THURSDAY. MARCH 7, 1935
THE FRANKLIN PRESS and THE HIGHLANDS MACON IAN
PAGE FIVE
LEGAL ADVERTISING
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE
SALE OF LAND
North Carolina,
Macon County, j
In the Superior Court.
The Federal Land Bank of Colum
bia, Plaintiff
vs
Fstnnie McCoy, Eula Foster, J. J.
Foster, Lyle McCoy, Elsie McCoy,
Eva Lee, lb Wood Lee, Nolan Mc
Coy, Paul McCoy, Nelle R. Mc
Coy, Jack Berry and Gertrude
Berry, Defendants.
Pursuant to a judgment entered
in the above entitled civil action
on the 11th day of February, 1935,
in the Superior Court of said
(jountv ttv the Clerk. 1 will, om
the 18th day of March, 1935, at
12;00 o'clock noon at the County
Court House door in said County, .
Sell at public auction to the high- j
est bidder therefor the following !
described lands, situated in said
County and State, in Burningtown
Tkywnship, comprising 60 acres,
more or less, and bounded and
described as follows:
All that certain piece, parcel or
tract of land containing 60 acres,
more or less, situate, lying and
being on the Burningtown Creek,
about 10 miles Northwest from
the Town of Franklin, and in
Burningtown Township, County of
Macon, State of North Carolina,
having such shape, metes, courses
and distances as will more fully
appear by reference ' to a plat
thereof made by John H. Dalton,
County -Surveyor, on . the 9th day
of May, 1918, and bing bounded
on the North by the lands of A.
B. Welch ; on the East by Burn
ingtown Creek; on the South by
Burningtown Creek and the lands
of I. N. Long, and on the West
by the lands of I. N. Long and A
B. Welch. This being the same
lands conveyed to said D. A Mc
Coy by Angeline McCoy by deed
J dated the 25th day of September
1917, and recorded in the office
of the Register of Deeds for Ma
con County, in Book of Deeds
. "B-4," at page 219.
The terms of sale are as follows:
Cash.
All bids will be received subject
to rejection or confirmation by
the Clerk of said Superior Court
and no bid will be accepted or re
ported unless its makers shall de
posit with said Clerk at the close
of the bidding the sum of Fifty
($50.00) Dollars, as a forfeit and
guaranty of compliance with his
bid, the said to be credited on his
bid when accepted.
Notice is now given that said
lands will be resold at the same
place and upon the same terms at
2 o'clock P. M. of the same day
unless said deposit is sooner made
Every deposit not forfeited or
accepted will be promptly returned
to the maker
This the llth day of February,
1935.
R. S. JONES, Commissioner.
F21 4tc J&J Mchl4
NOTICE OF SALE
North Carolina,
Macon County.
WHEREAS, power of sale was
vested in the undersigned Trustee
by virtue of a deed of trust made,
executed and delivered by R. L.
Porter and wife, Johnsie Porter, to
the undersigned trustee on the 12th
day of December, 1930, said deed
of trust being registered in the
nffire of Register of Deeds for
Macon County in record of Mort
gages and Deeds of Trust No. 32,
page 210, to secure certain indebt
edness in said deed of trust set
forth; and whereas, default has
been made in the payment of said
indebtedness and the owners of the
same have made demand upon the
undersigned trustee to execute the
power of sale:
I will, therefore, on Friday, the
8th day of. March, 1935, at 12
o'clock noon at the Court House
door in Franklin, Macon County,
North Carolina, sell at public auc
tion to the highest bidder for cash
the following described property:
On Main. Street ft the Town of
Franklin, beginningon the South
east corner of E. H. Frank's lot,
runs N '66 E 5 poles to a stake;
then N 24 W 32 poles to a stake
at the branch, which runs from
near the old Baptist Church; then
S66 W 5 poles to the Northeast
corner of the said Frank's lot; then
S 24 E to the Beginning.
This the 7th day of February,
1925.
