Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / April 7, 1933, edition 1 / Page 4
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Home and ciub News By Miss Eugenia Patterson Schedule of meetings for next week: Monday, Scuppernong. Tuesday, Cherry. Wednesday, Albemarle. Thursday, Wenona. Friday, Roper girls. Curb market Saturday morning. All the club women are invited to Beaufort County Federation meeting Saturday afternoon, April 8, at Wash ington. Miss Isabel Busbee and probably Miss Mary Rokahr will be there as speakers. Miss Rokahr is the national home management specialist, and is a na tionally known speaker. She will be the speaker at the Washington Coun ty Federation Friday afternoon, April 7th, Miss Busbee is a landscape special ist and will speak on home beautifica tion. -® Witout an interruption, Thomas Bird's descendants have been contin uously occupying the house he built in Boston, Mass.. 298 years ago. NORTH CAROLINA. WASHINGTON COUNTY. , , . The underpinned c - ' W .-hmgton County will expose at public sale at the courthouse d ,r or Washington County at 12 o'clock, noon, on Mnday. the 1st day or May. 1933, tor delinquent special drainage assessment, 1929, o» the ISt QdV Oi .VLd>. » ’Jv'i »' • “'■‘•"'i. ‘ r- . , - , , Washington Countv Drainage District No. 4. the land or the taxpayers here inafter named in Washington County Drainage Datrtct N" . 4- tiK' ,ot 'u,n-’n bers having reference to the subdivision ot said Drainage District map in Torren Book 1, page 2a: Board of Education. Lot No IN. 2 acres Ottie Kaiser, Lot No. 7X. 80 acres Ottie Kaiser, Lot No. 8N, 124 acres Ottie Kaiser. Lot No. 9N, 83 acres Ottie Kaiser, Lot No. ION. 80 acres O. W. Williams, Lot No. 16N, 20 acres N. B. Williams. Lot No. 16N. 20 acres N. Rosenthal, Lot No. 16X. 40 acres p \V. Brinklev. Trustee for Bank. Lot No. 19N, 80 acres P. W. Brinklev. Trustee for Bank. Lot No. 20N. 80 acres H. T. Dillon. Lot No. 21N, 80 acre? . H. T. Dillon, Lot No. 22N, SO acres H. T. Dillon, Lot No. 25X. 80 acres . N. T. Harmon. Lot No. 26N. 80 acres . N. T. Harmon, Lot No. 27N, 80 acres Sarah Bracker, Lot No. 28N. 80 acres Chas. M. Brown, Lot No. 29N. 80 acres Chas. M. Brown, Lot No. 30X, 80 acres H. T. Dillon. Lot No. 31X. 80 acres N. T. Harmon, Lot No. 34N, 80 acres N. T. Harmon. Lot No. 35X, 80 acres N. T. Harmon, Lot No. 38X. 80 acres N. T. Harmon, Lot No. 39X, 80 acres A. R. Latham. Lot No. 40X. 80 acres Chas. X. Brown, Lot No. 41X, 80 acre^ G. P. Sawyer, Lot No. 44N. 40 acres C. N. Brown, Lot No. 2S, So acres. C. N. Brown, Lot No. 3S, 80 acres L. D. Barr, Lot No. 4S, 20 acres \V. J. Vaughn, Lot No. 4S. 20 acres Lonnie Dunbar. Lot No. 5S, 33 acres O. W. Williams. Lot No. 6S. 30 acres John L. Hodges. Lot No. 8S, 34.1 acres j. D. and Collie Kinard. Lot No. 8S. 52.9 acre John D. Kinard. Lot No. 9S. 39 acres John D. Kinard, Lot No. 9S, 40 acres . Staton Harris, Lot No. 10S, 40 acres J. F. Carter, Lot No. 10S, 40 acres, B. M. Holton, Lot No. 11S. 80 acres C. M. Manning and Cora Manning, Lot No. 12S, 80 acres Theo. H. Rosenthal, Lot No. 13S, 80 acres $ 0.63 25.17 39.02 26.12 25.17 6.30 6.30 12.59 37.76 37.76 37.76 . 37.76 37.76 . 37.76 37.76 37.76 37.76 37.76 37.76 . 37.76 37.76 37.76 37.76 37.76 ... 37.76 18.88 12.59 12 59 3.15 3.15 5.20 4.72 ...... 7.59 16.65 12.27 12.59 12.59 12.59 25.17 . 25.17 . 25.17 S. L. Carter and L. F. Allen. Lot No. 16S, 80 acres .37.76 August F. Lohman, Lot No. 18S, 80 acres August F. Lohman, Lot No. 19S, KO acres E. \V. Mattison. Lot No. 23S, 7.5 acres . W. E. Mattison, Lot No. 24S. 71 acres \Y. E. Mattison. Lot No. 25S, 80 acres N. T. Harmon, Lot No. 26S. 80 acres N. T. Harmon. Lot X". 27S, 80 acres Elizabeth O'Connor. Lot No. 30S. 80 acres John L. O'Connor. Lot No. 31S, 80 acres Albert Fredrick. Lot X> . 52S. 78 acres Albert Fredrick. Lot No. 33S, 19 acres J. L. O’Connor, Lot No. 44S, 44 acres J. L. O'Connor, Lot No. 45S. 80 acres J. L. O’Connor, Lot No. 46S, 80 acres J. L. O’Connor. Lot No. 47S, 80 acres The foregoing amounts bear interest from June 1. 1930. The said land will be sold subject to a special assessment of Washington County Drainage District No. 4. levied in 1925 for maintenance and repairs of canals. This the 30th day of March. 1932. a-< 4?J. K. REID, Sheriff, Washington County. 37.76 28.32 3.54 33.51 37.7(i 37.7o 37.76 37.76 37.76 36.81 8.97 16.05 37.76 37.76 37.76 SWIFT'S RED STEER FERTILIZER NOW DELIVERED TO YOUR FARM PRICES ON FERTILIZERS HAVE HIT BOTTOM Get Our New Prices BEFORE BUYING We Give You Rock Bottom Prices on Groceries—Why Not Fertilizers? Yellow Front Market CRESWELL CLASS ENJOYS DINNER --» Seniors There Entertained By Mesdames Respass and Woodley -• Creswell.—Sedate seniors of the Creswell High School exhibited their traditional punctiliousness at a dinner given in their honor at the Christian parsonage here with Mrs. Stewart Woodley and Mrs. Roy Respass as hostesses to the finishing students Wednesday evening. The guests were greeted at the door by Rev. Roy Respass who, in turn, presented the hostesses who showed the ladies into a boudoir while the men were invited into the study. Daughters of the hostesses, little Miss Mildred Davis Woodley and little Miss Mildred Earl Respass, were mas cots of the class this year and they were present. The French doors to the living room and the dining room- were open ed and the two rooms converted en suite. Most of the older guests who came to be with the seniors were seat ed in the dining room while the sen iors themslves were seated around ta bles specially arranged for them in the living room. The repast was served in four courses beginning with delicious punch followed by the special dinner which included pickles, cream potatoes, English peas, celery, fried chicken, hot rolls, butter and iced tea. Then came a salad course which included chopped apples, bananas, carrots, sprinkled with cocoanut cleverly arranged on lettuce. Dessert consisted of three kinds of cake with ice cream orna mented by cherries. The gaily gowned and lovely young ladies were seated about the tables with equally as sartorially clad young men as companions and during the en tire meal the guests participated in progressive conservation while over in one corner an artist crooned softly through a radio while an orchestra played modern dance music. , Mowers ot lietereogeneous colors I lined the walls and were cleverly plac j ed on the tables and elsewhere in ! profusion as the class colors were rainbow, each flower and all the shades blending appropriately. Favors were small baskets plhced at each plate with candy in the containers. The flowers and the general decora tions harmonized beautifully with the handsome bungalow parsonage. A-; raong the flowers were pasmin.es, cat tails, narcissus, roses and others. Seniors present included: Misses Nellie Hathaway, Rachel Stillman, Sarah Jane Liverman, Zylphann Oli ver, Esther Spruill, Virginia Hare, Mary Elizabeth Woodley, Minnie Mae Furlaugh, Dorothy Woodley and Bill Jordon, Stewart Phelps, Stanley Ains ley, Huton Chesson, Dockie Daven port. Special guests: C. H. Rabon, C. H. Aderholdt, Roy Litchfield, L. B. Farabee, Dr. W. H. Harrell, Mrs. Clyde Smithson, Mrs. A. S. Holmes, and Walter H. Paramore. The hostesses were assisted in serv ing by Miss Eugenia Patterson. The principal amusement was the theatre party given after the dinner when the guests in six cars, visited the Ply j mouth amousement house. Present also was the little son of Mrs. Smith son and also the little son of Dr. Har rell. These boys were seated with mascots at a small table. Negro Appeals from Fine Given Him in County Court -® An appeal was noted by .Wheeler Hjolley, local negro, who was fined $50 and costs in recorder’s court here Tuesday for assaulting his wife. If he fails to pay the fine unless the/'-su perior court .changes the sentence, the negro must serve six months on the roads. The testimony intimated in court that Holley was beating his wife on account of her relations with another man. This