Newspapers / The Sanford Express (Sanford, … / June 3, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Sanford Express (Sanford, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE SANFORD EXPRESS P. H. ST. CLAIR l pnBUBHBB D. L. BT. CLAIR f PdbubhkbS ■0BSBIPTIOIC PRICK; ---©44 year. 11 * i u ‘ t < ■1 ■»• - . • *.,tl,OG --Mix month*.... ' ,6B - Th three month*..... Xk FRIDAY, Jane 80,1911 In discussing the progress and growth Of Sanford one of oni Citizens remarked to ns the oth er day: “Thei town' mast have more pay rolls if the place con tinues to grow and bnild up.’ This Is tree. For a town to de valop and Increase in else it mast furnish people with em ployment. To make a city oi Sanford we must make a bid foi more manufacturing enterprises, We have taxed ourselves to build the nucleus, the foundation, but If we expect to build a town ol "proportions we cant rest here. Among our most progressive and wide-awake business men are Our merchants. They are con atantly reaching out for trade and they are getting it, too. Through their energy and good business foresight they have succeeded : ; - m making Hanford the trario center of al) this section. They “ are doing much for the prog teas and development of the place, bot for the town to ad vance and bnild up as it should we must manufacture things tc * sell. This will bring money and people to the place. \ Nothing is being done at pres ent to induce capital to come in and invest. Onr Chamber of Commerce seems to be taking its summer vacation. We hope ^ before the fall season opens to >. see renewed efforts on the part Of our people to bring in more capital and build more enter prises in the town. What is known aa the “Williamsport Plan ’ - If adpoted here might prove ■ a good thing for Sanford. This plan is being tried at Asheville and Greensboro. It is to induce j manufacturing enterprises to locate in a town by assisting and encouraging them. At Ashe vilie, President Archibald Nichols, of the Nichols Shoe % Company, pledges to be one of 100 to give $100,000 at once pay able pro rata in such sums as may be needed, and $100 yearly ^thereafter for 10 years, or one of to s fund which shall be used to assist in financing manufacturing ■— enterprises for Asheville, along lines whose details shall be adopt ed by the subscriber to the fund. S. Montgomery Smith follows as _ a second on the list At Greens boro the Meyers Co. started this plan and are followed by the Public Service Company. This should mean mnch to a commun 1 ltj If carried to completion.; > There is many an enterprise wait | ing and needing just such a sub- j - Stantial inducement. Referring to the fact that Judge Walter Clark has a Woman suf- j ferage plank in bis senatorial j platform, the Statesville I.and mark asks, “Will the Chief Jus tice be the favorite candidate of the fair sex In the contest at - hand?” We hardly think so. There are comparatively few * women in North Carolina that seem anxious to vote. Talk with them and with the exception of one here and there you will find that they are either opposed to ' woman Suffrage or are indiffer ent about, the matter. They seem willing to let the men con - tinue to manage the political af fairs of the country. While there could be great improve ment made, the won en of North Carolina are yet unwilling to become mixed in the strife and turmoil of politics. Judge Clark will hardly live to see the day that the women of the State will In any great numbers demand the right to vote. The Charlotte Chronicle ex pressed the opinion that the use of snufP had been much curtailed and that the amount consumed Was not near so great as former ly. The Stateville Landmark took issue with the Chronicle and expressed the opinion that .tbe'anuff habit is still much more common than is generally sup- j posed. Now comes a correspond j out of the Chronicle who pro . oeeds to show that the use of snuff, instead of decreasing, is in creasing, and that a prominent snuff concern made a profit of • 000,000 last year. The women wuo use suuiT, like the men who drink-liquor, are not so oper about it as in former days, bu they qqntloue to use ’ j eiayor Gay nor, of New York /In Welcoming the delegates te the recent Interstate Cotton Seed Crushers’ Convention paid the toil Lug high tribute to South ern men living in the metropolis .; ‘We have 100,000 votes el 4 '%£ Southern people, who now Uvq here, • Let me tell you they are the best votes we have. They I have broufeht with then the pun political sentiment of the South. They vote right every time ic local affairs to put the rascals out." . , „ t The Tnbercnlosts Problem. , Greensboro Industrial News. In a paper submitted to th< North Carolina Medical societ: in session in^Charlotte last week Dr. M. Eugene Street, of Glen don, hit some hard blows de livered straight from the should er. He was discussing “Som' Phases of the Tuberculosi Problem,’’ and what he said i worthy of attention and seriou consideration, for he is a mai who has won his spurs as a sue cessfnl physician. He is there fore qualified to speak. Hea him: “Tuberculosis is a disease stalking in our state and claim ing its victims by thousand: yearly. There are some prob lems before us as to how w< shall prevent this. “The disease has been s< much neglected and so little un derstood that the average practitioner has an idea that i cannot be successfully treat*?* except by an expert. Nothin; in the field of medicine isfarthei from the truth. The average tuberculosi: patient is as well off under tht care of the average practitioner if the doctor understands the management of tuberculosis, he is in the hands of the average tuberculosis expert. The prob lem presented here is how tc get the average practitioner tc i realize that he can treat tuber culosis successfully. Of course, it is understood that I speak ol the disease in the early stage— in the curable stage. The sue cessful treatment of tuberculosis no more requires a special climate, an elaborate labratory with microscopes, x-ray roa chines, ozonizers. spraying ap 1 paratus, hypodermic- -syringes and other equipment of like character than does the success ful treatment of smallpox, dys entery, measles, typhoid fever, pneumonia, cholera infantum or any other common disease. “The quack methods and the Charlatanism of many so called tuberculosis experts has, I am ashamed to have admit, got most of our average practioners bluff ed to a standstill. The bluff has worked as effectually on most of them as it has on the average layman, and it is a disgrace to the medical profession, for it is costing many, many lives an lually, as well as providing an mdless succession of new cases [>f tuberculosis. No physician worthy of the name of doctor can afford to remain longer in such ^dense ignorance and re *»s*r^* the laity fs being educated along this line and the physician who fails to timely diagnose and pro perly manage pulmonary tuber culosis is going to be discredited and disgraced. May that time come soon! How can we best hasten that day? I know one man who had been to one of the tuberculosis sanatoria where a lot of hoodooism was employed, who later on went to one where the hygienic dietetic treatment alone is employed- At this sanatorium he gained very rapid ly and was taught how to live to get well. He admitted he gained health, weight and strength at this sanatorium very rapidly, but left the institution in disgust, nursing a great big grievance because they did not give him treatment enough there. He went back home and growled and knocked the place with all his might. But his neighbors laughed him out of countenance because they could see he came back with the goods oil mm i ue enu oi Lilt: story is that a little later he quit his foolishness and adopted the mode of living that he learned there with the result that he is today a well man working and carrying on all of his business just as though he had never had tuberculosis nor been a fool. "One great misfortune for the sick is that as soon as the aver age physician doing tuberculosis work reaches the point where he begins to derive the reven ne he thinks more about collaring the almighty dollar tfian he does throttling tuberculosis. “The responsibility for exist ing conditions is a phase of the tuberculosis problem that should not be passed over, and 1 wish to say that the general public is getting a great deal more out of the physicians of the state along the line of the prevention and cure of tuberculosis than is be ing paid