OFFICERS NAMED $ ROSENW AID SCHOOL The Ro?enwal caller of Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Frady 1 and family Monday. Me. and Mrs. Curtis Grey have moved in the Davidson River section, and Mr. and Mrs. Frances Allen have moved into a resident belonging to j T. T. Patton. Master Billy Lyday spent the week nd with Mr. and Mrs, Wade Lyday at Turkey Creek. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Capps and daughter, Crlena attended the Chero- j kee Indian Fair last' week. Miss Annie Gash was an Asheville j visitor last Wednesday. W. A. Lyday and Sam Wyatt at- j tended a recent Junior order meet- j ing in Wayriesville. Mrs. Carl Frady and children of j Brevard were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Frady. Mrs. T. Brittian taught the third grade in the local school several days last week in the absence of the reg ular teacher, Miss Flora Lyday who has been ill. Report of the condition of the TRANSYLVANIA TRUST CO bank at Brevard, N. C. to the Com missioner of Banks At the Close of Business on the 30th Day of Septem ber 1932. RESOURCES AMOUNT '.cans and Discounts $ 25,163.24 Overdrafts NONE United States Bonds .... 41,052.68 N'crth Carolina Bonds . . . 47,838.36 Furniture and Fixtures . . 122.15 Cash in Vault and Amounts Due from ap proved Depository Banks 32,372.32 Other Assets 122.11 Pisgah Industrial Bank, Guaranteed Asset Acct. 11,670.97 TOTAL $158,341.83 LIABILITIES Capital Stock Paid In . .$ 25,000.00 Other Deposits Subject to Check 60,325.95 Other Deposits Secured by a Pledge of Assets or Depository Bond 68,268.53 Cashier's Checks Out standing 826.03 rime Certificates of De posit (Due on or After 30 Days) 2,558.27 Savings Deposits (Due on or After 30 Days) 1,363.05 TOTAL $158,341.83 State of North Carolina County pf Transylvania. M. B. McDaniel, Cashier, F. D. Clement, Director, and Judson Mc Crary, Director of the Transylvania Trust Co. Bank, each personally ap peared before me this day, and, being duly sworn, each for himself, says that the foregoing report is true to the best of his knowledge and belief. M. B. McDaniel, Cashier, F. D. CLEMENT, Director, JUDSON McCRARY, Director. Sworn ?o and subscribed before me this the 11 day of October, 1932. MARY E. JOINES, Ncrtary ^Public. J My commission expires March 1, 1984 ^ children spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. Keith Stamey Sunday. ! Little Earl Stamey visited hi3 uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Stamey t Tuesday morning. The health of our community is very good at present. We Have Added A Line Of ?hoice Fruits bANANAS, GRAPES, APPLES, ETC. At The LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN Bananas, dozen 15c Apples, dozen 20c Grapes, 2'lbs. ,15c Buy from us and get the most of the best, for the least. Blue Bird Ice Cream Parlor Ruby McKinna, Mgr. McCrary Building Brevard, N. C. THE PRAYER CORNER ( From the files of long ago) /A \ar-7T? ? ? AN ABIDING COMFORTER "He abideth with you, and shall be in you A Comforter"? what a word of bliss, if we only could realize i 1 . Let us repeat it over and over to our selves, until its meaning the very depth of our being. And an "Abiding Comforter" too, not one who comes and goes, and is never on hand when most needed, but one who , is ?1 ways ready to give us Joy ior mourning, and the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness,. The very words "Abiding Comfo - er" are an amazing revelation. O comprehend them. We th.nk ou^ selves when we are in trouble '! can have a human comforter to stay with us for only a few days. but here is a Divine Comforter who is always staying with us, and whose power to comfort is infinite. Never never^ ought we for a single minute, to be without comfort; never *0' " minute ought we to be uncomfortable. I have often wondered whether those early disciples at all realizes what this glorious legacy ot a Com forter meant. I am very sure the majority of the disciples now do pot If they did. there could not possiblj be so many uncomfortable Christians . about. | But you may ask whether this Di- ? vine Comforter does not sometimes reprove us for our sins, and whether , we can get comfort out of this. In my opinion this is exactly one of the , places where the Comfort comes in,; For what sort of creatures should we ; be, if we had no Divine Teacher al- j ways at hand to show us our faults, and awaken in us a desire to of them? "If" said a woman writer whom 1 highly esteem, "I am walking along the street with a very disfiguring hole in the back of my dress, o which I am ignorance, it is certa'"^ a very great comfort to have a kind friend who will tell me of it, and similarly is is indeed a comfort to know that always abiding with me is a Divine All-Seeing Comforter who will reprove me for all my faults, a.i will not let me go on in a fatal un consciousness of them." Emerson say, "It is far more to a man s interest, that he should see his own faults than any one else should see them, and a moments thought will corn ince us that this is true., and will make us thankful for the Comtorter who reveals them to us. "I remember vividly," said the above writer, "the comfort it used to be . to me, when I was young, to have a sister who always knew what was the right and proper thing to do, ami J who, when we went out togethei, a j BLANTYRE BREEZES j .Ssftsmssifs! Saturday. . Raymond Reed returned home last week after spending a few days with his sister, Mrs. Howard Setzer at Canton, N. C. ... | Mrs. Clanie Justus and children ( spent Monday afternoon with J ,UMiss Mary Ellen Reed went to the"! Indian Fair one day last week. I Rev C. B. Hollingsworth, went toj Cashiers Valley Tuesday Mr. W. L. Frady called on Re\. r ? H. Holden Sunday. W. K. Duncan visited friends at Pisgah Forest last Sunday evening- ^ Mr B A. Twichell made a business . erin to Hendersonville Tuesday. ' l and Mrs. Rahn and family, our] new neighbors, have moved into the house formerly occupied by Will Nor man. They will build a new residence on the land which they recently pur ChMrs.' Clanie Justus visited Mrs. j John Reed Tuesday. . p Mrs. R. V. Duncan visited Mrs. f. F Holden at Pisgah Forest, she re ports Mrs. Holden slightly improved Rev. Lewis Simpson is on the s.ck '^John Reed called on Rev. F. H Holden Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. JonM Visited Mr. and Mrs. Carson Woodfm last week. , i EAST FORK NEWS ! i Rev. Wilborn Galloway will preach at the Baptist church here the fourth Sunday in this month. Mr. Robert Kimsey and Mr. Mc Leod, of Brevard, were on East Fork squirrel hunting Saturday. Rev. Mr. Yates filled his regular appointment at the East Fork M. E. church Sunday afternoon. The Singleterry family have moved to the Dubb Cottage for the winter. Several of cur people are going to attend the quarterly meeting at Rosman next Sunday afternoon. Rev. and Mrs. Eli Simpson, of Ly man, S. C., spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. H . E. Whitmire. Mrs. Whitmire accompanied them to Ly man where she expects to spend some time visiting her children in Lyman. Jule Iteynolds and family, of Bre vard, were East Fork visitors Sun day. Revival services were held at the M. E. church for a few days last vyeek. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Gravley, Sr., visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jteath Sunday. Sonje of our farmers are busy mak ing syrup this week. We have heard that the frost got >ome of our late corn on East Fori ' 'ast week. I ways kept nva in order. I never felt j ! any anxiety or responsibility abotit ! I myself if she was by, for I knew she } I would keep (a Btrict watch over me,j i and nudge me or whisper to ma if I I was making any mistakes. I was always made comfortable and not uncomfortable by her presence. But when it chanced that I went any where alone, then I would indeed fee] uncomfortable, for then there was nos one to keep me straight." The declaration is that He "com forts all our waste places," and He doer this by revealing them to us, and at the same time showing us how He .