THE NEWS, Chapel HiH, N. C. LOCAL Ai COUNIT NEWS SHORT NEWS ITEMS OF INTEREST OF TOWN IM COONTT. CONDENSES INTO PARA- GRAPHS FOR BOST NEWS READERS. Mr Madison Morgan, of the Mt. Carmel section, drove into town one morning last week with the rear wheels of his buggy in front. He did not discover it until Mr. Pleasant Bennett called his attention to his buggy being so high in front and so low behind. He said he thought something was wrong. Cotton is 19c. Mr, C. Y. Bennett has moved to Durham to reside. FOR SALE: Choice Seed wheat, apply to J. S. Pendergrass, R. No. 3, Chapel Hill, N. C. The Universities of North and South Carolina played to a tie 7 to 7 at Columbia Saturday. The oldest building in Pittsboro was destroyed by fire the other day. It must have been the court-house. General James I. Metts, Commander of the North Carolina Division Unit ed Confederate Veterans, who was injured when his automobile was struck by by a street car in Wilming ton Saturday night, died at a local hospital Tuesday morning. In the ac cident Geneal Metts received lacera tions about the head and his skull was fractured. was aged 80 years. emm^^S»K@iW» Work is progressing finly on the concrete bridge at Strowd’s ford. There is a temporay bridge a few yards downstream being used, but if there should come a freshet, travel would have to change its course. The new road is being used practically all the way to Durham. It is doubtful if 9^^^ bockio " SAFETY FIRST Let me estimate your ELECTRICAL WIRING JOB noe too small or large for me AND THEN The water shortage plants in many towns in section in this state. the closing drouth the concrete bridge will be and turned over to traffic now and Thanksgiving. finished between Ask us for FREE Paint Books If you have put off painting on account of high cost of paints, don’t do so any longer, for the price of Pee Gee Paints is back to its former level and is now within your easy reach. Now is the time to protect your property against the rigors of winter, and no paint will give greater protection at lower cost per years of service than Pee Gee Mastic Paint. Quality of Work and Materials Considered. My prices are the lowest. Full line of Electrical Fixtures, Lamps, Irons Double Sockets, and etc., on hand. CALL ME NEXT TIME. . . M. D. FOISTER (In store room with John L. Foister) Miss Willie Lynch has gone to the Watts hospital to become a trained nurse. The Community Sing will be held Friday night at 8‘clock at the High School Auditorium. Don’t miss it, but come and bring your voice- Mr. Bun Hearne, of baseball fame, is down on a visit to old friends, expects to practice up soon on feathered tribe. He the The Orange County Training School football team and the Durham tigers played at Caldwell’s park last Friday. It was the “best man wins“ game, qnd was very interesting. A large crowd of students and others at tended the game.The Chapel, Hillians out weighed the tigers and shoved I them back and forth over the field at will. The sore: Chapel Hill 13, Dur ham 0. Cards. ' FOR SALE: Frd with Racer bo- dy wind shield and top, good tires and in good condition, cheap for quick sale, apply to Jhon L. Foister. Pittsboro is to have electric lights from a power plant being installed on Deep river by the Gilliam & Herley Co. Good, we knew Pittsboro would wake up some of these days. Virginia defeated the V. M. I. 14 to 7, at Lexington Saturday, making the the 14th game registered by the Vir ginians over the cadets out of 17 con tests staged between the two teams. The cafeteria, recently opened in the new brick building on east main street, is one of the busiest places in town at meal time. The new system is proving quite successful. Miss Ione Cates, who last year had charge of the cafeteria in the Greensboro High School, is manager, with Miss Florence Blackwood, cashier. The space and equipment are designed for 600 meals a day, at about the same cost that prevails in the board ing houses which is around $30 a month. and Color CHAPEI BROWN, HJLL, N. C HONORARY MEMBERS CMMUNITY CLUB Fire Chief John L. Foister attend ed the meeting of the International Fire .Chiefs held in Atlanta last week. He repots a very enjoyable and help ful meeting. A large force of road workers are building concrete gutters and curbs along the concrete road in town, between the gutter and road, will ja sand clay road on both sides. In be Mrs. Emeline Cheek, who died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Fau- cette, in Raleigh, recently, was well known in this section. She was the daughter o the late Wm. Gattis. She had many relatives and friends