Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Feb. 22, 1912, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The News-Herald (Morganton, 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
aw New RALD, 33. Editor and Owner. , Subscription Price $1 Per Year in Advance. ;, xxvii. MORGANTON, N. C, FEBRUARY 22, 1912. No. 43. nib T 3T ft- 1 a- v.3 X ,1 3 - VS. ' a i ar i d - t m ' : 3 S'' i, ir lVO of Fnf NomctlllllP aLlsaF?es Wlth you. don't UU ictitwore its own way through: I .md makes vou feel bad. Clet T-Jrl j .,:i.i ' -it uii.iuy uy SIMMONS RED Z LIVER REGULATOR (THE POWDER FORM) ;:.-Puritios and badly digested food in the stomach and bowels; e t-Srpid liver and restores regular bowel movements. It is a fine i.r.eni runner tnat puts tne vital organs in sound, healthy condition. J Dealers. Price, Large Package, S1.00. If you cannot crt it. rrmit to us. we will send put up also in liquid form for those who prefer re; i' J. rh xttr Rrd 7. on the label. .:v.mins I ivcr Ret:u!arc.r is Look for the Red I. Libel. 11LIN CO.. Proprietors, St. Louis. Missouri t K. iiOUK, Pirector and Emhlmer. fjr.icJ.itc of ot action service? .TON, N. C. N Acting Optician. ;s Caiviuily Tested. Les Fitted. i ensed b State Board. I Engines and Boilers. Peerless Engine azter Keep the Plows Going. Progressive Farmer. From now until spring, every day that the land is in condition, the plows should be eroinir. It is Embalming. true that some lands may wash , t qrMTJa llttle mre and some other Juiitf. : lands may run t ether, so as to require rebr aking, unless th farmer lias a ci k harrow to use, : but in any case the benefits are j likely to outweigh the disadvan 1 tage. It is almost certain that if the breaking o? the land is left until just before planting the j man who uses a one-horse plow, j and in many cases the men who ; use two-horse plows, will think jit necessary to burn the grass ' and "trash" off the land in order !to do what they call "a good job of plowing." In such cases, the land is not only robbed of the thing it most i needs, but it is also practically impossible to prepare a good seed bed if the breaking is delayed until just before seeding. On the surface it may look as if a i wheels. Good j better seed bed had been pre pared, but a loose condition does i Stationary En-; nt necessarily mean a goodseed- i i 3 3 ti j. Boiler cn Ufc:u ailu LI11S 1S especially true j if ram does not come soon. We I complain often of the rush of spring work and give as an ex cuse for half doing some things ; and leaving other things entirely undone that there is not time in which to do as we should. Much of this rush of spring work is due to the fact that we leave much of the preparation which could have been done during the fall and winter until spring. Some may say that the good farmer j does not do this. If this be true, I it is then pqually tru2 that most of our farmers are not good farmers, for every spring we rind most of the land broken late and just before planting. Our mild climate enables us to better distribute our farm work, but we do not take advantage of this condition. The chief cause is probably a lack of system in farm management. P. Price '. Bailer on sills. A bargain at $125.- l jjjj 55? Unique Storyolts Discovery illft Stan. IKIgi&T Tut Champion car "Just a countryman that's all," is the way the grower of this remarkable ear of corn, Mr. Fred C. Palin, styles himself. Though he is admitted to be one of the leading corn experts in the country one whose services are greatly in demand as a judge of corn exhibits, Mr. Palin asks for no greater honor or distinction than to be known as a plain Hoosier farmer, and while he openly professes a reasonable pride in the achievement of grow ing the famous ear of corn which was adjudged the most perfect ever grown, it is without a shadow of ostentation. THE VlUKClLOSe TROAfV good, but we were a little late with the harvest. The men were going through the fields with the wagon in the usual way gather ing the corn, and the harvest was a promising one. "We have a sort of corn show at my farm all the time, and there is always an award for ex ceptionally good ears of corn- ears sufficiently true to tvpe to permit of their being exhibited. There is a small box on every corn wagon in which the most perfect ears are thrown. These, when properly selected, consti tute the seed corn, and among these more perfect ears we oc- PARENT PLANTS The World's Greatest Ear of Corn. VAI.IETY-Palin's Corn Flake Yellow. (Named after winninj the W. K. Kellogg 1,000 Trophy.) A HYBRID The seventh year production. ) Male Reid's Yellow Dent. Female Alexander's Gold Standard. v DIMENSIONS Length, 10$ inches. Circumferance, 7 inches. Number of rows, 20. Length of kernels, f of an inch. Width of kernels, about of an inch. Thickness of kernels, 1-7 of an inch. Arrangements, very uniform, kernels running in straight rows the entire length of the ear without a misplaced grain, holding their length well to the ends of the ear, tip being well covered with dented grains. Weight, 20 ounces. Estimated proportions corn. 92 per cent; cob, 8 per cent. G. H. TURNER, Dealer in Machinery, STATESVILLE, N. C. The champion ear of corn was casionally find an ear that we WANTED ! MB E R Sept. 15th I are a man on my yara old Piedmont Springs ::Morganton to meas :i pay for all kinds of green and dry. cash prices paid for on delivery. Will any amount of mer-lumoer. 3. ATKINSON. not an accident. There can be j no greater lesson in the value of careful study and painstaking selection of seed and breeding than the experiences of this same Palin. The farmer who thinks he stands a chance to go into his corn field and by a piece of luck pick out an ear which Nature has fashioned even more perfect ly and with it wrest the honors from this Indiana man, cannot do better to disabuse his mind of this fallacious notion than to read the story of Palin and his cham pion ear. , ill 3fiiWrJ A WEBSTEfCS It New c InurhationalWI Dictionary 1 HE MERMAM WEBSTER? 1 because jt is a new ceea- . TlnV f.r-.7Tin. OT7P7-1T f -sli of the world's thouzht. k "ttoa and er.lt.UTP. Thf cinlv e csabridged dictionary in 7 years. Realise lt define8 over 400,000 John Ross Reprieved by Governor. Raleigh Dispatch. 16th. John Ross was not electrocuted today for the murder of Mr. and Mrs. John Dixon near Shelby, Dec. 17, as scheduled. He has been reprieved by Gov. Kitchin to April 12th in the hope that he will be induced to make a full and clear statement of the mur der, that will lead to the punish ment of others who officials be lieve were necessarily accessory to the brutal crime, FRED C. PALIN. - In the first place, Palin knDws corn If there were not more are willing to exhibit m a con test. "On the day the champion ear was found, I was at the house and at dinner time one of the men brought it in and laid it, with a number of other ears, upon the window sill in the well room for me to take and put away in" the' seed house. 'Well,' I said, 'do you think you've got a good ear there?' 'It looks to me like a good , ' "1 ITTfl T ll 1 ear, ' ne said, w nat ao you ininK of it?' I picked it up and looked it over, wen, 1 saia nnany, i think it is the most perfect ear of corn I ever saw. It's good enongh to win the W. K. Kel logg ;.$1,000 trophy this year at Omaha.' "And I was confident the mo ment I saw it, and looked it over, that I held the trophy winner in my hand. So much so that when left for Omaha to exhibit the t . 1 . e 1 ear, l tooic it out 01 my grip anu showed it to the station agent with the words, 'That's the ear I'm going to win the $1,000 tro phy with." So there's the story of the hampion ear as Palin told it Preparations for the electrocu- pr0of 5f this fact than the bare story of the development and dis- W'orJs : more than ever re appeared between, two 2-wi J'ages. 6ooo II- tMers, Mirations' 5etanse 14 53 only dictionary '-h the new divided A "Stroke of Genius." 4use 13 " encyciopeaia in single volume. canse i3 accepted by the f v'uu"s Bchoola ind ferity one saPreme n- who knows Win a jr Success. Let ua tell r'aaouttr.a new work. D If -j !la of new dlTldad pf nctin IEE m of poekat mpt. t.ion to take dace at 10 o'clock where going forward at 9 o'oclock when the reprieve was served on Warden Sales. Those who talked with Ros before the news or the i reprieve was Drougnu to nun, &o.y he persists in his statement given in the court that he met - Frank Gladden in the road and that Gladden asked him to help kill the Dixons, and that he did kill John Dixon with an axe and that dndden went to the house and killed Mrs. Dixon, leaving the lit tle chill, fourteen months old, beside her, Gladden was tried at Shelby and acquitted a ftw weeks ago. There were here today for the expected electrocution Sheriff Wilkins, and Mr. Kline, father o? Mrs. Dixon. covery of the champion ear, is would be enough. And in proof of this fact, here is the story at he told it himself: "It was in November, 1910, and we were just harvesting oui rrvrv The weather had beer X v w : yhzo &$i.oo? -'- :- i i" COTTLE FREE 8 ' gcai.