Going to Build, or Repair ? If you are going to build a HOME, GARAGE, 01 BARN, or REPAIR any building this fall, we can fur nish all your LUMBER, and at reasonable Prices. Have iust received a car load of No. 1 and 12 KlLjn DRIED FLOORING, CEILING, MOULDINGS etc., from our Ashboro Plant, and will appreciate your busi ness. Asheboro Wheelbarrow Company PITTSBORO PLANT , » _ ~ Fall Goods Here. Our store is more completely filled with furniture than ever before. We sell for just a little less than and much cheaper than the majority. See our goods, get o U r prices and we will abide your decision. WALDEN & THOMAS Undertakers & Embalmers, MONCURE, NORTH CAROLINA. 1 iT^ horses I | tSSI MULES | I Constantly on hand at our Stables in Pittsboro. We guarantee our stock to be as represented. (m, We desire to build up a big trade in Chatham County: W] and if fair dealing will do it, we shall succeed. g| Don’t buy till you see our stock. ||! BLAIR & SHOVER |g G. W. BLAIR, Manager gj| I Wedding Presents • | WrriTT TlimmrrT'lTT I I Received at Pilkington’s Drug Store A Beautiful Line of | Community Plate and Silverware j suitable for Wedding Pres ents and Call and see them. Ylso a new Supply of Koaks and films. j IPERRV’S GAR AGE J Phone 400 SANFORD, N. C. : —Dealers In— 7 ' £ Dodge Brothers Motor Cars, . \ Part? and Service. | $ .... t The Modern j I The new style note is here sub Ml I mitted with unerring good taste, • y distinction, dignity and refinement. These exclusive effects are present- f 1 1!, ed in the Fall exhibit of Kuppenheimer Good Clothes y.y The suits and light-weight over* coats are superbly tailored of the frijM finest all-wool fabrics. Priced to give you the maximum in value. • wm>\ C R. BOONE “Uood Quality Spells What Boone Sells” I DeLuxe Clothiers RALEIGH, N.C 'mmtmmmHm—mmmrnm i The Record—Only $1.50 Year ! J. M. LINDLEY, AGED 1 94, DIES IN CHATHAM Leaves Eight Sons, Two Daughters, 59 Grandchildren and 35 Great- Grandchildren. Siler City, Nov. 21.—J. Meacham Lindley, age 94, perhaps the oldest man in Chatham county, died at his home 10 miles northeast of this place last night at 7:30 o’clock, his death resulting from a valvular heart dis ease and the infirmities of age. Mr. Lindley was q member of Chatham and Alamance counties’ oldest and most prominent families, and was ac tively identified with the affairs of the county throughout a long period; He was twice married, his first wife having been Miss Roxianna Branson. One son now survives that union, Levi B. Lindley, of Liberty. His second marriage was to Miss Frances Louisa Glenn, who survives him, to gether with eight sons, R. H., A. S., A. 0., and E. G. Lindley. of. Snow Camp; Walter A, of Liberty; C. A., of Duval’s Bluff, Ark.;-‘O. N. and E. M., Lindley, of Siler City, route 4; two daughters, Mrs. E. P. Perry, of Burlington, and Mrs. W. F. Fuqua, of Siler City, route 4; one brother, D. W. Lindley, of • Guilford College, 59 grandchildren and 35 great giand children. The funeral service was held this afternoon at 2 o’clock at Center M. P. church, of which the deceased was a member, being conducted by Rev. G. W. Holmes, the pastor, assisted by Rev. Dock Harris, both ministers paying 1 high tribute to Mr. Lindley as to ris Christian character and his upright manner of living. The pall bearers were his six sons and preceeding them as they bore the casket to the grave were four teen granddaughters all carrying beautiful floral designs, which were banked in profusion on the mound underneath which rested the body of this splendid man. Another death occurred early this morning in this same section, this being Mrs. Farror Ellington, 80 years old, at her home, one mile east of gilk Hope. Surviving are her hus band, two sons, Claude and Will El lington, and one daughter, Mrs. Will Bare, of Snow Camp. The funeral service will be held at Emmaus church tomorrow at 12 o’clock and interment made in the cemetery. The service will be conducted by Rev. Mr. Gordon, of Pittsboro. Dr. R. Harrid Durham, w T ho is as sociated with the Ford hospital at Detroit, Mich., is suffering from an attack of grip. A report received by his father, W. S. Durham, this morn ing states the young man is re covering satisfactorily. An infant son of Mr. and Mrs Frank M. Stone, formerly of this place but now living in Graham, died at their home Wednesday night. Its body was brought to Loves Creek, this county yesterday afternoon for burial, this short funeral service be ing conducted by Rev. Richard S, Fountain. JURY FOR SPECIAL TERM OF COURT The following is the jury list for the special term of court to be held at Pittsboro, beginning Dec. 8, for the trial of civil cases only: First week: C. N. Justice, James Jones, J. T. Gillilana. John A. Marsh all, Norman Yow, B. A. Clark, Tucker Perry, E. L. Lassater, Geo. M. Holt, Gaston Andrews, Marvin Mann, A E. Webster, A. D. Coggins, T. D. Cole, S. P. Sturdivant, Jim Knight, R. J. Hough, Tom Maddox, G. T. Yates. Girls belonging to the Polar Bear Club at Cape May, N. J., have to take a dip into the ocean every day through the winter or get married New V/ay to Stop Night Coughing Those who have suffered the tor- I tures of sleeplessness due to con- I tinual coughing at night, and who I as a result often feel utterly worn out and useless during the day, ■ need no longer permit their systems to be weakened and their vitality sapped by this distressing ailment. For through a very simple treat ment the trouble can be stopped al most at once, and people often get their full night’s rest undisturbed after the very first trial. Here is the method: Simply get a Dot tie of the prescription known as Bn King’s New Discovery from clrug store. Then to-night b « f ° re r ® tiring take one teaspoonful and hold lt in your throat for 15 or 20 seconds' before swallowing it. This prescription hias a double notion. It not onl ?. {L? £ heals the soreness and irritation, but it nuickly loosens and removes the phlegm. 