\
MARION PROGRESS. MARION. N. C., THUggpAY, MAY 9> 1929
LAND FOR SALE
Take notice that whereas on the
5th day of June, 1926, Sam Boyce
and wife executed a Deed of Trust
to the undersigned Trustee and
which is recorded in Book 26 at page
146 of McDowell County Mortgage
Deed Records, conveying the lands
therein and hereinafter described as
security for an indebtedness therein
described to the Home Building As
sociation of Marion, N. C., in which
Deed of Trust it was provided that
in the event there should be default
on the part of the said Sam Boyce
and wife to comply with the consti
tution and by-laws of said Associa
tion in paying the monthly install
ments on shares of stock described
in said Deed of Trust for a period of
sixty days, the Trustee should, when
requested by the Home Building As
sociation, sell the lands therein de
scribed for the ^purpose of satisfying
the indebtedness to the said Associa
tion, and whereas there has been
such default and said Association
through its Board ot Directors hav
ing demanded of the said Trustee
that he foreclose under the power of
sale gi'anted in said Deed of Trust;
Now therefore, the undersigned
Trustee will, for the purpose of sat
isfying said indebtedness, on Mon
day, May 27th, 1929, at 12 o’clock
noon at the courthouse door in Mar
ion, N. C., offer for sale to the high
est bidder for cash all that certain
piece or parcel of land lying and be
ing in the County of McDowell and
bounded and described as follows:
Beginning pn a black oak about 10
inches in diameter, standing on a
bluff (the intersection of two small
ravines bears S 35 degrees E 45
feet) and runs S 85% E 210 feet to
a stake at edge of the old Marion
and Bakersville road; thence S 19%
E 105 feet with said-road to a stake;
thence N 85% W 210 feet to a
stake; thence N 19% W 105 feet to
the beginning, containing 1-2 acre
more or less, and being more fully
described in a deed from C. H. Cal
lahan and wife to Sam Boyce and
wife, dated October 23rd, 1925, and
recorded in Book 67 page 510 of
McDowell County Deed Records, to
which reference is here made for
more specific description.
This the 24th dav of April, 1929.
J. W. WINBORNE, Trustee.
NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND
Under and by virtue of an order
of the Superior Court of McDowell
County made in the special proceed
ing entitled B. G. Dalton, administra
tor of the estate of B. W. Dalton vs.
Sarah C. Davis et al., the same being
No upon the special proceed
ings docket of said court, the under
signed commissioner will, on the 1st
day of June, 1929, at two o’clock P.
M., at the court-house door in Mari
on, North Carolina, offer for sale to
the highest bidder for cash that cer
tain tract of land lying and being in
Crooked Creek Township, McDowell
County, North Carolina, and more
fully described as follows: Begin
ning at a stone, C. C. Nanney’s cor
ner, also Justice’s corner, and runs
North with Justice’s line 31 rods
113 poles to a pile of stone, his cor
ner in Patton line; thence West 49
poles to a chestnut, C. C. Nanney’s
corner; thence with Nanney’s line
South 90 poles to the beginning, con
taining 17% acres, more or less.
This 25th day of April, 1929.
L. M. ABERNETHY, Comr.
NOTICE
Having qualified as Administrator
of the Estate of James G. Reynolds,
deceased, of McDowell County,
N. C., this i^ to notify all persons
having claims against the Estate ofj
said deceased, to present them to the j
undersigned at his office on or be-,
fore the 25th day in April, 1930, or:
this notice will be pleaded in bar of;
their recovery. All persons indebted
to the said Estate will please make
immediate payment.
This 25th day of April, 1929.
D. F. GILES,
Administrator of James
G. Reynolds, Decease^.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHimninnniiin
PAINS
In Side and Back
*1 HAD BEEN miserable
for a long time. My
health was poor, and
I sufiEered a lot from
weakness. At times,
my strength was so
little that I could not
stand on my feet. I
wotQd have to give up
and go to bed. My
sides and back hurt
dreadfully.
