Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Jan. 9, 1936, edition 1 / Page 6
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i 1 I ‘mihlsKton, Jaa. f .^^bUter- thtt tBaiioa’a air detansea % 884 a«w tlKhtlng iplaaaa at aa iWpoiJiiiata eoat of |!l8.8*».r«« «■* Meeanaeaded to Oas^Nkra to- 48^ Pnaident Roosai^. 1987 budKot ' eatiaiAtes, imwtlBc Babstanttally iotraaBed iWniiii latloaa to tba air artIui’Of •■•fc aarricas for thi« awTtidsa,' aalfc# for 507 new i>iaaas"for_ •e army and 377 for tb»%avy. i 'Of a projected 831,8««,'»Mr of i r plane purchaaas ia ' the financial year, 448 ■(%' to ed for the reanlar army's eral headquarters ail* ■ force, 9t tar the national KUhrd itod 16' •or the organiied reeerra;'' Due to the rapidity of 0;^leB- aiMe. howerer, army offfc^ ea- tkmnted most of theae trotolil'W mahired for replacemeats" and Mntt the actual number bt plalhea fn eerrice would be attgcidiited •mtj slightly. Secretary Dern recently recom mended a five year plane por- *a»e program for the army" to- wwlving the procurement’of ' 608 marbines annually. This would •bJI for an anticipated outlay of awroximately |70,000,088 ‘ • an- aaally. The army expected to have to awiviee a total of 1,348 planM by dha end of tbe 1938 fiscal’Veer. »m June 30. This number does ■m take into account a large mmotity of bombardment and anaiefc ships ordered last mbdtb and nearly 100 pursuit mach|h^' Imr which bids ■will be opened on April 15. ‘ ■provision was made in the i •■dget to give the navy 273 new 1 plaaes for the regular .service, [ I*-'’ ^ - for the reserve a.s replace- j istrator. mcBts and 6U as a det'inile in-^ wreaxe to its pre.sent aerial strength. Funds available were State PrUbB, Trehton, Jan. 7.—Bruno Richard Haupt mann was sitting in Celt No. 8, a towel around his neck and his face smothered in lather, when through the bars cams a voice saying: “The execution has been set for around 8 o'clock the night of Friday .'January 17.” '.]. The prison barber lifted his razor quickly off the face of the man who murdered tbe Lind bergh baby. Most men jump when told tbe day and hour .of their death. Hauptmann merely turned his head toward the cor ridor of thw denth house. There stood Principal Keeper Mark O. Kimberling, bringing him the worst news a man can get. Kimberling wore a dark suit and had horn-rimmed glasses high on the bridge of his nose. The barber’s razor scraped away again at Hauptmann’s face. Calm In Tense Moment Raleigh, , quota of 18,498.080, tbe state works progiess administration hu allotted *7,048,111,88. to Greats 68,1K8 JoIm tor destitute North Carolfniani, tbe state offl- ^ annonaMlf today. Bo faf/ ap^ proximatety 48,008 jobs hive been tilted’. -P j Tbe largest allocation, was *1;- 371,404.63 tor'sewing room prc^ jects to employ 11,661 sromen. Tbat allotment constitvtM 18.46 per cent of the total amonnt. ' Road projects ranksecond, with an allocation of |966,986.04 to. provide 7,418 •. jobs; . public building. projecU,’,. |846,S19;63 for 8,OO0 jobs. Conferences oa beach erosion control and other projects wilt be held with Washington authoriUes tomorrow by State WPA Admin istrator George W, Coan Jr;, who NOnCK OF sA|i]*l OF REAL ESTATK North Carolina, Wilkes Coun ty. Under and by virtue of a pow- In that tense moment Hsupt-. 