Jml News And Views Of Interest To Randolph Farmers Extension Dept. —Conducted by— E. S. MILLS APS, JR. County Agent Poultry Sale There will be a poultry sale held at the creamery grounds in Asheboro, next Wednesday, October 24th. Time 8:00 a. m. to 2:00 p. m. Prices as follows: Heavy Hens . 13c Leghorn hens . Hc Chicks, 1 1-2 to 2 1-2 lbs. 15c Stags . !9C Old Toms . l°c ■Roosters . ®c Turkeys . l'c These prices are a little better than thev were in our last sale. 1 do not know what the market is going to do, but 1 expect that you had better move all old hens that have gone out of lay, that you do not plan to carry over as breeders. You will notice that the weights on chicks run from 1 1-2 to 2 1-2 lbs. This means for young chicks and not old chicks that have been stunt ed that are still light in weight In other words it means chicks that still have a soft breast bone. Stags means young roosters between the chick age and roosters, or before their spurs start. Treat Seed Wheat Before seeding your wheat this fall, be sure to treat it for smut. The cost of this treatment is very small in comparison with the risk you run in seeding wheat without it. The most approved method of treat ing is the copper carbonate dust, at the rate of 2 ounces of the dust to each bushel of wheat. The best way to dust the wheat is to make a hole in each end of a barrel and run a pole through it. Then, cut n door in the side for putting in the wheat. You can then put a ham he on the pole like a well windle-s or rotate it by hand. The rotation should he thorough in order to be sure that all grams come in contact with the dust. While going through the treatment, place a rag over the mouth ami no.-e to prevent breath ing the dust, as it is very nauseat ing, if it is inhaled. Be sure not to treat more wheat than you will plant, as the treated seed is not fit for flour or for feeding purpo ses. This treatment, however, stim ulates germination, while some of the other treatments retard germi nation. I'se Pure Seed Wheat yields are low enough at best, so be sure to use the very best seed that you can get. There are several men in the county that have pure strain wheat of high pro ducing varieties. Kedheart' and Leaps Prolific are the two varieties in the county that have been certified. This gives you the assurance of getting a pure stfain of wheat and also wheat of known germination as all certified seed carries the germina tion on the bag. If you do not know who has this wheat, if you will get in touch with me 1 will be g!i i to give you the names of parties hav ing such wheat. 1 would like to say this in regard to the Redheart wheat. It is one of the best yielding varieties that I know, having produced as high as 45 to 50 bushels per acre here in the county on actual test. Also, it is a very hard grained wheat and for that reason is in demand at all mills, as it will produce more flour per bushel. Growing Mushrooms For Use In Home ">• Is Very Profitable Mushroom growing offers the home grower an opportunity to supply his table with fresh delicacies in winter. By spending a little time and care, the gardner can provide his table with mushrooms in January, Febru ary and March, says Dr. W. C. Coker, professor of botany at the Chapel Hill unit of the University of North Carolina. Mushrooms grow best in cellars or basements where the temperature does not go below 55 or above 65 de grees. Stables which are protected from the weather are suitable, Dr. Coker says. Horse manure from well-bedded stables makes the best soil for grow ing mushrooms. The manure may be spread in beds about a foot thick. Fifteen-inch boards stood on edge will serve to box the bed in. If desired, beds may be made and plac ed in tiers one above the other, with 20 to 24 inches clearance between each bed. The manure should be cured by placing it in piles three or four feet deep, covering it with cloth, and al lowing it to ferment. The manure usually requires about 15 days to cure. To prevent overheating while fermenting, it should be forked over every day or two and made into a new pile. After curing, it is ready for the bed. Cultivated mushroom spawn for pldhting may be obtained from seed dealers in the form of dried manure bricks. Break the bricks into pieces about two inches in diameter and plant eight to ten inches apart and two inches deep. After packing the manure firmly, cover the bed with straw. A week later, remove the straw and cover the bed with an Ihch of loamy soil. The beds should be sprinkled with water occasionally, but not enough to wet them. The mushrooms ere ready to pick when the gills beneath the umbrella portion are a bright pink color! They remain good until the gills are dark brown or even black, provided they Randolph Likely To Have A Cooperative Exchange All I know is by word of mouth, but it is voluminously rumored (and with some degree of authority) that Randolph is likely to be favored with a cooperative exchange, located in the fair city of Asheboro. The object of this exchange is cooperative buying and selling: the only sensible system of marketing for the farmer. By this method we can have the advantage of buying in larger quantities—lower prices; and cooperative selling—elimi j nating the enormous profit in vogue of the middle man or men as the j I case may be. It narrows itself down j ! to this: the farmer pays out less I money; receives more for what he ' sells, giving a greater net income. Of course this evokes multitudinous questions. Would such a system be a success? Turn such a proposition over in your own minds. The rea sonableness of it is evidence of its success. This is far from a now idea. It has been tested many years in many counties in many states and has been found to be very successful. 