■’ • ■ *”* '■■• I I 1 111 I ( | W liat You !\'<>e J Shoes. . J [ In addition our store is full of bargains with dress '; I goods, hats and furnishings for the men and ladies. Hos- I iery, and all the things that would be desirable at a low ! [ | pi ice and satisfactory wearing qualities. \\ j C. L. BROWER & CO., | Dealers in Quality Merchandise Siler City, N. C. f ;; ; ttf »ftft T | Musical Merchandise | Os Quality j: PIANOS—VICTROLAS—RECORDS. f I j| Darnell & Thomas I • I t f “Our Reputation Is Your Insurance.” i 118 FAYETTEVILLE ST. RALEIGH, N. C. | ADVERTISING IN THE RECORD BRINGS RESULT J Central Carolina JFubilee Day! | For Harnett, Chatham, Moore and Lee Counties Celebrating Fifth Armistice Anniversary ® I SANFORD, N. C., TUESDAY, NOV. 13TH 8 (GREAT PATRIOTIC CELEBRATION-SPEECHES BY GENERAL j BOWLEY AND OTHER PROMINENT MEN | I Pageant representing Current and Historical Events, Individual Floats, Great Decorated Au- I tomobile Procession, Beauty Queens, Representing Several Towns, will be in I parade, from whom a Queen of the celebration will be chosen * J Valuable prizes to be given away for best Pageant Division, Float and Decorated Cars, with | I second and third prizes | Three Fine Band Concerts Will Be Given During the Day by Fort Bragg Military Band | Free Barbecue Given to Legionaires, Ex-Service Men | I and Visiting Soldiers I Football Game Athletic Contests Wild West Parade Fiddlers’ Contest | I Open Air Festival on the Streets at NigHt I Higiand Fling Virginia Reel The Minuet Square Dancing Confetti War, Etc | I Everybody invited-We Want You with Us For Hus Great Gala Event-COME | | LAST DAY~Next MONDAY > > Remember my big Sale will close next Monday, Novem > ber 12th. We have many, many bargains left and we ! want you to come and get some of them. > - Monday, November 12th, we want everybody to be here and bring their keys for the Talking Machine, between the hours of three and six o’clock. 'Somebody will get it, it may be you, so come and bring your key on Monday, November 12th 3 to 6. We have shipment of new goods every day and they are all going into the Special Price list. If you want Bargains now is your best time to get them. Url S. BERMAN, CHAPEL HILL, I There’s Such Thing it | ;||| as being “too close to the trees to see the woods”— ! M And too close to one’s own business to visualize its larger 1 1 H possibilities. || > |m Oftentimes discussion with an impartial outsider gives || l ill birth to new ideas and freshens one’s viewpoint. i on say we can solve your problems we simply sug- || ► || gest that through our varied Banking and business ex- J 0 l perience, we may be able to be of practical assistance. |‘ M USE US FREELY. 1 I The Chatham Bank I |j| j. C. GREGSON, President. J. J. JENKINS, Cashier. || I rn W. A. Teague, vice President. |M If SILER CITY, NORTH CAROLINA. M i j . ————— ■ KU KLUX LAWYER IS KILLED. Was Making Effort to Blacken Char acter of The Publicity Man. Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 5. —Phillip E. Fox, publicity man for the Ku Klux Klan, late today shot and killed W. S. Cobum, Atlanta attorney and counsel for the faction fighting Imperial Wiz ard H. W. Evans and other officials of the order. Mrs. W. A. Holbrook, stenographer for Cobum, said that Fox came in while Cobum was talking to a client | and began firing when he was told : to come back in about an hour. She ! said five shots were fired, three of which took effect. Fox is the editor of the Knight Hawk, official organ of the Imperial palace of the Ku Klux Klan. When ar | rested Fox said: I “I am sorry I had to do it, but I i am glad he is dead. He was planning ■ to ruin me, and I had just as soon be hung as hurt. What I did has no con nection with the Ku Klux Klan. Co bum had threatened to ruin me and to publish affidavits affecting my character that were untrue.” I Anxious to Get It. I Mr. B. D. Woody, who is a good friend of The Record and a regular - subscriber, sent us a remittance for j a new subscriber this week. He says p they are always anxious to get The L Record each week. | AN IMPERISHABLE GIFT e WTien you make a Christmas gift Ii of year’s subscription to The Youth’s jj Compaion you think, of course, of the ■ j first great thrill that comes when ■i | those first holiday issues are opened \ and read. But you are giving more than that. You are giving the assur ance of fifty-two more thrills before the capacities of the gift are exhaust ed. You can’t do that with any gift that is made for immediate consump tion, like candy or fruit. Today it is here; tomorrow it is but a memory. But The Companion is imperishable. Its last taste, a year from now, will & be as appetizing as the first on this fj coming Chrstmas day. You cannot g put your money to better use or ad |j vantage in Chirstmas giving than in I! a subscription to The Youth’s Com panion. | The 52 issues of 1924 will be crowd |l ed with serial stories, short stories, | editorials, poetry, facts and fun. Sub s scribe now and receive: I. 1. The Youth’s Companion—s 2 is ? ( sues in 1924. |j 2. All the remaining issues of 1923. 