PAGE TEN October 31 Is Last Day To Comply With 1937 Soil Program Farmers Still Have Time Adopt Practices As suring Payment NOTIFIED Checkup Discloses Some Have Not Met All Re quirements Don’t forget that October 81 is the last date on which soil-building payments can be earned under the 1937 agricultural conservation pro gram, warns E. Y. Floyd, of State College. Farmers who have not yet earned the full amount of their soil-building allowance still have time to earn payments by seeding winter cover crops, turning under legumes, and carrying out other practices pre scribed by the program. In checking growers’ compliance, Floyd said, it has been found that a number of farmers have not yet met all requirements for growing soil conserving crops to qualify for diver sion payments. Winter cover crops such as crimson clover, Austrian winter peas, and vetch may be sown in October to earn soil-building payments and to help qualify a grower for his diversion payment, Floyd added. Payments offered under the pro gram for soil-building practices will largely off-set the cost of doing these things to improve and conserve the soil, he continued. County farm agents have notified growers of the acreage of conserving crops they still need to qualify for diversion payments and of the amount of soil-building practices needed to earn the full amount of their soil building allowance. Seeding crimson clover, Austrian winter peas, and vetch in October will count in the soil-conserving acreage for 1937 and also as a soil-building practice for which payment will be made at the rate of $1.50 an acre. , Soybeans, velvet beans, or cowpeas turned under hi October as green , manure will earn the grower $2 an acre as a soil-building practice. Planting forest trees on crop land , will earn $7.50 an acre, and on other land $5 an acre. Improving stands < of timber by thinning according to methods recommended by the exten sion service, $2.50 per acre. Ground limestone or superphos phate may be applied to non-crop pasture land or in connection with the seeding of crimson clover, vetch, and Austrian winter peas. For applying 1 000 to 5,000 pounds of ground limestone per acre, the rate of payment is $1 per thousand pounds. For applying 100 to 500 pounds of 16 per cent superphosphate, or its equivalent, payment will be made at the rate of 60 cents per hundred pounds. For constructing adequate ter races where needed, payment will be j made at the rate of 40 cents per hundred lineal feet of terrace. For sub-soiling to a depth of at j least 18 inches with furrows sufii- j ciently close together to completely I brc-ak the sub-soil, $2 an acre. The Tax Books for 1937 are now in my hands for collection. On taxes paid in October, there will be a dis count'of 1 per cent; November, one half of 1 per cent. There will be no ■ discounts for the months of Decem ber and January. On all taxes paid after February Ist, there will be the usual penalty. M ■ ■ ' y '■’ '* '■ ''>'4 V JL jQ . i ■ HPgfoy .-<7- “-f/V. & ,-i .■ | criif v/itowaii y/Oiikt i-y Jenkins Motor Co. Display New Models A. E. Jenkins, manager of Chas. H. Jenkins Motor Company, returned Sunday night from Pontiac, Michi gan, where he attended a meeting of automobile dealers numbering over 4,000. He is expecting very soon a shipment of 1938 model Oldsmobiles and at present is proudly displaying a number of 1938 Pontiacs, one of which was driven from Michigan. Decorative material has been re ceived announcing new car models and the show room has been made very attractive to display and ex plain features of the 1938 models. Cone Centric Tuning New Philco Feature The most accurate tuning ever de vised for the radio, with such amaz ing flexibility that reception of a greater number of stations is accu rately gauged, now is possible after seventeen years of radio develop ment