™iv. ■ ;’'V. g *flj W o v^hJ-V ‘ ■'.v-■j.fiV’t :.'^» '’■■ ^ 'r>- X::v:|:’: ■• >M!- '•■ S'iC'i-fit ”, V^> ^ . ■ :tii. ■ ««hM ■ibi / >' .a" OF zw RANSYLVANIA SUPERIOR COURT English & Breese Breese Breese English & Ward Galloway Breese Breese & English English Hamlin & Fisher . . Breese Breese Breese Galoway & Rolling . Galloway & Rollins FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3rd. ^ I. Cooke vs. Jennings 4. Toxaway Tanning Co. vs. Southe rn Railway Co. 7. In re J. A. Breedlove SATRDAY, DEC. 4th. M0JI0N3 & DEVORCES Vance-Brown, et al, vs. A. S. Owen, et al .... 75. A. S. Owen, et al No. 14. Faulkner vs, Wallis, No. 6^. Whitmer vs. J. H. Own & M iller No. 84. Carolina Timber Co. vs. E. H. Jennings .. No. 85. Board of Education, ws. Fidelity Co., et, Monday, December 6th II. Brown vs. Allison 17 Blankinship vs. Ewuing . TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7th. 19. Parkinson vs. Extract Co 22. Paxton vs. Southern R. Co * * ,. 31. Nunnally vs. Jennings. .. u 32. Armstrong vs. Jennings I 18 . Southern R. Co., vs. Rosman Tanning Ex. Co. 36. Southern R. C. vs. Hedrick .. Adams & Deaver Galloway & Rollins .. Adams A Deaver ... • Deaver Breese Breese, Adan^s & Dea. al Galloway & De^r .. Fisher & Hamlin Galloway & Breese Galloway & Rollins .. Adams & Deaver .. Adams & Deaver Breese Breese English Deaver Breese & Clayton WEDNESDAY, DEC. 8, Carpenter vs. Gloucester L. Co.'. Jamison vs. Brevard 44. McCrary vs. Ray, et al 39 .. Breese Galloway . .. Ray Galloway Adams English & Deaver 55. THURSDAY, DEC. 9th. Baltimore B. House vs. Mull 56. Maryland Cas. Co. vs. S. Raiby . .a.y Co. 59 Moody vs. Riddle Clajrton Galloway & Breese . Deaver & Breese Galloway Deaver . , Breese . . 65. 66. 92. Divine Lesson in the Garnering of the Golden Grain The summer Is over and the har vest is past. The sad skies, the bleal: fields, the bare trees, the raw winds that whistle and groan and sob and sigh their dirges mournfully remind us that the season of fruitage has gone by and the time has come when we can only turn away, each to himself, and measure up our garnerings. I l^nture gives us a seed time and a harvest tiiiie. But these would be meaningless to ns did she not also send a season 'When, at the warning touch of winter ^hlU, we m\l?t measure our gains and consider our losses. • But for the lessons of this season no iiiuD would labor; we would know naught of temperance or thrift; we would go through the briglit spring only singing, and idle away the sum mer In dreams. So It Is plart of the divine plan that each of us should now go apart and carefully separate the wheat from the chaff, the flowers from the weeds, and that which is good and sound and en during from all that perishes and taints. It Is now that each must hon estly examine and weigh the product of his own works. It were useless now to try to d€f- celve even ourselves. Now, if at no other time, we see the vast difference in value between the picked fruit and the windfalls. The one heap we proudly storei away, knowing it will keep sweet and whole to the winter’s depths, and the other we cast aside, that it may not contaminate as it rots. It Is a sad. sweet task—sweet for the counted gains, sad for the oppor- Umities lost and to come no more. • •••••• And as we garner the gains we also gamer wisdom. As we separate the wheat from the ^afF and the sound fruit from the windfalls, so, whether we will or not. we must in the inner consciousness separate the true froiiS the fr.Lse 5n principle.s of labor and living. No man, even of three-score—aye, four-score and ten. has ever known this law to fail in a single season. It knows no variation In all the cycles of time. But grains and fruits are not all that we are g:;rnpr5ng. Chaff and weeds are not all we ought to sepa rate and cast awaj'. There are things more important still. In the store house of the heart and mind and soul, is it not well to seek, just as care fully, though sometimes in vain, to keep only the better, the brighter, the more enduring things? When the hitrak November of life conics we shall have need of them. Dreary will be the wirter to him whose granaries are empty. But drearier and more desolate still must be the winlcr of oid to the inat! or woman whose mind and heart and soul have brought from the harvest only the joys that are chaff and the virtues that are mere windfalls, at tained and adhered to only through easy convenience.’ When that winter comes, as It must to many of us, we shall have only our selves to turn to, and we shall find onlj ^that which we have sown and harvested in the brl;:ht spring and golden summer—the pood grain, the sound fruit, the flowers, the high im pulses, ihe sacrifices, the loves, yes, and the cheat, the chaff, the weeds, the windfa-lls, the hates, the jealousies, the low passions—all these and nothing more, to sustain us or to render us desolate. We may. If we will, make each day a cycle of all the seasons. We sow each morning and reap each noon and garner each evening the fruits of our living in this little day. Day by day, if we strive on in right and hope and courage, must our knowledge and our strength, and our store Increase. Day by day, through many failings and tailings, do we come nearer to the ♦ni** manhood and the true woman- Jtood.