THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1954 THE NEWS-JOURNAL PAGE SEVEN o i ! I m FARM ITEMS By W. C. Wllliford County Farm Agent With the coming of Fall, you -will be thinking about getting your, small grain planted. The varieties recommended by the Experiment Station and the Ex tention Service are constantly changing because of new deve lopments, new diseases, etc. For 1954, there is little change from the previous recommendaitons. There are many new varieties being tested "that show a lot of promise, but havo not stood the test of time long enough for the grain specialists to recommend them. The varieties recommended for the 1954 fall planting are as fol lows: Wheat Anderson, Atlas 50, Atlas 66, and Coker 47-27; Oats -Arlington, Victorgrain 48-93, Ful grain, Fulwood, and Woodgrain;, and Barley - Davie and Colonial 2. It will be a good while before you start thinking about sowing your small grain,, but this infor mation is being given to you so you will have time to look a round and get the seed you want. Small grain is becoming more Important in Hoke County an naunally. It might be helpful for you to pay more attention to var ieties in the future. to add some extra watcrers if your chickens show signs of suf fering from the hat. There are some common drugs Aureomycln and Terramycin that have been effective for the treatment of bluecomb di sease. Treatment In the water Is more effective than the same treatment in the feed. The reason for this is when your birds are sick they usually have a fever. Feverish birds eat very little and drink a lot of water. It is easy to get more medicine in the bird through the' drinking water than in the feed. Apother thing that I have run into in vaccinating chickens and in making other contacts with flock owners is the unusually rough treatment in handling and moving birds. Generally speak ing, you handle your tobacco as the old saying goes "with kid gloves". Your chickens are much more sensitive, but very little attention is paid to how they are handled. Picking up a pullet by one wing or a handful of feath ers and throwing her over the fence is likely to make the dif ference of whether she grows into a good layer or not. move the runners thftt grow be tween now and fall. These new runners will have very few ber ries, if any. They will onlyi com pete for fetrilizer and moisture with your berry producing run ners that were grownn this spring. Fertilize your beds now with whatever kind of fertilizer you have on hand providing it is fairly well balanced. Teh recom mended fertilizer Is one gallon of 8-8-8 per 100 feet of row. This will amount to about 700 pounds per acre if you hnve a large size bed. Strawberry fruit buds are being formed, and they need nourishment now. Bluecomb disease has been more prevalent in poultry flocks throughout the Stnte tins year than previously. This disease is worse during hot humid weather of the summer and fall than at any other time. The best way to keep from having this disease in your flock is to practice good management. Grain containing more than 2G moisture should not be used as poultry feed. During hot weath er, grain feeding can be reduced and the birds should have cool, well ventilated houses if they are confused. They should have shf.de if they' are on the range. Give your birds plenty of cool, fresh water daily Most of the calls I have been on this summer about poultry diseases have shown me that the majority of flocks did not get sufficient cool, clean water to maintain good health. This is especially true in family size laying flocks. It will be well tmmk .. ,'. m .:.m. .: : urn ... Strawberries are one of the favorite foods of many people. Most gardens In Hoke County should have a strawberry bed. They are easy to grow and they are easy to freeze or otherwise i preserve for eating after the growing seabort is over. This hot, dry weather is the kind that kills strawberries which are extremely shallow rooted plants. There are several ways you can help prevent this. The best way, of course, is to ir rigate your beds once a week when it is needed. A thorough application of about one inch of water a week is better than sev eral light waterings. Weeds compete for water and in many cases can get more water out of your soil than your garden plants. It stands to reason that the removal of weeds will increase the number of strawberries you will harvest next spring. There are two ieasons that we continually talk about mulching strawberries. One is that mulch ing conserves water, and second it reduces weed competition. j Another thing you can do to help your strawberries is to re- I B : Alvin Robertson, who lives in the Ashley Heights section, is harvesting his tobacco with a new harvesting machine. This machine will harvest about two barns a day with nine workers providing evereything goes just right. The one Mr. Robertson is using was made to accommodate four primers, 2 stringers, and one driver who also takes off sticks. The handcrs are automatical ly eliminated because the tobacco is taken on a chain directly from the primers to the stringers. It also eliminates your truck driv ers and a lot of loose motion in changing tobacco from one op eration to the other. Mr. Robertson found that it increased the speed of his ma chine considerably to add extra stringers; so he widened the platform on the machine and now has four stringers instead of two. As far as I know, this is the latest tobacco harvester that has been put