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i 1 - The Drily News and Observer. .0 U ' Y SUNDAYV MORNING, MAY S, ' 100T. 1 "ssssssaasaiaaaawawsassasF WOMEN JmOUT TOWN Storids of Washington Life. new WASHINGTON HERALD. house It seemed that, his done. And brave and fine it stood.' And hadn't cost a single cent '' More than" he thought It would. It seemed he'd gone to hear an el- his horse., but he'd b?en obliged to was. a team of horses, "meaning to leave a , chicken at each house which he found give a horse to each man who had ' the -courage really to assert himself. I At the end of the week he still had Ocutionlst of note. And heard not "Aux Itallens.". "or aught that Riley wrote. t.----;. -:'f ;" ; It seemed that stocks had. gone the . -way ? . . .-. -. t . lie thought they .wouldn't go, ' And that his wife: hand never once ' Said. ;W'elV I. told;yoTi si"- So many lovely things Ilk j these. With1 pleasure filled his :up. And then it was the rls ng bell That rang and waked hlrr up. . -,. I have to thank an anoi ymous cor respondent for a bit of very valuable send back home for a lot more chick ens. On the eighth day he drove to the floor ' of a house where a very mild looking little woman was stand ing. ! 'Where' the boss?" he asked. "Down at the burn," was the condition-revealing reply. Delighted at the unmistakable proof of the husband's mastery the wise man caused him to be called to the gate, and after a few questions, satisfactorily answered, and a little explanation, told him to choose his horse. The man. examin ing the f horses with an experienced eye, said : t I Til take the gray." advice for bachelors. II el says he 1st iiiTVI rLJr. ."TR" .1-"" ter, and turning, he went into the a bachelor himself, but as he doesn't tell how he happened to b one, I am forced to conclude that hs'waa born that way. - No stuffed ha; fire, less ' stoves, for his, he says, ax id no. mush for breakfast. i : "I like a really nutritl us break- fast." he tells me, "and I get It my self in my room. When -1. get up in the morning,! light ' scaall alcohol lamp, which I keep in a j collar box. and set a tin pail fail of .water on 1L (I know now what those found -boxes are for,-by the way. Heretofore I la ve' supposed they wre merely among the "gifts suitable-for a man," like fancy "shaving , paper ' pads and embroidered - suspendersJ) When , this comes to a boll," he continues. "I pour a part of It Into my shaving mug. and a part , into ny teapot. Then I place two eggs la t ie pall, and put a teaspoonful of tea It to the! pot. By. the time I have finished shaving, the eggs are "boiled and the tea is Fteeped. '-, I have no overnight prepar ations to make,' and' withj a box of . zvreiback -1 have a delightful break fast ready without the. expenditure of any extra time. I I have no doubt that lt the love- 11 est sort of a breakfast, 'but- person ally, I haven't any sympathy at all for a man who is a ba helor and breakfasts on tea and ' ah) .vtng-water eggi . I - hope, his landlady will pry Into his. collar box the ver ' next time she goes upstairs. Elizabeth Banks, the aut or of "Ex periences of a Newspaper ' Girl." once told me of a thoughtful d vice which la better than even the bachelor's shaving-water tea idea. Th ere was an ' elderly gentleman in En rtand . dur ing Miss Banks residence there .who required a cup of hot be f .tea at a certain time every night. I e required, also, something to keep his feet warm, so his considerate wife ha i the hot water bottle filled with bee r tea every night, and when her husbend wanted his warming and sustaining drink, she had merely, to fish Out th hot-water, bottle and pour therefroi n the re quired cupfuL- The . elder y gentle man's name, so Elizfebeth 3anks told ne, -was Gladstone.' - w ' . ' , , Out In the edge of Georg town llf es i man whose wife ,1s we iU I dont oubt she's considerate, b jt it isn't I ways possible to teO just i horn she's onsldering. For fnlfy fiva years a rec growing