SPIED IT LIFE'
?That's what a prominent
druggist said of Scott's
Emulsion a short time
ago. As a rule we don't
use or refer to testimonials ,
in addressing the public, j
but the above remark and i
similar expressions are
made so often in connec
tion with Scott's Emulsion
that they are worthy of
occasional note. From
infancy to old age Scott's
Emulsion offers a reliable
means of remedying im
proper and weak develop
ment, restoring lost flesh
and vitality, and repairing
waste. The action of
Scott's Emulsion is no
more of a secret than the
composition of the Emul
sion itself. What it does
it does through nourish
ment?the kind of nourish
ment that cannot be ob
tained in ordinary food.
No system is too weak or
delicate to retain Scott's
Emulsion and gather good
from it.
We will send you a
sample free.
Be sure that this picture in the
form of a label is on the wrapper
of erery bottle of Emulsion you
buy.
SCOTT & BOWNE
Chemists
409 Pearl St., N. Y.
* 50c. and $1; all druggists.
Some Church Notes.
It is proposed to erect the tall
est church in Chicago on the site
now occupied by the First Metho
dist Church. It will cost $1,000,
000. There will be a huge audi
torium. and the rest of the build
ing will be for offices.
Of the population of Ireland? i
4,400,000?about 3,200,000 are
Roman Catholics. The Protest
ant Episcopal Church known as
the church of Ireland, and estab
lished by law as the state church
of that countrv until the year
1809, reported 570,000 members.
Presbyterians have 453,000;
Methodists. 02,000; Indepen
dents, 10,000, and Baptists
7,000
In France in a population of
88,000,000, 30,000 000 are
known as Roman Catholics Pro
testants number 700,000. Of
these 500.000 areconnected with
the Reformed Church. 15,000
with the Free Church. 70,000 are
Lutherans. Methodist churches
have 2,500 members, Baptists.
2,200, Plymouth Brethren and
allied companies 10.000, Jews,
00,000. Until now three ecclesi
astical bodies have received state
support, the Roman Catholic,
the Reformed and the Lutheran.
On January 1st 1900 there was
a complete separation of church
and state.?Selected.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
Tiie Kind You Have Always Bought
SPECIAL RATES ACCOUNT
SOUTHERN BAPTIST CON
TION. CHATTANOOGA,
TENN., VIA SOUTH
ERN RAILWAY.
The Southern Railway an
nounces account of Southern
Baptist Convention and Auxil
iary Societies low round trip
rate of One fare plus 25 cents.
Tickets will bo sold May 8 9-10
and 11th, final limit ten days
from date of sale, except an ex
tension until June lath, may be
secured by depositing ticket and
on payment of a fee of 50 cents.
The Southern has double daily
service for Chattanooga and is
the shortest rou'e to the Con
vention as well as the most
scenic. The route is through
Asheville and the "Land of the
Sky."
For further particulars call on
any Agent of the Southern Rail
way or address,
T. E. GREEN, C. T. A.,
' Raleigh, N. C.
- .
Gent's if you wish to buy a
nice hand welt shoe in pa'ent
calf or vici, at living prices, call j
at W. G. Yelvington's store.
GREETED BY STEER IN CUBA.
Mr. Longworth Tells How Animal
Held Up Bridal Train
Representative .Nicholas Long
worth related au anecdote yes
terda.v afternoon which indicated
the cordiality of the reception,
with which he and his bride were
received when they were in Cuba
Shortly after the train on
which they were traveling had
left Santiago, it was brought to
a eudden stop by the engineer.
Mr. Longworth and his bride
stepped out to ascertain the
cause and saw in the middle of
the track a large steer. The ani
mal was facing the engine, shak-;
ing his horns and bellowing
vociferously. The engineer toot
ed his whistle and the fireman
rang the bell, but the steer not
only refused to budge, but bel
lowed ail the louder.
After this had gone on for
several minutes,theengiueercou
cluded to charge the animal; but
as soon as he started the engine
the steer lowered his shaggy
head and prepared to make au
onslaught himself. This discon- j
certed the engineer and broke;
his resolution. He then held a
conference with the fireman, it
was decided to give the animal
some hot air. The engine was
started slowly in his direction,
and when it reached him a cloud
of steam was let loose. To add j
to the animal's confusion the
whistles were blown and the bell
rnnrr arroSn I
J. UU^ U^UIIUi
This was a demonstration
which the beast had never met!
before, and he slowly stepped to ;
the side of the track. Tnis gave
the engineer his opportunity, j
and he started the train with a j
jerk, and before the steer could
recover from hie surprise, it was
out of reach.
