Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / Sept. 22, 1932, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE TV0 the FAr::cLi:i r.ir.;.3 rj n:z i::x:iax:d3 i,:acc:;i SPEED COITUS, akgel urges Doctor Requests Payment Of Legion Dues so Fight Can Be Pushed Payment of American Legion dues-immediately is urged by Dr. Fur man Angel, of Franklin alter nate district commander, so that the Legion can push its fight for immediate payment of the soldier .bonus. "With out three .million mem bers,'' said Pr. Angel in a letter to local Legionnaires, "we hold the balance of power in the country and can put over any legislation we want to.". Pr. Anvrcl said. in part: "Please honor me with your American Legion membership dues at once so that I may be able to report a full quota from Macon County Post 108 at an early date. All of us want the bonus bill pass ed so that the government will pay us the genuine cash she justly owes us. These certificates may not be due but the government did not hesitated put up $2,300,000,000 for the defunct railroads and the tot tery banks when she did not owe them a . cent. This money has benefitted no one but the gentry of Wall Street. In the long run it. will not benefit the railroads for they are doomed to certain failure because better means of transportation will take their place. Furthermore, the R. F. C. did not hesitate to send $90,000,000 (more money than there is in the state of North Carolina) to Charles Dawes of Chicago to save his bust ed Republic Trust Co" Classified Advertisements Rate: ' One cent a word with minimum charge of 25 cents. Strictly cash in advance. Mail or bring your copy to The Press office.' Send stamps, to cover cost when you send in an ad by WANTED TO BUY WANTED Mixed Oak Cross Ties Will buy all you bring us this month. RUSH them in. Inspec tion will be made at depot on Tneedays and Fridays. PRICES No. 5, 40 cents; No. 4, 30 cents; No. 3, 20 cents. FARMERS SUPPLY CO. WANTED: Stove wood in ex change for subscriptions to The Franklin Press. We will allow a liberal price. ' FOR RENT FOR RENT : Two apartments in Orlando apartments one with furnace heat. Apply MRS. E. GEORGE WURST. S15-2tp-S22 FOR SALE FOR SALE: - $135 Majestic range, gray enamel finish, prac tically new. Will sell right. BRYANT FURNITURE CO. S22-ltc . Winter Is Coming Repair Your Home Now wtwtt Franklin Hardware Co. Hardware and Building Materials TELEPHONE 117 Deadlock Broken Councilmen Agreed ca Highway 28 Route (Continued from page one) through the public square or with in fifteen feet of the cross streets entering said square, and no car shall be parked on any part of Main Street for a distance of fif teen feet from a point directly in front of the center of any alleyway leading from Main Street. No car shall be parked on the parking square limits on Main Street be tween the east side of the public square and Alex Moore's front gate for a longer period than one hour between the hours of eight A. M. and seven P. M, And no car shall be moved from one parking place to another in said boundary with intent to beat the time limit above mentioned." Section Ten. All ordinances and parts of ordinances jn conflict with this ordinance or any part thereof arc hereby repealed, and all or dinances or parts of ordinances not conflicting with any part hereof shall remain in ful force in virtue and effect. Methodist Church Holds Conference y The Fourth Quarterly Conference of the Methodist church was held at the Horse Cove church Sunday Sept. 18. Presiding Elder Hayes of Waynesville officiated and preached an inspiring sermon on "Co-workers with God." Follow: ing the sermon officers for the incoming year were elected. High lands Methodists present included Rev. G. A. Hovis, Miss Susan Rice, Mrs. Westbrook, Mrs. A. G. Spencer Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Davis and Rachel -Davis, Mrs. J. Z. Got-, wals and Mrs! Marchcte. ' FOR SALE . FOR SALE: Rubber stamps, all sorts. THE FRANKLIN PRESS. FOR SALE : Typewriter second sheets, carbon papers, stationery (personal and business) cardboard etc. THE FRANKLIN PRESS.. FOR SALE :-We have just re possessed a number of large cabi net Victrolas. Will sell for balance due on each machine. BRYANT FURNITURE CO. S22-ltc FOR SALE:-Good used Singer sewing .machine. Will, sell right. Franklin, N. C. S22 ltc BRYANT FURNITURE CO., LOST LOST : A brown, hand-tooled, stltched-edge bill fold. Reward will be given for return to PRESS OF FICE. S22 Hp MISCELLANEOUS I have about 10 acres of good land to 1 be sowed in small grain. Will give all it makes for 300 pounds of fertilizer to the acre and grass seed enough to sow same. J. M. WILLIAMS, Franklin, N. C. S22-ltc WANTED: Piano. Reliable par ty desires use of piano for winter. Will keep it in .furnace heated house and take excellent care of it. If you are leaving town for the winter and do not wish to leave your piano in unoccupied house, here is good opportunity to place it in good hands. Write PIANIST, CARE THE PRESS. . SIS 4t 06 PJAVE you made those changes and repairs you've planned so long for your home? New doors or windows, new stairs or porches, new floors or mouldings. Why not repair your house now when prices are down to rock bottom? Come see what we have to offer and the prices at which we offer them. Everything for the builder.' Our Lumber is Trade Marked and Grade-Marked To Insure Your Satisfaction. DECLlilE SACK - (Continued from page one. who would agree with you so far as I am concerned and ' I am not going to try to put up an alibi ; but it would be interesting to have your opinion on Charley and lick. (Editor's note: Drown 'em!) "1 notice also that you thinks that two other things are advisable, the consolidation of counties and the abolishment of grand Juries. Our counties and grand juries are inheritances of the. past handed down from fathers who are older than their sons and, therefore, fogy contraptions. ' "I take it that it is your idea that had we, say twenty-five years ago, drowned all men with intel ligence enough to take part in politics as soon as they arrived at the age of fifty, consolidated coun ties into a few districts and abol ished grand juries we would not be in the mess we are, hence the way out of muddle we are in is to get busy along these lines. (Editor's note) .We never sug gested drowning the intelligent ones.) "Those who are old enough to remember the long continued world wide depression that had its cul mination in Cleveland's last ad ministration and commonly called Cleveland Hard Times will remem ber the many causes and cures, that were suggested. I. was in Europe when the depression was at its worst and remember many, of the ldeasthat were abroad. One espe dally worthy of notice of those who enjoy shallow thinking was peddled about in western France. There many thought the woes of the world could be traced to the Scarcity of sardines. - "The younger generation who arc floundering about in deSpair and doubt are at a great disad vantage. Any one who has never experienced a major depression can fully comprehend .the causes of depressions. Those who exposed their ignorance in 1893 had not ex perienced the depression gf 1873. The young men of today who did not live through the depression of 1893 are poorly . equipped for the study of today's problems. . Ever since the days of Moses when he gave -the commandment, "Honor thy father and thy mother that thy days may be long in the land which the Lord . thy God giveth thee" young men have considered their fathers fogies. All-young men make asses of themselves without know ing - it. No man ever lived who was not ashamed of many of his youthful sayings and doings. The way to keep out of such messes as we are now in as to heed the ad vice and take the advantage of the experience of men who have lived long enough to learn by actual ex perience. Some men never learn so time is criterion. The aver age man never rids himself of all prejudices and superstitions and thinks emotionally instead of be ing guided by facts. "During the war I travelled ex tensively throughout the whole south and met men of all classes on trains, at hotels, in fact every where and discussed all phases of passing events. I was struck with the amazing assuredness of the younger men and doubt of the old er ones. Since