Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Sept. 7, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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God Advertising Is to Easiness what Steam is to Machinery, that great propelling power. This paper gives result?. . j'k Good Advertisers Use these columns for results. An advertisement in this paper will reach a good class of people. ONWEAl ra C. HASDY, Editor and Proprietor. 'Excelsior" is Our Motto. Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year. VOL. XXVII. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1911. NUMBER 36. A HK U)MM PAUL Ii!TCH!N, Attorxf.y at Law, Scotland Neck, N. C. ices Anywhere. WATEK WITH MEALS. Test by an Eminent Specialist Proves Water Is Beneficial. !.'.nd Neck, N. C. R. C. DUNN. Enfield, N. C. flTTORNEYS T Law 'cotland Neck, North Carolina. Practice together in all matters - vpt those pertaining to-railroad practice. Money loaned on approv i security. Dunn & Dunn Attorneys-at-Law, cetlsnci Neck, North Carolina. money to loan. Kiiott 13. Clark fiiterr.ey at Law Pellagra not Contagious. Halifax, North taro na. I C'hir'r, II. D. Thurman D. Kitchin, M.D. Phone No. 131. LiRK S. KlTCIIIX Physicians and Surgeons Offices in Brick Hotel Office Phone No. 21. j. P. WiMBCRLEY, vsician and Surgeon eck, N. C. e on Do pot Street. Scotland o .nee in O. F. Smith ysicisn and Surgeon Fi-intcrs & Commercial ?rs & Buiidh Scotland Neck, N. C. J. L. SAVAGE OF ROCKY MOUNT, N. C. be in Scotland Neck, N. C, cn third Wednesday of each month hotel to treat -e, Ear, Nose, the diseases of Throat, and fit Still current is the old fallacy i-iicu. it, is uest 10 annK little or no water with meals. This idea is1 based on the theory that water taken while eating, must dilute the gastric juice and interfere with its strength and action. But more than a year ago we pointed out in this place that milk, the ideal food, is approximately 90 per cent water; that water does not remain in the Biuniacn longer man ruteen minu tes, while digestion lasts three hours, and that most stomach specialists actually prescribe con siderable water to be taken along with meals for many of their patients. Comes now the report of a most interesting series of experiments concerning this question recently carried out by a leading specialist in digestive disorders and teacher of physiology. From his class he seieetea sixteen nealthy medical students who volunteered to be ex perimented upon. j "Eight of these young men," i says the report, "were instructed to drink no water or other fluid with meals, and between meals to drink no more than demanded by actual thirst. The other eight were instructed to drink four g-asses, or one quart of water with each meal, and between mesls to drink it or not as desired. "These young men were carefully watched, regularly weighed and each symntom recorded. Of the eight who drank no water all lost in weight from eight ounces to two pounds with one exception. This exception remained exactly, the same -weight, and it should be mentioned that this young man was holding his position as railway mail Hi C UVEBriON, DENTIST. head Building hours from an.i 2 to 9 to 1 c 5 O'clock. 'clock Ft A. MIFF, Scotland Neck, N. C. 03 examined free. Broken matched and frames repaired, '?.3S53 strictly cash. I ii ARKS & BRO. o (ball kinds of 1 5 the and ma ;i wnrk, repair engines and boii a id rim a general repair shop. e-::hrdng a specialty. TfT" pjjgR 1 i - -1 KAia BALSAM " -w-.'- Cleft).- ttii'i teftutmss de hair. V u i a a larrurlarii (rrowt'i. :. w " r JV.1K 1o z:etcre Orrs; - y- Z't to VouiLful Cclor. ; ' ' ;:.' y-'-'Tt i'-s & hair lai.ijg. i t sT5 STOP 'in think how important it is to have your glasses fit correct ly, investigate the reputation ' i your optician, for much de P on jsj upon your eyes. clerk in addition to his college work, and that he was so accustomed to irrcgulai' habits that cutting off his water did not effect him like it did the others. In addition to loss in weight, each one complained of headache and more or less constipa tion, with the above mentioned ex ception. Only their loyalty made them hold out to the end of the week's experiment, and they all seemed gl&d to ffct back their wont ed allowance of water. "The eight who drank four glass es at each meal fared much better. One of them said that four glasses rather crowded his stomach, but did not make him feel uncomfort able otherwise. Of these eight all gained weight from four ounces to two and one-half pounds except one, whose weight remained the same. Not one reported headache, constipation or any form of diges tive, discomfort. Not one of the eight suffered a single qualm of in digestion, either gastric or intestinal, during the week of this experiment. The report speaks for itself. Yet we must not jump to the other ex treme and think that the more water we drink at meals the better, and we should always avoid washing down nnchewed hunks of food with water. The moderation dictated by normal desire and good manners should be our guide. By an Atlanta Physician. A statement from Dr. Roy Harris, secretary of the State Board of Health says that pellagra is not con tagious but is really poison caused by eating diseased corn products. Dr. Harris is one of the best inform ed physicians in the south and his opinion on any medical question ? 