Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 25, 1913 Page: 2 of 8
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■ — I
■’
Friday, April 26,
ON JOURNAL
Pas* Tw*.
1
i
$s?
you use.
F ■-
wean them take the bow out of the [
F while nursing.
Tenth. Pub
th*
KIND OF COWS TO BUY.
I
t
these failures are due to the use of
your i
MANY DUCK* IN OHINA.
corn
at
:
Tviaaaias*^ »vu v»» o , mr: laouai VUBCHVl W UUKJ HJU 1UOO.
today that investigations of the re- j of course, the plants have to be an-
&
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• 1
o
*
‘L ,21
I M. COLLINS
ED. COLLINS.
LIVE STOCK NOTES.
BUSY BEE RESTAURANT
♦
V
Short orders at all
MORE ABOUT SILOS.
The farmers of Texas are
g.
THE FARM HORSE TO HIS MASTER
p-i ■
sun
the
Both Phones 201.
No mar can make
Notice to Advertisers
1
green
$
Dr. W. H. Betts
ADS.
BY
Utts
mi
■A.
44^'
...
SLii* {nil i*1*
i.
THE HOUSEHOLD \k ORD
v ■ i ■. •. TuiW WJ
Clean, Ceel, CaBfertaNe
Best the markets afford.
i _______________
Most reliable Old Line Companies. At Citizens Nat’i Bank. < !
►♦♦♦•••♦♦♦••••♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦o»<oeaooe»woae»+»»»a»sso»c6SM 3
There is a decided difference be-
tween a cow keeper and a dairyman.
W. M. DUGAN
— FUR—
•k
Vi*
will
her
tawM
> * ■ "
FORT WORTB MONUMENTAL WORKS
107-111 E. Belknap Street
Md.----------~---
With weary steps I tread;
You ride behind me on the plow,-
I'm glad you can ride;
And willingly 1 toil for you
With patience and with pride.
the
I
•M
Sola in liqaid ferae or tabteU by
draggteta—or mi 50 one-cent
ataaaga for a box of Dr. Piarva’o
ftroortte Prescription TsMet*.
Ad. Dr. K.V. Plairca, Buffalo, N.Y.
THURSDAY
"winnB •
*r
"■ a
C
>'jHi
'■ ''1
M .7
Of I
Some
! FortWorth Laund/y <
t ERNEST CLOUD, PROPRIETOR !
"'Ll expense of these
costly buildings and machinery and
. . 1 ' 1 results. 1 can
make as good ensilage out in the open
next 36 hours, weather, etc., being
unchanged.
>
By Elizabeth Carkc Hardy
Oh, Master dear, the blistering
B'-afs down upon my head.
As round and round the furrowed
♦
♦
♦
*
*
♦
f L«J. L1
as roughage.—Texas Farm and Fire-
side.
tribute among subscribers to Success-
ful Farming. 1
winning ten ears last year, and said
Oh, Master dear, we serve you
But, oh, if you would think,
When oftentimes you quench
thirst.
How much we need a drink;
And if a moment, now and then,
You'd rest us in the shade.
We’d feel for all our patient toil
That we were richly paid.
When the pigs are three
weeks old leach them to eat and feed
WE WANT YOUR PATRONAGE
JKii
Ml
THE ARLINGt
H
■ I
w
eT-u’’
Be-
Let the co'.te have all the grain and
bright hay they will eat up. Keep
them going during the first winter, an
that Is the time when the foundation
for future strength and growth Is
laid.
} i
fe
BbT<
w
I
Why Women Have Nerves
The •‘blues’’— anxiety—sleeplessness—ail warnings of pain and
’ tress are sent by the nerves like flying messengers throughout body and'^L
limbs. Such feelings may or may not be accompanied by backache or
headache or bearing down. The local disorders and inflammation, if there
is any, should be treated with Dr. Pierce's Lotion Tablets. Then the
nervous system and the entire womanly make-up feels the tonic effect of
Omaha World-Herald.
Corn sold in Omaha for a time
Friday at the rate of 82,345 and wheat
3g
H
f DR. PIERCE’S
FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION
when taken systematically and for any period of time. It is not >“cure-all,'’
but has-----------*---■-- •—
WORLD RECORD FOR PRIZE CORN, age, and all the writers seem to
! think that it is necessary to have air
i tight buildings and that the feed
>luff. com or sorghum must be cut
I up fine. This is true if you use air
I tight buildings If it is out up in
I small pieces, it goes back into a sol-
id mass if it makes good ensilage li
does this when put up whole; stalks
of corn and sorghum. Then why the
necessity of cutting it fine with ex-
• * * 1 have a way
WE HAKE ABSTRACTS
and GUARANTEE TITLES
r
Meet me a i morning about 7:4S at the interurban sta-
tion, or phone 236.
