^TjSuBSDAYrM^ 80, 1940
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eight-
TO''MwntIe« thooMnds who,
Ith the ottslaaght of yoars, IWe
mortal terror of high blood
I pjoeeare. here la an encouraging
'ewd. It Is not necessarily or Im
mediately dangerous. The trouble
Is, blood pressure has reached
the proportions of a phobia, and
this Is eren worse to lire with
than the disease Itself.
Maxine Davis, authoritative
uniter on medical subjects, states
the facts and flays the fiction a-
bout this vital subject In the June
Issue of Good Housekeeping Mag-
aslnp. One myth in particular
Miss Davis wants to straighten
oait. It’s the old horse and buggy
formula that your blood pressure
should ibe 100 plus your age.
"Bunk,” says this author. Blood
pressure varies greatly, depend
ing almost entirely upon the in
dividual and his physical and
nervous make-up. Weight, for In
stance, is a determining factor.
Thin people have blood pressure
10mm. lower than those of norm
al weight, while fat people aver
age about 13mm. higher than the
normal group.
Alarming as high blood press
ure may seem, it is important to
remember that this situation may
be only an indication of some
other disease, Miss Davis says.
Head injuries often cause it, and
tibjCle in the kidneys and en
docrine glands also bring it a-
bout. Once these have been prop-
erDw cared for, high blood pres-
saP^usually subsides.
Though a final cure has yet to
be discovered. Miss Davis says
that doctors can prescribe care
for those afflicted with the di
sease which will enable them to
live a perfectly normal life. This
care resolves itself very simply
into a matter of common sense.
Don’t strain yourself mentally or
physically. Excessive worry and
work are injurious to
health. Be careful, too.
At
v: rs-.-*
’•' 'Viigtnia-Field. Robert Taylof, Vivien Leigh in ** Waterloo, Bridge”
Boonvllle.—Cttliens of Boon-
vllle Tuesday voted nearly three
to one in favor of a propoaed bond
issue of (30,000 to construct a
water system and sewage dispos
al plant for the town.
The vote was 120 in favor of
the bond Issue and 61 against.
-Mayor Harvey Gentry issued a
statement after the votes had
«n tabulated expreaaiag grati
tude to the citizens (or favoring
the project.
Gentry said the project would
get under way as soon as men
can be secured to do the work.
He said the system would be con
structed as a WPA project with
Boonv41ie as the sponsor.
The WPA will provide (42,-
873 and Boonvllle (30,000. How
ever, Gentry pointed out - that
bonds will be Issued as funds are
needed. He said that in the event
the project cost Boonvllle less
than the $30,000 approved, only
the amount necessary will be fi
nanced through a -bond issue. The
entire project is estimated to cost
$70,138.
The plans call for a complete
' To >EiuieHi
r-.-i ' ■ • :
An ^old-Utts -foraga crop, red
clover, may toon find favor with
EMMarn North Carolina farmers,
says E. G. Blair, agronoositt of
the N. C. State College Extension
Service.
AUhoogh a standard crop in
the moantain counties, red clever
was tjionght to ibo unadapted to
the part of the State east of Ra
leigh. However, J. B. Patrick of
Beanfort County has exploded
that-belief.
In the fall of 1938, Mr. Patrick
prepared a seed bed on one acre
of wood land and applied Ume
and fertilizer according to the
directions of Farm Agent W. L.
MoGahey. Then he sowed a mix
ture of red clover and oats.
This mixture produced a good
crop of hay In June, 1939. Al
though that was the last of the
oats, the red clover lived on and
made another crop in August.
Blair said Mr. Patrick allowed
this crop to ripen seed before he
harvested it. Before feeding the
hav to livestock, he used a pltch-
year... _
Mdam^e, tha original aera 41
ted clover Hved on, and in MaMh
of thla year, it waa topdresaaE-fr
with stable manare. During ttaa"^
middle of May. Mr, Patrick eat
two tena of axeellcnt bay from
thte acre. Blace removing the bax, ' -
ha has top^raeaed the field agata,' . ti
-this time using hog lot mannro.
He expects to get more cuttlaga
of-hay from the field thla year,
"According to' this experience,*’
Blair stated, ‘Ted clover can be
made a good - sideline bay ahS
grazing «rep I» Eastern Noc&
Carolina. It reoulree a fertile soil,
which muat.ala© be fairly heat?
but ..well-drained. Lime In mo^
cases and always liberal applica
tions of phosphate and potash ass
required.”
MHOinJt PAY MORE
Janey: Mother, did you buy me
from the stork?
Mother: Yes, dear, why do yoa
srIc ?
Janey: I’ve often wondered
why you didn’t pay a few more
doUars and pick out a baby with
out freckles.
Eighty-five per cent of la*
year’s traffic fatalities occurred
in clear weather.
Longer Life For
Many Fence Posts
you eat. Don’t overdo it. Rest and
relaxation are strongly advised
wherever possible. And above all,
consult your physician regularly
for a thorough examination.
Fence pos’s are an important
use for wood on the farm, hut one
does not realize that by far ihe
greatest use of all wood in con
tact with the ground is for this
purpose, says the U. S. Forest
Products Laboratory, Madison,
Wisconsin.
Cheap and effective presert-u-
tive treatment- now ma'-ie it pos
sible for the farmer to use kinds
of wood for posts that were for-
anyone’s )merly regarded as worthless, the
of what (Forest Products Laboratory
posts, or three to nearly five
fence posts per capita of popula
tion. This enormous consumption
will, however, undotubtedly de
crease as- old posts are replaced
with new ones treated with pre-
! servatives, a number of which
are cheap and the processes are
such that the farmer can easily
use to protect posts that he ca.n
cut from his woodland.