In frotnt of her house ,as obstructed her vWon. but as wo nen will I've heart! them say so : hemselves she said"- nothing about t . till she really couldn't stand it ny longer. ' Then she " began to u rge he cutting down of that tree. Her usband objected. Hd had! a sort of "Woodman, spare- the tree' feeling ibout.lt. , It hadn't sheltered him in his youth, but it had sheltered the nursery man, and men feel in honor bound to nang togetner. ue protect ed it. ; With my own ear I leard him i ay six weeks ago. when hi wife in sisted on having the tree, ci it down nd he said It with a sor of ' bull i!n determination that ra e me ad mire the strength tjf his character. house. Five minutes later he emerg ed with a somewhat altered mien. "I guess I'll take the bay." he said. The wise man refastened the buckle he had loosened. "No you won't, take a chicken." he said, "you'll FpeakiHg of chickens. I nver hear any one say of a hen. "She's stolen her nest," without bting entirely I1II ed with righteous indignation. 1 have always admired the hen. She is a standing or. perhaps. It were better to . say, Bittlug reproach to the folk man, give him a handsome wife; ; when you want revenge on a woman Kive ner a nanasome nusoana. The Hindoos are not much more re spectful than the Arabs. They say: The coquette Is like your shadow; chase her and she flies from you. flee I from her and she chases you. Do you want to test the fineness of gold? Use acid. The strength of an ox? Beat It. The nature of a man? Lt him talk. The thoughts of a wo man? There's no way. Nejtt comes the cynical Chinaman with a cunning maxim The tongue of a woman is a dagger, and she never lets it grov rusty. The spirit of a woman Is quicksilver and her heart Is of wax. The Persian says: When you go to war. say a prayer; when you go to sea. say two prayers: when you get maoietf. pray all the time. To a question:" What is a woman?" the Turk answers. "A prisoner;" the Albanian, "a slave;" the Servian, "a servant;" the Bulgarian, "a compan ion;" the Greek, "a queen." The gallant French are among tho most brutal in their folk sayings about women. "Where there are dogs," they my. "there are flees: where there is bread, there are mice: where there's a woman there's the devil " Another current raying is. "Women and fools never forgive." Alto: A woman laughs when she can and vee"ps when she wills. What the devil can't do. woman ac complishes. The man who beats his wife is like a man who beats a bag of flour. All that's good flies away; what's left is not worth having. Man has two eood days In b' dog to the last breath; of u woman to the next temptation. He who believes his wife deceives himself. He who doubts her is de ceived all the same. Man who has two good days in nis to whom anti-race suicide remarks j ,ife. tne one on which he takes and are addressed. She s unswervingly end irreproachably domestic. with a perfect understanding of her proper sphere. She accomplishes her daily task before she takes time to sing. I Jn hloh the proverbs were the one on which he loses a woman Good women are all In tne cnurcn- The compiler was unaoie io nuu nj She Is a devoted mother. stepmother. You can scarcely imag ine a better rounded feminine char acter than that of the, hen. Yet. if she chooses to select for herself a nursery for her family: if maternal in stinct urges her to bring that family Into the world a little sooner than the grasping spirit of the soulless poultry rather approves, it i is saiu or ner. "She .stole her , nest. give the company asses of 4U0,uuu, friendly to women. STATE PROIIIBITION. As Viewed by Rev. S. F. Conrad, of V. UOl lUUCi you. as If she had no earthly right to it. The maternal Instinct is some thing . too sacred to be trifled with. To the Editor: Of all the evils of a .... i A K 1 1 -mt v tram., nr Stole it. tnlndi lft . . of tne neatest. It is estimated that a billion ana a half dollars Is expended annually in this country of ours for strong orinx. K "OT.SSSJSiS? rawJ" df