I Want Ads.
?
| "Thay Bring RESULTS"
ROTECT YOUR FARM HOMES?
Insure today against Ira, wind, tor
nado aad lightning, in tha Farmers
Mutual Fire Insurance Association
of North Carolina. Katas amusing
ly reasonable. For further informa
tion consult the Local Agent and
Supervisor, L. C. Williams, A boo
kie, N. C. Je S tf.
SHINGLES FROM WOO to $9.00?
Building lime, fresh car load, $2.50
S3S%SWS MaduJTS.
?-? e
FOR SALE?SOME FRESH MILCH
cows and also some young Poland
China sows and pigs. M. F. Par
ker, Powellsville, N. C. Ja 27 1
WANTED I WANTED II WANTED!!!
The HERALD wants your printing
for 1922; and, if you give it to
them, they'll give you entire sat
isfaction and the price will suit
you on every job. Give them a trial.
WANTED?MEN AND WOMEN TO
take orders among friends and nei
ghbors for the gnuine guaranteed
hosiery, full line for men, women
and children. Eliminates darning.
We pay 75c hour spare time, or
$36.00 a week for full time. Exper
ience unnecessary. Write Internat
ional Stocking Mills, Norristown,
Pa. 021 lOtimes
WANTED?SEVERAL GOOD BAS
ket makers for the year 1922. Also
::ne fireman, one veneer lathe man
?*nd several good day men. Write
or apply in person to Woods Bas
ket A Package Mfg. Co., Milwaukee
N. .C. J 6 St
WANTED?SAW MILL, FIVE TO
ten thousand feet capacity and it
must be in good condition and also
cheap for pish. Cofield Mfg. Co.,
? Cofield, N. C. Ja20 4ti;
| -iT' V" ii |
SELECT RECLENED CLEVELAND
Big Boll Cotton seed, bred for yie
ld, eariiness and longer staple. Ed
V gecombe Seed Breeders Association
Inc., Tarboro, N. C. Ja27 4
? ... ?i?-?
USE THE WANT AD COLUMN?
If you hare something to sell er
if you want to buy something, the j
small classified advertisement, at
a very small cost, will do the work
for you. Try the HERALD.
SALESMEN WANTED?TcTsOLIC
it orders for lubricating oik, paints
and greases. Salary or commission
Address the HARVEY OIL CO., at
Cleveland, Ohio ? ' F3 It
North Carolina?Hertford County
In the Superior Court-?Before the
Clerk
J. W. Godwin vs. J. R. Warren. T.
H. Barrett, Mark Barrett, C. T. Whit
ley and J. W. Parker
NOTICE OF SUMMONS AND WAR.
. RANT OF ATTACHMENT
The defendant J. It. Warren in the
above entitled action will take no
tice that on the 12th day of Decern,
bcr, 1921, a summons in said action
was issued against him by D. R. Mc
Clohon, Clerk of the Superior Court,
of Hertford C?**nty> N. Ov, the plain
tiff claiming the sum of $365.00 with
interest on the same from February
9th., 1920, due hhn on.note^ which
summons is returnable before the 01
< rl^ of Superior Court of Hertford
County, at the Courthouse in Win ton
North Carolina, on the 11th day of
February, -1922. The defendant J. R.
Wnrren will also take- notice than a
warrant of attachment was issued by
said Clerk of the Superior Court of
Hertford County, at the time and the
place named for the return at the
uramona, when and where the defe
ndant is required to appear and ans
wer or demur to Dm complaint, or the
relief demanded will be granted.
This 14 th day of January, 1922.
D. R. MofMobou,
Clerk of Superior Court
C. W. Jones, Attorney.
LUMBER
Coal Brick Lime
Cement, Etc.
Why not boy your motor*
iala direct, in cor lots, and
on the discount*
''*r j ?) J
Tho Horoid la "flttoo" to
rood. Sknd no jroar aubucrip
tlon to-day.
Mdcuroo Chttla ond Colds. Ad.
