Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Feb. 4, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO BARKS OF THE BULLDOGS A Paper to Keep the Public Posted on Happenings in Henderson High School. Vnl. J Henderson, N. C.. February 4, 1985. NO. 15. The Official Organ of 11. 11. S. .lames Jenkins Editor-In-Chief Nancy- Barham Assistant Kditor Pauline Jenkins Typist i* „>I. Crmvder Sponsors Marine Taylor It MAI. TEST? With the examinations over and a new semester beginning there comes a feeling that, there is still a chance to do bigger and belter things, 'lo many who have done as good work as ( could have been done there is a stinm- i la to manifest greater efforts in the new semester. It is like a soldier who ■ has fallen once in battle, but, with re- | rowed strength and encouragement : he gets up and shows to his country his real worth. i To many each day in school is just “another day’’ to the cud and there i is only a desire to "get hv.” Rut why rot think of the future? Ten years | from now what will your high school j life have meant to you? How will the j days spent in high school affect your j life’s work? It is here that habits are j formed, work is done, and grades are j made that will he an outstanding fac tor in each life. Although, these things mnv seem insignificant at present, the , real test will come later. We must not sacrifice temporary interest. W ith new days, new work and clean states facing us, let's make the best of the new semester! Barks of the Mastiff biditor: Al Wester Seniors u.-uallv lake part in most of the school activities and the tradi tion is nor broken in the small play which the Dramatic Club is going to present at several local affaiis. The title of the play is "Crinoline and Candlelight" and the Senior partici pates are: Meredith Watkins, Bob the dashing hero). Bill Bryan, George Washington ■Revived in all hisglorv; and Al Wester, Father Time. With The Sick Although sometimes we cannot be With the sick physically, we are all with them mentally. We always miss our class members when they are sick, j. W. Rose and Ann Peace wore miss- i irtg from our ranks for a few days last week due to complications. New MemlMT We all rre very delighted to know of the return of one of our old class mates, Fred Ilecht from Keysville. Va. , and we are also exceedingly glad , That he will be able to continue his schooling and graduate here with the rest of his friends. He had been a member of the class who are now Sen iors since he starred in the first grade until his departure early this full and .so we are all extremely happy to have , hint back in our ranks. Growls of the Terriers Josephine Marlin Fdltor Associate Editors: Nell Kowlnml .'ary F. Pnylliress Sponsors: T.ily Kyle I G W. Crawford TIIE I*UICE TAG How do you mark your price tag? j Come and see how these college stu- • denis mark theirs. “The Price Tag" is a rousing Col- j iege Comedy- Drama filled with ac- f tion and tense moments from the very beginning. Suppose you were being j considered for a trip abroad and the j chance faded nwav because you were said to have fighting blood? That’s i what happened to Larry Sanster splayed by E. V. Bunn, Jr.) Ilis rival is Hal Rogers (concil P’innell), the conceited foot-ball star of Bell col lege. Glenda Wells (Frances Harri son) has already been selected for the ; trip and both Hal and Larry are both ! fighting manfully to he the one se-; kittle oy Margaret w/ddemer CRAFTER 4ft AJ* PSIkAI.LI liappejis, after the ruoriu <riime tke calm. Bngajcnient, tiuaocial. ctisis, thp compier* change 4f t.beir- household from a female *»o« to one inhabited by a. married '■oupiti and two subsidiary (or so the couple frlti females, and various emotions Leila did not want to name to herself had been effected in four abort days. Now things settled '■Jowly down, .is the waves settle smoothly over a town destroyed by *n earthquake. Spring tinned slowly iuto swmiuer. 1 be series of Wednesday and Satur day dances at the club went on. Leila saw Jerry at them; sometimes with Red DeFries and the tall pleas ant blonde girl Marge whom he was engaged to, but. much more with idary Martin. They couldn’t avoid •peaking, sometimes even dancing! together, but without anything 3aid •n either side, they avoided much; speech ot touch. Jerry, Leila knew, didst want to. Leila, would imve ’ been glad if sbe hadn’t had to. And yet, Saturdays and Sundays, tbey danced in the same rooms and on t-be same porches, loafed a.i i dived 1 fiam toe seme float, spoke to each) »tber easpally as they passed with fctoeir respective partners. i Bet. had followed Addison's earnest lead in leaving the dances