THE SIDE-LOCK OF the Sns-LOCK xWvXlNWVVk^ \NN\> CORTRIGHT metal SHINdLES Is another feature that makes them so popular'with property owners. - This and the overlap makes them abso lutely proof against rain, snowya»^ fact allcHn latic conditions. ^ They’re fireproof too, and their appear ance makes even a cheap building look handfiome. They’re not expensive and when vou con sider that they last as long as the building and never need repairs, you’ll see what a handsome investment they make. Miller-DeVane Supply Company, Brevard, N. C. MARK the graves. W. L. AIKEN will furnish to order iim MOmiMENTS, TOMBSTONES, Marble, Granite, etc* Don’t place your orders until you see me. Patronize those who Advertise E. F. GILLESPIE CONTRACTING PAINTER Estimates furnished and contracts solicited for Painting in all Braocties. Kalsomining, Floor Stain, VamisE, etc. Shop in rear Post Office, BREVARD, N. C Patronize those who Advertise YEARS* •RIENCE Marks Dessgns Copyrights &c. ^nvone sending a sketrh and description may tjTilckly ascertain our or*inion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communlca' lions strictly confldential. HANDBOOK onPatentft Bcntfree. Oldest aeency for secunngr patents. Patents taken tlirouiib Muiiu & Co. receive- special notice^ without charge, la the Jiut A handsomely illnstrated wncklr. T.nrirest cir culation of any scientlflc Journal. 'J'enns, t'o a rear; four months, Sold by all ■newsdealers. BIIUNN ^ 00^361 SrCudway, New Yorl( Brancu O^flco. S25 F St.. W asbincii-... I.' KILLTHECOUQH and CURgTHELy nqs «miDR.KINS^ mmmmt FOrCSH^J |pg!?5o*a$i.oo vOLDS lr TBIiUrBOmtrBIE ANDAinHBOATAMD lUHC TROUBLES et/Aff^Afr££o Sj4r/sfi4cro/ty O/t MON£V KEn/AfPED. r.IcrALL P/-TTESX3 perfcct f.t, simpllcltrrnd i-.Kioiiuy iuar;y 40 vc rs. Sold in ikarlv United States ."i:d C-.n.iun, tr by muil tlircct. Slore foM i’”'n r.ny oi.i r niukc. Send lor free cutjlo-i7c. P.7AG/LZIKZ rv.bscrsbcrs I'ir.n nnv ctlirr f-iO-iinn r.::tgnzinc—nullion a r.jontli. Invuiu;il):o. 1-t- c t styles pattvnis, c'rcssmal.inir, iiiiilln<*-v I a.n sewing, fancy iieedlewoik J,airdressin‘- cliquelte, good .lories, etc. On’y £0 cenSs'a je.ir (\.orth double), inc’r.ding a free p.Vite-T VVO^^ IXDUCE?.1ENTS ^ / to A-cnls. Postal brin-s prcnrv^ r ar.d..ev.c:..sh,M-!z^of:c:s, c.Xi.o^^ue 1B2 BScCAU CO.. 2C8 lo 2S3 U. S7Ui Si.. fiZVJ Y0E2 SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENTION, Whereas, our own State of North Carolina ha^ a Sunday School Association affiliated with the In ternational Sunday School As sociation,"and Whereas, 43 counties in this state have such associations and their Sunday Schools are profiting by conventions and institutes, de veloping Christian fellowship and larger growth and better meth ods in Bible instruction and soul winning. Now, therefore, we, the • under signed citizens of Transylvania county and Sunday School Work ers, confident that our schools need improving, confident that new schools are needed, confident that new workers will be discovered and present workers better fitted for their duties, do hereby call a convention of officers, teachers and older pupils of all Sunday schools in this county to meet in the Bap tist church in Brevard, on Satur day, the 13th day of November, 1909, to hear papers on important topics, to confer together touching our several problems and, if it is deemed best, to organize a county Sunday School Association for con tinuing the work. And we suggest that each school send three delegates to this first convention. Signed by many citizens. T. H. Galloway ) Mrs. Marie Owen v Com. Mrs. Frances E. Chapman ) Very Dear. A New York clergyman, discussing the extravagance of a New York debu tante’s coming out party, said: “Such girls don’t make very economical wives. It must have been a girl brought up in that manner that I heard two young naval officers talking about. ‘What a dear little craft your wife Is!’ said the first. ‘Dear!’ said tbe other. ‘Rather! I call her my revenue cutter!’ ” Its a Top Notch Doer. Great deeds compel regard. The world crowns its doers. That’s why the American people have crowned Dr. King’s New Discovery the King of Throat and Lung remedies. Ev ery atom i& a health force. It kills germs, and colds and la grippe v’an- ish. Tt healig cough-racked mem branes and coughing stops. Sore, inflamed bronchial tubes and lungs are cured and hemorrhages cease. Dr. Geo. More, Black Jack, N. C., writes, “it cured me of lung trouble, pronounced hopeless by all doctors.’’ 