for. While there Is more of the milk of human ^kind ness in the doctors as a class than in any other class of men they also have the limitations imposed by human nature, and when the people recognize the great value of the endeavor for the cure and prevention of tu - bereulosis that the physicians are engaged in and are willing to pay for it, the incentive for more efficient work will cor respondingly increase the faith fulness of efficiency of the work. “When the rank and file of the profession realize that it is as much within their province, as much their duty and as much within their ability to success fully treat tuberculosis as it scar let fever, gastritis, rheumatism and other common disease; then, and not till then Will there be any very material lessoning in the death rate frpjn tubercu losis.’1 In all of which there is. food for thought for the lay mind, as well as for those who have maintained the bleeding and bluffing process of quackery.' - HOW THE TltrST DII) IT. The Manner of the American To bacco Co. in Pestroying tom petition. The suit of the Ware Kramer Tobacco Company against the American Tobacco for >1,200,000 damages for destroying the . Ware Kramer Company s busi r ness, on trial in the bed oral 1 Court in Raleigh, has brought out the methods of the tobacco trust in destroying competition. > Here are a few instances 5 A. H. Hilman tostoied that he ; had been a tobacco jobber in New York 41 years prior to the . coming of the Metropolitan To bacco Company to New \ ork * and that since the fonn.iticn of | this company he a-al _.a' other jobbers had gone out of ousi ; | ness because it wa«. :mi>ossible j to maintain a trad- with the American Tobacco Company s j goous concernr:itoo i. me ! of the MetrojxViitan A>r compcti , ition. He said he e>lablisned | large trades with .» number of | independent mannf.ueu’-es' go**ls but each time tie* nuunfacturei* , would be bought up by the Amen ' can Tobacco Company and the | trade he had worked up would ! pass to the Metropolitan com i pany. He testified that at the i beginning of the war between the independents ami the Ameri jean Tobacco Company the latter j had about t*0 per « eut of the j Greater New York trade and j that now it has fully v*0 per cent. In his judgment it is impossible for a jobber to be successful in handling independent goods in the tobacco trade and the con centration of the American To bacco Company goods in the j hands of Metropolitan company I had driven practically all the in dependent jobbers out of busi ness. J. R. Hardie, express agent at Wilson, testified that when the Ware Kramer Comprny shipped goods through, the Southern Ex press Company representatives of Wells Whitehead Company (then a part of the American To bacco Company) would come with notebook and take the ad- j dresses of the Ware-Kramer j goods; that he took to packing! the goods on the trucks with the addresses tamed in so that they could not be seen and that the Wells- Whitehead employes would go to*ihe trucks and turn the packages about so. u to get tbs addresses. He testified that fin ally he wrote a note to W. M. Carter, manager of Wells-Weite head Company, and gave him to understand that if this were not stopped there would be serious trouble. Carter replied that he would see that there was no fur ther trouble. Freight Agent J. E. Morton, of Wilson,testified that the Ware framer Company and the Wells Whitehead factories were both close by the freight depot at Wil son and that the Wells Whitehead Company people cotld see when the Ware Kramar Company was making shipments and that they would send men out to the freight shed with notebooks to write down the addresses of the goods being shiped by the Ware-Kram er Company. Notice Having qualified as Administra tore of the estate of M. M. Moffitt, deceased, late of Lee count?, North Carolina, this is to notify all person? having claims against said estate to exhibit them to the undersigned at Sanford, N. C . on or before the 8fch day of June 1912, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re cover?. All persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate settlement This June 8th. 19ft. Royal Moffitt, E. G. Moffitt, Administrators of M. M. Moffitt, D. E. Mcfver, Attorney. Notice