LOCAL AND PERSONAL ITEMS. Sheriff Jones is out again after a severe attack of tonsili tis. Mr. John M. Taylor, of Wins ton, paid a flying visit here Fri day. Mr. E. C. Sheppard. of Law sonville, was in town Monday on business. Messrs. E. S. and J. A. Law son, of Lawsonville, were in town Saturday. The Reporter is very sorry to learn of the death of the infant of Mr. Rufus Mabe, near Seven Island a few days ago. Miss Helen Sparger, of Mt. Airy, spent Sunday here, the guest of Misses Nell and Mary Joyce, returning home Monday. President R. L. Nunn, of the Farmers' Union, spent Sunday here after attending the county meeting of the Union Saturday. Mr. J. H. Covington, of Capel !a, was here Monday on business from Capella. Mr. Covington is a zealous Sunday School worker, and is a high type of gentleman. He always finds a welcome at) the Reporter office. Mr. T. M. Lawson paid us a pleasant visit Monday, being in attendace on the meeting of the county commissioners. Mr. Lawson is one of the biggest far mers of Yadkin township, as well as one of that good section's best citizens. Mr. James E. Miller, of Dal ton, was here Saturday shaking hands with his many friends, j He was a delegate to the Far mers Union. James hadn't been here in more than eight years, having spent six years of the time he was away in Texas. Elder J. G. Southern, of Flat Shoal, was in town Thursday, i Mr. Southern, who is a Baptist minister, promised to preach at Danbury some time soon, and i assured us that he would do us no harm. Mr. Southern is aj mighty good, clever fellow, and [ they say he preaches with great j eclat. About twenty-five head of 1 horses and mules were brought l here Saturday by Messrs. J. Spot j Taylor and Smoak & McCreary. i On Monday Messrs. Taylor and j Alley Blum broke the record in ! the county for horse-deal ing, making some 18 or 20 trades, selling in a number of cases, and' swapping in others. Messrs. R. J. and Harry Petree, of Germanton, attended the County Farmers' Union meeting Saturday, returning home in the j pfternoon, while on Sunday even- j ing, the former came up again accompanied with Mr. 0. N. Petree, of Walnut Cove, both : spending the night in town and attending the meeting of the county commissioners Monday. % e djfll You *y{re (2orc/ia//yt J >y[Lillinery /6, 77 a7B J fH We IK'// *9or y 'our inspection t/ie jLi/te of % (|| (ladies' ats, . .Jrim/ninqs, Spring SDress . 'furnishings, (s/c. £ is i'cr S/ioton' H lYci/nut (2oae (20., *)Ya/nut (2ove, 2 ' S ' § The heaviest hail and snow of • the season fell yesterday. Mr. Duke Taylor was here ! Monday from Hartman. ' Mr. J. D. Humphreys returned from a trip to Raleigh yesterday. Ex-Sheriff J. C. Wall, of Wal nut Cove Route 3, was in town Monday. Mr. W. C. Moore, of Camp bell, paid us a pleasant visit Saturday. j Eugene Ray, who has been ill of appendicitis at King, is re- I ported better. ' The Reporter was glad to see Mr. J. R. Forest, of Francisco, I here Saturday. Mr. C. H. Sheppard, who is one of the best mill men in the county, was among the crowd Saturday. Master Odell Jones left again Monday for school at Wilkesboro, much to the regret of his many young friends. Mr. V. G. Lawson, of the i Asbury section, a strong Union young man, was among the Union workers here Saturday. Dr. W. L. McCanless has been confined to his room with grip for several days, and Dr. Will has been kept on double duty. since. Rev. R. L. Doggett filled his ; regular appointment in the M. E. ' 1 Church Sunday night. We hear; ] many compliments being passed ion Mr. Doggett's sermons. I Messrs. S. H. and W. S.' 1 Steele and L. W. Griffin, prom inent farmers and good citizens of Sandy Ridge, visited Dan bury Saturday. I Mr. James Kington, a hard j working and deserving young i , farmer, of the eastern section of i the oounty, was among the! crowd here Monday. ; Mr. Wallace Webster, of Ger-, J manton Route 1, spent a while; here Thursday. Mr. Webster J I reported his wife, who has i been sick recently, as improved, j Mr. R. H. Pulliam, one of the | best citizens and most prosper-j ous farmers of the Mount Olive neighborhood, was