^3
LOCAL AND COUNTY NEWS.
Snort News Items of Interest, Condensed into Small Space for Busy
News Readers. People You Know and Some You Don’t Know.
Business Locals and Otherwise.
Sheriff Bain was here Monday
on business.
Prof. N. W. Walker spent Sat
urday in Raleigh.
President Venable went to Ral
eigh Monday on business.
Gen. J. S. Carr, of Durham,
was on the Hill yesterday.
These early mornings are be
ginning to feel like fall.
The only difference is the
weather was cooler in August.
Miss Pearl Langley, of Dur
ham, is visiting friends here.
Mr. Luther B. Markham, of
Durham, is on the Hill on busi
ness.
Don’t fail to hear Congressman
Stedman at Chapel Hill the night
of the 26th inst.
One nice fresh milch cow for
sale. Apply to W. H. Copeland,
Chapel Hill, R. No. 1.
Mr. Louis Powell, Miss Lela
Powell and Master Sam Powell
spent last Thursday in Durham.
Job printing, all kinds, done on
short notice. Call and get prices
before having your printing done.
Mr. Lonnie Durham, of White
Cross, is painting Mr. W. B. Sor
rell’s residence, on Hillsboro
street.
Mr. B. H. Dunn, who has been
working with H. C. Wills & Son,
has gone to High Point, where he
has accepted a position.
Chattel mortgage blanks, 40c.
per hundred, or 10c. per dozen;
no less quantity sold. Call at this
office.
The people of Chapel Hill are
pleased to welcome Rev. Mr.
Moss back as pastor again of the
Presbyterian church.
Congressman Chas. M. Sted
man will speak in Chapel Hill on
Thursday night, Sept. 26th, at 8
o’clock. Everybody invited.
Mr. Adolphus Mangum, of the
U. S. Soil Survey Department, is
on a visit to his mother, Mrs. L.
0. Mangum, and friends in
Chapel Hill.
A large crowd from Chapel Hill
saw “Mutt and Jeff” at the Dur
ham Academy of Music last Wed
nesday night. The play is among
the best on the road.
If your eyes trouble you have
W. E. Sorrell to examine them
and it will cost you nothing to
find out the trouble.
Mr. A. D. Barnes, who resides
near town, brought a load of
watermelons to town yasterday.
Not many melons are coming to
town now, the season being near
ly over.
Mr. 0. R. Rand, of Smitnfield,
a brother of the late Isaac W.
Rand, is on the Hill. Mr. Rand
is a graduate of the University,
and is also a winner of tne Rhodes
scholarship.
During the past twenty years
newspaper advertising has in
creased at a rapid rate, and today
It is no experiment, but an abso
lute necessity to the business
man who wishes to succeed.
Notice: I have bought the in
terest of Mr. C. R. Phipps in the
Lloyd cotton gin, at Calvander
Academy, and am prepared to
do grinding and gin your cotton
better than ever. Jas. R. Lloyd.
Prof. Thomas Hume left Mon
day for the University of Missis
sippi, where he will take the
chair of English. Prof. Hume is
a chip off the old block and is a
teacher of ability. We wish him
great success.
Mr. and Mrs. Flannagan and
children, of Graham, came to
Chapel Hill Sunday morning in
their auto. They left later in the
day for Durham, accompanied by
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Hocutt,
where they attended a family
reunion, at the old Suitt home
place near Durham.
Mayor James A. Wellons, of
Smithfield, returned home Sat
urday, after having been called
here on account of the death of I.
W. Rand. .Mr. Rand, father of
the dead boy, also accompanied
the remains home. 1
Mr. Alexander H. Koonce, who
read law at the University and
stood the Supreme court exami
nation in August, has located here
for the practice of his profession.
He has rooms in the Durham
baick store building.
Mr. Jim Lacock, who resides
near town, on the Raleigh road,
was here yesterday with the first
new bale of cotton seen on this
market this fall. Cotton is open
ing rapidly on account of the dry
weather. The price paid for the
staple is 11^ cents.
Mrs. Cora Williamson returned
Monday from an extended trip
to Baltimore and other Northern
cities, where she went to pur
chase her fall and winter mil
linery and notions. She was ac
companied by Miss Causey, mil
liner, who was with her last
spring.
