The Avalanche. (Lubbock, Texas), Vol. 23, No. 9, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 28, 1922 Page: 4 of 12
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Tl IF. LUBBOCK AVALANCI IF.. TUESDAY. MARCH 28. 1922
AROUND THE CLOCK
Starlight and Sunshine' Lighting Life's Pathway.
Th. DUI
1. One thintr the war lift u it
the men who still wear wrist wateh-
e. 2. Church bell may not he fire
bells but they warn us of a fire in
the hereafter.
3. Some girl are bo modest that
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT
Tha following partiee authorize tb
placing? of their unmet in this columi
for the various offices nubject U
the Democratic Primary in July and
ask a favorable consideration of tbeii
claim.
For County Judge:
P. F. BROWN Lubbock
(Re-electinn)
D. W. PUCKETT Lubbock
For County Attorney:
JOHN R. MeGEE Lubbock
(Re-election.)
OWEN W. McWHORTEU
For Clerk of Tha District Court i
LOUIE F. MOORE.
For County Clark!
H. K. STUPBS Lubbock.
G. T. CRAWFORD.
For County Treasurer:
MRS. MARY F. IIINTON.
Lubbock (Re-election).
For Sheriff:
C. A. HOLCOMB Lubbock.
Re-election.
JOE W. PERKINS Lubbock
R. I. TUBUS Lubbock.
P. B. PENNEY. Lubbock
I. J. OSBORNE.
For Tax Collector:
SAM SPIKES Lubbock.
TONY Q. DYESS Lubbock
A. J. CLARK. Lubbock.
ANSEL II INKS Lubbock.
For Tax Ataeuor:
R. C. BURNS Lubbock.
(Re-election.)
A. B. JONES Lubbock.
For County Superintendent:
E. R. HAYNES Re-election
(Lubbock)
For County Commissioner Pre. 1
M. M. CRAWFORD Lubbock
Re-eleetion.
J. II. BURROUGHS
MARVIN T. WARUCK.
County Commissioner Pro. No. 3:
B. N. WHEELER Idalou
Re-electon.
For Commissioner Pre. No. 4:
J. C. SHAW.
L. C. DENTON.
For Justice of the Peace Pre. No. I:
J. WESLEY SMITiI
(Re-election)
J. H. RICHARDSON.
CEO. B. MULLINS.
W. E. JOHNSON.
For Public Weigher Pre. No. 1.
C. T. JACKSON Lubbock.
( Re-election).
J. F. BUM PASS Lubbock.
T. W. M.-NEFLY Lubbock
J. P. NELSON
For Public Weigher Pre. 3
(Idalou)
J. D. r I'GITT.
CITY OFFICIALS
For Maror:
PERCY SPENCER
J. T. INMo.V
Cofnmiisionr. Nv 1:
L. H. SIMPSON
H. C. LOVE.
Commiaaioner No. 2:
J. O. .rONKS
J. B. I'RYOR
Commiiiinnrr No. 3:
CEO. C. Wol.FFARTn.
W. C. BRYAN.
Commissioner No. 4:
W. S. POSEY
HOCKLEY AND COCHRAN
COUNTIES:
For Ta Assessor:
W. G. KRAZIER.
LEONARD C. TOW.
For Sheriff and Tx Collector:
J. A. STROUD (re-election.
BABY SHOW
Three prize will be given to bakir from six month to
eighteen month. Three prizes for babie from eighteen
month to two year and three prize for babie from two to
four year of age. If you want to enter this contest make ar-
rangement now Inquire At Studio for particulars.
The picture will be shown at a local theatre ome time in
April.
Johnson Studio
Leader Building Lubbock. Texas
they turn the picture!! to the wnll
when dressing.
4. The guy who drive the fast-
est usually is the one with nowhere
to go.
r. Crass widow are sometimes
girls who said they could cook and
I.... nrni'url thi.v rouhln't.
fl. The imperfections you look
Tor in ottier people run generally "-
In vmiv m rrnr
7. Occasionally an old maid is n
girl who wailed to una a pcrnn
tun n
8. A womun wearing $.".00 worth
of stockings nkes to now aooui
$4.00 worth of them.
9. The mnn who rcfuscii to do
honest work usuully is trying to do
honest workers.
10. The surest wuy to queer your-
self with the right people is to be
seen with the wrong people.
It. A mnn never realises how Ig-
norant he is until his children sturt
giving him ndvice.
12. The man you dislike most Is
the one who talk about himself
when you wish to talk about your-
self. .
The Fatal Outcome
"Did you ever realize anything on
your investment in oil stock?"
