Df; SESSION OF $ 'J ? . m 8 " * SUPERIOR COURT 8$ fix * i -vlfef?-; ^ ZZc^pA B (Continued From Front Page) ing of other records of th? court. No man <*n be mdr# accurate irt'the ;? i, writing of bjanotes than H*. i;' JvEva. ... M* ? $/; \% Without a single exception he has always been courteous and polite jft&fwd serves wpll all parties eoncern 4 ?d in the work at hand. Jt i? the . wish pi this bar th*t Mr. ft Ev.? may live long and qiway8 be our ? stenographer; that he may enjoy I srrttsWLiaL.tr ty and Brevard. ' ' 'V'TJg., j "T> ' '' Long may the health, wealth and enjoyment be with our good friend. That a copy of tbia resolution be ?prefed upon the siinutea of thia cpurt hnd that a copy may be furn ished Our truaty friend, ,fir. Eve, of Aahville. '? NICHOLSON . HOLDEN ?r P. N. Nicholson and. Cora Lee Holden. were married Saturday, Apr by Rev. Wallace Hartaell at the Pa?tortym. .v ?' .7'" 1 w' ":;<? ? ??????I TO RENT FOR SUMMER 8~' Room dwelling' Completely furnished All modern conveniencea T. jd. GALLOWAY I r\ J \r j c " ~r your Vegetables todav for JtlUKMJJtY / [7z> fiAn'f ri^Wl l4AnVAHl. 'D^.L^L ? ' ? ? --L Jnut in City Water The many advantages k h&vin?- c'-y Your house? your garden ? your lawn ?your -by, or your gorege will b, dent fited in nteny ways by, having city water. ? * ? free of charge, and then you v&ktXw ly how Utile it cost# to have thla oonvenience. 5* ^ '? V^fc do all kinus of ?a 1 ..psir work ' g NICHOLSON & ; npHIS .js a picture of an X English bakery of the fifteenth century. That was a long time ago and things .'have changed since then. Among these changes is that of preparing food. We know how to make ? ?; *1 Bread and Rolls of a kind that makes eating a pleasure for the people of this community. They have the home flavor, and their use avoids the drudgery of home baking. They invariably bring our customers back for more. If: Qpality and cleanliness are the twin mottoes of this bakery at all t'ne$. PHILLIPP'S BAKERY Telephone 24 Brevard, N. C. kosman locals ? j Bom to Rev. and Mrs. Capps* April 18 a twelve pound boy. Mrs. Myrtle Southerlin of Travel er>8 R*?t s. c. visited her parents | Mr an* W. P. Ho?.ed last .week. ? 1 , Mr. J. R.1 Meece motored to Pick ens S. C. one day tat week. Craig Whitmire has moved into hi? new barber shop, ' Mir. Loui^ Galloway has returned home after spending quite awhile n the Brevard Hospital. ' Milton Batson who spent the win ;er in West Palm Beach Flu. is visi ting relatives here this week. JTho Boy Scouts of Brevard enter tained the Rosman school last Fri day night. The entertainment was enjoyed by ell who were present. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Gantt on April 28, a son. Dr. G. B. Lynch and We' have, ?woved to Brevard. 1 Bob Zaghary of Brevard was a Rosman Vlrftor Sunday afternoon. NATIONAL MUSIC WEEK MAY 4 _ 10. 4 I ' -'I. i ' ii ^ V k fi ' Tj?e value to the nittKm of the broadening and deepenning jof the love for music, even in a single com munity, 1b very great. National music week aiming to accomplish this result in hundreds ;and ultimately thousands of com-l munities throughout the land, has a potential value great almost be yond calculation. " The great central thought of Na-> tipnal music woek Utttftt every one can participate, whether ?it be to step accross the street to hear in persofi, the fiatnoua star^sing grand opera in the great metropolitan centen or to. have recourse to the phonograph or radio;- whether it be a community sing frt which all ?urn out.'or as a member of a fami ly group of two or three in the borne. Let the Schools, clubs and Chur ches do something to ishow. their iri terest in this National Music Week. Let each pay tribute in his own W and receive the message - of mueic and pass it on to some unju wakened spul. "Hail to America's Ant National Music Weekl". Mrs. O. L. Erwin President. Music Lovers . Club. ' ' .'T . - : ?-????? FOR SALE frill have, plenty of sweet pouto slips ready for sale by May 26, See C. M. Siniard lpd CONCERT BY CHORAL SOCIETY OF BREVARD ? On Saturday evening May 8 at *ight fifteen the Brevard Choral So ciety will give tiieir first concert in the Hfgh School Auditorium. \ This organization ?n? jTffC?" Wit fall and the interest h^t^Swi'uH til nowNt is one of the most,' vital activities of the community. In this concert,, the Choral Soci ety is especially proud to .present Mr. Ccrl Beher, an artist of Ash Ville, who will assist, fcy. giving' sev eral number? on the Cellp.