The Decatur News (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 5, 1923 Page: 3 of 8
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THE DECATUR NEWS
1
BABIES CRY
OUR COMIC SECTION
U
DI
Big Events in the Lives of Little Men
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rmture
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(Copyrirht. W. N. U.)
A Popular Fable, With Peppy Gestures
upon the
R
ENTS
8
is
I
Sows Must Have Exercise
O'
O'
rily seek
W. N. U., DALLAS, NO. 27-1923.
ry.
i.”—New
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UP
Take That, Fanny
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|2-Page
booklet
The Great American
Syrup
BOR.SZ.OWEO A BOAT, CROSSED
Tf-C RAVER, UPSET, SWUM ASHORE,
LOST A SHOE IM TH’ MOO, GOT
CHASED BM A COWS HUSO AMD—
e your
a lift.
that really
ledicine for
i, liver and
COMG ON UP to
Tut BALL GAMt,
rtux
AND 60 FOR SEVERAL
MOIX»
©OX TOSSED THROUGH
A GOB-WIRE FEMCE JMTO
A MESS OF POiSOM IVM 'M
Got mS Sort Tore 'm
HtS WATCH BuSYEO 'kJ M&
$MEAW.E.O OVER. TH’
BACK FEMCE AW---
ID LIKE 1b, BUT I DON’T
know as I Should —
I’ve A LOT OF ERRANDS
lb DO Foe. the vipg an'
SUt’5 LIABLE 1b GE.T
SOQG IP I don't ’
DO ’EM
X’ll GET IT
ibwtD iin , Felix,
—YOU BETTER
HOP A ItOLLEY
AN GO HOME.
CEE.TjE OLD 8U5S
IS SLOWING* UP -
some Things
'WRONG
Blue,
sure to result,
ways use It. .
-•-Advertisement.
Don’t Forget Cuticura Talcum
When adding to your toilet requisites.
An exquisite face, skin, baby and dust-
ing powder and perfume, rendering
other perfumes superfluous. You may
rely on ft because one of the Cuticura
Tj;fo (Soap, Ointment and Talcum),
25c each everywhere.—Advertisement.
ry
>al
• cleans*
and keep
lai thy.
the bit of
bintficial
LM
darned IF I
KNOW WHAV6
IkL MATTER
7sgk
•jy"
Economical Production
of Pork Depends on Grass
Economical pork production depends
upon plenty of good pasture during the
summer months, both for the pigs and
the old sows, and also upon seeing to
It that not only the sows, hut also the
pigs, are constantly supplied with a
well balanced ration.
You can't judge a horse by the har-
ness.
i test this
its to Dr.
Y., for a
• sure and
tent.
4
csS>
-r_ »v—
Fair Question.
Theatergoer—Are we lute?
Usher—Well, they've already played
one act.
“Ah—which one?’’
'■'a
.f
Absolutely
Pure ana*
BSwti^Wholesome
JF
Ils to
today
k. It
q &
V.
Money back witbout question
if HUNT'S SALVE falls In the
treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA,
RING WORM,TETTER or other
Itching akin diseases. Price
75c at drugglata, or direct from
A I. Richard* RWItl** Ca.lhansM.Tu.
. it
W**: M-
•OLD SOraXltS-A FINK GENERAL TOMC
Age to Wean Lambs.
Lambs should be weaned when they
are hbout three or four months of age.
Unless tfils is done they will nurse
until late in the fall and cause the
ewes to go into winter quarters in
poor flesh.
FOR “C ASTORIA”
©0VMO THAT MO AOXAlSSlOU
\JJUX. BEIMd CHARGED ! '. \
will be materially increased through a
deposit of an even coat of fertilizer
and humus matter.
LIV-E
STOCK
Corroborating Daddy.
Robert’s parents were figuring house-
hold expense*, when ids mother cried,
disgustedly, “Oh, 1 can't figure!”
"Daddy’s right!" exclaimed her little
son ; "ladles don’t make good business
men.”
* ‘ ■ ■ % ’’•ft
Stands the
has proven
i thousands
kng cases,
iuickly be-
ll effect is
It is a gen-
Fd.
the
the following
, ’■ A
- 1
■
Our Bright Exchange*.
Sdeniist* can magnify the himjai
voice 12,000 ffmee, tint they wewm en-
able to do a darn thing for the voice
of conscience.—Brockvflle Recorder.
