Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / June 24, 1914, edition 1 / Page 2
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w———————————— m m X We are now showing: 2 | all the pretty de- J J signs in crepes, silks, J J ratines, etc., for g ? spring wear. § • « • A complete line of ladies | 2 and gents furnish- | S* ings. Every thing | i 2 new. | | MILLINERY A SPECIALTY® 2 We will be glad to f • © 2 have our Stokes coun= « • o f ty friends call on us. « iMcQEHEE & CO. I i m § Madison, N. C. % m ® !"no"TTceTI II ] I have just opened my store full of j NEW ROCERIES, RUBBER \ ROOFING, ETC. ) * am a^so £ enera l | I agentfor spray pumps, I ■ Ir HP ates * Churns, | p Jlj 111 l Arsenic of Lead to jj I kill tooacco worms | | potato bugs and all other kinds 1 j of insects. a 1 When vcu are in town see % i ' % j mc before buying elsewhere. | MY PRICES ARE RIGHT | | JOHN R. SMITH, I I Walnut Cove, N. C. | Do you raise early or late potatoes? I ■KfrY:'/. There's a difference between early and late varieties that should be considered in fertilizing. ■SsS re car 'y kind u;:e i.ooo pounds per acre n a fertilizer containing io?6 H Mr POTASH ■ S*' ammonia ar.l SJo phosphoric acid. Under average conditions, 800 pounds U of 3-o-S is tli« most profitable lor late crops. 5 home growers double these amounts, for they | Caution: He sure ynur Potash for potatoes j UR on heavy soil is in the form of Sulfate. J!/y?8S vKWfK. Write fur I'otash prices and for Kree Ikkilcs I with formulas and directions. We sell any i- 32/X/JS I amount of Potash from a 200-pound bag up. I GERMAN KALI WORKS, Inc. S 42 llroadwny. New York ' Chtafo. McCormick Block Savannah. Rank * Trail B!Jf. I N'w Orlrana, Wbiiner Cenual Bink Bldj. tfifivlmL'' **/ryy//V/!R lan PranclKo, 2 S California SI. AUama. tniplie Bidr. ///mL THE DANBURY REPORTER TAKE CARE OF CHILDREN Do Not Let them Plav In the " Heat of the Day have to Prevent Prickly Heat. Summer months bring added anxiety to the woman in the home. The housekeeper has, perhaps more than the average share of worry, but when she is ■ a mother as well her hands are full. i . ! Children need careful attention in hot months, particularly young children. One rule should be made and rigidl/ adhered to by all mothers in the intense heat of the summer months. That is that young children; should never be allowed to plav i out of doors in the middle of the day. The organizations of the 1 child body is too delicate to en-; i dure the heat which completely! 1 prostrates many a grown man • and woman. The best thing to do is to send , the children out for their play as early as possible in the morn ing, before this sun has had a I chance to bake away the I coolness. At 10 or half past, they should come in the house,]' for by this time the heat has ' j commenced in earnest. A tubful of cold water brings 1 perfect content to the hearts of ;young children if they are al- j 1 lowed to remove their clothes to, j splash about till lunch time, i An early lunch at 12 tindsj J everyone hungry. Aft r this a nan will serve to keep the child ren out of mother's way for i some time. Then at half past i four or live it will probably be, safe let the little ones go out to play again. In this the mother! must use her own discretion. If the heat is still intense at this 1 hour, it would be wiser to keep the children in until late in the evening. i: Yjung babies require careful'! ■ attention during the hot spells., Sponging the body oil' in alcohol |; ■ will do much to keep the little j, ! one cool. In the very hot weath- ' er this should be done as often 1 ! S 'as nteessarv. The baby's crib . should be placed near some win- I 1 dow where the sun does not ' j t ( shine and where a breeze will j ] blow it there are any breezes. I j Almost every child, and, in s fact, many grown ] e «ple, are ' subject to pric'vly lieut in the j 1 summer months. This is: | a rash which spreads over any ' i part of the body, most frequently , | the back of the neck and should ers. It is attended by an itching and smarting, or prickling which is really painful for children. Shutt Grain Cradles at J. Walter Tuttle's, King Route 2 at less than 53.99. I Eor Sale. i ! S3 1-2 acres of land, well 'watered with creek and branches,, good springs, plenty of timber j for a small farm, some good I bottoms, 1 tobacco barns, two j dwellings, 2 miles east of Sandy ' Ridge. Write for particulars if interested. E. H. VERNON, Route 1, Sandy