then I have met many of these younger men and invariably one of the first things they say is: You were right about it." Why should I not be right? Having lived through the panic and the depression that fol lowed in 1873 as well as the long depression that began in the eight ies and culminated in the panic of 1893 I should be drowned in a sack could I not interpret the causes of this depression For " years when I make a statement about trees no one ever doubts my statement simply be cause he knows something about trees and knows there is more to learn. When I make a statement about some phase of the economic situation in a crowd, sqme one is sure . to pop up and question the statement and that is because he knows practically nothing at all about economics and does not know how much there is to learn. Eco nomics is a science. Science is truth. An Englishman visiting this country reported us as a nation of - economic illiterates. The aver-, age young man is hindered in the study of economics by party orei- udices. He fits his economics to his party instead of trying to in fluence his party to adopt scien tific principles. Ye9; things are in a mess. We got in a mess by throwing sound principles, common sense, and social justice to the wiiius aiiu ntiii uu use uigcai jamboree in the history of semi civilization. The way out is to reverse and adopt scientific- prin ciple of economics, social justice and iive righteously." "." A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Tyree Neu, of Georgetown, 0., last Friday. Mrs. Neu ij the daughter of George Stiles of Franklin. The baby will bt named GeQrgt Theodor Niu. 2c3 at r4.ci.iiiicii McGahas &nd Tippetts Meet on Watausa The McGaha-Tippett reunion was held at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Bill Tippett o Watauga Sunday, Sept. 18, with - approximately 200 relatives and invited guests pres ent.. " . " John E. Rickman, postmaster at Franklin, made a short talk. The following officers .were elect ed: . , W.T. Tippett of Iotla president; W. A. McGaha, of West's Mill, vice-president: Irs. Lester S. Con- ley, of Franklin, secretary and treasurer ; Sloan Rickman, of Franklin, historian. Two bouquets of summer flowers were presented to the two oldest ones present, Mrs. Sallie Tippett, widow of the late Bud ,Tippett, and 'Chngman West. The next reunion will be held at the home of W. T. Tippett on Iotla next year. HOLD PARLEYS ONPOrERPLAN (Continued from page one) holds in United States govern ment bonds, the, interest derived therefrom to be paid to the Em pire 'Public Service - Corporation. This surety deposit, although joint ly held by the town and the Em pire corporation, belongs, to the latter as long as it fulfills the con tract it took over, from Jupollo. - This agreement is in no way a supplmentary contract to the orig inal contract, Mayor Patton ex plained, arid it does not become effective until the Empire meets the bond payment due vctober 1 and its authorized agents attach their signatures. The town council steadfastly re fused to sign 0 supplementary con tract proffered by E. D. Steele, attorney for the Empire corpora tion, and O. G. Martine. vice Presi dent of the East Coast' Utilities, Inc., a subsidiary under which the local utilities corporation operates. Mayor Patton and the councilmen decided after careful study that a supplementary contract might abro gate the original and lead io pro longed litigation. The firm of Humes, Buck, Smith and Stowell, New York attorneys, has been employed to institute leg al action to ; recover from the bonding company the $50,000. sure ty deposit frozen in the Standard Trust Bank. Mr. Martino told Mayor Patton that if the Empire interests decid ed to hold the Frankjin power plant, which he expected, they would,' improvements ' would be made in the property, especially to the lines and transmission system. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, r Macon County By virtue of the power of sale vested in the undersigned Commis sioner under authority of the Deed of Trust executed by O. L. Conley Heaters And Stoves Moderate Prices We carry a full line of stoves and heaters in a variety of styles. The prices now are lower than they have been in years. Come in and see. Macon County Supply Company Hardware, Mill Supplies and Farm Implements FRANKLIN, N. C. and willie Conley Norton to J. M. Cabe, Trustee, said Deed of Trust bearing date of March 12th, 1932, and registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Macon Coun ty in Book No. 33, page 13, to secure certain indebtedness in said Deed of Trust set forth, and de fault having been made in the pay ment thereof, and, demand having been made ujion 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 24th day of October, 1932 at 12 o clock noon at the Court House door in the Town of, Franklin, North Carolina, sell at public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash the following" described property:1 , FIRST TRACT : . Beginning at a white oak the N. E. corner of No. 4 ; then S. 62 E. 4 poles to a white oak; then N. 44 E: 16 poles tcx a post oak; then S. 20 E. 80 poles to an Ashe on the bank of the Creelt; thence S. 25 E. 84, poles to a Chestnut oak; thence $. 47 W. 22 poles to a chestnut the S. E. corner of No. 4 then with its line to the beginning. Containing 23 ac'res more or less.., With the exceptions of a lot beginning on North side of road in O.. L. Con ley's line runs witVroad west 66 feet to a stake; then North 72 feet to a stake; then east 66 feet to a stake in O. L.vConley's line; then South 72 feet to the begin ning. Said deed being made by O. L. Conley to W. A. Conley, dated 13th day. of.Feb.v1928 arid record ed in the Register of Deeds office for Macon County, North Carolina in book-of Deeds Book 0-4, page 343. ' SECOND TRACT: Beginning at Black oak'm -line of the Spen cer Curtis land , runs S. 12 W. 7 poles to a Black Oak William Gar lands corner; then S. 55 E. 28 poles to a Spanish oak; then S 9 E. 20 poles -to a rock ; on the Bank of the road; then 73 E. with the road 9 poles and 5 links, td a stake m Will Conley' s line: then with said line N. 17 W;27 poles to a stake in the Curtis line ; then with said line to the beginning. THIRD -TRACT: Beginning on a Walnut and runs west to Jhe creek; then the meanders of the creek tqO. L. Conley's line ; then with his Jine to the beginning. Containing about y acre. FOURTH TRACT: Beginning at a white, oak runs N, 62 deg. Heavy Quality Pink and Blue YARD ' Outing kiew mtL mm Blankets 66x80 Inches 3 lbs. Weight Men's Winter Weight Union Suits ' 36-Inch A r Sheeting 4 Heavy Quality yard LADIES' SPORT OXFORDS 98c & $1.50 We have the largest and finest selection of iadics' coats, dresses, coat suits and millinery ever shown in Macon County and at the mpst reasonable prices. Here you will find hundreds of styles to select from. Men's Overalls 220-Wt. ' Mill Shrunk 49c west 12 poles to a black oak; then South 14 deg. East 32 poles to a stake in the mouth of Gulley; then South 27 deg. Eastj48 poles to a poplar oh the bank of the creek, ; . rl ... Mighty Cheerful "Nevre! HEY, FOLKS -JUST A MINUTE! We have just received a complete, new' line - of men's and boys'-winter shoes and boots, guar anteed all pure leather, at such prices, that have; never been heard of before, ranging v $2.95 - S3.95 $5.00 Arid Up ' ; We also have men's leather coats and cliam ois jackets for -$4.95, which sold last year for ?s $7.00 and $7.50 Nunnally overalls for both' men and boys, men's. '98 cents; boys' 75 cents . 'These are, the kind that wear-and give 'you per . feet' satisfaction. Ask "Bill" he will always treat you with .the best of courtesy. V . - E, K. Cunningham & Co. ' "the Shop of Quality" " L4 ii Sells for Less FRANKLIN, N. C. 98' Fast i r 47 36-Inch Sheeting J L POL ,11 Sells for Less v FkANKLIN, N C thence North 17 dog. west 72 ihAs to the be,imiiiijr. Containing 3 acres. J. M. CABE, Truster. ' S22-4tc 013 ' ' ChildrenV Sweaters 35c an no 3-lb. Bundle CottonBatting1 .. 100. New White Cotton TT U C 72x90 Inches 36-Inch fil PRINTS : hi 2 Color . YARD YARD Men's & Boys' Good Leather Worlc Shoes Turkish Towel . T 20x40 Incliei 9C r I-
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1932, edition 1
6
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