Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 3, 1936, edition 1 / Page 7
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Farm Questions Answered At STATE COLLEGE Question: Should sheep be taken off feed before drenching for stomach worms? Answer: Yes: The • animals should be off feed for at least 24 hours before and kept from water and feed for at least five hours after drenching. The nicotine solution used in drenching is made by mixing together bne-half ounce of 40 percent nicotine sulphate (Black Leaf 40) and one quart of water with the mature animals re ceiving from two to three ounces of this mixture and lambs from one to two ounces at each treat ment. Usually one or two treat ments are sufficient, but in cases of severe infestation both lambs and ewes should be drenched every two to four weeks until frost. Question: What can I do to keep the terrapin bug out of my garden? Answer: Applications of a Rot enone-Talc dust containing one percent of rotenone will give good Control of this insect. Use suffi cinet dust to cover the plants thoroughly and repeat every week as long as is necessary for control. Applications should also be made after every rain. A dust contain ing three-quarters of lone percent of rotenone can also be used, but requires very liberal applications. Rotenone is not poisonous to hu mans. Question: When should I start to cull my laying flock? Answer: Culling is almost a continuous process and should be practiced throughout the year. For the laying flock, however, the most rigid culling is done toward the end of the laying period which, under normal conditions begins in July and continues through the fall months. Watch the flock carefully during June and July and cull out these birds that gfo into a molt during these months. It is sometimes stated that when a flock, especially in the summer months, falls below 30 percent j production it is time to cull the entire flock. However, the price received for eggs, the price of feed, and the feed cost per dozen eggs will determine the time and intensity of culling. Checks Malaria in 3 days COLDS first day Headache, Liquid - Tablets 30 Salve - Nose minutes Drops Try “Rub-My-Tism*’-World’s Best Linement —-- ' — Vote For 1 Edwin C. Gregory l For State Senate July 4th. He has actively served Dem ! ocratic party JO years. ? Has never held public of fice. Has never been candidate for office. | Friends declare him ably qualified ftor Senate. In first primary June 6th he lead by 1,277 votes over a field of four aggressive can didates. His opponent forced this se cond primary. | Your vote in second primary 5 July 4th will be highly ap preciated. Thank you. Tomato Juice Gains Popularity as Food, Drink and Appetizer Vitamin Cantant Makaa Tamata Julea Valuabla Addltlen ta Brewing Chlldren’e Diat TOMATO Juice as a beverage to serve at every meal and at social gatherings has enjoyed a phenom enal rise in popularity during the past few years. Many people enjoy tomato Juice best as a “pick up” in the morning, although it finds equal favor with many, when served with sand wiches and salads, as it adds just the zest needed to complete a light, tasty repast. As a cocktail, either plain or with spices and condiments added, it makes an ideal before dinner drink to whet the appetite. It is always wise to have a bottle of tomato juice in the refrigerator, to serve as a beverage when un expected guests arrive, for an after noon of bridge, or in the evening when informal gatherings require refreshments. Tomato juice, used in connection with the baby’s food, under the direction of your doctor, is one of the finest adjuncts to baby’s diet. A bottle of tomato juice contains Vitamins A, B, and C, needed by children for growth and health. To mato juice brings Vitamin A. which helps build resistance to infection, and because of the proportions of natural sugars and acids, makes a refreshing drink. If you are accustomed to serving tomato juice with canapes when you entertain, you will wish to jot down some of the following combinations which make delicious spreads: Llverwursc mashed to s paste, sea soned with chill sauce. Cream cheese mixed with minced onion. Chicken or tuna fish blended with mayonnaise. Chopped olives blended with mayon naise. Deviled ham or deviled tongue. Chopped eggs seasoned with mustard and chill sauce. Peanut butter with lemon Juice. Peanut butter with chopped pickle. Peanut bnrfbr. chopped bacon, and lemon juice. Following is a list of suggested garnishments for your canapes: Finely chopped hard-cooked egg white. Tiny pearl onions. Slices of tomato, radish or pickle. Halves of salted almonds or pecans. Maraschino cherry circles. A new height of savoriness may be obtained when serving tomato juice by preparing either of the seasoned appetizers listed below. Tomato and Orango Cocktail 3 cups tomato juice % cup orange juice 1% tablespoons lemon Juice 1 Vi teaspoons sugar 2 teaspoons chopped onions A little salt, pepiier and paprika Combine the Ingredients: mix thor oughly and let stand in refrigerator for at least one hour. Then strain through colander and pour over crushed Ice in cocktail glasses. Appetizer Cocktail 1 onion, finely chopped cups tomato Juice Lemon Juice to taste Add one onion, finely chopped, to the tomato juice: chill thoroughly: strain through a colander: add lemon Juice to taste Just before serving. Records Help Growers Qualify For Payments Farmers participating in the new' farm program need to keep records of the soil-conserving crops they grow and the soil-building practices they carry out. The records will be a means of proving they are entitled to soil building payments, said Dean I. O. Schaub, lirector of the State Col lege extension service. He pointed out that it is parti cularly important that farmers keep records showing the acreage of green manure crops grown and the date they are turned under. They should also keep receipts showing purchases of ground lime stone or superphosphate applied tic the soil as a soil-building practice. As a further means of proof, the dean sugested that farmers notify their local committeemen, or theii county agent’s office, whenevei they carry out soil-building prac tices. The notification dees not have to be in writing, he continued. The important thing is to inform