If II THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1932 THfr WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAnftSER 1 , L 0 j If to " "I , ' , , ' : I A Pug f Haywood fwmisn Butter May Now Be Stored For Home Use, It Is Found Butter Placed In Salt Brine Can Be Kept Until Time When Supply Is Low Farm butter, made from sweet cream may be packed in salt brine and kept in the told room for use later when the supply may bo low. according to John A- Arey. who has recently prep-red directions for storing any sur plus of this product. Air. Arey says by reason of the low price of butterfat. a number of house wives with a surplus of cream have been making inquiry as to th pos sibilities of making up the cream into Gutter and storing it for use later. This plan has been practiced by some North Carolina families 'for a num ber of years. The first consideration is that the butter be made from sweet cream. Given this condition, the re sulting product may be stored in jars, packed solidly or in one pound prints. In either case the container must be thoroughly and carefully scalded to kill all bacterial spores. If prints are used, a salt brine &uf. ficiently strong to float an egg is pre pared. This will take about one fourth as much salt as water. Boiled water shold be used. Then the one pound prints wrapped in dean white cloth are placed in the jar with a string around each print so that it may be recovered easily. A stone plate or follower of some kind should he placed on the butter to keep it in the brine and then the brine is poured over the whole thing. From time to timo it may be necessary to add ad ditional brine. While the print is the more con venient form to use in storing butter at home, a less amount can be packed in a given jar. If only sterile ma terials are used in packing this sweet ci earn butter and it is held in a cold place, good results nhould be secured, Arey says. West-End Singing Convention Will Meet On Sunday Roy S. Shelton, president of the West-End' Haywood Singing Conven toin announced that the .convention would meet at the Iron Duff Baptist Church on Sunday afternoon, Decem ber 18, at 1 p .m. The public is invit ed to attend this meeting. SPARKLE St WAX A BROKEN SUCED PINEAPPLE SI" WAX. RED SALMON CAMPIiKI-LV PORK AND BEANS can 5c PANCAKE or BUCKWHEAT FLOUR Fioe TnnCT S Caltmyrna lb. 1 Cr Brick at pkg. 15c Currants BLEACHED Raisins 2 pkg. 25c Mixed Nuts lb. 17c Walnuts lb. 25c Almonds lb. 21c Pecans lb. 21c GRAPE JUICE $g ittL 10c WinTEUOtSE EVAPORATED MILK i! 5c 2 ... 5c XMAS PACKAGED . T0BACC0Rh"gcut a0,2 69c BEST PURE LARD 4 & 25c Your Rift will be appreciated If yon obtainable nt nil A P stores. Timely Questions And Answers On Farm Problems Question: Can I reduce my fer tilizer bill through the u; of com post ? Answer: Yes, if the compost is wtll rottend. To hasten this decay mix 4; pounds 01 sulphate of ammonia, 40 pounds of limestone, and lo pounds i aeU phosphate and spread through a pile o fstraw. leaves, or other or ganic matter. The material will rot and form synthetic manure in about one-third the time it would take for ihe natural decay. A small amount Oi. stable manure will also aid in the decaying rocess. Question: How many hens should be placed with one male for the sin gle mating Answer: With the light breeds not over 20 hens should be placed in the pi n and this number should be re duced to 16 with the heavy breeds. .1 careful check on the first hatching .hould be made from ail matings and if the hatch shows low fertility, a new male should pe introduced. Question: How many cows should we have to begin a small farm dairy? Answer: This depends upon the amount of feed produced but if there is sufficient feed, five to ten animals would provp the most economical. A smaller herd than five will not justify the expense of the equipment needed :ind the cost of delivering cream or milk. Plan the farm dairy for not less than five cows and increase this rumber as the production of feed increases. Last Rites Conducted For T. W; Henderson At Canton Last Saturday Funeral services for T. W. Hender son, 73. who died at his home at Can ton Friday afternoon at 5 o'clock fol lowing a long illness, were held at the home .Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Burial was in Locustfield cemetery. Surviving are his widow, two dau ghters, Mrs. Thomas Davis, of Knox- ville, Tenn., and Mrs. I). V, Mooney- ham, of Asheville, three sons, Leicest er and Charles R., of Canton, and Grover, of Gastonia, one sister, Mrs. Eva Burnett, of Canton, several grand children and great grandchildren, Negroes are more numerous Georgia than in any other state, Grandmother's SLICED BREAD te 5c Gelatin Dessert pkg. 5c 2 Large Cans No. 1 Tall Can 15c Sunny field pkg. 5c Cluster Raisins 2 lb. 25c Raisins 3 lbs. 25c t'ocoanat . - Bon Bons 2 lbs. 35c Christmas Mixed Candy 2 lbs, 25c Stick Candy 2V2 29c Cream Drops 2 lbs. 35c 8x? Dates lb 29c make It A & P food coupons Vocational Boys Learn Value Of Certified Seeds" Account Is Made Of Difference' In Yield Of Certified And Ordinary Seeds i ' Vocational lleponer. ) ,K'rh:.p t.s no field in which VMidv mor,. useful progress in 1 her we have the past .aut's. several ve.irs than in no- In.-teud of trying the "hit or! mi s" method vv boys of Haywood) .v'uiu ufi-iueu to plant tur Irish po tatoes exactly ;s we were taught bv Mr. Smith. In February we ordered twenty b.ijrs nf certified seed potatoes. The seed bed was thoroughly prepared, the r.ght kind of fertilizer applied, the seed put in early enough. Some of the boy planted just ordinary pota toes and used fertilizer; but in the fall, when potatoes were due we soon saw the need for, and value of certi fied seed. On a field where two and one-half bushels of certified seed was planted, a total yield of fifty bushels was harvested. Forty-five bushels be ing number outs. On the other handj two and one-half bushels of ordinary eea .was planted yielding a total of thirty-five bushels. Only ten bushels -ing number ones. Then another boy planted three bushels of certified seed and got a total yield of seventy-three ousnetj, Mxtyuthree bushels .being number ones. Then three bushels of ordinary seed was planted with a total viel 1 of thirty bushels, only fifteen rusneis being number ones. 1' or every bushel of certified seed planted a yield of eleven bushels was harvested. On the other hand a bushel of ordinary potatoes was nlanted yielding only four bushels of potatoes. It took the same time, same ex . i . . . pense ana same naro work to pro. duce the poor yield and little potatoes as it, uin to produce the high yield and vuiuuuie potatoes, ao we think we have proved to our fathers the im portance of planting cert'fie I seed. Report Of Live-At-Home Results Will Be Reported to Gov. 0. Max Gardner VYjU He Tend ered Dinner IJy Newspaper Men In Raleigh As one' feature of, the live-at-home dinner to be tendered Governor and Mrs. O. Max Gardner and Governor elect and Mrs. J. C. B. Ehrinhaus at State College Friday evening:, Decem ber 16. Dean I. O. Schaub and Mrs. Jane S. McKimmon will report some of the results secured during the past three years by the farmers and farm women of North Carolina. The dinner will be tendered by the newspaper men and women of Ral eigh and the food will come from all parts of the State. L. II. Harris, steward at State College, will attend to the cooking and serving and the college dining hall will be the scene of action- An elalaborate program of stunts, entertainment, and serious ness has been prepared by John A. Park and his local committee. Among other things, the college ex tension' -service, will report to the out going Governor' and inform the in coming executive us to the results secured (luring the past thre? 'years of live-at-home effort. Preliminary figures indicate that the farmers and' farm women have increased the val ue of the food and feed products grown in this State by 50 million dol lars over the situation as it ''xis'ted In 1!)2!) when the campaign was begun. This result has been secured m spite j of low prices for all farm 'produce and means . that - -the. aggregate pro duction' was many time; that indi ;at il by its value in ' dollars. . Hack" in H'2!f, whin farm values (!! 