-2 l'if,-SlfMfl VW!---''-!. A 'it-:- '" ' ' ' :- ffV. w A T A B FQR If 0 NOTICE OF LAND SALE. I o'clock P. M., to the highest bidder of the land of W. M, Edmondson;; .. r- ' - . ' : 1 7v . ........ ' 1 t !- 1' a- m -n: . i U The. undersigned trustea-undeiand! le caiuv... tne loiiuiwm.. . aescriaiTnence; aiong ms ne io xr luvet (1 by virtue of a certain deed : of trustf tract er- parcel of land, ..... . ..,.:! the. ttfcl t?(Mini I to him exited-by A.- F, Baker and Situated in Nov. .1 Township, the containing 1Z4 acres, more or less. I other dated--December, lftth,. 1921 County of Edgecombe, and being the Also being the same land" conveyed1!" 1 and duly recorded in Book 213, Page; same land conveyed to L. E to.the said A. . Baker and otnerg Dy ; recorded in the Edgecombe .Registry. This May 12th, 122. ..... Geo. af.vFounfa!n: EXEQSES.GUHUI IF5 (609 of the Edgecombe Registry,' de-T Fountain by Ori'eW James snd' wife L fault having been" made 'in the pay- by deed1 recorded in- Book MO; Page mcht of Jthe indebtedness therein; 5 of the Edgecombe Regirtry,. where secured and demand iarjoreclosure: in said tCKUtJScir.Df'i.? toitowa;. having be duly made by the pai'ty Beginning on the north side of Tur te whom" said indebtedness is due,1 River at 'the 'corner' of the land 'of the will on Monday June 10th, 19Z2, of- Old Giant Land: ttunec aiong the fer for sale ' 1n" front of the Court line of this: laud .to the', public road (TmwjA.- D.iAit in 'T-offmrn V P. ho- 0ntnw n.tn THrluirn in Knurts! tween the hours, ef 12 M., and two' thence down said road to 'the corner1 ,aie Am E- Woaten, this is to not'i m m - Notisa f Adftiioiitration. The undersigned, havuig qualified as administrator of tiie estate of the Jiist One Town Le f t. 4 .... p - Where tobacco farmers "Who Vut , See" must submit to the olH system ...tried' for thirty-one yqars And Found Wanting! Wilsdn ' ! C Tnat's All mm LtORE,iJmfia, June 9. Si, San karan Nair,". formerly a member o the Viceroy's Council and also of th Secretary of State's Council, who rc cently returned from England, ha undui'Uikrn tiie task of exjjosaig w,ha he considers to be Gandhi's real aim for India. His opinions, publisher under the title, "Gandhi and Anal chy," constitutes a vigorous attac) on Caidhi and an exposure of thi dafig;ers which Sir Nair sees in non cooperation. Sir Nair has always remained loya to the British government, and th bttwewi iiiiM and Camlhi wa Iai-ade complete at the conferunae Medmute leaders held at Bombay t cently. In the course t his remark Ion the Gandhi movement, he says: j ."Though Gamthi hittveK and th j nvajority of his followers were me who were not well-known in the cm greas crnja or in the stifiuons dap P whicti preceded the introductioa o tthe refcm sthenie, his party oor jjUiincd same men who were member hof the old constitutioiiar congres iwhii.li afterwards was turned int thej kios," or one herse abs. Less foTtu- .' MOSCOW",1 . Jlinei 9.4-?or-:iall the ? $ j. . troublss' of the revolution, life lif ttuftiiais reverting to about tha aeme . reneral plane as uader the rule of. he Czars, according to the statement - i eld residents of Moacow. Tbere isf ' ?vowever, a complete rearrangement :f classes at rtie top and' the bottom f the social saale with the bourgeois e still safely placed in the middle. . Merchants and others of the bour geois class, who escaped the Red ter ror, kaive again becoibe rrienhants or lakea on parsaita sitnilat to thosi they fllowed under the Czar. The 'oss fortunate nobility, exeept its few n&mbers who have beaome bourgeois now oerapies the lowest run in tt)e" coMomic ladder. The revolutionary workmen1 who are employed in high ffieial positions, occupy the privi leged position that ouce belonged tV .he nebility. The workingmen whs'1 once walked ide ia the aiiftobiles that formerly belonged to the nobiKty, while the nobility now walks., but the bourge oisie, just aw always, rides in "droeh- KBr The Pi netops Banking Go. Cooperative M arketing . '. ?" THfif FOLLOW ikG RESOLUTION WAS PASSED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS ATj REGULAR MEETING HELP JUNE 7TH "That whreaa tfee Cooperative Marketing Asabcfation is fSrmerf foi" and is-a movement, looking to the welfare and interest of the farmers of this and other communities, and in view of the fact that the associa tion ia now making an intensive, drive to get signers, ; We ihereforej as a bank, ofFer our hearty cooperation in .this great myemenji ard wish t(S extend to the association and to the farmers of our county our best wishes. W believe always that the farmers' welfare is the public welfare-and -in consideration of this common good we want to lend our ENDORSEMENT and influence to this great movement. resent revolutionary congress en !tirely uader the eofftiKii of (iaiidhi There is scarcely an item in the IjGamihi program which is not a conv iplete violation of everylhiat; preach ed by the foremost sotis of Indie till 1919 ; which has not bewi strong ly, even