here abouts. She was aged about 82 years. The funeral and burial took place at Raleigh. Rev. W. W. Peele, pastor o the Edenton Street M. E. Church, of which Mrs. Cheek was the oldest member, conducted the ser vices. The Foweler farm, four miles east of Chapel Hill, sold at public auction Saturday, averaging $105 to $200 per acre. How’s that for farm lands around Chapel Hill? Besides the “honorary members It was gratifying to his many friends that the University conferred the degree of LL.D, on Maj. John W. Graham, of Hillsboro, the oldest trus tee of the institution. He bears wor thily a name long honored in North Carolina. In many respects his fa ther,'Hon. Wm. A. Graham, was the In view of the fact that the rapid development of our town has brought with it new and pressing problems that Can be solved not by our good Mayora nnd Aldermen alone, but on ly as they are backed up by the en tire, community; and in view of the J further fact that the Community Club furnishes a working organiz ation through which public sentiment is awakened and crystalized into a positive oorce for good, we appeal for the support of all citizens of the town, who are interested in the pub lic welfare . Your name on our books gives us not only a substantial fi nancial backing, but, what is even more important, an influential moral support. Will not every reader of the Chapel Hill News join with us, so that we can “carry on” to the best advantage in this critical hour? Your check for one dollar, sent to Mrs. Blanche Patterson, Treasurer, will enroll you in our memebership and pay your dues for the year 1921- ’22. The unusual covering capacity and great durability of Pee Gee Mastic is due to its 50% Zinc content, ground in pure linseed oil and White Lead, making it a double pigment paint. It is guaran teed and must give absolute satisfaction. “There is a Pee Gee Paint Product for every purpose that will Save the Surface* whether wood, brick, concrete, or metal.’’ I For Electrical Work MR. H. L. HALL, of Larkinville, Ala., a well-known merchant who sold STELLA VITAE and used it in his family, writes: “STELLA VITAE has proved to be the best medicine my wife has ever used for a run-down system.” WILL .TALK V arnub e^-S/ ciin^—KnameLc SSHt^k^QaaaBniBHHBBgaBBaRBKiaHaBUaaB For three generations women have been talking about Stella Vitae—“Woman’s Relief,” “Mother’s Cordial.” Telling each other what Stella Vitae has done for them, and their daugh-, ters, and their friends. Any woman may try Stella Vitae on. the positive guarantee that if the first bottle doesn’t help, the druggist will refund the money. Ask your druggist,, What Some Women Say About STELLA-VIK listed elsewhere inthis issue, Community Club numbers about “active” members. They hope double the number this year. the 130 to best furnished public official the LOST: A silver mesh bag engraved J. D. W. between Mr. Clyde Eubanks’ residence and Gerrard Hall on Tues day flight Octobedth. Liberal re ward offered. Return to Y. M. C. A. State has known. From the days of Joseph Graham the family has had a genius for public service. When I say “public service” I mean service to the public. They have served it with ability and fidelity, and none of them have served any private interest.— Hon. Joesephus Daniels in News and JObserver. Another big Auction sale of land will take place here nextSaturday. Three nice residence lots will be sold. Sale will start at 3:30 in afternoon. This property is part of the H. H. Patterson home place. The Chapel Hill Insurance & Realty Company will conduct this sale. Mrs. Susan Barbee, widow of the late Seaton M. Barbee, is on a visit to Mrs. Dell Tankersley. She stopped over en route from Asheville, where she spent the summer, to visit daughter at Washington, N. C. her People in Chatham county are in- terested in the proposed extension of the Bonlee and Asheboro railroad from Bonlee to Durham via Chapel Hill. We don’t blame them. We too Would become interested if there is anything to the project. Conederate veterans of Alamance county will be given free transporta tion over the railroads, to Chattanoo ga, Tenn., to attend the reunion of the United Confederate Veterans the South. The transportation be furnished by the county. of will The biggest football game of the season will be pulled off in Raleigh this afternoon between Carolina and A. E College teams.. Hundreds of stu- ents and others left this morning on the special train to witness the game and to take in the State Fair. 40 High Schools of the State are expected to compete for the football championship this year., The sche