THE DANBURY REPORT Eft VOLUME XXXIII. LOCUST HILL FARM. The Farmors Institute at Danbury Next Friday-The Ladies and the "Moon Farmers Especial ly Invited." Locust Hill Farm, July 'J. j Mr. Editor : I wish to use your valuablo paper for the purpose of extending A general invitation to my brother ' farmers (if Stokos county to be at the Farmers Institute that is to be I held on the '2oth day of July. We faru|erft, as a class, are a very nar-' row minded class. We need our minds broadened before we can • make any great progress in farm ing or improving our homes. Give us Voader minds and we will hare better roads, better schools and churches, our wiveß will be more cheorful, we can see knowledge sinking into our children as they leave, their pleasHiit homes for school. All our unsightly briar patches will be converted into nice grape vines or plums, peaches or apples, our worthless grasses will bo transformed into beef, mutton and wool. Our obnoxious weed seed will b® converted into poul try aud eggs; our brush-covered rnad-sides will be ehangod into things of beauty. 1 ask each comimtteo in the county to work up his township until everyone will know of it. The ladies have a special invita tion, and extra earn will ho given thom. Also the moon farmers have spuuinl invitation to be present audgive their experience. I. G. BOSS, Chairman. V . RURAL HALL ROUTE 2. Rural Hall Rotite 2, July 10. The farmers through this sec tiou are very busy killing grass and getting ready for threshing wheat. We can already hear the toot of the whistle in the distauco. Wheat is damaged a good doal in spots this year by the freeze. One farm being damaged to the oxtont of one-third or one half and the, adjoining farm not affected very much. There aro several Htokes boys pomtomplating leaving home this fall. Some are going to school, while others are going to Winston and other places to work. • 1 think Stokes will do her part toward* furnishing orators in the near future. Anyone who was at Mountain View last Saturday • night can testify to this assertion.! C. B.H. f : _ WALNUT COVE ROUTE 3. Walnut Cove Route 3 —People are aliout dono getting up wheat j hi this section. A largo crowd attended services At Clear Springs. Mrs. Bili Redman and family, of Spray, are visiting at Mrs. Joe Flynfw this week. Mr. Daniel Bichardsou and Miss Hattio Mickey, of Walnut Cove, attended service at Clear Springs j Sunday. Miss Hattie was not j smiling for life time but from ear to ear. Miss Minnie Dugginsgot struck on Mr. Niimie Redman Sunday. Miss.Minnie is wearing a ten- 1 conl smile as Mr. Jimmie Lee j Marshall hus returned from Roan oke, Va. TWO COUSINS. | Children's Day at Mount Hermon July 22. Madison, July 8, lid i tor Danbury Reporter : ' I'lease announce in the Re porter that Childrens' Day will bo observed at Mt. Hermon church j on the 4tl» Sunday in July. Ex-j ercirtf.B to liegiti at 10 o'clock j promptly; Preaobing in the after noon. Very respectfully, SALLIE DALTON. ' A Rattlesnake Killed By Mr. Robe i Davis- Other News From Pinnacles Pinnacle, July 14. Rov. liarrett filled his regular appointment Sunday A. M. Miss Grace King has recently ( gone to Winston to spend some time. Among those who visited Misses Grace and Gertrude King Sunday were Misses Hattio Davis, Dora Wall and Mrs. C. M. George and I children. Miss Hattie Davis has been I right bine for the past few days. ; We guess it is because her Claud : got married the fourth, we don't j know what elso. Cheer up, Miss ! Hattie, Mr. Lonnie is not married j I y«t. Quite a large number attended the lawn party on the M. E. lawn ' Saturday evening and was enjoy i ed by all. Mr. Robe Davis killed quite a ■ large rattlesnake the past week. It had oix rattles. Mr. Ernest Ayore, wl)o has been right sick with typhoid fever, is j some better, wo sre glad to note. | Miss Daisy Spainhour is visit -j ing her sister at High Point, Mrs.. Moser, Mr. Dault Davis went to Wal nut Cove on the fourth to see the match game and reports a nioe time, Mossrs. Robe Davis and Ernest Watson are looking for some one to love, some one please give thom a pointer. MEDDLESOME POLLY. Items From King, King Route 2, July 9—Here's of a few days around Mt. Olive : The Sunday School is still growing. The class has begun its practice work for the township convention, which is to be held at Mt. Olive on the second Saturday in August. Mr. John Tillotson has nearly completed his new dwelling. Mr. L. W. Ferguson attended attended the Convention at Greensboro Friday. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gordon were among the visitors at Sunday School here last Sunday. We learn that Aunt Sarah Ann Wall Is still right sick. Mr. J. W. Johnson carried Mr. Emmett Gibson to the cream freeze at Piuuacle Saturday night and complains that he had a good | time. Dr. R. G. Tuttle's name has j boon on the sick list but is about to be erased, we aeo. Mr. Wesley Petree passed on his way to the West field country j Saturday. Tho watermelon crop is reported fair to middling. Berries have! | about all been harvested in good! i condition. "POVERTY." Buck Island Literary Debaters Chal lenge the Muff Society. Tho Buck Island Literary De ! bating Society mot in regular j session Saturday, July 7th, and I after debate a motion was put be } fore the house and carried, that we i meet the Muff Debating Society j in joint debate on Saturday night, ! July 28th, 190(5. The query for I discussion is ''Which Is More : Useful to the Civilized World, the ! Lawyer or Doctor." We should like to have an ans ' wer to the challenge through the : Beporter. O. M. BENNETT, Pres. ANGANON NELSON, Sec. FORCED TO STARVE. j B. F. Leek, of Concord, Ky., I says: "For 20 years I suffered I agonios, with a sore on my upper : lip, so painful, sometimos, that I I could not eat. After vainlp try | ing .everything else, I cured it | with Bnoklen's Arnica Salve.' i It's great for burns, cuts and wounds. At all drug stores; only 25 cents. i DANBURY, N. C., JULY 19, 1906. THE PHOINE A/ND THE FARMER. THEY ARE COMPATIBLE, SAYS PROF. HARRIS, OF* GARFIELD, WASHINGTON, IN WHOSE COUNTY FARMERS OWN MORE THAN 3,00$ fyiONES--V'PLEASURE, A [ PROFIT, A NECESSITY. ' I ' A few years ago none but the rich people of our cities thought of owning a telephone. It was at | first a luxury possessed by thefow. But today tho phono is uot only a j convenience but a necessity. It is a good thing in cities where tho peo ple are crowded close together, and as a rule, have more leisure time than a country man/ How much j more necessary is it to the farmer living in sparsely settled commu nities. Yes, farmer, you need the phone. With a good system of tele phones, rural free delivery and a I good parcels post measure, life in the country would be far more ; pleasant. Seven years ago two farmers in this (Whelman county) connected their ranches by wire fence tele phones. From this beginning the system has grown until to-day the wire fence phones are in the main abandoned and a net work of lines along nearly pvery road binds this whole section together into one common whole like the nervous system of the human body. When any part of the body is affected ' the nerve lpading to that partic ular part of the body conveys the news to the nerve oenter from whence it is disseruinted through? out the whole body. So with our phone system, if any part of our county suffer the news, is instantly flashed over the wires and the whole body politic sympa- I thi^es. The Bell Phone Company is just now trying their utmost to get possession of the farmers, lines. They are making us tempting offers and I fear that they will finally get us, but they will not get us now. This agitation reveals the fact that the farmers, lines have in this county ovei' three thousand phonos. "We have centrals in all the towns. So you see that I con call up nearly any farmer or bus iness man in any town within 25 or 30 miles of mo. It is a business proposition, a great time saver and a necessity to the farmer Now for a few instances of the j convenience the phone is to me:j I had a sick liorse qnd did not know what-,ailod hw- I'had gone to tho neighbor; supposed to | know, 1 would hare found that it was something new to him. The next three were away from home, the fifth gave me the desired in formation and probably saved the life of my horse, k ' D " formation in five rmtiflies. With out tho phone, 1 would have been a day and probably given up" in despair, because the man who told me lives five miles away, Last Sunday I heard Garfield sentral ring; knowing that central is not called on Sunday, except in oaso of sickness, I rubbered and learn en that a ohilddown on the river had broken its arm and was suffer ing intensely. The first doctor was away but the second was on his way post haste in five minutes after the aooident. A tramp at tempts assault on one of my neigh bor's wives, but there were two women there and they beat him off and although all the men of that neighborhood were away at tending a sale, yet by nteaus of the phone, he waß captured within an hour. Right here I'll remark that: the tramp got a life sentenoe and nothing was ever said except in ap proval. If it had been a negro in the South all New England would have oried out "Another outrage by Southern Courts on the oojored 'wm I . .1 man." I could give a thousand ' instances not to say anything about the social side. It* annihilates distance and, brings your five mile neighbor ( | right to your door for many a friendly chat, frequently thnj3! ;or four will be on the line at the j same time and carry on a friendly ' | conversation as though we were | all in the same room. Often we I hear the call for music. Probably j two lines will be connected. Some ! 