THE DANBURY REPORTER. VOLUME XXXVIII. TO BEQIN FRIDAY ASSOCIATION AT VOLUNTEER c'. Thousands of Primitive baptists Will Attend Interesting News From Oak Grove Section. Oak Grove. Nov. 1, —The tann ers of this section are about through sowing their wheat crop, and the largest for many years. Mr. R. G.G unter has sowed on bis place 4" acres this year. W. H. Boyles has I>o acres and 1. G. Gentry 25 acres. The farmers are gathering in * ' their com. and we learn that corn is selling at SI.OO per bushel from the heap. 4 Born unto Mr. and Mrs. Wick Gordon, of Pinnacle Route 2, a girl. This makes the 7th girl that has been born to this family. " The Primitive Baptist Associa tion to he held at Volunteer, will begin the sth of November at lo o'clock. Let everybody come out. especially those that don't take the Reporter, and they will find somebody to wait on them. We think everybody will enjoy thein f selves, as Mr. T. M. Law son has killed a beef and a shoat for the occasion. We are glad to learn that Mr. 'Ernest Holland, who has been sick with fever, is able to be out. - ' He spent a few days last week with his parents at Pilot Mtn. , Mr. Burgess Boles has accepted a position as night watchman at one of the Warehouses at Wins ton. He will be glad to see his many friends while in town. Mr. N. S. Boyles, a well read man, with a good education, says he has read of ho "inny inar , * fLuu ■ - Ocxi j for a i'ih'i Hj Vv jpp wards to take a trip l over tjlp mountains uext week on • tafttiug expedition. |k!r. B. H. Bole« will start up a : > wholesale house in the old J. L. Wall stand, near Mt, Olive. *He will begin hauling in goods after the fair at King. The Sunday School, at Oak \ Grove is on the drag. The fifth ; Sunday there were only two pres. | . «nt, on dccount of the protracted f meetings. ' Mr. Charlie Boyles, who holds \a responsible position with Jenk ins Bros. Shoe Co., at Winston, } will spend a few days at the Fair; j at King. His friends will be glad ' to see him up. i SCRIBBLER. ! i Big Bargain. 1 Having decided to move out on L my farm I will sell my dwelling I house and lot lying on Main St., \ King, N» C. Lot is 100 feet 1 front and ISO feet l>ack. A very | ■M _ ''desirable ifipation. Good five room cottage with pantry, good out boose, excellent well, nice -flfc •bade tun, and an assortment of I fruit garden, con- crated baseWnt under kitchin. Nf yon want a bargain come to see N I \otice. Y .» W. PULLIAM. | WANTED, several hundred j \f good dry white Write us you have \ Also interest r cut to order, f FG. CO,. JTleui. N. C. j anything more I meditation • \ ' Sales Made On the Winston-Salem Market Saturday. Wiley iSpillmau t»92. $57.95 ' L. N. Hester 590. $4*5.27 J. M. Tutt le 505, BS").tit'» i M. A. Hester'so2. §IS.2 > ' > W. A. \ oung 557. .^II.OT) Elizabeth Rutledge 125. $54.19 Geo. W. Newsome 701*. s7 :.('»> George and White $52.25 S. F. Gordon 10t(i. $95.4i. R. T. and Delia Lnwson 752, $S2.f»4 J. 11. White Devith Tuttle 1701, SI'•! W. \". Meadows $5*>,55 M. T. Meadows stS, SSS «.KJ W. W. Ferguson 422. $42.1*5 J. W.Xeal lOW. $10.*J97 Friddle and Flynt 115t». slOl.- »»2 Si/.emore Bros. W. E. l'urdle 102fi, sJ#i.49 T. 11. Harrison tiSIJ. sti4.l7 11. D. Williams 922. s7*\74 Cicero Boles >7'>. $72 I'.' i Win. Struderant >2 S . ssl 54 J. P. Hooker 742. $93.21 L. E. Nichols >92. s7l 20 S. C. Tuttle 504, *lo.lo N. T. Biltitt s>7 01 G. W. Smith 558. s»>N.S> Hooker ami Stone 4»fi. $52.0.'! .1. P. Slaughter 105(5, sv'»$ v '» s l Tucker and Taylor »>4t'», sio *>7 Oscar Lash 501. $54.00 T. S. Farabee 1302, Tom Westuiorelauil .'»2l, s|s.9i L. M. Tucker 714. $95.7.'! ! W. O. Atkins l.ilS $115.22 King and Bowman 5 s 1. s>2>s S. I). Hall 40t>, $lO 50 Lee Albert 512, $>5.22 J. A. Bostic 7:52, s'.Mi.7l Hall and (iravitt t»3S. s7o.'.Mi W. 11. Davis 7t>o. $93 00 Fulp and Morris H55. $Ol 51 "nd Heathy SIOO.'X» '! Sjujih tJOli, si:l '>9 [ th Mi:; I ». aj. Holland H7H. *JBLjWW3*.SII.IS BudHayes 475, $43.01 Wade Boyles 539. $19.30 T. B. Hauser 920. s79.s* J. C. Inman 94b. $105.t»9 j Jno. Angel 917. sf2. s »> Walnut Cove. Walnut Cove, Nov. 1.--People are about done sowing wheat in this community. I guess Miss Mollie Gibson is looking very sad this'week as her l)est fellow has gone to Charlotte ;to eulist in the I'. S. army. He passed here Sunday on his way. We were sorry to see Roy leave. A READER. SIOO REWARD SIOO. j The readers of this paper will be | pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that 1 science has been able to cure in ! all its stages, and that is Catarrh. HallV Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Cararrh being a constitutional disease, requires s constitutional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, l acting directly upm the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation : of the disease, and giving the pa-| tient streugth by building up tbe : constitution and assisting nat irej in doing its work. The proprietors! have so much faith in its curative I powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of tes timonials. Address t F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, Too. Take Hall's Family Pills for I constipation. Dr. W. H. Waketkeld. of Char lotte. will be in Rural Hall, at the hotel, on Wednesday, Nov. 10th, for one day only. His prac tice is limited to the medical and surgical treatment of diseases of. ! the eye, ear, nose and throat and I fitting glasses. • / Mr. W. W. King Lft tub Winston on profesno DAtfBURY, N. C., NOVEMBER 3, 1909. BRIDGE COMPLETED OVER DAN AT PINE HALL County Commissioners to Examine Structure and Pay For Same If Accepted at Special Meeting Next Tueaday. Tlic ooufit)" commissioners were in session at the court txmse here • Monday, hut iittle iiusiness of geoe.ral interest being transacted. A small crowd was in attendance, attracted mostk b\ the public sales of land. The representative of the bridge company appeared before)" 'board stating that the new biiTge ■ for Pine Hall had been completed, presenting their bill for the same, !?~>.2()0. The commissioners will examine the bridge this week and provided it measures up to the contract requirement*. will lie paid for «t a special meeting of* the 15 iar l Ir-re Tuesday. Removal of the Capital. Regnrding the r>" ewed discus sion in tlie new-ptpers of the joke about m • • n j the State capi i tal from The Spencer Crescent bays: ! The Lexington Dispatch rises to remark that "if (ireeusboro is in earnest and proves strong ' {enough in the next Legislature to 1 get an election ordered, we are free to confess that we don't know whether Raleigh would come out victorious or not." Of course this talk is about moving the capital. The Dispatch says also: "801111' figures published the other day place the vote of the west at l!i\000, and of tht* ! east at I] Ilnh 1" If you'll draw nj . lir>'; hah. say between (ireens-i j fcoro And Bah igli. til acros'j'ix rtV> ( of the'btate, aud, take the census of 190{) you'll find just 65.000 i more people west of that line than 1 east of it. and since li»00 it has in- i creased in favor of 4he west Greensboro's the placo for the' capital, the center of area and the ! center of population. It's where the cspital is going to be. sooner or later. > Rather later than ' sooner, we. 1 would say. The Crescent seems to take the matter more seriously ) than any other paper which hss r alluded to the subject. Ry the ) way do those who are having: s something to say about the re . moval of the capital know it is said that should the scat of government be moved from Raleigh Capital square arid some ' other real estate in that city would ( revert to the heirs of Mr. Lane. I the man who conveyed the same t to the State when Raleigh was ijChosuaas the capital site'* We > • have heard—whether true or not we cannot say —that the deed of , conveyance contains a conditional. clause to that effect. Mr. Lane's 1 heirs are few in number and all* live in Raleigh. They are not basing any great hopes, however. lof ever owning Capitol square i through the removal of the capi : tal site to some other city.—fimr -1 lotte Observer. I Off For the Fair. Mr. and Mrs. J.TS. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Slate, Prof. J. T. Smith and Sheriff C. M. .Jones left early today for King to attend the Pair. For Sale! Retail busiiii in hustling town in Stokes county. Annual j sales $15,000.00. I'nr particulars address QUICK, Care Reporter. Danbury. N. C. j The sale of the 100 acre houie jpljJJlSJio" 'f 'he late Jackson • * \cjaiie here Monday by j (r J. D. Humphreys, •v wss bid by the | 1 ' AT WALNUT COVE BRIDGE NEARLY COMPLETED Farmers Can Cross On New Struct ure This Week—Work Begins On New Episcopal Church —Other News. Walnut ( Nov 1. Mr Luther Mitchell has moved to town in his cottage he bought from Mr. Jacob Fulton Born to Mr. and Mrs. Davjd Solomon, a tine son. Mr. Mott hired h horse from Messrs. Davis A: Whittcn yester day and went out driving. The horse took fright and ran away, breaking the shafts and over turning the buggy and throwing Mr. Parhatn out and finally got entirely free from the buggy and came into town X one was hurt. Mr. Joe Gofer's baby died Sat urday night. Talk about prohibition doing no good. The farmers all c mie back from Winston sober. We have hardly seen an>one even drinking this fall. Such a change. Any body can see it unless they shut their eyes to the truth. , The bridge contractor says he will have the bridge here so wag ons can pass over this week. , " Carpenters will commence work on the Episcopal church today. The old church lot was sold Satur day Mr. J. B. Woodruff was the purchaser. Protracted services- began at Saletn Chapel last Sunday. Mr. Williams, a former pastor of the Episcopal church, held services there Sunday night. The lie v bridcro here is !structure, and W'> f'''«*i \»r\ proud I w 4 Job s Coi'.iioi Ui s. When you see a friend looking | ill, don't forget to tell him sj. It ( jcomforts him greatly, and con duces* to his early recovery. Stretch your eyes as wide as two barn doors, and observe in tre menchious surprise: "What in the world's the matter Have you been sick?" >ll receiving ian affirmative reply, say: "Wal. ■you certainly do look it." This displays on yAur part the finest I tact, and renders your presence extremely felicitious Moral : Yon ought to shake hands with your self that you have been allowed to run loose so lung. Society ha;, incurred a distinct loss in that you have not been a doctor, so that by killing so many of your pat ients you might not long ago by the hemp route have been expunged to that region where 'the whangduodle nevor censes to whangiloodle, i j Dark Days Coming. Be prepared for the day of ad versity, sickness or old age when you will no longer be able to work, ami if you have not saved your earnings you must become an object of the charity of your friends, relatives or the public. A small amount placed in the Bank of Stokes County at Dan bury or Walnut Cove, and con stantly added to, will grow fast. The interest which the Bank will pay you will be working for you all the time, too. and in a few years yon will be independent. Start a savings account today.' j The Bank will receive any amount, la rue or >mall, and will pay you 4 percent interest, coin pounded every '{ months. Sheriff C. M. Jones will be in attendance at the Stokes County Fair this week and will have the | tax books with him, so if you I want to pay up it will be a good | opportunity. NewsJtems From Danbury Route 1. Danbury Route 1. Nov. I.—The farmers in this seetion are sowing the largest crop of wheat that has been sown for many years. Mr. Willie Priddy narrowly es caped getting his dwelling and stables burned Saturday. The tire originated from burning off a new ground. Most of the farmers are done getting up their corn in this sec tion. it is a good deal better than expected. Mr. Pink Hill, uf Smith, spent a few hours at Mr. John Priddy'a Sunday. Mr. Lester Morefield and sister. Miss.lettie. were among tiiose who visited at Mr. John Morefield's -Sunday. The North View school will be gin today. Everybody seems to be proud of their teacher, Mrs. Arthur Moore. R H. P. Visited Danbury Monday. Monday was the regular month ly meeting of the County Com missioners and among the citi/.eus of the county who were in attend ance we noticed the following gentlemen : Messrs. J. A. Law son. Win. Gordon. P. H. Young. H. H. Reid. Frank Dimlap. A. W. Davis. J ; H. Carter. Jno. W. Gann. T. M. Lawson, Z. K. Moran. W. S. Ray, J. J. Priddy, Charlie Reid. Robert Priddy. David flicks. Jacob Smith. J. A Whitten. Col. M. \ . Mabe. Jno. Sisk, Jas. H. Mabe. Chas. Sisk. J. M. Fagg. Cephas Branson. , Frank Dodson. Jim Tuttle. John Tillotson. Dr. J W Noil. Charlie Hutcherson, Joseph Coleman, J. 