%
S** M. 0. Gerock
AHOSKIE, N. C
for best prices on
1 HORSES & MULES
Seed Oats, Hay and
all kind of Feedstuff.
S.I. ?( Land for DMiioa?N.tfc.
[ On Monday, February 8th, 1922,
in front of the courthouse door at
Winto'n, North Carolina, between the
hours of 12 M. and 2 P. M., the un
deresigned heirs at law of the late
Bettie Watson, deceased ..will sell at
public auction to the highest bidder
for. cash, the following described real
estate: Situated in Hertford County,
St. Johns Township on the road lead
ing from the Horton place to Boxo
bel; and bounded as follows: on the
north by the road leading from the
Horton place to Roxabel; on the Ea
st by the said public road and the
lands of Cephus Jenkins; and of Mrs.
Janie Griffith; on the South by the
lands of Monroe Rawles; and on the
West by the lands of John Odom and
others, and containing one hundred
and eight (108) more or less, being
the tract of land which the late Mrs.
Bettie Watson died seised and poss
essed in fee simple.
There is a good growth of tiAiber
on this land and the same is
situated within a mile of a church
and good school. Any one interested
is inVited to go and look the property
over as it will be sold on the first
Monday in February, 1922, and this
land is situated in one of the best
farming sections in the state.
This 5th day of January. 1922.
Mrs. Annie L. Tayloe,
Langley Odom,
Mary Odom,
I Clinton Odom,
Ollie Odom,
Clarence Odom,
Linwood Odom,
Alma Odom,
Heirs at Law.
Burgwyn A Pittman, Attorneys.
Jackson, North Carolina. J6.
? 1
(I? i
Notice of Solo under Died of Trust
By virtue of the power and author
ity given by a certain deed of trust
executed by G. L. Vann and wife,
Annie W. Vann, on the 2nd day of,
September, 1919, to W. P. Shaw, Jr.,
Trustee, which is of record in the of
fice of the Register of Deeds for the
county of Hertford in book 96 on the
page 32, default having been made in
the payment of the debt therein se
cured, the following property will
be sold at public auction, viz: That
tract of land lying in Winton Town
ship, Hertford County, North Caro
lina, and dcnown as the G. L. Vann
Home Place where he now lives and
bounded as follows: on the South by
the Winton and Murfreesboro road,
on the east and north by Elm Swamp
and on the north and west by the
Eli Scott land now owned by R. C.
Bridger, said tract of land was former
ly known as the Joseph Beale land
and contains ninety (90) acres more
or leas.
Place of sale?in front of the cou
rthouse door in Winton, N. C.
Time of sale?February 6, 1922.
Terms of sale?Cash.
This the 3rd day of January, 1922.
W. P. Shaw, Jr.' Trustee. Ja6
-0
Notice Sale of Land under Mortgage
By virtue of the powers contain
ed in a certain mortgage deed exe
cuted by Mrs. Nellie Stephenson and
husband, to the undersigned, which
mortgage deed jC of record in the of
1 Aee of the Register of Deeds of Hert
ford County, book 65 en page 116,
the following described real estate
will be sold at public auction, viz:
That tract of land situated i
Ahoskie Township, Hertford Count
North Carolina, bounded as foDows:
' on the east by the lands of E. J. Ger
eck, on the south by the lands of A.
E. Garrett, on the west by the lands
of L. M. Mitchell, on the north by
the county road leading from Ahos
kie to Frasiera Cross roads, being
tracts nos. .four and five of the L. T.
Sumner farm which waa sold at pub
lic auction, said tract no. 4 contain
ing 10.8 acres and tract no. 5 con
taining 9.9 acres.
Place of sale?at the courthouse
door in Winton, N. C.
Time of sals?Monday, February
6, 1922, between the hour* of 12 M.,
and 2 P. M.
Terms of sale?Cash.
This 3rd day of January, 1922.
Mrs. Btjoce B. Brown, Mortgagee.
