Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Nov. 17, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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t.4,'f' ■ -•%% V •" *t ■ ' s not mean that I the ax we will ne ten or twelve t Order fs and Mount and Birds lome and guaranteed Dr information* ^ Brevard, N. C. u Eat? Jion depends sTotz can’t be ^od you buy. BEST be found at ?nded as the iVERT and everything Itee : : : >t Please<) GUE ood Wanted ;d at the Bromfleld lo^» ►t. Instructions for.Dog- iber as it should be cut^ f'r must not be under » liameter at the small end. pje straight and shall be cut Is crooked. The lenpfth ot [om 3 feet up to 8» 9 or length of timber is but mu5t not be shorter |et, as clear of small j; 2 ur 3 knots will not COD' Out all sticks so that the ends by cutting ofif the r sticks will measure the itended. All wood t9 to these instructions. ^ [. FONIAINE BREVABD, N. C. ' I* :r oNtY mmmsL coiHmr A HOME PAPER POR KOIlf K A T.T. HOME PRINT VOLUME—XYI BS^AED. NORTB CAEOLINAWiDAY. NOVEMBER 17^ '1911. SBMBER-46 (OOD CONDITHM W building AND LOAK local institution is a LIVE AFFAIR Rapidly Growing and Enlarging Scope of Work-rPirbfit?^ . Show Increase. There is no liver organization in Brevard than the Brevard Build ing and Loan Association. This in stitution has grown rapidly since its formation some three years ago and has aided much in the building of the town: The evidences of its good work may be seen on every side, and it is therefdre gratifying to know that it is in a flourishing condition. Below we are printing a repprt showing the condition of the asso ciation on the first of this montii.- This shows that the profits for the past year have been in excess of the profits for the tjvo precee<^ing years combined, and this is certain ly an excellent showing. The asso ciation is conservatively and eco nomically managed and is worthy of the hearty support of all who be lieve that the town ought to grow, not to mention the fact tha the in vestment pays eight and a half per cent. The following is the statement of condition Nov. 1,1911 ' Receipts to Date. Membership fees $ 213.50 Installments paid in (dues) 16,001.00 kterest paid in 1,009.53 J5nes paid in... 3.60 Total Receipts $17,237.63 Disbursements to Date. Loans $16,648.00 Expense account 284 15 Cash on hand • 305.48 Total Disbursements $17,237.63 Comparative Statement, 1910 and 1911, of net profits. Membership fees toll 111 $ 213.50 Interest to 11 1 11 1,009.53 Fines to 11 1 11 3.60 $ 1,227.63 Less expenses to 11 1 1... 284.15 t — Net 1911 942.48 Membership fees toll 110 $ 151.50 Interest to 11 1 10... . 311.40 Fines to 11 1 llo 2.10 Less expense to 11110 $ 465.00 172.80 Net 1910 $ Net gain for year ending nil.. 292.20 $. 650.28 President Taft has issued a proc- ^niation setting aside Thursday, November 30, to be observed as a ^tional day of Thanksgiving, and, is the custom, Governor Kitohin issued a similar call for, that to be observed in. the state; Mr. JOHN W. SMITH Brevard of the Fourth Prize, $18 Gold Rockford Watch REV. C. S-’MMINCi IS NOT TO RETURN METHODIST PASTOR SENT TO CANTON CHiniCH Rey. L. D, Thompson Sent to Brevard» flkod Rev. C, Car- pentCT to the Circuit. The Western North Carolina con ference of the Methodist i^isqopal Church, South, adjourned Monday morning with the*announcement of the appointments for the coming year after a session of six days at Statesville, The people of Brevard wilMearn with regret that ilev. C. S. JKlrk- patrick will not * return* to the church* here, having been sent to Canton. The new pastor of the _ MSS HATTIE AUCEN' Brevard Winner of the Grand Capital Prize, $300 Milton Piano Brevard church will be Rev. L. D. Thompson. The four years limit • had not been served out here by Mr. Kirk patrick, and the general impression was that he would again be sent back to the church here. During ,his pastorate here he has accom plished much of good, building up the membership of the church and serving his charge faithfully. He has been popular with all ;the citi zens of the town, not alone with' his congregation, and he will be missed in the community. The g6od wishes of the people here will go with him to his new field of labor, _ The man who is to succeed him here, Mr. Thompson, is a preacher of much promise, one of the strong men of the church, and he will re ceive U hearty welcome here. Rev. R. C. Kirk, who has been serving the Brevard circuit, has been transferred to ViTonathan in Haywood county, his successor on the circuit here being Rev. C. M. Carpenter. At