Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / Aug. 25, 1915, edition 1 / Page 5
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LOCAL P*j WNS £g The Winston Salem tobacco market opened Thursday. Miss Carrie Hill, of Meadows, is the guest of Miss Janie Martin this week. Mr. H. W. Alley, of Chatham, Va., is visiting relatives in Dan bury this week. Mr. and Mrs. Hardin Coving ton are visiting relatives in Mayodan this week. Miss Annie Martin, of Walnut Cove, is visiting relatives in Danbury this week. The D reensboro tobacco market will open for the sale of leaf to bacco August 21st. Messrs. G. L. Jarvis and L. B. Simmons, of Walnut Cove, were visitors here yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Pitzer, of Red Shoals, were Danbury visit ors Friday afternoon. Rev. C. W. Irvin preached at the Presbyterian church Sunday morning and at Piedmont Springs Sunday night. Mr. M. D. Sizemore, a good farmer of Germanton Route 1, was a visitor at the Reporter office yesterday. A number of Danbury people attended the reunion of the old Confederate veterans at Madison Saturday. Work has been started on the new residence of Mr. J. D. Humphreys here. Mr. R. H. R. Blair has the contract for its construction. Mr. John M. Calloway, of Madison, was here today en route to Piedmont Springs to visit his mother, who is there in her cottage. Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Joyce and children expect to leave for their home in Fletcher, Okla homa, today, after visiting relatives here for several weeks. Farmers are now busy cutting and curing tobacco. The general opinion is that the crop will be sweet and good. A great im provement has taken place in the quality during the last two or three weeks. The county superintendent of health of Guilford county reports that the water of ninety percent, of all the wells and springs in Guilford county contain typhoid fever germs. He is urging the people to boil all of their drink ing water. The ice cream supper given by the ladies on the lawn of the M.E.church here Saturday night was largely attended and quite a nice sum was realized which will be used for church purposes. A great many of the Walnut Cove people were in attendance, eight or ten machines full com ing over from that place. Mr. J. B. Martin, of Stuart, Va..was a visitor here this week. Mr. Martin has invented an at tachment for an automobile which he thinks will be very valuable. He will not make public the na ture of the atfaAbient until he secures patents upon it. Mr. Martin stated that he expected to buy a machine right soon and will pat his patent into use in the near future and demonstrate tj the public its usefulness. Mr. W. Hardin Flinchum, of Danbury Route 1, will remove soon with his family to Pilot Mt. to reside. He will farm with his brother, Mr. John Flinchum, who resides near Pilot Mt. Mr. Flinchum will rent his farm near Danbury to Mr. A. A. Nelson. Dr. E. Fulp was in the city yesterday. He accompanied Mrs. M. D. Linville, of near Walnut Cove, to the City Hos pital, where an operation was performed yesterday morning by Dr. C. S. Lawrence. Mrs. Linville is doing nicely today. Winston Sentinel. Mr. Paul Neal, of Monroe, who has been spending several weeks at Piedmont Springs, is the guest for a few days of Mr. Luther Ferrell. Mr. Neal, who graduat ed at Trinity last year, will enter Harvard this fall for the study of his profession, medicine. — Winston Journal. A party composed of Misses Grace Taylor, of Danbury: Mary English, of Monroe, and Martha Geslen, of Guilford College: Mr. Benbow Jones, of Greens boro, and several other young people left yesterday to camp for a week or more near Vade Mecum Springs. The party is chaperon 3d by Mrs. J. Spot Taylor, of Danbury. Preparation is being made to drill a well on the court house square at Dan bury. The ma chine was placed yesterday and work will be started Monday. It will be necessary to drill through considerable rock to get water. A well on the square is badly needed and will be a great convenience to the people, especially on public days at the county seat. Misses .Tanie and Agnes Mar tin delightful'y entertained a number of young people Tuesday evening in honor of their guests Misses Carrie Hill, of Meadows, and Annie Martin, of Walnut Cove. Numerous games were played on the lawn after which delicious ice cream and wafers were served. Those present were Misses Carrie Hill, of Mead ows: Annie Martin, of Walrfut Cove: Irene King, of Henry, Va.: Grace and Luna Taylor, Raynor Joyce, Alma Chilton, and Ora Kate Routh, Messrs. Paul and John Taylor, Robert Joyce, Burnie Culler, of Danbury, and Wallace Dalton, of