Local and Personal Items Rev. and Mrs. John Simmons am daughter, Charlotte, left Monday foi Memphis, Tenn., where they wui visit Mrs. Simmons’ parents, Mr. ano Mrs. H. J. Duttlinger, for two weeks Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Whitmire and daughter, Vtrnie, have returned Dorn a week’s visit with Mr. and Neal Hawkins, in Gastonia. Mrs. F. P. Sledge was a visitor in Atlanta, Ga., several days last week. Mrs. Carrie McKee visited friends in Sylva lust week. Mrs. Harold Whitmire Miss Ma bel McNeely, Miss Willie Kate Wat ers and Lawrence Holt motored to Greenville Saturday to attend the Fuiman-Brevard football game. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smothers and Mr. and Mrs. John Bishop w«ir® guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Rush •Whitmire in Charlotte. M iss Helen Galloway and Miss Lois Wood spent the week-end in Spartanburg, S. C., and attended the fair in session there last week. Uriah Cooper has returned to his home in Greenville after spending a week as guest of his sister, Mrs. l. W. Whitmire, and family. Miss Jean English, of the Mate Women’s college at Greensboro, spent the week-end here with net parents. Dr. and Mrs. E S. English. Sarah Elizabeth and Marshal! Teague were week-end visitors in Asheville. , , . Mrs. Ralph Fisher has returned to Brevard to spend two weeks at her home in North Brevard, after spend ing the past several months m tne eastern part of the state. , A. H. Kizer is spending his weeks vacation here with his family. Mrs. Madge Wilkins has returned from a buying trip to New A ork and a visit at Washington, D. C., and noints. Rue! Hunt and tommy wnnmue spent Saturday in Greenville, and • ‘tended the Brcvard-Furman game. Mrs. Mamie Verdery, of Hender sonville. attended the Straub Clayton funeral in Brevard last week. Mrs. Roy Kanipe and little son, ot Hickorv, are visiting Mrs. Kanipe s mother. Mrs. F. P. Sledge. Mrs. C. R. McNely i< spending a week with her twin sister, Mrs. W. S. Price, and family, at ter visiting Mrs Bill (’rooms and family in Dan \ Ya„ for some time. Mi Inez Cooper and two little. sons. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Nicholson and Fred Cooper, all of Cohutta, I (ja.. returned to their home Monday after being called to Brevard last week on account of the deatn of Straub Clayton. Milan Nicholson returned with his family to Cohutta. where he will remain for a tkne. George Beck, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Beck and son. Lawrence, of Ashe ville. and Mi-s Lavada Love, of Hendersonville, attended the Straub. Clacton funeral here on Thursday. | Mis> Paulette Gillespie, of w ash ington. D. C.. visited friends ami j relatives here last week and attend-( ed the Clayton funeral } Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Lookabil! ami! children, of Greer. S. C.. were guests of Mrs. Lookabill’s parents, Mr. and. Mrs Fred Johnson last week. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Kimzey and family are moving thi- week into Hie Witmer house in North Bre\ard. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Lawrence, ot Raleigh, are spending their honey moon in Brevard, guests of Mrs. j Lawrenee's mother. Mrs. J. S., Greenwood. Mrs. Lawuence is -he i former Miss Louise lowu.-eiuL i .1 \v. Starnes joined his family h re last week, after a critical ill-j ness near Ga-tonia. where he has a responsible mill p sition. Harold Norwood and two children,1 Bobbv and Mary Ashley, -pent Sat urday in Asheville and enjoyed the circus there on that day. ! Miss Mabk Gillespie has returned home after sisitinu friends and relatives in Greenville. S. C. Miss Mamie Mason lias returned from a month’s visit with friends in, Marion. . Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Gillam anil Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Punch and son Dun. of Kannapolis, spent Sunday in checks COLDS and FEVER first day Liquid—Tablets HEADACHES Salve-Nose Drops in JO minutes CHOICE MEATS Fresh VEGETABLES Complete Line GROCERIES • • Phone 47 We Deliver City Market S. F. Allison, Prop. I Brevard visiting Mr. and Mrs. James I L. Moore, who are winter guests at he home of Judge and Mrs. D. L. English. L. E. l’owell and family and Mr. ind Mrs. Frank Galloway and family vere Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. \V. F. Short. Mrs. Carrie Dorsett returned the Cirst of the week after a week’s visit .vith friends in Asheville. Mrs. C. B. West is spending this week in Hickory visiting her daugh er, Mrs. Leroy Whitener, and other elatives and friends. C. C. Yongue has been visiting his brother in Chester, S. C., the past week. Mr. and Mis. N. A. Miller and hildren spent Saturday in Asheville old attended the circus. Mr. and Mrs. Reese Combs, dir-j ■ctors of Chimney Rock camp, were J week-end guests of Miss Carol P. I Oppenheimer at Eagles Nest camp, j Mrs. E. M. Parker had as her guests the past week her