PERSONALS
Mrs. Paul Behr., of Jersey City,
N. J., is visiting her uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Filkins,
at their home, 23 Park Avenue.
Mrs. Behr is a sergeant in the
Women's Hospital Reserve corps
and has charge of a mobile kit
chen in New York city. She is also
an ambulance driver and co-host
ess at the Ritz Tower canteen in
New York city. Her husband is
in combat duty in the Southwest
Pacific.
Dr. ana Mrs. Robert G. Ferrell,
Jr., and two children, Bobbie and i
Nida, of Dublin, Ga., are on a
week's visit here with Mrs. Fer
rell’s mother, Mrs. J. T. McGehee,
and other members of the family.
Mrs. E. T. Schmidt, of Boca Ra
ton, Fla., an experienced nurse,
is visiting in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. W. C. Brenk.
St. Sergt. Ralph F. Monaghan
and Mrs. Monaghan of Greenville,
S. C., were week-end guests of
the latter‘s parents, Dr. and Mrs.
J. B. Wilkerson.
Mrs. Nelson Hammerslag, of
New York city, is visiting her mo
ther, Mrs. Frank Jenkins, here for
several weeks.
Mrs. Will Moore and little daugh
ter, Nannie Lou, of Farmville,
are visiting the former’s father,
Mr. D. P. Kilpatrick, and brother.
Karl Kilpatrick, and family. Her
sister, Mrs. S. T. Usry, of Ashe
ville, spent the week-end here.
Mrs. J. F. Winton left Wednes
day for Washington, D. C., where
she will spend a few days with
her three daughters, who are in
government w-ork there, after
which she will return to her home
in Lexingtofi, Mo. She has been
visiting her sister, Mrs. Anthony
Trantham, and family here for two
weeks.
Mr. H. L. Jollav. of Winter Ha
ven. Fla., has joined his wife here,
who has been visiting her aunt,
Mrs. Cordia King, for several
weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Morris
have announced the birth of a son.
Donald Lee, on July 22. Mrs. Mor
ris was formerly Miss Mary Edna
Ward.
Mrs. J. P. Taylor and children,
Mrs. Edgar Street and Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Allen, of Florence.
S. C., are visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Paul K. Jones and other relatives
in Cedar Mountain.
Miss Muriel Filkins expects to
leave Friday for Ossining, N. Y.
She will be accompanied by Miss
Kathleen Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs. John DeBord are
visiting relatives and friends in
Richmond, Va„ and Washington,
D. C., this week.
Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Loftis and
daughters, Dorothy Jean and Fran
ces. and son, Marshall, spent the
week end with relatives in Abbe
ville. S. C.
Sheriff and Mrs.'Freeman Hayes
were on a business trip to Kin
ston the first of the week.
Mrs. W. E. Poovey and son, Ed
gar, and daughter, Mrs. Grady
Campbell, spent several days the
past week with Mr. Campbell, who
will leave soon for military service.
Mrs. Poovey and son left for Sa
vannah, Tenn., where he is con
nected with the TVA personnel
there, and Mrs. Campbell is offi
cially with the TVA at Murphy.
Pvt. John H. Brown, Jr., has
returned to Camp Gruber, Okla.,
after spending a 10-day furlough
here with his parents.
Mrs. J. B. Pickelsimer spent the
wreek-end with her husband at
Mission hospital, Asheville, where
he has been under treatment for
several weeks, but is reported to
be improving nicely. She was
joined in Asheville Saturday
night by her sister, Mrs. J. E.
Loftis, Mrs. John Pickelsimer,
Mrs. Nathan McMinn and Mrs. E.
C. Brown, who attended with her
the Grace Moore concert Saturday
night at the city auditorium.
Jack Holden, of the naval air
station, Norfolk, Va., spent the
week-end here with his wife.
Mrs. Harry Yeoman, of Char
leston, S. C., spent last week here
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Johnson.
Mr. E. F. Gillespie, of Chapel
Hill, visited friends and relatives
here several days last week.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. C.
Whitmire during the week were
Mr. and Mrs. Neal Hawkins, of
Gastonia. Mr. and Mrs. Euge Gil
lespie and children, of Blantyre,
Rev. and Mrs. B. W. Thomason
and Rev. W. S. Price.
Guests the past week of Mr. and
Mrs. C. A. McCormick were Mrs.