Mr. Fred G. Patterson came
down town Monday afternoon as
happy as a lark and “smiling all
over his face.” The stork visited
his home about 11 o’clock Mon
day and left a bouncing boy. We
are pleased to note that both
mother and child are getting on
nicely.
Hon. Chas. M. Stedman, Dem
ocratic candidate for Congress
in this, the Fifth District, will
speak in Chapel Hill on Thurs
day night, September 26th, at 8
o’clock. Everybody cordially in
vited to come out and hear him
discuss the issues of the cam
paign.
Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Cates, who
have been on a visit to relatives
and friends in Chapel Hill and
vicinity, will leave Friday for
their home at St. Augustine, Fla.,
where Mr. Cates holds a position
with the Florida East Coast Rail
way Co. Mr. Cates is a son of
Mr. Bellfield Cates, of this coun
ty.
Announcement is made of the
engagement of Mr. Thomas Ful
ler Southgate, of Durham, and
Miss Lula McDonald, of Raleigh,
the marriage to take place some
time in November. Mr. South-
gate is the only son of Mr. James
H. Southgate, of “Southgate’s
Cabin,” near University Station.
Miss Pearl Hogan, of the Black
wood section, visited relatives
and friends here Tuesday. She
will leave the latter part of the
week for Greensboro to enter the
State Normal. She will be ac
companied by Miss Alada Hogan,
of the Calvander Academy sec
tion, besides several young ladies
from Chapel Hill, who will also
attend this school.
Friends of Mrs. A. G. Carr, of
Durham, will be glad to know
that she is getting along very
well at her heme in that city.
She has very recently returned
from Baltimore, where she had
been for treatment. All of her
friends wish for her a speedy
restoration to health. Mrs. Carr
is the widow of the late Dr. A. G.
Carr, who was born and raised in
Chapel Hill.
The Julian S. Carr Chapter,
Daughters of the Confederacy, of
Durham, will today celebrate
Veterans’ Day, at which they
will have Hon. J. Bryan Grimes,
Secretary of State, deliver an ad
dress to the old soldiers and the
public in general. The public
exercises will be followed by a
big barbecue dinner for the old
soldiers. The Confederate drum
corps, of Raleigh, will make
music for the occasion, which
will be a notable one in Durham.
Horse fok Sale: Young, gen
tle, not afraid of.auto or street
car. Apply to TV. S. Long, Chap
el Hill, N. C.
The youngest student at the
University is Master Robt.
Welch, of E'izabeth City, who is
12 years of age. He registered
without conditions as a full-
flodged freshman for an A. B. 2
course. Young Welch weighs
75 pounds and is unusually bright,
for one of his age.
The 120th year of the Univer
sity began last Thursday, when
some five hundred old students
and about two hundred and fifty
new ones assembled in Gerrard
Hall for chapel exercises. At
that time there were 781 enrolled,
and those who have come in later
make nearly 800 students at the
University. There were over
one hundred who failed to enter
on account of not being prepared
to enter the University.
Mr. S. J. Brockwell had an ac
cident with his large Cadillac car
on the Strowd hill last Wednes
day night. He was headed for
Durham and met a team on a
sharp curve, the driver failed to
give enough room to pass and
Mr. Brockwell turned too far out
of the road in order to avoid an
accident, when the front part of
his car went into a ditch, smash
ing the wind shield. This was
about all the damage done.
Tour of Inspection to be Made Later.
Dr. J. Hyde Pratt is in New
York on business connected with
the Crest of the Blue Ridge High
way. The tour of inspection of
the Central Highway, which was
to have begun Monday at Mt.
Sterling, in Haywood county, has
been postponed until a later date,
when the road is nearer com
pletion and other matters ar
ranged more satisfactorily. This
postponement of the inspection
is on account of the fact that the
Central Highway was not ready
to be opened up by the time of
the date mentioned above, and
also that the people who were to
have furnished an automobile for
the inspection found it impossible
to do so at this time. The date
when the tour will start will be
announced later.
Mr. Atwater Shoots Himself.
