Lake Toxaway News
Mrs. W. H. Arrowood gave an
Easter egg hunt for her Sunday
School class, she was assisted by
Mrs. Posey Owen.
Mrs. G. J. Bruner has been very
ill, but ia improving.
H. D. Lee and Nolan McCoy made
a business trip to Greenville, S. C.,
one day last week.
J. J. Foster of Leicester, was a
visitor here last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Raines and tit*
tie grand daughter Fredda J set
Hall spent last Saturday night with
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Thomas.
Mrs. Edd Tolley and daughters
Freda and Beverly. Misses Blanch
and Virginia Arrowood and Arthur
Dishman went on a picnic last Sun
day.
Mr. C. L. Sanders is sick with the
flu.
MrB. Payne left last Saturday for
Knoxville, Tenn., to visit her daugh
ter Mrs. Lloyd Baker.
L. C. Case, Jr., the son of Mr.
and Mrs. L. C. Case, returned to
Cullowhee Tuesday after spending
the Easter vacation here.
Mr. Cleon Williams has returned
home after spending last week in
Savannah, Georgia.
Mrs. Fannie McCoy left last Sun
day for Leicester to spend some time
with her daughter Mrs. J. J. Foster.
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Ray spent
last Saturday in Asheville.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McCoy spent
Acid
stomach
, /"^TF<!plj3
V
V *>? niillti DC
1
ExCESS acid is the common cause
, of indigestion. It results in pain and
sourness about two houcs alter eat
ing. The quick corrective is an alkali
which neutralizes acid. The best
? corrective ie Phillips' Milk of Mag
" nesia. ft has remained standard with
physicians in the 5 0 years since its ^
. invention. : i
.Onc spoonful cf Phillips' Milk of
? I.lgnesia neutralizes instantly many
t'aws ils volume in acid. Harmless,
and tasteless, and yet its action is
<;i:ick. You wiil never rely on crude
methods, once you learn how quickly
i : t method acts. Be sure to get
f - ? '?enuine.
i l:e ideal dentifrice for clean
tpcili i healthy gums is Phillips'
Dental jtinesia, a superior tooth
paste that safeguards against acid
"U)?t!i.
the week-end with Mrs. McCoy's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Robin
son at Quebec.
Mrs. Dean of Spartanburg is visit
ing her daughter Mrs. Lester Thom
as. .
O'Neil Owen spent the Easter va
cation with his parents Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Owens
Mrs. D. L. Gillespie spent the week
end in Asheville with her daughters.
Jim Dishman of Rosman is visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Edd Tolley.
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Owen and
children were the dinner guest of
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Arrowood Sun
day .
Rev. E. E. . Yates and Mr. Elmer
White of Rosman attended the
Quarterly meeting at the Methodist
church last Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. L. C. Case was sick last week
with the flu.
Miss Doreen Lee spent Easter witk
her parents Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Lee.
Virginia. Gillespie was the din
ner guest of Addie Owen last Sun
day.
Lensy Sanders of Oakland was a
Toxaway visitor last Saturday.
Bill Fisher is real ill with the flu.
We were sorry to hear that Mr.
and Mrs. W. J. Raines lost their home
by fire last Saturday afternoon.
Miss Leota Randolph of Rosman
spent the week end with Miss Inez
Owen.
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Ray, Miss
Edith Sanders and O'Neil Owen
went to Travelers Rest, S. C. last
Sunday.
? Mr. and Mrs. Berlin Owen, Miss
Majorie Johnson and Fred Hall wefe
?Gloucester visitors last Friday,
i Miss Virginia Bruner was a Bre
vard visitor last Saturday.
| There was quiWa number on the
sick list last week; Warren Case,
I Verner- Hall, Miss Virginia Bruner
and the children of Mr. and Mrs.
, Cole Lee.
! Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Raines and
little grand daughter spent Monday
: night with Mr. and' Mrs. C. C. Hall.
| ;Mrs. Walter McKir.na was sick
jlast Saturday and Sunday. ?
J Rev. and Mrs. S. B. McCall were
.the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leemon
j Sanders, last Sunday afternoon.
! O'Neil Owen made a business trip
jto Rosman Monday.
Mrtf. 'Riley Johnson and children
'are orTthe sick list this week.
j The Wolf Mountain choir will sing
at tfie Toxaway Baptist church next
Sunday April 3rd.
APPROVAL GIVEN TO
143 SCHOOL BUDGETS
nv
Raleigh, March 30. ? The State
Board of Equalization jdproVaj
, budgets of 143 county- antrSptciaT
.^charter school? and directed that final
checks.- iur.acrtt .teachers for the. last
two weeks of the six months t6rm.
h.eltl;up- until-- they could be cheeked.
About 50 others are yet to be check
J ed, after which the final State in
' stallment of salary and expenses will
, be sent cut.
j Consolidations made last. year"' have
! resulted satisfactorily and others wilj
i be raade for next year, Secretary
LeRoy Martin said. Some less than
t were eliminated. Remain
i ing. aTe.IOO white one-teacher schools
'and 1$$T" two and three teacher - hip*
*? ?? ' ? ? - ? ? .i.i
ALL
THE FACTS
ABOUT
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want in an automobile.
THURSDAY, MARCH 31
Junes Motor Co.
Main Street Brevard, N. C.
GOVERNORS' FIGHT
WAXING WARM NOW
Mr. Maxwell's Methods Worry
to His Politically Inclined
Opponents.
Raleigh, March 30. ? Some of the
old-time heat is being generated in
the gubernatorial fight, and from a
source least expected, the calm, cold.
J stoic? heretofore ? A. J. Maxwell,
'who threw out some hot shots in his
! Greensboro speech last week. He took
i up several questions on which all
candidate* agree, such as opposition
to the "short ballot,'.' and extrava
gance in government; and favoring
removal of the 16-cent ad valorem tax
for schools; the quadriennial assess,
jm'ent and the reduction of taxes
' generally. Mr. Maxwell called upon
Mr. Fountain for a statement of his
! position on the State-operation road
measure, and ridiculed his quoted
statement that he would eliminate ono
office that of Executive Cotfnsel at
a salary of $4,200 a year, Mr. Max
j well asserting that is one of the
most important offices, in view of
;the increasing prison population in
the State government.
Mr. Maxwell announced during
'the week that Robert Ruark, Raleigh
1 lawyer since 1925, who jpracticed
several years in Wilmington, would
manage his campaign. Mr. Ehrlng
haus and his manager, Maior L. P.
McLendon, spent a part of last week
in the piedmont, particularly in
Charlotte. Mr. Enringhaus made a
vicious attack on those who would
undermine the school system by
penury, in speeches in Fayetteville
and Gibson, Scotland county.
| ENON SCHOOL NEWS
?
Spring Fine
Spring is coining
The birds are humming j
The rain is blowing
Th? streams are flowing.
The grass will soon be green
And out the children will be seen.
They will go laughing cut to play
) And will stay about all day.
They will have lota of fun
They will squeal, jump and run;
How good it is for spring to come
So wc can get oar gardening dona.
EVA CASE, 7th grade.
| . Signs of Spring
j We have often heard the story of
1 Mother Spring sending the robin red
? breast as a sign of the eoming spring.
There are many things that show
! sign3 of coming spring. Today is
' March 21. The little birds begin to
build their nests, to chirp and sing as
-spviug grows ao r,ear. VioletB are be
"ginniftg to peep, and many happy
hearts will each the woods for them
Farmers begin to plow and plant and
this is one sure sign. The frogs are
beginning to call from ? heir winter
homes. The neids begin to tftke on
green and blossom with lovely
flowers. You can choose any season,
but I choose spring as the best of all.
CLAUD RICKMAN, 7th grqde.
Some Signs of Spring
I know that spring is coming
All thru the meadows bees are hum
ming.
When just at the dawn of a day
j Butterflies from their perch fly away
i And when the pastures all tarn green
. Kind and gentle cows are seen
Picking thru the pasture flowen.
Hastened by April showers.
And when the swallows are on wing
It is the surest sign of spring.
JOHN R SI1UF0RD, 7th grade
Signs of Spring
We know that spring is on its way
because almost all the birds have come
back. They are bringing us many
happy son?s of spring. These tunes
make us happy and gay.
The peach, the apple, and the plum
trcrs are budding and some arc
blooming. The alders by the stream
and the shrubs around the house are
telling that spring is here.
We hear the frogs begin thnir ca'l
ing in the marshy places. The bob
white and whip-poor-wills are
singing.
SYLVIA LYDAY, 7th grade.
Spring
Flowers are blooming every where
And their fragrance fills the air.
Birds are singing in the trees
And we feel the nice warm breeze.
'Tis time for marbl's with small boys
They're t'red of inside winter toys.
We go barefoot and wade brooks
For it's hello spring and goodbye
books.
For a good vacation helps us all
To master our tasks at books next
.fall.
The grass is green in fields all about
And we're sure to hear the joyous
shout :
"Play Ball". Their happy voices rinsr.
And. what is a better sign of spring?
DOROTHY TALLEY, 7th grade.
Looking for Eags
Winter has psst and spring has
come. The cold north wind made our
?fingers numb. But ncv spr'ng is here
and Easier to bring good checr.
Rurr ?ng, jumping we go to the
egg field, never unt'l every egg has
been -found will we yield.
LEONARD BRAGG, 6th grade.
Egg Hunt.
The fifth, sixth and seventh grades
had their annual school egg hunt Fri
sehno's in the State, some to be con
solidated.
Meantime, the Bureau of Purchase
and Contract, purchased 500 specially
built school bus bodies last week from
five' North Carolina manufacturers,
on a gecfir-aphical delivery basis.
C.h"c?v, of busses are to be bought
April 7.
REYNOLDS MPS ON I
MORKISON A'PLENTY
Big Aggregation Out to Hear
I Reynolds In His Raleigh Ad
I dress.
