Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / June 9, 1949, edition 1 / Page 2
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/• THE NEWS-JOUBNAL 1^} li ^ s .•■ifi m fL: * !i-v|>; THtJBSDAT, JUNE 9, 1949 cccrrisn news — By Mrs. A. A. Mclnnis. —« Rev, J. Parks Hackney of Siler | Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Ridge and City wil preach at Tabernacle churcli Sundaj' night at 8 o’clock. AJl who are interested in the se lection of a. new pastor for this church arc expected to • be pre sent at this service. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burnside of Charleston. West Va. and Miss Gabrilla Dove of Willow Springs were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Dove last Thursday and Friday. Southern Marble Works Lumberton, N. C. Get our prices before buy ing your monument. brother, Ervin Ridge, of Baltimore spent last Tuesday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. M.»S. Gibson. Bett>’ Jean and Ldbby Ann Ov erton spent the past week end with their aunt. Mrs. Otis Jackson at St. Pauls. Mrs. J. P. Barbour and child ren attended a celebration at her home church in Johnson County ast Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Gibson had all their children and grandchil dren to visit them Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Koonce and Miss Ellen Kate Koonce of Way|ide and Mr. and Mrs. Smith Mclnnis and daughter, Ann, visit ed the 4-H boys and girls at camp Sur,iay. Robert Mott, Fred McFadyen, Lacy Koonce, Franklin Martin, Janet Guin and Mary Kate Mc lnnis were among those who went to camp. Mrs. Lawrence Barnard enter tained with a party at the Woman’s Club in Fayetteville last Thurs day night in honor of her cousin. Mrs. Robert Burnside. Those at tending w'ere Mrs. Gordon Keith of Aberdeen. Miss Lela Snead and Miss Ethel Pate of Seventy-First, Mrs. Louise Fuller of Waterloo, Iowa and Mrs. Margaret Adding ton of Fayetteville. We are glad to report Miss Carrie Lee Townsend, who has not been well for some time, much improved. shopping tour and Mrs. Knight to spend a few days. with her daughter. Mrs. C. S. Pickett and family. Dusting BoosU Income of N. C. Peanut Growers Mr. and Birs. B. B. Britt and children, Gernon and Joe, spent Sunday at Carolina Beach. Rev. Osbourn of Columbia, S. C. will conduct services at Tabernacle church this coming week, begin ning on Monday night at 8 o’clock. Everyone is invited to attend. Angus Campbell Mclnnis, Jr. and sister, Bonnie Alice, of Wa- gram spent last week with their grandmother, Mrs. A. A. Mclnnis. Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Shaw of Rex visited M. S. Bristow last Sim- day. ' Mr. Dickerson, who formerly resided at Wayside and who was a member of Tabernacle church, is now a patient at the Sanator ium, Mr. apd Mrs. Thomas Yeargan and family of Garner were guests of Mr, and Mrs. Joe Yeargan Sunday, M. S. Bristow, who has been ill for a long time, has been ser iously ill this week. j Miss Jane Wood spent last Sat urday night with her cousin, Lois McLean, at Raeford. Miss Lilly Wood and Mrs. M. R. Knight went to Fayetteville Tuesday. Miss . Wood, went on a Miss Christine Rivers of Harts- ville, S. C. is spending two weeks with her aunt, Mrs. Herbert Long. ■ 0—0- Pasture and oat crops in Hyde County have been heavily dam aged by recent attacks of the army worms. You Want T Your Dollar? Then It Will Pay To Compare These Prices • Arsenate of Lead $14.00 per case • Boyette Tobacco Sprayers $79.50 • Browns No. 4D Sprayers $7.50 • Hackney 4-Wlieel Tobacco Trucks $12.50 ‘ • Buckeye Tobacco Barn Cnrers $180.00 • Galvanized Tin 5V Roofing; $10.00 per • 90 lb. Roll Roofing $3.19 per sq. • 5S fl. Roll Roofiisg p6f ® 4S is!! isefing , ; SlJf ptr ^s. ® ErtekSidERg 1 |5J§ ® mME ® Jshfis fhmlk Glaiskote (6ete) fliJI i ■ • Wire Nails, All Sizes, Common Ji per keg • Galvanized & Roofing Nails $14.00 per keg • No. 2 Pitcher Pumps $5.50 DUCKHEAD WORK CLOTHES BELOW COST • Men’s Overalls $2,95 • Men’s Work Pants Khaki & Blue $2.75 • ^en’s Work Shirts Khaki & Bine $1.95 Johnson Cotton Go. Of Raeford, Inc. Cash if You Have It Credit if You Need It i'SK*.