pli&flotody
from Nowhere
JBY ELIZABETH JOQDAN
corvn
n?c ccMnMv ci
Ninth Installment
WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE
A young woman who knows only that her
name is ,rEvt" finds herself standing on a
Fifth Arenue corner. She has no idea how
she came there or even what city it is.
There is nothing about her with which to
identify herself. While a policeman is talk
ing to her a young man, Eric Hamilton,
stops. Seeing that sne is in trouble he tells
her he has seen her at the hotel where they
are both stopping. He takes her to the hotel
ehere they find that she had registered in
French as "Miss Eve Nobody of Nowhere."
all f 'gB
gamilton volunteers to call in his friend
r. Carrington, a specialist in nervous
troubles. Eve, terrified, eludes the doctor
and through a French porter in the hotel, who
?ays he once saw her in Trance but does
remember her name, she finds a cheap
apartment in an obscure part of town.
In the next apartment lives Ivy Daven
cabaret dancer with a weak heart.
She is friendly, and persnades Eve to go to
"Jake's" and take ner place until she is
better. Her job at Jake's is to entertain
men at the tables and to dance with them.
The other girls there are crude but kindly!
and Eve finds the work not as difficult as
had expected. She is known there as
ft.
iu Bprion. She meet, a rami it
*' " her that i
named Hunt, who frankly tclla her that ahe
n't - -
NOW CO ON WITH THE STORY
He asked the question with a twin
kle, in tacit admission that he had no
right to put it, and she smiled for
givingly.
"I've told you. I'm substituting for
another girl. She's sick."
"AH right," he said, accepting the
I. "We "
rebuff. "Well let h go at that. Shall
we dance again?"
When they returned to their table,
Queenie rose.
"The best of friends gotta part,"
she announced.
"Hold on. What's the idea?"
It was the grinning youth who
spoke?Jackson, his name had proved
to be?his grin wiped from his face
by the abrupt decision. Hunt looked
equally serious, and Queenie regarded
them with approving eyes.
"The idea is that you two ain't the
only boys in the place," she explained,
"arid Jake has give me the high sign
' to move on."
"But, see here?" Jackson protested.
"Now, Willie!" Miss Morris was
almost maternally reproachful. "You
don't, wanta get my girl friend in
bad with the boss the very first night
she's on the job, do you?"
"Clt course not." Hunt rose and
bowed formally, and Queenie led Eve
away.
Better get out while the gettin's
good," she said, and added another
nelpful hint for the novice: "It's wise
to leave guys before they want us
to. That brings 'em back again."
She took Eve to another table on
the short list Jake had sent her. Two
men of a different type sat there, but
they responded to Queenie's initial
advance as readily as the first pair
had done. They were middle-aged
Canadian cattlemen, out for a good
tiny, and they had it with Queenie,
while Eve took such mild share as she
could in the bantering dialogue and
danced several times with each of
them. Apparently thi. encounter was
as successful as the first, fur both men
showed a flattering regret when it
was over. Before that, moreover, they
had unconsciously helped Ere through
the little matter of the first half of
the special program. While this was
in progress she remained with them,
and Jake seemed content with the
arrangement.
The long night wore on. At the
end of it Jake sent for Eve.
"You're awri'," he impersonally an
nounced when she again confronted
him in his office. It was half-past
three and his staff was perceptibly
wilting. So were his remaining
guests, but Jake himself showed no
sign of the night's strain. His linen
was as faultless and his hair as pastfly
flat as they had been at eleven.
"Take-y'-oo-regTar," he added.
"That's good of yon," Eve said.
More and more she liked what she had
heard of "Jake." "But I won't take
the work just now, thank you."
"Why notr
"It realty isn't in my line."
"More-money? Nothin-doin'. Fixed
rate."
"It isn't that," Eve hastened to ex
plain. The money side is quite all
right." It was. She had earned eight
dollars and tome odd cents by her
first night's work.
"Then-whst's-eatin'-yeh T
"I want to do something ebe.1
"What V
T dont know, yet I"
"Awri'." Jake moved the remote
eyes from her face as if this ended the
matter, but when she walked to the
door he asked a question: "How
W-IvyT
Kvr stopped end turned bacW
' "Why ... shell be all right tomor
row night, won't she?"
