Local and Personal Items PHONE 7 ] If you have visitors or know of anv in your neighborhood, j or if you or any one you know , have been away visiting, Ph0"® i No. 7 ami give the items to any I person answering the telephone, . or better still, call at the o - , t'ice and report your news item- ; in person. The Transylvania j Times never intentionally omits anv personal mention worthy ol note, but it is difficult to get ! complete coverage without co operation of our readers. Frank Martin, who has been in; Greenville for some time, is here with his daughter at the home of her grandmother, Mrs. Burrell. Mr- C H. Bosse returned Monday from Spartanburg, S. C.. where.^ visited relatives and friends several weeks. Mrs. Cordelle Russell and little daughter of Canton are visiting Mrs. Russell’s parent;,, Mr. and Mis. \ . H. Duckworth. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Babb left Sunday for Atlanta, where they will spend a week or ten da>s. Mrs. Ralph Fisher has returned from a two weeks’ visit in Wilming ton with her sister. She was ac companied home by her mother, Mrs.. Richardson, who will spend some time here with her daughtei. Mrs. C. E. Orr, daughter and son, Mi's Rowena and “Brother” Orr, plan to leave Friday on a motor trip tn Hartford, Conn., and other points m the New England states. Miss Dorothy Fetzer has returned from Vero Beach and other points in Florida, where she spent the past several months. IMr and Mrs. J. K. Barclay of C.mnsburg, Pa., have arrived to spend the season at their summer home Chestnut Hill Farm. Mrs. Minnie Whitmire of Green ville is visiting relatives here. Miss Agnes Clayton had the mis fortune to break her left arm at the elbow in a fall Monday night, and is unable to attend to her teach ing duties at the Brevard elementary Mr. and Mrs. Henry' King of Hendersonville were Brevard visitors) Tuesday. , . ,. Mrs J. E. Waters and daughters Misses Ruth and Willie Kate motor ed to Ash.ville for the day Satur Jay. I Mrs. Verne Clement left Sunday; for a visit with her parents in Er-i win, Tennessee. i Mr. and Mrs. John Bishop were; week-end guests of Mrs. Bishop 31 parents in Hendersonville. i Mrs. 0. L. Erwin, Mrs. F. P. | Sledge, John Reese and Garland; Sledge were Asheville visitors Satur-J Emmerson Eve. court reporter, I spent the week-end with his family I in Asheville. . , 1 Mrs. T. H. Shipman is visiting her) daughter. Miss Elizabeth, in Marion,; where the latter is teaching music. ; Misses Rose and Annie Shipman were Asheville visitors Thursday. Harry Patton was a business visi tor in Asheville Friday. Miss Jennie Aiken has resumed her teaching duties at Newton at-. ter spending the Easter holidays at. her home here. Mi-s Edith Sellers and William Pruette of Asheville were Sunday ■ guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sel-| 1" C. E. Ware of Lincolnton was in j Brevard the past week-end. He. moved his household furnishings to j "hat city the first of the week, | where he has charge ot a cotton. Major W. I). Cobb of Caesar’s| Head is seriously ill at homr | then- Lieutenant Layton Cobb, ot j C.eorgia, has been called to ‘he bed- j sii< of his father. Major Cobb is. well known in this section. made his home at Caesars Head for several years. Mrs D. S. Masters and little daughter Betty spent, the week-end with the formers parents. Mi. ana Mrs C. K. Osborne. Ralph. Osborne of Norris, Tenn.,j spent the week-end with his family 1 Mrs. C!. H. Levy and small son, o*' Monroe returned home Friday af ter a week’s visit with her parents, Mr and Mrs. M. G. Cunningham. Nina Burrell and Mae Cun ningham returned home with .Mrs. | Levy for a three weeks visit in, Monroe. . Glenn Cunningham, who is em cloved in Pender's store m Mon-, ;.oe‘ r< turned after a three weeks visit here with his parents. r O Brantley spent Sundnv with his parents, Mr*, and Mrs. A. C. Brantley. in Greer, weouS. C Several member- of Dunn s Rock lodge attended the Masonic district j, meeting last Friday night m Hen-. dersonville. „ . 