VOLUME XXXVII BREVARD KORTH CAROLINA, DECEMBER I, 1932. ' " NtImJ)W 44 = " , ?? ? :^^"--^S=S===;=^^ ? SUPERIOR COURT iS SMILED TO OPEN TERM HERE MONDAY Newly Elected Officers To Be Installed During The Day Also _ > WITH BOARD~MEETINGS IN THE REGULAR SESSION Combine To Make Next Mon day An Interesting Day ? For The County Next Monday will be a busy day in Brevard, with induction into office of the newly elccted officers, opening of Superior court and the meeting of the school board and the County Com missioners. It is expected that a large number of people will be in toi.vn for the occassion. Judge Walter K. Moore is sched uled to hold this term of court, but as he is very ill another judge will be sent here m his stead. It was not known Wednesday night who will come, but many believed that Judge H. H. Koyle Sink, now holding court in Haywood, will be sent to Brevard for this session. This is not official however, as no one would so state ex cept in the nature of a surmise. In the matter of the installation of the new officers, but few changes will be made in the personnel. The new board of county commissioners will have only three members as against the five members heretofore constitu ting the beard. Of these three, two were re-elected, these being W. B. Henderson and L. V. Sigman. W. L. Aiken is the new member of the board. O. L. Erwin, former chairman of the board, was elected as county treasurer, and will succeed Mrs. Jus tice in that office. ,-a ! J. C. Wike will be installed as the county surveyor, while Dr. J. B. Lynch will go in as county coroner. Jess A. Galloway was re-elected as register of deeds, and wHl assume the office for another two-year per iod. T. S. Wood will be sworn' in a3 sheriff and tax collector, succeeding T. E. Patton, jr., who has held this office for the past four years. Sheriff Wood has been serving as deputy, and j the duties of the office are already familiar routine to the new officer. The clerk of the court, Otto Alex ander, was re-elected two yeas agoj for a four-year term, and his office is | not affected by the recent election, nor will it be involved in the program next Monday. Hon. M. W. Galloway was elected to the house of representatives, suc ceeding W. M. Henry, former member J of the house. Mr. Galloway's duties] will begin on the first Monday in Jan uary, when the legislature convenes, j Friends of the several officers will j be on hand to witness their indue- j tion into office. EASTERN STAR TO MEET The regular scheduled meeting of i the Order of the Eastern Star will j be held next Tuesday evening at 7:30 j in the Masonic Hail. All members j are urged to be present. IF REPEAL COMES IN REALITY, THEN HEAR BEER RADIO SPIELS Programs Will Be Sponsored By Breweries And Liquor Dealers YOUR ANNOUNCERS WILL j TELL YOU MANY THINGS | How Beer Will Keep That, School Girl Complexion, ; Or Build Muscle Get ready! If we are going to have liquor we are going to have some of the other things with it. If repeal comes, gentlemen, expect this: Your favorite orchestra on the radio with intervals of liquor adver tising tailing the girte how beer will preserve that schoolgirl complexion, make 'em fat and make 'em lean, and put tv^giiir right on their beans. Bill board^ mpes of them, decorating the countryside, advising your son to drink whiskey, pictures of football | players, runners, and tennis players,! and the perennial pretty girl, all ad vertising liquors, Whiskey testimon ials from "champions" who do not ink themselves, but like to cash the pks? beer testimonials from Mis3 ;th America, who also likes her ks. White waj'3 blazing with the ation and the urge to drink li Advortisements confronting you your newspaper and magazine, on display at nearly every ,.corner. friend, get ready to have your nashed and your wife shoulder pto the street. Get ready to see customers pass right py your Jen route to the barroom. They on their way to contribute to fquor revenue and you, when you ^our taxes, will be forking ever ? to support public ofl5?iafe tfw? In the back of saloon?. MORE THAN 300,000 PEOPLE VISIT PARK DURING FIRST YEAR Only One Other National Park Had More Visitors Than Smokies I HIGHWAY WORK BEING I RUSHED FOR SEASON ? ExpecS Local Park To Take The Lead During Season Of 1933 I Asheville, N. C. ? With the Great Smoky Mountains already giving .promise of becoming, because of its i nearness to eastern centers of popula tion, the most popular of the park I areas in the National Park system, North Carolina highway forces are | pushing work on new motor routes leading into the scenic mountain play ground. Despite the fact that the Great Smokies have not as yet been las highly developed as the western ? parks, over 300,000 visitors entered the boundaries of the new park dur ing 1932, according to Nnt-ional Park officials. Present construction project? include the link of N. C. 112 from near Whit tier, N. C., to Cherokee, N. C., which road is being widened and re-routed to care for heavy traffic, surfacing of N. C. 107 from Smokemont to New found Gap on the crest of the Great Smokies, improvement of N. C. 107 from Cherokee, N. C., to Ela, N. C., to b0 undertaken when the N, C. 112 route is completed and the sur veying of a new road to Soco Gap en trance to the National Park near Waynesville, N. C. The 1932 total of visitors in the Great Smokies places this park sec ond in the list of 22 national parks in volume of travel. The Great Smokies were exceeded as a visitor-attraction only by Yosemite National Park in the country, exhibited as high a per centage of increase. The 1933 season is expected to place the Great Smokies in the first position among among national parks m visitor totals. To care for this in creased traffic, the North Carolina ? (Continued on back page ) iPIG CLUB BOYS ARE~ 1 TESTING NEW FEED The Pig Club boys have just re- J ceived 1000-pound co-operative ship- 1 ment of supplemental hog feed man-i ufactured in Iowa and endorsed by I the Iowa State College. This feed is to be used by the boys in connection with home-grown grains, and is be lieved to be one of the most econom ical feeds obtainable. One part of the | concentrated feed is used to twelve parts of the grain ration and eon-j [tains a well balanced formula con i sisting of protein, vitamines, Iodine ? and minerals. The boys are very enthusiastic in! their pig club work and are making a careful study of feeds, choosing J those that will enable them to raise j the animals at such low cost that! they will realize some profit from ! even with a low market when they ] are ready to be sold. It was after i considerable study along this line! ^hat this particular feed, known asj Iowa Big Ten was selected and j through quantity building they were! able to get it at a very reasonable! figure. Twenty boys are engaged in the project, under the supervision of Prof. Glazener, vocational agricul ture instructor in the Brevard High school. An interesting fact about this new feed it that every members of the concern manufacturing it is a prac tical farmer and has made a careful study of the subject of feeds. Another point mentioned is the fact that it is endorsed by the Iowa State college land Iowa is well known for the high | type hogs raised there. HOUSTON CLOSING SATURDAY EVENING "Tell the good folks of Transyl- 1 jvania county that we are closing ouri ' store Saturday night, and will begin moving the remaining stock to Hen j dersonville early Monday morning, i and all who want to buy furniture . at unbelievably low prices would do well to call at our store before clcs I ing time Saturday night," was the [message that Mr. Houston, of the I Houston Furniture company, asked j The Brevard News to give to the j people. Since announcement 5c last week'3 Brevard News was made, telling oi the removal of the Houston store to Hendersonville, many citizens have expressed regret, attesting tfcs gen uine popularity of Mr. and Mrs. Houston. The company is conducting a sale of their furnitwr# *nd many neople have taken jwhttrntisga of the jrreat values being offered. The Houston compare will occupy one of the largest store roosea 73 H?jnde?~ eowrille, having swneihiag ifts j|* 000 feet of sggffi fcjgfllg Raleigh, Nov. SO. ? If the ifirs* 20 stato departments to report budget requirements for next yea?, we to be taken as indicating the of ev ents, then North Carolina is- facing a larger expenditure of public' jnouey next year by far than was alloted for i this year's spending. These 20 de- j partments, in preparing their budget j estimates for comir.g year, are ask ing substantia! increases over the al- 1 iotment made for each department in this present year. Other departments will make known their wants at an early date. I If these budget requests are grant led by the commission, and the legis ! lature must find ways and means of raising the