Wise County Messenger (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, May 10, 1929 Page: 3 of 8
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29
ght.
Friday, May 10, 1929
X
W ISE COUNTY MESSENGER
—Page Three
BABY CHICKS
Surprise Dinner
Ingram-Ramsey
SORE GUMS NOW CURABLE
The children of Mrs. C- H. Miller
Christian’s
ler and sons, and Miss Pearl Meador. experiment into a glittring reality.
Feed Store
COLQUITT UNFIT
!
SEY in Dallas News.
AUTHORIZED PURINA DEALER
IN PRO. FAMILY
ATTENTION DAIRYMEN:
Bethel M. E. Church.
Phone 283
Start Those Baby Chicks Off RIGHT!
at the courthouse in Decatur. Monday
at 2 o’clock.
Messenger want-ads bring results.
4
NOTICE
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Bring Me Your Cream
5
AGENT RED RIVER CREAMERY
Fair Price and Test
Leave out protein and growth a*
j New Method Laundry •
growth is accelerated.
4
Company
• -
Trade in
A
r
your
A
OLD TIRES
Mothers Day
Sunday, May 12
Remember that dearest creature in the world - - - Say it
COOPER
with a gift — Select from these approppriate gifts.
Armored Cord Tires
8
A
BAGS
UNDIES
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V
ES8
Leather Hand-Bags are useful
Give mother one of these dain-
gifts - -
ty silken Slips, Gowns, Step-ins
>.
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Bloomers - -
$1.95, $2.45, $3.95, $5.00
98c, $1.49, $1.98
HOSE
SPREADS
May 10th to 17th
L
Hummingbird are nationally
r
Useful gifts are the most ap-
advertised - -
r
predated give her one - -
».
$1.50, $1.95, $2.50
$1.25, $1.98, $3.95
r
COO. ER ARMORED CORD TIRES
)
Tomorrow, Saturday, Sale of
MILLINERY
SILK DRESSES
For maid or miss, New Spring
and Summer Hats - -
Just arrived - -
r
$1.95, $2.95, $3.95, $4.95
r
v
$5.95, $9.95, $14.95
7
Rieder Dry Goods Co. :
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N. Trinity St.—Decatur
Try Messenger want-ads.
il»Whatl:aihBIIBIiBI«i:«rBliB:bBdiBiaTBIWiJllidflil«l.l
Mies Jessie Lee Ramsey, daughter I
of Mrs Ora Ramsey, and Mr. Selma
itex
500
With the 18th thrown in for good measure
we are going to buy your old tires—pro-
vided you can drive in to our station with
the tires on the wheels and apply this
amount on the purchase of NEW
TTITTTIITIIIIIT-TIIHTITTT
iuvuuTuIIIIIIUTEIT
charming
She is a eraduate of the musie depart- /
ment of the institution and will com- , •
tor.
once
Do you want to produce milk and cream cheaper?— Cow Chow
will do it!
Mr. J. W. Taylor has called a mass
meeting of all dairymen in Wise coun-
ty. to be held in the county court room
Pig (how ami Hog (how fed with corn will make a cheaper pound
of pork in less time.
Come
mot her.
22005
“SM'm
A large number of pretty and useful
gifts were presented the honoree.
Those present were: Mr. and Mrs.
C. H. Miiher, Chas. M Miller. Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Miller and daughter. Mr.
and Mrs. ob Miller and two sons, of
" are always glad to see new names on our list ■
| along with our regular patrons—if you will ?
i stand by Mr. Jameson you will soon have a ।
| service you will be proud of. i
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Upon entering the dining room Mr*
Miller was surprised to find a heavily ।
laden table witk good things to eat.
During Cooper Trade-In
Week ON NEW
and Education."
Out ler D. Gose. Pastor.
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Home Life
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Bowie, Texas
No Charge for Babie’s Soiled Clothing
Ingram, son of Dr. and Mrs. J. J , day on business.
Ingran, were married in Fort Worth | -----
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out and report
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eilmmmmilmmymlimmiliailunimIILIII•III•III•III•IIISIII•IIIEIII•IIIMiIIMIIMII:mIIMn
(*. P. Dodison and C. I.. Christian
| are attending the state Lions conven-
i tion in San Angelo.
----o-----
Jack Kieger was in Dallas yester-
#5753
!
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Fort Worth; Mr. and Mm. e w. Nil “ixsuhovenarqcond X
a commission to investigate
youngest mothers. Subject of sermon s =
• ■
1 protein and
A study of dif-
hearing them talk one would suppose
that Mr. Hoover had only one song
in his repertoire, and that. "Oh, How
Dry I Am."
