THE BEAUFORT NEWS THURSDAY, JULY 23. 1931
PAGE SEVEN
WANT ADS
THE COST IS SMALL
USE THEM FOR RESULTS
RATE:
One cent per word, Initial,
Letter, Figure. All want adi
paid in advance. No want ad
taken for less than 25c Mail
thm in.
DUpUy A1
RateiNa Rqt
Telephone No. IS.
USED TIRES FOR SALE MANY
miles of unused service. Loftin Mo-
REAL ESTATE IF INTERESTED
in town loU or country property ad
dress The Carteret Realty & Insur
ance Co., D, W. Morton, secretary,
Beaufort, N. C.
FOR RENT AT MILL, 3 FIVE
room houses, light, heat and water.
Fine condition. 1 six room house,
light heat and water. Fine condition.
Beaufort Lumber & Manig. Co.,
Phone 66. tf
FOR SALE EARLY BROCCOLI
Seed $1.50 per pound, cash with or
der. Lewis and Middleton, Parksley,
Va JuL 30
ward the various courses of the line
ditch to the mouth of said Salt Pond;
thence with the Salt Pond to the be
ginning. Also a second tract being in Straits
Township, Carteret County, North
Carolina, being the place where I. C.
Leffer lived including the tract above
described being a part of the land
bought by I. C. Leffer from James
M. Eliis by Deed recorded in Book
T. T., page 414, this being the land
left by will from I. C. Leffer to
Maud C. Willis.
Also a third tract bought of Lucy
Willis, which was willed to her by
her father, I. C. Leffer, parties of the
first part, sell all their right, title
and interest in all the lands bought
of Maud C. Willis, Thomas C. Willis,
Garrison Willis and Lucy Willis, con
taining 52 acres, more or less."
This 14th day of July, 1931.
H. 0. WHITEHURST,
Mortgagee.
Grissom and Marshurn
Attorneys for Mortgagee.
NO MORE RATS OR MICE
FOR RENT FURNISHED HOME
First two weeks in July and the
month of August. See or write
Mrs. Annie Loftin.
After You Use HUMBUG.
It's a sure rodent killer. Try a
package and prove it. Rats killed
with HUMBUG leave no smell. Cats
and dog3 won't touch it. Guaran
teed. 50c for large box, and it is
ready to use just the way you get it.
Don't take our word for this. Try
a package and if you are not more
(than satisfied we will refund your
money. Sola and guarantee! oy
JOE HOUSE DRUG CO. Sep 24
FOR SALE FIVE ROOM HOUSE,
water and lights, at Reasonable
price. 113 Live Oak Street See or
write Mrs. Grace Whitehurst, 128
Suttons Lane, Greenville, N. C.
FOR SALE FEW MILK COWS
and small beef cattle. Reasonable
price. J. M. Carraway, Merrimon,
N. C.
7-30
EARLY BROCCOLI SEED THE
kind that pays, $1.50 per lb. G. W.
Huntky, Beauofrt, N. C. 8-3.
Legal Notices
wHH-' 'H1 'I' ! '8' 'M1 M"feMM"H"
NOTICE.
North Carolina, Carteret County, In
Superior Court.
Cleveland Daniels
vs
Mrs. V. T. Daniels..
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
The parties above named and all
other persons interested will take no
tice that on the 27 day of June, 1931,
the above named plaintiff filed an ac
tion as above captioned in the Office
of the Clerk of the Superior Court of
Carteret County for the purpose of
foreclosing tax sale certificates for
the years 1928, on the following de
scribed property: 12 acres V. T. Dan
iels land, 77 acres V. T. Daniels land,
Cedar Island and known as Western
Point land.
The interested parties will further
take notice, that if they fail to ap
pear present and defend their respec
tive claims within 6 months from
date of this notice, they shall be for
ever barred and foreclosed of any and
all interest or claim in the property,
or the proceeds received from the
sale thereof.
This 27th day of June 1931.
L. W. HASSELL,
Clerk of Superior Court, Carteret
County. July 23
NOTICE SALE O? REAJL ESTATE
Can Malc Mpi!
Home Place of Be&yfy
More than ever before It la feelrif
realised that color can transform an
uninteresting home Into a place of
beauty and cheer; that color can help
make a room feel warm or cold; that
color, wisely employed, can give
brightness to a hallway that Is dark
or modify the effect of sunlight In a
room that Is overexposed.
And the base of color schemes of
the various rooms In usually the floor
heretofore restricted in hue to a few
variations of the natural color of the
wood.