I . I! I ...I... - ..1
tin yes: i reauzeu wnoi iui
I was
Look Again Solomon
"There's nothing new beneath the
sun"
Declares that wise-head Solomon;
And that he may convitn e us quite
Proceeds some instances to tite
To prove the point he wants to make
Now surely here is some mistake;
For if they are to be believed
The talcs we have of him received
He well miht take another stand
He must have overlooked his hand:
Of wives he'd five and thirty score
So we are told perhaps he'd more.
There must have been most every
day.
One brund-new baby anyway.
Invitation or Threat?
What would you do if I kissed
you
"I'd like to see you try it."
How Long Is a Minute?
When someone tells you to "wait
a minute" you could rlo almost any-
thing in that short time. For in-
stance in one minute you could
Oct run over.
Contract pneumonia.
Propoee.
Be accepted.
Regret it.
Take a drink if you had it).
Lose your money.
Speak to the wrong girl.
Get vour face punched.
Be fired.
Sit on your hat.
Stall a bill collector.
Make your wife mad.
Kick a stick of dynamite.
Have your tooth or leg pulled.
Oct off the car the wrong way.
Make a good resolution.
Break it.
Miss your train.
Fall overboard.
(let religion.
Lose it.
Die.
Always Boost
Boost the chap who is down today
Give him a lift for his sorrow
For this old world has n funny way
And you may be down tomorrow.
The First Year
The fir year of everything is
always the hardest. For iii-.tiiri.c-
The first year of married life
when you don't know whether you
can iro out nights as before or
whether she can make y u stay in.
The fir-t year a girl goes with
the boy 4 when she doesn't know
whether it's her face or figure or
fortune that brings 'em around. By
the end of the year she knows a lot
of thincs she didn't learn at school.
The first year of the baby when
you have to get up niifht and lose
your sleep and temper and wish
you were a bachelor; ami no mat-
ter what baby wants you must pet
it. Afier the first year baby crawl-
around tnu helps himself generally
to he very things he shouldn't have
The first year your mother-in-law
comes to st:iy with you a ub
jeer too painful for comment.
The- first year one pays an ire
come tax when it is hard to sine
When you re tick you go to doctor; when you need
legal dTke you go lo a lawyer; when you want a build-
ing erected you go to a real carpenter.
AND WE KNOW HOW.
enough out of the Income to pay
the tax.
The first year one is a million-
aire but as we have not yet en-
Joyed that experience we are un-
able to say what it is like. Never-
theless we are willing to try it.
Spoiled by Prosperity
Wife When we first went to
housekeeping you were glad to help
wine the dishes.
Iliib I know but that was when
we had only two dishes to be wiped.
Following the Fashion
TTn. vieu-eMt fnd nmonir actresses
Is to give their gowns trick names.
Instead of the gray georgette it is
"The Country Cousin." Inst end of
the negligee it is "The Morningi
Glory" and instead of the princess
slip it is "The Lounge Lixard" and
so on. On the theory that what's i
snnee for the goose is equally in-!
teresting to the gnnder we hnve
begun to name our wardrobe and !
so I
Our derby answers to the name
of "Hold Me Tight."
Our vest is "Pen Holder."
Our shirts are "Flashy Colors." i
Our shoes are "Decency."
Our suspenders are "Safety First" j
Who Wouldn't ?
"At my hotel" said the quiet lit-
tle man "there's a pretty girl who
floats through the corridor past my
room to her morning bath in rose-.
rolored silk pajamas over which is
flung a rreamy kimono."
"Is that so? exclaimed bis sporty
pal. "Too bad! If I were you I'd
slop her."
Hopes and Dreams
It's storming hnrd out -ide my dear.
But I've come through the win. I
and rain
To sit beside my darling here
i And dream our dreams all o'er.
again. !
So let us build the fire up high
Till all the room it warms arxl
cheers
Thi n what care we if storm cloud-
fly
Or wheen their angry sullen
tears .
For we have horses hope nnd youth
And we may side the golden
strands i
In dreams of love of life and truth
With thrills of strongly rlasping
hands.
South Plains
Grain Wints At
rat DtocK snow
The principal part of the exhibi-
tion from the South Plains of Texa
sent by the Plainview Chamber of
Commerce with the West Texas ex-
hibit to the Southwestern Exposition
and Fat Stock Show at Fort Worth
was grain samples. The award'
have been placed on grain and the
Plainview exhibit won more th:in
any single other exhibitor.
First place was given on bard
wheat any variety; first on barley
any variety; first on white maize;
second on spekti and variety; sec.
oml and third on red maize; and
third on millet any variety.
