SUNRISE ON MOORE'S KNOB. A bunch of Piedmont quests who had spent the night on the great mountain, attired in their unconventional but entirely comfort able blankets. Horses Doing Hard Work Should Hoi Run On Pasture For animals that must do hard work, or are worked regularly, it is not economical nor benefi cial to give them any appreciable amount of green feed. For such animals and for driving horses, nothing but dry feed should be used. It is probably more economical, when their efficiency and freedom from sickness are considered, to buy dry feed for such animals rather than allow them to graze or get green feed in any way. There is no more frequent cause of scouring, colic, founder and other disturbances of that sort than green feed for hard-working or driving animals. The animal that is in pasture at yr M. T. CHILTON, President. DR. J. W. NEAL, Vice-Pres. LOOK OUT FOR THE NEW MONEY Size of present bi11—7.2x3.04 inches. I Size of new bi11—6x2.5 inches. I J j i I -» 1 • V I e 1 rj ■* 1 _5 o I -J fD 1 f O 3 | | £ | The New and Smaller Paper Currency f I It is expected that within a month or two the people of the United States will witness a great revolu= -5 tion in the size and appearance of their paper money. Each one of the two billion notes of that kind now £. in circulation will be supplemented by uniform pieces of currency about a quarter size smaller than now used. P* The change in size is not the only one. Any note with Washington's portrait on it will be one dollar, 1 Jefferson's, two dollars, Lincoln's, five dollars, Grover Cleveland's, ten dollars, Alexander Hamilton's, twenty dollars, and so on. . This plan will render the raising of bills by crooks an impossibility, and we I will have the safest and simplest system of national currency in the world. " g I However, the new money will be just as elusive-=just as hard to get and keep==as the old currency, and I ' your need for the services of a good bank in caring for it will be just as great. This strong institution | | stands ready to serve you in this connection. 1 ' The Bank of Stokes County - - - Banbury and Walnut Cove. I - ••••■• - , • -v a N. E. PEPPER, Cashier at Danbnry. O. N. PETREE, Cashier at Walnut Cove. nights and on Sunday, or other idle days, is almost certain to suffer from too great looseness of the bowles the next day, if given fast or hard work. The most economical plan is to keep the horses and mules work ing every day, just as nearly as it is possible to do so. and grow on the farm, or purchase, if the feed is not grown, sufficient dry feed to supply the entire needs of this work-stock. We know the animals like the, green feed, and that it is their "natural" feed, but we are no; keeping them under "natural" conditions when we work them hard or drive them fast, and consequently what is their "natural" conditions ceases to be their "natural" feed when the conditions are "unnatural," or THE DANBURY REPORTER those of the hardworked horse or mule either on the farm or | elsewhere. For idle animals, or for those doing light work, the cheapest sodrce of feed is a good pasture, but for an animal doing regular, hard work, on hard or fast work irregulary, a pasture is not only not economical, but is: a common cause of sickness and ; reduced efficiency. The man who works his horses | and mules hard as regularly and constantly as possible and pro duces on the farm sufficient dry feed to supply their entire needs the year round is keeping his work-stock the most economical ly when freedom from disease and efficiency considered.— Tait Butler, in The Progressive Farmer. ;| How to Core Pea Hay. From Louisiana: "You speak in this week's paper of a method of curing cowpea hay. Please give it?" I have given this method annually for years, and I probably after a while will have I more asking for it. But as you are .in the far South, I give it [here again and hope the later | farmers will keep it. Now I have practiced this method for years, and many farmers have done it with success while others, for some reason, say they fail. I can only tell what I have done with perfect success. Begin mowing when the peas turn yellow in the pods. Mow in the morning till noon; if possible, run a tedder right after the i mower to keep the hay tossed up {and hasten the wilting. Rake jinto windrows that afternoon. jNext morning turn the windrows | with the rakn while the mowers are running on other parts. That | afternoon put this hay into cocks ;as narrow and tall as will stand j well. Then, as soon as you can ! take a handful of the nay and 1 twist it and can wring no sap to : the twist, haul the hay to the barn and let it settle with its own weight without tramping and then let it alone and it will cure all right. 1 f it heats some, ; let it heat. If you go to stirring jit to ''onl it, you will let in germs ,of niold from the air and will ; have moldy hay j Now. I have cured it in this i way many years and never made any moldy hay, hut had it come I out with the leaves on and green in color, and l'ar hitter feed than the usual assortment of sticks that many make by letting the hay lie in the sun to bleach and the leaves to get dry and crisp. In fact, I have found curing peavine hay as easy as any other hay if you simply let it cure and do not "monkey" with all sorts of scaffolds and contrivances that merely dry the hay and lose the leaves, the best part of the hay.—The Progressive Farmer. Constipation Cured. Dr. King's New Life Pills will relieve constipation promptly and Set your bowels.in healthy con ition again. Jon Supsic, of San bury, Pa., says: "They are the best pills I ever used, and I advise everyone to use them for constipation, indigestion and liver complaint." Will help you. Price 25c. Recommended by all dealers. Six Rules For Meadow Owners 1. Do not sow without testing I beforehand the power of germ | ination in the seeds. 2. Do not sow anything but | clean seed. Examine for noxious I seeds with a magnifying glass. 3. Do not sow when soil is very dry and cloddy. ' 4. Do not cover seeds to 1 ja greater depth than one-half ;of an inch. When covered two j inches very few, if any will germinate. J 5. Do not fail to exterminate all bunches of "broomsedge" and all "yellow dock" that may appear in the meadow during i the summer. Never let these go I to seed. 6. Above all, do not forget to top-dress your meadow with suitable manure in the fall of the year or the spring. Feed your meadow and it will feed you, and if you don't you will have to buy hay, which no South ern farmer ought to do with the chance he has.—P. A. Bryant, in The Progressive Farmer. Summer dress goods, send for samples. Boyles Mercantile Co. Terra-cotta for wells. Boyles Mercantile Co. 1 Good chop, $1.40. Boyles Mercantile Co. John WMte A XataUUtMd 1087