MARION PROGRESS, MARION, N. C., THURSDAY, FEB. 1, 1940
Beware Coughs
from common colds
That Hang On
Creomulsion relieves promptly be
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to loosen germ laden phlegm,
increase secretion and aid nature to
soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed
bronchial mucous membranes. No mat
ter how many medicines you have
tried, tell your druggist to sell you a
bottle of Creomulsion with the under
standing that you are to like the way
it quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
For Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
Laughing Around the World
With IRVIN s. COBB
Safety Was Not With the Razor
By IRVIN S. COBB
TT seems a colored girl was entertaining a gentleman friend when
another suitor for her favor appeared at the locked front door and
demanded admittance. There was jealousy in his manner and anger in
his voice. Also, there was a justifiable suspicion on the part of the
occupants of the house that he might be toting a razor. iGiyhow, the
newcomer had a reputation for behaving violently at times. His rival
within doors was of a more pacific turn of mind.
NOTICE
North Carolina, McDowell County,
In the Superior Court,
E. C. Hawkins, Plaintiff, j
-vs- I
Floyd L. Kelly and wife, Irene Kelly;
James A. Padgett and F. M. Bradley,!
; Trustee, Defendants. j
The defendant, James A. Padgett,:
will take notice that an action en
titled as above has been commenced'
in the Superior Court of McDowell |
County, North Carolina, to deter
mine the title to certain real estate;
described in said action and located)
in McDowell County, North Carolina, i
in which the said defendant is alleged ‘
to claim an interest; and the said de- j
fendant will further take notice that]
he is required to appear in the of-1
fice of the Clerk of the Superior !
Court of said County in the Court'
House in Marion, North Carolina, on
the 14th day of February, 1940, and
answer or demur to the complaint in
said action, or the plaintiff will ap
ply to the Court for the relief de
manded in said complaint.
This the 13th day of January, 1940.
J. F. MOODY,
Clerk Superior Court,
McDowell County, North Carolina.
(Jan. 18, 25; Feb. 1, 8.) I
NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND |
Take notice, that w’hereas on the!
12th day of January, 1928, C. W. i
Godfrey executed and delivered to i
the undersigned C. C. (Godfrey
“Gal,” he said to his hostess. “I ain’t aimin’ to have no rookus wid
dat tough nigger outside yonder.”
“You ain’t skeered of him, is you?” demanded the lady.
“1 ain’t skeered—I’se jest careful, that’s all. I reckon de best thing
fui me to do is jest to climb out of one of dese here back windows and
go on ’bout my bizness.”
“You better not do dat,” said the girl. “Dey*s a dawg in de back
yard."
“Honey,” qucth the departing one as he skinned over the window
sill, “de way tbincs is out front it don’t make no diff’unce to me ef de
back yard is upholstered in dawgs.”
(American News Features, Inc.)
^ CL rah ^yinn s
CooKing Class
OLD-AGE AND SURVIVORS
INSURANCE PROVISIONS
Apple Doughnuts
5 medium size ripe apples
2 teaspoons baking powder
4 cups flour
1 egg
1-2 cup milk
2 tablespoons sugar
Salt.
; I Part 5
: i How to Fiifure Old-Age and Survi
vors Insurance Benefits
For calculating benefits provided
under the new Federal old-age and
survivors insurance system, a for
mula, based on the workers monthly
wage, has been adopted.
To find this “average wage,” take
a commercial or industrial worker’s
total wages, as reported by his em
ployer, and divide this total by the
number of months he could have
, , Sift dry ingredients together,
mortgage deed on the lands herem-; ajj u 4. j -n u i. i.
after described for the purpose of i beaten egg and milk. Beat to ^ , . gmnlovment since 1936 A
securing the payment of certain in-j smooth batter. Peel and core applesn 4.1,1 k fif • « a f n
debtedness in said mortgage deed: and slice in rings 1-4 inch thick. Dip j . benefit is figured as follows:
described, said mortgage deed being | each ring in batter until well cover-i amount equal to 40 percent
registered in the office of the Reg-!^, of the first $50 of his average month-
ister of Deeds in Mortgage Book 391'!* ■" wage; to thU is added 1 per cent
at page 134, and whereas there has'*”^”^ gently until they are a golden.
been default in the payment of said I brown. Sprinkle with white sugar | P b sic a ount for each year
indebtedness. and a little cinnamon.
