The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 17, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 27, 1926 Page: 6 of 8
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Sick bodies
made strong
"For ten years 1
Buffered agony from
tciatic rheumatism.
Quit work. Lost 20
lbs. Tanlac results
amused me. I weigh
16S now, have no
pain, worb every
day, and feel fine. "
H. D. May fie Id, 135
Lombrano St., Sa
Antonio, Tex.
After n spell of Grippe or flu,
when your system Is all run down
and your legs are so weak they can
bardly hold up your body, start
right In taking Tanlac.
It's wonderful how soon you
really do improve! Tanlac sails
right In and puts the system In
fighting trim. It cleans the blood,
revitalizes the digestive organs,
gives you an appetite for solid food
and makes you feel like a new
person.
Nothing will turn the trick quite
as fast ns Tanlac, made after the
famous Tanlac formula from roots,
barks and herbs. Buy a bottle to-
day nnd get started back to full
strength and vigor. Take Tanlac
Vegetable Pills for constipation.
His Notion
"A perfesser says, here in the pa-
per," remarked Mrs. Johnson, in the
midst of her reading, "that a man
shouldn't change his business after
he is forty-flve."
" "Aw. I d'know about that," re-
turned Gap Johnson of Ilumpus Ridge.
"Fashions in bootlegging change, and
it 'pears like a feller ort to change
with 'em."—Kansas City Star,
A
FEED DAIRY COWS
LIBERALLY PAYS
For overnight relief to Inflamed ey« and
Mies use Roman Eye Balaam. Once tried,
always preferred. 872 Pearl St., N. T. Adv.
Then They Parted
"A little bird told me what kind of
« lawyer your father was."
"What did she say?"
"Cheep, cheep."
"Well, a duck told me what kind of
n doctor your father was."—Cornell
Widow.
Many dairymen are finding that It
is more profitable to feed good cows
liberally than to feed a larger number
of cows poorly or only fairly well. It
Is a common observation among dairy-
men that good cows will return a
profit on all the l'eed they will eat If
the ration is well balanced.
Cow-test association records re-
peatedly show that the greatest re-
turns over feed costs are made by the
cows which consume the largest
amount of feed.
Tests made by the dairy department
at the Ohio experiment station show
that'good cows fed more liberally than
Is the general practice not only
produce more milk and butterfat than
the same cows on the ordinary
but produce a larger amount at a
lower cost per pound.
The average annual butterfat pro-
duction of these cows fed a ration
ordinarily considered ample was 836
pounds. On the more generous ration
the average production of the same
cows was 568 pounds.
As the amount of feed used for
maintaining the animals was practi-
cally the same in both cases, th«
greater part of the additional feed
in the liberal ration was available for
production.
Not all cows will use the extra feed
for milk production; some of limited
productive capacity will not permit
liberal feeding or will turn the extra
feed into bodily fat In neither of
these cases is liberal feeding profitable
and with such cows ordinary feeding
will likely prove unprofitable.
NEGLECTED GRAPES
WILL NOT PRODUCE
Sure Relief
indigestion))
9% CENTS J/
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
ELL-ANS
FOR INDIGESTION
• 25$ and 75$ Pkgs.Sold Everywhere
Helpmate
"Daddy, I'm In love with a work-
ing girl." "Fine, uiy boy. Can she
support you ?"
Red Cross Ball Blue is the finest
product of its kind in the world. Ev-
ery woman who has used it knows
this statement to be true.—Advertise-
ment.
Deny yourself something every day
If you want to keep self-control.
Dairy Cows Need Plenty
of Water to Make Milk
Water In the dairy cow's ration can-
not be overemphasized, because It rep-
resents seven-eighths of the contents
which go In the milk pail. A short-
age of water will cut down the milk
supply more quickly than will a short-
age of any particular feed.
Tests at experiment stations show
that a cow will consume from 3 to 4
pounds of water to each pound of dry
matter. If the cow is producing 4 to
5 gallons of milk she will need more
than that quantity of water.
The average animal in the herd will
consume 12 gallons or 100 pounds of
water each day. One cow on test at
the Missouri station giving 110 pounds
of milk dally consumed 550 pounds
or 05 gallons of water In a day.
Water Is more often the limiting
factor In production during cold snaps.
The two-things which affect the quan-
tity a cow can drink are the tempera-
ture of the water and the number of
times she drinks. No digestive sys-
tem, even a cow's, can take 100 pounds
of Ice water at one time and not b«
disturbed.
