Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / Sept. 20, 1934, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR THE FRANKLIN PRESS and THE HIGHLANDS MACON IAN THURSDAY, SEPT. 20, 1934 LEGAL ADVERTISING EXECUTION NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, Macon County. The Bank of Franklin vs. Mack Thompson By virtue of an execution direct ed to the undersigned from the Superior Court of Macon County in the above entitled action, I will, on Monday, the 1st day of October, 1934, at 12:00 o'clock noon, at the Court House door of said County, sell to the highest bidder for cash, to satisfy said execution, all the right, title, and interest which the said Mack Thompson, defendant, had on the 29th day of June, 1933, LEGAL ADVERTISING NOTICE OF EXECUTION SALE North Carolina, -Macon County. The Bank of Franklin vs W. C. Cunningham, J. A. Porter, Sam L. Franks and W. L. Higdon. The Bank of Franklin vs J. A. Porter and W. L. Higdon. The Bank of Franklin vs W. L. Higdon and J. A. Porter. The Bank of Franklin vs W. L. Higdon and W. C. Cun ningham. The Bank of Franklin vs W. C. Cunningham and W. L. Higdon. The Bank of Franklin vs W. L. Higdon and J. A. Porter. The Bank of Franklin vs W. C. ci i: r ,j, "TV. uiu n;ku " v a Hie UiK UU M wiuui Itous, and which con tains Four Great Treasures .... in the following described land, to-1 Cunningham and W. L. Higdon. wit : By virtue oi seven executions Beginning at a stake on East , directed to the undersigned irom side of State Highway No. 285, E. the Superior Court of Macon S. Hunnnicut's Northwest corner ; ! County in the above entitled ac and runs with Hunnicut's- line east j lions, I will, on Monday, the 8tn nine poles to a stake in old road ;j day of October, 1934, at 12:0J men wnn oki roan ana nunniau s 0 clock noon at the Court House line north 8 east 10 1-2 poles to! door at Franklin, North Carolina, ' stake Hunnicut's corner; then within to the highest bidder for cash,; his line south 62 east 7 poles to a to satisfy said executions, all the stake in a small branch and in M. rjght( title and interest which the! G. Thompson's line; then with saj(i w. L. Higdon has in the foi-l Thompson's line the branch north lovving described lands: 32 west 2 poles to a stake Thomp- A11 the right title and interest ofi son's corner; then north 67 1-2 east, w. L. Higdon in that portion of 11 1-2 poles to stake, Thompson's lhc f0nQwjng described lands, which corner; then north 41 1-2 west 12 lic in Alacon County, North Caro poles to a stake; then north 72 ;na: . t west 20 poles to a stake on east' ltjnU A the lands described in s.de of highway; then south 2 eas' a (lccd from D D Javifis and with east side of highway 28 poles wife to w L HigdoIli said deed i to the beginning containing three bcaring (late of ,6 September 1913 'dCs-. . ! and registered in the office of Rcg- Begmrnng on a stake m Elmer, istcr of Deeds for Macon Com Johnsons line, rims a westerly th- jn J!ook w4 of rection with said line to stake c,., j . ah ,i i i t u i i t- tir t t second;' All the lands described known as ft,. W. lohnson s corner;., . , , c T n , , .iL -j r- iir t l , ij in a dec(1 from F. J. Conroy "and then with said E. W. Johnson s line I tU , wr T u- i -, , , ., . , y t- 4 t i J others to W. L. Higdon, said deed a southeasterly direction to a stake I. . . , - . .' . , . . ., i bearing date ot 23 April, 1923, and near a branch; then down said. ... . . ... ,,. ... , , ' , . I registered m the office of Register branch, with its meanders to ai n , , r . i f ., , . ot Deeds for Macon County in . j- Book VV-4 of Deeds, naee then a northerly direction to the beginning containing one acre, more or less. This 1st day of September, 1934. A. B. SLAGLE, Sheriff. S64tc J&J S27 NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE North Carolina, County of Macon. Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that cer tain deed of trust executed by James R. Parrish and wife, Callie D. Parrish to The Raleigh Savings Bank and Trust Company, trustee, which said deed of trust is dated July 1, 1927 and recorded in Book 30, Page 433, of the Macon Coun ty Registry, default having been made in the payment of the in debtedness thereby secured and in c;i j jtc j&j Q4 tne connitions tnerein secura, tne undersigned substituted trustee by instrument recorded in Book 32, Page 468, Macon County Registry, will on Tuesday, October 2, 1934. at or about twelve o'clock noon, at the courthouse door at Franklin Third : On the waters of the Sugarfork River, Peek's Creekt be- : gins at a locust near the Hender son tract entered by Holland, runs West 30 poles, to a hickory; then South 45 West 90 poles to a chest-1 nut; then North 45 West 90 poles, to a Spanish oak; then South 15 West 190 poles to a Spanish oak ; then South 80 East 100 and 40 poles to a chestnut ; then North ! 