"Nope. Meanp-three-four-days-p'
rape-more. Keep 'er-job-a-week?let
'er rest Might-fix-'er-up."
There seemed nothing dee to do.
Eve agreed to the temporary Job, and
i the vast gratitude of Ivy,
home at four o'clock.
Eve left her comfortable, and went
back to her own quarters, tired but
uplifted. She had put over what the
had undertaken; she had made eight
dollars; At bed bam offered a Job;
she had been able to keep her walk
ing nightmare at bay and to ieel al
most normal. Best of all, there was
now no endless night to face, for the
night was over. It might be worth
while to accept Jake's offer, if only
to do away with those awful nights
in the court bedroom.
If she could kill another fortnight
that way, and earn the money she so
badly needed. Marcel would surely
have hi; reply from Leon, and that
reply might lead her out of the fog.
She w.uld think the matter over.
However, she did no thinking then.
She fell asleep at once from sheer
exhaustion, and her dreams, when
she recalled them in the morning,
had to do with large buildings and
Queenie added excitedly.
She told him, with all the pride of
the ditcoverer, and Jake again sent
for Eve.
"Doin'fine," he announced.
"Thank you. I'm glad of that"
"S'earyou'French.'
"I beg your pardon?"
"TalksomeFrench."
"Now?"
"Sure."
"Do you speak French?"
"Nope. Butl'ltknow'fyoudo."
Eve laughed. It was the first time
Jake had heard her do it and it ap
pealed to him. His remote look
changed slightly.
"Tha'sthestuff," he approved. "Smil
'"Jake wants you to go an* meet that guy over In the eomer," she
said, eagerly. "I forget his name, but he's O.K."
glaring music and crowds of whirling
figures.
Succeeding nights at Jake's seemed
very much what the first one had
been, with the difference that Eve
had a fixed clientele as well as a
floating one. The Canadian pair came
regularly, and accepted without resent
ment her refusals of their invitations
to luncheons and other diversions out
side of the cabaret. Hunt and his
friend Jackson also became what the
girls called "reg'lars," though Eve
suspected that neither young man
could long stand the financial strain
of such frequent visits, for Jake's, as
Ivy had boasted, was no "cheap joint."
Ivy was able to "get back on the
job" on the fifth night and to go
through her dances with amazing skill
and pep. Her specialty was the "acro
batic waltz" Queenie had mentioned,
and her performance was a revelation
to Eve, who humbly told herself that
as a "substitoot" she had been a joke.
Miss Davenport was a born dancer,
which undoubtedly helped to explain
her employer's patience with her at
tacks. The only employee that com
pared with her at Jake's was a young
Italian among the loose-ankle boys,
whose version of the "Black Bottom"
was the cabaret's best attraction.
Queenie's high kicking was "pood but
not great," as Ivy expressed it. Mai
zie, despite her beauty and her superb
figure, did no solo-work at all, and
was not above the average in the ordi
nary dancing.
Eve decided that Ivy's "acrobatic
waltz" explained Ivy's heart attacks,
and she advised the dancer to drop
some of its more taxing features, Ivy
shook her head.
"Long's I do it. 111 do it right,"
she announced. Art came first with
t
c* ?
Ivy's popularity in the "artists
room" was second only to Queenie's
and at the two girl* stood together on
ill important issues Queenie's rule was
strengthened by her chum's return.
So was Ere't position. Miss Daven
port had a grateful nature. Loyally
and loudly she assured the world
nothing was wrong with Beraon. She
demanded Queenie's continued inter
est in her pro*?g?e, and after a brief
contest of wills she receive, it. The
"head hostess," it appeared, had a hor
ror of being "high-hatted" by any
one; and from the first she had cher
ished a dark fear that the new-comer
was Tiigh-hattia'" and "up-stagin'"
all Jakes artistes. Ivy was finally
able to explain Eve's manner and dic
tion to Queenie's satisfaction. '
"She can't help it," she pointed out.
"She's srf-jicatedl My Gawd I what
can a poor kid do when her folks put
her in schools an' hat her learned all
those thing*?* -
A little later Eve unconsciously
helped her own cause.
iVhere you from, anyhow, Ber
aon?" Queenie demanded one night,
when the novice had been at Jake s a
week. It was the first directly per
m imal sLaA m m M ? I ? .a 'A ,I
M?nai qwftioo iMt no Men put to
Eve, and Eve flushed under it
"I? Oh. Pve lived abroad a good
deal," the ttanancred.
