f\[ COMMISSION
BILL TO PASS NOW
Inclusion of Two Associate
Coinn , * 88 * onerß M a ke*
' It More Pleasing
nnlly
i„ the Sir Wnlter Hotel.
•IV J f. BASKKRVILL.
..oil Feb. 18.—The reorganiza
<.Rarommittee,s bill abolishing the
I,on mi ion Commission and setting
C ° lP< utilities commissioner, which
"taken up more of the Senate’s
t -‘L than any other piece of legisla
!„ this session, has now been dress
-10 again, and it is confidenetly
vnected'that the measure is now on
f t . F wa v to final passage.
The bill lias been defeated, recalled,
referred, passed, recalled and re
ared since it was first introduced by
1 , ,| ie reorganization committee
weeks a ?° ** one of the itemS in itS
mnch-herald program to cut Sta-te
Senses to the tune of $2,000,000.
Most of the objections voiced against
! h( ,' bill during its stormy course
thr()U gh the upper house are now he
aved to have been ironed out.
Originally the bill provided for the
calling in ot two su P erior court
judges to sit with the new utilities
commissioner in fact-finding cases.
Th i;j is eliminated in the substitute
bill drawn by Senate Judiciary No. 2
the las* committee to which the
much-juggled bill was referred—and
instead two associate commissioners
would be appointed to aid the com
missioner in fact-finding cases.
Under the new set up. which will
probably be reported to the Senate
Monday night or Tuesday, the new
utilities commissioner would be an
elective officer. The first commis
sioner, however, would be appointed
by Governor Ehringhaus, with the
approval of the Senate, and after the
next election the commission would
be elected quadrennially. His salary
would be $4,500-
The two associate commissioners
would be appointed by the governor
for terms of two years. They would
be paid $25 per day for the time they
serve, and in no event would their
salary exceed SI,BOO annually. It is be
lieved by proponents of the new mea
sure that the associate commissioners
would not be called in to serve more
than three or four times a year at
the most. ’• * '• ,
While there are some members of
the Senate who see the bill only as
an effort to remove two of the pre
sent corporation commissioners from
office, a good deal of the opposition
has been against the idea of calling
in the judges. These members content
ed that the judges would be too busy
with their regular duties and that the
bill might result In the appointment
of two additional judges.
Members of the reorganization com
mittee contended that the judges
would not have to be called in more
than two or three times a year, and
added an amendment to its bill set
ting forth that, it should not be con
strued in any way that the proposal
would permit the appointment of ad
ditional members of the judiciary.
The bill was In this shape, but some
senators who voted for it did so re
luctantly and hesitantly, and an ef
fort to reconsider the vote next day
met little opposition.
As the bill has been revised by the
judiciary committee, it is in a much
more acceptable form, and while
many die-hards will oppose it to the
last ditch it is expected to be passed,
passed, both by the -'Senate and the:
House. The chief opposition now will
come from the Senate bloc which con-l
■tends that elective offices should not
be tampered with by the legislature
unless it has. a mandate from the peo
ple to do so.
This bloc claims further that the
bill amounts to impeaching the pre
sent corporation commission without
bringing any charges against it. Back
ers of the bill answer this argument
bv pointing out that the General As
sembly created the corporation com
mission and thus has the right to
abolish it. • g
Censure Os House
May Do Some Good
(Continued from Page One.)