GEORGE B. PATTON, Trustee
F14 4tc BofF M7
LEGAL ADVERTISING
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of the pow
er ot sale contained in a deed of
tiust irom L. J. Moody and wife,
Uessie Moody, to the undersigned
Trustee, dated the 19th day of July,
iVJU, and recorded in the Office of
the Register of Deeds for Macon
County, North Carolina, in Book
io. 31, of Mortgags and Deeds of
Trust, page 332, and default hav
ing been' mad-e in the payment of
the amount secured by said deed
of trust and demand having been
made upon the undersigned Trus
teeto exercise the power of sale
contained therein:
I will, therefore, on Friday,
March 29, 1935, at 12 o'clock, noon',
at ' the court house door in the
Town of Franklin, Macon County,
North Carolina, sell to the highest
bidder for cash to satisfy said
A(,ht hrinrinal interest and cost.
the ' foUowing described tract or
parcel of land, to-wit:
BEGINNING on a water oak in
the East bank of the Tennessee
River, H. A. P.anland's corner and
runs N 89 E 5154 poles to a
pine; then N 59 E 24 poles to
a Spanish oak ; then S 74 E 54
poles to a white oak; then N 30
E 68 poles to a white oak; then S
85 E 62 poles to a hickory, now
down; then N 67 E 49 poles to a
small dead post oak at an Indian
grave; then N 12 poles to a post
oak; then N 89 W 62 poles to a
stake; then N 24 E 78 poles to a
stake on the South side of Russell
Spring branch; then down said
branch with the meanders 88 poles
to nlum bush: then S 87 W 64
- i '
poles to a stake; then S 75 E 16
poles and 7 links to the head of
a ditch; then S 88 W 68 poles to
a cherry on the bank of the river;
then up the river with its meanders
to the beginning, containing 151
acres, more or less, and being the
same tract of land deeded by Mel
Penland and wife ' to George A.
Jones, F. S. Johnston and Wilford
Downs.
This sale is made subject to a
deed of trust given to the Federal
Land Bank of Columbia.
This the 26th day of February,
1935.
R. S. JONES, Trustee.
Mch7-tc HRC-Mch28
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as executrix of
Addie Stiles, deceased, late of Ma
con County, N. C, this is to notify
all persons having claims against
the estate of said deceased to ex
hibit them to the undersigned on
or before the 7th day of March,
1936, or this notice will be plead
in bar of their recovery. All per
sons indebted to said estate will
please make immediate settlement.
This th 7th day of March, 1935.
MRS. A. R. HIGDON, Executrix.
Mch 7 6t A 11
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE
Having qualified as administrator
of Jack Mallonee, deceased, late of
Macon County, N. C, this is to
notify all persons having claims
against the estate of said deceased
to exhibit them to the undersigned
on or before the 12th day of Feb.,
1936, or this notice will be plead in
bar of their recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate will please
make immediate settlement. This
12th dav of Feb., 1935.
SAM J. MURRAY, Administrator
F14 6tc Mch21
EXECUTOR'S NOTICE
Having qualified as executor
Lucy J. Cobb, deceased, late
Manrvn Countv. N. C. this is
notify all persons having claims
against the estate of said deceased
to exhibit them to the undersigned
on or before the 5th day of Feb.
1936, or this notice will be plead in
bar of their recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate will please
make immediate settlement. This
5th dav of Feb., 1935.
RICHARD J. COBB, Executor
F7-6tp M14
ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as administratrix
of W. B. Brown, deceased, late of
Macon county, N. C, this is to no
tify all persons having claims
against the estate of said deceased
to exhibit them to the undersigned
on or before the 28th day of Jan.,
1936, or tfiis notice will be pleaJ
in bar of their recovery. All per
sons indebted to said estate will
please make immediate settlement.
This 28th day of Jan., 1935.
MARY BROWN, Administratrix.
J31 6tc Mch7
TODAY and
la
aaaagaaJ
FRANK PARKER
ST0CKBRID6E
AGE . r; in business
I know a New York business
man who says he is all through
with hiring young men and young
Women for jobs that call for intel
ligence, industry and attentiveness.