"Where r
"la France."
Queenie nodded. Living abroad ac
counted for anything.
"Can vou talk French?" she asked
, , J ft ... - A ? -A
wttn nKinrri lmcrcsT.
"Y?* a ?
"Honest? Sayt Jakell be glad ol
that I Some Frenchmen blew ui beta
last week, and none of us could parley
with 'em. An' only the night before
jrgo rams Say, III tJl Jake,"
in'sgoodforbusmess. Y'oughtalaugh
more."
Eve answered in French that no
dotibt this was true, but that she
couldn't promise to keep on smiling
indefinitely, though she would do her'
best. Finding it necessary to trans
late this, she did so, and Jake nodded.
"How'boutstayin'on ?"
"I haven't quite decided yet."
"Can'traiseratesbutgiveyuhsameguar
'ntee'sMorris." *
"Thank you. I'tl stay two weeks
longer, anyway, unless something un
expected happens."
"S'allri."
impli
bookkeeping, instead of being paid
nightly as a "substitoot," she was on
Jake's weekly pay-roll at a twenty
five-dollar salary, which was aug
mented by the dance-card* she turned
in.
A week later, when Eve and Hunt
returned to their table after a mid
night Charleston, Queenie hurried to
them with an expression of urgency
she hastened to explain. .
"Jake wants you to go an' meet that
guy over in the corner," she said
eagerly. "I forget his name, but he's
OlC. He's from the West, and he's
been watchin' you ever sine* he come
in. Me jest told Jake he wanted to
talk to you. Interduce yourself. I'm
lookin" titer a big dinner-party."
"Hiss Berson is busy here," Hunt
began. Hunt's air of late had become
slightly proprietary. Miss Morris re
buked him with a friendly shake of her
bead.
"Get wise, get wise," she advised.
"This has happened before an' it'll
happen again. Orders is orders, an'
she s worlrin' for Jake. You had your
turn. P'raps you'll get another later
on," she kindly added.
Hunt's jaw set For a moment he
seemed about to dispute the ruling.
Then his good sense asserted itself
and he rose with a shrug.
"All right," he agreed. "Ill take
you over.
"That'll make a big hit with the
new gay, Queenie murmured ironic
ally. But Eve understood, as she so
easily understood everything Hunt
did and said, the impulse that always
made him escort her through the
dancing crowds to any table where
she was expected.
She walked by Ms side with unwill
ing steps. She never knew what these
encounters might bring, and each time
She thus approached a stranger every"
instinct in her protested against what
she was doing. She constantly re
minded herself that she was there to
talk to and to dance with lonely men,
to help them to he** a pleasant eve
ning, and that the matter ended with
the talk and the dance, and that the
money she was earning was necessary
to her. II Jake's was the sort of
place yneng girls ej^jiood
could visit, as many such girls plainly
considered it, it was surely sale lor
her. Also, she urns plainly of use
here, hi ways she wns not paid for.
The girls trusted her and ashed her
advice. Even Metric had wannad up
since the little session with Jenny,
and the taller had shown a i
asyajaygRft.
WANTED
Fifty ball MltM right away, good
prlca, cub.
6-lS-4t Q. 8. LBONAHD.
. ,i , ... i
1UBAL MTATK LOANS
Loam mad* as lmprorad farm and
tnwa
Improrad fan
S, 7 and 10
W. k UpHVM
9-tO-U Louiabarg, N. C.
Baity Ban. "Tha Bat Ma
far* Beaching U? Hirer
I tea morlnr near tha rlror I
years ago, wa*va alwan aaed BAT
SNAP. Watched a vicious waUr rat
Kibbling at RAT-SNAP oatalta tha
hoaaa Aboat IB mtnataa latar
darted off for tha water to aool hie
hat Be died
wsnjr-r~
hr a p.
drvgglet. and F. R
ADMINISTRATOR* NOTICE
Hiring qualified aa administratrix
of A rate Ollllam, deceased, late of
Fianklln County, North Carolina, this
is to notify all persons baring claims
against the estate of said deceased to
exhibit them to the undersigned at
bis home, on or before June 10th 1M1,
cr this aotloe will be pleaded la bar
of their racersry. All persons In
debted to said estate will please make
Immediate payment
This ltth day of Ja?e l?so.
