, MRS. FANNIE JONES k‘ BURIED LAST SUNDAY CEDAR MTN., June 20—Mrs. Fannie Jones, wife of J. S. Jones, died at the home of her son, S. A. Jones last Friday afternoon at 5:JO following a lingering illness. Funeral services were held at Blue Ridge Baptist church Sunday after noon, with Mrs. Jones’ pastor ,the Rev. Mr. Cooper. Rev. C. W. Hilemon and President Ben E. Geer of Fur man University ,in charge. President Geer paid a glowing tri bute to Mr.. June-, and her husband who preceded her in death five years ago, as a couple who knew and loved Nature and appreciated the handi work of God, “Granny," as Mrs. Jones was af fectionately known to hundreds of pc pie. both residents of this section and visitors who make their homes in ► the Cedar Mountain section during the umrntr month.- .had lived a life of solitude and simplicity, and num bered her friends by her acquaint ances Surviving arc forii sons and one daughter, as follow.-: Mark Jones, ifenry Jones and B. M. Jones of Cleveland. S. C.. and Solomon Jones of Cedar Mountain, and Mrs. Amos Poole of Traveler - Rect. Four bro thers. Bill Bishop, Isaac Bishop, Jas per Bishop and .1 -- Bishop, and one sister. Mr*. Elizabeth Fowler, also urvivo. together with a host of grandchildren and great grandchild ren. j The following grandsons acted as pallbearers: Joe, Speedy, Ed. Bill, Millard and Wayne Jones. Misses \nnie Dixie. Pearl. Clara. Gertrude and Virginia Jor.es. granddaughters,' acted as flower girls. Famous Comedian Frank McIntyre, who is remembered as "The Travelling Salesman" and comedian of many musical shows, is featured in Palmolive operettas, heary every Tuesday n.rht f'om 10 to 11. Renew Your Subscription —for that outing . . Pure Beef Frankfurters Slit and roasted over the open camp fire b v. but they go great, o:. a bun with lots o’ mustard. FRESH MEATS VEGETABLES GROCERIES Phene 47 We Deliver CITY MARKET S. F. Alteon Mu',' St. Brevard i MARKET REPORT TO BE PUBLISHED EACH WEEK ! Arrangements are being j made by The Times to publish j the Atlanta and Chicago mar kets each week, the reports to be as effective each Wednes day in the two cities. Several people of the county have re quested that the home paper carry this information each week, which, while it will of course vary in the course of a week, will be correct on day of publication. BURY FRED ADOLPH IN LOUISIANA ON 7TH The following story taken from The Times-Picayune. published at New Orleans, tells of the death of Fred Adolph, father of Mrs.'J. Wate Kilpatrick of Penrose. Mr. Adolph died on Tuesday night, June 0. The article follows': Fred Adolph, retired New Orleans attorney and former member of the state House of Representatives, died at his residence, 4520 Oamp street, Tuesday night after an illness of two months. He was 77 years old. Funeral services will be held today at 4 p. m. at the residence, members of the Masonic Order, Knights _ oi Pythias and the Rev. Sidney L. Vail of the Church of the Annunciation of ficiating. Interment will me in Met airie cemetery. A graduate of the law department of the old University of Ixiuisiana, predecessor of Tulane university. Mr. Adolph practiced law in New Orleans for 43 years, until injuries received in an automobile accident forced his retirement in 1921. He served his term in the state Legislating during the Citizens' League movement and was chairman if the House judiciary committee as well as rf the joint committee o.f the Senate and House which investigated the old New Orleans Waterworks coni panv That investigation led to the dissolution of the waterworks com pany which was succeeded by pre-ent sewerage and waterworks system. Mr. Adolph was prominent in fra ternal and church circles. He was a past master of Jefferson Lodge f ■ and A. M., and a past grand chan cellor of the Knights of Pythias. For manv years he served as senior war den of the Church of Annunciation. He is survived by six children. Mi ■. ! Wate Kilpatrick of Penrose, N. < Mrs. John J. Saucier, Mrs. Angus K. Pate. Charle- E., A. Harold and Walter E. Adolph ,the latter an at i0.-nev here. Two brothers also sur ,-ivc him. Charles Adolph of Mobile u i August Adolph of New Orleans. TO BE JUNE 2IST Ai rangements are well underway ['o'- the second annual picnic o, Ki rtai.is clubs in the western sections ,f North and South Carolina, to be held Thursday afternoon, June *1, at Camp Greystone, s i x miles south of Hendersonville on L. S. Highway No. 25. W. P. Kimsev, Predident of the Brevard Ki warns dub was advised todav. FI pienic last year attracted more then 750 Kiwanians and their wives, ehihlvni and friends, and the attend ance this year is expected to reach one thousand. The pienic program will begin at 1 :;*,o - Vlock with the reception of visitors ,and will be followed from five until, six-thirty o’clock by sw.rn minir. boating, tennis, baseball (in bain, fishing and horseshoes. At - ' dock a Red Cros- life saving ex ,i I-i<i m will be given and at G:30 o’ lock the pienic dinner will be oread on the lawn. each Kiwaman bringing a basket of food sufficient for his immediate party. The Hen ih .sonville club will supply tables, I tales, cups and iced drinks. A brief KivViuiis program will be given in the pavilion at 7:30 o’clock with Lieut.-Gov. Wythe Peyton of Ashe ville. presiding and dancing will be featured from 8:30 to 10:30. Orches tic. music will be supplied by cour • of the Hendersonville club. Hubs invited are in division 1 and • of tiie Carolines district and include Asheville, Brevard, Forest City, Hen d 'sonville, Lenoir, Marion, Morgan ton. Slif-Iby, Tryon and Rutherford ton in North Carolina and Rock Hill, Greenville, Clinton, Anderson, New berry and Greer in South Carolina. COME TO SEE US IN f j Our New Home ] Main St.-Next Door to Long Drug Store j We have taken over the Martin Barber Shop, and j will move on Monday from the King Building to the j present Martin & Ward location, four doors up the | street. We- shall be pleased to serve you there with barber work that wili please. Smith’s Barber Shop l^gumig^Otflioicu it I This picture may not have been taken on a Monday but these Japanese women are confronted with an age-old problem that faces women the world over— doing the week’s wash. FORD REDUCES SALE PRICE ON HIS AUTOS DETROIT, Mich., June 20—Re ductions ol $10 to $15 in list prices of the 1934 Ford V-8 passenger cars and $10 to $20 in list prices of Ford V-8 commercial cars and'trucks were announced last week by the Ford Motor company effective Friday, June 15. Ford prices had remained un changed since the introduction of the 1934 Ford V-8 last December, the F'- rd Motor company not having par ticipated in the recent genera) auto motive price increase. The reduc tions are .therefore, a decrease in the original prices. The price reduction on the stan dard and de luxe Tudor sedans, most popular individual models in point of sales, is $15. Prices of other standard and de luxe body types were reduced $10 except price.- of the Roadster. Phaeton and Cabriolet, de luxe types, which remain unchanged. Both stan dard and de luxe passenger cars have the same V-8 engine and 112 inch wheelbase chassis. Body types for both art identical except for the de luxe equipment. Thing.- are sj much better seme , householders' have moved the wolf |out to the vacant half of the garage. THRESKERMEN ARE TO USE U. S. FORMS Jess A. Galloway, register of deeds, has just received a batch of special blanks, etc., which thresherraen are required to use this year. It seems that an old law was dis covered on the state statutes making it mandatory r.f the register of deeds to notify operators and to issue free threshing license cards to each. This might have slipped by but for the great need of official county acreage and production facts by the crop con trol county committees. Tin purpose is to provide reliable information on acres and production of small grains and peanuts. It is best for this information to come dir ectly from the growers and threshing records. The department of agriculture ha< really been considerate, by provid ing quite handy record books which the operators may keep for their own usage. At Lyday Hospital The three patients in Lyday Memorial hospital were all reported on Wednesday morning to be doing nicely. The patients include: Mrs. H. E. Williamson, Mrs. S. B. Allison and Herbert Heath. RATES: I Twenty-five cents minimum charge ; per insertion, with 25 words a'lowed I for each ad. For ads of ever twenty ’ five words, one cent per word per j insertion. 