He replaced his girl switchboard
operator the other day with a man
of fifty, and says that for the first
time people who call up from the
outside get courteous attention and
his outgoing calls are handled
promptly and efficiently.
He has a woman of forty-odd, a
widow with several children, as
head of his stenographic staff. She
doesn't waste his time and money
by using the office telephone ' to
make dates with boy-friends, nor
does she rebel against overtime
work in emergencies. Moreover,
she takes pains to understand what
her job is all about.
About the only reason for hiring
young folks is that they come
cheap. It takes a long time for
most of them to learn what work
really means, my friend says, and
to learn how to work efficiently.
Many never do.
I think he is more than half
right.
SOFT and selfish
I was struck by a phrase uttered
a little while ago by the Rev.
Ernest M. Stires, Episcopal Bishop
of Long Island. "Our great prob
lem," he said, "is the number of
intelligent people who are morally
unemployed."
He was talking about the great
mass of "good" people who have
grown so soff that they are un
willing to do anything that involves
sacrifice or inconvenience, even
though they might be of Service to
individuals or to the social order.
I am not quite in agreement with
Dr. Stires' suggestion that the en
thusiasm and self-sacrifice of great
masses of people for the causes of
Sovietism, Naziism and Fascism in
dicates a better moral tone than
we have in America. I think most
of the popular enthusiasm for those
causes is the result of force and
terrorism, and I am not at all con
vinced that the real enthusiasts,
the leaders, are making any per
sonal sacrifices.
I am fully in accord, however,
with the idea that we have been
bringing up a generation composed
largely of those who put self- j
gratification first in its code and
are too soft and lazy to give se
rious attention to anything else.
GLAMOR of the city
Twenty-two college girls from
Missouri came to New York on a
sightseeing trip a week or two
ago. They were tremendously dis
appointed in the city as a show
place. Skyscrapers didn't interest
them; they expected to see soiir
thing of the glamor of metropoli
tan life as pictured in the movies.
All they saw was a lot of un
interesting, rather narrow streets,
with people who dressed and look
ed about like those back home.
As a "show" city New York
doesn't betrin to compare with
Chicago; where every natural beau- j
ty has been enhanced by the won- j
derful system of parks and connect-1
uig jiuuitvaiua ami iik wait i iiuiu
has been made into the most valu
able aesthetic asset the city has.
The glamor of New York is for
the initiated alone. All that a
stranger can get of it is what he
can pay for. He can buy theater
seats or be neatly trimmed in night
clubs, but the real life of
York is not on public view.
New
Someone said not long ago that
while New York is the largest city
in America, Chicago is the largest
American city. Having lived a good
many years in each, I think that
is a fair comment.
WIND in Buffalo
One of my earliest chjldhood
memories is of my father saying
to me: "When you see a man who
grabs hold of his hat before he
turns any street corner, you can
be sure he comes from Buffalo." I
have known Buffalo, more or less,
for more than sixty years. I lived
there for ten continuous years, from
1891 to 1901. I learned there to
scoff at the notion that Chicago
was entitled to be called the "Win-
am mw x mrm
dy City." We used to be proud of
our wind in Buffalo.
Now corner along the U. S.
Weather Bureau and says that Buf
falo last year was first among cities
in the number of days on which
the wind blew faster than 32 miles
an hour; it had 97 such days.
Chicago was 'way down toward the
bottom of the list, with only six
days of high winds.
But, after living for several
years in Chicago, also, I want to
remark that when the wind blows
off Lake Michigan you know it!
Also, that the hottest winds I ever
encountered are those that come to
Chicago from the West, across a
thousand miles of sunbaked prairie.
FAKES . . . in the news
The other day a news story came
in from India telling of the dis
covery of the remains of a tribe
of pigmy people only 15 inches tall,
together with the bones of a tiny
horse of proportionate dimensions.
A few days later a doctor reported
to a medical convention in New
Orleans that an African native wo-
man
had recently given birth to
six children at one time, going
Mrs. Dionne one better.
It turns out that the pigmy story
was invented by a Hindu who held
the current superstition among his
people that one can avert bad luck
by starting a rumor that everybody
will believe, and that the same
story about the African sextuplets
was printed in 1903 and disproved
soon thereafter.