_
Prepared Especially for Infants
and Children of All Ages
Bell-ans
254 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
ed Cross
Pg. You
!• the re-
ped.—Ad-
Mllk for Pigs.
Six pooads of skim milk to two
pounds of corn-cob meal gives an
economical feeding ration for growing
pig*. A 100-pound shote will make
very satisfactory gains on two such
feodg • d*y>
35
»■
/ ■
y '. i
OFF TO CM?
©f th' Tightwad
Subscribed to
HlS HOIAE paper,,
he'd have kmowm
TH’ GA1AE WOX
FREE
BUT FEUX WA5 PER-
SUADED lb GO
Grove's
Tasteless
Chill Tonic
Restores Health, Energy
and Rosy Cheeks. 60c
a FINE TTmE To
Comg home - none
of MM ERQANDS DONE
— 6UPPER COLD---
You've been ib .
tme ball game f
| MADAVt----(HIS
L, 16 Tug. only
BAWL GAME,
WHICH MY PRESENT
HA5 GRACED
TbPAT p~]
cmaflQ
CJOfrRPoC
as Farrowing Time Nears '
As farrowing time approaches the !
sow should be In good condition, but I
not fat. If growth-producing feeds !
have been used during pregnancy and
the ration kept bulky by using ground
oats, ground alfalfa or skim milk, the
sow should be In this shape. Watch her
/ rarntulty. making har‘ ararc'iaa ouch
| day. A few days before she la to far- I
I row put her In a pen and let her be- I
j come accustomed to her surroundings.
| Include a little wheat bran or linseed
I oil meal In her ration to prevent cost-
: Iveness, nhlch is common at tills time.
The farrowing pen should be dry and
| well ventilated. Spread straw on the ■
ground, but not enough to let her build | "
^HfNOU A
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
INDtGESTM*/
>ld *t all
i, medium
Beluans
K Hot water
Sure Relief
Mother! Fletcher’s Caxtoria has!
I been In use for over 30 years as a
pleasant, harmless substitute for Cas- I
f.— ntl I>--------• . r,. — -
! Soothing Syrups. Contains no narcot* I
are on each
Snowy-white clothes will be |
. Try it and you will al-
All good grocers have it.
*
&
<
FiWik. _z ” “ ” * “ 1
pained i
I overdid.
Cowpeas With Corn Will
Cheapen Pork Production
Besides the immediate benefits of
I cowpeas with corn and cheapening
; pork production, there Is much saving
j in labor of harvesting the crop, and
i the fertility of the soli is Increased
! through all of the waste matter being
fed directly back into it. The general |
______ . ___ .. _______
Northcline’s Generosity.
Sir Philip (Jibes, writing In
World's Work, tells
| story about Lord Northcliffe’s gener-
! oslty:
He was very generous at times to
those who served him. I know one
man who approached 1dm for a loan
to keep draft £100.
He was shocked at the idea.
“Certainly not! Don’t you know
that I never lend money? I wouldn’t
| do it If you were starving in the gut-
I ter.”
, Then he wrote a cheek for £100, and
! said: “But 1’11 give it to you, my dear
' fellow. Say no more about it."
a deep nest. Pieces of 2 by 4 nailed I
around the outside of the farrowing |
pen about eight Inches from the floor
nnd eight Inches from the wall will
tend to keep the sow from crushing her
pigs against the walls.
After farrowing, the sow should re-
ceive no feed for from 24 to 3G hours,,
being given only lukewarm water. She
should then be fed a small amount of
j feed for a day or so, and the ration
I can then be gradually Increased. The
j bulky feeds used during pregnancy are
not In order now, for the gains secured
| on the suckling pigs will be the most
I efficient gains they will ever make.
; Skim ndlk tankage, ground oats, mid-
dlings and linseed meal are all good to
supply bone-and-mnscle-making ma-
terial, while corn or barley may be used
; liberally in combination with any of
the above mentioned feeds.
flood mothers witli large litters will ;
usually lose flesh, despite the’most lib- j
j eral feeding.—T. .1. Maynard, Animal 1
Husbandry Department, Colorado Ag
rlcultural College.
^7)\0 TA EVER HEAR WHAT MAPPEMEO TO A
TtGHTWAD, FOLKS’! 140Y VUELL.