he members feel that a great deal
•>f harm that cannot be corrected has
been done by the Williams statement
in spite of his apology,
h'om one angle, however, several
f iieve that the Williams outburst
may have done some good in that it
n ' r,y scrve to make the more radical
ft'-* mhers of the House, who have been
openly rebelling lately against the
* ,,w Progress so far, be more care
'’f what l hey say. Quite a number
m,. 686 bav e been intimating lately
u' ' berr hs a lack of sincerity some
e,, e. hat their bills do not seem to
l he attention they should
hat something ought to be done
c although none have ever
i ! ® ou *- an d made the flat, unvan
whl 6harges Williams made
w ncn he said:
Bini T ! le HUgges ' i( >n is rife that some
clfKr.r i lnfluence is at work behind
ta* t doors ’ to thrust the
la;t e int ° ' be very heart for the
whit 'k P from a P e °P le already bled
_ ny a cruel and merciless tyrant
Ho' , honor, the integrity of this
(iiKti ! openl y an d covertly and un
it .; a tacked for its seeming default
of an °'' lß res trained by the power
sideranoT?!! !l and from giving con "
'o th e only questio nthat
lief frf>m° XIS K enCe ’ ' hal ° f giving re_
bejn- P^ U^ arable 18X681 the while
of v h ,l h,>rte J (1 to worship the fetish
-2 balanced budget'.”
facts are - of course, that
Assemhw u members of the General
ing dav ha J 6 been Bnd stlll ' are Wor k
bri nR . o Lf r nd , mght in an ef fort t 0
out biiiJ iL of chaos and to bring
,1 V!' “ " ear ‘y•» p«»-
4 StatewiHn* 1 ", a ' es P rob l«ms from
bers are 8 and Poin - Many mem
0r fi ”e commit) 11 * ** many 88 four
from q oVwJ! tee meetings a day.
32 o’clock at k I \! he mon hng until
’he hundre t • n * gbt ’ tr ying to study
bracing different < fj. fferent bills > em
to uiiifv no deas, in an effort
> ** mmy pf these us fiossiblfi
Jesus Teaching by Parables
* >— Si - ~
Jesus taught the people many things in parables
*s he sat in a boat and they gathered upon the
shore. Afterwards he explained to his discipleg
>yhy he taught the people in parables while to his
disciples he spoke more plainly^' ~
Held in Lindy Extortion Plot
Joe Bryant (left) and Norman Harvey, arraigned at Roanoke, Va.. on
charges of conspiracy and sending threatening letters through the mails
in connection with the alleged plot to extort $17,000 from Colonel Charles
A. Lindbergh, under threats of kidnaping his second son. Thi-i is the
first photo showing the accused men together. Inset is Mv%. Elsie
Harvey, wife of Norman, who is detained as a possible inave-KU wit
ness in the Roanoke detention home. The Federal authcriti zz hand
ling the Drosecution of the accused men.
What's What At A Glance
WASHINGTON
By CHARLES P. STEWART «
Washington., Feb. 18—When the
Rec onstr uctl'on Finance corporation is
reorganized after March 4, mayfbe
wttih Alftfred E. Smith at its belaid,
the impression is that the policy, un
der which it hats operated hitherto,
will be exactly reversed, in a sense.
Applicants for R. F. C. money thus
far have been asked initially, “WHll
the enterprise, that this loan iis going
into, pay?” /
Incidentally, the R. F. C. has aim
ed to make its funds relieve distress,
but primarily 4t has sought to insure
dividends. '
tfal question is to be, “Wihkt’s the
Henceforward, it seems., the essem
gua rarity that this project really will
help the needy? If it’s isdlfkliquidatAng,'
well and good, but the vital consider
ation fc to feed the 'hungry,, shelter the
homeless and Clothe the ragged and
shivering.” I t
AWAIT MRS. ROOSEVELT
It already is foreshadowed that the
women folk —Mrs. Roosevelt and her
daughter, Mrs. Anna Roosevelt Dali' —
wil Ifigure prominently in the fore
ground throughout the coming White
House administration'. Washington
somehow never bais known Mrs.
Hoover at all! well. Not since Mrs.
Coolidge’s time the capif hi
thought of the executive mansion' as a
home —but rather as an official! resi
dence. .
SUPREME COURT MAY DECIDE
Not much weight has been given yet
to the consideration that congress’
grant of extraordinary powers to ithe
next president may be questioned on
constitutional grounds. It is men
tioned on Capitol Hill, however,’ that
the Federal Supreme Curt is likely
to have a word to say concerning the
expected of the govern
ment.
