THE DANBURY REPORTER 4 Established 1872 ahrut the AAA vul ot/tei €XT€NSION WORK \ >« cfrom. *Am /• . V A F. R. Farnham -Jy nsion Da" v » Specialist from State College, will spend Tuesday and Wednesday, December 2 and 3, on dairy farms in Stokes county. Picture show ••lectures will be given at the fol lowing places: TuesJay, December 2 10 a. m.—A. M. Carrol's Store 2 p. m.—N. G. Covington's Store 4 p. m.—Fred Fowlers hom« 7:30 p. m.—Francisco High School Wednesday, December S I j .. ,10 a. m.—R. M. Smith's farm J ™ 2p. m.—A. T. Steel's farm 4:30 p. m.—S.L. Hill's farm * J. W, Crawford of the LandL'se Office of Raleigh will accomfimy Mr. Farnham part of the time. The entire discussion will be very interesting and instructive to farmers at large and espicial'y fine for dairy and poultry farmers. It is -hoped all farmers of each re ' spective community will attend their meeting. Such timely topics lB winter feeding for milk produc tion* housing dehorning and pas ture making will 3e sunoe of th>; subjects touched upon by th,i specialist. R. M. Smith recently purchas ed t«To purebred Jerseys for foun dation animals. B. P. Baity reports that his lock of 1741' chickens were found be. free Irom pollorum diseaßo when leetec by the agricultural authorities. Mr. Bailey further re ported some interesting facts by Stating thai 352 barred rocks on the third f oor of his large poult ry house produced 244 eggs, or £9 per cent, for one days aver > age. Three hundred an eighty-nine reds on the second floor produced 265 eggs, or 68 per rent. Dim lights, sufficient .to permit te hens to eat ar.d drink day and night, are used in this modern poultry bouse. THIS WEEK 'IN DEFENSE President Roosevelt sent identi cal letters to UMW President Lewis .and to the steel company representatives Benjiman Fair less, Eugene Grace and Fran'i Purnell stating "work in the cap tive miijies must recommence... issue in dispute. ..does not justify a. stoppage of work in a * grave national crisis...** The President asked the four leaders to "allow the matter of the closed shop in the captive mines t!o remain in status quo for the period of the national emer gency." or else to accept final arbitration. He said any agree ment reached would have no ef fect o£ the UMW's. closed shop -Agree nient already in effect with regular commercial twines. "**" v Volume 66 STOKES SENDS I 17 MORE MEN i TO FORT BRAGG : ' j The following registrants have teen called by Stokes county draft board No. 1 to report here this morning at 8:30 to be sent to Fort Bragg for military training: I Wendell Vest Keiger, Tobacco ville. | I Howard Franklin Gordon, Pin nacle. I James Russel Mabe Danburv. > Arnold Vestal Chapman, Wal -1 nut Cove. ! Moir Lawrence Bennett, Nor folk, Va. William Harvey Lawson, Fran cisco. | Silas Martin, Walnut Cove. Willis Odell Ashby, Danbury. I Jerry Randolph Dodson, Sandy Ridge. Ralph Allen Neal, Pine Hall. Matt Jesse James, Winston- Salem. John Thomas Scott, Germanton. Joseph Hiram Tilley Hampton, > Virginia. | Fred Abraham Stevens, Dan i bury. Joseph Edgar Moorefield. Pin nacle. Cazzie Mabe, 4, Buried Today Cazzie, the four-year-old son o! Mr. and Mrs. Creed Mabe of nea. Danbury, died Wednesday at the I home at 2 o'clock after an illness of three days. | Funeral services were held to 'day at the home with Elder W. J. j Brown, Miller Vaden and Watt Brady in charge. Burial was i.i 'the family cemetery. ! j In a message to the CK> conven tion in Detroit, the President said unless democratic freedoms are protected from the "w or 1 d scourge" of Hitlerism, "free trade i unions and all other free institu tions will vanish." To protect thess ' freedoms, he wrote, "we must , produce guns, tanks, planes and i ships without delay and without I interruption, and the American people and their Government are ( determined that we shall have them." Arming of Merchant Ships President Roosevelt signed the legislation to repeal the three key sections of the Neutrality Acc. The President also requested from Congress a new $380,050,000 ap propriation for the Navy, includ ing $120,000,000 for "defense in stallations" on merchant ships. Navy Secretary Knox said the first armed U. S. merchant vessels will be plying the seas within a week. He said ships plying both the Atlantic and Pacific will be armed. The arming of the ships will require three to four mouths (Continued on page four) Danbury, N. C., Thursday, Nov. 27, 1941 * * * * (An Editorial.) IN DEFENSE OF A LADY Gene Tunney, former heavyweight champion, now in charge of navy physical training and ath letics, publishes in the last issue of the Readers Digest a strong, almost vicious attack on the cigarette. He says smoking shortens life, and you have a much less chance of reaching 60 if you smoke. He quotes Dr. Raymond Pearl of Johns Hopkins who "found that among 100,000 heavy smokers (over 10 cigarettes a day), 53,774 die before the age of 60." Among the same number of nonsmokers. Dr. Pearl found "that only 43,436 die before that age." Tunney goes on to say that no one has ever de nied that nicotine is poison, and tells again the old story about what one drop of it will do to a shaved rabbit, and that the nicotine dissolved out of "a few cigarettes and placed on the tongue of a grown man would kill him in 15 minutes," etc. The first person who ever smoked a cigarette in Danbury was a man who lived here when I was a kid. 1 thought so well of the way he blew the .•-moke through his nose that 1 learned the fasci nating art myself. The other day I visited this pioneer nicotinist at his home over in Virginia. He has not walked any for several years, due to a hip injury. He sits and reads and smokes cigarettes all day, with a fine clear mind. He is now past 80. I asked him how long he had been smoking cig arettes. He said: "Only about 65 years." Tobacco is not good for young people with bud ding intellects, but for maturer years when a per son is old enough to have sense, it is the greatest consolation of this era. No person has ever experienced the most exalt ed satisfaction of thephysical and mental cosmos who has not sat down after a hearty meal and slapped in a large chew of tobacco. In such a time you are quite willing to let the rest rest of the world go by while you ruminate and philosophize on the vicissitudes. Thea-e is a keen elation of the spirit as you reach encouraging solutions that otherwise would be severe headaches. If the evidence we have presented is not suffi cient to convince, we will introduce good and credible witnesses in corroboration. First—Mr. Carl Ray, efficient deputy sheriff, who consumes a long black plug of "Detective" every day, and who never chases a law-breaker without first putting in a fresh chew. Second—Mr. Jim Lasley, who keeps a quarter of a pound of the "consolation" packed away in his left jaw, and who can hit a fly at 10 paces. Now is the time for all good smokers, chewers and snuff-dippers to come to the aid of Lady Nic otine. THE BULL'S TAIL American labor, which is by far the higest paid in the world, made a serious mistake in following John L. Lewis, whose name is now mud as far as strikers are concerned. Somebody put a crimp in the tail of this swash buckler last week. He relinquished his hold and :the big coal strike that was destined to strangle (production in the steel factories fizzed out. But Lewis dared a little too far. His ambition and greed and conceit while leading to his own downfall, has seriously endangered the rights and privileges gained by the labor organizations during the last two decades. For, now, Congress is aroused and anti-strike legislation is being framed. Laws that will make it a crime to halt the defense program by unwar ranted strikes is sure to be passed. No 4 jsore will . the .bulkvisaged Lewis* have- the 1 power to help Hitler with dangerous sabotage. Published Thursdays HAWKINS MICA MINE MUDDLE COMPLICATION SI RKOI ND- 1 ING THE TITLE ENGAGES \ LEGAL ASSISTANCE—HIS TORY OF THIS CELEBRATED MINE, DEVELOPED FIFTY ' YEARS AGO BY PEPPER MINING COMPANY. I j The old James Hawkins mic.i mine, now biing workid, lias rt- | jcenUv cornr into publicity ' | * I I ing over c. !arge scope of the ! | country. ! The government finds need for ' , mica in its defense program, large- | ly it is reported in the mar.ufac- j :ture of airplanes, and so the price j for this rare mineral has skyrock-1 etei inducing speculators to make' i * I frantic efforts to control rmca, properties whenever found. Tin tiistory of the old James, Hawkins mine extends back more than half i» centrv. It was first de-; vtloj*\i by the Pepper Mining Company, who 50 years ago took fine quantities of mica from 1 this mine, selling it to northern interests at good prices. The Pepper Mining Company was composd of the late N. M. Pepper and Jas. A. Pepper, and J. W. Pepper. J. W. Pepper, livinj I now at Cbristiacsburg, Vs.. was . in_nfcgtr \J~ th'- fempanv Later the price of mica c!e» li/i-' ! ! 'ing to an impnlfitable level, the | i Pepper Co., who onlv held a lease t on tlie mineral sights of the land. 1 discontinued operation*. A.v the years went by Jwues 1 |Hawkins, the owner of tue mica, iditit Henry Whi'.aki i ol Pilot Mt. 4 •bought the heirs out and disposed 'of one-third interest in the mine to' 'Alex Joyce of Patrick county, Va. for 52.000. j Different' parties were later in •terested in the property. i Finally during the depression the property was sold for taxes, and a party in Mitchell county, ! North Carolina, became the owner, 'and still holds his interest but » j has made a sale to a Philadelphia concern at §22,000. I This was probably a conditional 'sale, as the Philadelphia concern engaged Charlotte lawyers to in vestigate the title, who found that in the tax foreclosure proceedings by the county Alex Joyce, the owner of the one-third interest, was not made party to the suit. Learning this state of the mat ter, Fred Pepper of Walnut Cove, went over and purchased Joyce'.- interest, Joyce giving the impress ion that his wife, who would have held a dower interest was dead. ■ But no sooner than Fred had : completed his Ue -i :han he le..rr. that Mrs. Joy-.e w.is sti.l living ir Oklahoma. inp-.tm d by A. J. I Ellington attorrev, Fx.*d went 'o i f 'Oklahoma and secuied a quit deed from Mrs. J iyc?. Another angle is that tit'e in vestigtion showed that one of the mines, or part of one of the mines ! was located on the land of Percy Morefield, who was bought out on la $5OO option by "W/G. Petree. Mr. 1 Petree has also been to Oklahoma * * * "Number 3,01 '1 Changes Made In Emergency Crop Loan Office ; W. R. James, field supervisor ol" Forsyth county in the emergency jcrop loan service, was here this week. Mi. James formerly had super vision of Forsyth, Yadkin and Surry in this government service, now yields Surry to (I. U. All'ori ; late Stokes supervis«»i, who i ns 'been transferred .to Surry. Mi i James will now visit Stokes ro_,- i ularly, as this county has been transferred to ljis supervision. j JAILED Watson Broadstreet and Her ! Bert Beeson, both of Walkertown 'v.vrt arrested Saturday by Patrol man Bristol Dellinger and weiv jailed after a warrant for trar.- - - ' fKii:ing li'juor was sworn. The/ 'were released under bonds >l ench for their appearance at the j January term of Superior Cour'. iThe hearing was before Jus'.i v of the Peace P. C. Campbell, j Oscar Gerry, Curtis Souther:* arid Fred Wall of Walnut Cove and Meadows were arrested Thursday by Special Deputy Cftrl Kay mi charges of public drunkm ss. They » were released upon payment of finer and costs. ... "» | Krnest Neal, George Bolton and j Marrtr. Bolton of Walnut Ctivo were arrested and jailed Saturday • 'by Deputy Sheriff Burke Smith. Special Deputy carl Ray and Pat- Jrolman Bristol Dellinger for pub lic drunkness. "thirty days lor the Boltons; 1 Ernest Neal", fine' a:vl cost. | Officers Cleve Laws on a:i i Rufus Mabe of Lawsonville ar rested Ed Collins and Otis Mr- Adams, of Peter's Creek Town ship, Sunday for public drunknes-. Both men were fined. ; I • THREL MEN OF SAME .NEIGHBORHOOD. COMBINEI* AGES 2 GZ YEARS Mr. and Mrs. Dixie Wood, of the North View section, visitet Danbury Tuesday. Mr. Wood in forms the Reporter that his fath er. Sol Wood, now past 80, is ? peart as a trtrltet ,u; I gets out; and wo*k°. J. 1). 'i ■.». :? :;){.•■*, S living nearby, now 92, is in fairly J ,sood health and his brother, P. H H.. of the same neighborhood, no>t* J past 90 is in delicate health nothing" serious. Here are three citizens residnH in the same community combind ages reach 262 years. R. C. Bodenh unmet* of I ton was business v'snor here I l in the interest of hi. title. • Next D. c\ Kirby was engage by Patrick county interested ties, and Mr. Kirby, too, has a trip to Oklahoma. So it appears that the real owi:H ership of Hawkins mica mine, bracing only about 30 «cr«sv be a subject for settlement by court*. |K