1 Miss Helen Gaboway spent sev eral days last week with .her grand mother, Mrs. L. A. Lewis, a. Mill- , RKalph Morris is visiting relatives, in Savannah, Ga., this w?ek. t G, G. KILPATRICK j FUNERAL HOME Licensed Kr.jba’.mers.Morticians Individual Ambulance and Hearse 214 W. Main Street Phone 123 Hrcvard — North CurolvpJJ j Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Jones and son tarry Li-or. and Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Meares and son Dennis of Ashe ville were week-end guests of Mrs. A. W. Barnette and family. Mrs. Paul Kellar is improving af ! ter a two weeks’ illness. Mrs. A. B. Galloway is visiting friends in Greenville for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Kilpatrick and Mrs Marie Bice are visiting rel atives, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Smith in Savannah, Georgia. Mrs. W. D. Banks returned to her home Tuesday after spending a few days with relatives in Greenville. Mrs. E. R. Pendleton was called to Bishopville, S. C., Tuesday on ac count of the critical illness of her aged father. Professor C. M. Fur man. Mrs. W. J. Wallis returned Sun day from various points of interest in Florida, where she spent the past several months. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Allison and children Mack and Elizabeth and Miss Charlotte Patton, Edgar Lof tis and Patsy Grimshaw motored to Asheville Tuesday. Dr. and Mrs. R. L. Stokes, ac companied by Miss Justine Wright, motored to Charleston, S. C-, where they spent the week-end visiting friends and r|dativfcs, | returning Monday night, with glowing de scriptions of the “quaint old city by the sea’’ at this time of the year, and of the beauties of the Magnolia Gardens. Mrs. H. S. Stroud and little daughter are visiting relatives near Mocksville. I Miss Helen Wright of Henderson ville spent the Easter holidays in Brevard with her cousin, Miss Jus tine Wright. . Mr. and Mrs. Mack McGinnis, Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Wright and son Earl of Mars Hill were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Gillespie and family. „ ,, Mr. ar.d Mrs. Preston Galloway | and family were guests of his father, ( W. M Galloway of Selica Sunday. [,. D. and Mrs. Sam Gillespie and children were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Gillespie and fam * Misses Irene Aiken and Allie Belle Morris spent Sunday night as guests of Misses Marjorie and Mel rose Tinsley. , , , . Mrs. W. H. Hogsed and daughters Betty and Helen were guests Sunday, of Mrs. Ed Gillespie. Miss Maxine Watson, of Durham, is guest of Miss Gladys English. Miss Roberta Bryant and little Perry Hamlin returned Friday from Angier. where they visited Miss Elizabeth Ramseur. Harry Clavton left last week for Laurens, S C., where he will be con nected with the baseball league as short stop the coming season. ! Mr and Mrs. Wood Paxton and , little son of Greenville were week end guests of Mrs. Paxton’s mother. ST. PHILIPS GUILD TO HAVE BOOK TEA A “Book Tea” will be given at the rectory Tuesday afternoon April 24, from 4 to 6 o’clock, sponsored by the Guild of St. Philips Episcopal church. Light refreshments will be served. An admission of twenty-five cents will include for the entrant a book for his or her own possession and choice, as well as refreshments and other enjoyable features to be pro vided for the event. More than fifty books have been donated for this occasion, all being rated as first class books of varied assortment and in good condition. HOMEMAKERS CLASS TO MEET TUESDAY Regular meeting of the Home makers class of the Baptist church will be held Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Robert Sherrill. OUT OF TOWN GUESTS AT JUNIOR MUSIC CLUB MEET Out of town and other guests hon ored the last meeting of the club year of the junior music club, which was held Tuesday afternoon at the home of the club president, Ora Holt Long. The guests included, Mrs. P. C. Stringfieid, of Mars Hill, dis trict director of junior music clubs, Miss Martha Biggers, of Mars Hill, Mrs. Knox DeLong, president ofi the Brevard Music Lovers’ club, and j Miss Eva Call, member of the local club. A prdgram of unusual invert^ l given by the juniors featured the meeting. Mrs. Stringfield' also made a few remarks of encouragement and information to the grpup. The young hostess, assisted by her mother.' Mrs. Roy Long, served an ice course following the meeting. Following is the program present ed : Life of Schumann—John Paul Jones, Fred and Edward Glazcner. Piano Solos: Hungarian Dance— Brahms, John Paul Jones. Minuet in G—Beethoven, Martha Kate Moore. Elfin Dance—Grieg, Lillian Zach ary. Cradle Song — Brahms-Grainger, Ora Holt Long. Dreaming— Lichner, Edward Glaze ner. Boat Song—Fearis, Fred Glaze ner. . ,, Shepherd Hey—Grainger, A. M. White Jr. . Valse Brilliante — Spmdler, Nina Lou Rustin. Chatterbox — Kramm, Rhuemma Bcddingfield. Vocal solos—I Passed by Your Window—Brahe; Sylvia—Sp<?aks, A. M. White Jr. , . Piano duet—Juanita and Virginia Ward. Fifty Drown As Wave Sweeps Norway Coast Oslo, Norway — A huge crag S weighing thousands of tons fell into i the sea on Norway’s west coast early I Saturday morning and caused hug;e waves that trapped sleeping resi dents of two villages, at least 50 of 'whom drowned. ___ (SEVENTH GRADE IN j OFFICER ELECTION Officers of the seventh grade of the Brevard Elementary school have been elected as follows: President, Emma Lou Loftis; vice president, St. Clair Austin; secretary. James Bridges; treasurer, Hazel Michsel. Class historian, Oliver Orr ; prophet, Mary Helen Galloway;! grumbler, Gerald Wilson; testator,; [ Henry Carland. I Best all-round boy, James Bridges; best all-round girl, Martha Kate Moore; most studious boy, James Bridges; most studious girl, Martha Kate Moore; most athletic boy, Ed ward Loftis; most athletic girl, Ed die Mae Mason; most musical, Mar tha Kate Moore; class artist. St. Clair Austin. Class colors .purple and white! Motto .“Rowing, not drifting.’’! REV. J. H. EDNEY IS j BURIED WEDNESDAY! • j - I MARION, April 11—The Rev. J.j H. Edney, 53, chaplain of the Way-1 side mission here, died from an at-; tack of heart trouble at his home on j Monday afternon. The Rev. Mr. Ednejf was a native■ of Hendersonville, but had made his I home in Marion for the past four j years. He was well known through | his mission work. He had suffered j frequent attacks of heart trouble. lately but appeared ro be in usual. health today and was talking to his family and friends on his porch j when" he was suddenly stricken. Deceased was a brother of Mrs. Zeb Stroup of Rosman. Funeral ser vices were held Wednesday after noon at Coston cemetery near Ed neyville. Mrs. Stroup and sons, Tom, Paul and W. N. Stroup, attendeo the services. Roosevelt Signs Bill . Miami—Seated beneath an awn ing on the quarter-deck of the Neurtnahal, President Rooevelt Sat urday signed a bill making cattle and other agricultural products basic commodities and providing $200, 000,000 to finance dairy and beet cattle production adjustments. N. C. To Get Six CCC Camps Washington—Six new CCC camps will be located in North Carolina and the continuation of thirty others al ready in operation. Two of the new i camps will be located in the Great I Smoky Mountain park. Find Inspires New Search For Dillinger Minneapolis—When an automobile collided with a produce truck and the two occupants in the automooile grabbed a machine gun and fled in 1 to the near by woods police thought lone of the men was possibly the In j diana outlaw, John Dillinger. WHIRL AT THE WORLD OF NEWS Items of interest gleaned during the past week Refuses To Levy Emergency Income Tax Washington—The senate on Tues day refused to levy an additional one-year emergency tax of ten per cent on all individual income taxi returns in 1935- It also rejected without a roll call a proposal to boost surtaxes beyond the finance committee rates which already are higher than existing levies. Missing Baby Found Nude And Half Frozen Chicago—Dorette Zietlow, the 2 year-old child missing since Sunday was found naked and half frozen in the attic of an abandoned icehouse. The baby was believed to have beer, held -captive by a madman. The lit tle girl’s condition was said at the hospital to be serious but not grave suffering chiefly from hunger and exposure. Tvffwell Named-As Revolt Grotto tedder Washington—Rexirord G. Tugwell, assistant, secretary of agriculture, was named today bv Dr. William A. Wirt as the “revolt’' group leader, the professor also involving six others in the “brain trust’’ movement to undermine the constitution. Tug well commented that some of the statements Wirt attributed to him were made in a 1931 speech, and there apparently dismissed the inci dent. Rainey Leads By Big Margin In Illinois Chicago-«-In the country’s first state-wide primary since the _ na tional Democratic landslide, Illinois voters today apparently chose, with or.e exception, nominees backed by the regular Republican and Demo cratic organizations Henry T. Rain ey, candidate for Democratic re nomination for Congress, was lead ing by big margin, with the demo cratic incumbents in Illinois appear-j ing sure of nomina tion, according to I early returns of the election. Cannon Faces Trial Washington — Against the back ground of the 1928 presidential campaign, Bishop James Cannon, Jv., and his woman secretary face trial i this week in criminal court here on; a charge of violating a federal elec-! tion law. U S. Mbiister Dies Dublin—William Wallace McDon ald, who became the American minis ter to the Irish Free State just two weeks ago, died suddenly of a heart attack Monday during a banquet given in his honor bv, Irish execu tives . Meekins Elected Chairman Charlotte — W. C. Meekins of Hendersonville was elected state chairman of the Republican party here Wednesday. James S. Duncan | of Greensboro, former chairman [ abandoned the race before a vote was taken Flood Waters Take Victims Elk City, Okla.—Although the bodies of nine Washita flood victims had been recovered here Thursday eight others were still missing as the waters of the stream dropped here following a 36-hour rampage along a 26 mile path. Au thorities believed that the death toll will reach at least 16 persons and properly damage is estimated in excess of a million dollars. Man Loses Life In Attempt To Save His Hat Minneapolis—Pedestrians on the Tenth avenue bridge over the Mis aippi river today saw a man in over alls dashing along the brink of a steep cliff nearby chasing a hat, which was being blowed along by the wind. . So intent wa3 the hat-chaser he tumbled headlong over the cliff into the river and drowned. Police re covered his body. He appeared about 60 years old. There were no marks of identification. Costner Sentenced Charlotte—Isaac Costner, who left his minister-father’s home in New port, Tenn., to throw in his lot with the notorious Chicago Touhy gang, Wednesday contemplated a 30-year sentence as he waited in the county jail here for the next move of his attorneys. Postal Figures Show Gain Asheville—Better business condi tions in Asheville are indicated by the gain of some $2,334 in the pos tal receipts of the Asheville postof fice for the first quarter of 1334 as compared to the first quarter of 1533, Wythe M. Pepton, acting Post master, said Thursday. Wearer Filey For Reelection. Asheville — Congressman Zebulon Weaver Saturday filed as a candi date for reelection. Ho posted his $100 fee with the state board of elections in Raleigh. Streams To Be Stocked East, La Porte—An order has been placed with the State Depart ment of conservation and develop ment for 200,000 brook trout with which to restock the trout streams on the 39,000 acre Jackson county boundary of the Blackwood Lumber company. Washington—War clouds in the Pacific faded Saturday as the com bined United States fleet, lying off California, gathered steam to re turn to the Atlantic after an absence of more than two years. Will Resume Work On Old Projects Raleigh—Work on. more than 500 civil works projects that were un finished when the program came to a close March 31 probably will be resumed this week, Mrs. 'ftiomas O’Berry, federal relief administra tor for the state, announced Satur day. rTHREE DRESSING ROOMS ■ _Prepared to serve all our customers — no c r a m p e il I quarters. Every convenience ■ to make shopping a pleasure. I We're Now In Our NEW LOCATI __and ready to serve You! (We like our new quarters and we feel you will too. We have more roomandthat *I‘I Z EI'I and .ook around We Wave for this opening event in our new location- real values that will thrill you. r SPECIAL NEW OFFERINGS We have no old stock. Rapid turnover enables us to car ry only the latest styles— new stock—with seasonable I goods coming in as soon as I I available. COMING « SOON We have some of the prettiest spring hats— in white, which is the latest whim of Dame Fashion - coming in real s1, ^1 l'hc them. WATCH FOR THEM_ A Beautiful Display Of HATS with style in every inch Hats are just adorable this season and we have secured a selection of the prettiest. A dandy lot priced at— The Famous “FAIR FOREST” SILK HOSE Yoi^ know what the “Fair Forest” line of hosiery is— what real values they are. Genuine 3ilk—full fashioned in all wanted colors and shades. Priced at only— Charming— accessories that are important to every woman prices range from WashaMe S1,bQ Kid at. to Fabric with fn cn ruffled cuffs The Famous “Style Lark” DRESSES You’d think these dresses would sell for much more. They are the finest we have ever carried yet priced at only— $16.50 $18.50 Values “Linen Lady” BLOUSES “The last word in style” A real value and they are “the thinfr” now. We carry a complete line. I<et us show you what we have. Only— $2.0 Charming SWAGGER SUITS There are Swagger Suita but you haven't seen the real thing until you see the charming creations we have for this sale. $9.95 and $15.00 A Complete Line of Pretty Print Dresses These print drcsres are well made and of excellent ma terial. You would suppose we’d have to ask muth moreffl for them, yet they are of fered during this sale at ul only— -sheer -clear -newest shades L, me NOBBY SHOPPE “For Women Who Love Beautiful Clothes” Main Street (Next Door To Old Location) Brevard „ — ... ..._ ■ ■■■■ ■■ > . A new selection of SILK ' Dresses at $5.00 K*agBtqlCTt*^6a;gagfeaE”

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