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PAGE TWO POWELL’S TOTRtSTS LOSE TWOOUT THREE Oxford and Franklinton Winners, Townsville Los ers During Week-End Ed Powell’s Henderson Tourists came out on the short end of theii week-end baseball games, losing to Oxford 2.1 Saturday in a Central State League game, and then drop ped a Sunday exhibition contest to Franklinton, 13-8 but managed to get a S to 3 decision over Townsville in a double program yesterday. Saturday’s game with Oxford was a pitcher’s battle between Edwards Tor the Tourists and Burnett for the Dodgers, each hurler allowing six safeties. Oxford got a tally in the first inning, Henderson one in the third and Oxford forced over the win ning tally in the sixth. Seven miscues were chalked up against the locals. Pleasants was boss of Franklinton in Sunday’s contest until the seventh inning when his support folded up. allowing seven runs to cross the plate. Short dropped tw o balls that should have been the second and third outs of the inning before a sin gle man had an opportunity to scoie. All of the runs were unearned. The Tourists managed to get a vic tory over Townsville as the shades of evening were falling upon a miser able exhibition of baseball by the lcc als. Lefty Breedove occupied the mound for the locals with Jackson doing the catching. No box scores were available for publication today. Sta^cfotaa PIEDMONT LEAGUE Club W. L. Pet Wilmington 29 13 .690 Richmond 28 18 .609 Portsmouth 27 19 .587 Norfolk 19 27 .413 Asheville 16 27 .372 Charlotte 15 30 .333 AMERICAN LEAGUE Club: W. L. Pet. Detroit 70 39 .642 New York 61 46 .570 Boston 58 53 .523 Chicago 54 51 .514 Cleveland 55 54 .505 Philadelphia 47 56 .456 Washington 47 64 .423 St. Louis 39 69 .361 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club: VV. L. Pet. New York 70 41 .631 St. Louis 67 43 .609 Chicago 70 47 .598 Pittsburgh 63 54 .538 Brooklyn 53 69 .473 Philadelphia 50 63 .442 Cincinnati 49 66 .426 Boston 32 81 .283 PIEDMONT LEAGUE Portsmouth 21; Asheville 6. Charlotte 4; Richmond 8. Only games played. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 0; Detroit 6. Boston 5-3; St. Louis 2-4. Washington 4-4; Cleveland 2-3. Only games played. NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis 1-9; Boston 2-4. Pittsburgh 0-3; Brooklyn 3-9. Chicago 8-5; Philadelphia 3-6. Cincinnati 4; New York 8. t All steam engines are really ma chines for turning heat energy into the energy, of motion of the parts of the Machine,, which in their turn do the world required NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE. By virtue 0 f power contained in a Deed of Trust, executed bv W. W. Dickerson to the undersigned trustee recorded in the office of the Register cf Deeds of Vance County in Book 162 at page 300 default having been made in the payment of the debt therein secured, on request of the holder of the same, I will sell by public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, at the Court House door In Henderson, at 12 o’clock noon on Sat urday the 14th day of September, 1935 the following described property. First Tract; One half interest in the following: The lot conveyed by B. T. Wood lief and wife to A. J. Perkinson and others, see deed Book 52 at page 409 in the office of the Register of Deeds cf Vance County. Eegin a t the North East corner of Mrs. Frances Good son s lot No 3; thence Eastward by Speas’ line 2 chains to the North West corner of B. T. Woodlief’s lot No. 4 thence South along said lot No. 4 ?78 feet to the middle of said road; thence in a Westerly course about 133 feet to Mrs. Goodson’s line, lot No. 2, thence along said lot No. 2 Northward about 252 feet to the beginning, and containing approximately 3-4th of an acre being a part 0 f lot No. 2 in the division of Mrs. Anne Woodlief’s land Second Tract: Begin at a sweet