Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 19, 1942, edition 1 / Page 13
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lTcnAY. FEBRUARY 19, 1942 THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Page 13 ffl.ii Vegetable Varieties Wapted to naywooa inmate No Worry About Rising Food Prices With Pantry Like This (Cntin'U vnfwill sufficient 6 rirty f greens nign in viuimin content, it . i 1I T rit 1 r pW family" consume They .alonlTr in the cor. l V.. . ,rndne all Bumiii" K AIr are ready to eat pumpki' through the ..inllV cows 11 lories a" on ralso be 'canned and pkins ca ..- the raw her use is - livegtock L.Hn for ieeun'6 rPkl" There are many of which have their garden is few rad- in SH l"c " without a fZZv can be planted in fch and ready, to eat in May. fc" i . wVion the ease to db . . r becomes hot and dry. - '..-a Scarlet filobe. lin? vaneiies litP Tip, and Long .v,-6.. lie r .ii-. TirVunli are are many .uwi about as good to select from. tp- Raw is a crop i trown for greens in both spring fall ana snoum us ..j o s mustard or luue. it t be cooked alone or mixed with ttard, kale ana lurmp Kreei jnany Pe0Ple Prefer their 8alad ed. ' ALSIFY: Salsify is not gener- grown in Haywooa county ai , it is another root crop that a distinctive flavor not furnish- by any otner vegemuie crop can be erown. It is frequent- ailed oyster plant because of its o ...:.. U Tnln n1 a . T Vl a for. DaMUWItll WiMU o ing variety ana it is grown much as beets, carrots ana fsmps. PIN'ACH: Bloomsdale is con fer MOOTH -erO! the Mountaineer should be planted very early in the spring in rows on good, soil and cultivated until ready to cut. SQUASH: There are three dis tinct types of squash adapted to growing in Haywood County, all of which are desirable. These types are the Yellow Crookneck, the Patty Pan of which the White Bush is recommended, and the Acorn. A few hills of each of the three kinds is recommended for home use and should be planted in April and May in hills about four feet apart thinned to two or three plants per hill. TOMATOES: Tomatoes can be grown on most any type of soil from good to bad and because of their vitamin content should be grown and canned wherever possi ble. The worst thing that ordi narily happens to tomatoes is a dis ease called wilt, and this can be overcome in large measure by planting wilt resistant varieties such as Marglobe and Rutgers. Seeds should be started in window boxes or hot beds in March, April and May for successive planting in the field in May and June. Die titians report ' tomato juice as re placing orange juice and since we cannot grow oranges we would rec ommend growing enough tomatoes for use throughout the year. TURNIPS: Turnips are valuable for both tops and roots and are too well known to require more than brief mention. The Purple Top Globe is one of the best var ieties and the usual time of seed ing is in August. Where possible a strip of new ground should be pre pared on which to seed them, but if this is not possible they should be grown anywhere by manuering a piece of old land as both turnip salad and turnips are too valuable to be omitted from the diet where it is at all possible to grow them. The above list is intended to sug gest the great variety of good things to eat that can be produced locally but is by no means com plete as there are many other things in addition to the ones list ed that can be and are grown in Haywood County, such as Jerusa lem Artichoke, rhubarb, water melons, and many others. It is not expected that many individuals will grow all of the things that can be grown to eat in Haywood Coun ty, but each family is asked as a patriotic duty to make a little Vegetables Are Of Health Foods Vegetabes are classed as one of Nature's best health foods. They furnish valuable material for build ing and regulating the body, and for promoting growth and health. Green vegetables, such as mus tard, turnip and beet tops, collards, green cabbage, kale and spinach, green beans and green peas, are especially important as a source of minerals, vitamins, and rough age. They have liberal amounts of iron necessary for building red blood cells and of calcium for build ing bones and teeth. They also contain an abundance of Vitamin A needed to build up a resistance to disease, to prevent colds and night blindness. The greener the vegetables, the higher is its iron and Vitamin A content. Dried peas and beans supply iron, phosphorous and protein. Tomatoes and yellow vegetables such as carrots, sweet potatoes, yellow turnips, yellow squash and yellow corn rank with the green leaves a good source of Vitamin A. Practically all vegetables sup ply Vitamin B, needed for good appetite, good digestion, and good nerves.: The tomato ranks as one of the best protective foods. Fresh or canned, it is outstanding as a source of Vitamin cannot be stored in the body and must be supplied daily if teeth, gums and : blood vessels are kept in good condition Irish potatoes, raw leafy and raw vege tables are good sources. Vegetables, especially the green leaves and tomatoes, supply the pellagra-preventative Vitamin G. The woody or fibrous part of r"r"J" It-J - ' -:': J 1 -1 0 11 5 s - i "T I l 'I I I'll III 'I"' 'I'11' 'I II III1"!! , For Your Victory Garden jBecause of the advanced prices for food, shortage of jcontainers, and the increasing war demands, more food .must be produced at home. Every serving of food pro duced in the "Victory Garden" saves money for tjie producer and makes available more food for our armed .forces. ...... Garden and Farm TOOLS Just what you need for a good Harvest PLANT MORE Buy It At MASS IE HAKIDIaARE CO. ROY PARKMAN Main Street Waynesvifle This well-equipped pantry, filled with a variety of home-grown food, answers the question "Why a Victory Garden?" The government is asking every family to "grow what they can and can what they can" not only because the food they would otherwise buy will be made available to our fighting men but also because they will be assured a healthful diet in the face of rising prices and threatened food short agesCut courtesy of News-Herald, Morganton. Lad Thinks Cows Have Six Sides A cow has' "six sides" and is "arranged for milking", according to an essay written by a ten-year-old boy from the east end slums of London and released by Ernest Brown, minister of health. Tha boy had been evacuated from the city to the country, where his amazed eyes beheld a cow for tha firSt time. "The cow is a mammal," ha wrote. "It has six sides, right and left and upper and below. "At the back it has a tail on which hangs a brush. With this he sends flies away so they don't fall into the milk. "The head is for the purpose of growing horns and so his mouth can be somewhere. The horns are to butt with and the mouth is to moo with. "Under the cow hangs milk. It is arranged for milking. "When people milk, milk comes and there never is an end to the supply. How the cow does it I have not yet realized, but it makes more and more. "The cow has a fine sense of smell and can smell it far away. This is the reason for the fresh air in the country. "A man cow is called an ox. "The cow does not eat much, but what it eats it eats twice so that it gets enough. "When it is hungry it moos and when it says nothing at all it is because its insides are full up with grass." greater effort to select from the list of crops adapted to growth in Hay wood County enough different food crops to provide a balanced diet in so far as vegetables will provide it for themselves and loved ones. vegetables furnish roughage which is needed in the diet to aid diges tion and to help in the elimination of waste from the body. Potatoes