THE DANBURY REPORTER.
Established 1872.
QUAKER GAP
FARMERS VIGILANT j
THEY ARE REAPING THE AD
VANTAGES OF THE SOU.
EROSION" PROGRAM
MEETING AT DANBURY
JULY 17.
Fanners in Quaker Gap town
ship have become erosion con
scious. Men living in this section
of the county are r.ot satisfied
to see their fields washed away
and are taking this summer as '•
season in which to build reu'
terraces on sdle fields. On the
farm of R. W. Mitchell the te*'
racing unit is now engaged in
constructing terraces on a large
acreage of land and in addition
will build farm roads on this,
farm. P. O. Frye started this |
work in his section sometime
ago and says he is well pleased
with the results acquired.
The suggestion is here givan
to farmers in this section who I
have not had occasion to see the'
!
terracing unit in operation to ;
drive over to the Mitchell farm
and get a better idea as to hov.'
real terraces are made.
Stokes Farmers To Consider
Farm Bureau
A meeting of representative
farm* . r fceei. called to be
i****
held in Daiiojry en rriclcy after
nocm at two o'clock, July 17th
to hear the Farm Bureau dis
cussed by Mr. Otis Kercher. who
is a prominent Indiana farmer
and a man who has cor.siderab'?
experience with and has a good
opportunity to observe the work
of the Bureau through which ]
farmers arrive at the solution of
many of their economic andj
social problems. The speaker was
for seventeen years a county
agent in Illinois. Has been presi
i
dent of the Illinois County
Agents Association. His message
should be of interest to local
farmers. He knows the Farm
Bureau.
The boys and girls 4-H Short
Course held annually at • the
State College in Raleigh starts
on July 22nd and runs througn
the 27th. Present plans indicate
that Stokes Clubsters will have
at least a fair representation in
attendance at this annua] event.
The boy or girl who has an op-j
portunity to attend this short j
course and accepts it will be for
tunate and will have something
of value ttid interest to tell his
or her neighbors for years to
come. Young people attending j
this meeting are well cared for
by the farm and home agents
wbo are in attendance. They will i
be housed in the college dormi
tories and will have access *.o
the college hospital should there
be occasion for it. Parents need
have no fear as to whether the
welfare of the boys and girls
will be properly safe-guarded. In
most cases boys an j girls to at
tebd the short course should
have reached their fourteenth
birthday and it is important that
tiejr be activity infiifwl la
I
Volume 64.
MRS. McNAIRY
WELFARE OFFICER
ELECTED AS WHOLE TIME
OFFICIAL BY BOARDS OF
COMMISSIONERS AND EDU
CATION COUNTY NOW
HAS STANDARD WELFARE
DEPARTMENT.
i
The Stohcs County Com-!
missioners and Board of Educa
tion ha%~e elected a full-time
I i
Superintendent of Public Waif are.
a full-time office assistant and a!
a standard Welfare I'tpartmen;
le-rical worker. This establishes
a standard Welfare Department
and will eir.Lle StrUv County to
share in Social Security funds.
Prior to this election, J. C.
Carson, Superintendent of
I Schools, has acted, ex officio, a;
welfare officer.
Mrs. Evelyn McNairy, who has
been certifying agent in the
Stokes welfare department since
; January, 1P36, was electei
j Superintendent of Public We!- ;
I
{far?. She rr.ajored in social work
at the We man's college of
Greensboro since June, 1933,
has- been social worker with
Fecial agenc:?s in Winston-Salem,
Rockingham and Montgomery
?ounties.
Mrs. will serve
r.s fuli-tir.-se welfare office As
slstant. Her duties will include
distribution of all clothing mrd-?
in WPA sewing rooms of the
county ar.d pJI commodities de
livered to the county from thf
State Department of Surplus
Commodities.
Miss Evelyn S. Page was sent
to the Stokes Welfare Depart
! ment in June, 1936 by the state'
to become full-time Child Wel
fare Officer. Before coming to
this county Miss Page worked
, with social agencies in Durham j
and Caswell Counties. As Chile |
Welfare Worker Miss Page' 3
duties are with any case of a
child "who is delinquent or who
violates any municipal or state
law or ordiance or who is truant,
unruly, wayward, or misdirected,
or who is disobedient to parents
or beyond their control, or who
is in danger of becoming so; or
who is neglected, or who en
gages in any occupation, calling,
jor exhibition, or is found in any
] place where a child is forbidden
by law to be, and for permitting
which an adult may be punish
ed by law, or who is in such
I condition or surroundings, or is
j under such improper or insuf
ficient guardianship or control as
'to endanger the morals, health,
ior general welfare of such child;
or who is dependent upon public
support or who is destitute,
homeless or abandoned, or whose
custody is subject to contro
versy." She is also the casework
er for children handicapped by
physical defects—crippled, blind,
and deaf; for all families in
county to whom Mothers' Aid or
Aid to Dependent children is 1
granted; for all children paroled
from HillH(iHions for de
_
Danbury, N. C., Thursday, July 16, 193 ii
(AN EDITORIAL)
McDonald And His Inspiration
The love overtures now playing out of North
Carolina Republican headquarters into the
McDonald camp are very impressive.
