Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / April 24, 1930, edition 1 / Page 3
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Hlti GLEANER -iRAHAM, N. 0., APR.'24, 1930. (?++++++4* t+++++.V-M'+++++++ ? ? V LOCAL NEWS + ? + w + J.+ + 4.4>+ + + + ?+? -t -r ?*? + + ++++<*?++++ ?Mrs. Z. T. Hadley entertained the Needlecraft Club on Wednesday afternoon ol last week. ?Monday was generally observed here as a holiday by individuals, factories, shops and stores. ?Fishing, so common at Easter time, was not so good Monday. It was too cool and windy. ?Several from here attended the Moravian Easter services at Win ston-Salem Sunday morning. ?The leaves are almost full grown, but their growth has been much retarded by the late cool, dry weather. ?A little rain would be helpful just now to keep vegetation going on with the fine start it has al ready made. ?Rev. W. E. Harrop addressed the Kiwanis club at Burlington last Thursday night. He was heard with keen interest and he made an appealing address. ?Sheriff Rudd and deputies cut up a jumbo booze plant for the week-end diversion. It was down on Alston Quarter farm in south ern Alamance. It was a 400-gal lon affair with necessary equip ment. ?At meeting of Orange Presby tery at Cross Reads last week Mr. McBride Holt was chosen a dele gate from the Presbytery to attend the General Convention at Char lottesville, Va., which convenes on May 22. ?Hon. Frank Hancock, Jr., of Oxford, candidate for the Dem ocratic nomination for Congress to represent this ristrict, was in town yesterday. He is meeting and getting acquainted with the people in this part of the district. ?A little frost is reported in some parts of the county this morn ing, and the weather man promises yet cooler weather, which means an other frost. Snow was reported in Washington, D. C., and freezing weather in the northern border states yesterday. ?An eclipse of sun will take place next Monday. It begins a few minutes after 2 o'clock p. m. and ends about 4:25. It is what astron omers call a total annualar eclipse. If you want to look at it, smoke a piece of glass to look through and you will not hurt your eyes. ?Mr. J. Dolph Long of Graham is announced as a candidate for the Democratic nomination to rep resent Alamance county in the House of the next Legislature. Mr. Long is an outstanding lawyer and citizen, and well and favorably known over the county. He has many friends who would be glad to vote for his nomination and elec tion. ?Sam T. Johnston and D. S. Myers are building a new brick building 40x60 feet,' one story, on the opposite side of No. 10 where W. Harden street ends, for a garage and machine shop. Mr. Myers is manager of the Dixie Grinding Co., whose shop has been on W. Elm street since it was founded. The shop will be moved to the new loca tion in about two weeks. ?The Standard Service Station, corner N. Main and E. Harden streets, has just finished putting in a device for looking over and giv ing cars attention. The car runs on a track and the simple turn of a lever lifts the car bodily by air pressure about five feet above ground, so that any part can be reached without one doubling up and crawling under the car. It is a mighty handy affair. ?Preston J. Chandler, age about 72, a highly respected and well known colored man of Graham, died at his home here at 10:30 last Friday morning. He had spent most of his life in Graham. About 10 days before his death he was strick en with paralysis while on his lot at work. He is survived by a bro ther, John Chandler of Graham and a sister. His funeral was con ducted from the colored M. E church Sunday afternoon. ?Coler F. Russell is starting the foundation for a new building ad joining his building on the cornel of S. Main and E. Pine streets. The new building will front on S. Main It will be of brick, about 59 feet broad, 60 feet deep and two stories Each floor will be a single roonc according to present plans. The other building, which the new one will adjoin, is occupied by the Es ther Hosiery Mills and Black & Ful ler's grocery store. 8am T. John ston has the contract for the nev building. ++++?!?+++++++++++*+++++++++ + + + PERSONAL + +4 4444+ !?