L. D. HAHN, Managsr- ’>
Texas Title Guaranty co.
. ’ SOfl W. Eighth St.. Fort Worth.
600-602-#’04 W. W. atherford Street :
• Knapp & Lee,-Agents, Arhngtgn :
Our advice may be a decided help to you in selecting
a monument to deceased loved ones. «
Visit us and see our modem plant and large stock.
Our oualfty and price will interest you.
H. H. WILKINSON, Proprietor, !
Fort Worth, Texas.
tel
, •" J I -
Fire & Tornado Insurance i
J
J
■
w - -
Iven uniform satisfaction for over forty yean, being d reign nd for
i purpose of curing woman’s peculiar ailments.
^0'
considers first how much service he
can get out of It and not its value as
scrap iron when • worn out. Those
who purchase a dairy cow shou’d con-
sider how much butter fat she
produce and not the value of
hide.
I treat Blood Polson, Bladder, <
Kidney and Rectal Troubles,
Night Emissions, Impotency*
Varicocele, Rheumatism, Ca-
tarrh, Stricture, Nervous De-
bility, Lost Vitality, Syphilis,
Gonorrhoea, Gleat Piles Fis-
tula Skin Diseases and all
Chronic and Private Diseases
of Men.
FREE CONSULTATION—EXAMINATION.
HONEST TREATMENT, CHARGES LOW.
QUICK CURES—FORTY YEARS’ EXPERIENCE.
— *- “ I compound my own medicines sod^
furnish sains to all patients. Per-
sons unable to visit me may be
treated by correspondence.
THE OLD RELIABLE BRAY-HAIRED SPECIALIST.
OMom Main and Ninth Sts., Over Tajiaa State Bank, FL Worth.
P’
■
-
■
K
■
''
-
IWW
WAS
UfilC
saw you. seek a shady place
Ind drink a cooling draught.
heard the water tricklQ down
As from the stream you quaffed.
If I could only plunge my nose
in water sweet and cool;
If 1 could quench my burning
A moment al the pool!
-------- ------ ■ ■■ " .......mi . . _ . ii I
weeks after farrowing and when you »»OSSSS»BSSSS»»»»♦»«♦• e»»S»»»S»»»»»SSS«»SSSSs3iM0»0M
lot and leave the pigs for a few weeks j U INTERURBAN PROPERTY OUR SPECIALTY X
where they have been uead to nmnihg ;; |f desirous of buying or listing, See us! We can make it t
Push the piga as much as ! > decidedly to your advantage. - •
;; W. P STEWART LAND-LOAN AGENCY ♦
[ 110 Weit *Mh. Street. Fort Worth 1223 1-2 Main Street, PaU»s T
w+»«»e»»eoooooe»+ee»eeoe»»eeeeeeeeeee»»eoeeeeeesssstd|
Forty Years Experien
THE ONLY SPECIALIST IN TEXAS WHO 1
HERE TWENTY YEARS AGO.;
Nemioos and Chi
h Z \ •’ I, <(d Ilk J i^-1 •
Diseases Cun
I
(
‘W
I
parche'd and dry my throat ini»8.t
he* * !
in the most prosperous dairy comma- *
' rutiou ivhrt adrv nni kallava iKai rlektsow— ”
mw*. * v>mn feetfaiM tf ,
a lZm3£ &'«—»-
f^»cu Atitr I* *mu i
J’ Dr PirnrataiMlL
Can you cheat the cowsf One
milk farmer says he makes money
by omitting about once a week the
usual feed of grain. But he does not
measure all his milk and Judges by
his eye. Every feed cows miss is
Just because the calf 1s large and
thrifty is no sign it will be a won-
derful cow.
I -----------------
-suits of the distribution of that corn alyzed to detect this change in the
showed that it is paying to put j
high-ciass seed.
whp&t which cnl/i at L/ip rutp !
And chokes and blinds me sore, , __ , _ _
My collar otisfes my sweltering neck cheaper they make pork.
As it has done before;
And long and sultry are the hours
Since I have had a drink,
How i
be, '
Dear Mister, only think!
. days that the value of the beef may
Chiidrerii herd ducks on every ^e, _0J, secondary Importance, if not
A person purchasing an implement
One thing ab ut the automobile Is
its efficiency in helping to secure a
good road.