Now, therefore, in execution of
the power of sale in me vested by
the terms of said mortgage deed,|
and for the purpose of satisfying the |
said indebtedness, I will offer for:
sale to the highest bidder, for cash,'
on Monday, February 12, 1940, at
10 o’clock A. M., at the courthouse |
door in Marion, N. C., the following i
Dried Peach Mousse
1-2 pint heavy cream
1 cup peach pulp
1-2 cup powdered sugar
Juice of 1-2 lemon.
[in which the worker earns at least
j $200 in covered employment.
Example: Jim Blank, a factory
worker, receives $100 a month in
wages from 1936 until the end of
1939. At that time he reaches age
65 and decides to retire to get his
Whip the cream, then fold in thej
I monthly old-age insurance benefits,
beginning next year. Jim’s monthly!
‘"'Ljinl^iTbeing on the waters of f'*'" P"!"’ P^^ered sugar and
Toms Creek and kts Branch, Mar- Serve with ladyjj^
ion Township, and beginning at a -
stake, government corner of N. A. 1
Riddle line on the top of a high hill,!
and runs Northwest to Bets Branch,'
then eastward a short distance,
Salad Baskets
Halve small oranges, and remove
crossing Bets Branch to a road and pieces; take out the mem-
Harve Godfrey’s line, then with his brane and seeds. Mix lightly with
line various courses and distances equal parts of canned pineapple.
back to the same road on govern- Heap in the shells and just beforeo
ment line, then Southwest with the . j • ;25c, and three times 25c is 75c. So
road to N A. Riddle’s line, then dressmg over,|jj^,^ $25.75.
XT A 4-1%/-k lTT*Jlr.P fl nir. rtr mimoTiTrt r\n •
first $50 of his average monthly wa
ges is $20. Add 10 per cent of the
remaining $50, or $5. That makes
$25. The law pi-ovides for an addi
tional 1 per cent of this $25 for
each year that he was covered (1937
1938, 1939). One per cent of $25 is
with said N. A. Riddle’s line to the Grate a bit of pimiento on
beginning, containing 35 acres, more Serve on lettuce, very cold,
or less.
This 12th day of January, 1940.
top.
I (For further information on the
^ , . above subject call or write the Soci-
I Grapefruit, Cherry and Pecan Salad |
C. C. GODFREY, Mortgagee.
NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND
Drain a can of white cherries; re
move the pits. Fill cavity with pecan;
jal Security Board, 204 Flatiron
Building, Asheville, North Carolina.)
(Next week: When Monthly Ben-
n-^t meats. Separate a large grape-
Take notice, that whereas on the fruit into sections. Remove mem- ,
14th day of July, 1939, Eliza Latta branes and seeds. Mix with the cher- "
and Walter Gardner executed and j-ies and serve on lettuce withj RANnnM «?TATi;T¥r«;
delivered to the undersigned Paul J. i, j • I RANDOM STATISTICS
Story, Trustee, a^ deed ,of trust on ^renc hdressmg. . j On an average eight-hour day the
the lands hereinafter described for;^ — : o j. r> .l-
the purpose of securing the indebt-' ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE ! Government Printing Office
«dness described in said deed of| Raving qualified as administrator i 8,000,000 stamped penny pos
trust, which said deed of trust is re- i of the estate of Anna Mask, de- cards for distribution by the Post
cor^d in the office of t^ Register j ceased, notice is hereby given to all Office Department. Annual produc-
C persons ha^ng claims against the es- tion totals about two billion cards.
C., in Deed of Trust Book No. --— tate of said deceased to present the * . ,
at page —, and whereas there has game t6 the undersigned at the office ^ Agriculaural experts say that in-
• J the payment of the of Robert W. Proctor, in Marion, N. sects annually cause tree billion dol-
if before the 26th day of;lars worth of damages to crops in
of trust, acco^ing to the t^ms January, 1941, or this notice will be ^he United States American farm
therein set forth, and demand hav- pleaded in bar thereof. All persons ^ ® United btates American fann
ing been made for the payment of indebted to said estate will make im-. spend as much as $100,000,000
the indebtedness and payment not mediate payment to the undersigned, i to fight the pests.
ha^ng been ^de. , I This 22nd day of January, 1940. According to government fieures
Now, therefore, you will take no-1 maqtt I ^^coraing to government nguies,
MASK, Administrator j Qj^e-half of all auto-owning families
of Anna Mask, deceased, the United States have incomes
tice that the undersigned trustee, in >
exercise of the power of sale in said:
deed of trust contained, will, on|
Monday, February 12, 1940, at 10 •
o’clock, A. M., at the courthouse i
door in Marion, N. C., offer for sale I
ADMINISTRATRIX’S NOTICE
TO CREDITORS
of $30 a week or less.