- rJ3Jf JTalB W Gov. Wilson has declined an invitation to speak in Ohio. He says it would be discourteous for h;m to invade Ohio in view 01 the fact that Gov. Harmon, of that State, is aho a candidate for President. Here i a message of hope and good cheer from Mrs. C. J. Martin Boone Mill. Va., who is the mother of eJgn v.iiiirn Mrs. Martin was cured of stomnch trouble and costipation by ni.amhPrlain'a Tablets after five years of suffering, and now recommends these tablets to the public. Sold by all dealers. Scott's Emulsion keeps children healthful and happy. Give them a few drops of this strengthening food medicine every day and watch them grow. IT PREVENTS Croup Whooping- Cough Bronchitis Loss of Flesh and many other troubles ALL DRUGGISTS 11-15 story. He tells it willingly, though modestly, 'for he knows that his story whenever told is a source of great encouragement of the thousands of farmers who never had a better chance than he had himself. Palin was born and brought up on a farm near Newtown, Ind. He has never owned a foot of farm land in his life, and the 360-acre farm on which the champion ear of corn which won the Kellogg Trophy was grown is a' rented farm. Mr. Palin' s real experience as a farmer began about sixteen years ago. He had been on the road as a grocery specialty sales man, when he took a notion that he would rather be an agricul turist, so he took a few short courses at Purdue University and rented a portion of the farm he now occupies. Nine years ago he began carefully breeding this new variety of com. For two years he planted two rows of Reid's Yellow Dent, then two of Alexander's Gold Standard, detas seling the Gold Standard. From the detasseled rows he picked for seed only the ears carrying the characteristics he wanted to reproduce, planting these in breeding plots and maintaining careful selection, so that in nine years' time he had developed a a well-settled type. The Palin champion ear was the first winner of the W. K. Kel logg National Corn Trophy, a handsome silver and enamel cup made by Tiffany of New York at a cost of $1,000. Mr. Kellogg as the originator and manufacturer of Toasted Corn Flakes naturally has a deep interest in the develop ment of the higher grades of corn, for the company of which he is president, the Kellogg Toasted Corn Flake Co., requires ten thousand bushels of corn a day for the making of its pro duct. The Kellogg trophy was offered to be awarded in annual competition for the best single ear of corn until won twice by the same producer. The fact that the Kellogg product is made only from selected white corn. while the winning ear was pro nounced yellow type, was a pe culiar feature. The Ke logg trophy was won in 1910 at Columbus, Ohio, by R. A. James of Charleston, 111., with a magnificent ear of JReid's Yellow Dent, but not so perfect an ear as that which originally won the trophy and which has become known as "the best ear of corn ever grown. The next award of this trophy will be made at the next Na tional Corn Exposition, which will be held in February, 1913, at Columbia, S. C. It i3 planned to make this exposition much broad er in scope than any held in the past, and consequently a longer time will be required t "r prepa ration, Speical buildings are be ing erected for the exposition, the main building to b 400 by 167 feet, ground measurements. The show will last ten days. The state of South Carolina has appropriated $40,000 for the ex penses of the exposition and the prospect is that Dixie will do herself proud" in an effort to make this expositijn the great est f its kind ovvr held. v4 Improvement of Public Highway?. Fro n the United States Office of Tub'.ic Roads. Even with a high-powered au tomobile that could keep up a pace of 93 miles a day indefinite ly, it W)uld take a man more than 65 years to cover all the public roa Is in the United States. A young man of twenty staiting out to accomplish this tremendous task would be 85 before he had c vered the last mile cf public highway in this country. After an investigation extend ing over many months, Logan Waller Page, Director of the Of fi2e of Public Roads, has ascer tained that there are now 2,199, 645 miles of public roads in the United States. The figures in clude all the new roads built up to the year 1909. In 1904 there were exactly 2,151,479. It is rp pirent, therefore, that the in creased mileage of new roads within a period of about five years ha3 been' 48,266. "The investigation just con cluded," said Director Page, in an interview, "shows conclusive ly that the movement for the im provement of public highways has obtained a firm grip on the country. The percentage of roads which were eally improved,, amounted to 7.14 in 1904, while in 1909, to which year statistics are now available, the percentage was 8.66. "It is interesting to observe ;he growth of improved methods in road construction. For in stance, the total mileage of stone roads in 1904 was 