Thursday, Jan. 23, 193( BUYERS WARNED OF TRUCKING L (Since Cherokee county borders on two other state?, A. Q. Ketner, county agent, suggests printing the following articles which will prove of immense interest to local farmers who will be buying seed soon. Seeds f of inferior quality has long proven aj set-back to the agricultural interests of this county, he says, and a timely | warning to all is to be found here? t the ed). Any trucker who is not a common carrier and who hauls misbrandcd seed from one State to peddle it in another State violates the Federal j Seed Act, the U. S. Department of Agriculture warns. Transporting mis- j branded seed from one State to an- ' other is forbidden by law, but com-1 mon carriers are exempt. Selling I the misbranded seed in interstate j commerce is also an offense, and the { peddling trucker could be punished . for either or both of these acts. | Complaints received from State officials by the Division of Seed Investigations, which administers the Act, indicate that much of the seed sold by truckers from other States has been sold at unusually lew prices. But this cheap seed is also of unusually low quality?or otherwise unsuitable. Truckers should be able to handle seed that is correctly labeled and is of high quality. Past experience indicates, however, that it is poor business to buy seed from a stranger or person whose reputation is not known. Buying cheap seed has resulted in injury to many farmers who have not realized the importance of buying seed that is clean and free of noxious weed seeds, seed that germinates well, and seed of a variety adapted to the buyer's locality. An investigation made by Department officials in one case revealed that a truck owner was buying screen ings from a large seed house and selling it across the State line as , good seed. Of course he was forced to misbrand the seed to get buyers. , If the seed had been truthfully lab- j eled, farmers would have known bet- j ter than to buy it. I Unless he keeps a record in black t and white, a farmer has no recourse j against the person who sold him the } seed. There have been extreme cases r where the seed was not labeled, where the buyer did not even know j. the name of the trucker or his ad. v dresses, and did not even make a record of the State and number on the license plates. It is impossible for I seed law officials to be of any assistance in a case of this kind. The Department of Agriculture of- K ficials think it is unwise to buy seed $ unless it is completely labeled and v unless the buyer gets a written record of the transaction. Any ques- j tionable transactions should be re- t ported to the State seed official who e may report the case to the Federal p authorities if it appears the Federal p Seed Act has been violated. r ~ ^ " t I .amhinir Time Is A Critical Period Lambing time is a critical period with sheep on the farm. Much of the year's work may be lost at this time if the ewes and lambs are not given careful attention. L. I. Case, animal husbandman at State College, has given the follow, ing suggestions for keeping the ewes and lambs healthy and thrifty: Bred ewes should gain in weight from the breeding season until lambing time. Permanent pasture, winter rye, rye grass, wheat and oats, together with a good quality of legume hay will usually furnish sufficient feed until one month before lambing time. Then give the ewe half a pound of grain per day, more if she is thin. Also give her two to two and a half pounds of good legume hay and gome succulent feed such as winter pasture, sweet silage, or roots. i ?wu icgunic nay is very important, but if it is not available a wheat bran and protien concentrate will come nearest to furnishing the food elements needed. Watch the ewes carefully when they are about to lamb. Pen them by themselves at night. Reduce the grain feed until the lambs are three or four days old, then increase it gradually to a pound or more per day for each ewe. Sometimes weak lambs need assis. tance in getting milk until they are strong enough to get it for themselves. Feed the ewes for milk production, as the lambs should have all the milk they can get. After the lambs are three or four weeks old, place legume hay and grain before them so they I will begin to eat it. I.ambs intended for market should ' be docked and castrated when 10 days to two weeks old. > The CI PEDDLERS ,OW QUALITY SEEDS I Robbinsville Boy Is 2 Buried On Saturday , Funeral services for little Jack , Hooner, aged 5, son of Mr. and Mrs. < OrvTTle Hooper, of Robbinsville, were held at the Baptist church with the , Rev. W. F. Sinclair officiating Sat- j urday morning. Interment was in the j Robbins\*ille cemetery. W. D. Town. ( 1 son was in charge of funeral arrangements. ] The boy died Friday morning at j J o'clock at the Angel Bros, hospital , in Franklin of pneumonia. He had , been ill only a short time. I Besides his parents he is survived by one sister, Anna Belle. ( ?