A' little bran- in the feed always
brings bac). its cost and a ittle more
In extra milk.
The calf stall should be plentiful-
ly supplied with good clean dry bed-
ding.
animal. Another Important part of
the food supply is water. Too often
champiqn ten-ear sweepstakes win-
ner. exhibited by Joe Overstreet, of'
Franklin Indiana. ' !
The ten ears were purchased J»y E. \VOI^t C08t Over $30.
• «.« le MAAS m
have my permission to do so, for the
good of those that want to use this
best of all feeds, but hesitate on ac-
count of .the heavy expense of air
tight buildings and feed cutters. With
best wishes for the Farm and Fire-
side, I am, respectfully, one of your
old subscribers, V. B.
While the stalks of. corn, kaffir,
milo, sorghum, etc., can bs saved by
storing it in the open, it is not ad-
visable to do so on account of the
fact that the chemical composition of
the plants so stored is greatly affect-
ed. It has been repeatedly proven
by exhaustive testa and experiments,
both in the North and in the South,
that when the plants are stored In the
open air that they lose from 80 to 40
per cent of their food value. In the
plants that are so stored or saved
, there is little physical change, or the
' > cause
so saved;
weight due
NO CHANBE HEREAFTER WILL BE PERMITTED ON ANY
ADVERTISEMENT IN THE JOURNAL COMING IN AFTER NOON
OF WEDNESDAY, UNLESS IT IS AN EMERGENCY IMPOSSIBLE
| TO HAVE BEEN KNOWN BEFORE. AND NO NEW ADVERTISE-
MENT OF ANY SORT WILL BE RECEIVED AFTER 10 A. M.
THURSDAY, UNLESS OF A PRESSING NATURE MOT KNOWN
. BEFORE THURSDAY MORNING
FORMS OLOSE FOR ALL REGULAR ADVERTISEMENTS BY -
NOON WEDNESDAYS, AND FOR ALL
MORNING.
■ —- - -i, —
I-
■ ►
It is not difficult to find men, even , t
out i food va ue of the stalk.
Not only is there a loss in the food , —-----------
The wheat which sold at 4he rate | xa.ue of the plant so saved; but i ing, out of the way of the horses duetion.
- of IFOO a bushel was grown by H. | there is a loss In weight due to Their indignant quack will not un-1 Produce enough butter fat in her best
I aynr.rjj»fliiz»n 4 b» a •xmaaaaa aP z4a»w<rk«» cpldnm ripAtvn Ihn waq r* r\f itrhon sarxv** OftVS th&t tl!6 \*S1UC 01 tflC t)€€f IHRV
23. j out, which invariably takes place | merce.
[ere ( where the air is allowed to come in
it | contact with the stalks. . And added
to the loss in weighty t. 1—
another bad feature to the i
stalks of plants in the field
open sheds. We all know, or should
„,4..»
at the rate of something like 1800 a ;
bushel.
That seems like an astounding;
statement when one considers that j
75-cent corn and 21.25 wheat are j
sufficient to create a nation-wide com- j tra eXpe’nse and labor,
motion. C_‘ ‘
true as the Ten Commandments or
the- s o’clock eloping taw.
Hundreds, of exiubilg ’w<
dor the hammer yesterday
[ . ... ---"z — “
nominal to the figure quoted above.,
E Faville, editor of Successful Farm-
ing. published al Des Moinas, Iowa.
Mr Faville bid and paid $335 for the
ten-ear exhibit and stood ready to
offer as high as 2500 for his pur-
chase, had the bidding forced him up
to that figure. Figuring seventy ears
to the bushel, which is the number
required for show purposes, the ex-
ercise of a little simple arithmetic
shows that at the rate paid a bushel
of the same corn would have been
worth the figure quoted at the first.
The price paid by Mr. Faville for
the ten-ear exhibit is the highest ever
paid for ten ears of corn In the
world
Just how much of the amount paid
may be credited up to intrinsic merit
in the corn and how much to adver-
tising value is hard to tell. Mr. Fa-
ville, the purchaser, bought it to dis- plants that
IL___“ I ti> a &> WVSM -______—
He purchased the prise I change is not great enough to
'1, the casual observer to note the loss.
Oermsn experimenters found that
green alfalfa put into an unwalled
pit in July and taken out in March had
decreased in weight by praotiolny 88
1-8 per cent. The outer Isyers were
more or less moldy, and In some
places the silage was partially chared.
Beet leaves and tops siloed in the
stock on the ground in October con-
tained 6558 kilograms of dry matter,
and about’5222 kilograms at the end
of. January. Corn stover silage made
in an Iron concrete allo suffered only
a slight loss in nutriment, as shown
by experiments, ana this loss was
offset by increased palatability, some-
thing which always counts for much.
n| . THAT will depend on the kind of REFRIGERATOR you use. The
Mar a 7 fl nA 111 " Genuine Herrick is “Built on . Honor" and will soon save its\
| VV cost in Ic« and food. Out Refrigerators are similar to a good piece of furniture. They will last a lifetime?
better, they will keep your food in perfect sanitaay condition, enabling you to liv« a lifetime. Let us show
• / yon our line. ‘THE HERRICK
Your Ice Bill? The McKinley-Slaughter Hdw. Co.
.................... 1 '"" " " "' ...... 1 "" ..............m
But believe it or not. it's as of putt!ng up silage out in the. open
the Ten Commandments or, air> Wjthout the ------- *
' cyvatlv l/iiino*a _
were put un-, Xvlth Just as good
. -‘-y and so d
for prices ranging from the merely t iti”7s can be made in a 8500 silo,
nominal to the figure quoted above., ^ow wfja[ ] write about^this busi-
which was-tlie rate paid for the grand , h<ss jg not what 1 think can be done,
but is what I have done and can do
in the way of making good ensilage
in one- of my open air silos, that
* . Now, Mr. Edi-
tor, if you see fit te publish this you
’ havp mv rtprmifiRinn tn dn tin fnr thA
One of our folks says he finds the
best way to market crops is in a
I cream can.
I * ——
A part of the ration should De sue
cut ent tn nature, as such* food sum-
Hs've the sow In ths right
Not fat, but in
, This condition is
best attained by feeding for the last
i few weeks on bulky nitrogenous
, feeds such as wheat bran, green pas-
1 ture, skimmed milk and -the like, to-
gether with plenty of exerclee.
second. See that the bow doee not
get constipated Just before farrow-
ing. Exercise, green pasture , and
wheat bran are usually sufficient to
remedy this trouble but If more is
needed give a couple of tableepoona-
ful of Epsom salts for a few mea’s
in her feed.
Third. See that ehe has a dry com-
fortable place to farrow where she
wHl not be disturbed or annoyed.
' Fourth. Clip the liMie blind tucks
on either side of the pig’s moifth Just
as noon as possible after farrowing.
| This will keep them from getting
sore mou4Ji and getting the sow's
bag sore during the first, few days
when they are all fighting tor the best
tit.j.
Fifth. Mark each Utter separately
with an ear punch or an ordinary
leather punch so you will be able
later to .tell what each sow dues in
the way of producing profitable pork.
Sixth. Do not feed the sow for 24
hours after farrowing. Give her
only a bucket of clear water. Then
feed her light for two weeks after
farrowing.
Seventh. Olve the sow a green
pasture to rim on while sh« has pigs
and keep them where they will take
plenty of exercise and get plenty of
I Eighth,
weeks old teacn mem to eat ano reea "«• c,very meu oowi miss is
them what elop they went where the recorded In the milk pall during the
cow can not get to It. “ “* *"* **“ **"
Ninth. Don't wean before eight
A cow should be fed all that she
will eat and digest well, giving due
consideration to the cost, digestibili-
ty and composition of the Jood fed.
The more palatable the food
greater quantity a cow will consume.
Variety often increases palatability.
E Krueger, of Beaver Dam, Wis.
Bidding on the wheat started at I
Il was rapidly run up to 220. xxw
it stuck for a long time. Then
took a spurt and began jumping up
by 25 increases until it reached <100,
and Mr Krueger took the sample with
the high bid* of <104.
The wheat graded sixty-four
pounds . The sample which was ex-
hibited had been reduced down to
somewhere between seven and eight
pounds, making the price pgld av-
you can and keep them growing from
The dust drifts up in stifling clouds weaning time until they are ready for
And chokes and blinds me sore, market. The quicker they grow
a success of
dairying who does not take good care
of his calves.
So much has -been said and is be-
ing said at this • time about the care
of the sow that will farroW and the
care of the young pigs that 1 hate to
bring up the subject again, but still
it is so important that yon do right
that I feel .that it will do no harm to
give a few of the most Important
rules again.
First. IL.' _ __
physical condition,
pretty good flesh.
Experiment
false
«h*r *» R-F- Aria M . D. / (MM
j dueers.
