Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / March 23, 1934, edition 1 / Page 6
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
rAUfi owv JOHN H. KEEL DIED THURSDAY AT OAK GROVE Prominent .Qitizen of Oak Grove Passes Away As Result of Paralysis John H. Keel, a leading citizen and farmer of the Dale Grove section, died, at his home there last Thursday fol-| lowing a stroke of paralysis suffered, a few d*ys before. Mr. Kee!, a member of a large and Imminent family, was 62 years old and had lived all his life in the Oak Grove community. He was married to Miss Mary Brown, who, with one son, Irving Keel, survives He also leaves three brothers, Messrs. X. T. Keel and J.] \V. Keel, of Rocky Mount, and Chas.i Keel, of New York; and two sisters,1 Mrs. J. M. Highsmith, of Roberson viile, and Miss Susie Keel, of Wash ington City. One sister. Mrs. Ella? Whichard, died at her home in Nur folk the same day Mr. Keel was taken ill "Not only was Mr. Keel a prominent farmer in his community, but he is remembered as a leading citizen, tak ing much interest in the Oak Grove] church and other organizations formed for the advancement Of his section. He was a member of the Oak Grove church for a number of years. Funeral services were conducted from the Oak Grove church Saturday afternoon by Rev. \V. A. Davis, of Washington, assisted by Rev. J. M. Perry, of Robersonville Interment was in the Robersonville cemetery. INCLUDE MILK IN FOOD BUDGET Allow 1 Quart for Every Child and Pint for Each Adult By Miss Lora E. Sleeper Every family food budget, whether in the town, or country, should include milk at least 1 quart for evrey child up to 16 years and 1 pint for every adult. What about your milk budget for your family. Milk supplies lime bones and teeth of the children, vita mins A prevent eye infection and res piratory diseases; vitamin B protect appetite and promoting growth,, vita min C preventing tooth defects and scurvy, vitamin 1) preventing rickets; vitamin G preventing ??r protecting against pellagra. Let your food budget increase the health in your family during 1934 b> an increased use of this very valuable food. ^ Lespedeza planted on small grain i an easy hay crop to grow and is < quality hay crop to feed, say Cum berland growers who are ex panel in > their acreage. Top-dressing small grain witl qukk-acting nitrate fertilizer is sail to be the most profitable operation on can make with the grain. ,Tr SURVEY OF LOCAL STORES SHOWS PRICES HAVE GONE UP STEADILY DURINti PAST TWELVE MONTHS FISH LICENSES NOW ON SALE Bag Limit and Minimum Size Limit Alao Made Public This Week The State Department of Conserva. ,i. in announced tcCT*ly th?' 19M ^ ,ng licensee are now on aaTe at reg - tar placet ?'f distribution in this coun ,y John W Mines. county gan.e war den. aaid recently that he had l?.t received ruling on the bag limit and .,rr limit for this year, and that fish em,en who desired to remain with u uw were expected to abtde by the j ,UFishermen win ro.U*?^ catch in one day moW ' fi Vfi. j number mentioned h.tow-(the fi?, fig | represents number of fish that ,??>? be caught and the second the s.ze 1 "l'.arge mouth black bass. 8; " Small mouth hass, 8; 10 '"i*1"' . Brook or speckled trout, 20; 6 to. Rainbow- trout, 15; 8 >n. Blue bream, 26; 6 inches. Red bream, 2d; 6 inches. Robin, 25; 5 inches. R?ck, 25; 12 inches. Crappie or Chinquap.n perch. ?. i inches. Goggle eye, 25; 6 inches. Red fin, 25; 6 inches. White perch, 25; 6 inches. *? Smith-Douglass Fe\tll1*" Follows Advice of Expert ft B. Douglass. Vice president of the B Uouk'??*. ' we _ Smith-Douglass Company, < . ? a Lie rfilfl* Va.. announced that his com any had arranged to follow the rec immendations of Dr. Z.mmerlyand ther government experts with respect O correcting magnesium defic,e"^. ? astern Shore soils, by producing heir Royal Potato Fertilizer with ran.ee of 25 pounds of water solu ble magnesium ox.de to the ton. In -making Lis an.HKmcement. M^ Douglass said: "We are wry proud ?f ,he service we have been render ,?g for many years to potato ?ro? ,,n ^Jiias.ern Slmre^ We have J T^r^n cooperating ^ closely With the government experts who have been trying to tapW cropresu ,?r the-growers ... that ??t on .nd the result of every one of their ,arches has been included .n our utilizer formula as quickly as pos iible. . . -Las. year, after the condu.uA. bad been definitely established that , high percentage of qu.ckly soluble organic. was advisable for the so.l the Eastern Shore, we '"'reduced Royal Potato EertU.zer, and desp t? adverse conditions, it met ""h're nlvcr>c nendous popular approval. Roya .... j-j 10 jjci vs-.ix s ,rgan.es, as weU as special ^.cn. iruaiucs, as aa r producing organ.es, and ?dl earn he same .his year. In add.t.on t< Price Increases Range from 15Tfo 100 Per Cent Over Last Year's Low ? Fluur. butter, eggs. hats, bedroom', suites, pork, overall*, talcum powder, - axes, ropes, paints, nails, mattresses, drugs, shirts, lingeries, lawn mowers, leather, harness, coffee, potatoes, hos-J itry? __ ^ Every one oF those items costs from' 15 to ]00 per cent more today than it did a year ago. Devaluation of the dollar by Washington, and President Roosevelt's plan to raise the price of farm products indicate that all will be forced higher. Merchants are not Only buying cautiously, but whole-j salers are selling cagily, many of them declining to take orders for future de livery. They don't know what the' dollar will be worth tomorrow. They don't know what ..commodities will sell for. They do know that prices have soar ed, and that they will go still higher. This was the information garnered, from a survey of leading retail stores this week. Merchants J^ere asked toj give the approximate>price rise dur-. ing the past 12 months on staple com-; modifies. Here arc some of the re-; suits: A hardware man says nails and: steel good* have gone up 12 per cent. I Cotton roping and athletic goods are tip 30 per cent. Leather and harness are up 15 per cent. Paints, calcimine, linseed oil, lawnmoweft are up 25 per cent. I A chain store manager was asked j about grocery prices. About a year ago, he said, a sack of flour sold fori $1 80. Now it brings $3.60?a rise! of, 100 per cent. Coffee has gone up 15 per cent, potatoes 100 per cent, short ening 20 to 25 per cent, pork approx imately 100 cent. And eggs,I which sold at 10 cents a dozen 10: months ago now fetch "29 cents. A woman's wear store owner esti mated that dresses and coats cost 20 per cent more than they did a year Hosiery is Up 30 per cent and lingerie 20 per cent. A furniture store buyer who rccent ly^returned from the High Point mar ket, said that every indication point ed to much higher prices very soon. Wholesalers are hesitant on futures, he said. During the past 12 months mattresses have risen 15 to 20 per j cent. Furniture, on the average, is | up 35 per cent, with the greatest rise , shown in the cheaper grades. On | higher grade furniture, the rise is only about 15 per cent. A bedroom suite which sold for $49.50 last February I now costs $85. ( In a department store, the manager said a price rise on overalls would I amount to between 60 and 70 per cent, i On cotton piece goods, he declared, j the upswing was varied between 5 and 100 per cent. On prints and col I ored pieces, the rise was sometimes | high as 70 per cent, j In a men's clothing store it was I learned that suits have gone up 25 per cent on heavy goods, 17 1-2 pei cent on light weights. Hats arc up '20 per cent, shirts 25 per cent. I In a drug store, it was estimatec I that the drugs have been boosted or ? an average of 15 per cent. Tolie I goods and soaps are up 15 per ccn : also. | And that s that^ All of which mean-' ?that, if you can buy now, you'd bet ter do it?before you can't. that, it will carry the 25 pounds o water soluble magnesium oxide. | "We believe that this wiU be great boon to potato growers in thi territory and that *tveir 4atr wreathe conditions, the potato crop on th Eastern Shore will be one of the grea : est in years. 