I ' I ' I e Receipts and Disbursements TOWN OF WILLIAMSTON FOK THE MONTH OF APRIL, 1926 W. T. MEADOWS, Treasurer April 1. Williamston Motor Co., fire department $ .SO April 2. W. L. Brewer, salary, March .. 140.00 April 2. Texaco Filling: Station, light operating 19.G2 April 3. W. B. Daniel, salary for March lOO.OO April 3. Joe Spruill, streets * 1 5.00 April 3. Henry Gurganus, streets 15.00 April 3. Miles Rodgerson, streets 16.001 April 3. Highway Filling Station, light operating 4.54 April 3. Ziney Hines, streets :l » 2.50" April |3. W. T. Meadows, salary, March _ 75.00 April 3. Harrison Wholesale Co., light operating ___ 5.15 April 3. Harrison Oil Co., light operating 34.6 ft April 3. J. S. Cook, police —l_.. 18.00' April 6. V. D. Godwin, water operating, freight April 6. V. D. Godwin, light operating, freight r __ .90 April 6. Henry D. Harrison, fire department 32.00 April 7. C. O. Moore & Co., streets , - - 11.25 April 7. B. S. Courtney, miscellaneous ' 4.00 April 7. Culpepper Hardware Co., light operating 28.07 April 8. Henry D. Hurrison, fire department .3.00 April 10. Fairbanks-Morse Co., new machinery . ! - 1,092.95 April 12. J. S. Cook, police 18.00 April 12. Miles Rodgerson, streets - * . 15.0 V April 12.. Henry Gurgunus, streets 15.00 April 12. Joe Spruill, streets r 11.50 April 12. Carolina Telephone & Telegraph Co., miscellaneous 3.20 April 14. G. W. Blount & Co., streets i 13.75 April 14. Chamber of Commerce, flags for streets 125.00 April 17. J. S. Cook, police i i. 18,00 April 17. Henry Gurganus, streets - 15.00 April 17. Miles Rodgers, streets i 15.00 April 17. Robert Bonds, salary, March, water operating *165.00._ April 17. M. S. Moore, salary March t 175.00 April 24. J. S. Cook, police .18,00 April '24. Miles Rodgerson, Streets 15.00 April 24. Henry Gurganus, streets ~ 15.00 April 27. Hanover Nat. Bank, int. and disct.j. bonds 1,500.(10 April 27. Seaboard National Bank, int. and disct., bonds 4,440.00 April 27. Seaboard National Bank, paid bonds 2,000.00 April 27. J. S. Jon.es, police 1 -18.00 Total disbursements, month of April ,'_i $10,21,9.97 Receipts from light and water, month of April 2,356.13 Jfeceipts from J. W. Watts, rent opera house : 75.00 /Receipts, M. S. Moore, taxes 7,000.00 I Total receipts ... , .'l'- $ 9,431.13 I Cash in bank, April 1, 1!26 ._ 2,212.23 Total receipts and cash in bank $ 11,643.36 I.ess bad checks returned by bank - 15.50 Total receipts and cash in bank, less bad checks , $11,648.46 Total disbursements, month of April - $ 10,219.97 Cash in bank May 1, 1926 .1 / 1,407.89 f 11,627.86 JL MITRAPO "SF Amm. ■ p. per cen COTTON AND CORN NEED POTASH Along With Soda ONE TON OF NITRAPO Equals 1 Ton of Soda and 1 Ton of Kainit Using NITRAPO Means Bigger Yields,. Early Maturity Better Quality Ease of Distribution Protection Against Rust and Wilts Packed in even weight 100 lb. bag, reground USE NITRAPO INSTEAD OF SODA For Sale by I). I). STALLS .Williamston North Carolina . • r . « FREE To Every New Customer Purchasing As Much as $5.00 Worth of ICE-ICE Coupons, We will give a CANVAS ICE BAG AND A WOODEN MALLET with which to crack ice for tea and ice cream. - * Let Us Show You One WE HAVE ONE READY FOR V #U. Lindsley-Lilley Jce Company NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of a judgment of the superior court of Martin Coun ty in actio*' entitled "Federal Land Bank vs. John Andrews, et als," the undersigned commissioner will, on the 24th day of May, 1926, at 12 o'cjock \ In the Kitchen / \ Famous Cooks / BREADS AND BISCUITS AS 3 EX! KRT COOKS MAKE THEM (Ed. Note: Thin Is one of a «erie» of articles on cookinir which 6 famou* cooks ere contributing to t.hie paper.) ' Bread can be much more than the uninteresting, pro saic "staff of life." It can be made so delicious that you eat it because you want to, not because you think eyou ought to. fldr ■£ Famous W cooks have un 7/ earthed many "S delicious bread • v * and biscuit \ «- recipes from Mm. Sarah various parts t. rorei* of the country for you. Follow their recipes for pleasing variety in breads. Eaiy Bran Muotnt Mrs. Rorer, the Philadelphia oook- Ing expert, recommends her bran muffins for breakfast. "They very nutritious und tiealthful. she says. "One might paraphrase the oll Baying Into T a bran puffin a day keeps the doctor away. It would hold Just as true. "These muffins are easily mads," Hhe affirms "Beat one egg. add a cup of milk, ft half teaspoon salt, one tablespoonful mifsr, and one tablespoonful melted butter, birt one Cupful flour with three level tea spoon* baking powder, and bake In a hot oven, In greased gem pane tor 20 minutes." Nutt for Nouriihment Mr* Horer hns a very appetising • and nourishing nut bread, too. ' Here's how to make It: Chop enough pecans to make a half cupful Put two cupfuls flour In ii bowl, ndd four level teaspoons ,f l.ttking powder half a teaspoon I sfilt. ond two tablespoonfuls of sugar. and elf'. Ml* In the nuts. Hfot one egg, add oiie cupful of milk, miit and add the flour Beat well, .mil turn at once Into a greased btetid pair. stand 10 minutes Light oven 3 minutes before bread Is light Bake half an hour nt medium heat Knlslne may be eubatltuted for nuts. N'ut bread makes very good sand wiches if spread with butter Cream ch.'.-so may also be used for a simple, delloloua filling Southern Corn Broad Corn bread, that favorite of the South, la another nutritious ohange from the every-day white bread Mailn with the recipe of Mlsa Hoea Mlohaell*. famous New Orleans cook, Jt's u welcome part of any meal Hero rue the' Ingredients: *4 cup of sugar A cupa corn meal IV4 teaspoons salt 8 eggr !! tabUiapoonfulß baking powder iSi- tableßpoonfuls shortening 2 oups water (or milk, or the Jwo mixed) Sift corn meal, salt, sugar, and , baking powder together. Add water or milk Add yolks of egga and shortening which hen been heated Add stlllly beaten whites of eggs. l'i 1 Into a hot greased pan. and ' bake In hot oven. This can be served with butter or with syrup. t - Rtrl Beaten Biecuitt If you hnve a patient right arm, ' you are bound to make successful beaten biscuits. This ta another old southern recipe of Miss Mlchaells'. 1 quart flour 1V& teaspoons of lard 1 pint of milk 1 uaspjju salt Sift dry Ingredients. Then add the shortening und blend by using the lingers—rub until smooth; add gradually the liquid and knead all together till the dough Is formed Should be a rather stiff dough. Then lay the dough on a biscuit board and beat with rolling uln half an hour. Knead lightly and beat again for ten minutes, till air bubbles form all over the dough. Then roll out and cut with cutter In any shape and stick top hore and there wltn fork. Bake In moderate oven about fifteen mlnutea or till top and bottom are a light brown. V— Oranget Orange muffins are lust the thing for breakfast. Toasted, they are de licious to serve with afternoon tea. Mrs Belle DeOraf, San Francisco, formerly with the Pacific Coast Branch of the New York Cooking School, glvee this delectable recipe: 2 cupo flour 4 teaspoons baking powder 1 teuspoou aalt 2 tablespoons sugar 1 egg 2 tablespoons melted butter 1 cup orange lulce Urated rind of one orange l.eot eggs and add liquid. 81ft a',.l combine dry Ingredients. Add II itcj shortening and first mixture. 