The Transylvania Times The News The Tune* Estab. 1896 Eatab. 1931 Consolidated 1932 Published Weekly on Thursdays by C. M. DOUGLAS Offices in The Nev.s Bedding "cT'aL^DOUGLAS.Editor MISS A. TROWBRIDGE..Associate u'uvuv^r^^J1~^-u*u^u~u^l~LI*|i^Jyv>*» ■ *» ■ SUBSCRIPTION RATES Per Year.?1-®® Six Months . •6W * --- WE LIVE NOT TO OURSELVES In Sunday school last Sunday study was made of the life and influences of ft great and wise king who faced a “depression” and who came out with flying cclors. This old king of Judah who lived more than seven hundred years be fore the time of Christ, could well be used as an example of unselfish devotion, a leader that put people first and political policies secondary, who put righteousness above power, and saw that only through the com mon good could his goal of prosperity and contentment be attained. He led his people to see that the immediate neighborhood, the larger community and ,thei entire nation must go forward as a unit if any were to succeed. The success that King Hezekiah at tained is not impossible for present day .... it lacks only the willingness of people to tote fair and go for ward together, with all classes getting a fair break By the way, people have just about quit going the wrong way on Jordan street by the postoffice. “Unde Sam Wants Money To Pay Off With” says a newspaper head line.... the dear uncle is not by him self_there’s lots of people who want the same thing. Brevard College—sounds good, doesn’t it? Well, it is a good thing, a great thing, for our community. We're proud of the name—Brevard College, and we have every reason to believe that we’ll be proud of the in stitution. Over in Mecklenburg the authori ties are having a hard time keeping their teach;rs cn the job. . ..a num ber of the better ones leaving there to accept better position* in other states. Small wonder that North Carolina teachers don’t ull lrave. what with the niggardly salaries and crowded conditions of schools, plus the usual and sometimes unusual things they have to put up with in the course of a year. THAT PRESS FREEDOM While a great deal has been said during the past few months as to the freedom of the press, Peggy of the Flint Hills in the Great Bend (Kan sas) Tribune sums it up about as truthfully and honestly as any com ment we have seen. Peggy says: ‘‘Freedom of the press is somewhat a matter of geography. Kansas edi tors can write a scathing editorial about the conditions in Russia or Tammany Hall or the Pennsylvania coal mines, but they don’t always say what they think about the politi cal situation in Topeka. They can brow-beat congress but must put a soft pedal on the deliberations of their own city commissioners. They may criticize a moving picture from Hollywood but the home talent per formers in their own town must be credited in the paper with ‘playing their parts exceptionally well.’ “The general opinion prevails that editors are free as the wind and can sav anything they please in their papers so long as they don’t offend advertisers, politicians, club women, church members, civic societies, or subscribers.”—N. E. A. Bulletin. NOT THE STATE'S CREDIT A summary of a news agency of the outlook for public educa\ n this fall lists North Carolina as the only American state that last year gave all its children the benefit of an eight months’ term supported by the state alone. It is, of course, a fact a* to North Carolina, but it is not all of the story. The reference remains uncomplete until there is appended to it the very pertinent statement that it was the school teachers of the state, rather than the state itself, that made it pos sible for every child in North Caro lina to have the same quality of in struction for identically the same length of time—eight months. They fo tfd Wne bill—to the tunc of $8,000,000. Why give the state credit for a phi lantla-ophy that was financed by the teachers within that >state?—Char lotte Observer. Atlanta Mill Never Slr>i;c\i Atlanta— The south has at least one textile mill whose workers are entirely untroubled by the national strike. Never in its history has it had a strike, walkout or shutdown. It is both a non-union and a “closed” shop. It runs every day. Official' say the workers are satis fied with conditions. It is the J <5,000 spindnle mill at the federal penitenti- i fry here. « ... LAKE TOXAWAY (Mrs. H. D. Lee) Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Raines and iiar.d daughter, Freda Jean Hall, spent Sunday with Mr, and Mrs. Ford .teed at Sapphire. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie McKinne .vere Brevard visitors Monday. Mrs. MeGehee and children who spent the summer at the “ Home stead,” left Tuesday for their home in Pittsburgh, Pa. C. J. Lee. who has employment in Asheville, spent the week-end with his family here. Mrs. Ernest Pangle and little daughters Mary Belle and Jo of Rosman are visiting her mother, Mrs. Harvey Rogers. Misses Helen Allison and Ruby Whitmire, teachers in the Toxaway school, spent the week-end at the homes of their parents near Cherry field. i Rev. and Mrs. Clyde McCali and | children were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Clark Sunday. A. B. Carter of Brevard spent a few days as guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Lee recently. Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Collins and I son Wallace and daughter Miss Ella j Mae, of Rosman, were visiting I friends here Sunday. j ttoceri «iufl»iauu, WIIU ims will j visiting his sister, Mrs. Pence, at I Penrose, has returned home. | Mrs. Oliie Sorrell and little niece, ' Annie Mavnis, who have been visit ! ing Mr. and Mrs. Cfcas Clark, have i returned to their home in Spartan jburg, S. C. Miss Susie Miller of Sapphire is ■ visiting her niece. Mrs. Chas Lee. j Mrs. Dillard Owen and children of ! Gloucester were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eli McKinna last week-end. Mr. and Mrs J. L. Sanders of Seneca, S. C.. spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sanders. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Eldridge of Rosmnn were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Arrowood Sunday. Prayer services were held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Riley Johnson Sunday afternoon. It is planned to hold these services at some home of ' the Methodist church each Wednes ; dav and Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wilbanks en tertained with a dinner at their home Sunday, honoring the lormer s nother, Mrs. Laura I/3foy. Guest ,resent w.re Mr. and Mrs. (R. M. Wilbanks and children of Greenville, 1. H. Wilbanks cf Greensboro: Ed Witbarks of Asheville; Mrs. A, B. McCarter, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wil banks and son and M. B. Smith of Greenville. Miss Gertrude Breedlove spent lunday with Miss Leo Benthci. Tom Lee was dinner guest of hi grandmother, Mrs. Chas. Lee, Sun day. Mrs. Harvey Rogers spent Wednes day with relatives in Brevard. Mrs. Frank Wilbanks will leave this week for a visit with relatives in Greenville and Ware Shoals. S. C. I. S. Fisher was carried to Angel Bros, hospital at Franklin last week for treatment. Miss Anna Wilda Norris left last I week for Tallahassee, Fla., where she will attend Florida State College for Women. Harvey Rogers of Hendersonville spent the week-end with his family here. Mrs. Leo Case visited her mother, Mrs. I. S. Fisher, Sunday. Mrs. Bill Vakos and daughter spent Tuesday night with Mrs. Paul McCoy. Mr. aim Mrs. L,eonaro i nomas anu baby were guefts of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Tinsley Saturday night. Mrs. Emmett Owen and little daughter are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mack Reed at Quebec. Miss Hazel Moses was the guest of Misses Mildred and Lucy Gallo way Friday night. Mi's Louise .Jennings spent Sun day with Miss Reba McCall. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy McCall and little daughter of Edisto spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sanders. Mr. and Mrs. Chas L?e spent Sun day with Mr. and Mrs. Gideon Mil ler at Quebec. John Rogers visited his uncle, Claude Cantrell, at Beuna Vista last week. Miss Sadie North has returned to her home in Brevard after spending several days with Mrs. H. D. Lee. Freda Jean Hall spent Friday night with Lucy Hall. Miss Inez Owen is spending some time with Mrs. Oscar Woodard at Cashiers. Mr. and Mrs. N. N. Ray spent Sat urday with friends in Brevard. Mrs. Nancy Breedlove and daugh QUEBEC NEWS j Mrs. J. W. Jones, Miss Madge | Jones, Garland June.?, Harvey Laugh- ] tor and Cecil Duncan were visiting relatives and friends in this commun ity Suday. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Lee and j children and Miss Susie Miller tf j Lake Toxaway were dinner guests of and Mrs. Gideon Miller Sunday. M s- Susie Miller is the oldest, sister cf Gideon Miller and the oldest child of the 23 children of the late Henry j Miller, but notwithstanding her SO years, she walks around as spry as a much younger woman. Mr and Mrs. John O’Neal and son Ned and daughter Nellie, before they returned to their home at Columbia, S C spent a day with W. B. Hen derson visiting John’s Rock camP. Locking Glass Falls and High Falls on Horse Pasture river. They 3ie so delighted with this country that they talk of making this their permanent home. T C- Henderson and Miss Helen Henderson attended the county teach ers meeting at Brevard last Satur day. , Mr and Mrs. Fred Whitmire of Sclica visited Oak Grove Baptist cemetery Sunday afternoon to place flowers on the grave of Mrs. Whit mire’s mother who is buried here. William uimn, Lfui»nt Miss Ruby Dunn and little Harold Whitmire of iSelica called on Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Henderson last Sun day r.fternoon. barline Fisher, little daughter cl Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Fisher, had been standing about the lake of T. C. Hun ter, Mrs. Dewey Thrift, and son, Bunyan Breedlove of Glcnville, were visiting relatives and friends here last Mr. and Mrs. Paul McCoy were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hali Sunday. Mrs. Houston Dishman spent Sat urday with Mrs. W. J. Raines. Mrs, Chas. Henderson and daugh ter, Miss Mildred, of Quebec and lit tle grand daughter, Laura Jane Ed ney, of Enka, spent Saturday with Mrs. C. C. Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland Nicholson and daughter of Enka were visiting relatives here recently. dcrson watching the swimmers. After I she-went home she was quietly enter taining herself at play and was heard to say ,as if to herself, ‘ Oscar Hen derson’s got no sense.” ‘‘Why do you say that?" asked her mother. She re plied, "He’s crazy. He said he was going to throw me ir. the pond.” Mr. and Mrs. Wait McCall and their son, Ralph, anil daughter, Opal, of Daeusville. S. C., were visiting, relatives in tnis community during! the week-end. Edward Black of Willistoti, S. C.,' is visiting his father, W. D. Black j this week. Rev. Burt could not fill his appoint ment at Oak Grove Baptist church Sunday, he and Mrs. Burt havin'; j been calied to South Carolina t: account of the serious illness of thei ■1 daughter -* j Youth Attacks Own Sistcis I Sacramento, Calif.—A youth, 15.; •whose six and seven-year-old sisters • were found suffocated in an icebox ; Saturday night, Thursday confessed! that he and hip brother, 12. had j locked the girls in the box, Sheriff' Donald Cox said. The sheriff said the boy made the ‘ confession in the presence of his! father. Harry Paiva, a few hours j after the funeral of the two girls, j Tpphaon Hits Liuov Manila— Thousands have been made homeless by a typhoon which raged for two days on northern Luzon [island, reports received in Maniia said Friday. The typhoon caused heavy damage to bamboo houses but no loss of life was reported. | ASHEVILLE Leaves Brevard | For Hendersonville For''Greenville 12:45 P. M. Lv, Hendersonville For Brevard i: ^PJ.' I GREYHOUND LINES | Anywhere in U. S. Renew Your Subscription AT ANY HOUR—DAY OR NIGHT MOORE and OSBORNE, Undertakers Are Ready To Serve \ou Day Phones 88, 159, 250—Night Phones 159, 250 BREVARD, N. C.—Ill & 119 W. Main St. Moore & Osborne undertakers WHAT you hear and what you read about a car should be considered before you buy—but one ride is worth a thousand words. Out on the road you get nothing but facts. The best place to test Chevrolet’s Knee-Action is a stretch of bumpy road, where you can see for yourself what a big difference Knee-Action makes in riding com fort. Chevrolet welcomes this fair and thor ough test because i t will acquaint you not only with the Knee-Action ride, but with all the other features that Chevrolet owners like— the smooth, economical, valve-in-head engine that gives you more speed ihaa you will ever care to use; the positive, cable-controlled brakes that are safe and reliable in any weather; the handsome finish and the roomi nessof bodies by Fisher,and the added comfort of Fisher Ventilation. For your own satisfac tion, go to your nearest Chevrolet dealer and make the Ownership Test by driving a Knee Action Chevrolet as you would drive your own car. Chevrolet is satisfied to let you and the ride decide which car is the best for you. CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY. OETROIT, MICHIGAN Compare Chet ruin't law delivered prime and easy G.hf.A.C. *erme A General Motors Value OLIALCft AOVEWTIBtMCSaT

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view