THURSDAY, JAN. 24, 1935 LOCALS Powell Mabc was in town Mon day from Jewell section. Lem Mabe was here Monday from Peter's Creek township. Mrs. Dr. A. J. P»ingle, of I-awsonville, spent a short while here Monday. Mrs. Fred Smith, of Meadow-;, was heie Monday attending to a business matter. Sheriff J. J. Taylor visited his brother, Dr. Spottswood Taylor, in New York this week. Reid, Clyde and Wilbur For rest and Charlie Christian, Francisco boys, were in town Saturday. Quite a number of Danbury people enjoyed the film "The County Chairman,' starred by Will Rogers at Winston-Salem. Rev. Fred N. Day, of Wins ton-Salem, will preach at the Baptist church here the first Sunday night in February, the 3rd. Mr. and Mrs. Hassel Ashburn, Mrs. C. L. Lester and Mrs. Silas Gibson, all of Pine Hall, spent the day Tuesday guests of Rev. and Mrs. J. B. Needham. R. E. Leake and family, of Guilford College, stopped over in Danbury a short while Monday. They were enroute home from the Leake funeral at Snow Hill. A bunch of gypsies; have been camping a mile west of Danbury on No. S9 highway. They are dealing in "fortune" stories, etc., the usual stock in trade of these nomads. The condition of T. L. Booth, county game warden, who has been suffering for several weeks with an attack of blood poison ing due to an infected hand. Is not very materially improved. Much sickness at Danbury an 1 throughout this community, prin cipally flu or bad colds. On the list this week are reported Mrs. R. J. Scott, Mrs. W. E. Joyce. Miss Janie Martin, Miss Luna Taylor. Stark Priddy, of High Point, accompanied by his two little boyß, was here Monday. Mr. Priddy was looking for walnut timber. He says most of the mills of High Point are now running regularly, and that times are pretty good in the "Furniture City." I A CALL TO ARMS! I Crime —America's danger and disgrace —3 full pages of actual photographs of this treat menace that threatens our national life. 1 Every Sunday in the BALTI MORE AMERICAN. Buy your j copy from your favorite news dealer oi newsboy. Perquimans County farmer.*!. paid $36,551.20 for surplus gin-i ning certificates covering 913,780. pounds of lint. By buying these certificates from farmers in thej southwestern drought area, Per-j quimans' farmers saved $15,-' p I 260.12 in Bankhead tax. Beef cattle and soybeans make a profitable combination on nny ! farm says J. H. Johnson of Wilkes County who has built up his land and made some money t from the combination. I Perfect Attendance I , Roll For Danbury School, Dec. 11 to Jan 15 IST GRADE Rachel Alley Eunice Flinekun: Olerir.e Flinchum I' Ruth Priddy - 2XI) GRADE Donald Stephens D. C. East T :IRI» B. GRADE Maxine Nelson Jarvis Stephens Junior Flinchum Hubert Fulp 3RD A. GRADE Jack Duggins Pete Flinchum i! Morris Stephens | i Annie Brown 4TH GRADE Harrey Fulp Lois Stephens Ellwood Priddy Augusta Sizemore STH GRADE -j Maria Goin 1 i Magdaline Wilson -! Lollie Glidewell Winifred Hall Brantly Wall Clarence Alley Walter Lee Flinchum Ellwood Flinchum 6TH GRADE Marjie Petree Annie Ruth Glidewell 1 , Lena Priddy Nannie Wilson 1 Carrie Goin 7TH GRADE ,' Thomas Lee Gray 1 : . j Junior Alley Ellen Kate Pepper Jean Priddy | Dolomitic limestone may b used as a filler in commercial • fertilizers t'o replace incr. I 5 materials, such as sand, and will * help to improve the land as well " as add some plant food. i I Anson County merchants an J 1 business men report to Coun'y . Agent Cameron the best Christ . mas season in some years. In Catawba county, poultry growers are getting 98 per cent. | livability from baby chicks brooder with home-made brick ■ brooder. A check of 14,000 chicks I at four weeks of age gave this ' result. II Alamance County farmers have started a soil erosion campaign in cqoperation with the ERA by l which it is planned to completely ! terrace most of the rolling fields j in the county. j Forsyth farmers are finding that tobacco barns make good sweet potato curing houses. L. D. Smith has cured 700 bushels in ' this way and the sweets are keep- I ing well. i j Lady Dolly Mae, a Guernsey cow owned by M. F. Shore of ; Yadkin County, has brought another state championship to her owner by producing 14,147 pounds of milk and 756.2 pounds 1 of butter In Class F. i'HE DAJMIUKY Klil'OKlEK i 1 To The Critics y, Of Modern Boy i.i And Girlhood | Every generation . inee tha beginning ol' time has raved over the degeneration o; the younger set. Looking back over a lapse of years we remember only the best in the pas;. The good old days take on a rosa-coloreu hue. We ;:'c stronulv impressed with the evils >n jireiont day society because ihey are a j.art of our present consciou.