alone. Ad- j diatrn bad never danced. They spent practically all their daytime over ar fhqoiarshlmd. They had, it .seemed. ' decreed to call it Kernwood Waters- ! •hic’h wait at )ea?)t appropriate What there was about the content plation of a dredge and one bouse I up—and 5J7.000 i« rush, more •r low.s, going down—that eiyuld make 1 • bride and groom -stay there from j HI to 4 almost every bright summer day, Leila could not imagine; but they were, Die thought, a* well there *» anywhere else. She didn't want to hear about ft t or Think about it. Kor tbe ftrw time m her life, she was being what Ad dtwn rather tritely caJUd a “but twray ’. Being a butterfly had nov elty, and she worked at It with vigor. lected as they are both in love with | ’ Glenda. Come and see the winning i i man! j 1 Landis Chavasse, John Laws, John j < Rose, and Ralph Grissom, the advor- j : tiding committee have already started h on this jvork and we are sure that the merchants of Henderson will cooper ate with them. I THIS IS NO Ill'Ll. I’m One Os The Jones Our curly haired Junior boy seems j Ito be well supplied with girls. He’s j got so many in fact, that he seems I to have forgotten Nellie. » Tin* blonde Senior on Andrews Ave. I seems to have lost some of her power Buba and our singing president seems to be doing right well with the Junior ! basketball player. Our Junior president is sticking out her tongue at the Senior presi- 1 d< at. Hooray for the Juniors. They j tell me that the Senior and Junior j ( Girls have caught on to his line. Look I out freshmen. "I’o’’ has not been seen so much on [Clarke Street lately. Wonder what’s ‘the matter. The little “Bitsy” guy has been sick ’ but the little Rosebud is still bios- 1 sunning for him. Yelps of the Pugs Editor: Frances Dank' Associate Editor* ; j Alice Whitmore i Maurice Capps Sponsor: Miss Athleen Turnage SCANDAL I wonder how the little. Sophomore ( girl, that lives on the West End Coun try Club Drive, is getting along with her hero? Believe me some of our Sophs who j < have been sick, better hurry and get j 1 well, before somebody else beats j' j their time with a good-looking senior, j One of our little blondes seems to be doing pretty good, with a little boy with theiuitials of “N. C.” Our “Rowland Street Dame,” has a ! 1 lut of "Billies. Bobbies and others” < on her trail, oh hoys, you better : watch out. ,; Yips Os The Puppies Editor: Billy Dennis Associate Editors Edgar Edwards |. Tommy Jenkins Sponsor: Miss Evelyn Kick lev j , WEl.<( >M E, Fit ESI IM V> r STU DENTS, HACK TO SC HOOL During the past two weeks, there • * have been many absentees in the ; ] t schools of Henderson but there have . | been many absentees in the schools of Henderson but there have been less . 1 less in the High School than in the j, ! others. There was such a large mini- ! I her sick in the grammar schools that 1 [they were closed for five days. The j diseases that caused these absences ; were measles and flu, mostly, with a * ; few other kinds. Some of the stu- 1 dents who were absent in the Fresh- : man Class include: Reginald Me- j Furlan, Malvin Parham, Clifton Ma- I jors, Frances Allen, Irene Cawley, Hazel Ellington, Willie Mae Falkner, ; Clifton Ferguson, Mable Forsythe, , I Gladys Stokes. Henry Dempsey, Thad | ! Harris. Tommy Jenkins, Willard Jones Victor Langston. Dorothy Champion, Livey Harris, Rebecca Patterson, i Vera Smith W. L. Beddingfield, Edgar Edwards, George Gooch. Bobby Kit i troll, Malone Parham, Lemnel Robin-j son. Dorothy McDuffie, Bertha Ram- • sev, Etheline Stainback, Flizabeth j Toeplcman, Seymour, Dworskv, Ro land Forsythe, Murray Pridgen. How- i ard Reams, Stephen Reavis, Evelyn ! i Miller, Minnie Lee Huffman, Arlenia | Jairell. Jimmy Peck, Peck, Delphia , Pearce. Estelle Ramsey, Naomi Aunt Minnie, in this summer or iceir downfall, hail decided to hire a maid. I Leila’s status demanded it. she .said. .Leilas pups, a litter of six which had sold for J.*o apiece—which was 'good—paid for it. So things were easier from that point of view. It was Orton, of all people, who | dragged her over to ttae marshland finally. He had a reason. ! He, as well 4* she, had heard a great deal from everyone about the i affair between Jerry Redmond and Mary Martin. You saw them to gether, you heard that they were together. Mary would cop off the best-looking new man who had come to live in Fern wood. (For Jerry was bunking with DeFrits, it seemed, in iiis hut at the development.) And Orton, badly worried, came to Leila about it. { “1 wouldn't like to think of little I Mary throwing herself away cu Red mond.’ he said. “Aside from you. of course, my dear Leila., Mary's the /nearest L have ever known to what it seems to me a girl should be. Al ways cheery, never tired, always per i fectly dressed-- ’’ i “Has it ever occurred to you that 1 with all the money iu the world, ( complete freedom and power, and no j r esponsibilities or work, it isn't dis- Ificult.?'' demanded Leila. She had really heard enough about Mary Martin for one time, j “Now, my dear, tbat sounds like , jealousy.” said Orton with a bright, j gratified smile, “and t hat ienrifAftke ! you”. It was jealousy. But naturally, j Leila denied it. I “Wiiy don t you a-sk her ?” she said, j **l did,” Or ton confessed. “I told j , her the hJea of her marrying a man very nearly approximating (he ad : venturer type was all wrong.' "And wdat did she say?” “She said sure he was an adven- • turer type, that was what grave her \ the thrill, and went on about how he once crossed the Atlantic in a sloop at. the age of eighteen, i—l cant tell you how strangfl I felt,” said Orton, looking wistfully at his fiancee. “1 have always taken sport lirUNDJikyuN, (K. a : / uA.I :Y IMJ > A-V:- 4, 1935 Thompson, William Windley, Eva Mae Darke, Virginia Anderson, and others. 'The Freshman Class wants to wel come those back that have come hack and hopes that those still absent will soon be back. State Supervisors of High School Visits 11. H. S. Dr. J. Henry Highsmith, the State Supervisor of High Schools of N. C. visited Henderson high school last week and addressed the faculty. He troduced the subject of writing new curiculum for the high schools of Vance County schools are cooperat ing with Dr. Highsmith and will make courses of study in the follow ing live fields; English with Mrs. J. Y, Paris chairman, Social Science with Miss Maxine Taylor as chair man, Mathematics with Mr. J. M. Pigrord as chairman, Science with H. H. Powell as chairman and Foreign languages with Miss Ruth Cordles as chairman. INCOGNITO A certain brown haired freshman girl on South Garnett St., is going “go-goo” over the captain of the foot ball team. Who’s the mysterious “Mr. X” that a certain dark haired freshman girl on North William Street hints darkly about? Time will tell. A certain Sophomore brunette girl from North Garnett thinks the fresh man boy who lives in the new “Mt. Vernor” style house, is cute. How about it? Appendages Editor: Ellard Yon Examinations this semester were taken during the regular one-hour class periods. It was necessary to have our regular subjects at the same time as our examinations. This put the teachers and students at a great disadvantage on account, of the regu lar lessons to prepare in addition to the exam which took a large amount of time. It was necessary to hold our examinations in this manner be cause of the limited time in which to receive a required amount of instruc tion in each subject. The fact tha.t the school term has been cut to eight months not only ef fect the future individual but the fu ture citizens of North Carolina and Vance County. Each teacher has a required amount of space to cover in the textbook. With the limited term the most important phases ,in each subject must he given only the time that should be given to unimportant phases. We hope that the old maxim “a smattering is worse than no know ledge” does not apply to high school students. Shall N. C. students he as well informed as students of other states? Shall they have enough edu cation to make a living or only enough knowledge to spoil their chance to “do big things” and to good to ‘‘do little things’’? Few Measles Cases Are Being Reported Few scattering cases of measles are still being reported to the county health authorities, it was stated today from the office of Dr. Z. P. Mitchell, county health officer. Several cases were reported Satur day and a. few otday, blit those re ported today were far below the number of cases reported over the week-end when the epidemic forced the closing* of schools in the county. Schools are being operated in the county and will continue to do so providing no further outbreak cur tails the attendance, making it nec essary to close them again. , , . r mg risk* myself, but not up ro ra.sh . Dress. I told her 4 was going in for . huntin’. She said if she decided ie 1 accept him she was going to finance > an expedition for him to hunt rhino > with her in South Africa. Won’t you j see ie you can find out? Women cam * j do these things." 