JULIA B FOSTER.
MMt
RB-8ALE OF LAND
By virtue of the power of Mle con
tained In a certain mortgage deed ex
ecuted by Blllle HIU and wife, to the
undersigned mortgagee, recorded In
Book 210, page 410, Franklin Regie
try, and by virtue of an order of re
sale made In this cause by Hon. J. J.
"iouiig. Clerk Superior Court ot
f ranklln County, the undersigned
mortgagee will, on
MONDAY, JULY 7TH, 1930
al the courthouse door In Loulsburg,
N C.. at public auction, sell to the
highest bidder, for cash, the following
described tracts of land:
Beginning at a point In the middle
of the Loulsbigrg and Raleigh road,
a rock on the Blast side of same and
running along said road South 37d
30 W 8.76 chains S 38d 30 W 7.96
chains to a point marked by a rock
in the Elast side of the road: thence
8 71d 30' E 36.00 chains to a stake In
Ford's line; thence along Ford's line
North Id 20' E 16.80 chains to rock
pile; thence N 71d 15' W 13.13 chains
to a pine Justice corner; thence by
the same corner 12.47 chains to the
point- .of beginning, containing (48
1-4) Forty Eight and One-Fourth
acres, more or less.
Also another tract on the West
side of the Loulsburg and Raleigh
1 Road In front ot the above tract, be
ginning at three cedars on West side
'?f said road; thence running West
to a stake; thence South to a stake,
thence Fast to a persimmon tree on
the North; thence North to three
cedars to the beginning, containing
two acres.
Thla the 13th day of June, 1930.
S. F. HARRIS. Mortgagee.
W. T? Lumpkin, Att'y. 6-20-3t
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of the authority contain
ed In a certain Deed of Trust execut
ed on the 1st day o( June, 1928, to
Southern Trust Company, Trustee, by
H. L Griffin and J. W. Finch and re
corded Id Book 280, Pages 164, 165,
end 166, of the Register of Deeds Of
fice of Franklin County, N. C? default
having been made in the conditions
of said Deed of Trust, the said South
ern Trust Company, Trustee, will, on
the
18TH DAY OF JULY, 1930,
at 12:00 o'clock nocn, at the Court
Fouse door of Franklin County, N. C.,
offer for sale at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash, the follow
ing described lands:,
Those certain lands containing 52
3-4 acres, mere or less, situated in
Cypress Creek Township, Franklin
County, N. C. and described as fol
lows:
First Tract: Being lot No. 4, de
scribed and shown on map of the
estate lands of J. H. Hollingsworth
recorded in Book O, and D 8. page 138,
'n the Office of the Clerk of the Court
for Franklin County. N. C. and begin
ning at a stake, corner No.' 3, in line
No. 1; thence S S5d E 52 poles to a
stake and pointers, corner of No. 5
In line lot No. 2: thence N 2 l-2d E
101 poles to a stake and pointers, cor
ner. No. 5 In Arrington's line: thence
Arrington's line N 87d W 52 poles to
a stake and pointers in Arrington's
line,jcorner No. 3; thence S 2 l-2d W
99 poles to the beginning, containing
32 acres, more or less.
Second Tract: Being lot No. 2 (in
part), as shown on the map above re
ferred to, containing 14 acres, more
or lesa Begins at a stake Mrs. Mitch
ell's corner; thence N 2 l-2d E 45
poles 16 links to a stake, Mrs. Mitch
ell's corner; thence N. 85d W 63 poles
to a stake, corner No. 1 of the division
of the late J. H. Hollingsworth lands;
thence 8 2 l-2d W 46 poles to a cor
ner of No. 1 in line of Mrs. Lucy Hol
lingsworth's dower, and also a nee
corner for a dividing line made be-,
tween the land sold to J. E. Wilder
sod that sold to W. A. Mitchell;
thence 8 85d H 62 1-2 poles to the be
ginning, being the same and describee
in deed from James M. Harris and
wife to L. F Inscoe, dated January
6th., 1226, recorded in Book 227, page
449, Franklin County Registry.