Annunl pruning of grape vines Is es-
sentia'. if profitable crops are to be
produced, says J. H. Clark of the New
Jersey agricultural experiment sta-
tion. Even one year of ueglect will
cause the clusters to be small and Ir-
regular, while the canes will be weak
and unable to produce a satisfactory
crop the next year. It Is advisable to
prune before growth starts.
The single-stem four-arm Knlffen
type of vine has proved to be more
productive and easier to handle than
others, such as the fan and spur re-
newal types. The Knlffen trellis con-
sists of two wires, one 5V4 to 0 feet
from the ground, the other SO Inches
below it, supported by posts set 15 to
20 feet apart.
The trunk, extending from the
ground to the top wire, Is retained as
long as It Is healthy and vigorous.
Four healthy, vigorous canes, prefer-
ably from 0 to 9 feet In length should
be selected as near to the trunk as
possible and located so that one may
be trained in each direction on each
wire. These canes should be pruned
so that each will carry from 6 to 12
buds, depending on the vigor of the
vine. Vigorous vines may be pruned
to as many as 50 buds, but weaker
vines should carry less.
A two-bud spar (that is, a cane cut
off Just beyond the second bud) Is usu-
ally left near the base of each cane
to provide a renewal cane for the fol-
lowing year. These spurs should be
attached to the old trunk, or as near as
possible to it. All canes excepting the
four renewal canes and the four spurs
are removed entirely. It is advisable
to leave only as much old wood as Is
absolutely necessary to hold up the
producing canes.
The trunk should be firmly tied to
both wires, and each cane should be
tied to the wire in at least two places
to prevent Its being broken off by the
weight of fruit produced. Binder twine
Is commonly used for tying.
Lift Off-No Pain!
00
&
e
Doesn't hurt one bit 1 Drop a little
"Free/one" on an acblng corn, instant-
ly that corn stops hurting, then short-
ly you lift it right oft with fingers. .
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
"Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient to
remove every hard corn, soft corn, or
corn between the toes, and the foot
calluses, without soreness or Irritation.
Age to Breed Heifer Is
Important to Dairyman
The age to breed the dairy heifer
will depend somewhat upon the de-
velopment of the particular animal in
question. If (lie Individual Is well
grown and has a tendency to lay on
fat, she shoutd be bred at an earlier
age than one not so w il grown and
showing less tendency o condition
readily. The well-devempe'd Jersey
should be bred to drop her first calf
not more than 26 months of
age, better yet 24 months If possible,
^he heifer of slower growth and less
vigor should be allowed about 4
months longer.
The aim among dairymen is to put
the young heifer on the paying list
early In life without permanently
injuring the individual. If bred too
young the energies of the heifer are
devoted to the foetus, later milk yield-
ing, with the result that the growth
is greatly hindered and often stunted.
The breeding time for young heifers
is very Important and should be con-
sidered If you expect the animal to
do her best.
Grove's
Tasteless
Chill Tonic
Stops Malaria, Restores
Strength and Energy, eoc
Dairy Facts
A gallon of milk weighs about eight
and a half pounds.
• • e
All grains or concentrates make bet-
ter feed If they are ground.
• • •
A cow ordinarily eats from 30 to 40
pounds of silage per day and from 10
to 20 pounds of hay.
• • •
In most cases at present, It Is poor
economy to try to get ulong with farm-
grown feeds exclusively.
• • •
Feeds can be mixed In lots of sev-
eral hundred pounds by shoveling back
and forth on a tight floor.
IeSSI
Lime-Sulphur Solution
Kills San Jose Scale
One of the worst orchard pests .In
some fruit-growing sections Is the San
Jose scale.
To get rid of It, orehardlsts spray
the trees with lime-sulphur solution In
the spring just as the buds begin to
unfold. One gallon of commercial lime-
sulphur Is used with eight gallons of
water, in some fruit sections In other
states, .oil emulsions are used, but it
Is considered much safer to use the
lime-sulphur, as It is so eiliclent In
controlling diseases of fruit. In addi-
tion to destroying the scale.
Oyster shell and scurfy scale are
much more common in the orchards
of Iowa. Individual specimens of the
former are much larger than San Jose
or scurfy scale. Because of their re-
semblance to the oyster they take that
name. The San Jose scale Is very
small aid one can only tell It with the
aid of a microscope—unless the Infes-
tation is quite severe.