These overtures are of course in acknowledg
ment of the McDonald gestures and in apprecia
tion of the McDonald inspiration.
The leaders of the Republican party in North
; Carolina are very intelligent and astute men
and women, and one would certainly vastly
underestimate their political perspicacity to
i believe they would be too dense to use the
I ammunition which Dr. McDonald has so
generously provided them with and which con
tinues to be manufactured for their benefit.
At the Winston-Salem rally of Young Re
publicans this week the expressions of sym
pathy, admiration, confidence, regrets, etc.. forj
:he Doctor were almost touching in their appeal.
One enthusiastic speaker declared that
"McDonald has been the greatest blessing that
has come to us." He added that this "machine"
which the Dr. has so "graphically pictured to u-'
crushes the very life out of the free will of the
people."
Another speaker said "there has never -been
a time when we have had so many breaks as the
Dr. has given us." i
It was urged that the great crowd who sup-.
ported McDonald, many of whom now still de- 1
elare they will do all thev can to defeat the'
Democratic nominee for Governor, be courted,
and coaxed into a combine of Republicanism!
land McDonaldism to deliver the State of North
Carolina to Republican rule.
As ?f in r. to "Sic him, Tige," the
Doctor launched another attack on the Demo-1
?ratic machine, declared the Hcey crowd had
;->tclen the election and demanded an mvp-ticra-,
|tion of a few dozen irregularities in a half dozen
counties.
Now since Dr. McDonald continues (ever/
{"in time of war") to render aid and comfort to
j common foe, he cannot of course be ap
i raised bv the organized Democracy (so-called
"the machine") other than as Political Enemvi
No. 1. * |
With this regard it will not generally be sup
posed that many of the thousands of Democratic
men and women who supported him sincerely in
the primary will feel disposed to follow him in
his efforts to defeat and humiliate the party that
they have so long supported and honored.
R. O. Palmer ' |
Has Wreck
While driving near Pine Hall
Monday R. O. Palmer, of the
resettlement office here, collided I
with a Standard oil truck on a!
curve. Mr. Palmer was accom
panied by Miss Lucy Booe, also
of the resettlement office. Nei
ther occupant of the car nor the
driver of the gas truck was in
jured, though both machines
were badly damaged.
Jesse Bill Lawson, of Lawson
ville, is visiting his son, Frank
Lawson.
Miss Lucille will oe
the Clerical Worker for the Wel
fare Department.
The Stokes County Welfare
Board, consisting of Wm. Mar
shall, Chairman, of Walnut Cove;
Miss Laura Ellington, of Sandy
Ridge and Mrs. R. H. Morefield.l l
of Danbury meets monthly with 1
the welfare staff to discuss, ad- '
vise and assist in welfare prob- 1
kans.
I Auto Accident
At Walnut Cove
Mabel Flynn, Muriel Rothrock j
and Louise Morefield, Walnut |
| Cove young ladies, were each;
[ more or less injured, none j
seriously, in an accident that oc
curred near the Street Car cafe
Tuesday, on Walnut Cove's main
street. Miss _ Flynn, who was
driving, lost control and the car
hit a telephone pole. The car was
badly damaged.
/
LawsonviHe School Or
dered Rebuilt At
sl7,ooo—Other School
House Improvements
The Board of Education in
session here this week ordered
the Lawsonville school house, re
cently burned, rebuilt at a cost
of $17,000.
A new school building at
Capella was also ordered built at i
a cost of $2,000, while arrange- ]
ments were made for 4 rooms !o
be added to the Sandy Ridge
School. j I
STOKES CIVIL ]
COURT IS OVER
i
i
.11LY TERM CLOSED Witt
XESDAY AFTER SETTLING
A MMBER OF CASK*
I
JIIKiE WARIJCK LEAVES
TO ATTEND Ft'VERAL. OE
Jl DOE OGLESBY.
The July term of
Superior Court for the u
j civil a-lions, ended Wedr.e.- av. J
Judge Wilson Warliek, wh .1. i
• criminal court last week. • i i
vas here conducting the civil ]
| term, left immediately to attend '
;the i'uner&l of Judge Oglesbv who
; died in Charlotte Monday. The ;
funeral and burial were conduc
, ed at Concord.
The following cases on the
the Stokes civil court calendar
* - ere disposed of:
In Re: Joe H. Wall. col.. ti
ate. Remanded to Clerk Sup? r
"r.ir Court.
D. E. Nelson vs. Jor.s E. X;!-
| '»n. Continued.
W. H. Eaton, vs-. J. M. 1~ : ■'!.
Ccr.tinued.
1
W. H. Eaton and wife. A:!a R.
:
Eaton vs. R. J. Scott. fu''=-1":
trustee. Continued.