—Charles Grant Miller In the (Christian Herald. “Think and Thank” Suggested Motto for Nation Today “Think and Thank’* was the motto upon the family crest of the great He brew philanthropist Sir Moses Monte- fiore. It would be an appropriate armorial motto for America today. These two little English words, differ ing In a single vowel, were originally Identical. In the Anglo-Saxon tongue, a “thank” was a “think.” Thanking comes from thinking, and thankful ness from thoughtfulness and thanks giving from thoueJit-giving. This will be a season of uiiusual* thenksfjlvlng— for we are made to think aa we have not been wont to think. It will be a very selfish soul that this srason falls to (h!nk of the gorrows and the sultenngs cf others. Look bpck at that first American Thanksgiving. Strange skies, sparse settlements, sparse larder, savage en emy, but thankful spirit! What makes the memory of the Pilgrim so pre cious? His thankfulness! As Howell puts It: “It is no Improper comparison that a thankful heart Is like a box of pre cious ointment which keeps the smell long after the thing Is .«!pent.” The Pilgrim and the Puritan have passed on. but they have left us a precious possession—a Thanksgiving day and the Thanksgiving spirit. Theirs was the Indomitable spirit be cause they “thanked (Jod and took courage.” They landed undeslgnedly on a “nK'k-bound wintry strand,” but they thanke«l God and took couras^e. They found no gold, but they did find Ihe golden grain of a first harvest and they th:itiko<l God and took courage. They found a rude wilderness, but they thanked God and took courage, and furrows, were turned and towns were built and cities grew and facto ries flourislied and culttire developed and instead of a wilderness a garden blossomed and the fragrance of their memory still survives and the spirit of their grace still inspires. Deaver Fisher, Hamlin and Evans Hamlin & Fisher English Breese Breese English Deaver & English Galloway & Curtis English Fisher & Hamlin FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10th McLean vs. Tanning Co Breese & English McCall vs. Gaston ; * . . Breese Ashworth vs. Bromfield English SATURDAY, DEC. 11th. 95. Loftis vs. Walters Breese 96. Merrell vs. Tan. Co Breese & Deaver 98. Hall vs. Lumber Co Breese 99 vs. Hunt vs. C^trell Deaver 100. Brevard T. Co., vs. Hamlin .. 130 . Shapleigh H. Co., vs. Macfie-Brodie Drug Co Galloway No 132. Brown - Patton Co., vs 0. W. Clayton Fisher & Hamlin 135. Glazener vs. Galloway Breese 138. Albert vs. Carr L. Co Breese Brown-Patton Co.. vs. Carrier, et al Breese Galloway vs. Moltz Breese ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Mary Taylor, de ceased, late of the County of Tran sylvania and State of North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said de ceased, to exhibit them to the under signed, at Brevard. N. C., on or be fore the 20th day of September 1921 i or this notice will be pleaded in bar | of their recovery, all persons indebt- 1 ed to said estate will please make im- i mediate payment. i C. C. KILPATRICK, Administra tor of the estate of Mary Taylor. 10-1-20 NOTICE AND SUMMONS State of North aCrolina, County of Transylvania. In the Superior Court. Lillie Tritt Breese, Plaintiff. ^ vs. Paul Henry Breese, Defendant. t The defendant above named will take notice that an action entitled as * above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Transylvania coun- | ty to obtain an absolute divorce by said plaintiff from said defendant; the said denfendant will further take no tice that he is required to appear at the term of the Superior Court of said county to be held in the court house in Brevard on the 29th day of Novem ber, A. D. 1920 and answer or demur to the complaint of this plaintiff or the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the com plaint. N, A. MILLER, C. S. C. Ralph R. Fisher, Attorney. 4t-10-8—10-29. pS >1T Ik f There once did live a turkey cock, And he was very proud; And walking, with his little flock He gobbled very loud. Perhaps it may your feelings shock- . Ho lived benoatii a'cloud. He could not speak of cranberry, Nor mention pumpkin pie Without a painful reverie, Whiln tsars stood in his eye., And cage, and summer savory, They always made him sigh. And though in June he spread his tail, And looked lilke Henry Eight, November always found him pais^ Sans Doisarte In his gait. If anyone would see him qualli Just say "decapitate.