When last seen the animal was j
still standing alongside the track
shaking his ponderous head,!
which the friends of the bride and j
groom said was his method of
bidding them farewell. They
tried to convince the couple that
he stopped the train in order to
extend them a curdiai welcome.?
Washington Post.
A GUARANTEED CURE FOR PILES
Itching, Blind, Bleeding, Pro
truding Piles. Druggists are j
authorized to refund money if j
PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure
in 6 to II days. 25c.
The Story of Success.
Rothschild began life as a ped- j
iler. Commodore Vanderbilt
ferried his own boat. Andrew j
Carnegie began life as an office
bov at $2 50 a week. Rockefel
ler, while working in a machine |
shop,saw hischancein petroleum,'
which was plenty, but crude.j
Henry Clay began to speak in
a barn with the horses and cows
for and audience. Daniel Web
ster was so poor when a student
in Dartmouth College that when
a friend sent a recipe to grease
his hoots, Webster wrote, thank
ing him, and added, "Rut my
boots need otuer doctoring, for
they will admit water and even
gravel stones." Alexander
Dumas said: "When 1 found out
that I was black, I determined to
live so white as to force men to
look beneath my skin."?Rev.
Madison Peters.
ucnnrwr /'T C A wcrrvctx
IV, 11! VJ U iMZC.UC.LM.
The Body Requires it Just as Much
as the House Does.
"You look sick this morning." i
"Yes. I woke up with a dull j
headache, a coated tongue and
that dark brown taste in the
mouth."
"Didn't you have pains in the
joints and muscles?"
"Yes. As my old negro mam
my used to say, 'I have misery
in my joints.' "
"Better get a bottle of RHEU
MABIDE and take it, old man."
"What does RHEUMACIDE
do?"
"Why KHEUMACIDE is the
most powerful and effective
blood purifier in the world. It
sweeps all the germs and poisons
out of the blood and 'makes you
well all over.' "
"Ever try it yourself?"
"Sure. I take a couple of bot
ties of it before spring begins.
Give my blood a spring clean
ing. And RHEUMACIDE puts
me in such fine shape that I
never have that tired feeling."
"Well, I am going to try this
RHEUMACIDE you say is the
best ever?"
"That's right. All the drug
gists sell it. Better get a bottle
to-day. You start to get well
with the first dose. The pro
prietors say that RHEUMA
CIDE 'gets at the joints from
the inside' and 'makes you well
all over.' And that's the truth,
old man."
f* H. Fkitue,
Che Napoleon
Of Copper
WHEN It was announced a few
days ago tli?t F. Augustus
lleinze bud won Ills tight
against the Amalgamated
Popper company and Its Standard Oil
backers men familiar with the dapper
little mining king were not greatly sur
prised. There are few men who stand
u chance of wiuulng when the battle
Is against such men us John 1). Rocke
feller. 11. 11. Rogers, Senator \V. A.
Clark and other exponents of what
Thomas \V. I.awson calls "the system."
lleinze is one of these few. lie gen
erally has luck on his side. lie knows
the copper mining business from A
to Z. he understands how to play both
business and inilitlcs so that the two
games will work his way, and he has
nerve enough to tackle anything. The
harder the proposition the better he
likes It. 11. II. Rogers Is considered to
possess a wonderful power as to esti
mating men and handling them In any
negotiations he may think tit to enter
with thein. Hut lleinze even ten years
ago, when he was quite a young man, j
proved too much of an enigma for the
Standard Oil vice president to solve. ;
There is a story that about that time
Mr. Rogers invited him to his oltlee one
day with a view of compromising
the tight lleinze had precipitated by
suits against the companies controlling
Amalgamated properties. At the be
ginning of the Interview Mr. Rogers is
said to have intimated in his usual po
lite and suave manner that of course
lie had the power to crush his youthful
rival completely to the earth, but that
he hesitated to exercise it. that litiga
tion would Interfere with some of his
plans and that. In short, he would lis
ten to a proposition for settlement. Mr.
lleinze, with equal politenesB, remark
ed that he had not come to make a
proposition, that Mr. Rogers had sent
for him, and he was there to listen.