-r.css. The good old days were not ;:o good as we remember them to be. nor is the present as black as it seems. The newspaper headlines, the moving picture, and the modem novel do not give us an accurate i view of contemporary American family life. There have always been extremists in every walk of life. Because of one dissipated j youth a whole set is condemned. I The noisy and spectacular minority is frequently mistaken ! for the majority. After all, in I the great majority of American families the life is just as whole some as it ever was. In these homes the good old virtues still prevail and are passed along to the younger generation. I A boy of today "is just as good, just as high-minded, potentially as decent and as splendid as bovs 1 ever were, wa9 the statement made by Dr. Alfred E. Stephens. On the other hand, Dr. G. Stanly Hall described very , minutely the peculiarities of the ( flapper as follows: "She has al ready set fashions in attire and I even in manners, some of which | her elders have copied and have ie passed il found not only sensible, but re t juvenating. Underneath the 11 manish ways which she some -11 times affects, she really vaunts her femininity, and her exuber i ance gives it a new charm. The ,J new liberties she takes in life are I y contagious, and m&i:c- us wonder . anew whether we fctve not all I t been sarvish to precedent, and ! slaves to institutions that need y to be refitted to human nature, ■ • and whether the flapper may s not, after all, be a bud of a new k and better womanhood. Never in the history of our s nation has there been such a , unanimous protest in the litera j ture of the day against the habits and amusements of young people, "j Those who know the intimate y relationship that exists between V the purity of family life and s national welfare are rightly alarmed. They can read the hand- J writing on the wall. I _ . j| It is time that parents set a , I good example for their children. 1 It ia time to assert parental ~ authority and save these young , people from the results of their own folly. It in time that we gave ; up taking the easiest way to 1 luxury, vice and the dissolution! ' of family life. Unless the church j ' is more actively supported and ; religion given a larger place in i ; our daily life than at present, then our nation is surely going to destruction; therefore, it is time the parents were setting such an example. No nation can hope to i survive whosa family life is not' based upon religion and upon ( j those virtues for which the early, 1 Americans were admired. | Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Joyce, of Winston-Salem, visited relatives here Sunday. Profit From Use 01' High Crr.uc Fertilizers I The widespread use of cheap , fertilizer in tiie southeastern J states i; COP ling the farmers real money, says L. G. Willis, guil' chemist at tie X. C. Agricultural Experiment Station. There is less plnnt fjod in ti:r low grade fertilizers, he explain-, and the crops treated with in ferior material will not produce a full yield. The small yields will lose for the grower more money j than he saved on the purchase cheap fertilizer ! If the grower attempts to pro-, duce a full yield by applying an . extra amount of low grade ; fertilizer, the additional cost will! , more than offset the difference , in price between the high and . low grades. ! Furthermore, Willis points out j I the application of cheap fertili : zer, which contains huge ■ * i , quantities of sand or other, . similar filler material, increases] I ! j the amount of sand in the soil ! and lowers the fertility. .] A ton of cheap 4-8-4 fertilizer j' contains only 320 pounds of plant 1; food and 1,680 pounds of sand or j other filler material, Willis says, and it costs just as much to bag, ! ship, and handle sand as it does! * i i . j plant food. • j By using the better grade i ' fertilizers, he adds, the farmers can save from 20 to 30 per cent, on the cost of the actual plant j ,; food they get and at the same | 8 j time they are protecting their j . soil from heavy applications of | I sand or other harmful material. I Willis explains that ht is not . oposc-d to lower prices for fer j tilizer, but is merely warning . against the use of low grade , material at a time when the bet-1 .! ter grades are not selling a; j - r. cheap price. J Succulent s!!r.ge, grown at! home and preserved in trench! I silos, is being used by North I [ ' Carolina dairymen this winter as a substitute for bought rough j age. NOTICE SALE OF REAL ESTATE I I j By virtue of authority con | Gained in a certain deed of trust , executed by J. S. Moran and wife, R. Ella Moran, on April i 22, 1930, to me as Trustee, and .! recorded in the Office of the | Register of Deeds of Stokes Co., '| N. C., in Book No. 78, page 514 . | etc.. and the stipulations in said ' deed of trust not having been ' complied with; at the request of '] the holder of said note and deed II of trust, I will offer for sale at r public auction, for cash, at the> Wilson Filling Station near ■ Brim Grove Baptist Church, in Stokes County, N. C., on Monday, February 18, 1935, at two o'clock P. 11., , the following real estate: I A boundry of land in Quaker Gap township, Stokes Co., N. C., composed of two tracts, both of • which were conveyed to J. S. Moran by Z. T. Smith and wife bv deeds which are recorded in : the Office of the Register of | Dccdn of Stokes Co., N. C., and j to which deeds and records refer | ence is hereby made for full ; description and metes and j bounds. This boundry of land contains 98 acres, more or less, i and is bounded on the North by Reid Jones; on the East by Dan Mabe; on the South by Johnni? King; and on the West by J. B. j Woodruff lands, formerly Elcaneyi Moran lands. 