Concerning the Plainview part of
the exhibit the Fort Worth Star-
Telegram states:
"I'ck measures of wheat nnd
oats barley and kaffir corn tnmre
and an abundance of bundle stuff
is the contribution Plainview made
to the Southwestern Exposition. Col.
Smyth n bachelor of plainview en-
tered a "wheat hat and dress." The
eoft unie is made of wheat before it
is 'hreshed placed together on a
background of cloth. Barley rye
and emmer is used in the ornanui-
tion of this plainview gown. Plum-
view exhibits are extraordinary in
their fineness of quality. Broom
corn wheat millet corn outs and
barley are shown from Plainview
and one pumpkin which weigh 4'i
pounris claims this Texas town as
its home. Thousands of aires art
irrigated and agriculture is thriving
John Bonwell secretary of the Cham-
ber of Commerce co-operated in
sending this exhibit to Port Worth.''
: Plainview Herald.
NOTICE FOR AN ELECTION
It is hereby ordered that an ele.
tion be held at the Ci'y Secretary
i Office in the City of I.ubhcxk Te
as on the rirst Tuesday in Apr..
1 y 22 the same being the Fourti
day of April 1922 whereby the
duly qualified voters of said City
niiv vote for the following officers
MAYOR.
COMMISSIONER NO. 1.
COMMISSIONER NO. 2.
COMMISSIONER NO. 3.
COMMISSIONER NO. 4.
The following person are ap-
pointed to hold such election: Will
E. Ballew as Presiding Judge E.
T. Penney and W. S. Clark as As-
sistants. The same shall be held in ac-
cordance with the General Laws
of this State governing Elections
and return made in conformi'y
therewith.
Ordered this 7th day of Mar. h
1022.
L. II. SIMPSON
Commissioner No. 1 and Aiti.-ir
Mayor City of Lubboi k Tc:.'.
Attest: J. It. Germany City S -
I retary Lubbock Texas. 4-7
Seal.
NO SIDELINES HERE
WOULDNT YOU RATHER
liiiiliiiillliiiiliiiililiiiiiliiliiiH
j When Your Mind is Made Up
1 We Don't Try to Change it
A story is told about a man who went in to buy a
I $35 Suit and came out with a $50 one.
1
A. B. ConklJ Jr.
How to Feed
(Hy F. W. Kazmeier Poultry
To raise the chicks is the big job.
If there is a stumbling block in the
poultry hu-onc it is the ruisu.g of
the chicks. Many people ea h year
lose half of their cricks htau of
faulty fees:::
In raising baby hicks ii is well
to study the feeding of them care-
fully. Many people do not ntop to
think long enougn to realize that a
small chick's dig' stive Fystetn is
very delicate and easily upset.
Milk has been found a rnot ex-
rillent feed f ir small chicks. There
is no feed that will develop ihi
so quickly and uniformly as milk.
Few people appear to realize the
value of milk in raising chicks. There
is nothing quite as good and posi-
tively nothing that will take its
place. If yon want to decrease the
mortality of your chicks feed more
milk. It will pay to buy milk and
feed to the baby (hiiks. We have
raicd over lliO.tM'O chi. ks and each
vear ome to realize more and more
the necessity of feodiiu: baby ihiiks
milk.
Sour milk or butter milk is the very
best. Sour miik or huitermilk pot
oniy is a wonderfol food but it con-
tains a lactic acid that has a ten-
dency to keep the entire d'geMne
system of the i hick in fine shape.
Feeding plenty cf sour milk has a
tendency to eheik and contral '.he
much dreaded dist ase "white diarr-
hoea."
The milk mut be fed regularly.
It should be kept before them all
the time and it is especially im-
portant that it be given the chicks
a early in life as Possible. It is
not wise to feed and should be fed
with very small amount of blaik
pepper sprinkled over it.
The milk must be fed In such a
way the chick can not get into it.
The drinking vessel must be clean-
ed and washed in scalding water t v.
ery other day.
Tirmt of First fmmA
The last thing a thicken doe be-
fore it emerge from the (-hell is to
absorb or assimilate the yolk of the
egg. This is nature's provi-bn to
keep n" bick alive for the first
few days or until it is strorg enough
to eat. What happens when )u
give the fir;(t few feedings to a
AND WHEN YOU WANT INSURANCE too ahould ro to
a real rnuranre agency. Thi firm ha three men WHO
HAVE NOTHING TO DO BUT ATTEND TO YOUR
INSURANCE. W hare no tideltnea to Lalta our atten-
tion away from your busines.
HAVE YOUR INSURANCE IN SUCH A FIRM?
It could never have happened here
because there are more models of
Griffon Clothes at $35 in our racks
than many others show in their en-
tire stock.