++++++++++++++++++++ Miss Sara Cobb spent Easter at her home at Franklin, Va. Hon. J. Elmer Long of Durham Is here today on legal business. Miss Genna Church spent the week- end at her home at Ronda. Miss Maie Roney vilsted in Chap el Hill the latter part of last week. Miss Gladys Yates spent the Easter holidays at her home In Suf folk, Va. Miss Elaine Goode spent the week-end with her parents at Scot land Neck. Mrs. J. L. Scott, Jr., Is visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. Mel Thomp son, in Mebane. Miss Julia May Bradshaw spent the week-end with her uncle, Frank Wilson, at Erwin. Mr. Henry Fuller of Lexington, Ky., spent the week-end here with J Mrs. W. J. Nicks. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Kernodle of Danville spent last Sunday after noon here with relatives. Miss Mary Weeks of Winston Salem, spent the week-end here 1 with Mrs. W. R. Harden. Miss Pattie Jordan of High Point spent the week-end here with her I sister, Mrs.! M. E. Yount. I Mrs. R. N. Cook spent last Fri day with her sister, Miss Lucy Gay Cooke, at Duke University. I Mr. and Mrs. W. A, Young and children spent Easter at the home I of his parents in Churchland. I Mr. Seymour Holt spent last Thursday with his davghter, Mrs. I John W. Harden, in Charlotte. I Mrs. Mabel Peterson of Greens j boro spent the week-end here with i her sister, Mrs. C. C. Thompson. Miss Mary Denny of Greensboro spent Monday here with her aunts, Mrs. McBride Holt and Miss Ada Denny. Miss Margaret Pritchard of Chap el Hill spent last Friday here with Misses Elizabeth and Annie Ruth Harden. Miss Ersell Geanes, teaching at Roseboro, spent the week-end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Geanes. Misses Lucile and Ruth Walker of Efland spent the week-end here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Walker. James Cook, A. B. Nicholson, Ralph Stockard and Hal Holt came home from Oak Ridge for the East er holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Will E. White and son Elliott spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Alexander in Morganton. A J,- ? ? ,1 T JT T7-..H , ??. uiiu mio. uuini yy. uotlUW U.XIU children of Danville spent the week end with Mrs. Estlow's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. P. McAdams. Herman Flannigan, William Har den, Harrison Jordan and Henry Evans left for aWshington, D. C. last Friday to spend Easter. Col. and Mrs. Don E. Scott and children spent the Easter with Mrs Scott's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eu gene Gray, in Winston-Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ross and daughter, Elaine, spent the week end with Mr. Ross' parents, Dr. and Mrs. George Ross, in Durham. Miss Emily Lee, in school at Pea body College, Nashville, Tenn., spent the week-end at home here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D Lee. Misses Lala and Fannie Brown ing had Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brittor | and son Marshall and Miss Nancy Browning of Greensboro, as week 1 j end guests. I Mr. and Mrs. R. W. DeMaurlce 1 and children of Darlington, S. C. ' were visitors here the latter partol last week at the home of Mrs. De ' Maurice's parents, Mr. and Mrs. M J G. Flannigan. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Holmes ol ; Reidsville and daughters Mrs. L . H. Kernodle of Danville, and Misi Maxine in school at G. C. W. . Greensboro, were here a short while this morning. Mr. Junius Parker of New Yorl . was here Monday viisting his sis . ter, Miss Mamie Parker, and passing . around shaking hands with olc . friends and acquaintances. In th< afternoon, accompanied by his sis t ter, he went to Pinehurst where they are spending this week. i ! To relieve the local surplus o ' eggs in Edgecombe county, loca - poultry growers placed 89 case: ? containing 2,570 dozen eggs ii - cold storage recently. | ?MJB8CRIBB FOB THB OLBANBi Mr. Junius Parker to Lecture At University Next Week On Monday, Tuesday and Wed nesday evenings ot next week Mr. Junius Parker of New York will lecture before the law classes at Chapel Hill on the relations of law and business under the topic of "Business and the State." Mr. Parker is one of the out standing lawyers of the great me tropolis. For a long period of years he