-SK*'‘JK* -US* -Hi- •'4^- -a. • . The use of fungicidal dusts to control leafspot in peanuts meant added profits of $2,600,000 to North Carolina growers, says Ho ward R. Garriss, plant pathologist for the State College Extension Service. In fact, Garriss believes the control- of leafspot is the most profitable practice a peanut grow er can .follow. “These added profits for last year represent the increase in nut yields only,” Garriss explains. “Increases in yield and quality of peanut hay alone more than took care of the cost of materials and labor for the dusting program.” Growers have increased their profits by as much as $50 to $100 or more per acre by dusting, he continues. He cites the case of a Chowan County 4-H Club boy, Jasper Lee Gray, who obtained a yield of 2200 pounds of nuts and 37 bales of hay on one acre of dusted peanuts. Jasper got a yield of only 1050 pounds of nuts and 27 bales of hay on an adjoining acre of undusted peanuts grown by Gray’s father. Garriss urged producers to have their equipment and materials ready to make the'first applica tion of dust during the first 10 days of July. A more uniform ap plication may be obtained by us- ing a commercial row-crop cluster, ei'i'er horse-drawn or power-op erated. In some cases airplane dusting is recommended, although' it is more expensive. ' The recommended' fungicidal dusts for controlling leafspot are (1) a dust mixture containing 4 per cent copper from “fixed” copper, or (2) 325-mesh or finer dusting sulfur. Three to four applications should be made, depending upon weather conditions. If the season is normal to dry, three applica tions are sufficient; if wet, four applications will give best results. Late planting should be dusted only three times. To get the full benefit from dusting, growers should realize that treated' plants are still pro ducing nuts when undusted plants are mature. For this reason, dig ging or dusted peanuts should be delayed a week to 10 days. 0 Using fungicidal dusts to con trol leafspot is one of the most profitable practices a peanut grower can follow. CHIUS due to; Malaria^ I ' Real Estate Loans I p . - • ^ I I have 5 new houses which I can sell and | I finance to F.H.A. approved buyers for as | I little as 20 per cent down. k ■I ^ i F. H. A. Insured Home Loans for 20 Years at 4 1-2% In- ^ I ® terest. iS H ^ 1 Will Handle Your Application. ^ Also Lots Approved For F. H. A. Loans For Sale ■ ^ I JULIAN WRIGHT P Office: Central Avenue T. D. POTTER RFD 2 RAEFORD, N. C. AOTHt _.'DALER FOR World’s Best Tobacco Cure: V 55 THE FLOREHGi: nilr-Conditiomug Oil Burning TOBACCO CURER LET US INSTALL A SET NOW—IN TIME FOR .CURING 1919 CROPS! ® MAYO’S COST LEES! ® MAYO’S USES UP TO 50% LESS FUEL! • MAYO’S CURE TOBACCO BETTER! . j o MAYO’S ARE REPLACED FREE IF BARNS BURN (ASK FOR DE TAILS!) • MAYO’S UPKEEP ONLY $1.00 YEAR AVERAGE! • MAYO’S ARE NOW IN USE IN MORE THAN 20,000 CAROLINA BARNS!' THEY MUST BE GOOD! It’s the Only Cnrer with Patented Air-Conditioning! See Us Today! ■4.- .1 i' 55 :;c: rMhH A I SACKED (10§ II. '■ * — $5.00 per ton -— 50c per bag FREE OF CHARGE SALE PRICE LESS THAN h PRICE RECEIVED LAST YEAR BVY AT OKCE BEFORE SUPPLY IS EXHAUSTED Hoke Oil & Fertilizer Co
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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June 9, 1949, edition 1
2
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