THURSDAY, JULY 29, 1937 | LOCALS R. J. Scott will attend a meet ing of the State Democratic exe cutive committee at Raleigh Fri day night. This meeting is cal'ed £ to elect a successor to State chairman Winburn, who has re signed, having been appointed judge by Gov. Hoey. Winfred Hall accompanied her mother, Mrs. J. W. Hall, to Greensboro to spend this week Mrs. Hall is attending summer school Miss Janie Martin is attending summer school at Duke Univer sity. * Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Palmer of King visited Mr and Mrs. R. O- Palmer Thursday night. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Taylor and children visited Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Wilkinson at Fort Bragg Sunday. Mrs. S. P. Christian and Miss Nell Joyce visited Mrs. R T. Joyce at Westfield Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Scott and daughter, Patsy, visited Mrs. Scott's parents at Pinnacle Sun t lay, Mr. and Mrs. Denny. Mrs. R. R. King and Mrs. W. E. Joyce, Nell King and J. B. Bulloch visited Winston-Salem * today. Mrs. J. Fred Gerne r and Lucille Martin visited Winston-Salem Tuesday. Qarl Wall of Walnut Cove was in town this week. He says the Cove will surely go wet. Miss Helen Vaughn of Jackson ville, Fla., has recently been visit-; ing Mrs. Gail Voss McCanless. Miss Margarett Tyson of Georgetown, S- C., was here last week-end the guest of Mrs. Wm. . McCanless L Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Blaid of Edenton, N. C., spent the week end at Danbury with their f friends Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mc- Canless. Mr. and Mrs Will Prathe r and daughters BUlje and Frances; Mr. and Mi s. Jolm Prather, Mrs j ■Jones Brown and sons, Johnny j and Bill, all of whom are occupy- j ing the Prather cottage at Pied mont Springs; Mrs. S. P. Chris-. tian, Beverly Christian and Paris Pepper spent this afternoon at 1 ' Crystal Lake near Winston-Sal cm. Attorney Joseph W. Neal was here this week from Walnut Cove. DANBURY DOWNS OLD RICHMOND ... WILL PLAY REYNOLDS CAM ELS NEXT SUNDAY. Danbury won over the strong Old Richmond base ball club here Sunday 'afternoon at Riverside park by the score of 0 to 4. J? Old Richmond was the first to score, scoring one in the first in ning but Danbury did not wait ! 1 long scoring two in the last half * i of the first with Big Boy Shelton , hitting a home run over the fence J with a mate on base. Caudle, led the hitting for the visitors J k with hree hits out of five time to i the plate. K Danbury w'l play the strong j Reynolds Camtel base ball club I here, next Sunday afternoon at J t 3:30 P. M. Old Richmond: ib rb e Kiger, 2b 5 1 0 2 j Vogler, ss 5 2 3 11 Bowen, L. 3b 5 0 0 1 I Daub, lb 5 0 2 1 Scott, rf 10 0 0 Cromer, cf 5 0 10 Oudte, rf 5 031 43 981 Long, c 4 120 Score by innings; P. Bowen, If 30 10 Old Richmond 1011100 001-4 Walleir, p 400 0 Danbury 202 202 10x-9 Hendrix, if 10 10 Umpires: Voss and Dorsett. I 1 42 4 13 6 Danbury Wins I Over Hartman Danbury: ab r he Arlington, ss 50 0 0 Danbury defeated the Hartman Wall, If 5 2 2 0 team here Saturday afternoon in Fulk, c 5 2 10a very closely contested game to Shelton, cf 52 2 0 the tune of 5 to 3. It was a I. Dunlap, rf 42 10 pitchers battle from the start to Frye, 3b, p 50 10 the finish between Ray of the D. Dunlap, lb 50 0 1 Danbury team pitted against C. Dunlap, 2b 4 1 1 0 Slate of the Hartman team with I Paul, p 4 000 Riay holding the edge most of Taylor, p 00 0 0 the way. Danbury was the first Altar diving from an airplane, Harold Parkhurst is shown bar* /V t!h» b#for * •P*nad bis parachute Harold Parkhurst, parachute - v jumper, plummets earthward | if* ,| in a thrilling delayed jump. He's calm about it, iso't be? / He says about bis cigarette: "Camels give mildness a new ''' meaning.They never jangle my nerves." Don't forget that are made from MR. TOBACCO GROWER: In our effort to be of continued help to the Tobacco Growers of the Winston- Salem Territory may we suggest as j follows 1 GREEN TOBACCO CANNOT BE SATISFACTORILY CURED. Harvest your tobacco it r'y>ens be ing- careful to leave late to become mature and ripe before gather ing or until the last curing. This will assure you a RIPE UNIFORM crop which should by all means be properly sorted and tied in neat, uniform medium sized bundles being careful to avotfd oversize. Tobacco CAREFULLY SORTED AND PROPERLY TIED should sell at THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICE and to YOUR ENTIRE SATIS FACTION ON THE WINSTON-SALEM MARKET. Winston Tobacco Board Trade, Inc. NOTICE OF SALE OF LIGHT PLANTS | x The board of county commissioners if § of Stokes county will sell to the highest 0 $ bidder for cash at the court house door o o in Danbury, N. C., on X | MONDAY, AUGUST IST, At the hour X $ of 2 o'clock P. M. 6 o one Cole Carbide Light Plant and fix- X X tures. This plant located at Stokes x X County Home. sj X One Light plant, flow located at the $ $ Stokes County Jail. , d X BOARD OF STOKES COUNTY $ | COMMISSIONERS. $ | By R. L. Smith, Clerk to Board. 