The Champion (Center, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 38, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 23, 1931 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
sm
x
ft
F
w
8
0
y<
5
W-
s2
Ijf)
r
de.
i®j
Now light up!
H
You’ll have to admit that no other home-rolled
cigarette ever had so much to recommend it.
Prince Albert is simply better tobacco, Gentlemen.
i
&
(
I
V
gfr:'
w
i
IYal
Jifc
&
|k
Have you tried a pipe lately? Men who thought a
pipe was not for them have changed their minds
after the first load of P.A. This friendly tobacco
just wouldn’t think of biting your tongue or parch-
ing your throat. Take my tip . . . get out the old
pipe and give it a new deal.
Open a tidy red tin of Prince Albert... sniff the
delightful fragrance of the tobacco. It’s the grandest
aroma that ever floated out of a package of smoking
tobacco. Then spread a cigaretteful in a paper and
sec how quick and easy it rolls into a trim cigarette
that burns evenly and stays put. No fuss or muss
or spilled tobacco . . . because P. A. is crimp-cut.
That’s why it rolls so smooth.
|g|FF
b
— AND THE PAPERS ARE IMPORTANT, TOO. The perfect
combination for home-ro’led cigarettes: P.A. for filler and OCB
for wrapper. The world’s finest papers, made at the famous Bollore
mills in France expressly for R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company.
Book of 150 leaves for 5ft. Buy OCR’s with good old P.A. and
you’re all set to be satisfied
VW
fc'
I fe
fi
i I
n
I
w
J
/
1
2 full ounces in every Tin
No other tobacco is like it
ET
Sb
-j^l
'WUMI
?■
I <
t.
lilh
H
M
llsi
I
.
kJ
l||l<
ftte Mi
Wif.
w.<
lF*
IF
wfe
£
■
ifS
f
r 1
gp W
'•'X
...
Spltaj
r mi i «7£> \x h 1_____
Z
|g ■z&n
^■Hr
Wi.
lip p
sw« O
” jJW
Jr
X.y jJV.
WWSOal
■■
41 /
i ■< <i
KEEP THE SOIL FERTILE
fa:
X
I
Mfaigjgigg
JOHNSON &
MIDDLETON
These things should not be
put off until the busy season
|n the spring. During the win-
ter we have more time to go
over our machines, get the nec-
essary repairs, and put every
machine in first class shape
than we will in the spring.
. Y
NeXT time you are out
of fix as the result of ir-
regular or faulty bowel
For Sale by L. Y. Rogers
IN THE
tiiau ■
When implements are given
rough usage by operators and
are left outdoors, exposed to
all kinds of weather, they can
not be expected to do good
work for more than five years.
The life of thousands of ma-
chines is cut in two by neglect.
Any system of farming that
does not include a crop rota-
tion is not safe farming. It is
not profitable farmiwng.
When we plant the same
land to th same crops year af-
ter year, we continually rob
the soil of its fertility, invite
soil erosion, encourage plant
diseases, and insect pests.
In the cotton belt, the wheat
belt, and in the corn belt there
are thousands of farms that
are less productive than they
SBftl
5 I
Jr wF
1 siw
■ s '
POULTRY YARD
—where quantity and quality of eggs determine
the real cost of any feed—that’s where you find
RED CHAIN Egg Mash to
be the most economical egg
|k producer!
Bilk
COZM:;
For Expelling 'Worms
detect either by sight or by
sound when any part of a ma-
chine needs attention. If the
machine is not working smooth-
ly in all its parts, the cause of
the trouble should be immedia-
tely ascertained and remedied:
A loose nut promptly tighten-!
ed will not only save valuable,
time, but may prevent serious
damage and prolong the use-
fulness of the implement. *
All bearings should be kept
oiled. In spite of care, bear- ‘
ings sometimes become hot.
BLACK'
DRAUGHT
WOMEN who are run-down, or suf-
fer every month, should take Car-
dui. Used for over 50 years, e-itt-a
It is just as important to
save farm machinery as it is to
save the crops after we grow
them. Often we almost work
our heads off to get a hay crop
under cover when a sudden
storm threatens. Yet, many of
us allow our farm implements
to stay out in all kinds of
weatlfer.