Thereupon John D. Rockefeller's right
band man is said to have declared:
"Well, Mr. Heinzq, we will give you
$250,000 to settle ail your claims?give
it to you In cash this afternoon."
Young lleinze smiled. "Mr. Rogers,"
he said, "I am surprised. I had thought
you were a man of broad views, accus
tomed to great negotiations."
"In heaven's name," gas^l the oil
magnate, "how much do you'*.aut?"
"Ten mllliou dollars," coolly replied
Heinze as lie turned and said good day.
It would have been economy had the
representative of Amalgamated and
F. ACGrSTUS HEINZE.
Standard Oil closed with Heinze nt his
own figures then. But he could not see
It that way nt the time. When the
long warfare was recently concluded
through the purchase of a majority of
the Heinze mines by a company con
trolled by Amalgamated financiers it
was rumored that Heiuze got $25,000,
000 out of the settlement. Amalgamat
ed officials denied the sum was so
large, but nobody doubled it was a
good deal in excess of $10,000,000. The
effect of the settlement will be to re
lease the Amalgamated inln?.? in Mon
tana from the injunctions obtained by
Heiuze and permit the working of val
uable veins to be resumed.
The "F." In the name of Mr. Heiuze
stands for Frederick, and he was call
ed Fritz as a boy, but he now goes by
his middle name of Augustus. He is
the son of a New York merchant and
was born in New York in 1809. On
graduating from the School of Mines
of Columbia university in 1889 he start
ed for Montana. His first job was that
of an assistant engineer on the "inside"
of the Boston and Montana mine, and
his pay was $5 a day. During tbo day
he grubbed patiently 1,000 feet be
neath the surface in overalls and laced
cowhides. He studied the trend nnd
dip of the copper veins nnd compared
his notes with the surface location of
other claims. When he came out of the
mines he washed tip, put on his "claw
hammer" evening suit, one of the first
seen in Butte, and dined as though in
a clubhouse on Fifth avenue. The min
ers called him "dude," but they soon
learned that he was no tenderfoot.
After two years of practical work in
the mines Heinze went to Germany
and spent two years there In study of
mineralogy. Then he returned to this
country nnd with his brother, Arthur
Heinze, a lawyer, formed a copper
company to operate In Montana. The
young men had Inherited some money
from a relative, and this they put Into
the venture. They bought mines sup
posed to be valueless, but which they
knew to be worth millions, and soon
enme to be big factors In copper min
ing. Then came the clash with tho
Amalgamated, with the outcome u.
ready described.
FOR MEDICAL RESEARCH.
Itockrfe Iter's Gill lu Aid Flichl
Attains! Dlt'-iJfcf.
Medical and sclent!!.. men the world
over are expecting important results
from the researches to h ? undertaken
In a lanje and imposing structure j
which may now he seen in New York :
city u]iou a site In the upper part of |
Manhattan Islam', commandant a fine
view of the Fast river. ?lt Is a site
ution which once stood the colonial
tnnnslou of Governor I>e Wilt Clinton,
nit the historic around is now to afford
ia abiding place for the Rockefeller In
ttltute For Medical Research. Eventu
tlly there will be a group of buildings
i -
THE l;0< KF.FET.EEIt INSTITUTE FOR MED
ICAU liBSEARl II.
oa the site, which extends nlotlg Ave- }
nue A from Sixty-fourth to Sixty-set
enth street, hut the structure recently
completed and shown in the accompa
nying engraving is the main building
and contains la!(oratories, offices, lee- j
ture rooms, library and apartments for
the conduct of all kinds of experi
ments. The main building is 185 feet |
long, 60 feet deep and five stories high. |
Close by is u building for housing the
animals which will be experimented on
for the benefit of medical science.
This Institute is the outcome of John
D. Rockefeller's grief over the loss of a
little grandson from cholera infantum.
He determined to use a part of- Ids
great fortune In aiding medical lnves- j
tlgators to discover effective treatment
for this and other diseases which so
often baffle the most skilled physlcluns.