dules for the games to be played in West and East are being arranged. The final game between ateam from the east and one from the west, will played on Emerson field some time in December. ENDORSE MOVE TO CUT ARMAMENTS Delegates attending the Mt. Zion Baptist Association held last week at Bethel Baptist church, five miles west of Chapel Hill, went on record as en dorsing the action of the president of the United States in calling for a con ference on the limitation of arma ments, according to resolutions made publc. The resolutions drawn up by a committee composed of Dr. J. Elwood Welsh, pastor of the First Baptist Church, f Durham, Rev. M. W. Buck, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Burlington; and S. W. Andrews, of Chapel Hill, read as follows: “Whereas, the president of the United States has called a confer ence of the allied nations and China to meet November 11, 1921, fr the purpose of considering the puestion of the limitation of armament, and “Whereas, the Christian people of all denominations are committed by their professin of faith in Jesus Christ as the world’s saviour to a policy of world-wide peace, therefore “Be it resolved, that we, the dele gates of the Mt. Zion- Baptist Asso ciation in annual session assembled at Bethel Baptist Church in Orange County, do hereby endorse the action of the president of the United States in calling for a conference on the lim itation of armament and pray God’s blessings to rest upon the delegates to this conference in every honest, sincere effort put forth to reduce the armament of the world.” The next session of the Mt. Zion Association i s to be held at the Rose of Sharon Church in Durham county. E MILIE R. HOLMES, Chairman of the Membership Com mittee o fthe Community Club. ‘The honoary membership of the Community Club of Chapel Hill in cludes the followng gentlemen: H onorary Members: S. W. Andreys, Clyde Andrews, Ralph Andrews, Kent Brown, C. M. Baker, S. Berman, S. W. Bynum, J. P. Bennett, G. Y. C. Buice, J. M. Bell, J. B. Bullitt, F. Bradshaw, E. L. Bas kin, W. S. Bernard, D. D. Carroll, W.. S. Cain, Collier Cobb, W. C. Colser, J. F. Dashiel, P. H. Dagett, H. M. Dargan, Clyde Eubanks, C. E. Green, G. A. Harrer, A. Hobbs, M. E. Hogan, Thos. H. Hamiton, C. A. Hibbard, J. Sv Holmes, G. K. G. Henry, T. F. Hickerson, Geo. Howe, W. B. J. E. Kennett, E. W. Knight, Latshaw, W. S. Long, S. E. John Lasley, F. W. Morrison, Horton, H. F. A. C. McIntosh, C.-S. Mangum, Isaac Man ning, Geo. McKie, Mr. Mustard, W. H. Odum, N. W. Paul, A. H. Patter son, W. D. Patterson, Jim Patterson, A. A. Pickard, J. H. Pratt, F. W. Prouty, W. S. Roberson, T. Saville, R. L.Strowd, J. L. Sibley, E. C.. Smith Jacob Thomas, W. D. Toy, H. R. Tot ten, O. Towles, W. B. Thompson, A. S Wheeler, H C. Wills, P. H. Winston, Paul J. Weaver, L. A. Williams, H. V. Wilson, Charles Woollen H. H. Wil- liams. Will McNider, Edwin Greenlaw, Hobbs, H. M. Wagstaff, Mrs. Lucy James, Mrs. W. Pickard, Mrs. L. Marriott, Mrs. J. Gore, Mrs. H. H. Patterson. W. W. 666 quickly relieves Constipation, Biliousness, Loss- of_ Appetit e _ and Headach e s. due to Torpid Liver. NOTICE SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY. Under and by virtue of authority vested in the undersigned by reason of a certain Mortgage Deed executed by Walter Knight to Sutton Middle- ton Co., on the 1st day of March 1921 registered in the office of the Regis ter of Deeds of Orange County in Book of Mortgages No. 58 at page 271 to secure the payment of a cer tain bond and default having been made for payment thereof, the under signed will on All persons are hereby notified that (SATUDAY. 12, NOVEMBER, NOTICE To my friends and customers: I am glad to state I am again in Chapel Hill in charge of the Grocery Department of the A. A. Kluttz Co., and will appreciate a call and the the co-partnership heretofore con- 1921, patronage of all. assure you the same service and appreciation as before. Bring your country produce to me I assure you the best prices for same. Respectfully. J. A. HOLMES. ducted by Frank H. Durham and E. P. Ellington under the trade name of Carrboro Cash Store is this day dis- soived by mutual consent. Hereafter the said business will be owned and operated by Frank H. Durham, who assumes all debts and libilities of the firm, and all persons indebted to said firm will make settlement with the said Frank H. Durham. This 14th day of October, 1921. E. P. ELLINGTON, FRANK DURHAM at the Court House door in Orange County at 12 o’clock M.. offer for sale at cash to the highest bidder the fol lowing described articles of personal