TRY TO AVOID RUSH
GENERALASSEMBLY
SECRETARY OF STATE GRIMES
SAYS TOO MUCH IS DONE
LAST WEEK OF SESSION.
DISPATCHES FROM RALEIGH
Doings and Happenings That Mark
the Progress of North Carolina Peo
ple Gathered Around the State
Ooitol.
Raleigh.
In his annual report to Governor
Craig and the general assembly, Sec
retary of State J. Bryan Grimed in
sists that some method should be
adopted to avoid the rush of work at
the close of the legislative sessions.
He points out that at the 1913 session
76 per cent of the acts passed had
their final reading and ratification in
the last 10 days of the session and he
marshals figures from previous ses
sions to show tha the congestion in
the last days increases with each ses
sion of the general assembly, making
inevitable much crude legislation and
many inaccuracies.
He urges the consolidation of the
engrossing and the enrolling depart
ments of the legislature in the inter
est of economy and accuracy.
The report insists that the state
would have a competent legislative
reference librarian, an officer that
many states in the union have found
necessary and greatly helpful as a
"clearing house for information upon
public affairs." He points that such
an officer would Be required to give
condensed, comprehensive, . impartial
and accurate information on any sub
ject on short notice. For the busy
legislator he would have ready the ac
cumulated classified experiments and
entries upon every question of legis
lation that would be likely to arise.
This officer could also edit the laws
for the state printer, make the annota
tions and keep the Revisal of 1905 re- j
-vised to date and give assistance in i
the preparation of bills for the mem
bers of the legislature.
The report expresses special regret
at defeat of those proposed amend
ments to the- state constitution de
signed to curtail the work of the leg
islature by making unnecessary
three-fourths of the ltitle "unimport
ant acts that now clog the legislative
mill each session. As illustrations
how there could be consolidation and
"elimination of a large part of the leg
islation complained of, he gives fig
ures as to local bills passed the past
four sessions. The figures as to the
1913 session making this, the worst
showing. Acts as to county and town
ship bonds, 97; other bonds, 119;
county commissioners, 88; court sten
ographers, 12; chicken laws, 4; drain
age laws, 20; game and fish laws, 89;
primaries, 16; local courts, 40; road
laws, 158; stock laws, 18; jurors, 16;
justices of the peace, 19; relative to
cities and towns, 325; corporations,
20; graded schools and school dis
tricts, 127; railroads, 24.
North Carolina Crop Report.
The crop reporting board of the
bureau of crop estimates of the De
partment of Agriculture says that the
cotton crop in North Carolina this
year will amount, to 950,000 bales
against 792,545 last year. The price
paid in 1913 in North Carolina was
12.6 against 6.9 this year. Thi3 means
a total loss of $17,158,226 to North
Carrolina cotton growers this year.
New Manager for Yarborough Hotel.
B. H. Griffin, head of the corpora
tion operating the Yarborough Hotel
here, has decided to assume the act
ive management of the hotel him
self, following the retirement of J.
T. Matthews as manager to engage in
the hotel business in Charlotte, and
he has made W. H. Plummer assistant
manager in active charge.
Slaughter 20,000 Pounds Pork.
This was "hog-killing day" out at
the Central Hospital for Insane here
and Dr. Albert Anderson, superin
tendent, reports 20,000 pounds of the
nicest sort of meat, with another fine
lot of hogs to be killed some time in
the new year.
Some Time Before Decision.
It is expected that it will be some
days yet before Unitd States Attorn
ey eGneral Gregory will definitely in
dicate to Attorney General Bickett
whether or not he will undertake the
suit that Mr. Bickett is urging him to
bring for the setting aside of the re
ceivership sale ant partition of the
old Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley Rail
road in alleged violation of the order
of the federal court at the time and
of the Sherman anti-trust law. In
fact, the plan is for Mr. Bickett to go
to Washington for a conference.
Employment Per Discharged Soldiers.
The United Stains War Department
is seeking to establish in this state,
in co-operation with the State Depart
ment of Labor and Prini.'ng an em
ployment bureau for honorably dis
charged soldiers. To this end Lieut.
