The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 142, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 11, 1923 Page: 2 of 4
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ONLY A FEW LEFT
A Chevrolet Touring Car
BUT THE PRICE REMAINS LOW ON
Goodrich Tires
FREE
Our Price
Regular Price
Kind
Sixes
of the reliable and depend-
A full
Watch thin apace for furture interesting
announcements
f
T. M. Thompson
Callahan Chevrolet Co
Bay City, Texas
North Avenue G
Phon 296
BAY CITY, TEXAS
1 HONE 109
DA I It) <OW
now to ji noi Tin
THE DAILY TRIBUNE
Publlslisd Every Hay Kicopl Hunday
/
SI I K i l l Mi FACTS.
Owner and Editor
CAREY SMITH
Trias
these
(4 06
up;
FITS
Hl K IRHOH.
POLITIC AL ANNOUNCEMENTS
Her clrculu-
©■
3 j i
i
LONG
•) Mrtn.
stem
The
<•4
Figure It Out!
to
» fob
And will be rend by from 3000 to 5000 people
i
a r
The Tribune
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i
■■■
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descrilied tn‘the first portion
The development of
of mammary vein*
These considerations, in the final
analysis, are the true basis of
economy in motoring.
What is the car's reputation for
satisfactory service after the first
year? After the second? And
after the third—-and fourth?
8UX3«/g
80X3 Vg
30X.3‘/g
83X4
SOOO readers of your advertisement for $20.40 against 100 readers for
$25.00. some difference, isn’t it?
1000 Circular Letters, by the time you get them in th* Post Office, will
cost you in time and material
•26.00
Besides your paper works for YOU while you sleep?
Let your paper do your advert isms for you
$11.00
$12.00
$12.60
$27.50
And it is this attribute of long life
to which Dodge Brothers Motor
Car owes its chief claim upon the
unalterable loyalty of its owners.
In buying a motor car, consider
what the cost will be when divided
over a period of years.
... - a—a---——
IMl'OMTIXT IHKH IOKs MEETING
Entered »• second else* melter al
tli« poatofllcs of Hay City under act
of Concrete
THE TRIBUNE I’III M l NO COMPANY
I’ubllsiier
“55"
“Safety"
“Silverton Cord”
“Silverton Cord”
■
......
Th* prhe of the Tour
it has lieen estimated that not over 10 out of 100 of such advertising
are ever read
$12.35
$14.20
$15.50
$32.20
Th* question of
be
HARPY ANDERSON AUTO
Phone IM : Ray City, lexsa
s»
Tbe Hally Tribune
Due Year.............. ....
e x a iii Inal it >n of the outlets which for
tunately are close Io the surface anil
easily observed As stated In a for
mer article the IiIimhI flowing through
the udder and its lymphatics and fol
ma.
When
They also pay the shipping other state lu the union
the state number
milk
uuiIh differ
marvelous thing
on same pasture.
had
i Auchen-
had
ap-
u>llk
The Tribune stated
Alisa Juanita Davis,
elected to a position
No doubt in primitive times all
produced meat and fat and
quuntltie* of milk.
r
I he following announcviuautl are
ibject to the action of the jh'hlto
Man's Union: yg’
i.n.i iouer. Precinct No. 4.
VIRGIL HARPER
R. A. WENDT.
tl nexpired term C. V.Cataniaai
•TOP THAT ITCHINU
•Use Blue Star Remedy for Ecuuml
Itch. Tetter or Cracked Hands Hing
Worms. Chapped K*<«. Poison Oak.
Sunburns, Old Sores 01 Seres OB CUM-
drmi It relieves all form* of Sere Faak
For sale by r _____
*idd hy Matagorda Pharmacy Haf
’■ -----. tw ~
» i
ws?
