Newspapers / State Port Pilot (Southport, … / June 8, 1938, edition 1 / Page 6
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I PAGE SIX Expert Answers Expert Answer! Farm Questions Farm Questie Culling Poultry Laying Advice On Well-Plan Flocks; Planting Tobacco Home Wiring Syst Plants; Seeding Fall Gar- Fertilizer On Pastu den I Farm And Home Wei Q: When should the poultry' Q: What are the requires laying flock be culled? of a well-planned home w A: This, of curse, depends up- system? on laying conditions and the per- A:Those farm families ha iod of molt. The flock should power lines run into their hi be watched carefully during the! for the first time should 1 early summer and when produc- j that the wiring system proi tion falls below thirty per cent for comfortable lighting, con it is time to start culling. The | iently iocated switches, an earlier the molt, the more rigid i sufficient number of well-pl the culling. The bird that has j service outlets adequately v been properly fed and goes into j and correctly fused. Exter a molt in June, July, or even j Circular No. 213, "Wiring August should be removed from ! Lighting the Farm Home , the flock. The price of feed, the j be obtained free from the ^ feed cost per dozen eggs, and | cultural Editor at State Col the price that eggs are bringing j Q: What is the effect of Should also be considered when | tilization on pastures? culling. | A: An occasional applies Q: Should tobacco plant beds of lime, phosphate, and po be plowed up after the plants! to the pasture will encourage are pulled ? growth of the most desirable ? tii? i?I- i tore nlants such as white cl A: By an means. mc ucuo , ? < should be plowed and all remain-1 and blue grass. These plants ing plants killed as these plants long the grazing period by furnish breeding places for ducing both early and late g thousands of insects that spread ing. As they or other good to the tobacco in the field and J ture plants increase in nun cause serious damage to the J the less desirable ones will growing weed. Then, too, failure j crowded out. Eventually this to plow the bed may result in a 1 treatment will result in the serious outbreak of blue mold duction of an abundant succi - next year. The bed should be pasture growth which has a n I I seeded to sweet potatoes or some j higher mineral and protein other garden vegetable immedi- tent than is found in ordii ately after plowing. I pasture plants. Q: When is the best time for Q: When will Farm and H seeding the fall garden? Week be held this summer? A: This depends upon the A: This annual convention hardiness of the different vege-1 farmers and farm women tables and upon the time re-1 take place at State College i quired for maturity. Tender vege-!ust 1-5. Extension Service tables should be planted in time cials are now making plans to produce a crop before killing produce a meeting that is frosts occur. Many of the cool-! educational and entertair season crops will mature through Tours of Raleigh, Duke Uni light frosts, but most of them s'ty, and the University of N should be planted in time to Carolina will be available reach maturity before the heavy j those attending. In addition, t frosts. A table giving planting will be motion pictures, g dates for seasonal vegetables is singing, recreation, and other given in Extension Circular 122 tertainment. Special classes and this may be obtained free j various farm and home sub. upon application to the Agricul-1 will be taught by State Coi tural Editor at State College. specialists. ThanksI I wish to express my sincere thanks to the voters of Brunswick county for the splendid vote accorded me in the primary, Saturday, June 4th. Dillon L. Ganey To the Voters of Brunswick County I wish to express my appreciation to the voters of Brunswick county for their splendid support in the recent primary. I shall endeavor to render the best service of which I am capable for the betterment of the schools Iand advancement of education in Brunswick county. G. T. Reid IMY APPRECIATION It will be quite a long time before I can meet my friends