Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Jan. 3, 1935, edition 1 / Page 4
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t, .. . LL, Cqi'' - -3 POST offic: 1. .a: ' AW N. C, A3 The Di'ri::r .-, brinrji.-'j ''. 1 j tre goers and t nf:- ;AIL MATTER. 'bates of sit : ;y mail), postfaid. ."113N .$1.50 .71 munltios aniu.- - i . RATIC JOURNAL,'- LISIIKD BY A ue.iuw- , devoted to 1 j: it.rial, education- OJfflC,. AND AC ..I.:--VI. INTERESTS OF vnd suraioux: : cc : nties. - te; :rAY January s, mss r or.i THE SCRIPTURES 1 Simon Pet i- answered and told, Thou. 1 of the living' God-Matt.l6:16. - art the Christ, 1 GOLDEN GLEAMS " Though the mills of God grind slowly, r J ' Yet they grind exceedingly sra all; Though with patience stands he waiting,, , , With exactness grinds He alL Frederick Von Logau. 4 --. yo , t ;l ! every good .deed needs ' a publicity agent ,. uma people Inevitably go crazy r-0- as the , old year ends.. Not all the' rackets In the country are being handled by gangsters. , ' ' 0 1 1 1 ', -' t , " , IJo, Pauline, we would not argue with' a lady who believes ' in .rology. , - - ' . ' , Oil. ' I I " I t.,' M " , ' A. year from now most of things that seem so Important will be uninteresting. " " ' ' Every nation,' we see, la for peace If she can get what she wants and keep it. . . j r, s 4 , 4 , , . ; ,;.,".. , . , ' 1 1 ' ' "' 0 , ;' '7 The best way to get'ahead la to begin systematic savings now not tomorrow. 1 O 1 'I ( 1 Unloaded guns kill number of individuals in the United States daring- the hunting season. t v - . t ' ' , ; 1 , , Business in now cooperating with the administration and we hope t ,t business can show results. " , . 0 S . - f . V HOWDY FOLKS tr,.,Hv fniira. miirhtv piad tn meet vou. Have been wanting to . ne to Warsaw for a long time. Ye editor la a native of Seven Bprings 1 f. :a like he belongs to Duplin Counfy. For the past four years he 1 , been located In Wetdon where he publishes the Roanoke News. I don't know whether you are going to like THE DUPLIN TIMES u s I can give It to youior not If you do like it tell others about It if j i ii t! fot like it then teU me. Any suggestions you have to offer will ' " ; accepted, like any other person I da not know it all and the 1 a 1 1, lay In this newspaper racket the more I find that' I " do not s ? t ythlng, but anyway it's a great game Just like anything else. r ( f hard work and' plenty of hard cussing, but I am getting use i by this time. 1 -I C ) not expect a big thing and am 'making no rash promises, I t, vi at to get out a Duplin County Paper for Duplin County folks I them.; You know after all we are just one big family, if you t t..at attend the Grady-Outlaw Reunion one time, - and " a good er that goes home is Just a weekly letter from one cousin to , telling who visited who, and what you ought to do whether II t or not Anyway I want you alt to feel like the TIMES is 1. '. ke columns are open to any reader at any time to express his , iinion on any subject You are not only welcome to use these 1 but are Invited to do so. I only; make one request when, you g to the TIMES if you cannot scribble with a pen. or pencil ! r than the editor can, please for the sake of better eyesight ? ; r copy typewritten or written by. someone who has a reason--I ble handwriting' I- '"- " -' . . ',J copy for the TIMES must be in the office by Wednesday ase bear this In mind. . ' 4 ? subscription rate for the TIMES J is only $1.60 and you know j buck and a half is what keeps the press turning. Notices will it to an dellnqufnt subscribers within a few days. Please send t neck or money order immediately. We will be glad : to send per a week or so, if you are hot a subscriber, but we can not this for Mr. Jim Farley, the Postmaster General says that ,vs and Regulations must be enforced,- meaning that news inot be sent through the mails at regular rates, unless they for- ' 4, - ; ' -, , ; f,. h is l -v, 1 ?y R..G. (BOB) MAXWELL . llaxwell of the Outlaws Bridge section has consented to be 1 tdbuting editor of the TIMES. Uncle Bob, as he is called by can always give you something' to think about We may 1 agree with