**I grew discouraged, for I could
do so little. I worried about my
self^ and almost gave up hope of
ever being strong and weU. I
could scarcely lift a bucket of
water. My house work went un
done, for I was not strong enough
to do it.
**After I had taken Cardui for
I a little while, I began to feel
better. I grew stronger, soon
■found that I could do my work
with less effort, and the pains in
my back and sides left me. I
tKink Cardui is a wonderful
medicine. My health has been
excellent since then.**—Mrs. D. L.
Bedmer, W. Main St., Salem, Va.
CARDUI
Helps Women
To Health
lliniifiimiiiiiniiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiimiinniiiiii
Constipation, Indigestion
ipauon, inatgesiion, ui
Costs only 1 cent a dose,
mmimmmmmm
.JO HELP NOURia?
Scott’s Emulsidh
no
m
CONTROL MOSAIC
BY GOOD ROGUING
To Identi^
Genuine Aspitin
increasing use of Bayer
Aspirin every year is proof
that it has no ill effects. It is the
accepted antidote for pain. It
always helps; it never harms. Quick
relief when you’ve a headache, or
cold; or are stiffering from neu
ralgia or neuritis. Rheumatic pains
yield, too, if you’ll only give these
tablets a chance. But you waut
genuine Aspirin, so look for the
Bayer Cross on every tablet. The
box always bears the name Bayer
and the word geauiae printed in red.
Remove Entire Root System
of All Diseased Plants.
In the control of mosaic in red and
purple raspberries, roguing dtit dis-
i eased plants has been demonstrated
to be a successful control measure,
j The use of stock practically free
I from nosalc is essential in setting
I out new plantings of red or purple
raspberries. All wild and cultivated
' raspberries should be removed within
j 200 or 300 feet of the new plantings.
Success in keeping mosaic under con
trol depends upon careful roguing the
first and second years.
The roguing must bf done so as to
prevent the scattering of aphids on j
the diseased plants, as these tiny in-1
sects carry the Infection from one |
plant to another. It is also essential |
that the entire root system of all dis-!
ea^ed plants be dug up and removed j
from the planting, for all parts of j
diseased plants harbor the mosaic
virus.' To be on the safe side, the
plants adjacent to a diseased plant
should also be removed, for in many
cases they have already been infected
when the diseased plan^ is discovered.
The first rogutog should be done as
soon in the spring as the leaf symp
toms are definite enough, which is
usually in late June. One and two-
year-old plantings should be rogued at
least two or three times during June,
July and August. Planting mosaic- j
free stock and roguing should insure j
practically no losses from mosaic for i
five years under average conditions. !
Most standard varieties, such as |
Cuthbert, Marlboro, June, Ontario and i
Columbia, are easily rogued, but mo
saic spreads rather rapidly in them
so that they are scarcely profitable
if mosaic is very prevalent Herbert
and St. Regis, on the other hand, 3S-
cape infection quite regularly, while
Latham, a new variety, shows con
siderable resistance to the disease in
that the plants are less seriously af
fected than those of more susceptible!
kinds.
iUous-
K*iaal
NOTICE
North Carolina. McDowell County.
In the Superior Court
Before the Cl^rk.
WILLIE DICKSON
—vs—
HENSILE MILLNER. i. . , . j ,
The defendant in the above matter I'* ••
will take notice that an action entit-1 —
led as above has been instituted in. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
the Superior Court of McDowell j MORTGAGE
County by
666
is a. Prescription for
Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue,
BOious Fever and Malaria.
