Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Feb. 3, 1922, edition 1 / Page 4
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m ^iii> mws. P«M«j tmA m»m» t Branupdl, N. C^ art IttiWer. :ription ratesi 9ayaU« im advaac*}' •«•* •••• •-•••'’••••. 91*80 itfM • . • • • • $1.00 • • • >' »80 ^T«ni mMtha .. .... ... .28 ADVERTISING RATES Display, par colnma inch .... > >30^ I RmmUbv NoUcm, per liaa ..... •. lOe Want ColvBU NoUcat, par liaa . .8« Wa ekarca 8 canto a Una fdkr Cards •f Thanks* Rasolatlans of Raspaet and for notices of entertainnents wliere admission is ckarced. Address All Communicationc To The BreraVd News: Foreisn Advertisins Representetive THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION FRIDAY FEBRUARY 3, 1922 THE boosters BANQUET; Eluctuil Is now tb« Daotn tC PpMa> saU tinder Trotsky, Roi^a appears to .'lave gooe the pace. Row do the Rnssianfi blow ^1 tbose babbles without soap? Oiina wishes not only an open door, but abundance of light One good way to reduce highway ae> .■ideiits would be' to abolish ditches. While the sun shines on ice dealer sells the hay that he made when it didn’t. If the way to a mun’s heart is through his stomacli, a fat mao's makes ii marathon. The e^d brc«zeg frarm tlia henrlLtC' fbo coal tnan.' Some people with wild sttc era late with their sowing. Disarmaihent of winter would appeffl to the ordiiiary householder. Pessimists have their innings at about the time of the winter solstice. Wealth is dedaied to be a disease. Work is a pretty good thing to do tor it The newly divorced admit that for a time they miss the rattle of their chains. The high price of candy has taught the consumer how to take the bitter with the sweet. A woman wouldn't mind bein^ poor so much If all her acquaintances were just a little poorer. It is remarkable that the insanity of all these murderers Is not discovered until they kill somebody. A shortage of 1,200,000 homes is re ported, but the supply of garages seems almost equal to the demand. The business men and women of Transylvania County will gather on next Tuesday night, at 7:30, in the dining room of the Aethelwold Hotel. The object will be to have a gener al get-to-gether social evening for the purpose of inaugurating an ad vertising campaign immediately. T. H. Wood, Division Passenger Agent of S. R. R,; N. Buckner, Sec. Asheville Chamber of Commerce; N. M. Hollowell, Editor of the Hender- ville^News; D. Hiden Ramsey, Editor Asheville Times are expected to be at the banquet. Circular letters are being sent out to eVery citizen inter ested in the tourist business of our County and it is estimated that from one to two hundred citizens will gath er at this Boosteer's Banquet. No doubt this gathering will be re membered for many years as the first movement for the inauguration of the Transylvania Booster’s Society. The committee has taken consid erable pains to mail to each and ev eryone interested in boarders, etc., a card; but some one may have been overlooked. The oanquet is for all but it is necessary that the secretary be notified of the number of plates at $1.00 each you may want. All orders must necessarily be in by Mon day noon. Please notify the secre-' tary at once. Last season was a dismal failure, and it is up to all of us to make this i year a success by sj^tematic advertis ing and it is believed this social get-' to-gfether meeting will create the pro- i per spirit and the News urges all who ^ are interested to be there — Let’s Go. ( German cities are reported bank rupt. At that, they have not much on a good many American cities just now. Compared with the amount a man wants in this world it’s surprising how little he can manage to get along with. One of the greatest needs for motor ists Is the automatic stop, such as some railroad systems have used effectively. The law of supply and demand has Its complications even in connection with so primitive a human necessity as milk. Still, Japan is doubtless willing that Uncle Sam shall retain the privilege of looking after China in time of famine. What has become of* the old-fash ioned yeast cake, that had no asphea? tlons beyond raising the harmless nec> essary dough? Those men who were caught embez zling money from the Russian bol- shevlst go7ernment must have been disguised as paperhangers. Statesmen and crowned heads must be cai^eful not to muss up the masterful way in which the correspondents are pulling off this arms conference. The pen is mightier than the sword, but what is needed right now Is a pm- oil that will come out on top In an en gagement with a patent pencil sharp ener. In its appeal to women to quit wear ing summer furs, the American Hu mane society looks to have the ad vantage of some very favorable weath er for it. Isn’t it strange what some people put auto licenses on? Crookedness nover pays in the long ran. Look at the corkscrew. Tlie profiteer wonders if his fur coat will last until the next war. The only wsigging tongues that help .t)usiness now are wagon tongues. After all, the l»est way to elevate the masses is to raisi^e children prop erly. There must be no moi-e wars. Let ;vthe killing bo done by the automo- .Ji>lles. j' Isn’t it funny that the nmU robbers never interfere with your monthly bills? ^Russia is tew ring up 700 miles of railroad in order to use the material for repairs on other lines. This re minds one of the iHingry snake that devoured its tail. Still, we aren’t being absoltstely swamped by immigration. Census fig ures show a loss in ten years of .5 of 1 per cent in white population of aative parentage. A Frenchman has won the world’s kissing championship in a rec«it con test. .It’s a precarious game—your success d< ’ ''nds so largely on the partner yo;; draw’. Austria’s deficit is 150,000,000,001 crowns. The odd one w'as Hapsburg Charlie’s. The Chinese have acquired sufficient American speed to start a run on their banks. Almost ai. of the remaining kings might now teil you that reign is a mat ter of plebian sufferance rather than of divine right, but don’t wound their vanity by asking them. If tlie world is willing, Cliina would ! like resign its job of Innocent by- • stai'ding^ The threatened adoption of the knickerbocker costume by women has been postponed till nest spring, so there’s that much less to worry about during the winter months. i "The only medium that can read the future f<n- you reliably is the circu- i lating medium. f Now another doctor comes forw^ard and says handshaking is in no way in.iurious to tlie liealth and tells everybody to go ahead and shake hands. But, Doc, w-hat over? A woman's reputation lasts about 15 seconds after she leaves a commit- , t€- .-ioetlnr first. t ' ‘ It‘s t!ie horseless age, but as long * as mine? pie is made there always 5;:; will be : lightmare. Tlie Japaneso stress on the internal dissension in ( hlna would have come with more weight had there l>een no suspicion that Japanese agencies had a hand in fosiering some of it. T TJnfort ately the plea of guilty by a forme; liank cashier does not al- , ways re^' e tlie money. I Every i; rn with a furnace can ma’ie |he claim that he is the head of sm Jraportant going concern. What has become of the old-fas' • toned family that used to buy a ba.- rel of apples every winter? . ' " I Queen Mary denies a story that she ^or3ered a dress made in Berlin. Says ‘ vit Is made out of whole cloth. ■ China Is In financial difficulties which puts that country right to line with the most up-to-date nations. Sleep Is pronounced by . a doctor as «nly a habit A phonograph In the 7 above will hretA tte habit. Vjf . 'I*' „ , . . ■ "V Sinking fighting ships Is something that has to begin at the bottom and work downward. Wading through the naval experts* tables is as refreshing as tin advanced lesson in relativity. Whenever a man says something that sounds well but means nothing he Is classed as an orator. If Germany is put into a. receiver ship some (»f Its neighbors will have a hard time keeping out. Slowly but surely the Liberty bond Is returning to the position of financial dignity it was intended to occupy. British prisons for w’omen are be ing closed for lack of patronage. The pessimists are bearing up hravely. The opinion of a man with rheu matism is that Medicine Hat weath er is something that can go chase It* self. A curious state of affairs Is that while the price of farm products stead ily falls, the price of farm lands doesn’t. What has become of the old-fash ioned orchardist who always raised a crop of worms w’hen he raised a crop of apples? Nothing like snow to tickle the hearts of the little folk and nothing like It to give a man with a snow shovel a pain. A French astronomer says a ray of light traveling from the earth to the moon would take just a second. Now, now. Just a second! In some country districts the school child still uses the old slate to figure profit and loss; and in some cities the coal dealers do, too. Russian rubles are still falling, ac cording to a cable dispatch from M<*s- cow. There is no bottom, apparently, for the Russian ruble. So long as Europe can’t pay and we can’t collect, why not keep on try- hig to find some other way of making the wheels turn again? “Too little or to«> much money are both bad.”—ThoniHs Edison. A lot of i[)eople know that Mr. Edison is partly right, from experience. Everytliing i« for sale by titled ov.’u- ers of some of the big European es tates except the titles; and they might be if they were transferable. Scientists have finally decided that there is no habitation cm the moon, so thaf's one locality we shan’t have to send any food to this winter. Ch-fna is a puzzle to the experts at the Wasliington arnrs conference but probabVy no more of a puzzle to them than It long has been to thoughtful Chinese. I Shell rim glasses are no longer the I vogue, it is :innounced, “because they I disfigure the face?’ Spectacles really I are not becoming when a person wear- : Insr t^hem becomes a spectacle. j ;> coroner has decided that the ' e: of the ZR-2 was doe to ac- cl Ant. This will be a great relief ♦o the people who have been thinking that the passengers did it on pur pose. The United States will spend $90.- 1 000 before next year in studying grass hoppers. Having studied Aesop’s Fa bles, the ordinary citizen thinks it would be much more profitable to I study the ant. Tire locomotion has the advantage over sole leather In another respect, viz., it can take on the wads of chew ing gura <n the roadway without caus ing tli6 atm osi-here to be' saturated with profanity. Eminent Japs deny any thought of hors** trading in their diplomatic op erations, which of coarse \v#«ild be an Inspparalfe part of any bargaining program. After ywrs of effort, scientists final ly iinve segregated, measured and modeled a molecule. Though molecules are the uiost plentiful of all things they are excessively grt>garious. American exports In October, 1921, were vaiuetl at about «ne-third as much as the exports in October. 1920. Tlrts proves what was already known —that an Impoverisiied world is not a good customer. It is more blessed to give than to receive, and less. likely to clutter you up with things you have no use Zor. The moral is to give to the needy the things they especially need. The Clitaese public is breaking away from tl»e andent and moiHi or •ess comfortable idea that noth^g which hapiiened in the rest of the world was of great importance. According to a couliular r^rt; scientists in Norway have decided that eels don’t grow from the hairs on a horse’s tail. Ho, we knew^ that long ago. It’s snakes that grow from horse hairs. While 15,000,000 Russians are slow ly starving in the famine areas the Hotel Workers’ union opens in Mos cow a restaurant reported to e<|ual in the s;pTsndor of Its appointments the best to Ameiica. 'The “new order*’ ia Russia brings scringe coutrasUb V x'' - We have passed our Twenty-Third Milestone It has been a great pleasure to the a Officers and Directors of our bank ^ to watch the steady increase in busi ness. Our deposits have grown from $35,000.00 in 1900 to more than Onc-half Million Dollars in 1922. No account is too large for US to handle, and we give the small accounts the same attention as the large ones. Four Per Cent, Paid on Time Deposits OFFICERS R. R. DEAVER, President JOS. S. SILVERSTEEN, Vice-Piesident THOS. H. SHIPMAN, Active Vice-President R. B- LYON, Cashier. DIRECTORS Jos. s. Silversteen, Chairman R. R. Deaver C. C. Yon^e W. S. Ashworth R. W. Everett W. M. Henry Chas. E. Orr T. D. England Thos. H. Shipman Education week might try to do something for tliose persons who open every sentence W'ith “Say, listen!” Russia is beginning to manifest symptoms of normalcy. It is reported to have seized Chinese territory. The Swiss may not have a navy, hut they have a cheese which the world’s navies may soon res«nble. Discovery of a new planet is not so very Important if true. There are enough worlds already, such as they areT Granting a moratorium on interna tional debts that nobody can pay now might be only recognizing facts, at that. Eg>’ptians report themselves expect ing a return ef unrest, and probably working liard to save th^selves llrom disappointment. Those experts who want gas con tinued a war weapon are men, per haps, for whom the light has not yet been turned on. Any man who has held the yam for his grandmoth^ should have a pretty fair idea of what affairs are Uke in the* Far East. Calling on his sweetheart, at work tn a restaurant, a young man threat ened to stri'ke her with the sugar bowL That’s a nice way to spoon. ty, to obtain an absolute divorce by said plaintiff from said defendent: the said defendant will further take notice thoC s^ is reqniied to appear, at the texm of the Saperior Court of said county to be h^ in the Court House in Brevaxd on the fifth Mon day after ffie first Monday in March, it being the 10th day of April, 1922, and answer or demur to the com plaint of tHis plaintiff, or the plain tiff will apply to the Cotirt for the relief demanded in said complaint. N. A. Miller Clerk Saperior Court RALPKKr FESHER, Attorney Peb-24. Perhaps by the time France tigures out how she is to maintain the big array she says she needs tffere may be a revlsiien of plans—^and fears. A Frenchman has invented an au tomobile that can fly, and it is now up to some American to invent a pe- ittatriaa who can soar at will. ftjveptfon of the “telephot,” or the telephone that can ?ee, would be a great scientific achievement, no doubt, but £t would spoil a lot of good alibis. Though young Prince Hlrohlto has assumed the regency in Japan, It Is worthy of remark that a few of the elder statesmen are remaining on the job. NOTICE AND SUMMONS STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF TRANSYLVANIA, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT. U. Robinson vs. Laura Revis Robinson The defendent above named will take notice that action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Transylvania coun NOTICE. OF LAND SALE BY TRUSTEE « North Caroima, Transylvania county. By virtue of the power of sale con tained in a certain deed in trust made and executed by Ralph W. Lee and wife Alice. L. Lee t* the tmdersigned Trustee to> seeing certain indebtednss therein mentioned, the said deed in trust bing'dated March 11th., 1920^ and registered in book No. 13 at page 172 of the records of dee<j[^ in trust of Transyfvania county, N. C.; and the said indebtedness mentioned in said deed’in trust having become due, are remwining anpaid» and notice as required ht said deed in trust having been given to the makers of the said deed in trust and note, to make good the payment, and default not having been made good, and the holder of said note and deed in trust having de manded that the said lands described in said deed in trust be sold to satisfy the sai indebtedness and cost of sale: Therefore, I will sell to the high est bidder for cash at the court house door in the town of Brevard, N. C., Monday the 6th. day of March, 1922, ;at 12 o’clock M. all the following de- I scribed lot of land situated in Little River township, Transylvania county, 'N. C., and described as follows: Adjoining the lands of Mrs. D. P. Mills, W. M. Bums and others Beginning at a stone on the south side of Walker’s creek, Soloman Jones’ and D. W. Lee’s comer; thence with the line between S. A. Joaes and R. W. Lee’s land to a stone comer of Mr?. O. P. Mills and R. W. Lee’s land; thence with said line to the west comer of said land on a stone; thence with R. W. Lee’s line to a chestnut comer in the State line; thence with line between Mrs. 0. P. Mills and R. W. Lee’s land to a stone comer in the Green River road; thence with said road to l>ridge on WcIIicr'a creek near R. W. Lee’s dw^ng; ihoice tip said creek to the beginning, containing 61 acres, more or liess. For a full and complete desoriptioD of the said land reference is fisrebgr aiade to the deed in trust abonce refletred ta. This sale is made for the purpose of satisfyiag the said indebtedness together with the costs and expen ses of the sale. This JaniHcry 30th., 1922. CHAS. B. DEAVER, Trustee Feb. S-10-17-24-Deaver. £VEILSHARP I^NCILS It is a far cry from the primitive 'writing tools of the ancients to EVER- SHARP-the mod em writii^ won- der« Equipped with the patent rifled steel tip which cuts tiny grooves in the lead as it passes thru, thus prevent ing turning or slip ping. Eversharp leads made especially to fit the rifled tip* Perfect results fol low the use of the twp together* ’ With the excep tion of the checking pencil, every Ever- sharp has an eraser* Beautiful, useful, durable, econopiical, Eversharp truly holds first place* - 50 cents and up / • FRANK D. CLEMENT, The Hallmark Jeweler. .. if • \
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 3, 1922, edition 1
4
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