19 hHI jMKM, |Hp isij ! BBS At JamELe irak JS&tk* .^^tiSseSSk '? jpr mjjm*y $jh JS^k [MhL '*"'♦». •*.» • -. ,v . > B bib m m 9v^ ViH bbh afiBi Him l^nnlwfc )■ ■ h, r \wHff \ »®eS in >n ns IBB ns .sn ns _V0L- XXVn._ YADKINVILLE, YADKIN CO., N. C., THURSDAY, AUGUSTI8,1921 NO. 32 State News Items S Locke cotton mills at >rd, closed last February trike of its 700 employees, ed operations last week bout 300 of the employees back on the job. J. B, Huneycutt, a Newton barber, was found dead on the streets of that town last Wednes day morning. Alcoholism. He was about 40'years old and is survived by a family, A. F. Coombs, of Newton, fell from a motor truck and frac tured his ski^ll. He died within a few minutes. C. C. Wagoner, living near Statesville, killed a crane near bis home recently that measur ed six feet from tip to tip and bad legs six feet long. Mr. Wagoner said he saw the crane ily over his house, and thinking at was a “stork” decided he would kill it. Harvey Clark, colored, of Catawba county, was shot with a .38 calibre pistol, the ball lodging in his heart. The doc tors say he will recover al though he still carries the bullet in his heart. Foui persons, two men and two girls, were seriously hurt last week near Ltnoir when their car left the road and went Over an embankment. Deputy Sheriff G. B. Flynn, Of Forsyth county, captured two men, a Ford car and thirty-eight gallons of whiskey near Walk town, that county, a few days ago. The men were well arm ed but offend no resistance whenarre«| The men, who gave their names as Harvey Ed wards and John Scott, of Virgin ia, were lodged in jail. George Franklin, a farmer liv ing near Charlotte, tanked up on tomato wine last Thursday and proceeded to raise h— in gener al. After shooting at his wife and missing her he shot two deputy sherriffs, seriou sly wounding them both. He was finally overpowered and landed in jail to cool off. : f NOTICE KortliCarolina Yadkin county In superior court before the clerk. »v imam ana busie bmith vs Sarah Phillips, John Kirk, Frank Kirk, Wade Byrne. .. -a Bynum, Odell Bynum, and Son Bynum and J ames Kirk. The defendants above named, John Kirk, Frank Kirk and Pearl Morgan will take notice that a Special proceeding entitled as a bove has been commenced in the Superior Court of Yadkin county, which is for sale of lands describ ed in petition, the proceeds from which to be divided among the tenants in common; and said de fendants will further taKe notice that they are required to appear before the Clerk of Superior court of Yadkiu county, at his office in Yadkinville, on the 17th day of September, 1921, and answer or demur to the petition filed, or* the relief therein demanded will be granted. This Aug. 17,1921. J. hi. Crater Jm Clerk-Superior Court tenant Commander W erner— OTarged with having sunk .Hie British steamship Torrington a-rub then- drown ing the entire crew with the exception of the captain, by submerging while the unfortunate men were linei^vip as prisoners jon the deck of the sub marine. t ,3 In the house of commons recently, In reply to questions, the attorney general, Sir Gordon Hewart, said the seven ca3w*tf6ijfiwftie government had prepared dla not begin to exhaust its ; list. They were merely seven selected ! test cases. i "; ‘ CHASES BLACK CHICK AWAY One of That Color Was Enough in This Hen's Family, So She Drives In truder Off Nest Allentown. Pa.—Does a sitting hen associate ideas with colors or has she a knowledge of arithmetic. This is the problem that is puzzling an amateur chicken fancier who is try ing to practice economy while follow ing his favorite hobby. A Rhode Island Red hatched seven 'yellow and one black chicks: three days later another hen brought forth a brood of four yellow and one black balls of fluff. For economy's sake the second flock was doubled ijp with the first. The mother hen opened her wings and clucked a welcome to the newcomers and all went well until she spotted the two black chicks together. Then she saw red. One black chick was enough for her family, and she promptly pecked and chased the offend fug black out of her nest. ENGLISH BIRTH RATE HIGH Vltai Statistics 10 1920 Show Mortal* ity the Lowest Ever Recorded. London.—Vital statistics just issued by the Ministry of Health show that the birth rato for 1920 in England is the highest for the decade and the death rate the lowest ever recorded. The infant mortality rate also is the lowest on record. The number of births is the highest ever recorded, while the number of deaths is the low est since 1SG2, when the population was only 20,000,000. The figures are: For England and Wales—Birth rate per 1,000 of the total population, 25.44; deaths, crude rate. 12.4; deaths under one year per 1,000 births, SO. For London—Birth rate per 1,000, 20.3; deaths, crude rate, 12.4; deaths under one year per 1,000 births, 75. The increase in the birth rate is at tributed to the number of delayed marriages prevented by the war and to the mmarriage of war widows. It is suggested that the low death rate may he due to the rapid strides taken in surgery, medicine and sanitation during the war. AMATEUR “FIXES” GAS TANK Hot iron—Then Neighbors Called the Police Reserves and the Fire Department. New .York.—“Now then, doggie, we’ll have this thing fixed in' a jiffy,” said William S. Grey to his dog, as he placed a hot soldering iron on a partly filled gasoline tank in the kitchen of his home. The tank on his auto had been leak-' lng and he decidgd to fix it. He had scarcely finished the sen tence when the top of the tank went up to the ceiling. Tenants on the three upper floors rushed to the street, pojice reserves, firemen and detectives were called and Inspector Callahan of the bureau of combustibles, who was in the neigh borhood, ran to the house. The police entered the apartment to take charge 6f a corpse, but found 1 only a broken Window, a dismembered tank and a perfectly healthy .man. Robert Hervey Randolph was a rich young man whose experience with au tomoO-.go lu,v, ocen confined to the racing kind. When he became a taxi driver he was a riot in more than one sense of the word. Read “Taxi,” our serial offering by George A.gnew Chamberlain. Building Church on Wheels. Louisville, Kv.—A church on wheels, said to be the first of the kind in America, is being built by the Episco palian diocese of Kentucky to visit isolated families in the western end of the state. * * \ Letter-Mailed in Boston J \ 31 Years Ago Delivered \ t Boston.—A letter mailed from * J Boston to the State House thir- * * ty-one years ago has arrived * t here. * * It was addressed to “David * t Pulsifer, Esq., State House, Bos- J * ton,” and the postal date, still * t very legible, was “Boston, Oct. * \. 5, 1889, 7:45 p. m.” ' { * It bore a light-green colored t * two-cent stamp, with a likeness * * of Washington, an issue long * 0 ».,ago abandoned. * 9 ' rt 'had' evidently reached Se- * t nttle in its thirty-one-year trip, ( * as it bore the following date, * 1 “Seattle, Wash., Terminal Sta- ' l tion, April 13, 1921.” ' 9 i Postmaster Morris Jackson at t , I' the Stpte' House doesn’t know J | "hnd never has heard of “David * | Pulsifer, Esq.” so he turned the \ $ letter over to the Boston postal * p authorities, to whose care it was t £ ’entrusted Jhirty-one years ago. * COCKATOO KILLS BIG ROOSTER ! I - Bird, at Outs With Barnyard Fowl, |j Wins Battle at Mar | tinez, Cal. Martinez, Cal.—A bitter battle was fought at the home of B. F. Rhine, local merchant, by a two-pound cocka too and an eight-pound rooster. The diminutive cockatoo proved thtit weight does not always prevail, for after taking a severe grueling for almost five minutes he grabbed the rooster in the windpipe with his sharp beak, administering the death blow. According to Rhine, the pair had been at outs for several weeks. One morning the cocka* >o was perched on a bush in the back yard when the rooster spied him. The heavyweight barnyard champion made a rush at his smaller enemy, spurs and beak. The cockatoo, however, dug his clawjjajfcito the rooster’s breast, and pullitiy' himself upright administered the de&th blow. TRAPS SHREWDEST CRIMINALS ' ‘liiiiiii Ainu!ton Mnrston, a Bostoi. lawyer and scientist, is shown here wirli his “lie detector.” Three com plicated pieces of machinery are used to detect deception in a witness oi other subject. First, the chronoscopy, it measures in twelve hundreths of a second, the time the witness takes to answer questions. “Innocent'’ questions and questions connected with the Case under consideration are verbally “shot” at him. He can’t die without hesitating a fraction of a second— . and tlie ebronoseope measures and records the delay. Second —The kimeograph. This measures the respiration of the suspect as he answers questions and records it in traced “graphs” on a smoked cylinder. And a man breathes differently when lying ' (does a woman?) Third — The spygmomanomefer. This charts the blood pressure during . the questioning. When a mari is lying his systolic blood pressure rises rapidly in a *Hying curve.” Scientists say that if a subject reacts “guilty” to all three tests his deception, or attempts at deception, is practically pr-wml in die full scientific meaning oi the word proof. | Wild Bears Endanger | | Lives of Tacoma Children | ft Tacoma.—While Tacoma is a ft ft city of 160,000 persons and old $ ft hunters sav that it has been _ ft ' , , ft ft twenty years since a bear nas ft ft been killed witlvn the city limits, ft ft a meeting of the mothers and ft ft fathers held recently at Cedar ft IZ Heights, a mile and a half from ft i the heart of the city, revealed ft ? the fact that hears and other ft z wild animals are lurking in the zz < woods, and they have petitioned ft ft for the erection of a school ft ft nearer their homes, so that the ft ft children will not have to pass ft ft through the woods every day. ft 4 » \ Pumpkin Vine Growing \ \ Inside the Parent Shell ! t When Mrs. D. 8. Thompson of t * Waynesboro, Pa., cut open a * 4 pumpkin she was surprised to 4 * see that the seeds on the inside * i had started to grow and that a 4 J young pumpkin vine had start- J 4 ed to fill the entire inside 4 \ of the shell. The pulp was \ 4 in perfect condition and the * J shell had been unbroken until it t * was cut. Roots several inches * t in length and full-shaped leaves # * had been developed. To Speak Saturday HON. CLARENCE POE Who will deliver the address at Center Farmers Union Picnic Saturday. His subject will be “Co-Operative’ M arkeiing.” Hon. Frank A. Linney is District Attorney Hon. Frank A Linney of Boone, has been confirmed by the U. S. Senate to be District Attorney for the western district of North Carolina and will take the oath of oflice at once and enter upon his duties. The Linney nomination has been hanging fire in the Senate for some time and me vote was 31 to 17 when taken. Mr Lin ney is a highly respected lawyer of western Carolina and his friends have been busy congrat ulating him. Angus Cattle Sold Here Saturday afternoon a truck passed through Yadkinville load ed with an angus bull aDd heifer for Mannie Williams. These are the prettiest beef cattle ever seen in Yadkin and came from the herd of Sanford and Rich of Mocksville. The bull was shown last year at the State fait of Texas at Dal las Texas, and also the fair at Waco and won the champion ship at both places. His father is Sanford and Rich’s biggest bull and weighs over 250o lbs. The heifer is bred by another Sanfoid and Rich bull that won the championship last year at the tri-state exposition at Savan nah Ca„ the state fair of S. C., and the Central N. C. fair. Ve believe Mr. Williams is starting Yadkin county off in the right direction and we hope others will follow in his foot step. Sanford ana Rich nave over 150 head of Angus cattle and anvon*e who is interested in good cattle would do well to pay their herd a visit. PLANS FOR A HUGE GARDEN Six Hundred Thousand Trees Are to Be Planted ci North Slope of Pike’s Peak. Colorado Springs, Colo.—Work wll! start soon on the planting of 000,000 trees on the north lope of Pike’s peak, and a bonus will be paid to the sixty odd workers who remain “on the job” until the planting is completed. This gigantic planting project is part of the reforestation program planned by the United States forestry service to conserve the water supply cf the Pike’s Peak region by reforest ing the watersheds that have been denuded by numerous forest fires. Thousands of the trees to he plant ed have already b£en delivered to a .earby spot, where, they are cached in crates in deep snhwbanks to prevent premature budding. The trees are four and five inches high and were raised from seetjs planted In govern ment nurseries^ / Miss Mackie Becomes Bride of Mr. Shugart Miss Sallie Mackie and M.r Zeno Shugart gave their friends a surprise Saturday night by get ting married- No announcement of the approaching event was made and the marriage came as a complete surprise. The wed ding took place at the home of Dr. Rvssell who performed the ceremony in the presence of a few relatives and friends of the happy couple. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Mackie. of this place and is a beautiful and ac complished young lady and very popular with her many friends, while the groom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Shugart of Shu gartown and is a deserving young man. Mr. Shugart now holds a position with the Auto motive Implement Co., of Wins ton, where they will make then home after a short honeymoon trip North. They both have many friends who wish them success and happiness. _*_ No Respector of Persons William Jennings Bryan had delivered a lecture at Delaven, Wis., and was making a fast au rnobilejump to Waukegan, a Chicago suburb, where a Chau tauqua audience awaited him. His driver had been doin/> a lit tle better than fifty miles an hour when he slowed down lor a curve at Antioch and made the acquaintance of J. B. Congdon, marshal. “Where are going, and who are you, anyway?” was the in troduction. “I’m going io Waukegan. I’m William Jennings Bryan, and I must deliver a lecture in Wau kegan in just a few minutes.” “Live in Waukegan, what’s vour business?” as the little note book appeared, “I'm a writer on subjects of political economy. I’ve been in politics forty-one years. I Jiave been a candidate for presi dent on several occasions and have served as secretary of state. In Lincoln, Neb., where I live, I am fairly well known as a law-abiding citizen.” “That may go in Lincoln But I never heard of you, Mr. O’Brien. You 'vii ve Y * ^ the judge about it.” At the village hall a Demo cratic policeman recognized Bryan immediately, and after apologies he sped on his way. There was no fnrther advent ure until Zion City was reached, where a motorcycle drove the machine to/the curb. “I’m William Jennings Bry an,” said Mr. Bryan to a request for his name. “Glad to know you,” said the motorcycle policeman. “I’m Woodrow Wilson and that man in uniform across the street is Robert E, Lee. Christopher Columbus is out shooting craps with Queen Elizabeth.” The Commoner, for once in his life, had no answer ready and the party proceeded to po lice headquarters. The police chief took one look and said: “Let me shake the hand that raised grapejuice to its present high state.” Mr. Bryan complied and sped on to Waukegan. —Mr. ami Mrs. it. V. Long spent a few days last week visit ing friends and relatives in Wins* ton and High Point. * .V Yadkinville Celebrates Coming of Electric Lights - 1 adkinville and her citizens put on a few extra airs Friday night in the form of a celebra tion of her new electric lighting system which was turned on the streets for the first time thaf night, A large cro vd of young and old people of the town turned out and celebrated informally for about two houis, parading the streets with all kinds of noisy instruments punctured now and then by the noise of a cannon or shot gun belching forth her welcome of the comiag of elec tric lights to the streets ol Yad kinviile AMr. \1. V. West brought' out his cannon which is only used for such important occa sions as this, the inaugural ot a : Republican president, the sign ing of an armistice, and so on. And tnis wite ud would not be complete it we did not pay yarucnlur credit to our popular ma\ or Mr. *. E. Wan ace wh.j has worked Laid aim iaithfui m securing this lighting plant tor the town, lie has at all times been the moving spirit in the en terprise, and has been backed by several progressive citizens who have placed at his disposal their money and influence. As a con sequence of their untiring etiorts there are several houses in Yad kinviile, in tact most oi them, lighted today with electricity, and all the stores but two. Yadkin County Convention Sunday School Workers Sunday School Workers of Y'adkin county will hold Con vention in the Harmony FrieDds Church, near Yadkmville on Sat urday and Sunday, August 27th and 28th. This meeting is ar ranged for Sunday School work- * ers of all denominations of the county. The first session of the - convention will be held on Sat urday morning, August 27th at i 10:30 o’clock. There will be morning, afternoon, and nights sessions on the 27th and morn ing and afternoon sessions on Sunday, August 2Sth. The principal speakers at this Convention will be Mr. Gilbert * T, Stephenson of Winston-Salem - who E teacher r* a large men’s '» tame class m me Brown Memo rial Baptist Sunday School and also Piesident of the State Sun day School Association, Mr. D. W. Sims, General Superintend ent, and Miss Flora Davis, Assis tant Superintendent of the North Carolina Sunday School Associ ation. Both Mr. Sims and Miss Davis are recognized leaders in Sunday School work. This Convention is arranged under th* auspices of the Yadkin County Sunday School Associa tion of which Mr. L. F. Amburn of Boonviile is county President. Other Officers of the County As sociation are Mr. S. T. Ilinshaw, Yadkinville, county Secretary; Mr. J, W. Garner, Yadkinville, Assistant Secretary; and Mr. W. H. Adams, Yadkinville, Vice President. Prominent among the officers of the Township Sunday School Associations in the county are: Messrs. Charles Hutchens, East Bend;,C. F. Reece, Eoonville; W. L. Mackie, Yadkinville; H. C. Johnson, Buck Shoal; R. J. \V. Doub, East Bend; Mrs. Mar tha Brown, Boonviile; and Miss Anna Speas, East Bend. I ■ /