1 am for it—“teeth and toenail.'’ Yet this should be said: The cus eess of any organization is largely dependent on its leader, and the i leader is the one who should be j chosen with much cure. Who would own this exchange? : The farmers of Randolph county, by ' purchasing shares of small denomi | nations. It is ours and we will not j only have the advantage of collective buying and selling, but will receive j at the end of each year (after the cost of operating such an organiza tion has been extracted) a dividend j worked out on a percentage basis based on the amount we have bought | and sold, this dividend known as a patronage rebate. May Secure Food From Oct. Garden Says E. B. Morrow A number of vegetables can be planted in October and cultivated; through the winter so as to keep the family supplied with fresh green food at all times. Kale, mustard, spinach, turnips,! collards, and onions are some of the old stand-bys, says E. B. Morrow, extension horticulturist at State Col lege. Kale gives a change from collards and turnip greens, he said, and spin ach can also be grown more exten sively than it has been in the past. He recommended Curled Scotch Kale, Southern Curled Mustard for their attractive appearance and edibility, although they are not quite so hardy as some of the other types. The storage of vegetables for win ter use is also important, Morrow said. Sweet potatoes and pumpkins keep best in a moderately dry place at a temperature of about 50 de grees. These conditions are best sup plied in a sweet potato storage and curing house. The potatoes must be j lug before frost and handled careful- ; ly to avoid bruises if they keep well. Cabbages, celery, beets, carrots, parsnips, turnips and Irish potatoes j keep best at cool temperatures and in j a moderately moist atmosphere. Pitts, hills and cellars afford good places to keep these crops, Morrow pointed out. Onions and other bulbous crops keep best in cool temperatures and ! a relatively dry atmosphere. Onions i keep best when stored in slatted crates in order to provide for better j ventilation. The temperature should ! be kept just above freezing when | possible, but never allowed to go below. “Good Old Days” Are Reviewed By A&P Anniversary Kitchen Article Contrasts Modern Meth ods Of Culinary Art With Those Of Grandmother A housewives’ revolution would be caused by a return to the good old days, declares the A&P Kitchen, re viewing those “good old days” on the occasion of the seventy-fifth an niversary of The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, celebrated dur ing the month of October. Throwing the spotlight of interest on the pro gress in feeding a nation during the last seventy-five years, the A&P Kitchen found these to be some of the difficulties our grandmothers had to face in feeding their families. If grandmother wanted to be sure of serving grandfather a steaming hot cup of freshly roasted coffee for breakfast in the 1850's and 1860’s, she had to roast it and grind it her self. That’s what everyone had to do then. For breakfast cereals all grand mother had to do was to buy a basket of wheat, cook a quart or so on the back of the stove for two days until it was soft enough to chew. In those days, away from the sea coast the only seafood obtainable was salted. It came in two forms, dried salt fish and pickled salt fish. The dried salt fish were just dandy if you had enough time to soak them for a day, and if you had enough time to change the water often. Soap was not something that grandmother could just order a dozen bars of at the local store. She saved her wood ashes and grease drippings for months and rendered them into a soft jelly-like mass then known as soap. Flavoring extracts did not come in neat bottles in the 1860’s. Grand mother had to buy a vanilla bean, or carefully save her orange and lemon peel for months and soak them in brandy, and in the short In other words we sell them our exchange our produce receiving the market price on date of sale; also, pay market price for our produce when we purchase same. At the end of each year when all has been checked up, expenses paid, the pro fits will be divided with each one who has bought and sold them the organization. Everyone knows there are profits to be had out of such operations. Otherwise there would be no merchants, nor other middle men who go over the county buying from the farmer; taking his profit; selling such goods to merchants who take their