1 here have been some inquirie made to us as to whether or not w will continue to guarantee Royal wit | respect to the premium charged fc it. as we did las tyear. The result 1 which Ro^al showed last year despit conditions have satisfied us that ot guarantee was a sound one and or which the goods would have live up to. We would be very proud an happy to continue the guarantee o Royal this year, but the provisions i the NRA Fertilizer Code make sue guarantees impossible and we wer under those requirements, forced t abandon it; WASHOUGAL WEAVES die New Suit Problem lor Younger Men the young man needs a dark conservative suit or a light sport suit?he will find in Washougal Weaves the staunchest of fabrics and tailoring as well as the smartest of designs and styling. All auks lined with lustrous Earl-Glo. ' ? V Wtdt (boict of modtls, fatria tmd (oUMb [li/Brotherr fartrty Irani (BUrtljw mmu WantS MORS MILK?MORS BOOS?USE Milk-Flo Dairy Feed and Sunshine Laying Mash. C. L. Wilson, Rober sonville, N. C. ' J19 lOt FOR SALS ? FLOORINO, CEIL ing, Windows, Doors, Shingles, Brick, Lime, Cement, Galvanised Roofing, Nails, also Wire Fencing and.- Carbide, C. L. Wilson, Robes* sonville. N10-20t,w-l STRAY SOW WBIFHINO ABOUT 1125 pounds has been at my home about 3 months. Color: Black and white spotted, marked slipt in each ear Owner please come lor tame. W. T. Gurkin, Route 4, Williamston. FOR SALE: DINING ROOM FUR* niters, in good condition. Sec Mrs, 'A, Hattell, Williamston, N. C. It YOUNG TAR HE?L FARMERS ENTER STATE CONTESTS Jamesville Chapter Votes To Have Representatives In Two Contests At the regular semi-monthly chap ter meeting of the Jamesville Young Tar Heei Farmers, which was held Wednesday in the agriculture class room, it was decided by a unanimous vote of the members that the local chapter should enter two state-wide contests whteh are sponsored, annu ally by the division of vocational edu r^tinn in Vnrth Carolina The contests referred to are the Young Tar Heel Farmers livestock judging contest and the Future Farm el Public Speaking contest. Both of these contests are national in char acter, and are conducted on a local chapter, district, state, and national basis. The prize in each case is the privilege of the winner TTT enter the next highest contest. In the final na-< tional contest valuable money prizes will be awarded to the winers. There was a considerable amount of inter est shown in these contests by the members. Twenty-six Jamesville chapter members will participate. In the livestock judging contest each chapter may be represented by only two members in the district com petition, and by only one in the public speaking contest. Consequently the immediate job'of the Jamesville chap ter is to select their representatives from the twenty-six members compet ing there. The Jamesville Young Tar Heel Farmers value the training re ceived from such contests, and hope to make a creditable showing as well. SAYS GROWER TO GET $15 FOR EACH HOG NOT GROWN Considerable Interest Now Being Shown in Corn Hog Contracts A new interpretation of the corn hog contracts shows that farmers will get $15 a head for every hog by-whiek they redce their production this year, according to W. W. Shay, swine spec ialist at State College, who has charge of the corn-hog sign-up in- this state. The contracts specify that the grow ers will get $5 a head on 75 per cent of the number of hogs .in their base average production if they reduce their production by 25 per cent. Thus a grower who had been pro ducing 20 hogs would reduce the num | ber to 15 and get $5 a head for the j 15 hogs, or $75. The $75 is the equitf | alent of a payment of $15 a head on j the five hogs he would fail to pro duce this year, Shay pointed out. WANTED: MAN OF INTEGRITY | 21-45, physically fit, interested in Gov't, work to write for information, I F S T B, Box HE, care this paper. rUULTKY tK&V NEEDSPROTEIN Poultrymen Should Have Knowledge of Function :?Of Proteins All poultrymen should have a thor ough knowledge of the function of ^ >roteins in nourishing birds and of the { rif 1? select protein feed* In pre- j >anng rations for chickens, says Roy i>. Dearstyne, head of the poultry de partment at N. C. State College. Protein is second only to water as the most prominent element in the body of fowls. Eggs haveHa high protein content, and laying hens ueed far more protein in their ration than the amount necessary to supply their body requirements. Young growing birds also need large v?011"** of pro tein. Good starting mashes for chicks have at least a 20 per cent protein content to provide for the rapid de vxelopment of the frame, flesh, and feathers. A similar percentag eis in laying rations. But from the time the