Newspapers / The Yadkin Ripple (Yadkinville, … / April 19, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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Yadkinville, Yadkin County N. C. Wednesday, .April: 19 1911. Yol. XT1II LOO TIL NEWS —AVIi:it next, fourth of July? — More vain more—mud. —The court house square has i received a much needed cleaning off. —Mr. It. E. Holton made a1 business trip to Boonville yester- j day. —Mrs. M. \Y. Maekie who has , been confined to her room is much improved. —A tty. D. M. Reece made a business trip to East-Bend last Friday. —A tty. F. W. Hanes went to Statesville first of t he week on business. —FINE Jersy Milkers for sale. Choice $30. C. M. Warden Yadkinville, N. C. J —The last census gives Yadkin- ; ville a population of 43*2. An in crease of 40 per cent. —Big line Men’s, Youths and . Boys up-to-date Suits at Wilmoth I Hayes Cio'hing Co. Elkin N. C. j —Miss Bertha Hair of States, j ville visited at the home of Mr. C. I Iv. Todd a few days last week. —A lot of $3.00 to $5.00 solid j gold rings, heavy, wide, only $2.50 i to close. Hutchens, the Jeweler, —Shoes, Hats, Shirts and Un derwear going at wholesale prices at Wilmoth-Haycs Clothing Co. Elkin N. C. —Mr. Mauny Williamson route '• 2, has a tine Jersey Bull at his barn. Registered No. 01222. In surance $1.00. —“Bud” Wooten, one of a gang of blockaders of this county, was arrested near Lone Hickory one day last week. —Dont forget to call a ml see ; "Wilmoth-Hayes Clothing Co. for j Trunks, Suit Cases and Hand Rags Our juices are right on everything, j -—Mr. Isaac Shore and family i attended a birthday dinner at the j home of Mrs. Shores’ sister Mrs. | Mary Helton out on route two last ’ Su nday. i —The remains of Mrs. John i Wooten who died at her home near ! Boonville last week was brought; here for burial at the Mackie grave- * yard. —Misses, Turney M arden, Beu lali Logan and Florence Bobbins' s]:ent Saturday uight with Miss Annie Brvant out on route three, j i —The Yadkin County lingers Convention will be held at New; Home the liftli Sunday in April at 10 o’clock a. m. All choirs are recinested to attend. i —Mr. Seim, the photographer,! has hi- tent up on the Court House lawn, where he will continue to make pictures for a few days Ion*! ger. From here lie and his assist ant, Mr. White, go to Booueville. —Yadkin Superior court con venes next Monday week, May 1 i with Judge Lyons on the bench, i About the usual amount of cases will be tried. The most import- I eut case is that against Jce Joyner and the Gross boys for shooting Clove McBride while attempting to arrest him for blockading. —Seven couples secured license to get married since our last issue as follows: Frank Randleman ^o ■Jennie Carter, Clint Stinson to jda Hobson, W.F. ’Weatherman to Bessie Macymoie, O. G. Jester to Susie Choplin, Sam Stokes to Martha Tucker, Herm Hutchens to Nancy Ashley and a Mr. Beaman to Nellie Reavis. —Dan Cupid was busy at tbe court bouse Monday when a cou ple, Miss Ora Poindexter and Mr. W. F. Hans r, both from West Fend, secured license to get mar ried ami could not find a minister to tie tbe knot. Finnalv Proff. Johnson, who is also a minister and he agreed to make them one. It was Mr. Johnsons’ first couple t«> tm<»*ry and lie made a splendid success. The happy couple were s »ou on their way home to give ifeeir friends a surprise, Both bride and groom ,.r- popular young pso. e and have many friends who join with m in wishing them suc b * J hamwness. he it '' ATTEMPTS SUICIDE John Wooten, whose wife was buried last Friday and his child Saturday, was brought here yes terday in a desperate coudition. Since loosing his wife and child, Wootens mind has become affected and he has attempted suicide sev eral times. One of his hands was in a serious coalition as a result of being bruised. Dr. Harding examined him and he was then placed in jail until an application for his admittance to the State hospital can be returned during which time he will have no chance to take his life. i