PACE SIX THE FlUNKLIN PRESS AM) tH HIGHLANDS MACONIAN TilURSDAV, APRIL 1$, tftf HORN'S SHOE SHOP SAYS , WE ARE STILL MENDING SHOES ,Vhcn you can't control Your mind or will We'll save your sole And a doctor's bill. HORN'S SHOE SHOP Box 212 Troy F. Horn Opposite Courthouse I M WV Alcohol tyfff 20-21 by volume NEW YORK STATE E HILLSIDE L VUacr'i Wine Cellar. Inc,N.ple.,N.Y. J ed ai full or vigo . '"Indicates Seeds in Bulk FRANKLIN Arngel Drug: Co. Roy Cunningham Farmers Federation Inc. Franklin Hdwe. Co. J. R. Pendergrass ' ' HIGHLANDS Talley & Burnett F. A. Edwards Highlands Hdwe. Co. G. W. Mairett SCALY. J. D. Burnette SYLVA Farmers Federation Inc. Sylva Pharmacy W8S Wrll lor a KHLfc copy ot wood Jr. I) L IITUI fVrfnlA. mI CimIm Plnm. f " V r and Field SmcLb. A poit card to T.W.Wood & Son. Sooduntn. Rlrhmand. Vrt. hrlnna IL . 4 Win Irak N State mmmmmmmmmmmm I w .14 ; ''V ..-v. x . : i ... ...v : . ' . ... . Left to right Standing: Hon. W. B. Umstead, Han. Graham A. Barden, Hon. Harold D. Cooley, Han. J. H. Kerr, Hon. J. W. Lameth, Hon. J. Bayard Clark, Hon. Lindsay C. Warren, Hon. Frank Hancock, Hon. A. L. Bulwinkle, Hon. Zebulon Weaver. Seated: Hon. J. W. Bailey, Hon. R. L. Doughtan, Hon. R. R. Reynolds. ' . t Peculiar Thermal Belt Interestingly Elxplained Alany visitors, as well as resi dents; frequently remark on the peculiar "Thermal Belt" which stretches through this section of Western North Carolina. This phenomena was recently in terestingly explained in a North Carolina agricultural publication.. Many years ago Silas McDowell wrote in the agricultural volume of the Patent Office Report an article relating his observations in Macon county. He was a man of much intelligence . and.,had been in , youth a companion of John Lyon, the English botanist, exploring with him the Yellow, Roan, Grandfather and Linville . ranges and caring for him until his death in 1814. Mr. McDowell was also a com panion of Curtis, Buckley, Rein hardt and Dow, the latter of whom perished in ."the mountains," and his remains were never discovered. Dr. Gray was in communication with him more than 40 years ago. He wrote: "When 1 commenced business it was as a farmer in western North Carolina, in a wild valley and amid lofty mountains, and for nearly 50 years my house was -an open, fre.e home to the scientist, particularly fhe geologist and botanist (my own specialties.) But now the light be gins to burn dim in the pinnacle and is nearly out." He died in 1882 at the ripe old age of 87. A description of the phenomena observed by him is given in his own Words : , "Among the valleys of the south ern Alleghanies sometimes winter is succeeded by warm weather, which continuing . through the months of March and April, brings out vegetation rapidly and clothes the forest in an early vendure. "This pleasant spring weather is terminated by a few days rain, and the clearing up is followed bycold, raking winds from the- northwest, leaving the atmosphere a pure in digo tint, through which wink bright stars ; but, if the wind sub sides at night, the succeeding morn ing shows a heavy hoar frost, veg etation is utterly, killed, including all manner of fruit germs, and the landscape clothed in verdue the day before now looks dark and dreary. "It is under precisely this con dition of things that, the beautiful phenomenon of the 'Verdant Zone' or 'Thermal Belt' exhibits itself upon our mountain sides, commenc ing at about 300 feet vertical1 height above the valleys, and traversing them in a perfectly horizontal line throughout their entire length, like the vast green ribbon upon a black ground. '"Its breadth is 400 feet vertical height, and from that wider ac cording to the degree of the angle of the mountain with the plane of the horizon. Vegetation of all kinds within the limits ot this zone is Delegation in Congress untouched by frost ; and such is its protective influence that the Isa bella, the most fender of all our native grapes, has not failed to produce abundant crops in 26 con secutive years; nor has fruit of any kind ever been known within these limits to be frost killed, though there have been instances where it has been so from a severe freeze. The lines are sometimes so sharp ly drawn that ane-half of a shrub may be frost-killed while the other half is unaffected. "This belt varies in the height of its range above different valleys. I will name a case in, point. I made my. observations in relation to this belt in Macon county, which is tra versed by the beautiful valley of the little Tennessee riter lying 2, 000 feet above tidewater. Here when the thermometer is drawn to 20 the frost reaches 300 feet verti cal height. A small river, having its sources in a high plateau 1,900 feet above this, runs down into this valley, breaking through three mountain barriers, and consequent ly making three short valleys, in cluding the plateau, rising one above the other, each of which has its IT'S X FERTI- lsA , s Farmers recogniz BASIC-0-TEH-F0UR as the most profitabl fertilizer for CORN w v.;v. w The latest Government for the United States 8 Fertilizer, is relatively cheaper than, any commodity the farmer can buy. Corn is high. When beef is high we feed our cattle heavy; when produce is high we feed our plants heavy. THE BEST PLANT FOOD IS BASIC PUL VERIZED FERTILIZER. For your convenience we carry in stock a complete line of Basic Pulver ized Fertilizer made only by the Knoxville Fertilizer Company. E. A. Dbwdle, Franklin own vernal zone, traversing the hillsides that inclose them, the first of which takes a much lower range than that of the lower valley and each taking a lower as the valleys mount higher in the atmosphere." Procedures for Filing of Old-Age Benefits' Claims Procedures for filing of claims for the payment of lump sums under the federal old-age benefits plan of the Social Securty Act, surpassing in simplicity any others for similar use yet devised either for government or private business purposes, have been outlined .by G. R. Parker, regional director, region IV. Moreover, Mr. Parker declared that when the claims procedures are in full operation the adjudica tion of properly completed claims can be accomplished with unusual dispatch following their receipt in the Washington office of the board. Claims already filed range from a few dollars each to $105. A simple form has been devised by the social security board for the use of each of the. five different types of claimants. Separate forms are provided for:(l) wage earners, (2) widows or widowers, (3) other close relatives, . (4) executors or administrators, and (5) guardians or committees. They ask a mini- A PROVE M FACT t 250LBS. rw SEE OUR 74 OV 1 1 j imp" report on the "Intended per cent below the' five year mum of from two to a rriaxlmum of 12 questions. . 'h ' A sixth form, known as "State ment of Employer," is a simple re port by the employer giving only the total amount of wages paid thv. employee and the employment per iod. . Mr. Parker said forms are ob tainable, and that assistance in ex ecuting t'hem is 'available, at any one of its 12 regional offices and 111 field offices now open at stra tegic points throughout the United States. Forms also may be obtain ed at the Board's office, in Wash ington, D. C. As the claims load increase, the Board stated .new field offices will be opened as the work necessitates. , i The nearest field office to this section is located in the Flatiron building, Asheville. ' WHAT to PLANT THIS WEEK , Compiled by Farmers Federation News Garden ities: First and' Best, Alaska, Early Bird. Wrinkled: Laxton, Telephone. SPINACH Bloomsdale, for spring and early summer. CABBAGE Set frost-proof plants, Early Jersey Wakefield, Charles-, ton Wakefield, Early Flat Dutch, ONIONS Danver and Silver Skin sets, Bermuda plants. BEANS Valentine, Tennessee tGreen Pod, Burpee, Giant. LETTUCE Grand Rapids (curled), N. Y. Wonderful, Iceberg. POTATOES-Irish Cobbler, Spauld- ing Rose and Green Mountain. TURNIPS White Egg, 7-Top, Purple Top Globe. BEETS Early Eclipse, Early Blood Turnip, Detroit Dark Red. CARROT S Chantenay, Danver, Ox-heart. CORN All sweet varieties. MUSTARD Curled. RAD ASH All varieties. TOMATO In flats and hot beds. PEPPERS Pimiento, ; Cayenne, Bell or Bull Nose, Field Seeding , LESPEDEZA Korean, Common, Kobe, Tennessee 76, Serecia. CLOVERS Red, Sapling,. Alsike, . White Dutch, White Sweet, Al falfa.. GRASSES Kentucky Blue, Red Top, Orchard, Rye, Grass, Tim othy. OATS Fulghum, ' White Spring, Red, Burt. RAPE Spade or plow in all manure available on rest of garden. Lime if possible, but leave lime and manure off potato land. Finish all fruit tree pruning and dormant scale spraying (spray oil, lime sulphur with arsenate of lead or nicotine sulphate, according to1 manufacturers' directions.) Acreage" of corn shows average.