DEATH CLAIMS MR. C. C. HARRIS Cliffside Man Died Last Wed nesday—Funeral Held at Prospect Baptist Church. Cliffside, June 9.—Mr. Columbus C. Harris, aged 49 years, died at his home here last Wednesday, attei a short illness. Funeral services were held Thursday afternoon at 4 o'clock at Prospect Baptist church. His pas tor, Rev. T. M. Hester, was in charge of th e service. Interment was in the Prospect cemetery. Mr. Harris is survived by his wid ow, who before her marriage was Miss Bertha Davis, and eight child- I i ———■—■ 1 i A A A A A AAA A AA AA I Thin, Pale, jj 1 Weak W | *5 "I HAD been through ' a bad spell of sick- i ness which left me Kr»\ | 4 very weak," says Mrs. / ''\§ , *5 Virginia Spruce, of J* t •5 Stapleton, Va. f 'l was 1 & | •5 pala «nd felt lifeless, /fo J ■5 and my strength did | "5 not return. / I •3 "I spent most of -J ■2 my time on the bed. •' Ji •5 I was very nervous, and the Ji •5 least thing upset me. I did not *5 have strength enough to lift a Ji ■5 broom. At times I would have Ji ■5 bad headaches, which would J ■5 hurt me until I could hardly see. j •2 f? Someone asked me why IJi 5 did not try Cardui. I had read gi £ of it, so I thought I would see Ji •5 what it would do for me. It .*« was really remarkable how I ! «5 came out. My strength re- % ; «5 turned, and my health was bet- ; •5 ter than it had been in years. $ ij I gained in weight about ten £« pounds. My color was good, £« 1 and I ceased to suffer from : i? headaches. I have told my ; I T ' ij friends about Cardui because I r« i was benefited after taking it." .*« : i AAG93MII t! £ Helps Women io Health Take Thed ford's Black-Draught for Consiipation, Indigestion, |S Biliou.snoso. 1 cent a dose. e-is42® •s* w v wv MViV.V.ViVuV. , .V. , . , .V.V«VAW.V.V.VAV.V//.VA , .Y»VJW , £ Mil" HK:s B a i s : %- it ■ r " W£-'*r «: ;r hESb | The Happy Family i| 5 The happy family is the one that is free :| 5 from financial worry. Freedom from fi- | % '» 5 naneial worry comes only when there is a 5 % surplus laid aside for use in case of neces- £ sity—a surplus that will provide for the J; "■ future —more comforts for father and j mother; good education for the children. £ *• "■ ■: With a moderate income, any family m s m % i can arrange its expenditures to permit 5 laying aside a definite sum each month in J: S a savings account. i 5 ! Begin now. Build a reserve that will 5 ** j ■C take financial cares from your home. S CAPITAL AND SURPLUS SIOO,OOO | INDUSTRIAL LOAN& INVESTMENT BANK J FOREST CITY, N, C. ;■ Investigate our weekly Savings Plan. ~ , . V/.WVAi . V.V., . V,V,V.V.V.V., . VV., . VAVNW/.VV.V. ren. He was a good citizen and neigh jbor, and was widely known. He had Jleen a member of Prospect Baptist j church for a number of years, and j had been a deacon for twenty-five I J years. | Pall bearers were Messrs James I Thrift, Ray Green, Abe Rhymer, ] Matt Hill, Jason Green, and Lorenc iKeeter. The flower girls were Misses ! Janie and Ocie Lee Thrift, Jewell j Davis, Winnie Ruppe, Bessie Martin land Geneva Gamble. i I MOORESBORO R-l « I Jolley—Earley Wedding Last Tues-. day—Sunday Guests —Local Items of Interest. ! Mooresboro, R-l, June 9.—A wed- ; Iding which was a complete surprise {to their many friends was that of; • Mr. Theron Jolley, and Miss Melita : J Earley, which occurred at Gaffney. »Thursday. The bride is the attrac-! [tive daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Zeb ! j Earley, of Dobbinsville. She is a I young lady of sweet personality and | f winning ways, while the groom is J (the son of Mr. George Jolley, and he j ! i;? a young man of highest ability j ( and character. The happy couple will j reside with the groom's parents. We j ! ioin in wishing them a long and hap- j j J py life together. } The young people are taking a ; J great interest in the choir practice , each Wednesday night at Race Path, j under the leadership'of Mr. Jim Rob- j inson. ; Mr. Herbert Parris, left Monday j for California and other points! where he will travel this summer. Mr. and Mrs. Theron Jolley, ac- , companied by Mr. and Mrs. Ray j Green and Mr. George Jolley, were dinner guests Sunday of Mrs. Theron ; iJolley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Zeb i Earley in Dobbinsville. i Miss Ophetia jHamtes, who ha.=; j j been nursing at the Shelby hospital j 1 ' is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ' ' Tom Hames. i Mr. Owen Padgett had as his din ! ner guests Sunday, Mr. Fay Jolley. j ; __ CARD OF THANKS. i ; I wish to thank my friends in For- j est City for the kindness that was shown during the sickness and death of my neice, Mrs. Hamrick. Mrs. Baxter Freeman. j THE FOREST CITY COURIER, THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1930. \ Ai, I fopburn, VI Road Hogging THE dangerous, unexplainably selfish and unsportsmanlike prac tice of road hogging undoubtedly is responsible for more traffic accidents on American highways than any other single factor entering into the scheme of motoring conditions. That the road hog should be smitten with a vengeance similar to that exercised in stamp- ing out any other common or garden variety of pest, i 3 a foregone con clusion. Any motorist will agree with that. Highway facilities in the United States are inadequate despite the rapid progress demanded by the re quirements of the twenty-six million motorists who are trying to use them in the interest of furthering their in dividual needs. They would not be nearly so inadequate if the road hog could be abolished and if highways could be used as a means of accom modating an expeditious movement of traffic instead of the hodge-podge that exists today. A number of progressive cities have declared war on the road hog. Chi cago is a notable example. In that city, the person who attempts to drive slowly on a high speed boulevard is treated with the same degree of in tolerance as the driver who attempts to break speed records where slow and careful driving is necessary. Michigan has discarded the old fash ioned method of regulating speed and has established in its place a law which permits the individual motorist to govern his speed in accordance with the width of the road, traffic conditions and sane driving policy. This law was enacted on the theory that thirty or forty miles an hour may be perfectly safe under certain condi tions while, under other conditions, fifteen or twenty miles an hour may be dangerous. The motorist who causes an acci dent in' Michigan . through careless ness or recklessness, loses his license and is otherwise dealt with severely. Undoubtedly, other states will follow TRUSTEE'S SALE OF LAND Under and by virtue of the power j of sale contained in a certain deed of trust executed on the 6th day of i February, 1226, by Augusta Lindy i and husband, L. Lindy to Farmers' Bank & Trust Company, Trustee, to ! secure the sum of $8,000.00, said j deed of trust being on record in j Book A-2 page 117 in the Register of Deeds office of Rutherford Coun- ; ty, N. C., default having been made j in the payment of said indebtedness at maturity thereof, and the above J named trustee now being in the pro- j 'cess of liquidation, and the under- j signed trustee having been appointed ; by order of the Superior Court of j Rutherford County in lieu of said j Farmers Bank and Trust Company, j the undersigned trustee will on , MONDAY, JULY 14, 1930. •at 12 o'clock noon, at the court j l ouse door in Rutherfordton, N. C., Uell io the highest, bidder for cash, j the following described real estate, .to wit: Lying and being in Cool Springs Township, Rutherford County, North Carolina, known and designated as lots numbers nine (9) and ten (10) of the property of W. S. Moss, sit uated on the South side of East Main street in the town of Forest City, N. C., as shown on plat of said property made by J. A. Wilkie, Sur veyor, and recorded in the register of deeds office of Rutherford Coun ty in deed book 115 at page 594, to which reference is hereby made IJ for a full and complete description 11 These lots are 25 feet front each | and run back 100 feet to an alley and are adjoining W. L. Horn on ! | the West and W. S. Moss and N. J. 1 1 James on the East. ' j This ; the 10th day of June, 1930. ;! T. J. EDWARDS, | J Trustee. 11M. L. Edwards, Atty. 36-4t. YELLOW )CX' PENCIL* IvlSm with the P^/REDBANB o MIKADO these examples in time. When they do, a welcome relief from the road hog should be closer to accomplish ment. In the meantime, the best way to work on that type of driver i 3 to show him how unpopular he is. The road hog has been defined as "that type of motorist who takes hi 3 half of the road from the middle." He is noted for his persistency in pok ing along on a high speed boulevard, forcing those who would pass him to endanger their own lives and the car 3 and lives of those who may be approaching from the opposite direc tion Deliberate road hogging is pure sel fishness and those who engage in it should be made to pay the penalty. Automobile manufacturers are doing their best to make the automobile a3 safe as possible. Four-wheel brakes, all-steel full vision bodies and a hundred and one other modern ideas have been adopt ed in an effort to reduce traffic acci dents. But accidents we will always have so long as motorists engage in unsafe driving practices, and partic ularly that one known as road hogging. Personal experience has taught me to drive with my head as well as my feet and hands. And this is partic ularly true when I am in unfamiliar territory. I have found it both wise and safe to get my c?r in one lane of traffic and keoD it there. It saves me the bother and expense of buying new lenders and of paying doctor and hospital bill?. Besides, it preserves my nerves for speed-way driving. ERWIN TO SALISBURY Rutherfordton, June 0. —Supt. Clyde A. Erwin went to Salisbury Monday where he will teach a course in education at Catawba college for six weeks at the summer school. He will spend some weeks-ends at home to keep in touch with his work. Tommy: "What is untold wealth, daddy?" Father: "That which doesn't ap pear on the income-tax return, my bc.v!" 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Let us aid you in selecting the fully-guaranter Ti Fls!c which B ive y° u al l the mileage you are going to require 2. Jx4.40 -—at the lowest possible first cost. mileage DOGGETT MOTOR CO. Forest City, N. C. MONITOR TOP the most inexpensive KBj JH i GENERAL % ELECTRIC BgreiFRfiaZEBgATOH Join u» in the General Elrctrir Hour, every Saturday evening on a nation-uuie A*. ft C n^rwrfr. ELECTRIC APPLINCE CO. Forest City, N. C. SOUTHERN REFRIGERATION CO. Charlotte Distributors TBELAR6tSTPEWIur^IT&aV^ V "i» Read The OOUt'igV Want Ai

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