4 &wth?Fam*r:J# u When a man asks me what Til take for my cotton I don't - even begin to figure until I've had a chew 1 or PICNIC TWIST. "When your answer means something, itVthen you want something to help you do some quick, clear, jure thinking before you say anything." Last year the farmers made $9,000,000,000 worth of crops. They did some thinking, and PICNIC TWIST helped. Do you want a tobacco that will give you the." punch" today without die "bump" tomorrow? Then try PICNIC TWIST. In it you get only the mild, mellow part of the leaf. In these soft, convenient twists there's more satisfaction than there is in any dark, "strong" tobacco. CHEWING TOBACCO " The Thinners of the Country Are the Tobacco Chaffers " PICNIC gives you a sweet, long lasting chew with none of the "heavy" tobacco's "comeback." You can get a freshness-preserving drum of XI PICNIC TWISTS for 50c. A Fafto Aoeueatlon. "Well. Oulglnback, ' fevere-ly began fl'julrp Rams bottom, "you are chargeo with cursing your mule Id a loud and Loisteroun manner In the public high way, and further abubing the animal by hitting him with a brick. What have you to say Tor youraelf?" "Wy. eab. j-o' honah, o' cou'se. I says 'Not I guilty,' uhkane dut'a p'lntedly what J 1*,' replied tb* citizen of 8enegam b'an descent, a- ho lounged In front of tie bar of justice. "Yaisah. |*a too eniaht a pusson to 'nuae a good mule dat-ub-way. I wm 'drenain' dem aalu brlous remahka to muh wife, what waa in de waggln and dodged when I th'owed de brick at her." ? Judge. NOTIC E Of HALE. Tinder and by virtue of the power of wale contained In a certain deed of trust executed by Marian na W. Styron and himband, A. W. Btyron, to H. C. Carter, Jr.. Trustee, which snld de*d of truat in dated January 1 ?*, 1914. and In duly r?noTd*d In ? *>?? office of the Reenter of Peed" ?or Beaufort county In Book 18ft. at *2. and Is hereby referred to ?ve underpinned trustee will on v^ndav the 22nd day of February. 1VR. at the Courthouse door In n*??nfort county, at 12 o'dlock noon, ^ffer for sale to the highest bidder for rash, the following described rpnT **tate. to-wltr Sftirat*. lylnr nnd hrln* In TWa f-irt Miinty. North Carolina. In Pan ?*ro town*hlt?. and dwrlb^d aw fol low** On Punwo rt**r. ImkIhhIiir at .Tno. Flubro'p corner no P'iniro rlr *t- runntnr thwnr* South flffy-two rimf sixtv-wlx pole?: thenro South ^viriT^|r^ R1xty.?V*ht polos *r> 'ho point of Marah: ?h*nco Routh Thlrlv-two Eaat Flrhtr-Micht polo# ?? th? inoiith of Harrlng Crook tr ?? ??*??? thonco North Fortr-flra Eu' polo*: thoneo Northerly with f 'h" of marked fromi which divider th? pri?*#nt wold land mid Hatnuol <"1atV, whlrh linn *?? mad" as ft dl Tha Intei-eat In th# for?*oln< land* and prarolaaa to h* aold at thla anla la the lnt?*raat of tha Mild Ma riana W fltrron and huM>and only. Ihi?me bfilnta on# half nndlvlrW Intaraa* in arid to Maid landa and prorata**. Pafault baring haan mada in tha Tjavna^nt of tha not# aecurad by ?aid Da*d of Tro*, and dam?nd having haan mada by tha hotdar nf aald nata, thla aala la haM for th* purnoaa of aattafytog th* d*bt. Thla Jrttii day of Jam. Ill* H G. C ARTE F . SH . Trw Villon linn b*twe*n H+Mry ajid Rain Hal Clark, running with thla If n#> no far as a ronm% N?