and supporters in person, and I am, therefore, expressing to them by publication, my deep appreciation of the loyal support of my candidacy for the House of Representatives. I know I had sufficient support to nominate me, up until after noon on primary day. I know, too, what took the support away from me. I am not stating herein the things I know. I am leaving the case in the hands of the people of Brunswick county. My pride is wounded, my disappointment over the unfair practices of some of my enemies is great, and my contempt for a few of them knows no bounds, but my loyalty to the great Democratic Party is unshaken, and I shall continue to go down the line for the party just as I have been doing for the last 42 years. Trusting that I may be of service to the people of Brunswick county as a private in the party, and again expressing my deep appreciation of the support of my friends, I am, most sincerely yours. ! * j R. E. SENTELLE. 1 5 Here's Way To |l ms Save Dead Trees i ned Contrary To General Belief, ! em; Dead Trees Often Contain res; Valuable Timber Of Cut ik And Sawed In Time ients I Woodland owners frequently I Iring I have had large trees killed by in- j t 'sects, blight, wind, or fire. Inj{ ving some parts of the United States imes 1 it is thought that timber cut Ic see from such trees is unsatisfactory { /ides f01. construction purposes. Engi-'s iven-1 neers at the U. S. Forest Pro- g j a j ducts Laboratory, Madison, Wis., s aced state that when sound dead trees . ,'ired!are sawed into lumber and the c ision j weathered or charred outside is anc] cut away, there is no way by o may j which the lumber from these trees i igri- can be distinguished from h lege, j that cut from live trees. Lum- j c fer. j ber from dead trees may, how- i f I ever, be partly seasoned when 1 ition j cut- o tash I tf a tree stands on the stump I ii the ! too long after it is killed, the f pas-1 sapwood is likely to become de- t over' cayed or badly infested by wood- a pro-! boring insects; and in time the h pro- heartwood will become damaged.'t raz- iThe same thing is true of logs e na c. I cut from live trees and no^ given J iber ProPer care. Until the wood is / be attacked by these destructive ii soil agents, the wood from dead trees o pro_ is just as strong and just as dur- c dent I a^'e as sound wood from the a luch i same kind of live trees. b con-1 ^ should be remembered that t' iary J the heartwood of a living tree is J | dead, and only a small portion of; i: ome' ce"s the sapwood is active, p I therefore, most of the wood cut | ii for, from trees is dead, regardless of p will! wf,ether the tree itself is living [ t VUfr_ I or dead. c 0ffi_ Because of variations in climate . to and local weather conditions and y both in other things that affect deteri- 4 ling orat'on, the length of time during c ver_ | which dead trees may stand or b orbh lie in the woods without serious t to injury varies. Tests made at the v bere Forest Products Laborartory on ], roup wood from trees that had stood 0 en_ as long as 15 years after being jn killed by fire showed that this t jects wood was sound and as strong as j, liege wood from live trees. Also logs { from some of the more durable [ s species have had thoroughly s ? sound heartwood after lying on a ? the ground "in the woods for . j several years. The important con- 1 ! sideration is not whether thej 1 trees from which the lumber is t | sawed are live or dead, but whet- J I ===== I A, "T PRIZE my Superfcx above a J. our home." That's what usei wonder. We are enthusiastic ab< etators, too, and so will you bi what one will do in your kitchi you live far from town, when refrigeration is much greater thai with food markets just aroui Cheapest to R No matter where you live, J modern convenience you can ANYWHERE and it costs lcs any other refrigerator we ever 1 no continuous flame. The burn work in about two hours and t t matically. And the kerosene ft costs only about $10?less than Superfex is made by the Perfeci pany, and we know what that does everybody who has ever i j oil stoves they've been