11. •' In greased muffin pane, In n.' Icrate oven about 20 minutes. Vou may eerve a different bread or biscuit every meal. These reclpea ar.> especially helpful to women with the lunch problem, as different sand w. it (tilings may be uaed with all biH the beaten blsoult with good ~ results. • ( Witch /or Mil ■eeft's specie/ «*eMn mrttclt on thu pmgm.) Much Ventilation One msnufacturer Is selling an efficient oven with lOt holes. Thess holes provide perfect air circulation mid carry away all surplus molsturs and all odors. This oven Is eepe clally made for oil stoves. ' J J. : ] Baking Hint The oven should always be pre "*■ For (HI Stoea Uaore ' > Women who cook with oil srUI appreciate one of the newer oU stove models with • reversible, easily filled glass reservoir. Tu hands 4e not come In contest vttk the kerosene at all t ' V ' r-id THE ENTERPRISE—WIIdJAMSTON, N. C noon, at the courthouse door of Mar tin County, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, the fol lowing described real estate: All that certain piece, parcel, or tract of land n containing 36 1-2 acres, more or less, lying and being on the Williamston and Greenville Road a bout 10 miles southeast from the town of Willisaiston, Cross Ro%)s Town shTp, Martin County, North Carolina, having such shape, mete sand bounds and distances as will more fully ap pear by reference to a map thereof made by T. Jones Taylor, surveyor, June 23, 1919, and being bounded on the northwest and weßt by the lands of Ross Mizelle, and on the south by the lands of Church Roberson estate, and on the east and north by lands of We Sell PERFECTION OIL RANGES For Any SEE THEM ON DISPLAY an( j Information Recommend B. S. COURTNEY Call 155 WILLIAMSTON NORTH CAROLINA :- - What 3 O lfears of Cooking , taught Mrs. Rorejjn|_ about otoves . MRS. SARAH TYSON RORE* Philadelphia Cook mi Expert 44 T PREFER oil stoves to any other All flames remained steady I kind. I speak from the fullness and even. They did not creep ; of 30 years'experience with or'crawl.'Thisisarealblessing iyr^'i them. Qil is clean, economical, to the cook. She can forget her stove and *•' >9s3i«f' and dependable. It saves a keep her mind on her cooking, world of work. No coal or wood to carry "Very Well Satisfied" 'L r 10. no ~he> lo c.rry out. And no dual .. Altogelhcr , was very well satisfied with Clean, Even "I iave just completed a special experiment the Perfection Stove. And, my good opinion / • r_r on the 1926 model Perfection Oil Stove, test- ofoil stoves has increased, if that is possible." V-eOOR 1// ff Ing it under all possible cooking conditions. The long chimney. „f , h , p«w I cooked many meals in my own kitchen. _ ' _ ' fe tinn burn every drop of the oil Every dish was deliciously cooked. The other live famous cooks were enthu- hefnr* it reach** the kettle. Thua siastic about the 1926 Perfection, too. And you get dean, even cooking hen Immediate Cooking every day 4,500,000 women get real cook- trrr rn, n »>«» »nH smoke. "Steak began to broil and my molasses cake ing satisfaction from their Perfections. You, You cm he doubly » ur « of thfc began to rise almost as soon as I lighted the too, will get the most cooking satisfaction *>■« ° heat when you use a par* burners. There was no waiting for the heat the year around when you cook on the water-white Kerosene that burn* to 'come up.' Utc, model Perfection. ' "The bottom of every utensil used in the See the complete line at any dealer's today. specially refined. experiment was as clean as a All siz.es, from a one- All impurities that might china dish. No scouring was burner model at Vj.75 smoke or leave deposit* of MM necessary. Those long Perfec- r Y/ r to a large, five-burner