1 “I’ll find out,” Leila promised, j which gratified Orton. He patted her . harm fondly and even kissed b«r in ■ broad daylight on the porch. I She couid see Mary financing th* expedition, too. And .joining the S?o --1 ciety of Lady Geographers on rh# r strength of it, and being phor*. : graphed with her expensively slip : pered foot ou lions and rhinos until the magazines remarked of her, an they had of another lady, how much pleasanter it would be to see a lion photographed with his foot on Miss Mary Martin. Leila felt like that I already, in fact. The larger and 1 rougher the lion, the better. “Let's go over to. the development then,” said Orton promptly. “She's usually there.” “Oh, not alt «bs time?” “Wstt. whenever that Redmond man is. Redmond 1 It’s probably an alias.” 1 i “Orton, did it ever occur to you that you were hidebound in your prejudices?” «ha demanded, a* she j went ro get her hat. If sbe had not { been so slinoly erect, if there had not I been no much fire and excitement, (and a stlrrwigness about her that ' made Orton feel more alive hinfigelf j when be was with her, he ntfllit , h|vs been annoyed. When Mary ■.said he was a. dear old cave dweller* |it sounded quire different. f “Nor at ah. if old you 1 was joins in’ a hunt. Read the best humor regularly,. . . thong|i I can't, say f can always see why it's funny,? hi added sadly when she cam© bad* • pulling on her gauntlets, the Jhte ar.s gument having put a swiftness in her step and a. fire in her eyes rhrtk excited him. He kissed her. “You’ri a dear girl. Lei), but you havens lived,” he added. It was a Una ~. Marv's which she recognized. (TO BK COXTIXUED) th-AT yr in in mn Dtdl ILMIOIIrtU BY JEFFERSON LIFE Greensboro Company, Rep resented Here, Is Largest In The South The best year in its history was reported bv the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company, of Greens boro, largest concern of its kind in the South, A statement of the finan cial position of the company is shown in an advertisement in today’s Daily 'Dispatch. F. M. Barnhardt and B. Frank Harris are local representa tives of the company, and all bus iness in this territory is handled j through the Raleigh office, in charge of C. D. Egerton and George E. Passmore. I Two new members were added to the board of directors, all former di ! reqtors and all officers of the cora i pany were re-eleeted, and the regular dividend of $5 a share, aggregating $50,000 on the capital stock of 10,000 shares, was declared Monay at the i annual meeting of the stockholders : and directors of the Jefferson Stand ard Life Insurance Company. The new directors announced by President Julian Price are Richard C. Kelly, Greensboro attorney, who was also put on the executive com mittee, and George Burnell, of Mont clair, N. J. j Julius C. Smith, a member of the {board of directors and general coun sel of the company, which is the larg est in the south, was also made a !member of the executive committee. Best Year In History “Our reports indicate that 1934 was the best year in the history of the j Jefferson Standard.” remarked Mr. Price. In his annual report Mr. Price di j rects attention to the pertinent fact j that the company’s cash position at , the close of the year 1931 showed more than $1,004),000 cash in banks. “Wo own in excess of $1,04)0,000 in United States government bonds. Last year the Jefferson Standard continued in the mortgage loan field, making many excellent loans on high class city and residential property. The company’s real estate holdings are less than in 1933. however, as much foreclosured property was dis posed of with practically no loss. Mr. 1 Price stated. ! “The special reserve fund which ■has been set up to take care of de preciation on real estate and invest ment fluctuations has been increased 'to $1,000,000,” he said. i His statement continues, significant ly: “All of these very favorable fac tors enable us to continue our pav j meat of 5 per cent interest on funds 1 held in trust for policyholders and (beneficiaries. In maintaining an in : lerest rate of five per cent, we are i holding intact an unbroken record j which began when the Jefferson (Standard was organized in 1907.” Mr. Price pointed out that payments 'to policyholders and beneficiaries in 1931 amounted to $7,078,072. “During the past five years life insurance proved to be the backlog in the eco j nomic life of our people. In this period 'the Jefferson Standard paid to its policyholders and beneficiaries more than $10,000,000, thus stabilizing and ] safeguarding the affairs of those who i had wisely provided for the emergen ; ey. The total payments made to pol | icyholders and beneficiaries since the j company was organized amount to I $81,308,758.” The president’s statement reported * a 28 per cent increase in the sale of new insurance in 1931 as compared with 1'33. The total amount of in surance sold was $16,660,600. “This splendid volume