Thursday, July 1, 1937
THE BEAUFORT NEWb BEAUFORT, N. C.
PAGE THREE
Mariner Plans Sea Cruise in Tub
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j, MALECK1
SAUSAGE
Ernest Biegajski of Buffalo, N. Y., evidently believes in safety first,
he has put on a me preserver before hoisting sail and moving out
to Lake Erie in his remodeled pickle barrel schooner in which he plant
go to Europe this summer if present experiments prove successful
is the second such boat he has built with his soldier s bonus money
Ha 1936 model leaked so badly that only the timely arrival of the coas
guard prevented its maiden voyage from turning into-a tragedy.
!r.t;on cf Potash Applications to Con
ti c..
The ot is experiment station
bulletin Xo. 310, -Beef Cattle Pro
duction in the Biaekland Area oi
North Carolina."
Specialists Offer
Mid-Summer Advice
Recommends Cowpeas
In Tobacco Middles
RALEIGH, June 30 Cowpeas
make a gooj crop to plant between
tobacco rows at the time of the last
culitvation.
The peas will not hurt the tobac
so, said E. C. Blair, extension agron
omist at Stet College, and they will
produce a b 'z crop for soil-conservation
purposes.
He suggested that the cowpeas be
planted in each tobecca "middle"
with a corn planter.
While growing they will help con
serve moisture and hold the soil in
place. After the tobacco is harvest
ed, they may be left on the land or
turned under to add organic matter
and nitrogen to the field.
Blair also pointed out that cow
peas or soybeans may be sown in
corn at the time of the last cultiva
tion, in the coastal plain area, unless
they have been already planted in
alternate rows with the corn.
Corn should be cultivated shallow
until it four feet high as cultivation
maintins a mulch that conserves
moisture. Too deep a cultivation may
injure the roots, however.
Frequent, dioilow cultivations
through the month of July are good
for cotton, E!ai- continued.
He advised against planting corn
and soybeans in July expecting to
make a full crop of corn planted at
that time, and said that it is more
profitable to get ready for an early
crop of small grain.
Recent rains in Union County
have worked wonders with the young
er crops, Cotton and corn are grow
ing luxuriantly, farmers report.
Print New Bulletins
For State's Farmers
K A. LEIGH, June 30 Rust, the
disease that cuts heavily into North
Carolina's cotton crop in section?
may be brought under control where
potash is applied to the fields.
In experiments conducted since
1934, it was found that applications
of 50 pounds fo potash to the acre
increased seed cotton yields from
775 up to 1,220 pounds per acre.
The plants were more healthy and
the lint of better quality, said Dr.
R. Y. Winters, director c f the agiicul
tural experiment station at State
College.
A report on the research work
done, and the results obtained, have
been published by the experiment
station in a bulletin authored by J..
H. Moore and W. H. Rankin, of the
experiment station staff.
Dr. Winters also announced the
publication of another bulletin show
ing how reed and grass areas in the
blaikland section of Eastern North
Carolina can be utilized profitably in
the production of beef cattle.
The bulletin also compares the
relative merits of grade cattle over
native stock, said the authors, J. E.
Foster, Earl H. Hostetler, and L. I.
Case, of State College.
The grade cattle were produced
by breeding purebred Hereford bulls
to native cows.
Both bulletins may be obtained
free by North Carolina farmers who
write to the agricultural editor at
State College.
One is experiment station bulletin
No. 308, "Influence of Rust on Qual
ity and Yield of Cotton and the Re-
RALEIGH,, June 30 Many mid
summer farm tasks about the farm
and home require information anJ
suggestions which State College spec
ialists are offering on the Carolina
Farm Features radio program.
Some crops are being harvested;
others are just being started, and
there are others not yet ready for
harvest which ate being cultivated.
The agricultural expert- are ar
rr.r. :'ir.g their discussions to conform
with timely piactices.