necessary money, then ! the question of taxes will become really acute in. North Carolina. The ; Twenty departments and the amounts j of increase aaked are as follows; | ^ The corporation commission this year has $42,400, and wants $96,328 !for next year. I The" department of public welfare ( had $36,127 this year, and is asking :fos $46,210 for next year's work. Mothers' aid had $44,000 this year! And wants $55,000 for the coming i year, j The state board of health was al- ; lotted $248,091 this year, and wants! this raised to $434,073 for the corning , year. j The historical commission had $18,- j 400 this year, and is asking for $23,- j 282 next year. The department of labor got along! on $19,355 this year, but wants this I raised to $22,220 for next year. t Standards and inspection had $16,- j 250 this year, but places the needed j sum for next year at $24,298. j The industrial commission was al-! [ ( Continued on back page) MRS. C. C. CASE DIES ; | AT AGE OF 76 YEARS Mrs. C. C. Case, 76 years of age, died last Sunday morning at her home in the Oak Grove section, after an illness of three weeks' duration. Fu neral services were held Monday af- ( ternoon at 2 o'clock in the Oak Grove' church, Rev. Paul Hartsell, Rev. J. I H. West and Rev. W. S. Price, Jr., | conducted the services. Burial was made in the' Oak Grove cemetery. Mrs. Case had lived all of her long and useful life in the community about Oak Grove, and was noted for her great Christian influence and neighborly regard for her neighbors.; The husband died last July. She was ! a member of the Oak Grove church,, and had exerted great influence over the people who knew her. Surviving are five children, three daughters and two sons. They arc Mrs, H. L. Southern, Pisgah Forest; Mrs. Rufus Guffey, Brevard; Mrs. Talmadge Southers, Horseshoe; Carl Case, of Brevard, and Clyde Case, of Pisgah Forest One sister survives, Mrs. A. W. Beck, of Brevard, and one brother, J. M. Hamilton, of Wy oming, Pall bearers were: W. L. Morris, V, L. Neill, J. M. Meece, J. A. Tin sley, L. D. Martin and George Lesley. reporTredcross ROLL CALL SUCCESS I Rev. Harry Perry, chairman of the | Red Cross Roll Call, is highly elated over the success of the call in this | county, he states, partial reports be ing made to him from the workers '? throughout the county indicating that ' great success attended the roll call j lehat began on Armistice Day and : ended on Thanksgiving ? Day. The ! chairman has had reports from the I primary school in Brevard, the gram- i mer school, Lake Toxaway, Davidson' [ River school and the Round Top school. All of these schools report- ! | ed one hundred per cent enrollment j But few reports haye been received j j from the churchs, the chairman j stated. | The Rev. Perry paid great compli- ' I ment to the work of the schools un der the leadership of the principals i and teachens. The elementary school ir. Brevard, Prof. J. E. Rufty, prin cipal; the Davidson River school, un der the leadership of Principal Jen kins; the Lake Toxaway school un der the leadership of Prof. Render- : I son, and the Round Top School, Miss : Mabel Whitmire as leader, all won the highest honors, Rev. Perry says, i in the splendid work done for the? Red Cross. Rev. Perry was especially ' well pleased with the work done byj , Miss Whitmire at Round Top, stat- j [ ing that her work is of outstanding j I nature. j i It is expected that reports from other groups, including the churches, | will be made at an early date. InewsIeceTyedof |M8. COOPER'S DEATH News has been received in Brevard ! of the death on Thanksgiving Day : i of Roy E. Cooper, of Cohutta, Ga., 1 ia former well known citizen of Bre- 1 ,vard. He married the former Miss, !Inez Nicholson, of Brevard, and had 1 been living in the Georgia town for, some time. The widow ar.d two chil- j ?' dren survive. Mrs. Cooper's father, 'Milan Nicholson, is with his daug'n iter, and is expected to return to i Brevard at an early date. While a resident of Brevard. Mr.j Cooper was connected with the Lowe Motor coapany, until that business was removed from Brevard, after which he was with the Whitmire Mo tor Sale* company until his departure from Br^TaA P,e WORKERS COMPLETE i TASK AT DAVIDSON: ! Workers being- employed through relief funds have about completed the' cleaning of the Davidson River cemc tery and it is very much improved., j Those who have relatives buried there j 1 are