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THE BREVARD NEWS. BREVARD. II. C
FRIDAY, DECEMBERS
ENTRY No. a®,-
B. E. Hardin enters ana -i-- ca
acres of land more or lea«^
Riv«T 'T’ovvnaViin r»n Jjlttle
River Township on^Ba^o^ Creek.
Shuford <
. hestnut oak on a »ek-3J™8 “
adjoining lands of C. \ j*
tate and others.
es-
Kinninpr corner of a tract
granted by the State to t
Orr and later conveyed to McCrarv
and DeChoiseul and rung with a W
of said grant North 36 1.2 dig west
80 poles to a black oak; then with the
line of another line of Grant to Mc
Crary and DeChoiseul south 55 deg.
west 80 poles to a stake in the C. A.
Shuford tract; then west 10 poles to
a stake, the north east corner of
Grant no, 3416 to Heifner (Now C.
A. Shuford estate) then with east
line of said Grant south 3 deg. west
100 poles to a stake in the line of an
other Grant to McCrary and DeChoi
seul; then with line of said grant N.
53 deg. east 140 poles to the begin
ning.
(Signed) B. E. HARDIN.
Entered Nov., 16th, 1919.
G. C. Kilpatrick, Entry Taker.
. ll-19-4tp..
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A CHRISTMAS WALK
In silvery softness the anthem closed
Like a slowly silenced bell;
The sacred calm of a peace divine
Like a benediction fell;
And out on the mornine light that spread
A glimmer of amber gray,
I walked with Margery liome f**om church
On an old, old Christmas D-.y.
A bland, mild day—for the rugged month
Had chosen a kindly mood.
Like a wonderful mellow aftermath
From the Autumn's plenitude.
With scarcely a tang of wliolesome cold
Did the Winter’s brazes blow.
As Margery walked from church with me
On a Christmas long ago.
The earnest words that had touched our
hearts—
The warnings, kindly and wise—
Had left a shadow of tenderness
In Margery’s violet eyes;
The merry, hoyrtenisn maid I’d known
For a twelvemonth’s flying space.
Had taken on tliat old Christmas Day,
A new and womanly grace.
As through the tremulous opal clouds
That shifted and swayed apart,
A sun r.iy liglitcd tlie rosy face.
The wish was born in my heart
That down tlie trail of the unspent years,
Whatever their trend misht be.
The soft-eyed maiden beside me then,
Miffht walk to the end witii me.
Absently watching the velvet flakes
By the white Kale set a-wins,
I breathe the spirit of otlicr years
Wiiile the hells of Yuletirte ring;
An'l near me. sniilintr with liappy eyes
At our children’s rf>mpinji play.
Is the fjirl who walked from i hurch with
me
On that old. sweet Christmas Day.
—Harriet Whitney Durbin, in I’eople’s
Home Journal.
WRIGL
LESSON OF CHRISTMAS DAY
Example of Christ Should Inspire Un
selfishness and Make Us Try to
Remedy Faults.
Chri.«tnins should inspire a world of
unseltishnoss. Tho example before us
Is ulniost too perfect, for it rather
frij:ht<*ns us to attempt sueh divine
lu‘ifj;hts of self-al)iie;;ation, hut we can
try. It will at least take us from the
depths of sellishness, where most of us
now are. Ka«-h Christmas day should
teach us something of the lesson of
the Holy Cliild’s life.
If we could learn from Christmas,
today niid in the succee<lin{r years the
serious le.ssons of self-betterment and
oniH»lilen’.!‘nt it has to olTer, how in
finitely better it would be than .iust
to look on it as a h<»iiday for ^ifts and
feasts, for extravagance and foolish
ness.
So take an hour or two off on
Christmas day and j;ive it up to retro
spective and self-inspection. Yoti will
eacli find faults, if you judtre your.self
impartiall.v, ft>r no one is perfect. Then
makt' a st^rious dt‘terniination to try
to overcome thtise faults, for only try-
in;r to improve is th(*re any Lcrowth in
character. If you are satistied with
yourself you stay just as you are with
all y»)ur faults and virtues. But If
you try hard to remedy the faults your
character is constantly j;»‘owiii.ir broad
er. This is tlu‘ lesson v.hi<-h Christ
mas day has for each of you.
5
5
c a package
before the war
c a package
during the war
c a package
NOW
THE FLAVOR LASTS
SO DOES THE PRICE!
157
BREVARD,
NORTH CAROLINA
Departments—College Preparatory, Normal, Music, Business, Do
mestic Art, Household Economics, Atjriculture.
An departnients are directed by teachers with special training and
large experience. They know their business.
Influences of the Institute are alone worth the cost of tuition.
Opens on September 5.
sna&gMMi
Come to Brevard ^
COURT WEEK *
Beginning Monday, Nov. 24th *
-X-
-K-
THE BREVARD PHARMACY ^
*
Wants Transylvania’s Citizens *
•:fr
to call and inspect their line of *
Dru'j;.':, Soap-!, Perfumes, Toilet
Articles, Norris Candies, Tab-
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lets, Envelopes, Stationery *
*
Coiiibs, Brushes, Tobaccos and *
cU *
Brevard Pharmacy ^
i Reliable Drugi;ists
J. Pickelsimer, Ph.G Prop. i
Phoi^..\'o. One Brevard, N. C. ..
Let Us Fill Your Prescriptions. *
* H: I',: ^ if ** f- ^ ^ it: if. ilf * *
ASPIRIN FOR COLDS
the “Goods’
The connecting link bet'W'een the Chero-Cola
Bottler and the Chero-Cola consumer is found in
the slogan—‘"perfect service/*
^^hether it be to serve soda fountain trade, grocery store or
refreshment stsind, this service is
edways the same.
The rapidly growing demand for Chero-
Cola makes fleets of motor trucks do service
to furnish the supply.
This is only one reason for Chero-Cola's
unusual popularity.
Name “Bayer” is on Genuine
Aspirin—say Bayer
Insist on “Bayor Tablets of i«Bpir;n
in a “Bayer package,” containing proper
directions for Colds, Pain, Hejul ichc,
Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheu/natism.
Name “Bayer” means genuine ( Aspirin
prescribed by physicians for Jnineteen
years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets
cost few cents. Aspirin is trxjcde mark
of Bayer Mr^.nufaeturc of Mynoaeetie-
^cidester of Salicylicaeid.
Chero'Cola
T/iEPES NONE SO GOOD