LEGAL NOTICE noticb or sale or mai. estate unuer execution in THE SUPERIOR COURT NORTH CAROUNA. C11EKOKEE COUNTY CARRIE TABOR. Plaintiff V8. J. T. TABOR. Defendant under ana oy virtue of an exe cution to me directed from the Su perior Court of Cherokee County. North Carolflna, on a Judgment In Mild Court rendered at November Tirm. 1941. In the above entitled ac tion. in favor of Carrie Tabor and mainst J. T. Tabor, condemning the lands hereinafter described to sale 10 satisfy said judgment, which lands were heretofore levied upon by mo wilder a warrant of attachment In said cause ironi saia Court to me di rected, I will on Wednesday, the 18th day of February. 1942. at 12 o'clock noon c Eastern Standard Time) at Hit courthouse door in Murphy. Cherokee County. North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, all the right, title and ta ?eiest which the defendant J. T. I'abor had. at the date of the dock , : ng of said Judgmen and warrant ,,f attachment, in and to the follow ?ii? described lands in Murphy Town hip. Cherokee County. North Caro lina. to-wlt: All that certa'v tract or parcel of land, containing 43 more or less, lying and being In Murphy Township, Cherokee County. North Carolina. locat-eH about 9 nitlCG East from Murphy and about % mile North from Peach tree, on the Public Road leading from Murphy to Peachtree, on the waters of Peachtree Creek, bounded on the North by the lands of John Donley, on the East by the lands of John Shanks, on the South by the lands of Oscar Dunk H, and OS the West by the lands of T. D. Hendrix and Halve Tabor, and being more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a stake, a corner with John Donley and T. D. Hen drix lands, and runs with the Hen drlx lands (line) and the road South 3 West 80 poles to a stake in the road; thence with the road South 82 West 19 poles to a stake; thence South 51' ^oles to the Creek; * hence with the Creek North 64 East 20 poles: North 78 East 48 poles to a stake, corner with John Shanks land; thence with said line North 4 East 113 poles to a stake in John Donley's line; thence with Donley's line North 88 West 50 poles to the point of beginning. Being the lands described In a deed of trust from J. T. Tabor and wife, Carrie Tabor, to W. O. Mc Glbbony, Trustee, dated Joly 1st, 193C, and registered July 6th, 1936. in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Cherokee County to Deed of Trust Record No. 115 at Page 23. Said lands will be offered for sale subject to the above mentioned deed oi trust. This the 16th day of January. 1942. J. C. TOWNSON. Sheriff Cherokee Cty., North Carolina. 41-2-12-42. ADMINISTRATRIX ?VTATE OP NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHEROKEE Having qualified as administratrix of the Estate of J. H. Axley. De ceased, late of the aforesaid County f.nd State, this Is to notify all per sons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Murphy. N. C.I on or before the 30th day of January. 1943, or this notice will be plead In bar of their recovery. All persons In debted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 29th day of January. 1942. I.KI1.A UHBY AXIJSY. Administratrix of the Estate of J. H. Axley Estate. 27-6t-chg. Catholic Services Waynesvllle. every Sunday 11:00 a. m. Bryson City, every 1st Sunday 8:00 a. m. Franklin, every 2nd and 5th Sun day 8:00 a. m. Cherokee, every 3rd Sunday 8:00 a. m. "Murphy, every 4th Sunda7 8:00 A. M." Sincerely yours. Rev. A. P. Rohrbacher ' NORTH CAROLINA CHEROKEE COUNTY THE l.'NDERSIONED A. J. Hem bree. having this qualified as Ad ministrator of the Estate of C*rl M Stahl, deceased before J. W. Donley, v-'lerk of tlie Superior Court of Cher okee County, all persons will, there lore. take notice that If they hav ?ny claims against the undersigned as Administrator of the estate. thc-y will file the same with the under ' signed on or before the 23rd day o' ! January. 1943 of this notice will be I pled in bar of any right they may liave to recover and all persons in , debted to said estate will make im- I I mediate settlement. This the 23rd day of January. 1942. A. J. HEMBREE ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF CARL M STAHL. I deceased i7-6t-chg. -o ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executrix of | the estate of L. E. Mauney, deceased, I late of Cherokee County. Nortn Car olina. this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at her home In Murphy. 1 North Carolina on or before the 5th day of February, 1943, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov ery. All persons indebted to said cs tate will please make immediate Day iin. no. This the 4th day of February. 