Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / Sept. 15, 1932, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO : ' THE FRANICUH a.-.J T,IZ IIILAI'DS VJXClllAU , -n M i , i REALTY BRISK UPLANDS Redden Acquires 94 Acres From Mrs. M. C. Smith, To Build Soon Hihlaii'ls iiminrty is proving more thuti i cr i"iml.ir, as procd by the following recent land pur chases : . C. F. Ketkkn i Augusta, Ga., ac quired 94 acres uf' Shot toff proper ty from Mrs. Mary Cliapin Smith last week.. !t is Mr. RciMtn's plan to build a suuinier In i.ue for him self and family on this property. J. Jay Smith began the survey of a road to. the summit or highest point or the property Wednesday of this Week. ' Highway S runs through thi valuable tract, whici. j adjoins the Beusel place, i he bieJ deh family have been- spending the summer in Highlands at the be well cabin. The Highlands estates colony has been increased recently by sev eral important additions. Lots have been purchased by Dr. Leroy C'hilds, a leading surgeon of At lanta; by James 'L. Dickey, capital ist of Atlanta; by Mrs. Dr. R. G. McAliley, and Mr. Veazey Rain water, also of Atlanta. The Leroy Childs home has been started, on the fourth green of the Golf Links and work is going forward rapidly. It is expected to be completed in about a month nnd will he nccunied next summer. Fulton and Hall, local firm, are contractors. The James L, Dickey home will he htiilt on the third ereen. The Veazey Rainwater he is i u i.. : : vX Mrs; Dr. McAliley's home will be rnnstfnrtpd nn the Club Road, not far from the new Clark Howell home which is rapidly approaching completion. Hogs costing 24. cents a pound to produce were sold recently on the Richmond market for Sxi cents by E. J. Danford of Brunswick county. Rebecca S. Harris REAL ESTATE Choice Residential Lots Homes For Rent HIGHLANDS, N. C. REAL ESTATE . I know the lay of the land in this region by acttfal survey. Therefore, if you are a pur chaser 1 can assist you. J. Quincy Pierson Highland Bank Building HIGHLANDS, N. C. 300 ROOMS lrHirllik $2.00 $3.00 up 'VV up S -In D 1 if I 0 N P I U G B L J L The Harrington ha always been on of the Capitol's popular hotels. A $100,000 improvement program hat just been com pleted in modernizing and refurnishing, so that now the Har rington offers its guests every conceivable improvement for their comfort end convenience. In the Heart of the City Convenient to all Government Btuildings and other points of in terest. A few minutes' walk to the leading theatres and shop ping districts. Breakfast 25c to 50c Luncheon 40c to 60c Dinner 75c to $1.00 Also A la Carte Excellent Food Perfect Service For Booklet and Rates Write HARRINGTON MILLS, Pres. DOUGLAS C. SHAFFER, Mgr. Social and Personal Nevo! From Highlands C. -Hutchinson, HI, grand of Charles Hutchinson,, co- son founder of Highlands, with his wife motored over from Cashiers Satur day to call upon Mr. and Mrs. J. Jay Smith. Prof. T. G. Harbison entertained Dr. and Mrs. R. Totten of Chapel Hill Tuesday night at dinner. Ralph Crosby and Marion Wood, of San Mateo, Fla., arrived last Tuesday, staying until Monday with Miss May Crosby and Mrs. Ralph Crosby at the former's Slim mer residence here. Miss Elizabeth Rice, Thomas Harbison, Herbert Wright and L. W. Rice left Highlands Sunday on a motor trip to Mississippi. They will be acniompanied on their re turn by Miss Edith Wright and Mrs. J. E. Rideout. Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson, of Augusta, Ga, who have been spending some time in Highlands, left for their Georgia home this week. . . Clyde Chase, of West Palm Beach, who is staying at the Life Abundant Center in Franklin, was a Highlands visitor Monday. Jack Chambers, of New Orleans who has been spending the summer here, left this week. Mrs-. Cham bers will remain a few weeks. Dr. Robert Bell of the Franklin T if e Abundant Center was in charge of services at the Episcopal church in Highlands bunday. Misses Bess and Sarah-Hicks Hines and Harry Bailey, of San Mateo. Marshall