fgf ,'/'x ■ ^V,V-.\ A\ ■■ :-v': Si - ri>v , : ] / ■, ' . l-\"y , * ft-" ’ n & ■■ !!• • : YOU ARE INVITED TO SELL YOUR TOBACCO ON THE CARTHAGE MAR KET —AND TO SAVE MONEY ON YOUR CLOTHING NEEDS AT THIS STORE. As you know, prices are mounting fast. And sales and process taxes add to the cost of merchandise. But bear this fact in mind: . , You can always buy as cheap or cheaper at Ginsburg’s. We absolutely guarantee to save you money or we don’t want your business. A lifetime in the dry goods and ready to-wear line has taught us how to buy the most economical ly and thus sell more cheaply. Visit us for anything in these lines. GINSBURG’S BARGAIN STORE Carthage N. Carolina HARDWARE and Building Material We carry a complete stock of lime, cement, plaster, rock lath, beaver board, roofing and nails, locks and hinges. In fact the best in hardware for every purpose. Do Your Painting Before Winter. We Have All Varieties and Colors. Lee Hardware Co. “EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE” Wicker St. ’Phone 101 Sanford, N. C. Good Equipment ENABLES US TO OFFER YOU A LAUNDRY AND DRY SERVICE SECOND TO NONE! Yes, we can with truth if not modesty say that we are equipped to give,you a laundry and dry cleaning service that can't be beat in any man’s town. We have the very latest machinery, the most competent and conscientious workmen and all that it takes to give you this better class of service. - /: ■ ATTENTION OUT-OF-TOWN FOLKS: When you visit Carthage to trade on Saturday or arty Mother day, bring along your dry cleaning. You don't have to leave your suit with us overnight or all day long. We are equipped to give you a good dry cleaning job in from two to three hours any time. So bring us your work when you get to town arid it will be ready for you to take home With you when you finish trading. .> * - BENNER LAUNDRY & DRY, CLEANERS Pfc -*yfe Strive to Please”*. ,7 ^ v 7 WeareinPinehurst every Monday," Thursday and Sat urday during the summer to pick up and deliver laundry. Drop us a card or Phone 60S if you want us to call at your home. Daily service in Pinehurst during the winter.. mm gww iiriijjuag s^sssa a ’emataitjt I» t&e Special- Not!ce\€eterm, —- STARTS ON PAGE ONE addition to the citizenship who is making tnany friends. Although their dogs jumped a buck on a recent hunting expedition to Hoke county. Ed Fry and Reid Fiinchum came back empty-handed. , George Carter’s bark is worse than his bite. The writer learns that he recently loaned a Moore county citi zen $10 with which to , buy. school books for his kids. Four or five oth ers turned the distressed citizen P. K. Kennedy, his many friends will be delighted to learn, has recov ered from his recent illness. His doc tor, however, has warned him to take' things easy. The Charlotte Observer says that the curve at the bridge on route No. 50, about a mile beyond Vass in the direction of kakeview, is one of the most dangerous in the state. Several serious accidents, some of them re sulting in fatalities, have occurred at this point, and Editor Wade Harris, of tbe Observer, says it should be eliminated. Another dangerous curve is near the old Neil McCoy place on No. 74, about a mile from Carthage. Tom Cameron, of Southern Pines, like his cousin, Shields Cameron, hists a wicked tune. White Hill News Mrs. Elizabeth Cole Spivey^ died at her home here Wednesday at the age of 87 years and 5 months. In spite of her years she held up well until a few weeks ago, when she sustain ed a broken leg from a fall in her room. From this she never recover ed. Her husband died 6 years ago. Mrs. Spivey was a descendant of the Scotch Coles and McLeodh and like her forefathers, she fought the battles of life with that brave, cour ageous disposition that they fought the wilderness of America. She has been a life-long member of White Hill Presbyterian church and as long as she' was able she * attended1 ser vices. Four sons and two daughters sur vive, Curtis Flowers, Dock and Mad ison Spivey, Mrs. Turner Smith and Mrs. John Holes. One brother, C. C. Cole, and one sister, Miss Nannie Cole, who is 93 years old, also, sur vive. Funeral services were held from the home Thursday at 10 o’clock by Rev. M. D. McNeill of Cameron. In terment took place in the family burying ground. Her grandsons were pallbearers and granddaugh ters flower girls. Mr, Neil . Tillman and Miss Fannie Bryant were married in Sanford last Saturday night.- Best wishes for the young couple. . t , V* Miss Mary Margaret McLeod at tended a medical meeting in Char lotte last week. Miss McLeod. will soon return to Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn~ to resume her studies ‘in medicine. Mrs. W. H. Jackson, G. L. and Katharine Jackson 'and J. L. Mor rison spent Sunday in Moncure with relatives. Mrs. H. I. Ogbum was notified Sunday of the sudden death of her brother, Lattie Young, in Angier. Mrs. Ogbum had a sister to die in April, and we extend our heartfelt sympathy to her in this bereavement. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Harrington vis ited Mrs. Harrington’s aged par ents, Mr. and' Mrs. Carlton Matthews, in Lemon Springs, Sunday. Mr. Matthews is now confined to his bed and they are both 85 years old. Mrs. Pierce of Ashboro has -been visiting Mrs. A. B. Caviness. # — STARTS ON P4.GE ONE? - PART BLAME FOR BAD PEACH SEASON LAID TO GROWERS factor of placing second-grade fruit on the market has done much to low er the market on good fruit to a fig ure below what it normally should be. It wouldn’t be hard to correct this dif ficulty could,thf peach grower look over the results that have been and are being experienced by the produ cers of citrus fruits in Florida. Some seven or eight years ago, the shippers of grapefruit and oranges had a ready market for their fancy packed goods in numerous cities and towns of the entire Southeast, including Kentucky and Tennessee. Today, one rarely finds a car , of packed goods in any of the towns in this territory, and this situa tion was brought about by the fact that citrus packers conceived the idea of selling their cull fruit to trucks that distributed these products' into the Southeastern territory. Lose Southeast Market The packing-house managers ho doubt felt that they were performing A .service to-the growers and shippers, ip that they were realizing for them a few cents income on the sale of fruit that would otherwise have been dump ed. It is now realised that this second grade fruit has taken the markets of the entire Southeast away from the shipper of fancy packed goods, leav ing only the* eastern and distant mar kets ami placing the full fruit of the growera in competition with the pack ed goods. Many of the forward-think ing citrus producers have reached a realization of this situation, , but the movement has gained such an impetus that it is doubtful if the situation will 'ever be entirely corrected, and thus the Florida producer haa/a vast field Renew Yoor Health By Purification Any physician will tell yott that “Perfect Justification af the,System is Nature’s Foundation of Perfect HeaRb. Why not rid ’^ouraelf of chronic ailments that are 'under mining yo*e ‘ vitality f .^arify your entire system by taking a thorough Course of Calotab*,—crice or* twice a week for several weeks—and see bow Nature rewards you with health....: Cdlotaba purify tbs bleed by acti vating the fiver, kidneys, atoms eh rad bowels. J» W eta, and -5K* ats.= padcagaa* AH' daahus.. %‘ ! of distribution closed against his pack-1 ed goods. ■’*' T ” ' And so it Is with the peach growers of the Carolines and Georgia—only we are unfortunately located somewhat nearer to the principal markets. If some changes are not brought about shortly, we will be unable to find a market in which to place pur fancy fruit at-a reasonable figure, as this low quality fruit is now reaching into some of the principal markets of the east; with dire effects oh the sale of fancy packed fruit. If we are to cor rect this situation, there must be uni fied action on the part of all growers and shippers of peaches, to the end that cull or defective fruit should nev er leave the packing-house destined for any other purpose than local con sumption; and if this action can be brought about, the peach growers will be able to retain the principal markets of the east for their packed goods and the business of peach growing should continue to be reasonably profitable. LIQUID v TABLETS - SALVE NOSE DROPS Checks Malaria in 3 days. Colds first day, Headaches or Neuralgia in 30 minutes. FINE LAXATIVE AND TONIC Most Speedy Remedies Known. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL : ESTATE North Carolina, Moore County. ' Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that cer-' tain deed of trust executed by Ralph W. Page and wife, Leila T. Page, to The Raleigh Savings Bank & Trust Company, trustee, which said deed of trust is dated Feb. 27, 1928, and recorded in Book 47, page 276. of the: Moore County Registry, default hav ing been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and in, the conditions therein contained, the undersigned substituted trustee by instrument recorded in Book 116. page 89, Moore County Registry, will on : 1 Monday, October 9, 1933, at or about twelve * o’clock noon, at the court house door at Carthage, N. C., offer for sale and sell to the high est bidder for cash the following de scribed property: That tract of land situate jin Ben salem township, Moore county, N. C., adjoining, or formerly adjoining, the lands .of one Seawell on the North, the lands of the heirs of D. M. Ken nedy, J. M. Thomas, S. Fuquay, Toby Austin and Lonnie Qraham on the East, the lands of Raphael W. Pum pelly and Bennett and Smitherman on the South and the lands of Cogar McNeill, the heirs of Noah Smith, J. R. Page and others, Milton Bird and Raphael W. Pumpelly on the West and more particularly described and bounded as follows: Beginning at a concrete ' monu ment south of the Norfolk