E. R. Staton, Mrs. Annie Nuckals,
Miss Gladys Nuckals, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde E. Nuckals and daughter,
Jeanne, of Buena Vista, Va., and
Sgt. Melvin McCormick, of Bos
ton, Mass.
Pvt. Thomas N. McCormick has
been visiting his wife and infant
daughter. Hazel, here the past
week.
Lieut. Richard McGehee spent
the week-end her with his mother,
Mrs. J. T. McGehee. He made the
flight trip to Hendersonville and
returned Monday to Stuttgart,
Ark., air field, where he is an in
structor in advanced flying.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Hogsed, of
Calvert, and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Landers, of Matoon, 111., were Sun
day guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. W.
Robertson. The latter’s piano pu
pils gave a contest hymn playing.
Mrs. R. B. Roper, of Perry, Ga.,
is visiting her sister-in-law, Mrs.
C. D. Brown, and family here.
Mrs. Ruth Clayton has returned
from a vacation at Columbia, S.
C.. where she visited her husband
who is in the service at Fort
Jackson. While she was away,
Miss Doris Noblitt. of Marion, was
in charge of the Western Union
office here.
Dr. and Mrs. J. N. Land, of
Anderson, S. C., spent the week
end at their summer home in
Brevard.
Miss Polly Powell, superinten
dent of Biltmore hospital, spent
the week end with her father,
Mr. L. E. Powell. Another daugh
ter. Miss Kathryn Powell, has a
position with the civil service de
partment in Washington. D. C.
Mrs. W. F. Short and daughters,
Mary Ellen and Janet, are visiting
Mrs. Short's sister, Miss Polly
Powell, in Asheville, and Mr. and
Mrs. D. F. Barnett and family.
The latter were guests last Sun
day of Mr. and Mrs. Short here.
Miss Janet Short, young daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Short,
is in Biltmore hospital for treat
ment.
Mr. Ed Cantrell, of Fontana
Dam, spent the past week end
here with his family.
Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Lewis and
children, of Greenville, S. C.,
visited relatives in Brevard the
past week end.
Sgt. J. S. Carpenter and Mrs.
Carpenter, of Macon, Ga., spent
the week end in Brevard. Sgt. Car
penter returned to camp the first
of the week, but Mrs. Carpenter
remained for a visit of several days
longer here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. E. P. McCoy.
MUSIC CLUB WILL MEET
THIS SATURDAY AFTERNOON
The August meeting of the
Music Lover’s club will be held
on Saturday afternoon at 3:30
o’clock at the home of Mrs. J. M.
Allison. Mrs. J. B. Pickelsimer
and Mrs. J. E. Loftis will be co
hostesses with Mrs. Allison.
GARDEN CLUB MEMBERS
ASKED TO WEAR CORSAGE
OF OWN MAKE
A reminder is requested to be
given to members of the Garden
club to wear a corsage of their
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VICTORY
I
Grads At College
Will Be Honored
Members of summer graduating
classes at Brevard college will be
honored this week end.
A formal banquet will be given
tomorrow night in the college
dining room, followed by a theatre
party. Miss Betty Smith, of Bethel,
will serve as toastmistress at the
banquet and a unique program is
being arranged.
Sunday afternoon between 4 and
6 o’clock a tea will be given in
the parlor at West Hall in honor
of the graduates.
Oakland To Have
Cemetery Working
BY MRS. LEE NORTON
Work at the Reid’s cemetery in
the Oakland community will take
place this Saturday, and all who
can are urged to come and help
with this much needed work.
Mr. and Mrs. Ansel Mabe and
daughter. Miss Thelma, Mr. and
Mrs. Claud Setzer and son. Paul,
and Mr. Archie Moss, of Lenoir,
were visitors at Lake Toxaway
Baptist church last Sunday. The
Hartland quartet, composed of
four of the Lenoir visitors, sang
several selections, with Mrs. Mabe
as accompanist.
Mrs. Spence Welborne and
daughter. Miss Rhoda Ann. of
Virginia Beach. Va.. and Mr. and
Mrs. Coy Fisher and daughter, of
Pisgah Forest, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Fisher and two children and
Miss Verona Fisher were Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Fisher.
Avery Hinkle is here recuperat
ing from an injury to his leg while
working in a defense plant in
Dearborn. Mich.
Leo Reid, who is in service in
Charleston. S. C., was a recent
visitor to his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. A. Reid.
Ray Sanders, who has been em
ployed in the ship yards at New
Orleans, is home for a rest re
covering from a serious illness.
