PAGE FOUR I LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE RESALE OF HOUSE AND LOT ' Under and by virtue of authority conferred upon me by certain deed ? of trust executed by Buster Pnyloi and wife, Lucy Paylor. on the 16th day 'of September, 1936, and duly recorded in the Office of Register of Deeds of Person County in Book 8, page 576, default having been made and the payment of the note secured by said deed of trust, I will on Saturday. February 3rd, 1945. at , 12 o'clock norn at the Courthouse door in Roxboro, North Carolina. Offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash the land, conveyed by said deed of trust to-wit: Lying and bring in the Town of Roxboro, b 'ginning at J. C. Pass' corner on Bowling Street; thence North 25 dcs ers East 133 feet to the Fuller line: thence with the Fuller line Filth 65 degrees East 100 feet to B, B. Newell's corner; j ther.ee with B. B. Newell ;, line South | 25 degree-: \v< t 133 fee. to J. C. j Pass’ line: thence with the line of J. C. Pass' North 65 degrees West! 100 feet > the beginning contain ing by ' jna,; n 30-100 of an acre more or less, ame being the West ern Part of I or No. 6 of the Cates and S-:' teffiekl land according to i plat and -tirvey of C. A. Whitfield, j Surveyor, 'July* 27th, 1890, said plat j being cl re: rd in Register of Deeds Office of Person County in Book 34. page -ISC. This being a resale, bidding will begin at 51832.25. This January 17th, 1945, Nathan Lunsford. Trustee. M. 11, BURKE, Jan, 18-25. Auctioneer EXECUTORS NOTICE Having been duly qualified as ex ecutor of the estate of William G. Rogers, deceased, late of Person county. North Carolina, this is to j notify ail persons holding claims against tile said estate to exhibit them to the undersigned executor, or executrix, on or before January 16, 1946, or this notice will be pleaded in- bar of their recovery. Ail persons indebted to said estate I will please make immediate pay ment. ! This January 16. 1945. | Thomo; R. Rogers, Executor, Georgia R. Crumpton, Executrix. F. O. Carver, Attorney. Jan 18-25- Feb. 1-8-15-22 NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Having qualified as Administrator i of R. Luther Satterfield, this is to j notify a! persons , having claims against this, estate to pay them to the undersigned, on or before Dec ember 21st. 1945 or this notice will SOUTH MAIN STREET I House and Lot I FOR SALE AT I PUBLIC AUCTION AT COURTHOUSE DOOR IN I ROXBORO, RAIN OR SHINE I Saturday, Feb. 3rd ---12 M I The Former Residence Os Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Clayton On I South Main Street Next To House Os J. J. “Dick” Woody * 8 Room House—Bath, Lights and Running Water 75 Foot Frontage On Main Street; 207 1-2 Feet Deep I On One Side And 203 Feet On Other We Will Also Sell Al Auction Four Lots I On The Old I.easburg Road Near The Prison Camp. All Lots Have 50 Foot Frontage H F:ach On I.easburg Road And Vary From 150 to 188 Ft. Depth ONE LOT DURHAM HIGHWAY I Near Roy Monks Service Station. This Lot Has 50 Ft. Frontage On Highway And ■ Is 200 Ft. Deep. All Os Above Will Be Sold February 3rd I Terms To Be Announced Day Os Sale For Additional Details See Theo Clayton I Roxboro, N. C. # be pleaded In bar of recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment. This December 18th, 1944. CLYDE T. SATTERFIELD. Administrator Lunsford & Burke, Attorneys. Dec. 21-28-Jan. 4-11-18-25. NOTICE OF LAND SALE AND PERSONAL PROP ERTY. I will offer at public sale at the court house door in Roxboro, North Carolina, on Saturday, February 3. 1945, at 12 o'clock noon the follow ing described real estate, to-wit: Lying and being in Flat River Township, bounded on the North by the lands of W. L. Blackard, on the East and South by the lands of Mrs. J. T. Cates and on the West by the lands of Bob Cates, (formerly Mrs. Nancy Cates land) containing 150 acres more or less, it being the land conveyed to T. G. Lunsford by S. jM, Finch, by deed dated Jan. 4th, ! 1926, and recorded in Register's of ! fice of Person County in book No. !35 at page 13, reference Is hereby j made to said deed for better de scription. Also see deed from T. G Lunsford and wife to C. H. Luns ford, Book 35, page 46, Register’s office, Person County, j The terms of sale are as follows: j one-third down and the balance in [equal payments for five years. There is located on this farm an excellent two story dwelling, four tobacco barns, pack barn and stripp ing room, and other out buildings. All of these buildings are in excel lent condition. The tobacco acreage allotted is 8.6. This is one of the best farms in Flat River Township. Peiisonal Property I will also sell at public auction on the premises in Flat River Town ship where I now