Now Mr. Hoover is safely ensconced
Barnum knew his okra. The people
like to be humbugged. F. o. MeKN-
I am a personal friend of ex-Gov- ai ihe uuriivuse i
ernor olquitt, but we have not often! afternoon. May 13.
Feed PURINA Poultry (’how from the time the chick is hatened till
sold as an old lien; also best for turkeys.
Don’t feed your calves whole milk. Calf Chow will raise better
calves for one third the cost of whole milk.
cendo of their campaign was prohibi
tion. They just had to support Hoo-
ver to save prohibition, "Hoover and
agreed in politics. He was one of the
organizers and leaders of bolting Dem-
ocrats who supported Hoover in the
last campaign. Now he is named by
President Hoover to a place on the
United States board of Mediation, a
position formerly held by ex -Governor
Sunday morning in honar of m
Presents given to oldest ami m
f
-4
■
0. B. Colquitt. The president points
sistent. notorious anti-prohibitionist I g
among all his democratic supporters —
in Texas and in the south. yclept.
Mrs C. L. Griffith. Mrs. Jack Tay-
lor and Mrs. Will O’Neal went to
Crowell, Texas, last week in response
to a message telling them that Mr.
Horace O’Neal, who was working with
a road construetion gang at that place,
had been very seriously injured by a
dnamite explosion. It seems that Mr.
CNeal was very badly injured by a
i rmatnre explosion of dynamite, and
is in a critical condition, and it is not
kuoyn whether he will recover or not.
However, word received this morning
stated that it was thought he stood a
chane to recover.—Alvord News.
prohibition” was their slogan. From
i
l mil ■ ! ■ I Bl lii ■ I ■ I ■ I ■ 1 ■'! Bil I ■ IB IBII Bd Bll ■ I ■ I ■ iBilBJBd Bil; -
I his finger at our ex-Governer approV-
ingly and says “You re it.” No HGo-
vet democrat has protested.
I wonder what the real honesi-to-
goodness pros who voted for Hoover
think of his appointing Colquitt. How
does he comprae as a prohibitionist
with ex-Gov. Pat Neff. Mr. Coolidge’s
apointee? Why did not Mr. Hoover
appoint Neff?
Besides, we still have Andiy Mellon.
Mr. Hoover is before long going to
baby chick can consume only a very
limited amount of feed daily —one
fourth of an ounce, or about one thizi-
bleful. Second, that the baby chick’p
feex should be high in animal protein
before civilized men entered an era of
domesticating birds for his use. In
milk products, meat seraps. wheat
germ, alfalfa leaf meal ami other in-
gredients, these scientists discoverer
by experiment the feed exactly needed
for the baby chicks.
Highly interesting is the fart th it
with this recent discovery of a bettev
way to feed baby chieks. state experi-
ment stations are verifying these
truths. At Nebraska. seven rations
were fed baby chicks. The one con-
raining 20 per cent protein gave the
ineluding a large two-tier birthday appoint
cake adorned with 76 pink candles. , prohibition ami find
what is really the matter with this
on the very order of feed that nature
furnished all young birds in the day (©
- ©
DECATUR MOTOR CO.
AIPFP •PA"nA gathered in the home of Mr. aud Mrs.
Nr r 11 Pnl 11 r liB ' W
11LLU I I AUJ I Lill honor their mother with a lovely sur-
। prise dinner. this day being her 76th
-------- birthday.
in the president’s chair. He has
a nice $12,000 a year job with which
to reward some agonizing prohibition-
ist in the south, who sacrificed his
democratic convictions of a lifetime
and voted for Hoover just to save
prohibition. He gives the whole south
the once over. He no doubt observes
those hundreds of dry Hoover demo-
rats who, since the election, in imi-
tation of Daniel, have been praying
urice daily with their windows open
oward Washington. His gaze falls
upon the one outstanding, active per-
fed a protein ration due to the possi-
bility of what some term "protein
poisoning." These laboratory studies
showed I ha l the baby chick is more
apt to suffer from protein starvation
rather than from protein poisoning.
These research studies definitely es
tablished two facts. First. that a
ferent animals revealed the fact that
the rate of growth in animals is more
rapid where Ihe mother’s milk is high
in protein. These specialisis found
that the rabbit’s milk contains 15.5 per
cent protein. It requires only six
days for ihe young rabbit to doubi *
its weight, The sow's milk is 6 per
cent protein. 11 requires the young
pig fourteen days to double its initial
weight. The same facts were brought
out in the study of the deg, sheep,
goat, horse and man. The same was
A steering gear for airplanes which
works automatically, has been in-
venteil.
is halted. Add
Don’t wait until your old tires blow out—
Let us give you a trade-in estimate on
them.—Let us show you the New COOPER
Armored Cord Tires—we know that you’ll
drive away staisfied.
