Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Sept. 5, 1919, edition 1 / Page 2
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I *,r ^ '-t. MmAY. tipmniR t, itif. S BREVARD NEWS, BRE /ARD, N. C. S.. I* 5 5 si- c a package before the war c a package during tfie war c a package NOW THE FLAVOR LASTS SO DOCS THE PRICEl 157 BEST GROCERIES for the least money. Our years of experience in judging Groceries enables us to estimate value very accur ately. By paying cash we get the very best quality for the lowest price. We are always on the lookout for BARGAINS and are striving constantly to give you more and better goods for your money than we have ever done before. MITCHELL The Grocer. 1 CITY MARKET Is the best place in town to get the best of EVERYTHING to eat. The best of Fresh and Cured Meats, Chickens, Eggs, Butter and Vegetables are to be found here at all times. We will pay the highest cash price for all kinds of Country Produce. THE CITY MARKET W. H. DUCKWORTH S. F. ALLISON A. M. WHITE U. G. WOODWARD White & Woodward of Rotman wish to an nounce that they liaTe accepted the agency for The Chevrolet Cars and will deliver, right to your door, a touring car for $83S.OO and a roadster for $820.00 Re- mend>er we deliver right here. Notify us for demon stration. / WKite Woodward <The Chevrolet” Rosman, N. C. $?SMOeO TO BE I BAPTISTS ANNOUNCE PURPOSES TO WHICH VAST SUM THEY SEEK WILL BE QIVEN. STRENGTHEN CHURCH WORK RAILWAY LABOR MOVE ASSAILED New York World, Strong Wilson Supporter, Denounces ''Revolu tion by Ultimatum.” PARALLEL TO RUSSIAN IDEA. Special Effort of Denomlnatron Along General Linee Will Be Enlarged And Made Stronger As tlesult Of This Campaign. Bverj general interest fostered by Southern Baptists will be strengthened | and enlarged through the success ot the B<«.ptist 'tS Million Campaign which is now well under way, and which will reach its climax in the final drive to secure this sum in cash and subscrip tions during the eight days of Novem ber 30 to December 7. A period of five years will be provided for the final payment of these subscriptioner but for the campaign to succeod, the sum of 175.000.000 must be subscribed Tvithin the eight days. J^any have ex pressed the belief that the subscrip tions will run to $100,000,000- At a meeting of the Bxecutive Com mittee of the Southern Baptist Conven tion the 175,000,000 to be raised was apportioned among the general inter Calls Railroad Brotherhoods’ Plan for Government Ownership “Sbvlet Economics Venture." J. H. Anderson, Wealthy Knoxville Merchant, Who is Chairman of the Campaign in the Baptist 75 Million Campaign. ests fostered by the ConveDtion, as fol lows: Foreign missions, $20,000,000; home missions, $12,000,000; Christian education, $20,000,000; state missions, ?11,000,000; ministerial relief, $2,500,- 000; orphanages, $4,700,000; and hos pitals, $4,12'5,000. The apportionment of this sum among the several states within the territory of the Convention has been announced «ui follows: Alabama. «4,. 000,000; Arkansas, $3,200,000; District of Columbia, $200,000; Florida, $1,000,* 000; Georgia, $7,500,000; Southern Il linois, $1,200,000; Kentucky, $6,600,* 000; Louisiana, $3,325,000; Maryland, $750,000; Mississippi, $3,350,000; Mis souri, $2,92'5,000; New Mexico, $2<50,- 000; North Carolina, $6,000,000; Oklar homa, $2,250,000; South Carolina, $6,- 500,000; Tennessee, $4,660,000; Texas* $16,000,000; and Virginia, $7,000,000. 'Here is what this big sum of money will help Southern Baptists do for the Master, as set forth by the Campaign Commission: \ “It will equip more adequately and multiply manifold the 1,099 missionary workers of thei Foreign Mission Board, and the more than 2,000 Home and State Board Missionaries. .. “It will enlarge and raise to a better efficiency the 132 Baptist schools in the South. “It will go far towards meeting the expanding needs of the Southern Bap tist Theological Seminary and the Women’s Missionary Training School tn Lcuisville, Ky., the Southwestera Baptist Theological Seminary and Women’s Training School in Fort Worth, the Baptist Bible , School in New Orleans, La., a Theological Semi nary for the Negroes, and will provide a first-class, college for boys and. fiirls of the mountain region. "It will Increase greatly our hospital service to the sick, open wider our i^rms to the orphans and provide a strong support for our aged ministers ef the gospel. "It will put Southern Baptists, in po sition to assume a considerable share in the reconstruction of war tom Eur operand embrace many of the marvel ous opportunities tor service which thrust themselves upon us from all parts of the world, at home and abroad.” While $20,000,000 of this sr:n will go to foreign missiot^s and thus be expended in carrying the gospel and its blessings to other lands, the re maining $55,000,000 will * be expended at home in bnilding up home mission ary. educational and benevolent insti tutions and projects, of which there are a number in every state within tbs Ijoundaries of the convontion. < New York.—^The New York World, in a lending editorial, characterizes the railroad labor pian for Government ownership of railroads as “a straight- out adventure into Soviet economios.” The editorial page of the World has long had a national reputation for un- deviating support of Democratic prin ciples, hostility to Wail street, and the most loyal and vigerous assistance to President Wilson. The World says: “Revolution by Ultimatum.’