property: The entire stock of good together wiht all the fixtures located in the comer building of W. A. Hayes in Hillsboro, N C. SUTTON MIDDLETON CO. Mortagees. PHONE 220 THACHER MEDICINE CO., CfeatJasooga, Tena., U. S. A W. A. LLOYD, CARRBORO, N. C. F. B. WALSER, Electrical Contractor, Next to Postoffice. I 28_ Bl B The Bank of Carrboro R. H. Ward.Ch’mn of the Board A. P. Lloyd Cashier WO RES two Me- half This farm is situated about miles from Mebane on the old bane-Hillsboro road, about one MRS. LILIE REYNOLDS of Mad ison, S. C., says: “I have been using your STELLA VITAE with won derful results. It is the most won derful medicine for women that I have ever used. I want all my friends to try STELLA VITAE.” Spent $1,200,000 for Relief of Famine Sufferers in China Last Year. Eighty Acre farm FoJ Sale mile off of the present State Highway and about one mile from Cheek’s Siding. It is beautifully lying red land of the highest quality, about sixty to eighty acres are thrown in to one level field bordering the road. The land is dark red loam, especially adapted to clover, grains and grass es. It will also produce cotton. The buildings consist of one new framed four room dwelling, one old brick dwelling with a fair old barn. The orchard is old with some large old fashioned apples trees. It is well watered with a splendid pasture with a good spring near one house and a well at the other. No nicer little farm can be bought at any price around Mebane. Our price for quick sale, $60.00 per acre. Address MEBANE REALTY & DEVELOPMENT COMPANY W. S. CRAWFORD, Manager. Mebane, N C To help overcome conditions of acute distress in five famine stricken prov inces of Northern China, where mil lions of persons were affected by an unprecedented shortage of food, the American Red Cross during the last fiscal year spent more than $1,200,000, $1,000,000 of which was contributed dl- reety by National Headquarters and the remainder by various groups in terested in the welfare of China. Through the wide relief operations thus made possible it is estimated that more than 600,000 famine sufferers were saved from- starvation. To the end that similar prompt re lief measures by the organization may always be possible the Red Cross is asking continued support by the Amer ican people by universal renewal of membership at the Annual Red Cross Roll Call, November 11 to 24. The method of relief employed by the American Red Cross in its opera tions in China was particularly effec tive, for in addition to saving hundreds of thousands of lives it provided China vith more than 900 miles of permanent roads that are sorely needed to pre vent a recurrence of famine. At one time the Red Cross employed 74,000 Chinese workmen, paying them in food for themselves and dependents, this food being brought in from Manchuria •nd elsewhere. _ Weak “After the birth of my baby I had a back-set,” writes Mrs. Mattie Cross- white, of Glade Spring, Va. “I was very ill; thought I was going to die. I was so weak I couldn’t raise my head to get a drink of water. I took . . . medicine, yet I didn’t get any better. 1 was constipated and very weak, getting worse and worse. I sent for Cardui.” TAKE CARDUI The Woman’s Tonic "I found after one bot tle of Cardui 1 was im proving,” adds Mrs. Crosswhite. "Six bot tles of Cardui and was cured, yes, I c they were a God-s me. I believe I would have died, had it not been for Cardui.” Cardui has been found beneficial in many thousands of other cases of womanly trou bles. If you feel the need of a good, strengthen ing tonic, why not try Cardui? It may be Just what you need. AU Druggists C.T. Young Machine Shop AND GARAGE, WEST MAIN STREET* CHAPEL HILL, N C. Automobile Repairs, Machinery Repairs, Oils, Auto Parts, Acetylene Welding, etc. Hava just completed and equipped a large Garage with the machinery aud am ready to do all work on st ort notice. My Oils are the best grades and at prices as low as they can be sold. GASOLINE always on band. WBR'Ccn be fixed to you any time of night : KmwtotimmimmtimiffiimiiiimiiiKiaatataitm Savers and Winners It is very interesting to observe enthu siastic savers. We watch them as they come regularly to the bank to make their deposits. There is on their faces the smile that is peculiar to winners. Thei rglory is not alone in the amount they save: they know that it is not always easy to save and are pros'd to have suc ceeded. And then there is the fascination of growth! Only those who have really sav ed know the pleasure of watching a sav ings account grow. A growing savings account is something to be proud of! HIM DERCORMS