i>> " '‘' •’■■-' . ' "' -V _ '../s’*”.' ^‘*4:"' ■ i'- ‘ ‘ ' ■ =••■■ ■•: ■•;■■■ .■ ■ ■,•%■■■- . -: * ^ ’ •:" - •. ' ■ '■ I ^ ; ■ : ■■-. ■' -/ ■';^' ■' -. fW W§m9, ’.'■r s frem ^ , OENUtNE BuiTDurham TOBACCO W« want you to havo the kost paper lor "BULL.” Be now you oan reoehre with eaoh paokagea book el 24 loavoe ol VLVHl** the very finest eigerette paper in the world. notice of mortgage sale By virtue of the power of sale con- .tained in a certain deed in trust exe cuted <m the 4th day of February, 1921, by Rachael A. Dougherty and William Wallace Dougherty, record ed in book of mortgages and deeds of trust no. 14 at page 6 of the Transyl- A'ania records, to secure the in- <lebtedness therein named, and de fault having been made in the pay ment of said debt and interest, and having been requested so to do by the payee in the note secured by said ^deed in trust, I will sell at public auction, for cash, at the court house door in Brevard, N. C., at 12 o’clock M. on October the 15th 1921, all the following described pieces or parcels of lands lying and being in Brevard, township of Brevard and county of Transylvania, and BEGINNING On a stake standing on margin of south Broad street, as extended, said point Sjeing at west side or margain of the side walk, corner of lot No. 4 as iihown on plat of subdivision dated January 8 th, 1912, registered on Book No. 28 at pajie 000, deed re cords of Transylvania County, N. C., a.nd rnns thence with the east mar- i;in of said South Broad Street and Avith the -west margin of said side walk, south, six degrees east 130 ft. to a stake on said margin of said ^street and sidewalk, said point being •corner of lot No. 6 as shown on said plat mentioned above; then with the line of lot No. 6 as shown on said plat south eighty-nine degrees east 150 feet to a stake; thence North 89 degrees east 100 feet to an iron stake; thence North 2 degrees west 123^ feet to an iron stake or post thence North 89 degrees west 100 feet to a stake or post corner of lot jio. 5 shown on said plat above men tioned; thence with the line of lot No 4 as shown on said plat above men tioned, North 89 degrees west 156 feet to the point of BEGINNING. The foregoing being the same proper ty fully described in a deed from George McC. Hixoh to Rachael A. Doughtery by deed dated 6th day of December, 1919, and ndV known as “NAVAJO," together with the con tents and furnishings therein contain ed. This sale being made to satisfy the debt, interest and costs of sale. This the 9th day of September, 19- 19. E. W. Ewbank, trustee Piedmont Pressing Club ft C. HARDIN, Manasfer Brevard, N. C. PRfi^SING . DYEING DR / CLEANING ALTERING R^&r l^mitb*3 Barber Shop Phc::el43 Pressins: 1 Suit 50c; 4 Suits '^ork called for and delivered prompdy t Let Qs Print .^nr Sale Bills BOW^ RU»j£D QUAD Itai^ bar MoClttr* N*w«p*p«r tjradleat*) **1 am a mined man!** Mr. Itowser threw away hU newa^ paper and dlgar as he ••uttered the wor<te. They were iqpoken«a8 solemply as a young man speaks when he- asks a girl to be his wife, and she tails him to go to Texas. Mrs. Bowser looked up, and turned a shade, paler. “Yes, I am a ruined man. and yon are the cau^ of it !*’ “Do foxi mean that you have gone Into bankruptcy?” “NOy not exactly, but, nevertheless, you have ruined me, financially.” “Can’t you pay two cents on the dollar?” “It isn’t that, but you have ruined me t)y ruining my prospects What am I totlay? I am working my brains out, and receiving only a small Income. All the best years of my life have passed away, and I have not taken advantage 9f the many golden opportunities held imt to me. I have ^>een thinking ihlngs all over, and I tell you, Mrs. LJ«)\vser, I feel very bitter! If I have to go into bankruptcy. It will be your fault. If we bwome paupers no one ■ >ut you will be to blame!” “I don’t know that I have done any- . liing to prevent you from getting on,” >lie said in a very calm voice. “Oh, you don’t, eh! Weil, we will ,'0 over the case. Some years ago I wanted to become an apple-grower. 1 got all tiie facts and figures and ')rought them to you. Apples were hen on the rise, and have iieen ever •iiioe. I saw a chance to become a 'iiillionaire. I wanted to get a tliou- ■iiind acres of land and set out 10,000 ipple trees. Each tree would have yielded iiu?