1 J - -WT carries weignt. jur. Harris con tends that one person cannot catch pellagra from another and says that no one need be afraid of sleeping even in the same room with a person afflicted with the disease. It is sim ply caused by what is eaten and nothing else, he says. It is not a new disease but it was discovered in the south only in the past f ew years. Now there are over 50,000 cases in the southern states alone. The dis ease has been known in Italy for 100 years, says Dr. Harris, and it has been under treatment there for that time. It is said that this dis ease could be prevented by the leg islature passing an act preventing the shipping of western corninto the south and the Dr. believes that if such an act were passed that penagra would De unknown in Georgia in five years. Western corn, to a great extent, is damaged badly by the weather during the winter as it is then shipped south and the diseased grain causes a kind of ptomaine poison which is called "Pellagra." Dr. Harris believes that it is a serious problem for the Southern physicians, and believes their fight against it will be hopeless unless the law-makers come to their assistance.-r-Atlanta Journal. MIGHT WAIT FOR YEARS. Then Tariff Board's Report Maybe Wcrtbless When We Get It. A Newspaper's Duty. Male Sold for Gne Cent. ways lavesti gauon. P-anU at ''-!' if. afe P'-'omptly have complete grinding all our stores, and accurately and the most difficult ! j Remember, j "ji our men are experts and we i 'V);Ju''Jtely guarantee you en ; t're satisfaction. j "Make Us Year Opticians." Successors to TUCKER, HALL & CO. Opticians of The Best Sort j j 53 Granby Street, I SMF0LK. RICHMOND. ROANOKE. First Monday and court week al- bring large crowds to the ounty's capital and Monday last was no exception to the rule, there : hincr n number of citizens here 3 " " from all parts of the county. These are also occasions for the congregat ing of horsewappers on the bona yard. Quite an amusing incident happened Monday when a horse wapper trotted out a mule that he offered for one cent cash. The of fer was promptly accepted by another dealer, who shortly sold the animal for twenty-five cents, realizing the handsome profit of 2400 per cent on hi3 short invest ment. Other deals ranging from 25 to 50 cents were frequently made during the day. So it will be seen that good stock is still in demand and bringing reasonable prices. Rutherfordton Sun. se Moving! i am prepared to move houses v ( h or without chimneys. Reasonable Prices. . For terms and further informa tion, apply to R. V. KITCHIN, Scotland Neck, N. C. f-7vur -n the baby grow strong if the nursing mother is pale and delicate? con's Emulsion makes the mother strong and well; increases and en riches the baby food, prui-t. One of the commonest problems the newspaper has to deal with is the fellow who falls afoul of the law and then wants his name left out of the paper because it will wound the feeling3 of some of his relatives when they read that he has been up in court. Nothing could be more natural than for one to want to svoid hurting the feelings of any one related or dear to him in any way. What puzzles the average newspaper man is the fact that this magnanimous thought for dear one'? feelings doesn't manifest itself until after the deed that brings disgrace has already been committed and the knowledge of it becomes public property. A stitch in time saves nine applies here as well as in other things. Even more comtemptuous, though, is the fellow who runs afoul the law and demands that his name be left out of the paper because he himself is a "gentleman" and his family are "prominent" people. This, they seem to think, is sufficient justification for the crime they com mit. There is more crime and more scandal committed, yes, several times more, in communities where the newspapers suppress such news than where they publish it. Publi city given those guilty of minor of fences save ihem from a more hor rible crime. It is probably rare when a news paper publisher delights