_ ? *-> ? . Timely Topics For The Farm H. K. SANDERS, COUNTY AGENT Flakes Of Naptha - lene Kill Tobacco B> J Wttimm Since the announcement recently that Ira Kinlaw, a progressive farm er of the HowellsyiUe Section in Robeson County, had used flakes of napthalene to kill the small worms infesting tobacco beds on his farm, about 4,000 pounds of the material has been purchased and used in RobeSon County alone and the prac tice is spreading to other sections, reports C. H. Brannon, extension entomologist at State College. Mr, Brannon had a letter from County . Agent O. O. Dukes last week in which the farm agent gave the use of the material his unquali fied endorsement. Dr. B. B. Pulton, research entomologist for the North Carolina Experiment Station, has found that the nathalene will not hurt young tobacco plants even when used in excessive amounts. The material not only kills the small worms burrowing about in the tobacco beds but some farmers re port that it will kill earth-worms and snails. The material is the same as that from which moth balls are made explains Mr. Brannon. However, if the balls are used they must be crushed before applying to the bed. He recommends the use of about one and one-half pounds of the napthalene to each 100 square yards of plant bed. Both Mr. Brannon and Dr. Pul ton have visited Mr. Kinlaw's farm to observe the results which he has obtained, and Dr. Pulton has made further tests since. that time. Both men believe that the Robeson farm er has arrived at a practical con trol of the worm nuisance in plant beds and are suggesting that other tobacco farmers adopt the idea. Farm And Factory There Is a rapidly growing be lief among farmers that the ulti mate Solution of our agricultural" problems is going to come from a much more direct relationship be tween agriculture and industry than exists at pfesent. For many years Industrialists and scientists have been pointing out the necessity for a closer tie-up between farm and TactoryT Mr. Hem y Puid haa -fori years been preaching and putting into practice his idea that, instead of concentratfhg production in great industrial centers, big industries should have numerous small fac tores. each producing some part of the finished product, so located that industrial workers could also be ag riculturists, having their own land to fall back on fnr subsistence when industry was slack. This has alwavs seemed to w like a sound Solution of the problem of the industrial worker, but it does not go far to ward solving the major problems of tne tarmer. The utilization of farm wastes and surpluses for industrial pro cesses has also been the subject of a exeat deal of intelligent study by I economists and manufacturers. One of the moift important of all chem- ; ical substances is alcohol. Alcohol : is easily and cheaoly produced from a wide variety of agricultural pro- 1 ducts. In Iowa and Nebraska a be ginning ha^ been made in the pro duction of industrial alcohol from corn, and experiments with a mix ture" of alcohol and eastoline for motor fuel have been fairly success ful. In California the errape grow ers are beginning a similar experi ment, producing alcohol from grapes which are unfit for shipment. We think these are steps in the j right direction. We are told that j scientists and technologists are ready to show the agricultural and Indus- I trial word how to utilize everything that acn be grown on the farm for industrial purposes. It is not diffi cult to imagine a coming era in , which hundreds of thousands of small industrial establishments will , be scattered throughout the agricul- j tural regions, providing as many new outlets for the farmers' by products and surpluses, and so sta bilizing agriculture on a sounder , basfls than it has ever been. ? Auto caster. O- ? Clean Brooder House Necessary For Chicks A perfectly clean and sanitary brooder house is needed for grow- ! ing out the baby chicks bought or hatched for replacement of layers in the poultry flock. "Some of the leading poultry > growers of this State declare that the preparation of the brooder house is one of the moSt important steps in the production of healthy ? birds," says C. P. Parrish, poultry extension specialist at State Col lege. "These men have found that the house must be thoroughly clean ed before beginning with the new crop of chicks and if it is portable, the house should be moved to fresh ground. This means soil that has not been used by poultry for at i In Bullet Pathway Toward Roosevelt A small, brave and quick -thinking woman, Mrs. W P Cross of Miami, Fla., has the thanks and the gratitude of President-elect Roosevelt and the nation as s whole for her heroic act in* grabbing the gun arm of the ' ' President killer ' Joe Zangara as he fired at the President-elect, wound ing five, amongst them Mayor Anton J Cermak of Chicago. Photos show the more seriously wounded in the tragic event . . . Upper, left to right ; Mrs. Joseph H. Gill of Miami, Fla., Mayor Anton J Cermak, Chicago, and Miss Margaret Kruis, Newark, N J Lower, Joe Zangara, New York anarchist and would-be assassin . . . and right, Mrs. W P Cross who grabbed Zangara 's gun arm and diverted his aim at President-elect Roosevelt. 8he has been recommended for a ' " Congressional Medal" for her brave act. least three years." To clean the brooder house thor oughly, Mr. Parr is h advocates sweeping the walls, floor and ceil ing; then scraping the floor clean of any dirt or droppings, and, fol lowing this by a thorough scrubbing of the floor with a hot lye-water solution. The walls to a height of 18 inches from the floor should also be scrubbed with this solution. Make It by using one can of lye to ten gallons of water. Do not use the lye on a concrete floor, ? however. After the floor and walls are dry, they can be sprayed with any stan dard disinfectant or seared with a fire gun. All the equipment used in the house should be cleaned thoroughly. Mr. Parrish believes it a good plan to have a foot mat at the door of the brooder house, espe cially if there have been any out breaks of disease on the place. To make this foot mat, he suggests sat urating two sacks with a standard disinfectant and have all visitors and attendants wipe their shoes carefully before entering the build ing. ft I W UTTlf OLD One large New York motion pic ture theatre has as many as twen ty counterfeit bills offered to its cashiers every day. Not one has ever been accepted. ? * ? Some young women in New York are wearing bracelets with their telephone numbers engraved upon them. ? ? ? The Manhattan-Bronx volume of the city's new five-borough direc tory contains 4,000 pages and weighs 20 pounds. ? ? ? ? A New York firm pays the state motor vehicle bureau 110,000 a year for copies of its car registra tion records and sells this informa tion to automobile dealers, shops, etc. ? ? ? The Sixth avenue elevated struc ture has been given a coat of alum inum radiator paint where it passes Radio City. As soon as one gets past those three blocks it's the Same black and dingy elevated. And al though the silver paint is getting soiled and looking gray it brightens up Sixth avenue. ? ? ? The electric light companies here say the jig saw puzzle craze Is great. Keeps people up late at night, is the explanation for their ' enthusiasm. I o j Horatio Oreenbough was the first American sculptor to be employed at the Capitol. He was commission ed by Congress in 1832 to execute a | statue of Washington. State Purchases Garden Seed For Destitute Families Raleigft, Feb. 27. ? Contracts for 125,000 packages of garden seeds for use in planting gardens for des | titute families were awarded last i week by the State Department of I I Purchase and Contract. Tliese seeds ' Office of Relief and in turn be, madr available for those -destitute ! families who have agreed to plant gardens so as to become self -sup- , porting. The details of working out the plan are in ' charge of the j county farm agents and the relief f directors in the various counties. _ , Every possible assistance is being offered by the Governor's Office of , Relief in carrying out the program , which is designed to enable desti- ( tute families to produce all the food they consume. A planting cal endar Setting forth in detail the f'ates for planting gardens, the amount to be planted, and instruc- ; tions for cultivating have been ( broadcast throughout the State. The State College Extension ser- ? vice has also published for wide- , spread distribution a guide to com- | munity farm budgeting, a pamphlet , which will be of material assistance , to relief directors in starting con* munity farms which will provide foodstuffs for those destitute fam ilies who do not live on farms. Executrix Notice Havin? qualified as executrix of the estate of A. S. Gillis, deceased, ^te of Person County, N. C? this is to notify all persons holding claims