Newspapers / The enterprise. / July 27, 1926, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE ENTERPRISE Published Every Tuesday and Friday by the ENTERPRISE PUBLISHING COMPANY Williamston, North Carolina y— —— i W. C. Manning ...... Editor Subscription Price - (Strictly cash in advance) lyear sl-50 6 months -80 3 months— -- — ~ -45 Entered at the post office at Williamston,'N. C. as second-class matter under the act of March 3, 1879. ~ . Address all communications to The Enterprise Now Is The Time For Farmers To Make Sure Success of 1926 Crop ■ ■ Now is the time for the Martin County farmer to land his business success for this- year. I p to now, with tKfNixception of the lateness of the spring and a .llght dry spell at plant ing/time" causing crops to be a week late and a few' bad stands, the year ha.-- been unusually favorable, taking less work than usual in cultivating and not having enough heavy rutins to wash fertilizers away. With all these favors we find about Sis.fliit crops of ail kinds in this coun ty as have ever been seen here be fore, including corn, cotton, peanuts, and tobacc.o. liui there is a chance to lose yet. Suckers can draw a mil lion. out of the tobacco in the next days, if tltvy-are permitted to ; Who Is the Breaker of the Law And the Numerous Laws Broken In .answering l the question, Who breaks the law we. all say, tin first thought, the other, fellow. Yet too ufleu it i.- nut the other fellow, it is . jursclve.s. A great many people think we huve too many laws, and there are yet a few who are so sel fish that they oppose all laws, even murder, rajw, . arson, and burglary should be permitted at will is their slogan of personal fights. Fortunate ly, the grtat body of people find it necessary and approve, laws to re strain the common evils that sur round their families and menace* their property. Laws eair not make men good, but it is foolish to say that law does not make men better. iod found it neces sary to establish laws for his people •and had recorded many statutes; some of them required that men should do certain things, while others of His law restrained -men from commit ting certain aits. In that good old - day they, many of them, refused and failed to do the things required by the law, while others deliberately did the things prohibited by the law. We have exactly the same situa tion today in our own civilized and proud country. " ** The law that requires men to come up before the tax man and list his taxes to help the government, once each year, is broken by many so-called good honorable citizens. They re fuse to be fair with their government and help it in proportion to their true and legal obligation. Then comes many of the statutes that were made to restrain men. The law against gambling, drinking, deal —mg MI liquor—all of these laws are frequently broken, many times by otherwise good men, who are too glad to point to their virtues in truth and honesty as a defense for other vio lations. - ' Satisfaction Guaranteed . With Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh A remedy with a guarantee of satis (action. That's what Is Justly claimed for Hanfords Balsam of Myrrh. Everyone who buys a bottle has the absolute assurance that his money will be returned If he is not satisfied with the results , of this remedy. - . Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh is for cuts, bruise*, scratches, burns, old sores, etc. It 1* antiseptic and cleansing. It has repeatedly had success in bard cases where other remedies hare failed. Set a bottle and use it for the bard case*. Manufactured by the G. C. Hanford Mtg. Co., Syracuse, N. J. Sold at dm* stores. * ' t grow too long. Much loss may occur from letting tobacco dry up in the field, much damage may be done by pulling it too green. It all depends on staying right on the job for i! 0 days more. Farmers can lose, even now, by leaving off that last one or two pfow ings that cotton so badly needs, and the peanuts want late plowing to give them vigor which will