-an make our wilderness like Eden, I ind our deserts like the garden of the Lord. You may object, perhaps, that you are not worthy of His Comforts. I do not suppose you are. No one ever is. But you need His comforting, and ail the more you need it, because you are not worthy. Christ came into the world to save sinners, not good peo ple, and your unworthiness is your greatest claim for His Savlatlon. A PRAYER Father of all Mercies, God of all Comfort, we bring before Thee the / record of our lives, stained with the | memories of sin and failure. Be pa- j tient with us, for if Thou tuns Thy j face from us we are lost. Cast us! not from Thy Presence, and take not Thy Holy Spirit, The Comforter, J from us. Here we would remember before Thee the wants and sorrows of our fellows. Unto those, O God, who fee] the pain and mystery of life, let the Sun of Righteousness arise with healing in His wings. Remember in pity, the sick, the distressed of body1 or of mind. Many and great are the disorders of our mortal nature, but The medicines are mighter. Open the souls of all who be on beds of weariness to the inflow of Thy Di vine Life. In the silence ma/ they hear Thy voice saying "I have heard thy prayer, I have seen they tears, be hold I will heal thee." For the burden bearers, the tempest ! tossed, the afflicted and not comfort ed, we pray. Thy consolations are greater than all the sorrows of the world. Bind up the broken hearted, and with Thy touch heal all those j wounds of the soul that bleed and [ will not cease. Give a spirit of endu rance and of trust to those whose thorn in the flesh must remain. Save them from despair, from the indiffer ence of the heart without faith, and perfect Thy strength in their weak- ' ness. Comfort all men everywhere 1 with Thy light, and guide thsm by 1 Thy Comforting Spirit, for Jesus 1 Christ's sake. Amen. 1 ? C. D. C. 1 ! OAKLAND NEWS Louis Rierdon and I. S. Senders with a bunch of school boys, attended the Indian Fair last week. Mr: and Mrs. J. L. Sanders were called to South Carolina last Friday on account of the death of their brother in law, Mr. Pitts. Clarence Norton was in Lake Tax away last Friday 011 business. T. E. Reid, of Brevard, was in our section last week in the interest of his business. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Reid and Miss Lula Reid attended the funeral of Mrs. J. A. Ycung, at Brevard, Satur day. L. C. Sanders and Clifford Reid were Brevard visitors Saturday night. Mr3. LeRoy McCail spent Satur day night with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Senders. A crowd of young folks from Oak land went on a picnic Sunday, Mrs. Henry Alexander chaperoned the party. Mrs. E. D. Reid, Miss Lula Reid and Mrs. Lee Norton were dinner guests Sunday of Mrs. S. E. Alex ander. Gus Galloway, of Glenville, was a j Sunday dinner guest of his sister, t Mrs. Mary Burgess. Mrs. I. S. Sanders spent Saturday with Mrs. Wade Nicholson. E. A. Reid called on Mr. and Mrs. W F. McCail Sunday afternoon. Mrr. and Mrs. Wesley Reid, of Highlands, spent several days here last week visiting relatives and re-j turned home Monday. Miss Myrtle McCal! and Miss Evon ; Sanders were visitors at the B. Y. P. ' U. services at Cashiers Sunday night. , Burrus Alexander and Don Wat son, of Glenville, called on friends j here Sunday afternoon. T. B. Reid spent the week-end with his grandson Ford Reid, and family, ! and motored with them to visit rela- j tives at Cullowhee Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. MsCall called on Mis's Alberta Burgess Sunday evening. W. L. Dillard, of Six Mile, S. C. ; called on friends here Monday. Wade Nicholson called on W. F. ] McCail Monday afternoon. Mrs. Mary Nicholson called on Mr3. ! S. L. Sanders Monday., i E. A. Reid made a business call on Clarence Norton Monday afternoon. 