PAGE FOUR
Overman Gives
Poultry Pointers
Care of Pullets Stressed
By Chowan County
Agents
Poultry raisers are urged to avoid
spreading poultry manure too thickly
or leaving it in piles on hand. It
should be preserved and used wisely
on the farm as it will be a valuable
source of nitrogen next season, es
pecially since the chemical nitrogen
supply for fertilizer will be greatly
curtailed.
Wet mash should not be fed or
lights used on early hatched pullets
soon after they start laying. These;
practices should be held in reserve for!
use after some signs of a break in,
production have appeared. Early
hatched pullets may show some break
in production after 60 to 90 days of I
laying. That is the time to start the
wet mash at noon each day. When
another slump in production is notic-.
ed after starting the wet mash, then'
lights should be used. Morning
lights are preferred and the birds,
should not be given more than a 13-f
hour day. Lights and wet mash may
also be used to help old hens in pro
duction.
With the arrival of September.
County Agent C. W. Overman says
that since the extremely hot weather
began in July, flocks with egg breed
ing back of them have come up in
production after the slump more sat
(»|«iiiiiiiiiinniniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimniuinitimtlimMUHtUilWW^
I LIVERMON I
LINE LEADS
| Copied But Never Equalled !
I THE LIVERMON j
I PEANUT PICKER 1
| See Your Local Peanut Cooperative!
Representative
| For Further Information W’rite =
jCarl R. Livermon Co.!
1 ROXOBEL, NORTH CAROLINA §
13 i,n*ii i,«,», *,,«,• i <>«,«i «Q
1 NOTICE TO ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS AND GUARDIANS
<r 4
f T
I The law requires an ANNUAL ACCOUNT < ►
1 to be made each year and an Inventory to be 1
X
I filed within 90 days after qualifying. If your |
J Annual Account, Inventory or Final Account \[
< ►
| are past due, we respectfully urge that you <>
| file same at once, as we are required to report j;
♦ < ►
I all such cases to the Grand Jury, which will be J►
convened at Term of Chowan County 11
Superior Court Sepfe*d&e?l4. \\
< ►
YOi R COOPERATION WILL BE VERY H
MUCH .4 PPRECIA TED ±
<►
< ►
Sincerely yours, |
L W. SPIRES, Clerk Superior Court
$
MR. FARMER:
i
Sell your TOBACCO with Basnight Tobacco Warehouses. Two
large warehouses and a sale every day. Let us sell your entire
crop. We guarantee you highest prices. Our organization con
sists of men who have had years of experience in the Tobacco
business.
Basnight Tobacco Warehouses
HOWARD BASNIGHT AND JOHNNIE WILKINS. Owners I*4 Proprietors
Ahoskie, North Carolina
WE SELL THE TOBACCO... AND NOT THE MAN
isfactorily than the broiler production
strains.
As hens are culled out and sold,!
t advises Mr. Overman, combine thej
‘ ones left and start cleaning and re-|
pairing laying houses. Floors and
side walls should be scrubbed with
I hot lye water, using a 13-ounce can
l of lye to not more than 15 gallons of
hot water. In case of wood floors, it J
would be well to paint the floor with
a wood preserver.
I Laying houses should be kept as
open as possible, providing through
ventilation for the pullets that have
been out in the open range shelters or
trees. Houses should not be closed
up until cool weather arrives, and
then they should be closed gradually,
a little of the ventilator space at a
time. If pullets are transferred from
range to a tight, poorly ventilated
laying house, they are much more
subject to a neck molt.
I Funeral Wednesday For
Thomas Davis
Funeral services were held Wed- i
1 nesday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock for
William Thomas Davis at the home
near Sign Pine. The Rev. J. T. By
rum, pastor of Ballards Bridge Bap
(tist Church officiated and interment
; was made in the family burying
ground. j
Pallbearers were: Active —James
Ward, Leland Ward, William Ward,
Paul Ward, Fertnor Ward and Elton
Ward; Honorary—W. T. Smith, E. E.
Boyce, T. J. Boyce, A. T. Perry, E. T.
Brinkley, G. A. Boyce, J. D. Ward,
and T. W. Berryman.
