Our County—Its Progress and Prosperity the First Duty of a Local Paper. j. J. MIIfER, Manager. BREVARD, TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY. N. C., FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 8.1907 VOL. XII-NO. 45 TBANSYLVANIA LODGE No. 143, K. of P. , / Meets Tuesday e ^'enings 8.30., Castle Hall, Fra- ternity buildiug. A hearty welcome for visitors at all times. Pv. L. GASH, C. C. Brevard Telephone Exchange. hours: Daily—7 a. m. to 10 p. m. Sunday—8 to 10 a. m., 4 to 6 p. m. Central Office—McMinn Block. Professional Cards. W. B. DUCKWORTH, ATTO R N E Y-AT-L A W. Rooms 1 and 2, Pickelsimer Building*. GASH (Sb GALLOWAY LAWYERS. Will practice in all the courts. Rooms 9 and 10, McMinn Block. D. L. ENGLISH LAWYER Rooms 11 and 12 McMinn Block, BREVARD, N. C THOMAS A. ALLEN, Jr., DENTIST. (Bailey Bloc'^.) HENDERSONVILLE, - - N. C. A beautiful crown for $4.00 and up. Plates of all kind at reasonable prices. All work guaranteed; satisfactioti or IK) pay. Teeth extracted without pain. Will be glad to have you call and ingpeet my offices, work and prices The JEthelwold Brevard’s New Hotel—Modern Ap pointments—Open all the year The patronage of the traveling public as well as summer tourists is soliclte<J. 0pp. Court House, Brevard, N.C. R-I-P-A-N-S Tabules Doctors find A good prescription For mankind The 5-cent packet is enough lor usual ocoasiOTis. The family bottle (60 oent'^) contains a suppiy for a year. All druggists sell them. T| Oi Ea CORRECT SURVEYS MADE Maps, Plots and Profiles Plotted. Only the firxcst adjusted instrn- nients used. Absolute accuracy. P. O. Brevard, N. C. RlCHEySOriO [■ „ VIRGlNiA t fi McGUiRE. M. P , PwESingniT. I ^ conforms to the Stand arvis S' * • by law for Medicfil Education. Send for £ N '-I'llstiu No. 11, which tells about it. t hTQt^ free cataIomt<^s-Specify Depariine'it- fi ;MCD!Ciri€ - DENTISTRY - PHARftlACs ^-.rwr’:-ii«flS5S3!rW3UKrE»IMaHW8MraEIB«aBHB^^ ^ '' ^ ^ ^ Write at once and learn vrhy we positions, and best salaries for graduates. Eugene Anderson, Pr«^s- ^ Do You Belong to This corumittee is made up of the men who sit around an excava tion for a new building, whittle pine sticks, spit tobacco juice on the fresh dirt and watch the other fellows work. It’s all right to show interest in new build ings, in town develop ment and progress, but there’s a better way. You can do more good for yourself and the community by re signing from “The Citi zens’ Committee” and getting into the General Progress Committee. This committee is the one that PUTS UP THE NEW BUILDINGS, brings new business into town to occupy them, paints the old houses, keeps the sidewalks in good repair, beautifies the front yards, cleans up the back yards and otherwise makes this town a better town to live in. The General Progress Committee is the Unofficial Town Booming Committee. It really ought to be organ ized and made official. Let all of us work together for the advancement of the town we live in, and there will be more room around new excavations for the fellows at work to throw out the dirt. Eternal industry is the price of progress. Let’s all fall in line for the General Progress Commit tee—and then JUST WATCH THE OLD TOWN GROW. #M#Wf—i I i Improves the Worst Earth Road In Short Order. QUICKLY DESTROYS ALL RUTS Change to Smoothness Almost In stantaneous, Says Inventor of High way Improvement Device — Other Benefits Derived by Using the Drag. [Copyright, 1907, by D. Ward Kins*] The King drag is like a sleight of hand performer in appearing to ac complish the impossible. In twenty minutes after you hitch to the drag the worst earth road is so much bet ter that a magician seems to have been at work, assuming, of coiii'se, that the soil is in fit condition. If you think I am making too strong a state ment, try it, and if j’ou are still of the opinion 1 will pay you at the rate of $5 per da3' for the time you use in making the experiment. Look at these Iowa photographs. In Xo. 1 the fellies and several inches of the spokes are hidden in the ruts. Just a fev^’ minutes’ use of the drag and the ruts are obliterated, and even the tire is in plain view. The two pictures are of the same spot, and not more than thirty minutes elapsed from^ the malving of the lirst negative to the making of the last. The Missouri pic- m I DIBT ROAD BEFOEE DKAGGING. tures show as great a change. In both cases we selected the worst road v^e could find, and 1 drove the drag mj- self. The change to smoothness is almo::.! instantaneous, and it at once begins to distribute the travel. The distribution of the travel is due to the absence of ruts, and in turn it also discourages ruts. The smallest rut tends to the destruction of the road. The drag ov/es its reputation to the fact that it is the cheapest known method of de stroying ruts. On a level road a rut. however slight, means a spot where the vrater will lodge after the next rain. Because this spot retains water it remains softer than the higher por tions of the road and for this reason is deepened and widened by every wheel and every hoof that touches it. If it held a pint of water after the last rain it will hold a quart when the next one fails. It is twice as large as at the beginning and of course presents twice the surface to the teams and wagons. Soon it will be so large that I>IKT ItOAD FEW MINUTES AFTEli DRAGGIIfG. travel wdll pass to the other side of the highway. It is now a mudhole oT consequence and quite able during a ten days’ rain in spring or fall to stall the largest teams. How different would be the story had that first little rut been filled by the drag! A mudhole that contains but a pint of water is insignificant; it harms no one. True, it maj" jar an in valid or give pain to a delicate woman, but the load it will ruin next March it jostles so gently now’ that it is unno ticed. With the drag the jostling and the pain giving jar are eliminated. And, strange as it may seem, more money is spent for road work under the plan that allows the mudhole to develop and ripen than when the drag is used to nip it in the bud. On a hill