^r ;j- tlr. Crosby Adams' whrT has train the Choral Society will conduct tic* conccrt Nvith Adaa3.at the' piano. ? ' ,V a. participants are desirous of having.-? full house to greet Uiem at their first eoncert. Tickcte on sale at Drug Stores 25 & 85 centa. Re served seats 50 cents. v? v \ GLENN E. LATHROP " , =r ?r ? (Continued From Front Page) physical condition to conserve his strength, the closing of business houses.of the Town, the throng of citizens standing outside the church unable to secure seats, all bore tes timony to the esteem In -which this townsman held. The escorting of the body to Vermont to rest beside his parents, by prominent business men, one of whom \fcaa an especially appointed representative of the "ity Officials, Was n t-r'b"* oaid to. one of "our ctlr" So there ^ parse-) frc-r r man whose citizenship > s<i. ed as of the highest, a po i-s.ied e! * i tain gentleman, much t.r .!? <!<1, \ ?ead, a deqp stuient of tfe world' \f fairs, a leader ?& his relisrious cir cles of charming personality. ? He came into our community unknown to most of us, he went out of it mou rned by all. The writer enjoyed a ' priviler< that does not fall to every youn' man, that of being numbered anion - the friends of the man whos? mep i ory will long live in the hearts o: our people. D. G War I Ted Clement has r .-trre'! * Greenville after spend *if? ,VP \- end in town. \ ? r 1 Let i . I X' ? ZEEPER OF THE MAfiOHURlA 1 Fifty years at sea is a lecord that ? retiring captain may talk about with out vanity, especially when he made hlH first' voyage at1 the tender age of ten. Phyalcftll#, Captain Zepdervof <tho Manchuria must be aa hard as teak.' Ltke sailors who , have knocked about , the world with a -heart for any fate, taking tie blows of cir cumstances as part ot the day's work, be wanted to retire inarticulate, saye the Indianapolis Star. But that could never be permitted by readers of Clark Russell andL Joseph Conrad. Such a man owes {he duty of reminiscence to mankind. It will surprise no lover otj the rpmnntlc to learn that Adrian. Zee tier ran away to sea. The surprising thing Is" thaf he made. a profession ol It after one voyage on a 75-ton fishing schooner trading to Mozambique unci Madagascar. A small boy who could I stick It otit was bound to go to the top. 1 . And so, when less ttym thirty, Zeeder I ?was captain of a ssailing ship In the j China trade. But he had to qualify I hy the searching test of proving litna-l self a flr^t mate wI(o could whip, any body on board. "It -was a hard1 life,' 'I be says, ,Jand a mate liad, to .04 tough to get along." As a sklpp^r/r^to/lUs six feet of brnwn, he seems to have de served the name of "King" ZeAtfer. A I man who could tak* his ship., Into I Hongkong harbor during a typhoon I that made a hundred Steamships keep I their distance In deep water, laboring to wear the storm "out, was worthy to be ^elebrat^d In the China seas. Wli)b j the genius of a Conrad what stales 1 Adrian Zeeder could have to tell! . I Cities of southern Sjweden were I among tlie greatest commercial centers pf the civilized world during the Mid- 1 die Ages. Stockholm and Lund ranked wlm London and Paris. They absorbed the commerce of the northern seas and I were the admiration of thousands of 1 travelers and merchants who passed I through them and, trafficked with them. Later Sweden was th$ great military power of northern Europe. The am bassadors of the Swedish kings were received with .the ntniopt deference In every court. -'Ber soldiers won great battles and ended mighty wars. The England of Cromwell and Charles II. was nnlipportant andvisolated In com parison. with thU northern kingdom, which could pour forth armies of gi gantic blonde warriors headed by brave' and ^stute generals. Sweden Is today a peaceful ^kingdom. Even the , secesslon .of Norway "was accomplished ! without f bloodshed. Deilmark once | domineered and tyrannised over both kingdoms.' { r-1 ? ; The ?deen of Spain was the princi pal singer on a program of entertnln nienf for the 'sailor* of the.dread naught(. Jaime prllnero. Queen Vlcto- 1 is British ahd she knows what Is cnlated. to make royalty popular.] She has that knack froA. her relatives , In. Engl aid. The prince W Wales and ; ibe rbyal family there have always, been ? amazingly