? v -' - Mi M-| M- N. k A-KD1A I l?-?te. XOW UJCATBD. I* m HOBTOK tmlldln?. nun* u? ?*??. 1?0. Com* lo *** **?>. F?*r*?rWat?on H>r4nn Co. I-IMU. P'nerwwo. K. C. l~Lt-Vc r*-. itxtj bora*-?owov-1115 mod ?I. fwmlor T?rtn? Car. . ?Q?lr aa wtth .Umrl?.-IK*ti, nl> ?Urt ?r, tir? pnmp r?a hy anflne an* ?II lil MHt <nl(M, m., for ate on wr. lvm **. will ?? ekaac* ferreel-utats-eood note mortiuw or- moot aortblnr rir Ui m l?i ttu MOO mil" an? li 1? p*rt*ot. o**?ltlon. Ooc Haekney. Jr. 2-18-1 we Jl'HrT RRCmVBD?VKRY NIC! ?!>pl?. Or*p? mu ud Orange" ' Pri m? reatonabl*- H. B. Hajo 1'H-IK asBSESsa?sastl ?>MwdV Whw M lo Ali JU?M. *? ??7 kara. a u?a?/ hv and Oh ba ablnr. bot ra* their no**a II: % wl?4<rw pas* a kaladua kom* t? l with Bn7 Mo 1* ali ?jicht.?Ctn ? tthtt fc'*. .. ?a*l? k*T* * Jok* wfth tb* waltar, and ?M Um K k* M *v*ra**a * aau? " ' " ' ar & -H . Sfc? m WE ARE *GfcMS Ivet Johnson, Reading Standard, Emblem, Hudson Dayton and Great Western BioyclM sold for cash or on rim* We . also have the most complete repair shop in (be city all work guaran D. R. CUTLER T , ,X Or UU OF LAND, ?l.r.Tl?B? ?* t'1" P??r 4f ?i* ooi^a tood u a Wong?*, M1, <tu ed 11th day of November. 19J3. by iTTiifiisr1 jst* rr*?4?* D*bo rahAlll?oo<l. hi. wife, to John 0. *+-?? Jr- ?i <?ly reeordei tb R??tot?r <* D**ds .??** f0"??*. In Book 1*4. at ???? JH, which I* her.br referred to ui mad. a part hereof th. nn ?WMlMd. Will, on Monday th? 18th d?r Of March. 1?16. offer for aale. to th? highest bidder for cash, at the Courthouse door in tfie town of Washington, K; C., At H o'clock noon, the following described lands and premise* lying and being in the county of Beaufort. 8tate .of North Carolina. In the city of Washington, and more fully described as follows (Situated In that part of the citv df Washington commonly known s MoVair town: Beginning at a poln* on the South side of Third street, ? distance of 16 1-t feet of th# Nor'V east corner of lot No 51 and run- I nln* with Third ??r~?t Fa*twardW a distance of 25 feett^ihene# wardln parallel with the oast line of said .lot No. 61. a distance of 21' ?Mot to the back line of lot No. Rft Ithepoli* W**tward1v with th?? ?-? back line of lot No. 68 und nara"'-' with Third street, a distance of 9r feet; thence Northwardly narallet with th? Bast line of lot No. Ri - distance of 310 fe*t to th* ?b*Hrni?f nn TWH mtrfP* ?f Ko'no- n nart of the wastern half of lot No. R8 M?" Nair town, and h?lnr the m-po ti??-4 j of the said lot conveyed to' R. t Jones by Charles H. Powell br dated, the S6 th day of December. J1900, and^Huly recorded In the of fice of the Reigister of Deeds of B**o |fort county, in Bctolr 107r nage 3 54 and by the said Jones conveyed * John Q. Hahourn by d?id dated January 14th, 1902. duly recorded to the Register's offce^ln- Book 11* at d^jre 152..and by the mid Ra bourn conveyed to E. T. Stewaft on October 18. 1902 whlcH deed IS du ly recorded in said Register** office Lin :Book 118, at page. 451. and by I the said .Stewart conveyed to W .II. Rnss, by deed dated'Feb. 27th. 191? and duly recorded in the said Regis ter's office In Boojc 170, at page 355. ?ad by the said JEfass Conveyed to John G. Bragaw. Jr., b? deed dated ? Aug. 1st, 1918, duly recorded in Book 177,. page 29, in *rald Regis tor's office; and bt fhe said Bragaw conveyed to the said Jeese and Fr<*<l die Delborah Alllgood. All of which deeds ace referred to and made e part hereof for the purpose of de scrkptlon. This 18th day of Feb. A. D.. 1915. JOHN O. BRAQAW. JR.. -. 