0i> contained in a certain Deed of mann was calmer than Kimber-1 Trust executed by James Sale ling. The principal keeper told a- j and wife, Beatrice Sale on the . .... . . n .n .1. SAOS SANTA CLAIT^^d. . . . The fane this small town has attained/ as thoOsindB spea tbonsaads of pisem of mail are seat here during the hoU- iad/i’-fHt feniirfftoi'each year, is to be perpetuated by a new poet oOm hsOHc; dediefi^ aa a sbiSe to the childres of Asaetiea. Above if aa e ^ a m r~ a --.a'f 1 ,'^M aa. ' a f VT . — — - 3 9 ^ ^ ^ OW a O a lad e bout it later today. “I can’t remember whether Hauptmann said anything or not,’’ he explained. "Maybe he thanked me, but I’m not sure. I know be didn’t show any signs of 4th day of March, 1935, to the undersigned Trustee for Mrs. R. C. Miller, and recorded in Book 170, page 218 In the office of the Register of Deeds of Wilkes County, said deed of trust being to secure the payment of certain secure the payment of certain emotion; there wasn t a change ^^6 past due in his face or appearance.’’ --j —j The barber finished his silROTf'liadlBl nf Ihii ‘’nsnfljlTnnsr" postofiee which the Santa Otaae ~ idMr of Oassmaree has apwoved. Below is tbe preaent poetofiM whieh OBRfed an threngh the yWi . . . toTaase, Job, wiped the lather out of Haupt mann’s ears and went away. Ktm- and unpaid, and request having been made on the Trustee, the undersigned Trustee will expose for sale at public auction at the lUCOillf O couu vTXjxai, cawsaj. a^aaae' tui oaiw *av g/UMOsao berllng left, too, and Hauptmann i Court iHouse Boor in Wllkesboro, . .. ... . . W.V at oa*. VaKs-tl. Says Failure To Use Land To Best Advantage Poverty Cause was in his cell alone, free to cal- niilate the number of hours, min utes and even seconds that are left for him to spend among tho living. N. C„ on the 8th day of Febru ary, 1936, at one o’clock p. m. the following described land, ly ing and being In Wilkes County, North Carolina, and described .land defined as;follows: It was a melancholy place and I Beginning on a stone in Mrs. manner for a person to receive j j j paust Holloway’s line, it llesettlemont [ration I I,and—the raw material Adminis- same time, this work will put a news of his death. The sun never j being Master George Henry Kel- Gray. Assistant Admin-1 plo.vment for local people. At the jbe death house because ]y’s South East corner, and run- there are no windows. Light | nlng north 50 degrees east with eomes in Indirectly from a sky-1 old line, it being Mrs. I. J. Foust light, but it Is so placed that, Holloway’s line 49 poles to her even at noon it conveys only a i corner, a stone: thence noith .32- of xsffmated at 127.660.000 The Navy department to make public detailed with respect to its air Thcee were reported to (’arms, torest.s and range—is one , , III our major sources of wealth, refused ' of figures , Hundreds of thousands of rural service. . families are now enduring a pov- be ap-lerly utterly ineousistent with standards of living apei'alion and sli.ghtly more than ! largely tiecaiise of a failure to ap- erly prsriimately l.oOO planes now in : American stop to the needless destruction of soil fertility, which, if permit ted to continue, would make the rehabilitation of the people even move difficult iind costly. raniilies who cannot lie em ployed in forest work will he ’I'-lpetl to movi» otil of the hills to flat, fertile lands where can become self-supporting. cInliBs ngoliurt th« iptito anid MMHA'ta Bidilbtt th« andOHlgMd IfortR OnroUiiA. UB 18th d*y of PooembMr, 1881, or this hoOilii will be plead in bar of thofr rochVory. AH ponoDs? indebtakl to satt Mtato wUI ptaase make Immediate settlemont. Thta the 18tl» December, .*> MR«. JOHN D. HAVL. Admtoistrator of John D., Hall, ,do«ftewdd^j--- NOnCR OF SALB OF BB.