McNARY PROGRESSIVE?
Pol iUi clans arc commenting on the
numfber of recent votes cast in pro
gressive company by Senator McNary
of Oregon, who will be Republican
leader in the upper congressional
Chamber when Senator Watson drops
out at th e end of the current session.
Their guess is that he is trying to
well'd the G. O. P. together.
into single bills applicable to the en
tire State. For ,as usual, most of the
bills introduced have been purely lo
cal bills, applying. to ony a single
county. Many of these bils are clearly
unconstitutional and unworkable
when they are introduced, and have
to be worked over and re-written.
The trouble with Williams, as well
as with Representative Bowie, of
Ashe, Taylor and Boyd, of Mecklen
burg, Spruill of Bertie, and quite a
number of others who belong to the
more or less radical “my county” bloc
in the House, is that very little of
their thought and few of their bills
have extended outside the limits of
‘heir own counties. They have failed
to realize that their counties are units
of the State of North Carolina and
that in order to cure the counties of
any ilia, the remedy must be applied
to the State as a whole, rather than
to only one or two counties, So they
have become irritated when their lo
cal bills have been delayed- But from
now on they may see tilings more
Cleary and complain lens.
HENDERSON, '(N.CJ DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY-, '
WORLD
By LESLIE EICHEL
New York. Feb.. 18—What Mayor
Anton Cenmak Chicago was so
to fall from one of ithe shots of ithe
Close ito President-elect Roosevelt as
would-be assassin in Miami seems a
co-incidence. No man in the middle
west has been closer in the confi
dence of the advisers to the presi
dent-elect than Mayor Cermla'k.
The mayor has been the most pow
erful boss that Illinois ever has had —•
with 'the State in his grip.
GUARANTEED BANK DEPOSITS
A few years ago anyone advocating
guarantee of 'bank deposits was .term
ed “a red”. Today conservative bank
ers are privately urging, congress for
a batik deposit guarantee trill," sc that
frightened depositors wiilll keep their
funds in banks. Unnecessarily
large reserves (meaning reduced cre
dit) are necessary as long as the pop
ulace remains nervous. ;
The Michigan situation is pinted
out as an example.
IRONY ”
When the national transportation
committee, w:|lh which Alfred E.
Smith has had so much to do, made
its report asserting that rates no long
er could be Msed on obsolete capi
tal structure, critics of Hhfe Recon
struction Finance Corporation snort
ed. The R. F. C. already has loan
ed the railroad's nearly a, .bjjfokjh to
pay interest and obWgatipps chief By to
New York banks s>«/
ital structure., *■% •:’»: ’)j jj
GETTING THE j* Ms
Democrats ”■! iihiusddl the
haste of Postmaster General Brown
in laying the cornerstone for Cleve
land’s new post-office. Somebody in
Ohio Republican circles happened to
figure oult that in the ordinary course
of events the cornerstone would be
laid just after the new Democratic
postmaster . general < took office. It
was hurriedly arranged to lay a cor
nerstone immediately, with Postmast
er General Brown, thigh in Ohio Re
publican circles, officiating. Then It
was arranged for workmen to lift the
cornerstone aside so that it would n'ot
interfere witlh foundation work.
Anglo-French Arms Note
To Austria Angers Italy
(Continued from Page One.)
the concentration of arms violated the
postwar treaty with Austria.
(A Paris dispatch said the note to
Austria was presented February 11,
and was mainly in the nature of a
request for information as to the state
of arms shipments in Hungary )
SENDING OF JOINT NOTE
S CONFIRMED IN LONDON
London, Feb. 18.—(AP)-Official
quarters today confirmed that Great
Britain and France had made joint
representations to Austria that a re
cent arms shipment from Italy violat
ed the treaty of St. Gertnaih. The
communications requested that the
arms be returned to Italy or destroy
ed by a certain date.
It was stated that the notes were
in no sense an ult’matum, but were
in the nature of a friendly request
, ILLUSTRATED SCHOOL LESSON m f
- Scriptur.—Mark 4,21-34 1 ' And J, Bu..A„ |
4g i%— j \\
He explained that he used parables to adjust the
truth to folks’ ability and willingness to receive'
it. It was not in order to hide the light, for men
do not light lamps to put them under bushels, but
.they do shade lamps to suit folks’ eyes. -
j
1
SAINT PAULS
Father Manly, of Raleigh, Priest.
Mass 10 a- m. ,
! Night service, 8 o’clock.
The public is most cordially wel
3omed. 1 - ■
— * •'.V'.-.
FIRST METHODIST.
Rev. D. E. Earnhardt,' pastor.
Sunday school at 9:45 a. in.
Worship service at 11 am., with
sermon by the pastor and special
music by the choir.
; Text for the morning sermon, “The
mountain of the Lord’s house shall
be established in the top of the moun
tain and' all nations shall, flow unto
it.” <! ~c; j
At 7:30 p. m..the orphanage ..sing
ing class from Raleigh will give a
concert/., . < ; ]i[ ’ ,
FIRST BAPTIST.
Pastor, Dr. Hugh A. Ellis.
Sunday school meets at 9:45 a. m.,
Clarence E. Greene, superintendent.
James Gardner cordially invites young
people to meet wiith his Young Peo
ple’s Department. Good singing. Or
chestra.
Morning service at 11 a. m. Ser
mon by the pastor. Subject “Two As
suring Facts for These Days-” The
choir will sing Dr. Hubert McNeill
Poteat’s anthem, “He That Dwelleth
in the Secret Place of the Most High”
Evening worship hour at 7:30
The pastor will give an address on
Buddhism; its Founder, Guatama the
Buddha; its tenets; its prospects.
The Young People’s Choir will have
charge of the music. A male quar
tette will (sitng, “That Beautiful
Land”.
Land.’’ Pittman Davis, G. W. Knott,
Jr., Dorsey Evans Jr., and Dorman
Blaylock.
There is always a warm welcome to
the First Baptist church
FIRST METHODIST PROTESTANT
Dr. L. W. Gerninger, pastior.
Sunday school meets at 9:45 a. m.
C. F. TankersJey, Jr., superintendent
and wiill be glad to see you in your
place torruorrow.
The pastor wiill conduct the serv
ices at eleven o’clock and seven-thirty.
His theme will be, “The Why Out” at
the morning hour. The way out of
wihiait? Well, come and hear. At the
evening 'hour he will use as 'bis theine,,
“The Big Ra.cea”
No prayer meeting Wednesday
evening.. Bulb don’t forget to pray.;
Rememjber that the chtirch, like
everything- is worth nothing un
less we use it. Your pew will be an
unsightly thing tomorrow without you
in lit; and I know of no one else who
cupies it. If you don't want him to
wants your pew unless the devil oc
occupy it, then come and fill it your
selfff. We shall look for you.,
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN.
Rev. W. C. Cumming, pastor.
J. Harry Bryan, Sunday school sur
perintendent
Sunday school at 9:45 a. m., with
Bible classes for men and women.
Morning service at tl a. rin. The
sermon subject will be, “What Our
Church Needs, and Wheat We Need ”
Mrs. Reginald Sprinkle will sing
"The Little Road to Nazareth.” 1
Vesper at 5 p. m. The ser
mon will be upon "Three Men in Acts
3.” Mrs. W. M. Coffin and Miss Sarah
Burwel'l will sing a duet.
Christian Endeavor feociety meeting
at 7 p. m. The subiect will be, “Why
Marriages Succeed or Fail?”
Come and worship with us.
CITY ROAD M. E.
Rev. C. H. Kelley, •pastor.
Sunday school at 9:45 am., P. M.
Porter, superintendent.
Preaching by the pastor at 11 a’
ms and 7.30 p. m. '
Hi, League in chailrge of Miss Nan
nie Mae Harper and Junior League
in charge of Miss Elizabeth Savage,
both meet at 6:45 ’p. m.
The public is invited to all these
services.
HOLY INNOCENTS EPISCOPAL
Rev. I. W. Hughes, rector.
Sexagesisma Sunday.
7:30 a. m-, Holy communion.
9:45 a. m. Chunch school.
10 a. m., Men’s and Women’s Bible
classes. j
11 a. m., Morning prayer and ser
mon. , >
7:30 p. m., Evening prayer and ser
mon. ’♦'•Wflf,
St. John’s Mission. North Carolina,
2 o’clock, church school; 2:45 p. m.
Holy communion.
SOUTH HENDERSON BAPTIST.
Rev. L. B. Reavis, pastor.
Sunday school meets at 9:45’ a. m.,
W. H Robertson, superintendent
B. Y- P. U.| meets ait 6/45 p. m.,
Miss Helen Dvtfke will be in charge
Preaching atj 7:30 p. m. by the pas
tor. The subject will be, “Follow
Thou Me.”
Come and .-worship in the, 7‘Lfttle
white church iuii Ihe hilL”
'WtsDot
Prwi i- * *"
Truth is like good seed sown by a farmer. All it
■eeds is a chance and it will grow. If we meet it
with receptive minds then it will develop, “first ft
_ the blade, then the ear, then the. full grain in
the ear’i
jftfk Churches
FIRST CHRISTIAN.
W. A. Newman, chairman, pulpit
committee.
, Sunday school at 9:45 a. m., C. D.
Newman, superintendent
There -will be no church services at
this church this Sunday. All mem
bers are urged to attend at one of the
other churches.
as to meetings -to
be held will be made at the Sunday
school hour.
There, will probably be a service at
the church dn Wednesday evening
in charge,of the,former pastor,. Rev.
R. A. Whitten, Announcement will be,
made at a latter date.
— '■ 'j
Finance Measure to be Long
Time In Reporting Yet
(Continued from Page One.)
mine 'the total amount of revenue
needed! n. any one year and bring out
a revneue bill that will yield the re
quired amount* - >'
Two things are hindering the work
of the ’ appropriations committees,
sow ever, And mjaikiing it difficult for
them to decide upon the amount of
the revenue needed for the nxt two
years. One of these is the failure of
the General Assembly to act upon
the variou srom|aiming reorganization
bills, which wiill materially affect the
size of the appropriations required in
a number of different departments.
A secoh-d factor is the question of
whether or riot the State is going to
take over the{ maintenance of the
eight months school term, which so
far has not been decided by eithei
house. If the assembly does vote
for a State-supported eight months
school term, the appropriations com
mittee will have to increase their Mil
by at leas(t $4,000,000 a year and the
finance committees will have to in
crease their revenue from their bill by
the same amount. So it is still a
long way to end of the session.
Only Miracle *Can
Keep Japan From
Deserting League
(Continued from Page One.)
demned Japaii’s MatiehUriiaA pdlicy in
a report submitted to all of the
world’s governments, now awaits the
result of its verdict, from Tokyo, Wash
lington and Moscow.
Across the world, in the capital of
the eastern empire, a high govern
ment offc. 1 said that only a miracle
would prevent Japan’s secession from
the league, if ithe Assembly should
adopt the report and! Tecom mendia '
tions at Geneva. Yosuke
Ma-tsuokia, head of Japan’ delegation
at Geneva, may be called home across
Siberia, the shortest route,, for a first
hand' report to hi® government.
Reaction from Washington and Mos
cow is important to the League for
both these non-member states will be
invited to participate wfith the two
belligerents and a league committee
in the work of finding a lasting solu
tion to the Manchurian conflict.
