1 ™" 1 '■ ■ ■ 'After j Pass it around after every naeaL Give the family the benefit of its aid to digestion. Cleans teeth too. Keep it always in the house. F 22 'Costs little-helps much" J _ T PROGRAM FOR THE CELEBRATION AT PITTS BORO JULY 4TH, 1925. ),00 A. M. Registration of Soldiers and Veterans at Court House. All Soldiers and Veterans are requested to register. LoO A. M. Band Concert by Durham Hosiery Mills Band at Court House Square. ;0:00 A.M. Climbing Grqp.sy Pole at Court House Square. Prize , of $5.00 in gold for first one to climb-pole. L : ° <v iVj - Ad Soldiers and Veterans assemble at Baptist church ood march to Court House. - * Speech by Major L. P. McLendon at Court House. i:OJ i . jai. Barbecue Dinner for all Confederate Veterans, Spanish American War Veterans and Soldiers of the n World War on Court House Square. Cand Concei t by Durham Hosiery Mills Band at Court House Square. BSO P. M. Free Black Face Comedy by Two High Class Artists Court House Square. P*P* M- Races. Prizes for Winners. - 1 B- Free Baseball Game. New Hope vs. Pittsboro. At School House. ! * i ! Mall & Burns . ■ | 1 / Originators of Low Prices. j ' Dry Goods and Groceries New Dress Materials are received frequently and we | t have an experienced lady to help the customer match col ors and materials. SHOES AND HOSIERY. We shr.P be glad to lit you ip Shoes, or sell you some of the best hosiery you can get anywhere for the money. We deliver Groceries in the town and shall be glad to I serve you. Respectfully, I tlci.ll & Burns j PITTSBORO, • 1 ! | Seaboard Airline Railway j THROUGH THE HEART OF THE SOUTH Schedule Effective May 10, 1925, Pittsboro, N. C. SOUTHBOUND. No. 231 arrives from Moncure 11:15 am. j No 211 arrives from Moncure 6:30 p m. NORTHBOUND. ! No. 212 leaves Pittsboro for Moncure 8:30 a. m. No 234 leaves Pittsboro for Moncure 2:15 p. m. For rates and other travel information, call on ! H. D. GUNTER, Agent, JNO. T. WEST. D. P. A., i Pittsboro, N. C. Raleigh, N. C. j -■——• - . - / * PERRFS GARAGE! j Phone 400 SANFORD N. C. —Dealers In— Dodge Brothers Motor Cars, j Part? and Service. | Razor that | 1 A 4. Qi. Sharpens Its Own Blades I 1 riUlUOllUp COMPLETE OUTFITS SI.OO f AND $5.00 * Kazor , —— I For Sale at All Stores Selling Razors S —Sharpens Itself and Bl,de ‘ B ~~ ~ r: ~" r ~ VHG Merchants j * who advertise In E this paper will give I you best values for I your money. j m , pjr for the relief of Biliousness, Ljj 'Poi p’»d Liver, Sick Stomach and P _ for moving the Bowels. „ Helps clear the skiz. Contents no GaisttsmJ Buy from your drv^tgtet. Pyv 25c and 50c the box. #1 ay r: t /;/ ■■■■s Vj -f • ]»A p| | " LV ' ILLUSTRATING WHAT A COUNTY AGENT MEANS County Agent, W. K. Scott, of Ala mance County has outlined the fol j lowing nine important projects to push during the next six months, j 1-The first annual picnic in co-op j eration with the North Scate Cream ery at Burlington about the first of : August. 2- of the pure-hred bull campaign. 3- agricultural tour, possibly in Alamance County. x 4- culling demonstrations all over the County in August. 5- A carload sale of poultry about the last of August. 6- Assisting* with the Mebane Fair in September. 7- a carload of turkeys. 9-Hold two sales of pen pigs, prob ably at Mebane and Burlington. I may say in connection with (1) that the North State Creamery at Burlington was brought about largely through the influence of the County Agent work. In conection with project 8 the coun ty agent has placed 23 registered bulls in the County since January first. In connection with project 2 the ccun ers can get explosives from the gov ernment through County agents for about nine cents per pound delivered. This is indepensable in clearing land, blasting, drainage, and other wojrk where high explosives can be used on the farm. METEORS HIT MOON 50 MILES SECOND, DENT IT This is why So Many Craters Appear On The Dead Planet, Says Scientist Mil ions of meteors, hitting the moon with a speed of as much as 50 miles a second,- and exploding, with a violence greater than that of T. N. T. dynamite, or Nitroglycerine, were responsible for the multitude of craters that can be seen to cover the surface of our satellite, when