1' .k ? Mortgagee. 1 Rtowart A Bryan, Attys. IMS ? , I FEW GOOD BROILER POINTERS 1 Brooder Is of More Importsnce Than Incubator ? Profitable Business for Farmer In Winter. (By W. M IttLLT.) i No person can hope to bo successful j In the broiler business without both skill and capital. - v It must be run In connection with a good egg farm, as that la the only way to procure good oggs for .the incuba tor. tt is. If .anything, more Important to bare a. good brooder than a hatcher. A top heat brooder may be all right la summer, but you won't want it In wln jtaL' ?* When closing for the night. If the little ones are stretching out on the N. Outdoor Artificial Brooder. ?roodor floor*, with their bills burled n the eand, everything la all right If they alt with ttylr mouth* open, the beat ta too groat feed Just a licilo abort of what the :hlck? wlU aat up clean, and fctap ??arythlDg tidy arid doodorlted. ? cross of Plymouth ROok and Brown Leghorn makes ?try good broil srs; they ara quick growing blrda with t yellow akin. Taking everything Into conaMora Hon. the broiler business Is yairy prof ttabld for ths farmer In ?tnter. Of sourSe lie must hare aome port Of oon tenlent buildings and Intalllgonoa enough to run an Jncnbator, *.* -.4 ^ ?him Milk to* P1Ba K K afually Mttmata?t thk? IM toon?* of 'iklm "bHk ark wntth. a* murk M k half bnah*l ol eora for toad lat paipcaaa?that la, It oom M oanta a kuhal, IM pound* of nkln ?Ilk ar? ?orlk 10 (till, In ftf41np pi?? KtT? IkMa' pfltinih of aklm mill to onft jpund of gralh Skim milk con "M par em BATE BUILT THROUOH FENCE Much IRoonvtplwoi and Rt^tlrlnf Can Be Saved by Adopting Meth od Shown In Hlwiritlow. (By M. OOVBBDBU) ?t the point wbere one to 1b tl habit or crawling through the be fence tho wlree beoomo M|pd and the woven fenoe to twtoted o?t of ?hap?, to My nothing at tho tnoon1 ?eni?mce attending tkto unhandy< ta? t bod jat getting through tba feace Sot an extra port ta Una with tb? fence at ?nob a point, vtapllna tba wlrea eocurely to It Braoe theTbsall Gate Through Top of Hog Fenoa, post and thi on* next to It m ihcwi In the Illustration; out thp wires be tween them; mak? a small fata to fit this opening in the fenoe, and >??"g It, using either Iron hlngee or strip? of leather, to support It and allow a free swinging. Attach a hook latch, as Indicated, and you win tare your self much lncon renlenca and repairing of fencea C0R FATTENING THE LAMBS COTTONSEED MEAL FOR FEED Hosrd'e Dairyman Thinks AbatA Two Pounds Dally Quite Enough for Best Results With Cow* In reply to a query aa to the p ropar amount of cottonseed meal to oaa In ?i combination with mixed ground corn. Hoard's Dairyman makes the following ,reply: Aa a rale, not more than two pounds of cottonseed meal should be fed -daily. We recognise that In the South much more than thla Is fed. but for bost results we think two pounda per animal a day la quite enough. A, p*.lxture, therefore, of the corn and cottonseed meal should be such as to provldo thla amount of cottonseed 1 meal dally. It would be better, how-1 ever. If some other feed oould be! mixed with these two. aa'we believe better resulte would follow. If the priceB seem too high for the other Classen of feeds, we would suggest that the corn aod cottonseed meal mixture be put on top of the silage allow Feeding Sllsge