He has defrayed the cost of the build
ings thus far erected, a sum exceeding
$325,000. and lias endowed the Institu
tion to the extent of $1,250,000. Most
elaborate provisions have been mnde
for experiments on animals, and it Is
anticipated that much more may be ac- I
compllslied in the future with such fa- i
cillties than under conditions existing
in the past, when the investigator
found himself greatly hampered often
times by lack of the right opportunities
for prosecution of his research.
LADY LAWSON.
KiirIInIi Woman .Journal i*t nml Her
Visit In tlie Orient.
I.aily K. I-awson, Hie distinguished
English woman journalist, lias been
passing through the United States on
lier way home from a prolonged stay In
the orient. Her tour Included Japan,
where she had a photograph taken
while in the picturesque costume ot the
mikado's country, but her longest visit
was to India, where she was greatly In
terested in the study medical scientists I
have been giving to the subject of
cures for the cobra bite and for the
plague. So many thousands of persons
perish annually In India from these
causes that the matter possesses the
greatest Importance. At last tin- Inves
tigators have discovered an nutitoxin
which is said to bo a sure cure for the j
LAIIY IiAWSON IS JAPANf.SK COSTUME.
bite of the cobra nml a serum or vac
clue for the prevention of the plague.
Lady Lawson secured snapshots of
several cobras while the fangs of the
huge snakes were lielng extracted for
the purpose of making the antitoxin.
The venom is Injected In small doses
Into a horse at different times during
two years, and at the end of that time
he Is Immune and cobras cannot hurt
him. He Is bled, and from this bloo<
the serum Is made. It Is used in the
form of powder. The anti-plague vac
cine is prepared by taking place
genus from the ImsIIph o'
putting them throu -'i ?? cos i f i>
somewhat compile'' ?'????. ".'Ml*
It Is used I'' tV' i is a preventive
it Is said to hive tii ? power of modify
In'* t! ? ill"' ,' In th<* e>'?nt of an Ipoc
e.!".*ed person "!:r; aft eked I
i.p'v I.i'vson Is a pa-son of many
ricor II ' - 'cits a- I is a contributor
to the leading British nublicatlons.
READ AND YOU WILL LEARN
That thn lending medical writers and
teacher* of nil the several schools of
practice endorse and recommend. In the
strongest tcrius possible, each and every
Ingredient entering into the composition
of 1 >r. Pierce'sGolden Medical Discovery
for the cure of weak stomach, dyspepsia,
catarrh of stomach, "liver complaint,"
torpid liver, or biliousness, chronic bowel
affections, ami all catarrhal diseases of
whatever region, name or nature, it is
also a a pacific remedy for all such chronic
or long standintr cases of catarrhal affoe
tlons and their resultants, as bronchial,
throat and tunc diseases (except consump
tion) accompanied with severe coughs. It
is not so good for acute colds and coughs,
but for fingering, or chronic cases it is
especially efficacious in producing per
fect cures. It contains Hlack Cherry burk,
Golden Seal root. Kloodroot. Stone root.
Mandrake root and yneon's root?all of
which are highly praised as remedies for
all the above menllomsl affections by such
eminent medical writers and touchers as
I'rof. llarthoiow, of Jefferson Med. Col
lege; Prof. Hare, of the Univ. of 1'a.;
Prof. Finley Elliugwood, M. D., of Ben
nett Mori. College, Chicago : Prof. John
King, M. 1)., late of Cincinnati; I'rof.
John M. Scuddcr, M. 1)., late of Cincin
nati ; Prof. Edwin M. Ilale. M. 1)., of
Hahnemann Mix!. College. Chicago, and
scores of others equally eminent In their
several schools of practice.
The "Golden Medical Discovery" Is the
only modiclne put tip for sale through
druggists for like purposes, that has any
sucfi profexaimtal endorsement ?worth
more than any numUr of ordinary testi
monials. Open publicity of Its formula
on the bottle wrapper Is ihe liest possible
guaranty of its merits. A glance at this
published formula "III shoo that "Golden
Medical Discovery" contains no poi-on
oiis or harmful agents and no alcohol?
chemically pure, triple-refined glycerine
being used instead. Glycerine Is entirely
unobjectionable and liesides is a most
useful ingredient in the cure of all stom
ach as well as bronchial, throat and lung
affections. There is the highest medical
authority for its use in all such cases.