making _ J years. They began making these ^Hyears ago, and when we fount of them have been in use rig! we figured that they must be j McGOUGAN h . W. F. COX FU CHADBOURN ELLIS MEARE ^j| "HE STATE PORT PILOT, S Quality Hay Is I Better As Feed Says Good Hay Should Be J Leafy, Small - Stemmed, Free From Weeds And 1 Have Green Color Thick - stemmed hay cut at | he wrong time, improperly cur- j i id, and filled with weeds has i lomparatively little feed value. i A good hay should be leafy, < mall-stemmend, free from weeds, 11 ind have a good green color, j laid John A. Arey, extension < lairy specialist at State College. J Many flowers make the mistake 1 if waiting too late to cut their t lay. The result is that the plants f lave thick stems with much L irude fiber and a smaller prolortion of leaves. Rapid curing is desirrable. Cut nly in dry weather, rake the hay s nto windows and let it cure be- 1 \ ore placing it in the barn. If ^ he windrows are turned over bout three hours before the ( lay is to be hauled to the barn, I he curing process will be speed- j d up. U Over-curing damages the hay. ind if under-cured hay is stored I n the barn, it will generate en- jc ugh heat to fade out the green ; a olor, lower the vitamin content, t nd become moldy. Green hay has ? een known to set barns on fire ;t h rough spontaneous combustion. |" When soybean and cowpea hay 3 being cured in the fall. Arey J ointed out, it is advisable to cure . t in small stacks placed on tri- ' ods. The stacks should not con- (^ ain more than 200 pounds of I ured hay. The best time to cut alfalfa is /hen the crop is from 1-10 to 1in bloom; lespedeza when the j 1 rop is about *iin bloom; soy- ' eans when the seed just begins j1 o form in the pods; cowpeas i' /hen the first pods begin to yel- ! 1 5w; small grains when it bloom j ' r the early milk stage. Grasses such as timothy, red ' op, and orchard should be cut 1 a the early bloom stage, because I' he protein moves toward the 1 eed as the plants mature, the 1 terns become coarse and woody, j nd the leaves begin to drop off. j j ler the products themselves are 1 Tee from decay or other defects j ] hat would make them unsuitable j' Tor use. 11 I"' nything else in rs say. And no j|?yM riut these refrig- \ e when you see \ ?n, especially if s the need for I n in city homes, id the corner. g5i V un free from trouble, iuperfex is one wonderful refrigera have. It works connections and n s to run it than get out of order. ( eard of. There's Ho> ersdo24houV' [ Think of these ath hen go out auto- j tQ markcts> bet?cr >r a whole year , stepS jaily, no wi $1.00 a month. ^ co]d and fresh for tion Stove Com- V frozen desserts. Su means, and so 3.' pays for its keep, used any of the ' J"' I for almost ^50 . it at the equator bu pretty good and :legtrig co., . rniture go hardware co. ... s hardware go. > E a f EC j I O N S T < O'JTHPORT, N. C. Poultry Growers Have Worries Egg Production Decreased By Lice, Red Mites, Etc., In Poultry Flock Says Expert Lice, red mites, and tropical I nites lower the vitality of lay-1 ng birds and decrease eggs pro- i luction in poultry flocks, warns 1 F. Parrish, extension poultry specialist at State College. When lice are found on the bo- . lies of he birds, the parasites! nay be eradicated by dusting | vith sodium fluoride. Pinches of' lust should be applied to the vent j luff, on the back near the oil j flands, under each wing, and on ' ;he neck. Or the birds may be dipped in | slightly warm water to which has J seen added an ounce of sodium' luoride for each gallon of water. | Dr nicotine sulphate may be apdied to the perch poles. Red mites stay in the poultry I louse. At night they crawl up on I he birds and such blood. To era- [ iicate mites, treat the perch poles ind pole supports with used moor oil to which has been added ine-third or more Kerosene. Gas ar or creosote may be used in ilace of the motor oil and keroene mixture. anrl Ronuhlican ?tm?v.u..v r- | /oters Nominate Ticket In 'rimary Election Saturday (Continued from page one) Dillon L. Ganey had 61 more, rates than did Jasper