I Refrigerators MBMff—.,! A 1 o X !! \y e have just received a solid car load of refriger- I ! t ators and we can please you in style, size and price. ii CARTER FURNITURE CO. f J * EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME. I <> SANFORD NORTH CAROLINA. | TVT^TfvfryfTT^^ryyTTTTTTtTVT?TyfyyTTTTy?yyTrTTTTy?^ [ UTILITY COUPE 1 j| 3 ► The Chevrolet Utility Coupe with high grade body < ► makes an ideal car, especially for a small family and it is J ► the lowest priced car, embracing quality, on the market. J ► ASK US ABOUT OUR EASY PAYMENT PLAN.- J i Bonlee Motor Co., I ► 5 ► Distributors in Chatham. < t BONLEE, AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAi SAFETY STRENGTH I SERVICE I The combination that a man demands before entrusting f' his hard-earned money to any Bank. The man who places m a part of his income in Savings Account here has no fear | over its safety. The same courteous, efficient service | I awaits the small depositors as well as the larger ones. Savings and Time Certificates here earn 4 percent. E| BANK OF PITTSBORO ft PITTSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA. > Capital, Surplus and Profits, $35,000.00 f A. H. London, Pres., J. L. Griffin, Cashier, W. L. Farrell, \- Assistant Cashier. : < s £ Keeps the Water Out" 3 > < t AND KEEPS ON KEEPING IT OUT FOR YEARS AND 2 ► YEARS AND YEARS. < f 2 l ————— 2 ► 5-V CRIMP GALVANIZED ROOFING for barns, sheds 2 * and pack houses 2 i * > GALVANIZED SHINGLES, painted tin shingles, As- 2 ► phalt and Asbestos shingles and slate for residences. 2 J ROLL ROOFING (slate surfaced or smooth) for gen- J t eral use. < > ' * ► RICHARDSON WALL BOARD for ceilings and side- * ► walls. « ► •* > GUTTERS, Downpours, Ridge Roll, Valley Tin, Sheet * ► Iron Sheets, Copper, Zinc, Tobacco Flues, Etc. 1> < > IF YOU CAN’T FIND IT IN YOUR HOME STORES, ► TRY DURHAM. ' ► : Budd-Piper Roofing Co. ► WALTER P. BUDD, Sec’y - - - DURHAM, N. C. ► “IT PAYS TO TRADE IN DURHAM” ► rAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA/ AA,,f A> aAAAAAAAf AA/ AA PAUL RUBBER OPTOMISTIC , Company at Salisbury, Reaping Ben » efits in Making Good Tires. ! Charlotte Observer > The Paul Rubber is reaping the * benefits of their strict policy of ! making nothing but the highest quality * tires and tubes, according to W. M. | McConnell, president. The manage > ment of the company is seeing evi * dence of the value of this policy al | most daily. Only last week a large » dealer from Orangeburg S. C., came ' to the factory and advised the of- I ficials of the company that they were > either going to have to supply their ’ customers with Clover Leaf Cords or ! else their customers were going else > where to secure same. It seems that about two years ago » this Orangeburg dealer bought a ’ large shipment of tires from the | Paul Rubber Company and sold same . to several hundred of their customers; ’ these tires are now beginning to wear | out and the car owners who use them ( refuse to replace them with anything but Clover Leaf Cords. He claims many customers have gotten consid erably over 20,000 miles and one car owner, in particular, came in a few days ago reporting 26,000 miles of service on two Clover Leaf Cords. Before this Orangeburg dealer left The Paul Rubber Company factory a contract was entered into to sup ply him six carloads of Clover Leaf Cords to be delivered during the year 1924. The Paul Rubber company also re ports that their customers are al ready preparing for the spring busi ness, and orders are now on the in crease, the total business during the past two weeks exceeding all previ ous records in the history of the com pany. The company now has a thoroughly organized agents organization throughout the entire United States also a well organized dealers organ ization throughout North and South Carolina, and those familiar with the operations of the company predict that business during 1924 will exceed that of 1923 at least 200 per cent. The company has paid eight per cent cash dividends on its preferred stock since three years ago, except during the year 1923, when a divi ded of 10 rev was Daid on both the preferred and common. * * * * * * * * * * He He * QUERY DEPARTMENT. * * Answers by John * He * H< He He H« ♦ * * He He He How did they stop Adam and Eve from gambling? Billie J. Pittsboro. Ans.