democratic. They, -kSow, perhaps better thto anyone else, ?that' the English people are at heart republican, but that they like to main, tain the old trappings of royalty and the crown as a link of empire. They know, also, that the English national,! character is loath to part with old eo tab li shed forms and customs, but that f 11 when It Is once decided thut something must go by the board they do not hesl tate to be drastic. ! ? ? - ? j Obenmmergau, the peaceful Ba-I ?Brian town where ^yery ten years the Passion plays are staged/- Intends to erect a monument "to the United State* f >r the -generosity shown to their fel- j low villagers, now on tour here. Over | the portals of the , new University ot j t Louvaln stands this inscription In Latin : "Destroyed by Teutonic furor, ^ rebuilt through American generosity." In Ros?la they are planning a memo rial to' Herbert Hoover, who directed the American famine relief two years" ago, and in Latvia they have already a large mpntiment to the American Red Crosg workers. ? .1 / ? h , '"T'r ? -*'* BfltLEY FOR FAIR FREIGHT RATES Deolarss In Opening Speech at Raleigh ' That*Obtalnlng Justice In Freight ' Rates WW Qo FSr T^waU. V Settling Our* Tax Problems. ; Raleigh.? In dusewrting the freight rate aihiatlon In hla opening speech In Raleigh, Mr. Joshlah W. Bailey, .Candidate for the ndmJ|uatlon lor Qov irnor, said 'in fytt: , '* dne of Nor^h" Carolina's *ro?twit handicaps tt^adv.6PMr 1 and' unfair freight rates. Everybody pays freight rates. We hive no big <?lties because we have no througb-rates from the West to the sea. ; If Raleigh, Greens boro, Charlotte, |Ashevllle, Wilming ton, Wlneton-Salem and Durham were ouch cities otmOMO population and there were Commensurate urban populations ' at other points, our agri cultural problem would' be half-solved; and our tax projblem Would bp much simplified. Our farmers would hava markets. Where they new have a 60 50 relation to th* population, there would be a 25-15 relation. We are due to hare such cities. , , For 17, years tke ^tot4 took no action to set aside theuntawfpl sale and dis memberment of thaCfipe Fear * Yad kin Valley by fhe Atlantic Coast Line an Southern Railway; and when it -did take action, a? act of the legisla ture of 1899 was pleaded against the State. The Attorney-Generaf - of "this State ' swears In the complaint In this action, that the sale ot the C. P. A Y. V. was fraudulent, (hat the dismember ment of It wa* unlawful, and that the Act of 1899 was a fraud and a decep tion. The Act was fcrawn by Atlantic Coast Line attorneys. We were a long time finding 'tfiW out, or a long time telling It, bat all will be Irell if we can get back the C. T. * Y. V. and make of It a great trunk-line from Wilmington to Mt. Afry, connecting With the N. * W: and penetrating the' coal fields and the Mlddle West, and thereby obtaining a throu*h-line.and a through-rate of freight ? and. so reduc ing freight charges throughout the State. If we cannot do this la the eoorts, then we must take other measures. We mast have a through line to deep water and s through rate. North Car olina must herve Justice la freight rates.. Thp- dlscrimintlons la favof of Vir ginia citlefc imd against North Caro lina cities ln. the . matter of freight rates 'Is wl&odt a parallel ,ln Ameri ca. -,i ? Virginia Cities Favored By Freight Rate* at Expense Thle State. Virginia pittefc sell North Carolina made j&ods aD "over North /Carolina, because those- cities JjaTeJow dl^trl buting.ni.tes ovor' larger territory than apy ' Nbrth Ckrollnit. 'eHy ha*. Tfcft freight rate from Chicago on shoes, meat, canned goods, farming imple ments, and automobiles ranges from $30.00 to *190.00 per carload in favor of Virgin!# cities agatast. North Car Oliqa MOes. v We 'are paying probably not'les* &Mi f 10, 000, 000 pef 'ioA ' *ore in freight than we should pay If we had a through-line and a through-rati from the Middle West and the coal fields to dgep-water. And no man can measure the loss fn business. ' There are moro people . w|thln 50 miles of Charlotte, Winston-Salem. Greensboro, Raleigh or almost '? any o;her North Carolina point than, there are- within 50 miles of Richmond' of Lynchburg. But Rlchmou/l nnd other Virginia citl03 arc selling .North lini, tows. Carolina-made damafks, dentin., w?. ... els, socks, underwear and overall*, all ovfer North Carolina. Why? There la but one