was chief counsel for the Amer ican Tobacco Co., which position he resigned a few years ago, and Is now a member, of a leading New York law firm. The people here feel that Mr. Parker belongs to Alamance, though he was born in Smithfleld. But he came to this county with his pa rents, the late Capt. and Mrs. E. G. Parker, when a child and spent his boyhood and young manhood days in Graham. He has a large number of friends be pleased to hear him at Chapel Hill. and acquaintances here who would And, by the way, In casting about for a president of the Uni versity to succeed Dr. Chase, Mr. Parker's name has been mention- i ed, and it is probable that his go- j ing to Chapel Hill at this time isj for the purpose of cultivating a closer acquaintance in helping the trustees to come to a conclusion. The average Stanley county farm- ' er will increase his poultry flock this season and is planning to use] the most modern methods of hand- ( ling the flock for larger profits. Sale of Real Estate! Mv virtue of the power of rale contained in a reriain mortgage deed j executed hv M M. Hallman and j wife, Clara B. Hallman, which is 1 recorded in the office of the Register, of Deeds for Alamance County in | hook of mortgages and deeds of trust I No. 109, at page 548, then nder-1 signed will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for j cash, at the courthouse door in Gra ham, N. C., at 12:00 o'clock, noon, on MONDAY, MAY 19th, 1930, the following described property: The following land and premises, lying and being in Graham Town ship, Alamance County, North Car olina, adjoining the lands of Clen denin Street and others: It being lots numbered 3 and 4 of what is known as the Fair Ground property, on the South side of Glen denin Street fronting on Clendenin Street 50 feet and running back between lots numbered 2 and 5, 150 feet, and being the same conveyed to Sallie Stockard by deed recorded in book 89 of deeds at page 74, and upon which there is a collage. This the Kith day of Aoril, 1939 j H. J. STOCKARD, Mortgagee, i Long & Allen, Attys. Summons by Publication. a'ORTH CAROLINA? Alamance County In the Superior Court ? Eugene Holt, Pilot Life Insur ance Company and A. M. Scales, Trustee, Plaintiffs, vs. National Real Estate Co., and Alamance Insurance & Real Estate Co , corporations, and I John M. Coble. Receiver, et als. I In the above entitled cause, the following named persons who are defendants therein, to . wit: [ Mrs. J. W. Elliot, Horace Elliot (and his heirs at law), Ed Elliot, Mrs. Emma Stuart, Grady Elliot, Julius Elliot, ! Bessie Elliot Milau, Romeo , Elliot,Remus Elliot and Maggie . Elliot, and the other heirs at law of J. W. Elliot, deceased, names and addresses unknown: heirs-at-law of J. C. Johnson, ! \ names ahd addresses unknown;' , J. D. Goins and wife, Decie Goins, Mrs. It. E. Guthrie, Geo. T. Macpn, C. F. Barnett. Mrs. . R. F. Albright, J. F. Williams. W. D. Blaylock, Mr. and Mrs. , 0. C. Jones, Mrs. Eunice L. Hayworth, Mrs. Sarah D. Itob ! ertson, Miss Mary Brannock, J. J. Warren, Mrs. C. C. Peele, . H. G. Burton, Miss Ida Wil . liams, Mamie Sockwell and S. r L. Morgan, will take notice 1 that this action has been coin : menced in the Superior Court - of Alamance County, North : i Carolina, for the purpose of foreclosing and selling under the orders of the Court that f certain real property situate 1 immediately West of the corpo ' rate limits of the City of Bur 1 lington, and South of Highway No. id, and known as the | Eugene Holt farm, for the pur pose of paying and satisfying the debts secured by the mort gage deed from National Heal Estate Company to Eugene Holt, in the sum of approxi mately $8,000.00, and the deed of trust from Alamance Insur ance & Heal Estate Compapy to A. M. Scales, Trustee, securing Pilot Life Insurance Company in the sum of approximately $52,000.00 And the said defendants will further take notice that they are required to appear at the office of the Clerk of the Super ior Court of Alamance County, at the courthouse in Graham on or befotu Monday, the 5th of May, 193u,and answer or demur to the complaint filed in said action, or the plaintiffs will apply to the Court for the relief demanded therein. This the 29th day of March, 