Newspapers / The Mount Airy News … / Sept. 22, 1921, edition 1 / Page 5
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• JULIUS ELDRIDGE Agaat far Vm LMbjr Ca. rlariat Nuaaally'a Ftna Cindl* TlMRnal 31 MWator cold. Lott canoa, Aunal V, K. L. Shiran. Plnia. Love to all at homa." Thin waa tha farawall mo* itatf* aeratehad into tha rocka by • Canadian, in a atony, wava-batten cava at Squaw Bay Point on tha 4aao late churv* of Lak* Superior, wh» he had boon marooned (Hiring a h«a< • turm Kiahormen found him elln ing to th« rack* vxhauated and woa Ing only a thrvd of a bathing rait. Wanted Rough hard wood car stan dards thirty inches long. Will pay $2.50 per hundred, cash on delivery. North Carolina Granite Corp. Mount Airy, N. C. 8-23-c The Successful Cake Cole's Sanitary Dcrtfn Draft Range With its W r^O LE'C V> HOT BLAST FUEL SAVING SYSTEM of Combustion insures vOen baking on all sides. Everything comes out of tke crOen perfectly baked No disappointments for the housewife. The husband is interested because of its one-third to one-half fuel saving results. Cole's Hot Blast Com bustion burns all of the combustible fuel gases (wasting nothing.) With fuel and food at its present high price these art things that even? husband and wife will find of interest in Cole's Dcrtfn Draft Range This range is furnished in blue or gnr? enamel or plain black finish. Come in and let us tell you of its mam) valuable feativfs and shoW ^ou its beautiful and saiutar^ construction. W. E. Merritt Co i TO VISIT AFRICA Chicago, III., .Sept. 17.—An excur •Ion by Mm* 900 American NipaM la Liberia, Africa, th« Negro repeblls fostered by people In the United Statee, waa declared to ba practically assured following a larva number of enlistments obtained at the national Baptiat convention, attended by 3600 negroes from all parte of the country Thia trip la to be mailt* on the invi tation of C. D. H. King, President oi Liberia. The viaito.s will b<> eipectwl to take part In the grand pageant of native race* on Dwrmb»r 25, cvla brating' the n e hundredth annlvrr Y >ary of the republic. t- It la proponed to charter the steam '■ ahip Tuniaian of the Canadian PacitW (Veen Service, for tha trip. TV jail ing data la December 3, *\nd the re turn January' 17, 1 VfL Kerb t-iuriat will pay hia own way, a sum of ap proximately |760. That the negro#* have the money could not bo doubted by anybody who had an opportunity to count the automobilm lining ooth aide* of the atreet for a block in front of the convention hall. They were mostly the big, expensive make* of can, too. A Traditional Bond. "Haven't we every r"a«'>n on earth for goirg back to Afri<;i for * visit?" asked Lewis Gfrw't Jordan of Phila ik-lphia, Penn., v-vretary of the For eign Mission Board of the conven tion. "Isn't it strange that for 250 years there were excursions from Africa, free to us, bringing the nude savage in chairs to serve aa a slave, but that no one has thought of an excursion >o carry the children of those poot enslaved people back to see their fatherland? <• "We an- in touch with more than 500 persons who have thought of -oing. Of these, 300 say they are Koing. We find it very difficult to have th-m remember that a ship to \ fries is not like a street car -|<ay as vnu enter. A ship for so important a cruise will need months for prvpara <>n, so that tho«e who are going are required to tell us by payment for their tickets and not by a long letter telling how much they are interested in Africa. "The West A'rica tour means a new day for Africa, commercially and religiously. |t offers an opportunity to the thoughtful American negro farmer and wide-awake business man, i he expanding teacher, and the preacher with missionary xeal and a vision. Educational Possibilities. "The West Africa'tour menns the broadening of til" vision of the Ameri can negro in a way that nothing hat don# for half a century. The help which will come to all who go will be felt by their children for a hundred vears to came. "Neither the laid ng of the Pil l ifrims nor the coming of our ftthers to Jamestown, Virginia, will be dwelt upon more by the historian in the coming vears than will be this tour to Africa." The American-African Tourist 0<»mpany, Inc., of Philadelphia, from which city the boat ia to start, ia handling the arrangements. A pros pectus of the excursion describes it ns an ideal winter cruise of 45 days, to be conducted In ,-onnection with the trade exhibit and convocation of chiefs at Monravia, Liberia. They will visit the Canary Islands, Dakar, Senegal, Freetown, Sierra Leone, Grand Bassa and Cape Palmas, Li beria, Cape Verde Islands, and Ber muda Islands. "At the trade exhibita," says