LAKETOXAWAY Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Molt*, who have been on a world tour, for the past nine months returned to Hillmont, their home here, Saturday, In a conversation with Mr. Molts about the trip, he said, "We are glad to be back home. I have made two world tours In yie past three years and I find that times are better in the United States, than In any other coun try. Western North Carolina Is the finest place In the world.” We are glad indeed, to have Mr. and Mrs. Molts back home. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Galloway and little daughter, Jo, of Athens. Ohio, who have been visiting Mr. anil Mrs. H. O. Rogers and other relatives In this and Jackson county, have returned home. Mrs. Dorin and son. of Miami. Fin., are spending the summer at the home of Mrs. Maude Owen. U. H. Thomas ana Rav I.ee. made a trip to Spartanburg, S. C.. last week. Mrs. McConnell and sons, of Penn sylvania, are spending tbe summer at The Homestead. Mrs. McConnell Is a sister of R. G. Jennings. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Rogers. Jr., and little daughter, Shirley, spent the week end with Mr. and Mis. H. D. I.ee and other relatives here. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Kmmett Owen, at the home of her father. Mack Reed, at Quebec. July 15th. a son. Mrs. Kilpatrick, of East Fork, spent last week here, at the recreation cen ter, giving instructions In making baskets. Rev. and Mrs. Clyde McCall and' children, were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Owen. Mrs. Bella Owen and children are t moving to the Wlke building, formerly I occupied by the Williams family. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Breedlove, of Wolf Mountain, are moving to the | bouse now occupied by Mrs. Owen and children. Miss Annie Dean has returned to her home at Woodruff. S. C„ after J spending some time visiting Mr. and I Mrs. Lester Thomas. Blanche Owen and Sue Neal McCall. [ of Quebec, spent Sunday with Frieda Talley. Chester Cash, of Asheville, who has been visiting his aunt, Mrs. C. C. Hall, has returned home. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Owen and children spent Sunday with Mr. and > Mrs, A. J. Lee. ^ Send in your Renewal—We will appreciate it now. I --- 11 1 -- - I SELL ! with Want Ad* > BUY with Want Ads RENT ! with Want Ad* TELEHONE 7 Transylvania Times | Classified T — r=s=--= SAME PEP JACK-IN-THE-BOX WOODMEN CIRCLE TO MEET MONDAY WITH MRS. WARD The Woodmen Circle will meet Mon day evening at S o'clock at the home of Mrs. T. P. Ward. Important business will lie transact ed. and all members are requested to be present. LITTLE RIVER NEWS Mrs. Grace Merrill, of West Palm Peach, Florhlu, visited relatives here last week. Quite a few people of this commun ity attended the McCall reunion which was Held at Crab Creek Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Orr and Wallis Orr. of Brevard, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe McCall Mrs. Clyde Hamilton, who has been director of our B. T. U. for a number of years, resigned her post Sunday 17. We are very sorry to lose her from out training union. Edward Mackey was elected to fill the vacancy. Miss Louise.Wood, of Brevard, visit ed friends in this community last week. James McCall, of Brevard, was guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Metcalfe Sun day. Mrs. fdumla Anderson, of Flat Rock, and grandchildren called on the for mer's sister, Mrs. W. J. McCrary Sun day. Mrs. Farmer Sanders and children, Joyce and Joe, of Richmond, Va., are visiting friends and relatives here. Lannle McCrary, who has been visit ing his parents here. Is leaving next week for Cleveland, Ohio, where he has employment. Mr. and Mrs. D. O. D. Hamilton and family and Miss Jennie George at tended the Huggins and Sentelle re union at Beulah Sunday. Sam Branch, of Raleigh Bpent last week with Edward Mackey. Mrs. Virgil McCrary and daughter, Helen, and Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Met calfe were guests of Pick and Achsah Evans, of Hendersonville, Sunday. Miss Ollle Mae Metcalfe, who is em ployed in Brevard, spent the week-end with her parents here. Misses Nell and Julia McCrary ac companied Alf Holden to Asheville one day last week on a business trip. Little ratrieia Ann Duncan, who has been sick for the past week, Is much Improved. Friends of Aunt Arsula Merrill will he glad to hear that she Is Improving liter a recent illness. Stop Hunting for Pins and Clips BE MODERN IN YOUR OFFICE NEW HANDY NEAT THE TIMES PHONE 7 Times Arcade Brevard I _■ I Twas This Way ! I By LYLE SPENCER \ | .1 © Western Newspaper Union. | *wi9 The Father of Chemistry HAT makes a fire burn? If you were asked this question, 1 you might be hard put to give a reasonable answer. As a matter of fact, no one in the whole world could answer it until Laurent La voisier, the famous French scien tist, discovered oxygen in the Eight eenth century. • Besides giving oxygen its name and explaining its properties, La voisier was the first man to show why hydrogen and oxygen combined to form water. Because he made so many fundamental contributions to the world of science, he is now generally known as the “Father