1 HE GLEANER GRAHAM. N. 0., JUNE 21, 1934. IB8CKD KVEHY THURSDAY J. D. KERNODLE, Editor. $1.00 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. Entered at tDe -?ortolBc* at Graham. .N C.. as wcu i^ vlau" matter. The State Democratic Con vention is meeting in Raleigh today. The keynote speech will be made by former Governor and U. S. Senator Cameron Morrison. It may be depended on that a platform and policies will be found that will not hamper candidates, and that will continue the party in charge of the State's govern mental affairs. Congress adjourned Monday night, after enacting practically eveey measure asked for by the Administration that it was be lieved would be helpful in pro moting business revival and to1 the country at large. The President at the outset gave himself to the task of lifting the country out of the depres sion and the Congress has back ed up practically every demand. The heavyweight champion ship crown toppled from the head of big Primero Camera, Italian, last Friday night when he met Max Baer, California, inside the ropes in Madison Garden, N. Y. Max pommeled Primo almost to a jelly. More than lifty-two thousand wit nessed the performance. The gate receipts ran up to $428, 392.80. After deducting Fed eral and State taxes of more than $67,000, Camera's share was $122,057.08. BaeFs share was $65,044.31. And Primo wants to try it over! Senator Josiali William Bail ey drew upon himself consider able criticism by his stand of opposition to the confirmation of Dr. Rexford Tugwell as Un der-Secretary of Agriculture, and it was reputed to him as a disturbing element in the Ad ministration's efforts to man itself with able and dependable aides. Perhaps Mr. Roosevelt will never mention the Sena tor's attitude and will not hold it against him. It would be human to do so, but the Presi dent is feeling his way cau tiously and is not going to flare up because of some opposition to men and measures and con structivo criticism. Hunger is the best seasoning for meat.?Cicero. Nothing can lead into greater hazards thau promises hastily and uncautiously made. Few persons have courage enough to appear as good as they really are. Death borders upon our birth: and our cradle stands in our grave. There is no gathering the rose without being pricked by the thorns. Many go out for wool and come borne shorn themselves. Gorgeous Finery of a Queen of 5,000 Years Ago. What Queen Shub-Ad of Ancient Ur of the Chaldees Looked Like and How She Dressed Kevt-aled in a Page of Colored Reproduction in The American Weekly, the Magazine Which Comes On June 24 With The BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN. Buy Your Copy From Your Favorite Newsboy Or Newsdealer. SAVE MONEY?Buy your mag azines through The Gleaner's club bing offers. They wlU help you save money on your reading mat c. it. enfield | Wanted: To trade a leuif-u for date. Auotker liold up: itaby play ing with his toes. When a man "goes out" the undertaker conies in. Mrs. Adds Cash granted divorce To get married again, of course. liilly's comprehensive deliiii tiou: "A kiss is nothing seasoned with honey." A recent advert is. nieot: "Pat ent cooker prepares eggs in the shell." Hasn't the lie-. Iieen do ing this for centuries? liusiness slows up because the President called "time out " The person who blows his horn I can always lie heard. Spooky man. spooky man. Catch me if you ean; Spooky man, spooky man, Stop! Let uic go' It's natural to play. Even adults play?politics, however A headline: "Yankees dance in Shanghai." Again lie- Occi dent and Orient are in antns. Her Pal?Elizabeth, your hub by must feel proud of you? New Wife?Why so, dear? Her Pal?For the nice biscuits you serve him New Wife?Aren't they nice? I buy theui at the A A I' -Store, They aro called "Canine bis cuits." Margaret,(17 yr. old daughter)? Mother, I want to go to Smith field I while you're tearing up to move. I Mother?Why. darling? Margaret?To get out of the dust. This will Ire a funny world if! all who are trying to become hu morous ever arrive. USE GOOD SUGAR FOR GOOD JAMS AND JELLIES Buying in Cotton Bag* Assures Purity and Full Weight In buying their sugar for canning and preserving this Summer. South ern women should be particular to buy It in the 25, 10 or 5-pound cot ton bags In which It Is packed at the refinery. There are many good reasons for this, the first being that she knows exactly what brand of sugar she Is