W. G. Jerome
Real Estate and Insurance
Winston-Salem, N. 0.
506 Wachovia Bank & Trust
Building. Phone 983.
i
FOR SALE—Several farms near
Winston-Salem. All kinds of city
property. Life, health, accident
and fire insurance.
Dr. L. S. Fox
DENTIST.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Wachovia Bank Bldg.
. Rooms 504-505-
Dr. Geo. J. Evans
DENTIST. ~
Masonic Temple Bldg.
Winston- Salem, N. C.
Sooms 404-405
Office hours: Bto 12 a. m. 1:30
to 6 p. m. Office phone 1261,
Residence phone 696.
W. READE JOHNSON
Attorney-at-Law.
Masonic Temple.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Will practice in both State and
Federal Courts.
i
CHAS. O. McMICHAEL. J. E. SAINTSINO,
Wentworth. Reldsville.
M'MICHAEL & SAINTSINO,
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,
Practice in State and Federal
Courts. All business given
prompt attention. Chas. O, Mo-
Michael will be in Madison on
Saturdays, at his old office over
the post office.
DR. H. V. HORTON,
Dentist,
Is now back in his old location,
corner 3rd and Main Streets,
Wachovia Bank & Trust Co.
building.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Rooms: 301, 302, 303.
DR. THOMAS W. DAVIS?
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.
Office 405-7 Masonic Temple.
j Winston - Salem. N. C.
Hours: 9to 12:30, 2to 4 and
by appointment.
REID P. JOYCE,
Liveryman,
» WALNUT COVF N. C.
Good Safe Teams nd Careful
Drivers
DONALD. D. HAWKINS
Attorney-at-Law
4th Floor Wachovia Bank
Building,
Collections a Specialty.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
DR. R. A. FRY, Dentist,
Office Opposite Postoffice.
PILOT MTN., N. C.
| R. R. ROGERS J. I. FULTON
ROGERS & FULTON,
LAWYERS.
Offices Jones Building, Liberty St.
Winston-Safem, N. C.
R. R. Rogers will be in Walnut
Cove on the first and third Tues
days in each month.
J. W. HALL,
Attorney-at-Law,
DANBURY, N. C.
Will practice in all courts,
both State and Federal.
I Office over Martin' sstore.
I '—
JOHN D. HUMPHREYS,
Attorney-at-Law,
DANBURY, N. C.
Prompt attention to all boaineM
entrusted. Will praotioe in all
' r State oqorta.
# I
PETREE, EAST A CO.,
Real Estate and Rental
v Agents,
WALNUT COVE, N. C.
SOME GOOD ADVICE
TAKE GOOD CARE OF YOUR LAND
Prof Psrker Tells You How To
Do It —Cover Crops Are Great
Land Savers.
Every farmer owes it to him
self, to his family and to poster
ity, to take the best care of his
land that he possibly can; to
maintain its fertility and to keep
it from washing away.
Investigators, whether scien
tists or practical farmers have
found that winter cover crops of
any kind prevent land, in a
large measure, from washing,
and when turned under the fol
lowing spring make productive
then if no crop had grown on it.
An experiment covering a
number of years, in one of the
North Western states, showed
that more plant food was lost
from the land during the months
when no crops were grown on it
than was taken off inj the regu
lar summer crops, ilf this was
true in that state where they
have long and cold winters
when leaching is impossible for
weeks at a time, how much more
would it be true in North Caro
lina with her opan winters when
plant food can be leached from
out soils almost any week during
our winter months.
A ton of green rye contains,
according to good authorities,
about 66 pounds nitrogen; 3
pounds phosphoric acid, and 14.6
pounds potash. A ton of green
wheat contains, 10.8 pounds
nitrogen, 3 pounds phosphoric
acid, and 14.6 pounds potash.
Green oats contains just a little
less plant food than does gieen
wheat. A ton of greed crimson
clover contains 8.6 pounds nitro
gen, 2.6 phosphoric acid, and
9.8 pounds potash. Red clover,
Bur clover and the veches con
tain more plant food in their
green state than crimson clover
does. The wheat and rye men
tioned above was probably grown
on fertile land which explains
their high percentage of nitro
gen, for it is an established fact
that corps grown on rich land
contain more nitrogen than when
grown on poor land. For that rea
son grain grown on rich land has
a higher feeding value that
grown on poor land. It may be
well for us to remember this
when growing grain for our own
feeding purpose. --
Rye, wheat and oats take nit
rogen from the soil and store it
in the plant, thus saving much
of this costly element of plant
food that would otherwise be
leached from the land by our
winter rains. The stoole or
bunches and their roots and
leaves retared the flow of water
and act as brakes which will
prevent to a large degree the
washing of our rolling lands.
