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THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1935 THE FRANKLIN PRESS and THE HIGHLANDS MACON IAN PAGE FIVE LEGAL ADVERTISING NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE OF LAND North Carolina, Macon County, In the Superior Court. The Federal Land Bank of Colum bia, Plaintiff vs Fannie McCoy, Eula Foster, J. J. Foster, Lyle McCoy, Elsie McCoy, Eva Lee, R. 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 County by the Clerk, I will, on 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 est bidder therefor the following described lands, situated in said County and State, in Burningtown Township, 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 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 11th day of February, 1935. R. S. JONES, Commissioner. F21-4tc J&J Mchl4 LEGAL ADVERTISING 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. Tones, 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. Mch7-4tc-HRC-Mch28 TODAYS FRANK PArTTsSts lT SrOCKBRID6EjyfV NOTICE North Carolina, Macon County. Town of Franklin. Notice is hereby given that an election has been called by the Board of Aldermen of the Town Vr Franklin for the election of Mayor and six Aldermen, said elec-1 tion to be held the first Tuesday! after the first Monday in May,1 1935, said date being on May 7, 1935 ; that Sam J. Murray has been appointed Registrar and A. L. ; Leach and George A. Mashburn have been appointed Judges for said election; That the registration books will be open for the registration of i voters in the Town office at 9 o'clock A. M. on April 6, 1935,, and shall remain open until sunset on April 27, 1935; that challenge day will be on April 27, 1935. All candidates shall file their in tention of running with the Town ClerV thirty days before the said election. GEO. DEAN, Clerk of Town Board. Mchl4 ltc NOTICE North Carolina, Macon Couiroty, In the Superior Court Eula Fouts vs Blanton Fouts The non-resident defendant, Blan ton Fouts, will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Macon County, North Carolina; that the purpose of said action is to have the bonds of matrimony now existing between the plain tiff and the defendant dissolved on the ground of two years separa tion ; that the summons in said action is returnable on the 11th day of April, 1935, and said de fendant will further take notice that he is required to appear on i the 11th day of April, 1935, be fore the undersigned Clerk Su perior Court and answer or demur to the complaint filed in this ac tion, or the relief demanded in said complaint will be granted. This 11th dav of March, 1935. HARLEY R. CABE. Clerk Superior Court, Macon County, N. C. M14-4tcGP-A4 NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the pow er of sale contained in a deed of trust from L. J. Moody and wife, Dessie Moody, to the undersigned Trustee, dated the 19th day of July, 1930, and recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Macon County, North Carolina, in Book No. 31, of Mortgags and Deeds of Trust, page 332, and default hav ing been made 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 debt, principal, interest and cost, the following described tract or parcel of land, to-wit: BEGINNING on a water oak in the East bank of the Tennessee River, H. A. Penland's corner and runs N 89 E 51 2 poles to a pine; then N 59 E 24 poles to a Spanish oak ; then S 744 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 2 E 78 poles to a stake on the South side of 'Russell Spring branch; then down said branch with the meanders 88 poles to plum bush ; then S 87 W 64 poles to a stake; then S 75 E 16 poles and 7 links to the head of 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 dav 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 l indebted to said estate will please) make immediate settlement. This 12th day of Feb., 1935. SAM J. MURRAY, Administrator F14 6tc Mch21 EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as executor of Lucy J. Cobb, 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 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. RTCHARD J. COBB, Executor F7-6tp-M14 WAR ....... our teold tu : i j : I xncic is a wuiiu war guiug on that we see nothing much about in the newspapers. It is a war for the possession of gold. Every im portant industrial nation in the world is in this war, the ones that have plenty of gold trying to keep what' they have, and those which are short of gold trying to. get it away from those which have it. It affects almost everybody in the world, and is the great obstacle in the way of the revival of world trade. England began it, first by selling silver from its Indian stocks, then by going off the gold standard in 1931 and offering higher prices for gold than the world had ever heard of. Much, if not most, of the world-wide depression, including our share of it, is due to England's efforts to get more gold. We countered by bidding up gold from about $20 an ounce to $35, and so have stopped the British drain on our gold stocks. France and the group of nations associated with her in the "gold bloc" have so far stood pat. They have more gold than they need, and England's lat est move is to try to force gold out of those countries by depreciating the pound sterling to the lowest point yet reached. Many of my friends who under stand such things say that the only hope of world price recovery is in breaking the French-Netherlands-Swiss gold corner and compelling those countries, also, to devaluate their currencies. MONEY . . . international trade The only measure of value in in ternational trade is metal gold or silver. All money must be, in the long run, based on one or the oth er or both of those metals. The only way a nation that is short of gold can get more gold is to sell its goods in international trade. By offering a higher price for gold than other nations that is, by re ducing the value of its own cur nency one nation can gain an ad