getting, and can tell whether or not It Is sugar that has been refined in this country under the strict United States sanitary conditions, by Amer ican labor, under the NRA code-or whether It Is foreign refined sugar. The cotton bag also keeps the sugar In the same pure, clean state In which It left the refinery. In addition, when she buys sugar In a cotton bag. she Is stimulating the consumption of cotton?the crop upon which the prosperity of the agrlcultdral 8outh largely depends. The Savannah Sugar Refinery at Cauannali Ha I rrf nw* r\t Hlvln Crystals Sugar.i alone uses IOjOOO OOO yards of cotton cloth a year In pack ing their sugars Put up plenty of fruits this sum mer for use this winter The price of canned goods. Jellies, etc.. has gone up materially in recent months, and it is predicted that their price will go even higher. The more you can thia summer, the more you will save on your food bin next winter. SALESMEN WATTED Timet* are better?business in e reusing?conditions improving. Slart selling now A real oppor tunity is open for you, distributing direct to the farm trade a full line of homo remedies and household | products. M a n y make $1(0.00 weekly or more at start. Write quicklv for free catalogue. G. C" HKBERLINO COMPANY Itloornlogtou, Illinois Dept. 1792 ADMINISTRATOR!} NOTICK Having jquallfled as 'administrator of the estate of O. If. Straughan, dee'd, late of Aalmance County thia is to notify all persons hav ing claims against the csta e of tin ?aid deceased, to exhibit them to the undersigned at Burlington, N. C.. H F.D No. 6 Sidney Road, On or before the 20th day of May, 1035, or thia notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All iperaona indebted to said es tate Willi please make immediate settlement. j Thia, Hth day of May 1931. H. S. WILCOX, Adm'r . of 0.1T. Straughan, Deed i H. 8. V. Daaeron, Attjf I ARTHURIAN LEGEND REAL IN TINTAGEL Memorial Hall Erected to Mythical Warrior. Washington.?Modern ' critics may doubt that King Arthur and his Knights of the Table Round ever ex isted, but in Tintagel Arthurian le gend Is so real that a stone memorial hull lias been erected to the mythical warrior who is supposed to have led the Christian kings of Britain against the Saxon kings of Kent in the Sixth century. "Tintagel is a lonely, wind-swept village on the northwest coast of Corn wall whose chief claim to fame is the crumbling ruin of a gray old Cliffside castle?one of the most remarkable monuments of antiquity in England," says a bulletin from the National Geo graphic society. "Whether or not King Arthur ever conducted his Table Round in the an cient stronghold that crowns Tintagel Head, it is certain that it dates back to an unfathomable age. To Cornish men it seems logical that a legend which has survived so many centuries must have a respectable origin. So stories of King Arthur, MeFliu the Enchanter, and others are preserved, if not strictly believed, in Tintagel. Just Crumbling Walls. "At Tintagel, as a matter of ract, what the visitor brings measures what he takes away. Come full of the Ar thurian legend; come with Tennyson, with Geoffrey of Monmouth, with Mai lory, and in spite of the cynics, you will savor nothing but romance. "Nowadays Tintagel castle is but a tracery of crumbling walls on a vast headland, at the foot of which the most superb seas of Cornwall crash and glitter. So 1'ar below is the water that even when the thinnest mist is in the air it is hardly possible to see the white foam of the breakers. "The castle is in two parts, sep arated by a deep ravine which, legend says, was once bridged. That is was Impregnable before the days of aitil lery or aircraft is evident, defended as It is by steep cliffs and the sea. Jtoman, Saxon and Norman built here before the Cornish earls of recorded history. "Today scores of sheep pasture fear lessly on the slippery slopes which plunge so swiftly to the sea. Hut the iron-studded door of the keep, as in days of yore, Is still the only exit or entrance to the headland. Narrow, steep stone steps lead from it down the cliff to the high, narrow causeway linking the head land with the main land. "The banqueting hall of the castle is open to the sky and the sun and stars look down in turn upon its turf-clad floor. Grasses grow where once Ygrayne, wife of the duke of Corn wall, watched the siege of Caslle Ter rabil, on the mainland. When Ter rabil fell, Uther Pen dragon, Its con