* The plan of the railroad brother hoods for taking over the railroad properties of the country Is a straight- out adventure into Soviet economics. It contemplates collective ownership, but class operation and control, which is at the foundation of the Soviet sys tem. The American people, through their Government, are to buy the railroads from the private owners and turn these properties over to the railroad em ployees to manage and operate. In consideration of an investment of ap proximately $20,000,000,000 tlie Gov ernment is to oppoint one-third of ‘the directors, and the public is to share in such savings in the cost of opera tion as may remain after the em ployees • have paid themselves what they think their services ought to be worth.* ■ The spirit in which tiie program is put forth may be inferred from a stare- ment made by B. M. Jewell, acting president of the railroad employees’ department of the American Federa tion of Labor, in which he said that if President Wilson’s suggestion to Con gress was carried out “we will tie up the railroads so tight that tliey will never run again if that legislation is passed.” It might have been Trotzky himself speaking to a bourgeoise that had offered mild and academic objec* tions to being despoiled. Who Is the Government? Before any railroad plan can be worked out one highly essential fact wust be established—namely, whether the sovereign power of the United States is vested in Government and In the American people or whether it is vested in the railroad brotiierhoods. For three years now the brother hoods have assumed that the sovereign power was vested in them, and Con gress has provided them with excel lent reasons for that assumption. When the railroad employees in the critical period of the summer of 1916 demanded an eight-hour day and threatened a general strike. President Wilson sent a message to Congress in which he urged that the eight-hour day be made the basis of work and wages, but he made four other pro posals, one of which called for— “An amendment to the existing Fed eral statute which provides for the mediation, conciliation and arbitration of such controversies*as the present by adding to it a provision that in case the methods of accommodation now provided for should fail, a full public Investigation of the merits of every such dispute should be institut ed and completed before a strike or lockout may be lawfully iittempted." Try to Intimidate Conigress. Congress refused to enact this legis lation because the-labor leaders ob- .jected to It, and now we have a situa* .tion in which a labor leader can threat en to “tie up the railroads so tight that ithey will never run again” if Congress presumes to pass an act to which the • brotherhood autocracy objects as un equal to Its imperative demands. • The railroad brotherhoods have em barked upon a policy that even the .most conservative of them must admit :is economically revolutionary. If their scheme of nationalization untfer class .control is to be carried put in respect to railroads, nobody can draw the line ■where it shall stop until all industry is ; under Soviet direction. Yet they are mot putting their program out as a , matter to be discussed and deliberate ly considered by tlie American people. I’They are trying to force the issue and ^ bring About a revolution by ultima- AND MAKES YOU SICK Acts Like Dynamite on fl Slus- gidi Liver and You l^ose a Day*s Work. turn. The Public Pays. ‘ In the last three years the railroad employees have received hundreds of 'millions of dollars in wage increases ' for wliich the general public is paying.. • As a reward for its generosity the country is to be taken by the tiiroat and choked into submission if the most complicated economic issues that have ever confronted it ui« not settled forth with. If ^there is any diflference be tween that kind of. arrogance aiid the arro^raae^ of the tinman generbl staff in July, 1914, ^e should like to kiiOw wbat It la. . ' There’s no reason why a person should take sickening, salivating^ calomef when a few cents buys a large bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone—a perfect substitute for calo mel. It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid which will start your liver just as surely as calomel, but it doesn’t make you sick and can not salivate. Children and grown folks can take Dodson’s Liver Tone, because it is per fectly harmless. Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is mercury and attacks your bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel today and you will feel weak, sick and nauseated tomorrow. Don’t lose a day’s work. Take a spoonful of Dodson’s Liver Tone instead and you will wake up feeling great. No more biliousness, constipation, sluggishness, headache, coated tongue or sbur stomach. Your druggist says if you don’t find Dod son’s Liver Tone acts better than horrible calomel your money is waiting for yotL— Advertisement. Professioiuil Cords. ROBT.L.GASH W. E. BREESE. Jr. GASH & BREESE LAWYERS 11 to 17 McMiim Buildiqg Notary Public. CONNESTEE LODGE NO. 2371.0.0. F. Meets every Monday 8KM) P. M. Visitors welcome. DONN’S ROCK LODGE NO. 267 A. F.&A. M. HEWS "^WEAK I Protects Young I GIRLS 1 Regulates, tones up, drives i away “the blues” and makes I them glad they’re living. 