Newspapers / Rutherfordton Tribune (Rutherfordton, N.C.) / Sept. 26, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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. i 'i-.. " ? - -. .'-m jt.r i . liV-Ar- VOL. I. NO. )(. RUTHERFOEDTON. N. C THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2(5, 1-901. 81.00 A YEAR. i U A really healthy woman has lit tle pain or discomfort at the uicusuuiu penoa. jno woman n needs to have any. Wine of if Cardui will quickly relieve those R smarting menstrual pains audi othe drasTrrin? head, hack amlF n . . - -r Wshle aches caused bv falling of n the womb and irregular menses. j- - ii has brought permanent relief to !'! .. ... , .... i. i,uou,UUO women who suffered IS every month. It makes the men-M strual organ.? strong and healil -. Kit is the prov:don made by Ku-f ture to givo women relief from I the terrible aches and pains which blight so many homes. T . Gke3:xv.-ood, La., Oct. 14, 1DO0. . UVD lJCt'.l Vl'V r.lPV trf rA.i,A 4- taca :vi.ti a sevcro pain in rjv I SHlO tad (V.)Ulil w.nt. i.nt o. i:n fl tried a bot.la of Wino of Carchii. Uo fors I hr.J tal.cn all of it I was relieved 1 ree l :t my duty to say that Ton hnvo a wondeKul niediciuo. Vj Mrs. M. A. Youjjt. I 15 t oradTioeanrt iitPT-aturp, nMr"ss. plvin: :i '.r ; ':m . i .1.- Cliaibuiuoga, 'dan. Notics, Oa Saturday, the 2Sth of September, ITdi. I will scil at the court house door in Rutherfurdton, for cash at public- out cry, all the right, tiile, interest and es tate of L C. Rollins in and to the fol- . lowing descri.Kd pieces or parcels of hind lying in Rutherford county, on the waters of Main Broad river, it being the lands oE which llhillip Robins died seiz ed, bounded as f ollows : Beginning at a sycamore on the south V-ank of Main Broad river, corner to lot No. ij, and runs thence with lines of the sr.ue south 15'.; west 97 poles to a small persimmon. C'ftiiwo Kii'.nc; thence south .S we.- t 29 poles ton wild cherry ; thence north .S7'2 Avest 'M poles to a pine; thence same course :JO in"les to two iost oaks on top ii FH of ridj?e; tlience north $2 west (i poles to a siall pine on tlie :ld line; thece with it smith S5."i west 1 j2 ixiles to a stake on tlje Speculation line; thence with the old h:if; thence with it and south VI S i n1' . S poles to a pine on McKinney line at the edjje of old field, crossing the branch north iS west 70 poles to a stake in the rsid : thence with said road north 27 cast to u stake at white oak in the fork of the branch ; thence north 8"5 poles ton stake; theme north east ptd's to a persimmon; thence north cu -t 41 p.les to au ash on bank of the river; thouee up tin? same to the besjiii ni?ir, containing eighty-one and three quarters acres, more or less. That the said interests of L. (i. Rob ins in the said lands will 1h sold by vir tue of a mortgage deed with full powers of sale executed by L. G. Robins and wife to the, undersigned on the 5th day of February, Its')., and registered in litMtk H of Ileal estate niortgages'on p,age iJfsC, now on file in the Register's office for KutherfuiVi county, to which refer ence is h.irebv made. This Aug. 27, ISiOl. ANIE BXISOOK, Mortgagee. IVlcBraycr & Justice, Attorm.-s. Ko:: rHCAiOL(XJi. In Superior Court, Rutherford County. Before the Clerk. Isabella Lane and others, vs. . Notice. Ellison Clements and cithers. Mrs, Nancy Wallace, Joseph Clements, Sirs. Nancy (luffey, and Mrs. Margaret Y ilkie, defendants in the above entitled cause, if they be living, will take, notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court ot Rutherford County before the Clerk, to sell certain lands for partition, situate in Rutherford County and full- describ ei' in the petition tiled m the cause, and will further take notice that they arc required to appear before the clerk of the Superior Court of Rutherford Coun ty, at his office in Rntherfordton, on the X)th duT of September, 1901, amlaiisw r or demur to the petition on file, or the petitioners will apply to the court for the relief therein demanded. Th:"s Au gust 20th, HH)1. M. O. DICKKRSON, C. S. C. McBrayer & Justice, Attorneys for Petitioners. Notice! By order of County Commissioners of Rutherford county, an election will le held on the Kith day of October, 1901, in llutherfordton mid Sulphur Springs townships