Russ for he sheriff's nomination, but iVrent Mintz, the third candidate, j lad 255 votes and there is the | possibility of a second primary -ace. Ganey had 1,097 votes; Russ 1,036. John G. Caison scored a clean) :ut victory over his two oppon;nts for the coroner's nomina:ion. Caison had 1,204 votes; J Northrop 656; Long 410. Oliver Lewis led the race for lomination as member of the j ooard of county commissioners j ivith 1,250 votes. J. M. Roach.1 present chairman of the board, vas second with 969 while J. Roland Mintz had 930. S. C. j B i&, f I And that's a fact, they're tors. They have no ou'side o moving parts to wear or^ n It Saves ... 'antages?not so many trips meals, saves thousands of isted left-overs, meats kept days, ice cubes and delicious perfex is a convenience that ft 40NMIK* -v? t send us a postcard or telepboni We uill be glad to girt yon demonstration in your kitchen. RNERS DO 24 HOURS' WORK IN 2 HOURS Tahor City Tabor City I Chadbourn Fair Bluff ma rSVVTSTpa 0 V E COUfAHV rrniMifiT.! Tripp, who polled 862 votes, was | R fourth and has the right to enter, of the second primary, if one is called. Fifth man was San; J. Frink, V> member of the present board, with 825. Others were R. Will Davis 734; Chad wick 591; S. C. Gore 367. Members of the county board of education had little trobule I securing their renomination in the preferential vote. R. I. Phelps led the way with 1,461 votes, R. T. Woodside was next with 1,371 and Gilbert T. Reid had 1,364. Unsuccessful candidates were Don Harrelson 956 and O. P. Bellamy 776. For the first time in recent years the Republican named their x ticket in a primary election. Race for member of the House of Representatives was closest, with Chas. M. Trott nosing out Dan R. Johnson 512 to 505. F. L. Lewi3 led his party ticket with 849 votes for the sheriff's nomination over William Matthews with 95 and R. J. Sommersett with 93 votes. There is the possibility of a run-over race for the Republican nomination for Judge of Recorder's court. Martin Robbins had a plurality with 494 votes, Herbert Potter was second with 305 and Herbert A. Mintz was third with 220 votes. Race for the party nomination for county commissioner found G. W. Sellers leading the way with 628 votes; second was W. McKinley Hewett 784, while the third high man was Frank D. Inman 465. Other candidates and their vote were Frank M. Hi Norris 425: B. Garfield Simmons ar 319; W. E. Lewis 270; C. H. se Gray 86; H. M. Long 68. M SOUTHPORT TEAM LOSES TWO GAMES (Continued from page 1) of 11 to 9. Spencer was on the cli mound for the home team, with Harrell opposing for the visitors. _ Two games will be booked for 1 this week. Watha will be played iK there Thursday, and an attempt ig is being made to land a game here Saturday afternoon with ^ Acme-Delco. M M SHORT SESSION ;> IN COUNTY COURT t (Continued from page one) ^ Sump Brown and Dinah Bnrown colored, were found guilty of tres- Jjjj pass, but gave notice of appeal. ^ Bonnie Templeton, white, was ^ charged with operating a motor M, vehicle while under the influence Jp of intoxicating liquor. He was called and failed to appear, and ^ capias was issued for him. M: M RONE H. LEWIS, DIED ON FRIDAY f (Continued from page 1) ^ of the American Legion, the Whiteville Tobacco Board of Jj< Trade, and the Whiteville Merchants Association. He is survived by his widow, jjp who was Miss Margaret Crowell, of Whiteville, and three sons: Rone Howell. Jr., William Herbert, and Julian Douglas Lewis, A II, all of Whiteville. The following brothers and sisters also si r- c= vive: Mrs. William H. Richard- T:| son, of Raleigh; Mrs. A. W. M Palmer, and Mrs. R. E. Carrington, Jr.. of Sanford, Julian D. Lewis, attorney of Whiteville, B. $ Gordon Lewis, editor of the News pJrejg^jaaigrejararejEJsrajBjajaraia | NOTK | The Brunswu Review will meet jjj days for the purp | year 1938. North West and ' Monday, Junt Smithville and L< 3 Wednesday, J Sliallottc and Wat Friday, June S The board shall, o g or control property as: 5 the valuation of such jjj rect errors in the narr but shall not increase g