'V 'i:. n' gijpipp^ m. j-.- ■ '** ' M-'; \,V. I'inm^wwiii T «K 'ril£«M6UMB XMW>' Ofti Vib^ O^a 9>#rTM AMAUWcrteo .STRMMC 9UU004 -<HE U6M9 fto «EE \F VT XttftS A'FFeeootiKte \f _ \ Qn& eogiib ,afe/«r -xue YRAVHk •«) )'^//9i»»y. wwr AVxavuauMr. 'Qurr ow ^ •to aee \r ue «pi^ SAME MOMCV- 'I XD) s: ' Go to the BREVARD PHARMACY for Norris Candies, Cigars, Cigarettes, to baccos, ice cream and soft drinks. It is a pleasure to serve you. BREVARD PHARMACY J. B. PICKELSIMER, Ph. G. Prop. Telephone No. 1 Brevard, N. C. Let Us Sell You Medicine. Brevard VuIcani^ingCompany BREVARD NOW HAS A FIRST - CLASS VULCANIZING PLANT. MACHINERY AND ACCESSORIES ARE ALL NEW AND COMPO SED OF THE VERY LAEST INVENTIONS AND THE VERY HIGHEST MATERIAL. MR. STEVEN FONTAINE HAS NOW RE- TURNED FROM AKRON, WHERE HE OB TAINED HIS DIPLOMA AND IS PREPARED TO DO WORK OF THE HIGHEST GRADE UNDER A GUARANTEE. — Call on u»! S. FONTAINE, Manager. Next to Post Office. Brevard, N. C. ^r^uarh Knatttuf^* BREVARD, NORTH CAROUNA Departments—College; Preparatory, Normal, Music, Business, Do- mestlc Art, Household Economics, igriculture. An departments 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 S. - y NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY CARS Says WHITE & WOODWARD Chevrolet Deakrs OF ROSMAN, N. C. The rain will probably soon|bc over and the finest fall of all, and the best roads for running the Chevrolet ever* You will be surprised how little it costs to operate a Chevrolet Four-Ninety Touring Car, Twenty-five miles on a gallon of gasoline is not an unusual record. Tires last an unusually long time. Repairs are few and far between. Care-free, regu lar performance is the Chevrolet rule. Yet with all its economy and low price, the Chevrolet Four- Ninety Touring Car is a handsome, roomy, com fortable car—a car you can be proud to own. We have just unloaded a car load of 5-passen- ger cars and you had better get yours before they are all gone. . TRANSMOGRIFICATION, ! ! %. ITCH! >a—or oacK wiiLuut qimboQ ifHOMT’S Salve Mb m the orrrcH. eczema. RINGWORM. TETTER.or other itching .Iris T^v • 7S eort ■» nu» ri«*' ^•r SaU By Macfi*. BrodSa’.Dnifr C«. Ifenay back wlttaoat aaaalioa if HUNrs fiilva Ml* to <ha tcwtoMBt of iTciL irrifitMji, RlNQWOKMi^ •thar ftdilnc a n aaatnhes ai .jaor dak^ For l^la By Maefia. B#odia Drag Co There exists a sect or class of peo ple who entertain the idea that af ter death they pass and continue to pass through various changes by the soul simply entering into first one thing and then another, therefore it never grows monotonous in such changes, though sometimes it may enter vicious animals and be terrify ing even to itself. Let Imagination go to work and as sume that the soul has entered into a buzzard and is soaring around hunt ing the (Carcass of some dead animal. Such a thought is not pleasant to contemplate for we all know the na ture of buzzards. Again the sou! enters into a hawk and is flying around the farm yard, there secreting itself to watch a chance to devour an innocent little chicken. The farmer with his gun rushes to the rescue of his chickens and knocks the feathers out of the hawk. Unhappy soul! It seeks refuge in some other creature. The next step was to enter into a fox and to assume the nature of the same, which was as carnivrous as the hawk. The fox is a cunning animal and often outwits the dogs, but ad venture toward the rural barnyard to hunt some of the feathered tribe, weighed upon his mind for he was hungry. He came upon a flock of geese and set his eye upon a sturdy old gander. He caught him by the neck and was carrying'^him to a safe retreat where he anticipated a great feast all to himself, but the remain ing flock kept up a great commotion and attracted the midnight attention of the farmer. He called his hounds and put. them on the track of Mr. Fox. Their howlng put him on net tles and he abandoned his prize to ■ save hs own life. They traced him for many miles, but at last his cun ning devices outwitted the dogs and he escaped unhurt, except by wearri- ! ness. I According to the theory of the sect it is not the province of the soul to remain in one animal and after' this exciting escapade it was transferred to a horse which fell into the hands of quite a rough master — a master who wanted service without kind I treatment. The animal after a few , days privation of food and drink was ! hitched to a bug^ and driven for , several miles, hurriedly, on a hot sum ' mer day. He came to a little brook let and was so th^drsty that he broke the tight rein that held his head alv normally high and began to drink. His master gave him a hard whip whereupon the thirsty animal turned his heels loose and demolished the vehicle behind him. The time had come for another transformation and this time the soul found a sweet refuge in the form of a mocking bird. Near a farm house in the sunny South he perched upon