viewed with a telescope or even a .pair of binoculars, according to a i new theory proposed by A. C. Gifford of the Hector Observatory at Welling ton, New Zealand. . The action of the meteors was much the same as that by which ex editions of the lunar craters on the battlefields of France, when earth thrown into the air by the force of the explosion returned to the ground to form a some what higher than the surrounding plain. These meteors were not greatly different from those that now reach the earth, but while thousands of them enter the earth’s atmosphere daily, friction with the air is so great that most of them are burned up be fore they reach ground and when this occurs at night, a shooting star is the result. The few that do land have so greatly slowed down that they can do no daniage. Since the moon has no appreciable atmos phere, they hit the lunar surface with their full speed, frequently of 40 miles a second. “With this veloc ity.” says Mr. Gifford, “if the meteor is stopped within one-tenth of a sec ond, it will penetrate two miles into the surface. In this time it is changed into gas, but confined tem porally in severely limited space. The pressure is so intense, the ex pansion so rapid that it is instan taneously shattered and ejected by an explosion 500 times as powerful f and much more rapid than that which would result if an equal mass of dy namite were exploded in a cavity within an inner crust.” As further evidence of his theory, Mr. Gifford has calculated the shape of a crater formed in such away, and his figures closely resemble those of actual craters seen on the moon through a telescope. Sea water contains 32 of the 92 known elements. - dll; > *P.SXINDSEY General Sales Manader Ifaispsi t Tire Co. IIV Vf ANY motorists fcil to realise ! |\/| that in stopping a motor car A quickly they are literally ibuming up brake bands and tires. I Most motorists know that the 'gasoline engine develops great ; power,especially when one is step ping on the gas or trying to a quick pickup. When a driver ; tries to stop this power suddenly, |by jamming on the brakes, there is f generated, at the point of contact between brake lining and tire, a heat that is truly terrific. Most motorists know, through ex perience, that a gasoline engine gen jerates great heat. Yet the amount of heat generated in traveling from t a standing start to 25 miles an hour, in a distance of 200 feet, is only i slightly greater than that generated ion your brake and tire surfaces as i you stop your car when traveling - at the same speed and within the ' same distance. * Think of applying this tremendous j amount of heat to the comparatively i small surfaces on your brake bands 1 and tires, and then you may marvel •t the design and manufacturing i / . . it—■ l—lll ■! 111 !■ 11l ill IIIBIUMIH hi STONE MOUNTAIN MEMORIAL COINS NOW ON SALE The Confederate Memorial at Stone Mountain, when completed, will be the greatest monument ever con structed by the hand of man. Across this mamouth background of granite, beginning at the summit of the prec ipice and sweeping downward 1,350 feet, is being carved in full relief a Panorame representing the Confed erate forees and their matchless lead ers. Artillery appears at the top, as if coming down the mountain. On th? left will be the Confederate calvary in motion, fn the center will be carv ed a collqssal group representing the Confederate high command. The cen tral group alone will surpass all oth er monuments. It will consist of Gen eral Robert E. Lie, General Stone- , wall Jackson, President Jefferson Davis and four outstanding 'gener als now being selected by a commis sion representing the thirteen South ern States. To complete this memorial, which will stand as a perpetual tribute to the valor and heroism of the South ern soldier, Confederate Memorial Coins, minted by the United States Government, are now on sale at the price of ONE DOLLAR each. Every Southern man and woman, every boy and girl, in whose veins fl'ows the 1 blood of the heroes of 61-G5 .should ! possess one of these beautiful half dollars. „The most splendid pages of Chat ham’s glorious history are those that recount the valour, heroism, bravery and sell sacrifice