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PAGE SIX THE FRANKLIN PRESS ami THE HIGHLANDS MACON I AN THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1W5 NOTICE The Southern Division of the Macon County Singing Convention will meet Aug. 10 and 11 at Highlands, N. C. , LEE McCLURE PjwttcgP BALD? Give Your Scalp a Chance Japontt Oil is the nam of the remarkably successful preparation that thousands are using to get rid of loose dandruff, stop scalp Itch and grow strong, healthy hair on thin aud partially bald spots where hair roots are not dead. This famous antiseptic counter-irritant stimulates circulation in tbf scalp, brings an abundant supply of blood to nourish and feed starved hair roots-one of the chief causes of baldness. Get a bottle toda eoc "The Truth About the Hair." you write to National Ramady Co., 56 W. 45th St., N. Y. JAPANESE OIL ATMs VerrlseieBt wot approved by a ref Istered physielaa. Make Your Permanent Last 3 Times As Long Women everywhere are finding that the) secret of keeoinar a permanent wave i to reset it regularly with the new WBd root Wave Powder. Naturally curly and atraisht hair are also easy to set with this inexpensive home-made fiakeleas onirk drvtne wave set. Buy Wudroot Wave Powder, mix with water and foe- I .Unl 1irMfinnii in ftacklMi Obtainable at all drug and toilet goods counters. 6omethingHa$ Been Don About the Weathi by the Southern Railway System Air-conditioned Pullman Cm and Southern Pining Can ere now in service Travel in Cool. Quiet Delightful Comfort free from Dust Smoke end Cinders ... A miracle de velopment 61 temperature COD tool ior the convenience of the traveling public 2 Cento per Mile-15 Day Limit 2 2 Cents per Mile-6 Month Limit Ticket honored la aleeplng and pwlot car on payment ol proper charge loi space occupied . no autchaig One Way Coach Fast IVac Per Mile Lv. Asheville 6:40 p. m Ar. Chicago 2:15 p. m Lv. Asheville 5:00 p. m Ar. Washington 6:50 a. m Ar. New York 11:59 a. m For fares, sleeping car reservations and other travel information, call or write: R. H. DEBUTTS, Asst. General Passenger Agent Asheville, N. C. y at any druggist, ine cost is inuinc, Economy size, ii. jrou nwe uiuB w ..nrt miioh t rain. FREE, valuable book 25c size ISggsrfl MAKES 3 PINTS VSCal 10c SIZE, t PINT TAX MEASURES BEFORE HOUSE Congress Trying to Pass 'Must' Bills Before Adjournment (Special To The PreM-Maqonian) WASHINGTON, July 31. The Washington picture is Still one of a group of tired, steaming and dis gruntled members of Congress toil ing away at a task which they would prefer to postpone until Win ter, but which they are tackling because the majority of them have oecome convinced that their own political fortunes and those of their party are in large measure depen dent upon their doing what the smiling gentleman in the White House has told them has to be done. Like good soldiers, the members of Congress are making a desper ate effort to put through the Presi dent's "must" program, even though this involves starting with a blank sheet of paper to draft, what many consider, the most important and iar-reaching tax bill since the Haw-ley-Smoot Tariff Act of 1929, and to do that in the shortest time oossible. The Ways and Means Committee jf the House of Representatives, with whom all tax legislation must originate, is bending to its task with all the good will it can mus ter, under the chairmanship of that hardworking wheelhorse, Kepresen tative Robert L. Doughton of North Carolina. Collaborating as tar as nossible with the House committee! . 1 s Senator Hat Harrison of Missis sippi, Chairman of the Senate Fi nance Committee, through whose hands the bill must also pass. These two gentlemen are among ihe most experienced and best bal anced political figures in the two louses of Congress. Some few are of the opinion that had they been left to their own initiative, neither one would have dreamed of trying to draw up a measure of such vital importance in such a short time. School of Taxation The bill that finally results from .iese committee deliberations will .trobably not conform, in many re jects, to Mr. Roosevelt's skeleton outline. Both Senator Harrison and Chairman Doughton are shrewd enough politicians to know just how tar it is safe to go, and that, in their judgment, is not as far as the . resident would like to go. A regular school of instruction in the fundamental principles of taxa tion has been set up in the offices of. the Ways and Means Committee ihe professors are Lovell H. Par ker, Chief of Staff of the Congres sional Joint Committee on Inter national Revenue Taxation, and Herman Oliphant, General Counsel to the Secretary of the Treasury. Neither of those gentlemen is a politician. Both of them are mas ters of facts and figures, and Mr. Parker in particular is a thorough student of the whole subject of tax ation. If their advice is followed, the chances are that the tax bill, when it comes out, will be work able and practical. Estate taxes, taken out of a dead man's property before it is dis tributed among his heirs, will un cmestionably be increased. There is doubt, however, about the prac ticability of Mr. Roosevelt's pro posal for inheritance taxes, te be paid by the heirs, after already taxed estates have been distributed. The technical advisers of Congress ;ire of the opinion that any such plan would be extremely difficult to work out and to administer equit ably. It can be set down as certain that individual income taxes will be increased under the new bill. All incomes down to $100,000 a year and probably on very much lower incomes. The