Cooper of Sylva, and Hal Cabe of Otto, motored to Hendersonville where they visited Mrs. John Crosby and family Sun dav. Billy Nail, Richard and Howard Pearson entered school at Christ School for the 1932-33 term Wed nesday of this week. They were accompanied to Arden Dy Airs, a R. Nail and Miss Bertha Nail. Miss Nail left the same day for Washington, D. C, where she will attend school this year. Mist Marie Gormley, of Ver sailles, Ky, who has been resting this summer at the home of Mrs, J. Z. Gotwals, left for Asheville Tuesday with Mrs. Roger Smith While there Miss Gormley will consult a specialist. Mayor and Mrs. Hugh Thurston and Mrs. Thurston s mother, Mrs Pye, of Thomaston, Ga., who have been summering at the Pierson House, left for their home this week. Mrs. Anna J. Anderson has re turned to her home here , after short visit to her son, Mr. Knox Anderson, and his family of Cash iers, N. C. Mrs. W. E. Westfelt and family who have been occupying the Lamb cottage this summer, left for their New Orleans home this week. Mrs. Annie Westbrook, Miss Fannie George Lucas and Sammie Westbrook, of Stantonburg, N. C. Who have been spending the sum mer in their Shortoff cottage, will remain for this winter. Prof. Bill Lippincott of Clemson FIREPROOF College was in Highlands Sunday. Miss Ethel Calloway spent the week-end with friends in Dillard, Ga. Mrs. C. E. S hepard is enter taining her sister, Mrs. K. S. Haines of Jacksonville, Fla., at her Highlands Estates residence. Furman Merrill, of Asheville, visited friends here Sunday. A week-end camping trip on Wayah Bald was participated in by Misses Evelyn Cleaveland, Eva Potts, Osceola Everett, Mary Lu zie Potts, Emma Louise Potts, Bessie Neely, Betsey Potts, Dewey Hopper, Bill Potts, Thomas Potts, Fred Hopper, Herbert Rice, Henry Cleaveland, Edward Potts, Thomas Anderson and Sidney Mc Carty. Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Potts. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Blanchard and. Mr. Harry Bailey, who have been spending some weeks in High lands, left for their San Mateo homes Wednesday morning of this week. Miss Mildred Day left recently for Inman, Ga where she will at tend school this winter. Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Hammett and family, of Honeapath, S. C, who have been enjoying the seas on at their summer home here, left this week. Miss Rebecca Nail and Thomas Greville, who have been at Brook side Camp, are- now occupying the Nail home on Sunset Road. Mrs. W: H. DaCamara and her daughter, Mrs. F. M. Morrison, of West Palm eBach, left for a motor trip to New York City Monday morning, lhey expect to return to Highlands soon and will occupy their summer home until November, During their absence Miss Mi riam Stowers, also of West Palm Beach, who has been staying at the Life Abundant Center in Franklin this year, will stay , at the Da Camara home with the children' of Mrs. Morrison. Mrs. Ralph Crosby, of San Ma teo, Fla., was hostess at a party last Tuesday night at the summer home of Miss May Crosby. Games were enjoyed and delicious refresh ments served. The list of guests included Mr. and Mrs. J. Blanchard, Professor William Lip pincott of Clemson College, Miss Elizabeth and Sidney. McCarty of Augusta, Ga., Miss Rachel Davis, Harry Bailey of San Mateo, Ralph Crosby, Thomas Greville and Miss r. I TT' f TT' saran-nicKS nines. The Highlands Community Qui met Wednesday. Sept. 14 at the home of the president, Miss Ber nice Durgin. The summer home of H. D. Ran dall of Cincinnati, O., which has been under construction for the past few weeks at Billy Cabin Mountain, is now complete, and will be occupied by the Randall family next summer. Joe Webb was contractor for this house. A picnic supper which took place Monday night of this week at the Bearpen Mountain home of Miss Elizabeth McCarty, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. S. L. McCarty, was en joyed by Mrs. Ralph Crosby, Miss Elizabeth McCarty, Miss Louise Edwards, Mrs. S. L. McCarty, Sidney