VJUMS1 THEM WUX A TiGMIWAO WHO
VJAMYEO TO GO TO A BALL GAME
But wuz. too t<ghy to <»am way
im, So to save a quarter, w*
Help That Achy Back!
Are you dragging around, day after
day, with a dull, unceasing backache?
Are you lame in the morning; bothered
with headaches, dizziness and urinary
disorders’ Feel tired, irritable and
discouraged? Then there’s surely
something wrong, and likely it’s kid-
ney weakness. Don’t neglect it! Get
back your health while you can. Use
boon's Kidney Pills, boon s have
helped thousands of ailing folks. They
should help you. Ask your neighbor!
A Texas Case
Mary Schelink,
5. O I d d I n g ». Tex.,
says: “My back
was lame and
whenever
_______My back
hurt and at times
I felt so lame and
tired it was hard
to do my work I
took Doan’s Ktd-
—4 ney Pills and sines
then when my kid-
neys have been
Irregular. Doan's have quickly re-
z.j. Doan's Kidney Pills
my standard kidney medicine."
Gat Doan’s at Any State, flOc a Box
DOAN’S V.VJi’
FOSTER MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
---g_
Company
, fertility uml productiveness of the land zz..... *'13
ss-ill k->«* ttin ♦ z*h! i> I I •• <a».l « I . . .-I. n
Shinol-A ■
Black • Tan • White • Ox-Blood - Brown
k In the handy box that opens with a turn of the
I key. No broken nails or soiled hands. Softens
IN and preserves leather. Sheds moisture. Shoe
I shining with SnOKMA is a nifty thrifty habit
"The Shine for Mine”
on pasture.
That 15 pounds of corn silage,
I pounds oat straw, fed with 8 pounds j
I grain Is a satisfactory ration for
horses doing light work during the :
uinter months.
For true blue, use Rod Cross Ball
..........-l-.l___ ...ISS 8 ! 1
BATHE YOUR EYES
Use Dr. ThotuptMHi s Byewater.
Buy i;t yonr druggist'n or
UKI River. Troy. N Y Booklet.
A Possibility.
"My stars, Mr. Pester!" ejaculated
an acquaintance who had overtaken
the pessimist. "What is happening nt
your house?"
"When I went downtown a couple of
hours ago." replied old Festus Pester,
, "I left my niece, who is visiting us,
I singing soprano, with which she is
| sadly afflicted."
“It sounds more like some one is be-
I Ing murdered !"
"Possibly so. The neighbors, unable
I to endure it an.v longer, may be
j cutlng her. I ll find out as soon as I
1 go in."—Kansas City Star.
Daily Rations for Draft
Horses, Mares and Colts
Lxperimentul und demuustraliou
Mork by the L’nivorsity of Missouri 1
College of Agriculture shows:
•That ijiuft horses averaging iu
weight approximately l.GUO pounds >
and which did 4.8 hours u day aver-
age farm work, required an average
daily ration of 14.bl pounds of gruiu
and 17.12 pounds of timothy huy.
That brood mares may be used effi-
ciently for farm work, but the yearly
feed required by them is 2(5 per cent
greater tliau tiie cost of feed required
by gelding or "dry" mares doing the
same work.
That brood mares working and
; nursing foals required 47 per cent
more grain and 32 per cent more hay
daily during the suckling period than |
dry mures.
That foals during the suckling
period consumed an average dally ru-
tion of 3.58 pounds of grain and 1.35
pounds of hay, in addition to their
mother's milk.
That draft colts consumed an aver-
age daily ration of (1.68 pounds grain,
7.42 pounds hay dally from weaning :
time until they were turned in pas- I
ture in the spring, a period of 219
days, during which time they gained'
330 pounds and weighed at the close
of tiie period 836 pounds.
That It required 4.40 pounds of
grain and 4.83 pounds of bay to pro-
duce one pound gain on draft colts
from weaning time until turned on
pasture tiie next spring.
That In using a grain ration com-
posed of 2 parts corn, 2 parts oats, |
1 part bran. It required 1'1.46 bushels j
1 I of corn, 18.30 bushels of oats and 1
I 202.9 pounds of bran t_ _____r.
j j i colts In good growing condition from I
1 weaning time until they were turned j
j on pasture.
tor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and 1
les. Proven directions 1
package. Physicinns recommend IL
The genuine bears signature of
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Tyler, L. W. The Decatur News (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 5, 1923, newspaper, July 5, 1923; Decatur, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1322653/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .