Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / Feb. 25, 1932, edition 1 / Page 2
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t f Published every Thursday1 by The Franklin Press A Figiiklin, North Carolina Telephone No. 24 VOL, XL VII BLACKBURN W. JOHNSON. .......... EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Entered at the Post Office, Franklin, N. C.as second class matter 'FtlSS ASSOCIATION vl norm SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year $1.50 Eight Months .s $1.00 Six Months .75 Sing'e Copy : 05 Obituary notices, cards of thanks, tributes of respect, by individuals, lodges, churches, organizations or societies, will be regarded as adver tising and inserted at regular classified advertising rates. Such notices will be marked "adv." in compliance with the postal regulations. . The prt invitvs it readers to expreti their opinions through its columns and each week it plans to Carry Letters to the Editor on its editorial page. This newspaper is independent in its policies aai is glad to print both sides of any question. Letters to the Edi tor should be written legibly on only one side of the paper and should be of reasonable length. Of course, the editor reserves, the ri$ht to reject letters which are too long or violate one's better set abilities. Weekly Bible Thought "We walk by faith, not by sight" 2 Corinthians 5:7. Commonplace TPHE OTHER day a man came into the office of The Press, transacted his business, chatted a mo ment and went on his way. Nothing remarkable about that. He was tail, not very tall, he seemed taller than he was. His hair was grey, back straight and shoulders square. Clear blue eyes held the eyes of his listener in a frank, direct gaze. An easy smile touched the fine drawn Unes of a face sobered by re sponsibility and strengthened by toil. Nothing re-; markable about that. This man had just won a battle. The circumstanc es oi existence had put obstacles in his way that very nearly equaled his powers to overcome them. Some- ; thing worth while that had cost him years of labor was about to be lost. He had saved it. The doing of it makes news that any Editor would like to print but, awed by the revelation of Divine Will in the private lives of men, he dares not. Nothing remarkable. Nothing unusual. Men have struggled and suffered in the past. Some feel the strain, of strife more keenly now than ever his pioneer fore-father who whetted his wits and his axe against the grindstone' of adversity. But, however keen the --whip or heavy the load there is a natural force that toughens, the hide and strengthens the back, a power that grows greater with need and weaker in disuse, , Weakens but never dies. And so it is with nations. Individual acceptance of responsibility, individual termination bring victory Community difficulties become private peril. Private success in the composite brings the glory of commun ity achievement. Strength comes from conflict and victory from defeat. But whether the day's fight be won or lost the GocUgiven privilege of struggle can be denied to no man. God's ultimate destiny may be hidden from our short sighted eyes but we know that here and now we have the precious privilege of strife, the bounden duty to love our neighbor and the glory of the knowledge that our talents re being put to strenuous use on the resources that we have at hand. We can live and fight our best, Die and win a blessed rest What better? Editorial NORTHWESTERN MILK AND MONEY Eleven years ago Mr. Frederick E. Murphy, a successful farmer just become a publisher of The Minneapolis Tribune, came to his office resolved to put into practice certain ideas which had grown up in his r"'"d from thrir yeais' vacation on a grain farm. There was a severe agricultural crisis in - that year of sharp deflation. The farmer's friends in -Congress were busy making relief bills.