PAGE TWO FRIDAY, SEPT. 28, 1917 CHEAP FEEDS FOR LIVE STOCK TKe hoys favorite Make Your Dream Come True It's 4 p. m. any big day work is be coming worrisome you begin day-drearr ing if you could only refresh yourself with a nice cold bottle. You can make that dream come true. Step out and get a bottle of It's Easiest f 0?BtACK WHITE TANjO? THE REV1KV mr Jliimlll if I I c hi m mum M.MlLtYcaO New VORK INC BUfPALO,H V. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNERS LAWSONVILLE STREET DISTRICT The undersigned Mayor and Board of Comnnssioners of the Town of Reidsvi'lle, North Carolina hereby Rive nolce of the completio of the asseHs- nient roll of the property ownfn Bull Frog Tried To Eat Pifl Mr. Harvey Tew, a well-known far mer of Wayne county, gave the fol lowing unusual tory to a reporter tH p other day. He stated that one night last week ho heard one of his young pigs queuling lie It was In great distress. He secured a lantern and went to tho pasture nfar the house to make an nvestig.tlon. When A bunch of hogs Just finishing a field of soybeans. Many farmers plant enough to provide feed for their hogs long into the winter months. (Edge combe Branch Experiment Station. HDUUing on amue . .-.- hfi arrlvp(, on lne lhe to his et Street and Lawonvll e street In aBtonisnmet he found a large the district covered by the petition .Marked the m. w tiallv Kwollering its head. In fact, for asphalt paving, rursuam , pru . ,u.u had 8W0l,ered ,ne pig.s head nereioiore imnaeu uy mo .... u, ..u . , stroft, beginning at the intersection of said Setle street with Main street and following said Settle stred with ut Market Street, thence following Kant Marktt Street from its inter action with Holderbyj Street at the North corner of T. S. Keld's lot to the Intemeellon of Bald East Mark et Street with Lawsonville Street at W . L. Uascoe'a corner, thence fol- utes th pig would have been dead. As it was its jaw was skinned, and its head and eyes badly swollen. I Great Faith In Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy. Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea i rteuiedy was used by my father about I a year ago when he had diarrhoea. It relieved him Immediately and bv ta lowing Street eastward to the eorpo.-k three doses he was absolute! ate limits at J. A. Pettlgrew m resi- ;.... ... . , ,.,,, , ,vU I cured. He has great faith In i remedy," writes Mrs. AV. H. W1I Mr. Business Man dence was made a local -improvement district. And pursuant to said reso- Stanley, N. Y, lution the said streets have been.! paved and .assessments have been duly made an assessment roll com pleted and filed In the office of the Clerk of Town of Iteldsville and the same lis now subject to inspection by alt parties Interested. AH parties owning property abut ting upon said streets so paved and j Improved are hereby notified that a meeti ng of the Mayor and Board of Commissioners of the Town of Helds vllle, N. C. will be held at the Town Hall in the said Town on the 9th day of October, 1917, at 2.30 o'clock p. m. for the hearing of any allega tions and objections In respect to special assessment against the prop erty abutting said streets. Any person falling to appear at this time end ruake objections to the special assessment wilHuive thin no lice pleaded' In bar of their right to object to such assessment hereafter. This the 2Cth day) of September, 1917 V. I CUM MINOS, Mayor JNO. P.' SCOTT, N. C. THOMPSON, O. E. CRUTCIIFIELD, ; 1 . J. F. SMITH, W. W. Wit AY, Commissioners A. Wilkinson, Clerk. ' By DAN T. GRAY, Chief, Animal Industry Division. Farmers who have made proper use of our Southern cheap feeds for live stock will probably accept the title of this article in the same way that the man who visited he menagerie for the first time accepted the reality of the giraffe. After examining the giraffe from the front, side and rear, the early winter and spring months furnishing considerable green feed along wl'h the cured grass. During the cold months the fourth lot of cattle was permitted to run upon this left over summer pasture receiving no feed iu addition to the pasture except a few days when everything wa deeply covered with snow. Mr. Gwyn has done, in making pa- and taking into consideration his long tures, upon his farm what thousand neck and general ungainliness, he ! of others can do upon theirs and oh said that he had always believed that ' tafn enually satisfactory results. there was "no such animal" and he was now, after seeing him, thoroughly convinced that there was no such thing. In like manner farmers who In the experiments referred to it was found that the Blockers grazing upon the winter pasture did much bet ter and were wintered much more have never made use of our really I economically than those kept around cheap feeds are apt to say, at the i the bani and fed upon dry feeds The present time, without an investlga- st0(.kers which ate nothing but winter tion, tnat - mere is no sucn ming. .pasture