THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1S3S
THE FRANKLIN PRESS and THE HIGHLANDS. , MACONIAN
PAGE FIVE
NOTICE OF SALE
North Carolina,
Macwn County
WHEREAS, power of sale was
vested in the undersigned Trustee
by Deed of trust from S. T. Phil
lips and wife Ida Phillips to Har
ley , R. Cabe, Trustee, dated 22nd
day of January, 193, 'and register
ed in the Office of Register of
Deeds for Macon County in Book
No. 31, of Mortgages and Deeds
of Trusts, page 003 to secure the
payment Yr certain5 indebtedness as
in said deed of trust set forth; and
whereas, default has been made in
the payment of the indebtedness in
said deed of trust set forth, and
the holder of the same having re
quested the undersigned
1 will, therefore, by virtue of the
power of sale- by deed' of trust in
me vested, on 25th day of April,
1935, Thursday, between the legal
hours of sale, sell at the Court
House door in : Franklin, North
Carolina, at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash, the follow
ing described property :
Being' a deed made by S. H.
Phillips and wife to Samuel Phil
lips, said deed dated the 22nd day
of June 1891, and recorded in the
Register of Deeds office for Ma
con County in Book EE of Deeds
on page 342, with the exception of
all the tract of land lying North
of Highway No. 28 for a more
definite description reference is
hereby had.
This the ?5th day of March, 1935.
HARLEY R. CABE, Trustee.
Mch 28 4tp A 18
TODAY and
NOTICE OF SALE
North Carolina,
Macon County.
WHEREAS, power of sale was
vested in the undersigned Trustee
by deed of trust executed by L. F.
McCall and wife, Roxie McCaU,
dated November 21, 1929 and reg
istered in the office of the Regis
ter of Deeds for Macon County in
Record of Mortgages and Deeds of
Trust No. 31, page 260; and de
fault having been made in the pay
ment of the indebtedness secured
thereby;
I will, therefore, by virtue of the
power of sale in said deed of trust
in me vested,' on Wednesday, the
10th day" of April, 1935, at 12:00
noon seU at the Court House door
at Franklin, N. C, at public auc
tion to the highest bidder for cash
the following described property:
A tract or parcel of land situate
in Sugarfork Township, Macon
County, State of North Carolina,
and being all the land described in
a deed from E. G. Houston and
wife, to L. F. McCall, dated Aug
ust 16, 1922 and recorded in the
office of the Register of Deeds for
Marnn Countv in Book H-4 of
MOTORS now fuel.
What may turn out to be the
most significant news of recent
years is the announcement from
Germany that means have been
developed for driving motor cars
with illuminating gas and wood.
One type of truck now widely
used, it is reported, uses gas dis
tilled from wood. It . carries wood
in a rear compartment, and is said
to cost 30 per cent less to , operate
than if driven by gasoline. Other
cars have been quickly and cheaply
adapted to use illuminating gas in
stead of gasoline, a tank of gas
being carried in place of the gaso
line, tank. Also there have been
developed new types of steam-propelled
automobiles, using a variety
of fuels, while a new stationary
motor for farm use can .be. operated
oh coal dust, vegetable dust, dried
leaves or pulverized corncobs.
There never has been any ques;
tion in my mind that the problem
of the future supply of petroleum
was no real problem at all. The
time will come, whenever it is eco
nomical to . do so, when we will
again get our power from vegetable
products.
I hear from other sources that
aviators have not abandoned the
idea of steam engines instead of
internal combusion motors for stra
tosphere flights.
I may not live to see it, but some
day, I believe, men will fly around
the world between sun and sun,
with steam-engines propelling their
planes at height of ten miles.
CODDLING . . ... all wrong
One of the troubles with modern
youth, as I have often remarked
before, is that they have too much
done for them and are not thrown
on their own resources early
enough or emphatically enough.
They grow up expecting society to
provide a soft cradle fof them to
ease their way through life.