36,818, while in 1903 it was 59,237. The total mileage of gravel roads in 1904 was 109,905, while in 1909 it was only 102,870. This decrease in gravel roads, however, was due to a reclassification of roads. Many of those reported in 1904 to be of gravel proved to be of some other substance, while ex aggerations were eliminated. "The total mileage of sand- clay, brick, bituminous-macadam and other improved roads in 1904 ras 6,806, while in 1909 the mileage reached 28,372." The Office of Public Roads has just issued a table showing the states having the largest mileage of improved roads: 1904 23,877 23,460 5,876 10,633 9,486 ll Absoiuiaiy Pure if ijj Economizes Butter, Flour,v W yji Eggs; makes the food more (W If appetizing and wholesome jftf fm The only Baking Powder nade m from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar Wr Opportunity at West Point. Deeply fixed in the thought of the more well-to-day, is the belief that anything like equality of opportunity or condition would be incompatible with their own enjoyment and with ef ficiency of work in the lower classes. The dignity of self-sustained leader ship on ti e cr.e himl, and the spur of necessity ou ti e o;Vsr, seems to them the only f". t 3 v l.'ch can keep the world moving. But this belief has really no higher authority than that of tradition urd long-established cus tom. Wcit Point, and in only a less decree I1;- service outside, demon-ctrr-ies ': impotence of wealth or privilege a necessary spur to en deavor. Equality of opportunity, priv ileges, and pecuniary rewards are found to be in no sense Incompatible with individual initiative, with effi ciency in work and with the general happiness. No loss results rather, the reverse from the absence of all ex traneous advantages, and from com pelling every one to stand on his own. merit, performing the work for which he is fitted, without any reference to the pecuniary compensation, which ht receives. The Atlantic. A Sign of Age. "I guess he must be getting old." "Why?" "He's quit thinking that be can ling." . . . SIGHT TOO VALUABLE To be neglected. Sutherland's Eagle Eye Salve will cure any case of sore eyes, granulated lids, opthalmia or any inflamed condition of the eyes. Painless and harmless. 2.-c a tube at all dealers. Indiana, Ohio, New York, Wisconsin, Kentucky, Illinois, California, Massachusetts, 7,924 8,803 7,843 1909 24,955 24,106 12,787 10,167 10,114 8,914 8,587 8,463 A mass meeting of citizens of Warren county was held a few days ago to formally announce the candidacy of S. G. Daniel for the Democratic nomination for corporation commissioner. FOR DYSPEPSIA. You Risk No Money if Yon Try This Remedy. We want every one troubled with indigestion and dyspepsia to come to our store and obtain a box of Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets. They contain Bismuth-Subnitrate and Pepsin carefully combined so as to develop their greatest power to overcome digestive disturb ance. Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets are very "pleasant to take. They tend to scothe the irritable, weak stomach, to strengthen and invig orate the digestive organs, to re lieve nausea and indigestion, thus promoting nutrition and bringing about a feeling of comfort. If you give Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets a reasonable trial we will return your money if you are not satisfied with the result Three sizes, 25 cents, 50 cents, and $1.00. Remember, you can obtain Rex all Remedies only at our store The Rexall Store. W. A. Leslie. No Man is Stronger Than His Stomach A strong man is strong all over. No man can be strong who is suffering from weak stomach with its consequent indigestion, or from some other disease of the stomach and its associated organs, which im pairs digestion and nutrition. For when the stomach is weak or diseased there is a loss cf thex nutrition contained In food, which is the source of all physical strength. When a man "doesn't feel just right," when he loesn't sleep well, has an uncomfortable feeling in the stomach after eating, is languid, nervous, irritable and despond -ent, he is losing the nutrition needed to make strength. Such a mart should use Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It cures diseases cf the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It enriches the blood, invigorates the liver, strengthens the kidneys, nourishes the nerves, and so GIVS ff2i'f STKEiVGl'H TO THE WHOLE BOIiY. Yon can't efford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this non alcoholic medicine of known composition, not even thoui;'i the urgent dealer may thereby mak-: a lift's bigger profit. Ingredients printed on wrapper. There is no better medicine maec. for colds than Chamberlain's Coujjh Remedy. It acts on nature's plan, re lieves the lungs, opens the system to a lealthy condition. For sale by all iealers. 