%L SHTACT W1 North Carolina, Wilkes County. Under and by virtue of a cer tain mortgage deed eluted the 8rd dav of August, 198* trdm C. R. Billings, Blanche Bil' NoncK W. Johnson and Carrie J to J. W. Walker, and the of said mortgage deed not hi North Carolina, Wilkes Coun ty. gray, thick gloom to the prison-i ers below. , I.egiil lterour.se Left mils There is legal recourse left to j I llauptinaun — the New Jersey I i court of pardons meets ,‘tatiirday :t0 west 17 1-2 poles to a stake in old state highway No. 60; thence with the meanders of said highway south 70 1-2 degrees west 37 1-2 poles; then south ,"i2 1-2 degrees west with same IS 3-4 poles to a .stake in said under con.struclion. i Oldsmobile Sales area.s sucii as iHirlions of southern .Appalachian Moun- 5 and Service : Electric and Acetylene Welding* B^y and Fender Repairing, Radiator Repairing and General Antomobile W ' ay or Night ! use the land to its l)cst advant- ~! age. _ I In ! he iains, where conditions of living .are partictilarly .severe, one fen- Isoii for the present itoverly is to I be found in llie liistory of land j use. Tdugfgrest. ■wiiich formerly rrtdedUie cfljef income for the people of the sotH-bern_ . mourL-jJtV iT‘’‘T.a!lob or grazing, tains, was cut off without any The extent ol this work nioruing to consider liis plea for clemency- -but tlie plans of pri son officials are based on the bordering' similar lonversinn of the land to lietter uses is iieing und ent, ken in other areas siicli as i the old forest re.gion bordering, „ . , , be executed a week from 1 nday. tile f.reat Lakes, the western . ,, , „ ■ „ . • ,, As the days wear on, prison of- plains, and the oi l cotton Itelt of i , , ■ ,*, * , ,, , ncials liecome more certain that !)ie dren south. Land tlial is not , I aiiptmann never will talk —not fertile enongli lor farming can, ' . ■ . , „ , , . , * r ...even when the hig dynamo hums he almost alwavs utilized for . , , u • i- 1 i!i.„ am the man who was shaving Ins some oH.er purpt^e ke to.esuy j .tiok oi giaz)n„. I .. j( there and face today comes down ' ridor to shave his head road at Master George Henry- Kelly's corner; tlienee south 18 dpt^rces cast with his linp oioss- ing a hollow 31 poles to tho be ginning, containing 8 4-160 acies more or less. This the 7th day of .lannary. 1936. J, M. BROWN. 2-7-51. Trustee. XOTH'K Williams Motor Co. t T. H. WILLIAMS, Owner. I Mile West. N. Wilkesboro PHONE 334-J. I care for the future reproduction the long lime uece.ssary to restore i ^ _ 1 of the trees. The laud is on the the land, place it beyond tbe I wiiole too sleep for farming, and sphere of private enterprise. Got- cultivation merely aggravates the i ernmeutal action is essential un- ! problem bv encouraging the ero-1 ie.ss thou.«ands of families are to .Sion of tile fertile soil. j be abandoned fo permanent pov- ! With both tlie forest and tbe|erty and great areas of land rele- topsoil destroyed, llte people have gated to ruin. become economically '‘stranded ". I o—. T-r. r a dssi:d~c~a in and their standard of living has STA^ FAKMtKS AlU steadily declined. Housing is very ; FROM AAA REVIEWED poor, ronsistinii of dilnr^- dated, leaky (.-itbins which pivo insufficient shelter, and enforce t is any Under and by ^ t a. *1. T J i nner ana ov vinue of the any secret about the ^ •gh crime that the law has not executed 1934, virtite a ferreted out, Hauptmann is going to take it with liiin to the chair, officials lielie'v'e. C YCLE NEWS ' luihealtlty crowding. T'lie food I snppiy is so limited tliai children FATIGUE you'tired? No time to rest? ! TWb try a refreshing, sparkling 4rtak of Alka-Seltzer. Tkikc Alka-Seltzer for CokU, | Mtsd Indigestion, Headache, suifer from malnutrition, and , easily fall prey to disease. Educa- 1 tion is necessarily limited. | Society must decide whether | ' tlie.se conditions can be tolerated. i Kaleigli. .Ian. 6. — Governor Eliringhaiis received “in silence for the present'' the United Stales Supreme eourfs decision killing the Agricultural Adjust ment Administration, while in one (luarter tlip art was taken as a ehalleuge that “should fill I ('YCLE. Jan. 7.