Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / Jan. 19, 1939, edition 1 / Page 4
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vhmwxt. JAW. ii, it» J)eaUi And Burial Of ' Mrs. Nannie Joyce Smith (Contributed.) lira. Nannie J. Smith, 74 years, U months, 7 days, departed this life on January 2, 1939. She was * daughter of the late Peril Joyce and late Mrs. Joyce, and was marriej to D. C. Smith of Stuart, Virginia, Route 3, Septem ber 3, 1882, and resided near where she spent her childhood jteys. To this union was born ten children, four preceding her to the grave. She is Burvived by her husband, D. C. Smith, Stuart, Route 3.; four sons ,JoseDh Smith, of Amelia, Va~; . Lee, of Raleigh,. N. t g.»; Tom. and Dewey, •f High,.Poinl,;.N. G, two daugh-. ters, Mrs. Frank Smith, of Law sonville, N. C.; and Mrs. Blaine Collins, of High Point, N. C., for ty grand-children and six l great grandchildren and three brothers, Watron, 'Alex and John Joyce, all of Stuart, Va., Route 3. Mrs. Joyce united with the Primitive Baptist Church at State Line July 1893, being a faithful member for 45 years and was baptized by the late Elder F. P. Branscombe. lire. Smith was one of, our most Ji • 1 beloved and highly respected ladies of this .community. She was a loving companion, kind mother and good neighbor. Friends, neighbors and relatives •came from far and near to lend ■» helping hand in caring for hei during her illness. She alqo had a. graduate nurse with her and the family physician and a " did what they could do. God knew beat to take her from this world where there are no pains and sorrows and to dwell with Jesus forevermore. We feel our loss was her heavenly gain. Funeral services were held a t her home Church on January 3, by Elder F. P. Stone and W. J. Brown and a .large congregation assembled to pay their last tribute to their aged friend. The beautiful floral tri butes spoke highly of the esteem in which she was held. Inter jnent was in the church cemetery plot Active pallbearers were grand sons and one by marriage. Ed ward, Richard, Walter and Charlie Smith, Herbert Rogers and Harold Martin Honorary pall bearers were A. A. Jefferson, A. M. Flippin, Will Rogers and Can a Ounkley, deacons and members af the church. Flower girls were granddaugh ters, Edith, Irene, Gertrude, El- Tor, Estelle, Madeline, Annie and Hilda Smith, Nellie Elsie, Rogers and Thelma Collins. A FRIEND. Land Posters For Sale At Reporter Office Land posters for those who wish to past their lands against banters or other tresspassers, may be had at the Reporter office printed on cardboard at 25 cents per dozen, or will be wot postpaid en. where at the •ame price. Address REPORTER, IHnbury, N. C. 13 OUT OF TOWN ((I ! ! .HUNTERS FAY )}) I (NO TAXES HERE \§ I ■x LET US DO YOUR M I 1 PRINTING Questions And Answers About Old-Age Insur ance ______________ m Q: I am a retired farmer 76 years old. I have no income or any means of support. Am I en titled to benefit under the Social Security Act? A: Because of your age, you are not covered by the old-age in surance provisions of the Social Security Act. However ,the old age insurance provisions of the Act make possible a Federal- State cooperative program for aid to needy men and women who are 65 years of age or aver. This program is administered .by your own State Welfare department. It is suggested that you consult your local city or county welfare department for information con cerning your eligibility. '• Q: I have just started to work in a factory on a part-time piece work basis. Do I come under the old-age insurance law and should I get an account number? A: Part-time employment is not excepted from the old-age in surance provisions of the Social Security Act, and the fact that you are paid on a piece-work basis has nothing to do With your being covered finder the You should apply - at the nearest So cial. Security BoW Field Office for an account number; and then report your number to your em ployer. Q: If a merchant employs his son in his store, is he covered by the old-age insurance provisions of the Social Security Act? A: Yej, old-age insurance pro visions of the Social Security Act cover all employees of a commer cial or industrial establishment who are less than 65 years of age. No exception is made for family employment. Q: My wife worked before we Were married. She had an ac count number and paid taxes on her salary. She does not work now and possibly will not work any tuore. Can she get any money under the Social Security Act for the time she has already worked ? A: The wages she haa earned will stand to her credit until she reaches age 65. If she should earn more wages in a job that comes under the Act between now and the time she reaches 6a, these earnings, likewise, will be credited to her Social Security ac count. She will not draw month ly benefits, however, an til she reaches 65. Should she die before she is 65 a lump-sum payment equal to 3 1-2 per cent, of all the wages she earned after 1936 in covered employment will be made to her estate. Q: I am a farmer but last fall I worked in a tobacco warehouse during the tobacco season. I was paid an hourly wage for the timo I worked. I understand that be cause I am a fanner I do not come under the Social Security Act and do not have to have account num ber. Is this correct? A: No. Your information la not correct. You are a farmer only when you farm, so far ai; tho Social Security Act is concerned. Under the Social Security Act, r '(-employment is xceptcd and agdcultu al labor Is excepted; 11'Ut when you take a job in a to jbacco warehouse or ui any other covered employment, you then THR DANBURY REPORTER 1 Proposed Cut In Relief Bill Is Big Blow To President ' Washington, Jan. 17—President Roosevelt tonight said that the proposed cut of $150,000000 in the new relief bill would force re moval of more than 1,000,000 workers from WPA rolls by June 1, and his estimate was promptly attacked by conservative Demo crats as "misleading." The President said at his press conference that the reduction voted by the House would deny relief aid to 4,000,000 or 5,000,- 000 persons. This estimate, he said, is based on figures showing that each WPA worker has three to three and one-half dependents. He nodded in agreement when a reporter told him that Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia, of New York, spokesman for the U. S. Conference of Mayora, had pro tested before a Senate appropria tions subcommittee today that *he cities would be unable to care for those who will be thrown off the WPA rolls. Who Will Feed Them? "Who will feed these people, if the government refuses •to do it and the cities are unable to?" he was asked. He replied that he was asking himself that question. Reporters hurried to the Capitol where the Senate subcommittee was concluding today's hearing on the $725,000,000 relief measure and cornered its chairman, stumpy conservative Alva Adams, (D), Colo. He declared the Pres ident's figures created the wrong impression and protested that i; was a simple matter of mathema tics to determine that the maxi mum number of WPA workers to be affected will be about 600,000. Stuart Theater "OUTLAWS OF SONORA"— The Three Mesquitters ride again. Smooth, fast, exciting, this is an excellent western. There is a grand free for all fight, an exci ting chaso on the desert, a short, , vicious fight, with Bob Livings- 1 ton throttling his enemy and col- 1 leoting the reward. j "TOO HOT TO HANDLE"—A 1 spectacular saga of newsreel men jand an aviatrix, filled with ex plosive action and suspense, play- ed by two of the brillian' stars ' sf "Test Pilot", Clarke Gable and j Myrna Loy. Gable is al his best as the sly cameraman who uses 1 1 his charm to entice flyer Myrna ; Loy to take a few shots. He fi nally wins her from rival Wal- 1 ter Pidgeon, If you liked "Test ! Pilot" don't miss this sequel. 1 "THE TEXANS"—The marvel ous hokum of Indian raida, stampedes, blizzards and dust stonms which beset a Texas fam ily on a trek to Kansas with 10,- 000 head of cattle after the Civil War is spectacularly effective here. Joan Bennett plays the lovely heroine and Randolph Scott plays onposiis her. May Robeson su the grandma is splen did. \ come under the Act. You should i "ftcuro an account number no | that y -ur wngo earnings in cover- J od employ- ..t . .iay be credited to your 1 6 curitj & ccount. SOCL XITRITY BO APT), Vinstoa-Sskm, N. C. — —,i. 4.. —r—- Welfare Department > Sends More Stokes Boys To CCC The following Stokes county ! boys were enrolled in the Civilian 1 Conservation Corps on January 10, 1939, through the Welfare de -1 partment. 1 James Alley, Walnut Cove. Everette Coon, Pinnacle. Jack Joyce, Madison. Albert Reid, Madison. Daniel M. Rhodes, Lawsonville. ( Charles Smith, Pinnacle. Woodrow Southern, German ton. Paul Terrell, Madison. James Bitting, (Col.), Walnut Cove. Clanton Vaughn, (col.), Walnut Cove. " GOOD Tobacco and small grain farm with good buildings and in good community in Orange coun ty. See or write— !; C. E. WAKEFIELD, Guilford, N. C. ' 12jan2w NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND By virtue of an order of the ' Clerk of the Superior Court of I Stokes County, North Carolina, made and entered- on the .——day of January, 1939, i n the special'' proceeding pending in sai d court, entitled, "R. J. Scott, Administra- ] tor, d. b. n. of A. C. Amos, de- ji ceased, vs. Jim Amos, et al", the ' undersigned will, on— MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 1939, at the hour of 10 o'cloek a. m., at the Courthouse door in .Danbury, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, the following described lands: 1 "Lying and being in Snow 1 Creek township, Stokes county, North Carolina, adjoining the 1 lands of J. H. Ellington, ' Peter \ Martin and others. Beginning on 1 a post oak stump, Pete r Martin's 1 corner, runs North on his line 58 i chains to a stake in W. R. Car-' ter's line; West o n his line 3 ] chains to a stake; thence North ' on his line 20.5 chains to pointers; ' 'thence East 3 chains to a sour- ] wood; thence North 10 chains to 1 a red oak; Sam Steele's corner; ' thence North 78 degrees West on '1 his line 12 chains to a forked j maple, Hutcherson's corner; '] South on his line 8 chains t9 a 1 chestnut tree; thence 45 degrees '] West 10.5 chains to a white oak; i r thence South 61 degrees West 23 'i chains to a maple; thence South ji 41 degrees West 10 chains to a i white oak; thence South 53 de- j grees West 6 chains to a chestnut 1 oak; thence South on Hawkins' j line 36 chains crossing Mill ] Creek to a black gum; thence ' l East on Alley's I'ne I'.o chains 10 1 a stake; thence South 36 degrees l East 33 chains to the beginning, I containing 269 acres, more or j less. Save and except about 29 acres sold off." For description j; of portion excepted see descrip- j; tion of Eight Tract in Book No. 82, page 167, office of the Regis- j ter of Deeds of Stokes county, 'j North Carolina. ' £ The last and highest bidder at 1 the above sale, as an evidence of ' j good faith will be required be- j, fore his or her bid is accepted to j deposit with the Clerk of the ' Superior Court a sum equal to j twenty per cent, of the bid. 1 This day of January. 1939. j R. J. Scott, Administrator, , d. b. n:, of A. C. Amoa, de'cd j DALLAS C. KIRBY, Attorney ] NOTICE | ■ ■ Having qualified as executors 1 of L. C. Boy'. deceased, notice ' is hereby fiver, > a ll persons hav- 1 ing claims agair the estate of ' the said L. C. . ..yles, deceased, : to present ttu.n to the unc '.fen- ■ ej executor, piuperly aut! !ea ted, on or -cfc 1 e Janu*. 1 2, 11939, or this nctlce will be j:' •' '- led in bar of their recovery. Ana I all persons indebted ♦:> said es tate arc* nutiflad to . ;*ke imme diate payment to the undersigned. TWs.J'inuury 11, 1939. .. . • . O. E. FJOi'IJCS, and RAY F > ZLES, nterH. Chas. IL Httoabeok, Aity. NOTICE OF SALS OF LAJfD j UNDEB A DEED OF IBUBT By virtue of the power contain ed in a deed in trust executed to |me on the 14th day of January, 1928, by C. C. Jones and Wife Sarah Jones, which is recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Stokes county, North Carolina, in Book No. 76, at page 565, to which reference Is here unto made, to secure the pay ment of the sum of $1525.00, to Robert W. George, default having been made in the payment of said 1 debt at maturity, and the owners ! and holders of the note secured j by said deed in trust, having ap plied to me to foreclose the trust deed for the satisfaction of the debt secured thereby, I will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, at the Court House door in Danbury, North Carolina, on— SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18TH, 1939, at the hour of eleven o'clock a. m., the land, conveyed in the deed in trust, to-wit: . "Lot No. 2, Beginning at a stone, corner of Lot No. 1, fun ning North, 26 degrees East, 2 chains to a Spanish oak; thence South 84 degrees ' East, 19 3-4 chains to a stone; thence South, 4 degrees West, 16.07 chains to a", stone, Denny's line, corner of Lot No. 1; thence West, a new line, 27.35 chains to the begin ning, containing 40 1-10 acres, more or less." | See the following deeds record- ! in the office of the Register of j j Deeds of Stokes county, Nbrth . Carolina, in the following Books: I . No. 67, at page 174; No. 75, at , page 278, No. 75 at page 279, to., jail of which reference is hereun- \ to made." ' ] This the 10th day of Jan., 1939. 1 N. O. PETREE, , J Trustee. 1 NOTICE OF RE-SALE j By virtue of an' order of re- ! sale made by J. Watt Tuttle, j Clerk Superior Court of Stokes 1 , county, North ' Carolina, dated' , December 23, 1938, directing the '} undersigned Trustee to advertise 1 1 and re-sell the>tr&atfl of land) hereinafter described, and also fully described in that certain * deed of trust executed by J. I Rufus Covington and wife, Elsie 1 Covington, to the undersigned IJ Trustee, recorded in Book 83,'] page 173, in office of Register of." Deeds of Stokes county, North \ Carolina, I will offer for public' sale, to the highest bidder, for' j! Cfish, in front of the "Wilson ( Filling Station" near Brim Grove 1 Baptist Church in Stokes county, 'c North Carolina, on— jj TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1939, I at TWO o'clock p. m., the follow-11 ing three tracts of land described , * in said deed of trust:- 0 FIRST TRACT: A tract of 30 e acres, more or less of land ad joining lands of the Presley Pearce and the George Pearce lands, and others, in Quaker Gap. I township, and for metes and bounds reference is hereby made o description contained in a deed ' from William R. Govington and | Sarah Covington, his wife, to said t J. R. Covington, dated Feb. 3,' c 1899, recorded in said office in r deed Book No. 43 page 164 etc.. a o which record reference is made !t for metes and bounds and full de- li scription. j \ SECOND TRACT: A tract con- c taining 7 1-2 acres, more or less, 'v adjoining lands of John Coving- ■ { ton, George Pearce and others, in j Quaker Gap township, and for t full description reference is here- j by made to description contained in a deed from W. R. Covington and wife S. E. Covington to said J. R. Covington, dated March 22, 1900, recorded in said office in I Book No. 43 pages 163, etc. Ij j THIRD TRACT: A tract of 2 14-10 cares of land in Quaker Gap township - adjoining lands of Jamrs R. Covington, J. W. More field and others, and for full t description and metes and bounds, ( reference is made to a deed from James R. Lynch and Emma Lynch, dated February 26, 1907, j recorded in said office in Book 1 No. 64 page 270, etc. L Vhe tracts above referred to' • regating 39.9 acres make up j ■".io "Home Place" of First' j "Parties. j, Bidding nil! start at $501.75. This January 7, 1939. O. E. SNOW, I I PARI! FOR BALR-2M acri I farm seven miles southeaet of Sfler City in -'Hickory Mountain J section of Chatham "county. SIO.OO per acre. Addresa Mrs. J. M. Isley, Box 1384, High Point, N. C. lwk-p „ . . WANTED—Good reliable white tenant with stock and equipment for recently acquired *l4O acre farm. Give full information wheu replying. Write J. H. Mclve% | Box 1218, Winston-Salem, North. Carolina. 12jan2w / / / relieves 6.66 Headaches. Llqmd Ta«, and Feyer r leta. Salve, due to Cold. Nose Drops. |„ 30 Minute* Try "Rub-My-Tlsin"—. . . a Wonderful Liniment. / NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND WHEREAS, pn the 21st day of May, 1931, Carrie E. Reich and S. J. Reich executed and delivered unto W. O. McGibony, Trustee for Land Bank Commissioner, a cer tain deed of trust which is record ed in the office of the Register or 4 Deeds for Stokes county, North Carolina, in Book 88 at Page 160; and- ■ • . . WHEREAS, default has been made in the payment of the in- p, debtedness thereby secured as- " therein provided, and the trustee has been requested by the owner and holder thereof to exercise the .power of sale therein contained: NOW, THEREFORE, .tender and by virtue of the authority confer red by the .said deed of 1 trust tbef undersigned Trustee will on the; 21ST DAY OF JANUARY, 1939, at the courthouse door of Stokes county, North Carolina, at twelve o'clock noon offer for Bale to the highest bidder for cash, the fol lowing real estate: , : . fe All that certain tract o? land containing one hundred twenty five and sixty-four one-hundredths (125.Q4) acres, more or less,, known as a part of the lands: "** formerly owned by Peter Riser, in Yadkin township, Stokes county. State of North Carolina, bounded on the North by the lands of L. R. Pulliam, Grover Pulllam, W. O, and D. C. Cromer; on the North east, and East by the lands of W. O. and D C. Cramer and R. W. Barr; on the South by the lands of L. J. Kiser, J. S. Barr, and J. E. Ashburn; nnd on the West by the lands of Roy Watts. Tha property is more fully described by metes and bounds in the deed of trust mentioned, to which refer ence is made. This the 12th day of Dec , 1938. w. o. m'gibOny, • Trustee. R. J. Scott, Agent and Atty. for Trustee. ~ NOTICE " I " ' Having qualified as administra tor of James Calvin Tuttle, de ceased, late of Stokes county. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to ex hibit them to the undersigned at Walnut Cove, North Carolina, on or before the 12th day of Jan uary, 1940, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their rqoovery. All persons indebted to said es tate will please make immediate payment. This 12th day of January, 1939. j SAM TUTTLE, Administrator of James Calvin Tuttle. L. H. van Noppen, Atty. for ' Administrator. * NOTICE Having qualified as executrix of . the last will and testament of W, C. Parts, notice is hereby given to> all persons having claims against the estate of the said W. C. Pali* to present them, duly authentica ted for payment, to the undersign ed on or before January 5, 1940, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their reooverv. Aci all persons iudobted to said f >tat# , will maks immediate payment to ®e> This January 1, 1939. t , LULA PARIS TUTTLB, ■hp*. • ■ »—4 j
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 19, 1939, edition 1
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