1 I I Prices Are Lower | I . Now | x * A Our SDecial was a big success and we appreciate the I | large volume of trade given us. LISTEN! | § WE HAVE SOME EXTRA SPECIALS | that will interest anyone. Come and see them and be i $ convinced that Srower can Save You IMoney on j 0111 pui - ! chases. All goods have been priced low, but you cannot | afford to overlook the Specials. | C. L. BROWER & CO. | f Dealer in Quality Merchandise. | t SILER CITY, 4*Sx£<§><§><£ <f . =fU I Yfj~ ' " - . - t _-y’ j/ Jko N \ ' sr&jj it - Jsm ! A- ■ QM : /As : " - . ' V'vt-VA ■.: :<* > A V . V ’?) -' i - i Low Cjsl “Comfortable Motoring j This Euwk four cylinder, five passenger touring car effor s dependable, comfortable motonrg for every occasion. » Improvements in the design of both the chassis and the L.rr.oue Buick Valve-m-Head engine have contrib uted further to the well known Buick qualities of dcpendcbvhty c.nd ecoromy. Innovations in equipment have j id • d con ic ts 1 n the open mod el tha 1 2 pproxi liiaiw uu/so lounJ ui much **lo*6 expensive closeci cars. For instance, with the Buick designed storm curtains, reinforced by the Buick weather s*rip, closed c'f cori r®ss m b' d weather has been closely approximated. A signal pocket fur the driver, complete instrument board, transmission lock and many ether conveniences are features every motorist appreciates. Fours Sixes 2 Pass. Roadster $855 2 Pass Roadster $1 175 4 Pass. Coupe • 5 Pass Touring 835 5 F«3s. Touring 1135 7 Pass. Touria* 1435 3 Pass. Coupe • 1175 * i £ pass C dan ■ 1335 5 Pass Touring 7 Pass. Sedsn • 2195 5 Pass Tounag Sedan . . . ,935 Sport Roadster 1625 Senas lo^j Sjv*' l -Roadster 1025 5 Peas. Sedan • 1935 Sport Touring . 1675 Prices f. a. b. Buick Factories; government tax to be added. Ask about the G. M. A C. Purchase Plan, which provides for Deferred Payments. D-15-37 NP f 11 ■■ ■ ** ■" 1 —“ • i When better automobiles sl p built, Buick will bi ..... -v ;SH, BhOYN -BUICK SERVICE STATION, SANFORD, Distributors : Chatham, Lee, Moore and -Montgomery % ' ’ ! —* i -si %je+ -at oaus >c-<k rm ccx'/r«MK><giK'n , xvgaac4a>(i* , vo< ,; ai u«M»c«as GENUINE | SANFO R D l! Self-Filling—Leak-Proof | FOUNTAIN PEN I j Ii i | Big Sales and Satisfied Users of the Full Standard Size Special Sanford Pen which was but recently introduced j have prompted the makers to produce this same high J j quality pen in Special Ladies’ Size also. Both models are the most practical, durable and easy-writing Self-filling Leak-proof fountain pens ever produced at the prices— •§ I made .possible only by quantity production. Remember, there is only One standard of Sanford Quality, which has been fully recognized by the trade for nearly 25 years. DESCRIPTION. \ , 14 KARAT GOLD PEN, tipped with geiui\e, hard native (Russian) iridium, smoothly ground and polished, pro vides perfect, long-lasting writing qualities. Pen Barrels are of very best grade Para rubber, handsomely chased. Self -11 ling device automatically cleans the pen at the same time it fills it, thus insuring instant writing at all times. Screw cap makes leaking impossible. FULL STANDARD SIZE has nickel silver clip on cap to hold pen firmly in pocket when not in use. LADIES’ SIZE, has gold ring affixed to end, instead of pocket clip. For the next 80 days we are making the liberal offer to give one of these ladies’ pens to the girl or young wo man who will send us four new subscribers to the paper, either The Record or The Herald. Or to the boy or young man who will get the same number of subscribers we will give one of the men’s pens. i i This offer is good for four subscribers and they may be sent in—one subscriber for one paper and three to the I * other or two to one and two to the other or all for one paper, thus making it easier for the solicitor to get the list. Send all the subscribers at one time and tell us they § are sent for one of the pens. Promptly upon receipt of the $6.00 we will forward by prepaid insured mail the pen asked for—men’s or ladies’ size. This is the most liberal offer ever made by a newspaper I in North Carolina. The pen is equal to the $5.00 fountain | pens on sale anywhere and satisfaction is guaranteed. It | is a beauty and you will be proud of it. Address: I COLIN G. SHAW, Editor— j Pittsboro, North Caroilna. GENERAL NEWS BRIEFS. Short Items of Common Interest to All. Atlar. «u, Ga.