Third Tract: Beginning at a stake.
8. a Corner of lot No. 3, as shown by
plat of the division of the J- H. Hol
lingsworth lands, about referred to,
and a subsequent survey made by Jos.
T. Inscoe, Surveyor, Sept 2nd.. 1927;
running tbence N 3 l-2d E 14 poles 4
links to a pine stump Griffin and
Finch corner; thence 8 32d W 57 poles
to a stake J. a Wllder's corner;
thence 8 74d E 34 poles to a pine
stump; thence N 31-4d E 41 poles 11
links to a stake; thence containing
6 1-9 acres, more or lees.
A deposit of ten per cent of the
r mount bid Will be required of tbe
successful bidder at the hour of sale.
This notice dated and posted this
17th day of June, 1930.
SOUTHERN TRUST CO.,
Trustee.
By W. A. Worth. Atfy. 6-90-61
SALE or VALUABLE FARM
PROPERTY
Under nnd by virtue of the author
ity conferred upon ua In a deed of
truet executed by J. D. Kearney (un
married) on the 2nd day of April 1926
and recorded In book 246, page 629,
we will on Saturday the
6TH DAY OF JULY. 1930
12 o'clock noon at the courthouse door
in Lcunburg, N. C., Franklin County,
sell at public auction for cash to the
highest bidder the following land, to
wlt:
That certain piece, parcel or tract
of l.ind, containing 143.65 acres, more
or less, situate on the Franklinfon
OTeedmoor Road about 3 miles south
west from the Town of Franklinton,
N. C., in Franklinton Township,
Franklin County. State of North Car
olina. the same being bounded on the
North by the lands of J. H. Conyers
and O. H. Pergason, on the east by
the lands of C. H. Pergason and
Claude Cheatham, on the south by
the lands of N. Y. Oulley and on the
West by the lands of N. Y. Gulley
and Popes Church and beginning at
a point, corner for Church lot in J.
H. Conyers line, and running thence
along Conyers line N 88 l-2d E 21
chs to Pergason line; thence along
Pergason line S 1 l-2d W 51.67 chs;
thence S 87 1-2 D E 12.12 chs to
Cheatham line; thence along Cheat
ham's line S 2 l-2d W 2.62 chs to
Gulley line; thence along Gulley line
N 88 l-2d W 40.87 chs; thence N
8 l-2d E 39.07 chs N 47 l-2d W 1.90
chs N 16d W 2.36 chs; thence along
Popes Church line N 47 l-2d E 6.42
chs; thence N 9 l-2d E 7.22 chs to
the beginning, and being the lands
conveyed to J. D. Kearney by the re
maining heirs at law of Dardlnella
Usry by deed dated recorded in book
page , Registry of
Franklin County, N. C.
This sale is made by reason of the
failure of J. D. Kearney (unmarried)
to pay off and discharge the indebt
ednes secured by said deed of trust.
A deposit of 10 per cent will be
required from the purchaser at the
sale.
This the 22nd day of May. 1930.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF DURHAM, Trustee.
Durham, N. C.
Yarborough & Yarborough,
Atty's 6-6-5t
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executor of
the ectate of Peter Hawkins, deceas
ed. late of Franklin County, N. C..
notice is hereby given all parties
holding claims against said estate to
present them to the undersigned on
or before the 23rd day of May, 1931,
or this notice will be plead in bar of
their recovery. All nersons indebted
to said estate will please come for
ward and make Immediate settlement
This May 22. 1930.
HUBERT HAWKINS,
E-23-6t ^ Executor.
NOTICE
Having qualified as administrator
of the estate of Henry N. Strickland,
deceased, late of Franklin County, N.
C-, notice is hereby given all parties
folding claims against the said es
tate to present them to the under
signed on or before the 23rd day of
May, 1931 or this notice will be
plead in bar of their recovery. All
persons indebted to said estate will
please come forward and make iaune
diate settlement.
This May 22, 1930.
F. J. BEASLEY, Adm'r.,
Ya rborough A Yarborough,
Atfys 5-23-6t
NOTICE
Having qualified as administrator
of the estate of Mrs. M. M. Perry de
ceased, late of Franklin County, N.
C.. notice is hereby given all parties
holding claims against the said estate
to present them to the undersigned
on or before the 20th day of June.
