FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 132 THE FRANKLIN PRESS PAGE THREE Dad's One Home Job Lost Through Modern Invention MODERN inventionlias taken away the only thing that made a man popular- around ! the house during the housewife s busy working-hours, namely, the old-fashioned can-opener , that "wouldn't work" when feminine fingers tried to manipulate it. Can-opening has always, hereto fore, been the bane of a woman's existence. Ask Dad. He knows! No soon er would he settle down to his pa . per then he would hear that wail from the kitchen, and a frantic call for his assistance. "I've cut my finger with that horrid old can-opener again!", would be his greeting upon entering the culinary department. "I never could do anything with it! You'll just have to open this can for me George." - "Let George do it!", was ever the cry, when a can was to be opened. And George always meek ly did it. If he happened to be ab sent, Mother always had a tied-up finger to show him on his return. But now Dad hag lost his one domestic job, and hasrt't the slight est excuse for hanging around his home and fireside during the day time. For the mechanical genius which has distinguished this gen eration ha? not enttrelv neglected the lowly can-opener, and the re sult is that there are now on the market several improved types which dq away with much of the labor and inconvenience that at tended the use of the old-fashioned kind. , The simplest of these improved can-openers consists of two scissor like pieces which govern two small, sharpened rollers. The rim of the can is placed between these two rollers and they are operated by a small screw. The two metal handles which control the sharp ened wheels are held with the left hand, and the screw is turned with the right hand. The opener is thus worked around the edge of the can. It cuts smoothly and evenly, entirely removing the lid and leaving no jagged edges. Another, more elaborate type of opener is screwed to the edge oi the table or to a shelf above tht sink, much as a meat-grinder is attached. The can is held so that its rim is between the two cutting, knives, and they are worked by a handle operated with a rotary mo tion. In using this tvoe of ODener. it is advisable to place a saucer under the can, as a small amount of the liquid it contains is liable to spill over. . Since these openers do not come in direct contact with the food, it is not -necessary to wash them, and they can therefore be screwed to the table or shelf and remain as a permanent fixture. ' It has already been pointed out. that these improved openers leave a smooth, straight edge, which will not endanger the hands of the worker. There is an additional ad vantage in this, for the foods will not : be jagged and broken when they are turned out of the cans. In this rushing, complicated age, the housewife should take advan tage of every device that will pre vent the duties of the home from degenerating into drudgery., For there is no time nor place for drudgery, today, in the life of th woman who is taking an active part and interest in the world's work, as well as in her own. Modern Chick Must be Hatched Early to Ring the Cash Register The early bird gets the worm, and the farmer who hatches his chicks early "is laying the foundation for profitable egg production next win ter, according to the Larrowe Insti tute of Animal Economics. Noyer ber now brings highest prices for ggs instead of January as in former years, and progressive farmers are finding that it' pays to advance hatching, formerly done in May and June to February and Mar:h. While winter is normally the sea son of dorjnant reproduction in poul- ry, the farmer who applies the few basic principles of poultry culture will find that he is able to ge,t satis factory ' production from his flock 'during the cold months, the Institute states. The use of good blood is the first prerequisite; early hatching is important; third, there must be con stant growth from the time the pullet j)ops out of the egg until she lays one, and plentiful feeding of egg-making fo,od during the laying. Especially important is the matter - of proper feeding, for without the right kind and quantities of feed the other fac tors will be of little avail. The advantages of early hatching are enumerated by the Institute as follows: Early hatched chicks are less susceptible to the common poul try diseases, make a good normal growth during spring and summer and come into laying condition when eggs are in excellent denjand at a satisfactory price. Under average brooding i. and rearing', conditions, chicks with an early start make a much better growth and attain a larg er size I and development than do late hatched chicks. Another advantage of early hatching chicks is that the surplus cockerels can be marketed as broilers when eight to ten weeks old on very satisfactory terms,, but if this is not desired, they can be put on good green pasture and grown to roaster age, when they can be mar keted advantageously in October or November. Then, too, early hatched pullets, if allowed to neck-molt in November and December will slow up production and, if allowed to come into production again, make ideal breeders. Cheap Feed Produced By Good Pasture Raleigh, N. C, March A good pas ture produces the best feed for al kinds of livestock and the feed is se cured more cheaply than in any olhe way. Even the man who keeps but one cow, a few hogs and some work stock will find a permanent pasture to pay well. "Demonstrations have shown that the loamy soils of North CaroJina, will produce good pastures that will furnish succulent food for livestock from March until late November," says S. J. Kirby, extension " pasture specialist for the State College of Ag riculture. "In almost every county east of the piedmont section,, there are permanent pastures which have produced heavy grazing for periods varying from one to 21 yearr. Almost any type of soil will produce these pastures and some soils will produce better pastures than any other kind of crops. The best pasture land is rather fertile soil ranging from a sandy loam to a clayey loam of low to medium upland. Woods, cut-over land and cleared land will produce good pastures and arc easily prepared for seed, stales Mr. Kirby. The woods land may be prepared by cutting out the under brush, thinning out the taller trees and removing those trees which arc valuable for timber. It' is necessary to break and disk old broom-sedge land before seeding. The cultivated land may be prepared simply by disk: ing the soil. A better growth is se cured if the land has been plowed the fall before, but cultivated land should not be plowed for planting to pas ture just before the seeds are sown. Mr. Kirby states that the land should be well fertilized with stable manure, 300 to 400 pounds of acid phosphate and from 200 to 300 pounds of some organic nitrogen ' material Hke cottonseed meal or tankage Seed mixtures to usd can be secured on application to the county agent or to the pasture specialist and seed ing should be, done between rebru ary IS and April 1. ' REWARD NOTICE A reward of $25.00 will be paid for the name of any person starting a iorest fire on the Onteora hstatcs. Kephart Writes of the Great Smoky Mountains The forested and shrub-covered mountains in Western North Carolina and Eastern Tennessee, which the federal government proposes to set aside as the Great Smoky Mountain National Park, has a charm that de fies analysis, says Horace Kephart noted writer on these mountains, in a recent' article in the Charlotte Ob server. "Many a year have I wandered back and forth over the Smokies," Mr. Kephart writes, "often going alone for days on end without seeing a human being. 1 have passed the same, places scores and scores of times. But never in all these jour neys have I come a second time to any glen or brook or summit without finding there something new. Never have I followed a trail through the tall forest without, wondering what I should find at the next turn. Al ways there is something new grow ing on the old place or moving over it. "Do you wonder, then, that we who live in the Smokies and who have worked sC hard to protect and preserve their loveliness we wno are fighting the commercial interests that would, if let alone, destroy the vir ginal charm and adorable beauty of God's masterpiece that we should now be elated by the almost certain prospect that the nation will soon adopt this region and preserve it for ever as a national park?" - "What is the secret of that charm that fascination of the Smokies, which lingers so lovingly in one's memory when he is away and lures him so irresistibly to return " Mr. Kephart asks, and then, as if to an swer himself, he says: ; "I have often wondered over it, but I confess it defies 'analysis. In part, however, it is due to the superb and wonderfully . varied forest primeval that covers the Smokies with living verdure to their very summits. "Bare rocks may rise to awe-inspiring heights, they may be sculp tured by nature into striking forms they may be toned by the elements and colored by atmospheric changes they may be robed in snow and jew elled with glittering ice, they may be majestic in calm or terrible when tempests rage or. when avalanches thunder down the . slopes ; but bare rocUs are never lovable. The stony bosom' is cold. r "But ' when the mountain ' frame work is covered with trees and shrub: bery and flowers, grasses and ferns and moss, which harbor an . infinite variety of animal life, then every peak becomes a personality itself en dowed with the graces and warmth of life. Then nature is our mother, and we love her." Mr. Kephart described his conver sation with Robert Sterling Yard, widely known authority on national parks and the secretary of the Na tional Parks association, on 'the sub ject of the proposed Great Smoky Mountains National Park. He met Mr. Yard, he said, at Asheville and was told by Mr. Yard that the Na tional Parks association had directed him to visit the proposed park area and determine whether it came up to the national park standard, or whether it had merely been overrated by local pride. Mr. Yard declared that he had been skeptical, that even the fulsome