—Mr. L. W. I Lunsford is very ill, his many ! friends will regret to learn. I .Mr. .Mancie Roberts spent Tues- II is especially important when i we realize H't*' Ibe poverty every seat’’ 'at Democrat Jackson „{ i day dinners over the stale. fee rural slums means the de pendence of large niimliers of families mu.ii public cliariiy | S27.000.0(UI in rental relief. Our olijeetivp must be not , In two and one-half years the AAA had lined the pockets of .Vorth (’arolina farmers with » ' , iand lieiiefit iiayments besides .«8»ra}gia. Stomach Gas, Mus- only to restore to these people (hvotigh its control «&r. Rheumatic and Sciatic ! chance to attain an Amern.an ^ boosling the prices of Ruins. Pleasant, effective, eco- ; standard of living, but to make sane; , and ■ products. asmical, non-laxative, non-j them once more consumers arm; , o Schaiib, of the State Itatet forming—does not depress produeers of economic goods. , , „ extension service. who ^ a ca- bus ■ directed the AAA program gfwour is buying _up ti-aets^ of land Carolina, had no com- 8mni»'u various problem areas to helpi restore the natural forest or grass ment on the Supreme court dc- E.WISE-ALKALIZt: ifjsources which, if properly I eision. Me said, however, approx- cared for. can again provide em- \ have PtVVniIRCflIIIITVTAIISTHIS MOIWH t»a> SAVE PENALTY will save the penalty if you pay your county taxes on or before You FEBRUARY 1,1936 It will save you money if you will pay your 1935 taxes during Januaiy. Do so at your earliest convenience so that you will be sure to take advantage of the opportunity to eave the penjJty before it is added to the amount of your tax. WI B. SPMERS • SHBBUT OF,WILKES COUNTY imately 200,000 farmers i received AAA checks, j The latest figures from De.-.ii Schaub’s office showed that to * October 1, 1935, farmers of the j state who had co-operated with day night with his sister, Mrs. Albert Johnson, in IVindy Gap. Friends here were sorry to learn of the illness of Mr. Otha Johnson’s children at Windy Gap. Messrs. Harrison Hemrlc and Carl Hemric. of Boonville. visited the former’s son. Ernest. here one day recently. Mr. and Mrs. Quince Jarvis and three of their children spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Jarvis. Robert, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. .Mathis, was sick Monday. Mr. Preston Roberts Is quite sick w'ith a cold. Mr. and .Mrs. Carl Hemric, of Roonville. were dinner guests of Mr. and .Mrs. Ernest Hemric, Sunday. Mr. H. C. Roberts spent Sun day night with his father, Mr. T. K, RoKbrts. R. C., sou of Mr. and Mrs. S. D, Mathis, is sick with a cold. on the 14th day of June, by W. H. Jones and wife. Jettie Jones, to the undersigned trustee, and default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness .secured by said deed of trust, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, at two o’clock, p. m. on Friday the 7th day of February, 1936, on the premises, the fol lowing described property: Lying and being in Wilkes County and State of North Caro lina. in New Castle Township, and more particularly described* as follows: Beginning at ar, old corner in the old Hampton line, near the Jonesville Road, running South 10 degrees east crossing said road — chains, to a holly on the b.-anch; South 7 1-2 degrees west :i.50 chains to a small red oak; In the Superior Court. , J. M. Brown. Administrator C. T. A. of the Estate of M. F. Brown, Deceased, v.s. J. E. Ham by and ■wife, Dora Hamby. The defendants, J. E. Hamby and Dora Hamby will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Su perior Court of 'Wilkes County, North Carolina to recover judg ment of them by reason of the exSention of certain promlsory notes and negotiable instruments executed by the said defendants to M. P. Brown, deceased; and the said defendants will further take notice that they are required to appear at the office of tbe Clerk of the Superior Court of Wilkes County in the court house in Wllkesboro, N. C., with in thirty (30) days after the ad judication of the service of sum mons by publication in this cause and answer or deoiiir to the com plaint in said action or the plain tiff will apply to the Court for tlie relief demanded in said com plaint. This the 1st day of Jan., 1936. COR.V CAUDII.L, Deputy. Clerk of Superior Court, M'ilkes County. 