4 , F ZD. 13, 11 23 (ilddturo Student Mapa Coiiatructive Farm Pronram (The following .article was written by Norton Bryaon, 14, a student in the vocational agriculture das of the Frank lin high school taught by E. H. Meacham.) The farmers of the nation are trying to work out a sound agricul tural program for 1933. The farm er is in a worse condition than he ' . has ever been before. He has no markets for his goods, but if he , does sell then the margin of profit is very low, if any at all. He must use this fact for the basis, of his program for next year. A sound agriculture program for 1933 is the big problem that faces the farmer today. The farmer must live if the rest of the world wishes to live. The farmer is partly to blame for the condition he is in. "The reason for this is that he stays in the same old traces and never moves forward, therefore he can not expect to be successful. The ' farmer can make more 'progress by using his head a little and trying to find out how to do things bet ter than he is doing them. It would help a farmer very much to use the improved m supervised methods of farming. The Program What I would do if I had a farm: v I. Produce more and. better ... products on less land. ' That is I would improve my land to get large yields of quality j)rod- r ucts. - If the fanner can do this he will cut down the cost of pro duction. ' - 1 2. : Include -crop "Totaition. "The rotation of crops Is a very important factor in farming, be cause it aids in soil fertility. It helps to control crop pest, and the farmer knows what to plant in the future. Rotation helps to conserve soil fertility as it is not good for the same crop to grow for two straight years on the same land. Rotations also improves the physi- ' cal condition of the oil, helps to conserve moisture and vegetable matter, aids in control of weeds, increases crop yields, distributes farm labor and helps to systema ' tize farm labor. 3. Work your farm on the budg et system. This means a well thought out plan of yourtime and money. Many of the farmers of today -do-not-know-whether their farm is paying or not, all he knows is that he is 'living, though hard up. "The farmer should budget his " expenses and conserve Tiis i time and money, tie snouia get nis tnc. and expenses to balance with his rincome, tMost-farmer s-dornot-gox -to , this trouble though the-timel i spent is -well paid A well balanced) Jarming system will usually balance a budget. 4. Use legumes to add fertility "to the'soil."" :7' "T7"" The use-of - legumes -to- fertilize "theoittrrood-practicc-to ftil low. They are the cheapest' kind of fertilizer that can be used. They add great quantities of nitrogen to the soil. But if the legumes arc Baptist Church Notes BY REV. EUGENE R. ELLER The Sunday school will meet at .9:45 o'clock. This will be Catch- rrup Pajrin the Sunday school.- The goal for the offering is $50.00. Let's all work to reach the goal. Let's have af lcasr 200 "in" attendance." Dr. Oscar E. Sams of Mars illpllege3yiir preachatthe worship hour at 11 o'clock. I)r. Sams is a man of culture, wide experience, and deep spirituality. Don't miss his .message. He is anxious to see all the high school students who are interested in go ing to Mars Hill college. The B. Y. P. U.'s will meet at 6:30 and the evening worship at 7 :4S. We are grateful for the fine attendance in the Sunday even ing services The pastor is bring ing messages of the evangelistic type each Sunday evening. Wednesday evening, February 22 Rev, James A. Ivey, pastor of the West Asheville Baptist church and L president of ; the North Carolina B. Y.' P. U. Convention, will preach in the Baptist church. This ser vice is' being sponsored by our young people and the public is most cordially invited to attend. If the weather permits the Sun day, school wil conduct a religious census of the town Sunday after noon. . WelFs Grove Mr. Paul Carpenter and Miss Dora Lee Garner were married Saturday, Feb. 11. Mr. Rufe ' Ray is on the , sick list but we hope him a speedy recovery. Mrs. G. W. Culver has been sick-for the past few days. She had a message Saturday that her son,' George Culver, Jr., who is now stationed in the Philippine Islands is seriously sick. -. , Mill Blanche Cab went to Cor removed for hay instead of being turned under they add nothing to the fertility of the soil. In fac they deplete the soil in phosphoru and potash. Many legumes can b sown in the' fall and turned unde in the spring, therefore keeping the land occupied all the tinle. Some of the best winter cover crops are the clover, especially crimson, the vetch and Austrian winter