—Their paradise (pair o’dice) was taken from them. Does a house burn up or down ? Sam P. Apex. Ans.—ls a house catches from the > top it brns down. If it is insured for a good sum it burns up. Who is the author of ‘‘Yes, We TT-ive No Bananas Today?” Sam J. Pittsboro. Ans. —Thas. Backney. He wrote it one night while he was dreamin.g I What made Lot’s wife turn to a pillow of salt when she looked back? ) Sallie, Bynum. Ans. —Curiosity, we suppose. She | had just met a Pittsboro marred woman and rbn VuV-a back to see if her hair was bobbed. Is high he-*l shoes for women going to be the fashion in future? —Mary J., Corinth. Ans.—Guess so. Paris fashion folks have decreed that shoe heels were not Meh enough and in future women will havn ’ T r.-i , strangfTaneTcurious. Peculiarities That Will Astonish Almost Anyone. Miss ChaFotte Nash, of St. Louis, has had her dimples insured foi SIOO 000. } l h The Bible, according to a new 'aw, must he read in the public schools in Kentucky. Mrs. Herbert H. Clark, Topeka ; Kansas, is suing her husband for di \ vorce because he will not sposk to | her. t Christ’ - an E MirULtown, N. Y. who had be mi. bl : nd for years, hct a !f all a few days ago. When he got up his eyesight was restored. • i Girls w'm wo’k 1 ■-* the office of tke | Common P’eas Court in Akron. O 1 io, s "urnt boh their hair by April 1 or lose l their jobs. E J Courad Onus, an engineer of a s trrsin running rut of Pittsburg, stoop- I ed his train. Whea I he fireman reach- J ed him he was dead. \ Edward Pilcher, of Pomeroy, 0., J killed h> • brother and the Judge sen -4 tenced him to serve one day in ev h ery month in the county jail for ten * years. J A strange man in Waco. Texas, was 4 arrested for boot'egging. He was sen- tenced to jail. He killed himself, 4 ferring to live in hell than go to jail, •& he said. 2 I • n™ —■: The vegetarian rather has it on the .4 beefeater when good hay sells around ◄ twenty dollars. h " ‘ y~ 2 *! ' te eth the right way ij | '—with a dentifrice that \ I not scratch or scour. . ◄ \ ] “ Wash” your teeth clean 2 \S With l \ COLGftTE S HONOR ROLL FOR PHILLIPS SCHOOL. Bear Creek, Rt. 3, April 4.—Fri day March 28, 1924 completed the fourth month of school. The attend ance has been very good for this month, which we hope will continue so for the next and final month of school. The honor roll is as follows: First grade —Louise Wilson, Ven tress Cockman, Kate Windal and Winifred Baxter. Second grade—Glenra Hussey. Third grade—Carl Harper. Fifth grade—Allyne Cockman, Vir gil Caviness and Tom Wilson. Sixth grade—Clara Powers, Flor ence Purvis, Edith and Attie Phil lips. Seventh grade—Lelia Phillips, Stel la Hussey and Mava Purvis. i Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Brown, of Ashboro were visitors in the home of Mrs. Brown’s parents. Messrs Huey Purvis and W. Wes ley Caviness, accompanied by Misses Leta Brewer and Annie Jones at tended preaching at Bennett Baptist church Saturdav night. Miss Mary Kidd, teacher of Phil lips school spent the week end with home folks. BROWN EYES. ABOUT THOMAS BROWNING. If any of our older readers ever knew a man named Browning, partic ularly Thomas Browning, or J. T. Browning, we would be glad to learn about it. One of our subscribers is anxious to know bis history: where he moved to from Chatham; when and where to. Write the editor of the Rec ord any information that you may have in regard to any Browning that you may have known in Chatham several years ago. '.iiia © tmm< A. synonym is a word you use when you can’t spell the ether one. For Sale. Complete Saw Mill Outfit, con sisting of the following: Austman & Taylor boiler and en gine mounted on wheels, sixteen hp. Bergeant standard mill. Hoe saw 48” 42 tooth, 8. 