FRIDAY. JULY 4d», 1919
TIIZ BREVArvD NEWS, BREVARD. N. C.
Jm
fOODISCURE
FOR BOLSHEVISM
Ffrmt Aid Treatnyent Splendid MedI*
cine for Spirit of Unrest. How
War Savings Stamps Help.
President Wilson has asked for food
to stop the wave of Bolshevism roll
ing westward out of Russia. No intel
ligent person doubts the value of food
sui a first aid, but at bottom the secur
ity of our institutions resti° upon the
working interest the people take in
those institutions.
Citizens having no interest in a gov-
•mment, no economic interest in the
success of that government, are apt to
be the first victims of vicious propa-
Saada or unbalanced political theo-
iteta. On the other hand men and
women who have invested In their
Kovemment either by way of conduct
ing private enterprise under its pro
tection or through direct purchase of
sovemment securities have something
at stake and desire to maintain stable
tnstltutions. Such persons are not
necessarily reactionists. They may
be quite progressive and anxious for
nform wfa«re reform is needed.
Consequently the effectivie barrier
to Bolshevism in America today is
thrift and investment The philosophy
must reach into the workshops of the
Mtion. It is reaching into those work
shops and into the schoolhouses of the
iiat?0B in the form of the Thrift
Stamp and the Wat Savings Stamp.
When everybody in America is ftuy-
iBg Thrift and War Savings Stamps as
a hsbit one won’t hcAtr much about
Bolshevism in Amerles. It is the
flnancial and patriotic duty of every
Amsriean who loves real liberty to
set the Thrift Stamp habit NOW.
E0U> WiOt. SEOUBITIES.
TO ENCOURAGE THRIFT
Schools Called Upon by Treasury
Department to Make Saving
Happy Habit.
Through the government savings di
rectors of the twelve federal reserve
districts, the Savings Division of the
United States Treasury Department
has called upon the normal schools,
colleges and universities of the coun
try to aid in the government cam
paign to make thrift a happy habit.
The American Council on Education,
representing institutions of higher
learning throughout the country, has
joined with the Savings Division to
secure the co-operation ol the schools.
The plan evolved by the Savings Di
vision and the Council on Education
contemplates the creation of thrift or
ganizations in each of the normal
schools, colleges and universities, to
teach the basic principles of intelli
gent saving—wise buyinig, sane
spending, safe investment and avoid
ance of waste, and to aid in featuring
the advantage of Thrift Stamps and
War Savings Stamps as the Ideal in
vestment for small savings. Through
the American Council on Education,
the presidents of the instltutiens oC
higher learning have been urged to
name institutional thrift representa
tives, who will coH>perate with the lo
cal savings organizations. This has
been done in most cases. The educa
tional institutions are expected to
have £. large influence in the move
ment to make the United States a
nation of intelligent savers.
COME TO THE BASKET DIN
NER JULY 16th AND BRING A
BASKET FULL OF DINNER.
WORLD’S HISTORY IN RE
SUME PROVES W. S. S.
WILL PAY.
Eastern Business Men Issue Wsming
Against Psrting With Government
Bonds snd W. 8. 8.
That It Is a bad business proposi
tion for any merchant to encourage
liolders of War Savings Stamps to
cxchangs them for merchandise is the
opinion of a group of eastern business
men, who recently discussed this
question at their anmial convention.
**Snch action merely helps fake pro-
aotsrs and ditrtionest brokers in their
•ffort to shake publie confidence in
(ovemment bonds as an investment.”
said ons of ths speakers. "It is la
mentable tSiat they havs worked to an
alarming degree €tmong the poor, and
amonf Ifnorant people of this conn-
tTT.”
Tbe two hundred delegates attend
ing the gathering were so impressed
with the necessity for keeping War
Savings Stamps in the hands or the
original purchasers that each pledged
to go bsck home and constitute him
self the head of a vigilance commit*
tee to oppoB9 the offering of merchan*
4ise for government securities.
One thing we know as ws pursue
the history of antiquity, from times
when Noah was the news, of Baby
lon’s iniquity, down through the dare
when Caesar’s ghost was haunting
Brutus in his bed, is this. The spenders
s)iottted most, but nearly all of them
were bled. Whereas the lad who
never fiung sesterces to the Forum
crowd was never inxmaturely hung nor
measured for an early shroud. This
bit of ancient sophistry has now its
modem counterpart, and more and
■more It’s t>ome on me how splendid
is tbe saving art—the art of mind
ing one’s affairs and watching little
things increase. It rids the future of
its cares, shows profit on our elbow
grease. Today when W. 8. S. you
read upon a hanging sign, you know
the man sell Thriftiness, a virtue
once quite hard to find. I do not thank
the war for mnch, but thit I've learn
ed. and learned it proper, when some*
one tries to make a “touch** a Thrift
Stamp makes an A-1 stopper.
Watch your nickels and the dollars
will take care of themselves.
Bmall leaks sink big ships—stop
them with W. S. S.
TABLE sum HOW MONEY HDLHPUES
More Thsn One Hundred Dol
lars Monthly for Eight Months
WIH Qrow Into Thousand Dol*
lars by Jan«iary 1, 1924.
Tlie following table will be of serv
ice to the individual who plans to
•avb systematically throughout the
year by means of War Savings
IBtamps. The stamps draw four per
cent interest compounded quarterly.
Bach 1919 War Savings Stamp wae
worth last Janoary $4.12. Each stamp,
because of the inteftst tliat is com-
p«niRded, costs one cent more each
tDonth, so that next January it will
cost $4.24 and at the end of five years
It will be worth |6.
Thrift Stamps are of the denomi-
•ation^ef 25 cents and are the means
tqr which one may accfunulate small
•avlngs nntil a sufficient amount is
saved to purchase a War Savings
Stamp. They are invahiable for the
thrifty saver who can lay aside only
■m small amount at a time.
Cost
As soon as be accumulates sixteen
Thrift Stamps he may exchange them
for a War Savings Stamp -by paying
the few cents additional to make up
the purchase price of a War Savings
Stamp for that month.
Thus if the Thrift Stamp saver col>
lected his sixteen stamps in May, U
then cost him 16 cents additional to
convert them into one War Savings
Stanap. In June it eosts 17 cents addi
tional and so on, and then on January
1, 1924, less than five years after the
enhange, the War Savings Stamp will
be worth $S and the govemmenS will
pay that amount for it
In the table below the second col*
umn shwe that the person who in*
vests a little more than $100 a month
for eight months of this year, will
have paid in before January 1, 1920,
$839. On January 1, 1924, this wiU
have grown to $1,000. The other col
umns show what the purchaser will
be required to invest to have $500,
$250, $100 or $50 by January 1, 1924.
Saeh Mestft
Ne.
Cost No.
Cost
No.
Cost
No.
Coat No.
Cost
Mar
|4.1«
15
$104.00
13
IS4.08
7
129.12
S
|12<48
2
$8.32
June
4.17
25
104.25
12
55.04
t
25.02
2
8.34
1
4.17
July
4.1S
25
104.50
13
64.34
6
25.08
S
12.54
1
4.18
Aug.
4.19
25
104.75
12
50.28
6
25.14
s
8.38
1
4.19
6spt
4.2#
95
195.00
13
54.60
7
29.49
s
12.60
S
8.40
Oct
4il
25
105.25
12
50.52
6
25.26
2
8.42
1
4.21
Nor.
4.22
25
105.50
13
54.86
6
25.32
s
12.66
1
4.22
Dec.
4.29
25
105.75
12
50.76
6
25.38
2
8.46
1
4.2S
^TAL
200
839.90 100
419.48
50
209.72 29
88.88 10
Maturity Yal.
Jan» 1,
1924..
1.000.00
280.00
1M.OO
Want ads bring results. Try one
in the News and see for yourself.
NOTICE—LAND SALE BY TRUS-
TEE
By virtue of the power of sale con
tained in a certain deed in trust ex
ecuted by John Heilman and wife,
Emma Heilman, dated Dec. 1, 1917 to
the undersigned trustee to secure cer
tain notes therein mentioned, which
Trust deed is registered in Booke 11
at page 231 ct seq. of the Deed in
Trust Records of Transylvania coun
ty, N. C.
And the notes not having been paid
as therein stipulated and power of
^ale having become operative, five
days notice as provided for in said
Deed in Trust having been given the
makers to make the default good, and
same not having been made good,
and the holder of said notes having
directed that said trustee advertise
said land and premices for sale as
provided for in said instrument:
Now, therefore, the undersigned
trustee vrill sell to the highest bidder
all the hereinafter described lands
and premises at public auction for
casket the Court House Door in the
town of Brevard, County of Transyl'-
vania, State of North Carolina, on
Monday, July 7, 1919 at 12:30 P. M.
said lands described as follows >
Lying in Eastatoe township, Tran
sylvania, county, N. C. on the waters
of Little Creek, tributaries of Toxa-
way River, and on Woodruff branch,
waters of West Fork of French
Broad river, bounded as follows:
BEGINNING on a stake in what is
now known as Maple Gap of the Blue
Ridge, this point formerly being a
hickory which stood in Henderson
county line, and runs then west, north
west and south west with the top of
the Blue Ridge 641 poles, more or
less to a white oak (now down) in
a gap of said Blue Ridge; then South
62 deg. east 100 poles to a stake;
then north 20 deg. east 24 poles to
a chestnut oak; then north 30 deg.
east 30 poles to a stake; then north
8 deg. east 8 poles to a stake; then
north 34 deg. east 66 poles to a
stake; then south 65 deg. east 38
poles to a white oak, a corner of
what is known as the Warren Low
Grant, a comer of one of the ex
ceptions herein mentioned; then south
62 deg. east, 200 pole^, more or less,
to a stake near, but east of the top
of what is known as Frozen Ridge;
then east 5 poles to a stake; then
south 45 deg. west 130 poles to a
stene, a comer of what is known as
State Grant No. 15783 to W. M.
Meece; then south 42 deg. east 90
poles to a maple; then south 45 deg.
west 30 poles to a stake; then south
45 deg. east 120 poles to a stake;
then North 30 deg. east 140 poles to
a stake; then north 15 deg. west,
crossing a branch, 10 poles to a stake
with white oak and poplar pointers;
then north 15 deg. east 40 poles to
a pine; then south 15 deg. east 36
poles to a black oak; then south 65
deg. east 160 poles to a stake; then
north 2% deg. east ^3 poles to a
spruce pine near a branch; said
branch being one of the head streams
of Little Creek; then north 85 deg.
east 85 poles to a large chestnut, a
corner of the Whitmire heirs land;
then with the Whirmire line north 112
poles to a stone on the side of the
Blue Ridge; then north 50 deg. east
100 poles to a white oak on to\) of the
Blue Ridge; then with the top of
said Blue Ridge, south 80 deg. west
22 poles to a stake on top of said
Blue Ridge; then north .39 deg. east
38 poles to a stake in what is sup
posed to be the “Meigs & Freeman
Line”; then north 48% deg. west with
said supposed line, crossing Wood
ruff branch, and Cross Mountain, 130
poles to a stake in a hollow on the
north west side of said Cross Moun
tain; then south 47 deg. west 160
poles, crossing a branch, to a stone
on top of the Blue Ridge, formerly
a pine (now down); then with the
top of the Blue Ridge, westwardly, 20
poles to a pine on top of said ridge;
then south 32 deg. west with the top
of said Blue Ridge 28 poles to a dead
pine; then south 17 deg. east, cross
ing a branch, 61 poles to a black
gum; then west 52 poles to a stake;
then north 20 deg. west 36 poles to
the begfinning, containing 1240 acres,
more or less.
From the foregoing boundary there
is excepted three certain tracts: First
Lying on both sides of Frozen creek,
begrinning on a small black gum on :
ridge on West side of the creek, runs
north 10 deg. east 50 poles to a chest
nut; then north 17 deg. eaM 44 poles
to a stake; north 37 deg. east 60 poles
to a stake on top of the Blue Ridge,
west of Maple Gap; then with top of
said ridge eastwardly, 100
poles, more or less to a stake in said
Maple Gap; then south 20 deg. east
crossing head waters of Frozen creek,
16 poles to a stake; then following a
marked line, south 35 deg. west, 130
pol^s to a stake; then crossing the
frozen creek to the beginning, con
taining 70 acres mor or less.
SECOND TRA(3T—excepted: Be
ginning on a black gum, beginning
corner of last tract above described^
runs north 41 deg. west 23 poles to
a chestnut; then south 40 deg. west,
crossing a branch, 36 poles to a stake;
then south 45 deg. west 54 poles to
a pine; then south 35 deg. west 38
poles to a stake; then south 30 deg.
west 14 poles to a chestnut; south 45
deg. west 18 poles to a white oak;
tiien south 10 deg. east 18 poles to a
birch; then south 60 deg. east, cross
ing Frozen Creek, 44 poles to a stake;
then north 61 deg. east 195 poles to
a stake, a corner of first tract above
excepted; then with line of same to
the beginning, containing 48 acres.
Third Tract—excepted: BegL.ning
on a stake near the top of the Blue
Ridge, near what is known i.a the
“pinacle” and runs south 40 deg. east
40 poles' to a stake: then south 130
poles to*a stake; then north 40 deg.
west 110 poles to a stake on top of
Blue Ridge; then along the top of
said Blue Ridge 88 poles, more or
less, to the beginning, containing 40
acres, more or leas.
Said sale to satisfy said notes, in
terest, cost and expenses of sale.
