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PAGE TWO TODAY «•»> KPARKER BRID6E T»£ FRAWMLiM iWSS AJSD THE HIGHLANDS MACONIAN LEGAL ADVERTISING king human nature Edward VIII became King of Kngland on the death of hi^ father, George V, without even a mild pro test from those of his subjects who still believe that the throne belongs by right to the family of Stuart. Less than 200 years ago, in 1746, the last battle fought on British soil resulted in the defeat of the army led by Charles Edward Stuart the "Young Pretender,” grandson of King James 11, who had been de posed and banished in 1688. Until 1901, when the present King’s grandfather succeeded his mother Queen Victoria, there was a constant fear in England of another “Jacobite Rising” to put the House of Stuart back on the throne. I*'in- gerbowls were long banned at im portant public banquets, lest some secret adherent to the Stuart cause, in drinking the toast “To the King” should hold his wine glass over f fingerbowl and so drink to “The King over the water.” In later years the Jacobites have contented themselves with gather ing at the .statue of Charles I in Trafalgar Square on January 20 each year denoimcing the reigning monarch as a usurper. This year however, they postponed the de nunciation to March 27, so as not to annoy the mourners for Kin; George V. Some of my Canadian friends tell me that their Jacobite “Socicty of the White Rose,” has a jolly time at their annual dinners, denyjng the claim to the British throne of the monarch at whose call they wo '1 ' all go out and fight for the Empire Human nature is funny in most of its manifestations. WOMEN . bonu. Nobody knows exactly how many American women took an actual part in the World War but there were more than 14,500 of them regulary enlisted in the military and naval lervice of the United States, who are entitled to a bonus on the sarri'e basis as the men who served. They are mostly members of the Army Nurse Corps, enlisted nurses who served in the'Navy hospitals, and survivors of that interesting corps of young women who were given the rating of “Yeoman” in the Njivy, and went through the war in imiforms, doing clerical work in the Navy Dei)artment in Wash ington and at th'e various naval bases. Probably fully as many women did war service overseas in the volunteer organizations such as the Red Cross, Y. M, C. A., Salvation Army and the rest, and several times as many were engaged in war work on this side; but only the ones who were on Uncle Sam’s payroll are due for the bonus. Folks who have the idea that all women are pacifists, don’t remem ber the enthusiasm of the women of America the last time we went to war. WEALTH . . .need* watching When young John Jacob Astor III quit his $25 a week job with the steamship line of which his half-brother, Vincent Astor, is vice- president, a lot of people siwke sneeringly of the “idle rich,” jump ing to the conclusion that the young man was nothing but a “playboy” after all. But to me his explanation that the 48 hours of work every week took up so much of his time ..chest COLDS Florida’s Citrus Qoeea I ;- / ' V i * i 1 P A.S I '■ f I S i S , , ^ » ■* WINTER HAVEN, Fla Miss Beatrice Hyuck (above), of Lake Alfred, is now ruling Queen of the Florida Orange Festival for 193G. She wa4 choice of the judges over many entrie* from the Florida citrus belt. nate this dangerous glare entirely. The principle of “polarizing” light has long been known, but up to now it has required expensive ap paratus to reduce light beams to a single plane, and so as it were, take out the dazzle. I hope young Mr. Lands inven tion will do all that is claimed for 1 like to drive at night, but 1 it. as cars dread it more and more, multiply, speed increases and head lights get brighter. SPECTRUM YOLKS Concord, N. H.—Milady may now have egg yolks to match her break fast gown. Experts attending the ooTivention of New Hampshire ^ultry grow ers say they can provide blue yolk- ed eggs for the woman who eats her morning meal in blue dimity. Other colors specified are green and brown. 12-Year-Old Modiiec Peculiaritiei* of Camels The fact that the camel can’t be sheared lor pulled, isn’t the only pe culiar thing about him, Ther'c’s also the curious fact that the extremes of the desert temperature—intense heat by day and chill coolness at night—require that a camel must be kept cool by day and warm by night. And for reasons that the scientists can’t explain, camel’s hair retains that paradox of properties. PORT ARTHUR, Tex. . . . Mrs. Daniel Gonzale*, 12-ycar-«ld, tlainis th# Ttcord of being America’s yonncMt mother. On JasHary 81st, ■h* gar* birth to a buaky 7 boy. The father Uw b«y U M years old. Photo aboT* ia «i ' >'''r infant tom. that he couldn’t attend to his per sonal business affairs properly sounds quite reasonable. “In limes like these,” he said, “you have to watch things pretty closely.” He has had to learn young that it is easier to make money than to keep it. Heirtoo,ne of the largest fortunes in America, he has discovered that everybody is trying to take it away from him, and that he has to do his own watching, instead of leaving the guardianship of his property to hired men. I know a number of very w’ealthy men. Most of them work harder at the job of keeping their wealth from slipping away from them than the rest of us do in trying to makft a little more. housing for poor .T’ve been hearing a lot of talk about low-cost housing for the poor, but I haven’t seen anything tangi ble, so far, that convinces me that new houses can built with high- pricqd labor, at a cost that w’ill en able the lowest-paid workers to pay the necessary re,nt. They’ve done it in England by buying cheap farm land a long way from town, and paying building trade workers about one-third the wages they get in .-\merica. I’ve seen some of the Euro pean low-cost housing develop ments. They are all based on lan€ alucs far below ours, lower labor costs, and remission of all taxes kti lands and buildings for twenty i-ars or more. Even then, the very poor can’t afford to live in hem. It seems more reasonable to me o encourage the modernizing of 'Id houses for the use of the lowest f cars one meets on the road. A young Bosto,n scientist, Edw Land, has developed a new trans- .u me nnrtprc- j parent material for headlights and for Mrs Isaar^ *™stee windshields which is said to climi- third j>art, anJ Careful With Deooratian Japanese lacquer objects, which are ranked with the most perfect works of art ever made, are pro duced with infinite care, writes Daniel Simon, Virginia, Minnesota, in Collier’s Weekly. Often as many as 20 coats are applied, each be ing put on at sea to avoid dust, and months apart to allow for dry Book No. 32, page 26 et seq a default et sea of Macon County Records, ■having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and in the conditions therein con tained, and demand having been made on the undersigned by said party of the third p.art to sell th-e property therein described, I, the undersigned trustee, will therefore on Monday, March 2nd, 1936, at the courthouse door in the town of Franklin at or about 12;00 noon sell to the highest bidder for cash the following described real prop erty. Beginning at a stake on the southeast Ijank of Ellijay Creek, near a rock fence above W. H. Hig don’s mill, thence running south 14J4 degrees east thirty-seven (37) po'les to a stake; thence north 75^4 degrees east forty-two (42) poles to a stak'e; thence south 14 degrees east sixty-four (64) poles to a Spanish Oak; thence sO'Uth 39 de grees east twenty (20) pioles to a Spanish Oak; thence south 14 de grees east eighteen (18) poles to a White Oak; thence south 70 de grees west thirty-seven (37) poles to a Locust; thence south 35 de grees east thirty-four (34) poles to a Poplar; thence south 10 degrees east eighteen (18) poles to a Chest nut Oak; thence north 70 degrees east sixty-two (62) poles to a Chestnut; thence north 26 degrees east ninety-four (94) poles to a Spanish Oak on the top of the Trail Ridge; thence north 2 degrees east twenty-three (23) poles to a Spanish Oak; thence north 32 de grees west with the meanderings of said Ridge twenty-seven (27) poles to a Chuestun O.ak; thence noTth 86 degrees west eighteen (18) poles to a White Oak; thence north 56 • “ • lo * ing and polishing. Incidentally lac- , ' rrnpr ivmII ,lr,r ;t, ^r-,r o',t Tt degrees west ten (10) poles to a Spanish Oak; thence north 29 de- quer will not dry in dry air. It only attains its jnaximum hardness in the presence of moisture. “Vermilion” Des-ivation The color “vermilion” is derived from the Latin “vermilicus”—^trans lated "shining worm—or thirty-fold color.*' Because of its brilliance, vermilion has always been used to signify power. The ancient Romans used the hue to color the faces of their statutes of deites. LEGAL ADVERTISING NOTICE OF SALE Nporth Carolina, Maaan Coantj. WHEREAS, power of sale was vested in the undersigned Trustee by virtue of a de^d of trust made, executed and delivered by C. E. Crisp and wife, Bertha Crisp, to the undersigned Trustee on the 4th day of September, 1919, said deed of Trust being registered in the OfSce of Register of Deeds for Macon County in Record of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust No. 24, page 135, to secure the payment of certain indebtedness in said deed of trust set forth; and whereas, default has been made in the pay ment of said indebtedness, and the owner of the same has made de mand upon the undersigned Trus tee to exercise the power in him vested by said deed of trust; 1 will, therefore, by virtue of the power of sale by said deed of trust in me vested, o,n Monday, the 2nd day of March, 1936, at 12 o’clock, noon, at the Courthouse door in Franklin, North Carolina, Macon County, sell at public auc- tion to the highest bidder for cash' the following described property ■ First tract described in a deed from J L. Strain and wife, to Strain, dated February 1 18^, registered in Book FF, page 451, Register of Office, Macon County, North Carolina. Secoiid tract described in a deed rom J L. Strain and wife to Koyd Strain, dated January 26, W, registered m Book UU, pag^ S . Macon ^unty. North Carolina. To both of which deeds reference is hereby made for a more definite descrip- ^on of the calls of which is hereby deed ^ This 31st day of January, 1936 R- D. SISK, ’ ncome groups, and the