The News regrets to hear of
the tragic death of a former
Chapel Hill young man, Mr. Ed.
E. Atwater, who was well known
throughout this section. Mr.
Atwater left Chapel Hill about a
year ago and went to Miami, Fla.,
with his brother, Mr. Jas. At-
wgter, and from all accounts he
was getting on nicely in his new
home. The shocking news was
received here Saturday that Mr.
Ed. E. Atwater had shot himself.
We failed to learn the particulars
of the sad affair. The remains
reached here Tuesday on the
11:45 train, and were taken to the
home of hif sister, Mrs. Isaac
W. Pritchard, and on yesterday
the', burial took place at Cedar
Grove church, twelve miles
south-west of Chapel Hill. De
ceased was a brother of County
Commissieser Thos. A. Atwater.
A large crowd of relatives and
friends attended the burial.
In the Right Direction.
It is becoming more and more
the case that almost every busi
ness industry is putting the ban
upon the use of intoxicants by
employees. The Lackawanna
Railroad Company has passed
this rule: “The use of intoxi
cants while on or off duty, or
the visiting of saloons or places
where liquor is sold, incapaci
tates men for railroad service,
and is absolutely prohibited.
Any violation of this rule by em
ployees in engine, train, yard or
station service will be sufficient
cause for dismissal.”
This is a step in the right direc
tion. The using of intoxicants
hurts the business that the em
ployee works for as well as the
employee himself, and the Bur
lington News well says that the
day is not far distant when the
defender of liquor will be laughed
out of court.
Attention, Men
of Orange County!
The General George Burgwyn
Anderson Chapter, United
Daughters of the Confederacy—
a mere handful of women, is try
ing to raise funds to build a mon
ument to the men of Orange
county, North Carolina, who
served at the front in the fight
ing days of the sixties.
They claim for this county,
that, in proportion to her fighting
strength, she sent more men to
the defense of the South than
any other county in the Confed
eracy. For by actual record of
names and commands, out of a
population of 1,818 men in No
vember, 1360, she sent 1.727 men
into the army; and should all of
Orange county men who. served
in the regiments of other States
be added to these, the count
would go up well into the thou
sands. There were Orange coun
ty men ie the Bethel regiment
that historic Sunday in June,
1861. Orange county men furled
the flag of Company G, 27th Reg
iment, N. C. Volunteers, at Ap
pomattox. From the first drum
tap—from Bethel to Gettysburg:
through the Trans-Mississippi,
on land and on sea, her sons of
all ages and conditions gave
themselves to the State, and
served with distinguished gal
lantry wherever they were
placed, until our bugles wailed
themselves into eternal silence
one April day in 1865 amidst the
Blue Virginia hills.
And now the time has come
when a fitting memorial should
beerected to keep alive this story
of loyal service till the trumpet
of the resurrection shall blow
time’s* last reveille, and these
men shall stand at “Attention”
for the last great roll call of “the
Captain of their Salvation,” the
God of battle, and the Lord of
hosts.
And we 1 appeal to the State
pride and loyalty of all Orange
county men from Maine to Texas,
from the Atlantic to the Pacific,
to help us make imperishable the
record of this matchless story, so
that it may teach the generations
yet unborn what love and loyalty
to a glorious past demand of
them should days of stress and
sacrifice for their State face them
in years to come.
All contributions can be sent to
Miss Rebecca Cameron, Presi
dent of the General George Bur
gwyn Anderson Chapter, North
Carolina Division, United Daugh
ters of the Confederacy, P. 0.
Box 32, Hillsboro, Orange coun
ty, North Carolina.
Death of Mrs. James C. MacRae.
Mrs. MacRae, widow of Judge
James C. MacRae, late dean of
the University Law School, died
at the home of her daughter, Mrs.
E. J. Lilly, at Fayetteville, Sat
urday afternoon, of apoplexy.
Mrs. MacRae had been ill about
three weeks with malarial fever,
but her condition was not con
sidered serious and her death
came rather unexpected. She
had been in Fayetteville for a
month visiting those of her sons
and daughters who reside there.
Mrs. MacRae was an unusually
lovely and gifted woman; intel
lectual culture distinguished her.