??~ 1 _ , ? ' H' ?
FEDERAL HIGHWAY ACT PROVIDES
WORK FOR QUARTER MILLION MEN
About 0no-Half Of All Roada That Aro Being Built Are Being Aided by the
Government Financially.
[ iPnpind by thv UnlUd Statw Dtpirtmtni
?( iyrleiltm.) ?
Seventy-five million dollars becomes
available as federal aid for road con
struction In the various states, the
money to be spent under the super
vision of the bureau of public rouds,
Department of Agriculture, Vtnder the
federal highway act, signed November
9, by the President. In addition, $15,
000,000 is appropriated for national
forest roads. The $75,000,000 repre
sents the federal government's appro
priation to the work of building high
ways In the various states and must
be matched, dollar for dollar, by funds
-from the state treasuries, except In
states where more than 9 per cent of
the area Is unappropriated public land.
Part of Money Now Available.
The $76,000,000 appropriated is for
the fiscal year ending June 80, 1922.
Here is how the money will be ap
portioned among the 48 states:
Ala ji.C4.t20.rt Neb. ....*1.581,189.50
Arts. 1.063.281 44 Nev 963,438.78
Ark 1.254.142.20 N. H *66,?S6.wJ
Calif 2,462.098.11 N. J MtDO.K
Colo 1.241.175.69 N. M ... 1489,823.34
Conn. 480,897.78 N. T. ...v 3,686.447.97
Del. ........ 265,825.80 N. C. ... 1.708,333 90
Florida ... 886,816.89 N. D. ... U84.714.42
Georgia ... 1.997.957.68 Ohio 2.823.004 V,
Idaho 933.538.es Olcla. .... 1,782.139.P
Illinois .... 3,246,281.07 Oregon .. 1.1S2.6C3.90
Indiana ... 1,968.865.41 Penna. .. 3,398,963.97
Iowa 2,102.872.74 R. L .... 366.625.00
Kansas .... 2.102.281.51 &. C 1,861427.34
Ky 1.417.17J.63 8. D 1,204,060 31
Louisiana . 996.880.84 Tenn. ... 1,647.692.21
Maine 696.160.25 Texas ... 8,426.172.41
Md 640.629.01 Utah .... 949,41741
Maas 1,606,17]6.O4 Vermont 386.625.00
Micb. 2.249,632.43 Virginia . 1,468.828.47
Minn 2,123.587.87 Wash. .. 1.103,798.77
Miss 1.294.908.22 W. Va. .. 902,359.77
Missouri .. 2,448,123.83 Wla U04.815.96
Montana .. 1.546.896.82 Wye. .... 934.87.63
Of the appropriation of $15,000,0(10
for the Improvement of national forest
roads $5,000,000 Is made available for
the fiscal year ending June 30. 1922.
and $10,000,000 for the following lineal
year.
The federal highway act In a general
wny resembles the federal-nld set of
1010. but contains several new f cut urea.
Administration of the act by the secre
tary of agriculture, ami under lilm the
bureau of puMic roads, remains mp
chiuiged.
Apportionment of the fund to the
states Is almost the same as In the pre
vious act, the fund being divided into
three parts', one part apportioned ac
cording to population, one according to
area, ami one port according to mileage
of rural and star mall routes. A
aew feature Is thle stipulation that no
state shall receive less than one-half
of 1 per cent of the total fnnd which.
in this ruse, amounts i(> tins
stipulation will Increase the amount
received hy four of the smaller states,
t e., Delaware, New "Hampshire, Rhode
Islam! and Vermont.
Change In Uae of State Allotments.
There Is considerable change. hows
ever. In the manner In which a state
may use Its allotment. Kach state
must select u connected road system'
not exceeding 7 per cent of Its road
mileage for luifirov Mnent with federal
aid. Thla system will be divided Into
two claai&s, one of which will be kuown
as Interstate highways and the other
aa Intercounty highways. The inter
state highways myst not exceed three
sevenths af the system selected; on
them not more than 60 per cent of the
state's allotment can be spent with
out the joint approval of the seeretaty
of agriculture and the state highway
department. The Intercounty high
ways, which consist of the remainder
of the syateni selected, will receive
the remainder of the state's allotment
-Except In states where more then S,
per cent of the area Is unappropriated
public land, the amount of federal aid
received on hny project must not ex
ceed SO per cent of the estimated coat
In state* where more than 5 per cent
of the area Is unappropriated pnbUc
land the SO per cent allotment la In
creased by an amount eqnal to one
half the percentage of unappropriated
public land In the state. Before any
funds can be paid to a state, the state
must appropriate money, under the
direct control of the state highway de
partment, to match the federal allot
ment, and for the maintenance of
federal-aid highways.
All pathways In the Interstate syitem
must have s anrfaced width of at least
16 feet, unless a narrower widtl("1a
deemed permlselhle by the secretary of
agriculture. In rase a federal-aid
highway '!* not properly maintained by
a state, the state will he given 90 daya'
notice hy the .department: at the end
"fi'W" tin* If t^e highway Is '?>l In
;S ????.? nrr*1!'i? n .?r ?"jtliiio?-suc? ?? Wi- j
fctnry if agriculture will uuilntu'n It
ant of the slate'a allotment and refuas
.* ' ' l" hJ
to approve any new projects until
reimbursement la made by the state.
What the new appropriation will
mean to the country can be judged by
the use to which the $275,000,000 pre
viously appropriated tms been put, af
ford Ins to officials of the United State*
Department of Agriculture. Practically
$200,000,000 of that money has heen pot
to work lb projects which are either
entirely completed or now under con
struction. The exact amount was $109.
823,41'T on October ,31. To match this
amount the states'have appropriated
$265,520,090. making a tota'l of $465.
352.51T.
Mileage 8ufflelent to Encircle Earth.
The roads to be paid for by thl
money. If platted end to end, would en
circle the earth and extend from New
York to San Kranclsco on the second
lap. the total mileage of the roads
under construction and completed be
ing reported by the bureau of public
roads as 27.000 miles on October 81.
Of this mileage, ft555 miles is In proj
ects which are entirely completed and
the contractors discharged. The bal
ance of 17,445 miles Is In projects
which are still under construction, but
which were 69 per cent complete on
October 81. In these projects there Is
therefore the equivalent of 12,000
miles of completed road, so that the
completed road to date totals over 21,
000 miles.
Tk? average cost per mile of the
roads built with federal aid has been
between $17,000 anil $18,000. More
thdn half the money has been spent ?
for roads with the highest types of
surface, such as concrete, brick, ami
bituminous concrete, hot ? very large
mileage of roods of the cheaper type,
such as grovel and sonrt-rtny, lias been
built where such type* would withstand
the wear of the traffie.
Prior te live years ago the federal
government took m> active part In the
road construction of the country. To
day a bom one-half of all the roods that
are being built are being aided! Wy
the government llnandally. and rbe
construction Is subject to the Inspec
tion h?mI approval of federal engineer*.
Work for Quarter Million Max
It Is estimated by engineers of the
United States Department of Agricul
ture that the federal-aid roads natter
construction on October 31 were giv
ing employment to about, 250.096 rue-i.
either directly on the actual reed run
struction or Indirectly In the produc
tion and transportation of the ma
terials which enter into the veastrpc
tlaa
\ i ? i
IF YOU CARE FOR CALVES
Don't slaughter er sell . a
heifer calf from a profitable cow.'
Raise It.
Don't keep your cows in a
ilark. (lamp, dirty pen. ?
Don't overfeed them.
Don't feed milk at 100 degrees
temperature one time and 80 de
grees the next time.
Don't feed sweet milk one
time and sour milk the next
time.
Don't feed from dirty buckets
and never front a trough.
Doing any of the last Ave
things Is apt to cause "scoars"
and "stunted calves."