What's more wo never surest
anything which is higher than the
amount you care to spend. H
Personally we feel that Griffon
models at 335 are just as distin-jruished-Iookintf
as others at $ lo.
uoreta
And Griffon
unmatchablc.
Baby Chicks
Husbandman A. & M. College
bunch f baby chu ks nvthered by
a hen -she gobbles it up in a hurry
so the b'tl chi. ks inn not eat
any i f it. She knows what is best.
Too bad we can not arrange for
the same thing to hapten when
artifitial'y brooded chicks are fed
too soon.
Millions of (hicks are killed out
right killed e.u h year by feeding
too soon liy feeding c refer to
solid food mid not milk. We i'.d
not find it safe to ever feed our
chicks before they are 4 hours old
and some timos we wait until they
are fill hours old. We like to wait
until they are very very hungry
am) show this by the way they act
Haw Much to Fd
Many n-oil believe it possible to
feed chicks by measure. Some peo-
ple consider It safe to feed chicks
all they will eat up clean. Exper-
ience has shown us that for the
first two wicks biks should never
be fed pite all they would eat up;
clean. Over-feeding i one of the i
most i opinion caus" of bowel'
trouble. We beliCve it Ml-f to feed j
often say five times a day the'
firl two weeks but never all they
would eat up clean. Feed in an- h
a way that they are always glad to
nee you at the next time and act
very hungry.
Starting F4
There are many good starting
feeds. A good starting food above
all else fresh.
Corn bread the kind we eat
ground tip fine and baked dry is
an excellent feed the first few
days.
Eipial parts of rolled oats and
bread crumbs mixed with 10 per
rent hard boiled eg?s is a good
feed.
Any of the o-calltd buttermilk
starting feeds are excellent. They
must be fresh and clean.
Method of Feeding
Starting Food -
8 parts rolled oatt.
8 parts brrad rrnmbs.
10 per cent hard boiled eggs.
Griin Mixt'iie
I lb. racl.i .1 wbent.
I lb. rrai ked corn or
1 lh. era ked milo.
3
g
ri
3
S3
re.
'.-1
"forty" are almost
3
Lubbock Texas
Mash Mixture
'.i lb. wheat bran.
1 lb. wheat shorts.
1 lh. corn meal.
1 lb. sifted meat scraps.
First Week: Starting food three
times a day on feeding board or
shallow pie tine. (iisin mixture
twict day lirst two dys
clean feeding boards after that I
the li'ter. (ban water and miik;
chn k sue grit charcoal and crack-
ed bone in sej arato ill hes. Green
food cut very fine.
One to Thiee Vtek' Two feed
day of starting food. Grain mix-
ture fed in li'ter twice a day liy
ma-h in a hopper always before
them. lint ami i harcoal in hoppers.
Plenty of green food. Clean wn'i-r
and milk to drink
Ihree to S'X Weeks: Morning
feed of moist ma-h; two feed of
grain mixture in litter. Iry mash
mixture in hoppers. Imrease pro-
portion of wheat shorts if diarrhoe
appears in chn ks. Water miik
grit and (harcoal always available.
Green food.
After Six Wn ks : Morning feed
of moist (milk) mn-h; one reed of
grain mixture in littrr. Iry mash
mixture before them all the time.
Milk water chrtrcoa! grit and bona
in boxes.
Craaa Food is NcMary
Many people do not realize the
importuni e of gieen f aid for small
c he ks. When thi y arc small it
honld be ery fin and succulent
and cut up very fine. Fine tut
cabbhgi. onions clover lettuce and
sprouted oats may be fed.
Svdd a Chaagos
It is very unwi-e to make any
sudden tharigc in either ration or
system of feeding. Sudden thangv
may disarrange the digestive system
and causa owe! trouie. Necessary
changes should be made Very grad-
ual. Sufficient Feeding Boards
Plenty of feeding boards or
troughs should be provided so th
chi' ks do not have to crowd at
feeding time. This is especially
true in the iae of large flock.
Insufficient feeding boards develop
stunted ihiks and weaklings.
Copyright lD.'Z by F. W. Kazmeier.
Name your firm and have your
bttirheads envelopes und butter
wrappers printed. The Avalanche
job department will asist yoJ in
si.ting a suitable name for your
farm and do your printing in a neat
and sati.fa-tory manner.
Here to Stay
BRIGGS
DENMAN
ALWAYS ON THE J03
n
1 4
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Dow, James L. The Avalanche. (Lubbock, Texas), Vol. 23, No. 9, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 28, 1922, newspaper, March 28, 1922; Lubbock, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth288526/m1/4/: accessed May 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .