Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Aug. 19, 1921, edition 1 / Page 8
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grory ■ •* * ■• ■ 'it ‘.v-. MMBSf iMs rni. THB WIKVAIU) NEWS. BMViKliB» M.^ THE KREVARD NEWS. PublUhad «T«ry Fri^y mnd mntmr* at Postoffice at Brayard, N. C.* at V Sccond Clast Mattar. W. E. BREESE, Owaar Wm. A. BAND, Publisbar SUBSCRIPTION RATESt (Subscriptions payable in advanca) One year $1*50 Six months $1.00 Tbree Months 50 Two months .25 ADVERTISING RATES Display, per coilvmn inch 30c Reading Notices, per line «... * .10c Want Column Notices, per line . .5c We charge 5 cents a line fdr Cards of Thanks, Resolutions of Respect and for notices of entertainments where admission is charged. Address All Communications To The BreTaVd News: ForeiRn Advertising Reprctentiitlve THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION FRIDAY, AUGUST 19th, 1921. THE MENACE OF SECTARIAN BIGOTRY. There never was a time when sec tarian narrowness and bigotry were not ugly and hurtful to the cause of PERSONALS C. F. Woodfiin a prominent fanner of the Penrose section was in town Saturday. . Sheriff Shipman and policeman Bar nette ran across a load of spirits that drives away all cares and unpleasant thoughts and makes men feel like John D. Rockfellow or puts fighting qualities equal to Jack Dempsey into a fellow; consequently the bootleggers are all in jail. H. Garren of the Cedar Mountain section was in town Tuesday. M. W. Ball of the Little River sec tion was in Brevard on Tuesday. H. C. Batson of the Catheys Creek section was in town Tuesday. Felix Rabb of the Carson’s Creek section was a Brevard visitor last Tuesday. J. A. Gillespie was in town Mon day. Joe M. Galloway of Rosmtin was in Brevard Monday. Mr. Weston Galloway of Easley, S. C., is spending some days among h?s boyhood friends. Ben Coleman oi' Greenville, S. C., ia in the city for a few days. Walter Grogan is again on our sts after some months absence. Jule McCall was a visitor in town Wednesday. Asa England was in town Wednes day, Rev. T. W. Raymond^ D. D., presi dent of Mississippi Synodical College Holly Springs, Miss., will preach at vital Christianity. They are con- I the Methodist Church, Sunday^ Aug. trary to both morals and Biblical 21 at 11 o’clock. Come cut and hear leaching. The Bible furnishes no j this great speaker. All welcome. j’Tound for the s'ssuniption that di-1 ^ „ V. 1 , • 1 ' Mrs. L- nox Flo-.ve and pmall son vine grace is conveyed exclusively throu;.;h some group of specially oi*- : Jaincd nriests or ministers or ihat W. R. Kili>atrick Tuesday. was in Brevard L' HOX f’lo'.ve anc it for Snartanburg on V/ednesday Mr. J. S. Calhoun and daughter, Miss Bertie of Selvia, N. C., arrived in the city Monday where they were cal led by the death of little Mary Fran cis Summey. « Mrs. R. B. Stone of Ash/sj^ille and daughter, Mrs. Hood of Southport, N. C., returned Saturday after a visit of several days with Mrs. H. C. Ran son, on Probarte Street. ^ Miss Molly Hood is home again af ter a visit of two weeks at Whittier N. C., with friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Hesse and son Earnest of Charleston are recent guests at the Galloway House. Mrs. H. C. Ranson left Tuesday morning to visit her sister-in-law, Mrs. R. B. Stone in Asheville. While there she will see the play “Conquest of Canaan” which was recently filmed in Asheville. Miss Marguerite Robertson of For sythe, Ga., is visiting her grandmother Mrs. W. K. Osborne. Dr. V. W. Osborne, wife and little daughter Mary Gene of Stone Mt., Ga., are visiting Mr§. W. Ki Osborne and Mrs. James K. Mills. Miss Kate Cort of Greensboro is the guest of Miss Miriam Silxersteen at Silvermont. Mrs. Jack Hine and Master Jack, Jr., of Raleigh are visiting Mrs. Hines parents Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Breese. Miss Elsie Hayes who is a student nurse at Clarence Barker Memorial Hospital, Biltmore, is visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Hayes. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clarke have returned to Brevard and are now at their home on East Main St., after an goocincas is coniine { within the limits of ronic* ecclesiiiFtical . organizat'.on hedged about by sacerdotal rites. And such an assumption is as unreason able as it is unscriptural. It is con trary to what we have learned of God through study of the universe as well as through the vovelation of him in Christ Jtrus. And it is further con. dtn-nod by the lact that it has Ecldom failed to beget a spirit v.’hich was out of hirfiriony with the spirit of Clirist. It is hard to find a more disagreeable ;ind un-Chi ist]ikL' person than the av- c fclesia^'tioal bigot^ with his i roud