of Chemistry.” But Lavoisier was far more than a famous scientist. Handsome and witty, he was also a prominent courtier in the Courts of Louis XV and XVI. He was a friend of Marie Antoinette and was always in the thick of royal intrigues and politics. When the French revolution broke out, he was in the thick of that. He witnessed the roaring fall of the Bastille. He invented a new way of making saltpeter, the es 1 sential element in gunpowder. Fa mous chemist though he was. Lavoisier was finally thrown into I prison by the fanatical Robespierre, who said he had no use for any scientists, especially aristocratic ones. Those were the days when Paris streets were running red with hu man blood. Being an aristocrat, Lavoisier was soon on his way to I the guillotine. He died as he had lived, laughing and unafraid. A | friend who witnessed the execution wrote his memorial: “It took but | a moment to cut off his head, but another like it cannot be produced in a hundred years.” — | *Twas This Way » By LYLE SPENCER j © Western Newspaper Union. f ii*—— """!»> Military Uniform* LOUIS XIV, the depraved French king, really brought on the French revolution through his ava rice and cruelty to his people. A most disorderly man himself, his greatest contribution to posterity was his reintroduction of the mili tary uniform, the forerunner of modern standardized goods. Although regular uniforms had been worn by Greek and Roman soldiers, the art was lost during the Middle ages. Since soldiers fought in small bands, they could either recognize each other personally or wear some identifying badge which distinguished them from the enemy. But Louis XIV built up the larg est army Europe had ever known up to that time, a huge force of 100,000 men. He gave orders to his generals, “Drill them to act as one, discipline them to respond as one, uniform them to look as one!” The generals could do the drilling and disciplining without any trouble, but when it came to the uniforms they were up against a new problem. Making 100,000 uni forms that all look exactly alike is no small problem. The generals were finally forced to build up a whole new textile and clothing in dustry and install the first modern system of standardized goods and sizes. So when you go into a department store to buy a size seven shoe or a fifteen collar, remember that it was old Louis XIV and his aides who first thought up the idea. Send in your Renewal—Wo will appreciate it now. Mrs. T. R. Gave and two children, of Asheville, are visiting Mr. nnd Mrs. A. N. Jenkins, and family. Mrs. H. A. Zachary and son, James, of Cashiers, are visiting the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Jenkins. Miss Annie Lee Connover, Of Nor folk. Va., was guest the past week of Mrs. Alfred Chance. Miss Frances Jenkins, of Kannapolis, spent the week-end here with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Jenkins. Guests stopping with Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Rufty are Mrs. F. W. Fischer, of New Orleans, Mr. and Mrs. Claud Davis, of Miami, Fla., and Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Keisacker and son, D. C. Keisacker and friend, of New York. T. H. Shipman returned to his home here Friday after being under treat-, ment In a Greenville hespltal. He Is reported to be slightly improved. Miss Katherine flpratt has returned from Marlon to resume her position here with Smith Furniture store, after being away the past two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. David Luther are oc cupying the apartment of Dr. and Mrs. E. S. English on Jordan street. Mr. Luther is connected with the Ecusta Paper corporation, Mrs. Emma Quillln, of Portsmouth, Va.. visited Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Orr last week. Mr. and Mrs. fra D. Galloway and little daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Galloway, of Ohio, visited friends and relatives in Brevard and the coun ty the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Keisacker, of Miami Bench. Fla., have been making their home at Mrs. John Rufty's the past ten days. Their son, D. C. Kei sacker, who is a nationally known motorcycle racer, arrived Thursday from New York by motorcycle and stopped in Brevard en route to Colum bus, Oa., where he attended a race Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Keisacker ex pressed delight with Brevard. J. T. McGehee, of Macon, Ga., spent the week-end here with his family at their summer home on Franklin avenue. Miss Fannie McGehee has al so arrived to spend the remainder of tl^ summer here with the family. Miss Katherine English is assisting in the local telephone exchange, and Mrs. Langdon English is assistant manager in the Western Union office durthjjr the summer. ReV. W. E. Petit, of Spartanburg, 5?. C. is spending a few days in Brevard, guest of his nephew. J. B. Petit, and family. Wallis Orr, a student ut Berea Col lege. Berea, Ky„ arrvied last week to spend his vacation here with his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Orr. Grady Pritchard, of Chapel Hill, spent several days in Brevard the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Sledge and children, of Atlanta, are visiting Mrs. F. P. Sledge. \ Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Plckelsimer were called to her former home In Tennes see on account of the death of a nep hew last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Rush Whitmire and children, of Asheville,' were Sunday guests of T, W. Whitmire. Mrs. Cos Paxton Is visiting her sis ter, Mrs. J. H. Case, in Asheville. Dr. and Mrs. E. S. English were I guests Sunday of Charlie English at Etowah. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Moore had as their guests Tuesday the latter's moth er, Mrs. George Gash and granddaugh ter, Robbie Gash, of Asheville, and Miss Pink Gash, of Etowah. Earl Twiggs and Alvin Owen were business visitors in Greenville Satur day. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Robbins and son. Glenn, and daughter, Carol, of Miami. Fla., are spending ten days at Way side cottage, Lake Sega. Mr. Robbins Is Florida district manager of the Fed eral Housing association. Sam McCullough, of the Berry school, Rome Ga., is spending his va cation here with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Sam McCullough. Miss Elolse Lewis has returned from 12 weeks’ summer school at Western Carolina Teachers college. Cullowhee. Mrs. Fred Holt has as her guests last week her mother. Dr. Eunice Green, and her brother, George Jr., of Burlington. Dr. Shelton Smith, of the department of religious education at Duke Uni versity, Is spending a month in Bre vard, stopping at the home of Dr. and Mrs. E. J. Coltrane. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Neal and fam ily, of (Greenville, were week-end clients of Sheriff and Mrs. George Shuford. Mrs. H. J. Payne and two daugh ters, of Asheville, were week-end guests here with the former’s mother, Mrs. A. W. Barnette. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Twiggs and son, Thomas Earl, have moved to the Hunt er cottage on Franklin avenue, after spending the past three weeks with Dr. and Mrs. E. S. English. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Jones and sons, of Asheville, are visiting Mrs. Jones' mother, Mrs. A. W. Barnette, and family. Mr. and Mrs. Sam T. Llpsey, Miss Peggy and Sam T. Jr., of Savannah, Ga., are at their summer home here near Keystone camp, where they will remain until early fall. Hubert Ramseur and Mira Edith Ramseur were Sunday guest* of Miss Katherine English. Miss Myrtle Toting and 8. 8. Bar nette, both of Rotboro, are spending their vacation here with the lattei's mother, Mrs. A. W. Barnette and fam ily. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dennison, son and daughter, of Miami, Fla., are ex pected to arrive August 31st to spend two weeks at Wayside cottage, Lake Sega. Miss Alma Cade, of Wilmington, Is expected to spend the week-end here as guest of President and. Mrs. E. J. Coltrane. Miss Cade will be remember ed as piano teacher at Brevard Col lege last year. James Waters, of Lockport, N. Y„ Is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Waters. He attended the wedding of his sister, Miss Ruth Waters, at the Methodist church here Sunday af ternoon. Miss Doris Cary-EIwes, of Saluda. Is guest this week of Mrs. Harry Perry. Misses Charlotte and Louise Brown spent the day In Asheville Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Guthrie Kilpatrick and son. Billy, and Miss Nell Gillespie, re turned to Chapel Hill Tuesday after visiting relatives and friends here. They were accompanied to Brevard by Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Kilpatrick, who had been visiting. In Chapel Hill and Wil mington. Dr. John M. McGehee returned Tues day to his home In Cedartown, Os. after a short visit here with his par ents. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. McGehee. Alice and Bryan Petit are visiting their cousins In Liberty, S. C„ this week. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Tate have moved into the former Stokes residence on Broad street. Mr. Tate Is supertn tendent In charge of construction for the Fiske Carter company at Eeusta. Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Mullls. of Omaha, Nebraska, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Miller. Mrs. J. W. Wilson, of Goldsboro, Is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Shipman. Miss Elizabeth Zachary, who has been attending summer school at the University of North Carolina, has re turned to spend the remainder of the summer here with her mother. Mrs. Beulah Zachary. Miss Nettle Wise arrived from Ed neyvtlle on Wednesday to spend sev eral weeks here. She Is guest at the Norwood house with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Norwood. TRY OUR WANT ADS — .. FINAL WEEK BELK’S Still lots of Bargains left for Thrifty Merchandise Buyers ' ut They Go! atr DRESSES Entire stock Fashionable Summer Dresses put into 4 Big Groups-Final Sale GROUP 1 GROUP 2 $2.95 up'to $4.95 Your Choice for Your Choice for GROUP 4 Values 7 QC Up To Your Choice for $5 •a GROUP 3 J Values ffC AC Up To Your Choice for ALL SUMMER GOODS REDUCED CLOSE OUT Entire Stock Ladies Summer HATS Values that sold all summer up to $2.95 each — Straws, Fabrics, including all whites. UKa 25c - 48c - 98c —-—— - jre MAIN STREET BREVARD, N. C. -————*——————