60 East 140 poles to a mountain ' oak; then North 30 West 40 poles' to a black oak"; then North 60 East 70 poles to a pine; then North 20 East 40 poles to a chest-! nut; then North 10 poles to a Spanish oak; then South 75 West 100 poles to the Beginning. This the 7th day of September, 1934. A. B. SLAGLE, Sheriff. MARK TRAVELS WITH SAUL SAUL'S conversion was instan taneous, yet its development was most interesting. Instead of arresting any one in Damascus, he at once announced his change of convictions, and had to escape from the city by means of a basket let down from the wall. For three years he retired to Arabia. When he emerged he had a definite plan. He would go back to Jerusalem to be welcomed by the disciples, who would naturally c h o o-s c him as their leader, and so he would become minister of the First Church in Jerusalem. It was' a grand plan, but it met with bitter dis appointment. When he arrived in Jeru salem the disciples were afraid of him and, even after he had been vouched for by Barna bas, gave him a very grudging wel come. Rebuffed but still ardent, he went to his old home in Tarsus, a Greek city, where he had been born, a Jew but with full right of Roman citizenship, a fact of which he was immensely proud and of which he took full advantage. For a while he had little to do. Then Barna bas, a discoverer of men greater than himself, the discoverer of Mark, went to Tarsus and invited Saul to come to Antioch. After a very successful work in BrUce Barton Antioch, Barnabas and Saul pro posed to visit the old home of Barnabas in the island of Cyprus, and to preach as they went. This they did, and took with them Mark, who was a nephew of Barnabas. In Cyprus they had great success and established a friendship with the Roman governor, Sergius Paul us. Soul, named for the Old Testa ment king, now changed his name to Paulus, probably after this gov ernor. From Cyprus they went in to the nearer regions of Asia Minor. And now an occasion of irritation arose. Barnabas was the leader of this journey, but Saul everywhere became the more prominent char acter. Barnabas was evidently a tall impressive man; Paul much smaller, more active, and nervous. In one place on the mainland they were received with such honor that there was a proposal to deify them . "And they called Barnabas, Jupiter; and Saul, Mercurius, because he was the chief speak er." Mark did not like the way things were going. His uncle Barnabas was the really great man, but Saul was taking the lion's share of the honors. Mark made himself dis agreeable, and Saul did not like Mark, who finally left the two older men and went back to Jerusa lem. In due time Saul and Barna bas followed, and both at Antioch and later at Jerusalem gave a vivid account of a most successful tour. Thus far there had been no se rious quarrel in the church, but the calm was about to be broken. EASIER BANK CREDITS SEEN Loosening of Purse Strings Forecast after Capital Conference TODAY and 1m how old a thing is so long as it is good. FPANK PARKER STOCKBRIDGE NOTICE OF RESALE North Carolina, Macon County. WHEREAS, on August 31, 1934, i 1 1 i ..I J North Carolina offer for sale and tne uriaersigneo trustee so a tne sell to the highest bidder for cash,land described in a deed of trust the following described property: executed by V. A Calloway and All that certain piece, parcel or wfe, Annie Lee Calloway, dated tract of land containing three hun-' JulV 28- 1931- a"' recorded in Book dred and forty-two (342) acres, I No- 31 liae 472 ' and Wnr-K ivr, (Oflfl v anowav raid ed the bid of Will Mason and H. more or less, situate, lying and be i'ne nn the Wpst's Mill Biir'ninfr town public road, about seven (7) j L- Rrvant tn $HM0; miles almost north from the town1 WHEREFORE, on Monday, Sep of Franklin, in Cowec Township, tembcr 24- 1934- at 12 n'c,ock noo Macon County, State .of North at the County Courthouse door, in CLASSICS on the screen Passing a motion picture theater the other day 1 overheard two young women talking. They were typical "cheap" city girls, the sort that constantly seeks "thrills," mis taking emotional excitement for happiness. The picture at the theater was "Jane Eyre." "Aw, we don't want to see that; it's nothing but a clas sic," said one of them. That attitude, that anything that isn't "modern" hasn't anything in it for folk of today, is prevalent, I observe, among the unintelligent and half-educated. Yet "Jane Eyre" has been one of the great successes of the films of 1934, as was "Little Women" before it : sug gesting to me that the