McCarty, Mrs. James A. Hines, Rev. C. R. McCarty and Miss Sarah-Hicks Hines. Mrs. G. W. Marrett, Misses Stel la Marrett, Kay Wickline and Lu cile Boardman accompanied Mrs. Martha Freeman to Westminster, S. C, where she took a bus for her home in Atlanta. Mrs.' Free man operated the Zimme Beauty Shop this summer. . Captain and Mrs. Harcomb of Clemson College, S. C, week-ended at their Mirror Lake cabin. Highlands Literati Elect Officers The first meeting for this year of the O. F. Summer Literary So ciety was held at the school Fri day. New officers were elected as follows : ' . President, Helen Holt; vice pres ident, William Edwards; secretary, Mary Lizzie Potts; chaplain, Cecil Edwards ; treasurer, Louis Edwards ; pianist, Lucian Jones; pages, Caro line Perry and George Beale; pros ecuting critic, James Beale, and reporting critic, Eula Mae Potts. Golf Tourney At Highlands Sept. 20 An invitation golf tournament will take place at the Highlands Country Club from Tuesday, Sept. 20 until Saturday 24. Preliminaries will be held the 20 and 21. Prizes will be awarded to winners. , A feature of this tournament will be "Scotch Foursomes" in which the men choose their own feminine partners. . Errie Ball, Highlands Club pro, and Southeastern Pro fessional Golfers' Association cham pion, will be In charge. As this is probably the last tournament of the season here, quite a number of Rolfers-'BT, expected to' enter th liitl.' REJECi G. 0 p mt URGES X aith Lost in Government, Says Former U. N. C. Football Star Charles Crawford Poindcxter, known as "Poindy" to thousands of North Carolinians who cheered his brilliant leadership of Carolina football teams, knows something about picking the right man for the job. A - football captain has to know that - '' - "Never pick a candidate because he needs a job, but instead pick the man that is qualified to do the work," he told a large gathering of Democrats Saturday afternoon at Macon county court house, "Something is wrong with this country today, since it .takes one out of every seven to take care of the government of the other six. Many of the candidates have the wrong idea hhty think the voters are the servants. In reality, the officers are the' servants. Government CoU "In 1890, the government cost only one-sixth what it costs today Government costs the average citi zen more than $80.00 a year. And this body .of ours, if reduced to commercial values, is worth only 98 cents. "They say 'never change horses in the middle, of a stream,' but I say it is better to snatch at the limb of a tree than to go over the waterfall. There is no doubt but that a change in Washington will help. The people have lost all faith in the present" regime in Washington. Mr. Poindextef said that he be' lieved Macon county is taking the lead in a political movement in North . Carolina, due to the ac tivities of the Young People's Democratic Clubs. This is the kind of work," he said, "that will get the government back to the common people and do away with the kind of govern ment we now have : government for big business, by big business, ' of big business. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT NOTICE. OF SALE North Carolina Macon County By authority of the power of sale vested in the undersigned trustee by a certain Deed of Trust executed by J. W. Guest and wife, Fannie Guest, to H. W. Cabe, Trustee, dated October 22, 1930, said Deed of . Trust being regis' tered in the office of the Register of Deeds for . Macon County in Book of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust No. 31, page "356, to secure the payment of a certain indebted ness in said deed of trust set forth ana aeiauu navmg oeen made in the payment of said indebtedness: I will, therefore, sell at the Court House door in Franklin, Macon County, North Carolina, on Monday the 24th day of October, 1VJ4, at 12. o clock noon, to the highest bidder for cash, the follow ing described real estate: The two lots in the Mann Sub division on the Georgia road. This the 14th day of