for the purpose of submitting to the. qualifie d voters in said towships an opportunity of voting on the question sss fo r-iuti.cScm1 Ki;?116 rumer lu which they woultl Koad vjompany, a corporation existing and incorporated under the laws of North Carolina, llntherfordton township to vote $10,000.00 iu bonds, and Sulphur Springs' $5,000.00. Said bonds to be used in the construction of railroad from Iiutherfordtou to the South Carolina line. Said railroad running through s lid townships, crossing Broad river at or near Big Island on said river. By order of Commissione rs of Ruther ford county, September ;Srd,.l()01. J. P. JONES, Clerk iCx-officio to Board. Notice! The undersigned has been appointed iid has qualified as administrator of the rf Mix M:irv N:iliov. rleeennrl i late oi rvuriieru.ni cuun.y. AU ihtsoiis inoeu.. AVr..r. ri make prompt settlement; and ail per -Bims having clai s against same are no tified to present same to the nudcrsigij- cd within J2 montH.s of this date for pav 1,'cnt. or this notice will be pleaded in i'..r of their recovery. This September 4fh, 1W1. J, F. FLACK, rtministrator of Mrs. Mary Xaljors. KSTATE OK MR. MeKIXLKY He Refused to Make Investments While He Was President. President McKinley has leff a fortune of not more than $70,000, and at least $50,000 of that is in the form of cash, which is in theUrom an insane hospital near Chi hanks of Washington and Canton. His fortune, except perhaps $12, 000, has been saved since he was first inaugurated President. The fact that it is in the form of cash shows how jealous the late Presi dent was of his reputation. Offered many opportunities to add materially to his wealth by speculation, Mr. McKinley invari ably refused. He took the ground that the President of the United States should irot soil his dignity nor entwine himself in any scheme of money making. Mr. McKinley lived simply and saved as much as possible from his sal ary. In order that it miirht not be said that he was in anything that approached speculation, he kept his wealth in the form of cash. When he was first selected for the presidency, Mr. McKinley owned property of various kinds valued at about $12,000. This he kept in its original form, but he has not. added to it. He was pecu liarly sensitive in regard to his personal integrity, and he refused even to invest his savings in gov ernment bonds. His fortune is left entirely to his widow. It is understood that Senator Hanna is made executor and is given charge of the income. It cannot be told exactly how much life insurance the President left. Until two years ago he car ried only $20,000, but it is under stood that he increased this sum somewhat. It is said that he in tended to take out policies to the amount of $50,000, but -whether lie did so or not cannot be told until an examination is made of his personal property. When he was in Congress Mr. McKinley, at the beginning of each campaign, borrowed $2,000 for his expenses. This was repaid by him at the rate of $1,000 a year, and he lived on the balance of his salary. Washington Spe cial to New York Herald. The Sooth Noticed. If anything had been needed to prove tho heartv lovaltv of the South, the conduct of that section of the country would have fur nished ample evidence. Happily, notning was. neeueu, lor tlie re sponse of the Southerners in the Spanish-American war settled that question for all time. In no part of the union has gen uine sorrow for the nation's ex ecutive been - more marked than in the States that once hiy south of Mason and Dixon's line. Men forgot that they were Democrats or Republicans, and remembered only that they were citizens of a common country and that their chosen chief had been stricken down. Incidentally, it may be noticed that the South has never permit ted itself to be infested by nests of anarchists. The bloodthirsty crew that generates murder plots at Paterson, N. J., would not be permitted to remain in a South ern city long enough to see two suns rise and set. The reds that are a nuisance to Chicago and a constant menace to law and order could not carry on their machina tions in Atlanta, Jacksonville, Chattanooga or New Orleans. j we uc-ait. miii might not be ill strict accord with the statutes, but the mam point is that thev 11 . cut, braise, bum, scald