Newspapers / The Wallace Enterprise (Wallace, … / Aug. 22, 1935, edition 1 / Page 7
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PUttle Annie Margarett and ffney Sykes of Turkey are iting their grandmother Mrs. nie Baker. dessrs. J. P. Tucker, Horner Taylor and Marvin Bradshaw attended the Camp meeting at " Falcon Sunday. Little Annie Mae Snow of Wilmington is visiting Kath leen Ring. Miss Ethel Thomas of Rock ' fish spent the week-end with Miss Julia Wilson. &?• Mrs. Lizzie Waters of Rocky Mount visited her neice, Mrs. J. A. Smith last week. Mrs. Julia Watson and dau : ghters, Misses Mamie and Ruth of Selma are visiting Mrs. Wat son’s mother, Mrs. Victoria Gaylor. ,T Mr. and Mrs. A. r. Merriu, Miss Martha Southerland and Mrs. Ella Hobbs of Kenansyille and Miss Mamie Fennell of -Richmond called on Misses El la and Macy Cox Thursday af 1 ternoon. « Mrs. Jim Rogers and three children of Conway, S. C., are ;f visiting her mother, Mrs. J. L. Southall. Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Crowley | and baby, S. L., Jr., of Wil . mington spent Friday with Rev. if and Mrs. T. H. Williams. Mr. Johnnie Whaley of Sa t vannah, Ga., is visiting his un cle, Mr. Dave Whaley. Mrs. Lloyd Lanier who has been with her parents in Rose Hill for some time recuperating .fronj an operation for appendi citis has returned and she and j Mr. Lanier are at home with Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Horne. Mr. Robert Burns of New > York is a guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. I. H. Baker. Mrs. Hattie Cox Gaylor, Miss Melrose and Mr. Alton Gaylor ahd Mrs. Jack Alpers spent last Sunday in Durham with Mr. I and Mrs. J. 0. Andrews. Miss Dorothy King of Wil / mington is visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. G. B. King. Mrs. J. S. Sutton spent last % week with her sisters, Mrs. Sa rah Fryer of Ingold and Mrs. Sallie Hobbs of Clinton. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Howard and Mrs. John Parker and chil .'■■■ dren, Milton and Mary Emma ' attended the birthday dinner of several relatives in Onslow County Sunday at the home of Mr. Willie Jarman. Mrs. Mary Gavin was hostess Suunday at noon dinner to the families of all her children. : Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gavin and / three children, Robert, Irene | and Pauline of Baltimore, Mr. I and Mrs. Dewey English and - three children, Annie, Lucy ' .and Aubrie of Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. Ebie Wilson and three children, Robert, Helen and • Jdary, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Merritt and little daughter, Delores of Magnolia and Robert Gavin who lives m the Ji°me with his 1 mother, Mrs. Arthur Gavin and children are also visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jonah Howard. Mr. and Mrs. John Aman ana daughter Mrs. Alice Jackson and little daughter visited Mrs. Clara Gavin Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Lacy Cook and son Gar land of Portsmouth, Va. are visiting her father, Mr. F. D. | Scott and Mrs. J. E. Hamilton and other friends. Sunday they carried Mr. Scott, Mrs. Clara and Miss Elizabeth Gavin, John Fisher and James David Ham ilton beyond Chinquapin where many relatives met and cele brated the seventy fifth birth day of Mr. Scott’s sister, Mrs. | Harriett Cavenaugh. Mrs. J. H. Alpers and sister, Miss Melrose Gaylor motored to | Goldsboro Monday. Miss Mel rose ha<l her tonsils removed • in Goldsboro Hospital and re ; mained over till Tuesday P. M. Mrs. Edna R. Harris of Ral eigh spent Tuesday night with Misses Ella and Macy Cox. She is to be special speaker at the « W. M. U. Annual Meeting at : Bear Marsh Wednesday, jf Mrs. Janie Carlton and dau ■ ghter Miss Sudie Mae, and p Mrs. Elmore Carlton calletf on ’ several friends here Monday | afternoon. Mi*s Lucille Hollingsworth is' at home with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. 0. Hollings ; worth after spending the year fv at Mars Hill taking special school work. She will teach an elementary grade at Pineland. Carlton Birthdays Celebrated Sunday at the home of Mr. | and Mrs, M,. J. Carlton three Jbirthdays were celebrated with member pf every family |;present.' Their son, Wilbur was 4 ters, Gaylia West was six and Carol Carlton two. The Cake had 29, six and two candles on th6m. The families were Mr. and Mrs. Elmore Carlton of Raleigh, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Carlton of Roanoke, Va., Mr. and Mrs. Bernice West and Gaylia of Thomasville, Miss Sudie Mae Carlton of High Point, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Carlton and two children, Car ol and one other, near the home. Miss Margaret Carlton and Rev. R. C. Foster of War saw