EXPONENT OF TRAN- SYLVANIA COUNTY. f TWELVE PAGES IN THIS ISSUE VOLUME XXV BREVARD. N.' C. FRIDAY, JULY 30th, 1920 NUMBER 31. ICE CREAM SUPPER SUCCESS 1 REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE OF The ice cream supper held at Lake; TWENTY-FIVE f i Toxaway Saturday night was a suc cess and enjoyed by everyone present. REGULATE OR ABOLISH THE SPEED FIENDS WHEREAS, The motor traffic on HOW WE TAMED THE BASCHI- i that the ho^s must let them alone, LELE. I or they must let the hogs alone while on the job, and neither is exactly will (By S. P.. Verner—Copyright pend ing. All rights reserTcd.) BREVARD INSTITUTE NOTES Recent arrivals at the Institute in One can- elude D. S’. Camak and family, Mn. The undersigned committee was Seventy dollars was collected from aPPointed by Gov. T. W. Bickett at | our public highway is becoming the the proceeds of the supper and will^’^’" Citizens’ Conference on Educa-1 principal means of transportation;, be used for the community fair this North Carolina Col- 'and j faU. ; Icp;c for Women on May 4th and 5th, I WHEREAS, At the present time i i took my rifle ' her with anything approaching ac- of Spartanburg; Mr. and Mrs. A contest for the prettiest girl was for the purpose of making a 1 these motor vehicles are paying but against a tree, i curacy because of such incalcuable T. F. Morrison, Miss Edith Guffy of ing to this arrangement. calculate the productivity of a col- i Mrs. R. B. Burgess and Loire While the men were cutting the lector in l^rms of the labor necessary ^ Satterfield of the Textile Institute kodia, there arose a shout of to tap collect, and transport the rub-, Spartanburg, S. C.; Mrs. E. FL held and Miss Carrie McNeely was voted the prettiest and received a delicious cake as prize. A GREAT MEETING AT OAK GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH A series of meetings began at i condensed report of the pro^cram ' little attention to speeding on our im- enundated by that conference. The proved highways; and committee, basing its conclusions up-1 WHEREAS, Many accidents are on tRe reports submitted by the four sections of the conference (Rural I School Village School, City School and Higher Education) and having in mind the present educational equip Oak Grove the second Sunday in '^ent of the State of North Carolina, July and continued for about ten firmly convinced that the following days, with services morning and ’ is fundamental for the proper educa- I cation of the people of a great state: The morning service consisted of | 1- The school system of North [ ways, the General Assembly of North Bible study and the order of the Mo- Carolina should be organized on the Carolina should pass legislation re bile Schools, which resulted in a basis of the county as a unit of tax-1 quiring all drivers of motor vehicles ation and administration. The ^ to take out a license, which would state should continue to aid the show his fitness and ability to drive weaker counties by making the edu- a car, and that said license would cational opportunities of all children be revoked for a certain number of constantly occuriitg, due to this sel fish use of the roads, and WHEREAS, Incompetent persons are driving motor vehicles on our public highways, endangering not only themselves, but all others users of the highways; Therefore be it resolved, That, in the interest of all users of the high- great blessinir to the church and the ommunity. We have never seen the pirit of the Lord manifested in greater power. At somi! of our day services every ^he state as nearly equal as pos- days if the driver was convicted of unsaved person present was happily convei'ted. But, when Cind’s people go to work ; Some of the men started to climb factors in the biipinass. The conse- Cortcord; Miss Grace Gaither of Wash trees, while Wembo and the braver i quence in the Congo was that when i”gton; D. C. I ! ones got their guns—ngulibi is no ^ the pressure became too severe on ^ Miss Minnie Hopper of Breman joke when you can hardly see ten : the natives, they either tried to move ! College, who has been the Dean of yards around . We heard him plung- | cut of the district, or rose into re- Girls during the Summer school lefc ing up the slope above us. A hur- volt against the white man’s power. | on Monday for a visit among relatives ried consultation sent Wembo, Kassa-. The earlier systems of stimulating jn Mississippi, di, Kalamma, and myself to the four. rubber production by purely com- j points of the compass, in an envolop-1 mcrcial means was far more effica- ing movement, while the others stay-1 cious in the long run than the system ed up in the trees . Soon a shot j of taxation payable directly in rub- | was heard from Wembo’s side, fol- | her, which was resorted to under the , lowed by a roar, a series of grunts, j temptation of the high profits in the j business. Under the voluntary sys tem the natives really enjoyed a rub ber collecting excursion in the dry season. They combined it v*rith hunt ing, and turned it into a sort of pic- and a war whoop such as only a go rilla or Wembo could emit. The com motion indicated a state of war. F r- rying in the direction of the sounds. I came upon clearer growth on the Miss Myrtle Langston, who had i ; ! charge of the Art Department, dur- 1 ing summer-school left on Saturdajr ' to attend the conference at Lake Junaluska, after which she will go* to Warren, Ark., to spend the rest; of the season with her brother. edge of the thicket where Wembo nic. But to spend most of the year stood in front of a big hog with hfs ; at nothing else was irksome to them back to an immense tree, he with in the extreme. After we had lo- sible. The local school unit should speeding; and upon a second con vie- be made as large as possible by con- tion the driver would be fined and | machete ready, but he was more in-' cated and tapped a considerable num solidation with transportation of his license reyoked for a period clined to whoop than to strike. The her of vines scattered over several the Jievil gets mighty busy. On Sat- children to the school where neces-' three times as long as the previous j boar’s tusks gleamed white under acres, we gathered up otir sundry urday night, following one of the [period; upon a third conviction his | the rays filtering t’arough the leaves, j trophies and filed toward home. We greatest outporing of God’s Spirit we Adequate facilities for the fine would be doubled and his license | a red stream trickled from his should have to return the n xt day to have ever witnessed a great congre* training of teachers should be sup- j revoked permanently. j hind quarters. Wembo’:-' musket lay gather the coagulated rubber from gation assembled and it seemed that P^’^d as quickly as pdssible by the i jt further resolved. That any | off to one side, he had not had time the incisions made that morning, very air was filled with the spirit of ^'^tablishment of additional training ; driver who drives a motor car, while j to reload. | Next morning I decided to follow Miss Alma Trowbridge returned on Monday from a very delightful trip to iPorest City, Spartanburg anc£ Greer, S. C. THE COUNTRYSIDE the meeting. But, while Brother schools. The program outlined by Manley was preaching a rock, thrown the State Supeiintendent of Public from the outside in the dark came Instruction for training teachers at crashing through the window into summer normal schools, at summer the congregation, scattering glass sessions maintained by state institu- over the floor and throwing the whole tions and departments of education congregation into confusion. This attached to high schools should be completely broke thi* spirit of the adopted until adequate facilities for meeting. j training of teachers can be pro- The Word tells us that “Men love '’ided. darkness rather than light because ' 3. The economic independence of their deeds are evil.” Many people the public school teachers of the seem to want to excuse our boys who should be assured by the payment of have been in service across the sea, salaries, not merely sufficient for but we believe that protecting an living expenses^ but sufficient for pro outlaw in their deeds of violence fessional training and culture. in a state of intoxication shall be i The noise I made siimualted the fined and have his license revoked for j boar. He rushed straight at his ad- ; a certain number of days; upon sec-1 versary, who, having heard me call, ond conviction his fine will be doubled | was so disinclined to run un-ler my and his license revoked for five times | eyes, that he planted hi? leus I'lrmly as long a period as the first; upon a j and held his machete spear-like to v»as about seven miles. An^lmost third conviction his license will bo! receive the boar in th: nv»utb li pos permanently revoked. By request, T. H. GALLOWAY, the trail from the station through the I forest up to wh"ere it debouched upon the grassy uplands before 'oing after the rubber. The distance y^vered universal characteri.-tic of the flora sible. It was a characlerj.