Having qualified as Executor of j James H. Maori, deceased, fate of ! Jonesboro, N C., this is to notify all persons having claims against th* Restate of said deceased to exhibit | them to the undersigned at Jones boro, N, C., on or before the 12th j day of J one, 1912, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their discovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immedimate pay ment. , T, N. Campbelf; Executor of James H. Mann, deceased. This the 12th dav of June. 1911. Administrator** Notice. Having qualified a* administrator o( the estate of H. H. Powell, deceased this is to notify all partem having claims against said estate, to present them properly verified, to the undersigned at Sanford, North Carolina, on or bold e the 24th day of May, 1812, or this no tier »ill bo plended In har of their ru oovery All persons Indebted to laid estate will please make Iutmedteate payment. This the 24th day Of May mu. •* “ John N. Powell, tilmitr.elralor, estate of H, H. PoireU. I tv. ttuark. Attorney. --.... Notice To Creditors. r Having qualified na ndmtnlatrntrtx 1 of the estate of L. A. Bridges, the uo> der-ugned hereby give# notice to #1} creditors of said eaUUe to present tbelr *oiwurw. duly verified, to the under signed on or before the Iftth day of May. 1912. otherwise this notice will he pleaded iu bar of their recover;. This the loth day of Mny, Otis L. Bridges, Administratrix of L. A. fridges. A. A. Y. Sea .veil. Attorney. 1 -x Report of the condition of the • Hank of Sanford at Sauford, * m the State of North Carolina, at the cIom* of business J SUO _7,1911.! resou rces : * Loans and discounts,' $136,650,94 Overdrafts, secured and unsecured , 2,16588 V11 other stocks, bonds ami n ort gages, 1,075.00 Furniture and fixtures 3,470,24 Vii other real estate owned, 000.00 Demand loans. 12,500.00 Due from banks and bankers, 4CL434.43 ' * *i 1 com. 2,25000 S.iver com. including all imiior coin currency 802.87 National bank notes and •>ther T S notes 3,950.00 Total. liabilities: Capitol stock paid iu, $16,650.00 Surplus fund. ^ 6,500-00 Undivided profits, less cur rent expenses and tax- ‘ espaid. 1,049.88 Deposits subject to check, 171,684.76 Detuaud CVrteficates of , ; •, Deposit , 250.00 Due from banks and • ''u-! bankers, 5,938.72 Cashier's checks outstand ing, 2487.00 Total, $204,20836 State of North Carolina, County of Lee. 1^*" I I, S. P. Hatch, President of the above named bank; do solemnly 8wear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. S. P. Hatch* '' PnMudapM Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 14th day of Jane, 1911. : , Ralph Monger, ) Notary Public Correct—Attest: i , J J*R. Jones, ' P. IL Melyer, to& A ClumntHK Womaa # is one who is lovely in face, fori* mind and temper. Bat its bard form woman to be charming without healtft. A weak, sickly woman will be nervous and irritable. Constipation and Kid ney poisons show in pimples, blotcbdb, skin eruptions and a wretched com plexion. But Electric Bitters always prove a godsend to women who waot health, beauty and friends. They fe gulate Stomach, Liver and Kidneys, purify the blood; give strong uerves, bright eyes, pure breath, smooth, velvety skin, lovely complexion a&d perfect health. Try them. oOc at Crab tree Drug Co. Commissioner's Sale of Land. By virtue of an order of the Superior court of Lee county, made, in a special proceeding entitled'J.: J. Edwards, Administrator of J. H. ^ Fore, vs, Snsie Fore, heir at law of; J. H. Fore. the undersigned com missioner will, on the 3rd day of July, 1911, the same being first Monday, at the hour of 12 o’clock, noon, at the court boase door 10 Lee county, sell at public auction for cash, the following described lands to wit: Two contiguous tracts of land iu Greenwood township, Lee county, on the waters of Big Juniper creek, known as the Henry Fore tract and the Rankin tract, respectively; 1st tract. Beginning at a stake running thence 8. 27 E. lb chains,' thence N. 63 E. 40 chains to il stake and pointers; thence X. 27? W. 16 chains to a stake; thence SJ 03 W. 41 chains to the beginning containing 65 acres more or less 2nd tract. Beginning at K«>re * corner in. John Catrerons |,0e£ thence with his line 65 1.4 ft chains to D. B. MeDougald’f corner; thence with his lin^ 24 3 4 W. 11 chains to his oth**y corner, thence N. 61 1 2 \V j J chains to the Carthage road; thf-oci; with the southern margin of t|,l sa d Carthage road to a corner Morris’ line: thence as said Iinfc 8. 