- A f ! &
:7
CONCOr.D.N.'G.T: ,SDAY, JANUARY 25,1912. - - ;
1 :.;. 43 Cent a tfor.ta. . (
'3 E.Li
IV. r r c.
T: And ef
Elaent U It
"r. Editor: You bar published
th report of tb , banquet given
Tuesday evening, by tb local firemen
. In honor-of President J. D. McNeill,
vf FayettevilU, and th other mem-
bers of the But Firemen's Execu
te Ci"imitte..I writ-to My that
. this ck -wn .was highly enjoyed by
all prewtit, and a more elaborate
menu U seldom spread before- our
.'people. A great impetus was given
the eaune of the firemen by the per
or'ol of those present and especial
ly I j lL splendid address of Mr. Me
Kf X And thia but cause demands
y few more word insyour r. ' A
more chat suing speaker I been
heard hen in years. Err:k...'.g with
wit that caused th r t stoi to
laugh, and abounding i, '.'.e I ' b
ext stretches of oratory tiii ; -cr
enthused ali prent as he jpi fef
the holiest sentuuents.of the human
heart. ' . . . -f
jJLia therfij was att appeal for the
proper weJUam of the ; world'
her the Brendan. Th man and the
, tumu
. occasion had met
' classic and chase be portrayed 'thia
hero as the greatest her of the age
' aa he, without reward or hope of re
ward,.risks his life almost daily to
- aav the Uvea and property of the
.people. The speaker's reference to
" mother ' and botue and 11 that de
pends upon the fiwman 'a skill was
; beautiful, inspiring and could hardly
b equalled by the most polished ora-
toftw He l.ar.eteme. FayettevUle
as the OMos.mf .Eden. He eb.eve
' ! daugl'J mo faseiMt-
in that; eraph that wing her
. ight above ; the etars or .. beneath-
. theiav
' On the whole fti speech waa gem,
, It was touching it. was on of .those
rare effiusiona that makes hia hear
' r feel glad, that lift them np to
; higher things and themes." Concord
- is glad to say nice thing of "Jim'
L. MeNeilL H deserves this and more.
. We will welcome him again around
, the banquet hall as the light grow1'
-a dim or in fornm. . And be honor the
eaus of the champion.. .
The firemen' banquet was a ua-
- esV l( showed the need of more
encouragement to r these brave fire
" kddi. It will lead to more eflksien
y in pnr fir department if the al
demen and 'citizen win idvUkSnii
v1 w . . . . ''1' .i; t ,..
II in people, ; wno are: me ucrou-
.
thn ,h -
soon be in h-flrst clas -oil the in
r'TI; rrfTrr.i7 i TJ
surance UL -whilejwe are: now second.
- When thi i done the people will
aame enough on the insurance prem
' iums tr instalTmost of these thing.
Let us give these boy chance to
s "do" things for onr town. It i a
patriotic rtove olely on their part
. for tbe,good of tho city,' i 1
v " i. G. E. KESTLEB.
v P. S.'t-I believesthat atpry of Fay-
-"" ettevill1 being the real Garden of
Eden for what Jim say is so, -and
' he ha lived long enough to know a
- Oardenr of Eden when he see it, but
iere' the rub: K iAdaW the first
mayor of the Garden of Eden, wa
" a prohibitionist la; Bn anti-prohibitionist
town while Mayor Jim is an
I ' anti-prohibition mayor of a prohibi-
tion town.,. Again Mayor; Adam pro'dered on Saturday before Christmas.
hihiUd-Eve from eating apple of. a I A discussion, led' by Mr. Tho
certain variety, -while' Mayor" Jim
don't care a continental what kind.
of apples the Eves eat in his Gardenj
olvlidn, neuner aoes ne uiauie uuuouriey, juagie tmu, iu iv. mx
the sv ' es sfhen they .do eat of them
'Again- Mayor ' Adam Was defeated
for m yor of the Uarden and east
T out while Mayor Jim ean be mayor
. l forevetand a day". So there must be
two Garden of Eden on the map,;will cover pages 206 to 254 of .this
Adam' and" Jim 'a.' '
' ' G. E K
EstT'Lt-.-8raas of Cabarrus.