Winston. Constipatiou Causes Most Ills Accumulated waste in your thirty feet of bowels cause ab sorption of poisons, tends to pro duce fevers, upsets digestion. You belch gas, feel stuffy, irrit able, almost cranky. It isn't you—it's your condition. Eli minate this poisonous waste bv one or two Dr. King's New Life Pills tonight. Enjoy a full, free bowel movement in the morning —you feel so grateful. Get an original bottle, containing 3(spills from your Druggist tdjpay for 25c. WANTED—tiOO poles, locust, cedar, or green chestnut, lengths of IS ft., 5 inch tip, delivered on the road between Rural Hall and Danburv via Capella. If you have any poles of this size or larger write the Rural Hall Telephone Co. at Rural Hall, N. C., and give the number of poles you have and the price wanted. "THE GREAT MUDDY CREEK MURDER MYSTERY"—This 128 page book contains life-like portraits of the pincipals, and sensational story of Mrs. Ida Ball Warren, "the Woman in the Case." Price 25c. Postage extra sc. E. P. NEWSOM, King. N. C. i»aug 4t THE DANBURY REPORTER Corn Is King This Year. The corn crop of the South this, year, not counting South Caro- i lina and Florida, is 778,5000.000; bushels, says the Federal Depart- j ment of Agriculture. Cotton has at last dropped into second rank in the South. It is 170,000,000 bushels more! than last year's crop, and nearly 250,000,000 bushels more than our five-year average since the census year. Unfortunately our crop in North Carolina is some three and a half million bushels less than that of last year. It will be better to feed our surplus corn to pigs than weev ils: better to turn it into hams, shoulders and bacon butchered, trimmed, cured and sacked, fly and skipper proof, packer style —than to sell it without profit as raw pork in the wintertime: bet ter to market it gradually in 4fin ished form in the parcels post than to sell it for a song as corn. There is small profit in any raw farm product. The margin is larger when it is converted into finished products cream, butter, cheese,ham,bacon, and shoulders and the like. We need these farm industries in the South. And now is the time to hasten their development. $68,000 Worth of Typhoid Vaccine Sent Out In July Dr. C. A. Shore of the State laboratory of Hygiene, reports that during the month of July, 137,000 doses of anti-typhoid vac cine were sent from the labora tory for free treatment. This amounts to over $68,000, accord ing to the retail prices of the serum. Notice of Sale of Real Estate. By virtue of a decree of the Superior Court of Stokes County, N. C., rendered on the 2nd day of August, 1915, in the special proceeding entitled "Harriett Lankford, and others, Ex-parte," I will expose to public sale to the highest bidder for cash, at the court house door in the town of Dan bury, N. C., on Monday, Sept. 6th, 1915, at the hour of one o'clock p. m., a tract of land on the waters of Camping Island Creek, in Danbury town ship, Stokes county, N. C., con taining 140 acres, more or less, and bounded as follows: "Beginning at a poplar, cor ner of the Watson Collins grant, (now N. A. Martin's land), and runs west on said Martin's line to Camping Island Creek at a large rock, thence up said creek as it meanders to the mouth of the branch where James Nelson and William now live, (formerly lived) thence up said branch as it meanders to its head near the ridge road, thence due North to the crest or top of the Sauratown mountain at a rock, thence East to a stake directly North of the beginning poplar, thence South falling on the James A. Pepper tract and the late Dr. D. C. Pepper tract to the first station, the aforesaid poplar and Watson's corner." See deed from Archilus Fry to Harriet Lankford, et al, Register's Office. Stokes County, Book 41, page 36fi. This the 2nd*day of August, 1915. N. 0. PETREE, Commissioner. A Medicine Chest For 25c. In Jh»s chest you have an ex celle®„*emedy for Toothache, Bruises, Sprains. Stiff Neck, Backache, Neuralgia, Rheuma tism and for most emergencies. One 25c. bottle of Sloan's Lini ment does it all—this because these ailments are symptoms, not diseases, and are caused by con gestion. If you doubt, ask those who use Sloan's Liniment, or better still, buy a 25c. bottle and prove it. Sold bji all druggists. Send | Your | JOB | WORK The Danbury Reporter Job Department. 1 We Make a Specialty of f Printing High Class f LETTER HEADS 2 ENVELOPES | BILL HEADS | SHIPPING TAGS j CIRCULARS, ETC. j Prices Are Very i Reasonable. j Danbury Reporter j Danbury, N. C. j HH
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 25, 1915, edition 1
5
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