of new business, with j a greatly improved renewal record, gave us an increase in insurance in force, the total amount in force now being $314,834,797.” ; Surplus and special reserve funds j totaling $4,285,000 have been set aside ■ ft>f the additional protection,, of po titeyhoityeni ’ t j which year the mortality rate was | only 54 per cent of the expected. B. \ L. GROUPS LEND $300,000 MONTHLY Wad.esboro, Feb. ‘. —The building j and loan associations in North Caro j lina occupy a prominent place in the j recovery of the building industry as I it. relates to residential construction I and repair work. Recent surveys re : real that the associations are lending I from $300,000 to $400,000 monthly for j modernization of present homes and I for the construction of ne>» homes, ac cording to a statement made here to day by Paul J. Kiker, president of the North Carolina. Building and Loan League. I In commenting upon statistics re ! cently gathered by the United States j States Building and Loan League cov ! ering the country as a whole, Mr. ! Kilter pointed out that practically half ' of the contracts for new residential j buildings awarded in November were financed by construction loans from building and loan associations. He pointed out further that while con tracts awarded for residential con struction in November revealed a total of $19,924,700, it is estimated that the building and loan associa tions advanced $9,246,000 of construc tion loans during that period. Figures for the three Fall months reveal that construction loans >bv these local thrift and home financing institutions were 40 per cent of the total new resi dential contracts awarded, according to Mr. Kiker. The United States Building and Loan League lias gathered this infor mation from its members in all the states. Based upon this information, it is estimated that $65,000,000 has been placed into thp construction in dustry by these institutions during the Fall months of 1934. 1802 -Mark Hopkins, noted presi deut of William College, Mass., for more than a third of ’a century, born at Stockbridge, Mass. Died June 17, 1887. I ..cud mg College lo New Growth , I T D. k'/TC-tflH Local alumni of Wake Forest Col lege will be interested in a review of some of the achievements during the nearly five years Dr. Tnurman D. Kitchin, has been president of the in stitution. The review was furnished by J. L. Memory, Jr., of the college faculty, and is rather lengthy, but the main points follow: “With the 101st anniversary of the founding of Wake Forest College just around the corner. February 3. North Carolina’s senior Baptist college for men is rounding out the first lap of I) r second century of service and the fifth year of the administration of Dr. Thurman Delna Kitchin. “Since becoming president in 1930, the physician-educator has been too busy making history for his Alma Mater to stop to talk about it. “The public in general has learned only about two things during the last few years from Wake Forest—that her enrollment has passed the 1.000 mark, and that a mysterious firebug played havoc around here a couple of years ago. “Os more importance than these matters, however, are achtevements of Dr. Kitchin’s administration. During the last three years three new and handsome fireproof buildings have been constructed, a section of con crete bleachers with field house ac comodations have been extended across the entire east side of Gore athletic field; the student enrollment has increased from 617 in 1930 to 1010 in 193-t; twelve thousand new volumes have been added to the law school li brary; interest in the historic literary societies. Euzelianx and Philomathe sian. has been revived to a. point where it is now necessary to have sec tional meetings almost every night of the week to accommodate those with forensic ambition: there is a friend liness and contentment among the faculty and a. relative temperance a niong the student body not usually found in institutions the size of Wake 'Forest. ' “These are some of tile linos along which the former medical school dean has been directing his energies since becoming the college head.” Wisc Pi rsen ers If you want to hang calendar or' unframed picture on kitchen wall that is painted, attach one end of a small piece of adhesive tape to the article to be hung and the other to the wall. STOCK FOR SALE 60 Shares Henderson Cotton Mills. 