That is why I applaud the re-
LEGAL ADVERTISING
TREASURY DEPARTMENT,
Procurement Division, Public Works
Branch, Washington, D. C, Mar. 20,
1935. Sealed bids in duplicate will
be publicly opened in this office at
1 p. m., Apr. 10, 1935, for furnish
ing all labor and materials and per
forming all work for installing one
freight elevator in the U. S. P. O.
at Franklin, N. C. Attention is di
rected to the special requirements
Vslsllairv Ar Cot fVrftl Ifl t Vl f
J9 m fc - a yJl UlUUlligfl VIA., avi ivi ui
Deeds, page to wnicn oeeu , specification. The prevaitmg rate
1 1 I K l n n,xT ' r I
C I 1
so recorded reierence is nereuy
made for a more complete and def
inite description of said lands. Con
taining 53 acres, more or less.
This the 11th day of March, 1935.
GEO. B. PATTON, Trustee.
Mch 14-tc JHS A4
NOTICE
To Depositors and other credit
ors in the Bank of Franklin, Frank
lin, N. C.
As required of all banks operat
ing under the laws of this State
by the Act of the General Assem
bly (duly ratified and known as
House Bill No. 185) this bank has
tens to give you due notice of the
effect of this legislation, according
to the following statement spe
cifically set out in the. Act :
"That on and after July 1,
1935, by virtue of Chapter..'..,
Public Laws of 1935, the addi
tional OV double liability here
tofore imposed by Statute up
on the tockholdor of banki, in
the event of the liquidation of
ueh banks, doing buine un
der th laws of North Carolina
will be no longer impoted."
H. W. CABE, Cashier.
M21-tc BofF All
of wage shall be paid all laborers
and mechanics employed on the
project as provided in the Act of
Mar. 3, 1931, (Public No. 798), and
Executive Order of Jan. 19, 1932
and Order No. 6646. No bid will be
considered unless it includes or is
accompanied by a certificate duly
executed by the bidder stating that
the bidder is complying with and
will continue to comply with each
approved code ot fair competition
to which he is subject, ano u en
gaged in any trade or industry for
which there is no approved code of
'fair competition, then stating that
as to such trade or industry he
has become a party to and is com
plying with and will continue to
comply with an agreement witn tne
President under Section 4 (a) of
the National Industry Recovery
Art Drawings and soecifications
may be obtained from this of ce
in the discretion ot tne Assistant
Director of Procurement, Public
Works Branch. W. E. Reynolds.
Assistant Director for Public Works.
Mch 28-2tc-A4
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as executrix of
Stiles, deceased, late of Ma
con County, N. C, this Is to notify
all persons having claims against
th estate of said deceased to ex
hibit them to the undersigned on
nr hefnre the 7th dav of March,
1936 or this notice will be plead
in har of their recovery. AH 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
When Your Head
Feels "Stuffy . .
Apply Vt-tro-nol
...just a few drops.
Va-tro-nol pene
trates deep into
the nasal passages,
reduces swollen
membranes, clean
away clogging mu
cus, brings welcome
relief.
Two generous sizes
...30 and 50.
. USID IN TIMI
help; PREVENT many colds
fusal of the New York State Com
missioner of Education to order a
school bus to make a half-mile de
tour to pick up one thirteen-year-old
boy. Any boy of thirteen who
is. not a cripple or an invalid
ought to be able to walk half a
mile to the bus stop, remarked
Commissioner Graves.
The first school I ever attended
was more than half a mile from
our house. I was under five when
I began to, walk to and from school.
In my grade school . days it was a
mile walk each way; when I got to
high school it was a three-mile
walk. Noiiody had ever thought of
providing free and easy transpor
tation for school children in those
days. We didn't get even free
schoolbooks. And we grew up
with a pretty clear idea that any
thing we got out of the world had
to be paid for, with money or with
labor.
INQUIRY . . . to all
I would like to hear from any
body who knows of an actual in
stance of anybody who has re
ceived money from the Federal
Government for not growing tobac
co or cotton or corn or hogs or
wheat, who had not previously
been in the business Of growing
those things.
Every little while somebody tells
or prints a story of some man get
ting a check from Uncle Sam who
has never been engaged in the
line of agriculture for the control
of which the money was paid.
Those have always seemed like
fairy tales to me. I can believe
almost anything about the stupidity
or carelessness of Government em
ployees, this or any other govern
ment, but these yarns have strained
my credulity.
They have come to the front
again by a statement made in all
seriousness by an eminent historian,
James Truslow Adams, who told
of three such instances, Chester
Davis, the AAA administrator,
came out with a prompt denial. I
have no doubt both men believe
they are right. It would be a real
public service to get at the facts.
