f ITEMS and IDEAS i bT A Country Physician Dr. W. B. Crawford Mrs Kirby Smith, of the Ebene' er section has been on a visit to h°r brother in laws' family. Rev Char'to Peterson, in Washington, D C.. a^d returned last week, accompanied t' her nephew. Mr. Aronld Peterson, who brought her in his car. She bad a delightful visit and enjoyed 11 to the limit. Rev. Mr. Peterson arc lamily once lived here, and owned the place where Mr. Rupert Neal now lives on Southern Railroad, and Mr. Peterson was a Friends miai> ter. and preached at the Oakland church After the death if his wife here, the family moved to Washing ton City. Mrs. Peterson was a sis ter of Mrs. Smith. t Mr and Mrs. David Pearce, of 'Wallace, and interesting little son. David. Jr, came last week for a t j short stay here, and after a visit over the week-end at Swansbor >, ' they went to Louisburg Monday ia ' visit Mr, Pearce’s mother, and wtU return to their home at Wallace *jii» ! afternoon. [ Mrs George M. Becton, Mrs. Best Thompson Mrs. Sam Smith, and Mrs. Aaron Johnson, went to Ha leigh last Thursday to attend the Federation of Home Demonstration Clubs, of which they are active members at Rosewood, and take great interest In all that pertains to (the advancement of the great work .hese clubs are doing. Mr. and Mrs. George H. Becton spent the week end in Lumberta.i, on a visit to the home of Mrs. Be ton's sister, Mr. and Mrs. C. M Oakley. L r i i \ r TRY OUR OWN PREPARATIONS Our NAME. KNOWLEDGE REPUTA TION Stand behind them. Thar flallsfg or youi nuntf bach. BROWN'S Anti Add Powder. No. 1 & No. S_35c 4 50c BROWN* liniment_?5c BROWN’S Run-Fit far Doga_$1.00 BROWN'S Liver Pflla. 10c i BROWN'S CMC Chaser -_35c and 50c t BROWN’S Antiseptic Heattng Powder_25c V BROWN'S Indigestion Remedy_50c and $L00 BROWN* Eye Bath far Tired. Burning. Injected Eyes_50c BROWN* Antiseptic Mouth Wash___25c and 50c BROWN* Rheumatic Remedy_50c and $1.00 BROWN* Mineral Oil ......____49c BROWN DRUG GO. See Your Doctor First - Then See Us The PRESCRIPTION Store PHONE 591 WE DELIVER OLIVER HAY TOOLS THE OLIVER Plain lift or combination plain or vertical, In a mower built to mow and built to last When It’s Hardware, You’ll Find It At— Smith Hardware Compaay Goldsboro. N« C. ] We surely have great deal to be I thankful for this weak, a* we have | succeeded in getting our tobacco ■crop all housed and cured even if (we did have to rant a barn a m:io | from home, put in flues, detour j through the woods, to get there on 1 account of the highway being under | corfctrucUon. and then buy wood,1 a net sticks in order to save tha cron j We never before had so much trou ble or expense with a tobacco cro>. and feel relieved that we were for tunate enough to save it, especially j since seeing so very much on the I highways, since then, that has been I ruined because of failure to get helo | to save the crop. If prices now *nU * Just be what they should, or at least be sufficient to repay the far mers for the hard work, and extri expense they have been put to in order to save the crop, all will I e well and good, and the farmer wi!l be wearing a different look from the one which low prices right .ow would produce. While our esteemed friend Pet Smith was visiting at Oak-Glen, w; had the pleasure of attending thr Union meeting at Chapel Primitiva Baptist church, near here, wher.-« there was a two days meeting, with dinner on the grounds both days, but we only were there on Sundav. and there was an elgant dinner barbecue and everything that could tempt any appetite. Both of us re called the day we attended one of the biggest associatiins of the church at the same place, when there wvs an Immense throng, back in the norse and buggy days of the iong ago, while we were at home from the University of Virginia, in 188V if we are not mistaken. At any nte it was before we graduated in medi cine. and just why we so well re member the day, was because of tnc fact that both of us were dressed In double breasted Prince Albert coals with striped pants, and wearing h'ph silk hats, as they are now called, but at that time were known as "beav ers”. That one was our first and only silk hat, and we do not thin': we have ever worn one since. We showed friend Pat a picture taken, with the hat on, just as we wore it that day, when he and myself were sporting our “Jim Swingers” ano beavers, and attracted attention. Our highly esteemed and beloved friend Pet Smith, who was here U>t week, and delighted our home and hearts with his presence, went ‘o Kin3ton Wednesday morning am spent a day and night at the home [of Mr. and Mrs. Phil Crawford. Sr. returning to Oak-Glen Thursday morning, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs Crawford, and wife any myself joined them and went to Wilson, where all had been invited to dinner I in honor of Mr. Smith, at the home of Mrs. E. A. Darden, in that most beautiful little city. We arrived there safely and found a most gri cious welcome from our hostess, at her beautiful and attractive homi, where real old time Southern hos pitality was as freely and gladly dis pensed as the air we breathed. Bat how couid it have been otherwise, when Mrs. Darden’s forebears we -9 noted for just such delightfully pleasant occasions, as far back as w 1 can remember, and she has simply] inherited the knack of knowing ju;i how to make visitors enjoy the de iightful pleasures which abound -31 her home. She is the daughter cl te late Sheriff Luby and Salite Ha. per, of Greene county, and was bor' and raised near the beautiful lit'-1* town of Snow Hill, which nest'cl among the lovely little hills on thi banks of Contentnea Creek, whet, nature has done so much to beau tify the location, as anywhere we have ever seen Her family an.l ours are very closely connected, and before and right after the civil war there was no two families anywhere that visited each other more than did these two. But those now living of the two families, have rarely see 1 each other, in many years past. M-s. Darden's maternal grand mother, Annie Crawford Hooks, and our paternal grand father, Jobs C Crawford, were brother and sis'e \ and in our childhood, and young manhood, there was frequent vls't ing among the two families, they being held together by the strong est ties of kindred and love. After an elgant dinner at Mp. Dardens, we had the pleasure of seeing her niece and daughter, Mrs. Hunter Flemming, and Miss Ha.* riett, as we had never before had the pleasure of meeting them, bo* well remember Mrs. Flemming's mother, whom we knew ss "HAtie Harper”, and have not seen her since six was grown. W« alio had the pleasure of seeing our great niece, and her little girl, Mrs. Long est, who before her marriage wai Miss Elizabeth Edmundson. daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Edmund* son ol Stantonsburg, Wc remained at that delightfully pleasant home till late afternoon, and then wendod our way homeward, with the £lad remembrance of one of the most pleasant visits we had ever beer permitted to enjoy, and this with the association of our dear frieni from Alabama, gives us still more to be thankful for, as the shadows lengthen, and life's evening sunset approaching, reminds us every day, and every hour, that we soon shat, have lain druvn our burden here, and gone hence to try the realities of the unknown beyond. Our o124} Atlantic Cy IS it Waahlafton til Asheville .. 7.M Jacksoevl'e 10. J# I Caret. B'ch 1.55 Norfolk_4.(0 GREVHOIM) TERMINAL 104 S. John Phone 8(2 J. R. MUSGRAVE GOLDSBOR<5, FI. C. WE WIU BE CLOSED WEDNESDAYS AFTER 12:30 K M. 9 AUCTION HOUSES ieadtheseTobaccoAver^es^P-^'^^S^ gK5£X$1^.30 AV^age UttlCiai A 5 lOAD your tobacco^h^*^"1DAYservice NO BLOCKS o„ took rca-cco*^™^ lumberton ♦