SNOW HILL |j NEWS Mrs. L. v. Morrill, who has teen ill, is improving. Mrs. D. C, Thigpen spent the week end with relatives in Beulahville. Mrs. Garland Holden of Farmville visited relatives in town Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Carson Herring have moved into the home of Sheriff Kirby Cobb. 7 Mr. Raymond Snipes spent Friday night as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Tillman. Misses Annie Carraway and Best Dail visited in Farmville Saturday morning. Miss Loraine Galloway of Wals-j tonburg is visiting her sister, Mrs. I George Eason. J Born a son, William Powell, to Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Powell, Friday morn ing, Jane 25th. | The mas Holmes is spending a week in Morehead City with his cousin, 1 Sammv Ovarby, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Holden and daughter, Betsy, spent Tuesday in Raleigh. Mrs. George Hart, Jr., who has been visiting in Kinston, has returned r home. Harvey Debnam of Wilson spent the week end with his mother, Mrs. J. E. Debnam. Born a son. Roger Earle, to Mr. I and Mrs. D. J. Mewborn on Sunday morning, June 20th. Mrs. J. C. Wooten and daughter, Miss Alice, of Greenville, visited rel atives here Tuesday. Mrs. R. R- Tillman, who has beer, confined to her home by illness foi I several days, is improving. Mr. Earle Sugg of Norfolk, son oi I Mr. T. W. Sugg, is spending his vaca tion at the home of his father here. Misses Cera Jean Kearney and Carrie Ola Hughes are visiting friends and relatives in Washington, D. C. , Sammie Pittman of New Bern, who I has been visiting his cousins, Henry J and Alvin Pittman, has returned home. Mr. Joshua A. Mewborn, Clerk oi the Court, attended the meeting oi the Clerks of Court held in Winston Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ipock of New Bern visited in the home of Judge and Mrs. J. Paul Frizzelle, Sunday afternoon. Mrs. W. M. Currie and sister, Miss Dixie Barrett of Farmville, were the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. John 1 G. Barden, Thursday evening. Little Miss Dorothy Mae M?zinSc I of Farmville, who is visiting her sis ter, Mrs. John Henry, was the guest 1 of Miss Ellie Mae Eason, Saturday. Mrs. Drew Harper and sons, re turned Sunday from Taylor, S. C., I where they have spent several weeks I visiting her mother, Mrs. B. F. Flynn. | The first cotton blossom reported J from this section for this year was found on Wednesday, June 23rd, by Davis Smith of the Shine community. Miss Minnie Best Dail spent Sun day in Farmville where she was the I guest of her sister, Mrs. G. A. Rouse, who honored her with a delightful J birthday dinner. Miss Bertie Northcolt of the Snow I Hill School faculty, who is attending 1 sumrper school at C. T. C., Green-1 ville, was the week end guest of Mrs. J. H. Harper. I Mr. and Mrs. Major Best and Miss Fannie Best of Goldsboro, and Mrs. W. T. Harding, Jr., of Fieldsdale, Va., were guests of Mr. and Mrs. I John G. Barden, Saturday afternoon. Miss Winnie DuRant of Washing-1 ton, D. C., is spending her vacation I here with her mother, Mrs. C. O.J DuRant, and sister, Mrs. Mark C. | Lassiter. Miss Edith Turnage and Miss Thelma Mewborn, w-ho attended the I Institute of International Relations j at Duke University and also visited friends in Chapel Hill, have return ed home. Randolph Rooker, a law student at the University of North Carolina in | Chapel Hill, accompanied by Miss Williams of Angier, visited his sister, J Mrs. R. R. Tillman Monday. Little Miss Mabel Cummmgs, of | Kinston, returned home Wednesday night, after spending several days with Mary Murphy. She was accom panied home by Miss Murphy, who will be her guest for several days. Dr. and Mrs: R. J. Walker, former ly of Tarboro, have just moved to Snow Hill. Dr. Walker is occupying the office of the late Dr. W. B. Mur phy for the practice of medicine, and at the present time rooming in the home of Mrs. Murphy. HAS FELLOW" FEELING """"""""" * | Chicago. ? While Police Chief Percy McLaughlin, of Detroit in vestigated the theft of an automobile beLmging to George Oliver, he was surprised to find that a thief had stolen his car from in front of his home. SLEEPS THROUGH TORNADO Graettinger, Iowa.?Although Die . roof of his house was Mown off, his I barns and outbuildings reduced to I matchwood by a tornado, Con Brekke j , . ,1 . x : ' - i n ? j n _ tvt Scenes and Persons m the Current News . 