Mr. Davis, who would have been 54
j years old Saturday, died Monday
morning, August 24. at 5:30 o’clock,
following a cerebral hemorrhage, j
While his health had not been good
for some time, he seemed unusually
well on the Sunday preceding his
death, spending the day with his son
and attending services at Happy
Home at night. Soon after returning
I home he was stricken and never re
j gained consciousness.
Always willing to help his neigh
bors he will be missed in his com
munity.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Sallie Parks Davis: two sons, Thomas
Davis, now with the U. S. Armed
Forces, and Carson Davis, of near
Glidefi; two daughters. Mrs. Jesse
Craft' and Mrs. Thomas Ashley, of ,
Newport News, Va„ and one brother,
Charlie Davis, of near Center Hill.
Four grandchildren also survive.
THE CHOWAN HERALD EDENTON, N. C„ THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 19*2
Weekly Newspapers
Chosen To Advertise
j livermon Pickers
i
ij —-
i Three hundred weekly newspapers
throughout the south and southwest
ern Peanut Belt states have been se
! lected for an advertising campaign
lasting several weeks by Cary R.
Livermon Company of Roxobel, manu
facturers of peanut picking machines.
The Herald is one of the 300 chosen
for the campaign.
"In selecting key weekly newspa
pers in 300 communities throughout
the peanut belt,” said Mr. Livermon,
“I was influenced by the belief that
the weekly newspapers furnish the
best contact with the people because
they are closely read, and their cir
culation is centralized. There is no
lost circulation scattered over wide
areas; you get the reader interest
you pay for.”
The Livermon Company has for
many years manufactured peanut
pickers and is one of the leaders in
the field. At the Livermon plant is
|an experimental laboratory which is
devoted to the interests of the peanut
growers, where experts are constantly
at work devising means of bettering
their product so as to make the pea
nut crop easier to handle and more
profitable for the grower. This year
there is wide-spread interest in pea
• nut growing and development of ma
; chinery to handle the crop due to the
fact the government has contracted
with farmers to plant more than
4,000,000 additional acres in order to
provide peanut oil and peanut food
vitally needed in the war effort.
J. H. Haskett Patient
In Norfolk Hospital
j J. H. Haskett is now a patient in
the General Hospital, Norfolk, Va.,
where he was taken early last week.
Mr. Haskett underwent an operation
Friday and while showing some pro
gress, his condition is not as satisfac
tory as his relatives and friends
would like to see. Mrs. Haskett is
also in Norfolk to be near her hus
band during his confinement.
TussifTedT
AND LEGALS
FULLER BRUSHES FOR EVERY
purpose, public, home and personal.
Prices not raised but steady. Phone
or write R. H. Bachman, 217 W.
Eden St., Edenton, N. C.
5ept.3,10,17,124c.
WANTED TO BUY 50,000 REEDiS.
All sizes. Will pay cash at your
place when cut. Write Corona Co.,
Bowers Hill, Va. sept.3pd.
CLERK WANTED TO WORK IN
drug store. Apply Mitchener &
Leary, corner Oakum and Queen
Streets. sept.3c.
CHICKENS FOR SALE—TENDER
delicious, economical. Apply 923 N
Broad St., Edenton.* aug.6t.f.
COMPLETE LINE SHOE POLISH
for white and colored shoes at
Ward’s Shoe Shop, Edenton.
FOR SALE—TOURIST CAMP AND
cottage on Lake James. Jack Yel
ton, Nebo, N. C.
aug.20,27,5ept.3,10pd.
KEYS MADE. SAFE COMBINA
tions changed, guns repaired, and
an7 work of a locksmith done in
first class order. See Geo. Lear\,
Queen St., Edenton. N. C. t.f.
FM1666
LIQUID.TABLETS. SALVE. NOSE DROPS
I ‘ i»»
For the first time in her career as
Maisie, Ann Sothem gets a chance
to go glamorous in a big way in
“Maisie Gets Her Man” at Taylor
Theatre, Edenton, today (Thursday)
only. V
shoe"
all requirements at Julian Ward’s
Shoe Shop, Edenton.
