PAGE TWO THE ENTERPRISE MUwd Iwy TtieetUy aad Friday fay The ENTERPRISE PUBLISHING CO. WILUAMITOM. WORTH CAROLINA. W. C. M.tlm Editoi SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Btrictly Caab In Advance) IN MARTIN COUNTY OM ysar 91 JO Six Months .75 OUTSIDE MARTIN COUNTY OM yssr SMO Sis months l.OO No Subscription Received (or Lcm Than 6 Months Advertising Rats Card Furnished Upon Request Entered at the post office in Williamston, N. C., as second-class matter undci the act of Congress of March 3. 1879. Address all communications to The Enterprise and no to the individual member* of the firm. Friday, October 23, 1931 Sauce for the Gander In case Governor Gardner does call a special ses sion of the legislature, why not pass a law to make tobacco buyers make another payment to the farmers for the tobacco they have bought so far below the cost of production. It would be just as reasonable to tell tobacco buyers what they shall do as it is to tell fanners what they shall not do. There seems to be a greater disposition to regulate the poor than the rich. Political Rivalry American political rivalry certainly must outclass' that of any and all other nations for downright sel fishness. The spirit is to let the people suffer rather than assist the rival party to help things. The only time in 50 years when the two rival major political parties in this country have worked like statesmen and pulled together was the years 1917 and 1918,'. when the war clouds hung heavy over our land. Before and since then, we have paid more attention to try ing to tear down what the opposing party did, or tried to do, than we have in trying to help in the general uplift. We, the rank and file of humanity, need never ex pect any reasonably fair governmental administra tion for any length of time, just so long as our gov ernment is run by selfish politicians who serve sel fish interests rather than the public interest. We need some statesmen in this country. Too Much Money The Reynolds and Cannon families left their chil dren too much money. So much, in fact, that it has hampered their thinking capacities and somewhat stained some of their characters. It is just another case of old folks knowing how to make money and the children not having sense enough to use it. Cannon and Reynolds laid up their money where mothy children are destroying it. NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND FOR TAXES I, Sheriff C. B. Roebuck, tax collector for the county of Mar tin, State of North Carolina, have this day levied on the following tract* or parcels of land, and will sell same at public auction, for cash, at the courthouse door in Williamston, North Carolina, on Monday, November 2, 1931, at 12:00 o'clock m., for taxes due and unpaid for the year 1930, unless said taxes, penalties and interest, plus cost, are paid on or before that date. The amounts listed be low include taxes for the year 1930, four per cent interest and a 4- cent penalty. In addition to the amounts shown, SI.BO is to be added to each item to care for costs in handling the sale. This the Ist day of October, 1931. C. B. ROEBUCK, Sheriff, Martin County. James villa Township—White C. L. Ange, 49 a. Collen Ange and Imp. $ 26.00 H. L. Ange, 19 a. C. H. Davis land 33.40 J. T. Ange, I residence 29.30 L. L. Ange, 22 a. Ange land g.gO L. W. Ange, 82 a. mill land, 21 a. Collen Ange land 45^40 Onesa Ange, 22 a. Ange land 17.80 S. H. Ange, 50 a. Ange land 54 20 W. F. Ange, 2 a. Asa Harris 2^oo tH. Bailey, 125 a. Bateman land 147^60 H. Burroughs Heirs, 30 a. Cooper Swamp .HI 23.20 «. T. Coburn Est., SI a. Gaylord land 49 40 S. R. Coburn, 50 a. W. T. Coburn land. 20 a. Tarkle Neck Id. 66J0 * r f; A. Corey, 1 residence, Sunset Avenue 21.30 S. M. Dardens Est., 8 a. Dardens land .... 