25 Shares Citizens Bank and Trust Co. 12 Shares Durham Cotton Mfpr*. Co. 50 Shares Riverside Dan River Cotton Mills Common. Standard Investment Co. Phone J-3341 Durham, N. C. NOTICE! We have just installed modem machin ery. We are now in a better position than ever to take care of all kinds of monu ment work at the least cost. Get Our Prices If Interested WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD Henderson Granite & Marble Works Day Phone 866—Night Phone 565-W. J. B. GEP], Proprietor. Filling Stations May Be Asked for Increased 1 axes Daily Bhpatok Bureau, In tin* Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Feb. 4- —A serious effort is being made to force filling station operators to make heavier tax pay ments to the State treasury. Those who contemplate such taxation plan xo do it. tinder the. chain store tax section of the revenue bill. Their aim, of course, is to collect larger levies i from the major oil companies. A special sub-committee of the joint finance committee is now studying re vision of the chain store tax and the feasibility of collecting such a tax from filling stations. Such stations were exempted from the present act because it was shown that while fill— I ing- stations do less than five, per cent ; of the total chain busines they would j have had to pay moree than eighty ; percent of the taxes levied under the : law, j Advocates of the. assessment of a ; graduated tax on filling stations, bas i ed on the number of stations operat ! ed by one company, seek to tax the i larger oil companies. It has been point 1 ed out, however, that such a tax ■ would strike hard at operators of small chains which are North Caro lina owned. In most of the larger j towns there a.t*e operators who have several stations. It will he difficult to frame a law which would not inflict, hardship on these locally-owned small chains. The major oil companies are some j what, taken aback at the serious pro posal to tax them stil] more. Beecause | they did not enter objection to the present State, gas tax they had tho ught themselves relatively free from ' further molestation. The recent West : Virginia case before the United States ( Supreme Court is thought to have in fluenced many legislators who now want to impose the additional tax on i chain filling stations. That decision. | in effect, gave to states the right to I tax. such groups in almost any man { Her. Filling stations are. now taxed from ! $lO to SSO by the State, the tax vary i ing according to population, and with j the added clause that in no ease shall : .he tax be les than $5 per pump. Islo,ooo, 000 Asked For Roads Nearly Same as 1933 Sum i i __ Dally k Bureau, lii tin* Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Feb. 4.—The $10,000,000 aps j prepriation for maintenance which* the State Highway and Public Works ! Commission is asking for .each year. I of the next biennium represents ac | tually only 51,000,000 more than the ; 1933 appropriation of $6,900,000 a year | when the difference in the buying i power of the dollar in 1933 and 1935 i is taken into consideration, Chair | man Capus M. Waynick, of the com- I mission, will point out to the appro : priations committee when he appears j before it. Wednesday. I According to figures prepared by j Chairman Waynick for presentation j to the appropriations committee, the i cost of maintaining roads has in j creased. 11.8 per cent since July 3. i 1933, so that taking this difference in costs into consideration, as well ! as the proposed wage increase of 20 I per cent, the amount of maintenacee ’hat. can he done with $9,000,000 now is equal to what could b? done with $6,900,000 two years ago, Bo in ask ing for a maintenance appropriation 1 of $10,000,01(0 a year now', the highway department is really asking for only j $1,000,000 a. year more than was given | it by the 1933 general asembly when it appropriated only $6,900,000 a year | for maintenance. 1915—3 assassins, connected with murder of Archduke Francis Ferdin- I and, cause of World War, executed. * AIOnxiSTIUTOIi* Having qualified a .s \ f| . ... j Os the estate of W. li. pf,-,' j late of the County of Vr.nw '' :to notify all persons 1 i j against the estate to exhnur'V.^ 11 '’ ! the undersigned nr his hnr.n-' . v j County, N. C., on or before \ day of January. 1986, . .. ” krh will ho pleaded in bar to persons indebted to the P . : .' Al: please make immediate . vlSr i This 14th. day of January .... T. 110 j qv Administrator of the ]-U ” W. IT. Hope. NOTICE OF FORECI.OSrni By virtue of power contained' a deed of trust executed bv''p. ,/!; Alston and wife, 23rd August hm 'L record in book 130 at page .?.) no of Register of Deeds, Varee”cr° u g?. default having been made in • v. - r '\' ment of the note therein seeumd ‘V the request of the holder of ,v Tr , o '\ shall sell, by public anchor, to tV highest bidder, for cash, at To rw,' house door in Henderson, A. V the 28th day of February lory a < p o’clock, noon the following depe-n,..