the fi ••bullion con -
OMd Unl tax dto-:
•at ^H-ving peti-!
«l ,
far aa election to (• bald to
i cb« will af the poofte
__ that* ahall be levied • *padal
■f not mn than thirty cenie on
each UM hundred dollar! of valuation ,
fit pmprrty and not mor*
wSmm
t tha funda apportioned to sa!d
by tha Board of Education
Tha aald petition having baa* ap
proved by tha Board of Education of
Surry County, it in thai WWW MM
that an election ba haM in tald pro
paaed uarial tax diatriet on BaiaMay,
tl tTi day of December 1M1, to aa
' tha will of tha people aa above
Bald propoaed diatriet being bound
ad aa follow*: ■•gjanlag at tha
Mouth of Ho ma Creek and down tha
Yadkin river to the mouth of Oraaay
Creek, theaee up the creak fo mouth
of Adiun Scott branch thanea up eatd
up said
r*
branch to the butt of Stony
thence across aad Mmm
Scott'* farm to tha *ou(«* or Hudaoo
Creek, thanea down *ald weak to
Ararat river, thanre down tha river
to mouth of Batty Kelly cr**k, thanea
with the old dietrirt line to mouth
af Horn* croak, being tha place of the i
beginning, J. E. Hudson's home to be|
included In boundary.
It I* further ordered that an aMttr*
aaw re|ri*tration of the voter* in *aid |
diatriet be had. That B. F. Scott he
and I* hereby appointed Registrar,
that Charley Coon and R. E. »j«rber
are hereby appointed Judge* to hold 1
•aid election, that the registration
book* he opened on the 12th day of i
November, 1921, and closed on the
Srd day of Dooember, 1921. That
•aid election be haM at B. K. Bcott'*
•torts, in Shoals Townihip.
Thii the 31st day of October, 1921.
Henry Wolfe, Clerk to Board of ,
County Commissioner*.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
SCHEDULES
The following schedule figures are
publiahed a* information only, and
ar« not guaranteed.
The arrival and Departure of Paa
aaogcr Traina at Green*boro, H. C.
Arrival Depart*
nam hi
12:26a New Orleans-Atlanta 7:86#
12:30a Washington 1:14*
8:28a Birmingham-Atlanta 12:40*
4:10a Washington 10:10?
• :2&a Richmond 10:86p
4:00* Goldaboro-Kaleigh 12:40*
• :45a WinsUm-Salam 10:40*
•:15a Washington U:Mr
7:26a Waahington 12:86a
7:80a 8anford 7:ttp i
7:46a Charlotte x 7:00*
10:20a Raleigh 2.16p1
12:10p Goldibnpn-Raleigh 4:15;
11:66a Mt. Airy 4:Mp
U X N. Witkaaboro W-S l:Mp
12:26p Danville 7:40p
1:80p N. OUana-P'na 8:Mp
4:06p A*h *v ilia- W Inrtoa 11:20?
4:16 Sanford Wilmington 12:S0p
6:46p New York-Waah l:42p
<:80p Weatminiater-Char 12:4(p
• :50p Wllkcsbor© W-S 8:00*
7:00p Mt. Airy 8:00a
7:80p Gold* bo ro Raleijh 8:20*
i: 60p Winston.Salem 7:40p
10:09p Charlotte-Atlanta 7:40p
10:10p Goldsboro-Raleigh 7:26a '
10:21 p Augusta-Columbia 4:20a
ll:46p Atlanta-Charlotte 8:86a
X Daily Except Sunday
The arrival and Departure of Paaaea !
far Traina at Mt. Airy.
11:86a Sanford 3. JO;
8:00p Sanford-Wilmington 8:80*
The arrival and Departure of Passed
far Traina at Winaton-Salem.
11:46a Mt Airy-Rural Hafl 4:8<tf
8:05p Asneville l:80pi
M. A. Pendleton, Ticket Agent. A-Y 1
Rwy Co., Freight Office. Phone 28.
SOME EXAMPLES OF
WISE FARMING
mrnm ButUr T.IU mi Mm WW
Haw Saiud TMr Oppor
(By Bion U. Butler)
Zeb BUm li I iMMt who ll«M Ml
th« headwaters of Little Uvir ta Um
heart of Moor* comity. Ho wae
brought ap to rales mm nMn, mm
tobacco, wm of Um other thine* that
tho typical farmer la thla section
raleea, and at hia father's hoaia he gat
riffhi good Idaaa of aiklnf thoaa
crops. Ha atrritd a wlfi who haa a
knowledge of fam Itfa, and who haa
alao a knowledge of the things that
are taught in the achoola regarding
farm home making They are a sub
atontiaJ pair of country folka, with a
good farm, hoaM convenlencee, hooka
and papers on tho table, and they have
the ifroper conception of atokiag on
the fam the tMnga the farm needa.
Bat the otlier day I waa talking
with them as I drove paat their farm
and Mr. Blue told mm a atory of farm
ambltiona. Briefly tt Is that Moore
county la opening a new world for the
farmer. No, It la not peachaa, nor to
bacco, nor any of those pleasing pro
jecta that are dotng ao well In the
Sandhill country. Zeb Blue's atory
it simply a tale of the capitaliaatlon
of opportunity, and it la applicable
nvcr must of North Carolina.
