Newspapers / Forest City Courier (Forest … / May 3, 1928, edition 1 / Page 3
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peel Good Most ailments start from poor elimination, (constipation or Bemi-constipation). Intes tinal poisions sap vitality, undermine health and make life miserable. Tonight try N? — NATURE'S REMEDY—'aII-vegetable cor rective— not an ordinary laxative. See how Nf will aid in restoring: your appetite and rid you of that heavy, loggy, pep less feeling. Mild, safe, purely vegetable—2sc 1 ill ID. I fCI 11 w Recommended and Sold by All 3 Forest City Druggists Feel Tired and Achy? Too Often This Warns of Sluggish Kidneys. LAME? Stiff? Achy? Sure your kidneys are working right? Slug gish kidneys allow waste poisons to accumulate and make one languid; cired and achy, with often dull head aches. dizziness and nagging back ache. A common warning is too fre auent, scanty or burning excretions. * Doan's PUls, a stimulant diuretic, increase the secretion of the kidneys ami thus aid in the elimination of bodily waste. Users everywhere en dorse Doan's. Ask your neighbor 1 f 1 DOAN'S p, & s A STIMULANT DIURETIC KIDNEYS fbster-Milburn Co. Mfg. Chem. Buffalo. NY. • I Just Tottering, I I So Weak I I "I was in * bad state of 9 health and was going through I a critical time of my life," says I ■ Mrs. Ella Scarborough, R. F. D. I I 5, Dothan, Ala. "Several dif- V ferent things were recommend | ed to me, but I did not get ■ any real relief until I began to I take Cardui. "I was just as weak as could I be. My legs were shakfy, and ■ often I would just totter I ■ around thle house. I finally got | so bad that I was in bed sever- I ■ al weeks. "It was then that I began to V take CarduL I kept it up for I ■ quite a while, and at last I re- I I) gained my health. Cardui was I ■I certainly a friend to me in time II "My health is splendid now, I Jj and I seldom have to use I Vl-medicine, but I gladly say a I word about Cardui whenever I I I find a friend going through I the same suffering which I en- II For sale by all druggists. E 12| I J^TAKE^V fCARDUI] A PURELY % VEGETABLE TONIC/} FIERVESX^ ON 6 1 EDGE When you feel A SHiervous and irrita- vV *ble; when you can't W concentrate, havegp*- nervous head- By ache, lie awake nights, laugh or I i cry easily, you glHßjjß " need a reliable 8G5833 medicine for your nerves. Dr. Miles' B has been used with success in. nervous disorders for nearly fifty years. *|DR. MILES'- NERVINE Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Dyspepsia, Neuralgia, Nervous Neurasthenia, Headache, We will send a ( J generous sample for ymstoitj 5 C i n stamps. Dr. Miles Medical Company* Elkhart. Indiana RUTHERFORD HAS | THREE WINNERS 1 IN STATE CONTEST ! Mrs. P. D. Carpenter, Mrs. C. F. Cline and Mrs. Grant Allen Get Prizes for Best Gardens. ; Raleigh, N. C., April 30.—Win i ners in the year 'round state garden i contest for the season of 1927-28 j have been decided upon by the horti | cultural and home demonstration - workers of the State College of Agriculture under whose supervision I this contest was conducted. j There were 2,037 individuals in 20 ! different counties entering the con- I test last spring.. Each of the five ! districts under which extension work lis administered was represented and ; the sum of $350 in cash was award led to the prize winners of the dif ferent districts. Under the plans of j the contest as announced last year, | a county prize of $25 was offered for the county making the best rec | ord in a district. prize was ; awarded to the county council of ! farm women sponsoring the move ! ment linder the direction of |he I home agent. Three prizes of S2O, •sls and $lO were also offered to in dividuals in each of the five districts, i The money used in awarding these prizes was donated to the Extension ! Service by the Educational Bureau ! iof the Chilean Nitrate of Soda. i According to E. B. Morrow, exten sion horticulturist, Rutherford coun i ' jty won the prize for the mountain ; district with Mrs. P. D. Carpenter of Route 3, Forest City, Mrs. C. F. ! Cline of Gilkey, and Mrs. Grant Al |len Of, Union Mills, winning the three prizes for individuals. In the Pied ! Mont district, Forsyth county won | the district prize with Mrs. P. C. j Henry of Conover, Mrs. W. P. Sig rnon of Hickory and Mrs. Tom Wil liams of Granite Falls winning first, ' second and third prizes as individ uals. In the Central district, Rock , ingham county won the county prize, I Mrs. F. C. Lantern, of Stoneville; i Mrs. J. M. Gibbs, of Reidsville, and , Mrs. B. F. Atkins, of Stoneville, win ning the three individual prizes. In the Northeastern District, Northamp ton county won the county prize with Mrs. A. A. More of Washing ton; Mrs. Rosa Briley of Greenville, and Mrs. Clarence Vincent of Win terville, winning the three individual prizes. In the Southeastern District, Cumberland county won the