Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Feb. 6, 1902, edition 1 / Page 1
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News BK1JNU iuun Job Printing TO TTATTn The News-Herald " IS THE " BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM . IN THE ' Piedmont Section. f foe News-Herald Office. T. G. COBB, Publisher. f irst-Class Work at Lowest Prices. THE BURKE COUNTY NEWS.) CosnMda.d Nov 29 19 OL THE MO R.GAN TON HERALD) J Conso i,t4 Wov- Z9' ul Subscription Price, $i Per Year, in Advance. VOL. XVII. MORGANTON, N. C, FEBRUARY 6, 1902. NO. 47. ioUlTAIN LAND ENTRIES. , scheme That is Very lluok of a Fraud. tOTl ui lpv" " ,!fiu about the wholesale " f ....i.iim l'inilo maila in , ,jnel! aud Alexander coon sbvA U Miller is of interest frp because last year this same rtv " nterea" 40,000 acres of Qin lU.rke and possibly 20,000 Is ui McDowell. Every inch of f ntl be entered in this county bud " previously granted by the i 1.;.. mitriiK Imra nrnmnt. " - 1 I V Caldwell and do not thiuk the laramler people need lose auy Jeep'ver ,hese eiltries- Tl,e LeK islature has wisely declared that "ll grants issued which cover lands JrevioTiNlv granted, are absolutely ;0.,1 iind besides from letters hiel 1 ,,ave Deen reeeiviu2 in Morg-Jf'tti I am led lo believe that nlosi. ii tlie people making these iholesa' entries are looking after nie North of .Mason ami Dixon's .. f know it to We a fact that ar-nuts of survey," which are mert-Iv ouWrs t ihe county aur Mr.ir'of vacaut l nd. have hf'en sold in the North to people w bo iliougut mey weie purcnas mil North Carolina lands. Any our can make an entry ami unless he game is protested unuer me I J - tatuie, can get a warrant ofsor- It costs about bo cents to et a wariaiit fin G40 acres, ami mi- information is that some of ti.e,e warrants have been sold in ti.n ortb lor SlOO or more. Two iPirsaiio! saw a letter from a uiiuistei Ju Coucecticut, written to an ofticijl of the Southern Kaii w.iy, in which the friendly offices of ihe latter weie asked to help lo cate two tracts of 1-tnd in McDow ell county which the minister thought he had pniebased. He liail two warrants ol survey for 640 acres each, which were located iu a section of McDowell county which lud plenty of old fields in it hen Ferguson's troopers raided ibf Catawba valley before the battle of Kiug's Mountain. Jno. W. Thomp-'ou, late assistant com missioner uf agriculture, round a lot of thse warrants for gale iu a real cot ate office in New Yoik. As a business enterpri.-e this sibeuie lays the cherry tree and lupkin ling iudustry in the bade. TbtTf is very lttle vacant laud iu tbe North Carolina mountains, and this is generally in small tracts that were left out by some iuac curate surveyor. The general rule is that where these wholesale eu tries are made the enterer has not faith enough in his claim to pay tbe State L cents an acre for a craut. or even to i av the cost of a (survey, and the unterrified moun taineers ol Caldwrll aud Alexin der can well affoid to wait until Mr. Mil er takes out his grants and commences to take possession of hUesta;e. In the meantime, while the eu tries in question may have beeu made in ad good faith, aud while Mr. Miller m iy be as straight as a siring, ihe duty rests somewhere to see to it I hat if Northern preach ers ami dry goods cl rks and fac tniy girls will insist on buying North Carolina whi rants of survey tliev know what they are !uying and' tl.ar the supply is unlimited and tiiat the market, price is 65 Cf tits. Notice. To A. E. Hutchins, Esq. You will take notice that on the 4th day of March, 1901. the undersigned proclaimed from Manly McDowell. Sheriff of Burke county, a trtct of land in Upper Creek township. Burke coun ty, containing 300 acres, and being the lands enbraced in State Grant No. 6726 for the tax assessed thereon for the year 1399. You will further take no tice that vou can redeem the 6ame at any time before the 4th dav of March 1902, Lv paymg the amount of said taxes and costs of sale amounting to t'4.50, and interest thereon as allowed by law, and the cost of this advertisement. W. C. Ervin, Morganton, N. C. FIRE INSURANCE. We write Fire Iusarauce poli cies on all kinds of property in the largest home aud for eign ecompanis Erv loss sustained ou iropert insured in this agency, established fifteen years ago. has been prompt Iv and satisfactorily settled. We are agents for the North Carolina Home, Aetna of Hartford, Hamburg Bremen, Hartfo;d, of Hartford, Con. Insurance Company of North America, Niagara of New York, Home, of New York and German American. Policies placed ou our books are promptly renewed before expira ation. We write risks from $i00 to 5100.O0O on nronertv iu town or ' i c J country, at lowest rates. AVEEY & EEYIN, AgtS. Post-office Building. fiSubscribe Herald for The News NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS As Told by the Papers in the Neighboring Counties. Mcdowell A Big Enterprise -A Railroad from Greelee'sUp Cribb Creek into the Mountains Prospecting for Oil and Gas- Marion News, Jan 30th. The first quarterly meeting on the Old Fort circuit will be held at Ebenezer church on the 8th and 9th of February. Rev. BrownlowLyda, the best known, and, perhaps, the most popular preacher that ever proclaimed the glad tidings in McDowell, is on the Old Fort circuit. Z. Z. Laughridge, and W. D. uaviuson, oi iima, unio, are stopping at the Eagle Hotel and will remain here several days. They represent the Ohio and In diana Oil and Gas Company and are prospecting in this neck of the woods for these valuable liquids. Oil has been found, it is said, near Asheville and astonish ing developments are expected. We hope these gentlemen will find indications here sufficient to induce them to bore a few arte sian wells that will pav them enormously for the outlay. The News noted last summer that Mr. H.L.Murry of Williams- port, Pa., purchased from t he- Western North Carolina Land Company about 3000 acres of iana lying in xucwoweii, lancy I Jl I . - Hr 11 A " 1 and Buncombe counties. These lands lie mostly in the north- western portion of this county, on the warers of Mackey's and Cribb creeks." The consideration was $100,000. Mr. Murry has organized a company composed of Edwin Ebin, Chas. E. Ha pell, Ralph H. Hopkiu, of Lancaster, Pa., and H. L. Murry for tbe purpose of developing the lands and marketing the timbers. These gentlemen are goiug to run a railroad from Greenlee's up Cribb creek into the moun tains where thev have a world of virgin forest. The rich moun tain coves having been inacces sible abound in valuable timber, such as poplar, walnut, etc. The is chased and shipped to Green- ee's. and the railroad will be between fifteen and twenty miles long and meander about in the mountains so as to get the merchantable timber. This will be one of the largest enter prises that ever came this way. and it will give employment to many laborers, and put lots of monev in circulation Other McDowell Items- Marion Democrat. Jan. 31st. Miss Hope McAlpine, of Mor-, ganton, was the guest of Miss Gertrude Needham lastbaturday and Sunday. W. F. Leete was notified last Friday of the sudden death of his father in Brooklyn, N. . De ceased was 87 vears old, a mem ber of one of the original families which settled Connecticut and had been very prominent in the history of Brooklyn. Mrs. R. L. Long was called to Blacksburg, S. C, Monday to at tend the funeral of her uncle, T. M. Moore. Mr. Moore will be remembered by many of the old er residents here as the first con ductor to run over the "3 C s - after it was opened to Marion. Mrs. R. A. Cheek has returned home from Asheville, where she was nursing her son, John Cheek, whowaspainfully injured recently in a wreck on the Murphy division of the Southern railway. Her son and his wife accompanied her here and will visit until he has fully recovered from the effects of his injuries. U. S. Marshal Z. P. Phillips, of Mitchell county, came over Mon day wit h four prisoners, viz; John Smith, W. W.JLowery, Jack Tay lor and W. Jackson, to nave a hearing before U. S. Commission er Craig. The men were charged with illicit distilling. After leng thy hearings, all four men were discharged, for lack ot evidence to warrant holding them to courr gpSubscribe News-Herald. for The CALDWELL. Items of News and Personal Mention Lenoir Topic, Jan 29th. The mill men say wheat is very scarce. The mud is keeping the lumber wagons awa v for a season. Mr. A. G. Corneninsr has com- menced milling at his new mill npir PTn i-f lo rwl I iivui xaiii UIIIIU. I Miss Helen Shell was injured quite seriously while coasting: last Wednesday. Mrs. R. T. Clay well, of Morgan ton, is visiting her mother,-Mrs L. Al. Newland. Mr. Jack Crisp is still quite un well. His mental condition is said not to be improved. There was a sale-last Saturday at the old homestead of the per sonal effects of the late Weslev Shell. J. W. Abernethy was auc tioneer. About thirty souls haveprofes sed conversion and twelve have been admitted into the church by baptism at the protracted ser vices at the Baptist church. The epidemic of crime which has prevailed over the State has iriveii Caldwell the ro by. ft ever before have we known so little lawlessness, never for so loner a time has our jail remained so nearly empty. Mr. John Kiiby, who lived at the foot of the