Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / May 27, 1954, edition 1 / Page 10
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jj cr t. We or V . r. N. C STATE HAITI A VPAlf ' Porta, dairying tram the standpoint Mi-alllf IIUIIIv If VVtV of producer, consumer, and pro " Ike local County extension agents Ce8sor- eoJoy e increased rec- tsotay announced the Tann and Un facilities offered this year ; M is Week program to be present- 1 Kaleigb,. cal at N. C. State College, June A daily schedule of Farm and ' T-JB. Home Week events follows: - ' They said that more than ever Monday, June 7 f - iiu JAh annual nn. Evening nnenlnff exercises and re this the 46th annual con of farmers and homemakers. with subjects of vast and ssaaacdiate concern to all rural f '- They expressed hope that a large president, N. C. Federation of Home sasaher of our County people would Demonstration Clubs; and W. A. aaaoept the Invitation to take part Connell, Warrenton, president, Far- - in farm and Home Week discussions mers Convention. -t such timely problems as agricul-1 Tuesday, June 8 tarl policy formation, price sup- I Classes for homemakers: 0000000000000000000000004 r o o Cent in -See the big difference! A . mniMM o G-E 21 -inch AluRiinized Tube X9 o o o o o eB i.O. o o o o o o o o o o o I O A " - ,;.v:a. V 6 J. e iWto ml TV. 0 : Model 1IC1I4. 31-faca eoiuole In FARMER'S HARDWARE & MERCHANDISE COMPANY The Farmers Friend WARSAW N. C. J. F. (Jimmy) Strickland Mrs. Floyd Strickland loooooooooooooooooooooooo top Harvesting for 19 I !ypy l Now, Greater Capacity JVbdel 66 ALL-CROP Harvester - 11T prop Harvester continues to harvest more acres . . . I c . for more profit on family farms throughout the Nw the new 6-foot Model 66 brings greater capacit y witfi rSeWsaving feature, that have made the ALL-CROP Hamster the standard for the harvest field. " Ih. Ml.wln or. unmUlokobl. h,r . Ih. n.w "' 1. New Slx-Foo Iwoder with hydnwllc or levee lift 1. Naw Six-Sat sturdier 3. 4. S. Wide-Flow food Now Step-Up ftrowroek Wide flvo-foot cylinder 6. lubber Ihroihina surface T 7. Cylinder Oolck tpeed - Air Wort reparation Saw-tooth WU Control whv settle ior less uum . .W. ..at a lower price. settle for less than an TtrnaTn and Home Hovr .Ivory SoUrrooy NSC T. A. Turner Co. Pink Hill, N. C. Phone 2346 ' Jtmcrs' Trccfcr & bplbcnt Co. Kinston, N. C Phone 5231 FARM AND HO.ViS IVESIf JUNE 7-10 COLLEGE. RALEIGH creation, William Neal Reynolds Coliseum. Remarks by D. W. Col vard, dean, SchooJ of Agriculture; Mrs. Charles Graham, Linwood, WeH turn on this G-E next to any other set anywhere near its price. You be the judge. See for yourself the difference the G-E Aluminised Picture Tube mskee blacker blacks, whiter whites, greater rang of pays. Designed for oflaaww UHF-VHF. Let us show you this G-E in action. O o o o o o o o o o o o o o In o o DOKSTRATIO Sm C-l itM V mm o o o o o o o o o o performance years . . reel chonger vaivo. . AIX-CRUK Hvesier ;. t: ; . , , i;,,,,,. See us now ior quick delivery. Ml-CtOf b o lfl-ohor licioeao. C fiius-crntr.:: 9 f The Challenge program, Williams Hall, address by I Y. BaUentine, commissioner of agriculture; pre sentation of local programs and discussion-of problems by leaders from Ashe, Forsyth, Orange, Rockingham, Stokes and Wilson Counties. Ad dress by & Yt Floyd, secretary, State Board of Farm Organizations and Agencies. Presentation of Awards In Town and Country Church Improvement Program,' Gov. William B. Um- stead. Coliseum, Evening, Cherokee Ranch Rodeo, State Fair Arena, "r , Wednesday. Jane Classes far aememakera. "How to Make More Farm Prof its,'' address by True D. Morse, under-secretary of agriculture, US DA. Coliseum. Dairy Foods Exposition, demon stration by Mrs. Miriam T. Kelley, Kentucky Extension Service, Tex tile Auditorium. 4 All-day dairy program, discussion of dairy policy by Morse; demon strations at new Animal Disease Laboratory; demonstrations of fly control, pasture irrigation. Self feeding trench silo; quality milk production. Problems and oppor tunities of the dairy industry in North Carolina as Viewed by a con sumer (Mrs. W. C. Pressly, Raleigh), a processor CMose Riser, Greens boro), and producer (T. L. Reeves, Pittsboro), College Dairy Farm. Evening, address on international trade by R. L. Beukenkamp, agricul tural attache, Netherlands Embassy. Cherokee Ranch Rodeo. Thursday, June 10 (For women) North Carolina Federation of Home Demonstration Clubs annual meeting. Address by Ben E. Douglas, head. Department of Conservation and Development, Pullen Hall. All-day program on Farm Policy and Price Supports, Frank Thomp son Gymnasium; Brooks James, head of agricultural economics at the college and Brice Ratchford, assistant extension director, will lead discussions. Flake Shaw, execu tive secretary, N. C. Farm Bureau; Harry Caldwell, master State Grange; and economists Ed Bishop and Bill Turner will form a panel to discuss questions on farm policy and price supports. M. S. Williams, head of extension farm management and marketing, will speak on "What Should a Price Support Program Achieve?" Meeting of State Cotton Promo tion Committee, T. B. Upchurch, Raeford, chairman. Meeting open to public. Evening, Home Demonstration Pageant, "Green 'A Growin", Coli seum. Pageant To Show Growth Of Home Demonstration Thursday evening, June 10, will be the time for navintf tribute to home demonstration in North Caro lina - the adult education move ment for farm women that's been 40 years "a-growin." William Neal Reynolds Coliseum at State College will be the scene of the unweaving of the home dem onstration story. A two-act pageant entitled "Green A' Growin," writ ten by Mrs. Emily Selden and Mike Healey of Chapel Hill will be put on by the home demonstration women of North Carolina. Counties in charge of the various scenes are Sampson, Madison, John ston, Mecklenburg, Anson, Pamlico, Durham and Currituck. There will be glimpses into early farm homes, visits to canning club day, to com munity picnics, to early curb mar kets, to dressmaking clinics, and to county council meetings as the home demonstration story unfolds: Includedin the pageant will be both the humorous sidelights and the more serious episodes that have con tributed to the advancement of home demonstration work in North Carolina. Also playing an important part HERE'S ANOTHER OIIE of our many services to make banking easier for you. Save time this wonderful way. Every mail box becomes a branch of our bank for you. Come in today, or write for full information on this convenient time saver. BRANCH BANKING? and TRUST CO. i "The Safe Executor" WALLACE T7AESAW Dairy Day : Will Shov Ways To Curb los During 1954, dairy herd owners death Of calves under two years stand to lose $51 - million from of age. Dairymen who attend Farm and Home Week, at State College will learn some! , new things they can do to prevent such losses. , , Dr, J. C Osborne, head of the State College veterinary section, es timates that North Carolina farm er alone stand to lose $680,000 from calf losses this year. Part of the Dairy Day program, Wednesday, June 9, will be held in the hew Animal Disease Laboratory designed and developed, to aid In disease loss prevention. During the morning, experts will tell of pro gress In making maximum use of roughage, report results with sim ple and complete grain mixtures and exhibit the facilities of the lab. A feature of the Dairy Day pro gram will be an informal discussion cf dairy questions by True D. Morse, under-secretary of agricul ture, president of the Commodity Credit Corporation, and former president of Doane Agricultural Service. Morse will also speak tne same day to a joint Farm and Home Week audience. Consumers, processors and dairy farmers will give their viewpoints of "Problems and Opportunities of the Dairy Industry in North Caro line." Dr. D. W. Colvard, dean of the School of Agriculture, will pre side at the afternoon program at the College Dairy Farm, where dairy experts will demonstrate fly control, pasture irrigation, self-1 feeding trench silo and show the latest methods on getting quality milk production. Speakers Listed The 46th annual Farm and Home Week will present 23 top-ranking off-campus speakers and instructors in their fields, in addition to a large number of State CoUege per sonnel. The event, sponsored by the N. C. Federation of Home Demonstration Clubs' and Farmers Convention, in cooperation with State CoUege and the State Department ol Agncuuure is being held in the spring for the second year In a row, to eliminate conflicts with harvesting. Many families have indicated iney will attend graduation ceremonies t State Collese. which end Sunday, June 8, and remain in Balelgh for Farm and Home Week, which be gins the following day, according Wort Sloan. Farm and Home nraob' efloratarv. .Speakers .from off-campus will include the Rev. Ed. Agsten, West Raleigh Presbyterian Church; Doris Anderson, New Jersey home man mt eDecialist: L. Y. Ballen- tine. commissioner of agriculture; r L. Beukenkamp, agricultural at tache, Netherlans