THE DANBURY REPORTER Established 1872 Volume 66 R. B. REYNOLDS SEES BIG EAGLE NAT ROBERTS INJURED IN A FALL—BASKETBALL GAME | —THE STORK—OTHER KING NEWS. King, Dec. 19. R. B. Reyn ( olds, planter, who resides near Mountain View, reports having seen a large eagle near his home i one day last week. I J. Nat Roberts fell on the side walk here Saturday night inflict ing a severe injury to his should er. Mrs. Kennis Pulliam of Knox ville, Tenn., is spending some time with relatives here and at Mount Airy. The King High split a double header basketball game with Old Richmond at Old Richmond Tues i day night. The King boys won their game by a score of 24 to 22 while the girls lost to Old Rich mond 52 to 10. Eight more Stokes county boys were examined here Thursday by Dr. G. E. Stone for the U. S. Army. Mrs. Anne Grabs is having Bome repairs made to her home on Pulliam street. J. M. Alley, Jr., of Fort Bragg, • is spending a twenty-day fur lough with his parents, Mr. and j Mrs. J. M. Alley, Sr., on east I Main street Joe Reid Turner, who is at-! tending State College at Raleigh, i is spending a few days with his j parents, Mr. and Mrs. Banks Turner on Ohio street. Mrs. Wilma White of German- ) tan underwent a tonsil removal operation here Friday. Luther Smith, planter of the Dry Springs section, was a Tauai r ness visitor here Saturday. The following is the stork's re port for last week: to Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Booth, a daughter, »' to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Robert son, a son. A much larger report is promised in the near future. F. M. Brown of Greensboro was I here Friday looking after some business matters. H. T. Corn In Hospital —W. R. Stovall Swaps 4 Homes With His Son i W. B. Stovall was here today, p giving us some news from th 3 Sandy Ridge community. Henry Thomas Con warn takes to a Stuart, Va., hospital Wed nesday, suffering with high blood pressure and heart affection. j Mr. Stovall has removed to the Ebb Nlckleston place, which be has bought. His son, Morris, who formerly lived there, takes i his father's old home. It was a swap. Mr. Stovall says things are g( ' -m the ridge—plenty of hog bj and everybody ready for '"Jul:'-ras. j Mi* W. 1. Joyce, 10M BRa| D 111, Mm K. X. Watt, rili. B. J, aptt, alt of Dm**7, —— " »'■■» «*, -vjiaaJsl Mrs. Pearce Gives Valuable Advice on Meat Canning } (By LELA T. PEARCE) Now that hog killing time is • here the home makers are busy | with their meat. In doing their meat canning they are reminded by their home agent to follow very closely the directions and I suggestions made in Mrs. Cor ! nelia C. Morris' leaflet on "Can-! ning Meats." Mrs. Lila T. Pearce. home agent, calls special atten tion to the use of steam pressure: ; cookers in meat canning. She says that the pressure cooker is the only safe way to can meat and that in meat canning 't should always be used. Othe.- i methods are not safe. Suggestions are listed below for your convenience: 1. Select fresh, clean meat and discard surplus fat. Chill pork 2 hours and beef 48 hours before canning. 2. Meat for canning may be packed into jars either raw or; partially cooked. The process ing time will be the same in either case but it will take the raw meat longer to reach the desired 1 pressure. 3. Precooking may be done by searing the meat in the fat by partially roasting it or by par boiling. Meat to be canned should jnot be cooked more than half' beforfc cooking. 4. meat into pieces con venient size for packing and pack j loosely into hot sterilized jars, j Arrange the pieces to allow the heat to penetrate. This applies to both seared and raw meats. Salt is added in the same propor tion to all meats. Two level tea spoonsful to each quart. Pepper may be added sparingly if de sired. 5. Sausage, liver and fried chicken should be packed dry. All other precooked meats should be covered with broth or with di luted pan gravy to improve flav or. Leave one half inch head space to prevent loss of liquid. 6. Do hot add liquid to meat which is packed raw as the pro cessing Will draw out enough li quid to coyer the product. 7. Wipe off the rim of jars to rem are grease. Grease causes the rabbet rings to disintegrate. Adjust thi jar tops or caps and partially seal to permit exhaust ing. PI fee jars in the pressure cooker immediately and process. 8. Prqeess both cooked and raw | meats Q0 minutes at 15 pounds pressure. Letter to Santa Claus Pinnacle, N. C. .Dear Snnta Claus j I air t • ■>« a letter to let you kn & little girl 8 years old. la.' te second grade. I was sick »- year. I want candy and nate of all kinds, i jDoot forget my sister and broth er, I mat a toy sad tfelaga. j jt at afaj* Va, Danbury, N. C., Thursday, Dec. 19, 1940. (Editorials.) LET AMERICA DECLARE WAR ON GER MANY NOW-PUT THE NATION ON A WAR TIME BASIS, SPEEDING UP PLANES ONE HUNDRED PER CENT—REMEMBER THE SAD FATE OF INNOCENCE AND APPEASEMENT The United States should immediately DE CLARE WAR ON GERMANY. j Does this suggestion jar you? It should help to mitigate the greater jar impending as a result of this nation's APPALLING SLOWNESS in preparing against the menace of the German. This advice will be heeded only by those intelli gent Americans who know that this nation is al ready at war with Germany and has been at war with Germany for months. Why should we not have the honesty and the courage that is needed in America's greatest cri sis—the courage of Geo. Washington, Andrew Jackson, Stonewall Jackson, Theodore Roose-, velt, Grover Cleveland? Let the declaration of war be followed by full wartime production and intensive use of all ithings in this nation which will be required at ! last if the monster Hitler is defeated. Instead of | a promise of 50,000 war planes by 1942, let ut= have 100,000 war planes before the end of 1941. We boast of what we can do in 1942-3. This pride appears to be based on COMPLETE INNO CENCE—-predicated on the childish assumption that Hitler will sit still with his armaments and make no increase of his power until we get to a place where our production equals his. , Whatever we may call Hitler, let us ritot delude ourselves with the idea tfiat he is a fool. What do you suppose—when his production now is more than England's and America's put togeth er—what do you suppose he will do with all the industrial plants of Europe in his hands —what cto you suppose he will be doing while we are waiting for 2 or 3 more years to pass? Why a declaration of war? Because this step of this powerful nation would be dynamic in Europe and Asia. Russia—fearful of Hitler and intensely jealous of his depreda tions in the Balkans—would at once mobilize against the Axis, Turkey would dare the Huns to cross her border, Yugoslavia and Bulgaria would enlist themselves without fear on the side of America, England and Russia, while as the people of England rallied in their agony and hope lessness, all the slave nations on whose necks the iron heel of Germany rests, would institute re bellions. Czechoslovakia, Poland, the Nether - lands, Norway, Denmark, Belgium. There you l ave the consequences of the expressed determi nation of the United States to see this hell through with her multi-billions of gold and food, of steel and oil and manpower. our boys across?—No, not necessarily. Europe does not need men, Europe needs MEN'S EQUIPMENT. But send our industrial power across escorted by battleships. Spain would rebel against the Axis, all the South Americans would bristle with resistance against pirates of Europe who would conquer tree-born men and women, reducing them to vassalage. Let America declare war on Germany at once The moral effect must electrify the world with Ihope in this beautiful but sad Christmastide, when only the outlo pear* as of blood and tears and destruction >x all things that democra rr r and Christian civilization and freedom hold I ost dear. jfou who are a pacl'M., you who are an ap peasaer, you who listen \,o the fifth-column fakes tfnd fancies of the Johnson*, the darks, the iVandenbergs, the Holt». the Lindbergh the Browden—remember the fata o." . (fUIWN SB Faa*' Published Thursdays Sfortes Gf Stokes (Bounty O^unters When Lon Sisk lived on his farm at Lawsonville, there was a rabbit of very large size that constantly ate his turnips, cao bages and apples and which could run so fast that no dog in that country was ever able to 1 keep in sight of him. The rabbit when chased, al i ways took refuge in a deep ho'.e under a rock, a hole so deep that no twisting or smoking ever reached Dim. Mr. Sisk says he heard of 1 hound over in Patrick that had never failed to catch anything that he went after, and so he | went over in Virginia and bought I the dog for $4.00 and brought it jhome to catch that rabbit. A day or two after the arrival I of the hound, Lon took it out for I a try. The dog soon struck the ! trail of the big fast rabbit and . the race started. The dog was ! pushing the rabbit pretty close until the rabbit saw the running qualities of the hound, and began to speed up. The two animals went around a large circle about half a mile in circumference, j around and around. As the rab bit would pass Lon close .'every time the circuit was made. Lon tried to shoot it but the long-eared runner travelled so fast he couldn't get a bead and finally he stopped trying to get a shot and just stood looking on. Every few seconds the runners passed, and Lon could see that the rabbit was rapidly gaining, and that the dog was no match for the rabbit in running, and that every time the rabbit pass ed the hole where he usually took refuge from hunters, he would not go in but kept on run ning as if to aggravate the dog. Lon says finally the rabbit had got so far ahead and around the circle that actually he was be hind the dog, and that at last when pushing the dog very close, the dog actually ran in the rab bit's hole and that the rabbit stopped at the entrance of the hole and barked like a dog that had treed his game. Lon was so surprised at this 1 unusual situation that he would not or could not shoot and when he went close to where the rab bit stood barking at the hole, the rabbit actually wagged its short tail at him when he spoke. Mr. Sisk was so nonplussed and mystified that he shouldered his gun and went back home with the rabbit following close at his heels. And he says that rabbit remained a pet around the household for sev»'~>l years, and that the dog v -ever again heard from. Mr. Sisk has i:v • _ ai/.e to explain the pfruuoxneu .1 e»- eej* aa the theory advanced by Dr. ItenMd that the intense '"Wwueat mfiaderad fa the two • r»» the dose ra*», " t**cuoste or Num> >t 3,569 First Roman Banquet Held By Latin Club Of Walnut Cove School (By Myrtle Wall.) The first year Latin Club held its first banquet in Roman style November 25, at 6 o'clock in the school room. The color scheme cf purple and white, which are the Roman col ors, was carried through as th 3 decoration for the center table. Candy trees were uscil. Candled were placed by each person's plate. The program began with the invocation and "America" in Latin after which Mr. Greene gave the welcome with Mrs. Bailey responding. When giving her talk on Rome. Becky Crews brought out the importance of the Latin language, using Roman wedding as her topic. Jo Ann Voss said it was the custom for the groom to take the bride from her mother by force. Roman places of interest were pictured to the gussts by Mrs. J. S. Taylor, who is a visitor of Rome. Roman women had to be on ex cellent terms with their hair dressers for fear of a misplaced curl was expressed by Nora Leo Clingman in her talk on Beauty Culture of the Roman Women. Rochel Tuttle related the pleas ures and hardships of the dail/ life of the Roman people. In her talk of Roman meals, Mary Eliz abeth Tuttle explained how the Romans ate and reclined on the table while watching a bull fight. Interesting facts were brought out by Noami Parrom in her talk on The Roman Family, which re lated that the father had power to kill his children if he wishe3. Roman Religion was explained by Mr. Lawrence, which is some what similar to ours. The program wns carried through with as much liV"-e3S as possible to the Roman ' te The menu card was '• shape of a Roman girl in and white. The menu, which contained potato chips, pickles, chicken salad, stuffed celery, crackers, fruit salad, grape juice, cake and ice cream, was served to the members of the club and their mothers and a few guest* as the talks were presented. 4 More Boys To Be ' ! Called in January : t North Carolina will be called ' on to furnish 2001 more n.cn for ( the conscript army 'o T a a"y 23. Of this iun ■ ths f kes quota wlil be 14. • ' ' some kind of a trans' nitii ■» c? exchange of animal . or I personalities so that ibbit thought he was the . hiio I the dog concluded that ust tie the rabbit. The phsaomenan occurred tor-, end yuan ago, hoi Mr. ttnk de dans he comM provo it by at I«aat 8 |*od wttn—w, bat that ■aforhmately fftixasm m