The clovers save the land from
washing in the same way and in
addition to this are beneficial by
being able to take'nitrogen from
the air through the agency of
bacteria which adds to the fer
tility of the soil. But to grow
these latter • - ; successfully
the soil must contain the bacter-
! Wood's Fall i
Seed Catalogue j
just issued —tells what crops 1
you can put in to make the j
quickest grazing, or hay, to j
help out the short feed crop*. I
Abo tells abqut both . j
Vegetable and
Farm Seeds
that can be planted in the fall
to advantage and pro£t
Every Farmer, Market Grower
and Gardener should have a
oopy of this catalog.
His the best and most corn-
fall seed catalog issued.
Mailed free. Write for it
'■ " 4 ' - if nW '
T.W.WOOD© SONS,
lord 11 on. • Richmond, Va.
, in': » "1 '
• ■: V .U dinLfci font's.
THE DANBURY REPORTER
pMwpn
1 1 iiwLJn^rffl
I~ CURED A BAD SPAVIN. V i
Mr. B. H. Irtjr, Marion, N.C., write# s
11 Mj horse had a very bad case of spavin H
and nothing did any good until I tried your ■
Mustang Liniment. I rubbed the spavin H '
frequently with the liniment and soon saw H !
an improvement. I did this three or four ■
times a day and my horse was completely H
cured. It is sure to cure if properly used." ■
■pppwvbmhbhhihhh '
IT Iu H i I
|
Mr. S. J. Hudson, Newbern, N.C. writes: |
"I have used Mexican Mustang Lini- I
mentfor different ailments and have found ■
it an excellent liniment. At one time my ■
mare was badly stun# by hornets but your ■
liniment quickly cured her. I have recom- H j
mended it to others hundreds of times."
25c. 50c. $ 1 a bottle at Drue AGso'lSiow [ j
Mr. R. S. Skaltea, Hill, N.C, writes:
"I used Mexican Mustang Liniment on I '
a verv valuable horse for swinney and it ■
cured it. lalways keep it in my stable and li
think it the iK-st liniment for rubs and galls" ■ j
It contains no alcohol and »o cannot H
stin# in casta of optn wounds or burtu. ■ •
Soothes and cools at once. Just try it.
I For BURNS and BRUISES. I
Mr. W.V. Clifton. RaWigb.N.C., write*: I
"I keep a bottle of Mexican Mustang I
Liniment in mv house continually for gen- ■
eral use. It is the finest thing in the world ■
for Cuts, Burns and Bruises."
25c. 50c. $1 a bottle at Dru« & Gon'l Store# |
ia peculiar to the particular crop
grown.
It has been the experience of
J many of our farmers that any
crop grown after a winter-cover
crop, when turned under at the
proper time in the spring, and
disked well before and after
turning, will prod ice agreat deal
more, often as much as 30 per
cent more, than if no winter-cov
er crop had been grown. The seed
for a c >ver crop will cost from
one to live dollars an acre accor
ding to kind and quantity of seed
used. This should save to the
soil and aid to thi next year's
crop more than twice the cost
of the cover crop.
Sow at the rate of 15 to 20
pounds crimson clover seed per
acre and cover lightly with har
row or cultivator. These can be
sowed in growing crops, on stub
ble lan i, or afcsr peas. So -v from
20 to 30 pounds of vetch per acre
if sown with small grain, and if
sown alone put from 40 to 50
pounds per acre. Rye should be
sown at the rate of oae to one and
a half bushels per acre.
An application of manure, or
from 200 fco 500 pounds acid
phosphate, per acre and 25 to 50
pounds muriate of potash on
sandy or gray land, will be help
ful to the clover and vetches.
For rye or other small grain it
may be better to add nitgrogen
to the above.
It is now time to commence
putting these crops in. When
put io cotton fields it is better
to sow immediately after the
pickers, as in that way no cot
ton will be knocked out in cover-;
iiig the seed.
Put in the crop that will suc
ceed best in your locality and ex
periment with other crops in a
small way until you are assured
they will make satisfactory
growth on your land and under
your conditions.
T. B. PARKER,
Director Cooperative Experi
ments, N. C. State Depart
mentof Agriculture.
Don't trifle with a cold is good
advice for prudent men and wo
men. It may be vital in case of
A child. There is nothing better
than Chamberlain's Cough Re
medy for coujgrhs and colds in
children. It is safe and -sure.