mountain, died Thursday night of pneumonia. He had been quite sick but was nil i improving. Thursday he grew worse, Dr. Wilson was sent for but the sufferer died before the doctor could get there. He was about fifty years of age. Other Caldwell Items. Lenoir News, Jan 31st. Mrs. Jennie Seagle, of Morgan- ton, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jake C. Seagle. Mr. R. M. Tuttle, who is in Baltimore for treatment, was doing asjwell as could be expect- ad at last accounts. Married, last Saturday, at the home of the bride's father, a few miles north of town, Mr. Pink Swanson to Miss Julia Kendall, Rev. G. H. Church officiating. The little twelve-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Johnson died of pneumonia at their home in the northwestern part of town last Sunday. The remains were taken to Blowing Rock Tuesday for burial. Mr. J. T. Montgomery, who has been surveying on the C. & N. W. Railway, nearGranite and Cliffs, was forced to quit work on account of bad weather this week. The company is having some lines run with a view to changing the location of the road bed between Granite and the wt'op hfiT ipn Tilt nrwurt 1 1. and Cliffs. BUCKLEN'S ARNICA SALVE Has world-wide fame for marvellous cures. It surpasses any other salve, lotion, oint- mentor balm for Cuts, Corns, Burns, Boils, bores, Melons, Ul- cers. Tetter. Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Chapped Hands, bkin Eruptions; Infallible for Piles. Cure guaranteed. Only 25c at Tail's drug store. In the "Wake of the Cherry Tree. Statesville Landmark. A female lace drummer has been doing Salisbury, Charlotte and other towns. She sold the only real thing in lace an article which could be had in local stores for 25 cents sold for $3, $4 or $10, according to the gullibility of the customers. The Sun thinks the woman got about $100 in Salis bury. Now the female victims of the lace fakir are in sackcloth and ashes and their cries of dis tress are in the air. But if it isn't lace it's something else. The peo ple must be humbugged. WOKKlJNCr UVLJtl'lML. by those tireless, little workers Dr. King's New Life Pills. Millions are always at worK, night and day, curing Indiges- tion, Biliousness, Constipation, Sick Headache and all Stomach, l.Jrai. and RwaI tmnhlps. vc Vacant eat snvfi Anltr 95n nt Tnll's drnf? store. CLEVELAND. A Verdictfor $4,500 Shelby's Baptist Pastor Gets $50 in Gold for a Guess Married Died. . Shelby Star. Jan 29th, Mr. Robt. A. Dodd, the Ken tucky horse dealer who frequent ly visits Shelby, will be married at Wilmore. Kv.. on Feb. 11th. to Miss Mary Lee Guin. ei17 1 TT Ml I ' ll iir. "wasnv narrui, a nigniv respected and deserving young farmer died Saturday at his home near Lattiinore after an illness of a few days with gravel. He was about 36 years of age and leaves a wife and several children. Mr. Frank Moore, an aged and highly respected citizen of Shelby, died Saturday morning and was buried Sunday at Boiling Springs. He was 88 vears old, a good man and true Christian. He leaves a wife and several children to mourn their loss. Mrs. Artie Humphries died on Jan. 24th at her home in No. 2 township, of cancer. She was about 75 years old and the mother of Mr. A. E. Humphries, of this county, and Messrs. Lew is and William Humphries, of Cherokee county, b. C Miss Annie Wray, a former Shelby girl, but more recently of Caroleen, was happily married m Charlotte last 1 hursday nignt to Mr. G. Frank Hall, a success ful vonng insurance man of that place. Miss Wray has been clerk ing for Belk Bros, in Charlotte for several months. Sunday's Charlotte Observer says: "In the Superior Court yesterday morning Col. H. C. Jones concluded the argument in the case of J. R. Dover, adminis trator of B. L. Roberts, vs. the Atlantic, Tennessee & Ohio Rail road Company. The jury ren dered a verdict, in this case for $-l-,500. The usual entries were made for appeal to the Supreme Court." Our readers will remem- her that Mr. Lee Roberts, who is a son of Capt. Jno. A. Roberts, of this county, was killed on the yard in Charlotte while attempt ing 1 o couple cars, and Mr. Dover, his brother-in-law and adminis trator, brought this suit. Last year the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company made an offer of $50 in gold to the policy holder in North Carolina who came nearest guessing the amount of insurance written by the company in this State during the year. Last Friday Rev. C. J. Woodson, the local agent of the company received the $50 in gold to be given to Rev. R. F. Tredway, the popular Shelby Baptist pastor, who was the successful guesser. Ihe amount of insurance was $1,834,558, and his guess was $1,834,500. There were about 3000 guesses and his host of friends are con gratuiating mm upon nis goou trTTllHO jihv- A FIREMAN'S CLOSE CALL. "I stuck to my engine, al though every joint ached and i i every nerve was racKea witn Dam." writes U. W. .Bellamy, a locomotive fireman, of Burling- ton, Iowa., "I was weak and pale, without any appetite and all run down. As 1 was about to give up. I eot a bottle of Electric Bitters and, alter taking it, I felt as well as I ever did in my life." Weak sickly, run down people always gain new life, strength and vigor from their use. Try them. Satisfaction guaranteed. John Tull, druggist. Price 50 cents. Coronations no Good. Champ Clark, of Missouri. 1 will never vote a cent to pay any man s expenses to go to England, or elsewhere, to help crown a King. We went out of the coronation business on the 4th of July, 1776. HE RECOMMENDS CHAM BERLAIN'S COUGH REM EDY. "I have used Chamberlain's Remedy for a number of years onH h q T70 -nr hociranrnr in thati ;t is the best Remedy I- o - for coughs, colds and croup I have ever used in my family. I have not words to express my connaence in inis itemeay. Mrs. J. A. Moore, North Star Mich. For sale by W. A. Les lie, druggist. I SSubscribe for 1 HE N EWS Hekald CATAWBA. January Marriages - Died Other News. Newton Enterprise Jan. 31st. We heard a phvsician say this week that he was called the oth er day to the first case of dipthe- na he had attended in a number of years. Mr. S. T. Wilfong, President of the Catawba-Burke branch of the Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance Association, attended the State meeting in Raleigh last week. Mr. Lawson Sigmon, another aged! citizen of Cline's town- snip, died at his home nearClare- mont last I nday morning. He was about 85 years old, and a good citizen. Mr. W7 B. McCaslin died on Monday at the residence of Mr. G. M. Haynes, with .whom he had lived for many years. He was 69 vears and three months old and was only ill', five davs with pneumonia and heart trou-J ble. With corn and wheat at about a dollar a bushel, pork 10 cents a pound, sweet j)Ota toes 40 cents a bushel, wood $1.60 a cord, eggs 20 cents a dozen and other farm products at proportionate prices, the farmers are not spend ing much timecomplainingabout dull times. Some say there is nothing to sell on account of the wet season last, year. Perhaps there is not as much as usual, but it does not take much this vear to count up considerably. Catawba farmers generally have something to sell. Married, on Wednesday, Jan. 29th, Mr. Rufus G. Cloninger to Miss Vesta, daughter of the late Perry Bost. On Sunday, Janu ary 26th, at the bride's home near Plateau, Mr. William F. Rudisill, of Maiden, to Miss Min nie M., daughter "of Mr. Jake Kistler. In Hickory, Sidney J. Bolch to Miss Laura Davis. Near Maiden, Mr. Jonas W. Baird, to Miss Amanda, daughter of Mr. A. A. Withers. In Cline's town ship, Mr. Frank Eckard to Miss Susan Huffman. Mr. Lester Bowman to Miss Minnie Smith. SOMETHING THAT WILL DO YOU GOOD. We know of no way in which we can be of more service to our readers than to tell them of something that will be of real good to them. For this reason we want to acquaint them with what we consider one of the very best remedies on the mar ket for coughs, colds, and that alarming complaint, croup. We refer to Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. We have used it with good results in our family so long that it has be come a household necessity. By its prompt use we haven't any doubt but that it has time and again prevented croup. The testimony is given upon our own experience, and we suggest that our readers, es pecially those who have small children, always keep it in their homes as a safeguard against croup. Camden ( S. C. ) Messenger. For sale by W. A. Leslie. Has Business at Connelly Springs. Hickory Democrat. Editor D. P. Dellinger was here Monday. He is the last rose of summer among the bachelor edi tors that he named in his paper some time ago. W e hrml v believe he is also becoming very tired of wrecks along the shores of iutem his lot, as he seems to have more perance and the vile wotks of the business at Connelly Springs than all the other newspaper men in the State. HAD TO CONQUER OR DIE. 1 tttq c? incf oVnnf rVAna writes Mrs. Rosa Richardson, of Laural Springs. N. C, "I had Consumption so bad that the best doctors said I could not live more than a month, but I began to use Dr. King's New Discovery and was wholly cured by seven bottles .and am now stout and well." It's an un rivaled life-saver in Consump tion, pneumonia. La Grippe Brochitis; infallible for Coughs, Colds. Asthma. Hav Fever, Croup or Whooping Cough. Gurranteed