NOTES 1 * £Ol i ncal Nature Gathered Here and 5 of a Persona I Mention gfOB TODAY. | Drink. -„d is not meat J Lr.e. f , aid Hoiv Ghost. l i;l Q been on £ I;. C^a 01 , visL ■llieKeco^i f Harrington, of . felling >'■ >i’e l!U ‘» e 01 „ viin left Monday for feKwi* to l-ttcs , Farl Russell ? Pent l' tba ,f ( \V B. Dorsett, of Kth Mr. VN - ° ■; City [ „ v of Creedrnoore, I of Rt. 4, ■ i a ,t week. I GoltWon ha? gone to At ■ , k ~-ith tne road toice ne Eh for some time. I, Connell left for Wwh ■ gstunlay to spend a lew lliis son, Graham. I line Perrv has returned fc short visit to his son, ■perry, in Kaleign. Burns and a friend, e are expected to arrive a visit to her par- I r Dorsett and daughter, Belt, or route 4, Siler City, ■day with Mrs. Joan R. I Dorsett and Mr- Harvey ■f route 4, Siler City spent ■ n( | i n Sanford with Miss I Gunter, agent of the Pitts ■ tells The Record that at ■borers have left PitCmoro ■ cities. ■ p errv will celebrate his ■av June 24th, 1923, at his ■place. Public is invited to ■bring dinner. ■on Xooe, familiarly known ■” is spending some time in ■ with relatives. He is ac ■ by his “boss”, Mrs. Xooe. Monday to Thursday of last ■boro’s early worm—we ■ener-Sherman Alston, gath- Hounds of snap beans out of ■il Lindsay has bought the ■oods, good will, etc., of Lit ■arrell and opened up for ■ the store in the Blair ■ding Tuesday. ■the 12 graduates at the Me ■ge of Richmond this v.eek ■ Eugene Burns, of Goltls ■eble Lee Horton, of Apex, ■low full fledged doctors. [[meeting of the board of Bnmissioners and the board H°n held a long session last ■T'ne proceedings will be ■th week in the Record. ■er.e T-iiijjgjge Harper and ■lie Horne were married ip ■tssday of last week. They ■ honeymoon with his par ■nd Mis. Ben Harper, near J ■ are daily passing through I Hem the number of tour ■at have passed through the ■ must have been a million ■unst? i n Florida during the ■ ? Pnng. ■ k LWherry, of Colerain, ■ough PHtsboro last T'hnv=- ■ way to the western part ■ m ]\ vidt relatives. Mrs. ■ and Her mother, Mrs. Mar ■ ate at the old Hatch home ■5, taxes for ail the ■ tne county expired May ■i, ; V; ave failed to list vour see Register of Deeds ■m Ce ln le c °urt house, ■demeanor not to list your CiWt? b “ the thin s” to Bavf 1; bl ? spring at By- j ■rnm’oi e \ Bra P ar ties have! ■Vml , boro recently and It 5;* ad . on tbe ground. It’s ■ ll * eren t from eating off ■ last P ? a Huer went ■mwlf’ dri Y in £ a Ford ■ar t l - ere H.ey parked ■ town sapf ap ] tol grounds and ■ «twn t ed d tt? me trading ’ |H-hadsSfenit ar W “ * s having oil ■rc raiW l i S 8?' lon koUse of * Pitt lyi' 1 Tt W ‘H not be ■ soi U | boro People will be ICI *;y*nts a gallon, if pillion dolff 8 “notion to UUdls to some Hewey Dorsett ■nurn to i *janks of Haw ■bu• -(h.,. school I R. V r er ® Bev. w. E. I s ”. Cecil?' o ,"’ Prof . W. r Lindsay, Grady Cultivate the garden after rain. Plant vegetables for succession. j Mr. Roy Beard, of Oxford, spent the week-end here with his parents. There will be Children’s Day ser- ! vices at Emmaus Baptist church next Sunday. Ail are invited to attend. | A good feed ration brought the pro luction of 50 hens from 15 eggs pe* lay to 30 eggs per day, reports Coun- j ,y Agent R. B. Reeves of Pitt county, j Don’t forget to save some of that 1 jest grain for seed. There is always j. scarcity of native grown pure bred, selected rye, oats and wheat seed in the fall. Alex Riddle, of Garysburg, has mov ed to Pittsboro and is making his home with his brother, Mr. A. B. Riddle, with whom he is associated m; che lumber business. Miss Mary Clegg, whose home is near Pittsboro, and who has been teaching school at Mount Airy, has gone to Washington City to spend part of her vacation with her sister. J Miss Pearl Wiggins, who has been visiting friends in Wendell, has re turned to her home in Siler City. She was accompanied by Miss Jewel Smith who will spend a few days in Siler Ciyt. “You laugh at prohibition laws; the libertine laughs at teh marriage laws; the anarchist laughs at property laws; watch out that your son does] not laugh at all law’s.”—Souix Falls' (S. D.) Argus Leader. Mr. Archie Ray, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Ray, who has been at school at' Davidson College, is at home. "He , will have in a few days the Valley ! of Virginia to do mission work. Young Mr. Ray is studying for the ministry, j Last Saturday a bard of the Salva tion Army was here for a short while. The leader made religious talks on the streets. There w r ere several lit tle children in the crowd and they had their musical instruments with them, - which they used in plaving religious songs. It was very pretty music. Hickory Mt. Methodist church ob served Children’s Day last Sunday. A 1 large crowd was present. In the. morning services the pastor, Rev. O. I I. Hinson, made an excellent talk to 1 the children and in the afternoon preached a fine sermon. There was good singing a~d good eats and every body enjoyed the day. Mrs. J. S. Wrenn, who has been in Raleigh for the past three weeks tak ing treatment for a head trouble spent