Perfect Apple Variety
Not Yet Been Discovered i _
There is no such thing as a perfect
apple variety. All of them have their!
faults. However, every variety is at;
its best in certain parts of the coun-|
try and many of them are quite ex-1
acting as to soil requirements. Even:
the human factor enters in. A cer-;
tain man may make a great success!
with a certain variety where another
would fail. In this day of special!-^
zation, a man must “know his apples.” |
Now for the red Delicious. It is a |
high-priced apple, a good eating ap-j
pie, it has been highly advertised and
the consuming public is quite familiar
with It. It is listed among the apples
for commercial planting, it has an at-'
tractive appearance when well grown'
and some growers have made a sue-!
cess with it On the other hand. It;
is often a very shy bearer. i
i
i
Willie Dickson for the
Fruit Trees Respond to
Any Good Fertile Soil i
Fruit trees, like other crops, re
spond to a good fertile soil. The fer
tility that is applied artificially by !
most farm folks Is largely barnyard'
manure. In too many cases, in their
desire to treat trees properly, the
planter is inclined to put fresh ma-i
nure in the holes, immediately about
the roots of the trees. This is about!
the worst practice that one can fol-|
low In the planting of the trees, for|
it will nearly always result in the;
death of the trees If any quantity of;
manure Is used in this way at the
time of planting. The fertilizer should
purpose of obtaining an
Annulment i Notice is hereby given th^t, under be cultivated into the ground Imme-;
orhermarriaffruDon the grounds of and by virtue of the power of sale! diately about the surface of the,
d^etL ai?d the said defemiant will! contained in a certain Mortgage ground, and not too far away from
fniw fatp that he is reauir-: Deed executed by L. 0. Lawing ftnd the tree, but by all means keep It
ed to appear within fifty days before; wife, Velsie Lawing, to J. R- Gray | away from the roots at time of plant-1
tS'^TfomplaTn" oTtiirplain^SlSisfa^d ?f"?^ed ?n Book L at| >”«-
nSF 1929.
19th y P tioned, and default bemg made m
h # o • ! the payment of said indebtedness as
Clerk of Superior Court. | provided, the undersigned, J. j
NOTICE OF APPL.CAT.ON FO^ |
PARDON OF ROTHIE MILLER | 3rd day of June, 1929
Horticultural Hints
Cherry trees, more than almost any
other fruit trees, should be planted
early In the spring.
• * *
Community efforts In the eradica-!
Application will be made to the I at 12 c’clock M., at the court-house;
Commissioner of Pardons and the'door of McDowell county, Maripn, orchard pests are as Important
Governor of North Carolina for the I N. C., v-public * | other community movement, j
pardon of Rothie Miller convicted at, cry, to the highest bidder for cash , as any oiner commu ^ y ,
fViA cionfpmher Term. 1928, of the 1 the olio wing described tract oi] . . . , ^ '
Superio^ Court of McDowell County i land, lying and being in Montfords I While pcuning is in fact one meth-;
for the Crime of Larceny and sen- Cove Township, McDowell County, od of thinning It does not entirely;
tenced to the State Prison at Ral-1 North Carolina, and described as fol-; take the place of hand thinning. The j
eigh, N C., for a period of two years lows: ■ thinning of fruit as a means of re-|
Al’l persons who oppose the grant-; Beginning at a black-jack bush, nevlng the trees of exhaustion has;
ing of said pardon are invited to for-|^ ^ Lawing’s comer; thence with! undoubtedly a direct bearing upon
ward their protest to the Commis- g. 80 E. 60 poles to a sour-1 production.
’ ^ wood, his corner; then with his oth-; * • • |
er line S. 70 poles to a Spanish ash, i Qj.jjpgg ^an be pruned any time dur-
sioner of Pardons without delay
April 29, 1929.
ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE
h?“iiL^E^60®'poleft"o*ypiS™ “>« dormant seaMn ex«pt when.
