Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Jan. 18, 1963, edition 1 / Page 2
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HOME DEMONSTRATION CORNER EMILY BALLINGEK, County How Ec*araUc? Agent The home agents announce the following schedule: Monday, Jan. 21: Afton-El beron-Vicksboro Community 4-H Club will meet at 7:3fl p| m| at the Afton-Elberon Clubhouse. Areola Community Club will meet at 7:30 p. m. at the Areola Community Build ing. Tuesday, Jan. 22: Areola Home Demonstration Club will meet at 2 p. m. at the clubhouse. Wednesday, Jan. 23: Elber on Home Demonstration Club will meet at 2 p. m. at the home of Mrs. C. E. Mustian. Drewry Home Demonstra tion Club will meet at 2 p. m. at the home of Mrs. J. C. Watkins. o Thursday, Jan. 24: Wise Home Demonstration Club will meet at 2 p. m. at the home of Mrs. H. Evans Cole man. Friday, Jan. 25: Friendship Home Demonstration Club will meet at 2 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Sol Bobbitt. HOUSE PLANTS Mr. John H. Harris, Exten sion Horticulturist, says: January is a bleak cold month. About the only gar dening we can do is indoors. Let's talk about house plants. Good soil is the starting place for growing house plants. You can make a good soil by mixing two parts gar den soil, one part peat or woodsmold and one part well rotted manure. Add some sand if your soil has no sand. Mix with the soil about a teaspoonful of 8-8-8 fertilizer and if the soil has not been limed recently use about 2 teaspoonfuls of agricultural limestone to each 8-inch pot of soil. As long as the plants are growing satisfactorily there is little need to add additional fertilizer. When further feed ing is needed use a teaspoon ful of 8-8-8 per gallon of water. Special water soluble fertilizers are available from your seed store if you prefer: to use them. It's important to give plants j the right amount of light. ? generally speaking, give fol-i iage plants (non-flowering plants) largely indirect light, i Flowering plants, on the oth-| er hand, need partial to full sun. African violets require! partial shade from hot sun but like early morning and winter sun. If plants do not receive enough light the stems will grow long, giving the plants a lank appear? <ice. In applying water be sure to soak the soil unti' water drains out the hole in the bottom of the pot. You can i also apply water from thel bottom but water from thel top occasionally to wash outi excessive fertilizer salts in! the soil. Wait until soil be-| comes dry on top before watering again. It's a good j idea to use luke warm water j since the foliage of some j plants will be injured by cold water. For the control ofj insects, Malathion or Nicka tine sulphate is recommend ed. If you have a poir.settis and want to keep it for another year, here's what to do: When the plant drops most of its leaves, place in a dry place where it won't freeze, and let the soil dry up. Next May bring the plant out, cut the stem back to about three inches, wash the old soil off the roots and repot outdoors. Move the pot often enough to keep roots from growing out of the hole the bottom of the pot. Softwood cuttings may be taken in August and rooted in sand. If you don't make cuttings, cut the old plant hack around August 25 to gpht eigh indie* high; oth erwise, the plant will be too tall for beat use In early I'lMb bring the plants inside P* I ACTORS and give them maximum sun light. The poinsettia will only bloom if given long nights. Therefore, place a 11 dark covering over it at night i or place it in a room where i it won't be exposed to arti ijficial light when you bring ; it- indoors. "Selecting and Growing ] House Plants" is ihe name of i a new Department of Agricul ture bulletin. If you like <1 house plants, I'm sure you I will like a copy of this bul letin. It is available from the Superintendent of Docu ments, U. S. Government I Printing Office, Washington , 25, D. C. The price is 15 cents. Negro FARM AGENT NEWS LEONARD C. COOPER Negro County Agent I. W. MCRFREE Asst. Negro County Agent This is first in a series of | articles on "Credit?A Profit able Tool When Wisely Us- j ed," by Dr. Robert I. John- j stone, Extension Farm Man agement Specialist, State Col-1 lege, Raleigh. Credit is a tool by which a