19 00 Alice Davis, 7 a. Mitel! land, 44 s. P. A. Davis land Z..~Z 40^60 H L. Davis, 56 a. W. f.. Wright land 77 30 L A- Davis Est., 10 oa. J. A. Davis land 29 00 J; V* Davis, 34 acres W. M. Davis land 18*60 Mrs B S. Edwards, 1 town lot ion J. W, Gardner, 31 a. Gardner land 31 90 Eli Getrganns Est., 75 a. Waters land I 41 ™ Mrs. C. G. Gurkins, 10 a. residence innn G. Hack, 9 a. residence * 17fifl W- R Hampton, 100 a. Fisher land. " 65 30 E W n I * nd ' ,W ' hind 9L50 c. w. Harden, 96 acres Dsrdens land 57 on HIIU 1 ,* Cr * land 111 10 90 U,ttn - 1 'tore Jc cX R- Hftdnck, 1 residence 20 90 1"u ?. *0 a. Hinson land Il_ ' 64 60 J® 1, Holliday, 25 a. Davis land ~ 740 1 Mary C. Holliday, 20 a. Holliday land, 32 a. Holliday land 1 town residence 7 in 3n 57 • Holliday land, 60 acres Holliday a. Lilley ,o sjg j wSei£rte u> ttigr/wsrai'sft 1 " >w ° j c Sl £££' i? his —«:# 1 Jmo. A. Mitdl. 7 acres „ ™ Lanra and H. W. M«eUi*, 1 vacant in*" ~~~~ ! L. W. i £f' ■T. A. p.* Bj ] More We Raise, the Less We Get In 1923 Southern farmers planted 37,000,000 acres in cotton, produced 10,171,000 bales, which sold for $1,571,829,000. In 1926 they planted 47,000,000 acres, produced 17,755,000 bales, which sold for $982,- 736,000. The next year, that is in 1927 the acre age dropped 7,000,000 acres. We made 5,000,000 bales less, and got 287,449,000 more than we did for the big 1926 crop. In 1930 we went back to a 45,000,000-acre crop, i produced 13,784,000 bales, which sold for $674,044,- 000. This year we went wild on acreage again. It now looks like more than a fifteen and a half million bale crop, and taking the price up to now and measur ing the remainder of the sales pn the rises and falls Of previous crops, it will st&'tor about $450,000,000, about one-third as much as did our twelve and three quarter mlliion bale crop of 1927. If 15,000,000 acres of the cotton land this year had been permitted to go to weeds, or some feed crops, the Southern cotton farmers would in all probability have gotten at least $200,000,000 more for their cot ton than they will get. We are literally starving ourselves and losing our lands for the want of sufficient judgment to stop rais ing so much cotton and tobacco. Every time we attempt to plant big money crops to try to pay our debts we run the price down and increase our debts. ,• What the farmer needs to do is to stop increasing his debts by trying to do the same things that have already gotten him In debt. One acre of tobacco produced without cash outlay will pay more debts than 10 acres that costs more than it will sell for, v • r Smaller acreage of all crops that we have an over production of is the only solution for 1932. Cotton Problem Is Of Long Standing Sampson Independent We have before us a copy of The Caucasian, a weekly paper published in Clinton many years ago, bearing the date of November 17, 1904, and note that the people of the South were worrid at that time be cause of the low price of cotton. Meetings were be ing held and farmers urged to hold their crop off the market with the view of securing a better price, according to a story carried in the paper of that date. The crop that year was estimated at 11,000,000 bales and the price was ranging around 8 cents per pound. The