Having qualified as adminsitrator' ^nd Neal’s line; thence with; IMs cold .enough to freeze the wood.,
the setate of James O. Moore, de- j j^^al’s line N. 60 poles to a stake at which time the vines are very brit-
of the setate of James O. Moore, Neal’s line N. 60 poles to a ui wiiiv;u ,
ceased, late of McDowell County, N. Morris’ line; thence N. 45 | tie and \vlll easily snap off if they;
C., this is to notify all persons hav- qq to a stake on the Burke are handled. j
ing claims against the estate of the then with the said line W. 65 • • • i
said deceased to exhibit them to the ,pQjgg to a stake on William Lawing s- The grape vine, as commonly grown,
undersigned at Old Fort, N. I 5 then with the said line S. 50 needs at least eight feet of space each
or before the 9th day of May>. : poles to the beginning, containing vines are set commercially
or this notice wilUbe pleaded in_,oar!59 acres. ^ f^^t apart in the row and the
This 2nd day of May, 1929. apart, so that wagons,
D. F. GILES, I snravers and cnltivatins tools may
of their recovery. All persons indeb
ted to said estate will please make j
immediate payment.
This 6th day of May, 1929.
T. B. FAW, Administrator
of James O. Moore, deoeased-
. 1 sprayers and cultivating
Administrator of the Estate p^gg between the rows without dara-
of J. ^ I - -
MAS ni 400
Ztcads the World in •Jflotw Car \'*alue
$1060.00
Delivered,
Fully Equipped,
Nothing More
to Buy!
Compare
delivered, fully-equipped prices
See wliyNask is lower!
ON the basis of quality, the Nash
"400” should cost more than other
cars in its competitive field. It actually
costs less!
Nash engineers—one of the industry’s
outstanding engineering organizations
—have created a finer motor car. They
have developed the high-compression,
7-bearing motor to its highest point
of perfection and power. The exclu
sive Nash outboard mounting of hy
draulic shock absorbers doubles their
eflfectiveness and creates supreme rid
ing ease. And here is the "world’s
easiest driving control,” in this new
and finer motor car.
These are but a few of many "400”
features of superiority.
Why then, is the Nash "400” lower
priced?
Here is the explanation. Every Nash
"400” is now factory-equipped with
the acces^ries, purchased at factory
savings and included in the factory
price of the car. Bumpers, shock ab
sorbers, spare tire lock and tire cover
come with the car and are not added
later as "extras,” at retail prices.
You will find some dealers (not Nash
dealers) charging as much as $50 or
$60 extra for bumpers alone.
Compare the delivered, fully equipped
price of any Nash "400” with the de
livered, fully equipped prices of com«
petitive cars. You'll see the saving!
HNIEY MOTOR COBPANY
MARION, N. C.
1929 Oldsm.obile
is winnifHf even greater
admiration from owners, because it is
DESIGNED TO DO
ALL THINGS WELL
I
It is a relatively simple engineer
ing task to design a car that em-*
phasi^es only a few qiialities at
the sacrifice of others. It is an
engineering achievement, how
ever, to combine all d^irable
qualities* to an outstanding de
gree in a balanced whole. Yet
that is exactly what Oldsmobile
engineers have done in the new
1929 Oldsmobile.
You have only to drive it to
realize what brilliant all-round
performance it provides. Its big
highxcompressio^ engine now
delivers 62 horsepower.
And the piston pins are
pressure-lu.bricated, a
feature formerly charac
teristic of high-priced
automobiles.
NEW LOWER PRKE
TWO POOa. •C»Alli
^875
In appearance, this finer 01dsmv»
bile is as beautiful and as smart as.
any car on automobile row. Its
grace of Une—it^ perfection of
detail—its harmony of colox^—all
bespeak the artistry of Fisher
craftsmanship.
The interiors are luxuriously ap
pointed and richly uptholster^
... they are roomy and restful
as well. And the new Fisher ad
justable front seat, combined
with Oldsmobile’s adjustable
steering wheel, assures a comfort
able driving position.
Come in. Drive the 1929^
Oldsmobile. Enjoy the
results of full develop
ment of all the qualities
that contribute to motor
ing pleasure.
Oldsmobile
* t o o or mo^ocs
CLINCHFIELD MOTOR CO.,
East Court St. Phone 248
MARION, N. C.
John and Richard Webber, twins. Start a friendly Mttlc habit that liiil pay. Read tbc
of Swansea, Wales, were 73 recentlvj adVCrtfS'mei:tS In thlS paper.