enable them to fruit well. Most farmers look after these de tails closely, but there are enough folks that save just a little work every year to make them slaves the next year. Quitting the job too soon is one of the sources of great loss to , farmers. Hut of all the broken laws, the au tomobile laws are perhaps the ones mos largely transgressed; that law is broken op every corner, on every bend, and on every straight stretch in the road. Perhaps mc>re good people break this law than any other of the laws. Why do we break them 1 Many times because we do not think about them, frequently because we do not care. One driver approaches the cor cjie coming, and would do no harm to ner; he is a good lawful citiien;"he obeys the stop sign, yet he sees no drive on. He stops because the gov ernment under which he lives* has found it necessary to order cars to stop at that particular point because it is a frequent point of danger. The same driver passes ninety and njne times and concludes there is no danger and that the law is foolish, and on the hundredth time fails to stop and the other fellow runs into hm and kills him. He suffered be cause he took the law in his own hands. Such is the nature of the au tomobile traffic that we must have laws to govern it and the fellow who obeys the law is the safest; and both fellows would obey the law, it would save the life of at least 30 peo i pie in North Carolina every month, besides hundreds of limbs. Who would have the automobile laws abolished or repealed, even though they do give all a little trouble. They save others and may save us. They make travel safer. '' ' The liquor laws in a way are simi lar in their nature. Thousands are not harmed by liquor, but Other thou sands are. If we would all obey the liquor laws we would save many deaths and much trouble and destruc tion every day and every week, and all would have a safe place to live. Who would have any of our laws re pealed, if they help to make the coun try and'its people safer and better? Still there is not a law on all of our statute books that is being obeyed nor that will be during this generation. Men will sell liquor for many years to come; they will dash around cor ners as long as automobiles will run fast; they will kill as long as sel fishness rules the hearts of men. But keep the laws—they restrain and help. - ■. » J The Exposed Second Joints Don't Befit Fair, Fat and Forty "The Exposed Second Joint," writ ten by Miss Betsy Lake and taken from Louis Graves' paper, "The Chapel Hill Weekly," portrays the feelings of persons, especially those who are a little overgiied, who look awful if they follow the extreme styles and curious if they do not: '"Speaking of women's bathing suits, they proclaim one thing—that the woman of 1926 has risen above personal vanity. When gazing upon the spectacle of fair, fat, and forty, in a skin-tight swimming costume which reaches the unfortunate equa torial zone half way between the 1 waist and knees, one hardly knows whether to admire the spirit or de plore the spectacle. Here we behold lovely women who, a brief decade ago, were hampered by the amenities of civilization and by skirts shorn of both. We see. Sunday school teachers, grandmothers, and flappers all dis porting half clad in the waves or pa-, rading the beach, apparently forget-! ful of those bygone days when, iij this very century, they would not even appear at the waters edge without stockings. Once while visiting Atlantic City I observed two policemen standing near I . X\ • some steps which led from the board walk to the beach. They were watch ing intently the women who appeared in bathing suits, and occasionally would exchange broad smiles, then walk forward and intercept some lady. The lady would forthwith retire to the semi-privacy of the shadow of the boardwalk and pull up her stockings. This was the first season of rolled hose of the brazen few. " 'No knees allowed to. show,' the portly guardian of our virtue explain ed to me. And this was not IR6O. Oh, no! Nor was