the prospectus, "the African interior, with all its untold natural splendor, will ba on display. Natives of all tribes will appear in tribal costume in a typi cal native village. Native handiwork will be on sale." | Warfare Planned to Drive Rat* From Eastern State*. Damage totaling $200,000,000 in stored foodstuffs, brain, fleld crops, and other injurable materials is done by nit* In the United States annually. Only the united effort* of every homs owner and tenant can effect the abo lition of the** rodent pest*. The Biological Survey, United States De partment of Agriculture, I* starting a big campaign against rodent* throughout the eastern United State*. Much already has bam accomplished In the matter of entrol In the Wes tern and Middle Western State*, where effective co-operation waa se rured. On the other hand, residents of the Eastern and Southern States, a* a rait, have been exposed to wide* spread ravage* aad attack* from rodaat* for such long period* that they have become ao accustomed to the nuisance* a* to accept them a* a matter of course. Uncle Sam I* doing to to tke nmd fc To llluatrate tka to grain and com Hold*, tka ■if tko SUto Penitantiary fmem, »»« Ing 2,600 mm, at Baton Rouge. La., la of interest. Last jroar a 200-acr» AoM of oora waa planted on Wita farm. Tito rata worked their way through tho Hold, iUaN«| alt tko aood before the kernels could germinate. Tke Hold m plantad a second time, and again tha rata overran tha proepectiva eontAald Waving In thair waka path* of daa tract ton. Undeterred, tha term 1 —H«r plantad Uto Bald to corn a third time. and ultimately secured a poor (tend, which rooultod In tha pro ductton of about one-third of a normal Thia yaar, Juat before planting, a ilrhrt on tha rate waa org an lead, fol lowing method* recommended by tha Biological Survey. Convict labor waa uaad In diatributlnr poison bait ovar tho ar.tira 2,ft00-acre tract, and aa a »naM|Uonra tha placa waa practically .'road of rata. Ai a direct result of hta lat-aradication drive, tha farm ihia year eecured from a alngla plant ing an escellent itand of corn thai' •ear a indicatlona of an early harvaat of a good crop. HINDERCORN8 ki moves corna and callouaaa. St"| tall pain. Knaure* comfort to tha feet. Makve walking aaay. i IHCHX C lk ICAl WORgS Mai .1 n, v. HALE OK VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. By virtue of authority contained In: a certain deed of trust executed on tha 20th day of July. Itf20, by C. W Hollo- i well to H. G. Draughan, Trustee for1 J. K. Gregory, to secure an indebted neea of $440.00, being balance of pur-i chane money, tha stipulation In aaid1 deed of truat not having bean com- i ui.ed witli and at tne request of tha holder of aaid bond, tha undersigned trustee will eapoae to sale for casB to the highest bidder, at the court house [ door w tko town of Dobaon, Surry County. North Carolina, on Saturday the 24th day of SeptemWr, 1921, the following described real eatate: Adjoining the lands of A. B. Kisley and Will Lowe; beginning at • 1 on Tayolra' line at Sid Me Roberta '•omer and running «outh with Owen Taylor's line to the P mill creek: thence still south course with Hill Oillam'H line to Robert K — I line and hia corner; thence eastward with Robert K— due line to Nat Bowline line and hia comer; thence I north with Bowling line to Will Lowe's line; thenee with his line still north wit!' Sid McRoberts line: thence west to the beginning, containing eighty new, more or less. H, C. Drauphan, Trustee. Masting* and Whicker. Attys. NOTICE. A live per tent uia having beau I placed wfcn me iin.l hy virtue of au ; i.uirty or an order of the Clerk-of the Superior tour! of Surry county, MM I in the special proceeding entitled A.| I J Deathernge. Ailmimv.r itor of thi ' estate of Fd. A. MidKff ile^nwd »s Nannie Miiikiff et a)., the same being No. . on th. special proceeding , dockets of said court the undersigned | tommiicaioner will, on Saturday, Oct. 16th. lMt, af S O'clock offer f->r sslel i to the highest liidder on terms of one ihird cash, balance in six and twelve I month*. that certain tract of lati .1 k i Mount Airy Township upon which ii | the home if th" late Ed A M ilkilT 'neai the Flat Rock and an | follows: Itc^ining lit a stak* and running S. 30 dee. W. 27 ft.; thence S. 44 de»r W. 12.1 ft.; thence S. IN' deg. W. '00 ft. to a stake; thence N. ldH de/ W I 1,113 ft. to a stake; thence S. 82 deg ' SO min. K. 12S ft.; thence N. 2 dwr. 4."> j ruin. ft. to a stake; ih*nce N II cleg. K. 42'. ft. to a • ike; thi ice N. j 40 dei{. 