FRIDAY, FEB. 18, ltl» THE BREVAW NEWS, BREVARD, N. C.. when they saw men in khaki coming •cross thi sea in the spirit of crusad ers. mnd they found that these were sinmge men, reckless of danger not (Mily, hut reckless because they seem ed to see something, that made that danger worth while. Men have te» tlfled to me in Europe that our men were possessed by something that they eoiild only <^ill a religious fer vor. They were not like any of the other soldiers. They had a vision, they had a dream, and, fighting in the dr^m .they turned the whole tide of battle and it never came back. Tribute of a Humorist. One of our American Humorists meeting the criticism that American soldiers were not trained long enough, said: “It takes only half as lon^ to train «n American soldier as any other, be cause you only have to train him one ■way. and he did only go one way. and lie nover came back until he could do It when ho pleased.” And now do you realize that this confidence, we have established tliroughoi’t the world imposes a bur den upoTi us—if you choose to call it a fcuril'^n. It is one of those bur dens wlUch any nation onsht to be proud to onrry. Any man who resists the present tides that run in the world will find himf?elf thrown upon a '•.hore po high and barren that it •will seem as if he had been separated from his humnn kind forever. T!io Furope that I left the other dav' wn"- full of somethin? that it had Tievpv fr>U fill its heart so full before. It wn=! fiiM of linpr>. The Kurcpe of th vonr of tlir* w'lr. the Eu rope of t'lo voir of the war, was sirkinrc n rcrt of stubborn dosper- aticn. They did not see any great thin.a: t.) he nf-hievrd even when the war should he won. They hoped there wrnM he some salv.Tse: they hoped th’t they e'‘uld elenr their tor- ritories of invading armies; they hrr>ed th'^y’enii’d set up tlieir h'lme': rjnd stnrt induptries afresh. P.ut th-'v tliruw’it if vv’onld pinipl:' he the rjr.ption rf the old' life that Eu- n»pe had—fn fpiir. led in i:rxi"tv. led in cr.irtant fuspicious watchful T :iovrr droanie:! that il would be ;• Fnrope of i^cLtlod rcace and of jiJTti']''.! hrpe. All Pocplcs Buoyed Up. And now tliese ideals l ave urcT.Tlit this new :n;''^ic. t’lat all f.ie people of Europe are buoyed up and conf: dent in the spirit of l;op“. heeau'c they believe tliat we are at the eA'e of a new a,:^e in the world when na tions v/ill undrstand .one iinotlior. W’hcn nations will support one anct’i- «r in every just cause, when nation? will ur.ito every moral and every phy- atrci’f^th to see that the right jall prevail. fi Am r:ca vrere at this .lunctnre to fill the world, what would (;onie of ’!;? I do not mean any disrespect to any other great people when I say *;hat America is the hope of the world, and if she does not ju'^tify th.at hope the results r.r? unthin]: ;hle. Men %vill be thr>'wn b:uk upon the liitterness of dis:ipi):)iatnient no4 only, but thr’ bitterness of dertpnir. All will 1)5^ set up a.'? hostile camp.s the men at the peace confcrenr ; v,’!;’ 2:0 home with their heads up.-^u Ihr r breasts, knowir.fj th"t they have fi i od—for they were hidden not to co.ii!' home from there until they did so:ne- thinj? more than sign a treaty ci peace. Suppose Arve si^n the treaty of peace and thut it is the most satisfactory treaty of peace that the confusing: ele ments of tho modem world will af- f land, immature, inexperienced, as yet UHorganized, and leave her. with a circle of'armies around her? Do you believe in the aspiration of tlie Czecho-Stovaks and the JUgo-Slavs as I do? Do you toow how many pow ers would be quick to pounce upon them if there were not the guarantees of the world behind their liberty? Have you thought of the suffering of Armenia? You poured out your money to help succor the Armenians after they suffered; now set your strength so that they shall never suf fer again. The arrangements of the present peace cannot stand a generation un less they are guaranteed by the unit ed forces of the civilized world. And if we do not guarantee them, cannot you see the picture? Your hearts have instructed you where the bur den of this war fell. It did not fall upon the national treasuries, it did not fall upon the instruments of ad ministration. it did not fall upon the resources of t!|e nations. It fell upon the victims’ homes everywhere, where women were toiling in hope that their men w^ould come back. No Doubt of Verdict? When I think of the homes upon which dull despair would settle where this great hope is disappointed, I should wish for my part never to have had America play any part w'hatever in this attempt to emancipate the world. But I talk as if there were any questions. I have no more doubt of the verdict of America in this mat ter than I have of the blood that is in me. And so. my fellow citizens, I have come hack to report progress and I do not believe the progress is going to stop short of the goal. The nations of the world have set their heads now to do a great thing, and they are not going to slacken their purpose. And when I speak of the nations of the world. I do not speak of the govern ments of the w^orld. I speak of the peoples who constitute the nations of the world. They are in the saddle and they are going to see to it that if their present governments do not do their will, some other governments shall. And the secret is out and the present governments know it. There is a great deal of harmony to be got out of common knowled2;e. There is a gr; at deal of sympathy to be get cut cC living in the same at mosphere, and except for the differ ences of languages, which puzzled my American ear very sadly. I could have believed I was at home in France or in Italy or in England when I was on the streets, when I was in the pres ence of the crowds, when I was in great halls where men were gathered together, irrespective of class. I did not feel quite as much at home as I do here, but I felt that now, at any rate, after this storm of war had cleared the air, men were seeing eye to eye everywhere and these were the kind of folks who would understa-nd w'hat the kind of folks at home would nnderstiind and that they were think ing the same things. Manners Very Delightful. I feel about you as I am reminded of a story of that excellent witness nr'l cood artist. Oliver Herford, who c:io day, sitting at luncheon at his club, was slapped vigorously on the back by a man whom he did not know very well. He said: “Oliver, old boy, how are you?” He looked at him rather coldly. He said: “I don’t know your name. I don’t know your face, but your manners are very fa miliar.” and I must say that your manners are very familiar, and let mo add very delightful. It is a great comfort for one thing, to realize that you all understand the languapiP I am speaking. A friend of mine said that to talk through an in terpreter wr-s like witnessing the com pound fracture of an idea. But the beauty of it is that, whatever the im pediments of the channel of commun ication. the idea is the same; that it gets registered, and it gets regis tered in responsive hearts and recep tive purposes. I have come back for a strenuous attempt to transact business for a lit tle while in America, but I have real ly come b?ck to say to you, in all soberness and honesty, that I have been trying my best to speak your thoughts. W^hen I sample myself, I think I find that I am a typical American, and if I rample deep enough, and get down to what is probably the true stuff of a man, then I have hope that it is part of the stuff that is like the other fellow's at home. And, therefore, prcbing deep in my heart and trying to see the things that are right without regard to the things that mav ho dehated as expedi ent. I feol ■'h-t I int'.;rorrt:ng the purpf'*',? thought of Anerica; and in loving America I find I l.'ive ^"i^pd the gre.'^t majority of my !el- lo'.viiien throughout the world. DELEGATES TO CONFERENCE ARE “LORDS OF THE WORLD” London.—Under the heading “The Lords of the World” The Frankfurter !5eitung publishes a rather lively sketch of the peace dele.^jates in Paris. It wonders whether any of them will turn out to be a ^letternich, a Talley rand, a Hardenberg, a Nesselrode, or a Castlereagh, but thinks that none of them at present can be compared with Bismarck, Disraeli or Gortscha- koff. It is added; Wilson, Clemenceau and Lloyd George are already characters with sharply and firmly outlined features. What they have done for their coun tries tho war raises them high above mid.IK) s'„:iture. But their greatness as statesmen has still to undergo th» tests of fire at the greefti table. areJFJ&yond '*\burNoseKno!W5’ *Tke Encyclopaedia Britannica says about the manufacture of smokinsr tobacco, " • . • on the Continent and in America certain *sauccs* are employed • . . the use of the ‘sauces* is to improve the flavour and burning* qu^ities of the leaves/’ Your smoke-en|oyment de pends as much upon the Quality and kind of flavoring used as upon the Qu^^lity