Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / May 19, 1922, edition 1 / Page 6
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THE BREVARD NEWS, BREVAR \<ORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY, MAY 19th, 19)22. Everything for Your BaldngNee^s ounM nren>ii. «•» I Good home made bread, biscuit and cookies always make a with husbands and kiddies. And they^re tic kled when you bake a delicious cake* If you are not getting as grood results as you would like to have, why not consult with us about the flour you are using. We have handled many different brands of flour and meal and know just which are eivins the best satis faction. We invite you to profitby our experience. S. F. ALLISON, Proprietor urance May me^n weeping in smoke or in sadness viewing the ruins of your home. But Insurance shows business ability. Means sat* isfaction in protection. Means Contentment of mind. Means the saving of a lifetime’s earnings. Means the comfort of old age. Destruction has visited your neighbor and our neighboring town — It awaits us.. Insure while it waits •— tomorrow may be too late. Brevard Insurance Agency T. H. GALLOWAY, Manager Brevard, N. C. .n."- ]• I’cr U T side of tlio . ' • and until i id.isfr; HUMAN The enormoiis ■ attached in Aim called the care of . made clearer <*\tr recognized oi) t!ie *> liintic that unless grapples with and soIvm's Its lir.r.i ir: problem there ran he no. peace j its rauks. The latest proof of tiiis! enthusiasm Is “PJul'elin 299” of the | United States Dei»iirtmr*nt of Labor | which iS' a “Guide to Organized Ko- j search in Eraployinent. Manrij-ment. ! Industrial Relations. Training and Working Conditions.” The voinuie con- | tains 199 pages devoted to short notes i on the hundreds of agencies, l»oth j state municipal, Industrial and i)rivate. i which are now laboring on this prob- i lem. Tlie study of eflicien^^y and fatigue at work is very well covered In America, as is also the sub.ie<*t of industrial hygiene and occupational disease, including whnt is called “in dustrial morbidity.” find accident pre vention. The impoi t:uice of this gr*^at j work Is only being realized now in this country says the London Times. It Is a new science of tl;e first magnitude: It provides, moreover, a real working baste of agreement between capital and labor. There is no finer antidote to the unrest now disturbing tlie world. The -only melon u get-rlch scheae “jrer cut was a citron. It is nof true that the world is flat. It merely seems so at times. A Judge often makes a short speech that reciuires a lot of time. The American inclination to try any thing once recruits the ranks of ad dicts. The danger to Fiume must Impose an awful strain on D’Annunzio’s poetic soul. The increasing sales of overalls In dicate that .things are* not so blue as they seem. Europe’s verdict is that diplomacy and Jazz do not mix. This looks to be indeed fortunate. Our Idea of a real scientist Is oae wlio can discover a sun spot on the buck yard garden. Telephone Orders Given Prompt Attention CITY MARKET The enormous advantage which the screen has over the spoken stage Is that In film drama you cannot hear the child actor speak. Of course, be ing a child actor is practically as i)ain- ful as being an ingt^nue. The weight of public opinion demands that such a performer must be cute continuously. A great mistake was made by the American Federation of Labor in fail ing to form a union which sljould in clude ail people engaged in tlie biisi- ness of being cute, writes Haywood Broun in Judge. Such a union could win terrific public support by coming out in favor of a two-and-(me-half-liour day for its members. I^img vaca tions would also b,e a popular de mand. Nobody can be cute 24 hours n day without straining hi?; neck. And ingenues of this type, as F. I*. A. has pertinently remarked, almost invari ably fall victims, sooner or lat^.l■, to fallen archness. Americans use an average of eight matches per day per person. Sounds like a matrimonial item. - I - ■ • If one-half of the visibl'e gold Is In th» hands of the United States the other half is in Its teeth. When a woumn says her husband Is the light of her life, he probably does not get out very often. We are told the modem dance is wonderful exercise. The reformers certainly are exercised about it. Russia having butted its head against a stone wall, blames capital ism for the presence of the wall. Prains and beauty so seldom go to- gether because as long as a woman has beauty she d(K?sn’t need l)rains. Anotlier question is whetlier that 13-month calendar ^would mean any Increase In the number of pay days. There a])pears to be an increasing, and a justifiable desire to know wlio is being relieved by the Russian relief. It is all very well to shout that bobbed hair must go. But Jiow, \m- less the flappers are forced to wear V.’IgS? I M. Briand is quoted as having* spoken disrespectfxdly of golf! In clear and ratlier unkindly reference to Mr. Lloyd George, the forme* French premier is reported to.have F:iid: “I-]ng- lishmen never cej'.se to .bo rjil- dren. Cannot you enjoy a roi;:uTy walk without hitting a silly little rub ber ball?” These be awful words in the ears of golfers, but—well, for non players of that ancient game they voice a perfectly i’omprehensible won der. Its charms are hidden in a deep mystery from the uninitiated, and only experience can reveal and teach them. M. Briand had excuse for not being in the best of tempers, and as a Bre ton, he naturally would not take to golf, but his opinion will not surprise quite so many people as golfers would like to believe. * rx jijj [□ZJ Modern Conveniences 1 Youf family deserves all the advan tages that your friends and neighbors provide for the^ So why not give them the popular conveniences of the modem home. Free them from the distaste of using old- fashioned equipment — out-of-date methods. Let them enjoy life to the fullest. We are prepared to install a complete water S5^tem in any home—large or smalL Let US figure on plumbing for yvur home now. Repair work done prompt ly, neatly and efficiently. NICHOLSON & DUCLOS Plumbing, Tinning and Sheet Metal Work TYPEWRITER RIBBONS On sale at i he News office. Let us supply you. Junior high school ]j^oys of Lexinf- ton, Ky., acquire skill In the manual- training department and put It to prac tical use at home as well as in the class-room, according -to the United States bureau of education. Some of the Jobs done at home by these boy# are the following: Mending a leaking roof, repairing fences, buHding garage, mending steps, screening house, in stalling electric lights, helping to re pair barn, papering rooms, staining and waxing iloors. The boys also made much of the furniture for the practice house used by the girls of the home economic classes. According to a German scholar. Sfcakespeare was a German and his name was Jacob Speer. The war is over! Amosjg other things that are return ing to .normalcy is the one-pound loaf, which is getting back toward five cents. Tlilrty Mexicans have started a re volt and since about 29 must be gen erals the rest of the “army” probaldy will retreat. It is now expected that Yap will be restored to a place In public attention more proportionate to its actual size and population. Our ideft of the prize pessimist Is the man who thinks the world Is going to pot because the woman is going to the rouge pot. In spite of aircraft, tanks and ma chine guns, the experts have decided that the doughboy behind the baycnet Is the real goods In war. A Shanghai dispatch sa.vs that a plan to overthrow the Peking govem- ment Is under way. But it won’t make much difference—they have plenty of other govexnments. —- - - , i—- A prominent educator complains that millions are being spent to educate de fectives, but nothing for geniuses. Well—if a genius needs any education he doesn’t need any help. Quebec proposes to encourage lit- j erature by offering annual prizes of i $25,000 for the best books written dur- | Ing each preceding year. The ques tion whether this will stimulate the production of better books or only make the same old kind a little more profitable remains, however, to be de termined b^ events. A wife*s suit for divorce was thrown out of court because she had forgotten what the charge \t^as that she brought against her husband, and the husband didn’t know just how she would take It if he stepped over and reminded he'r of it. Trotzky has issued a call to the troops to be in preparedness for a call at any moment. One report has it that the reply was: “All right; we will be—right after dinner.” King Boris of Bulgaria complains that his royal elephants eat too much hay. Why doesn’t he feed them on royal Bulgarian buttermilk, which tones up the system and adds to longevity? Lack of fimds has been reducing the student enrollment at the universiiies. It sliouid be remembered that the rush for the higher education was one of the best of the phenomena that accom panied tlie siik-sh^rt era. * At the Harv^d observatory they have discov^ed tlmt a big abandoned telescope is Mseftil for measuring the heat of stars. >^!Sut can they utilize that heat, now tbat the gas is getting low? *’• / A court has held that payment for | liquor with a bad check is no crime, i But buying liquor with a good check ; Is a crime, ipn’t it? Things are get- j ting all mixed up. i And to think, if somebody had L*allf-’ grant''r>oit:fv j ttapper, VO! • I vv.iuid have ■dllf>(' s. NOTICE—LAND SALE BY COM MISSIONER Ey virtue of the power and au thority to me directed by the Clerk of the Superior Court of' Transyl vania county, N. C., in a special pro ceeding ponding in said court entitl ed: “A. R. Tinsley et al. vs. T. E. Gas ton et al.* I will sell to the highest bidder for cash at the Court House (’cor in the town of Brevard, N. C., on Jlonday June 5, 1922. at eleven o'clock A. M. all the following de scribed lands and premises: FIRST TRACT: Lying in the town of Brevard, N. C., on the south side of King’s creek, adjoining lands of Mrs. M. A. Cooper, et al., and bound ed as follows: BEGINNING on a stake in the center of King^s creek, at or near the ford of said creek where the road leadmg from Whit mire street to Mount Surprise cross es said cr. ^k. and run,3 then with the old Coopcr-King line, S. 3 degrees west 190 ff'et to a stake; then south 70 and one-half degrees east 254 feot to a take on the bank of the mi’l race; ^h«n down and with the north b?v.' -hr' ■ tances: h "’d of the said Breese mill ■r.ving courses and dis- ^olr -half degrees ' 'legrees east east 100 feet; HTLnS PORTLAND CEMENT PERMANENCE means ^ONOMY. t^ermanent fencing protects both stodc and cxops, snd reduces labor. Perma^ ncnt feccKng floors save food and save stodc hedth. Farmiag, like any other indastxyr shows greatest profits ficom proper equ^ ment. Your local building 'material dealer dtatrvt* much of the credit for modem fsum constructioB* His tied up ia comparatively ilow moving building materials, has kept on hand the means of community izt^Mxivemeote Withsuchan investment on his part he natur ally has selected such materiab as he could safiel^ depend on. For concrete construction, whether fence posts, feeding floc|ts or siloi^ he is to recommcnd Adas Portland Cement, **theSflld«lJ by v/hxh ell other makes are meaMued.** THE ATLAS PORTLAND GBMSIT COMPANY Sdks Offiees: New York—Boston—Pbilad^lMa ! Nosthampton, Pa.—Hudaoo, N. Y.—Leeds, All* Statidard bp which _ allotherMskes are measuiea^ ATLAS \ CEMENT Southern Railway System Spring Outing To Washington, D. C. May 26-29, 1922. The Southern Railway will sell round trip tickets to Washin^on, D. C. on May 26th, with final return limit tp leave Wash- ngton on any regular train (except No. 37) on or before 9:50 P. M., May 29th. SCHEDULE Train No. 12, Leave Asheville, 2:25 P. M., May 26th. Train No. 32, Arrive Washington, 7:30 A. M., May 30th Tickets good in sleeping cars when Pullman accomodations purchased. Spe cial sleeping csurs from Asheville and Char lotte. Following rates will apply from sta tions in Western North Carolina! Asheville, Biltmore and Arden, $12.00 Fletcher * . . $12.50 Hendersor^ville and Flat Rock • •. . .$13.00 Brevard and Saluda, $13«50 Tryon and Rosman, $14.00 Lake Toxaway $14.50 Three full days in the National Capi tol, an opportunity to see Congress in ses- sioji and visit the public buildings, Arling- \ton Cemetery and many other points of historical interest. New York and Wash ington will be playing in Washington dur ing this week and Babe Ruth will be in the game. No more attractive outing will be of fered the people this season. For further information, apply to your Local Agent, or write % J. H. WOOD Division Passenger Agent Asheville, N. C. 1 south 56 degrees east 40 feet; south 82 and one-half degrees east 115 feet to a stake at the southwest cor ner of the T. H. Shipman lot; then with the line of said lot, north 36 degrees east 270 feet to a stake in the center of said King’s creek; then up and with the center of said King's creek to the point of beginning, con taining three acres, more or less. On this tract there is a cottage house. SECOND TRACT: Lying on Long Branch, Brevard township: Begin ning on a chestnut on the north bank of an old road leading to King’s mill and runs north 59 and one-half degrees east 37 poles to a stake in said road; then along and with said road the follo\Wng courses and dis tances: south 2 degrees east 4 poles; south 22 degrees east 12 poles; south 38 and one-half east 7 poles; then with the line of G. F. Marshall tract south 55 and one-half degrees west 30 poles to a small chestnut in the Cooper line; then north 35 degrees west 23 poles to a stake.formerly a white ^ak; then west 1 pole to the beginning, containing two acres, more or less. THIRD TRACT: Lying on Long Branch above the I. C. Tinsley old residence; Beginning on a bunch of maples on the east side of .the branch, the I. C. Tinsley corner, runs with the Tinsley line, N. 45 deg. E. 39 poles to a small black oak near top of the ridge; then N. 44 deg. W. 46 1-2 poles to a small spanish oak; then S. 16 1-2 deg. W. 41 poles to a stone in a hollow; S. 12 deg. E. 5 poles to .i chestnut; S. 32 deg. E. 10 poles to a stake; S. 35 1-2 deg. E. 6 1-2 pohes to a maple on east bank of the branch then crossing the branch S. 15 deg. W. 1 pole and 5 links to a chestnut; S. 21 1-2 deg. E, 4 poles to a whito oak; S. 1 deg. E. 5 poles and 20 link.^ to a stake; S. 17 deg. E. 5 poles to a white oak; then with east margin or road 9 poles and 20 links to a stake; then east 13 links to a stake in the Cooper line; then with said line. N. 8 deg. E. 12 poles to a stake in the branch; then up and with said branch 11 poles to the beginninpr, containing 8 3-4 acres, more or less. Sale made on the following terms: Terms of sale will be all cash whe:r sale is confirmed. A deposit of 1'^ per cent of the bid made will be paid on day of sale. This April 24th, 1922. WELCH GALLOWAY. Comnio- sioner. 5-19-w<?.
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 19, 1922, edition 1
6
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