1931 or this notice will be plead in
bar of their recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate will please
come forward and make immediate
settlement
This June 19th, 1930.
N. M. PERRY,
f-20-St Adm'r.
FORECLOSURE SALE
By virtue of power contained in *
mortgage-deed, executed by Julias C.
McKnight, Nancy McKnlght, Del ma
McKnlght, Louis R. McKnlght, record
ed in the office of the Register of
Deeds of Franklin County, Book 233
at page 83, default having been made
In the payment of the debt therein
secured, on request of the holder of
the same, I shall sell by public auc
tion to the,highest bidder for cash at
the Court House Door in Loulsburg.
N. C.. at 12 o'clock noon on
MONDAY, JULY 21ST. 1930,
the following described property
Bounded on the West by Benjamin
8mith, on the Soidth by the old pub
lic road, on the East by the M. B.
Hedgepeth (193) acre tract, and . on
the North by W. H. Smith and June
Smith, the same being along the line
of and in both Vance and Franklin
Counties. This being a part of the
Stegall Tract owned by the late J. E.
Hedgepeth. This being the same land
deeded by M. B. Hedgepeth and others
on the 19th day of January. 1918, to
Fannie B. Smith tor division, con
taining 97 acres. Reference is here
by made to the above mentioned
mortgage for further description.
CITIZENS BANK ft TRUST
COMPANY. Administrator of
Mrs, Fannie & Smith. Mort
gagee.
Perry ft Klttrell, Atfys. ?-20-St
June 19. 1930.
Henderson. N. C.
SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE
Under and by virtue of Om authori
ty contained in that action entitled:
"The Atlantic Joint Stock Land Bank
of Raleigh, a corporation, Ve. Mrs.
Annie Pearl Harrison, et a Is", the
ttderslgned Commissioner, will on
MONDAY, JULY 7, 1920
it being the first Monday in the month
of July, at or about the hour of 12:90
o'clock noon, at the courthouse door
in Louisburg, North Carolina, offer
for sale and sell to the highest bidder
for cash, the following described real
estate, to-wit:
All that certain piece or parcel of
'.and, lying and being In. Cedar Rock
Township. Franklin County, State of
North Caarolina. adjoining the t?n?i?
of Mrs. Fannie Chaplin, E. Harrison,
Coppedge's Old Mill Pond, et als.
bounded as foflows: Beginning at a
white oak, E. Harrison's corner at the
high water mark of Coppedge's Old
Mill Pond; thence S. 6 l-4d E 39
poles, 5 links to a large pine; thence
8 4 l-4d E 145 poles 9 links to an iron
stake to E Harrison's line; thence N
70d W 60 poles to a stake; thence N
2d W 76 poles to a stake about 6 ft
east of a large white oak and two
small pine pointers; thence N 47d W
SI poles to a stake and 2 pine point
ers, Fannie Chappel's corner; thence
N 39d E 106 poles, 17 links to a pop
lar and black gum pointers. Mrs.
Chappel's corner at the high water
mark of the Old Mill Pond; thence
down the high water mark of the said
Old Mill Pond to the beginning, con
taining 85 3-4-acres, more or less;
and being the same lands conveyed
to Annie Pearl Harrson by her father
and 'mother, W. T. Dean and wife, Cora
Dean, by deed dated Sept. 10, 1910,
and duly recorded in the office of the
Register of Deeds for Franklin Coun
ty in book 177, page 563.
A cash deposit of 10 per cent of the
price bide will be required of the bid
der at this sale and if said deposit is
not made, then this land will be im
mediately resold.
This the 30th. day ot May, 1930.
G. M. BEAM,
6-6-5t Commissioner.
SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE
By virtue of the power of sale con
tained in that Deed of Trust exe
cuted by Berry J. Overton and wife
Mary Overton, and Carrie Overton,
dated April 29. 1925, to W. H. Ruf
Gn, Trustee, which deed of trust is
recorded in Book 251, page 258,
Franklin Registry; default having
been made in the payment of the in
debtedness therein secured, and de
mand for foreclosure having been
made by the holder of said note there
[ under secured, I will, on
MONDAY, JULY 7, 1930,
$t the hoiHL-of noon, at the courthouse
door in Louisburg, N. C? offer for
sale at public auction to the highest
.bidder, for cash, the following tract
of land situate in Goldmine Town
ship, to-wit;
Lot No. 1 in division of H. S. Gup
ton land, devised to said Mary Over
ton and daughter. Carrie Overton, by
G. S. Gupton, Will Book", page 50
51-2, reference to which is hereby
made for further description, contain
ing 73 acres, more or less.
