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PAGE TWO THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND THE HIGHLANDS MACONIAN LEGAL ADVERTISING NOTJCE OF FORECLOSURE SALE OF LAND. North Carolina, ..iacon Co»nly. 'i :ie l'eder;il Land i5iinkof Columbia, Plaintiff, Against C. G. Gunter, Uolly Woodall, W. E. LEGAL ADVERTISING Mosley, VV. C. Arvty, Geo. U. i’atton, , Trustee, The Bank of Franklin, J. 1^26—6 p—J H. F. McDowell, Robert L. Smart and FU/y Smart, Defendants. Pursuant to a judgment entered in the above entitled civil action on the 23rd day of December, 1935, in the Superior Court of said Coun ty by the Clerk, I will, on the 27th day of January, 1936, at 12 o’clock, noon, at the County Courthouse door in said County, sell at public auction to the highest bidder there for, the following described lands, situated in said County and State, in Smith’s Bridge Township, com prising 135 acres, more or less, and bounded and described as follows: All that certain lot, tract or parcel ■')f land containing 135 acres, more or le:,b, located, lying and being ia Smith's Bridge Township, County of Macon, State of North Carolina, being btninded on the North by the lands of J. E. Cabe and the United States (ioveninunt; on tin Fast by the lands of the United States Gj\ernBu nt; on the South by the lands of A. J. Dills and on the West by the lands of the l.’nit- ffl States Government and George Dryinan and having such shapes, metes, courses and distances as will more fully appear by reference io a plat thereof made by W. N. Sloan, Engineer, December, 1921, which plat is on file with the Federal Land Bank of Columbia. The terms of the sale are as follows: One-third cash of the ac cepted bid to be paid into Court in cash, and the balance on credit, payable in three (3) equal annual installments, with intsrest thereon from date of sale at the rate .. six (6%) per centum per annum All bids will be received subjcct to rejection or confirmation by the Clerk of said Superior Court, and no bid will be accepted or re ported unless its maker shall deposit with said Clerk at the close, of the bidding the sum o ONE HUNDRED ($100,00) DOL- EARS, as a forfeit and guaranty of orympliance with his- bid, the same to be credited on his bid when accepted. Notice is now given that said lands will be resold at the same placc and upon the same terms at 2 o’clock, P. M. of the same day unless said (keposit is sooner made. Every deposit .not forfeited or accepted will be promptly returned to the maker. This 27th (lav of December, 1935. GILMER A. JONES, Commissioner. J2—4tcJ&J-J23 against the estate of said deceased t(, exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 24th day of De cember, 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This 24th day oi December, 1935. GLENN RAY, Administrator. LEGAL ADVERTISING ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of W. T. Potts, deceased, late of Macon County, N. C., this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 2nd day of Dec., 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate 'settlement. 'I’his 2nd day of Dec., 1935. F. H. POTTS, Administrator. D5-6tp-J9 NOTICE OF PUBLICATION North Carolina, Maooh County. In the Superior Court. The Federal Land Bank of Colum bia, vs J. R. Franklin and ITarve Cabe, Adms. of the Estate of C. L. In gram, deceased, et al. The defendants, John Perry In gram, Edith Ingram, Clara Ingram Fuller, William Fuller, W. R.‘ In- gram, Harriette .Ingram, Margaret Ingram Tomlin, Garland Tomlin, Lenwood Ingram Dixon, Sanford Dixon, C.harles Ingram, Tom Payne, Perry Jones Chevrolet Co., will take notice tiiat an action as above e.ntitled has been commenced in the Superior Court of Macon Connty, North Carolina, to the end thst the plaintiff may foreclose a mortgage covering lands in which the above named defendants kave an interest, and the above named defendants will further take notice that he is required to appear with- m thirty days in the Office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Macon County, North Carolina, and answer or demur to the Complaint m said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said complaint igjh's the 12th day of December, h,\rley r. c.abe, Clerk Superior Court, Carolina. D19—4tc—J&J—J9 ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE NOTICE OF ACTION BY PUB LICATION OF SUMMONS: In the District Court of the United States of America for th* Western District of North Carolina Asheville Division at Iaw’ No....323 United States of America v. 2,149.80 acres of land in Swain and Macon Coun ties, North Carolina, B. B. Lenoir Estate, et al.