- property: Begin at a .-take on Andre* Avenue 100 feet from Pinkston run thence along line of lot No p 150 feet to a stake, thence parallel with Andrews avenue 50 feet to s:'! r thence along line of lot No. r i feet to stake, Andrews Avenue, 0 ,- r(V ; along Andrews Avenue 50 f oe f | ginning, see deed Will Have n ’!,i | wife to Parry Alston same herekv'ro ! ferred to for moro accurate .WotF tion. This 28th day of January I0?~, A. A. BUNN. Tru'-tp.-. i FORECLOSI RE SALE. j By virtue of power contained ii, ; Deed of Trust, executed by Hugh e I Williams and his wife Nancy Williams : recorded in the office of the Regiy Pr of Deeds of Vance County in Book i 140 at page 166 default having l*,.?' ; made in the payment of the detc therein secured, on request of tb holder of the same. I shall sod }■ public auction, to the. highest, biddf - for cash, at the Cqurt House door it, Henderson, at 12 o’clock noon or. Sat urday the 9rb day of March 193 q, following described property: Fronting seventy-five fret on .hmo Htrcet in the City of Henderso?. camp i times known as Clark Street ami running back along the line of 0-, residence lot of the laU Rev. H. I Walden in the North or Northon?! and the line of the late re-ddence In; of W. O.’ Outlaw, deceased. one hun dred fl?et deep to Rev. J. W. ScotT line; and being part originally of said Outlaw lot. ELIZABETH B. PTTTMAN. Executrix of Estate of Thomas M. Pittman. Trustee. Henderson, N. C„ February 4. IPS.) NOTICE OF SALE Os RF VI ESTATE. * North Carolina: •County of Vance 1 ! Under and by virtue of the povou i and authority contained it) that, err | tain deed of trust executed by J. Mr? j stead Kelly (.unmarried; t.o The Tin : leigh Savings Bank and Trust Co trustee, which said deed of trust b (dated February 1, 1927, and record**’] ;in Book 146, Page 107-10.8, of the j Vance County Registry, default km ; ing been made in the payment of the (indebtedness thereby secured and it: | the conditions therein secured, tb j undersigned substituted trustee by ir> j strument recorded in Book 166. <■ ; 415, Vance County Registry, will o: i Thursday, February 7. 1935, tit <n 1 about twelve o'clock noon, at tie ■ courthouse door at Henderson, Norik Carolina, offer for sale and sell to t!v. i highest bidder for cash thp fobowir j described property: , ; FIRST TRACT: All of that or-;tail. , piece, parcel or tract of land re taining three hundred and fifty five acres, more or less, situate, lying ard being about 3 1-2 or 4 miles South of i Henderson, In Henderson Township j Vance County, North Carolina, hav ' ing such shapes, metes, courses ark • distances as will more fully appeal I by reference to the plat thereof mad'' by Thomas Taylor, Surveyor, Oeiolv.: 31, 1916, and attached to the ahstrnc now on file with the Atlantic Job Stock Land Bank of Raleigh, t's same, being bounded on the North H the lands of Ed Vann, on the Fist V the lands of the County of Vance Poorhouse tract, on. the. South by tV lands of the County Poorhouse trafi and on the West by the Zands of I Burwell, n.nd being the identical trnc’ of land as was conveyed by deed o' Lucolla Fuller to J. Halstead Kell; and recorded in Book of Deeds ' 0 69, Page 392. in the office of the Ik gister of Deeds of Vance t'oun . North Carolina, to which reference b made for a more complete do-erg tion of same. SECOND TRACT: All of that e.er tain piece, parcel or tract of land cur taining ninety and one-fourth (00 acres, more or less, situate, lying being about 2 1-2 miles South of H f derson, on the Henderson and 1- ieigh hard surface road, in lien down i Township, Vance County. North *■ olina, having such courses andl tb tances as will appear more fu l ’ reference to a plat drawn by Taylor, Surveyor, from notes of ’ • ton Ctirrin. Surveyor, and (he abstract now on file with the ■.-• lantic Joint Stock Land Bnr.it o. ’leigh, the same being bounded or J 1 North by the lands of D. B. white and 11. A. Davis, on ‘he • • i>y the hard surface road 1 from Henderson to Raleigh, South by the land of Stewart., o:. West by the lands of H. A. Davb ■'•' being the identical tract of lar.o ’ v-everl by deed of J. A. Kelly n:. • Ella V/Kelly to J. Ttalsieml recorded in Book of Deeds 277, Register of Deeds Office County. _ V i; Terms of sale cash and require deposit of 10 percent amount of the bid as evidence e faith. , n . This the 7th day of January JOSEPH L. COCKERHA.J Substituted Ini? ? - Robert Weinstein. Attorney. Raleigh, N. O, -
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 4, 1935, edition 1
2
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