through the new Cone Centric Tuning, introduced for the first time in the new Philco line. Noise and distrotion due to inac curate tuning finally have been mas tered through this new device, which, though highly scientific is so ex tremely simple that it is sweeping the radio field. It is so easy now to accurately locate any station that no matter in what part of the country it is used, the radio owner now can definitely mark any station he de sires. The station marks on the radio dial are apparently close together, say about one-quarter of an inch, yet in radio language they are 10,000 cycles apart. It is obvious that no human being could possibly consistently tune to within about one-eighty thousandths of an inch of absolute precision. Yet this is just what Cone Centric Tuning does, and it is fixed for all time. And the demand for the new system.is tremendous. Buddy Lassiter Sent To Roads For 90 Days Pleading guilty to two charges that of malicious destruction to prop erty and being drunk and disorderly, Robert (Buddy) Lassiter on Friday morning in Recorder’s Court was sentenced to 90 days on the roads. Sixty days resulted from the first charge and 30 days on the latter. Lassiter, while under the influence of whiskey, deliberately broke out the windows in the store of his fath er, Jule Lassiter, on Oakum Street, and then surrendered to the police. j RYLAND | V Miss Mary Lee Davis returned from Edenton Monday night. She has spent the past two weeks wit! Mrs. B. F. Francis. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Wadsworth and children, of Erwin, were week end guests of her mother, Mrs. C. A Spivey. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Lane return ed to their home in Richmond, Va., Sunday, after a visit with Mr. Lane’s sister, Mrs. Roy Parks, and Mr. Parks. Mr. Parks carried them tc Richmond, and returned home Sun day night. Miss Gertrude Jackson visited her brother, Oliver Chappell, at Lake View Hospital, Suffolk, Va., Friday night. Mrs. Raymond Dail and Mrs. John Irvin Chappell spent Monday with Mrs. Lloyd Chappell. Miss Orene Outlaw visited Mrs. Will Copeland Wednesday afternoon. THE CHOWAN HEKAID, EPENTON, N. C., TW o ■■l I -■— ■■■ -.... .IM ■..■.«■ I. «i ■iii«ii».i.i.i>rfai»i.riii,wy i. i ';i. i 11 hi. I i'll |Hh : j : : jA * -v mbh 3? % « ■ ? J M v .•? it j,. li§Mni 'I .W * Children’s Appetites Will Lag If Packing of School Lunches Permitted to Become Routine Affair r PHE packing of school lunches may A become a routine task because of its frequency. If the packing of the lunch is allowed to slip into a rut, the appetites at the consuming end are very apt to do the same, with the result that soon the growing children are going without many essential foods they need to carry on their school work and build strong healthy bodies. There will always be favorites in sandwiches that seem lo be the back bone of the lunch box, but faithful as they are, there is also need for variety and newness to keep the appetites from lagging. This ever present need for change may be accomplished in many different ways. Besides many tasty sandwich fillings, there are several different types of bread that lend themselves well to sandwiches. Milk is such an important item in the daily diet it must not be overlooked in the school lunch. If not supplied at the school, it may be carried in vacuum bottles and can take several different forms for the sake of .variety. Cream soups of all kinds incorporate milk to an advantage and may be carried well in a vacuum bottle. Chocolate milk and cocoa both n r. ideal milk beverages for a lunch f Isaac Byrufh and T. L. Ward were in Edenton Monday on business. Mrs. C. W. Ward and Miss Avis Ward, from near Sign Pine, and Mrs. R. S. Ward spent Tuesday with Mrs. Harriett Parks. Miss Evelyn Jordan visited Miss ■ c o\ idly *° SQUINT A completely new kind of radio .. . with complete tuning BH|i| 1-- perfection! That's the 1938 Double-X Philco. The Philco WJj|§|£>‘ f Automatic Tuning Dial is on an Inclined Control Panel . . . IP inclined so you can tune with ease and grace. Standing or BBffi sitting, a single glance shows the call letters of your favorite BHUS 1 stations! With a single motion, Philco Automatic Tuning ImSIWMMI AI gets them! And the Philco Foreign Tuning System brings mlglf «7 ■' -I you unsurpassed overseas reception. y :: mSßß [glffjjpffl|! jku .