Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Feb. 2, 1923, edition 1 / Page 6
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1923 THE BREVARD NEWS, BREVAR D, NORTH CAROLINA THE BREVARD NEWS. Published every Friday and enter ed at Postoffice at Brevard, N. C, as Second Class Matter. Win. A. BAND . ... . . . . . . Editor, SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (Subscriptions payable in advance) One year $1.50 Six months .... $1.00 Thre Months .T.. .... ... .50 1 wo mon ths .35 ADVERTISING RATES Display, per column inch .... ' .30c Minimum Rate For Display Adver tisements '. $1.00 Reading Notices, per line .... .10c Want Column Notices, per line ..5c We charge 5 cents a line fair Cards of Thanks, Resolutions of Respect and for notices of entertainments where admission is charged. Address All Communications To The Brevard News: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1923 Money talks, but la llussla If mall talk. Some of these round-the-world nyl mtors must suffer terribly from tired feet. S It is not always the spooniest per sons who make the mot stirring re marks. There's all the difference In the world between a stout woman and a fut one. "Robespierre not a Trot.ky." Head line. No old Kobie was a cheap piker beside Leon. Germany is attempting to stop the sale of furs to outsiders, realizing that it Is a cold world. When a grass widow begins to pity a married man, the poor simp is be ginning to, need it. "Dodging automobiles Is a healthful exercise," says u physician. "If you are successful in the dodging." It must be dclight'ul to drive an airplane straight ahead and not have detour everv ten miles. Pailerewski with a cold must be a very cautious statesman. If he sneeze Jit is (juite apt to be misquoted. The movement to limit the age of jokes can make a good start by lim iting the jokes on women's ages. Montreal is first in the field with a "No-Longer Skirt league" to stick to current fashions. Line forms on this .side. The meek may inherit the earth, but the rent they now pay would indicate that they are buying it on the Install ment plan! About the time a man begins to iiave some hazy notions on the income tax along coiaes the changes in the football rules. Many fathers are complaining about the exorbitant prices for coal, but wait until they get the college boy's ex Ien.s?s for "books." The perils which a motion picture HCtor faces for film purposes are large ly artificial. The studio has its real : personal dangers, nevertheless. One trouble about golf Is that n fellow always makes the best shots when playing alone-, and nobody be- llevcs the tale he tells about them. The king of Siain could hardly b railed a chip off te old block; his father had 3l0 wives and he is Just marrying at the age of forty-seven. Pays for itself in time and labor saved and the progressive farmer buys that machinery with money saved by modern banking methods, A checking aexunt shows the way educates to buisnss methods, establishes NOT GUILTY OF BEING "USED' Naturally the Editor of a news paper is only human and yet in spite of every precaution to eliminate cheap propaganda from their newspaper col umns, occasionally some unscrupulous jay will put accross what looks like a good news item and maybe misleading propaganda. It takes a mighty clever newspaper publisher to always be able to distinguish between an advertise ment, propaganda or news. The Bre vard News, under the present manage ment, has never intentionally pub ,isheij any propaganda, misleading or otherwise. Nor are we at all interested in the career of any law yer or his petty cases. We do print the news or as much as our limited vocabulary will permit and if sorne one accuses us of being some onee's "puppy dog" or the mouthpiece for any corporations, rings, etc., he does the present editor an injustice and we can only plead not guilty and frankly say that we are not pulling anyone's 'chestnuts out of the fire'. MR. SHIPMAN OPTIMISTIC Thos. II. Shipman, who returned last Thursday from a ten days nor thern business trip, says a general revival in business conditions seems :o be in progress all over the United States. lie further stated that fioin inter views with leading national financiers there seems to be a growing senti ment among the northern capitalists to invest vast sums in the Southern states. "There are many good rea sons for this," says Mr. Shipman. "The forty-four hour work day adopt ed by many of the Northern skilled iabor unions, the splendid all year round Southern climate, excellent working conditions and vast undevel oped resources to-gether with the raw material are the main factors in this movement according to the bank or. "Tom" pointed out that the wond erful undeveloped water-power pos sibilities of Western North Carolina and especially in "The Land of Water falls" was attracting considerable in terest by those who are interested in future power sites. He waxed en; thusiastic in his predictions that we had a wonderful future in our county if we can locate and establish manu facturing industries here. He spoke in a very serious manner of the splen did opportunity the citizens of this community have if they will continue to stand shoulder to shoulder and work in harness for a greater coirnty, and he deplored the fact that there were not, at the present time, a great er movement to inaugurate more power in order that we could speed up the location of greater annual weekly payrolls. He pointed out .hat cheap power was one of the greatest factors in establishing indus ries. CARD OF