Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Aug. 7, 1937, edition 1 / Page 6
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rAiQi m. v* THX CAKCHUIHA TIMES SATURDAY AUCUST 7, 1937 IIE-LEGAL ADVERTISING j^artk C»r«liB«, UiirkM CMwity. TRUSTEE SALE OF LAND UNDER AJSU BY VJTUE ot |jl|t power' ooafwred upun th« 1Vu«t«* in « cwUin Deed oJ TVuat dated Novenibac *6, 1^30 ud executed by 1* W. Wilhoite ~iSrwilV'Ethel--T, aLilliwte, and duly recorod In the office of Register of Deedji in of MartfM'ei 184, «t pacf de- .fault havinj .been made in the payment of the hame, the under- aigned Trustee will ofer for sa'c at public auction to thfe highfct bidder for casji at the Courthtmsc door in Durham, N. C.> on SATURDAY, A&gu8% 14, 1937 at 12 o’clock Noon •file following diacriged land, to- wit: Hugh Thomp«o», Attorney iorth Carolina Durham County j ‘ AdministMitor'a NoUet Having qualified as adminlatra. or of the esUte of WUson^own deceased, lat« of Dorhana County North Carolina this is to notify claims against the estate of said deceased W exhibit them tb the undersigned at 803 PiRe Street, Durham, N. C., dn or before the 21 day of Au gust, 1937, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediats pay ment. A. E. Teele, Administrator of Wilson Brown, deceased. Dated this 17 day of July 1937 NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY BEGINNING .at a sUke in the i^uthnat con>«r oi Vi\% L> ^ WUboite homeplace and running | jjj SUPERIOR COURT -lorth 112 feet to a sUke; thence j ALICE ARMSTRON, Adminiatra- East 36 feet to a stake in *he jfijj y/. }, Armstron, Decea^i^ Northwest corner X>f the L, J. SlMuldi^ property; thence Couth trt faet to a ataka ia the Sout’a- west corner of the L. J. Spaulding property; thencg West parallel .to Umstead Street, ’ 3€ fact tc tiie point or place of Imginning. THIS CALE will remain .ipen for ten days to recaive increase bids, as required by law. THIS PROPEDTY is sold at the equest of the holder of said note. Dated this 13 day of July, 1937. E. R. Merrick, Trustea and Alice Armstrong, Individu- ally, Sallif Chalmers, heir-at-law W. J, Armstron, Deceased NOTICE The defendant, Sallie Chal mers, will take notice that an action entitled as abqye has been commenced in the Superio Court of Durham County, Norti Caisolina to sell land of W. 'J. Armstrong, deceased, to make as sets; and the said defendant wih DON’T BE "HOOKED" Hay^oney \ trtiftfWAra h*va "hooked" many a man and got his hard-earned money. HiMe schemers are not all dead yet . . . and they have not quit "working" the "easy marks.^ Ask some level-headed man before YOU bite or they may land you in their net. . START SAVING REGULARLY NOW , .W# Welcome Your Banking' Bu sine s i MeGbaniGs & Fan Bank Durham , - Raleigti further take notie* that-aba ife re quired to appear at th« Office of the Clerk of the auperibr cour t of said County in tha Courthouse ip Durhun, N. C., ten days after th« 3 day of August, 1937, and answer or de mur to the complaint ik said act ion, or the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demand ed In said complaint -^nr-»r-Ston*^^ Ass’t. C. S. C:, Durham CouiT This 23 day of June, ,1937 TRUSTEE SALE OF LAND North Carolina, Durham County. . Under and by vli^ue of the pow er conferred upon tha Trustee in a certain Deed of Trust dated No vember 6th, 1929 and executed *By Fred Bj^num and wife, Nellie By num, and duly recorded in the of- c/ ^ Eeftister of Deeds for Durham County in Book of Mort gages 183, at page 56; and default having been made in the payment of the same, the nnderaigned Trustee will offer for sale to the highest bidder fOr cash at public auction, at the Courthouse door In Durham, N. C., on FRIDAY, AU GUST 20th, 1937, at 12 o’clock Noon, the following described land, ^o-wit: • ADJOIJ^IWG the -lands of Sid ney R. House and James Reuse and others, beginning at a stake on New (now Carnell) Street, and running thence Elastward 232 feet to a stake in Sidney R. House and Jameji M. House line; thence Northward with their lines 65 feet to a stake; thence westward 232 feet to a stake in New (now Oarnell) Street; thence Southward with the line of said New Street 66 feet to the beginning. See deed ftpom Sylveater Bynum (widow) to Fred W. Bynum dated June IZ. 1922, recorded in Book of Deeds 63, at page 378, Durham County Registry. This sale will remain open for ten (10) days to re’ceive increase bids, as prescribed by law. This property is sold at the re quest of the holder of said note, ^ated this 19th day of July, 1937. A. M. SHBARIN, M. Hugh Thompson, Trustee. Attorney. NORTH CAROUNA^ DURHAM COUNTY TRUSTEE S.