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i THURSDAY, DEC, 15, 1939
YADKIN CORN
Mrs. R. B. Holcoxnb of the non
community in Yadkin county se
cured bushels of. corn from
two acres where the land had been
seeded to lespedezu the year before.
The sod land was .subsoiled; allow
ed to stand until mid-winter when
it was-, broken deeply, and was
given a coating of barnyard manure.
No corrimercial fertilizer was used.
BULGIN BROS.
WROUGHT IRON WORK
ACETYLENE AND
ELECTRIC WELDING
GENERAL MACHINE WORK
Franklin N. C.
"' " 1
W. H. Mashburn
JEWELER
ALL MAKES OF .
WATCHES REPAIRED
Ashear Bldg. Franklin, N. C.
FOR QUALITY CLEANING
CALL
ECONOMV
" CLEANERS 1
Phone 136 Franklin, N. -C.
Loyal Order
of Moose
Franklin Lodge, No. 452
v Meets,
In Americal Legion Hall
Every Thursday Night
7:30 O'CLOCK
Billy Bry son, Secretary
HORN'S SHOE SHOP SAYS
WE ARE STILL MENDING
SHOES
- - As the days grow cold,
And the frost is on, .
Have your shoes half soled,
And you'll then be strong.
HORN'S SHOE SHOP
Opposite Courfchouae
"We Buy and Sell
Box 212 Troy F. Horn
CAN YOU AFFORD
TO BE WITHOUT IT
Funeral Benefit Insurance Costs
Are Surprisingly Small
Rates From 2l2c Month Up
, According To Age
Benefits are Provided in the
Amount of $100 for Persons
Over 10 Years of Age and in
the Amount of $50' for Per
. sons Under 10 Years of Age.
Bryant Burial Ass'n.
Franklin, N. C
CAGLE'S CAFE
FRANKLIN SYLVA
"We Cater to the General
' Public"
Oysters, Steaks and Fish
a Specialty
Good " Tasty Food and
Home-Baked Pies
We Appreciate Your Patronage
A. G. CAGLE, Prop.
IleJp Them OeanM the Elood
of Harmful Body Waste
Your Iridfieyt art constantly flltarfn
wuti matter from th blood atrMin. Bai
kidntyi omatlmM lag la their work" de
not act aa naturo ininaQ imu e r
tnoTt ImpuritlM that. If ratalnod, may
poison tho Byitam and upaat U wkoto
body machinery.
Symptoms mty ba narttag backache.
para latent headache, attacks of dUBlaeaa,
getting up nights, swelling, pufllneaa
under the yea a foaling of aorvwns
anxiety and loaa of pop and stnagth.
Other eigne of kidney or bladder die
order may be burning, scanty or toe
frequent urination. '
There ahould be no doubt that prompt
treatment la wiser than neglect. Uso
Doom's Pill. Dean's have been wtaalag
new friends for mora than forty years.
They have a nation-wide reputation,
Axo recommended by grateful people the
country over. Aik your ntigkberl
towcBiaiina
tUlS FIlANKLm
Santa Claus Letters
Prentiss, N. C,
Dec. 7, 1938.
Dear Santa Claus,
1 am a girl nine years old. For
Christmas 1 want a doll and cradle,
some candy, . nuts, apples, oranges,
that is all I will ask for "this time.
Don't forget the little children that
has no mother or father Santa.
Don't forget my little brother, he
is 10 months old. He is fond of
"all-day suckers." He also wants a
teething ring. ,
Your little girl,
Barbara Ledford.
Prentiss, N. C.
Dec, 7, 1938.
Dear Santa Claus, i
I am a boy 11 years , old. For
Christmas 1 want ia red wagon, cap
buster, and some fire crackers, I
also want some candy, nuts,
oranges, apples and rasins. I guess
that is enough for this Christmas.
Remember my little brother he
wants a baby walker.
. Yours truly, .
Calvin Ledford.
v Prentiss, N. C.
Dec. 6, 1938.
Dear Santa Claus,
.1 am a little girl four years old.
I want a sleepy doll, and a tea set.
I want .some candy, apples, oranges,
raisins and nuts. Santa don't forget
other little boys and girls that has
no .mother or father. Santa please
don't forget my little brothers and
sisters.
Your friend,
Thelma Ledford.
Prentiss, N. C.
Dec. 6, 1938.
Dear Santa,
I am, a. little girl seven, years old.
THE GEORGIA-TECH
FOOTBALL GAME '
I wnt traveling the pother day
And saw. some kinsfolk along the
way. '
They treated me nice and kind, too,
I never had a chance to get blue.
i
Georgia Tech from Atlanta' came
To play Georgia in a football game.
At the half it looked like both
sides were bluffing
For the score stood at nothing and
nothing.
At the end of the game the' score
was tied,
Not a thing had been made, by
either side.
