Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Sept. 16, 1954, edition 1 / Page 13
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r J it,' 1- 17 THE DCllJM TIMES, KENANSTOXB, W. C, THURSDAY, SETmSSSS It KM J7 Jk o o o e o o e o o o o o o e o e o 3P Q o o 9 O o o o o e o o o o a o o. o O o o o a o o o o o o O - o o o o o o METT & AUSLEY, D. D. yrd Announce the' Opening of Hi Office For the Practice of . i General Dentistry In Warsaw Daily 8:30 A. M. Til 5:30 P. M. Thurs. 8:30 A. M. 1:00 P. M. Located in Dr. Otto Matthews Office Phone 640 ooooodboooooooooooooooo John H. Carter Company o office supplies & equipment 5 Phone 3133 f O 2 Kinslon, N. C. oooooooooooooooooooooooQ DR. THOMAS W. ALLEY Optometrist Of Wilmington, N. C. Announces The Opening Of His Office For The Practice Of Optometry In Warsaw, N. C. On Tuesdays & Saturdays From 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Second Floor Warsaw Drug Co. Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted $ $ SAVE $ $ Buy Building Blocks & Septic Tanks Wholesale. Manufacturers Steam Cured Laboratory Tested Building Blocks. Ask For Warsaw Block Plant CAROLINA MILLWORK & BUILDING SUPPLIES . Phone 666 Warsaw, N .C. 18 'Ma It I V fea s3 11 INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS FARMALL TRACTORS FARM IMPLEMENTS rffc- M E. REFRIGERATION PARTS -SERVinr MACHINERY COMPANY, INC. kinston,northcarolina-phone4176 i i a We Wanl Your Hogs . r-A We Pay A Premium For Top Quality Hogs See Us or Call 2106, Clinton, N. C. Clinton Livestock Market OPERATED BY LUNDY PACKING COMPANY Buying Days Are Mondays Through Fridays 8 a. m. Until 5 p.m. ( If At this time of the year you will begin to take notice whether or not you have a good crop of grapes on your muscaaine vines. IX not, why not? Although not always the case, the usual answer to that question is poor pollination. Most muscadine varieties require pollination by a male vine in order to set fruit. Many of the wild muscadine vines are males and in the past have ser ved as pollinators for the vines planted in the home gardens. How ever, many wooded and brushland areas have been put into cultivation and in doing so the male muscadine have been destroyed and now the garden varieties are not producting good crops. I saw a good illustration of this last week. A large James grape wnicn formerly produced good crops has only a scattering of eranea on it. That has been the story for sev eral years. However, three young vines propagated from this One and planted in another sarden along with some perfect flowered polli nators have a heavy croD of eraDes on them this year. This Boes to show how important pollination is for your scuppernongs and muscadines. During the past few years several perfect flowered varieties of mus cadines have been offered for sale. They were develorjd at th N. C. Lower Coastal Plain Station by Mr. Charles Dearing. These varieties will produce crops without the presence of male vines and also will take the place of male vines in pollinating other varieties. Since the male vines produce no eranes. it is a distinct advantage to use one of these perfect flowered vareties for pollination. Why use the old varie ties at all? Because they are of bet ter quality. The best of the perfect flowered varieties are Burgaw, Wal lace and Tarheel. Year-Round I'i, By VERA WINSTON . ITALIAN cotton in black vith a red plaid cleverly handled, gives a good account pi itself in a frock that is wearable the year round. It is nicely molded through the bodice and the belled skirt is lined to hold its shape. A small white pique dickey fol lows the V neckline and Is sen sibly detachable. New weaves, new finishes make cotton more important and desirable than ever. I Wilmington Coca Cola Bottling Company ington, N. C. RED ASH BRIQUET COAL FUEL OIL and KEROSENE R. B. WARREtl Your Habits May Harm Household Equipment i Did you realize that your very habits can harm yo.ur modem Kitch en and laundry equipment? According to Mamie Whisnant, State College extension specialist in home management, your equip ment can be handicapped or even harmed by your old work habits. When machines are not properly used, the job will not be so well done, It will take a greater expendi ture of time and effort in perform ing the jobv and more repairs may result from this improper usage. Precision is important, for ex ample, in using an automatic wash er. Many homemakers overload their machines and do not bother to measure the correct amount of the right kind of detergent. Abuse of the washer will mean not only a poor washing job but also strain on your machine. Miss Whisnant adds that home makers today are singing the prais es of modern equipment, but unless that homemaker can keep up with her labor-saving equipment, she will not get the full return for the money invested. You may find that you will have to change some of your old habits to suit your new labor-saving appliances. When you get a new piece of electric equipment, study the in struction booklet carefully, advises Miss Whisnant. Instruction pamph lets given to the homemaker as she purchases a new appliance contain valuable material. But how many homemakers do more than carry the book home and push it back in to a drawer to read later when they have more time? Don't wait for "later" to come. Sit down as soon as your new piece of equipment arrives and learn all you can about it. Discover what the machine will and won't do. PIANOS M. & H. Furniture Co. Located in Wallace Jewelry Store Good Selection Used Pianos Very Reasonable -it QUESTION: How much pasture do I need? Conserve Limited Rainfall ASC Advises Farmers When it comes to the farmer get ting the most out of his labor, fer tilizer, and seed, it is as important to hold the moisture on the land as it is