1-23-lt John R. Jones. Attorney. been complied with, and mount secured thereby and payable and dema been made and payme I will on Saturda, day of January, 1936, clock p.’m„ at the C(J door in Wllkesboro, N. for sale to the highest bidder', for cash, the following described property, to-wlt: In Rock Creek Township and known as the Johnson home- steadi. adjoining the lands of Walker heirs, C. W. Wiles and Hubert Johnson; Beginning at a stake In the Spring branch running north 18 degrees west 46 1-2 poles to a white oak, the N. S. Myers cor ner; thence north with the My ers line 24 poles to a white south 81 1-2 east crossing down Turner’s Branch 63 poles to a white oak on banic said branch; thence south 62 poles crossing a small branch to a Spanish oak; thence west with the C. W. Walker line 5 poles to a white oak, west 33 poles to a stake, north 18 degrees west one pole to the beginning, containing 30 acres more or Ie.ss. This the Util day of Diii-in- ber, 193.7. J. W. WALKER. l-9-5t. .Morlgir-. By John R. Jores and .1. Brown, Attorneys. oak^^ 53/TT M. Mt’l’ICK OK SALK I ers, situate on the north side of j the Yadkin River Is, the Town By vi'iue of the ]iower of sale contained in a certain deed of trust executed on Deeemher 10. 1924, from T. B. Finley and wife, Carrie Cowles Finley to the undersigned trustee, said deed of trust being recorded in the of fice of the Register of Deeds for Wilkes County in Book 14 0, page 234, and the terms of same hav ing not. been complied witli and the 'amrnTnt seouieJ ’I> Stlld dlfSl* of trust being due and payable and payment demanded and re fused. I "n'iU on Wednesday, the 1.5th day of January. 1936. at ten o’clock, a. m. in AVilkeaboro, I Rector’s corner; thenc beginning at a sink" n-., Soutli side of an alley, J. || | tor and T. B. I'inley i iu im ■. running north 58 1-: o, east with the outside of alley 545 feet to a slake ji, dividing line between lUiiir Finley lands; thence soutli degrees east with said lino feet to a water oak or a on thebankoUhfl-^^tm; ifl?nif!^^rCiiDCre^’; up and with the .said river 570 feet, ^ ^ to a stake on the fuf.,* river, T. B. Finleylr*V north 20 North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder, for cash, the following described tracts of real estate, lo-wit: First Tract: Situate in AVilkes County, North Carolina, adjoin ing the lands of A. A. Finley, degrees west with their line .362 feet to the beginning, containing 6 acres, more or less. Fourth I'ract: Situate in the Town of North AVilkesboro. be ginning at a stake on the South side of B Street 150 feet east- Oak Furniture Companv. et a!., I wardly of the southeast corner of bounded as follows: streets, and running Beginnin.g on a large walnut south 27 degrees 27 rninutes east COLD IS TOO MUCH FOR WEATHER MAN Kinston. Jan. 6.—A part of the time last week this city’s res- AAA had received $26,159.