— Reports from the peach districts of this State today showed that smudge pots saved ti e orchards oL middle Georgia from ei sects of the frosts which prevailed 1 around Easter time. 1 ! Trenton, N. J- —A cartridge which Clvde Oliver had turned into a pen cil holder, exploded, tearing off two of the boy’s fingers. Columbia, Miss. —Damage estimated ! at SIOO 000 was caused by fire here which destroyed the Arcade hotel a-cl ! five stores, for a time threatening the I entire business section of the town. Augusta Ga.—E .S. Davis, 22-year old white man, who is said to be from Bristol, Term., was drowned in the j canal here when he attempted to es cape from the city stockade. Officers 1 at the stockade said the body had rot been found at 2 o’clock this afternoon, i The young man had been confined at j the stockade since March 10, office r ! said, being charged with the theft of a bicycle. 1 New York. —Mrs. Rose M art ell i, of the Bronx, cut the throats of her 3- year-old son and fiour-year-okl daugh ter and then slashed her own throat. : The children died. The mother is un | der arrest at Fordham hospital. ! Florence, Ala. —Mrs. Dave May . leaped i to a well and was drown d j at her farm near Clove*dale, accorb ! ing to the county coroner, who sa d that domestic troubles probably ac | counted for the woman’s act. j Boise, Idaho.—Smashing his If" ! reeoid of 22 fried eggs, six slices of ; bacon, four y>- es •. f toast and a b* : of coffee, Oliver E. Allison ate his ! way through another record Easter I morning. At one sitting he success ! fully disposed of 12 soft-boiled eggs,' o- 0 slice of In cad and a bowl o ' j coffee. Mag >ila, Mir- .• • *Three aged j e 1 RorS; inmates of the county almsho i e near here, were burned to death in a i fire which destroyed the cottage i n < cpi d The vi Gris were Win go, Wm. Cruise end Archie Wc’’ •, the last named a negro. M” 1 ion, Ga.—While on a visit to hi j d ‘hter, Mb ' h nine Far.a. pa-h.vt ! u a Macon infirmary, Ci h Farmer, 47, a stock and bond broker, of New Yo>k city, became sffbieui} iii here and died in the hos pital in which ills daughter is a pa * t T cnt. i 2 wanna, Go.—Fire of undetermin ed -- r T- ved $50,000 worth of a.- in one w. rehouse of the Savan ■;b F gar T : nery companv, eiglT: : n2'e..» v est c* Savannah, Sunday. T v ..e Arlinrt.ol hotel at Hot Springs, was t d Thursday mo : ' s the of.' -1 hostelry in lloc Sy« < ws. i I ; ' o’ating of Klansmen in a Bel levue, Pa., church last week by the i pastor is held up as a model for oth- ! i e i’ 3 - j Thirteen prsons are dead, over 20 injured and 142 houses leveled to tie ground, is the toll of a tornado that passed over Fineville, La., last week. ; i President T'farding returned to a month’s vacation, a month’s vaactoin. 1 1 ! ! The churches made a big increase 1 ; during 1922. The total number of ! 1 church members in the United States 1 ' totol 44,663,684, They gained nearly a , million. Mrs. Foust 111. ; Gohlston. Rt. 1, April 9.—Miss Mol- j j lie Gains has returned home from | ) Greensboro where she has been at j work. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Oldham and i j child''en, Marvin and FI eta, were re- ; | cent visitors to Greensboro and Wins- I ton-Salem. Sorry to report 11. D. Stinson is ill with pneumonia. j Mr. J. W. Oldham, of Greenville, S. ' C., was a recent visitor at the home of his brother, Thos. Oldham. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Oldham and Al ton Elkins spent the week-end in Greensboro. Mrs. Lillie Foust, of .Greensboro, who is visiting at E. P. Barber’s is se riously ill. j * | Passengers From Bermuda Given Sur ! prise. j New York, April 10.—When the * steamship Araguays arrived today | from Bermuda, 75 passengers, each ; were armed with a quart of liquor. j When customs guards began col ; lecting the bottles, the tourists mur mured “for medicinal purposes,” and produced newspaper clippings of re- i cent date stating that Thomas W, 1 Whittle, surveyor of the port, had; ruled a quart was admissible with in- j valids. The voyagers’ faces fell when they were informed the local customs rul ing had been cancelled by Washing ton while they were steaming up the j coast. Bomb Wrecks Office Ku Klux Paper.! I Chicago, April 10. —Explosion of a | bomb wrecked the publication of the Dawn, a Ku Klux Klan organ, last j week. Twenty minutes later another! bomb partly damaged the office of F. W. Gilliand, a roofer, who said he had advertised in the Klan publica tion. The two explosions, police said, probably were set off by the same person. Soon after the bombing police tele phoned advertisers of the Dawn to ! warn them of possible bombing. Edwin J. Parke, publisher of Dawn, j said he had been receiving threaten ing letters. “Only two days ago I re ceived a telephone call warning me that my printing establishment and my home would be blown up,” he said. Police were assigned to guard * Parke’s home. j. T. OLIVE ACburi. I t i I want to write this time on the subject of repentance and remission of . sins, and we all know that those two things have to be had before we can enter heave . V/hat a glorious gift it is of God to give us those great blessings and how good it is to feel j God s love in our souls, and that we have complied with God's commands.; I feel that if He was to call us we j would be ready to go, and that thru j repentance and remission of sins we are ready to go when He does call. Although the world persecutes us and says all Christians sin, does not Jes us plainly say that a good tree can not bring forth corrupt fruit, I Matt. V ard .LG j 'J v ei e, they complied with the i offered terms of the gospel and re- j pented as J been redeemed through Jesus' Lboci and been cleansed thru Jesus’ blood. He is then a stranger to the world and the world hates for he has repented. God has given him j the remission of sins. My brethren in Christ, do you not feel, therefore} that holy feeling of God’s love that j dwells in your heart? j If you do not for the Lord’s sake do, and then you will know what re ligion is. Then you will have repent ed of your sins and .God will write your name in the Lamb’s book of life, j Then the world will hate and perse- i i you like i did Je >us b< ; you. j But nevei theless, we live sinners’j * <v.ds but we must not love their ways 1 nor t ) with them. N ' •..'b, . . ~ • ■n ns ebau, a...mi i ernvimg by wo ds ard filthy talk. | . iot even p. t their. tongues u on, riph. 4-5. ace and remission of sin:-, v. id do for anyone and, those sm-; ' all sin, \ e >•* ! p- so vshst the B :: >L • r-y •, for >e are Jesus Christ’s witnesses} for him. How can we witness lor: ■'] a s 1 the same time wit.ecns against him ? Dear people, they tha f have re^e- 4 -- sion o sins, are not living such lives as that, for hv ll’oir fruits you shad Iso/ them. /■e U , - ■ we well kn< . thev Fine ( 1 air?! >. ring povr ocv.lit bosoves, shor 4 - g like. I say thru fi i ! in • • ' l ‘ t • c-V lelJ■ ’m. and those vko do such .th’e. ■/ do them beeai thev love such things more than they .e (o' ; ’ d s ich fre’-s ate r.ot goo 1 Such fj si ? religion. prove** is that God will convince them and show them what a mess they are 371, May God bless theb* precious souls and v- lem wliat they are doi g before the r roach ete v ” , al destruction c ’ t 1 may be saved for . whom. O-V died. To think how it well be, until nil sinners and all Mars end hv- : . weepi -g £nd wailin •• and cnashino’ of teeth. I T am honing and praying to God; thof t-Crt m’U] nro few W r *' , fD to ! g of His poor lo t souls mid Tib hies mgs on all. ! i remain vour servant in Christ. j Pittsboro, Rt. 2. J. T. OLIVE.' Former Chatham ite Marries j Ga i»a B inner, April 6. Mr. Raymond Rose Knight and Miss! Aud Maze were united in! mac. b.; -sue day afternoon at the j hoc. of Mr. 1 Mrs. Frank Clegg on j Green street, Rev. L. B. Jones of-j ficiating and using the impressive ring ceremony, ihe house was pret tily decorated, jonquils being used in profusion. There were only a few in timate blends and ’relatives present, the man Age be big in the nature of a surprise so well were the plans kept secret. V . A. White, the best man, was the ordy attendant. The bride, who was Miss May Maze, a popular you g lady of Clarksburg, W. Va., ha been the guest of rela-J fives in Southern Pines for several} months, wqs attired in a blue satin j dress overlaid with black lace. She wore a corsage of sweet peas and li lies of the valley. She is a graduate j mi ape. Mr. Kright, who is a native of i Chatham county, bolds a responsible i position u. ith the Dillon Supply Com- | ileigh, making Sanford his headquarters. He is one of the most' popular yoimg men in Sanford and •as many warm friends. Immediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Knight left for Clarksburg, W. Va., where they will visit the home of Mrs. Knight. Says Potatoes Did It, New York, April 10.