McMILLAN’S NOMOPPIN CURES—
prevents chicken sore head. Given
in drinking water. Saves chicks
time. Postpaid $6.80, $4.30, $2.75,
$1.25. McMillan Drug Company,
Columbia, S. C.
aug.20,27,5ept.3,10pd.
SUEDE SHOES RE-BUFFED BY
experienced man at Ward’s Shoe
Shop, Edenton.
NEW SLACK BARRELS, KEGS,
and Plywood Drums. Write or call
The. J. R. Raible Company, Ala
bama City, Ala., Phone 3180, Ex
tension 270.
aug.27,5ept.3,10,17pd.
WANTED TO RENT—THREE OR
four room apartment, furnished or
unfurnished. Write' Post Office
Box 3, Mackeys, N. C.
aug.27.sept.3c. •
, •
■BN ... and WAR
j r f
When you hear that bombing planes cost
HBp $335,000, tanks $75,000, anti-aircraft guns
$50,000 —And when you hear, too, that
IMjMpf . America needs 60,000 planes, 45,000 tanks,
HI ’ W j and 20,000 anti-aircraft guns at once — 1
ilt doesn’t take much fig*
uring to see that winning
this war calls for every
dollar all of us can scrape
together. With our freedom at
-V&V tU'"'stake —with our farms, families,
even our very lives depending
upon the outcome, we’d gladly
give this money.
But we aren’t asked to do that.
Our Government asks us only to
lend the money —to put our in
creased earnings into War Bonds
—month after month —until this
war is won. In doing so, we save
for our own security as well. For
we get back $4 for every $3 we
NOTE —Now You Can Buy War Bonds
Through Your Rural Postmanl
WAR Bonds ★Stomps
; 41 -
The Bank of Edenton
| “SAFETY FOR SAVINGS SINCE 1894” |
TVTlilltfil ITjJju J npiMMuf T„ilium C *■
lVlvlllUvi * vUvl Al a/v|IU3I t* AII3UI <flrllvf~ vIU JlUl«vlt/Il 1
North Carolina In The
Chowan County Superior Court
Viola Hill Davis, Plaintiff
Vs.
Samuel Boyd Davis, Defendant
, NOTICE
The defendant, Samuel Boyd Davis,
will take notice that an action entitled
as above has been commenced in the
Superior Court of Chowan County,
North Carolina, for the purpose of
obtaining a divorce a vinculo from
the defendant; and the said defendant
will further take notice that he is
required to appear at the office of
the Clerk of the Superior Court for
< Chowan County on or before the 21st
day of October, 1942, and answer or
demur to the complaint in said ac
tion, or the plaintiff will apply for
the relief demanded in said com
plaint.
This 21st day of August, -942.
E. W. SPIRES, ‘
Clerk Superior Court,
Chowan County, N. C.
W. S. PRIVOTT, Attorney.
aug.27sept.3,lo,l7—WSP.
North Carolina In The
Chowan County Superior Court
Before The Clerk
IN RE: ESTATE OF MARTHA
• • «• V, va ~.. ...»
CENTURY DIRT I LUNG CO.
WARREN WINBQRNE J
NOTICE TO CREDITORS ’
The undersigned, The Bank of
Edenton, having qualified as Admin
istrator, C. T. A., of Miss Martha $
Warren Winbome, all persons having
claims against the decedent are here
by notified to exhibit the same to the
undersigned Administrator, C. T. A,
on or before the 18th day of August,
1943, or this notice will be pleaded .
in bar of their recovery. \
This 13th day of August, 1942.
THE BANK OF EDENTON,
Administrator, C. T. A., of Miss
Martha Warren Winbome.
By W. H. GARDNER, Cashier, y
aug.13,20,27,5ept.3,10,17pd.
SCHOOL DAYS^B^I
Itime to check up
UH on your child’s eyes.JKpV
Do it today—don’t
invest, when the Bonds are held
10 years. And if we need the
money, we can get it all back any
time after 60 days from issue date.
This is the American way —the
volunteer way —to raise the bil
lions needed for Victory. And the
money can ... wi11..... must be
raised.
So let’s show them that the farm
ers of America are helping to
win this war in two vitally impor
tant ways —by producing more
Food for Freedom and by saving
more in War Bonds.
Make Every Market Day “Bond
Day” —Invest At Least 10%.