profits before handing it out to the consumer. We have en tirely too many human parasites who accumulate fortunes because they are allowed to pay the price they desire to the farmer for his produce; then charge the price they desire to the consumer when the latter makes his purchase. In other words they have the “Bull by the horns,’- and this particular bull has horns at both ends. Whether or not this rumor I men tioned in the outset becomes a reality, certainly we farmers should get to gether and organize a system of co operative marketing and selling. There is nothing we need more. It wdll not only benefit the farmer him self, but will also benefit the con sumer as well—giving the farmer more money for his produce and the latter more produce for his money. At a later date when I have more facts at hand I will go more fully into this proposition. In the mean time, think it over. Most of all think seriously of the one who would be chosen to head such a movement. -^T. M. CAXOY. time of a month she had vanilla ex tract or orange or lemon extract. ! Hominy was another favorite of [late 18(i0's. For hominy a bottle of strong lye was kept on the pantry shelf. This bottle of lye, plus an iron kettle full of water, plus some shelled corn, plus a clay’s soaking, plus repeated washings, plus cooking, produced hominy. Simple, wasn’t it ? | Meat, however, was different. If grandmother bought fresh meat she [got it fresh. Very fresh. It was not [ aged in a refrigerator as good meat is now. It was alive in the morning and grandmother bought it that day, or the next, because there were mighty few refrigerators even after the packers in Chicago learned how to ship refrigerated cars of meat in the 70’s. The only ice machines they had were ponds and a prayer for cold weather; and that didn’t work so well in the south. Though it is rumored that in 1871 an ice plant was built in New Orleans, from which ice was even imported into the north. The great change in the food buy ing habits of the nation came in the 1890’s. Cities were growing. The tempo of life quickened. Housewives no longer wanted to spend hours and even in some cases days preparing a single dish or a meal. In response to this demand changes in food sell ing habits appeared rapidly. Fully automatic can-making machinery j first appeared in 1885. Thereafter canned foods became an important I part of the grocery business. Break fast cereals were invented that came ready to serve. Oats for oatmeal j first, then gradually the myriad wheat and corn cereals that one sees i today. Rectors’ restaurant which opened in Chicago in the 1880’s prov ed to a disbelieving world that oys ters packed in ice could survive a trip to Chicago. Home soap-making disappeared overnight before a su perior manufactured product. Every one of the 200-odd A&P stores be gan to carry extracts in response to demands of the customers. By 1901 the changes progressed far enough for the Ladies’ Home Journal to write, “In these days you can buy almost everything partly or wholly cooked.” However, the develop ment of ready-to-eat foods, that so excited the ladies of 1901 was hardly the beginning. Growth since that time of food preparing technique plus growth of well organized distribu tion systems not only made prepar ed foods available to everyone, but also fresh fruits and vegetables and good meats available the year round at low cost and made the modem meal a matter of minutes not hours. Sian ir Slang is popular but unauthorized language, usually inelegant. Slang has been defined cleverly as vigorous outlaw language. World’s Chemicals About 15 per cent of the world’s chemicals are manufactured in coun tries which in 1913 had no important chemical manufactures. Friends Church In Ohio There are more representative branches of the Friends church (Quakers) in Ohio than in any other state in the Union. Goose Ignores Water Hawaii has a species of goose that never goes near water except to drink, yet has web-feet like its an cestors and present-day relatives. Fog Sailors’ Worst Eenemy Of the six dangers of the sea, fog, fire, icebergs, storm, rocks and shoals, sailors reckon fog as far their worst enemy. Removing Freckles Maidens of the seventeenth century were worried about their complexions and for the removal of freckles were advised to wash their faces in the wane of the moon with elderflower water. Quantity Recipes of Quality . AFTER THE lazy summer lull, church and club activities begin to pick up with new fall zest. Members whose enthusiasm was worn threadbare at the end of the spring rush, return from their holiday trips full of energy for the new year’s work. Eagerly they plunge into their fall activities, not the least of which are the countless pleasant dinners that women’s organizations are wont to give to raise funds for the new season, or just to get together again. So often, though, it Is difficult to plan a budgeted meal for a large group of people. Recipes for six do not always multiply successfully, and dishes that are delightful when served for a small family, often are quite impractical for a big group. So it