Jt^PAiRf HOUSE FOR SUMMER USE OTHER Cedar mt. NEWS: s. Chas. Hill of Aiken, S. C., who liaa a summer home here, has been up having some repair work done. She cxpects to come back soon to spend the summer months. Miss Nellie Lee returned Saturday from Greenville, S. C., where she has been visiting her aunt, Mrs. P. R. Bishop. Miss Rhoda Heath has been real sick for the past week. We hope ^he will be out again soon. vBom to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jones last week, a son. Mies Eldine Bishop has just re turned home from the Mountain Sani tarium where she underwent an op eration for apendicitis. The farmers of Cedar Mountain are real busy this week planting corn. Little Jennie Burns has been sick for some time but is recovering. Harlen Jones and Hamlin Bishop were in Greenville last week. Mr. and Mrs. V. B. McGaha VisitcJ Mr. McGaha’s daughter, Mrs. Eliza Baxter, last Sunday. Hobart and Raymond Bishop spent lact week in Brevard. FROM MISSOURI; WAS LDCKY FOR WNN6 HE SAYS. Chattanooga Man State* Tanlac Over- came His Troubles — Can't Say Too Much Fo^ It. W. P. Dennis, 203 Lyerly St., Chattanooga, Tenn., formerly of Mobile, Ala., makes an interesting statement regarding Tanlac. “It certainly was lucky for me,” said Mr. Dennis, “that I got hold of Tanlac when I did, for I was just a- bout down and out. Off and on for th^ee years I have been down with malaria. For ten months on one occasion I was confined to the house most of the time. “As I usually spent my winters in Chattanooga, I came back here last September to spend the r6st of my life with my daughter. When I ar- i"ived here I was in a very weakened condition, for the malaria was fast r:cLting the best of me. I had no appetite, felt weak ancj, tired all the time and . had pains in my "'.pmach that were completely upjotting my nerves. I slept very little and got up mornings nearly exhausted. In fact I a^s just about ‘all in' arid kept getting worse. “Five weeks ago I got Tanlac and my appetite picked up with my first * half bottle. Soon I wa§ able to sleep * Vi- M- ■€« FORDSON ifi ■ifi: ■6^ €«• €«■ W- ««■ W- M- I ^ e9- We Missourians are feeling kmd of blue. On Easter Sunday we had a freezini^ rain. Killed all of the tree fruit and hundreds of the trees, ^ all night and felt like a new man. ; especially the budding fruit and the 11 eat any kind of food set before me ^ pears. We will not have more than j and enjoy it. I have gained several i ^ one-third crop strawberries. The pounds in weight and feel better than ■ ^ peaches vv ere in full bloom, and the 11 have in five or six years. Tanlac apples showing red. The average has saved me money and given me fruit crop of this country is counted health, too, and I can’t say too much slump in It seems by millions in dollars. Then here comes the prices of farm products, that the farmer is always the first suflFerer. Think of it! Eggs from 60 cts to 15, butter from 70 to 30 cents. Flour from $7 per hundred to $4, com from $2 per bushel to 7 Sets, Milch cows that f-old during Wilson's I administration for $100, now $25. (leneral merchandise has fallen some but not in propo’i-tion to farm pro ducts. And Hardin.!' hiis not been President quite three months yet. And still more trouble. We are in the midst of a flood. Rivers and creeks out over the bottoms, wheat and oats under water. We had April in February, now we are having February in April. But we arc ii: tine spirits. See! ,1. R. HAMLIN. fOr it.’ An advertisement News will sell that cow or horse tor you. in the surplu: NOTICE OF SALE: ■€^ !■€« I ■6» -60 1^ Transyl- : ^ Superior 1 ^ State of North Carolina, vania County, in the Court. Before the Clerk. Nan Smith et al. vs. James Jones, Jr., et al. Under and by virtue of a decree of the Superior Court of Transylvania, I till' undersigned commissioner, will cr. rJonday, ^lay tiie 30th. at 12 o’- 1921, at the Court House ROSMAN ITEMS: The farmers are busy idanting their crops. We are I ««■ Y in the Town of Brevard, sell to | ^ V3- <5^ clock M doc rhc highest bidder for cash the follow, ing tracts of land for partition among r;i(‘ tonants in common, which tracts of land are described as follow-s: Lying and being in the County of CAN BE REGULATED TO ANY SPEED — EASY TO START. WILL EQUAL ANY TRACTOR ON THE MARKET IN PULLING POWER AND SELLS FOR ABOUT HALF THE PRICE. The Ford Motor Campany have just issued a book called “The Fordson at Work.** This bock is given f.. 3. Call in and get one. If you cannot call, write and we will mail you one without charge. It is not what tho Ford Motor Company says about the Fordson Tractor but what the army o^ users have to say. This book voices the hardest kind of practical experience. It shows in illustration the Fordson Tractor at actual work along some ninety different lines of activity. It shows in these illustrations the wonderful versatility and utility of the Fordson Tractor. Shows it to be, beyon d all question, the one bit of machinery that is a neces- sity, not only on the farm but along many lines of commercial business; especially does it show up the Fordson as a valuable servant on the farm. With it the farmer is r^ieved of the hard work; because he can take advantage of the weather in preparing his seed bed; he can do it at the right time; the same is true when it. comes to harvesting. It solves, to a great extent, the problem of scarcity of labor. With its wonderful, reliable power, itjl^rings to t he farm home all the conveniences, in the way of runn ing water in th house, electric lights, operation of the washing machine, churning, separating the cr«tam from i the milk; it assumes and takes to itself the drudgery of farm life oth in the field and in the house and it is only a matter'of a few years until it will be as imiversal in its service on the farm as is the farmer himself. It will become a part of farm life; a beneficial part; a pro fitable part. Get order in for there*s a rush coming. BREVARJ) MOTOR COMPANY C. H. KLUEPPELBERG, Manager Ford Cars Ford Service Ford Parts Fordson Tractors M- «e- W- 18 ««•« M- v>f .ire lO ii.irn that the e I Rpascti-over Creok, still plemy of fmt South of the Blue | ^ y si„,.t«n Ridjje in Shoal Creek .section. Cold winter has passed. Sp-ins; time is here with all of its beauties. How plad we are to see the earth covered again with its mantle o. jrreen. The “Flu” has again paid a visit ti our little town, but almost all th« people who have been sick for the past two months are able to be at work once more. Miss Della Gillespie has returned liome from BaTfour, where she had been teaching school for eight months. Henry Wells returned last Tuesday from Arden, where he had spent the dav in the Western North Carolina $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ ail.ioiuinp: the lands of C. Y. Slatton and others. I IRST TRACT. BEGINNING at a Spanish oak, Crook’s old corner, and runs east 80 poles to a broken top Spanish oak; thence north 80 poles to a spruce pine at a branch; thence west 80 poles to a stake in Slatton’s line; thence south with his line to the beginning, containing 40 acres, more or less. SECOND TRACT: BEGINNING AT A SPANISH OAK, Crook's corner and runs east 80 poles to a stake. Crook’s corner; thence South 60 poles to a stake in Soloman Jones line; thence west 80 poles to a chestnut; thence north 60 poles to the BEGIN- or less. This April 30th, 1921. • This April 30th, 1921. LEWIS P. HAMLIN, Com. 5-G-lt.c. May 27. SAPPHIRE THEATRE Log Rolling Association Meeting. He , NING. Containing 30 acres, more reports a fine time. Savalie Galloway, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otho Galloway, died last Tues day night at the Mission Hospital, where ho had been sent for an oper ation, but too late. His body was c-rrlt-u back to Gloucester for buriaL Nathan Passmore is recovering, fast from the wound he received some few days ago. We have learned that Miss Martha Brooks is now the Superintendent of the Mission Hospital at Asheville. This fine young lady is a native of Rosman and a daughter of old Dr. Brooks, who_is dead. Our best wishes go with her. LITTLE PEEWEE. FRIDAY, MAY 6 Miss Olive Thomas in ‘‘UPSTAIRS flAND DOWN”. SATURDAY, MAY 7 Miss E:'V Rhodes in ‘ iJGBO-^Y’S GIRL” Also a Comedy ^SMITH’S place: where you will receive courteous treatment, and where every one who is employed is a Tonsorial Artist We will be pleased to serve you PISGAH FOREST, R. 1. ir. and Mrs. Street Burns are visiting their daughter Mrs. V. B. McGaha. Mrs. Pearce from Greenville is now at her home here for the summer. Mrs. Charlie Robinson died at her home near High Falls on Thursday of last week. The interment took place at Blue Ridge Cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Smith, Hobart and William Bishop attended the eomm<neement exercises, of Brevard graded schools. ^ Jack Heath and McClellan Shipman of Greenville, S. C., are spending a ■few days in Cedar Mountain. Mrs. Hamby of Greenville, S. C., is visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. £. A. Heath. She expects to return 1 next week. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Cary Beckworth from Charleston are here at their home for Jthe summer. A CORRESPONDENT. MONDAY, MAY 9 Eugene O’Brian in “ A Perfect Lover” Also A Lai^y Semon Comedy TUESDAY, MAY 10 Miss Dorothy Dalton in “La Pache* WEDNESDAY, MAY 11. Margurite Clark in “Easy to Get’ THURSDAY, MAY 12 Mary Pickfoi^ in “Rebecca of Sunny Brook Farm. FRIDAY, MAY 13 Extra Special “Blind Youth’' SHOWS START Daily Matinee, 2:30 P. M.; Nights, 7:30. Coming — 'The Courage of Marge O^Doone by James Oliver Curwood, same author as “Back to God's Coun> try. Common Business Sense Means Insurance Protection And comm<m horse sense points you to the pro tection of your property and loved ones against loss by DEATH, FIRE, LIGHTNING, OR WIND If you put off to-day until tomorrow, it may never come, or to-night your live stock, farm implements, or perhaps all you have accumulated from 3rears of hard savings, may be consumed. It is happening every day. See the oldest Insurance Agency before it is too late, then you will not have **Spilled Milk” to cry over. Brevard insurance Agency T. H. GALLOWAY, Manager Brevard, N. C. A. M. WHITE SELLS THE Chevrolet Certificates of $70 or $100 Given with purchase of each “490 Chevrolet Automobile. This is re deemed at face value provided 50,000 cars are manufactured and sold between January 1st and July 31, 192J. We have them on hand now—ask us about this plan* Chevrolet ^*490^' Touring Cars $795 f. o* b* Flint, Michigan. See or call A. M. WHITE, Rosmant N. G ^nsktitntB BREVARD*' » 0 NORTH CAROUNA Departments—Collef^ Preparatory, Normal, Music, Business^ Do mestlc Art, Household Economics, Agriculture. AD 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 5.

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