road the tiny rut is the dan gerous ravine in embrj’O. Neither r.n- vine nor mudhole can exist in a care fully dragged earth road. The ciay BAD MISSOUIil BOAD BEFORE DRAGGING. hill south of my house has been work ed Vv’ith noijiing but a drag and a plow for over ten years. There have been no mudholes in all that time nor ruts worth more than passing notice. And this is the experience of farmers, road commissioners and men of science in authority all ovfer our broad land. The use of the King drag brings to pass numerous other details which gly seem unimportant, but which in the aggi'egate constitute the perfect earth road. One—smoothness—has been mentioned. Next to smoothness is the crowning of the road, which, with the smoothness, provides for the drainage of the traveled portion of the highv>^ay. Then comes hardness or density, whicli gives permanence and which comes more slowly than the first tv/o. grow ing and gaining for several years. Then follov»-s the absence of weeds, of the chuck hole at the bridge and cul vert, a decreased amount of mud and. what is not so readily granted, a re markable decrease in the amount of dust. Tlie cost of culverts also is less ened, first, because vrater can no lon ger follow the wheel track to the cul vert and soften the abutments by standing in a puddle in the chuck hole; second, the cost is lossened Lecause a mc*re durable culvert can b6 put in. QUICK CHAXGE TO SMOOTHNESS BY DRAG GING. When first cost is considered I thir.k tile is the cheapest culvert. The ob jection heretofore has been the difficul ty in keeping sufficient earth above the pipe to protect it from traction engines and other heavj’ loads. This trouble is obviated by the use of the drag since the drag puts more and more earth on the tile and thus continually rdds to the protective covering. Weeds^ire de structive agents in a negative way. By their roots and the dying of their tops they bring humus into the roadway Humus, much to be desired from the fiirmer’s standpoint as food for crops and for its mechanical action, on close, dense soil, Is not good material for roads. Again, the weeds by their roots and the shape of their tops keep the roadway soft. And by their mere pres ence they catch dust and mud, gradu ally building up the well known shoul der which prevents water running to the ditch. Less mud? It is gi*anted without ar gument. Less dust? One is not so sure. But if less mud, then, since dust is manufactured mostly from the rims of hoof tracks and the spewed up edges of ruts, mast not the dust be less? I^ss depth of mud means shallower foot and wheel tracks and therefore less dust material. Last, but not least, the dragged road dries off in from twelve to sixty hours before the undragged roads, the hours depending on the character of the soil and the number of years the drag lias been used. The smoothness or the quickness of drying will either one pay the cost of dragging. R.ural Delivery Notes In Texas a v,^oman has the contract to carry the mail from KilTe to Siernal Hill, and Georgia has a Vv'onian mall carrier who travels a forty mile route tri\veekl3% besides managing a large farm. It is now only fourteen yeai*s since an appropriation of $10,000 was made for experiments with the project of rural free delivery, says the Boston Globe. As recently as ten years ago the appropriation for this nev/ service amounted to only $40,GOO. Last year it was more than $25,000,000. while this year rural free delivery v/ill cost $37.- 000,000! Mrs. L. A. Donohue of Edgemoor, the only female rural mail carrier in Delaware, was a heroine the other day, says a Wilmington (Del.) dispatch. Unaided she captured Samuel Stewart, an escaping negro prisoner, at the point of a revolver. Stewart and t^vo other negroes w*ere arrested for acting suspiciously in the Edgemoor freight 5’ards of the Pennsylvania railroad. Watchman Plumline locked them in an office, whereupon Stewart jumped through a window^ and dashed across the tracks. At this juncture Mrs. Don ohue emeri^ad from the railroad sta tion with a mail bag. Running in front of the fieeing prisoner, she drew a pis tol and compelled him to hold up his hands. The watchman then captured the negro. Alexandria, Ind., has long had the honor of having a v/oman raral mall carrier. With the installation of rural free deliverj^^ Mrs. W. W. Condo be gan work at Alexandria on route 19 and with but a few days’ exception, while ill, has not missed a week’s serv ice for her patrons. She is one of the most painstaking and popular of the eight rural carriers with routes cen tering in Alexandria. In the j-ears Mrs. Condo has carried mail she has not neglected her household or social duties, being one of the most active members in two or three literary and social clubs. Tiring of horses, Mrs. Condo decided to surprise her patrons with an automobile. Without consult ing any one except members of her family, ^Irs. Condo bought an automo bile buggy. In a few v.'eeks she mas tered the management of the convey ance. Mr;?. Condo is financially inde pendent and delivers mail for the ben efit the work and open air trips are to her health. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, / Lucas County f Fmnk J. Cheney makes oath that he isseniorpartnt^r of the linn of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing bcsines.s in Die city of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said lirni will pay the sum of One Hundred Dollars for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the u.^te ot Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Fua>:k J. Cm-:sFA\ Sworn to before me and subscrii>ed in iny presence, tliis Gth day of De cember, A. D. 18SG. (Seal.) W. Gleaj::OX, iNOtary Public. Hairs Catarrh Cure is taken intern ally,^ and act.s din^dly on tiie blocd and mucous surfaces of tlie system* Send for testimonials free. F. J. CiiENEY & Co.. Toledo, O. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Tako HnlPs Family Pills fcr constipai ion. tite i Alls in i;is S;lvan VailSj' fisws Iriag results

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