. A ' n.i-ctins: for. the Lutheran of
Cabarr:: county is being arranged
in ka hold at l!.)lv Trinitv church in
Moiiiil' rieasant, next Sunday; after
noon, January 2?Ah, at 3 o'clock. The
olicct of this gathering is to present
the call of the convention-for Luth
erans to beheld HuSalwUury i';-u
ary 7 X Every indication points to
a tr ' t 'meeting in Salisbury, v We
Lu ans of Cabarrus VTSnt to be
r-. nted. ' The whole press of ht
d. is u'-iug Lutheran laymen
to f to"r..'.ii.liury. Let us have a
j,,.. ! fv;r '? from all over. Cabar-
i ' i t run'.iy aftcrhoon at
! 1.. - t t t'k over the Sul-
1
t:
r -.V in ana moKe pians
(;' "'"i Connty Lut'ieran-
t 1 P?v. C.
T T r I
. e : 1 1 ;
9 t
( .
1 t cf
iti 'I
r.'
V
: . i U' ij
tr 1 -t L . .1 Accrt
i, Y., Jaa. 21. Dr. IT, mi.
ry Lotus Smith, president of PaV'.d
aou, N. C, College, waa today onani
mously elected president of Wash
ington and Lee University.
Dr. Smith waa born-in Greensboro,
N. C, and is 54 years old. He was
graduated from Davidson , , College,
afterwards pursuing a course at the
University of Virginia, - which, i in
1910, conferred upon him the doctdr
at in philosophy. He Joined the
faculty of Davidson in 1887 as pro
fessor of physics and has been presi
dent of the institution since 1901,
daring which period1 the number ef
student has trebled and the endow
ment and material equipment ' have
been doubled. , ' -
To Dr. Smith belong the distinc
tion of taking the first X-ray photo
graphs South of, Johns Hopkins Uni
versity, and he ha done much work
U I k En. v He long bat been prom
inent as a lecturer on educational and
scientific theme. He is a brother of
Dr. C Alphonso Smith of the TJniver-
tj of Virginia j Ry. Egbert Smith,
Watson Smith, of Little Bock, Ark,
'.. DrSmitlt Eat Not PeddeoV ,-, .
v-Charlotte,, Jan, , 24.Dr. Henry
jXonis Smith,', in an interview over
the long distance telephone tonicrht,
declined to say definitely whether be
would accept the offer of the presi
dency of Washington, and Lee Uni
versity. Dr. Smith frankly admitted
that the proposition appealed to him
.trongly and said that he was of the
,opinion h(kt to hig u ytm, Uriet
,t Davidson tht be had f ulfilleoT his
miMion, tha- another might carry
the work farther. From other sources
it is gathered that Dr. Smith will
probably aecerjt. J; .-. js v ir' .
K York Honor Now Cardinal
:New York,' Jan. 25. New York'
eelebration"(n honor of the elevation
of the Most Beverend John M. Far
ley to the .eardinalate, which began
a week ago. with the welcome of the
new; Cardinal, npon his arrival from
Rome, culminated-.today . in notable
religion ceremonies held in St. Pat
rick ' Cathedral.' The demonstration
waa one of the mosf remarkable of
it kind ever held in the -metropolis
and : va participated in "by eminent
Cathohe,ehruh from many. part of
the United States and Canada. - The
fetOTWl of ttvice were
tho celebration of th. solemn fionti-
of Philadelphia, a serjnofl bjr.tbe Rt.
Rev.i Thomas F.'Causack, archbish
op of New ' York? "and addresses "at
eonirratulation in behalf or the cler
gy of laity, delivered respectively by
the Rt, Rev. Mgr. Miebael J. Lavelle,
rector of the Cathedral," and Justiee
Victor J. Dowune. Cardinal Farley
presided in the sanctuary during, the
celebration Mof the masa. .
Ueeting of County Teacher
Aaio-
- - - dation. ' - ;
The meeting of the County Teach
er' Association will be held at the
graded sohqol in Concord on next
Saturday. The meeting will begin at
11 o'clock.
Th Drosramm will be the same as
Grief, subject: "Specifio Purpose of
Study.;' "
A- discussion led by Misses' Mary
Steele, subject: "Supplementing the
Thought of tho Author."
A recitation on 4 'CoL' Groves, The
Teacher and the School," conducted
bj Prof. A. S-Webb. The recitation
book. - - '." 'T '
A full atendanco is expected. . -
k K Alton B. Parker to-Speak.'
Atlanta, Ga.j Jan. x 24. The Geor
Judae Alton B. Parker, of New York,
onvthe- programme to deliver the an
nual address, theynmeteenth annual
meeting of the South Carolina Bar
Association was opened ,' here today
with all signs pointing to the moat
notable meeting in the history of the
association.' Leading lawyers from
all parts of the State are in attend
ance when tlie gathering was called
to order by the president, P. 11. Nel
son, of Columbia. " The meeting will
continue over tomorrow... -
Zzf Watterson is T ntucfcy' Choic
Frankfort, Ky., Jan. 23. Declar
ing Henry Wattersou is Kentifl l;y's
choice I or ine yemm:iut
1 1 .utii.'ii, members of ti.e I
Prer
r I;.- a tf t'e Kentucky lo;. e
! t !' '1 v '1 a whoop a re 1
i iv i.,1"; ,at!crson to addi-t-
:' l a at 1 s 1 !aaure.
r I, .1 w row in Wasliir:"-
I I s i ' 1 J ' T r' xt
f r I . '1 t) t ll'.i viu' -
Son ef Itr.'D. . Bearer, ef Laadi
Ooe Throogh Ezidg and Loses
Onr Landis eorraspondent, Mr. C.
Deal, telephoned n this morning
inforn.; ? os of th death by drown
ing of air. Lee Beaver, son of Mr.
E. Besver, of Lend is, whieh oe
eurred yesterday . , at Ivanhoe, - in
Sampson, county. He was engaged
hi driving a four-mule team drawing
a, steam roller over a bridge span
ning the Black river when the bridge
gav way. Mr. Beaver and the-4eam
were precipitated, into the Stream,
and he and two of the mule were
drowned. The team and roller be
longed to Mr. Wm. Moore, a sawmill
man of Ivanhoe. ' . . . .
Mr. Beaver was 30 year of iff
and unmarried. X' Th body arrivedln
Landis today and will be buried at
Oakawn 'cemetery tomorrow; '"V
Minstrel Fun for Eicconghing Girl
th Last Kemedy,
Camden, f N. J.," . Jan. 24. Mis
Mary Sbinn,. 17 years. old, has bean
hiccoughing almost continuously .for
17 days. Naturally she is very anx
ious to stop it,: for it is extremely
wearying. Her , mother and ; her
friends also 'desirestrongly that she
top niecougning. A most attractive
girl, she Is becoming thin, pale and
nervous. ',r 4 -ft.
There .is a home, tradition that if
you' frighten y person who -is hic
coughing,' s'earehe breath out of him
her the -hiccoughs -will stop.
Mny and novel methods .have been
adopted.. to scare Miss Mary and she
has been dreadfully scared but she
ha continued to hiccough.' Now her
mother is going to try to make His
Mary laugh so heartily that she will
forget, the hiccoughs.-
Mrs. Slunn, has asked the members
of the old Dumont Minstrel Company
to come to her house and give a show,
Miss Mary dotes on minstrel jshowg
and her. mother fondly hope she will
be thrown into ouch convulsions' of
laughter', that the hiccoughs will go
.. Ooiiferenco oa Child Labor.'
Loui8vill, Ky. 'Jan. 25. Dele
gates from nearly . thirty -.. States,
among ; them many . men and women 1
whoiave made th amehoratlon of
thn condition of the workinff classes
ttierr-life-worfcf gathered uuis vilk
today tor Ae opening of the ighth ,
TiKni
Child Labor Committee. The ,-cott-
ference will bo in Session several
days.' Mis Jane Adams, of Chicago,
Mrs. Florence, Kelley Of ihe .Nation
al Consumers' Lague,'Pr. Felix Ad-
ler ot New - York, President - Alder-1 .
man- of the' University of Virginia
P. P. Claxton, .United States com
missioner -of education, "and a num
ber of other civic workers of nation-
al prominence are -included among;e of her uMh ft 0. Bost,
H..-Ul.lnld rkra. The main 'M Ko. township,, the occasioning
the scheduled speakers. The main
subjects to be considered bysthe eon
ference' are:-Tiia relation of rural
schools to child labor, reforms, 'child
labor, and eompulsory. education, in
creasing the efficiency of the elemen
tary school, industrial education and
vpcaiionai vgmunua, tuwM : w v
education, t and niireasonable indus
trial burdens on women,and chUdren
BUUt.vllV '-mi-v-w.. ;
: Senator - Overman Involyed.
T OAti
Washington, Jan. -?opie8 of
. ' "7 ii n -
arit, r. j- containing
item from the' Washington correspon
dent of the Greensboro News,' were
serit ' to the member of- the North
Carolina delegation in Congress to
day: ' '. ' ' -'"
U "Colonel Henry . Watterson, of
Louisville, told Senator Leo S. Ov
ermanof North Carolina at Charlotte
last December , that Colonel Harvey
asked Governor Wilson to meet Thos.