recommendation of the members of the Southern Appala chian National Park commission that the Creak Smokies be included in the national park group had not con vinced him fully that these mountains were on a footing with the Yellow stone, theYoscmite or Grand Canyon parks of the West. He visited the proposed park area, and Mr. Kephart said to him : "Well, you have just returned from the Smokies. You have seen them. Are you skeptical?" "No," he replied with some empha sis, according to Mr. Kephart's ac count of the conversation. "Kep hart, t have found something in the Smokies that is unique, something that no other park possesses. I do not mean just scenery, though in that respect the Smokies have all that the commission claims for them. I mvvi something that not only delights the out tnat wins tne neart. mere is a charm in the Smokies that de fies analysis."- How does it affect you? Mr. Kephart asked Secretary Yard. 'In tins way, Mr. lard replied: "Some other regions may have more extraordinary, more awe - inspiring features. But when you have seen one of those wonders of nature, such as a geyser, a glacier, a lofty pinnacle or a profound gulf, why you have seen it. You don't care to go back again to sec the same show over, any more than you would pay admission to sec a theatrical show the second time. But the Smokies lure you back You want to return and linger there. You love them. My wife and daugh ter and I wrc co overcome with af- ection for the Great Smoky Moun tains that we are going to come back and . build our summer home here." Everyone, Mr. Kephart declares who has once climbed up into the liigh Smokies, away back from the highways and railroads into the wild Eden that remains there in all its primitive majesty experiences the same feeling, the feeling which Ma jor W. A. Welch of the Federal Park commission expressed when he said of these mountains : "Nowhere else in all the world is nature so much my mother as in the Great Smokies. There I rest in her bosom and am satisfied." Rornanoffs' House is . Converted into Museum Sverdlovsk (formerly Ekaterin burg,) Siberia, Feb. 7. The Bolshe vok government has converted the house in which the Emperor and Em press of Russia and their family were murdered, into am historical museum. Part of the building now is a small communist "university." The former dining room of the imperial family has become a reading room, where scores of proletarian students pore over newspapers and scientific books. In the basement is the blood-stained, bullet-pierced room in which the royal family were killed. It has been preserved as an "historical reminder of the just fate that befell the auto crat of all the Russians." A section of the floor is torn up. Kolchak troops, having, it is said, at tempted to remove traces of the crime. Visitors . are told that after the Kolchak officers discovered the murder, white soldiers washed ' Cie floor and distributed the suds to, the clergy, "priests having waited for hours in lout: lines for their share of the water containing their .former im perial master's blood. , , Visitors must have special permis sion. .Seme Americans recently were refused entrance" on the ground that foreign visitors had written- matter hostile to the Bolshevik regime. Out side the house, which, overlooks the ' "square of national vengeance," is a marble pedestal on which stands a headless statue of Karl Marx. The statue was "beheaded" by Kolchak soldiers in 1918. , Notice . 1 wish to say to the Democrat vot ers of the Twentieth Judicial District that I am a candidate for the nomi nation for judge of this district and will appreciate any help my friends will give me. J. D. MALLONEE. Atwater Kent Radios Huyler's Pens CANDIES Hollingsworth's SCHEAFFER ' Pencils Anti-skipper compound for that fresh pork. It's fine and guaranteed. A $1.00 can will preserve from 600 to 700 pounds of meat. Your favorite magazines can be had here. Our prescription department is growing daily. Try us. This department is in charge of an experi enced registered druggist of wide experience. THE FRANKLIN PHARMACY : "We are in Business for Your Health." SPEAKING OF PUDDING lit advertising merchandise the word "Bargains" has perhaps been overworked. Yet we know of no other expression that exactly fits conditions at our store. It has often been said that the "proof of the pudding is in the eating." Likewise, the proof of Gordon's bargains is in the buyir. as hundreds in Macon County can testify. Each week wc are receiving large shipments of new merchandise. These oods are being sold at uniformly low prices. - A trial will convince you that our prices are RIGHT. GORDON BROTHERS "HAVE THE BARGAINS FOR YOU" NOW IS THE BEST TIME TO HAVE YOUR Car Overhauled It is so much better to bring your car to us NOW, be fore real Spring weather arrives, because we know you will not want us to give you an answer like this "FULL OP-NO TIME FOR VEEKS" But that will probably be the answer if you put it off too long. Phone or'call on us TODAY for a reserva tion and let us give your car a genuine overhauling before fine driving weather arrives. City Garage