1?Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr., pictured before the joint house-senate committee investigating federal tax evasion. 2?Workers of the Bethlehem Steel company's plant at Cambria, Pa., leaving the premises after Governor Earle ordered state martial law during the steel strike. 3?Premier Paul Van Zeeland of Belgium, who was a recent visitor to the United States. Timely Farm Questions Answered at State College QUSTION: How can I cure colds in my young chicks ? ANSWER: Colds usually are caus-j id by overcrowding, chilling, over, heating, an unbalanced diet, or a drafty house and the first step should, be to find the cause and co?*1 The worst cases should be destroy*! and Epsom Salts given to the re maining birds at the rate Pound to each two and o^half gal Ions of drinking water. This should be kept before the birds for one day and a suitable germicide kept in the drinking water while there is e*i-j dence of the trouble. Usually an out break of colds runs its course and if ?rood management and sanitation is practiced only a few birds are lost. QUESTION: In topping tobacco, how many leaves should be left on :he stalk? . A.NSWER: This depends to a great) extent upon soil conditions*^ the amount of fertilizer used. On the average soils of the State, tobacco *111 mature when fifteen to eighteen leaves are left on the stalk. On poorer soils the plant should be top oed lower and on the richer soils it should be topped higher. Be sure and begin topping just as :soon .as the seed parts of the plant begin to show. The tobacco will run up enough to op every three days and shou d be topped as uniformly as possible so that the plants will mature more evenly. QUESTION: Should silage be used for feeding dairy animals in the iummer? . . ANSWER: Silage has its place in summer feeding only as a supplement to short pasture. Where the silage ?rops yield well they furnish a cheap er and more convenient supplement to the short pasture than do soiling crops. Where it is available, it is also well to feed a reasonable amount in the morning for the first several days after cows ar^ turned on pas ture. This is advisable even with an abundance of grazing as it pre sents the animals from gorging on the tender, watery grass which tends to scour them. Treated Seed Checks Damping-Off Disease Destftp unfavorable weather, failly good stands of cotton are- growing on some 250,000 North Carolina acres which were planted with seed that ha been treated to control dampmg-off iiscasG. This disease, which has been a menace to the cotton crop, is being brought under control as more far mers treat their seed, said Dr. Luther Shaw, extension plant pathologist a State College. Last year, he said, good results were obtained on some 20,000 acres, and this year 1222 times as much land has been planted with treated seed_ A recent survey of 47 farms in 16 -ounties representative of all-.stne cotton-growing sections of the State showed that an average of 452 plants were found in 100 feet of row where treated seed was planted, whereas inly 307 plants per 100 feet were pro iuced by untreated seed. Moreover, Dr. Shaw said, the treat ad seed will produce-healthier, more vigorous plants that will make bigger yields of better quality lint. The treatment costs about 27 cents oer acre and increased the value of the crop by $13.35, per acre in demon strations conducted last year. Similar benefits are expected this vear, he added. ? ^ The treatment - recommended is -lusting the seed with two per cent ?thyl mercury chloride, commonly known a* CeresajL TO SELL POORHOUSE Austin, Texas.?i*ck of inmates has caused officials .of Travis County to sell its pooAm?e. They ^pete get many times the S2,250, because property tmtoes ? the vicinity have been greatly en*, hanced in recent years. I V * , . ? -J ? .. :!' .