him but we will have to admit his ability as a 1 speaker. He needs no introduction. If you have never known aJ!y you know of him. If you don't know him you shouldThe lis he is the most interesting person he has ever talked with. will not be in Warsaw. He wiH do his writing at home and dng to correspond with him may do so through the TIMES i '.rect .addressing him at Seven Springs. , ' , i- iL r fy ' ! ADVERTISING STIMULATES SALES ' "7. Babson, ; noted business statistician, points rout that ndvertising for fourteen conecutlve months has registered I "id same month of the previous year and says this means turers and merchants alike are looking forward to better n calls attention, however, to the Mbit of businessmen 'r advert . ling appropriations in slumps. He urges them advert ding in order to take advantage of one of the ''totlrf of ironing out the bumps in business. . it t business men temporarily' lose faith In ad i slump and they enter into a vicious circle i a decline ii jk? ertising budgets; leas adver a t ' er ir 1 i( , and so on down the tobog- f r survive, t. NiJ J I. "ll,e I ed on i the d;r: betwe this week t'.e r- . I I the R C A b u. 1 . system is d'-,ji;,sn J to , .0 1 J a more perfect reception w.. 1 t .v ! most pleawlng tone. 'oil In addition to- the new RCA sound system the theatre has t," o replaced its seats with 2 '! c, '.- ion seats, ffouuwuig 11a tiw... -i 1. 1 . j 1 pleasing its patrons f:. t the h-ai-ager is barring nol'.iu ; to t j your theatre a f! asant eh . ft 1- ing and educational Insl.ut worthy of the town In which it in located. , '. . . ' " . Admission. charges will continue on the same basis they have been in the past. ,1 For your next week's entertain ment the. management offers: . . 1 Jcta Brown, the clown of Holly wood in "Circus Clown" Mon day and Tuesday. This lime he , not only is a clown but takes the . part of a clown. Joe : will , take " - you a mlle-a-mlnute In his great-. est of all fun specials. There will be a matinee showing Monday at 8:80. , ' ; . Wednesday only will be shown '- "State vs. Elinor Norton," with Claire Trevor. Matinee at 8:30 ' ' Thursday and Friday you win aee Gloria Swanson and John Boles In "Music In The Air." :' .1 With every picture you are al so entertained with a comedy, news and short subjects.' - ' " " ; j r- . 1 Soil Improvement . With' Les pedeza r.-r t .1 1 1 13 itJb' .it- lerenuo j n coi. Improved vs. i upland. On bul 1 1 1 ,-iy are secur . On such soils vV. .h and yii-lJ ."!.' and the ia I i than on In rid from 2 to By GUY A. CARD WELL The fact that lespedeza will im prove the soli on which ' it is grown so that subsequent crops of small grain, corn and cotton will be larger larger than before lespedeza was planted, . is well established. The degree of this improvement as measured by increased -yields will depend upon the way the lespedeza is handled and on soil and climatic conditions. When the lespedeza' is cut for hay, increases of from '50 to 100 per cent in the yields of corn and cotton - have frequently been recorded In North Carolina. .The best practice appears to be to grow lespedeza for 2 'or years, utilizing it for hay or pasture, and to follow with 1 or 2 years seed crops. ,r : When land has become so worn out as not to be worth cultivating it is" of ten "turned out" Lespedeza comes in, ' but 1 it takes several several years to cover such J?oor ground through natural spread. A bette plan ia to disk arid level af ter the last crop of corn or cotton and seed, down with lespedeza. Su perphosphate or basic slag, 800 to 400 pounds per acre, will help the lespedeza materially, and the lespe deza can be usea for hay or pas turage, or, if the farmer xas , no use for it left on the ground to resced and enrich the soil for a year or two. . ,"'' The species 4 of lespedeza two annual and one perennial-are of interest to the farmer. The annual re (1) : the common (Lespedeza straite), with two improved varie ties, Tenessee No. 76 and Kobe, (2) the Korean (L, atipulacea), with one extra-variety. The peren nial is "UScriceaT ' The annual lespedeza are grown extensively in the South, for hay, pasturage, soil improvement,., and seed production. - ' . " , CULTURE , ' " v ' -.The' culture of lespedeza id sim ple. The seed is best sown on win ter . grain about the middle of March in the latitude of North Carolina, and somewhat- earlier farther south and later' faiUei north. If seeding Is done too ; late for the freezing , and thawing of the ground to work the seed under the surface, the field . should be lightly harrowed after sec"' if 25 .to 30 pounds of seed are oj a hay crop may be eypprtol f ' fall, provided , soil t 1 1 conrl ' .ma e -e F' '' ' ' r r fra ' j mny 1 I 1 1 ' r f 1 ! 