more the committee studies the proposal for increasing corporation taxes in proportion to capitalization, the more the feeling grows that it probably would not be good politics to impose a tax on 'mere Bigness. Adjournment "If" Whether this Congress will re main in session until it has enacted the proposed new tax law is still an open question. The prevailing de sire is to get the bill out of com mittee and have it published, so that it can be widely discussed while Congress takes its inuch- needed vacation before finally act ing upon it. Perhaps the controlling factor which will determine whether Con gress adjourns around the middle of August or sticks around until the tax bill is passed, will be the activity of the advocates of the bonus payment to veterans, the Black Thirty-Hour-Week Labor Law and the Greenback Inflation proposal for the relief of mortgaged farms. If these muster too much of a show of strength, Congress may adjourn in spite of orders from the White House, at least until the weather gets cooler. DYNAMITING OF FISH DEPLORED Useless Slaughter Decried By State Game Official Officials of the department of conservation and development at raleigh have expressed their pur pose to wage a determined campaign against the use of dynamite in streams for the purpose of taking fish. John D. Chalk, state game and inland fisheries commissioner, re ..entry commended Game Protector G. C. Plott, of Haywood county, ior his work in the conviction of tive defendants recently on charges of dynamiting fish in waters of Haywood county. ine defendants were found guilty in superior court and were fined $100 each and costs with 30-day J 1 A. . L suspenuea sentences in eacn case, "Dynamiting fish is one of the most serious offenses against the natural resources of our state," commented Commissioner Chalk, "and the division of game and in land fisheries is doing all within its power to check such practices wherever they might occur. It is most gratifying, however, to note that dynamiting of streams in sel dom indulged in but in every case where evidence can be obtained these cases are prosecuted vigorous- ly. Beyond doubt, public sentiment is against such inexcusable prac tices as dynamiting fish. Such is certainly the case in Western North Carolina where the department of conservation and development has for many years carried on an in tensive restocking program. Dyna miting of such streams not only de stroys the natural stock, including all types of fish, large and small, but makes ineffective the long-time efforts to restore good angling. Dynamiters, in addition to destroy ing their own facilities for fishing injure the sport for others and de tract from the general attractions of the community." Son of Former Franklin Man Wins Puzzle Prize George Wooten, 14, East Wey mouth, Mass., grandson of Mr. and Mrs. John Wooten and son of Alex Wooten, won eighth prize in' a Jinx puzzle contest staged by the Boston Daily Globe. The contest was a series of car toons depicting various supersti-, tions, the entrant trying to give the right superstition shown in the picture. Eighth prize was $50.13. Alex Wooten, father of the win ner, was reared in Franklin, mov ing to Massachusetts in 1918. He is connected with the New Have railroad. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank each and everyone for their many deeds of kindness and expressions of sym pathy shown us during the recent loss of our dear husband and fath er. Also for the many, lovely floral offerings. Mrs. Albert Rickman And Children. Al ltp (adv.) LEGAL ADVERTISING NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, Macon County. Whereas, power of sale was vest ed in the undersigned Trustee by deed of trust from Hettje Whit- tingtun and E. L. Whittington, dat ed the 28th day of July, 1930, and registered in the office of the Reg ister of Deeds for Macon County, in Book No. 31, page 337, to se cure the payment of certain in debtedness as in said deed of trust LEGAL ADVERTISING T set forth; and whereas, default has been made in the payment of said indebtedness, and the holder of the notes secured by said deed of trust has requested the undersigned to exercise the power in him vested by said deed of trust: 1 will, therefore, on Monday, the 26th day of August, 1935, at 12 o'clock, noon, sell at the Courthouse door in Franklin, North Carolina, at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the following de scribed property: Being a lot in the Town of Franklin. Beginning at an iron post by a peach tree on the West side of Iotla Street runs thence S 63 degrees 35 W 73 feet to an iron post; thence S 17 degrees 20 E 66 feet more or less to a stake in the line of the Hurst lot and the Episcopal Church lot and the Ivan hoe lot; thence with the line of the Hurst and the lvanhoe lot to a stake on the West side of Iotla Street; thence with said Street to the beginning, and being the same .and described in a deed from Thomas R. Frint to R. S. Jones, Trustee, dated June 6, 1929, and registered in the office of the Reg ister of Deeds for Macon County, North Carolina, in Book of Deeds 2-4, on page 296. This 25th day of July, 1935. G. A. JONES, Trustee. Altc-J&J-A22 NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, Macon County. Whereas, power of sale was vest ed in the undersigned mortgagee by mortgage deed from J. E. Rice and Mrs. Florence R. Thomson to Nimmons-Adams Lumber Company Mortgagee, dated 6th day of June, 1928, and registered in the office of Register of Deeds for Macon County, in Book of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust No. 31, page 73, to secure the payment of certain in debtedness in said Mortgage Deed set forth; and whereas, default has been made in the payment of the sum secured by said mortgage deed: I will, therefore, by virtue of the power of sale by said mortgage deed in me vested, on Monday, the 5th day of August, 1935, at 12 o'clock, noon, at the Courthouse door in Franklin, North Carolina, sell at public auction to the high est bidder lor cash, the following described property: Lying and being in the Town cl Highland, State of North Caro lina, and feeing the same lands dc scribed in a deed from W. E Mosely and D. E. Vinson to Ol W. Dills, dated the 6th day of November, 4917, and being lot No 229, on Main Street in the Town of Highlands, North Carolina, and being the same land described in a deed recorded in Book A-4, page 298, Register of Deeds office, Ma con County, North Carolina; and in the Deed of Trust from O. W. Dills to J. F. Ray, Trustee, regis tered in Book No. 22, page 545, Register of Deeds office, Macon County, North Carolina. To all of which deed reference is hereby given for a more definite description; and the calls of which is made a part and parcel of this deed. . . t, ... This 3rd day oi July, 1935. Nimmons-Adams Lumber Co., Mortgagee. jlyll-tc-J&J-Al . NOTICE OF EXECUTION SALE State of North Carolina, County of Macon, In the Superior Court A. R. Higdon and R. M. Hudson Trading as the Franklin Hardwar Company, vs W. S. Bearden. By virtue of an execution direct ed to the undersigned from the Superior Court of Macon Count in the above entitled action, 1 will on Monday, the 19th day of August 1935, the same being, the first day ol the regular August term, 1935, Macoof County Superior Court, at 12 o'clock noon, at the Court House door o said County, sell to the highes bidder for cash to satisfy said exe cution, all the right, title and in terest which the said W. S. Beard en, the defendant, had in the fol lowing described lands and premises on October 20, 1934, or at any time thereafter, to-wtt: Lying and being in the corporate limits of the Town of Franklin Macon County, North Carolina, o the South side of State Highway No. 28, Beginning at an iron stake on the south side of Highway No 28 in the West line of Johnston LEGAL ADVERTISING lot, and runs S 70 W 125 feet to a stake on the East side of High way No. 285; then S 15 E 285 fee to a stake in the branch; then down the branch with its meanders S 74 E 85 feet to a stake, the Southwest corner of Johnston lot; then with the lines of said lot N 2lA E 231 feet to a stake, a corner of Johnston lot; then N 20 W 136 feet to the Beginning, and being the same property described in i deed from Maude Blaine et at U W. S. Bearden dated 27 September 1934, and recorded in Deed Boole W-4 page 560, Records of Macon County, North Carolina, and on which is now situated a gasoline and oil filling service station build ings and structures. This the 18th day of July, 1935. A B. SLAGLE, Sheriff of Macon County. j25-4tc-JHS-A15 NOTICE OF SALE North Carotin, Macon County. WHEREAS, power of sale wa vested in the undersigned Trustee hy Deed of Trust executed by C W. RUSSELL and wife, SINDA RUSSELL dated September 18 1931, and registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Ma con County, in Record of Mortgages and and Deeds of Trust, Not 31 page 501; and default having been made in the payment of the in debtedness secured thereby: Twill, therefore, by virtue of the power of sale in said deed of trust in me vested, on Tuesday, the 2l)th day of August, 1935, at 12:00 noon sell at the Courthouse door m Franklin, N. C, at public auctiou to the highest bidder for cash the following described property: Situated in Cowee Township, Ma con County, State of North Caro lina and described as follows : First Tract: Lying where the Morrison School house stood, Be ginning on a Spanish oak; thence West 17 rods; thence South 7 rods; more or less; then East with Raby's line 17 rods; then North 7 rods more Or less to the Spanish oak at the Beginning, containing 3f acre. Second Tract: All the lands de scribed in a deed from R. F. Rog ers and Hattie Rogers to C. W. Russell dated February 21, 1927, and recorded in Book U-4, page 94, Records of Macon County. This the 20th day of July, 1935. H. R. CABE, Trustee. J25-4tp-A15 ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of Sam Cunningham, deceased, late of Macon County, N. G, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 8th day of July, 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This 8th day of July, 1935. ROY R. CUNNINGHAM, Administrator. Jll 6tc A15 EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as executor of John L. Cabe, deceased, late of Macon County, N. G, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 11th day of July, 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This 11th day of July, 1935. MELL CABE, Executor. Jll 6tp A15 EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as executor of W. A. Cunningham, deceased, late of Macon County, N. G, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 18th day of July, 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement This 18th day of July, 1935., J. W. Cunningham, Executor. J186tp-A22 NOTICE FOR PAROLE Notice is hereby given that an application will be made to the Governor of North Carolina for a parole for Ray Miller. Any one desiring to protest will do so at once. MRS. H. B. MILLER, Mother. J25-2tp Al
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 1, 1935, edition 1
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