Don't feed the grain In the
titUk; teed It dry. Chewing it
aids digestion. Mixing it In milk
means more scours.
Don't feed the foam that
forms on milk as it comes from
the separator, nor that on whole
freslt milk. Foam is bubbles?.
bubbles are full of gas and gas
causes colic and sometimes
scours.
Don't expose young stock to
cold, bleak weather, nor allow
them to drink very cold water In
winter.
-
? , X.
DAILY REQUIREMENTS OF COW
Food Uood for Milk Production' Must
Bo in Addition to That Neces
sary for Body.
A row weighing 1,000 ponnda needs
every day. for the maintenance of her
hody. an amount of food equivalent to
that supplied in eight pounds of elo^
ver hay and twenty pounds of good
corn ullage. She ran at have this food
reggi'dieas of whether she producer- ,
Hit; ..it.*. I-'immI used for milk prodtte '
'Ion titaai he In addition to that. re
quired* to aialntaln the cow's hodf.
Life Is Hot Dull
It's the Liver
, Blue?life doesn't teem worth the living?
ydur best friends annoy you?everything goes
wrong? Chances are, your fiver it out of order.
Unless you fix it up, things are likely to be
worle to-morrow. You can't fine anything that
will relieve you more quickly and effectively than
Dr. Miles' Liver Pills'
Just take a couple when you go to bed to* %
night You'll feel a lot belter In the morrlntf.'
For chronic constipation, and as an occasionjPfjUttwc, those I
fttls work like magic.
Oct a Bob of Your Druggist
1.
Conquers Peon
Unlike other liniment* Montana to
made tf hv*U?g oils?no alcohol,
actus or peeper used. Milting
aewr bt*rr:i rf smart* *ot em
when applied to open wounds. Pain
is relieved quickly by Mustang,
which thoroughly permeates the
syslcnr and hastens heating. Over
73 yean,' success guarantees Mas
tana as hes# for MAN, LIVESTOCK
and POULTRY.
SoUIr
DRUG and GENERAL STORES
..sJ*.-,. ; <: ..
Actual Six* 88c Bottle (Trial)
SOc Bottle bokU3 times p.j much
Sl.OO Battle holds # times as mucft
?KM
" Jt ?' ...ii '
MUSTANG.
"Sto 6W Oht S.and/xrSinco /S4S~ '
LINIMENT
LYOft MAMUFACTURING CO.? INoprioto- 4L40AS Somik RftfcSulm u^jjlt
%
Bank of Ahoskie
"THE OLD RELIABLE"
Established 1905
Invites and Solicits the Confidence
of Your Banking Relation.
A BANK STRONG IN flgST;
One of tfee oldest banking institutions in
this section?Yet, one of the most modern
in method.
. t., v
Strong-Established- Conservative
We Want Your Business?
You Need Our Protection.
4 Per Cent Paid on Saving's Cqund
Compounded Quarterly. ~ Secure
Ahoskie, N. C.
?g
than you can bu? wbSSSSmq f J
? 3Mb- sack of your regular flow and mix **"*2Sfi3s* 5
with It a package of Hon ford"*. TMa makea fn (MM ( ftfc JO J
a more wholesome, efficient. self-raising floor " ;
than can be bought ready-prepared. Pure """H ! JiwJ
phosphate* In Boraford's make breads and noux. i S-J'qJ
pastry more nutritions, strength-building !< J,
tasty t il satisfying naswsnaa, Sp ft
For free Prise Usl, wriU Romford T""?"~* P SS
Chemical Works, Proeidenea, R. I JEeySiSS' I < dS
SELF-RAISIN6BHEAD PREPARATION
?? ' ? -
\ ^ ?
JOB HUNTING DONE BY THE HERALD IS ALWAYS DONE
. RIGHT AND ALWAYS DELIVERED OA TIME
. ''iW v.-i J ? ; '.s ' I * " ? w ' ' "V: ????' '