to Cowe. ? Feeding the silage tends to relax' the cow's system ilk* grass In the summer time, therefore, she la mora susceptible to extremes of heat and cold than the cows that are kept ex clusively on dry fooder and tboy should not be exposed to chilly winds tN't knot warm and comfortable. THE DOCTTOR'ft WIFR Aktcm With Hlra About Food. A trained nurse wyi: "In the practice of toy profession I have found so many points in favor of Orfpe-Nuts food that I unhesitating ly recommend K' to all my pattenta. ?'it la delicate and pleasing to the palate (an essential la food for the slci) and can he-adapted to all ages bei|ig softened with milk or cream for 'babies or the aged when deficien cy jof teeth render* mseticatlon 4m poHHible. For fever patients or t h at e on liquid dlst I And Grape Nut? and aibumen water very nour ishing and refreshing. ".This recipe Is my own Idea *nd Is diadeas follows: Soak a. teaspoon - -ful. of Grape-Nuts In a glgga of wh ter' for an hour, strain" and with Hie beaten, white of gp egg and S spoonful of fruit htfoe for flavor - Ing! This affords a great deal of nourishment that even th* weakest stomach can assimilate without any I ^My hurf>and Is a physician and hs joecs Orape-Nuts hJrwwflf and pfe, ders It many ttpes for hie pgtlenia. ^Fersonslly I, regard *. dish of Grape-Nut a with fresh or aterwed fruit as the Ideal breakfast for *nj one?well or sick.'*.' In stomach tronhle, nervous | t rat ion. etc., a lO-day trial of Note wtil usually wprk wonders to ward nourishing and residing and 4n this wftj end the tro&fe. Kam* *re? by Gostom <*., Battle Cretk. Mich. l*>ok 1n pkgs. for the f among lit book, "the Road to Weif*tt&" ? *? IsteerT 'a ? BMWk > Nortkos.P*. a polptoud U N. Dl Mi t m mM to (o to Bticunk u. thu OB?* omiki I of an k* rat tfa?T? ultbt r CWtMWX at fate, mot ? For "- T" "bilo h? bunk th?t fa, Mat to tfa* l ueoont of tfa, C<ut?r mu tin On Litti* BUT Hon In Julj. . 'TO- " u 1 toti AbrmWm Ltoootn, tfa* ?o?t of ti? teTOBtk mrmSn ud.tka haadqui. '? friendship aal friend ?f the offlcwi *t Lincoln. And ?o It wu that k? sad the poet satana rod? oat from tU?i old garrison with the CmUt expedition when it started ta Jan?. 1S7C, to punish tha Bloux. The ?urgeoo and the operator made the first twelve mile? with the BeVenth caralry. Then they turned back with tha laat die aatohae which Brigadier General Cue tiw; ?ant tn 4 No word oame .back to Bismarck from the Berenth caralry and It? 00m mander. But that oecaaioaed no sur prise. Expedition? of that ?ort wan ft common occurredce In those day*. V k waa aw tha night of July I when th# steamboat Par, Wee t came down the rirar to Bismarck. The Far West brought tha wounded of Reno's com mand and J*a ?Acial rttspstehae which told of tha eomplata annihilation of ths Custer 00 mmand. On tha morning of ? morning of July 6 Mr. Caroa han found on.his desk tha telegraph office a carpet bag filled with official dispatcher. There was an Immense lot of them. He "fiaahed" the news to the East, and then settled down to the transmission of Che Official story to the department of war to Washington. It waa eight o'clock on the morning of Jnly ? when he began his tremendous task. Not until Are o'clock the fol lowing morning?SI hours?did ha tears .is tastxaments. Then for three hours he slept the^sleep of utter ex? hanstlon.