the week-e:d at home. She returned j to Raleigh Mordav to continue the : treatment. It is thought she will be j able to return for good by the end of j the week. She is greatly improved since taking the treatment. Two thousands and two hundred and seventy-eight farmers in North Caro lina have signed the pledge to “Live at Home” this year. What a difference would be found in the prosperity of ; this State if every farmer would do j the same, say extension workers of The State college and State Depart ment of Agriculture. The Woman’s Auxiliary of the Epis ; copal church in Pittsboro met with! the woman’s auxiliaries of Durham and Sanford at Hillsboro last week. Those who went from here were Mes dames Arthur H. London, Laura Mor gan, Fletcher Mann and Louis Nooe. They had a fine dinner and enjoyed the occasion immensely. Mr. Johns, who has been frf charge of the new cement bridge over HaW j river at Bynum, had the misfortune to. get caught under his car when it turn- i ed over in a ditch near Bynum last! Friday. He was not seriously hurt, j Mr. Johns was intending to leave Monday for Atlanta through the court-! try. Rev. J. J. Boone has returned from Richmond, Va., where he went to a hospital for examination. Mr. Boone was thoroughly examined by a phy sician and it was found that he was - suffering mostly from a nervous stom ach trouble. He was advised to take a rest and that the medicine prescrib ed for him would soon put him in first class shape. Mrs. O. T. Cooper, who lives on Rt. 1, has four cows that are slowly mak ing her rich, or rather they are help- j ing her to add much money to her i banking account. One of her cows is j 19 months old and the oldest is 2 1-2 . years. Three days of this week she made 16 pounds of butter from these! four cows. She gets 35 cents a pound ( for it, this in addition to the butter- j milk for which she charges 15 cents a gallon. We grind your corn or sell you meal. Beard Bros. NOTICE OF SALE CONTRACTOR'S OUTFIT. Twenty-one Good mules, 21 two horse wagons, 10 sets harness, 2 road plows, 4 drag Scrapes, 10 iron cots, 1 Ford truck, 1 road machine, 5 wheel ers, 1 Babcock buggy, 1 coral tent and 8 smaller tents and blacksmith tools will be sold at public auction at 10 o’clock a. m., Monday, June 11, 1923, on Central highway, about one mile east of Hillsboro, Orange county, N. C., at W. A. Dicus’s camp. For fur ther information, white R. R. BreWer, Trustee, care Teague & Teague, * at-, torneys, Sanford, N. C. June 7-c. J Mi. M. T. Williams is having a new* coat tof paint put on his house. Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Dixon,' Rt. 3, Pittsboro, June 3, a daughter. Mr. Luther Riddle was successful-1 ly operated on for appendicitis in a Durham hospital last Tuesday. • # Miss Lina Burnette Moore is visit-' . inj-T her aunt, Mrs. E. R. Hinton, and is expected to be here some time. Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Hackney turned home last Tuesday from Ra > leigh where they had been spending several days with relatives. Mr. John Birihns has been elected , Chief of Police by the Pittsboro town commissioners and in a few days he i wil l he sporting a blue uniform. * i I Mr. C. C. Hamlett has had his' house covered with new galvanized shingles and his front porch repair ed which adds much to the looks of the place. -m. 'I The workmen are progressing niee -1 ly on the new dwelling of Mr. R. C. Griffin on Foushee street. At the pres ent rate he can soon be living in his ! new home. Mrs. Vanda Johnson, who went to a hospital in Durham about two weeks ago for goitre treatment has not suf ficiently gained her strength to go through with the operation. j By order of court and in the ence of the county commissioners, Sheriff Blair last Monday poured out about 30 gallons of liquor said to have belonged to Palmer and Lackey and which was captured some time before court was in session. No Ice On Sunday. Mr. G. J. Griffin, manager of the * Chatham Hardware Co., says that ho I cannot undertake to sell ice on Sun day unless it is a case of sickne. ;s and urgently needed. There is ai ordin ance against the sale of commodities on Sunday and Mr. Griffin says that he cannot violate it. i He is right and we think that the Sunday laws should be stringently { observed. It is easy to fill the refrig t erator on Saturday for Sunday use. Let’s keep the Sabbath day holy. SCHOOL FACULTY COMPLETE At a meeting of the school board . Firday night the Siler City High school completed its faculty by elect ing L. H. Fogleman as teacher of science and mathematics and director of athletics; Miss Julia Barclay as ! teacher of the fifth grade and Miss Elizabeth Ferguson in the High school j department. I Sixty Americans are insured for sl,- 000.000 or more. llf She Trusts I j You, We Will I | We are willing to trust you with the furniture if the I young lady is willing to trust her destiny in your care. <■ We make it a point to be liberal and show every consid- B eration to newly married people. We will get your bill of goods up and for a small consideration as a cash pay- u ment we will carry the balance over to your satisfaction. When you consider that we are selling furniture on a F very close margin of profit, it is a big consideration for r us to give you these terms, and we want to do business r in a business way and we realize that service is the for- L 1 ward word these busy times. 