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PAGE TWO LEGAL ADVERTISING NOTICE OF PUtSLICATlON North Carolina, Macon County. IN' THK SLPKklOR COURT 'J'HK I KDKKAL LANlJ BANK OF C.'OLLMBIA, I'laintiff, against J, D. Stiles and Ella Stiles, Frank 1. Murray, T. VV. Stiles, K. A. \'an- hook, Annie Vanhook, Admix, of the Estate of K. A. Vanhook, de ceased, Jim Gray, Harve Cal>e and Jerry Franklin, Adms. of the Estate iii C. I. Ingram, deceased, Claude Stiles and wife, Khoda Stiles, Defendants. The defendants, Claude Stiks and wife, Khoda Stiles will take notice that an action as above entitled has been commenced in the Superior (!ourt of Macon County, North Carolina, to the end that the plain tiff may foreclose a mortKage cov- frinK lands in which the abjve named defendants have an interest, and the above named defendants will furth’Cr take notice that they are required to appear -within thirty days in the Office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Macon County, North Carolina, and answer or demur to the Complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief de manded in said (Complaint. 'I'liis 18th day of March, 193^>. HAKI.KY K. CABE, Clerk (,f Superior Court, Macon County, North ^Carolina. .\12f)—4tc—J&J—A16 today «»> the franklin press and the HICHLANDi MACONIAN Sf™ Pi-ANT NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, Macon County. WHEKF'AS, power of sale was \ested in the undersigned Trustee by virtue of a Deed r/f Trust made, executed and delivered bv J. M. Da ves, to the undersigned 'I'rustce on the 31st day of De- rember, 1928, said Deed of Trust being registered in the Office of Register of Deeds for Macon County in Record of Mortages and Deeds of Trus; No. 31, page 156, to secure the payment of certain in debtedness in said Deed of Trust set forth ; and whereas, default has been made in the payment of said indebtedness, and the owner of the same has made demand upon the undersigned Trustee to exercise the power in him vested by said Deed of Trust; I will, ther'fore, by virtue of the IMDwer of sale by said Deed of Trust in me vt*«ted, on Friday, the 17th day of April, 1936, at 12 o'clock. Noon, at the Courthouse door in F'ranklin, Jkfacon County, North C-'irolina, sell at public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash the following described property: Adjoining, J. L. Cabe place oii N., I.uther tract on E., Mitch Rrown on the S. and Jim Daves home l>lace on W., containing 160 acres, more or less, known as the Deal Tract. This 16th day of March, 1936. R. D. SISK, Xf26—4tr-J&J-A16 Trustee. w PARKER grOOBRID6E NOTICE OF SALE I5y virtue of jKJwer of sale con tained in a deed of trust from Jess Thompson and wife, Ethel Thontp- -son, to the undersigned trustee, dated the 12th day of July, 1932, and recorded in IJook No. 33, Page 59, office of Register of Deeds, .Macon County, and securing the Mun of $174.00 to Joines Motor and 1 ractor Company, Inc., which note and deed of trust has been trans ferred to Fferman Dean and said note being past due and on the demand of the owner of said note, I will on the 27th day of April, 1936, at 12 o’clock M. at the courthouse door in the Town of hranklin and Comity of ^lacon, sell to the highest 'bidder for cash the following described tract of land lying and being in Millshoal Township, Macon County, North Carolina, and mor> particularly de- >cribed as follows : Being all that tract or parcel of land conveyed by E. R. Nichols and wife Annie B. Nichols to Jesse Thompson by a deed dated No vember 21, 1927, and recorded in Book 0-4, -page 328, Office of Register of I>eeds, for ^[acon County, North Carolina, to which deed as so recorded reference is hereby made and had for a more definate description of the lands to be sold. This the 25th day of March, 1936. R. D. SISK, Trustee. A2-^tc-RDS—A23 INVENTION . . . American 1 went out to Dearborn last month and, among other things, took a quick glimpse at the .i^reat museum of American inventions which Mr. F'ord has assembled in (i/eenfield