There were thirty thousand people
there;
They shouted and threw their hats
in the air;
There were drunk men reeling and
rocking around,
They would stagger, and sometimes
fall on the ground.
There was one of them got , pretty
rough,
He said that he was, really tough,
So they took him out and bruised
his head
He ought to have been at home in
bed.
Kenneth Young.
Molasses-Grain Silage
Used On Mountain Farm
. A possible solution to one of the
major problems of the Southeastern
dairy farmer is reported by J. C
Lynn, farm agent of .the State col
lege extension service in Mitchell
county. Lynn has, cooperated with
S. T. Henry, operator of a small
commercial dairy in the mountain
ous section of Mitchell county, to
conduct an experiment in preserving
grasses and legumes as ensilage.
Mr. Henry cut the grasses . and
legumes in June and late August
and filled a 70-ton upright stave
silo with an ensilage made from
the grasses and legumes, mixed
with molasses. Lynn reports it is
keeping well, , especially where the
grasses and legumes were ensiled
before vthey wilted, and that the
cows are eating it with unusual
appetites.
Milk flow has been' remarkably
well maintained and the herd has
kept in excellent condition, the
farm agent says. Next season Mr.
Henry intends to do considerable
experimentaal work with his herd,
feeding some cows solely on grass
silage and concentrates, others on
Muse's Corner
hay and concentrates, and some on
PRESS AND THE HIGHLANDS
For Christmas I want a sleepy doll,
some candy, oranges, apples, nuts,
and I guess , that will do for this
time. Santa don't forget other little
girls and boys especially . the little
children who have ho parents, Don"t
forget my little sisters and -brothers,
for they want something too.
Yours truly,
Yvonne Ledford.
Prentiss, Ni C.
Dec. 7, 1938.
Dear 'Old Santa,
I m a little boy almost six
years old. Will you please bring
me a trycycle, a little red wagon,
some gloves, candy, nuts and some
oranges. Don't forget other children.
Yours truly.
Spence Ledford.
Prentiss, Nf C.
Dec. 7, 1938.
Dear Santa, a
I am a little girl almost eight
years old. I want a doll that will
open and shut her eyes and cry;
a doll cradle; a ring; some candy,
nuts and oranges. I'll thank you for
these things.
Sue Ledford.
Prentiss, N. C.
Dec. 7, 1938.
Santa,
I am a little girl nine years old,
in the fourth grade. I go to school
and haven't missed a day. Will you
please bring me a sleepy doll, a
dress, also 1 would like for you to
bring me a story book, for I do
enjoy reading,, some candy, nuts and
oranges. Don't kforget other little
boys and girls who go to school.
Thanks for these presents.
. Kathryn Ledford.
all three. He believes that under
his conditions molasses-grass silage
has many advantages over corn
silage, and that it may be possible
to eventually substitute molasses
grass silage entirely for dry hay.
: Dairy farmer who try to grow
feed for their herds on farms where
the land-is -steep, the .rainfall heavy,
and the soil light, and subject to
severe erosion, have serious prob
lems. Row crops . do not produce
satisfactorily and heavy rainfall
usually causes the making of hay to
be a precarious matter.
State College Answers
Timely Farm Questions
Q. What is the best fertilizer to
use on newly planted fruit trees?
A. One-half pound of nitrate of
soda or its equivalent should be
used on apple and nut trees the
first year and one-quarter pound
of soda on the peach, pear, plum,
and cherry trees. If the commercial
5-7-5 mixture is used the application
would be two pounds for the apple
and nut trees the first year and
one pound for the peach, pear,
plum, and crerry trees. .The ferti
lizer can be applied at any time
during the dormant season up to
within a month of blooming time.
Q. How much skim milk, clabber,
or buttermilk can be used as sub
stitutes in the laying mash?
A. This depends upon the amount
available on the farm. If three gal
lons are available each day, this
amount may be used as a substitute
for all the dried milk products, one
hajf the fish meal, and one-half
the meat meal recommended in the
mash required for 100 hens. One
gallon may be used in place of the
dried milk products each day for
100 hens. The success of these
substitutions will depend upon the
regularity of the feeding and, if an
ample supply is not available at all
tjmes no substitutions should De
made . .
Q. When should lettuce plants be
set in the. field?
A For the early spring crop in
Eastern North Carolina the plants
should be set in January and early
February. In the upper Piedmont
and, lower Mountain sections the
plants are set in the field in late
Feburary and early March. Much
care should be taken in transplant
ing lettuce to the field. The tap
roots should be set straight in the
ground and the plants set to about
the depth they grew in the bed.
Do not cover the growing bud and
do not set weak or diseased plants.
Early planting is necessary as let
tuce that does not mature before
hot weather is usually of poor qual
ity and often does not head at all.
MACON IAN
aatisBwi
kudZu Hay
From one acre of kudzu, H. C.
Carson of Rutherford county, cut
five tons of hay from the first
growth and allowed the second
growth to remain on the land. - It
now ' forms a mulch about three
inches thick and acts as an erosion
control. Mr. Carson says kudzu al
so makes fine pasture if not grazed
too closely.
LEGAL ADVERTISING
CERTIFICATE OF
DISSOLUTION . h
Stata of North Carolina
Department of Stata
To All to Whom these Presents
May Come Greeting;
Whereas, It appears to my .satis
faction, by duly authenticated rec
ord of the proceedings for the vol
untary dissolution thereof by the
unanimous consent of all the stock
holders, deposited in my office, that
the, Franklin Hardware Company,
a corporation of this State, whose
principal office is .situated in the
Town of Franklin, County of Ma
con, State of North Carolina (A.
R. Higdon, being the agent therein
and in charge thereof, upon whom
process may be served), has com
plied with the requirements of
Chapter 22, Consolidated Statutes,
entitled "Corporations," preliminary
to the issuing of this Certificate of
Dissolution : ,
Now, Therefore, I Thad Eure,
Secretary of State of the State of
North Carolina, do hereby certify
that the said corporation did, on
-the 2nd day of December, 1938, file
in my office a duly executed and
attested consent in writing to the
dissolution of said corporation, ex
jcuted by all the stockholders
thereof, which said consent and the
record of the proceedings aforesaid
are now on file in my said office
as provided by law. -
In Testimony Whereof, I have
hereto set my hand and affixed
my official seal -at Raleigh, this 2nd
day of December, A.D. 1938.
-THAD EURE,
Secretary of State.
(SEAL OF THE STATE)
Maoon County, i
North Carolina
Recorded in book of Incorpora
tions No. 1, page 158.
" IndexediHs the 6th day of De
cember, 1938.
' . HARLEY R. CABE,
, Clerk Superior Court.
(SEAL OF THE CLERK)
D8-4tc D29
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
North Carolina, V
Macon County.
Jn Hie Superior Court
Macon County
vs.
Margaret R. Siler, et al
The defendants, Mrs. C.T.Roane,
Annie Will Siler, Freda Siler, Mar
garet D'Onofrio, Michael D'Onofrio,
Mrs. Charles P. Hershfeld, Mrs.
I SEND THE PRESS AS A
CHRISTMAS GIFT f
: A year's subscription to The
H Franklin Press would be appreci- M
& ated more than anything you W
& could give by your relatives or g
u friends who have lived in Macon
H County and are now making their ijj
homes elsewhere. For $1.50 you W
Sr. can send them every week for a
S whole year the news of happen-
ft: ings in the home county. Jt is a
gift worth while. Send in the j
names so that Jhe paper cpin start
j with the first issue of thp new fj
U year. :4
f $
The Frankjin Press &
page nine
LEGAL ADVERTISING
Mrs, Frank K. Kearney, will take
notice that an action as above en
titled has been commenced in the
Superior Court of Macon County to
the end that the plaintiff may fore
close a tax lien covering lands in
which the above named defendants
have an interest, and the above
named defendants, will further take
notice that they are required to ap
pear within thirty days in the of
fice of the Clerk of the Superior
Court of Macon County, N. C. and
answer or demur to the complaint
in said action or the plaintiff will
apply tq the Court for. the relief
demanded in said complaint. i
This the 23rd day of November,
1938.
HARLEY R. CABE,
Clerk of the Superior Court.
Dl-4tc D22
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
North Carolina .
Macjcn County
In The Superior Court
H. W. Cabe, Administrator of the
Estate of E. J. Bouchard, deceased,
vs.
Bonnie E. Bouchard, Arthur Ed
ward Bouchard, Naomi Bonnie
Bouchard, and Lucille Eleanor
Bouchard.
The defendants, Bonnie E. Bouch
ard, Arthur Edward Bouchard, Na
omi Bonnie Bouchard, and Lucille
Eleanor Bouchard, will take notice
that an action as above entitled has
been commenced in the Superior
Court of Macon County, North
Carolina, to the end that the plain
tiff may sell the lands of his in
testate to make assets to pay debts
and the costs of administration, in
which land the above named de
fendants have .an interest. The
above named defendants will fur
ther take notice that they are re
quired to appear within' 30 days, in
the office of the Clerk of the Su
perior Court of Macon County,
North Carolina, and answer or de
mur to the complaint ir said action
or the plaintiff will apply to the
court for the relief demanded there
in. This 21st day of November, 1938.
HARLEY R. CABE,
Clerk of the Superior Court
Macon County, N... C
N24-4tc D15
WOMACICSH
SERVICE STATION
Atlas Tires Batteries
PRESTONE
Hot Water Heaters
Washing Greasing
Best Grades of Oils and
Lubricants Used
Phone 1904 Franklin, N. C.