to keep the r,un-off from taking the soil with it. As H. V. Mangum, of the State Agricultural Stablization and Con servation office, explains, the addi tional moisture held on the land through conservation practices often makes the difference between a poor crop and a good one some times the difference between no crop at all and a good one, he said. With inadequate rainfall gener al throughout the state and with re strictions on the plantings of cash crops, this factor alone becomes all the more important.. Mangum said that in most instances the concern is over losing the soil and little at tention is given to the water that leaves the land. And yet, he points out, often without the moisture the soil is of little value in bolstering farm income. He says that the soil and water conserving practices for which as sistance is provided under the Agri cultural Conservation Program are primarily aimed at saving and im proving the land and that moisture conservation is an important by product. Such practices as establish ing a good protective cover with grass and legumes, the construction of terraces, contour farming, and many other fall in this class. In Mangum's words, "maintain ing and improving the productivity of the land is the purpose of the Agricultural Conservation Program and this means conserving both soil and water. Often one is as import ant as the other." ANSWER. Every farmer should provide at least one and one-half acres of unproved permanent pas tures or equivalent for each mature cow or horse and mule on his farm Four brood sows is the equivalent of one cow. Twenty hogs, two 500 pound heifers are all the equivalent of one cow. QUESTION: What makes good permanent pasture? ANSWER: Look at your land first. If it is clay soil or moist soil, then Ladino clover and orchard grass or Ladino clover and fescue should be the backbone of the grazlne Dro- gram. They will produce more feed over a period of years properly han dled than any combination of plants now available. QUESTION: Why does milk pro duction fall off in hot weather-" ANSWER: The lack of feed is the main reason, aithougn noi weather and flies usually take the blame. WVen weather gets hot, pas tures dry up rapidly. Cows graze less hours because of the heat and flies so they end up short of feed. Yorkshire Breeders Plan ;;. First Annual Fall Sale , . The newly-organized Yorkshire Swine Breeders Association will hold its first annual fall show1 and sale Thursday, September 16, . at Rocky Mount. Jim Butler, swine specialist for the State College Agricultural Ex tension Service, says the show will start at 10 a. m., followed by a sale at 1 p. m. Eight bred gilts, six open gilts and four boars will be exhibited. Butler said this is the first time that registered Yorkshire hogs have been offered at auction in the state. There has been a tremendous in crease in interest in the Yorkshire breed throughout the country and especially in North Carolina during the past few years, according to Butler. Yorkshire breeders stress the fact that this breed is very prolific. Animals consigned to the Rocky Mount sale come from an average litter size of more than 12V4 pigs. A. J. Cavenaugh, Jeweler DIAMONDS WATCHES Watch ft Jewelry REPARING A ENGRAVING Butler report. Trv of ine MAnal are. from Jitter ot 18; the imaBect . inter aize Kwaeu in ujv bmww One of the gilts ottered aft fh' sale is bred to bait brother of tb : Grand Champion barrow at the . ... ... ,-. - - V , -J'.?""-..? ternatlonal Livestock Show In 19SJL j. ' GEO. P. PRIOGEH Plumber i STATE LICENSED PLUMBING CONTRACTOR SUPPLIES T BATHROOM CQHmnOfT HOT WATER HEATSBS WATER PUMn KITCHEN SINKS Phone 473 WARSAW, N C FREE INSPECTION AND ESTIMATES FOR TERMITES EAST COAST PEST CONTROL PHONE 2602 ROSE HILL, N. C. CECIL A. MILLER General Insurance Beulaville, N. C. Office At Brown & Miller Co. ONT OUAtTUOU S m DAIRY jfggl PRODUCTS "", " 'ArrrnviutHC I JV ff-wmiv:.j. e lUXBtRTON. N. . I B Cj.UMm-OH. M c. I the big today You can read it in the sales figures Buick's the car that's climbing to a phenomenal public preference. For Buick today is outselling all other cars in America regardless of price class except two of the so-called "low-price three." And every month strengthens Buick's new leadership position. It's the "hot" car for style, for power, for performance and, most emphatically, for value. v ::,t;:!:r. Any way you look at it, Buick's the buy of the year, hands down. For Buick prices start close to the lowest-just a few dollars above those of the "low-price three." But those few more dollars you pay for a Buick buy you a lot more power, room, comfort, style, ride steadiness. And get this: with our tremendous sales volume right now, we can offer you a really top allowance on your present car. That's the added bonus you get from our big volume. ft tho SHHer HO It's just common sense. With Buick's year-ahead beauty today, youll be driving a car that's right up front in the style parade of tomorrow. And when you're ready to resell your Buick, it will still be fresh and new-looking, with the modern features the others will adopt in the corning years. And that means you're bound to get a higher resale price when you do trade it in. Drop in and see this beautiful buy right now-and see for yourself that you make the buy of the year, in this tomorrow-styled beauty called Buick. whin irrm automoiiiu ah iuiit iuick wiu auito thim- 1 i. , 1 -S I i A' if 1 y.t TkM tsn Mt. OUve, N. C East Main St Wallace, N. C. . . V. Ni , ' .TV' ' i ' 5- ' PiX--XK -? r?it?V.j.:-:k ,T:::;;;'T.r :V: :' ' - v ' - ' . -J ..... .' U" ', , "" .;. -V,:. A. y .'V,f;.;..'..i'..t.i.i.. " i .' ' : -. - ''' " ' '
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 16, 1954, edition 1
13
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