Southern Railroad, a corner of the lands of S. Fuquay in Toby Austin’s land and running thence north 19 deg. 50 min. east 885 tL to the State Highway, I with the Sta^g,, Highway north 78 deg. 10 min. 6 dieg. 16 min. west 1746 ft. to a concrete monument; thence north 30 min. east 4830 ft. with the line of the land of their heirs of D. M. Kennedy to a stake with pointers near Tantrough Branch; thence north 87 deg. 35 min. west with Seawell’s line 856.5 ft. to a concrete monu ment, black jack pointers; thence north 79 deg, 36 min. west 2650 ft. to a concrete monument; thence north 24 deg. 20 min. west 700 ft. to a stake; thence south 15 min. east 6820 ft. through Pumpelly’s land to a stake in the line of his house tract; thence south 88 deg. 45. east 446.8 ft. with this line to a corner stake; thence south J4 deg. west 1250.7 ft. to a comer stake; thence south 6 deg. 45 min. east 660 ft. to the right of way of the N. S. Rd. Co.; thence with sa*d right of 'Way in a southwest di rection 1245 ft. to a comer stake; thence north 14 deg. 30 min. east 1260 ft. to a road; thence with said road north 66 deg. 30 min. west 648 ft., north 67 deg. 30 min. west 810 ft., north 55 deg. west 405 ft., north 54 deg. 86 min. west 600 ft. to Milton Bird’s line fence; thence south 6 deg. 10 min. west with his line 200 ft. to his comer post; thence with his line south 83 deg. 48 min. west 200 ft. south 67 deg. 03 min, west 339 ft. south 40 deg. 26 min. west 210 ft. south 32 deg. 11 min. West 676 ft. south 12 deg. 23 min, west 585 ft. north 69 deg. 10 min. 762 ft; thence south 3 deg. 55 min. west 160 ft., crossing the Norfolk Southern Rail road to a stake; thence north 69 deg. 10 min, west 100 ft. to a stake with black jack pointers,, Milton Bird’s comer; thence south 3 deg. 55 min. west 1474 ft with J. R. Page's and others line to a concrete monument, corner with Pages thence south 80 deg. 30 min. West 75 ft, to a concrete monument, aliso a comer of the land of the heirs of Noah Smith; thence south 6 deg. 40 m|n. east with their line and the Hne of Cagor McNeill 2326 ft. to a, concrete monument, Bennett and Smitherman’s Corner; thence with their line north 82 deg. 20 min. east 2080 ft. to a stake; thence nortb"| deg. 45 min. west 300 ft to a stake; thence north 29 deg. west 1500 ft. to a stake; thence south l 78 deg. east 550 feet to a stake; thence south 80 east 500 ft., to a stake; thence south 83 deg. east 752 4 ft. to a stake; thence south .1 deg. 25 nun. west 1810 ft, to a stake; thence 83 deg. 35 mm. east 1584 ft. to a stake in the line Of the tract of land sold by Graham to Allred; thence with this line (Lonnie Graham’s line) North 22 deg. 6 Win. west 1346 ft. to a corner stake; thence north 25 min. east 1320 ft. to a pine stump, comer; thence south 88 deg. 26 min. east 990 ft. to another nine stump corner; thence north 7 aeg. 45 min. east 1298 ft. to a stake;-thence south 86 deg. 30 min.'east 2265 ft. with Toby Aus tin’s line to the beginning, contain ing 1049.9 «u*es and being the first tract of land described in deed of U. L. Spence, H. F. Seawall and Francis S. Hassell, Commissioners, of date 27th day of February, 1928, unto the said Ralph W, Page. Terms of sale cash and trustee will require deposit of 10‘per emit of the amount of .the hid *» evidence of good faith. This the 2nd day ,e£- September, 1938. .v • ■ ' •' ..' , JOSEPH L. COCKERHAM, I ... Substituted Trustee. McLatn A • fthtey, •2pm» " Lamberton, N. ~C. -— 1 Other nearby markets are stressing what they call superior shipping facilities, a very pointed thrust at the Carthage market. f t Cj The truth is, and buyers on the local markets will bear us out, tobacco shipments over our line receive the same handling as, if not quicker than those on the main trunk lines. A car is hardly sealed before it is rolling away to the re-drying plants. Tobacco sold one day is moved the next morning. By It Is More Dependable and It Gets Your Products There In Better Shape. WE HAVE PUT LOWER RATES INTO EFFECT ROY BUTNER, Agent GEO. R. ROSS, Pres. ARTHUR ROSS, Sec.-Treas. « i! U the Bis: Brick Warehouse, in Aberdeen again this sea son. ' I feel that my old friends will realize that Lean get them more money for their tobacco in Aberdeen than they can get elsewhere. I wish to thank all my friends for their Royalty and patronage in the past and assure my old and new customers that their tobacco will have my personal attention on sale. ^ > it will be impossible for me to personally visit each and every grower in this section but want to assure you jq>f jny very best efforts and support on every pile brought to my warehouse. ':" * ,; My market is set for opening on September 19th. .Prepare and bring me a load on that date. The Bank of Pipehurst, Pinehurst, N. C., will have branch office .in /, Aberdeen to cash all tobacco checks here. Vf *Jli t Jy *: B. B. SAUNDERS, Proprietor •" > 4 ' - ■ ■ . ■■ < ■. ’ , * ' . • v • ■ f' ' H ' * * * *** ' * ' Mm i ► • 'i 4 ►-! *> Hi [-;■ ■■■;:d?.i 4 ►