Ridge, N. C.! For Sale Or Rent. Two complete threshing out fits, one Frick gin and gasolene engine, one Huber gin andstsam 1 engine, also 1-4 interest in Hu-1 ber gin an;l steam engine. All in good condition. W. G. SLATE, j Mizpah, N. C. Resolution of Appreciation. Piedmont Springs. I Resolution s Stokes county, | of Apprecia- North Oaro 1 i n a. I tion. WHEREAS, by and through the action of the County Board of Education of Stokes county and the courteous invitation of the Messrs. Pepper, it was made possible for this Institute to be held at Piedmont Springs, a popular summer resort, greatly to our pleasure and delight, and, ! WHEREAS, Prof. W. R. Mills as Director and Miss Louise Lunn as Assistant Director, have come to us and have won our love and esteem by their sterling business qualities, their patience, their ! integrity, their clear-sightedness and the faithful discharge of ! their duties. NOW, therefore, we, the student body, in committee, wish to express to Prof. Mills and Miss Lunn our sincere thanks and appreciation for the inspira tion and the wholesome instruc tion they have given us for the past two weeks. We feel that we have been gr atly benefitted, not only as teachers, but as men : and women by the advice impart-; ed to us. We wish to thank, also, the ( management at Piedmont Springs . for the hospitality shown us dur ing our two weeks stay. Suggested that a copv each be given to Prof. Mills and Miss Lunn and spread upon our: minute book. Done in committee at Piedmont Springs this the 19th day of June, A. I).. 1011. MRS. J. W. NEAL, MISS LIZZIE ADKINS, JOHN A. LEAKE. W. T. GEORGE. Committee. NOTICE OF SALE. By virtue of a decree of the | Superior Court of Stokes county rendered bv His Honor Judge Henry P. Lane at Spring Term i 1914 of the Superior Court of I said county in the cause entitled 1 "The Bank of Stokes County vs. j Lola Bennett administratrix of | W.I). Bennett, et al," appoint ing the undersigned acommis-; sioner to make sale of the herein- \ afte*-described peivuml property,, I will sell at public auction to the I highest bidder for cash at the court house door in the town of Dan bury, N. C., " Mond.iv, August the 3rd. I'.'i 1 nt the hour of one o'clock J' M. fi"e shares of stock in T' e Wal nut Cove Mercantile C >mpany, Incorporated, of the tnr value of each share at SIOO.CO and the par value of the five shares being $500.00 same being certifi cate of stock No. issued by the said The Walnut Cove Mercantile Co., Incorporated. Sale subject to the con fir ma ! tion of the court. This June the 20t.h. 1914. J. 1). HUMPHREYS, Commissioner. Death of Frank E.Tlinchum. Spray, June 19. Mr. Frank jE, Flinchum died at his home here last Wednesday morning at •3 o'clock. He was the oldest son of Elder J. W. Flinchum and I was about 33 years of age. He leaves a wife and twochild ' ren, a father and mother, five | brothers, two sisters and a host | of friends to mourn their loss. Always Lead to Better Health. Serious sicknesses start in disorders of the stomach, li-ver and kidneys. The best corrective land preventive is Dr. King's • New Life Pills. They Purify the Blood Prevent Constipation, 1 keep Liver, Kidneys and Bowels in healthy condition. Give you , better health by ridding the . system of fermenting and gassy j foods. Effective and mild. 25c. ' at vour Druggist. Bucklen's Arnica Salve for All Hurts. DEPARTMENT OF WOMANS' WORK. (Conducted By the Womans' Union Missionary Society of Danbury.) Meditation on God's Word. "Noah walked with God." (Gen. vi. 9.) Contextual reading, Micah vi. 6-13. Life is not a couch, nor a wilderness, nor a wind-borne : wave, but a pathway. It means | activity, progress, and destina | tion. It implies a whenc3 and a j whither. It suggests, moreover, the need of guidance and com ; panionship. I "Noah walked with God." Let not such a word from that far-away time fall meaningless upon our ears. Often have we prayed: "When life's trials are over, take us unto thyself." Let us oftener pray: "In the midst of life's trials take us into conscious companionship with thee." We may not cease to sing the Christian battle song: "Fight on,my soul, till death Shall bring thee to thy Got." But neither must we forget that God is with us in this life, and that we may live in spirit as well as in physical fact very near to him here. \Y hen it was sai i to a dying man in a present-day story. "You will soon be with God," the answer was: "1 have Mr. Spurgeon Booker. | It