1942 ELIZA MAUNEY. Executrix of the estate oi L. E. Mauney, deceased 28-6t a. & C. o Picking Parasites Newest War Game, Started by F, D. R. Word from Washington states that when President Roosevelt told Wash ington pressmen that the "parasites" j s hould De driven out of over-crowd- j ed Washington and that 20-ioom houses or Massachusetts Avenue j should be taken over for workers who couldn't find rooms he started a new tamo that the National Capital found as entertaining as the President's birthday balls. One Washington newspaper pub lished a long dull and serious edito rial in defense of "suspects," and it was a perfec vindication for some very dear lad: >s. including Mrs. Wil liam Howard Taft, Mi's. Woodrow Wilson and Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth. All the other newspa pers made a game out of the Presi dent's remarks about there being too many people here "to watch the show." A retired General and a retired Admiral collaborated and protested I that they must stay in Washington and see to it that "this nonsense about the Arm:' and Navy cooperat ing is pigeon-holed." An intelligen. taxi-driver observed that "as I get it they want room for more clerks to do the work the clerks they have got ain't doing." A society leader protested: "So now I am a rarasite, am I? After eight years of feeding lisping New Dealers until I am bustle-bound my self. I wish I had my anchovies , back." A policeman: "I dont know any thing about these Termites, but I do want to be on the detail that sees to | il thai girls are put to bed at 10 1 o'clock every night, the way one of our smart Congressmen suggests.' A tavpayer observed that "it don't | mako any difference to me, brother; 1 I my number is up any way you fig i ure." A number of rich, or lucky, political parasites were put on the spot. "Were their faces red" when the great newspapers used their names as hon-ible examples, with plenty of unwelcome advice about what to do with their 20-room houses, their .spare time and their money? "Picking parasites" is a great game. It can be played everywhere? right in your own community .with friends and neighbors. But don't get. tough because some ; one may make jokes about you. o SURPLUS Agricultural commodities bought Jie Surplus Marketing Administra tion during November under lease lend and other rondltl!?T!? raised a value of more than $73,000,000. A Report To The Nation Washington. D. C. Tlie war production story of the ! past eighteen months and what the I United Stales must do to achieve Its l>otentlal overwhelming arms supe liority u detailed in a Report Tu The ] Nution Just issued by Archibald Mac- i Leish, Director of the Office of Pacts j and Figures. The deport was pre- 1 pared at the request of President j Roosevelt. Only "by the mobilization of every j available tnan. woman, dollar and thing ? every plant, tool, machine and bit of material" can an endequate production si.iuci.uii- "or buii'.. says tho report. Among the high-lights of war pro duction in the United States sincc . the fall of Prance are: The foundation has been Ui'l for tilt annanent program of u magni tude no other nation over has at tempted. Nearly tluee times as many v. cap- 1 ons and supplies of war will be pro duced this year a.> in the eighteen uiouths between June. 1U40. intl the ond of 1941. tllb yc.ir of production ot planes till dtanks will equal tint of Hitler in aM i i "? years before 193!) when he was preparing to conquer the world. Goods from the arsenal of democ i racy are flowing or will flow to aii | coiners of the earth where tile sol 1 diers and sailors of democracy fight tile Axis. j The United States production pro- j I a ram, as described in the Report to i 'he Nation, covers every phase ol the | ; war : The Army and the Navy. I planes. tanks, ordinance, munitions. I I shipments throughout the world un- I ! der the Land-Lease Act. conslruction I and expansion o fnew plants and ! conversion of existing plants. The report tells the story ol stiip construction and repair. It describes the degree to which more workmen f.'-e needed in war industries and the plans for recruiting and training them. Tiie part played by science in the war against the Axis is also de scribed. The report constantly stresses the fact that a start, only, has been made. For military reasons it can not reveal the exact number of j planes, tanks or ships being built. | Yet the rate of building is impressive. | Production of tanks and other com- ! bat vehicles is now more than three j times as large as a year ago; gu.isof all types nearly five times as large. Army warplane production. th3 re l>ort states,' has been stepped up to ;he point where, with Great Britain, we soon shall exceed the plane out put of the Axis countries. More Im portant. we shall have the plant ca pacity to increase our production to the point where we can seize con trol of the air in all areas of the world struggle." Not only this, the report continues, but the Army now has "four types of combat planes ? -better than anything yet produced abroad." In short, the Army's story is one of equipment of kinds as well as housing for an ultimate army of 7,000,000 men, the largest in the history of the nation. Tlie Navy, fighting the aggressor in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, is vapidly becoming a two-ocean fight ing force instead of the traditional I one-ocei.n combat unit. Fifteen bat tleships are being built., 11 aircraft carriers. 