4 tones of fcny t j S"'0 acre may be expected. On 1 X u;'und the im prlved sorts ws.l outyield common lespedeza. It i.j i jnerally believed that with a got, 1 stand 4 inches of lespedeza above t'.e cutter bar will yield one ton of hay per acre. The Kentucky Agricultural Experi ment csiauon says 01 ureou uiaij when a good stand Is 8 or 9 inches , high a ton of hay may be expect-1 ed;' when 12 to 14 inches, 2 tons and when more' thin .24 inches, 4 tons of hay may be expected.- At any rate the yields of hay are sur prisingly heavy. When cut early, that lsk before bloom When tall enough to make a ton of hay per acre, and if not cut too short, say 3 to 4 inches from the ground,' lespedeza may be ex pected to make new growth and to make a good seed crop in addition to' the hay. The best hay is made when the lespedeza is not more than 15 inches high. When taller, it is more stemy, with a smaller pro portion of leaves. - . ' To make the best hay lespedeza should- be cut when in full bloom or shortly after. When it is left un til a considerable part of the seed Is ripe the resluting hay Is of poor er grade. -Lespedeza -contains less moisture than alfalfa or red clover, inconsequent y more quicker cured, and the field-cured hay contains somewhat , more dry 'matter than similarly cured alfalfa or .clover When' the lespedeza is from 8 to 10 inches high cutting may be done In the morning;, the hay should be windro wed "soon after - being - cut and in good weather It may be hauled to the barn next day. When the lesped&av-fs more, than fifteen inches high It should ' lie in the windrow 2 or 8 days. ' ', Most lespedeza hay is consumed at home or in the neighborhood where it is produced. No grades for lespedeza hay have been establish ed, and there is ho general market Good lespedeza 'hay falls but little short of alfalfa in protein and is even superior in carbonhydratec on tent Korean lespedeza hay -has been used' In Missouri' to prepare fat cattle for stock shows and has given good results. LESPEDEZA. FOR PASTURA&X Lespedeza ii more widely usied for - pasturage than for hay. ThoroughouC the Southeast lespe deza of one variety or another is or should be an ingredient of every pasture mixture. Lespedeza 18 ': a hot weather plant pnd should not be expected to provide early graz ing. In North Caroiiua June 1 to 15 is a fair date to expect lespedeza but dies earlier, - so that it is not so good for late gs ''"?. When cattle ate fen,....J mo;,L"y on grass pasture it Is a,'. V.j U have a reserve field of lwpwltTB upon which the c'.U3 nr.. y I a I. . ed from July unr'l f-"st 1" ' v '" maintain gains or lu.. p up tJ t .ui Ihcreme the milk row vL"i r 1 Ing the graas. : . ! A gOOj J .i.,uiO u i . 3i may be expected to r"; ' 1 " ' after year as lor f it u This la also gen- -?; .J Icrpedeza pa;;; : c ' ; ; c"- -i'.y fa; ' c " ; -' 1 y 1 j t , t i r f 1 1 t - 2 1 - , ? i --I o 5 ? 1 , It V - 1 . , , it. S Mil-. -VC7. C 1,1 JTsj v.. i-i: t C - ' REokiHS'kvAPB .... '. v - A BAND '6? INDIANS: WERE 'SmJ6HT TO THB STUDIOS TOCT. IN'TUZ SHRILLS NOISES' ' - NOISES, WHICH. TT FREQUENTLV APPEAR IN SOUND RECORDINGS AO ONE KNOWS WHY ARB CALLED 'CANARIES" Ah THE COLUMBIA STUUIOj: "Tf W PROGRit I TVEZC ; JAN; 7th. r -X t - s MON. -TUES.- JOE E. BROWN , IN CIRCUS CLOWN COMEDY 1. '1 ' MATINEE MONDAY 8:80 -wed. CLAIIII TIIEVO? " " ' , IN cc ;y mat;:. .2 s.oj T"rs: glo:;ia 1T.1.
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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Jan. 3, 1935, edition 1
4
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