Village. It is a liberal education in Americanism to study the development of industrial prog ress from the |)rimitive tools of the first settlers, step iby step to the marvelous'machines of today which can do everything but think. It is hard to name an invention of imjKjrtance which did not either originate in America or get its first practical use in this country. Nowhere has the truth been better demonstrated of the old proverb: “Necessity is the mother of inven tion." The poineers of America had to be inventi\e. Starting out with not nuich more than their ban- hands, they had to improvise means of coniuering the new world. I think we have done a pretty g(y/d job of it so far, but invention has not st')pped yet. PIONEERS their problem The two American inxenlions which 'enabled our forefathers to conquer the wilderness were the curved axe helve and the long- barrelled Kentucky rifle. The pioneers had to clear and S’ettle a forest country filled with lurking savages and dangerous wild beasts. The straight-shf)oting Kentucky rifle [irotected them against the dark terrors of the for est, while the free-swinging axe helve -cnahled them to develop a a new' and more effective technique for clearing the land for their farms and building their log houses. For the first 250 years, .America was handicapped by a shortage of labor. We had to invent machines because there wasn’t enough man [lower. And, in s[>ite of all of the present unemployment, men engag ed in big manufacturing industries tell me there is still a shortage of geiminely E.killed labor. MACHINES .... operators The greatest contribution Amer ica has made to the world it Stone Girl” Happy _ M3 'if'' ^ ^ if ROCHESTER, Minn. . . . Miss Nona Cloyes (above), stone girl ” has been assured she will completely recover within a year from sclerodermanj an illness oi riffidity skin. eroderman, an and hardening of the ■hat tioii i.-i far from 'being twice w it was in 1900. CHEMURGY tie-up ■'Cheniurgy” is the name for the new line along which industry is dex eloping. It means the application ot chemical jirocesses to raw ma terials U) con\ert them into usable commodities. Jioth industrial anl agricultural researchers hold out great hopes that through cliemurgy farm product> may make a larger market by their conversion to in dustrial uses. In the Ford factory at Dearborn J saw one important ajiplication of chemurgy. Many parts of the l-'ord car, including some o'f the interior fittings, are made of a compound derived from soy .beans >by chemical processes. Soy bean oil is an essential part of the lacqiUT with whick the cars are painted. We are going to hear much more of chemurgy. F^very for\>t’ard-looking jicrson realizes that the ultimate solution of the problems of our economic life lies in a closer tie-up between agriculture and industry^ Chemurgy holds promise of going a long way toward solving that problem. THIS WEEK Courtesy Farmers Federation News len: uraiui ncipius frame only, N, Y. Wonder Curly or smooth seems to me, is our ingenuity in building brains into machines. I never go through a modern manu facturing plant without seeing some new machine which minimizes the need of intelligence on the ]>arf of the man who operates it. The engi neers who designed and - the tool makers who build it put their brains and skill into the mac\*iine itself, so that the most unintelligent labor er can run it. One of the most complicated de vices that we had to turn out dur- « ing the war was tlie recoil median- g ism for the hrench 155-milIimeter howitzers. The pro.blem of making them was put u]> to a big Detroit automobile factory. It took three months tu design and build 'the automatic machines to do the job. I went through the factory m 1918 and found every one of these auto matic inachines being tended by a chunky 1 olish girl in a smock. It took no muscle, it took no skill or training, to ])roduce. by aid of the machine which could almost think, an apparatus in which every part had to be accurate to a thousandth of an