live at 2 o'clock P. M. on February 3, 1945, all of my farming equipment consisting in part as follows: 2 mules, horse, wag on. mowing machine, hay rake, stalk i cutter, 2 section harrows, several I plows, about 40 barrels of corn, 8 thousand tobacco sticks and num erous other farming utensils. Also a large quantity of hay. This personal property is in ex cellent condition. This 23rd day of January, 1945. C. H. Lunsford, Owner R. B. Dawes, Atty. 1-25, 29, Feb. 1. Do It Yourself-at Homo JO Chum fail PERMANENT WAVI KIT Complete with curlers, oaltF/% sham poo and wave set. HU6 It’s easy to do and safe for every type of mBS r hair. For amazing results—be sure to ash i tar Cbarm-Kurl. Over 0 million told. Thomas & Oakley Drugs Legislative Echoes From Capitol Hill Raleigh, Jan. 22,—During the past week the legislature has shown signs of getting into high gear-and of ap proaching what sports writers would term "mid-season form." Judging by the number of bills tossed into tlie hopper to date, however, the 1945 Assembly still lags consider ably behind the showing of the 1943 body. As of the close of busi ness on Friday, the box score would compare with the period of the 1943 sesison as follows: Number of bills intro duced: 1943 1945 Senate 60 58 House 135 76 Totals ............ 195 134 But the number of bills introduc ed within a given period is by no means the sole criterion of the speed with which a legislature is going about, its business. That busi ness, like ancient Gaul, is roughly divited into three parts: (1) appro priating funds to cover the costs of the State’s services to its citizens: *2 * raising necessary revenues to meet those costs; and (3) regulating the conduct of the State's citizens. The present legislature is no laggard with respect to its attitude toward those three major divisions of its business. Principal items (1) and (2) are being handled with all of the dis patch which anyone could desire, and even beyond the desires ot some. The biennial appropriations Get your FREE copy of Esso War Map 111 • The ring of American steel is growing tighter round I Japan... But just where are the places our men are ao 1 bitterly fighting for? Follow the news on Esso War Map 111... Close-up of the Jap anese Islands, Eastern Russia and China ... 6 colors, 33" x 22". .. Free! See your Esso Dealer today for your free copyl (too) V MALI, V and the revenue bill, both introduc ed last week, are making remark able progress in the joint Senate and House committees. As for the business of regulating the conduct of the State’s citizens, the House in one day received nine bills hav ing to do with the revision of the General Statutes of North Carolina, adopted last session. Among the nine bills was one to create a "General Statutes Commission" w'ith the gen | oral duty of studying the General i Statutes—our repository of general regulations—and of reporting to 1 succeeding General Assemblies, and another bill containing 47 sections which seeks to correct numerous ! flaws, inconsistencies and discrep ancies in our newly adopted code. I The provisions of these nine bills ■for the most part merely clarifying jor removing discrepancies fTom the [ General Statutes—are too numcr jous to .mention, but it may be said that if enacted they will give the I “General Statutes Commission”, if • created, a head start in its work, j. Both the appropriations and rev jenue bills were being assaulted this week. Perhaps the most serious j from the standpoint of ultimate Everlasting What does a test tube and the contraptions below have \ Jr \ to do with a locomotive and the operation of a railroad? W ■ \ In the Norfolk and Western Railway’s modem, com- ~ pletely equipped physical and chemical laboratories, and In 1943 ’ the N& W had 42 percent fewer loco in the field, the railroad’s chemists, physicists, metallur- motives than in 1918, but the better designed, easier to gists, and mechanical experts make approximately 30,000 maintain and more efficient locomotives of 1943 per scientific tests and analyses a year of nearly everything formed “ average of 33 percent more service ’ 58 used by the railway - the steel that goes into locomotives, more freight ’ hauled in better cars that made 61 per cars, rails, and bridges; concrete, ballast, paint, lubricating *** m ° re mileage ’ at 60 percent faster freight speed, oils, signals, brakes, draft gears, coal, and thousands of The Norfolk and Western, and other American rail other items. The search for better materials, improved roads, are alert and awake to their opportunities. By con facilities, better operating methods, and improved safety stant research, study, improvements, and enterprise, they goes on day after day, year in and year out. What art