“Local News” from the Aug. 22, 1907, issue of the Watauga Democrat.
Fine weather at present. The hay crop is all up, and a finer
lot was never harvested in the county.
The Confederate reunion will convene in Boone on Thursday,
Sept. 17th.
Married on last Sunday, Linney Barnes to Miss Maude
Bumgarner of Howard’s Creek.
Prof. Matheson of Durham is spending a few days in town with
his sister, Mrs. Frank A. Linney.
Some cleaning up around the bank building has very much
improved the appearance of that popular business house.
R.M. Greene is making some nice improvements on his dwelling
by adding a new dining room and kitchen thereto.
Many of the public schools of Watauga are now in session,
and the attendance is uniformly good.
Wanted: To buy a good grazing farm in Watauga county. Write
or apply to J.C. Walters, Shull’s Mills, N.C.
Joseph Cook has moved his engine from Meat Camp to East
Boone, and will soon be ready to go to dressing lumber, cutting shingles, etc.
Glad to see R.F.D. Inspector Plumber in town this week. He
goes from here to Blowing Rock to look over some new routes that have been
petitioned for.
Prof. Reid, who opened school on Flat Top on last Monday,
has moved his family to Boone, where they will remain during the session. Glad
to have them.
The fact that the Farmers’ Institutes in Watauga county are
growing in interest each year is most encouraging, and shows that our tillers
of the soil are determined to get out of the old ruts in their vocations by
improving their methods of farming.
Mr. George Hardin of Jonesboro, Tenn., and Mr. Hardin Epps,
his nephew, of the same town, are visiting relatives in Watauga and Ashe
counties.
The County Superintendent requests us to state that he has
not received any registers for the public schools, but hopes to get them this
week. He will send them out as soon as he gets them.
James Watts, who has been in the standing army for more than
two years, stationed at Ft. Caswell, N.C., is spending a short furlough with
relatives in Watauga.
The trustees of Walnut Grove Institute have condemned in the
strongest terms the habits of cigarette smoking, card playing, and kindred
vices by the pupils of that institute. Good for them.
J.W. McGhee, N.N. Colvard, and Ben Hodges are at Mountain
City, Tenn., working on the large brick school building that is now being
erected in that hustling little city.
Hon. R.Z. Linney will address the people of Watauga at the
court house in Boone the last Saturday in August at 1 p.m. on the Appalachian
Park Bill. The ladies as well as the men are invited to attend.
Notice is hereby given to the road overseers of Boone
township that they are required to work out their respective sections of road
by the first Monday in September or they will be reported to court.—T.L.
Critcher, Chairman of Road Supervisors.
The cloing exercises of the First Half session of the Girl’s
Department of the Lees-McRay Institute for the year 1907 will take place on
Friday night, Aug. 23rd. To these exercises the good people of
Watauga re cordially invited.
With the great oil prospects on Cove Creek and vicinity, the
macadam road from Lenoir to Blowing Rock almost a certainty and a railroad from
Mountain City, Tenn., to Boone within our reach, the good peole of Watauga have
much reason for rejoicing.
W.E. Shipley of Valle Crucis, who has handled more than
3,000 head of sheep this season, returned last week from a buying expedition in
Buncombe and other counties and now has a flock of more than 300 head of fine
sheep on his pretty valley farm.
The base ball players of Blowing Rock and Cool Springs met
on the Blowing Rock Diamond last Saturday in a match game. The game resulted in
12 to 0 in favor of Cool Springs. The same teams will play on the Blowing Rock
diamond next Saturday.
We are much pleased to know that Miss Jennie Matthews of
Mecklenburg county has been added to the Training School faculty. She is a
graduate of two or three of our North Carolina colleges and has taken a
post-graduate course at Chevy Chase College, Washington City. The regular faculty
were all re-elected and the prospects are good for a fine opening Sept. 3rd.
Dr. Ballard, who, for some time, has been in the mercantile
business at Silver Stone, this county, was arrested for obtaining goods under
false pretense, taken to Jefferson for trial and brought back to Boone and
released on bond for his appearance at trial early on October. Attys. W.R.
Lovill and J.C. Fletcher appeared for him.
The Rev. Hugh A. Dobbin will preach his first sermons as a
minister of God on Sunday, August 25th at Church of the Holy Cross
at 11 a.m. and St. John’s church at 3 p.m. Mr. Dobbin, who has spent a number
of years doing faithful work as a layman at Valle Crucis, is too well known in
Watauga to need an introduction, but all rejoice with him in his advancement to
the ministry of the Protestant Episcopal Church and bid him God speed in his
new life work.
Miss Creelman of Saluda College was one of the pleasant
callers at our office on Monday. She is here in the interest of Skyland
Institute at Blowing Rock, and informs us that the school will be open on
Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1907. Miss Andrews of Highland College, Ky., has been chosen
as principal, and the faculty will be composed of four teachers and a matron.
The school has been discontinued for the past two years and many of its former
patrons and friends will be glad to know that its doors are again open to the
boys and girls of the county.
Through the courtesy of its author Shepherd M. Dugger, the
revised edition of “The Balsam Groves of the Grandfather” is on our des. It has
not yet been our pleasure to peruse its interesting pages in full and note its
superiority over the first edition, but we are safe in saying that it is a
great improvement and should be in the library of every lover of the hills and
dells of Western North Carolina. Mr. Dugger has expended quite a sum of money
on this new edition, and the people at large, especially those in Watauga and
adjacent counties, should purchase it at the very low price of $1.25. Splendid
binding, good print, and lovely engravings go to add to the popularity of the
handsome book.
Mr. Greene, general agent for the Swift 1904 Clothes Washer
Co., with Mr. G.C. Winkler, sub-agent, were in town Tuesday in the interest of
his business. Washing was done at different homes, ours and number, and, to say
the least, we were enough pleased with the labor-saving device to purchase one
without question. It does its work easily, quickly, and without damage to the
garments. In fact, we had our only one-dollar bill washed with a tub of soiled
clothes, and when it emerged from the tub and wringer it was clean, crisp and
had the appearance of just issued from the U.S. Treasury. The washer is a
decided success in our opinion, and should be in the homes of all our people.
Mr. N.L. Mast was in town Monday and told us that the Oil
Company will begin boreing on his property early in the next month. The lumber
for the derricks and 150 cords of wood have been ordered t the site decided
upon for the first well, and experts from different oil-producing sections of
the United States are satisfied that oil will be found in great quantities. The
amount of land desired by the company has not yet been quite secured in that
section, but options are still being taken almost daily. Calvin J. Cottrell is taking
options for the same company in the vicinity of Boone, and is succeeding very
well indeed. Why it is that any man would fail to give this company a chance to
develop the hidden wealth on their property we are unable to say, and we are
pleased to state that the little prejudice that has been existing among our
people in this county against the oil company is rapidly subsiding and the
options are again being taken right along in the Cove Creek section.
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