9 gage. Two log carts in first cla:s condi tion. One Gold water pump, practically new. One Fairbanks-Morse gas engine 1 1-2 hp. almost new. A lot of one inch piping. Good drive belt, 6 ply, 10” rubber. Shafting and pulleys to run cut of saw, also belting. Several things not mentioned gs with mill. This outfit can be bought for SI2OO and is in first class running condition, —Apply to— R. L. SPENCE. Owner, Star Rt. Siler City, N. C. j HAVE"yOUR EYES EXAMINED! BY AN EXPERT—COSTS NO | j j i j Dr. J. C. Mann, the well known J I eyesight Specialist and Optician jj ] will be at Dr. Farrell’s office in j [Pittsboro, N. C., every fourth Tues-I | day and at Dr. Thomas’ office, Siler! | City, N. C., every iourth Thursday! !in each month. Headache relieved | | when caused by eye strain. When I She fits you with glasses you have! | the satisfaction of knowng that! (they are correct. Make a note of f | the date and see him if your eyesj !* are weak. 1 His next visit in Pittsboro will I be Tuesday, April 22. I His next visit in Siler City will j be Tiiu sday, April 24. === Mouses Well | Painted I Are not only increased in sale l value —but are safeguarded jj against rot and decay. Property worth millions is jj destroyed each year by fire, I but this loss is as nothing compared to the loss by rot, rust and decay. FOY’S PAINTS j j will preserve your house .! against these foes and in this > way pay you big dividends. i It’s the White Lead, Zinc and j Linseed Oil in Foy’s Paints that * make it cover more surface per gallon and wear longer than the ordinary kind. Insist on Foy’s Paints ami be assured of durability, covering ! capacity and rich, beautiful colors. ! Color Folder and Color Suggestions j Free upon request. I CAPPS: f Hardware Co. Distributors, Sanford, North Carolina. N — ' ARE YOU A GOOD JUDGE? IF SO, YOU HAVE CHANCE TO WIN A FREE SUBSCRIPTION First prize One years’s subscription. Second prize Six month’s subscription. Third prize Four months subscription given to next three nearest. Nothing to pay to get in. No work to do.. Just give The Record your opinion as to the kind of reading you think folks find most interesting. The six prizes, amounting to two and a half years subscriptions, will be awarded April 17th, to readers of The Chatham Record. If you are a fairly good judge of human nature, you have a pretty good inkling of what kind of reading mat ter interests most folk—your friends and neighbors, for instance. If you are a good judge of human nature, you can easily say what you yourself like or dislike, and will stand an ex cellent chance to win a worth while prize, a free subscription to The Chat ham Record. How to Enter Contest. Read this issue of The Chatham Record over carefully, decid'ng, as you read, which items you like best and which you like least. Then clip the five items you like best, also the five you like least. Mark the item you like best No. 1, the item you like sec ond best No. 2, and so on down the line to the item you like the least, which will then be marked No. 10.. After you have numbered the 10 clippings, cut out the coupon below. Then, on the coupon, in the space numbered No. 1, write the heading of the item which you clipped and mark ed No. 1. On the coupon in the space numbered No. 2, write the heading of the item which you clipped and numbered 2. Write in the spaces pro vided the heading of each of your ten numbered clippings. If the items you clioped are para graphs, without headings of their own, just write the first three words of the first line of the paragraph. Af ter you have written the item head ings on the coupon, write your name and address plainly, also your sex and age. Then mail the couDon to . Joe Snyder, care The Chatham Record, Pittsboro, N. C.. So that you will understand clearly what is meant by “item” we will ex plain that an item is a paragranh, story, picture, drawing—any reading matter or illustrations, or even the ads. Cut Out Coupon. JOE SNYDER, Care Chatham Record , Pittsboro, N. C. i- . E 3 t ® r , me as a con Jestant for your free subscriptions. My ten items are listed below, m regular order : I Uke These Items Best: I Like These Items Least: (List below items No. 1 to 5.) (List below items No. 6 to 10.) 1 6 1 2 7 4 9 Name Town Rt.. St., or Box No. State Mv asre is *Sex is , ‘V«xSkJx*x*> * j PERRY’S GARAGE f I Phone 400 SANFORD, N. C. | 1 —Dealers In— i J I I Dodge Brothers Motor Cars, I n J 2 | Part? and Service. | 1 i* Better then a Mustard Fluster .. , j Jr or Loughs and Lolds, Head aches, Neuralgia, Rheumatism u S i 111 i®p7 i | if “I and AH Aches and Pains y S i UlMifi i j§ ALL DRUGGISTS Hospital size, $3.00 I Howto Make Money! [ I paint facts Illustration describes how to make BEST —PURE —PAINT j For $2.82 a Gallon | S WS§? UM SEMI-PASTE PAINT f (I #teGAL3• rn, is White Lead and Costly White | Zinc to assure longest years of f They are simply addingLinsced Wear, aS proven by 50 years Os i SI ® utmost satisfactory use. | LEAST cost _ because in Semi-Paste form, and therefore I, vou mix 3 quarts of Linseed Oil into each gallon, and so | make LG gallons of Pure Paint for $2.82 per gallon, GUARANTEE - Use a gallon out of any you buy, and if not per fectly satisfactory the remainder can be returned Without payment being made for the one gallon used, FOR SALE BY POLLARD BROTHERS, CONNELL & JOHNSON, C. B. CRUTCHFlELD, The main thing is to indicate clear ly just what you like to read in The Chatham Record, what articles, para graphs, pictures, etc., that interest you most. Also what stories, jokes pictures, etc., have little or no interest to you. You stand as good a chance as anyone to win a prize. How could yo v get a subscription to The Record anv easier? This will be the last prize we will offer until after April 17th, when the winners will be announced, and this same announcement will be printed in The Record next week, but all replies must have clippings from the partic ular issue from which the coupon is clipped. All answers must be in the hands of Joe Snyder not later than Saturday, April 12th, 1924. » Send The Coupon Now. j Look over this paper now. See how easy it is to decide on one item— “I | like this,” or of another, “It doesn’t I interest me.” Just remember that what interests you—the pictures, sto ries, etc, which you like or dislike others will also like or dislike. So mark the items now, cut them out with the coupon, list the headings, then mail both the'clippings and the coupon to Mr. Snyder, care of The Record, Pittsboro. Get your bid in for a prize first and don’t wait until the coupon is printed the second time. Winners’ Names Printed April 17. It is our purpose now to print the names of the winners in our paper of Thursday, April 17th, and unless we receive too many to get them credited this will be done, but we will give all the same consideration, even if it takes longer to check them. All clip pings will be sorted by numbers and counted. The item liked best (marked No. 1) by the largest number of con testants will be listed by the judges as No. 1. The item liked second best (marked No. 2) by most contestants will be listed 2, etc., down to the item liked least by the listed as No. 10. This list, made up from the items of all contestants will be the Master List. The six contestants whose lists are nearest like the Master List will be awarded the prizes. The contest is open to all, old and young and we hope to have a good list of replies to this problem. It will enable us to print a better paper.