3. The Companion Home Calendar $ for 1924. f. All for $2.50. 4. Or include McCall’s Magazine, K the monthly authority on fashions, ft] Both publications, only $3.00. THE YOUTH S COMPANION, | Commonwealth Av&St.Paul Streets, Boston, Mass. I! I® 3 SEE YOUR LABEL • Papuan Politeness. A Papuan’s idea of courtesy will take him to almost any length. He has been known to plead guilty to a charge of which he was innocent sim ply because he thought that by doing so he would please the judge or mag istrate. Even if he has been told a story two or three times a Papuan will laugh just as heartily and ex press the same astonishment the last time as the first. “He wanted me to carry him across the river,” said a prisoner charged with murdering another native, “but he looked heavy. Os course, I could not be so rude as to refuse to carry him, so I thought the best way out of the difficulty was to kil lhim.” Despite their almost insane craving for bloodshed, the Papuans are readily amenable to discipline and have a great respect for the government. A native policeman might succumb to temptation to break the law, but he would always take or his uniform first. GOOD IRISH POTATOES. Mr. W. B. Dorsett, Siler City, Rt. 4, planted three pecks of Irish potatoes in the late summer and he dug the patch last week, getting ten bushels of extra nice potatoes, lour of which weighed five pounds. Who can beat ! that for potatoes? rWANTs! S x Disappeared from my farm on or about Oct. 22, one purebred solid ; squirrel colored Jersey heifer, six months old. Reward if returned to Jno. T. Johnson, Siler City, N. C. lt-c JUST UNLOADED TWO CARS OF Acme and Sensation Flour, $6.25 to $7.00 per barrel. Every bag guaran teed to be good as tne best. R. M. Connell, Pittsboro. ts. SPECIAL for SI.OO a box containing fifteen assorted engraved Christ mas cards. Postpaid. P. O. 1041, Richmond, Va. lt-p. GET the best Norfolk Oysters $5 bbl. F. O. B. Norfolk. Give us your bu siness. Correspondence solicited; sat isfaction guaranteed. Wainwright & Co. Norfolk, Va. lt-p SOLD MANY BARRELS of Flour during the past week —$6.25 to $7.00 per barrel; every bag guaranteed to be good as the best or your money back. I buy flour to sell, not to keep. R. M. Connell, Pittsboro. ti* WANTED—Poultry and eggs. High est market prices paid. Ship to Greenville and get results. Write, wire or phone. Textile Produce Co., Greenville, S. C. lt-p WANTED—Boxwood branches, eight to fifteen inches long, in ton lots or less. A. B. Price, 925 Virginia Ave., S. W. Washington, D. C. lt-p (GENERAL Smith and Repair Work. Have received new machinery and am now prepared to do all kinds of . repair work, blacksmithing, wagon and buggy work, and horse shoeing at I short notice. Give me a share of your \ patronage. W. Ren Harper, rear of court house and west »>t jail. I Nov 8 ts-C, j FROST PROOF EARLY JERSEY I Cabbage plants, now readv; 500 for * 7 scents; 1000 $1.25 postpaid. A. B. f Clegg, Moncure, N. C. Nov29-c AUCTION SALE—I will sell at my home place in Oakland township on j Saturday, November 10th, 1923, be r ginning at 10 o’clock a. m., all my farming tools and some household \ furniture. Terms cash. F. L. May, IPittsboro, N. C. Nov 8-c KEROSINE ENGINE FOR~SALE— Witt make, 6 horse power, mounted on truck, good shape, will sell cheap. Rufus Jones, Rt. 4, Siler City. Nvß WANTED TO BUY a timber wagon. Name price first letter. C. B. Moore, Pittsboro. ts. (PRESSING CLUB—Why not have your clothes cleaned at The Star Pressing Club; cheaper and better; dry cleaning, repairing and steam pressed and dyeing. Allow me a share of your patronage. First door north of Post office, Pittsboro. N. C., David Smith. Nov B-c I WANTED—Men oi women to take j ■ orders for genuine guaranteed hos iery for men. women, and children. | Eliminates darning. $75.00 a week I full time, $1.50 an hour spare time Cottons, heathers, silks. Internation al Stocking Mills, Norristown, Pa. Nov. 29. PRESSING AND CLEANING done promptly by The Siler City Pressing Club. Mail packages given prompt at tention and returned postage prepaid. Located in Stone’s Barber Shop, Main j Street, Siler City, N. C. ts. I FIFTY-ACRE FARM for sale, near Pittsboro, 30 acres cleared, balance in wood land, cash or terms, buildings on farm. Write to “Farm” care of The Record, Pittsboro. ts. MONEY TO LOAN—We have $50,000 to loan to the farmers of Chatham ' county within the next ninety days ' at 5 1-2 per cent interest and from 1 to 33 years time. Chatham Realty Co., V. R. Johnson, secretary, Pittsboro ts LUMBER OF ALL KINDS and qual itv. Florida kiln dried cei ng and flooring; we buy cross Les standing in woods or delivered to road. V/. F. Bland. ts GOOD IMPROVED FARM FOR Sale, on Goldston-Pittsboro road, 3 miles east of Goldston; Carolina school right at the door, good store and churches near, improved build ings, tenant house; 75 acres, 30 are in cultivation, balance growing timber; cash or terms; price reasonable. Clarence R. Gilmore, Rt. 1, Cumnock, N. C. ts. I GOODRICH and KELLY-SPRING- Is FIELD Tires at rock bottom prices at C. B. Crutchfield’s. Moncure, N. i C. __ Oct. 4-ts-c.