or like iniurv ; - - - v y mo ynui ana wm . . lu lmlt5 luau W - : other very Pain severe Balm it will not also cures lea a scar. rheumatism, scrams, swellings and lameness. Fori s ue by Twitty St, Thompson. Subscribe for Thk Tribune. ouiu not. oe anowea to live there ; mnch tliat i giYen iip all hopes of and plan the murder of those in j recovery. I was so feeble from the ef authority. The South has a quick ! fects of the diarrhoea that I could do no temper, and loses its i,ead at 'kiud of labor-conl,t not eTen trave1, but f;mot, i,f -f(3 t. f , ,jby accident I was permitted to find a tunes, but its sense of honor and of chambci.laiu-s Colic, Cholera justice can always be relied on. jalld Diarrhoea Remedy, and after taking Kansas City Times.- ; several bottles I was entirely cured of I that trouble I am so pleased with the Cuts md Bruises Quickly Healed. 1 resuit that lam anxious that it be in Chamberlain's Paiii Balm applied to a ' reach of all who suffer as I have. For IMAGINES HE IS WEALTHY. It is Said That "Dr." Dillard is an Escaped Lunatic. It is reported from Reidsville that "Dr." Dillard, "the million aire negro7 is an escaped patient cago. The "doctor" not only seems to have impressed himself with the i lea that he is immense ly wealthy, but has succeeded in h inoculating some of the good po-1( pie and financiers of our neigh boring towns over the line with the same virus greatly to his gain and their loss. He pissed through this city this week en route to visit his sister at Martinsville. The "doctor" maintains that he has been great ly misrepresented, and as soon as he can get returns from his banker in Australia he will make his promise and representations good. He is in very feeble health, and his chief amusements, since ar riving in Reidsville, have been excessive drink, high living and driving and expatiating on his personal wealth. From the best, sources of infor mation it appears that the doctor is either a colossal fake or pos sessed of that happy species of in sanity that enables him to im- rgine and enjoy all the fruits of great riches, without nossessinir them. He seems honestlv imbued with the idea that all will turn out well when his "ship arrives" from across the water. Danville (Va.) Register, 21st. Trsatni-.Mit for Co gosz. "Standing mute," as Czolgosz did on last Wednesday when ar raigned for the murder of Presi dent McKinley, was equivalent to making aplea of not guilty. U li ter the old common law of Eng land, as the New York Times re calls, there could be no trial until au issue w is joined, and "stand ing mute" was not permissible. The accused was required to make his plea. Blackstoue tells what happened to him if he refused to comply : "That the prisoner be remanded to tiie prison from whence he came, ,and put inrT a low, dark chamber, and there be J lid upon his back, on the bare door, naked, unless where decency-forbids; that there be placed upon his body as great a weight of iron as he could bear, and more ; that he have no sustenance, save only, on the first day, three mor sels of the worst bread; and on the second day three draughts of standing water, that should be nearest to the, prison door ; and in this situation this should be alter nately his daily diet till he died, or (as anciently the judgment ran) till he answered." Mobile Register. Roosevelt and Uryan. During the campaign of 1900. one day the train bearing Roose velt was halted within calling dis tance of that from which William Jennings Bryan was making "rear-platform" speeches. Roose- velt recognized his political oppo nent and called: "Hello, Bill !" "Hello, Teddy!" came the Demo cratic candidate's answer. "How's your voice?" "About as strong as the Demo cratic platform,'' shouted Roose velt, hoarsely, "and yours?'' "Oh," wheezed Bryan, 'mine's in about the condition' t.f Repub lican promises." And the trains passed on. Atlanta Journal. Cured of Chronic Diarrhoea After Thirty Years of Suffering. "I suffered for thirty years with diar rliwn niirl thnr.rdit, T was oast being cured," says John S. Halloway, French Camp, Miss. "I had spent so I much time and money and suffered so J I. C4V14. tJ.AV sale by T witty & Thompson. , Th Ralei(rh corresp0ndent of the Char- woioca. Th cotton on: look s btd-verv bad There cannot be one scan