Raleigh, March 30.? "Cap'n Bob
Reynolds swooped down from the
mountains in 4 flying monster, not
unlike a huge eagle, and with beak
and talons tore into the status quo,
particularly tfco prohibition law, the
Republican party, tha State's
official family, the power and tobacco
interests and particularly his op
ponent, Senator Cameron Morrison,
in a manner characteristic of (the
fighting and colorful mountaineer.
He would change the liquor law,
which "does not and never will'
prohibit, from attempted prohibition
to government control, take the tax
off iand and put it on liquor and thus
eradicate the 40,000 bootleggers,
rumrunners and racketeers, each of
which he termed a saloon, in contrast
to the 167 licensed saloons operatiiig
in North Carolina in 1907, before
State-wide prohibition.
"Our Bob" ripped into Senator
Morrison for approving the appoint
ment of Frank R. McNinch, Charlotte
to the Federal Power Commission,
thus rewarding "a man with a
$10,000 job for treachery to his
party" by heading the Anti-Smith
campaign and helping to carry North
Carolina for Hoover. He advi3ed
postponing balancing the budget until
"we get a Democrat President on
March, 4," saying the Republicans
would otherwise take credit and
blame Democrats for the tax in
1 creases. He expressed favor for
'guarantee of bank deposits, payment
in full of the service men's insurance
"pdlicy and a return of $5,000,000 a
year to the State from the Federal
j taxes collected from North Carolina.
I Reynolds is looked upon as Senator
Morrison's most-to-be-feared oppo
nent and is expected to take full
advantags of the "wet" sentiment
, polta are showing exists in North
Carolina to a degree hitherto not
believed. Frank D. Grist and Thomas
C. Bowie, also contestants, are busy
in the bushep and on hustings.
1
day March 25. Syivia Lyday and
Nina I.ou Rustin were egg hiders.
Every or,o had a good time. Willie
Landreth was tht lucky boy who
found the golden egg.
I NINA LOU RUSTIN, Gth grade
My Tcacker
Thou art my teacher sent from
God. ? John 3:2.
Don't forget to show thy love day
by day. ? Heb. 1S:2.
A friend loveth all the time. ? Frov.
17:17.
God hears me always. ? John 11:42.
Even a child is remembered al
ways. ? Prov, 20:11.
KATHERINE TOWNS E N D. 7th
grsde.
Bl&ntyre Breezes
Mrs. John Powell visited Mra. Flora
Picklesimer Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Otho Scott speflt Sun
day with Mrs. Cornelius Rhodes.
Mrs. W, K. Duncan called on Mrs.
John Reed Monday.
Prof. J. A. Glazener was in the
Blantyre section Saturday.
Mrs. C. B. Hollingswortn visited
relatives on Willow rocently.
! Mrs. Ed Jones called on her sister,
Mrs. Moore, Monday afternoon.
Miss Jewel Justus spent last Thurs
jday with Mrs. J. T. Justus, and Mr.
Clannie Justus. Misa Justus spent the
winter in Florida and says that she
enjoyed her visit there very touch.
Uncle Dave Holliday and son Dave,
Jr., went to Brevard Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Setzer accom
panied by C. J. Setzer and Miss
? Christine Pendleton visited Mr. and
Mrs. John Reod recently.
Clannie Justus went to Old Toxa
way Monday.
I Mr. and Mrs. James and family
; spent Easter with their daughter,
jMrs. Harvey English on Boylston.
i Miss Belle Reed spent the week-end
| at her home here.
Mrs. W. K. Duncan entertained the
'children of the Sunday School with
an egg hunt Sunday. All present en
| joyed the affair very much.
! Mr. and Mrs. Clannie Justus, en
?tertained with an egg hunt Saturday
night, quite a number being present
to enjoy the hunt, and also the good
, music.
j Rev. Mingus Hamilton delivered a
good sermon at Blantyre Sunday.
I Welcome back, Rev. Hamilton.
Rev. F. Holden will fill his regular
appointment at Blantyre the first
Sunday at 11 a. m. and Saturday
night before.
MOTHER
March 27, 1932
( By J. if. Hevdfirton)
She lives in the light of her cherished1
love.
For her Savior and friends, and
all others.
From her girlhood her goal is the
i gleam above :
Eer name is just GrandnJt and
Mother.
Her ninety-fourth birthday this
Easter morn
Finds her sweetly at peace ir.
the gloaming, ?
' As, awaiting tnd watching, her deeds
adorn.
The doctrine of God in her
homing.
May the gentle angel of peace keep
near,
With her manifold graccs super
nal,
To aupply every need of our mother
dear,
As she girds on her garment?
eternal,
! Kidder ? So your town is so health
ful people live to a great old age
i here-'.'
| Native ? Yes, my father died at
120.
j Kidder ? Not really?
j Native ? Sure 120 Main street.
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Day 'Phone 116 Night 'Phone 16 3 E. Main St. BRfcVAKLJ, N.C.