property, except whei s been sub-divided, or w g been added or remov circumstance has affec 1 Willi, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8 K eporter, and Miss Etta Lewis, [ race Russ led Ganey spT/H ' Greensboro. i The latter called for a seCOr/^E Interment was made in the mary, but again was BE Tiiteville cemetery. L044 to 902. W ? W. M. Stanaland says :hiE? I ITTI C DITC wU1 not request a LI 11LL Dl 1 j mary ,race f?r thc r?,? nomination unless Ru?s i'^H nr Dir newq ?ne in the sherifrsH Ur DlU IlLYV U In the event one is callM (Continued from page 1) JnJ/JPPfJ?T * ferent capacities, were eulogiz- . th 'oUn(1 -ViHj ed in fine tribute by former Place on tte "ck,et ?s Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus, 1 aloner s candld<>te and h?H president of the general alum- ? Ticket strain "n,.ttlp ni association, who presided, Rnhhin<! Samst .flK and by President Frank P. B' Robblns j Graham> REYNOLDS AND If I other Love (continual *1 1,600 of the state's 1 .flip I $ Two broken wrists didn t Cincts, Reynolds had 272 i\y prevent Mrs. H. L. Morgan of lots agajnst 180,111 for"Hj^K Canton from seeing her son The contest developed graduate from N. C. State col- jor issues of policy how lege. Mrs. Morgan fell down senator, now completing h"'<H a flight of stairs at the college fuli tern1i and the repiesenJB| a few hours before the com- Both ran as SUppOIters mencement exercises Tuesday. Roosevelt administration. "H She was treated at the college I >] infirmary for two broken Eelect Officers Of LouR.2 wrists. She insisted on seeing j American Legion AuxiljB' her son graduate, however, and j < Continued from page ij^Ej was driven to Riddick stadium [ chairman of child welfar, Hj in an automobile, from which j habilitation, hospital and she witnessed the commence-, Mrs. R. C. St. George. ment program. H. L. Morgan, ! saries chairman: national Jr., received a bachelor of chairman, Mrs Wavne~b* science degree. | Mrs Yaake? poppv "iMDrTiTinM |U Mrs, Josephine Marshall.* DMPETITION IN munity service chairman y?^B SOUTHPORT BABV j. Loughlin, membership tj1! SHOW IS STRONG man; Mrs. Edna Bell. Continuea from Page 1) chairman; Mrs. J. E. Carr erbert Oberjohann son of Mr. lative chairman: Mrs. C. CjBo id Mrs. H. H. Oberjohann, won national defense chairman ] a cond prize in this division. ] Ed Daniels, education <,< 1 r | orphans chairman. * ay Hold Second Primary In her report made ttBi To Nominate Candidates "tate headquarters. Mrs. (Continued from page 1) j record showed $1.1.05 pair; the official canvass to de- 'Cations during the year ire his intention. tions from both the Statt^H Two years ago in a four-maif National Departments. e There is no Dull Season I In Farm Needs I And we are prepared to sell you what I 3 you want at the lowest possible price in keep- flj? iiijjr with higrh quality merchandise. Remember, fl it is poor economy to slow up efficiency by try- B ing to do without things you need. | \ 1 j Shallotte Trading Co. I h ,1 Hobson Kirby, Prop. | SHALLOTTE, N. C. 9 :E! NOTICE!! I :k County Board of Equalization ami 1 in the court house on the following m ose of reviewing the tax lists for the j| Town Creek Townships:? I ; 13th, 9:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. Jj ?ol.'tj;AA/le Knllir Tnurncliinc* 'IS IVIWVUUUC1 J \Jliy M. \J ? I Itllll yj *-> M 'une 15th, 9:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. II :camaw Townships:? Jffl 17th, 9:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. ja m request, hear any and all taxpayers who own H sessed for taxation in the county in respect to f| property or the property of others?shall cor- <Jg les of persons, in the description of property: jH or reduce the assessed valuation of any t'ea' |8 re errors have occurred, where property has w rhere something of value of $100 or more has ed from same, or where some extraordinary Jif ted same. ? am Jorgenson I AX SUPERVISOR T I
State Port Pilot (Southport, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 8, 1938, edition 1
6
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