News —^ = . — : *1. Our County—Its Progress and Prosperuy the First Duty of a Local Paper. — . J. J. Manager. — — ... . BREVAED, TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY. N. C., FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 22.1907 VOL. XII-NO. 47 TRANSYLVANIA LODGE No. 143, K. of P. Meets Tuesday ev’enings 8.30., Castle Hali, Fi*a- ternity bn i Id in g-. A hearty welcome for visitors at all times. R. 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. DUCKWOR.TH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Rooms t and 2, Pickelsimer Building. GASH ®» GALLOWAY LAWYERS. Will practice in all the courts. Rooms 9 and 10, !Mc]Minn Block. D. L. ENGLISH LAWYER Rooms 11 and 12 McMinn Block, BREVARD, N. C DENTIST. (Bailey BIoc't. ) HENDERSONVILLE, - - N. C. A beautiful «^old crown for $4.00 and up. Plates of all kind at reasonable prices. All work guaranteed; satisfaction or AO pay. Teeth extracted without pain. Will be j?la.i to have you call and inspect my otiices, 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 solicited. Opp. 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 occavsions. The family bottle (60 cents) contains a supply for a year. All druggists sell them. H. G. BAILEY, G. E. CORRECT SURVEYS MADE Maps, Plots and Profiles Plotted. Onlv the finest adjusted instrn- ments used. Absolute aci*uracy. P. O. Brevard, N. C. Write at once and leafn why we secure best Vpositions, and best salaries for our grraduates. ^ Eugene Anderson, Pres. ^ Oldest in tha State. Busi ness, Sliortlxand. Typev.ri- tiiijjr, Pe n m a II s li i p, and Kutr 1 isli courf'es. IsiW ffraiiuatos in pos.Hi''!!'?. " or I'lore of your raii- ,aul. )':tu.vof f3 ® roadf;.cV:;^r:3>^.y; Ey'3 i5t>0(i bi);ird u t •• In“Th3Land of tUo Sky.” Kear tho Sapplilrc Couatiy. for it. / I'rim ASHEVILLE, If. 0. y ooo ■ r*/J^ Kvi/ r-^c ^<s A In the city of Brook- IjTi, [N". Y., ther(^has been for many years a con spicuous signb<)ard out side an office which reads, ^^KICK; THE PEIiS^TEE.^^ Bibulous persons sometimes go inside to carry out tlie apparent request, but they dis cover that the printer is a gentleman^ by the name of Kick. In every to’wn there are persons who, if they do not actually feel like kicking the printer—the newspaper man—at any rate do a lot of kick ing at the way he con ducts his paper. Please DO^’T kick the printer; he is doing the best he can. And what he does for the town and community, despite his occasional mis takes, may be a great deal more than the kickers themselves are doing. Did THAT ever occur to you ? We are all neighbors in this to\^’ii. What helps one helps the others. What hurts one hurts the others. Every community is a mutual benefit association, wlv.i'her organ ized or just running wild. The printer is a charter member. If you had no printer—no newspaper—how would you like that ? Do you know what happens to towns that don’t support a newspaper? Xothing happens. IN^othing ever happens in a town like that. As soon as things begin to happen in a town the newspaper comes along and tells about them. The newspaper boosts the town. It records progress and offers suggestions, by the editor or the readers, as to further progress. Every copy of every issue advertises the town. This is all free advertisement. It costs the town nothing. It costs the people nothing. It is a part of the business. In view of this fact, which nobody can dispute, it is much better to pat the printer on the shoulder now and then or to speak kindly of him than to kick him. NO; DON’T KICK THE PRINTER Calvert Breezes. Editor Sylvan Valley News. Ice one inch. Joe Galloway is looking fine and happy. DonH you hate to beg poeple to pay you? Waldrop is hauling logs for John Whitmire. Ho only charged her and her chil dren ^2. CO. A. B. had an offer of marriage but she declined with thanks. Miss Bessie Boren went over the gap last week with Florence Moore. Barbecue at Hogsed’s sale on the 20th. Bpef, mutton, pork and no jugs. Gaston Whitmire and lady drove to the Stone Pile to church last week. Go again. John Southern is whooping up his corn harvest. John always did raise good crops. Who w^as the drunk the other day that wanted to ride on top of the car or under it? Mrs. D. Marr and jV|iss Ardelle B. Gleason took lunch with Mrs. G. Houston Moore last Friday. The man who wants to draw his money out of the bank now because he is scared is worse than a rotten' crosstie. Cousin Bill has a hog that weighs 378. Capt. M. K. Gleason says'he must have driven one of Uncle John's on the scales. George Wilson and his two aunts. Mrs. Fenwicke and Mrs. Grogan, were enjoying Sylvan Valley New;- items last week at Crab Apple office. There has been 21 postmasters changed since the 19th of last Janu ary in this county; and Jackson, Ma con and seven more to follow. A w'heel works in a wheel. Henry Lanning is attending Mount Moriah school. There are 35 pupil> at this school which is to be a 3 months term. We hear praises on all sides for the teacher. Jim Wilson informed Harrison that the word radical nieant “root out, o* root hog or die.