THE DANBURY REPORTER.newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn91068291/1911-07-25/ed-1/seq-1.pdf · which is...

1
VOLUME XXXIX. DANBURY, N. C., JULY 25, 1911. PUBLIC MEETINGS SEVERAL TO OCCUR SOON [ Old Soldiers' Day Next Saturday, Meeting of Dry Prizery Stock- holders Tuesday, August 8 ? Farmers' Institute Wednesday, 9 ?Farmers' Union Picnic Satur- day, August. 12 Danbury is billed for quite a variety of public gatherings of county wide interest during the next few weeks, some of which will doubtless draw large crowds. First comes the annual reunion of the ex-Confederate soldiers, which is set for next Saturday, July 29. Besides the number of interesting things which the old soldiers will participate in, there will be two base ball garqes in which Danbury will try to win the scalps of the Walnut Cove and Smithtown teams, respec- tively. On Tuesday, August 8, the stockholders of the Farmers' Dry Prizery will gather here to take steps of vital interest to the Union in the county. On the Wednesday following, there will be an Institute for farmers and farmers' wives conducted in the court house, which will be at- tended by a number of speakers and lecturers of State reputation. Saturday, August 12, is the date for the Farmers' Union picnic, which will doubtless attract a tremenduous attendance from all neighborhoods of the county. | .. RED BANK NEWS V Everybody Getting Ready For The Picnic Season?Personals. German ton, July 25. Editors Reporter : The health of the Red Bank section js very good, but we hear of a lot of sickness and deaths elsewhere. We have had some hard rains that washed the land and done considerable damage, but the crops are looking better since ffie rain. Never before have vegetables been so scarce. Irish potatoes are an entire failure. Mr. J. A. Simmons is teach- ing a singing school at Provi- dence, also one at Shiloh. He teaches two days in each week at each place. He is training the classes for the Red Bank picnic. He has a good crowd at each place. Everybody is getting ready for the picnic season. Shiloh willhave their picnic on Satur- day before the 4th Sunday in August. Everybody is invited. There is a large crowd expect- ed at Red Bank August 12th. There will be two or three lawyers from Winston-Salem; Dr. J. L. Smith, of Westfield; and we hope to have our pastor, Rev. Sam Hall with us to ad- dress the audience. Several Sunday Schools will be there with songs and speeches. There will be plenty of refreshments \u25a0on the grounds. Now every- one come and don't forget those well filled baskets. Mrs. J. A. Simmons and little . son spent the 4th Saturday night and Sunday with their sister, Mrs. S. J. Crumpler.. Mr. J. W. White and family i spent Sunday with his brother, \ Mr, J. H. White. Miss Myrtice Simmons, of Rural Hall, and Mr. E. A. Rainey called on Miss Iris Crumpler Sunday afternoon. Misses Blanche, Bessie and Florence Merritt, Florence and Elsie Sullivan, are at home, after spending some time at Moore's Springs. Mr. L. W. Marshall and fam- ily visited their relatives near Dennis Sunday. -The threshing machines will soon be out of a job in this section. PARSON'S POEM A GEM. From Rev. H. Stubenvoll, Allison, la., in praise of Dr. King's New Life Pills. "They're such a health * necessity, In every home these pills should ; be. Jfother kinds you've tried in vain, \ USE DR. KING'S -JUtr \u25a0nc"Wcrr again. 25c at all i Druggists. i gJMesars. J. C. Wall and wnf Wiil, were visitors here Tues- day. i REV. C. W JBLIDEWELL WRITER OF THE POOLING He Is Having Success ?List of Ap- pointments?Big Time Expected at Meadows. Walnut Cove, July 24. Editor Danbury Reporter: You will please allow me space in your paper to speak a word to the Union brethren of Old Stokes and adjoining counties. Brethren, the work in Old Stokes is progressing nicely. We are pooling nearly all of the to- bacco in most places. The brethren mean to co-operate this time in the sale of their products which is the only way to obtain better prices. If the merchant or manufac- turer would start a business and pay the farmer just the price he asks for his product and then sell his entire output for just what the other fellow would Erice it at how long would his usiness stand? Not one month. And yet the farmer has been do- ing this very thing for ten years, although he can spread his ice- cream supper with the very best cake, cream, lemonade, for I have had the pleasure of trying it four times in the last month at Young's school house, Preston- ville, Mt. Hermon and Buffalo. At all these places we had large crowds, enthusiastic brethren and sisters. One sister cut cake until she blistered her hand and had others to help her. Boys, if you want a good time and some- thing good to eat, come out and join us at a Farmers' Union pic- nic. We will have one at Mead- ows, August 5, and expect to have plenty to eat and some to spare. Can't you come? If the Lord willbless us in the future we will have some money to enjoy, for we are going to have part of the profit of our labor, and build us some fine houses. We have built some already but the other fellows have enjoyed them'. But now we are going to build some for us. We will have our county pic- nic and rally at Danbury, August 12. We expect a great time. Come all of you and bring a well filled basket. Come early or you might not get inside the fence. We expect Bros. P. M. Conner, of Danville, Va., and P. W. Glidewell, of Reidsville, to tell us about the good things in store for us. Come and spend the day in this good and social crowd of laborers who feed and clothe the wurld. If nothing more is ever derived from this grand organ- ization the social side would pay, still that is not all. Some day ( you fellows will wake up and find this crowd of down-trodden hay seeders (as they are called) in the lead. I will stop now be- fore I tell you just how it will be with us. The farmers will meet me at the following times and places: Oak Hill school house, Satur- day, July 29, at 1 o'clock. Fulp school house, Monday July 31, at 1 o'clock. Mt. Tabor, Tuesday, August Ist, at 1 o'clock. German ton, Wednesday Aug. 2, at 1 o'clock. Pine Log, Thursday, Aug. 3, at 1 o'clock. Rose Bud, Friday, Aug. 4, at 1 o'clock. Meadows, Saturday, Aug. 5, all day as that is the place we will kill the fatted calf. If you don't come you will always wish you had. C. W. GLIDEWELL. ADVICE TO BOYS STICK TO THE FARM It Offers Unlimited Opportunities to the Young Men of Brains and Energy. Boys of the South, fix it firmly in your heads that the farm is the best place for you. You may think you will have to work hard on the farm. So you will if you ever amount to anything. The boys who are go- ing to be of use in the world from now on, as in the past, will