F. Ryan to diseuss the: Wilson ean:
didncy for -President. This statement-
waa made by Senator Overman
to Senator Hoke Smith,' of Georgia,
and others.- The understanding Ov
erman had was that, it was tfiTFpurr
pose of the proposed meeting between
Rvan and Wilson that Ryan "should
ajuust to finance Wilsorf's candidacy
after the manner of old-style pou
ties. ; The manner of the rejection by
Wilson of Harvey's suereestion caus
ed Harvey to inquire regarding Wil
son's idea as to the value of Har-
rer's Weekly support, and that was
followed bv Wilson' nana answer.,
- When shown this item, today, Sent
ator Overman declined to affirm or
deny his connectioa with the Ryaii
story.
- Dance at Elk Homo. V
: The following couples enjoyed
mince at the Elks' Home last night
' ' TTary Fry and Frank Morrison
I i Mary liurwea and A- Joa
n n, T's Alice Brown and Fred
C.'i r. !, ! ' s As!.!
n Lowe and Lu! li
tz of tl I Er And Bso-
wti-e . , a And Oo." A v
Mrs. Z. A. lion I is spending the
day in Chariot!. ; - . '
Mrsj. UaiMy Sow is .visiting
friends in JLlbemark. J.
Mia Nan Can mi has gone to
Chariot! for a brief visit. -. ' "
Mr. Gowan Dusenbery has gone
t Gaetonia on a shaft business trip.
i ,
Miss Mary Durham, of Charlotte,
is the guest of .Mias Dnrald Borden.
Mrs. F. C. OdIL ef Greensboro,
a guest at th hi lie of Mr. W, R
Odell ?o. 'J I ;' .1 j.
Vr. U. B. StickW wTOt' to Char.
lotte yeeteTday afternoon on profi
sionai bnnne,
Miss Isabell Tn
in and Richard
th day in 8al-
Gibson are spendin
isbnry with fnem
Mr,. W. T. Wall
knd children are
visiting Mrs. , Wall's father, .Rev.
Paul Barriager, in Mount Pleasant.
v MMdames A.' XL Lenta, C ; L
Smith, E. j. Braswell and Misses
Margaret Lenta and Annie McDowell
are spending th day in Charlotte. -
Mrs. A. S. Caldwell and two chil
dren, of High "Point artf the goests
of Mrs. W. J. J Weddington, Mrs.
Caldwell's aister.-- They ' will eturn
bom, tomorrow; j! S
Afraid of tho; uffragette
London,-Jan. 25.-Great interest is
being taken Jn the ' mass meeting
which A? Bonar. Law ia to . address
at the Albert Hall tomorrow. The
speech -will be the first pronounce
ment made by Mr. law in London
since his releetion- aa leader of the
Opposition in the Honae of Commons.
Extraordinary' precautions are being!
taken to prevent a possible demon
stration by the "militant suffragists.
Women will bo admitted to on sec
tion of the hall only, and no woman's
ticket has been issued without a per
sonal guarantee that - the holder will
not disturb the proceedings. ' -f; V
..-fWork on the Street Hallway; p '
The street ear. fore has' completed
the track on South Union street.
The -work, was started' at the Luther
an church corner 'and fnds at, a point
just below Mr. Leonard; Brown's resi
dence; The street car force is ow
-e u haw theR traok connected
Gibson; miU :,ta the Lock
... . (TOiv. jttVr ghonU ee-
tain expected developments material
ize fheirack will be extended runn
er down South Union, although this
is mere eonjectnre. " ; ;lf V
T Celebrate "-Br 94t& Birthday.
Mrs, Evelyn Barhhardt ia the hon
or iruest todav at a dinner at the
the celebration f her ninety-fourth
birthday..- The guests; present were:
Mk and Mrs.-D.'B. Parish,Mrs.P.
f T)rv arid children. Mrs. F. D. Lef-
ler, Mr. Reuben Biles,' llrs. ,Misen
heimer and Mr. Fred Leflor.:, num
ber of other relatives were invited
but could not attend on account 'of
i: Mr
the j serious Illness of Mrs., monroe
;."( jk"'., mmmTmm; - ; &f
Mas Nannie Alexander has award-
1 eontraot to-Mr. JohnR. Query
put in A new at her miUin-
lOT store.- The front wiu.o ox mou-
i degi, win hftve a large plate
glass window, wor Awut uegi u
lew aajrs. 7 r .
