L_ 1|TK YON M E ll II I ^ - \cj)J T I 0 W|| ^ribe to the Ne Vol. X XXI No. 50 SPANISH CREDir 17 -v?/ fori At Ric IEK C i V. VI A ^ Owners, Ev< Convei ARCHITECT! y ; I.'f :tn?l provided , I (1. was the lin- ; .irly 1(H) af Try- ^ ,in:; citizens aft- 1 -!i Court. tile) ,iu-: completed era tidal I Inc. . .. r.it? ?i> to say that ; . tic. i-i includ 'i| f these apartit friceratnrs. elec I. * incinerators. vaj i !. d > all oil heater i I ar_ . - . :... !i ;?: !? al to all. and j i a !. " p-.-sfiiiv give evi-11 i.l: thi builders have [ i ; ta lives of future 11 free as possible. J i IV-naff ill Ccnstr'uction |! lj : > - ' that this sanie clis- | resard and same regard for ... and comfort of the t- . v thruout the building ' a d in every detail of|! its er.-'rie 'ii Hollow tile walls ' ? i -t. .a impossible to attain ' in ?!.> teturo and in addi- ' jti'ii i - from firp keep out;' th, ' a inter and the heat of (' uriy: proof partitions and)' kul.i: i ors contribute both to |' ?' file and annoyance from !' p- .1 -ile roof is an additional L" h ?r >.tioti as well as a mark ofj* Ii!; appcnrano*-. bcrcenK s' - und'T the oaves and ; i-iaivm ::i ;11'-!i ,i li\mg-rooni, two , t- : I. ilr-Miins. hath, kitchen , K::r- .kf.i.-r mum. Cupboards and d-s-:- | numbers arc to be ?- : ; ... n . exaggeration to | 5? " > available space has I make it possible for V> , minimize the wear ami ti:\' "i v jay living. The elecf'v:r?-s are of wroght d> -ii i: which on(. would i!H' ' i a house of Spanish 1 ? < 1 Peace, Goodwill and the Spirt* 0^ I i 0^^^ "Wherij love havp boon Joined in on? 1 ,'.::^H a beautiful woman. This | I lady was one of tie central fig- j H 'n & laKeant staged at tie Sesqnl" j ^JMeuniai International Exposition In 1 ^sfolphla, celutrratiiig 150 years of j I Independence. The Expos! i I ** continue* until December ! ? ' HAS A \ The ws COURT IS TO CITY r Cost To The 3ry Modern nience JRE GREAT type and together with the draperies and furniture are appropriate and in exeellent taste. All hut on,, of tile five apartments have been leased, demonstrating the faet that there are people who appreciate the work of the designers and builders of Spanish Court and who are willing to show their ;jpprecintion in a substantial manner. Crnndal) Inc. feel that they owe ' much to their architect. Mr. J. Fos- j [er Scares for the painstaking labor i: iTut attention fo detail and eood I' taste evidenced shown both on the 1 interior of the building, and that 1 they ar,. indebted to the Kiske- Car ' lor Construction company for the : uihstantial construction of the building itself. 1 No{able Assemblage Present Among those present at the formal 1 ipening of the apartments were: Mr. ' ind Mrs. Holmes, Mr. and Mrs. Hoi- 1 len. Mr. and Mrs. Hester, Dr. and ' Mrs. Bishop, Dr. and Mrs Jervey, ! Mrs. and Miss Mrs R O. An- 1 Irews. Mrs. Cathey, Mrs. C. P. Rur- ' lett and her brother, Mrs. Dobbyn 1 ind her guests, Mrs. Paul Smith and 1 Miss Margaret Doubleday, Mrs. Heb- ' iert, Mrs. and Mrs. Rogers, Mrs. J. V. Jackson, Mrs. T. D. Jervey, Mr. 1 ind Mrs. Edwin Lindsey, Mr. and * Mehaffey. Mr. Kllertson and Mr. Maz- ' umovich. Mrs. E. E. Missildine and ' Mrs. Alice Missildine. Mrs. Frazier i' Mr. and Mrs. Orr, Miss Monday, Miss |1 tlolden, the Misses Pitkin, Mr. and 4 Mrs. Stone. Miss Lorraine Stone M inn Miss Clare Bell, Mrs. Strong and 1 ng. Miss Vale. Mrs. Ellis and Mrs. ' Miss Strong. Miss Taylor. Miss Ew- : M'aller, Mr. and Mrs. Whittlesey. I BLANTON & STEARNS I TO START SUBDIVISION b ?o? t filanton & Stearns, Polk County's .ending real estate dealers, have purchased several tracts of land east of Lynn for a new subdivision from If. 1 ? . Cannon, and Tucker of Lynn, J. j II. and Gordon II. Pucker of Asherille and Cla'yton Constance of Co- ' lumbus. These traces will Jtfve considekthle frontage on the south side of State highway No. 19, east of Lynn ind will have a most wonderful out- ' look to th'(. whole range of mountains from Hogback to White Oak and the ralley intervening. In the develop- ' aient the whole front.-ute will be a 1 parkway beautified with shrubbery ' md trees for the use of the resi- 1 dents. There will be attractive auto ap- 1 proaches at each end of the property ' with a forty foot boulevard encircling the property from which other ' streets wil] radiate to generous sized homesites. This is not to be a ' speculative proposition but a home ' creating sale of sensibly restricted 1 sites within a ten minute drive of ' the county seat or Tryon. Blanton & Stearns wll soon offer 1 prizes for a name for this subdivi- ' sion, also for street names and for building homes. ] KKPIN MOTOR CO. MAKES CHANGE j The Carolina Oil Co. of Hendersbn- j ville, N. C., has appointed The Kil- j pin Motor Co. of Tryon as their rep- j resentatives for the Cosca Products handled by the Hendersonville concern. High grade gasolines and Oils will j be carried. The Filling station of! the Kilpin Co. has been remodeled and presents a very attractive appearance from Trade St. being ornamented with large globes with Cos- : co trade mark showing. \j\... . i n'riTflfiiri r E A R ROU. folk PUBLISHED EVER1 TRYON, N. C? s ?-TChevrolet Is i Heavv Hauler * Transportation of heavy supplies up si cop mountain trails formerly traversed only burros and llamas, to Bolivian mines located 12,000 to 16,OOOfei't above sea level the Andes rune,, has been solved by the uso of light automobile trucks. Chevrolet s figure prominently - 4n fleets recently purchased by mine operators ' in South America. Centuries ago the Ineas first developed these mines located in the most inaccessible inland ranges. The Spanish couquistadores, envious of the Indians' wealth, mad,, short work of reducing the native population to a condition of slavery and supervisig the production of gold. In later years silver and (it. have been the most profitable metals produced in Bolivia, with operations seriously handicapped by the in.iccessibilty of the mining sites. t'ntil a yt ar ago burros and llamas, carrying a maximum load of 100 pounds each and traveling only 20 miles daily were relied upon to transport supplies t(> the sky-line operat- ' ing renters and to carry down to so.. bound and railroads the refined ^ metals, enormously heavy even in 0 small quantities. Improvements in o mining practice wore impossible un- d il beter distributing methods were E ivailable. Notwithstanding roads which were ^ inly rough trails covered with racks \ uid il"' fat't that an automobile moor ordinarily loses 30 to 35 percent if its poWer when operating in the arefied atmosphere of high altitudes Chevrolet trucks have practically supleded the pack animals. One light R(. ruck of the Chevrolet type, carry- ra) ng 3.000 pounds and co Hiring 120 nilcs daily does, the work of 120 (e| nirros or llamas and cuts transpor- ()j ation charges exactly In half. Kl] Perhaps in no other locality in the vorlii nr.. automobiles subjected to ()(> inch sever.' tests of their stamina ve; ttid power as in the Andes ranges .vhriy road building is of the most primitive type. Recognizing the lece.vsity of good roads as being jaj veil greater than railroad transporOil ation, the Rolivian government has j mharked ou an extensive road buildug eiiiipaign to further the use of | lutouiohiJes. foi HEWHIGHWAY OPENED TO ? HOGBACK MOUNTAIN CLUB fr< Therc are people who still vaunt lin he superiority of European roads ' md their beauties, but they will cer- in aiiilv he called upon to make good ! 