have to work. Work is merely accomplishment. But you do not have to work as hard on the farm as you do in other callings. In any other line you are limited by the product of your hands and your machine. On the farm you are helped by all the power of Nature. You plant a grain of corn and neglect it, and Nature will make some- thing of it. In town you plant a something in the machine and neglect it, and the job stops. The machine has a limit. The farm may have one, but nobody ever yet found it. Who can say that two bales is the limit of an acre of cotton, or three bales or four bales, or any amount? Na- ture is glad to do anything to help you as far as you are willing to go. But Nature helps the boy who helps her. In every Southern State last summer a boy showed that it is possible to make over a hundred bushels of corn on an acre. There is no secret about making a good yield. It is a matter of getting the ground fertile, and of work. You are intelligent enough to do what other boys have done. If you have the energy and the ambition and the willingness to find out how the successful boys make a hundred bushels of corn, you can make a hundred bushels. Y'ou can make a bale of cotton to the acre. You can raise a cow that will make seven pounds of butter a week, for cows have been known to make three times as much butter. The farm, you see, re- sponds to any reasonable effort with good returns, and makes your reward correspond with your willingness to work. * * * It is not so in town. There your wage is fixed, and you can not make your ten-dollar job pay you twenty dollars by increased work, for you have to work the limit to earn your ten. " The farm is a place that offers you an opportunity that is limit- ed only by yourself, and it is the only place on earth that is so generous. All other occupations depend on the whims of the peo- ple. The farm depends on you alone, therefore on the farm you are independent and free. * ? * ; BILL ADAMS BOBS UP [ NEITHER DEAD NOR DYING : The Blatant Banjoist On Deck Again I ?Wants Damages For Being Libeled. Bill Adams is not dead, i This is official. Somehow the news got out a i few weeks ago that this noted » character had passed away. The > Madison Herald printed it, and the Reporter copied the news [ from the Herald. I Sher'ff Jones saw Bill trudging ? along the road near Walnut Cove Saturday, and the Sheriff asking ; Bill where he was going, Bill i replied: i "Gwine to Danbury to sue the ; Danbury Reporter. Charge every man f> cents who say I'm dead." Long may Bill live to extract ; hideous agony from his old two- stringed banjo. A prominent . personage, a privileged charac- ter, his ribald revelry is an in- despensable requisite to every gathering in the county. When Bill comes to die really, may his soul find that lsst chord which it is ever seeking here; may his now troubled spirit rest and be bathed in the nepenthe of the groves where ethereal orchestras are said to constantly furnish divine melody for the blessed. A PEEP INTO HIS POCKET. would show the box of Bucklen's Arnic Salve that E. S. Lopor, a carpenter, of Marilla, N. Y. al- ways carries." I have never had a cut, wound, bruise, or sore it ; would not soon heal," he writes. i Greatest healer of burns, boils, scalds, chapped hands and lips, fever-sores skin eruptions, eczema, corns, and piles. 25c at all Druggists. Did you ever work for 10 cents a C n y? Well, that is all you make worming tobacco with your hands. Get one of our machines, they are only $1.90. They worm as much tobacco as ten men. Does not injure tobacco. For further information, address ACME DISTRIBUTING CO., Reidsville, N. C. acres, of his work, of his farm stock, his own destiny. The farm is the greatest in- dustry of man. It is the farm that makes the cities, for the cities live to suppy the wants of the fanner. The railroads are built to carry the products of the farm. The factories depend on the farm trade. Everything must turn to the farm for its living, for the farm is the place where the living for the race is made. # # # You want to be on the ground floor in the world's big work, and that is on the farm. The farm in your father's time was not the desirable place it is to be in your day, for. much cheap land induced farming on such a basis as kept prices of crops very cheap. Free land has gone, and the world must pay for its sup- plies from this on. That assures you good prices for your work, where your father received much less. The new conditions will make of the farm one of the most prosperous spots on earth. It will make the farm not only your pleasant home, your work- shop and your foothold in the world's work, but it will make of the farm a source of such prosperity that there is no longer any reasonable argument for the boy to go from the farm to the town. * * * But the boy who gets the highest success on the farm muit learn his trade. He must edu- cate his hands, which is the least important, and his head, which is the most important. He must be a reader and a thinker. A reader learns what other men have learned and set down in books. A thinker reasons out and applies to himself what these other men have learned for him. When the boy learns and thinks and works he will see that the farm is still ready to meet him with- unlimited opportunity, for no man has yet found the limit of his farm's ability to produce. HORRIBLEJFFIIR BOY KILLED IN RUP3 AY Fourteen-Year-Old Son of mJJ 'nd Mrs. Luther Joyce, Near ? 4y Ridge, Meets Violent Death. J Madison, July 26. ?A horrible death occurred near Oak Grove, in Stokes county, Friday when the 14-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Joyce, was killed by a runaway mule. The boy was riding the mule to the house from the field at noon when it became frightened and threw him, catching his foot in the trace chain in such a manner that he was unable to free him- self. He was dragged for a considerable distance, his body being beaten almost into a jelly against stumps and trees, and he only lived a few minutes after being released. The mule had to be hemmed in a fence corner before the boy's foot was ever gotten out of the loop in the trace. Mr. Joyce was so over- come at the awful death of his boy, which he witnessed, that it was with difficulty the neighbors restrained him from taking his own life, we learn. HOW TO KEEP HEALTHY IN SUMMER Seven Rules Suggested by an Emi- nent Physician in the July World's Work. 1. Shun the soda fountain. It is iced and syruped death. 2. Drink water of a moderate temperature and much of it. Iced water ig a club with which you may beat into inaction the most delicate machinery of nature ?your digestive organs. It is the frigidest idiocy of man's dis- covery. 