scornful at titude of those who regard them selves as sophisticated is not as many people think. Carolina, having such shapes, metes, courses and distances as will more fully appear by reference to a plat thereof, made by W. J. Jenkins, surveyor, on the 2nd day of June 1927, and attached to the abstract now on file with the Atlantic Joint Stock Land Bank of Raleigh, the same being bounded on the North bv the Tennessee River; on the East by the Tennessee River; on the South by the lands of Charley 1 towns and E. E. Roper ; on the West by the lands of Sam Moore and Deck Welch, and being the identical tract of land conveyed by deed from Gilmer A. Jones, Trustee for Carolina Realty Company to lames R Parrish, of date January 22nd, 1927, said deed being duly recorded in Deed Book Q-4 at Page 5, in the Office of the Regis ter of Deeds for Macon County, North Carolina. Terms of sale cash and trustee w'll require deposit of 10 per cet of the amount of the bid as evi dence of good faith. This the 1st day of September, 1934. JOSEPH L. COCKER HAM. Substituted Trustee. Robert Weinstein and Victor W. Thompson, Attorneys Raleigh, N. C. S6-4tc-S27 Franklin, N. C, the undersigned trustee will sell to the highest bid der for cash the following describ ed property situated in Highlands Township, Macon County, North Carolina : A house and lot being the home place of parties of the first part, also used as a storehouse, situated about two miles East of the Town of Highlands, North Carolina, be ing on State Highway No. 2H ad joining the lands of Prince Cal lowav and Rov Phillips. This the 11th day of September. 1934. T. FRANK RAY, Trustee. S13 2tc J&J S20 ADVENTURE . . always thrills A wholesome adventure story dramatically told that will live long er than its authors, reputation in other fields is Robert Louis Stev enson's "Treasure Island." And if anyone has any doubt as to wheth er a "clean" motion picture will be a box-office success he ought to sec the crowds standing in line at the box-office where the new film of "Treasure Island" is being shown. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having oualifierl ns executor of E. Hurst deceased, 'ate of Macon Countv. N. C. this is to notify all persons havinc; claims apainst the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or be fore the 27th dav of August, 1935, or this notice will be plead in bar of tlieir recovery. All persons in debted to said estate w'll please make immediate settlement. This ?7th dav of Aug.. 1934. EAL HURST, Exe-utor. A30-otc-O4 REVIVALS . pack 'em in Further evidence that you can please the theater-going public oth er than by constantly giving them something a little newer and a lit tle rawer than what went before is to be found in the current revival of the Gilbert & Sullivan comic operas, in New York, by an English company which for years has play- ' ed nothing else. The largest crowds to attend any New York play in vears swamp the theater every I night. A great English actor-manager, Sir Nkel Plavfair, died the other dav. His chief claim to fame was ! that he put on a revival of John ; Gav's "Beggar's Opera." first pro duced about 1730, and it had a con ! tinuous run of more than 1,100 per formances, provine that English au diences, like Americans, don't care ANTIQUES . . and "teste" The interest in ancient things does not end with plays, and books.; 'ihere has grown up a great in-! terest, in the past forty or fifty ; years, in the collection of what are: generally classified as antiques. Old glass, old china, old books, old furniture, old anything-and-every-thing, command a market, even in times of depression. Here, again, there is great con fusion in the minds of the many, who imagine that the value of these things derives from their age alum:. That has much to do with it, but discriminating people never buy anything merely because it is old. Leaving historical associations out: of the picture, the value of antiques depends upon whether they are, first, more beautiful than their modern counterparts; second, better made and more durable. The beau ty may in part be due to age, ana the durability and quality ot workmanship is often testiiied to by the fact that they have existed and been in use tor a century or ivu. But when a common pine shoe maker's bench, such as 1 used to see the village cobbler working at when I was a boy, sells lor the price of a grand piano, then 1 can only think that somebody has mor. money than taste. NOVELTY . . and living It is as easy to establish a wrong idea in one direction as in another. Against those who think nothing is good that isn't new stand the ones who think nothing is good unless it is old. Neither, of course, is true. Much depends upon what sort of things objects, ideas, entertainment or what not--onc is talking about. The sort of persons who demand new ideas about life and living and the social order are usually the same type who regard everything else that existed before they were born as being out-moded. As a matter of fact, nothing is so durable as a sound idea, and nothing so evanescent as a new idea that is not sound. The test of time has resulted since the be pinning of things in the discarding of novelties in government and so cial relations and the return to the ancient standards by which tlv world, on the whole, has been gov erned. Often the symbols and the methods are changed, but no so cial order has long existed that was not based on the durable truths derived from countless centuries of human experience in living together. (Special to The Press-Macooian) WASHITGTON, Sept. 19.-The financial education of the Admin istration appears to be progressing nicely. Chairman Jesse Jones of the Reconstruction Finance Cor poration, after "bawling out" bank ers on numerous occasions for not lending more freely, has admitted publicly that the main reason for restricted credits is "the lack of demand for good loans," and that this is due to "uncertainty on the part of both bankers and industrial ists that markets could be found for the manufactured products to finance which the loans were in tended to be made." Mr. Jones spoke feelingly, after trying to lend $300,000,000 to in dustry under the authority granted at the last session of Congress to the RFC, and finding himself un able to put more than $10,000,000 out in good credits. And while Mr. Jones did not say so to the public, he expressed himself vig orously to the Secretary of the Treasury about the policy of the Comptroller's office of forcing the banks to "bear down" on business men who are trying to carry on and who have always been regard ed as entitled to reasonable bank credits. Expect Loosened Credits The upshot of this situation was the calling to Washington of the chief bank examiners from all over the country, for a conference in which the Federal Reserve Board, the Reconstruction Finance Cor poration and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation took part with the Treasury. The outcome is expected to be a general loosening up of the restrictions which have been placed on bank credits by the Comptroller's office. That office has jurisdiction over only National banks, but state banks usually have to follow the practices of the na tional banks in their localities. Secretary Morgenthau is taking an active hand in trying to bring about more effective cooperation among the various fiscal agencies and bureaus of the Government. There is reason, therefore, to ex pect that bank credit will be easier for sound business men. Trying to Satisfy Business Friends of the Administration are beginning to be troubled about what appears to be a growing hos tility on the part of business men and industrialists. The first inclina tion when reports of dissatisfaction began to pour in was to pooh-pooh them as emanating from political sources. Now Washington is becom ing convinced that the business leaders arc serious, and is trying to figure out what it can do to satisfv them. The stumbling-block seems to be the President himself, who is reported by those extremely close to him as being unable to understand why business needs any more reassurance. Conservative members of the Ad ministration are now saying rather openly that if business men had been assured some months ago that there would be no further changes in the rules under which they are supposed to do business, they would have begun to expand their activities and by now real recovery would have been under way. But instead of such assurance they have had to face such things as the President's direct order to the cot ton clothing industry to cut down hours and increase wages, regard less of profits; the more or less open disagreement between the President and General Johnson on price-fixing under the codes the President opposing and the General standing firm on the original plan and the growing feeling that mon etary inflation is in the offing. Inflation Outlook That inflation will be unavoidable if the program of increased Govern ment borrowings for the purpose of "priming the pumn" of business continues is the considered opinion of many of the soundest econom ists who are in touch with the situation. The last Government loan did not go so well, and Uncle Sam had to take up part of the issue himself.
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 20, 1934, edition 1
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