hnd. that one hundred thousandper to be discouraged. Why brand the hen with the stigma of felony? Why not say of her that rhe has chosen sons are brought to untimely graves and launched Into eternity as a re sult. If to this could be added the woman abuu i ji -vv i i -u. penge of COUrts. Jails, penitentiaries, her nest, or merely that she hai re- , oor hou8;, orphanages, and movea irom ner iormer piace ot twi- ,h; MnAaM incident from disease. ner iamuy i , Kiiin,' h ft- siv r dence in order tobring up In peace and quiet? ; We allow that for physicians' hire, sick nursing and medicines, etc.. it wouia mane a sum b'ood bolls at the slur cast on the hen Nobody ever deserved greater consid eration from us tnan sne aoes. pa tient, industrious soul, narrow-minded but that's no fault In one of her sex. and what mind she has she con centrates on nerxduty In life. Martyr, contemplate. The drink question Is therefore not a local one but one which both affects the State and na tion. When State after State begins to throw off the liquor traffic and the people of a whole State put it Into their Constitutional law and enact . : . - v - " i ineir uonsiituuonai raw nnu caaci trt?t ?d , 0688 niOW8 i penalties adequate to suppress the side, robbed of her ultimate right I hope nobody - will ever again "stole" to me In connection with a hen. I can't bear to hear it. There's a babv In th fatally of ihe young doctor in our street., and my traffic It will not be lonar until the general government will take It in hand and ' declare It contraband and abolish It from our country altogether. Some Reasons Why the Liquor Traffic Should be Made a State Issue. "t Paao a fKa AsaB Mana Aft 4 Visa small ifrteno .Margery nas a new sister trafflc a re not local In their nature, of about Athe aame age. The baby ,f lt were connned to a few towns or carriares of the two families were trundling along the sunny side of the street one day last week, and Margery walked beside her little sister. "You haven't seen our baby yet. nave VOU7" sne saia to me. . inralltv nnihle. Th IIo are flood There was hot the pride In her 1 . . ,y,m nt.t .iinrin. onH invitim one town. It extends Its business ahd the evils of the traffic to every com munity around it. There Is not a 11 uuor town In the State that does not seek ' to push Its business Into every "Cut that tree down T'TIlfdle first.' Iat week, passing that fvay early one morning. I beheld that quudogged man superintending a menial who-was chopping away at the tree. always tactful so early tn thd I reosUed to him; the vl which still rang In my planred toward the house, as one who spoke In One Isnt morning; lie words tears. He i j ffjrm an eavesdropper, and ".a low. almost cooing voice r "I know I said that." he "but. thinking It over. I cone It would b mor romfortaq off my dying till afterward. it And -theretrpbn he told mfe a story that used to be a great favorite with n dear old Canadian physician, whom I knew In my youth. There n man. Dr. Powell used to relate, who made up. his mind that he'd find out for himself In Just what! proportion f families the wife was thet directing spirit, end in what the husband was really 'lord and master.- Acfcordlngly, 9 txt out with a dozen chlakens and confessed. tided that le to ; put ed with the most alluring and inviting lffers soliciting orders. And conse quently one liquor town becomes a menace to the whole State. ' t. Another ' reason why the trafflc mould be dealt with by the State as a whole is because the sale of liquor is a great 'moral question and one that the State caa handle better than a tingle community. There is always In very community a class of the liquor traffic effects which are silent and voiceless as to removing it from' their -nldst. viz.: the women and children. UiM-oniplimeulary Things Said of Her I Often designing liquor men will spend In Slanv Lanrnaees. l?rSft sums of money to corrupt voters . j 'lo carry a local ejection and the or- The .treatment