- ten bushels of fruit, and I vould thus have had 10,00<>,000 bush- •Is to sell. I was all ready to go into ;t—wlien—when—” “When I figured It out,” interrupted drs. Bowser. “1 figured that you liKin't a tenth of the money to buy the 'tiial with. You hadn’t the tenth of lie <‘u.-?h to buy the trees with. You ■iiuliJn't have paid the uieu for setting him out. It was simply a wild dream >f yours.” •‘.\ever mind the wiki dream!” said Ur. Kowser, witli a wave of liis hand. •>\'lirit you term a bad droarii may turn lut a [xolden dream. I wanted to go into poach brandy. It had just been liscovered, and was taiveii up every- vhere. Whisky, gin, rum, l)t>er and ■ill otlio;- drinks were way to jit'afh l)randy. E\-en tlie Pre.^iuent of !ie Uiiiteil States ict-pt his Ix'ttie. , My (ini was to get a forner on the peaoh •nip of the United ynitrs l(n- fivp years. There would be iiil!i;nns cC .'r>l'.''is. Tliere would be millions of i r.rrels t)f peach brandy. I w(juid j)ut 'le price up. and hoUl it th(M•t^ Tl’.e j.-apers would have {dvon me t!;(* n;i;iK> of ‘Peach lirandy Bowser,’ anc! yi.u would have come in to share my lame, but no—no—no! You must get o-,it pencil and pai>er and do some figur ing! By that figuring you cost iwe ndilions!” “Yes, I remember,” answered Mrs. Bowser. “You had about $5,000 at the Bopmr., **Xflpa lim - lea, »nd, jov -ire tiflBif te ii4 imt I ipiAl^i x I iieald haw uade ' er nliUf)«i doii^ bjd yof iMst Vget ent!^ jieM and lAraw me that 1 wers Iheii ^ vwy chsapwi Toe buy a ttLt bog for ahpi^t, h lar. Ton could cut him up a^sm^e the meat and make It bring jvanalmiit 112. Why, It was as .easy as turning your hand over, hut, np—no—ilo again 1 Ytm said 1 would lose everytlilnig I put into i)t, and tonight you are fac ing : the foot that bacon is 50 cents a pound, and your husband could have beeiK worth $20,000,000 well as notl" “Mr. Bows^, what you always lacked was capital. Tou had no money to buy. hogs nor to handle the meat, and yon were going into the schen^e without any experience. I advised you not to do it, and again you got mad and left the house. I think I saved your bacon, tf you didn’t go into bacon.” "Never mind my bacon, Mrs. Bow ser ! ‘ But for you I would be able to buy out half this town now, and it must be a great satisfaction to you t» ki^ow it We will take another case. When I saw that war was com ing, which was before anyone else, I knew there would he a ereat demand ficmct ^ AAUtt *^ou Have Ruined Me, Financially!" time. You had need of about $5,000,> 000. I simply asked you wh^e you were going to get the money from, and you got mad and v.ant out for a walk." “Never mind the madness nor the money, Mrs. Bowser' I am sure I could have pushed t: rough in some way, and been revel i<. r in my gold at this moment. Othe? len have raised $5,000,000, and why .shouldn’t I? And there was the potato case: Potatoes were high nTf'd going higher. It need ed no figtM o to show that they would come to $ ' :> biu^. Potatoes could be raised Hr cents a bushel and, by selling at $3 a bushel, why, e man cou! <i(ve arranged to raise 8,000,000 bushels a year, and that would have given me a dean profit of over $7,000,- 000. Didn*t you st<9 me from going Into this schemer* * “Why,** answered BIrs. Bowser, “I figured that you couldn’t raise 90 bush els a year. You had no land, you see. You had no capital to use. As a mat er of feet, petatoes arev cheaper n.)w than they were then. Men have bought that they ^ Could make dia- uonu^ uC of pebbl^ hut they, have •lever tncceeded yst"' . “Never mtnd<the men add, the ndv “Ten Carloads of Cucumbers." for cucumber pickles to send to the soldiers. I wanted to get 5,000 acres of land and plant it all in cucumbers. I would thus raise enough to sell to the government at least ten carloads of cucumbers. The government would buy and piciile them. Tliey would have paid me millions of dollars. I had everything worked out, even to the last cucumber, but I met your op- positioa again. You began figuring on the cost of the seeds, the land, the cultivation, the gathering and, selling, and you made out that 1 would los^ about $10,000. What was the result, jruilty woman! AVliy, cucumber pickles sold for a quarter apiece, and the government couldn’t get enough of them at that priice. Every soldier vvHnted his pickle, morning, noon and nijcht, and some of them i>ositively re fused to fight without a pickle in their pockets. Ah, but how can you sit there so calm and cool, when you have worked such black ruin!” “You can thank me that you are not in the poorliouse,” quietly observed Mrs. Bowser. “Never mind the poorhou.