1 ? When you are ready to make a purchase whether small r? or large, just drop around and let us quote you prices and show you the goods. i The Lee Furniture Company | Binders, Mowing I Machines and Rakes j ? Reaping time is nearly here and the time has to turn our attention to harvesting the small in good i shape. We can furnish you with all kinds o* harvesting I ■ machines and at about the old price—NOT, the advanced 1 price. 1 We handle the International Line—‘Bering and McCofw I mick—and carry at all times these machines. I Big Stock of Twine, I If your stock is small, use 8 Let us show you. Wffldn^i(£csSri? I Bouse of Kupf>enheiiner Good Clothes. j Spend Summer in Liberty. i j The family of Dr. J. D. Gregg has gone to Liberty where they will spend the summer. Dr. Gregg will remain in Siler. REMEMBER THIS. ! : Vass Pilot. 1 We’ve always contended, and we’re going to keep right on contending, that the people who live out in the j country have just as much right to come to town and enter your yard and break down your flowers and fences as you have to drive out to j their homes and commit similar depre | dations. If a stranger stopped his au to in front of your home and climbed the fence and broke off the limbs of a fvorite tree, or snapped off a hand : ful of your prettiest flowers you j couldn’t get hold of an officer quick enough" And you’d prosecute him to the last ditch. * That is true as gospel. And yet in the face of it we hear frequent re j ports of some one from town stop ! ping in the rural districts to break off limbs of trees, to break or dig up shrubbery or, as has been the case more than once, to enter some f-arm yard and carry away choice flowers. And just where there is any difference between town and country desecration of property, or just plain down-right stealing if you want the real defini tion, we are unable to determine. We can’t draw a line between the two, be cause it is just as criminal, just as despicable, in one case as it is in the other. It wouldn’t be a bad idea if every body would pause just for a second and pledge himself or herself to treat other people’s property just as they wish their own to be treated. We’d have a better community, and a good deal prettier one, to say nothing of better and more pleasant relations be tween town and rural citizens. If you live in town your property is your own : and no one has any right to deface or destroy it. If you live in the try, the game thing is true. So try and be better citizens by remember- 1 ing this next time you see something i you want that belongs to someone! else. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. The undersigned, having this day qualified as the administrator of the estate of R. M. McGhee, deceased,. late of the County of Chatham, this is to notify all persons holding claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 10th day of May, 1924, duly verified or this notice will be plead in bar of their re covery. All persons owing the said estate will please come forward and make immediate settlement. This the 10th day of May, 1923. j D. P. HUNT, ' Administrator of Estate of R. M. McGhee, Route 1, Chapel Hill N. C. June 14-R-p. ii COTTON AN DCORN PLANTERS AND GUANO DIS- !m] TRIBUTORS. H If INTERNATIONAL AND OLIVER CHILLED SIX HOE If H CULTIVATORS. || H THE BEST MADE. || 1 W. L. London &Son I P PITTSBORO, Ei US PLEASE I ik as a one-eyed boy at a two mg s has outgrown our present loca- Mg a larger store and we are mov- M VA ing to the location recently occupied by Little & Farrell, |KJ| in the Blair Hotel building. Here we will be better en f|*j) abled to serve our growing patronage. M |H Next week we expect to give you a message of interest Ml in this paper and we trust that you will read it. Come iMI |H around and see us in the new location. * M. In the meantime don J t disappoint yourself by buying |j| Mi inferior goods at low prices. Quality demands its price mj and we have the values in our store. M | Cecil H. Lindley, I M The Pure Food Grocer. ||| ||!| Main Street. Pittsboro, N. C. M m*m\ Our stock is featured by Groceries—it is our first inten- B tion to keep a line that is fresh and one that will meet the demand of Pittsboro and vicinity. However, we car ry a few notions and dry goods that will surprise you in ■ 1 price. Also buy and sell country produce. ? | BOONE BROS. - - Ernest md Jarvis I PITTSORO, T. M. BLAND & CO. HAS A FULILINBOF CHECKERBOARD FEEDS KEEPTHEM in GOOD ORDER Above we print the picture of a horse that has been fed on our Checkerboard Feed and he has fattened wonderful ly since Spring. He has been given a good balanced ra tion and the results have been gratifying. We want ev ery farmer in Chatham county to try these feeds because they are wholesome and economical. We have a tremendous stock of fee