that womankind re- Janised liquor dealera association will ceives in the proverbs or various peo- omblne lt efforts with millions of plea forms the subject or an article money to back those who desire to by 1 P. Flobert In the Pari Oaiilnl. fasten the saloon upon the town or voice that I expected to hear, but she gave me a peek at the baby s face. "It's a dear little thing Isn't It?" I a!d. Margery sighed. "Oh, yes," she said, with an air of resignation. , "It's- nice, but It hasn't hair like Dr. Blank's baby. Of course he had to go and keep the best one WOMKX IN PROVKRBS. On the whole, the array Is far from complimentary. Among the Spanish maxims one ol the gentlest Is "Women and mules obey better when caressed than coer ced. ' . Another is. "The man win muctwwho Apses his wife.. Here are a few. more: Man Is tow: women is Are, and the devil blows the bellows. The tears of women are worth much, though they ; cost little. ' The fox Is cunning; but the woman who loves knows, far more than he. The -proverbs of the Arabs place a very low value on women. Here are some samples: i The beauty of man is In bin nnlrit the spirt of woman Is In her beauty Always consult your wife, but do ar you please. I When you want to get square with a sons Prove FsdSts A comparison of.Nunnally'a with other high grade candy, will prove that their claim of super iority is not aline a claim; ' bat an i indisputable 23, as well as the coatinM of , the variety of assortment in e care with which each box is DODuIar verdict will be that T lft t ' r .m . . nunnauy-g fanay is me purest ana; Desc on tne :fact. Compare the each separate each box. and packed, and t lece. fTn SALK BY IIEXnY T SnCKS CO,J AND - TUCHdl UUILDINQ 1I1AIUIA0Y, ; .! community. No community can now Ight the liquor trafflc single handed ind alone without fighting a power ful organisation behind It. 3. Then again the State possesses the law-making power and has the ?ower of the whole State with Its ourts. solicitors and judges to make Its laws effective. To say that it can not suppress the liquor traffic so is to minimize its evils or that It can tot enforce Its laws are moral ques tions. Is to say that state government s a failure. 4. Then again the State apart from 'he national government, in the only -ightful law-making- power and being composed of many counties, represents 'he sentiment of a large area of coun ry. It therefore Is the only body 'hat can submit a great constitutional' luestion to aH the people under its lurlsdlctlon. Any section or any mu nicipal organisation which would Ignore or set aside the supreme will of all the people Is nothing. short of anarchy, lawlessness and a violation of the great principles of Americanism of majority rule. 4. Then again the right ofa sover eign State to pass upon a great moral luestion which affects the whole State. !s by common consent conceded. The State therefore regulates the question yt marriage and divorce: the question f . pollgamy or a plurality -of wives, 'he question of (rambling and lotteries, 'he question of marriage between the -aces, of prize fights, hull fights, ob cene exhibition, houses of prostitu tion, etc. No municipality or county has a lght to settlei for Itself any of these Treat questions because they affect or -elate to the whole State. The object or punpose of prohibi 'lon Is to protect Its cltlxenshln as ar as It can be done against any 3C Qnn p "nnr" i I'l l ' pmrioiiHr Ann ram o. a w cerroM mha atlawta.oX" PE2MESS PflTEOT H -sW Honor, alt. or- jf Local isioi'i Oiscuii "i . fo)Io)0 ini I Ini JUL DUIillALVN. C. i t. . April Sttli, 1907. ' . TBatJkaa "V JT : c think It uas TALLEYRAND who obsrrrctl, tliat no man is a hero to his valet, and there l a hu if tnitii in Hm observation. Just along tills line, we realize that DURHAM is too dso to It ALE1GII, for us to do what c ' lulglit, if hc were fartlier away. It's distance tliat oftentime lends values. The further we are from head quarters the more It means sometimes. Be that as It may. Ve are really jtrond that - Dnrluuu lias such u neigtibor as RALIG1I. : : . . :- :- (v'vv;'; v:'- -j ; .; 1 ' ' " We are more happy to liave such an Intelligent audience as Ue RALEIGH PUBLIC, to discourse to, upon tlie virtues or PEE lt LESS and CLIMAX FLOUR; the opportunity la so pleasing that uc inwt clieerfully forego tlie privilege or cuttlng the lce.M We might, ir we lived more remote. But some' tldngs are - prlce!