^’ Wait for the wagon and we’ll all take a ride. Who killed Harrison’s hog. Mrs. Leo Hogsed is busy preparing for her journey westward. She will be missed by all. What we lose the west will gain in a family of the best. None better to be found. Lewis and family (so Sis says) is to move to Morjranton. Been look- ! ! ing for it ever since the first time 11 saw him; and now the deer hopped over the fence last week and Lewis is hunting him with salt. Don’t it rattle your slats to see a fellow get some one else’s Sylvan Valley News* take it homo, keep it, and finally growl because it is no larger paper. He has missed the chaingang by one paper. Manning Moore’s children last Week amused themselves by burning up 35 panels of fence. Several of the neighbors had a warm time for awhile, and later Manning warmed the dear children up with the mush paddle. The children stood up for snpper. Did you hear Capt. M. R. Gleason talk Dutch and Latin while driving stakes in the Balsafn a few days back. The horse he was riding bucked as a good sized bear rushed by. McCall, Baxter Owen, William Owen, Oliver and Brown all stej>ped aside so as to not hurt the bear, l)ut Captain has a bear liide. Who killed it? Read Washington and New York papers. ' Toie Exposure. 'el ivery Not Of the 37.597 rural I'ree delivery routes maintained by the poi-roiiice de partment of tlie United States “i.Vi jiro regularly served by women (‘arriers. and there are four limes that iiuiuy fe male substitute carriers. Congressman Lloyd of Missouri was advised recently that complete country rural delivery service has been ordered established in Adair connty. *vIo., effec tive Jan. 2. 1008. The total number of routes in the county is twenty-one. of w^hich three routes are new\ Postmaster Genera) Meyer w*as the principal guest and speaker at the re cent annual outing to Marblehead, Mass., of the Essex Republican club. He said that one of his recommenda tions to the next congress would be a bill to establish a parcels post. He also indicated his intention to exteud the rural delivery sj^stem, which he said was doing more than anything else to relieve the isolation of farmers and others living in remote country districts and thus incidentally was greatly checking insanity in these dis tricts. “The rural free delivery system has caused us no end of extra work.” said the publisher of a trade journal that has a large country circulation. “Prob ably not even the postal authorities realize so clearly as the man who has a heavy country correspondence how- rap idly the rural free delivery system has grown in the last two years. The books containing the address of onr country correspondents and subscrib ers have had to be entirely overhauled. Scores of little postofRces have literally been wiped off the list, and John Smith and hundreds of other men who for merly had then’ mail addressed to then* home village are now’^ on route No. 2, 3 or 4 of the delivery system of a good sized town.” The Stage Lions m i heir Den. iiiPB The Beauteous Damsel In Distress— The lions—how’ they roar! The Stage Manager l[behind the scenes')—Now, then, boys—a good, healthy roar! All together, please. no less than 3.000.000 microbes on the average dollar bill. This does not mean, however, that there are 300.000,000 on the av erage hundred dollar bill; the lat ter does not have the opportuni ty to accumulate microbes by ex tensive travel that the former does. A Large Contract. When T. B. Allison the enterpris ing druggist, first offered a 50 cent package of Dr. Howard’s specific for the cure of constipation and dyspep sia at half price, and guaranteed to return the money if it did not cure, he thought it probable from his ex perience with othe^- medicines for these diseases, that he would have a good many packages returned. But although he has sold hundreds of bottles, not one iias been brought back. T. B. Allison wants every person in Brevard who hivs constipation, tiyspepsia, headack.es, or liver trouble to come to nis store or send T. B. Allison 25 cents by mail and get GO doses of the best medicine ever made at half the regular price with his personal guarantiee to refuud the money if it does not cure. To tliose suttering with dizziness, heada;:he, poor digestion, constipa- iion and straining. Dr. Howard’s specific offers quick relief. It is an invaluable boon to all wiio 1‘eel un comfortable alter eating, and is to day the popular dinner pill in ail large cities. noy 8-22 At the John Temple Graves oanquet in. Atlanta, nothing stronger than coffee was served. When the Colonel gets to his N'ew York editoi'ial job he will ap preciate the force of the song, •Home ain’t nothin’ like this.” State of Ohio, (.’ity of Toledo, ) Lucas County f Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he isseniorpartner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay (he sum of One Hundred Dollars for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use ot Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Gih day of De cember, A. D. 1886. (Seal.) * .1. W. Gleasox, Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken intern- illy, aird acts dir^^ctly on the blood and mucous surfac(*s of Hie system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills tor constipation. When the President comes to award the “good trust” medals and ^ive the “bad” trusts the Big Stick swat, he will probably do it on the same old principle of “our’n is good and your’n is bad.” Of course money talks, as it al ways has—only it is inclined to use the long distance ’phone a good deal right now. A Hard Debt to Pay. ‘‘T owe a debt of gratitude that can never be paid off,” writes G. S. Clark, of Westfield, Iowa, “for my rescue Irom death, b\^ Dr. King’s New Discovery. Both lungs wefe so seriously affected that death seemed imminent, when I com menced taking New Discovery. The ominous dry, liacking cough qvit be fore the first bottle was used, and two more bottles made a complete cure.” Nothing has ever equaled New Discovery for coughs, colds and all throat and lung complaints. Guaranteed by T. B. Allison, drug gist. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Something seems to have got ten tangled with the Taft bootn.

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