This June 9th, 1919
J. SCROOP STYLES, Trustee.
NEW TIRE PRICES
60 PER CENT OFF
By Having your old Tires Retreaded.
We reduce your tire bill more than half
with Non-Skid Retreads.
All kinds of tire repair work done—Vul
canizing a Specialty.
We guarantee satisfaction and service.
We make a specialty of Out-of-Town
Business.
SEND US YOUR TIRES
We will get them back to you in three
days.
STETSON TIRE CO.
Phone 3171
Asheville, N. C.
Your Drugs
ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN
YOUR FOOD. WE USE THE BEST
DRUGS OBTAINABLE IN FILLING
YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS, AND THEY
ARE ALWAYS FILLED BY A COM-
PETENT PHARMACIST.
MOST COMPLETE STOCK OF
DRUGS, TOILET ARTICLES, IN FACT
EVERYTHING KEPT IN A FIRST-
CLASS DRUG STORE.
DAVIS WALKER DRUG CO.
Succeison to DUCKWORTH DRUG CO.
Main St. BREVARD, N. C. Phone 85
Furniture Talk
WE WISH TO ANNOUNCE TO THE
PEOPLE OF TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY
THAT WE ARE IN THE FURNITURE
BUSINESS. WE TRY TO KEEP AT ALL
TIMES A GOOD LINE OF STANDARD
FURNITURE—SPRINGS, MATTRESSES,
FLOOR COVERINGS, CHAIRS, ROCK
ERS, ETC.
WE ALSO HANDLE ORGANS, TALK
ING MACHINES, SEWING MACHINES,
ETC.
WHEN YOU CAN’T FIND WHAT
YOU WANT IN YOUR OWN TOWN, WE
SHALL BE VERY GLAD TO HAVE
YOU CALL TO SEE US. WE PROMISE
YOU KIND TREATMENT AND THE
BEST PRICES AND TERMS THAT CAN
BE GIVEN ON FURNITURE AT THIS
TIME. GIVE US A TRIAL.
Hendersonville Furniture Ce.
^'The Old Reliable” Hendersonville, N. C.
On account of the rapid
growth of my business, I
find it impossible to make
trip to Brevard. Those
wishing to consult me will
kindly come to my office in
Asheville.
DR. S. ROBINSON
The Eyesight Specialist
**Look for This Sisrn’*
78 Patton Are., AsheTille, N. C.
When you think of Electricity, think of
LOFTIS. t
If anything goes wrong wth your lights,
call LOFTIS.
e
If "'you need wiring done, remember
LOFTIS.
If you need Electrie Supplies of any kind
see LOFTIS.
L. C. LOFTIS, Electrician.
Philip’s Bakery
?.
WHY BUY BREAD OUT OF
TOWN WHEN YOU CAN GET
MORE BREAD AND BETTER
BREAD FOR THE SAME
MONEY AT YOUR HOME
BAKERY?
Philip’s Bakery
CALOMEL DYNAMITES
A SLUGGISH LIVER
Crashes Into Sour Bile, Making
You Sick and You Lose a
Day’s Work,
Calomel salivates! It's mercury. Calo
mel acts like dynamite on a sluggish liver.
When calomel comes ipto contact with
sour bile it crashes into it, causing cramp
ing and nausea.
If you feel bilious, headachy, consti
pated and all knocked out, just go to your
druggist and get a bottle of Dodson’s Liver
Tone for a few cents, which is a harmless
vegetable substitute for dangerous calo
mel. Take a spoonful and if it
doesn’t start your liver and straighten yoa
up better and quicker than nasty calomel
and without making you sick, you just go
back and get your money.
If you take calomel today you’ll be sick
and nauseated tomorrow; besides, it may
salivate you, while if you take Dodson'n
Liver Tone you will wake up feeling grcut,
full of ambition and ready for work or
play. It’s harmless, pleasant and safe to
give to children; they like it.—Advertise
ment.
TAKE" ASPIRIN
^ WAS TALCyl^
Therefore Insist Upon Gen
uine “Bayer Tablets
of Aspirin”
/
Millions of fraudulent Aspirin Tab
lets were sold by a Brooklyn manu
facturer* which later proved to be
composed mainly of Talcum Powder.
“Bayer Tablets of Aspirin’' the true,
genuine, American made and Ameri
can owned Tablets are marked wkh
the safety “Bayer Cross.”
Ask for and then iasist upon “Bay-
6r Tablets of Aspirin’* and always
buy them in the original Bayer pack
age whieh contains proper directions
and dosage.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer
Manufacture of Menoaceticacidester
of Salicylicacid.
Im
V,