Embassy; Harry n Caldwell, master, State Grange. Ben Douglas, head, Conservation Maryland associate 4-H leader; E. Y. Floyd, director. Plant r- Tr,citnti N C. and Va.; Ar nold Hoffman, state supervisor of music; Mrs. Vernon James, Eliza beth City, Route 4; Mrs. Miriam Kelley, Kentuck consumer market ing specialist. True D. Morse, under-secretary of agriculture, Washington; Mose Kiser, president, N. C. Dairy Pro ducts Association; M. G. Mann, gen eral manager, N. C. Cotton Growers in the pageant will be the State Home Demonstration Chorus, direc ted by Dr. Arnold Hoffman, public school music supervisor. Serving 'as narrator for "Green A' Growin" will be Mrs. Effie Vines Gordon, pioneer home demonstra tion agent in Nash County. "Green A' Growin" will close the 1964 Farm and Home Week Pro gram in Raleigh. 13! FACON Music To Pky.Csg Perl. Music will play a big part In Farm and Home Week 1954. The home demonstration chorus, now nearly 300 voices strong, will make its annual performance In William Nea Reynolds Coliseum on Thurs day evening, . June 10. The state ' chorus, directed ' by Arnold Hoffman of the State De partment of Public Instruction, will also set the 'mood and furnish back ground music for "Green A' Grow-in",- the pageant depicting the first 140 years of home ,. demonstration work in North Carolina. One, of the classes planned for Is rogram A complete explanation of how and why local leadership is the key to North Carolina's wrdely heralded Challenge program Is in store for those attending the 46th annual Farm and Home Week. John W. Crawford, program plan ning specialist for the North Caro lina Board of Farm Organizations and Agencies, sponsor of the "Chal lenge," long-range rural improve ment program, said a special feature of the 1954 Farm and Home Week will be a program built around the idea of "getting off the ground with an action program." Crawford explained that in all good causes, "Someone has to striker the match; others must pickup the torch," Just how this was done, step by step, in Chatham County, will be explained. "This, type of ex planation," said Crawford, "will be of great help to leaders in counties still planning to meet the challenge of a more abundant rural life." The "Challenge Day" program , is scheduled for Tuesday, June 8, be ginning at 10 ajn. The program will be held in 'Williams Hall auditorium on the State College campus. Farm and Home Week this year is set for June 7-10. Opening the program will be L. Y. Bailentine, state commissioner of agriculture, with a talk on "Progress and Plans." Bailentine Is also a member of the Board of Farm or ganizations and agencies. Following Ballentlnes talk those present will hear how Chatham County initiated and developed its prize winning program. Following this explanation the program will be thrown open to questions by those attending. Other highlights of the Challenge discussion include "How Agricul tural Enterprises Have Been Devel oped," "How Home Improvements Hsve Been Made," VHow Communi ty Projects Have Been Carried Out,' featuring rural leaders from Ashe, Forsyth, Orange, Rockingham, Ruth, erford,' Stokes and Wilson Coun. ties. "How Lay-Leaders Might Further Help in Developing County Long- Time programs," will be discussed by E. Y. Floyd, secretary of the Board of Farm Organization and Agencies. Coop; Dr. Bessie McNeil, head, ECC home economics department; Mary Omen, home economist, J. C. Penny Listen to the local news at 12:00 noon over WGBR. rr loooooooooooooooooooooooo o o Bargain Hunters By" IHRIfTYS o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o kgrw " eo.oaawsswsasea women at 'Farm and Home Week will be "Let's Have Good Music." a' course to include practical instruc tion " in conducting and planning all types of - musical programs, Mrs. Vernon ' James of Elizabeth City, chairman of the State Home. Dem onstration Music Committee, and Dr. Arnold Hoffman and his staff of" co-workers will teach - these Classes. : I On Thursday evening, the Julie F. Cuyler Scholarships to the home demonstration music camp will be awarded to women showing leader snip in music education. This music camp will be held in July at Cataw ba College in Salisbury. :: The WPTF state choral awards will be - presented on Thursday evening to the two best ., choral groups in the women's and mixed voice chorus divisions. Prizes of $100 and a trophy will be awarded to the first place winners in each division and $50 prizes will be given to the runners up. '..,.; i .'