101 heir claims if the South goes op de- vil (doping and opening more of such tat lighways as that leading from Mer- mi ittsville on the Green vi|lq-Hender- tw Kitiville road to the top of Hogback eq Mountain in liltie Ridge Forest. jga The formal opening of the new j fr< oad took place oil Saturday and was ! lei (tiown as "Greenville Day." This j iew route shortens the distance from on Iroenville and points south ad west, J ''<1 ifteen or sixteen miles. Those who j Irove the road on Saturday of last | "" .veek were delighted both with the lanorama constantly unfolded to hem and by the road itself which is <'r'c refrigerator, has been givi isley, Ala., plant of the Tennessee Spartauhurg territoy for th al. Iron & Railroad Company and nPP-'iratus. Mr. Andrews has bet livered before the close of the wontlcrftilly successful with the se ar, fhich will enable It to advance ?' t'10S(- machines and has wc >gram for laying 100-pound rail by l10,,ors w'1 h the firm, he hr 9 miles. attended many of tire sales meet in; The rail Just purchased will be conventions and Is most enth d between Atlanta and Charlotte siastic over the ndditioal territoi the northbound track of the doub- ',;iH been assigned to him. track Washington-Atlanta line 10 Southern has been pushing the er no ring of 100-poud rail on this line, |f|yp|/ [VjAp\ ? 192G program originally calling '" ? Ifini V th0 completion of both north- MADC Al/Ail ADI llnd and southbound lines between lYIAUt AvAILADL ashington and Charlotte and the ing of thirty miles north from I , , , ? . .. I 'Most o ft he larger streams of tl lanta and an equal distance south . , . , Olympic Peninsula, in northwester >m Charlotte on the northbound . Washington, hive their sources c P the glacial slopes of the Olymp; Hie additional 100 miles to lie put M(?miajns within th,. boundaries < servic,. this year will carry the f)(r Mo,||lt oivinpns Nationar Mm ) pound rail as far north as Ayers- |iment a)ul ,hp ()|ymp|c Nationa, Fo le, Oa? and as far south as Spar- (>st ,n <.nl)noction with Ug Kencrl iburg, S. C., leaving only 100 Klmjy ()f ,j1(i wa(,.r resources of th les on the northbound line, be- |>u|i|jp (1()m;|in (ho ,ntprtor Dopar een Atlanta and Washington m(in(> (lm)i|Kh ^ CeoloRical Su nipped with 85-pound rail. This j v<,v has |utt;|in a survoy of thef p and part of the southbound line L|n,nms Thp ^ ,s (!OVOrp(, w? mi (harlotte to Atlanta will be ( () ayy pr,,^), 0f spruce, fir, her d with 100-opund rail in 1927. . . , ... .... u wuu ?> lock, and cedar, and the principal i Th,. SO pound released will he used ... . , , . ? 1 dlislry at present, is lumliering. Ill other main lines which arc now ^ streams have a wcll-sustaint nipped with rail of lighter section. f,()w an(, a my hcayy Rrade thf constitute a very valuable power r ' sonroo. The city of Tacoma h( rpTTTC recently dedicated its 50,000 hors J- J.1AO VV j.pnwcr development on Skokomis FARM NEWS > River, known as the Lake Cushma COUNTY NEWS 1P'-nit. aU(l plans have heen conside SOCIETY NEWS l(>1' for :l sccon(1 P'ant to havo a caP WEATHER /REPORTS. of 9(M,0? horsepower, betwec ILLUSTRATED FASHIONS Bushman and the Hood Cana SPORTINfl COMMENTS ^ually many other streams wi WEEKLY CiSoois. , * ?P* FEATURE STORIES. I J' * ^ Tt fcmecr of the Geological Surve WEEKLY COMfOS. \ , ., CHURCH NEW^- | made plane-table surveys of tt STATE NEWS- i N<"'th a"'1 S?Wth F?rkS ?f Sk?k?r J ish River, Dosewallips and Hamir ! Rivers, mid ILHiwaup Creek. Tt resulting maps are drawn on a sea iru/ riPM npfiiNl7Ffl f 3 i,,cius tn the mi,p'and thec? ' * 1 KA frvnf A a fhov AT JLVV I llllll VIIMnillbiiW jiiini' llliervui in ,iu itu, ,MV/ ?/* Ari I JU|Tn(a |n<>f based on precise levels nor tie HI AUIUO int0 known geographic positions, It maps may be subject to some errt of both location and elevation, bi Mr. Jack- Cantrell and C. YV. Bal- d,0y prosent a record of the fall < nger have formed a partnership to (|)fl Sfroanis am] topography < dl Automobiles in \Tryon. The (jjP j)ankfl an,j therefore have co; rm will have (lie exclusive agency 8l(lorabie valuc for nae in makil] r the Hudson Essev, Dodge, Cms- ... ... , ? WF preliminary estimates of power po r and handle a full hue of accesIrjes sihilities. Copies can be procure inn nf the main features of the a' a nominal price from the distrh ;w concern will be the special ser-1 office of the Gcoolgica] Survey, n ce department that wll be nmiin- Foderal nuflding, Taconia, Wash ined. High class repair work done id particular attention will be paid i greasing and washing. Wp wish to convey our heartfe The show rooms will be at the thanks to our many friends for the and now occupied by the C. W. Isympathy and flowers during tl allenger Motor Co. near the rail-1'"ness and death of our little son. ay station. I Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Rhode . ; ... J . ' (. L TO THE lews >e" IF FRANCE'S mi an nrtir WHO KLVl (From Greensboro News) "The outstanding feature and the unescupahle fact al>out the situation here is the strength of feeling against the United States." It is Frank It. Kent's cabl(, from Paris to the Baltimore Sun. It carries, particulate to North Carolinians, ntore weight than the report of any other American observer, for Nortli Carolinians know that in Mr. Kent's recent series of articles upon this state and other states in the south he write with a remarkable degree of accuracy. Hp is here reporting what has been reported before. It cannot be ignore d by anyone who searches facts. Mr. Kent, for instance. was writuig immediately aft or the Clomenceau letter, which "was spread nvi every newspaper and liroadeast by radio to every corner of France. In all save the Communist organ and one other was hailed _ as 'the vocie of France.'" h Yet lie is not judging by that e alone. He sees the signs in newsy papers, music halls, cabarets and 11 cartoons. These are factors not to he ovcr~ whelmed by the figures in the ac|| count lxioks. The debts are there. [J Nobody can deny that. Rut it is just as futile to attempt to deny the state of mind of a nation when that state of mind assumes the status of an imponderable. The French are not interested in facts as this country records them. They are vitally interested in what is to them the p- greater fact, overshadowing*. and te overwhelming all others?the plight ;n of their country. Nor is it of any is valut, to point out to them their in share of responsibility for that II- plight. Suppose, says Mr. Kent, the in shoe were on the other foot: is Few fair persons/would doubt that ;s if the positions of France and Amu erica were reversed, if France were y the creditor and we the debtor, if it worn the franc that was up and the dollar down an dif it were our taxes that wer mounting instead of theirs, that our country and our press would ring with denunciation of the awful Eavariciousness of France in demanding her pound of flesh and of the iniquity of the attempt to place us in a condition of economic slavery ie for generations to come. n Our tight-lipped President, who 'n once said on the subject of the 'c French debt, "Well, they hired the 5'| money, didn't they?" would sing an11 i other tune. So would his secretary r-jof the treasury with his paper achedule of payments covering 62 years ie and touching a fourth generation to whom the facts and figures of these r- _ tO : NEW VICTOR MACH: INES DELIGHTS MANY : AT MISSILDINES 15 ^ file now Orthophonic machines recently put out by the Victor Talking Machine Co. of Camden, N. J., r-; is. delighting many every day. The firm has most all of the now recj ords in stock and a number of sales ' have been perfected since this new machine has been on display. It is noted for its long range and particu16 larly the sweet .mellow tone that y, comes from this preat musical dole vice. n 1a AN UNSIGHTLY BUILDING : TO BE RAZED id e Rlanton & Stearns have purchased a half acre of ground on State Highway No. 19 between Lynn and Co^ lumbiis on which stands an old barn that has been used by the county n. for several years to stor Machinery and material in. rne n-ni wnj uu torn down thus relieving the beautiful scenery along the highway from !