■ ®N S»iM* 1——————————^ \ VQL- XXVII._YADKINVILLE, YADKIN C0„ N. C., THURSDAY, JULY 21,1921 NO. 28 DIM REFUGES I MARSH AREAS %d by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) ington.—Although legislative measures for the protection of wild fowl have multiplied, and have added to the restrictions on hunters, these regulations have not been sufficient to maintain these game birds in their former abundance. Regions that once were the summer homes of myriads of wild;. ducks have been drained and placed finder cultivation, and extensive areas where the birds at oDe time bred are now populous farming com munities. These changed, say biologists of the United States Department of Agricul ture. have crowded out the former feathered residents and have served in a corresponding degree to reduce their numbers. Realization of these facts has led recently to the adoption of other measures to encourage waterfowl. A number of extensive marsh areas have been made permanent refuges under the guardianship of the Department of' Agriculture, and many private pre serves, some formed by artificial means, have been established where the birds are protected while nesting. In addition, in a number of cases, * rigid local restrictions have been placed upon hunters. Investigating the Ducks. As a means of co-operating in such efforts to maintain and increase the number of waterfowl, the biological survey of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture has undertaken Investigations of tlie general conditions under which wild ducks live and thrive, coupled with counts of the birds found in areas varying in char acter. During three summers, field studies were made dealing with wild ducks in the Dear river marshes in Utah, a report of which has just been published by the department in De partment'Bulletin 93G, Wild Ducks and Duck Foods of the Bear River Marshes, Utah. D uring the three seasons devoted to I this work 12 species of ducks and the Canada goose were found breeding in the region included in the Bear river marshes, which cover an extensive area at the northern end of Great Sait Lake. In an enumeration made during May and June, 1916, of the 11 species of breeding ducks 3,560 pairs were counted, and it is believed that this number represents between 60 and 200 per cent of the total number of breeding ducks occurring here that season. Vast Number in One Rejyion. y Allowing live young reared to ma turity as the average for each pair, and considering 1916 as an average season, the bullet** states that, at a ■conservative estimate, between 25,000 and 30,000 wild ducks, native to the marsh, are to lje found there at the close of the breeding season. It was found that, in addition to the large number of birds reared on the Bear river area, many other ducks came in after the nesting season to re main there until fall. That birds from the Bear river section range widely after leaving these marshes has been shown by records of. ducks that have been handed and released there and sut?e-’W'tly were shot elsewhere. Rec ords urns obtained show that ulrdc. i>. leased near the mouth of Bear river 1n migration cover the region from 'Oklahoma to Texas and west to Cal ifornia. The department urges th% es tablishment of a greater number of preserves where wild fowl ma$ breed ami rest unmolested and find an auv\ pie supply of food. G!F1 guardian of family Or.iy nineteen Yea.s Old, but Will Lock After Five Persons by Order of Court. Kan Francisco.—Unwittingly proving thai -he is capable, independent and Lfjaiyies a good balance wheel of judg for her young brothers y Carmicia, a slim, hppyP* Inst two years, since the pRnl rr the family has not only been !ii o 'he little children by doing th, ••ting and other household worB* bu;-W; s'r r/i in the stead of a father sir, A. his death eight 'years ago. ; 'rjtfm,•> the death of the mother an l«en acting as guardian for ii? * •;mily, but lately they have be en-..- restive and anxious to manage their >wn business. i — -- «..., ^ Bumped Into Auto; Fined. "S, \. ■'kep.p n, 111.—H. C. Itelmer was fine' .>7.40 because he started to cross the .ireet and bumped into an auto His Jnjured head was band ■Bg- at r hospital. Then he was 'frfri. -A A-itli ‘‘humping into an auto :mob; it*.*' Magistrate Walter Taylor ' . . ;:J.*3c^‘;ised^.the dne. ^ { IT MADE PARIS GASP Extravagant Costume Worn by Mrs. Wilkinson of England. “Temperance Queen,” Who Never Wears Same Gown Twice, Gives the French a Sensation, Paris.—No longer afraid of being called profiteers, the owners of “war millions” are now bringing them out f®r the “grand season.” The result is that "Paris it witness ing a carnival of flamboyant extrava gance unequaled, according to many "critics, since the days of Nero. Mrs. Smith Wilkinson, English “tem perance queen,” who for three weeks has made Paris sit back and gasp, appeared at the Pre Catalan restaurant one Saturday night with her third husband, who is twenty-four years old, wearing on her head a genu ine crown composed of more than a thousand pearls and rhinestones. The crown formerly was worn by the Grand Duchess Xenia of Russia. Mrs. Wil kinson bought the trifle for $800,000. Suspended beneath her chin was the cluster of famous Shrewsbury pearls, more than 30C years old. They were bought by Mrs. Wilkinson from the English museum so she could wear them in Paris. Her dress was inter woven With more than 300 genuine diamonds, other gcius being set in her stockings and shoes. y Altogether, Mrs. Wilkinson esti mated her costume to be worth in the ; neighborhood of $3,500,000. She said: “French women have been the style j setters long enough. I made up my mind 1 would show them what real sensations meant. I have a different gown for every day in the year. 1 never wear one twice.’ WON FORTUNE FOR A TRIFLE Capt. Alban/Jones, ft. IS., resigned, won £G9.0t)0 /($269,100) on a $2.75 ticket of the^Caicutta Sweepstakes on this year’s /English Derby. Captain Jones, wh^ia assistant marine super intendent, oi the Union Castle line, had never before placed a penny on any hf>rse. He declares he will not five up his present post in spite of j winning the large fortune. ASKS new furniture style Frenchman Blames Architects for Louis XV and Louis XVI Designs, , , Paris.—A new style in furniture was demanded by representatives of the French furniture industry at the furniture congress recently held here. Architects are blamed by the presi dent of the Furniture Makers’ associ ation for the continued production of false Louis XV, Louis XVI and other styles of antiques. They design in teriors to go with such furniture and naturally the manufacturers have to meet the demand, he says. He proposed that the teachers in the fine arts school should begin the camp, ign for a modem original style by ir ,piring original ideas under the general direction of a committee com posed of artists, architects and furni ture makeys. Baby Cab a Rum Cache. Fort Huron, Mich.—John Hammond of Sarnia was arrested bj customs offi cials while wheeling a baby cab from a ferry boat. In the cab on which the baby rested was a quilt contain ing 12 pockets ia each of which re posed a bottle of liqqhj'. With Ham mond was' his wife an two children. He stated he jvas buyfig a house on the contract plan, andltook up booze smuggling to raise money. He Is em ployed by the Grand Trunk: in Sarnia. Hammond was placed In la|L % 0 % - i r , General News President Harding has issued a call for a world conference on disarmament. The date will be annouced later. T wenty thousand enlisted men in the army applied for dis charges in the first ten days of July, and 13,000 have been re leased from service. General Bowley, commander of Camp Bragg, together with the county and city officials of Fayetteville, have started a cru sade against bad women and bootleggers around the camp. There is said to be a new put bread of pellagra in the southern states. The cause is attributed to the farmers having been forced back to a diet of salt pork and corn bread, since the low price of cotton. Mrs. Buelah Johnson was tak en from a hotel at Shreveport, La., Saturday night by masked men, driven to the country,strip ped, and tarred and, feathered and returned to the hotel. We have not learned the cause of the treatment. Mrs. Katherine Kaber was convicted of the murder of her husband at Cleveland, Ohio, last Saturday and sentenced to < life imprison in Ohio Reformatory at Marysville. Mrs. Kaber plot ted the murder of her husband last spring when lie was stabbed by unknown parties. Rev. Phillip S. Irwin, arch deacon of the English Episcopal church at Miami, Fla., w as way laid and tarred and feathered bj a mob of men near that city Saturday night. It is alleged he had advocated the intermarriage of whites and blacks in the south. -j TAUGHT TO HE REDS Communism Is Taught in the Schools in Russia. ‘Revolutionary Conscience” First Thing to Be Developed in Child, Says Former Prisoner of War. Riga, Latvia.—Most of tlie younger generation of Russians are Bolshevist, says Capt. Marion C. Cooper of Jack sonville, Fla., the American flyer who was captured by Russians while serv ing in the Polish army and recently escaped from a Moscow- prison. He attributes this to the Bolshevist edu cational system, nub • which commun ism is taught in the schools. “The schools are all red,” he stated, “and the educational program pre scribes that the first thing to be de veloped in the mind of the child is the ‘revolutionary conscience.’ “In prison I saw, several times, chib dren .visit their anti-Bolslievist par ents. The children were reds and ac cepted their parents’ imprisonment philosophically, wondering how they could go against the tenets they had been taught to absorb in the classroom.” Vying with this system of educating the children, said Captain Cooper, was the wonderful propaganda system by which the Bolsheviki attempt to convert adults. “Their communist lecturers work even in the prisons, trying to convert the prisoners,” he continued. “They even tried it on me. There were lec tures or classes held frequently. If a man said he was converted and could convince the prison committee of that fact, he generally was released. “Further in the Tine of skilled prop aganda was the exce]Jejli treatment of the Polish wv.’r prisoners just be fore la-ey Were returned to Poland, uneur the repatriation agreement of the Polish-tlussian peace treaty. Be fore each bunch was repatriated, all of the soldiers in it were given new’ clothes and new shoes ar.d wise well fed for several weeks, so that when they arrived in Poland they looked well fed, well dressed and, in short, were walking advertisements for the soviet government.” Generally, Captain Cooper said, con ditions in the prisons werg very bad from the standpoint of didt, Hut that | he received no personal ill:treatment. 1 v l ' ' . ' N Extra Session of Legislature Dec. 2 Governor Morrison has called an extra session of the general assembly to convene in Raleigh on December 2nd, for the pur pose of creating legislation in regard to city financing, which legislation was intended to have passed the legislature at the reg ular session last winter. Serious Cutting Affray at Elkin Herbert Wolfe was seriously stabbed by Raymond Burcham at Elkin Monday afternoon when the two men quarreled and fought over some lumber. Wolf was stabbed in the left side and is said to be in a serious condition. After stabbing Wolfe Burch am escaped toward Jonesville and at last reports had not been apprehended, Wolf is about thirty years old, and Burcham about twenty-two. State News Items Governor Morrison and mem bers of his family have gone to Asheville where they will spend the remainder of the summer. The campmeeting at Ball Creek, the famous old camp ground in Catawba county, will begin August 2lst. Richard Menzie, aged 63, mil ler at a mill at Glen Alpine, was caught in a Belt ai the mill and sustained injuries from which he died, Lonnie Lewderwilk, an elec trician, was kilted near Morgan ton last week when he came in contact with a live wire while working on the line. A dispatch from Raleigh says that more than 100,000 automo bile license tags have been sold leaving more than 40,000 cars without license tags. Rev. Baxter McLendon began his evangelistic campaign at North Wilkesboro Sunday, It is estimated that more than 10, 000 people attended the two ser mons Sunday. Some unknown party stole a gallon of whiskey Sheriff Ham son’s office in Raleigh the other night. All efforts to locate the guilty party or the gallon have been fctule. Abner Brinkley and Fred Brinkley, brothers, were con victed c. the murder of Homer Barringc r in Catawba , county court iviii. week and sentenced to 5 inti 2 \ v urs in the state prison. The mure nr occured last March. Geer & Wilson, contractors, doing woe on the Asheville CiiarlotteA /ilmington highway near Ruthc fordton, lost three lice mule$. last week. The mules fell ii > an oid abandon ed wei), co\ c.ed with vines and weeds. Rev. Baxic • McTepdon, better ; kno wn as “C. -done ^Uek,” the i.*o.V-Ci c . wiiPy >1, a as PaO seated a ky i;. v? ea$w|pilie, a lit 1 tie town in thy Ashe vh it, and • r i 4' rtM ? dem e v ; war. .-name there. 