iUJJMrwWfi terr—
EPILBF8Y
FALLING
8IOKNMG
Sius', a«Mr 6swamit»
’rife today far rwleatlfi fcaafc
Otva m« iwtfba
••
A page advertnee'ment (120 inches) in The Weekly Tribune (if you ar* a
regular advertiser) will cost you
•20.40
yesterday that
who had been
on the school
faculty, had decided to teach In Hous-
ton The facte are that Miss Davis
was offered a flattering position In
Houatou. but having previously ac
cepted a place here, decided to re-
main with the Hay City contract
We are very much pleased to make
tbe correction
Car l« I
|hijo delivered
Tbe tegular semi monthly meeting
of tbe board of directors of the
Chambei of Commerce will be held
Tbursdav night This la au unusually
Important meeting and every mem
b»r Is urged to be present The gen-
eral public la always Invited to these
meetings and any citizen
desire to do so, is welcome to attend
It you have any suggestions, bring
them along and the board will be
glad Io give them due consideration
—o---------——
Mrs. l.loyd tleorge ways 'Bringing
up a family Is a full time lots an
overtime one if the family Is large
and no working < lass mother can
ivsihlsr It properly with wage earn
•ng
considered auch an Impotent factor |
In great production tint It Is an ■
ax lorn, that great mammary develop-1
Some
with
uml complete Block
able Federal Tires ail sizes always on hand.
In addition to our Tires, Tubes anil Accessories, we
operate the handiest and only “Drive-in" Filling Station in
Bay City.
n poor producer with a well developed
Is
must be made prosperous by bringing
the mill into close proximity with the
field and the gin.
Today in Texas
facts are true
qulrklr rsN.d I, Dr I
UBtd *Pf M »*Mfb Wl„„ „
•nd HUI TBIAL uf Bfm*dr
DR 8 H KUNE CO. 79 Fbae 1m. bi hdll
This is the seventh of a series of
articles hy Mr Clapp The next will
appear in an early Issue
Edward Page tlateon an archeolo-
gist and brother of Lucy Page (iatson,
of «ntl i igsrel fame la searching at
Graveland. England, tor the tyones of
th, Indian Princess Pocahontas whom
he claims at au ancestor
A $621.00 Chevrolet to be given away, free, to the party holding the
lucky number. The number will be drawn from a box which will contain
all the numbers that have been given out and that number will be adver-
tised for one week, and the party who holds the LUCKY number will drive
away the touring ear—ABSOLUTELY FREE.
All there is to it is—buy a Great Big Can of (.'old Patch for the sum of
60c each and get with it a chance on the Chevrolet.
COME AND GET YOUR CHANCE NOW and TELL YOUR
FRIENDS TO COME EOF THEIRS.
WATC H OUR AD IN THE TRIBUNE FOR THE DATE.
One n.< re thing we want you to know and that is this: H'<- are selling
Tires and s—oh, so cheap in prim and high in quality. Just call and
see for yo rself. WE 1’AKE THE CAKE FOR GOOD PRICES.
/ I'.vpys open- Day and night. ‘‘Scrricc’’ js our middle name.
Indignant
Hrt’ons whose forbears lie buried
with th* legendary savior of Captain
John Smith have threatened Gaston
for violating their dead In his search
: vit'umgh armed with a permit from
the home office and accompanied by
Btiiish anthropologists, he is meet-
ing With much resistance Marquis:
Cur on foreign secretary, has added i
his vol. e to the protest against tbe
search at Gravesend
startling
If you don't think so.
investigate and find out for yourself.
If all the people of the United
States were to move to Texas, its
population per square mile would not
exceed that of .Massachusetts.
Texas Is one and one-fourth times
as large as the German empire was
before the war
Texas has more farms than any
417.770 In
Texas baa 24,000 farms that
contain .*>0u ac res each.
The farmers of Texas spend fib,-
OOO.iiOO annually for agricultural im-
plements
The uncultivated area of Texas
could suppoit all the people of the
United States, using ax a basis of
calculation two aci s per capita,
which Is the world.' average,
Eighteen per cent of the v
cotton crop lx produced lu Tex
Texas there are 487* gins. 113 c
presses 22* cotton *e<-d oil
and 20 cotton mills
Still, some of us rail at fate and i
swear the South doesn't g.t a square f||j. Texas.
Pn»fe*.or Robert IxwC Ward, of
j Harvard I'niversity. writes No p.vs
sible temporary advantage to he gain-
ed hy the importation of cheap alien
labor < on id in any way nffaet the
inealcnlahle harm which each an in-
flux would inevitably do to our coan-
■ try and our -ace T*:- ■*
, profits >a not for a moment to
considered as more important than
poetertty"
In
mills.
mammary syslem Many lartnera tnj
the South look for what they call a
dual purpose cow. The word dual I
sounds well and seems to be a favor-
ite among Texas dairymen It really
means two In one The production of
beef and that of milk are two differ-
ent line* of business and if one is to
make a success from either, one
should u*e the proper animal A real
good milk cow will make such profits
from her milk that when her produc-
ing years are over beef may be for-
gotten and the opposite Is true of the
beef cow tine cannot secure thu
maximum of either product without
sacrificing the other Keep milk cows
forget lieef Keep
for beet forget milk
one*, pure
deal, when all these years tbe South
has been cutting her own throat by.
a criminal neglect of her owe r_a«
sources.
It's time for Texas to wake
time to get busy.—Exchange.
the blood
Hon Its flows
through what
potentially is the greatest
undeveloped empire lu the world.
Texas Is big enough and large enough
and strong enough and powerful
enough to live with herself, given a
few more factories more mills and
manufacturing plants
In this state the raw resources are
produced. In other states they are
made into the finished products They
are shipped back to Texas Texas
people buy them and pay a big In-
crease
costs both to and from
where their materials were milled
Texas is potentially the wealthiest
sections of the United States lu the
United State* It Is conceded the
wealth of the world centers Ameri-
cans are looked upon as spendthrifts
America I* regarded as a spendthrift
nation
Texas, then Is In a fair way to be-
come the richest spot In the world.
She must develop her resources She
must build factories Her farms
must be made more productive
thiough extensive Irrigation. Her
cities must t* made greater through
more factories Her cotton farmer-
pn lacing
prt luce Priceless heritage
for mllh. forget !>eef Keep beef
cows for beef forget milk Keep
go. .1 ones pur* bred, each animal
hat ng received from a long tin* of
ancestor* th* ability
See to
It that there flows in th*lr circulation
the blood of profit ” Be < ontent
with no other
llcles deposit* its milk forming
terlal and milk Is produced
has performed this func-
back into the body
Is called mammary
In front of the udder of every
be found two of theae veins,
These veins carry
If
large vein, It uieaus Impeded flow,
but If on tbe contrary they are small,
they pinch the vein and obstruct the
flow Sometimes the mammary veins
branch and pass through the walls
uf the body through many of these
boles which are called milk wells As
many as 16 have been found in some
cows All cows have two of these
veins, one on each side, and two milk
wells, but as a rule they are indiffer-
ent producers. It will be of interest
to go back a bit and consider what
lakes place during the digestion of
feed When the cow takes teed Into
her mouth she passe* It directly to
the first stomach, which is commonly
called the paunch This Is the store-
house and It remains there until she
begins to ruminate and then It is re-
gurgitated or brought up Into tbe
mouth where It Is inastii ated This
Is called chewing the cud In this act
saliva la mixed wrllh the teed and di-
gestion begins for starches are at this
time changed into sugars. It Is then
swallowed and passes into the third
stomach, which squeez.es out some of
the moisture and then to the fourth
stomach and later to the intestines
Ixiring its progress through the vari-
ous stomach* It is brought into con-
tact with the gastric juice, bile, pan-
creatic and Intestinal fluids which
pick up the nutrients, separating
them from waste material and allow-
ing them to be absorbed Into the
blood At this point circulation be-
come* Important for through this
force the nutrient* are carried to the
most distant parts of the body, de-
positing here and there, for building
up the tissues and a considerable
portion is diverted it no the udder for
tlie manufacture of milk In tbe beet
animal, the blood carried nutrients,
after maintaining the body are util-
ized for the production of beef and
fat. while in the dairy animal the ex-
cess Is used for the production of
Here Is where these two altl-
To the student this is a
Two cows, grazing
same pasture, consuming same
feed and yet one produces that great
marvd. milk, and the other produces
beef
I town produi’Fil meut and fat
small quantities of milk, but when
man began to study how he might Im
prove his cuttle, he soon found that
by proper selection he could create which yielded 1,1’47 95 pound* of hut-
aii animal that would produce more
milk or more meat as he desired and
then cows were divided Into two
classt*. one the beet type and the
other the milk type This ha* been
fair idea of Ils carrying ability by an lurr(„| l(, ,U(.h extvnt that today
wn have one cow that breeds to beet
production and small quantities of
milk while the dairy type breed* for
milk production and I* of secondary
value a* a beet producer We nacrl
flee beef for the more valuable prod
urt of milk It ha* taken centurle.