among the ; crowd here Saturday attending i the Union meeting. The term of Mr. F. P. Stone, as member of the Board of Ed -1 ucation of Stokes county, having | expired, Mr. S. P. Christian, of j Westfield, was appointed in his ! stead last week by the legisla ! ture. Major W. S. Ray was in town | Monday selling spectacles. These glasses offered by the Major are guaranteed to make I the blind see. and to bring back to old eyes the lucid visions of youth—only try a pair and you will never be sorry. THE DANBURY REPORTER COUNTY FATHERS ORDER COURT HOUSE INSURED Amount Placed on Buildinf Is Ten Thousand Dollars—Mr. Bondur ant Qualifies As Surveyor—Other Business Transacted. The regular monthly meeting of the County Commissioners was held at the court house Monday. A full board was in attendance. The question of insuring the court house was again taken up and it was decided to have policies issued for SIO,OOO. Miss Helen Sparger, of Mt. Airy, and Mr. O. N. Petree, of Walnut Cove, came before the board, each asking that the insurance be taken with their respective companies, and the the board touk $5,000 in each of the representatives companies. In taking out this insurance on the county's court house the commissioners acted wisely. It should have been done sooner. Mr. R. F. Bondurant appeared before the board and qualified as county surveyor, filing his bond with the commissioners. Some additions were ordered to be made to the small bridge recently built on the Danbury- Piedmont road. The petition filed some time ago asking that a public road be laid out from the Quaker Gap road, near Capella, to the Volunteer road, byway of Lunsford's mill, will be consider ed at the next meeting of the commissioners. Among the crowd in town Saturday at the Farmers' Union meeting were Messrs. B. J. Savage, D. F. Tillotson, F. L. Moore, and Frank Robertson, leading Union men in their res pective sections of the county. Do you know that of all the miner ailments colds are by far the most dangerous? It not the cold itself that you need to fear, but the serious diseases that it often leads to. Most of these are known as germ diseases. Pneumonia and consumption are among them. Why not take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and cure your cold while you can? For sale by all dealers. Chairs and rockers. Bbyles Mercantile Co. New siippers. Boyles Mer cantile Co. See us for sample shoes and hats. Lewis & Simmons, Pilot Mtn., N. C. Highest Cash Prices Paid For Chickens and Eggs. McGEEHEE & CO., MADISON, N. C. .R. DAVIS EYE TROUBLES Selling Out At Cost I DRY OOODS, NOTIONS, I; BOOTS, SHOES AND LADIES' MILLINERY, „ „ AND FURNISHING We are prepared to fit Spectacles and eye GOODS. glasses to all eyes. Why let your eyes suffer ' and give you headache when you can have this defect properly corrected and read with Great Bargains ease. ® We examine your eyes free and we guar- ~ ~~~ antee every pair to fit. DAVIS For more than 10 years this store has made 411 LIBERTY ST. aspecialty of fitting glasses. 8 WINSTON - SALEM. Come to see me when here and it wont cost jj| you any thing to find out if your eyes need li i ■■■■■ glasses. I KILLTHECOUGH j; andCUREtneIUNCS ! «»Dannie's FRED N. DAY NEW DISCOVERY Registered Optometrist, IS? 406 Liberty St. Winston-Salem, N. C. t, ALL THROAT AND lUHCTROUBItS ' GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY ___—_—MON£Y RCn/NDCD. 's ' ' THE GRABS SAW MILL PATENTED AND MANUFACTURED BY V. T. GRABS, KING, N. C. All iron and steel, the best and completest mill on earth. Turns its own logs. Made in four sizes—lo feet, 15 feet, 20 feet and 30 feet long. Write for further in= formation and prices. Washington, March 3-Sec'y. ' 10c ' pound ' old hens. Boyles Onion sets. Boyles Mercan- Norton at the white house today Mercantile Co. tile Co. informed the corps of newspaper p eg( j stu fj Boyles Mercan- Clover seed. Boyles Mercan correspondents that if an extra! ' tilp Cn session is called the presidentj 1 e °" has decided on March 15 as the j g eec j oats Boyles Mercantile Spring goods have arrived, date. I Co. Boyles Mercantile Co. Page 3