peas. The vetch and , peas may be sown with rye. Winter cover crops prevents the land from washing and leaching. Among the many other thing that a farmer can do to help his present condition is to live a. home, he should produce enough food for his family and produce all the food for his livestock so that he will not have to buy food productstharcan beT produced on the farm. The farmer cannot be a spend-thrift in the condition that he is now in. The farmer should practice di versified farming, that means to raise a variety of crops and not specialize in any one crop. - He should raise corn, wheat, oats, forage crops and hogs, and plenty of garden products. A well bal anced farming program will in clude livestock and poultry. Be cause of the low market prices a farmer cannot depend upon one crop. If he is a diversified farm er, and the prices are low he is not hurt as badly because he has raised The tood needed for his fam ily and livestock. AH farmers should raise products and stock of good qualityand type. Good, seed and -good iivestockareessentia1." The farmer should study the market demands and raise his prod ucts to meet the requirements. He should by all means have good wholesome food for his family. Do not keep an unproductive type of livestock because they eat more lhan a-good typeand utilize their food to a much less advan tage.. TJAn-unproductive animal -4s an expensive one to keep. Every farm should have improved pastures to furnish an abundance of cheap ecd for the livestock. If the pasture contains swampy acres they should be drained. If the soil is acid it should be Kmcd, and if the pasture is unproductive it should be reseeded and fertilized. -T-aise pufebred livestock an d plant certified seed. are factors of economy. These' factors are very impoitant in successful farming. "Purebred livestock' will serve any purpose better than scrubs, and good seed is just as important as a welj prepared-seed-bed. The term like begets l:ke holds good in both, seed ..and livestock. Last but not least isto use the 'best "possible "Ipiethods of produc tion, because they will pay. . The state " of North Carolina " does"" not giveher-farmers recommendations unless they have been tried and proven. Any farmer may get agri culture literature free by writing to the State College of Agriculture in Raleigh. nclia, Ga., Sunday to visit sister, Mrs. R. C. Snyder. The a. Y. r. U. is still on foot regardless of the bad wcath cr. There ; was. a mistake in the Well's Grove locals . last week where it": mentioned that the Sny der school was progressing fairly well. s It should have been the Sunday-chool-instead. - Aqtione (Unavoidably Omitted From ..... Lasj wcek's Press) Regie" NcaT. ol Franklin, is visit ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Neal, at Aquonc this week. Miss Rachel Davis, of Franklin, was in Aquonc on business last Thursday. Elmer Rowland, of Kyle, was the guest of Bob Hawks last Saturday night. Sherdon Gibby and Willard Rop er returned home Saturday from Rainbow. Springs, where they have been visiting the past week. David Walls and Nora Taylor and Grace Wood, of Aquonc, at tended the prayer services at Earn est Roper's home Sunday night. W. A. Pendergrass was in An drews last Saturday on business. E. H. Potts, of Clear Creek, is planning to move to Atlanta next week. We are glad to see some relief work going on in this district. Ten men are at work on the bridge near Clear Creek. Those men sure ly need work, but it seems they should draw their pay every night as they can't work without some thing to eat. Cartoop;echaye (Unavoidably Omitted From Last Week's Press) Influenza, has been raging se riously in this community. Arthur Sprinkles and son, from Hiawassee. Ga..' was in this sec tion on business last week. Quince Roane, from Dillard, Ga., was visitinsr home folks Sunday. Mr. Bowers, of Rainbow Springs, was here on business last Thurs day. Misses Ruby and Blanche South ard spent last week-end at Frank lin. We are glad to say that Mrs. David Guffie, who has been se riously ill, is improving. F. J. Southard made a business trip to Clarkesville, Ga., last Mon day. L. W. Southard, of Franklin, was in this section on business last week. -r . ....t Rainbow Springs A. W. Agee returned Saturday after spending 10 days away on business. Miss Ann Bailey, daughter of L. O. Bailey, and Mr. Russel Shamate of Statesburg, West Va. were recently married. Robert Latham, of Buck Creek, has returned to West Virginia University. The employees of the W. M. Ritter Lumber company seem well pleased with the services of their new physician, Dr. N. G. Williams