to bling this about, for example, the
Holstein Priexlsn ha* an authentic
history of something like 2<MM year*
while the Jersey has more than X00
year* of breeding back of her Dur
Ing these centuries men have, by
careful selection .uni breeding devel-
oped the wonderful producers of th •
present day Circulation ha* by thl“
in. thod lieen directed until it ha*
fol med type The volume of blood
carried and direction of its flow are
observed by the mammary vein* and
the milk well* The mammary vein*
can first be observed by an examina-
tion of the udder and then followed
out a*
of this
.1 great i
ydSTi-i
5
By Harry Austin Clapp,
Collegeport, Texas, July II In
many respects circulation I* a most
Important collateral of the produc-
tive dairy cow If II lias little ca-
pacity or I* Impeded in any way pro-
duction slows up. The amount of
power delivered by an internal com
liustion engine dept lids largely on
complete circulation In the system
becomes dogged or Is too small and
the flow of the drculallng medium i*
interrupted, power decrease* and
filially c»a*e* In the same way the
cow should have ample circulation
and a free discharge of the circulat-
ing medium which in thl* case is the
blood The main artery which sup
pile* blood to the udder Is concealed
in the body of the animal, secure
from observation, hut one can gain a
cow may
sometimes three
hltMsl from the udder to the heart
thr» are large, with great carrying
who may capacity If they are tortuous, crook
ed and long, well branched, one can
he quite certain of good production
Many men who have handled cows
for rear* are Ignorant of the exist-
ence of these vein* Examine your
cows, beginning with the front of the
udder follow these veins to the end
and you will find that they enter the
bodv through holes In which a finger
may be thrust If these boles are
large, permitting the passage of
inent means great production
close students do not concur
this ftatement. but tbe theory may I
easily be proven by an examination
of great producer* and comparing
them with those of small ability Sev-
eral years ago th< writer in conver-
sation with a Judge of dairy cattle
was told that no cow could be great,
without a good development of the
escutcheon Up until this time be
had paid little attention to this por-
tion of the cow The escutcheon is
located between the hind legs, and
above the udder at the point where
the hair grows up At each side the
hair grows oul. Those who believe
in the theory contend that the reason
the hair grows up I* because it is
living fed and nourished by blood
passing to the udder, while the hair
on each side is nourished by blood
which contributes to the general
nourishment ot other body parts The
writer is Inclined to believe in thl*1
theory for as a rule when a cow pos-
sesses an escutcheon that Is long and
wide and extends down on the udder
she lias a well developed mammary
system, and that means a generous
blood flow with corresponding quan-
tities of nutrients Many will not
agree with this and it is their privi-
lege. but when looking cows over,
after examining the mammary devel-
opment observe tbe escutcheon The
writei was first attracted to the great
value of circulations by having the
privilege of examining that wonderful
ow. t’olantha 4th'* Julianna at the
time holder of the world record over
all breeds The entire lower part
>• of her bodji was literally covered with
mammary veins, some of which were
us laige a* i< man'* wrist, others the
*1 « of a thumb. These veins were
not only large, but they were long,
crooked, tortuous, branched and pass-
ing Into the body through numerous
milk wells, some of them being large
enough to allow the insertion of a
thumb Such development Indicates
the passing of large quantities of
blood from the udder to the lung* and
htart for purification and pumping
again through the circulating system
t’olantha Ith's Johanna produced in
one year 27,432.5 pound* of milk
ter No matter if she did have a
gieut constitution, wonderful capac-
ity. ideal udder, if her circulation al-
lowed nutrients to be deposited a*
beef and body tat she would have
gone to the butcher As It was she
represented the top notch of milk
producing development because of
generation* of selection and breeding
always for production
thin system carried milk producing
nutrient* to and through the udder
laboratory An eaxminatlon of any
great cow will show the *ame devel-
opment Bosnian'* Anna had won-
derful development, while
brain** White Beauty not only
splendid udeer development,
proachlng the ideal hut her
vein* were very long, disappearing
into the body under the fore arm
Nurne Cowan, I niches* Hkylark Orms-
by. Sophia HHh. Begl* Bietertje Pros-
pect and all other great cow* ar*
great because of the development ot
circulation co-operation with the oth-
er essentials The writer ha* never
seen a great cow without it and doe*
not believe inch a cow ever lived o*|
will live and he ha* never seen a'
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Smith, Carey. The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 142, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 11, 1923, newspaper, July 11, 1923; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1365725/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.