris rulers of fashion say to
women all over the world:
“Wear your skirts above your
knees afd paint your Mrs red.”
And tte pathetic fact is that
millions of women will wear skirts
so short as te be silly, and paint
their ears without loss of time.
Also the eyelids are to be stained
dark brown or blue, the eyelashes
curled, and the inside of the nos
trils stained bright red.
The short skirt, in reason, is
sensible, a step toward common
sense, and away from microbes.
Red ears, when natural, indicate
good blood condition. But for wo
mwear skirts that would look
on a child, paint artificial
health on their ears, curl their
lashes and color their eyelids, that
seems too much. However, back
of it all there is divine wisdom, un
doubtedly. Woman is on her way
to some grand destiny. Let us ob
serve and admire, but not, criticize.
,We can estimate the wealth un
der ground in this country. The
' Barland Oil Company strikes a new.
oil well in its Colorado territory.
The roar of the gas, rushing out,
twenty million feet a day, can be
heard for six miles. If gas were
worth one dol'ar a thousand, which
is called “a cheap, conn scat ory
price” how much would that well
yield in money ?
And the wealth in the ground is
perhaps less than the wealth in the
air. Floating above every farm,
waiting to be taken out and used,
is enough* nitrogen to fertilize
mvny r,u:b farms. We buy nitrogen
haulrf ail the way from South
Amevks and there are billions of
tons of it above our heads.
And what is the wealth be'ow
the waters of the oceans, seas and
lakes, that cover the greater part
of the earth?
Here and there, along the Pacific
Coast, you see oil v/ells out in the
ocean.
Men eventually will explore the
ocean’s bed, as they now explore
Alaska, or Africa, and give to the
farms, from the air, the nitrogen
they need. Henry Ford would do
it now, if he had Muscle Shoals.
The Supreme Court decides that
the ’game and fish act is constitu
tional. The National Goverment
therefore has power, where game
and fish are concerned, to protect
the interest of the people.
The Monterey Fish Product Com
pany must now discontinue turn
ing into fertilizer fish fit for human
food.
What about an act that would
prevent exploiters of child labor
turning young Uvea into dividends
and grinding up children into
profits? Isn’t that worse than
grinding good salmon into ferti
liser?
Hie Supreme Court was not able
to uphold the constitutionality of
an act to protect children, although
Certain so-called “radical” justices
on that bench did uphold it.
However, our highest court does
find a way to protect fish and game.
About a hundred years ago, in
a Vermont log cabin, a young
mother read to her children old
Bible stories, about the whale that
swallowed Jonah, Elijah and his
chariot of fire and the fig tree that
withered under Divine rebuke.
That mother was poor and all
her people were poor, and ours was
a young and poor nation then.
The old Bible from that log cabin,
carefully wrapped up, was taken to
the broad platform before the Capi
tol. With his hand on that Bible,
Calvin CooUdge swore to do hia
duty as President of the United
States. He is the grandson of the
New England woman that owned
the Bible, 100 yean ago.
This Is the land of
and growth. What will it be in
years to come, if the 112,000,000
now here work as hard and hope*
fully as men and women did in the
' ""-Coolidge's
Stiff Neck
Get this relief now
To get rid of a crick in the neck
in snort order—apply Sloan’s.
No rubbing! The marvelous
effectiveness of the liniment it
self does the job for you. It
Bends fresh, new blood through
the pain-ridden tissues, and
takes out the stiffness—stops the
pain. All druggists—36 cents.
Sloan's Liniment—kills pain!
Blight, sparkling eyes, cheeks with
the glow oi health, a skin as smooth
as velvet, the ideal we all strive to
attain. No blemishes, no eruptions,
no blackheads, no marks to destroy
the even texture cf healthy skin.
The secret is pure, red blood free
from poisons and impurities, blood
that makes the body glow and radi
ate health, blood that drives pim
ples, boils eruptions, eczema and
skin blemishes from the system.
LEONAHDI’S ELIXIR FOR
THE BLOCD makes rich red
blood, drives the impurities out,
brings the glow of health. Use it
now. Insist on LEONARDI’S.
Refuse substitutes. At all druggists.
STANDARD DRUG COMPANY
Asheboro, N. G
Fhr” Usually Starts
with a Cold
And Miuterole is Death to CoUt
It does the work of an old-fashioned
mustard plaster, and does it with com
fort. Just spread Musterole on the neck
and chest, with the fingers, before the
cold has gone very deep. Usual results
— first, a warm tingle, then a loosening
of congestion and cough, easier breath
ing and a feeling of great relief. No need
then to fear grip, “flu” or pneumonia.
Near-by stores sell Musterole—35
and 65 cents in jars or tubes, and a
special “Children’s Musterole,” of mild
er strength, for babies and tots.
Enable Dyspeptics to eat whatever
they wish. Cause food to assimilate.
Nourish the body, give appetite.
DEVELOP FLESH
STANDARD DRUG COMPANY
Asheboro, N. C.
BURNS, BRUISES
SPRAINS YIELD TO
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BUILD NOW — RE-ROOF
If you are going to build a New Home, Barn or
anything else.
Or if your buildings need a new Roof, see us for your |
Lumber, Brick, Sand, and Roofing
You’ll find our Grades and Prices Right.
Bird’s Roofs are standard everywhere. Have been in f
the manufacturing business 130 years. They are the
oldest manufacturers of Roofing in the country. They
know how to make it right. Whether it’s Asphalt Shing
les, Roll Roofing, Wall Board, or Building Paper we have |
them. See us.
ASHEBORO WHEELBARROW CO.
ASHEBORO, N. C.
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HOME BUILDING
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