Newspapers / Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.) / June 6, 1929, edition 1 / Page 7
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MARION PROGRESS, MARION, N. C., THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1929 EXCIifiSION TO CHARLOTTE, N. C. JUNE 7, 1929 VIA . SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM Round Trip Fare From MARION, N. C $2,25 Final Limit June 8th, 1929. UNITED CONFEDERATE VET- ERANS PARADE, GRAND MIL ITARY DISPLAY, 15 BANDS, BEAUTIFUL FLOATS, AND MANY OTHER ATTRACTIONS. ASK TICKET AGENTS LAND FOR SALE Take notice that the undersigned Commissioner, under and by virtue of a decree of the Superior Court of McDowell County, N. C., in that certain special proceeding entitled “J. D. Blanton, Administrator of the Estate of Mrs. Sallie Y. Steppe, de ceased, against Paul A. Steppe and others,” dated the 7th day of May, 1929, will at 12 o’clock noon, on Monday, June 10th, 1929, at the courthouse door in Marion, N. C., of fer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, all the right, title and interest of which Mrs. Sallie Y. Steppe died seized, of, in and to the following de scribed piece, parcel and lot of land in the town of Marion, N. C., bound ed and described as follows: All that lot of land on the NE cor ner of Garden and Spring Streets in the town of Marion, N. C., bounded as follows: Beginning on an iron stake on the North margin of Spring Street at a point 99.9 feet N 67 E from the NE point of intersection of the said two streets, and running' thence N 20 W 60.8 feet to an iron stake; then S 67 degrees 15’ W 106 feet to a stake on the East margin of Garden Street; thence S 20 E with the said margin of said street 61.7 feet to a stake at the intersection of the Eastern margin of Garden Street and the Northern margin of Spring Street; thence N 67 E with the North ern margin of Spring Street 99.9 feet to the beginning, on which said lot is situated a two story ten room house which is situated one block East of South Main Street. The said sale will be subject to the homestead rights of David M. Steppe and Annie Kathery^ Steppe, minors, during their minority of, in and to that portion of the said land bound ed and described as follows: The two rooms in the North West corner of the second story adjoining and connecting in the Steppe house on the corner of Garden and Spring Street in the town of Marion, togeth er with the right to use the bath room on the second story, and the right of ingress, egress and regress through the hall on the second story, ’ the stairway, and the use of the porch on the first story North of the entrance to the said house, and the right to use the hall on the first story. The sale will be subject to confir mation by the Court. This 7th dav of May, 1929. JOHN M. STEPPE, Commissioner. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER MORTGAGE Notice is hereby given, that, under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in certain Deed of Trust, executed by Charlie Lytle and Jane Lytle, his wife, to the Marshall Lum ber Company, and J. W. Winbdrne, Trustee, and assigned to J. C. Sand lin, dated September 12, 1924, and registered in Book 28, at page 164, in the Register of Deeds office of Mc Dowell, county, North Carolina, to secure the payment of certain indeb tedness therein mentioned, and de fault being made in the payment of said indebtedness as therein provided the undersigned, J. W. Winbome, Trustee, will, on the first Monday in July, 1929, at 12 o’clock M., at the courthouse door of McDowell Coun ty, Marion, N. C., offer for sale at public out-cry to the highest bidder for cash, the following described tract of land, lying and being in Old Fort Township, in McDowell County, and more particularly described as follows, to-wit: Being a certain lot on the Cataw ba River Road adjoining the Cataw-i ba Baptist Colored Church, the Salis bury line and others; Beginning on a Tocic corner of the church lot and runs N 18 W 57 feet to a stake on the Salisbury line; then N 70 E with the Salisbury line 35 feet to a stake, Boyce’s comer; then South 18 East with Boyce’s line 57 feet to a stake; then to the beginning, containing one-fourth of an acre, more or less. This 28th day of June, 1929. J. W. WINBORNE, Trustee. To Identify Genuine AsptiAn increasing nae 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 yon’ve a headache, or cold; or are suffering from neu ralgia or neuritis. Rheumatic pains yield, too, if you’ll only give these tablets a chance. But you want genuine Aspirin, so look for the Bayer Cross on every tablet. The box always bears the name Bayer and the word genuine printed in re^ Talent and Prestige . Needed for “Authority” Throughout the ages man has striven A^inly with his fellow compatriots to attain tliat pinnacle of absolution, au thority over his fellows, but it has been left to Aldous Huxley, writing in Vanity Fai^r, to tell why a man wants to be an authority. “Whai are a man’s motives for want ing to be an Authority? The two necessary attribues of an Authority are in the first place talent and in the second a prestige which is a product partly of that talent and partly of causes external to the talented indi vidual. Nobody