-i!ca!iy fool: Central Africa Y the division into hardly bit of bravado, for while the , - , i i • ^ • i. i. „ ’ i forest and plam, not in vast homo- OLD HOME DAY Mayor.; boar’s head took the machete square-1 I ' j ly, the impact knocked the weapon geneous areas of each as in the case j ' of the prairies of Kansas and the Brevard will have a Grand Rally Day on August 14, and extends a from Wembo’s hand, and the boar ^ went straight between his iess! Not forest of Western North Carolina, yet acknowledging defeat, niy valient but in alternation in small areas in henchman seized the anin.a! by the which the determining factors are j hearty invitation to all citizens of | along his back, thus nearly always bodies of water—rivers leads them on to gi-eater evils, as | 4. The public school teachers of other counties and climes to meet • preventing me from shooting, and lakes, etc. A typical section of ter- seems to be the result in this case, j statethe state should be employed for > with us on that Old Home Day, and While the meeting was not all we ' the full year period with salaries on j there will be a band of many pieces hoped for, there v/ere twenty conver- twelve-month basis. When teachers here together with some great ora- committing himself to a personal en-j i-jtory, for example, will consist of counter, the like of which I had never , a forest lining a stream flanked by witnessed before in my Irfe. The : gi-assy plateaus, and then rising into sions and we feel that the result will are thus employed the problems of tors. Citizens who are promoting | weighed just about the same, | more heavily wooded high hills and be far reaching. The only hope of ^ illiteracy, length of school terms, et , the great railroad into South Caro- j y^embo’s chief handicap being his i mountains. The explanation of these our country and the world is in. the cetera, will be readily solved.^ j lina have promised to be here and tusks. Both fell under the ; phenomena is involevd in the two- Religion of our Lord and Savior, Je- 5. The community should provide , hold a mass meeting to discuss the momentum of the rush, Wembo on : fold influences of seasonable varia- sus Christ. When the people are full comfortable homes for its teachers. ■ proper way to develop this proposed , on the; tion and of the fogs. In the Kasai, of the Spirit of the Master, we’ll, 6. The courses of study in the | undertaking. Those wanting more j boar’s sides for a moment, and then for instance, which is below the equator, the months of May, June, and July and August are usually dry. need no law to protect our churches,' public schools should be adapted to ; information can write to the Bre-, quiddy twisted himself around schools and public gatherings. C. W. HENDERSON INJURED BY SMALL RIFLE the needs of the community and the , vard Club, Transylvania’s Business Men’s organization. MUSICAL RECITAL AT HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM The Betterment Association of Brevard will give a musical recital demands of modern life. 7. The health of the school child ren should be properly safeguarded; every child should have a thorough T. L. Snelson was shot in the arm physical examination twice each year by some one with a .22 rifle while | and this should be supplemented by standing in his shop door last Friday ^ physical education. afternoon. While it made a painful! 8. The public school should, when j by sev^ial young wound he is not seriously hurt but | ever feasible, be utilized as the edu- what if it had hit him in the head or ^ ucational, social, and recreational over the heart. Men have been known ^ center of the community, to be killed by a .22 rifle and this' 9. An efficient and well-trained ought to be a warning to everyone man or woman should be at the head owning a .22 rifle to be careful and . of the school system of each county, not to shot it in town or . to- and this official should be supplied until, to my utter amazement, he clamped down on one of the boar’s | and there is a short dry season in ears with his teeth! I January. The other months are The point of this maneuver was ; rainy. The rain fall would not be ’ Then will each child feel kinship witia evident when the efforts of the boar sufficient to support the massive vege j the lifted skies. Farm One day each farm will pulse be neath the feet Of some strong man who loves the ground he tends, The herds he feeds, the gr*" j g corn . and - X. The w furr Then will vest,' Each barren acre blossom for lover’s sake. HOME One day each home will be some mother’s shrine, To beauty builded among flowers and trees, Where love shall minister with rites divine To childhood’s joys and wearied manhood’s ease. Then will the needful and the joy* ful cease their strife, And loveliness become the toiler^ bread of life. • „ — * SCHOOL One day each school a house of dreams will be, A trysting place for noble thoughts and deeds, Where youth shall learn to plan and toil, that he May mould the world to fit haS; spirit’s needs. to turn his head so as to use his tusks were frustrated for the brief moment men from the ^ ”®^®ssary to enable Wembo to get | ^ rapid and strong evaporation under Cininnatti Conservatory of Music, tation along the rivers but for the { And view4| the eartTi with "^ream- fact that in the dry months there is] wards any house or stock for while they look small there is enough power to kill a person—in fact they should not be played with, especially by boys in town. A CITIZEN. SUPERIOR COURT IN SESSION Superior Court convened here on Monday 26th with His Honor W. F. Harding presiding. The charge to the grandjury was very thorough and urged many morals to be protected by the manliness of men on this and subsequent grandjuries. The Court ground out many case& in the three with assistants for school supervision as the need arises. 