Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Sept. 30, 1943, edition 1 / Page 6
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THURSDAY, SEPT. 30, 1943 THE NEWS JOURNAL. RAEFORD, N. C. PAGE SIX A Substitute for Hell 1 9rmm-ypik.f7 f?-vrv . - si CXZT-v' -s&i Atr ...2 . Legume Growers To Harvest All Seed Possible i Calling on farmers t harvest all the legume seed possible this fall, J. C. Hutchinson of the Pee Dee-Cape Fear soil conservation district said this week that seed of these crops must be harvested on the farm if an adequate supply is to be available for planting next year. Lespedeza, cowpeas, soybeans, cro talaria, and sericca lespedeza are the most important legume seed that can be saved. An adequate supply of seed for these crops that will be required in carrying out farm conservation plans and also establishing soil con serving practices may not be availa ble through commercial channels. The war has closed the European seed-producing areas to the American market. Then too farmers will need large supplies of forage, soil-conserving, -and pasture plants seed next FARM BUREAU NOTICE Any person wishing to join the Farm Bureau of Hoke County may make application for membership at the office of The News-Journal. You can leave your name and an nual dues ($3.00) at our office. It will be turned over to Mr. J. M. Mc Gi ugan, secretary and treasurer and he will mail you your official receipt. O Advertising Called "A Major Weapon" Washington, Sept. 27. American business firms should maintain their advertising schedules as "a construc tive contribution to the war effort," is the opinion of the commerce department. Asserting that advertising contain LIBRARY NEWS Alfred Leland Crabb's supper at the Maxwell house, the popular A Tree Grows In Brooklyn, by Betty Smith, and Thirty Seconds Over To kyo, by Captain Ted W. Lawson are the outstanding bouks on the Hoke County Library's list of new titles in the past week. Others are: Tambourine, Trumpet, and Drum, by Sheila Kaye Smith; Mrs. Pennington, by Katherine Car son; One World, by Wendell Wilkie; Young Canada, by Anne Peck; Lea thernecks, by Rolfe Boswell, and How to Dress in Wartime, by Winifred Raushenbush. spring to add nitrogen to the soil ting important wartime information Somewhere in New Guinea these wounded soldiers await evacuation. Flat on their backs, in the steaming beat of the jungle, where mosquitoes plague the air and ants and mosquitoes torment weary bodies, they dream of home ... of clean white sheets and the touch of cool, comforting hands. You ran help provide modern hospi tals and the medicines they need for their recuperation by putting every dollar you can into War Bonds during the Third War Loan. y. s. Trmntrj Dttanmm Seed Treatment Cuts Grain Loss irake up for a lack of commercial ni- trog n and to insure the sustained production of food for freedom. There's more than enough legumes and pasture plant seed to take care of next year's planting needs if har vested, but unl.ss this seed is saved a shi rtage may develop. Aveiting that possibility falls directly on the shoul ders of the farmers themselves. O CRATES Annual losses due to attacks of smut diseases in small grain can be cut to a minimum by the use of seed treatments and the planting of smut resistant varieties, says H. R. Garriss, plant pathologist at State College. Garriss poinis to the results of tests conducted in 18 North Carolina coun ties during the 1941-42 season as proof of his statement. In the experiments, to control the bunt of wheat, often called the stink ing smut, seed of the Red Hart vari ety were artificially inoculated with smut spores. One lot of the seed was treated with ethyl mercury phns-! results showed an average of one phate at the rate of one-half ounce i tenth of one per cent infection in the npr hlishel of seed, while the Other IronlwH ormin nnH nn ni-onop nf id i portion was not treated. . per cent infection in the untreated I necl,ra 1 Seed fron the two lots were plant- group. ed in adjacent rows and the results: in the same test, it was found that ! showed an average of 45 2 infected the Lelina, Letoria. Victorgrain, Stan- Home canners are asked to return the e.npty fruit and vegetable crates I and baskets to their dealers, who will return them to growers and packing houses where they are desperately CHICKENS heads in the untreated rows, and only a trace (two-hundredths of one per cent) in the treated rows. For the c ntrol of loose smut of wheat, only the use of disease resis tant varieties, such as Leaps 157, will give success. Seed treatment is com pletely ineffective, Gorriss says. In controlling loose smut of oats, the seed of the Lee variety, suscepti ble to this disease, were inoculated with the loose smut spores, and then' only part of these were treated. The ton and Fulgrain 4 showed marked resistance to the disease. p More Winter Peas Now Available To Farmers In poultry-raising, the use of wire mesh floors has simplified the care of chicks, and for older hire's, the use of a deep, highly absorbent litter saves changing it so often. constitutes "a major weapon of the home front," the department said: The record shows that business has shared this viewpoint. Companies continue to advertise. And they key ed their messages to aiding the gov ernment in its prosecution of the war." The department said in a 96-page booklet that it realized immediately after the Pearl Harbor attack that ad vertising would be an important home front weapon. "People had to be informed," it said. ' Talents used so effectively in creating a desire for goods could with equal effectiveness show how to help win the war." DO YOUR MENUS NEED A LIFT? You can get well despite wartime rationing and f od scarcities by fol lowing the tested recipes to be found in the Housewife's Food Almanac, a Help feature for the homemaker. Look for this interesting department regularly in The American Weekly The Big Magazine Distributed With THE BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN Order From Your Newsdealer V LOAN i :: : : . . A,. Your ANEW PALMIST Madam Frances GIFTED PALMIST Guarantees to read your entire life, past, $ present and future, giving dates and act ual facts of business, love, health court- $ ship, marriage, divorce and family af- jj fairs. Reads your innermost thoughts and secrets, unravels your most intricate affairs, overcomes enemies or rivals and makes up lovers quarrels. She has read for manv noted and promi- nent people in all walks of life. The best 1 1"f"11 class of people consult her and bring JL llllll C their friends. Tells who you will marry and when whether husband, wife or sweetheart is true or false, what part of the country is luck iest for you and just what to do to be successful in life. She will warn you gravely, suggest wiselv, and explain fully. Satisfaction guaranteed. READINGS DAILY AND SUN DAYS from 9 o'clock a. m. to 10 o'clock p. m. LOCATED in HOUSE TRAILER at 643 PERSON ST. U. S. Highway 301, (North) beside Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. Fay etteville, N. C. Look for Orange and Blue Hand Sign and Trailer. Licensed by State and County. Buy War Stamps SPECIAL READING a and Bonds Readings for both oLOO White and Colored North Carolina farmers now have a total supply of almost 8.000,000 pcunds of Austrain winter peas avail-' able for fall use as a winter cover crop following a recent allocation to the State of an additional 5.000,000 pounds, it was announced today by G. T. Scott, chairman of the State AAA Committee. The additional amount was made available, Scott said, as part of a pro gram designed to increase seeding of winter legumes this fall in order to prevent erosion and Increase produc tivity of the soil. Deadline for applying for supple- g I mental materials is November 15th, v I he declared, and all materials not used within the current program year I will be charged against the farm's 3'1944 production practice allowance. . All orders must be placed with the $ County AAA Committee. A o SWEET POTATO $ ' The sweet potato is now recognized ': i as the South's greatest food crop in $ : that it gives the largest returns per j acre in nutritious food, says J. Y. Las ijj.siter, Extension horticulturist. 'i I To get the most food value from Drawing Shades Makes This Possible ! T06ETHErJ i them, tomatoes should be eaten raw I E. Thomas, extension State College. O ! nutritionist at 1 s : : : : : ; Fall is the best season of the year , ' for seeding lawns, says L. G. McLean, ! horticulturist with the Experiment Station at State College. i 445,200,000 GALLONS OF FUEL OIL 'ARE SAVED ANNUALLY BY JLOWERINft WINDOW SHADES, ENOUGH OIL TO MAKEf ' 333,900,000 GALLONS . .OFJOOiOCTANr oAsotiwr; WICH VV0U10 ENABLE BASFD'IN ZNGL AND. TO " BOM0?BE RUN 576 TIMES. HOW OPEN C. & E. CAFE "Formerly Bill Wrights Place" ROUTE 15-A FOOD? GOOD! DRINKS? COLD! COFFEE? DELICIOUS! Hours Open? 5 P.M. to 12 P.M. Closed Every Tuesday NOTICE NO CURB SERVICE PUROL STATION with GAS and OIL Station Hours: 9 A. M. to 12 P. M. Sunday 2 P..M. to 12 P.M. weekdays Closed Every Tuesday A friendly place for a pleasant Evening CHARLIE & ETHEL BAKER w e nave Kept 10 SALE EVERY DAY McCONNEL Our Promise Farmer Friend We Are Averaging From $42.00 To $44.00 For EntWe Sale Each Day At EH0U SOME SALES THAT WILL SHOW YOU HOW WE SELL TOBACCO Our Hoke County SALE EVERY DAY Carthage Ashburn & Johnson Red Springs 240 49 250 9 250 50 244 47 MrNair & 300 300 256 lfiO 150 2X4 270 W. Gentry - 47 - 47 - 47 - 46 - 50 - 40 - 41 180 284 270 300 275 160 200 226 41 41 41 41 45 45 47 50 .Sheriff Wright & Smith 242 204 251 230 132 46 46 47 47 37 102 Thomas & 276 148 114 180 156 272 268 240 230 232 232 220 43 Harris 46 45 44 47 47 49 49 49 49 48 49 48 250 20 48 48 W. M. Thomas & Ixv.kler 192 236 226 176 180 226 176 180 40 41 47 45 46 47 45 46 L. C ameron 4c Tenants 284 45 120 44 210 46 216 48 220 49 Sheriff Wright & Gilcspa 174 45 154 45 180 48 140 48 110 38 56 44 George Morrison 210 47 230 46 210 46 220 43 W. V. Taylor ii MrFadyen 2G0 43 196 42 250 42 Odell Ashhurn & Johnson Red Springs 232 50 196 50 192 49 120 47 I, Personally, Guarantee My Friends Satisfaction On Every Pile Of Tobac co Sold With Me E. Leon Cameron McC0HHELL WAREHOUSE GEORGE D. CARTER & SOUS George D. Carter - Dan Carter - Bill Carter O 2 Hour Sale Time EVERY DAY O TOBACCO HAS ADVANCED SELLING UP TO $52.00 - 1 -n i
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 30, 1943, edition 1
6
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