\LE OF LAND UNDER AND BY VlRllUE of the powe^ conf«l?r*d upon tha Trustee in a certain Deed of Trust dated July 2'5, 1M2, and executed by party of the first pa^i and du ly recorded in the offiice of th6 Registar osf Deeds for Durham Co. In Book of Mortgagee 209, fit ■yngp -80; iefauK havtng been made In the paymenFofThe same, the undersigrted trustee will offer for sale at pv|>lic auction to the hlgheat bidder for c^ at th# courthouse door in Durham,(N. C. n MONDAY, AU&UST 28, at 12:00 o’clock noon, the follow ing land; BIGTWNING at Jf ^ South side“ of Lanrei Avenue which said stake is 178 feet wist- erly from the Southwest intcr- ^eetfon of laurel Avenue aiiiS to Pine Street^ 200 feet to a stake in a southerly direction parallel to Pine-Stree, 200 feet to a stake the Northeaat corner of Lot No. 21j, Block L as shown on Plat ht^inafter referred to; thence along and with the norh aide of said Lot 21 in a westerly direc- erly direction ^ feet to the be- east corner of Lot No 9; thence along and with the north Lot No. 9 in a nokherly directbn 208 feet to a stake on the Soflth aide of laurel Avenue, he North east comer of said Lot No. 9; thence along and with the South side of Laurel Avenue in an east- wVy direction gfO feet to the be ginning, and feeing Lot No. 8, Block L, as shown on plat of the J^w Hope Reali% Company’s property, copy of which made by R. M. Pickard Ajpril, 1922, is duly recorded in the Office of the Re gister of Deeds of Durham Coun ty ^in Map rack 1, section 1 to whieh plat ref«(rence is hereby made for a more iparticular des cription. THIS SALE will remain open for ten days to receive increase bids, as require^ ^ law. THIS PiROPERTT? is sold at the request of the holder of - said note. Dated this 21st day of July, 1937. MiXJHAMjlCS and FARMERS BANK, Trustee .M. HUGH THOMPSON, ATTORNEY l_otttns SPLENDID BREAD PHQNE J-37»2 612 Fayetteville 9t. Freeing 4 Boys Not Final Scottsboro Solution, Says N. Ye Herald Tribune YORK. Aug.^ 6.—C—' Having taken thq editorial -leacl In crystallizing public opinion in New York and the nation in favor o( a •cfompromiae in the ^cottsboro»* cases, ,^e NEW YORK HERALD URIBUNE, in a column long lead ing editorial Monday, gi^ve a mas terful analysis of the dramatic lutli -5ft Satunlay four 6? the boys, bat th^ naatter is not ended, and that ♦the endi^of Justice ha^f' only p«(’ id^o such as was accorded them at Scottsborp in 1931,. they would t»av» been 0l^gBlKy murder«li’, and that would have been tho end of the. matter. ' “That, it wms not the end of the matter in their eaae^ was due io many -things. If Communist agi tation had a hand in it so did the ~>ion>icnce, the greater' en- and restraint ©#^ the peoplp of Alalbama. If it was due to also to the judicial system, in “Scolta- Unj^er the caption, boro”, the paper said: “Tl\e surprisfng-denouempnt in which the retrial -of tha Sctoo^i- boro cases has ended represents a material victory for the caus> of reason ant justice in the Ameri can community—a victoi’y even through reason must find it diffi cult to reconcile the contradic tions off the settlment and the requirements of an ideal and per- — > Wbieh, detmee fmihd maike effective'^—asjfstem which in the South, as ela«^whare,^is freeing it self from old trares of lynch law and politics, and ^ which still Has at its head the unimpaired arm of the Supreme ^ourt of th« U. S., still powerful to protect th? lowliest from deniak of justice ,by mob spirit of whatever character. "Acquittal ImpoKib'n” “A glance ov»'r past history is f enough to, show how much has feet justice are obviously far from | gaineda-ghince at the more being served by its terms. A stat' after holding two men for morj than six years in prion and en one occasion codemning both of them to death, a'brubtly announ-es for reasons avai(laiUl© from the very beginning, that they were not guilty. It releases tw^.inofe w(ith a similar implication that, they suffered six years’ imprison ment and imminent risk of death for a crime which they were in nocent. In the case of •* fifth, who had subsequently assaulted one of his guards, the state drops the original chargt-s; but the judge, OH'TCCDtmt