Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / March 6, 1934, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE FOUR 11 Cent Sale Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday I - MANY USEFUL THINGS YOU NEED EVERY DAY—LOOK OVER OUR TABLES. BUY ONE ARTICLE AT THE REGULAR PRICE AND GET ANOTHER LIKE IT FOR ONE CENT. TOILETRIES—HOUSEHOLD REMEDIES— ■ «;• RUBBER GOODS—STATIONERY—DENTAL AND SHAVING SUPPLIES—DRUGS ~ iS ' • I One Cent Sale DAVIS PHARMACY One^en^Salj HONOR ROLL I AT JAMESVILLE —B Fifty-Three Names on List For Fifth Month of School Fifty-three names appear on the J Jamesville school honor roll for the j fifth month, as follows: First grade B: Ben Gray Lilley, Grace Brewer, Ernestine Gardner, Mil-® dred Gardner. Firtt grade A: Fred Calloway, Janie Mae Hardison, Ethel Lilley. Second grade: l'ete Ange, Leon I Gray Sexton, Clifford Corey, Irving | Gardner. ' —' Are You Ready? FOR THAT NEW Spring Coat or Dress ✓ OR A Smart. . . Swagger Suit Arriving and are being displayed daily. The modes we are displaying are a rare collection personally selected in New York several days ago. The several groups we received this week are the smartest of the season and represent in viting values at the most modest prices. —— Marriolix Brothers where fcarirty Srattb GJloltiea anuld * * We %ay ... ■■■ "Spring at this chance DO YOU KNOW why so many K: % I people are buying (Ire* earlier than usual thl* year? . . . Kvery- 9 one believe* price* are headed WKkkl upward*—and thinking driver* figure It'* no *avlng to run risk* IL^H while u*ing up old rubber, only to pay more (or new tire* lnv**t now in a whole new *et of Goodyear*—you'll be glad you acted on our advice. A OW* have guaranteed W I Goodyear* lower Af than our All wf p Ji Weather ahown here f! Ijfl I but more people buy m Jfj the All-Weather I Tin* hIY/I are etUl to low in price un|N* trading in your car thi* STILL PRICED Sprint, '*'• beat to la « irwN | v**t In the beat. That |HHH wy you spread the bMieAt of today'* great M ****** *** 'Priest subject to change without notice end to any SdM win C CENTRAL SERVICE STATION WILLIAMSTON, N. C. | Third grade: Herbert Gardner, jr., ■ Beulah Modlin, Kosalyn Mizzel, Ella 'Ange, Frances Wallace, Rufus Man ning, Sara Frances Wright, Jimmie I Burnette. j Fourth grade: Dolly Goddard, Ma | rie Gurkin, Bernice Gardner, Andrew iHolliday, jr., Merrimon Mizelle. j Fifth grade: Shirley Faye Bowen, .Margie Martin, Eris Stallings, fteba !Gardner, James Wallace, Macon Hol ! liday, Joseph Ange, Marvin Sexton. Sixth grade: Delsea Mobley, Dor lothy Swinson, Glen Davis, Harvey 1 Wright. i Seventh grade: Beulah Swinson, Roy Manning, Henry Clyde Walters,| Joseph Holliday, F. C. Stallings. I Eighth grade: Flora Swinson, Hel-, | en Wright. ' Ninth grade: Fannie Modlin, Mar- t PUBLISHED BVKKV JUBM^NyjIDAV NO CASH CROPS MAY BE PLANTED ON LAND SPECIFIED IN CONTRACT Dean Schaub Explains How Land Retired From Culti vation Under Federal Contracts May Be Used; No Objections To Certain Crops Dean I. O. Schaub, of State Col-j lege, has explained the following: points in regafd to growing orops on! land retired from cultivation under; the crop reduction contracts. The contracts allow growers to use the rented acres to grow feed, food,® soil-building, or erosion-prevention: crops, provided none of them are of fered for sale. • Since the contracts also specify that the growers are not to increase anyi of their other salable crops when they| reduce the one covered by the con tract, a number of growers have got ten the idea that it will be all right to grow a cash crop on the rented acreage so long as they do not in crease the total amount of the crop. EDGECOMBE GROWERS IN FAVOR . FORCING TOBACCO COOPERATION Send Resolution To North Carolina Senators and Con gressmen Asking Them To Push Legislation To Force Reduction By Non-Signers „. . —— t Edgecombe county growers of flue curcd tobacco have come out strong I for federal legislation to force non signers of the tobacco contract to re duce their acreage. Representing practically every grow er in the county, the Edgecombe Coun ty Tobacco Control Association has sent a resolution to North Carolina's ,i senators and congressmen asking i them to push the enactment of such legislation. i The resolution urged laws forcing ' non-signers to reduce under penalty ■ of paying a tax of 15 cents a pound 1 on all tobacco they sell above the t amount they would have marketed tin- ' der the contract. ' Furthermore, non-signers would be ' required to reduce without getting the rental benefit, and equalization pay- ' ments given to growers who signed. They would also be prevented from obtaining crop loans from the Farm ' Credit Administration. ' Ahe resolution furtlttr Requested 1 the secretary of agriculture to pro- ' vide for a permanent system of crop 1 control after the present contracts ex- ! pire, and to place government grad- ! ers on the markets to grade all tobac- f co sold free of charge. ' Claude T. Hall, of Woodsdale, the president of the North Carolina To- ' bacco Advisory Board,, is also in fav or of governmental action controlling t the production of those who have not j signed the contract. Mr. Hall re- » cently made a statement urging all ,j cooperating growers to. ask their con-', gressional representatives to support f such action. 