-<. v| - I| Never before such an outstanding radio! Never before such 1 remarkable reception . . . such glorious ' m ll tone .. . such l>eautiful cabinetry! Come * ‘.'t 'I'M in .. . see, hear and tune a new Double-X ' i * ‘ Philco. We’ll put one in your home for only , p ‘■•l- ■> T ' - v - . • J. -Ss*' J £3s ;» ‘ - breaking value I Le»s aerial I I I .. . _ QOINN FURNJTURE COMPANY j IBua&S - *-'*''.• fi-*: - -'i .'■’ " ; -• . / •.' 2r*-'' r ?i*: \“i.:.' 2■ i^P'ssß v^»^^Sf< l S^t'S s #?S^??^SaMSB^BttBB ’ Following are some suggestions that ! may serve as a guide for lunch box ! menu planning. If planned in advanoe, ! the chances for better balanced menus > are greater, and at the same time less ■ effort at the last minute is required. Sandwich Bread Suggestions Nut bread: date nut bread; orange bread; apricot bread; fig nut bread; prune bread; Boston Brown bread; gingerbread; hran bread; whole wheat bread; raisin bread; corn bread: rye bread and white bread. Sandwich Filling Suggestions Peanut butter and mayonnaise; peanut butter and marshmallow cream; peanut butter with minced onion; peanut butter with crisp bacon; peanut butter with fruit preserves or jelly; cottage cheeee with fruit preserves or jelly; cottage cheese with salmon; eottage cheese with onion and nuts: eottage cheeee with chopped olives; cottage cheeee with crushed pineapple. Dessert Suggestions Graham crackers spread with melted milk chocolate; graham crackers with peanut butter and marshmallow cream; cup cakes; fudge bars; date bars; cookies; sponge cake: cup evstards, tapioca, corn starch ana chocolate puddings; fruit terts; fresh fruits; hard candy and milk chocolate. Food Extras Lettuce rolls filled with meat or vegetable r'luffed celery (cheese spreads); potato < ' !’■ open faced csndwichcs in animal shapes; ci - .'c l c— stuffed with meat filling; raw ; icg:, tomato; fruits—apples, vr'cr.eliir, plums, oranges and bananas. 1 i Thelma Ward Tuesday afternoon. ' Mrs. R. S. Ward and daughter, \ Lelia Faye, spent Monday in Edenton. Mrs. H. N. Ward, Mrs. R. S.j Ward and Miss Elizabeth Eason visit- j ed Mrs. Herbert Lane Saturday after- j noon. ' | s :ji.W*V^- L VV.)iJij& I. 1 . 1 — 1 . . I ll* ’I SL A jh & n II ■HUHHUHUUUHUHHMOUUHMIPUUHUUHHUHII Now Is the Best Time to Sow WOOD’S SPECIAL Grass and Clover Mixtures Special Mixture for Every Type of Soli Permanent Pasture Mixtures, Nos. 1 to 5 For Abundant Nutritious Grazing Throughout the Year Permanent Hay Mixtures, Nos. 6 to 9 For Bumper Hay Crops Sow SO to S 5 Pounds Per Acre sl7. Per 100 Lbs., Sacked, F. O. B. RICHMOND, VA. Ask for WOOD’S CROP SPECIAL A 4 A A A AL Bjfi a Jii AvlwJ f»J 1 Good Second-hand Peanut Bags For Sale f I These bags are of the same quality that! | I proved so satisfactory to the many farmers j > I who used them last year. They are not per- :: I feet, but we consider them better and more «► I uniform in size than most of the so-called 1: I “re-built” bags. Stop by and look them over | 1... and get our prices. It may result in a con- | I siderable saving to you. I The Edenton Peanut Co. I PHONE 34 EDENTON, N. C. S MjyUIEMiJMgKr ‘Mil -: ‘ .V.w * I : kl< j- .' • V.i xaSES* ssssSmi •’■Mpfs 13 PHILCOII6XX* ****•’» fine*tl Inclined Control Panel, Auto- Dial. Gorgeous cabinet with pro tective bade shield. Less aerial ' I yw &jife