—TO; Mattie Camp bell and husband; spouse of Na- wasi Conley; wife of W. B. Lenoir; F.d. Roper; spouse of Ollie Am mons; A. M. Frye; spouse of AT. H. Lindsey; wife of Alexander Truitt; E. M. Truitt and spouse; Hester Truitt and husband; Callie Welch and husband; J. E. Cabe, trustee; Ca'^olina Provision Co; R. -M. Ledford, trustee; Rosetta Mc Clure ; W. E. Sanders and wife; I'red Shope; W. R. Conhran and wife; J. E. Hurst and wife; J. A. I’arrish and wife; J. B. Ramsey and wife; I'rank Frye and wife; Martha Truitt and husband; Myra L. Burdett* and hu.sband; Bessie Lenoir; Ci. R. Bradley and wife; Minnie McClure; W. M. Ritter Lumber Company; H. W. Bateman; Creditors of Estate of J. I.. Con ley; Creditors of Estate of B. B. Lenoir, Jr; Fannie Corpening and husband; J. A, Corpening and wife; J. W. Forester; Creditors Est. M. V. Lenoir; Mrs. Joe Conley; Jay Gibson and spouse; James Patton and wife; C. S. Slagle and wife lames DeHart; A. M. Grant and wife, Lucinda; wife of R. P. Lind sey; Dollie Truitt and spouse; Etta Truitt and husband; Malissa Truitt and husband ; Colonel Anderson and wife; John L. Cabe; B. H. Carpen ter; M. L. McClure and wife; Tom McDonald; R. M. Shook; J. C. Shope and wife; R. J. Constant, Admx. G. T. Parrish and wife; J. M. Raby and wife; W. A. Ramsey and wife; Tiney Lindsey and spouse; Ed. Stiles; Ben B. Lenoir and wife; Bessie C. Lenoir; B. M. .McClure and wife; Jane Oliver and husband; W. D. Almazor; B. V. Conley; Laura J. Constant, Admx. Orrie Corpening and husband; F. A. Corpening; Flora Corpening and husband; Thee Corpening and sjiouse; unknown creditors, Est, H. R, Lenoir; Florence Siler; ^fary L, Tiplon and husband; J. H, Ev erett and wife; C, E. Graham; Wm. C. Grant; W. A. Haskins; A. S, Horsley and Co,; Alice L, Rob inson ; Charles Robinson; Kate Robinson; Annie E. Thompson and husband; James W. Truitt; Alur- I p_hy Truitt; James W, Wilson; P, E, Collins; R. A, Collins and wife; J, G. Jolly and wife; Esty E, Thom as and wife; W, J, Lakey; Martha (r. Ramsey; Mechanics National Bank; J, Z, Wright; John Johns ton; H, R, Lenoir; Alammie Slagle Patton; Mary C. Siler; C. W. Sla gle; F. H. Busbee; Frank Cox; .'\nie Miller; Theo W. Poole; A, E, Hodgins; A. L, McClure; W. C. McClure; William J. McClure; A. B. Andrews; Theodore Pool; E. G. Gates, Trustee; H. J. Truitt; Eliza C. Grant; W. M. Grant and wife; R. AL Holden; W. Morris; Annie .May Robinson; Julius Siler Robin son; Alary Swain Robinson; Ada Truitt; John Truitt; Alyra Truitt; A. N. Collins and wife; Pheby E. Collins and husband; E. N. Forester And wife; Parthey Parker and hus band; E. Tomlinson Gill; W, Har- ry Alattson; P. H. Busbee and wife; John Wright; J. L, Conley; B. B. Lenoir, Sr.; Mrs. M V Le noir; James W. Siler; William T. Siler; A. B, Andrews; P. H. Bus- E. Everett and wife; Elvira Miller; J. L. Robinson; L. C Hol brooks; E. R. McClure; W. H. Mc Clure; John Ramsey; Franklin Loxe; and all persons whosoever who have, or claim to own any estates_ or interests in the fee or otherwise in and to the premises described in the petition filed in this cause and described in this notice, and any and all heirs and devisees of the several parties above named, whose names and ad- every of them; and all unknown owners, lienors, or claimants, hav ing, or claiming to have any right, title, estate, equity, interest or hen; and all occupants; lessees; us«s, holders and owners of and claim ants to any rights or easement or prescription i,n, over, across, or through, said lands, or any part thereof; You will please take no tice : That an action entitled as above has been commenced in the District Court of the United States for the Western District of North Carolina, at Asheville, North Caro lina, that summons has been duly issued out of said Court, and pe tition filed therein asking for the condemnation of certain lands de scribed in the said petition and hereinafter described; that you, and each of you, are necessary and proper parties to the just and final disposition of this action, lhat said action has been instituted by the United States Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina, on behalf of the Usited States, for the condemnation of said lands de scribed in the petition in said pro ceeding, said lands to be appropri ated, condemned and taken, pur suant to the provisions of the Act of Congress of August 1, 1888, (25 Stat, 357, 40 U, S, C. A., 257, 258 and 258-a); That the lands propos ed to be condemned and appropriat ed by the plaintiff United States are described substantially as fol lows: B. B. Lenoir Estate Tract. All that tract of land containing according to survey 1868 acres, and designated by the Forest Service as Tract 1013, situate,, lying and being in Macon County, North Carolina, on the waters of McGaha Creek, and being entirely covered by Grants No. 30, 113, 114, 284, 317, 325, 696, 993, 995, 996,, 1004, 1853, 3004, 3065, 3067, 3617, 14196, 18364, 18541 and 994, adjoining the lands of the Joines Motor and Tractor Company, A. B. Slagle, and others, and being the same land fully de scribed in the petition filed herein, and