sentiment appeared to be that the crop should sell for at least 12 cents with that amount of cotton produced. This only calls to mind the fact that cotton always has been, and continues to be, one of the biggest problems of the South. Occasionally a cotton crop sells for a price which nets the grower a reasonable profit, but more often it does not. That is to say, there are more years when the growers fail to get a fair price for their labors and expenditures in produc ing a cotton crop than years when they are satisfied with the returns. It would appear that if the world could take care of a crop of 11,000,000 bales in 1904, a crop of around 15,000,000 bales in 1931 should not prove so astound ing as to. run the price dowrf to the present level. We don't believe it is the size of this year's crop that is causing the low price, but the fact that conditions throughout the world are unsettled. Too many people are idle, and too many others working for . wages so low that they can not purchase the actual needs of themselves and families. If all the people in the world were at -work, drawing a "living wage," there would be but little surplus of any of the major crops. The problem is, however, to find jobs for the unemployed millions in this and other countries. S. J. Perry Est., 150 a. Hardison land 11.70 J. 1). Price, 50 acres Price land 19.40 Vance Price, 60 a. Price" land W. W. Kol>cr>.on, |5 a. mill 44.50 Mr*. Bonnie Sexton, 1 vac. lot, 1 residence - 20.30 W. C. Sexton, 1 residence 23.7(1 Mrs. J. K. Smith wick, 120 a. Burroughs land, 17 a. Will land, 45 a. Jones land, 27 a. Barnes land, 6 a. Mizell Tand, 5 a. Mirell land, P. O. and Bank Bid*., 1 vac. lot 347.00 H. T. Stalling* Est,, 1 residence 24.70 Julius T. Wallace, 33 a. Hardison laud 29.70 W. W. Walters, 1 residence, 1 vac. lot, 1 warehouse - 78.1C W. W. Walters, trustee for L. W. Miielle, 1 store 49.2t Mrs. E. G. Waters, 35 a. Caskett land, 45 a. aters land 76.21 Mrs. L. F. Waters, 22 a. Davis land * 28.51 Warren W. Waters, 52 acre* residence ... 50.4( Jam**villa Townahip—Colored Maud Blount, 18 a. Cordon land ..... 15.20 Brick Boston Est., 75 acre* residence 25 70 Columbus Boston, 26 acres residence (Godard) 22.11 Elizabeth Boston, 17 acres _ 32.4 C 1 celine Boston, 16 acres Boston land 14.3t Lucretia Boston, 58 acres James land _ 23.81 Major Boston, 14 acres Brooks land ......... 21.80 Willie A. Boston, 5 acres Tarkle Neck land ! 8.30 Willie D. Boston, 11a. Boston land, 44 a. Boston land, 9 acre* Boston land, 6 acres Cordon land ...» 68.20 William Boston, Sr., 15 a. K. Boston land 13*30 R. W. Butts, 2 1-2 acres Godard land 9.0,] David Brooks, 23 acres Brooks land n 11.5(j Elisabeth Brooks, 17 acres Brooks land "* 32.3€ Edward Cordon, 12 acres Cordon land ....... 14 30 Ethel Cordon Estate, 12 acres Cordon land a.StJ Gadyst Cordon, 80 acres Cordon land 14.00 F. Cordon, jr., 16 acres Cordon land _ 22 20 Ellen Daniel E*t., 12 acre* residence _ , ' 3*90 Geo. F. Cordon and Moore, 50 acre* Jones land . 14J0 " Cordon, 5 1-2 acres residence :.ij 12.60 William Cordon, 1 acre James land 980 Peter Dickens, 1 residence _ ' 7*70 16 * en * honl ' residence 27 10 r a ™-' W ,' »•. and Horace Duggins, 16 acraa Moore land ■*7.70 Carrie and Clyde Haisell, 12 acre* Moore land S 80 Henry Gray, 1 residence 1130 Sylvester Gray, 6 acres residence ~ non Thomas Gray, sr., 1 acre, residence J. ■ 970 J. H. Garrett, 10 a. Forest land _ ll'io S• Hardison, 10 acre* wood* land 3 70 Nathan Harrington, 10 acres woods land : s*2u Louise Holloman Estate, 1 residence _. 