THE DANBURY REPORTER Established 1872. PAUL TAYLOR GETS MARRIED J POPULAR STOKES BOY AND MANAGER OF TAYLOR'S WAREHOUSE, WINSTON-! SALEM, WEDDED MONDAY | WITH MISS ATKINSON OF WINSTON-SALEM HAPPY p AFFAIR OCCURS IN NEW YORK CITY. Monday at the church of the 4 in New York city, Paul Taylor and Miss Lois Augusta Atkinson, were united ID wedlock. This happy affair marked the culmination of a friendship of long vstanding between two ex ceptionally fine young feople. Miss Atkinson is the daughter of Herbert Cole Atkinson and I the late Mrs. Gertrude Downing Atkinson of Winston-Salem. This young lady is well knc ... among a large circle of friend:, for her splendid qualities of mind and heart, and for her alluring personality. She was educated at the Greensboro unit of the State university. Paul Taylor is the son of Mrs. Nellie Moon Taylor and the late J. Spot Taylor of Danbury. He was educated Guilford college and ijpokjaLOgiiy In. a business - • i iffcL, ' York, pb Is an outstanding busi ness leader of Winston-Salem, and one of the proprietors of the very successful Taylor's ware house. After the first of January! - Mr. and Mrs. Taylor will be at home to their friends at 6411 Summit St., Winston-Salem. % 1 Christmas Visitors Will Stovall, Ek Southern and Jerry Baker —a trio of rough, f gruff farmers, called on us to • day. ' The day was cold, the white frost lingered on the meadow, f and the north wind growled through the thicket. Some of them wore overalls, and had not bought a new hat for the winter. f But Shakespeare says clothes W 1 do not make the man. Many a white, honest heart beata i through blue denimn. But this three —have you ever been to see them. Thoy live at home, with wide acres, bulging grain bins and fat corn criba. of them this fall has killed more meat than they could ever ufce without inviting in the neighbors to help eat it up. Each one of them could buy a broad- cloth suit for Christmas, if he wanted it, also a high top Stetson hat. The Reporter man has been to each one of these Stovall, k Southern and Baker homes. Therqt he found nothing except plenty, -kindness and welcome. . Can you imagine anything ktottar? • I Volume 64. XMAS PROGRAM ! AT KING BAPTIST i ! SLEET BREAKS DOWN POWER LINES SCHOOL CLOSES TILL JAN. 4 STORK HAS AVERAGE WEEK. King, Dec. 23. —The King Bap tist church will give a Christmas ! program entitled "Christmas Me i mories," introducing well known Christmas Carols, at the church December 24th at seven o'clock. i At the conclusion of the program gifts will be distributed from the Christmas tree. Everyone is ! very cordially invited. The heavy sleet here Satir '"7 broke down some of the TV '* • ; Power Company lines. 0..v of the linemen while making : ;was hit in the face by i. v*i • stretcher knocking out two tec.'. I Marshall Newsum is having •ected a new home on his farm two miles south of town. M. W. Saunders, manager of the Ford Motor Company, is moving his family to Winston- Salem ;he will go back and j forth to his work. James A. Rumley made a business trip to Raleigh Satur day. The King High School closed last Friday for the holidays and w'll open .Ti "ty. January 4th. I Miss Louise Helsabeck, who is 1 attending Meredith Colleie at Raleigh, is home for the Christ , mas holidays. Ross Snider is moving his i family to Liberty, Randolph ] county, where he will engage in farming. A Christmas tree and inter tainment will be given at the King Moravian Church Tuesday night. Mrs.' Garfield Doss has pur chased fro m Seaton Tuttle his home-place at Five Forks. Mr. Tuttle will move to King. Fred White, World War veteran of the Soldiers Home at Johnson City, Tenn., is spending a Christ mas furlough here and at Rural Hall. The stork got in about an average week here last week, the following births being recorded: To Mr. and Mrs. Willis Burrow, I a daughter; to Mr. and Mrs. Hobson Bennett, a son; to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Moore, a daughter and to Royal Spainhower, a son. The Moravian Love Feast will be held at the Church on west Main street next Sunday night at seven o'clock. The small child of Mr. and l Mrs. Ross Fulk, who is suffering! from an attack of pneumonia, Is I quite sick at their home on Cottage Grove avitnue. Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Morefield visited Winston-Salem Monday, and Joe too. D. C. Conner, of Buffalo Ridge, Va., was in town Mon day with a nice load of apples. Danbury, N. C., Thursday, Dec. 24, 1930 iJ (An Editorial.) CHRISTMAS ' 'on marvel at the power and in f.