C. T. Smart, Ninth Infantry, located
at Charlotte, has just had a conference
with the Commissioner of Labor and
Printing in which the Commissioner
assured the. army officer that he would
co-operate in any way that he coald
without doing an injustice to North
Carolina's regular labor interests.
Reocommend That Expert De Work.
The legislative auditing committee
t hich examined the State Treasury,
the office of the State Auditor and
the Insurance Department recently,
and found the substantial general
fund balance in the state treasury of
$164,572 for the close of the fiscal
year December 1, filed its formal re
port with Governor Craig for the
General Assembly and included a
number of important recommenda
tions. One is that provision be made for ex
pert accountants to examine the state
institutions that receive state aid an
nually, especially for he reason that
it is practically impossible for a legis
lative committee to perform this duty
with the thoroughness and accuracy
that the interests of the state de
mand. Attention is directed to the fact
that the funds that the federal govern
ment provides for the work at the ex
periment station' are paid over to the
experiment station quarterly and that
there are no vouchers showing how
the money is disbursed or under
whose direction and authority it is
expended. Also the committee finds
that the vouchers coming in for ex
penditures by the Agricultural De
partment and the A. & M. College are
not accompanied by detailed state
ments of the purposes for which the
amounts are expended and that there
should be a law to require such statements.
Opinions of the Supreme Court.
State vs. Ed. C. Craft, et al, New
Hanover, no error; State vs.' Southern
Express Company, Burke, affirmed;
Corpening vs. Westall, Burke, new
trial; Ridge vs. Norfolk Southern Rail
way. Randolph, no error; Clark vs.
Wright, Lincoln, new trial; Lutz vs.
Lincer, Cabarrus, modified and af
firmed Horton vs. Jones, Caldwell,
modified and affirmed, costs divided;
Land Company vs. Bostic, Rutherford,
no. error; Carpenter vs. Rutherford
ton, new trial; Hoyte vs. City of
of Hickory, Catawba, no error; Pierce
vs. Eller, Wilkes, reversed; Whitaker
vs. Garren, Henderson, new trial;
Embler et al vs. Glouster Lumber
Company, Henderson, no error; Pad
gett;: vs. McKoy, Buncombe, no error;
motion for new trial for newly dis
covered evidence denied; Turner vs.
Asheville Power & Light Co., Bun
combe, new trial; Reynolds vs. Palm
er, Buncombe, no error; Ingle Admr.
vs. Southern Railway, Buncombe, no
error; A. Dicks vs. Chatham, Bun
combe, affirmed; State vs. McDraw
horn, Sampson, motion of defendant
to reinstate denied; Dillard vs. Sim
mons, Granville, motion for new trial
on new evidence allowed; Lancaster
vs. Bland, Craven, dismissed under
rule 17 and motion to reinstate de
nied. Nearly 300 Farm JBoys at University.
Classified according to the profes
sions of their fathers, the call of back-to-the-land
is imperative to one-third
of the students attending the Univers
ity of North Carolina. The occupa
tion of farming contributes more than
twice the number of students enrolled
on the registration books this session
than any other occupation or profes
sion. Of the total enrollment of 982
students 289 are sons of farmers. The
merchants follow next in succession
with 132.
The distribution of other occupa
tions and professions are classified as
follows: lawyers 68, doctors 60, man
ufacturers 50, public officers 30, min
isters 26, real estate dealers 23, in
surance agents 22, lumber dealers 18,
teachers 17, railroad men 17, bank
ers 17, contractors 17, traveling sales
men 15, druggists 12, tobacco dealers
11, livery men 9, mechanics 7, brok
ers 78, editors 5, book-keepers 4,
printers 3, fishermen 3, civil engineers
3, carpenters 3, laborers 3, butchers 2,
nurserymen 2, jewelers 2, hotel keep
ers 2, engineers 2, chemist 1, photo
eraDher 1. promoter 1, mason 1, libra
rian 1, blacksmith 1, undertaker 1,
optician 1, ranchman 1, boarding
house keeper 1, and purchasing agent
School Teachers Must Be Paid.