15 511 A. C. Jackson, 28 acre* residence . 17°X) Arthur James, 2 1-2 acres Coburn land _7™ Elvira James, 5 acre* James land ..... 1040 {Jane James, 7 1-2 acre* Botton land 14 on oseph Jame*, SO acre* Botton land 8150 lelvin Jame* Est., 15 a. Summett land, 30 a. mill pond I 37^0 Milton James, 58 a. wood*, 58 a. re*., 2a. Louisa Simpson Id. 76.10 Isaac Kev'.' B # .u n S 2 a Cordon Und - 5 »• Keys land 16.30 Isaac Keys, 1 acre Bentley land _ sjn Moore ' and ' 5 a. Dempsey land 5160 acres residence 570 Sarah J. Moore Est, 10 a. Moore Und, 25 a. Moore land I 19.30 J P Mc^ddel, 7 I C ° ' Und ' 3 « #3 Uis McNair, 20 acre, Martha.Pierce, 2 a. E. G. Waters land 3on *. P. Powers, 1 residence IQ 90 THE ENTERPRISE " | PLANS ARE MADE FOR LIVESTOCK CO-OP IN STATE Will Render Receiving and' Selling Service for Shippers I A North Carolina unit of the East ern States Livestock Cooperative Mar keting Association, which is affiliated with the National Livestock Cooper ative may be organized within the nexi year, according to plans made at i meeting held at State College lasi week. "The new marketing association will render a receiving and selling service for shippers of livestock from this State at a lower cost than present commission firms charge and will pro rate profits of the business back tc the producer members," says Dean I O. Schaub, in discussing the proposed organization. "The Eastern States Livestock Association will have it! membership afriong the producer.' throughout the eastern half of th« United States and is being organized under the auspices of the Federal Farm Board. The principal offices will b maintained at Baltimore, and receiv ing stations are being set up at Balti more. Jersey City, and Lancaster, Fa W. W. Jarvis, of Moyock, Currituck County, is a member of the Board ol directors from North Carolina and is also chairman of the North Carolina advisory .committee." The new marketing association will begin work with a capital of $25,000 to be increased to $50,000 when con ditions warfcapt. North Carolina's share will be SI,OOO, to be increased to $2,000 when the work gets under way in good shape. It is hoped by the organizers that 1,000 North Caro lina livestock growers will join and take share of the common stock at $1 each. One member gets one vote. Dean Schaub says the contract is the most liberal of any that he has ever seen. There is no coming back on the members for further funds, and any man dissatisfied with his experiences with the association can get out in December of any year. All profits made by the association are prorated back to the members. METHODS VARY FOR CONTROL OF MOSQUITOES Different Varieties Have Different Methods of Breathing Because the many varieties of mos quitoes in their intermediate stages be :ween the egg and the adult l\uve dif ferent habits, mfin has had to adopt lifferent means for their destruction n his fight again t tliem, says the United States Department of A;:rirul ure. All mosquito et hatch in the wa er,. and that is whore controv work :enters. After the eggs of the "rain jarrel" or common mosquito hatch, tlie arvae, or "wigglers," feed in the wa er below the surface, but each larva )reathes through an air tube near the ■ear of its body, coming frequently to he top for this purpose. Coal oil placed on the water clogs these air übes, killing the mosquito larvae. But the larvae of the inland marsh j W. E. Rhodes Est., 21 acres residence 22.30 j Nellie Ruffin Estate, 1 residence - - 9.70 Joe Simpson Estate, 12 acres residence 6.70 W. H. C. Sykes, 8 a. 1 mill road land, 14 a. mill road land 16.60 Katie Taper, 11 acres Taper land 30.60 I.udy Taylor, 1 residence Minnie Walker, 1 vacant lot - 2.90 Winnie Walker, 27 a. Lightfobt land 29.00 Belia Watson, 3 acres Moore land 7.70 Earlie Whitehurst, 1 acre residence and store 27.90 j. E. Whitehurst, 15 acres Fagan land - 8.10 J. I). Williams, 1 acre residence 11.80 J. W. Williams Est., 40 acres Williams land 36.10 Stephen Williams, 20 acres Hyman land 19.00 Will Wooten, 25 acres Davis land - 7.70 Williams Township—White S. L. Andrews, 150 acres residence, 60 acres Leggett land 125.55 C. L. Daniel, 207 acres Short land 136.56 {. A. Davenport, 160 acres residence 53.15 ; G. Godard, 22 acres Henry Carson land 3.55 Mrs. Bettie Green, 135 acres residence - 85.00 Frartk Griffin. 100 acres R. M. Riddick land 56.87 Mary E. Griffin, 64 acres L. L. Roberson land 28.35 J. D. Hardison, 200 acre* residence 59.70 Frank Hopkins, 1 acre residence T 9.30 J. N. Hopkins, 124 acres residence .... 107.25 J. W. Hopkins Estate, 50 acres residence ...± 54.00 R. D, Jones, 39 acres residence 33.70 H. E. Lilley, 50 a. L. H. Lilley land 25.00 ! 1.. H. Perry Heirs, 663 acres residence 119.80 H. C. Roberson, 2 acres residence 14.56 Mrs. R. T. Roberson, 80 acres residence 31.55 Sudie Roberson, 50 acres Eason land Z95 Mrs. Theodore Roberson, 98 a. residence, 120 a. Jones land ..... 87.20 I W. W. Roberson, 100 acres residence 79.75 I Z. H. Rose, 331 acres J. S. Peel land 91.40 i Mrs. Roxie Smithwick, 25 teres residence 33.33 Clemmie Wells Estate, 22 acres residence 7.10 Robert Wells, 3 acres residence l 3.70 L. H. Williams, 51 acres residence 11.50 Mrs. Laura Wells Eat., 75 acres Hall land 13.30 T. S. Hadley, 50 a. Burroughs fishery, 140 a. Donaldson Id 29.20 Miss Lucy Smithwick, 30 a. Gibson land, 50 a. Highland po cosin land'*.. _ U.gS A R Dunning and J. D. Lilley, 13 a. Henry Carson land Z 3.5$ Mrs. JAW. Hopkins, 100 a. Harmon Williams land 33.65 Williams Township—Colored Moses Andrews, 71 acres Andrews land 54.70 Aaron Andrews, 24 acres Andrews land 13 45 Ben Bazemore, 60 acres Stanley Field land 13.30 Knowledge Barrow, 10 a. Wiley Gardner land 2.65 Maggie Clark, 13 a. Edward Lee land s 4.00 John Cherry Estate, 25 a. residence „ 9.30 Abraham Fagan, 19 acres Garrett land 16.70 Annie Fagan, 10 acres residence 5 35 Liaa Green, 4 acres Knight land, 5 acres island land, 1 a. res. 13^25 ™? rd, ? on ' 10 acres Hardison land 6.60 W. W. Lanier, 30 acres Gray hind 1970 George Lyons, 5 acres residence, 5 acres Perry land 15.00 acres residence ___ 11.00 K. M. Moore, 66 acres residence 27 40 i«h„ v X » "tX' 10 * cr " F,nnie Y,rr «" land . 2 6.60 John Yates, 10 acres residence 9.70 *** Township—White k t ™ rl Li lo • e r? Teel Und —-—: 121.10 1 • kdmondson, 46 acres residence _ 30.90 WOMAN MAKES GOOD EARNINGS FROM HATCHERY # On the outskirts of Statesville, there is what is reputed the biggest hatch ery plant in the Carolinas. From it there goes some 200,000 baby chicks every year, and to it eggs from 50 to 75 flocks of pure-bred chickens on as many farms in Iredell and adjoin ing counties. The plant is operated in an addition to the house in which the owner lives. "When I started it, several of the children were small, and I had to ar range things so that I could look aftei them and the incubators at the same time," says Mrs. F, B. Bunch, owner Df the hatchery, who built up her big and widespread business in about six year's time. "The presence of eight children to be fed, clothed, and edu cated caused me to start the hatchery.' 7he Bunch hon|e sits in a plot ft several acres of land, which the lady ol the house had been utilizing for poul try raising on a small commercial scale. Feeling that the operation might be enlarged, she took a course in poultry work at Pedue University She started off with an incubator ol 12,000-egg capacity; now her plant has a capacity of 77,000 eggs. Last year she did a business of around $30,000 and observers in touch with her work say that her earnings have averaged M.OOO to $5,000 annually in recent years. She supervises the scattered flocks of liens from which come the bulk of the tggs she uses. She has some layers on Ihe place and raises a good many ;hickens every year for, in the main, ;xperimental and demonstration pur >oses. "Practically al of our baby chicks eniain in the State and demand for hem shows that good poultry farm ng is progressing in North Carolina," lays she. "There is room still for Jiuch further development of it." mosquitoes, known as Mansonia, can I not be killed by putting coal oil on the water, for they don't come to the sur face to breathe. Their breathing tubes, which are queer looking, are adapted for piercing and drawing air from the roots and stems of water plants. Drain 'age is the only effective means of > ; combatting this type of musquito. I Malarial mosquito larvae differ from ' those of other mosquitoes because they • do not have long breathing tubes, j They breathe by means of pores lo- I cated near the end of the body. These j pores are opened through the surface film, while the mosquito larva lies just below. Instead of hanging'head dowm like the rain barrel mosquto larvae, they lie horizontally when feeding. As they eat any minute organisms 011 the surface of the water, the spreading of poison dusts on the surface has proved an ineffective control method. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER MORTGAGE DEED Under and by the terms, and by the authority in me vested in that cer tain mortgage deed, executed by C. G. Gurkin and wife, Eva C. Gurkin, and H. Gurkin, on the 22nd day of De cember, 1920, which is duly recorded in book F-2, at page 316, of the Mar tin County records, 1 will sell, at the courthouse door of Martin County, on Thursday, the 12th day of November, 1931, at 12 o'clock noon, the follow ing described land, viz: I Known at the T. O. Woolard tract' beg'nnMg at a marked black gum on the north s«le of Free Union road, in the head of Deep Bottom Branch. , , thence down the ran of caid branch to a corner in the Ball Gray line; thence N. 45 E. to a cedar known a* the j Stalling* corner; thence S. 10 E. to the »aid Free Union road, thence up the .aid road to the beginning, con taining 10 acre*, more or leas. See hook H, page 166, Martin County rec ord* for a full description, j Also that tract adjoining, Beginning at an oak post on the Dykes road, running a northerly di rection to a cedar tree in the Pollock line, thence N. 45 E. with said Pol (lock line, to ffie head of s small ditch ia post, thence down the said ditch in ;a post at the Turnage Theatre WASHINGTON. N. C Program for Week Beginning October 26th Monday and Tuesday n . t ~ „ . ~ MONKEY BUSINESS 5 Featuring the FOUR MARX BROTHERS COMEDY AND NEWS Wednesday Only nrt . „ DAUGHTER OF THE DRAGON A w "™ oli " Thursday and Friday Octobsr 29-30 WOMEN LOVE ONCE Saturday October 31 BUCK JONES IN "THE DAWN TRAIL" Show * 2m 4 7 * 9 FOUR SHOWS DAIL? j Extra Specialsl 1 LADIES' NEW FALL COATS ■ For Only $ 4 95 aad (5 95 I §§ LADIES NEW FALL DRESSES ■ $1.98 - $2.98 - $4.95 I Children's Ribbed Hose, a good buy, only 10c I Children's Union Suits, sizes 2to 12, only 49c I B Men's Good Heavy Union Suits 69c I I Men's 2.20 Denim Overalls and Jumpers 69c I I BIG REDUCTION MEN'S SUITS I $24.95 Suits reduced to j/J.&lKl 1 lot Men's 3-Piece Suits on sale for only $8.95 I g Boys' 3-Piece Suits $2.98 I g Boys' 4-Piece Suits $4.95 H This Is the Place to Buy Your SWEATERS I Prices Range from I 49° TO $1.49 J | YOUNG'S STORE! Mrs. R. F. Griffin Estate, 40 acre* residence, 25 a. Griffin laad 22.20 H. L. Hopkins, ISO acre* Taylor land 106.00 L. G. I.eggett, 48 acres residence , 38.30 W. S. Leggett, 59 a. res., 30 a. Joyner land _ 73.00 V. G. Taylor, 470 acres residence, 200 acres Roebuck land, 70 acres Knox land, 66 acrea Pearce land, 53 acres Sil verthorne land, 87 acres Leggett land, 35 acres, Edmond son land ... „ _ 9qj jq Mrs. Laura Whitaker, 45 acres Leggett land 27.60 Poplar Point Tow*sh*p—Colored S. P. Moore, 270 Cofield land ___ J25 30 Joe Tillery, 55 acres Cofield land ~ 37.80 Griffins T ownahip—White Beverly Corey, 15 acres residence, 60 acres Head of Swamp land, 5 acres Sophia J. Corey land 21.20 Mrs. J. R. Corey, 25 acres residence • J470 L. E. Corey Estate, 156 acres residence 79 50 Robert Corey, 25 acres Hardy Corey place 10.00 Thomas A. C orey, 50 acres county line land 3. 8.55 J- A. Daniel, 131 acres residence > _ 53 60 Eli T. Hodges, 39 acres Powell land l*jn Louisa Lilley, 75 acres residence 40 * crel Smithwick land, 125 a. old res. . 5640 Geo. M. Peele, 90 acres residence, 10 acres adj. J. E. R. 50 acres wire grass land, 7 acres Corey land . _ 73.00 Mrs. John G. 1 eel, 68 acres residence 51 so JW. 'SO acres residence 53.00 ClaudiuA Roberson, 156 acres residence . _ 114 80 James E. Roberson, 55 acres res. __ in'on s jcr e» Moore - I—l 27*80 N. T. Woolard, 200 acres J. T. Peele land fJJJ Griffins Townahip—Colored Geo Butler, 45 a. adj Chas. Williams, 25 acres residence 35 acres Perry land _ _ ' Ton, Clemmons, 5 acres Phones Bridire land ~ ~ .*£ y. ,r > C ° re y 7 acres Mary Corey tract 2.10 B R res " 150 * * evel * bnd, 2». Stehtes land 28.00 B. R. Godard, 40 acres residence ®crea residence ib ja ' Ji"™ re,id * nce - 125 »• Corey land 37 20 jKader Stallinga, 60 acrea residence 17 23J0 Cross Roads Township—White Ayers, J. 8., Est., 75 acres Avers land ; y ffl w °"" »• .m. . BaiUy. J. E., Heirs, 1 vacant lot ~~ 4^ S b'j-*— r..-r3EEE SB Bn.lock, J. R., 30 a. res., 13 a., Gurganus land 14 a 1 Mr , m Wan ru 1 ; 196 ,cr *« Roberson land u" ile Moore »•«*> J&SS Clark, S. H., 225 acres Clark land . X ilmf ov j' *• ?- 195 acrM »aid .~: — James Mrs. Nancy J., 80 acres Wvnn land S' J r Ute - \ ,crM wood, u'h —- K-eel, G. L., 60 acres Burroughs land uE S"£ £ *" =£= it W. Aij Estate, 85 acres Ayers land io'lq Mobley, Mrs. Kmchson, SO acres Mobiay Umi " |f£o (Coatfaoed oa page io«r) Friday, October 23.1931 head of the cartway, thence along said aoatherly to a black gum on ifci. thence west along said Dykes jroid to the beginning, coo taming 12 acres, more or less. Beii« *e same land deeded to C. G. Gurkin October7thl9l9, »>y H. Gurkin. 0c to«»«r. 1931. CHLOEE. GURKIN. Owner of Debt By Alice Coltram. Guardian. 66 6 LIQUID OS TABLETS Headache or N«ualgfa in 30 minutes. checks a Cold the first day, aod checks Malaria ia three days. SALVE FOR BABY'S COLD

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