1 Tim Miller, of Sapphire, and dif- ' ford Reid called on L. C. Sanders j Sunday. His many friends will be sorry to learo that Uncle Abe Lowe is still I ;n the sick list T. E. Reid had the misfortune to ' lose a good part of his cabbage crop ? last week. First time that such a thing has happened in our communi ty that we know of. We have always been sorry for anyone whom we thought needed food and had no way to earn money to pay for it, but we !F!JT SURPLUS FEED INTO BEEF CATTLE The two main advantages of fat tening beef cattle for market arc to provide a market for surplus feed stuffs and to wcure manure that will cut down the fertilizer bill. "Whether it will pay any faraer to feed some cattle this winter will depend largely on the amount of feed he has on hand and thfe nead for manure in his farming opera tions," says L. I. Case, beef cattle expert at State College. "Every roan ?who prows a surplus of feed each year will also find it profitable to feed a given number of cattle each year. If he will follow this system year in and year out, he wiil unsual |v ah'.ad over a period of year*." Mr. Case makes it clear that the beat feed for fattening cattle is corn. If this grain is fed with dry rough age and a proteind concentrate, it will produce gains. The practice gen prally followed in the main cattle feeding sections of the country is to feed broken ear corn, allowing the hogs to follow the steers and consume any waste. With present prices for beef cat tle, it will not pay to buy feed, ex cept cottonseed meal or some other such concentrate for balancing the corn. When cottonseed meal is lew in price, it may pay to buy both meal and hulls. However, heavy rations of cottonseed meal are not safe over lone periods of time. When using the meal, feed out mature animais weighing from 900 to 1100 pounds. These may be finished in from 90 to 100 days which is close to the limit of safety. I,ow grade roughage is fine for wintering steers and dry cows but animals being fattened for market should receive only the dry roughage which they will clean up after the concentrates are fed, Case says. have no sympathy for folks who will riot work, nor for theives, and we hope Mr. Reid will catch the men who stole his cabbage. Mr. and Mrs. Wade Nicholson and son, Claude, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. McCail and T. B. Reid attended the political speaking at Rosman Mon day night and report a jolly good time. Jones county farmers ordered 183 bushels of Abruzzi rye seed this fall through the local mutual exchange. 66T^~ LIQUID - TABLETS - SALVE Checks Malaria in 3 days, Colds first day. Headaches or Neuralgia in 30 minutes. 666 SALVE for HEAD COLDS. Most Speedy Remedies Known MR. CAR OWHER Within the next few weeks cold weather will be here with us. If you have an old battery in your car and it fails to start some cold morning, call or come to see us about a new FIRESTONE Battery. Firestone Batteries are guaranteed by Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. and'by us for 12, 18 and 24 months. Firestone Batteries are by far the best battery on the American market ? they are built of the finest ma terials that money can buy. They are built of high oversize plates which provide added life and capacity ? more power to spin the motor under ail conditions. Tough Post Orford Cedar Separators give protection against shorting and help to retain the active materials in the plates. No other battery can offer you as much safety and power as Firestone Batteries. DON'T FUSS AT YOUR CAR BECAUSE IT WON'T START These cool mornings have a decided effect upon your automobile. It ia NOT always the fault of the Battery when the car starts slowly and lazily. . Often the trouble is in the Starter, or maybo it is because of a bad Spark Plug or something like that. The proper thing to do is to bring the car here and have the ' v IGNITION PARTS, SPARK PLUGS and the STARTER Thoroughly tested. Maybe we could save you several dollars, and we know we can save you much annoyance and delay. Of course, if you need a battery we have the Firestone in the right size to fit your car. Firestone Sentinel Tire 29 x 440 $3.96 30 x 450 4.47 28 x 475 5.12 Firestone Oldfield Tire 29 x 440 $5.25 30 x 450 5.95 28 x 475 6.80 "WE SAVE YOU MONEY AND WRECKER SERVICE DAY Brevard, N. C. REPLACEMENT PARTS FOR YOUR CAR ? SEE