Society and Personal Items
DANCE HONORS
JACK MILLER
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Miller gave a
dance at Camp Transylvania Monday
night in honor of their sen, Midship
mar. J. D. Millar, of the United
.States Naval Academy, who has just
returned from the cruise to Europe.
The lodge at camp was gaily
decorated with the camp colors, red
and white, and presented a colorful
appearance. A large number of
friends enjoyed the evening.
Midshipman “Jack” will be at home
for » few weeks before returning to
the academy for early football prac
tice. Ho was a camper for a number
of years, and won high honors in ath
letics while at Camp Transylvania.
HOMEMAKERS CLASS MET
WITH MRS. PRICE TUESDAY
The Homemakers class of the
Baptist church met with Mrs. W. S
Price Jr, Tuesday afternoon.
An enjoyable meeting was report
ed. with Mrs. W. T. Bcsse presiding.
Mrs. Avery Case read the scripture
lesson. After the meeting, the mem
bers were served by the hostess. j
The next meeting will be with I
Mrs. C. C. Hutches. _
, BLANCHE BARRUS CIRCLE
IN INTERESTING MEETING
Mrs. T. E. Reid and Mrs. Mitchsl!
NeeTy were joint hostesses to the
Blanche Barrus circle of the Baptist
church Tuesday afternoon at the
home of Mrs. Raid.
Mrs. Long, chairman, read tha
scripture lesson. Mrs. Knox f'eLoag
led the opening prayer* Mrs. J. M.
Gaines had charge of the program
giving an interesting discussion of
the subject, “Future in the Making."
Refreshments were served by the
hostess during the social hour.
CELEBRATES SISTER'S
BIRTHDAY Y/iTH PARTY
Ethelyn Pickeisimer delightfully
entertained a number of little folks
Tuesday afternoon from 4 to 8 in
honor of the sixth birthday of her
sister, Anne Louise.
The dining room was beautiful in
• color scheme of white, pink and
gr^en. Pink papers hung from the
chandelier to the tabic, with pretty
pink baskets of pink and green mints
used as place cards and favors. The
urge cake was iced in pink and the
little candles were lighted as the
quests entered the room, singing
' Happy Birthday to You." The little
~ ~ — -——
: 'Oft JCHOOi
School Tablets
Big F ive and Big Chief
tablets
3 for 10c
Notebook Paper
50 sheets in package
. 3 packages 10c
N. C. Sales Tax Included in Price
of All Merchandise
Boys’ Blue Deaim
OVERALLS
Sizes 6 to 16
EACH
59c
Boy’s Dress
Shirts
Plain and fancy colors
Fast Dye
59c<« 79c
Children’s Brownbilt
Shoes
Oxfords
Guaranteed all leather.
Sizes little 2 1-2 to big 6.
PAIR
$1 to 12.95
Children’s Fast Color
Wash Dresses
Sizes 4 to 161-2
49c to $1.00
Fast Color
Prints
New fall colors and
patterns
YARD
15‘»IV
Tennis Shoes
and
Oxfords
Famous Brands — Hood,
Ball Brand, Keds
PAIR
79c to $1.00
R. H. PLUMMER
Broad Street — Brevard
'jlk3 derived great pleasure in open
ng the many nice gifts.
Those present were: Betty Ann
Aiken, Janet Banks, Betty
Nancy Jane Loftis, Nancy Carol Kil
patrick, Betty Tomlin, Frances Hen
drix, Mary Jane Haynes, Kathryn
Huggins, Charles Kent Hartsell,
Philip Price Jr., Perry Hamlin, Ned
Whitmire.
Ethelyn was assisted in entertain
ing by Misses Ruth Pickelsimer and
Emma Deaver and Mrs. Dave cul
ver.
HOUSE GUESTS ARE
HONORED WITH PICNIC
Mrs, F. P. Sledge entertained her
house guests at a picnic supper given
at White Pine camp on Thursday ef
last week.
Those enjoying Mrs, Sledge’s hos
pitality were; Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell
Boales and daughter, Miss Sarah
Boales, Daytona Beach, Fla., Mrs.