Last year, world production of pe
troleum and related fuels reacher a
♦ +1. 4. u 4! I. n Having qualified as administratrix j ,
to the highest bidder, for cash all estate of A. C. Kanine, de-inew high of 2,150,000,000 barrels—
??ased,_late_ of _ McDowell County, about 90,000,000 more barrels than
fir Gard- North Carolina, this is to notify ali;:^ 1938
^ may be, in ^ persons having claims against the e»- i ^ j i. u .? • i.
and to the following described prop-;tate of said deceased to exhibit them I shortly before Christmas
Tit 1 XT rtrt 1 • J ^ . . i>ortn v^aroiiim. on or
S. i" dav Of January, 1941, or ^this notice fice. This was said to be the great
est volume of mail ever handled dur
ing the same length of time by any
post office in the world.
AWAITING THE PROPOSAL
“Why do you call your boy friend
‘Pilgrim’?”
“Because every time he calls he
makes a little progress.”
1 + XT oo oo OA ^ oc undersigned at Old Fort, ‘ 17,508,033 pieces of mail passed
Block No Ivfn/ind '^orth Carolina, on or before the 26 j through the New York City post of-
No. 22, lying and being in jav of January, 1941, or this noticf
^e northern part of the Town of |,e pleaded in bar of their re-
Marion in the Auguste Marion In- covery. All persons indebted to said
vestment ^mpany Addition to the gstete will please make immediate
Town of Marion, and according to T.„^TnoTl^-
plat on file in the office of the Reg-^
ister of Deeds for McDowell County,! January, 1940.
N. C., in Deed Book 18, page 590; i CORA KANIPE, Administratrix,
said lots are each 25 feet wide and j ^he Estate of A. C. Kanipe.
165 feet in length and front on (Jan. 25-6w)
Fleming Avenue. i
Witness my hand this 10th day: EXECUTOR’S NOTICE TO
of January, 1940. j CREDITORS
PAUL J. STORY, Trustee. \ Having qualified as executor of
PvpriiTPivt estete of L. H. Miller, deceased,
EXECUTRIX NOTICE ,iate of McDowell County, North
Having qualified as executrix of j Carolina, this is to notify all persons „
the estate of E. Brevard Osborne, paving claims against the estate of j the estate of W. T. Morgan, deceas-
deceased, late of McDowell county,! said deceased to exhibit them to thejed, late of McDowell County, North
N. C., this is to notify all persons undersigned at Marion, N. C., on or | Carolina, this is to notify all persons
ha Ting claims against the estete of before the 4th day of January, 1941,'having claims agsdnst the estate of
said deceased to exhibit them to the; this notice will be pleaded in bar i said deceased to exhibit them to the
undersigned on or before the 22nd i their recovery. All persons in-1 undersigned at Marion, N. C., on or
day of December 1940, or this notice i debted to said estete will please! before the 4th day of January, 1941,
will be pleaded in bar of their recov-1 make immediate payment to said: or this notice will be pleaded in bar
ery. All persons indebted to said es- ■ Executor or to his attorney, Edw. j of their recovery. All persons in-
tete will please make immediate Morgan. jdebted to said estate will please
payment. i This 12th day of January, 1940.! make immediate payment to said
This 14th day of December, 1939. i „ GEORGE W. MILLp, j Executrix
TncT?T>TiTxn^ A I Executor of the last will and This 12th day of January, 1940.
JOSEPHINE A. OSBORNE. ! testement of L. H. Miller. | MARY A. MORGAN,
Executrix of the last will and
Ij Health and 1
is •
i laeautjr . . . :
• •
• Dr. Sophia Brunson •
. • •
• •
I NEW DISCOVERIES IN
MEDICINE
; “The moving finger writes; and
i having writ
; Moves on; nor all your piety nor wit
i Shall lure it back to cancel half a
line
I Nor all your tears wash out a w’ord
j 01 it.”
j Thus sang the great Persian poet
I over a thousand years ago.
I Musing by the fire on the last
i night of the old year, a panoroma of
disasters unrolled before me. Earth-
; quakes, droughts, floods, dust storms,
' pestilences, highway deaths, and
iwars. Surely 1939 has been a year of
fear, anguish and calamity. Is there
; nothing redeemable about it? Yes;
I while nature and man seemed to con-
I spire to destroy thousands of human
I beings, the doctors and scientists
;have been laboring to save them,
i Early and late they have toiled tq
I find means of curing diseases and to
1 alleviate human suffering.