included in an option to con vey to the United States dated January 15, ' 1935. Mrs, Hester Truitt Tracts. All that tract of land containing according to survey 99.40 acres, and designated by the United States Forestry Service as Tracts 177 and 177-a, situate, in Swain County, North Carolina, about one mile South of Wesser, North Carolina, on the waters of Silvermine Creek, adjoining the lands of R. P. Lindsey, United States National Forest and others, fully described in an option to con vey to the United States dated De cember 18, 1933, and set out in the petition filed herein. W. B. Park er Tract. All that tract of land containing according to survey 78.70 acres, being designated by the Unit ed States Forest Service as Tract No. 507, situate, lying and being in Macon County, North Carolina, in Smith Bridge Township, oa the waters of Coweeta Creek, and fully covered by Grants 1646, 1751, 3488, 15956 and 169-89, adjoining the lands of Ed Sanders, Fred Shope, United States National Forest and others, and fully described in an option to convey to the United States, un der date of November 26, 1934, and set out in the petition filed herein. Everett Cook Tract. All that tract Df land containing 45.00 acres ac cording to survey, designated as Tract No. 504, situate in Maco,n County, North Carolina, in Burn- ingtow'ii Township, on the waters of Tellioo Creek, and being entire ly covered by Grants No. 1814, lODAY and P p PARKbR BRIDaE SALARIES ability A great deal of publicity is being given these days to the salaries re ceived by the heads of big b.usines,s enterprises. To superficial thinkers it seems unfair that one man should receive for his service so much more than most men do. It depends, of course, on the value of the service rendered. If one man has the ability to manage the affairs of a great corporation sio well that it is able to keep thousands if work ers empTioyed and at the same time earn profits for the capital investied in the business, it wouldn’t seem un fair to me if he were paid, say at the rate of $1 a year for each em ployee. I know dozens of cases, though, where the executive head of a big organization gets nothing like that. One of my friends draws a s.alary of $100,000 a year—hut his company employs 300,000 persons all the year ’round. , The scarcest commodity in the world is administrative ability. Without it, no great enterprise could flourish, and the man who has it is w'orth whatever he costs. WORKERS who rise Few wage-earners work as hard as their bosses do. That is my con sidered belief, based on many years of experience and observation. I have seen so .many wage-earners rise through the ranks to high ex ecutive posts that I began, years ago, to' ask how they gained ad vancement. In every case the answer was to the general effect that they always did a little more than they were paid for, liked their jobs .and regard ed the company’s interests as their own. While most of them did not say so, it was always clear that these men who started life as manual workers had higher intelli gence and better control of their appetites than their fellow-workers. And they had ambition. There isn’t any other route by which men rise to high places in our industrial system, but thg route of hard work plus intelligence, plus ambition. And they don’t stay long in the high places- unless they also have the priceless element of character, WAGES the guage I talked not long ago with a friend, who heads a great nation wide oo'rporatio-n, about wages, “What we try to do is to put every dollar that it is possible' to put into every employee’s pay envelope,” he said, I knio'w that is true of most great business concerns, in spite of the belief whicn many workers have that the effort is always to pay them as little as possible. The man who is content to da as little as he has to, to get by is ■v„ THURSDAY, J»AN. 9, ijj ? comes of industrial concerns btJ tween Labor, management anj Capital. Roughly, it seems that oi of every dollar taken in for the ished product, 65 cents goes mt the pockets of Labor, about 20 ceni "■' is paid o.ut in taxes—Federal, Stat ''S and local—and out of the remainitij 15 cents raw materals have to b ^ paid for, interest on borrowed capj tal—bonds—has to be paid, managt ment compensated, and the stocl holders get the rest, if any. The average profits to stockhold ers run around 2 per cent on tlif ' volume of business done—in son businesses, less. Doubtless many inequites exist i our industral systems, but the notijl'' that Capital gets the lion’s share i:’ T! as J see it, a foolish belief based of.' ignorance of the facts. CAPITAL " the ,syst«tr When I hear people talk aba|-- the “Capitalistic System” as if ,',J were something to be abo'lished speedily as possible, I wonder wb they would do under any other sys tem. For nowhere in the civilize world, otitside of Russia, is ther