of Franklin. Oscar Phillips, who lives on the Black place, is resorted to" be ill with heart" trouble. The many friends of Mr. J. M. Smith were shocked to hear of his death at his home in Canton last Tuesday. Mr. Smith was well known in this section, having re- siaea ior some time on uiacK street. Jess Brooks and Ed Cruse, of Rainbow Springs, and S. M. Wolfe, of Asheville, attended the funeral of J. M. Smith in Canton Wed nesdays : " Mrs. Ed Cloer, who has been ill for the past week or two, is repbrted,3td3 .b?rnpr5yiri& Work on highway 28 in Clay and Macon counties has been de- ILLUSION: The stage is all set he shoots the arrow fixes itself in the she smiles through 1 . - . . 1 1 """"""" "-"""WWUUUg .i,...........,.......,.., , X m $m&m i - ; zSX wmu zz v. v u If Sl 111 y . -Illl . f .ssssss -x v ' --. - , ; -t J fcv .w. JUS .1, 4. r T :f I i U I v- I - EXPLANATION: The arrow which the marksman "shoots through" hia assistant simply folds up into the crossbow I The arrow which is actually embedded in the target is shot by the girl herself from a belt concealed under her dress. She releases a little spring, the arrow unfolds, and shoots straight into the bull's-eye I It is all done in a flash 1 So quickly the eye cannot detect the girl's movements 1 To heighten the impression that the ar row has gone right through, the girl releases a rjbbon from the front of her dress the continuation, appar ently, of the ribbon attached to the arrow in the target J3 , KEPT FRESH . , , , IN THE WELDED V HUMIDOR PACK v - ' aWSdtii vl Wit w v A TIIS JT RAN KLIN PRESS and THE HIGHLANDS layed due to bad weather. According to. reports, the ther mometer reached 4 or 5 degrees below zero in Rainbow Springs last week. However no damage was reported at the lumber yard or mill. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE Having qualified as administratrix of C. T. Sanders, deceased, late of Macon county, . N. C., this is to notify all persons . having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the under signed on . or before the 9th day of January, 1934, or this notice will be plead in bar of theif recovery All persons indebteded to said es tate will please make immediate settlement. This 9th day of Janu ary, 1933 EULA SANDERS, Administratrix. J12 6tp F16 NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, Macon County, Under and by virtue of the pow er of sale contained in a deed of trust, from Perry Swafford to the undersigned Trustee, dated the 8tl day of November, 1924, and record ed in the office of the Register of Deeds for Macon County, North Carolina, in Book No. 28, of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust, Page 82, and default having been' made in the payment of the amount secured by said deed of trust and demand having been made on! of A. W. Jacobs, deceased, for the undersigned Trustee to sell i partition among , the tenants in said property as in said deed of j common, and the defendants will trust described, the undersigned take notice that they are required Trustee will, on Saturday, the 4th! to appear on the 6th day of March, day of March, 1933, at the court! 1933, in the office of the Clerk hguseikarinhe-Townf-FrankSuperior-Court7of-NlaconrCoHnty, fin, Macon County, at 12 o'clock, noon, sell to the mur to the complaint in said ac highest bidder, for cash, to satisfy tion, or plaintiffs will apply to the """"N. . oN msdsaJk . 11 " .1 for target practice. The magician Hits bis bow and aims an arrow at the bull s-eye. His lovely assistant then steps in front sf the tarEeond apparently through her and it very center of the bull's-eye I And it all while the audience gasps. - yf Jillil V Copyright, 1B23, E. J. Bynoldi Tobtcoo Companj ';W!Mf!!0'0ffff, i-fi: I K -L MACON IAN LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT the amount secured by said deed of trust the following described tract or parcel of land: Being all that tract or parcel of land described in a deed from B. P. Jacobs and wife, Belle Jacobs, to Perry Swafford, by deed dated November 8, 1924, and recorded in the office of Register of Deeds of Macon County, in Book K-4, Page 290, to which deed reference is hereby had for a more perfect description of said property. This . February 1st, 1933. HORACE J. HURST, Trustee. F9-4tc-M2 NOTICE OF SERVICE OF SUM ' MONS BY PUBLICATION North Carolina, . Macon County. In the Superior Court. Lawrence Weaver, Executor under the last will and testament of A. W. Jacobs deceased, Lawrence Weaver, J. L. Jacobs and wife, Frances Jacobs, Maude E. Jones and husband, G. A. Jones, Mary Emma Bell Bryson and