IjOCALigd! wm §§ Next Thursday is Thankgiving. j Mr. Latimer Neal, of Mizpah,; was a Danbury visitor today. Several citizens in this section have killed nice porkers recently. Dr. R. H. Morefield, of MoOre's! Springs, was a Danbury visitor; yesterday. Mr. A. J. Holt, of Francisco,! Hpent a short while in town yes-1 terday on business. Mr. R. P. GlidewelJ, of Mead ows township, was a visitor here; Monday. Mr. Everett B.King,of Greens boro, is spending a few days here on business. Messrs. Harry Davis and Joe Fowler, of Wal nut Cove, spent last night here. Messrs. Hansel Thomas and j Sidney Allen, of Winston-Salem, j visited Danbury and Piedmont [ Springs Saturday. Miss Agnes Martin entertained a member of her young friends • last night in honor of her guest, Miss Annie Belle Lees?, of Pitcs- j burg. A nice sum was realized from an oyster supper given in the M. E. church annex Friday night. The money will be used by the church. Rev. 0. P. Routh, the new pas tor for Danbury circuit of the M. E. 'church, is expected here this week. Mr. Routhhas been sta tioned on the Morganton circuit. Messrs. J. Frank and X. Ray Martin, of Pittsburg, Pa., are expected here next week cn a visit to their parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Martin. The meeting; oft the Etude Music Club, which was to have been held Friday night last, was postponed until Friday night of this week. The club will meet with Miss Agnes Martin. Rev. T. J. Folger and family expect to leave tomorrow for a ten days' visit to relatives at Dob son. They expect to remove to Stokesdale, their new home, soon after returning here from their visit to Dobson. The Reporter is requested to announce that there will be a box party and voting contest at Zebulon school house next Satur day night, Nov 21st. The pro ceeds will be used to buy a library. The public is cordially invited. Good music will be furnished by a string band. Splendid Medicine. * Stomach Trouble I Suffered for Several Ye art Peruna Restored My Health Mrs. Elizabeth J Reuther, No. COS I Twelfth St., N. W.t Washington, D. C., ■ pleased to endorse Peruna as a splen did medicine for ratarrh and atom ach trouble, '£*? which I suffered Egp;; for several years. apl [ took It for sev- gT;- cral months and time found my healtoljfi| was restored and havers||S ! ' |_ l felt splendidly ever|j^™^ nince. I now take It when I contract a told and It soon rids the system of any catarrhal tendencies. Over Ten Years Aio. "I would not be without Peruna. Although It was over ten years ago that I first gave you my testimonial, I am of the same opinion as when I wrote It, and give you the privilege to use It as you see fit. I still use Pe runa when I think It necessary. I am recommending It to my neighbor* whenever a chance occur*," NEXT LEGISLATURE. Will-Be Besieged By Good Roads People, Equal - Suffragist Advocates, Etc. Raleigh, tyov. 17. Equal j suffrage advocates, good roads' boosters, constitutional overhaul-' ers and child labor reformers find the members-elect of the next general assembly the most • interesting study of the day. The number of all these! propagandists who are coming! here every day is imposing. The j legislature will be asked to do! something for the cause of good j roads, and Governor Craig has! declared in his addresses to the j county and state fairs that he is I going "to have good roads if I have to build them myself." To date nothing definitely shaped for such action has been sub ; mitted. The complexion of the general assembly will have a | good deal to do with the energy j of the undertaking. The governor will be asked to 'present special appeal to the legislature to do something on ithe labor situation in the state. He made important recommenda tions in the inaugural message last year and this agitation resulted in some modified form of regulation. The proponents lof better laws have never been satisfied, however, and will ask for something better than they now have. The suffragists will Dress hard for recognition. They have made no program announcement except their correspondence with I the individuals of the incoming i legislative and iheir intention to; open legislative head' |Uaters soon.! Tomorrow the Raleigh suffragists; will hold a meeting and hearj from the Charlotte convention. The delegates who went down will make reports on that meet ing. It is understood that the legislative undertaking will be discussed in every suffrage club this week. There is plenty of sentiment for a resubmission of the con stitutional amendments in less cumbersome shape and in reduc ed numbers. The advocates of a new poll believe that if the im portant matters embodied in the late ten could be incorporated in two or three there would be no trouble in carrying the election, j The revenue question is the one S that gives greatest concern, and i the next legislature tackling it is | expected to put this question so : squarley before the people that Democratic conventions will not ; shy at tax reform. For Sale At Bargain. A ninety-five acre farm with a new three-room cottage and feed barn in an excellent neigh borhood. It is situated on a good road near church and public school house, R. F. D. route and telephone connection. We will sell this place cheap. If inter ested let us hear at once. Also have a number of small lots and small portions of land for sale near Oak Ridge Insti tute. Write us. llnov4t DONNELL BROS. LUMBER CO. Oak Ridge, N. C. Remarkable Cure of Croup. "Last winter when my little boy had croup I got him a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. I honestly believe it saved his life," writes Mrs. J. B. Cook, Indiana, Pa. "It cut the phlegm j and relieved his coughing spells. II am most grateful for what this remedy has done for him." For I sale by all dealers, THE DANBURY REPORTER inf KIWI ran or i IEJM ron A DIG SALE I Wednesday, October 