1 J one will give us a good piece at! ! the close of which another phono, i II graph will take it up and render i something else and so on. I _ 1 am aware that Stokes and our surrounding counties have a few lines. These are quite a con venience but thfjgj'tt® owned by companies or individuals and are operated for profit with stations at given Intervals you cannot call up; yoqr nearest neighhor and ask him for the loan of his plow or wagon to take the placer ,of your | broken one till you can get another. We haye must dealings with our nearest neighbors and these oaunot be reached by your | system of toll lihes. What ia the . remedy? Why let some farmer select a route for a farmers, line, say from Germanton to Danbury, count up the cost of suoh line, canvass the farmers and see how many will take phones. Suppose you get ten subscribers; then di vide the cost of the line between these ten and let that amount con- j stitute a share in the company. The farmers ooqld furnish their own poles and put up the line so that the only cost would be the price of the wire and the phones. Let them all use the same kind of phones and my advice would be to put in nothing less than a phone of 2500 ohms resistance. Later on others will want to come on your line; let them pay in the price of a share to be divided out among the members of the com | pany or kept in the treasury to j defray any expenses that may : arise. Finally and soon other lines will be built and you will I have centrals in all the little j towns and can call up anybody in ; the county or in adjoining coun-; i ties with no cost except keeping' \ up lines i Farmer, would you not like; I this? But the cost! Well, here lis the way it costs us. For a I single line, it takes one hundred and sixty-five pounds of No. 12 j j wire and 25 to 30 poles to the j mile. Wire costs us to 5 «ents and poles come at various prices 1 besides hauling them 10 to 151 miles. Doubtless you can get telephone \ j wire at 2to 2i cents and could I j furnish and set your own poles. S • Your phones would cost you i twelve to fifteen dollars each Every man buys and owns his own phone and keeps it in order.' When a new man comes on the line he pays in the price of a share, buys his own phone and furnishes the connecting line from the main line to his house. If on, the the supposed line from Ger inanton to Danbury you get twelve : subscribers then those twelve men would purchase 2,000 pounds of, wiro for fifty dollars and 433)1, put in twenty-eight poles an*! buy a good phone arid 1 (ftfofi mart is out not exceeding" twbnty dollars and hasJrpe telephone service with j ■ ; his near neighbors. When a now man wants to come on lot him pay |in something like ton or fifteen j dollars, buy his own phone and ! connect himself with your line. This phone business is like ! whooping cough—it is catching j The more that get on a line the j more that want to get on. j The line lam on charges twenty- I five dollars per share, but auother ; 'line one half mile away charges! 'fifteen, and another ten. A nominal fee charged outsidors for the use of the line will keep ! up the expenses. lom not *n expert, but if any of your readers should like to ! build a lino I would bo glad to geti ! for them the advice and expenses |of some of our best phone men j that your people might be able |to get the best phones in use and to avoid costly blunders which ! are often made by experiments. W. B. HARRIS. Death Of Little Anna Ferguson, and Other Items From Oerman ton Route 1. German ton Route 1, July 9. Little Anna, tho daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Preston Ferguson, died last Thursday. It • was 7 months old. We know it is better off. We know it is safe in the arms of our blessed Jesus where pain nor Borrow never comes. It was laid to rest at Hawpond. Mr. D. V, Carroll -conducted burial servioes. Tobacco crops are looking fine | in this section. Misses Ola Eaton and Lillie Covington, of KiDg Route 1, paid Misses Cora and Lula Eoyles.a pleasant visit last Sunday and Monday. Come again, girls. Mr. Cary Darnell called 6n his girl Sunday. On account of rain he stayed all night and lost his hut and went home carrying his shoes in his hand. Next time you had better leave your hat at home* SCAT. PINNACLE ROUTE TWO. Pinnacle Route 2, July 12. ; People in this seotion are most through laying by their crops. Rev. P. Oliver tilled his regular appointment at Olive Grove church Sunday. Mr. Ernest Wall and Miss Virginia Edwards visited Miss Lillie Lawson Sunday. Mr. Hassie and Miss Maggie ; Lawson attended preaching at j Rock House church Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wall visited Mr. Dock Boyles Sunday. Miss Eftie Boyles is all smiles | as Mr. Marshall called Sunday. Guess it is time that Mr. C. H, j j Boyles was taking his lantern' | back. j Mr. 'Squire Edwards called on I Miss Ollie Boyles Sunday. BILL BALIEY. , KING ROUTE TWO. King Route 2, July 9.—A sad ! loooking orowd passed by going !to the Springs 4th of July. Ouly | three couples, Misses Flora Spain | hower, Eltnira Rumbly and Stacie i Love, Mesers. Willie Keiger, | Oscar Fowler and Lonnie Coe. I j Guess they had a jolly time. BLUE EYES. i jTO CURE A 4 'COLD IN ONE DAY ! Take LAXATIVE BBOMO Quin-1 ; ine Tablets. Druggists refund ! money if it fails to cure. E. W. j j GROVE'S signature is on each [ 1 box. 25c. $5.00 REWARD—Wanted, Mili tary Bounty. Land ~ \Varrants. j Will-pay $5.00 for telling me who i has one whether,! buy or not. Dealers excepted. •* B. K. KELLEY, Kansas City, Mo . ' GOVERNOR GLENN COMING. j Pretty Certain thnt the Governor of North Crrolina Will Addrecs the Cld Soldiers At Danbury Aug. 11—Hon. C. B. Watson Will Also Probably Be • Present. I Tho following lottcr has been j received by Capt. .Ins. A. Leak, ! which explaiua itself . .Raleigh, July 12, 1900. Mr Jas. A. Leak, Peter's Creek. Va. Dear Mr. Leak : Your letter asking me to be with you in Dan bury on August 11th received. That is my birth day, and 1 know of no place where I would rather spond it than witb the good people who have done so much for me. 1 will not make you any positive promise, bocaUse I cannot yet toll whether the State Guard encampment will prevent my going, but I will say this, I will go if I can, and if I do not, I will send a good man in my place. Truating that I can be with you, I am, Yours very truly, R. B. GLENN. Capt. Leak liaa also received a letter from Hon. C. B. Watson who has promised to be with us at the reunion, if possible, and make a speech. Owing to the fact that the County Republican Conven tion meets at Danbury on August 4, whioh date had also been set for the reunion, Capt. Leak has chang ed the Old Soldiers' Day to Sat urday, Augtist 11. ' Let everybody who feels an in terest in the old soldiers, eomeout on Saturday, August 11, and hoar the address of Gov. Glenn and Watson, and help ~give the "boys in gray" a pleasant time. Year by year their ranks are grow ing thinner. Soon the last one will have passed over the river, They fought for a cause dear to the heart of every Southerner, j Hnd we, their children, own them j this honor and reverence in their | old ages. Come and bring a bas. I ket and help give them a good dinner. Dr. L. H. Hill, of Germanton, and Col. M. V. Mabe, of Danbury, will make music on the old Con federate fife and some one will I boat the old rebel drum. Every old soldier in the County 1 who can, will be here, and every ! person who had a relative or a : friend in the great struggle of 11801-65 should honor the occasion ; with their presence. The ladies, I the wives, daughters and grand J children of the old soldiers should i all corne out and make tho great eat reunion that has ever been held in Stokes County. The best way to start, a bank ac j count is to start it now Don't ' wait to start with a big pile Any amount is taken. The Bank of Stokes County will be glad to give you a check book any time. Call on or write cashier at Danbury or Walnut Cove. Pay your bills with check. It gives people better impression of ' you as a business man. Besides the check will oporate as a receipt in law, showing that the bill has | been paid. And, besides, you are | saved a good deal in the run of a year in the way of money order fees, registered letter fees, etc. A SURPRISE PARTY. A pleasant supprise party may be given to your stomach aud liver, by taking a medicine which will relieve their pain and discom fort, viz: Dr. King's New Life Pills. They are a most wonder ful remedy, affording sure relief and cure, for headache, dizziness , and oonstipation. 25c at all drug stores. NO. 24