<&? >\ w??? >-v. Convention To Stress Richer Life On Farins Farm and Home Week at State College, August 2-6, will focus at tention on the theme, "Building a richer farm life." The program will cover most of the things that make agriculture and rural life more fruitful and satisfy ing, said John W. Goodman, aseist and director of the State College ex tension service. "Since the farmstead is a coopera tive enterprise in which both hus band and wife share the responaibili ties and the benefits," he continned, "we are arranging a program that will appeal to farm men and farm women. "We are also desious of having a large number of husbands and wives come to spend the entire week, as every day will be something worth while on the program." Rooms will be furnished free in the college dormitories. Other rooms close by will be available at a very low price, Goodman added. Inex pensive meals will be provided in the college cafeteria, and no charge will be made for the classes, demonstra tions, and lectures. Rural ministers of the State have been invited to meet with the farm people, and to hold meetings of their own during the week. "We are particularly interested in cooperating with ministers to help the church reach more country peo ple and to help them render a broader service in the rural community,' Goodman stated. The various agricultural organiza tions of the State have been invited to iheet at the conference. The Junior Orphanage at Lexington will send a 25-piece band. Recreation, band music, and other entertainment will be offered to help make the week "a real vacation as well as an educational event," Good mn pointed out. Crotalaria Is Good Soil-Building Crop Crotalaria, a legume which has been used for several years by far mers in Florida and in the Carolina sandhills to build up poor, thin soil, has been introduced on several farms in the Huntersville erosion control area, according to agronomist H. 0. Beck of the Soil Conservation Service. Agronomists of the Service recom mend that crotalaria be seeded on sandy soils which are low in,fertility and deficient in organic matter and which are unsuited to the production of lespedeza. It is not advisable to seed crotala ria near a barn, pasture or poultry range, Beck warned, as the seed of certain strains (such of Crotalaria spectabilis) are poisonous. This should not worry fanners, however, since livestock will not eat the foli age. Radio Talks Help Poultry Growers ' : Rural listeners continue to find helpful information in the wocVly radio talks. presented b# specialists of the State College Poultry Depart ment on the Carolina Farm Features program. Friday a representative of the department prepares timely informa tion for those who take part in one of the State's largest agriculture en deavors. Poultry is not confined to the farm, as many town people keep chickens in their back yards. These growers, too are receiving the suggestions of the State College specalists. Culling layers is an important topic at this season of the year. Dr. Roy S. Dearstyne, head of the poultry department, will give, advice on cull ing in a radio talk Friday, June 18. Keeping unprofitable layers In the flock eats into profits, and is an un wise practice, Dr. Dearstyne say*, t The quicker a grower gets rid of these birds,; the better wiH be his -hancftsfor profit. Reduced produc tion costs raise -' annual income. Recommends Cowpeas In Tobacco Middles Cowpeas make a good crop to plant between tobacco rows at the time of the last cultivation. The peas will not hurt the tobacco, said E. C. Blair, extension agronomist at State College, and they will pro duce a big crop for soil-conservation purposes. He suggested that the cowpeas be planted in each tobacco "middle" wits 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 is four feet high, as cultiva tion maintains a mulch that conserves moisture. Too deep a cultivation in jure the roots, however. Frequent, shallow cultivations through the month of July are good for cotton, Blair 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. THE ANSWERS! 1. Stalin is a selected name re placing the dictator's original "Djug ashiviU." 2. The National Youth Adminis tration has job counselors in the pub lic employment offices of 58 cities. It receives applications from those between 16 and 26 years of age. Since beginning, it has placed 46,000 persons in private employment. 3. One chance in 133,333 to win one of the grand prizes?$150,000, $75,000 or $60,000. 4. It ranks third, with 9.47 per cent, of the total tonnage. Japan has 10.27 and the Bhitish Empire 44.84 per cent. 5. -On 1935 incomes, 4,473,426, with only 2,067,736 being taxable. 6. 35,254,000 ounces in 1936. 8. Commodities produced and ser vices rendered in 1936 were valued at an estimated $63,799/100,000; in 1929, $78,000,000,000. 9. The idea that government should regulate nothing. 