Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / April 14, 1922, edition 1 / Page 2
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Three Friendfy Gentlemen ■s’ r . . ' - -.1; t Ml? , 4 ffrriYTi in a new package that fits the pocnet— a price that fits the pocket-book— The same unmatched blend of T^mKjsiL Virginia and Burley Tobaccos GuBisnlccd by SLjL.^M^ *in NOTICE TO CREDITORS - I f T<fortli Carolina, Transylvania Coun- ^aving qualified as executrix of the last will and testament of J. F. Hays, late of Transylvania county, N. C. this-is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of J. F. Hays, deceased, to present them to the undersigned, or to her agrent, T. ;H. Shirman. at the office of IV.V'^ar i Banking Company, Brevard, N. C. on or before the 22nd day of March 1923, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons in anyway indebted to said estate arc herebv required to make immediate setf'^-'.ent. Maxch 22. 1322. MABEL C. WILSON, Executrix of Last Will of J. F. Hays. deceased., V JIOTIC2 BY PUBLICATION "y nM.' jntilled as above has been commenc ed in the District Court of the Uni- ed States for the Western District I of North Carolina, At Asheville for Lhe condemnation of the following I described lands in Transylvania Co., North Carolina, on the north side of I Searcy Creek, adjoining Tract I oif .he Vanderbilt lands and designated '.s Exception No. 3, containing 53.08 I acrcs, all of which said lands are fully Icscribed by metes and bounds in the petition filed in said proceeding, the said lands having been selected by :he Secretary of Agriculture, with the lapproyah of the National Forest Re^ Nervation Commission and found nec- pssary for the purpose of carrying lout an Act of Congress of the United jStates approved March 1, 1911 being Chapter 186. page 961, Vol. 36, Sta- :utes at Large, a^ amended by the |A.ct of August 10 1912, 37 Stat., 1269-300, ch. 284. And the said non-resident defend- jints named, and all persons whomso- iver owning or claiming to own any Jjstate, lien or interest of any kind lor character in and to the premises 1 {escribed in the petition in said pro- heeding, defendants named as afore- aid, WILL FURTHER TAKE NO- jriCE that they are required to ap- )ear in the District Court of the Uni- ed States for the Western District |>f North Caxolina, at Asheville, on :he 22 day of May 1922, and answer lor demur to the petition or complaint |in said proceeding, or the plaintiff vili apply -to the Court for the re- ief demanded in said petition. This notice issued by ^ order of ’’ourt, directing that publication be nade once a week for six successive [weeks in The Brevard News, a news- ("?aper published at Brevard, North Carolina. This the 30th day of March, 1922. R. L. BLAYLOCK, Clerk U. S. [Dist. Court. By O. L. McLurd, Deputy Clerk. [May 5—6tc. jA1'4 i Ui'is. SKYSCRAl { ; have sfettau' CARpUMA. miMT, iMPKIL K a. .eproacli to t.ialiftnuia, the iaud i*f l>ig trees, Wg peawhes, big telescupes, and big ranchers tiiut it should pttssess no skyst^raping buil<Hng worthy of the name! Of course, with the immense tracts of habitable territory within Its valleys, there is less apparent need for seeking commnnion with the sun- swept skies .tliau ihere might b<‘. say, in crowded New York^ Nevertheless. | it seems sometimes, on viewing the | Woolworth buildini?, that New York I piped and California refused to p’ay. , But now it appears that the reproach will be lifted. San Francisco will join the game with Its projected 800-foot j high Crocker bnllding, says the j Christian Science Monitor. This wUl j be easily the tallest building on the Pacific coast. But Its claims may not stop at all. Does not the Wool- worth itself measure but 780 feet from sidewalk to poak? Then, of#course, there will- be subsidiary note-compar- Ings with the.Woolworth,*which can offer 43 miles of plumbing,,two mileS of elevator shafts, 40 acres nf floor area, and hund’^ds Af milli^'ns pounds weight. Truly It is a wonder ful game! New York <^ub women have solved the problem of unsuitable Christmas presents by the simpl^ expedient of “swapping parties.” This deWce has been long practiced by youngsters, but somewhere In the borderland between diildhood and maturity most people develop what they are pleased to call sentiment and sensibility—hazy quali ties that nevertheless have a power ful hold on most of us. It Is a cou rageous adult who will fly in the face of the twin emotional Illusions. And evidently the members of the Wcunen’s City club are courageous In the ex treme. The strangest thing about it was that tiiere were actually senti mental people in New York to protest, says Youtlis* Companion. One doesn’t associate sentimentality and New York clubs, espctrially of the feminine per* suasion. To a farmer 'who complained to jhim about ^the taxes and asked who Iwould raise corn at 40 cents and otlier jcrops to feed the state “when j'ou get ill tliem boys that education” Gov* frnor Hyde lias written a reply that covei’s the case about as well as it be covered in brief form, says jthe St. Louis Globe Democrat. “Nine of levery ten of ^the families that n»ove jto town from the. country,” says the Jgovei'nor, “will tell you^that they lihoved to get their children into a ^tter school.” He makes the point the farms need these families and leclares tliat better farm conditions, letter schools, and oetter roads would lo more tlian to check tiiis injurious |»ovement. "It would, he predicts, turn tide tlu* other way and cause, lousands ol families now living in Jie towns to i-.jove back to the farms. According to a reix>rt of tlie United tates Department of Agrieuiture, the ^'orlv of the seed-eating