Eliza Williamson and daughter, Miss
Virginia Williamson, and Miss Hat
tie Sledge, all of Smithfield, N. C.,
Miss Victoria Mial, of Raleigh,
Hugh Walker of Greenville, 3. C.,
Edward Ripper, of Philadelphia, Pa.,
Mrs. M. W. Simmons, of Charles
ton, S. C. Accompanying Mrs. Sledge
wore Master Jimmie Kanipe, of Rox
boro. and his little friend Charles
Cantrell, of Brevard.
After a most delightful time at
the camp, the party returned to the
Sledge Home, where bridge was en
joyed by all .the guests.
INTERMEDIATE G. .4.’5
MET WEDNESDAY
The intermediate G. A.’s of the
Baptist church met Wednesday af
ternoon at the rome of Polly Ksi'tsell
for the regular meeting. The presi
dent, Ruth Fulton, presided over the
i business session.
The next meeting will be held at
' the home of Ruth Fulton.
The following were present at the
I meeting: Maoel Gillespie, Mary
I Aiken, Mildred Henderson, Mamie
i Mason, Catherine Fulton, Elizabeth
Price, Polly Hartseli, Ora Holt Long,!
Ruth Fulton, and one visitor, Elaine j
Scruggs.
Mrs. Kennon of Parksburg, W. Va„ |
is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Dave .
Cub'cr.
Mrs. Ernest Tilson returned Tues
day from a week’s visit at her former j
home in McCall, S. C. ,
Miss Sarah Jor.es of Easley, S. G., j
.and Mrs. Hubert Nolan of Green
i ville were guests the past week of
Miss Lorene Payne.
Tom D. Hampton of Norris, Tenn.,
j spent the week-end with his famuj
j and had as his guest Glenn Metz, of
Mrs. W. B. Rustin and daughter,
1 Mir-s Nina Lou Rustin, have returned
from Savannah Beach, Savannah,
| Ga., where they visited friends and
relatives for two weeks.
Miss Belle Godwin and Miss
Mary Smith, of Benson, and Broddie
, Godwin, of Dunn, were week-end
1 guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Poole.
Miss Elsie Turlington, of Benson,
is the guebt of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Poole this week.
Miss Emma Bagwell has returned
from Fletcher Sanitorium where she
has been under treatment the past
several months.
Major H. E. Raines, of French
Broad camp, spent the week-end in
i Charleston, S. C.
Miss Myrtle Barnette, who is in
nurse training in a Winston-Salem
hospital, is spending her vacation
here with her mother, Mrs. A. W.
! Barnette and family.
Mrs. Mamie Veraery and Mrs. Lari ,
Frady and children of Henderson-1
ville were Brevard visitors Satur
' day.
Mr. and Mrs. JPreston Taylor and
small son, Preston Jr., left Sunday
for Mt. Holly, after spending some
time here with Mrs. Taylor’s parents, |
Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Trantham.
Albert Shuford, who underwent an |
operation fox- appendicitis at Bilt- I
| more hospital on Monday, was said
i at last reports to be doing as nicely |
; as could be expected. He was accom
| panied to Biltmore for the openation
1 by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
I Shuford.
Sherman W. Tracey and son Os
wald, of Chicago, returned home Sun
day after spending a week with their
| cousin, Mrs. J. T. Gillespie, and
other relatives in Brevard.
Little Virginia Aiken had as her
guests last week-end Juanita Guriy,
,iof Hendersonville, Carolina and Nell
; Summers, of Cameron, S. C.
i Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Mills have as
their guests at Mills farm, Mrs. D. C.
Neiman, Mrs. John C. Colclough, and
Miss Marion Loyd, of New Orleans.
M. L. Shipman of Raleigh spent
j the week-end in Brevard,
Dr. and Mrs. G. C. Bernard of
Kannapolis were week-end guests of
| Mrs. Bernard’s sister, Mrs. W. S.
Price. Little Mary Louise Price, who
has been visiting her aunt and uncle
in Kannapolis for several weeks, re
turned to Brevard with them.
Guests of Mr. find Mrs. M. M.