in giving to the public news of crime but when such news becomes public property it is the duty of all conscientious newspapers to give the subscriber information. It is an obligation such a paper takes on itself to give all the news of public interest when it takes the subscribers money. Statesville Landmark. The plea made by the' President that the country should wait for the report on each schedule by the Tariff Board, fair and consistent as it is, is not likely to be accepted patiently next session. At the rate at which the board is proceeding, it will take many years before the country can obtain the data for a revision of the entire tariff. The purpose and methods of the Tariff Board, moreover, are open to grave question. What they are avowedly seeking to do to as certain the relative cost of produc tion of identical articles in different countries is likely to prove little more than the pursuit of a mirage. It is much like the "physical valua tion" of railways if a chansre of rates is based on the valuation the real valuation will ' change. If the cost of production of protected arti cles is ascertained, based upon the present tariffs and the tariff is changed, cost of production will be changed. If the people once wake up to the conviction that the Tariff Board can not find firm footing in the quick sand of fluctuating domestic and foreign values they will have little patience for the plea that they should wait indefinitely for its find ings. How far Republican leaders can protect the President against the adverse influence of the combi nation of Democrats and Insurgents remains to be seen. There are" like ly to be many sighs from moderate Republicans as v. ell as from the pro tected interests for one hour of Senator Aldrich in the next Con gress to avert political disaster. Wall Street Journal. ThcaHt It Easy Money. the Pittsburg "Pay Charlio sixth race at Sand-Hay Roads Preferred to Macadam. The matter of building roads of a combination of sand and clay is be ing widely agitated throughout the South, and the desirability of sand clay roads is being generally admit ted. For instance, the Chamber of Commerce of Jacksonville has been informed by the New York Herald and Atlanta Journal scouts engaged in selecting a route for a national highway that they consider the sand-clay roads the very best they have ever traveled over, not except ing the macadam. This is a re markable testimony to the valve and desirability of sand-clay roads, es pecially when it is recalled that the macadam roads cost about ten times as much as the sand-clay. In this connection the State geol ogist of Georgia, Hon. S. W. Mc Callie, in an official report of sand clay road construction says in part: "A sand-clay road is a road sur faced with a mixture of sand and clay in such proportion that when the mixture is compacted it forms a firm surface suitable for traffic. Roads of this class have in the last few years attracted much attention throughout the Southern States by reason of their cheapness and suit ableness for common county high-ways.-'-Danville Register. "In the last race I have a good thing,'' said Fred Rush enticingly to Harry Polack, vaudeville ".gent. Rothschild in the Jaurez. I have the tip straight from the firm of Rothschild, the bankers, and they own the horse." "I will risk $10," said Polack, car ried away by the apparent confidence of his friend; "where can I play it?" "Leave it to me," replied Rush, and he clutched the money. When Polack had gne, Frank Bohn remonstrated with Rush. "That horse is a plug," he said. "He hasn't a show in the world to win. Why did you give him to Polack?" "Hush," replied the wily one, "you're in on it. I won't put the money down at all. The horse will lose, and then we can dine. Brams, brains I got them." Several hours later the couple sat down in a Broadway restaurant Rush insisted on ordering and he went as far as the $10 would go, Polack beamed on him. "I thought," said he, "that you were kidding me on that horse, but it was a good tip after all." "What!" exclaimed Rush, choking on his soup spoon. "Thirty to one was the price," said Polack. "Brains, brains," jnurmured Frank Bohn. St. Louis Dispatch. A Salary Basis. A burden is imposed on every county and municipality that allows its officers to operate on a fee sys tem. There are pauper counties wherein the sheriff, clerk of the court, register of deeds, treasurer, and other officers, draw larger emoluments than the governor of the commonwealth. There are men holding comparatively insignificant offices drawing ten times the money they could make elsewhere. Would you hire your officer to handle your personal account and at the same salary he is