24 3-4 E 40 chains to a corney* theoee N. 65 1 4 E 39 chain* £ the beginning,containing 105 a« r.*^ on the east side of the b»g Jumped and west of the A. C.'L. Railroad. T The above described lands sold for the purpose of making al* se»e to pay the debt* of th*> decani* Tbw the 29th d*v of May, A. A. F. Seawell, 0* Commissioner^ CORIR1GHT SHINGLES “ ' Eaaihr laid — can be laid right o»« wood ahingles If ^ v„ Fireproof Stormproof — La* mm long mm the building and need repairs. For further defiled ioforantios apply to A. J, SLOAN, Joaeabore. N. C. Now is the time to jollrt;he<!rewd..that are daily taking advantage of:the unheard of Bargains that we are giving the trading public^ of Sanford and surrounding country. The tremendous throng that have crowded our store daily, tell of the great values we are giving in all kinds of seasonable Dry goods, Mil linery Ladies Ready to wear garments, Shoes, Clothing, Gents Furnish ings and Etc. Read on. Clearance Prices. We give few prices below of late arrivals that go in this sale: 2000 yards capital Apron Gingham, worth 5c for 3 l-2c . Big lot Annams Percale, worth 10c, sale price 5c. Lot short Length Cannon Cloth 12 1-2 value 5c, 10 Pieces Papama Checks—36 inch wide, worth 12 l-5c for 8 l-2c per yard, 2000 yards short length 40 inch Lonsdale Cam bric and Fine Bleechings, worth 15 1-2 and 15c,— This sale 5c. ---- Late Bargains in Mens* Department. Mens Half Hose Black' and colors, 10c value for 5c pair. • Big lot mens’ Five Cent large size white Hand kerchiefs, sale price 3c, 15 Dozen 25c wash ties,—this sale Sc. Mens 25 and 35c Lisle Thread Suspender's, this Sale 19c, We are offering thousands of other bargains all over our "big-store, but have space to mention only a few; all we ask is for you to come and let us show you the goods. Remember only Four More Days of the Bis* Sale. I SALE CLOSES TTTESID.A.'Sr .TTTT t~v 4^2 ' Williams-Belk Co. ■ .. .. " ■■ ■ ■ • ____ SELL IT FOR LESS. D- E. McIVER. Lawyer, 'PS 8anford. N. C. .. B. HOYLE. SAM R. HOYLE. ifTOYLE & HOYLE, Attorneys at Law, «• Sanford, N. G. Offices In McKeithen Building. * ■=/ ■ J. W. RUARK - Attorney at Law, Offices ill Bailey-Lutterloh Building, f-i -j—Sanford, N. C. 7 ,T3r. Chas. L Scott, Z, V/ Physician and Surgeon, ? .•'••'"V Sanford, N. C. ”7 Office over Reids Durg Store. Residence ’Phone 46. Office ’Pone 171. DJUjF. W. McORACEEN, .MBt Dentist, ’1 Sanford, N. C. Officer In the Commercial Building. --I#;Work done at night. Dr. J. H.Ihrie, jTy’ DENTIST. Beginning August 1st. Dr. Ihrie will visit Pitta boro the first Monday of each month and remain one week. Can be found in kls office at Sanford dally ex cept as above stated. I^FRANK D. JONES, CIVIL ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR, Water works, sewerage, streets and roads, power development, also land surveying. Address me care Carolina Insurance & Realty Co., Sanford, N. C. KXyrdraweFNo. m — DR- J. K. HUNT. ' DENTIST, Jonesboro, N. C. Olive and Kan kin, ICE AND MILK. —. Under Cunningham building. 7Phonel41. W Win* Klabt For Life. ' It was a long and bloody battle for life that was waged by James B. Mer ibon, of Newark, N. J., of wbicb be writes. “I bad lost much blood from lung hemorhagpB, and was very weak ana rundown. For eight months I was unable to work. Death seemed close on myljeelSi when 1 began, three weeks ago, to use Dr. King's New Discovery. But it baa helped me greatly. It is doing all that you claim.” For weak, sore lungs, obstinate coughs, Stubborn colds, hoarseness, la grippe, asthma, hay fevej or any throat or lung trouble its supreme. 