. , Available $1 High. Dormitory space will be provided at ,$1 a night for those attending Farm and Home Week in Raleigh, according to Miss Maud K. "Schaub, extension program planning spec ialist. The festival for farm families will be held June 7 through June 10. . Reservations, accompanied by room fee, may be made by writing to Miss Schaub, Box 5157, State College Station, Raleigh. You should bring your own bed linen, blanket, pillow, towels and personal articles, Miss Schaub said, Good, Inexpensive meals will be available at the State College Cafe teria, according to Miss Schaub. Breakfast will be served from 7 to 8:30; lunch from noon to 2 p.m.; and supper from 5:30 to 7 o'clock. Co., New York; Lonnie Powell, N. C recreation commission; Mrs. William C. Pressley, - radio commentator, Raleigh; T. L. Reeves, dairyman, Pittsboro; Flake Shaw, executive, vice-president, N. C. Farm Bureau. Mrs. Pamela Stock, color consul tant, B. C. Moore Company, New York; .Reginald Styers, decorating consultant, High Point; T. B. Up- church, Chairman of State Cotton Promotion Committee and Gov. William B. Umstead. Words of the Wise People dont ask for tacts In making up their minds. They would rather have one good, soul-satisfying emotion than. a dozen tacts. ' , " I -.(Robert Keith Learitt) I Ex-bakers mutt have robbed the pastry shop in West War wick, a I, where S91 was hid den in the oven, Tbey knew how to "raise? dough. j Armyworms and pea aphids are among the most damaging insets to I ftarm cropu. Be "The Bride Of The Month" . . . Get Lovely Prized May, June or July, come in and get a lovely gift we will give to . every bride who registers before her mar If you are getting married during rlage ... in addition you many win the valuable prize we will give to some LUCKY BRIDE OF THE MONTH Be Sure To Come In And Register o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Bjr Ruth Current .-' State Bobw Demonabrmtivar Agent CASK OF TOUR WASHES PATS OFF Regardless of what laundry product yout use, regular car of the waifi! i bjr the- housewife will greatly-increase its length t satis factory service. Car can also elim inate many service callsv Always follow the mauiaffcttiaret's directions. It the directions booklet gets lost, write t th iweearflirfw er for another. ": ,' Take' eat 'mt tte washer after using as well as darutf use. The more car it has who In use, the leas repsdr it .iriB need. Rinse, drain and dry after each use. Flush out the washing; meahin thorotjgMy with' plain water, and dont forget to fins the cower ot the washer, OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQCCOO n m tscar OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOI ATTENTION FARMERS! W Wish To Announce The s.:. 'r,"- ' "tiv.'-.'. it'. . Appointment Of J.Ttl. Edgerton & Son Inc. j Goldsboro, II. C. AS DEALERS OF: v . - ". I O Hardio Rain Control Irrigation f' Couplers, Valves and Fittings. O Carter Irrigation Pumps. f O I. H. Power Units II All DIE COUPLERS GIVE YOU MORE IRRIGATION PR DOLLAR OF COST Only Hardie Rain Control provides a coupler with adequate foot support, positive lock, no-blow-out gaskets, and that is attached without drilling, punching or welding. Slippage and pipe damage are eliminated by two-bolt ring clamp that holds steel hook. Can be coupled or uncoupled from middle of the pipe. It will pay you to find out how Hardie Rain Control saves you labor, maintenance cost and makes water go further and do more. Hardie Rain Control fits any ground, is readily adjusted to any acreage. f Rain Control Valves Stop Surging And Reduce Flow Resistance ParteUe Sarklhr IrrkjeHai frttea. jr.leMeailetekWIy tmt' ' A- : IIACO FAr.r.i CUPFLY STOr.H i.3ATi3:i diyi:io:i I Ual thto oupoa to t. M. Ugartoa Sm. fee. 1314 H. Wll-1 I las Street K you would kka to at reprtseatativ to aB on I I ftm to sjwkt t deatga and estiniata lor ymr farm yiUEC, a...3 1 ImoiJ I.Ve etr:' .... . ,;" A Vv, j':'' ,; '' 2 -n.". i'i.".a.'''.7''-.i..vLi'.;.' '. I . (MXO'.oe.eeooieee.e.ieoooo...e.eoo I i ------- - --le: 1 1 too;, drying tu mluneat& pari wltis a eioth. CAUSES OF. "YELLOWING" Yellowing, like graying, is often ' caused wheat soap la used and is not completely rinsed out Heat of ironing1 will often turn fabrics yel low, cietnes can yellow duri JuruTl nprdp storage. This can be due to imp er washing, soap or starch left in th matwral, improper rinsing and ' the Hke. . 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The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 27, 1954, edition 1
10
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