brother, E. V. McKenzie of Wilmington, her niece, Mrs. A. G. Smith of Wilming ton and Bladenborof, and Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Benthall, of Phebus, Va. | Mrs. Juanita Pearce and her i mother, Mrs. Sallie A|orrison, and Bob Pearce have moved from their ■•ountry home, Flor-O-Lina, to the Wallis bungalow on East Main street for the winter. C. B. West of Easley, S. C., visited his family here on Sunday. He was accompanied on his return by his son, Kipp, who will spend this week with his father. Mrs. G. C. Brinkman is visiting friends and relatives in Boone this week. President E. J. Ooltrane sunerea injuries in a fall last week, which confined him to his home several days. The friends of Mrs. Doe Wright will be glad to know that she is some what improved after a serious ill ness of the past week. Mack Sitton. who has been in Jacksonville, Fla., for some time, is in Brevard spending his vacation with friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Hunter, of Swannanoa, were guests Sunday of Mrs. J. E. Clayton. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Burnett and sons of Greenville were Brevard visitors Sunday. Walts Mull, Miss Josephine Mull and Mrs. R. A. Payne are visiting the World’s Fair in Chicago this week. „ , , Deputy Sheriff Tommy Wood has ’•eturnod from Biltmore hospital, where he underwent an operation for appendicitis. Mr and Mrs. Frank Gaffney and children of Greenville were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.. C. C. Kil patrick. . „ . Misses Elizabeth McCoy a n d Charlotte Patton attended the Bre vard-Greerfville game in Greenville Saturday. I Mrs. Nettie Benedict was guest ol | relatives and friends in Asheville the j nast week-end and attended the «es- ] sions of the North Carolina Teachers association convening in Asheville Friday and Saturday. Mrs. John Dermid and daughter, Miss Olga, were Asheville visitors Tuesday. . Mr, and Mrs. Harry Loft is and Mr. and Mrs. Roseoe Nicholson are visiting relatives in Baltimore, Md., this week, making the trip by motor. Misses Agnes, Josephine and Jack Clayton. Roberta Bryant and Henry Erwin attended the Brevard-Furman game in Greenville Saturdat. Mr. ami Mrs. Julian Glazener and three sons attended the Barnum and Bailey and Ringlir.g Brothers cir cus at Asheville Saturday. Mrs Winifred VanEpp and two grandchildren are leaving Monday for West Palm Beach, Flu., where they will spend the winter, where spending the past several months at their home at Cashiers. Miss Harriet Emma Boggs, who is employed at Morgnnton, was the guest last week-end of her mother, Mrs. Hattie C. Boggs. \ eriioii lxi/.t'i. v* umvv.nvv.., visiting his brother, A. II, Kizer, and family. , Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Brown and I daughters have returned to their ! home in Abbeville, S. C„ after spend ling the pa-t several months at their ! summer home here on Thomas street. ! Misses Charlotte and Louise were accompanied to their South Carolina home on Sunday by their brother, Charlie Brown.'who returned later in the day to Brevard. Mrs. Roy Long spent the week-end in Winst-n-Salenm visiting h e r daughter, Miss Ora Holt, who is a student at Salem academy. From there Mrs. Long, accompanied by her daughter, visited relatives in Gra ham for a few days. Mrs. J. J. Avant,.of Bennettsville, S. C„ and Mrs. Bernard O’Neal, of ! Charleston, S. C., are stopping with (Mr. and Mrs. A. 0. Kitchen for the ’ winter. Mr. Avant and Mr. O’Nea. | j,re both officials of the CCC camps near Brevard. Miss Jean Hfggie, of Jacksonville, j Fla., is visiting her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Henry N. Carrier. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Kizer and j children spent Wednesday in Sylva. They were accompanied on the return home by Mrs. Kizer’s mother, Mrs Carrie McKee, who has been visiting in Sylva the past week. i OVAL YOVXC, LADY WEDS OA. ATTORXEY Of wide social interest is the an nouncement of the marrige of Miss Marie Louise Croushorn, only daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Worth Whit more Croushorn. of Pisgah Forest, nd Mr. Hollis Fort, Jr., of Anmeri •u.-\ Ga.. in Jacksonville, Fla., on Wednesday eveniimg, October 17, at H:30 o’clock. The Rev. Father Harry Hornick was the officiating clergy man. ... The bride was visiting the parent? • i' the groom in \mericus and to •r-thcr they accepted an invitation for a house party given by the gloom’s aunt, Mrs. C. 0. Niles, at nor home at Panacea, Fla., at which a number of young people were guests. The couple, accompanied by Miss Helen Moore and Mr. Lucius Lamar MeClesky, Jr., of Americus, also members of the house party, motored from Panacea to Jackson ville, where the marriage was sol emnized in a quiet ceremony. Following the marriage, Mr. and ' M i s. Fort returned to the groom’s home at Americus, and came from thi re to Pisgah Forest, where they are now visiting the