Newspapers / Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.) / Jan. 31, 1929, edition 1 / Page 2
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MARION PROGRESS, MARION, N. C., THURSDAY, JAN. 31, 1929 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE. North Carolina, McDowell County. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of the power of sale Vigilant Law Officer Had Seen ’Em Doing It Speeding across the country from Los Angeles to New York by motor. contained in a certain Deed of Trust j two motion-picture celebrities were from B. F. Horton and wife, to J. E. lield up by the constable in a small Neal, Secretary &• Treasurer of the| town and, as usual, the officer had all McDowell Building & Loan Associa-i (|,e advantage on his side. He re- tion, said Deed of Trust bearing date! ^ and finally tL^R^gfs^iof'Deedsi"! McDowell County in Book 20 at: before the .iuds©- page 293 of Mortgages and Deeds of ^he constable was very hot under Trust, it having been given to secure! the collar and declared he would make an indebtedness therein named, and| it hot for tliem, but the couple were defualt having been made ■ in the! hardly prepared for the outraged of- payment of the same, the under- ticer’s charge in court. signed will sell to the highest bidder i “Your honor,” he announced pom- day of February, 1929, at 12:00; people an the charge I m prefer- o’clock noon, the following describ-' I’in’ against them is arson.” ed property, to-wit: j “Arson!” roared one of the ac- Beginning on the North side of' cused. “What do you mean! We were the Crooked Creek road 16 feet! never out of our car till you flagged west of the western boundary of thei us!” school house lot and running north! “You was burnin’ up the road, an’ 33 deg. west parallel with, and ^15 j»,j, preferrin’ the charge of arson against you,” insisted the constable, and even the court had to laugh as he let them oflf with a five dollar fine. m\iLW feet from said boundary line 53 2-3 poles to a stake with pine and oak pointers; thence north 87 deg. west 30 poles crossing old road to a stake and pointers in Kellough’s line; thence with his line south 3 deg. west 67 poles to a stake (6 feet west of maple pointer) Kellough’s cor ner; thence south 87 deg. east with Snipe’s line 41 poles to a stake on the north side of the Crooked Creek road; thence north 45 deg. east with said road 30 poles to a stake (the begfinning) on north side of the Crooked Creek road and 16 feet west of school house lot, containing 19 51-100 acres more or less, and Just One mor« Bobby, a tive-year-old Irvington boy, has reached the Inquisitive age. The other day he was particularly annoy ing, and his mother was busy an swering his questions. Finally she could stand it no longer. “Bobby, stop asking those foolish questions and run out and play,” she ordered. “Oh, just one more," pleaded Bobby being fully described in a deed from i “Say, if I was twins, which one would M. M. Horton to B. F. Horton, dated I I be?”—Indianapolis News. May 15th, 1922, recorded in Deed I Book 61, page 234 of McDowell i « r j’*- County Deed records, to which re- . ference is hereby made for more OLD FORT BUILDING AND LOAN specific description. EARLIER HATCHED CHICKS FAVORED Good Business to Have Good Laying Flock in Summer. This the 18th day of Jan., 1929. J. E. NEAL, Trustee. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE. North Carolina, McDowell County. ■ Notice is hereby given that under ^ and by virtue of the power of sale i contained in a certain Deed of Trust from W. J. Williams and wife, Nora i M. Williams, to J. E. Neal, Secretary i & Treasurer of the McDowell Build ing & Loan Association, said Deed of i Trust bearing date of January 3, 1923, and being recorded in the , of fice of the Register of Deeds of Mc Dowell County in Book 20 at Page 230 of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust, it having been ^ven to secure an indebtedness therein named and default having been made in the payment of the same, the under signed will sell to the highest bidder for cash at the courthouse door in Marion, North Carolina, on the 18th day of February, 1929, at 12:00 o’ clock, noon, the following described property, to-wit: First Tract: Being lots Nos. 9 and 10 in Block 2 according to plan of; the Salisbury lands surveyed by T. j C. Dobson for J. C. Cole, and being described in a deed to W. J. Wil liams and wife, from Williard Craw ford, dated January 9th, 1920, and recorded in Book 61, page 314, of McDowell County Deed Records. Second Tract: Being lot No. 1 in Block No. 2 of the Salisbury land as surveyed by Dodson for J. C. Cole, which map is on record in McDowell County, and being described in a deed from H. A. Westerman and wife to W. J. Williams and wife, dated Sept. 10, 1919, and recorded in Book 61, page 315 of said Deed Records. Third Tract: Being Lot No. 1 in Block No. 3, as shown on map made by T. C. Dobson, of the Salisbury property in the Town of Old Fort, N- C., and registered in the Regis ter’s office for McDowell County, and being described in a deed from G. Jli. Fortune and wife to W. J. Wil liams and wife, dated March 30th, 1920, and recorded in Deed Book 61, page 317, of said Deed Records. This the 18th day of Jan., 1929. J. E. NEAL, Trustee. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE. North Carolina, McDowell County. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in two certain Deeds of Trust from J. A. Rader and wife, Delia Rader, to J. E. Neal, Secretary & Treasurer of the McDowell Build ing & Loan Association, the first bearing date of August 26, 1926, and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of McDowell County in Book 32 at page 104 of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust; the second bearing date of October 20, 1927, and being recorded in the office of ASSOCIATION of Old Fort, N. C., as of December jalst, 1928. : I (Copy of sworn statement submit- ! ted to Insurance Commissioner as . required by law.) i Assets The Association Owns: ^. j I Cash on Hand and in Banks $ 308.08 Mortgage Loans 86,576.00 Money loaned to shareholders for the i purpose of enabling j them to own their ] homes. Each loan se cured by first mort gage on local im proved real estate. Stock Loans 7,825.00 Advances made to our shareholders against their stock. No loan exceeds 90 per cent of amount actually paid in. By hatching a part of the poultry flock between January 15 and Febru ary 15, so that the birds will' mature in July, the poultryman takes a big ^tep toward maintaininffi hi? late sum- irfer and early fall proaliction, advises R. R. Hannas, poultry research spe cialist, in the New Jersey Agricul ture. Mr. Hannas points out that the price of eggs begins to climb as the sum mer wanes and that it Is good busi ness to have a flock of layers at this time. Ordinarily a decline In produc tion takes place with the old fowls about July. If one-quarter to one- third of the flock is hatched between the middle of January and the middle of February the poultry keeper can offset this decrease. The article goes on to say that brooding of chicks early in the season has beep carried on successfully for a number of years. Chicks thus pro duced will reach a good growth and development before hot weather comes on, thereby giving them an ad vantage over later hatched stock. One precaution, to prevent leg weakness, is advised. Because bad weather is likely to make it unsafe to let the chicks out on the ground and there is a lack of green food at this time, cod liver oil and sprouted oats should be supplied. The oil is gtven at the rate of 2 per cent either of the amotint of grain or of the amount of mash fed. Experience has shown that it Is easier to mix it into the grain, and that however used, it is highly ef fective in preventing leg weakness. The writer concludes with the sug- ge«?tion that the earlier hatching en ables the general farmer to get this phase of his work out of the way be fore the heavy rush of spring arrives. Tlie Birtk of London No one can say when London be gan ; the beginniog is lost in the mists of time. London is first mentioned in a passage in Tacitus, a Roman his torian whose uncle, General Aglcola, spent most of his active military ca reer in Britain. Tacitus describes the Roman London of A. D. 61 when it was sacked by Queen Boadicea—^the British warrior-queen. It is one of the strangest things in London’s history, that she should first appear at the moment when she was sacked by a British queen, and that that queen’s statue should now stand in a place of honor under the palace of Westminster, looking down the Thames. It is strange, but it marks that peculiar position of London as the meeting place of the races out of which the English people were made. Mental Tr«nsformation In the course of some investigations of epilepsy, a French neurologist se cured some specimens of writing be gun before epileptic seizure and con tinued during that state. His report is that the part written In a normal and lucid state is correct as to form and content, while th^ part writteu in an epileptic state is Incorrect in both cMjntent and form. The defects in the writing appear suddenly, with no transitional phase, and affect the penmanship and the composition. The letters have become curved, the out lines have been enlarged and the forms have been changed. The com position is « strange, incoherent con glomeration of words and ideas. TOTAL $94,709.08 Liabilities The Association Owes: To Shareholders Funds entrusted to our care in the form I of payments on stock as follows: i Installment Stock __$79,667.00 Bills Payable 2,500.00 Money borrowed for use in making loans I to members, or re tiring matured stock. Each note approved by at least two- j thirds of the entire Board of Directors as required by law. Undivided Profits 12,542.08 Earnings h e 1 d in trust for distribu- | tion to shareholders at maturity of stock. TOTAL $94,709.08 State of North Carolina, County of McDowell, ss: ' F. M. Bradley, Secretary-Treasur- er