Misses Mary, Martha and Rachel
Nan Matheson have returned to
their home in Troutman after
visiting their Grandmother Norton.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cloer, of
Hayesville, were recent visitors of
the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
L. E. Cash.
Miss Jewell Chappell has return
ed home from Knoxville, Tenn.,
where she visited her sister, Mrs.
Lloyd Bryson. She was accompani
ed home by Mr. and Mrs. Bryson
and son, Terry, and Miss Loretta
Bryson.
Miss Theo Galloway, while look
ing for eggs in a hen’s nest near
her grandfather’s barn, found in
stead of eggs a large rattlesnake
in the act of swallowing a big rat.
A revival is in progress at Lake
Toxaway Baptist church this week.
NEWBURY TO SPEAK TO
B&P CLUB NEXT THURS.
The August supper meeting of
the Business & Professional Wo
man’s club will be held next Thurs
day evening at 7:30, August 26,
at the Bryant house.
“Accidents—Enemies of Effici
ency” will be the topic to be
presented by the Committee on
Education and Health. H. E. New
bury, Safety Director at Ecusta
Paper corp. will be guest speaker.
own make to the garden tea and
flower exhibit on Friday after
noon.
HOME DEMONSTRATION CLUB
ENJOYS PICNIC EVENT
A social and recreational event
was held by the Brevard Home
Demonstration club last Monday
afternoon at the J. M. Allison
cabin at Camp Sapphire. A picnic
supper, telling of jokes and a gen
eral good time were enjoyed by
the dozen or more members in at
tendance. This gathering was held
in place of the usual demonstra
tion meeting in the homes.
441 CLUB BOYS
- FROM PAGE ONE -
encampment were J. A. Glazener,
T. S. Gash and Miss Annabel Tea
gue.
Listed below by clubs are the
club members who attended the
event this year.
Little River 4-H club—Clifford
Frady and Ansel Merrill.
Enon 4-H club — Elsie Mae
Brown, Jack Talley, Billie Talley
and Claudia Cox.
Pisgah Forest 4-H club — Ted
Newton. Annie Joe Sherrill, Reba
Allison. Rebecca Allison, Lois Mc
Call, Bobby Lee McGuire, Mike
Griswold. Betty Jean McCall,-El
mer Sentqil. Pat Holden. Billy
Gardner, Betty Gardner. Newell
McCall, James Tinsley. J. T. Hol
den. Betty Burns. Pat Griswold.
Charles Wolfe, David Sherrill,
Howard Wolfe and Warren Frady.
Brevard 4-H club—Bobby Reid.
Mary Bracken, Mazie Holden and
Jack Bryant.
Selica 4-H club — Emma Sue
Sitton, Betty Lou Lance, Davis
Barton, Jimmie Sitton and Joyce
Lance.
Calvert-Cherryfield 4-H club —
Frances Gillespie, Robert Gillespie,
Hugh Gillespie. J. B. Whitmire.
Ruby Winchester, V. C. Styles,
Dorothy Whitmire. Carlos Cassell
and Grace Allison.
Lake Toxaway 4-H club — Hoyt
Soil Tests Made
On Five Farms In
County This Week
Complete soil tests were made
Monday and Tuesday on five spe
cial TV A demonstration farms in
Transylvania county by W. D.
Lee, extension soil specialist of
State College, assisted by County
Agent Julian Glazener.
Soils on the farms had been
previously classified and this week
samples were taken and will be
sent to Raleigh for testing by the
State Department of Agriculture
to determine what is needed in the
various soils.
Farms that were tested are
owned by Charles Davis, Madison
Allison. Frank King, J. W. Mc
Crary and J. O. Wilson.
Kadez Wilde, Betty June Fisher,
Exievee Wilde, Betty Rogers, Lucy
Tinsley, Jean Hall and Theo Gai
loway.
Cedar Mountain 4-H club—Helen
Willis, Cleo Willis, Jean Pace,
Florence Oliver, Ralph Pierson.
J. P. Oliver, Haskell Jones and
Patsy Clark.
Connestee 4-H club — Hovey
Gravely, Helen Hogsed. Lola Mae
Glazener and Dusty Erwin.
Judge: Can't this case be settled
out of court? ’
Kelly: “Sure. That’s what we
were trying to do, your honor,
when the police interferred.”
