Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Oct. 1, 1931, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE GLEANER GRAHAM. N. 0., OCT. 1, 1931. ISSUED ITIIY THD18DAT. J. D. KERNODLE, Editor. J $1.00AYBAR, IN ADVANCE. | hUnd >1 tu PoitoOo* ?t o r?b?*. 1 .N 0.. as ?seuu<l-?l?s? macro - ?" < Peyton McSwain, State Senator. < whose home is Sholby, announces * himself a candidate for Attorney ( General of North Carolina. He is | ^ a prominent lawyer and exper ienced legislator. ^ There are forward-looking folks 1 these days, especially in politics. 1 Jt takes an early bird to head the procession of place hunters. A time-keeper with a stop-watch would be necessary to determine i the first entry. I J.C.B.Ehringhaus, Elizabeth City, attorney and out-etanding guber natorial candidate for govenor, . spoke to a Joint meeting, of the Ki wania and Rotary Clubs in Bur lington last Thursday night. He made no mention of politics, and In that he displayed shrewd politics. The State Fair at Raleigh will be held Oct. 12 to 17, inclusive. Indi cations are, according to reports coming from Raleigh, that it will be a great exposition. Those fopd of horse-racing, and most people are, will be able to enjoy the sport again, as there are races scheduled for every day. / In choosing Heny L. Stevens, Jr?, ol "Warsaw, as Commander of the American Legion at Detroit last Friday, a destinct honor come to' the Old North State and the South And coming back home his fellow citizens gave him a royal welcome, and other events on a big scale In , his honor; aire In the making. What #?1 be done about it iS problematical. The American Leg ion went on record for a referen dum on prohibition, affecting beer, and the National Orange ppposes the Region view in that it would militate against the dairy interest. Both these are big organizations with large influence. The people are sober-minded buf the operation pf the Volstead act, and its enforce ment. is not msking a good Job of making .them prohibitloo-mlhded. Is hard times a^myth?an economic | condition or a mental delusion? I The continuous spending land do ing prompts the interrogation There is apparently no let-iup in , burning gas; amusements, base- , ball, football and movies > continue 1 go draw big crowds; and as for the * schools?the attendance grows?the University has its record matricu- ' 1st ion and other schools are show ing no appreciable falling off. It 1 takes money for all thesejind the money la coming from somewhere to spite of the depression. , I Double Feed Money 1 By Selling To Cow*, j Fourteen dollars worth of farm grown feed fed to good average cows will produce ?2S worth of but- 1 terfat, at present prices and will 1 leave 98.80 worth of aldmmilk on the 1 farm to say nothing of the manure. "At the present prices for but- 1 terfat, the man who has produced a surplus of forage and other dairy 1 food can sell this feed through cows to a fairly good return for his la bor," says A. C. Klmrey,. dairy ei- * tension specialist 'at State College. "The relation between the farm r price of dairy feeds and butterfat Is favorable now and bids fair to ^ remain so through the coming win- ^ ter. Records kept on present mar- 1 ket conditions shows that if 91i worth of feed Is fed to good aver- c age cows, It will produce ISO pound* " of butterfat. When sold for butter- ' making purposes, this fat Is worth ? m. In addition there will be left 1 cm the farm about 1,800 pounds of Skim milk worth 85 cents a hundred t pounds. This is excellent for feed- a lag poultry or bogs and when so fed p has ? value of HjH." h . JUST ONE THING AFTER ANOTHER By Carl Ooerch Last Friday I went down to War ? It was the day after that com nunlty had received word of the ?lection of Henry Stevens as na lonal commander of the American jegion. . You talk about k place being all (xcited and stirred up. The folks lown there were some kind of ela - *J. Half of the babies born in Dup in county during the nex six uonths probably will oe named in ionor of Henry. Despite all this talk about hard iroes anil business depression ,1 read in the papers last week of two men?one in South Carolina and a aother In Ohlo-who had been ar rested for bigamy.; Another thing I've never besr, jble to understand is this business of ordering a suit made to your measure. When you look over the nock of samples that the taUorputs on display, you skim through tha until all of a sudden you see a pi-ce that ktrikes your fancy. It's a beautiful piece of goods. You rave about it. The tailor,not to be outdone, also raves. The meas urement. are taken and you leave the Store with the knowledge that for once in your life, you're going to have a striking, distinctive and wonderful suit of clothes. When the suit arrives, it looks like something the cat has dragged in. You try it bn and your wife comments- "Why in the world d.d you ever pick oat a pattern like that?" Your friends are e pjally that