ci,y utiu. x"" i."5 half a croo in this State. Cotton men nlf n cron in this State. Cotton inen five-eights, but they really mean l..J? TT ot- irr- - light; oulv a fourth as much thus far September as they were a year ago. MOST'S MEETING STOPPED. The Anarchist Arrested aligning a Crowd of While liar- lice of Newton, Borough of Queens, to-night arretted Johann Most, the anarchist, as a disorder- I ly person. They suspected that he wa going to conduct, an anar- C!ll: ti:ig in a saloon at Co- i . They also arrested Frick, who is said to run the saloon, on the charge of j violating the liquor tax law and ; keeping a disorderly house. Later developments show that Herr Most was gathered in while ' i i i haranguing a crowd of 00 people, i Back of the saloon is a large-sized I i ii rP, c " i ' hall. I Ins was the meeting place, j Capt. Hardv and his force of five ! , , ... t men entered the saloon without ' question. Ihey were inside of 1 purpose of the new management j flip Imll bofnro tlioi r nrpspnpp W'uto onoivit dmiblo "bi 1 1 v imecpiKwr i suspected. Most was on the stand . at the far end of the hall, declaim ing loudly. When the police were close upon Most, some of the group about the leader attempted resistance, and in an instant the! jxilice had their sticks drawn. One or two of " those about Most went down with blood flowing' ed, and that when this was done from scalp wounds and the others j the Coast Line would have practi- gave way so that Capt. Hardy gotjcally a through line from Cincin- It - . t . . m sv v i a hold on .Most. All resistance ! then ceased and Most and the other prisoners were led to the; police station. District Attorney : Merrill was summoned and ques-: tioned the prisoners in secret. He declined to say what, if any thing, he. had learned from them. The police Seized a lot of papers and a red flag which was dis played in the room. His taxes called for $12.000. VanderMit Break, the Record i Uuncomba County. Biltmore, N. C, Sept. 22. The largest, single item of tax collec tion ever made in this county Buncombe was made yesterday. George Vanderbilt gave, the county tax collector a check for $12,000, being the amount of his taxes on his $1,000,000 mansion and 100,000 acres of land in Bun- combe county for the year 1001. Mr. Vanderbilt has now under construction thirteen more resi dence buildings in Biltmore vil- lage. Five weeks from now he will leave Biltmore with his wife and child for his Fifth avenue home, where he will probably spend the winter unless he should decide to visit Tacoma, Wash., where he owns the leading bank. much other real estate and a mag nificent residence. Kceentric Dr. I iry Walker. Dr. Mary Walker, of Oswego, narr mvIv escaped rough handling at the hands of a crowd of work men at the Rome. Watertown &. Ogdansburg railroad station there this morning. She was at the jticketwindow when she made the ! remark that the State of New York, if it executes Czolsosz, is ljust as great w - was, and that McKinley was a ! murderer because he was killing n mnnro, Im'rirlnnl in t IP conntrv tvition-.l Filipinos. She was dressed in blem of that authority been so male attire, and one of the men broadly in evidence as it is tow-as about to strike her when he ' day. From every public school it saw who it was. She was instant - ly surrounded by- a crowd of angrv men and there were threats of lynching. Cooler judgment prevailed and one -said that she ment it utters a lesson with which was crazy and she was allowed to many have not been hitherto fa go. Syracuse (N. Y.) Dispatch, miliar. It tells of the country's 18th. ' Iprofoundest grief as at other Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Great Favorite. The soothing and healing properties of)"" L, tV t-lTt. vrtnmfl t- i'c n-tlt'i t; fat-ta onfl prompt am i permanent cure, nave mao lit a great favoiite with people every- where. It is especially prized by moth ers of gmall children for colds, croup and whooping cough, as it always af- fords quick relief, and as it contains no opium or other harmful drug, it may be given as confidently to a baby as to an adult. For sale by Twitty & Thompson. Messrs. Oliver & Co., who are improv- ing the grade of the Southern Railway at Morganton, iii Morgan's Hill cut, near the school for the deaf, have unearthed a gold mine. One of the nuggets they have found is worth $72, and a number of smaller nuggets have been found. - 1 little PickeA n a Piece of Sold worth in m tlio filf wl, Mia ' . ' earth from the cut is being clumped. 