building of F&-4tc—TS.T lew homes for the ones who can J«J—t-—27 if ford to live in them. r7T~ ——- -.lare .Kiiw No,* Sif " Every motorist knows that the Maoon Comity hief danger m night driving is the Under and by virtno f .t. dazzling glare from the headlights sale contain^in , f .f ('arc — ii._ — I . cQ iH a dccd of trust W. his - wife to Higdon" . JXl ‘J!' “"il««gned as trustee in Deed grees west fourteen (14) poles to a Red Oak; thence north 85 de grees west thirtv-three (33) poles to a Black Oak; thence north 84 degrees west twenty (20) poles to a Hickory; thence north 72 degrees west twelve (12) poles to a White Oak, thence south 18 devrees west eighteen (18) poles to a st^l^e, thence north 28 degrees west twenty-two (22) poles to a stake on the branch on which J. H. Higdon lives; thence with said branch forty-six (46) poles to a Maple at the mouth of said branch; thence north 40 degrees east seven (7) poles to a stake on the road leading to Ellijay Creek; thence with the southwest side of said road fifty-three (53) poles to a stake on the bank of Ellijay Creek; thence in a southwesterly direction with the meanderings of said Creek to the point of beginning. Contain ing one hundred (100) acres, more or less. From this tract is expected the tract of 25 acres, more or less, known as the home tract of J H Higdo-n, conveyed to him by deed from W L Higdon and wife on October 10, 1903, reference to which deed _ is_ given for more particular description. Terms of sale are cash and a de ntil U A amount of the bid will be required as evi dence of good faitR. This, January 29, 1936. T. B. HIGDON, F6—4tc—F27 Trustee. NOTICE~^r^^^^^^]^ sale. North Carolinia A^aoon Oounty Wade Arvey vs Franklin Recreational Association, Under and by virtue of an exe- to the undersigned Sheriff of Macon County, North of'^'t^"’ Court w faw County in the case of Wade Arvey vs. Franklin Recrea- wnal Association. Inc., directing Count; to‘"r' i^ounty to levy on and sell the property of the defendant, Frank! n Recreational Association, Inc.: ’r under and' by ‘ tue of said execution and to satisfy same, sell, on Monday the 2nd day of March, 1936, at’ the TOurt house door in the Town of Franklin, North Carolina, at 12 interest the terest of the defendant, Franklin J^ecreational Association, Inc in and to the following described tra t or parcel of land: fr^ described in a deed THRUSDAY, FEB, 13I LEGAL advertising County,, in Book U-4, of J Page 242, EXCEPTING there all the land described in a claim deed from the Towi Franklin to Gilmer A. Jones [ September 7, 1934, and rec( in the Office of the Regist( Deeds for Macon County, } Carolina, in Book W-4, of £ Page 513. This the 31st day of Jac 1936. A. B' SLAGLE, Sheriff Macon Couii North Carolina F6—4tc—BS—F27 ' I NOTICE The undersigned, will on « fore the 20th day of February apply to the Pardon Comni for parole for Roy Mason; one opposed to a parole for will file their protest with thei missioner of Paroles. i This the 4th day of Febij 1936. ' Roy Mason By: Christine MaJ F(^2tp—F13 ’ NOTICE Notice ' is hereby given an plication is being made to his cellency, the Governor of Carolina, for parole of Georj liott, now serving a term ol year on the roads. Dated this the 3rd day of ruary, 1936. Mrs. George Ellil F6—2tc—F13 ADMINISTRATRIX’ NOTlf Having qualified as adminsii of W. J. Zachary, deceased. I; Maoon county, N., C., this notify all persons having against the estate of said deti to exhibit them to the undersi on or before the 23rd day of nary, 1937, or this notice will in bar of their recovery. All p indebted to said estate will || make immediate settlement j 23rd day of January, 1936. MJ ZACHARY, Administratrix, t J23-6tp-F27 ■ ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTi Having qualified as adminisi of Leona L. Bryson, deceased of Macon county, N. C, this notify ,all persons having ( against the estate of said dec to exhibit them to the under; on or before the 7th day of ruary, 1937, or this notice w plead in bar of their recover; persons indebted to said estati please make immediate settle: This 7th day of February, 1! GEO. B. PATI Administi F13—6tc—TWP—M19 FOR HAIS3 AND SC41 JAPANESE I M«t in U. S. A. Scalp Di#«r«nt from or^iisory Holr To»l«s FEEL IT WORM AlAIID'sgf, Writ* for FRfE BtrOkl«t “T'o Trotli «i The Hulr.” Naion>t Oemeiiy Co., N«*J Itch Ointment] We offer a remedy, preparei pecially for this store, guarai to give satisfaction for the relii itch or scabies. Inoffensivt use. Quarter pound jar 75 c Perry’s Drug Store FRANKLIN, N. C. Watch Your ? Kiidneys Be Sure They Properly Cleanse the Blood YPUR kidneys are constantly ■ ing waste matter from the stream. But kidneys sometim** ^ the^ work—do not act as nah# tended—fail to remove impuritif poison the system when retain® Then you may suffer nagginS' ' .“dizziness, scanty or too fr» urination, getting up at night, pii' under the eyes; feel nervous, U 0‘e~all upset. Don't delay? Use Doan'f Doan's are especially for poorly tioning kidneys. They are mended by grateful users the c® over. Get them from any driigS
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 13, 1936, edition 1
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