Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Jan. 11, 1935, edition 1 / Page 3
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I rRlDAY, JANUARY 11, f Today I Tomorrow By Frank Parker Stockbrid*? f L > f health and age Worrying about one's health Is, usually' a sign of advancing age. I liSed to do a lot of it, until I got # cld enough to realize that the human machine, like any other machine. nccds only regular, normal care to keep it in good running order until it wears out. The best way to keep well, after fone reaches middle age, is to be m. I make it a rule now, in the sixties, never to indulge in any physical exertion that I can avoid. Of course, when you're not running the engine at full speed it doesn't take as much fuel. It's surprising M. how ht a man can keep on half the if W" food he lisea lu <1^ I doesn't throw his weight about and M bum UP lus muscular energy. m chauncey Depew, who lived to be I 93. remarked once that all the exercise he ever took was walking- to the funerals of his golf-playing I friends. I gave up golf ten years ago. Five men that I used to .play with, all younger than I, have since dropped dead on the golf course. PICTURES . . . they improve I I am not the world's most en3 thusiastic motion picture fan, but I find myself going to the pictures oftener thai: I used to, and getting more satisfaction out of them. It seems perfectly clear to me that there has been a great improve 9 ment in the films in the past year or so. Better stories, better acting, - better stage effects, better sound reproduction. I find much less that I is offensive to my sense of good taste and decency than I used to, less of the sort of thing that is apparently aimed at the lowest mental J and moral types, ft No greater mistake can be made '9 by anybody who seeks to entertain I or instruct people than to under estimate their capacity for discriminating between good and bad. No newspaper ever succeeded whose wiimr thought it necessary to "play I down" to the supposed low level of his readers' intelligence. It looks to me as if the motion picture people had discovered that the best they can offer is not too good for their audiences. They have also discovered that it is not necessary to be dull to be decent. HISTORY . . . good teacher A friend who is in charge of the historical collection in a gTeat library tells me that more young folk are coming in for information about things that happened in the past, than ever before. That is a good sign. Once one understands that nothing that occurs today is without its parallel in the past, the better he is able to judge of the value of new experients to change the social order. The realization that human nature is unchangeable is the chief lesson of history. I have been reading lately the accounts of the great speculative era in England and France in 1720 and thereabout. A precise parallel to the speculative era in the United States from 1926 to 1929 is found in the history of the South Sea Bubble in England and the Mississippi Bubble in France. Everybody was speculating, everybody lost, tens of thousands were ruined and the bottom seemed to have droDDed out of everything. But, somehow, civilization conI tinued to develop and the world I kept on running. I COTTON ... and Calico Two hundred years ago the flaxI growers and sheep breeders of Eng land were greatly concerned for the future of the wool and linen industries. Gaily printed cotton cloth was being imported from India? ^ I from "Calicut," whence we get the word "calico.'' Women were disI carding wool and linen to wear the I new fabric. Laws were passed forbidding the importation of calicoes. They resulted only in extensive smuggling. Finally Parliament passed a law prohibiting the wearing of cotton j I garments. That didn't work, for it II was impossible to send to prison 1 all the women-folk who persisted 1 in Haunting their calicoes in public. I The outcome was that England began to import raw7 cotton and spin and weave it in its own factories, and encouraged the growing of cotton in its AmpH/*Q? ..V4 4V Ull (Now we grow more cotton than 6 world will consume. A lot of her ])eople have found out that leV can grow and weave cotton, tomen are wearing more rayon, 'ade from wood pulp, and less cot)n The English cotton mills are 1 distress and so are our cotton rowers. No man-made laws will Ure the situation. Yet. somehow, the world will wag )n- It always has. farmers who sell cream to nearby Wants will find John Arey's new Publication, Extension Circular No, 2?3- "Producing Quality Cream" of considerable value. The publicdTTofi be had free of charge on apcation to the agricultural editor State College. 