>'rU? fWxty Went arrow* to Jno. = Klsbro'* Jhie, will Include on? hundred arras to the be ginning on the rlverr. It being tha snme lot of land whtoh waa aat a part to Catharine Clark In tha dMs lon of tha lands of her lather, Caleb Clark, whkrh 1a racorded In tha of fln* of the Raglstar of I)e*da for Beaufort county. Good NewsTo 4 Calomel Users Dodivon's Liver Tone is a perfect vegetable remedy to take instead of calomel and 1b guaranteed to he harm lean. If you have trouble witli constipation or biliousness, be careful how you take calomel, because calo mel is a form of mercury, and if mercury remains in the system very long, it will aalivat* and seriously injure the strongest person that ever lived. If you nesd something to etart tl\*. liver to working take Dodaon'a Liver Tone. It Is a harmless vegetable liquid which will liven up the Hver aa well as calomel does and without any bad after effects. No reetrlctlon of habit or. diet is necessary. Dod son'a Liver Tone la aa safe for chil dren as It la for grown people and everybody like* Its teste. Buy a bottle for fifty cents from Lee Dayenport, and If jou do not And that It ebeolutely fcekes the pleeo of calomel, the drug store will giv* you yonr money back as toon as you ask for It. No argument ? this is the guarantee that balks. notice of halk. I7nd*r >nd by rlrtue of <he powfir of Ml?t oontalned In t of truat *reeuted by H. C. Rrapr*w and wlf* *nd M. O. Peele and wife on Aa|ui4 2nd. 1913. the nnderetrned truitee <*111. on Tueaday. February 1?th 1&1B. at 11 o'clock noooo. aoll a* ho Court houto door. Beaufort conn ?y. to tha highest bidder for eauh ho following described property: A tract of land In Chooowlnlt' 'ownihlp and In tho town of Choco ?Inlfcy. county of B^anfort and atat' ?f Worth Carolina, bounded aa fol Iowa: Beginning at a etske on the wMt dde of the Washington and Hew lem road at a distance of 36 yardr *rom N. C .Hughes' and J. W. Hays' orner: thence parallel wtth the sal' road South' 48 West St yards to t 'take; thence parallel -with the dl "1?1 on line between the lend* of N. C. Hughe* and J. W. Bare* North 53 degree* and IS mfontea west $o rarde to a stake; thenoe North 48 Kast 28 yard* to a stake; theno South S3 degree* 16 mlnutee Kas' 60 yards to the flrat station; con 'alnlng by actnnl surrey, a fraction lees than one-third ofa n acre, the ?ald land having been conneyed to H. <!. Bregaw and *f. G reele. ar ?pp*ers hr deede to them d?ly re -srrded !n the office rrf the Reflet#' of Deeds of Beaufort County f& Befits 170 at page iej, and 1ST 6t page SB#. i%i. iu? dBT of ft# till. C. H. HARDWO, X~~J Woman. The n.o?t ^ tuple," innst frivolous ?nd thoughtleaa *oji?d hides at the hot torn of her soul a ap*rk of heroism, which neither she herself nor anybody else suspect*, which she nevei show* If her life runs its normal course, hut which springs Into evidence and mini feats Itself by actions of devotion tud self-sacrifice if fate strikes her or thase whom ahe loves Then she does not wince. she does not complain nor give way to uselesa despair, bui" rushes Into the breach. The woman who hesitates to put her feet Into cold, placid water, throws herself Into the oerlls of the roaring, surging maat ?*rom. ? Lombroso. NOTICE OF 8ALB Under and by virtue of the power of eale contained In a certain mortg age deed executed to the onder&tan- 1 ?d by R. H. Reeves, irtilch said mortgage Is duly recorded In the of flee of the Register of Deeds for Beaufort county, in Book 182, a' page 10, and la dated the trd da? of September, 1914, and la hereb? referred to, the und enOgoed will, oi the 22nd day of February, 191i, a* 12 o'clock noon, offer for Gale, ?? the Courthouse door In Beaufor* county, to the highest bidder fot ?*aflh, the following real estate, to wit: Being lot No. 3 an laid off by W P. Paugham which wan aa follows ?* T,ot No. 5ft McNalr town, ^aa lml?" ?