FAYS TO IRRIGATE SAYS THIS FARMER Raleigh, Aug. 24?A gross income c l nearly nine hundred dollars from j; plot of ground less than an aero i:: extent convinced D. G. Wilson of Cie Tyro community in Davidson c;unty that it would pay him to ir rigate when the seasons are dry. 44Mr. Wilson is one of the suc f\ stffi'.l truck growers of Davidson County", says County Agent C. A.j Sheffield. ''This spring while moslj of our truck crops such as tomatoes! and early Irish potatoes were a com-! plete failure, Mr. Wilson irrigated his land and grew on about (>-10 ol' an acre 210 bushels of Irish Cobbler, jK)tatoes. He sold these on the Salis-' bury, Lexington and Spencer mar-! kets for an average of $2.05 j>crJ bushel netting hint $'.'10.50 on his| venture." To produce this yield of potatoes,! Mr. Wilson used at the rate of 1,500 ]>oiinds of a 7-5-5 fertilizer jht acre,' and manured the land heavily before, planting. 1 I Not all the plant food was used by the iK)tatees reports Coiihty Agent Sheffield, and enough was left to produce a good general crop. The cost of seed, manure and fertilizer "> V. ? !; was $80, which left a profit on the i potato venture of 350.50. On another third of an acre in the same field Mr. Wilson planted out 900 Chalk's Jewel and Bonnie Best tomato plants which yielded a return of 50 cents per plant. The tomatoes were sold on the same market as the potatoes and brought in $450. 'This makes a total of .*880.50 worth of tomatoes ami ]>otatoes from less than one acre of land, states Mr. Sheffield j...d -hows what any farmer near a.' good market can do if he takes ad-i \.i!it::Lro of all opj>ortunities offered' l.i.'i. The good yields produced onj t is land were made possible by tin-! heavy fertilization and the use of ir rigation. PREPARE FOR DAIRYING BEFORE EUYING CCWS Raleigh, August '2t?Koland Wells' of Murphy in Cherokee eoiuitv lias prepared for dairying be l ore buying his cows. He has constructed !><> ea : before catching his bird Ik-caUse l?e believes that preparedness is a good policy for going into speeia.I line:; of farming. "Mr. Wells recently came intopos-' session of an abandoned iarm on! v.hich the soil was very poor," says) S. J. Kirby -extension pasture spee-'j ialist at State College. " Following | the advice of his county airent, !!.; W. Gray, Mr. Wells set about to re-! claim the farm to increase the fcvtll-l ity of the soil and to get ready for the dairy business., He cut the scruti-; by trees, the shrubs and briars, IKv filled up the gullies and planted part of the land to soil improving crop;. Soybeans and cowpeas were used as: an important part of this program." Mr. Kirby states that there are! now ten acres on the farm in mead ow grasses and clovers, 15 acres are j in permanent pastures, one half acre in stock beets and tlie remainder of the 75 acres of cleared land is plant ed to corn and soybeans, and oafs, rye and wheat followed by soybeans for hay. The pasture is reported to be one of the best in the section. It has a good variety of grasses and clovers growing on land treated with ground limestone and acid phosphate before the crops were planted. All tlu\, poorer sjxits were covered with | barnyard manure and the pasture is> now grazed by a famify cow with the' weeds mowed periodically to keep it'1 in condition. Tons of hay have been harvested) from the meadow land and the barn is full to overflowing with several Stacks nearby. The beets are ready for the winter and prospects are good for a heavy corn crop. The next step planned bv Mr. Wells and county agent Gray is to buy 10 or 12 high producing cows to consume the hay and grain and to graze the pasture. Mr. Gray states that most farmers go into the dairy business unprepared and therefore lose money but here is one man who is ready to produce butterfat at a profit. 1 WINTER COVER CROPS HAVE PLACE IN ORHARD i Raleigh, Aug. 24?Growing some kind of winter cover crops has been recognized as important in keeping up the fetrility of those North Caro lina soils used for general fanning. Now there is an interest in cover crops for orchard trees. "We probably will not secure the) same results from cover crops in the j orchard as we will in field crop ro-j tat ion but there is no doubt that | some form of cover cropping has a j place in good orchard management," says.E. B. Morrow, extension hortl-l culturist at State College. "If tliet crop docs nothing else, 1T will add to the physical character of the soil and a better physical condition in the soil means a better water holding capacity and more favorable condi tions for the nutrition of the crop. Some orchards have been cleanly cul tivated tor years and the grower must then rely almost entirely upon comiiicivial fertilizers for a satisfac tory crop. Sometimes the hot fertil izers will not respond becyues of a lack of organic matter in the soil." '} .Mr. Morrow slates iliat many or-i (Chnrdists are now attracted to a com bination of rye and vetch as a cover .crop. This combination-11 may be high ly recommended, he staf"*;' The two . ? f cropsscan be grov.n under variable soil conditions am! :renerally good re sults are secured. <)ii .soils that !ia*'e never grown, vetch, some inoculation is necessary, Mr.Morrow slates that this may be done by the use of the bacterial cultures or by yet ting soil from a field in which vetch has been grown successfully for a year or two. The use of the soil is to be recom mended. A heavy stand of vetch with enough rye to support it is the ideal combination. The cover crop should be planted as early as the season will Feed ct ?- ; ; Flour Groceries ^ -' \ ' ' - . o - ' ' ) > ? ? it . . i We make a specialty or Feed and Flour. We have some on hand and please don't forget that we ac tually want to sell it. (Do 1. ENSLEY & SON allow in oi'Jor to gob it well estab lished for early spring growth the j following year. . 1 , Tlie cover crop should always be tinned under fairly early in the sprang so that the trees will not be robbed of the moisture so badly need* ed lor spring growth and fruit set-1 tintf. Scientific research is the basis of progress. Dr. B. AV. Wells of State College has found that cranberries will u'l'ow in the great savanna re gions of southeastern Carolina. ' ( Some farthers are. finding?a thirty ? Y I five percent infestation of boll wee vil in their cotton fields. It is not yei too late for the weevil to do damage. i J (Jood farmers find a way to make money on the home place. Those are the men who have attractive i homes and conveniences for their wives. ; The Mosquito is the most cowardly of all insect tormentors. They attack in the night'when we are asleep and defenseless. Their bite causes burning torment and ]i4tin. Little children are most susceptible. Fly-Tox the rooms and the screens. Scientific research developed Fly-Tox for the benefit of mankind, (let Fly-Tox from your re tailer, always in bottles, with bine label. . I ( Fly-Tox your kitchen. Serve appetis ing food untouched by filthy flics.. . NOTICE OF PUBLICATION North Carolina, Jackson County. In the Superior Court Itobert A. Crisp vs Bei t ha Cri p." . Tiie dcleijihmt tibpve named ivill take in..Ice lli.it an action has b'A'ii coniiiuiuci iii the'Suiwrior Court of Jackson county by the plaintiff against the defendant for the pur pose of severing the bonds of niatri niony existing between plaintiff and defendant and a summons therein h is been i.-.MN d returnable before the Clerk ,i;f tiie Sujierior Court of Jack son CountSyiva, X C. on tjie lOcli day of September liHiti, when and where the defendant is required to ! appear and ^answer the Complaint to I be fiieil in said office and if the de ! feiidaul fails to answer the plaintiff will take juJirmcut for the relief 1 . ' 'asked in the complaint. j This tin- JO day of August,j 1U2G. jxa D. xoktox, 8 J I It Clerk Sujierior Court ' ?' ' |~ WANT COLUMN i \ I i 4 The rate for classified ads in | , | this column is 10c. per line for J | each insertion, averaging six | (6) woids to a line. ! WANTLD ?Snap Beans $1.50 a bush j el. Queen's Fruit Store;?8 18 tf LOST pi! STOLEN?July 23, a lady's traveling bag, containing lady's1 ami children's clothes and ] mail addressed'to Mrs. J. W. Swayngin. Return to Smoky Moun tain Bus Line at Sylva Pharmacy lor reward. FOR SALE?One five room house! and 2 acres of land with new Larn and good spring, about 1-4 m'le of Beta. Apply to J. A. Reed," Beta, N. C.- -8 4 tf. FOR SALE?50 acres in three tracts,5 l^ives miles from Sylva at Greens Creek. N. C. on the State Highway running from Dillsboro to Franklin situated on the banks of the beautiful Savannah Creek. Attractive homesites. Several acre3 in cultivation. Eight room house, large barn and othe^* outbuildings. Each tract may be sold separately, or together. For particulars write: A. C. Cagle, G500 West Tlurd St., Station S., Los Angeles, Calif. ) FOR SALE?