2Sth 244914 Pounds for $31464.43 Average $12.84 Per hundred \ Piedmont Warehouse WINSTON Run By the Norfleets. Join The Thousands of Satisfied Customers Who Sell at Pied mont First Sale Days For November Every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Great Demand For Ameri-! can Food Stuffs. Washington, Nov. 17. Of- j ficiais of the various government j departments in touch with the j country's business activities feel j confident that the most serious I effects of the European war on | American business have passed. | The restoration of the cjpedit | balance with Europe has greatly j eased the situation, the increas-' ing demand from Europe for, American food supplies and also the sudden development of an j abnormal trade in articles needed j by the huge armies now in the field, aiding to that end. No accurate figures on the con tracts of the latter character are abtainble but orders for horses, mules, army clothing, harness and the like have flooded factor ies and stockmen in some dis tricts. It is said that including ammunition orders, this business reaches a total of over $200,- 000,000. In several lines factor ies are straining to highest cap acity to meet the demands. Other factories which have aided in clearing up the situation are the opening of the Panama canal which has already increas ed freight traffic to the west of South America, and the entry of more than eighty foreignbuilt ships into America registry un der the emergency law passed at the last session of Congress. Of the shipping situation offic ials said today there was a grow ing scarcity of carriers for Am erican export commerce because the bulk of that traffic was in creasing so steadily. Freight rates have risen remarkably and it was said shipping companies were now selecting their cargoes with the greatest care, avoiding all articles of even a semi-con traband nature. Huge shipments of grain are awaiting transportation at many ports. It appears probable this condition will result in renewed activity in behalf of the adminis tration Federal merchant marine bill when Congress reassembles next month although the new complexion of the House of Representatives where the Dem ocrats control by a narrow , mar&in, makes tHe result doubt- ful. There was vigorous opposi tion to the bill last session by I many Democrats. The pulse of the Nation's j foreign commerce is showing steady improvement, according to the daily telegraphic state ments received bv Secretary Mc- Adoo from the ten leading ports of entry. Import business of last Saturday, based on reports from ports handling 87 per cent, of all imports, amounted to $2,330,512, exports from these ports, hand ling 72 per cent, of all exports amounted to $10,421,551. The daily average for these ports in November, 1913, was imports $-1,922,397, exports $6,983,426. Secretary McAdoo determined last month to keep in closest : touch with the foreign commerce of the United States noting from day to day th? fluctuations (f imports and exports. To that end he ordered the ten largest custom houses to make dailv reports. The result is tabulated with comparative figures and as laid on Mr. McAdoo's desk affords instant information as to the course of foreign trade. See me before you order that winter suit. E. P. Newsom, King. llnov4t Notice- Sale of Real Estate I'.y virtue of a decree of tin* Super ior Court of Stokes couut.v, rendered 011 tlie lutli day of Sept. 1!tl4, iii tlie f'peeinl l'roceeding entitled ".I. !•'. Newsoin, et til. ex parte," appointing tlie undersigned a commissioner to make wile of tlie lands hereinafter set forth, I will sell at a public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, upon the premises at King, Stokes county. N. on Saturday,lht*. ."•th, 1!)14 at tlie hour of - o'clock p. in. the following lands formerly belonging to John \V. Newsoin, deceased. First Tract, beginning at a black gum, .1, \V Newsom's and !rabs* corner, runs Hast lis iMi-'iii yards to a rock, thence North 10t> yards to n rock, thence West lis L't!-."»(! yards to a post oak, thence South lMi yards to the beginning. Second Tract.beginningat astake, Keiger's corner, runs Kast with (irabs' line, crossing a branch s chains and -tl links to s post oak. thence South on Lloyd's line 4 chains and 77 links to a black guiu, thence West crossing branch N chains and 41 links to a stake, in Keiger's line, thence North with his line 4 chains and 77 links to the beginning, con taining 1-2 acres, more or less less one-lialf of one acre sold to L. A. Uutleilge and wife. The land will be sold in two separate lots and also iia a whole to see in which way ii will bring tlie best price. This the 1-t h day of Nov. 1!»14. I>. ShATH, f'oin'r. N. O. l'etree, Atty. for Coiu'r. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Cures Colds, Croup und Whooping Cough. Rheumatism Muscle Colds "It is easy to u«e and quick to respond. No work. Just apply. It penetrates without rubbing." Read What Others Say: "Hive umu your ULimc.l v*:y frut-c«*»luUy in a caw of rrrtiir.ttifrr. r.f.d tlwajH have a bottle on har.d in #«;.w of a col«l or *ore throat. I v>n to ray I think it rr.e of ti.c brft of household ron i vo;;,tl not hnv» und it only it *i\n SLOANS LINIMENT Good for Neuralgia, Sciatica, Sprains and Br iet. AU Dealer* 25c. Send four cenii in ttampt for • free TRIAL BOTTLE. DR. EARL S. SLOAN, Inc. Dept. B Philadelphia, Pa. ENGLANBSAYS JOO NOALUH JpliJ 1M FOOD So does France So does Germany The sale of alum foods has been made illegal in Washington and the District of Colum bia, and alum baking powders are everywhere recognized as injurious. j Q yourself against alum, when ordering baking powder, Say plainly- ROYALrowSra I and be very sure you get Royal. Royal is the only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar. It adds to the digestibility and whole* L someness of the food.