Home Gardens Show Sizeable Expansion . ? i Judging from the appearance and size of home gardens this year, pan tries in rural North Carolina homes this fall and winter will be stocked with an abundance of canned fruits and vegetables, according to John W. Goodman, assistant director of the N. C. State College Extension Service. Evidently realising that they face the prospect of slim profits from cot ton and tobacco this year, farm fami lies have given serious consideration to the suggestions of Extension work ers and have redoubled their efforts to produce good gardens. Not only have these families de voted more area to gardens, Good man said, but they have planted a 9 wider assortment of vegetables. This will assure a greater variety in the diet. That part of the garden not used for current needs is being pre- , served for fall and winter use. In most home demonstration clubs v at the present time, canning has come s to the forefront as a major project Home agents of the Extension Ser- e vice are instructing farm women I members in the latest and most scien tific methods of canning and preserv- f ing surplus foods. J Likewise, Goodman said, these J safe agents are giving instruction to 4-H Club girls in 3aving fruits and r vegetables. Many of the club girls ( have taken Jfood conservation as their major project for the year. ] Greater than usual interest in home gardens was stimulated this year by 1 a new AAA provision which provides 1 i I We Join With | Farmville | ?IN? |< I A Special Welcoming to j; | Farmer Friends 11 I AND INVITE YOU TO I?' \ Visit Our Show Room | ?and? |r 1 See The New Models j; I Ford V-8 Mercury j, | FORD FOR 1940 }! J POLLARD AUTO CO. j I PLANNING? I I BBILD?REPAIR?REMODEL I: I LET US GIVE YOU LOW-COST ESTIMATE I I PLUMBING & HEATING JOBS I: I CAREFUL ATTENTION TO THESE . I < I PROBLEMS I j I & Heating Co. I; I ? We Have Stokers For Curing Tobacco ? I I HOWDY! and... I How are Your Home I And Farm Buddings? I i Necessary Repairs I Should Be Made Now I ? CONSULT US FOR ESTIMATES ? I i FARMVILLE RETAIL LIMBER CO. I FABMYILLE, N. C. | ? ' J J ; ? '-lei W ? t '?*" . '*'. v^r? . . -. - ?_? t ? \ ? ?*! " * ? 11 ? OttT Tiyic f ?jl ? 11 I Comic To Sec Us? If -?j' Evelyn Holt Bailey is spending this reek with-her aunt, Mrs. Willie Ea on, near Lizzie. . 7 Dalton Moye left Tuesday for Ral igh to assume his duties in the U. S. favy. Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Redick and amily and Miss Ruby Marlowe and diss Janie Marlowe spent Sunday at Atlantic Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Craft were din ler guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. >aft, Simday. Mrs. James E. Shackelford was a .??armville visitor Tuesday. Mrs. Sam Jenkins, Mrs. W. A. darlowe, Mrs. W. E. Lang, Mrs. detta Herring and Mrs. I. F. Smith ittended a tea in Fountain Thurs iay afternoon, honoring Mrs. Leslie tfewman, formerly Miss Mattie Lee Sagles. Mrs. J. A. Bundy and sister, Miss Susie Bunn have returned after spending the week end with rela ives in Washington, D. C. Mr. Wilbur I. Bennett filled his ?egular appointment at the Christian Dhurch last Sunday. He was ac .?ompanied by Mrs. Bennett and chil lren. They were dinner guests of dr. and Mrs. L. N. Shelton. The Rev. Yarborough, pastor of he local Methodist Church will hold he regular services next Sunday norning and evening. The public is :ordially invited. Mrs. Jason Shipley and little sons, Charles and Don Ray, spent a few lays last week with relatives near iVilson. Friends will regret to learn that diss Ruby Marlowe was taken to a Yilson hospital Tuesday night where he underwent an operation for ap jendicitis. J Mrs. A. 0. Holloman is ill in a iVilson hospital where she was tak :n Tuesday for examination. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Futrell spent he week end with relatives in Pine Level. Mr. and Mrs. W. Earl Lang are spending some time at Atlantic Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Royadl Minshew and children of Raleigh were dinner juests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl T. Hicks, Sunday. Miss Hazel McKeel is spending this veek with friends in Wilson. Miss Ernestine Gardner and Miss Christine Gardner of Saratoga spent some time here last week as guests )f Miss Dorothy Gardner. Mrs. Appie Flanagan of Farmville spent Sunday here with Mrs. W. I. Shackelford. Mrs. Estelle Bailey and Miss Alice Talley spent the week end at Miss Talley's home in Siler City. BIRTHDAY PARTY Alma Grey Beaman entertained a lumber of friends at her home Tues day celebrating her twelfth birthday. Out door games were played from three to five o'clock. The little hostess* mother, Mrs. Fred Beaman, served cake and lemon ade. Those- enjoying the party were; Pauline Dixon, Frances Moore Dixon," Ramona and Joyce Rouse, Franklin Wooten, Emma Jean Redick, Ruth Gay, Jean Parker and Virginia