;
J. M. Carroll vs. A. M. C . -
' Xor.-suit:d.
A. J. Brown vs. A. C. /.r.-.o-
I
I James Amos and S. J. Ar:i?. a„-
n.inistra: ors of A. C. Ar.ios-. X
suited.
i
K. G. Harding anj wife. Mu.-
tha Ha: ling, vs. Mis. Mui th i
Jr.re Shire and husband, F. E.
Shore. Judgment for defendants.
1 L. S. Grab? an-? J. S. Grabs vs.
W. J. Fuik. Judgment for defend
ant.
Early Sands vs. C. R. Walker
' and Atlantic Grevhound Lines.
i
| Judgment for plaintiff, $275.0')
1 an«i costs.
Fowle: Mfg. Co. vs. Walnut
Cove Veneer Corp. Continued.
Quality Ojl Co. vs. E. D.
Smith. Continued.
William M. Burrow vs. South
eastern Public Service Co. and
I
Jacob Leech. Judgment for plain
tiff, $1500.00 and costs.
Chas. Fowler vs. F. W. Wool
worth Co. Continued.
I
i Jonah Carroll, A. M. Carroll,
'et al vs. J. M. Carroll, executor
of Wm. H. Carroll and J. M.'
Carroll, individually. Non-suited. I
Joe Phipps vs. T. J. East. Con-i
tinued.
Mrs. Lucinda Mabe vs. Geo. J
Cox. Continued.
Commissioner of Banks ex
rel. Bank of Stokes County vs.
Walnut Cove Motor Co. Non
suited.
Henry C. Cahill vs. Mary Alio;
CahilJ. Non-suited.
Chas. Smith vs. State Highway
anj Public Works Commission J
Continued. '
Commissioner of Banks ex rel. [
Bank of Stokes County vs. J. W.
Neal et al. Non-Suited.
C. H. Lunsford vs. Mary Luns
ford. divorce. Judgment for
plaintiff.
—————— 11
J. O. PyrtJe, of Weatfield, was
in town Thursday. L
Number 3,351
KING CHILI)
LOSES ONE EYE
SKVEX-YKAR-OLI) SON OF
MR. AND MRS. KIEM;\ SI 1-
FERS ACCIDENT \IT.
VIEW t.KTS KI.KCTRIC
lk.hts cither \i;ws of
KING.
1
July 1 r>. Mis. Etti
' .. .■ . \v!.o s ,-i U-s in Walnut
Hills. ci If.-' «t( J h'-r sixtieth
Lirtkday Sund:;v. A num
ber of relatives and fritrnU* were
j resent to enjoy the occasion
wit h her.
Keever Newsum, of th United
States Army, stationed at Fort
Bragg, is spending a ten day
furlough with relatives here be
fore departing for the Phillipine
Islands where he is ordered for
duty.
Roby Sprinkle. of Winston-
Salem and Mies Roxie Doss, of
King, motored to HilJsville, Vir-
Satui -ay, where they were
united in marrrxe. They will
their Im:j u* in Winston
m.
Mr. ar.d Mrs. John Smith and
Mr. ar.d Mrs. C. D. Slate. Jr..
left Saturday on a t»ip through
"i." .- •. ..]■>. V«'!»-y. They
vj.-it Washington. D. C. on
Willi 1 V.*:ht. >1 Hamlet, is
• c:i .■: a '"f\v days hc:e the
- i-i' ' Mi. a:.J Mrs. Earlie
. Mos.; Waiau: Hi "Is.
71.•; v.- pov.y; liiit' extending
frern King to Mruntnin Vit»w has
betn ■■• . t leicJ and the lights
v.":t . ...J c-n F:I.!:).* .-tight.
Ths King Tigers lost to White
Oak Mills, of German in a
game played at Greensboro Sat
urday. Final score 11 and 4.
The stork is having a resting
spell in this vicinity, only two
births were registered last week.
The\ '. ere: Mr. ar.J Mrs Arthur
Marshall, a daughter and Mr. and
IMi s. Mack Ray Hannn, a daugh
ter .
i
I Miss Mary Elizabeth Gregory
has returned to her home in
Winston-Salem after spending a
, week with Mrs. Ernest M. Grif
fin in west King.
I The East Yadkin township
Sunday school convention held at
the First Baptist Church here
I Saturday was attended by a very
• large crowd of people. «
Wiiburn Baker, planter of the
j Chestnut Grov e section, was
i among the business visitors here
Saturday.
Mr. ar,d Mrs. Murry Thompson
and Dr. and Mrs. Nash Thomp
son. of Stuart. Va.. visited rela
tives and friends here Sunday.
I Harve - v Johnson. prominent
.planter of the Mountain View
I section, was here Saturday on
business.
i
I The seven year old son of Mr.
and Mis. Arthur iKrby. while at
play at their home two miles
south of town lest week stuck
the point of a pair of scissors in
hi£ We- He was rushed to an eye
special at Winston-Salem for
treatment. He will lost the sight