Chatting About Chatham (continued from page on€) any old cedars in the woods. . The idea was tQ tod out whe‘2ier the prolific growth of the present comes from primitive trees or from those taken info the hills ‘by settlers. The cedar in those hills spreads rapidly. On the flats of eastern North Carolina the seeds die where they fall.. But up there .the fains wash them-down, the hills and.thus .they arp. carried into the streams. The cedar is also easily scattered f»y birds. The inquiries were not satisfactory; .yet T have seen no evidence in the woods of such aged • cedars as those at the- Jones, homestead. - Prepdent Hooper of Wake Forest. • • .William f Hooker;- a son1 of- the yhnng- couple ■ that ' -settled at- Chapel Hill becameoneofthe-earlyprest dents of Wake i Forest College. The idea for:' th* dd. Lacy is the only male of the line in Chatham, arid BHss Hattie, his'1 cousin", the only' female;: except Captain Alston antf M» ni|c|, fc O. £5*?!j£?g$ ham Miss Hattie’s brother lives elsewbeie. Tb family Governor ■ seemingly disappeared alisO. Colonel ' ?**&* whose possibly greatest of tions lay on the .Waeeamaw, Riyer, on Its comse from our Lak I>..Siler went down'into Bladen and: married a Miss Lloyd, who was’ a grande -daughter of General Brown, of the Battle Of Eliaft* bethtown and “Tory Hole” fame. On© of the most notable features of hhe grand pageant preparing for Ihe celebration at Elizabethtoii on April 27 features the. Brown story. And yonder in that. Alston home is tihe picture of the General and of his magnificent home on the west bank of the Cape Fear in- the lower tip end of Bladeij, for .which the'brick were brought from England. And there stands a great four-poster bedstead of mahogany which a century -and : a: half ago stood in the1 Brown mansion. I was’ tempted to ask tcV lie let sleep in that bed. In the dining room is found the very dining table that the large family of Lloyds, daughter and grandehildreh of Generali Brown, used‘in'their Bladen home. That, .table is a treasure in itself. It is divided into three-sections, totaling 15 or 18 feet in length. Only one of, lihe sections serve as a diningxtable for .the Alston home at present. {The other sections sit > in other quarters of the dining hall. Headers, the mahogany boards, of that table measure two-fee| ur* breadth ! I measured them. „ * That bedstead and table should lie on exhibit at ■ Elizabethtown on April 27. .But all the rreaspres ape not of Bladen origin. See this sitting room furniture—bought by Laeyig «. grandfather in 1826 in Philadelphia. Imagine; id*, if you want to contrast, these days with those of a hundred years ago, see Young! Alston driven down to Fayetteville in his carriage or riding down horse haek; and- there taking a boat for Wilmingtdn- -In Wilmington he must find shipping to Philadelphia. - There; having bought the furniture, the finest of ma/-.,~ hogahy, alid a tail glass vase-like concern in wlifeh"' to set lighted candles when used in the wind, the pnrchases are hilled to Fayetteville by boat. 'Home” by the. same route- those things are conveyed 'by wagon from Fayetteville to the Chatham" 'hoi**, ~' ’There ts the mahogany and there the candle v'ase—^ a fragile thing of glass that has endured 108 years without a shiver. Gtfteral' Cotteh. A little to the south of the present Alston home stood the residence of General Cotteh. Even some of the' Pititsbord folk' locate the home of the General at the Carney Cotteh place, two miles, north of Pittsboro. Carney Cotten was a son oYthe ftfeneral, who got his titl’e from being adjutant-geheriil of the State. lie served as a colohel in the Mexican war. The late Mfs. 'Williams was. the general^ grand daughter. Fred C. Williams and sisters, Mrs. dreg Otf and5 Mts. Duncan, ate -his' great-grainlchiidren. General. Cptten. married rffsister pf Lacy AlsV, jO^f ather,; a. ■ in theKsanife- comnniihity, lived the DieGraflVim hp,. JUst When they eam haven’t learned. The Baron left, no children J North Carolina, I believe. Probably all the Graffenrieidts in. this cqhhtpr are of the Chatham stock... The , ed$or ot the-Shreveport morning when I lived iit Louisiana was a DeGraffenremt ail(| lie told me ' thaV hisaneesfry lived back in \m.t!l Carolina.