are rich in energy food: Irish Potatoes in starch and the sweet potatoes in starch and sug gar. . PHLEGMATIC SPEEDING SWEDE ' "Hey, didn't you hear me holler about three miles back ?, Why didn't you stop?" "Oh! Vas dat you yelled ? I thought it was some von I run overt" NOTICE OF SALE On Monday, March 16th, 1942, at 11:00 o'clock A. M, at the Court house door in Waynesville, Hay wood County, North Carolina, I will offer for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, the following lots, units or parcels oi land, situated in Ivy Hill Town ship, Haywood County, North Caro lina, and more particularly des cribed as follows : to-wit: - - TRACT ONE: Lying ana Demg on tne waters oi iuimwi --i the County of Haywooa ana bounded as follows: BEGINNING on a stake Carver's corner in Cald well's line and runs South to 36 poles to forked hickory; thence N. 85 W. 84 poles to a sourwoou ry old line on ridge); thence up ridge N. 48 E. 16 poles to two chestnuts; N. 24 E. 24 poles to white oak; N. 5 W. 20 poles to Spanish Oak N. 15 K. 12 poies 10 Spanish oak; W. V i V'CB white oak; N. 60 E. 14 poles to hickory on top of mountain; thence down mountain S. 66 E. 9 poles; thence E. 10 poles to stake S. 76 E. 42 poles to chestnut; a. iu Hj. 90 poles to oak and rock; S. 68 W. 38 poles to BEGINNING, con taining forty-two (42) acres. -TRACT TWO: Beginning a small dogwood on the bank of Jonathan Creek and runs N. 21 W. 26 poles and 20 links to a Spanish oak; then up the ridge N. 30 V4 W. 17 poles to a small chestnut on top of ridge; then N. 12 W. 12 poles to a black oak then N. 56 W. 9 poles 5 links to a chestnut on A. J. Car ver's line; then with his line S. 16 E. 56 poles to spruce on tne uia Creek run, then down the Old Creek mn M. 86 E. 17 to the BE GINNING, containing three acres, three rods and 11 poles. TRACT THREE: Lying and be ing on the waters of Jonathan Creek, BEGINNING on a Spanish oak, R. H. Plott's comer and runs N. 85' W, 10 poles and 15 links to a spruce pine on West bank of True Love Branch; thence S. 76 W. 42 poles to a hickory on water shed of ridge; thence up said ridge with its meanders 50 poles to a chestnut, A J. Carver's corner; thence S. 10 E. 64 poles to a chestnut; thence S. 24 E. 44 poles to an oak; thence S. 11 E. 18 poles to a dogwood on bank of Jonathan Creek; thence down said creek with its meanders 60 poles to a bunch of ivy in Plott's line; thence N. 84 poles to a black oak; thence N. 31 W. 42 poles to Spanish oak the BEGINNING corner. Contain-) ing thirty-seven acres more or less. Reserving and excepting however from the operation of this convey ance a wagon road as the same is now laid out and constructed, which is to be kept open for the benefit of the property lying back of the tract herein conveyed. Reserving and excepting also a right of way for a flame line as the same is now constructed across and over the property herein con veyed for a period ending Decem ber 19, 1922, which said flume is to be kept up for that period by Arthur Lewis, one of the grantors for the benefit of the land owners back of this tract. This land is known as the land which C. R. Moody and his wife E. A. Moody conveyed to Arthur Lewis and wife Mattie Lewis by deed dat ed December 29, 1919, and regist ered in Book 65, Page 250, Record of Deeds of Haywood County. TRACT FOUR: BEGINNING on a spruce pine on the north side of Jonathan's Creek and at the mouth of a branch thence up the branch North about six poles to a chest nut oak, corner of land, thence with his line a Southwest direction to the creek, then with the creek to the BEGINNING, containing two acres more or less. TRACT FIVE: An one-half un divided interest in the following tract: BEGINNING on a aeaa chestnut in R. H. Plott's and Noble Garrett's line just above Killian Gap on top of ridge, and runs up said ridge with its water shed, and R. H. Plott's line as lollows w. a W. 38 poles to a white oak; N. 31 W. 16 poles to a small white oak; N 22 E. 16 poles to a black oak; N 14 E. 28 poles; N. 17. E. 40 poles; N. 42 E. 24 poles; N. 38 E. 9 5-10 poles to a white oak, Jerry Leatherwood corner; N. 2 W. 20 poles; N. 17 30' W. 24 poles; N. 7 W. 38 poles, N. 32 W. 28 poles; N. 42" W. 25 poles to the ton of Walker Bald: S. 81 W. 20 poles to a double chestnut, Cham nion Fibre Company corner; thence down ridee with its water shed as follows: S. 19 W. 28 poles, S. 38 W. 26 poles; S. 45 W. 2 poles; thence S. 23" W. 28 poles; S. 60 W. 8 poles; S. 38 W. 42 poles; S. 21V W.' 11 poles; S. 87 W. 12 poles; S. 32 30' W. 20 poles; S. 21 W. 20 poles; S. 41' 30' W. 12 poles; S. 44 30' W. 22 poles; S. si' W U noles: S. 46 W. 14 nolea: S. 34 W. 15 poles; S. 10 E 14 noles to a chestnut, Cordell F.vunii corner: thence with the Evans line S. 12 E. 9 poles; S. 35 E. 16 poles; S. 60 E. 20 poles; S. 61 E. 8 poles: S. 45 E. 8 Doles: S. 14 E. 16 poles; S. . 39 E. 16 poles to JNooie uarrew s . . . . ii iii. corner; thence witn iNODie wrrevn line 9 calls as follows: S. 78 E, 40 poles to a locust on top of a ridsre: N. 85 E. 43 poles to a chestnut oak; N. 53 E. 12 poles to a chestnut oak; N. 88 E. 10 poles to a chestnut; N. 25 E, 6 Doles to a sourwood; N. 69' E. 8 noles: N. 60" E. 10 poles; to a chestnut; N. 64' E. 10 poles; N. 70 IE. 6 poles to the BEGIN' NING, containing acres, more or. less. ' Sale made pursuant to the power and authority contained in that certain deed of trust dated Septem ber 6, 1935 from Mrs. A. J. Carver, Will Carver, Stell Carver, Charlie Gaddis, Cora Gaddis, Ernest Car ver. Rebecca Reeves Carver, Min nie Davis, Lowery Davis, John Carver. Margaret Carver, Tom Carver. Sadie Carver, Gilbert Day- is, t lorence Jjavis, wewey server, Grace Carver, Pesrl Wilkey, and Henry Wi!-key to William T. Han nah, Trustee for A. K. Hannan, which deed of trust is recorded in Book 34, page 859, Haywood Coun ty Registry. The undersigned act ing as Executrix of Estate of Wil liam T. Hannah, deceased. This the 10th day of February, 1942. CARRIE EDMUND HANNAH, ; Executrix of Estate William T. Hannah, deceased, Trustee. No. 1167 Feb. 12-19-26 Mar. 5 FOODS A Food Store With Bargains 6 days a week No. 2 Can Cherries 12 Baker's 20c Size Cocoa only 150 7-oz. Boxes O. K. Macaroni 3 for 100 P & G Soap or O K Powders 6 ,,25( O K SOAP 35c Only OXYDOL 1 25c Box 1 10c Box Value Oil A .......,,..:...... FAIRY SOAP 3 bars 14c 1 bar lc tst . 12 oz. bottle 17jt AuntJmimai' 2 boxes 250 POST BRAN FLAKES boxes 250 Si4 boxes 20c giant size J 20C 151 Large Cans Tripe Beef Stew Roast Beef 25? SUPER SUDS boxes 22c White Water Rose FLOUR 24 lb. bag $1.05 Plain Or Self Rising FRESHE R V EGETAB LES Take Your Choice Carrots 2 bn. 130 Spinach lb. 100 Mustard lb. 100 2 Pounds Tomatoes 250 Choice Grapefruit 6 for 20c Lettuce 2 for 150 Large Sunkist Lemons doz. 290 Oranges doz. 170 -Large .' Apples 3 for 100 Green or . White Cabbage 2 lbs 91 GRADE A MEATS Native and Western Steaks CREAM CII E E S E lb. 29 Sealed CanB Full Pack OYSTERS pint 31 Strictly Fresh Dressed HENS AND FRYERS FAT BACK thick lb. 1210 No. 2H Size Can Peaches 3 fpr 250 LIBBY'S Chilli Con Carne lb. Can Bliss Coffee 25c .W.JW.v.'.',-X-. . -1.,iwM.w.,.'.v.,.y.v.w.v.",w. v..v.... 1 Old Linen Toilet Tissue 3 roI8 150 lA-Large Jar Wright's Silver Polish 250 Lux Flakes I Large ' '4. I Pound Kraft's Parkay Margarine 250 Large Package Del Mar OLEO 170 "Pint Jar Sweet Mixed PICKLES 15 Large Bottle French DRESSING 170 Heinz Baby Food 3 c ns 250 PURE LARD 8 bucket SI a25 Lifebuoy Soap Only 60 See Us For Garden and Field Seed Bulk and Package CASM HAZEL WOOD, N. C THE BETTER FOOD STORE"
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1942, edition 1
13
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