drawing? You have no right to complain about high taxes and dirty politics as long as you lack the manhood to protest these evils. Graft is the penalty of a dis interested citizenship; and high tax es without permanent improvements is the necessary result. No use boasting your city or community, if you do not kill the political leeches that prey upon the industries locat ed in your midst. Go back to child hood for your example; you and ycur brother or friend fought each other, sometimes cussed each other, but never allowed an outsider to pursue the same tactics. Fight your fights on the inside. Knock hard from within against all forms of graft and reckless expen ditures of public funds and boost mightly the advantages offered capital in your community. Go to it. Merchant's Journal and Com merce. The Chicken Laiy. It is Coed ta ce a Soufterns?. Ve people in America are indeed the favored of the gods and none more so than those of us who live in the South. There is indeed much to suggest that idea that here in the South, with our rich natural resour ces, kindly climate, democratic ideas, the absence from us of a fashion mae, idle-rich class of degenerates, our old-fashioned ideas of morality, and our growing freedom from the enervating effects of intemperence and idleness, we shall grow leaders who will not only make the South great, but win leadership in the nation at large. And in bringing about this result upon no class does so much depend as upon those next to the soil. Clarence Poe, in Pro gressive Farmer. "I have been somewhat costive, but Doan's Regulets gave just the results desired. They act mildly and regulate the bowels perfectly." George B. Krause, 306 Walnut Ave., Altoona, Pa. Memphis Lady Writes. Memphis, Tenn. Mrs, D. Looney, of Memphis, writes: "I suffered mif-erv for nearly eight years. Since taking Cardui 1 am much stronger, and I haven't missed a single meal. I hardly know how to express my gratitude." Don't worry about your symptoms Cardui goes deep er down. What you need is strength. Strength will enable you to throw off female- troubles and will prevent the headache, backache, dizziness ond other symptoms that? you now suffer from. Cardui helps you get it. Hardly a week passes that The Record is not asked to state that it is unlawful for chickens to run at large. These requests come mostly from women women vho do not want to offend their neighbors whose fowls depredate on their gar dens, flower beds, etc. The law is plain and has been printed in full in this paper, while time and again it hss been referred to in plain langu age. There is., a misapprehension, however, about the way to enforce it. It is a State law and the only thing one has to do is to ask that a warrant be issued, agreeing to be come a witness. We have never Trinity College News. Durham, N.C., Sept. 2 President Few to-day made this important an nouncement; Judge J. Crawford Biggs, former ly professor in the University of North Carolina and for the last five years one of the most distinguished judges of the Superior Court in the state, has resigned his judgeship and accepted a professorship of law in Trinity College. Judge Biggs has behind him a brilliant record as student, teacher attorney, Supreme Court reporter and judge. This bringing to the School of so learned and accomplished a lawyer is re garded as a most valuable acquisi tion. With Dean Samuel F. Mordecai, LL. B., Judge Biggs, and R. P. Reade, LL. B., the school is equipp ed with a faculty that will enable it to carry forward the great objects for which it was seven years ago established. This was the first Southern law school to maintain adequate admission requirements, the first to introduce the case-system and the first to write its own books. Under the brilliant leadership of Dean Mordecai the school continues to hold this primacy. In the face of the disorganized state of legal education in North Carolina the School stands firm for higher stand ards and better methods of instruc tion and it goes steadily on putting out books that meet the approval of the highest authorities in the coun try. In this movement to raise and in vigorate one of the learned profes sions, Trinity College is making sub stantial contribution to that moral and intellectual leadership for which every great college in part exists. Do You Get Up Willi a iamo Back? Kivir.cy Trcut-ic ILiIies Yea Hiscratlc. Almost everyone knows of Dr. Hihacr'a Swaiup-Koot, the jreat kidney, liver aul bladder ivirv.-dy, be cause of Us roi:iark- 1 able lie null re'.toiMijj i proi.-eri.ie.