11 "To keep quiet at this time is to j give support to those who seek to' s wreck the adjustment program," he; i declared. ( «, Two Methods for Treating > Worm-Infested / Ppultry I' . - » 1 here are two methods for treating^' worm-infested fowl. one is to place worm-removing ingredients in the 1 mash and the other is to treat ea-ch individual bird with medicated tablets ( or capsules. The individual treatment j is best, however, as in this way the : poultrvman is surf that each bird i gets the medicine. These tables are i sold at practically all drug stores and ; may be bought for both chicks and i adult bij-ds. Place the tablet o cap-'( sule deep in the bird's mouth and rub 1 j the throat downward to make sure i the medicine is swallowed. Follow this treatment with Epsom salts at i the rate of one-half pound of salts to ! thre; gallons of water for every 100 I adult birds. The day following clean' I the house thoroughly and burn all' refuse. I Buyer In New York Mrs. Pi H. Brown, representing the ( local firm of Barnhill Brothers, local merchants, will leave this evening for , New York where she will make large purchases of spring and summer wear- i ing apparel for the business hree. garet Holliday. Tenth grade: Louise Martin, Mar- , tha Moore, Rosa Moore, James Wal ien Eleventh grade: Reba Ange, Carrta 1 Pearl Manning, Melvine Mixelle, ' Elouise Perry. r —( I THE ENTERPRISE ■j In other words, the dean said, if a I ; farmer heretofore has been growing .! two acres of %arden truck for sale, he' j may grow the same amount of truck,' I but not on the rented acres. 1 j To do so would be a violation ct' . the contract, the dean emphasized. | i! Likewise,' growers cannot shift a part of their cotton crop to land re-| tired from tobacco acreage, or parti : of their tobacco crof) to land retired; i from cotton, even though the total. | acreage of each crop is not increased j •j thereby. I The contracts specify that a cer-j J tain amount of land is to be retired j I' from the production of cash crops. That land and no other must be set ' aside as the rented acreage. GROWERS WANT NON-SIGNERS TO BE PENALIZED —.. Rumblings from the cotton grow ing sections make it increasingly evi dent that the cotton adjustment pro gram will leave both dissatisfaction and friction in many rural communi-, (tics of North Carolina unless definite action is taken to curb production by non-signers. The Extension folks at .State College haven't said so much about it, but there have been reports from county agents in the larger cot ton-producing counties to the effect that some growers who have signed will demand their contracts back un less the non-signer is restricted. Other county agents hint at "re volts." The extension workers do not attempt to interpret the meaning of the word "revolt" but they have been informed that non-signers will never market all the cotton they plant this spring. The same is true of tobacco, but to a less extent because tobacco glowing is restricted to smaller terri tory and North Carolina growers who liave signed will share in larger per capita payments. If Congress restricts the produc tion of- non-signers and makes it im possible for these growers to sell their cotton or tobacco without payment of a profit-destroying tax, then the co-1 operating growers will be satisfied. These cooperating growers are high-' ly in the now, since about 98 per tobacco acre age usually grown is now under con tract and approximately 90 per cent > of the cotton acreage. In some of the larger cotton-growing sections, as much as 95 per cent of the grow ers have signed. These men are a 'fraid, however, of the plantings which may be made by new growers and ex pansion by old growers who have not Signed. | 1* appears now that Congress will pass some restrictive legislation. How .this will work is about as follows: Say a man has a base acreage of 100 acres. By signing a contract and re-1 ducing 40 per cent, he may plant 60 acres and will reduce 40 acres. If he| has made 250 pounds of lint average' on his land during past years, he will get a rental payment of 3 1-2 cents a pound for the production on the 40 acres. This means 40 time 250 times 3 1-2 cents, and will amount to $350. One-half of this will be paid btfore March 30 and the other half between August 1 and September 30. But in addition he will get a parity payment paid by December of 1 cent a pound on 40 per cent of the cotton normally raised on his base acreage of 100 acres. So 100 times 250 pounds of lint per acre will be 25,000 pounds of cotton. Forty per cent of this is 10,000 pounds, and 1 cent a pound on this is SIOO. So the man who signs gets $450 in reutal and benefit pay ments, plus his increased market price for cotton brought about by the gen eral reduction over the south. On this basis, too, the man who signs will be allowed to grow and sell allotment of 30 bales of cotton. If he grows 40 bales, he wjjU have the WILLI AMSTON HOgTMCAIJOtmA tax of 12 cents a pound placed on his extra 10 bales. More than likely he will be content with hi* government payment plus the good price on his allotment of 30 