September, H. W. CABE, Trustee SIS 4tc BofF 06 m JOE Building ... .... . . HIGHLANDS, N. C. Frame or Log Houses NOW OPERATING The W. M. Cleaveland Mill Ready To Do All Kinds OfMaiWork Located in W. Former ' I - I V In E&t&ils Mrbn The impossible has happened! An eatable watermelon has been grown in Highlands! The melon was grown on the Henley summer place at Kettle Rock, one of the higher points around Highlands, from Hun garian seeds given to Mrs. J. C. Henley by a friend returning from Europe. Due to the alti tude, watermelon-growing is al most impossible here and this is the first one known to reach a stage where it is both large and of fine flavor. The. only watermelons hitherto enjoyed by Highlands people : have : been brought up from South Caro lina and Georgia. Care of Tobacco P r o p e r Attention Will Pay, Advises Expert Proper care of tobacco from now to market time is going to make a big difference in prices to our Western North Carolina growers this year, says C. H. Bartlett, field representative of the Carolina To bacco Warehouse at Asheville. "Here are .a few things whjch most growers will remember, but they are worth checking over any way at this time of the year: "Don't top your tobacco too low, for if late rains come, the leaves will grow too coarse. . "Don t cut your tobacco until thoroughly ripe. A dry spell will sometimes make tobacco look ready for cutting when it really should be left in the field a week or so longer. "Don't hang tobacco in an open shed if you can help it. The wind bruises it before it gets dry, and then will" break it after it' is dry. "Don't hang tobacco where it will get overheated and barn-burn ed. Hang it where you ,can open windows to let in plenty of air on the hot, sunny days, and don't hang it too close up under the roof. "Don't hang your tobacco too close together. Give it plenty of air." The general tobacco situation this year looks pretty good for West ern North Carolina growers, Mr. Bartlett says. With the crop for the entire South estimated at some think like 55 per cent of last year's, prices ought to hold up pretty well. The crop in the Caro lina burley belt appears to be about 90 per cent of last year's, by weight With normal weather from now on, the grower in this section ought to make as much profit from two acres of tobacco this season as he did from three acres last time. The main thing right now is to take proper care in curing tobac co. Farmers Federation News. Dur-Inda The 100 per cent Oriental fruit food in uncooked tablet form. For sale by 1 .. REBECCA S. HARRIS .. HIGHLANDS. N. C r Ask for Free Booklet "The Spirit of Dur-Inda" ) J WEBB Contractor M. Cleaveland'i Offica 'ranks Viro Prc2 Gets $53 Award in Chilean Nitrate Dealer Contest Sam L. Franks, proprietor of the Farmers Supply Co., Franklin, has received a prize of $50 as one of the winners in the V)Si Uincan Nitrate Dealers Contest. A schedule of planned advertis ing in The Franklin Press was one of the factors that brought Mr. Franks the prize. . . t i totfor -,f mncratulation, 111 A O ' James M. Gray, state educational manager of the Chilean miraie (Advertisement) Tke Curse ef the Ages . I'sji CcisncJ et Lest Cclvcd Tt.!3 p AutfccrUba Asrc Thz Old Fcihlsr.sd Pogs!Y3i Sdis, 0, Csthzrtiss end Laxatives 123 t!csciCwcd ConstJpstten end ttsver IViX Rcnicrkable f rectment Discovered The commonest and VMcst curse "of mankind . Is consti pation. M b man's greatest enemy. It poisons him.' slows him . dowa mentally and physically, breaks down youthful strength ' and vigor, ages him prematurely and leaves htm an easy victim to the attack of almost countless diseases. Millions are virtual slaves to the laxative habit, without obtaining real or permanent relief. r.thortva An relieve constipa tion tor the time being, but their effect to only temporary at best nd the more we resort to such artificial aids, tne more we require, because their continued use weak ens the natural action of the bow els. AN AMAZING DISCOVERY Medical Science hat discov ered that