gum corner of school lot, on old Road and run thence along school line 114 yards to a stone school lot, corner of C. R. Brummitt line, thence North West along school line about 57 yards to a stone near a spring, school lot corner, thence West 30 yards to a white oak near a barn, school lot cor ner in W. W. Dickerson line, thence along school line, in a southerly di rection about 200 yards to southern corner of school corner sweet gum stump in Blackley’s line, thence East erly about 70 yards to place Q f be. ginning, being the old Egypt school lot, see book 69 at page 512. August 12th. 1935. JASPER B. HICKSi Trustee. Toda^Gfimesl PIEDMONT LEAGUE Portsmouth at Wilmington. Charlotte at Richmond. Asheville at Norfolk. AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Chicago. New York at Detroit. Boston at St. Louis. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati at New York. Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. Chicago at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Boston. East Is To Have New Game Officer For the District Daily Dispatch B«rea«, In the S«- Walter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKERVILL. Raleivh, Aug. 19.—Rupert E. West of Mayock, Currticuck county, well known sportsman and frequent con tributor to national conservation pub Mentions, has neon added to the staft of the State Department of Conser vation and Development as district game protector in charge of the northeastern district, according to J. D. Chalk, State game and inland fish eries commissioner. Mr. West’s appointment has re ceived the enthusiastic approval of R. Bruce Ethel idge, director of the Devartment of Conservation and De velopment, and the new district pro tector will begin his duties on Sev tember 1. The new game official has had a life-long interest in conservation and, according to the commissioner, is thoroughly familiar with all types of game and fish through frequent in dulgence in these forms of sports Mr. West has had considerable practical experience in the breeding and rear, ing of game in captivity as well as contact with wild life, woods and waters. He formerly operated a pri vate game farm in Currtick county. During the past year, Mr. West served as director of Camp Weaver, transient unit at Kitty Hawk, Dare dounty, North Carolina which has been engaged in a program of sand fixation. This camp under his direc tion has constructed miles of sand fence along the ocean front and has grassed the dunes formed by these harriers. In addition, the transient group has constructed ten miles or more of ditches for mosquito control on the Dare county marches. District 6, of which Mr. West will be district protector, consists of the following counties: Bertie, Camden, Chowan, Currticuk, Dare, Gates, Hali fax, Hertford, Northampton, Pasquo tank and Perquimans. Utility Fees Paid Lawyers Are Fabulous (Continued from Page One.) suspended dividents, but which spent a fortune fighting the holding com pany bill and in distributing largesses to officers ando rganizers and advis ers, are fighting mad. Those stockholders have npt much chance- They have no say either as to policy or as to dividends, or even as to reorganization. But they can vote to support the government that regulates holding companies. That is what Wall Street fears. WEEPER A "Taxpayer,” writing to the New York Times, inadvertently played in to the hands of the bill for taxing those in the upper brackets. This "Taxpayer” urged Americans to think of the widows and the or phans of tnose who would be hit hy the inheritance taxes. He pointed out that the widow in heriting SIOO,OOO would receive mere, ly $90,200; the widow inheriting $200,- 000 would receive merely $151,700; the widow inheriting $300,000 would re ceive merely $202,700, and so on up the brackets to beyond $1,000,000. The letter writer