the committeemen. Then in checking up |on a grow er’s compliance, the committeemen will take note of the practices car ried out and give thef armer cre dit for them. Before a producer can qualify for the payments, the dean empha sized, he will be required to submit proof of the soil-building practices he has followed. This is why it is important to keep records, and notify the com mitteemen of all such practices observed with the new program. • Patronize Watchman Adver tisers. For Bad Feeling Due to Constipation 0*4 rid of constipation by taking Black-Draught as soon as you notice that bowel activity has slowed up or fou begin to feel sluggish. Thou nnds prefer Black-Draught for the refreshing relief it has brought them, tfra. Ray Mullins, of Lafe, Ark., mites: "My husband and I both take Xhedford's Black-Draught and find It splendid for constipation, bilious ness, and the disagreeable, aching, toed feeling that comes from this XMidltion.” With reference to Syrup it Black-Dra ught, which this mother fives her children, she says: “They like the taste and It gave such good results.” BLACK DRAUGHT LOANS Make use of 1; Our confidential service Negotiating loans for salaried people Easy re-payment plan "You are invited to call and inves tigate our proposition. C E. Allen & Co. SECOND FLOOR, WASHINGTON BUILDING I 120 North Main Street Phone No. 7 SALISBURY, N. C. DROPPED COLON BETTER THAN NONE A very much alarmed patient came to a great specilaist and said: "Doctor, I have a 'dropped colon,’ I now what’s the worst thing that may happen and when may I ex pect it?” "It has already happened, my dear,” said the doctor soberly; "it happened when the fool told you his diagnosis.” Among my present clientele there are no less than three elderly patients with dropped colons of twenty to thirty years standing. They are neither dying, nor "run ning into cancer,” as the esteemed charlatan would have them believe. The colbn has become the veritable gold mine for the medical impos tor, who will stave "cancer” off for you if you tickle his benevolent palm with a sufficiency of cash— in advance. You may h*ve a dropped colon, "ptosis” we call it. Stop worry ing. Treat yourself as if you didn't have it. If it causes no discomfort, let it alone. If it annoys you, take gentle laxatives and unload it, always gently. Try mineral oil every day until you get a satisfac tory effect. A well-fitting ad dominal supporter, not too tight, may help. You want support, not garroting. See that ytou maintain a regular diet, avoiding hard fried foods and heavily seeded berries, either in pies, preserves or jams. Seeds are bad for colons and so are skins of baked apples, cherries, plums. Swallow no skins if your colon gives distress. Sweet milk may clog the lazy canal. If it does, switch to butter milk. Whatever you do that is right, stick to it. You can’t put a dropped cplon back in place. Neither can the bl&tant quack, even if you paid him a hundred or five hundred dollars. And a drop ped colon is better than none. Be sensible. Good Pastures Needed In Livestock Growing Cattle get plenty of exercise but produce little meat and milk from worn out pastures, according to James M. Parks, agronomist of the Soil Conservation Service in North Carolina. Properly managed pastures con trol erosion on sloping fields and produce the cheapest of all livestock feeds. Overgrazed pastures are soon reduced to a play ground for hungry cows and mules, says Parks. Good permanent pastures prevent losses of topsoil and the formation of gullies. Together with trees they represent the only natural and income-producing means for pro tecting slopes too steep for the production of clean-cultivated crops. If you want to keep your pasture from becoming a livestock gym nasium and protect the soil from washing away, Parks suggests the application of these timely pasture hints: 1. No not graze heavily in dry seasons. 2. Mow the weeds and shrubs that rob moisture. 3. Let new seedings make a good top growth before grazing. 4. Plant temporary pastures of Sudan grass, soybeans, cowpeas, etc., to tide th<e livestock over the entire season. DISCOVERS PANTS ABLAZE Fitchburg, Mass.—When Roswall Swett, thirty-five, of Leominster, rushed into the Central Fire Station he just had to bring the fire with him—because it was the seat of his trousers that was burning. His trousers caught fire as he wtorked on a relief project in an adjacent building. Firemen extinguished the blaze before anything but the trousers was damaged. SKELETON WARNS Marysville, Cal.—A new use for skeletons is being tried out here. One, with a cigar in its jaws, and whiskey bottle at its side, seated on a demoslished automobile, is being used as a warning to speedy drivers at a dangerous curve on the Pacific Highway. PERMANENT WAVES $1.00 TO $8.00 EUGENE WAVES CROQUI GNOLE $2.50 SPIRAL $3.50 CAROLINA BEAUTY SHOPPE Chestnut Hill Phone 9120 WORK GUARANTEED Let Your Vote Be for a New Man 1 Experienced, Loyal and Courteous 4 FOR 1 Secretary of State | [x] THAD EURE A World War Veteran 1 A Democrat All the Way All the Time I This space paid for by friends and snpporters of Thad Sara || I Let Your PRINTING [ Typify Your Business What Do You Heed? Envelope* Statements Letterhead* Personal Stationery Circulars Ruled Forms Window Card* Invitation* Programs Booklets Stickers Office Form* • Distinctive printing serves as an in dex to the type and quality of bus iness you operate. For the past cen tury The Watchman Printshop has typified its job work with distinctive ness and it is our policy to have the proper equipment to handle your work in an efficient manner which re- i suits in a most moderate cost to you. In the furtherance of our service t<5 you we have recently acquired some new j and modern type faces and equip ment. When ordering printing from our plant you may depend that the work will be done to your complete satisfaction. Phone 133 and have our representative see you about your next printing order Watchman Printshop Printers Since 1832 119 E. Fisher St. Salisbury, N. C. Phone 133 » ■■■ ■■■■■ — ■■ '■ ■ - ■ - ' ■■■■■'■ — ■■ ..I
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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July 3, 1936, edition 1
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