-.. Hy::.::iZ r, iioot i;;!:.i!3 a:;:i t riiiir.: CO!ili!' I. Any skin itching is a temper-tester. The more you scratch the worse it itches. Doan's Ointment cures piles, eczema any skin itch ing. At all drug stores. He Smith told me the other day he thought I was suffering from brain fag. She Oh, the flatterer! Balti more American. j'i ncys, liver, aim every i t.i iuq v.ihiary "r3i:; "-e. lz hold water and pcs,l:lini;pr.i:i i:i p-jr-ivrl', or bad efiecis follovi;i( u: e c i liqr.or, V or beer, and overcomes lint ca: t necessity cf bciiif; compelled to y.t o.'t.-;i through the day, e.tnl to ct v.t i:ur. times during the nikt. Swanip-Roof: is r.ot rcco"r.r.?jj!r;,l f, r everythiiu' but if oa l.:iv : Li '.'.i-v. live or bladder trouble, it v. ill bo l'oir.id ji-.rt the remedy you need. It l:u:; been the: onghly tested in private nraclicp. ;! 1 liv proved so successful that a special ci ranement hv.s been made by vhicha'I readers of thij paper, who hr.va not r. -ready tried it, may h.-.vc n rample boU'i sent free by mail, also a Lou'.v tellir j more about Swamp-Root, end h'.v ti imuojin you nave t.ia- "w"vi ney or bladder trouble. tsgfVjpznS When writhigmentkn (SIKC?' readiii'i this irencrous FSrti:irStlr::irr:?: offer in this paper and 'T'. '.,l -,r,"f S - J send vour cd;lre3S to c.c :t' V 1 Dr. Kilmer & Co.'tl.luiZ- Einghamton, N. V. The regular fiflv-cer t and one-dollar size bottlei are en!d 1 ell druggists. Don't make a:iy rtiisLab'a hut remember the name, Swamp-Root, ir. Kilmer's S. vamp-Root, and the .?i dress, Eiushauitou, N. Y ., tviry botVn, . Dyspepsia is our national ailment. Burdock Blood Bitters is the national been able to understand whv the of-1 cure ror it. It strengthens stomach i fleers do not at least make an at tempt to enforce it. Persons who permit cows, hogs and the rest run at large are yanked up in a hurry. The law is exactly the same as to chickens. The only thing an officer has to do is to walk around town almost any old day and find chickens depredating on others, or at least running abroad. Witnesses as to ownership are easily obtainable and they can be forced to attend and give evidence without a great deal of urging. Only a week or two ago a conviction was secured and the defendant owner of the chicken was fined for the offence. Greensboro Record. What Do Ycu Carry ia Your Pocket, Young Kan? The young man whose pockets are filled with cigarette wrappers, moustache combs, finger nail clean ers, miniature curling irons, look ing glass, etc., and have their moth ers crease their pants every day are not the ones who will make promis ing husbands. The pockets of those who are helping to make the coun try bloom and causing two blades of grass to grow where God planted but one, will be found filled with barbed wire staples, and different sizes of nails and scaews. They are the boys the girls had better look after. Red Springs Citizen. membranes, promotes flow ge-;tive juices, purifies the builds you up. of di- blood, Confidence may be defined as the feeling we experience just before we nroceed to make a mistake. Puck. Diarrhoea is always more cr less prevalent during September. Be prepared for it. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem edy is prompt and effectual. It can always be depended upon and is pleasant to take. For sale by all dealers. "Mother, I know what elephants tusks are made of." "What, dear?" "Why, paper knives." Punch. For bowel complaints in children always give Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and castor oil. It is certain to effect a cure and when reduced with wafer and sweetened is pleasant to take. No physician can prescribe a better remedy. For sale by all dealers. Divorce separates a man from his wife; alimony separates him from his money. Digestion and Assimiiafion. It is not the quantity of food tak en but the amount digested and as similated that gives strength and vitality to the system. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets invigor ate the stomach and liver and en able them to perform their functions naturally. For sale by all dealers. HYOMI FOR CATARRH. World's Greatest Remedy Free Cocaine, Opium and all Habit - Forming Drags. Frca Start right now, before the cold weather comes, to kill catarrh germs and get rid of catarrh. It's the best time. Breathe HYOMEI (pronounce it High-o-me) E. T. Whitehead Com pany guarantees it. It is made of Australian eucalyptus, thymol and other antiseptics, and besides de stroying the germs it soothes and heals the sore, raw membrane and prevedts mucus from forming in the air passages. Breathe it a . few times a It's an easy and pleasant treatment and resultsare quick and certain HYOMEI is guaranteed for catarrh, asthma and catarrhyl deaf ness, or money back. A complete outfit, including hard rubber inhal er, costs $1.00. Extra