I STATE NEWS IN DIGEST V : The North Carolina Tuberculosis Association will place on sale this year 10,000,000 Tuberculosis Christ mas Seals, vfhich will sell for one cent each, the receipts to be used for the care and prevention of tuber losis. i The Rocfcy Mount Chamber of Commerce has voiced its unanimous approval of Governor Morrison's plan to establish a steamship line for the Eastern towns of the State. Bids have been opened and the con tract will be awarded this week for the finest public school building in Winston-Salem. It will cost about 9250,000 and will include class rooms, lunch rooms, library, adminis tration offices, medical rooms, combi nation auditorium and gymnasium with showers. After barely escaping from poison she swallowed last Saturday, a young woman attached to a carnival at the Wilson Fair was married while lying in bed to B. S. Smith of Hartford, Conn., also a member of the show. The Tidewater Power Company of Wilmington has purchased two light ing plants in Florida, amount paid being four million dollars. Unofficially estimated at more than two million dollars and to have a mileage' aggregating thorp than 200 miles, completion of the new high ten sion transmission lines is rapidly be ing pushed, and the installation of two new hydro-electric plants are un der contemplation by the Southern Power Company. The Baptist people in every section of North Carolina and throughout the . South are girding themselves for the task of reinforcing the 75 Million Campaign launched three years ago by raising ten million dollars "during the month of November, about one tenth of that amount coming from North Carolina. Despite increases in pay for teach ers in .North Carolina, there is still a shortage of well qualified teachers in the State, according to an an nouncement of Jule B. Warren, sec retary of the North Carolina Teach er's Assembly. Plans for increasing North Caro lina's port terminal facilities with an eye to combatting excessive freight rates by the water route will be the main topic of discussion at a meeting of about twelve chamber of commerce secretaries to be held in " Raleigh Tuesday, November 14. George W- Revis, Republican lead er and one of the most prominent residents of Jackson county was shot and instantly killed by Walter Fisher at the poling place Tuesday afternoon, and Fisher was then shot by Joe Sutton. Both men are being, held for criminal court. , A million dollar loan has been made to the Peanut Growers ssociation by the War Finance Corporation. G. F. Duryea of Kinlton remained pinned under an automobile with a dead companion for an hour Wednes day. The ??car ran into a creek, turn ing over and Idling one of the men. Duryea was pinned beneath the car with the dead man while awaiting aid. A total of seventy suits have been filed by the Tobacco Growers Co-op erative ssociation against members who have violated the contract ' Workmen razing a building in the heart of the city of Wilmington un eartHbd a human skelton buried .just a few inches below the surface. It is being held for examination and dis posal. - More than 100,(M)0 ponds of tobac co was sold on the Durham open mar ket Monday, at an dverage price of 536.82. Representatives of piany leading insurance companies are attending a convention at Pinehurst this week. 7VUtpaj. extermination of the Republican Party in the State under an unprecedented Democratic land slide Tuesday became more and more apparent Thursday as the returns from Western and Eastern counties continued to pour in. Only 13 Repub lican representatives have been elected to the next General Assembly. The State Democratic majority is ex pected to reach almost 30,00b, the largest ever on record in North Caro lina. Elizabeth City Wednesday voted favorably for the issuance of $800, 000 bonds, to be used for improve ments to sewers, water, light and power. A check for $1,127,678.06 was re ceived Monday by Tobacco Growers Cooperative ssociation from R- J. Reynolds Tobacco Company on ac count of sales of redried South Caro lina tobacco. This money will be distributed next Monday as second payment to member growers. Both white and colored schools of the town of Hertford have been or dered cloeed for one week on account of an epidemic of diphtheria. 