A new method of finishing maple
flooring has made possible the employ
ment of color In tho floor. This uses
an acid stain process developed recent
ly by the Maple Flooring Manufactur
ers' association in co-operation with
the Industry generally.
The process may be used by any
painter of ordinary skill, using the
staus and varnishes recommended by
the association; It Imparts to north
ern hard maple a variety of delightful
transparent permanent finishes, and
their application brings out the deli
cate grain of the wod, creating a dis
tinctive type of floor beauty never be
fore achieved.
In the application of the process the
stain Is covered by one coat of lac
quer and two of finishing varnish.
Some of the colors adopted by the
Maple Flooring Manufacturers' asso
ciation Include Spanish brown, early
American, autumn brown, silver gray,
dove gray, royal blue, pastel green,
orchid and an ebony black.
Under and by yirtua of the power
of sale contained in t"nt certain
Mortgage deed executed on the 23rd
day of May, 1930, by Custis Gillikin
and wife, Myrtle Gillikin to H. O.
Whitehurst, recorded in book 67,
page 146, Carteret County Registry,
default having been made in the con
ditions of said Mortgage Deed, the
undersigned will offer for sale to the
highest bidder or bidders for cash,
at twelve o'clock noon, on the 20th
day of August, 191, in front of the
Courthouse door of Carteret County,
the following real estate, lying and
being in Straits Township, Carteret
County and State aforesaid, describ
ed and defined as follows, to wit:
"Beginning at a stake in the side
of Ellis Salt Pond running N. 78 E.
with a ditch dividing the land of Mel
ton M. Chadwick, and Anita Leffer to
a' stake in said ditch 31 poles; then
North 8 W. 34 poles, 8 links to I. C.
Equipment of Kitchen
Must Be Up to Date
In a recent house-planning contest
In which 6,000 "Ideal" plans were sub
mitted the Judges were unanimous in
their report that the Wtehon is the
most carefully studied part of each
plan.
As a matter of fact, the avernge
housewife spends 70 per cent of her
waking hours each day in the "engine
room" of the home. No wonder she is
willing to forego a Queen Anne front
If she has to pay for It by having
a Mary Ann back.
Ideally, the kitchen should have a
central location in the house, for easy
access to all other parts. And In or
der to save miles of walking during
the preparation of the thousand meals
each year, it must be as small as
consistent with the equipment which
must be placed there a minimum of,
say, 100 square feet for the average
home.
One of the most effective means of
cutting down needloBs stops is the
Farm Board Aids Growert
Washington, - July 15 The farm
board said today 6,000 Florida citrus
fruit growers and hundreds of grow
ers of vegetables and other products
in that state have been benefitted by
its assistance to cooperative organi
zations. Commitments or more than
$3,000,000 were made to the Flor
ida Citrus exchange soon after the
board was established.
Compact and Economical Design
Just Right for Small Family
I BedKm. PEr toKK 0
iU ail 1 Porch
the North Carolina State College co
operating with the Farmers' Wife,
national fann women's publication of
St. Paul, Minnesota.
The women selected for this title
are Mrs. E. L. Peele of Pikeville,
Wayne County; Mrs. J. J. Forbes, Sr.
of Shawboro, Currituck County; Mrs.
L. E. Barnes of Henderson, Vance
County; Mrs. Annie C. Hay of Mays
ville, Jones County, and Mrs. J. F.
McKnight of China Grove, Rowan
County. The public ceremonies
during which the recognition will be
bestowed will take place Wednesday
evening, July 29, at the 29th annual
meeting of the North Carolina
Farmers and Farm Women's Con
vention. The exercises begin promptly at
8:30 o'clock with Mrs. Jane S. Mc
Kimmon presiding. An address will
be made by Miss Lucille Reynolds,
of the editorial staff of The Farmers'
Wife, and each of the five women will
be called upon for a brief response
telling something of her work and
accomplishments in the pa?t several
years.
The five women selected for this
honor were nominated by their neigh
bors and were chosen from a list of
hundreds of such nominees. A
committee appointed by the maga
zine and the home demonstration de
partment of State College then stud
ied the nominees carefully and espec-
jially the answers to about 500 ques
tions. The final selection was made
after carefully considering the work
done by the women in managing their
homes, education and 'development
of their children, community work
and the health records of their fam
ilies. Each one has made some not
able contribution to her community
and state, says Mrs. McKimmon.
A COINCIDENCE
Floor Plan.
By W. A. RADFORD
Mr. Wlllia-u A. Radford will answer
questions and give advice KltlCK OF
COST on all subjects pertaining to
practical home building-, for the read
ers of this paper. On account of his
wide experience as editor, author and
manufacturer, he is, without doubt, the
highest authority on all these sub
jects. Addross all Inquiries to William
A. Radford, No. 407 South Dearborn
Btreet, Chicago, 111., and only Inclose
two-cont stamp for reply.