193S Warrenton, North Carolb I Tobacco Contracts Declared In Effect L The tobacco adjustment contracts signed last winter by flue-cured tobacco growers have been extended into 1935, with certain changes, E. Y. Floyd, of State College, announced this week. As a result of the 1934 adjustment program, Floyd said, the surplus of flue-cured tobacco has been eliminated and the carryover is slightly below normal. Consequently, the allotment;; in 1935 will be a little larger than last year. The growers will be given the privilege of producing either 85 or 90 per cent of their base acreage ra and production. But growers who P produce 90 per cent will get only p one half as much in rental pay- If ments as those who produce only || 85 per cent, Floyd added. M The 15 per cent reduction sched- H uled for 1935 is only one half as || much as the reduction last year, he continued, and the rental and ad- s justment payments will be scaled 1 down to one half the previous * amount. * However, the rentals will continue at the rate of $17.50 an acre j on the land retired from tobacco _ cultivation. The adjustment pay- ments will be 6 1-4 per cent of the J net sale value of the 1935 crop. The L deficiency payments will be at the rate of one cent a pound on the amount by which a grower fails to produce his allotment. The rental payments will be made after compliance with contract is checked, *loyd said. Last year they were made shortly after the contracts were signed. For growers with a base of less than four acres, the rate of the ad justment payment will be increas- fl ed, in accordance with the terms I of the contracts, to a maximum fo 12 1-2 per cent of the value of the I 1935 crop, Floycl added. Fertilizer Needs J Should Be Studied | Before planting time, every farm- G er should take an inventory of the cr crops he intends to raise and deter- " er mine the amount and kind of fer- ^ tilizer needed, suggests C. B. Williams, head of the State College TI agronomy department. ri; This will enable him to buy or fr mix his fertilizer and have it ready S1 beforehand so as to avoid delays ~~ that might result from waiting until f" the fertilizer is needed, he said. As a guide to the fertilizers L needed, Williams has given the following mixtures for use on one acre of land: For cotton in the coastal plain area, 500 pounds of a 4-8-4 mixture | should be drilled in just before planting time. Or the grower may mix his own fertilizer from 238 pounds of 16 per cent superphosphate, 70 pounds of cottonseed meal, 80 pounds of sulphate of ammonia, and 38 pounds of muriate of potash. The latter mixture has the same fertilizer value as 500 pounds of 4-8-4 ready mixed. In the Piedmont, he recommends 500 pounds of 4-10-4 to the acre drilled in before j planting. |Or a mixture of 304 pounds of 16 [per cent superphosphate, 52 pounds of cottonseed meal, 83 pounds of sulphate of ammonia, and 38 pounds f( of muriate of potash. hi For tobacco, on light and less H productive soils, he recommends 800 w pounds of 3-8-6 per acre drilled in w before planting, or a mixture of * 388 pounds of 16 per cent superphosphate, 70 pounds of cotton & seed meal, 44 pounds of animal _ tankage, 50 pounds of nitrate of soda, 39 pounds of sulphate of ammonia, 24 pounds of muriate of potash, and 134 pounds of sulphate M of potash-magnesia. ( On heavy more productive soils, Williams recommends 800 pounds of 3-10-6 or a mixture of 488 pounds of 16 per cent superphosphate, 70 pounds of cotton seed ea meal, 44 pounds of animal tankage, ^ 50 pounds of nitrate of soda, 39 ~" pounds of sulphate of ammonia, 24 L pounds of muriate of potash, and 134 pounds of sulphate of potash- I magnesia. Farm Questions A M J A neurAl*C I rtllU nno TT vi ? Question: What green feeds are available for use In the poultry ration during the winter months? Answer: Where there are no growing crops, cured alfalfa hay, lespedeza, or clover hay make good greens for winter use. When fed in racks the birds will eat only the leaves and the stems can be thrown in the litter. Alfalfa leaf meal, provided it is gTeen in color, also makes a satisfactory green feed but | should not constitute more than ten I " TTifo m/aol is percent 01 tne uitun. iXUU U?VWa ? LUKE RILEY SAYS THE RAT; BEFORI Since moving near the river se ' BEST-Y17r. We watched the vicious wi outside the house. About 15 minutes If to cool their burning stomachs, but d 1 and mice only. Will not hurt cats, dogs [ from the dead rat. BEST-YET comes size 50c. Sold and guaranteed by dealer 1 Confident of Future | . /> j DETROIT ... A new portrait tudy of Hen/y Ford made at his Lome which shows the automobile nagnate as he appears today. His aith in the future is best shown in lis program of spending millions nlarging his great plant to make 935 his greatest production year. Decision Brings Riches J-. 7 ^ ^ | DETROIT . . . David Graves eorge " (above) 67 years " 'old, ippled and the father of five lildren, wrote a hillbilly saga ng about "The Wreck of the Old years ago. The U. S. Supreme surt rules George is the author, be decision assures George the ght to collect royalties on profits om the sale of 5,000,000 phono aph records. Phooey, Huey! ! jffl888888&aaaa^\38Wrefey.v. NEW ORLEANS . . . Lawrence Biff" Jones (above), Louisiana >otball coach, who resigned after s "tiff" with Kingfish Senator uey Long, has been swamped ith 'Offers to coach other big illege teams but announces he ould prefer military assignment > Ft. Leavenworth for 2 years. Biff" is a former West Point >ach and still in service. ich preferred to the regular alfalfa 5al but neither is as satisfactory the alfalfa hay fed in racks. Question: What is the best temrature for hot beds in growing rly vegetables? Answer: For the cool season or rly crops such as cabbage, lettuce, d onions the day temperature helping millions lo END COLDS CAMIFD S DIE REACHING THE RIVER. J j veral years ago we've always used ater Rats nibbling at BEST-yj;;!, iter they darted off for the river ied before reaching it. kills ruts or chickens, and there is no smell, in two sizes, 2 oz. size 25c 5 oz. s. [TIE WARREN RECOF 'should be from 60 to 65 degrees and < the night temperature of 50 to 55 ' degrees. Warm season crops such as 1 tomatoes, eggplant, and peppers grow best with a day temperature of 70 to 75 degrees. The night tempera- 1 ture should not drop below 55 to 60 ? * I I ? I j OUR DI I I I I ? I I I I I I I I I I I I I I t I i i ? i Cash and Due fr j U. S. Government i State of North C I I i Other Stocks and I Loans Bank Building ? Furniture and Fb Other Real Estate ' Tote hatsssnimssMExaimmixnnm I ki / BUY TF / 1A#HEN a / ww doesn't f / buys the kind / itself ?y /And that's plant bed gr should buy Tobacco F BLUE F ggO ?a< Tt m be^ * BIGN * y T ' >|) Warr iegrees. Care In ventilation ?rtll give < air for the growing plants end will ( also regulate the temperature. ??? 4 Question: How can lice on dairy i animals be controlled? Answer: A two percent solution of WATAVAymTAWMWAVlWlWAVAYAVA'TOWAVATATi SPOSITS ARE INSURED UNDER I CONDENSED S THE CITIZI WARRENT DECEMKB RESOURCES om Banks $429,897.40 Bonds 59,691.02 arolina Bonds 78,998.75 Bonds 13,458.95 320,595.93 17,492.79 ctures 1.00 ! 11,454.95 ll $931,500.79 WkWlWkWkWkWlWkWkWkWkWkWiWk'WkWk'WkWkWxWk'WAWkWkWkWTW^ SB" BUY:, l i i e fl?|: ANT ?BKKYfS.Wi je kind th ian buys an automobile, he juy just any old brand?he that has made a record for rmance! the way you ought to buy yc jods ? and it is exactly why BLUE RIBBON GUANO for Jeds! JBBON was introduced thrcr id it has made good every ye, ' ? nery Aa. akes good because it is tii<_ r ormula! It is loaded heavily dy soluble, soil-warming, b; lag organics. It has a higher n SMITH-D Plant* at Norft HPSS SOLD ALL JO t en ton, Nor ih Carolina / :reolin applied with a spray pump 1 3r brush is a fairly effective mea- i sure Tor ontrol. A second applica- i tion shouli be given in about ten ] to fourteei. da>s to kill any lice that hatch aft sr the first application. There are several standard dip solu- i J. S. GO VERNMENT INSURANCE 1TATFMI NT INS BANK ON, N. C. ER 31, 1534 LIABILITIES Capita 1 Surplt is Undivided Profits Interest Collected but Not Earne* T^iia TVirvnpifi rVCSCJC 1UI XI Ltd COG JL^UC Reser'e for Depreciation Reserve for Contingencies Pederil Checl; Tax Deposits Total UTAWATATA* >a?.ITA?**AW JATATAWATATaTATATATATATATA a HO fO? % ' _ v'.-'-'vv- jfeM^ KU ^ ^1 ' " ?1 H -" i fc~ ? / tent tha.1 ordinary plan' prevent chlorine injur contain less than 1% >uf you Ask your neighbor your ribhon. Then, if y plants, and want ?Ws earlier?if I ? W'.vr years eise-resisting pi* ar' md grow right are stricken?if feet plant . . fine, top-mone' with soft, acteria -pro- Use Blue Ri itrogen con- Beds! OllGilAS* CO., Inc., ilk, Va., Danvlllti, Va., Klnaton, N. C jj^j BY >NES, / I tions on the market that axe also satisfactory but, when using them the directions given should be closely followed. r. . . M notice tne <w:e on your label and renew your subscription. I: I ' ! 3 1111 ors.... 2,034.75 J 0 4,838.43 2,000.00 259.58 I' 853,262.13 $931,500.79 i I TATATftTATATATATAT^ETiT^ETiiTs/ ? ?Hi I Pi /? %??*// t-bed goods. And, to /, it is guaranteed to chlorine. / what he thinks of BLUB ou want plenty of fine them ten clays to two ?frhy, dis J you want tie**, mts that will hold on out of blue mold if they you want the basis of a y tobacco crop ? bbonGuano for Tobacco Norfolk, Va, J Murfraaaboro, M. C. ^ten^t ' |
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 11, 1935, edition 1
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