'higher' than tlu'y are now, it tin' i -.! that the i'oik-? were iniport :rr: ah;iut loO millia'i (lillars anr.u- !!v ."in - And a. nl . fo"ii i-r.i.l'ir' . Thry 'iii ,vi naid largely out of money marie ivith cotton, tohiicco and pea nuts, '' Hut .'when the farm iivorii :-. mid values shrunk, it -was s'c'etj that this great' bill could no lo.iger. be borne by the returns from cash crops That the live-at-home plan has been a suc cess can be seen from the fact that the acreage to cash crops decreased b" 575.842 acres and the acreage to food find feed crops ir.cr'va-' d by- S'.i": 841 acres in two years. Three Members Of Mountaineer Squad Invited To Play Three members of the Mountaineer Eleven have been invited to play in t cha-ity game in Ashcyill-S Saturdfvy. Th p three members .receiving the in vfitation were Reeves, ouarterbajck, Greenwood, center, and I'atton. All Western Knd this year. Reeves made quaift'Aack on the all-wes'ern on he second team. LIBRARY XEWS: The regular quarterly meeting of 'he Wavnsville Library Board was 'ield at . Mis Alice Quintan's on" Wednesday,- December the 7th, at 10:30, 'be president. Mis Hoggs, presiding This was a particularly important meeting as several matters had to be iefinitely settled, and plans made for "arrying on the work of the library during thp winter months, always a difficult se-ason to tide over finacially. Champion Canner " Yjf 1 MRS. ANNA BUCKTHAL Grand Champion Cmnncr of 1932 Mrs Bucktall is from Kdwards port. Ind., and took part in the Inter national lowest. News was received here this week of the prize won by Miss Emma Kavenson, Route 1. Waynesville. who v successful in being awarded a prize for the best can of beans en une.l in the International Canning Contest. This is quit,, an honor, since oyer 100,000 jars of foods Were ex. hibited. It is the plan of those in charge of the contest to place on dis play at the World's Fair in Chicago next year about 10.000 cans of these foods. Expert Finds That Tobacco Plants Need Better Canvas Cover Cheaper Grades' Fail To Keep Out Flea Keetle; Also Ex poses Plants To Cold Tin' poor grades of cheese cloth used to cover tobacco plant beds will not give protection from flea beetles and growers should request their dealers to get a better supply this winter. "As a result of our demonstrations in the control of tobacco flea beetles in the plant bed, we have found that canvass or chessp cloth having 26 strands to the inch will give 'better protection than the poorer grades commonly found on the market, ' says C. H. Hrannon, extension entomolo gist at State College. "Growers there fore should urg0 their dealers to lay In a supply of this canvass. Such a grade will cost little more and will pay a profit in thrifty plants protected both from the flea beetle and cold weather." Mr. Hrannon has found that the beetles may gain entrance through the poorer grades. Then, too, he says during the late freeze last season, only the tight beds with the better grade of canvass provided protection from the cold weather. Very few dealers last season hand led canvass running as much as 26 strands to the inch and growers are advised now to insist on lx-tter can vass this season. Good canvass used along with the trap bed as advocated by Mr. Hran non will Help to produce strong, stocky plants. If the flea beeUes were as 'tug as nogs and uio growers Could see them destroying the young plants in large quantities, a great cry ol alarm would no raised ; dui the insects an. small and in most cases tnv amount, oi damage none is . . f i 1.. nut realized until the plant beds are p.