of this crime of which the man must be assumed innocent increases by five years the fifiesn- year sentence he had intended to impose for the assault. Finally. proceedings are dropped again^ these five def«'ndants only becai^e four others have been coiywSted and sentenced to deatJi or life immdiate,history surrounding these cases puts the ‘compromise’ it self in resent an unexpectedly ro^eful practiral^ adjustment of the fiercelp lashing human el ements through which justice here, as always, was compelled to work. The cases weri? deepfy punged Tlot only in racial passion and sectional jealousy, but in the furi ous hatreds which inevltaA>Iy grows in such black soils. Every step in the long record seemed only to render an acquittal before a lo cal court and jui’y. more and mor humanly impossible; regardless of evidence. If it is not justice, the resent solution verges on a states- which is perhaps the nearest approach to justice that under the circumstances be a ked for now.- CALVIN’S DIGEST— Continued from pace three. "Ajnerica**” ^dltorlel Staff We are pleased to b6 advi-scJ by Father John LaFarge, associate editor of “America”, natio wl Catholic weekly Journal of opin- jpn, of New" York, that, contrary Farge make* the correction, he explains, not because it mattera BO much, but that he vould not like the public to get the Idea that perhapa he wrltea all the articles in “America” on the race queetion. On the contrary, he say*, all 4^he stAff member* feel as the v«rious articles show; they are written by different men—some by Paul L. Blakely, some by Mr. Feeney, and some by Father La- Farge. In other words,, the entire editorial staff of “America* is represented by the various articlee wfritten and published. The re cent long editorials on "No Com- promise’^’on ScottaborO, and on the Antt-iLiynching hill were by Mr. Blakely. (Father LaFar;^ is activte* in interracial work, and is a lealoua i^t^wle, "The Ijtack .Cardinal',', nublished in a recent number o^ the maga^fife, !bat titat #rt>rie, was written by Leonard Feeney, the Literary Editor. Father La- io reportsT he dtd^ rrot vrrite promotep of the eauM of Inter racial justice. He admits that the staff of “America” is pleasfed with the evident popularity of its inter racial articles with the colored editors of the country. 1 I NOTE: YOUR question wHI be answered FREE in tbis column ONLY when you include a clipping of this column and sign your full name, birtbdate, and correct address to your letter. For a "Private Reply"... send only'(2Sc) and a self-addressed, stamped envelope for my new ASTROLOGY READING and receive by return mail FREE ADVICE on (3) Questions. Send all letters to: ABBE WALLACE, care of THE CARO LINA 'TIMES, 117 E. Peabody Street, Durham, N. Carolina. ,‘-We do not think that it ?s, or aught to be, a final solutiqp.' . , .. By securing life imprisonmenr in- impnsonment, tho^the evidence 1 against the latt^ group is *irb- Have » CLEAN SHAVE Without Using a Razor . . . Simply ually the same ae that against the former, and cejM^inly littli* if any more substantial. Sentence will preeumaibly ibe com- GM'G—I found two pictures in my husband’s pocket and I would like to know why he keeps them? An>; Ju»t to make you angry. He doein’t go with either of theic people nor doei he care anything for the picture*. Forget them and don't bring the subject up to him anymore and he will get rid of them. BEB.—Will I gp to/New York next’ Iholith and will I' be success ful in getting a job when I get up there? work riffht in your home town. Ant: The change U Jutt what you need. Make it before the first of September. The city you have in mind i« al»o a very tlosirable place for you to go. Yes yoa can gfct a private reply. Send a quar ter for Astrology Reading and 1 w^I be glad to send you free my personal opinions on three ques tions privately. muted), the state has left the way * 1® 'believe that you are go open for an ultimate pardon, or. Your Beard At Iftst science has found a way to , „ „ i remove a beiu^ without shaving. No | they are legally free men ana razor, TO s^pliig, no cuts, nojtheir jeopardy is at an end. A soap, no bother. M^ntly apply Magic . Shaving Powder as directed — then I generation or so ago they would wipe off, leav^ a clear, smooth ' almost certainly have been lynch- Don’t wait! 35c buys a generous | , ... .. . -omnanions as ^oon nanlrnm nt. unv dniff st.orR.