an apple tree and cailrolled his sweet est song. For a season he was not molested as the farmer protected him from the onslaught of stones or fire arms. The time of migration came again and the soul must enter into some other creature for a season. The bald eagld was the choice and to soar among the high craggy peaks was an inspiration that had never been felt, but a descent into the val leys had to be made occasionally to appease the appetite. A little child was playing in the yard of an humble home, the father was at work in the garden close by. The hungry eagle pounced down upon the little two- year - old and burried its cruel tal- lons in its flesh and started to its rendezvous to feast upon it. It was a case of life or death and the far mer ran for his gun and shot the bird, br*»aking a wing. It came to the e.'^.'th slowly with the child" which was unhurt, except for the mark of the tallons. The monster bird was dispatche'^ +he little child still plays in the yard. The body f*ios, but the soul lives on and on. therefore it must hunt another habitat. This time it‘en ters into a fish in a clear running brook. The water was not deep nor wide, this did not exactly suit the wandering soul, but it must dwell in its new ouarters for a season. It soon found that by going down sttream the volume of water increa'sed by the influx of other streams. As the vol ume of water increased tiie size of the fish increased also, therefore the new habitat was constantly in danger of lieing swallowed by larcre fish. By constant dodging tJie briny wat ers of the great ocean became his ren dezvous. But this particular fish was not built for salt water. He had lost his bejfrings and was wand ering aimlessly about, when he was seized by a monster shark and de- vo’ireH. Thus ended his fishv home. Left to enter into some other liv ing creature the soul rose tibove the waters of the great deen and drifted landward. A flock of sheep was dis- “Boycott ThFs EWction.” New York.—^Large placards urging •workers i^ot to vote but* to strike and “boycot this election” resulted in the arr^^st of three men found posting them in Harlem. 2,500,000 Pounds in Gold Bullion. New York.—The steamS'hIp Aqui- tania arrived here from Southampton -and Cherbourg with 2,500,000 pounds In bulMon, consigned to American bankers. President and Wife Vote. Washington.—The Pre^!dent and ^ IMrs. Wilson voted In the Pveaidential ‘ election. They marked their ballots and mailed them to Princeton. New Jersey, where the President herto- fore 'has gone each election day lo <Tote. Harding Declines Wilson’s Offer. 'Mairion, Ohio.—President Wilson’s x)fFer of a battleship to carry Presi- dent-eleot Harding to Panama on his vacation voyage, was declined by Mr. Harding. Downward Trend of Prices. Washington. — Commodity prices have indicated such a- downward ‘trend that the department of justice lis "largely' content to let the down ward trend carry -on by its own mo mentum,” according to a statment by Howard Pgg, special ass^tant in c-arge of the work. American Mission Captured. Lfondon.—^An American mission In South Russia has fallen into the hands of the s-oviet forces, acording to the Moscow newspaper Pravda, as quoted in a wireless dispatc hfrom the soviet capital. Bermuda is Celebrating. Hamilton, Bermuda.—Bermuda has been celebrating the 300th anniver sary of the founding of its house of assembly, one of the oldest hepresen- tative bodies in existence. Specials for^ Today and Every Day $2.10 Flour for *.$2.10, 24 lb. $2.00 Flour for $2.00, 24 lb. $1.75 Flour for $1.75, 24 lb. 30c lb. Coffee for 30c. 50c lb. Coffee for ^Oc. 40c lb. Full Cream Cheese for 40c. Armour’s 43c. lb. Breakfast Bacon for 43«5. WE GIVE 100 CENTS WORTHON THE DOLLAR. MITCHELL Main Street “The Grocer” Brevard FOR YOUR LIVER AND KIDNEYS UV-aKIDS For Biliousness, Constipation Headache and Kidney Complaints ♦ Price 35c the box For sale at all drug stores. Tripartate Agreement Signed. i, Paris.—France, Great Britain and I Italy have signed a tripartate agree- \ ment in which they undertake to sup port each other in maintaining their "sphere of influence” in Turkey. Soft Coal Prices Decline. Washington.—Soft coal prices are on the decline, a statement from the | 'National Coal association said. They | have alrea;dy dropped, 25 per cent in i several fields. Wrangel in Bad Shape. Paris. — Further dispatches con-| firming the extreme gravity of the I position of Genei'al Baron Wran^el, j have been received by the French foreign office. Want to Know Status. Constantinople.—Frc^"!.ch and Brit i»h representatives here have asked I their governments df their warships { in Black "Sea waters should support ^ General Wrangel at Perekop and Sal- kova, where the societ forces are pressing upon the Crimean peninsula. I 320 Killed in Mines. I CharlGEton, W. Va.