it 1890. It was just ten years ago. In those days, as we all S. 0. S. Agriculture, Farming Program andDiversifiedCrops "It in nil everlasting duty—the duty of being brave." —Thomas C'arlyle. Hy G. A. C AKDWELL The somewhat lengthy period of agricultural depression through which most one-moneycrop sections have been floundering has tried the souls of men and women on the farm. Farm prosperity has most assured ly gone aglimmering for many. How ever, there are some brave individ uals who have ignored habit and tra dition, and have proved that a living, pius some profit, can be made out of farming, even under most adverse conditions. These successful farmers should be our guiding stars until we are led out of the present darkness into the light that must be some where ahead. While the grain farmers of the West have been appealing to Con gress for relief, the cotton and to bacco farmers of the South have been trying to work out their own salva tion. They have hac( some hard knocks—have met with serious re verses; but they are still plugging a long and will eventually succeed. It is most difficult to change a long established system of agriculture, but it can be done; it will have to be done if farming as an independent voca tion is to survive. Virginia agricultural leaders are working hard to put across a five year "safe-farming" program. The Carolinas have girded up their loins and are building agriculture, perhaps slowly, but certainly surely, through variations* of "mixed farming, 41 —ac. cording to sectional conditions. And THE ENTERPRISE—WimAMCTON, IT. C. know, the bathing suit had an ample skirt, reaching to the knees, and be neath that a stout pair of bloomers attached to » modestly thfck under wait. There were, of course, stock-- ings and, generally, shoes. It was rather hampering and perhaps a silly attire. But now! No longer are policemen needed to preserve the morals at the shore. Women appear in costumes in which they could not possibly attract any body but a cannibal. As an observer, one who swims poorly, dives not all> and sits on \he bank mostly, I won der. Is it necessary for us to be so hideously frank? Can't women swim freely and still be clothed to the knees? ' 'jj ij After taking a careful survey of the backs of two feminine bathers as, they walked from me recently, I sud denly was seized with the depressing vision of myself as others saw me. And I resolved never again to appear in what is now considered the bath ing costume' a la mode. I observed the aforementioned ladies from the tight red caps on their heads down to their wide shoulders, and on down as they became wider and still wider, and finally when my eyes fell off the abbreviated bathing skirt— or rather shirt —on to the broad expanse of flesh, it just seemed too much—or not enough—for a Victorian. Girls in tights at 16 are passable; women at 25 one can endure; at 80 they become deplorable; but at 40 the swimming suit figure is nothing short of a ca lamity. One can endure knees with equanimity these days, of course, re gardless of their age, but its the 12 inches or so above the knee which I can not face. Having come to the unpleasant real ization of this fact, I hastily sought aid from the latest catalogs from New now .it is stated that progressive forces of Alabama recently adopted a safe farm plan at a State meeting of bankers, extension workers and the State Department of Agriculture. The suggested program, which fol lows, is the result of long experimen tation and every principle set forth has been tried and found worthy of adoption: 1. Such a distribution of crop acre age on each farm as will result in: (a) The production of sufficient feed to supply all live stock kept on the farm. (b) The production of such amount* and kinds of family food as may be economically grown. (c) The production of such imounta and kinds of food and feed commodi ties for sale as may be economically! grown and marketed. (d) Plant only as many acres in cotton as can be fertilised and han dled properly under present boll weevil conditions and scarcity of la bor. .