will be with considerable relief and confidence that club women may turn to these reliably tested quantity recipes for their fall dinner parties. Tomato Juice Cocktail Ham Baked with Barbecue Sauce* Candied Sweet Potatoes Quick Cole Slaw* Hot Biscuits Ice Cream Fruit Cup Cakes* Coffee Porcupine Beef Balls* Whipped Potatoes Celery Curls Stuffed Spanish Olives Sunset Salad* ^ Hot Buttered Rolls Fruit Cup Cookies Coffee (•) Indicates recipes given below. Ham Baked with Barbecue Sauce i (serves SO)—Soak 2 hams, weigh ing 10 lb?, each, for 3 or 4 hours or overnight in warm water to ex | tract salt. Drain. Add fresh water and boil slowly until tender, about S’-j or 4 hours. Remove from water, place in roasting pan, cover with barbecue sauce and bake in a moderate oven (350° F.) until thoroughly cooked (11-2 to 2 hours) basting constantly with the sauce. Barbecue Sauce (serves SO)— Chop 2 large onions and 2 cloves garlic very finely. Add 1 cup Tomato Ketchup, 1 cup Worcester shire Sauce, 1 large can Cream of Tomato Soup, 1 cup Pure Cider Vinegar, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons sugar and % teaspoon pepper. Pour over hams. Quick Cole Slaw (serves SO)— To 2 gallons finely shredded cab bage 2'i tablespoons sugar, 2 j tablespoons salt and 1 teaspoon pepper. Mix 1 quart Mayonnaise with 1 cup Pure Vinegar and pour ever the cabbage. Add 6 chopped green peppers ar.d 1 teaspoon onion juice. Mix thoroughly and sc rve on crisp lettuce leaves. Fruit Cup Cakes (SO cup cakes) .—_.ft 6 cups pastry flour (sifted once before measuring), add 3 teaspoons baking powder and '14 teaspoon baking soda, and sift to gether once. Cream 1 cup butter, add 21a cups sugar and cream together thoroughly. Add 6 well beaten eggs. Add flour alternate ly with % cup sour milk. Add 3 cups Mince M at and 3 teaspoons vanilla and mix thoroughly. Pour into greased muffin tins, filling la full. Bake in a hot oven (400° F.) for 20 minutes. (May be baked in oblong baking pans in moderate oven (375° F.) for 45-50 minutes.) Porcupine Beef Balls (serves SO) —Combine 8 lbs. ground round steak, 1 qt. uncooked rice, 2 table spoons minced onion and 2 table spoons salt, and mix thoroughly. Form into small balls. Place in Mileage Hints By J. F. Winchester, S.A.E. Supervisor of Motor Vehicle Equipment, Standard Oil Company of New Jersey 'T'HE appearance of the automo * bile may not seem to have much to do with its mileage. However, the motorist should use at least or dinary care to keep his car well groomed. Not only will this be a substantial help to him in case he desires subsequently to sell the car or trade it in; but in the long run it will also save him money in repairs and replacements. Don’t let grease or oQ stains re* main on the finish. Wipe their off as soon as you notice them. If they won’t come off with a damp rag, a little auto cleaning fluid will remove them. By keeping the painted sur faces free from oil, grease, dirt, dust and other substances you will keep your finish in an attractive condi tion and eliminate the necessity for a repaint job. If the paint on your fenders has worn off and become rusty, get a can of paint at your service station and touch up the rusty spots before the nut eats through the fender. While you’re at it buy a can of top dressing and paint the top before it gets dried out and cracks. This will prevent leaks in the roof. Keep your car polished. Many motorists have found it profitable to apply a wax finish to the outer surface. Clean the upholstery and polish the metal fixtures periodi cally. It is also advisable to have your car washed thoroughly several times a year. Pressure washing will remove the dirt,from beneath the fenders and the underneath part of the body. Also have the engine cleaned at your service station. A clean car is not only more pleasant to drive and to ride in but it will give you a pride in ownership that will make you hesitate to neglect any little replacements or repairs that are necessary from time to time. A dirty, rusty car often leads motorists to neglect these seeming ly unimportant jobs until it is too late. Off fumes coming from a dirty engine and going out of hood tends to dull the finish of the hood and Try a COURIER WANT AD. > By JOSEPHINE GIBSON Director, Heinz Food Institute deep baking: dishes and cover with 1 No. 10 can Cream of Tomato Soap. Bake in a moderate oven (350° F.) about 1V6 hours. (By using uncooked rice a “porcupine” effect is assured, because during the cooking process the rice swells and extends in points on the out side of the beef balls.) Sunset Salad (tervet SO)—Dis solve 1 institutional package (26 ozs.) lemon flavored gelatin in 3 Vi cups boiling water and % cup Pure Vinegar. Add 3 qts. water or pineapple juice and chilL Then add 3 qts. finely grated raw car rots, Va No. 10 can drained crushed pineapple and 2 teaspoons salt to gelatin when slightly thickened. Chill in individual molds or shal low pans until firm. Serve in crisp lettuce nests with Mayonnaise. Rights of Others Everywhere the Gospel bids tha Christian to take sides against him self. He is to stand ready to forego his surest rights, if only he is hurt by so doing; while on the other hand he is to be watchful to respect even the least obvious rights of others.