- He returned1 to his work, and for SO hours he sat at his key. It was four o'clock tha next morning when ha checked off the signature of the last dispatch in that old carpet bag. He hag aent 80,000 words In (he two shifts. For two days the eastern newspa pers had been clamoring for news, and there was no one to send 1L Mr. Car nahan ooald not leare his official sfork and there waa no other telegraph op erator within two hundred miles. To the New York Herald, the Chica go Inter Ocean and the 8t Paul Plo* neer Press he sent ss mnch of the* news as he had strength to prepare. And that was the way the news of the Gostar battle was sent out That was the big news article tn the career of John Carnahan But tn the professions] spcreta of SS years st a telegraph- key there BVSt be many Incidents stored up. which would star. y tha world if thay w*ra to&t COW IS USUALLY UNDERFED Idi? Animal of Any Sort Will Not Pay for Extra Food?Food Aooordlng to Aooom pi lah monta. A nan la generally paid accord la? to what he earns. Why pot. app|y th* aaoa rule to th* dairy cow T The good oow 1? uanally underfed, white the poor one la gWen fao^o than aha deaervee or can pat (or. Food the lire atoelf aooordlng to what they do what la expected of Ihem. The animal of any aort, . Of a dairy that will cot pay for oxtra food, ahould only recelre aa much food aa la neceaoary to maMUn It la the condition desired. The young animal iM oeoally ha kept growing, white good dairy oow ahould hare her lnoroaood, over and abore that n other?, ao long aa ahe wall continue W pay aa baoroaaod not ?toSt "fir QUITS HUSBAND FOR TRAMP Women Twioe Crooeee Continent With I Man Arreeted With Mor on Portland. tMMUM Aft?r twtn oroMtnt UMDt ta I O? l?i>4. Wkaa lk?r Ont M. am thu ? ?4? I* I > rn ?M rfbr Mw. Mm? Of Jiokttn* ?n L? ?t. i-. ,, wh a ho Inai oat oka W ?iiiiM < ^ mmm wnuw i SAYS HE IS H18 BROTHER Ate* TWtlo Wife ?h? It Hit ?eter** Uw ?nt Tr?iu H.r ee If ,jK wS?* Twomi, from the to rtiuBbir his owm bmm. U^v4 a Cooper west to Seattlo with hit wlfit, who bad Juet protenco la Taooma. The -jert day h? ditappeared __ When ho next ouie to official boUm be *u at the Taooma dty JaU. rapre ?on tin? him?tt m Um Rov. Bniwt 4. Cooper, who hod oono from Africa to help find hit mlttlnc brother, Edward. 1 QBtead of th? dlnjT brow? nit he had worn at th? "nu o( myttery," ha [ donned a tori* frock ?Cat with ?Ilk lapels, black rimmed spectacles, fancy reat and broad clerical hat. Be bad tho poUoa brin? oet the plo ture take* of the qtfoact wanderer arretted on Taoowa arenne laat March. He declared thli unkempt, be wbickered person wat hie brother Bd ward. Ho teemed much disappointed when tnformad the unknown had left the ooonty hoepttal. bat declared ho would keep &p the search. The unknown wat In % data whea found by the poUoe latt March wan derlnf almlestly on Taooma ttreets. He wat toot to the oounty hotpttaL rat Coo per* t wife in Seattle who ra refied hit plural identity or intanlty. She tald ho it now otaejeed with, the Idea that he lt^ own brother, traaU hit wife aa a tlateMn-Uw an# talkt reli*ton to bar at if ha were actually a preacher. FERDINAND PINNEY EARLE The mm wly> drew "affinity" from the pagee of the dictionary la now tor tag at the home of hla brother el Al lenhuret, N. J. Hla lateet eoulmate la M lee Charlotte Herman. COWS SKELETON SAVED HIM Arfcaneee Youth Had Been Convleted in Court of tUallnf AnhMl. Little Rook, Ark.?Tke India* + the akeleton of a cow In a woode in i Howard county eared William fte* ne^jr, twenty four, from entering tke penitentiary. Kennedy kad been eon dieted of Vvcallnc tke oow. and ?en tented to one yeer. I e wne allowed -to, cerne to Little ** k alone. apd w^e ?bout to f? to tke pea tentlnry tr anrrender. when a tole ration ot frtenia brought htm tke food JUDGE HAS NARROW ESCAPE Dumb-Sell Ixeroleee Areuee Suepic That Me le CMndnhetlni With Enemy. [ London.?An In?1 lah Jndtfe kad A a arrow eeoepe flrpoa %rreet on tke But eout. ud.Mli ?Mtoa>rr wttk ?art aP',*.'**. mm*i i . - -?U?T* "I U Ox age when if count is ? indespeasable to the man or , T i who has money transactions. Your check Is always a receipt and the danger of paying twice the same bill is entirely eliminated. Become a Depositor of tiri* Bank Today One.Doflar Starts an Account Bank of 'Washington Washington, N. C, ? Weather like this is a Fire-Breeder Better protect yourself with Bragaw's Insurance ' while you can, before the fire comes. / v? Pbone today about it?Phones 75 and 59. Wm. Bragaw & Co. First Insurance Agents la Wellington, N. C. S&Y ' BIG TASTE Crystal Ice Cream ONE QUART OF OUR BRICK CREAM WILL SERVE SIX OR SEVEN PEOPLE, ONLY COSTING ABOUT 8c EACH We Wilt Be Glad To Explain 'Phone is' Crystal Ice Company Washington, N. C. ;|LEON WOOO Mwbw New Yorfc Cottoa <iena?<* -l\4CS W LI J. LEON WOOD & GO . BANKERS and BROKERS ?flrttag. Martt**, Wm. Frtrmtm ikM to l?v York Mo?k ! ?tt*Dy i Don''t Talk High^Prices Phone us your orders, special prices on Flour. FulP line of heavy and fancy groceries. SCOTT & BERGERON Patent applied for OUR FORCING BOX Is well and solidly built of 7- 8?inch cypress wood and painted to avoid rotteninj*. The dimensions are 12X14 inches atbase, with an 8X10 top and depth of six inches. The fliass slide works In a grove at the top, premitting it being withdrawn at the will of the growth and also to facilitate e*sv stdftge from season to season. Whtfn the glasses and wood en portion can be kept separately, the wooden boxes being of such shape that they "nest" nicely, one within the other and take up very little storage space. Cucumbers, Cabbage, Tomatoes aqdotber,vegetables are wonderfully hastened in (heir growth and productiveness by the use of these boxes, and in sections where they have been used growers have met with the greatest q4 success. No other methods of forcing has yet been devised :Mifl we suggest that orders be placed early as there is sure to be a great demand for tkem as soon as their true worth is recognized FOR SALE AND DISTRIBUTED BY Hassell Supply Co. & Harris Hardware Co. WASHINGTON, N. C. tmStwesjs-,?? vhlflk not tW t mmm Mr ma th* asiU? i?mi(h of afl th? *nM"< ??" thai mrtt tint ixmM ?t w?ti otr fit*. kaor. ?o*??r. tor?. rommo?, ou> puh uU that w ParSSE?? J?**k??^jra> w?b mM k* ?wk ? nt*?4 t* mm throw* ar ?2. # 7!3SM?S?iMkk. -?* JM* M Ihto: It m th* wnpumi W*M ha** m Mlm *n Mm u* En K/nm Man of Hla WH. Ht Rltcfflni * an of Ma wmtr "TTnfortunataly so. WtiMW ka dkMpa tAndlord. nil ih. rWta? Mr ar 1 Woat Oo Ron* Till Morata?!- ka ahaolatalj tnalau oa i Try Thumb TMa p taaka laataad ?* i ara aa?? to ?a paatrr aad oopbofM afcatt. tka i alotk mar ba aaalty rawra4 vka* Varlowa Vlawa af tha ?warn Tka taraar calla tk4 an t?a *aa? ?ana fartlllaar. u kaaea tk? Jliaat warm and pata dollara pilivluilf^ Ma raoact paokata. It la Mfc mad hj art lata, wko aaa ataiial

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view