China received the League report
wCth satisfaction, but meantime a Jap
anese ultimatum has been delivered
to the Chinese m,'ililt&ry authorities an
Jehol province, demanding immedi
ate evacuation of the city Kai'hi in
northern Jehol. The Chinese deter
mined to ignore it, and it appeared
that a iriajor battle might ensue.
Main Items Still ‘
Face Committee
(Continued from Page One.)
North Carolina have protested that
they can not get along on the dras
tically reduced allowances recom
mended by the budget commission.
An appropriations sub-committee has
•boosted the budget commission’s high
way recommendations about $4,000,000
apd the full committee is expected to
take some action on this item at its
next meeting Monday.
The committee wound up this week’s
work by approving the budget com
misSsfian’s recommendations for the
Negro Agricultural and Technical
College, Winston-Salem Teachers Col
lege* Elizazbeth City State Normal
School, North Carolina College for
Negroes, North Carolina School for
the Deaf, State School for the Blind
and Deaf, Blind Steudents Aid, Cas
well Training School, North Carolina
Orthopedic Hospital, State Sanator
ium, Stonewall Jackson Training
School, State Home and 1 Industrial
Scha.ll for Girls, Morrison Training
School, Eastern Carolina Training
School.
3 The committee cut appropriations
fdr the State Historical Commission
td $13,905 and $11,760, whereas the
budget commission fecommended $17,-
Jesus likened the Kingdom of God in its smaljf
beginnings and later growth and spread to a
► mdstard seed, “less than all the seeds . . .**. yet i
when it is sown, groweth up, and becomeUi greaty •
' er than all the herbs”. *
Golden Text—lsaiah ll:^
BANK HOLIDAY IN MICHIGAN
• —i : « '
f- wmm ... > i
j. ' '
'. 4 * L "
Ir - ;/' i»:| '"-v 'L 1
■N** Wf / jfM
(CEPOiITi m Ot.TRQiT) j? ”j
Gov. William A. Comstock of
Michigan is being commended for
issuing a proclamation closing all
of the 500 banks and trust com
panies throughout the state, for a
150 and $15,150. It decided to- approve
the'amount of $1,400 for the Efland
Industrial School for Negroes for the
year 1933-34, but cut off the next
year’s allotment altogether, thus cut
ting off further money to this school
at the close of the fiscal year.
A number of allotments are being
held open by the committee until va
rious reorganization and consolidation
proposals now before the assembly
are decided one way or the other.
Important Bills
In Senate Delayed
(Continued from Pag© one.)
date.
No bill * that arouses the least' bit of
debate or discUsdioh;: ever gets'si.* dee
ond attid third readiing oh the same
day. Wiithout exception, scage mem
ber' objects rto a thlird' readfhg witin
the result that the controvevrsy is
started all over again the next day,
sometimes the resu'lit that the
bill' iis x’d-roferred back ito the com
miltoee whence it came for another
hearing.
Th'us, whiile scarcely la day passes
that ail' the bills on the Senate’s cal
endar are not acted upon,, a good por
tion/, of them are Weld over on some
one’s motion, for various and sundry
reasons; or Some senator, hoping that
the .body myghlt change its dllective
min'd on some bill overnight, taisps
an objection to a third reading.
Foir instance, Friday the Senate had
26 public bills on its calendar. Here,
is vwh>at ihapipened to them: Os the
fifteen that were reached before ad
journment, one was kM’Jed, five were
passed on second reading and objee
tiori was made to final reading, and
five went over on the; calendar until
Monday or some Miter date. In the
last, named category were .two of‘the
most controversial billis pn the list;
Roosevelt To f ße Guarded
More Closely Than Others
Who Have Been President
(Continued from Page one.T
No modification in Inauguration
plans in intimated, and if there are
any .it is a certainty that readjust
ments wiilil be so unostentatiously
made as to escape general notice.
Nevertheless, there is no question
that the plans are being gone over
in minutest detail .probably for some
thing like the hundredth time, to eli
minate the most microscopic possi
bility of any weakness.
Another request is said likewise to
have gone out to all important cities
to send plain clothes men to the cap
ital to keep a lookout for doubtful
characters, known within their respec
tive bailiwicks who may head for the
capital as March 4 approaches. The
inauguration crowds assuredly will be
thoroughly sprinkled with the plain
clothes men and not the slightest un
toward move on the part of any spec
tator will pass unobserved.
Zangara Considered Crack-Brained
Zangara the Miami assailant is
judged off-hand by men experienced
in political and international police
work to be a sample of the crack-
Ibrained ultra-individualistic type of
anarchist; He is believed to be a re
preseul ative ol a philosophy wholly:
PAGE THREE
period of eight days, protecting
deposits pf $1,200,000,00fi. The
holiday, was necessary, the gov
ernor stated, to prevent the clos
ing of a large Detroit bank.
i i y ir' !
different from communism and look
ing toward no definite program* He
suffers, from a complex which fan
cies a tyrant in everyone in ari im
portant government position.
The breed 'is not exactly Common,
©till especially in pre-war days it
was not altogether rare either—par
ticularly in the southern Latin coun
tries where its exponents have includ
ed such assassins as Moral who at
tempted the life of King Alfonso on
the monarch’s weddin gday; the slay
er of Premier Ganalejas of Spain and
Orsini the historically celebrated
Italian anarchist of a generation; ago.
Act Independently.
~ Sqcli folk always have beert a pro
blem to secret services through their
habit of resorting to acts of terrorism
wholly independently of any organ
ization and without rhyme
or reason.
Usually they are perfectly aminable
harmless folk aside from their spe
cial obsession sometimes of better
lhan average intellectual quality and
utterly indifferent to danger that
they conceive to be their personal
mission.
Indications are that the Miami in
cident will strengthen anti-alien sen
timent on Capitol Hill and probably
stiffen restrictive immigration legis
lation- It is likely too that it will pro
mote the campaign of advocates of
closer regulations of federal firearms.
The attachment of a cat to a home
seems to be the locality, and in a
lesser degree to those with whom the
animal lives.
NOTICE
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA:
COUNTY OF VANCE:
Default having been made in the
payment of those (bonds secured by
that deeid as trust dated the Bth day
of February, 1918, recorded in the of
fice of the Register of Deeds for
Vance County, N. C., dn Book 82 at
page 170, executed by James Hamilton
and wife,, Alice Hamdllton and Heniry
Hughes and Willie Hughes, his wife,
and at the request of the holder there
of, the undersigned trustee wild offer
for sale and self to the highest bidder
for cash, at the Courthouse door in
Henderson, N. C., ait 12 o’clock mid
day, oni Tuesday, March 21st 1933, the
following described real estate, ,
Begin at an iron stake Meirriman
corner on Henderson and Kdttrell
roadi, run thence along said road
northward 50 feet to a stake, Crutch
field’s corner; thence westward along
his Oruftchlfiield’s line to right-of-way
of S. A. L. Hallway; thence along
right-ofl-way so said Railway toward
Kittrell 50 feet to Carrie Merriman’s
line; thence eastward along her line
to thie Henderson and Kittrell rood
the place of beginning . It '>eing the
lot on which James HamUrtun and
wife have recently ereolea a house
and now reside. See deed in office
of Register of Deeds for Vance- Coun
ty, N. C., in Book 52 at page 111,
Book 62 at page 401 and trust deed to
A. J. Harris in Book 75 at page 452
for further description. This deed
securing money to pay off said last
named trust deed.
This the 18th day of February, 1933.
A. A. Zolkcoffer and J. P. Zollicoffer
Executors of the Late •"
1 .A. A. Zcriiicofxer, Trustee. 1 »