was denied by the wife. The warrant charged that he beat her on March 28. -<*■ Mrs. Harris Is Slightly Injured in Fall Here -® Mrs. Fletcher Harris sustained an i injured back Wednesday when she fell I through an open place in the floor at E. If. Liverman’s store while shop ping. The door had been left open by an employee who went to the cel lar to build a fire that heats the store. Medical attention w^as rendered by Dr. C. McGowan. It is not thought that Mrs. Harris’ injury will prove serious. r HINTS FOR HOMEMAKERS By Miss Johnnie Camp, Home Service Director Virginia Electric And Power Company V_J Ravioli—From Sunny Italy Ravioli is an Italian dish, but it has won the approval of many Ameri cans who like to be '‘different.” I have received frequent questions about the preparation of this hearty, savory concotion. A native Italian woman, now a resident of Macon, Ga., per mitted me to take down the follow ing recipe. There are four main stops in the making of this intricate dish: First she made the paste or '“pasta”, as Italians pronounce it; second, the filling, third, she combin ed the filling and the paste; fourth, she prepared the tomato sauce. The paste is made of: 5 cups of flour, 4 eggs 6 tablespoon- water 1 teaspoon salt Sift the fl ur onto a bread board, make a hole in the center and break the eggs into it. Add water and salt, and mix all together until the flour is absorbed and the paste is stiff enough to roll out. Roll paste 1-8 or 1-16 of an inch thick and let stand until it has dried out a little. While she waited, she prepared the filling—mix together: 1 pound lean, chopped cooked meat, 1 tablespoon grated Parmensan cheese, 1 egg, slightly beaten, Dash grated lemon peel 1 tablespoon butter. 1 cup or less, chopped cooked herbs salt and pepper to taste. Any kind of meat will do, although Italians are partial to pork and chic ken. Spinach may be used for the herb. She stuffed the paste in this man ner: Place the tilling by teaspoontuis on the sheet of paste in a row two inches from the edce and about two inches apart. Fold over the paste to cover the filling, cut across where the edge meets the remaining paste and then cut the strip into squares, with filling in center of each. Continue until all ingredients are used. Press the edges of the squares together so that the filling cannot fall out and then put in to boiling salted water, cook slowly until tender. Meanwhile .-lie prepared the tomato sauce, using 1-2 onion, -hopped 1 small st:• k celery, 1 small bunch parsley, 1 No. 2 can tomatoes, or 7 or 8 fresh ones, 4 tablespoons olive oil. Salt and pepper to taste. Cook all ingredients together slow ly for at least one-half hour or until as thick as cream. Strain, garnish with Parmensan cheese. If you haven’t a good recipe for real Italian spaghetti, try this one: 1-4 cup oil 1-2 teaspoon black pepper, 1 sliced onion, 3 tablespoons tomato paste, 1-2 cup water, 2 cups canned tomatoes, 1 bay leaf, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1-2 pound spaghetti, 1 o Parmensan cheese. Put the oil into a saucepan, add | the black pepper and heat two min- j utes. Add onion and cook until it I .is a delicate brown. Mix tomato j | paste with half cup water and add this to the oil, pepper and onions in three "installments,” allowing the mixture to boil up after each addition. Add tomatoes, bay leaf and salt and cook slowly for 45 minutes. Put in sugar and cook 15 minutes longer. Cook spaghetti in boiling salted water, drain and mix with tomato sauce. Serve on a platter and sprinkle with grated cheese. Six servings. Serve piping hot. EXECUTRIX’S NOTICE Having qualified as the executrix of the estate of J. O. Moore, deceased, late of Washington County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of ' the said deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before the 5th day of April, 1934, or this notice will be’ pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 5th day of April, 1933. MARGARET E. MOORE, a_7 4t Executrix. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ES TATE North Carolina, Countv of Washington. Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that cer tain deed of tru-t e xecuted by ( . 1 Get Our Prices BEFORE YOU MOVE YOUR PEANUTS Planters Nut & Chocolate Co. L. P. Hornthal, Jr. Cahoon and Lnrena Cahoon, his wife, to the Raleigh Savings Bank and Trust Company, trustee (the under signed trustee having succeeded to the rights and title of the name trustee, under chapter 207, Public Laws of 1031), which said deed of trust is dat ed July 1. 1925, and recorded in hook 89. page 43, of the Washington Coun ty registry, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured, and in the conditions therein secured, the undersigned trus tee will, on Monday. May 1. 1933, at j or about twelve o’clock noon, at the j courthouse door at Plymouth, X. C., ! offer for sale anti sell to the highest bidder, for cash, the following describ ed property: All those certain pieces, parcels, and tracts of land, situate, lying and be ing in Scuppernong and Skinnersville 1 Township, Washington County, and State of North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows: First tract: All that certain piece, ■ parcel, and tract of land adjoining the lands of Sallie L. Williams, ( C. ta hoon, J. C. Gatlin, and others, and bounded as follows, viz: Tract No. ! edev'en (11) conSaining 14.15 acres, tract no. thirty (30) containing 19.09 acres, tract no. twenty-nine (29) con taining 20.64 acres on plot of property formerly owned by John L. Phelps and known as the Lindsey Phelps farm, as surveyed and plotted by John B. Rcspass, C. E„ which said (dot or map is recorded in map book No. 72, page 364, of public registry of Wash ington County, reference to said map is hereby made tor a full description. Total acreage being 53.88 acres. And Second Tract: Also all those certain •racts of land in said county and state divided a- follows: being tracts num ber twenty-two (22). twenty-three (23), twenty-four (24), thirty-one (31), situated near the town of Creswell, North Carolina, in Scuppernong Town ship, on plat of property formerly owned by John L. Phelps and known a- the Lindsay Phelps farm, as sur veyed and plotted by John B. Res pass, C. E.. which said plot or map is recorded in Map Book 72. page 364, of Public Registry of Washington County, reference to said map is here by made for a more perfect descrip tion. Containing a total of 75.25 acres. Terms of sale: cash: and trustee will require deposit of 10 per cent of the amount of the bid as his evidence of ! good faith. I In? the JUth day ot March, I'Mj. NORTH CAROLINA BANK AND TRUST COMPANY. | a/ 4t Trustee. Successor to the Raleigh Savings Bank ami Trust Company, Trustee. J. L. Cockerham and Robert Wein stein, attorneys, Raleigh. N. C. NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to a decree of the Su perior court of Washington County signed and entered in an action en titled “The Town of Plymouth vs. J. H. Toodle and wife, Sarah Toodle,” appointing and directing the under signed commissioner to sell the land hereinafter described for the purposes set forth in said decree, the same bear ing date of March 18th, 1933, and duly docketed in said superior court, the undersigned commissioner will ex pose at public sale to the highest hider, for cash, on the 21st day of ! April, 1933, at the courthouse door of • Washington County at twelve o’clock noon the following described lot or 1 parcel of land: One house and lot situated and lo cated on north side of West Water Street, Plymouth, North Carolina, and adjoining the Jerry M. Walker estate on the west; Water Street on the south; property of E. R. Jackson on the east, and Roanoke River on the north; being the -arne property now occupied by .