y re removed. This assures th« •ion chimneys certainly are in- ROKER is one range at $ 120 .00. maximum amount of heat. By turance against sooty kettles. of the six famous cooks who " c '" K to ,a " * r , • 7 J J Buy the stove en- you arc sure of b«t resulu from All al Ike Same Time j*,l cmpleieji »evel cent- dor.ed by MM. ~ «• . , "t cooked many thing, at once. *"/«»« Rorer .nd the other V ~ ~ T For boiling beef I used a very 6tovt ' others are: M,s * five famou « cooks, srAND AR » ° 1 L Co. low flame. I Prench-fried po- Lucy G. Alien, Boston; the 1926 Perfection. tatoes over a hot flame with Miss Margaret A lien Hall, Manufacture b "STANDARD" yellow tips about 1% inches Battle Creek; Mtss Rosa PERFECTION STOVB high above the blue area. I Michaelis, New Orleans; KEROSENE cooked white sauce over a \A v . x> ir i r CUvUmJ, Okh Mrs. Kate B. Vauvhn. Los medium name. „ AmAtt, and Mr,. Belle ~ 1 used .11 dr.de, of he.t .t DeGraf, SaH FraHciue. the sarnie time tetisfactorily. STANDARD OIL COMPANY {NewJ 15551 m V Distributors *26 Broadway « New York jj ] f W /'/] PERFECTION Oil Cook Stoves and Ovens | jf WARNINOi Use only genuine Perfection / Tj II 1 L j wicks on Perfection Stoves. Tkty art marked -V l\ f with rnt triangle. Others will cause trouble. J j \ I Send for this Free Cook Book Get Out prices You Buy - Dave Wynn, this being the same tract of land heretofore conveyed to the said J. A. Andrews by J. E. Swain and wife, Leona, by deed dated December 5, 1906, and of record in Martin Coun ty registry in book SSS, page 6. This the 21st day of April, 1926. B. A. CRITCHER, a3O 4tw Commissioner. NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND 1 i Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that certain deed i ' of trust executed to the undersigned , trustee by A. O. Brown and wife, i Agnes Brown, on the 23rd day of Feb i ruary, 1923, and of record in the pub ■ lie registry of Martin County in booh , H-2, at page 243, said deed of trust 1 ' having been given to secure certain ' ' ■ . "" "" ' " ' " ■ . .MI. ■ " ■■■■■■ TBi PERFECTION OIL RANGES THE BEST MADE Culpepper Hdw. Co. WILUAMSTON NORTH CAROLINA notes of even date and tenor there with, and the stipulations in said deed of trust not having been complied with and at the request of the parties in terested, the undersigned trustee will on Monday, May 24th, 1926, at 12 o'- clock m., .in front of the courthouse door in the town of Williamston, N. C. offer at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following describ ed property: A house and lot in the town of Wil l liamston, N. C., on the West Side of Sycamore Street in the town of Wil liamston, N. C., beginning at Sarah Cherry's (now George Spruill) corner on Sycamore Street, running thence ! northwardly with said street 85 yards jto a stob, corner o fr lot owned by i Holmes and Dawson, running thence 1 1 "* at right angles with Sycamore Street nnrf along Holmes and Dawson's line 26 yard* to a stob, Henry Jones IJne; thence a line parallel with Sycamore Street along line of Jones and Rid dick, 36 yards to a stob, Sarah Cher ry's (now George Spruill) corner; thai along what was formerly Sarah Cher ry (now George Spruill) line to Syca more Street, the beginning, containing 1-4 of an acre, more or less, and be ing the same land that was conveyed to said A. O. Brown by deed from S. R. Riddick dated 22nd day of Febru ary, 1916, recorded in public registry of Martin County in book G-l, at page 339. This the 23rd day of April, 192«. t WHEELER MARTIN, a3O 4tw Trustee. Mm———a^———————— ———— We Have Them > y On Display. Free Demonstration

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