assumption of suT)criority in l.otlii ilv'ge and sanility over thosf v.’iio do r.ol pronounce his shi- boleth or beh'eve in his special brand of "acrej charms. Of cour"^e an assumption that is contrary to Christian teaching and which produces an unchristian spirit and unchristian attitudes on the part of those adopting it cannot fail to whole. And, as a matter of f£.ct, prove hvrtful to the Church as nothing else has done more to dis credit Chr'stianity an^ to divide and j weaken its forces than such claims. V hile ecclesiastical narrowness and sectarian bigotry have always been inexcusable, they are more so to-day than ever before. For, in the first place, the more clearly we comprehend the true nature and meaning of Ciiristianity the more absurd do they become, and in the '^ftcv several week’s visit fcro;her, Wm. A. Band. with her ! extended; visit to Chicago and York. New ( seconrj place, in the face of the gig- ju:V noY.-, the need for fraternal co- with his parents here antic tasks v/hich co,''’-ont the Church opcrr.iion between t^stian forces is particularly urgent. There are no greater enen:!' of the Idngdom of God which we are seeking to ^'stablish than those who, by their un\. • •"•nted claims and their uncharitable udes, make it impossible for the lowers of Christ to unite in the com mon tasks to which they are called. The above reflections taken in part. from an article in the Sunday School T. W. Whitmire and M_agazine of the Methodist Church is Southern v,ere in deserving of special mention and A.sheville on Monday, ir.’jch honor to the writer for his timoly warning of the greatest ACE” to th« church of today. This recalls an instance which happened Hl-v. a. s. Raptr v;ili betTin a series of meetings at Oak Grove Methidt.3 Church SuR'Juy^ Au;:;u^t 21 at 3 P. M. vSiTviccs r^onday 11 A. M., and M'oiiihiy nii'ht at 8 P. i\I. will continue =everiil day?. A’’ of the people in tii'j community aie very cordially in- ^ You win bo welcome. Mt'^'irs W. E. Brec?e. J. S. Silver- ; tcer.. and Fred Johnston, are attend. i.:,; c urt at Burnsville this week. Mrr. E. L. Oulla Master Jack Ov. S. r. .'’Vj guests ■vf Mrr,. j King al her camp in v; Brevard. Mr. ;tnd Mrs. S. F. Al!i?on and fam ily niotcreii to Ashevi'ie on Sunday. Dr. and Mrs. Wood who have been FP^'nding some time in Brevard re turned to theiv home in Charleston on Tuesday. Miss Nina K. Clayton and Mrs. Ag nes Marchant spent Wednesday in Asheville. i Ivliss Mfii’garet Breese has returned | to Koper Hospital in Charleston after i There \\ iii be an all clay singing, ri/crdjpg son)c time with Mrs. J. M. and dinner on the ground^ at the Lake A'.Iison. I Toxaway Baptist Church the fourth \V. J. Watkins who has been visit- Sunday in this month, Aug. 28th. E. ing with Mrs. C. W. Pickelsimer, re- D. Ranciolph is to be there with the turned to her home in Richmond, Va., Cedar Mt. Choir, on Wednesday. ’ j Everybody is cordially invited to Mrs. C. B. Wilson of Abbeville, S. dinner. C., is visiting her father Mr. T. T. I Loftis. j MINISTER DISCUSSES HIS Jack Zachary returned to Atlanta WIFE’S TROUBLES on Sunday after spending two weeks Mrs. Fagan has returned to Ashe ville r.fter spending a shoi't time with Mr. Fagan at the Aethelwald Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. .J. A. Miller, .Jr., and ii Mrs. J. W. McM inn attended the mus ic Festival in Asheville on Saturday, j Dr. Raynionch who is in charge of , Camp Illahee, near Brevard, filled the j pulpit at the Presbyterian church on { Sunday in the absence of the pastor j Rev. J. R. Hay. | Miss Dorothy Colton anc] Miss Kate i Quackenbos, schoolmates of Miss ^ ?>'Iii-iam Silvcrsteen have been her I J ; gueiTs for the past ten days. j The Fortnigiitly Club wishes to j thank the performers in the Minstrel | in shov/ for their kindness in taking ^ p;irt. and their faithful cooperation ' with the director and the committee in charge. | Mrs. J. Fred Zaciiarv Pres. Miss Eleanor Townsend is visiting her mother, Mrs. J. F. Townsend on Probarte Ave. ilr. and Mrs. J. W. Lindley have returned to their home after a short vacation spent with relatives in Bun combe. Hr. Dotherrin returned to Charles- iG. Saturday after a visit to camp Chanc-, Rev. A. K. Svkes, former pastor of the Watkins Park Presbyterian church Nashville, Tenn., says: “After seeing v;hat Tanlac has ac complished in my wife’s »case, I am convinced thpt it is a medicin'e of gre^at power and extraordinary merit. I do not think I have ever seen any thing give such prompt results. Mrs. Sykes had been in delicate health for ten months, suffering from stoma<h trouble and nervous breakdown; J Notice-Lanil For Sale! On Monday, September ,5th, 1921, at 12 o’clock noon, I will sell at the Court House at Brevard, N. 0., the following, re cently belonging to A. M. Verdery, Jr. These are valuable tracts of land, and now is the time to make a good investment. \ One 'lot near Southern Railway known as the Nancy Osteen lot* One lot in Franklin Park, near the J* S. Silverstecn place, and known asjthe Mull lot* I 1-2 seres near T, S* Wood, Sr., consisting of small lots* Ons lot in negro town, near Arthur Robinson's house, adjoining All Benjamin* Two acres at Rocky Hill, known as the Annie McIntyre land* Two[smaII lots i'n|the old Dick Pender place, in the C* C Kilpat rick subdivision. One-half interest in mountain tract in Dunn's Rock Township, known as the Bill Kinsey^and* One tract c^mountain land in Dunn's Rock Township, known as the CharleyfRaines andj.William Raines place* ' - i / SJJ^Terms of rSaie,iore-third^ cash, in three and six ironths twith “satisfactorily ’secured notes fcr the deferred payments. W. P. WHITMIRE, Assignee of A. M. Verdery, Jr. One recently during the progi*ess of a re vival in ’one of our local churches. The attendance was small; the inter, est manifested was nearing the -zero mark; that help was needed was as plain as the nose on your face. Then ‘I frequetly sought medical- adyice town from but Tanlac is the only thing that gave her any relief. After taking the Sam King of Charleston is visiting ii^edicine only a short time, she was MEN his father Mr. P. S. King for a few help with the house days. h old duties. I think it only a short t-ms until her health v/ill be fully res- toi’ed.” Tanlac is sold by leading druggists Miss Margaret Blythe returned from New York on Monday. Miss ^ Blythe has been attending the sum- forget the concert to be giv Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Riley and Miss Sarah Wathers spent the week end in Montreat. a good Kood brother, active worker Columbia University. of a sister church offered his services. The membership was very appreciat ive of the proffered assistance but the preacher in charge said “NO we v,’il rttn our own revival, we do'not' v»*ant the help of outsiders”. The ar- Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Silversteen and the Misses Silversteen and their guest attended the music festival in -Isheville Inst week. Miss Irene McMinn vi’cnt to Green ville on Thursday v.-here she will visit en by the Melton Sisiters, assisted by Anthony Bates of Camp Sapphire on Tuesday evaaing, August 23rd, at S:30 o'clccii adroission .25 .and 50 tide referred to above sounds the j L- B. Houston, keynote of truth when it says, “There Sam Summor;; came up from Col- ars no greater enemies of the king- urnbia and spent the week end dom of Goj which we are seeking to | with Mrs. Summers at Mr. T. L. Snel establish than those who^ by their un sons. v,arranfed claims and their unchari-| ;.it. .-,id Mrs. J. M, Eilpatriek and .ab.e attit,udes, ma.ie it impossible for : Mrs. Tiios. Teasue and children motor the followers of Christ to unite in the , cd to Spartanburg on Tuesday to common tasks to which they are cal- | visit Mrs. Ira Hamilton, led.” • ■ I j Mrs. M. L. Shipman, Misses Jose- j j phine and Dorothy Mae and Mitchell! WANTED. Second hand baby’s crib ! Lee Shipman, Jr., are visiting at the | Tuesday Evening address the News Office. j home of Mrs. W. K. Osborne. 1 Le Your Sale Bills Don’t forget the concert to be giv en by the Melton Sisters, assisted by Anthony Bate of Camp Sapphire on August 23rd, at 8:30 o’clock. Admission 25 and 50. Those with money already saved should investigate our FULLY PAID STOCK Department. Shares of $100 each, paid in, are with drawable on 30 days notice, pay 5% if] left less than one year, pay 6% if left" a year or over—interest pay able in cash or com pounded if desired. Such stock is tax free and thus pays better than any ordinarily obtainable invest ment, with no care to the owner* Not Save Money IS BECAUSE IT IS so EASY NOT TO BEGIN Tiie man who is looking j'for excuses not to save can always find them, because there are nearly always legitimate obstacles to any worthy accomplishment. Your ability to overcome these obstacles determines your success or failure. The Twenty-Sixth Series of The Brevard Building and Loan Association Opens in Septeniber It^s shares are non-taxable and have always paid 6% Join it and help yourself and the upbuilding oi your commu nity ftt the same time.| |The entire assets of the Association are inJFirstJMortgages on good houses here in this county. Bre^aril BuiiiliRg aiid Lean Dunn's Rock Building Thos* H. Shipman, Pres. J. A. Miller, Vice-Pres. G. E. Lathrop, See. & Treas.
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 19, 1921, edition 1
8
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