gained, during the winter, The doubting farmer, however. asjfrom 17 t0 26 pounds each. The stock- well as the visitor to the menagerie, j er8 whi(.h were ft)d upon ear corn, corn is mistaken, because there are cneap silage an(1 otlie. st0red feeds all lost live .siock leeus even hi uib present ln welEht. On the averaee t cost YMY not make your age through the columns of this newspaper? With every issue it carries its message into the homes of all the best people of this community , Don't blame the people for flocking to the store of your competi tor. Tell them what yoy have to sell and Jf you prices are right you can get the business. lllllul. Everything is Now Centered on the BIG GENTRAL CAROLINA FAIR Greensboro Oct 9, 10, 11, 1 Four Enormous Days of Rare Enter tainment and Pleasure for the Thou sands who always visit the Brilliant show. Arrangements have been made lo make this the Foremost Event in the history of Greens boro's Big Fain.? Midway Bigger Than a Circus .hrillinj Races, the fastest horses ever seen here. - Wonderful Exhibits of Live Stock, Grain and Farm Products. Enormous Assort ment of Fruits, Canning Club Exhibitsand Everything Wonderful on which to feast the - eyes. ' ' Garland Daniel. Secretary Greensboro, N. C. time, but they are not found among purchaHed grains or by-products. There are two classes of cheap feed;; to be secured for the coming winter- silage and pastures, especially the latter. All kinds of live stock make use of pastures if the opportunity is offered. Some kinds of live stock make use of silage. The live stock farmer expects to avoid an expensive winter's feed bill must supply either silage or pasture or both. If these two feeds are to be provided the pre liminary work must be done In September. There is plenty of evidence at hand to show that our farmers are awake to the fact that these two feeds are our cheapest ones. During June, July, August, and September hundreds of ilos were built in the state. During August. September and October these silos will be filled with various kinds of silage crops and during this samn time thousands of grazing crops stt able for fall, winter, and spring graz ing will be sown. The majority of farmers who keep beef cattle and dairy cattle should certainly provide a silo and all of them should provide some kind of fall, winter, and spring grazing. Var ious kinds of crops may be used for KTazing purposes. In the first place, many of our farmers have failed t.o appreciate the value of the old corn and cotton fields, and these we have with us always. As a result of this neglect vast quantities of roughage are wasted each year which should be turned into meat and milk. The good farmer allows none of these cheap feeds to go to waste. We should not only not allow the feeds usually pro duced to go to waste, but just now an effort Should be made to create new feeds by putting many of our Idle seres to work. Under the direction of Mr. It. S. Curtis, of the Animal Industry Divis ion of the N. C. Agricultural Experi ment Station, experiments have been under way for several years to deter mine the value of permanent winter pastures in the western part of the state. The "work has "been done in co-operation with Mr. T. L. Gwyn of Haywood County, a - prominent beet aula raiser of that' section. Those who know the agricultural conditions of the western part of the state know that one of the greatest problems is to develop a system of farming which will employ some of the lands lying idle at the present time. In these experiments the beef cat tle carried through the winter upon various rations and an accurate ac count kept of the amounts and costs of feeds of each winter together with the gains made by the stockers. One carload of stockers each winter was fed upon ear corn, corn stover, hay nd straw. A second Jot was fed upon corn silage, corn stover, hay and straw. A third car. of stockers was fed during the winter months upoo corn silage, corn stover, hay and utraw, while a fourth lot was given no feed at all except that obtained from the winter pasture. Mr. Gwyn made these winter pas tures by first clearing the mountain sides of the trees. A contract was made with the mountaineers giving them the free use of the land for two years If they would deaden all of the large trees, clear out the small brush, and put the land ln cultivation, plant ing corn each year. The second year at the last cultivation of the corn a mixture of 15 pounds of orchard grass, 4 pounds of blue grass, and 7 pounds of timothy and clover were seeded broadcast through the corn. The1 gras was permitted to grow through the following summer without being rraxed. It, of course, grew up and j fell oyer thus protecting the roots: during the cold months. V-vin? tladea continued to come out ?