county prize with Mrs. Henry Middleton, of Warsaw, Mrs. C. S. Bell of Currie and Mrs. Ernest F. Scott of St. Paul winning the three individual prizes. KILL POTATO BUGS WITH CALCIUM ARSENATE Raleigh, N. C., April 30. —Calcium arsenate, familiarly known in North Carolina as an efficient poison for the control of the cotton boll weevil, is also one of the best poisons for the common potato bug on Colorado Potato beetle. "Calcium arsenate is the cheap est poison that potato growers can use at the present time for the con trol'of the Colorado Potato beetle," says C. 11. Brannon, extension en tomologist at State College. "Those who grow potatoes know that this insect can completely destroy the plants in a short while if no control measure is used. Calcium arsenate may be used either as a dust or as a spray and is absolutely effective if applied." In using the material as a dtist. Mr. Brannon advises that the potato plants be covered well. The amount to use will depend on the size of the plants and, the material may be applied satisfactorily if the regular cotton dusters are used. There is little danger of burning the foilage but too much poison should not be used for the sake of economy. Re cent tests show that good control is secured by this method of poison ing. However, it should be kept in mind that the arsenate is not a con trol for plant diseases but for in sects alone. If desired, a spray may be made by using two pounds of the calcium arsenate to 50 gallons of water. For the growers with only a small ac reage, a spray may be prepared by using 10 tablespoonsful to three gal lons of water. In any event, the applications of either dust or spray should be start ed as soon as the beetles appear in numbers and should be continued just as often as the beetles become numerous. The prospects for a bumper crop of red clover in Piedmont North Car olina is the best in years. THE FOREST CITY COURIER, THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1928 BASEBALL Lowell Forest City won their first game of state championship by eliminating Lowel High in a one sided game, 20 to 4, Thursday on the local ground. "Tim" McKeithan, local ace, al lowed the visitors only four hits and sent an even dozen of them back by the strike-out route. Bently, who started on the mound for Lowell, was hit hard in the three innings that he twirled, allowing twelve hits and sixteen runs. Haw kins, Lowell first baseman, relieved Bentley in the fourth inning and al lowed seven hits and four runs in the final five innings. D. McKeithan, Blanton and Laughridge, of Forest City, hit for the circuit while Draton, Lowell's center fielder, hit one that bounced over the left field fence in the first inning. D. McKeithan led the hitting for the locals with five hits out of six times up while Hawkins, led on Ihe offensive for Lowell with two hits out of four trips to the plate. This was Forest City's fourteenth victory of the season. Box score: Lowell AB R H E Leonard, ss _ 5 0 11 Holmes, 2b _ 2 10 2 Hawkins, lb-p 4 2 2 0 Deaton, cf 4 110 Hand, If 3 0 0 1 Bentley, p-lb 3 0 0 0 Price, c 4 0 0 0 Reeves, 3b 3 0 0 1 Leonhardt, rf 4 0 0 0 Totals - 32 4 4 5 Forest City AB R H E Biggerstaff, 2b 4 2 2 0 Blanton, 3b 6 3 4 1 D. McKeithan, ss 6 3 5 1 T. McKeithan, p 4 2 10 Keeter, lb 6 2 2 0 Watkins, c 2 3 10 Moss, c .. 10 0 0 Laughridge, cf - 4 3 3 0 Likens, rf 6 0 11 Whitlock, If ...... ... 3 10 0 Horton, If 0 10 0 Totals -42 20 ID 3 Summary: Home runs: Blanton, D. McKeithan, Laughridge, Deaton; two base hits: Biggerstaff (2), Keeter, Laughi*idge (2) ; sacrifice hits: Moss; base on balls: Off Bent ley (5), off Hawkins (3), off T. Mc- Keithan (5); struck out: By Bent ley, none, by Hawkins, (1), by Mc- Keithan 12; hits off Bentley, 12 in three innings, off Hawkins, 7 in five innings. Umpire Frye. START COTTON RIGHT . ADVISES FARM WORKER Raleigh, N. C., April 30.—The fre quent, cold rains of recent weeks have caused cotton planting to be delayed and it is doubly important now that the crop be started so that it will grow off quickly and vigor ously. "The most important cultivation is that one given just before the piants come through the soil or as soon afterwards as they are thor oughly out and straightened up," says C. R. Hudson of the farm dem onstration division at State College. "Cultivation with a weeder or light harrow will destroy young weeds and grass that will later have to be chop ped out with the more expensive hoe ing. Get over the field with this weeder or harrow while the land is in best condition after a rain. One man with a mule can cover from iO to 12 acres a day with these mach ines." Chop the plants when they have put on four to six leaves, advises Mr. Hudson. In this way, wood limbs will be suppressed and fruit limbs will grow. Thicker spacing on tKe row will also help in better yields. Two stalks to the hill, eight inches apart is not too thick, according to the experiments. It will also pay to fertilize well this year, states Mr. Hudteon. Ten der boll weevil conditions, side ap plications of nitrogen fertilizers mu?r be made early. If the boll wefvil is to be kept under control, later applications of nitrate of soda may probably pay but under usual condi tions it is best to make this applica tion right after chopping and before the next cultivation. Since planting has been delayed, the use of aids applications j«of quickly available nitrogen fertilizers, such as nitrate of soda, will probably pay better than usual. Applications of at .least 100 pounds to the acre should be* used. Mr. Hudson believes that the prof its to be secured from the cotton crop this year will depend largely on the manner in which the crop is started. Running the weeder or hai» row, chopping at the right time and applying a liberal side application early in the season are three very im portant items. STATE LINE ROAD BEING IMPROVED Chesnee-Cliffside Road Under Construction, and Forest City-Cliffside Road Being Improved. The following appeared in the Gaffney Ledger last week: "Five miles of highway No. 10 in Cherokee county, from Chesnee to the Cliffside highway at State Line church, will be surface treated this summer, according to a decision reached by the State Highway Com mission meetin in Columbia this week. The hard surfacing of five miles of the Chesnee highway from Gaffney, now under way, is expect ed to be completed by early summer. These two projects will leave a dis- "As Good As Goodyear" - - •* ~ m To our notion it can't be, but how much do you think this state ment has cost the tire buying public? We say plenty. Perhaps you have used Goodyears or possibly your car, when new, was equipped with Goodyears. When new tires were needed, you took a chance on the "just as good" kind. We are continually impressed with this loss, because, nearly every day one or more customers tell us of their experience with tires claimed to be as good as Goodyear. How often do you hear—Goodyear is a good tire—but ? The price may be lower or higher. Even with the local anaesthetic of special sale, discount or long trades, the mileage cost is usually high, compared with Goodyear. UNIFORM VALUES Goodyear tires are the standard of tire values. They are not high priced and offer a selection of types in all sizes to meet every re quirement of the motorist. The lowest priced Goodyear may give mileage equal to or greater than many tires priced higher. We have been in the tire business a long time. We have read many "Amazing" offers, but the one sure-fire, dependable, high-qual ity, low-cost tire bargain on the market today is a Goodyear tire. SCIENTIFIC TIRE SERVICE The Clear Vision Repair Shop, where repairs are made as they are at the factory. Careful and scientific application and care of tires. Service Cars to handle your tire trouble at home or on the street. Our place is at the service of the Public for repairs or street serv ice regardless of the tires used. Cliffside Motor Co. Cliffside, N. C. tance of only eight or nine miles un surfaced between Gaffney and Cliff side. "The Spartanburg Herald yestei day reported the matter as follows: "Surface treatment of state high way No. 10 from Chesnee to the Cliffside highway at the North Car olina line was approved by the State Highway commission in sessiofi yes terday, according to Charles O. Ilearon, commissioner of this district. "Work on the five-mile stretch should be completed during the sum mer, Mr. Hearon said. Completion will provide a through route to the Cliffside-Rutherfordton highway and will shorten the distance several miles. Traffic to North Carolina has been directed via Cliffside." The highway from Forest City to the South Carolina line, via Caro leen, Henrietta and Cliffside is be ing improved. Traffic is being de toured over the old road from For est City to Caroleen. This work will be completed soon. Why He Succeeded Honored politically and profession ally, during his lifetime, Dr. R. V. Pierce, whose m picture appears 0 here, made a success few have equalled. His pure LJL\ herbal remedies which have stood test * or years are still WrW£m£\ among the "best \Si/ sellers." Dr, ff^yPierce's Golden Medical Discov ery j s a stomach alterative which makes the blood richer. It clears the skin, beautifies it, pimples and eruptions vanish quickly. This Dis covery of Dr. Pierce's puts you in fine condition. All dealers have it in liquid or tablets. Send 10 cents for trial pkg. of tab lets to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., and write for free advice. The loco weed grows down Texas way, and it may be a pretty good idea to keep a close watch on the democratic donkey next June.
Forest City Courier (Forest City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 3, 1928, edition 1
3
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