without some sort of outstanding talent /Can hope to be come an Authority for the world at large. At the same time, talent with out prestige is unarailing. Many men of talent have lacked authority during their, lifetime; authority has only come to them posthumously with a posthu mous accession of prestige. In this age of newspapers the greatest source of prestige is publicity, the mere fact of being somebody who figures in the news. It is possible for any public person, whatever the nature of his success-bringing specialty, to become an Authority.” PAtNFUL INDIGESTION *1 SUFFERED a gOOd while before I found something that would help me,” writes Mr. E. W. Berry, of Neosho, Mo. "My trouble was indigestion^ pains in my chest and a tight, bloated feeling tnat would make me feel smothered. "Speaking of this to a fnend of mine, he told me that Black* Draught was good for this trou ble. 1 went over bought a pack age. It certainly did help me, so I continued to use it. "I am in the transfer business, sometimes when I would be hungry and ready to eat, I would have a call and would have to eat later. Then I would eat too much or too hurriedly. This would indigestion. After I started using Black-Draught, I found it did me a world of good. It is splendid for biliousness and stomach troubles.” American Indians Not • Wanderers by Nature The bureau of American ethnology says: “One of the common fallacies of early historians, by no means yet entirely dissipated, was the idea that thie Indians were generally nomadic, having no fixed place of abode, but wandering hither and yon as fancy or the necessities of existence demanded. “The term nomadic is hot, in fact, properly applicable to any Indian tribe. Every tribe and every con- j geries of tribes, with few exceptions.! laid .claim to and dwelt within the! limits of a certain tract or region, the j boundaries of whictj were well un derstood, and were handed down by tradition and not ordinarily relin- quislied save to an superior force. Between many of the tribes, indeed, were debatable areas, owned by none by claimed by all, which from time immemorial formed the cause of dis putes and intertribal wars.”—Path finder Magazine. (K F«r CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, BILIOUSNESS WOMEN who need a tonic should take Cardul. In use over 60 years. c-ia« Excommunication Only Way When Nathaniel Parker Willis wished to withdraw from membership in the Park Street Congregational church in Boston he found ihere was *410 place in the ecclesiastical scheme for honorable withdrawal, and so “by the authority of the Lord Jesus Christ,” he was “excommunicated from this church,” writes Granville Hicks in the American Mercury. His attempted withdrawal was not a result of disagreement with church doctrine, but of rebellion against church discipline; he liked to go to the theater and he found church at tendance p bore. Several years later he wrote to his fiancee: “I should never have wished to marry you'if you had not been re ligious, for I have confidence in no woman who is not so.” LAND FOR SALE North Carolina, McDowell County. Take notice that under and by vir tue of the power contained in a cer tain mortgage deed, dated the 25tn day of October, 1926, and recorded in Book 39 at page 60, IV^Dowell County Mortgage Deed Record^ which said mortgage was executed by G. W. Bird and wife Fannie B. Bird to T. J. Fortune to secure the payment of a certain indebtedness therein described, payment of \^icn said indebtedness not having been made, and the term thereof having expired, the undersigned will, on Thursday, the 27th day of June, 1929, at 10 o’clock a. m., at the court house door in Marion, offer for sale .to the highest bidder for cash the following described land: Lying and being in the Town Old Fort, N. C., in what is known as the Mashburn Subdivision, and being a certain tract of land adjoining ana known as the Mashbnrn Subdivision and being lots 11, 12, 13, and 14 in Block L as surveyed by E. C. Hams. This 28th day of-May, 1929. G. P. FORTUNE F. T. FORTUNE Administrators of T. J. Fortune, Deceased. WhenFbod Sours Lots of folks who think they have “indigestion” have only an acid conditi» which could be corrected in five or ten minutes. An effective anti-acid like Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon restores digestion to normal. Phillips does away with all that sour ness and gas right after meals. It pre vents the distress so apt to occur two hauTs after eating. What a pleasant preparation to take! And how good it i* for the system! Unlike a burning doee of soda—^which is but temporary relief a* best—Phillips Milk of Magnesia nra- tralizes many times its volume in acid. Next time a hearty meal, or too rich a diet has brought on the least disoom- fort, try— PHILLIPS r Milk . of Magnesia Inspiration for Saws The earliest prehistoric saws, so It seems, were not made as are our ordi nary hand saws, with teeth notched out in the material of the blade. The original type seems to have been a wooden blade with Inserted teeth, copying almost exactly those in a jaw bone, and these ahcient devices varied mainly in the substances of the teeth. For example, one type of early saws used flint teeth, another obsidian or volcajiic glass, still others Broken shell, while In some of the Pacific islands wooden saws were found* with the actual teeth of sharks inserted along the edge of the blade. It there fore seems likely that the jawbone was the inspiration for'saws. Innocent Beffinninff Mired in the depths of juvenile de pravity, David, age three, horrified a North side household by strutting from room to room vigorously repeat ing “Dog gone! Dog gone! Dog gone!” Where he had picked up this I incipient Infantile profanity was a I matter of much concern to his elders I until “gramma” remembered that she I painstakingly had been trying to teach i him that well-known classic beginning, “Oh, where, oh, where, has my little I ‘dog gone’?”