For sale by aU dealers.
WILL HOLD COTTON.
Br. H. Q. Alexander Says The Farm?
ers Will Hold Their Cotton For
Fifteen Cents.
"Will the farmers of North
Carolina hold their cotton for 15
cents?" Dr. H. Q. Alexander,
president of the State division
the Farmers' Union, was asked
Saturday afternoon by a Char
lotte paper.
"That depends," Dr. Alexan
der responded. "Of course there
are some who cannot hold. They
have incurred obligations which
have to be met and there is noth
ing for them to do but dispose of
enough of their crop to get rid
of pressing obligation. Of the
remainder, however, I am confi
dent that the great majority will
hold.their cotton for 15 sents.
The organization is making a
constant and I believe an effec
tive campaign of education with
the view to b?tterini? the con
dition of the farmers, instruct
ing them as to the production
[and marketing of their crops and
otherwise looking after their best
interest.
"I have received several inquir
i ies, mostly from officials of coun
!ty locals throughout the State,
i asking about the financing of the
crop. My replies to all these is
to have the county locals appoint
influential committees to wait
upon the locals banks to see if
funds cannot be secured at home
for the financing of the crop, the
securities being the warehouse
receipts. 1 have added that if
sufficient accommodations cannot
be secured, then to communicate
I with me so that I can in
| touch with up."
Dr. Alexander is assured that
j the farmers of the South can
| realize on their crop if they will
only market it slowly and jud
iciously.
GIVES AID TO STRIKERS.
Sometimes liver, kidneys and
bowels seem to go on a strike and
refuse to work right. Then you
need those pleasant little strike
breakers—Dr. King's New Life
Pills—to give them natural aid
and gently compel proper action.
Excellent health soon follows.
Try them. 25c at all druggists.
Miss Harriette Ross, of Locust
Hill Farm, visited in Danbury
Thursday.
Stokes Prisoners Carried to Rock
ingham County.
The prisoners sentenced to the
public roads of Rockingham
county at last week's term of
Stokes Superior court were car
ried to Madison Thursday by
Sheriff C. M. Jones and Deputy
Sheriff S. W. Neal and delivered
to the Rockingham county
authorities.
The names and sentences of the
prisoners were as follows : Mil
ton Barlow, white, 12 months;
Cephas Long, white, 4 months;
Ben Anthany, colored, 4 months.
MRS. McGILL
BROKE DOWN
Gives the Seal Facts In Regard to
Her Case and Tells How She
Suffered.
Joneaboro, Ark.—"l suffered a com
plete break down in health, some time
ago," writes Mrs. A. MoGill, from this
place. *1 was very weak and could
not do any work. I tried different
remedies, hut they did me no good.
One day, I got a bottle of Cardul. It
d'l me so much good, I was surprised,
and took some more.
Before I took Cardul, I bad headache
and backache, and sometimes I would j
cry tor hours. Now lam over all that,
and can do all kinds of housework. I
think K is the greatest medicine on
earth."
In the past fifty years, thousands of
ladles have written, like Mrs. Maßlll,
to tell ot the benefit received torn
Cardul.
Such testimony, from earnest women, 1
rarely mdfeates the great value of this j
toolc reksedy, Of diseases ■peculiar to j
women. AM you;* su#erertv Test I
Cardul Is the medicine you need.
We ai*e jw* to try it
Tn-lrutHimi, ml 64-km* book, Horn TrMtmaat
tor Watnao." MM la piaia wrappor, as nSW.
.
!U>»-.'ii! uifl**. 1. • ,Ik,'-
It's Easy to
Stopfcin
l8 A al>NE.
"I use Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain
Pills for Neuralgia, LaGrippc
and all pains. I don't intend
to be without them, for I find
ready relief in them for every
thing I use them for."
MRS. L. F. MILLER,
120 W. 6th St., Davenport, la.
All Pain
"In my family Dr. Miles'
Anti-Pain Pills are used for
headache, colic and other
pains, and always give relief
at once."
THOS. R. FOWLER
R. D. No. 3, Dunn. N. C.
Sold b-y drugghita «wrywh«ra, who
authoriaed to return prfoa of ffrrt
p-'ckaoo If thoy fall to ben« At.
VILE 3 MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
THE STOKES COUNTY FAIR.
A Cordial Invitation Extended to
the Public To Come and Enjoy It.