1 for SALE—Electric Mixer with at tachments. Brand new. and will i .soil verv Reasonable for cash. Phone g2. lfP WANT TO TRADE OR SELL— l Jersey or Guernsey ne'.fers, first land second calves. Will trade for I beef <-attle, either cows or steers Also I pasture for rent by the month or ! season. Paul F. Roberts, Cedar Mtn. May 10 3tp. _ WASTED — Your Shoe Repairing We are equipped to do first class shoe repair work. Ladies soles and heels 75 cents. Men’s soles ami rubh^r heels $1.00. Brevard Shoe Shop, T. E. Waters, owner—News Arcade. Jan 1 WALTERMIRE HOTEL under new management, offers excellent meals at a reasonable price. Special week ly rates. 22-tfc FOR RENT—Good boarding house centrally located in. Brevard, “ rooms, two baths, garage, nice loca tion. Welch Galloway, Asheville. > FOR RENT—Furnished house, tfcrei bedrooms, modern conveniences electric range. Apply to Dr. J. H McLean. 'u' FOR SALE—Fresh picked raspber vie.-. Phone 2901. Miss Annie Jear Gash. _ . WANTED—Someone to take ovci entire rye crop for renter’s shari | of grain and straw. Mrs. Graci i Howell, Pisgah Forest. _ FOR SALE—Tomato plants, differ ent varieties, 20e per 100; caobag plants 10c per 100. J. L. Bracken Lake Sega, R-3. ™ FOR RENT--Several furnished and i some unfurnished house? for rent. On- & Hnm'in. Phone 275. Brevard. MOVING and GENERAL HALL !\(]—reasonable price?, every load ( insured See Charlie McCrary at j McCrary Auto Service. Phone 2Sn, - Brevard, N. C. Mcli S j HELP WANTED—Good proposition to man selline Vacuum-type fruit i irs and extra caps for any style jar. C. W. Anderson, box 221 Hender sonville. J21-2tp i j-- " . i F(>r SALE—Late varieties, good 1 tough field grown cabbage and ■ tomato plants. Santy Nicholson, East | Main St Brevard. J 20-2tp ; - --- i FOR SALE— Late cabbage plants, Flat Dutch and Baldhead varieties, 15c per hundred or $1.25 per thous and. Late tomato plants 20c hundred, $1.40 thousand; pepper plants sweet or hot, oc dozen. Celery plants and flower plants. Mrs. John C. Tinsley, Maple St. _ WANTED DOG WOOD — Will pay $15.00 per cord. Specifications for cutting dogwood logs—not less than 4 1-2 inches at the small end of log. To he sawn in billets or short pieces that will measure 18, 86 or 54 inches in length. These shoit logs to be 85 per cent clear of de fects and we mean by defects— red heart, knots, both large and small, bird recks, etc., that can be seen with the eye on the outside of the ; tree. A log that is hollow could no. ’ be used unless there was 2 1-2 Inches of solid tree between the hollow and the bark. H. S. TOWNSEND Railroad Street Brevard, N. C. WHEN you want to move, don’t | cuss, call Siniard Transfer Co. at 1 phone 118 ... and your wor ries will be over. Also wood, kindling, . sand and gravel—general hauling i Cash only, but less. 4TH JULY EVENT BE HELD IN ASHEVILLE These hog callers of Transylvania county who have been boasting of their vocal ability to summon the wiley porker will haye an opportun ity to display their talents in the hog calling contest which is to be a faa> j ture of the old fashioned all day cele-! bration picnic at the Memorial Sta dium in Asheville on July 4, Welcome to Asheville, Inc., under whose sponsorship the celebration is being conducted, nas arranged a most inviting program of amu-sements and field events such an characterized Fourth of July celebrations of fifty years ago and the hog calling contest is but one of the many competitive event?. This includes climbing the greased pole, catching the greased pig, the obstacle race, the three-leg ged race and many others. Other features of the day’s cele bration include a patriotic parade in the morning with an address at the stadium delivered by the Honorable Clvdc- It. Hoev of Shelby, North Car olina. There will also be a balloon as- j ceneion and a bathing beauty contest in which attractive young ladies wiil compete for a prize as well as a title of the bathing beauty queen of West trn North Carolina, There will also be a ball game be tween the two outstanding semi-pro fe-siona! teams of the mountain area, Enka and Sayles Bleachery. This event will take place at the Asheville Ball Park. The day’s festivity will be brought to a close with a gay nineties ball in costume with prizes for the