«e, but listen to me! There is just one chance of my v recouping myself—just one chance. If you prevent me from taking this chance, nothing will be left to meAut suicide. Mrs. Bowser, do .you krrow that horseradish is selling at 2~} cents a bottle, when it used to sell at five? All the doctors In the coimtry are recommending it. It is found the greatest cure for many ailments. I want' to make horse radish troches. I want to make them by the billion. I want to flood the whole world with them. The profit is 200 per cent. Now, then, are you go- in? to oppose me?” Mrs. Bowser could contain herself no longer. Her laugh was almost hys terical. Mr. Bowser looked at her and gave up all hopes. He heard her laughter and knew he was ruined lor* ever. He left the house to suicide, t:ut, np to date, his body has ^t been found dangling from the limb of a soft maple shade tree. Oils From Petroleum. Benzoline, kerosene or coal oil, and petrol or gasoline, are obtained from petroleum by a process similar in principle to that employed to obtain alcohol from the fermented grain mash. The crude petroleum Is brought to a certain tem^rature, which caus es its llghtCT and more volatile parts to be driven off in the form of vapor, which, being collected and allowed to condense, becomes those lighter oils of which gasoline Is one, and which made possible the engine that drives airplanes, automobiles, tractors and threshing machines. Famous Violin Maker. ^ Joseph Guamieri was a member of a family of celebrated, violin makers In Cremona, Italy. He was active in his work from 1690 to 1730. His' violins are usually partly identified by a stain or sapmark in the belly running paral lel with the finger board on either side. They were noted for their t<me- produclng powers, a fact whidi has stimulated the s^e of spurious Tfadixis with his forged toscriptioc. Bt yixtw of the'90^ eCfileeiiB » ’ i»F I«yd/«| Ae. liplr dj^. «f^ i^iKjlBter^VW 4l^ pag» 680 of tile Deed in Trttst records of Transylvania Ooimty^ N. C., to se cure eiertain hotes therein hirationedjf And wheraas there le^mains om df said notes unpaid,[ai^notice jhevii^r been given to the makers thet pay ment mtrat 1^ made oir , the.laiiiSs would be sold to satisfy same; and the default not having been made good, after the five days notice was given. Therefore, the undersigned trustee will sell to the highest bidder f or^cash at the Court House Door in the town of Brevard, N. C.; ON SATURDAY, OCT. 22, 1921, at 12 b'clock M, all the following de scribed tract of land, situate in Bre vard township, Transylvania jibunty, N. C., adjoining land^ of C. M. Sin- iard and others and bounded as fal- loWBt Beginning on a beech on the north side of a branch, the beginning cor ner of the L. C. Neill tract, and runs with the east line of said tract. North 3 1-2 degrees East 5 1-2 polies to a stake; then North 86 1-2 degrees W. 117 poles to a stake, a comer of the C. H. Robinson tract; then with the line of the C. H. Robinson tract, S. 3 1-2 degrees West 55 1-2 poles to | a stake in the south boundary line of I the L. C. Neill tract; then with the south boundary line of said tract. South 86 ^-2-degrees East 117 poles j to a stake, the southeast corner of i the L. C. Neill tract; then North 3 j 1-2 degrees East 50 poles to the be- ■ ginning, containing 40 acres^ more or i less. ' Sale made to satisfy sa^ indebted ness, pricipal and intere»' cost and expenses of sale. This Sept. 17th, 1921. WELCH GALLOWAY, Trustee. 4t to Oct. 21, W. G. c. NOTICE — LAND SALE BY TRUS TEE: v'‘ ^ By virtue of the power of sale con- ’ tained in a certain deed in trust exe cuted by W. M. Meece and wife, Kan- nie Meece to the undersigned tsustee to scure a certain note therein men tioned payable to the Brevard Bank ing Company, which deed in trust and note is dated Jan. 12. 1920, and which became due Sept. 1, 1920, which deed in trust i» registered in Deed Book No. 13 at page 75 of Ihe Trust Deed records of Transylvania County, N. C. And whereas, said note remains an paid, and the holder having demand ed that the said trustee give the not ice required, and said notice of five days having been given to makers, ' and the default not having been made good, the payee in said note having demanded that the power of sale given be executed: | Now therefore, the undersigned' trustee will sell to the highest bidder I for cash at the Court House Door in ! the town of Brevard, N. C., ON SAT- i URDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1921, at 12 | o’clock M. all the following described ,' boundary of land, situate in Easta- toe township, Transylvania County, N. C., bounded described as fol lows: BEGINNING on a spanish oak, the Nealus Powell comer, and runs South 5 degrees West 112 poleg to a stake in the road leading from Pine Bottom to Toxaway School House; then with said road. North 66 degrees East 12 poles to a stake in said road; then N. 34 degrees East 44 poles to a red oak on the west bank of said road; then St>uth 83 degrees East 118 poles to a stake in the public road leading from Toxaway Baptist Church to Laurel Fork; then North 6 degrees East 16 poles to a red oak; then North 65 degrees East 60 poles to a small black pine on a ridge; thien North 63 de grees East 16 poles to a white oak on the south side oi Flat Creek of Toxa V ny river; then North 35 degrees degrees East 42 poles to a red oak. : cheaper how l^an it has been since Ae war starts. FLOORING CEILING SIDING WINDOWS DOORS Now is the time to build. We are looking for higher prices next year on everything in lum ber. We will sell you anything cheap for cash. Brevard Lumber Co. FRANK JENKINS, Prop. Phone 120 Near Depot CITY MARKET S. F. ALLISON, Proprietor, Our Grocery Department is stocked with the finest quality products that can be bought. \ Buy your Groceries from us. Two Phones: Nos. 47 and 51 Residence No. 124 CITY MARKET BREVARD, NORTH CAROUNA Deportments—College Praotratorv, Nirnil, ifasic, Bjsiasss, Dj mestlc Art, Household Economics, Agriculture. An departments are directed by teacheri wrth special traiaiag; ail large experience. They know their basines». Influences of the Institute are aloae worth the cost of tuition. Opens on September 3. gree? West 11 poles to a chestnut; then Sonfh 33 deg^^es West 4 1-2 poles .to a spanish oak fetuxi^; then J. D. Morgan s comer: then North i cir ^ ^ ^i x- J Txr • 1 X V * I South 55 degrees West 44 poles to 19 degrees 16 poles to a chest-' nut stump or. tho bank of the road; then North 3 c .grce» East 168 poles to a sp^tnish oak, crossing the public a cucumber; then South 30 pol^s to a maple, Ed HendrickV comer; th^ South to a stake in the J. E. Gallo- road; then North 48 degrees West ;^y jjug. with said line, South 43 poles to a white oiA at fork of j 3^ ti a>Iaek pine; ib« a branch; then up and with the^nghtl « , ^ ~ l»nd prong of odd branch. North j 4« «eBT«8 W«rt 24 poles to a 57 degrees East 32 poles to a white/«^Wte then South 21 degree* W. pine at the fork of a branch; -then up 22 poles to a spanish oak; then South •nd with the right hand prong of 7 degrees West 68 poles to a white -Aii tonch, 57 demes EaM then Sooth 44 degree. Wert SO poles to a wtote pme; then Norft ^ ^ ^ 8 degrees ^ poles to . sUke at creek «t To»*ay ri- 2r at the le fork of «d bwncfc! Iben Nort(i a«n Sorth 44 degree. Wat 8 degrees East 13 poles to a lurge ^ ^ beglBBing, eontM^ Honesty. **The bak«r*a boy was very If a cate was ten coits Wd say IQMIL The had.to stq;> . ‘*80me piopK started to psr .lb^ bQa^lvil|• GitMlrta^^^ opular in said branch; then North ‘1 degrees East 76 poleg to a white •ik between . Isaac Camp branch and « Grave Yard; then KoriJi 6$ de- West 82 ^les to black pine; rt North 46 ^degre^ poles icafjle": ^en, Norih 60 do ing B79 acres. Sale nisdc to satisfy add inddlrted nesiy eost and expenses sakt., TbSm Sept 27ih,^1921. ' WELOH GALLOWAY^ Tritttee. Me-4t Oct Hr, Go / Beware of Cheap Glasses Self-aelected store glasses or passes furnished by incompetent persons, is FALSE ECONOBIY. Value ^ur eyes at their true worth. Have them examined by us and wear the i^asses required. “YOU KNOW US** Optometrist n^ttOftAvie. pci«b aiNews offtce* r t' ' V - J.3

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