queror, slew the duke and speedily married his widow the same day. It was from this marriage that King Ar thur was born, legend relates. Ancient Stone House. "The village of Tintagel (also called Trovena) lies about a mile from the castle and sea, at the head of a long, winding ravine. It is not a port, al though occasionally a boat with sup plies comes in under the cliff to the steep, shingle beach. In addition to a few summer hotels and cottages the village pos:es>es a Fourteenth cen tury stone hoiiM* with a sagging slate roof that gives it the appearance of a sway-backed horse. "Perhaps this old dwelling was once the residence of minor nobility, in that era when the hall was carpeted with rushes and one dipped with one's own hand in the dluner pot The common room is uncelled to the rafters, and at one end a little balcony overhangs from which, no doubt, the ladies of the place kept displeased eyes upon their lords at wassail below. The walls are of graystone, the roof of gray slate, while all about the bluest of cornflowers blow. "The new King Arthur's llall in Tintagel village is a splendid struc ture built of CnrnUh stunoa --v-v? V. uiau.. colors. A corridor around it glows with 49 stained-glass windows, en riched with heraldry of the Knights of the Table Round. The hall itself has 114 stained glass windows and Is light ed by medieval torches on oak shafts. The chief treasure of the hall Is a col lection of paintings by William llath erall, depicting events in Arthur's life." Three Arkansans Find Way to Aid Theimeltret Fordyce, Ark.?Three brothers here are entering Into the help yourself pro gram with n real effort. Oddie Word, Guy Word and Olllc Word have been receiving some relief from the government, but with the dis continuing of the program they have decided to start farming and raiting whatever they can. They found they had no mule to plow their ground, but that didn't stop them. Guy hitched up Oilic and Oddie and they pulled the turn plow while he plowed. They "plowed the en'ire ground and have a crop started. They claim they plowed Just as deep as any mule could have done. Towns Paid Fines Plymouth. Mass.?A lO-shilling fine was imposed upon the town that didn't keep its ducking stools, stocks and whipping posts In good repair, Puritan records reveal. This ancient form of punishment was found in the statute of the courts enacted November 15, 1G30. Very few motorists are arrestee 'or speeding while hurrying to work. When good fellows get togethei the wives wait up until daylight A super-man is one who hssu'i yet been trusted with the job Summons by Publication NORTH CAROLINA, ALAMANCE COUNTY. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT Margaret Warren. VS. Julius Warren. The defendant, Julius War ren, will take notice, that an action entitled above, lias been commenced in the Superior Court of Alamance County. North Carolina, by the plaintiff for the purpose of obtaining a decree of absolute divorce ,rom the said defendant upon statuto ry grounds, and the said defeud aut will further take notice that he is required to appear at the office of the Clerk of the Supe rior Court of said County at the Court House in Graham, North Carolina, on or before July lit, 193-f, and answer or demur to the complaint tiled in this action, or the plaintiff will apply to the court lor the relief demanded in the said complaint. This June 19th., 193-1. E. H. MURRAY, Clerk Superior Court Alamance D. J. Walker, Atty. Summons by Publication NORTH CAROLINA, ALAMANCE COUNTY. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT. Beulah H. Tate. VS Floyd Tate. The defendant, Floyd Tate, will hereby take notice that an action as entitled above has been instituted by the plaintiff in the Superior Court of Ala mance County for the purpose of obtaining an absolute divorce upon statutory grounds; and the said defendant, Floyd Tate, will further take notice that he is required to appear at the office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Alamance County at the courthouse in the Town of Graham, N. C., on or before the 10th day of July, 1334, and file answer or other pleadings in said action, or the plaintiff will be granted the relief de manded in'said action. This ISth pay of June, lt?34. IZORA McCLuRE, Ass't Clerk ot *he Superior Court. Long & Ross, Attys Notice of lte-Sale of Laud Sale Under and pursuant to the power of sale contained in that cer:aln deed of trust