1 1 ?ff?1 1 MARKET YOUR HOGS - FOR BETTER PRICE County Agent Say* Soil On The Hoof In The Largor Eattorn MarkoU A good many farmer* in this county have some extra pork for sale each year. As a rule this surplus is passed on our local butchers at very low prices or the meat is cured and sold as hams, shoulders, and middlings, sometime during the spring and sum mer months. flither of these practices is waste so far as the farmer is concerned. Unless he gets a lot more than the average local price offered, for to begin with the hog only dresses out about average of two-thirds its liva weight and then if the farmer cures it the meat loses a good bit in height. Let's take for example a two hund red pound hog. If he is corn fed and solid he will probably drese about 185 pounds. All right say for sake of illustration, that the local market will take the hog at 12 1-2 cents, then you have $16.20 for your hog and your leaf fat and liver, heart, etc, will just about pay cost of butchering. If you cure this hog and can sell the cured meat direct to a family who wants it you may be able to get two or three dollars more for the hog, but in this case you have got to take the chance of the meat spoiling and then there is also some expense and trouble attached to curing meat. What then is-the solution to this tangle? Ftten your hogs so as to be ready for market by late February or early March, and club together on car lot shipments. Hogs will sell on an average in March on the Baltimore and Philadelphia markets, for as much per pound live weight as you can get for dressed hogs, locally, in December and January. So you see when you dress the hog and sell it locally you lose on an average about one-third the value of the hog.. Then, fcoo, you can easily glut the local market, while you are not at all likely to glut the eastern stock markets. Hogs have averaged above ten cents per pound on hoof for the last ten years in Baltimore and Philadelphia, during the months of March, Get your extfct hogs ready for market by that time and save your self the worry and embarrassment of trying to sell pork on an already glutted local market, and incidentally get about one-third more for your meat. We have made tentative ar rangements alfeady for the shipment of three cars of hogs from the county next March, and if you are interested in this, get in touch with me at once and I will be glad to assist you in working up a car lot shipment from your shipping point. H. L. MILLER. STEAM HEAT FOR , COUNTY PROPERTY CommutioMn Award Contract To Suffolk Concern For. Installation Of Plant Eighteen hundred and fifty-eight dollars will be invested in a modern heating plant for the county court house and jail, by Hertford County Commissioners. The contract has been given to Wilson and Company of Suffolk, Va. The contract calls for immediate installation and the complete plant will be furnished by the contracting company, with the exception of quart I ers for the boiler and furnace. | These will be placed in the old pump house on the courthouse grounds. All of the ofjjaes in the courthouse wil be heatelfby the new heating sys tem, and coal stoves will be discard ed. Hard coal is scarce, and the county has none on hand, and has little prospect of securing enough for the winter's supply. With the new plant installed, bituminous coal will be used, at a saving of several dol lar* on each ton burned. Professor E. P. Dixon, formerly principal, of the Ahoslde school, was elected Alamance County chairman of the State Teachers' Assembly at the first meeting of the. teachers in that county list Friday. practically every industrial plhnt in North Carolina is in operation and many of them are working overtime, according to monthly survey of con ditions issued Monday by ?hS United States Employment Agency in Ral eigh. >'? On Monday night an attempt was made to wreck the home of an A. C. L. employee at Rocky Mount A huge explosive was placed under the house. On the eve of leaving for Cincin nati where the hearing on the peti tion of the railroads for an increase in rates in South Eastern territory was resumed Thursday, Corporation Commissioner A. J. Maxwell received notice of material concessions in the demands of the railroads,'amounting to approximately a reduction , of 12 cents on the 100 pounds from their initial proposals. HAMILTON L. ROE Hamilton L. Roe, -who has been in Ahoskie and vicinity for the past week introducing his Fanning With Elec tricity, will hold his second meeting ih the Woodmen Hall here Friday night. t his first lecture Monday night several farmers and interested business men of the town heard him explain the detail of his plan. The Chamber of Commerce took up with Mr. Roe the feasibility and genuineness of the project at a called meeting last Monday. Tootsy Good Luck, owned by Leon ard Tufts of Pinehurst, leads all cows on test in milk production during September by producing 1500 pounds of milk, according to records of the Animal Industry Division. 