—This is a tale of the lowly spud. Boiled and salted it formed the ' early diet of Miss Alma Cummings, of ; San Antonio, Tex. Mashed and salted it carried her through the perils of Texas ranch life. Baked and salted it sustained her in New York where recently she danc ed continuously for 27 hours and es- ! tablished a record for long distance dancing. During the time that she was es tablishing her record Miss Cummings exhausted one band, two talking ma chines, 12 dance records, one pair of shoes and eight partners. The first of her partners danced for j seven hours and then fainted. The j I second danced for five hours and a j j half and then excused himself as it! I was Sunday morning and he was an- j I xious to go to church. One by one ! i sir other partners took their places j only to retire wan and defeated. “I Never Knew You Could Keep Rats Out of a Butcher Shop.” What Ralph Watkins says: “Fig ured rats around store had enough to 'feed on; wouldn’t touch anything sus ' picious. Heard about RAT-SNAP, I gave it a trial. Results were wonder j ful. Cleaned all rats out in ten days. i Dogs about store night and day never touch RAT-SNAP.” Three sizes, 25c. 50c., SI.OO. Sold and guaranteed by Siler City Drug Store and The Hard ware, Siler City; W. L. London and f Son, Pilkington Pharmacy and The Chatham Hardware Co., Pittsboro, N. C. ' I A Distinguished Appearance /nv /n is a pleasure enjoyed when your Res idence is attractively painted with f|Mpf L&M SEMI-PASTE PAST ! Longest years of wear because costly if White Zinc is added for durability— ! JJ /cJBGALSjj&i Least Cost, because you add 3 quarts of lin- \ LGM'Jj’* l N seed Oil to each gall, paint, making the Best 5 Pure Paint for $2.82 a galL, ready to use. jjj Oil to L&M Semi-Paste Paent Extensively used for SO years Quickly done. SavesyouMoney * w r- „, r XV—FCR SALE BY*m J POLLARD BROTHERS DURHAM, N. C. W.'L. LONDON & SON PITTSORO, N. C. C. B. CRUTCHFIELD, MONCURE, N. C. The FARMERS BANK* PITTSBORO, N. C. The Bank with a reputation of being the most'accom modating and the most apprecia tive of your business When you have money, When you want money, we want it. we have it. FOUR FEE CENT PAID ON SAVINGS ; j !. SI. RLAND, RUBTIS BENTON President Casliier A.-C. HAY, Vice-President .. _ ,v;,A JTjS' 5 w T nr- ? 'a ?-j j a. a. j. j a Ast Our big, general Stock of Groceries is the finest pos- a sible at the lowest prices—enables us to fill your grocery J order more profitably and satisfactorily to you, whether | it be an ounce of tea or a barrel of flour. It’s a servie we S believe you will like. The prices, too, make our store an ij inviting place to trade. | nriri-c? DAnwcßi I ■ l ntl oUUINti dKUo. i P'SNEST aud JARVIS jjj PITTSORO, —•— NORTH CAROLINA. | £... -■ £ . J*.... v...a. 6 f I ’• % I -- i| W'JiIMMF 1i w ! || , i' ' S ' : " - ... ■ _ J I Retail Dealer in * FURNITURE, COFFINS and CASKETS | BENNETT, N. C. | | I have opened a Furniture Store at Bennett and will sell iwhat Furniture I carry on a close Margin, as Ido not ex- t pect to sell on time, this will be better for me and also the | | Buyer. % I also have and will carry a line of BURIAL SUPPLIES I : I CASKETS, ETC. | 1 1 When you are in town stop over to‘ see Our Furniture | I<| Line. See what I now have and get Prices. i Also Mrs. E. S. PHILLIPS and Mrs. C. E. JONES sell | ! | millinery and -make ladies’ and children’s dresses on or- | ! | ders in the same building. I Yours truly, I ED. S. PHILLIPS 1 | PHONE BENNETT DEPOT BENNETT, N. C. | 'y 5> r— '1 | && Get the Best ! I For the Least Money i KXklpiy Automobile Tires have made tw r o ad- ; fVV J H vances since January 1, 1923, and are J ;* 'J\X\ i! % destined to go higher if the price of cot l XXX i 1 m ton stays high. The Goodyear Tires are \ 'XX/ l p the BEST Tires—they have stood the !; ■ V\A i! B Test. We have a big stock in all the |! fVfy ii 1 sizes and can meet your needs. Buy now || !!;•% B and take advantage of the present low I; S Also general line of hardware in any- ; / thing and everything that you need. |! i| j / Call on us. }j Ir- ■ ■ ■ ( The Hardware Store, Inc., E. H. JORDAN, Manager, SILER CITY, N. C. j Service and Satisfaction Guaranteed. i Phone 139.

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