from Mrs. Lizzie Tur ner. widow, to the undersigned Trustee, dated May 5, 1930, and re corded in the office of the Ra ster of Deeds for Alamanc" Coun ty in Deed of Trust Book Xo. 112, at page Xo. 199, default having been made in the payment of the bond secured by the said deed of trust, the undersigned Trustee will offer 'or sale at public auction at the Courthouse Door in Graham, North Carolina, on Monday, June 25th, 1931, at 12 00 o'clock, noon, '.he following described real prop erty, to-wit; A certain lot or parcel of land n Graham Township, Alamance County, State of Xorth Carolina, idjoining the lots formerly owned bv J W. Harden, the lot of J. L. Scott, Sr.. and others, known in the plat of said town as Lot Xo. 49. This is the same property con \ eyed to Mrs. Mary J. Turner by Junius Harden, by Deed dated July 27, 1653, duly registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Alamance County, Deed Book Xo. 8, page 715-711, and reference is nade to that deed and the deeds ' therein referred to, for more par | ticular description The said sale wl'l be made in ac cordance with the terms of said need of trust and subiect to ad ' \ ar.ee bids and confirmation by the I Court as provided by law, foreclo sure sales under deed of trust. This is a re-s de or account of an advance bid and bidding will begin ht $1,785.00. | This June 11th, 193i. J. DOLPH LONG, Trustee, t Apple Vies: A $25,000,000 Business ? AT THE TOP, LEFT. Intricate machines peel the apples and cut the cores. Would you like one in your kitchen? (Photo courtesy of Fortune JHagasine.) ABOVE. Scene in one of the kitchens of Pie Bakeries, Inc., a $3,000,000 company. RIGHT. Ready for filling, these pies travel on an endless chain. The cook in a bakery like this has to be something of an engineer too! (Photo courtesy of Fortune Magaaine.) 0 a t mrTnttntr i xt *rr , j , ' Photo by Arthur Gerlach Auinuuvjn umy ixew rjugiauu ers are said to like it for breakfast, apple pie remains the great American dish. Everyone has seen an apple pie being made in the kitchen, but few people have seen the inside of one of the great apple pie bakeries, such as pictured above. Two out of every five pies baked in these modern factories are apple pies. Official figures disclose that $25,000,000 worth of apple pies are sold every year in this country?and that of course does not include any figures for home made apple pies. Roughly, the apple pie industry consumes 2,500,000 bu. of apples a year, 8,000 tons of shortening, 16,000 tons of flour, 20,000 tons of sugar and 78 I tons of cinnamon and nutmeg. Just as apple pie is a universal dish, apples are grown in almost every siaie. aiosi progressive apple-growers use fertilizer, believ ing, as does Carl Swinson of The Bureau of Agricultural Economics, that its increased use pays enor mous dividends. Nitrate of soda is heavily used in apple orchards where abundant growth is wanted. It's an interesting side-light that thousands and thousands of apple pies eaten in New England are made from apples which were fer tilized with American nitrate of soda made in Dixie. Boatloads of American nitrate of soda leave Hopewell, Virginia, every year, carrying this Southern fertilizer to Boston and other northern ports. It's a tribute to the South and to a great Southern industry that these Yankee apple farmers have joined with Southern farmers in saying, "Give me the American nitrate of soda made down South." TIRED? Worn out? Light a Camel! It is now known that they quickly turn on your flow of natu ral energy. Smoke all you want...Camel's costlier tobaccos never interfere with healthy nerves. "Get a MS with a Camel!" GUARANTEED QUALITY BINDER TWINE Super, $4.00 bale 8-lb ball, 7Qc.j* 5-lb ball, 43c. Imported, $3.75 bale 8-lb ball, 65c Cooperative buying assures farmers the best quality supplies at lowest possible cost. Fly Spray, $1.00 gal. Southern States Burlington Service Cooperative Non Prolit Coleman * AUTOMATIC Fasu-mide ELECTRIC IRON Light Weight 3V2 lbs. Full Six# IOOO Watts Come in and ?ee thif No bearing down, no heavy push* fine automatic electric |Dg and pulling. Extra heat does the iron . . . the new mod- Hr MjW work of extra weight. All you have j 1 ern Coleman EASY- to do is guide it. Has automatic i GLIDE. Saves you time, adjustable Heat Regulator; Button !, work and money . . . Bevel Sole Plate and Beveled Ironing and does better ironing. Edge, which makes it easy to iron around j A beauty, too. Graceful buttons and other hard-to-get places. Saves up i in design. Finished in to $5.00 a year on current because it has ' j I Super Chromium Plate. ^ | 1. Accural*, Long-Lasting Tharmostat 2. Dependable, Long-Life Heating Element | GRAHAM HARDWARE CO. and RICH & THOMPSON ; Lost Continent of Lemuria Found in Indian Ocean? Modern PevicoH Have Lrcatpd What Sri. enlists Believe is Fahled Conti. i nent. An lllnstratid Artiele in i Vhe American Weekly, the Mai;*, jzine Which Comes Cn June 24 With The BATTIMORESUNPAV AMERICAN Buy Your Copy From Your Favorite Newhey Or Newsdealer. Executor's Notice Having qualified as Executor (br the Last Will and Testament of Mary E. Walker, dec'd, late of Ali manee County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against estate of deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before the 25th day of May. 1935, or this notice (will be plead ed in bar of their recovery. All persona indebted , to said es tate will please make Immediate settlement. , This May 19th, 1931. Joseph G. Walker, Ex'r., Gaffney, S. C. Notice o t Trustee's Sale of Land Under Power in Deed of Trust I'nder and by virtue of the power and authority conferred by a cer - tain deed of trust dated February lfl, 1925, from N. W Roberson and wife. : A nnie Roberson to Raleigh ,Bank ; ing &: Trust Company, Trustee recorded in the office of the Reg ister of Deeds for Alamance Coun ty, North Carolina, in Book 100, ,at Pages571 to 515; said Raleigh Bank ing & Trust Company, having been (duly removed and The Commercial National Bank of Raleigh and Leon S. Brassfield, substituted therefor as trustees thereunder bv insr - ment recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Alamance County: and The Commercial ,Na tional Bank of Raleigh having been remot od and J. Granbery Tucker having" been substituted therefor as trustee thereunder by ins rn - ment recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Ala - mance County, all as provided in said deed of trust; default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness Bccured by said deed of trust and the owner and holder of said Indebtedness having d il>" requested said substituted truste - es to institute foreclosure proceed ings according to the provisions of said deed of trust; the undersign ed suostituted trustees will offor Jor sale and sell to the highest ci 1 ? der for cash at the Alamance Co unty Courthouse door in Graham, North Carolina, on Tuesday, June iilth. ! 93 4, at 12:00 o'clock noon. All that certain tract or parcel oi land situate in Alamance County, Newlin Township, State of North Carolina, and described as follows: Beginning at a rock, corner in the line of Dr. Mann and Monroe John son ; thence with Monroe Johnson's line, crossing Mary's Creek, South 2 degrees 30 minutes East 41 chains and 75 links to a stone; thence W. 17 chains, Cf03sing public Toad to a rock in H. J. Stockard line; thence nith H. J. Stockard's line South 2 degrees 30 minutes East 18 chains and 60 links to a rock, corner ,1 n Walter Stockard's line; thence wlrh Walter Stockard's line East 26 tehs. and 50 links, re-crossing said road to a rock, corner in O. Pickard's line; thence with O. Pickard's lin ? ( North 16 chains to a rock corner, thence with O. Pickard's line East 10 chhains to a rock, corner in Pob Marlette's line; thence with Eob Marlette's line North 10 chains to a rock corner; thence West 5 chains to rock corner; thence North 12 chains and 50 links to rock cor - ner; thence East 8 chains and 60 links to a rock corner on E ast bank of Mary's Creek; thence N. 1 8 chains and 50 links to a ro' k Marlette's corner in the line of Dr Mann, thence with said line of Dr Mann and crossing a private road, West 13 chains and 60 links jto a rock corner; thence Northi 85 deg. 50 minutes West 10 chains to the [loint of beginning, and contafnin g 133.1 acres, more or less. The above description embraces and includes the three tracts of land conveyed to the said N. W. Rob erson by John A. Poust and wife. Mrs S. A. Roberson and T C. Rob srson and others, and said tract of and being originally a part of t h e IVilliam Roberson home place. This the 23rd day of May, 1931. All those certain tracts or par tels of land, situate in Alamance f. Oranbery Tucker and Leon S. Brassfield, Substituted Trustees. Winston & Tucker, Attys. Raleigh, V. C. r

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