vehemently, denounted bj those old respected members of the congress who now follow CaniHii. "The severe simplicity and auster ity of Gandhi's life, nomWned with his appeal to the principle of 'Ahim a' (non-injury), inherited from Bud j ilhists I'lid now ingrained in Hindu life, !;ar, secured him the support of the Hindu masses, and pnrticularfj' vegetarians. His iniHscnminaiing sap- pwl of the extreme KhaKlTt demanii has ensured the Mohajiimedan sup port. Some politicians who natarallf esire to use him and the iaflueaof he has acquired for puttiag prtssarc on the government to catKede fur ther reform, also have joined him. There are f euutsc tidily gnwin oatrios who, believing in t-hv efflcaty )( his n.ethods to obtain hoie rule ;ilso follow Him. But I am satisfie lie is u.sing them all to further hit own ends, an attenit in which he if lound to fail." WATCH LABEL ON YOUR PAPER FOR EXPIRATION DATE AND RENEW YOUR SUBSCRIPTION t - AT ONCE MOSCOW, June 9.K Moscow's opera a-nd dramatic season ap proaches its close, scores cf;Russia'5 best aitists are turning their eye. longingly toward America. If tht American State Department consent Madame Nie.idanova, premier so prano ot Kus.-i; m. sono!T, kus- sia s most noteo tenor, ana severa others of the Moscow Grand OpeK nay appear ia Mew Yonk this fall, Madame Nieslidanova., a coioraturt i oprano who, wrM Mnatiapla aau SobinoflT, formed an operatie tnr which hns wen high fraise ia Russia ilnudy has' permission of the Sovie .rorernment to leave for abroad. Sh las long been favorahly known i Hussia, and although ' somewhat ' ad ,anced ia years she stiU retains he voice. : Madanc Nieshdanovji sant frequently with Caruso in Buropc. M. Rumialiseff, admiaistrative di; :ector at the Hascow'Art Theater, i preparing to Wave Within a shor time for New York to arrange thrf for the presentation of several o' .he Art Theater's most famoa: Iramas. r.ate workingmen who are not offic i ially employed live en scale even less bountiful than they did under the Czar. It is not only in this arrangement oi classes that the similarity of Rus sia tod;iv and before the war is be cemin more prono,UHced daily. "Do s you please, but don't bother with politfcs," was the general creed of Russian life under the old regime. Since free trade has been restored, the treed of the Soviet regime might be expressed in the same words. If one did bother with politics under the old negime, the eid secret police got him and did with him' just about as they pleased. If one today opposes openly the Communist oligarchy that aow rules Russia, its secret peiioe get him and he has no recourse.' In neither ease was or is there any free dom of the press or real freedoaf of speech. Just as before the revolution', persons desiring today to form polit ic! parties in opposition to the gov ernment row meet i secret places and speak in hushed whispers. Persons whe fc-e recently fallen into the hands of the "State Politi cal department," as the successor to he "Chcka" is known, declared that, ust as this is nothing but the Cheka a a redueed foqm, so was the Chek'a nothing other than an outgrowth ef he Czar's "Okraiaa," or secret 'pb lice. In, fact, many of the principal operatives of these institutions hare erved in their same yositiena thfu ut the three changes of the name.'' CALIFORNIA WM S ! ' ' . ml-6t .jTTTTtTtTTtV'ITTTTI ITt'H IIIIHIIII I'll mTTTTf'IV'l't'M I I.IIHtTI ' 1'TTHTTl t ti H'l'li.r fy all persona holding, claim against to the undersigned at Maeeleafield X. C;; duly verified, on er beiare-the 1st day of May, 1923, or this notice will be pleaded in bar ot their ' re covery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make . immediate settlement.. ' - - This the 1st -day of Mat, 1922. -J. F. BROWN, Administrator, Maecleateldf N. a " . ;' : .' -.' - : it .. Why is it that for the first time for many years there are fewer men on the farms than there are in the cities? Why is it that the census ol 1920 pointed eut that there was' a irreater urban population tMtn' a -ountry . population? Because ' the oung men1 are leaving th1 farms; arming doea net pay. ' Why is it true that here as well as iractically everywhere, tenantry is ncreasmg and the ownership of in lividndl farm is decreasing? Because to man as an individual has a chance 'igainst the system and connot keep 'lis head out of water oft' his payment, nd gradually they lose the farm and .revert .Into the old feudal rstenV of icnaratry. ' Why is it that they wear shoes nr iHk stockings ia the cities? Why is it that they have bath rooms and toilet In the houses ill tha cities, -and when , I go through your coahtryhere lie a situation of Kfe on this 'farm that makes ma knew as well as yeu that yeur farming life is one generation behind the standard of living ia the city? It' is., because youlT system of mark tin s. the ene point where yom convery year years's labor into mon ey is defective. - - Aarea Sapiro

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