person can purchase some thing without owning suffic ient capital to pay for the purchase immediately Pay ment is made from income earned after the purchase. ! Many successful farmers have | learned that they can in- { crease their income by using | credit to pay for machinery,! livestock, buildings and facil ities, land and annual pro duction items. However, just as with a piece of modern equipment, misuse of credit is expensive. Misuse of credit can lead to the downfall of a personal business The wise use of credit involves a care- j ful look at the purpose of I which the money is borrow ed. the source from which it is borrowed, the length of i time for which the loan is | made and the financial status | of the borrower. First, it should be pointed | out that farm people will use the two basic types of credit I There is the credit used in financing a farm business.. In addition, farm families use \ consumer credit for the pur-, chase of items for the home j and living expenses Fre-1 quentlv. a person will refer to credit without distinguish- j ing between the types of j credit involved. Consumer credit is evaluated on the; basis of the income it is ex- > pected to produce. Credit Is Not Income Credit is the use of some-1 one else's money and entails j pi obligation of repayment.! A family may confuse credit I v.ith income or confuse busi-1 ness credit with consumer! credit. A rapid expansion! may take place In the farm \ business through the use of j credit. During the expansion j period a relatively large ] amount of money passes I through the family accounts. | This increased amount of available money can cause the family to feel that they have more for living expenses than is actually the case. Purchases are made for fam ily living in excess of those that may be justified in their current income and debt sit uation. Such unwise use of People, Spots In The News NOT PHILADELPHIA, but Mos cow! Russian bell, cast in 1733, never has been rung, as it cracked during a Kremlin fire. draws tourists. ft ICY SEA SERPENT?Freak icicle formation makes it look as though Chicago's Lincoln Park swans have a visitor-?a stegosaurus?from the Ice Age! funds may often lead to later: hardships for the family. A family making heavy use of credit, either in the family living or business, should al-| ways keep an accurate record j of financial activities in order! to keep expenditures con sistent with family income I and debt obligations. Next Week ::When Does It Pay to Borrow?" Announcement By Negro Agent Phone 204-1 MRS. BERTHA FORTE, Negro Home Ec. Agent Telephone 953-1 Monday, Jan. 21: 1 p. m.,1 Pine Grove Home Demonstra-1 tion Club will meet at the j clubhouse. 7:30 p. m., Macon Home Demonstration Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Ida Fitts. Tuesday, Jan. 22: 12:30 p. m., Shocco Home Demonstra tion Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Omega Davis. 2 p. m., Mayflower Home Demonstration Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Elnora Mann. Wednesday, Jan. 23: 1 p. m., Ellington Home Demon stration Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Indiana Seward. 2:30 p. m., Russell Union Home Demonstration Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Eliza M. Terry. Thursday, Jan. 24: 2:30 p. m., Hecks Grove Home Dem onstration Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Zelma Jones. Friday, Jan. 23: 2 p. m., Elam Home Demonstration Club will meet as scheduled. Inez Club Meets At Harris Home The Inez 4-H Club held its regular meeting on Saturday, January 12, at the home of member Ernest Boyd Harris. Linda Oillard, president, pre sided and Evelyn Dillard led the pledges to the American and 4-H flags. Isabelle Wil liams had charge of devo tions. Lisa Coleman, s^> A"g leader, led the group in sing ing, "For The Beauty of the Earth." The agenda for the after noon consisted of distribu tion of record books, organ izing the year's work and setting up goals. After the business meeting, games were played and refreshments ser ved. Nine members attended, including i new member, Leon Dillard. Officers of the club are Linda Dillard, president; Ter ry Mustian, vice-president; Elizabeth Williams, treasurer; Elizabeth Williams, treasurer; Lisa Coleman, songleader and Ernest