- "Let us help ourselves," said' Mr. Murphy, no believer in Government aid. The Northwest had stuck to single wheat fanning during and after -the war. Yield as well as price was smalt Mr. Murphy's remedy was "eood fanning with good livestock The "Agricultural Credit Corpora tion of Minneapolis was organized trt hk the eram Krower not in I '-y ,mFA. circumstances to buy . dairy cattle and sheep. f Under the new system agricul- t tural Income jumped enormously almost $100,000,000 a year. But r how have things been in tlie last two years, when farm and com modity price again slumped? Mr . IJurrhy sayst' ' '- - Farmeri of the United States as t whole in 1931 had an In cc:r cf I.C3 per cent lew than Number 8 um itm lji resourcefulness and-de over private problems. Clippings The income of Minnesota farmers in 1931 exceeded their income for 1911 by 61 per cent. A great new buying power has been created in the Northwest. Mr Collison tells us about it in phamplet on "The Golden Land of Milk and Honey." He proves by charts that the prices of most dairy,, live stock and diversified farm products are even now, above the average before the war, and that ' most of these prices have been far above the price level of general merchandise for years in exchange or trading value." The one-crop farmers in the dumps The good farmer's buying power is still high. Minnesota's annual uuuer crop yieias )i3,vw,wo a year, a value more than that- of all her small grain crops, a third more than that of her iron crop. In the four Northwestern states, Min nesota, the Dakotas, Montana, the dairy cow is "a $300,000,000 in dustry." In Minnesota the big feeding crops, corn, hay, oats, bar ley, bring in nearly $250,000,000 a year: How do we market , these crops? As butter and beef, pork and lamb chops on the hoof, as milk and cream and wool, the products of diversi- . fied live stock and dairy farm ing. Our barnyard flappers ulone give . us a crop of eggs and poultry woita $30,000,UUi) four times our wheat crop. Our barnyard biddies make wheat look like chicken feed. They don't ask for any farm . relief, either they go out in . the nest and lay their own re lief, As soon as they manu facture their merchandise they rise right up and advertise it. Minnesota pigs, a by-product like FARM - CERTIFIED SEEDS BESTVTO PLANT Those crops seeds which have been grown under the supervision of the North Carolina Crop Im provement association and have been certified as to their quality by this .association are the best to plant. Particularly is this true this year when quality must count in the marketing of all 'farm, produce. "Crop seeds which haveheen cer tified by the Crop Improvement association are of the highest qual ity because they conform to the standards of the International Crop Improvement association," says W. H. Darst, director of this work at State college. "Then too certified seed must be of a variety approved by the North Carolina Experiment station., Before a variety is elig ible for certification it must show merit in comparative field "trials for a period of at least three years. Certified - seed must also pass a rigid field and bin inspec tion The first inspection is made in the field before harvest when" the crop is studied for purity of variety, the presence of noxious weeds, and for plant diseases. After the seed has been harvest ed, cleaned and prepared for mark et, representative samples are se cured and analyzed in the state seed laboratory for germination, purity of variety, weed seeds and foreign materials. The seeds must always conform to high standards of quality, Mr. Darst " declares. The inspections are made by seed experts employed by the state and these men must qualify as disin terested in either the crop or the person growing the seeds. All claims at to origin, breeding, man ner of threshing and cleaning must be . verified by the grower. Mr. Darst says no other source of seed found on the market is so carefully checked as to quality and value. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS NOTICE North Carolina, Macon County. r In UM 3uprkr Court, Bertha Bryant Fountain 4 vs. Charlie Fountain The non-resident defendant, Charlie Fountain, will take notice that an action, entitled as above, has been commenced in the Su perior Court of Macon County, North Carolina; that the purpose of said action is to have bonds of matrimony, now existing between plaintiff and defendant dissolved ; that the summons in said action is returnable on the 15th day " of March, 1932, and the said defen dant will further take notice that he is required to appear on the 15th day of March, 1932, before the undersigned Clerk of the Su perior Court, and answer or demur to the complaint filed in this cause, or the relief demanded in said complaint will be granted. This the 10th day of February 19JZ. FRANK I. MURRAY, Clerk Superior Court Macon County, North Carolina. F ll-4tc-CCP-M3 NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, Macon County. By virtue of the power of sale vested in the undersigned commis sioner under authority of the Deed of Trust executed by Ed Ledford to J. L. Sanders, Trustee, said deed of trust being dated Feb. 11, 1930, and registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Macon County in Book No. 31, page 300, to secure certain indebtedness in said deed of trust set forth, to Virginia Sanders, and default hav ing been made in the payment there of and demand having been made uupon the undersigned trustee, to exercise the power of sale in said trustee vested under the terms of said .Deed of Trust. I will, therefore, on Monday, the 7th day of March, 1932, at 12 o'clock noon, at the Court House door in the Town of Franklin, Worth Carolina, sell at public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash. the following described property In Franklin Township, Macon County, adjoining the lands of V. S. Moffitt, Marion Ledford. Be ginning on a white oak; then N 16 W 28 poles to a DODlar: thence. N 45 W 37 poles to hickory, W. poultry, earn $W,0W,U0Q . a year. Shetp clean up the soil as weii as furnish two crops a year wool and lambs. It's good to find one great stretch of country where the farmer has helped himself into a condition that isn't badly shaken even by the most adverse years. We sali'te and sing "the cow and the sow" and the little red hen." Almost Mr. Murphy persuadeth us to be a farmer. New Yorn Times. J - IINTS BUILD FOR FUTURE THROUGH LIVESTOCK Farmers who have produced ex cess amounts of hays, grain and other feedstuffs in the last two or three years should begin to slow ly add livestock to their agricul tural systems and not allow the lure of high prices for so-called cash crops in the future to change them from this course towards bet ter balanced farming. "In addition to balancing our present systems of farming, live stock helps to build soil fertility and permits the utilization of non salable feeds with profit to the grower," says Earl' H. Hostetler, in charge of animal husbandry in vestigations at State college. The eradication of the cattle tick has made it possible for us to improve the quality of our cattle over large areas but it has also left unoc cupied thousands of acres of na tive grasses and reeds which were formerly returning some revenue. Many doubt, that better bred ani mals, like plants, must be fed and cared for if they are to thrive and return a profit; yet, much of this native grazing should be utilized better than it is at present." , Mr. Hostetler says landowners in tick free territory need to know what kind of -legumes and cultivat ed grasses will give them the best results in their respective sections. North Carolina farmers need also to learn that southern protein feeds such as cottonseed meal could be used to better advantage. North ern and western livestock growers have long been large useds of these feeds but down here where the feed is grown, it is little used to grow out finished animals. Cottonseed meal, peanut meal, soybean meal and other such feeds produced in this state could be used in fattening livestock here at home and the fertility kept on home farms. Until the North Car olina farmer learns to feed live stock, just so long will he buy meat from Chicago, work stock from Missouri, hay from Kansas and milk from Wisconsin, says Mr. Hostetler. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS Moffitt's corner; thence S 71 W IS pole's tw--a -stone; thence S 35 E 73 poles to a hickory; thence N 28 E 12 poles to the beginning. Containing1 seven acres more or ess. This 6th day of February, 1932 J. L. SANDERS, Trustee. Fll-4tc-BofF-M3 NOTICE North Carolina, Macon Coanty. WHEREAS, power of sale was vested in the undersigned trustee by deed of trust from W. J. Zach ary and wife, Maria Zachary, to George B. Patton, Trustee, dated November 21, 1929, and registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Macon County in Record df Mortgages and Deeds of Trust No. 32, page 126, to secure the payment of three notes of even date with said deed of trust, pay able to R. S. Jones and R. D. Sisk, Receivers, said notes aggregating $6,000.00, due and payable, $1200.00 on November 18, 1930; $2400.00 on November 18, 1931 ; and $2400.00 on November 18, 1932, with interest from date at six per cent annum, payable annually, and said deed of trust and notes stipulating that in case default should be made in the payment of the first note or in terest upon the same that the re mainder of said notes should at once become due and payable, whatever might be the date of ma turity expressed therein, and where as the first of. said notes has not been paid nor any part thereof, nor the interest thereon, the remainder of said notes, with interest there on, are therefore, declared to be due and payable and the holders having requested the undersigned trustee to exercise the power vest ed in him by said deed of trust: I wilL therefore, by virtue of the power of sale by said deed of trust in me vested, on Monday, the 14th day of March, 1932, at twelve o'clock, noon, sell at the courthouse door in Franklin, N. C, at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following described prop erty: All the lands described in a deed from W. J. Zachary and wife, Maria B. Zachary to Trimont Park, Inc., dated June 1, 1926, and re corded in the office of the Regis ter of Deeds for Macon County, in Book N-4, of Deeds, page 337, and more particularly described as follows : TfMt 1. Stint all the lands eoft UTS veyed by deed by John P. Jones I and wife to Wiley Zachary, dated January 31, 1925, said deed being recorded in the office of the Regis ter of Deeds 'for Macbn county in Book J-4, page 459, said tract con taining approximately 360 acres, to which deed and record reference is hereby made for a complete , de scription of same. Tract. 2. All the lands conveyed by deed by W. B. McGuire and! wife, to W. J. Zachary, said deed dated November 28, 1924, and re corded in the office of the Regis-1 ter of Deeds for Macon County,! in Book J-4, page 473, to which deed and record reference is here-1 by made, for a complete descrip tion, said tract containing approx imately 800 acres. Tract 3. All the lands conveyed by deed from M. D, Billings; and wife to W, J. Zachary, said deed bearing date of December 17, 1918,1 and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Macon Coun ty, in- Book E-4, page 78, to which deed and record reference is here by made for a complete descrip-l tion, said tract containing approx imately 75 acres. This February 9th, 1932. GEORGE B.PATTON, Trustee. t u-4tc-M j ; NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, Macon County. vested in the undersigned -Trustee I by deed .of trust from C B. .. Woody and wife, Ruemma Arcella Woody, Maude Woody Breedlove, Emaline Woody Manliff Woody to R. S. icoo a : ? v f 1929, and registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Macon County m book No. 32 page 107. secure me payment. OI rw,, n 5m; uoiars; ana wnereas, aeiauiv nas neen maae in we pay o sa 5um,uui u.c owner oi saia inaeoieaness nng aemanaca tne saia trustee to exer- cis? me power pt saie m mm vest- ... '. . . . i win, tneretore, oy virtue ot tne power of sale by said deed of trust in me vested, on Tuesday, the first day of March, -1932, sell at the courthouse door at Franklin, North Carolina, at public auction tothe nignesi maaer ior casa me iouow- ing described property : . Beginning at a Diack oak corner in the old Creenenberg line; now the Government line, South side of Turkey Knob- not far from the Battles, it being the beginning corn- er of State Grant No. -13473 and runs with the Government lines as follows: North 16 deg. 30 East 184 poles to Government stake in flat at head of small branch; thence North Y dcg. " West 126 poles to a Spanish oak corner on top of ridge, Government corner; inence soutn bb aeg.. w tast so poles to Government corner; tnence aoutn 10 deg. Jtr t.ast 50 poles to government stake; thence bourn oJ deg. sr west 55 poles to Government stake, at rock; thence South 33 deg. 30 East 152 poles to ft hickory or stake in old