- 4?ter the extinction of^g Chatham fam. il£ there haS-Ctffiiie from'afidth^ State on? to ry. 'skJefan the old hornet through marrying Mrs. .Jordan, Ohb-of the Pe^y sisters,, whose father came up froi,’ gouMi Carolina and bought the old ^DefJra rtV11rd.1t home. ... , _... „ ' lire ri&iiW of’ Sifohfr I^aMmjrs. ' ’ But, after Jfll; the wealthy families of Chatham, as in ' all piarts ,,of.the Sfruth,* Were' far, g-Ufntnnhcr(d by-th.epoof. Chatham has-l>eeu and is the home of .sMir fariners. /They* have caught;-zip in recent ye ars, but the old: county- is' tlie fiatutal habitat- 0f thb stttali fannbr and hbre omrwffi find a'pit M.;t rou? peopld, on a sihali scale,' When ' other sections have problems we know'n'ot-qof as yet, as"many as are the present ones.,.. Chhtham^lf^urrouhded by thriving' towns. itaieigh, Dufhaiii,ot3hhpel Itill, Burlington, Graham, GreahWj^,; Afiheborof Sanford- a re ali Avithin''ah tbeyJis;Hdrive^-frem^he heart of the conntj. One hundred and flftyi thousands of urban- population will afford a mdrket-fqr^+h^ poultrjq- dairy pro;] nets, and other produce of; the,';'e&Ufety . Other 10ld" (ftawam: Names. I am ‘taking- up too much -space with Mm past ot the old county, = but one cannot get the flavor «,t Chatham without knowing that, here at I’ittsbovo UEpse-the: history-making family of Maiilys: the ■giedmansy the Mannings, the- Londous, Jacksons, ■Toomets, Hanghtons,: Ihries, and MIllls. Mrs. E. PoU-Wfts aii Mhttie. ,Mrs. ?H. A; London a Jackson, her .mother a daughter, of Governor Wortl;. flint ham is said to have been1 the residence of Captain Blakfty, of nai-aD fame, wihosev fate and that of his vessel is one offthe unsolved problems of the r. iS,_ Navy. Chatham as County, ,of Diversified ■ Indus' r4es. Chatham Ms no i.large' town.. Conse«tnen l.y one* .cannot readily conceive., the variety of iij Inslries harbored .in the, county. It wag ChathamV co.il that. : raili’Dftd north froiiitl.Pgyett^ille during thewar of the sixties to. oktEgJlA hbw. Cuiunhek. However, that mine and village are now in Lee. After the war of the sixties the railroad was pushed' across the Deep to Gulf, and that village became a depot of supplies for a large area. Among the prosperous merchants Of that' heydey of Gnlf was joung John M, Mclver. About 40 years ago. lie, then classed' as'an old bachelor, married Mis,; Lois Anderson, a teacher of the writer, who was n sistet of <*e Rev. Neill A; Andersoii, orte of the South's mutable Presbyterian ‘ ministers before his death three or four years ago. When I went to Chatham it was a pleasure to meet John M, Mclver. Jr., who succeeded his father as merchant and planter at Gulf. During my residence in' Chatham both Mrs. Mclver and Dr. Aifdersoh died. The latter gave mo niy first. ’ lesson 1 in-' Latin fifty -years ago next fall* Gtxlf is still a high-toned community. It is about the must distinctly S&te'h jii 'tli^; COunty. Here live the Milrehisuns, Hills, Devereux, -Knights/ Oldhams, Itev. GeSrge L. Merrill, who was a dignified senior when l ehtered Wake Ko^estMU13 D. Y Tyner, a na tive” of ItoteesbtiV ‘;*nd Palmers. ■ Gulf ; bus-the Ifest ratlroaa^fa-oHtties of-any. town, ini Chatham, he ing the-i ju«ction.pe«iti of, the-Nurfolk Southern an.i \C:. F.,St Y. V. . Goalj is,:at hand and a great brick and- t,ile • plant, but 1 both • theinin r City as fine bedroom and parlor'fUrniture as any of us. nOed is prbdnced in quantity* and chairs, ami office equipment^ galore, wastF boards, brooms, amt cotton yarns in abundance!. ”xtt’ Bynum also is ll" jath mill that has lost as little:time in the last tea years as any cotton' mill in tlfe 'Btate, I believe. This is under the oversight of lit.lX ll! London, with Mr. George Moore as superintehdefit. Af PUtslmro a label plant prodtiices millions of clothing labels, h"r another stops' for that plaht. Chatham reproduces titribhr fefeter t)ian any other section I <^afi^ued oft page.four); • ■ - '■ -