in operation in Hoke County. Since it is time to work on the summer management of your strawberries, the bulletin featur ed this week in the County A gent's office is Extension Circu lar No. 333 "Small Fruit Cul ture for Home Gardeners". This bulletin includes the culture of dewberries, red raspberries, black raspberries, and strawberries. Nation Saluting Your Garden Vegetables can Vegetable Growers during this special week in their honor. My best wishes go with all of them." That's what President Eisen hower had to say recently in ob serving National Vegetable Week, July 29 to August 74 Actually the purpose of this national week is to acquaint more persons with the uses of vegetables. You, for example, can add sparkle to your Health by put ting the vegetables in your gar den to work. Salads are an ex cellent way to get your needed servings ol vegetables each day. Virginia Wilson, State College nutritionist, suggests serving crisp salad greens with cooked or un cooked fruits and vegetables. "If they're raw," she adds, "so much the better. Cooking destroys some vitamins and washes out miner als." Getting your family to eat well these hot summer days may be something of a problem, but eye appeal may do a lot to perk up those lagging appetites. And ac cording to Miss Wilson, one of the easiest ways to get color into your meals is to use green and yellow vegetables carrots, squash, spinach, beans, peas, and salad greens of all kinds. And there is a definite connec tion between the color of some foods and their value to your body. Those deep yellow or green in color' have more vitamin A value in the body than the pale colorless ones. Green leaf lettuce, yellow squash, corn or peaches, will furnish your body with more vitamin A than the bleached or white varieties. closure, the holder of the indebt edness thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said indebtedness, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at pub lic auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse door in Raeford, North Carolina, at twelve (12.00) o'clock, noon, on the 24th day of August, 1954, the land conveyed in said Deed of Trust, the same lying and being in Hoke County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows: Being Lots No. 84 and 85 ai shown on a Map of "Residence Lots of the W. L. Maultsby Pro perty, Sanatorium, N. C," re corded in Book of Maps No. 2 at page 243, Hoke County Registry together with all improvements thereon. Eumg the same land con- i veyed to tha parties of the first part by Deed dated Nov. 8, 1948, from Evan Harris and wife, Bes sie Harris, duly recorded in Deed Book 90, page 28. The above described property will also be solr' subject to taxes, special assessments and other liens of record. This 21st day of July, 1954. R. F. Hoke Pollock, Trustee. 9-12C "I am particularly happy to salute the great army of Ameri- LEGALS NOTICE North Carolina Hoke County Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a cer tain Deed of Trust executed by Ike McKay and wife, Ida Mc Kay, and Herbert McKay, single, to R. F. Hoke Pollock, Trustee dated the 15th day of March, 1954, and recorded in Book of Mortgages 98, at page 123, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Hoke County, default having been made in the payment of the in debtedness thereby secured, and the said Deed of Trust being by the terms thereof subject to fore- "A JOURNEY WTO JL V&W?SZ? ' - ' NATURAL WONDERS 0( i Ctiz-JY.'vrX. - , prterlh lak.nj grander match "iHr. Ill hi 9 !L,' . - . ' j - i 1 i t , , - s . f; V- , i ' ! ' ' i s "- , ' t ' ' -' ' j A " WnM i . U KU f - V!rv- MONDAY - TUESDAY - AUGUST 16-17 RAEFORD DRIVE-IH THEATRE .j ii fa rsMTk 1 T J-Jook, Joe, I'm making these lamps in my spare time." "Swell job, Jim. But these tools must have cost you plenty." "Yes, I've put oyer $800 into them, but soon my hobby will be paying me a good profit." "I guess those machines we have at the plant cost a lot of money, too." "Right. I've read that it costs a manufacturer about $12,000 per worker for tools and equipment to provide jobs like ours." "That's quite an investment, isn't it?" "You bet it isl But these modern machines help us turn out ouf product at less cost per piece that means our company can sell at lower prices and more people can buy from us." "And when the company does more business and makes a profit, our jobs are more secure, aren't they?" "Right again, Joe. It takes sales and profits to provide new machinery, higher wages for us, and more jobs for other people. The better we produce the more all of us benefit and modern machinery helps us to increase our output." Working side by side with America's "industrial team," i banks, too, play an important part in the nation's prog ress. Our bank is always ready to help you with per sonal or business money matters roll on ty any time. The Bank of Raeford Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. ''Helpful Banking For Over Fifty Yeats" Twin -State Warehouses liGS. 1, 2 & 3 1 urn era A SALE EVERY DAY Grade Your Tobacco in Big Piles Just Throw Out Trash and Green Leaves, Tie-up and Bring it to TWIN-STATE For the Highest Prices and Best Service. 300 Pounds Can be Sold in One Pile. Large Piles Bring More Money. Sell Early for Best Prices. "FAIRMONT LEADS THE BORDER TWIN - STATE LEADS FAIRMONT" P. O. WILSON P. R. FLOYD PROPRIETERS JOE PELL Sec Buck Blue cr II. B. Walters For Space Buck Blue Thone 441, Raeford Warehouse Phone 6S01, Fairmont I