54 chuisers, 193 destroyers ? nd 73 submarines. The Navy has 2,000 new airplanes ;.nd work is being pushed day and night on Its new bases, air stations, docks an dother facilities. Merchant shipping, equally vital In the war against Germany. Japan and Italy, will soon be augmented at a rate of two ships a day: the building of ships in World War II dwarfs the program cf World War I. When the program is in full swing an army of 700.000 men will be building ships In the United States. Already contracts have been sighted for 999 ships. Added to this building program is the task of getting men to operate the new merchant fleet. Crews must be found for about 800 ships, so 25.000 seamen and 6.300 of ficers are to be trained for this ser vice. The complexity of modern war roduction Is described In the Report. Not only must essential raw materi als be brought from all parts of the world: new ones must be developed. So the 'production of the tools of war ir an endless struggle to build new factories and expand ex 1st ins? ones: to convert the machinery of peace to the purposes of war. Gov ernment and private industry have joined hand* to invest a total of 7 billion dollars in plant construction unci exoansion. Steel ingot capacity Ls to b-j in creased by 10,000.000 tons, aluminum production by 700.000 pounds a year ? nd magnesium production by 350. 000.000 pounds But even these to tal'. arc inadequate for the 1943 ob jective of 125.000 ariplanes a year. Machine .siSivui wnich the whole program would bog down, were being produced at arate of only 150, 000.000 dollars a year before France fell. This year the total should reach 12 billion dollars. Plant conversion and the adjust ment o fsmall business to war pro duction ls under way. the report Mates, but the difficulties have bee n ; i eat No part of the program would be gjosslble without the workers wno i . lie lonk hours and arduously for ?.<? Army an dNavy at the front . "The first conquest of the Nazi.;." -<i v. the Report to the Nation. "?raj the conquest of their own people." The Reich factories which belch forth the armaments of a?gression are run by slaves. Tile factories of democracy must be run by free men, holding dear to their right to work for whom they please under condi tions which satisfy them. There were strikes. Priceless time, never to be regained, was lost. But now repiescntatlves of the CIO and the A. F. of L. have given a pledge against strikes and the employers have promised that there shall be no lock-outs In essential Industries. A War Labor Board lr. to pass promptly on all grievances. Equally vital is an Increasing sup ply of workers skilled n the tech-iir-xi processes of war manufacturing. Five million workers have already been i drawn Into the production program; i within six months an additional 5. ! 000.000 will be needed. The existing I industrial army must be trebled trj th e > nd of the year and quadrupled by the close of 1944. Some shortages will be unavoid able. but a training program of un precedented sure will furnish most ol the needed men and women Already nearly 2.500 000 workers have been UiuKht to run the machines whlcn produce the goods of war Labor unions have been scouting the coun try for former members who because of the depression became filling sta tion operators or entered other 1cm essential trades. A final aspect of the production problem described by the Report to the Nation is that of transportation "It Ls not enough to produce the roods of war. They must be moved. ?nd moved swiftly, by rail, by air. by truck, by boat to their destination." This is being accomplished by new cars and locomotives and by more efficient use of existing equipment But the added freight which must be ni v~d this >ea: will strain the rail ways and the truck lines of tlie na tion ;o n breaking poin' - -o HGGS The >.?.sonal low point in farm marketing of cg.:s has p.urrd, and wiln favorable weather, production will incroj.se until no:t April, reports | the U. S. Bureau of Agricultural Economics. AX Tilt AXIS QUICK RELIEF FROM lymptonn ?l Plilnw Arfclng frwn ! STGmACH ULCERS oucto EXCESS ACID Free BookToUaofHonoTrMtineirt that Matt Help or It Will Cost You HotMns Orer two million bottle* of tho w iLLARD TRE ATM EN T have boon sold for relief of symptoms of (list reus arising from StomacN and Duodsnal Ulcers duo to Excess AeW ? ?wwi Signiion, ?our or Upset Stomach. Casilrmi, Heartburn. Sleeplessness, etc.. duo to Excess Acid. Sold on 15 days' trial' Ask for "Wlllsrd's Message" which full;.* ?x plains thia truataiont^ffreo ? at, THE MAUNEY DRUG CO. R. S. PARKER, Druggist A REAL OPPORTUNITY THAT MAV NOT COME AGAIN IN YEARS * ? ? ? ? 1 ?? ? ? ? Our supply of plumbing materials is too small to justify the large space we set aside for storage in normal times. So, we offer it for sale ? and we urge you to buy now, while it can b delivered, at once, it can be had. Future supplies, as you know, will be harder and harder to get. ? ? ? We have in stock, for prompt delivery: KTTCHEN SINKS? BATH-TUBS COMMODES? LAVATORIES SHOWER FIXTURES WARM AIR FURNACES, COMPLETE - AIR CONDITIONING UNITS^STOKERS OIL BURNERS- HEATING BOILERS Materials for Complete Heating Systems RANGE BOILERS? JACKET HEATERS COMPLETE SUPPLY OF MATERIALS FOR PLUMBING OF ALL SORTS ?? * ? II ? EXPERT, GUARANTEED INSTALLATION ? ?????? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ALL Work Guaranteed and Backed By Our Years of Service ROGERS PLUMBING COMPANY MnrptiT Branch Manarrrt by the President of the N. C. Association of PlnmMnir and Hentlnjc Contractors. Offices In rear of Carrlnrrr-* Store or ICC !

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