50c & *1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by Craj>trfee Drug Co. v jr. e. Phillip*, •Sri* -J. ine fftnwicsaSe and Retail Ice Man, : Sanford, N. C. , -•. There U one medicine that every family should be proyided with and especially during the summer months: viz, Chamberlain's Colie, Cholera ana Diarrhoea Komedy. Ilia almost eer tain to be needed. It cost* bnt a quarter. Can you afford to be without i it? For sale by All Dealer*. ‘ D. L. SEYMOUR, Prepared to do all kinds of PLUMBING. STEAM PITTING AND ELECTRIC WIRING. Keeps in stock all kinds of plumbing goods. First class work done on short notice. Shop on corner of Steele and Wicker Streets. Ab the fly season is here now ts the time to buy your screen doors. ’PhOBe or write the Jonesboro Sash and Blind Company if in need if any they will send a man to take measure. Contractors and Builders. Prepared to move or raise your bouse any height or distance at any place or time. Also to contract and build. Cor respondence solicited. Reference furnished upon applica tion Terms reasonable. Boykin & Toomcr, e SANFORD. N. O. Work Will Soon Wart after you take Dr. King's New Life Fills, and you’ll quickly enjoy their tine results. Constipation and indi gestion vanish and tine appetite re turns. They regulate stomach, live f and bowels and impart new strength and energy to the whole system. Try them. Only 25c at Crabtree Drug Co. An Itching Skin is about the most troublesome thing thing there ie. You know it if you have ever bad any kind of skin trouble. But they all give way, disappear, every last one—every plumpy, scaly, itching, eruptive kind of disease of the skin—when yon treat them to a box of Hunt’s Cure well rubbed in. Nothing like it to make the skin healty and smooth and free from sting or itch or pain. Price is 50c a boi, and one box is guaranteed to cure any one case or ypu get yonr money back. SOLD BY WILLIAM W. JtEID All who wish to have corn ground should bring U to my mill on .Saturday m that is the only day of the week that I run my mill. Riddle, the Hlftcic smith, Sanford, N. C. ___A Dreadful Wound from a knife, gun, tin can, rutty nail, fireworks, or of any other naturri, de mands prompt treatment with Buck ten'll Arnica Salve to prevent blood poison or gangrene Its the quickest, surest heater for ail such wounds as also tut Buy ns,, Bolls. Sores, Skin Eruptions, Eczema, Chapped Hands, Corns or plies. 25o at Crabtrse Drug it. — Notlce. • J North Carolina—Lee county—to the Superior Court—Before the Clerk. M«tfaUwSer- ?*"*ja* ana Thomas Cole^ Everett Cole, Mary Adams, Willie A, Fields, Flora Cole, Annie Cole, A. B. Cole, Lizzie Mat thews, Lena Usher, John William Wicker, Jr., Bascomb Usher, J. A. Usher, Mary Usher, J. B. Usher, Min nie Cole, Flora Jane Wicker, Bessie Ray Wicker, Lilly Ruth Wicker, George Hugh Wicker, A. B. Cameron, Guardian for Bessie Ray Wicker, Lilly Ruth Wicker and George Hugh Wicker, O. Rascomb Covington, Elijah Covington, Judd Newton, Heok New ton and Mary Parsons. Of the Defendants above named, Thomas Cole, Everett Cole, Mary Adams, Lizzie Matthews, Lena Usher, Bascomb Usher, J. A. Usher, Mary Usher, J. B. Usher, O. Bascomb Cov ington, Elijah Covington, Judd Newton, Heck Newton and Mary Parsons, will take notice that a Special Proceeding, entitled as above, has been commenced in the Superior Court of Lee county for the purpose of sale tor partition among the tenants in common of a cer tain tract of land in Pocket Township, Lee county, North Carolina, contain ing about 169 acres, and known as the “Richard Cole Home Place”, and the said defendants will further take notice that they are required to appear be fore the Clerk of the Superior Court of Lee county on Saturday, July 1st, 1911, at 10 o’clock A. M. and answer the petition which has been filed in said cause or the petitioners will ap^>ly the Court for the rfilief deman said petition. This May 23, 1911. T. N. Campbell, Clerk Superior Court Lee county It is worse than useless to take an3 medicines interhally for muscular oi chronic rheumatism. All that is need ed is a free application rf Chamber Jain’s Liniment. For sale by A1 Dealers. Commissioner’s Sale of Land. By virtue of a decree of tbe Supe rior court of Lee couuty, made iu a special proceeding, entitled W. Q, Webster, E. L. Webster aud others V8. T, E. Williams and others, the undersigned will on the 8rd day of Jui/, 1911, the same being tirst Mon day, at the bonr of 12 o'iock, noon, expose to sale to the highest bidder for cash, the following descibed land: One tract of land in East Sanford Township, ■ near Colon, adjoining the lands of Graham Riggsbee, Mrs. Ruth Yarborough and others,known as the Colon Tract, and also as the Webster Home Tract, where the late R, B, Webster lived at the time of his death; also one aud one-half aeres adjoining the said tract of land known us the Lassiter lot and con veyed by Joe Lassiter to ft, B. Web ster. Tbe above laud is sold ior parti-1 tion amongst the heirs at law of Mrs. Delaney Webster. This tbe 80th day of May, 1911. A. A. F. Seawell, Commissioner. The uniform success that has attend ed the use of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Dtrrhoea Remedy has made it afavorlte everywhere. It can “•ways depended upon. For tale by All Dealers. ...... Notice. 