This the 6th day of June, 1930.
THOS. W. RUFFIN, Execu
tor of Wm. Hi Ruffin, de
ceased Trustee.
W. L. Lumpkin, Attorney.
Pcsted this June 6th. 1930. 6-13-4t
NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND IN THE
TOWN OF YOUNGSVILLE, N. C
FOR DELINQUENT TAXES
At about the hour of noon at the
Mayor's Office in Youngsville. N. C.,
on Monday July 7th. 1930. I will sell
at public auction to the highest bid
der for cash, pursuant to the laws of
North Carolina and the Charter of
the town of Yonngsville, N. C., all
lands an said town on which taxes
for the year of 1929 or any fraction
thereof remain due with costs added
as revised by Section 8009 Consolidat
ed Statutes. 1919 and Amendments
thereto, described as follows:
I T Winston, llot Main St, tax
$17.00, cost $1.20, total $18.20
J. C-^Winston Est. 1-3 Gin Lot,
tax $3.33, costs $1.20, total $4.53
Young Bros. 1 lot Church St. 1
lot College St, tax $29.10
costs$1.20. total $30.30
M A Young 1 lot Main St. tax
$6.00, costs $1.20, total $7.20
Cheatham Bros. 0 lots Cross St.
tax $102.00. costs $1.20. total $103.20
W A Alston. 1 lot Pine St, tax
$2.00, costs $1.20, total $3.20
Gillie Baker Est. 1 lot Persim
mon St, tax $4.00, costs $1.20,
total . $5.20
II D Debnam l lot Pine St. tax
$2.50, costs $1.20, total $3.70
Violet Fuller, llot Pine St. tax
$3.00. costs $1.20. total $4.20
Joe Gailes, 1 lot Nassau St, tax
$3.00. costs $1.20, total $4.20
J W Holden, 1 lot Nassau fit. 1
lot Nassau St. tax $11.50.
costs $1.20, total $12.70
Mrs E T Alford. 1 lot Main St.
1 lot W R. R. St. tax $25.00,
costs $1.20, total $24.20
Mrs B F Burrows, 1 lot Main St.
1 lot Franklin St. tax $800.
coots $1.2$. total $9.20
W C Freeman Est. 1 lot Nassau
St, tax $12.00, costs $1.20 to
tal $13.29
W J Gay, 1 lot College St, tax
$9.00. costs $1.20, total v $10.20
H S Hicks. 1 lot Main St. tax
$5.40, costs $1.20. total $0.00
It H Patterson, 1 lot Franklin
St. tax $15.40. coots , $1.20. to
tal $1?.90
R B Pearce. 1 tat Main St. 1 tat
College st. tax $11.55. easts
$1.20, total $12.7$
V R Purkerson Est, 1 lot Col
lege St. tax $10.2$, coots $1.20,
total $11.00
Splrojr and Timber lake. 1 tot .
Main St. tax $39.00, costs $1.20
total $21.20
D W SplToy, 1 tat Main St. 2
Iota Winston St. 1 lot Mala
St. tax $1199. costs $1.20, to
tal $17.00
This June 7th, 1900.
HM
a Mow fights Oar the hoot. In
SALE
Grtu Reduction on price of 8ho? re
pair work and Anto top work, com
Saturday, June 28th., 1930
?nd continuing until July, tlat, dur
ing which time prlcea on ehoe repair
work will be aa folio we:
Men'i half eolea, aawad ? 78c
Ladies' eolea SOc
MCn's rubber beell J6c
Lad lea rubber heels ? 28c
1 Nothing charged during this sale.
LOUISBURO REPAIR SHOP
' J. LXHKAK, Fraprlafer
Location at foot Tar Rlrer Bridge
FOB COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
If I Iom yon toM. I thank
you for your Mat support
Yours for wnrloo,
6 20-3t 0. 0. HUDSON
TOR FIRST CLASS JOB PRINTING