and aging of the tobacco. Tuxcdo tobacco uses thepurest, most wholesome and delicious of all flavorings—chocolate! That flavoring, added to the finest of carefully aged and blended burley tobacco, produces Tuxedo — the perfect tobacco— ^*Your Nose Knows/* Years Succsss The Wonderful Recoid of Dr. Thacher’s liver and Blood Syrup. Those medicines which live for even a quarter cf a century are exceptional, and continuous use for over two-thirds of a century is indisputable evidence of wonderful merit. Dr. Thacher’s Xdver and Blood Byrup came into cxistcnce in 1852, and from I Chat time to the present it has grown j j in the confidence and estimation of its jrearly increasing number of users. I through all these years it has steadily : grown in popular favor. I Its wonderful building up power i.^ ' shown in the experience of Mrs. C. £ Chadwick, Beale. Ala. was all run dow^u in health,’* she says. •* Weighed only 104| pounds and getting worse every day. I began the use of Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup and today, I am thankful to say, X am in ueware or counterfeitsi Some are Talcum Powder, T f “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.'^ Quick Relief—with Snfety! For Headache Colds Neuralgia Earache Toothache Achy Gums Lumbago Rheumatism Grippe Influenzal Colds Neuritis Lame Back. Joint-Pains Pain! Pain! Firfect health and weigh 155 pounds, attribute my good health to the use of that most wonderful medicine. 1 Try This Test; Rub a little Tuxedo briskly in the palm of your hand to bring out its full aroma. Then smell it deep—its delicious, pure fragrance will convince you. Try this test with any other tobacco and we will let Tuxedo stand or fall on your judg ment—Mose Knows*** NTEED TO SATtSF"* ? OR VOUR MONEY BACK firmly believe there are numerous suf fering people that could be sound and well by the use of Dr. Thacher’s Livei and Blood Syrup.’’ If you need a toniC) or a blood puri fier; if your liver is out of order, youi stomach troubles you, or you are con stipated, have indigestion or dysx>epsia. try Dr. Thacher’s Liver and Blood Byrup. It is purely vegetable and connot possibly injure any one. It has been of wonderful benefit to others, therefore should command your atten tion All dealers in medicines sell U and will recommend it. For Sale Macfie-Brodie Drug Co., Brevard, N. C. Adults—^Take one or two tablets anytime, with water. If necessary, repeat dose three times a day, after meals. Since the original introduction qi “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” niillifi upon millions of these genuine lets have been prescribed by ph^ clans and taken by the people each, year, with perfect safety. on of IliA 5 dP" phjlif- “Bayer Cross” on genuine Tablets. 'Tbe Ptsrfect Tobacco for Pipe and Cisareite ENTRY A certain tract of land lyinf^ and being in Dunns Rock Tov.-nship, Transylvania County, North Carolina and described as follows: Beginning on a water oak (Span- i ish oak) on the north side of the 3- 1 mile knob near a bluff, the beginning I corner of a hundred acre tract owned ; by Daniel McJunkins and runs south ' 20 poles to a chestnut on the south margin of the old 3-niile knob road; thence west v/ith the old 3-mile knob road 37 poles to a dogwood and water onk on the south margin of the said old road; thence north 22 poles to a I stake, Wilson’s corner; thence south : 80 degrees east with the Wilson line ; 32 poles to the beginning, containing i 5 acres, more or less. I Entered' this the 8th day of Feb ruary, 1919. i T. J. WILSON. ! < G. C. KILPATRICK, ; 2-14-4t-tjw Entry Taker. Buy only “Bayer” packages. Aspirin is the trni^.c mark of Bayer Manufac- t*irc o£ Aloiiodcotic2cnicster of Silicylicftcid Ask for and Insist Upon **Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.’’ American Ov/ned, Entirely. 20 cent package—Larger sifts alsoi. Let Us Print Your Sale Bills Pm* --v’ ■ Notice To Taxpayers: Unless you want to see your property advertised for sale in the Brevard News and see your name in the paper, you had better come into my office in the Court House, Brevard, N. C., and pay your tax before the 1st Monday in April, 1919. I am going to advertise all unpaid taxes on real estate to seii the 1st Monday in May, 1919. And 1 or my Deputy will be around after all personal property when the taxes are unpaid. / ^ If you want to save yourself trouble, embarrassment and > cost come and see me, because I MEAN BUSINESS. February 1919. COS PAXTOll Sheriff & Tax Collector. \