Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / June 19, 1924, edition 1 / Page 2
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I rUE ASHEBORO COURIER, ASUEBOKO, IN. u Tkuwday, Jame It,!!! i i' .' it.-- NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION Notice is hereby given that by mu tual agreement, the partnership heretofore existing between Mr. E. N. Wall nd Mrs. Hattie Howell of fcawfieman, N. C, under the firm une of Mrs. E. N. Wall & Co. He and the same is hereby dj solved; the said Mrs. Hattie Howell have oU all her interest to the said E. N. Wall her partner in the said firm of Mrs. E. N. Wall & Co. The business will be continued by the said Mrs. E. N. Wall, who is to settle all elaims against the said fin ml Mrs. E. N. Wall & Co., and also to collect all debts owing to the said firm. And the said Mrs. Hattie Ho veil will not be responsible for any debts that is contracted after this data. This the 27th day of May 1924. MRS HATTIE HOWELL MRS. E. N. WALL, t-6-12-24 NOTICE OF SALE I NDER MOSTGAGI 1; Thane along the lino of Lot No. 1; North M degrees and SO minute West 444 1-4 feet to center of said By virtue of power esied in the PubUe Road, stake or stone in bank, undersigned by a certain mortgage southwest corner of Lot No. 1; Thence deed executed by Sherman HU1. of center oi ruouc ttoao aouw Randolph County to Harrison Smith- 43 ST and SO Minutes West 645 erman, the nth day of March. 1922. to the beginning, containing and recorded in book 195. at page 277 JJ-89 f? ol or leu. See in the office of Register of Deeds for 01 ? neirm, Asneooro, . w which u duly recorded in Reg ister of Deeds Office for Randolph Because of the influence of home demonstration work, several schools are now planning to have home eco nomics teachers next year, finds a district agent for the State College extension service. QOfKHMHrOOf)1 Gained Tea Pounds Mrs. George S. Hunter, of Columbus, Ga., says she suf fered severely with female troubles. "I had to go to bed and stay sometimes two weeks at a time," says Mrs. Hunter. "I could not work. My . . . were irregular said I got very thin. I went from 126 pounds down to less than 100. My mother had been a user of gill The Woman's Tonic and she knew what a good medicine it was for this troub le, to she told me to get some and take it. I sent to the store after it and before I had taken the first bottle f up 1 began to improve. My Ode hurt less and 1 began to mend in health. I took four bottles in all during the last ten months. Cardui acted as a fine tonic. . . I am well now. I have gained ten pounds and am still gaining. My sides do not trouble me at all and my ... are quite regular. I know that Cardui will help others Buffering from the same trouble." Take Cardui. m E-ioi OOOOOOOOfrOOOOOOOOOOOPOO Randolph County, I will sell at Dob- lie auction for cash on the 21 st day ef June, 1924, at 12 o'clock, M., at the aourt house door in Asheboro, N. C., the following lands, said land situate, lying and being in Union township, containing twenty-five acres more or less and a one-half interest in four teen and three-tenths acres known as the Sherman Hill land and for a more particular description of aaid land by metes and bounds reference is hereby given to Book 195 page 277 in the Office of the Register of Deeds I for Randolph County, default having, been made in the Daymen t of said! merUrare this sale is made under and 1 The Providence Township Sundav by virtue of the power vested in -said School Convention, which was held at County. N. C. Terms of Sale: Cash. Time of Sale Monday Jane 23rd, 1924, at i30 o'clock, P. M., or as soon there after as possible. Place of Sale: On the Premises. This May 21st, 1924. High Point Savings 4 Tract Co. ED. L. RAGAN, See. A Tress. 4t 5 29 24. Mortgagee. PROVIDENCE NEWS mortgage. This sale is made on the account of an advanced bid having been placed on a former bid in this action. This the 5th day of June, 1924. HARRISON SMITHERMAN, . Mortgagee. Brittain & Brittaim Attys. 2t 3 12 24. , NOTICE OF SALE UNDER MORTGAGE Bethel church Sunday, June 15,' was an interesting and inspiring conven tion. Among the speakers were Mr. Medenhall and Mrs. Kate Hunt Kirk man. Dr. Cicero Garner left Saturday for Beulahville, N. C, where he will prac tice dentistry. Miss Janie Parker, of Granville county is the guest of Miss Etta Neece. The farmers of this community are harvesting their rye and the wheat will be ready foi harvesting in a few days. We are glad to note thas Mrs. J, H. Skeen, who has been ill, is improv ing.' Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gregson visited relatives in this community Sunday. The friends of Mrs. E. L. Cox, will be sorry to hear that she does not improve very much. Several of our people attended the land, sale at Brown's Cross Roads, OO By virtue of power contained in a certain mortgage deed, executed by Effie White on the 29th day of Oc tober 1920, to High Point Savings and Trust Co., and duly recorded in the Office of Register of Deeds for Randolph County, N. C, in Book No. 196 Page 176 et als, and default hav ing been made in the payment there of when and as the same became due, and still remains past due and un- :u ... j i.;. Saturday, June 14. t(Wll W WIG lOOv CUiU U1UUCI V m T1 . -nr-i i l ! 1 ? Maci Taw A7 Wilonn qhH iihilrlMMi Public Auction on Monday, June 23rd, '; too 0-9.9n .1av p i J of Asheboro, recently visited Mrs. JwiL3! eJ2?,F- X Wilson's parents, Mr and Mrs. T. K.' jises, the lands embraced and described g ' in said mortgage deed, situate in Randolph County, N. C, in Trinity SOPHIA ROUTE 1 NEWS Township, and described and bounded as follows: The hum of the reaper is heard in ! Being Lot No. 2. Beginning at a this section. . point in centef of Public Road in A lare rowd attended the Chfl Trinity, N. C stake or stone, on area's Day at Marlboro , Sunday, bank, N. W. corner of Lot No. 3, be- tnos attending from a distance were longing to J. S. White. Thence along Rev- Robert Melvin and daughter, the line of Lot No. 3 South 67 de- Miss Ara, Miss Jauss and Prof. N. F. grees and 50 minutes East 1400 feet i'arlow, of Greensboro; Miss Ethel Xo a stake or stone, North East Cox and Mr. Ernest Macon, of Cli corner of Lot No. 3, in Heilig's line; " ax, and Mr. and Mrs. Manly Millikan Thence along the line of said Heilfg of High Point. North 3 degrees and 30 minutes East Mr. James C. Davis spent Thursday 795 1-2 feet crossing Johnson branch with relatives. to a stone in said Heiligs corner in Miss Cora Edwards attended the Old Clark Marsh line; Thence along Brown Land Sale, Saturday, the line of Old Clark Marsh Place Mrs. Civilia Lowe, of High Point, North 78 Degrees and 30 minutes is spending several days with relatives West 445 1-2 feet to a stone at cedar, in this section. corner of Clark Marsh Old Place; Among the visitors at Mrs. Eliifa Thence along the line of Clark Marsh Edward's Sunday afternoon were Mr. Old Place North 3 Degrees and 15 and Mrs. Marion Osborne and litty? minutes East 180 feet to a stake or Miss Hannah Ruth Osborne, of near stone, South East corner of Lot No. Coltranes Mill. t 'ft J KLANISSUE A HARD PROBLEM Democrats are Anxious to Keep Klan Issue Out of New York Convention. (By David F. St Clair) I K I,' ou imm to Mo w this chart!" "V7HATS the good of a acientific lubricating chart," says W the experienced Fleet Bom, when you don't take the trouble to follow it. You ought to use medium In Winter and heavy in Summer, watch your transmission grease and xut a rel flushing oil when you drain your crank case Car and oU engineers together have figured out the chart. I qse it f or every model In the fieei-you ought to be just m carefuL". FifrycWyeart of experience la stttdywg lubrkag1 prob lems and specifying the righidWcanb are back th"e"Sttnd ard PoUrine Chart:; for ciry truck'or tractor motor, trans mittiotu iilferettlai-the chi U . yW.bne! rtUahU guldev leafli What 4 chart, lays an4 ttlck to it. Moat good dealers . ? carry all the "Standard" Polarine Motor ofli and greases you need and urge you to accept only whitthe chart mommeads. Washington, June the most dangerous now confronts the Democrats is- how to keep the K KIm Klan issue out of the New York convention. Thk same question may come up this lwek at Qeveland but it is not made a fighting issue in the Republican party. Ia the Democratic party the ' leading eanoiaate lor president, W. G. Ad 00, it is charged by Senator derwood s friends, hat acquired his great strength in the South and West through the influence of the klan. Whether or not this is true, i(j is no secret that the klan is very friendly to Mr. McAdoo and he has shown no disposition to antagonize it - The danger that is earetf ra the New York convention is; the growing demand of the klan itself tha the convention must go on record as en-' dorsing it. For sometime the anti klan forces represented' by Senator Underwood and Governor Smith have been threatening to ask the conven tion to pass an. anti-klan resolution. This threat did not scare anybody for the. Smith-Underwood men can coh troi neither the committee on resolu tions nor the convention itself. But .it now appears that the klan is encouraging move on the . part of its enemies for a show-down in the convention. This was a disturbing fact in the Democratic conferences held here last week, both in the Mc Adoo and anti-McAdoo camps for the leaders of the party are extremely anxious to keep this issue out of the campaign. It cuts both ways as a political question. If the New York convention should commit , the party to the endorsement of tile klan it would sweep the big Eastern States in to, the Republican., party and the Central and Western States into the Democratic party; Political leaders foresee what will happen if this religious issue is in jected into American politics. In the intense hatred that it has always aroused elsewhere in history and is certain to stir up here, every other question will be overshadowed and the tolerance that the founders of the republic put into its cornerstones will be destroyed. That tolerance, the klan now shouts, has already been destroyed and it is only the blind who will not see what is before the country. It asserts the issue cannot be blinked or put out of sight by the dread of timid politicians. Mr. McAdoo's friends point out that to counterbalance the charge that he has made use of the klan to pro mbte his candidacy, he has chosen former Senator Phelan, of California, ta prominent Catholic kto make the leading nominating speecn tor mm in the New York convention. That not only shows his tolerance, they contend but he has neither favored nor op posed bringing up the klan issue in the convention. Hiq backers here charge that his enemies are trying to make a klan candidate of him solely to injure him with all those persons A Republican congressman said vst.prdav: "McAdoo is the most dangerous man for us the Democrats can put up, and he , will get many votes, especially in the west, 01 men and women who are in sympathy with the nationalism and patriotism of the klan ideals." As the convention approaches nearer anil nearer, the feeling seems to grow that as Mr. McAdoo anil Governor Smith have come to incar nate in the public mind respectively the opposite side of this klan issue, the only way to eliminate it from the campaign, will be to nominate some other man for President. Governor Smith's nomiation has never been re garded as possible because of the ery danger of the klan issue, and if the klan has impressed tne puniic to nnv extent that Mr. McAdoo is its candidate, many Democrats in Kw York convention will be inclined to think twice before throwing away the big Democratic Catholic vote. It was particularly that aspect of! the danirerous klan issue that Mr, McAdoo's managers sensed in their; conference here last week. But they ' profess to be absolutely confident that, ha will or rather that he has already. overcome this obstacle in ota peta at. he has vanquished the ou siaiMurerK , 1' TRDflTT NEWS Mrs. Naaaie. Craven is. visiting rel atives ia Richmond, Petersburg sad ether places ia Virginia. " Will Roy Parkin, who has been at tending school at Chapel Hill, is spending some time here with his brother, Ashford Parkin, in North Triniti.. ...... 01x61 IKfl are so plentiful in 'North Trinity that children and others bare een picking on shares, . They have not begun on the new school building yet guess they will . . ,, before long. 10, Decidedly Jam Weeks is visiting in proDicm uiai Edgecombe county now. ' " nrc D. C Johnson, of High Point, was ia towm Thursday. She Was - ac companied: toy her little son, Dougan flimi'j'm . ..... Mrs.i H. -& Craven, of Ridgecrest, baa' been 'Visiting' relatives here. -Mr-jrRdlaiid Pavna ant! danehter. Me- Kildmit. uMitiimii diT last ww in Un- Hlarh$St&ths nest of her daugh ter, Mrsi Harrey Burgess, BST HEALING OIL IN THE WORLD Eddy's Port Heattng Oil Forehead, nose and ieafsees, af fects; For Rheumatism, - Lnmbage, Sprains, 8 tiff Joints and Patns i er Acnes; Catarrh, Hsy Feveiv Back ache, FooUche, Headache, Wounds, Cuts nad: .Sores. - Coughs, - Sera Throat, tNenialgia, and Sronchitis leaves a bad cough, so does nBa" and lagrippe.' This oil can be taken in ternal and; external. Guaranteed or money refunded. Largs bottle $1.60. Write r call, -4--. EDDti HERB; PILL CO. Vm. Wains SVMUwaokee Wis. ET" - , 1 NOTICE i '"'. ,: Wehay( 1 Samson "Tractor . and 1 Fprdson, both new. Spec ially priced for immediate sale. Wfll trade for Automobile. See L MV Mfller at . ' THE MOTOR CO. Winston-Salem, Universal' Bldg. or Address P. 0. BoxMoo7 DEllCO-UGHT Llimwbnaiurfhk HK1AO-UGHT VtH dc wlouVIe!trieity wMn DKLCO-UQKt owprtci f "4 itnarallyffy f mim inipltn lc it o easily, wfthln. -your twh. Saw Leo Dealer for' - Awe sne Temt, w.... m "i5'V'- (3 Box 491 B.G COX? Dealer Asheboro, N. C Phone 168 Procrastination istheTnirf of Time Perhaps you have no sur plus money at the present time that you want to place on a bank account But you expect to have a surplus at some future time, at "harvest time" perhaps, whatever it may be that you expect to harvest. This is the time to make your provision for old age. Decide now that a definite portion, of your income shall be laid aside every year, and then when old ajre comes you will be pro vided for. Our savings department pays 4 per cent interest, compounded Quarterly. Make your plans, now, and open a savings account with this banfc MakV provision for the rainy day that comes to every one. Begin to save NOW Bank of FranWmle E. & MOSS, Cashier FRANKLINVILLE, N. C mmtmftitMiieiuiii CCaivffilErKi One-slith of the time ships save In using the Panama Canal pays their tolls. This Is simply a saving In boat operation ; the saving In speeding merchandise to markets Is an additional gain. The Panama Canal is a spectacular demonstration of countless similar savings to commerce through viaducts, highways, tunnels and bridges shojqtenlng routes and making them safer through Portland Cement. Atlas Is also making homes safer and more perma nent. If you plan building, ask yon dealer how and where you can be benefited In using "the Standard by which all other makes are measured.". the P1DnnTI A P l l H II ' W .W wmm . . ,- . N'ORFOLK SpUTIip RAILROAD crviNO onx . The StraggU DUcesrages Masy, Cttlsem er Asheootev . ffTANDARD OIL COMPANY (Ntw Jeney) . and th juiWkdWari? Tokrlni. f , t, t K.,i tl:t"i ' ' .i i -1 ; f ' mm correct Urn ymut 4rt' Poltrinm , m,t lyt nm .f' 1 ,V. '.-in1 , 1(1. : J -V t! ; v'.i , , (Announces A Around all day whh an ichfaif Uc Cant rest at sight;. s ' , 'i Koough to make any eoe givfoot".) Dean's Pills are helping thousand. They are for kidney backache; , And ether kidney ills. . ' Hers Is Asheboro proof of their Krs, W. D. Spoon. 8. nyuyvf BLf says: "I bad the grip an my kidseya were left ia a weak condition. I got ngni flown so l couion iwm mv tmtt five minutes st a Urns.. My bade ached and my whole body was in nmln M faot and IlmDS SWeUSS Snl my flmrers wers so suff , morning that -I couldn't bend them. Ths wsr . mr kidneys acted csusxi me jw end of snnovancs. I used Dosn'S rillte i fof theee ailmenu, vhicn I roi a Asheboro Drug Co. ", Dosn'lr wert , Just the right remedy for me and soon pot m en my feet sgslm' The schet and pains left and my kldneyi were reruiateo." -, . ; , .- , .? . v Price 60c, at . an dealers. ' uen t Imply sk for a kidney rvmHy gt Doan's Pills the sme that Mrs. KpoAn Ksd. Fonter-Miibum Co, Mfrg, Uuffslo, W. Y, ' ,. ' i Erlha TsrVs end V.t. Frnt f C3rk wr mrrid st V rntl Uy E'Jlh, Iv. V.. B. I'l, of.'wU'.rg. To ! ACQUADAIN.C . ' jXoton Springs; n. a Tickets on sale Fridaya and Saturdaya 'i M of each week commencing: May 15tH and. ?. ?" coihtinuinsr until Aufftjt , 29; ;1924,,, final:; ?. limit to reach original startinsrj point -prior'tdMdnight of Tuesday followihar;: "Por'' further. Hnfrrnatibn call bit any jybrfolk, Southern ticket agent or'com- r xnunicatc with J. F. Dalton; general i'as: .scngcr Agent, Norfolk, u:;' : rr. paIton. " General lv cngcr Agent1 r. i . h i. ..4. V V
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 19, 1924, edition 1
2
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