— Dr. H. C. G. Moule. PURE WATER Have your well 'drilled and be sure of Pure Water. Also dug wells drilled deeper. Work Guaranteed. E. A. INGOLD Mehane, N. C. 666 Liquid, Tablets, Salve, Nose Drops Checks Malaria in 3 days, Colds first day, Headaches or Neuralgia in 30 minutes. Fine Laxative and Tonic Most Speedy Remedies Known. . “Keep young in your heart; keep a song on your lips. Ton still have your youth if you an happy.” We are happy in the knowledge that our customers appreciate the ’Square Deal we give them, and show it by their continued patron age. Very- reasonable rates for all type machinery repairing and re building and boiler and engine work. 'HINL . .i.iius.mop. ICL.I W.SAU5BUW ST.-ASHEBORO, NjC Timely Farm Questions Answered At N. C. State Question: Can skim milk or but termilk be substituted for any in gredient in a laying mash ? Answer: Yes. Both skim milk and buttermilk may be used in place of the dried milk products as well as the fish meal and meat meal. Three quarts of skim milk or buttermilk should be used where only the dried milk products are substituted. Where the dried milk, fish meal, and meat meal are left out of the ration four and one-half gallons of skim milk or buttermilk should be substituted. The success of this substitution depends upon the regularity of feeding the milk and, unless there is ample sup ply for constant feeding, no substi tution should be made. Question: How long should a hog be without food before killing? Answer: The animal should not be fed for at least 24 hours before slaughter, but should have plenty of fresh water. This makes it easier to get a good blood and meat cures out better when the small blood ves State College Dairy Graduates Farm In The State More than 85 per cent of the stu dents who have graduated in animal husbandry and dairying at State Col lege are putting their college train ing to practice in North Carolina. Of the 153 students who have graduated during the past 15 years, says Fred M. Haig, associate pro fessor of animal husbandry and dairying, 16.3 per cent are county agents; 19.4, livestock and dairy farmers; 16.3, superintendents of dairy manufacturing; 9.4, in com mercial livestock work; 7.6, managers of livestock and dairy farms; 17.6, state and government agricultural workers and 12.2 per cent college and vocational agricultural teachers. , ^ Spanish Custom The bull rings of Spain all have chapels under the grandstand, where prayers are offered for the matadors. sels are free from food partid00 , blood. Before the •nhfffyg keep it as quiet as possible as ‘? citement produces a feverish condi tion which prevents proper bleed£ and causes the meat to sour vfi in cure. ,ule Question: Is it too late to sow vetch and oats as a winter kv crop, Answer: No. Vetch may be sown on almost any soil up to October is and oats may be sown anytime up to November 1. In using vetch, how. ever, be sure that the land is oculated for legume growth. Seed should be put in as early as possible to prevent winter injury, especially with oats. This injury may be partly overcome by seeding with an open furrow drill or by using the Norton, which is an early cold re sistant variety, or the Lee and Vir ginia Gray varieties, which are late and cold-resistant. The Carolina va riety of vetch is more resistant to disease than hairy vetch and also makes a good grade of hay, S. W. Weston of Hyde county had his first experience with lespeden this season and produced two tons of hay to the acre. Indications are that there will be two or three million pounds of extra tobacco to sell in Pitt county this fall and the growers are buying ad ditional allotment cards from other contract signers. Wayne county cotton growers re port picking their cotton wet due to excessive rains for the past month. i GET YOUR FALI & WINTER OUTFIT -FROM H. & H. Clothing Co. Asheboro, N. C. A Small Deposit Down, the Balance Each Pay Day! TVavel anywhere .V any day o„u,e SOUTHERN* A fare far every purse...! ft I PER MILS Way Coach Tickets On Sale Daily Round Trip Tickets. lor each mile traveled . .. return limit 15 day* Good in Sleeping and Parlor Care on payv-mt of proper chargee for space occupied Round Trip Tickets. lor each mile traveled... return limit 6 months Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment of proper charges lor space occupied One Way Tickets. Good In Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment of proper charges for space occupied NO SURCHARGE! . men clam trains Dmriat Room ad Opes Scctioa ‘lupins Cn MODERN COACHES.. r 8arvte oa As 8oadMm IWhray 8|tMa Be Comfortable in the Safety of Train Travel flANXLmWNi MiUen.nc/ R. H. GRAHAM, Div. Passenger Agent Charlotte, N. C. 1 SOUTHERN RAILWAY.SYSTEM FARMERS, ATTENTION! We have installed a Modem Seed Cleaner that Cleans all kinds of Small Grain, Lespedeza, etc. Let Us Clean Your Fall Seed. You Reap What You Sow. Hayworth l Coltrane Asheboro, N. C. SEE US FOR H. C. IMPROVED FERTILIZER