1 v r H Mr. j. C. Steele,*- cx-nAy or of Statesville and head of tfL firm of J. C. Steele & Sons,’ bwjgjk ma chine manufacturers^ di< a sud denly at bis home in iliacity last Thursday morning. tt&gvas 82 years oick^.. ^2 I Kohloss Appointed Prohibition Director R, A, Kohloss, of Salisbury, was appointed prohibition di rector for North Carolina last Wednesday by Secretary Mel lon. The appointment was strong ly opposed by the Anti-Saloon League but was upheld by Mr Blair. Mr. Kohloss will enter upon his duties at once. The first as sistant to the prohibition direct or will be A. B. Coltrane, of Trinity, whom Kohloss has des ignated for the position. Big Farm Convention to be Held in August The North Carolina farmers’ an4 farm women’s convention will begin on Tuesday morning, August 30th and extend through Thursday, September 1st, at the State College, Raleigh, The program is not yet in fin al form, but preliminary arrange meats are made and the secre tary is in correspondence with some of the leading speakers in North Carolina and the United States. Among the speakers who have been invited to ad dress the convention are: Hen ry Wallace, secretary of agricul ture; Dr. E. V. McCollum, Johns Hopkins university, and many others. Rooms will be furnished free at State college, but visitors will have to furnish them own toilet articles and bed linen. The convention .officials ex pect record crowds this year, on account of the changing agri cultural conditions and the strong program to be presented. Co-operative Tobacco Mar keting Campaign Starts Mr. C. C. Zimmerman, teach er of marketing, from the State college of agriculture at Raleigh arrived in Yadkin county Tues day to assist Mr. D. H. Osborne, county farm agent, and the local committee of the tobacco grow ers’ association to complete the campaign for co-operative mar keting of tobacco in the next few weeks. The Case of Alvin York | Word is put out that Alvin IY ork, of Pall Mall. Tenn., who is the acknowl .ged greatest he ro of the world war, is about to lose his fine farm through mort gage foreclosure. Neighbors and friends of New York gave him over $11,000 on his farm as bridal present over a year There is a $12,000 mortgag&^m the farm and crop failurajgjpj year made it impossible York to make payments oxrcral land debt. He refuses mercialize his war rcic&jl&SMi raise money hv going iure platform. But ffae quesfwj arises if M:\ York was made on account record, why should he.d^fuilHJk, iako uiord nionn.v on account of 1 ihat record?-vBut many of us, who cannot ioi'i^vy. Air. York’s now probably would Yot ‘navej followed his body when he thrust it torwankou October 1& 1018, in the Argo an 2 Forest and! killed twenty-five Germans^*1 lenced thirty five ffiaehineMaal and marched 132 German Upk twes into th^ American camjj^J . Big Jitneys and Little Jitneys _ Yadkinville and this section seems to be well supplied with jitney cars just now, there being something like five lines plying between here and Winston-Sa lem. At this place one of them branches off to Boonville and the remainder goes on to Brooks’ Cross Roads. However, aside from the mail line and Sbouse’s big jitney, there is little travel except the line coming from Boonville via Yadkinville which goes down in the morning and bac^ in the afternoon and does not conflict with any other line, and carries some passengers. The Shouse boys have been On. this line a long time and have a well established schedule and make it regular and they are carrying the bulk of the pas sengers, in fact more than alt ! others combined, as people have learned iheir schedule and like their manner of operation, and also their capacity for carrying passengers. They can carry 15 to 2<> people comfortly at any time. The danger ol the thing is overdoing the jitney business and driving off the larger caFS unless they are patronized, and then, perhaps, have no jitney at all, which we hope won’t be done. “Home-Coming” Day at Macedonia ' ■ The fourth Sunday in this L ■ month will be observed as “Wome Coming” day at Mace donia Methodist church, near Last Bend. All who have evei belonged to or attended this old h.storic church, and the friends and public are cordially ini%$4 to attend the exercises on this r . day. The/e will be talks &$dt addresp s by different ores, coP^ dudtedbv the pastor, Rev. L. P. ^ Bogle. The exercises begin a& 10 a. m. and cbntinue throughout the day. Dianer will be staved on the grcpffis. Everybod^isrask ed toT&ina a basket. Mr. F. Brown Cele: brjfll!|fc?rd Birthday Brown, ipns of the county’sJjLt Ciii/..-us, cele ..mated his j^A)irthday Sunday •S^gt^m^^pftBoonvilie. - W' j Bet^e^-^lftiO Ad 500 relatives a§d^iends dfeJEla Brown were ce%^ tlle natal (iaySl^th'him. § tariff Moxley*. , -v„ ;who wm presenly sjfes he count e&mtpany as fo| slight a uto %tohj^s besides tlJS&ho came mi buggies and on f|Km |§!||grge table was«ftted on |^MLwn and a.bounJBrdinner and Rev. L). C. R(?e^^iade talks, after^vhi^Pfeose $>te8fes*-’helped themsel vejfti^e f in tfe* li^aeT w&%tng \Mr. BrojLi ^ y%pi)jrbirlha^3 s- ^ ^ -s-5* ;W% . * v . .» * 'iTt ra