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PACE TWO THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND THE HIGHLANDS MACONIAN THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1939 For Those Sunday Appetites By BEULAH V. GILLASPIE Director, Sealtest Laboratory Kitchen v0 NSfttf"" 'rr f. iUm.,f!f' ......nil... i. .....nn i ' . ..., 3 Courtesy Sealtett Laboratory Kitchen y. J SAUSAGES and sauerkraut a satisfying combination if there ever Is one! And, for a, Sunday luncheon or supper, the recipe sug gested here calls for a lot of "sec onds." Easy to prepare, too! SAUERKRAUT WITH SAUSAGE DRESSING l No. 2 '2 can or 3 2 cups sauerkraut ' 1 cup thick sour cream pound sausage meat 2 cups soft bread crumbs 2 tablespoons butter Salt and pepper Drain the sauerkraut add the sour creara and mix lightly.' Place in a buttered shallow baking dish. Fry the sausage, stirring frequently un til brown. Drain and add to the crumbs. Add the melted butter and 1 tablespoon of the sausage fat and season with salt and pepper to taste. Shape in 6 patties and place on top of the sauerkraut, Bake in a mod-i erately hot oven (375"F.) for about 25 minutes. Serves six. FERTILIZED VETCH A. C. Thomas, Joncsboro, Route 3, Harnett county, planted vetch each f-all on his corn land until he began to harvest 40 bushels of corn an acre. Last year, , says the county agent,' Mr. Thomas fertilized the vetch before planting, followed it with corn to which he added no fertilizer and harvested from 75 to bushels of corn to the acre last fall. BARGAINS! FACTORY RECONDITIONED SINGER SEWING MACHINES AT ONE-THIRD THE ORIGINAL PRICE Bryant Furniture Co. HELP STOMACH DIGEST FOOD Without Laxathe unl You'll Eat Everything from Soup to Nuts The ctomicb should dlcut two pounds rf food daily. When you eat heavy, freasy. coins or rich foods or whto you trt nervous, hurried or chow poorly your itomach often pours out too much fluid. Tour food doem't digeit and yon bava gi, heartburn, nausea, pain or tour tosaaeh. Too feel sour, tick and upset all over. Doctors say never take a laxative for stomach pain. It is dangerous and foolish. It takes those little black tablets called Bell-ana for Indigestion to soaka the excess stomach fluids harmless, relieve distress in no time and put you back on your feet. Belief is so quick It Is amazing and one 2ie package proves it. Ask lor Beil-ans tot Indlgeatksa, ' Loyal Order of Moose Franklin Lodge, No. 452 Meets In Americal Legion Hall Every Thursday Night 7:30 O'CLOCK Billy Bry son, Secretary INSURANCE Fire, Windstorm Automobile (all forms) . Public Liability Bodily Injury ' Bonds Careful Personal Attention to all Business SAMUEL H. LYLE, JR Higgini Bldg. Franklin, N. C. State College Answers Timely Farm Questions Q. When should poultry be vac cinated for chicken pox? A. Young birds are more .suscep tible to pox -than the adults so the proper time to vaccinate is when the birds are from 10 to 15 weeks old. Do not .use pigeon pox virus at this time. Pull a few feathers from the thigh and rob the small brush, which comes with the vacci nating material, over the holes left by pulling ' the feathers. Be sure the brush has been dipped in the vaccinating solution. When once started, all birds on the. farm, ex cept the old hens which are prob ably resistant, should be vaccinated. Q. Is it necessary to plow up tobacco plant beds? . A. Yes all beds, should be plowed up and all plants destroyed im mediately after use of the bed. The.se plants and beds furnish a breeding place for insect pests which will spread to the tobacco in the field and cause the loss of thousands of dollars worth of to bacco. After the plowing the bed should be planted to sweet potatoes or some other garden crop or it may 'be sown to soybeans. Q. How can- I force the growth of garden crops? A. The quality of succulent vege tables is dependent upon rapid growth and it. is very often neces sary to maintain this vigorous growth with side applications of a quickly av ailable nitrogen. The time for applying these side applications depends upon the vigor and matur ity of the crops and also upon seasonal conditions, and the grower must use his best judgment in de termining when the application should be made. In applying nitro gen, care must be taken not to let the fertilizer come in contact with the plants as this will usually re sult in severe damage.." , CAGLE'S CAFE FRANKLIN SYLVA "We Cater to the General Public" Oysters, Steaks and Fish a Specialty Good Tasty Food and Home-Baked Pies We Appreciate Your Patronage A. G. CAGLE, Prop. 4-H Crops Champions To Get Scholarships L. R. Harrill, State 4-H club lead er, announces that four one-year scholarships to State college again will be offered to the 4-H mem bers who conduct the best cotton, corn, tobacco and horticulture pro jects in 1939. These