Lime-sulphur solution applied as
mentioned above will. In two or three
seasons, clean up bad infestations.
Tills wash Is not quite so rapid on re-
sults for oyster shell scale because the
pest Is continued over winter In the
egg that you can easily find under the
old scale. Take the point of a knife
or a pin. raise up the scale and you
may see the eggs with the naked eye,
though it Is better to have a micro-
scope. Trees in which the branches
are badly encrusted can be cleaned up
In due time.
Not Advisable to Spray
Trees in Full Bloom
it is never advisable to spray apple
trees when they are in full bloom, on
account of the danger of poisoning the
honey bees. It Is now a well-knowu
fact that the honey-bee is one of the
best friends the apple grower has.
Practically the entire work of cross-
pollination Is accomplished by this in-
sect, thus enabling the farmer to ob-
tain a set of fruit. If this spray is
made when the trees are in full bloom
It Is also likely to prevent a satisfac-
tory set of fruit, as It may he strong
enough to bum and destroy the sta-
mens and pistils (the reproductive or-
gans of the flowers). The force of the
spray may also actually Injure these
essential parts of the flowers.
The chief object of this spray Is to
place a small quantity of poison In
each tiny calyx cup for the apple
worm, which generally takes Its first
meal here two or three weeks later.
If the fruit grower does good work
this should be accomplished, and the
first meal that the little worm takes
will be Its last one
(TO
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No bran is added to
SHREDDED
1
•« .., .,
It contains all the bran in the wholewheat
Those gifts are ever the most ac-
ceptable which the giver makes pre-
cious.—Ovid.
"DIAMOND DYE" ANY
GARMENT, DRAPLRY
Just Dip to Tint or Boil to Dye
Each 15-cent pack-
age contains direc-
tions so simple any
woman can tint
soft, delicate shades
or dye rich, perma-
nent colors in lin-
gerie, silks, rib-
bons, skirts, waists,
dresses, coats,
stockings, sweat-
ers, draperies, coverings, hangings—
everything I
Buy Diamond Dyes—no other kind—
and tell your druggist whether the ma-
terial you wish to color is wool or silk,
or whether It Is linen, cotton or mixed
goods.
Because all the sick do not re-
cover, therefore medicine is not an
art.—Cicerc.
To Have a Clear, Sweet Skin
Touch pimples, redness, roughness
or itching, if any, with Cuticura Oint-
ment, then bathe with Cuticura Soap
and hot water. Rinse, dry gently and
dust on a little Cuticura Talcum to
leave a fascinating fragrance on skin.
Everywhere 25c each.—Advertisement.
It is the prerogative of great men
only to have defects.—La Itochefou-
eatild.
Real Prodigy
"Why do you call your child remark-
able?"
"He's nine years old and plays no
instrument, doesn't even . recite
pieces."
mm. "!-
Wmm i
Pataffine
Base
Every Quart
Guaranteed
(jood
Entertainment
at K-O-I-L the
Mona Motor
Oil Radio Station
To Be Sure
Visitor—Your son Is rather small
for his age, Isn't he?
Fond Mother—Oh. no, but I do think
most of the boys of his age are over-
grown.—Answers.
A
SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST 1
Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years.
DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART~1
Accept only "Bayer" package
which contains proven directions.
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aaplrln Is th« trade mirk of Hirer UtouUclura at Mono«ccUc eldo«Ur of BaUcrllcacU
DR. W. B. CALDWELL
AT THE AQK OF 83
Women Need
■ . r" *
a Mild Laxative
-Not a "Physic"
Countless girls and women now know
how foolish and needless It Is to
"purge" and "physic" themselves to
avoid sick headaches, dizziness, bilious-
ness, sallow skin, colds, or sour, gassy
stomach.
They have found that Dr. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin helps to establish nat-
ural bowel "regularity" even for
those heretofore chronically consti-
pated. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin not
only causes a gentle, easy bowel move-
ment but, best of all, It never gripes,
sickens or upsets the most delicate girl
or woman. Besides, It Is absolutely
harmless and so pleasant that even a
cross, feverish, bilious, sick child
gladly takes it.
Buy a large OO-cent bottle at —y
store that sells medicine and Just se«
for yourself.
Dr. Caldwell's
SYRUP
PEPSIN
I;
. v
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 17, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 27, 1926, newspaper, April 27, 1926; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth340999/m1/6/: accessed May 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Atlanta Public Library.