Dual purpose animals may be used
in some localities to good advantage,
in
the
ineir voices are a raminar sound in (>u
every town and country site of the but to get the best results one of the
_ _ A ■ • A • * a* aa £SV\4>Atnl zIaIw,, bxMAA^A a^aaaIaA 5a A AaaJ
usui j x»x uwn eu wsm lfxj uovu>
cities Th*s doe® not mean that only thor-
ougbred animals should be used, but
I animals that are bred for milk pro-
A good dairy cow should
Those traveling In foreign lands |
are apt to note with interest many
peculiarities of the people of differ-
ent nations, and of course are apt to
notice the different kinds of fowls
and animals found in different coun-
tries.
There are more ducks in China , a 60<xi dairy herd by tins method,
than in all the rest of the world. | ’* ‘
Their voices are a familiar sound in
seacoast and the interior of the vast j d?iry .hree^* sL°Y,d__^e
empire. Even
ducks abound,
the coolies legs.
' nities, who do not believe that dairy- I
ing pays. They’have tried it and fail- 1
( ed, writes E. A. Markham, of the 1
Idaho Experiment Station. Some ,
have purchased good stock, but poor i )
j management or false economy In I !
housing or feeding prevented them
ttu st! from getting the results they expect-
ed, but by far the largest number of
these failures are due to the use of
wen { animals that are not adapted to dairy-
I ing.
your i Those who purchase a few cows
i when the price of butter fat is high
' and sell them off when the price goes
I down naturally have a rather poor
I opinion of the dairy business. To ob-
j tain the best resuite it is essential
I that the animals purchased for the
' dairy should be of the strict dairy
type and be made a permanent part
of the farm live stock. Those who
purchase cows With the Intention of
milking them but a short time and
then selling them off when the price
of butter fat drops or when the ani-
mal goes dry, naturally look more for
beef producers rather than milk pro-
It is impossible to build up
. aiiu .uusu I f v
there; ta also I i« no back yard
storing of j house,
d or in great.
over the land there are great duck--
„ J establishments, many of
silage we mean a succulent food. By • them of a capacity huge enough to
succulent food we mean one that has
the natural Juice of the plant in it.
. For this reason silage te referred to
erage up close to 8800 to the bushel, and often spoken of ap “bottled June
It was disappearing so fast from the pasturage.'* It te for1 this fact that
pasteboard box in which it was ex- the cows fed upon silage yield a
hibited that a long chain and padlock ' greater amount of milk than those
were placed in under the glass cover, i fed upon dry feed. The cows need
I it, and we do not think that when
< the stalks of the plants to be pre-
| served for the winter’s feed are al-
becom- j lowed to dry out that they are de-
Ing more and more interested in si- ' sirable for feeding purposes, except
los each day, and it will be only a : r*-----*"— “---“---—* *
course of a short time until the whole | i
state will be dotted with these build- !
ings, which are such boons to the far- •
mere.
■Here is a letter which we recently 1
received from one of our subscrib-
ers who lives at Yoakum, Texas:
“J have read a good deal daring
the past year about silos and ensil-
in the targe
They dodge between
—---------- They flit, squawk-
but png, out of the way of the 1
........ _ ______ ___ tc . ~“L — — —
I evaporation and the process of drying seldom drown the roar of urban com-
_1, LLa invariably takes place merce. CLLL.™ 4 ... .
* road, on every pond, on every farm, j entirely ignored.
• on every lake on every river. There ! A, person pun
■ i«r n« kaav yerq without Its duck
There is no boat, little or
1 great, without Its duck quarters. Ali
I ^e*AA t 5» A 1 A *4 <<»AWA AAA M>*AaA /4»,aI*
know, that by the term silage or en- I batching
• i>rodiice fifty thousand young ducks
every year. Duck among the Chinese
is a stap'e delicacy. It is salted and
smoked like ham or beef. It te serv-
ed as a delicacy prepared in many
ways, and a number of travelers de-
clare that only the Chinese know how
to cook and serve a nice fat duck. 1
in royal households and among the I
very wealthy the duak te served tn e i
particular style in honor of any dis- I
tinguished - guest, and those fortunate j
enough to have eaten say It te far:
beyond anything they get e'sewhere '
in the way of prepared fowl.
Many ducks are exported from
China, and it promisee to be a grow- ,
ing industry. The climate, as well as
the care of the fowls, is said to pro- I
duce .the most excellent flesh.—Ex- ulates vigor, thrift and health in the
change.
RULES FOR OARING FOR FARROW- ,hi“ 18 not Flv«n proper consideration.
ING SOWS.
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Bowen, William A. Arlington Journal (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 25, 1913, newspaper, April 25, 1913; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1302842/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Arlington Public Library.