B. Harris, reporter. Detection Two fathers were discuss ing their families and chil dren and some of the inci dents that arise in daily liv ing. "My three boys sure stick together," said one dad. "When one of them gets in trouble, neither of the other two will ever squeal on him." "But how do you find out the guilty one so you can punish him?" "That's easy. All I do is send all three of them to bed without supper, and the next morning I thrash the one with the black eye!" ?Harry J. Miller in Tracks. Congratulations to WHNC FM ?" On Their Good Music Programming We Have A Complete Selection Of PHILCO AN and FH RADIOS Remember 3 yon only have AM? Too only hare half a radio? ?^jj WAJMtENTON, N. C. . . - WARRENTON FURNITURE EXCHANGE Sec. 901, 1941 Machinery Act in Part Provides: "It shall be the duty of every person, firm, or corporation, in whose name any property or poll is to be listed, to list said Real, Personal Property or Poll with the proper list taker within the time allowed by law. Any person, firm, or corporation, whose duty it shall be to list any poll or property, real or personal, who willfully fails, refuses, or neglects to list the same with in the time allowed by law, or removes or conceals property for the purpose of evading taxation, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor." There is a penalty for failure to list Taxes. Be sure to list your Taxes during the prescribed time, which is during the Month of January, 1963. Below are the names and appointments of all list takers for 1963: Townships: RIVER Mrs. J. H. Northington, Littleton, N. C. Littleton, S. D. King's Store?Jan. 5, 12, 19, 26. Appointments A11 other days during January at Mrs. Northington's Residence in Littleton. SIXPOUND Jasper W. Shearin, Macon, N. C. Oakville, King's Store?Jan. 2, 9:00 A. M.-12:00 Noon. A Churchill, Mrs. R. F. Sorrell's Store,?Jan. 9. Appointments pjve Forks, Edmonds Brothers Store?Jan. 10. Macon, Mrs. C. A. Harris' Service Station?Jan. 24, 25. HAWTREE G. W. King, Route 1, Warrenton, N. C. Appointments Oakville, King's Store, Jan. 2, 9:00 A. M.-12:00 Noon. Wise, PerkinBon's Store?Jan. 3, 4, 28. Paschall, Bolton's Store?Jan. 29, 9:00 A. M.-12 Noon. Warren Plains, Frazier's Store?Jan. 30. SMITH CREEK W. S. Hicks, Jr., Norlina, N. C. Appointments Norlina Shoe Shop, Jan. 2 to 31. Inclusive. NUTBUSH Mrs. Annie Wilson, Route 1, Manson, N. C. Ridgeway, W. H. Daeke's Store?Jan. 8. A Manson, Fleming's Service Station?Jan. 15. Appointments Drewry, J. c. Watkins' Store-Jan. 22. All other days during January at Wilson Brothers Service Station. SANDY CREEK W. W. O'Neal, Route 2, Warrenton, N. C. Pinnell Brothers Store?Jan. 8, 22, 12:00 Noon-4:00 P. M. Bill's Place?Jan. 9. Appointments Vicksboro?Jan. 10. Vicksboro?Jan. 24, 12:00 Noon-4:00 P. M. J. B. Russell's Store?Jan. 11. SHOCCO ooyd M. Reams, Route 2, Warrenton, N. C. Park Town?Jan. &, A. M. Peter Brown's Home?Jan. 8, P. M. Appointments J* F. Brown's Home?Jan. 9, A. M. Bill's Place?Jan. 9, P. M. Afton?Jan. 10. FISHING CREEK Mrs. Louise Gupton, Areola, N. C. Armnintment* Areola, R. L. Capps' Store?Jan. 9, 16, 26. Appointment* Grove Hm R()y pittman.8 store?Jan. 12, 19. JUDKINS Mrs. Gilbert Reid, Route 1, Littleton, N. C. Littleton, S. D. King's Store?Jan. 5, 26. . . . . Vaughan, Porter's Store?Jan. 9. Appointments Vaughan?Triangle Service Station?Jan. 19. Embro, Stallings' Service Station?Jan. 12, 23. WARRENTON A. E. Wilson, Route 2, Warrenton, N. C. A Ridgeway, W. H. Daeke's Store?Jan. 8. Appointment* A11 Qther day8 during january at court House. FORK Mrs. Richard Coleman, Route 3, Warrenton, N. C. . . . R. L. Powell's Store?Jan. 3 ,10. Appointment* E. R. Davis' Store?Jan. 17, 24, 31. ROANOKE L. W. Kidd, Ebony, Va. Sykes' Store?Jan. 12, 10: A. M.-12 Noon. Appointment* Elams, Jones' Store?Jan. 12, 1:00 P. M.-4:00 P. M. All other days dOriragt January at L. W. Kidd'a Residence. PENALTY WILL BE CHARGED TO ALL FAILING TO LIST DUR ING JANUARY. Unlets otherwise specif iced the time of all appointments will be from 9:0ft A. M. to 4:00 P.M. A. P. RODWELL, JR., Tax Supervisor J^EN COUNTY
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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Jan. 18, 1963, edition 1
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