-w . and our NElCillBOItSIlIP with RALEIGH Is one or oar priceless assets. No. we could not get alonjr without ItALKIGH, liave not done so In the past, and now that we lave PEERLESS and CLD1AX FLOUR to sell, don't want even to think of It, for the future. And we do hope that the thought of out nearness, will not. count against us, for while we may not be as large, maybe, as some of the big flouring Mills-Wa-Wa-Yan-da -ct, wliat we lack In magnitude and distance, wepromlse to make m In cieverocs i-eud "In tliese preM-eiM-e," we promise you that no mill North or South, Eat or West, shall ever put FLOUR upon the RALEIGH MARKET superior in quality or lower in price, than we offer our PEERLESS AND CLIMAX, the grades be in" equal. ' , " We repeat that we have previously said that we back 'every sack of "our ".PEERLESS ' and CLIMAX Brands of Flour with the ABSOLUTE GUARANTEE, tliat they are as good as the BEST. ( WE EXCEIT NONE. .. . .-, Right here pardon a scrap of history, that relates to ; both - RALEIGH and DURHAM.' ;' . Born In tlie city of Raleigh In 1808, was a youth, who in a little more than half a century afterwards was to slip down from his cross legged seat (all tailors sit on their cross legs) upon his table in his little Tailor Shop buckle on ' his shoes while .his goose cooled, neglected upon tho hearth, to fill the Presidential chair of tills tlie Greatest Republic on earth. He visited our University, strange as it nuty sound, as lreicleiiu Stopping at Durham to find transportation over to tlie "Hill. and having breakfasted sumptuously at t!e -CARKOLINA. with his distinguished party, consisting op Mr. SewaruV his secretary of State,, Mr. Randall, or Wisconsin, his Postmaster General. General Miles, Gen. Sickles and others, the President sauntered out up on tlie lawn, where the curious multitude was In waiting:, lie espied a f ewr' "wards of tlie nation with bocks Ritcl 'Slates. Ah! my lads, you go to school?.. Rolling up their eyes, showing only the whites, tlie- COON ariswcVc L "Yes, sir, - Yes sir., BosV we.'go to bchooL'Tlicn spell PONY! ( 'the-COON spelled ''. PONY-all tl -I.t. Now Kpell Baker! Tlie Coon spelietl Baker all l.ht.Sood! Good! said the President. Now tell me w hat la twio . 5? Ten, replied tlie Coon. Good! Good: I - Now wiiat is 5 times 5? 25, replied. the Coon. Sure, . and -ou liall liave twenty-five cents! Tlie Coon waited, -.the President fumbled In all hiv pockets, but failed to produce hi- twenty-five, cents. Turning: to his Prime Minister, who liad been an Interested spectator, lie said, sewartl," lend me twenty-five cents. Why eerta Inly." 3Ir. Sewartl fumbled and fumbled In all his pockets, bnt failed' to find twenty-five cents. Turning to Postmaster General Randall. Mr. Seward said. "Mr. Postmaster, loan the President twenty-five cents. "Why. sure, and lie proceeded to fumble and fumble In all his pockets, but railed to find the twenty-five cents. Turning to Gen. Sickles, the Postmaster General said. "General, loan the Ir's5 dent twenty-Are cents. "Why yes. said General Sickles and he proceeded to fumble and fumble In all hia pock ets, but rinding nothing. Gen. Sickles turned to Gen. Miles and said, Mlles," loan the President twenty. !".ve cents to give tlie coon. "Yes, certainly, why not," and General- Miles rumbled nntllx the situation bentnie embarrang. when Buck Black well stepped up with a liandful of the "coin or tlie realm, and remarked, "Here boys, help yourselves, I see that, you are all busted. : " s - ' ' - ' - r- ' Everybody