10. The State of North Carolina faces a real emergency in higher ed ucation. The institutions of higher learning are utterly inadequate to meet the demands of the young men and young wom.en who ask for ad mission. Provisions for enlarging consisting of concert pianoforte, bara tone singer, an exceptionally fine vio linist and reader. To be held at the High School Auditorium Building on Friday evening at 8:30 P. M. The prices will be 50c for adults, 25c for children and for our campers 3Scents. There will be no reserved seats and j tempted to say. everyone is urged to* come early. This I Wembo! Go it hog., will be an opportunity for the good i *o see how the fight would turn people of Brevard to be entertained 1 attachment to my old his hands on the fore legs of the : the tropical sun from the surface of brute, and so prevent him from run- j streams large enough to continue ning away. But to see the tussle the | flowing through the dry season. This beast made with his hind le.gs against. jg condenfed during the night into Wembo’s grip with his feet on the j.pavy fogs which hang over the ground was worth the sight of every j valleys until late in the morning battle Jack Johnson .fought in his, thoroughly drenching everj'^thing whole career. For a moment I w’as by something unusual in the way of a fine musical concert. comrade was too strong. It was IMPORTANT MEETING and strengthening all of the institu- | ^ most important business meeting tions of higher learni|g in the state the Transylvania Chapter U. D. C. chould be made at once. j jg called at Library on Saturday, July Respectfully submitte,d, ' 3jgt at 4:30 P. M. Every member J. I. Foust, E. C. Brooks, C. L. should come to see that all the work Coon, R. H. Wright, H. W. Chase, boosting the Chautauqua is not Clarence Poe, W. P. Few, Fred Ar- p^|. qjj shoulders! d&3^ following its convention and be- cher, S. B. Underwood, T. R. Foust, ANNIE JEAN GASH Pres gan on Thursday morning ^ith the ^ Z. V. Turlington, Jones Fuller, Mrs.' trial of Elliot M. Cantrell of this ^ C. C. Hook, Gilbert Stephenson, E. Mrs. J. A. Browne, R. F. Beasley, C. county for the murder of Sheppard. C. Lindeman, W. H. Hipps, P. S. Lam H. Ireland, W. S. Rankin, Galatin Powell. Ibeth. T. E. Browne. W. N EMitett. Roberts and Mrs. J. S. McKimmon. within the area of their incidence. These fogs arc sometimes as thick as any ever experienced on the streets of London, and I once found v/hen my boat got completely turned round in one of them just above the comparatively easy to get the muzzle; mouth of the Lulua River, where the of my gun under W^ernbo’s body and | current damned by the larger Kasai, to put a ball in the boar’s heart, j y,.as practically imperceptible and I Wembo stoutly protested that this. paddled for half an hour in the was unnecessary, but I noted that ^vrong direction before I found it out. his voice shook considerably as he | These fogs take the place of rains protested. j in promoting massive vegetation. Welcome as this addition to the but beyond their limits the vegeta- smoke-house was, the incident illus-1 tion becomes very much diminished trated vividly the sort of interrup-. and dwindles to grass, small trees tions rubber collectors are subject and shrubs. These form what has to. When they are told by their been called the veldt in South Africa, j chief, under pressure by traders or and what the Baluba call Mpata, by government officials, that they must which name I shall hereafter desig-* positively bring in a fi^ed weight of nate it. rubber by a certain date, it means (To Be Continued.) taught ,understanding eyes. COMMUNITY One day each neighborhood, a living: soul. Will breathe the breath of con- scious bro:herhood, And know the freedom gained by strict control Of each man’s actions for the common good. Then will plain plowmen, modest, self reliant, free, Answer the ages’ prayer for real de-» ; mocracy. t I COUNTRY TOWN One day each town will dream t farmer’s dream, And know itself of country life? part— Blood-kin to fields and woods and wayside streams. Sap of the grasses flowing though its heart. Then learning’s home will be beneath the village spires. And village hearths will glow with art’s cfeative fires. % Southern Agricultorisik .