Newspapers / Forest City Courier (Forest … / Oct. 22, 1931, edition 1 / Page 5
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sdav. October 22, 1931. ■ c -/ociofP* II BY MRS. C. E. ALCOCK The help of friends will make this column more interesting. Please a jl 40 and report items for this column. All news items of interest to •mrren are welcomed. JJ P. C. Chapter £|ects Officers. t Lee-Eaves-McDaniel Chapter, C.. met last Thursday after ■ t 3:30 o'clock at the home of F. I. Barber. At this session ot f;, . _ tor the next year were elect v follows: Mrs. Charles Z. Flack,! p r e>'-;ent; Mrs. F. I. Barber, vice! p,. e - nt; Mrs. G. P. Reid. secretary ;j Broadus Moore, treasurer; Mrs. j Gf'i-f Dalton, historian; Mrs. John p a k n. registrar; Mrs. G. C. Mc par . flag- custodian. )I>. Charles Flack and Mrs. John oali g ave » report of their trip t Charlotte, where they attended u jnual U. D. C. State convention X; t oal chapter was awarded a ten gold piece as a prize for se curir;. the most new members of any hapter in the state during the I)a ?: year. Mrs. Flack donated the oold piece to the monument fund. Mvs. Carl Huntley read a paper on George Washington Bicen tennial celebration, which will be held next year. .V interesting- discussion was held in retard to the proposed monument to be erected by the local chaptef* here. A: the close of business, a delight ful ?alad course was served. * * * Mi-. Tho.-. G. Stone, of Thermal Cry. -pent Monday night with Mrs. C. E. Alcock. * * «•« ID-. A. A. Price and three chil dren. of Stony Point, spent Monday here with Mr. and Mrs. V. T. Davis. » * * Mi;* Rebecca Perrin spent the week *Mid at her home in Bishopville, S. C. * * ♦ 3lr-. G. P. Hamrick, of Shelby, was the week end guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. McKinney. ifr * * Mi-- Mary Crow, of Oakland, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Morris. * *. m M:.-. Ernest Roberson spent Mon day wirh her sister. Miss Dorothy Dogs. :t in Asheville. * * * M: Robert Hair and little daugh ter. .f Pineville, are visiting her fathe Mr. J. B. Long. * * m Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Edelstein and m»u. -pent tho week end in Saluda, S. C » * » Major Dave Glickman left Sun day n a business trip to New York and rher points north. * * * Mi-. S. N. Watson spent the week end v. ith her daughter, Mrs. R. B. Dobs..n and Mr. Dobson in Spartan burg. sjc * * M . and Mrs. M. H. Freeman, of r. S. C.. spent Sunday here u 'ith the former's- parents, Mr. and i'- ; . L. Freeman. * t- r and Mrs. J. W. Williams re- Monday from Atlanta, Ga., they attended the world-wide v .ce of the Methodist church. * * * - May me Martin, Minnie Sara Bailey, Thelma Moss iry Crowell were shopping in nburg. Saturday. * * * •Ir. tnd Mrs. R. Marion Ross and n, of Charlotte, were guests -♦ir. and Mrs. J. W. McKinney, Sunday. * * » and Mrs. Grady Carpenter a!:( ! onildren, of Gastonia spent the • l - end here with Mr. and Mrs. T. Davis. T- x r- Mr?. M. R. Carroll, of Forest City, K spent a few days here with her 'laughter, Mrs. H. B. Doggett and Mr. lioggett. * » * Mio. F. Thornton, of Mullins., 1 •, is spending this week here ' her daughter, Mrs. Charles and Mr. Flack. * * ♦ apt. Dave Glickman left first of week to purchase new goods for Bee Hive. He will visit Balti-1 New York and Boston on this and is shipping in new goods , Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Wilkie, of * Bessemer City, visited friends here , Monday. ■ * * • Miss Alice Barber and Forest Barber, Jr., spent last week end with ! their uncle, Mr. Frank Barber in Asheville. • * * * Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Fanning and daughter, Miss Gertrude, of Wood ruff, S. C., were recent guests of. Mrs. Dora Wilkie. ! ♦* * i Miss Annabelle Ware, of Ashe ville Normal, Asheville, is at the Rutherford hospital where she un derwent an operation for the remov al of her tonsils. * * Mrs. A. W. Falvey and Misses Kathleen Dorsey, Nelle and Margar et Young and Mr. Claude Young at tended the funeral of Mr. John R. Dover in Shelby, Monday afternoon. * * * | Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Harrill and children, Mesdames J. M. Tate, Vir ginia Roberson and son, Milton spent J-Sundav with Mr. and Mrs. C. S. j Calton in Sunshine. I * * * Word has been received here that ; little Billie Kendrick, who is under j going treatment at Shriners hospital at Greenville, is doing nicely and mak ing splendid improvement. * * * Mr. G. P. Hyder has taken over the management of the Sinclair plant known as the Young Filling Statio?i. j Mr. C. J. Baldwin will devote his time to the wholesale end of the j Sinclair business. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator! of the estate of A. A. Price, deceas |ed, late of Rutherford county, North | Carolina, this is to notify all per sons having claims against the es tate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before jthe 19th day of October, 1932, or j this notice will be pleaded in bar |of their recovery. All persons in |debted to the said estate will please I make immediate settlement. This, the 19th day of October, 1931. V. T. DAVIS, Administrator, of 'estate of A. A. Price, Deceased, ic. O. Ridings, Att'y. 3-4t. Woman's Club Asks Hog Pens Be Abolished At the last meeting of the Forest City Woman's Club resolutions pro testing the keeping of hogs in the residential section of the city were adopted. The. club also requested the city officials to adopt an ordinance prohibiting the maintenance of hog pens and hogs within the thickiy settled sections of the town. The resolutions follow: "Whereas, in the absence of any law or ordinance preventing 4 the keeping of hogs and hog pens with in the residential sections of the town of Forest City, N. C., a great many hogs and hog pens have been and are being kept therein, stagnat ing the air with a foul odor, pro viding breeding places for flies and germ carrying insects, and other wise resulting in most undersirable nuisances; it is therefore, "Resolved, First: That the Wo man's Club of Forest City, North i Carolina, unanimously favors the I removal and elimination of all hog pens within dense residential sec tions of the town of Forest City, j "Second: That the Woman's Club lof Forest City, North Carolina, ear nestly petitions the governing body of said town to pass, at least prior to the opening of the spring of 1932, an ordinance prohibiting the keep ing of any hogs within the dense residential sections of said town. "Third: That a copy of this reso lution be placed with the governing body of the town of Forest City, and a copy published in The Forest j City Courier. —Resolutions committee of the Woman's Club. Macon county, limed his Laredo soy- j beans this year he "harvested 4.2 to!fs of cured hay an acre and where he ; did not lime, he harvested only 2.7 i tons an acre. I THE FOREST CITY (N. C.) COURIER HONOR ROLL • List of Honor Students for First Six Weeks of High School and Grammar School. I j Graed 1 Bl—Carolyn Bodie, Betty Black, Louise Blanton, Betty Dun can, Betty Freeman, Martha Hope Harrill, Mary Lila Hamrick, Margaret J£ingr Harrill, Lucy Hamrick, Helen Mcßrayer, Josephine Sanders, Tom Brown, Thornton Finch, George Fisher, Boyd Nanney, J. E. Neighbors Dean Hardin, Jack Upton. Grade 1 B2—Mary Frances Har rill, Betty Jean Harrill, Ruby Lee Johns, Dorothy Meares, Virginia Toney, Eugene Huntley, Cewitt Grant, Herbert James, Michael Mor row, Jr., Frank Moore Dorsey, Jim mie Dye. j Grade I—Robert Lee Bostic, Leon ard Hardin, Arthur Lawson, D. L. Smart, Eloise Carter, Frances Car ter, Evelyn Crowder, Valerie Gee, Mary Newton, Mary Helen Sisk, Ruth Sisk, Catherine Suber. j Grade 2 B—Helen Bisrns, Ber tha Giles, Evangeline Grayson, Karo lyn Jobe, Almeda McMurry, John Downey, William Hartley, Jack Ham rick, Kerwin Stallings, Robert Wai kins, Marjorie Smith, Edith Love lace, Martha Jeane Harrill, Louise ; Richbourg, Jakie Alexander, James Earley, James Grant, Reburn Epley, Martha Callahan, Norman Whitesides, Ira Mas Woody, Billy Hardin, J. M. Jenkins, Henry Freeman. ; Grade 3 Bl—Frances Blanton , Dorothy Rose Dalton, Sara Kate Davis, Dorothy Harris, Doris Hodge, Modine Nanney, Eunice Thompson, Wendell Young. Grade 3 A—Francis Hardin, Ford Gurley, Robert Smith. Grade 4—Bernice Dorsey, Char lies Moore, Gladys Reinhardt, Madge Allen. Grade sA—Mary Helen Caldwell, IMax Duncan. | Grade 6B—Virginia Searsy, Mar sha Alexander. High School. j Eighth grade—James Bradley. Ninth grade—Mary Logan King, | Ernest Harrill, Eleanor Hollifield. ! Tenth grade—Winifred Gray, Rose j Suber. j Eleventh grade—Alice Matheny, Myra Morris, Frances Ledbetter, Doris Ledbetter. : ! Comments On The "Kangaroo Court 9 * ! In regard to the brutal Kangaroo ! Court that exists in our county jail. ; I read the article in the Forest City ; Courier last week that Hon C. 0. , Ridings had published and I :wa nt to congratulate hi m i for putting this before the eyes ! of the public. Many is the time I j have wondered that our good county I officers would allow a brutal thing i like this to exist, and go on in a { civilized country like we are living j in. Father and mother think about J your son if he were arrested, and j was guilty of no crime, whatever, l which is done in many cases, and j placed in jail with the worst of ! criminals and these criminals tied him down and whipped him until i the blood streamed down over his i body. And if it is not your boy, it | is some mother's boy, who is being , brutally beaten by these hardened i criminals. Father and mother it i* 1 time you are waking up to the fact and forbid such things of this kind to be allowed. However, I have faith in our good county officers and I believe they will abolish and forbid the brutal thing like this to go on. And- if they should fail, and allow it to go on then I think that it is time for the good people of our coun ty and state to raise their voices against a brutal act like this to gf> on so I hope some other good citi zens will express their opinion thru our good county paper and let us know how you feel about allowing a thing of this kind to exist in our own county. —B. H. WILKINS, Harris. Americans who wonder why China doesn't control her great rivers have probably forgotten the Mississippi flood. Maybe the world wouldn't have so much trouble in solving its prob lems if it could get the real facts established. Farmers seldom starve, that s whv there hasn't been an agrarian revolt in the United States in the last five years. Winter wheat and winter legumes will be planted to a greater extent in Johnston county this fall. "SPIRIT OF NOTRE DAME" AT HORN'S, OCT. 26-27 The Spirit of Notre Dame" is to be shown at Horn's Theatre next Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 26-27. The greatest piece of entertain ment you've seen in years—the fin est college picture ever made! Mothers!— Here are your sons— li\ing, loving, fighting for supremacy in a glorious, romantic football drama Down the field they go—bands playing, crowds cheering, men of steel fired by the glorious Rockne tradition of fight! fight! fight! for the. glory of the team! Youth, romance, bright college years, carefree sweetheart days! It will make your heart beat faster, you will be swept away by nerve tingling emotions! All women will love it. All men will thrill to it! It is real, it is true, it is authentic it is just as Knute Rockne would have wanted it, and it is, in all rev erence, dedicated to him, the friend of youth, the maker of men! NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of the pow er and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by B. B. Henson and wife, Ola Henson, dated June 2nd, 1927. and recorded in the office of the : Register of Deeds of Rutherford County, North Carolina, in book A-6 at page 250. default having been made in the payment of the indebted ness secured thereby, and the holder : thereof having demanded that sale be made of the lands covered there by for the payment of said indebted ness, the undersigned trustee will of fer for sale at Public Auction to the I highest bidder for cash, at the court i house door in Ejutherfordton, N. I •C., on | MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1931. iat the hour of 12 o'clock, M., the : following described tract of land: j First Tract: Being part of Miller ; and Strickland tracts and bounded las follows: Beginning on a stake on ;the east side of road and runs with 'old line south 49 west 787 to a stone ,in the field; thence south 49 east ;678 feet to a stake; thence south 21 1-2 west 341 feet to a stake; j thence north 49 west 615 feet to a 'stake in old line, south 49 west 413 feet to a stone, thence north 25 west 182 5-10 feet to a poplar stump; thence north 53 1-2 west 288 feet 1 , to a stone; thence north 40 east \ 1556 feet to a stake in the field; thence south 46 1-2 east 353 3-10 feet to the place of the beginning, containing 18.68 acres more or less. 1 Second Tract: Being the 25 acres > | tract deed to P. H. Henson by W. M. Strickland and wife, L. H. Strick land and bounded as follows: Begin ning on white oak stump, J. M. Hen son's corner in the old Alexander : line, and runs north 80 west 524 , feet to a stone in the west side of ; road; thence south 10 west 217 feet to a stake in the east side of road; thence south 40 west 787 feet to a stone in field; thence south 40 east 1253 feet to a stone in the old Alex ander line; thence with it north 4 east, to the beginning, containing 25 acres more or less. This, the 20th day of October, 1031. 3-4t. B. T. JONES, Jr., Trustee. WANT ADS FOR SALE—One wicker baby carriage and also one leather stroll er. both in good condition. Inquire at Courier office. 3-3t i FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE— Large Oak typewriter desk, fine con dition. Exchange for electric sew ing machine in good condition. Tele phone 84. 3-lt- Farmers Hardware Co. has recent -1 ly taken the national known line of | Purina Checkerboard feed. This is | considered one among the very best 1 and nothing better. They make the . price right. | SCRATCH PADS—Two for 5c Just the thing for Grocerymen. Handy for making notes, and mem orandums. About 125 sheets to a pad. Get all you need at The Cour ier Office. Turnip Seed. All kinds, at Farm ers Hardware Co. ! I - ' The difference between a politi cian and a statesman is that a statesman stand? for something be sides his job. I Your Old Friend I I JACK I Has not gone out of business. He in- 1 I vites you to call and see him at | j I The Bee Hive I Bargain Center of the County, |j Forest city f \ Telephone 58 I ""'S §SKr»* I>OURIER n —— Letterheads, Billheads Cards, Circulars, Folders, Fine Booklets, Pamphlets, etc. We never disappoint a customer on a promise. You get the job when its due I I FOREST CITY, NORTH CAROLINA WILL SEND veu GOmaSSmes AND THIS NEWSPAPER tea FOR oNury jj THE MAGAZINES LISTED cost through your home town news paper? You can actually get five of X 'fTDSSi America's leading farm and fiction 1 Sfm magazines at this amazing price if A A If you order now. If you act quickly you g Soai. w '" rece ' ve iiilY magazines during the next year for just a little more some se come to y° u now - K J Gentlemen: I wish to take advantage of your magazine bargain offer lam enclosing the above amount in payment for a one year sub- scription to your paper and the five magazines that I have marked with D American Poultry Journal [] Household Magazine R M □ The Country Home 1 Illustrated Mechanics I □ Everybody's Poultry Magazine I 1 PathHndar (Weekly) M □ The Farm Journal Li People's Popular Monthly ,if t 'i y □ Gentlewoman Magazine LI Poultry Success □ Good Stories LI Standard Poultry Journal '3ftT G Home Circle U Successful Farming r □ Home Friend □ Woman's World
Forest City Courier (Forest City, N.C.)
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Oct. 22, 1931, edition 1
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