•. I ■ r (e) The development and mainte nance of soil fertility to such a de gree as will result in profitable acre yields. (f) The elimination of costly labor peaks, and an economic distribution of labor over the entire season. 2. Such increased use of machinery and work:stock as will enable avail able farm labor to compete with oth er sections in the production of crops, and to meet varying prices in relation to demand. 3. The growth on the farm all livestock needed for fane use and surpluses of livestock and livestock products for sale as may be economi cally produced and marketed. York A "knee-length bathing suit was all 1 asked. But this I could not find. It is true, all the illustrations showthe abbreviated costume on fig ures divinely slim. Nothing like real ity was depicted in all my metropoli tan clothing literature. Having sought in vain through the mail-order catalogs for a bathing suit in which one's mid-Victorian modesty might seek refuge, I tried stores. In these small-town establish ments I was equally unsuccessful When I inquired of the saleswomen they lifted their brows in derison. One would have supposed that I was asking them to show me a hoop skirt "I can stand knotty knees," I con fided to one, "and feet that are the worse for wear—everything but that flabby second joint exposed to the sea breezes and the public gaze." But she gave me no sympathy. "These are what everybody is wear ing. They are so much more sen sible than the old-fashioned ones," she said. I sighed. After all, is it sensible for women to be too sensible? You understand I am not insisting on a suit of armor or a train, or even stockings. All I ask is just a few more inches of the cloth covering to which civilisation has accustomed us. I went home and exhumed an old dress from the attic. With labor and thought and courage, if I do say it, I concocted a bathing suit somewhat o like those of the present day but six inches longer. It really looked quite successful in the privacy of my own mirror. But now the result is that in spite of all my labor and my own opinions, I am ashamed to wear the suit. It is so modest it makes me conspicuous. I simply haven't th« brass to go swimming with clothes on any more?" 4. The recognition and practice of the principle of quality production in order to find the most profitable con sumption. 6. The recognition and practice of the principle of cooperative buying and selling of purely farm commodi ties and of orderly marketing. 6. The use of the least expensive system of farm credit available, that agriculture may enjoy equal benefits with industry and commerce in eco nomic credits. 7. The setting up and future main tenance of permanent farming sys tems on each farm in order to meet price fluctuations, and stabilise pro duction. 8. Hearty cooperation with all offic ial agencies in the dissemination of dependable information concerning farm practices and production. We demand for agriculture equality in legislation, in taxation, in trans portation facilities, in education, and in such standard ef living as will make the farm and farm home at tractive to the farmer and his family. We ask the hearty cooperation of all persons in business and social eon tact with the farmer in establishing this permanent program in every county in this State. We present this program in the be lief that it will enable the fanner to work out hi* own suoceea by the ex ercbe of intelligence, independent thought, and thrifty conduct of his FOR SALE: 100 STEERS AND heifers, some in good butchering order. W. S. Hundley, Boydton, Va. Jy23 tt WANTED: WASHING FOR SEVER aI families. Good clean service. Bee Mollis Jacobs, 990 Washington Road., SALE OF LAND FOR TAXES J, M. S. Moore, tax collector for the town of Williamston, have this day levied on the following tracts or parcels of land, and will sell the same at public auction for cash, before the courthouse door in the town of Williamston on Monday, August 2, 1926, for