called for a cham pion to protect the American home of the widows and orphans inheriting from SIOO,OOO on up. State Is Seeking Chain Store Levy On Liquor Stores (Continued from Page One.) of this tax, it is understood. Unler the chain store tax section, as contained in Section 162 cf the 1935 Revenue Act, for every store operated in the State in excess of one and for not more than four ad ditional stores —that is, up to five stores, a tax of SSO each is decreed, until the tax amounts to $225 per store for all stores in chains of 20l or more. But since no county is op. erating more than five liquor stores —New Hanover county will eventual ly operate five stores—the SSO chain store tax is all that will apply. Accordingly, the Department of Re venue maintains that if a county Is operating as many as three liquor stores, it must pay the State chain store tax of SSO on the second and third stores, or on all in excess of one. Thus Nash county, now operat ing three liquor stores, would have to py the Departcent of Revenue SIOO as its chain store tax on all stores operated in addition to one, New Hanover county, when it gets its five stores open, will be expected to pay S2OO to the State as its chain store tax of SSO per store on four stores. Counties operating only two stores will have to pay a tax of SSO on only one store. Must Pay Eventually. Those counties which are objecting to the payment of this tax, are main taining that, since the store are be ing operated by the counties, which are governmental units, they are hence of a quasi-governmental na ture and not subject to the State chaip store tax law. The Department of Revenue, however, maintains that under a Supreme Court ruling, any government that engages in any bus HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAiiA" ijidFATuiU HONDA i. AUGUST 19, 1935 * y i / CHAPTER 36 DISCOURAGED alter culling for Nita, Janet sat down. Nita had not heard. She must he outside. Far awav, so far away she could not hear the bell. Perhaps she had gone to the town of Boisevain . . . walked those miles to secure help. Comforted a little with this thought, Janet was calmer. How long, though, would it take Nita to walk those six miles to Boisevain and those six miles back? Hours, probably. Hours. And in the meantime, she would be in the House . . . this house which even Miss Boisevain feared so much. Why did Nita want her to stay with Miss Boisevain 7 Janet stole a lock at the woman lying on the chair bed Did she just imagine or was it true that her face seemed happier and a slight smile lit her features? Certainly the face did not look as it had in lite, hard, with the eyes only sottened and somewhat kind. Yes, and the skin which had been so yel low was lighter now. Younger Miss Boisevain looked by many years . . . younger in death. The girl’s eyes were on the clock. Nita had been gone for an hour, now. An hour that seemed 10. On the table near the dead woman, the lapis lazuli box lay, the lid open. Beside it the two miniatures. Janet remembered that the other, the one of thy black haired man was under Miss Boisevain’s pillow. She herself had placed it there, at the woman’s bidding, along with the few letters. On the table near the box, was the silver vial, hardly as big as her thumb. ' Also the gleaming red ruby. On the polished surface of the table it was casting out red lights. Had it ] been in a ring? It was too large for . that, she thought. Probably it had,,' been the drop on a pendant. < Janet had seen but few' jewels in her life. Never one as large as this. Vaguely she remembered as a child her father showing her her mother’s jewels. So vaguely that she was not sure she had even seen them. She must have been very young. Then, she had never seen them again. They must have been sold to pay their living expenses. Perhaps she ; and her father had lived on the money they had brought for years and years. . . . On Miss Boisevain’s hand as it lay across her chest, she saw the crystal ring, with its plain silver setting . . . i a setting that did not bind the round clear stone at ail. < What a queer woman she was! Despite her superstitions, Janet w r as : positive she had a real reason to be afraid. This house . . . the strange occurrences even in the few days she ; had been in it . . . the dog . . . Kita’s dumb, true affection. Timidly she glanced at the mirror less frames . . . glad for once she could see nothing in them, no reflec tion of the room, or the woman lying dead on the chair bed. ,J She longed to leave the room. Longed to go out through the kitchen, and to the stable where Miss Boisevain had said Blair Rodman was. Nita’s note seemed more like a command to her than a request. She must stay, until the servant returned. Another hour went by. Janet was beginning to worry. But Nita could iness involving profit and loss be comes the same as any private in dividual engaged in business and hence subject to the same laws that govern the taxing of private business. Accordingly, it is maintaining that the 16 counties in which nearly 50 county liquor stores are now in oper. ation are subject to the chain store tax just the same as if these stores were being operated by private in dividuals. Indications are that the Revenue Department has the law dis tinctly on its side and that, regardless of how loudly the counties object to the payment of this tax, they will have to pay it eventually- It is understood that one of the loudest squaks against the payment of this chain store tax to the State are now coming from Edgecombe; county, although the neighboring county of Nash is reported to have agreed to pay the tax without objec tion. Counties to Resist. The Department of Revenue points out that the liquor stores are not tax ed under the license tax section of the Revenue Act and hence are not required to pay any State tax, al though all drug stores, soda fountains cases and /irtually all other occupa tions and businesses are taxed. So un less the State can assess and collect the chain store tax from these coun ty liquor stores, the only revenue it will get from the sale of liquor in the state will he from the three per cent sales tax which is charged on all salesi If the counties are now objecting I to paying the chain store tax of SSO a store on all stores in excess of one this may be regarded as a sample of the fight these counties will put up if and when the General Assembly ever attempts to set up (State-wide li- j quor stores law and thus abolish tne existing county liquor stores, all the profits of which flow into the county treasuries. Some countries are report, ed to be earning as much as S3OO a day from their liquor stores. It is generally agreed that the counties that have these liquor stores will not give them up and the revenue they are bringing in without a fight* Wife Preservers “A watched pot never boils,” they aay. It Is because in watching it you remove the cover, and part the heat escapes. Keep the of utensils on when possible, see that they fit. 1 Janet looked at the note several times. not walk that 12 miles in two hours i . . . that is if she had gone to Boise- i vain. And Janet could think of no other place that she could go- Noon. ... J Now and then the girl walked to 1 the window to see if she could see Nita coming up the road. If, she thought suddenly, if Nita had gone to Boisevain for help, she w'ould only have to walk one way! Someone would take her back! She could make the six miles back in a car in a few minutes! Although she listened intently for the sound of a motor, she heard nothing except the occasional short song of a bird outside, the stir of the bushes as their leaves touched each other in the wind. She remembered the day she had come back from a short errand and had found her father still and lifeless In his chair . . . the frantic cry for help, and the mad rush to a tele phone for a doctor ... four years ago. . . . Mjss Boisevain had said her eyes were tired, too old for her. It w r as true that she had suffered and suf fered alone. There were her lonely years with her father, and lonelier years afterward. . . . One o’clock and no Nita. She might have fainted on the way in the sun ... it was warm out. Fainted from exhaustion. And excitement . . . but Nita was strong and sturdy, old as she must be. . . . A buzzing fly had settled on Miss Boisevain’s hand. Janet edged over and chased it away. But her finger tips touched the dead woman’s hand. \magine doing a IT'S EASY WITH A • It washes big tubfuls in two to seven minutes... grimy work clothes clean without hand rubbing... and it is easier on the clothes. The one-piece, heat-retaining, cast -aluminum k.—'"A. - tub is in itself enough reason for choosing the Maytag, but there are a score of other reasons. That’s why the Maytag is first \ jS— choice in both farm and city homes. gfirilm \ , rjj starts it. • Write or call on the Maytag dealer now. Prices still Jvivn —terms very easy. j$9J M I Electric Models (or home* with elertcm it*. HHUHH 1 JM Southern Carbide & Elec. Service Co. 535 S. Elm Street Greensboro, N. C. | THE MAYTAQ COMPANY • Monofactiwort • found*! 111! • NEWTON, IOWA Notice oi‘ Sale of Land For City "Taxes North Carolina, Vance County, City of Henderson. The following named persons having failed to pay their taxes for the year 1934, due the City of Henderson, I have this day levied on the following real estate, situated in the City of Hend erson. which I will sell at the Court House Door in Vance County on Monday (September 9, 1935, at 12 o’clock Noon to satisfy said taxes and the cost. This the 12th day of August, 1935. S. B. BURWELL, City Clerk WHITE Allen S H & Irene W. 1 lot Chestnut Street $59.52 Beckham, 3. O. 1 lot Clark Street 11-65 Blacknall Miss Gussie C. 2 lots Horner Street 96.15 Bobbitt, L. M., Jr., 1 lot Alc h Street 14.77 Brings J. W-, 1 l ot An( lrews Avenue 20.75 Carraway, Mrs. Temphie H. 5 lots Turner, Chestnut and Pettigrew ...117.93 Carter, C. D. 1 lot Andrew’s Avenue w 7 38.05 Cooper J C Peace and Parham, 1 lot Andrews Avenue 129.95 Crabtree, J. I-, 1933 taxes, 1 lot Chestnut 26.28 Davis Mrs. Celene B. 1 lot Arch Stseet . 14.25 Dunkley, Geo. W., 1 lot Breckenridge 26.07 and she drew back, a sob in hei throat. The hand was ice cold! Tiie slight sound of a door opening and Janet sprang forward. It might be Rajah! With glazed eyes sha looked at the swinging door. . . . It opened slowly, and Nita ap peared, her face wet with sweat, hex hair straggling over her plain face. Her dress was streaked with dirt and her hands were red and soiled. She walked straight to the dead woman, with not so much as a glance at Janet. "Nita! Where have you been .. . I’ve been so worried, so f right eo#4 . . . Nita write it for me. Did you bring help?” Janet rushed to the table and brought her a pad and pen cil. The servant still did not look at her. She was breathing hard and her shoulders were bent a little. Taking the paper and pencil, and stooping over the low table, she slow ly wrote a few words. Then bending over the chair bed, she took the life less body of her mistress in her strong arms, and started with her burden to the door. Janet looked at the note several times, before the words made any im pression on her mind. "1 have been digging her grave.” The girl stumbled to the chair bed, and reached under the pillow for the letters and the miniature. She was sobbing hysterically as she followed Nita through the kitchen and into the garden, to the fresh grave near the stone bench. . . . (TO BE CONTINUED) Dunn, Mrs. W. W.. 1 lot Montgomery Evans, T. J., 1 lot Montgomery Street " ’ s Faulkner. Miss Ruby, 1 lot Davis Street Ferebee, S. Scott. 1 lot Granite Street J”- 3, Fleming, Mr. and Mrs. Vance. 1 lot William Street Gill, J. W., 15 lots Chest., John and Various Harris, Dr. F. R., Est.. 7 lots Young, Chestnut, and Various ..A A?'?' Henderson Hotel Co., 1 lot William Street 1 ; 1 Henderson Loan and Real Est., Co., 8 lots Breckenridge, Flint Hill 'A 7? Hester, R. M., 1 let William Street Hight, C. H., 1 lot Cooper Avenue Holland, Mrs. J. J., 1 lot Granite Street Houch, \j. C., 1 lot Andrews Avenue Houghtailing, Mrs. Catherine 1 lot Rockspring Street Jessup, M. T., 1 lot William Street Johnson, W. H., 1 lot Montgomery Street ; Kearney, Tobias, 1 lot Andrews Avenue Lassiter, Robert, 41 lots Montgomery Street 33 9 Longworth, Mrs. Gussie S„ 1 lot William Street ' McDuffy, J. R., 1 lot Granite Street ' 35 ‘? Marston, R. E., 1 lot Andrews Avenue u 1 Matthews, W. A. Est., 1 lot Andrews Avenue May, E. D., 1 lot S. William Street } o '2 Mitchell, Mrs. Bettie L., 1 lot Young Avenue 4? ' ' Mitchell, N. T., 1 lot College Street 3 </.- Nichols, Mrs. L. S., 2 lots Orange Street jgjj: Peace, Mrs. J. M., 4 lots William, College, Hillside 5l - Peace, J. M., and A. A. Bunn, 1 lot Chestnut Street ' Perry, Mr. and Mrs. A. R., 1 lot Winder Street Polston, Mrs. Frances C., 1 lot William Street Porter, J. R., 1 lot Ghclson Avenue L , 7^ Powell, Mrs. E. W., 1 lot Garnett Street Air' Robertson, M. H., 1 lot Whitten Avenue 12^ Shaw, Mrs. Cassie K., 1 lot Young Avenue 48& - Smith, J. W., 1 lot Burwell Avenue 5305 Stegall, Mrs. Annie Gill, 1 lot Hamilton Street 22 51 Thorne, Mrs. Howard, 1 lot Southall Street .. iq'o3 Wakeham, Mrs. Maude E., 1 lot N. Garnett .. 437 Watson, Mrs. Julia Howard, 4 lots Carolina Ave., qnd Winder gjQ-, Woodlief, E. F., 1 lot Winder Street 497, Woodlief, Mrs. Lottie E., 1 lot Montgomery Street 45 77 Wright, J. G., 1 lot Gary Street 27 25 Young, J. R-, 10 lots Garnett and Various H‘2.79 COLORED Allen, Blanche, 1 lot Water Street (balance) $ 3^ Alston, Rabel, 1 lot Whitten Avenue 1035 Alston, Saliie and Paul, 1 lot WTiitten Avenue 1295 Barnes, Jennie, 1 lot Pearl Street 477 Baskerville, Junious, 1 lot Whitten Avenue 94^ Betsch, Mattie, 1 lot Rockspring Street, (balance) 1134 Black, Lem Est., 1 lot Pearl Street 645 Branch, Lucy, 1 lot Andrews Avenue 12.11 Brodie, Carrie, 1 lot Arch Street 7.75 Brodie, Richard Est., 1 lot Hillside Avenue 149*' Bruce, Cooper, 1 lot Clark Street 17.51 Bryant, Will, 1 lot Whitten Avenue 2.87 Bullock, Janies, 1 lot Vance Street 1529 Bullock, Polly Est., 1 lot Winder Street 6.81 Burton, Ella, 1 lot Pearl Street 775 Burton, Mose, 1 lot Palmer Street 7.11 Burwell, John, 1 lot Horner Street 795 Chaviis, Olivia Kearney, 1 lot Arch Street 451 Christmas, Alfred, 1 lot Water Street 6.45 Christmas, Annie 8., 1 lot Whitten Avenue 2.55 Clark, Saliie, 1 lot Hillside Avenue 6.45 Collins, Dallie Rice, 2 lots Andrews Avenue 16.57 Collins, Eliza Est., 1 lot Rockspring Street 9.05 Cooke, S. F., and S. T., 1 lot Andrews Avenue 489 Cooke, Zollie, 1 lot Flint Hill, (1933 taxes 359 Cooke, Zollie, 1 ’ot Flint Hill 359 Crawley, Kitty, 1 lot Arch Street 7.11 Crews, Maria, 2 lots John Street and Whitten Avenue 945 Crews, Narcissus, 1 lot Whitten Avenue 11 "0 Crudup, Fvlvester, 1 lot Near Laundry 827 Currin, Thomas and Bessie, 1 lot Eaton Street 593 Daniel, Ann, 1 lot Chavasse Avenue Ml Davis, John X., 1 lot Palmer Street 645 Davis, Omega, 2 lots Orange Street (balance) 4.43 Durham. J. Henry, 4 lots Hillside, Vaughan and Winder 4975 Eaton, Alice, 1 lot Eaton Street 531 Eaton, Blake, 1 lot Hillside Avenue 1127 Eaton, Fannie, 1 lot Davis Street 905 Edwards, Madie Reed, 1 lot Rockspring Street 645 Evans, Lewis, 1 lot Winder Street 1287 Fogg, James, 3 lots Eooth Street H 25 Foster, Lucy, 1 lot College Street 40.61 Frazier, R. S., 3 lots Spring and Horner 31.29 Gailes, John, 1 lot N. William Street 243 Gaither, J. C., 1 lot Arch Street 645 Gales, Henry, 1 lot Rockspring Street 33.89 Gales, Virgil, 1 lot Mulberry Street 73'55 Greene, Clarence, 1 lot Eaton Street 77’4 Green, William and Susan, 1 lot Adams Street 385 Han/it on, Dollie M., 1 lot John Street Harris, Fred, 1 lot Flint Hill ®- 19 Harris, Joe C., 1 lot Pearl Street 3.90 Harrison, Wesley, 1 lot Pinkston, Street Ml Hawkins, Eliza, 1 lot Whitten Avenue 0(5 Hawkins, Dr. J. D., 1 lot Rockspring Street IM 9 Hawkins, Sandy, 1 lot Kittrell Street 321 Hayes, Alex, 1 lot Orange Street 121,9 Hicks, Thos. G., 1 lot Chestnut Street &- 11 Hodge, Charles, 1 lot Wall Street Holloway, Kate and Kate Boyd, 1 lot Vaughan Street Horton, Jerry and Polly, 1 lot Water Street Howell, King, 1 lot John Street 1,112 Hughes, Edna, 1 lot Eaton Street f ll Hunt, Green, 1 lot Breckenridge Street Jackson, Willie, 2 lots Pettigrew and Ransom Streets 121,1 Jeffreys, Napoleon, 1 lot Fiint Hill • •••• - Johnson, John, 1 lot Palmer Street 6.4 a Jones, Abbie, 1 lot Water Street 911 Jones, David Est., 1 lot Arch Street ,lIS Jones, Geo. W., 1 lot Spring Street 11 Jones, Henry, 1 lot Rockspring Street Jones, Rowland, 1 lot Adams Street ...... J l9 Jordan, E. A., 1 lot Chestnut Street Jordan, E. A., 1 lot Rockspring Street , 3.01 Kearney, Lucy 8., 1 lot Winder Street 11 Knight, Julius, 1 lot earl Street * 1211 Latta, Nancy, 1 lot Orange Street 64:1 Mayfield, Fred, 2 lots Chestnut Sreet 1,119 Merriman, Hunter Est., 1 lot Horner Street 10l> * Herriman, Sarah, Est., 2 lots Garnett and Pearl Streets Mills, John Q., 1 lot Pearl Street 1(1,1 ' Outlaw, Oscar, 5 lots Vance and Water Streets Parham, Emma L., 1 lot Montgomery Street 91,5 Parham, Rachel and Gilliam, 1 lot Pearl Street J n 1 Parham, Rev. S. L., 2 lots Ransom Street 2 * Peoples, W. H., 2 lots Rockspring Street • IS ' l! j Perry, Susan 8., 2 lots Whitten and Eaton 19 Pope, James, 1 lot Whitten Ayenue Pratt, Ida 8., 3 lots Vance Street 21 "! Rathborne, Margaret, 1 lot, Whitten Avenue l 0 7 75 Reavis, Roxanna, 1 lot Andrews Avenue ' Reavis, Rosa Green, 1 lot Hillside Avenue , c ; Reid, Wade, 1 lot Winder Street 11 ’’ Richardson, Amanda H., 2 lots Rowland Street 19 Richardson, Wm., Henry, 1 lot Breckenridge Street Riggs, Martha, 1 lot Hillside Avenue "‘f Robinson, Fannie M. Est., 1 lot Horner Street Rogers, Lucinda, 1 lot Arch Street ® 9 Royster, John Est., 1 lot Andrews Avenue Royster, Laura, 1 lot Winder Street ' ,l ' Royster, Sarah Brown, 1 lot Arch Street n T. L. Rogers, 1 lot Pearl Street 1:1 s ' Addison, Royster, 1 lot Orange street Ruffin, Georgiana Est., 1 lot John Street Shaw, Geo. C., Lucy Dent and Alston, 1 lot Montgomery Street 09 ’ ’ Solomon, M. B. and C. B-, 1 lot Orange Street rj Summerville, Lizzie, 3 lots Hamilton and John Streets (balance) ", Southejland, Lquvenia, 1 lot Hamilton Street * - Steel, Caroline Est., 1 lot Andrews Avenue ' . Stone, Dora, 1 lot Chestnut ' 7 Thomas, J. W., Administrator, 1 lot Vaughgn Street . Townes, Conrad, 2 lots Pearl and Rockspring 9 , <fj Union Insurance and Realty Co., 1 lot Boothe Street ” Vincent, Cora, 1 lot Palmer Street ’ Vincent,. James, Est., 2 lots Palmer Street Ward, Bennie and Gladys, 1 lot Winder Street Williams, Hilliard, 1 lot Andrews Avenue . h Willairns, H. W., 1 lot Vaughan Street ' A. ,3 Williams, James M., 1 lot Arch Street 7^ Williams, Louvenia, 1 lot Arch Street O U 7 Williams, Nancy Outlaw, 1 lot Clark Street Wimberly, R. E., 1 lot Rockspring Street 1ll(l Wimberly, R. E. Agent, 1 lot College Street Wingfield, Pinkey, 1 lot Breckenridge Street Winston, Mary, 1 lot Palmer Street *'j- Wortham, John Earl and Joe Hockaday, 1 lot Burwell Avenue ~ Wortham, J. H., and Mary B.; 6 lota Flint Rill Wyche, Mary E„ 1 lot Flint Hill Wyche, N. Gaston, 5 lots Flint Hill- M