Uovemment line; tnence with the reenenoerg or wvernmeni line aoutn jj aeg. w tast poies to m iiPAb VJVl Vtl'tllVUI VVI MVI f MIVI1VV soutn w deg. r tast n poies to a stake in the painted Govern- ment line on the ridge near an old road; thence South 63 deg. West 46 poles to a. chestnut Government corner; uhwcc owuiu M vvch w poies 10 . a uovernmeni siaKe;it;nr) tnence ftoxui M west m poies to a government staxe on e rnoun- tain; thence South ,58 deg. 30 Wes 148 poles to z Government stake across top Of mountain ; thence North 16 deg. 30" East 30 poles to the beginning, containing 172.5 acres, more or less, according to e,y LWi" Jenkms' surveyor 01 way j ia. Being the land conveyed to C B. Woody by G. W. Parrish and wne, t. j. rarnsn, oy aeea aatea the 3rd day of November, 1900, and recorded m the office of the Register of Deeds, for Macon County in Book VV, page 268, which is also State Grant No. 13473 and is recorded in said Res- istcr's Office' in Book HH, pages 496-7. Being also the land conveyed to C B. Woody by State Grant No. 17934 which Grant is recorded in! said Register's office in Book Q-3.1 page 127. Being also a portion of the land conveyed by State Grant No. 12642 to C B. Woody which Grant is recorded in said Register's office in Book FF, page 301, to all of which reference is hereby made This the 29th day of January, 1932. . 1 R. S. JONES, Trustee. F4-4tc-HAO-F25 NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, Macon County. By virtue of the power of sale vested in the undersiened com- missioner under authority of the Deed of Trust execoted by George T. Parrish and wife, Beulah E. Parrish. said Deed of Trust bear ing date the 13th day of August, 1930, and registered in th office of thi Register cf Cudi (ot M ; J to ' l,, A KJf U Ij ( - . v vt I V Is) wl . You Doinr tQ Ltu:,j, T'b W Tllnnrl A UIO I J X avvj Lit uiuvu When He Stands On It!" . " , LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS con county-in dook ino.'oi, pagt 338, to secure certain indebtedness m said Deed of Trust set forth, to the Bank 0f Franklin, and default hay. becn made in the payment thereof, and demand having been d J ft undersigned trustee , ,u , nt i ; sajd tfUStc vested under the tcrm$ q Trugt j wi thereore on MondaVi the 7th day q March( 1932i at 12 0.clocl noon at the Court House in thc Town of Franklin, North Caroiinai scU at. public auc tion tQ the hlghest bidder for cash Ithe following described property In Burningtown Township, what is commoniy and generally known as thc George T. Parrish and Beu- i-u v Parrish homi. nlari- rvn which they now livCf containing 160 acres more or esa and being all the land described in a deed from N. H Parrish and wife to George T. Par ;t. and xl( IWIat, F Parrish dated March 5, 1895, and recorded in the office of Register of Deeds for Macon County, North Carolina jn Book FF of Deeds, page 12 Also the land desrrihed in a Deed from j. r. Guyer, et al, to George T.. Parrish, which deed-is duly re- corded in the office of Register Df Deeds for Macon County, North Carolina, in Book E-4. nape 293. to both of which deeds as so recorded reference is hereby made for a more complete and definite desenp- tion of the land hereby conveyed. This 3rd day of February, 1932. c. F. MOODY, Trustee. l F4-4tcBF F2S NOTICE OF SALE NorUl Carolina, Macoa County. , Sup.rior Court. Youn I ... Tfl. Ha- . ot i am n( Fonn- LoU(knnilk, Deceased, WHOSE names and addresses are unknown, and othef personSf firms or corporations claiming any interest in the subject matter 0f this -flc Under and by virluc of a judg. ment entered by the Su ior 0 Macon County, North Carolina, entitled as above, and annnintincr tli inifWicmp,t 9 3 Commissioner of te Court to sell the hereinafter described lands, I on the 7th dayof. March 32, at the Courthouse door in the jQvn o franklin, North Carolina between the legal hours of sak sc to thc highest bidder for cash ,he following described land, to 1 w;t : in Millshoal Township. Macon County, North Carolina, adjoining the lands of John B. Potts and S. L. Loudermilk, and Beginning at a laru white oatr nn Inn nf a ri.trro and old corner, runs N 53 W 4 poles to a Spanish oak ; then S 58 W 32 poles to a small chestnut oak: S 39 W 8 coles to a Spanish oak; S 5 E 24 poles to a stake; E 18 poles to a stake, S. L. Louder I milk's west line ; ; northwardly with S. L Loudcrmilk'i line to thc Be I ginning, containing six acres more or less. I This land is being sold pursuant J to a judgment entered in a tax I foreclosure preceding to recover on tax certificates held by. the plain tiff. This 1st day of February, 1932. J. FRANK RAY, Commissioner, F4-4tc-F25 , NOTICE OF RE-SALE UNDER DEED OF TRUST THAT WHEREAS, the land hereinafter described was duly sold at public sale on the 29th day of January, 1932, kto Frank Hyatt for the sum of $175.00; and that where as, said bid was duly reported to the court and that within ten days thereafter was raised the sum of 10 fir cent tt fcy law provided, and Him? frnnv RiidKin' to His Head LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS the court having made an order to the undersigned trustee to resell. ; r Now, Therefore, under and by . virtue of the power of sale con- . tained in a certain deed of trust executed by; W. H. Young and Nancy Young, his wife,' to W. R. hFJIVIW.., ." ... 1 - - - j . on the 17th day of 1931, which deed of trust is duly recorded in Book 32 at page 246, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Macon Coun- . ' m o. ft r 1. , ty,. Worth Laroima, ano aetauit having been made in the payment of the indebtedness secured there- Dy, ana tne noiaer 01 me hoic nav , ing directed the said deed of trust be foreclosed, and an order of re sale having been made by - theV court; the undersigned will otter for sale and resell to the highest bidder for cash, at the Court House Door in the Town of Franklin, -Macon Co., N. C, on Saturday, the 27th day of February. 1932, at XT A a .' f - . '. 1 J U . ! 4 . . and cost of sale the following de- Situate, lying and being in Mill- snoai jtuwnsnip, iviacun vouuiy, North Carolina, and bounded on the North by the lands of Herman Dean;, pn.the East by. the lands of Frank Crisp; on the South by l. T ,. r the lands of J. W. Berry; 'and on Fish, and containing 40 acres more or less. This the 11th day of February, 1932. W. R. SHERRILL, Trustee. F18-2tc-F25' NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE-OF . THE POWER OF SALE contained in that certain deed of trust made . by J. H. Stockton and wife, Mil dred Stockton, to Carolina Mort gage Company, Trustee, dated April 15, 1927, and recorded in Book 30, at Page 399, in the Office of the x Register of Deeds of Macon Coun- tv. North Carolina, default havine been made in the payment of the notes thereby secured and the hold er thereof having directed that the deed of trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at the court house door, in the City of Franklin, North Caro lina at twelve o'clock noon on Wednesday, the 23rd day of March, 19JA and will sell to the highest bidder for cash a certain lot or parcel of land in or near the Cfty of Franklin, Franklin , Township," Lounty of Macon, State of North. Carolina, and more particularly de scribed as follows : Lying and being in the Town-of Franklin and bounded on theNorfli " by the lands of , C. T. Blaine; i the East and South by the lands of J. H. Stockton; and on the VVest by Harrison Avenue and be ginning at an iron stake on Harri-' son Avenue, the N. W. corner of said lot and 917 feet NnrtWnrrliv from the intersection of Harrison Avenue and Love Street and runs thence S. 13 degrees 15' E. 91 feet with Harrison Avenue to a stake; thence S. 29 degrees 10' E. 34 feet with Harrison Avenue to a stake; thence N. 77 degrees 45' E. 210 feet to a stake; thence N. 3 degrees 50 W. 124 feet to a stake; thence S. 77 decrees 45' W. 246 feet to the beginning. . The above described property being a part of the same lands con veyed to J. H. Stockton by deed from C T. Blaine and wife, Min nie Blaine, dated April 1, 1926. and filed for registeration on the 12th iji, 140, m tne ottiee of Register of Deeds, County of Ma con, State of North Carolina, re corded in Book M-4, Page 368 ims, the 17th day of February, 1932. f$SimA MORTGAGE COM PANY, Trustee, F2$4teCMM I
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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Feb. 25, 1932, edition 1
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