sarcastic. One of these days a miracle may happep; a suit may look as good to me as the sample from which I selected it. but I Bili ously doubt it. While we're on th- subject .of suits, bigamy, depression and such things-which have nothing to do with the next subject?I've often wondered about those Jokes that one hears on the streat, In pullman smoking compartments and in other places where men congregate. Who makes them up? Where do they get their start apd Bow do they ntanafee to circulate so rapidly? They can't be published:, because they arc too raw, and yet. I've heard the same jokes in New Mexi co that they tell up in New York. I haVe yetf to find anyctae who could itell me where these jokes get their start. Does somebody just mske them up accidentally, oil are there folks who spend their time in trying to think them up? The Wlckersham Commission o^ght to have.given that subject \a little time and attention. It's a funny thing, but during the last week or so. I've heard leas talk about the gubernatorial and sena torial situation than at any time in the last two months. From now on until next June is |a long time. The various candidates ?re going to 'have a hard 1 time of It, keeping interest at a high pitch! luting this interval. What with the World Series and the football sea ion Juat opening up in good faah ion. politics doesn't stand much :hanc% of hogging the spotlight for the next several weeks. I was on the road between Oolds Loro and Raleigh last Friday after noon. Driving along at about forty nlies an hour, I was passing a little -ountrv store when a man out In Iront ol the place lot out a yell of itaraa and pointed at my rear tire. ' fuinraed on the brakes and tiought the car to a atop. The man tame running up with a grin on da lace. "Mind giving me a ride up the -oad apfecef" he inquired. First off I started to get mad. Then I derided not to. "Sure* I heartily assented. "But could you mind running back into he store and getting me ad>ox of aatcheaT" He darted toward the building. Phea he got Inside, I threw the car i) gear led beat it. It was the last paw of him. ent of the plant food 1* fb?|,food- , tuffs will go 'beck to the tens in . be form of 'manure and thus set ?wn the fertiliser bill, says Mr. klmrey. j The return from selling foodstuffs ? trough cows does not suggest that t ny one will get rich from the s reject, cautions Mr. Klmrey, but t e does suggest that a better price L HI be reeaiwad for the grades and a i?y than It the tame material ii old in the raw state. In addition, here ie the advantage of a steady ncoine each month from the tale I cream. rhe Graham Messenger Move* To Burlington And Change* Name. The Graham Messenger, estab lished here three and a half years ago by F. A'. Slate, is moving to Burlington this week. Its pred ecessor here was the County Seat Graphic, operated by C. S. ParnelL owner of the Mebanei' Enterprise. Our relations with The Messenger have been very pleasant and we re gret our neighbor is leaving though It is not going away very far. Capt. B. Q. Foster, a veteran newspaper man and well known throughout 'the county, has edited the Messenger most of the time since its establishment. It is un derstood he will not be connected with the new paper. - The new paper will be known as The Burlington Messenger. Vol ume 1, number 1, appeared last Friday. At the mast-head is the name of Brinson Smith as editor and F. A. Slate as manager. The Oraham paper was Repub lican in politics, but Mr. Slate says in his salutatory, "politically, the Messenger will be as thoroughly independent as it is humanly pos sible to make it." Mr. Smith, living at present in New York City, is a native of Geor gia. In his newspaper career he has been connected with the New York World, the Detroit Times, Success Magazine and other papers. The new paper, says the announ cement, begins as a tri-weekly and will be converted into a daily as quickly as necessary machinery can be installed and a staff organized. With two dailies in Burlington and two weeklies, at Mebane and Graham, Alamance citizens should keep up with the happenings in the county. Mankind Seems to Haro Reversed Nature's Rule It bas been revealed that the men of one crest American city spend al most as much for clothes as the women. There Is s difference la cost, of coarse. Women can purchase three or four dresses and appear beau tiful for the money a man pays for one salt And there can be no dis pute about the women looking far more comfortable, especially la bet weather. One writer, commenting along this line, makes the observation: "The masculine taste Is to dress well enough to be unnotlceable and the feminine ambition Is to dress well enough to attract attention." Accepting this ep igrammatic statement as true. It is a complete reversal of nature's rule as between male and female. In natural life the male Is endowed with the fineries, presumably to attract the at tention of