EAST*BEND RT. 2 Sunday School was organi sed at Union Hill last Sunday with a large crowd in atten-! deuce. Quarterly meeting was held at Macidonia Saturday and Sudnay. Rev. T. A. Williams will conduct a few days meeting at! Union Hill, beginning the 5th Sunday in this month. Mr. Pies Norman who has been sick in Maryland is im proving. There was no gardens plan ted in our part Good Friday. Mrs. Laura Johnson who has been very sick for some time is no better, Mr. A1 Norman of Wauta-j gue county spent last week! with his brother Mr. f. I. F i Norman after an absence of! 14 years, j Wheat is looking very well J in this section. Our people are having fine j sport down on the Yadkin riv-i er fishing and duck hunting, j Route Two News Great excitement was can-' sed in this community last j Friday morning when a ’phone ' message from Baltimore stated a mad dog was headed this! wav. Several men with guns ! went in persuit and succeeded j in killing It near Mr. A. Din-! kins home. When found iti was fighting with several dogs ! It bit some I2 or I5 dogs in | this community and a pig for. Mr. Thomas Rutledge, and; a regular dog killing has been ■ in progress ever since. Mr. \\ m. Shermer has been confined to his bed for the past week or two. Mr. Sanford Davis arrived from Richmond Va. and will; visit relatives and friends for a ' few days. Mr, Frank Eddleman and daughter Miss Mary, visited in Forsyth a few days the past week. Miss Eula Davis spent Eas ter with relatives and friends ! in Winston. The seventeen year locusts are beginning to make their appearance. ---— Slate-wide prohibition in Alabama was given knockout blow April 5, when both bran ches of the Legislature adopted the Smith liquor regulation bill. This provides that 45 per cent,of the voters of a county may petition for an election to determine wheather liquor shall be sold in that county either by saloons, dispensaries or otherwise. Each county is thereby given full power to reg ulate its liquor traffic. I NOTIQB Dr. M. A. Do.vail of North Wil kesboro will bo in YadkinviJle on May 1st and 2nd—court week. His practice is limited to the treatment of the Eve, Ear, Nose and Throat and the Fitting of Glasses. Gost of Bad Roads Danbury Reporter Dr. J. H. Elington of Sandy 1 Ridge, was in Danbury Mon day and dropped in to see the Reporter. He is among those of the county who favor better roads, and told the Reporter that he was willing to be taxed to get them. The doctor said he recently had the pleasure of driving'over some of Guil-; ford count3T’s excellent maca-' dam roads and that he enjoj^ed it very much. As an instance of the disadvantage of our bad roads he cited a case near his home where on account of the j dreadful roads a man who ow-j ned only a one-horse team had’ to hire Ins crop of tobaco hau led to market with two horses which cost him nine dollars. * The doctor stated that the ex tra cost this man was put to' on account of bad roads would j have paid hi * road tax for ma in- years. Another citizen from the j same section stated that he re- j cently hired a team to go to, market twelve miles away, j paying him $2.50 per day for! the team, ft required two; days to make the trip of only 24 miles, making the team j cost him $5.00 and he did well. to pull twelve hundred pounds through the mud. With good 1 roads the trip would have cost him only §2.50 and one day of j his time, and he would have! hauled twenty-four hundred j pounds. That is paying bad j road tax at a high rate. The Dead Letter Office When you write an import ant letter be sure to place a re j turn stamp upon it or have something on or in it indicat iug our exact address. At i the Dead Letter auction every ! year the increasing national j carelessness in correspondence 1 sends over a hundred thousand letters and parcels to be auc tioned off by the Post-office depaitmcnt. This year the net revenue from this sale am ounted to $8,749.75, and am-1 oug the auctioned matter were more than 7 ,000 parcels. At the sale there are always a number of bidders ready to take a chance of finding con tents of value in the letters and parcels from the dead let ter office, and it is needless to sa}^ that myriads of tragedies and comedies tan be read bet ween the lines of these waifs of the great ocean of postal commit nations. NOTICE . North Carolina ) In Superior r Court before Yadkin County ) the clerk F L Gentry et al ) * vs ‘ -Notice AY J (leu t ry et al ) ]>v vi' tuo of an order of the Superior Court made in the above entitled action, I will sell at the Couit House door iu Yadkinvi lie on the fst day of May 1911,, to the high jsfc bidder the following lands; About sixty acres described in the petition tiled in4 the action. Terms of sale; one third to be paid in cash, the remainder upon a credit of six months, bond and approved security beariug interest from date until paid. Title re served until the purchase money is paid. This March 22nd., 1911. D. M, Iteece, Comm — FOIl BALE, a good Farm six miles south of Elkin (land all level) on Jonesville andHampton ville road; containing 182 ac.ms, ‘ room house, good barn and .iluu buildings all now. Can be bough) on easy terms. Apply to 1). M Iieeoe, Yadkinville N. C. Pointers We guess the continuing cool weather is caused by an ! attempt to put wool on the free list. --♦» - Doctor Cook ought to be in that Democratic bod}^ at Was hington. He has all the ac complisliments-ielling hot air stories. •-■-? That Democratic Congress might change the date of Eas ter to a little later in the sea son, that it may be :n warmer weather. -- The Durham Sun says with much truth “Mose Speaks is about the only man put on trial in this State in years who had any sort of grounds for a plea of irtsanity, and yet he is about the only one who fai led to make it. Congressman Kitchen says! the Democratic house has done! more in a few days than the Republicans have in many years. Strange we had not heard what they done. Can some Democratic editor tell us what it was? -♦» A Maori clergyman sojourn ing in Chicago sugests that the Maori custom of rubbing noses be substituted for kiss ing. This gentleman ought to go to Newport or Paris if he wants to start a new fusion. We refuse to adopt the custom until it is endorsed by them. Only In * Jersey. W. J. Bryan, Champ Clark and Governor Wilson will all make speeches the same night from the same platform in New Jersey at an early date. Can they get a platform that they can all stand on?—Elkin Times. We are of opinion that yon j might expect anything to hap j pen up in ’Jersey*, but they cannot all stand on the same national platform. Taking Away From the Subject. Wlien Frederick Robertson of Brigh ton, the {;roat preacher who had writ ten much about Tennyson’s poems and for whom the poet had a high regard, llrst calhsl upon him, "I felt,” said Tennyson, “as If he had come to pluck out the heart of my mystery, so I talk «sl to him about nothing but beer." How’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Ho ward for any case of ('atari h that cannot be cured by Hill's Catarrh Cure. K. J CHEN EV & CO., TOI.EDO, O. We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the |ast 15 years, and be ievo him perfectly honorable in nil bvs iness transactions, and tinancirt|ly able tocarrv out any obligations made by bis firm. WAI.DINU, KinilUl & MAKVIM, wholesale Druggists. Toledo, o. Moll’s Catarrh Cure is taken, inter nally, acting directly upon the blood ■and mucous surfaces of the system Testemonials sen* fate Price, 75c. per bottle, fcjold by ail-Di uggists, Take Hall's Family 1'ilis for consti pation. NOTICE Having qualified as Admr. of the estate of Lee Weatherman deed this is to notify till persons liold ng claims against said estate, to present them for payment within 12 months from date of this notice or the same will be plead in bar of their recovery and all persons owing said estate are hereby re quested to settle them at once. This Mar. 8 1911 W. L. Hudspeth, Admr of : Lee Weatherman, dec’d NOTICE The Hoard of Commissioners for the iowu of Jonesville 