-i idents had to guess at the tem- The rental and benefit! iierature. AA’eather Observer Alex I payments .started in .May. 19.33. AVilliams went on strike when the ! No figures for the last quarter of \ cold spell was at its worst. His ' ‘ ■■ ■ - ! ’’weather works’’ are high above 1935 were available. ’Pobacco growers had received $1 4,515,189.49 of the total or the major share. Cotton growers had been paid $10,698,546.59. corn-hog producers $848,005.77 and wheat growers $97,451.88. Under the AA’’arren potato con trol plan the potato growers were to benefit in 1936 for the first time. Hie municipal building is a police sergeant. Williams south 28 degrees west 4 chains to a poplar near the branch; thence with the branch as fol lows, E. 3.39 chains to a walnut, S. 15 1-2 degrees E. 3.21 chains to a poplar. S, 4 1-2 degrees E. 4.46 chains to a walnut on the west side of the branch: N. 83 degrees E. .3.79 chains to a stake, south 72 degrees east 3 chains to a stake; south 43 1-2 degrees east 1.94 chains to a walnut; north 77 degrees east 4.47 chains to a large wild cherry, the old Gilliam corner near Swan Creek; north 2 degrees west 27 chains 64 links to a stone in Arm strong’s line, corner of Bethel church lot; with Church,lot west 2 chains; north 2 degrees west 4 chains and 75 links to a stone in C. W. Gilliam's line; south 75 degrees west 11 chains 80 links to the beginning. Containing 35 acres. Second Tract: Beginning at a stone H. S. Vanhoy’s corner in Burchett’s line, runs with i Bolt Rips Off Shoe of Child j Anderson, S. C., I shoe on the right Jan. foot IX E a police sergeant. j v^nhoy’s line Bouth 10 1-2 de- For a time t*>® ladder leading . 13,35 chains to a to the thermometers and o***®*" I stake in AVill Hampton’s line; doodads were covered w ith Ic®-[ North 80 1-2 degrees east with AVilliams refused to risk his neck : and Jule Hampton’s line climbing it. He declined to listen 15.33 chains to a stone Jule to newspaper people who Insisted Hampton’s corner in Jackson the public was just dying to line; with Jackson’s '*“® M.n Fdud i ri.rr.r8rde*;». .Alo’int Airy, Jan. 6.—A fued|^^,est 10 chains and 54 links^to just above the ford in Aadkin River on the dividing line be tween this tract and A. Finley’s land and running from thence North 36 degrees 15 minutes west 1580 feet to a stake in A. A. Fin ley’s lino 8 feet westwardly from a rock corner of the AVinston Land and Improvement Com pany; thence south 88 degrees 10 minutes east 110 feet; thence parallel with 10th Street 100 feet to a 25 foot alley; thence north 62 degrees 33 minutes east along the north side of said al ley 50 feet to a stake: thence north 27 degrees 27 minutes west parallel with 10th Street 100 feet to a stake in the south side of B Street: tlieuce south 50 feet to the beginning, being lots No. 20 and 18 in Block 27 north 88 degrees 30 minutes east 1 as shown in the AATnston I.and 20 feet- thence north 88 degrees 1 and Improvement Company’s map east 160 feet to a rock corner; | of the Town of North AA'ilkes- thenco south 34 degrees 7 min- boro. utes east 64 4 feet to a stake; near a walnut; thence south 40 Notation: Lot 18, Block 27, released. See deed from Julian degrees 41 minutes east 618 feet Price to T. B. Finley in Hook to a rock corner on the Bank of 1 145. page 389. the Yadkin River; thence «P L. In the Town Fifth Tract tlie river to a VtakeH thence north ' North AVilkesboro, beginning 36 degrees 15 minutes west to. a stake on the northeast come the large walnut tree to the be-1 of D and 10th Streets and runs ■^inning containing 11 acres, ex-j north with 10th Street llo let*- cepting therefrom public road to an alley; thence eastwardl) 4-10 of an acre and also except-1 to the alley 50 feet to a stake; ing about one-haif of an acre i thence southwardly parallel wits sold to the Oak Furniture Com-! 