bile, prepared by the liver, le a natural laxative and that people with a normal flow "of bile are practically Immune te constipation Furthermore, we now know that bile Is an antlseptio snd anti-acid and combats putrefaction and the formation of gas In the bowels. If s also a dlgestant without which proper digestion and as similation Is impossible. . A QUART A DAY Bnt when our livers become in active or sluKKiBh and fail to ponr fntn the intestinal tract the nec essary quart of bile each day, We suffer from constipation, indiges tion, headaches, biliousness, sour stomach and many other common ailments. Recent reports indicate thai nrobablr seven out of every tea persons past thirty years old suffer frequently from lack of bile due to a siuggisn uver. OLD THEORIES OVERTURNED Until the discovery of Barren Soft Mass Pills it has been the commoa practice to blast out the intestines with calomel and other drastic cathartics and Durces, be- Bovlnc that they stimulated the Uver. But Modern aieaieai bci eae baa now learned that calomel talta, oils and other laxative drugs have ao effect whatever on the Uver or ks production of bile. Sargon Soft Ma W Recommend Ssrgon Sft ttsz PEa PERRY'S DRUG STORE PA When you take Bayer Aspirin you are sure of two things. It's sure relief, and it's harmless. Those tablets with the Bayer cross do not hurt the heart. Take them when ever you suffer from: Headaches a Neuralgia Rheumatism Lumbago Neuritis Toothache D D WARD OP Educational L I ,1' V.h,"' N. C, said: "Working under the handicaps of last season was no l'.f)!tt tiiik, ''ahI it is with pleasure for us to recog nize your efforts in tlis' way. "It has been a pleasure for mc to work with you in the past, and I am looking forward to being of some assistance to you in the fu ture." . V A large share of the credit for ' winning fhe prize goes to J. M. Moore. '! , -' .Y Avery farmers have received a welcomed supply of cash recently from the sale of 1500 lambs and a good acreage of late snap beans. (Advertisement) . . ; : THE PROBLEM 80LVED A world wide search has beea carrlod on for a harmless sub stance which would actually Invig orate a 8luggiih liver to normal production of bile Nature'a Great Weapon Against Constipation. This has been accomplished. . The principal Ingredient In 8argon 8oft Mass Pitts Is an amazing substance which the . highest medical authorities agree Is the most . effective stimulant to the bile produc ing activity of tthe liver known to Materia Medlca. Unlike calomel or other cathar tics, this substance doea not shock or upset the system, cause nausea or other ill effects. " It does Its work by gently but steadily stimulating the -liver to cleanse itself through increasing its production of bile, which is a more natural and thorough laxa tive than can ever be devised by man. ' v , ' . Sargon Soft Hasa Pills ate. not like any laxative yon have ever taken.. They are so gentle and thorough in their action that there is nothing about' them to rem tad yon that yon have ever taken medicine, and most remarkable of all, their directions call tor a gradual reduction of Ihe iou until tk point U reached where ou m longtr require laxative el Bo remarkable are the reeuUs from 8 argon Soft Mass Pills that they are sweeping the Nation: over 135 Million have been sold in the past tour years. The great Bar con Laboratories at Dayton, Ohio, have been -obliged to steadily increase production to 'meet the rapidly growing dmBd. . . , ICO When your head aches from any cause when a cold has settled in your joints, or you feel those deep-down pains of rheumatism, sciatica, or lumbago, take Bayer Aspirin and get real relief. If the package says Bayer, it's genuine And genuine Bayer Aspirin is safe. Aspirin is the trade-mark, qf Bayer manufacture of monoacetio acidester of salicylicacid. fl i &!)(. If.llTATIO NO
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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Sept. 15, 1932, edition 1
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