bottles if afterward needed cost but 50 cents. Honest people should always be i bent on stopping crooked persons. A Dreadful Sight. to II. J. Barnum, of Freeville, N. Y., was the fever-sore that had plagued his life for years in spite of many remedies he tried. At last he used Bucklen's Arnica Salve and wrote: "It has entirely healed with scarcely a scar left." Heals Burns. Boils, Eczema. Cuts, Bruises, Swell ings. Corns and Piles Tike magic. Only 22c at E. T. Whitehead Co. Some folks talk about you and yet talk behind your back. day. Terrible Train of Troubles. Lake Charles, La. Mrs. E. Four nier, 516 Kirby street, says: "The months before I took Cardui I could hardly walk. I had backache, head ache, pain in my legs, fainting spells, sick stomach, dragging feelings and no patience or courage. Since taking Cardui, I have no more pain and feel good all the time." Take Car dui and get the benefit of the pecul iar herb ingredients, which have been found so efficient for womanly ills. Other people have done the testing. You profit by their exper ience. Tiv it. Notice of Safe of Dunn Izrd October 2, ici J. Under and by virtue of ?.n ordtr cf the Superior Court of Halifax county, made in Uu? special proet-td-ing entitled, W. B. Dunn. Robert G. Dunn, Mary 7. Dunn :.;:'.! IUvm I. Dunn Vs. Anr.ie V. Du in. Jio i:v.r.; beir-g No upon th" Etv.'ird nro- ceediriir docket of i:d court, tin undersigned commi-Rionc-r will on Monday, the :;eco.vl d.;-v of Oet( her. l'Jll, at twelve oV!o?k. no r;n. at tin; court house door in Halifax. Nrt.li Carolina, offer for s-r.k to the high est bidder certain tracts of hind lying and being in Enfield tnynshlp, Halifax county. North Carol hi:'. . -in I described as follow:;, to-wit: First Tract Adjoining the lands of S. C. Bellamy and oil. en', begin ning at the inside coner o'? r.n ohl dam rnd ditch. S TM!aniv' conv : thence north 8dl V poTes rJor.g said ditch, said to be Ue'lr.mv'u l;n ; thence continuing lieilMny's lines along n hedgerow N c"A V r,S bole.s to a large pine stump an the -";v.' of a ditch, said to be Jusey'o line; t henci; N f E 101 poll's to a car.r.l nnd dr.-n, said to he the line; thence along the dam and canal to its junction with a larger canal and dam; thence along said cannl to a l?rge cypres.'? tree standing at a crossing of a planta tion path; tlientt; south lL'.j V 41 poles and 10 links to tho beginning, and CO poles along said dr.m from the south side of the public road to Enfield, containing 15ti acres; the last distance, bO p-d&j, U given s as to locate the corner, known as the Short Swamp place. Second Tract B .-ginning at tho public roid to Enliold nt t!.- b. :id of a dam, the c mt r of the Dn-m :n d Tilicry t rat-La in 1 !hirr, ' ; Hie; tnenro a'oni'tua oarn iz v, i :c; , S 6 V 14 polo-', S 11 K 18 poll 10 Isr.kR, S 15 W 21 p.-)!tH lo the of the dam; Derxl Cre; th-nco S 1 E ar.'i end k; their'u ulot A : to Dead Creek to Fishing Cree to a very large drawf and knurled o:;k s!:i-.d-ing on the bank of l'i.ihirg Cjvt-k ft a point whtre it trakfrs a sharp turn; thence N M E ill poles to the psbiir; road to Enfkl'i; thnoe nlon;r s iid road to the? beginning, containing 1D2 ncrc3j known as Washington Whitehead Plac?. Third Tract AdjVning the lands of Dr. O. C. Stalling, J. L Fl?ming, Mrs. D. M. Dunn f-.nd r.ther, and being known as the B. C. Dimn horno place, and said to contain V 1 ) acror., more or less; ths said hoi,:: place being the property of Wflls Diaugi. on and willed by siid Draughon to B. C. Dunn and wife, Rosa P. Dunn, for life and at their death to their children, and being the place at which B. C. Dunn and wife lived, and being known in Enfield town ship, Halifax county, as the B. C. Dunn home place,' and being si turn ed on the old road leading from En field to Scotland Neck, kno.vn as Enfield road. The above property being the property and all of s.ame deviled by Wei is Drauphon to Mrs. Rosa P. Dunn for her life and then to her children by will probated September 21. 1872, and recorded in the office of the clerk of th Superi or Court of Edgecombe county in Will Book Volume 7, page C02, t which reference is made. Terms of sale One third cash, one third i-n six months and ;ne third in twelve months, deferre 1 payments to bear interest from da to of sale, and sale made subject to confirmation by court. R. O. EvLurrrr, C'jmmi;s:oner. This 29th day of August, 1311. Are Yon Going to Build ? You will need Sash, Doors and Blinds, Porch Columns, Hardware, Paint, etc. Clark Sash & Door Corporation . Frank T. Clark, Pres., NORFOLK. - - - VIRGINIA.
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 7, 1911, edition 1
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