Newspapers / The Charlotte Herald (Charlotte, … / Jan. 4, 1924, edition 1 / Page 7
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—*y— * . ' "■" 1 1 ---—■— LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS V / NOTICE. J North Carolina Mecklenburg County Nellie L. Bagwell, Plaintiff, vs: Er . ne«t Plummer Bagwell, Defendant. Notice of Publication of Summons: 4Ehe,defendant above named will a^e notice that an action entitled as lovg has been commenced in the Superior Court of Mecklenburg County by the plaintiff for an abso lute divorce from the defendant upon grounds set forth in the complaint on file in the Office of the Clerk of the Superior Court. The said defend ant will further take notice that he is required to appear before the Clerkjjjf the Superior Court of said Coupmnt the Court House, in Char •-fottnjf N. C., on January 21st, 1924, ' then and there to answer or demur to, the complaint in said action, or . the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said com plaint. This the ■ 18th day of December, D. 1928. * (Signed) J. A. RUSSELL, Assistant Clerk Superior ' Court. ,rvin Li Ritch, Attorney. D21-28-J4-11 NOTICE. North Carolina Mecklenburg County Lillie Reid, Plaintiff, vs. John Reid, ■ Defendant. Notice of Publication of Summons: 4 • ? The defendant above named will take notice that an action entitled as 4 above has been commenced in the Superior Court pf Mecklenburg ; County by the plaintiff for an abso JJ lute divorce from the defendant upon * 2|ys|oqnd-s set forth In the complaint ■ file in the Office of the Clerk of ■ Superior Court. The said defend will further take notice that he B^required to appear before the ^Klerk of the Superior Court of said ■■County at the Court House, in Char _ lOJtte, N. C., on January 21st, 1924, v. then and there to answer or demur to, thfe complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said com j plaint. This the 18th, day of December, A. D. 1923 (Signed) J. A. RUSSELL, Assistant Clefk Superior Court. Mjarvin L. Ritch, Attorney, i ... D21-28-J4-11 NOTICE. 4 North Carolina Mecklenburg County. Sarah Stewart, Plaintiff, vs. C. S. Stewart, Defendant. Notice of Publication of Summons: The Defendant abovfe named take notice, that an action entitled as above, has been commenced in Meck lenburg County for an Absolute Di vorce on the grounds laid down in ...tlm. statute and the said Defendant ;will' further take notice that he is retired to appear before the Clerk of the Superior Court of Mecklenburg County on the 12th day of the month of January, 1924, in Charlotte, h North Carolina, and answer or de mur to the complaint in said action, Bor the Plaintiff will apply to the ^^■burt for the relief demanded in said ^■complaint. JH J. A. RUSSELL, IHL, Asst. Clerk Superior Court, 'w ' This the 10th day of December, ▼ 1923. D14-21-28-J4 COMMISSIONER’S SALE. Under and by virtue of the au thority in me vested by a decree of the Superior Court in that certain cause entitled, “J. A. Newton (wid ower) et al., Plaintiffs, v. Mrs. Lottie Newton Lowery and husband, Silas Lowery, Defendants,” being thereby licensed and ordered to sell lands, I jwdtt offer for safe at public auction at 'the court house door of Mecklenburg County, N’. C., on Monday, January 21, 1924, at 12 o’clock, noon, to the highest bidder for cash, all the fol lowing described tract or lot of land located in Charlotte Township, Meck lenburg County, North Carolina, be ing,: more particularly described as follows: v. Being Lot No. 6 in Block No. 6, •according to the Map of the Belmont jBungs Company, recorded in Book WLn.page 8, to which said map refer —-----. aptness" doesn't halfexpressit Get One From QUEEN CITY CYCLE CO. | . 42 r^ORTH COLLEGE ^ ——* r • ' ■ • - ■ ~ " ■ ence is hereby*made, said lot fronting 50 feet on Belmont Avenue and ex tending back with that "width -150 feet. Being the same conveyed to Nancy E. Newton by J. A. Newton, by deed recorded in Book 280, page, 67 in said Register’s office and dated June 16, 1911. See also Book 364, page 322. This 20th day of December, A. D. 1923. , F. 0. CLARKSON, Commissioner. D21-28-J4-11-18. ---—, -- i ■ SHERIFF'S SALE OF LAND UNDER EXECUTION. Under and by virtue of the au thority of an execution issued to me by Hon. James M. Yandle, Clerk of the Superior Court on the 21st day of September, 1923, in the cause en titled “Henry Stitt, Plaintiff, v. Lavada Shaw, Defendant,” judgment having been obtained by the plain tiff against the defendant and the said judgment docketed in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court in Book of Judgments “R,” No. 1274, said judgment having been obtained on lien filed and notice given for labor and material furnished in ac cordance with statute, and the said issue not having been 'satisfied: Now, therefore, I, W. O. Cochran, Sheriff of Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, will sell at puublic auction at the court house door of Mecklen burg County on the first Monday in January, the same being January 7, 1924, at 12 o'clock, noon, to the highest bidder for cash all the follow ing described lot of land, lying and Being in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, Charlotte Township, same being known as one house and lot, No. 532 East 'Boundary Street, in said City of Charlotte, adjoining William Lewis and one Williams, same being conveyed to Lavada Shaw by Abram White, by deed recorded in Book 458, page 203, to whieh deed and all the deeds therein referred to reference is hereby made. This November 28, 1923. W. 0. COCHRAN, ^ 1 Sheriff. D14-21-2 8—J4. ADMINISTRATOR’S ADVERTISE MENT. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Virginia F. Marks, deceased, late of Mecklenburg coun ty, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims ' against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at the office of Taliaferro & Clarkson, Attorneys, on or before the 24th day of Decem ber, 1924, or this notice will be plead ed in bar of their recovery. All pei> sons indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment. J. A. MARKS, Administrator of Virginia F. Marks. This 24th day of December, A. D., 1923. D28a4-ll-18-25-F-l TRUSTEE'S SALE. North Carolina Mecklenburg County Under and by virtue of the poWer and authority vested in the under signed by that certain deed of trust executed by W. B. Beaty and wife, Nancy Ann Beaty, dated the 7th day of June, 1918, and recorded in book 390, page 582, of the office of the Register of Deeds for 'Mecklenburg County, to which reference is here by made# and because of default in complying with the terms and ...per forming the condition therein con tained; having been hereto request ed by the cestui ,^ue trust therein, I Will sell at public auction for cafeh, at the County Courthouse door of Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, in Charlotte, N. C., on the third Mon day in January] 1924, being the 21st day of January, 1924, at 12 o’clockf noon, the lands embraced in said deed of trust, the said lands being describ ed as follows, to-wit: “All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land containing 219 acres more or less, situated, lying and be ing on a private road about 14 miles sightly northeast from the city of Charlotte, Huntersville township. County of Mecklenburg, State of North Carolina, having such shape, metes, courses and distances as will more fully appear by reference to a plat thereof madd by John S. Long, C. S., December 7, 1888, and being bounded on the north by the land of J. M. Baker and the Baird lands; on the east by the land of W. M. Brad ford; on the south.by Potts lands, the lands of Will Jordan and the lands of George Jordan; and on the west by the Old Bell place, now own 64 by Sims and the lands of,J. M. Baker.- This be the same tract of land heretofore conveyed to the said W. B. Beaty and wife, Nancy Ann Beaty by J. R. Wallace and wife, H. A. Wallace by deed dated the 31st day of December, 1910, and record ed in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Mecklenburg County in book 268, page 270.” This the 18th day of December, MARVIN L. RITCH, Trustee. D21-28-J4-11. JOB PRINTING-PHONE 4126 NO SUBSTITUTE FOR UNION —" .. ' .— .... . - V BY EDWARD KEATING, : Editor of Labor. "ti '| «■ " m. |' u ill 1 -I"1- v > ■'' ".1 ". iiTiiij. I T’BERE is no substitute for the 1 labor union. i I have been in the labor movement for thirty years, and I have done a frightful lot of talking and writing in that time. But in season and out, I have persistently endeavored to get across to my fellow workers the idea expressed in my opening sentence. There is no substitute for the union. \ It is the workers’ Vendun. If the union falls, the labor movement wiH be destroyed. Therefore our first thought should be, “preserve the union.” But that devotion should not pre vent us using other weapons. Chief among those weapons is education. The workers must know what is going on in the world, as well as what has gone an in the world. A knowledge of what has gone on may enable us to deal ef fectively wi^Ji what is going on. Lyow.is this knowledge to be con veyed to the workers? To my mind there is only one way:/ Labor must have its own press-— owned by labor, controlled by labor, edited by labor, subject to no outside influence. Political action is another great weapon. M'any of labor’s battles in the future will be decided at the bal lot box. Thousands of men died, tens of thousands rotted in prison cells, countless thousands suffered in body and mind in order that the work ers of today might have the ballot. We catanot afford to be careless in the use of a legacy purchased at such tremendous sacrifice. In politics the workers must be independent. They must not wear the party collar. They must support' men a&d measures, and refuse to be come mere camp followers of politi cal bosses. We are justified in facing the fu ture with confidence. God has been very good to the workers of Ameri ca. No enemy can vanquish us if we are only true ourselves. PHILADELPHIA UNION MEN BUILD THEIR OWN HOMES By- International Labor News Service. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Jan. 2.— Progress made by the Quaker C,ity Cooperative Construction Company is believed by labor men to point the way to the settlement by members of organised labor of therl housing troubles. Nine homes, built, financed and de signed by union members in West Philadelphia^ They were erected at a cost estimated at 20 per cent less than individual builders would have this winter. W. T. Allen, of Carpenters’ Local No, 277, and seeretary-treasurer of the Philadelphia district of the Brotherhood of Carpenters, is treas urer of the Quaker City organization. He says: “We have enabled workers to buy good homes without undergoing fi nancial hardship. The first payment is $1,000. After that the homes can be paid for at the rate of $8.24 a month. Under such conditions, it is riot risky to prophecy that the move ment will continue to grow until it will be a big factor in solving the housing problem.” The funds for the erection of the nin© houses were raise*! by the sale of stock to union men and to the public. Through sale of . stocks about $8, 000 was raised. That was sufficient to finanie the purchase of land in Upton street, and to start construc tion. Funds to carry on the build )ing—to pay the union’* laborers and to purchase materials—were ad vanced by the Producers’ and Con sumers’ Bank, Chestnut street at ninth, which also is a co-operative labor institution. SENATOR LAFOLLETTE WILL REPORT |OR WORK WASHINGTON, jaa. 2.4 “Bob” LaFollette wit) be back on the job when the Senate re- ' convenes tonierrow. The leader of the Progressives , has now almost completely re covered from a severe attack of influenza brought back with him from his recent tour of Europe. During the holidays Senator LaFollette conferred with other Progressives, in Congress, mak ing, his plane for full participa tion in the fight which the Pro gressives will wage in 1924 for constructive legislation pledg ed to the people in the last elec- . tion. John Sinclair, one of the leaders of the Progressive forc es in Minnesota, Donald R. Rich barg, of Chicago, and Herman L. Ekern, attorney general of Wisconsin, were among the first to see thtr senator this week. The Senator and Mrs. LaFol lette enjoyed a family reunion 1 on Christmas day. Their twd sons, Robert,s Jr., and Philip, and daughters, Flora and Mary, \ were in the city to spend the holidays. New “Y&B” Coal Prices Phones 210-211 1 West Virginia Special . . $8*°° per ton “Y&B” Lump (Blue Gem) $900 per ton * Poca Egg and Lump . $10.*°° per ton V Pocahontas Steam . ... $7. 00 per ton " ' 9f Penn. Anthracite Furatce11*1 $ 18 °° per ton i Prices of Carloads On Application “Y&B” Ice and Coal Company ^ ^ v . . ■" - Phones 210 and 211 QUICK AND SATISFACTORY DELIVERIES Billy Sunday is a very attractive and forceful preacher—go to hear him
The Charlotte Herald (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Jan. 4, 1924, edition 1
7
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