town taxes due and unpaid for the year 1926, unless the taxes and cost are paid on or before that date. This the Ist day of July, 1926. . Jy9 4tw M. S. MOORE, Town Tax Collector. Colored Taxes Cost Total William Andrews, 1 res. and lot, Biggs Street $ 16.00 SI.BO $ 17.80 W. T. Alexander, 1 res., Koanoke or Forrest St. >— 43.63 1.80 45.53 F. L. Allen, 1 lot Elm St, 1 lot Hyman St. 27.25 1-80 29.06 Oliver Andrews, 1 res. Washington St. 3.75 1.80 5.66 liodger Ayers, 1 res Hill St 16.88 1.80 18.68 lola Bagley, 1 res Railroad St 13.60 1.80 16.30 Thomas Bagley, 1 res Hamilton Road, balance 6.50 1.80 8.30 Philas Bailey, 1 res, Sycamore St 2.50 1.80 4.30 Elizah Brown, 1 res Washington St ___" 14.76 1-80 16.65 Pete Bullock, 1 res Elm St 14.76 1-80 16.66 Will C. Bunch, 1 res Elm St, balance 13.50 1.80 16.30 Paul Clemmons, 1 res Sycamore St 6.00 LBO 7.80 Sarah Cloman, 1 res, Perkins St 17.60 1-80 19JO Ad line Duggins, 1 res Main St, balance 11.29 1.80 13.00 Florence Everett, 1 res, Washington St 15.00 1-80 16.4 ii) Chris Una Everett, 1 res Hyman St 10.00 1.80 11.80 Gertrude Ewell, 1 res Hamilton Road 1.88 1.80 3.68 Henry Everett, 1 res. Sycamore St, 2 vacant lots Railroad St, 1 res ... - 48.00 1.80 40JS0 John Edwards, 1 Main St ' 46.38 1.80 48.18 Fidelity Mfg. & Repair Co, garage, Washington St— 37.60 1.80 89.30 Bryant Gainor, 1 res Railroad St 6-00 1-80 Martha J. Gorham, 2 lots Lette St 2.60 1-80 4.30 Henry Gurganus, 1 Wilson, shop, 1 lot —— 11.30 » 1.80 13.10 Jule Gorham, 3 res, 7 lots, Main St , 44.25 1.80 46.05 Alonzo Gurganus, 1 res Biggs St 9.75 1.80 11.56 P. S Hagan, 1 res Hatton St 17-60 1.80 19.30 Lixxie Hawkins, 1 lot 2*jjo J*® G. T. Hills, 1 res Sycamore St 17.25 1.80 19.00 C C Hoggart, 1 res and lot, Washington St 27.50 1.80 29.30 G W Hyman, 1 res Hyman St, 1 Centei St 39.76 1.80 41.65 Sarah Hyman, 1 res Hyman St 21-26 1.80 23.06 Gertrude Hassell, 1 res, Washington St 20.63 1.80 22.43 Lizzie Hines, 1 lot L C Hoggard, 2 Washington St 50.00 1.80 61.80 Rebecca Hyman, 1 Hyman St 8.76 1.80 0.6» V R Hyman, 1. vacant lot 6.00 1.80 „? Augustus James, 1 Pearl St, balance £ 23.78 1.80 20.0 a Andrew J James, 1 lot adjoining B Speller 18.60 1.80 20.30 Ed Johnson, 1 res White St > 10-60 1-80 12.30 Mary & Rebecca Lanier, 1 vacant lot fi-60 1.80 B.BU William Latham, 1 res South Pearl St 2.00 1.80 8.80 Jack Little, 1 res Railroad St 7 -60 1-80 9.30 Clarence Lloyd, 1 res Hatton St 2.26 1.80 4.06 W B Mizelle, 1 res Elm St 37.26 1-80 89.06 John Milikan, 1 vacant lot *-60 1-80 o-oO W V Ormond, 4 Main St, 1 Rhodes,* 1 Hyman, 1 Washington, 1 Church, 1 Rhodes 366.38 1.80 868.18 Edmond Ormond, 1 res 17-6 ? Jr'Sq Jule W Peel, 1 res Washington St 24.18 1.80 26.93 lobe Purvis, 1 res Broad St —i 10.60 1.80 12.30 John Rhodes, Estate, 1 res Main St 26.00 1.80 26.80 Gus Purvis, 1 residence 18.00 1.80 Lizzie Purvis, 1 lot —— 1«26 1.80 8.06 J. T. Purvis, 1 res Hatton St —_ 9.76 1.80 11.66 W T Purvis, 1 res Center St 6.13 1.80 7.93 Fenner Respass, sr., 1 res. Elm St 12.60 1.80 14.30 John Respass, 1 res Elm St 17.88 1.80 19.68 Jane Rhodes, 1 res Church St 10.00 1.80 11-80 Neat Rogers, 1 res Sycamore St 12.60 1.80 14.30 William Ito tigers, 1 New Road 17.38 1.80 19.18 Hilea Rodgers, 1 res Wilson St 6.00 1.80 7.80 James Ruilin, 1 res, Main St 20.00 1.80 21.80 Whit Ruffin, 1 res Elm at 8.88 1.80 Francis Roberts, 1 res Wilson St . 17.60 1-80 19.30 Ed Rodgers, 1 res, 13.50 1.80 16.30 Henry Ruilin, 1 res Hamilton St __— 17.38 1.80 j-9-18 Jake Ruffin, 1 res, 7 shop, Washington St 61.63 1.80 68.48 Sarah Ruilin, 1 res Hamilton Road 8.75 1.80 10.66 Delia Sherrod, 1 Washington St 2.60 1.80 4.30 Robert Simmons, 1 Washington St, 1 res 17.76 1.80 19.66 Ben Scott, 1 shop Main St 20.58 1.80 22.38 Bettie Scott, 1 Main St —i 12.60 1.80 Bessie Scott, 1 res Church St _____ 27.60 1.80 29.80 Alfred Sherrod, 1 res Hatton St 18.75 1.80 16.65 W H Sherrod, 1 res Washington St ——l2-60 1.80 14.80 M D Slade, 1 res, White St - 9.13 1.80 10.98 Sherrod Slade, 1 residence 11.00 1.80 12.60 Richard Smith, 1 Main St 14.66 1.80 Abe Spruill, 1 res White St ; 9.75 1.80 11.65 Tom Stokes, 1 res and shop 21.05 1.80 22.85 J B Speller, 2 Washington, 1 Purvis, 1 Nicholson 68.60 1.80 60.30 J C Taylor, 1 res Hamilton Road, 1 vacant lot 68.76 1.80 70.66 William Whitley, 1 Pearl St, 1 Washington St 46.00 1.80 46.80 G M White, 1 res Sycamore St, balance 28.88 1.80 25.18 Gabriel Wiggins, 1 res Haughton St 27.25 1.80 29.K Ella Wilder, 1 Railroad St 22.60 IJ(T 24.80 Carrie B Williams, Col, 1 res Hatton St, balance 2.75 1.80 4.66 P D Williams, 1 vacant lot Main St 6.13 1.80 7.98 Joe Wijkins, 1 res Main St - 13.60 1.80 16.80 Joe Wilson, 1 res Hatton St, 1 vacant lot 21.00 1.80 22.80 P W Wright, 1 res Roanoke St 16.00 1.80 17.80 Emma Williams, 1 Pearl St 12.60 1.80 14.30 Joe Williams, 1 Wilson St, 1 Main St 24.33 1.80 26.18 Robert Williams, 1 residence 23.20 1.80 25.05 Es telle Woolard, 1 res Watts St 17.60 1.80 19.30 White B. R. Barnhill, 1 res Smithwick St $104.25 SI.BO $106.05 Mrs. Byra Ballard, 1 res Main St 36.42 1.80 86.92 P A Ballard, 1 res Mani St 37.80 LBO 89.60 J H Beech, 1 res Haughton St 44.12 1.80 45.98 Mrs. Annie Biggs, 1 Watts St 26.00 1.80 26.80 Joseph B Biggs, 1 vacant lot . 6.00 1.80 6.80 S S Brown, 1 res Haughton St 39.60 1.80 41.80 H M Burras, 1 vacant lot 25.51 1.80 27.81 Mrs H M Burras, 1 res Main St, 1 MixelJe 100.00 1.80 101.80 Geo E Bunch, 1 res Pine St 60.68 1.80 52.48 Mrs Nancy Cherry, 1 res Hamilton Road 17.60 1.80 19.80 Mrs H H Cowing, 1 vacant lot Main St 36.69 1.80 87.49 Mrs B A Critcher, 1 res Watts St 113.63 1.80 115.48 Critcher 4 Critcher, 1 Main St, 1 Ray St, 1 New Road, 1 Hyman 96.36 1.80 97.16 Mrs B D Critcher, 1 res Watts St 86.00 1.80 87.80 Leslie Fowden, 1 res Smithwick St 111.75 1.80 118.55 Mrs Mary P Godwin, 1 res Main St, 1 res Elm St 198.20 1.80 200.00 Mrs B' W Graves, 1 vacant lot Watts Grove 6.26 1.80 8.06 G N Gurganus, 1 res Main St 60.92 1.80 62.72 R D Gurganus, 1 res Main St, balance 20.65 1.80 22.35 W Halberstadt, 1 Gurganus, 1 res Church St ; 75.38 1.80 77.18 Calvin W Hassell, 1-7 Hassell place Jft- 56.22 1.80 57.02 T S Hadley, 1-2 Atlantic Hotel 1 141.69 1.80 148.49 Home Realty Co., 1 vacant lot 4.68 1.80 6.48 J L Hassell, 1 Smithwick St, 3 Main St 719.00 1.80 780.80 Q B Hollingsworth, 1 garage Washington St 18.60 1.80 20.80 W A ames, 1 res Main St 97.52 1-80 99.32 A S Leggett, 1 lot Main St 17.60 1-80 19J0 Mrs J B cGowan, 1 Main St 43.75 1.80 46.55 J B McGowan, 1 Main St 43.96 1.80 45.75 Wheeler Martin, 1 res Main St —— 152.44 1.80 154.24 Martin and Fowden, 1 res Warren St, 1 vacant lot _ 68.76 1.80 66.65 John H Mizell, 1 res Main St 58.48 1.80 00.28 M R Melson, 1 Main St lO.OO 1.80 11J0 J R Mobley, 1 Watts St, 1 Main St. balance 29.76 1.80 BLSB Moblev, Taylor 4 Hight, whse Washington St, bal _ 66.66 1.80 88.48 Lucy Modlin, 1 res Church St ' 35.00 1.80 88£0 Mrs J L Rogerson, 1 res Main St 191.48 1.80 193.28 E K Smith, 1 res Warren St 37.50 IJO 39.30 J W Taylor, 1 town lot 12.50 1.80 14.30 H D Peele, 1 Haughton, 1 Simmons Ave, 3 Main __ 484.82 1.80 436.62 J L Peele, 1 res Church St, balance 22.68 1.80 24.48 J S Peele, 1 Main, 2 Washington, 1-2 lot R.R. 186.78 1.80 188.68 W H Price, 1 lot Hyman St 8.75 r-1.80 10.55 Ray-A Bennett, 1 Watts Grove --—.— 10.00 1.80 11.80 S. K. Clary, 1 residence _ n 20.00 i 1.80 21J8 J A Teel, 1 lot Church St 2. 6.00 1.80 &80 J B Waters, 1 res Main St 84.65 1.80 86.48 John A Ward, 1 res Watts St __ 41.00 LBO 42J0 Ward 4 Critcher, 1 res Ray St 60.00 1.80 61.80 B B Williams, 1 res Railroad 84.76 1.80 Mftg Williams ton Cooperage Co, 1 vacant lot 7.50 1.80 9JO Mrs Lavenia Williams, 1 res Main St 107.60 1.80 109.40 M R Wilson, 1 Main St 10.00 1.80 11.88 Mrs L B Wynne, 1 res Haughton St 60.00 1.80 SLBO Herbert Wynne, 1 vacant lot 6.00 1.80 7.80 W H Wynne, 1 res Pine St, balance 8.95 1.80 6.76 Moore, Crawford 4 Martin, 1 store Main St 175.00 1.80 178£0 Norton Hiw. Co., 3 lots, river , 77.60 1.80 79.80 L H Peele, 1 lot WatU Grove, bal r , , 6.00 140 840
July 27, 1926, edition 1
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