J. Y. Joyner, state superintendent
of Public Instruction, announced that,
with the approval of the Attorney
General he hs made a ruling that it
is the duty of the county boards of
education, under Section 4,165, to bor
row money for the payment of salaries
of teachers, if necessary; and he urges
that the boards throughout the state
take the necessary steps at once to
provide for the monthly payment of
salaries without discount or KoS to
the teachers.
Attorney General Bickett Has Pork.
Attorney General T. W. Bickett said
that a letter from his home in Louis-
burg has just brought the news that
one of his "pigs" had been killed and
that it tipped the scales at 54o pounds
The attorney general confided this
news to his friends with that pleased
mien that indciated confidence that
this would go far toward establishing
his farming interests and capabilities
and emphasizing claims to farmer
support for his candidacy for governor
two years hence.
Limit Age of 13 to Child Labor Law,
Recommendations ny Commission
er of Labor and Printing M. L. Ship-
man to Governor Craig and the Legis
lature made public urged a specific
age limit prohibiting children under
13 years from working in any kind
of factory, or messenger service, or
any employment during hours school
are in session; advanced laws govern
ing safety appliance and sanitation;
factory inspection as to child labor,
work hours, fire escapes and tae like;
and either repeal our mine inspection
law or provide an active inspector.
A Vision of the
Glorified
Br REV. L. W. COSNELL
AjtisUat to lb Dcu. Moody Bibla Inritutt
Chicago
TEXT His servants shall serve him:
and they shall see nls face; and his name
shall be in their foreheads. Rev. 22:3, 4.
The Bible tells little of fne Inter
mediate state. The early Christians
looked not for
death, but for
the coming of the
Lord. Tre, those
who ar5 with
Christ are in a
blissful state, rest
ing from their
labois, "at home
with the Lord"
and enjoying the
sweets of Para
dise (Phii. 1:23:2,
Cor. 5:8 R. V.
margin; II Cor.
12:4). But "man
was made for cor
poreity" and will not reach perfection
until clothed with a glorified body. The
text exhibits some privileges of the
finally redeemed who will dwell In
"the holy city, new Jerusalem."
Service.
"His servants shall serve him." The
common idea of heaven is as a place
of rest, and it will be so. Earth is
full cf weary ones, and the millions
who follow Buddhism, with its teach
ing of annihilation as the final blessed
ness, are evidence of the craving for
rest. But heaven may be a place of
rest and of service too. Says Mac-
laren: "Work at its intensest, which
is pleasurable work and level to the
capacity of 'the doer, is the truest form
of rest. In vacuity there are stings
and torments: it is only in joyous ac
tivity which is not pushed to the ex
tent of strain and unwholesome effort
that the true rest of man is to be
found."
What will the service be? Those
who are faithful over a few things
will be made rulers over many. In
'the regeneration," the apostles will
sit on thrones, judging the 12 tribes
of Israel (Matt. 19:28); and we hear
cf saints who will rule over five cities
or ten (Luke 19) : this seems to point
to millennial times, when the glori
fied will share the government of
earth. Again, Ephesians 2:7 shows
we have been saved "that in the age3
to come he might show the exceeding
riches of his grace in his kindness to
ward us through Christ Jesus." Won
dering angels will magnify the grace
of God in us. One of large vision
says, "We know not what new worlds
may be created, what new spheres
may be opened for the exercise of the
powers of those who shall reign in
life."
"His servants shall do him priestly
service," is the literal meaning of the
phrase before us. While it will be all
work, it will be all worship. It will
be the happy estate of Mary and
Martha combined. Work will be wor
ship and worship will be work, yet in
both we shall rest, sitting at Jesus
feet.
Vision.
"They shall see his face." This
seems to contradict some scriptures
which tell us man will never see God.
True, in a sense we can never see
God. God is a spirit and cannot be
seen corporeally: we may never be
hold more than a symbol of him, as
Stephen saw "the glory of God," yet
this would not preclude our knowing
him, for "spirit with spirit can meet."