THANKS Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Zachnry wish to thank their many friends and neigh bors for the kindness and sympathy and floral gifts during the illness and death of their little daughter. Every minute of day and night, 32, 334 letters are dropped into mail boxes. The total is 1,400,000 an hour. Small wonder, that a letter occasion ally goes astray. Our destructive sense rages at these Isolated delays. ! It rarely occurs to us to give credit ! for the vast majority that are de j llvered on time, for the constructive ! instinct has not yet conquered the de ! structlve tendency in man's brain. Ob serving a few isolated cases, we ae j eept them as applying geuerrillyr crlme in particular. Mordern Farming Machinery TRANSYLVANIA MAN RE CEIVES MUCH PRAISE We find in a copy of a little pub lication "The Survey" featured on the front page a Brevard native son, W. J. Scruggs. Mr. Scruggs has made a mighty creditable record with The National Map organization dur- ing the past three years and he is ; going to be with them again this sum- j mer. He finishes the first two years j in medical work at the University of j North Carolina in June and is going j t0 complete his education either at j the University of Pennsylvania or Jef ferson Medical College at Philadel phia. Very truly yours, NATIONAL MAP COMPANY Fred Jones, Asst. Mgr. HEALTH ARTICLE There are at least 500,000 people m North Carolina who pass a large!10 nic inou?n ne Knew ne naa im part of the ir lives in that twilitrht ! umphed and had thus justified the zone between being really well and ! recognizably sick. They are impair ed in body and spirit by constipation an 1 that miscellaneous group of ills uvually designated indigestion. In telligent people from the class in which thev exist and elevate them to that group of the population which j is really healthy and vigorous. But these are only a small part of the population of the state who suffer from mistakes of diet. Of the large number who each year are sick abed, and of the nearly thirty thousand who : annually die, certainly most are the ; victims of a system of faulty nutri tion. "You cannot maintain an Al nation with a C3 papulation," declared Da- vid Lloyd George, ex-premier of j eoveted caress of the lips was be Great Britain. And you cannot raise J ?towed on the cheek and also on the the standard of the population with- foorhead of the illustrious naval corn out improving the diet. Here in ! mander, who thereupon sank to his North Carolina we are paying Hhe j penalty of having concentrated too j heavily on meat and bread, and ex I eluded milk and vegetables, j The human body needs three kinds I of food: fuel food, building or re- pair food, and regulating food. It ! is very much like an automobile en I gine, to do the best work it must have the rig:ht mixture and the proper ! quantity. Two essentials that must be pre- sent in the diet are a variety of min- oral salts, as lime, iron and phospor- ous and vitamines. These are found : in abundance in milk and in the green 1 vegetables which grow so readily in North Carolina soil. Tomatoes, cab : bage, carrots, culiflower, celery, let tuce, onions, parsnips, fresh peas, and both white and sweet potatoes, are all rich in vitamines, and in ad dition contain more or less the im portant mineral salts: that are so neces sary to good health. Moreover, they contain these mineral salts in a read ily assimilable form, prepared by Na iture for human need?. ; Bulky foods are also necessary in order that the digestive system may , b even as the kn.eat Enfriish Admir properly function, and the wastes of al desired to receive from the belov the body be eliminated. These are j (d Hardy, a token of his love and af provided by the leafy vegetables, j fection. May we, too, fall asleep which therefore counteract constipa- ; tion, giving adequate work to teeth jaws, stomach and bowels. j The time spent in making a garden I and producing for the family tables j the various vegetables so easily grown j in this State, whether it be on the farm or in the town, is a wise invest ment in tho health- of the family, and the "Live-at-Home"" policy advocated for the farmers of Xorth Carolina is not more important even from the economic standpoint than from the standpoint of health and physical ef ficiency. Sineerely, W. J. WALLIS. mil i ml ( ( BAnrt I BrevardBanKiiig Company THE PRAYER CORNER THE DEMONSTRATIVE" Love dies, or at least languishes without expression, and, however cold some may be constitutionally; they like to see the demonstrative, and the pulse quickens at the exper- ience of some endearment. What is needed in the home, in society, in religion is less of tne self- ! contained and secretive life and more 0f the demonstrative. Christ Him self is not above desiring some mani festation of the deep devotion that may be burning in the human heart. The greatest of earfh never outgrows a yearning for the affectionate. This is illustrated in the case of Lord Nelson, the great English Ad miral, when he received his mortal wound at Trafalgar, and when he i was carried oy viarines down below 1' j 1 1 V 1 1 , ,. "ming of his flag ship "The Victory," which still swings in Portsmouth Bar- fin, lit; . - ann;u LU r-t: iidi , 111.1 chief subordinate, who ,for a while, could not leave the deck where, under his direction, the histori-.