10th Street 140 feet to D Street: pauy off the north end of this j thence westwardly with the iiorlli tract Iving north and norlheasi side of D Street to tho begin of tlie ditch as appears by deed ning. being lots 29 and 31 i i to said Company. | B*p®k 56 on the map of .Voit.i Second Tract: Adjoiuiiig the; Wilkesboro. first tract and beginning at a; Sixth Tract. Beginning at a rock corner in the dividing line j slake on the Northwest corner ot between A A and T. U. Finley H and 10th Streets and niiiniiT running south 46 degrees and 45 , north 27 degrees 27 niinirfes minutes west 500 feet to a stake, i west along the west side of lUtli (rock corner) on the Bank of | street 140 feet to an all-y: Reddies River; thence extending | thence south 62 degrees 33 min- to’ the middle of Reddies River I utes west along the south side and with the middle of this ' of said alley 50 feet to a stake: stream down to the middle of the thence southwardly parallel to Yadkin River regulated by mea surements made on banks as fol lows: ‘ Thence south from the rock 10th Street 140 feet to a stake on lae north side of D Street; thence eastwardly along th« north side of D Street 50 feet to described corner on the bank 32' degrees 1 the beginning, being ea.st 350 feet at the upper end of as lots 1 and 3 in Block 57 in eight-year-old girl was torn off by lightning at a country house near here during a rainstorm to day, rendering the child uncon scious for five minutes and leav ing a -slight injury resembling a scald. 6.—The i .viu-jiii • -• -- I ncoi iv — i - •* i of an (said to be caused by a love affair | the beginning. Containing la i-i Checks COLDS and FEVER |-ljqaid)^h!eto'“' first dsy Salve-Nose HBADAOTES Drops ^ in 30 miaatca between two younger members acres, of the families culminated In the! Third Ttact: ■shooting of Thomas Marion, 32, lauds of R. L- near his tome in the Slloam sec tion of Surry county late yester day. Caleb Wagoner, 50, who alleg edly shot the youth In the back as he entered an automobile, made his escape and was still at large today although sheriff’s officers combed the surrounding country side throughout the night, ,, Adjoining the Harris on the north, Jim Morrison and T. N. Green on the east, T. N. Green and J. B. Armstrong on the. south and J. B. Armstrong on the west.*Containing 50 acres, more or lees. For further description reference is made to deed from F. M. SAvaim, 'Tax Collector, to VV H Jones, recorded in Book 14'8, page 13. Register of Deeds office -Wilkes County., This the 7th day of January, A thimblefta- of tobacco^eWs^iSayt.' - - - * *'■' win furnish ehohgt plants fori ,*• an acre of ground. ' , 1-30-4^;, New r’lvii changing course of Reddii-j River; thence with said Canal south 38 degrees 13 min utes east 790 feet to a stake near a clump of box elders at the low er end of the canal; thence to and with the. center of Yadkin River to a point on the north bank of said river that bears from the box elder corner north 37 degrees 37 minutes east 607 feet to a stake in the dividing line between A. A. Finley and T. B. Finley 7 feet from the hank of Yadkin River: thence with the said dividing line north 86 de grees 15 minntes west 1066 feet to the beginning, containing 12 97-l(to acres, less 4-10,61-an acre discounted tor roads. , ThirA.TfwA: New* .Uto,««oij4 tract-adjoining the lands of i F. p. Blair,. J. H. Rector and oth- lo of ^ foe? the map of the Town of North AA'llkesboro, N. C. Seventh Tract: Beginning at the northeast corner of E and 11th Streets and running north 27 degrees and 27 minutes west along the east side of 11th Street to a stake on the south side of ■ P. Street; thence north 62 grees 33 minutes east along* south side ol E Street 225 to a stake; thence south 27 de grees and 27 minutes east 300 feet to a stake on the north side of E Street: thence westwardly with the north side of E Street 225 feet to the beginning. - This the 11th day of Decem ber, 1935. JULIAN PRICE, iiyustee. 'JOfiB' R. Jones and J, M. Attorneys. - ' ’'7
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Jan. 9, 1936, edition 1
6
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