DRY LETTERS OF INTEREST WHITMIRE WRITES — Editor Transylvania Times: Will you allow me just u little space in The Times that I may speak through it to my friends in Transyl vania county urging them to go to their voting precincts on Tuesday, November 7 and cast their vote against repeal of the 18th Amend ment—which counts dry. I am frank to admit that the 18tn Amendment is going to be repealed no difffferenoe how we vote but we can save our state from the wet col umn if the dry voters will all go to the polls and vote Tuesday, Novem ber 7th. But giving the wets all doubts and say the state might go wot what are we going to do with Transylvania county, which has the great honor of landing a junior col lege [n Brevard? Would the folks who gave us two hundred thousand dollars worth of improved real estate which made it possible for u« to gc! the college located here, ap preciate seeing Transylvania county in the wet column? My answer is no, but if they sec Transylvania county in the dry column you will hear them sav ‘‘we made no mistake in our location." Now, my friends, it can bo done. The dry force? are gaining every day. 1 caw 200 voter? last Sunday afternoon rise to their fevt and .-ay. "We will do our part to cany our county dry.” Now. my good Christian friends- , men and women—I beg and plea" f, ,- you to go to your voting precinct —even if you have to waik on lucs dav, November 7 and enst your vote and it will be the best days work ym ever did in your li.o, jtu-t »o knew you did your part. It every man and woman who honestly be lieves it best fev our county to go div will uo out and vote on Novem r 7th it will g<> dry by BO" major i*v The onlv hope for the wets now is' that the dry will not turn out an<| vote. This is or.e time they will h- surprised, for I know the dry voU .vs are going to the polls it >hov have to walk. It tins Rime w t v it but let us fight from sun-up to un-down to keep Transylvania county, the home of the Junior col lege, in the dry ranks. Now in dos ing. try friends, I wish to say wo can nut the wets away by going to tli, polls -'ti election day. T \V. Whitmire. SHOULD VOTE DRY SAYS BREEDLOVE Editor The Times: Please allow m> opinion in regard to the letter by Mr. Eck Sima, Octo ber 12. giving bis position and decis ion against the 18th amendment. Mr. Sims says he is in favor of a better system of enforcement but docs not for one time state what that ■-ystem might be. We want to know who he expects to vote for a thing they know nothing about, and the public should demand a showdown. Mr. Sims states further that, r. host of good citizens who are in fav or of the dry issue were lounging in comfort by their firesides, unmind ful and unconcerned toward the ef fort- ho was making to halt the evils hi loundly complained of. Yet he failed to state many would have helped willingly if they had beer, given the privilege. Many tilings we could state at this| time which wi shall omit, yet we I fed that it is an imposition for Mr.I Sims to lay any blame on some of | -- •——, ]\e Are , Paying j (subject to change) -i Heavy Hens, 11 ^ 1 b. up In trade .lie j Cash.10c ; Light Hens, under 4 Ulb. ! In trade .10c j Cash.9c 1 Leghorn Hens, trade 8c ] Cash. 7c i Fryers.! 10c EGGS, in trade .... 25c ! Cash.2:5c • Potatoes, No. I .... 80c ! No. 2.40 j B. & B. FEED AND SEED CO. _- u our faithful citizens who would have given their lives if need be against the liquor traffic. Yet some of us were denied. Yes, Mr. Sims served a number of, years and did much, but all this time he was drawing a fat salary, and us a private citizen he is as ; neutral as any of us. Mr. Sims says he is against see ing men, women and boys buying whiskey on the highways nnd byways that is very poisonous and makes them craiy. We challenge any one to mention a blend of whiskey free from poisonous effects. The last we drank was government controlled 26 years ago, end please take notice it had a poisonous effect. We ask in the name and honor of our country and the innocent youth Of our land, why should we go back 25 years to degradation and shame" Hut lee us think soberly and prayer fully nnd vote for Clod and right on Novcmbei Tib. Wurd Breedlove Sclion, N. C. t); | October 2li. 19HN •, MR. HENDERSON WRITES POEM It is lnml to fool a fellow with open heart mill eyes, With en.s well trained and set to . catch the sound. With gentle touch and fooling for I hopeless sobs and cries When controls have failed to func- j tlon till one’s downed. Bui tii? heartless, cruel hoaxers j that have plied that trick so long. , , Cover all their erooked business with veneer, _ .. . \nd unless you want the Devil and everything that is wrong You must look below the surface: be a seer! \Vh' n you see a little poster quoting "WickorshnmV Report," ! ,.\nd great mm of other ages brought around T. plead for legal liquor tor the pi* cut ago and court, It’s a wicked rh nn report that you have found. Wh n men come ‘round proclaiming with limber tongue ihe tale Ilf happy times when legal liquor (lowed. Far,- trained for truth and justice can hear the bitter wail j (if helpless women crushed beneath j the load. Of drunken husband’s thieving, and^ the children under-fed, j And homes without the means io , carry or, . And give their loved ones clothing | and the needed daily bread; i Where heart ache holds and lingo-i ing hopes are gone. Whin tin y tell yui <>f the taxes that the liquor tratio will bring And prosperity that flows througn liquor lands, . Tie accustomed nose can sum anil smell the very thing That drunken men disgorge—the brewers’ brands. Think! A dollar sunk in whiskey t’or to wet u wretches throat, •hist to bring two cents in taxes to the state! Is it justified by reason or by econo mic note, . j As tin wets are wont, with winks, to calculate': I Oh! Prosperity in liquor lands, with wage- gone for drink? To th ' brewers, ye- to the working man, . , Each lifted gins- will forge in slav orv’- chain, a link. \ cniel curs to bind him heel and hand. The great defending Father hear thrj lit tie children’s cry; The unborn babes out yonder, yet to be, . 1 And arm, for them, this nation to ! hold the earth and sky, ] Erom the awful curse of drink (. forever free. j J. K. Henderson. October 21. 1913. ____ I ‘ MRS. NORTON REPLIES j TO MR. SIMS Editor The Times: I am peeved, and if I could com mand language to put my thoughts into words 1 certainly would like to , tel! Mr. Eck Sims just what I think of u man who claims to be a good citizen of Transylvania and especial ly a good officer, and then come out a- a candidate for repeal of the best law our country haf ever had, the 18th amendment and prohibition. I will remember when Transyl vania had its government stills and Brevard had its saloons and hoodlum gangs. I also remember hearing some of the good citizens of Bre-j vaid say that court week was a pain on account of the country men col lecting in town and freely patroniz ing the_saloons there. I also remember Masquerade Dance Tuesday Night—Oct. 31 MUSIC BY THE BROOKSHIRE ORCHESTRA BREVARD SKATING RINK V.V*t Main Stret E. 0. KEATI-TEEY, M*r. hearing the country women my they wore not allowed to spend a penny, that it took ull the cash that could be gotten together from one court to Rnothcr !'■ i the men to have enough to run their spree during court wee That wu- in government still un.i saloon days. Like Mr. Henderson, J umember when tins Aiken (poor fel low) was peddling through the coun try locating all the blockade stills and whnt a whilrwind broke loosi when he got them all located. But the officers of those days, like now had their pots and many a blockadj dill helped furnish whnt was sup. posed to bo government liquor. What can we hope for now when folk have become so reckless? In a conversation with a gentle man a few days ago, we were talking about whnt prohibition had done. He leld of one instance, said he was talking to a railroad man who ran j train on the line between Asheviik and Murphy. In the (lays of the sa 1m n on Saurdayg when the men whe lived between Asheville and Sylvi and worked in Asheville went home that he always had from a dozen L twenty-five drunk men on his train some of them so drunk he would hav< to help them off. Now under prohi bition lie never hud any trouble ol that kind. We admit that the prohi bition luw has not stopped blockad ing, neither lias the luw ngainsl murder .stopped killing. Of course, if the 18th amendment is repealed and the prohibition luw done away with the government wil get a good bit of money in revenue and we say God pity a governmen* that wants money gotten through such debasing channels. There will be blockading ami boot legging in spite of all the laws, at long as there are folks who buy anti drink the stuff. And in my opinion the ones who buy and drink are at guilty as the ones who moke ami sell It. I hope from this rambling lettei that the general public will get th. idea that I am against the liquoi traffic in nnv form, und 1 want peo ple who haven’t lived as long as 1 have to know that the 18th amend ment and the prohibition law did noi cause blockading and bootlegging lor it lias been going on to my know ledge ever since I can remember, ant now m\ hair is getting gray. N-eithoj did the 18th amendment nor prohi bition laws cause the blockader tt make poor liquor, for the blockade: I, amed to do that when he mixec his liquor with the government man aged liquor. Get on the right side, Mr. Sims and 1 will gel in ft good humor with vou. Sincerely. Mrs. U'c F. Norton ■ Lake Texaway, N. C. Octuhor 23. 1933. THINKING of YESTERDAYS (Reprint of editorial of Textile Bul letin, charlotte, N. C„ July 7. 10-121 We are thinking of those dayi wh n women gathered around the mill doors on Saturdays in order tc get the pay envelopes away from their Ini-bands before they readier th bar rooms up town. We are thinking of the wan ant linil looking* women and pitiful rind hungry children who appear at mill offices every Monday morning with the same old story, that the husband had not meant to waste ail d' hi.- pay, L-ut had come home drunk uml without a cent and that there iv::s no food in the house. We are thinking about the opera lives who were always missing on Monday mornings and of those who tppcuml with shaky nerves and of he inoffieent work of many who o-.ild hardly keep going. W i n thinking of th • days when he State sold whiskey in South Carolina and the dispensaries, as hey wete tailed, stunk into high Heaven of the graft and corruption which surrounded them. We arc thinking of 1913, -luring vhieh we made an accurate check, amt -reliably of other years, when ov&r uilf of the superintendents changed dbs, most discharge being for cx ->sive drinking. We are thinking of one of the most litiful -pcctaclcs we t ver saw, the ippoarance at our office of a man, h one-time top notch superinten lent of the South, but a victim of vhiskey, and of his pleading with us 0 get him a j cents. Men's solos and rubber heels $1.00. Brevard Sb« - Shop, T, K Waters, owner-New Arcade. Jan 1 if;: FOR RENT—-Six nr in bungalow. furnished, modern convenience*. 414 Broad street. Apply B. V Bea ■ ley or The Times office. ltp WE CAN do n perfect job on thir - ning thick bushy hair, We «pecin • ize in Ladies and Children's hair cuts. Smith's Barter Shop. ---- WASTED: Representative to look after our magazine subscription i iO.rests in Hr vard and vicirity Our plan enables you to -court i. good part tf the hundreds of dollar* .-pent in this vicinity each fidi and v.i it -r for magazines. Oldest agency in U. S. Guaranteed ‘lowest rates or all periodicals, domestic and foreign. Instruction* and equipment fret. Sturt a growing and pennanent business in whole or spare time. Ad Wayland Road, North Cohoclon, N.Y. dress - MOORE-COTTUELI. In J Fertilizer applied to a carpet gra pasture has paid E. E, Beil : Pol locksvillo in Jor.es county a rut profit of $4.18 an acre by increasing the weight of grazing beef cattle, says L. I. Cate, beef cattle specialist at State College. Practical demonstrations in Tiiion County have proven the value of growing vetch seed a* home and the plan is meeting a favorable recep tion over the county Good yields of Korean ie-pt-iezi are reported in Alexander County. I.ee Roy Pre-lai -ays be secured 254 bales of hay from less thin five acres. CHOICEST SIRLOINS CUT JUST RIGHT which makes a lot of dif ference in the quality < t meats. Let Us Help You take care of your meat problems. ... and remem ber we have a complete line of Staple and Fancy GROCERIES Phone 47--we deliver ' CITY MARKET S. F. ALLISON Why Rent A House ? When You Can Own YOUR OWN HOME I have houses that you can buy on terms al most like rent, and NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY BUT—If you are determined to live in a rented house, see our list and take your pick and choice. JUDSON McCRARY Phone 172 Brevard, N. C, i-.L- -r^Fl^-rrrrtrr^-r ' 1 i