Moreover, we shall not see God in
the sense of finding him out to per
fection; he is infinite and we shall
have always before us the joy of dis
covery. But while this is true, we shall see
Jesus, who said, "He that hath seen
me hath seen the Father." He is the
word by whom God is revealed. We
see now through a glass darkly, but
then, face to face. We would not min
imize the work of the Holy Ghost In
us, revealing Christ, but the early
Christians longed to behold the face
of their Lord: their cry was, "Even so,
come, Lord Jesus."
Knowing as I am known.
How shall I love that word.
And oft repeat before the throne
"Forever with the Lord."
Likeness.
"His name shall be in their fore
heads." This speaks of ownership.
But it suggests likeness, too, for in
Scripture the name stands for mani
fested character; we shall have God's
image stamped upon U3. We seek to
be holy now, but there we shall have
attained. "We shall be like him."
There is no sin in heaven:
Behold that happy throng,
All glorious in their spotless robes,
All holy in their song! -
"Our light affliction, which is but for
a moment, worketh for us a far more
exceeding and eternal weight of glory,
while we look not at the thing3 which
are seen, but at the things which are
not seen: for the things which are
seen. are temporal; but the things
which are not seen are eternal. For
we know that if our earthly house of
this tabernacle were dissolved, we
have a building of God, a house not
made with hands, eternal in the heav
ens" (II Cor. 4:17-5:1).
r
NOTICE.
VALUABLE REAL AND PERSONAL
PROPERTY FOR SALE.
Under and by virtue of a deed of
trust executed la duplicate to the
undersigned, Henry E. King, Trustee,
dated November 12, 1909, asd regis
tered in Book 68, page 167. and fol
lowing pages In the office of the Reg
ister of Deeda in Tyrrell County,
North Carolina, and in Book 64, page
240, and following pages in the office
f the Register of Deeds la Washing
ton County, North Carolina, the said
Harry E. King, Trustee, will offer for
ale at public biddings, for cash, In
iccordance with the terms of the said
deed of trust at the courthouse door
In Edenton, Chowan County, North
Carolina, on the 8th day of January,
1914, at twelve o'eloek M. the follow
ing described real estate and personal
property lying and being In Washing
ton and Tyrrell Counties, North Caro
lina: Each and all of the several tracts of
land described in a deed from Metrah
Makely and wife to The Tarault Land
& Lumber Company, registered in
Book No. 47, at page 472 and follow
ing, in Washington County, and in
Book No. 62, at page 179 and follow
ing, In Tyrrell County. North Caro
lina, and consisting of certain lands
situated in Washington and Tyrrell
Counties, respectively, in North Caro
lina, together with all buildings, all
growing timber, and the saw mill,
boilers, engines, dry kilns, sheds,
dredge, locomotives, cars, railroad
tracks, rails for railroad, skidders, and
all other machines and machinery
ind all implements, tools and applian
ces of every kind, nature and descrip
tion, and all of the other Improve
ments upon or about said premises,
and the privileges and appurtenances
unto said premises belonging; said
lands lying and being In the State of
North Carolina, being described as
follows:
Those several tracts of land de
scribed in a deed from Charles L. Pet
tigrew and others to M. Makely, regis
tered in Book No. 30, page 590 in
Washington County, and in Book No.
39, pages 214, etc., in Tyrrell County,
and consisting of the following tractu
of land.
a. The Bonava plantation, begin
ning on Lake Phelps, now called Lake
Scuppemong, at tne great Garing
place, a marked cypress in the Lake,
referred to in the deed from Josiah
Collins to the Rev. Chas. Pettigrew,
dated April 3, 1781, and still the eor-.
ner of the Bonava and Somerset
tracts, the latter formerly belonging
to Josiah Collins; thence north 45 de
grees east along Somerset tract 170
poles to a sycamore, at the place
where the late Ebenezer Petti grcw's
ditch was; thence north 28 1-2 degrees
east along a line of marked trees, the
Collins & Pettigrew line, 400 poles to
a large cypress, one pole from the
northeastern edge of the six foot
ditch, called the lower gate ditch;
thence running parallel with the said
d'tch one pole distant, south 60 de
grees east, 1440 poles to the Pettigrew
back line ; thence along said back
line south 82 degrees west 1100 poles
to John Wynn's northeast corner;
thence south 40 poles; thence south
15 degrees east 192 poles; thcnoe
north 65 degrees west 70 poles; thcnc
south 25 degrees west 160 poles;
thence north 65 degrees west 100 poles
to a cypress in the Lake; thenc
along the Lake to the beginning point
containing five thousand acres, more
or loss.
These courses and distances are
taken from a survey made in 1819. For
further description of this land ref
erence is made to a deed from Eben
ezer Pettigrew to Chas. L. Pettigrew.
dated January 27, 1848.
b. Also four tracts of land lyin
on the southwest side of the said
Lake, the' first containing two hun
dred acres more or less, the second
containing eighteen hundred acres
more or less, the third containing
seventeen hundred acres more or less,
and the fourth containing two thou
sand acrei more or less all fully de
scribed in a deed from Mary Collins,
executrix, to Mary B. Brown, dated
July 21, 1809, recorded in the records
of Washington County, Book "N",
page 242, and by her conveyed to
Metrah Makely and wife, reference
to which Is made for fuller description
Second.
The lands described in a deed from
Andrew Bateman and others, dated
December 4, 188J, and registered in
Book No. 87, page 496, etc., consisting
of the following tracts:
A Uuct of land lying In South Fork
Township, Tyrrell County, North Car
olina, known as the Magnolia Planta
tion, and the White Oalr Island tract,
situated between Lake Phelps and
Stippernong River, adjoining the lands
formerly owned by C. L. Pettigrew,
Harvey Terry and others, containing
five thousand acres, more or less,
and more fully described in a mort
gage deed from C. L. Pettigrew to
Nell McKay .which is recorded In
Book No. 27, page 53, office of the
Register of Deeds for Tyrrell County,
and In a deed from McKay to H. Wr.
Bateman. which is recorded in the
same office, Book No. 34, page 242,
and also the last will and testament
of H. W. Batesman, called Wilson H
Bateman. dated June 21, 1836, and
duly proven and recorded on the 5th
day of September, 1886, Book of Wills,
In the office of the Clerk of Superior
Court of Tyrrell County, reference to
which deed in hereby made for full
description.
Third.
Those tracts of land conveyed by
W. D. Pruden, trustee, to the said
Makely, by deed dated 24th of April,
1896, recordd in Washington County,
took N. 14. Vf
Thr thousand acres, more r
leas, lying on the north sidv of Lake
Scuppemong, adjoining Western Plan
tation, being the same land devised
to Mary Matilda and Henrietta E
Collins by Josiah Collins, the alder,
their grandfather.
b. lying on the west side of Lake
Scuppemong, devised by the said Col
lins to hia granddaughter( Louisa, M.
Collins, and vonveyed and described
in a deed from W. A. Stickney and the
said Louisa M., hit wife, to Herbert
H. Page, registered in Washington
County, Book "Q", page 64?, contain
ing two thousand acres, wore or less.
Both of these tracts of land are par
ticularly described and platted under
the will of Josiah Collins, the elder,
dated 1819, and recorded In Will Book
"C", pages 73 to 76 in Chowan County,
North Carolina, to which record ref
erence is made for full description.
c. One hundred acres, more or less,
and bounded south by Lake Scupper
nong, east by the lands first described,
west by the lands next described, and
for further description see the deed
from Arthur Collins to H. II. Page,
dated January 26, 1878, registered in
Washington County, Book "Q", page
454.
All the lands above described are
subject to the reservations and excep
tions hereinafter particularly set out.
Fourth.
A tract of land conveyed in deed
from James Sprunt and others, dated
November 12, 1903, and registered in
Tyrrell County, North Carolina, De
cember 4, 1903, in Book , page
517, which lands are particularly de
scribed as follows:
Commencing at the monument on
the southermost point of Lake Phelps
standing two poles from the edge of
the Lake; thence south 12 1-2 chains
to a two inch cast-iron pipe; thence
east 261 chains to the" Orr line (three
degrees variation being allowed on the
two lines above mentioned, so as to
corrrspond with the Orr line ; thence
with the Orr line north to Makely's
Bonava land; thence with the said
land to the Lake, and with Lake west
wardly to the beginning, containing
2,800 acres, more or less.
Fifth.
All the interest of the said Makely
and wife, Mollie Makely, in and to a
certain tract of land described in a
deed from C. R. Johnson and wife, to
the said Makely, dated March 5, 1898,
and recorded in Book 45, "pages 28 and
29 in Tyrrell County, described as
follows:
Two tracts of land in South Fork
Township, Tyrrell County, adjoining
the lands of the said Makely and oth
ers, the first tract having been con
veyed to C. R. Johnson by Jesse Bate
man and wife in 1895, and the second
tract conveyed to the said C. R. John
son by Geo. W. Bateman and wife in
the year 1896, said two tracts of land
containing by estimation two hundred
(200) acres more or less, and for full
description reference is made to the
said deed from Jesse and Geo. W.
Bateman to the said Johnson"
Sixth.
Twenty-four (24) acres of land,
more or less, conveyed by Geo. W.
Bateman to M. Makely, by deed dated
December 23, 1898, and. registered in
Tyrrell County, Book No. 43, page
274, known as the Veau Land and ad
joining the lands of Alfred Alexander
and C. R. Johnson and being the same
conveyed by B. Jones, Sheriff, to S. D.
Wynn, August 1, 1887, and recorded In
Book No. 35, page 541.
Save and except, however, from
said lands above described the follow
ing: 1. The Pettigrew family burial
ground and the land belonging there
to, described in a deed to the Vestry
of St. Paul's Church, Edenton, North
Carolina, recorded in Tyrrell County,
Book No. 19, page 62, dated June 15,
1846, and a right of way to and from
the same to the Pettigrew family and
to all others having the right to use
the same.
2. A small school house for ne
groes on the Bonava Plantation, con
veyed by Makely heretofore to a
School Committee, and being about
fifty feet aquare, but for particular de
scription see Makely's deed duly re
corded in Tyrrell County.
3. The lot about one hundred feet
square conveyed by the said Makely
to a white Baptist Church, being part
of the Magnolia Plantation, and par
ticularly described in Mekely's deed
to the said church.
4. A school lot tor whites about
one hundred feet squat on the Mag
nolia Plantation, and adjoining the
church property last above described
and particularly described In Make
ly's deed duly recorded.
5. That part of the, Bonava tract
on the south side of " Lake Phelps,
which was conveyed by Makely to
James Sprunt, and others by deed
dated, November, 1903, in exchange
for the property which James Sprunt
and others conveyed to Makely, being
No. 4 above, . and which is particu
larly described in Makely's deed to
Sprunt aforesaid, to which reference
is made for particular description.
Seventh.
Also all mill, engines, dry kilns,
sheds, dredge, .locomotives, cars, rail
road tracks, rails for railroads, skid
ders and all other machines and ma
chinery, and all implements, tools and
appliances TVm on or belonging to
said premises above described and
hereby conveyed, or which may be
hereafter bought, obtained or added
in any way by said Pittsburgh -Land
& Lumber Company, its succesors oi
assigns, until the full payment and
satisfaction of the indebtedness here
by secured.
The premises corered by deed of
trust under which tbll notice is given
are subject to prior lien thereon for
balance of Indebtedness sacured by
deed of trust elr by Tas Tarault
Last Lroobet Omiw W. tt
Pruden, November S, 110. registered
In Book No. 47, at page 4TI aad fol
lowing pages, la the offloe of the
Register of Deeds in WaablE-gtoa
Count, North Carolina, and In Book
No. 61, at page 481 and following
pages, in the office of the Register oi
Deeds in Tyrrell County, North Caro
lina, and any sale made under thia
notice will be made subject to said
prior line.
November 16, 1913.
tf HARRY E. KINO. Truataa.
NOTICE.
WASHINGTON COUNTY, N. C.
Under and by virtue of a judgment
and ancillary order rendered in tha
action. James E. Adams vs. Pittsburg
Land & Lumber Company, at October
Term, 1913, Superior Court of Waah
ington County, North Carolina, an
duly docketed therein.
The undersigned Commissioner and
Referee will sell for cash at pubUa
sale at the Court House Door In Ply
mouth, North Carolina at (2 M., oa
December 27th, 1913 all of the land,
title and Interest including aquitlea of
redemption which the said Pittsburg
Land & Lumber Company tnay have
in any and all lands la Woihingtoa
County, North Carolina, which said
:ands are more particularly described
in the judgment in said cause men
tioned above and in the warrant of at
tachment aad return thereto in thia
said action. Reference beirg had to
same for a more complete description,
1st. First tract fully descclbed la
the, will of Josiah Collins to Mary and
Henrietta Collins, and recorded la
Will Book C, page 72, Chowan county,
North f!arnHna. rnnrainlne- 2.X43 nrr
2nd. Second tract marked Louisa
Collins upon the plot attached to tha
said will of Josiah Collins, containing
1,654 acres.
3rd. Third tract containing l,70r
acres and described as the third tract
in the levy of Sheriff J. E. Raid of
Carolina in this cause.
4th. Fourth tract 100 acres of laai
fully described in a deed frono Ar
thur Collins tn W TT Pays Rrtilr Q.
page 454, Public Registry of Washing
ton county, North Carolina.
5th. Fifth tract containing 60 acre
formerly owned by Joseph Phelps al
the West end of Orchard Tract fully
described in said levy of attachment
Said lands being a part of tha
premises which the Tarrault Land A
Lumber Company conveyed t the
Pittsburg Land & Lumber Company,
by deed dated May 12th, 1909, and rag-
istArtxl in 'Wn Mn et evn rfT-w Sr,i-!
Carolina. It being the purpose to ad
vertise and sell all of the lands de
scribed in the warrant of attachment
levied by J. E. Reid, sheriff of Wash
ington county, North Carolina, i&poa
the lands of the Pittsburg Lt.nd k
Lumber Company as will more fully
appear by reference to his return la
this action dated September 23n, 1911
and regularly docketed in said county.
Said lands being subject to the tern
of three deeds of trust of record ia
said county as follows:
Tarrault Land & Lumber Comjpany
to W. D. Pruden.
Pittsburg Land & Lumber Company
to H. E. King.
Pittsburg Land & Lumber Company
to R. D. Beardsley.
This the 26th day of November. 19if
W M. RnNTV JR..
tf. Commissioner and Referoe.
NOTICE.
TYRRELL COUNTY, N. C.
Under and by virtue of a judgsaettt
and ancillary order in the causa eai
titled James E. Adams vs. Pittsburg
Land & Lumber Company rendered
at October Term, 1913 of the Superior
Court of Washington County, Nortk
Carolina and duly docketed in the
Superior Court of Washington Coua
ty and Tyrrell County.
The undersigned Commissioner ani
Referee will sell for cash at pmblie
sale at the Court House Door in Cob
umbia, Tyrrell County, North Carolina,
on December 29, 1913 at 12 M., all oi
the right, title and Interest which tha
said Pittsburg Land & Lumber Com
pany has In any and all lands in the
said county of Tyrrell. Said lands be
ing fully described In said Judgment
and the return to the warrant of at
tachment. Said return being of record
in Tyrrell County, Clerk Superior
Court office, and being dated Septem
ber 26th, 1913. Said lands being more
particularly described at the Bonarvif!
and Magnolia Tracts, together with
additions thereto. Containing tn all
15,000 acres, more or less, and baina
those tracts and parcels of land fully
described in a deed from the Tarrault
Land & Lumber Company to the sail
Pittsburg Land & Lumber Cttnpany
dated May 12th, 1909, and registered
in D Book, Volume 69, page 5W.
It beimr the
" v w uuuoi,
signed Cdmmissioner to sell ali' of tW
lands which the said Pittsbura Land
& Lumber Company may won In tha
said County of Tyrrell. Said land be
ing subject to the term of three deeds
of. trust of record In said comity as
follows:
Tarrault Land & Lumber Company
to W. D. Pruden.
x Pittsburg Land & Lumber Company
to II. E. King.
Pittsburg Land & Lumber Company
to R. D. Beardsley.
This the 26th day of November, 191X
W. M. BOND, JR.,
tf. Commissioner and Referee.
Are You m Arrears ") '
WE NEED THE MONET
VJ