-aid J. H. Toodle. This the 18th day of March, 1933. E. L. OWENS, mr24 4t Commissioner. -# NOTICE OF SUMMONS Washington County. North Carolina, Washington Coun ty; In the Superior Court. Albemarle Drainage District (Beau for County Drainage District No. 5) C. W. Grandy, Rufus Kirn, Charles Webster, a Committee, and the Nor folk National Bank of Commerce and Trusts, Depositor of the Bonds Issued by Albemarle Drainage Dis trict, and E. R. Mixon, Treasurer of Albemarle Drainage District (Beaufort County Drainage District No. 5), vs. Norfolk Southern Land Company, Bankers Trust Company as Successor Trustee to Manhattan Trust Company, and Central Union Trust Company, as Successor Trus tee to Central Trust Company. Defendant-, Bankers Trust Com pany and Central Union Trust Com pany, are hereby notified that an ac tion entitled as above has this day been instituted in the Superior Court of Washington County and that said defendants are required to appear and answer or demur to the complaint which has been duly filed in this ac tion on or before May 1. 1933, and that upon their default to so appear and plead, plaintiffs will be entitled to judgment in accordance with the course and practice of this court. Said defendants are notified that this ac tion is instituted for the purpose of saving sold sections Nos. 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 60, 61, 62, 65, 64, 52, 53, 54, 55, 49, 37, 38, 39, 40, 36, 35, 34, 33, 17 and 18, as shown on the map of Norfolk Southern Land Company, re corded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Washington County, North Carolina, being Registered Estates Nos. 102, 133, 134, 135, 136, 129, 130, 131, 132, 121, 122, 123, 124, 118, 109. 110, 111, 112, 108. 107, 106, 105, and 104, certificates for which were is sued by the Register of Deeds of Wash ington County. Said tracts contain 12,727 acres, more or less; the said sale to be made for the purpose of pay ing delinquent drainage assessments due Albemarle Drainage District, which became due and payable in Sep tember, 1929, and all assessments ow ing to said district since said date, and to declare said assessments a lien on the proceeds of said sale; to bar said defendants of any right to re deem said lands from said sale or to participate in the proceeds thereof un til after all assessments now due it and which -may become due to said Albemarle Drainage District are paid. This the 1st day of April, 1933. C. V. W. AUSBON, a7 4tClerk Superior Court. NOW! Get Your Razor Absolutely Free With each full year or more subscriptions— either new or renewal—to the Roanoke Beacon, we will give one Durham-Duplex razor. The straight type safety razor set is in a handsome, flexible, pin-seal soft leather case. This offer applies to new subscriptions or re newals brought direct to the Beacon office. Get your razor before the supply is exhausted. No razor will be mailed but will be kept until some one calls for it for the subscriber. Remember — The Beacon is still accepting produce. Eggs are needed at the present. Any other useful item accepted at higher than mar ket price. Pay up today. Roanoke Beacon Did You Ever Stop To Think? That Advertising Speeds Up Success? Truthful advertising is nourishment that the people can eas ily digest, and will pay any business concern that uses it persist ently. Competition is keener today than it has been in years, and this makes it necessary for business concerns to pay more atten tion to the work that advertising does. Truthful, persistent, advertising compels attention and al ways creates favorable impressions. It aids sales with its con venience, economy, and effectiveness. Advertising is vital to the success of every business. Per sistent advertising indicates quality and value and creates con fidence in the minds of the buying public. Quality goods well advertised sell and keep on selling. Advertising builds business and, by increasing volume, cuts down overhead—nothing strange about that. It is being done everywhere. For high quality at sane prices, advertised goods are best.
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 7, 1933, edition 1
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