--'ns about $10.00 to feed each one of tho dry-fed steers through the winter months but the expense of getting the pasture-fed steers through the same length of time was just half as much, even when each steer was charged $1.00 a month rent for pasture. Farmers raising hogs and poultry should, by all means, during August and September, take steps toward providing cheap feeds for the winter. The only available cheap feeds, as far as hogs and poultry are concerned, are pastures. Corn, wheat, oats and other grain feeds and by-products are nil unusually expensive unless fed in conjunction with pastures. Many tern-1 porary pastures are suitable for both hogs and poultry. An acre of good land planted in rape affords grazing for five or six 100-pound fattening pigs throughout the winter provided a half ration of grain is employed as a supplement. Or. one acre of good rape should make from 300 to 500 pounds of pork. An acre of rye, oats, barley or wheat will usually do just about half as well but in addition will yield a partial crop after the hogs are removed. . The value of pastures and range conditions was emphasized again in some poultry experiments conducted at the Pender Test Farm during 1916. One lot of Buff Plymouth Rock hens was given the range of the farm where many green crops were available the year around. A second lot of hens was confined in a dry lot and fed upon dry and other high-priced feeds exclu- sively. During the year the range lot of hens produced 2651 eggs while the hens in the dry lot produced only 314 eggs, although, they were fed about as well as could be expected under dry-lot conditions. The hens in the two lots were fed exactly the same feeds except those in the range lot had the freedom of the farm and ob tained green feed, bugs, and worms. The range lot of hens returned a clear profit of $41.02, while the flock of 32 hens in the dry lot suffered a total loss of $33.66. TEN POULTRY CLUB HINTS "THAT STAND FOR SUCCESS CLUB MEMBERS WHO FOLLOW CLOSELY THEgE TEN RULES SHOW GOOD REPORTS. ' v 1. Dust your hens just before set ting and three days before they hatch. 2. xDo not feed chicks until they are forty-eight hours old. 3. The first food for chicks should be grit or sand; this will start their grinding mill. 4. Later on, feed hard boiled eggs and oatmeal, mixed together, or well baked Johnnie cake or cornbread for the first week. 6, Then feed a mixture of two parts of cracked wheat, two parts of oat flakes', and two parts of cracked corn, or a good commercial chick feed 6. Keep clean water or milk before the chlcks'at all times. 7. Clean the brood coops once a week and examine the chicks careful ly for lice. 8. Give the chicks the- best of car and keep them growing. 9. Hatch early, rr-tnenfbering "that the early bird gets the worm." 10. Under no circumstances sell the early pullets; get rid of the early cockerels. Agricultural Exnslon Service, . Raleiph. N. C I TV Haa all the amber beauty, foaming goodness and snappy flavor of the hops. It's just what you've , been waiting for. ' - Oh, you'll like it! You'll get the 4 o'clock habit it's not a bad habit for ReiPs is not intoxicating, just refreshing. Firs? in the field, Best of the yield; None can compare With the taste that's THERE. Not a Compound HARVEY WARE & CO Distrihuri. REIDSVILLE. - Party Line Courtesy The quality of service on a party line is largely dependent upon the co-operation of the subscribers on that line. No subscriber should use a party line for long periods of time, to the total ex clusion of others. When a party line is found to be in use, hang up your receiver immediately. While it is off the hook conversation is interfered with. Each neighbor on a party line is en titled to a reasonable use of the telephone service, and should not be interrupted or have the privacy of his conversation inter fered with. The Golden Rule applies with partic ular force to party line telephone service. When you Telephone Smile SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY BOX 820, GREENSBOKo H. C l 1 PwwfV W Sell Your! Tobaccolms Reidsville ttl"t THE S0UHIERF1 SOME RESULTS OF LAST YEAR'S CLP ' '. x Corn Club V- uced I29,0I for the State ' Poultry Or 1uced 1& for lb' j An Ambition and a Record j ! THE needs of the South are identical with the needs ij I of th Southern Railwaj i ih rrowth and mcccn of one menu , . upbuiidiiif uf the utucr. The Southern RUy mks vno bvofi f (pedal Drlvilep: not i .corded u others. Tbe ambition of the Southern Railway Company Is to are that J i ivy f interest that Is Dorn ci co-opcrauun raw , ' e rii-oa is; to see perfected that fiiir and frank polkr .n the manaee- , ' t of nilronis which invitra the confidence of forernmeMal I . tirj, to rtaliie that liberality of tfeatment wMcU iU enable k l .! in t1-' additional capiul needed fur llie acquisition of oener ana -rrd faciliiiea incident to the demand for Increased and better .iV.ce; &r.d finail)""" -o t-'ce Its nlcha In the body politic of the Sooth alonnide ol j J ..--. it industries, with no mora bit with snua! liberties, equal ly ' -v jvl cual opportunities. ' The Southern Serves the South." ? "wis, "'if Southern Railway Syotom i it