the Conference Mr. Kirk was raised from the rank of local preacher to deacon and re ceived on 'trial in the conference. His career in the church' will be \tratched with interest by many friends throughout the county. Rey. W. H. Willis, who for the past four years has faithtully served this district as presiding elder, ^ was this year giyen a sta tion, being sent to the Mt. Airy church, one of the l^^t in that sec tion of the state. ^ Rev. T. F. Marr; who is well known here, was given the Trinity c]inrch at Charlotte. For the past four yerfrs he has been the presid ing elder of the Winston district. Rev. J. A. Sharp, who has many relatives, fend friends in this county, was again returned to the church at Plea^nt Garden. The new presiding elder for this district is Rev. L. T. Cordell, one of the bestjn the conference. The conference just ended has been a most successful one. Its sessions .ware presided over by Bishop E, R. Hoss. The reports made showed that the las^t year has been bl good one for Methodism. •Continued on page 3. A TRIBUTE WFlMsneT Mrs. Carrie B. Gafioway, wife of T. IJ. Gralloway; ^^aa bom in Pick ens county, Soutfi" Carolina, ^ in '1878; di^ f.t l^Vard, N, C., Kov. 8th, 190.. Is • ' "She 'ms a dfikigfiiter of Joseph Addison and Patt)i||0 Qpggs., Her father was one of the first and moiit prominent setters of upper douth Carolina, iMSi^r her parents have tboths passed, like' she, to the beyond. > # ; v This family established ^ them selves among the undulating foot hills of Pickens county, at Liberty, and there the family ^as born and re^^d, and brought-^p'r in the PresDvterian faitti which charac- te|*ized many of the aethers of -the. Piednaont section of 4he^ Carolinas. The old homestead still stands, as it has stood through ‘Sxin and storm, through war and peace, with all its comforts and splendid hos pitality to make glad friend and stranger alike. V Carrie united with the' Presbyte rian chu^h at the. age of 12 and lived in strict keeping with the tenets and doctrines that faith until after her marries ■When she united with the Methbdist church, of which her husban4';^a« a mem ber. Connected'withi tiite c)®|irch, she was always found !^\hei^-rplace at S^^ay school, inih^ffeh, in so cieties, unless kept aw^ by si^k- ntjss, and the church ai)^ its vari ous organizations will miss her ever present smile, her wise counsel and friendly communion. Suffering seemed to be her por tion for a larged p*irt' of her mar ried life, but it was borne with a marked degree of patience and for titude. Medical skiir was, baffled by her last illpess, ali"^:;that tender hands -antj^ sympathetic friends could do to alleviate pain was done. - Through the valley of the shadow she has gone as all must go, but the life she lived and the good she did leave the blessed assurance that her departed spirit is with those of the just made" per fect—those who are a^ rest and ' jlOlieiE DAILY SERVIGE TRAINS WIUL GO THROUGH , TO LAKE TOX AWAY Ellective Noy. 26, Double Daily Service From Lake to Hendersonville pffective November 26 the South-, ern railway will give a through double d^ily service between Hen dersonville ^nd Lake Toxaway. • After that date the two trains now making Brevard a terminal will go on to the Lake, and this section wiU haye the best train ser vice ever giyen with the exception of, special. service ill the tourist season. ‘ ' . Trains number 7 and 8 Will be ex- ifRS. W. a GROGANi Jr. / Breva^ Winner of the Setond Prize, $75 Rock Hill Buggy MRS. C. R. SHARP Selica Winner of the Third Prize, $75 Majestic Range peace with Him that sitteth upon the throne of*the heavens. A loving wife, a devoted mother, a patient sufferer, a noble Christian woman has lain her burdens down and has passed with the boatman to the shores of that undiscovered country. She loved hei* home, she loved her friends, she had no ene mies. Cheerful, hopeful, gentle, patient, loving mother and wife is not here to guide infant feet and make home complete, to counsel in time of trial those who must meet them, but other beckoning hands reach out from ,that other clime to welcome those who mourn her de parture here. A brother and hus band with heavy hearts and a babe of tender years ar« left behind. Beside her mother in the quiet cemetery , near where’ she played when life was young, where she dreamed when’ girlhood’s roses bloomed, where she thought and wrougl^t when life’s. realities m^t her fac6 to face, she sleeps the ,gjeep of the just beneath the wreath, the crescent and the croM of per- Continued on p^e 3. tended to and from Lake Toxaway on the following schedules. Leav ing Hendersonville at 11:25 No. 8 will arrive at Brevard at 12:25 as at present and then go on to Lake Toxaway arriving there at 1:30 in the afternoon. No. 7 VTill leave Lake Toxaway 3 p. m., will leave Brevard at 4:05 as at present, ar riving at Hendersonville at 5:05. The schedule of the trains leaving Lake Toxaway in the morning and returning there at night - will not be changed. The double daily service recently institutiBd as far as Brevard has been most, satisfactory. The two extra trains have proved most’con venient both to the people of Bre vard and points below here atod also to the outside people who wished to„reach Brevard. Since the estab lishment of this service there has been a very noticeable increase of feafflc. The decision to make the service the same the entire length of the road will be received with nearly as much joy as the former ehange in service. ' , The* new service will give the people of the upper end' of the county the same conveniences las' those of Brevard and the lower por tion of the county. Particularly will it enable the. residents of Ros- man and I^ke Toxaway and inter mediate points to ^“visit Brevard more eonveniently, and this should prove Well worth while to Brevard. A WORD OF THANKS In ,behalf of the teachers and pu pils of the Graded school I wish to thank all peri^ns that help^ us win the contest piano^ 'Could you have seen the happy faces of the idren Friday morning you would ;e felt amplp paid for your in vestment in it. ^ The piano ^now belongs to the chil,dren of the Beevard district. I make only two requests of the par ents of th^ children, that you send them to; school every day of the school year, if possible, and that you visit the school when yoti can. Hattie Aiesn. GOUNTy HOME AGAIN SUBJECT OF REPORT GRAND JURY URGES IMME- ^ DIATE ACTION Conditions at County Home Again Declared to Be Unbear- ' - able by Official Body. . When Judge Henry P. Lane on Wednesday adjourned the Novem ber term of the Superior court for this county he annouiiced that he would be back Friday morning to resume the sessions of the court, but he failed to return. Instead he; telephoned that he was ^ndiSposed, and instructed Clerk of the Court Paxtpn to formally- terminate the term. ^ ^ , When the judge and solicitor left Brevaird Wednesday aftemoofi the grand jury Was still in session, anid this body did not complete ’its business until Friday morning. The report of the grand jury was turned over to Clerk Paxton, and is as follows: “To his Honor Judge Lane, pre- 'Siding: ' ' , “We the grand jury named for this term of the court beg to sub mit th^ following report: ■ “First: The county home. We have, by committee duly appointed, examined the county home for the aged and infirm and find that the number of members in the home is five, who seem to be reasonably well fed and clothed. Sanitary con ditions are as good as could be ex piated with the present conditions of the home. Now we as your grand jury find the county home in a de plorable condition, such that we deem it impossible to keep the in mates of said home in a comforta ble condition owing to the cold winds that pass through for lack of proper fitting doors, window^plas- tering and floors, and we as your grand jury ask your honor to make a. special order that the home be made comfortable and safe at once, and as it has been asked for here tofore and the cofnmissioners have failed to comply with the request. " “Second: The jail. We have as a jury examined the county jail and find it to be in as sanitary condition as present arrangements will admit and that the inmates are properly cared for. •‘Ilhird: The county ofl&ces. We find that/the’county offices are in good condition. We recommend that the* necessary chairs be provi ded for and also that broken lights be replaced, also that' the outside of the court house be cemented for protec.tion of same. We also rec ommend that the sheriff be request-' ed to keep the public proi>erty in side the court house grounds. “Before closing our report we de sire to thank your honor for your kindness to our body, and for your clear and instructive charge'. “A. C. Garren, Foreman.” Salicitor Reynolds returned to Continued on page 3. MISS BERNICE BRIDGES Quebec Winner of the Fiftli Prize, $18 Tailor M^e Suit
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
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Nov. 17, 1911, edition 1
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