3. Unless you take a great deal of physicial exercise, eat only half as much meat as you think you require: and after a while you cut your supply half anain. Eat thoroughly cooked vege- tables, and be careful about all uncooked food. Make sure your raw fruit is fully ripe, and has rip- pened normally. 4. The more you perspire the less waste you carry. 5. Learn to eat so that you will need no medicinal aids to digestion. Till you do this you have not found the food that you ought to have?rather, you eat food that you ought to avoid. We are just learning that most persons eat far too much. 6. Try sleeping outdoors for a few weeks. Perhaps you'll make a discovery. 7. Avoid fads and medicines. What you wish to have is a dis- infected body: and to acquire that you must keep it clean inside and out. Tobacco worms are reported to be very plentiful, which means a heavy crop of August and Sep- tember worms. A May and June worm make the August and Sep- tember fly. Better get an Acme Worming Machine and be ready. They will worm as much tobacco as ten men. It does not injure tobacco. Price, $1.90. For fur- ther information address ACME DISTRIBUTING CO., Reidsville, N. C. Your success on the farm means work. It means not the work of some inefficient negro while you sit in the shade and direct. It means your own in- terested work. It means inter- ested, intelligent, energetic work. Don't think work is de- basing. Work is the gift of a generous Creator, for it is simp- ly the priviledge of doing for yourself the acts that bring you what you want. The boy who drudges does not like his work. If he likes the work he finds a pleasure in get- ting the results it brings, then work has ceased to be drudgery and becomes a delight. If you farm intelligently, your work willbe fascinating, for you will be enthusiastic over your prog- ress. To farm intelligently you yon. must read and watch. You m int gst the farm bulletins from your Slate and from Washington and study the chemistry and philosophy and mechanics of farm work. * * * In such reading and study the farm offers the boy a liberal edu- cation, for such study broadens his thinking powers and sets his brain at work, which relieves his hand and back and takes from work much of its burden. To a boy who reads and thinks the farm is a wonderful educator, for it brings the boy in touch with the important principles of life and of nature. The farm boy grows up to be a master. He is a~ master of his SIOO REWARD, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh be- ing a constitutional disease, re- quires a constitutional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in- ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assiting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & co., Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggists, 76c. Take Hall's Family Pills for conitipaton. ESCAPED WITH HIS LIFE. ' 'Twenty-one years ago I an awful death," writes, H B. Martin, Port Herrelson, S. C. "Doctors said I had consumption and the dreadful cough I had looked like it, sure enough. I tried everything, I could hear of, for my cough and was under the treatment of the best doctor in Georgetown, S. C. for a year, but could get no relief. A friend advised me to try Dr. King's New Discovery. I did so, and was comqletely cured. I feel that I owe my life to this gxert throat and lung cure." Its positively guaranteed for coughs, colds ana all bronchial affections. 60c & SI.OO Trial bottle free at all Druggists. Mr. W. E. Hartman, of Hart- man, lost a fine hone yesterday. THE DANBURY REPORTER. No. 2,11 LOCAL ITEMS. Mr. Robt. Priddy, of Dan- bury Route 1, was here Tuesday. Miss Berchie Dunlap, of Gideon, is visiting relatives here this week. Mr. Robt. Kiser, of Meadows Route 1, spent a short while here Wednesday. Mr. Tom Knight, of Leaks- ville, spent Tuesday night at the Taylor hotel here. Mr. J. I. Blackburn, of Wal- nut Cove, spent a few hours in town yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Chilton visited Mr. Chilton's father at Westfield Sunday. The threshing machines are finishing up all around, and the report is of a good wheat yield. Messrs. R. J. Chilton and Odell Jones attended preaching at Snow Creek church Sunday. Mr. J. T. Joyce and other citizens of Sandy Ridge were visitors here on business Tues- day. Messrs. Bib Priddy and James Smith, of Danbury Route 1, were in town on business Wed- nesday. Miss Phebe Edmonds, of Winston-Salem, is the guest of relatives in Danbury, the Misses Joyce. Messrs. J. D. Smith and R. T. Joyce, of Mount Airy, are spending a few days at Danbury and at the springs. Prof. D. D. Carroll, of the History Department at Guilford College, is visiting his relatives at Mizpah, this county. Miss Delia Stewart, who has working at the Leaks vilie- Spray Gazette office, returned home Wednesday of last week. Mr. N. 0. Petree has recently had his home here equipped with an acetylene gas lighting system, which affords a beauti- ful light. One of the prettiest pieces of tobacco is that of E. R. Nelson, a mile and a half north of Dan- bury. There is no better show- ing anywhere that the Reporter has seen. For summer diarrhoea in chil- dren always give Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and castor oil, and a speedy cure is certain. For sale by all druggists. The Bank of Stokes County pays 4 per cent, interest on time certificates of deposit, and you can withdraw your money any time you need it. Open an ac- count today. Crops in the Hartman neigh- borhood are said to be among the best in the county, while the greatest damage from the drouth has boen in the region in and around Lawsonville. Mr. W. R. Carter, of Sandy Ridge Route 1, visited Danbury Monday. Mr. Carter reports crops as sorry in his section of the county, that is, the main staple is sorry, but corn is look- ing very well. Mr. Cabell Hairston, of Wal- nut Cove, has been spending a good deal of time recently at the Piedmont Springs hotel. Mr. Hairston is a good roads enthusiast, and believes it would be a good investment for the county to have them. Never leave home on a journey without a bottle of Chamber- lain's Colic, Cholera and Diar- rhoea Remedy. It is almost cer- tain to be needed and cannot lie obtained when on board the cars, or steamships. For sale by all druggists. Mr. W. E. Joyce, one of Dan- bury's young men, is the builder I of a rustic seat which if properly advertised and placed befor* t the public would doubtless be * a paying thing. It is used principally for porches and lawns, and is very pretty as well as useful. Mr.W.E.Hartman.of Hartman, was in town Monday on hts way 1 to Walnut Cove on business. Mr. Hartman in association with hi» brother will manufacture tobacco flues at Hartman tills year, anl * promises to save the farmers^/ purchase flues