80 m n. E. JoO f: to the l>ogin- j nine For lietlcr ,ie,<■ "piion see ilw-tl from C. H. Keesc. t!d. A. Mnliilf and title bond from C. B. Keeaee to Ed. A. Midkiff. This Sept. 10, E. C. HIVENS, Com TAKES CARE . OF 5 CHILDREN _____ ' Mr*. Taylor's Sickneta tnded by Lydia E. Pinkham'g Vegetable Compound Roxbury, Maaa — "I ruffered eontin oaily with backache and waa often de aponoeni, uo amy •pelts and at ray monthly periods ft 1 ww almost impos sible to keep around at my work. Since my lut baby came two years ago my | back has been worae and no position I could get in would relieve it, and doe tor's ndidne did not help me. A friend B> DI.Lk._'. v— etabie Compound and I hare founc relief aince lumg It. My back la twtter and I can (leap wall. I keep hooaa and hava tha cara of (fa children ao ray work U yery trying and lam van thankful 1 hare found tha Compowad eoeh i Mp, I recommend It to my frienda and if vow wiah to uaa thia latter I are vary clad to help any woman Buf fering aa I waa until I uaad Lydia B. Ptnkham'a Vegetable Compound. Mra. Maud* E. Tatujb, 6 St. Jamaa Place, Roxbury, Maaa. • iaoneoftha nvmptoma of a displacement or d reamaf tha femala lyatam. No ahoold make the mfatake of trying to ovareama it by heroic endurance, let profit byMra.Taykir'aa«parianee and try Veteran of Civil War Still Hale and Hearty GBOKGB U. KUAW. Sprtnff i*W, Mm. To nay that I reel twenty-nve years younger, twenty-live year* healthier ind twenty-five yearn atronger ex ,«re»* what Tanlac has done for me >etter than any other way I ran put t," aaid George D. Shaw, veteran of he Civil War, who now Uvea at 321 Walnut street, Springfield, Mans. "I am now seventy-eight .year* old uid I don't hesitate to «ay I have lever known a medicine to equal Tan ac. For fifteen year* I wax aubject o attack* of indigestion that were so >ad at timea I would have to lay up 'or a week or two. For a 1<mg time 1 ived on cracker* and milk alone a* uithing elae agreed with me. ''When 1 started on Tanlac 1 wi-igh •»l only one hundred and seventeen Miundft and my day* were thought to Office Change My office hereafter ia in ike Muni ipal building at head of the stairway. T. B. McCargo. A Pronoun -ed Succ< h». The uniform suece** thnt has at - t-.idvd the use of Ch*mb«rl.i;n'a Colic md Diarrhoea Remedy in the relief in<l cure of bowel complaint*, both tor hildven and adult*, ha* brought it in o almost univeriwl use, so tn:«t it ia .Tactically without a rival ami r.a 'veryone who ha* umxI it know*, it ib vithout an equal. be numbered. I've heen so wonder fully built up, I now weigh on* hun dred and forty-three poftnds and my stomach ia as sound u a dollar. In fact, I believe I could eat the old anny ration* again without it hurting me in the least. "1 never mien a chance of laying a ■ id word for Tanlai and I would like , Ui urge the boys of the "Sixties" who | are not ftteiing right to irive it a trial, I fur I am sure it would put them in line again juat as It ban me. For j ; man of my aire to have no physical ailment, to be well and strong and , ■ njoy life as he did twenty-live yean ! i. Is certainly something to b« .mikful for and there is nothing too £ood 1 can aay for Tanlar." Tanlat is sold by leading druggists everywhere. NOTICE The underaignvd having qualified as Admmistrator of the estate ot f. A. • r:H*m;.ti. deceased. t his i* to notify -.J! persons holding -laims nirainst th« rotate to present same to the uniier signed Admnmtraior or hia attorney, within twelve nt»r>th» from the date hereof or ttlia not:«e will be pleaded In bur of recovery thereon. All pers<> if Indebted to the estate ure .-e<jue*to<i to make immediate pay m nt. This August 16th. 1921. R. K. Simmons, Alter, of F. A. C.-i»sraun, Jec'd. I. H. Foltfer. Attorney. Common sense . in good baking *- {SLwr® TRY juat one sack of Occo-nee-chee Self Rising Plour and see what it saves you. See what wonderfully good biscuits, waffles and hot cakes yoo can make every time you use it. Yon don't have to worry about measuring eut baking powder, soda and salt. They are already mixed in Occo-nee-che* Flour, in iuet the right proportions. Their cost is less when used this way than whan bought separately. By adding water or milk and shortening to Occo-nee-chee Plour your batter is ready for cooking. Think of the time and bother that saves. And you can be absolutely sure of its turning out right.' These are tl}e reasons for the great popu larity of Occo-nee-chee Plour among common senae housekeepers. Order a sack from your grocer. You can tell it by the Indian Head on m front It will pay you. B* an kmy Prnmrlmt AUSTIN-HEATON COMPANY Durham, North Carolina
The Mount Airy News (Mount Airy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1921, edition 1
5
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