Tho "Discovery " Is a concentrated glyc
eric eitract of native, medicinal roots
and is safe and reliable.
A booklet of extracts from eminent,
medical authorities, endorsing Its ingre
dients mailed free on request. Address
Dr. K. V. Piorce, Buffalo, N. Y.
NOTICE!
The undersigned having oualitted as execu
tor on the estate of D. L. Barnes, deceased,
all persons having claims against said estate
are hereby notified to present the same to
me duly verified on or before the 2nd day of
March, 190]', or this notice will be pleftded in
bar of their recoverv and all persons indebt
ed to said estate will make immediate pay
ment.
This 22nd day of Feby.. IDOtf.
C. w. HOKNE, Executor.
L. H. ALLRED,
Aftorney-At-Law
SELMA, N. C.
Will Practice In nil the Courts.
T l I ? Ml I 111 dh
CURES WHERE ?LL ELSE FAIIS S
Best Couph Symp. Tastes Coed A
Um in tima. S I I y : i j ^
Wood's
Evergreen
Lawn Crass.
The best of Lawn Grasses for
die South; specially prepared
to withstand our summers
and to give a nice green sward
the year round.
Special Lawn Circular telling
how to prepare and care for
lawns, mailed free on request.
riant Wood's
Cardcn Seeds
for superior Vegetables
and Flowers.
Our Descriptive Catalogue tells
you how and when to plant for
best success. Mailed free. Write
for it. ^
T.W. Wood&Sons, Seedsmen,
RICHMOND, . VA.
If you want the sweetest and best Water
Melons anil Cantaloupes grown, i?ln it
Wood's Southern-grown seed. ' 'or
Descriptive Catalogue t<-li~ all
about the best kinds to ]>lant.
* '<?
| Don't Leave |
1 It Off
R 'i
IYou have intended to buy i
a Sewing Machine this win- 'i
ter or spring. Your wife *j
needs it and you can buy
now Don't leave it off but )\
write me at once for one h
stating where you live, i.
what kind of Machine you Si
'j8 want and what you can pay
? cash on it. Remember I |
have old style second-hand ?
? machines at from $10.00 3
S to $15.00, new style second |
* hand machines at from S
X $20.00 to $.'15.00 and new X
% machines of both New Home ;,j
and Domestic makes. Let i|
? me hear from you. |
| J. M. Beaty |
"* Smilhfield, JJ.N. C. I
KOLLISTER'S
Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets
A Easy Medioine for Busy leopio
Brings Golden Health and Reaewed Vigor
A sneoiflc for Constipation. Indigestion, E'vo
end Kidney Troubles. Pimples Eczema lmpur?
lilood. Bad Br uth. Plutreish Bowels. L
and Bankaohe. It s R*?ckv M ? mtatn in t
let form, .?> c?nts i ?>o< CDnnDi' de ' ?
Hrv.' --'! Py,".i '' vp.vny ull.son Wis.
ru-..: ton a;.i.Ltw
MORTGAGE HALE OF VALF
ABLE LAND.
By virtue of authority contained in a cer
tain mortgage deed executed to me by Sir
William Johnson and Aliz-mry Johnson, hit
, wite, on the 10th day of January. 1MJ6, and
dul* recorded in the Registry of Johnston
County in Book "M" No. b. page Job, the con
ditions iu sai?l mortgage having been broken
and the mortgagors requesting sale of land
to satisfy the indebtedness secured by the
said raortK>*;r-? i **">1. therefo-e. sell at purv
lie auction at the Col'KT HOI'S E door in the
Town of Smithtleld. N. C? on Saturday, the
17th day of March. at 12 o'clock, M? the
following' described real estate, to wit:
That piece of land, lying and being in Ban
ner Township. Johnston County, adjoining
the lands of John W. Allen. N. H. Barker,
i Haywood Johnson and McCoy Johnson, and
iKiunded on the South by the lands of Jno.
W. Allen; on the East by the lands of N. K.
Parker; on the VVest by the lands of Hay
wood Johnson and on the North by the lands
of McCoy Johnson, and lie? >a the North
1 side of Hannah's Creek and is known as the
"Home, farm and plantation and mill, mill
seat and mill pond ol the said S. W. Johnson."