answer-freight rates. . The freight <jn fresh oystefg ship ped from Morehead City to Kansaf City is 17 cent# more per gallon than It Is on , oystors shipped from iialtlmore to Kansas City. How cai} we hope to develop thfc wealth of this State against such pfldCTaj>,' North Carolina has the. power to ?n8??i net justice for our people from tfck railroads, Let us pot be content with illlng petitions. bet us have demand* and action to tfult tbe case. The rail roads are not more powerful tb*n commonwealth. We are pot helpless, ind they know It. ' \ A proper settlement of this matter jf unjust freight charges will settle v o\\t tax difficulties, and will set the - whole State on the road to magnifi cent material progress. ?; '? /; Again to sum up. Hera la an issue to be decided June 7, 1924. Shal) the full power of this com ( men wealth be exerted to exact justice tor. the people of North Carolina in the matter of frelghkratest What you do on June 7tb will settle this questionT^ilM what you do in the . November election. )?, Before I finish I must say a word about the standard of progress. After all, It la not the structnrea we build. Towers palaces and millionaires are not the evidences of , progress. Often they are tjie signs of decay. should measure our progress by what la being done for the children in the cottages ? in the 460,000 homes that < > live upon less, than $2,000 per yeaj?-T ' 850, 001^ off them on less than $1,000 i per year. Are their fathers. and moth ers getting, ahead? Is home-owner ship Increasing? Are 1 Incomes' of : these homes Increasing? We must measure our progress not by the number of millionaires In tfca State, but ' .by tho number of happy homes. It! Is Ours to make of North Carolina the best place in. the world for men and women and children ta.'^^W live in. . Thli 14 the only polities. Thtm is tho new politics 'throughout world., Government based on author-x .lty, rathei- fl^an JOatlce trf; the 1 stdi yldual " privilege1; j litfrttuMtyi It muqt pass likewise in North Cam:, Una. It Will pass. Tha will ol God is agalnst It We have had enough of politic* oft selfishness and power and pelf and glory. The whole world Is; sick, anU weary ot that sort of politics, and all the people ot the earth are risln* uw 'and taking charge "of. their - gov era,, ments. It is so in Europe.; It is'sb Japan. -It la beginning to be w Ik China even. The bosses and machines^ Will fall In America just aa. tJm-< thrones and the lords have fallen i? the Old World. - There Is a neW. see the world over. Its prophet paasad w v tew weeks, ago, but his wort will a*. Wrf ' ? JMtiST-. crat Indeed, and he gave to the Dew>-? cratlc party In American- and Den?i?-i-/.'f hopo lor progress lwt-? ^ , , politicians, the machines' ind th?? bosses. They interpret politic? 1b terms of aelf-servlce. All the progiw? i . that ever, wa3 achieved was achlo^arffe; by the people, framing aa- 1hi% pouslng a cause, and demanding 'a*:, answer. We have had enough In .Amrelca/ tt* awaken us. \ We have had enough la North <*?"' Una to awaken us. , ?V We shall have our day June T,' J Many in America Completely Hypnotized fyr the Communist Propaganda > By SECRETARY HUGHES, Before Canadian Bar Association- ' ,,4 .. . . - - r?CTM-. ANY persons- in the United States who have managed to make for^ themselves reputations in the intellectual world have been so completely hypnotized by the Communist propaganda, , that the propaganda itself lias been able to establish something V oLa reputation for sanity and respectability. . % This latter manifestation is one of the most amazing features, of the whole situation regarding Comfhunism. The most important fact ,-Aj. 1' r*r. ** I - - about Cammunisn antithesis of dqn Coin niunist opern Ik. tho- onrl '??mi; .antiy prear' iJ-'t men r *eili M:ie anc; ? v<ie_\ as la o* \mericans are concerned, is that it is the uorship is the inescapable- conclusion of U' goal of the Communist movement , It '! e objective, coiinautly in mind m V ? At ? rSjpV 14 names, possessed of .! of ;; n<r c Communist pro pa nne.1 Tliey function >f the e'ect if I say Mirrtle? it is .almost HTgumi-nt that docs ? zed group of thi? ffi ThP hnPb' j :onf' sj'i h *i? r . writers of specif - :t r<< of books and " ' !v Gospel. swum fojr a ur? of urn them 'ti goes on i.i :is t ve re f?p. ? bench, ->e<l Into vei?

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