- sea fight was being fought to a finish, and En- Kami's supremacy on the ocean was being fullv established. But at last the dying hero was per mitted to see the beloved Hardy, to hear from him of the victory complet ed, and there, ere his spirit took its flight, with a touch of nature which makes the whole world kin, he made that pathetic request at which many eves have since moistened; namely, "Kiss me Hardy." Amid a flood of emotions which the sturdy mariner could not repress the final rest like a child falling asleep, after a mother's loving good night. The captain of our salvation doubt less desires to receive from us some token of what our inner feeling to ward Him may be. Impression should always be followed by expression. A PRAYER Our Blessed God and Father, we know that expression is a law of Christian life and growth, and there fore the Psalmist says: "Oh that men would praise the Lord for His Good ness." We know we ought to praise- Thee as well as one another, for that is something which even Thou dost crave, and hence the command. Let the redeemed of the Lord say so: "What we need in the home, in so ciety and in church is less of the self centered and secretive life and more ! of the demonstrative." We know that Christ Himself is not above desir j ing some manifestation of the deep , devotion that may be burning in our hearts. Oh Thou great Captain of ; our Salvation, Thou dost desire to receive front as some token of what i our inner feelings towards Thee mav l with Thy kisg of love and peace upon our lips. In Thy beloved name we ask it, Amen. C. D. C. overseer m an Ka stern school naw announced anat gambling will warrnn the dismissal tf a student. It appea. that no ook ever worked his way through cotlege waiting on a greea baize table-.. Chicago, doctor claims that wWa people liie together for years t'fty begin to look alike. You've hoards that bef.vjre, but have you yet seea an aged couple that you couldn'6 leU mn rf ? Wholesale Human. Mutilation. Forty thousand pairs of ears and 40,000 noses, the war trophies of that famous and painfully thorough Japa nese General Illdeyoshl, lie beneath the plain stone marker and grass grown mound of. the "Mimi-Zuka," or Ear tomb, a short distance from one , of Kioto's maln streets- iney were cieposnea mere as evi dence of the valor and success of Illde voshi's expert carvers, and also to serve as emphatic warning of the fate nil who crossed that determined war- ! rlor misrht exneet. The ears and noses are not, how ever, the bounty of any recent exploit. Illdeyoshl was the strong man of Japan more than three centuries ago, and his gruesome trophies were once the valued property of 40,000 Koreans who had foolishly resisted the Japa nese general's invasion of their native land. If those pessimists who are bewail ing the white-livered coniplexyn of tlx- times would think some original, progressive and constructive thought j they might Unci the public gratifyingly I appreciative, ! !! J ft I iversiTiSQ ads. j FOR SALE I have one or two first class second nana cars lor sale at bargain. See J. W. Burnett. 4tc. a LOST Heavy laprobe; red; yellow and black stripes. Return to News Office or Mr. Ralph Zachary. ltpd. WANTED Care taker for summer j camp. Can use man or man and ; son. Write giving references and ' salary wanted. TOXAWAY CAMP ; Lake Toxaway, N. C. ; LOST Bunch of Keys, either in Post Office or on Streets of Brevard. Finder return to C. E. Orr and re ceive reward. . ltc. LOST A four-bladed, black handled knife with place on side for ini tials. If found please return to News Office and receive reward. DOGWOOD WANTED Paying highest prices. Sixteen dollars and up. Cash as delivered at mill or on railroad siding. Car load lots. Brevard Manufacturing Co., V. Fontaine, Manager. tfc. FOR SALE FORD TOURING CAR as good as new ( guaranteed.) to be. Reasonable. Apply News Office. WANTED SALESMAN for Transyl vania to sell lubricating ail direct to automobile owners. One with car preferred. Good pay. For particu lars write C. E. Rogers, Box 1064, Greensboro, N. C. If it isn't an Eastman, it isn't a Kodak. If it isn't a Kodak, it isn't Autographic. If it isn't Autographic, it isn't up-to-date. Hence: If it isn't an Eastman, it isn't up-to-date. All 1923 Kodaks and Folding Brownies are Auto graphic. We have an up-to-date line of Kodaks and Sup plies and we are always glad to show them. FRANK D. CLEMENT The Hallmark Jeweler credit, and it obviates money loss by fire or theft and aids in many other valuable ways. We welcome the banking accounts of farmers, and aid in furthering their every interest Mail inquires are solicited. Southern Railway System Special Round Trip Rates To NEW ORLEANS, LA., MOBILE. ALA. and PENSACOLA, FLA. ACCOUNT ardi Gras February 6 to 1 3 1922 Account of the above occa sions, tickets will be sold to New Orleans and return. Selling dates February 6th to 13th, inclusive, final limit Feb ruary 20th. Tickets may be extended to March 7th upon application to Special Agent, 708 Common Street, New Or leans, and payment of $1.00. Round trip fare from Bre vard to New Orleans $40.41, this being one and one-half the regular one-way fare- Proportionately lower rates from other stations. Stop-overs permitted on go ing and return journeys. Special round-trip tickets also on sale to Mobile, Ala., and Pensacola, Fla., account Mardi Gras Celebrations. For further information con sult ticket agents, or address the undersigned. J. H. WOOD, Division Passenger Agent, 42 Haywood Street, Asheville, N. C. "In the Land' -f Waterfalls' The Autographic Kodak i Celebration
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
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Feb. 2, 1923, edition 1
6
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