Said piece or uarcel of land is composed of
two tracts of land which were allotted to the
said Sir Wm. Johnson in the division of the
lands of NVm. I>. Johnson, his father, and
Curtis Johnson, his brother, as will appear
by reference to the division of these lands in
band Book "C," page b0. and 299. in the of
fice of the Clerk of the Superior Court of
Johnston County, containing in all Eighty
Acres, mo re or less. T E It Ms OF 8 A L E ARE
CASH.
This 17th day of February, 190b.
JOHN W. VINSON, Mortgagee.
Wilson's Mills. N. C.
l'Or & BKOOKS, Attyt..
Smithtleld, N. C.
LAND SALE!
i By virtue of authority, vested in the uu
[ dersigned Commissioner, by a judgment of
the Superior Court before the Clerk rendered
, in the following entitled cause:
I >oc. J. Smith, Administrator ot W. J. Smith,
deceased, pltf,
vs.
bidia Smith, widow; J. b. Smith, William
Smith, Nannie Smith, Annie Smith, Doc. J.
; Smith, John Austin and wife. Martha
Austin: Robert Pool and wife. Fuss
Pool; Polk Varner and wile, Ka
tie Varner; J. P. (llover and
wife: Nellie Glover?Heirs
at Law?Defendants.
I On Monday, April 2nd, 1900, between the
hours of 12 and 1 o'clock, the undersigned, as
Commissioner, will sell, ut public auction for
Cash, at the Court House Door, Ln the town
of Smithtleld, N. C\, at public auction, the
following tract of land, situate, lying and
being, in Wilders Township, Johnston Coun
ty, North Carolina, adjoining the lands of
Jno. Sealy, Hardy Hatcher, J. T. Ellington,
Jesse Castleberry, and others, and bounded
no luuuns.
Beginning at the mouth of Massey Creek,
on Neuse river, the Watson corner and runs
as the Watson line up said crj?. k to the mouth
of a small branch; thence up sa d branch to a
forked poplar, Watson's corne ; thence the
Watson line N. 8 E, 56 chs. to a stake, on the
Clayton road, J.T. Ellington's mi ner; thence
as said road to a pine, said Ellington's corner;
thence his line S. 87 E. 8.65 chs. to a stake, his
corner: thence N. 8 K. OlUk to the Clayton
road; thence up said road to a stake, said El
lington's corner; thence N. 3 E. 15 chs. to a
dead pine, said Ellington's corner; thence
N. 87 W. 3.75 chs. to a stake; t'uence N. 3 E.
1.30 chs. to a maple, John Sealey's corner;
thence his line N. fit W. 30.48 chs. to a maple.
Hardy Hatcher's corner: thence his line N.2)6
E. 32.90 chs. to a stake ai the head of a small
Spring branch: thence down said branch to
Perry's Creek; thence down said creek to a
Mulberry, John Oneals' corner; thence his
line 8. 80 E. 23 chs. to a stake; thence 8. 74 E.
i 5 chs. to the Archer road; thence down said
road to C ifton's mill creek; thence down
said creek to a poplar, Oneals' corner; theuce
N. 80 W. 2.50 -lis. to a maple, on Neuse river:
I thence down the river to Donucorner: theuce
as Donu: N. 64 E. 26.50 chs.; tin nm N. 41 . K.
I 24 chs.; thence N. 1)6 W. 20 chs.; thence N. 65
| E. 11.62 chs.; thence 8. 54 E. 9 chs.; thence 8.
i 20 W. 35.75 chs.; thence 8. 34 S E. 4 chs.; thence
S, 76 S< E. 10 chs t hem e S. 11 \ E. 1 ( lis.; I lo iu-e
8.41)6 W. 28 chs. to a stake on Neuse river,
just below the tlsh trap, thence down said
river to the beginning, containing 068 acres.
A good deal ol this land is well timbered,
about 6 miles from the town of Clayton, N.
C., and also contains good farms for the cul
tivation of any crops.
J NO. A. N A It RON.
Commissioner.
I Feb. 27 th, 1906.
NOTICE!