inch. UNEMPLOYMENT . . answer I think the ultimate answer to, the problem of unemployment will be a tremendous increase in the number and \ariety of so-called labor saving” machines. Only iby providing that sort of machinery can most of the tmemployed be em ployed, profitably to industry and to themselves. The machine makes it possible to pay -wages which the unaided, un skilled worker could never earn. One of our great American dis- cmenes has been that the more machines are set to w’ork making useful goods, the greater the de mand for the goods, because they can be .sold cheaper, and .so the de mand for more machines and work ers to tend the machines increases With all the talk about the great army of unemployed there are twice as many people at work t/-,day in the United States as there were thirty years ago. Yet our popula- Coluni'bus, Ohio,—The groundhog was crpdited A^ith saving the lives of innumerable rabbits during the sub-zero period that took a heavy toll of Ohio game this winter Law rence Wooddell, Ohio conservation commissioner, said rabbits found a snug haven in groundhog burrows while thousands of birds and other wild life perished in open fields. Flowers SWEET PEAS—Spencer Mixed. Garden BEETS—Early Blood Turnip, "c°?BBaTe" - Set frost-proof g"f.ton^WakSielI Early^lat Dutch. CULll’LOWER: Snowball. CARROTS: Chantenay, Danvers, KALF3—Scotch, or Siberian. LETTUCE—Seed in cold frame or garden: Grand Rapids (curled). In cold frar-- ^ Wonder ful. Iceburg, MUSTARD: leafed. . ^ v P£AS—Smooth varieties: First & Best, Alaska, Early Bird, Wrinkle varieties: Tall & Dwarf Telephone, Thomas Laxton, Laxtonia, Gradus. ONIONS: —“potato onion” sets Danvers, Silver Skin. POTATOES —Irish Cobbler, Spaulding Rose, (ireen Mountain. RADISHES — Cal. Afammoth, Icycle, Saxon. SPINACH — Bloomsdale, for spring and early summer. TOAIATO: Seed in cold frame; Bonnie B'est, June Pink, Chalk’s Jewel. TURNIPS: White Egg, Early Mild. Field Seeding CLOVERS—Red, Sapling, Alsike, White Dutch. GRASSES—Kentucky Blue, Red Top, Orchard, Rye Grass,, Lawn and Pasture Mixtures. Fescue. T.ESPEDEZA—Korean, Common, Kobe, Tennessee 76. OTHER CROPS: Oats-Ful- ghum; White Spring, Rust Proof, and Burt. Rape: Spade or plow i,n all manure available on rest of garden. Lime garden if p.o'ssible, but leave lime and manure off potato land. Finish all fruit tree pruning and dormant scale spraying (spray oil, lime sulfur with arsenate of lead or nicotine sulphate, according to rrTaker’s directions). THURSDAY, LEGAL ADV£p-.,»i REPORT OF THE HlGHLANmj HIGHLANDS, NORtJ LINA, TO THE COlWl OF BANKS AT THpV„ BUSINESS ON THf> Of iMARcS'j assets ^ Loans and discounts Real estate owned oft.’ than banking house Cash in vault, exchatiJ cash items, and baul with other banks a Other assets " j! "t. Total Assets ..,, LIABILITIES^ Benjamin Franklin invented bi focal lensed glasses so that he might see his food, he explained, and also the ladies across the table. Deposits of individiii, partnerships or corpo, . tions payable on or within 30 days I Other liabilities, Cashi# checks' ^ Capital account: ^ (e) Common stock, shares, par ’ji per share .. (f) Surplus operaiir* deficit Net capital stock Total, includin,g capij account 4 F. H. POT'K'Ei J. R. phillipsI F. A. EDW.^LRD>r State of Niorth Carolina,^ County a£ Macon . F. H. Potts., Cashier, jr lips. Director, and F, ,\| Director of the Higjifcr each personally appeared! this day, and, being di2 each for himself, says J foregoing- report is truci*. of his knowledge and fef Sworn to and sukscril me this the 4th day of FRANK BI Noii^ My commission expireij 1936. > FRANKLIN SHOE SHlf WE ARE STILL SHOES When you see To make the Ml! We’ll save you pat- And a Doctor bS: FRANKLIN SHOE if Opposite Courthoii^ We Buy and Sil, Box 212 Trojij C wiiTGulf is the Gas for April m6e*:y gasolloe especially refinedfoTE.®
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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April 9, 1936, edition 1
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