«If '''^n tneil companions as as they had been apprehended. size«package at axjy dhig store.* If you want to try before you buy, write Magic Shaving Powder Co., Dept. 34 Savannah, Oa., for free thal sample More recently, after being run J • jperhapsi some other future and ar—froiH—Even"handed tJu*t?ee’’(calmer—.that—uuU—stand “All this is very far, Tindeed, from a picture of even-handed, impersional jusitice; and looking only at this aspect of the cases one would have slight reason for comfort. (B»ut th’ere is another a?- . pect.. Four of the defendants, to begin with, have been released; on firmeijground than does, this inconsistent. ‘compromiLe.’ The Scottsboro Cases tre >io5 ended. But in « a; 1 *1; T.is nU' .’i* • Alabanii^ deserves, we thlnt;, high commenjdation. It has given the country new confidence that will it has fehown that the ideals of reason and ju^stice, if sometimes imperfUctljy exprpssed-rsince lall men are imperfect—are still in the Unittd States ideals with a living ipower which, in several other great states, they no longer BH.—^Do you think this medi cine will do me any good ar should I even take itt iAns: Go to see your doctor and h« will - give yeu Am richt^ An*: You are going to find medicine so that you cun ovrecome the condition yen are sobering with. The medicine you ing to make the trip to New 'ioik of course be alright h«t a friend of yours is going to , doctors pre- convince you that your place is down here in the south with him. RL.—Iwant to know if the boy I am in love with cares for me nd will we get married soon? An*: F^o—never. He realizes tha^ you are already married to scription. MHP.—Sh|)uld mdth^ expert to find oil dn the place she was born and should she do about t'lis property? Ans: Encourage her to hold on fm3 tlie riSHt"^ at U imtiLslie it reaionablp s*' * a. . ...s. * * a ^ I M A _ A ^ aL ~ him to get interested in you un til you secure a divorce. You haven’t «» yet met ye>ur future husband. through the mere form of tria), enjoy.' ANTYBODY k Can Afford to Build! Becaase conditioa* coaceraing the plaaailig, HkmheAg afed aclaal *ee—tradtion bf m new home haTe Beyer b«ea jihora faveraMet there’s absolutelyi ao'reasoa wky yoa can’t iiaTe the hoist* yen de* ■ire. Uaiier tEe~Fedar^-|^aB* yoa «»n build with th|e certainty of full ownership .. a home that wHl be 'years ~Ia 10 or 20 years. And y^nr iaJtial iaveetmeat need be oaly 20 per eent of the t*1o* of \ yonr property! This aew method of financing !• easier, BM>n e*n> venieat and more economical... Take advantage of this goVien op* portuaity aow. , j f ^ \ ^ COME IN NOW FOR ALL INFORMATION ABOUT IP FEDERAL LOANS AND HOME FINANCING PLA^S 1 Specialists In iFire Insurance - Rentals - Real Esiate- Properly Management Automobile and All Kinds Of Insurance.. ; , - '■ L- : Union Insurance & Realty H. M. MICHAUX, Maniager , i|ut|uun,N. C Phone J-6531 rOR MEN AND WOMEN Silky, JUST LOOKAT THAT HAIR! If you crave L*nc, -J -pi**utMMr Hair and who does not?—lose no time in keeping your Hair in OrowlitB Madam J«n*a HAIR ALORY helps to soften and Smooth Short, Harsh, Stubby, Stiff and Kinky Hair. Adds new life and .«lo8s to faded, dead looking hair. Before you know it you should be able to df^ yet|r hair in attractive '*“*iIon whi?h should wiri 'the ilration. of your friends and loved ones. Remember, your hair is your erowninc bIo». So make yourself happy and'prond by sporting a beau tiful heaid of Well kept haii:. Don’t let bad? rKtc.1 looking hair * hold you back nend name ppdaddrewifOr Madwii J*mm jrtMS Itoir rSSitmmmt ad vice and learn h6w easy it is to Kave ^beautiful, lonkr straight hair..with |NjMteM{ MADAM JONES CO.' Dapft. XtfK 22M Cattas* Qrsiv* AvMMM MCRfl.—Should I )lei|ave thjsi tlty and will I be as successful as I think that I will be? Could I »et e. private reply? that oil cannot b© found there. It so happens that oil' has bMia found in several pjaeee aroimd this place and until she is cun fident there isn't oil there don't make a salo. RS.—Do you thonk that I will ever get a better job that will Continued on page five Ride The both«r«d with an outomdbllt «i har)4l litwntown «v«ry do)Mirh«n It !• it •ahiK « biM? muff m If'ff «h«a0«c I* rfdt th« but y«u apart-tlf« VK >«u flt^ jyijrhamPublk "7) - i ■
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 7, 1937, edition 1
6
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