birds last win- !r saved the farmers of X3hio al>out $.3,000,000. This represents the en hanced value of crops due to the de struction of weed seeds. Tliis winter our busy little allies probably will du plicate their good work. A flock of tree sparrows or juncoes or a covey of bob white is very interesting when it Is nqled in the snowy'fields. It is even more interesting when one under stands that each bii*d in seeking to sat isfy Its own h inger Is working to make the earth more productive- for human requirements. An ordinary passenger locomotive consumes a pound of fuel for every 52 feet it travels. Every unnecessary stop, made with a heavy freight or passenger train, represents a fuel loss of from 500 to 700 pounds of coal, depending on the weight of the train, the length of the stop, and the gi'adc conditions, writes Floyd W. Parsons in the World’s Work. A brakeline air leak on a train of 50 freight cars has been known to cause a loss of as much as 2,540 pounds of coal in a ten-hour period. The loss- of coal every time a modem locomotive pops off for flw minutes is about 75 pounds. If loco motive firemen were to save a little more than one shovelful of Coal out of every ton used, the total saving would be equal to nearly 1 per cent of ail the coal handled. L Where Do You Keep Yowr Money? . If you ke^ your m<mey in your Home Bank it helps you and ey^ry member in the com* munity. If you send it away from Home it'helps some one else and some other commu nity. Our money is loaned among our own people—it is used to develop our conununity. You know us. We are al ways here. You can fihd out everything about us. When you deposit your money with us you teke NQ chances with that money. No one has ever, regretted keeping money here. Thousands may regret not having done so. PKGAH BANK BREVARD, N. C. % m '‘Civilization begins and ends with the plow.” No real growth in art, wience, literature and other out growths of virile citizenship lias ever been attained in any country without agriculture to produce tiie people’s food and clothing and to make It possible for a division of labor In society. Na tions may rise and fall as tiiey have, but if they attain any considerable commerciifl importuned they must be backed by agriculture that affords sus tenance fc)f the people. Truly, civiliza tion will end whea the plow ceases to run and the “eartl» to- ylrfd her froits in season.” \ The extreme of consdentiousraem seems to have been reac&ed In the cane of tHe girl who, J>efow8* <r(»nmlttiiig suicide in her boardli^ house romn by turning on the gas, tlioughtfnlly fefi $3.50 on the table to pay for the gsis used. Aren't they making quite « lot «f ado over the farm hand wluo acqnirefl a piece of oil land t^t !» mtuinxSni^ SiSi' « oay, but continues to wotric IN THE D'‘TRICT COURT OF THE UNITED J " \TES FOR THE WEST ERN DISTIvICT OF NORTH CARO LINA. United Stales of America vs. S3.08 acres of land situated in Tran sylvania County, North Carolina, J. H. Pickelsimer, J. B. Pickelsimer and C. W, Pickelsimer and others. TO: . i Unknow heirs at law of John Har kins, deceased; Unkno^’ n heirs at law of Nancy Harkins, ^' iceased; Un known heirs at law c" H. M. Patter son. deceased; Unkn^ vn heirs of H. P. Searcy, deceased; Unknown heirs at law of j. G. Stamoy, deceased; and idl persons whomsf' ver. owning or claiming to oWn a y estate, lien or interest of any kir l or chflracter in a»d to the premia^' desrriberi in the petlUon in this' ca"' e: Yon icdll take nc .‘ee nn act ion In a speech in Boston, Mass., Secre tary of AgricuHure Wallace sfild: “We are app?bachi:;g that period w’hich comes in the life of every nation when we must determine whether we shall strive for a woll-rounded, self-sustain- inr “' ‘ ional life in wiiicli there shall be ; • balance between industry and Sign ; or whether, a» so many na tion ii: ilie past have dotfe, we shall •• crilice our agriculture for the build ' of cities and expect our food to h oduced not by independent farni 'i /■at by men and women of the pea--^ type.” for $1 inue fo Mars ^Hes United ships them.’ a day? He could afford t© eon- r less than that. •CM •M 40 40 <0 40 40 40 40 40 40 40 40 40 hal Foch, after travelfog and for many days over ibf^ States, may feel urged to say, “Parbltu. America doesn’t need Ixittle- and submarines as we need Doct ors are reported to have discov ered t] mt the practice of starving the Nov? cured half who m fever patients was wrong. They can hardly blame the patient If he want- to know from them if tliey are quit< sure tpey have It right this time. €e> ^. w- !? Time is money on any kind of a con struction job. Idle workmen, waiting for material, represent so much good money thrown to the winds. There will be no lost time bn the job if you buy from us. ^^Speed and Satisfaction” is the b^is of our Service. You will be treated with courtesy and receive close atten tion at all times, and we guarantee to ^^eliver the goods.’’ A small order means as much to us as a big one—each gets the same prompt and careful at tention. . I some man Is*s!ii<l to have b* er> of blindness hy n new sH ■ foliar. There nr»* some p-'.'- Ight be blinded b,v such a rIv ¥ Tlie ficr-ident to a mau on a car the oilier day is hard to .ctand. It seems almost incro'IIM this that tills inan shui:!.} atteni' to light his ciuur \\>‘)i'loth a cf'lIuT(xi(l <‘1.’.;! ■ •■"hv- 'lowevt'i’, it 1 th 't lr * Lone water many have i' on uses 330 iKV daily. There fires tliere sum' street-wasix ga^on^ 't be a •ot.nhi OJiiy sa.v tf> si'h Miller Supply Company J* A«|M1LLER, Manager *
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 14, 1922, edition 1
2
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