King, Sept. 21. —Home com
| ing time and the days of the 1911
fair will be well worth the pres
ence of everybody. The endeav
ors of the management will
doubtless be met by a hearty re
sponse on the part of the people.
Why not make up your mind
right now that you are coming?
Your friends and neighbors will
be there; you will regret it if
you are not. The small amount
it takes will never be missed.
In extending this invitation to
our friends we guarantee that
while they are here they will re
ceive liberal treatment, and en
joy the fair. The fair is held at
a seasonable time when every
farmer and his family can take
a few days rest and visit the
fair.
We urge the many friends of
the association to join us in unit
ed effort and help us make the
1911 fair, by far, the best ever
held. United action is all that
is needed to produce this result
and this we believe you will give.
The Association desires every
citizen of the county to assist in
any way possible toward making
the fair a substantial success.
With proper encouragement from
the public and exhibitors the
annual fair can be made the most
instructive and enjoyable feature
of the entire year.
Fair time is a Home Coming,
and the sons and daughters of
the county and their decendents,
and ali former citizens are espe
cially and earnestly invited to
return to their native county,
visit the scenes of their youth
and mix and mingle with rela
tives and friends of former days.
A warm welcome is extended to
all who avail themseves of the
invitation.
The premiums offered are
liberal and we all owe it to our
selves to fill the various classes
with entrys and thus encourage
this home enterprise.
To all we say come, devote a
few days to pleasure and harm
less enjoyment, and thus add
ease and comfort to the' life we
are now living.
Respectfully yours,
THE FAIR ASSOCIATION.
! You are not experimenting on
yourself when you take Cham
berlain's Cough Remedy for a
i cold as that preparation has won
I its great reputation and exten
i sive sale by its remarkable cures
!of colds, and can always be dep
! ended upon. It is equally valuable
j for adults and children and may
be given to young children with
; implicit confidence as it contains
no harmful drug. Sold by all
' dealers.
" 4,i hJ> . M-.'.kk i lx.\S2iAt, J.-. Li. ' i!J&i&a
The Toll Road. 1
The toll road from Walnut Cove,
N. C. to the Buck Island Bridge
is an important matter that
should be considered by every
citizen of Stokes county. Not
only will this road be of benefit
to the citizens of Danbury and
Walnut Cove, but it will be worth
more to the country at large
that can be estimated. We con
sider that it will be a good in
vastment to the stockholders,
but that will be only a small
portion of the great good that
will be derived from it. We
welcome the project and think
there is no doubt of its success.
0. N, PETREE,
Cashier Bank of Stokes County,
Walnut Cove, N. C.
KlSundav School Picnic Saturday.
The Sunday School at Brim's
Grove near Pilot Mt. will have
its annual picnic Saturday. The
school has a good enrollment
though it runs only six months
during the year, from April to
September, and at the close of
each season the students are
given a picnic.
HOW'S THIS?
We offer One Hundred Dollars
Reward for any case of Catarrh
that cannot be cured by Hall's
Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY
& CO., Toledo, 0.
We, the undersigned, have
known F. J. Cheney for the last
15 years, and believe him per
fectly honorable in all business
transactions and financially able
to carry out any obligations made
by his firm. Walding, Kinnan
& Marvin, Wholesale Druggists,
Tolodo, 0.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken
internally, acting directly upon
blood and mucous surfaces of the
system. Testimonials sent free.
Price 75c per bottle. Sold by all
Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for
constipation.
NOTICE!
Having duly qualified as ad
ministrator of W. H. Vaden, de
ceased, notice is hereby given
to all persons indebted to said
estate to come forward and make
immediate settlement of the
same, and all persons holding
claims against said estate are
hereby notified to present the
same duly authenticated for pay
ment on or before the 10th day
of September, 1912, or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery.
Moore's Springs, N. C., Sept.
sth, 1911.
W. 0. VADEN and
J. M. VADEN,
Adm'rs of W. H. Vaden, dec'd.
J. D. HUMPHREYS, Atty. for
Adm'rs.
THE;
♦2JJAT V
WITH THE
* 3 /FACTION
BEA*£TH& y
AT
TRADE MARK
WE ARE /OUtAGE^TJ*
N. L. CRANFORD
AND COMPANY.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
R. DAVIS
Selling Out At Cost
DRY OOODS, NOTIONS,
BOOTS, SHOES AND
LADIES' MILLINERY,
AND FURNISHING
GOODS.
Great Bargains.
;•* Ji .jSu
411 LIBERTY ST. '
WINSTON - SALE*.
.A - '%,:£! I .--J.*;- _ T AIH
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