most at tractive and authentic gown of that period. The dance will take place in Tobacco Warehouse with music by a modern orchestra as well as an old fashioned string bank. - j •- j | MRS. M. HENDRICKS jBURIED LAST SUNDAY GREENVILLE, June 20— Mrs.! Mary H. Hendricks, 80, died at the( I residence, 12, Pelzer street, Mrnag jhau mill. Saturday night at 9.45 f , o’clock afte** an illness of many i j months. j | She was born in Pickens county, • '■ and lived there until she was 10 j j years of age, when the family moved i j to Transylvania county, North Caro lina. She made her home there until* j 1922, when she came to Greenville , and has since lived in the Monaghan, community. She was a member of the Toxaway Baptist church in Transylvania coun ; ty. I Surviving are three sons, W. E. Hendricks, Pickens; M. R. Hendricks, and Carter Hendricks, Greenville, be sides 16 grandchildren. 48 greut | grandchildren and two gTeat-great ' grandchildren. I Funeral services were held Sun , day afternoon at. 5 o'clock from the i Monaghan Baptist church, the Rev : S. W Jolly officiating. Interment was made in Monaghan cemetery. FARM CREDIT BOARD TO BE SET UP HERE RALEIGH, N. C., June 20—-Under the direction of the North Carolina Farm Debt Adjustment commission a corps of five workers will be or ganised in each county at once to effect agreements between farmers and their creditors thereby clearing the way for refinancing farm debts through the Federal Land Bank of Columbia and relieving a situation that heavily oppresses many farmers of this state. The commission named by Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus to head the work in this state is familiar with the plight of the mortgage-burdened farmer and his creditor. Lionel Well of Greensboro, elected chairman at its initial meetdng is a farmer and a merchant. Former Lieutenant Gov ernor R. A. Doughton of Sparta, vice chairman, is a lawyer and farmer. Other members of the commission are J. L. Skinner of Littleton, president of the County Commissioners csso eiation; H. A. MiHis, of High Point, manufacturer; Julian Price, Greens boro, insurance company tKterutive; M. O. Blount, of Method, and J. Allen Taylor of Wilmington. Dr. G. W. Forester, State College agricultural economist, has been named as secretary >f the commis sion. He will begin at once to assem ble the corps of workers needed for each county to carry on the work. These workers will be asked to serve without pay in bringing together debtors and creditors. since reaerai tana name loans are made for only 50 per cent of the appraised value of farms and loans of the land bark commissioner for only 75 per cent .there are many in stances where these loans cannot be large enough to retire all outstanding mortgage1. The workers will seek to secure agreements iwtwoen debtors and creditors that will enable farm ers to retire mortgages with the amount of the loan. Benefits expected to accrue from the adjustment of farm debts are: (1) The retention of their land by the present owners; (2) the mainte nance of good family life; (3) put ting of money into circulation in the State and (4) creation of a better spirit between creditor and debtor dassfs. A state-wide campaign wil be con ducted to acquaint the farmers and their creditors with the purposes and benefits cf the debt adjustment plan. According o W. Kerr Scott, former master of the State Grange and now a representative of the Farm Credit Administration, who is developing the work of the debt adjustment com missions, around 2b or 30 per cent bf the total outstanding mortgage in debtedness in North Carolina is sub ject to the work of the Farm Debt Adjustment commission. A thing that never upset* a muni tions maker is competition. It is found when one goc* into production, orders pour in on all. Renew Your Subscription See our window display .WOLVERINE &eo n. . Sh'j5 dar?Z SOak*d under *'ork / A fun .r '' "’« S1"'- / jSSsSSps-ss; / 4-p!y thrcuT- *°e ** thT? ov» / "1 the '!a* hee/. /, ■ ■?«**«/ / / 3Hrs / rsi‘roadir.g%f0^ do / faeton- IKi«f?ic _•# Iarininir. Ven'nos gjvJna:l,in<' shop .ln],nnf* / iZdC0,nf°$ / IVQUi?#%f SHELL HORSEHID* SHOES $2.69 to $4.95 R. H. PLUMMER & CO. BROAD STREET BREVARD

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