I Let us review some of the things
jthat have been accomplished by med-
■ical science last year,
j Dr. Fishbein, editor of “The Jour-
! nal of the American Medical ^sso-
: ciation,” believes that “when the
I year’s statistics are gathered they
: will show the lowest sickness and
i death rates ever atteined in the Uni-
|ted Stetes—^with a great reduction
■ in the mortality of mothers during
j childbirth.”
j The discovery of sulfanilamide
.stands out as one of the greatest
j steps forward in the long march of
I medicine. It is a wonder drug. -We
are entering a new era of cures for
diseases and infections that were
considered incurable. .
Pneumonia, once called “the cap-
tein of the men of death,” is yield-,
ing to sulfapyridine, a derivative of
sulfanilamide. Many cases are get
ting well that formerly would have
died. As the study of this drug ad
vances we find other maladies yield
ing to it. Fishbein says, “In 1939
hundreds of lives were saved or pro
longed by these drugs.” Dr. Garhard
Domagk of Germany won the year’s
Nobel prize for discovering it. It is
made from a red dye.
Sulfanilamide is one of the very
few specifics known to medicine. Dr.
Fishbein lists as specifics, “quinine
for malaria, arsphenamine for syph
ilis, and diphtheria anti-toxin. Sul
fanilamide entered this ‘hall of
fame’ by acting as a specific for a
strain of streptococcus germs.”
Infections that were frequently
fatel, such as childbed fcver, erysip
elas, meningitis, etc., are often
cured by saufanilamide. There are
also loathsome venereal infections
that are yielding to its use. Even
endocarditis, which is an inflamma
tion of the inner heart lining, is
sometimes cured by this drug.
During 1939 we have gained new
and valuable information in regard
to vitemins. Much light has been
thrown on Bl. There are many
foods that are deprived of this vita
min bj’^ modern processes of milling,
which remove the brown parts of
rice and grains of various kinds
which contain vitamin Bl. The ab
sence of this vitamin causes pella
gra in this country and beriberi in
the Orient. Many alcoholics suffer
from neuritis which is said to be
due to a vitemin deficiency.
For many years this writer has
been pointing out the dangers of de
ficiency diets, due to improper selec
tion of foods, devitalized grains, ov-|
ercooking, etc. Now Dr. Fishbein
says in his report, “The vitamin Bl j
deficiency must be much more wide
spread in this country than clinic-i
ians have believed hitherto,” so the
council steted. He, continuing the
statement, said that “It was once
believed that there was plenty of
vitamin Bl in the foods we eat. The
highly refined diets have resulted in
a general deficiency. Refined sugar
and flour are very deficient in vita
min Bl. Whole wheat flour had
about 1.65 units of vitamin Bl per
gram, but modern white flour has
only about 0.15.” j
(To be continued)
JUST HUMANS
By GENE CARR
EXECUTRIX’ NOTICE TO
CREDITORS
Having qualified as Executrix of
PLEASE SEND IN CHANGE
OF YOUR ADDRESS AT ONCE
Executrix of the Estate;
of E. Brevard Osborne, j the advertisements. It pays. testement of W. T. Morgan.
Progress subscribers are ask
ed to notify us promptly of any
change in their address. Under
the new postal laws newspapers
must pay postege due for notices
of any change of address fur
nished by the postoffice. In addi
tion there is abo the problem of
delay in delivery or failure to
get the paper. The best plan is
to send in the change of address
direct to publisher in advance.
‘taxi.”
‘ Really r
HEADACHE''
neuralgia
The "BC" ionnula is a special com- Keep a 10c or 25c package of ”By’
binalion of sereral quick-acting in- handy. When used for the relief ol
gredients widely recognized for their for wliicli H i*
... _ , recommended, and according to di-
relief-giTing effectireness. These in- sections indicated on each pacLge. we
^dienu di«iolTe promptly and go think youTl agree that It wXfast and
light after such discomforts as head- reHeres in a hurry. Always consult a
aches, neuralgia, muscular aches and physician when pains persist or recur
functional periodic pains. frequently.
We Pay 3^ Interest
On Deposits—Invest Savings
Let Your Money Earn Dividends!
Call or Phone for Information.
Marion Industrial Bank
W. R. CHAMBERS, Pres. WILLIAM TREVERTON, Cashier
riDST NATIONAL
PANk:^
MARION. N.C.
JOHN YANCEY, President
W. R. CHAMBERS, Vice-President
J. N. MORRIS, Cashier
W. F. GRANT. Assistant Cashier
PRINTING
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WE ARE fully equipped to
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of every description and
proudly boast of the service
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McDowell Publishing Co.
Publishers of the MARION PROGRESS
Telephone 64
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