2nd congestion which is the real cause of the cough. So your throat is left wonderfully soothed and cleared of irri tatin'” gatherings, you can sleep soundly ind Pjtfulfy. and the co US U la ucoally gone in a very short time. . Dr. King’s New Discovery is a remark able remedy for coughs, chest colds, hoarseness, sore throat, bronchitis, laryngitis and bronchialasth ma. At all good druggists. Aslc for observations By Rambler. “If worn out cars keep piling up,” I remarked a citizen the other .day, I “the garage people will have to (have 1 a rummage sale to get rid of them. / “Well, this is Thanksgiving week,” said a townsman, “and for one thing, I am thankful that I am living, and am thankful also that my,wife hasn’t got to buy her a new hat.” “If there is anything I hate worse than a snake or a dog,” said a lady, “it is politics ’ and politicians. I think the two are the greatest ene mies the country ever had. And if I had my way I’d put every man that talked politics on the road, and every paper that printed political stuff I’d have them banned from the mails. They are a curse to every thing.” V “Breaking up whiskey stills in all parts of the state,” said a deputy sheriff a few days ago, “has been a hard job. They are like the Irish- , man’s flea. When you think you have one of these mid-night workers under your thumb, he ain’t there. You can destroy a still in one place and he’ll open up in another. Big money causes these people to make supposed liquor, and they will take all sorts of chances to make the stuff. I like a dram, but I’m blest if I can stand the stuff that is made now.” “There is one thing that the peo ple of Pittsboro is blessed with,” re marked one of our business men, “and that is wood. The people here do not have to spend all they make in buying a cord of wood like they do in the large citi. ■. Here you can get all the wood you want for $3 and $3.50 a cord. Some of it you can buy for $2 a cord, and it is delivered to your house. In the large cities it costs anywhere from $lO to sl2 a cord. And how the poor folks pay fo.* it and pay high rents, I cannot imagine.” “You can say as much a ? you j please about living in town,” a farm er was talking the other day, “but give me the country every time. When it is cold, there is plenty of wood to burn, and when it is hot. there are plenty of shade trees to get under. When you want bread it is no trouble to load your wagon with corn or wheat and go to mill and have it ground. In the country you can raise your own meat, and in winter you can catch a rabbit any time you want one, and you do not have to pay anywhere from 50 cents or 75 cents for it either. Give me the country every time, where I can breathe pure air, kick up my heels and holler as loud as I want to.” Jamaica ginger killed 22 people in Hamilton, Ohio. OTHERS ~ WANT IT for croupy children be cause it quickly clears away the choking phlegm, stops hoarse, croupy coughs and allows restful sleep. No alarming croup when Moth er keeps a botte of CHAMBERLAIN’S COUGH REMEDY always on hand in the home. Benefits children and grown persons. No Narcotic*. Sold everywhere. For Sale by G. R. Pilkington A good night’s rest There’s nothing like it to put you in shape for the day’s duties or pleasures. There’ s nothing like ! Dr. Miles’ Nervine to bring refreshing, restful slumber. Buy a bottle. If it does not help you, we’ll give your money back. Vour druggist sells it at pre-war prices—$1.00 per bottle. GINNING CREEPING UP v The report of cotton ginning in Chatham up to November 14 shows that the ginnings for this year, so much retarded, are creeping up to- I Auto Painting, Upholstering,. Top Dressing Why Drive a Shabby Car When We Can Make It Like New ? I Drive Your Car to our shop and let » s I show you what we can do for it I . POOLE’S AUTO PAINT SHOP, i Sanford, N. C. & » ORGANIZED IN 1903 The name of this institution has stood for financial soundness and efficient service for nearly quarter of a century. On this record we are seeking new business-. May we serve you? BANK OF PITTSBORO PITTSBORO, N. C. A. H. London, Pres. James L. Griffin, Cashier. *»s<s<&<s><s<&<s><&s><&<s><&<&&&<&<§><&<&s><§><&<s><s><s>& I For Twenty Years; A fifth of a century, through panic and war, good times and poor, this Bank has steadily grown, and ! prospered, always serving Sanford and vicinity with— -1 EFFICIENT BANKING SERVICE H ■ ■ I Banking Loan and Trust Co., £ SANFORD. £ ? We Pay 4 Per Cent Compounded Quarterly. ** ' 5 J. W. Cunningham, W. S. Weatherspoon, W. W. Robards, P President Vice-Pres. Cashier. R. E. CARRINGTON, Chairman of Board. JONESBORO: MONCURE: I. P. Lasater, Cashier J. K* Barnes. I The good^ M must go out and get them. That “lucky fellow’ 5 usua Ll |m| the chap who rowed just a little harder than the r.ex low to achieve success and happiness. „ raS p [j] Savings gives you the opportunity to gain a firm S M on your oars—it means that this Bank is reaay z you that helpful hand. Now is the time to act—com lOTI and talk it over. I The FARMERS BANK §)] T. M. BLAND, Pres. A. C. RAY, HV. R. Johnson, Cashier. E. E. Williams, Asst lasn i PITTSBORO. N. C. ward those of the year. The number ot ', , date l] this year to the d ate ** SiJ 645, while last year to ft ’^l it was 7,842. The * ? about two-thirds of >»«J rr~— — / year ’s pv.l

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