of the above named Association, personally appeared before me this j day, and being duly sworn, says that' the foregoing report is true to the best of his knowledge and belief. F. M. BRADLEY. | Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 21 day of January, 1929. H. R. EARLY, Notary Public.: Crowded Conditions in Many Poultry Houses A recent survey of a number of farms shows crowded conditions in the poultry houses. Many of these houses are almost wholly lacking in ventila tion. At night when one of these buildings is crowded with chickens the air is not fit to breathe. A human being will not remain long in such a place. If he did^ remain throughout the nijrht he would be “all in” by morning. And this is just the trouble with a lot of chickens now. The chickens are badly crowded at night in a poorly-ventilated house. They are forced to breathe bad air. They become too warm. They are “all in” in the morning, and emerging into the cool outside air is a sudden change that many of them cannot withstand. These crowded conditions at night and sudden changes from warm to cool air are responsible for many of our poultry ills. Giving the chickens medi cine will not do any permanent good so long as the cause of the trouble re mains unchanged. Either additional room should be provided or the size of the flock reduced. Wealtk From “Scrap’’ By the system of reclamation of the scrap pile now being generally fol lowed by nearly all the railroad com panies, bright new tin buckets, cups and other articles are being manufac tured from old metal roofing, empty powder and carbide containers anl other junk salvaged. Old broom han dies are made into staffs for signal flags, old canvas is transformed into curtains for the locomotive cabs and coaches, steam-pipe coverings and aprons. Thrift practices such at these save the carriers hundreds of thou* sands of dollars annually. Personal Work Years ago C. H. Spurgeon, advocat ing personal work, said: “If you had one hundred empty bot tles before you, and threw a pail of water over them, some would get a little in them, but most would fall outside. If you wish to fill the hot ties, tlie best way is to take each bot tle separately and put a vessel full of water to the bottle’s mouth.” That is successful personal work. Leading the New Trend . o. in power and getaway ^ ... in style, lux ury and beauty COUPES . . .$1195 to $1875 SEDANS . . . $1220 to $2145 SPORT CARS . $1225 to $1550 These prices f. o. b. Buick Factory. Con venient terms can be arranged on the liberal G. M. A. C. Time Payment Plan. The New -BUICK- Marion Buick Co. Phone 88 Logan St. Marion, N. C. contained in a certain Deed of Trust j County, N. C., in Map Book 1, page from W. J. Bowman and wife, M. O. 25, to which reference is hereby Bowman, to J. E. Neal, Secretary & made for a more complete descrip- Treasurer of the McDowell Building: tion. & Loan Association, said Deed of i Trust bearing date of May 23, 1924, i and being recorded in the office of j the Register of Deeds of McDowell I County in Book 20, page 295 of i Mortgages and Deeds of Trusts, it i having been given to secure an in- This the 18th day of Jan., 1929. J. E. NEAL, Trustee. NOTICE All persons are hereby notified ^ that the undersigned has been ap- debtedness therein named and de-1 pointed, and has qualified as, admin- , fault having been made in the pay-1 istratrix of -the estate of Ella P. i ment of same, the undersigned will j Gibbs, deceased. Any and all persons sell to the highest bidder for cash at who may have any claim against said NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE. North Carolina, McDowell County. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of the power of sale the Courthouse door in Marion, North Carolina, on the 18th day of February, 1929, between the hours of 12:00 a. m. and 2:00 p. m., the following described property, towit: ery of the same estate are hereby notified to present the same to the undersigned within one year from this date, or this not ice will be plead in bar of the recov- Being Lot No. 11 of the Jos. Kirk- man sub-division, as per map of the said sub-division in the office of the Register of Deeds for McDowell This 21st day of January, 1929. HANNIE GIBBS, Administratrix of Ella P. Gibbs, Deceased. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE. | North Carolina, * | McDowell County. j the R^^ster'^nf I Notice is hereby given that'lHIdrr! County in Book 32 at i power of sale i MorteLes and DppH-T a certain Deed of Trust e*X'of*’Ve"m''’an?