Infertile Eggs Keep
Best In Summertime
points out.
One of the simple treatments
is the tire-nihe method, In this
treatment a section of a discard
ed auto lire tr-he is stretched over
the butt end of the pest that has
I i,pp„ the hutt end
Questions
.\nswered By-
State College
Question: When should culling
be started in the poultry flock?
.\nswer: When best results are
secured culling i.s almost a con
tinuous process for ihe eiilirc
flock hut wi;h l.-'.y'':i.-: in'-s -.he
ti;i'.e for the most rlg’d c’lll'ng is
toward the mi.! .jf lii- l.-iyimv u--r-
icd. This u-mally occurs from July
until Novem-ber. The v.ise p.)',’.!-
tryniaii will bigiii ;■) checl: liis
liens ill aLiv aii-i .i. -ie for sign.,
of molt as imniy h';is go iiilu :i
molt as early as July.
The earlier ilio mr.ii I'.ie nu'.re
ri.eid the ceiling ami Miose i-ir.l .
ths^" ) into a mtiuit In June ii'-l
July .should ’ e ren
flock.
Get rid of. or pen up the roost
ers and produce only infertile
eggs, says C. F. Parrish, head of
the Poultry Extension Office at
N. C. State College, in his sugges
tions to poultry-raisers for the
month of May.
“The male hirds are of no use
in the flock after hatching is
completed, so sell them, eat them,
or at least seperafe them from
higlier than the other end. The i the liens,” the specialist said,
tube is then filled with a solution I He pointed out that infertile
of zinc chloride and this soaks ! eggs keep much better than fer-
throiigh the sap’vood. This chemi-1 tile eggs in the summertime. Ga-
cal will give a fence post that i ther the eggs often in -wire has-
wil! last three to four times as i ketSa-especialiy lo-^he broody hen
Ion? as the ini'renttd one. .season, and this will help to cool
The hro.id hc.nring surfaces of the eggs quickly. The eggs should
iwoodeit pu.s! nirainst the earth ini
which they are set and .h''
strelie'h of ll'.e re-“. i’.s»'’f ill'-' iu-
;lierv: ' ;;i-s in c - vM-
i;.'. The eii.-c with which nails
can ne •ir:-;- n ;v ; ■■
fi-iec erection a si;ii;ii.' i.-ru.''--
adii;-'ted to ordinary tonl.s and
ill. ‘ .p-'U,'!-;)! .-ui.a'iiluy of
for ti.se ill new
I'liient is esti-
1“ left in the wire baskets over
night, before pnekiug in cartons
y cases for mavkei'ng. I
Continuing ! i adc’-'g Parrish i
said: “If a cool moi-t r-anni i.- nut
civanaiilo for Iiolding the eggs
until marketing time, construct ;
all eg.g coaling rack, it i'i,r.s:s'-s j
if a irai.iework covered with bar-'
lap on one or more wi h |
..■ov.-ion being made tor a water,
pan or can on toi;- in km p 'he ■
biirlan cnrlain sa: m ated vith ,
water. The evaporation keeps the ^
ttention—and results! mm
from i'in lo f’OO miHioii I
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jQPeflme
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An
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MU
Carter-Hubbard Publishing Co.
North Wilkezboro, N. C.
I NOTICE
j By virtue of an Order of the Su-
I pcrior Court of .Wilkes County,
I >5 gneJ liy the Clerk thereof on the
i 17th day of May 1940, in the
1 Special Proceediiig entitled Mrs.i
I Lizzie Dotson, Admr., and as Wid
ow of ‘Wik-y Dotson, deceased,
against Henry: Dotson, Sr., and!
others, heirs at law and next of kin ‘
of Wilev Dotson, deceased, appoint- j
ii'g the rndersighed Commissioner
to se'l ‘he lands described in the
Petition, situated in Wilkes and
Alexander Counties for the pur
pose of making assets with which
to pay debts, and for partition of
the remainder, the undersigned
Commissioner will on Saturday,
June 29th, 1940, at 11:30 o’clock
A. M. at the Court House door in
the Town of Wilkesboro, N. C. sell
to the highest bidder at public
auction for cash all the interests
Wiley Dotson, decease], o-wned at
the time of his death in the follow-,
ing described lands:
J ivring and being in the County of
Wilkes on ,the waters of Hunting
Creek, adjoining the lands of
Jesse Dotson, Mary Transou and
M. B. Transou on the West; on the
South by Magdeline Ho-well, and
A. Howell; on the Itorth and East
by Nathan Parker Heirs: on the
West by Zeno Baity, and others,
and bounded as follows:
Beginning on Jesse Dotson’s
Northeast comer, and running
E^st 70 poles; thence South 69
poles to Parker’s line; thence
West on said line 20 poles; thence
South on Parker’s West line 80
poles to the Salisbury Road;
thence West on said road to Jesse
'Dotson’s line; thence North 100
pedes on said line to the -beginning.
Containing 46 acres more or less.
This the 28th day of May,
CHAS. G.
Commissioner
6-20-it (t)
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The Morrison is sold in the exclusive gift shop^ in New York City, where it
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yioa Should Act Now! Get This Pen
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JOURNAL-PATRIOT
Bndosed Had I for which kindly pay my
subscription for one year to The Journal-Patriot. I
enclose cents postage for which please send
my Morrison pen in (Men’s) or (Wo
men’s) st^, to me to
NAME
Cirr and STATE
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The Journal-Patriot