the will continue to forge ahead when Victory is won as the results ? Here’s one example: safest and most efficient transportation system in the world. Army Hospital* need 22,000 Waet to serve as Medical Tech nicians. WAC training in the Medical Department affords an opportunity to prepare for an important postwar job, while helping our wounded men back to useful civilian life. The need is urgent. Go to your nearest WAC recruiting station today. RAILWAY PRECISION TRANSPORTATION . • t Jr* -ft- GOS mm t 5 / —\ THE COURIER-TIMES effect, though the Mildest from the standpoint of Objective, was a Mil to revise the schedule of teacher? salaries. This bill, SB 58 (ItentleSl to HB 72, introduced the same day>, would increase the increments for experience beyond the increases pro vided in the biennial appropria ■ tiens bill. The most serious front . the standpoint of objective, though . perhaps not so serious from the . standpoint of ultimate effect, was a , bill which would make federal in l comp tax payments deductable frofn . gross income for State Income pttf . poses. Tliis bill, if enacted, would . play havoc with the Governor’s pol icy whicli he annouced In his in . augural address: no major changes i in the tax program. The second full legislative week 1 again saw matters affecting women l seemingly holding a high priority i rating. A Senate bill, In further ance of one of the Constitutional amendments adpoted by the elector ate last November, would eliminate 'ho requirement of privately exam ining married women with respect to their voluntary assent to their execution of legal instruments “free from compulsion of their said hus bands or any other person,” except as to those instruments embodying contracts between husband and wife. A companion but not-quite identical House bill introduced the same day would eliminate even that exception. Another bill would give widows the same rights in the per- j sonal estates of their intestate i hhsbands ffcat widowers have in the peHMrtM emtan ot their intestate wives. The General Assembly, composed of fathers, brothels and uncles of North Carolinians who are making history upon the far-flung battle fields of World War 11, is giving and Indicates that it will continue to give throughout its present ses sion the most sympathetic consid eration to the problems the return ing veterans Will have to face, and to the problems the families of the veterans are now facing. This week saw the ratification of a bill to per mit the taking of acknowledgements of members of the armed forces by any commissioned officer, rather by a captain in the army and equival ent grades in the other services. And the Senate bill to permit the appointment of an administrator LefflM Juice Recipe Checks Rheumatic Pain Quickly If you suffer from rheumatic, arthri' tk or neuritis pain, try this simple inexpensive home recipe that thousands are using. Get a package of Ru-Ex Compound, a 2 weeks’ supply today. Mix it with a quart of water, add the juice of 4 lemons. It’s easy, pleasant and no trouble at all. You need only 3 tabtespoonfuls ttw> times a day. Often within 48 hours sometimes over night splendid results are obtained. If the pains do not quickly leave and if you do not feel better, Ru-Ex will cost you notfaing to try as it is sold by your druggist under an abso lute money-hack guarantee. Ru-Ex Compound is lot sale and jecommemkJ by THOMAS & OAKLEY And Drug Stores Everywhere for a member of the armed forces missing and “presumed" to be dead —of importance to the families of such missing members — was-report ed favorably by the Senate commit tee, as was a bill to clarify an act making easier the probate of wills of servicemen. Public libraries rece-ved attention in the Senate, One bill would pro vide for joint public libraries for non-adjacent counties and munici palities therein if the non-adjacent counties and municipalities can agree on the appointment of the costs. Another would provide for a SQUARE DANCE At ROXBORO HIGH SCHOOL SATURDAY NIGHT, JANUARY 27 8:00 12:00 BENEFIT INFANTILE PARALYSIS FUND Admission, Each .... 42c * Tax . 8c Total 50c EVERYONE INVITED—TELL TOUR FRIENDS THURSDAY, JANUARY 25,1945 ~ { new registration upon an election to Y increase or decrease library taxes, j This new registration, which could : be asked for in the election petition or prescribed by the governing board, would result more nearly in * a vote for or against the library tax, instead of a vote “against the books," as at present. Still another , bill would authorize cities and counties (In spite of a grave Con stitutional question) to levy a _tax not in excess of 5c on the »100 val uation in support of public libraries without submitting the qestlon to popular vote.