L926.
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DRUG
ED OF
deliver-
cKeith-
trad-
19 th
ed in
ds of
9, page
B. Mc-
will, on
at 12
auction,
ash)
e & Co.
C., Wo-
follow-
in trade
undriea,
handise,
soda
al prop-
ure and
s and
tore an4
& Co.,
Iding, in
C. Said
ole and
HEN
«signee.
.) Sept
September 3, 1926.
ABERDEEN
(Continued from page 1)
spent several days this week with her
aunt, Mrs. J. R. Page.
Miss Harriet Godfrey, of Cheraw
S. C., is visiting relatives in town.
Mrs. Estha Jones and Miss Mary
Page have returned home from an
extended trip through the mountains
of Virginia and North Carolina.
Miss Lois Barclay is at home again
after a visit to her father's home in
Statesville.
Mr. and Mrs. McManus, and Mr. and
Mrs. J. D. Fleming have returned
from Charleston, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mizzell have
just returned from a visit to the
Sesqui-CentennSal, and are leaving
Wednesday for their home in Tampa
Fla.
Miss Mildred Campbell has return
ed to Tabor, N. C., where she will
teach.
Mrs. Tessie Moffitt, of Sanford, has
been visiting at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. J. D. Thompson.
Miss Bessie Martin has returned
from a visit to Biscoe and Mount Gil
ead.
Misses Carson are visitors at the
home of Rev. V. R. Gaston.
Rev. Jesse Blalock occupied his pul
pit here last Sunday after a vacation
in the mountains.
Miss Mary Ploy, of Kannapolis, is a
guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Carleton Kennedy.
J. D. McLean and James Fagan
have gone to Washington, D. C. to
see the ball game.
John Atwarter, of Chatham county
was a visitor at Hardin Gunter’s.
There passed through the express
office here a few days ago, a sack
weighing 154 pounds and containing
22,500 pennies. It was sent by the
Bank of Ellerbe to the Federal Re
serve Bank at Richmond.
The new building for the A. & P.
company on South Street is complet
ed and will be opened for business
September 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank McGraw, Miss
Jane and Gibbons McGraw, have gone
on a trip through northern New
York.
Alice Wilder has returned from
Camp Alloh-wes~tee at Blowing Rock,
where she has been for the last two
months.
Leland and Edwin McKeithen, John
and Clifton Blue, and Richard John
son have returned from Cove Echo,
boy scout camp, near Marion.
A wedding of interest to the peo
ple of this community was solemnized
at the home of T. M. Sharpe, Monday
evening, August 30, at 8:00 o'clock,
when his daughter. Miss Mabel, was
married to Mr. Clyde Valentine, of
Hagerstown, Mid.
Rev. W. V. McRae, pastor of the
bride, performed the ceremony in the
presence of the family and a few in
timate friends of the family. Miss
Lois Sharpe was her sister's only at
tendant.
Mr. and Mrs. Valentine drove to
Sanford, where they took the train
for their home in Hagerstown. Mrs.
Valentine has lived in Aberdeen all
her life and the good wishes of her
many friends here will follow her to
her new home.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Smighton, of
Raleigh, were out of town guests at
the wedding.
KIWANIS JABS
WICKED KNIFE
(Continued From Pagre 1)
lected and not accounted for they
will be asked for.
Naturally considerable talk has
grown out of the situation, and while
no specific evidence has been present
ed on which to make a case the brush
has been fired, and the fire according
to members of the Kiwanis club, is
not to be put out until the matter is
cleared up one way or another. The
determination to press the affair to a
finish was the dominant note of the
Wednesday meeting.
But another matter was also dis
cussed with considerable animation.
That is the double road between Pine-
hurst and Southern Pines. The com
mon sentiment was that these two
towns are of such vital importance to
the Sandhills that the best possible
communication must be maintained
between them, and a committee of all
the club was advised to go before the
county commissioners next Monday
and talk about the possibilities of fi
nancing an oiled road between the two
towns, and also to visit the road com
missioners and see if the double road
cannot be undertaken at an early date.
The Gathering was equally enthusias.
tic over the need of improvement of
that road, and the imperative need
of doing something with it at the first
possible minute enlisted a right unan
imous promise to be at Carthage to
see if a mass invitation for help will
bring it. The difficulties in the way
of improvement were discussed as well
as the needs of it, but the club are
pretty emphatically for an oiled road,
especially as the lower end of the
county pays the big end of the taxes
involved in making it, and that part
of the county asks for it.
So it seems that Carthage will be
an interesting spot next Monday. In
cidentally some member of the club
suggested that anybody who has any
evidence to offer as to road needs or
pertaining to the question of fees or
other phrases of law enforcement
send it to the secretary of Kiwanis
club, Richard Tufts, at Pinehurst, or
the president, Edwin McKeithen, at
Aberdeen.
GOOD CITIZEN OF
HOKE PASSES
((Continued from Page 1)
Dunn; five sisters, Misses Mary Ann,
Jane and Harriet McCraney, and Mrs.
W. F. Beard, of near Vass, and Mrs.
J. T. Faircloth, of Ala.; one brother,
W. J. McCraney, of Raeford, and a
number of grandchildren.
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