...
Before putting any machine
in the shed after it has been in
use it is always best to apply
a coating of grease to all pol-
ished parts. This will prevent
rust. If the moldboard is kept
bright, better work will be
done by the plow and the en-
ergy of both man and power
will be conserved.
A good operator is quick to movement, try Thedford’s
Black-Draught for the re-
freshing relief it gives
thousands of people who take it.
Mr.E.W. Cecil, a construction super-
intendent in Pulaski, Va., says:
....... "When I get con-
stipated, xny head aches, and I
have that dull, tired feeling—just
not equal to xny work. I don’t
feel hungry and I know that I
need something to cleanse xny
system, so I iake Black-Draught.
We have found it a great help.”
Sold In 25-cent packages.
ThedFordb
>7-30
Y\
sock of feed costs more
than a sack of sowdust—but
you can't "save money" by
feeding sawdust to your
chickens.
Likewise, a sack of RED CHAIN
: Orange-Vitamine Egg Mash costs
more than cheap imitations—because
.it’s worth more to YOU!
Feed it to your own flock; test it in
comparison with any other egg mash,
. tanu jvm ii iwu ixc;i> y^r-
'<Jay in the year—for bigg,
; round poultry profits!
’ ’ • ' A
A It
1
mt
mo ■
F
4* J
Poor care of machines
means waste of labor, waste
of money, and waste of cr^ps.
We can not do good work
with implements that are in
poor condition-
and you’ll feed RED CHAIN evei
jer year
y^RED CHAIN Feeds
Are SUPERIOR Feeds
^■/4 1,
Iftt
3
b
<
lllliib \b.
•• : >
- f
/
y
-
nee Alber
ROUS easy and stays put C ’ ■Winston-Salem, N. C? COmPan?
HOME-ROLLED
cigarettes ever
... try this
For the best
This trouble can be remedied
by mixing graphite with the
oil.
TAKE CARE OF
FARM IMPLEMENTS
We should carefully go over
our machines for the purpose
of detecting every loose or mis-
sing nut or bolt, every worn or
broken part. A list of all need-
ed repairs should be made and
these should be secured and
put in place during the winter.
A little paint will do much
to preserve both wood and met-
al. It also improves the ap-
pearance of a machine-
”~Lack of care of farm mach-
inery is one of the greatest
sources of loss on American
farms. Every year the farm-
ers of the United States spend
millions of dollars for imple-
ments, and, as a rule, these im-
plements last only about half
as long as they should be-
cause they are not kept under
cover when not in use.
were a generation ago. Hun-
dreds of these farms, ruined by
the loss of fertility and by soil
erosion have been abandoned.
The corn root worm, which
causes a loss of more than a
hundred million dollars annual-
ly, is the result of planting the
same fields with corn year af-
ter year. Many other insect
pests can-be eradicated by the
crop rotation.
Nearly every plant disease
increases in activity when the
same crop is planted year af-
ter year. If these diseases do
not have the same host plant,
for two years in succession,
they are unable to gain head-
way.
In adopting a system of rota-
tion, the following things must
be considered-
1. Climatic condition.
2. —Soil condition
3. —The relation which the
various crops bear to each oth-
er.
Legume crops—red clover,
I sweet clover, cowpeas, soy-
THE CHAMPION, CENTER, TEXAS SEPTEMBER, 23, 1931
Buy
a Fair Ticket for $1
beans, etc., should be rotated
with grain crops. Legume?
crops improve the texture of
the texture of the soil add hum-
mus and nitrogen, prevent ero-
sion, insure larger yields froni
crops that follow them.
groaiSBa!gBE3SBg^^
______ —-
[tr? -. : J.;. ■
_________4__
J_____—
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Foster, Joe B. The Champion (Center, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 38, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 23, 1931, newspaper, September 23, 1931; Center, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357086/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fannie Brown Booth Memorial Library.