I would like to hear from any
reader of this column who can fur
nish the name, date, place and
amount of any such payment fo any
individual who was not entitled to
it under the law.
FOOD . . . . sky high
Costs to city folk of the principal
articles of food have gone up 34
per cent in the year ending last
month, the Department, of Com
merce reports. Eggs are up 80
per cent, meats 41 per cent, dairy
products 29 per cent, and so on.
I don't know how much of this
increase has filtered back to the
farmers who produce . the food
stuffs, and how much has been ab
sorbed by middlemen on the way
from farm to consumer, but I feel
certain that city people won't tol
erate much higher prices. Salaries
and wages for the general run of
city dwellers have not increased in
anything like that ratio, many not
at all.
If Government would turn its at
tention to the cost of distribution
of food products the cost of living
might not rise so fast.
ENCOURAGEMENT . . to capital
1 think the most encouraging
news of the past fortnight has been'
the announcement that two great
corporations, Swift & Company and
the Pacific Gas & Electric Com
pany, are about to offer to invest
ors more than $100,000,000 of new
securities, to provide additional
capital and retire higher-cost bond
issues.
This is a clear sign that some, at
least, of the big industrialists have
got over some of' their' fear of the
future. If these new issues are
readily sold, it will indicate that
capital is beginning to come out of
hiding. If that sets in motion a
general movement of capital into
industry, then it will be safe to
say that the backbone of the de
pression has been broken.
It takes more money than the
Government can raise to set the
wheels of industry running arid
keep them oiled. Once money is
assured of a chance of fair profits,
it will go to work
Rip-Tide
The Oxford dictionary defines
the rip-tide or tide-rip as a com
motion of the sea caused by op
posing currents of by rapid cur
rents passing over an uneven bot
torn. The name is also given ;
tidal wave or current. When a
current setting to the northwest
meets a strong sea breeze, from the
west, there is a criss-cross or tide
rip formed.
PEP STOCK MEDICINE
Never fails to give satisfaction. ABSOLUTELY GUAR
ANTEED. Cows failing of milk will be restored to normal;
Hogs, made to eat and fatten; Horses, to shed, fatten, and
ready for hard work; poultry, wormed, and put in health so
they ean lay; in fact, is good for all kinds of livestock.
PEP STOCK MEDICINE is not a tonic; but a pure con
secrated medicine (has no filler like the "big" cheap boxes of
other kinds you buy). Remember, your money back if you are
not fully satisfied. Try a box on our money-back guarantee.
Sold only by
FARMERS SUPPLY COMPANY
J. M. MOORE, Mgr.
Electrical & Refrigeration
Service
For a Safe Job at a Reasonable Price See
H. D. KIMSEY
Electrical Contractor
Telephone 5904
Franklin, N. C.
I Am Still Selling
FERTILIZER
With the coming of Spring the demand for
OX GUANOS has become so" great that, despite
a previous announcement to the contrary, I have
decided to handle this reliable fertilizer again
this year. So come and get it, boys; I've got it
in stock.
REDUCE YOUR CROP COSTS
You can increase your
yields per acre and lower
your growing costs per bush
el by using
OX GUANOS
It's the bushel cost, not
the acre cost, that counts
when crops are sold.
BEGISTtfitD U S PATENT OFFICE
Now Is the Time to Haul Fertilizer
There's no better time than right now to "get
set" for your crop. Let me supply your require
ments. Roy F. Cunningham
FRANKLIN, N. C.
NEW BUS LINE
Now Operating Between
Asheville, Brevard, Highlands and
Franklin
READ DOWN
P. M.
5:50 P. M.
6:45 P. M.
7:35 P. M.
8:15 P. M.
8:45 P. M.
8:55 P. M.
9:10 P. M.
P. M.
Leaves
Leaves
Leases
Leaves
Leaves
Leaves
Leaves
Asheville
Brevard
Sapphire
Highlands
Gneiss
Cullasaja
Franklin
READ UP
A. M.
Ar. A. M. 10:55
Ar. A. M. 9:50
Ar. A. M. 8:55
Ar. A. M. 8:05
Ar. A. M. 7:35
Ar. A. M. 7:25
Ar. A. M. 7:15
A. M.
SMOKY MOUNTAIN STAGES, DHL
For Tickets and Information, Inquire at
Angel's Drug Store
Phone 119
Franklin, N. C