Transcript of THE DANBURY REPORTER.newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn91068291/1911-07-25/ed-1/seq-1.pdf · which is...

Page 1: THE DANBURY REPORTER.newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn91068291/1911-07-25/ed-1/seq-1.pdf · which is the only way to obtain better prices. Ifthe merchant or manufac-turer would start

VOLUME XXXIX. DANBURY, N. C., JULY 25, 1911.

PUBLIC MEETINGSSEVERAL TO OCCUR SOON

[ Old Soldiers' Day Next Saturday,Meeting of Dry Prizery Stock-holders Tuesday, August 8 ?

Farmers' Institute Wednesday, 9?Farmers' Union Picnic Satur-day, August. 12

Danbury is billed for quite avariety of public gatherings ofcounty wide interest during thenext few weeks, some of whichwill doubtless draw large crowds.First comes the annual reunionof the ex-Confederate soldiers,which is set for next Saturday,July 29. Besides the number ofinteresting things which the oldsoldiers will participate in, therewill be two base ball garqes inwhich Danbury will try to winthe scalps of the Walnut Coveand Smithtown teams, respec-tively. On Tuesday, August 8,the stockholders of the Farmers'Dry Prizery will gather here totake steps of vital interest to theUnion in the county. On theWednesday following, there willbe an Institute for farmers andfarmers' wives conducted in thecourt house, which will be at-tended by a number of speakersand lecturers ofState reputation.Saturday, August 12, is the datefor the Farmers' Union picnic,which will doubtless attract atremenduous attendance fromall neighborhoods of the county.

| ..