<1 this ugly blot. ct rienton Springs Park, Columbus, )4 is becoming very popular with South Carolina people who want a place in the Montain Country for their picnics. Every week brings partys " of several auto loads. Ir ,e Polk County needs a fair ground. Where will Polk County locate its s. Airport? It wtll soon be needed. r RIVIERA | 1A PAGES I ill TODAY j Thirty First Year 'ive Cents Per Copy WAR DEBT RSED TO U. S. ' I I -| dead debts wll[ bt> hard to recall whom the subject of the dispute would he utterly blurred and unintelligible. So the Borahs, Johnsons and Iteeds, who now howl, "Make i hem paylt So, too, would some of our eight percent bankers who, hoping for another cut in the surtax, look upon these war debts as an asset instead of a liability. And if, on top of th,, demand of payment from a country with an j "inpty treasury, a couple of hundred housand French, on pleasure bent, swarmed into New York, Baltimore and Washington, able with their hundred percent francs to eat at restaurants and to buy goods from ! which we were debarred by our depreciated dollars, there would be he same sort of howl from the Am| erican people there is over here from the French, only louder. This is foolish fancy. It could novo,* homton tiiVnr lti>lnnr it Iir>9 I* nnj UI|U8 11 up; 11 is no foolish fancy in France. When virtually a whole nation thiks a set of circumstacens is thus and so, the set of circumstances actually becomes thus and so for that nation; nor are the circumstances to be removed by the application of hard logic. The Cleinenceau letter was reeking with false allusions and inaccurate deductions. Yet it spoke with the voice of a race. It may be absurd but there it sands. There it will continue to stand. There are those in Washington, the Daily (News' bureau 'reports, ? who see th*> debts question everlasting cause of discontent."* The statement is mild. Presenting arguments to a man in the depths of despair is a difficult task, particularly when that man is certain that the fault lies with the other. This country will be fortunate if the feeling goes no further than discontent. lh All?i VAIBIftl flbUUI lUWN ' Miss Newman who is one of our efficient telephone operators spent tlio week-end with home folks in Greenville. Lucy Moore has returned home from Reidmont College. She will return to School there in September. -oMrs. C. J. Lynch has with her this week Mrs. Parries of Columbia, S. C. | Dr. and Mrs. Justice motored over lo Ridge Crest Monday to hear Dr. Truitt. They were accompanied by Mrs. S. K. Watson and Mrs. T. J. Kennedy. ?o? Mr. and Mrs. C. Byles, of Chattanooga, Tenn., were the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Ward on Melrose Ave., last week-end. ?o? Mr. Byles is connected with the Southern Mercerising Co., being manager of the Chattanooga office. ?o? Mrs. James A. Schwing and son Master Loughan Schwing of Spartanburg, S. C., were guests Tuesday, of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Dreyer, at their home, Viewmont Heights. ?0? .. ^ Mr. C. W. Bartleson Sr., returned to his home in Ft. Myers, Fla., after spending several days here as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. A. Cathey. Charles Edward Rhodes, thirteen months old baby of Mr. and Mrs. .iesaie Rhodes died Sunday morning at 8 o'clock. The funeral services were held at the Lynn Baptist church and burial in Tryon Cemetary. The child died of broncal croup. Col. D. C. Stearns and daughter leave Saturday evening for Cleveland, Ohio. The Colonel goes on a business trip and will return in September. Miss Stearns will return in October with her brother and family who will make an aut0 trip here. Miss Catherine Stearns entertained at the Mimosa Hotel Thursday evening Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Jackson an ddaughfers, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Graham and Mrs. Marmaduke of N. IY. were her guests.