Insects and plant diseases take
t'ieir toll yearly. Yet many dollars
could be saved each farmer if he
would follow preventative and con
trol practices.
Already this year the flea beetle
has damaged thousand? of dollars
worth of tobacco in northwestern
counties.
With a favorable season and no
control practices, the boll weevil may
cut cotton production sharply this
season. However, by the application
of p:-ese:ibed methods, farmeis cam
check the weevil attacks.
The Carolina Farm Features sched
ule in full for fie week of June 28
Ju'y 3 follows: Monday, John A.
Arey, "Making Good Hay;" Tuesday,
M. E. Gardner, "Selling Fruits and
Vegetables;" Wednesday, S. L. Clem
ent, "Supply and Expert Situation of
American Tobacco;" Thursday, Miss
Ruth Current, "State College Farm
and Heme Week;" Friday, C. F.
Parrish, "Timely Poultry Practices;"
and Saturday, 4-H Club program.
"I have been farming in Mitchell
County for 40 years and I've never
seen crops, as aw hole, look better,"
remarked one farmer to county a
gent J. C. Lynn, last week.
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Scenes and Persons iiTthe Current News
m v4 ; I life
1 Scene in the Queen Anne room of St. James palace, London, as premiers of the various dominions and
.i: cr delegates attending the Imperial conference following the coronation conferred on problems of the
British empire. 2 Employees of the Jones & Laughlin Steel corporation, whose vote adopted a C. I. O. union
'or representation in collective bargaining. 3 President Roosevelt, who has asked congress to enact lgis
atton staolishing wage and hour standards for labor. -
STICKS TO HIS LAST
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the more urgent work attached to get ' demonstrations wit n the county a
ting applications for old age a-si.-t-' s . nt.
ance and aid to dependent children
ready.
Commodities will be distributed as
usv.al upon receipt of cards.
Limestone, phosphate and legunK-a
are building a new farming era m
Haywood County say those farmers
who are cooperating in management
D. W. MORTON
NOTARY PUBLIC
i'ire and Casualty Insurance
BEAUFORT. N. C.
Bubbling over with joy, Salvatore
Branchiella is pictured in his shop
at Mamaroneck, N. Y., as he soles
a pair of shoes for a customer. Sal
vatore's joy comes from his receipt
of the news that President Roosevelt
had just signed a special bill grant
ing him the right to live in the United
States. He was to have been de
ported on a charge of allegedly
stealing $15 from an employer in
Italy 19 vears a 20.
Orthopedic Clinic
m
The Pitt County Health Depart
ment wishes to call attention to the
regular, monthly, State Orthopedic
Clinic held every first Friday, from
noon to 3 o'clock p. m., in the Health
Department offices. 215 W. 3rd
Street, Greenville. The next clinic
will be held on Friday, July the 2nd.
This clinic serves not only Pitt
County, but Beaufort, Hyde, Pamli
co., and Carteret as well. The clinic
is open to both white and colored.
All types of cripples are received
into this clinic for examination with
out cost.
Dr. N. Thomas Ennett, Pitt Coun
ty Health Officer, requests that where
practical, all patients bring a note
from their family physician.
The Health Officer extends a spec
ial invitation to all physicians and all
welfare officers to visit the clinic.
Welfare Office Rushed
Due to the increase of work in pre
paring application blanks for old age
security, Mrs. George Henderson
County Welfare Supeiintendent, has
announced that no more clothes will
be given out at the Welfare Office un
til after July 15, when the office will
have had time to complete some of
Edgar S. Weaver
P. D. PH. MS. D.
METAPHYSICIAN
Specializes on Functional and Or
ganic Incurable Diteaie and Prob
lem of the Mind.
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
BOX 563 BEAUFOR, N. C.
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Sea the Kew
Autcmatie
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Months To Pay
10 Allowance
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2hi km
Tide Water
Reddy Says:
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Power Co.
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CONTINENTAL DISTILLING CORPORATION, PHILADELPHIA, PA.
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