RED BANK NEWS

V Everybody Getting Ready For ThePicnic Season?Personals.

German ton, July 25.Editors Reporter :

The health of the Red Banksection js very good, but wehear of a lot of sickness anddeaths elsewhere.

We have had some hard rainsthat washed the land and doneconsiderable damage, but thecrops are looking better sinceffie rain.

Never before have vegetablesbeen so scarce. Irish potatoesare an entire failure.

Mr. J. A. Simmons is teach-ing a singing school at Provi-dence, also one at Shiloh. Heteaches two days in each weekat each place. He is trainingthe classes for the Red Bankpicnic. He has a good crowd ateach place.

Everybody is getting readyfor the picnic season. Shilohwillhave their picnic on Satur-day before the 4th Sunday inAugust. Everybody is invited.There is a large crowd expect-ed at Red Bank August 12th.There will be two or threelawyers from Winston-Salem;Dr. J. L. Smith, of Westfield;and we hope to have our pastor,Rev. Sam Hall with us to ad-dress the audience. SeveralSunday Schools will be therewith songs and speeches. Therewillbe plenty of refreshments

\u25a0on the grounds. Now every-one come and don't forget thosewell filled baskets.

Mrs. J. A. Simmons and little. son spent the 4th Saturdaynight and Sunday with theirsister, Mrs. S. J. Crumpler..

Mr. J. W. White and familyi spent Sunday with his brother,\ Mr, J. H. White.

Miss Myrtice Simmons, ofRural Hall, and Mr. E. A.Rainey called on Miss IrisCrumpler Sunday afternoon.

Misses Blanche, Bessie andFlorence Merritt, Florence andElsie Sullivan, are at home,after spending some time atMoore's Springs.

Mr. L. W. Marshall and fam-ily visited their relatives nearDennis Sunday.

-The threshing machines willsoon be out of a job in thissection.

PARSON'S POEM A GEM.

From Rev. H. Stubenvoll,Allison, la., in praise of Dr.King's New Life Pills. "They'resuch a health * necessity,In every home these pills should ;

be.Jfother kinds you've tried in vain, \

USE DR. KING'S-JUtr \u25a0nc"Wcrr again. 25c at all iDruggists. i

gJMesars. J. C. Wall and wnfWiil, were visitors here Tues-day. i

REV. C. W JBLIDEWELLWRITER OF THE POOLING

He Is Having Success ?List of Ap-pointments?Big Time Expectedat Meadows.

Walnut Cove, July 24.Editor Danbury Reporter:

You willplease allow me spacein your paper to speak a word tothe Union brethren of Old Stokesand adjoining counties.

Brethren, the work in OldStokes is progressing nicely. Weare pooling nearly all of the to-bacco in most places. Thebrethren mean to co-operate thistime in the sale of their productswhich is the only way to obtainbetter prices.

If the merchant or manufac-turer would start a business andpay the farmer just the price heasks for his product and thensell his entire output for justwhat the other fellow would

Erice it at how long would hisusiness stand? Not one month.

And yet the farmer has been do-ing this very thing for ten years,although he can spread his ice-cream supper with the very bestcake, cream, lemonade, for Ihave had the pleasure of tryingit four times in the last month atYoung's school house, Preston-ville, Mt. Hermon and Buffalo.At all these places we had largecrowds, enthusiastic brethrenand sisters. One sister cut cakeuntil she blistered her hand andhad others to help her. Boys, ifyou want a good time and some-thing good to eat, come out andjoin us at a Farmers' Union pic-nic. We willhave one at Mead-ows, August 5, and expect tohave plenty to eat and some tospare. Can't you come? If theLord willbless us in the futurewe will have some money toenjoy, for we are going to havepart of the profit of our labor,and build us some fine houses.We have built some already butthe other fellows have enjoyedthem'. But now we are going tobuild some for us.

We willhave our county pic-nic and rally at Danbury, August12. We expect a great time.Come all of you and bring a wellfilled basket. Come early or youmight not get inside the fence.We expect Bros. P. M. Conner,of Danville, Va., and P. W.Glidewell, of Reidsville, to tellus about the good things in storefor us. Come and spend the dayin this good and social crowd oflaborers who feed and clothe thewurld. If nothing more is everderived from this grand organ-ization the social side would pay,still that is not all. Some day (you fellows will wake up andfind this crowd of down-troddenhay seeders (as they are called)in the lead. I willstop now be-fore I tell you just how it will bewith us.