modest potential mates' It Is a waste of vigor to protest against woman obtaining what she de nominates her rights. She takes them where she sees them and there Is nothing to be done about It?Toledo Blade Removes "Fresee" Betes Nuts on bolts used on machinery often become "frosen" la place and are removed only with great difficulty. Often It becomes necessary to cut 1 them away with a chisel or remove them by drilling, either of which Is a long and tedious operation. Human strength cannot mova thsse pieces, but a pleoe of pasumatlc machinery has been recently devised which does the work. It is an air-driven wrench which has been largely adopted for use about locomotive shops and sim ilar establishments. The tool is of such convenient form that It may readily be carried about and will quickly dislodge nuts on bolts up to an Inch and a quarter. United States Par Center The United 8tales has displaced ' London as the fur center of the world, . according to the latest government re- | porta There are no accurate figures i for the domestic fur catch In the Unit- I ed States, but Its annual value Is estl- 1 mated at from S4S.000.000 to $70,000,- ] 000, and moat of this comes from the Mississippi valley, which Is the larg- j est fur-producing area In the world, \ with double the catch of Bussla and three times that of Canada The four outstanding domestic commercial fore are mask rat, opossum, skunk and rac coon. ~i?>nsn ?- j luntmk County has 19" acres In t hi a y >i- vil w "'trv ? rn Sn o' i ? J on to a larff* tonna?* v tedesa hay. From June 8 to September 8, a 92 day feeding period,26 head of steers /? ' . ? - ? I I' ? ? -arp. grass and leaped z e'> . t i K. i ?> .???(> i Jones County, gained 196P pa nl Since tne an--, n- # err i-nery at Washin- t > ? ,i : r' i vitr a n imaer of fa ? ner ; "C baying cows to consume the cheap corn, oats and hay that are : . p R K. Moore of Columbus County reports yields ot two tons of cured hay an acre from seven acres of lespedeza on his farm. There are 58 lespedeza demonstrations in the county this season. Notice of Trustee's Sale! Default having been mad > in the payment of the indebtedness se cured by that certain deed of trr-st to me as Trustee for Jefferson Standard life Insurance Company on the 12th day of May, 19iq by V. B White and wife. Cecils If. White, and Mrs. Pattie O. V. White, and recorded in the office of the Regis ter of Deeds of Alamance County in Book 79-M at page 546,1 (Will, un der and by virtue of the power of ale vested in m < by said deed of trust, and at the request of the ces tui que trust, and for the purpose of discharging the debt secured by said deed of trust, proceedjfco setll to the highest bidder, for cash, at the court house door in Graham .Ala mance County. North Carolina at 1200 o'clock noon, on MONDAY NOVEMBER 2nd. 1931, the following described land, to-wit A certain tract or parrel of land adjoining the lands of J. F. Garri son and others, and more fully de scribed as follows Beginning at a hickory at a ;pcl)i*f at Lot No. 5, being the let assigned to Mrs. Pattie Vaughan Holomon. thence S. 49 deg. W. to a point; then ce N. MX deg. W. t(hence N. 65 ,dtjg W. to a corner, adjoining the lari'is of J. F. Garrison ; thence S. 16 deg. E. to a 'point; thence S. 15 deg. 'E 2.20 chs. thence 8. IX deg. W,t then ce 8.56X deg. W. to a poplar on the lands of one Allen; thence 8. 36 deg. E.; thence N. 80 deg. 31 nlri. . R : thence N. to a "hickory at the b g.n ning, containing 232 acres more or less. The above described tract of land is a part of the Harrison Harbour lands which he devised to Mrs. Pat tie O. V. White for life, Wi,th re mainder to her children, the said lands having been dividpd by h r children by quitclaim deed). This the 28th day of 8ep6emb r, 1931. GEO. A. GRXMSLEY, Tru9.ee. Brooks, Parker. Smith ? Wharton. Attys., Greensboro, N. C. Large Desk Bladen, 19x24 inches, Colon?white, cherry, orange, red, pink, moea green, dark and light bine, Nile green, gray, buff aud purple, for sale at Tub Gleaner Office. Magistrates' Blanks - State Warraosi, Civil Summons, Transcripts, o! Judgments, (or sale at The > Gleaner office, Graham. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Um For Ov*r 30 Y?ar? EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. \ Having qualified as Executor of the Lam will of John D. Vaughn, late of Alamance County, all per sons having claima against hie es ite are requested to present the ?in* duly verified, to the under dgned at 618 Forest Street, Oraena boro, N. a or to my attorney, in Jraham, oo or before the 18th day September 1938, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. 411 persons indebted to said estate ire requested to make prompt set ilement. Tills September 8th, 1911 . J. R. VAUGHN, Executor. 