and Miss Mavil Smith of Magnolia were invited guests. A sumptuous dinner was serv ed by Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Carl ton and a happy day was spent with the family and friends. This good cohntry home is about five miles northwest of Magnolia where friends de light to visit and always re ceive a warm welcome. CARDWELL’S OLUMN BARNYARD MANURES By GUY A. CARDWELL, The care of manures is of first importance. Dry manures, such as are obtained from hor ses, sheen, and poultry, are likely to heat—a process that liberates nitrogen, one of the very elements most desired for the field. A “smoking” man ure pile loses strength rapidly and becomes about as valuable as so much traw. Dry manure may be prevented from “burn ing” by keeping the pile mad erately wet or by mixing it with the cold and wet manure from the cow barn and pig pen. A manure pile should on no account. be allowed to leach. The color liquid that runs a way from the pile during a rain is precisely what the soil requires. It’s escape is quite as wasteful as rat holes in a granary. If a pile is to be formed ,it should be made in a hollow spot. A concreted bot tom saves its cost many times over. A broad flat pile, tamped thoroughly by stock, saves the strength of the manure best Efrdppings arouhtl the y&rd should be thrown into the pile, winter and summer. Stable liquids are exceedingly valua ble; they should be absorbed by bedding and be added to the pile. Straw bedding is best for the land. Sawdust is most desirable in the stable, but it decays so slowly that it is a detriment to the field. Good farmers declare that manure should be scattered on the land fresh. Piles of man ure dumped in the field leach badly. The immediatt spot re ceives more plant food than it can utilize and the coarse lit ter spread by a fork later ha* lost much of ita strength. In! case of sheep pens, calf pens, and small feeding pens gen erally, excellent results are ob- < tained by allowing the manure to remain under foot til spring. The droppings, bed ding, and liquids are saved per fectly and are tramped into a compact bed of valuable ferti lizing materials. manure that must be remo\ daily, as is decidedly the case in dairy barns and horse stables, it is considered advisable to send to the field as often as a load ac cumulates. As often as the spreader is filled it should be driven afield, and the manure scattered in fine bits. The j leaching that follows, always ( provided the ground be moder ately level, enriches the soil un iformly. The litter may be plow ed under at convenience. Fre quent light dressing gives lar ger yields than a heavy applica tion of manure at long inter vals. No soil can be built up and kept strong and lasting without organic matter. It has been known for many centuries that continued cropping reduces the ability of the soil to produce. Long before chemistry could explain the cause of soil ex haustion, the farmers of olden times learned a great deal about the maintenance of the soil, and the simple methods employed are still used with ex cellent results. The use of stabe manure and crop refuse are still among the most im portant instruments of soil im provement. CHEVROLET’S SOAP BOX DERBY WON BY IND. BOY Akron, 0., Aug. 19.—Eighty thousand spectators saw Indi ana boyhood triumph for the second consecutive year in the All American Soap Box Derby here when 13-year-old Maurice E. Bale, Jr., of Anderson, Ind., drove his scarlet and gray coas ter to victory over juvenile champions of 51 other contend ing cities. Seventy-pound Everett Mil ler, 13, St. Louis, was second, and Lonny Kline, 15, of Akron, O., third. The three finalists flew down the bricked slope to cross the finish line scant in ches apart. The first Debry, in 1934 at Dayton, O., was won by Robert Turner, of Munice, Ina. ~ * The winner of first place re ceived a $2,000 four-year schol arship in any state university. Second was awarded a Master Chevrolet coach, and third a Standard Chevrolet coach. Each of the three boys reach ing the final also received a sil ver trophy and a medal. A wrist watch was given to each of the 52 city champions. Other awards were: Charles F. Kettering Trophy (for the best designed and constructed car) — Drayton Rhodes, Philadelphia. • Indianapolis Motor Speedway Knockout Prices At the sound of the gong on August 26th, the two battlers, KNOCKOUT VALUES and KID PRI CES, will rush from their corners each intent on a quick knockout. It will come. Following advice of his handlers, KNOCKOUT will feint with his left and slug the KID with a hard right to the button. PRICES will bite the dust and will ptay there for the whole fall season. In his entire career PRICES has never been hit as hard as he will