—and the imaginary dog’s I absence measured the extent of his ' proficiency.—Indianapolis News. TEETHING BABIES DO WELL ON Scott's Emulsion Sure Sign of Old Age A young man In Kansas City came downtown on a recent morning look ing tired and worn. “No, I’m not sick,” he said. “I’m just getting old.” Then he explained his thirteen-year- old daughter had had a party the night before. He was trying to help entertain as he always had done at such affairs since she was a baby. Pretty soon his wife beckoned him into the next room, “Paw,” she said, “go on upstairs and let the young folks have a good time.”—Capper's Weekly. 666 is a Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. U » tbe most speedy remedy known. A Little Delayed Nancy, who was only five, was much impressed when a large bunch of roses arrived for her ipottier. “Why did you get them, mother?” she asked. “You see, Nancy, seven years ago today daddy and mother were raar- ried,"’ explained the mother. “Goodness! He was a lozi* time sending them, wasn’t he? lou’d think he’d have sent them seven years ago.” MAgM '400 M^eads the Wwld in JfTotor Car TVxlue ▼▼ Before You Buy in the $900 Field compare! COMPARE FEATURES! See the high-priced motor car features which the Nash '*400” offers. Compare PERFORMANCE! Drive it and test the action of its powerful, 7-bearing, high-compression motor, the unusual acceleration, speed and power. Compare STEERING! Here’s the greatest ease in turning, parking, han dling you’ve ever known—due to Nash engineering. Compare RIDING! Specially designed alloy springs tailored individually to the weight and size of each model and Lovejoy hydraulic shock absorbers, outboard mounted by Nash, to increase their efficiency. Compare BODY DESIGN! Contrast the low, smart beauty of the ’*400” with any other car and see how it cap tures your preference. Compare EQUIPMENT! Nash pro vides at no extra charge front and rear bumpers, hydraulic shock absorbers, spare tire lock, and tire cover. Compare VALUE! Sum up all Nash offers—in quality, and performance and beauty and features—then com pare delivered, fully equipped prices asked for other cars in this field with the LOW Nash delivered, fully equipped prices. Price Range (/. o. b. factory) of 23 Nash *‘400^* Models, $885 to $2190 including Touring, Roadster, Coupe, Cabriolet, Victoria and Sedan Models FINLEY MOTOR COMPANY MARION. N. C. («-2)-S77A Chec\ Oldsmobile Performance by the Surest Test of all— DRIVE IT- KNOW WHAT IT CAN DO W f HERE’S one sure way for you M. to prove Oldsmobile perform.- ance . . . comc and drive the car yourself! Leam by actual experi ence, not only what this Olds- mob£le can do, but how it does it. Get behind the wheel. Make your self comfortable . . . regulate the adjustable driver’s seat to suit your height. Note the convenient arrangement of controls and instru ments—the facility with which you can operate the starter, lights, gear-shift, accelerator, clutch, and brakes. Then drive! Try this finer Olds mobile in traffic and on the open road. Test every phase of its performance. Even in thickest traf fic, you’ll find Olds mobile easy to drive. Swift, stageless pick- up gives you the advantage at the signal NEW LOWER PRICE TWO DOOR. SC BAN $875 /. o. b. Lansingf Midiigan Spare Tire tend Bumpers Extra light. Easy handling and flexible performance enable you to slip nimbly through crowded streets. Fingertip steering and a short turn ing radius simplify parking. Out on the road, Oldsmobile’s big 62-horsepower, high-compression engine delivers a smooth, rhythmic flow of eager power. There is greater speed than the average motorist ever needs—quick, sure acceleration to flash past other cars —^tremendous reserve power for the hills—stamina to maintain a touring pace hour after hour. Come drive this Oldsmobile. Com pare it, point for point, with othei* ' cars. Talk with own ers and get the results of the trials of months and miles. Then, when you know what Olds mobile can do, judge it by your own stand ards of performance. Consider the delivered price as well as the list price tehen comparing automobile values. Oldsmobile delivered prices include only reasonable charges for delivery and financing, QfpS MOBI LE CLINCHFIELD MOTOR CO., East Court St. Phone 248 MARION, N. C. Shop with home mercnantt. □Jd Newspapers for sale at The Progress office at 5c a bundle. \
Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 6, 1929, edition 1
7
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