50c., $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guar anteed by Allison & Macfie. Sale of Land by Order of Court. * By virtue of a decree of the Superior Court of Transylvania county made at the August-Septeml^r term, 1909, of said Superior Court in a case therein pending, wherein W. H.'Faulkner is plaintiff and W. P. Smith and wife, Nancy Smith, are defendants, I will sell to the highest bid der, for cash, at the court house door in Transylvania county, in the Town of Bre vard, on Monday, Nov. 1st, at 12 o’clock M., the following described boundary of land, situated in Gloucester township, Transylvania county, N. C., on the waters of the West Fork of French Broad river. Beginning at a small white oak on the “Rough Ridge,” the R. G. Smith comer, and runs then north 75 dog. west 96 poles to a white oak; then south 13 deg. west 85 poles to a locust; then south 40 deg. east 32 poles to a hickory on top of a ridge; then east with the meanders of said ridge to the mouth of Walnut Cove branch; then east to the beginning. T^his being the sape land conveyed by R. G. Smith and wife to W. P. Smith on the 4th day of May, 1891, as appears on record in Book of Deeds No. 9, at page 517 of deed records of Transylvania county. Said sale made to satisfy the indebted ness set out in said decree, and the costs and axpenses of said sale. ^ » ThisSept. 16th, 1909:'- "5^ '^ ^ - - f WELCH GALLOWAY, Commissioner. .SHOT 8P0USE IN CELL. Through Prison Bars Woman Fired Pistol at Her Husband. Chicago.—Through the'bars of the cell where he had been placed only two hours earlier on a warrant sworn out by her, charging abandonment, Mrs. Esther Levy fatally shot her hus band, Abraham Levy, a tailor. Mrs. Levy vidted the cfell room of the police irtatlon where her husband was confined, and before the startled lock-up keeper had a chance to inter fere, shot through the bars at Levy, inflicting a fatal wound. In the building at the time were a score or more of pollcemon. Mrs. Levy had no difficulty in obtaining permission to visit her husband. She stood in the corridor of the cage talk ing in a low voice to the prisoner, who remained locked in his cell. Suddenly she drew the revolver, which had been concealed beneath her jacket, and fired. She was taken to the women’s an nex of the station, where she became hysterical. When Mrs. Levy secured the war rant for herTiusband’s arrest she told the magistrate Levy had neglected his home for other women, and that she had to work as a saleswoman to sup port their four children. Pugilists Sign For Fight. New York.—jRck Johnson and James J. Jeffries—for the negro in sisted that as present champlou his name should go first—signed articles in New York binding them to fight forty-five or more rounds to a finish not later than July 5, 1910, before the club offering the best financial inducement, the winner to take a side Let of $1(J,000, and 75 per cent, of the purse, the loser to take 25 per cent • ’ " Roosevelt 51 Years Old. Oyster Bay, N. Y.—Some of the Oyster Bay neighbors who keep birth day books, ware reminded that their distinguished fellow townsman, Theo dore Roosevelt, l3 just 51 years old Monday. In a recent magazine arti cle he speaks of himself as “an elder ly gentleman, whose varied past in- dndes rheumatism.” Bride 71 Years; Groom 75. Berkeley, Cal.—Evading her chil dren and grandchildren, Mrs. Rebecca Walworth, 71 years old, was quietly married to Paul P. Chamberlain, a San Francisco contractor, 75 years old. Member^ V6f Mrs. Chamberlain’s family" admitted that opposition w'oula have developed had the aged woman disclosed her intentions. Big Sum For Taxes. New York.—New York city's tenta tive budget has been announced at city hall, and amounts to $163,049,000, wLich, with the appropriation to the dock department of $2,821,932, and mandatory increases deducted, shows a net increase in the budget over last year of less than $1,000,000, the small est increase, it is said, in many years. $25,000,000 Spent on Road. New York.—The sum cf $25,000,000 will be spent by the New York Cen tral lines in 1910 for new equipment The contracts include S25 locomotives, 197 passaager cars, 17,850 fre!giit cars, and 1C5,000 tons of steel raila. The American Locomotive Company secured the locomotive building con^ tract. To Entertain Daughters, West Point, Ga.