THE BREVARD NEW5. BREVARD. N. C. FRIDAY, lUldlCH IMh, : : *5 , : : Brevard Lumber Co. We will have two more car loads of Acid and Fertilizer this week for garden and potatoes. Also 16 and 18 Per Cent ACID Come in and let us tell you about our 18 per cent Acid and give you prices. We will meet any prices on Acid and Fertilizers. Our goods have been used years and everybody knows their relia bility and worth. Don’t buy only where you !:now what you are buying. We have in a car load of fresh Lime. Prices are lower than last year. Brevard Lumber Co. FRANK JENKINS, Prop. Plione 120 Close to Depot Drevard, N. 6. Fresh Beef, Lamb, Pork and Cbicken At The City Market Full line of Groceries Try Lassen’s Perfection, the quality Flour* Best hard wheat flour on the market* S, F. ALLISON, Proprietor “QUAUTY FIRST’ OUR MOTTO We are just as particular re§;arding the quality of goods we buy as we are about the way we sell them. Only the best products on the market are good enough for our patrons. Our reputiition is backed by our many years of experience. MITCHELL Main Street “The Grocer” Brevard 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. Do you know whv ii s foasied To seal iro the delicious Surley i tobacco ffScvor. OUR RALEIGH LETTER: If you are not now a subscriber to The News you should become one. It only costs $1.50 a year.. Raleigh, March 14, 1921 — The city of Raleigh does not show the signs of life that she did a week ago. The legislators and the lobbyists (of which there was a large number) are gone. A few of the members linger ed to say goodbye to their friends, but ninety - five per cent of them boarded the first train for home im mediately after the curtain fell on the session of the general Assembly of 1921 §t two o’clock Wednesday morning of last week. On the whole, the recent session of the Legislature wrought well. It es tablished a record in the matter of appropriations for the State’s educat ional and penal institutions; for pen sions and for the construction and maintanance of an elaborate system of public highways. The members took Governor Morrison at his word and has made possible of accomplish ment many of the progressive ideas advanced in his inaugural address. Fifty millions of dollars for roads would have been unthinkable eight, or even, four years ago. Not so in the year of Our Lord 1921. The people of the State had made up their minds to taboo the mud tax and their representatives in the General Assembly knew what they were do ing in the action taken when the road bill came up for consideration. A bare handful in each branch voted to “let well enough alone.” The pro gressives won easily and the people will cheerfully sustain their action. And the folks were not interested in roads only. They had very de cided views looking to the future of the higher institutions of learning and adopted a robust program to start things going on a really big scale. Twenty million dollars were asked for to be expended over a period covering six years. The Legislature did not think this wise and adopted a two- year program and appropriated more than seven million dollars to meet immediate needs. This decis ion is generally approved. The pubftc schools of the State also fared well at the hands of the Gener al Assembly of 1921, which provided a fund of five million dollars for school buildings in needy communit ies. It also appropriated $1,400,000 as an equalizing fund and to defray the expenses of the State Board of Examiners; to pay salaries of county superintendents and take care of var ious agencies which contribute tr {ha advancement of the public Echool system. Another problem v'- "': appears to have been amicab’- iJjusted by the solons recentlv r.;:scinbled here is that of the valvon of property by lo cal assersors under State direction. No little complaint has been heard relative to values put upon the real property of the State last year when prices of everything had reached their highest level. Eastern Carolina far mers are facing bankruptcy because of the rapid decline in prices of cot ton and tobacco and have been- insis tent upon a revision of assessments. Their appeals reached sympathetic ears and the Revenue Act for county boards of review, which are to meet on April 5th for the purposes of re vision is provided. Any citizen who feels that his land has been assessed too high will have an opportunity to speak his mind upon the subject. These boards of review are required to report their findings to the State Tax Commission not later than April 20, so it will be well for those who may have complaints to offer to be on hand promptly at the appointed time. The Legislature also provided for bringing the manless job and the job less man together by the establish ment of a free empjpyment bureau in the Department of Labor and Printing under the direct supervision of the head of that department. This bureau will serve all classes ployees. Other legislation will be ployee. Other legislation will be discussed from time to time. WOMEN OF THE SOUTH IN WAR TlME§t . Attention, Daughters of Con federacy and all those interested in, the history of our country. * , This book, whose title is gi||m a- bove, has been recently published un der the auspices of the United Daugh ters of the Confederacy. It consists of a collection of stories of personal experience compiled and edited by Matthew Page Andrews. These stories, which would “read well” in fiction, with the added merit of actuality, must grip all true Sou thern hearts. And not Southern hearts only. Truth is truth, and honest minds and true hearts the world over must re spond to these acts of devoted heroi sm. In this connection we quote, in part, the comment of the Boston Transcript: “Ideas maintained in the Northern States concerning the people of the South, in the days of the Civil War were, in many cases, undoubtedly superficial; years have passed since the surrender at Appo- matax, a new generation has been born and grown to maturity, we have had time to think. “It is well to look back upon the war days from the standpoint of the South and, so looking, we may see some features once hidden from our gaze and may understand more fully the position of those whom we once regarded as devoid of all honesty and faith. Hence, it is well to read these re miniscences, written by women of the South, in whose minds the days of the early sixties are yet vivid re collections Most valuabW foot notes to history are these records here brought to light and offered in .so kindly a spirit, a spirit from which the last trace of bitterness seems to have disappeared and been forgotten.” Such testimony is proof enough that “Women of the South In Times” is not a raking up of ancient grievances, but an honest narrative, plainly told, for the enlightenment of the present and future generations. The United Daughters of the Con federacy have published the book with two objects in view; as a con tribution to history and as a memor ial to those who “made every heroic sacrifice through four long years of war and ten of reconstructionsome of whom are still living. Will not such a memorial be more inspiring, more lasting, than a tablet of marble or of bronze? In the foreword, the editor states briefly the “True Cause of the Sec tional Conflict;” a dry fact occasion ally overlooked by historians, fiction al writers and others. Subscriptions for “Women of the South In War Times” will be taken at the U. D. C. Library. The small percentage allowed by the Publica tion Committee goes into the fund of the local chapter. A. LILA RILEY, Chairman Pub licity Committee. GOOD BLOOD NEEDEDIN SPRINGTIME People with Poor Appetite, Bad • Complexions and “Spring Fever” Need a Blood Tonic. GUDE’S PEPTO-MANGAN IS BEST Makei^ Rich Red Blood — Renews 'Vitality and Increases Body’s Resistance to Disease Spring is the time when good blood is so vital to health. If you do not feel the thrill of Spring in your blood if you take no pleasure in living, if your appetite is poor, your complex ion pallid or muddy, and you tire easily, you can be pretty sure your blood is not up to the mark. So many feel that way in the Spring. Especially housewives who have so much work to do. They get over tired and run - down — their blood becomes weak and thin. Build up your health now by tak ing that splendid Spring blood tonic, Gude’s Pepto - Mangan. It will give vital power to the red corpuscles in your blood. They will go racing thru your blood, carrying fresh supplies of oxygen to all the tiny cells. It will help improve your color and your appetite. You’ll take more interest in things and enjoy life more. You will stop going around with that tired, all - gone feeling. Physicians have prescribed Gude's Pepto - Mangan for thirty years. You can get it at your druggist's in either tablet or liquid form. Take whichever you prefer. They have :he same medicinal value. Get the genuine. Adv. FRESH VEGETABLES W You will be pleased with the kind you get at our market and with the price, too. If you haven’t a phone give your order to our solicitor and it will be filled promptly. F. P. SLEDGE Meats, Groceries, and Country Produce MAIN STREET BREVARD, N. C, SMITH’S PLACX where you will receive^courteous treatment, and'where every one who is employed is a Tonsorial Artist We will be pleased to serve you Three New Chevrolet Cats FOR SALE Sec A, M* White of Rosman, N. C, and buy the irxst economical car on the market today. BUY NOW m ENJOY THE GOOD RC^eS A. M. WHITE Big Ben $3.'/ ^ On time the wor! d r rcu n d whether,; ^in r« trogratl, London, New Yt>rk or Honolulu, you’ll find Big Ben—and always on time. He’s known the world over as the clock thit rinsfs on time, runs on time, stays on time and lasts a 'ong time. A fresh lot just in. Other clocks that are warranted as low as -32.3 FRANK D. CLEMENT The Hallmark Jeweler 3nstxtnit BREVARD, NORTH CAROUNA Departments—College Preparatory, Normal, Music, Ujjia-,!, mestlc Art, Household Economics, Agriculture. AD departments are directed by teachers with sp cial tr ii li i111 large experience. They know their business. Influences of the Institute are alone worth the cosl of t jitl ja. Cpens on September 5. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Having qualified as the Adminis tratrix of the estate of Robert Orr, deceased, late of Transylvania County this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate, to present the same to the undersigned within twelve months from the date hereof. or this notico v/ill be plead in b : cf their payment, and all pcr^onz in debted to said estate wiil plcarc :r.a!:y immediate settlement and This the 2nd day of March, 192 i> English & Hamlin, Mary S. Ott. Attorneys. Administratis 4-8. Hamlin.