10. Seven Democrats signed the adverse report, seven did not sigt it. NOTICE OF RE-SALE Under and by virtue of an order entered by J. F. Harrington, Cleric of the Superior Court for re-sale, and by virtue of the power of sale con tained in that certain deed of trust dated October 6th, 1934, and execut ed by J. B. Nichols and wife Christine Nichols to John Hill Paylor, Trustee, which appears of record in Book M-20 at page 640 of the office of the Regis ter of Deeds. Pitt County, default having been made in the payment of the debt secured thereby, and the owned of the debt haying called upon said trustee to foreclose said trust, the undersigned trustee will, on Mon day, July 7th, 1987, at 12 o'clock Noon, at the courthouse door in Greenville, North Carolina, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash, (bidding to begin at $992.25 subject to tax and claim of North Carolina Joint Stock Land Bank,) the following described rMl estate: Beginning at the mouth of a ditch, Hi CI Kinsaul's corner, and runs with said ditch H. C. Kinsaul's line North 5 degrees and 80 minutes East l&K chairs to s large long leaf pine, said Kinsaul's corner in the Willoughby line; thence with said Wiliopghby's line South 88 degrees East 10.16 chairs to a stake H. C. Kinsaul's dottier; thence wijh Kinsaul's linf South 5 degrees afid 30 minutes West <4.10 chairs to a ditch in O. P. Pol NOW is A GOOD TIME TO NKW YOUE SUBSCRIPTION. I lard's line; thence with the said Pol i lard's line a ditch, North 84 degrees | West 8.60 chains; thence with another of said Pollard's lines South 4 de grees East 9.76 chains to a stake, his corner; thence with another of his lines North 88 degrees and 30 minutes West 16.10 chains to another ditch; thence with said Kinsaul's line North 4 degrees West 9.76 chains to another ditch, said Kinsaul's corner; 'thence with said ditch and Kinsaul's j line South 84 degrees East 13.60 | chains to the beginning, containing 28.60 acres more or less. It being the same land. conveyed Mary Wil loughby by J. B. Crawford and re corded Book X-13 at page 210 Pitt County Registry, and reference is also made to deed from W. A. Pollard and J. 0. Pollard, trading as Pollard Auto Company, mortgagees, to Paul E. Jones, and recorded Book J-18 at page 314 Pitt County Registry. This the 26th day of June, 1937. * JOHN HILL PAYLOR, 2wks. Trustee. 8rec Solid Color lj DRESS LINEN 4Sc YARD ? ? . FANCY PRINTS 36 in. wide ioc yd Ladies' Full Fashioned HOSE 49c PAIR ? MEN'S ? DRESS SHIRTS $1.29 Value ! 98c WASHINGTON DEE - CEE t OVERALLS $1*19 pair { ? McCALL and SIMPLICITY DRESS PATTERNS ? i | SCHLOSS BROS. TAILORED CLOTHES ! | VISIT OUR HARDWARE DEPARTMENT | * "EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE" J I Sole Agents For ATHEY'S and GLIDDEN'S PAINTS. | | Westing house Electric Refrigerators, Fans, Ranges, Washers, Water | X Heaters, Radios, and Many Other Appliances. + | Tobacco Harvest Is Now Beginning?Fill Your Needs c | $ Now with Dietz Lanterns?Taylor Thermometers. | i X | Tobacco Twine?Flues?Barns and Packhouse Repairs. + (?fm y'9 THE TURNAGE CO., Inc. FARMVILLE, N. C. K -> ? -*? t -? -t- -t- -t. -t- J. -f - -t- -?- J- J. J- -t -f - -t. t- .? -> .1. J. t. J, J, _f. _>. J. rTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTvTyVTTTVTTTTTTTTTTVTTTT ? ^~ ANNOUNCING Federal Fuel Oil Company I Successors Federal Oil Company I JOBBERS OF A COMPLETE LINE OF FUEL OILS | Attention ] Veers of Oil Burning Tobacco Curers I Iiiieig H MiTir rim ii l&MI ?? OMfltk 9m. j ?. eo* r? m tNir?Ani.sNM^iN? Smith's 3?eatluy System, Hue. KINSTON. N. C. \ May 88, 1987. * w. Mini 811 Coavaay, doldabore, I. 6. fMtlMMM 9ur cuatoaara, uaari of Saitb'a 011-Burnln.r Muto Curara, bar* uaad your apaolal tobaooo our la/! ' foal oil auppllad by you for tba paat too yaara and nport that It baa glvan parfaot aatlafaotloe la avarj raapaot. la aaai to taka tbla opportunity to axpraaa aar appraalatloa for aupplylng a aatlafactory oil and da11 varlas aaa? la alaaa ooatalnara. Xou know It la a', aolutaly aauoiaary for eontalnara to ba ,olaaa or tfe all will RUB up ttaa buroart. Xoura vary truly, Saltb'a Haatlnc Syr tar:. Inc., Iv.-a., bocco Curing Fuel Oil is also recomm&d icturers of other 00 Burning tobacco ntyof drums for sale or will lend with deposit ALPH HUGHES, Salesman 236-1 Warehouse Opposite Vought Lumber Co. '?