—Arrangements have been practically completed by the Fort Tyler chapter, of the Daught ers of the Confederacy, for the enter tainment of the Georgia division ol United Daughters of the Confederacy, which will be in convention here on November 3 to 5. A hundred and fifty or more delegates are expected. t vi-irawv fvetiioao. Slloam Springis, Ark.—Mrs. E. M. Fowler was killed and her two chil dren T^-e injured when their h^^iae was destroyed by a tornado. It was feared the storm had don® much other damage, but no definite information of any kind has been received. Last of Union Generals^ Burlington, Vt.—General Oliver O. Howard, last of the Union comrasknd- ers of the Civil War, died at his home in this city. Heart disease was the cause of the noted soldier’s death. He was 79 years old. Tlie 6ed-Koe]{ of Success lies in a keen, clear brain, hacked by indomitable will and resistless ener gy. Such power comes from the splendid health that Dr. King’s New Life Pills impart. They vitalize every organ and build up brain and bodyv^'J^ Af." B^ritton,ILtiemore, W; Va.. writes:^ “They are the best ipilla I ever used.” 25c. at Allison & MaCfie’S. •*; First Annual CcMivention Transylvania County S. S* Association Brevard Baptist Churcli, Brevard, N. 0., Saturday, November 13, 1909. NOTICE: 1. Every Evangelical Sunday School in the county belongs to the Association (as soon as organized), without action; but only those schools get “help” which send dele gates to the convention feast. ^ 2. Each school may send three delegates to the convention, with “Credentiar— that is, a note from Superintendent (or Acting Superintendent) naming the delegates, their school, its Superintendent, and his address. 3. Delegates should be instructed on these four x>oints: (a) Does your school run all the year—is it “evergreen?” (b) The school’s total enrollment. (c) What is the *"Best thing” in your school, or its most successful work? (d) Bring the school’s “offering” for County and State Sunday School Association work, or instruction to pledge a sum for future payment. 4. All residents of the county and visitors, who are interested in Sunday School work are invited'to hear the convention proceedings. PROGRAM A. M. 9:30—Song service. 9:45—Messages of cheer from “Our Father”—choice “memory*' verses recited by delegates. Sentence prayers. 9:55—Election of Temporary Chairman. Appointment of Convention Secretary. 10:00—^Principles and Methods of County Sunday School Association Work.” Rev. Lewis Collins. 10:30—Enrollment of Delegates. Reports by Delegates, especially “The Best Thing in Our School,” in a minute or less. 10:45—^Appointment of Committees: ^ 1. On Constitution (five). 2. On Nominations (five)r Both to report at 3:30 p. m. 10:55—“The Best Version of the Bible; why I Prefer the American Standard.” Rev. J. R. Owen. 11:15—Round Table. Sunday School Management. A chance to ask questions and get helpful answers. Recess. ^ P.M. AFTERNOON SESSION. 2:00—^Some marks of a live Sunday School. (a) The Cradle Roll and its Working—15 minutes. Miss M. M. Mitchell. (b) The Home Department—15 minutes. Miss Sadie North. (c) The Adult Bible Class Department—25 minutes. Prof. C. H. Trowbridge. (d) The Teacher Training Department—25 minutes. Prof. W. M. Rogers. 2:50—Note: Delegates will be asked to say which of these “good things” they will introduce into their school. Sing two verses; all standing. 3:00—“The Bible Drill: explained and illustrated.” 3:30—Reports of Committees. Action. Installation of Officers, President elect takes the chair. . Offerings and Pledges; Schools and Individuls, 3:45—“The Teachers* Meeting: It’s Necessity and Successful Conduct.” 4:15—Round Table. The Sunday School Teacher. Adjournment. T. H. Galloway, ) Mrs. j. R. Owen, > Committee. Mrs. C. D. Chapman, ) H. redwood & CO. 7 and 9 Patton Avenue, Asheville, N. C« Dry Goods, Fancy Goods, Smallwares, Underwear and Hosiery, Ladies* Suits, Skirts and Waists, Shoes and Hats, Men’s Boys Clothing, Trunks, Rugs. Autumn Vroods just opened; Ladies^ Fine Sviits, Ladies^ Hats, Handsome Novelties in Fine Sweaters, Shetland Floss, Corsets, Men’s Fine Shoes, Men’s Suits, Boys’ Clothing, etc. New Autumn' Goods coming in daily. One Price to All. Art Parlor HAND-PAINTED CHINA f LARGE ASSORTMENT OF LOCAL VIEWS IN SOUVENIR POST CARDS Stamped and Finished Goods. Silk and Cotton Emtiroidery Floss Miss M. W^ave Long Patroni^e Those Who Advertise