1 The prescription of an old I Southern doctor who treated § and cured thousands of suf* fering 'women. Is also good for young girls— to bring them safely through _ the period of adolescence which g cll motliers know is a time at I which their daughters need S the utmost care. I At all drug stores. MONEY i REFUNDED if the first bot- I tie fails to benefit. I Thacher Medicine Co. g Chattanoogs, Tmun^ V. 8. A. a Mrs. Paralce Frader. Longview, Tox., 1 cxprpflsed apprcciatioa of STELLA- 1 VITAE in these words: “I cannot i say too Riuci) for this wonderful g medicine. I had taken other female g nricdicines for two years with no good g results. I am truly grateful for the g goud STELLA-VITAE has done me.” For Sale by Macfie-Broodie Drug Co. Brevard, N. C. CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION To All Whom These Presents May Come—Greeting. Wheras, It appears to my satisfac tion, by duly authenticated record of the proceedings for the voluntary dis solution thereof by the unanimous consent of all the stockholders, de posited in my office ^hat the Macfie Brodie Drug Company, a corporation of this State, whose principal office is situated in the town of Brevard, County of Transylvania, State of North CaroljniKS^.'^. Macfie being the agent th^ein and ii;t charge there of, upon whom process may be serv ed,) has complied wiu the retire ments of Chapter 2I-, oi 1905 entitledi ‘Corporations,”Ijbrclimary to the issuing of this Certimate of Dis solution: I ^ ^Jow,’: Therefore, I,. J. \B.' Grimes, Secretairy of State of ^rth Caro lina, 4<T hereby certify thJt the said corpori^ion did, on tho' lith day of August; 1919, file in my ^ce a duly execute and attested Jeonsent in writii^'to the dissolutionCof s^d' cor-. poratio^, executed by m thi^ stock holders ) th^of; i which / said ■ consent and th< record of tlM proceedings aforesad are now on me In vfiy said office ai provided by li^. . > In Te itimony Wherew^X have hore to set ii y hand and my official s^al at ^eigh, this 1}^ A. p. 1919. J. Bry a Grimes, stary of .State. Wi^Y BUY BREAD OUT OiT/i t TOWN WHEN YOU CAN GET more BREAD AND BETTER BREAD FOR THE SAME 1^ MONEY AT YOUR HOME BAKERY? I It Philip’s Baker “BAYER CROSS" ON ASPIRIN Always Ask for Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin'? Only Aspirin Tablets with the safe y “Bayer Cross” on them are genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” owned and made by Americans and proved safe by millions of people. Unknown quantities of fraudulent Aspirin Tab lets were sold recently by a Brook- Ijm dealer which proved to be com posed mostly of Talcum powder. “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” should always be asked for. Then look for the safety “Bayer Cross” on the pack age and on each tablet. Accept noth ing else! Proper directions and dos age in each Bayer package. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. in? in? NOTICE OF SUMMONS AND WAR RANT OF ATTACHMENT North Carolina,—Transylvania Coun ty—In the Superior Co\irt. R. G. Gaines, J. C. Boggs and M. W. Gray vs. E. H. Jennings. The defendant, E. H. Jennings, will take notice that a summons in the above entitled action was issued against said defendant on the day of August 1919 by the clerk of the Superior Court of Transylvania county, N. C., and that an action en titled as above has been brought by the above named plaintiffs against E. H. Jennings to recover damages for injury to property of the plaintiff to wit: Lands and growing crops of the plaintiffs situated on the waters of the Toxaway River below where the dam which once held the waters of Lake Toxaway was situated. That said in jury and damage was caused by the negligence and carelessness of the defendant in allowing and permitting the dam at L*Ae Toxaway which once held back the waters of teid lake, to be and remain in a dangerous and un safe condition resulting in the brcr.’"- of said dam and tnereby releaj- the waters of Lake Toxaway v»Iilch waters overtlowed and dam aged and destroyed the property c " the plaintiff as above mentioned to the amount of at least $2500.00. That said defendant is a proper par ty to said action which relates to dam age to both real and personal prop- ty of the plaintiffs. The defendant will further take notice that he is required to appear at the office of the Clerk of the Sui> erior Court of Transylvani^'county, N. C. at his office in the court house, in Brevard on the 20th daAof 3ei^ 1919, at 10 o’clock A. M. 2|*^insw* or demur to the complaint of the, plaintiff filed in sai I action or the re lief demanded in said complaint will be granted. The defendant will further take notice that a warrant Of attachment was issued from the Supenor Court' of Transylvaniia county, N. C. on the ' l^th day of August 1919 against the property of sai4 defendant which said Warrant of attachment is retixmable . at the same time and place to wit: Saturday, Sept. 20 1919, at 10 o’clock A. M. This August 12th, 1919. N. A. MILLER, C. S. C^ Tran> sylvania county, N. C. _ **Mrs. Kcach Tells How She Got to Known Rat'-Sup** “Have always feared rats. Lately noticed many on my farm. A neighbor said he just got rid of droves Rat' Snap. This started me thinking. Tried. Rat-Snap. myself. It killed 17 and . scared the rest away.” RAT^SNAP comes in'three sizes, 25c, 60e, fl.OO.. Sold and guarai^ed by the Brevmrd Hardware Company. BUY YOUR ^GROCERIES FROM aic^PGE. J. /’if'
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 5, 1919, edition 1
2
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