bottles 50c and 1.00. Trial hntilps tVpa at. Tnll's drno- store. ww - fi-Dr. C.H.Taylor, veterinary surgeon, has located in Hickory for the practice of his profession. Out of town calls answered promptly. SAM JONES PAYS HIS EESPECTS TO BISHOP POTTEE. Atlanta Journal. Bishop Potter, of New York city, is a great man, he is a broad man, be is all sorts of a man, be is every body's aian. It is not because be is a bishop nor because be is au Epis copalian that makes me say what I say, bat it is because of bis views so widely circulated, which I am sure the devil himself approves. Bishop Potter, of New York knows as little about us poor white peo ple in Georgia as we care about bim in New York. He runs withja dioerenc gang to what we ruu with aud traiu with. The good, God fearing people of Georgia are for prohibition and wo don't like the names ue cans us ana tue names be calls our pet theory, such as 'impudent fraud aud impudent failure," and such like, If the bish op will allow me in a brotherly way, I will say to him that what he says on the subject of prohibition, drunkenness, aud soon stamps him as au "impudent fraud'' whether he be an impudent failure'' or not. The business of a minister of God in this world is to champion and fi'ht. agaiust everything that's wroug. There is uot a good man iu Georgia who endorses the sen timentof Bishop Potter, of New York; there is not a rummy or red- nosed rascal iu Georgia who does uot fully endorse his utterances on tbe liquor aud prohibition ques tion. Bishop Potter may vaporize about education and transforma tion and so on, but what the good people of Georgia want is prohibi tion. I tell you, in New York when thev take a bishop around with them and dine him aud wine bim and stuff him and toast him, it don't take bim loug to imbibe tbe views of wine bibbers and gluttons and to preacn tue doctrine oi voluptuaries from the platform How long befoie the bishop and his gang, will be broadening the Ten Commaudments and liber alizing the moral law so they would have it read: Thou shalt not steal less than a million dol lars; thou shalt not break tbe Sab bath, but bend il double if there is money in i': thou shalt uot com uoic adultery by baviug more than one wife at your home; thou shalt not ovet but get all you can aud keep all you get; thou shalt not kill a single mau, but like John Bnll kill them by tbe thousands aud it is all O. K.; thou shalt uot be guilty ot idolatry, worship tbe true and living dollar, etc, 1 miugle and mix much with preachers and people. I don't know a faithful true minisler of God to-dfciv who is uot a Prohibi tionist iu sentiment aud heart, nor do I know a God fearing member of the church who is uot anti whiskv from bottom to top. You may take Jerry Macaulaj's work in New York city among the bums and tugs, the salvatiou of tbe poor and the humble. His sentiments were as much at antipodes with Bishop Pottei's as heaven is from hell. Bishop Potter when dining with his millionaire trieuds with their flow of wines and glow of spirit, is in very poor positiou and attitude to talk to us poor Georgia people, or to advise and counsel anvbodv, but the 400 of New York. You cau mighty uigb tell what gang a fellow is ruuuing with when you read bis sentimeuts and lis ten to his views. It is a very hard matter for a preacher to say anythiug that will wound a bro ther in bis church that is worth a million dollars, or comment scrip turally upon the couduct of the rich aud great he runs with social iy. I am satisfied that Bishop Pot ter's views on tbe questiou at is sue are well pleasing to the devil, and he has done that old gentle man a service that be will remem ber bim kindly for, no doubt in the days to come, aud when I look upon the faithful, tried and tme men of Georgia who have seen the saloons, and see their tears and prajers as they struggle to ri 1 our state of this the worst enemy we have, and then have them ridiculed aud cajoled and guyed by a pam- pered priest, I feel like praying for such a mau like ram prayea ror Alexander, tbe coppersmith: 'Oh, Lord, reward him according to his work-," and I dare say that if the bishop will come to Georgia ana ntter sentiments like that, he will hewbeietbe Spiritualist speaker was who bad been speaking tor an hour and had his crowd all aglow with his wonderful rhetoric and logic, audby and by be said: "Now, ladies and gentlemen, I announce the most marvelous phenomena in the spiritualistic world when I say to vou that in tbe realm of tbe I spiritual everything necomes real, that you can there handle a ghost like vou can handle a man." 1 . . - . . About that time a little, measly laced, red-headed, squint