Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Nov. 14, 1919, edition 1 / Page 9
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THE| BDEVARD NEWS, BREVARD, N. C. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14th, IflfU ; PERS0NAI5 : Mrs. C. T. Shytle of Ash-vllle is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Duckworth. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Hampton and children left Monday for Raleigh where they will spend a‘ week. Mr. and Mrs. Grover Morlock and Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Culver of Detroit, Mich, are visiting at the home of Mrs. Morlock’s father, Mr. Thomas Dods- worth. Mrs. M. A. Cooper, who has been very ill for some time, is improving nicely. Mrs. F. J. Hay left on last Thurs day for Florence, S. C. where she has gone to visit her daughter, Mrs. Salters. Mrs. W. H. Parked and daughter (.'harli'ston, who have been guests at the Shipman house for a month, left on Thursday for their home. Mr. and Mrs. Parker have purchased a lot from INIr. Hampton and will begin building soon. They intend to make Urevard their summer home. Mrs. Eastman of Boston, Mass. is the guest of Mrs. O. F. Sprague. Miss Eliza Wallis left on Friday for Alexandria, La. Later she will visit Mrs. Louise Milner of New Orleans. Mrs. Sam McCullough who has been ill for a month at her sisters, Mrs. Wallis, is much improved. Miss Vedean Beckwith of Charles ton, S. C. is spending the winter with :\Irs. Wallis and attending school here. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Cooke and children returned Monday from Spar tanburg where they spent last week taking in the fair. Mr. Cooke, in conversation with a News representa tive stated that besides Brevard Spar tanburg was the best town in the world; that everybody had plenty of money and that they didn’t mind spending it. The T. E. L. Cl ass of the Brevard Baptist church will meet with Mrs. W. H. Duckworth on Tuesday, Nov. 18 at 3:00 P. .M. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Mills and two children have returned from a trip to Atlanta and other southern cities where they have been spending the past week. Ralph R. Fisher has returned from a hunting trip to Toxaway where he says he killed several deer. When I saw the contraptions he used, I was scared to death. He had a thing just like crab claws, which gripped me round the head I became so fustrated, I started my clothes to shed. Facing me was a queer looking thing, I kept one eye on it He examined it her^ then there, then changed some scenes a bit. He went into a little room, came out with a piece of glass. Then put it in that thingamajig, and round me he did pass. He said, steady .there now steady, put on a pleasant look. He hid his head behind a cloth, and shook and shook, I though he hac^he argue, or maybe he had a fit. My head was screwed into a vice and there I had to sit. He held a girls picture and said, just look at that. By gum! she was a peach; my old heart went pit a pat. Next he grabbed a rubber ball and gave it a gentle squeeze, He said, it’s all over now, then call ed next person please. It seemed it took an age for those pictures to be done, I figured »I would be home by the settin’ of the sun. When I showed them to Mandy, in a passion she flew. Saying, why didn’t you bring a pic ture of me home too. DOUGLAS WIER, Arlington and Greenmount Ave. Baltimore, Md. A RECORD SWEET POTATO We read in the Western Nroth Carolina Times last week of a five pound sweet potatoe which had been presented to the editor. A five pound potato is about the average size for Transylvania. , Mr. J. M. Zachary presented the News this week with a seven pound potato. This potato is as perfect as any potato and when first taken frohi the hill tipped the scales at 7 3-4 pounds. Mr. Zachary states that he raised 110 bushels of, this variety of potato on a half acre of land; that he has sold $120.00 worth and has 50 bushels left. We think Mr. Zachary has broken the record for potato raising. Diversified Ads TOWN LOTS,—Farms and timber lands for sale. Frank Jenkins, Brevard, N. C- tfc. FOR SALE—1 2 horse corn planter. 1 Riding Cultivator. 