Fields. THE G. A. SOCIETY MEETS The G. A. Society met Friday after noon with Emma Jean Redick. The topic of the month: Growing A Missionary Tree in Africa. The meeting was presided over by the President, Rayohel Bailey, who read as devotional A Tree in The Bible, followed by sentence prayers. The minutes of the previous meet ing were read by the Secretary, Pauline Duypi. Joyce Rouse's name was-added to the roll. After the business session Mrs. Redick invited the guests to the porch for refresh ments. WALSTONBURG HIGH SCHOOL FACULTY?1940-41 J. B. Hinson, Principal and History, Walstonburg, N. C., A. P. Lewis, Math and Science, Walstonburg, N. C., Miss Iris Davis, English and French, Stantonsburg, N. C., Miss Mattie Lee Jackson, English and listory, Lumbertcn, N. C., Miss Frances Kornegay, 7th gmde, Mt. Olive, N. C., Miss Roxy Jones, 7th grade, Bloonts Creek, N. C., Miss Virginia Turner, 6th grade, Wilson, & C., Miss Gladys Miller, 6th grade, Alliance, N. C., Miss Sudie Lee Dlldy, >th grade, Walstonburg, N. C., Miss Margaret Condon, 4th grade, Stan tonsburg, N. a, Miss Beulah Hansley, Srd grade, Greenville, N. C., Miss Sue Stalling* 2nd grade, Stantonsburg, N. C., Miss Rose Heatherly, 1st grade, laleigh. N. C. DIFFERENCE ' . - Where he fumigated with peradi hlorobenzene to control blue mold, W. L. Bostic of Magnolia, Duplin County, pulled 2SJ)18 tobacco planbr per 100 sqoare yards of bed as com tared with 3,438 plants where no taniaant was used.-'ii-ajv-'yl^-^ ? -f i small payment for planting and ipeeifiea a minimum of ten vegeta Weed Men Bade 3-Year Contract (Contimud torn Fag* On*) ? ' ' " 7 '? ?v' r ? ' ' ! mate Without 1941 control. State AAA Executive E. Y. Floyd of State (College said the. control pro gram would be carried to the grower before the July 20 vote and djpw unanimous response in an appeal for assistance from bankers, merchants and warehousemen. W. E. Fenner, warehousemen, and Millard F. Jones, banker, both, of Rocky Mount, assured AAA officials the program would carry. Similar testimonials were voiced from rep resentatives from "Virginia to Florida, W. W. Eagles of Macclesfield, who acted as secretary, expressed a simi lar belief. Explaining the control system, Hut son said that if the three-year plan was adopted, no farmer's quota in any year might be cut by more than 10 per cent of his 1940 quota. For in stance, if a farmer has a 20-acre al lotment this year, he may not be cut under 18 acres in either of the two subsequent years. ?. On the other hand, Hutson went on, there is no ceiling on quotas, and if demand develops, quotas can be raised as high as needed. The AAA drew plans for a series of meetings in every tobacco com munity to acquaint farmers with de tails of the AAA control plan. The full text of the control reso lution follows: "Whereas: The present situation confronting flue-cured tobacco grow ers is more serious than at any time in previous years due to the war overseas, eliminating exports of flue cured tobacco to those countries formerly purchasing nearly 60 per cent of the entire flue-cured tobacco crop grown in this country, and "Whereas: The huge 1939 surplus of approximately 400 million pounds has depressed and will continue to depress prices until this surplus is eliminated, and "Whereas: It would disrupt the en tire tobacco growing industry, as well as the economic life of the to bacco growing areas, if growers were compelled to absorb the necessary acreage reduction in one year rather than in three years, and "Whereas: The average prices of growers had already fallen eight cents per pound below the average of the previous five years even before the European war started last Sep tember. "Now therefore, be it resolved, That representative growers, bank ers, tobacoo warehousemen, and oth er business men from the States of Virginia, North Carolina, South Caro lina, Georgia and Florida in meet ing assembled at Raleigh, N. C., with Mr. J. B. Hutson, Agricultural Ad justment Administrator, this the 18th day of June, 1940, unanimously, go on record as being in favor of the regulation of tobacco acreage for the three-year period rather than one year, in the belief that: "1. The trade would be more like ly to make purchases at reasonable prices. . "2. The government could better give maximum support for the ex port grades, which at the present time have practically no markets. "S. Normal credit could be more intelligently extended, thereby as suring growers necessary financial aid in producing their crop. "4. Under three-year quotas grow ers could make their plans without fear of drastic changes from year to year. "Be it further resolved: That the growers, bankers, tobacco ware housemen and business men from the above mentioned flue-cured belts, do hereby pledge themselves to support the three-year regulation period, and urge all tobacco growers to vote for the three-year plan in the referen dum to be held July 20, 1940." MATTRESSES Approximately 450 low-inoome farm families of Union County have [made application for mattresses un der the Federal-State cotton surplus removal program, says Assistant Farm Agent T. M. Mayfield. Girls Are Advised To Build-Up For Relief ' > Lade of knowledge now many weak, undernourished girl a tot of sufferingl Many others, however, know how the headaches, nenouMHiCniDp*' like pain of functional dysmenorrhea due to malnutrition am -helped by the proper use of CABDUL 8mne take it *Um daye befom I and dozing "the time," to help oaM - periodic But CARDUl'S ? principal nie is to hfV incness appetite; stimulate the flow of J gaitrie JWcerjeo aid digestio%: 1 assist in building op physical re* ?? w TT* ? Mr. -r 1 1 ? _ sistanco and thus Vlp reduce pari'* ?' J odical distresa^wbmen hare Med ] CARDUI for over 60 peaak v OPTOMMTRI9T ? I $ llH-VBMT VlSSt? pjaieMa.-Office at Fields' Jewelry Store MONDAY, JUNE OI-JISSSMSW SatwdS^jJ AMINISTRATRIX NOTICE Having qualified as ada^Blstratrix of tile estate of J. A. Mewborn, de ceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persoiis having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned in Farmville, N. C., on or before the,11th 'day of June, 1941, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All pardons in debted bo said estate will please mafee immediate payment) This the 11th day of June, 1940. MRS. J. A; MEWBORN, Administratrix of 6wks. J, A. Mewborn, deceased. MONEY-BACK KIDNEY DIURETIC rnmrttmr w? t. wli W* t. ? l? ss^jes^rr'-s."" titers ?taMaa a diuretic attanalant and other fnarodtonta which set directly kpon the bull bnlbii ha dlaram facta tad diatremee U Get ttawUp^flgfeto, B?kecho, Lea Patau. Khtou BtsdftdMif Lois if' ?tod to fttctfaaal kidney trochlea. Tm owe H to ytmtmU and family to milt ailn aa refaction. Taken aeeerd tow to direction*, KHUN8 will ?fca aplen. 22 reaalta. Try I3PAN8, Buy it at oar Special Prtfco OSar on two feoxt*. Uao oao fen. If not wHrtili rotarn anoponod bar sad get touk money back. Leading Druggists Everywhere WHELESS DRUG COMPANY FARMVILLE, N. C. 2 I Full | Glasses | 0 ElnTmB3XfflH| > Best By Taste Test | iflV - ' -flflfci'- ? flfcSHB~ IflHHP-/ .JflflHUfciBtV / * '^|BWWB?:?B ^SMRHI TO BUY YOUR 1000 REFRIGERATOR ' ? ? - ? _| :il?w Kxlvinatoe gives you full 6% cubic foot aim capacity s.a i quality backed by Antsrioa'a oldest maker of electric refrigerators::; a price that's just as low as what you might pay elsewhere for an out-of-date, last year's model?just $119.95!* I Look at the features you get! p 1% sq. ft. of shelf ppeoe.^; Cold storage tray 3 s s Automatic light < k > s 2 extra-fast freezing shelves J p 3 e the Polarsphere seeled uait, that uses current less than 20% of ( the time, and has Sufficient capedty to keep 5 refrigerators cold, under average household conditions. I Come see this great Kelvinator. Look over the entire 1940 Kelvi nator litter We'll give you a free | book "The 1940 Refrigerator Guide" to help you choose a re frigerator. a SIC 6-854 CUBIC WOT 1940 MODEL KELVINATOR . 'iir ( MwW k pr HMM J i wtth 5 Ymt ProtMtiM Pko. j Farmville Furniture Co.| NOTICE OF LAND SALE Under and by virtue of the puthoi granted in a certain Deed of Trust executed by L. A. Fulford and wife, S. F. Fulford to John Hill Paylor. Trustee, dated November 24, 1928, and duly recorded in' the Office of the Register of Deeda of Pitt Coun ty, in Book N-l7, at page 306, de fault having been made in the pa ment of the indebtedness thereby se cured, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at the Court House Door of Pitt County, to the highest bidder for cash on Monday, July 1, 1940, at 12:00 o'clock, noon, all that certain tract or parcel of land lying and being in the Town of Farmville, County of Pitt, State of North Caro lina, and more fully described aa fol lows: Situated on the East side of Main Street and beginning* at an alley on Tyson Street and running with Ty son Street 205.5$ feet to Contntnea t Street; thence in a Southerly direc ion with Contentnea Street, 100 feet 0 corner of lot No. 16; thence with he line of Lot No. 16, 202.70 feet to tn alley; thence'.with said alley 100 'eet to the beginning, being lots Nos. [4 and 16 of a certain plat which is >f record in the Registers Office of ?itt County, in Book T-9, page 168, vhich is hereby referred to and made 1 part of this instrument for a more lefinite description. Said division mown aa? Tyson's Subdivision of ^orth Fayetteville. Being the identi sal tract of land conveyed by Walter 3. Shepherd, Commissioner June L4th, 1928, to L. E. Knott, which said leed is duly recorded in Registry of Pitt County in Book 0-17, at page 541. Terms of sale: Cash. This, May 30th, 1940. JOHN HILL PAYLOR, Trust*;. Dewey says the New Deal failed ? provide adequate defense. ^ . ^ Y0 U R LOAN REMAINS/ AT HOM E