1 . "tit? Ti?tit-vi. .. nil r,.,l- nr.i in i the only paper published in Ru thcrford couutv. COAST LINE TO IlrN S. C Ai G. E. 1 I Report That the Old :JCs Will Pass 1 Into New Hands. To-dav'a News and Courier lias ' report from Yorkvillo to the je'Fect that the Atlantic Coast' Line will assume management of the South Carolina & Georgia Ex-' tension Railroad, better known as the "Three Cs " It is said that the new owner will operate through trains, both ireight and passenger, between Charleston and Marion, N. C, via ! A l i.-4. fi 4-: i uin;iri, .urn i iid.i. mc ciime nuu will be improved to an extent! that will cause it to compare f ii (, ,. favorably with the other lines owned and operated bv this great (. , ,i . .1 . , system, and that the equipment will be second to none. The rc- 1 . . 4, i port goes on to sav that it is the I 1 1 trains between Charleston a nd Marion. In railroad I . , , . circles here it was asserted that the road would be1 I l .1 ,1 ( : ( a. extended to some poiiu in npsspe. wliPi-ft it, would ninko onn. I nection with another road in which the Coast Line is interest- nati And the West. IN o one here was able to speak authoratively ' on this point, and the "talk" is ' reported as one of the railroad rumors of the day. Columbia (S. C.) Record, 20th. ANARCHISTS GUARD WITH GUNS. Twenty of Them Have l.OOO Rounds of Ammunition. Spring Valley, Irx., Sept. 22. (Twenty anarchists, armed with j louble.barrelea shotUMS ,, 1 1,000 rounds of ammunition, are Istandinir iruail over the office of L'Aurore, the notorious anarchist publication which exnressed iov at the murder of President Mc - L Kinley and satisfaction over the announcement of assassin Czol- jgosz that, he was an anarchist. Meanwhile fully 2.000 citizens of adjoining towns have sent word that they are ready and extreme- ly anxious to start at a moment's notice for this city and assist in exterminating the reds. The tem per of the people here is at the boiling point, the defiant attitude of tire anarchist colony serving to increase their anger. To- morrow a committee will wait upo i (lenral Manager Dal- the work of alienat ion ; there are : the ofli'cc of the. Register of Deed for ell of the Snrir.o- Vnllev (V...1 ! men who see only ill in everv-' I-utherford cuuty in BjKk H of Mort iccii, oi inc. opjing ciiiev J . gi-.ge IVhIs, at jiiige rjo; said morii.:ago Company, who resides in Chica-c, and insist that he discharge every known anarchist in his employ. 'C I. I .A . ll : lr, ... .... I i ut? a 1 1 it mi isi s ami ineir sympa thizers number fully 500, and if this step is taken it will mean that, one or two of the mines will have to close down until other men can be brought in. The Flag is Still There. The president was killed simply because he represented more con-, l uiuie ton , spicuouslv than any other indi- ' authority. But perhaps never before in our history has the em-j ; tells the story of the nation's life j . and the nation's power as well as the ration's grief. By the sig- : nificant variation in its times as it flies from the peak, it i tells of her iov and strength. The draperies called out bv the occa- s,on wul pass will) ine weeii, out 1 " Ml '1.1. ll. . 1 1 i fl fl; fTOVor Rnatnll ,., ? , - ; ransci ipt. Many physicians are now prescribing Kodol Dyspepsia Cure regularly, having found that it is the best prescription ' they can write, because it is the one ' preparation which contains the elements ' necessary to digest not only some kinds j of food but a11 kib and it therefore cnTCS indigestion and dyspepsia no mat- , ier u llh Ku-.tni"yaj ""'uv SOU. JLJie i" loieiice Willis, rujns-i -.icy. Robert Snipes, who shot and killed A ! Mm-moiton hist Thursdav. has not arrested, through Sheriff McDow . j . , eu, OI Jiorgauioii, auu . j mediately in pursuit Snipes returne! tit -1 - : . e ... tll)l File 1'milOOlIlCS U J.e weeks atro. ; where he was a pnvate m one of the ; volunteer regimenis. . OK DREAM. I. . A1I!1 rivt r that ripple jour name AndTali lke thf r wrt1iof Fame!" F"r a touch that is tender and human And the intifnl w of . , ' Sets life to the song of a dream. H. On eas that are shadowed, far-faring, In oceans dim. d solate nights. Love marks the white shores he is Hear ing The shine of the welcomin" lights- s ston,!S I lehohlyon,i . 