CATTLE RANCH ROUTINE
The great events of the ranch
man's year are the round-up, when
stock is taken, the cattle are brand
ed, and such full-grown cattle gath
ered into a herd as are suitable for
market ; and the departure of the
herds for market or port. In the
South there is but one annual
round-up, on the ranges of Wyom
ing, the Dakotas, Colorado and
Montana there ane two round-ups
in the year one early in spring, to
brand the calves and ascertain the
losses during winter, the other in
autumn, when the steers over three
years old are separated from the
main herd and sent for sale.
Easy Pleasant Way
To Lose Fat
How would you like to lose 15
pounds of fat in a month and at
the same time increase your energy
and improve your health?
How would you like to lose your
double chin and your too promi
nent abdomen and at the same
time make your skin so clean and
clear that it will compel admira
tion ?
Get on the scales today and see
how much you weigh then get an
85 cent bottle of Kruschen Salts
which will last you four weeks.
Take one half teaspoonful in a
glass of hot water every morning
and when you have finished the
contents of this first bottle weigh
yourself again.
After that you'll want to walk
around and say to your friends,
"A quarter pound jar of Kruschen
Salts is worth one hundred dollars
of any fat person's money."
Leading druggists America over
sell Kruschen Salts. (Adv.)
TVavel anywhere.. any day 41a
SOUTHERNS
Afarejbr every purse. . . Mm miib
ONE WAY and ROUND TRIP COACH TICKETS
for Each Mile Traveled
ROUND TRIP TICKETS Return Limit 15 Dayg
mffi for Each Mile Traveled
ROUND TRIP TICKETS Return Limit 6 Month
jrg&p for Each Mile Traveled
0NE WA1 T,CKETS
TOm"f for Each Mile Traveled
'Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment of
proper charges for space occupied. No surcharge.
Economize by leaving your Automobile at home and
using the Southern
Excellent Dining Car Service
Be Comfortable in the Safety of Train Travel
R. H. DEBUTTS, ASST. GEN. PASSENGER ACT.
Southern Railway System
"I HAVEN'T HAD
A GOLD IN
FIVE YEARS"
"In the old days I used to dreaa Om
coming of Winter. I was always fighting
colds feeling about half alive trying to
work with my body aching and every nam
on edge.
"Then a friend told me about McCoy's
Cod Liver Oil Tablets with their marvelous
vitamins A and D. I started to take than
five years ago and I haven't had a cold
since that time.
"McCoy's tablets put new life in folks;
build up resistance so anyone can laugh at
cold germs. They make weak, skinny people
strong, steady-nerved and vigorous. They'
wondprfull"
Get the genuine McCoy's Cod Liver OO
Tablets from your druggist today. Dent
waste money on imitations. Ask for McCoy's.
New Kidneys
If you could trade your neglected, tireu and
lazy Kidneys for new ones, you would auto
matically sret rid of Night Rising. Nervousness.
Dizziness, Rheumatism, Burning, Itching and
Acidity. Tocorrectfunctionalkidneydisordera.
try the guaranteed Doctor's special prescrip
tion called CYSTEX (Siss-tex). Must fix yos
up in 8 days or money back, a! ill B ujgUic
At 3 o'clock in the afternoon,
At 3 o'clock in the night,
It's all the same to your
TELEPHONE
WESTERN CAROLINA
TELEPHONE CO.
HUSKY THR
Overtaxed by
speaking, sing
ing, smoking
If RITE for a Free cepy
of Wood's Catalog offering
Now Varieties, Old Favorites,
Planting Table, etc. T. W.
Wood & Son. Richmond, Vs.
ANDREWS, N. C.
Bristol's Market
BRYSON CITY, N. C.
R. G. Coffey & Co.
FLATS, N. C.
M. J. May
HIGHLANDS, N. C.
F. A Edwards
W. S. Davis
G. W. Marett
SYLVA, N. C.
R. R. Fisher
OATS
SslkllSSSSSSS
i