7 •**>* ' North C&rolina—Lee County—In the Superior Court, Before the Clerk. W. O. Kellv, Ada K. Fitts and her . husband W If. Fitts, Lillian Lynch and tier husband P. II. Lynch, Loula M. Garner and her husband W.' H. Gamer vk. Fred Kelly, Mollie E Badgett, Boyo© ~ Yarborough, Seth H. Kelly, Rex L. ‘ Kelly and Paul Kelly and J. W. Mclir- ‘ N tot?h Guardian ad litem. • ~ Pursuant to an order of the - Superior <— Grnirt of Lee County, made in the above entitled proceeding, the undersigned Ckunnn8sioner, appointed for tliejpurpose, will offer and sell, certain tracts 6f land lying and being in East Sanford town-* Hhip, I/ee County, North Carolina^ad joining the lands of Harrington,. Kelley mid others, bounded as follows: FIRST TRACT: Beginning at a stake * in Thomas Wicker’s line, North of, the, road, and running N. 10 W. 17 chains to a stake and pointers; thence N. 70 K. 29 chains to a stone and pointers, thence 8. * . 9 k 6J chains to Patsy Womack’s corner, how Wren’s; thence N. 71* E. 6.15 chain® «. to a stake, oak pointers; thence 8. 9 E. 18.25 chains to a , stake, , gum pointers; thence 8. 70 E, 10.80 chains to a Btake v and pointers, Arrie Harirngton’s comer;' thence *s her line 8. 88 W. 15.90 chains to her comer, also a corner of the John Harrington lot; thence .8. 59 E. 10 chains to a stake, oak pointers; thence 8. 41 W. 5 chains to a stake, oak pointers; thetfee b. 51 W. 5 chian* to a stake, oak point ers; thence 8. 41 W. 13J chains to a stake m the corner of an old field; thence W. 9.25 chains to a stake, oak and maple pointers; thence 8. 15 E. 9 chains to a ' road; thence with, and parallel with, said road S. 79 W. 15 chains to John Street s corner thence; N. 18 chains to a stake and pointers; thence N; 24.66 chains to a stake; thence N*70 W. 8A chains to a stake and pointers; tlience N. 25.75 chains to a stake; thence W. lOj chains to the beginning, containing 194 acres, excepting, however, from the above bnunrinrioa nna nnm u ^ nowever. from' the above boundaries, one acre of the West thereof, heretofore conveyed by J. M. Kelley for white school house; alBO three-quarters of an acre on the East, side, now used for a grave yard. , A ®°. ?.ne tract beginning at the. ford of the Creek and running 8. 78 W. 9 chains to a stake in the old line among 1 pointers; tlience 8. 10 E. 4 chains; 8. l5 W. 18.60 chains to a stake; thence N. 76 E. 4.60; thence 8. 62 E. 3.10; N. 60 E. 4.60; thence down the creek N. 42 W 2.76; N. 11 E. 6.25; N. 8 W. 3.76; N. 5 W. to the beginning. TERMS OF SALE: one-half cash: -"—wx rajurj-. ouc-oau cash; balance in 6 months witli 6 per cent in terest, title to property retained until full purchase price is paid. * Place of 8ale: On the premises. J Saturday, July 8tR 1911, 10 o'clock. A. M. . This June 5th, 1911. ' ' - -cv: 14 ~ I). E. Mclver, L’ • . CoumiisBiodjen r-v The woman of today who has good health, good temper, good sense, bright eyee and a lovely complexion, the re eult of of correct living and good df "" gcstion, wins the admiration of the world. If your digestion in faulty Chamberlain's Stomach and XilVST Tablets will correct it. For sale by All Dealers. ■ , Whooking cough is not dangerous when the cough is kent loose and ex pectoration easy by giving Chamber lain's Cough ltemedy. It lias been us ed in many epidemics of this disease with perfect sucoess, For sale by All Dealers. ~ : ..."... ... ■ i ■ , €. ». WOODELL, • Sanford, N. 0.. i Cheep paint, cheap painters, irhlts wash—all go together. Does it psy or sot?
The Sanford Express (Sanford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 3, 1911, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75