>ff Into 6 lota of 85 feet front, br 95 ft. deep (16 feet being lefts* anal 'eyto bo used In common by tbo?e J 'old the six lota to. or to their hHr? *?nd assign*. ind thla lot No. 2 lie* Set ween the ?*orner lot deeded to P T. Hodges and th* third lot aold t' ^loqnt Gordon. The lot No. 80 w?? Sy Julia M. Rtaton aold to BauKbar % Bragaw. by deed dated 10th da* >f November. 1892. and recorded I* ^ook 82. page 103. Beanfnrt connb -ecords. and Wm. Bragaw convey ?M Ma one-half Interest to W. P Baugham by deed dated Januafr 1, 1895. and recorded in Book 89 page 110. This 22nd dsy of .Tan. 1915. EDWARD L. 8TKWART, ^ i Votlea Is harabr firm that tft* undaralmad tii tbli da r qmiiiiL M mentor of the aatata of N.nc Kln?. dacasMd. lata of Daatifort 0* . ??<! ill " parnona holding claim ?*?ln?t tha amid aatata will pmJ< tfc* man to ma, dalr rartllad. wit* nt r?ar from thla data, nr ||)' nntlca will k? (bod ad la bar of tbab raeorarr. All parians indaMad f? UM aatata will |1mh malra |DIW. ll?'? pa mailt Till to, ut. 1*11. tj; j. J.I >, * UiQfll, know sound travel said thai* It Trow* for a man's granted tbe possibility of aucn u t an tic lungs, to travel to Ban Fran clsoo through the air. On the wires It takes less than one -fifteenth of a sooond. Electricity was driving Or. Bell's "ahoy" at the rste of-* 56.000 miles per second. 80006* ] un abetted, limps along In covaj^tff, Hon. making only 1,160 f?6t per igm ond. So If there was pride In the facer of the engineers -who cluttered round Dr. Bell as he talked to "Prlend Watson" today there was mnwmm mmmmnm-Ktm l? TTp 4p ?.At Mia longest telephone line In the world was between New York ?nd Den ver. "but Mr. Carty and hte young nsen have gone their previous record 1,300 miles better and once again 'hey have given to this country t>he longest line In the world. From Boston to Providence, hack In th6 eighties, from New York to Boe ?on, and then to Chicago In 1898. ^nd Anally from New York to Den ver and on to the coast, the engi neers have roared copper wires into carrying the human voice. The work of constructing: the transcontinental line took two years Mit the history of the work of mak 'ng the poles and wires, etc., and *trung by the construction crews who do their duty runs back over ?he space of many years. It bring? tou Into experiment stations and ?*stlng rooms and laboratories. It -overs Innumerable experiment* ^tld Improvement*. Every steo for ward In the development of tele phony hs? been over a gigantic <?crap heap. Bell's original trans mitter has seventy-three dencen lants. Fifty-three types and styles of receivers have been Introduced Ince 1877. Within ten years the ^ell system spent for construction ?>nd reconstruction an amount more ?hah eoual to the present book val ?le of the entire plant. And what Is true of transmitter* ^nd receivers Is even truer of all ?bat lies between the terminals of ?he transcontinental lino, for It Is 'n this Held that the engineers had ?heir real problems. To fill In the gap between Denver and the coast with wires and poles was compara tively simple. The task they eon fronted was to begin at New York ?vnd working all along the line, make ?he multitudinous Improvements ne^ssary for a. 3,400 mile talk. Transmitters, switchboards, metal lic circuits, ha?d-drawn copper wire and loading colls all had to be at funed to the trnnacontjnental key note. There Is a hint of the res' ??chlevetnent celebrated yesterday Jp -vhat the engineers did with tho 'nading eell. When tlnr loading "oil left the hands of Its Inventor 1* was as large as a keg. and the fine '?<?n wtr*s Inside jt cost a mint to make. Today the londinr coil 1? - few Inches Tn sis*, and in the New ark-Ban Francisco line there ar* *8. OOP mlloi of that wire whose cost -?f msnnfscture is comparatively lew Fnr tho*e !ti the T >?v street of Ves th*re was striking proof that 'he problem of transmltttng speech |'s not solved hy any lond-sn??w<nr ^snemiMer jn th<l Mp]ir4l of Bells **ventlop that lay before them "*h?y reallied as they looked at thai 'nstrument, erode In the lldbt of all ?hat has happened to trammltters Mnce. what the eftglneer* had aecom lino la the backbone at a network of tl, 000, 000 miltfe of wlrt worn round 9.000.000 tole+houo etatlo*? of the Bell System. The completloi of this line is *mi?hty step forward owmrd that ideal of unlr?rsal a?r rtce, it M? nl that ?ojob? enywhwr could i>i>l to ? aayone anywhere 1b t)US country by taking "hi* Ulephow receiver off the hook. The line li ?tlll in Che h*n<#B of the enjinesrs Ijhere is en amount of B?ld work ? be'dose before It Is opened to th?| 'pvbltc for commercial use, hut [when it la opened, it -will meen that' 1 The telephone pioneers who Art* talked abont universal service and a line across the continent -were re ceived with derision. Most of them took part in the various celebration* today. They could prophesy with sudh certainty because they had laid down a plan in the seventies that was comprehensive of the growth of today! They looked through Mr glasses at the telephone. Prom the start they' saw that it wa? of servior I only as it was made available to the J most people. 80 the telephone lr the United States has always set the pace for the rest of the world, ft j hM "made in U. 8. A. stamped or1 tts very soul. Invented In this country, every appreciable advane'l <n the art of the telephone has been made here where the telephone bar j enjoyed- a larger freedom than It bar ever known a&road. As a result ncj other country in the world can boast of a telephone development that Sip-j oroaches America's. Horn are some figures in connec I Hon with the New York-San Fraa rinco line for the lovers of statis tics: Length of line 3.400 miles. Route, from San Francisco to Salt Lake City, 770 miles; from Salt Lake City to Denver. (80 miles; from Denver to Omaha, 585 miles; from Omaha to Chicago, 600 miles. At Chicago the line branches, onr branch going to Pittsburg, 545 miles, and then to New .York, 88C miles from Pittsburg. The othei branch goes from Chicago to Baf falo, 603 miles, and then down U New York, 850 miles. There is s continuation of the line from Buf falo to Boston, 4W: ?1U? 'lOBf I from Pittsburg there is a continua tion extending to Baltimore. Iff miles away on to WeshlagtOB, Iff miles. Philadelphia Is reached toy a branch from the line extendln from Pittsburg to New York, con necting at Newtown. Squsre. The diameter of the hard-drswr copper wire of number 8 B. W. <*. (suge used (a the Hoe I *161 Inch The total weight of one circuit con Blstlng of two such wires Js 1.4$f tons. There are 180.000 poles In the line. In the two physical circuits of the line each circuit having twr wires, there are 18,600 miles df ?or pgr, wirs. fir New York business man can talk to his San Franciaoo a?eociate ?with oat leaving his desk. And the tim< will not be long, say 'the engineers before he csb seed bis sol? not only to San Francisco. but where he will, vp and down the Pacific seaboard It Is easy now to look forward to the day when a man can send tola role# ranging these United States ? North South. Ea-st and finally West. Tat when that is done thera still remain problems for this and succeeding generations of telephone men who** solving will be fully aa difficult