bales. But say this man has been growing 100 acres on which he has made an average of 250 pounds of lint per acre and will not sign a contract. He loses the $450 benefit payment and will not be allowed to sell but 30 bales without a tax. If he plants his whole 100 acres, he would make 50 bales, based on past yields. He will prob ably be allowed to sell 30 bales with out a tax and without benefit pay ments, but if he attempts to sell the other bales the profitrdestroying tax of 12 per cent will be placed on him to help defray the expenses of the program. This will probably mean that the co operating signer may get a, higher parity payment next December. At least this is the way the out look appears at this time. WORST PERIOD FOR CATTLE LICE Calves in Particular Suffer Most During Early Spring Months The early spring months are the worst time of year for cattle lice, par ticularly on calves, according to R. H. Ruffncr, Itrad of the State College animal husbandry department. Cattle infested with licr cannot be thrifty, he said, and they frequently lick and rub their skin until the hair comes off in great patches around the tail-head, neck, and withers. The best treatment consists of washing the animal with a solution of 1 ounce of sodium fluoride to 1 gallon of water, Ruflfner said. The liquid should be applied over the entire body and,' worked in well with a brush around the back and sides and with a rag under the belly and neck and between the legs. A clear day is best for the treat ment, so that the animals will dry off quickly. After the liquid has been ap plied the animals should be rubbed until almost dry, then allowed to stand quietly. WANTS MORE MILK—MORE BOOS—USE Milk-Flo Dairy Feed and Sunshine Laying Mash. C. L. Wilson, Rober sonville, N. C. jl9 lOt FOR SALE: VALUABLE HOUSE and lot. l'rke right. For particu lars see W. C. Manning. tf FOR SALE: DUGOUT CANOB in good condition, bargain for quick sale. See Sarah Griffin, West Main Stfeet, City It @llllllllll 1 BAUGffS fT | ANIMAL BONE FERTILIZERS ' I In the manufacture of the BAUGH BRAND of FERTILIZERS, the distinct originality of process and the technical success of the new tJHL» OLDEST methods adopted by individual thought and action in 1855 (nearly four ANNUAL BRAND score years ago), have without interval been maintained and advanced OUTPUT IN by the same personal oversight and determination. JOOOOQ AMERICA This statement may be rendered more forceful by the TONS p— ' word, that correct principles of business and good faith with farmers * , > and dealers have, likewise, been an abiding policy. OFFICES WORKS. F% S * W = Philadelphia, Pa. MM tft. *.«,* o» .= —■™ Baltimort. Md. _ mUm fmrmmims miU km mmim» ■■ ■ Kttx nAIIfIH i /S^SS& N 0. V - I ittWUn NORFOIit, VA. Jj^ nifjg) FOR SALE BY Salsbury Supply Co., Hassell, N. C. —W. G. Keel, Oak City, N. C. C. B. Hassell, Will iamston, N. C. - Slade - Rhodes & Company Hamilton, N. C. * - 4 _ _ - . . - .... \ "V/'- BEAUTY SPECIALIST GIVES | TREATMENTS HERE FREE Miss Marguerite Hunt, represent*-) tire of the Vilen's Educational Beauty J Service, Inc., Kansas City, Mo., will bt at the Colonial Beauty Shoppe the! remainder of this week giving com-; plimentary beauty treatments. You are cordially invited to come to the beauty shop to have a free consulta tion and treatment. —adv. » Growers of early truck crops in Brunswick County have pooled their | orders for irish potatoes and snap bean seed and have arranged for a trucking company to transport their produce to market this spring. • CARD OP THANKS We, the sons of Mrs. Pennie Rog-. erson, want to express to our friends j in both Martin and adjoining coun ties our appreciation for the lovely, flowers given and sympathy offered during the recent illness and death of our mother. , (Signed) Delmus, llermon, Ira, and Elmer Rogerson. WINDOW FULL Horse and Mule COLLARS WILL BE SOLD At Old Price We also have a large supply of back bands, trace chains, plow harness of ev ery description, such as bridles and plow lines. This stock was bought before the price advanced, and we shall pass this saving on to our customers. Come in and get our prices before buying. CULPEPPER Hardware Co. WILLIAMSTON, N. C. Tuesday. March 6,1934 Mr. Henry Odum, connerted with the power company here" for several years, has returned to his home in Ahoskie. Mr*. Odum and little son are in Norfolk. Miss Thenia Brown is able to be out after being confined with influenza for several days. CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our heartfelt appreciation to every one who will ingly offered their services and for their expressions of sympathy during the recent illness and death of our daughter, Mrs. J. B. Nicholson. We also wish to express our thanks for the beautiful floral offerings, and as sure all those who administered unto her and unto us that their kindness and thoughtfulness wjll long be re membered and cherished by us. THE FAMILY. DR. C. J. SAWYER EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT Windsor, N. C. IN WILLIAMSTON Fridays, 2 to 5 P. M., and by Special Appointment Thru Local Physician*
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 6, 1934, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75