The farmers will meet me atthe following times and places:

Oak Hill school house, Satur-day, July 29, at 1 o'clock.

Fulp school house, MondayJuly 31, at 1 o'clock.

Mt. Tabor, Tuesday, AugustIst, at 1 o'clock.

German ton, Wednesday Aug.2, at 1 o'clock.

Pine Log, Thursday, Aug. 3,at 1 o'clock.

Rose Bud, Friday, Aug. 4, at1 o'clock.

Meadows, Saturday, Aug. 5,all day as that is the place wewillkill the fatted calf. If youdon't come you will always wishyou had.

C. W. GLIDEWELL.

ADVICE TO BOYSSTICK TO THE FARM

It Offers Unlimited Opportunitiesto the Young Men of Brains andEnergy.

Boys of the South, fix it firmlyin your heads that the farm isthe best place for you.

You may think you will haveto work hard on the farm. Soyou willif you ever amount toanything. The boys who are go-ing to be of use in the worldfrom now on, as in the past, willhave to work. Work is merelyaccomplishment.

But you do not have to work ashard on the farm as you do inother callings. In any other lineyou are limited by the productof your hands and your machine.On the farm you are helped byall the power of Nature. Youplant a grain of corn and neglectit, and Nature will make some-thing of it. In town you plant asomething in the machine andneglect it, and the job stops.The machine has a limit. Thefarm may have one, but nobodyever yet found it. Who can saythat two bales is the limit of anacre of cotton, or three bales orfour bales, or any amount? Na-ture is glad to do anything tohelp you as far as you are willingto go. But Nature helps the boywho helps her.

In every Southern State lastsummer a boy showed that it ispossible to make over a hundredbushels of corn on an acre.There is no secret about makinga good yield. It is a matter ofgetting the ground fertile, andof work. You are intelligentenough to do what other boyshave done. If you have theenergy and the ambition and thewillingness to find out how thesuccessful boys make a hundredbushels of corn, you can makea hundred bushels. Y'ou canmake a bale of cotton to the acre.You can raise a cow that willmake seven pounds of butter aweek, for cows have been knownto make three times as muchbutter. The farm, you see, re-sponds to any reasonable effortwith good returns, and makesyour reward correspond withyour willingness to work.

* * *

It is not so in town. Thereyour wage is fixed, and you cannot make your ten-dollar job payyou twenty dollars by increasedwork, for you have to work thelimit to earn your ten." The farm is a place that offersyou an opportunity that is limit-ed only by yourself, and it is theonly place on earth that is sogenerous. Allother occupationsdepend on the whims of the peo-ple. The farm depends on youalone, therefore on the farm youare independent and free.

* ? *

; BILL ADAMS BOBS UP[ NEITHER DEAD NOR DYING

: The Blatant Banjoist On Deck AgainI ?Wants Damages For Being

Libeled.

BillAdams is not dead,i This is official.

Somehow the news got out ai few weeks ago that this noted

» character had passed away. The> Madison Herald printed it, and

the Reporter copied the news[ from the Herald.I Sher'ff Jones saw Billtrudging? along the road near Walnut Cove

Saturday, and the Sheriff asking; Bill where he was going, Bill

i replied:i "Gwine to Danbury to sue the

; Danbury Reporter. Chargeevery man f> cents who say I'mdead."

Long may Bill live to extract; hideous agony from his old two-

stringed banjo. A prominent. personage, a privileged charac-

ter, his ribald revelry is an in-despensable requisite to everygathering in the county. WhenBillcomes to die really, may hissoul find that lsst chord which itis ever seeking here; may hisnow troubled spirit rest and bebathed in the nepenthe of thegroves where ethereal orchestrasare said to constantly furnishdivine melody for the blessed.

A PEEP INTO HIS POCKET.

would show the box of Bucklen'sArnic Salve that E. S. Lopor, acarpenter, of Marilla, N. Y. al-ways carries." I have never hada cut, wound, bruise, or sore it

; would not soon heal," he writes.i Greatest healer of burns, boils,

scalds, chapped hands and lips,fever-sores skin eruptions,eczema, corns, and piles. 25c atall Druggists.

Did you ever work for 10 centsa Cn y? Well, that is all youmake worming tobacco with yourhands. Get one of our machines,they are only $1.90. They wormas much tobacco as ten men.Does not injure tobacco. Forfurther information, addressACME DISTRIBUTING CO.,Reidsville, N. C.

acres, of his work, of his farmstock, his own destiny.

The farm is the greatest in-dustry of man. It is the farmthat makes the cities, for thecities live to suppy the wants ofthe fanner. The railroads arebuilt to carry the products of thefarm. The factories depend onthe farm trade. Everythingmust turn to the farm for itsliving, for the farm is the placewhere the living for the race ismade.