of her noble sons who wore the grey. Let their de scendants and all who revere the | memory of their valor and devotion invest a pittance in this most worthy cause. The coins are now on sale in Chat ham at the following places, viz: Bank of Pittsboro, Pittsboro, N. C. Page Trust Co., Siler City, N. C. Moncure Bank and Trust Co., Mon cure, N. C. or may be obtained direct from Miss Margaret LI. Womble, Chm. Chatham County Memorial Coin Dis- j tribution Committee, Pittsboro, N.C. Death of Mr. J. F. Foushee | \ Contributed. Moncure, Rt. 2, June 26. —The many friends of Mr. J. Fl Foushee will be grieved to learn of the death of that good man. He passed away at his home on Moncure route 2 last Wednesday morning at 3:30 a.m. af ter 10-months confinement to his home with heart trouble. Mr. Foushee was seventy years of age. He married Miss Jennette Pet ; ty, of Chatham County October 29, j 1879. There were twelve children and j tweny four grand children. Nine chil dren still are living, namely, C. D. Foushee, of Mebane, N. C., W. H. Foushee, Moncure, Mrs. Daisy Mc- Adams, Graham, Mrs. Ona Snipes, of Swepsonville, Mrs. Mattie Bradshaw, Siler City, Mrs. Josie Love, Burling ton, Mr. Joe Foushee, of Burlington, Mrs. Florence Burke, Siler City, all of whom were present at the funer al. ; Mr. Foushee became ill 12 months ago and was cared for by his son : W. H. Foushee and wife. However, he was able to go to town and greet , his friends and always had a good ■ j word for everybody. The burial was ■ Phillips’ Chapel cemetery, in Ala r mance county, beside his wife, Thurs l day afternoon at 4:30. The funeral i service was conducted by Rev. R. R,. Gordon, of Pittsboro. A large crowd r of friends and neighbors was pres ent to pay their last respects. Mr. , Foushee was a member of Pittsboro Baptist church. He was a good man and will be greatly missed in his community. Automobile owners are given to July 7 to get tags, this extension be ing necessary by the rush during the closing days of the month. . |_ - it—^ — j jolmm ! SlIiSS?f /0P& j Mm pis' v?' ■ methods that produce fabrics able to withstand the punishment. When brakes are applied with such pressure that the wheels slide, heat and wear are transferred to , that one small point of a tirelwhich is in contact with the road surface. If four-wheel brakes are used this friction is, of course, between four tires and the road surface. From one and one-half times to double the braking effect is secured by four-wheel brakes as against brakes on the rear wheels only. arms ari-1 Children a!! Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the StomacK and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of —bso ntely Harmless -No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it. I , Good Will | M the good will of a customer is a valuable I § asset. m l«| GOOD WILL IS ACQUIRED FROM GOOD SERVICE. |Mjl ||| GOOD SERVICE IS OBTAINED THROUGH CO-OPER- !*f ”1 ATION. ||l feli CO-OPERATION IS WORKING IN HARMONY. wj® M ‘ THIS BANK 13 ALWAYS IN TUNE. ’ [fit i i 1 I The FARMERS BANK'S il sis M W. F. BLAND, Pres. A. C. RAY, Vice-Pers. W. W. LANGLEY, Cashier. jft| MISS MARY BLAND, Asst. Cashier. || PITTSBOKO, N. C. l We Handle Nationally Advertised j t t Johns-Mannville Asbestos Roofing 3 ► Richardson Super-Giant Shingles 3 t V : ► Ruberoid Strip Shingles 5 : Corco Galvanized Roofing and 3 ► Shingles 3 l Potts A. L. T. Roofing Tin 3 l Buckingham and Vermont Slate 3 t Ludowici Tile Roofing 3 ► < i t It will pay you to consult with us be- 3 t fore you buy your Roofing 1 \ Bndd-Piper Roofing Co. f ► _____^___« | “IT PAYS TO TRADE IN DURHAM” 3 iAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA # 3 I A Ford Is a Ford » I But the way the purchaser is treated counts for much, x i We want your business in the futiire as well as now. Ac- <►. | cordingly, it is to our interest, also our pleasure, to treat I you right. . !! • I Repairs and Parts ! | We are prepared to repair your Ford. We keep genu- i " i ine Ford parts. Our prices for work compares favorably J l> with prices at any other garage. < ► | Call on us. ! * I The Chatham Mo- i I tor Company I I PITTSBORO, ! i

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