tuttlSPAY, MARCH 12, 1936 Over near the far end of the glacier ,.', be found a drift with a four incb'crust packed by the drive of the win-i during the previous snowstorm. He went at it Hke an Eskimo, slashing out his domino-shaped blocks with his knife. if!er lie had gathered a high pile of 'the blocks on a fairly level spot just beyond the drift, he started to cut oth ers and lay them edgewise in a cir cular wall around the pile. Two feet cp he besan to lean the blocks Inward. !v the end of three hours, he stood i.i'ickness of a snow beehive. U we- '"- tiilf a fuc-t his-'her than his head and I out seven feet across at the floor level. Low down in the wall he cut a hole. There was little more than . space enough between the Igloo and the -lacier front for him to crawl out. lie circled around the snow dome and the bis drift, through the thick swirl of snow, nnd recrossed the stream. In the cave he found Llllth fur-bundled and hovering over the lamp, as she broiled thawed caribou steaks on a shank bono spit. He picked the girl In tier tddti wrappings, and carried lier out anil around to the igloo. A second trip fetched the rest of the skins, the lamp, and enough meat for a starter. While she went on with her cooking, over the re-lighted lamp, he cut more Hoiks and built a low entrance tunnel from the door to part way around the curve of the Igloo wall. When he backed in. he blocked the mouth of the tunnel with a snow slab. The Inside of the igloo was already So warm from the lamp heat that. the Inside-of the dome roof was beginning to soften. lint Garth knew there was no slightest danger of It falling In. As fast as the snow melted, the mois ture was sucked outwards. It met the euld of the outside , air and froze hard. In a little while the Igloo would be a dome of solid ice strong enough to linld tin" veight of a bear. The in ferior was both warmer and drier than any tent, or any hut of wood or stone. The caribou skins made even the snow floor comfortable. The girl had a stack of caribou steaks broiled for him. lie sat down, without a word, and began to eat. In the midst of the nieal the smoke and heat became so stifling that he had to cut a two-Inch ventilation hole In the All the time he gave no sign that lie rr -eh ed the look of misery In Lillth'g eyes.; l'.ut when he had eaten his fill, he sjH.ko. a sudden order: "liare your foot." - She -obeyed, tensely silent. lie looked cl"so at. the swollen ankle in the lamp light ami felt it with his finger tips. Kasy as was his touch, Lilith gasped i:h iain. liut he smiled his relief. 'N'o -.broken bone or dislocation; ily a -sprain. You'll soon be all right, art parkins' it with softened snow. Iwn it as cold as you can without freezing." - At tliat. nil her pent-up emotion burst out: "Oh, how you must despise ffet you into this frightful dan !,'N) a lame! A helpless, use Hs drag on you ! That beastly cow-ird-lie'll bunt you out . . ., murder you like the poor policeman. And all n.v fault:- '-.'. rth shook his head. -"You take tf'O nmeh of the credit, Miss Katnill. 9 far as reganlsj Constable Dillon, the result would have been the same If had stayed at; Fort Simpson." -I'ltt but you can't get away !" '' "'s smile hardened. "Neither can they. xow tend t0 your ankle- til L7' f,ng for meat" "" ,lr'wed and crawled out Into the ; "a- When at last he came back in, "e had brought nearly half of the carl y meat from the ice cave and -acked it around the igloo. He had '''' set up hlocks of snow-crust to rape a drift of new snow In a certain J!' "nl-ed the thawed wolverine i and showed a big hank of eatgut. carit'ft e ne started to shape j Li'i-h- I0r parkas and trousers. in s eyes, brightened. She softened fa , , f catgut ,n the aelted lamp and asked for a needle. death t!,e, rPrnaintr!r of that day of aw Jl storffl- both of them plied tW v "ckskiD needle and catgut stre v was an Eskimo seam ccarse' JZ .tl,elr 8tItche3. though toheaS! tong- By nIghtfa11 they ' Brst Wibou-skin suit- , cc8. and parka aood.front fringed with wolverine GaS"Lant,hPr meal of broiled meat, aoralne Ut.and cllmbe1 the lateral boa e'ftllw a quantity of carl- drifts or t, m between the 80 w" in w wind-ept tundra. one n, IetUrDedl Llllth lav "ok do' uncut sk,ns- She had 6 hl' COmpIetely tired out Garth W a cw?' b,0cke1 the roof hcle D skin I ' q suin mat oi the other ide I of the lamp from the girl. He lay down on it and snuffed out the light. CHAPTER X The Bedeviling. I.llith opened her "eyes as Garth fin ished his hasty meal of lamp seared meat and tat. lie explained about the plane. Her hands clutched together till they whitened. "You you'll be careful?" "Never fear. I'll come back to l.w.k out for you. The storm has blown out. Clear sky, and about 10 below zero. Keep treating yuur ankle, and, work on your suit." "But how long?" He handed her t tie knife, but took the bclt-nx "If I'm not back soon, it will not be till late afternoon or after dark. They may" turn out early, like myself, to have a look at their plane. In that case, I'll have to hide-out all day." , "You'll freeze!" That won a smile from him. "This Is an Eskimo rig. I've sat in one for hours beside a seal hole, at 40 below zero. Finish your own suit, and crawl out to enjoy the frost. Only, be care ful of that ankle. When outside, keep close to the igloo, and duck inside If you see anyone else than myself." She flung out her. hands, "Oh, If only I could go along to help! I'm so afraid he'll lind you. All those guns he and his men; you, empty handed !" Garth met the almost fran'to out burst w ith a' look, of cool irony. "Do you take mo for a ehechahco? Mark this that scoundrel lluxby is the man Who's in danger." With the assurance, Garth crept out through the tunnel, shoving his snow shoes ahvad of him. Snow had con tinued to fall after the wind had died down. 'That meant easy tracking. In the dim starlight, he had to guess at the covering of his trail to the stream Channel. During the night, the last dwindling flow had choked t ho channel with anchor ice, had Hooded over the snow, and frozen solid. Garth took off his snowshoes and crept across the glare Ice without leaving any marks. On the other bank, he plowed a heavy trail up into the lee tunnel, and brought from the storage cave one of the remaining legs of caribou. He left the meat atop the moraine, and started down the tundra as fast as lie could travel by starlight. Dawn was graying over the east mountain wall of the valley when he neared the lake. He crossed over Un frozen ford and went to peer' at the three-seater plane in the growing twi light. It stood much higher than, he had left It. A close view showed that the "engi neer and his men had managed to raise the craft above water by cribbing logs under the shattered pontoons. The top logs of the crib brought the bot tom of the floats level with the thick ening skim ice. Long poles had been set to brace the wings against the wind gusts. Garth swung aboard. As he ex pected, all the food had been taken away. So also had been the breaker points from the magneto, Huxby no doubt had figured that the canoe builder might repair the floats with rawhide, and run away with the three seater. To balk the engineer, In turn, Garth helped himself to the breaker cam. " - He jumped back oh the bank, and mushed eastwards along the shore in the dim grayness. At first, thickets of alders and willows cut off all view of the lake. He did not trouble to seek an opening until he had covered a half mile. There he came to a remembered stretch of partly open bank. Though the gray dawn had grown a little less faint, he peered for several moments without sighting the cabin plane, It seemed as If its pontoons must have been sawed through by the sharp-edged sheet of ice, so that the aircraft had foundered In deep water. But then he made out vaguely a white shape against the white of the snow-covered Ice. A short dash brought him close to the grounded plane. It lay in shallow water, surrounded by freezing slush. The blizzard had hit the lake bard enough to break up the sheet Ice and crack It into pieces' too small to grind through the sides of the. pontoons. The plane had been driven across Into this corner of the lake, along with the sludge. xTlie shoreward-swung tail was only a biscuit toss out from the solid bank. Garth hastened to fetch small trunks and pieces of rotted logs from the Oown timber under the nearest trees. By tossing out chunks of log on the snow-covered sludge and bog, he was able to make a slender footbridge with pairs of trunks. The last extension proved touch and go. Cross pieces and stringers drove down under his weight Into the sludge filled water and the mud beneath. But he had made a dash of it His hands THE WAYNESVILLE clutched hold of the rudder before he could sink. He climbed upon the tall, run forward to the cabin, and swung inboard. The frozen body ot Constable Dillon lay on the Moor where lie had placed 'it. He buckled the cartridge belt with its bolstered pistol about his own waist, took the keys and handcuffs from Dil lon's pocket, and climbed out to scrim ble forward into the cockpit. The side of the cockpit had beeu pierced by several bullets. Uut when Huxby tired at the drifting plane, iu his attempt to kill the suppose,. .1 !d d u fugitives, lie had aimed with great care to avoid damage to the instru ment and controls and the motor. A'ler removing the breaker poius from i he magneto, Garth ran hick to the tail of the plane. Here came the gree test of his risks. The bridge poles had risen to the surface again, but the outermost cross logs remained em bedded in the mud tinder the water. He let limself down sideways. As his moernsins touched the slender truniis, lie let go of the rudder and leaped. Though the ends of the poles shot downwards, his swift dash car ried him up their sharp slant to the nexi pair of trunks. The rest of the Improvised bridge was fairly firm. A single misstep any where along It would have landed him in deep bog ; but he had done far too much cauiunug and rough-ground run nlng to lafc balance or sure-footed, ness. Sate back on solid ground, he at once stepped Into his snowshoes and headed straight away from the shore into a dense growth of spruce. There he circled to the right towards the glacier gulch, keeping well back from the lake. Midway to the stream channel lie stopped where, through separate vis tas, he could see both planes. The gray da.wu had brightened enough to make (hem visible at a distance. He sat down on a log to wait. In the Eskimo suit, the cold was negligible. A look at the constable's pistol showed It to be fully loaded. He tool; olT the belt and buckled it on again up under the loose fullness of bis parka. Holstered between the caribou skin and his rabbit-fur .under suit, (be oil in the pistol mechanism w ould become warm. Cold oil is apt to Jam a gun.. After making sure of the pistol, he had nothing to do except give his face aii occasional rub to prevent frost bite, lie sat' restlully relaxed, as patient as an Eskimo hunter beside a seal hole. Very slowly the gray dawn, brightened.. It at last began to mellow into gold. From across the lake came the crack of rilles three shots in quick succes sion. .-'.Garth told himself that lluxby or Iiis men were hunting moose. He surmised why. The engineer planned to cover the shattered ends of the: three-seater .-plane's floats with raw hide. The sun glared over the Jagged bar rier mountains into the frost-gripped valley. Quite a while later, Garth saw one of his four enemies Come out 'of the trees near the lake shore, on the far! side of the frozen glacier stream. . .The man carried a big lidded hide (Hi his left shoulder, lie held his ritle ready fur a njilcl; shot, and as lie advanced, he peered around at the brush and trees. A shout turned the man's steps up Inwards the ford. Oilier shouts came from, the slope above.. Garth smile. I. It was as lie had foreseen, in coming to repair the lloats of the three-seater ..plane, lluxby and his men bad formed a line from the lake shore to tiniber line and searched the 'spruce woods. . lint the hunters, had -found no trace of: t! dr'. quarry all the way to the bank of the frozen glacier 'stream. There, however, the snowshoe tracks coming down from the' tundra made plain sign even, for cliechalicos. lluxby came running along the trail, followed by the man with the moosehide. Near tlie plane the engineer stopped lor the miner to overtake him. They approached the stranded aircraft war ily, with rifles raised, ready to shoot. When-' nothing ''happened, Huxby signed for his companion to drop the. hide and climb aboard. As the nian obeyed, another of the miners came running down the trail. . ; Huxby was looking at the tracks that led on along the hike shore. The man on the plane peered Into the three cockpits; lluxby sighted the cabin plane across the corner of the lake. He shouted and pointed to it, but waited for the second .miner to come up before starting on along the trail. The fourth -man of the party appeared up the stream bank. Garth slipped back behind thick cover and swung Into a fast pace, lie struck the stream bank above the ford. Trees cut off all view of the four trackers. Garth crossed the ice In the open stream bed and found cover again on the west bank. But instead of head ing up the gulch, he kept straight on, parallel with the lake shore. He held to a fast pace. There was a chance that the trailers might lose time trying to get aboard the cabin plane. But Huxby was no fool. He would know that the plane would be easy to reach after the sludge hud frozen. In all probability, he would at once flounder on along the snow- shoe trail with all his men. ! The thought of 'Lilith amused him. She had been seen only by the miner who had fired down from timberline. At the distance she must have been mistaken for a man. Only a degen erate criminal would knowingly shoot at .a woman. But her short snowshoe trail following his own and Dillon's must have shown the trailers that the third member of his party was as help less as the dead or wounded constable. They would be perplexed to guess what had become of his two compan MOUNTAIN EER ions. No man could make oft' with two persons on his back. Even if Huxby had guessed the truth that Dil lon was dead and his body aboard' the cabin plane, he would be mystified by the puzzle of the third person who, with the snow shoe-runner, had beeu kept from boarding the plane. Still smiling, Oarth came to the placer camp. The big tire under the gravel-thawing kettles had died down to a bed of coals. The forelegs and hindquarters of the newly killed moose lay iu the snow beside the brush lean to. On the tioor mat of spruce sprays, along with the bedding, was a pile c-f rood bacon, flour, sugar, dried fruit j lea. liacn 01 me looii were tight-lid ded cans tilled with dynamite, coils of fuse, and caps. Garth jerked up the blankets.' Under one set lay the strong canvas bag for which he was looking. He had hoped to find the constable's title, lint one of the miners must have come to the valley without a gun. The carhlne had iot been left In camp. The failure to find the weapon did not alter Garth's plans. Working fast, he filled the three-gallon teapot with packages of tea, salt and sugar. The pot went Into an empty floursnck, along with a little dried fruit, some dynamite, and a pair each of tin cups, plates and spoons. On the Mg stack of fuel beside the leatito, he piled all the rest of the food and dynamite, the blankets, and the quarters of moose. With a shovel that was leaning against the rocker cradle he tossed coals from the tire Into the base of the stack. The wood soon blazed up In several places. With the floifrsaok pack and the bag of platinum alloy slung over his shoul der, he went downslope. Garth lugged the sack across the open space and past the stunted spruce beside which Constable Dillon had been murdered. In a drift on the north side of the next tree, he dug a hole, dropped in the stick of alloy, and cov ered It over. A backward look at the camp showed the bonfire flaming high. At any mo ment the frozen dynamite- was apt to thaw enough to explode. .From off to the left came angry shouts. The direc tion of Garth's trail had at last warned the -pursuers of his raid on their camp. They were hoadln for It as fast as they could 'flounder through the drifts. Instead of circling to .-double past them again, Garth slanted olT down slope tow ards the west side of the lake, There was no need to warn' them about the dynamite. Before he had taken a dozen strides, the frosty air crashed with a thundering explosion. He bent forward and went pounding downhill through the soft snow as If breaking trail for n fast driven (log team. When be neared the border of the muskeg he glimpsed a gray shape-in the outer fringe of willows. -No. .wolf could bulk so large. The she-grizzly had been first Of the flesh eaters to lind What was left of the newly killed moose. Close looking and listening showed that the cubs of the great bear were not. with her, Carlli went straight to wards the hoggishly .feeding beast un til she caught bis scent. She reared up to gape her bloody Jaws iitid roared as she had roared al him and lluxby and Mr. Kaiuill, Garth very quietly turned to the left and tingled oil' away from her. lie was Hie two-legged (-real uro who had several times shied respectfully around her and her cubs during the summer, She watched him' go, then returned Ic hor greedy gorging. lie skirted along the border of the muskeg to where a narrow neck of the .swamp', extended- up a little valley to a gulch in the side of the west iiioiin tain. At the far bank he shifted sideways and crouched down behind a clump of willows. lie did not have long to wait. Enri'ige.l by the .-destruction of t.ieir food and camp out tit and the taking of the platinum alloy, lluxby and his men must have "rushed fan down the trail of their bedevller. From over across the corner of the muskeg came the warning roar of the disturbed grizzly, A qulc:; shot ;'ol lowed. Close upon the 'report dinned an outburst of terrific! snarling roars and a whole fusillade of shots. The roars suddenly ceased. But the firing kept up for four or live seconds. "Scared, Wasting cartridges," Garth told himself. .''Hopping-, -mad nt me, and, atop that, flurried by her 'charge.' Hope she didn't get any of them." His wish was soon fulfilled. All four trailers came plodding along the border of the muskeg. Huxby was In the lead. But the bearded man next behind shoved forward beside him as he came Striding out on the bog. Both happened to step two or three times on nlggerlieads. Then the miner hit the snow between tussocks. The bearded man's curse as he plunged down into the quagmire jerked Huxby's glance around. He saw the trap a split second too late to keep on the tussocks. Like the miner, he shot down through the frozen crust Into the deep slime and mud. The third man followed suit. But he was near shore, where the bog was only kneedeep. The fourth, lagging behind, halted on solid ground. At Huxby's shouted orders, the last man ran to fetch poles of down tim ber. The two leaders were In almost to their armpits before the dead aspen trunks could be brought and" shoved out to them. Set on nlggerheads, the poles gave support for the trapped men to pull themselves up out of the treacherously sucking quagmire. Other poles made a bridge for them, hack to solid ground. But ' the bearded miner left his rifle down in the ooze. (Continued Next Week) Get Rid of Poisoiu Produced by Constipation A cleansing laxative purely vege table Black-Draught Is the first thought of thousands of men and women who have found that by re storing the downward movement of the bowels man? duagrernble lymptomi ot eoiutlpfcUon promptly caa b rellered. . -Mr. J. P. KlKhilfey. of Clinton. 8. C . writes: "I h found that Blck-Druf tit U vary ffeeUTe In the oleanalng ot the 711am. Whan affected by the dull head ache, the drowalnea and lassitude caused by constipation, I take Blacs-Draugbl." A natural, purely vegetable laxatlva. BLAC K-DRAUGHT XOTll'K OF TltlSTI irS SAI.K On Monday. Morch 111, 193i. at eleven o'eloek A. M... at the court house door in the town of Wnvnes ville. Haywood (.'ouuty, North Caro lina, the undersigned trustee will sell at puldie outcry to tVe highest bidder for cash, the following lands and premises: K1KST TKAi'T: (Oiuniilted ). SIXMN'O TRACT: . An undivided one-half interest in a tract of 447 acres of land described in a deed from John L. 1'erKuson and wife, to J. 11. lioyd. J. K. Moyd and C. A. Campbell, dated Dei ember 7, 1!M3, and record ed ill Hook page 172. Record of Deeds of Haywood County, to which record reference Is made for a full description. THIRD TRACT: An undivided inte rest in S3 acres of land fully describ ed in a deed from James L. Messer. et al. to ,1. H. lioyd and C. A. Camp bell, dated September 14, ltiOti, and recorded in Rook 23, page 215, Record of Iud of Haywood County. FOl'RTH TRACT: At) undivided one-half interest in a. tract of land fully described in a deed from TV T. Hoyd. Commissioner, to J. R. lioyd and C. A. Campbell, dated Alay 17. I'.Htl, and recorded in liook f!, pne 40ii. Record of Deeds uf Haywood County, (o which record reference is made for a full description. Sale made pursuant to the power of sate conferred upon me by virtue of that certain deed of trust executed by ('. A. Campbell and wife, Margaret Campbell, dated July 15, l!12,ri, and recorded in Hook la, page 204, Rec ord of Deeds of Trust of Haywood County. This lllh day of February. Ill .10;. .1. H. .Ml'lili AN. Trustee. No. 417 Feb. L'0-2S-.Mar &-I2; UXKCUTItrX NOTU'K lUiving qualified as executrix of the estate of Doyle 1). Alley, de, ceased, thv is to notify' n!) persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to file them with the Clerk of the Superior Court of Hay wood County on or Ik1 fore the fth day of February, l'.l.')7 or this notice . ill bo pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons' indebted to said es tate will please make .settlement , at once. This I he 5th dav of February, IMG. MRS. DOYLE I). ALLEY, Executrix'' of ,the .estate of Doyle I). Allev, deceased. No. ill-Vib. G-I.'l-2(l-27-Mar. 5-12 None i; or sai.i: i di:k di:i:i OF Tit I NT Tinier and by virtue of authority Contained in a certain deed of ti'UHt executed by M . i. Foitner and wife to the Citizens National Dunk of Hal -oh;h. N. C, Trust.ee, nn the 1st day of .March. ltlL'S. reeor.i.lcd in liook 2 0. I .-1 jt; t 1 fill. Registry of Hay wood Colm ey, North Carolin;i. default having been made in I lie payment of Ihe in debtedness secured .thereby, the un dersigned Commissioner of Kinks, having' succeeded In the rights and duties of The North Carolina I la ilk and Trust Company, ;;iieeessor to The Citizens Hank, successor to tlie Citi zens Na I ionat Hank of Raleigh, N. C. Trustee, will offer lor sab-, at public auction, for cash',' in I'roiii of the I laywood ( 'ounty court house dour on Monday. Mar. h Hi, l!t.'ii;. at. twelvi o'l.Toek noon, a certain piece or tract or land lying and being in U'ayncs vilie Township; Haywood County Slate of North Carolina, and describ ed and d. lined as follows: , l!i:!INNIN(; at a slake in the Fast en! margin of Ualsain Street, sland iug Xoi th X degrees 30. minutes Fast till) feet from the intersection of the Fasfern margin of Jialsam Street with the Nort horn margin of ( ioorgia Ave nue, and runs thence with the Faslrrn inarg-in . of Jialsam". Street North S degrees. 3" minules Fast 7-". feet to it stake. in sid margin; thence with. the. line of hits Nos. If., and 1 ti South 77 degrees 3D minutes JCast .200 feet to a stake, corner of Dots Nos. 2, 3, 14 :uui 15; thencu with the line between Dots NOs. 2 and 3 South 6 degrees 30 minutes West 100 feet to a stake; thence North 70 degrees 45 'minutes West 202.5 feet to the point of begin ning, lieing the Northern portion of IvotS Nos; 1 and 2 of lilock XVIII of "(Irirnball l'ark", as per survey and plat of John N. Shoolbred, niade De cember, 3922, and recorded in Map Rook "IS", Index "C,", Records of Maps of Haywood County, North Caro lina. . Doing- the same lot or parcel of land conveyed to the said M. B. Fort ner by W. II. McClure and wife, .Ida Oxner McClure, by deed dated Oc tober IS, 1927. Being the same prop erty described in a I'lat made by J. V. Sea ver, . Civil Engineer, Feb. 23. 1928, and now on file in the office of the World War Veterans .Loan Fund, Raleigh, N. C. '.. Dated this 31st day of December, 1933. GUR.NEY P. HOOD, : Commissioner of Banks, No. 446 Feb. 20-28 Mar. 6-12. NOTICE OF COMMISSIONERS SALE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HAYWOOD. T. V. FERGUSON VS. DOLLIE FERGUSON, Z. V. FERGU SON, AND WIFE, BETTIE FER GUSON, J. C. FERGUSON, AND WIFE. MAUDE FERGUSON, L. F. FERGUSON WIDOW OF N. C FERGUSON, DECEASED, CHARL ES FERGUSON, AND WIFE GLENNIE FERGUSON, GENEVA GRAHL AND HUSBAND C, L. (IRAIIU KUANCHK MEDFORD AND HISIiAND. FRED BOONE MFDFoRD, M. M . NODAND, WID OWER. l'AFI.INF DAVIS AND HUSBAND HENRY DAVIS. I'EARL. KIRKI'ATRICK AND HUSBAND M . .M KIRK I'ATR Ii 'K, DAISY FERiiUSOX AND HUSBAND MIL LARD FERCUSON. CI.i;.BSEY 1'ERCUSON. WIDOW OF W. Ii. FEKC.USON. DECEASED. T V. FERCl'SON. EXECUTOR C. T. A. OF THE ESTATE OF X. It FER O.rsoX. DECEASED. T. W. FER lU'SoX. ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF H. C FERC.U SON. TRADINC AS BRANSON .MOTOR COMPANY. J R. HII'l'S, K. T. BOYD. THE FIRST NAT IONAL BANK OF VA YXESVILLE, TRl'STEE. V. I. HARRIS. TRAD INC. AS HARRIS SALES A.- SER VICE. W. T. SH ELTON AND E J. HYATT. TRADINC AS HYATT AND COMPANY. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Commissioners, W. T. Crawford and William T. Hannah, will offer for sale to the highest bid der for cash tlie hereinafter describ ed lands at the courthouse door in Wayneaville, North Carolina at twelve o'clock noon on the ltith day ol March, 193t. This notice is under tlie authority o the Judgment of the Superior Court entitled T V. Ferguson vs. Dollie Ferguson et als and the land to be sold is described as follows to wlt: BEGINNING at a stae. Pine game, corner to V. Jt. Ferguson Morrow land Wild runs S. S4 V. 32 poles to a stake; then X. 4ti W. ii poles to the public road; then running the road as fol lows: N. 78..s W. ti poles; N, 6? W. polos; X. 3d W. 12 poles; NT. E9 w". 2 poles to a stake opposite a Chest nut stump. W hite's corner; thence N. 7U E. 30 poles passing the Chestnut Stump to a Spanish Oak; then N. 62 E S poles to a stake, then N. 70 10. 10'4 poles to a Locust; then N. 38 s E. D'Cj poles to a stake; then N. 59 E. 7 tildes to a White Oak; then N. SI I-:.. 25 'i poles to a Black Oak: then N. 5'3 E. crossing Spring branch al 20 poles. 4 poles to a stake on a ridge (Hickory gone) then along the top of the ridge N. f2 W. G poles to a 1'ost Oak; then along the top of the lldge X. 40 W. 23la poles; N. 15 W. 10 poles to a stake, Black (ink down; then leaving the ridge N. 3 i E. 51 poles to a stake on the river bank IM1 poles to a stake at the bank of the river In (!. R. Ferguson's line: then S. 4 E. 75 poles with said line to a Black Oak and Locust ; then S. 22 II. I Ml poles (o a Black Oa k on a ridge. V. 11. Noland's and (1. It. l''erguson's corner; then S. 5 1 W, With W. H. Noland's and James Dotson's line, then with Dotson's line about 150 poles to a large White Oak on a ridge; then N. 75 W'. 51 poles to a Chestnut, W. It. Ferguson's corner: then N. 13 W. lid polos to the Jli:C. INNINll, containing 150 acres niorr or lens... This the 10th day of February, 1.9 3 ti. WILLIAM T. HANNAH. W. T, CRAWFORD, Commissioners No. 445 -Feb. 20-27 Mar 5-12. NORTH CAROLINA. HAYWOOD COUNTY NOTICE .'I'll is is to notify' all persons that have claims against WeiH Coal Com pany,' a' partnership, consisting- of II. (J. West, John W. West, iind .lean M. West, to exhibit the .same t.o the John W. West and Jean M. West, within twelve months from this (bite, the surviving nartners of said partner ship, the said II. (J. West having-died. This the 2nd dav of March, 1 !:!. JOHN W. WEST, J E AN M . WEST. No. loll -Mar. 5-12-19-21). NORTH CAROLINA. HAYWOOD COUNTY. NOTICE Having qualified, as administratrix of the estate of II. CJ. West, deceased, lata of tlie County of Haywood, N. C... tliis is .to notify till persons having; claims against the estate of said de ceased to exhibit them to the under signed on or .before .the 3rd day of March, . -1937," or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. Thirf the 2nd dav of March, 19.W. ' J KAN M. W EST, Administratrix 'of H. L West. '..'4-l'.l Mar. 5-12-l!i-2i;-Apr. 2-9. . NOTICE IN T!!i: S! PEEloU rol'KT. NORTH CAROLINA, HA Y WiiHD ' il'NTV. Rt I II OII.LEY WILSON ' vs. WILLIAM DEAN WILSON. The defendant; William Dean Wil son, will take notice that an action, entitled as above, has been commenc ed in the Superior Conic of Haywood County, .North". Carolina, for an abso lute divorce'. And the said defendant will further take notice that he is .required to ap pear at the Ottioe of the Clerk of the Superior Court of said County, in the Court House in W'aynesville, North Carolina, im the 27th day of April. 19 36; and answer or demur to the complaint 'in said action, ot- the plain tin will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said complaint. This the 3rd day of March. 1936. , j KATE WILLIAMSON. Clerk. Superior Court. Haywood County. North Carolina. 44S Mar. 5-1 2-19-26 Pd. . ..',". STRENGTHEN THE BLADDER MAKE THIS 25c TEST Drink lots of boiled or distilled water, if irritation causes getting up nights, frequent desire, , scanty flow, burning, or backache. You know what hard 'ater does to a tea kittle. Drive out excess acids and deposits with buchu leaves. Juniper oil, etc., made into; green tablets call ed Hukets, the bladder lax. Works on the bladder similar to castor oil on the bowles. In four days. If not pleased, any druggist will refund your 25c. (The YVaynesTille Pharmacy). !:'tK i t , i : - ; i. h !,' 1, .'J i .t : i v. t ;." ' t 1 r mi