# # #

You want to be on the groundfloor in the world's big work, andthat is on the farm. The farmin your father's time was notthe desirable place it is to be inyour day, for. much cheap landinduced farming on such a basisas kept prices of crops verycheap. Free land has gone, andthe world must pay for its sup-plies from this on. That assuresyou good prices for your work,where your father received muchless.

The new conditions will makeof the farm one of the mostprosperous spots on earth. Itwill make the farm not onlyyour pleasant home, your work-shop and your foothold in theworld's work, but it will makeof the farm a source of suchprosperity that there is no longerany reasonable argument for theboy to go from the farm to thetown.

* * *

But the boy who gets thehighest success on the farm muitlearn his trade. He must edu-cate his hands, which is the leastimportant, and his head, whichis the most important. He mustbe a reader and a thinker. Areader learns what other menhave learned and set down inbooks. A thinker reasons outand applies to himself what theseother men have learned for him.When the boy learns and thinksand works he will see that thefarm is still ready to meet himwith- unlimited opportunity, forno man has yet found the limitof his farm's ability to produce.

HORRIBLEJFFIIRBOY KILLED IN RUP3 AY

Fourteen-Year-Old Son of mJJ 'ndMrs. Luther Joyce, Near ? 4yRidge, Meets Violent Death. JMadison, July 26. ?A horrible

death occurred near Oak Grove,in Stokes county, Friday whenthe 14-year-old son of Mr. andMrs. Luther Joyce, was killed bya runaway mule. The boy wasriding the mule to the housefrom the field at noon when itbecame frightened and threwhim, catching his foot in thetrace chain in such a mannerthat he was unable to free him-self. He was dragged for aconsiderable distance, his bodybeing beaten almost into a jellyagainst stumps and trees, and heonly lived a few minutes afterbeing released. The mule hadto be hemmed in a fence cornerbefore the boy's foot was evergotten out of the loop in thetrace. Mr. Joyce was so over-come at the awful death of hisboy, which he witnessed, that itwas with difficulty the neighborsrestrained him from taking hisown life, we learn.

HOW TO KEEP HEALTHY INSUMMER

Seven Rules Suggested by an Emi-nent Physician in the July World'sWork.

1. Shun the soda fountain. Itis iced and syruped death.

2. Drink water of a moderatetemperature and much of it.Iced water ig a club with whichyou may beat into inaction themost delicate machinery of nature?your digestive organs. It isthe frigidest idiocy of man's dis-covery.

3. Unless you take a great dealof physicial exercise, eat onlyhalf as much meat as you thinkyou require: and after a whileyou cut your supply half anain.Eat thoroughly cooked vege-tables, and be careful about alluncooked food. Make sure yourraw fruitis fully ripe, and has rip-pened normally.

4. The more you perspire theless waste you carry.

5. Learn to eat so that youwill need no medicinal aids todigestion. Till you do this youhave not found the food that youought to have?rather, you eatfood that you ought to avoid.We are just learning that mostpersons eat far too much.

6. Try sleeping outdoors for afew weeks. Perhaps you'll make adiscovery.

7. Avoid fads and medicines.What you wish to have is a dis-infected body: and to acquirethat you must keep it clean insideand out.

Tobacco worms are reported tobe very plentiful, which means aheavy crop of August and Sep-tember worms. A May and Juneworm make the August and Sep-tember fly. Better get an AcmeWorming Machine and be ready.They willworm as much tobaccoas ten men. It does not injuretobacco. Price, $1.90. For fur-ther information address ACMEDISTRIBUTING CO., Reidsville,N. C.

Your success on the farmmeans work. Itmeans not thework of some inefficient negrowhile you sit in the shade anddirect. It means your own in-terested work. It means inter-ested, intelligent, energeticwork. Don't think work is de-basing. Work is the gift of agenerous Creator, for it is simp-ly the priviledge of doing foryourself the acts that bring youwhat you want.

The boy who drudges does notlike his work. If he likes thework he finds a pleasure in get-ting the results it brings, thenwork has ceased to be drudgeryand becomes a delight. If youfarm intelligently, your workwillbe fascinating, for you willbe enthusiastic over your prog-ress. To farm intelligently youyon. must read and watch. Youmint gst the farm bulletins fromyour Slate and from Washingtonand study the chemistry andphilosophy and mechanics offarm work.

* * *

In such reading and study thefarm offers the boy a liberal edu-cation, for such study broadenshis thinking powers and sets hisbrain at work, which relieves hishand and back and takes fromwork much of its burden. To aboy who reads and thinks thefarm is a wonderful educator,for it brings the boy in touchwith the important principles oflife and of nature.