Salle to Resort Towae
Not far from the Blur farm la
Pinehurat, and Southern Pine* la
about the same distance, and the
other re»ort town* and the proapec
tive reaort communltiea that are
building. Theae resorts uae a moun
tain of atuff to eat. Not juat corn
bread and aide meat ahd collorda,
whicliar (food thing* when you want
them, llut theae communltiea uae the
things they want and they get those
thin** largely from or Palti
more or Florida, or wherever auch
•tuff ia made. Now Zeb Blue, inatead
of figuring that becauae the folk* at
I'inehurat do not buy much fat back
and corn meal it ia useleaa to try to
aell them anything ia undertaking to
find out what they really want, and
make that wTrt of plunder for them.
He ia not going into any untested
and improbable schemes, nor attempt
ing to make those things that are not
adapted to his climate, but so many
things are within hia range that he
proposes to get some of the Pinehurat
morfey by having things to sell that
Ptviehurat wants.
He will still have cotton on hla
place, and other staples that mean
money, but he will alao endeavor to
have those other products that mean
some easier money, and money that
will come in each day he senda some
stuff to hia local market.^ Already
much of that kind of farming ia
catching a hold in the Sandhill coun
try, and it ia making a big difference.
Successful Negro Parmer
Ben Leslie is a negro farmer near
Southern Pines who has establiahed
a connection with the Highland Pines
Inn, and he sells that hotel each seas
on a lot of sweet potatoes, onions, and
other eatables, and probably he real
Take the guess out
of your baking!
WHY not be sure that your biscuits will
always com* out of the oven crisp, light,
and tender? That your family will not be
disappointed with heavy, tough waffles and
hot cakes.
Take the guess out of your baking with
Occo-nee-chce Flour. So many women us* it
because it means absolute baking success.
There's no chanc* of going wrong in meas
uring out the flour, baking powder, soda and
salt. They are already mixed in Occo-nee-chee
Flour and in exactly the right proportions.
You simply add water or milk and shortening
and your batter is ready for cooking. Your
ingredients cost less that way.
Get a tack of Occo-nee
chee Flour from your gro
cer. See how easy it makes
good baking. The Indian
Head ia on every sack.
Wkm a JW wmnt f mU plmim
Mamr mr4t Pfrlam
Au^tm-Heaton Conpuy
Durham, N. C.
OCCO -NEE- CHEE
Self-Rising Flour
*+ i . P • m
wool* gat for tkm or few Mm af
cotton, taking pctoaa aa they run how
year to jtni. Ho aloo ratoe* cottoo,
ami b • r**J eoUoa farmer, bat hi*
■wot potatoee that go to the hotal
1 l>ring him mora for m am of crap
than bio cotton bring*. Bat bo makee
I Ho right kind. Ho toM m» a day or
two ago that bo oapartad la havo at
tho colored fair at Pinehurat a boahol
of aweot* that would not Kara mora
than ton poUtooa la tho buahcl.
Up In Chatham county laot waak I
> (topped at tho boaao of Jod Newton,
| a ono-armod awn who haa boon a ton
ant farmer, and with W* one arm ha*
1 mado aomo mighty good ctopo of *ot
! ton, whoat and othar thing* for hi*
•uboiatonco. Ho-haa a bunch of tur
; koy* and chic bona and tolla mo that
' thoro la mom money In tarkeya and
rhlrkena at tho proaoat awikrt pricao
' than any cotton ho ovor rata ad On
! tho farm thav forago largalp for
iha-maolvaa, and in th* fall tho ttirkeya
ara In good domaad, and bring good
monoy. Chickona are ahrays waatni
and at pricoa that to fair to took at
thooo day*.
itemaaafor ran* Hluff
(Thickens are in demand In Chat
| liam county, turkey* ire In demand
> in Chatham, hut the coonty boundary
line does not mark the limit of the de
1 mand. The New* • Letter, printed
< over at the University, has assembled
«ome figures to show that the fartor
! ies of North Carolina make in a year
almost a billion dollars' worth of
rood*. When I came to this state a
little less than twenty years ago the
manufactured products totaled less
than one-tenth that amount, or about
a hundred million dollars. Now the to
tal is close to a billion, and nobody
knowft where this flc«*i is tending.
Almost a hundred and sixty thousand
hands are working in the factories,
und they and other members of the
families they represent are calling
for a vast amount of stuff that the
farms make.
Few people are aware of it but
' the farms have before them a steadily
nnd rapidly increasing job of feeding
' the factory hand, the railroad hand,
the town residents, who are steadily
' increasing in numbers, and the winter
' visitors who are also becoming more
, numerous every seaaon. And this itv
crraaing buying population is scatter
ed all over the state. It is confined to
' no one county and no one section, and
; no one section will have the monopoly
of providing what must be provided.