*dcf '’’'’easorer of the Mrfjowelf^BunSing Sen^dein th^ ‘ Loan Association, said Deed o? S7to‘Ihe h*s1&f ard"?e*iott'dl®t“e'™fflce February, 1929, at 12 00 o^lock ^Peds of Trust, it “--ibed tropl'SlSe^rthS. ‘nUedl'^U" ! fault having been made in the pay- 1 J J .? J . "6i*^g that tract of ment of the same, the undersigned land described m a deed from W. E.' will sell to the highest bidder for Poovey and J. A. Rader and | cash at the Courthouse door in Ma- wife, dat^ 1924, recorded I rion. North Carolina, on the 18th in Deed Book 64 page 156, of Me- day of February, 1929, at 12:00 Dowell County Deed Records, to i o’clock noon, the following describ- which deed reference is hereby made I ed property, to-wit; for specific descnption. | ^ ^ Second Tract: Being that tract of sub-division of the J. L. Morgan. i?"d described in deed from M. E. I Pleasant Garden farm fronting on I Greene and wife to J. A. Rader and Highway No. 10, 150 feet, and! wife, dated October 3, 1922, record-' fronting on Peach Tree street 280! Deed Book 64, page 145, of'feet. For more complete descrip-l i County Deed Records, to | tion reference is hereby made to ^ which reference is hereby made for; map which is duly recorded in the complete description. | office of the Register of Deeds of; This the 18th day of Jan., 1929. j McDowell County, N. C., in Map, J. E. NEAL, Trustee 5°°,^ 1, page 53. See deed from J.! I F. Johnson and Wife to E. S. Smith I "■ ~ ~ {dated June 30, 1927, recorded in Have you renewed your subscrip iBook 73, page 110 of McDowell tion? Notices have been sent out' Deed Records for specific •nd we ho^ those receiving ther. | day of Jan., 1929. •lU re.pond promptly. , ^ ^ Crooked Breast Bones Found in Chickens Crooked breast bones may be caused by inbreeding and general debility, or may come from improper food and feeding, or poor management of some kind, writes Michael K. Boyer Jn the Farm and Ranch. There is oq ques tion about heredity being the fault, at least to a certain extent That being the fact, it should be bred out, which miglit be done by the selection of only straight brea^t-bone fowls for the I breeding pen. Lack of bone-making material in the feed of growing stock,- which is the prime cause of leg weakness, has also the effect of producing crooked breast bones in young chiAens. There used to be a theory, which by many still is believed, that very early roosting of growing birds causes the soft breast bones to bend. This might be no in some instances, but does not h(»ld good with the general run of stock. Buying Pullets Buying pullets by weight may be more satisfactory than buying entirely by age. April hatched pullets on in sufficient rations may be of Tess value than May hatched pullets which have been properly fed and brooded. A May 1 pullet Is much better than a May 30 pullet if the conditions have been equal. The later hatched chick has missed four fine weeks for the de velopment of poultry meat, but the name of the month is not fully de scriptive of quality. Culling Fann Flock There are two essentials in culling farm poultry. First, to get rid of hens that are not laying, and second, to distinguish lietween' the hens that have been good producers and those that have not laid enough to pay for their feed. Culling should start in late May or June and continue throughout the year at regular inter vals. Eliminatiug the hens us ihe.v become unprofitable saves feed and iatwr and Improves the conditions for those that are laying. THE RECORD - B R E A K I W C NEW N A S H O O' Special Six ^^400^^ Sedan $1466 Delivered fully equipped w ^i^orePmiv^i^MotvEtoiumiieulJHoioting in 19^0 the Mew Mash TiHw loj^irioiv Motor HERE’S one sure way to make your motoring more delightful in 1929 —drive a Nash "400”, the car with the Twin-Ignition Motor! More power... greater, smoother speed ... remarkable economy of operation— these are new advantages now offered by Nash Twin-Ignition performance. In the development of this‘remarkable new motor, Nash has combined three great principles of motor design—twin- ignition^ high compressiont And valv€-in~ bead, 9 Sedans from $1060 to $3510, $1000 to In the air, this type of motor is winning the honors. A twin-ignition, high com- pression, valve-in-head motor carried Lindbergh to Paris, Byrd over the Pole, Goebel to Hawaii. Now, for the first time, Nash makes this more efficient, more economical motor design available to every motorist. Ask your nearest Nash dealer to give you a Nash "400” to drive. Compare what we say about ,the Twin-Ignition motor, with what the Twin-Ignition motor says to you! 8 Coupes, Cabriolets, Victorias from $2120, Delivered ^^^NA5H"400 > I^a^a the Woria in Jffotor Car Waiue IMPORTANT FEATURES —JTO Twio-Ignidoii motor 12 Aircraft-cype spark plugs High compression Houdailie and Lovejoy shock abso'rbers itxciustpe Nash motimtimg) Saloa Bodies Aluminum alloy pistons (.Invar Struts) New double drop frame Torsional vibratioa damper World’s easiest steering 7-bearing crankshaft crank pirns) OTMER C^Mt MM^S ^1.1. Longer wheelbases Bijur centralized chassis lubricatioa Electric clocks Exterior metalware chrome plated over nickel ihort turning radius One-piece Salon fenders Clear vision front pillar posts Nash Special Design front and rear bumpers FINLEY MOTOR COMPANY Marion, N. C. (9377)
Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.)
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Jan. 31, 1929, edition 1
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