The farm boy grows up to be amaster. He is a~ master of his

SIOO REWARD, SIOO.The readers of this paper will

be pleased to learn that there isat least one dreaded disease thatscience has been able to cure inall its stages, and that is Catarrh.Hall's Catarrh Cure is the onlypositive cure now known to themedical fraternity. Catarrh be-ing a constitutional disease, re-quires a constitutional treatmentHall's Catarrh Cure is taken in-ternally, acting directly upon theblood and mucous surfaces of thesystem, thereby destroying thefoundation of the disease, andgiving the patient strength bybuilding up the constitution andassiting nature in doing its work.The proprietors have so muchfaith in its curative powers thatthey offer One Hundred Dollarsfor any case that it fails to cure.Send for list of testimonials.

Address F. J. CHENEY & co.,Toledo, 0.

Sold by all Druggists, 76c.Take Hall's Family Pills for

conitipaton.

ESCAPED WITH HIS LIFE.' 'Twenty-one years ago I an

awful death," writes, H B.Martin, Port Herrelson, S. C."Doctors said I had consumptionand the dreadful cough I hadlooked like it, sure enough. Itried everything, I could hear of,for my cough and was under thetreatment of the best doctor inGeorgetown, S. C. for a year,but could get no relief. Afriend advised me to try Dr.King's New Discovery. I did so,and was comqletely cured. Ifeel that I owe my life to thisgxert throat and lung cure." Itspositively guaranteed for coughs,colds ana all bronchial affections.60c & SI.OO Trialbottle free at allDruggists.

Mr. W. E. Hartman, of Hart-man, lost a fine hone yesterday.

THE DANBURY REPORTER.No. 2,11

LOCAL ITEMS.

Mr. Robt. Priddy, of Dan-bury Route 1, was here Tuesday.

Miss Berchie Dunlap, ofGideon, is visiting relatives herethis week.

Mr. Robt. Kiser, of MeadowsRoute 1, spent a short whilehere Wednesday.

Mr. Tom Knight, of Leaks-ville, spent Tuesday night atthe Taylor hotel here.

Mr. J. I. Blackburn, of Wal-nut Cove, spent a few hoursin town yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Chiltonvisited Mr. Chilton's fatherat Westfield Sunday.

The threshing machines arefinishing up all around, and thereport is of a good wheat yield.

Messrs. R. J. Chilton andOdell Jones attended preachingat Snow Creek church Sunday.

Mr. J. T. Joyce and othercitizens of Sandy Ridge werevisitors here on business Tues-day.

Messrs. Bib Priddy and JamesSmith, of Danbury Route 1,were in town on business Wed-nesday.

Miss Phebe Edmonds, ofWinston-Salem, is the guest ofrelatives in Danbury, the MissesJoyce.

Messrs. J. D. Smith and R.T. Joyce, of Mount Airy, arespending a few days at Danburyand at the springs.

Prof. D. D. Carroll, of theHistory Department at GuilfordCollege, is visiting his relativesat Mizpah, this county.

Miss Delia Stewart, who hasworking at the Leaks vilie-Spray Gazette office, returnedhome Wednesday of last week.

Mr. N. 0. Petree has recentlyhad his home here equippedwith an acetylene gas lightingsystem, which affords a beauti-ful light.

One of the prettiest pieces oftobacco is that of E. R. Nelson,a mile and a half north of Dan-bury. There is no better show-ing anywhere that the Reporterhas seen.

For summer diarrhoea in chil-dren always give Chamberlain'sColic, Cholera and DiarrhoeaRemedy and castor oil, and aspeedy cure is certain. For saleby all druggists.

The Bank of Stokes Countypays 4 per cent, interest on timecertificates of deposit, and youcan withdraw your money anytime you need it. Open an ac-count today.

Crops in the Hartman neigh-borhood are said to be amongthe best in the county, whilethe greatest damage from thedrouth has boen in the regionin and around Lawsonville.

Mr. W. R. Carter, of SandyRidge Route 1, visited DanburyMonday. Mr. Carter reportscrops as sorry in his section ofthe county, that is, the mainstaple is sorry, but corn is look-ing very well.

Mr. Cabell Hairston, of Wal-nut Cove, has been spending agood deal of time recently atthe Piedmont Springs hotel.Mr. Hairston is a good roadsenthusiast, and believes it wouldbe a good investment for thecounty to have them.

Never leave home on a journeywithout a bottle of Chamber-lain's Colic, Cholera and Diar-rhoea Remedy. It is almost cer-tain to be needed and cannot lieobtained when on board the cars,or steamships. For sale by alldruggists.

Mr. W. E. Joyce, one of Dan-bury's young men, is the builder Iof a rustic seat which ifproperlyadvertised and placed befor* tthe public would doubtless be *

a paying thing. It is usedprincipally for porches andlawns, and is very pretty aswell as useful.

Mr.W.E.Hartman.of Hartman,was in town Monday on hts way 1to Walnut Cove on business. Mr.Hartman in association with hi»brother willmanufacture tobaccoflues at Hartman tills year, anl *

promises to save the farmers^/purchase flues