- . ..v -t i-v- '. ;
V : V V . ? S h . r ' v
I. ff
; i - ' 7 '
v ' -:mms
,'i , . : '
N02.T3 CXZCLXXA XWS.
ZUaa of New rroa All fart of th
" ; 014 North Stat.
Senator Overman has selected the
location for th Vance atatae in
atatuary. hall in Washington. It will
b placed next to that of Robert E
Lee and near that of Dr. J. L. M.
Curry, of Alabama, who spent much
of his time in North Carolina. ;
' Th Ho Joseph us Daniels ha
been made chairman of the delega
tion from th South Atlantic States
to soak th necessary arrangements
for holding th national , convention
in Baltimore. All who want a ticket
to the convention hall -can write Mr
Daniels at Raleigh. , :';'"
r Charlott Methodists - have sub
scribed $10,000 toward the erection
of a handsome school building at
th Children 'a home, this city. While
plans have' not been drawn for the
proposed new itrueture, it is known
that Superintendent Hayes has addi
tional subscriptions . amounting lo I-
.1 1 to AAA .u. vi
m. m.. "-"K
A few days ago a postmaster in
Anson county was notified by an of
ficer that he was wanted to answer
a. charge of tarrying concealed weap
one, w hereupon the postmaster in
formed the officer that he was not
amenable to State statutes, his offi
cial position exempting him, and he
doubtless threatened the officer with
all the powers of the Federal govern
ment If he so much a touched a hair
of his (the postmaster's) head.' The
officer "got cold feet,' and called on
Solicitor ' Robinson at Wadesboro;
the ' solicitor was so astonished by
the claim that he asked Attorney
General Bickett, The Attorney Gen
eral's answer was brief ancL-to the
poinfT, It was: "Take hun.";; : v -
Tof Inaugurate Georgia Governor.
Atlanta,' Ga., Jaa." 21 The Geor
gia legislature convened ioday fora
special session to eanvasa the retnns
of the recent election and inaugurate
Joseph M. Brown a governor. '.The
work; is, expected to occupy - but a
few days, when ihe legislature will
adjourn until the latter part of June
for Us regular session.
Mrs, George H. Richmond will be
hostess to the Cbrstian Reid Book
Club Saturday afternoon at 3 o clock
at ftehome of..MrjC JJTIartseU
1
V
tP in - QUMSTtOl
or unrr-onM a
emcuso jccoum
Win TBI HONMT
rov NWS KICCf- '
Mr to ' '.
DAILY Tfl AMOW
KUDBm, wutrmt
tf A HOVStHvLD
JCCOONT O tOt
CONCORD NATIONAL BANK. :
Capital 1100,000. . , i , Snrplna $33)00.
4 Per Cent,. Interast Paid oa .Tim
. Deposit..
j KYXTL8 VAWKXSi CASH
I A.kMfll. fVH mam T.rnrt. km aV1(.V
-Bom Btartilng Light
, Th Asbevill Citixen baa been v
riastingly after th murderer of
Myrtle Hawkins, in Hendersonville
last summer and promise som im
portant disclosure aooa. In a re
cent issosvtbat paper says:
"la again referring lo th eaae of
Myrtl Hawkins, whose mysterious
death ktiI remain unsolved, it is not
the purpose of th Citizen to engage
in controversy with a Hendersonville
writer, who with that curious form
of intelligence whieh ha featured
most, of hi work in thi State has
advanced a suicide theory. .The mer
curial disposition he shows in deal
ing with facts and conditions, which
he himself explointed when he vo
ciferously demanded in Th Hender
sonville Hostler that the slayer of
Myrtle Hawkins be brought to juiP
Iceland that the county "officials do
their duty, make him. irresponsible
in argument, and there we drop huu.
"It may be necessary, however, to
""7 mocctbbit
joeeMioniy qnoU from ntf this
remarkable manuscript, , penned - at
th time pt the hearing in Hender-
sonville last September. , Therein lie
most of th clues and theories along
which, the detectives - andN officials
worked when they first began to hnnt
for those responsible, for Myrtle
Hawkins' death. . His vivid imagi
nation say that the unfortunate girl
drowned herself, on Wednesday night
after vainly attempting an operation
on herself. ; The' Citizen has in its
possession: tome of the mannscripts
referred to which say that Myrtle
Hawkins left home on Thursday
morning,, a -fact, to whieh the girl's
parents will, and did testify a fact
borne out by letters recently' receiv
ed by The Citizen, from members of
the Hawkins family who indignantly
resent and brand as false the state
ment that 4Jie girl committed sui-
eida. " .,-'.-':
"Tlie Citizen expects ' to publish
within the next two or three days
some interesting data from, an an-
thoritatiye and representative onrce
in- Henderson county , whieh, we be
lieve, will throw some new, if not
startling light on the Hawkins' mys
tery.", ; ." . ' .- . y
'' r , v'An Instrnctiya Play.
'The ...Third Degree," Charles
Klein's great play, remains the tri-
nmntianc - nnnliA wneffMl.nv:.'.i:tiiiti it: 1
was rewgnized to8Tif?
about a year ago, .'The play not only
entertains its hearers, bnt it in
structs the larger, portion- of its pa
trons in a harmful police practice of
great interest to th commonwealth.
. Wait For Our
SEMl-ANNL'AL
GLEA RANGE
White Goods Sale
VfHICH Witt OCCUR NXT WEI
THIS WILL BE THE. GREATEST VALUE-CIVIIIS
EVENT OF THE YEAR. EVERY WOMAN EKGV. :Z
WHAT OUR SEMI-ANNUAL SALES MEAN. 7V .
... ...... . . .. . ... 4: . . . - .
GREATEST "SAVINGS OF THE YEAR.' WATCH CU-t
ADVERTISEMENTS FOR OPENING DATS. : 7;
n
a- kl
Norfolk Soutlcra J.1 I 1
Baying CJlt li-,
Norfolk, Ya, Jan. 24. A f: !-
to restrain the 'orfUk Sou: -a
Rilrod from purchasing tb r-
dn Asbaboro, Cartha A 1 1 .
burst, Dnrham A O"rlotu, Ucf d
A Troy and Rale-h TS,Mitbport r 1-
roads in North Caroline was fed to
day in tb United tAst. L. i t
court and was made part cf tit
proceedings ia th as of Tmt Com. .
pany of America against th s - "'k
A Southern Railroad Company. 1 . .
petition was filed by Dr. fcout! - '
Leigh, through hia attorney, t"i.
A Terry, and an order was isrnd t r
Jndge Edman WaddiU, Jr, euinr tie -
nary 31 to show cans why tb oraver
should not be granted and tb r" f -
demanded allowed. - ' "!
Dr. Leigh waa snreeon for tb
railroad --before it went - into- the
hands of receiver and for. 4b
eeiver while they operated th road,
and he claim over $1,50 i do him
for sueq services. Tho petition al
leges the revetm if tb rV is. not ,
sufficient to pay , th fixed charm :
and cost of maintenance, and. opera- .
tion; that the roUrng' tck is 'worn
oat, old and .dilapidated 't khat th '
roadbed is rough and th . ties rot
ten and that the road cannot be op
crated with safety Withoiteipending
urge ums of money and that tb
only way the company ha of raising
money is to use h aaeeta of th
Norfolk A Southern Railway, " por
chased at tho' leceivers' 'sale, from,
revenue derived from 'opeAtion' or
further encumbrance of th property. '
ant has sold all the floating property. .
of he company the stoamer Vir
ginia, Comet, Waterburg, Garrett,' v
Dickorman, (Maven Belle, Wagner and !
aj dc mane and that it ha een rt- ' .
moved from the jurisdiction - of th- i :
court. It recite the the. property
was purchased: ffor $800,000 and
th assumption of certain liabilities, '
among them Df. Leigh's clsira, and ' -that
it hs since been mortgaged for .:
$25,000,000 and that it has provided .
for an additional issue of $10,000,000. . -
Baal Estat Daala.
Mr. T. L. Ross has purchased 62
acres of land in No. 't township from
Mr. J.'A. Kimmons. v . -'
. Mr. J. W. . Culp' has porohased a
house and lot near the- second. Bap'
tist church. , . , : t
Mr. Job rr Groff has ; pnrc'"' -i
jP i
of the Wallace Cook property ,
-'The last three sale were from- th
Wallace Cook property . an A. war
made by Messrs. J. F; Cannon, nnd
and J. C. WaoWorth. u ' ,
SALE
er r."o' ,
st 1 '. n Archey and
:;.! :iy 1 i c,; I"' !. Lucy Brown and
At. 1 .;-!'!. ' c; -foncs: . !"
r. a. t' : .' ' i I . r.