1 This boundry is known as the! home and farm of J. S. Morin i and wife, and includes all the lands they own in Stokes County (at time of executing the deed of trust referred to.) Sale made to satisfy said debt, taxes and costs of sal-?. This Januarv 17, 1935. O. E. SNOW, , .. j Ki ' - TruaUe. King News King, Jan. 23. Cladie S. New sum celebrated his forty s-ocond birthday at his home on Main Street Sunday. A number uj' !:• ••■ relatives were present fo: tL casion. L. J. Kiser has purchased r r : > Gurnic P. Hood tiie John 1 Hauser residence on West Ma'., St reel. Tiie Southern Public Company are securing right way preparatory to building power line from King to Toba ville. This new line will gi v • Tobaccoville and Five Fori:- electric lights as well as all residents along the line. Prof. A. R. Phillips, of Dalton was here Saturday looking aft; 1 business matters. Mrs. Minnie Boyles has rnov; 1 into her new home on Main Street, recently completed. The King high played a double header basketball game wit a Rural Halj school at Rural Hall Friday night. The King girls won their game, the score being 20 to: 8. While the King boys lost to Rural Hall by a score of 41 to 19. I The following births were' recorded here last week: To Mr.i and Mrs. Reid Bennett, a son; to' | I i Mr. and Mrs. Shelton Booze, a! I I ; daughter and to Mr. and Mrs. Carl Tuttle, a son. Alva S. Francis, who is suffer- ! ing from an attack of influenza at his home is very sick, his I friends will regret to learn. C. V. Kiser, planter of th .• j Dry Springs section, was a busi ness visitor here Saturday. There is decided improvement in the condition of Charlie Snider, who has been seriously sick at his home near here for ! several weeks. | Mr. and Mrs. Gabe Tuttle and J son, T. D. Tutllc and Mr. and j Mis. Wilturn Sliouse, of Rural 1 Kail, spent Sunday here the j guests of relativea. Get aHEEvgfea Camel! r*MOUS ftVMTM. (Rjgbi) Sir Char- : PHYSICAL INSTRBC les Kiogsford-Smith says: "Once TOR. ( Delou) A you've had a chuce to appreciate Camel gives roe a ibe mild, mellow flavor of Camels, **? sense of renewed no other diarene seems 10 suit x&jjflKL\ MMBLrflim vim, *®>' s Charles you. Camels are m> 'supercharger' Adams. "I enjoy this they jeive me new energy and j&Kkv'' delightful'lift'often, •go.' And they never throw Omels^nevtr 'gjjSL% B#NK TCtIER. U.r/» ' A|«r "I've noticed that after ' '' any strain or when I ♦ 'i need cheering up. I get a %1 V f® 1 'lift' in energy from a jLf * V Camel," reports Baxter Jt£ Davidson. "The> taste so good. Camels don't dis- \ «Ky tßr ■'• Curb my nervous system." %:■■ How To Keep Colds UNIER#ONTROL 1 assess \ \ \ t I \ R ub.lUemorhe«.«. 6utlongi I \ use »*»P* to P * 0 (t CoU» 1 I r^"'" 6 '° onanl l inhalation. \ 1 colds, and tot 11 s tmwlat» j irec t relief- I | 1 vURub bring* Vo Mtd IttlibKi to Cold*: Follow the rules of 41 rv p*i. of the ctuikaUy toted Victo Plan for Dottgr^W/fif '» iuUy v^|g£%j.^.) Page Three A new effort to save home fertilizing . rrM'.vrinlK has been started by Avery County farmers this winter in the building of compost heaps. RUPTURE 11. 1.. Hoffmann, Kv[ifrt, for mer associaie of C. I\ liedlich, Minneapolis, Minn., will demon strate without charge his "Per fect Retention Shields" in WINSTON-SALKM Monday \ Tuesday, Jan. 21 4: 22 at the ZINZI;MJGI:F HOTEL From 10 A. -M. to 1 P. M. Please come early. Evenings by appointment Any rupture allowed to pro trude is dangerous, weakening the whole system. It often causes stomach trouble, gas and back pains. My "Perfect Retention Shields" will hold rupture under any condition of work and con tract the opening in a short time. Do not submit to avoidable operations and wear trusses that will enlarge the opening. Many satisfied clients in this com munity. No mail order. I HOME OFFICE: 30.> Lincoln Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn. CONSTIPATION Cm be Helped! ; (Use what Doctors do) \ »ty do t!«* b'-wrN usually move •.\uuk.rlv and | i |.h>si !,.'i i;i\eu you treatment r ir constipation'.' i'lilr.r fives :t liquid ux.tli*c that can always lie taken in ; lie fifjia :'i::ouiit. You'i ail gradually red we !'»«» (!">•:. Urduccd dosage is I tin sreret o/ uul and safe relief from ,\sk v-iiir ilot'tor about this. Ask \>u; druggist how popular liquid laxatives have lieceme. The i liquid laxative gives the right kind | 'fii' lp an- 1 '.he right amount > f help. When li t . so is repeated, instead of , more ca. h wine, you take less. Until ' tin* bo'vels are moving regularly and I thoroughly without cay help at all. I The'liquid laxative generally used 1 ii Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It contains senna and cascara, and i these arc naliirnl laxatives that form Ino habit oven in children. Your druggist hub it; u:k for— [SYRUP PEPSIN

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