bride’s parents for a few days. They will return shortly to Americus, where they will reside. The bride was educated at St. Gen evieve of the Pines in Asheville and at Wesleyan college in Macon, Ga„ wheic she was voted the most beau tiful girl during her freshman year. She is a talei\ted_, artist, having done much landscape work. She is also noted for her tennis and golf game. Her family came to Pisgah Forest from the Shenandoah valley of Vir ginia 22 years ago, and her father is secretary-treasurer of the Carr Lumber company, of which her grandfather, Mr. Louis Carr, of Pis gah Forest, and Alamogordo, N. M., is president. Her grandfather is also president of the Southwestern Lum ber company of the Alamagordo, N. M. The bride’s paternal grandfather, | the late Howard Vanleer Croushorn, I was a prominent planter and country .gentleman of the Shenandoah Valley j of Virginia. ; Mr. Fort was educated at the Uni versity of Georgia and Vanderbilt ! university at Nashville, Tenn., and is [ a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsi lon fraternity. He is a lawyer and is associated with his father, promi nent attorney of Americus and soli citor general of the Southwestern judicial circuit of Georgia. He is a grandson of the late Judge Allen 1 Fort, long prominent in Georgia pol | itics and state affairs. His maternal grandfather was the late Dr. George M. Niles of Atlanta. He is the eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Hollis Fort. CIRCLE SO. 3 MEETS WITH MRS. TRASTIIAM Circle No. 3 of the Methodist church met Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. B. W. Trantham. The business transactions were in charge of the chairman, Mrs. Cordia King, after which Mrs. C. B. West conducted the Bible study lesson. A short social period followed, dur ing which the hostess served light refreshments. LOCAL CHURCH TO ENTERTAIN ZONE A meeting of the eastern zone of the Waynesville district of the Methodist church will be held at the Brevard Methodist church next i Tuesday. The meeting will begin at 10:30 o’clock and continue through until the luncheon hour. Ladies of the local church will be hostesses of the day. Mrs. F. E. Branson, district sec retary, will be present and make a talk. Mrs. Atkinson, zone chairman, will preside over the meeting. Lunch will be served at the church following the morning session. There will be no afternoon session. SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASS ENJOYS PICNIC AND HIKE Members of the Gleaners Sunday school class of the Methodist church enjoyed a hike and a picnic supper at | Glen Cannon falls Tuesday afternoon and evening. Quite a number of young lady members of the class, accompanied by their teacher, Mis3 Eleanor Trowbridge, were in attendance for the pleasures of the event. BIRTH OF SON OF INTEREST HERE Many friends here will be interest ed in the announcement of the birth of a son to Mr. and Mrs. Randall W. Everett Jr., in Washington, D. C. The little son has been named Ran dall Wade Everett III, and was born on Monday, October 15. Mr. and Mrs. Randall W. Everett Sr. of Brevard are receiving con gratulations over the advent of their first grandchild. They Always Return . . . | The greatest compliment 1 we can receive is to have a customer come clay by clay. It proves to us he’s satisfied Good Food, Cooked Might— The heat coffee you ever drank prompt service at all hours— THAT’S THE SECRET Come in and let us prove our claims. They always do. it. Canteen "The Home of Good Coffee" Doc Galloway, Prop. We ark that you check our priee* and compare the quality of our good*. We tell QUALITY merchandise at FAIR prices. Men’s and Ladies’ COAT SWEATERS Fleece Lined—Part Wool Sizes 36 to 46 $1.00 Men’s Heavy FLANNEL SHIRTS Grey Only—Special Values ' Sizes 14 1-2 to 17 89c Men’s and Boys’ Slipover Sweaters Part Wool—Colors, Blue and Black Sizes 3G to 42 59c Children’s Coat and Slipover SWEATERS Assorted Colors Sizes 24 to 34 49c Up Men’s Shirts and Drawers Heavy Weight—All Sizes j Hanes and Three Season Brands 69c Up Boys’ OVERALLS Sizes 2 to 18 59c - 79c $1.00 Single Cotton Blankets Assorted Colors & Plaids 69c Ea. Men’s Heavy Duty RUBBERS Ball Band Brand # Men’s Brown-built WORK SHOES Guaranteed All Leather Composition Soles N. C. Sales Tax INCLUDED in Prices On All Merchandise Men’s Anvil Brand OVERALLS Sizes 32 to 44 $1.39 Pr. Ladies’ Ke^ Fall DRESS SHOES Brown-bilt-Guaranteed All Leather Browns, Blues, Blacks. Suede trim, printed & smooth leathers $1.98 to $3.95 One Lot Ladies’ Dress and Walking Oxfords Odd Sizes—$2.50 Values Children’s SHOES Brown-built—Guaranteed All Leather Sizes 5 1-2 to 2 Father George SHEETING 36 inches wide 10c Yd. _ OUTING Heavy Weight—Solid and Fancy Colors 27 Inch OUTING Good Weight—Solid OleTt Men’s Winter UNION SUITS Medium Weight—First Quality Sizes 36 to 46 69c Boy’s Winter UNION SUITS Good Heavy Weight First Quality Sizes 24 to 34 50c R.H.P BROAD STREE1