Feaster Sunday, honoring Mr. Feas
ter’s birthday, included: Mr. and
Mrs. A. M. Feaster of Charlotte, Mr.
and Mrs. David Feaster, Mrs. J. M.
i Palm, John Palm Jr., and Caroline,
and Mrs. W. H. Davis, all of Green
ville, and Miss Septima Twiford.'of
Hendersonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles B1. Allison
and son and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Allison and daughters, Mary Eliza
beth and Garnet, all of Umatilla,
Fla., are visiting relatives and friends
here for several weeks. They were
guests on Tuesday of Mr. and Mrs.
M. M. Feaster.
Bandit Killer In N. C.
Statesville— Godfrey C. Kimball,
41, sheriff of Iredell county, was
killed Friday morning when he and
his two deputies attempted to arrest
Ralph Davis, 2B, Davidson county
] outlaw.
Tokjfo Threatens Russia
Tokyo—The Japanese press Friday
was publishing threats of military
action against the Soviet government
- as the result of another dangerous
I situation in North Manchuria.
I AT THE
CLEMSON THEATRE
Wallace Beery end Jackie “Skip
py” Cooper, who won the hearts of
millions of moviegoers in “The
Champ” and more recently in “The
Bowery,” are again re-united in
“Treasure Island,” Metro-Goldwyn*
Mayer’s ambitious film version of the
famed Robert Louis Stevenson clas
sic. Beery portrays the dreadpd pir
ate, Long John Silver, while Cooper
plays young Jill Hawkins, who ac
companies the nfyaterieus expedition
in search of buried treasure, and
shares the thrills and adventures of
his disreputable but kindly crony.
Treasure Island is showing at the
Clemscn Thursday and Friday, Aug
ust 23 and 2d. Lionel Barrymore,
Otto Kruger, Lewis Stone, Nigel
Bruce and Charles “Chic” Sale play
interesting role? in the world-famed
story.
Saturday, August 25th, Rex Bell
I reveals his versatility when he may
be seen as a sailor-cowboy at the
Clemson. He i; urgently called from
the navy to his home ranch where he
proceeds to use the fistic ability he
acquired as a sailor to clean up the
bad men of the west.
Franc hot Tone plays the part
.Monday and Tuesday, August 27 and
2H, of a boy out of prison who re
turns home to feei the urge of old
life and the pull of underworld flame
against the love of a girl who loves
him more than he loves her. A |
strange conflict, “Straight Is The;
Way,” is adapted from the play i
“Four Walls.” Supporting Tone are
May Robson and Kares Merley.
“La Cucaracha,” an amazing mel-'
ody drama in Technicolor is to be a I
special added attraction for Monday1
and Tuesday’s offering. Produced by
P'oneer Pictures, Inc., the film is the
first to be shown that reproduces,
every, tint and color, as against the
limited number heretofore transfer
red to the screen. Also it is said to
eliminate the eyestrain that, was
common to the old types of color
films. The effect is enhanced by
special color compositions by Robert
Edmond Jones.
Steffi Duna, successful European
dancer and actress, has the heroine
role, with Don Alvarado and Paul
Porcasi. The locale is Old Mexico,
and it present* a whirl of drama,
comedy, and the exhilirating “La
Cucaracha” dance and song.
Haunted by her own life, hounded
by all men and hunted by the boy
who loved her with a love she had
never known before, Rosemary Ames, I
a dance girl in a land of jungles |
and malaria, rubber plantations, and I
wild game, thousands of white men
and only a scattering of white women
has a difficult problem to solve. “Pur
sued,” filmed in Borneo, is being
played at the Clemson Wednesday,
August 29.
Royal Wedding Loams
Bled, Yugoslavia— Prince George
of England is reported the ardent
suitor of Prince Marina, of Greece.
The prince is now guest of the king
at his summer palace.
RATES:
I Twenty-five cents minimum charge
per insertion, with 25 words allowed
, for each ad. For ads of over twenty
five words, one cent per word per
, insertion.
' HUNTING RIGHTS—Exclusive, on
| 130 acres land adjoining Pisgah
| National Forest. For lease. See
, M. G. Boswell, Brevard.
[ FOR RENT — Four room cottage,
coinplete'y furnished, in easy
walking distance of Brevard College,
510 per month for thus season, M. G.
Boswell, Brevard.
FOR SALE — Reasonable, child’s
drop leaf crib; seven tube Philco
radio; baby carriage; Lane cedar
chest; large linoleum rug; bird cage.
262 Maple street, Brevard. ltp
FOR SALE— T Model Ford sedan;
motor in excellent condition. Cash
only. 417 Probart, Brevard.
WASTED — Your Shoe Repairing
We are equipped to do first clans
shoe repair work. Ladies soles Bnd
heals 7E cents. Men’s eoles and
rubber heels $1.00. Brevard Shot
Shop, T. E. Waters, owner—Newt
Arcade. Jan 1 tfe
FOR SALE— Ctib of corn. See Mrs.
C. A. Sliuford in Brevard or Ed
Gillespie on the Shuford farm. ltp
—
E. L. HA.LSELL will sell his place
at Davidson River. See the property
or write E. L. Hals,ell, Pisgah Forest,
N. C. 18 acres, good five room house,
three room annex, garage. Ag 16-4tp j
-1
FOR SALE OR TRADE—Or.e pair
steers, three years old. H. A. Orr,
Greenville Road, Brevard R-l.
F' SALE—Water wheel, 7 14
feet, ferris wheel, 80 feet —com
plete or in parts.’Wheel o. k. for mak
ing light or other uses. Hale Siniard,
Brevard.
FOR SALE—Two houses and three
lots in the town of Rosroan, N. C.
1 Part cash and easy terms on balance
or will exchange for other property
in the county or outside if desirable.
J. W. Giazener, Granite Falls, N. C.
Ag 28-2tc
WANTED TO EXCHANGE—Cot- g3
tage in Brevard for a vacant lot
or acreage. Orr & Hamlin, Brevard.
MOVING and GENERAL HAUL
ING—reasonable prices, every load
insured. See Charlie McCrary at
McCrary Auto Service, Phone 220,
Brevard, N. C. Mch 8
To Establish Tobacco Futures Mart
Washington—The establishment of H
a New York tobacco exchange, ten
tatively scheduled for September 6,
will attract world wide interest in the
tobacco trade since its field of opera
tion is so new as to be virtually with
out precedent.
Cheato Electric Chair
Raleigh—Death cheated the North
Carolina electric chair of an intended
October victim on Saturday.
Eli Spencer, Moore county negro,
convicted slayer of his wife who was
brought to state’s prison Friday to
ews.it execution October 18, fell dead
Saturday while he v/as being finger
printed by Cap. Bowen S. Dorsey.
The negro sought to escape the
chair by taking his own life in the
county jail at Carthage a few days
ago, but the effects of the poison that
he drank were not immediately fatal.
We’ve some more of those good alarm clocks that
have been selling for $1.25. Now they cost you
Only 97c
Buy now while the price is down.
Frank D. Clement
The Hallmark Jeweler
Clemson Theatre Building
we want to DAT A TAC Q
BUY ALL YOUR iTKJ 1 J\ 1 ULj
60c ^
NO. ONES
NO. 2’s, 30c BUSHEL
Year in and year out, we do our best to keep the price
of farm produce up in Transylvania county, and have
the confidence of all those who have dealt with us.
PLANT A FALL GARD N
. . . and REMEMBER, we're always ready to help with
suggestions whether it be for a small home garden or
for the markets.
GOOD SEED—fAe kind that GROW
r Sow Cabbage and Lettuce for fall head
ror... ing. get out Cabbage and Celery plants.
Plant more Snap Beans and English
▼ egCldUies peas gow Winter Radishes, Turnips,
Spinach, Kale, Mustard, Endive, Col
lards, Parsley, and Onions.
Sow Crimson Clover for soil improvement For.,
and feed. Sow Rye, Barley, Hairy Vetch, r. D>M
Dwarf Essex Rape, Grasses and Clovers. fAlVra
SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY GROCERIES
B. & B. FEED & SEED COMPANY
7he Store With the Checkerboard Sign
Phone 66 East Main Street BREVARD, N. C.