* NO*^ICE OF SMMONS State of North Carolina, County of Transylvania. In the Superior Court. Nettie Lyday Hancock, Plaintiff vs. Reece R. Hancock, Defendant. The defendant above named will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Transylvania Coun ty to obtain an absolute divorce by said plaintiff from said defendant; the said defendant will further take notice that he is required to appear at the term of the Superior Court of said, county to be held in the court house in Brevard on the 29th day of November, A. D. 1920, and answer or demur to the complaint of this said nlaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the com plaint. N. A. MILLER, C. S.C. Ralph R. Fisher. Atty. for Plaintiff. . 4t-10-8—10-29. Watch the Labe! On Your Paper And if your time is about up fill in the blank below, accon panied by check or post office money order for renewal. JSUBSCRIPTION PRICE One Year $L50; Six(Months $L60; Three Months 50c; Two Months 35c. “Brevard News,” Brevard, N. C.: Gentemen—Enclose find $1.50 in pajmient for subscription to **THE BREVARD NEWS.” Name '. R. F. D Date Town & State CLIP THIS AND MAIL IT TODAY. NOTICE TO BIDDERS: ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE: Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Pirik Lyday, deceas ed, late ,of Transylvania County, N. C., this is to notify all persons hav ing claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the un dersigned at the office of Ralph R. Fisher, attorney at law, in Brevard, on or before the 21st, day of Oct. 1921, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 21st day of October, 1920 Ralph R. Fisher, Attorney. Juda Lyday, Admrx. of the estate of Pink Lyday, deceased. Please take notice that thirty days after date the County Board of Edu cation will let a contract for the con struction of a two - room school house according to the plans and spec | ifications which are on file in the of fice of the County Superintendent of Public Instruction. Said house is to be constructed for the Island Ford School in Dunns Rock Township, Dis trict No. 2. Please prepare your bids according to aforesaid plans and ! specifications which may be had by | calling upon the County Superinten- i dent of Public Instruction. Your i bids should be on file not later than j Monday, December 6th, next. Thtf I County Board of Education reserves ■ the right to reject any and all bids. A. F. MITCHELL, County Supt. Public Ins. ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE Having qualified as administUator | of the estate of Rebecca Galloway, { deceased, late of Transylvania County | N. C., this is to notify all persons hav- , ing claims against the estate of the said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at the office^ of Ralph R. Fisher, attorney at law, in Brevard on or before the 8th day of Novem ber, 1921, or this ^ notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This the 8th day of November, 1920. Carl L. Galloway, Admr. of the estate of Rebecca Galloway, deceas ed. — Ralph R. Fisher, Aattomey, December 3rd, 1920. IF YOUR LABEL SAYS NOVEM BER 20. IT MEANS THAT YOUR SUBSCRIPTION HAS EXPIRED AND THE PAPER WILL BE CUT OFF AT ONCE — RENEW. NOTICE — LAND SALE UNDER EXECUTION: Town of Brevard, N. C., vs. J. H. Pickelsimer and J. B. Pickelsimer, Exrs. of R. J. Pickelsimer, Deceased: By virtue on an execution directed to the Marshal of the town of Bre vard, N. C., by the Secretary of the Board of Alderman of the Town of Brevard, N. C., the undersigned Mar shall of the town of Brevard, N. C., will sell to the highest bidder for cash at the Court House Door in said town of Brevard, N. C., or. MONDAY, December 6th, 1920, at 12 o’clock, M., all the following described lots of land situate in the town of Bre vard, N. C., on the South side of Main Street and on West side of Broad Street, bounded as follows: FIRST LOT: Lying on South side of Main Street; beginning on a stake on south margn of Main Street, corner of Cooper Lot, and runs S. 26 degrees W. wth the Cooper line, 73 feet to a stake; then North 64 de grees W. 44 1-2 feet to a stake; then North 26 degrees E. 73 feet to a stake on South margin of Main Street; then with same, S. 64 degrees E. 44 1-2 feet to the beginning. Being: the lot on which the brick store build ing stands. Amount charged a> gainst this lot $120.00. SECOND LOT; stake on West margin runs N. 64 degrees W._ with line -of Dunn’s rock building Co., 132 feet to a stake; then N. 26 degrees E. 63 feet to a stake; t|ien South 64 degr^ East 132 feet to a stake on West gin of Broad Street; then with sai^ South 26 degrees tWest 63 feet t6 the beginning. Being the lot lying^ between the rear end of the Cooper and Pickelsimer buildings, and - the Dunns ROck buildng Co. Amount ' ch{urged against this lot $16d.50> Said sale made to satisfy said exe» , cation And 'costs of sale. This November 2nd, 3^20. ‘i A. W. BABNl^f, t Mardiall of To^ of Brevard, N« 00. 4 • Beginning^An in of Broad St. V: IV -

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