1ms or dered an election to be held on Tuesday May 9tli 191] for imoro venients. A new registration is required, I. \V. Vestal appointed registrar. W. M. Swe ini, Mayor. WE ARE NOW RECEIVING Our spring line of Goods. *The prettiest lin ever carried. Call and examine our stock of DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, SHOES, you buy. We also have a lot of UNDERWEAR, for Ladies, Men am as cheap as the cheapest. We also carry a full line of Hardware, Groceries and mens Hats. In everything usually kept in a large store. We are also receiving a large loti UP-TO-DATE MEN'S AND BOYS CLOTH IN1 Our line of fcpring MILLINERY is the most complete we have ever had. Consisting of the^latest Styles from the fashion resorts. We will do anything in our power to make it to your interest to trade here. sa YOUR FRIENDS, SHORE & DOUTHTT * Everything THAT’S GOOD % If yon want a gray suit, if 3011 want a brown suit, if you want a black suit, if you want a blue suit—no matter what you want, if it’s good, we have it in the line of “Tailors That Satisfy,” and every sample is all wool. Whether your taste runs toward the bright snappy pat terns or the more conservative weaves we have them all. Remember, if we don’t please'you in every respect we would not let you take the garments from our shop. Q icer ycur Suit today. ROYAL & MYERS NOTICE North v aioliua. ^ jn sUj-e,ior Cour | Yadkin Couutv \ hefore the (Aerk j lJenj Shore et al ) vs Notice. Thus Steelman et al ) The defendants. Thos Steelman j John Wave, Ollie Wave, Joseph Macy, Wm. IMacv, Geo Dougherty j Fannie Darglmrty, Thos Maey,! Chas Packard, Susie Packard, Jas j T Sprinkle, Henry Sprinkle, Min-! nie Sprinkle, Benj Sprinkle, Clin ton Sprinkle, Maggie Sprinkle,; and Robert Sprinkle^ will take notice that a special proceed- j ings entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Yadkin County belore the clerk, j to have the lands described, in the petition divided and partitioned among the petitioners and defend ants according’io their respective interest theiriu.and the said de fendants will further take notice that they are required to appear before the clerk of the Superior Court of Yadkin county at his office in Ysitkinville on Saturday the qth. day of May 1911 at 2 o’clock P M to answer or demur to the petition or the petitioners will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said petition. And let the infant defendants Clinton Sprinkle, Maggie Sprinkle, and Robert Sprinkle, further take not ice that if they fail to have a guar dian appointed for them, the pet itioners will apply to the court to appoint a guardian ad litem to re present them in said proceedings. This April lldi. 1911. J. L. Cm ter, C. S. 0. — Miss .Mary “Thomason has •huge of the Millinery depavt nent of Shore & Douthit, at the mine stand. See her for Spring rats. \ 130 YOUR 13 A 1ST K L 1STG Wi l l I TFT E Bank of Yadkin YADKIN VILLE, N. C. The oldest and strongest bank ing institution in the county CAPITAL - - $10000. SURPLUS - - 3,000. Since its establishment, Oct. 11)05, it has ]>aidin div idends to its stockholders $3,400.00 and S7,7^.72 interest to depositors. While tliii is a small bank, yet it is safe and sound, taking no risk as some of the larger ones do. It extends thanks and best wishes to its many patrons for their- past confidence, and solicits a continuation of your banking, as well as new accounts. Banking through lb. mails is safe-a large part being done in this way with this Bank. Every consistent courtes}' will be extend ed to its patrons Interest Paid on all Time Deposits. Officers Benjamin Shore, Broident. T. J. Byerlv, Vice-Brest,. AY. A. Hall, Cashier Isaac Shore, Yiee-Bres. Finance Comm: Benj. Shore, Dr. J. M. Phillips and - T. J. Byerl v. Directors: W. A. Baily, E. L. Gaither, Isaac Shore J E. Zachary, T. B. Harding, At. M. Crumel and C. B. lleavis.
The Yadkin Ripple (Yadkinville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 19, 1911, edition 1
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