FRIAAYi AUGUST 0, |tlf THE BREVARD NEWS; BREVM®* It C "It’s d candi” ■ 7" i *rNj7^ »V'<#rT • ****»»» HllHi* ^90KT07f^ Wrapped to insure its perfect condition in ail ciimates and seasons. Seaied tigiit—i^ept rigtit. Tiie perfect slum in tiie perfect paciia^e. Aft2r every meal The flavor lasts 9^. K. When you think of Electricity, think of LOFTIS. « If anything goes wrong with your lights, call LOFTIS. If vou need wiring done, remember LOFTIS. If you need Electric Supplies of any kind seeLOFTIS. L. C. LOFTIS, Electrician. Jh CITY MARKET Is the best place in town to get the best of EVERYTHING to eat. The best of Fresh and Cured Meats, Chickens, Eggs, Butter and Vegetables are to be found here at all times. We will pay the highest cash price for all kinds of Country Produce. THE CITY MARKET W. H. DUCKWORTH S. F. ALLISON A. M. WHITE U. G. WOODWARD Annwincing the Chevrolet White St Woodward of Rosman wish to an nounce that they have accepted the agency for The Chevrolet Cars and will deliver, ri|rht to your door, a touring car for $835.00 and a roadster for $820.00 Re- ipaember we deliver ri|rht here. Notify us for demon- libration. ; -* • , . < WKite Woodward } **The Chevrole^’^ Rownaw, N. C. BUY YOUlpt CKQCIOUCS jHidm ProfesdoiMd Cords. DR. J. Y. McKINNEY Dratist Over V/eiit’s L^ies’ Store ROBT. L. GASH W. E;BREBSE. Jr. GASH & BREESE LAWYERS 11 to 17 SMlAim Bofldfa^g Notary Public. > CONNESTEE LODGE NO. 237 1.0.0. F. Meets every Monday 8:00 P. M. Visitors welcome. DUNN’S ROCK LODGE NO. 267 A.F.&A. M. ALFALFA AlfalXa hay makes the most nutritious foodtfor bonse& cattle and all live it^ck. tlie proper time for..»owinp when plaptcd the end of An- gust or during September. AU z&lfa will yield furl crop* and rnalio, under favorable conditions,:' ip-.’.r or five cuttings of nutri tions nay the foIlowlnflT season. \7oocL’3 Alfalfa Saed 13 AauKri> o2id lM3ft 4iudit7 ob- imSONCLOVERI Otlmaon Clovaae Is the best of soll-improvingr and forage crops for Pall seeding. Makes one of the best Winter cover crops, fur nishes excellent grazing and the earliest green feed or a good i hay crop. Oat tha best by oidax. ing W00D9 SEEDS KSW TALL OASA^a gives full description and inform mavion, and also tells about th« OATS, SB1D 3TB, S3SBD WICBAT, for Fa. I sowing. Write for Catalog.and prio?a of any Seeds required. t. W.WOOD & SONS, SESDS30EH. SlduaOBd, ▼». ■■ VALUE OF SA\m BECOMES APPARENT One of Great Lessona of War Is That of National and Individual Thrift, Now Rapidly Growing Now that the new German govern ment has acccpted the inevitable, and has ofFicially signed the peace terms dictated ■ by the allley and the coun scourged the world. For nearly has been topsy-turVy. T'he ' tiimgs that were needed yesterday are no longer required, and the actiyities of the great war establishments and mvini- tion plants are being diverted to the manufacture of implements of peacQ. There must now be a readjustment. Governments that have thought in bil lions and spent money with a lavish hand, munt retrench and think in mil lions and even smaller amounts, and must gain a new perspective. Viewed in the retrospect the part played by America in the great world war is one ol the most glorious chap ters in history. And in the making of this brilliant history the plain Ameri can citizen played a stellar role. The mountains of munitions, the equip ment for the millions of soldiers, the great ships that carried the men across the ocean, could not have been provided had not the common people of America provided the money. Much of this pnoney was obtained through the sale of Liberty Bonds and War Savings and Thrift Stamps. This great volume of money has not been wasted. First it brought perma nent peace to the world, and now that real peace is here, every cent that was so invested will come back to those who aided their government, and it will come back with interest. This war that is nbw happily ended has taught the people the value of sav ing. They went into the saving game as much through patriotism as anything else. But now that they are reaping the returns, and see that what they did with a patriotic motive is a real fpundation for future fortune,, they have gained a new confidence in their country, and they will continue to buy the securities the Treasury De partment offers, and will make the country many-fold more prosperous than it would have been had not the war instilled the lesson that will prove invaluable in future years. CAMOT LOSE MONEY IF INVESTED WISELY i^und* Put Into War Savings Stamps Are Absolutely Safe and Yield Handsome Profit to Holder Government securities afford the safest and most practical investment, in the world. A War Savings Stamp is a promisory note for ^5 if redeeme'd at maturity, or for the original cost of the stamp plus accrued interest if re deemed before maturity. It was only after America entered the great world conflict that the small wage earner in this country was af forded the opportunity of investing in government securities; of becoming co-partners with the government. That there are today more than 20,000,000 holders of government securities is a fact which speaks for itself. When you buy a War Savings Stamp you are helping the government. To be able to make a loan to the govern ment, even as small as the sum repre sented by a War Savings Stamp, is a proof of patriotism and also a practi cal manifestation of that spirit of na tional thrift and individual saving^ which has come to us as a permanent heritage from the war. WEALTH OF NATION CROWING RAPDLY In Washington some of those ex perts, who are masters of figures and who have a mind attuned to statistics, frequently dig up queer thfngs. One of this type has figured out that the total wealth of the United States is $300,000,000,000. Then he figures out the new wealth produced annually, which he terms “net income.” This gets into dizzy figures, too. He esti mates that last year the national wealth increased $18,000,000,000, which he admits is going faster than the normal. Another Washington official points o'«t that one of the best ways to conserve this national income in wealth is for individuals to buy War Savings Stamps. ONE SAFE PLACE FOR LIB ERTY BONDS—THE BANK- PUT YOURS THERE PAYING OFF THAT MORTGAGE TP Theod)>re Roosevelt said: ‘Thrift is merely the use of hard common sense in the spending of money.” Paying off the mortgage on the installment plan by buying War Savings Stamps is one of the uses of this hard com mon sense. Not only does this plan offer a tical way saving small amounts of money, but smnll amotmts may be earning interest as soon as they are set aside toward the collecting 'ot the larger sum. This interest in tv(ni materially helps to^jreduee the 6 WPT cent interest rate commonly charged on mortgases. When the mortgage comes due It may either be paid off in whole, or in part and renewed, the metiiod of saving through W»r Savings Stamps being employed until the principal U liquidated. “May the vast future not have to lament that'you neglected it.” Buy Thrift Stamps and War Savisgs Sts'i'ps. Is th? £.Iue OB the back of War Sar- (ngs Stamps flavored with peppermint VftUlersreenT'^ Bay one imd .llnd The Cumberland (Md.) Eve ning Times prints the following, which should be a reminder to all who are now keeping their Liberty Bonds or War Savings Stamps in boxes around the house or in broken tea pot? or in mattresses: Mm. William B. Devdr, wife of Fireman-Engineer Dever, Baltimore and Ohio railroad, of o Rowlesburg, W. Va.; threw $1,- 650 worth of Liberty Bonds into the Cheat river, back of her home, hy mistake, with rubbish she had cleaned from their home. The valuable bonds have not been recovered although a diligent search of the Cheat liner bottom in that ricinity' h^s been made. W. B. Dover's grmt loss of 4>ond«- has a paiMleL W. W. Wood, Baltimore and Ohio rail road engineer, lost $190 worth <» of Libe^y Bonds from his pock et They were a $100 and |60 issue. Engineer Wood Intended to deposit the bonds iii a local bank. They have not been lo cated. A laborer unloading a ear of coal at Paw Paw, Saturday, found a $100 bond in t>.e coal. It is tfaous:ht to have dropped from the j^ocket of a ear loader at the mluos- The laborer re ported the matter to the com pany’s station agent at Paw Paw, is satd, with a risw of returning it to Its owner. Dr. M. C. KREITZER’S — CELEBRATED SALVE THE WONDER WORKER For Corns, Boils, Carbuncles, Bun ions, Bums, Sores, Fresh Wounds, Swellings, Scalds, Indolent Ulcers, Tumors, Sore Breasts. Erysipelas, Acute and Cronic Rheumatism, etc., follow directions closely. Try it and you will never be with out it. Price 12 and 30 cents. For sale by Macfie-Brodie Drug Co. W. C. POWER & CO., Mfrs. 3630 N. Gratz St., Philadelphia, Pa. NOTICE OF SUMMONS BY PUBLI CATION State of North Carolina—^Transylva nia County—In the Superior Court < —Before the Clerk. Tom Garren et al. vs. Jim Garren, Mrs. Jim Garren, Essie Garren, Robert Garren, Jane Garren, Wade Garren, Jr., Dora Batcheldore, John Batcheldore, Milford J. Lan- ning, .Lizzie Lanning, David Watson, (Page), Hemus H. Henderson, Essie Henderson, L. A. Graham, Cannie C. Graham, Romus D. Henderson, Amie Jlenderson, Ellis W. Henderson, Janie Mae Henderson, Bessie Cathcart, Ja son M. Cathcart, Nathan Brindle, Hariett Brindle, R. B. Buchanan, Julia S. Buchanan, Floyd J. Sitton, Annie Sitton, S. N. Buchanan, Mag gie S. Buchanan, Phillipp L. Sitton, Maggie Sitton, John Slagle, Emma L. Slagle, Lee C. Sitton, Lillie Sitton, Lenord Gibson, Hester Ollie Gibson, Dan Coble, Will Lindsey, Nannie Lindsey, John