—Three hundred j and twenty men were killed in the I mining industry in West Virginia j during the year ending July 30, last, I acording to the annual report of the ! state department of mines. NOTICE OF SERVICE OF SUM MONS BY PUBLICATION: North Carolina, Transylvania County, Superior Court, Nov.-Dec.-Term, 1920. Ada Crow ts. Henry W. Crow. The defendant above named, will, take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Transylvania Co. for tne purpose of obtaining an ab solute divorce, on statutory grounds, by said plaintiff from said defendant; and the said defendant will further take notice that he is required to ap pear at the next term of the Super ior Court of Transylvania County, at the Court House, in Brevard, on the 29th day of November, 1920, and an swer or demur to the complaint of the plaintiff,/and that at that term the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the com plaint. This the 28th day of October, 1920 N. A. MILLER, Clerk Superior Court. — 10-29-4t. W. E B NOTI^~OF^LAND SALE UNDER EXECUTION {Brevard, N. C., the IVTarshall will sell j to the highest bidder for cash at the Court House Door in the town of ; Brevard, N. C., on Monday, Dec. 6, j 1920, at 12 o’clock M. all the foil- owing described lot of land situate on Main and North Caldwdll Streets in said town of Brevard, N. C., bound ed as follows: I Beginning on a stake at the inter* section of North Caldwell Street, with North margin of Main St. and runs North 64 degrees West 165 feet to a stake, E. S. English’s comer; then with the English line. North 26 degrees East 132 feet to a stake; then South 64 degrees East 165 feet to a stake on West Mar^n of North Caldwell Street; then with the West margin of North Caldwell Street; South 26 degrees West 132 feet to the beginning. Being the lot on which the Clayton Hotel is situated. Amount charged aganst this lot is $838. 52. Sale made to satisfy said execu>- tion, costs and expenses of aid ale. This November 2nd, 1920. A. W. BARNETT, Marshall of Town of Brevard, N. C. / To Start From New Orleans. New Orleans. — President - elect Harding, in a telegram to Arthur D. Parker, president of the New Orleans Asi9oci£.tiou of Commerce, etated he believed he wolud start his PatUkma trip from New Orleans. ; ciovered and selecting the largest, an ; old ram with crumpled horns, he' en- : tered in. This ram was the king^of the entire flock and had a butting capacity rarely excelled by any. To get into a fight with him only requir ed a nod of the head. Some little boys were on the creek bank fishing when Mr. Ram came along. One of the little boys, always full of mis chief, knew the ram and concluded to have some fun with him. * He gave the nod and the unsuspecting ram came up, stopped, and then took a few back steps in order to measure the distance and to get a good start, I came with his head down, not obser- ^ ving that the boy had stepped to one i'side and into the creek he plunged in water 10 feet deep. He swam to the opposite side, got out and shook himself and gave the boy a, fujrtive glance as if to say: **You beat me I that time**, and then walked off musingly. The soul left the ram and will ap pear in the next aiticle in 4ome oth^r 'animal.. Town of Brevard, N. C., vs. J. W. ' Brooks: ! By virtue of an execution directed i to the Marshall of the Town of Bre vard, N. C., by the Secretary of the I Board of Aldermen of said town of Brevard, N. C., the Marshall of said town will sell to the highesrt bidder for cash at the Court House-Door in the town of Brevard, N. C., on Mon- i day, December 6, 1920, at 12 o’clock I M. all the following described lot of land situate in the town of Brevard, N. C., on South side of Main St. in said town of Brevard and bounded as follows: Beginning on a stake on South Margin of Main Street where the East Margin of Soutl. Alley inter sects same, and runs with South Mar gin of Main Street, S. 64 degrees E. 41 3-4 feet to a stake; then S. 26 degrrees W. 100 feet to a stake; then N. 64 degrees W. 44 3-4 feet to a 'stake on east margin* of South Alley; then with same N. 26 degrees E. 100 feet to a stSke on South Margin of Main Street; the point of beginning. This being lot on whch tl^ Cooi^er Lvery stable stands. Amount char ged against said lot ^113.44. Sale made to satisfy said execu tion, costs and expenses of sale. This November 2nd, 1920. A. W. BARNETT. Marshall of Town of Brevard, N. C Philip’s Bakery NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND UND ER exe<;tion: Town of Brevard vs. J. E. Clay ton. By virtue of an* ^ecution to the Marshall of the^’l'own of Brevard directed by the Secretary of the Board of Aldermen of said Town of WHY BUY BREAD OUT OF' TOWN WHEN YOU CAN GET MORE BREAD AND BETTER BREAD FOR THE SAME, MONEY AT YOUR HOME. BAKERY7 If you wdnt to bity, ^eJA'OT let H be kndwQ tlurouKii the c<d- nmns of the Hews. Our want «d8 w3t do tile wofk.

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