husband, W. M. Bryson, VS. Christine . Burns, Susie Jacobs and Roy Jacobs, Jr. Susie Jacobs, Roy Jacobs, Jr., and Christine Burns, defendants in the above named cause, will take notice that an action as above entitled has been commenced in the Superior Court of Macon County, North Carolina, for the nurnose of selling the real pstatp Its fun to -1 . I TTTifs more luii to Like to see through tricks? Then let's look at another... the illusion in ciga rette advertising called "Cigarettes and Your Throat." The audience is told that by certain magic processes tobacco can be made as soothing as cough medicine. explanation: The easiest cigarette on your throat is the cigarette that is made from the choicest ripe tobaccos. Cheap, raw tobaccos are, as you would naturally expect, harsh in their effects upon the throat. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS Court for the relief demanded in said complaint. This the 3rd day of February, 1933. HARLEY R. CABE, Assistant Clerk Superior Court. F9-4tc-J&J-M2 NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, , Macon County. Whereas, power of sale was vest ed in the undersigned trustee by deed of trust from Alvah Pearce and wife, Ruth Pearce, dated Oc tober 9, 1931, and, registered in the office of the Register of Deedt for Macon County in Book No. 32, page 323, of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust, to secure the payment of a certain indebtedness in said deed of trust set forth; and where as, default having been made in the payment of said indebtedness: I will, therefore, sell at the court house door in 'Franklin, North CarolmaronMondayr-the-20th-day of February, 1933, at 12:00 o'clock noon, to the highest bidder for cash, the following described prop erty: Second Tract: Lot on the West side of Harrison Avenue and on the N. side of Church St. in , the Town of Franklin, being the lot purchased by Alvah Pearce from C. R. Tarkington and wife, Verna by deed dated May 6th, 1927, and recorded in the office of the Reg ister of Deeds for Macon County in Book 0-4, page 121. This 18th day of January, 1933. G. A. JONES, Trustee. J26 MC-4tc F16 EXECUTRIX : NOTICE Having qualified as executrix of Elizabeth Kelly, ; deceased, late of M aconzountyN ChisrisJto notify1 all - persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned be fooled If you have to consider your throat, the quality of the tobacco in your cigarette is important. Camels are made from finer MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. Camels are as non-irritating as a ciga- rette can be because Camels use choice, ripe, tobaccos. And because of the matchless blend . ing of these costlier tobaccos Camels have a rich bouquet and aroma ... a cool, delicious flavor. Keep the air-tight, welded Humidor Pack on your Camels ... to assure yourself and your companions a fresh, cool smoke. IN A PAGE TlinZZ LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS on or before the 26th day of Jan., 1934, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This 26th day of January, 1933. LASSIE KELLY CUNNINGHAM, Executrix. F2-6tc M9 NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina Macon County By authority of the power of sale vested in the undersigned trus tee by a certain deed of trust exe cuted by Franklin Company to G A. Jones, trustee, on the 28th day of July, 1931, said deed of trust being registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Macon County in Book of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust in Book No. 32, page 269, to secure the payment of a certain indebtedness in said deed ofrusteOorthlan(Lde fault having been made in the pay ment of said indebtedness: I will, therefore, sell at the Court House door in Franklin, Macon County, North Carolina, on Mon day, the 20th day of March, 1933, at 12 o'clock noon, to the highest bidder for cash, the following de scribed real estate: Lots Nos. 4, 6, 7, 8, 17, 18, 19, 20 in a tract of land known as Fair Ground park, in the town of Franklin, as surveyed by W. N.. Sloan, March 1926. This land will be sold in separate parcels or by the entire tract at the option of the trustee. TermS of sale will be all cash at time of sale, Upon the failure of any bid der to pay cash for any part of said land at the time of sale, sale of-lhat-parr-wilhbe-continuedand:: resold -at 2 PrMref thesameday. G. A. JONES, Trustee. F16 4tc B of F M9 . KNOW It Is a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that NO TRICKS .JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS MATCHllff BLIND r

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view