mav not be known that one | of Surry county's brightest • young men is blind, Mr. Spurgeon Booker, son of Mr. G. M. Hook-, jer, spent his early youth in Mount Airy. lie attended the j 'graded schools and acquired aj practical education and began; life with as bright prospects as most men. About the age of twenty-one years, a serious spell of sickness left him hopelessly, blind. After a few months in j the wretched state he began to adjust himself to the new condi tions which faced him, and began > life over by entering the school for the blind at Raleigh. For. eight years he applied himself to; the task of acquiring aneduca-, tion under the new conditions. A few weeks ago his father had the pleasure of seeing him graduate with honors at that institution. Hi begins life now. Lumbago-Sciatica ||| * Sprains Jt ,S "The directions ieys, its good for lumbago too, — Sloan's cured my fjil ") /"SvC-A rheumatism; I've used it and 1 tf'n \ sfs';'l know." Do you use Sloan's? \! ' /( "I my bark hurt in the Doer War \' gJJ.fI'OT- Jtlttti y// '«{ mid two y.-.irs a*n I was hit by a street li'AHr 1,1 m • liR ' fL I tar ' ' tried nil kinds of dope without j '' M*' ' / nieces*. I »:iw your l.iniment in a driut fllwPpggs>t»C*H-.' VT'.\V3fcJ« More and Bot a Ixittle to try. The first / 'i i >*w\ application caused instant relief, ami now V ' 1 except for a lit Hi? still'iicus, I am ■ 1 moat 'J. Wcll/'—H'kAcr Aunnan, Whiuier, Calif. - Instant Relief from Sciatica s " * wns k«P* * n *'ith ®**»atloa ainee * 1 the first of February, but I had almost io- > X ft ant relief when I tried your Liuiuient." \ —tf . 11. liauktns, Frankfort, Ky» Sprained Ankle "As « user of your T.ininent f-.r the Inst 15 years, I enn fay it is one of the be§t on the market. Fifteen yrnr* :uro I sprained my ankle and had to use erutehea, and the doetors paid I would ahvn> «* he lame. A friend advised me to try your Liniment and after using it night and morning for three months 1 eould walk without a ean© arid run as good ih anv of the other firemen in my department. I have never been without u bottle Mlice that time."— Air. William li, tirutov. Central Itlip, N. Y, SLOAN'S LINIMENT At all Daalan. Prlca 25c., 50c. aad SI.OO Sloan's Instructive Book on horses, cattle, poultry and hogs, sent free. Address, DR. EARL S. SLOAN, Ine* BOSTON, MASS. been with him &11 my life." So there is a another sang of the soul that has been given us to sing: "Close to thee, close to thee, All along my pilgrim journey, Saviour, let me walk with thee." "Noah walked with God." We thank thee, Lord, that even in that dark and godless day, when thou wast grieved in thy heart with a world that would none of thy ways, there were those who knew thee as the ever-present One. They had no Scriptures, they had no sacra-, ments, they lacked the knowl edge, culture, civilization, and Christianity in which, as in an atmosphere charged with great ideas and incentive?, we haTe lived from the very dawn of life. Yet their hearts went a-search for thee, and thou found them, In the spiritual loneliness of life they felt the touch of a heavenly hand. And so they had power to walk life's pathway humbly, reverently, and hopefully with thee. May we listen to thy voice and tell thee all that is in our hearts, as did these ancient sons of thine! So in this holy converse will thy presence be come a conscious reality. at the ape of thirty-two as an accomplished and intelligent man. He is a skilled musician and uses the typewriter with as much pro:iciency as a profession al stinographer. He can sit down to the typewriter and write rapidly, intelligently and at length, and never get a comma or a period or a letter out of place on the paper. While completing his literary education he realized the im portance of the skilled hand as well as the cultivated brain, and with this in mind, he acquired the trade of manufacturing brooms and mattresses. At the present he is at the home of his father west of Dobson, and in a small way, he will operate a broom and mattress factorj. All necessary machinery for the business has been ordered and the factorv building erected. Of course the business will be small in the beginning but here is hoping that his efforts will be crowned with abundant success. —Mt. Airy News.
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
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June 24, 1914, edition 1
2
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