birds weigh two pounds until they reach maturity, the protein in their feed ought to b< reduced, as a too-generous supply will stimulate laying before the birds' bodies have reached maturity. Soybean oil meal is high in pro tein. So is cottonseed meal, but egg* produced from the latter are liable to show discoloration and be hard tc market after being placed in cold stoi age. Peanut meal, cocoanut meal, ami cowpeas are sometimes incorporatec in a rati<pp, hut when only vegetable prbtefns are used in the feed mixture a mineral supplement is necssary. Animal protins, usually marirn products or by-products of the slaugl tcrhouse, are considered better thai Build Up Health and Paint Go Away WOMEN who suffer from weak ace* often have many acbee and palria which a stronger state of health would prevent. Women in tht? condition should take Cardui, a purely vegetable tonlo that bus been In use for over 00 yeai*. Take Curdul to improve the general tone of the' system in cases of run dovrn?health and "tired mervea." Women have found, in such eases, ' that Cardul helps them to overcome pains and make the monthly periods easier. CARDUI Is safe and whole-^ some, for women of all ages. Trv it' vegetable proteins. Properly process - rtl fish meal and meat scraps have been proven satisfactory. Oniy~T3gK grade fish meal which has been vac uum-cooked should be used as low grades are liable to increase the death rate of chicks Size ot Seed Piece ot lush Potatoes Is Rcing Tested The tizc ol the seed piece used in planting the irieh potato crop has been ot concern to Beaufort County growers foe tone years. This J*** Wood meal. Unkage, fresh mrat.. ?he> ?" runn,n* '? ?. I s si iL.t ...ill mun tha and milk products are often used, but should be fed with careful planning. Poultrymen should guard against the tendency to substitute cheaper feeds for quality stutf in preparing home- Dolomitic Limestone find out the size that will give the highest acre yield. other things being equal. ? Is Excellent "Filler' mixed rations. * # Dolomitic limestone is an excellent Top Dressing Small Grain filler in commercial or home-mixed Offsets Damage by Cold fertilizer and has a value high above _ <5. 0 w I that of inert sand. ~~ Top dressing small grain with a] $ quirk aeting *<4obU nitrogen fertiliz- At least 100 Duplin County farmers er will help to overcome the efforts of j will sign the cora^hog reduction cun the recent cold weather. tract, believes the farm agent. APPLY ARMOUR FERTILIZERS FOR LARGER ACRE YIELD AND LOW PRODUCTION COSTS I I *<?rtiii%et2rm 1 Costs come down when acre yields go up. Small yields per acre are expen sive. An investment of a few dollars per acre in Armour Fertilizers will bring increased yields and that means lower cost per bushel or pound. Use Armour Fertilizer ?lii? spring for bigger acre w" Hake ^3 1, Every Acre M ?S Do Its ' ?fe* Best flk yields, better quality, lowc.' costs. Make your good acres better. We can supply the Armour Fer tilizer your crop needs. ? See us the next time you are in town. For Sale By Ingram & Sparrow AT FARMERS WAREHOUSE Williamston, N. C. PROGRAM FOR W$EK BEGINNING MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1934 Turnage Theatre ? Washington, N. C. Monday March 26 "I GOT YOUR NUMBER." .with PAT O'BRIAN and G. FERRELL Tucaday March 27 "WHARF ANGEL" with Victor MacLAGLEN and Preaton FOSTER Wednesday March 28 "ALICE IN WONDERLAND" with CHARLOTTE HENRY Thursday and Friday March 29-30 "QUEEN CHRISTINA" with GRETA GARBO and JOHN GILBERT _ Saturday March 31 ZANE GREY'S "THUNDERING HERD" # GASJ GAS The wise old owl sits calmly by, Unruffled by the hue and cry? For, after all, he knows those birds Can't make cars run With empty words Judge Essolene by performance not promises... m % by facts not claims. Make'your own test... in your own car... in your own way. That's all we ask. We leave it to Essolene to do the rest. ?i ... - - . Ifawfut* Motor Oil in tho cronkcms* mob It, Kitolont to do U? wy hrtt. | \ Essolene Smoother Performance Tfcto ?**? Monti*00 M.MI Bmm Statlont and Doalarsf mm Main* to Louisiana who roproaont tha STANDARD OIL COMPA'NY OF NEW JERSEY
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 23, 1934, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75