• Hen Who Seise Their Opportunity
It is men like Zeb Blue, the fann
1 <-r, who aees what is in front of him
1 and who sees ahead, who prepares for
this opportunity on a systematic
; scale, who will profit most by it. Hi*
j type of men understanding what they
| are to count on and what tbey m^y
| expect. It is men like Ben Leslie who
1 ratch the opportunity that comes to
him, und gets the money out of it as
! he gtx s along, and this man has made
I himself a farm from his work, for he
| lives on his own place. It is men like
Jud Newton who realise that turkeys
and chickens have comi to be worth a
i price in the market, and that such
i thing* are worth making because they
can help so much in the making them
selves. and pa> when they are made
in thik fashion.
NOTICE
One fourth of the freeholders con
stituting a proposed special tax
» ho«i| district herinafter net out, hav
ing petitioned the_Board of County
Comm s-iioners for an election to bi
b-Id V> ascertain the will of the peo
ple whether Hhere shall be levied a
special tax of not more than 6 cents on
the ore huadrcd dollars valuation of
property and not more than IS cents
on oach pill to supplement
the funds apportioned to said district
by the Hoard of Education. The said
Ktition having been approved by the
ard of Education of Surry County.
It is therefore ordered that an elec
tion be held in said proposed special
tax district on Saturday, the lTtn day
of December, 1!>21, to ascertain the
will of the people as above aet out.
Said proposed district being bounded
as follows; Beginning at meuth of
Skin Cabin Creek on Ararat River,
then & Westward course including J.
V. Wall, then by the way of Jaaper
Brown's including him to the old
Stanford District line near J. W.
Fulk's, then as the road meanders
to Whitaker's Cross Roads, thence
with Corinth District to C. D. Brun
ers then Eaat to Pine Hill, M. E.
church, then Eastward course not in
cluding James Boyles to M. W. Wall
placc including it, then a So. course
ny H. G. Whitaker's not including
him to the old district line to river
thence down the river to place of be
ginning.
It is further ordered that an entire
new r< gistration of the voters in said
district be had. That J. L. Patterson
a \d 0. G. Hardy are hereby appointed
judges to hold said election, that Ben
jamin H. O'Neal be appointed Regis
trar to hold said election. That the
K<>gistration books be opened on the
1-th day of November, 1921, and cloa
ed on the Srd day of December, 1921.
That said election be held in Stanford
school house, Siloam township.
This the 31 st day of October, 1911.
Henry Wolfe, Clerk to Board of
Co. Contra. —
Drs. Robert I Eugene Cox
CHIROPRACTORS
Residence Phone, .. ,. 36
Office Phone, 384
Marshall Heights
Part of the Rterse Farm on Ike Stat* Highway to Dahsoa
| Will be Sold at Public Auction
Tb27lT Nov. 24
Subdivided into building lota—One lot will be given away FREE!
Other prizes.
Easy Terms | Band Concert
26 stacks of hay, fodder and shucks and a large quantity of corn and
feed stuff will be sold, also a lot of pigs, shoats and cattle. Terms or cash.
PIEDMONT LAND EXCHANGE AND AUCTION COMPANY
Dr. J. E. Banner |
DENTIST
Special attention given to ihe treat
went of pyorrhea and to X-ray wutk
I can now uromtao poaitive cure in
the neat majority of j*yorthrn ra»e«
i Office in bulMlnir fouoff'r*
Sydnor& Sparge;
Insurance A^eni
| tOI'NT AIRY, N.C
Jarrell Produce Co.
Wants
Chickens, Eggs, Butter
Brmwax and all Kinds Country Produce
SEE US BEFORE YOO SELL
Ingredient* of VICK8
<Jfciverti*ement cA4\Z «
Oil of Eucalyptus
from Australia fit
From that far land where leaps the kangaroo
Cornea iSucaJyptua, famed for healing fume a"
o
iN the other side of the globe, in Australia,
^ grows the marvelous Eucalyptus, tallest of
trees, sometimes 480 feet high. Its foot-long,
twisted, feathery leaves yield an aromfctic heal
ing oil, whose perfume fills the air. Natives have
christened the Eucalyptus "Fever Destroyer,"
because they believe it keeps away malaria. The
Australian Government plants it in low, marshy
places to prevent miasma.
QIL of Eucalyptus is on*
of the sources of the
surprising efficacy of Vicks
VapoRub against conges
tions of throat, nose or chest
—against skin hurts or itch
ing* against various bodily
aches and pains.
The United States Dis
pensatory, the great author
ity on drags snd their uses,
in commenting on Eucalyp
tus, says:
"It is germicidal. entisaptic
and stimulant; also tsptctomit,
Urt.]r owl In be immwi at
chronic bronchitis sad infection*
of tha upper rMpiratory Met It
is fraqoantly uaad aa an inhale
It <■ so afraaabie draaaing to
ulcere and is largely ueed in Ala
iHihih; alao often uxd ae t
counur-irriunt in the treatment
at netualgia. rheumatism, ate."
Vicks penetrates and
vapori—a. For houra after
application the healing fames
of Eucalyptus, Camphor,
Menthol, Thyme, Juniper
Tar .OilofTurpentine,Cedar,
etc., are breathed into the
In literally millions at
homea, Vlcfcs ia the standby
for colds and doeena of com
mon hurts and ailn isiiis //
//