be at the start of the battle of trade on August 26th, 1935. Doctors who are treat ing him, however, claim that he will come back stronger than ever after the first of the year. How ever, PRICES is at present very low. While he is in this unconscious condition he can be seen at TURNERS’ INCORPORATED, the store of quality. Also at present KNOCKOUT VALUES, is having his hand wrung by hundreds of customers who are grateful for the chance we have given them to see their old enemy laid low. COME ON DOWN AND MEET KNOCKOUT VALUES WHILE YOU HAVE A CHANCE | . , ' Turners, Inc. WALLACE, N. C. rrophy (fastest heat)—Lonny Kline, Akron, 30.4 seconds. | J. D. Tew Trophy (best brakes)—William Spain, Roch sster, N. Y. Collins & Aikman Trophy (best upholstered car) — Ken leth Shatto, Louisville. Climalene Trophy (best bal anced car)—Joseph Ogilvie, Cleveland. The young contestants, eyes unblinking on the track and steering wheels in the grip of small determined fists, took the stiff 1181-foot roadway in their stride, and with only minor mishaps, to the roar of a swel tering crowd of over 80,000 peo ple that packed every seat and every foot of standing space. BRIER; VERY BRIEF Hoover is silent on 1936 can didacy. WPA strikes throughout na tion are expected by Green. Senate votes for NRA condi tions on government contracts. Bids asked on weekly mail service to Pacific isles and Or ient. Smuts fears reprecussions resulting from a war in Ethi opia. Government sales of “baby bonds” now total $162,471,459. National income up $5,000, 000,000 in 1934 it is estimated. Hoover calls on Roosevelt to define position of Constitution. Hitler says Germany is ready to meet outside threats. Italian demand to rule Medi teranean enters Ethiopian is sue. General Motors plans to spend $50,000,000 on expan sion. Gadsden defies utilities foes to make policy a 1936 issue. Filipinos see quiet economic absorption by Japan. Recurrence of disease epi demics of past declared unlike ly Ellsworth leaves for Zeppe lin flight to Antarctic. 100 big companies owned by 4,678,470 persons. ' NOTICE OF RESALE By virtue of power of sale in a Deed of Trust from J. J. Tew and wife, Sidie Frances, to T. Barden, Trustee, dated Jan. L9, 1931, book 335, page 511, legistry of Duplin County, de fault having been made in the payment of the debt secured thereby the undersigned will sell to the highest bidder for cash, at the Courthouse door, Kenansville, N. C., on MON DAY, SEPT. 2, 1935, at one o’ clock, P. M., a one-half undi - -" ■ vided interest in a tract of land situated in Island Creek Town ship, Duplin County, North Carolina, described as follows: The tract of land situated at Charity Cross Roads, adjoining | State Highway No. 40, Charity Church lot, and the road lead ing from Rose Hill by Charity Cross Roads to Jerry Teacheys store, and being more particu Trust above referred m^Vi 1> i *m ? r 9jr UP^S1 W M < HL im/HKKKtrw J9RBP9^P f &« JpE Hf r/j[t ft ram BEFORE BUYING TIRES— see how MUCH MORE QUALITY the world’s largest tire-maker offers for prices as low as OR LOWER than any. Remember, Detective Faurot’s great investigation showed the sensational Goodyear “G-3” All-W ‘ . livering more than ) 43% EK. WITH A LIBER/ TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE 30x3% ca. *5^5 4.40-21 $0^05 4.50-21 $0^5 4.75-19 $7:05 I Here’s genuine 1 Goodyear quality in theworldrs first choice economy tire. Built of tough, new rubber—with center traction safety tread Supertwist blow out protection lit every ply. Finest tire built for the money. PHTHFIHBER A value made pos sible only by millions of sales. Goodyear built and guaranteed —with all quality features: thick non skid tread — Super twist body — rein forced sidewalls—all new rubber, a won derful “buy.” SPEEPWAY I DOUBLE GUARANTEEI in writing against road injuries I and defects I WITH A LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE 30x3 Vi CL *4J2 4.40-21 $5Jo 4.50-21 $5 jo 4.75-10 DONT BE FOOLED by trick discounts from padded price lists. Buy no tires until you see I how much more quality Goodyear gives you for the same money—or lest! Above are cash prices and subject to change without notice. State sales tax additional. St ,164 bUm A. Schmid Merchant WataonrlUa, Cal. I'11 i ri THE PRICES U SETTLE THE ARGUMENT— WHY BUY *! ANYTHING T OTHER THAN ! GENUINE 3 GOODYEARS? ) Cavenauglt Chevrolet Company, Inc. ■ Wallace, North Carolina -_:---1_I--M We Will Open For Business Mon,, Aug. 26 And Will Begin Receiving Tobacco Saturday. Your Patronage Will Be Appreciated. Blanchard’s WAREHOUSE i Wallace, N. C.
The Wallace Enterprise (Wallace, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 22, 1935, edition 1
7
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