1 . ... sejis iiiinuituous stream. Aim rnaniTul and glad I enfold von luy bna':t. "k beautiful dream. 1M . , , IIK Oh, tender and gentle Cod's will is in darkness or flo-.ver-wreatlied moi-ns It';:wls .sweetheart, to the lilies, tr wild ways of crimsoning thorns; He www o'er th ways that are human, . H the ;WlM( Earth's night', A1 the beautiful love of a woman Leads on to the Li"ht ' To the Light1 Eaith green, and iv. i blue sky above von. A ml hn-rii, f..,. !,..;..! a ' And all the world singing, "I love von!" v hue seraphim echo your name. If stars are but myt hs earthward stream- ing. All(l 1ves are 110t that which they . - it to love you ih only sweet ureamin". t me c r am Le t me dream! Let me dream ! P csident Itoosevelt. 'ur OI II,e Pioom l iiowing the fteful Buffalo tragedy arises a strong and sterling figure, repre- 0Ml f n f I If C 4- 1 . 1 . n . A ... " wi ineric;ui manho)(' an carrying in his veins t,,e best bloml of the revo- lution that of the Roosevelt of New York and the Bulloch of deorgia. The late president melted away all that remained of estrangement c uised by the struggle of a iren- ,eiu - ioii ago. i nai me successor his Place ' so iclosel - v alliel t() ,,0'h sections is an omen of good. That he is so ! yuZ Jls. ,,ot to have been a par- ."cipant in the tatetul struggle of tl,e sixties is fortunate. That he represents the young America grown up after the retirement of the principals in that conflict is a J blessing, lie conies into oflico with the people united in tears; he finds them equally imbued with ambition for the whole na tion, and hence the onedutv now TO THE SONG before him is that of construction. ! )J mart for a more fall ac count f said mortgage. This Septein- Ihere are anarchists of "various classes. The breed is bv no means confined to the red-mouthed Mosts ! and the short-haired Goldmaus. j fT!w.ll O Vm TiUrtttlil tl'llk Till rc.Jll ! . .. . . prejudices between the sections ; .. .... ire are n e ws pa pe r s l e vt d cell o thing that a leiiow-man aiiempis. inese people are inemsoivcs iiie,";; - - : , V"' v 1 1 . IOt li iiziv nf An.riit I k'HI fflt.r:tiilt-livsiitr ! first seedlings of anarchy. Re- HV.ci'n.r th-it -wd.-iw.wll.m.elit f,i 0 . . " patriotism and good intent ion to 'others claimed for themselves,! ' t ne' unless en- ;:,e(1 in censorious criticism. President Roosevelt has it in .. . ,, his power to sweep away all these malirn influences. It is expected A I J 1 1 I T ( UUU lie Will advocate iioiiic-m ic 1 . I lir... ,vi,;f.l, I.,. will !(: ,.. , - ... -4 - ii i n prpiicps oi ill . vuu- AUVU - eating them from the highest 15 and 4 fronting across street. Ibisf'! ..... . . , ' . teniber 7lh, I'.MM. standard of Americanism, he will; j j sPROUSE, Mortgagee readily concede the same credit ... to thase whose convictions will ! - lead them to dtirer. The differ- j . r . fp . ence itself will be that of twojV A ( Qni () QYAe 'earnest well-wishers for the same j cause. Thev will alternate in ! . (ii ,th possessio 1 ot governmental ! , . . 'ii ! DOWer, UUt theV Will OWe ll HIJ"l' '" nuiam .u.- ami uiijawn; v ' ' i ii 1 therefore, for the satisfaction of said tax theiiiselves to respect each other, ; ,lni. x s. u !lt omlt j,.is, ,iftt if thev would command respect. ! in Rntherfirdton, N. C, on Momhiy. - . i l !ktUr ,th, li:01, the following de- Tlie new president has always , . hinds: been a man of frank methods, a j K. A. MARTIN, Tax Collector. characteristic which has endeared; him to the people of the South, who always admire an outspoken i man. of our country The president should always be considered from the office he hokl , and not from his personality. There is, un dolibtedlv, too great a disposition to make free with the name of our chief magistrate. It is to be presumed that no man can have the good of the c luntry more ear nestly at heart than the president himself. Ilis policies should be discussed from the high plane upon which thev are enacted. Persrnal abuse, likely to lessen bis influence. is hurtlul to me - nation itself. 'IM . 0t nunv rcflirill' - i.iC ...r ,i .w., ....... j all along the way, Mid Th priii i won ( to .n trood Iinic in wnn.u o inaugurate them. Atlanta iMiuumn poisons the blood, irritates the nerve-cells and causes aches and pains in the tem ples, eyes, brain and spinal cord. Headache, neural gia, impaired appetite, indi gestion, sleeplessness, nerv ous exhaustion and des pondency all point to the weakened nerves that arc crying aloud for renewed strength and health. "Mjr head was badly troubled, I ached n!i over and was weak aud Ferr ous. One buttle of Dr. M:!ts' Nervine and Dr. Miles' Tills brought mc but all right-" 1 Iexsh o 1 L Joyvs, Lluefield, W. Va. XL Bt. miles' 0 soothes the nervous irrita tion, stimulates digestion and builds up health and strength. Begin to-day. Sold by druggists oa guarantee Dr. Miles Medical Co, Elkhart, Ind. Hiandl Sale. By virtue of the power of Kile contain ed in a mortgage deinl, made on the 2th day of March. In'.IT, to J. B. Stcadmau, the undersigned mortgagee, bv Ed Dun can and Lorenzo D;.:ican, I will nil to the highest bidder IVi cash at the court house door in Rr.thcrrordton on Monday, October 7th, 1001, a certain tract of land d-i-scribed in w.id mortgage deed and lying and Loin? in the county of Rutherford, and more juir ticularly descrilicd as follows, to-v. it: Beginning on a stone and pointers in Briscoe line, also the comer to lot No. 1, and running thence with line of lot No. 1 north 2S west 17 ftMOO chains to a stone corner; thein-e north I934 cast t'O links to a stouj in Briscoe line; thence with his line south 7)., cast K2 link to stone, his corner; thence with his lino north 2 east 5 20-100 chains to stone iu his line; thence south V,4., uist 2:j chains to a stake and xiiitcrs with a black gum alxmt four links north of it, marked as corner in Briscoe line; thence south 80 west 8 "7-100 chains with it to the be ginning, containing i:i .V.I 10O acres. Said mortgage has Ik-cu duly rewctlcd in the office of the Rgister of Dacd iu l'Kt "II at page 127, to which rt f er- 1kt 5th. 101. J. B. STEADMAN, Mortrage. Eaves & Rucker, Attorneys. X42.xxdL Sale. I By virtue of a ct rtain morttrago deed t executed by J. W. Bright and wife, Ju- Ik.. ,A...I ... 1 T .... .1 ; - y - - '" :,i,ed haying been duly trnisf.-rred and made J , ....... . .I.J, in the pavmenr ot the nto cur i oy said, mortgage, w will sell to. , the highest bidder, for cash, at the court ; house door in Ruthorfordton, N C, on Mondav, October 7t It, P. XJl, jthat certain piix-o or parcel of Lmd lying ! and tate of North Can.lina, and desciib- -ed as follows: Located m the town of iMillwo-nl on the O. R. & C. Railnud, , forin,.riv ti. (;. c. & C. Railroad, and known and designated as lots No. l. No. a"' a. -t iji ft a, til riitf iiiivu in ; L,ltN i fronting on Main strict and is Trf) feet wide and 100 fc-ct in i depth. Lots No. s ami 4 each an- .vi .r Jlt,,.j' orj f.-.t ;,. .,.!, T.j o.u 'u .f im m u.F. r i am r..... -.. . .i. . HANNAH . iJKKiHT. Assignee, . I I'.- l.er Attiii'tiev in fac.f R W. Trfi.ntt The follov.-'nsr tnuts and iKim-ls of land, hereinafter mimed, bare Lecu lev- it(i oll for tAX( nn for ,, Vlr jf i.:..i. ...:n .....i ... :-i . WSCAX S CKEEK. R. S. Price, 1 SI acres of land on moun tain, taxes and coht, $-.20. ( i. 3. Snrratt, Zi acres of land on Ilen- ' ion's cn-ck, balance, due ou taxes and '-o.-t, l.i7. liL'TIIEItl-rntDTOX. .John t. Twirty, one town lot on (Vrart street, taxes and cost, $1.0fi. ( 'aroline Twitty, M acres land iu Fair View, tases and cost. ..4S. Notice! Th underin:ei:. H. II. Hicks, having applied for and obtjdned l-ttrs of ad ministnitiiHi on tl:- ft-faf f O-ily I). Hauey, late of Rntbe.iford cm-jity. hi re by nves nitic to ail rwuis in-l led to ki id estate to conic fni wanl and n-ttln tho same. Also all iwrs"iis L'dding claims against said estate are hend'y re-qairi-d to pres-nt the tanie duly aiMhcnt iestteil to the undersigned for aym tit on or before the 2rd hiv of Jnly. V.m. or this nftW will bo iUadI in lar of '. .... rlnin.s ,u i.n-.ut. It!.,.. ,J(.ri ia 1BllW Tbi.Iulr -:jrd. jyoi. H. IL HICKS. Admb.b-trator of Ceily f. Hancy. Mr Bray r i!fc .Tasti'f, Attortiey. i i
Rutherfordton Tribune (Rutherfordton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 26, 1901, edition 1
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