Neff under appointment by Mr. Cool- ■
idge. m
Tills naturally makes one think =
You won’t lie ashamed to smile
again after you use Leto's Pyorrhea
Remedy. This preparation is used end
recommented by leading dentists and
cannot fail to benefit you. Druggists
return money if it fails.
Renfro's Drug Store
Feed your work horses and mules O-MOLENE to get them in con-
dition for summer work. One hundred pounds has the feeding
value of five bushels of oats or three bushels of corn.
"noble experiment.” By the end of
Hloover’s first term this commission
will have reported and we will have
found out what is necessary to make
prohibition a success and if the pros
’Had your thimbleful of protein to-
day,” will become the popular interro-
gation in the poultry yard between
baby chicks foliov ing the recent an
nouncement by the |M ultry department
of Purina Mills that a thimbleful of
feed, high in protein, should consti-
lute thr chick’s daily menu.
This new contributioi 10 poultry mi
trition knowledge came about unex-
pectedly ami more 1 r less accidentally,
specialists in ihe department declare.
"For generation-." they say, "corn and
oats has been the accepted standar
ration for baby chicks. Corn and oats
of course are high in carbohydrates
and low in protein.”
These specialists bgan wondering
about this corn and oat ration. They
knew 'that the chicken before it was
domesticated, fed while young on
worm* and bugs—protein. "What’s
wrong with nature's way of handling
baby chicks? Possibly nature had
some reason for this method that man
has overlooked," they asked then-
selves.
A little study on the part of these
scientific research men brought out
the well known fact that calves re-
ceive colostrum, the cow's first milk,
which is high in protein. The baby
chick’s first food, injested yolk, is
35 per cent protein. The baby chick
doubles its initial weight in about 12
days, consuming only about two and
one-half times its initial weight ot
feed. Since the baby chick consumes
so little feed during those first twelve
days—a thibbleful each day—it is
only reasonable to assume that much
of this must be protein because the
chick is at this time making heavy
growth. AU that it consumes is going
to make bone, muscle, blood and
feathers.
Delving still farther into this realm
of nutrition—highly interesting study
that it proved to be—they found that
protein in the ration is a growth fac-
on the evening of April 24. and left
immediately for a f< w days wedding
trip. They returned home Sunday.
The bride, a student in Decatur Col-
(■IIBt ■ Bl ■ l ■ ' ■ 1 ■ l •II ■ l ■'I.BilBIIBJ ■ । ■ : ■ I ■ I ■ I ।
best results. The California station
also in its experiments verifies the
fact that a baby chick should be fed a
high protein ration anil one that is
easily digestible. Even the most criti-
cal feel that this new discovery in
baby chick feeding may be as far
reaching and as important as the dis-
covery some seven years ago of the
keeping qualities of vitamin D in cod-
liver oil wherr mixed with commercial
feede.
The old idea that a baby chirk
should be fed a ration of corn and
eats alone is now a bit of a theory fit
for the ashcan. What is true is simply
this, that the baby chick with its small
capacity for food and its need for pro-
tein enn use only one-fourth of an
ounce of feed, one thimbleful per day.
It should be high in protein. The
popular baby chick refrain now will
be, “Had your thimbleful of protein
today?”
“A Dangerous Trend in
some things. With the Hoover Demo-? B
erats the one swelling note, the cres | Fo the People of Decatur: f
" We have arranged with Mr. Jameson of ■
| your city, to represent us in our work—we
• feel sure that Mr. Jameson will be glad to •
! have a call from you—Give us a trial, as we f
8 « >
0
J.
pl We her literary course in June ofjm
this year. Early in the spring she w as g
chosen most popular lability of the =
schon, where she is an unusually bril- •
liant student- m
Mr Ingram is a very popular young g
man, possessing a large number of =
friends in this community. He has =
for a number of years been engaged in ■
business here and is an energetic and m
business-like young man. K
found to apply to the baby chick—a
need of a high per cent of protein in
the ration from the very first.
These findings on the part of these
research men. of course, exploded the ©)
theory that baby chicks should not Is* ©
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Collins, Dick. Wise County Messenger (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, May 10, 1929, newspaper, May 10, 1929; Decatur, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1611217/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .