Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / April 8, 1932, edition 1 / Page 10
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a age a via LEGAL MATTERS | NORTH CAROLINA? Cherokee County ? In the Superior Court. t The Federal Land Bank of Colum bia, Plaintiff, vs. Hamilton-Carhart Overall Company: House-Hasson Hdwe Co.. Block Candy Company, Jim Anderson et al, Defendants. NOTICE OF SUMMONS The defendants above named will | take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the superior court of Cherokee County, North Carolina, to foreclose a first mortgage. dated April 23, 1925, ex ecuted by William McClure and wife to the plaintiff, to secure a loan of $3,000.00. and conveying to plain tiff a certain parcel or tract of land containing 125 acres more or less in Murphy Township, and being part of Tract No. 31, raid mortgage being re corded in the office of Register of Deed* for Cherokee County in Book 86 of Mortgages at page 111; that plaintiff in said action alleges, and | claims, that it has a first lien on said t lands by virtirre ot" said mortgage, and that sa:d defer. Jants have or claim some interest in said lands by virture of subsequent judgments and or conveyances which plaintiff al leges are subsequent in priority to , plaintiff's said mortgage lien; plain tiff demands a sale of said lands free ! and clear of defendant's said claims, j and asks that the proceeds of such sale be applied to the satisfaction of its said mortgage lien. The said defendants will further take notice that they are required to appear at the office of the Clerk of said Superior Court at the court house in Murphy. N. C., within thirty days from the 2"> day of April. 1932. and answer or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plain tiff will apply to the court for the re lief therein demanded. This. Monday March 21, 1932. (34-4t-h&g> J. E. KEENER, Clerk Cherokee Countv Suoerior Court. NOTICE OF TRUSEE'S SALE Default having: been made in pay-! ment of the indebtedness secured by ; that certain deed of trust to me a? ? Trustee for Jefferson Standard Life j Company by T. M. Jenkins and wife, i Winnie M. Jenkins, on July 26. 19- ; 23, and recorded in the office of the j Register of Deeds of Graham County, j North Carolina, in Book 4 at Past* 26. I will, under and by virture of the power of sale contained in said deed of trust, and at the request of the cestui que trust, and for the purpose | <?1* discharging the debt secured by said deed of trust, proceed to sell to I the highest bidder, for cash, at the coifrt house door in Robbinsville, Graham County, North Ca'rolina. at 12:00 o'clock M., on FRIDAY APRIL 29. 1932 the following described land, to-wit:, Being part of Tract No. 20. BE-, GINNING on a Spanish Oak. the : Northwest corner of Tract No. 20 1 and a corner of the Graham County J Land and Transport Company land, j and runs South 200 feet to the : Southeast corner of the Court House i Lot on the Topton ? Knoxville Housewives and Scientists TH E twenty tifth Annual C o n v eation of the National Canners Associa tion. held in Chi cago this year, proved beyond a doubt that the two main depen dencies of the canning industry fjre still house wives and scien tists. This is not as incongruous as it seems, since a housewife may well be a scientist in these modern times, and women certainly depend on scientists to a i vuot extent to safeguard f heir health and that or their families.! That this confidence is not mis placed in connection with the canning industry is proved by the fact that even before the passage of the Pure Food Law twenty five years ago the industry was depending upon scientists to keep it straight, that it helped the late Dr. Harvey W. Wiley to pans the Pure Food Law. and that it orig inated and fostered the passage of the McNary Ma pes amendment to the Pure Food Law which in forms the housewife about the quality of food which she is buy ing in addition to the protection j of perfect purity afforded by the original law. Many Scientists Spoke If any additional evidence were | needed of the determination of the whole canning industry to j make its products as wholesome I and good as is humanly possible, it would be afforded by the char acter of the scientists who ppoke j at the various sessions of the Convention in Chicago. In ad dressing a session on home eco nomics. Miss Frances L. Swain. President of the American Home Economics Association and Direc tor of Household Arts in the Chi-, ra*;o City Schools, said: 'We know that we can trust what canners tell us because of the hissh standing of the scien tists who do their work." Among these scientists who ad dressed the Convention were the following men from great uni versities: Walter H. Eddy of Columbia University, New York City, F. C. Gaylord and J. H. Mac Clillivray of Purdue University and D. M. Doty of the Purdue University Experiment Station at I-afayette. Ind.. E. R. I^ancashire of Ohio State University. Colum bus. Ohio, and J. C. Walker of the University of Wisconsin at Madi son. The Research Departments Still other scientists who spoke ramo from the research labora tories of the Association and of the largest can manufacturing companies. In speaking of their work Theresa A. Clow. Director of the Harriet Hammond McCor mick Memorial in Chicago, said: "In institutional buying for a large number of people the only advertising which we use is the reports which are sent to us from the research departments of the industry." The men from the Research Laboratories of the National Can ners Association. Washington. D. C.. who spoke at the Convention were W. D. Bigelow. Director. E. F. Kohman, J. R. Esty. Direc j tor of the Western Rranch Lal?- j oralory in San Francisco. Charles Woodbury, Director of Raw Products Research. H. R. Smith and E. J. Cameron. The men from the Research Division of the American Can Company who delivered addresses were R. H. Winters. L. G. Weiner. R. S. Scull, C. W. Curry and D. F. Sampson. Those from the Re search Department of the Con tinental Can Company were W. H. Harrison. Director. C. H. Rloedorn. L F. Pratt, O. V. Hall man and A. E. Stevenson. Government Authorities, Too But this is not the whole tale of trained scien tists who contrib uted their knowl edge at this Con vention. National and Slate govern ments also sent their ?nen. These included Karl F. Kellerrnan. Asso ciate Chief of the Hureau of Plant Industry and William E. Lewis of the Bureau of Agricultural Eco nomics of the United States De partment of Agri culture. R. S. Hollingshead. As sistant Chief of the Foodstuffs Division of the United States De partment of Commerce, can ?. Pedcrsca and C. C. Say re of the New York Agricultural Experi ment Station. Geneva. N. Y., and A. W. Pomerening of the Wiscon sin Department of Agriculture and Markets. Madison. Wis. Many Housewives Heard From With all these scientists speak ing about the proper production, processing and safeguarding of canned foods, the housewife's viewpoint was presented by a group of women whose wide con tact with many housewives has transformed them into a sort of distilled essence of the universal American housewife. Those who spoke on what the housewife expects in canned foods and wants to know about them were Miss Alice Blinn of the Delineator. New York City. Ruth Atwater, Director of the Home Economics Division of the Na tional Canners Association. Fran ces L. Swain, President of ihe American Home Economics Asso ciation and Director of Household Arts in the Chicago City Schools. Sybil Woodruff, Associate Profes sor of Foods. University of Illi nois. Faith McAuley. Department of Institutional Administration, University of Chicago, Theresa A. Clow, Director of the Harriet Hammond McCormiek Memorial in Chicago. Mrs. Wilbur E. Frib ley, Cnairman of the American Home Department of the Illinois Federation of Women's Clubs, and Miss Lita Bane of the La dies' Home Journal, Philadelphia, Pa.? Highway; then East with said High way 80 ft. to a stake on the bank of Highway; then North 200 feet with ( the dividing wire fence to the line of No. 20; then West with said line 80 feet to the BEGINNING, being the i Town Lot conveyed from W. F. J Mauney to T. M. Jenkins and Winnie i M. Jenkins, by deed dated July 25, j 1923, recorded in Graham County in Book 32, Page 365. This the 26th day of March, 1932. JULIAN PRICE, TRUSTEE. (35-4t-bps&w) TAX LISTER S NOTICE Permanent Wave $4.00 BY W. M. TURNER | Copperhill, Tenn. Phone 18-J :j; After looking over the conditions in Murphy, I have found so much poor beauty shop work has been done, we have decided not X to put up a shop in Murphy at the present time. Should you want a wave, drop us a card or come on down any day or niprht. ? We Do Work Any Time You Are In Copperhill :j: NOTICE! I am reliably informed that people who that I am out of the City. Y ou will find me at "Fone" 72 days, and 83 nights. I will deliver your Caskets by Funeral Car. Some pecple use "Home Made Caskets." Why do this when I can furnish you a nice cloth covered casket for $25.00. come to town for Caskets are being told Funeral Director and Embalmer MURPHY, N. C. ah persons suoject to taxation are j required to furnish a list of their | real and personal property to the List | Take'rs.of the Township in which they I reside, or the township in which the I property is located during the months j | of April, and at the same time all | I farmers are required to furnish an { | account of the nurobe'r of acres in I their farm, and the number of acres , cultivated in various crops for the ! current year, etc., etc. I The law provides that non-resi- j dents, women, and intvalids may list their taxes by an agent, all others j must furnish their lists and verify 1 [ same. It is just as important that all i i real estate be listed as that the ; personal property should be listed. ! A failure to list your taxes is a mis demeanor, ana also rendeds the delin quent subject to an additional tax on the j?ropetry not listed. For the purpose of receiving your tax lists for the year 19:52, the under signed List Takers for Murphy Town ship will be at the following places on dates indicated. Come and list your taxes at one of these places and thus expedite the business, and also save expenses to the public and extTa cost to you. Boiling Spring, April 4th, 1932. Grandview School House. April 5 j and 6, Ebeneezer, April 7th. Grape Creek School House April 8. Tomotla School House, Apfril 9th. Peachtree School House, April 11th and 12th. Brasstovvn. April 13th. Murphy, April 14th, to April the 27th inclusive. Very respectfully, L. L. MASON. i R. D. LOVINGOOD LIST TAKERS T. W. AXLEY. (35-2t-co) TAX SUPERVISOR! ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE | J Having: qualified as administratrix I i of estate of Mrs. Augusta Dickey, ] deceased, Cherokee County, N. C.,; this is to notify all persons having claims against (ieceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Murphy. N. C. on or before the 15th day of , March, 1933, or this notice will be | pleaded in bar of their recovery; c\\ persons indebted to the estate will please >uake immediate payment. This March 11th, 1932. MYRTLE DICKEY EVANS, Administratrix Estate of Augusta (33-6t-rm) Dickey, deceased. MALTBY Singing at Mr. Bob Queens last Saturday night was enjoyed greatly iby all present. M iss Erira Trull, of Marble, spent Saturday night with her brother and family. J. P. Trull, of this place. Mr. Jeff Trull and son, of Marble, are doing: some nice screening work on the residence of Air. George Craig. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Stiles are visi ting :?t Postell this week. .Mr. Frank Craig and wife visited the former's sister, Mrs. P.ank Cof I POSTELL .Mr. and Mrs. Ed Allen, of Athens, j Tenn., and iMr. and Mrs. Quince Al i len, of Etowah, Tenn., were guests ; Saturday night of the formers' par ? ents, Mr. and Mrs. S. Y. Allen. Miss Mattie Fox, of Ranger, was the guest Saturday night of her cous ; in, Mr. asd Mrs. Guy Suit. She also j was a visitor at Shoal Creok Sunday school. i Mr and Mrs. Walter Kimsey, of j Turtletown, Tenn., were Sunday j guests of Mr. and M?rs. J. M. Cotter. Mrs. J. M. Brown's condition does 1 not seem to be much improved at this I writing. Her many friends and rei | atives hope for her an early recov , dry. Friend? and relatives will regret to learn that Mr. Clyde Brown car.not walk from the effects of inflamatory rheumatism. MY. and Mrs. J. M. Kamby were Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lakes Ouinn. Karly last Sunday morning, Mrs. Leona Cotter fell off a high porch and on examination, Dr. G. M. Young decided her back was badly fractur ed or fcfroke. He will X-ray it as early as possible. Friends and rela tives are in great sympathy with her. cOlberson S. L. Kisselburg lost his barn by fire Sunday morning. The neigh bors assisted him in saving his stock. Rev. B. V. Mull spent Saturday night here. He left on appointment to preach here beginning on Friday night before the fourth Sunday in this month. M. N. Collins, W. A. Nichols, L. B. Collins and O. G. Anderson at tended the Republican convention at Murphy Saturday. A number of our people attended the homc-coming at Hopewell Sun day. and report a nice time. Which is the greatest duty of our government, to relieve those in dis tress or prosecute the criminals? Rev. J. W. Bailey filled his regu lar appointment here Sunday. Dear Farmer Friend: Don't let the third-row man, or the man who, because stuff is cheap, would have you leave out every third acre, per suade you to not raise a sufficient amount of food and feed stuff this year to supply your needs and some to spare. Who knows what the har vest will be. Those attending court this week are M. N. Collins, J. W. Hyatt, Mrs. W. C- Mason, J. W. Stiles, L. B. Col I lins, W. A. Nichols, Arthur Nichols, j ernal Ballew and Rev. W. T. Truett. | fee, of Marble, Saturday night. Miss Willie Nix motored to Pos tell Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Roberson, of Marble, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Trull Sunday. We hope some one will soon get busy and make the seats for the school building at this place so we can have Sunday school these fine Sundays. CANDLER'S Bankrupt Sale CONTINUES WITH NEW BARGAINS EVERY DAY IN THE WEEK Saturdey, April 9th, trade $1.00 and get 10 Yards 36-inch Sheeting for 29c MONDAY, APRIL 1 1th? jftl Children's Dresses TUESDAY, APRIL 12th? Rayon Mesh Hose WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13th Amoskeag Ginghams, 32-Inch THURSDAY, APRIL 14th? Oicl Children's Tennis Shoes FRIDAY, APRIL 15th? 77 Men's 10c Hose All Goods Must Go Regardless of Cost WE MEAN BUSINESS! H. M. CANDLER SUCCESSOR TO CANDLER'S DEPT. STORE MURPHY, N. C.
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 8, 1932, edition 1
10
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