eyed, half deaf fellow sitting back iu tbe audience, hollowed oit uAmeu.' The speaker stopped and sa'd: "I am thaukful for a witness to this wonderful proportion, come forward, my friend, and give them Baking Powder Most healthful leavener in the world. Goes farther. : ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO . NtW VOHK the facts and proof of this wonder ful phenomena." He called the fellow up to the front aud said to him: "Now, my friend, give these ladies and gen tlemen the facts on this proposi tion.7 "What, what, what was your proposition?" ' I said, sir, that in the spiritual istic world everything was so real that you could baudle a ghost just like you could baudle a man.7' "Ab, the devil," said the fellow, "I thought you said a goat." It is no ghost, gentlemen, that the bishop has jumped up, it is a goat, and that goat has butted millious into I ell, and I have no doubt be was butting the bishop to good effect when the bishop belched up such sentiments as are accredited to bim. A Masonic lodge is not responsi ble that one of its members got drunk and committed a crime. A great church is not responsible that one of its members violated the law of God, but a Masonic lodge is responsible for the man they elect worshipful master. A church is responsible for who they put at its head. There responsi bility is fixed aud must be met. Give us rjiuisters of God who are true to the right and who look not with Ithe least 'allowance upon siu aud crime, and then I have hopes for the triumph of right and the defeat of wrong. Yours truly, Sam P. Jones. For Over Sixty Tears. Mrs. Winslov's Soothing Syrup has been used lor over 60 years by millions of moth ers for their children while teething, with penecT success. 11 sootnes tne ctiiid, sottens the gums, allays all pain; cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It win relieve tne poor little sufferer imme diately. Sold bv Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other kind. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, Department of State. CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION. To all to whom these Presents may come Greeting: Whereas, It appears to my satisfac tion, by duly authenticated record of the proceeding's for the voluntary dis solution thereof by the unanimous con sent of all the stockholders, deposited in my office, that the Burke Grocery Company, a corporation of this State, whose principal office is 'situated at Morgranton, county of Burke, State of North Carolina (Nathan Lazarus being1 the agent therein and m charge thereof, upon whom process may be served), has complied with the requirements of an act of the General Assembly of North Carolina (Session 1901), entitled "An act to revise the Corporation Law of North Carolina," preliminary to the issuing of this Certificate of Disso lution, Now, therefore, I, J. Bryan Grimes, Secretary of State of the State of North Carolina, do hereby certify that the said corporation did, on the 11th day of January, 1902, file in my office a duly executed and attested consent in writing to the dissolution of said cor poration, excuted by all the stockhold ers thereof, which said consent and the record of the proceedings aforesaid are now on file in my said office as pro vided by law. In Testimony Whereof, I have hereto set my hand and af fixed my official seal, at Ral eigh, this 11th day of Janu Seal. ary, A. D., one thousand nine hundred and two. J. BRYAN GRIMES, Secretary of State. Administrator's Notice Having qualified as admiinstrator'of Miles Edmonson, deceased, late of the county of Burke, State of North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said Miles Edmonson, deceas ed, to exhibit them to the undersigned, ad ministrators, on or before the 31st day of January, A. D. 1903, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate payment and stve cost. This the 30th day of January. A. D. 1902. CA. EDMONSON, F. P. GIL. LAM, Administrators. Avery & Avery, Attorneys. Administrator's Notice. Having qualified as administrator of Riley Talent, dee'd, late of Burke county, N. C, this is to notify all per sons having claims against the estate af the said deceased to exhibit them to tbe undersigned administrator on or before the 29th day of November. 1902. or this notice shall be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted jo the said estate estate will please make immedinte payment. This 29th day of November, 1901. V. B. MULL, Administrator. uiiij " - - r .
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
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Feb. 6, 1902, edition 1
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