The undersigned having qualified as Ad
ministrator on the estate of Emma Woodard.
deceased, all persons having claims against
! said estate ur? hereby notified to present the
same to me duly verified on or before the 9th
I day of March, 1907. or this notice will bo
plead d in bar of their recovery and all per
sons indebted to said estate will make im
| mediate payment.
I This 2nd day of March. 1900.
J. I. WOODARD. Adrnr..
! M 9 4 x Kenly R. F. No. 2.
NOTICE OF BALE.
I'nderand by virtue of authority contain
I ed in a certain agreement made and entered
into by the undersigned with one J. G. Blain
on the 21st day of October, A I)., 1905, condi
tions and stipulations in said contract having
been broken by the said J. G. Blain, we will
offer for sale at the Court House door in the
' town of Smithtield on Saturday, the 7th day
of April. 1906. at 12 o'clock M. at public auc
tion. for cash, all the right, title and interest,
legal or equitable, of the said J. G. Blain, un
der and by virtue of said contract, in and to a
certain Mill Plant and property located near
the town of Seima. North Carolina, on the
East side of the A. C. L. Railroad, about 200
yards Southwest of t he depot at Seima. adjoin
ing the lands of the Southern Cotton Seed Oil
Company and the Navasso Guano Company,
containing about 4 acres, on which is situate
the Lumber Plant ami Planing Mill formerly
owned and operated by the Neuse River
Lumber Company and the Calumet Lumber
Company, being the property purchased by
Edward W. Pou and F II. Brooks at public
auction under mortgage sale, T. Mason
Thompson, Mortgagee, and also purchased by
Edward W. Pou at public sale conducted by
I F. H. Brooks, Commissioner, of The Superior
> Court of Johnston County in the ease of the
Bank of 8elma against the Calumet Lumber
[ i Company; reference to these deeds is hereby
; made for a more particular description of
i said property.
; ! This 7tb day of Mareh, 1906.
fc. W. I'or and F. H. BKOOKS.
NOTICE.
NORTH CAROLINA. < In the
JOHNSTON COUNTY, i Superior Court.
C. E. Thompson, atlmr. of W. H. Watson,
vs.
i Cathelina Watson, Widow; Sarah Peedin and
! h nsbanu, Gaston Peedin; Ella Thompson
and husband, C. E. Thompson; Huttie
Page and husband, Daniel Page;
James H. Watson, Barna H. Wat
son, and George T. Waison.
By virtue of a supplemental order of the
Superior Court of .Johnston County made in
this cause on the 1st day of March. 1900, 1 will
expose for sale at the depot in the town of
Pine Level at 12 o'clock M. on the 14th day of
April, 1906, the following described tract of
land subject to dower.
Beginning at a stake Cathelina Watson's
corner the same being a dower corner and
runs with said line N. 2* E. 54 3 10 poles t ;t
stake Joseph Crocker's corner, thence witti
his line N.87)4 W. 41 poles to a stake, thence
N. 80 W. 14 poles to a stake, thence S. 2S W.
50 poles to a stake in a path, thence with. > .. 1
path 80? E. 54 2 to poles to the beginning
containing 17 88- !?>' acres
Terms of sale are Cash.
This the 12th day ot March. l'.'Utf.
ED. S. vBRLL.
Commissioner.
NOfUKL
B> virtu? ot the authority contained in a
Mortgaire Deed wnuuh i t" hie <?n the flat
; day of March, 1 by It. it. Mcdlinani Wifl,
11 Fanny Medlm. and dui> registered in the
Register'sOffice o( Johnston County in book
' I T No \ page 222 1 shall at auction, for cash
at the Court House door in the town of
i >mlthfield. N.on the 12th day of April,
i 1W.0. at 1 P. M. the following real property
to wit: Begintmnr at a stake on Harnett
Street in the town of Benson, N C? inn feet
west from an alley and runs N. 37 h. 140 feet
I to an alley thence as said rUey N. 53 w. 50
feet t<? a stake, thence **. 37 W. 140 feet back
to said Harnett Mreet thence as sild street
s. 52 K. 50 feet to the ne doning containing a
fractional part of an acre a??d fully described
in said Sloriiraire.
I This 5?th day of March, l'yv..
N. T. KYAIA J.\.WR>r.
Attorney. Mortgagee.