Here Is a cottage type bungalow,
very small, very compact, but ofTerlng
a large amount of living accommo
dation at a very low cost In the first
place, being but 26 feet square, this
home may be built on n small lot and
still leave a comfortable margin of
space for light, a!r and privacy be
tween it and its neighbors on either
side. The squurs plan Is, of course,
the most economical one possible, giv
ing the greatest amount of floor space
in proportion to tho amount of wall
and roof construction. And In the
case of tiiis particular house, the de
sign is such as to take full advantage
of every Inch of the available apace.
This Is a four-room house with the
living room serving also as a dining
room, an arrangement which has been
gaining wide popularity In recent
years with the demand for better uti
lization of space. The separate dining
room is, from this point of view, a
large waste, for It Is used but a very
small portion of the day. With the
arrangement shown here It Is possible
to provide In this small cottage two
bedrooms of a very comfortable size,
and each provided with a good closet.
Between the kitchen and one bed
room is the bath, and nil of tike rooms
open onto a central hall space which
occupies but a small part of the total
floor area even though It must also
accommodate the basement stair.
In exterior appearance this little
home Is particularly pleasing. This Is
due, In large measure, to the roof
lines which have been so handled as
to avoid the fiat appeararfce which
detracts from so many small homes
of this type.
Lifeguard at Sixty
Leffers line, then with his line west- miles.
Manitoba's forest area has been of
ficially estimated at 137,000 square
1 f " I
Now old preacher McCltrre
Was a good man I'm sure,
As good as they're usually made
He lived a long life
With a fond loving wife,
But at last in the earth he was laid;
The neighbors all said
When they heard he was dead
They felt sure he to heaven had gone,
And m that they were right
For with neatest delirhi 1WM
He was wakened by Gabriel's horn.
As he entered the gate
Where Saint Peter did wait
To give greetings to all the elect
The preacher's face glowed
And much pleasure he showed
To receive more than he did expect;
As he wandered at will
Just taking his fill
Of the blessings that Heaven did be
stow
All at once came a thought
To his mind, and it brought
A remembrance of earth down below.
"I have it!" said he,
"Thi3 place reminds me
Of Beaufort where I used to live,
And I now know just why
I hated to die
And take what the future might give;
But it's my fond belief
That there was. once a thief
Who snaked into Heaven one day
And stole a small bit
And made it just fit
On the shore line of old Beaufort
Bay."
Edward Halton,
Beaufort, N. C. July 21.
jW4fHfH4fHWW4W ! ! -H' 't1
Five Farm Women
Selected For Honor j
By F. H. JETER
Ra!eigh, Jul 20 Wayne, Curri
tuck, Vance, Jones and Rowan coun
ties have had honor brought to them
wit hthe announcement last week
t.hAf. farm ummnn v . i l- I i' n. ;M -U ..
counties have been selected for the t
title of Master Farm Homemaker by
o
o
Wearing New Shoes?
Well, not quite; but the very next
thing to it. These shoes were expertly
half-soled, heeled, and polished by a skill
ful artisan at
Beaufort Shoe Shop
J. W. Chadwick, Prop.
Here Is Mrs. Claude Martin, who Is
sixty years old and Is president of the
Joplln Y. W. C. A. board of directors.
She has been a member of the Red
Cross life saving guards for the last
eight .years and is on duty at various
resorts where young women swim ior
Ing the summer months.
There are more passenger automo
biles in America than telephones, ac
cording to the Chicago Motor club.
In 1930 autos numbered 23,042,840
and telephones 20,098,059.
USED CAR SALE
We Have On Hand A Large Number of Used Cars That
Must Be Moved At Once A Small Down Payment,
Is All That Is Required.
A YEAR TO PAY THE BALANCE
NOTE THESE PRICES
MODEL T 1-2 TON TRUCK $ 20.00
MODEL T 1 TON TRUCK 60.00
MODEL T 1 TON TRUCK 100.00
NASH COUPE 25.00
CHRYSLER 4-DOOR SEDAN 200.00
1 CHEVROLET 1 TON TRUCK ......... 100.00
1 CHEVROLET 1 TON TRUCK
(Good Condition) 200.00
1 MODEL "A" ROADSTER 200.00
1 MODEL "A" TOURING 200.00
1 MODEL "A" COUPE 200.00
lorn MOTOR COMPANY
BEAUFORT, N. C.