vantage over others. A dollar is still a dollar inside the United States, and a pound is still a pound in England.. But the foreigner wanting to buy our goods can buy more dollars with his own gold than he could a year or so ago, and he pays us, in the long run, in dollars. We have been doing pretty well lately, since we nationalized gold and devalued the dollar. Our ex port trade has increased and we are adding to our national stock of gold many millions of dollars a week. Now we have more than 82 billion dollars of gold, and less than that amount of currency and bank-notes outstanding against it. England is not in quite such a good position. She has only about half as much "gold as she has cur rency in circulation. That is why she is underbidding all the rest of the world in the markets of the world, for her export commodities overbidding them all for gold. France has even more gold in proportion to currency than we have. France still values the franc at the figure to which it was re duced in 1925. Germany, on the contrary, has 45 times as much currency issued as it has gold coverage. My guess is that Jhe Franch gold corner will be broken and then we will have another in ternational monetary conference which France will not break up, as it did the last?- one. DISCIPLINE .... an asset I hear from several sources that the young men who have had six months or a year in the CCC camps are being given preference by em ployers who have jobs to fill. The reason is that these boys are, first, necessarily healthy and strong, but principally because they have learn ed what discipline means. Nobody is very much good in any sort of a job until he or she has learned how to take orders and follow instructions. Nobody, for that matter, is fit to give or ders unless he or she has first learned how to take them. The best boss to work for is one who has grown up in the business and kaows how to do everything he calls on his help to do. The worst worker on any job is the one who thinks he knows better than the boss how to run the shop. CHARACTER . . . a tribute How soon the world forgets the man who never did anything but make money; and how long it re members the one whose character lifted him above his fellow-men. Think of the "great" men of his tory. Nine out of ten of them live in memory because of their service to others. That is the high est test of character, whether a man puts his own selfish interests first or those of the social order in which he finds himself. Those are some of my reflections after reading the dispatches report ing that Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes was dying on the eve of his 94th birthday. Few men of our time have so won the esteem and respect of the whole nation. And that is because few men have given themselves so fully and so ably to the service of the nation. "I HAVEN'T HAD A GOLD IN FIVE YEARS" "in the old days I used to dreaa the coming of Winter. I was always flghtinc colds feeling about half alive trying to work with my body aching and every nam on edge. 'Then a friend told me about McCoys Cod Liver Oil Tablets with their marvelous vitamins A and D. I started to take them 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're wonderful!" Get the genuine McCoy's Cod Liver on Tablets from your druggist today. Don't waste money on imitations, ask for McCoy's. DON'T NEGLECT YOUR KIDNEYS! IF your kidneys are not working right and you suffer backache, dizziness, burning, scanty or too frequent urination, swollen feet and ankles; feel lame, stiff, "all tired out" . . . use Doan's Pills. Thousands rely upon Doan's. They are praised the country over. Get Doan's Piils today. For sale by all druggists. DOAN'S PILLS Dixie Limited, 24's (guaranteed) 98c-48's $1.91 j7L-iV-rUIV Kitchen Queen, 24's (and in class with White Lily) $1.15 We have a good flour 24's at 89c COFFEE We Srind ) pk 6 O'clock . 19c lb. Oatmeal (plate free) 29c Oatmeal 20-oz 10c Pimientos, 10c size 5c Pepper Sauce, 10c size 5c Pickles, 10c size 5c Tomato Soup 5c Tomatoes 6c, large can 9c Tomato Juice 5c Vegetable Soup, Van Camp's 6c large. . 9c Extra large. Early June Peas. 15c kind 10c Sugar Corn .10c Hominy . . . .5c large can. .9c Pork & Beans, 2 lee cans 15c Lorn Starch tor Cakes and Puddings, 10c size 6c .13c Mustard 9c Sausage, Armour's 2-lb. 19c Tripe, 2-lb. can 18c Macaroni, 10c size 5c Raisins, 6-oz 5c 15-oz 9c Qt. Jar Pure Apple-Butter 24c Karo Syrup 35c Kara Syrup, White (just like honey) 39c Turnip Greens, Stokely's 10c Spinach, Fancy 10c Tetley's Tea, 10c size 5c Salts & Sulphur, lb. boxes 10c Borax, Lb. Boxes 13c Baking Powders. Health Chib. 32-nr " Household Ammonia, 10c size 5e T; ir. i i .. i - ""J ..'U TT UI.U 1UI. mill . Octagon Soap, 12 bars.... 25c Scouring Powders (takes the llTsfZ?. BEST! i.r,.5C ) 3 ' 25c Bottles 15c Bruton's Snuff, 20c size. . .18c Black Draught' 20c All kinds Flavoring 15c size 10c Garden, and all kinds field seeds carried, at prices that is RIGHT. Also will have FISH-BRAND fertilizer-the kind that makes STUFF grow. We buycorn, cain seed, clay peas, soy beans, side meat, lard, eggs, onions, dried fruit, etc. YOUR TRADE APPRECIATED l ...,y:v'v..v,v n !5 . Successful oid in PREVENTING Colds At the first nasal irritation or sniffle, apply Vicks Va-tro-nol just a few drops. Used in time, it helps to avoid many colds entirely. (Two sizes: 300, 500.) VICKS VA-TRO-NO i Over Forty-three Thousand minutes a month. You can use your TELEPHONE Any of them WESTERN CAROLINA TELEPHONE CO. TVavel anywhere ..any day on the SOUTHERNS W A fare far every purse. . . fsbmiu ONE WAY and ROUND TRIP COACH TICKETS for Each Mile Traveled NV4 ROUND TRIP TICKETS Return Limit 15 Day. for Each Mile Traveled ROUND TRIP TICKETS Return Limit 6 Months gB& for Each Mile Traveled mm 0NE WA1 TICKETS TOar 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 AGT. Southern Railway System
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 14, 1935, edition 1
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