as the one presented by a transconti nental line. NEW THEATRE C. F. Haradtn* Dramatic Co. WEDNESDAY JANUARY 27 TEMPEST ft SUNSHINE THURSDAY JANUARY 28 A MINERS SON War time prlctn ? O 4 atfcl*. ThU i? not ? Movomu c Show Beginning on the North side of the pubHo road known m the M*H road. at en Iron axle, drlren. In the ground. at the comer of the land iold by Harry McMullan and Dan 'el L. Perry to Henry O. Cherry and Mfe: thence with the said Henry C. "berry and wife'* line, North tt> *-a*t ?t 1-1 pole*: thence North 80 1 -S Wft?t IS pole*. to a marked wm, Cooper and Jack eon's corner 'n Noah B. Hodges line, thence with >toeh B. Hodgee line. North 4* East *8 polee. to Cooper** corner; thence Vorth CI TCaet SO pole* to Jackeoa'* -?orner: thence South If 1-4 East M S-5 t?o1ee to a pine stump; thence *ooth 6 Beat 18 S-S polee; thence V>uth IS 1-8 Eaat 10 pole*; thence 'onth St Weet to the North aid* a* he Mill road: thenee with the North ?de of the M411 roed to the begia Mn?:- containing ISl.t acre*, a* eur ?eyed by John B. Reepaa* on Jann ?ry Hh, 1814: being eaaae land thi* lay oonreyed to the the *r?t p*H by Harry MfcMellanNaM -ife and Daniel t,. IVrryXto wWch ?e*d reference i* made foKXaMher leecriptlne. Thi* Mat day of Ian. 1818. O. RUMTjKT, Trwtee. Under aad b% rlHi* of ww# r _? contained Iq a gf Treat *?>?*. T. Btwblww to thVelZS >!???<* O. RmnJ*, trMte. ?-T^ K?|lM4r| oflk* Of BMnfivH ~?ir North c^lo? *1*; ?n<ler?trnod will ??II for outi before the CoarttionM door j[ eonnty, N. C., on the S3 Jf* ' IS o'clock noon to-wl? del,<:rtb<><1 "*? ?UU NOTfCK OF SATjK. Under and 1 ry rtrtee of the power if aala contained In a nrortcajca deed ?xecuted by Thorn** Crawford and wW* dated April litb. 1*14. and 'nty recorded In tha ofBce of the tiefflfter of Deeda of Beaufort coun *? 1n Book 177. Tfcjce 489. which t? 'lerahr referred to. the nnderaten >d will on tha .Stnd day of Febru ary. 1915. at 11 o'clock noon, at the "mxrthonoa door In Beaufort eonn ' V, offer for aala to the hfcheet Wd for ?a*h. the followtnjr describ ed real aetata, to-wit: Berlnnlnr at Jantee Health'* cor ier. aftd running ^Htfc hla line to r mn t? BUown'a run: thaace to the **rawferd dtteh: theaea with aatd Iitcb to the Old road to tha W?tn Maf. containing eleren tad three ? carter a crm. tnore or leee. Thl* iA*h dar of Jan. 1915. *DWARt> L. STlfWABT. . Mortgagee. 1-11-4 we. CASTORIA Tin KM Yn Ian Ahiiyi Bntkt French Remedy For Q^manli Trouble ho?ob or uta. V^Bir. <MM at Um pamar at ate con talaad Id tha nott(i|< tad to ma. aaaeatad Ir J. tC LIUMatd aad ?wlik, data* IMruir Mi, 111*, ud raeordad la ?ha ?aalatai'a aMaa at Beaufort tout r, la Book l??,?a?a Ml, Which la harafcy rafariad to. I win hU at tfco Conrthouaa door at Baaafort county aa Monday. <ka llnd ter at Fibrnrj, Ul(, at noon, that lot or paroat at laad la tka Titian of ami. Richland tow. a hip, Baaafort county, daatrftnJ aa foitowa: ' ' Batfnnlnc In the old road ofc Wa lar atreet wbara It la tatonaasto* *y Rattrqpd atraat, and naalac Baat wardlr ?? Railroad atroat M laat Watt of KatlMriaa Fraatafa Waat llna to naMla raa: Oaaca down aaid run to M BaauMtt'a Northaaat earaar; tfcaaoa , Southwardly with Jam Bennatt'a aa*t Bail to la* Baa natt'a Soathaaat ooraar: thaaoa Weatwardly with Ja* Baaa?tt*a Una lo J. R. Ca.Uoway-1 hatra (luB^lH earaar; then Co Waatwardly wltt nanowmy-a llaa to aM old road or Water atraot. and Southwardly with ?aid road or atraat to tfca boflnalni. containing * aaraa. mta or laaa. Thla Jan. II, till. w. Y HtnwRj.n ? ? I" Morlcacaa. l-n-lwa:

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