anything but capitalistic system For instance, every farmer is capitalist. So is every storekeepeij every man who owns his own bail ber-sho’p, garage or any other kinj of “service” business. You are capitalist if you have a saving bank deposit or a life insuranc policy. Those two latter classe take in nearly half of all the peopl in the country. Where does the capital come froij to finance big entrprises ? Maiiil from you and me. Our money, paij into the savings banks and the lifj insurance companies-, makes a bij pool of money which goes into tlii bonds and shares of all sorts (| money-making (yiterprises. ? I shudder to think what wouli happen to all of us if the capitalis system were suddenly abolished. Helps Prevent Many Cold! Vicks Vatro-nol Nos* &Throot .jS Especially designed^ aid for nose and^ upper throat, wherej j^ most colds start, s- Regular Size Double Quantity 50^ Vicks Va tro nol of the United States National For est and others, and fully described in the petition filed in this cause. R. P. Lindsey Tract. All that tract of land containing 33.20 acres ac cording to survey, designated by the Forest Service as Tract No, 1442, situate, lying and being in Swam County, in District No. 12, upon the w'aters of Silvermine Creek and being entirely covered by Grants 182, 3659 and 8108, ad joining the lands of James Truitt, R, P. Lindsey, United States Na tional Forest and others, fully de scribed in the petition herein filed, and in the option to convey to the United States, datad September 19, 1934. J. N. Aloody Tract, All that tract o’f land containing according to survey 25,50 acres., designated by the U, S, National Forest Service as Tract No. 206, situate in Swain County, North Carolina, in Nanta- hala Township, located on the wa ters of Franklin Branch, and be- mg entirely covered by grants No, 189, and 8108, more particularly de scribed in the petition filed herein, and m the option to convey to the United States dated June 6, 1934, Vj.. each of you are hereby notified to be and appear at th( office ^ the Clerk of the Unit States District Court for the West- ern District of North Carolina, in the United States courthouse Biiild- ing at Asheville, Buncombe Coun- 7’ ""‘t later than ten (10) days from and after the completion of service of this sum mons by publication for four (4) Ofu; r ■ ■ .1. ’ I the one who grumbles about ' wages. But the National Indus-; trial Conference Board reported the ^ other day on 2,400 buisiness estab- i HavinR qualified as administrator ! are unknown, and all and of H. P. Ray, deceased, late of ■ their heirs, husbands, Afacon Munty, N. C, this is to sVr^toVs admini lishments, employing 4^ million workers, all of which offer their employees opportuntities to earn higher wages. Afore than half of them pay on the basis of work done —SO much for each item turned out. That makes it worth while for the worker to be industrious. A third of these companies have premiums and bonus payment systems ;• many are on a profit-sharing .basis. The bigger the concern, the more it is interested in putting as much into every worker’s pay-envelope,as possible. PROFITS ....... ^ I have been studying some sta- tistics; as accurate as any statistics can be—on the division of the in- Afford:%p>b.yed Service I Lv. Asheville 5:00 p. ml Ar. Washington 6:50 a. Ar. New York 12:01 p. mj Lv. Asheville 6:40 p. ml Ar Cincinnati 8:10 a. m ] Ar. Chicago 2:15 p. Round TripTiclcets 1 ^ On Sale Daily ^ LEGAL ADVERTISING assigns, of each and .'herein filed by7he alx)v; Soner in the office of the said Clerk and you are further notified that if you tail to appear and answer or de- niur to the said petition or com plaint within the time specified the petitioner wdl apply to the Court for the rehef demanded in said pe- V Honorable E. y. Webb, Judge of the District Court ^r the Western District of North Carolina, this the 5th day of December, 1935, and the year of our Independence the 160th—T Y Clerk; By: Q. L. Mc- ’t Deputy Clerk; Attest- X- Jordan, Clerk, By: Q. L. nio Deputy Clerk. D19—4tc—J9 2 Cents per Mile—15 Day Limit 2>/2 Cents pet Mile—6 Months Limlll Tickets honored In sleeping and ptilotl cars on payment oi proper charges iolj Space occupied ... no surcharge Oste Way Coach Faresi V/2C Per Mile AIR- COWPITIO WEP equipment Air*conditioned Pullman Carl and Southern Rail'vrajr Dlnl'nl Cars Stave been placed in servici • The air condition in each lowel berth, compartment and drawinS room is under control of the individi nal passenger. • Travel in Cool, Quiet, Delightful Comfort, free from Dust, Swok and Cinders • For fares, sleeping car reservations aW other travel tniortnation. call ot write R. H. DEBUTTS, A&st. General Passenger Agent Asheville, N. C. m y.i-rtidiwrfryMii
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 9, 1936, edition 1
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