6 inL DANBI KV R!:?ORTFK to score, scoring one in the first! and one in the second but Hart-' man bunched ithree hjits for as j many runs in he fifth to take the lead until the eighth when' the Danbury team came through' j with three runs and the ball! ; game. The hitting stars of th 2 game were Ray and Shelton of the Danbury team, each getting' i two each while Scott led the' hitting for Hartman, driving one of the right field fence for two, bases by ground rule. Ray sent 11 of the Hartman hitters back I to the bench by the strike-out route. Danbury: ab r h e ! I Martin, 3b 5 111 Ray, p 5 12 0 Dunlap, If 5 0 10 J Smith, c 5 0 0 0 TroxelL, s s 5 0 10 Neal, lb 3 2 10 Shelton, cf 5 0 2 0 Paul, 2b 4 0 0 0 Scott, rf 4 j j i | 41 5 9 2 Hartman: a b r h n Scott, cf 4 110 j Patterson, lb 4 0 10 L. Smith, if 4 0 10 Meadows, 3b 4 0 0 2 Hayes, c 4 00 0 Ha", 2b 3 0 12 Palmer, cf 4 110 Levins, ss 4 0 0 0 J. Slate, p 3 110 ! 34 3 6 5 Score by innings: Danbury 110 000 030-5 ' Hartman 000 030 000-3 I The people wh 0 '"aren't worth II a row of pins" are as numerous as they ever were. / / / Checks ft ft ft MALARIA V U V in 3 days , , COLDS Liquid - Tablets „ Salve - Nose Drops Headache, SO minute* Try "Bub-My-TisnT-World's Besl Liniment B SIS -■ 'OA tmi I ^ COMQ TtvE I E3 IT MAY HAPPEN TO YOU H CSS ™f"HE real danger of the highway grade crossing is not the unexpected approach lof the train, but the failure of the automobile driver to exercise the utmost £J caution. Consider these two records: Record No. I —Within a recent ten-year period, the Norfolk and Western has expended $3,400,000 for the elimination of highway grade crossings on its lines. To safeguard the thousonds who cross its tracks at grade, the railway has spent more than $780,000 for the installation of protective devices at crossings. For the maintenance of these devices and the pay of gatemen and watchmen, it spends ap proximately $240,000 annually. For years, the N. &W. hos carried on a vigorous and Bmh unremitting campaign to educate the automobile driver to "Stop, Look and Listen." BJSS KS3 Record No. 2 lncredible as it may seem, about 20 per cent of all the grade ■■■■■ crossing accidents on the N. & W. lest year were due to automobiles being driven B into the sides of trcins, either standing on, or passing over, grade crossings, and 132 automobile diwers drove through end broke down crossing gates which had been lowered for their protection. A recent check at a number of protected cross- BEBJ JH ings on the N. &W. revealed first, that of the total number of automobile drivers who arrived at crossings after the warning signols had begun to operate and before the trains had reached the crossings, 61 per cent continued to cross the tracks in 88888 utter disregard of the warnings; second, that in practically every case the attitude H and conduct of the driver indicated a full consciousness of the signal warning and B| its purpose 85558 Largely through its huge expenditures and constant vigilance in the Interest of public safety, grade crossing accidents on the N. & W. have been reduced 40 per ccnt during 'he past ten years. Bit th" tragic and utterly useless destruction of BJJJJSB life continues. This is the season when autcmob.le trcf.'ic is heaviest. It is the "open season" E559 for highway rindc crossing accidents. The exercise of caution on your part may save your life. Whot you say to a friend may save his life. The N. b W. and the other railroads of the country cannot alone solve this serious problem. They are doing more than their part. Won't you exert every effort to do your port? Buy a six-bottle carton for your / Mttm ' s so conven ' ent t0 buy six bottles of fjm |B Coca-Cola in the handy family package—and Lm II so easy to carry. Ice-cold Coca-Cola is every n> j|B J place else; it belongs in your family refrigerator. m COCA-COU BOTH COMPANY P. S. —Listen to "Refreshment Time With Singin' Sam" over WSJS at 11:30 A. M. Mondays through Fridays. Also The Coca-Cola, Quizzt'r over WAIR at 9:45 A. M Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satur days.

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