awards, to gether with a cash prize of $100 for the best club in the state and banners to the best club in each county, are given by the Arcadian Nitrate Educational Bureau, through H. L. Meacham, its North Carolina representative. " The awarding of these prizes will be on the basis of the approved project record book of the State college " extension service, with Leader Harrill as the judge. Two Rowan county boys and one each from Wayne and Wilson coun ties won the scholarships offered in 1938. puard Cress, a 17-year-old club boy of Salisbury, Route 2, was the horticulture champion; Luther Paul Canup, 18-year-old freshman at State college and a member of the St. Pauls 4-H club 'of Rowan county, won the cot Jon-growing championship; Walton Thompson, 16, of the Black Creek club in Wilson county, conducted the best tobacco project ; and Clenon Best, 20, of the Four Oaks ( community in Wayne county, was the corn growing king. Young Cress made a net profit oi $l:4.3 on a tomato project, which was carried out on a garden plot of 360x120 feet. He sold 240 bushels of tomatoes, canned 112 quarts, gave 30 bushels to neigh bors, and consumed 10 bushels in the home. Canup made 966 - 'pounds of lint on a measured acre, which is approximately four times the state average. It measured 2,470 pounds of seed cotton and return ed him a profit of $99.62. Thompsbn made $287.42 from 1, 284 pounds of tobacco produced on an acre, and Best produced 432 bushels of corn on 2.6 acres, the; project netting him $208.85 profit The yield figures almost 167 bush els per acre. MORE Cattle producers are expected 'to market considerably more grain-fed cattle this spring and .summer than last, but numbers of heifers and cows marketed will be smaller, ac cording to the U. S. bureau of agri cultural economics. Seventy swine growers of John son county have planned a trip to a packing plant at Richmond so as to study the effects of intestinal parasites, bruises, and feeding prac tices on the dressed carcasses and to see how the bodies are graded for soft and oily pork. ENSIGN $1.25 POCKET and WRIST WATCHES $1.00 to $395 ALARM CLOCKS '1.00 to '2.95 LOOK FOR &BS&& ON THE DIAL Milton Sanders Given High Rating In College In the dean's list of undergrade ate students of high scholastic standing recently given out by the Massachusetts Institute of Technol ogy at Cambridge, appears the name of Milton Sanders, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sanders, of Franklin, who , is a second year student in that noted institution. Mrs. Herman Sutton of Windsor, Route 1, planted a nice little home orchard this winter consisting of 12 peach trees and six apple trees enough, she says, to supply fruit for the family. SAVE MONEY DURING National Shoe Repair Week APRIL 15th TO 22nd Your clothes closet is likely to reveal one, two, or maybe more paiirs of shoes that can save you real money if you'll bring them to us for re pairs during National Shoe Repair Week. Maybe all your shoes need is a neat resoling job or a pair of rubber heels to put them in good condi tion. Look over all your shoes now and bring them to us for reconditioning. OUR SHOP IS HEADQUARTERS FOR NATIONAL SHOE REPAIR WEEK WILSON'S SHOE SHOP Franklin, N. C. Ford has bnllt noro than one-third ef oil the antoao bilcs over trail! in the urorld 4y iff v2twSa lll l I , IS feu. ' "'''WJ-s.f II ' i I a HERE are more Ford cars in use today than any other make. And there are more Ford V-8s than any other 8-cylinder car. The 1939 Ford V-8 represents the broadest ex perience In building cars any manufacturer ever had. You will find values in it far beyond what any other maker can put into a car at the low Ford price. Ford performance, traditional for a generation, has reached new heights in the 1939 V-8. And now Ford style leadership is equally outstand ing. "The smartest cars on the road" is the way own ers describe their new Fords. Smartest in action. Smart est in appearance. Leaders, as they deserve to be. APRIL IS FORD INVITATION MONTH I Your drive America's most modern low.prlced car. Make a Look at thoso FORD FEATURES STYLE UADMSHir-TU lux ury cur in the low-pric field. V-fYPi 8CYUNDEH tNGINt Eifht cylinders giv smooth nest. Small cylinders fiva economy. HYDRAULIC I JUKCS-Eaay. ctlnf quick, strmlfht stops. TRIPLE-CUSHIONED COMFOXT N.w flexible roll-edge seat cushions, soft transverse springs, doubU.actlng hy draulic shock absorbers. STABILIZED CHASSIS fia front-end bobbing or dipping. Level starts, level stops, Jevel ride. SCIENTIFIC SOUNDMOOf iNO Noises hushed for quiet ride. tOW -ftfCIS- Advertised prices include many Items of desirable equipment. . U. Ford dealer invites vou to date for a new experience.
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 13, 1939, edition 1
2
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