-ence of Christmas on the masses. Why is December 25 the outstanding holiday, the soul-stirring festival? The answer is simple: Christmas has a meaning- as bright as the sunrise, as deep as the ocean, as wide as humanity, as all-embracing as the universe. Christmas is ths birthday of the MAN who proclaimed to the world that he was able and willing to save them from the effects of their folly, and this without money or price. Wise men came out of the East and worshipped, and the shepherds saw the star beaming above the Bethlehem hills. They came and saw and rejoiced. Countless millions of wise men and women have since followed this star of hope, which has led them on. There are those who say this is a Hebrew myth, but they are able to of fer nothing else to supplant it. The judgment of the centuries has endorsed it. The power of its rays has up raised and overthrown empires. Its influence has turned the course of history. And today we celebrate it, nineteen centuries later. The theme of its oc casion is GIVING, after the example of the Messiah's gift to the world of Him self. The meaning of giving is, simply to make others happy. Only in this way can we be happy ourselves. Those who find no pleasure in giv ing are those who have gained the world but lost their own souls. They may find their counterpart in Charles Dickens' Scrooge. You may hold to your substance till the habit of hold is fixed in your character and grappled to your soul. Hold, and tomorrow you die. and then— the distributing process, while you are quickly forgotten. The onlv thincs we can keep are those we give away. Ever think about that? LETTER FROM O. N. BROWN, I). C. APPRECIATES STAND OK IM PORTER FOR ADEQUATE NATIONAL DEFENSE OR GANIZATION OF SOLDI 1:1: BOVS DESPISES THEORY OF PACIFICISM. I Greensboro, Deo. 2, 19:!(i. ' Mr. N. E. Pepper, Editor The Danbury Reporter Danburv, N. C. Dear Mr. Pepper: I have read with a great deal of interest your very fine Edi torial appearing in the Novem ber 26 issue of the Reporter I concerning National defense, and I hasten to let you know that the I veterans of this country are ii. deed proud to salute men 1" | you; men who are broad enough to know and appreciate that ; adequate National defense does not necessarily encourage war. Rather, it discourages war to the 1 extent that if we are adequately 1 prepared and those who woul.l become our enemies know it they will certainly not be as free to invade our shores as would be the case in unpreparedness. This organisation, composed exclusively of America's overseas i veterans, despises the theory of ( pacifism and we believe it to be a dangerous threat to the future ; security and safety of America. We contend that we must hav® a national defense on land, on . tho high seas, and in the air I adequate at all times to preserve' our neutrality and command the' j respect of other nations for 1 American principles. We would not think of doing away with our law enforcement officers in our towns, cities and counties in !an effort to reduce lawlesness, | and the same principle applies I to this country as a nation. I sincerely hope you may see fit to continue your articles in support of national defense, and with expressions of my high re gard, believe me Very truly yours, O. N. BROWN. Department Commander. Veterans of Foreign Wars, Dept. of North Carolina. The editorial of Nov. 26, which Capt. Brown refers to, is reprint ed as follows: WAR INSURANCE Pacifists object to naval an 1! army appropriations. Their co>i-j tention is that America should i scrap her navy and disband her army. This would set a beaut i i ful example of peace to the world. I' * i Pacifists should be confined i>i ;a quiet asylum for the harm! - | insane. History shows that the peace ful peoples and the unprotected ! , I territories of the world have | been for time immemorial the , prey of ruthless imperialism. America with its giant re- | sources car. build 100,000 bomb-' Number 7l Sale of License Plates Fifty Per Cent. Ahead Of Last Year ; Raleigh. Dee. IT. The sale . of license plates on t ii«> opening days of sale have run about fifty ' per cent. ahead of a year ago. Those who buy jil.itcs ahead of the last few days b- forc January first save th'-.r. selves the great inconvcni' nc .- r standing in line t for hours waiting to lu served. In t lif>uj- \j n:;i: o vehicles have I now In b" license.;! than in any I former y. >r. nvaaing a greater I ■ jam if rit-ts wait for the last . rush. It is n«-.v a w t !1 understood II policy that no extension of time ■ is riven for use cif old license ' streets and highways • • January first, i - ration of motorists will !,? greatly appreciated. To Annie Kate "Tiie white l'lowci of a blanie life' — :iiat is what we lost i l . , ' uy the u ;:th oi Annie Kate | Joyce, a junior in Sandy Ridg* ': high school. The strength of her sterling character and the sweetness of her personality will linger among her friends ' far longer than her physical strength sustained her. The fact that she lingered 'or nearly a ' month in Rek!svi!i c hospital with ' her body full of poison that the ' average person stands for only a 1 few days shows i lie physical I strength she possissod. | Surely Cou must have planted , ano.he.- seed in His gai.len on November 8, lO.'Jti. when she left ' her home and friends, and we 1 can only be submissive and say 1 as Tennyson said, ' " Ti.s better to have lovej and lost, Than never to have loved art all." Respectfully submitted, j NANCY JOYCE, j 1 LOLA SISK. MARIE STOVALL, Pie Supper at Mountain View There will be a pie supper, a 1 cake walk anj suing music at Mtn. \ iew school building. Fri day night. Jan. 1, 1937. Everybody invited to come. Ladies requested to bring a pie. Music furnished by the (Jully j Jumpers Band. jing pi."nes in 1_» montha. America should build fx.-1: a fleet and i ' l «"'e;.v y u> man them. j Tli: next war v!l i f . i: iu , the air. The pirn « of Europe I Ameii they l:r.-v wc wero prepas ,'d. , T'' l V-y-- and property of ■America should be adequately insured. j We have the money, the | material and the men. i Give us this insurance. 1