requested to put the final touches I to the work by caring for the indi-! Ividual graves in which they are in-; [tereated. These should be rounded off and the markers replaced and made secure. This will add much to the ap pearance of the cemetery and this is | the best time to do it following the; general .cleaning off it has just re ceived. MONmlclflCKEN BUSINESS PROVEN ^ Proving that there is money in tlie chicken and legg business, the) B. ar.d B. Feed and Seed company* takes the figures on a flock of 100; hens and show where the flock will I earn over $25 per month. j One hundred hens, Mr. Brittain says, will lay an average of 1,500 eggs per month, or 15 egg.? per hen each month. The B. and B. is r.ow paying 30 cents per dozen for eggs, which would amount to $37.50 for the 1,500 eggs. Figuring corn at 58 cents a bushel, Mr. Brittain says that $3 worth of corn plus $6 worth of lay ing mash will feed the flock for a month, leaving a net earning of $28.50 from the Sock of 100 hens. In an advertisement on another page of this paper Mr. Brittain in vites farmers and poultrymen to i come in on Tuesday, Thursday orj Saturday or any other day and talk; the matter over with him as it may j mean extra money for all concerned./ BOARD OF EDUCATION TO MEET NEXT MONDAY | The regular meeting of the county ? board of education will be held on; Monday, December 5. according toj an announcement made by Prof. J.j B. Jones, city- county superintendent of education. All members of the} board ar erequested to be present, at j this meeting. BREVARD CHAPTER | PLANNING PROGRAM Plans are being made for the Father-Son banquet given by the Breverd chapter of Young Tar Heel Farmers, to be held here on Friday evening, December 9. The committee in charge of the program is pre paring to make this event one of the] outstanding events of its kind ever! staged here, but have not announced the nature of the program as yet. j A more detailed account of the! event ?will be given in next week's issue of the Brevard News. FUNERALlOMENOW 1 IN NEW QUARTERS ! Announcement of the removal of the Kilpacr-ck's Funeral Home to the new quarters in the Mul! Building on Broadway is made in this week's Brevard News, and of special inter- ) est is the further announcement of: ;the company that Rev. W. S. Price, llioenscd mortician, is now connected with the Kilpiitrick firm. Commodi ous waiting rooms and parlors have been arranged rnd comiortably fur nished for use by patrons. The par lors whero services may he held are especially arranged. In addition to the u;id?rtaldng and embalming services qf this old es tablished Brevard C#wqp*sy, Kilpat rick'e have a medorn ambulance ser vice thai every hour in i>A5n -rfevr^mSB^SCtjltotrkk's Far: 614& t 1 niit Msniy. i HL SPORTSMEN FROM 18 STATES COMING FOR DEER HUNTING HERE Some May Camp At White Pine Camp, But Many Will Stop In Town _ HUNT BEGINS DEC. 5 AND LASTS UNTIL 24 Will Enter 50 At. A Time For Three Days Each ? Officials Coming In the list, of tbo four hundred] hunters chosen by lot from among the j over 1,200 who applied for the privi-,' lege of shooting deer in the great Pisgah National Game Preserve, this season, are sportsmen from 18 states. The announcement that' the Preserve would be opened to hunters this year, for the first time in its history, brought applications for shooting privileges from ali parts of the coun try. ; The 400 lucky hunters were chosen j by lot on November 17 by Pisgah \ National Forest officials and a special j drawing committee. An additional lOOi alternates were chosen, to fill the j places of any of the original 400 who j were unable to take advantage of the ' privilege. The area chosen for the hunt, to t;:ke place from December 5 to 24 inclusive, comprises an area of 14, 000 acres in the heart of the preserve. The shooting area has a deer popula-i tion of from 1,200 to 1,400, according, to the deer census taken in the area, in 1931. During the period of the , hunt the area open to shooting will be marked on its boundaires with signs. [ Ten separate sections in the area have been designated and each hunter I will be assigned to one of these sec- ! tions during the hunt. Fifty hunters; will enter the area at one time, cach : hunter being allowed three days hunt- 1 ing and is allowed to shoot one deer.' buck oc doe, which he may ship toj any part of the country. All ammunition used must be of txK; ? seft^noaed type Tfcid rifles of n