* o King of England Dies; Eldest Son Crowned ; I King George V, beloved monarch ! [ of the vast Great Britain empire, died | at his Sandringham home Monday at : midnight. The ruler, who was 70 ; years old, had been ill of pneumonia I and a weak heart for four days. His eldests son, the Prince of Wales, 41-year.old bachelor and play, boy, ascended the throne as King Edward VIII. Although generally beloved to be more of a titular ruler than anything 1 else the king of England has a pow. erful sway over the largest and one ' of the most important empires in the ' world. 1 The tact and graeiousness of King : George had made him one of the 1 world's most popular rulers. r v Rev. Hyde Appointed County Deputy Sheritt t The Rev. H. H. Hyde was appointed deputy sheriff for Cherokee county station of Valleytown township t an Wednesday, Jan. 15, by Zack C. t Ramsey of Murphy, sheriff of Chero- t kee county. Mr. Hyde retired from c the Baptist ministry a few years ago >n account of a throat affliction. Mr. ( dyde has been connected with the ? iV. W. Ashe Furniture Store for a tl lumber of years. t] He succeeds Roy L. Rector, who H las accepted a position with the si Southern Railway in Asheville. o .ARGE CROWD [ 0 Continued from front pace) :enial young Murphy man, who has (, pent much time on the arrangements s( rill bring here. u There will be no President's tirthday ball closer to Murphy b han Bryson City and naturally danc. h rs and fun-seekers from Andrews, ii tobhinsville, Haycsville, Copperhill, i: lucktown. Blue Ridge and other sur- t. ounding towns are expected to at. t end here. Already inquiries have t A /' # No need to mu new ear! Arran today. Let the ea 2,500,000 Ford \ why this 1936 ea Then let's talk tet it easier for yon t been before. New Universal Credit | cost to a new low i Y O U R 1 I UNDER 1 UNIVERSA] ' Ford Dealer* I 1. New Lower J more than $25 p 2. New Low Finn of IX a month on 3. New Complet< fire and theft; $5C coverage each as < storm, eartbquak herokee Scout, Murphy, 1 een made concerning the local ball i howing the interest that has been juilt up by similar affairs in Cher- ] >kee county during the past two rears. The admission to the dance will be *1.50 and 70 per cent of this amount, ifter the expenses are paid, will renain with the Young Woman's club >f Murphy to be applied to the Mary fo Davis fund The other 30 per :ent will be forwarded to National leadquarters to be applied to the und for research for the prevention >f infantile paralysis. For three years now President FYanklin D Roosevelt has been ng his birthday, January 30th, to lancers all over the United States for the purpose of fighting the paralytic scourge. More than $175 has been turned over to the Murphy club during the past two years to be applied to the fund that i? hoped to cure Miss Davis, a beloved Murphy girl, from the malady. Walter Mauney, who is chief of he nrrangenynts crops, this year expects one of the largest crowds to gather here that has ever attended a dance in Cherokee county. VETERANS HERE.... Continued from front page) would be made available to around 3,500,000 bonus holders at local postaffices. Tht-y could ca^h the bonds im mediately or hold them as an investment. If held, they would pay 3 per :ent simple annual interest for nine rears. If redeemed the first year no nterest would be paid. Sponsors of the bill claim the denands on the treasury the first year >*ould not exceed $1,250,000,000 on he theory that thousands of vetrans?500,000 have not borrowed on heir certificates?would hold their baby" bonds as a nest egg. Money To Be Made Available Soon Opponents contended it would cost he government $1,000,000,000 more han it promised to pay in 1925, and hat the move may place the nation's redit in a dangerous position. To questions of Senator Thomas D., Okla.), as to how soon the money ould be made available in view of he fact the bill merely authorized he funds to cash the bonds Senator [arrison said, "just as soon as posble." "There will be some delay in geting immediate cash," Harrison said, because of the mechanics of acceptrcg applications, deducting loans and ther matters. "I am assured that in event this ecomes law, the machinery will be et in motion to take care of the sitation." Only one amendment was approved y the senate and that was offered y Harrison. This alteration wrote n penalties of $1,000 and five years' morisonment for a.nv fraud in oh. aining the bonds. Application of he penalties to violators of rcgulaions was striken on motion of Senat flr< New 1 t any longer before you buy that ge a Ford V-8 demonstration ir itself show you why more than r-8'e have already been sold?and r is far and away the finest of all. ms. Ford dealers today can make 0 own a Ford V-8 than it has ever r financing arrangements through Company bring down financing . Let's talk it over today. FORD DEALER NEW 6% PLAN OF L CREDIT COMPANY Offer You Three Advantage* lonthly Payments ? so need to pay sr month after down payment, nee Cost?6% plan for 12 month*, or total unpaid balance pins insurance. 5 Insurance?actual value?broad form 1 deductible collision; combined additional damage from falling aircraft, cyclone, winde, tornado, flood, riot, hail and explosion. Morth Carolina tor Borah (R., Ida.), who called that "too severe." By 65 to 23, an amendment by Senator Neely (D., W. Va-), to pay the soldiers debt in new currency was rejected. A similar proposal by Senator Thomas (D., Okla.), was defeated on Saturday by a 64 to 27 vote. King Amendment Voted Down An amendment by Senator King (D., Utah), to pay only the cash sur- ] render, or present, value of the cer- | 1 tificates and thereby save the treas- i jury an estimated $1,200,000,000 was ' shouted down. King's "aye" was the only audible one in the affirmative. A vote of 50 to 38 turned down a motion to reconsider previous rejection of an amendment, by Senator Connally (D., Tex.). It would have extended bonus benefits to 2,257 "provisional" first and second lieutenants who served in the regular army in the World War and resigned the first year after the Armistice. Connally and Senator Rus?ell (D., Ga.), argued strenuously for the amendment, declared it would avoid "rank discrimination," but they got nowhere after Harrison had stated the war department was opposed to the proposition. Byrne# Delighted At Vote Senator Byrnes, one of the co-authors, declared himself "delighted" at I rauKn | Thursday and Fri< "THE LAST DA $ Dorothy Wilson e X Bulwer's immortal novel d Vesuvius and the destruction of '? Saturday, Y Everyone of the great Western y saga of tho West ! ! ! i "POWDERSM X featuring Hoot Gibson, Harry ( X ed in person on the Henn theat v Tyler and all your favorite tves *j. Said to be the finest Western ei | Monday and Tues jr The Marx Brothers | in a screaming, laughi "A NIGHT AT | Wednesday jr. One of Columbia's b< all-star cast. . . | "GUARD T v > Im A MOI After usual lou> d< This plan ?l#o applies to Ford V-8 "* ? the size of the v<&e in favor measure, adding it indicated that^^l the bill is vetoed by the Presidm^^N will be passed in the senate over^^H Byrne.' said the present nlaj for a motion to be made in the Wednesday to "concur in the seu^H bill without the bill being setr Jfl conference." This would send it H rectly to the White House. * Senators King and Burke i]fl Neb.), who voted with seven Democrats in opposition, were most outspoken in speaking the coalition measure. King said he hoped I'resijJV? Roosevelt, who has given no intit tion of his position on the bill, *0i v "not act favorably" on it. "Approval by congress of a ma ure docs not always establish tjj NJ wisdom of the measure," he asser^H Hailing the passage as the "stJljS of an era of real prosperity," JasIjS E. Van Zandt, commander-in-ck, ^ of the Veterans of Foreign Wars,t \ dared: "Enactment of this law," he a ' means that more than $1,000,000,' will be put into circulation immt ' ately. Money, just like the music Jfl the current popular song, goes 'roafll and round.' I believe this will totS% off the fuse and an era of unexprw ed prosperity will result." .c rheatre lay, January 23-24 YS OF POMPEII" tnd Preston Foster lepicting the eruption of mighty I'ompeii. January 25 Stars combined in this thrilling IOKE RANGE" iarey, Art Mix (who has appearer stage), Buffalo Bill, Jr., Tom tern stars. Years in the making, rer screened. day, January 27-28 ng sensation . . . * THE OPERA" ,January 29 ;st pictures with an HAT GIRL" VTH l >ten payment " i light commercial units j