-.acti.cally destroyed, be says. TBSIE COUIVTS tchen you're in PA IN ! Insist on genuine Bayer Aspirin; not only for its safety, but its speed. Take a tablet of Bayer Aspirin and some other tablet, and drop them in water. Then watch the Bayer taolet dissolve rapidly and completely. See how long it takes to melt down the other. That's an easy way to last Jh? value of "bargain" preparatio ' i a far bevter way than testing i... l in your stomach ! Bayer Aspirin offers safe ami speedy relief of headaches, colds, a sore throat, neuralgia, neuritis, 'lumbago, rheumatism, or periodic pain. ?t contains no co:inc, irntal'nr particle I or impurities. CI) ' !.-' SUNDAY'S miiajl djiml fesmt CHRISTIAN STANDARDS OF LIFE iJolden iext:--lt a man will coine ai'tcr nic let him denv himself and talu' no hi.-, cross dailv. and follow n: . l.uki- Lesson Text: Golden texts for the ouarier. Oct. 2 Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. 2 Peter ;!:18. Oct- 9 I will witlk within my house with a perfect heart, l'.-alm 101:2. Oct. 16 Train up a child in the wav be should go: and when he is old, be will not depart from it. Frov. Oct. 2;; As for me and my house, we will serve the Ixird. joshuu 24:15. Oct. :!0 Whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap. Gal.' 6:7. Nov. 0 Mossed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of Cod. Matthew 5:9. Nov.' l.'l -Not slothful in business Romans 12:11. Nov. 20 Take heed, and beware of i ovetousness; for a man's life con sisU'th not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth. Luke 12:15. Nov. 27 -They first gave their own selves to the liord. 2 Cor. 8:5. Pec. 4 Of a truth 1 preceive that God is no respecter of persons. Acts 1 (!::!!. Dec. 11 Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do. do all to the glory of God. 1 Cor. 10:31. Pec- IK If any man will come after me. let him deny himself, and take up; his cross daily, and follow me. Lukei !:2:;. Pec. 25 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever 1elieveth in him 'advance SALE OF JEWELRY VK. . THIS CHRISTMAS PJ KSN every gift problem tyM 1VV . ANSWERED Y 1 X HERE J i III ' " !"- Ill You Could Not Buy To Better Advantage If You Waited A Lifetime. HURSEY & GO TURNING STOCK INTO CASH DIAMONDS WATCHES Nevrr before Imve yon been offered sreater reduc tions, a greater sacrifice, a greater Telenor on Ills'' grade muti lianilKr ami at a time; when bargains : an; most appreciated. ESTABLISHED IN 1889 And for 4'I years they have been hiiHillns an organi zation n ml business that lias the respect anil confi ilcnce of thousands or customers. SIMPLY WRECKING PRICES NOW This Is' the sale you have been waiting for 4he en tire community will benefit by the huge savings on everything In jewelry This Magnificent Jewelry Stock Now At Your Mercy. : ;; COME - - .' ft URSEY & 'CO; AS?:VILLE should not perhh but haw everlast ing life. John .'i A review of the lessons are being !;..! this Sunday ins'. .i.l o:' next Sun day and the Cn-i tma:; message will be studied at that time. Ol'TUXh' OF DEYOTIOXAL STUDY Phjlippians IJ 4 I. Paul Counts All Things Loss for Christ (8) II. Paul Oesires th(. Righteousness of God (9) III. Paul Longs to Know Christ Personally (10) IV. Paul Kager to Suffer With Jesus (11) V. Paul Seeks That for Which He was Chosen (12) VI. Paul Not Satisfied With Pres ent Attainment (13) VII. Paul Pressing Toward the High Calling (14) After looking over the above topics that were studied during the past quarter, it is too hard to determine just which should have the most space devoted to it, therefore the best sug gestion that we can make toward studying the lesson is to read over the texts outlined above and meditate and then bo in your Sunday School class Sunday morning and bo pre pared to join in any discussion ot any one of the texts that the teacher or class may wish to discuss. At this time of tho year when we are thinking of beginning anew with tho new year, perhaps it would be worth something to adopt the text of October 2H as a New Year's Reso lution, not only to bo made, but to be expressed in our daily lives for the years to come. Can you think oi better one? in a 1 1 3

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