1. S, Cook. Atty. Mortgagee's Land Sale! Undei and by virtue of the power contained in a certain mortgage deed executed by H. M. Ray to Mr*. Mamie R. Patterson, on the 20th day of September, 1921. to secure the payment of a bond therein men tioned. said bond ^nd mortgage having been assigned to the under signed, and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Ala mance County, iu book 82 of MDs. at page 149, default in the payment thereof having been made, the un dersigned will, an MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2nd. 1931, ?ell for cash, ac the Court House door in Graham, the following real estate, to-wit; A tract of land in Graham Town ship, Alamance County. N. C., ad Joining the lands of W. J, Nicks, Jones Heirs. H. Ml Holt R. P. U. Ray. the HeirS of H. Mi-j/Rjiyi; Sr., and others and containing 104 acres more or less. This is Home tract of late H. M.' Ray, upon which is i eommodlua dwelling, and through which State Highway No. 54 passes lust out side the corporate limits of Graham, but from which there has been sold in lots about 6 acres, ?a shown ty deads duly of rs.-ord from H. M Ray, Jr.. to W. J. Nicks, W. H. Boswell, Whittemure and Lewallen ' Time of sale: 12 :t0. O'clock, M , November 2nd. 19S1. Place of sale; Court House door, Graham. Terms of sale: Cash. This the 1st day of October, 1931. MRS. MAMIE R. PATTERSON, J. S. COOK, Assignee . NOTICE! Sale of Real Property Under Mortgage Deed. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a certain mort gage deed, executed and deliver.- i by R. Eugene Hunter and his wife, Gertrude Finger Hunter, to W. L. Anderson, dated Jan. 4th'., 1928, and duly recorded in the office of the Regiser of Deeds for Alamance County, in Book of Mortgage Deeds No. 109, page 199, default having been made at' maturity in the pay ment of She bonds and the interest on the same, secured thereby; and under and by virtue of .the laws of North Carolina, ,the undersigned, W. L. Anderson, Mortgagee in the above named mortgage deed,' suo ject to a first Deed of trust, ex ecuted and delivered by said R. E. Hunter and wife Gertrude Finger Hunter, to First National Bank of Durham, Trustee, dated Dec. 15th., 1927, and recorded iu the office of the Register of Deeds for Alamance County in Mortgage Deed Book No. 110, page 131. which first deed of trust secures an unpaid balance of about $3100.00, will, on THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8th, 1931, at 12:0l) o'clock, noon, offer for aale at auc.toojto the hgh- j est bidder, for cash, and sell, a: the Court Houst Door of Alamance County, at Graham, N. O., the fol lowing described real property, to wlt: A certain .tract or parcel of land and all buildings and Improvements ? thereon, lying and being in the cor porate limits of the City of Burling ton, Alamance County, North Car olina, adjoining the lands of O. Marvin Holt, Broad Street, W. L. Anderson and others and boundea as follows; Beginning at an iron bolt, corner with Hole on S. E. aide of -said Street!; running thence South M deg. E. 105 feet to an iron bolt, eor ner with said Holt; thence South 55 deg. Wl 50 feed *'o an iron bolt, corner with mid Anderson's lot; thence North 35 dag, W. 1*5 feet to an iron pipe, corner with said Anderson lot on 8. & side of said Street; thence North Si deg. B- 50 feet to the beginning, containing 5250 square feet, more or less. This sale will be made subject 10 increase bids made within ten days as provided by law. Date of aale, Oct. 8th, 1981. Place of sale, Court House Door. Hour of rale, iSo'clock noon. Terms of rale, Cash. This September 6th., 1981. W. L. ANDERSON, Mortgagee. D. J. Walker, Atty. Foreclosure Suits For Taxes \ Actions Instituted During the Month of August, 1931 Fourth Advertisement feme# of Plaintiff* Name* of Defendant* Townahip Year* Taxes Dettpquent P. W. Moore, R. L. Burnett and wife, Burlington 1947 Annie Burnett, et als. P. W. Moore, Levi H. Patrum and Patteraon 1447 '' ' wife, Sophia Patrum This the "f*y of September, 19SI. E. H. MURRAY, Clerk Superior Court A Bushel of Wheat jggsas-BgssBBanBsaasaB&EBssaaEsssaBBasBs Will Pay for The Gleaner * One Year v * A full year's Subscription will be credited for every bushel of wheat delivered. \ $1.00 Is the Price for a Year's Subscription. ~ Wheat is Selling at 65cts. i \ We can't Handle over 500 Bushels. The Southern Planter Semi-Monthly Richmond, Virginia The Oldest Agricultural Journal in America 56 CENTS FOR ONE TEAR *1.00 FOR THREE YEARS $1.50 FOR FIVE YEARS TVlCE-A-flONTH 200.000 TWICE-/1.M0NTH ^ ; ?n - MOTHER! Fletcher's Castoria b a harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children al ages ot Constipation Wind Golfc Flatulency To Sweeten Stomach Diarrhea Regulate Bowels Aids in the assimilation of Fojd, promoting Cheerfulness. Rest, and Natural Sleep without Opiates * T? r.soid iodtstinns. always look for the signature of Proven djsecripm on e.ch packige. Physicians everywhere rirnnwl g,
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 1, 1931, edition 1
2
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