remembers the vltlt or ANDY JOHNSON, the 17tli President or tlte United States to our "PEER KESS UNIVERSITY. Returning from our "PEKRLES UNIVERSITY.' tlie President came to Rale! - h. And as a tailor he was remembered in Raleigh not as ' President ; Tliere was yet living at IliUi.borf, North Carolina, a tailor, who had sat upon the same bench In tlie ' little lltle tailor -hhop with "ANDY, s . lie always love to call . him. Wheti tlie Preskleiit came lie' was ; , at the Yar tioroiiglt House to greet him, waiting In tlie. lobby. As the President registered and turned from the desk, there at his elbow stood his old friend and fellov workman. Levin Carmirhaei. Tlie -recognition was Instantaneous. , "Why 3IAC 'said the Iresident! "Why ANDY," said CarnUchaeL They cla-pcd hands, threw- arms around each other's ncckN and wept like children. v -; .!, ' - , ; ; CARRbUXA ROLLER MILIiS, x LEST YOU ITRGET WE TURN FROM PRESIDENT TO THE NEXT GREAT QUESTION THE I"TT.D ING OF THE FOLKS WHO MAKE PRESIDENTS. W"E REPEAT ALL SINCERELY THAT OUR HIIANDS F FliOUR. PEERLESS and CLIMAX are as' good as the best WE EXCEPT NONE, 'AND WK GUARAN TEE PEERLESS 'AND CLIMAX TO ? BE ;AS GOOD AS THE BEST, OR YOU GET, YOUR MONEY BACI. THE "CARR BOYS ARE BEHIND IT, WITH OUR GUARANTEE THAT PEERLESS AND CLI? IAX FLOURS ARE AS GOOD AS THE BEST IN QUALITY, AND AS LOY IN PRICE. AND lT IS ONLY ON THIS BASIS THAT WE ASK YOUR PATRONAGE. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED or MONEY BACK. REMEUER IT IS PEERLESS OR CLIMAX, BOTH ARE GUARANTEED. , . - iv - 4. S. CARR. Jr.. President. A. M. CARR, Director, C. M. CVRR, Director. V. F,' CARR, Director. 4. S. CARR, Director, ;, MRS. C. R. LEE will be glad to demoiiGtrrj merits of these brands of flour T7itli any ic Raleieh. , ' corruption of the , morals of Its citi zenship. There is no safe nor sane method of dealing, with the liquor trafflc but to restrict it to proper and legitimate uses. To grant to one poljce regulated town what it refuses to another Is to grant rights and privi leges' to some which it refuses to oth ers and necessarily sooner or later will create opposition to such a law. For a father to give privileges to one child which it withholds from an other will create a rebellious attitude to the father's rule. Some Objections Considered. 1. It Is argued other States will ship business which mlna nnri raM-iint th It into our- borders. Why not there 'f norals of Its oeonle. J give to a community the right or rlVlJege to engage In anything that s Immoral for a tax consideration Is o put a premium upon lawlessness nd crime. No State can do this with out lowerincr the standard of moral ight, V Since the people govern themselves t is true that they may have a cor upt government, bad laws, and low norals.. "Righteousness exalteth a nation but Hi n is a reproach to any eople." "When the rihteous rule he people rejoice, but when the wlck d rule tha teople mourn." The saloon has been denounced and condemned by every religious body lu 'lie land. The State regards it as one vll by putting upon It enormous .tax- and by the incorporation of church es and schools. No other business rou Id stand the treatment given to he llnuor trafflc. and when if opens vide the door for the propagation of the business it invites crime and the By at nome? ine d of argument is fallacy of this kin seen on Its race. "Louisiana runs a State lottery, why not let us have one In North Carolina and keep the money here?" Then again the State j Sunday, May 5th. can pruieci iiwcii uy uutiig mc ru- companies wrong in spite of God. the State, so ciety, law or what not, but let not the State open wide the . door for . his meanness. "The law Is not made for a good man but for the lawless." Khali a great State go ;: into copartnership with a business ' that is morally wrong? There may be a few towns for the sake of money who would 'sell out Its manhood and morality for gain but It is only an, evidence of the low standard of its morals and corpora tions must answer here to a higher court than human. -Be. not partaker of other men's sins," Is a law of moral right which will hold good as to both State and nation. " v CllANGE OF SCHED ULE. roads and express companies enor mously for handling IL Texas taxe.