Coble, Clarence Coble, Henry Sitton, Lena Sitton, Sarah Sit ton, Jane Sitton, Fannie Sitton, Louis Sitton, Bessie Sitton, Edgar Sitton, Virginia Sitton, Claude Sitton, Stan ley Sitton, Harvey Sitton, Alex Sit ton, Ruth Sitton, Hester Sitton, Mrs. Ruth Sitton et al. The defendants, Jim Garren, Mrs. Jim Garren, Essie Garren, Robert Garren, Jane Garren, Wade Garren, Jr., Dora Batcheldore, John Batcheldore, Milford J. Lan ning, Lizzie Lanning, David Watson, (Page), Remus H. Henderson, Essie Henderson, L. A. Graham, Cannie C. Graham, Romus D. Henderson, Amie Henderson, Ellis W. Henderson, Janie Mae Henderson, Bessie .Cathcart, Ja son M. Cathcart, Nathan Brindle, Hariett Brindle, R. B. Buchanan, Julia S. Buchanan, Floyd J. Sitton, Annie Sitton, S. N. Buchanan, Mag gie S. Buchanan, Phillipp L. Sitton, Maggie Sittqn, John Slagle, Emma L. Slagle, Lee C. Sitton, Lillie Sitton, Lenord Gibson Hester Ollie Gibson, Dan Coble, Will Lindsey, Nannie Lindsey, John Coble, Clarence Coble, Henry Sitton, Lena Sitton, Sarah Sit ton, Jane Sitton, Fannie Siton, Louis Sitton, Bessie Sitton, Edgar Sitton, Virginia Sitton,* Claude Sitton, Stan ley Sitton, Harvey Sitton, Alex Sit ton, Ruth Sitton, Hester Sitton, Mrs. Ruth Sitton, in the above entitled special proceeding will take notice that on the 9th day of July, 1919, a summons was issued in said special proceeding against said defendants by N. A. Miller, Clerk of the Super ior Court of Transylvania County, North Carolina, which summons was returnable into the office of the clerk of the superior court of said county, on July 29th,. 1919, and the above named non-resident defendants will also take notice that said special pro ceeding is brought by the plaintiffs against the defendants for the pur pose of obtaining an order for the sale for partition and division of cer tain lands in Transylvania County, N. C., lying in Catheys Creek Town ship, and Iwing what is knows as the Silas Garren Home Place, and in which lands above named defendants have or claim an interest, and the said defendaOijte and eac)i of then^are necessary parties ta said special pro ceeding which is brougM^toMihe pur pose of said lanafriyS^KT^r partition and division as above stated.: The defendants, and each of them, will, further take notice thi^ they are required Jko appear at the^ office, of &e Clerk'of llie Superior Cowrt for Transylyania iCounty, N. CVon the 9th day of August, 1919, and iin swer or demur to the petition camplaint of the plaintiffs in tne above proceeding, wluch pe^tion ai complaint is on file in liie office ^f the Clerk of Superior Court of sylvanim County, N. C., or the relief demanded in said complaint will jbe granted. This the 29th day of Jw, 1919. N. A. MnXEE,T Clerk of Superior Court in itod/ for, Transylvania County, N. LEWiS P. HAMLIN, Attornejy for Plaintiffs. / Philip’s Bakery r I g I I- — *1 i 9 I I $ WHY BUY BREAD OUT OF g g TOWN WHEN YOU CAN GET g I MORE BREAD AND BETTER BREAD FOR THE SAME MONEY AT YOUR HOME BAKERY? Pliilip’s Bakery “BAYER CROSS” ON ASPIRIN Always Ask for Genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” Only Aspirin Tablets with the safe y “Bayer Cross” on them are genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” ownM and made by Americans and proved safe by millions of people. Unknown quantities of fraudulent Aspirin Tab lets were sold recently by a Brook lyn dealer which proved to be com posed mostly of Talcum powder. “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” should always be asked for. Then look for the safety “Bayer Cross” on the pack age and on each tablet. Accept noth ing else! Proper directions and dos age in each Bayer package. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacides^r of Salicylicacid. WHY SUFFER so?" Why suffer from a bad back, from sharp, shooting twinges, headaches, dizziness and distressing urinary ills? Birevard people recommend Doai^’s Kidney Pills. Could you ask fi stronger proof Of merit.? Mrs. Z. V. Burrell, Whitmire St., Brevard, says: ‘Several years ago, kidney trouble got the upper hand of me and I was in pretty bad con dition.' I had a dull, heavy ache across nty kidneys most of the time and I felt tired out. It was almost impossible for me to straighten after bending and blinding dizzy spells came over me ix^en 1 could hardly stand. I was more tired mornings than when I went to 1>d and I had headaches and nervous spells. My ankles and hands swelled badly U)d my kidneys acted irregularly. He^ itng of Doan’s ^dney Pills I beg^ taking them and in 1a short time 1 was feeling like myself again.** 60c at all dealers. Foster-Milbum Itfgrs., Buffalo, N. T. Your adve News will biri people. ^ment in the id by more th^ 6l^|b BUY YOUR BUTTERMILK FROM % Vi’-

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