1 Disc Har row. All in good condition. C. M. Cooke, Jr. Oct.24,4t. FOR SALE—Will sell cheap, or trade for cattle, one first class mule colt One good mare for sale or trade for cattle. C. C. Yongue. tfc YOUNG JERSEY Heifers for sale. See P. C. Orr, Everett Farm, Da vidson River, N. C. 11-1 4tc. FOR SALE—^Young Turkeys. Put in your order now for choice young turkeys for Thanksgiving. P. C. Orr, Everett farm, Davidson River, N. C. 10-31-4tc FOR SALE—One fine black driving mare and one rubber tired buggy and harness; also one Jersey cow. Also one 6-octave oak organ, apply J. A. Hartman, Pisgah Forest, N. C. NOTICE r WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A LARGE SHIPMENT OF STETSON HATS FOR YOUNG MEN AS WELL AS OLDER MEN. COME AND SEE THEM. WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY. Brown-Patton Company PISGAH FOREST, N. C. WHENIHADMY PICTURE TOOK I though I’d have my picture took, so I diked out in my best With a fresh paper collar, a clean biled shirt and my new white vest With my Sunday suit and my red neck tio^I was rigged out for town. I k‘f^ Mandy home quilting with the sewing articles around. m A car, run with a fishing pole and line, cami* whizzing along. I goUaboard. Clang, clang, ding, di®g she started humming a song I heira my breath; I was so scared by the w'ay she spun ahead, I knew if she stopped sudden like. I’d land upon my head. After a time we pulled in time, and stopped at a picture shop. Then I got off and walked around and was haled by a cop, He took me in from hed to foot and said I had a suspicious look. I told him that I was no crook but came to have my picture took. After a lot of parleying he decided to let me go. , I headed for a picture shop^my gait was not slow. ( I was all upset thinking that X would be too late When I went up those stepp I was ir. a nervous state. At last 1 reached the top—u was aU out of breath Local Dealers* Advice Is Often Helpful ’ Your local merchants know their goods V and are always glad and willing, to let you profit ,by their knowledge when you go to them for merchandise. When you are undecided between two articles—when you don’t know which is best for your needs—your locEd dealer’s advice may make your prob lem an^asy one. (hen you buy by '"sight unseen" Is you have no one to ask for Then your experi^ce is the only teacher, but, unfortunately, a poor adviser. Moral: Patronize the local dealei^ and get their advice on important purchases. BRniRD PRINTERY Having purchased the Athel- wold Hotel building and as 1 have had several of my friends to ask me for a lease on the Hotel 1 have decided to let any responsible parties who wish to lease hotel and furnishings as it now stands write me what they will pay for it by the year. 1 will lease it to the party pay ing the highest price, as I bought it as an investment. But I will be judge of whom 1 think capable of operating hotel re gardless of price. You have from now until Dec. 1st to an swer this notice and Jan. 1st to take charge ^f hotel. T. W. WHITMIRE, Box 842,, Asheville, N. C. S 50 years without a change. The Good Old Fashioned kind that never fails.' Unequalled for Biliousness, Sick Headache, Consti* pation and Mala* ria. Your Grand father relied on them. Nothing better at any price.. Get the genuine. ^tnlldi uir^ist^. M.infd. by I'olk Miller Uruf; Cu.» Inc.. Uichinond. Va. Polk Miller' liver PiUs 10c. ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE Nune **Bayer** is on GenuiM Aspirin—say Bayer A Insist on **Bayer Tablets of :Aspina‘* in a *‘Bayer package ” containing proper directions for Headache, Colds, Paia, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and RheumaUsm. Name “Bayer** means genuine ^pirin prescribed by physicians for ninetgm years, ^andy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin is trade of^ Bayer Manufacture of i^onoacetios acidester of Salicylicacid. Brown 3/?d his JPod ’ A? 7~r^£:/WT S TOf^E HENDERSONVILLE, N. C. Tuesday, Nov. 18th. GRAND FREE ENTERTAINMENT Everybody is Invited An Entertainment That Will Amuse And Interest Both Young And Old FREE SOUVENIRS TO EVERY BOY AND GIRL Lay a 1^ m rolling *em with Albert Copyright im byR. J. Reynolds TobaecoCo. (PaAiieuIaA 9t\ BAND. Manager ihe national joy smoke nOLrLING your own cigarettes with Prince Albert is just JlV. about as joy’us a sideline as you ever carried around in 3^our grip 1 For, take it at any angle, you never got such quality, flavor, fragrance and coolness in a makings cigarette in 3rour life as every A. home-sxi^*’ will present you! Prince Albert puts new smokenotions nndw 3^oor bonnet I ao deli^itfal rolled into a cigarette- and, so easy to ndll' And, 3^n just tt£e to it like you been doing it since awity badcl You see^ P. A is crimp cut a cipch to handle f It stayi| put-randyou don't J6se a lot wlm yod starttohug the paper around tboiobmooot YoaH like Prince Albert in a jimmy pipe as mudt as you do in a homi^ rolled tool Bite and paxdb are cat out oar exdusive patedic^ . process. You know P. A is the tobacco Oiat has led three mai to smbl^ -pipes where one was amoked before,^ Yes sir, Mnce Albert Uaaed’t^ wi^. And, me-o-my, what a jrad.of smnlBBHPcwt wiB lyple yoor •Va tins you fin op I • ' Awaitiagyoar aay-BO,, £nd toppy ndhagt, tid tina, haadmoaae potuuf mad half pound <m bamiden^ mnd—tbat ctmaajr, ptuoU^ peand crymM gtaaa httmMr with mp^aip tnoialeaer that kmapm PiinomABmrt ooodifloa /. R. J. RafBoUs Tobacoik ConpaBjr
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 14, 1919, edition 1
9
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