-v the express -companies with a $5,000 license tax. v The -harder it l& to get liquor the less of it will be used. -Then the State can Impose heavy penalties for selling it and jalso hold the party responsible for the damage it. does as does the law applying to Union county. 2. "You Interfere with the Individu al's personal right No. : no mors, than in many other things and other, ways- He may play, the fool and kill himself he may become, a counter feiter or forger, a robber, a wrecker of trains, but he has no right to Im pose his meanness and hellish business upon other folks. Some folks will do : a - ' - a The Durham and Southern Railway will change Its schedule, taking effect Sunday trains w'll be discontinued: Trains will levo junction points as follows:. No. 4 1 Leave Durham 4:15 p. m. No. 41 Leave Apex 5:l.r p. ni. " .No. 41 Leave Varlna 5: go p. m: N. 41 Arrive Dunn 7:00 p. m. No. 5 Leave Durham 7:30 a. m. - No. 5 lAsave Apex 9:15 a- m. No- 5 Arrive Varlna 10:45 a. m. No. 5 Arrive Dunn 1:00 p. m- ' No. 3 8 Leave Dun n . 7 :00 a. m. , No. 38 Leave .Varlna 8:05 a. m. No. 38 LeavetApex . 8; 35 a. m No. 38 Arrive Durham 9:35 a- m. No. c Leave Dunn 8:45 a. m. No. Leave Varlna 9:45 a. m. No. Leave 'Apex 11:55 a" m. ' ' , No. . I Arrive Durham 2:15 p. m-" SALE OI t lXn D. By authority, of an order made by w..m. kuss, clerk of the' jjuperio- court, of wake county, in the special proceeding. No. 1372, entitled J.x T. Broughton vs. Myra Crocker, I w:.l offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder foricash at the county pourt house door itt" the city of Ral eigh, on Monday, the 3rd day of Jun-, 1907 at 1 2. o'clock m-, two parcels or lots of land situate In' the town Garner, Wake county; N. C, adjoining the lands formerly) of Polly John son, C. H. Dopreo andothers. bounded as follow, to wit: '- '-s ; ' First Lot: Beginning at the inter section of the westi line of a street along G. 0; Barbee8 line with th southern line of the , street, running parallel with the North Carolina Rail road. 3 f eet "a from sald-Barbee's west corner, runs, with said last mentioned line ; north 26 1-2 decrees west "one and one-half chains to a stake; thence southf 26 1-2 degrees west 2 chain- and 60 links to a stake 63 1-2 degree east 3 chains to 'a stake In said flrs. mentioned street: thence with the same to the ' beginning. containing three-fourths of . an acreand ; being the two - lots Which were conveyed to Pavld W. Crocker, each being thre eighths of antacre the one conveye.i by Polly Johnson and William E. An derson, trustee, by deed dated Sep tember 28th. 1887, the other by Pollv Johnson by deed dated the first of January.'-'I890----'-v.v.-;?.- Second Lot: 'Beginning at a stake In the side of-the, Raleigh .-road. Cruris, south 27 degrees west 3.09 chains to a stake; thence south 63 decrees east1 1.585 chains to a Make; thence tu 27 decrees east 3.25 chains to a st In the IlalcJ-h road; thenco n,rt!i decrees west 1.59 chains to iLe ginning. containing: one-half ; and being the tract of l,n . ed by J A. Kpcnce and C. M. : tq Samuel Crocker and D. V. r by deed dated Mav 7th. 1 8 H I . registered in the oi.ice or the i ter of Deeds for A'ake county, In book 87, pae 102. Land t 5 partition. - This April 27, 1907. ' ' . ; . "li. .c:;o::::r ". - . . . ' , v e . . - 4-28-law-4w. . - ) ii t. r i . i . , WurLii t f HKCAlf!i IT . i ; - t". 7;c tM-1 . a m;ixt. 7otvtu 1 ".j i Havln- '. HTowardy C '1 county, I l r r having claim 4 them on or t f this notice w'.'l recovery. ' . ' -April 2Z' law
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
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May 5, 1907, edition 1
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