Newspapers / Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, … / July 21, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE 2 SATURDAY, JULY 21ST. GRANVILLE SUPERIOR COURT. FARM AND GADEN CALENDAR THE PUBLIC LEDGER Calendar of July Term Hon. Geo. W. Conner, Judge Presiding. CIVIL, CAUSES JURY CASES 6 12 39 66 75 77 83 WEDNESDAY, JULY 25th Taylor vs Meadows. Chandler vs Chandler. Goss vs Adcock. Oakley vs Hite. Suit vs McDuffie. Eastwood vs Bullock. THURSDAY JULY 26th Parhara vs Gray et al. 84 Mangum vs Clayton & Day. 93 Levine vs Kaplon et al. 94 Blumberg Bros, vs Kaplon et al. 99 Hicks & Clark vs Lakel. 107 Wilkins vs Tilley. 110 Meadows vs Winston. FRIDAY, JULY 27th 114 Morton vs Bragg. 119 Sherman vs Eaton. 124 Roberts vs Adcock. 127 First National Bank vs Meeder. 128 Tanner vs Jones. 132 Moss vs E. C. Harris. 136 Berger vs Fergenbaum. 138 Lyon vs Auto Co. et al. 139 Cousins vs Peace. 140 Insurance Co. vs Bragg & Floyd. 141 Arrington vs Arrington. 146 Furniture Co. vs Kaplon. SATURDAY, JULY 28th 91 Oakley vs Southern Ry. 112 Peace vs Southern Ry. 113 Dement vs Southern Ry. 150 Carlyle vs S. A. L. Ry. 147 Daniel vs Millis. 148 Thomas vs Overby and Chapman 149 Harris vs Harris. 150 Howell vs Southern Ry. MOTION DOCKET Wolf vs Wolf. Bank vs Lumber Co. Farlow vs Locket & Cupp. Ragland vs Lassiter & Co. Smith vs Huff & Watkins. 101 Marable vs Hobgood et al. 115 Mantos vs Contos. 116 Pannabaker et al vs Bluewing Copper Co. Ii7 Cutts vs Life Ins. Co of Va. -122 Murray vs Gooch. 131 Cupp vs Clark. 137 Blackwell vs Blackwell. 142 Mangum vs Eakes. 143 Henderson Loan & Real Est. Co. vs Henton. 144 Rogers vs Hester. 145 Loyd vs Harris. 1 RALEIGH DECLINES TO ADD ROAD 43 51 61 73 84 The Bullock Link Will Built. Not Be (Henderson Daily Dispatch) Raleigh has declined to assist in raising the fund for the completion of the National Highway from the Vance county line to the town of Bullocks. This information was con tained in a letter received by Secre tary C. W. Robards, of the Chamber of Commerce from the secretary of the Raleigh Chamber. The Raleigh man said that after an unavoidable delay he was able to inform the par ties here that it would be impossible for Raleigh to do anything. The chairman of the good roads committee of the Raleigh organiza tion was quoted by the secretary, in regard to the matter. Several weeks ago a delegation from the local Chamber of Commerce went to Raleigh to lay this matter before the Chamber there, stressing the benefit that would accrue to Ral eigh business interests by diverting traffic to that city over the great highway between the North and the South. It was reported at that time that material aid might be expected, and that Raleigh hotel men has promised to make contributions to the fund. Although it seems that Raleigh I business men have turned the deaf ear to the appeal from the Hender son Chamber hope is still held out that assistance may be had. It was hoped to get $600 or $700 from Ral eigh. The total needed was $1,800, of which $1,100 has already been subscribed by citizens in Vance coun ty, and along the proposed route. TRY GRANDMOTHER'S METHODS OF DRYING VEGETABLES Producing food is only half the job. Food which isn't needed now must be saved for the future. To waste food at any time is inde fensible; this year it is little short of criminal. Most vegetables and fruits are largely water, and it is the water that makes them spoil easily. Drive off the water by drying and save the real food. It will keep perfectly in a paper box: You can draw on your spigot or well bucket for the water when you need it, and make appetizing food. Your, grandmother dried vege tables and fruits before canning was known. If you can't get cans or pars at reasonable prices, practice the meth ods Grandmother found good. Send for Farmer's Bullentin 841, which tell$ how. Several Things Can Be , Successfully Planted in July. Editor of Public Ledger: I wish to state to your readers that some of the finest vegetables grown are planted during the month of July. I herewith hand you an out line: The Garden 1. Succession planting of sugar corn can be made till the last of the month. Stonwell's Evergreen are best varieties. 2. Transplant Ponedrosa tomato plants or other late varities. 3. Snap beans if or succession; stringless green pod. 4. Sow bush lime beans for fall crop. 5. Plant sufficient butter beans and black eye peas to dry for Winter use. 6 Where the ripe onions, garden peas and other early vegetable crops have been removed plant to other seasonable vagetables. The Farm 1. With the wet weather we are having, see that all ditches and drains are kept open and free from obstructions, so that they . may do their duty. 2. Keep up successive plantings of grazing crops for the hogs, partic ularly cow peas and sweet potatoes. We must feed our hogs on something other than two-dollar corn. 3. Give every crop thorough cul tivation, keeping the weeds killed and saving the moisture, is the surest guarantee of a bountiful harvest. u" lOOOS " r AY uj FOR SALE BY J. G. HALL, F. F. LYON STEM MERCHANTILE CO. Stem, N. C. AND ALL GOOD DEALERS His Best Chance (Columbia State) An editorial on "New York's One Negro Firmen" in The World start les Southern readers. That there are comparatively few negro firemen in paid departments in the South is explicable, but that in the metropol itian city, with its tens of thousands of firemen and larger negro popula tion perhaps than any Southern city has, negroes are practically excluded from the department of fire protec tion is amazing. 'Tis pity, but 'tis true that the negro's best chance, poor as it may be, is the land accurs ed of the Abolitionists. A housewife in Paris cannot buy a I 50-pound sack of coal at any price, but large consumers have been able to obtain it in lots of from two to ten tons at $75 a ton. This situation was disclosed in the dabate in the French chamber of deputies on the economic situation. IF 'il Wat dh 'for the Elect psuruy s mm- pedal When some me stops advertising, Someone stops buying, When, someone stops buying Someone stops Selling, .When someone stops selling Someone stops making When someone stops making, Someone stops earning, When someone stops earning, EVERYONE STOPS BUYING. Therefore, let us all keep buying, keep selling and KEEP GOING UPCHURCH & CURRIN Funeral Directors & Embalmers. OXFORD, N. C. SALE!! And a ELECTRIC m BP-HOW $3.00 Carolina Light I Power Co. WATCH THE DATE ON THE LAEEL OF YOUR PAPER Buy Ti Nissesi Wagon The standard farm wsgon. Sold in Granville county for the last fifty years. Some have lasted twenty-five years. Ask The Farmer Who Has Owned A Nissen Wagon. fi 1 it tf 1 . (soot ims (sWRSSte 1 'J S3 ! ,- '4, n SEVENTEEN TIMES ITS OWN WEIGHT IN VERY PRECIOUS PERISHABLE FREIGHT. After years of hard usage, a three inch "GEO. E.' NISSEN WAGON" carried 77 people, weighing 11,500 pounds, and won for its oner a new Wagon offered by Horner Bros. Co., "Geo. E. Nissen" Agents at Oxford, N. C-, because it carried more people to the Granville Count Fair than any other, wagon. . COULD YOU ASK MORE OF A WAGON? Prices of material have advanced again. Save money by buying now. ini(0)inruir pra i
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
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July 21, 1917, edition 1
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