1930. E. H, MURRAY, Clerk 8uperlor Court J. Dolph Long, Atty. Receiver's Sale of Real Estate. Under and by virtue of the power of eale contained in a certain mort gage deed of trust duly executed by Willis Corbett arid wife, Sarah Oorbett, in favor of Piedmont Trust Company, Trustee, on the 2<)th day of October, 1919, and securing the payment of a series of bonds num bered from 1 to '20, both inclusive, hearing even date with said mort gage deed of trust and payable to bearer, each in the sum of Five Hundred Dollars (500.00), default having been made in the payment of said indebtedness as in said mort gage deed of trust provided, and by the further authority of an order of the Superior Court of Alamance County in an action therein pending, and being No. 3682 upon the Civil Issue Docket, the undersigned Re ceiver of Piedmont Trust Company will, on the first Monday in May, 1930, at ten o'clock a. m , the same being THE FIFTH DAY OF MAY, 1930, at the courthouse door in Alamance County, offer for sale at public anc l tion to the highest bidder for cash, Ithe following described real proper ty, lo-wit: Kirat Tract. A certain tract or parcel of land in Ahimance County, North Carolina, adjoining the lands of D. T. Curtis, heir* of .f<>)> 11 Staley, deceased, I). I,. Dixon and others, and funded lis follows, to wit; Beginning ?t an iron holt in public r< ad leading from Big Falls to Burlington, comer with It L. Curtis; running thence N 28$ deg E 27.(>1 chs to an iron bolt in said Staley's line; corner with said Dixon;' thence N 80$ deg W 2C.50 chs to a rock, corner with said Dixon; thence |S 3$ deg W 27.50 chs to n roclt;, thence E 12.80 chs to the beginning, containing Forty-eight (48) acres, more or less. Second Tract: A cirtain tract or panel of land in Bailington Town ship, Alamance Conntv, North Car olina, adjoining the lands of \V. C Kirk Patrick, Qnrney Wright and others, bounded as follows: Beginning at a poet oak tree, cor ner with said Kirpatrick; running thence N 22$ deg E 41 chs 31 Its to a rock or iron bar in public road to Burlington, N. C., corner with said Kirkpatrick; thence N 89 deg W 3 cha to a rock, corner with said I Wright; thence S 20} deg W 10 chs to h lock; thence S 67 d?g W 14 chs 25 Ik* t'> a rock, corner with Raid Wright <>n K side of a road to Baid Wright's house; thence S 9 deg E 4 chs 71 Iks to an iron hsr on N aide of said public road, corner with said Wright; then *e with sai I road Soil deg W (5 chs 53 Iks; thence S 49^ deg W 6 chs 33 Iks to an iton pipe >n S side of said road corner with Wright; thence S 0} deg F. 10 chs 40 Iks to a rock, corner with said Kirk patrick; thence S XJ ,)eg E 12 chs 20 Iks to the beginning, con taining Forty-two an i Eightv-foor One Hundredths (42 X4) a -res, more or less The terms of the sale will be caah mmn the date of the sale and the hsser will be f'.rnished with a i ? -ffcate by said Receiver certify i! , the amount of hia hid and ipt ,-.f the porchase price, and i lies de will be left open ten days thereafter for the placing of advanc ed bids as required bylaw. Tins i he 3rd day of April, 1990. THOMAS D. COOPER, Receiver Piedmont Trust Ob |J. l>o.j>? L*l{, Atty. 7 -Sc/nI pours fragrance into these |, tobaccos ^ LONG BEFORE the choice leaves of golden Turkish and velvety brown Domestic tobacco are selected for Camel Cigarettes, nature's own alchemy has worked a miracle in them that no effort of man can hope to duplicate. Every tiny leaf-cell is irradiated?stored full of goodness by the clean, pure vigor of the sun! Our share in the making of Camels is to see that all of the fragrance, mildness, mellowness, aroma?in a word all of the natural goodness of these sun-ripened tobaccos is preserved and developed?then to combine them into the smooth, delightful harmony of the famous Camel blend, and manufacture them into cigarettes by the most modern methods known to the industry. You can taste the natural goodness in every delicious puff of a Camel Cigarette. Camels for real smoke pleasure O 1430. R. J. limit Tllirn C?WU?. ?r K. C.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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April 24, 1930, edition 1
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