1 NOTICE North Carolina?Hertford County: Superior Court, Before The Clerk. TOMMIE MARTIN vs. SARAH SARAH MARTIN. The above defendant will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Hertford County, N. C., to obtain a divorce "A VINCULO MAT RIMONNI" and the said defendant will further take notice that she is required to appear before the Clerk of the Superior Court of Hertford 1 County, at his office in ttie Court house in .Winton, N. C. on the 27th day of November, 1922, and answer or demur, to 'the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief-demanded in said complaint. D. R. McGLOHON, ClerlTof Superior Court C. W. JONES, Atty. for Plaitiff. ll-3-4t I- - , ?? The State Jersey Cattle dab will hold it? annual meeting and banquet in the Chamber of . Commerce rooms at Charlotte at 7:30 p. m., November 8th. J. C. McDowell of the United States department of Agriculture will be the principal speaker.. Arey, of the office of dairy farming, and Others of the Extension Service, will tal^ part in the program. . The Official State Poultry will be held at Greensboro December 13 to 13, according to Dr. B. F. Kaupp, Sec retary. The show will be held jointly between the Central Carolina Poultry Association and the North Carolina Poultry Association and will be the largest poultry show held in the South this y^ar. A special educational pro gram will be put on. E. G. Wardin, formerly assistant poultry agent, has been appointed assistant poultry extension work to as sist A. G. Oliver. Mr. Wardin work ed for the Agricultural Extension dur ing the war period. NOTICE OF SALE ? By virtue of authority contained in a certain deed of trust executed on the sixth day of February, 1920, by C. J. Boone, and wife, to Roswell C. Bridger, trustee, which said deed of trust is duly recorded in book 65, page 246 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Hertford County, default having been made in the payment of the debt therein secured and at the request of the holder thereof the un dersigned trustee will on the 18 th day of November, 1922, at the Court , house door, Winton, N. C., offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash be tween the hours of II a. m. and 1 p. m., the following described real es tate. Beginning in the Cofield and 1 Ahoskie road at the letter "A 2" on plat a corner on D. D. Nickens, thence leave the road with Nickens E. 38 1-4 W. 6 chains, 22 links to a post in the R. R. line at the letter B. a corner on Nickens and in the R. R. line, thence the R- R- line S. 5514 W. 5 chains to a post at the letter "C" a corner in R. R. line and on the said Nickens, thence to R. R. with Nickens, S. 36 E. 6 chains 12 1-4 links to the center of the road at the letter "d" a corner in road on the said Nickens, thence ? along the road N. 57 1-2 E. 4 chains N. 50 1-2 E. 1 chain to the first sta tion containing two and one-half acres, per survey W. F. Eason, C. E. This the 14th day of October, 1922. ROSWELL C. BRIDGER, Trustee. 10-20-4t ' Subscribe y> the HERALD. BARKER'S Cash and Carry Specialty Store Ahoskie, N. C. Books, Bibles, Candies, Nuts, Can Goods, Groceries and Novelties, Bread Trays, Bread Boards and Rolling Pins. COME AND SEE PRICES TO SUIT J ?? i ?*> BUY IT AT HOME Your Ice Cream Satisfies If It Is "The Quality Kind" Every ingredient of the purest kind, and nothing shoddy about it. We maker it right here in Ahoskie, out of the Richest Cream obtainable, and flavored to the "Queen's Taste." A STAPLE DELICACY . Is Ice Cream, and you never lose the taste for it, no matter how low the temperature may be. Ahoskie Ice Cream Co. Manufacturers of "The Quality Kind" 124 Main Street Ahoskie, N. C. v City Deliveries Made on Sunday from 10:00 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. - / . , ....,;-v. - ;=====^===========> Wynn Bros. THE ONE PRICE STORE MURFREESBORO, - NORTH CAROLINA INVITES YOUR INSPECTION OF THEIR WONDER FUL FALL AND WINTER STOCKS. YOU WILL FIND EVERY DEPARTMENT RIGHT UP-TO-THE MINUTE COATS and COAT SUITS in the newest materials and models both fur trimmed and plain Beautiful collection of NEW AUTUMN FROCKS in charming styles at prices that represent their intrinic value Full line of COATINGS and DRESS FABRICS in. velour, duvet-de-laine, Normandy cloth, tricotine, poiret twill and serges Fetching line of WAISTS and SWEATERS MEN'S and BOYS CLOTHING?A moft wonder ful line for your choosing?fabrics of the best; prices at the lowest Autumn modes in FOOTWEAR for every member of the household. A splendid line of "R. J. & R." school shoes Remember that every article shown over our counters, except in the Hardware and Crockery depart ments, is absolutely new. No old left over stock WYNN BROS. THE SHOPPING CENTER f ' v SUBSCRIBE TO THE HERALD ONE YEAR $1.50 BANKS WILL CLOSE ? 7 * USSSStUSi Saturday, November 11, ARMISTICE DAY A Legal Holiday BANK OF AHOSKIE k ? FARMERS-ATLANTIC BANK * ^