4 Gov. Kitchen has increased from $250 to $400 the reward offered for - the murderers of Myrtle Hawkins, of Henderson county. Tne total reward from all sources now aggregates $750. B'JCKSHE'S SEE23 SUCCEED 1 t- e? r r a e & & F? V-. attie to bo:U JfoTT Knrlrcss, AtrtalWHl tiinka vou our nennaaeiit cvxtomer. rrrp fn1lPfr!n Ritf-k, 17 varieties; . - . tv. 1 !:IT:.(S: IOi:.mw-, na f.wwt : irwul?. t Bplend.il ; o!u. S best vavie- tltis i0 3yrip.flwt'fi s osibi i.j va.r.ctiL-s .a an. u, . . . . t rw .1 .... - . . I' Wiiie todsy; Mention this Psper. BEKD 10 CENTS I to eorer poF r.d packing ai d rccIva t.i!s vamable I i eol)ect:an ' 9 o1 nild, topctlier T. i'.l'. my big i t ituti uriive. liimitsi'iil f-ceil tnd ilr.nt lino, t tells i! hout & HztA Tirict-.os ot 3c? !i, ".:, tc &. $k it W p. 14io 5is. STSciT $ ft: ft;? PARROT AS GERM CARR1EF Physicien Finds the Bird Is Subject to Disease Human Beings May Contract. ALL, SKIN TROUBLES Axe overcome by using Dr. Bell's Anti- eplic Salve. It is as pleasant to use is pure cream and is guarantee 1 to rive satisfaction. 25c a box. Mortgage Sale o! (Tand. twKKELLOGGl mooo.oo )NALCOITKDI-Tl JV1ADE BY TIFEANV Twice Awarded. To be Com peted for again at tne next Corn Show at COLUMDIA.S.Cr himself. And on the strength of it who wiilsiy that Fred C. Palin doesn't justly merit the title, "I'hs Man who Knows Corn?" But that's not all of Palm's Better not keep a parrot, A physi cian has discovered that birds of this species are subject to a disease called psittacose, which is peculiarly con tagious, and may easily be contracted by human- beings. As a germ carrier, in fact, the parrot is unrivaled. Now the Office "Window Is not par ticularly afraid of germs. They may be quite as bad. quite as dangerous, as they are represented. But what Is the use of trying to get away from tbem? We cannot eat, drink or breathe without taking in germs. We associate with them from morning tin night. They are bound to work their will with us anyway so we may as well ignore them and have as good a tiine as we can, before they get us. But tbe Office Window Is perfectly willing to take advantage of the gerni3 as an ally against the parrot. This preposterous bird has nothing to recommend him except his unlike ness to the bird species. He does not sing, but squawks. He is regarded as worthless unless he can "talk," in a kind of harsh resemblance to hu man speech. He is neither bird nor human; he is a disorderly episode in creation. He grates on the poetic soul. He is a nuisance. New York MaiL Hoping for the Worst. "Jimpson doesn't like you." "I hadn't suspected that. What makes you think he doesn't like me?" "I heard him wishing the other day hat you would buy an aeroplane." $100 REWARD, 5100.3 The readers of this aper will be pleased to learn :hat there is at least one dreaded disease th; science has been able to cure in all its stages, anc hat us Catarrh. Halt s Cattarrh Cure is the onli ositive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a institutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure fc "aken internally, actine directly upon the blood. ind mucous surfaces oi tne system, tnereby de stroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitu tion and assisting nature is doing its work. The oroorietors hive so much faitn in its curative Dow ers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for am case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testi monials. Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, Ohio.3 J3o'H rv T 7Sc. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Rv virtue of a mortgage d ei executed on the 5th diy of February. WiO, by J.D.Leonard and wife, Minnie Leonard, to Adelaide G. Hadley. to seeir: the payment of a dubt of $975.00 and in- ter33". due said AieUuie - iiadicy, tne unaer Big , d, to whom i he sari nior'gige deed has beer asiigned, will, at 12 m . on t'ne llth day of March. 1912. at the Court House door in Morganton, N. C, o fer for sale at public outcry to tho highi st bid der for cash, a tract oi land in silver trreK town ship. Burke county, fully described in said mort gage deed, wnicn is registered in kxi i inu. c, si pigel6?. in the oilicc of tbe Register of Deeds ol K irke county, anatowr.icn raci-cira: u neicujr mide. The debt secured by said mortgage deed was due and payable on the 5th day of Feb., 1912, and sale will be made by reason ot ueiauit in .payment. Thi3 10th day ot reb., l'JIZ. H. M. GROOM. Assignee. Wood's Seeds Fop 1912. Our New Descriptive Catalog' is fully up-to-date, and tells all about the best Garden and Farm Seeds. Every farmer and gardener should have a copy of this cata log, which has long been recog nized as a standard authority, for the full and complete infor mation which it gives. We are headquarters for Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed Potatoes, Seed Oats, Cow Peas, Soja Beans and all Farm Seeds. Wood's Descriptive Catalog mailed free on request Write for it T. V. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, - Richmond, Va. Farmers Need It. A COUGH Is a danger signal and should not be neglected. Take Dr. Be'i's. Pine-Tar-Honey at once. It allays inflammation, stops the cough and heals tho membranes. A BEAUTIFUL WOMAN Must have a beautiful skin Dr. Bell's Antisertic salve removes pi m pies, black heads, cusps, ano rouganc&s, leaving the skin smooth. Try it on out guarantee. The progressive farmer is regarded as the T Y PE of independence. Ht lives well, has practically everything he wants, and has money in the bank Do you know what made the successful farmer.' vvny, it wasn simply tne ap plication oi business principles and methods to agriculture, ll you are a farmer and haven't a business educa tion, you are simply making old Mother Earth give you a bare living. when she ought to yield you a surplus. Apply business principles bookkeep. ing, etc. to your farming operations, and you will be astonished to see how- much more can be done by a little FIG URING than by a lot of SWEATING. For catalogue, address Drauehon's Practical Business College, Charlotte or Raleigh. N. C, or Knoxville oi Nashville, Ter.n. . ; g jj Notice. I C A. Cook enters and locates 251 acres of land in Morganton townsnip, curse county, lying on the head water3 of Bailey's Fork, adjoining lands of J. M. MulL Harvey Deal and tbe iands of Clay- well and Cook grants, beginning on a stake in the road, J. M. Mull's south-west corner, also J. A. Mull's and Jesse Huffman's corner, and runs east with J. M. Mull's line 60 poles to a stake in Harvey Deal's line: thence south with Harvey Deal's line 22 poles to a stake, formerly a white-oak, the north-east corner oi Claywell grant; tnence west vitn Ciay well gi ant 14 poles to a stake, coi ner said grant; thence south 23 degrees west, crossing i branch 36 poles to a chestnut-oak, corner said rrant; thence south 74 west with line said grant 0 noles to a small white-eak. corner said grant; thence south with line said grant 22 polos to a hestnut-oaV. corner said grant, in Brem's line. and also a corner south-west Cook's 40 acre grant; thence north with line of said Cook grant 70 poles to a stake, corner said grra:it; thence north 15 west with said line and grant, crossing a branch, poles to the beginning. ani runs various course? and distances for complements so as to include vacant land. Entered -Ian. 28th. 1912. UlAny person oi persons claiming the above entry ur a"y part tnere.ii win n:e ineir pruvc&i uctiuii the issuance oi n warrant jor ire same in mt Entry Taker's ffice, and if said protect is no filer1 within thirty days from the date of this notice. I shall issue a warrant for the same as the law directs. This January 31st, isn. I. B. HOLLOWAY. Entry Taker. Frost Proof Cabbage Plants for sale. Fresh and nice. Ap ply at The News-Herald office. itheumatlc palis are relieved Dy T- Miles' Anti-Fain Pilla. NORTH CAROLINA. Burke County. ' In Superior Court. )' Before the Clerk. Lucy Brown and others, vs. Mary Whisnant. Widow. Joseph Whisnant, and others. NOTICE. The defendant, Joseph Whisnant, above-named. wi 1 take notice that an action entitled as above ' has been commenced in the Superior Court of Burke county to allot to the widow. Mary Whis nant, her dower in and to the lands of her de ceased husband. Isaac Whisnant, and to aripoint commissioners as provided by law to divivide and allot to the tenants in common the remaining por tion of said tract of lar.d; and the said defendant Joseph Whisnant will further take notice that he is required to appear before the undfrigned Clerk of the Superior Court of Burke county, at the court house in Morganton, on Monday, the 4th lay oi March. 1912, and answer ar demur to the petition filed in said pction, or the petitioners will ippiy to the court for the relief dcmar.ced in said petiiion. This the 31st day of January, R91?. L. A. BRISTOL. Clerk Superior Court Burke County. 3. L. Huffman. Atty. for Petitioners. 3r. Bell's Antiseptic Salve Good for all Skin Diseases Dr. Miles' Anti-Palm Pffla for all fatST, J
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 22, 1912, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75