She possessed considerable liter
ary ability. She was the only
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. S. J.
Hinsdale; of Fayetteville, and in
1867 married James C. MacRae,
who later became a Supreme
Court justice and was at the time
of his death three years ago dean
of the University Law School.
She leaves eight sons and
daughters and a host of relatives
and friends over the State, who
deeply deplore Per untimely de
parture. The remains were
buried by the side of her hus
band at Fayetteville.
COUGHS, COLDS, WATERY EYES
CURED IN A DAY
by taking Cheney's Expectorant—also cures con
sumption, whooping cough, droppings from the nose
and throat, Bronchitis, and all throat and lung trou
bles Cheney’s Expectorant a liquid preparation,
tested for 50 years. Thousands of cures made
where all else failed. Try it. Safe, sure and satis
factory, Druggists, 35c. and 50c.
THE BANK OF CHAPEL HILL
Oldest and strongest bank in Orange County.
We Work For Our Customers.
During the last three months we have paid an av
erage of $10.00 a day- on Time Deposits. Don’t let your
money lie idle at home but leave it with us wherejit
will make
4 Per Cent For You Rain or Shine.
Thanks for the confidence and patronage of’the
public is gratefully tendered by the
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
M. C. S. Noble, Pres. H. H. Patterson,
J. C. Taylor, Cashier
Vice-Pres.
J. S. Carr,
Clyde Eubanks,
C. H. Herty,
A. A. Kluttz,
C. L. Lindsay,
J. B. Mason,
HARNESS and BUGGIES
NEW AND SECOND-HAND.
PRICES VERY REASONABLE, i'
Call at our Stable on Rosemary
Street for Bargains.
Geo. C. Pickard & co.
g»»®»HHSl
I Reduction Sale! |
1 BOUND TO MAKE ROOM K
^ A grand chance for all wanting ^
I'‘Nobby” Hats, Shoes and|
I Furnishings. |
I House Packed With Good |
Values. &
I A. A. KLUTTZ. g
8S88mK8S38K8SOS8^^
Learn Telegraphy
And earn $50 to $150 per month.
Thousands of operators needed.
Most fascinating and educational
work. Positions assured all grad
uates. Write immediately for cat-
x alogue.
SPARTANBURG SCHOOL OF
TELEGRAPHY,
Main St., Spartanburg, S. G.
Bilious? Feel heavy after din
ner? Tongue coated? Bitter
taste? Complexion sallow? Liver
needs waking up. Doan’s Regu-
lets cure bilious attacks. 25
cents at any drug store.
The Men Who Succeed
as heads of large enterprises are men
of great energy. Success, today, de
mands health. To ail is to fail. It’s
utter fol’y for a man to endure a run
down,half alive condition when Elec
tric Bitters will put him on his feet ^
short order. “Four bottles did me
more real good than any other medi
cine I ever took,” writes Chas.B. Allen,
Sylvania, Ga. “After years of suffer
ing with rheumatism, liver trouble,
stomach disorders and deranged kid
neys, I am again, thanks to Electric
Bitters, sound and well.” Try them.
Only 50 cents at Eubanks Drug Co.
I. W. Pritchard,
H. Lloyd,
R. L. Strowd.
WOOD’S
Special Grass and
Clover Mixtures
Make the Largest Yields of
Hay and Pasturage.'
They are combined in proper propor
tion to give the beat results for the differ
ent soils for which they are recommend
ed. 11——" ■»■"*
We use in these mixtures our Trade
Mark Brand Seeds, which are best qual
ities obtainable, and tested both as to
germination and purity. ^m^ ^'^j
Our customers report the most satis
factory results, both as to securing excel
lent stands and largest yields of both hay
and pasturage. ^
Wood’s Descriptive Fall Catalog
gives full information; also tell about all
other Grass and Clover Seeds, Alfalfa,
Vetches and all Farm and Garden Seeds
for fall planting.
Catalog mailed free. Write for it.
iT. W. WOOD & SONS/1
Seedsmen, - Richmond, Va.
William J. King, who lives in
House’s Creek township, Wake
county, celebrated his 100th
birthday one day last week.