-A few good productive farms on -the "Joe Brown High way" between Murphy, N. C., and j^wcetwater, Tenn. Also some in the fertile Sweetwater Valley on the Leo Highway. These farms are priced to sell. Write us if inter ested. Mutual Realty Co. Box S, Sweetwater, Tenn. 8 YEAR OLD HORSE, 1 WAGON and houses for sale or exchange for anything you have. See me. W P. Potts.?7 7 tf. WANTED?For Cash Butter, Eggs, dried fruit, hams, sides, shoulders, chickens, home made molasses. W. B. Yoder Co., Winston-Salem, N. C ? 6 2 tf. I ? ........ NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE North Carolina, Jackson County. By virtue of the power and author ity conferred upon and invested in the undersigned trustee by a certain deed in trust executed, by Nathan Ward dated the 3rd day of December, 1925 and duly recorded in Book 96 of deeds of trust on page 145 in tho Office of the Register of Deeds of Jackson county, and default having been made in the payment of the in debtedness thereby secured, the same being past due and unpaid, and de mand having been made by the owner and holder of said deed in trust and the notes secured thereby. NOW THEREFORE, I, W. R. Sherrill Trustee, will on Monday the 20th day of September, 1926 at .12 noon, at the court house door in the town of Sylva, offer for sale at pun lie auction for casli the following described piece or parcel of land sit uate, lying and being in Qualla Town-| ship, Jackson county, North Carolina and bounded and described as fol lows : BEGINNING at a poplar, the be ginning corner of No. 4 and runs with the lines of tract No. 4 to the divide between Camp Creek and Shoal Creek; then S 44d E-, 3 poles to a stake, S 30d, 8 polos to a stake, S lOd W, 7 poles to a stake S 5d W., 14 poles to a stake, S. 5d E, 13 poles to a stake, S 5d W, 6 |K)les to a stake, S 10(1 E, 4 jioles to a stake, S 37d E, 19 poles to a stake, S 75d E, 6 )>olos to a stake, S 52 <1 E, 10 . poles to a stake, S i;l E, 14 |M)les to a stake, thence S 10d E, 50 ])oles to a stake and pointers on a divide between Shoal Creek and Camp Creek; thence S 71 d E, 24 poles to a stake; thence East 18 jHjles to a mountain oak; thence N (?9d F,.19 poles to a hickory; thence N. 12 1?2d W 10 poles to a stake; thence N 5 1 -2d E 9 i>oles to a hickory; then N" 2'M W, 12 |wiles to a stake; thence I .'ortli I?' polos to a chestnut; thence I \'- 13d W, 30 ]K)los to a sourwood; thence N 53 1-2(1 W, 12 jhjIos to a chestnut; thence X 78d W, 37 polos to a chestnut; thence N 21d W, 14 J ;>'les to a Spanish oak; thence 20<1 J W, 16 poles to a chestnut oak; j thence N 8d W, 18 poles to stake I oh top of ridge; thence X, 47d W, 14 |?oles to a black oak; corner of lot No. 3; thence with the lino of No. 2, N 72* Good fresh Georgia Peaches, $2..")fi ? ? 1 r 1 i nr. "or your summer ice cream. Write f quantity prices to Grimes Broke? Co., Room 429, Kimball House, At lanta, Ga. ?5 29 20t. Unseen Sources ?f Long Life ! .' The basic sources of automobile v value are not always apparent to the eye. / ? ! - ? i ( A motor car, like a house, may LOOK a great deal more substan tial than it really is. Because of this difficulty, more and more thousands are turning to Dodge Brothers product for insurance against disappointment. The years have proved, and each year proves anew, that Dodge Brothers are as deeply concerned with the UNSEEN goodness of their motor car, as with the seen. The mileaige it will deliver, the safety it will provide, the expense and trouble it will save the owner over a period of years, are quite as im portant to Dodge Brothers as the more obvious details of equipment ? and style. / . v/ M. BUCHANAN, JR., GARAGE Roadster ...1 ...... ...... t. Coupe .... .... .... Sedan 4 .... Touring Car v.,$ 895.00 ...^ $ 94S.;>il ..$1005.5o $ 897.00 Delivered Dodee- Brothers MOTOR CARS hzJ ??. ? , i v * ... waste" "I have never yet seen persons really get anywhere who were always in a hurry with never time to care for their motors? picking up gas, all kinds?here, there, and everywhere. They soon find this policy makes their car shy at a hill-climb ? whine for second gear?pine for a rest. "Best to make haste slowly. Play safe. Always fill up with 'Standard* Gasoline. It's the result of ftfey-six years' experi ence?always dependable. Right handy everywhere. ?? "STANDARD" GASOLINE f. I ALWAYS DEPENDABLE /