God Gives Laws for His People
HIGHLIGHTS ON THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
By NEWMAN CAMPBELL
(The International Uniform
Lesson on the above topic for
Aug. 22, is Exodus 19-24; Deut.
11:18-21; GaL 3:23-28; 5:13, 14,
the Golden Text being Luke 10:27,
“Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God with all thy heart, and with
all thy soul, and with all thy
strength, and with all thy mind;
and thy neighbor as thyself."
THE LESSON today is so long
that we can comment upon only
a small portion of it, leaving
out many interesting parts. The
older classes, especially, should be
urged to read all the lesson and to
realize how fundamental are these
laws laid clown for the Children of
Israel—laws relating to the rela
tions of man to God, and of man
to man.
The Israelites left Rephidim
and, led by the cloud, traveled
slowly to the desert of Sinai,
where they pitched their tents be
fore Mount Sinai, which is 1,200 to
1,500 feet high. The huge cliff re
sembles a colossal pulpit, and
from this pulpit, on which the
great cloud brooded, the Almighty
spoke to the people, giving them
the ten commandments and also
the other laws which were to
guide them in their future life.
Moses went up first and God
called to him out of the moun
tain, telling him what he should
say to the people. He was to re
mind them how He had brought
them out of Egypt, destroying
their enemies. If they obeyed His
voice they should be “a peculiar
treasure unto Me above all peo
ple: for all the earth is Mine."
* Calls Elders
Moses called the elders of the
people and told them what the
Lord had said. The people an
swered, “All that the Lord hath
spoken we will do.” And Moses re
turned the words of the people
unto the Lord.
The Lord told Moses that He
would appear in a thick cloud
that the people might hear His
voice on the third day, after they
were cleansed and sanctified. They
were not to come too near or
touch the mount or they would
die. On the third morning there
were thunders and lightnings and
a thick cloud upon the mount and
the voice of the trumpet very
loud, so that all the people were
frightened and trembled.
“And Mount Sinai was alto
gether on a smoke, because the
Lord descended upon it in fire
and the smoke thereof ascended
as the smoke of a furnace, and the
whole mount quaked greatly.”
The “trumpet sounded long and
waxed louder and louder, Mosea
spake and God answered him by a
voice.” The Lord then told Moses
to go down to the people and
speak to them, which he did.
“God spake all these words,
beginning, I am the Lord thy God,
which have brought thee out or
the land of Egypt, out of tha
house of bondage.”
Then the Lord -gave them' the
Ten Commandments, and after
that “all the people saw the thun
derings, and the lightnings and
the noise of the trumpet, and the
mountain smoking: and when the
people saw it, they removed and
stood afar off.” Moses told them
to “fear not: for God is come to
prove you, and that His fear may
be before your faces, that ye sin
not.” The first of the laws God
gave related to relations with
Him, the second section man’s re*
lationship to his fellow men.
" The first laws alter the Ten
were concerning the erection of
altars; the next the relationship
of master and servant; then In
juries inflicted upon others, the
rights of property. Next sex
crimes and the prohibition of all
forms of oppression.
Offering of Firstborn
The seventh division was the
offering of the firstborn and first
fruits to the Lord. Next laws pro
hibiting falsity—“Thou shalt not
take up a false report: put not
thy hand with the wicked to be
an unrighteous witness.” They
were not to oppress strangers or
harm them, “for ye know the
heart of a stranger, seeing ye
were strangers in the land of
Egypt.”
They were instructed * exactly
how they should keep the Sab
bath, and concerning the three
great feasts of Israel.
Lastly, rules were given for
their conduct when engaged in
conquering Palestine, and Moses
wrote down all the words of Je
hovah, so that the Israelites
could keep the laws always before
them.
Love was to be the fulfilling of
the law, however, “For ye, breth
ren, were called for freedom; only
use not your freedom for an oc
casion to the flesh, but through
love to be servants one to another.
For the whole law is fulfilled in
one word, even in this: Thou shalt
love thy neighbor as thyself.” Gal.
I 5:13. 14.
Stiff Competition
Milo: “Porter, get me another
glass of water.”
Porter: “Sorry, suh, but if I
take any mo' ice, dat co'pse in de
baggage car ain’t going to keep.”
When yrur doctor asks where you
prefer to have your prescription
filled, say: VARNER’S, because:
Filled only by registered pharma
cist; as written and at reasonable
pri s. (Advt.) tfc
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P L U MMER’S
We Close At 1 P. M. On Thursdays