Rosman Section of The Brevard News MRS. JORDAN WHITMIRE, Editor local and personal news ( Rev and Mrs. Hubert Ba^ett and ?4^issra? M? ?f Mrs. J. W. Owen. fc""; rf?M?. ?? 'W* | Bags? Inst week as guests of Mr. ana ( were'^reported quite ^jTbZ' and daughters, Ruth! Mae, M=olp??eddfhne Si?;inD, 5K5. ?' B"?"1 Sl'n Mism Fay Glazener, a student of Asheville Normal, AsheviHe arnved home Tuesday to spend a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. 1,1 Mfs"es Beatrice Sisk ?n^ ^'|drcd Watkins attended commeneement ex ercises at Weaver college at Weaver V'lralaSiskCCof Chattanooga Term., spent Friday as guest of his brother, T M.'^Watkins spent Sunday as guest of his daughter, Mrs. Robert Zacharv, in Hendersonville. Messrs. Elvin and Marvin Edney, Mr, p.u,i Rogers and children spent the week-end near Salem, visiting rel 1 Mrs Charlie Moore and children JSaSSi wm? i M"' ,???? ,m5 C I. Moss and son Harold, vis'^?d High Hampton, Cashiers and Sap Phi&. claW and mother, Mr?. M. Kellar, Miss Lftura Pressley Kxey Vicks of Brevard, heard the bac caUureate sermon delivered by D . ^ H. Cox at Wesslyn M. *awson B. Haynes, deceased. May 14-21-28; June 4-11-18 Administratrix's NOTICE State of North Carolina, County of Transylvania ? In the Superior Court Having qualified a3 administratrix of the estate of Edwin Poor, de ceased, late of Transylvania County, North Carolina, this is to notify all parsons having claims against the es tate of the deceased, to exhibit them to the undersigned at her home in Brevard Township, on or Before the 28th day of May, A.D. 1932, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery .All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 18th day of May, A.D., 1931, MAGGIE ./. POOR, Administratrix of Estate of Edwin Poor, deceased. M28 June4-ll-t8-rr,July2 THE RIGHT WAY TO TRAVEL la" by train. The safest. Most com fortable. Most reliable. Costs less. Inquire of Ticket Agents regardinu greatly reduccd fares lor short Vips. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM W.O.W. IN OPEN MEETING The W. 0. W. and Woodman circle of Rosman held an open meeting at the Woodman hall Saturday night. Guests were present from Lake Tox away, Brevard, and Cherryfleld, to gether with practically all, Rosman members present. Addresses were made by the follow ing ladies and gentlemen: District Deputy W. H. Grogan, Mrs. W. H. Grooan, district deputy 'for Woodman A. B. Galloway, consul of Bre vard; Rev. J. E. Bert, of Rosman. A bountiful supper was served to about one hundred guests and mem jbers present. The event proved to be I one of the most enjoyable ever held in ' Rosman. Iwere business visitors to Asheville Monday. Laura Pharr spent Friday night as guest of Ruth Lewis. | Thomas Glazener spent Tuesday at j Old Toxaway visiting his graridmoth jer, Mrs. J. E. Galloway. Mrs. W. M. Brittian spent Monday as guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Jack | son. j W. D. Cantrell of California arriv ed Tuesday to make his home near I Rosman. Mr. Cantrell is a native i Transylvania boy. Kor the past IS ! years he has resided in the west but ;has returned to Transylvania to make his future home. Mr. Herbert Schain has returned from a two weeks visit to relatives in .New York arid Berwick, Pa. I Alfred Cantrell of Reids Siding I who has been ill for several days, is : slightly improved. J Mr. and Mrs. Gus Harrison of Ashe, iville, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lee of Wis consin, and Miss Irene Harrison oi [Asheville, were week-end guests oi |Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Winchester. Mr. and Mrs. Claud Lewis anc | daughter, Caroleen, and Miss Ger ,trude Saunders, of Easley, spent th< week-end as guests of Mr. and Mrs W. R. Lewis. j Ruth Lewis left Tuesday for a tw( weeks visit to her grandparents, Mr and Mrs. E. A. Lewis. | Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Glazener anc ! children were visitor* to Saluda Sun day. Dr. C. J. S. Parsons of Sapphire, was a business visitor to Rosman Monday. ' James T. Harrison and W. J. Nich olson of Sapphire, were Brevard and Rosman visitors Friday. Miss Frances Edens and brothers, Dan and Jack, spent Wednesday in Brevard, as guests of Mrs. John Kil patrick. Mrs. Wm. Jarrett, who underwent an operation at Angel Brothers hos pital, Franklin, will return to Rosman Tuesday. ? Miss Sadie Mull of Concord, Miss Mamie Mull of Brevard, and Mrs. Clyde Watkin, the former Miss Paul ine Mull, tff Elmore, Penn.,'were Sun day guests of Mrs. D. L. Glazener. Mr. and Mrs. Thad Miller of Sen eca, S. C., were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Paxton. Thomas Glazener spent Saturday as guest of Harold Saltz, in Brevard. Miss Ola Paxton left Tuesday to spend several days as guest of her aunt, Mrs. Wade Garren, in Asheville. Mrs. Cole Pangle was celled to Jocassee, S. C., Sunday on account of the- serious illneis of her mother, Mrs. John Crow. Miss Irene Galloway spent a week as guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 'L. C. Galloway, leaving Tuesday for Sapphire. | Mrti. Sarah Galloway spent Sunday as guest of Mrs. Lee R. Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. Glover Jackson and sons, Vance and Louis Earl, Mr. and ! Mrs. Marion Galloway and Mr. and i Mrs. Lem Brooks of Brevard, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fisher. | Homer Littleton of Cashiers Valley iwas a business visitor to Rosman Fri I day. ! A. T. Winchester and son Claud oi I Sunset, S. C., J. W. and Jim Win | ! Chester, of Pickens, were guests oi Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Winchester recent. ly Mrs. Tom Morrison spent Mondaj I as guest of Mrs. T. V. Smith anc . ;M"s. Joe Galloway. ' ] Mr. and Mrs. Melton O'Shiald anc children were visitors to Rocky Bot I torn, S. C., Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. I^wis Sentell ant i children of Hendersonville, wen . recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. S "Winchester. > Mr. Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Mance ? Sumaral, of Hendersonville, were re cent guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. C 1 Sumeral. f THE PRAYER CORNER L. AV? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? THE FLOWER OF JUNE "Jane can never be anything but! 'sweet and lovely. The Flower of Jane would make that impossible. The rose! How full it is of mystic I meaning. We westerners miss a world of Thought and Beauty which is open the Easterners. To the Ori entals the flower world is as real as a world peopled with human beings." . "In Eastern lands they talk . in flowers. And they tell in a garland theio love and their cares. Each blossom that blooms in their garden bowers on its leaves, a mystical lan guage bears." __ ______ The English have caught the thought more or less in some of their flower names with their sacred things ? They have the flowers of the Church, the Lent Lily, the Pink of Pentecost, the St. John Wort, the Harebell of St. George of England, -and the Cowslip of St. Catherine ot Sienna", The Madonna Lily and fh' Christian Rose. The rose, however, has a simpler, softer June meaning for us. It is one of those flowers which recall some lovely deed of Saintship. "Each flower is a written book, Recalling by memorial quaint, The holy deed of marytr'd saint." What does the rose recall? If no one special deed, it tells at least of I one of the roots of saintship. Foi 1 the rose tells of reticence. Silence ? and saintship, how often they go to gether. ? It is said that one-third of the sin ? of the world is caused by sins of the tongue. And there is one special form of reticence suggested by the ; rose. It is found in the phrase, "sub rosa," such familiar Latin, that we ? have almost dropped it as English ? | "under the rose.'' In its old meaning 'the saying tells of 'things not to be I repeated. Among the Ancients, the rose was dedicated to Harpocrates, 1 j the God of Silence, and was suspend ? ed over the tables in banqueting halls as a sign that the talk of the guests 1 sitting underneath it ? "under the : rose" ? was private. ? ' The teaching is as obvious as it is necessary, for moderns as well as I Ancients. And not in banqueting - halls only must we live "sub rosa,' ? though many a bitter jealousy and broken friendship would be avoided if thing* were not repeated after the party. As in Smyrna, there ig a street named the Street of Roses, because in H there are roses, roses all the way, the sub rosa life is to believed every where ? in public and in society, at work, on a holiday. It is a form of the hidden life, which June places before 'its clients. Verbum sac Sapienti." ? A word to the wise is sufficient. A PRAYER Grant, 0 Lord, that I may be single hearted in all I do, and say, and that I may ever speak as in Thy Pres ence. Help me' so to train ir.y facul ties that I may be able to speak the exact truth, and .grant that I may never swerve from it through a |to give pleasure or to avoid disagre^^^^ ment, or through laziness, self-inter est or prejudice. 1 Pardon, 0 Lord, I beseech Thee, my misuse of Thy most gracious gift of speech. Set a watch upon the door of my lips that I offend not with my tongue; that being careful to con fess my own faults with penitence - and not to publish my neighbor's I Ji failings with malice or derision, I may ever speak words of love and godliness. Have mercy 0 God, upon those who are accustomed to speak harshly of their brethern, and grant that in all our judgments of others we may re member Thy Judgment whereby we exercise that charity whereby we shall ourselves be judged, and may hope to be forgiven. I We pray for those who love us, and for those who, it may be, dislike us. Take from us any evil thing that hinders the flow of love from soul to soul. Pour out upon us the Spirit of Brotherhood and Sisterhood, in the strength of which we may bear each : other's burdens, and cover with a mantle of charity our brother's or : sister's weakness, , i If any are estranged from us do Thou pluck out of their hearts and i ours any root of bitterness, and unite : us again in the bonds of mutual af i fection. As we go among our fellows ? may we ever manifest a patient tem ? per, a kind and happy spirit, a love i that beareth all things, endureth all r things, believeth all things. These ' blessings we ask in the Name of Jesus 1 Christ Thy Son, our Lord. Amen. I ? C. D. C. CfrftMtfj Qppfa !i //? re# tjoun Don't Rasp Your Throat With Harsh Irritants "Reach for a LUCKY instead" Now! Pleasel? Actually put your finger on your Adam's Apple. Touch it?your Adam's Apple ? Do you know you are actually touching your larynx?? This is your voice box? it contains your vocal chords. When you consider your Adam's Apple, you are considering your throat ? your vocal chords. Don't rasp your throat with harsh irritants ? Reach for a LUCKY instead ? Remember, LUCKY STRIKE is the only cigarette in America that through its exclusive "TOAST ING" process expels certain harsh irritants present in all raw tobaccos. These expelled irritants are sold to manufac turers of chemical compounds. They are not present in your LUCKY STRIKE, and so we say "Consider your Adam's Apple. U TUNE IN? ' The Lutky Strike Dance Orches tra, every Tues day, Thursday and Saturdaf evening over N. B. C. net works. ? 1981 The A. T. Co.. Mfra. "It's toasted" Including the Use of Ultra Violet Rays Sunshine Mellows ? Heat Purifies Your Throat Protection? against irritation? against cough