'D. Young, Jim Smith. Bud J. •' ' -jtpard and others. ' A Med jucptiji. «f Curriii' Li'.?; : Few indeed ar | women of full age -say 25 who ] not yet contracted the mal ady that will kill them, according to that distinguished scientist and physician Dr. Felix Regnault. Normally, as contemporary in vestigators are beginning to tind out.it takes twenty years for a fatal malady to kill a patient. It may take thirty years. The pop ular impression is that a man may die suddenly or that he may only rt quire a year to die in or six months To be sure, a man may be killed or a child may die in a ft wmi nths at the age of one year. But. ordinarily speaking, ai! deaths are very slow, indeed and about 95 per cent of civilized adults are now stricken with a fatal disease. They do not know it. They may not suffer from it. I u due time they will have their i cases diaguooed as cancer, or as t überculosis or diabetes or what not But so inveterate are cur rent misconceptions of the nature of death that the origin of the fatal malady in time —will be miscalculated by from ten to thirty years. In the case of human beings, death barring accident is near ly always caused by some specific malady. This malady is as likely as not to be cured what is called "cured." The "cure," however, no matter how skillful the treat- I metit or how slight the disease, has left a weakness behind it in somc particular organ which is. if not prematurely worn out. at least so worn that its resisting powers are greatly diminished. All of us in this way when we have reached a certain nge possess an organ that is much older than the rest of the physique. One day we shall die because of this organ. Even if we live to be very old indeed, we shall not die of "old age." but of ; weakness of the lungs, or of the kidneys or of the liver or of the ' brain. . HOLDING HER LEAD r « 1 MISS PULLIAM 34.275 Small Gains Made By All cAthe. I Leading Candidates Since Last Week —Many Votes Given Out, i But Few Cast —Holding Back For the Great Deluge. Miss Beulah Pnlli»- Miss TnHie P X Miss Claudia 'v.2 s( 4 Miss Rosa Can .*2.'! Mrs. Ida La>-ke\ 'i) Miss May Wall \ Miss Vevie King Miss Bertie Dicks »>• 1 Miss Lizzie Vaugim Miss Martha Ingram ■>) Miss Annie Moore Miss Nellie Ziglar / Miss Lelia Wat kins Since last week all of the lead, ing candidates in the Voting Con test have made small gains. Miss Beulah Pulliam holding her lead with a :ain of l.lOtt. Miss Trudie Reid gains TOO: Miss Johnson. oT~>. These figures only show the votes cast since last week. A large number of votes have been issued to workers fir the various candidates, who are laccuinnlat ing big holdings for the deluge that will come in the last days. All the candidates with their friends will be at the Stokes County Fair at King this week, and a large number of votes will doubtless be secured ainung the crowd there. There are now only eight weeks ' more of the battle, and during ' this time it may not be doubted • that many thousands of ballots I will be won by the girl 3. Let everybody remember that •IU .tiff**.?** • .•;» are receive I .i f I ■;i tvr ' ' Pine Hall Bridge Completed. Mr. \V. H. Gibson, of Pino Hall, was a visitor at the Repor ter oHice Monday and informed us that the iron bridge across Daa river there had been completed. The people in that section can t now cross over dry shod. The bridge is a good one and cost tha county about Sti.T(HI, . Baptist Association Begins Saturday. i An association of the Primitive . I 'apt ist church will begin at Vol -1 unteer church, two miles north of I Pinmcle. next Friday, eontinu -1 ing until Monday of next wees, i Volunteer church i.s in Fish River i District. The association will no . doubt bo largely attended r i Missionary Meeting Sunday. ' The Ladies' Foreign I'nion Missionary Society, of Danbury, L will hold its regular monthly e j meeting at the Methodist church ' I next Sunday at 2:«»0 o'clock, and ' the public is cordially invited to attend. The subject for discus • sion will be South America. Dillard Items. ! I Dillard. Nov. 1. Mr. Davids?. Duncan has returned from Wins ton. where he spent a good while working on some of the many , buildings going up there. Mr Kverett Sheltoii has ac , cepted a position with Mr. J. Wes , ley Moretield. i , For Sale—Quick. i !.> ; i acres on Big Creek, about .)i> acres of tine timber on same. • (iood water, good orchard, peach f es and apjiles. Fine feed barn s just built. Buildings in good r condition. Six good t bacco barns. H. C. LAWRENCE, Francisco, N, 0.« No. 1,901

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